Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 26, Decatur, Adams County, 31 January 1958 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Capital Landmark Damaged By Fire » ■ Tomlinson Holl Is Damaged Thursday INDIANAPOLIS (IB — F i r e badly damaged Tomlinson Hall, an Indianapolis landmark for 72 years, Thursday night. Flames broke out about 10 p.m. (CST) in the upper floors of the brick-faced structure at Market and Delaware Sts., two blocks from Monument Circle. Twenty-two fire department vehicles raced to the scene as flames burst' high above the buildFor Sale USED EQUIPMENT Priced Right 10—Colony Hen Nests. 3—B-Gal. Founts. I—6x6'/z Ft. Hog House s—Kerosene Heaters and Bases. ’ NEW EQUIPMENT Hog Feeders, 4-6-8 Doors. Wooden and Metal. Hog Waterers, Kerosene and Electric. STIEFEL GRAIN GO.

Fri. Sat. Sun. Mon. W* M -X*** IB KjMB ■ Continuous Sat. & Sun. r m ONLY 15c -50 c SO GREAT—We’re Playing This Hit FOUR Days’ COLUMBIA PICTURES preaeru# MfiA M1 ■ mAbM BllkW U W W /dMkl UK ££m a.W I Ffli uI kM Ata ta ij AIHB&kML Ir AR BSDCOKI SIM PRODUCTION Technicolor* APPLES OBtw' ■ ALL KINDS x - t ■: • Northern Spies • Yellow Delicious • Roman Beauties ♦ Red delicious • Mclntosh • Jonathon • Winesap SPECIAL THIS WEEK! ' RED deijclOUS ---"--^'’^”-^""-—^ —~ ’ JONATHON —- Sf.QQ WINESAP __ OjFV Peck Basket grapefruit * Cc „ T 0 POP! SWEET-JUICY ■Ol*- * ADA liftEO Get yours Now! vlCnNtitw Prices Are Going-Up! 3 DO7 *I.OO ““ BIG EYE SWISS CHEESE GRADE A 3!b w LB - H «« en |7 ed Over Piece - - HEY KIDS — FREE GAL 60c SPUDNIK Flying Satellite with Large tnDI v Bag of Seyferts Potato Chips MGI. 69C SPECIAL ■■ 59 e B. g Hammond Fruit It. ‘ 240* NORTH 13th STREET - OPEN 9A.M.t09 P. M. EXCEPT SUNDAY OPEN SUNDAY 1 P. M. to 9 P. M.

ing. Firemen fought the blaze for hours and kept it from spreading to adjacent buildings, including | City Market and the Moose Hall. Firemen also were able to save street-flodr shops in the burning building itself, but the roof caved in on the big hall where many thousands of Hoosiers have visited since 1886 attending cultural , programs, political meetings and sports events • Fire Pvt.' Jsmes Whitaker, 25. was injure-' slightly by glass as . he worked atop an aerial ladder. • A woman spectator collapsed t from shock While watching the i fire at its height. The building is owned by the ■ City of Indianapolis. i Vocational Guidance Program At Church Youth week activities at the First Presbyterian church will conclude with a special vocational guidance program at 5:45 o’clock Sunda” evening at the church. A social time and refreshments will follow the program, to which the public is invited. The program is designed to assist the young people in choosing their life work and also their parents, who are to be'guests, to enable .them to give wise counsel to their children in selecting a career. Representatives from business and the professions who have been invited to participate include: Bud Townsend, business; John DeVoss, law; Dr. James Burk, medicine; Dr. John Spaulding, dentis- | try; John Margerum, engineering; i Miss Eleanor Pumphrey, teaching; Jack Heller, journalism; Mrs. James Kocher, Jr., homemaker. « If you have something to sell or rooms forrent, try a Democrat Want Ad — They bring results.

