Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 22, Decatur, Adams County, 27 January 1956 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Name Hugo Boerger As Extension Head Named Chairman Os County Committee Hugo Boerger of Root township, was elected chairman of the Adams cotinty extension commfttee tor 1956 at the annual meeting Thursday in Xlonroe. Other officers elected were Homer Winteregg of Monroe, vice-chairman, Mrs. I>an Striker of Monroe township, secretary. Edison Lehman of Monroe township, treasurer, and Mra. Noah I* Habegger of Berne, director. The meeting was opened by Orison Stolz. 1955 chairman, and the minutes of the last meeting were read by Mrs. Harold Zeigler, secretary. The treasurer's report was discussed and accepted. Hugo Boerger reported on the progress of the long range program planning committee started recently in Adams county. Phil Connelly, state county agent leader from Purdue. stated that the committee has made an excellent start and pointed ont that the objective is to develop a long range extension education program based on the needs of the people in Adams county. Peter B. Lehman, building committee chairman, reported that Calvin Nussbaum of Berne was the low bidder on the foundation for the dairy barn on the 4-H grounds. Lehman also stated that he had teen offered trees (mostly dead

FLOOR SHOW Every Sat. Nite II P. M. PARTY. NITE Every Wednesday PARTY MITE and SQUARE DANCE Every Friday Nite L. O. O. M. Adams Lodge 1311

I EjCW rcfl R HI 1 'I Hr J Reg. $229.95 '’W Lowest Price Ever! J NOW ~ „ (Mg $ 159-’5 Now is the best time ever to replace your old-fashioned sink. Start enjoying these timesaving, work-saving features: • Deluxe swinging mixing-faucet—warranted 5 years • Removable cutting board _ • Handy, flexible rime spray • Soap-box rack • Sturdy STEEL construction ... will not warp, rot, swell, stick, or splinter r • Beautifully curved contours ’> • Partitioned, fined cutlery drawer • One-piece steel top—porcelain-enameled, acid-resistant • Easy td dean, easy to keep dean • 5 huge, easy-gliding drawers • Enormous undercabinet storage space • Broad, no-tip drainboords • Crumb-cup strainer catches food partides • Finished in gleaming Star White , . . “w • Kitchens Food Waste Disposer easily Installed—only $79.93 extra, plus installation BUY NOW—SAVE NOW Stucky & Co. MONROE, INO. Open Evenings Except Wednesdays

elm trees) which could be used i In the dairy barn construction.‘Any-I one interested in helping furnish ■ lumber for the barn should contact Peter B, Lehman. - The 1956 fair date was set for July sl. August 1 and 2. tt was also voted by the committee that the extension executive committee be ordered to appoint a fair board with each member being in charge of a respective department to make plans carry out the fair organisation. Fairground insurance was discussed and a committee will be appointed to study the situation thoroughly and act accordingly. A report of the Adams county brucellosis testing program wad given by Seltenright. county agent. Work is completed in three townships and Is progressing satisfactorily. It Is urged, however, that the testing be completed as soon as possible. Forty-one members attended the meeting. t , Limberlost Land Plates On Sale The special Limber lost Land license plates for the front df auto mobiles in Adams. Jay and Wells counties were scheduled to have their premier sale in Geneva today. The; cost of, the plate is sl. Each person obtaining a plate is beinf requested to sign a Limberlost booster register which records him as a booster for a bigger and better Limberlost Land. In Geneva the general sale of the plates will be at the local auto license branch operated by Mrs. Eleanor Snyder. "It is expected that by next week thtsne special Limberlost Land plates will be on display and sale in Berne, Decatur, Portland and Bluff ton. Profits from the plates will go into a special fund for marking natural and historic points of in terest. In Adams. Jay and Welk counties — the Limberlost Land counties. Anybody desiring add! ■tlonal information about these special plates should contact Ear’ Dawaid of Geneva who originated and is pushing the project in the interest of greater Limberlost Land development. He Is being assisted tn the distribution of the plates by L. A. Mann of Geneva. If you have something to sell o rooms for rent, try a Democra Want Ad. It brings results.

