Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 52, Decatur, Adams County, 2 March 1956 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Essay Contest For Limberlost Lake Outboard Motor To Be Given Winner

The name of the lake being established between Geneva and Ceylon tn the heart of Gene Strat-

ride the bus • • • CONVENIENT-SAFE-THRIETT f 2: Charter a bus « 5 I No bother —no fuss , j ‘ “ t Z> 7 INDIAMAFOLIS - NOMKVH.IE - MUNCIE • \jOACnTJN£S south UNO-Foar wayne-xkxmono

r< —o*l ft W \ S' \ \rih\te 4* B I ’•■' \ i K ■ ’• refrigerator in |r *1 . ■ddFltaMll W ■ Mi’ trade, regardless \ 1 I\D 11 - \ % V V I a B, _ . ■ WV condition _ •] ■ I I ■ a Bl i/VmMM ■■ ■II * jii"iiS*‘jt In 1 i ’2Febß*n ftAfir&a ■ f \ i ji-wo ba«| j«4& « r «•I* ■ V AUI V.-,-wU||l ■ j ‘ y f , T&Jdjjj gdjL^ J : « «*« ;i " I■' FREEZER I '', __ CWsii~ I *T|| ■pMMOH ■ ■- _rrl | | ~ |jj^grTT = t hi ir j__ — ■ - tTO RA o c I Jr*i *• ' AIR CONDI’ 1 ° W * ° F ~I ”" I Air Conditioned REFRIGERATOR Lp - Ma J? *5 *»] 1 K9B F w - _ I o HgMH Vwfflffw ruuv rZs -1 *a f L_-—• —""I F NfVEff \ r " BKVWMMf Ntfos \ I | DffltOSriNG N — PH I ICO 10J7 I c so ■3322E58 I * X I ONLY " A WEEK ■■■■■■■■■l HAUGKS I -. ■ fTT' ■ r.- ': ■ •/ -r- . ; - ....’. '..' 'f -‘ f<- , , , ■. ’’ • > . • u .•' ■ v» ■ ~ • • > • ~ { PLUMBING — HEATINfI — APPLIANCES a ■•-. ■> .?,»-* ’ ' * ■ , |209 N. 13th SI. Phone 3-3316 I ■ •'■’ ■:-■ ■: 4b—■—— mbmmo Monritae m>mmmmm

ton Porter's Umberieet Lead nnd*r xpouaorOliib of thi LtaMrloet Aaßociatioa. lac. la to be decided in ah e*M» coateit epos to all school children of the - Utaberioat counties of Adam*. Jay aod. Welte. First prUO *Ol tee a* Mtteodrd mo toir donated tey the onuect e«ti neer. Walter GiUwan. and the project real eMate broker. U A. Wann There *ttl alee be other prises tor second, third, etc. Annmneemeat of the winning name

will be atdde at the Umberlost Labi Party to be held ih Osnetra the night of Friday, Marsh 23. . FolloWiag aM the rules Whktte •rill gorera the rosiest (hl Any school boy or girl in Adam*. Jay-os Wells counties between gipdes.l to 12 inclusive may enter the contest. • ' (b) Essays shall be limited to’ 200 words or less and shall be either typewritten or written in clear eaky to read handwriting. No essay will be considered which is hard to read or lacking in neatneks. . *'"", '■. f (ci Essays shall suggest a name for the new lake (other than the name Limberlost which can not be used) referred to or used in a book written by Gene Stratton Porter; and the essay shall explain why- the. writer considers it the most appropriate name for a lake in a project intended to promote 8e mempry of the life and xorks Gene Stratton Porter and preserve the natural and historic heritages of the region in which she lived and worked. ■ (d» Essays will be scored on the writer's reasoning in support of the name suggested end 90 the understanding of Gene Stratton Porter and the Limberlost which the, writer displays and not just on the essay's literary content. ."'James pot associated wltli the .writings;

PolloMng «M the ralM Whkh will gordra ttete rosiest (hl Any school boy or girl in Adam*. Jay-os Wslls counties between grades 1 to 12 inclusive may enter the contest. ‘

