Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 181, Decatur, Adams County, 3 August 1953 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By ’ ™ mcatur DEMOCRAT CO., INC. entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller President <A. R. Holthouse -Editor J. H. Heller -Vice-President Chas. Holthouse — i Treasurer < Subscription Rates: ' - y Mall In Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $8.00; Six months, $4.25; 3 months, $2.25. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, ♦$•00; S months, $4.75; 3 months, $2.50. B y Carrier, 25 cents per week. Single copies, 5 cents. \
Christian Dior’s edict that women’s skirts should be 17 inches from the floor, will get little support if the present generation looks at pictures of the supposedly fashionably styled woman of the Coolidge era. o——o>— While the nation; mourns the death of Sen. Taft, the heart of the people beats in remembrance of Mrs. Taft, paralyzed from a stroke nearly three years ago. All during her husband's public career, Mrs. Taft participated in his. campaigns and the team of “Martha and Bob" became nationally for successful teamwork. o o Two vacancies now exist in the United States senate. One is from New Hampshire, where it is taken fcr granted that the Republican governor will name a man of that . - party to succeed Sen. Tobey. The Ohio appointment may not be filled until t next January and in the meantime Gov. Lavsche, a Democrat, will decide on Sen. Taft’s successor! - ——o o- ’ Mrs. Mildred Foley will continue to serve as county attendance officer. Capably serving in this office the. past year, Mrs. Foley was re-elected by the township trustees to direct this department, a vital point in the operation of the school system. Mrs. Foley has been unusually Successful in filling the assignment. i The problem of how to reach a L doctor late at night can be disturbing to the family which has I no regular physician. Faced with r an emergency they often spend valuable time trying - to discover f just what doctor to call. A midwestern suburban town has done Something about this problem; Only three doctors in the town although 19 ’doctors re- 1 side there. All 19 have agreed to a plan which sets up a daily list of four physicians available for emergency calls. One telephone number will reach whatever doctor is on duty. The emergency doctor makes the call and reports to the family physician if there is one. Communities faced with similar problems Would do well to look into it. * ' ; J' I o- O— — I , Attended by President Eisenhower and high dignataries from all branches of the government, a. state funeral was! given Sen. -Robert A. Taft today in the ro-’ tunda of the. Capitol. Members of both branches' of congress were in attendance, as the nation's respect for one of its outstanding public ( se’% ants was paid , to the Ohio
New Agent Counteracts Effect' Os Overdose of Barbiturates
! »Y HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D. INSTEAD of being the reliefgiving, sleep-promoting help they were at one time, the barbiturate drugs when wrongly used have been turned into a menace. Originally, barbiturate drugs could be purchased without a prescription and so were used Indlscriminately. About three billion doses of them are employed every year in the United States alone. However, there are now state and federal laws which limit the sale of these drugs only to persons who have physicians’ prescriptions. Maay Take Overdose Nevertheless, now and then people use the barbiturate drugs that were obtained through a prescription in improper ways. It has been estimated that one out of every two thousand persons admitted to hospitals in the United States has taken an overdose of the barbiturate drugs. To counteract this alarming state of affairs, efforts have been made to find a combination of drugs that would offer some degree of protection for the person who may take an overdose of the barbiturates. A drug known as pentylenetetrazol has been dls- ■'' l V 7 TV' r ~ r
, ■ ■ .4 • 1 I h• > I’ il \ senator, who devoted his life to lawmaking and legislative matters. The senator's body will be taken to Cincinnati, home of the Tafts for nearly a century, and final rites conducted there tomorrow. ——o ■■ - o We/come To Decatur: This newspaper welcomes the staff and students to the Reppert School of Auctioneering, outstanding sales training school of its kind in Anyerk-a. Founded by the late Fred Reppert in 1920, hundreds of the best auctioneers and salesmen in the country haie been trained in the summer and winter courses offered by the school. Managed by Dr; Rolland Reppert, son of the founder, and directed by Cpl. Quentin R. Chaffee of Pa., the summer semester which opened today promises to be ope of the most successful in the school's long history. i To the staff and students, many of whom ajre outstanding auctioneers and salei managers in their own cbmmunities, is given the reminder that Decatur is noted as a friendly city. : ' Everybody joins in extending a welcome to you! The 4-H Fair:— Propelled ’by/thri slogan, “To make the better,” the annual Adams Counity 4-H Club Show opens Tuesday at. Monroe, with the assurance that it will be a bigger and better show. Through Tuesday, Wednesday 11 - and Thursday, the program is jampacked with club activities. A tented city near the Monroe high school building - will house livestock, cattle and club exhibits. Sponsored by the* Adams County Extension Committee the show I is represenative of the wide range of club activities and accomplishments of th * young members of the 4-H clubs.| | I Every 4-H sho|w is proof to the country that Ajnerica excels in farm and methods. The show f irthjer ipttests to the fact that thel, kioijntiy is producing capable aud.alelt ypung folk who later will tjakej over home and farm management problems in our bountiful rural areas. Directed by L. A. Archbold, county agriculture agent, and Miss Anna K. Williams, Home Demonstration agent, the Extension Committee invites you to take a look at this yeans fair. I: A climax "to the three day program will Uej the Thursday evening of cattle »nd livestock raised by the cilub members.
