Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 245, Decatur, Adams County, 16 October 1952 — Page 9

/ ' ' J .■; . ■ ' . THURSDAY. OCTOBER 16, 1952 ’,

■ 1 jT Moonlight Ramblers ! I'' i l ' ■- ' I ■ New Time 8:30 I I I 1450 ON YOUR DIAL I I Hr STATION WANE I I I ■I •- , ’ ■ Public Auction HOUSEHOLD GOODS ' As I have sold my property I Will sell the following at Public Auction 309 N. 4th Street, Decatut*, Ind., oh j Saturday, October 18,1952 AFTERNOON SALE—at 1:1)0 P. M.—AFTERNOON SALE Mahogany Dining Room Suite, extra gtiodf Bridge Lamp; Floor Lamp; Table Lamp; End T&ble; Several ( Mirrors: Occasional Chair and Footstool; Walnut Coffee Table; Mahogany Bedroom Suite consisting of Double Bed. Dresser. Vanity & Stool, Nite Stand. & chair, ,extrd good'; Small Oak Dresser; Folding Cot'; Some. Bed Clothing; 8.3 X 10.6 Rug; Throw’Rugs; Tappan Gas Stove, 1 yr. old, like new; Frighlaire 6 ft. Refrigerator, extra: goodj 3 kitchen chairs; Stand; Nice' "Cabinet; Card Table; Ironing Board;’ New Hamper; Dishes, Pots, Pans,\Cooking Utensils and miscellaneous '! TERMS—CASH. Not Responsible fol* Accidents. I. A. KALVER, Owner Ned C. Joh nsori—Auctioneer . ' ' Bryce Daniels—4Cterk j , i U H 14 16 Public Auction \ ■ Due to my illness. I eaniiot take care of my livestock, and will sell my Holstein cattle anti Hogs Tuesday, October 21,1952 I ' 1:00P.M. 11 — HOLSTEIN COWS —ll j I \ Registered Cow 11, milking 40' lbs., due in March; •. \ Grade Holstein 3, due Dec/ Bth J ' ? ’ ' '< ;Grade Holstein 6. was fresh Sept. 9- milking 68 Ibsj.j Grade Holstein 5, be fresh by sale day; * Grade Holstein 6 ; milking 38' lbs.; j| Grade Holstein 3. was fresh Aug. 27, milking 48 lbs.; ft I Grade Holstein 5, milking 30 lbs., dire Jan. 24; i ; r I Grade Holstein 4. milking 60 lb's., was fresh Aug. Hi Gfade HolKfein 3. was fresh Sepu 8. milking &1 lbs.;; r Grade Holstein 6. was milking 48 ttjS.: Grade Holstein 3, was fresh Sept. 5, milking 60 lbs. This is? a good herd of Large, nicely marked yearly records on each one will be»givehday of sale. They are Bred to Bulls of Adams County Artificial Breeding Association; T. B. and Bangs Tested. , Health papers with egch oow. f| I . • HOGS—6 Hampshire Sows, double Immuned, Bred; 1 Berkshire Boar. L HAY LOADER—^M-M!Push Bar anjl Cylinder, all stefej hay loader. ‘ TERMS—rCASH. ' ' OSCAR KOENEMAN, Owner Roy S. Johnson, | ? Sled C. Johnson — Auctioneer ? » ; Bryce Danielgf-Clerk _ Public Auction I r •' | ' ' ■ ■ ? M v -' pj i: ' We, will sfell at? Public Auction 6 miles West of Decatur or 1% mile I North of Magley. Indiana on Blakk Tqp Road to-the Salem Magley Reformed Ch lire h then Vi mile East, on Thursday, October 23,1952 ; ' at 10:30 A. M y C.S.T. 24 — HEAD OF CATTLE — 24 | \ < ,T. B. & Bangg Tested Registered Holstein Cow 3, “Sally Mary Nellie” Nb- 3136252, due 2nd calf in >(ov.; Holstein. Cow.fc due Oct. 17, 5 gal, cow; Holstein Cow 5, due Jan. 7, 5 gal. cow; Holstein Cow 4, wasjjfresh Sept. 18, milking 5 gal., open: Holstein Cow 2. was fresh July 6. Milking 4% gal., bred Sept. 25: Holstein Cow'2 was fresh Aug. 17' milking 4 gal., open; Holstein Cow 8, milking .3 gal.. due Marfch ?5; Holstein Cow 5, due in Jan., 5 gal. cow; Holstein Heifer 2. 9";![ Holstein Heifer with Bull! Calf: 3 yearling Heifers;' Holstein Heifer. 14 mo. old; Holhtein Bull, 2 yr. old; Holstein Bull Calf, & mo. old, from artificial breeding; Holstein. BUR’ 8 mo. old. Extra gbod, Individual; Holstein heifpr 7 mo. old; 3 yearling Guernsey fleifers; Shorthorn RUII. Red, 8 mo. old. Eligible to Register; 1 Shorthorn heifer. Red, 7 mo. did. Eligible to Register. ? 1 fl > DAIRY EQUIPMENT—2 Unit Fgrm Master Milkdr; IHC 4 Can Milk (pooler; 15 gallon Electric Watei*,Heater; 2 Wash Tanks. \ 26—HEAD OF HOGS—26 Double Immuned !. 3 Brood fSows due with Second litters in November; 2 Gilts due in November; Six Feeders 190-150 lbs.; 15 Feeders, 37-75 lbs. \ HAY—GRAIN—STRA'W—3S Ton, rhore or less, chopped, Hay; 100 Bushel, more or less, Cherokee Oats'; 90 Bushel Wheat & Oats, mixed; 325 Baled Oats & Wheat Straw. ; CHICKENS—23O New Hampshire gullets, laying 50%. J ,t TRACTOR & IMPLEMENTS 1949 John Deere B Tractor—with Power Trdl—completely eguip- - ped..“"including “Heat Houser”.; 1950 John Cultivators, quick attaching; 1950|John Deere No,<4*4 Power Trol 2 Bpttom 14 inch BreakI ing Plow, on rubber; 1950 John Deere Tractor D|sc. 7 ftl; 1951 John Deere 2 Section Spike Tooth JHarrowj Moline 3 “Section Spring Tooth Harrow; Soij Surgeon, used 3 seasons; GI 8 ft. Cultipacker, good; IHC Corn Planted with Fertilizer Attachment —for Power Trol; 1948 New v Idea»7 A ft. Power Mower, gbodj 1948 Case 4 Bar Side; Delivery Rake; 1949 GI Tractor Manure Spreader; Sears Rubber Tire; Wagon & 14 ft. Rack; 1948 IHC 10 inch Hammer Mijl & 50 ft. Rubber Belt; Power Corn Shelter Steel Wheel Wagon & Rack; Electric’Brooder Stove; Chicken "Feeders & Nests; Hog 'Troughs; Winter Hog Fountain; One 4 Hole; one 6 Hole, and one 8 Dole Weber Hog. Feeder; Barrel “Standard” No. 20 Oil: 15 gal. No. 20 Olli 35 lb. NbJ 3 Grease; 5 gal. • Finol”; 5 gaj- Fly Spray; Small Tools and miscellaneous. TERMS—CASH. Not Responsible for Accidents. RAYMOND KILTER and f (Mrs.) GLADYS PECK-Owners Roy S. Johnson, , < ? ' Ned C. Johnson — Auctioneers ? it. Bryce \ ' ! '■ i Lunch By Ladies Aid Saletfi Magjey Reformed Church 16 18 21 I . —_ ; ■

