Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 106, Decatur, Adams County, 4 May 1951 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Release Plans Tor - ■■ ' ■ * ■A " ! \ : Reservists Listed »./• Marine Reserves To Be First Released Washington, May 4 — (UP) — Reservists who were involuntarily recalled to active duty/since outbreak of the Korean war today were given some idea when they can . expect get out, The official Release programs of the defense department were an--4' nounced by Rep. Overton Brooks, D., La.. chairman of a house armed services subcommittee on reserve affairs. . - ,\ Leatherneck reservists can, expect to return to civilian life first., The marine corps plans to release from active duty ill enlisted and officer reservists, by June 30, . A summary of the release program: - ■ Marines—First releases to start, in June this, year.; Priorities go to (1> World War II veterans. (2T • . non-veterans. serving Ln reserve before Korea 7 , and (3) those who volunteered for immediate assignment to extended active duty since

if 1 satijrm7& siwM B SPECIAL g Kg ; ' ' Fregjb" jj. . Kfil i DRY COTTAGE CHEESE B H 10c lb 2 lbs l9c H Tasty MILD CREAM CHEESE B Delicious Horn Cheese t j Nice For Lunches or Parties 1 i ICE CREAM | || 5j.95 Gallon S9Bc ' 2 Gallon B ‘ IN MANY DIFFERENT FLAVORS Eg MEET YOUR FRIENDS AT THE EQUITY. Milling]

Announcing Change of Management { • hi ’• I " ; ■ -A/ \ AT . /. V Preble Restaurant PREBLE, IND. \ / / . ' ■ ./ . • ■ ■■. IWe extend a most cordial invitation to our friends to renew old acquaintances, and to the public in general to come out and see us. We will continue this rest- j aurant and tavern in the same spirit of friendly service you enjoyed before. Your favorite special events will also be continued: delicious chicken on Thurs. and Sat. evenings, templing fried fish on Friday nights. „ PAT and INEZ PATTERSON , - ■ ;■ , 8 ; ■ "I. \ ,

I/ Have You Enrolled In Our Family Group Plan of Hospital and Surgical Expense, Protection. OPEN ENROLLMENT—NEW HIGH BENEFITS at Nation-Wide LOW COSTS. Leland Smith LELAND SMITH INSURANCE AGENCY Glenn Hill “GRANDMA" By CNARUE& KUMh “* £»-AfTMAT’S TH’ VIRY I M-M // FOR TH* LIFE O’ ME, I j_|| MAYBE 1 SHOULD READ TH J M OWE T -•*£□ PERFUME I’VE I CAN’T PRONOUNCE TH* NAME.' ADVERTISEMENT AGAIN PLEASE BEEN WANTING.] ' — ) / \ £ -/ iaube I -.(SPSI 1 tsr-, s. ' \wy<&St Ajk IMJS i i* 1 "" y fcZ-PDr.' HWI L ILz 4L71 czxf: FVwM $ (B®C fl k-"< -s-Aia?Mnc. "./a F n..uw*n~«l V ~g Hl 171 i I .J , ~ ■■■■■». ■■ rll ~'' r —““ U 7 • ■ ,\. *. — ’/. I■■-■■4 !— H — ’*“ * ' BCONDiF — 5 OUT OF THE DOGHOUSE | ? r | „-4 . ■1 ( I BOUGHT A SET BLONDIE < I (sonT APGue. PEAR.-Jn fiTjj] I . ' |-=A. QP THE MOST will never ) I V/iSH IJ- r THIS china is SO tl I' —s. A ITS SOMETHING . TRUST ME CQUtD THINK LO/ELY WELL USE V H •“ 7X'at Mmi JITHAT WILL GET ME AND FRAGILE, .70 WASH ) ( OF BRIGHT IDEAS IT ONLY \> OU r OF WASHING 311 i DISHES I x S THEM LIKE THAT v- l|]L COMPANY y 7 ! . GOT THERE )( T hE DISHES FROM COULD FIND ) o-WI? ? I — y NOW ON y — \ . U I ' - V l*v \V' M \ : \ J o\ Wrvnk ’fez Ki rIMBLs 1./r R a . Cost i7si, *<*»» .. * ■ ■ ■ A^ZAin s ‘< / «>‘-^»‘«* ,<l <

