Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 183, Decatur, Adams County, 4 August 1952 — Page 2
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Indianapolis Girl Is Miss Indiana Miss Ann Garnier Wins State Contest 'i ■ i ■ ■~ 1 tINDIANAPOIJS. UP — “MUs Indiana,” curvaceous Ann Garnier of Indianapolis, hoped today she could do what no other Indiana beauty has done—Walk off with the coveted “Miss America” 1 itlh at Atlantic City. She j was crowned queen df Hoosierland's glamour parade -Saturday night at Lafayette by 1951 winner Carol Mitchell of Rochester, who placed second in the na- ; I—_ _ 7 ' ■ - ■ f
\ I * lSl®7 ' W»(to) Do You Jaywalk the Telephone line? Jaywalking on a telephone party line can be just as bad as any other type. A "telephone jaywalker" ignores emergency call pleas—makes call after call without pause—always talks •ooloos. When you use your telephone sharingly—party line traffic flows smoothly with better service for everyone! " Citizens Telephone Co/
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As is our annual custom we expect to purchase several 4-H Club Calves / at annual 4-H Club RoundupJ Sale" to be held at Munroe Thursday, August 7. We have taken orders for i I quarters of this high Quality ■ Adams County and will con- ■ tinue to accept orders for it up until the time of the sale. No doubt a ■ number of Decatur and Adams ; I - County people would like to qnjoy \ I having a quarter or half of this fam- ■ .7 ous Adarris County 4-H Beef in their I locker or home freezer unit, if they ■ knew it could be* made available to them at a nominal handling charge. Our livestock truck will be on the grounds the night of the sale, so I there will be no charge for trucking the same to our Packing House on Highway 27 North. Our standard slaughtering charge of $4.00 a head ■ or one dollar a quarter is the only overhead expense added to the cost I -of the Beef. Pur! charge for proces-
M e take this opportunity to invijte you to stop and visit our, modern, sanitary Packing Plant, we kill cattle every day of the week and hogs every Wednesday. Take along one of our delicious; Home Cured, Hickory Smoked Hams or Side of- || ■ Bacon, Pork Shoulder, Fresh Hams or Loins, or some of our famous All Hog Sausage at Wholesale Prices. V r " B ■ B I Special This Week! 50 lb* can Home Rendered Lard $6.00 25 lb. can s3*oo I H. P. Schmitt Packing Co. I Highway 27 North Phone 3-3146 B I I ■
tional contest—highest a "Miss Indiana” has ever gone. Miss Garnier displayed a perfect 35-25-35 figure in bathing suit competition with seven other hopefuls Saturday morning. At a luncheon, . the 20-year-old. honey blotfde was rated: on personality. Saturday night, she won the talent competition and the title with a rendition of ad Italian aria, “11 Baciq.” second place went to Martha Mae Christian- as Miss Lakes of . Monticello. Norma Miller ds Miss -West Lafayette won third place. View of Miss Garnier’s physical charm. 123 pounds and 5 feet 7 inches tall, was denied the public. Bathing suit Judging was barred to all but officials for the first time in the content historv.
