Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 176, Decatur, Adams County, 27 July 1951 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
SKT” ~ f ”] " 3 h* 111 i' ■ryß t * ■/» ■ TBR 1 <-« &&£■ r 4A B«t\ BASKETBALL BRIBE investigators who revealed the involvement oi Bradley Tech stars with fixing of games are shown conferring is Peoria, 111. Front row (from left), Detective James Cashman, |NeM York; LL James Oakley, Chicago; Vincent O’Connor, New York assistant district attorney. Back row: Detective John Doyle, Chicago; James B. White, New York district attorney’s investigator;. Michae. Shore, Peoria county state’s attorney; Detective James Canavan,, New Vork district attorney’s office. I International Soundn^ot^. TRADE IN DECATUR SALE CALENDAR ) ’ JULY 28 —Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Duncan, corner Butcherjhnd Washington Sts., Geneva. Ind. Household goods. 1 P. M. Jeff Auct. I v ■ 'I .ILLY 28—7 P. M„ Koine City, Ind. Case Business and two story Building. Ardeth Ream, ownerj. J. F. Sannianq, Auct.} » JULY 3 miles South of Lagrange, Ind. J. Ej Sanmann, Audi AUG.’l—Sherman Paxson. 4 ini. N. of Bluffton tin Road 1, then? !% ini. E. LivestiM k sale. 7:30 P. M. Ellenberger Bros., iucts. A4’G. 3—.Ah’. & Mrs. Clifford Coil, corner Main & Oak Sts,. Wrdu, O. 5 room house. 7 P. M. Kent Realty & Auction CO., b. S. ’ “ Blair. C. W. Kent. Aucts. s AUG. 1 G::;o p. M. Six room modern home and three lots in Claypool, Ind. Benlah Luwinani bwner. J.’ F. Sanmann, Auct. j sonul property, 3 miles North, of Silver iuake oh highway 15. Arthur Hurley, -ojvner. J. F. Samuann, Auct. I \ j\ Al G. io-- llarvcji L. Steffen, <l .mi. W. of .Decatur on 224, then 4 lii. S. <S regrrtyred Hampshire bogs. 7 P. ( M. Ellenberger Bros., AUCtS. . . r |
Good \ews_ i '" <r '' F/> *" : ■ I I on ■ Z?b' Polio! ? ■ b ‘ 1 ~ I r. w z f / JBr ' ; /_. wWw'a 'r£ 1m Hi i <X \ 'RoZ UH J. <ss> | TV RING the fifteen years ending in 1949, polio epi- | 1' demies in the United States caused an average of I eight deaths in every hundred cases. * In the last two years, the death rate has been cut in half! Today,- in Collier’s, yoiFll learn some of the reasons why. You’ll learn of such miraculous developments as 3 v i the “pocking bed,” which helps the victim to breathe. And of revolutionary new bone surgery to lessen deformities. ’ V’ • I L'_ I . ! Most important, you’ll find in this timely article the J latest, pp-to-the-minute information on the origin of this midsummer nightmare, and how to] protect your | children from it. Don’t miss POLIO IS LOSING ITS P U NCI I, by John Lear... in Collier’s, on newsstands now. ANOTHER “KOREA”? asks Lilienthal f ,** r India and Pakistan are poised for a war £ involving 360 million people — one-sixth | ,N 9 A f *4 *h p wor^’B population, For the U. S., £ I 1 -* ■ that could mean a crisis far worse than * ‘ I|V Korea. What can We do to avert such a 5 .1 \ JVIa conflict? Be sure Io read this authorita- \ \ lfr.\ tiV® Report by Davi lE, Lilienthal, former AEC chairman, and on-the-scene observer °f Asiatic affairs. A Also—the final installment of the / Jimmy Durante story, and a glitter- I ing array of fiction and features. [ v H CollieriijL&J
B«n Gerke Pasture Is Tops In County Is First In Green Pasture Contest Benjamin Gerke’s pasture j was placed first in the Adams county green pasture contest. Th? county contest judges were Ward Stu-' dor. field supervisor for S.C.ff., and Wayne Ruthgeb, assistant county agent of Jay county. The judges placed lvan\ Huser, Hartford township, second; Liechty and AsChleman, Wabash township, third; Edison Lehman, Monroe township, fourth, and Eugene Caffee, Jefferson township, fifth. There were a total of 37 pastures entered in the tpwnship contest. These were judged under the direction of the