dhcbfeak or ngntmr ’ toond lieutenant* and f non-veteran officers are expected from the priorities. They will be kept op active duty 21 mdhths. will start in September for enlisted ordered to active duty as individuals from a non-pay status in the inactive or volunteer reserves. All enljsted reservist* ordered into active service as Individuals from inactive or volunteer reserves who wgre gra&ted a delay j and have not yet reported to duty, will not be repaired to serve. Criteria for release of- enlisted reservists will be subject to local conditions, including maintenance of efficiency in unit*. Return of enlisted reseryists from Korea will be correlated with rotation of combat personnel.' r \ No; plans were announced for the release of reserve officers or members of the national guard or active reserve. « ' Nayy—Release/ will start in July for enlisted volunteer reservists recalled to active duty from A non-pay drill Status. Initially about 1,000 a moitth will be re--1 eased, but by October the rate will be up to ; 6,000 a month. Criteria for release will be whether, a particular skill is needed and

No Gambling Ease For Indiana Fairs Schricker Refuses Relaxation Os Ban - Indianapolis, May 4 —(UP) — Hoosier counties faced fairs witlv oat carnivals today as a result dr Governor Sclyricker’s refusal to rela* bib anti-gambling ban. 6 Ralph Morse pt LaPorte, president of the state association of district and county fairs, told the governor cdrnivals would not appear at county fairs unless they could meet expenses by operating games of chance. But Schricker refused to budge bn the gambling ban and replied the law would not be laid aside for "any particular group or purpose.” He said his stand would not affect the Indiana state fair and hop ed county fair officials would operate fairs without gambling. “This office could never give consent for violations of Indiana laws,” Schricker said. \ However, the \governor said Morse did not ask him to relax the gambling ban. He Morse as saying local fair officials “are troubled—having difficulty with carnival finances.” \ ‘ "Maybe I beat him to the draw.” the governor said. “I merely told him my position. This office pannot compromise with any Ihw violation or indicate to anybody they can violate the'law—no matter whal the purpose.” whether a reservist is a World War II veteran. Reserve officers will be kept for a minimum of 21 months. Release program for officers will not start before April, 1953. Air Force—Airmen ordered "to extend aetiye duty from the volunteer reserve will be able to choose relief from active duty after 12 months, while reserve officers ordered to active duty from volunteer reserves since June 26 may be required to serve a minimum of 21 months. •* ’ • 1 1 Air national guard and organised reserve airmen ordered to active military service may obtain release after 21 months active service or after termination .of their enlistments plus one year extension required by law, whichever is earlier. z The first Prize ,fbr literature won in lhe U.S. was awarded to Sinclair Lewis in \ t

