Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 203, Decatur, Adams County, 28 August 1951 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
Eugene Melchi Is To Coach At Seymour Eugene Melchi, Jr., son of ML and Mrs. Eugene Melchi of this city, has accepted a position as assistant football and basketball coach at Seymour high school, Seymour, i and \ will mote to that city fromldunde when housing is available for his family. Melchi graduated from Decatur - high school in 1942, where he was •a varsity member of the football team. Me received his bachelor of arts at Ball State Teachers cbllege ' and taught a at Young America.! He was recently awarded hfe master’s degree in industrial arts and coaching frdrii Ball State. He is married to the former Miss lona Beer, from Berne, and they have two sons? Ned and Rex. —— - COUNTY FARMERS ’" / <C*nti*aM frao Ftu» Ob«i than in past programs; protection higher than cost of investment. Soil Conservation and Forest Services were explained by Winfred L Gerke. Chairman of PM A anil AM committees. Recomniendatidns; land-owners receive some assistance by Soil' tkinservatlon Service tp obtain necesaary drainage on family farms and that county be Increased. I’M A membvrpof the AM commltee |<l<( a dierm Rural Elwtrltlrgflnn Administration. it wmh agreed by the farmdrs present, who are ser-v---rd by the KHA that service is good with (tie MMptfoa «»r nuiia receptlon In Mirim cusea, which Ip due to low voltage No re<omuiriulatlcms for < luiiihch In elthftf . Illi* • I* * i«i> „<ir tclupfione service. \’ . 3 Mj IWkineynr mlho eg plained lll'’ iHr of the iiilh. of Infuiiiot thm RucpmnitimlHtlona; establish ■ I t»i ixntno iit of Agriculture field (iffivrs Io fro naeil to serve »S lit (nrinaUve spun n of lite Offley of ‘ inlhtrimtiiun rather limit nstahllsh . srimrato field office* for thia pur |toso ‘ iDotiald Norqueal, FHH thetulmr of the JAM commit tee, explained the polh lea bf she Karin Home Artn|litlsirit(lbn. IlccommetidHtions: operating limits- be increased and - slut) repayment period, increase
3—4 and 5 DRAWER CHESTS priced from If - ■ ss- o »■> ' IP MBS — ALSO—- • Radio Tables •Coffee Tables • Nite Stands y--g! • Magazine Racks ' • Dressing Tables •i. • Nick Nack Shelves IfiSfiHSFt*; f ; j • Book Shelves, Etc. --- Made of good pine MHHMMBfe" ! Pre sanded Easy to finish ;pfaSll KANE Paint K Wallpaper Store 158 So. 2nd Phona 3 3030 t
| i i . , - W ■ h - • *\X u ■fiKMKSBr* Take Some Home Tonight! I If / \ I Ipnjoy this delicious treat at hor^c ! > \t 1 11 t makes a perfect dessert with 11 II meals or can be served at partife. SHr// 4 u y Zesto by the Pints or Quarts. .. CONES MILK SHAKES SUNDAES — MALTED MIIMS '-" - 1 • ■ •" '|p : H- "•■■■' ’. ■" * r .'liT > Locally Owned N. Bth St. I
Hold Services For } Charles Brock 7 Funeral services wei»e held this aflernoofr for 3. Charles Brock, retired Decatur merchant who died at the Berne nursing home Sunday. Dr. M. O. Lester, former pastor of (he fhrst Methodist church here officiated. “ Burial was made at Decatur cemetery. Mr. Brock, a lifelong Decatur resident had been a member of; the Methodist church since childhood. ' 1 . \ ; Marriage License John W. Weariy, 29, Huntington,j field scout executive and Mary Jo Krick, 24, Decatur, nurse. ■ ' , . < Four Return . Four Adams County men, members of the. 122nd AC&W Sqdn. of the Indiana Air, National