covered which, when combined with the barbiturate drugs, Interferes to some extent with the serious effects that overdosages cause. j Poisoning Neutralized It is interesting to note that . pentylenetetrazol, when administered alone in dosages that are used in combination with the barbiturates, can cause a great deal of discomfort. However, the combination of both drugs seems to neutralize their poisoning effect. Suicide with the barbiturate drugs is almost Impossible when they axe combined with this new agent. Also, the effect of small dosages of barbiturates are not altered, and they can be used for their usual medical purposes * when prescribed by a doctor. An interesting fact, also, is that. the fuzziness and hangover that a person may experience after taking an overdose of a barbiturate drug is more or less eliminated by the use of this new combination. QUESTION AND ANSWER Mrs. L. H.: Can pregnancy cause a loss of hearing? Answer: So, it is unlikely that pregnancy would have any effect on hearing.
0 —— — Q | : 20 Years Ago I Today 0 _ ( August 3—Fair prices for necessities of life will 'be published each week by the government. Pay no more. Judge Finley Johnson of the Philipinex supremb court many years, a former Van I W£rt man with relatives here, died July 31, it has just been learned. Union township farmer audtenly died suddenly this afternoon. iMrs. Fred Patterson returns from several weeks in northern {Michigan. The Giant Collegiutes of Piney Woods, Miss., a colored basebrill team, will play the A. C’s in Decatur next Tuesday afternoon. James Stewart's |. Mother Dies Sunday j INDIANA, Pa„ UP—Mrs. Elizabeth Ruth Stewart, 78, mother of actor James Stewart, died of a heart ailment in a hospital here Sunday. Stewart flew to his former home here from California after his mother was stricken a week ago. He and his sisters, Mrs. Virginia Tirauoff of New York and Mrs. Mary Perry of Erwinna, Pa., Were at the bedside. p— _o Modern Etiquette | BY ROBERTA LEE | 0— o Q. If the bride is being married sin a traveling dress, what should the bridegroom wear? A. He wears an ordinary business suit, or one that is appropriate for traveling, with perhaps a little white flower from the bride’s corsage in his buttonhole Q. What 'type of stationery should be usjed by people in mourning? s ' ■, A. White stationery of good quality is correct, and this is now generally preferred to blackborded stationery. Q. Should asparagus) be eaten with the fingers? A. (No; it is ill-bred to take up this dripping vegetable with the fingers. It is properly eaten with a fork. I
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T>nvM Barton, an able young business executive, had been inconsolable •ince the death of his teen-age son. Tim. Nothing that friends or family did or said seemed to help him. He had sought escape tn drink, and that having tailed him be was determined now to seek some woodland abode where ne might fight out this battle of self, alone. It was al) very amicably agreed between him and his devoted wife. Emily. She would accept a job that had been offered her. one that would take her off to Eqrope during her husband's absence from home. So we finu David Barton now, living the hermit life at an abandoned campsite In the eastern sector of our north woods. CHAPTER NINE IN THE village Dawson Introduced Dave to a number of people, and halfway to camp they stopped at Cas Rogers*. The farmhouse was comparatively old and close to the road. There was no river there, only a little brook. Hank Dawson explained:! this was Mr. Barton, he’d taken a long lease on Dan Peter s’ camp. “Thought you’d want to be neighborly,” he said. Rogers would be pleased to be. "Anything 1 can do,!