Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 43, Decatur, Adams County, 20 February 1964 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
~ ... —l■— ifObs WASHINGTON’S gllH|ll BIRTHDAY Wffe SALE * AU METAL RATH DELICIOUS GALLON TOWELS CHOCOLATE GARBAGE a ßc COVERED CANS 38 ® CHERRIES VnWW MATCHING ss 00 WASH “ OTHS 55c Box 3 for 29c 10 ONLY tinVELTY BLACK WOMEN’S NOVELTY RUBBER , BETTER CHINA CAR DRESSES BANKS mat Jizos 12-14-15.18-20 Regular 98c „„ Regular $5 00 18 « 22 sj.i7 2L5c 88c 16 PIECE HE^ynnSrc TY 17 ONLY! SCT — KIDDIES LA£>|ES ROYAL WHEAT QYM COTTON DINNERWARE SETS HOUSE JZsAUCERS COMPLETE WITH: DRESSES 4-6 >4 " BREAD AND LAWN SWING, BUTTER RATES ATTACHED SLIDE si 2'7 4 i° ° 4-1014” DINNER PLATES TRAPEZE, S ““ ,4/ ‘ *• M/ * Genuine Fine China- 2 CHIN BARS, C M Open Stock Available. GYM RINGS, / $Ca44 Re » U,ar $2 63 JR - * - * 2 Chain Swings —— co 8 PAIR ONLY! 3 PAIR ONLY! S 2B* SS LADIES’ WOMEN’S CORDUROY TapT SPA,RONLY! CAPRIPANTS Wlrlll WOMEN’S Size 10 Only PANTS CORDUROY ?1 .00 each CAPRI PANTS 1 Regular $3.98 r $ 1.77 ’ o*7 c» 16 PA,R ONLY! * 1 eP/<* WOMEN’S - MISSES ’ Size 10 Only CORDUROY 3 PAIR ONLY! . FLANNELETTE 3 PA,R ONLY! CAPRI PANTS ■■■•■a WOMEN’S — MISSES SiW AA each PAJAMAS CORDUROY S l-° O sl ?oi °eU CAPRI PANTS - —*”2 Sl’S'. women’s . sl-77 DUSTERS FLANNELETTE si „, NIGHT 20 PAIR ONLY! | R< * u,or $298 AAllftiC GIRL’S \ $1.66 UUvVHO CORDUROY ■ ■ CAWH PANTS WOMEN’S 00 each Sijes 7810 Only COTTON —- —— Regular $1.99 UAIIGE 331/3 SO AA each llUUdt L °STEREO Y sl -°° cach J DRESSES and in ONLY! Sizes 10-12-14-18 MONO Sizes 14- 24'/z ■ “ WOMEN’S - MISSES Regular $2 97 RECORDS CORDUROY s l-»7 99c DUSTERS HOME 3 ONLY Sizes 10 ”” FREEZER GIRLS s 2-99 KITS JACKETS v aee pints and Vq Urr QUARTS KIT S, J** B *Vs OR - • ECONOMICAL packages si* 9 nn each ALL — FOR FREEZING . »l«00 eac GIRLS <•-»„ . L WOMEN’S - MISSES XXC — CLEAR-VU iiavftd ALUMINUM JACKETS EXTRA THICK CAST — -7 PIECE BAKE 8 ONLY! afJEimUM 5 WIRE BOYS SPRING ALUMINUM PIE PANS, CAKE PANS, , JACKETS COOK-WARE UHUTY PANS. 10AF PANS „ JET 2 fOr 98C Sizes 6-8-10-12-14-16 1 & 98c «2-77 «7-99 Etwvll J ? > N. SECOND ST. DECATUR, IND.
THU DCCATUH DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA
Awf .* 'Pnw ' KSjjv. wwi w Hew W|| SIGHT FOR SWEDISH EYES—Dressed in their native garb, three young residents of Greenland attract attention in Stockholm. The girls (left to right), Christine Berthelsen, Marie Petersen and Soso Heinrich, are folk dancers participating in the Danish Weeks celebration at the Swedish capital. Greenland is a Danish possession.