United Slates 1 Saved Baghdad Pact Failure Key Speeches From Dulles Saved Pact From Stark Failure ANKARA, Turkey (UP) — The United States saved the Baghdad Pact conference from abject ureBut the “northern tier” alliance is still a weak fledgling which could be pulled apart by the conflicting interests and fears of its members —Turkey, Iran, Pakistan. Iraq and Britain. As a collective security organization, the pact still has a long way to go. It is beset by problems which often threaten to obscure its basic purpose—defense against the Soviet Union. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, now en route home, was satisfied, however, that the fourday meeting which ended Thursday turned out better than he expected. Two key speeches by Dulles made the difference. The Moslem members reflected the changed atmosphere in their closing speeches. Dtlies Turning Point When the premiers and foreign ministers met Monday in the still unfinished Turkish grand assembly building there was a definite feeling that Dulles was bringing only himself to the conference, and that was not enough. In addition to their own individual troubles, the pact members tended to feel they were not getting either moral support or the money they needed from the United States to meet the Soviet penetration of the Middle East with its program cf threats and economic The turning pc . t came Wednesday, the ct. zerore the conference ended. On the opening day, Dulles already had reaffirmed that U.S. “mobile power” would be used under the Eisenhower Doctrine to . back the pact members against any Communist aggression. On Wednesday he surprised the Moslem members by offering another 10 million dollars for a project-to improve wire communications between the Middle East capitals He held out the prospect of loans for other regional development projects for pact members from the American loan fund for economic development. The psychological impact of the promise went beyond the actual amount promised. - Military Plans Approved Equally important, Dulles answered the claims of Soviet “aid” with a detailed analysis of how much and how little it actually was compared with aid from the United States and the free world. It showed plainly U.S. aid was far greater than Soviet aid and it satisfied the Moslem leaders. The military part of the conference approved holding the pact’s first combined staff exercises by its new combined military planning staff in the near future. The . planning staff is perhaps only a small step toward a joint command, needed for NATO-like solidarity. But permanent planning to coordinate the defense plans of the individual countries has just begun, and any joint staff is still a long way off. Dulles underlined another weakness of the pact in his closing speech when he reiterated America’s “commitment” to help the pact “if need be by military action.’’ Under the Eisenhower Doctrine the United States is more committed to help the pact countries if help is requested than the mem» bers are committed to help each defense.” . In the lanuage of the timberman,’ soft woods are trees that bear cones and hardwoods are trees that wear broad, deciduous leaves. The -terms often mislead the layman, since softwoods such as longleaf pine yield lumber harder than such hardwoods as the tulip tree and cottonwood. Trade in a good town — Decatur SUNOCO STATION FOR LEASE Minimum Investment’ Good Income Low Rent Located On HIGHWAY 27 BERNE, IND. For Information CALL 7 SUN OIL CO. Box 30 Huntington, Ind. Phone 4010 Huntington

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA

High Winds Block Satellite Firing Winds Continuing At High Altitudes CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. «P» — High altitude winds which would block any attempts to launch the Army’s satellite missile may continue over Cape Canaveral for days, forecasters said today. A powerful jet stream carrying blasts up to 200 miles an hour swept directly over the cape, where the big Jupiter C missile was believed almost ready for the nation’s second attempt to fling a satellite into space to match Russia’s Sputnik 11. Other missiles, including an intercontinental Atlas and an Air Force intermediate range Thor, ilso stood in their towers at the cape, but whether the jet stream winds would affect any plan? to launch them was unknown. The Jupiter C became the nation’s first hope of getting a satellite into orbit around the earth when the Navy Vanguard satellite carrier was grounded with mechanical difficulties which also resulted from bad weather during several attempts to launch the slender rocket last week. c orbWayne Liquor Store Owner Robbed FORT WAYNE W — Bernard Lamonte, a Fort Wayne liquor store owner, told Fort Wayne police Thursday he isn’t an expert on guns, but he knows enough not to argue with one. Lamonte was typing up his record Thursday when two youths entered his store. One pulled a gun and demanded the money in the cash register. Lamonte gave them about S4OO i”d thev fled after jerking a telephone off the wall. Gar /uman Held On ’u pi ion Os Murder GARY (IP! — Mrs. Jeanette Rhodes was held on suspicion of murder Thursday in the gun death of her husband, Clifton, 32, father of nine children. Rhodes was dead on arrival, at Gary Methodist Hospital Thursday, shortly after his wife called police and told them she shot him in the head with a revolver. Mrs. Rhodes said her husband nagged at her for hours about the way she ran the house. She said she.waited until he went to bed, then fired at him as he slept. KILLER CContlnued frorp one) hostage in the Bartlett home until Monday when Card's grandmother became suspicious and notified police. They fled to near Bennet, Neb., southwest of Lincoln, where Starkweather’s car became stuck in the snow, and a teen-aged couple, Robert Jensen, 17, and Carol King, 16, both of Bennet, picked them up The .youth told the ■ sheriff he marched .the two at gunpoint to a storm cellar in an abandoned school yard and ordered the boy into the , cellar, killing Jensen when the boy tried to escape. He then shot Miss King at the cellar entrance and threw her in, the sheriff said. Starkweather denied committing an unnatural sex act with Miss King, although pathologists said the girl had been the victim of a sexual attack. The sheriff said Starkweather confessed he killed August Meyer, 70, a bachelor farmer of near Bennet, when Meyer came to the door later Monday night with a gun in his hand. Starkweather said he assumed Meyer had heard about him and was prepared, to defend himself. Meyer was shot and Killed as he stood in the doorway of his home. The next-night, Starkweather invaded the fashionable Lincoln home of C. Lauer Ward, 48, the sheriff said. Starkweather shot Ward, president of Capital Steel Works in Lincoln, and fatally stabbed Ward's wife, Sarah, 50, and their maid, Vivian Fencl, 51, the sheriff quoted the young slayer. The 11th victim was Merle Collison, 37, Great Falls, Mont., who was shot to death in -his car near Natural Bridge, Wyo., late Wednesday- , Starkweather' and Caril have been charged by Lincoln authorities with one of the murders, that of Miss King. “Caril, who told authorities Starkweather planned to kill her “when we get to Washington/' still was pale and shaken when she arrived at the Scotts Bluff County jail here. Douglas, Wyo., Sheriff Earl HesJin, with whom Caril rode, said she sat silently during the trip Thursday night. “She’s still obviously in a state of shock,” Heflin said. Caril was given sedatives and fell asleep promptly in the women's section of the jail. Wyoming gave up jurisdiction Thursday after a conference between Converse County, Wyo., Atty. William Dixon and Nebraska officials. If you have something to sell or rooms forrent, try a Democrat Want Ad — They bring results. |

