Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 219, Decatur, Adams County, 17 September 1951 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

_ • — • , —— . ' -4.-— .J“ If UjßF' \ «4f Mw >*‘Afl£ggW*SliW U.x> y_ vm. i hept i&jiOwjys^< ■ HsT XrMW > J**? gpy* * ~ ydF • »* **• * yr » jg '■£***^l9l^■•; X?'’-•' Ji ’£ ■* AERIAL VIEW of Gls digging in after;capturing thia eastern front hill in Korea gives some idea of how it came to be called “Bloody Ridge.*’ Jhirious attacks with napalm bombs, artillery and mortars by United Nations forces stripped it of verdube as well as Communists. (International Boundohotoi ■ . • . ■•. ' —

Three Arrests Made ■ ’ - v ■ : \ On Traffic Charges ■■ -i < ■ .■ , -. ■'■ h One Minor Accident is Also Reported City police made three, traffic arrests oyer the weekend, one of Raynjond -Ehrsam, of Pleasant Mills, who was cited into justice of ti> peace court on a reckless driving charge after being stopped at First and • Madison streets. Pleading guilty,’ Ehrsam "was fined $5 and costa totalling >15.75/ Eriberto Senia, of 946 North Twelfth street, And Ira Carpenter, street, also arrs«|d. the former [for speeding and another vehicle at the Thirtnjemh and Nuttijnan street intersectipdj 'the*.latter for disorderly con<W‘ i .. a , Sdrna -and Carpenter are schedutedito appear before justice Floyd igsriter later today. 'Ole other youth, John ZintsmasSaturday court actiop, was fined $5 awOcosts. totalling $15.75, for rurin|» the stop sign $t the Thirteenth afaoAdams street intersection. He wjkdarrested Friday by sheriff Bob S|l£aluka. ", - -■’ A; :Pslice also investigated the minor accttent which occurred Sunday wjteh a car driven by William Grav ; e>s,i of Monroe, rammed into the rearj end of a car stopped at the and Madison street inters<JCson by Oliver Dickerson, of Buford, Ark. Total damage was esttiated at $45. I — I Sleeps At Wheel, Mptorist Killed Augusta, Win., Sept. 17.-^—■(UP)— Walter Warneke, 33, Hammomd. Ind. was killed near here yesterday -when he apparently fell asleep whitt driving home from a northern "Minnesota filing trip. Warneke’s brother, Eugene, ST, East Chicago, Ind., was injured when the car rolled into a ditch. He was taken to a hospltal at Eau Claire, Wis. V Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

• - : * ■ >■* ■ I I 1 ' , H -I ' '"" *'' . . •.'• 'n ! ■•'■'/?". H ’• I . i to thfe '” ' '- itt t:) ; , ' 1 : \ Moose (Lodge . k .of Decahijr • The Exhaust Fait , and Canopy over the Grille in-the Kitchen < « Were by us ASHBAUCHER’S TIN SHOP EBTABLISHtD 1916 Roofing - Siding • Spouting - Heating 116 N. First St. Phone 3-2615

; Two Sisters And I Brother Visit Ist Time In 48 Years sj A reunion between two sisters lind a brother was affected here liver th'e«,weekend after 48 years ?|hen Mrs. Cora Robinson, of |Cong Beach. Cal., came to Indiana glj>F a visit. \ . y It had been almost a half cen- ' .iiiry since Mra. Robinson had seen ®er sister, Mrs. Lillie McFarland ' Serkins, of Goldsmith, and her ; brother, Charles Smith, of Kemp- : tbn. They are all guests in the Mime of Mrs. Perkins’ son, Eddie McFarlandy of route six. 1 At the time when the family ttst they lived in Oklahoma: from there Mrs. Robin|on moved west and the rest of t>ie family came to Indiana. Throughout the ye«rs the family corresponded with one another, h|t distance kept them apart, Perkins and Smithy visit o'tbut neither had seen their lister in that time. > , =Mrs. Robinson plans to visit in Indiana for about three weeks' before returning to her California home. Arriving Sunday at the McFarland home, she’ will visit dt|ier relatives during her stay WeTwo Are Arrested Following Accident 1 -r Sheriff Bob Shraluka and deputy i litn Cochran investigated the accident which pccurred on a county. road four miles west and two north of Berne which resulted in the arrest of two per- ; Baumgartner, of route Bluffton, and Galen Baumgarttfer, 15, also of route 4, Bluffton, . wejfe cited, into Berne justice of • thfe peace court, the former chargi ede; with improper parking and no • plates on a\ farm w-agon; thi latter with operating a vehicle . A'iihout a driver's license. I ■ A car operated by Raymon 1 . Baumgartner which was, pulling a farm wagon was stopped on the cogpnty road. A car driven by struck the wagon and chtomed off intx> an approaching