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DDCATUB, INDIANA

Lutherans Purchase Summer Camp Site The Lutheran Camp Association, Idc., hag | purchased a 50acre lake front camp site at Wolf Lake, 48 miles northwest! of Decatur, ./for a\ children’s recreation cottier. The new camp, to be called Luthprhavep, is situated between U.S. highway 33 and state road 9, just west of Wolf Lake; \i Edwin Knake of Fort' Wayne is president of the Lutheran organization. Herman Krueckeherg, cash ler of the First State’Bank, is a representative of the .Walther League, one of the groups associated in the purchase of camping site and ijs development. The camp will have a hpbby shop and dining porch; a ball diamond, a Warded, a wildlife sanctuary, serv. ice amphitheater and modern cabins, in 'addition to full recrea tion and swimming facilities for c.hldren who will attend camp. ' | Health Council In Meeting Thursday The Adams county health coun-j cil met Thursday evening in Decatur on call of its secretary, county health nurse. Miss Jean Shockley. Malcojn Mason and George W. Nuffet, extension health specialists of Purdue, told of the progress of health activities in ether counties Os the state. They reported that five counties are, planning rabies eradication'/ campaigns similar to the one carried on by the local group. ! Dr. Harold Zwick. county health officer, stated that/he appreciated lhe fine manner in which the educational campaign\ on rabies eradication had beep carried out. He further stated that his office would like help in learning the answers to other health/problems,, such as the trhe- status of sanitating in the ; county; the status of vaccination and immunization. It was decided to invite it!i a small group of representatives of rural organizations to help plan a survey that would give a true picture of these situations. This meeting will be held June 12 < GEN. RIDGWAY (CwrtUwH From PW O—> ‘ ■ ground. Previously patrols have fanned out during the day and returned to the UN’lines at night. Allied tank and infantry ftfrols also fanned out ( fcoin Seoul during the day. Those going north land, nori encountered only light; But , forces striking northwest, on the road to Munsan and Pyongyang, ran into heavier opposition. The tank force driving north entered Uijongbu. 11 miles north of Seoul, ..-for the third Consecutive day. Those striking’toward Munsan ran into a regiment of Reds and several fights broke out. • Front reports said, however, the Reds still were massed in sizeable, foyce in areas from which they could easily move ihto attack positions overnight. \ Rain turned, the Korean roads into mud and grounded most of the United Nations air offensive. But haval headquarters in Tokyo \ disclosed that five aircraft carriers have been throwm back into the Korean fighting for the first time since the Hungnam evacuation last December. The codfish tanks with the Maine summer tourist in its appetite for lobster, notes the Natjonal\ Geographic Society. The cod doesn’t balk even at the hard shell of an eight-inch lobster.

SCRIPTURE: n Samuel #—S; 1 Chron|CDEVOTIONAL READING: Psalm *•: 20 29. ■ - ■ ■ What Is Greatness? Lesson for May I, 1951 «rHAT is a great man? Some W msn have been called great who were not »o; they were only prominent. Hitler, tor example, was Certainly prominent enough; but he was | v-'’ ' not great. Men can I truly be called! gr ea t for various I good reasons. Some ■ may be artists, H . . Sorrie may be sol- I' diers, others statesthen or prophets. | ’ \ Once In a while a • r , remaß man is bom who is great in more ways than one. David the Ideal King (g»UCH a man was David, King of Israel and one of the world’s, most famous men- The United Kingdom of Israel had a short history, only three kiqgs reigning over it—Saul, David and Solomon. Os the three, David was by all odds the greatest man and greatest king. Neither Seal war Solomon was ' capable of bolding for a lifetime to a high ideal. Neither was ' . capable of whole-hearted devotion to God. Neither one could gain and hold the loyalty of the nation. : > It was only David who could do these things. It is no accident that |ofevcr after, when a Hebrew thought of the ideal king, he would think neither of Israel’s first king nor of the wealthiest, but of David the best and most peldved. ’ • * Military Genina, IXAVID was great, in part because of his power-in battle. What no one since Joshua had been able to do. David did: he welded the quar- . reding, jealous, weak tribes of’lsrael into a ’single sword.” The tiines called for military genius, and David had It He gave Israel the military might that was essential for their peace and prosperity., \ I 1 1 ? So, often since David’s time, there have been great r who have used their military genius not for conquest in itself but tB order to win some place in the son tor peace- \ loving nations. One thinks of Charles Martel, who: saved Ewrepe from barbarian cenqsest; of William of Orange who set the Dutch free from Spanish t tyranny; of Washington, ”fae tber” of a great nation; and of many others. . , The great soldiers of history have been more than professionally skilled and successful killers of men; they have been like David, men whose skill .was used to preserve nations, not to destroy them. . v ;, T Lovable Leadership TN OUR times Hitler brought the * word “Leader” under a shadow, because his > leadership was in the wrong direction. But there is such a- thing as noble and wise leader- ' ship, and David had this quality in a high degree, It is true, success has something to do with It. Men will flock to a winner who would have nothing to do with him If he were a loser. But still it is a fact that most of the world’s great leaders who have come up from obscurity, as David did, have arisen at the head of groups of devoted men who have followed them loyally through • the darkest times. So it was with David. During his years as leader of the “underground” (laterally so, since for some lime his beadquarters were in a great limestone cave), he developed the hard of the army he commanded at a later time, a core of Inen who would rather lose with £)Svid than win against him. Loader in Faith DAVID had yet another quality of greatness, and for this he Is perhaps best remembered. He was pAnan of deep religion. But religion for him was riot merely a personal matter; he carried his faith into public life, be made his faith contagious. He did * his best to make faith in God central, as it had never been, in the life of his Ration. i . Religion for him was not a stick with which to beat other people about the head, but a rod and staff to lean upon. If was not a secret locked hi his own heart but something he desired to share with all his people. It was not a device to ( keep his subjects contented; H Was an acid test for his ow« < . life. i - And though be sometimes slipped ! ami terribly fell, he could always rise again, for bis religion gave him that rarest of all qualities in great men: humility before God land man. (Copyright INI by tke IMrtaion M fe'n.iaßrS’ii&'rtrs.'Sss i, Mats* •« geteuM by i Feature*. > i A ffl

