Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 219, Decatur, Adams County, 16 September 1952 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Bunday By ■|i THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. Sater n,- ? e r? e n atur ’ Ind - Pott Office as Second Class Matter ’ M- Helldr ___Vice-President Chaa^. Holthouse Treasurer J « Subscription Rates: « and A( P oi hJ n * Counties: One year, |6.00; |: Six months. >3.25; 3 months, $1.76. ’ I s? on- M « il^^+ y k Ond «A d c amß „ &nd Ad ' ,o,n,ng Coon Mes: Ona year, \- » ® ninths, 13.75; 3 months, 12.00. - v .By Carrier, 25 cents per week. Single copies, 6 cents.

A week from next Saturday you turn back the clock and catch ' ub on that hour of sleep lost last SPrl °* 'J : • . V —0- 0— — ' There more than 11,000 eligible voters in this county and the best evidence of their good citizenship would be the voting of at 4‘ 1 ' ■ O ' < irJ ■ ■ I ■ • .. - 0 i Wayne is largeY tha-n Bend, but the later city thrned out about eight times • stronger to Street Qen. Eisenhowj er. The Allep. county Republicans still remain in the Taft tent anii so far-have not. warmed up to i, ■ ‘ t. fr the man who defeated their idol r 'in Chicago; ‘$ j' ■I ' —/—WI ■ ' I’ Not only are we living better n , these days,, bpt we’re living long- / I . er, A man’s qhances of reaching I ? th£ ago- of 52 were\only 55 out I of 100 in 1900 —today they are j better than.B3 out of j.OO, insur- | ance statistics show. A- man’s | chances of reaching 65 . are now | i 63 oht of a 100, and men Who are* 65 years ' old now have better V than a 50-50 chance of going on | ■ for at least 10 years longer. I' O— — ' ? s S>ome of the {statistics"on- home < f ownership are surprising. In spite I. of steadily rising prices and build- ® ing costs (the average American I home-owner .is an ordinary per- | son making, less than |5,000 a , |. year. Federal ii!Housing Adminis- ' I tration statistics show that ah most 70 percent of all people buyV I \ ing homes are in’fcthat income I' group. A nation. where niost wbrk-, g . - ‘ . •. . ■■ ) \ .. v .. f ing .people cap aspire to home ! ownership is bohnd to be a strong one. The more people who own property the more people there | ate who’have a stake in the counI' try. J't will be hard to sell ComImuritsm to thrifty American home ■ owners. .■ 'J j ' | J.' L—'of- —o Gen. Eisenhower was loudly cheered in Florida and there is no ' ■;/ j .. i/ ■ ’ ■ ...

' v ... ■ . . ■ • ■ 0 — o I Modern Etiquette | BYROBERTA LE£ ■ o—- — 4 Q. Is it still, customary to put small favors tn the wedding cake? A. /es, usually' in the top tier of ths cake. The caterer should mark the side* plainly so that no man will get the tiny thimble which is f6r an old maid and no bridesmaid ,wjll». get the button which is for tire bachelor. Be dure there is a wish bone for a big wish, a wedding ring for the girl who will next be inarried. a tiny

TF 7~' ; ———• * —- —- H | - . , I ; l) | J-. Mental Diseases

f By HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D. I UNTIL a lew years ago, most * peoplfe with a serious mental disease had Tittle to look forward to. They were doomed to life in a mental institution, without too much hope of ever being cured. Medical science of today has advanced in the field of. mental - r diseases. The advance has been , ,'; slow, however, when compared with the amazing progress in /many other fields. ( Personality Conflict It is encouraging Jo note that psychiatrists are making great strides in learning how to treat i. people suffering from the neuroses. A neurosis is a mental dis--1 turbance in which there is some ; t : form of personality or emotional conflict, but po definite break in the personality or the emotions. I - ' Our mental institutions are filled with people suffering from | psychoses. These are forms of ■ mental disease in which the person becomes separated from re- ■ j ality and is living in another > ; world. He may, see objects and • ■ hear voices that are not actually ! there, or he may have ideas that *~he is someone other than himself. Memory Difficulty 7 • - Many of these patients have I c 1 tftfllculty v in memory and in asSoK eating things, so that their thoughts are disorganized and . 7 without reason. Others have ideas 1 I 1 that they are being persecuted and that the whole world Is; against them. f''> ' ■ j