—— c~ 1 11 ■ vehicle driven by Robert Kaehr, of Evanston, 111. Total damage was estimated at S4OO. Mrs. D.A. Schwartz Dies This Morning Funeral Services ! Wednesday; Morning Mrs. Daniel A. Schwarti, 61, bedfast for the past seven weeks, died in- her home today, northeast of Berrte. \ Born Nov. 24, 1889. in Newtpn county, Mrs. Schwartz, the former Maryanue Hochstetler, was married there Feb. 5, 1910. She was a member of ’ the Amish church. In addition to her husband, the deceased is survived by five sons, William, Henry and Levi, all of near Berne, and Amos and Menno, at home; four daughters, Mrs. August Wickey, Mrs. Noah Wickey, Mrs. Andrew Hilty, also ot near Berne, and Sarahs at home. Two brothers, Eli, of Middlebury, and William, of Mendon, Mich., also survive, as do two sisters, Mrs. Mose Helmuth, of Bremea, and Mrs. Martin Mast, of Nappanee. One sister preceded Mrs. Schwartz in death. Thereare also 39 grandchildren. Funeral services will be held in the home Wdenesday at 10 a. m., where it will be returned from Yager's funeral home. John L. Schwartz, of Nappanee, will officiate. Burial will be in the Schwartz cemetery. MEETS WITH - (Continued From Pagrc One) cused UN fQrces of more than 200 violations of the neutral zone since Sept. 1. Only one —the strafing incl*dent Sept. 10 —has been found factual. The UN command has said that others either were staged by the Reds themselves, were committed by South Korean guerrillas, or were purely imaginary. r __ ■ s . Meter Courts In 1922, there were only 000 motor courts In the whole nation. Today there are 20,000 motor courts with an average o 2 22 rooms to each court ■' \ : r ”~ ' Lutheran world population has reached an estimated 68,500,000. Seven new Protestant missionaries, all Presbyterian U.S. A., planned to sail for Iran in August and September. \ In India, Bishop 5 J. Waskom Pickett wrote to Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D.-Minn.) that passage of the wbeat-for-India bill is leading “a good many” Indian Communists to Christian conversion. He termed the bill **a powerful blow” at Communism. $ Two Negro pastors were elected delegates to General Conference by predominantly white Annual Conferences on opposite sides of the nation, the first such' to* W

■ ' f \ '■ J DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

chosen since unification in 1939. They are Rev. Charles L. Warren, elected by California-Nevada Conference, and Rev. Samuel H. Sweeney, elected by New York Conference. Fifty-six young people were commissioned as foreign mission’aries of the Presbyterian church in; the; U.S.A., at a special service held th Fifth Avenue Presbyterian church, New York. Teach Religion — Make Men Free is the theme for Christian