* he pledged. And, under questioning, yes, be sold apples, potatoes too, and Dave could get milk here and eggs, and chickens, long as they last.” He added that 1 in summer he’d have a garden. Maybe. Depends on weather," he said. He added that tus boys could deliver stuff after school, run errands too, while the weather held. "Welcome to Use the phone any time, Mr. Barton." He was a small, thin man, and in a dark quiet face his blue eyes were farseeing. Dave wrote to Roger Newton. After telling him about the camp, “Dare say you know this country, but it’s relatively new to me—hitherto I’ve seen it only from a car." He went on to ask, “1 suppose my credit’s still good at the Dale*Bookshop T jlf so, would you select some books and* ship them to me 7 Vou said 1 didn’t read much. There'll be tune now, and it will lend support to the legend of my literary activities. I don’t care bow many nor how few; just you pick ’em." The final letter was for Emily; he had a wastebasketful, of discards before he .finisbed. At the end, giving her the Rogers address, he said, “I hope you’ll want to write. If not, please keep in touch with George, so I’ll hear at least secondhand if you’re all right, and where you are. Seems queer not knowing, not to be able to picture. Don’t think me liar or hypocrite when 1 say I love you. I do, and always have, however much it’s seemed otherwise. Em, I hope you find your work good; I’m sure you will if you find you’re necessary. In a way, that’s why I’m here; to find out if I’m necessary, not only in relation to you or anyone living—”
Helping unpack, regarding the tjT>euilar with adimraimn. the
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I —0 I Household Scrapbook I | BY ROBERTA LEE 0 o Smoother Iron# ' . Rub your electric iron with a] piece of wax tied in a cloth, a#d afterwards scotir it on a piece of paper jor cloth strewn with coarse salt. Place Cards Dainty place cards niay b>e made at home by painting a narrow strip of gold around the edge of a plain oblong card and wj-it-itig the guept’s name in tlhe center in gold ink. They look particularly well if your china and g)aaFware happen ,t<{ be goldiedged.; Dingy Carpets A dingy-lookipg carpet! can be brightened immeaburahly by sponging with warm .waiter that has a fair amount of ammonia -in it. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Wan; Ad. It brings results.
gun and tackle With exclamatory envy, Dawson asked, "Hey, don't you expect to eat ? Or you planning to go out for meals until bad weather? But what| [about breakfast?” Dave’s jaw dropped. He answered, abashed and truthful, “I’m a dope. So help me, I clean forgot!" Dawson laughed, tolerantly, and it occurred to Daye that if any one thing could establish his legend as feckless man of letters it was this apparent—if unpremeditated — indifference to “My fault," Dawson said. "Should have asked if you’d stocked up. Np harm done, though; we can stow away this stuff and get back to the village." In tfac store Dawson restrained the older man from stripping the shelves to the owner's regret. “Thought you was a friend of mine. Hank," he expostulated. Dawson smote him on the shoulder reassuringly. “Want all your annual profit in halt an hour ? There’s always tomorrow. Say, Mr. Barton, yob like beans that much ? Ot course, maybe I’m prejudiced, after my hitch—” “Everyone so formal up here? My name's Dave." “Not to say formal. We like to be sure of our ground, though. I was going to say, Dave, you have lots of time beforp you’re snowed in. And call me Hank." He jolted off and Dave returned to the house. By the time he had finished putting things away dusk was upon him and darkness at its heels. He set the lamps about and lit them, and the swinging lamp over the kitchen table. It was turning cold and he made a fire in the fat stove. i \ Rain came, with a cold wind, and lasted a space ot days. It was October and the branches bare. Only the evergreens retained their dark colors. During the