Guard, have returned from two weeks training at Camp Douglas, Wisconsin. They are; Pfc. Robert Beitler radar operator, Pfc. Robert Drew, radar operator, Pfc. Donald Rupert radar opeator, and Herbert Kit Son, code radio operator. The 122nd AC&\y Sqdn. its-to, be activated November 1, 1961. —4-^44 —l due tb tl|« fact that the present limit |s riot sufficient for ftie aveiage revolving funds I* used inaierid of iinniinl upproprialions |n to make mow seonomlcul turn of funds. .. Nnri(ium|t ulsii explaln«a| the Commoditjy Kxeliimgn Authority, n whs riM'i)pinit'mt»*il -thni tills pros grain be (<>iilluu«u| ns Ip tin* past. Homtir 'W. Arnold, PMA, and Henry I Humph'. REA, members iil Uhr A M < oititniti«« were uuublti 10 nflciiil I lilg meeting. A Ml io ilm < imlrmsn ot Ilin miiri mith'K. Milled irnliiy that any farm St <>i t« pi. ni.iiivi- ot goy organ11 ii ion who have HirHinr- rn< om hiewdat kills relative to I lie Hcllvltics of tlm various Agricultural agcnrles, ire urged to write to the county committee prior to Hep tember I*. J Trude 111 a Good Town — Decatur
No Arms, No Legs Biit Lots Os Heart Quad Amputee To Wed Ndxt Month Joliet, 111. <|Aug. 28.—(UP)— Pvt, Hubert’ weeves, a quadruple amputee M the Korean war, said today he planned to marry a 17-year-old met after she wrote him to brighten his hours in the hospital ' The 19-year-old soldier said his marriage to J&everly Jean Hall would be held ls&pt. 9, in the First Baptist churcl* n Joliet. Reeves olst || Oth feet and all but one of h||i fingers after he suffered \ frostbife in Korea last fan. R “We’re happy about it,” Beverly Jean said, so arie both sets of Reeves was captured last fall during a Chinese breakthrough. He had been ini combat only about a month at tbrit time. Later his captors were driven back and they left him behind, thinking he wits dead. He later was rescued by advancing United Nations forces! Reeves, the son of Mr, and Mrs. D. Hubert Redyes of Joliet, was shipped back tq the United States and he underwent months of surgery. persons wrote him during time when they heard of his lujUriag, 1 Hut the letters he received from Beverly Jean, who lived In Wilmington, 11. shput IK miles south of JqlhH, hiUtreeled him most. ' He retunmd to Juliet lust Muy. The town gave him n hero’s wwl come. When the ,excltemeiit died down ha ctilljul llaverly Jeun ami asked for a <at*| "It was just alt ordinary data,” sulil llaverly Jeuh, "Hut as I auw more arid morn flf him, I raullMud w4mt u wnnderfril puhrim he. Is ” "I think Ed hus a wonderful personality ii- in n i fait sorry tor blmsclf. He just Joked about his troiiblrs.'* The Util, blue-eyed brunette said her fiance popped the question about n month after their first duty. She accepted at once. Her father, David W. Hall, agreed with )ier choice. \ He's a fine boy.” Hall said. “They worked it all out between them and we*re mighty happy.” Beverly Jean no»’ works as a salesgirl. She said she plans to quit her job affer the wedding when Reeves returns to Valley Forge at Phoenixville, Pa. . . Reeves] will be discharged from the army “sometime in January.” he His plans are indefinite, after that. SBUSfeCZ The Rev. and Mihß. Robert Hammond are the|||arfnts of a baby girl, Judith Elaine, born at 9:30 a.m. today at. tjm Adams county memorial' tfthe weighed 8 pounds, ounces, and is their second child. ter of the Firsf Baptist church. Mr. und Mrsfflene Moser lire the parents of a bfthy boy. born at the Adams countyJ memorial hospital Monday at 9: <»| a.m. He weighed 7 pounds, ft Mt outibus. . - —ftr —i H Democrat Want Ads Bring Rseatt*
