Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 209, Decatur, Adams County, 4 September 1953 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT V I Published EJvery Evening Except Sand* By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. i Entered At the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller — President f A. R. Holthouse —4 Editor ‘ - iv H ‘ HeHer _——l—. Vice-President I Chas. Holthouse & - - Treasurer Ll Subscription Rates: i By Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 18.00; Six months, |4.25; 3 months, $2.25. _ i.' 1 _ MaU ’ b ®yond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 19.00; 6 months, $4.75; 3 months, >2.50. By Carrier, 25 cents per week. Single copies, 5 cents.

Probably the largest Labor Day celebration planned in the state is the picnic at Wicker park near Hammond. Seventy - thousand workers have been invited to the Outing. Labor Day without physical labor is the way America celebrates this notable holiday. /'I O-—-,-0 ■I -11 l Ge n . Jonathan Wainwright, hero of Bataan and Corregidor Is dead. He w’as one of America's greatest} soldiers. His hetoic will always be remembered add if any soldier deserves the eulogV, “Old soldiers never die; they jujst fade away,” it is the immortkl Gen. Wainwright. ■ o—o |5Ti . ij. , 1 ' | / R The Wall Street Journal cbrji* ments that world series baseball tickets may be more, ekpensivfe, , but easier tn get this year. The boost on boxes and reserved seats may be as much as 25 percent and ticket bifokers fear that fans gather at tavernn and watch ihfe* games via TV. * 1 At least 39 soldiers were killed in two accidents this -week, were drowned in training ma? neuvers in North Carolina and met death in an airplane crasti near Portland, Ore. Theie tragi edies make us wonder if we have' become tdo dEfeTess in< ’’ Ing, of our young Wien, or set too rapid a gait for their indjoctridaj tion into the forces. I t ' —o—--[o- [ ' •- 1 ■ ■ ■ » HI pi The drought boiling sijirt damaged com and soybean crohj I *3 awd almost wiped out grass pas ; tures in tihis county. In ti e latter consideration of the farm prob? lem there is sufficient tfrain to tide oyer;the livestock. farmers are not pessimis ic over harvest prospects, although will be down and the corn will not mature properly. Until the dry spell set in the prospects were for a bumper harvest. O 10 A few months ago leaders ih congress accused the government of trying to “buy friendship” with foreign countries. With the situation in Iran, many wilF watcn what’ the administration will ■db 7- I ■ . F in granting a -loan to the oilwealthy middle east country. FofJ. L I '■ if. • eign experts say that, Iran does not care which country comes th their aid, just as long as money is furnished the treasury. Thfe trap might be a loan from th| United States and a bigger hun| from Russia.".

.7 ' . M ■ 1 x M : ; ' 7 • i ■ I I Pains Are Often Misleading

By HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D. (THOUGH it Is thought of as a positive symptom of disease, pain takes a multitude of misleading forms. This is one of the reasons why doctors must team the different patterns of pain. Pain Is one of the prlmaty symptoms for which a patient seeks help, but the location of the aches often have no relation to the organ involved. For example, an ache along the inner side lot the arm may occur with coronary heart disease: upper abdominal pain can occur With appendicitis, and pain over the Shoulder blade may mean , disease of the gallbladder. i < Pain Impulses There are many less Willknown patterns of pain. Different strains, injuries, exposure to drafts, fatigue and poor posture may set off certain areas, known as “trigger areas,” in the muscles and connective tissues which send pain impulses to the nervous system. Such areas may be ho larger than a fingertip, but may give discomfort over a vast area of the body due to the fact that the nervous system Can spread the patn over large spaces. In many Instances, pain may not be situated in the same area where the trigger mechanism is setting off the pain. Stimulating **■<*"-r - |j i \ I ''