rain he went out for a short time every day, wearing boots and a waterproof coat. Returning to camp he would strip off his wet things and sleep. How long this endured he did not know—was it a week, 10 days, two weeks—before the Rogers boys came walking up his road, knocking at his door. It must have been a Saturday, for it was early afternoon when under a sky gray as ash they knocked and were admitted. He had Just finished breakfast, having slept since the afternoon before. The older boy, tall, fresh faced, and about 14, spoke first: Tm Joe Rogers,” he said, “pop sent us. He wondered if you’re okay—you hadn’t stopped by. I brought your mail and milk and eggs, in case . . ." “Thanks,” said Dave. He cleared his throat, wondering if his voice was rusty. “Come on in. What did you say your name was?" “Joe. This is my brother, Herb." Herb was U and shy. He had
TI T| . ’V!'' ' Carl H. Musselman Receives Discharge Carl H. Muselman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Chris H. Muselman of Berne (has received his honorable discharge from the U. S« army as first lieutenant. His promotion to the first lieutenancy came to him during the last week of his service, in recognition of his satisfactory completion, of his 18month commission in the finance corps. He was stationed at the finance center at Ft. Benj. Harrison, Indianapolis. lA. Muselman recleived his degree at Indiana University and then volunteered for officer, training school at Fort Riley ; Kans., graduating as second lieutenant in January, 1951. His plans for the future are not yet fully determined.! He and Mrs. Muselman and tjieir son John have established residence , at 536 Compromise street, in Berne. Dempcrat Want Ads Bring Result*
redhalr and a! good many freckles. “Sit down,” Dave said. "Want some coffee or anything? I just had breakfast Sometimes 1 sleep late. 1 ran out of milk and eggs long ago but was top darned lazy to corrie for them. 1 had some canned milk.” He sat down, for until he did the boys would not, and looked around the room, conscious of dust and disorder. “I’m not much of a housekeeper,” he said. “Been sleeping mostly, since 1 came.” "It looks swell,” said Herb, finding his voice. “This is a swell camp.” “It sure is,”- Joe agreed. "Don’t you want your mail, Mr. Barton?" he asked. ' “I forgot." He took the letters, put them on a table. “Here, we’ll set. the eggs and milk in the* icebox only there isn’t any ice. I’ve been putting things outdoors. It’s cold enough.” “Pa cbuld bring some,” Joe said, “he s coming past here with the truck pretty soon?’ Dave tojd them about a raccoon that had been around°the camp all his first night, “Came after that,” he said, “for a couple of nights.” Joe nodded. "Dots of coons around,” he said, “the campers all feed them, they’re real tame.” His eyes were dear and friendly; also a little anxious. “Is it all right to hunt here, Mr. Barton ? We always go out after deer with Pop. Herb, he’s the And we’re let to go alone for squirrel and rabbit. Pop said we shouldn’t bother you and it you think we would, you're to say so right out.” “Sure you can hunt here,” Dave said, and forced himself to smile But tie felt an unjust, miserable resentment. Tim had been a fafr shot. Tim's father could get along without people, that was why he’d come here. He could get along forever without growing boys who walked, ran, laughed, went to school, took their guns and hunted squirrel.’ ' He cleared his throat again and added, “Glad to have you.” Their faces brightened; it was obvious they’d been worrying ever since he moved into the camp. Joe spoke eagerly. “Maybe you’d go out with Pop and us sometimes. We know every foot of ground hereabouts.” “I’d like that,” Dave said, lying. Now they jumped up, anxious to release their energy, express their reMei in chores—fill the woodbox, chop wood, bring in kindling, dispose Os kitchen waste. They were as whirlwinds rushing about tn a fury of activity, simply because be did not know how to say ■Ko.’* And he resented them increasingly, the bright cheeks, .the clear eyes, the young, hard muscles. He read the mail while they were outside, he could bear them laughing as they dug the garbage into the pit. fie Be CoatutueQ