reason why Americans should refrlin from giving him a hearty welcome. Every hospitality should be shown the famous general. However, since he is campaigning for votes in the south for president, Florida voters may hot mark l|is ticket. The St.\Pet> ersburg Tibies, one of the largest papers in the stath, announces that it will support Gov. Stevenson and the Democrat ticket. Says the Times, “Gov. Steven Son has a talent for political leadership that a successful head of a democratic state must have. He has the greatest political courage of any major leader of our times.-* ———o o—/ Johnny W at kins:— The New Castle Courier-Times ’ • ' - - i V 4 ‘’ - editorializes on John Watkins, y tpe Democratic candidate for governor of Indiana. I In his public life,-the editorial states, ’’Watkins is as clehn as a "hound's tooth.” 1 Continuing, the newspaper •says - / ! ..’■:? - ■» *ii - ’t ; ; . He’s a common &ense He is well educated, smart and experienced in business and t public matters, but it is his tremendous common sense that we think of when we think of John Watkins. No fast talker is about to put some fancy deal over\on t pim. He makes his decisions by Christian standards. He is one of those rare persons who measures progress first by moral and human standards, and secondly Uymaterial benefits. He asks not only “will it make a better community?” but “will 'it do something for the lives of the people who lilve there?” As' a newspaper, editor, he has seen and helped record the best and the worst in our civilization; yet knowing the worst and understanding the obstacles, he has faith that the world can be made better and counts it his privilege to share in the work. ■ That's John Watkins. ■*»• ■ ' i j

airplane for the mhn who WilLtravei, and a> pair of dice for luck and so forth. . i tj. Should a her own cigarettes when goin£ odt on a date or should shd smoke her eis-i Cort’s? i ■ ; ; A. Either way is correct, although the man is usually* expected to furnish the cigafettfes. || . Q. Is the yeat usually givjgn when dating a social letter? A. No. 4 ! I ■ „lj So far ,as is fcnloyn,; only man, monkeys, and guinea pigs can develop scurvy, the disease resulting from a deficiency pf vitamin C in the diet.

Certain types of psychosis result when the brain tissues have been damaged by injury, drugs, or aging. No definite caiise can be found, however, for many others, which do not appear to come from any special damage to the brain or nerves. It is in this group that a cure is being sought by So many doctors today. Some Os these cases are being!! helped by electric shock treatments. Others are! helped by . for suljn given in high enough doses to cause convulsions. j Surgery Helps Some Brain surgery has been of help to some patients who are unrelieved by any other treatments. This type of operation, known as lobotomy, severs certain tracts of the brain. ' ,' * Lobotomy Is also being performed with very good results on a group of patients known as hypqchondriacs. They are abnormally <,and constantly worried that they may become sick. These methods have enabled doctors to restore patients who would formerly have been considered' J . QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS [ E. I. K.: Can you tell me some of the early signs of pregnancy?; Answerr\The early signs of pregnancy are varied. Swelling of the breasts, frequent urination, and nausea and vom- . iting, usually in the morning, are some early signs. Later on in the 1 pregnancy, life can be felt. ; L ; ■ ■' ■ 7 ■ ■ 1 m

O -■— ■ 1- c 30 Years Ago TODAY O ' . o Sept. 16—Peter Tonnelier, 69, dies at home in Fort Meyer, Fla., following a stroke. Clarence Miller and Barnard Braun purchase Campbell gas statiod at Jackson and Second streets in Decatur. J. G. Niblick is selling 3-pound comforts made from wool from his own sheep. ;/ G- D. Teeple and John T. Kelly will speak at the annual homecoming) bt Mt, Carmel church id Jefferson township tomorrow. 'Charles (Bud) Magley opens a filling station and repair shop on Nprth Second street. Mesdames Vincent Bormann Dan and Clyde Hptler entertain the So Cha Rea club at hamburger fry a\t Sun Set park. y . ru.. 0 I Household Scrapbook | BY ROBERTA• LEE g—..J,. ■ -Q Baked Bananas * Baked bananas are ideal for children and for nervous 1 persons. Bake in the skin for 15 or 20 minutes until soft and they burst the skins Remove the skins and lay them in a baking pan with very little water, Dust sugar over the top and sprinkle with lemon juice. Serve hot. A Paint Spots To remove paint spots from hardwood flbord, apply some kerosene and rub briskly. Follow this by rubbing the floor with a soft cloth wrung from lukewarrp water. Patent Leather Sweet oil makes a good dressing for patent leather. Apply it with a small piece of flannel, then -polish with a soft cloth. Window Shades . The tearing'of a window shade from the roller can be prevented |ay removing the that hold it to the'roller and substituting a istrip of adhesive tape. Beer Flows Abroad MILWAUKEE (UP) — The beer capital of America has sent its biggest shipment of Milwaukee |t>eer dir.ectly\ to foreign countries. ISome 4,000 cases were sent to American embassies in Rome and t’aris for distribution to U, S. diplomatic personnel, army posts and other government w’orkers in Europe. . i .'r . •' ■ Democrat Want Ads Bring Results

