Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 190, Decatur, Adams County, 13 August 1958 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

SECOND (Contluued frcm Paco one) The Navy is known to be anxious to .chart the floor of the Arctic Ocean. Such a map would enable submarines to plot their

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REAL SAVINGS FOR THRIFTY M W: v\vzj V /' ' / '/ £ i \ i yOMQWmnBIx Twn.g. Regular 39e SAVE 65c ON BEAUTIFULLY MADE |Wf f Ib*■/' J I RAYON BRIEFS TRIMMED NO-IRON SUPS . \kk W |k~ : lUt I For High School and College! 2u c s Tc $1.84 rW J ■ i J 2,95 SH,RTS !‘ y . on d .S t iB H w± i7±i I 1 \C< Ifln 1 ,¥y 77 boHom w h Shadow P anel {ront Sh ” r " I \Mbz I ‘hipa., foulards. Regular ion and lac. 'J''® f N| | ,1.16 zrfS&x i i I LfX\ /**<•/ ’ * BOYS' REGULAR ,1.49 |3w Nd i Q7_ W* I BIG ’N Lime SISTERS* | W ■ Regular 59c Sill Mswo»* Regular $1.49 Mittet* Regular 49e pr. ORLON CARDIGANS | HEADSQUARES Sweater Blouses BOBBYSOCKS * . f .. . , M Y7 r O Mod faihioned, long QA broadcloth io ] WSR >▼ 33* 88. 3-99.1 &?S= 2’ 66 ■:;•.;■» i/JB 7 . SAVE 2be SAVE 4,e Wha. rfratd .vine. . Si,t *'* 34 *° REGULARLY $2.98 boysTerrific CMortment of COHOII tnih in solid , . ..' I I REGULAR patterns and colors. colors, strfpes and cotton lined feet; triple L-. | $2 69 H Whl| Hand-rolled hems. prints. S.M.L roll cuff. 9 to 11. |VY STYLE | no ii st if w 1| gBOYS IVY LEAGUE k. ■ $3.88 H M STRIPED DENIM t ? ■ s*vt W WESTERN JEANS I fl © Made of 9 ox. Vat Dyed -a 6 te ,6Ze ‘ T Sanforised Striped Denim JIIIMWIjL I ~~ | Blue orJCharcoal I $, SLACK SOCKS. 3 prs. 79 c . r«,T$2« 16 $ /S®SSKA 1 ' ’ ■mgula.m.-u, Reg. 52.49 • > TOn ’ MIW I SPECIAL! OMIIIIf' I 2<«99 C I BOYS LINED : pfeXlT save mon two '[ Desklanps . || JACKETS . t s r 66 I ZL^ Q 2’. AL II).£2S2. N . — 1 t i Na.,, g..,.) SCHOOL DRESSES T Goosened style for any I SkeS 6to 16 Prints, Solid Colors, Plaids I A Few of the "Extras" | No W s '': 7 ’........../2-94 ’I- 77 I You Get at MURPHY'S “—“ “** ““ —“ *— ..I, ! ■"'■■■l I—-INN I • ONE STOP SHOPPING CONVENIENCE School Opening Special SCHOOL OPENING SPECIAL 1 and pleasant atmosphere. 5 HOLE .4 DEII 9 DENAIR GET •' Without exception you get FIRST QUALITY FILLER PAD - 4-riece "ER & rERUL otl ...no seconds r. no irregulars. ■ Rill e BalJ poJnt pj#n gnd RefUl e Mechanical Pencil and Refill • QUICK SERVICE STATIONS io speed cusFor 2 or 3 Ring Reg. SI.BB Oft4* tomer service. Binders — “OS* • BULKY PACKAGES DELIVERED io your ri caf ,f tfore entrance. CJVk ftlft WWL a VI al I ■ OPEN FRIDAY NEL to serve you. anrl CATIIRnAY * MONEY CHEERFULLY REFUNDED if you -W« Z* rest -AWHILE CUSTOMER CHAIRS for , your comfort* ISS N. 2nd St. Decatur, Ind.

