Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 70, Decatur, Adams County, 23 March 1956 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
WATKINS SPECIAL! • Floor Wax • Moth Crystals • Rug Cleaner • Upholstery Cleaner also • Garden Dust • Fly Bait • Barn Spray for Flys • House Spray for Flys ELMER WENDEL “Your Watkins Dealer” 925 Russell Street FREE DELIVERY
BE THE GREATEST GUY IN the WORLD... TAKE YOUR FAMILY OUT TO DINE Great man! Great mathematician! Dad figures that three meals a day, seven days a week, make twentyone meats! At least one too many if you're doing the cooking, like Mom. So he gives the whole family a treat . . takes them all OUT to eat. once every week. And whether they go to a famous hotel, a big, popular restaurant, or just to the friendly little toeal eating place—it always seems like a party. Mom relaxes, gets that BEST GIRL. BIG DATE feeling again. The kids revel in the heady pleasures of picking and choosing from a real ‘jfcrown-up” menu. And Dad, who has fun too, enjoys the added satisfaction of being, a family hero . . recognised by one and all as the GREATEST GUY in the world! WHY HAVE THE LITTLE WIFE SLAVE OVER THE HOT STOVE ALL DAY?? THE WIFE YOU SAVE MAY BE YOUR OWN!! rße Officially Registered In “THE GREATEST GUY IN THE . - WORLD CLUB” z r Rl ffilpe a • m«NM liflA .mm mm HU | ■ • MMUT MM . • MMMMW / ROOM J**" \
jf* W7ff.V V■ I SUN. & MON. W A —Continuous Sun. from 1:15 LfIUkDwSBEBLI ONLY 15c -50 c I ALAN I EDWARD G. | JOANNE 1 I LADD I ROBINSON I DRU I la CINEMASCOPE ••< WaraarColor — «Ml !»•• Waroor Bra*. ■■■lll !■■■ 11—Q I ■!■■ II ■■i.n».o.i»».ali.i ■ — TONIGHT AND SATURDAY — With Guts and Gunfire They Blasted Their Way! A Slice of Living History out of Villa’s Fabulous Saga! Filmed As It Happened, Where It Happened! Terrific in Technicolor and Superscope! “TREASURE OF PANCHO VILLA” ~ RORY CALHOUN, Shelley Winters, Gilbert Roland ALSO—Color Cartoon & New*—lsc*soc
Red Cross Campaign Previous 'Report -—12534.49 Mrs. L. Bowman. Dec. Res. Zone 5 4.00 Zion Lutheran Missionary Society -j 10.00 W. R. Stanley, Wash. Twp. Sec. 26 .... 7.00 Noah Neuenschwander. Monroe Twp. Sec. 31 8.00 Pythian Sisters 5.00 Delta Theta T»u - 5.00 Tri Kappa 25.00 American Legion Post 43 . 10.00 Beta Sigma Phi -----...... 5.00 General Elec. Co. (Nation’ll 200.00 .Mt*. Lulu Fruchte, Decatur Zone 11 13.50 Mrs- Arthur Holthouse, Dec. Res. Zone 11 44.50 Mrs. G. D. Mac Lean. Dec. Res. Zorm 11 —........ 44.50 Irene Zwick, Dec. Res. Zll 84.50 Mrs. B. A. Townsend, Dec. Res. Zone 11 22.75 Mrs. W. Lister. Dec. IRes. Zone 1 ...... 11.75 Martin Selking, Preble Twp. Sec. 10 19.00 Glen Girod. ■ Preble Twp. Sec. 6 9.00 L. F. Sapp. SL Mary's Twp. Sec. 7, », 9. 10 — 22.50 Richard Geimer, Union Twp. Sec. 33 ... ...... 800 Mrs. N. Maaelin, Monroe Twp. Sec. 17 — 11-00 Mrs. Clark Funk. Mrs. R. Nussbaum, Monroe Twp. Sec. 9 and 10 ..... 14.85 Mrs. Fred Nussbaum, Monroe Twp. Sec. 6 ....—. 7.50 Mrs. Roland Beer Monroe Twp. Sec. 22 6.00 Mrs. Tillman Beer, Monroe Twp. Sec. 18 14.00 Dan Habegger, Monroe Twp. Sec. 15 —- 6.00 John Peters. Preble Twp. Sec. 21 23.00 -Court House, Decatur Business 28.00 Mrs. Frank Bohnke. Decatur Res. Zone 9 —& 9.00 Mrs. Hitchcock. Decatur Res. Zone 9 — 24.05 Betty Feasel. Decatur Res. Zone 9 -V - 16.80 Mrs. Wilbur Steel, Decatur Res. Zone 9 -V——- 16.00 T. V. Johnson, Wash. Twp. __ Sec. 18 -.^5.,—-.x-i-- YjIB Northwest School, Decatur Business 21.09 Alva Railing, Union Twp. Sec. 30 — X—— 14-00 Womans Club, organisation 25.00 Mrs. Frank Noack. Dec. __ J Res. Zone 7 \ 8.00 Mrs. Wm. Kobne. Washington Twp. Sec. 5 12.00 Mrs. R. Schuster, Stratton Way 5.00 Ladies Auxiliary. V. F. W. organisations — 2.00 Mrs. Wtft. Wtapes, Decatur Res. Zone 12 — ---- 3.00 Edson —Lehmann, Monroe ~ Twp. Sec. 35 16.00 Rosary Society, organlzat’n 5.00 Lewis Rumschlag, Wash. - Twp. Sec. 11 & 14 ..... 10.00 Mrs. Frank Dellinger, Blue Creek Twp. Sec. 5 5.00 Mrs. Frank Dellinger, Blue
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FLOOR SHOW Every Sat. Nite it P.M. PARTY MITE I Every Wednesday PARTY NITE and SQUARE DANCE Every Friday Nite L. O. O. M. Adams Lodge 1311