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CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR SHE WANTED to keep him beside her, but he had already turned away to examine the chart with the nurse, and Eve hadn’t yet the strength to raise her voice to call him back. Tomorrow she would be stronger. And the day after that, Stronger still. She was going to get well quickly. The constitution of a dandelion, she’d told Jeremy once. "Penicillin is wonderful,” she said to the nurse who approached her with a needle. "Isn’t it?” “Yes, Mrs. Ireland." Eve had learned not to flinch, to hold herself aloof from the brief, quick stab. From the other pain, pie one that began sharply the minute came of her love for Jeremy, she had not yet found immunity. She thought, He hates me. How can I tell him I Jove him? How can I make him believe me, after everything ? There was away. She could be. honest with Jeremy. About the past, everything. Even her reason for marrying him. No dissembling. She’d been almost honest, once, with Steve Raymond. It had Worked, and he had married her. But this was different. It wouldn’t be easy, throwing herself on Jeremy’s mercy, asking for a secoiid chance. But Jeremy was kind. He had loved her. He would again. He would forgive her. But she would have to start with honesty. He’d hated all heir lies. She asked the nurse, "Do I look -if “Yoti look fine, Mrs.- Ireland.” Naturally, she’d say that, Eve | thought. Nurses, and their professional brightness! "Bring me a mirror,” she ordered. She looked at herself.. “’Mmrnm.” She grimaced. "Is that what you call fine?” “A few more days, you’ll perk up.” i So she waited until a faint color qame back into her cheeks, until her fingers were steady enough to hold the lipstick and tie a ribbon in her hair. Then, propped against pillows, looking beautiful and feeling more scared than ever before in her life, she said to Jeremy, "Must you rush off? Can’t we talk today? There are things I want to say to you, Jeremy. Please,” |ij He glanced at his wristwatch, pulled over a chair. "Smoke,” she said, "if you like. It’s going to take a little time for all I have to say.” He looked, dubious, “Can’t it Wait ?” "No,i Jeremy.” ' J ■ L She saw his' frown when she told him she’d have to go a long way back. Back to the time when she

DBOATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DBCATUR, INDIANA

THE HEIGHT "OF TOLLY’ \ z >-’ *' -•■//>■ jSOSI ®/\ X /\ ) !—- 1 L. ■ -

Cicero Residents “ Ask Name Changed Submit Name Change To Municipal Vote Cicero, 111. UP — .Cidero voters who vvould like to wipe out the memories and associations of the years had a chance today to change the name of this one-time hangout for bootleggers, gamblers and gunmen. The town board of , the former headquarters Os “Scarface” Al Capone voted Monday night to submit a proposed name change to a municipal vote. 4 ) The board had been pressed by certain citizens to change z the name of the Chicago pnburb to Electra, Normanfly, or some'other innocent name. ? ! Some of the town Officials agreed. Nicholas BerkoK citly attorney, said. “People everywhere think we're just a bunch of But the board decided it Was up to the voters to make ap attempt to erase the Capone stigma. Two petitions will bp Offered to the voters. One would approve the

was a child, before she’d known his father and mother. “Eve, this can wait.” “Please.” . ' 'll * “AU right” She said a surprising thing. “Jeremy, do you believe children are decent to start with?” She didn’t wait for his reply. "They’re not They have to be taught decency. They have to be shown the difference between bad and good. My parents hadn’t time for me. They were more interested In. horses. They raised thoroughbreds, and foUowed the horses* season in, season out all over the country. I didn’t read Hans Christian Anderson. I read, the Racing Form.” She shruggejl. “By the time people—not my parents—started teaching me that lies were wrong, and stealing wicked, it war too late. Who was it said, Give me a child from birth to seven years, and I’ll show you, the man or woman he wiU became? . . . The formative years; I found out that I could get the things I wanted by taking them, if I were smart. And that I could lie my way out of anything. Your mother was the first person who tried to change me. Perhaps, if she hadn’t least me» off —” She shrugged again, not flippantly. "I hated her for sending me back to the Shelter, Jeremy. I told her I’d get even, that I’d pay her back for not giving me another phance ...” The hatred and the frustration had remained with her all the time she had been at the Shelter. She was the institution’s Bad Girl. She refused) to make friends with the other Children; she broke all the rules, snapped her fingers at authority. She was desperately lonely and unhappy, but too proud to acknowledge either. She had stayed at the Shelter until she instigated a hunger strike against the skimpy and horribly monotonous meals. After that, she was sent away to Reform School. She still hated the Irelands. They were responsible for everything that had happened to her. They’d deprived her of aU the things she might have had —a home, pretty clothes, frieiids. They had sent her to this —bars at the windows, cotton bags of dresses, supervision, rules, drabness. She would get even. But she had to find away. Her hatred could not toUch the Irelands unless she found the means of getting back into their lives. Even that would be futile, unless she could meet them on an equal social and financial footing. Two things she must have. An education, and money. \ At the Reform School, She read everything she could lay her hands