4-H CLUB CALVES iIJ.-. irr i - l ■' l. ' • ! . I: '• ! <
. "J : *•• t ; f 11 ■ ■ .-ar' **♦<; /■ f :■ ?-'• jffE - - J IB ;! ®K MiilWlilolß O'F Kw! HHE lis ?£t I < Mist , lit /X IS' ■ >*■ 11 w irjP , MRS. ED BAUER, volunteer services chairman so? the Adams toilnty Red Cross chapter, is shown presenting pins to volunteers who have given 150 or i more hours of s rvice during the year, as R. E Glendening, chapter chairman, watl-hes the ceremony. \ : Left to right, are: Glendening. Mrs Bauer, Mis. 11 P En?,le. 305 hours; Mrs. W. E. Brant. 17$ tiburs; Mrs. Robert Railing, 164 hours; Mrs. Norman P. Leonardson, 155 hours. Not shown is Mrs. Norbert Gase, 150 hours, who was unable io ,be present for photo. . ’
I. U. Alumni Club Officers To Meet Adams county is among 14 northeastern and east-central Indiana counties whoTiave been invited to send representatives to Marion Wednesday,for a regional conference (>f Indiana University alumni club officers.An outstanding I. U. alumni from Decatur, G. Remy Bierly. has received an invitation -to attend the meeting. Host for the meeting will be the I. U, alumni club of Grant county. The conference will
sing and cutting up, double wrap- ■ ping, and sharp-freezing and nqark- - ing the different is our staqd- : ard processing c h ar g e of 5c lb. Therd will be no additional charge for storing or aging your Beef in our ® newly equipped aging cooler. Ppr past experience ih slaughtering B these highly grain fed Beef is that They dress about 57 7to 637 meat, ra depending on the condition of the steer at the time of weighing. We are infprmed that the calves will be weighed as they enter the sale ring. || If you..should purchase qne for your- H self, we will be glad to slaughter and g process it for you at the above listed charges. | Q Let’s give the 4-H boys and girls || a boost by leaving this good Adams E| County Beef in Ac ams County. We ' || are paying 6c a pound for Beef Hides which can be credited to your slaughtering\and processing char\ges. r g
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA '
li. * fpclude a golf outing at 2:30 p.ia iat the Meshitigomesia Country i club and a dinnef at'6:3o p.m. at Miller’s Supper club in Marion. ■ M ' ■ [ii \ y J ■ ; Cole Porter's Mother i Dies At Home In Peru i j PERU, Ind. UP j—Services will be conducted today for Mrs. Kate ifofter, whose death Saturday 1 night ended a famous, mother-son ’ cjomradeshlp. Her only child, songwriter Cole ' porter, was at her bedside when sihe died at her home, Wes.tle.igh ; fkrms.
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(State Police Plan ';Two New Subposts To Establish One \ Post At Baer Field INDIANAPOLIS, (Special) — State police Supt. Robert A. O'Neal today announced that two subposts will lie established near South Bend and Fort Wayne next month to “increase the availability of troopers to the A six-room frame house along F. S. 31. four miles south of South Bend, has been leased from Mrs. Mabie L. Sult and w ill serve as a •state police headquarters for ! St. Joseph, Marshall and FuEton coUnits under Lt. Mark A, Nelson; Dunes Park post commander. A former restaurant building at Baer fiei\t, near Fort WayneJ. will be converted to a headquarters, for Allen. Adams ami, Wells comities, under the command (rfLt. George A. Everett, Ligonier post. The Sbuth Bend and Fort Wayne subposts will be in direct charge of a sergeant and a corporal, who will have several troopers at their disposal. Opening ;ioi the rtubdistricts will lie delayed pending the selection of supervisory personnel and the installation ohradio inent and office and dormitory furnishings at each location. • ' Supt, O'Neal indicated the upstate ''projects may be a forerunner to a gradual reduction ip the size of the present state police post areas to provide better administrative control of department i field, operations. The plan wilt 1 algo permit closer contact with citizens who need police service, he said. ; “We have known for sonietime that growing demands by the pubi lie for state police assistance can ! only be met by increasing the department’s facilities," asserted Supt. O'Neal. “The present and anticipated traffic and crime work i load is just too mych for an organ- { ization which has not been changed appreciably since it was estab- ' lished 18 years ago.” i Public and • legislative support will be sought, he said, for a pro- 1 gram now being prepared to enlarge the state police department ! in proportion to its hiounting responsibilities. ALLIED PLANES (Ctmtinued From I*age One) down 383 MIGs, probably shot down 9G’ and damaged 529. I The, 1,000 mark was reached Aug. 1. film evaluations showed, in a battle that resulted in four MIGs beitig destroyed and