Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 45, Number 265, Decatur, Adams County, 10 November 1947 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

It isp’t how you "put in the day" but what you put into the day. O Trade in n Good Town — Deratin' Yes-There is A Difference in Corn TX* , fvt ” • 1 SgiiKlw: WK Early DeKalb Variety Outyields by 2 to 1 The importance of selecting the seed corn that fits your soil and weather was clearly demonstrated on the farm of Aloysius Beckman of Ft. Wayne, Indiana, this year. Mr. Beckman experimented with two early hybrid varieties, one was DeKalb 458, and the other, a competitive early variety. Both were planted on the same day, but when harvested, the results were remarkably different. The DeKalb variety nearly doubled the yield of the other hybrid, and produced much larger ears. DeKalb dealer, Raymond Tepper, pictured above, holds ears picked at random from rows of both varieties. On the left, is an ear from tlie competitive hybrid, while on the right is a DeKalb 458 ear which grew in the same field. Besides its greater yield, Mr. Beckman found the DeKalb variety stood better, and happily says, “Needless to say, I like that DeKalb Corn.” Muck Fanner’s Corn' Tests Under 21 Percent Moisture on Oct. 15 .—When it comes to making a real corn crop on x i muck soil, Robert r'* ! E. Rice of Plymouth, Indiana, Bi&a figures DeKalb 56 has them all jHH beat. He ’ 'H especial! y i-■«. S pleased with his f s- ' a » DeKalb Hybrid L Seed Corn this year, for in spite of a backward season, his DeKalb came along fast, testing only 20.63 percent moisture on October 15, and looking like a sure bet for at least an 85 busheli per acre yield. I See Your DeKalb Dealer Today I HUGH NIDLINGER R. 3, Decatur, Ind. CHRIS A. INNIGER R. 1, Monroe, Ind. WALTER REPPERT R. 1, Decatur, Ind.

Public Auction IMPROVED 40 ACRE FARM Saturday, November 15 1:30 P. M. LOCATED: 2’i miles East of Decatur, Indiana on No. 224, then % mile North. IMPROVEMENTS: Good Six Room House, built-in Kitchen Features and Sink. Entire Home has been newly decorated and is in fine repair. Good Basement. Nice Yard. Shade Trees and Some Fruit. G.iod Well and Large Cistern. Barn 24x36. New Roof. Newly Painted and in good repair. Granary and Brooder House. ENTIRE 40 ACRES IS UNDER CULTIVATION, Good Productive Soil, in a fine state of fertility, beans this year mp.de 25 Bn. per acre and corn will yield at least 50 Bu. per acre. AN IDEAL LOCATION, close to Decatur, Indiana and only ’/i mile off <>*' highway Number 224. POSSESSION in 30 Days. TERMS: 20% day of sale, balance upon delivery of good title. JOHN COOK I OWNER J. F. Sanmann—Auctioneer ' C. W. Kent —Sales Manager Sale Conducted by Midwest Realty Auction Co. Decatur, Indiana. No. 7 10 14 PUBLICSALE •'e will offer our 8 room home and 4 lots Cor public sale at the residence at 716 Schirmeyer street, on Sat. Nov. 15, ’47 Starting a t 1 P. M. DESCRIPTIONS: — Lot No. 32 with good 8 ro'jfn home, drove well, electricity, garage, in good repair. Will give possession. Lot No. 44 with good si’/fe barn and shed. Also Lots numbers 33, 43 and 47. All will be sold individually. * TERMS: 20% cash at tiije of purchase, balance on delivery of title. • • i hufus Werst Estate 1. D j'-hielrrotein—Auctioneer. . ... - '