The Most Rev. John Francis Noll, Bishop of the Catholid diocese of Fort Wayne, has been given an honorary title of Archbishop by Pope Pius XII. Bishop Noll's diocesan jurisdiction will not be extended, nor will he be required to leave Fort Wayne. A church leader pf note, Bishojj Noll is nationally famous as a publisher and editor. He is thb founder of |he large publishing concern in Huntington, which prints 800,000 copies of the weekly, Our Sunday Visitor. It is distributed throiighout the United Statek.| . o oL| j J Mrs. Mary Drew has retired as deputy county auditor and able assistant in that important office. : - ■ i ' Conversant with- every detail In , the office and an efficient bookkeeper, the wife of former county Auditor Thurman I. Drew, compiled the intricate' tax abstracts j and supervised the semi-annual distributions of taxes to the various governmental units. She was accommodating and helpful to all who sought informatioh at the\ office or perusal of official records. Now after eleven years of faithful public service she retires with the gopd wishes of everybody in the community. ' —o—o Ocean Peril Except t6r~tfce Antarctic!, the Atlantic is the world's stormiest ocean. One of its most dangerous regions is off Cape Fear and Cafje Hatteras on the North Carolina coast, the so-called Diamond shoals. Here the gulf stream meets the cold current from the Arctic., At the point of impact spray fs tossed often 100 feet in the air, dropping sand, shells' and sea life to build the shoals. Though the peril is well-khown, the route is tempting because it offers the shortest cut between the south and the north Atlantic .states. The history of the shoals and their victims has been told by David Stick in his book “Grave- ■! ■- - 'i'-' _L >■’L T ' 1 yard of the Atlantic.” He lists 642 known vessels lost between 1526 and 1945. There must be many others, wrecked in days of inaccurate records or no at all, or ■ not positively knotvn to have been lost here. Now the shoals are losing their threat. Boats are morei soundly built, steam has replaced sails, and protective devices like radio and radar reduce the dangers of the deep;

I the so-called trigger area can ' give rise to patn in some other part of the body. There are usually no outward signs to distinguish these trigger areas. Nevertheless, the pain disappears when these areas are eliminated. Treatment Methods Once the trigger area is discovered, it can be injected with 1 a local anesthetic, known as pro- ; calne hydrochloride, or sprayed with an external anesthetic, known as ethyl chloride. Sometimes the process known ■ as "dry needling,” in which many ! small punctures are made into the trigger area, wijl eliminate the area of referred pain. The exact reason why this works Is . not known but It does so in many . instances. , Because this area is extremely ► sensitive when it is injected or i treated, there is always intensi-i 5 fled agony for a short while. Soon I afterward, however, there 14 . mdrked disappearance of pain. ) w QUESTION AND ANSWER f A. W. M.: My son, who is thir--1 teen years old, has a deviated t nose septum. Is he too young to i be operated on? Answer: If your son’s sympy toms are severe enough and if i the operation has been recoms mended by your physician, it 5 should be done.

[ Household Scrapbook I BY ROBERTA LEE 0 o Mildewed Linen For badly mildewed linens, use a solution of fouV tablespoons of peroxide to one quart of water. Use enough of the water to cover" the garment, and boil gently for an hour, or until the stains are gone. Coffee Pot The coffee. pot should be thoroughly boiled out, with a solution of baking soda added to the water, at least once a week. : Furniture Cracks Apply melted beeswax to repair the cracks that appear in table tops and chairs. Apply on the end of a knife and press snugly and smoothly into the cracks. I -—) o i Modern Etiquette | | BY ROBERTA LEE I Q. Should all the women be served first at the dining table where men and women are seated alternately? A. This would be a foolish waste of time. The guests should be served in regular sequence, whether man or woman. Q. If a wedding is to be so small that engraved invitations don't seem necessary, how should the bride and bridegroom invite their guests? z. L A. The bride should write each invitation personally. \ Q. Is it proper to drink part of the coffee with the spoon, especially if it is very hot? A. No; the spoon should be used only for stirring, and then it is placed in the saucer containing the cup, and remains there. Court News Real Estate Transfers Amanda Liby to Paul V. Stucky etux. inlot 9 in Monroe. • Christian Hilty to Gcydon D. Hilty etux, inlot 512 in Berne. Cletus J. Hamilton etux to Morton A. Railing eutx, parts inlot j 979 and out lot 81 in' Decatur Kenneth L. Barker etux to Clarence E. Michel, inlot 60 in Decatur.