"Ay ft 111 SUKMQB jSA Awarded Infantryman Badge PFIO Doris L. Foreman, son of iMr. .arid Mrs. True D. Foreman, of Geneva, was awarded the combat infantryman badge for excellent performance of duty in combat -with the '2nd infantry division’s 23rd regiment in Korea. Foreman, an automatic rifleman in Coinpany K, also holds the UN service rilAmn and the Korean service ribbon with one campaign star. He was employed by Master Feed Store in Berne tbefore entering the army in October, 1952. Jolly Kelly Fund Is Now $1,766.77 Final Donations To Be Taken Wednesday The Jolly Kelly fund stands at $1,7G5>77 today and donations will be received until Wednesday of this week, the Friday and Saturday reports reveal. V I Those in charge of the drive stated today that a final report would be made Thursday and donations received at the post office Wednesday will be forwarded direct to Mrs. Kelly. Thdj formal presentation of the checkfto the Kelly family will be made the last of this w r eek by T. F. Grallker, president of First State Bank’. ■? Here are the Friday donort: A Friend iJ—is 3.00 Mildred Niblickl 2.00 A Friend l.Off Charlei €ook & Fartlily 3.00 Deeatiu- Delta Theta Tau Somrity __L_._4_.__ 5.00 Mr. Mrs. William H. 5 Brown 5.00 St. Ambrose Study Gtub 5.00 J. G & Verena Niblick 5.00 Mrs. Feter C. Miller & FairiUy 10.00 Mr. A Mrs. W. Guy Brown 5.00 Rentz Florists 5.00 Anthony Teeple (Teeple Truck Lines) 25.00 Rosary Sodality, St.- Mary’s Catholic Church 110.00 TOTAL Ftjß DAY .$84.00 GRAND TOTAL Here are Saturday’s contriFriends who attended P. A. AMen |ilgh with Joe and Jolly j-.l s.ffo Andy Apjpelman (West End Restaurant) L_. 10.00 Sarah Jahe Gass (E. F. Gass Store) Mr. & Mrs. Clyde Butler l-i- jb.9o Hr. Elizabeth Peck 10.00 —H j-1 TOTAL f?OR DAY $4500 GRAND tOTAL TJ _51.7(i6.77 Plane Crashes, Four Dead, One Missing
Missing Airliner >i Found Near Turkey ATHENS, Greece. (UP) — The Greek government announced tonight that a missing Air France airliner, with 11 persons aboard., has been found near Alania. Turkey. A communique said tjiere were “some.survivors.’’. |'V ; .' !• Airlines officials’ said an American woman and her child were among the plane’s passengers. The Iranian news agency. ANSA. reported from Istanbul that $5 persons, 27 passengers and eight’crew members, survived the crash landing of the < crippled plane. It said four others were killed and one was missing. Airline officials identified the Americans as Marjorie Clark Yahyiva. Portland, Ore., and her infant child. The pilot radioed that engine' failure was forcing him to make a crash landing in the r Aegean Sea. Greek and Turkish fighter planes searched Turkish waters near the island of Rhodes. Coasti al patrol boats joined the search. Air Franca headquarters in Paris said the plane's two left engines failed after the plane took off f|rom Rome for Beirut, Lebanon and Tehran. Air France said the plane carried 33 passengers and a crew of eight. It was equipped with inflatable rubber lifeboats. Officials said the control tower at Rhodes picked up two SOS messages. The first said, _ “Left motors stopped, trying water landing.” The second said, “Motors stopped. Landing near east coast Rhodes.” ! Guilty Os Driving Without License Robert Huser, 19, route 1, Monroe, today entered a plea of guilty to driving without a driver’s license in the city last week. Mayor John Doan took the sentencing under advisement pemjinj the outcome of an application for a UcdnoG made by Huser today.