' • I I ’N ? name change; one would endorse “Cieero.” ■ ,\ ) If the first petition carries, public hearings will be held to make the final selection of a new name. If the electorate shows it is in favor of a new 1 name, the Illinois secretary of state will b‘e asked to his stamp oi approval on a differeht' name. Considering th4 importance of the issue at stake, Monday night’s meeting was sparsely attended. About i6i»’ citizens attended the meeting, but they were there to complain about their sewers. _ E.— General Motors To Consolidate Divisions INDIANAPOLIS, UP — General Motors will consolidate -its propeller making and aircraft engine producing divisions in the Allison division here today. C, E. Wilson, General Motors president, said aeroproduets division, producer of propellers in Dayton, Ohio, will its employep to the Allison engine plant in Indianapolis. The Indianapolis branch will build both gas turbine and propellers.: - J I Deshbcrat Want Ads Bring) Results

on, Shakespeare filched frdm the bookshelf in th* Matron’s sitting room, i tabloids salvaged from the dormitory waste baskets. She read, not in search for knowledge, but to put herself on the. cultural level of those who had read all the right things. Her memory was a sponge, soaking up everything avidly and indiscriminately. She could quote whole passages of Shakespeare, without understanding in the least what it was. all about. She worked to enlarge her vocabulary. Sometimes, when she had used an unfamiliar - word, she mispronounced it, but she did not know this. She had the remarkable vocabulary of the girls in \the, Reformatory, and as well the fine new words she was learning. The girls laughed at heh She didn’t care. She subscribed to the Thurstonia Herald, ahd clipped. from it everything that was printed about the Irelands. That, then, was her only contact with them. > From the Reform school She was sent, at eighteen, into housework. She hated that, the minimum of personal freedom, the uniforms, the inadequate income. Eventually, she ran away with a pair of valuable diamond clips stolen from her employer. l Os coiirse they caught het, and she sp,ent a-year in prison. The ig-V nominy she resented less than the wasted time. She determined, when she was free, neveir again to put herself in a position where *he would become entangled with the law. She worked in a munitions’ factory, Hut sh* had no intention of staying on the assembly line. She tool:-a night course in secretarial work, arid was soon transferred to the office. A stenographer in a big room with all the other girls at typewriters. Then secretary to the assistant manager, with an office of her own. She began to meet people, important people. She didn’t bother with the others. She met . people of social standing, with money. She met Steve Raymond. She saw at once that he was taken with her looks. But he knew dozens of other beautiful girls, and Eve knew he had to see herj as different, set apart from! the others. So\ she gambled on a long chance, ; I and With What seemed disarming frankriess, Shi told him everything about herself, R e form school, prison, everything/Essentially, she told him the truth, but she made it amusing, appealing, tragic. You poor kid, Steve said. You’ve had all the tough breakt, haven’t you? Soon he was. saying, Marry me, Eve. /To Be Continued)