President Os Gabon Back In Power Today LIBREVILLE, Gabon (UPD (UPI) — President Leon M’Ba returned to power today through French military intervention and announced that army officers who tried to overthrow him will be punished “without pardon and without pity.” French paratroopers flown in from Senegal and the former French Congo put down the mutinous Gabonese troops Wednesday and arranged the release of M’Ba who had been taken to a remote village in the interior by the insurgents. M’Ba arrived back at the government palace in Libreville today and resumed his duties. He also announced that controversial National Assembly elections set for Sunday would bp held on schedule. The rebels had announced cancellation of the voting. Await Reaction A group of junior army officers headed by Lt. Jacques Monbo and Lt. Valere Essone were believed to have staged the brief takeover Monday with the backing of the 400man Gabonbse army. Diplomats awaited with interest the reaction of o’ther African nations to France’s first military intervention in one of its former African colonies. The 200 French troops were sent in at the request of Vice President Paul-Marie Yembit under a 1961 pact providing French military aid to put down internal subversion in Gabon. which became independent in 1960. French Move Swiftly No official casualty figures were available but a French soldier estimated 25 Gabonese soldiers were killed and 40 wounded when the paratroopers attacked a Gabonese military camp in Libreville Wednesday shortly after securing the airfield in a swift dawn operation. The French troops then surrounded the government palace, held by Gabonese insurgents, and forced its surrender without firing a shot. where the arrested coup leaders wete being held. Training Ivy English and Boston ivies may be coaxed ftito climbing on brick walls by placing the tendrils in grooves between the bricks and plastering them with mud. By the time the mud falls away, the ivy will have taken root in the brick. y’ J ■ Dynamic. Challenging FfA 'M' WEEK. fj < \ Fze.ts-aa . ...... ■ - ■ ■ ■ ■■■/■ - ■' ■ - . . .. - . , ■ >
_ X SMORGASBORD 9 o, Fri. and Sat. Nights - 5 to 9 p.m. 4E! Barbecued Ribs — Chicken — Fish OPEN SUNDAYS with CAFETERIA AT NOON PARKWAY RESTAURANT US 27, South edge of Berne, Ind.
Sale Os Kane Paint Store Is Announced Mr. and Mrs. James Kane, owners and operators of the Kane Paint & Wallpaper Store, 158 South Second street, today announced the sale of the store to the Ream-Steckbeck Paint Co., Fort Wayne. The Kane store will be closed Saturday of this week, and the Fort Wayne firm will open at a later date in the room at Ilf South Second street, vacated this week by the Kiddie Shop. The Fort Wayne firm, which has three stores in Fort Wayne and will Open a fourth store soon in Warsaw, plans considerable remodeling and redecorating before opening the Decatur store. Manager of the Ream-Steck-beck store here will be Jerry Dager, of Monroeville, who plans to move to this city. James Kane wiH continue to work for the Fort Wayne fipm in one of its Fort Wayne stores,, where he has been employed Ipr the past five years. Mrs. Kane, ' who has managed the store here, plans to retire. The Kiddie Shop, owned and operated by Mrs. Kay Boch, will reopen Friday in its new location, 140 South Second street, formerly occupied by Sears Roebuck & Co. Farmers Must Pay Self-Employed Tax Most farmers must pay a federal self-employment tax for 1963, Sterling M. Dietrich, district director of internal revenue for Indianapolis district, reminded them today. He said the rate of self-employ-ment tax is 5.4 per cent, and is in addition *to any income tax payable. Social security taxes are paid by employes and their employers, and the self-employment tax must be paid by persons who are self-employed. These taxes are used to pay old-age, survivors and disability benefits under the federal social security program. A self-employed person is one who operates his own business or farm. A farmer is considered to be self-employed if he employs others to operate or workthe even though he__dces_ not live on it himself. ' A farmer who had net earnings from self-employment of S4OO or more and did not receive any wages subject to the social security taxes on employes, or who had net earnings from self-em-ployment of S4OO or more and wages of less than $4,800, must file a federal income tax return and pay the self-employment tax due even -though gross income is less than S6OO and he owes no income tax. “Farmer's Tax Guide," which furnishes more detailed information on this subject, is available upon request - from the—internal - revenue service. ' — ■ . ' -