Jan. 21 Accident Fatal To Driver MICHIGAN .CITY (OT — Injuries i sustained in an accident Jan. 21 , Thursday proved fatal to. Alphonse ' Bunn, 64, Chicago, who died in Doctors Hospital here. Burm was fatally injured and his wife, Marie, 59, sustained a fractured hip when the Burm car collided with a state highway snowplow on U.S. 20 near the Forler-LaPorte county line. Suspect Volunteers To Remain In Jail Stories On Fatal Beating Conflict RICQARD (UP) -John Handy, 62, one of two persons apparently present when Mrs. Eleanor Tiefenthaler, 53, was beaten to death in her home at Cambridge City, late Thursday volunteered to remain in Wayne County Jail until the slaying is cleared up. Handy and the victim's husband, Walter, 58, have told conflicting stories about the fatal beating. Tiefenthaler is under police guard in Reid Hospital where he is recovering from similar head injuries inflicted by the same iron pipe which killed his wife Tuesday. Handy, a Cambridge City fruit stand operator, told authorities he entered the Tiefentiraier home and found Tiefenthaler beating his wife. He said he grabbed the weapon from Tiefenthaler and the younger man was injured in the struggle which followed. Tiefenthaler said he found Handy beating his wife and he too was beaten when he attempted to stop him. Handy submitted to a lie detector test in connection with the crime and results appeared to clear him. In a statement given to prosecutor Bert Keller Jr and sheriff Edward Cordell, Handy waived his right to be charged and volunteered to remain in custody. He said he would not discuss the slaying with anyone unless his attorney is present and also volunteered to take another lie test Authorities said Tiefenthaler also would be asked to submit to a lie test when he recovers. They said Tiefenthaler would be taken to Cambridge City “under guard" today to attend his "Wife's funeral. The iron pipe apparently used in the slaying was found Wednesday. It was taken to Indianapolis where State Police will try to determine whether it was the murder weapon. Soil Test Mandatory For Cost-Sharing Burl Johnson, chairman of the Adams county agricultural stabilization and conservation committee, announced today that soil tests are mandatory before requests for cost-sharing of the application of limestone under the 1958 agricultural conservation program are signed in the ASC office. Tests are to be made by Purdue University and should be sent in at an early date. Containers for submitting samples are available at the county extension office. Soil tests from other laboratories are not acceptable. Johnson stated that the rate of cost-sharing for the application of limestone is $1.40. The limestone must be applied to legumes or grasses. EXCHANGE (Co.mnued from page one) medical and dental care are also a part of the program. The speaker said Americans are kind, generous, and hospitable. He said he is enjoying his year's visit here. Eliasson is amazed at the number of automobiles in America, especially those driven by high school students. TV is most interesting, also. » The speaker concluded his remarks by urging the club to continue its foreign exchange program so that other students might share his experience in the years *to come. RACKETS