Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 129, Decatur, Adams County, 1 June 1951 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

High Court Orders Judge Grant Venue Determine School Fund Distribution V IftdfanapoHa, June I.—(UP)— Marion' cpunty superior jhdge L. Ntblack had to Jun is 9 toss rday ordered Niblick to grant a <harige of venue id a salt tof determine hoM' state funds should be ' ■ I di MS

(fancied SEED POTITOB ■ r W~ z fai ; R> py s WEST Side Market U. S. 27 1 i. . O.

F SALE CALENDAR JUNE JJ— Mt' and Mrs. Joe Mumby, 1% miles West of .Bryant, Ind. and F lU, miles North, Farm Machinery and Equipment, Household Goods and Some Antiques. Midwest Realty Auction Co. J, IF. Sanmann—Auctioneer. HU J' 1 L jt’Nfc B—Rqbert (Abe) Stuckey. Vera Cruz. Ind. Household goods. 7:[?0 P. M. Eltienberger Brog., Aucts? JUNE 11 —"100 t*. XL Chalmer Deßblt, Agent. Heirs Mary Jane Deßolt, Diertes street, Decatur. One story- house, garage and 50X120- lot. oy, Ned Johnson and Melvin Liechty, aiicts. JUNE 14—1100 P. M. Mr*.. Allabelle Jones> 5 soiithwest of Willshire, 9 miles northeast of Eierne, 14 miles southeast of Def cajur.. 1 mH»m<A»th and 1% mile east’df Salem. 114*4 Acte , \ Improved Farm' Roy. Ned Johnson and Liechty, auct JUNE 20 —6100 P. M. Richard L. Bogner, Atfmr, Julia Shady, Preble, ’» Indiana. House, land and personal property. Roy Johnson, A ’ Auct Severin Schurger, attorney. | f i Public Auction EVENING SALE I > REAL ESTATE EVENING SALE \ J -■/?:, f | h , ; v, r The undersigned, agent for the Heirs of Mary Jane Deßolt, will sell the- following described Real Estate at Public Auctiorf, located at 909 DIERKIbs STREET, Decatur, Indiana, on \ > MONDAY, JURE 11,1951 . EVENING SALE at 7:00 P. M. EVENING SALE — DESCRIPTION — A very well improved one story House newly sided with Asphalt — siding. New Root Insulated. Front Porch vtith concrete floor. Good Frame Garage. Garden space. Nice Los 50 x 120 feet. 2 Bedrooms. Enclosed back porch. Property in a good state of repair. INSPECTION & POSSESSION—PIease call the Auctioneers, Phone “ 3-3606, or 3-2796 if' you wish to inspect the property. Possession upon full settlement of purchase price. TERMS—One Fourth Cash Down, Balance Cash on Delivery of Deed and Merchantable Abstract. : Lb -jr j CHALMER DEBOLT AGENT, HEIRS MARY JANE DEBOLT Roy S. Johnson & Son f ' Meivjn Liechty — Auctioneers . s .' John DeVoss— Attorney - 15 8 - \ — ■ rH Chickens ; "V ■ ■ B . I , i 111. 59c —M-—————| ; 1 * UABAtt Whole,, cured and smoked jt£ & ; I HAItIO 12 ■ U Ib.ave. tt>. I I i SLICED BACON ... lb, 59jC& 49c ! • ——'— — - Jh f ■ 1 tt"’ ; I • SLICING BOLOGNA fb. 35c, 49c i [ ' e ' —.... Ml < I ; SKINLt SS WEINERS ... lb. 49©& 55© ! ' nt .. 11 i i jr i<i i j .T. ih» 31; v/.‘ rrj . p j: • m |/\|s ■ ■ i J Sdieiman Bros. Market < ; See us before yoa sell your livestock. i I; c-- , PHONE 3-2992 H ] •—

