Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 79, Decatur, Adams County, 3 April 1956 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind.. Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller President J. H. Vice-President Chas. Holthouse Secretary-Treasurer Subscription Rates: •_ By Mall in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, >8.00; pix months, 94.25; 8 months, 88.25. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, <9.00; 6 months, >4.75; 8 months. <2.50. By Carrier: 25 cents per week. Single copies, 5 cents.

If anyone is planning a foreign vacation tonr this year, they won’t need, to feel lonely In some foreign land. Chances nre better than even that See. Dulles will be close at hand. He created quite a sensation recently by being tn his office in Washington. 4—» 0 If April weather follows the pattern, we can expect showers, Wind and sultry weather. All of these types of weather, whether pleasant or not, are needed for plants and flowers to blossom into spring beauty. Os course, we also need some dry planting days. Weather guessers believe that some typical spring weather is scheduled for this area in the next few days. 0 0 ■■ Results of the Central Soya conference with northeastern Indiana college students held last Saturday at Fort Wayne were interesting. Twenty Adams county young men and women enrolled in colleges attended the conference along with some seventy-five others from neighboring cities. Executives of the Soya company got an excellent opportunity to survey the local field of future personnel possibilities and the young people “got first hand information on what is necessary lor them to make a big-time connection when they are finished with their college work. —fl fl—- ' People of this area will have a rare opportunity from now until April 13 to see the Freedom Foundation display of flags, historic government documents and letters. now being exhibited at the Youth and Community Center, under auspices of the Decatur * schools. Only a few cities the site of Decatur get*fiie‘promlnenl and interesting display and everyone of us should take advantage of the opportunity. The entire dis.play is free and all people of the area are invited to attend at any time until April 13. —«-fl fl»— Filing time for Primary election candidates Is over and there are three interesting contests which the Democratic voters of the county will decide May 8. Louis Worthman, incumbent first district commissioner is being oppos--ed by Richard Bleeke and Lew

jin PROGRAMS wfflhJr ~ (Central Daylight Time)

WKJG-TV b— —— (Channel 33) TUESDAY Evening <:00 —Gatesway to Sports 6:15 —Jack Gray, News 6:3s—The Weatherman B:3o—Wild Bill Hickok 7:00 —A/tnos & Andy • ,:3o—Dinah Shore Show —-7; 4s—News Caravan ton ’Btirle '■ ■■ o:oo—Fireside Theater o:3o—(Circle Theater 10:30 —Big Town • • lj . oo—.The Weaithe rtnan * Bports Today 11:15—The News, Ted Strasser ~ WBitty Tlystander Wednesday — Morning -> 7:oo— Today 9:oo—Morning Marquee 10.0v —Ding Pong School , 10- The Ernie Kovacs Show Afternoon 11- —Tenn. Ernie Ford Show 11:36—Feather Your Nest j; 00—Farms & Farming 1:15 —The Weatherman I:26—News, Tom Elkins I*39—Here's ITiisrlie 1:00 —.Musical Moments 1:10 —Faith to Live By I:ls—Editor's Desk «► I.2s—Show Business 2-30—Rar Miliand ~ ; i;OO—NBC Matinee Theater 4.oo—jCartoon Express Ilomauces 4:3o—Queen For a Day 1:00 —Pinky bee Show 3:3o—Howdy Doody Evening 6:00— Gatesway to Sports 6:ls—Jack Gray. News 6 13—The Weatherman :30 —Carol and Corky ; 43—Patti Page Show T:oo_The Great Glldersleevs 7:Bo—Eddie Fisher 7:4s—News Caravan I:oo—Highway Patrol B:36—Father Knows Best - 9:OO—W a t e rs roitt j;3»—Buste With Ann Southern Jf;o6—This la Tout" LIL* tl-40—Mr. IDatrict Attorney 31:66—The Weatherman , * n ;lt—sports Today 11:16—New# jt ; 30—Bombay Waterfront