Adams County Youth Fined After Spree Pleads Guilty To Drunken Driving An Adams county youth, living I near Monroe, was fined by Mayor John B. Stults in city court this morning in a climax to a two-day drinking spree that landed him in jail Saturday night Karue Allen. 22. of Monroe, loute two. pleaded guilty to a charge of drunken driving—was t ned $25 and costs, amounting to $38.90. and his driver's license t was ordered suspended for 90 j days. The defendant, who said he I started drinking in Fort Wayne 'after getting off work Friday, allegedly went to Berne and proceeded to continue drinking. There, officials charged, he left a tavern and drove away with a car. owned by Howard Teeter, of Berne, route one. Berne town marshal David Dubach finally nabbed Allen at his home near Monroe and returned the car to its rightful owner. Allen, his face bleeding from head injuries suffered in a fall on the sidewalk at Berne, was brought, to the local jail and turned over to the custody of sheriff Herman Bowman an,d deputy Sam Bentz. This morning he was charged by prosecutor Myles F. Parrish New “Indiana” Plan Hospital and Surgical Bills Paid! Individuals Or Family Groups As Low As A month •B I B &Ju> per PtRSON ■ 75c FOR CHILDREN Covers room and board; general nursing care; operating room; X-ray and laboratory examinations; drugs, medicines and dressings: ambulance; maternity benefits; surgeons’ fees, etc. Also For a Small Additional Cost A SIOO Monthly Income While sick or disabled: For men or women. 24-hour coverage on or off the job. Pays from first day of sickness or accident. MAIL COUPON TODAY ‘‘s6th Anniversary” Indiana Travelers Assurance Co., Insurance Bldg., 8 East Market, Indianapolis, Ind. Without Obligation Send Information On “Indiana” Plan for Hospital Care O Also SIOO Monthly Income Name I Address City Age D-11-47 Roy S. Johnson & Son Auctioneers & Real Estate DeVoss Bldg., Ground Floor Phone 104 153 So. 2nd St. We'll be glad to Represent you in the transaction of Real Estate at Public Sale or private sale. 25 years in this business in Decatur. We welcome your investigation of our record of which we are proud. Melvin Leichty, Rep.

a, « , ... * j DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

with public intoxication and drunken driving. The former count was dismissed upon , his plea of guilty to the latter. A vehicle taking charge was not placed against him, prosecutor Parrish said, because intent was not shown after Allen said he was “too drunk to know what was going on.’ ’ He claimed at | first that he had “won the car in a crap game at Fort Wayne.” o Mrs. Mary E. Beam Dies At Willshire Mrs. Mary Ellen Beam. 92, prominent Willshire, 0.. resident, died at 8:30 p.m. Saturday at her home. She was a member of the Willshire Methodist church. Surviving are three sons. Jess Beam of Van Wert, 0.. Harry of Hollywood. Calif., and John of Helena, Mont., and a granddaughter. Miss Vera Fishe/', at home. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the home,‘the Rev. E. O. Bissell officiating. p Getting even with a person means putting yourself on his level. o— ——— IPI’OINTIIKVr OF EXE<TT<II< ESTATE Art. 4370 Votive Im hereby Kt ven. That the undersigned has been appointed Hxecutor of the estate of Conrad C. W. Christlaner late of Adams County, deceased. The estate is probably solvent. Oxi'iir T. ClivlstiaiHT Eveentor Xov. IS. lIM7. Henry B. Heller Attorney Nov. 10-17-24 XOTICi: OF SPECIAL MEETING Notice is hereby given to the taxpayer of Adams County. Indiana, that a Special Meeting of the Adams County Council of said County, will be held at the Auditor’s Office in tlie Court House at Decatur, Indiana at the hour of 10:00 A.M. Thursday, November 13, and Friday November 14, 1 947. The Council' will consider the following additional appropriations which are considered necessary to meet the extraordinary emergency existing at this time and to consider such other . business that may come before it. COl X IT Clerk: 104 —-Clerks Per Diem, Cases Venued to County .. . $75.00 401 — Clothing and Care •of Insane 450.00 Auditor: 200 — Operating 90.00 Surveyor: 205-C — Repair Tile Drain 1,500.00 205- I D—Repair Open Drain 7,670.00 200— Operating 750.00 Attendance Officer: 101-B — Salary 1X9.00 Infirmary: 200— Operating 1,200.00 Hospital: 200 — Operating 22,000.00 Sheriff: 206 — Board of Prisoners 100.00 600 — Properties, Siren for Deputy Car 60.00 Jail: 600 — Properties, New Benches 60.00 < Hili a: iMHi«»n<A*H: 102 — Salary, County Council ~150.00 404 — insurance, County Buildings 100.00 HIGHWA 1 103-A — Truck & Tractor Drivers —2,500.00 103-C — Single Hands 1,800,00 200— Operating 3,800.00' 300 — Materials 3,260.00 Transfer from fund No. 302 t o fund No. 301 .... .... 500,00 403-H — Asst for Dep. Children in Cust. of Relatives 2,200.00 103-J — Asst for Dep. Children in Cust of Inst. 1,000.00 Taxpayers appearing shall have the right to be heard thereon: after said appropriations shall be made ten or more taxpayers feeling themselves aggrieved by such appropriations may appeal to tlie State Board of lax Commissioners for further and final action' thereon by filing their petition therefor witli the County Auditor within the time fixed by law and the State Tax Board will fix a date for hearing in this County. » Thurman 1. Drew, Auditor Vilnius County, Indiana. Nov. 3-10 0 HOWARD HUGHES (Continued from Page 1) I | mony that he had offered the air! | force officer a postwar job. He | said the general once made an overture, saying he might like to take the wartime post of general I manager in Hughes' aircraft plant. | Hughes did not give him a job. 2. Testified that Meyers became one of his “few” wartime friends after first being a member of the “hate-Hughes” club. He said he did not “want to say anything that would hurt Benny Meyers.” 3. Testified he had been told he was “heartily disliked” at Wright Field, the air force procurement headquarters, because he did not entertain like other manufacturers. As a result, he said, he ordered his tree-spending public relations man, John W. Meyer, to entertain. Thank God For Muscle-Rub! WRITES MR. ROBERT JORDAN, COLON, MICH. Advises every sufferer from Rheumatic—Arthritic—SciaticNeuritic Pains to try Muscle-Rub. Here’s the true story of a man who took treatments, used all kind of remedies for his Sciatic, neuritic pains without being helped in the slightest degree Mr Robert Jordan of Colon, Mich, suffered agony from pains in his hip—knee— call ot legs. The pain at times was so bad that he couldn't sit down. He tried several different treatments, many different medicines, all of which did him no good. He couldn’t work Life was misery for him. Then one day he saw an advertisement ol Muscle-Rub —the doctor’s prescript**!—and in desperation bought e bottle. He used it as ■ directed and in ? days the pains were relieved ' and Mr lordan war back on the job. No wonder lie advises every rheumatic suf- , I f-'M to try Muscle-Rub for fast pain relief (let a liotl)' today at ALL GUVD IJKLG ~Sl'<j!:l’>. I Remember. Muscle Fub is sold on this more? j tel g’jirxzte-' If c-’y half a bottV Inafc rcb'T veue Hrugfeist is authorued t© i ittuttx your owy.