two' damaged. Six Sabrejet pilots of the 4th fighter-interceptor wing shared credit for the I,oooth MIG. They included Ist Lt. Gepe F. Rogge, Auburn, \ Neb. Lt. Gen. Glenti O. Barcus, commajitler of the sth air force, said the grand total is “further evidence of th? superiority of United Nations pilots and aircraft over the Communists.” Cn pie ground. U. N. 2nd division troops shattered the fourth Communist attempt in as inanjdays to knock them from Old Baldy hill. A hail of American artillery shells hit a reinforced Chinese platoon as it moved up the slopes on the strategic west-central fropt height west of Chorwon. The Communists broke under th? fury of the i barrage and fled • I back to the cover of their own ' lines: They lost an estimated 20 •'.to 35 men in the atack. Gen. James A. Van Fleet, command?r of the Bth army, congratulated the men of the 2nd division today orr their recapture of Old, Baldy in ah eight-hour battle Fri- , day. ;
Flying Discs Reported In Europe, Iran Europe Newspapers Shrug Off Reports; Check U. S. Saucers By United Press % Europeans btecame talkative about flying saucers again today, but spoke of the piysterteus “objects” with less concern than skygazers in the United States and Canada. France reported the greatest number of discs seen \avfer the week end, more than 20, to lead the European standings. There, were several reports from Italy ahd Iran, also. i | European newspapers generally took the "sightings" lightly. Some used the tongue-ih-cheek technique in reporting the presence of discs spinning across the skies at incredible speeds. Other journals covered the incidents wi|th an. editorial shrug of the shoulders. But on this side of the Atlantic, authorities listened seriously to every report. Maj. Gen. Roger M. Barney, U.S. air force’s director of • operations, said Sunday night that although flying saucers “do not enter into the defense problem of this country,” the air force "feels a responsibility?’ to cheOk each report, i i Ramey said on a network television program, Columbia Broadcasting System’s Man of the Week, that the air force was well convinced” the objects were not “solid.” ( He again stated that the mysterious circles and lights in the skies “very definitely” are not a product of the UJS. air force, but predicted the government soon would be able to determine the source of the lights with special cameras. \ Ramey said the air force would continue to investigate, every report to the best of its ability and without "frantic fear.” ' Shortly after Ramey concluded his talk, Washington’ newspapers and radio stations reported they had received numerous telephone calls from persons who had seen strange lights over the Capital. Official observers reported they saw nothing. The Royal Canadian air force, using the strategy of its U. S. counterpart, assigned an intelligence officer to keep score on all reports of ‘‘saucers” or ,other objects. ' . i : Saucer signtings are reported in Britain about once every three weeks. A couple of Melrose, Mass., said 1 Sunday that Britons tad seen fly? mg saucers as long as 291 years ago. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond G. Maso\i said they have a book, published in 1821 and entitled “The One Hunddred Wonders of the World and the
_ _ TOWNSHIP FORM NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES In the matter of determining th® tax rates foi- certain purposes by Blue Creek Township Adami County, Indiana, before the Township Advisory Board. • Notice is hereby given thq taxpayers of Blue Creek Township, Adams County,; Indiana that, the proper legal ofticers of said municipality, at their regiHar meeting place, on the 26th day of August, 1952, will consider the following budget:- ' TOWNSHIP BIDG ET CLASSIFICATION
Towiiublp Fund: Salary inf Trustee $ 900 1 Office rent ’. 90 Clerk hire i 73, Trustee’s traveling expense ...j 150 J I’. S.alary and Supplies . 25Q Pay of advisory board J. 75 Fire Truck 250 Care of cemeteries -too Miscellaneous 220 Total Township Fund $2410 Tuition Fund: Fay (of Teachers .. SIOSOO Pay of Substitute Teachers .... 3<>o School transfers ! 7WO