1 DRCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
J|HM V . K Mu ■y jet p fid if'flffWffnHlroi jWW' ' * .i •* > A HARE'S BREADTH 18 27 inches here, as pretty Toni Crandall calli attention to the magnificent earspread of Lady Arabella, one of onlj 25 lop rabbits in America. Purpose is to lure you to the Los Angela County fair, opening Sept. 14, Record earspread for a lop to 31 >4 laches, so now you know what it means to be 100-cared. <lnt<:matio»aL
32 Ousted West j Point Cadets At ND *AII Accepted' State Officials Os School Mouth lleud, ImU Aug. SI. IUP.J ''University of Notre •Hume k <tfficliUs suld today m'oruj than one third of lite wu cintels v»peih'il from West i'oitti fur cribbing -hnvn heet) enrolled under terms nf mu uimiiymous Huh man's yftdr to fiiui the hill Tlte Rev, Untie Thorntoni dlfnelof' of ndmlsMhms, mild tH« tailclH who atqillcd all wcic mi ia pl art, Their dleidoNvul. •, I ■ ’ P 1 The unnamed nilllhmalro who offered to pay th? 1 ousted cmletH ; tuition, room itml Von rd here said he did so because he they “should have a reafconabli* chance to rehabilitate themselves.’’ !. —— \ ALLEGES (Ceatlnued From r«xe Oae) the UN and Communisr countercharges, the headquarters release said: "Today, six' days later, Kim and Peng ]>ropose that the investigation be reopened. (The statement referred to the latest alleged neutrality breach, a Red complaint, that a United Nations plane botnbrd aud strafed the conference area. (Kim and Peng are Kirn'll Sung, premier ami commander in chief iu North 'Korea, and Gen. Pbng Teh-H\uai, Chinese Communist commander in clyef.) “They ask General Ridgway 1 to ] order his liaison officers to Khe- i song to re-examine the 'ovidence. “Once again they may be s4k-1 Ing to utilize their control of the conference area, to their udvantage The orginal evidence was ho transparent as to Immediately indicatt the fraudulent nature of the bombing charge,;, . ' "Hut thia defev( in the (-ivhleiici? could be cured. Hm>uld lhe]lnveHti ggtion be reopened, it is probaldc that much morel rotivinclttg t*vl deiice of a bombing ullm k would usl “ The Ruds kepi (he truce riiltfer mice ullve fu a ml'nsage hi|..td( »ist by radio I'eipjng early leduy], line lt»lf tin- ih'Xl iiiini’ io (he sitpipme I’N communflot’. Tin* t’oiiimunlht message riluirg «d that llhluway had "malirlim M |y MlMmlurtMl" the ItedM, Thi«i to hlwtime of last Hdimday, mu, h onllml Rod ciiinplalni« ihiii the |'N hud V'loltikud Km<Mmg*s itmiltaliiy "mallelous fol soli isxls," ; ; [WjOJRITAr O ri Admlttcdl: Kaye Runyon. Dtcn tur; Mrs, Levi Schwarts, Moproe; Miss Helen Engle, 222 North Fourth St.; George Tellant, Deca tur. J . Dismissejd: Linda Gkckler. Monroeyiile; Mrs. Harley Stradb aud baby girl. Decatur; Patsy Bauscrman, Berne; Gerald Sipe, Decatur. . ; | L__i, S,OOO Burps i' J Lunenburg, Mas?., Aug.' 28.— (UP) —Police chief George Wazel released this hoxscore on an outing here of some 14,000 , Boston navy yard employes T and their families: «wi 56 persons treated by Red Cross. \ .d Five hospitalized. V 29 rescued from drowning. 11 lost children returned to parents, j , One arrested (case i&ter dismissed). L 75 barrels of beer consumed.
