Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 175, Decatur, Adams County, 27 July 1954 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
State Institutions > 'I ■ . ' — ' ' Seek Three Millions Building, Repair Funds Are Sought INDIANAPOLIS (UNS) — The Indiana department of health today announced it will a«* the incoming general aasetnbly for n. 782.497 to build and repair at five medical institutions during 1955-57. U.. • v-' Included in the proposal given lhe Indiana budget committee was a request for a 82,011.000 hospital at the Rockville State Sanitarium. State director Dr. Bertram Groesbeck, Jr., cut 83,587.525 from requests submitted by the Southern Indiana tuberculosis hospital and the etate eoldlere and sailors’ children's home. These same five institutions asked 85,734,116 during the last legislature for 1963-55 and received
BUY SELL Looking for Some Good Used Furniture, Appliances, Bicycles, Cars .... or do you have something to Sell for CASH? Write your Ad on this Easy-to-Use Order Blank. DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, . ... SAMPLE DECATUR, INDIANA 25 - Word Ad YOUR AD in this space for Please insert the following Classified Ad t-*-- three days for only 11.50 will be read in over <OOO for Days. My name, address or homes each day. Decatur ■ - „ '- - Daily Democrat, Phone phone number are part of the Ad. 8-2121. , l : £ . -."•■"•'4 —“5 » I . I I • I ; ’ Name Address t sew WORDS DAYS Est < DAYS ew OR LESS For *•“ Q For MAIL YOUR AD TODAY FOR QUICK CASH RESULTS I . -• —r-: - ■ ■ z /<? — feS l )- 8 > E W® 1 ? Special tyek-matic fiiqidaire with Complete Self-Service 0 4) Makes all other refrigerators old fashioned. Big 10.3 cu. Modal Shown CTD-103S ft. capacity gives you Self-Service from top to bottom. » v Completely separate, real Food Freezer has Quickube Ice O N LY Trays that serve ice In a wink . . . and Frozen Juice Can « Holder that practically hands you each can. Beautiful in3 tenor—with colorful porcelain finish and rich, golden trim. J There's Self-Service in the twin Porcelain Hydrators and 2 WB aluminum Roll-to-You Shelves that bring back shelf foods up front. Cyda-matic Defrosting gets rid of frost and defrost As|( about * ra^er automatically. And there’s even more Self-Service in easv terms *• Pantr y' Door wi,h hand y E o« Server, Butter Compart- | i ment and removable shelves from top to bottoml See it demonstrated today. UHRICK BROS. - 130 WEST MONROE ST. PHONE 3-4109
8890,000. Other requests were State School tor the Deaf, 89«4,<95; State Soldiers and Sailors' Children’s home, $426,424; State School for the blind, $93,248, and Southern Indiana Tuberculosis hospital, $90.150. V •• . The new hospital at Rockville would replace 100-bed units now housed in wooden buildings which Groesbeck termed fire hazards. Costa Jane Hike Attends Institute Miss Coata Jane Hike, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hike of Monroe, returned this weekend from a two week high school journalism institute at Indiana University. Miss Hiker who has had two years experience on the Adams Central bi-weekly newspaper, will be editor of next year’s paper. A Junior at Adams Central, she'was sent to the institute by the Adams Central parent-teachers association. Democrat Want Ads Bring Results
17-Year-Old Boy Sought In Shooting Madison Boy Shot " Fatally Last Night MADISON. Ind. (IN) —A 17-year-old Madison boy was sought today for questioning in the shotgun slaying of Donie I’rseth. 11, also of Madison. lahoJ and state police reported that the U-yearald boy was found shot to death near the Parkmoor trailer court at (Madison at 9:15 p. m. Monday night after his parents reported he bad not returned home for supper. ' . Police are uncertain whether the shooting' was accidental or intentional. but said that boys frequently practiced target shooting in the area where the little boy was found dead. However, Richard Sheehy, 17, of
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA
w BH H Ar aft ■ b] K, WWi H ® « y jml'm tJHs mi * • HL Hi Iki Ks ■ I lißmßk' ’ ■I ' ft HF SINATOR JOSEFH t. McCARTHY (left) appears thoughtful as he talks with Wilbur M. Bracket (right) and Walter Swan, both of the Defense Department, after a closed-door meeting of the Senate Investigations subcommittee in Washington. The two officials advised the group that the Department would not explain its denial of a security clearance for Thomas W. LaVenia (right), an investigator for the subcommittee. Later, McCarthy announced that LaVenia would be retained as a staff member. (International)
