Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 123, Decatur, Adams County, 24 May 1960 — Page 8

PAGE TWO-A

To Tighten Bonds Os \eutrul Lands

b* rmt nfwaom t ri tAitex A UfStrathS of ’l** bo**** attMUHI IkßltiiU •ittd Mft crvAßifK arnwiid th** Wj <w» * vu»<*f th o<*wt nuni’i® world rvmU whicfc .m*> drew thru l«tr l» •”**■ ‘" " rw»M>’ that may I* e*pr<n«d hum •**!• World rrtiction O'er recent <v«-nl* in “ariw m<*n «s » *—* * etai lest ot a n* « ■

Take time to remember 0 ... send a LAFF (, Mr /Z* 7 Al‘V/ ®sor& sHio Cards To say ’’Get Well”.. .’’Happy Birthday”... or just for fun! See the newest oi“ HOLTHOUSE PRUC Co.

□ m Helpful friend of the traveling family IWW ■ —...-■: —HI Ik <e I U Hurl wjL 4 b -i C * si*’wCß MB 1 > W I KkW fer tW-<WWRBI ■Mlk ' ' JP*' |^Ol?lßßk.. v •**■ \ ~.jjl _>---■■<- ffiLl 1 iJm iQW ii !iii j 1' ’MIHhhBHO®®* »•• ■■ a.i- - - «■ -•--*— Standard Oil Dealers say.. AS YOU ASK US ~ center. Want a place to spend the night. HQRVW ,—- A place to eat? A good vacation spot. Like . X^ 8 " 888888 a tree state-wide sight-seeing guidebiiok to I take with you? It s all yours atjStandard ® Oil Dealers, plus, of course, the finest carcare top-quality Standard products, clean _- n \ restrooms. So see t fiat helpful friendof the ( STANDARD) traveling family, your Standard Chi Dealer, «BMB _ ._. ___ — who says *'As you travel— ask us. - WALT’S STANDARD SERVICE . PHONE 3-4188 U 5. 27 and 33 i A. G. BURKE’S STANDARD SERVICE PHONE 3-3810 ■^FlVM’OlNT^^^^ m■— —km— ■■■"'■ 1 ■ D. & T. STANDARD SERVICE C K DEBOLT 13th & MONROE, PHONE 3-2516 ~ ; J. W. TUTEWILER

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• ateod Nmm» PvmMt* l« Uur t'MUdl Areb Rfiiiilh H *•» IrH UMd Uw llta* mi ||*uvvd Um currveUM** et FrwidMrt Al«lH tioouii Na»**r'» *ntK9 ut VMitrat Ih» nod ih»i hi* prMU(« hud I gyin<'d arourUiafßy. • to UubUu '>*Hinc (Hum* F»no r 1 Mitti.Mr Kwum* Nkiumuh votcwl thr iNoF 1 * “t Numy Wbrti It* . anMl a W»* (ndowd • ’’hurttf» ut OUT •** UUll *hr f* !r if the wfculr ut HMinkind »htxi!d be left In Uw baud* at the tehdrr* tn Hci«rad< Yu«o*luvl« C**« muni*l Prr*uMK Tito critlctrrd tarth the I'nltud Stale* and Hu»and *nld H b <*lr«r "that <ouMnm cannot auptxirt any he--lof poUcm that Would be uxnttaty to mankind'* deep atrivFor UU* hr waa roundly criti* riAd in Moac.iw and attacked at a "revlaMUirt" b, bcO» lhr Mn ” , cvw and P• I pi n M Cnmmunut Communlat jargon la to a*k for > tfr c fra ng man'> nooau or the firing India tea rid that thr summit bkm-up might lead Red China to take i> tougher line against India ■ m Uuir border quarrel All Avowed NeaUatiaU The UAR. Ghana and India arc avowi-d noutraliaU Tito long bat cult’vatcd cl°*e tiet with both India and Egypt m an attempt ta ( ■ ertabliah a nuutral bloc. Now. mon.' than ever, it ma* It be expected that the neutrals and the undecided nations will resist attempts to draw them into either I CMRlweflr. The bitterness of Uu US.-Soviet 'quarrel may also be expected to serve as a unifying factor which the neutrals have lacked in their efforts to set up a third world force. In the United Nations, the 29nation Afro-Asian group usually L characterized as neutral. But this group includes some allied to the SEATO defense bloc, and others closely tied to one or the others among the Lmted States. Britain and France. By the time the next UN General Assembly rolls around, seven more African nations are expected to hold U.N. membership. They will add their votes and then voices to-the demand for a greater role in .world affairs and to the prevention of a war nobody I wants.

rm MTATOR DAILY DBUftCMAT DBCATUR. WDIANA

1 1 S 3 ***'j I b i * ’ ■ wAk 5 i ■ I > Mm B y »? EVERY RIGHT TO O»USE. -Dr WUMKMmMU. profewor of zoology at the University of nu. miniature radio transmitter to a hooded rufled RM- TM •cbool tracks bird* aa part of ito wildlife research program.