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF ADAMS COUNTY OF TAX RATES CHARGED Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Adams County, Indiana, that as a result of'action the Tax Adjustment. Board of Adams County, on the budgets and levies submitted by the tax levying officials of the several taxing units of the county, rates of taxation on each one hundred dollars of valuation of the taxable property and rgtes on each poll hereinafter tabulated by taxing units, now stand charged, subject to appeal, for state, county or other purposes stated, payable in the year 1952, ? 3 • l'-:/- ■ - ' ' " ' townships . yj— ~ corporations ===f l w - <J J. ADAMS QOUNTY ~ ’ V ’ ~ IT I , ’ ! . -J ’ TAX RATES FOR “ O § 0 « J £ L T ? | ± YEAR 1951 QX§2<gw “ WFH>O° ui z > S d Srfh Z § < X Z < < « I 5 PAYABLE-IN 1952 3. 2 5 Si E S § h 5 << 5 | § £ O O n Ia I i -v x S a. <g co JI £ £ m o o p Z 2. 1 | State Revenue for ’Aiition .0700 .0700 .0700 .0700 .0700| .0700 .0700 .0700 .0700(07001.0700 .070& .0700 .0700 .0700 .0700 .0709 .0700 ■ 2 State Board of Agriculture .0035 .0035 .0035 ,0035 .00351 .0035 .0035 .0035 .0035 .00351 .0035 .0035] .0035 .0035 .0035 .0035 ? .0035 .0035 , STATE 3 state Forestry .0065 .0065 .0065 .0065 .0065| .0065 .0065] .0065 .0065 .0065 .0065 .0065 .0065 .0065 .0065 .0065 .0065 .0065 4 Teachers’ Retirement .0600 .0600 .0600 .0600 .0600| .0600 .0600 .0600 .0600 .0600| .0600 .0600) .0600 .0600 .0600 .0600 .0600 .0600 RATES - .5 War Memorial ' .0100 .0100 .0100 .0100 ,0100|. .0100 J)100 .0100 .01001 Total State Rate I - 1b l»lS 1-15 J 5 .15 | .15 .15 .15 J 5 .lii | .15 | .15 | .75 | .15 .15 .15 .15 ( ! ! .'\ \ ‘ ~'l | bounty Fund |-.48 | .48 .48 ] ,48 .48 | .48 j .48 .48 | .jiß [ .48 j .48 j .48 | .46 | -.48 j >4B .43 I .48 | .48 ' COUNTY '2 hospital | ,06 | .06 .06 j .06 ,06 [ .06 | .06 .06 | .06 | .00 } .06 | .06 .06 | .06 |.06 .(fo | .06 | .06 ~ ; j 1 Welfare - | .12 | .12 ( .12 42 .12 | .12 | .12 .12 |.i 2 | .12 | .12 • .12 | .12 | .12 '( .12 .12 |42 | .12 RATES pjrotal'County Rate | .66 j .66 | .66 | .66 ~JB6 | .66 | .66 .66 | .66 ( .66 I .66 1.66 jl .66 ( .66 ( .66 .66 ! .66 I .66 ' CIVIL ' 1T Township Fund ,-j .15 .12 | .12 , |'j2 ' | .07 | .05 |.OB |.05 ( .lb ( .10 J\.l2 | .02 || .05 fOS | J>2 | ,|2 | '| 02 TOWNSHIP ~2~[ Township Poor | .03 [ .05 ( ,04 | .04 | | .03 | .j .09 | .10 [ .01 | .07 | .11 || .03 | .09 | .I*l j >97 -| | .11 RATE S 7 Total Township Rate | .18 | .17 | .16 | .16 | .07 | .08 | .08 | .14 | .20 | | .19 | .13 |( .08 |_.l4 | .13 | .0 | .Ofr-j .13~ “ 5 Tnfultion Fund |- ,72 | ,55 .65 | .44 | .44 [ .22 | ,17 | .71 | .64 | -.*7 .44 ) .55 | .58 | ? ,58 | | .44 j 44’ 2 Special School | .50 | .75 .85 .79 | .6Q T j~To | .24 ~ f .45 | ? . ! 75 ,51 | .11 .60 | .75 | .75 | .41 j .60 (.60 ~3 School Bond? " | | ,05 | ' | ( | .06 | .11 | | .05 ( .06 ;j .06 |/, * | j SCHOOL A 4 j Library Fund ,„ ( ,01 j | .01 | | | I -01 -06 | .18 |'■ 14 | .14 j ! ~ t> Vocational , 11 | .06 j .06 j | | | .06 || j } |■: | .06 »| .06 ~ * LIBRARY ~6 I Recreation | ( | | | " | | | ]- T II I/ 02 l “ ti 2 'l I 7 . 7 | Bonds ( j ] j’ ]p ( .03 ( ' M ? 1' ,'l I I ~' o3 ' 'J'|K ■ t I‘T- ■ RATES 8 I |4l| ;. ,10 40 | ,20 | .20 (.10 j .10 | .10 .10 | ~20 .20 ( I | .20 | .20 | .20~“ H\ | Sinking Fund \ | J ,25 | ' | .75 | .75 | ’ j j .75 |( .25 | .30 | .30 |:; ' | .75 I .75 | Total “ ? 1|; Fund | | j | I .I J I I I I I I 11 1 1100I 100 I*4° I I “ 6ft I - 60 CORPORATION, CITY » | Paife "" v I '"I l " I I I I I I I I I ! II I - 08 I/ 08 I J I I * TOWN RATES ' U, I I- "I I I . I f I I I I ' I II I I A town ka ifc» fl Police Pension ~ ; | |''|' "" | | "r"j | j' | ] | j j} | .02 | .02 |j J | ' i ~ Total Corpz"' ~ | ' | “| I I I | I I | | ; j jj1.25 |l.lO 'ji.io I I .60 | XO~~ I AND TOTAL ’ 12.33 |2.57 2.30 (2.93 |2.95 |1.45 11.76 |2.68 2.27 3.05 ||3.92 (3.93 13.89 |3.015 (3.54 l 3 ‘ ' ' . ' I|' j. ptate Tax Revenue |l.oo’-|i.oo |I.OO |I.OO ~|Lbo |l.oo~~[Lpo jl.oo |loo~~|l.oo 1.00 "fLOO “j|l.oo 1.00 |i.oo 13)0 |I.OO 1.00~ 2 ) State School Revenue | .50 | .50 .50 ( .50 | .50 | .50 | .50 | .50 | .50 .$0 .50 .50 !| .50 .50 |~.50 JSO .50 ,50~~ POLL TAX 3 ( Corporation Tax j | | j' | | Ir *1 I I II loa 1 100 100 j Metal Pols Tax" \ |i.'50"d1.50 |1.50 [1.50 11.50 |1.50 (1.50 11.50 |1.50 [1.50 1.50 |1.50 ||1.50 2.50 2.50 1-50 (1.50 Anv ten or more taxpayers affected by any budget, rate or-levy shall have the rig ht to file objections with the county auditor to such budgets, rates and levies within ten davs from the date of publication of this notice. All appeals shall be in writing addressed to the State Board of Tat Commissioners, naming specifically the items in the budget and tax rates -which are objected to, and shall be filed with the County Au ditor. This notice is given in compliance with Chapter 119, Acts of 1537 as amended htr Phantpr 41 Acts of 1947. Effective February 26, 1947, and the rights of-taxpayers and the manner of filing objections are set forth therein. 1/ t nfted this 12th day of September. 1951. / THURMAN I. DREW, Auditor Adam.; County Ind. J . r- — ' — • — r-—A- • .. .... - ■— —————— ■ L• - . . 1.-h 4. I . .1 1 ‘ ■' T.‘l -i I • ■ p — r r fowraS, *” v ; e »O»S£4lnvitations...thatonly I a — \ I * n Y other engine ever ® responsiveness than I «J Ven on “on-premiuS, OT U ?° Arn eri can i • I r fue1 ’ its bu »ltj Chrysler - f . / i» any ul®®,® 11 * 0 ’ the flrat °i e y T d ' aulic ' • * • 11 > / Aeer •. . to YF/\ r I ♦u 3o^new ex P®rience <«• literally a I can give you! / I ■ / »i does through * HF<*’ Cllr ysler this year uses a ADS! [ I fria 22^ a ! lock ovX v^- ionary new I S i f!■ 11 ‘- - ■—> " at any price. U9ed on any / ! uh *k I L difference this makes f ° r yourself what ■ ,11 I . , W R I appens whOT bump, di sappear C | ° me fe «' what I ' 7 r- - •> v ! 1 , 1 ■ '—F ' y ydrssufcte w—ilsrtl cm Cytt- : <■> "“Z ONLY A RIDE CAN SHOW YOU WHAT ONLY A CHRYSLER GIVES! f \ ; Phil il Macklin Co. •107 So. First St. i ; . V ’*» -s . • '■ ' • ’ ' ' . ■ : ' ■ t : . . i . ■ ■ : ■ '