I Adlai E. Stevenson by Noel F. Busch ' \ '• \; 1 { • HI — A Vacation From Law School

A frequent canard about Stevenson’s education is that he flunked out of i Harvard Law School. Wh«t \ really happened was more compli- . cated. After his last year at Prince- * ton, he and a. classmate named Ralph Goodwin drove in the tetter’s Jordan roadster to spend the summer on a ranch) in Wyoming. Ranch life proved much to-.their liking. Stevenson and Goodwin decided to stay on in the West, began looking at property and presently found soine they thought would suit them. When Stevenson wrote to tell his father of the new turn his career had taken, Lewis Stevenson failed to cooperate. He replied that if SteVenscn did not . report back on time to attend Har* vard Law School, someone would come to fetch him. At Harvard Law School, Stevenson got passing marks but, unlike the later generation of embryo New Dealers who sat mesmerized by the pedagogic wizardry of the great Felix Frankfurter, he never met Frankfurter arid never put his heart in it. 3 Stevenson did take a couple of years vacation frbm law school and spent them on the family newspaper; the Bloomington, Illinois, Pantograph, in various editorial capacities. Then he decided to finish

up his tew course and, having fall- as well as one of the most attracJb b dflßb Vte. JR > IHIA I \

en a year behind his classmates 1 who had already graduated from < Harvard; he entered the tew school ’ \at Northwestern university and < took his degree there in His : cousin, Loring Merwin, still runs the Pantograph along independent Republican lines. Stevenson still; .< owns roughly twenty-five percent ; of the company but resigned as a : director and vice-president after being elected Governor. Expanding His Horizon iAfter completing his formal ' schooling, Stevenson decided .to have a test look at Europe before , settling down to practice law in Chicago. Starting with Switzer; land, he covered most of the beat* en tracks from Scandinavia to the , toe of Italy. He wanted to go some, where new, and hit on Russia. In order to effect an entry, Stevenson got Hearst INS and Pantagraph credentials as a foreig;n correspondent. Having arrived in Moscow, where the first thing he noticed were honieless children; fighting to licit the cobblestones where someone had spilled ‘some jam, .Stevenson presented himself; at the Foreign Office and explained that he wished to interview Finance; Minister Chicherin oih the subject of the then highly controversial New Economic Policy.; He was told to ; come back the neixt morning. The | nex:t morning he presented himself;

To be continued ; \

Fuel Advice DETROIT i(UP)-4Qhrysler engineers pass along this following ( gas-saving tip; an engine Uses the; same aniount of gasoline white idling during the period ’ as it wilf white beihg driven—-and ‘ an engine under load warriis up Quicker. (

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, INDIANA

again. He was told to come back the next morning. This continued for four weeks during which Ste- . venson passed his afternoons in less monotonous fashion. He lived in a house run t?y two middle-aged Quaker ladiei which was also a favorite meeting place for members of the correspondents’ colony. Stevenson roamed about town with them and called on surviving relatives o_f some White Russian emigres whom he had known in Chicago. His appointment with Chicherin was never forthcoming. After a month of daily cqlls at the Foreign Office, he left without it bdt with a twenty-five year start on many of his later colleagues in the diplomatic world, insofar as intimate, firsthand knowledge of Soviet Russia was concerned. When Stevenson returned to Chicago in 1927, he joined the city's Oldest \law firm, Cutting, Moore and Sidley. Under the pressure of new circumstances, his conscience, always reasonably clear, now began to shine like a mirror. He worked a sixty-hour, forty-dollar week, and his personality expanded, prompting him to take a lively part in the lively social doings of the era. Ellen Borden:was one of the most\ eminently marriageable,

tive young ladies on the Chicago social scene. Her weeding to Stevenson in December 1928 was one of the. top events of that Chicago season. j Divorce The causes of the Stevensons’ divorce in 1949. while somewhat puzzling, appear to derive chiefly from incompatibility ’ due to increasingly divergent interests. Mrs. Stevenson’s tastes lie in the world of art and literature. No other persons, and no scandal whatsoever, affected the legal proceedings. Stevenson, who opposes divorce generally, was shocked and saddened but pot surprised. The divorce, accompanied by a substantial settlement, was handled without rancor or undue publicity. It had been preceded by twenty years of apparently happy marriage. i One of Stevenson’s father’s close had been George Peek who, in 1933, was caped to Washington to organize the Agricultural Adjustment Administration. Adlai Stevfenson, like millions of other Americans, had been deeply stirred by Franklin Roosevelt’s inaugural address in 1933. Knowing the Depression better than imost people, he wanted to do something to help cure it if tie could. When'Peek; asked him to come to Washington to render legal aid to the rapidly ' expanding • AAA, Sjtcvenson re- ! sponded promptly.

Never Too Old SPRINGFIELD, Mass UP — At the age of 91, Miss Josephine Flynn, retired Smith College house mother, visited a -beajuty shop here and got her first permanent wave. Trade in a Good Town —decaturi

