Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 224, Decatur, Adams County, 22 September 1964 — Page 12

PAGE FOUR-A

■ ■p urn 1 • W UB » Ki.. ' 4 Hr wMpW ” MV jf' m ■r JH V *. * * fl I id Til )■'' jiy %k i i I! jjf Svfll DANCE OF FLAME—A Hawaiian dancer cuts a figure eight with a flaming torch at the Hawaii Pavilion of the New York Wbrld’s Fair. The show is drawing capacity audiences.

Wiegmann Will Sell AT AUCTION Located */ 4 mile East of Zulu on U. S. 30, or 8 miles East of New Haven, Ind., or 2 miles West of St. Rd. 101 on U. S. 30, Saturday, September 26,1964 at 9:30 a.m. HOUSEHOLD GOODS 18-ft. Coldspot upright deep freeze; 10-ft. Norge upright freezer; Crosley Shelvodor refrigerator, with freezer across the top; Admiral apartment size refrigerator; Maytag 40" gas stove with dutch oven; 27" Truetone TV* Flgurama table with massage and vibrator (cost $1,100.00 new); 2 pc. living room suite; chairs and ottomans; desk and chair; china cabinet; Recordio; Radio record player; speaker and recorder; al}o most of the ball games on record from 1947 and 1948; G. E. ironer; electrical appliances; Singer portable sewing machine; sewing cabinet; 3-pc. bedroom suite, with springs and mattress; maple single bed, with springs and mattress; 3-pc. maple bedroom suite with springs and mattress; hospital bed; chest of drawers; dresser and chest; breakfast set with table and 4 chairs; Youngstown 42" kitchen sink; kitchen table; 20 kitchen chairs; rocking chairs; kitchen Sellers cabinet; Westinghouse roaster; 6 coffee tables; 6 table Jamps; 5 floor lamps; G. E. 20" fan; Burroughs adding machine; dehumidifier; Seth Thomas 8-day clock; Sessions mantle dock; alarm clock; electric appliances; wall plaques; .22 automatic rifle, Mosburg with telescope; meat slicer; games; pots and pans. TRUCKS - TOOLS - FURNACES 1952 IHC PICKUP TRUCK ' 1962 FORD Econoliner Pickup Truck with overload springs, 6 ply tires, grain bed; stock rack and camper; Lennox Air flow 112,000 B.T.U. oil furnace with blower, like new; large wood and coal furnace with blower; furnace cleaner; Air-Blast Economy stove; Wilson heater; 3 oil space heaters; 42-gal. electric hot water heater; 8" Craftsman table saw; electric sander; Lincoln welder, 180 amp.; V| h.p. electric drill; 8" Craftsman power saw; drill press; 2* 2 h.p. electric drill; Ij, h.p. electric drill; %" drill; 2 Wisconsin motors, good; I.H.C. motor in A-1 shape; 6 h.p. Briggs & Stratton motor; 3 air compressors; large air compressor tank; metal welding bench; steel shop bench; paint gun, 8 paint regulators; 2 gal paint bucket, with gauges and controls; 2 bench grinders; lots of V-belts; flat belt lacing machine; hyd. wagon jack; 2 David Bradley 20" chain saws; White's gas-jet portable heater; 2 Armstrong nylon 10-ply 700x14 tires, like new; 2—600x16 tires; 4—650x13 tires; lots of other tires; battery charger; Toledo vegetable scales; chahnel iron, different lengths; different sizes of windows and screens; lots of brass and copper fittings; c-clamps; cement tools; ref. trucks; 2—6-ft. part bins; steel and wooden boxes; set of socket wrenches; box wrenches; pipe wrenches; pipe dies; 2 sets Bolt dies; staplers; peg board, 4'xß'; portable ice fishing tent; spinning rod; casting rod; fishing poles; 3 h.p. Firestone.outboard motor; ice chest; 2 rubber tired wheelbarrows; 150-ft. garden hose; 12x30 tarp; 2275 gal. oil tanks; 150 gal. tank; overhead 300-gal. gas tank; 100-gal. propane gas tank; mud pump; child's swing set; lawn chairs and hand tools. MACHINERY-GARDEN TRACTOR AND MISCELLANEOUS 7-Ft. Clipper combine; Jaeger portable 3'G cu. ft. mixer with hopper on lubber; 3-section spring tooth harrow; 4section I.H.C. spike tooth harrow; small grain blower; automatic chicken feeder; Van type truck bed, 7-ft. x 9-ft. 2— 1953 front end axles with springs; buggy chassis; buggy pole; painter scaffolding; slip scoop; 6 case upright CocaCola cooler; Power-trac garden tractor, with Briggs-Stratton 8 h.p. motor and 24" lawn mower; buzz saw; log chains; lawn chairs and lots of hand tools. DOG—Reg. Schram Pug Dog, 9 months old. ; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Taylor, owners Lunch Served TERMS—CASH Not responsible for accidents. Auctioneers: Walter Wiegmann, Auct., Decatur, Phone Preble 74511 Orville Sturm, Auctioneer, New Haven, Phone 749-1491