ll■ „l II ■■ li II I II HI I ■ ■ l» - distributed to school eprpdfiticrfis. The Indiana supreme cottft yesterday ordered Niblick to Want a dfiiri'getof venu'4 6y that of show cause why he should not. t The suit was brought by Gary school officials against Wilbur Young, state superintendent of public instruction, and other state officials. They sought Use of a new formula enacted by the, 1951 1 state legislature in distributing about 158,00*0,000 in state funds 1 in August, instead of the 1949 ’ formula Yotlng favors. > Young, who late yesterday cert!- * fled that the August distribution be made undOr the 1949 formula, engaged attorney Leo Krtfier as bis personal: attorney id the controversy. Kriner asked the change of venue and' said Niblack overruled the application fori a change of venue on grounds that Youfig could not be represented by anyone except the attorney general’s office. J?;,.Kriner said Young certified that the 1949 formula be used to state auditor T. Mfllis to comjply with a July 1 deadline. _j 4_i \ * I ; 25-Year Sentence For Market Robbery Indianapolii, June 1. — (UP) — Wilbur Daugherty, M began a 25year sentence in a federal prison today for robbing a market where a postal substation was located. He was sentenced by federal judge William E. Steckler. Police said Daugherty had “put the finger” bk many criminals, including Robert O. Brown? 37, and Frank Badgßiy, 50, who were executed for the 1947 slaying of a Hammond policeman. t \ . - Indianapolis City police inspector Jack said Daugherty also furnished the tip which led to the indictment of four meh in the five-year old robbery-murder of Abraham Azan,. ; Indianapolis shoe cobbler. 6 Since 1860. Norway: has had compulsory education j for all children to the age of l4. >J,I y. . . .■ -

\ SPEAKS f l •• ~■ a 5 I ' " ■ "'jjl 1 wWI V— 11 ■ I J Sund»y tyg»___JKaai J SCRIPTURE: »W* 1; «-8j N«h»ml«h DEVOTIONAL HEADING: Psalm i. 1J »-

1 f a tn • Out of Ruins 3 ' ~ Lewsn /er 1, Ml ! 9 I- * ■

H GERMAN who came through 8 A world War II recently said: ? "At present there i» no country in ’ the world where a man can live ’ more like a man than in Germany.

This is because yest terday has been re- ) duced to ruins and i rubbish .. ..We can thank God that he has blessed us with ruins more than he has othefs." This rhay sound shocking, but it sounds not unlike ■ the Bible. There • were Jews in an-