WHISKS ’ H ; i © ---ax# t MSI 1 1| I ' BF

A COUPLE of septuagenarians are shown at revival of Korea's annual national kite flying contest, in Seoul. Kite flying is a favorite sport in Korea, and Is being revived there after a 10-year eclipse. These two had flown kites together in their youth half a century ago, and hadn't seen each other since. I International J

Membership Drive By Lutheran Laymen Briefing Meeting Scheduled Sunday — The Decatur zone of the Lutheran laymen's league will hold its annual membership drive briefing meeting at Zion Lutheran parish hall in Decatur Sunday night at S o’clock. , Otto J. Wiese, of Reynolds, will be the guest speaker. A large flip chart to be used In the 1956 cam-' iialgn will be demonstrated. The Decatur zone has for several years led all other zones in the Northern Indiana district in both total membership and percentage if communicants enrolled, but last year several other zones also did outstanding jobs. The Lutheran laymen’s league lg the laymen’s organization in the Lutheran church-Missouri synod and aids synod in various proects. Its best known project is the Lutheran Hour, now broadest in 65 countries in 56 languages. It also assists Valparaiso University, conducts semlnirs, produces Christian films, pubishes an outstanding monthly newspaper, etc. Its newest interests include a senior citizens protram, youth leadership training, end aids to synod’s evangelism and stewardship projects. Marvin Schroeder of Hoagland is this zone’s membership secreary. William Selking of Preble If. president of the Decatur zone. Membership secretaries in each it the ten Decatur area congregations include: Arthur Fiedler, 3ethlehem; Fred Berning, St. John’s; Wilbur Blakey. Immanuel; Elmer Bultemeier, Zion, Jriedheim; E. F. Fuelling. St. Peter’s; Karl Reinking. Zion Decatur; Frederick W. Bieberich, St. Paul’s; A. F. Dietrich, Emmanuel; Wade Tyler, St. John. Flat Rock: ‘'ha Paul T'rueChtenlcht. Trinity. Sacramento — California’s crop ’ of oranges brings more money ’ each year than the entire production which brought on the gold rush of the famous California gold fields days in this state In 1849.

yWSWw, c- ’ so . w/■■ ’F '’ % 'R r - : BjWtwl

STUART OUTERBRIDGE, •cion of one of Bermuda’s founding families, is shown in Hamilton, Bermuda, with his bride, Harlem, singer Royce Wallace. He said fellow Bermudans are ostracising hint because of the marriage, that he no longer can get credit They are shown in his night spot, Angel Grotto. (latemaHonall

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA

Three Pilots Killed When Plane Crashes SMITHTOWN, N. Y. (INS) —■ Three pilots were killed Thursday when their twin-engined Lockheed Ventura crashed on a snowcovered hilltop near Smithtown. The three meh. employed by the Swiftflite Aircraft Corporation, were in a checkout flight when the accident occurred. The pilots were identified as Bernard J. Malloy of Bohemia, N. Y„ Hugo Fijgngeri of Blue Point, N. Y., and Raymond Hamburg of Malverne, N. Y. Grant Extension On Paying Income Tax State Grants Stay Until February 14 1 INDIANAPOLIS (INS) —Taxpayers ware granted an unexpected extension on gross income tax deadline today after the division reported thousands of requests for more time. The state finance board agreed to vote in favor of an extension to Feb. 14 for payment of state gross income taxes for 1955. Voting were state auditor Curtis Rardin, executive secretary Horace Coats for Gov. George NCraig, who Is in'Florida, and assistant Charles Bryant, for state treasurer John Peters, who is in New Albany. Request for the extension was made by state gross income division director Frank Millls, who said thousands of requests had come In from individuals and many of the state’s were late submitting their forms. Top Sports NEW YORK (INS) - America’s favorite sports — participation variety — are fishing, bicycle riding and teller skating, according to a recent report. Other top active sports include softball, hunting, horseshoes, golf, shutfleboard, volleyball, tennis and skiing. - / Trade tn a Town — Decatm