fCmtlnued rrom page one) order of business in about midFebruary. IKB (Continued from page one) other party leaders were to be heard on 1958 campaign problems in the afternoon. The President said the Republicans have a “good cause” to present the voters "in the form of a proud record of past achievement and a lively, thorough, wellbalanced program for the future." Most Gain Senate Seat The GOP, he said, must not let its story of progress be drowned by “dismal wails of despair” from demagogues like some of those heard in the past five years. He offered this definition of a demagogueC "A person who rocks the boat, himself so as to persuade everybody that there’s a terrible storm on the water" If you have something to sell or rooms forrent, try a Democrat Want Ad — They bring results.

CLAIMS TO BK ALLOWED BY THE BUAjRB OF (COMM.IHSIONHRS ON MONDAY ran. 8, HMM COtJNTY City of Decatur ojir ....< 147.84 1* w Klrech elk exp ...... 45.00 Owley Typewriter A Off Sup 4,00 Miller-Bryant-Hnerca Co ........ 10.30 Commercial Print Shop do .... 14.35 Commercial Print fthop Aud exp 8.15 Frtden Inc de ........ -.,.,...1... 48.44* Mobile Binders do 100.04) Haywood Pu>blltibln.g Co do .. 12.10 5 J? Tr % J * H H Johnson Treaa exp 173.00 “ •••- 160.00 Remington Rand Corp dp .... 18,«7 Decatur Lumber Co do .... .. 28 40 Commercial Print do ? 440 C<) do .. 15.55 Recorder exp 098.50 Dihl Eddy do ». 65J.50 M Affolder Sher exp 39 33 a odtv dd i # :oo R W Setts do .u „ .... 10 00 Schwartx Ford Co do 182 45 Petrie Oil Co do ~ 7(2 89 Gaye Mdbll Serv do 15.08 Police Bqulpment do 123.36 Kknpel's Cigar Store do 10.45 Commercial Print Shop do .. 1.35 k Anepaugh Studios do ....... 2A5 bnited Tailore Inc do 349.00 J S Lehmann, do Emergency Radio Serv do .. 2(147 H Moellertng Surv exp— Anderson Industry Staking A Rod Anspaugh Studios ,Pro Atty exp 200 T* L Smith do 44.00 B Koos Asae-HBor elk 98.00 W Koos Assessor exp 18.20 Commercial Print do 1 25 National Mkt Reports do 191.50 G M Grablll Sch Supt exp .... 9.84 Typewriter Co do 275.90 M M Foley Atty Off ........ 26.08 L Seitenrlght Co Agt exp .... 56.68 L M Folk do _ 10.99 Cltlxens Tele Oo do 17.45 ComerciaJ Print do .13 80 C WmFreeby J 4 T> Hlth Off 64.16 -M F Parrish Ct Ct exp _ 10.00 Ideal Dairy Bar do 46.05 Cltliens Tele Oo do 36 60 W Augaburger do 8.60 Coverall Rental Serv do 1.80 West Publishing Co do 74.00 American Law Book Co do 12.50 W H Anderaon do 13.50 C H Muselman do 22.80 J Bixler Ct H Cue 235.00 O D Sudduth do 205.00 B L Daniels Ct H Mat 100.00 L Drake Ct H Watch —. 10.00 Beavers OH Serv Ct H exp .. 1.74 Basco Products Co do .......... 201.23 P L Macklin do 2.00 U S Chemical Co do 54.40 D Affolder Jail Mat 125.00 Decatur Lumber Co Jail exp 455.30 Ha beg ger Hardware do 2.1.52 Hites Grocery do ... 22.03 J I Holcomb Msgr Co do 25.50 Basco Products Co do 22.73 Northern Ind Publ Serv do „ 10.63 G Foenaugh Co H Si«>t 200.00 A C Foenaugh Co H Mat ..... 155.00 E Moore do exp 120.00 D Scott do 60.00 B Wendel do 60.00 M Sbaof do ................ 30.00 B Harvey do 140.00 C McDonald do - 120 00 Dr N S Rich do 50.00 J I Holcomp Mtgr Co Co Home exp 72.55 Davis Well Msgr Co do 37.31 Food Marketing do 97.32 Dr R E Allison do .... 9.50 A Lengerich do 27.10 Saylors Chevrolet Sales do .. 5.00 Haugk’s Heating do 25.84 Stiefel Grain Co do ................ 228.80 Morrison Farm Store do 12-35 Hammond Fruit Mkt do 94.60 Burk gUevatof (Oo do 266.83 Ace Extermination do 8.00 Klmpel’s Cigar Store do 25.20 Sprunger Implt Co do 27.30 Neuer Supply Co do 86.13 Stewart’s Bakery do 69.06 Heller Coal Feed & Supply 133.3(2 \V Wlrines W Twp As 183.33 D A Macklin Co Atty 125.00 Berne Witness Co legal Adv 246.08 Decatur Democrat Co do 235.72 V Ferry Bridge ...... 