i cient times who lived to thank God ) for tbb ruins of Jerusalem. • • ♦ . . I At Last They Believed IF you had asked a resident of that city, at the hour when the enemy armv was burning his beloved , home, if God’s hand was in the . catastrophe, most likely he would have said, "No, not by any mteans. This is Nebuchadnezzar’s work, or the devil’s—certainly not God’s.** Consider what good came out ' of it. Per one thing, it taught the Jews that God is really a God of justice, after aH. The nation that sinneth, It shall die; the nation that takes the sword shall perish by the sword. The prophets had been trying to tell them that for many a long year; but no attention had been paid. The sins the prophets had said God would surely punish, went on and, on, and there seemed to be no reckoning and no punishment. The little nation was deluded into thinking it could get by with anything for as long as they pleased. But after the crash of 586 8.C., they all knew the prophets had been telling the truth. * */ Yesterday Is Dead r>R another thing, the egfle cured the Jews, for a tengj time,, of trying to be a political ration like other nations. God had cabled them to another, kind of existence. So long as they had been an independent nation they had kept fooling around with politics, armies, international intrigue. After all that had been ’ swept into Nebuchadnezzar’s dustbin, the people’s hearts turned pore and more to God and his laws, a Another way In which that city-wide ruin was a blessing was that it "killed yesterday.** Before the fatal \ year 588, the Hebrew kings and people Had more or less looked backward. Every king wanted to be a great ! conqueror like David, a wealthy . potentate like Solomon. But they , I never would look the cold fact tn the face, that those days were gone forever. \ y But when the exiles came back to rebuild the ruins, the younger ones at least looked'forward. Yesterday was dead; they built now for tomorrow. i ' • • • Blessed With Rains RUINS can be a blessing in more ways than one. So Chicago and San Francisco and Baltimore,were better cities after their big fires; Louisville improved after its great flood; the South” of today is blessed as the Old South, for all Its glamor, could not have been. ’ Sometimes a man who has been depending on anything but God for hope and happiness— / on his money, on his friends, on his health, on his r >sition—finds these things swept out j ’’’•on under him, and then at i last comes back to God. [ After a man’s childhood faith has i been shattered bjl manhood’s dis- [ ilhisionments. it has often come to i pass that out of the ruins of the J childish beliefs he rears a tower of faith far itrbnger than anything he has Idst. Let’s Not Make Ruins rilS doet not mean, of course, that we ought ever to go out and deliberately make ruins. The best way to ifnprove other ndtibns is not to drop bombs on them; the best way to be improved ourselves is not to act in such ways as to tempt other nations to drop bombs on us. The best way to build a better faith Is not to scrap all the faith We hive. The best way to find God is uot to go out and find him In a fox-hole. The blessings of ruins are net the best God has; but sometimes they are what it takes to bring a man to , \ his senses. \ And if the crash does come, and | the towers fail, and life lies in rubble around us, we must remember what the Hebrews learned: that even in the ruins we may, better than ever, come to know the living God. (C»vrrt(ht ivsi by Olviaten .«f Christian gdnentlon, National Connell

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

__ ijn ! - - ~i' , ;z''v Rtfral Churches ° t-i. : Arrtlocb t United Missionary Church OH'e Keeps, aapL / L. W. Null, pastor Sunday school, 9:00 a.m. Morning worship 10:00 a.m. Rev. W.E. Marges. We will have a '‘flaby Dedication” and Communion in the• morning worship service, after xjbich a short business meeting will be conducted. There will be no Sunday evening service or prayer meeting this week on account of the revival at Mohroe Tabernacle. \ ’ , Everyone; js welcome to all our services. \ ■ Calvary E.U.B. Church Albert N. Straley, pastor Sunday school a.in. (CDSTJ The lesson will be “Rebuilding A Devastated Homeland.” under the dirtciton of Dale Beer, superinteh dent. ' Prayer meeting lb:30 a.m. with the Class leader James Darr* irij charge. $ - Evening service 7:30 pin. with tLe pastdr pleaching on the theme, “Jesuls, Who Makes All Things New,’’ based on parable. Bible school begins June 18. Craigvllle E. U. B. Circuit J. H. Nall, pastor v Lancaster Sunday school 10:30 a. m. L Preaching service 9:30 a. in. I Tocsin Sunday school 9:30 am. Craigvllle Sunday school 9:30 a. <n. Preaching service a. nJ. Salem Methodist Church\ Austin Merriman, Supt. Austin Mdrrican* Supt. Chas Burkhart, AsS’t 1 '• Worship Aervice 9:30 a. m. Sunday School 10:30 a. m. This Is lh|e first Sunday for our new minister. Rev. Harley Shady Let’s all get to church the fi?st Sunday of the Conference year and give him a good welcome. , Riyarre U. B. Church, L. A. Middaugh, Pastor Mt. Zion * 9:30 a. m Sunday school. 10:31) a. mj Class meeting. 7:30 p. m Christian Endeavor. ■ 7:30 p. m. Wednesday, prayer meeting. Vacation Lible School. Monday, lune 3rd at !i :00 a. m. ’ - Pleasant Grove 9:30 a. nE Sunday school. 10:30 a. m. Preaching service. T.po p. ih. Christian Endeavpr. 7:00 p. nij. Wednesday, prayer meeting. ' \ hjlt. Victory / 9:30 a. in', Sunday school.' i ■

