Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 12, Decatur, Adams County, 15 January 1953 — Page 7

SECTION TWO it < 4 irf ol

Fence Feuding Pits Sheepmen, Hunters WASTHNIgTON (UP) jU The old difys of, ffti/din’ and figlitin’ over fences In Warning are returning—hut this time the action is between sheepmen and sportsmen ihstVad of sheepmen and cattle’rammers. The fences. oh publje, grazing Hinds, have started the .feud, it really boilfjdownto a tpreierehce between sheep and antelope.- The barriers which keep thq sheep in also hampers the prdrtg horned antelope. The antelope can’t jumjpi the fences. Their ihigrations Across the

So. 74«, \ J il' ■ 3 - .1 • «' ■ ' • I h ,’■H- r' '■ ' > '•>. ' • ■ ' ' I ■ ffi-V- -- ;I; "• ■"■ifHl ■■ -h > -‘I - ■ : ' . 111:1 •> f> • - • • i i■ | - 1 ' ; I •!* 'i ■’ .f National y ; advertised Styles and ; W Fashions are now obtainable in Decatur at Your Favorite iStore 4 ii. . . Jani Lyn: Suits . . . Coats J . . Dres-•-H & ses ... Lingerie ... as advertised in < ('harm .. . Bazaar .. . Seventeen ... \ * Life and other magazines. |\ Designand tailored by suchl famous i names as Lampl . . . Zim . L . Smart ' . ' Maid . . . Henry Rosenfeld .i. . JonaL than Logan .. . Teena Paige ... . \ | ' Forever Young . . Sue Carson: ... Powers Models and hundreds of , others are now available in Decatur I at "your” ; 1- • ' I I ? ; \ ■ ' Newest Fashion Center Jani Lyn “Tomorrow** Fa»hiona<Today” —— N. Second St. Decatur

I I SALE STARTS JAN. 17th . M ■ SALE STARTS JAN. 17th || rlifrmy.i K tA L || CLOTHING SALE — c — — — U-4 "jr r— I I SPORT I *** ”““'***i « I I l SHIRTS | SUITS OVERmTS I Overcoats | I I io% OFF I 1 20% I ■ I 50 V-neck Pullover ANY I I I I— I SWEATERS WINTER CAP I i- — —. I I ENTIRE STOCK I ‘1.50 % PRICE I MEN’S hi I, I | SUITS I LOT MEN’S'FANCY 30 WOOL & LIGHT WEIGHT I IiXKIS II I • Sizes 34 L 48. $25.00 to $65.00 I DRESS SHIRTS J L JACKETS I II OFF I. 52.95t054.50 «/ $5.00 to $9.00 1/ ■' OFT? * V /O Valoes */2 PRICE J | Values PRICE I ZO% <H P ■ - I. 'I. cl';;. I, ; : ?! : W :.. .. i > . , ■ , I 4 I ! x ■,! V ■ i . ■ I CAL E. PETERSON I=-1 ■ ■■■■■■■■MMnßr | CLOTHIER I R -< L. I : i ■ |.\ : -V I ! I.d ' 1 t j. •h i J. \ ■

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT

sage-brush: lands are often completely halted. The antelope may starvje food is exhausted, fall prey to coyotes dogs, or hang themselves y on the fences when they desperately try to climb them. Difference In Fences \ AhtelOpe are big business in Wyoming, 'according to the National Wildlife Federation? This year 4ti,OOi) sportsmen wbre licensed tb hpnt the 100,000 antelope roaming plains. hotising, and feeding this army of iantelope hunters brings quite a. bit of cash into th«| state. Sb the interest of the sheepmed’s opponents Is not human!* tariah; it is in the interest of antelope steaks and tourist trade. Thh prong - horned antelope,.

quite a speedy critter, could wriggle through the standard cattle, fences, which consisted of only three or four strands, of barbed wire stretched between posts. But the sheep-tight fences made of woven wire stop the prong-horn cold. And these fences havei been appearing on public grazing lands, with and Without benefit of Bureau of Land Management permits. ' : i yeg Hat Honey On Tap CHAPEL HILL.N.C. (UP)—Mrs. Hugh Cole keeps bees in the wall of her home. When she wants her annual supply of honey, she has a neighbor rip a board or two from the living room wall and cut out a new white comb. ,

Decatur, Indiana, Thursday, January 15, 1953.