Sapp. John Klnts, in the second year of his first term Is opposed in the second district by Otto Hoffnjjjijs, former commissioner. Therl are three candidates for coroner. They are Harmon F. GHlig, incumbent and Richard Linn and Elmer Winteregg. Jr. All three are Decatur funeral directors. Incumbent Gillig is associated with John Doan in Gillig and Doan. Linn Is associated with the Black funeral home and Winteregg with Zwick funeral home. Your attention is called to the fact, that while candidates for commissioner must reside in the district which they wish to represent, all Democratic primary voters of the county cast votes for a candidate from each of the two districts. fl fl— — The Cole administration, with five Democratic councilmen and a Democratic clerk-treasurer, has completed the first quarter of administering the affairs of the City of Decatur for 1956. The new administration faced the future with some pretty serious problems, including the power situation, the water shortage and the usual number of smaller worries facing any incoming group of officers. Headway has been made in the effort of the water department to meet the possibility-of a water shortage. A new field is being explored and indications are that new wells to be drilled in the future will provide the necessary year-around water supply for a growing city. The Council and Board of Works have tackled the electric power problem and while ■ no solution is ready to be made public, all phases of- possibility are being scrutinized-. Work will start soon on street improvements repairs and the street apd sewer committee and the street personnel have made such headway in the annual early spring job of opening clogged sewers and cleaning the streets. Mayor Cole’s first statement was that he was “no miracle man" but that he was sure every person in his administration would give an earnest effort to the city’s problems. No one can that every member of the Administration has-been hard at work on the various problems, and it appears that solutions are in sight for the toughest ones.

j WINT-TV (Channel 15) TUESDAY Evening 6:oo—The News. Hickox 6; 10—Sports Extra • 6:ls—Range Rider. 6:ls—Douglas Edwards 7:00—I bed Three bives 7:3o—Warner Brothers Presents R; 80—Navy bog v ' 9 ;iio—43uy ixtnihardo Jul-i k-e __ »:30—TV Reader's Digest 10:00 —164.000 Question 10:30—Ethel and Albert 11:00—Files on Jeffrey Jones 11; 30—News, Weather, Sports WEDNESDAY Morning 7; 00—Good Morning B:oo—Captain Kangaroo 9:00—TB»e Early Show 10:OO—Gary Moore 10:30—Arthur Godfrey , ll;i»o —Your Own Home 11:1*5- —Arthur Godfrey 11:30—Strike It Rich Afternoon 12:00—Valiant Lady 12,: 15—Love of bi f e 12:30—Search For Tomorrow 12;45 —Guiding bight I:<ift-—Jack Parr Show I:3o—«As The .WvWrld Turns 2:oo—lt's Fun to Reduce 2; 15—Robert Q. Lewis 2:3o'—The Pastor * * * S;4s—House Party • - r’/. 3:oo—Big Payoff .3. 4:oo—Brighter Day 4:ls—Secret Storm I:3o—The Edge of Night , " 5; o'l—Bar 15 Ranch Evening 6:00 —News, Hickox 6:lo—Sports extra, Grossman 6:ls—Gene Autry » , 6:4-s—Douglas Edwards 7,:60 —Ellery Queen 7; 30—Passport to Danger * B:oo—Arthur Godfrey B:39—Dr, Hudson 9:oo—The Millionaire 9; 30—I've Got a Secret 10:00—20th Century Fox Presents 11:110—The Whistler 11:30—Nqw, Weather, Stiorts moviesT . ADAMS / "World in My Corner" Tues. & Wed. at 7;42; 9;4f.

Annie and I, ¥-i HATE muatah “Golly! —if this was 30 years ago, we’d be late ■ for school!”

2d Years Age Today o — April 3 — Forty persons have died in the mid-west snow storm. Dr. Fred Patterson reelected moderator of Decatur Presbyterian church. Bruna Hauptman is to be electrocuted tonight unless Governor Hoffman grants another reprieve. Milton Hower announces candidacy for Democratic nomination for recorder. He is fourth candidate to announce. The flood aid fund in Decatur reaches $818.47. Mrs. Ward Calland and Mrs. Frank Alton leave for visit in Columbus and Garnville, Ohio. o o Modern Etiquette BY ROBERTA LEE 0 —— —— : Q. At the home of a friend recently, a large howl of mixed salad greens was passed with the meat course. Since I don’t like salad mixed with my food, and there were no salad plates, 1 asked my hostess for a small plate. Was this all right? A. No. To ask for anything extra in a private home shows criticism Os the service. Instead of asking for the extra plate, you should have declined the salad. Q. If a male relative performs the rite of giving the bride away ther father being dead), does he then take his place in the front pew next to the bride's mother? A.-This is the usual procedure, although it is not required. Q. If a man is walking with a woman and she is carrying her coat on her arm, should he offer to carry it for her? A. This is not expected. . I A-— 4) Household Scrapbook | BY ROBERTA LEE n — . ,t.. Washing Brushed Wcol Any garment of brushed wool must be washed carefully. Make a suds of pure flakes and warm water. Squeeze the garment ia the suds, changing the water frequently. Rinse thoroughly, adding a few soap flakes to the last rinsing: Spread out flat to dry. turning the garment when one side is dry.