• 1 —< Rural Churches Rivarre Circuit >' V U. B- Church L. A. Mlddaugh, Pastor* Mt. Sion , 9:30 a. m. Sunday school--10:30 a. m. Class meeting. 7:00 a. m- Christian Endeavor. 7:30 p. m. Wednesday, prayer meeting. /' Pleasant Grove 9:30 a. m. Sunday school 10:30 a. m. Preaching service. 7:00 p. m Christian Endeavor. ' 7:30 p. m. Wednesday, prayer meeting. | ‘ ML Victory y 1 a. m- Sunday school. ' 10:30 a. m. Class meeting. 7:00 p. m. Christian Endeavor. 8:00 p. m. Preaching service. 8:00 p- m. Wednesday, prayer meeting. * Monroe Methodist V'/ i W. L. Hall, minister 9:30, Morning worship. • Baptismal service. 10:30, Sunday School. 6:45, iMYF. v 7:30, The evening service. Wed. 7:80, Mid-week Servicelyed. 8:15, Choir practice. /District Conference May 8 at the St. Pau! Church in Forfc Wayne. ——i St. luke Evangelical A Reformed Honduras ? H- H. Meckstroth, paster 9 a, m. Worship service. 10 a. m. Sunday school. Cralgvilie C. V. B. Circuit J. H. Nall, Pastor /1, Cralgvilie Sunday school 9:30 a- m. The singing Brands will begin a’ revival tervice at 7:30 p. m. Tocsin : Preaching serviced:3o a. m. Sunday school lt:3oj a- m. u Lancaster < f Sunday school 9:30 a. m. Preaching slirvice 10:30 a. m. A welcome awaits you. Calvary E. U. B. Albert N. castor , Special ihissionary services Sunday evening. Rtev. Funuo Koike, a pastor of the Japanese church in Kobe, Japan, will be the speaker. Rev. Koike is a senior at Bonebrake Seminary, Dayton, J Ohio, where he is completing his theological training. In addition to his dirties as a pastor when he is at honaje, he is also a professor In the Quahsei Gakuin, a Christian conege ’near his home We are privileged to hear him tell of the hope of Japan. The service will begin at p. m- (CDST). -I Sunday School 9:30 ja. m. with the Superintendent, Dale Beer, in charge. The lesson will be, “The Glory of David's Kiiigdqm.” Prayer meeting ,10:30 a. m with