(BMiDSILV'' tMKIBEATS /J. i * L ’ IhdiUuted by King^ Feature* Syndicate. I • I - L’• • ; I ' 7 1$ • \ ■

• SYNOPSIS Packrat Purdy a arrest had opened up unce more the case of the Phantom , Bandit and sent Cole Manning galloping into the Bootjack country. He hc.ped now to b r . n g to jnistice the hold-up robber of a valuable Wells Fargo cargo, wno had eluded his illustrious father, the late Sheriff Flint Manning, years before. But on reaching his< destination Cole learns from tough Mack Torgin and his killer com- • parior Gal. that sly old Purdv had fled the jaij and aided by a girl and her wagon, •was at large now. a bounty on 1 his head. Griffin, the present sheriff, explains to Manning that eccentric old Packrst is not Important to the case. He’d merely oeen held for questioning when some pf the long lost foot turned up near h’s home. CHAPTER EIGHT \ GRIFFIN’S only sign ot surprise at Manning’s announcement of his identity was the hoisting of a pair of mouse-colored eyebrows. Without rising, he extehded a pudgy palm. “Young Manning, eh?’* he said. “Been expecting you. Say.you favor your father a heap. You do for a fact. 1 was deputy, under him years back. Probably you don’t remember me. I was a mite thinner then. Best buck-and-wing dancer in the Bootjack. You’ve growed a bit since those days youfsejf. Sit down, boy. Sit down.” Manning shook hands but rejjjained standing. “I’d like to know how Purdy escaped." i Griffin sighed. “Plumb careless on my part.” He looked up at Manning and grinned. “You recollect ,pld Ma Hibbard, the cripple? No, I reckon you' wouldn't. She cooks over at Doc Brownlee’s hospital, and she’s been fetching pics to Packrat. One a day, faithful as the clock. Me, I gave her $ key and let her tote her pie back to the cell and chin with Packrat While he et. Well, sir, after she came hobbling out through the office yesterday, 1 had a look in Packrat’s celt And bust my britches if there wasn’t Ma herself, sitting there in her petticoats. She’d give her dress and' shawl and crutches to Packrat arid let him walk out right under my nose!” “Why did she do a thing like that?” Griffin shrugged. “Couldn’t guess.” “I’ll have a talk with her,” Man* ning said. “You’ve got her locked up?” - “Shucks, no. I gave her a scolding and sent her back to the hospital. Folks would be plumb peeved was 1 to keep Ma Hibbard jailed. Nearly everybody in town has been a patient at Doc’s hospital at one time or another, and Ma makes a right tasty pie.” He began to chuckle, his vast belly stirring. “The nurrawing that woman took for having to cross the street tn .her petticoats! A prim old gal, Ma. You’d have to know her to Appreciate the humor of the situation." . ! Horsemen made a clatter out in .the street. From where he stood. Manning could glance through the fopan doorway; and he recognized I Macik Torgin, blocky in his saddle. | Two tnen rode with him. Possibly they wgre two of the three who’d

TUB DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DfiCATUR, INDIANA

jf \ X ZIPPER TROUBLE -h-- - , a * \ / gSwx y\. Wk ft

20 Years Ago I 1 Today 0 1. Sept. 4, 1933 was Labor Day. J p____ m Bramy Completes Basic r.Pwt. Gordon Alan Watts has completed basic training at Camp Pickett, Va. with the medical division and is vjsitihg in Decatur on leave. September 11, he .will leave for Camp Kilmer. N. J. and from there, expepts to go overseas. BefqYe entering service he was employed at Ashbaucher’s Tin Shop and resided with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Rice. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

been involved in [that pursuit yesterday, but neither of them was the rhan who’d interested Maiming, the one called GaL They’ll be over here m a minute, he thought. They’ll come to tell Griffin how Purdy slipped through their fingers because of me. But they rode on. Manning stepped to the doorway and watched them. They swung along the street until they were in the region of the hospital, but when they got down from saddles, they headed toward trie mercantile. Torgin, he noticed, seemed to be limping slightly. He faced about and was again irritated by the bland face of Burke Griffin. “The jewelry that wadj found in Purdy’s shack?” he asked. “You’ve still got it?” Griffin indicated a locked desk drawer- “Sent an inventory to the Wells Fargo people. They wrote back and said it fitted the description, on their old waybill. No doubt ot it I told ’em they could have it later, but we’d needjit for evidence if you dabbed a loop on the jigger that stole it years back.” “How about the currency? A good many thousands of dollars wert stolen at the same time, Griffin. ;No sign of that or the mail in Purdy’s shack, eh?” Griffin wagged his head. “Whomever robbed the stage 'knew he could spend the dinero, but he was l|ke!y scared the jewelry would be recognized. I’d guess\ that he hid the sparkly, stuff, and Pa c k ra t found it and toted it home, packrat ain’t just right, yop savvy. riot crazy-loco, bpt his mind works like a ten-year-oid’s. You can bet he never had that money or he’d havo gone on a spending spree years back, and Flint Manning would have nabbed him.” The street was comparatively quiet again. Whatever business had brought Mack Torgin to town, the , man seemed in no hurry to get to the sheriff’s office. “Did you get any information out of Purdy ?” Manning asked. "Nary 1 a bit.” Griffin sighed. “Padkrat was some puzZled ' over being kept in jail. He’s done a bit of stealing, but there’s no real bad in him. We’ve always called it quits whenever we took things I awty from him and gave ’em back to the owners. It’s been going on that«way for nearly thirty yeart now. You’re likely wondering why I I ain’t out chasing Packrat. I fig- , ger he’ll show back by and by." i Some, deep-stirred sense of the > ridiculous came to Manning’s resi cue, making him less irritated, i “You’ve been a great help, sheriff,” , fie said, but he didn’t put any real : bite into it. “Now I’ll have to go l and find out why Ma Hibbard pried , Purdy out of the hoosegow.” • “She’ll talk a lot,” Griffin proph- • csied. “She’ll talk all day, for a fact. But when you sit down afteri ward and sort it out. I’ll bet ydu’U , find you ain’t one minute brighter. • Say, while you’re over there, ask I Doc Brownlee to send me some . more rheumatism medicine when r he gets time. I’ll be mighty I obliged."