the Parkmoor court, who had been target practicing near the scene, disappeared after Donie's body was found, and police said they wanted to question him. Sheehy had joined the searchers in hunting for Donie when he was reported missing, but failed to return to his home after the body was discovered. Report Two Enlist In U. S. Air Force Paul Allen Hill, son of <Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Hill, was sworn into the U. S. air force Friday at Samson Field, Geneva, N. Y. His period of enlistment is for four years. Jerry Joseph Pace, son of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Pace of Geneva, will leave Thursday for Indianapolis for a physical examination prior to four years enlistment in the air force. If he passes he will be sent to Samson Field. ■Enlistments are taken Halden Elzey of the Fort Wayne recruiting office. He is in Decatur each Tuesday from 10 a. m. to noon at the post office. ASKS F B I AID <Tnr» Tj Pa<e F»«r) 1 had employed .Lively to work as a salesman for his ment company. Cohen has denied Lively’s story that after Dorothy was dead, he had contacted his boss and Cohen had sent help to room 665 to dispose of the body and hide evidence of the slaying. East St. Louis and St. Louis, Mo. detectives were asked to swh for ‘‘Ruth’’ also. Lively said “Ruth” had been Cohen’s companion on the week end of July 16-17 when the confessed killer claims his boss and the mystery woman were in his hotel room prior to Dorothy’s slaying. Meanwhile, a Marion county grand jury is scheduled to consider the evidence against Lively Aug. 3 or 4. He wavied arraignment before Judge Patrick J. Barton, who named an attorney t to defend him, and was bound over to the grand jury. At the Indianapolis office of the FBI, a spokesman confirmed that a request had been received from the Ipdtanapolis police for “background information’’ in connection with the Poore slaying. He added that this does not mean the FBI is actively entering investigation of the case. If you have something to sell or rooms for ent, trj a Democrat Want Add. It brings results. NOW THAT PEACI has come to Indochina with signing of the agreement partitioning Vietnam and giving the northern half to the Vietminh Communists, Vietmlnh leader Ho Minh (above) seems bent on winning the rest of Vietnam as well. In a broadcast he said the nation will “without failure” achieve unification and “the people throughout the country will be definitely 11b- . crated.” flntumational)
Propose Another Foreign Aid Slash Move Develops For Half Billion Cut - WASHINGTON (INS)--A move developed in the house tbday to cut another half billion doilare from President Eisenhower's foreign aid program because of the French-negotiated truce in IndoChina. Rep. Glenn R. Davis (R-’tVis.) said he would propose the slash as the house called up~i. five billion dollar bi to finance the aid program in the current fiscal year. The measure, approved by the house appropriations conrrnittee Saturday, carries two billion 896 rail Hon dollars to new funds and authorizes spending of two billion 312 millions more in unobligated money previously voted. Davis toM newsmen he would offer amendments to cut 212 millions from the 712 million dollars provided for southeast Asia and 200 millions from unobligated funds allowed for general military aid. Both items were reduced by the appropriations committee when it whacked Mr. Eisenhower’s new money request by 543 millions and slakhed,.. asa.,,millions,, from the amount he asked in left-over funde. Davis, whose amendments for the sharper cut were defeated in the committee, said he felt the truce in fndo-China called for review of the aid programs for
what am I waiting for? -fw~=-' ■*>■*. ■ K — *- x There are Just as many good reasons for having jrJJwjjj® ~~ — — a clothes dryer in summer as ... dust, dirt, sun bleaching, sudden squalls are no problem a dryer. These are some the ——- reasons why more pftjple bought gas clothes dryers Jr ; last summer than at any other time in the year. J So don’t get your dryer JSFJgA - f X J? y jt?| IVl" | '- — •■ ..--i- «r ,• ’r\ OOTHU MYBRI [ J BOy / \ \ ( - WHEN YOU BUY YOURS - ; - r ' ! * •• • MAKE SURI ’J” S A i Fz/ / CIOTHES Pit Yl* I \ // ! • LOWEST Installation . \ Pt/ ■ • LEAST Cost \ W| ' ■ Wf/ i I • FASTEST Dryins Time \ " ? : I ■ V’[ I • MSTRaaulti ■k / ‘i 7/re GAS Cantpantj ' NORTHERN INDIANA PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY
that area -end Europe. Th® appropriations committee cut 88 millions from the administration'!* request for 800 million® tor southeast Asia. This is the same reduction recommended by the senate foreign relation® committee. Blind Broommakers Strike Is Settled Five-Month Strike Reported Settled PITTSBURGH (IN®) — A state mediator met with official® of the Pennsylvania association for the blind today to iron out final details of a settlement that ended the five-month strike of 42 blind broommakers in Pittsburgh. Mediator J. Edward Waldron refused to disclose terms of Monday night's settlement hut predicted that the broom shop will reopen soon. The broommaker struck last March 2 when the association tried to decrease the price pair for a dozen brooms from *1.13 to 78 cents. When the association threatened to abandon the Oakland district broom shop last week, the broommakers staged a twoday sit-in which shutdown all operations. , , _ The association claims >70,000 was lost in operating the shop last year. If you nave something to sexi or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results
