Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 184, Decatur, Adams County, 6 August 1959 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
Service Station Robbery Reported City police reported a break-in and burglary of the Hi-Way Service station early this morning. Francis Ellsworth, the operator of
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We’ll Trade for Anything that has Resale Value! abb > IB 1 A IB Ab iRBr J ■ /<An ’ I Lz 7f A \| ft I l “i f lightA I I </ “\| Act Z X in I —"VCA B J" -'mM ;t 1B^ : . | .W Stores LID! MT Imbmbt 1 for a 1959 ALL-FEATURE 15 Cubic Foot ' B D ) CORONADO "Royal Deluxe" I ast u O n iy t^ 00 wn J? I FREEZE I A sensational buy! Not a discontinued or stripped-down |B * Section \\ economy model, but a 1959 Coronado Royal Deluxe A Sg mJB ■ X\ freezer, brand-new and feature-packed! We invite you MM KM t 0 check features » check P rices w!th other leadin 9 brands - *Lg A"' 7 $l2O LESS! How can we do it? The answer lies in (1) a t -J giganHc 35-trainload mass purchase (2) manufactured N M CRATE P 1/1 by the world’s largest producer of freezers (3) direct B COla factory-to-you distribution which eliminates warehous- at the | Control II ing (4) you take delivery at the freight car—no store CAD ’ handling, uncrating or delivery expense. Our vAK 1 ZU tO A^^ I liberal credit terms and full trade-in allowance. 188 I I . D .U T„ LESS YOUR TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE I I GAMBLES fftAfiXf/ GUARANTEE Only 2.50 Per Week... Payable Monthly I W I « Sealed refrigerating system guaranteed for five years ' »PB I ■ against defects in materials and workmanship. AnvEBTiCEn IM * W I ThirvYnf \ O All other parts guaranteed for one year against defects FREEZERS ADVERTIoeD IN f uupunu 1 Ain materials and workmanship. 11 r r J dulux I Five-yea $250 warranty protects food investment I CCDST UP LI I E Finish / * a ® ain ’ t *•” <•»• ta mechanical failure. look x- V ■rukuw r ■ Baskets 1 Successful I and J MffItfrtWRwMWWW?TfTW •’ <‘ i BWaO W< Farming \Divider/ <yC_jLZ CjCjOOO ' ri-rX.-- . A*GAMBLES OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9 P.M. i 1 r r . - in- 1 ’ 11 r uii ir -'• „ ■■■■
the station, called police at C:27 a.m. today, reporting the loss of about $35 in cash and a check for $73.29. The subject or subjects entered the building through a door on the southwest side of the establish-
1 ment on 1013 N. 2nd. street and 1 apparently left the same way after looting a cigarette vending machine of $5. and $5 from a pop coder. About $25-30 was taken from a safe, which was already open. The city police are continuing their investigation.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DBCATUH, INDIANA
Rickover To Report On Soviet Projects WASHINGTON <UPI (-Congressional atomic energy experts called Vice Adm. Hyman G. Rickover today for a report on Russian atomic energy projects he visited with Vice President Richard M. Nixon. Rickover, pioneer in the development of the U.S. nuclear submarine fleet, was scheduled to meet with the joint Congressiorwil Atomic Energy Committee behind closed doors. He returned with Nixon Wednesday from a twis week tour behind the Iron Curtain. Committee sources said the meeting — which was not announced in advance — was arranged to give members an opportunity to get Rickover’s appraisal of Soviet progress in nuclear energy. Thanks in part to a timely intercession by Nixon, Rickover may well be the free world's most knowledgeable expert on Russian developments in nuclear propulsion. He was the first American to see the atomic power plant of the Russian icebreaker “Lenin.” Visiting the icebreaker with Nixon in Leningrad on July 27, Rickover complained that he was being given a run around and had been refused a look at the vessel's power reactors. Nixon protested that visiting Soviet Deputy Premier Frol R. Koxlov had been given full access |to the atomic-powered merchant ship Savannah, now under construction in the United States. Rickover then was permitted to make a two-hour inspection of the Lenin. He later reported that its three reactors are similar to those in U.S. submarines, and apparently no more advanced. Los Angeles ONlv sfi7- 71 *lll plus Tax COACH V • ERIE XJJjjiP RAILROAD TELEPHONE 3-4311