ITwq Persons Fined On'Traffic Counts Two fines \yere handed out in justice of the peace court Thursday night. Sonia Shoup, ' 15, Willshire, 0.. >'was fined $1 arid costs on a plea guilty to driving without an operator's license. Gall A. Smith Sb, Fort Waynd, was fined |v Jhind costs on pleading guilty to a gjjhdrge of driving jwhlle unlicensed ' " """ I p Notice ft; Notive is hereby Riven that the pj>e<-ii.tnr Plan Coniitiii.<sJ<>n will h<>l<J & pirblic hearing Monday night SepHfMnWr 14 at 7:SO o'clock D.S.T &(»» :;ft o’cloc k CST. i at the City Hall Mp c-onsiclt-r reeoinnbvndinß a change t-he City <'oun<lil in the Zoning i A >rdinative of lyecatur. Indiana, inJw>lvlng an area South of Dayton; of Marshall; East of ThirSteenAh and West of 11 fir.* The conJtenwplated change is from Hl to R 2 ■to permit construction of two-family 'dwellings. The PUldic is invited to •■take part. \ j' DH-K HELLfell. Chairman. iSEIPTtEuMBEH 4

v “Sbre," Manning said, straightfaced. “i’ll even take a day off just to rub that medicine into you.” He started for the doorway. K “Just a minute,” Griffin called. forgot There’s a letter here.” He pawed at the littered top Ot his desk and fotind an officiallooking envelope, '‘put this in your pocket and read It sometime when you’re roundsiding. Came from the warden at Deer lodge right after |he papers started printing all that stuff about’ your taking the case that* threw old Flint. You ever tlear your dad mention a feller Called Texas Joe Bridger?” !; “Npt that 1 recollect.” j; “Well, he was a| killer Flint habbed up in the Marias country, After he’d unpinned his badge and left here. Bridger drew a life sentence, but he busted out of stony ■lonesome not long ago. The warden got remembering that Bridger always held it against Flint Manning for putting hitn away. Maybc Bridger’s escaping at just this .time means something; maybe it don’t The warden reckoned you bught to be warned, though.” ■g Manning stewed the letter inside jhis shirt “Thanks," he said. £ “You need any help," Griffin said,\ x’ypu just come trotting to me.” ♦ “Sure.’’ Manning said and went filit to his horse. K The sun stood lodv and the town 'was beginning to mellow With twilight; and as Manning led his horse down the street, hei was reminded that he was hungry. Leaving the hprse at the first livery he found, he went in search of a restaurant Those three Slash 7 horses were ktill tied near the hospital, he Noticed, but Torgin was nowhere to be seen. Tor gin’s continued presence in town nagged at Manping, worrying hftn. •’ He turned into the first eating blace he came to and got a table to the back and ordered. They put St a good steak in these parts, t from beef made fat on mounIn grass, but he had no real taste for it Not this evening. He’d seen a last hope go Winging, thanks to toe stupidity of Sheriff Burke Griffin, who had neither managed to hold purdy nor to wring any inforfuation from him. Or was the Sheriff so stupid? Recalling his talk with Griffin, Manning got a hotion that there’d been more than lazy voice to Griffin. A lot more. ? His meal finished, he came out to the boardwalk, tossed aside his i toothpick and let his gaze run the length of the street. ? ■i Presently he saw Mack Torgin Walk alone from one of the saloons I and go boldly toward the hospital i and let himself in. At once ManI ning’s interest was aroused. Torgin looked neither sick nor of the kind to dance attendance on the I sick, and on impulse Manning > crossed over to the brick building I and eased inside. , WHe found himself in a shadowy ; corridor rank with the smell of i medicine. He moved quietly until i fie reached a door marked: “Luke ’ Brownlee, M. D. Wald In." J;. _ (To Be Continued)