sz Two Are Slightly Injured In Wreck * ’ I Two Autos Collide Near City Sunday Two persons was hurt, neither seriously, when two cars collided one mile east of Decatur on federal road 224 about 9 a.m. Sunday. Mrs. Earl Geyer suffered leg injuries and her fonr-month-old daughter sustained a nose laceration when the car in which they were riding struck the rear of another. Deputy sheriff Sam Bentz, who investigated, said an auto driven by Harold Warthman, of this city, enroute toward Decatur, slowed down for the driver to “pick up” a neighbor walking along the berm. The other auto, driven by Mr. Geyer, crashed into the rear of the Warthman auto, throwing the occupants forward against the instrument panel. The injured were treated at a local physician’s office. Deputy Bentz estimated the damage to the Geyer auto at $250 and that to the Warthman car at SSO. 0 Give according to your means, or God will make your means according to your giving. — Dr. John Hall.

Remember The Beet Bread You Ever Ate) W| YOU WILL WHEN YOU TASTE jrt Wik T V' ' X.' THE BREAD THAT’S BAKED g gMtek )> X BY PASTBY CHEFS 5 With a Lot More Sugar.., V , , , , i ! . v!Sy < Chances are, the best bread you ever remember cat- a V f° r sweeter flavor, better '-I toast, more and faster energy. ing came fresh and fragrant from the oven in your own home. Well, thanks to the skill and talent of I A&P’s master pastry chefs, those happy days are fl 3 With a Lot More here again in every slice of the wonderful new Jane /\ Shortening... n . n < \ Parker Bread. k for better keeping quah- $ iiivc' ' P ° r CFU 1 nCI t Each tender, tempting loaf of Jane Parker Bread | X; -f is fresh and crisp ... smooth and sweet... rushed I from Jane Parker’s ovens straight to your A&P*-$° j With a Lot More g et J ane Parker Bread—guaranteed fresh .• ■ sec | the date on every wrapper. | j f° r smoolber texture - more K protein and minerals (in- Hcmciiiber-lrhpn freshness fades, J eluding calcium). ! flavor fades. WA Ilf Bl '1

| SIAM GOVERNMENT (Continued from Page 1) He is still miskiug, as is Nai Pridi Panymyong, premier of the wartime resistance .movement. 0 2. FEW MERCHANTS , (Continued rrom rage 1) flation or that congress would clap on new controls. William Flanders of the Indianapolis Retail Merchants Association said the consumer “must not be permitted to buy promiscuously — on a dollar down and the rest when you catch me basis.” Some merchants in scattered seci tions of the nation reported some increase in sales volume and a , light demand for easier credit, but I said that generally the situation . was static. Credit, terms may be eased by the trade associations, they said, if strong competition develops, and they believed there may be a general change across the nation when Christmas buying In Detroit, the president of the ’ Retail Merchants Association said i there seemed to be no apparent i difference at all in sales and buying. Charles Boyd, head of the association, said there had been little public response to release of the controls. “Not many merchants,” he said, h“ave changed their terms radically. Most firms are deciding

