Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 131, Decatur, Adams County, 3 June 1952 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Fined For Invalid Dover's License L Meldren J. Kreps, of 317 Weiit Oak street, involved last month tn an; accident in which Mrs. Louise Bepeke of Fort Wayne was killed, was fined $1 and.costs in court for not having a valid driver’s license at Ithe time of the mishap. l|lore than 300,000 properties of many types of land and buildings ia England, including 52,000 dwellings, \ owned by British railways ar* rented to employes, the total rentals amounting to £5,000,000 h Meir. •» —— ’l'rade in a Good Town —Decatur!

' M ■ " . ’ I j llieqaslwiM heater,! L-. A SENSATION! ; MHF ais< ■» 3 ro s 2 ■F* Oo *« < I MORE exclusive.! 0 Period furniture styling. Lus. i trous. /finish. < 10 Famous Equaflame Burner—- ; for a dean, efficient flame. 0 Famous COMFORT SELECTOR \ ! on automatic thermostat— k j tailors fire to weather, (op. : tional) 0 Power-Air Blower saves up to /: | 25% on fuel, (optional) *pL ' ■ - MORE features! t 0 All-in-One Control—revolm | tionary! 0 Big radiant doors! 0 Heat saving economizer; 0 Extra large heat chamber; i. O.AGA approved. ■ Buy now on easy forms at STUCKY & CO. MONROE, IND j I ‘ ’ ■■■; 'j £ ’ . ■ I OPEN EVENINGS EXCEPT WEDNESDAY

Public Sale — nite; SALE — The undersigned, Executrix of the Orve C. Davis Estate, will sell at public auction the following .personal property on the Davis Farm, located 1 mile North of Markle, Indiana on State Road No. 3, then % mile East; or 18 miles southwest sos Fort Wayne on State Road No. 3, -then % mile East, on . . !* . Friday Nite, June 6,1952 —4 ■ “ V \ 1 Sale Starting at 7:00 P. MU --'-J | - . — DAIRY CATTLE — T. B. and Bangs Tested V U ■ V ~ . ' ' ■ • (granny, Guernsey cow, 8 years old, was fresh April 26th. !Spot, Guernsey cow, 4 years old; was frash April 18th. Mossy, Guernsey cOW, 2 years old, was fresh April T7th. ppisey, Guernsey cow, 5 years Qld.was fresh Dec. 14th. ffiatar, Guernsey cow, 5 years old, fresh by day of sale. - |Rose, Guernsey cow, 5 years old, fresh by July 28th. Lily, Guernsey cow, 4 years oldAwill be fresh by day of sale. \ ’Hlackie, mixed, 3 years old, will'be fresh Oct. 17th. ■Chloe, mixed cow, 3 years old, tie fresh by Jurie 15th- \ Nigger, mixed cow, 3 years olch':was fresh March 14th. •. This is a .high producing and high testing herd of dairy cows with lot pf size and quality. Records will be given night of sale. I \ Also 8 Head of Calves from herd of ! BRAHMAN CROSS-BRED STOCK ;1| Brahman-Guernsey bulls, service age, 11 months old. heifers, 6-9 months old. V I Brahman-Angus-Guernsey heifer, 2% months old.-- V - |li| Brahman-Shorthorn heifer, 3 months old. V * : S3rahman-Hereford heifer, 3 months old. These crosses were all sired by a Valuable registered Manso BrahBull arid/all the crosses have made consistent gains averaging 75 to 100 lbs. per month from birth to date. inspection of this herd in advance of the sale is invited. Records literature 1 on Brahmans and ; Brahman crosses will be available ime. Health papers will be furnished with each animal. | i 1951 FORD TRACTOR & IMPLEMENTS 1'1951 Ford tractor, like new, used 5 months, only; power scoop; belt puljey; rotary hoe; Black Hawk corn planter; 10-hole Emerson grain TiDR-MiS—CASH. Nos responsible in case of accidents. f | Sale will be held under large tent.' J ORVE C. DAVIS, Estate EFFIE S. DAVIS, EXECUTRIX Ellsnfoergerßros.-—Auctioneers • | Old First National Bank—Clerk. 1. 3 I : ' V ’ f

Daughter In Step Bethany, ConiL (UP) -- Marjorie C. Urquhart ia training as a state police rookie. She and her father, Capt. Ross. V. Urquhart, make the Connecticut state police’s firtft father-daughter team. The English Speaking Union has awarded 8 Walter Hinjes Page traveling scholarships to | enable British teachers to visit the U.S. for periods of 4-8 weeks dilring 1952-53. Montreal is one of th|e great ports of the world, even, though ice closes it from December to April. It is second only to New Yofk in North American port facilities. I ■ 4j———-H—H-,.i ' i Trouble Piles Up South Bend, (UP) —Troubles can pile up. At the las. report here is what was happening, to the family of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Parcher: Michael, 9, had the chicken pox; Tommy, 8, had the 'ipeasjes and Mary,\ 13 months, was in bed with the mumps. | . ; - ; ; ' L' 1 H