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the class leader, James Darr, leadlYonth Fellowship 6:30 p. m. when Joan Swygart -will lead t'ae group in consideration of the topic. I “What Is a Christian Vocation?” Pleasant Mills Baptist Church Lowell B. Noll, Supt 9:30 a.m. Sunday school. 10:30 a.m. Worship service. Ser mon by Rev. Schrock. “Let us come into his courts with gladness,” ■ *1 /■ I ‘ * St Paul and Winchester U.B. Circuit Dale Osborn, pastor Winchester: I 9:30 Worship and sermon. 10:30 Sunday school. A I Thur. 7:30, prayer meeting. St. Paul: L 9:15 Sunday school. 7 p.m, Christian Endeavor. 7:30 Sermon. i Union Chapel Evangelical United Brethren Church Lawrence T Norris, Pastor , 9:30 Sunday School Wendell Miller Supt. Warren NidHnger, Ass’t10:20 Worship Service Evening Service 6:45 Junior C. E- Shirley Workinger. Pres. 6:45 Adult C. E. Earl Chase, Pres. 6:45 Youth Fellowship, Veda Williamson, Pres. 7:30 Worship Service Wednesday Evening 8:00 Prayer Meeting each Wednesday evening. “Omer Merriman, leader.” Vacation Bible School Our Vacation Bible School will begin on the the 28th of May. We invite all who wish io attend to contact the Pastor. Phone, 32081. You do not have tp be a member of this church to attend, if you have no transportation, we will - call for you. 1 u THE METHODIST CHURCH R. W.\Parsley, minister Salem \ Regular preaching service at 9:30 fast time. We will observe Rural Life Sunday as a special feature. Sunday school at 10:30. The youth work is being given special attention and will sponsor the choir and MVF and all young people of the chureh and community are invited to take part. Pleasant Mills Sunday school at 9:30. The Daily Vacation Bible School is being planned for and a call meeting of the workers Is to be held at the close of the Sunday school hour. Also a meeting -of the Sunday school boar£ of education. The worship service is at 8:00 p.m. we will also observe Rural Life Sunday. Since the community in which Salem and Pleasant Mills

FRIDAY, MAY < 1951 ’

are located is largely rural we think that the churches through this area have a grand opportunity to do a great job as Jhey minister rto the needs of farmers. But if we accomplish great thingd we must ail catch the vision of ibe opportunity So come to the services and work wlth;a willing beart. Dan Freeby Enlists In Examination Group Dan Freeby, student at Butler University and son of Nr. and Mrs. Robert Freeby of this city, has enlisted in the 406th induction examination reserve as a laboratory technician; according to word received here. [ Freeby, who is enrolled in the Lpharmacy school al Butler, will continue his studies until he is graduated and then will: enter active service The induction group has charge of examining men enlisting in the service- ij. j Hard lease Clearfield, Utah—(UP)-—Robert Aflen, 39-year-old truck driver, nearly lost his life when his vehicle was in a . collision. He escapeu with minor bruises. But he stil, complained to police about the loss of bis wallet, which contained SSO In caslj. - HAM SUPPERlTFriedheim School Sunday, May 6/ 5 to 7 p. m. Tickets at door. Adults Children 50c. New John Deere EQUIPMENT Available A & B Tractor, 2 A 3 Bottom Plows. J , J B A Standard K B A HeavyDuty “Disk. -• Kilirfer extra heavy disk. J C C Field Cultivator., , 2 & 3 Section Spring Tooth Harrows. - 2 4 3 Section Spike Tooth? - Harrows. ’ J Lime Spreader, Cultivators. Field Harvester with att. ) Baler and Elevators I Briller's Mule hers and Packers j 1948 John Deere B Tractor, ? extra good. : i - L I- USED EQUIPMENT — f 1948 John Deere B Tractor, extra good. 1944 John Deere A Tractor, good 1947 Case S standard tractor. 1947 Moline R tractor with ’• • cultivators. Moline heavy disk, like new. McDeering heavy 9 ft. disk. 1 Several other disks. Plows, Mulchers, Packers. Spring Tooth Harrow. ' STEFFEN IMPLEMENT COxMPANY ! Phone 3-3813. / ——»