that so long as buiinegs comes in well on the present terms, why change?” Salt Lake City, Indianapolis, Minneapolis and Dallas said they noted an increase in demand for easier credit terms, although these cities were the exception to the rule. Several big mail order houses — Sears Roebuck, Montgomery Ward and Spiegels reduced their credit terms to pre-war levels —10 percent down and up to IS months to pay on large purchases, 12 months on smaller purchases and a minimum monthly payment of $5, but officials said it was too early to determine the results. RUPTURE Shield Expert Here H. M. SHEVNAN, widely known expert of Chicago, will personally be at the Indiana Hotel, F6rt Wayne, Thursday and Friday, only, Nov. 13 & 14, from 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. Mi. giifevnai: says: The Noetic Shield is a tremendous improvement over all former methods, effecting immediate results. It will not onlyhold the rupqure perfectly no matter the size of location hut it will increase the circulation, strengthen th? weakened parts, and thereby close the opening in ten days on the average ease, regardless of heavy lifting, straining or any position the body may assume. A nationally known scientific method. No under straps or cumbersome arrangements and absolutely no medi- ■ cines or medical treatments. , Mr. Shevnan will be glad to demonstrate without charge. . 6509 N. Artesian Ave., Chicago 45 Large incisional hernia or rup- ’ tufe following surgical operation I especially solicited.

TO RETURN (Continued from Page 1) would revert to ita rightful owners if they could establish their claims legally. The law did not apply to losses sustained through bdmb damage or to bank accounts which were taxed by central government laws. Rookwell said.

NOV. 12—Aloysius Betkman and Ludwina n u Hoagland and then first farm west n ' an ' 3 ttlki miles west and 1 mile north of M n “ SoUth * f ‘ personal property. Roy & Ned Johnson'’ 18 ' aucts. > °nuson aaj y, NOV. 12—Harry Bittikoffer, 3 miles North ana < saw, Indiana, well improved 1 fit o ’ mi,e s Auction Co., J. F. Sanm^lV" 6 far ”’MO NOV. 14—Lester f. Week, 5 miles west of Van tv ‘ 2 miles south or 12 miles east of n?".' olrt <> ot & miles south. 40 Registered Holstein s D p Ur °» Ku and Melvin Liechty, aucts. ns ' Ro T &Nm NOV. 14—Fred A. Callahan, miles West of n north. Improved 60 Acre Farm mm*’ B ''HlMi Co. J. F. Sanmann, Auct. ,idweßt R»a” 2 NOV. 15—John Cook. 2’4 miles east of Deem,,. ' ’ north. Improved 40 acre farm j ' 2 « them, NOV. 15—August Hartman. 6 miles west > aniUan o. Walter Weigmann, Auct. ' "‘ es 'W o[ jl NOV. 17-Joseph J. F. Schwartz, 1 mile east and lu , 1 Monroe or 1 mile east Berne Tile Min Illlle known as the John Yoeman farm ‘c.p„L, 4 ' 4 *> & Ned Johnson and Melvin Liechtv tlrB Wi NOV. 18—Edwin W. Carmichael, .3 miles north of m No. 303, Highly Improved 191 Acre F»?° ntw ®-In Midwest Realty Auction Co. J f c a ®' M «i«t| NOV. 19—James A. Ramsey. 604 Eas; Walnut A “« come property. Five Complete .iDartm’enY 1118 " 1 alfy Auction Co., J. F. Sanmann Au Mii »« NOV. 20—Loyal Hoaglin, 1 mile south and 2% mile, „ Ohio. General closing out sale. R ( j v e. J? 01 Melvin Liechty, Aucts. y - 1 Jobnm NOV. 25—C. E. Bell and M. O. Stoutenberrv 2 n,iu V 2 mile north of road 224. 37 head of Mau’"' 11 * Ned Johnson. Aucts. ' Holst|1 < j

® • I « MONDAY, j

I,le Properties ’“lessee, work “ ke wbl <* the v , 08t lc Jai2 Rockw e n and B a S ° '° 90 Percen OW Ber S ot' the ' !| * m ' The «»ai dafeT y ’* 2"der th \la*wa,