PUBLIC SALE As we are quitting farming and devoting all our time to the Poultry Business. we will sell at public auction our implements, etc., on the Blaising Turkey Farm, Located 4 miles south of Fort Wayne on l : . S. highway No. 2". then 1 tnile east on the Thompson road, on THURSDAY, APRIL 5 at 12:30 P.M. — FARM IMPLEMENTS — 9’ Cage heavy, duty tractor disc; Case 13-hoie fertilizer grain drill in good condition; Little Genius 14” tractdr plow, on rubber; Bradley 4-bar side delivery hay rake, on rubber; International manure spreader; 8 ft. lime spreader, oh rubber; cultipacker; 2-sectioh spike tooth harrow; Oliver 7' semi-mounted mower; implement trailer with wench; cement mixer; 750 gal. water wagon; 24 ft. grain elevator; 300 gal. overhead gas tank; 2500 Watt, 110 V AC. field generator; hog house; 25 ft. 6" drive belt: 8” portable electric saw; electric drill and disc sander; 3” belt sander; 1000 bushel round steel grain bin. TURKEY AND POULTRY EQUIPMENT — 10 Hawkins Rangers, for chickeqs or turkeys, equipped wfdt feeders and fountains; 14 met al community hen nests; power egg washer; poultry feeders; 5, Bxlo pit roosts; Humidaire automatic goose incubator, 300 egg capacity 361 C turn. Many miscellaneous kerns. . - .. .. HOUSEHOLD GOODS —Porch.glider;- 2 end tables; lamps; desk and chair; 2-gal. ttitlk pastlftlzer; other items. GARDEN TRACTOR & MOWER—I9SS Simplicity garden tractor with gear shift and 2% h.p. electric motor, cultivators and cycle bar; Sythette power weed cutter. TRACTOR & PLOWS W. C. Allis Chalmers tractor and ■cultivators; Allis Chalmers 14” tractor plow on rubber; John Deere 14” tractor plow, on rubber. 3 COMBINES 1948 Case 6A power take-off combine; 1949 International No. 62 combine with motor; 1947 Massey Harris 7 ft. Clipper combine with motor. •%, The above combines and tractor consigned by CHAS. MORRISON. TERMS-rCASH. Not responsible for accidents. BLAISING TURKEY FARM — Owners Ellenberger Bros., Auctioneers Chas. Patton, Clerk Fort Wayne phone K-5512. , 30 3

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Removing Whitewash Whitewash can be removed from walls by dissolving one pound of alum in one gallon of strong vinegar, applying with a brush, allowing the mixture to soak in real well, and then scraping and washing. ’ Cleaning Brass Brass can be cleaned and will keep bright Tor a long time if a soft paste of whiting and ammonia is applied, followed by a rubbing with olive oil. Alfred Sloan Quits As G. M. Chairman NEW YORK (INS) —Alfred P. Sloan Jr., 80-year-old head of the largest corporation in the world, has resigned as board chairman of General Motors. Albert Bradley, 64, English-born member of the GM board of directors and an executive vice president, succeeded Sloan in a series of top level personnel changes announced Monday. The career of Sloan, a titan of American history, spans the history of the American automobile Industry.

IF Jl SEN. WALTER $. GEORGE (D-Ga.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, arrives at the White House for a previously unscheduled conference with President Eisenhower. They conferred briefly in the Executive Office, then continued their meeting in the Executive

Court Rews Marriage License Claude A. Garee, 58, Marysville, 0., and Pearl C. Pruden, 52, Miami, Fla. Alias Summons The law firm of Hunt, Longfellow and Suedboff has entered appearance for the defendant in the complaint for drainage by Helen, Marie Rothermel against Mar# Ann Ewell. The firm has moved that the summons issued for the defendant be quashed because it was improperly issued and improperly served. The court has ruled that an alias summons be issued returnable May 4. Set For Trial In the complaint to foreclose chattel mortgage by Herman Brown against Edgar Clem, Severin H- Schurger has entered appearance for the plaintiff. On motion of the plaintiff the cause baa been set for trial April 80. Estate Cases A petition for letters of administration has been filed for the estate of Ruth E. Munro. A bond in the sum of $2,300 has been filed and letters have been ordered issued to Esther L. Cooper. A report of the deed on 40 acres of the Evaline Archer estate sold to Roy and Margaret Price has been filed. The deed has been ordered delivered. The inheritance tax report for the Mary E. Brod beck estate has been filed. It shows a net value of with $18.63 tax due from each ‘of five nephews and nieces and $53.38 tax from a sister-in-law and no tax from other heirs. The total tax due is $146.53. A petition to amend the personal representative’s inventory for the estate of Emma Gerke has been submitted and sustained. Real property valued’ at $8,500 in the original has an actual value of $20,000. The schedule to determine inheritance tax for the estate of Lewis H. Reynolds has been filed with reference to the county assessor. The estate is valued at $3,115 and the heirs are four daughters.