I Creek Twp. Sec. 18 4.00 ‘ Mrs. Carl Schug, Blue Creek Twp. Sec. 17 — 8.75 J Floyd Meyers, Blue Creek Twp Sec. 8 j.- • 9.50 Mrs. Charles Burkhart. Blue Creek Twp. Sec. 7— 5.00 Mrs. C. B. Brewer. Decatur Res. Zone 13 — - 3.50 Mrs. 11. VonGunten, Blue Creek Twp. See. 13 13.00 Harvey Sells, St. Mary’s Twp. Sec. 31 11.25 Mrs. G. G. Thomas. Wash. Twp. Sec. 35 11.00 Milton Fuhrman, Root Twp. Sec. 18 7.00 H. Aschleman, French Twp. Sec. 35 .....jC......... 13.00 Charles Berning. Root Twp. Sec. 8 9.00 Mrs. R. Beery, Preble Twp, Sec. 33 r. 9.00 W. Neuenschwander, Wabash Twp. Sec. 4 - . 10.00 Eugene Farlow, Wabash Twp. Sec. 2 —j 9.00 Amos Neuenschwander, Wabash Twp. Sec. 6 4.00 Homer Miller, Wabash Twp. Sec. 9 9.00 P. J. Neuenschwander, Wabash Twp. Sec. 10 - 7.00 Erwin Bauman, Wabash Twp. She. 11 ... 7.00 Herman Burke, Wabash Twp. Sec. 14 11.00 Otto Kaufman, Wabash Twp. Sec. 19 3.50 David Moser. Wabash Twp. Sec. 20 — ....... 13.00 Godfred Smith, Wabash Twp. Sec. 24 ........... 5.50 Sol Moeser, Wabash Twp. Sec. 26 8.50 Eli Habegger, Wabash Twp. ■ sec. 3uxxx.:xx^:—. 6.15 Orvel Arnold, Wabash Twp. Sec. 36 -. 2.50 Total $3,611.84 Dr. John Bollard Returns To Purdue LAFAYETTE, Ind. (INS) —Dr. R. John Bollard has returned to Purdue from Auckland, N.Z., to assume an assistant professorship in aeronautical engineering. Bollard has been teaching in the school of engineering at Auckland University College since Septem- | ber, 1954, following his return to New Zealand from Purdue. He is a graduate of New Zealand engineering institutions and originally came to Purdue in 1952 to study for bls doctor’s degree in aeronautical engineering. » DULLES GIVES (Continued From Page One) U. S. allies is the bolstering of foreign economies. He believes that the '■military alliances— constantly denounced by the Communists and such neutralist leaders as India's prime minister Jawaharal Nehru —have done their primary job. They have forced the Russians to adopt a more conciliatory tone and have developed an atmosphere of security whicth makes possible progress in other than military spheres. Dulles spent nearly two hours Thursday afternoon behind closed doors with the house foreign affairs committee. MISSILE MASTER(Continued from Page One) Army experts assembled to demonstrate the mechanism said the “protector" can sto pthe fire even after a battery has flashed “on target," if a friendly plane has been mistakenly identified as bos-, tile. The missile masters normally will operate as local adjuncts tc the air force’s larger and similar SAGE (semi automatic ground environement) system, which is also in an early stage of construction. More advanced radars and faster missiles, the experts said, may later provide effective defenses even against space-traveling rockets arriving at 10,900 or more miles an hour. The present system is believed effective against the pilot-less-plane type of missile. SOVIET LEADER (Continued From Page One) -the Soviet dictator. Mikoyan declared: “There should be nothing unexpected in that," he said. “It is a form of Communist selfcriticism. . Is it surprising that we should attempt to see a man's historical role in perspective? “What we are trying to show the Russian people is the true role played by Stalin. 1 do not bee anything surprising in that" He denied categorically that there had been any “political demonstrations” in Georgia, Stalin’s home province, following the denunciations of the late premier at the party congress. “There is absolutely no truth in those stories,” he" stated. I had introduced Mikoyan to Randolph Hearst, president of the Hearst Publishing Company, who asked the first deputy premfer how political opposition could be expressed in a country with only one party. , . ... _ “We have the only party but it is a good one,’’ Mikoyan answered. “If it were not a good one, the people would soon get rid of us. “But the people support the Communist party because they know it is the people's party.”