vocational agricultural departments. The first placing pastures in the township congests were then compared on the county basis. Studor and Rothgeb both said they had seen some remarkable pastures. They further stated they believed livestock farmers could have high yielding, nutritious pasby simply following the program laid down by those who topped the pasture The tirst step fa building good pastures is testing the soil for\lts lime content. If the lime content is low, enough should be added to make .it right. Mixed seeding 'of grasses and legumes tan then be made in either oats, wheat, or rye,, applying not less than 400 pounds of, mixed fertilizer per acre. Needless to say, the legumes should be inoculated. The best pastures were top dressed with manure and mineral fertilizer, usually in the fall, using 300 pounds of fertilizer or more per acre. \ . It was noticed too, that in all cases the successful contestants had their, pasture divided igto two or more paddocks for rotation grazing. J. W.’s Fill Home Fort Worth, Tex. (UP)- The mail problem at .the Joe W. Evahs home stands a good chance of becoming confused in a few years. There are five persons named J. W. Evans living at the place First, there’s father. Then there are) Jqseph William, 10; John Weldon, 7; Jerome 4; and James Wesley, 18 months. OHDI.VASCF Short Title: An Ordinance concerning Traffic in the City of Decatur, Indiana deaiKiiating certain preferential .streets, and providing penalties for the violation thereof. BE IT ORDAINED by they Oommon Council of the City of irecatur, Indiana, as follows: 1. That the following street and intersection in the City of Decatur, Indiana is hereby designated as through and/or preferential street and/of intersection: !Madison Street at the intersection of Madison and Twelfth Street in the City of Decatur, Indiana. \ 2. It is hereby declared unlawful and a violation of this ordinance for any person, firm, or corporation to oper ite or cause to be operated any vehicle into and upon said preferential street and/or intersection without first bringing said vehicle to a complete stop and to look both to the ieft and right before proceeding in or upon said preferential street and/or intersection. 3. it is hereby declared unlawful and a \ iolation of tluiAordinance for any person, firm, or corporation to directly or indirectly interfere with or interrupt the traffic in or upon said preferential street and/or ihtersectijn. < 4. Tilts' ordinance is supplemental' to an ordinance entitled, “An Ordinance to amend Section IX of An ordinance entitled “An Ordinance for the Regulation of Traffic within the City of Decatur, Indiana, and Providing Penalties,” Passed August 171 1926 and Recorded in Record No. I~|, Page 529.”, which was adopted on 21st day of February, by the Common Council of the City of Decatur,' Indiana. 5. Any person, firm, or corporation violating a portion.of this ordinance shall Upon conviction thereof be fined any sum not exceeding one hundred dollars ($100.00) to which may be added imprisonment, not tip exceed thirty (30) dlfys. <>. Tills ordinance shall be in ft(ll force and effect from and after its passage, approval .by the Mayor, and due publication. luily adopted by the Common Coirtieil of the City of Decatur, Indiana, this 17th day of July, 1951. Jopn M. Uuan • Presiding Officer ATTEST: H. Vernon Aiirand Clerk-Treasurer Approved by me this 17th day iotf July, 1951John M. Dunn Mayor ATTEST: 11. Vernon. Aiirand Clerk-Treasurer J. JI IA 20——27 ' // ' I stands for the ZEAL, the ambition toplease, ■ the energy to serve ■ you. Stop in for tasty ■ meals-, sandwiches, short orders, ice B cream, soft drinks, B’ magazinesr-S-u nd a y ® papers. Try our com- || plete. Jro s p i t a b 1 e service. 7 '\M The Pioneer H 142 So. Secorid St.