12.60 E Fell do ....... 12.64) C C Albbott do 50.40 R Fuhrman do ..._ 12.60 N Brunner do 12 60 C Meshberger do 12.60 H Mankey do a 50.40 C Death 4o ............. It.lT E KukelhAn do 1415 C Zuroher do 12.15 J Augsburger do ."... 12.15 American Steel Supply Co do 363.11 Bower Hardware do 139.35 The Schafer Co do 33J4 Yost Gravel-Readymlx do .. 105.84 L Somers do 98.77 H L Schaadt Open drains .... 40.00 L Noll do Yost Const ruction Co do .... 61.75 W C Bauman Title drains .. 2Q.00 Krick Tyndall Co do 1-9.84 Gottschalk Supply do 46.00 Adams Co Farm Bureau do 3.15 Decatur Inp Agcy Insurance 135.50 Decatur Irrs Agcy Off Bond 5.00 J Bolt Fox bounty 8.00 L Steffen do ; .2 3.00 C Framkllh do ;.. 3.00 L Hteele do ...... 600 HAG Balslger do 3.00 R Singleton oo .... 3.&0 G Wilder do d .... 3.00 rndliaha Girls School Care of Tat. 424.12 Irene Byron Hosp do 562.60 C Myers Foreign Sher ........ .1.10 Anderson Industry Prel exp 73.80 W H Gllllom do 188.641 C Lehman Election exp 10.04) . a™ WELFARE B Nelbon Mil l<2.f? M J Haxelwood do .' 6.79 M Marshall do 2.87 V Linn do 10.92 Cltlxsna Tele Co oper 29.10 Royal Typewriter Oo do 9.50 CO A DITCH AL H Moeller!ng Mileage 30.08 L Smith labor 816.00 C Burkhart do 2 91.00 A Hlrsehy do 93.80 A Merriman do 60 20 O Wettfeld do - 37.80 R Cole do 37.80 M Rirschy do’ .17.60 R Velex do 61.25 R Balls do 505 R WablS do 53.75 L J King do 45.50 I Fox do 68.50 J King Jr do 63.75 E Inch do 49.38 P P Clark do 11-25 L Wardon do 11.25 - R Klpfsr R Beer do 51.25 L Byer do .— 10.00 I® Mich 2(5.00 A Wlokey do 1-0.00 V Riley do 20.00 H L Burkhart do 15.00 R Thomas do 10.00 H Geisler do .... 5.00 D E Gatwood do 6.00 Goodyear Serv Store oper .. 204.3*6 Alder Bros Garage do 50.52 Decatur Auto Supply do .... 6.10 Korte Bros do 224 Beavers Oil Serv do #3.49 Ander*»on Industry do W H Gllllom Ditch Imp 178.80 Andereon Industry do 33.43 Berg <3onstructio*n Co do .... 833.32 HIGHWAY L. Noll Su.pt Sal - 147.50 B Fuhrman Asst do 186.66 M J Runyon Clerk 195.00 I W" o i2Si >8:8 s m, , C Harder' 1 let* H Burtfer Tr 'Dr 188-. M De Wayne Beer do 138 6* R Stiener do —- 153.6* -R Fuhrman 4to 1M.40 8 te ft 1| ft N BrUnner do i?! ? 0 C Meshlberber do - 136.00 M M<nkey Ao M«« C Death do — - l? 1.50

TAILOR-MADE TO FIT YOUR REEDS .... A STOREKEEPER’S LIABILITY POLICY in one simple contract covers practically all your liability hazards (except vehicle.) COWENS INSURANCE AGENCY L. A. COWENS JIM COWENS JO# Court St. Pbone R-MOl Decatur, Ind.

E Kukelhan dx> F Kltson do C Zurcher do * t 1 TreaS. Adams Co Soc Sec .... 74.05 Cltlsens Tel Co Oper City of Decatur do 51.13 , Beavers OU Serv do l- ’j Schwarts Ford Vo do - 46.1-4 Stockberger Mach Inc do .... 23u.41 Hartley Auto Wrecking Co do 145.00 Reid Holoomb Co do 29 W Co*mmer<Ual Print Shop do 88.69 W BrinMenhOfe do 1«5» Decatur Auto Supply do .... 297.19 Decatur Equip Inc do ...— 10.»O Eddie Ewen's Mar Serv do 7.75 Premier Autoware Co do .... 16.45 Moasman Yarnelle Co do .... 4'9.73 T Beenbower do 30.00 D. A. Lutbricant Co do 10*.15 Petrie Oil Co do 5 ?I oi Motor Fuel Tax Div .do 2* 82 Pearl Oil Co do 18. 32 Nat l Oil A Gas do ...... l»»-3» Rawls Inc do- J s2s Goodyear Serv do —- *O7 78 Schafer Co .Inc do “? -!> Central Soya Co do 5 “0 Parr's Tire A Imp do 14.45 R J Leininger A Sons do .. 162-50 Meehberger Bros Material 13.1J] 1J J W Karoh Stone Co do -1« H<6 L Somers do 448.2a I-ogamsport Metal Culvert Minneota Mtn A Mfg do .. (s.OO J Peters Stage Dept do »995 7 0 Neuenschwander Inc In# ..., 35.01 Deeds Equip Co Prop w•* 5 I A Beer do —. I£-“Y Beavers Oil Serv Inc do — 2M 3* V McMarty do 1w.70 Adler Bros do Beard of Comnilaslonera Certified this Slat day ot January ,# Edwsrd F. Jaberg, Auditor Adams Co. Jan 31 Feb 7 Driver Fined For Traffic Violation I Andrew A. Hoover, 41, route 2, Fort Wayne, appeared in the jus- ! tice of the peace court Wednesday 1 and entered a plea of guilty to a charge of operating a motor vehicle without a valid tiriver’s license. He paid a fine of SI and costs, totaling $16.75. Hoover was arested Jan. 25, by state police on U. S. highway 33? 