Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 53, Number 279, Decatur, Adams County, 28 November 1955 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

YOU CAN’T BLINK at facts! Accidents do happen. lie prepared with AUTO ACCIDENT and INABILITY INSURANCE. Consult us today. 4 COWENS INSURANCE AGENCY L. A. COWENS JIM COWENS 209 Court St. Phone 3-3601 Decatur, Ind.

/ Look To The Leaderl I A & T° Cut Your AM Food Bills More! yjSp&jfe. "SURER-RIGHT," SMOKED Hums p=N ib ’ 3v Smoked Hams OR BUTT PORTION i 49® Sliced Smoked Ham CUT TER Ib. 89® i VfiSl ROSSt SHOULDER-CUT • • 29® Sliced Bacon GRADE ~A " • • Ib. 39® I Veal Chops SHOULDER-CUT • • 39® Fish Sticks FROZEN-COOKED 3 pkg” $1 I i U.S. NO. I GRADE, MAINE - Potatoes 50 ’1 39 Wagner Apples •• • • bushel $ .98 Florida Oranges jucT •• 8 big 49® I Grapefruit S** 8 £ 49® Baking Potatoes 1 25 99® Rome Apples r® * * 5 £ 49® Fresh Carrots PA KED • 129* | : —-REGISTER VALUABLE ~H—i NOW .... “ PRIZES! 100 Prizes To Be Given Away Al Decatur A & P 140 - Christmas Tree Light Sets REG,STER EVERV T,ME Yo * viaw I,ECATt R Viiiioimao S A & P THIS WEEK AND NEXT WEEK. I • - i 30- Sets Dolls (2 in Box) No Purchase Necessary. I jj ■ • You Need Not Be Present I 30 — Regulation Size Footballs t« win! ■ » » .I, iii ■ ii ... .I ii i i ,i . '.'l 111 ~ r ' "■ 1 ■ ■ • @JANE PARKER, GLAZED Donuts 29 c Cherry Pie barker .• • • 33® Cheddar Cheese smtM°o N • »>. 45® Layer Cake S“ ANJI • • 49® Brick Cheese W CONSIN • • Ib. 45® I White Bread parker •• • 'ipi b ' 17® Ched-O-Bit cheesetooo • 2X- 68® ■ ■ i f .| ■ EMERALD BRAND. BABY jm| Walnuts 4o c Apple Sauce . 4 ‘£l 49® Chocolates AS ORTED° D • 4 box I Prune Plums B s r% a o na . . 2 39® Mixed Cardy .-X 39® Bling Peaches or“ d 3 79® Diamond Walnuts £I eE . . 49® Party Loaf S DE . . • •29® Mixed Fruits 49® DI J J Cbrvbrm ANN 24 ' oz - QQfi EFFECTIVE AT ALL A&P STORES IN THIS AREA IfiSnuSu PAGE- • • bof. VW* foiimosi FOOD «etau»»... SINCE >IS» Green Beans X? E A . 2 35® Deodorizers wtcktype 2 bt°. 59®

“ British Troops On Active Duty NICOSIA (INS) —More than 10.(KM) British troops were placed on active duty today to strengthen the fight against Greek Cypriot nationalists on the troubled island of I Cyprus. A proclamation signed today by governor General Sir John Harding made the British forces on i Cyprus '‘temporarily subject to the " army act as if they were on active . ''' V . Ilr n ' IT 1 " 1 ' " . ? .. "'

THS DBCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA j>

service.” Elks District Deputy Here Thursday Night 1 Harry Sprunger, of Ligonier, dit- * trict deputy ot Elks lodges, will 'lntake hie official visit to the De- : | catur Elks lodge Wednesday night. He w'ill meet with lodge officials prior to the regular meeting, at 8‘ - o'clock, which will he featured by t initiation of a class of candidates. > I All members of the lodge are urgj ' ed to attend. ' " I.