DBCATVR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DBCATUB, INDIANA /
feusas £ SCRIPTURE: lan k • 7:33: Romann W &£X£ ori, »» Wan * 85 1 DEVOTIONAL BEADING: Paalm 1. Think of Brother .'V ; ■ \ : r ' Lesson tor July 29, 1951 •pHE Christians in the city ot * Corinth were bothered about a number of things. One of them never bothers any-
Dr. Foreman
body any more, and yet, strange as it seems, it throws a light on some of the hottest problems a i Christian meets. The Corinthian problem was beefsteak. We have a problem -vith that | too,—that is, how
are we going to pay for it? That wasn't the Corinthian problem. This was away back in Jloman times. Every city had its temple where sacrifices were made to the gods. Sacrifices were of all kinds, from flowers to cattle. It was considered rather wasteful, after killing a big bull, to throw the carcass away; so after the ceremonies at the temple, the rose-garlands would be taken off the beast’s neck, and the animal would be hauled away to some butcher’s shop, where it would be cut up into roasts, steaks and what not, and sold over the counter just like any other meat Now some of the Christians began to worry over their meat supply. Suppose I buy a steak in the market (one would ask) and suppose that steak came from a bull or a cow that has been killed as [a sacrifice to one of these heathen gods? Won’t that make me guilty of idolatry? Your Conscience May be Clear, but— QO they wrote to the best man they knew, their old evangelist and pastdr, the man who had converted them to Christ and organized their church, the Apostle Paul. They asked him about this and other things; and what we call *’l Corinthians” is his answer. You might think this beefsteak problem trivial, but Paul never handled a trivial problem to a trivial way. He approached the problem in this way: Meat is only meat, he said; It certainly wasn't the bull's fault that he was part of a heathen ceremony. As for the butcher, he paid good money for the animal, in a perfectly respectable business transaction. Then where was the sin in eating such meat? j But wait a minute. Suppose you are dining put, and you happen to know where the meat came from, and everybody at the table knows, and somebody at the table isn’t very clear-headed, and when he sees you eating, the meat, thinks you must be approving of heathen sacrifices; then whai? Or perhaps, some one else is less enlightened than you; eating such.; meat Seems quite wrong to himj but when he sees yhu eating it, he may (just to be polite) follow suit, and yet his conscience, not being an educated conscience like yours, will hurt him all the sanie. So what you do quite freely and rightly, .causes another man to igo against his conscience. *’ * * ' I Think of Brother! WTOW, then, says: "If what I eat makes rpy brother\«all, I will never eat meat agiin, rather than make my brother fall." (American translation.) There you have ♦he Christian principle. J The important question is not, "Is it any harm?” but, "What effect is this going to have on other people?" ' We have seen that the basic Christian principle in all human relationships is the importance of personality. If an act, even a harmless and blameless act, hurts persons—makes them sin, makes them go against their dwn conscience, then the Christian’s rule is at once: Don’t. V: i _ The ' rightness or wrongness of a thing is not all in the thing itself: it comes from its effects on persons. Now apply this to some of our own problems df social living. Is drinking alcoholic liquor a Sin? Is the use of tobacco