mu— mu , , . .Reef In Germany $Vt. jßonald Reef, former eraofw«4Jentral Soya company hs |ervin4 /nj the medical corps at Nuhrnberg, Germany. Mrs. Reef resides near Bertie. Reef left the sta|es last July. HiS address is Pvt. Donald lJ Reef, US 55249181. MedicarUo. Int regt, 43rd division APO 112, % P|4 New York, N. Y. i A3UDIB Set For Issues Lucille Quirk vs Adams lodge 131 i, Loyal Order of the Moose, Indi, coniplaint for personal injuries; oh motion of the plaintiff is set tor issues September 26. Case Is Dismissed Willard ;C. Dausman, State Auto Mutual Insurance Co.. ‘ vs Delbert J.‘ Haviland, complaint for daittages; on motion of plaintiff case is dismissed; costs of action assessed against plaintiff. ■ti 1 ? I/) _ ■ l* County agents * j I pOLUMN Farmers having weeds in their soybean fjelds that will retard har-vest-will bp interested in the following article, states county agent L.E. Arciibcld. ’ \ ~ l “ Farmers are warned by O. C. Lee. J weed specialist at Purdue University,; that too early spraying will .hurt the beans. Beans should be free in- the pod before sprays are applied. \ “trials at Purdue have shown that? yield jand quality of soybeans i\ere loweiecj when the beans were sprayed tj>o early. It is also thoiiiht the germination of the bean mayj be afected. “The recommended spray is a five percent penta-chloro-phenol solution in oil, fuel or kerosehe. This- spray is the most practical and inexpensive. The rate of application the spray varies with the amount of weeds in the field. Thr<&6 gallons per acre is sufficient for £ fieldjof light weed infestion And Six gallons per acre is needed tor a field with a lot of weeds./ ‘(TW e method of application recomtuendec Is by airplane,; as the usefof ground bquipmhnt may eausfe mechanical dhmafce to the soybean plants and reduced The average cost of such an operation'is frcm |4.50 to |7 per acre.” !■. Sr

GERBETS f VEAL CHOPS i For a meal that's djfferentfserve our tender | and delicious Veal Chops . . . . it’s a meat treat the entire family will enjoy. ■.,j . , . — VEAL CHOPS . . . lb. 79c ;j■' 'jr---- -—■XI,"! 'H, 'v a ; ,—— Gerber’s Market 150 S. Second St. h , , Phone 3-2712 ■M——- - .. '* i ■ «Hi " 1 iii ' iiii ,w.ii I li'n II I ~| ■ — I I ■ f-r 'I l Get a jet-streamed Studebaker and cut your driving costs! Htatf Commander V-S Htarliner. Whitd. tide wall lire aad ebrome wheel discs optional at extra oost. ''l ' ' H [ j .., ■’ ■ • ' 1952 STI DI HAKI H I COMMANDER V-8 OR CHAMPION Spend less for gas—less for upkeep—with a Studebaker! Get more for your money all the way—with a Studebaker! Check delivered prices and you’ll f “ y | I . drive home a Studebaker! AU models offer Studebaker Automatic Drive or Overdrive—and glare-reducing tinted g'ass—al extra cost. , ' ENGLE & IRWIN MOTOR SALES ! .“Your Friendly Studebaker Dealer” , 13th Street A Winchester Street Decatur, Ind.

Annual Party For Teachers, Trustees Hold Annual Party At Geneva Oct. 2 Date for the annual trustee and teacher pirty, originally scheduled for Oct. 16. has been changed lb Thursday/ Oct. 2 at 7 p. m. at the Gepeya high school. Geneva Officials have invited the teachers, j trustees and their wives or hu-sbands to the party. All county\ teachers are asked to meet at 6:45 o’clock at the Geneva school! auditorium to elect three delegates and three alternates to the representative assembly bf the l Indiana state teachers association. County school officials, at their meeting, also decided to return to the following (previously used) system of grading for the 1952-53 school year (grades 142): A, excellent or 1 superior; B, good or above average; C, average; D, poor, work does not meet satisfactory standards; F, failure or below passing. “Parents are urged to look at their children’s work and grades,

Light It and Forget It! COMBUSTIONEER OIL OR GAS HHB FURNACES MBH For • Basements tgsjFM I • Utility Room I- ~~Z Ii t- 1 • Crawl Space "T FREE DIAL FREE ; INSPECTION 3-3316 ESTIMATES HAUGK’S COMFORT HEADQUARTERS S. 2nd St. Across from Court House '

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1952

impartially. No grading system is perfect, nor is any teacher. . 1 Some people insist that no grades should be issued, but it is agreed ' that are not ready for such a system as yet. Parents are urged ' i to visit their schools in order to become more familiar with the work that is being done by their children. ' “Special attention is also called to the serious consequences of irregular school attendance. It is important to remember that the loss of even a portion of a school z session Often proves to be ,a serious interruption in the progress of a pupil, and tends to produce a of interest and proper attitude toward -the school. Attendance is also a moans of acquiring state financial support” Glen B. Custard, county superintendent ol .1schools, explained. Says Playground No Place For Crap Game MILWAUKEE, UP — s Judge HarVey Neelen commented, today that a crap game on a public schoolground has a “bad effect” on children. . < f .A* He fined five men $5 each for shooting dice on the Roosevekl junior high school playgrounds • “Os al! places to play craps, the worst is a schoolground,” he said.