.wm-w 1 in 1 ■■■—■■■ Education week to be observed ,SepL 30 to Oct. 7. Sponsored by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of Churches and its forty-member denominational boards of education, the special week will offer churches an opportunity to demonstrate the imoprtance of Christian teaching and to launch their new program of work for the fall apd winter months. “This theme is appropriate to the times, ’ declared Dr. Roy G. Ross.

>'^- x -‘Wav 130 m •mrivomr /’ ’ J •-r iMgi, 1 , 'J J .i"JJUMMJ9 fwyr< Treating Commmunism Cbmmunism needs a shot in the arm of liberty, equality, justice, fraternity and good will. These qualities are contagions and may also be injected into society. No

wonder Russia insists on an iron wall, for when it is broken down there wlh ureaK forth such a moral force that will withstand the might of arms, means of the radtt and balloon messages to Russia, a new treatment is being administered (that will change history. No brick wall is high enough to keep out the spiritual f treatment * which is possible and now beginning to be givqn. Christian faith- and prayer have more to do in. this needed

- ' , J ■■ I■' : MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1951

treatment than one can measure. In the exercise j of these means every one can hhve a part, ■ 4—Rev. D. Carl Yoder ' - U Prize rVon The first Pulitier Prise in jour* nalism was awarded The New York Tribune tn 1917 for editorial writing excellence. | .\. , Without constancy there is neither love, friendship nor virtue in the world. —ftddison.