Dr. Foreman

jo J&‘ m HYS > . .' mileage on regular gas. And just 4 of oi ' u crankcase * BI<W! ItWbwl b 1 1 ? ISr I s * s to ast i / I cost Willys service will keep it Bl ‘ .-i". performing its best and saving I I OU money ever ? m * ,c * ' Drive in today for a Road-Test of the WILLYS Station Wagtd ■ The Willys Station Wagon is , twO car< 1° one — a smooth, and Appraisal of your old car—without obligation! - f j r comfortable passenger car and, , ■ • ! i- i with seats removed, a cargo G ;i\ • carrier for loads up to a half-ton. Willys oS Decatur Corner First & Monroe - i.l■ * — ! -

! 10:30 a. s'. Class meeting. 7:00 p m. Christian Endeavor. 8:30 p. m. Wednesday, prajer ; \ meeting. , St. Paul and Winchester U. B. Circuit Dale Osborn, pastor Winchester Sunday School 9:30. ’ Preaching 10:30. Bible school will start next Mou- > day afUrnoon. \ ! i St. Paul Sunday School 9:15. > - » Bible School demonstration 7:30. : Prayer meeting, Wed. 7:30. ii’ . ■ ■' ~r ; Church Os God Herman. Hammond, of 927 North Fifth street, will be the guest speaker at the Chbrch of God, two blocks northwest of thej hospital, at the Sunday evening service at 7:3rt. He is a son of Mr. and v Mrs. Walter Hammond of this city.. He 1 will speak on “The gospel as the poiver of God unto salvation, to all ■ who believe.” " “You can be saved from sins, and receive a real experience of * salvat ion, and then there Is 3 second definite experience, of being sanctified holy, and receiving power from God to l|ve without sinning etery day.” . | • The public is invited to all servr< 7 ed| Preble Circuit Methodist F. H, Kise, pastor if f Beulah Chanel ; ; Worship service 9:30 a.un. Sunday school 10:30 a.m. Eugene Sommer, «!# Mt. Pleasant Sunday school 9:30 a.m, ' Worship service 10’30 aka. Leo King, Sr., Supt. . ■ ‘ St. Luke Reformed, Honduras H. H. Meckstroth, minister 9 Worship service, \ 10 Sunday school. 7:30 Children’s Day program. Monroe Methodist iW. L. Hall,, minister Morning worship. ' lOcip, Sunday school. •- 6:45, VMethodist Youth Fellowship. \ 7:30, The evenin gservice. Wed. at 7:30, Mid-week service. Wed. at 8:15. Choir practice. I' , Sunday morning June 10 we will have as our guest preacher «. the Rev. Laverne Steiner who Is a brother of our own Martin Steiner. Daily Vacation Bible school tach morning at 8:30, closing at 11. | \ - ' Union Chapel Evangelical United Brethren Lawrence T. Nbrris, pastor 9:30 Sunday school, Wendell Miller, Supt., Wafren Nidliriger, Ass’t. \ - 10:20 Worship service with com-

