Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 59, Number 228, Decatur, Adams County, 28 September 1961 — Page 9

THURSDAY, SEPT. 28, 1981 i

T ” ' “ r 5 : ’ 1 - '——————— ——— ; - ■ - “ •c'h. dHWoiLfaX'''** r J M » •h . i < T u few rkfl i «MrtW. >W W II Ct 7RI ta. Tw wt r AbJvK Klk laXW - w.i i ,IM fr 7 jHg t W * /t. t jab |Lwy

- • r *.. - ■ Is This What You Are Waiting For? RIA SEWING Iff I I- MACHINE UI U SALE KLENKS- _ Westinghouse Dealer ' win free! Wr?r this m fir DOMESTIC , W ■wmmU I TO BE GIVEN AWAY f ,•' JK FREE! / Yes, you may win a New Domestic Sewing Machine [" UnScRaMbLeMeNoWI! "I —* — Below are 15 scrambled words which apply to sewing. For example, the first word WESNGI, becomes 1 "sewing." Unscramble each of these words and mail your corrected answers on this coupon to Klenk's I or bring your coupon to Klenk's and place it in a special container. THE FIRST CORRECT ANSWER ■ 1 PICKED from the container will be grand winner! All entries must be submitted before 5:00 p. m. ■ I Tuesday, October 3. SALE STARTS WEDNESDAY, October 4. 1 WESNGI CTISTH EMDNMOIBEREDR , I I OGMRMNOACHAMIENAMSE .___LMATAERI L • MESDOTIC REPZIP _TABES ___Z_______MHE OEBTUHTNLO . Name I i MTCK . , Address 1 I LENEDE City State * Klenk's employes and their families are not eligible to enter contest. I Decision of judges final. The winners will be notified by mail. Plus Over 100 Valuable Prizes 65 -$50.00 Domestic Certificates 35-$25.00 Domestic Certificates NOTHING TO BUY TO ENTER CONTEST! “We sell the best and repair the rest” Factory trained service man for home and commercial sewing machines! m 1/ | C M K c== — I* Bi K Db Iw FIRST 232 W. MADISON ST. DECATUR* IND. PHONE 3-2158

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

First World War Memories Will Be Recalled Over Weekend Memories of World War I and organization of the city's first military company since Civil War days, will be recalled by veterans of that war when they gather at the American Legion home in Decatur Saturday and Sunday for the annual reunion of the 139th Field Artillery. 1 One unit of the artillery organization was Co. A, organized in Decatur immediately following the outbreak of the European war. The above photo of Co. A, taken on federal muster day Aug. 15, 1917, was snappd from the west side of Third street to the encampment site across from the public library. The postoffice is now located on the site. A residence was located on the south and in the rear was the Smith & Bell lumber office, with the courthouse and the Boch build--Tng” IdbmTng'bh-ffiFlSFrawrTn W"exfreffie and Robert Peterson, second lieutenant. Charles Morgan, of Decatur, a past commander of Adams Post 43, American Legion, is president of the 139th Field Artillery Association, meeting here for the first timee since 1954. How many of the veterans can you identify?

Bonn Has Not Lost Its Tranquility

By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst BONN—Along the Rhine, German families picnic in the soft warmth of late summer. In the early evening they stroll through the squares, but by 10 p.m. the streets of this “permanent provisional” capital of West Germany are almost empty. >. Bonn would have remained just another provincial capital had it

EVANS SALES & SERVICE offers.... 20% off ."J,1962 PONTIAC 15%0ff “J962TEMPEST Don't Buy Until You Shop EVANS Sales and Service 126 -128 S. First SL Phone 3-2506 I We May Not Have All of the Latest Electronic I I Equipment, but We DO HAVE EXPERIENCE. I I Our Mechanics Have MORE Than 85 YEARS I I OF SERVICE to This Fine Community, and I I GUARANTEE Their WORK. I I Now is the Time to WINTERIZE Your CARS I I and TRUCKS - Align the Front End - Tune Up I I "Major Overhauls - Install Anti-Freeze. I I - YOUR COMPLAINT IS OUR EDUCATION - |

not been for Konrad Adenauer. In the nearby village of Rhoendorf, Adenauer tended his roses in his years of political exile under Hitler. And he brought the provisional capital here as the Federal Republic of West Germany emerged after the war. Despite the swirl of world j events into which it has been thrust, Bonn has not lost its

tranquility. From the tiny villages which dot the Rhineland countryside, men emerge each morning to till their small acreages. West Germany’s prosperity has not yet reached these villages. The beans growing in neat rows on poles higher than a man’s head, the cabbages and the tomatoes are more real than any question of German reunification. Just the same, there is sober realization of how close the world stands to war. The Rhinelander separates the question of Berlin and German reunification. 1 About the latter, he spends lit--1 tie time in reflection.

He may. unless he has relatives in the Eastern Zone. byen resent the aid his government has given refugees from the East. Said a woman who fled the Eastern Zone and now works for the government: "They think we’re all rich.” But about Berlin, especially since the election campaign which was waged principally on the question of the mounting crisis there, his mind is made up. It is worth fighting for.But if there is uncertainty among some of the iwpulation over the issues and the risks involved in today’s crisis, there is ■ none in the embassies and. chancellory of Bonn.

PAGE ONE-A