sinful? Is dancing wrong? (—to name a few:) Let us suppose, for the sake of the argument, that you gfe not harmed by such things yourself. Jt is a fact, hovzever, that some people are harmed by themJ Now suppose your act, which is quite harmless to you and done with a clear conscience, influences another and perhapp weaker person to indulge in something harmful to him? Then a Christian Vill say, as Paul said: If this thing makes my brother fall, I will never do it again. Which, after all, is more important to me’ my own freedom or my brother’s character? u \ iCopyrijbl 1»51 by the Dlylsiun e s CbriulUn Education, National Council of the Xhurehea of Christ in thoLsited sutes of Ameriea. Beloaaed by WXD
| Rural Churches | 9 s St. Paul and Winchester U. B. Circuit Dale Osborn, pastor . St. Paul: Worship and sermon 9:15. Sunday school 10:15. Prayer meeting, Wed. 7;30. Winchester: \ ]~ I , Sunday school 9:30. Class meeting 10:30. Sermon 7:30. Prayer meeting, Thur. 7:30. / Antioch I United Missionary Church L. W. Null, Pastor Ollie Kreps, Supt. Sunday school 9:30. Morning service 10:30. No Sunday evening service in fevor of the revival at Monroe Tabernacle. / i Miss Betty Best, returned missionary from Africa will speak in the morning service. You will really want to hear her message. \ • Prayer meeting Wed. Eve. Pleasant Mills Baptist Lowell B. Noll, 8. 8. Supt. 9:30 a. m. Sunday school. 10:30 a. m. Worship service. ' ■Sermon by Bro. Robert SchrockKeep yourselves in the love ot God. Jude 21. ar' ■' ' T \A . ' Monroe Methodist W. L. Hall, Minister Morning worship 9:30 a. m. \ Sunday school 10:30 a. m. Wednesday 7:30 p. m. Prayer meeting, conducted by Homer Winteregg. Cr«igville E. U. B. Circuit J. H. Hall, Pastor ’ Tocsin Preaching service 9:30 a. m. Sunday school 10:30 a. m. Craigvilie Sunday school 9; 30 a. m. Preaching service 10:30 a. m. Lancaster Sunday school 9:30 a. m. . ' ■ St. Luke Evan. & Reformed Church, Honduras H. H. Meckstroth, Minister ' 9:00 Worship service. 10:00 Sunday school. i Wed. 8:00 Girls’ Guild at the home of ..Beulah Jane Bertsch. \ Union Chapel Evangelical United Brethren Church \ Lawrence T. Norris, Pastor \ 9:30 Sunday schqol. Wendell Miller, Supt. Warren Nidlinger, Asst. 10.-go Worship service. - Evening 6:45 Junior CUE.; Shirley WorkIpger, Pres. 6:45 Adult C. E., Earl Chase, pres. 6:45 Youth Fellowship, Veda Williamsoi). Pres. -i Wednesday Evening 7: Oi) \ Prayer Meeting. Omer Merriman, leader. Fourth Quarterly Mating August sth will be our last quarterly meeting for the year. All reports must be in the hand of the pastor on that date as the conference bdoks wild close on the 15th. ■ Holy Communion j Holy communion will be observed in the morning \ worship hour of same date. (Aug, sth.) Calvary E-U.B. Albert N. Straley, pastor \ The. annual Sunday school and ladies’ aid picnic will bq held Sun day, at. the Hanna-Nuttman pari, west of Decatur. The dinner will follow the regular seryicea at the church. J Sunday school 9:30 a.m. with the charge. The lesson for the day will superintendent. Dale iu le, “Christian Social Life.” Morning worship 10:30 undeit tho direction of the pastor. The ser-' cion theme for this day is, "What
It WAS A Fine TOMATO CROP Before The Hailstorm I Get Kail Protection NOW! Be Safe with Insurance you can depend upon. Oyr pQjicies, issued by the largest company of its kind; w backed by many years of fair dealing and prompt settlement claims. HARRY ESSEX I ’ ; \ Solicitor for I h\l ‘ r ; Leland Smith Insurance Agency BEFORE IPs Too Late, Insure in the p Home Insurance Co.