Iloving , liifill HUSBAND.. I ( * A f S/l YOU'LL FIND THE ANSWERJN hit -M ( by : ’■*» • . Elizabeth Daly A terrified young bride j ... a war hero with an in- j credible past.. . and a book that holds a fatal secret — this combination intrigues Henry Gamadge, the bibliophile detective. It will intrigue you, too,in this tantalizing and fast-paced mystery novel. Don't miss a singld installment of THE BOOK OF THE CRIME! Starts IM. Jiic 4 ia DAILY DEMOI’RIT

IK . TwwKmntwuf KLACK MARKr kjgjMu |k| rs xJk > I 111 MKv\ ® I *''<'•£ Jw 1 ■■■ K .iJM MM HQ . HIGH COST OF LIVING on potatoes is spotlighted from two,sources. Left: Waitress Rosemarie Martin points to sign in Fischer grill, operated by Harry Fischer in Pittsburgh, Pa., which explains why spuds are not on the menu. Meanwhile, Pittsburgh OPS office said suits would be filed against "three or four” potato black market operators against whom there is evidence. A. hundred pounds, with ceiling price of $6, were being sold at 39, sometimes with tie-in sales as well. Right: In Washington, Rep. George Bender (R), Ohio, displays potatoes wrapped in gold and silver foil—“nuggets,” he means—in telling the House that in order to get “the ordinary spud today you practically have to get them wrapped in gold and silver tinfoil.” Five years ago potatoes were in vast surplus supply. (InternationalJ

—» . • —■ \ ■/..J, 1 ■ f i Mk. I ill j f/m V - jf//I I ■ Klim Wfi ...u: AS STRIKING of! worker pickets Jeer, traffic through Indiana Harbor, Ipd., ship canal returns to normal and an empty oil barge passes into harbor to take on a cargo of oil foi the midwest. Pickets had blocked raising of the drawbridge since the oil strike began, but a county court injunction was served on the bridge tender, forcing him to operate the bridge. f i; ; (International Boundphoto) ■. 1 . ! , , j | ! Il *?. * .

Auto Is Damaged By Hit And Run Driver Clark Mayclin of 207% North Seventh street reported to the police yesterday that his car was hit yesterday by a hit ans run truck, w’hich caused damage to the extent of $l5O. Mayclin said that he thought the vehicle was a tr ick because the front end of his car was hit too high to have beet caused by a car, and that furthermore, the truck was probably red as traces of the paint were fqund on the, wrecked front end. Pblice are investigating. \ ’Possum Takes Trip \ Amory, Miss. (UP) —A ’possum hunt that began here went on for two days and stretched to Kansas City, Mo„ and back. The animal got in the engine machinery of a Frisco train and wasnt. caught until the train went to Missouri and back. \ ' 1 '! * 1

L\ ' 1 Jcl I RE zzr ’ T jk <• T WBMh I- > M sSHsLvJ tfwHw t L/r 1 ' &..| a iUgi ' IJ i Hl E .^W-y?w > i ' i-im wX ' ’" J 4 w 1 i Ww® &£■■■ . iL-1 «■».--»: JaflLflß A DEEP DITCH between compounds 76 and 77 on Koje island falls to uncover any tunnels between. Water seepage, authorities decided, would make such tunnels impracticable, Photo by International News Photos staff photographer Dave Cicero. (International Soundphoto J

THE DECATUR .DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Dividend Declared Today By Nipsco Hammond, Ind., June 3 — (UP>t— The Northern Indiana PUblic Service co. today declared a dividend of 38 cents per share on common stock, payable June 20 to shareholders of record at the close of busihess June 6. V ' President Dean H. Mitchell of the utility's board of directors' said the board also declared a dividend of 22 1-2 cents per share on 4 J-2 percent cumulative preferred stohk. and a dividend of 28 cents £er share on 4.56 percent cumulative preferred stock. Frying Spoils Pearls Hartford, Conn. (UP) — Mts. Olga F. Clapp probably will eat her oysters raw-from. now on. She found 27 pearls in a single oyster but the gems were worthless be* cause the oyster had been fried. Trade in a Good

j. The; Mohammedans of Lanao, Sulu and Cotabato in the Philip- ! dnes wash their dead before burial. t is their belief that a person with , dirty body cannot enter the king|om of Allah. S£LL F TM>[\ .£TC.'

g~"~ jMa 1 MOW YOU CO BUY ■fl S ] I ' l ? ully Automatic I gjl I W BENDIX ELECTRIC DRYER ' _. AT ONLY $ * AA.QC L *lll “* - Convenient Terms ' * T'' ! ■'u, I i ■H ” * i" ' For A Limited Time—While Limited Stock Lasts. \ Electric Model .•_ ' I: , ■" \ i J ' . I. • - _'....' ..