State Is Studying Battle Os Barbers
INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — A long-simmering battle between the Indiana Board of Barber Examiners and operators of the state’s barber schools was under study today by the Indiana Civil Rights Commission and the Legislative Advisory Commission. Representatives of the Indiana Barber Schools Association, joined by two legislators, appeared before both groups Wednesday to complain that the board is dominated by the Barbers Union and is unnecessarily strict with the schools. George Bubel, secretary of the board, denied the schools were treated unfairly and said most of the friction between the board and the association involved “Negro schools in Gary.” Bubel said the board had “leaned over backwards” to. cooperate with these schools but the instruction they offered was “of poor quality,’ some schools were unclean and “colored boys don’t have the minds to learn the theory of barbering.” Association President Ken Fleener, Indianapolis, told newsmen, the board is “trying to dictate what we do. It is trying to make it impossible for us to get instructors and trying to squeeze us out so we can’t operate.” Bubel said no instructors had been certified in Indiana since the 1963 Legislature passed a law requiring new instructors to pass an examination after taking a one-year course in the teaching of. barbering. He said no barber college had set up the instructor’s course so the board could not approve a course. He said the association wanted the board to establish and conduct the course “but that’s not our business.” Fleener and James Watkins, East Chicago, vice president of the association, said that two years ago the school operators wei;e summoned to a conference in the State Office Building and introduced to a salesman selling a course on salesmanship. They said the course consisted of 13 records selling for $79 and the school owners were ■ told they would have to have -■the’ 'Course because their students would be questioned about salesmanship in license examinations. State Sen. Earl Landgrebe, R-Valparaiso, said the board had tried to impose an age limit of “not over 32” on student barbers although the law
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makes no such restriction. He said this had barred three former Studebaker Corp. employes, who had hoped to retrain as barbers after the automobile plant at South Bend was closed, because they were about 38 years of age. Fleener also accused the board of discriminating against women barbers. He said one of his female students passed the licensing exam but was denied a license after points were deducted from her score because her “pants were not pressed and her shoes were not shined.” He said the woman was wearing a skirt at the time and was wearing shoes of a type which could not be shined. The LAC named a subcommittee to hear the association’s charges and Harold Hatcher, director of the Civil Rights Commission, said it would investigate if formal charges were filed. •
1 — IT PAYS ■ *lll TO SHOP at A& P ALLGOOD SLICED BACON i (flbe 2QAc -'•.. .. . 4 I | OPEN FRI. and SAT. ’til 9 p.m. | The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., Inc. w
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1964
Must Include Extra Income On Returns “Don’t forget to include that extra income when you prepare your 1963 federal tax return,” Sterling M. Dietrich reminded taxpayers today. — He pointed out that interest on savings accounts and U. S. savings bonds, tips, most dividends, profits from hobbies and from sales of property are all taxable income. The taxpayers should read the form and instructions which list the various items of income that must be reported. As a general rule, alb income from all sources is taxable, unless specifically excepted by law. Taxpayers who fail tb report all taxable income will have to pay any additional tax due as well as interest of 6%. They may also be suject to penalties. Modern electronic equipment is now being installed by income revenue to help ensure accurate reporting of taxable income. Fresh Cheese Put a lump of sugar in the cheese dish, and it will keep fresh for a longer time. The sugar absorbs the moisture.