position with greater exactness than surface ships using compass and less precise forms of navigation. Knowledge of this Artic shortcut would enable transfer of submarine fleets from Pacific to Atlantic far faster than now possible. With the fleet of U.S. missilefiring subs steadily expanding, this new passageway would enable American undersea forces to strike swiftly and secretly at distant Can t Be Detected Russia, as far as is known, has no atomic submarines. There was speculation, but no official confirmation, that a third U.S. atomic sub—the Sea Wolf—is in the Arctic area. It has been gone from its home base at New London, Conn., as long as the

Skate. The United States is building a number of nuclear-powered- submarines to be armed with 1.500mile Polaris ballistic missiles which could operate in Arctic waters. There presently Is no operational device known which is capable of detecting from above a submarine lurking beneath the 10 to 14 foot thick shield of polar ice. Even the submarines must surface to establish radio contact. ZiT (Continued from page one) Electricity, Nancy Bailey. St. Marys Kekiongas; Lois Jean Gerke. Union Pals; Ronnie Christner, Blue Creek Sodbustersu and Roger Roth, Kirkland Futbre Farmers. Handicraft, Connie Bergman, Monmouth Merry Maids; Charles McCullough, St. Marys Sodbusters; Richard Weiland, Union Workers; Ricky Gerbers. Union Workers; Sharon Diehl, Berne Jolly Workers; Paula Strickler, Washington Happy Hustlers. Baking, Ruth Ann Smalley, Blue Creek Up and At It; Cynthia Carroll. St. Marys Kekiongas; Phyllis Meyer, Monroe Boosterettes; Mary Schwaller, Washington Happy Hustlers; Lois Jean Gerke, Union Pals; Jane Duff, Hartford Happy Go Lucky; Annette Thomas,

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA

Washington Happy Hustlers; Rosalind Bauman, Wabash Cloverleaf. Clothing, Kathy Thieme, Union Pals; Shirley Gallmeyer, Preble Peppy Pals; Ann Inniger, Monroe Boosterettes; Cindy Collier, Decatur Peppy Gals; Rita Norquest, Decatur Peppy Gals; Gail Egley, Jefferson Work and Win; Lois Jean Gerke, Union Pals; Helen Rumple, Jefferson Work and Win; and Carol Norquest. Decatur Peppy Gals. Food preservation, Wanda DeBolt, Jefferson Work and Win; Anita Fennig, Blue Creek Up and At It; Marsha King, Monmouth Merry Maids; Brenda Roe. Blue Creek Up and At It; Nancy Raudenbush. Blue Creek Up and At It; Linda King, St. Marys Kekiongas; Nancy Cook, St. Marys Kekiongas; Lois Jean Gerke, Union Pals; and Karen Nussbaum, Monroe Boosterettes. Elkhart Woman Is Suicide Victim ELKHART, Ind. (UPI) — Florence E. Freeman, 51, Elkhart, hanged herself with a clothesline on her back porch Tuesday, state police said. Authorities said she was mentally ill and had been receiving treatment. Her body was found by her husband, Leland, at the couple’s farm home.

FLORIDA (Continued rrom Paga one) Ga., a real estate man. Sam Beil, Cleveland, Ohio, a former bookmaker. Theodore Wender, Minneapolis, operator of an exclusive women’s clothing store. t Max Stein, St. Louis Park, Minn., a salesman. Alex Ostrom, St. Louis Park, president and general manager of Royal Aluminum Products, Inc,, Minneapolis. Yiddy Bloom, manager of the Kenesaw Bar, Minneapolis. Isadore Blumenfield, lis, who has hotel and liquor interests. Irving Pasternak, Englewood. Colo., who has oil and uranium interests. Meyer Tim Shaner, Denver, Colo., a restaurant owner. Sam E. Rodder, Fresno, Calif , a merchant. Only One uives ixaine Blumerifi&d was the only one of the group who would give newsmen his name at first. Bloom was identified by his attorney. The presence of the others was confirmed only by Johnson as the men, most of them conservatively dressed, crowded a witness room and dark corridors narby, obviously shunning publicity. , Meanwhile, deputy marshal Dale Jordan revealed that a sub-