Nurse Is hecuted j In Alabama prison v ■I J 'l'.' First Whifrf Woman j Executed In State 1 ii ■ ; . I MONTGOMERY,JAIa. UP !— Mrs. Earle Dennlipn, ft 011 o tvcheeked forrher n&e, was electrocuted early toda® for, poisoning her two-year-old with Arsenic to collect $5,040 IrmUrance. The 55-ye*r-old wjdow declared, “'GoJ has for all I have done,” then.,>Rh apparent resignation but nq sign of fear she became the first 'wjipite woman to die in the Alabamax|blectric chair. She w,as prorioulced dead at 12:12 am., c.s.t., hours after Gov. Gordon Sjrsons denied her clemency witjP a statement tkht “there is no of Mrs. may God Test Mrs. DennislqiMg soul.’,’ Mrs. Dennison had lost a legal battle to p&ve herself insane after confesMig 4he murdered Shirley Weldqn by giving her a drin® of poisoned orange soda whiled visiting the Weldon farm home, L i (I She was also ind|cted for murdering the child's Swtfer, Polly Ann Weldon, in the s<me way two years before but wAs not brought to trial for this. S|ie had insured the lives of both naming herself beneficiary. O. G. Weldon, father of, the dead children, was quoted by his attorney as saying. “I feel nothing but sorrow for Mrs. Dennison and her family, but at the same time J havd to remember that shb did hot show any mercy t<> my little girl." 'Mrs. Dennison Wgs not suspected Until the second coincided with a visit to thi Weldon hqme. She "was she dfove to an insurance office \to make a premium payment immediately following Diann's death. That was one day Before the policy would have An autopsy showed Shirley Diann diet! of arsenic poisoning. The body of Polly Ann, who had died at about the; same age. was exhumed and fouifd so contain arsenic. ( Trailmobiles | which expand, from the eight-foot width of a freight carrier oh the highway, to a 14-foot width while parked, emphasize the flexibility of the modern vehicle. The expansible side walls permit their use as a 14-by--20-f6ot room, for displays, classrooms, or photo laboratory’. J' ? ~

VAN WERT COUNTY FAIR SEPTEMBER 7,8,9,10,11, 1953 FIVE DAYS! FIVE NIGHTS! 1 \ < Monday, Labor Day, Sept. 7th Mammoth Midway . Increased Purses Labor Day will feature Derby Day at A Great Racing Proand Premiums the Van Wert County Fair. Seven (7j gram. Running and Elaborate Night Running Races that will go Rain or Shine. ‘Harness Races. StartjIOXHAY NIGHT- Kleins -Interna. „ ° a,e ’ .'«J2 Sesnui ci-ntr-rtniai tional Follies.” An elaborate stage show Phntn Finish Paaeant T T that wiH b * Presented in front of Grand- H MutJels Pageant. J r gtan(l Acts a Jine of Girlß Orcßegtrat and Pari-Mutuels. ’ 5 | Lights, ! Scenery, etc. Don't miss this show ■ -

I Tuesday, September Bth TJiis:ss junior Fair Day. Judging starts in most departments. County Horseshoe Pitching Contest. Three <:}) Harness Races. TUEfpAT NIGHT I — Kleins “Grand] stand Waweties,” |A variety program of new ac||. lights. Scenery etc. that you will not walifetiy. miss. I ■ "7 ' r — o I ' i ! Thursday, September 10th GraridbMjH|de of Litestock, headed by Junior 'felubs and Floats at 10 A.M. Also Parade of Floats, tion of from 10 A M. to- 3 P.M. AfternootblßWang Program—Four (4) Har- ... ness ■ t * “Trails oCOW ne -’*l The jSesquicentennial is a large and beautiful spectacle and costumed by The John B. Producing Co., with local talent as You will want to see i this big ■' 'U • "■ ' ' ■