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u. S. SECRETARY OF STATE John Foster Dtillea ia shown in Rome, where he stopped to discuss common problems" as a prelude to the Big Four foreign ministers conference In Geneva Beside him ' is Clare Boothe Luce, U. S. ambassador to Italy, and at right, Foreign Minister Gaetano Martino. Martino said he was gratified ° to hear Dulles nail Italy "great Dower.” flnttrnational Radioohoto)

Truman Denies Any Profanity On Nixon Denies Charge By Los Angeles Paper LOS ANGELES (INS) —A con- ‘ troyersy raged today over whether former President Harry S.. Truman used profanity to describe I Vice President Richard Nixon. A Los Angeles Examiner newsr man quoted Truman as saying, “I don’t want to discuss that > — —Don't even mention. pis name to me.” but the former | Chief Executive denied it. Truman said: “I would never say a thing like J that about the vice president of ! the United States." 1 Truman said that what he actually told reporters when asked about his reaction to Nixon becoming the 1956 Republican presidential candidate, was: "1 don't want to talk about Nixon, you know how I feel about him.” ■. ' The 72-year-old former Chief Executive spoke to newsmen ; when he alighted from a private plane at Lockheed air terminal a flight from Seattle. Asked to comment on the assertion by Gov. G. Mennen Williams es Michigan tjiat the Democrats would be "guilty of the most era* i ven cowardice" if they allowed tile 1956 campaign to "degenerate ■ hrto a spineless and self-defeat- , fug formality.”"|he grinned: ’ “That's good. That's the way i -Democrats are. They have opinions and they speak their minds." Truman is on the west coast to lh'e ,> *l , ftifiifift' Maniorial Library in Independence. Mo. He will address a fund-rais-ing dinner in Los Angeles tonight and another in San Francisco Tuesday evening. He said: "These dinners on the west coast will almost complete the fund raising for the library.” N Slight Damage Done By Automobile Fire Decatur firemen were called outj side Deca.ur Sunday night at about 7 p. m. when a car driven by an unidentified* Fort Wayne woman caught fire, it is believed that antii freeze boiled over and then caught fire. Damage was slight.

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Alva Buffenbarger Honored Saturday Alva Buffenarger, who is retiring this week after 39 years as a foreman at t)he General Electric plant, was honored at a dinner Saturday evening at the Elks club. Among those who attended were the guest of honor and his wife; E W. Lankenau, former {i E. plant manager; John Welch, present plant manager, and 40 foremen and supervisors of the local plant. Buffenbarger, "who began working at Fort Wayne and was transferred to Decatur in 1919, was pre- . sented with a desk chair and lamp ' as a farewell gift. State Traffic Toll Low Over Week-end Indiana Toll Far Less Than Usual _ INDIANAPOLIS (INS) -=-lndi- I ana's week-end highway death toll was for less than the Usual grim total. ~ However, Mrs. Mary Evelyn Faust, 64, of near Frankfort, was a casualty of a snowstorm Sunday night on Road 39 five miles south of Frankfort. She died and her husband, Homer A. Faust, 65, was’ injured seriously when their automobile slid off the highway andl struck a tree. Harvey Warren, 33, of Summit-1 Ville, drowned when a ear driven | by his brother, William, 42, skidded off Road 103 near New Col-i umpfis Mhd plunged into Fell Creek J a -M*w miles Trbitn t 6e r victim's home • Mrs. Priscilla Myers, 50. of R. R. 2, Washington; Ind., was injured fatally in a two-car crash five miles west of Owensburg in Greene county, which was blamed on ice. Three others were hurt. State troopers said a car driven by Slavian , E Myers, 55, the dead woman's husband, skidded on ice on Ind. 45 and collided with a car driven by Norbert Ollinger. 24. of Huntingburg, Sunday night. All three members of the Myers family were thrown from their vehicle. Mrs. Myers died of a broken neck. The husband was treated; for head abrasions. A daughter. Janet, 22, was taken to Washington hospital with double fracture of her left arm and face lacerations was taken to Crane naval dispensary with face, chest I and knee injuries. Manion Denounces Ike Congratulations Denounces Ike For Message To Russia SOUTH BENI). Ind. (INS) —Clarence E. Manion, former dean of the Notre Dame -law school, denounced President Elsenhower for sending “best wishes" to Russian leaders on the 38th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution in a radio address Sunday night. Manion said: “President Eisenhower did what, none of his predecessors had dared to do-even if they so desired, namely congratulate the Soviet' government upon the anniversary ' of its successful cap.ure' and enslavement of the Russian people. " Manion maintained it was the anniveistfiy of a “bloody burglary which inaugurated the cruelest and bloodiest government the world has ever known" and outlined Soviet successes since the Russian < “lulled our boys into relaxed tensions" at the summit session in Geneva. “The time has come to go iTack to the successful policy we pursued from 1917 to 1933. Let us cut off all diplomatic relations with' ail Communist, government because | of the essential immorality of Communist despotism. And, fur the j same reason, let us refuse to trade or deal w| th any of' these gangster I governments. I ’! "This will not bring on a shooting war with the Kremlin, hut it will; speed up successful -anti-Comniu-nist revolution behind the Iron and Bamboo Curtains, which is the only avenue, to a just and lasting peace,; in tire world."