iftunion and baptismal servfee. Evening service 8:45 Junior CjE., Shirley Work<nger, Pres. 6:45 Adult C.E., Earl Chase, Free. v "6:45 Youth Fellowship, Veda Williamson, Pres. 8 Worship service. Quarterly coiiferenee business following. Sunday mornihg is cash day; one thousand dollars is the goal to • complete the new parking lot. Our Vacation Bible school is progressing nicely with 65 in attendance. , Pleasant Mills Baptist Lowell B. Noll Supt i a 9:30 a. m. Sunday School. 10:30 a. m. Worship service, add- , ress by Robert Schrock. CHURCH HEWS First Christian The’-following children will take part in children’s day exercises at t First Christian, church Sunday: Gail Hammond, Judy Rhodes, Nancy Ismifh, John Inniger, Judy Worthihan. Sbzie Worthman. Deborah Smith, Jimmy Berkey, Junior Fifer, Gail Musser, Robert Anderson, Jean Heller, Stephen Burnett,* Diane Rhodes,. Keith Stucky, Dewayne Fifer, Janalee Heller, Allen Scheidereri Jerry Miller, Wayne Lehman, James Anderson, Madge Scheiderer, Glenda Scheiderer,\ Tony Rupert, Mike Worthman. Strickler. Stephen Zimmerman. Sandra Strickler,'Donna Jean Mjller, Daniel Wooley, and Suzie strlcklen Announce Increases In Newsprint Price Toronto, Ont., June 1 —(UP) — A |1« a tori increase in lhe price of newsprint was announced today by Abitibi power and paper co. LTD. Thfc jump brought the basic price of newsprint to sll6 a ton at New York. \ An Abitihi statement said steadily increasing labor arid pulpwood costs caused the boost, effective July 1. Other Canadian newsprint companies were expected to increase prices. .. \ LIE CALLS I (Coßtlaurd From Page Oae) democratic government freely .dhosI en by the Korean people.” This objective, Lie said, dates from 1947. 3. “Restoration with UN help of a land as terribly ravaged by war as any in modern history.” In lhe 1860’ri steel collars were I high style for men and women. , They were enameled, white an-1 could Ibe cleaned with a damp • cloth-

I ■■HU. I "*« Report Kiig George Is Confined To Bed Lung Inflammation Developed By King London, June I.—(l'F)—King George VI, whd has suffered tor several years from sn incurable rrteia! blood ailment, has developed a lung inflammation and s confined to his bedVoom it Buckingham Palace, It was announced today. The 55-year-oid I monarch has been in bed for a week with influenza. His doctor* have > called on him twice a day. It is known tHat any illness of the king, particularly with a temperature, causes concern to them because of his blood ailmCnt. The king suffers frolm Buerger’s disease, a condition wiych causes a congealing of. the blood in the arteries. It became so serious in 1948 that amputation of «; leg was Reared. •\' gt He was not considered in serious danger at presettt. A medical bulletin signed by four doctors said 'he is suffering from a catarrhal lung inflammation. It was the first formal statement made by Buckingham Palace since the king became HL- |. -- is i• ' i If You Have Anything To Sell Try A Democrat Want Ad —lt Pay*.

Did You See It, Too? I 1 11 What? i-A I I That New Brickrete Home f L at 416 N. 10th Street ( \ \ The Masonry Ohly Cost 1 ■ MJ- $ for the complete home. \ Yeo, that** right folks, this nice 26’ x 32’ horpe. with 8-lnch f w*lls, made of Brickrete by Cottjsr Bros., cost the owner 1 just slightly over $385.00 for all masonry units. O f Drop ih today for a free We carry a complete 1 line of hame plan books. f We Handle ) Birch or Gum Fltish Doors j \ W ’ J Glass Snd Plywood in Quantities g Insulation .It HARTFORD OVERHEAD DOORS J —the latest word and jthe least cost a .In overhead garage doors. J IF YOU WANT QUALITY—CALL: < COLTER BROS. J i Millwork as time allows j ■ Screens, Storm Windows, etc. 1

FRIDAY, JUNE 1, l&l ,

Decatur Attorney i Is Special Judge AUorney Hubert R, McClenahan set Wednesday, June 13, tor suomisiion of further evidence anl argi ment of counsel in the contern: it of court charge against Jasper Cttaptnan. McClenahan was appointed to hear the case by Judiie Homer Byrd of the Wells circ lit court. i ' ' .

• ! U A - I ' ....is for the ■ REGULAR customers I who are our best ad- H vertising. If you want ■ regular meals, any ■ one o* otfr large selection of sandwiches or jiist an ice creafti cone, stop in. ■ I The Pioneer 142 So. Second St.,