Loose Talk \ Low Angeles, Aug. 28.—(UP) — Model Baum wvn a default divorce from her glrdlbnttcr hitsbiitid after testifying that he broiiglit her Igirdles tijtd .only three were t|te right slzsi Mrs. Bsurn said her hasbund, Allan, hMd dealings with “all tny glri frlemls” In the aoiiHe of hIM work, u|id bs tipparmiily fitted them with tto trotibls; But, she ('<iiii|iluiinul to superior Judge Thuriimud UlMtke Monday, her liiotbaiid never wmm phlo to give het' a ilmt'hl fit. SCHRICKER H oeHeerM Free* I'sge One) «’sptciMlly> for those pistil but |ng II toining teen ngurs, 11 "For poisons* who |ry Io undermim* the youth of Indians by supplying them with dope,” he said, "a life sentence isn't one bit too severe.”
B0YS! \ ——• It’s fun for all the young boys when —■ ■ i | they can strut back to school in the m ASimTfi r latest styles and toughest wearing | - RH||(Tq fabrics. Send him over for a few ...... < try-outs in brand names that can’t , J That are tailored to fit and be beat!’ their shape. Necks .JL-rtyjraa , , ' J tape-staid to insure no w stretching. Full cut of the BOY’S SOCKS LS;“ l ' l " ngand Is alwaya hard to find a sock that will give the boy the proper amount, of wsar. ' Don’t worry, we have them with the Mun- A J ■ingwear label. That meant the finest for the >UC rL. A 1 sucks SPORT SHIRTS —. \ \djy in tbgt famous Hls-bias | V ? by Kaynes —■ Bsfsty Legion — ***•* *jy Ls|p*>n j Tom lawyer. These shirts will Th * ** •' , "” M< lh- ’ ****W?«J / ’ I 4 fit and wear along with much •"* tooy • Perfect fit. JD I f II higher prised shirts. —| * *• tv lb • T / Plain eolors or fsney gattorns ■ ’ . if /Wa ' L »\1 wt ' <• chooss from In long or short H fill Ilv »».»,. »j.w ■ Ji v Ml DUNGAREES — of good heavy 8 ounce sanfor- How It A Good Time To Pick wl Ont His Winter Jacket! L—*" Western styles. Also Double \ V\l knee ‘- [ -. ] " A Small Payment ; X <!'•< 64 M Will Hold Any P*«»3 to UZ.Z9 Garment Holthouse-Schulte & Co. I DECATUR’S STORE FOR MEN AND BOYS
Elect Chairmen For Breeder Club Form 1952 Plans V At Meeting In Berne The cattle breeders of Adams|criunty met recently at the Bank of Berne with county agent L. E. Archbold for the purpose ot planning tor the Holstein 4-H steer project in 1962. The group elected Ben Mazelin and Rolandes Llechty as co-chair-men of the steer project committee; other members are Leonard Kingsley, Holman .Egly, and Alfred Busick. This Lester Busick, Eli Schwartz, and the extension office will take enrollment in this project. Any boy or girl who will be 10 years old in 1952 or who is under 20 years of age is eligible to enroll in this or any other 4-H project. The following rules were written up for the Holstein meat animal project: Steers out of registered Holstein sires and dams with typical Holstein markings, dropped in July or August of 1951, may be entered in the meat animal project These animals are to Ve cared tor and fitted as beef animals. In the 4-H Club Show, they will be judged Las beef animals. They may bo offered for eale at the 4-H club livestock auction. Feed record should bo kept from dote ot hlrth or purchase ot the calf. The d mull iso tor enrollment Is October 1, Archbold said, DroNNlug percentage on ibo top Holstein steers were 17, 67, I, und 67 pecuent reepeelivaly DreoMlug perimulags* on tb« throe Angus rMlvea shown al Monroe wore 1)1, 6M t> and fil l according to tinal analysis checks. Urfltd To MootRepresent mH? pm of bwba which plan lo enter the Minor Howling league are urged to meat at the Mies Itac real km Alleys, on North Herond eirret, Wedncedsy to com pi*-i•• plans far tbe forthcoming bolwlng Irague oeaaun. Meeting time: 8 p.m.