George Views World Affairs With Optimism Senate Dean Warns International Mess Is Tough To Settle WASHINGTON (INS) — Sen. Walter F. George (D-Ga.) who will be 78 on Sunday, sees America at the crossroads in foreign affairs but confronting a domestic future rich with economic and political promise* The' president pro-tempore and dean of the U.S. senate, now a candidate for a seventh term, said today in an exclusive pre-birthday interview: "I have ceased to be disturbed by predictions that things are impossible." George, son of > tenant farmer and a veteran of 33 years in the senate, is looking ahead. . He told this reporter he is “optimistic about the long-range view" in foreign affairs. But he emphasized that the “extremely difficult" problems which now exist in Europa and elsewhere can have a "profound impact" on American policies. He warned that "getting out of the international mess is a long, : kgrd .job,".. ... George said there is in the na tion — and in his home state of Georgia —a sound basis fpr continuing economic growth A" d expansion. He looks for no major slump. And he declared himself confident that politics — “the science of government” — will attract more and more young Americans into lives of public service. With possible reference to apposition forces involved in his own reelection situation, George observed: “Demagogic appeals that so frequently upset young people are losing more and more of their hold on the masses of our youth." The senator’s view is that of one who has worked with the problems of foreign policy and home-front economics longer than any of his colleagues. He is now

Here They Are! New Chevrolet Task-Force Trucks for '56!

jhK«&B jgjgjM ~zrs • ; - : WMn3MI , SB : Sy?SW Ss»ife% .<a^ i «^j2n»MMan > S-saw -.zns»w«gcai b,f-Jyffi? w|iyrs iQttlßl mBBHBL \ cX r y^ WMtWf £®»3||!ms??‘ W z & ~ : -~i3L j - | iifc Til j '' x- »: T 7^.^.- Z v> , • gr f ,2c *. ■"■■' ** - . A . **• v ” vl u. 4 \ iSH mBM [KMiiian i iiAiit in I jjtfwMiMSi — —-——— ..- i ~—= - ;-<Ke- 111. . —— ' zv/’wS&--- \'^ f 4^’' . ISite’t. > ’ Wm W waMa

Now there ore more reasons than over why anything less is an old-fashioned truck!

An automatic transmission for every series! A super-efficient, shortstroke V 8 for every model I Higher powered, higher compression 6'sl New, higher capacity! Come In and see all the new things that’ll whittle down hauling time and slice your costsl

New ‘56 Chevrolet trucks bring you new power—a short-stroke VB* for every model, and higher compression 6’s that pack a bigger power punch z than,ever! •. . .../.j<. . \.? ~ And you can haul bigger loads! These new Chevrolet trucks are rated

‘\/>- . < 4j Saylors Chevrolet Sales

13th Street and U. S. 27

serving as senate foreign relations chairman for the second time in his tenure. For many intervening years he headed the tax and tar-iff-writing finance committee, of which he is still a member. Many times the measured, organ toned voice of the onetime judge, raised in the senate, has shaped the outcome of legislative action. The white-haired senator one of the calmest men in Washington. is one of the very few who can change a vote by what he says. it was just a year ago, on George’s 77th birthday, that the senate passed the Eisenhower administration’s "Save Formosa” resolution. It was largely through George’s leadership that thia authorization received almost unanimous bipartisan support. The vote dramatized his influence in a body which claims to be the most deliberative in the world. How .does he feel, heading into a campaign in a year when the nation's attention is concerned with the President’s heart attack? T feel fine." he said. “I enjoy work and it’s my principal recreation. I’ve found that activity helps. When I traveled over our state last fall, making many speeches. I felt better and better." One reason the Democrat from Vienna. Ga. maintains his health under a punishing legislative schedule is bis firm rule against getting caught up in Washington's diplomatic social whirl. He refuses invitations for after 6 p.m. His evenings are usually spent relaxing with Mrs. George in thetr Mayflower hotel apartment sometimes with intimate friends. Many, evenings George spends going through legislative reports and Wpannkag books op foreign affairs His favorite reading for complete relaxation is a "whodunit” and he enjoys a "reasonable” amount of television — mainly sports. George's thoughts are seldom far from his chief responsibility—foreign affairs. He said: “We must note the fact that right at the moment our international affairs are at the crossroads. There are problems we haven’t had before, or ones which have taken on a new face. But I'm confident it is going to work out. “Getting out of the internatfonal mess is a long, hard job. We can’t afford to give up experience or to walk away from it

