Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 53, Number 259, Decatur, Adams County, 3 November 1955 — Page 13
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3. 1955
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE AINU PERSONAL PKOPEHTI AT PUBLIC AUCTION Tho undersigned administrator wlitih the will annexed of the estate of Letta Tulua.li Aiwien, deceased,' being entale No. 5099 In the Adama Circuit Court, Adame County, Indiana, by virtue of an order of said Court aubhoidalng the tame hereby gives notice that he will on the 12 th day of November 1a,,0, betweem the hours oX-l;00 P. M. and 3:00 P. M„ D. S. T. offer at public auction on the premises, 1122 West Monroe Street, Deratur, Indiana, all <xf the goods ot said decedent. Terms: Caßh. Said administrator will also offer for sale at public auction at the time and place set forth above the following described retCL. estate towlt: Inlot No: 609 In Joseph Crabb’s subdivision of Outlets, In Joseph Crabb's Third Western Addition to the Town, now City of Itecatur, Adams County, Indiana, as the siuqe- Is designated on the recorded plat ot said subdivision. Said sale will be made subject to the approval of the Adams Circuit Court for not less than Two-thlrds of the full appraised value thereof, free of all Menn and enoambraeices except the 19.‘. r > taxes due and payable In 1956, and upon the following term® and conditions: At least Onethird of the purchase money In cash on the day of said sale, the lialance upon delivery to the purohaaer of an administrator’s deed approved by the Adams Circuit Court, and an abstract of title brought down to date of sale showing said real estate to be free Os all liens and encubrances except the 19t&5 tiaxes due and payable in 1956. Possession of said real estate will be given upon final and full payment of tn* purchase price. David A. Macklin, Administrator Estate of Letta Tuluah Annen Deceased. Oct. 20-27, Nov. 3
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Buddhist Head Wants U. S. Citizenship Determined To Be American Citizen NEW YORK (INS) — A sacred Buddhist leader who would rather be called “mister" than his rightful title "brilliant tiger" Is determined to become an American citizen. He is Thuben Jigme Norbu, more familiarly known to over 1,000,000 of his countrymen in remote Tibet as the Tagstar Lama, or "brilliant tiger." He is also the older brother of the Dalai Lama, supreme spiritual leader of the kingdom on top of the world. But Norbu laughingly passes off the bqjief held by awed Buddhists everywhere that he is the modernday reincarnation of a saint who was spiritual leader of northern Tibet centuries ago. He didn't look nor act the role at a press conference held for American reporters in New York after his arrival in the U. S. from London and Tokyo, where he has lived since 1952. He arrived dressed in a charcoal gray suit with a red knit tie, looking at 34 more like a rising Madison Avenue executive than the highest ranking Buddhist religious leader in the U. S. He speaks English, but answered all questions in Mandarin Chinese. translated by another Buddhist priest, Geshe (doctor) Wangyal. Wangyal himself is the leader of a colony of 570 Russian Kalmucks torn away from their Mongolian homes and resettled in Farmingdale, Long Island, after World War Two. Norbu came to the U. S. as an immigrant under the (Refugee Relief Act sponsored by the Church World Service of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. When the dashing young Tibetan was ten years old, elder Buddhist priests in Tibet decided the student studying at a remote monastery was the living reincarnation of the saint. He became Tagstar Lama. Ten years later, another council of Buddhist elders chose his younger brother as the Dalai Lama — an unprecedented coincidence, according to Norbu, because never before have brothers held such high positions in Tibet. But in 1949 the Chinese Communists began to assert control over the country which perches on top of the precarious peaks of the Himalayan mountains. Through tbe first months of .ConynwteV .domination, the, communists J to Norbu. He told them he was sick and had to go to India for treat-’ ment. He went and has never been back. . ~ — In 1951, Norbu came to the U.S. where he lectured at U.S. colleges and universities. The next year he flew to Tokyo to attend the International Buddhist conference in Tokyo, and stayed until last month. Now, Norbu said, he wants to become an American citizen. He plans to brush lip on his English and then join the staff of an American university to teach Tibetan history, customs, language and religion. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results.