Training School To Home Club Officers Annual School To Be Held On Friday The annual home demonstration officers training school for Adams county Is scheduled for Friday beginning at 9:30 a.in. at the Decani; Jfouth and Community Center. Mrs. Floyd Baker, Mrs. Bert Haley and Mrs. Noah Habegger will be in charge of registration. Mixers will be led by Mrs. Wilbert Thieme and Mrs. Arthur Krueckeberg. At 10 a.m. a singing session led by Mrs. M. J. Neuenschwander of Berne will be featured, followed by introductions and announcements by Mrs. Theron Fenstermaker of Geneva. Training classes for each office will begin at 10:15 a m. Instructors will be presidents and vice-presi-dents, Mrs. Albert Beineke of the state executive committee; secretaries and treasurers, Miss Gloria Koeneman of the county extension office; lesson leaders and alternates, Miss Jane Knapp of Purdue university; sopg leaders, Mrs. Neuenschwander, county chorus director; news reporters, Dick Heller of Decatur Daily Democrat, and health I and safety leaders, Dick Willaey and George Nuffer of Purdue university. A summary will be presented at 11:30 a.m. and luncheon will be served at noon. The afternoon program will begin at 1 p.m. and will feature special music by the song leaders class, a talk by Miss Knapp on "A Good JClub Meeting” and in stallation of the 1956 officers. Those to be installed are Mrs, R. C. Hersh, president: Mrs. Dan Striker, first vice-president; Mrs. Dale Moses, second vice-president; , Mrs. Noah Habegger. secretary; I Mrs. Rue Strayer, assistant secretary. and Mrs. Bert Haley, treasur-l-er. la charge of the installation will be Mrs. Albert Beineke and Mrs. Theron Fenstermaker.

CENTRAL MICHIGAN FARMS 525 Acres. 3 Miles N. W. Farwell on M-115. Producr tive soil. 130 cultivated acres. Balance pasture and woodland. 8-room modern stone house; tenant house;,.Liorse stable; b^W ; 2 Beef barns, sO’xl2O’ and 30’x60’; 120-T. tile silo; two trout streams, one could be dammed to forma large lake. One of Clare County’s beautiful old homesteads. $42,000.00. TERMS. We have many other farms and resort properties. FRED L. WOODBY, Broker BEAVERTON, MICHIGAN PHONE IDS-7317 1 .. -r:- — ' r--:-- • - - • ...; ...■ • ■ ■ - ,=3 . ■ I • » ’ * * * ’• this Christmas give ... NOTE PAPERS.... / ‘ ' The thou gbWut practical Christmas Gift. \ \ There’s one for every person I and every social occasion. x. z’/z ,■ ' You can Ptease even the most J Zr */v discriminating people with a • ~design to suit each personal- .-' 7 lty ' v 11! And Hallmark Note Papers 'vjSgyeyy // co® 4 so little. They're priced at 59c and SI.OO a box. Choose those you want to send as vVwjSX Christmas gift* this., very * * week . . . and be sure to in- * S' elude a box or two for your •• .* ! own use. SMITH DRUG I'll.

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 38. 1955

Veteran Employes Are Honored Sunday Employee who hive worked 20 'years' or more at the Central Soya company and their wives were honored Sunday evening at a banquet held wt the Allen county war memorial coliseum. They attended the Fort Wayne Piston-St. Louis basketball game after the dinner. Those who were honored included Everett Hutker, Harold Idlewine, Merle Williams, Lavern Bowman, Frank Drake, Chalmer Stevens and Harold Kelley. D. W. McMillen, Jr., president of the company, presented awards to the bweoty-year group. Tom Allwein, local plant manager, was toastmaster. Guests included Mrs. Allweln, Mr- and Mrs. Art Burris, Mr. and Mrs. James Basham. Mr. and Mrs. Don Jones and Mr. and Mrs. Dike Eddleman-

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