up to a hefty 19,500-lb. G.V.W. Then there’s an automatic transmission for every series —a wider range of Hydra-Maticf models, plus Powermatict, a hew six-speed heavyduty automatic. Come in and look ’em over!

Costly Damage WASHINGTON (INS) - Damaging moisture frequently invades a structure because of faulty construction, improper design or ne-

PUBLIC SALE 1, the undersigned, since I am moving, will sell my entire herd of dairy cattle at auction located Vi mile west, % mile north of Berne. Indiana, on FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3,1956 12:30 23—HEAD OF HIGH GRADE HOLSTEIN CATTLE—23 5 Holstein cows, 5 yrs. old, were fresh between November 10 apd December 9, and are rebred and milking from 55 to 80 lbs. a day. 3 Holstein heifers, 2 yrs. old, due to freshen by day of sale. 4 Holstein cows. 3 yrs. old, due to freshen between April and June, all on good flow of milk. x. 1 Holstein cow, 5 yrs. old due to freshen June 3. on good flow , of milk. 1 Holstein cow. 4 yrs. old, due to freshen March 6. 1 Holstein cow. 8 yrs. old. due to freshen July 4, on good flow of milk. • 1 Holstein ccjw, 2 yrs. old; due to freshen Sept. 25, on good flow of milk. .. ■" ■ ■ «■ ■- '■ 2 Holstein heifers, 2 yfb. old. due to freshen in March and August. 4 Holstein heifers, 15 month/ old. 1 Holstein heifers, 6 months old. These cattle have been tested for TB and Bangs. All cows have been calfhood' vaccinated. but 4 cows. AU cows are bred artificially and most cows are from artificially bred stock; have been on owners sample test for the last 4 yrs. Will give record of production on sale date. - This is a real herd of cows and can be seen anytime before sale day. ,*■ MILKING EQUIPMENT 2 Sterling milker units, less than 2 yrs. old; like new. / < can Victor milk cooler, double stainless steel wash tanks, -— SaniMatic water heater, 12 good milk cans, stainless steel milk strainer. HAY AND STRAW 900 bales of good mixed hay. i 200 bales of mixed hay. had rain. 500 bales of nice bright straw. MACHINERY AND MISCELLANEOUS New Idea No. 15 120-bushel power take off manure spreader, 1 yr. old; 7V» ft. double cultipacker; lime spreader; Toro sickle bar mower; Burgo power take off grass seeder; 1 good brooder'house, 12 by Id ft; 6 hog houses, and articles not mentioned. • - ~ TERMS: CASH. Not Responsible For Accidents. ELLIS NEUENSCHWANDER — Owner Phil Neuenschwander, Auct., Berne, Ind. D. S. Blair. Auct., Petroleum, Ind. Gerald Strickler, Auct., Decatur, Ind. First Bank of Berne, Clerk. Sale will be held in Tent. Jan. 27 Feb. 1

“Established 1926”

FRIDAY. JANUARY 27. 1958

gleet of necessary repairs, Driv- ■ ing gales of rain and the forma- ( tion of ice dams at the eaves In areas where snow falls often showup such defeats in epidemic proportions.

Fast Facts About Now *B6 Task-Force Trucks A Modern, Short-Stroke V 8 for Every Model • More Powerful Valve-iq-Head Sixes • An Automatic Drive for Eveiy Series • New Five-Speed Syn-chro-Meih Tran»mi»iiont • High-Level Ventilation • Concealed Safety Steps Tubeless Tires, Standard on All Models Fresh, Functional Work Styling. •Ft standard in L.C.F. modtls, an txtro- « cost option in all others. at extra cost in a wide range of models.

Deeatur, Ind.