Vermont Lone State Never To Go Democratic

EDITOR’S NOTE: Here b the first of the series of dispatehee by United Press International reporters on political trends around the country as the 1964 campaign approaches the half-way mark. Outlook '64—New England By PETER 8. RICHARDS Unite! Press International BOSTON (UPI) — Fremont. Blaine, Hughes, Landon, Willkie, Dewey and Nixon—t he s e were the men nominated for provident by the Republican party who never made the White House. They all carried Vermont. Vermont, haven for harried urbanites ancjl stronghold for laconic Yankee humor, is the only state of the 50 which has never voted Democratic in a presidential election. Democrats, who hold three of the four governorships and four of the five Senate scats up for election this November in New England, would like to give Preu I dent Johnson a triumph which eluded even Franklin D. Roosevelt —a Dem-

ocratic sweep of all six states in the region. Entails Maine Victory Besides carrying Vermont, this also would entail victories in Maine, which has not voted Democratic since the Bull Moose movement split the GOP vote in 1012. and in New Hampshire. which last succumbed to the lure of a Democrat when Roosevelt ran for a fourth term in 1044. There seems to be little doubt among political observers that the three southern New England states —Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts, where Democratic rule has strengthened steadily in recent years—will support Johnson. Throughout the region the big issue in national and state contests is Barry Goldwater and his controversial opinions. Several Republican incumbents and office-seekers are playing down their political affiliation and avoiding taking a stand alongside the GOP presidential nominee. Gets Newspaper Support Many newspapers which usually or always have supported Republicans have endorsed Johnson. The three northern states have shown fissures in their rock-ribbed Republicanism of late. Politicians there, including many prominent Republicans, feel Yankee uneasiness about Goldwater's views, especially on foreign policy, may lead many to cast their first Democratic vote or to decide they cannot, vote in good conscience lor cither presidential candidate. Vermont, which has sent an internationalist like George D. Aiken to the U.S. Senate since 1940. has shown signs of political orneriness. It elected 11 s first Democratic congressman in 106 years in 1968 only to turn him out two years later. Then in 1962 it elected Its first Democratic governor in 109 years. Democratic Gov. Philip H. Hoff, a lawyer whose father iwas a Republican state legislator in Massachusetts, is running for re-election against Republican Lt. Gov. Ralph A. Foote. Republican Sen. Winston L. Prouty, who is not as well known in Vermont as Aiken, is seeking re-election against Democrat Frederick J. Fayette, a respected attorney. Both these contes*s are regarded as close. M tinkle And Mclntire In Maine, popular Democratic Sen. Edmund S. Muskie is running for re-election against conservative GOP Congressman Clifford G. Mclntire. Congressman Stanley Tupper, who was New England campaign manager for New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's bid for the presidential nomination. is an example of the liberal Republicans in Maine who have repudiated Goldwater. He has said he "cannot conscientiously support” the GOP presidential nominee. New Hampshire's first Democratic governor in 40 years. John W. King, riding a crest of popularity resulting from his approval of legislation creating the only state sweepstakes in the nation, faces the same Republican he beat in 1962, former state legislator John Pillsbury. In Connecticut, many top Republicans are too "liberal” to accept Goldwater's philosophy. Even state Chairman A. Searle Pinney has made no secret of his displeasure with the Arizona

I MOVING | IF SOMEONE YOU KNOW . . . u is moving into I new community, v let us know too. A friendly cell by £ the Welcome Wagon Hostess with I her basket of gifts and helpful g information, will make the newIp comer feel quioMy at home. Join jU in carrying on our community'a IP traditional spirit of Hospitality, r Just give their name and address |r ,0 k Wekwi(jMi|\ag()n H Rhone 3-433 R f WELCOME NEWCOMEMI Um this cowpea to let M know you're I bore. H»wm g AddreM _ | City j □ Plmm hove the Welcome Weton I Hoeteu coll on mo □ I would like to eubecribo to the 1 □ 1 olreody Mbeorlbo Io the I Fill out coupon end moll to ClrtuMlon I Pont . |

THE MfcATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, PMCATOTL WPIAMA

JIMI- II ■ /'* ■ ? ,z "' '■ '''' * I,J W A BL ; A IB%gf " > B RESCUED BY A HELICOPTER—In addition to being at home In the air, Royal Canadian Air Force helicopten are obviously maneuverablein the lea. Thia tandem-rotor helicopter, designed by the Boeing Cov, can land in choppy water and retrieve an injured man In a rubber dingy (left). The copters rear ramp opens and both man and raft are pulled inside. The versatile whirlybird can also taai up to h survtvor (right). Members at the cree lift nun Into the craft through the side door. The rescue helicooter. officially called the CH-113 Vovageur. is based at tte RCAF station at Trenton, Ontario.

senator. And Goldwater forces have not been helped by the penchant of their local chieftain, John Lupton, to make statements often deemed less than tactful. ■ , Expect House Victory Democratic Sen. Thomas J. Dodd is given a substantial edge over his GOP opponent, former Gov. John D. Lodge. There is also some thought that the Democrats will take all of the Connecticut’s six seats in the House. They now hold five of them. Rhode Island, strongly Demecratic, seems sure to send Democratic Sen. John 0. Pastore back to Washington for another six years. The governor’s fight is between GOP incumbent John H. Chaffc, who sneaked Into office by 396 votes two years ago. and Democratic ht. Gov. Edward P. Gallogly.

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LAURA: “Say, Lfeo.” LEO: “Yeah, what’s up?” LAURA: “Do you think it’s right for us to snooze in

front of the tourists?” LEO: “Well, why not? We need our little eat naps. Don’t you agree, Martha?”

MARTHA: “Z-z M-z-z.” LEO: "How abnnt yon, Grace?” GRACE: “Z-z-z-z-m”

, WKBHMMT. SEPTEMBEH 4 1964

(TMs brief eoWljLbetyeen the Lion family mjght have Frapclsca Zon,l