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Some Westinghouse Workmen Balking Balking At Terms By Company And Union SHARON, Pa. (INS) —The Sharon plant of Westinghouse Electric Corp, was free of pickets tot* the first time since Oct. 17 today* but only a “low” number of men was reported returning to work. Some 200 men, about half of them from n»»i»i ten nice crews, were reported in the plant on Thursday night's shifts. This was after company vice president Frank L. Snyder warned the porkers “If they do not return to work within 10 days after formal notice to do so, they will be separate from the company in accordance with the strike settlement with the lUE.” The trouble at Sharon developed when the 6000 membeis of Local 617 of the International Union of Electrical Workers balked at terms agreed on by the union and firm to end the J56-day strike Tuesday. — The local includes nine of the 36 workers now on sj-.pension for strike incidents and members voted Wednesday night to delay a return to work pending further discussion of the question. The company promptly declared that any delay in reporting for work when called would be a “direct violation” of the contract. Meanwhile, the company concentrated today on negotiating a settlement of the separate strike by the independent United Electrical Workers. There are some 10.000 UE members on strike, including 6000 from the Lester, Pa-,plan: who walked out in an incentive pay disput a week before the IUE strike began. The IUE had a total of 44,000 members on strike. Gen. Gruenther Calls For More Weapons WASHINGTON (INS) — Gen. Alfred Gruenther has called for new atomic and missile weapons to beef up North Atlantic treaty forces as a deterrent to war. • Gruenther, supreme allied commander in Europe, told the house foreign affairs committee Thursday that the western military machine was not strong enough now to repel an all-out Soviet attack on Europe. tJUAOWBB BV - «• THE BOARD OF COMMISStONKIiS ON MONDAY MARCH 111. lit.Mt > HIGHH A1 Lawrence Noll 9upt. 61-66.66 Walter Reppert A. Supt _ 147.15 Albert Beer flo ................. 117.45 Hubert Iseh Clerk -.145.60 Lawrence Koenig Diesel J 44.30 Raymond Kolter do 110.10 Virgil Ferry do . 137.80 Virgil Draper do 85.05 Jesse Patch Mnck 150.15 Harold Burger. Truck .... 118,30 Burl Fuhrman do 119.60 Don Harvey do ........ ~X.UTO Richard LaFo.ntaiiu- do .... . 136.50 DeWayne Beer do 123.70 Roger Steiner do 130.00 Arthur Rosa Tractors 119.60 Noah Brunner do .fc.... - 136.50 Christ Meshberger do 135.20 Joe Spangler Janitor 37.50 Max Case 8. H 115.00 Christ Zurcher do 112.50 Joel Augsburger do ............ 113.75' Co. A Ditch Al Lawrence Smith Labor 175.50 Carl Burkhart do 88.20 Austin Merriman do 30.80 Board of Commissioners. Certified before me this 22nd day of March, 1956. FRANK KITSON Auditor Adams Co. March 23 Trade in a Good Town — Decatur,
\ J The luxuries you’ve wanted, Draw closer as you fill Your Top Value Stamp book— And every gift is a thrill! We give Top Value stamps Save ’em for Top Value gifts PARKWAY “66” SERVICE LUBRICATION — CAR WASHING and WAXING TUNEUPS 13th St. & Nuttman Ave
SB,OOO Grant From State Industries BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (INS) — Two Indiana Industries have granted SB,OOO to community services in adult education, a cooperative bureau of Indiana and Purdue Universities. The grant is to be used for research in adult education. It comes from Dalton Foundries, Inc., of Warsaw, and Indiana Gear Works of Indianapolis. Yearly, Unlimited Assembly Proposed Urges Amendment To State Constitution INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — Out going budget director Donald H. Clark urged some 40 state legislators to pass a constitutional amendment permitting unlimited, yearly sessions of the general assembly. Clark, who has resigned to take a Job with Indiana University, told a session Thursday of the legislative advisory commission that the present 61-day biennial session is too limited for efficient government. Some 1.000 bills are presented to each session and no one legislator has time to even read all of them, let alone become familiar with them. He noted also that a difficult assignment is placed upon the legislature of trying to look into the future for two and one-half years. The budget director noted: "Obviously the legislators cannot foresee all the complications or changes that would arise during that time to make the appropriations either too large or too insufficient for actual neegs.” Each session of the general assembly must appropriate funds for the operation of state government, now a $682 million biennial business, for a two-year period beginning six months after the session. Should the 1957 assembly pass the constitutional amendment proposed by Clark, It also would have to be passed by the 1959 assembly and voted upon at the 1960 general election. . ...... Another speaker at the meeting, superintendent of public instruction Wilbur Young, advocated loans from the common school fund of S2B million to some of the school districts most Th need 61 new schools.