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1- ' ' > 5> ' " ’ What’s it like to take the wheel of a 1956 Cadillac? If you don’t already know, then we hope you’ll come with us now on a little imaginary journey in the “car of cars”. Suppose, if you will, that you’re in the driver's seat. How wonderful you feel. Those deep, luxurious ( cushions hold you in perfect comfort—your hands rest naturally on the slender wheel—and all about you are vision . . . and beauty . . . and luxury. And how quiet and restful it is! The car is so smooth and silent in operation that your only t sense of motion comes from the sound of the wind and from the passing landscape. Starting .. . stopping .. . turning—all are regulated with the lightest touch of toe and hand.

ZINTSMASTER MOTORS FIRST & MONROE

Additional bond in the sum of $15,000 has been filed in the estate of John Mosure. A report Os the sale of four acres of real property to William and Minna Andress for $8,700 and of 80 acres to 'Roger and Treva Shaffter for $10,200 has been filed. The deeds have been ordered delivered on fuH payment. The schedule to determine the inheritance tax for the Rose Venis estate has been filed with reference to the county assessor. Ths estate is valued at $1,515.80. Four daughters and a son are heirs. Three-Way Probe Into Plane Crash Pittsburgh's Worst Airplane Disaster PITTSBURGH (INS)—A federal agency was putting into operation today a three-phase investigation of the plane crash which resulted in 22 persons burning to death in the Pittsburgh district’s worst air disaster. Fourteen persons, Including the pilot and co-pilot, survived the crash of an eastbound Trans World Airlines Skyliner that plunged into a knoll near the Greater Pittsburgh airport Sunday night Investigators for the civil aeronautics bureau said that one group headed by George Van Epps- of New York is checking operations. Another, under the direction of C. E. Searle, is hunting for possible structural defects in the twin-en-gine craft. The third team, made up of experts from Washington, is checking engines and propellors. A TWA spokesman in Washington explained that the plane banked sharply minutes after leaving tha airport. He said that this phase will be checked to determine whether the pilot, Captain Raymond McQuade of Red Bank. N. J., was at fault. The wing had dipped just before the craft nosed into the knoll along a section of abandoned strip mine.

Highway Headaches Discussed At School Annual Purdue Road School In Session LAFAYETTE, Ind. (W 6 —The man-slsed headache now posed by the lag In adequate highways behind vehicular use was brought hottie to highway personnel and others attending the annual Purdue University road school. A progress report on highway needs in Indiana, bding carried out by the joint highway research project at Purdue, made these points: Safety requires that any road carrying 5,000 vehicles daily should be dual lane, but Indiana now has cnly 300 miles of such road, although surveys show it needs 1,600 miles right now and another S,OOO miles within the next 20 years. Limited access to heavily traveled highways is another safety need, but the survey showed the average mile of primary road in Indian has 16 entrances, exclusive of intersections, with some miles having as many as 100 entrances

CARLING'S BEER IMWINO COUPORATIOH Os AMERICA e CUVKAND, OHIO

. ' - y-'- ' . ’ You simply lean back and enjoy the ride. We’ve heard it said that a drive in a new Cadillac isn’t really a drive at all, in the normal sense of the word. It’s a time for rest and pleasure and relaxation. •* 7 ♦ Reiter come in for a visit some day soon. > I J you should decide to move up to a Cadillac, it will be our purpose to make you as pleased with your ’?'* ' relationship with us, as your dealer, as you are certain to be with the car itself. The Cadillac name has tong been a symbol of automotive integrity and honesty of purpose—and we make every effort to have our own business reflect the same ideals in our dealings with owners. It would be a pleasure to see you—at any time.

TUESDAY. APRIL 8. 1956

per fttlio. dnly rerouting ead live needed limited access In many cases, the report said. Prof. Harold L. Michael, assistant director of the project, defined the "safe and practical highway" Os 1980 as having 12-toot lanes, IL foot shoulders, three degree cur Aes, three percent grades and limited access. He noted that surveys have shown the number of vehicled using Jndiana highways will increase more than 100 per cent by 1880 and traffic volume will be two and one-halt times greater. At the present revenue rate, the $l9O-mlllion Intake of 1880 would be far short of what will be needed. However, the Purdue researcher made no suggestions on how the money should be obtained. Michael estimated about $250mlllion a year for the next 15 years Would be required to provide an adequate highway system, considering the lags of the past and future needs. Des Moines — There are 30,000 or more known diseases which menace U.S. farm crops. About four million. U. S. cars were scrapped during 1854.