Aiding Others Full Life For One Nurse Public Health Work Explained By Nurse OWEENVILLB, Miss. UP — A motherly-looking\ ‘lady in ■white” says the confidence people Main in nurses ‘’sort of does something to you inside.” Miss Ueene C. Greene .has been on-the job for 32 years and she isconvinced she copldnft have found! a better way to spend her life than doing- public health work. One of the reasons the whitehaired Miss Greene likes her job sols that it “is helping people who need helfr and who appreciate what you can do for them.” She was graduated from nursing school here in 1920 ready “to see a little of the world.” wanderlust carried ;her to Ellis Island New York, for her first Job- There she met immigrants avUo were entering the country for the first time. j Stern With Patient# •’Sometimes I couldn’t understand what they said but it wasn’t hard to understand what they felt \ when they were sick and a little scared, too/’ she recalled. Miss Greene,? known to her cpworkers at Washington County health department here as “Ma has a btern way with her patients. If she tells them tq come to the clinic here tor a more thorough check-up, they do it, .because they know that if they fail to' do so,, she’ll ibe around to find out why. '> f V i Hey stern manner doesn’t dampen the admiration theyC hqld for hen however. There probably are more girl babiea named 4*ter her than any living woman in trie area Notes Progress ;'Miss “Greene notes that there has been a “great deal” of progress ih public health work sinfce she returned here II years ago after 2p years oif roaming the? nation'as . a nurse. * [ - '■ , “Among the it is partlcul'arly sO,’-’ she said. “I find much Ipss superstition than existed 11 years -ago.’ I Greene keeps up w|th the latest advances in- the field of nursing by attending college' clinics and by outside studies. , ' .Her top job? today is making house-to-house : calls to > help individuals with; health problems. She trains midwives and follows up on their ; practices,) making

Jani Lyn... k 7vj-I Li f . " ' ■ • i , .. h| ..• I ■ . • ■ .. > '-h. :f i I ■J . i . ■ ; \ ' \ • 'i. i . i ’ ' I i : •: . ■ “Here’s shy-... . “Sells the Dresses” Jani Lyn, features nationally i.: ' . advertised designer’s " ' . V ■ j . ■ j . Fashions .G. . Jonathan Logan A Sue Carson Henry Rounfeld I Forever Young ' I i WKwllii i Teena Paige * ZiUMfIU *j2K ■ .h . j. Paris Originals WK ! ■’ ' • wIl, - . Gloria Swanson Originals Q jgHUBBOBak WW j w 111 jW./ jLW a- /?».#■ A bV J jfT. Btoßlf Dozens of others. it pi/’ 1 1Wlf and . . . J | IKWi wy <7l wild Combined with modern dis- Xjf IfjoßO f | ' play, sincere service, and I ' I wit ! ill deep appreciation of "your” Pill K //tJi « 1 »*l ’ patronage... H sRs Jani jLyn presents fabulous ill • •«vfn|e on all dresses at the | |j V nV budget price of . . ( j M . W * V ■ ' : ' ■ . < ■ ■ ' i ■ ■ ’ 5.95 JANI LYN 119 No. 2nd St. Decatur, Ind. -'■ ' ' ! ■ ■ ' ■ \ - .

hlood testify giving pre-natal and post-natal examinations. Easy Does It ROCHESTER, N. Y. (UPj—Lack of a mop wringer proves no problems for a local store porter. He simply IrfyS his saturated mop under the wheels,; of a bus that conveniently Stops in front of the store. Thinking Young" MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP) — Lafayette Lee Robbins, 80-year-old former lumbejrjack who travels 60 inijes each dayi to his job here explains: “People get qld quickly because they think they’re old. 1 feel the same as I did when I was 25 and I’ll the same when I’m 100. '.My mother is 107 and she feels as I do.’\ But Not On Mondays MEMPHIS, eTnn. (UP)—Shirley Farmer says she* knows people who have a new use for a washing machine. They shell, peas by putting them through the machine’s wringer - _______ ' Ah, Romance! DETROIT, UP — Robert Rattle. 23. sentenced to one to five years in prison foB stealing a city garbage truck) explained the theft by riaying, *T, wanted to take my girl friend for a drive.”

■r 1 ' 3® ■ * mH ■ ® I'a K THIS CAT was photographed, placidly surveying the passing show from behind dark glasses, at the recent International Film Festival in Venice, Italy, which was attended by film actors from all over the world. The mouse hound seems to be waiting for someone to offer her a light for her cigarette

X /SB ■ /./ ■ * ’ *• Pi 1 A ' r Step’s BRIGADE 7I V \ /J L \ % , X — ■. «..a favorite that looks smart, feels wonderful . Smart, stylish and comfortable... Air Step checks off all three in this suede walking shoe. The checklist includes other features, too—a supporting arch, combination lasts for a snug heel and plenty of room at the ball of the foot. The | most comfortable walking shoe that - — ever pampered a foot. ( B Z) . - i; "| ' . Aj. - " J .-J AAA thru B — thru 10 « : "BUY SHOES IN SHOES DECATUR ♦ BLUFFTON

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