pena for Terre Haute Mayor Ralph Tucker to appear as a witness Aug. 22 was left with local authorities in that city Tuesday after he was told Tucker was due back today from a vacation and would be served with the document. Decatur Woman Hurt In Auto Accident In a two-car collision at the intersection of Wiley avenue and Daughterly streets in Bluffton Sunday, a Decatur woman was injured, along with a Huntington resident. Mrs. Harry Pottios, 610 Line street, was a passenger in a car driven by Lewis M. Smith, 31, 610 Winchester, and Miss Bonnie Toilett, Huntington, 22, Huntington, was riding in a car driven by Ralph Smith, 19, Umpire, Ark. Both women were treated for cuts and bruises at the Clinic hospital. Smith, charged with improper auto registration, is to appear in Bluffton city court. IKE (Continue* from Page one) leadership in the Arab economic program. He said this nation would support it if the Arab states agreed on it and were • “prepared to support it with .their own resources.*’ But “leadership must belong to the Arab states themselves,” he said. He proposed that U.N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold start consultation immediately with I Arab nations to see if they could agree on establishing an Arab I regional development institution (with the job of speeding up of /‘progress in such fields as industry, agriculture,* water supply, (health and education.” | He predicted such a program would attract both public and private capital from other countries. ■ He hinted that the United States would furnish atomic isotopes for finding of underground water supplies and thus help the Middle East solve a major problem of water shortage. Tail Riders CHICAGO (UPD — Eight per cent of all drivers involved in traffic accidents were following the car ahead too closely, according to the Chicago Motor Club. Trade in a good town — Decatur.

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MONROE (Continued from P*ge one) chairmen for the parade, with Ehrsam in charge of band registration. Commercial companies will be limited to one vehicle each in the parade. A food stand will be operated by the wives in the fire station, with tables both inside and out on the cement driveway of the fire station. Food will be served Thursday from 6 p. m. on, and from about 10 a. m. Friday and Saturday until closing time. Ladies on the committee organizing the food tent are Mrs. Clarence Mitchel, Mrs. Orv a 1 Neuenschwand.r, and Mrs. Harry ( Crownover. , „ , , Bleachers will be installed near the depot in Monroe so that those who desire may sit down while watching the tractor pull and queen contest. The lightweight class for tractors. including those 5,000 Pounds in weight, and smaller, wd be held Friday afternoon. It will be followed by the medium class pull, including tractors weighing from 5,L10 to 6,500 pounds. will be a percentage pull on concrete. Saturday morning the heavyweight pull will be held, with tractors weighing from pounds to 8,500 pounds. It will start at 10 a. m. John Genth and Louis Steffen are in charge of the pull. Friday afternoon tickets good for 10 cents on each ride will be distributed to all children w h o attend the fair. A special feature will be held for the children on Saturday afternoon, also. A greased p“le climbing contest will be held Saturday afternoon with special prizes to be awarded. J. J. Genth is in charge of this contest. A cake walk will again be a feature of the Monroe Days fair. Glen Stucky, Lloyd Engle, Luther Engle, and Ralph Ulman will be in charge. Each of the three sponsoring ■ units will also have two conces-i sions each on the midway. These i have not been fully planned, but at present the Monroe Lions are planning a skeet shoot and a baseball and bottle concession; the town fire department plans a duck I ring and basketball shooting stand; and the rural department has not yet completed its plans, i Many other special features are, planned that cannot be listed, but which will entertain and thrill the. spectators.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1958

Harold Arnold has been named chairman of the kitchen cleaning committee which will operate after the fair is completed. Harry Crownover is in charge of the chair committee, and will work with the clean-up committee afterwards. The entire group of three •organizations Interested in the fair will meet the evening of Sept. 2 to distribute the posters. Breakin Reported At Geneva Tavern A breakin was reported to the sheriff's department early today that occurred during the late hours in Geneva Tuesday night. Preston Pyle, Geneva town marshal, reported approximately S3OO was taken from Andy’s tavern. The thieves gained entry into the building through the front door by using a large heavy instrument inforcing the door open. The cash drawers were then disturbed and the money removed from the premises. Pyle and deputy sheriff Charles Arnold, are continuing their investigation of the incident. Chain Reaction BAKER. Calif. (UPD — An automobile accident one morning nea~ here was followed by these events: A patrol sergeant, en route to investigate, was delayed when his car lost the tread off a tire; the driver of an ambulance speeding to the scene lost control and his vehicle turned over: the tow car en route to the accident broke down and had to be towed in.

QUALITY PHOTO FINISHING AU Work Left Before Noon on ThursdayReady the Next Day, Friday, at HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.