THU DBCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DMCATBR. INDIANA

of Qene Stratton Potter *lll n«l be oonsi4«ted in the contest <•) All osaays submitted boeoritk the pfwpterty of the Uabteriodt Association, Inc.; and the decision of the judges *lll be final in ah matUMr Judging will be in such manner as will eliminate the possibility of ties and assure a single winner of the contest. -ts) Essays ate to be in the hands of Earl Dawaid. secretary of the Limberlost Association, Inc,. Geneva, on or before Friday night. March 16. Time of the contest has been limited to test students* ability to act and produce quickly. (g) On every essay submitted, the name of the student, grade, school and county should appear 0P the hack site of the paper. — never on the front or where contents of the essay appear. Springtime Weather Continues In State INDIANAPOLIS (INS) —lndiana's springtime weather will continue for the next five days fc with temperatures four to eight degrees above normal, according to the forecast of. the Indianapolis Weather Bureau today Normal maximums are 40 to 51 degrees apd normal minimums , J 22 to 30 degrees..

Dulles Leaves For Diplomacy Tour In Asia Secretary Os State On 19-Day Personal Tour For Diplomacy WASHINGTON (INS) — Secretary of state John Foster Dulles leaves this afternoon on a 19-day personal diplomacy Mair durigg which the future of collective security in Asia may be decided. The secretary warned before he left to visit io nations that there is greater danger of war in tile Far East than in Europe. He said he will try to find ways to strengthen the aide of freedom in the area. ; President Eisenhower planned t<) bid his secretary farewell and ppssibly touch on a few problems of U. 8. policy in the Far East. Dulles is to fly directly to Karachi, Pakistan, where the foreign ministers of the eight nations of the Southeast Aslan treaty organization begin a three-day conference on Monday. ,-U. S. and Asian officials agreed that the SEATO talks will go far toward determining whether the idea of collective security in Asia Will survive. One American official said the issue is whether SSATO will be given real teeth or 'whether it will cd&tinue as what amounts to a paper tiger.*’ Dulles favors an increase in the military strength of SEATO but is not ready to meet Asian that American troops be stationed on the ground in the area. After the SEATO meeting the secretary will fly to India to talk w’th prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru and then will go on to Ceylon, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, the Philippines, Formosa, Korea and Japan. At the SEATO conference and in the trip that will follow it, Dulles said he will study at first hand “the new Soviet and Chinese Commnnist tactics" of economic and political maneuvers in Asia. — < Washington — California leads in the number of automobHes with 4,879.210. New York state ranks second with 3,893.980. -' < ■ .... Northwestern Paraguay is called the Gran Chaco.

