Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 48, Decatur, Adams County, 26 February 1959 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
BLACKWELL QUITS f LAST 8 DAYS — Stock!! Regular to $5.98 I / 2 / LadieslSweaters /3/ $ i “ FF Only a limited quantity left! Save on these red hot specials v/ . . not every site in each style. r Men’s Campus & True Val REGULAR to $5.98 \' £>/ SPORT SHIRTS J Stock up now on these famous brand shirts at once in a life time savings. Sixes small, medium, large and extra large. f Regular $6.98 to $10.98 / LADIES DRESSES / $ 2” «• 2<« *5 W | J Included are our entire stock of Maternity, Misses, Junior, and Half Sizes. I F Only 100 Left' so Hurry!M— Entire Stock! Regular to $5.98 LADIES DRESSES ' CAMPUS SLACKS $159 co O for $ 4 >.00 Re s- to $ lO - 98 -NOW $5.00 Jl*” ea. X™ r *4l ~ Reg. to $5.98 „v _ now $3.31 r Both daytime and evening cotton frocks at unbelievable . , . I R„v Veveral and SAVE' Not every color and style in each size, but every pair at huge savings . . . sizes 29 to 42 Regular to $3.98 SAVE! WOMEN’S COTTON BLOUSES COTTON PIECE GOODS S I M 4,..a.51-M I Others regular to $5.98 NOW Sl-99 I V* IICI J ————————Both prints and solids All cut from the bolt at tremendous savings. Regular to $1.65 pair Women’s Full Fashion Out They Go! I NVI ARI UACF Regular to $1.99 NVLOII Host CHILDREN’S BLOUSES I 59c »»■ 2* S T 93«, k s.: I Included are famoue Hanes and brands. 7_____Z— - Women’s ENTIRE ! Regulm- to SI.OO r ANKLETS LADIES BELTS I 10 S I M 23* and Pastels . . . prices slashed during Save over 75% styles I CHENILLE BEDSPREADS MEN’S BROADCLOTH SHORTS ;»wssiWMMmwMaiaMßaaMaiMß Values to $4.98 DHILDREHS'HISSES & SKIRTS *•«« « '" IL “« E "’ S SIWES I SI.OO *1“ Only one and two pair of a style ... so be early. Values to $7.98 Values to $7.98 WOMEN’S & CHILDREN’S SHOES CHILDREN’S SHOES I s^- 66 $ 3- 88 Values to $9.95 mb"" WOMEN’S SHOES WOMEN’S SPORT SHOES SJ.OO -w t j BB Included are famous Connie and Jacquline brands ... dress types, wedge and casuals. . Black and white saddles, penny loafers gßßßßMßumuuouomuususassusmsußßumßaßßMß ! BOY’S DOUBLeVnEE JEANS yfficf GOODS** 2 pair s 3 ,o ° 39c yard Sizes 6t016 .. . heavy 10 oz. blue denim , - . , sanforized . . . .Save! Both solid and prints at huge savings. Hundreds Off Specials Not Advertised
TBB DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, HfDLAHA
Many New Faces In Oscar Nominations By VERNON SCOTT UPI Hollywood Correspondent HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -n ‘Diey’rt off and running in the Oscar derby with the preponderance of j entries charging out of the start- ( ing gate for the first time. • Never before have ao many ( new faces appeared in the nom- | inations. ; Eleven of the acting nominees find this their maiden race. There ( are eight veterans going again, ( and one old war horse. Spencer , Tracy, a two-time winner, is the ( only major Oscar holder in the ( field. Running against him for the ( golden statuette are three young comers — Tony Curtis, Paul Newman and Sidney Poitier — and veteran David Niven. | Shirley MacLaine, however, is , the only new arrival on the fem- j inine scene. Her competition con- ( sists of a pair of four-time losers, , Susan ~Hayward and Deborah j Kerr, a three-time taser, Rosalind Russell, and one-time loser Elizabeth Taylor. Niven And Hayward Favored i Morning line favorites in the . top handicap races for best actor and best actress awards are Da- ; vid Niven and Susan Hayward. 1 So how do the rail birds pick these two? Inasmuch as Tracy has collected two Oscars, and because it generally is agreed he has turned in better performances than in “The Old Man And The Sea,” he is unlikely to garner much sentimental balloting. Curtis and Poitier 'first Negro ever nominated for the top award) are apt to knock one another out of contention in that they co-starred in the same picture and will draw a split vote. The race, then, dwindles to Newman and Niven. Newman,*despite his fine acting, is not a particular favorite with film folk. Niven, on the other hand, is enormously popular and will win many votes based on previous outstanding performances. He is the best bet. • Liz Hurt By Romance Liz Taylor is the first to admit her chances have been hurt by her off-screen romance with Eddie Fisher. Miss Russell is bucking a tough precedent in that- few musical stars have ever breezed home with the Oscar. Shirley MacLaine still is a youngster, the experts figure, and has plenty of time ahead of her for winning awards. Thus, -the best actress diadem narrows to Susan Hayward and Deborah Kerr, both of whom
