Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 66, Decatur, Adams County, 19 March 1958 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

25th Anniversary Sale — ON — FURNITURE - CARPET - RUGS and APPLIANCES ONLY 3 MORE DAYS NOW AT Uhrickßros.

— ... STOP EVERYTHING! DROP EVERYTHING! Thursday—Friday —Saturday ONLY TRUCjGLOAD SALE ■ ~'"" 1 - i ’-..-.... DOWN TO GOODYEAR .-. ' MlllMim 'tuWlß , 1058 Beat the Crowd lll/C® I " ato the Model : b She e I vRIP//TELE VIS AN fIfIBTX X ? ,. 38-‘ : -- I vmr lilfcllifivn yj ß , l f-A X/l X . ..../. _J K wBK I Bl >*Mrp '.dit ggg &L. so Sc/t _ . » they >ve COME IN BY THE TRUCKLOAD ... We Want 7ketff Gotte by Sat Nite I DON’T BUY ANY TV UNTIL YOU’VE SEEN OUR SENSATIONAL DEALS i H Portables, Table Models, Consoles! Here Are Only Two Examples: j WBRQJ " E lt” fo^l SAVE I Top-TuningK|^^l ; f $ 60'" 1(~-®H K I '■ TABLE MODEL X*k /I ' 21” Mahogany 'i X /ll\ I I / I I W of viewable area i [ Regular $339.95 i b uINFmIiI ! I 111 OAT \I I ■■*• ii • “Ultra-Vision” Chassis L V ] i \/l\ ?R\. 3®® vO*'* I ■ ;! • Slim-Silhouette ![ All 1 os'eß I I QR :• 3-Speaker Sound Z\| I M an 1 ■ System for Brilliant AAI l 7tBF*W !■ yHwWWW Tonal Quality /I I ul " ! | • 110”‘Aluminfced CT / ■ I *■-■■ Event' W Picture Tube e MCHia// V || for ia — ■. • ""• " N,NG - EASY TO REA( H !>• G . E. Dependability - Modcl 21C1548 II w z z z B • NEW - 110 aluminized picture tube ;' , — JiiMMMMnn^mMaaMi mm • CLEARER RECEPTION—INCREISED POWER ][ - QK X ftfi ! G. E. EMPLOYEES: |Sv#Cl^ han - S<W M klv:i WE WELCOME YOUR PURCHASES AT REG. $219.95 PAY S<M®isU StF B P ith EASY Y VVVSIIIf SPECIAL DISCOUNTS DURING THIS _ ____ -- nvr v * WFFKIV I B your old WEEKLY ’ EVENT, AS WE DO THROUGHOUT THE CMIfE COO AA nr»ni-i > fll operating TERMS ; YEAR ON TV AND APPLIANCES. dAVE SZU.UU No Handling Charge in 90 Days| TV GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE] 121 N. 2nd Stmt richard kershner, Mgr. Phone 3-2009

Driver Is Arrested On Speeding Charge Harry C. Harvey. 65, Fort; Wayne, was arrested by the city police at 10:40 p.m. Tuesday and;

I INSURANCE Strong Stock Companies and Prompt Service When Loss Occurs. Consult This Agency Today! COWENS INSURANCE AGENCY L. A. COWENS JIM COWENS 209 Court St. Phone 3-3601 Decatur. Ind. j — — —

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

| charged with speeding 41 milus. per hour in a posted 30-mile zone.' He was arredtCd on U. S. highways 27 and 33 where s t|>e city police had ! set up the electric timer. Harvey is scheduled to appear in the jus- ; tice of the peace court Saturday.

Services Tonight At Lutheran Church The children of the primary! choir and the men’s chorus will provide the special music at 6:45 and 8 o'clock as Zion Lutheran, West Monroe and Eleventh streets, will conduct the fifth in a series of I midweek Lenten vespers. The Rev. ■Edgar P. Schmidt, pastor, who is preaching a series of sermons i on the general theme, “Our Suffering Redeemer,” will this eveing emphasize the topic, "Our Re- ■ deemer Abused,” (Luke 22 , 63, 71) recalling ‘how’ the Savior of the world suffered almost unbelievi able abuse as He ’was wounded for our transgressions and was ! bruised for our iniquities’ 'lsaiah | 53>.” Mrs. Louis Zwick will lead

the primary choir as they sing, j ‘‘Glory be to Jesus.” The men’s i chorus, under the direction of Karl I Reinking, will sing, *‘O Sacred Head.” Both are well-known Passion chorales. The question and answer period that has been conducted the past few Wednesday evenings has now been discontinued, and the services tonight will not last more than 50 minutes each, being at 6:45 and 8 o'clock. The public is invited. ELKHART. Ind. (IP) — A quail flew into a sporting goods store here recently and salesman Dick Laughlin put the confused bird to good use. He made the bird pose for a photograph with himself, a gun and a large sign: "Indiana Quail Season Opens Nov. 10.”