New Classroom For Vocational Ag Pupils Adams Central’s vocational agriculture students will have a new classroom this fall, Hugh Tato, assistant superintendent of the Adams Central school, announced today. The old cafeteria room under the gym has been converted into a classroom, with plenty of space for a farm shop. Ulis will allow the two rooms, both taught by Martin Watson, to be adjacent. The old vo-ag room will be utilized for M d i t i 0 n a 1 classroom space.. Two teachers have been added to the staff, one in the junior high, and one in the third and fourth grades. Voting Is Close In Mississippi Race JACKSON, Miss. (UPD — Lt. Gov. Carroll Gartin and Jackson attorney Ross Barnett, facing a run-off for governor Aug. 25. looked hungrily today at an estimated 120,000 votes in the column of a surprising newcomer to Mississippi poltiics. While each mapped plans for capturing Charles Sullivan’s losing ballots in Tuesday's Democratic primary, it remained undetermined which actually would claim the lead in final tabulations in the initial vote. With only 96 of 1.855 precincts unreported. Barnett had 140,023 votes to 136.213 for Gartin. Sullivan had 120,785 and Robert F. Mason, a welder, attracted 2,565 ballots. Paul B. Johnson Jr., three-time gubernatorial loser and son of a late governor, was on the verge of a primary victry without a runoff in the lieutenant governor’s race over three lesser - known opponents. With 105 precincts still out, Johnson had 191,999 votes, Dist. Atty. Armis Hawkins 81,335, state Rep. Brown Williams 63,113, and the Rfev. Henry Bucklew. 46,305. Gartin based his campaign on his public record as lieutenant governor under two governors, while Barnett charged that Gov. J. P. Coleman is a racial moderate and a dictator and Gartin's election would perpetute Coleman’s power.
Answers Questions On New School Ad INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — Indiana Atty. Gen. Edwin K. Steers I today answered a series of questions State School Supt. William E. Wilson asked about the 1950 ■ school Corporation Reorganiza- > tion Act. . Steers said in an official opin- - ion that the restriction against • any new construction of a school building, gymnasium or other facility applies only to school cor- • porations with less than four classroom units in grades 9 1 through 12. He said state distribution laws define four units as I being about 112 pupils. Steers told Wilson that in school corporations educating fewer than 112 students in grades 9 through 12, no new construction of any school building or facility can be made, including additions or extensions to existing buildings. Whether a school corporation comes Within that class is determined by the average daily attendance, he said. A school cor--1 potation may count children trans 1 ferred into it for educational pur- , poses but may not count pupils • transferred out tor their educa--1 tion. Steers said the present average daily attendance to be considered ■ is the one for the preceding school year. After Oct. 31, the average • daily attendance will be based on puils attending during that term. 1 Steers further ruled that school ; cororations which are members of a joint high school located out ; of their cororate boundaries may I not qualify for exemtion under the new law. He said each of such corporations still retains its sepi arate identity. But he said school corporations ■ in which the joint high schools were physically located could ■ count the number of pupils being 1 exiucated in such buildings for the : purpose of qualifying for exemtion 1 from the law. Given Scholarship For Russian Study Effie Amber, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur D. Ambler, Jr., of Washington, D.C., has been awarded a national defense graduate scholarship for study at Indiana University in Russian studies. Miss Ambler’s mother was the former Mary Kathryn Schug, of Decatur.
Elkhart Building Destroyed By Fire ‘ ELKHART, Ind. (UPD—A building containing the Amerjcan Metal Products Co. and the Bender Neon Products Co. was destroyed by fire late Wednesday. Damage was estimated at $125,000. Officials said the blaze was caused by a welding spark which ignited spilled paint in the metal company quarters. No one was injured. Trade in • eonr anre — rtecatiM - r .i,!.^,.-i. ■ 1 .w ■
I “'schmitt"market"is"the “I I PLACE TO SAVE ON MEATS f* I Schmitt’s Quality Fresh - Pork I GROUND PAN I I BEEF SAUSAGE I I B 39 c 3 J Hickory - Smoked Lean - Pork jg I SLICED SMOKED I I BACON SAUSAGE I | ■ 45* 39*1
THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1959
♦ . PHONE 3-3857 FOR “BROASTED” Golden Brown CHICKEN SHAFFER’S RESTAURANT ————