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Secret Eisenhower Parley Postponed Conference Os Top Advisers Delayed WASHINGTON (INS) — The White House today postponed for 24 hours President Eisenhower's secret conference with his top military and diplomatic advisers. At the same time. White House news secretary James C. Hagerty said that the meeting, which will be lield at 9 am. (EST) Saturday has nothing to do with the Middle East situation. In announcing postponement of the high-level session, Hagerty explained that it was being put off because some of the participants were unable to attend today. Included were defense secretary Charles E. Wilson: undersecretary of state Herbert Hoover, Jr.: Allen Dulles, director of the central intehjgenee agency: Adm. Arthur W. Radford, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff; air force secretary Donald A. Quarles: and Gen. Nathan Twining, air force chief of staff. L — ' The White House declined to shed any light on what the meeting was about, except to imply that it was of considerable importance. The new disarmament proposal appeared the most likely subject of discussion, however, in view of the officials invited to the conference. , -■ ’ CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (INS)—Livestock: Hogs: Salable 7,500, steady - strong; early top 1465;- bulk 13Hs(h heavy 13-1425; medium 13751456; light 1250-1465; light Tights' 975-13; packing sows 1050-1275; pigs 3-950. Cattle: Salable 600, steady; calves salable 100; choice and prime steers 2050-2550; common and choice 15-2025; yearlings 152550; heifers 12-2050; cows 10751350; bulls 10-16; calves 15-26; feeder steers 15-18; stocker steers 15-22; stock cows and heifers 8 - 17. Sheep: Salable 500; steady; choice and prime lambs 1950-2025; common to choice 15-1925; yearlings 10-17; ewes 5’9. Boxer Tastes INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (INS) — The following classified ad appeared in an Indianapolis newspaper recently: "Brow’n boaer, A.K.C., registered. Will eat anything. Especially fond of children."
Presbyterians Plan Holy Week Services , The Westminster choir, direct- 1 ed by Mrs. Clark Macylin, will lead the singing at the 10:30 a. m. worship service at the First Presbyterian church. Three Infants will be baptised, Kathleen Ellen Knudson, John Arthpr Schauss, and Timothy George Allwein. This youth choir processional with palms on Palm Sunday will be the first in the Holy Week services at the church. The Lenten prayer meeting will be held at 7:30 p. m. .Tuesday, and the Maunday Thursday service at VS# P- 1,1 Thursday with communion aer-1 vice and reception and baptism of i new members. '<
MEL TINKHAM INSURANCE AGENCY • No additional charge for female drivers under age 25 • Standard or Broad Form Policies • Prompt claim service. See or Call Homestead No. 40 Phone 3-4611
PLANT THE BEST GREEN LEAF IND. CERTIFIED SEED CORN Select the Corn you like best from the following varieties — AES 702. Ind. 620, 252, 419, lowa 4249, Ohio C-54, K-62, and others. LARGE FLATS, REGULAR FLATS MEDIUM FLATS — ALL — __Bu. You will say it is the Best Grading you ever had! Be your own salesman—buy Green Leaf Certified Hybrids at this cost saving priceWe invite you to visit our Elevator and Seed House—check the accurate grading. Order your seed corn or take it along with you. THE LITTLE ELEVATOR CO. HQD for Seed Corn • Rockford, Ohio
FRIDAY. MARCH 23. 1956
RHEE TO SEEK (Contlnuea from IW One) favored a "younger" South Korean president to whom he could give "moral support."
MASONIC Master Mason Degree Saturday March 24 starting at 10:00 A. M. Weldon Bumgerdner, W. M. 4