It means to be a - The Oakwood Pgrk f Assembly Will begin this wepg and last until Sunday, August 5. The minister 111 be at Oakwood Park on tha* -Sunday. (Regular Sunday school and prayer service will be held in tm morning, howeveri - -±—k J. RJvarrc Circuit U.B. Church L.A. Middaygh, pastor Mt. Zion 9:30 a m. Sunday school. 10:30 a.m. Class meeting. 7:30 p.m. Christian Endeavor. \ ’7:30 p.m. Wednesday, prayer meeting. Pleasant Grove 9:30. a.m. Sunday school. f 10:30 a.m. Preaching and Communion service, Rev. Paul Parke? in charge. K 7:00 p.m. Christian Endeavor, f 7:00 p.m. Wednesday, prayer meeting. * 7:30 p.m. Saturday, meeting business session, Rev. Paul Parker in charge. Ky Mt. Victory \ 9:30 a.m. Sunday scbooU, 10:30 aan. Class V 7:00 p.m. Christian Endeavor and re organization. 8:00 pm. Preaching service. 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, prayer meeting. \ . CHURCHHEWS Pleasant Valley A special missionary service will be held at 10'30 a.in. Sunday at the Pleasant Valley Wesleyan Methodist church. The program follows; Song by congregation Welcome —Karen Sue, Sprunger. Welcome —Joyce Bailey. Scripture and prayer-—Rev. W. F. Siders. Over , the Sea—Carol Wable. My Verse —Netta Fennig. Helping—Norma Simons. . \ Book for All —Ronnie Ray. \ A Good Point—Nahcy Bailey. ' Enlistment —Jean Simons. \ j 'Spng - -children. Exercise — The Lantern^ —Donald Ray, Roger Simons and Wilbur Bailey. ~ , '' Our Task —Katy Bailey. An Investment Penny — Joe Sprunger. v , &ong— Janice and Esther Bailey. It’s Grand —David Bailey. ' A Light for Jesus —Evelyn Bailey. The Boy Wable. A Suggestion—Jean Simons. 1 Offering. • \ Reading—Norma Jean Bailey. '• Opening of missionary barrels. Benediction —Rev. Siders. Erie's Net Income - is Slightly Lower Bradford. Pa., July 27. —Eri.’ lailroad net income for the first half of 1951 w-as 35.021,358 or 31.64 a share of common stock befor? capital and sinking funds, Paul. W. Johnston, president, announced at the board of directors’ meeting, here today. In the same period a } ear ago, it was $5,2257,454 or $1.73 per share. - Drop in at Used car or got fem!
Hi ■ PROBABLY THI HRST man to work inside a jet engine Is Harold Kirkendall, 31, only 47 inches tall and an employe in GE’s jet plant in Lockland, O. Shown Bitting in the mouth of a jet engine, |iia diminutive stature enables him to crawl inside of afterburners (the elongated tail pipes in which additional fuel is burned to provide increased power) for inspections. Here he discusses an inspection problem with Jerry. Medford, an engineering supervisor-
TRADE IN DECATUR
Like To Trade Cars J • •- -v i ’ ' : r . i | : i ' : I I’ • ‘1 ... but Short of Cash ? A i '■ rL • ' es I J p-r T’T'‘ ,\ M..' | ■ *-:v" WE Would you like to trade your old ' CAN - car in on a later model but just LOAN can’t see your way through? Up To Come in and talk over your probCKM lems us . . . wc will be glad vWUi t o h e jp vou Decatur Loan & Discount Co. 209 Court St. / < Phone 3-3601 ' I
AUCTION SALES Salarday, 2d» & &00 P.M. • iln(l p I' Every Night 8:00 P.M. .■ . , ■ ’ n i .■< .■ ■-. v ’ Corner Madison & 2nd Sts. : - « Conducted By : ~ - STUDENTS OF THE i REPPERT AUCTION SCHOOL —— TRUCK LOAD PEACHES 1 i. Southern Elbcrtas SATURDAY NIGHT 3.49 U. fc. No. 1 POTATOES 50 lbs. 13 lbs. s ltS9 63c 1 ICE COLD WATERMELONS 1 i ': i; vj i - : ■ >7 !iv. / as low as '4 ' I-lT 1 ' ’ I’" ■’ ■■ ' 79c Hammond Bros. x in the Highway > y I
FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1951