Plan Revamping Os Ike's Organization / Any Changes To Be Announced Thursday Washington, June 3 —I (UP) — Plans to revamp the Eisenlfow'er-for-presldent organizations ajre under way as the general takes off for Kansas and his first campaign speech. His friends expect him to name a new campaign manager or to designate a personal spokesman. Any changes may be announced Thursday when the new Eisenhower in civilian clothes meets the press in his first political news conference. That will be in Abl- ' lene. f i Its 2Q weeks since Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., (R-Mass.) announced here that he was putting Eisenhower ln\ the March -11 New Hampshire primary. Lodge appeared then as a self-appointed sponsor or campaign manager. Eisenhower answered up immediately from Paris that he was a Republican and woud permit his name tq go before the voters. He also said then: “Under no circumstances will I ask relief from this (Paris) assignment in order to «e«k nomination. I shall not participate in the pre-ponyention activities.” Events drove him from the shelter of both decisions to remain in Paris and to refuse to campaign. Under a barrage of conflicting advcie frdm his supporters and topdrawer advisers, the general began to : weaken in late March. ' The variety of advice offered Eisenhower in the past 20 vreeks and the division of influence and campaign authority among several individuals and groups in the east and mid-west evidently have convinced all concerned that the campaign organization be tightened at once. In addition to public statements on universal military training and foreign aid, which were well within his field as NATO commander, Eisenhower found it necessary to do some quiet pre-convention campaigning for the support of speli Al 6 . Ji I 1 ;|i ■ ■ Hi AT ANNAPOLIS, Helene Frances Kidd, 19, of Baltimore, Md., named r Color Girl for June Week at the Naval Academy, poses with her fiance, Midshipman Joe Carter Burgin Jr., of Macon, Ga., commander of the Academy’s 1952 Color Company. Miss Kidd will reign over the traditional June Week activities which ends June I 6 with the graduation of 783 middies. (International Soundvhotnl

clal interests or groups. Prior to the bitterly-contested selection of Texas national convention delegates, the general got right with public opinion there in a letter saying rich oil-bearing tidelands should belong to the states. Midwestern farmers learned from qnother letter that Eisenhower liCl'ieved in some kind of farm price supports. From the saiqe source the inhabitants of the Misisouri Valley beard \he favored a flood control project there. Eisenhower ducked an- inquiry from Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, \Jr. (D-N.Y.) On fair employment I practiceis legislation, > but indicat--1 ed he would take a public position on it later.' Beginning this . we(?k the questions will cbme fast and hard. Eisenhower will need the best obtainable management of, his preconventjlon activities to meet the developing situation, r i ; : .l; Britain is awarding 75 scholarships this year to young, students for study of production technology and management in U.S. universities, technological institutes and industrial undertakings. I

;IFT (^. MAK6 YOUR) ’ KITCHEN - / j with ( /( I I • I ■■- ' -■ * IF YOU WANT the kind of bright, easily, covers well, is self-smoothing 1 cheerful, colorful kitchens you see . .no brush marks afterwards. It’s j in the magazines, take a look at tough, hard, durable, stands lots of Peach Blossom, or Green, Ripple, washing. An ideal paint for interior > or Blue Powder, or the other new walls, woodwork and shades in,Tudor Interior Gloss trim where wear and washability Enamel. „ < - are required. - i . Here’s an enamel that goes on \ « -i--; r-, .• ■■■' ■■ - l f -> t. 1 ' jj Kyaniie TUDOR ? j Iv* Interior Gloss , .-J _ L 1 ...Jalilk Kohne Drug Store SPECIAL A SUNDAY EXCURSIONS IJ ■jß*,Wi‘ TO CHICAGO BARGAIN ROUND TRIP FARE iIEKXrh . GO SUNDAY MORNING I C 75 I | - RETURN SUNDAY EVENING TAX • Leave on Train Number 1— Erie Limited / S\\ Return on Train Number 2—Erie Limited or /p Train Number B—Atlantic Express 5 66 ma i or league baseball orspend the \ V / *'T\ day Chicago’s museums, zoos, or ■ K tl ' ta^e a Gra y ne sightseeing trip, availy/hj] able to excursion passengers. (/ irt Baseball ndmlKwlon tickets available I I / /Ar from vour Erie tleket axenf Erie Railroad xy

TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1952

_, , , ■», ....... ~, ~M • • Jm I ANA FAUKEIt, long-time friend of Prime Minister Stalin and one of the top powers in the Communist hierarchy in Romania, has lost her party positions and is assumed to be on the political skids. Seven persons, including Mrs. Pauker, have been eliminated from among the 13 regular members of the Romanian all-powerful Politburo. A new one composed of nine members has been announced in the Bucharest press. (International) i Trade in a Good Town —Decatur!