6n6 mile southeast of Pleasant Mills. Gerald D. Hammond, 20, Deca- ! tur, was arrested by the state i troopers Tuesday, and charged i with operating a car with improp- [ er mufflers. He was stopped on i U. S. highway 33 at Five Points j in the city of Decatur. Hammond > is scheduled to appear in the jus- ‘ tice of the peace court at 7:3C i p.m. Feb. 17. i ! Two Americans Hurt ’ When Elevator Falls i PARIS (IP! — Two Americans ’ were in' the hospital today with * broken legs suffered when an as- ! cending elevator faltered and I plunged two stories to the ground ‘ floor at U. S. Air Force Headquari ters. Injured in the mishap Thurs- ; day were Air Force Major Edward I Gladue, 46, of Watertown, Miss. J and Mare Suma, 45, a civilian, of > Scranton, Pa. _ > : Bomb Scare Delays > Plane's Departure 1 NEW YORK (OT — The depart- ! ure of a Nwtheast Airlines DC-3 > with 19 pasSengacs aboard was ’ held up one hour and 25 minutes > Thursday night because of a bomb J scare. Airline officials said an an * onymous caller telephoned sayinr [ “a plane going to New Hampshire" i had a bomb on it. A search of the [ delayed plane, bound for Keene ' and Lebanon, N. H., failed to un [ cover any explosives. i J-fTTER MM W. i i i f JMMM. > 6 •» ’ * C ABSORBS * DEODORIZES ’ Ja \ TAKES FLACE ‘ OF SANO Kitty Litter is the answer x > to cat owners' biggest probi lem! —a specially procJ essed material which proi vides a modem method of — ! eliminating the daily un- ! pleasant "Sand-box rou- * tine". Kitty Litter dries fast f and absorbs more odors than ! sand. Kitty Litter deodorizes ! —effectively. Kitty Litter is ; herm’sex «o your pets. I 5Si 55c 1 10 & ’l-00 GORDONS ! WESTERN AUTO ’ STORE 1 152 N. 2nd Street

FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 195$

Berne Conservation Club Shoot Sunday The Berne Conservation club will «pon»or a shoot at Paul Shoemaker’s, one mile south and 1% miles west of Berne, Sunday. Shotguns, rifles nd pistols will be fired in separate matches. NEW TESTS (Continued from iwige on«) weapons of all kinds “equaled or exceeded” the goals set for 1957. —Repeated that, despite AngloAmerican laboratory advances reported Jan. 24, the effort to harness H-bomb fusion forces “still is very much in the research 1 stage” and the first fusion power device is still "years" away■957 OLDSMOBILE "98” Sedan, Completely equipped. Power. 1956 CADILLAC Coupe De Ville— All Power. 1956 OLDSMOBILE Super Sedan, All Power. Air Conditioned. 1966 OLDSMOBILE Super “88” Holiday Coupe—All Power. 1966 OLDSMOBILE "88” Holiday Coupe, R & H, Hydramatic. 1955 CHRYSLER St. Regis Hardtop Coupe—All Power. 1966 DESOTO Fireflite 4-door Sedan—AU Power. 1955 OLDSMODILE “98” Four Door Sedan — Power Steering. 1954 DODGE V-8 Royal 4-door Sedan, Power Flite. 1954 MERCURY 4-I>r. Sedan, Radio, Heater, Merco-Matic. 1954 OLDSMODILE Super “88” 4-door Sedan, Hydramatic. 1953 OLDSMOBILE “98” 4-door Sedan, Power Steering. 1953 PACKARD “400’ Sedan Ultramatic Drive, Power Steering. 1951 BUICK Super 4-door Sedan. One Owner. 1950 CADILLAC “62” Sedan. Radio, Heater, Hydramatic. 1950 OLDSMOBILE “98” Club Sedan, — Radio, Heater, Hydramatic. These Are AIT New O Ids mobile and* Cadillac Trade - Ins and we invite Your Inspection at Our Used Car Lot at.... 967 North 13th Si. ww MOTORS Phone 3-2050