Regional Meet At Bluffton March 29 Two Teachers From Adams County Aid Edwin Prible, Allen high school, Bluffton; Imogene Beihold, Adams Central, Monroe; Beth Blue, Berne, and Wayne Lee, Rockcreek Center, Bluffton, will serve as chairmen for the Bluffton regional meet of the annual state high school contests in mathematics, English, Spanish and Latin sponsored by the Indiana University extension division. Regional meets will be held Saturday, March 29, in 33 cities throughout the state. Prible will serve as general chairman; Miss Beihold as chairman of the English contest; Miss Blue, chairman of the Latin con- ; test, and Lee, chairman of the mathematics contest. Winners of the regional meets will compete in the finals April 26 at Indiana University. There will be three sections in the math contest—algebra, geometry and a comprehensive field. The English contest is designed for juniors and seniors. The Latin tests will be given in four divisions—first year Latin, second year Latin, Cicero and Vergil. The Spanish contest also will be divided into three sections. Cities selected for regional meets are: Angola, Bedford, Bicknell, Bloomfield, Bluffton, Covington, Crawfordsville, Crown Point, Evansville. Fort Wayne, Fowler, Goshen, Greencastle, Greensburg, Indianapolis, Jasper, Kokomo, LaGrange, LaPorte, Linton, Monticello, Muncie, New Albany, Richmond, Rockville, Rushville, Seymour, South Bend, Terre Haute. Vevay, Wabash. Warsaw and West Lafayette. SUMMIT (Continued from page one) had come out for some form of U. N. association in an outer space agreement. If this could be pried away from the bases issue it would open the possibility of an ■ outer space agreement along lines i first proposed by President Eiseni hower. KOHLER (Continued from page one) j completely” took over local law I enforcement agencies, he accused ’ former SHerin " Theodore Mosch and former Mayor Rudolph Ploetz of aiding the strikers. “This country, cannot long tolerate union leaders who have become so powerful that they can and do taW over and control law enforcement and justice,” he said “This is a danger at least as great, and, mmy opinion, greater i than any racketeering of union leaders.” i As for union charges that the i company refused to bargain in 1 good faith and was interested only jin ousting the UAW from its plant. Conger said: “We are Willing to bargain with any union that represents our employes. But we will not bargain with a gun at our head.” Conger presented copies of the company’s contract proposals. He said “there were many concessions” on union demands except for union security. He said the union wanted workers who joined the union to be required to continue as members, but “we do not believe in compulsory unionism in any form.” As to arbitration, Conger said the issues now are before the National Labor Relations Board and “we are willing to await the outcome.” A map made by Ptolemy at Alexandria about 150 A.D. represents only the “habitable portion of the globe” —about one-third of the northern hemisphere, according to Rand McNally's Atlas of World History. Trade in a good town —. Decatur

rffnerrccfc 70/> Ifafue Luxury Ufa// Parnt/ PAINT NOW! J Ono Onllon Wl KK\ jj ■ Covert end VlJ| L) / ; H Boovtlflos the Wethoble I I JI One-coat Jlatlui wall paint fa the key print driet quickly to * magnificent J to economical interior decorating, long-lasting finish, ftr colorful new ! Buy to ete and available in a wide rooma, buy Flatlux today! Goes oa ■ range of beautifu! colon. Fiatlwt wall wnoochlr with brush or toilet. "KLENKS., t WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY jOGHTS

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1958

School Held Here On Meat Cutting Purdue Economist Leads Discussion More than 100 people attended the meat cutting school Tuesday evening at Gerber’s Supermarket. Jim Stevenson, consumer economist of the extension staff at Purdue University, led a discussion on purchasing meat and the identification of meat cuts. Stevenson stressed that the average consumer spends Vi of his take home pay on food and Vi of his food dollar is spent in purchasing meat. He also stressed that tenderness of meat depends upon age of the animal, the amount of connective tissue, the amount of marbling, and the grade of the meat. The most economical cut of meat is not necessarily the best buy as it will depend upon the family’s likes and dislikes. Stevenson also stressed that meat may be made more tender by breaking down the muscle structure as when a steak is pounded with a hammer, when the butcher cubes a steak, or when a commercial tenderizer is used. However, he stated, that commercial tenderizers only penetrate into the meat the depth of Vi inch to 1 inch, therefore, they may be satisfactory for a steak but would do little good on a large roast. Dean Reber, butcher of Gerber's cut a side of beef for the group, showing the different techniques of cutting. Reber showed the group what all of the cuts, both wholesale and retail, looked like, as well as their location on the carcass. Following the beef cutting demonstration, Reber did some cutting on pork, showing the group the difference between the ham and picnic, and the cuts from the loin area. Sheriff Attends Police Conference Sheriff Merle Affolder attended the Eastern Indiana and Ohio conference of police officers held in Dayton, 0.. Tuesday. He stated that the attending peace officers witnessed a demonstration of safe cracking by two professional safe crackers, w'hich was the feature event of the conference. Lectures and discussions of bank robberies and burglaries were also given. Juan Peron Leaves Dominican Retreat NEW YORK (W — Juan Peron, exiled former president of Argentona, and his entourage have left their retart in Ciudad Trujillo, Dominican Republic, according to private advicers to the United Press. U. P. sources said Peron had left the island republic but were not clear as to his destination. They said he departed last Friday. The oldest known map is a clay tablet made in Babylonia about 2300 B.C. according to Rand McNally’s Atlas of World History. QUALITY PHOTO FINISHING AU Work Left Before Noon on ThursdayReady the Next Day, Friday, at HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.