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At *■, . \ MB b-iOt ' .wF 4 ’ 1 ! pgw wißi “1 r -WwwM ■ * '** I ■ WSgt ta W' OajQKMS*’ L if UndOHi I 'M if lW i \ . .. ’flMI i Mil I \ - MM i ®M \ j| r Wt I.V jßt * , ■■ Bl* ' ' THE WALL EXPLODES in a spray es brickbats and mortar dust nt Silbro Lamp Products company in Philadelphia Below, a fireman runs for his life. One fireman was killed, f ZntemationaZ SotuidphotoJ
Plant Study MANHATTAN, Kas. (INS) — Winter rye plants found by chance on a farm near Kansas City are being used by agricultural scientists at Kansas State College seeking a cure for soil-borne wheat mosaic. The plants showed severe green mosaic symptoms and plants from their seed continued the symptoms when infected in greenhouse laboratories. The seed is being increased so other researchers can have the plants as a host for soil-borne mosaic studies. Trade in a Good Town — Decatm
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TH> DHCATUR DAILY QJBMOCRAT, DBCATUR, INDIANA
Indian Student t In Food Search KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (INS — One of the toughest problems for a resident of India in the United States is to find the kind of food he likes. So reports Kuttalan Arayanan, who enrolled at Oregon Technical Institute. The 26-year-old student is a pure vegetarian and for a long time he looked for an eating house that serves. plain boiled rice. In his home town ot Wyilt isl-South India almost everybody is a practis-
ing Hindu and eats rice thrice a day. At the same time he reported that communism is losing ground in India. He pointed out that it thrives on poverty and explained: “In India tbe industrial and economic development of the country is very rapid. A great change has come about. Fine roads and highways arl being built, dams constructed and more land is coming nnder the plow.” s Columbia, S. "C. — Much of South Ca.roljnqX textile, industry is located in the Piedmont area.
Movie Company Aids Little Mexico Town Build Bell-Tower For Town Church DOS CHUPADEROS. M ex. (INS) ~~ The two-hundred inhabitants of a tiny adobe-mud Mexican village will remember a Hollywood movie company not for the insensitive money-making machine it is. but the thing of human warmth It also can be. Director George Sherman of the movie “Comanche" was the first to notice something awry in the village of "bos Chupaderos" (the Sucklings) when Carl company moved in: The übiquitoa church, as much a part of the Mexican scene as barefoot peons, was missing. On inquiring, Sherman learned that indeed a church existed but that it had no steeple because there had never been enough money among the worshippers to buy a bell. There was a sadness in this that the director felt needed correcting. He ordered company prop men to immediately construct a bell-tower on the tiny church, and at the same time instructed Mexican coproducer Alfonso Sanches'Tello to purchase a bell. But now the machine moved in. This would be a good thing—for the picture. Trained publicity men channeled the news to the press. Krueger re-wrote one of the film’s scenes making the ringing bell a warning signal for a Comanche raid. When the bell arrived —a new bronxe one still bearing the price pencilled on its side — Sherman presented it to the town’s bumble and embarrassed mayor, Francisco Almaraz, amid the whir of cameras and pop of flashbulbs. But although, the new- bell had been delivered, the townspeople showed none of the expected eagerness to install it. Thn one day the puzzle was resolved by a small incongruous procession that marched quietly through the movie props, painted warriors and shouting men that occupied a part of the little town. The procession, guided by Mayor Almarec, consisted of two blackrobed prieets, two page boys and a representative of the state governor’s office. And it stopped in front of the church. Almarez then detached himself from the group and went to tug on Sherman's sleeve and with the director in tow', returned to the clergymen. Two boys brought the bell, suspended in a crude tripod of logs, and set it before them. Fathers Miguel Uribe and Jose
Angel Castaneda at once began the ceremony of dedication. The money • making machine stopped. Mexican youths, recruitfrom the area to play Comanche braves, rode their horses nearby to hear the priests’ words. Costars Linda Cristal and Dana Andrews walked quietly to the scene. Then as simply aa it had begun, it was over. The two boys tied a rope on the bell and hoisted it into place in the tower. In a few minutes the sound of it pealed out across the town and countryside, calling the people to mass. Sherman turned to the quiet grouped members of the "Commanche" cast and said very quickly: “Wrap it up boys. That’s all for today.”
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PAGE FIVE-A
$325 PER MONTH GUARANTEED Plus bonus each week based on production. YOU MUST have automobile, be fpse to travel Indiana Mondavi through Friday. You will be home every weekend, and available for immediate employment. If hired you will attend sales school and receive field training at company expense. WRITE TO: W. W. Kuhn, 530 S. Sixth St, Springfield, 111. You will be contacted In the next two weeks.
