Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 219, Decatur, Adams County, 17 September 1959 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
Nikita Shows Mastery Over Give And Take WASHINGTON (UPI) — Nikita Khrushchev has demonstrated once again that he is a master of verbal give-and-take—particu-larly when it comes to defending his political beliefs. At his appearance at the National Press Club Wednesday, the Soviet premier skillfuly parried what he described as “provocative" qulestions, and used others as a springboard for ong restatement of Communist ideology. Khrushchev, who came here with the avowed intention of melting the ice of the cold war, bore down hardest on a basic article of Communist faith—the inevitable universal triumph of Communism.
Wfßp- I picnic e I WE GIVE HOLDEN RED STAMPS K I WITH EACH 10c FOOD PURCHASE IswßßolO M ’VM . dsRI ißßl®®’ ,b Ww IS OUR OWN PURE PORK SAUSAGE "^29/1 I brands BONELESS PORK CUTLETS "*79' I \ A u IB \ SMOKED JOWL 25< 1 f RfGULAR TIN 1 ViIRHBES OYSTERS Z* B OLOGNA I % MORE FOOD PURCHASE pTW ilife*- TOMATOES 10 :| ■=» GRMM BEANS ”S“ -lO< «Ljg~ CORN oarss.txs, —lO/ J GREEN BEANS —lO/ POTATOES == —lO/ CRISCO FLUFFO Z*DEEBIC garden fresh 9 oui RRg CAN ft 1 g GREENS TURNID - KALE . MUSTARD . 303 10/ cockers MR. CLEAN noz. QO , no": I pUSBiKajBwKNO 1-EXTRA FANCY-LARGE RED CLUSTERS I ivory soap ivory soap "IL IVORY SOAP IVORY FLAKES I au 2 LARGE OO , REGULAR EHMBI s« jj/ s. M 33/ ■ —, ,j.^Fr- 1 CAMAY SOAP IVORY SNOW I 39“ 2-29/ -- I 3k «« 33* wb— I B.L Vi * - "7777 7 — TZ~T7 l . '. L .x„. ..." j CAMAY SOAP ZEST SOAP ZEST SOAP LAVA SOAP c <**,.. OXYDOL TIDE CHEER I£. or |Z Z7*| 4 y * OJF «« 2J/ |. 33/179/ 29c 75c 29c 75c .. ■ *'' ' ..•?■ "~ t ■ ' ‘
IT%s iMMttaMt •* whom chev once in a slip of the tongue addressed as “comrades"—consisted mostly of distinguished reporter often decribed in Communist jargon as "lackeys ol the bourgeoisie.” "Capitalism To Die” They were told firmly but politely, in answer to a question, that history foreshadows the inevitable death of capitalism, to be repalced by the "more progressive" Communist order. With equal emphasis Khrushchev explained away the statement he once made to Western ambassadors that “we shall bury you” by saying he had not intended to assume the role of the “grave digger of capitalism." Khrushchev’s remarks on capitalism followed a familiar pattern. Had he know Shakespeare as well as he knows Russian folklore, he might have been tempted to paraphrase Mark Antony's oftquoted “I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him” in this say: “I did not come here to praise you or bury you but only to an-
nounce cur doom." Moat Moderate Utterance The speech Itself was one of the premier's most moderate utterances. It was an essay on the need for improving Soviet-Ameri-can relations and settling global problems. It was conspicuously devoid of threats, (recrimination and verbal bricks. It was under questioning by reporters that Khrushchev waxed foxy, eloquent and witty. Some of the questions —those dealinw with Hungary, the status of Jes in the Soviet Union, and Khrushchev’s personal role in the Stalinist tyranny—might have embarrassed a more conventional Communist. But not Khrushchev. For a man who is by reputation hotheaded, impetuous and unpredictable, he proved ‘io be a master of restraint. “I will not be provoked by any questions,” he said, “or do anything which would hinder the improvement of our relations.’" Over 2,50 u Da'iy Demccrau are sold and deliverer" in Decatur each day. !
m Muwt tuav Mttoeut Mutn, amtuu
Consider Meeting On Time Problem INDIANAPOLIS <UPD—An informal "regional meeting” of city officials from a North Central Indiana area may be held here next week to try to thresh out the problem of what time to ol> i serve this winter. Mayors and city council members of certain cities located between Indianapolis and South Bend may get together, or at least talk among themselves, during the annual convention of the Indiana Municipal League next Tuesday and Wednesday. Mayor Wilmer McClintic of Monticello said Wednesday his city’s officials wanted to sound I out the officials of Lafayette, Lo- ! gansport, Prankfort and other | area cities regarding their thinki ing on the “fast" time vs. “slow" | time issue. I The problem was posed by action this week of Marion and
Muncie in deserting the "slow” time zpne, thus reducing the size of an area which held to the 1957 state time law during the past winter while sections around Fort Wayne and Indianapolis adopted “fast" time the year around. The growth of the year-round "fast" time area was seen as a result of a movement in recent months to have the Interstate Commerce Commission move the boundary line between the Eastern and Central time zones from its present location along the In-diana-Ohio Stateline to a point westward which would bisect Indiana. At Logansport, Mayor Ralph Eberts was presented a petition signed by several hundred workers asking that the city join the “fast” time zone. Eberts said the administration iwll watch to see what other area cities do. Baby’s Bottles A six-bottle soft-drink carton is a handy receptacle for storing baby’s bottles in the refrigerator. It takes a minimum of space, and prevents spills.
Open Mental Health Conference Tonight INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - The 1961 Legislature members are going to know much more about conditions in Indiana mental institutions than have previous legislators, according to a plan to be outlined during the annual meeting of the Indiana Association for Mental Health. The IAMH conference opens tonight for three days during which three nationally known persons will speak. But in between talks by author Vance Packard, television personality Dr. Joyce Brothers and a research psychiatrist, Dr. John H. Cumming, much practical planning for the future will be sandwiched by Hoosier mental health volunteers. One of those will be the association’s “off-year” legislative program. IAMH officials made no
secret of the (act the/felt the 1959 General Assembly failed to provide the mental health division with sufficient funds to correct long-standing abuses, including overcrowding of patients and sixday work weeks for employes.. So between now and January, 1961, the mental health people to carry out a series of visits to the institutions by everybody who will be or hopes to become a member of the next lawmaking body. The intent is to show where tax money goes and what might have been accomplished had the Legislature been more generous. For example, one widely-her-alded plan for reducing the overcrowding in the state institutions never even has been put into operation because of insufficient funds. This was a bill providing for certain patients in the institutons to be transferred to county homes. Surveys indicated the state has about 75 such homes with R 5,570-capacity but which are only
TfItJRSDAY, SEPT. 1?, 1959
half-filled. Legal changes were made in the family care program for mental patients to allow these extra beds to be used, in cases where the county home and its personnel met requirements. But Dr. John W. Southworth, of the; division of mental health, said the $175,000 appropriated for a two-year period by the 1959 lawmakers was not enough to put the county-home plan into operation. “We were already spending that on the family care program in private and nursing homes,** he said. Mental health volunteers from throughout Indiana are attending the conference which begins with a dinner tonight at which Packard speaks. Governor Handley also speaks briefly. Dr. Brothers, the psychologist who won $134,000 on a TV quiz show, and Cumming, director of the New York State mental health research unit at Syracuse, will speak Friday.