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Montos 1$ Again On Most Wanted List - First Criminal To Repeat On FBI List WASHINGTON (INS) — Nick George Moatos, who han fought an almost lifelong dual with the law, today became the first criminal ever to reappear on the FBI roeter at “Ton Most Waited” fugitive*. < 4.,,?. T<C ' , •, The 39-year-old Montos, a ruthless robber and daring burglar, an expert safecracker, and an altogether brutal character, escaped from the Mississippi state penitentiary J an. 10. It was his fifth breakout from a major penal institution. Montos Wks serving a seven-yekr sentence on federal and state robbery charges. Hanging over his head were indictments for other offenses, including bank robbery. The elusive criminal, a native of Tampa, Fl*., originally was placed on ths “Most Wanted" list on Sept, g, 1953. He was apprehended by FBI special agents at Westchester, 111., on Aug. 23, 1054. His Mississippi confinement resulted from that state’s claim on him for crimes at Hattiesburg and Clarksdale. Just before dawn on Jan. 10, Montos and another inmate used a hack saw blade to cut a staple which held the lock on a prison door, scaled a 10-foot, cyclone-type fence, and fled to the uneasy freedom they sought Bloodhounds followed the separate trails of Montos and his oompanion but eventually lost them. The FBI is hunting Montos down across the entire nation, aware that his depredations have ranged from Miami to Chicago, from Georgia to Wisconsin, with his crimes Including such offenses as the sadistic robbery and beating of an elderly man and woman at Alma. Ga. Oddly enough, the dlmunitive but dangerous fugitive who has eaten so much coarse prison tare is regarded as likely to turn up among gourmets; he likes wellprepared food and has been known to frequent expensive restaurants renowned for the excellence of their cuisine. The FBI calls Montos "one of the country's moat cunning criminals.” He attempts to evade capture by using such techniques as changing his brand of beer every few month*, shunning the hangouts of hoodlums, and hiring pickpockets to obtain new identification papers for him. He fancies himself as a skilled gambler. He is fond of dogs and has owned such canine pets •» a bulldog and a boxer. He is a zealous scribbler of letters and postcards. The G-men note that “associates have related that Montos has a 'big-shot' complex coupled with a personal mania for safe burglary abd that be Jealously seeks to protect his reputation as an ‘expert safecracker.’" ft is thought possible that the balding Montos may be wearing a teepee. He is believed to be armed, and is said to favor a .38 caliber blue steel revolver with a fourinch barrel. Here are aids to identification of the two-time "Most Wanted” fugitive: Alias — James Anderson, N. J. Hastings, Henry H. Kiesendahl. Nick Montes, Nicholas Montos, Nicholas Mojutos. Joseph R. Rubin, Frank N. Russo. Walter C. Sawyer, Samuel Clinton Terry. Nick WatUy, “Little Nick.” Description — age, 39. born Nov. 8, 1916, Tampa, Fla.; height, five feet, five inches; weight, 165 pounds; build, medium: hair, black, balding in front; eyes, blue, may be wearing glasses; complexion, dark; race, white. Occupation — bookbinder, laborer. painter. - Scars and marks — numerous pit scars and skin blemishes on face, one-half Inch blue scar outride Corner right eye. one-half inch ’scar on right side of forehead, scar on left eyebrow, six-inch scar outer part of left elbow, long dim scar on back’ of left little finger, left atm slightly crooked from an old fracture. Remarks — may be wearing mustache, may have hair dyed, may be wearing toupee. Wind Changes Traffic Light, Woman Hurt INDIANAPOLIS (INS) —The wind blew a traffic signal one quarter turn off position and caused an accident in Indianapolis that sent a woman to the hospital. Other signals on the sama corner were unmoved by the wind knd while ohe car proceeded through a green light showing on an unturned signal, a truck went through the turned signal whiah also showed green for his lane. No arrests were made and Mrs. Emma Meisters, of Indianapolis, was reported in fair condition ?/ 1 — Spokane — forest product Indu strive in the United States account tor more than three million jobs annually.

Standard Oil Co. Seta Naw Records INt>iANAMtia (tNSJ) -Standard Oil Company of Indiana announced today its total income for 1955 set new records. ? . The income reacneu a new high of $1,813,954,015 and net earnings also set a record, 84 per cent over 1954 earning*, of 8157417,828. The earnings Included a net profit of 89,235,000 ’ from the sale of an interest in some producing properties. Two-Year Sentence For Stealing Mail INDIANAPOLIS (INS) —Dale J. Pryor, 26, of Bloomington, today began two years in prison tor pilfering cheeky from a postal pourch and then tossing the sank in a southern Indiana lake. Pryor was Indicted oh three counts of mail theft and drew twoyear terms on each count the sentences to fun concurrentlyPryor worked for a man .who had a contract to haul Mail. Government attorneys said Pryor opened more than 100 letters, removed the checks and later cashed them.

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Adams County Farm Bureau Co-op Association BERNE MONROE GENEVA 2-2612 6-6035 14 PLEASANT MILLS WILLIAMS 7-7316 Long & Short on 18 Hoagland

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FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1858

Cigarette Blamed In Fire At Kokomo Left Smoldering In Couch At Club KOKOMp, Ind. (INS) — Fire chief Francle Mannion said todajj a lighted cigarette left smoldering In a couch of a private club caused the half-milHon-doilar fire in Kokomo. The flames destroyed the second and third floor* of the three story structure and shops on the first floor suffered extensive smoke and ■ waierdamage. - ~ Mannion said he learned Ibn Saud Grotto had rented its lounge tn the building for a private party which broke up about two hours before the tire was discovered. A lighted cigarette in a couch apparently touched off the blase. Two firemen were overcome by smoke but neither was hospitalised. The same business block was destroyed by fire on Feb. 6, 1888. Fire equipment and water supplies ware inadequate and the entire block wetit up in flames. Trade in a tivod town — Decatur