One of popular features of the Van Wertj County Fair is the grand interdenominational religious rally held in the Grandstand at 7:3Q on Sunday, night preceding the Fair.- A I \ massed choir ttttmer the direction of “Herb” Jones, Director of mhkie in the public schools, will lead the vast audience in the singing of Hymns. Making the address this year, with the heartiest * endorsement Ministerial Association, will he Harvey Q Haljn. Pastor of The Otterbein ll Church. United Brethren, Dayton, Ohio. Come early (or a good scatDedication iri' New Junior Fair Building on Sunday, September 6th at 2 P.M. " .■■ O'. r „ . i i ' \. • Scsquicentchiwl Parade at 4 P.M. on Sunday, September 6th. \ Ic. ’ 1 ’ ' .‘ ' : »■ Tro ' ' ■ I. L ■ # * Plan to Attend! Be a Booster for aqd Exhibitor at this 97th Annual Fair. Admfi&ibn 50c ' Family tickets $2.50 .■J I Walter Keith,

Bar Speaker ■ Mk x ■- o St KtSflsSft ’ - <J. S. SENATOR Herman Welker of Idaho will be the principal speaker at the 57th annual convention of the state bar association in Fort Wayne, at the, banquet .Sept. 18. Members of the Adams county bar are invited to the meeting. U. S. Commissioner Os Education Dies WASHINGTON, UP -t- Dr. Lee M. Thurston, U. S. commissioner of education, died of a heart attack early today at Georgetown University hospital. Thurston, 58, had served in has

NEW BED ROOM SUITES STUCKY & CO. Monroe, Ind.

SALE CALENDAR SEPT.'5—10:00 a.m. Preble Fire Department. 4Vi miles west of Dei atur on 224 in Preble. Livestock, machinery, hay, grain, furniture and new merchandise. SEPT. 9—7; 00 p.m. John Krieg, owner. 1200 block South Malip Bluffton. Indj New quality furniture. Ellenberger Bros., auctioneers. I . SEPT. 10—1:30 p. m. Robert J 4 Rumschlag, executor of will of JElifcabeth A. Parent, deceased. 317 W. Adams St., Decatur. Real estate and personal property. D. S. Blair. Gerald Strickler, v auctioneers. C. W. Kent, sales mgr. - Severin H. Schurger, attorney. I SEPT. 12 —1:00 p.m. Pearl Swygajt, administratrix estate of Edward D. Newport, deceased. 916 Indiana St., Decatur. Real estate and personal property. D. S. Blair, Gerald Strickler, auctioneers. C. W. Kent, sales mgr. Severin H. Schurger, atty. SEPT. 4 —7:30 p.m. Hall of Distributors, Inc., owners. J Decatur Sale Barn. Merchandise auction. E. C. Doehrman, auctioneer. SEPT. 17 —GILES PORTER, 3 miles east of Decatur on tX. S. road 224 (known as “Union Town.”)' 11 lots each 60 x 208 feet. Roy S. Johnson & Soil. Aucts.

‘ ' jii. j. 1 ! j. i i j Wednesday, September 9 . Judging completed in all departments. Afternoon Racing Program—Four (4> exciting HarnesssßaceS. Horses started with Mobile Starting Gate. WEDNESDAY NIGHT—The second and final showing . of Klein’s “Grandstand Varieties.” • [ - —- L . I t ’.* • e’ ' r ? dr •■'4 ♦ Friday, September 11th Free-for-all Horseshoe Pitching Contest. Sale of Junior Fair Livestock. Afternoon Racing Program-Four (4) Harness Races. FRIDAY NiGlfT—Second, showing of ’’Trails ot Time.” The SesquicentenniaJ Pageant. Yon wilt waflit to seO this gigantic ‘Spectacle which has a cast of over 200 , local people. Saturday Night, Sept. 12th The Final showing pf “Trails of Time,”the large and heautiful Sesqui-Centenriial Pageant which Is costumed and directed by professionals who will use local talent.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1952

post since July 2. He was taken to the hospital in a critical condition Sunday. ' If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Add. It brings results.

SPECIAL for Labor Day 1952 DESOTO Firedome L | 1949 CHEVROLET Club Coupe 1949 PLYMOUTH Convertible coupe 1951 PLYMOUTH LJgedAn > , r ,, , | 1948 DE SOTO Sedan 1948 Chevrolet) i Sedan DICK MANSFIELD j d ) MOTOR SALES 251 N. 2nd St. OPEN EVENINGS