ESTIMATE OF FUNDS TO BE RAISED i Special Funds Required For Expenses I . Township School Tuition Atigust 1. present yenr, to December ftl. of ensuing year « Fund 11 Fund Fund 1.. Total Budget Estimate tor Incoming Year s34p» $13230 117800 2. Necessary Expenditures to be made fhom Appropria- , tiotis Unexpended July 31, of. present year i *.1250 6640 12400 3. Additional Appropriations tQ be made August 1, to c , ■ December 31, of. present year L.Jf 4. Outstanding Temporary Loans to be paid before 1 Perember 31, of present year, not Included in Lines .’ - 2 . or 3 J A. .. 5. Total Funds Required Funds on Hund And To Be Received From Sources Other Thun The .Proposed Rate Os Tax, Levy 6. Actual Balance, July 31, present year 1674 7516 1 1575 7. taxes tor be Collected, present year (December Set- ' \ A tlement) : I UH : 1 5252‘ 8. Miscellaneous Revenue, other than from Tax Levy • . to be received front August-liof present y ar to December 31, of ensuing year. (See Schedule in , v, Trustees Office) \ - (a) Special taxes (see schedules) _ ...A <b( All Other Revenue (See Schedules) <s , 2032 /7J 9. Total Funds (Add Lines 6,7, 8a and 8b) ...A' 7 27R5 iiAn -''U42 10. Net Amount to bo raised for expenses to December 31, of ensuing year J 873 p,,- l r . 11. Operating Balance (Not in excess of Expense “ ' January 1, to June 30, Less Miscejllaneou-s Reveille 19 l\' r a er,o . d) a 4Um 4um * 12. Amount to be raised by Tax Levy < 2080 9426 11001 ' PROPOSED LEVIES Net Valuation of Taxable Property „ A.st,sßl,74oNumber of Taxable Polls 125 Adjhstment Factor ...- X 677 Levy on Amount to W’i,. n I Property Be Haloed special school j a 1. „::..az::1 ’mr nuition = _ 7n Horn, Tran X'^ r .? tlOn - .11 1739 COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF TAXES collected and to Be COLLECTED » FUNDS To Be I \ A A ' | ' Collected Collected Collected Collected Townshin J 1949 !9SO 1951 1952 Tuition r j \ .- 9395 4y313 12«38 nni ■ Transportation e A \ 1586 IW9 TOTAL ... i ■ ; . . NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX I LEVIES Taxpayers appearing shall have a right to be heard thereon. After the tax levies have been deter mined, and presented to the County Auditor not later than two days prior to the second. Monday in September, and the levy fixed by the County Tax Adjustment Board, .or ori their failure so to do, by the County Auditor, ten or more taxpayers feeling themselves aggrieved by such levies, mayi appeal to the State Board of tax commissioners for further end final- hearing therjeon by filing of .petition 1 with the county auditor on or before fourth Monday of September or on or before the tenth dav after publication bv the county auditor of tax rates charged, Whichever date Islater, and the state board will fix a da be for hearing In thii ■ ■ounty. Dated August 2, 1952. . FIXfYp L. MEYER, Blue Creek Township
Three Kingdoms of Nature,” which devoted a paragraph to the first evidence of a “saucer” over England. A “On Oct. 22, 1661, two-mock suns and a halo were seen ipLondon, England, about 11 the book’s chapter on “Atmospherical Refraction” said. “They were bright and distant. These silver discs had tails of a white color. They were evidently red toward the true sun but pale whitish at the opposite sides.” A Paris newspaper disclosed it recently bad bgen offered "exclwslve pictures” of a flying saucer for |2,87& Scientists said the engineer who submitted the pictures had photographed a weather balloon. Figures show' that more than B 0 pericent of the revenue of Canadian hotels comes from the sale of beer, wine and liquor, more than 23 percent from room rqnts and slightly more than 18 percent from the skle of meals.
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*vr x> t uu v iv.ii Total Tuition Fund SI7BOO Special School Fund: Repair of buildings and care of grounds J SI2OO Repair of equipment, except School Busses .. 400 School furniture and equipment, ,exc|ept School Busfees *SOO School supplies, other than Janitor's Supplies p.... 250Janitor Supplies 250 Fuel for Schools 1400 Loans, lnter4?st and Insurance 250 School Transfers : 1 700 Janitor Service J., 600
MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 1952 S
Says Many Germans Still Held Prisoner HANNOVER, Germany, UP — A German bishop told the Lutheran' world federation conference that “hundreds of thousands” of Germans still are being held as war prisoners by Russia. The statement was made by Bishop Toeodor Heckel of Munich shortly before the 10-day session ended late Sunday. Heckel said a total of 1,50C>000 were still reported as “missing” in Russia since the war. He said only 15,000 held as war prisoners were allowed to communicate with their families. He added that these included 45 Protestant pastors. A measured inch, of rain totals 27,000 gallons of water per acre of ground. When an inch of rain falls on the District of Columbia, it brings roughly 1,200,000,000 gallons.
I BVF«M ' Transportation of Children ...A. 7000 Water, iHight, arid Power 180 Ditch (Expense, (Benefits to \ School Property Only) .. 100 Miscellaneous .jA.;.....'.. 200 Total: Special School Fund $13230 Poor Relief Fundt A. Adminixtration Expense: A.L : Personal Service ........i. 100 Direct Relief: 83. Total Direct Relief (Total Bl and B 2) 1630 Total Poor Relief Fund $1730