'Cooks’ Comer' .By Mary R. Thaman I — * .——- -A Why We Hive Baking Failures About thia time of year 4-H* girls compete for various homemaking honors including baking. As a 4-H judge I am often asked why cakes fail. There are any number of reasons why we have baking failures. Sometimes poor products are caused by the use of poor equipment. Most often, however, failures are a result of not following the recipe. It ts even possible to have a failure with a cake mix if the directions are not followed. / There are two basic types of cakes—cakes containing fat and cakes without fat. Cakes containing tat are called butter cakes. Cakes without fat are the sponge type cakes. Good butter cakes have certain characteristics in common. In external appearance the cake should be aymetrical in shape and only slightly rounded. If it’s a layer cake it should be almost Gat on top. The crust should be soft and an even, golden brown in color. It should have no appearance of sugariness (crust should be neither crisp nor shiny). The cake should have raised so that it is a good size in proportion to the Ingredients used and feels light when lifted. Causes of deviation from a good butter cake are as follows: 1. A sugary crust may be due to too much sugar, an improper method of combining ingredients, or possibly too much leavening or insufficient mixing. 2. An uneven shaped cake Is a result of uneven heat in the.oven, an uneven oven, cake not level in the pan or pan may be warped. 3. Uneven browning may be attributed to an uneven heated oven, a lack of sufficient leavening or insufficient mixing. 4. A cake falling is caused by too thin a batter, too stiff a batter, too much sugar, too much fat, too slow an oven or too hot an oven temperature. 5. Coarse texture in cake may be traced to poorly combined ingredients, insufficient mixing, too much sugar, too much leavening or incorrect oven temperature. 6. A crumbly cake has too much sugar, too much leavening or possibly been baked at too Jow an oven temperature. 7. Heavy cakes are a result of too much mixing, lack of leavening, too much fat, too much sugar, too much liquid, insufficient baking. incorrect oven temperature or improper cooling method. —B_ Tunnels areuiauaed by overmixing, uneven distribution of the leavening agent or failure to get rid of air in the batter when put in the pen. . —-— 9. Tough cakes result from too much mixing, insufficient leaven-
TUESDAY. JULY 27. 1954
ing, sugar, shortening or too much flour. 10. Cracks on the top of the layers may be traced to too hot an oven at the first of baking, to® stiff a batter—■probably due to too much flour. 11. Dryness in a cake is caused by lack of enough fat or liquid, over-bqaten egg whites, cake overbaked, too much baking powder or not enough sugar. 1 . A good sponge cake ts symmetrical In shape, evenly and slightly reminded and delicately browned. The crust is tender but not sticky. The texture is silky, tender, moist and resilient. The grain is uniform. The color, odor and flavor are in keeping with the ingredients ftsed. A cake containing both whites and yolks should be yellow, the depth of the coloring depending oh th® color of the yolks and their relation to the other ingredients. The odor and flavor of sponge-typ® cakes should be delicate and inviting. A cake containing only th® whites of the eggs should be white. Causes of deviation from a good sponge cake are as follows: thick, hard crust is a result of too hot an oven at first or too long baking. 2. A sticky crust is due to too much sugar, damp flour or insufficient baking. 3. A cracked erust results from too stiff a mixture, over-beaten eggs or too hot an oven. 4. A tough crumb is caused by under-beaten eggs, too little mixing or too hot an oven. 5. Dark color can be traced to inferior flour or wrong proportions. 6. Dryness is due to over-beaten egg whites, too much flour, too little sugar .overbaking or too slow a baking temperature. Heaviness is caused by loss of air In mixing or omitting cream of tartar. 8. Shrinkage might be caused by too low a baking temperature, too llttle cream of tartar or insufflcient baking. Two Autos Collide Late Monday Morning Damage amounting to >175 was, caused to two automobiles in an accident Monday at 11 a.m. five miles south of Deqatur on Mud Pike. ’ George Idding, 63. of near Tipp City. 0., started to turn left Into the George Thomas driveway. As he turned, a car Driven by Robert E. Huser, 20, of Moqfoe route one, attempted to pass. Both drivers were alone in their cars and. neither was injured in the resulting collision. Deputy sheriff Merle Atfolder investigated the About 90 percent of the cases of swine tuberculosis occur when hogs come into contact with infected poultry, says county agent L. E. Archbold.