Continue Search For | 2 Pendleton Escapees Pendleton, Ind,. Aug. 28.—-(UP— I Indiana reformatory guards continued their search today for two Inmates who fled the institution Monday by leaving a working ( party and disappearing into the woods. - BupL Ward Lane identified the escapeee as Thomas Jones, Jr., 24, Chesterton, sentenced last February from Porter county to one to--10 years for grand larceny, and < Herman Little 22, Rushville, sentenced in April, 1948, from Rush county to two-to-14 years for ■ forgery. j Accident Victim ■Richmond, sod. Au g. 28.— \(UP)_James Gillespie; 36, Con nersvllle, was killed x Monday night when a car driven by, James Warfield, 26, also of Conndrtville. went out of control near here' and hit a bridge abutment on U.S. 27. Warfield, was injured slightly. ' -', , -1 Visualize Need To Enlarge Hospital The Adams county memorial hospital is a busy place these days, aud in the last fqw weeks it has uncommon for persons admitted jo be plgced in the corridors, a| UeaHt temporarily, until foom* are vacated. Those in cbdrge are making every effort to make the patient# comfortable but the capacity) la taxed constantly. No applications sot admittance have been turned down and every available apace is being used. Nureea and other hospital personnel are working overtime to cere for patients. Hospital lioard mambero, aware of the tact that tl.e cominuii II y has dire need tor a larger hoapltal, are study Ins the problem and Imm>s to make recom meadatluiia for Increasing faulll- * Iles i i one board member today romp 11 I niehfod the hospital staff on Ihtrir i work In recent weeks under the i crowded mmdltloaa and said that he hoped soon that the hospital ; board would bring the matter offl- ! dally before the county commissioners for study. ■ . - -
TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1951.
Case Owner Scores Hit With'3s Menu 'jd ’ Guthrie. Okla., Aug. 28—(Up(— . Hearty eaters released their belts another notch today and aaW tbat the Oklahoma case’s one-day experiment of selling meals at 1935 prices was—burp—a mighty success. For 25 cents they atel Fried chicken, roast pork, beet or meat loaf, three vegetables', decert, bread and butter and drittk. J Everyone was happy, including - case operator Doin Taylor wjho dreamed up the ■ experiment to httract new customers. “Boy, they really went for i|t,” said Taylor. "Lunch customers were lined outside waiting. 1 was forced to turn ’em away part of the day." ~ ' Breakfast Customers wereb’t overlooked either. The “two-ljit special" Included two eggs wijth bacon, ham or sausage, buttered toast and coffee. _ “We just plain ran out of food] a couple of times,” Taylor sa|d. ‘Tripled my staff to 15 persons, but-, couldn’t keep up with the demand. It was wonderful.” ? Hamburgers, cheeseburgers arid'! all other sandwiches sold for a dime. ”Wei sold more than 506 hamburgers alone. The bread man said he'd never-, seen* such a run on buna,” Taylor said. - ■ V The portions on the meals ware true 1935 slze-bly enough to f<td . the huskiest man. Chlckdn. lovers each received two Urge pivees. Taylor could make no rstlniate of what the ex|»erlment coat blm. but he said he had “hundreds and hun dreds” of customers flock into bU Iv-seat case. Services Planned : Neymour, Hid., Aug, 2s, < -»■ Her vices were plahimd today fur Edward P. Elsner 72, attorney and former member of the Iniliaim setiate who died MomUy In mi tmllatiupolU hospital. Elsner wus Demovrutlc inspirit y lander of the ImlutiM moiimlc for four yudrM beginning iu 1913 and was minor lly leader for tour years ftjoin mt f If You Have Anything To Refl Try A Democrat Want Ad—lt Pkya»