have failed in four previous tries. Red-haired Susan won the New York critics award last month for her role in “1 Want To Live, a big plus factor. Niven also has this advantage. Additionally, Susan carried the picture on her back. She was in almost every scene and turned in a job that had Hollywood raving. Susan A Front Runner I Miss Kerr's, part in “Separate Tables” also was outstanding. But it was a relatively small role i which reflected top-flight- performances by other members of the all-star cast. i Susan is the front runner here., ; In the "best picture” category Movietown is poised to reverse its long-time trend against musi- : cals. Two were nominated—'“Auntie Mamp” and “Gigi Three dramas. “Cat On A Hot ■ Tin Roof,” "Separate Tables. and "The Defiant Ones” are pitted against them. But Hollywoodians, charmed by brilliant music, bright costunies and stellar performances, have lost their hearts to "Gigi”—which is the best bet of all. Will Makes Bequest To Decatur Resident The will of the late Luella Reynolds bequeathed SSO to Olive Shoaf of Decatur, according to the executor, 4 Cloyd Reynolds. Bluffton Toute 3, son of the late Mrs. Reynolds. The probable value.of the estate is'listed at $22,500. The remainder of the estate is to be split as follows: one-half in equal shares to grandchildren James and Sue Reynolds, and one-half in equal proportions to grandchildren Roselyn Lynch, Ruby Hoffman, Edison and Robert Reynolds. 4 ...» Damages Is Asked In Hanni Death ■►- Mrs. Helen Maye Hanni, of Decatur, has filed a suit in the U. S. district court, asking $125,000 damages from the Pennsylvania railroad for the death of her husband in a truck-train accident on Mtnicb rqgd, one mile north of Hoagland. Her tasband, Vincent, was fai tally injured on Aug. 1, 1957. The i complaint alleges that the grade crossing was obscured by trees> and that the train did not blow, a r whistle to warn vehicles near the crossing. Mrs- Hanni has three children, ranging in ages from 12 to 17 years of age. She is bringing the action as administratrix of her h late husband's estate.
Argentinians Complain On Skyrocketing Prices
By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Editor Suppose ss a resident of the United States the cost of your gasoline suddenly rose to a dollar a galkta, bread to 40 or 50 cents a loaf, beef to two dollars a pound and almost everything else nr QgyMPtifMlAtftl V - It has happened in Argentina and the people are beginning to complain despite the best efforts of President Arturo Frondizi to convince them it is for their own good. Even the businessmen, his most ardent supporters, are protesting. Under dictator Juan D Peron, Argentina was Wed nearly dry. Peron and his late wife, Eva, bought popularity by using the nation’s capital reserves — . the backbone of any country’s economy — to boost wages to unprecedented highs without increasing production. Trade Im’aawnee Occurred Peron sacrificed agriculture to grandiose plans for industrializing Argentina. The once-profitable meat, wheat and wool exports could not keep the money coming in fast enough to pay for imports. This Is known as a trade imbalance and if it keeps up long enough a country will go broke. Watching hi* reserves drop, Peron confiscated private industries. Foreign investors took their money elsewhere. More loss of currency. , , When Frondizi took office last May as Argentina’s first freelyelected president in 20 years he was faced with a monumental task. . . , For 2»4 years the provisional governments had been unable to reverse the downward trend of the economy. Sought Aid Frondizi, an expert economist, first of all disassociated himself from the Communists and Peronists who voted for him, insisting he did not seek their help. Then he looked to the north for aid. He got 329 million dollars worth from the United States, but he did not rely solely on this. Convinced the main effort would have to be made by Argentina itself, he released artificial controls over the peseta and left it to seek its true value on the world market. Frondizi told his people it would mean sacrifices, and it has. Prices on everything have skyrocketed with the dropping ot the peseta's" value.