Flying With i Acrojets No Restful Stint ; ' T r i "’l3' ■'• • ■i I ■l . ’f Whit WILLIAMS AIR FORCE BASE. Ariz., UP — Chappie’s long, sensitive fingers gently flick the control stick of the T-38 jet back and forth—half an inch to the left, half an inich to the right. 4 > Three other hands in three other jets make identical movements simultaneously, keeping the four planes wing tip to wing tip as they dive, roll, climb and bank at 4<)fi-mile-an-hour speeds in the Arizbnd sky. • [• j Let one of those hands slip half an inch too far and there will bp a sickening thud as metal rips nrto metal and - plane pilot syfiln crazily earthward, ending in Seconds the long hours of labor that produced the jet, and (he yearst; of chre and training that produced the pilot. The chances of such a crash is slim, for these are the Acrojets. the Air Force’s four-man tean) who do formation acrobatics that Hew jet pitots would attempt even if alone. Chappie' is Capt. H. M. ChapAtlanta, Ga... 10 Os whose 2ft years have been spent jockeying platies. For 30 months he and the other three Aerojet pilots : have been flying these tight formation acrobatics, a form of livelihood frowned upon by insurance companies. Up front leading the pack is Col. Sid Woods, of Yuma, Arizi, lacquered Jielmet and red welder’s visor give him a appearance. Across the way. flying parallel to Chappie is tall, balding Major Bruce Carr, also 28, of Springs, N. Y.. who has been ctadiraing his six-foot frame into fighter plane cockpits for 12 years, « A yard below and some 72 inches to the right is the slot man, Major E- A. Klapal, 29j\who has be<n flying for 14 years, beginning at Ms home tow’n of Sargent. .Neb. From the rear seat of <’happh<s plane you can clearly observe the facial expressions of sach pilot, the three of them are usually close epough to step from wirig to wing

I ' WRI wHPn. WK" fl IK? : fl KjalmKa JH Ail fl isl UK Br Jfl s dKm A fliJ Lfl fIU Ma Ila 1 \fl I / j j EZjoI I-1 fl"’ m B ' Sni mKH! KBKVIKSaHHKRI RmKB WITH HIS FULL CABINET around Jiim. President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower sits for the first picture which includes those who will help steer the government in the ne'xt four /ears. In this pre-inauguration group at the Eisenhower New York headquarters are (1. to r.) front: Herbert Brownell. Attorney General; George M. Humphrey, Secretary of the Treasury: Vice-President Richard Nixon; Preside.nt-eievt Eisenhower; John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State, and Charles E. Wilson, Secretary of Defense. In the rear row: Joseph M. Dodge. Budget Director; Mrs. Oveta Cu'P Hohby. who heads the Federal Security Agency; Gov. Sherman Adams, Presidential Assistant; Sinclair Weeks, Secretary of Commerce; Gov. Douglas McKay, Secretary' of in teribr; -Arthur Summerfield, Postmaster General; Ezra Taft Benson, Secretary of Agriculture;''Martin P. Durkin. Secretary of Labor; Henry Cabot Lodge, permanent representative to the United Nations, and Harold E. Stassen, chief of Mutual .Security Administration. . ;

without stretching a muscle. Colonel Woods bosses the show, and over the intercom comes his Soft, casual directions — “Immelman next” ... “clover leaf” . . . “going dow;n” . . . “rolling left” . . . “Bpipbsheli.’’ A glimpse of the speed indicator shows it swinging past 350 . . . doo ... ,\420 and up to 450 as the quartet dives earthward. The .chessboard fields and toylike buildings suddenly swell into big and hardlooking acreage as the four jets are rammed earthward right at an immense field of white-boiled cotton. The colonel then gives a casual “going up" and the weight of

GOP Team Gathers For Pre-Inaugural Photo

the world suddenly crams itself down on your body as the planes, come out of the dive and head skyward. For 20 long minutes the quartet performs its Hag of tricks before finally calling it quits. At the airfield snack bar the quartet reflies the whole show*, correcting points here and there.\Colonel Woods explains the whole thing'simply “It’s just a case, of teamwork. Collectively we have had nearly 4,400 hours in the air with jets, and we have complete confidence in each qther. Without that w r e couldn't, do a thing. For example. Klapal here did the whole roatine

today without a radio. His went out a few- minutes after "takeoff. He was .the slot man, remember, right on your tail?’’ The back seat passenger remembered. and his quaking hand spilled hot coffee all over the place. Conductor Gets Ticket PASCAGOULA, Miss. UP—Reason Over, conductor on a Louisville and Nashville Railroad passenger train, was arrested here for over-parking when his train stayed too long across a downtown intersection. City Judge Joe A. Mqore released him with a warning hot to let it happen again.

Brother Fills Gap NEW BRITAIN, Conn. jUP» * After returning from the*, fufteral . • of his brother, drowned while serving with the Marines. Robert .1. Cote found his induction notice. Not Hie Right Line BOONEVILLE, Miss. UP —L. )L WomqiclL says he picked the world's worst location tor a store and has given up ftryiag. Two Stores h» built on the. same spot were blown away by tornadoes, one in 1931 and the other in 195 ft. Womaek i takes it’ he Wasn’t meant to be a J merchant and has turned to chicken raising, A