Truman Criticizes Adlai E. Stevenson NEW YORK <UPI» — Former I President Harry S. Truman said today he had thrown his endorse- , ment to Avcrell Harriman at the 1956 Democratic national convenI tion as a political maneuver to i enable the almost sure winner, ; Adlai E. Stevenson, “to disasso- ' ciatc himself from me politically.” Diat Stevenson wished to do so ! was the biggest mistake of his two unsuccessful presidential I campaigns, in Truman's judge- ! ment. He was further critical of Stevenson for indecisiveness, for ' campaign inadequacies and in 1 one instance for lack of judge- ; ment in the second instalment of his post-presidential merfioirs u appearing in Look magazine today under the title. “How Stevenson Let Me Down." In Chicago, Stevenson’s office today released a one-setnece rejoinder. “I respect President Truman if not his memory of events,” Ste- j venson said. Asked today whether his recent; endorsement of Sen. Stuart Symington for this year's Democratic nomination might have a hidden reason similar to his 1956 support of Harriman, Truman made the following’reply: ’ “I don’t change horses in the middle of the stream. J endorsed Symington because he's the best man in the picture. I was for Harriman in 1956 and" I'm for Symington in 1960.” The first railroad tracks in Missouri were laid -in 1851.

Ijfc : ,y V?: W-. ir ”M 01 C "fl i■ \ ■ »■ '*s ' w M J fe' JRi t i tßi I ' wMr 'T B iiW V l' ? ■ ! I t 1 ® f I /W A f < iJ :1 L x b i J I i |1 1 THE SHIRTDRESS—fashion without fuss! The fabric’s without fuss, too. It's a.blend of a "Dacron" polyester fiber that drips drv and needs little or no ironing. Multi-color plaid has a Rowing madras looT Pattern 9490 in Teen Sizes 10 to 16. Sena Thirtyfive Cents <3sci coins for each pattern. (Add 10 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing.’ Send to Marian Martin, care of Decatur Daily Democrat Pattern Department, P. Q. Box w, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11. N. Y. Please print plainly your name, address with zone number, size and style number.

Heavy Schedule For U. S. Supreme Court WASHINGTON <UPD—The Supreme Court's decision to hear a second round in the Du Pont-Gen-era! Motors Mtttruat suit adds to . an already impressive list of /cases scheduled tor its fall term beginning in October. ’ i The current term will end next month. The decision in the antitrust cast, now 11 years old, will de- ’ termine whether E.I Du Pont de /Nemours and Co. can retain a 1 three-billion-dollar. non-voting interest in General Motors Corp. The Supreme Court also agreed Monday to examine the constitu- ’ tionality of two Connecticut laws forbidding anyone to use mechani ical birth control devices and barring doctors from prescribing them. A few weeks ago, the high court agreed to hear three cases testing the validuty of "blue laws,” which restrict Sunday retail . sales in Massachusetts and .Maryland. It added another Pennsylvania case to the list Monday Besides all these cases, the I court dodketed tor its next tertn! decisions on the constitutionality of the “membership clause” in the Smith anti-Communist act; on I whether the Communist Party i must register under the 1960 miternal security law; the validity of racial segregation in restaurants of interstate bus terminals; a test of Chicago's movie censorship ordinaw; and the validity of •a $1,857,545 damage award in the Dixon-Yates power case in the Tennessee Valley The tallest mountain in Texas is Guadalupe Peak, which is 8,751 feet tall. ’ .. . -

.V* * ’-Al/ rl ; j V* 4 ' \ V/‘ 1 1 A ‘ ’ IWSw A 1 & Kr /1 iw * *'hf\ VJ I \ I 1 Selling isn’t at all like palling rabbits out of a hat, except in this one respect: there’s a lot more to it than meets the eye! Buying often starts in the customer’s mind, long before he enters the store. By the same token, selling usually starts where most people look for buying information ... in the advertising columns of the newspaper. Practically everybody reads the newspaper ... often as much for what is in the advertising columns as for what is in the news columns. Because the newspaper reaches the advertiser’s TOTAL market with TOTAL selling impact, it is known as the TOTAL SELLING MEDIUM. Experience has proved again an d again that the newspaper is the ONE advertising medium for which there is NO satisfactory substatute. BE A REGULAR ADVERTISER IN THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT

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