Takes Bisk ■Frondizi is taking a calculated risk that the new rate will be so attractive to foreigners that exports will zoom and the income more than make up for inflation. He has launched two other campaigns to improve the Argentine economy: Try to attract more government and private capital from the United States (which he did on his just-completed trip) and create regional market areas for Latin America. Frondizi predicts his plans willbegin to bear fruit for the Argentine people in two years. The question is: Will they wait that long? Decatur Artist On Television Show John Sheets, a 1958 Decatur high I school graduate and part time artist, will appear on WANE television's presentation of “Dance Date” Friday night from 5 until 6 o’clock, where he will donate one of his paintings to Jack Powell, emeee of the popular teen-age show. Sheets will escort Miss Pamela Walter to the show and accompanying them will be Nick Conrad and Miss Patricia Sovine. i Sale Os Portland Newspaper Revealed The Dunkirk News and Sun, a weekly, and ' the daily Portland Commercial - Review have been purchased by the Graphic Printing Co. of Portland, it was an- ’ nounced Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. . S. C. Ide, publishers of the papers • involved in the sale, said ill health and other business connections were major factors in their deci- , sion to sell. Management changes, if any, will be effective March 1- The newspaper will be transferred to the Graphic Building. Mr. and. Mrs.‘ Ide will continue to .publish the monthly “Dawn,” a national Americanism publication. Two Lima Women Die i In Auto Accident LIGONIER. Ind. (UPD — Two Lima, Ohio, women were killed and their husbands were injured ■ Wednesday when their car : rammed a utility pole, bounced > over an abutment and landed in , a cornfield on U. S. 33 south of i Kimmell. Mrs. Millie Shelmadine. S 71, and Mrs. Cora L. Pepple. 71, : were killed. Charles 0. Shelma- ! dine, 72. the driver, was. fcospitaL ! ized at Columbia City and Clinton r, L. Pepple, 73, was treated, and released.
Bill Schnepf Joins With Ned Johnson The association of Ned C. Johnson and Bill Schnepf together in the auctioneering and real estate business .was announced this morning. Johnson was associated with his fattier, the late Col. Roy S. Johnson, from 1941 until his father’s death’about a year ago, except for a period of military service during the second World War. Since then he has operated his business alone. Schnepf has one year’s experience as *n auctioneer and real estate dealer together with a lifetime of practical farm experience 4 and H years as the manager, of a prosperous 360 acre farm. A resident of Root township, he is married and has two daughters, Betsy and Sally, Monmouth students, and one son, Bill. The two auctioneers will operate from their office no the second floor of the Boch building over the Sears store at the corner of Court and Second streets. Adult Farmer Class Meets Monday Night The Pleasant Mills adult farmer class will meet Monday evening at 8 o'clock at Pleasant Mills high school. Main topic will concern livestock feeds. The program, featured by Morman’s feeds, will follow with refreshments. - - -4 =~- - Simple Language To Aid U.S. Military CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPD - Aircraft and rocket experts today hailed 107 little words that may spell a military advantage for the United States. The words form a simple language which enable electronic brains to plan and supervise the manufacturing of plane and missile parts by other mechanical equipment. The work will be done
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, IM9
■ ' ■ ■'< A a Mr fl flat* r* jJE \. Ehrhardt Lang, student at United Theological Seminary in Dayton, 0., will be guest speaker at youth revival services at the Union Chapel Evangelical United Brethren church, opening Monday and concluding Sunday, March 8. Services will be each evening, except Saturday, at 7:30 o’clock. Lang was born in Germany and was-reared in Japan, where his parents are missionaries. The public is invited to attend these services.
faster and at less cost. The language, part of a system called Automatically programmed Tools (APT), was made public Wednesday night at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. APT will enable the U.S. to “build a war machine that nobody would want to tackle,” said Lt. Gen. Clarence S. Irvine, Air Force deputy chief of staff for materiel. MIT scientists said APT works very simply. An engineer would take a rough drawing of a designed part and use APT language to write out a brief summary of its specifications. The electronic brain would take the summary and, in a matter of seconds or minutes, plan the part in detail. The brain would then send instructions to an unmanned machine which would turn out the part. APT Will make production both cheaper and less time consuming .: researchers saidIrvine said APT will mean better airplanes and space missiles at no increase in cost. He said APT may even greatly reduce the current cost of national defense.