Annual Governors Conference Opens Panel Discussion On. Aid To States SEATTLE,' Wash. UP — The 45th. annual governor's conference opened its first business session today, with most state executives looking to President Eisenhower to help them sell congress a program designed to make states less dependent on federal aid. And. in turn, Mr. Eisenhower, who will attend the conference Tuesday, received Abe informal support of Republican governors on two of hig most controversial domestic pplic|es, taxes 1 and th% national debt. When pressed about thi national government’s fiscal policy, the subject of a major address tonight by secretary of the treasury George M. Humphrey, GOP governors generally agreed that the budget should be balanced before taxes ar'e cut and that the national £ebt 1 limit be increased from $275,000,000,00(1 to $290,000’,000,000. ■ .J' J * The president hak! m<st stiff opposition; to the first policy, especially from Rep. Daniel Reed R|N.Y. anjd' members oi his own parity helped kill his debt limit proposal in the senaite after thje house had approved. Most, governors gathered here believed, this was their lies!)’chance in 20 years to expand the field of states’• rights and authority. , Virtually every governor among the 13 Democrats arid the 32 Republicans ,aty?nding the conference! agreed the pantl discussions on fMera|l-state relations;, first on the list, was the most important one of the tour-day meeting. Several specific i<jeas On what functions and taxes tbe federal government should abandon to the states were offered in advance of the panel discussion! led by Gov. James Byrnes D. of South Carolina, a longtime champion of states rights. Gov. Walter Kohler R of Wisconsin said the federal government should eliminate practically all subsidies, including allocations to aid such state programs as old age assistance. Kohler said the national government also should get out of the gas tax field and stop collecting the payroll tax for the administration of the states’ unemployment insurance programs. Gov. 1 Theodore R. McKeldin R of Maryland drafted two resolutions asking (Ire governors to oppose drafting of returning veterans into national guard units or preventing 17 to 18 1-2 year olds from joining the national (guard instead of being drafted. ,i ' New York Gov. • Thomas' E. Dewey R said the administration had to call for an increase in!the debt limit-“as a practical necessity.’’ 1 ; ( “We are just now getting deliv-
SALE CALENDAR . AUG. 6— m. John kfieg, owner. 1200 block S. Main St.’ Bluff- - Ellenberger Bros.. Aucts; Al G. 7—7:00 p. m. Lawrence M. Frantz and Mrs. D. C. Frantz, owners. 5% miles West of Bluff tori on the Road. 40 head registered Ayrshire dairy herd. Ellenberger Bros., Aucts. . street. Montpelier. Ind. 7 room semi-moderh home. I). S. ? 4air ’ Gerald RrickiOr, auctioneers. C. W. Kent, sales mgr. ALG. 19—10;00 a. m Jack U;eii. owner, Deerfield. Ind. Antique auction. SAE; Leocardson. sale mgr. Ray Elliott. Auctioneer. ** 3 LLX—Tr~ ' : ; * SI i IRE: TMw \ HrU'" fnnß T ML Li ■■ Rsk RH OIF*/ AT E nS ~ iBRU JRHHH '■ ■ W * 4 ■ JKu ’ Fo»Mr Pullen V *x R«p. Frances Bolton - r*|l / JR|hr b! 1 1 w i ||jmRHRR Gov. James Byrnes fi Rep. Joints Richards A Henry Cabot Lodge A WOMAN Republican representative, Frances P. Bolton of Ohio, is included in President Eisenhower's appointments to the U. S. delegation to ths United Nations General Assembly. Others will bo' James F. Byrnes, governor of South Carolina and former secretary of state; a South Carolina Democratic representative, James P. Richards, and. of course, Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. Secretary Dulles , I is an ex-officio delegate to the General Assembly. (International £
MONDAY. AUOUBT >. ISI3
. —- -r— , ery on huge defense orders placed three ye«rs ago,” Dewey said. | Fall Down Stairway Is Fatal To Woman !NDIANAI*OUIS V UP—-Gertrude ’i| Day.; 27, Indianapdlis, who apparently plunged headlong i down a basement stairway in a hotel here, died in a hospital Bunday. Authorities said she was found unconscious Saturday night at the foot of a staircase at the Riley Hotel.* Man Suffocates As i Home Catches Fire : OWENSVILLE. Ind., (UP) Walter Jones, 50, was suffocated Saturday when bis home here caught fire as he napped. Coroner Robert KemlaN said it was .believed Jones went to slees in 4 chair while smoking. His body was found on the floor near a door. Court Rews ! Marriage Licenses Richard Lammatzseh, 31, and Jparihe O. Lammatzseh, 24, of Fort Wayne. j ' (Loren Wayne (Myers, 25, Berne, and Norma Jean Funk, 20, Mohroe.: ‘ ' ■ i - ■ >•■■ ■' , j ' '* !' |r - Wi'/ V;’A ’ . J -i ' ?i ~ - ! ’ L.TEEPLE ; MOVING & TRUCKING Local anef Long Distance PHONE 3-2607 ~■ 1 ' Patronize Local Business SHOP at HOME WELCOME WAGON PHONE 3-3196 or 3-3966
