Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 139, Decatur, Adams County, 13 June 1956 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

I ' » * xxfej' .'■■■ xM' 7 *X B * • ■ Jw2 <•':Y’ ; v vjl -■.♦ „<. • ' ■ ■■ -j r- I |_V I -W ' ■' ■. :'■> f x ! l - * tIIIBBSaK SQUMEIJ e XI - trlk* tW? lmxiivzx.' ..;—r-; . Photos at the left sbdw Adams county's first pole type broiler house, constructed on the David Alberson farm in Hartford township. Schwarts und Wickey used co-op poles and materials in building this structure, which is 40 feet wide and 105 feet long. A modern, efficient dairy production plant can be seen on the Carl Amstuts farm in Jefferson township. John Foley. Purdue agricultural engineer, designed the layout. Schwarts and Wickey. local builders, did the construction work, and the Co-op lumber yard furnished the poles and other materials. The top picture at the right showq the pole loafing barn as viewed between the iftilk house and the hay feeder, and the bottom picture at the right shows the pole hay keeper and feeder. A new service of the Farm Bureau Co-op is a 14-inch soil auger for making holes for pole type buildings, and a nine-inch bit is Useful for making holes for smaller poles end wooden fence posts. ■.

Record Heat Wave Now In Fifth Day Summer Is Still „ Eight Days Away By UNITED PRESS ’ A record-breaking heat wave blaxed into itj fifth day, today. ■MBH»«»aaaaM*BaßaaS AIR CONDITIONED Tonight & Thursday „ —. —— o I OUR BIG DAYS! I First Show Tonite at 7 | Continuous Thur, from 1:30; | 1450 Reasons to Attend! | y ... ...--J ——— — — -— < Technicolor Musical Comedy in the New “Cinemascope 55” GORDOfWcRAE NES • v “CAROUSEL” With Cameron wtchell ALSO — Shorts 15c*»50c --—*» Fri. A. Sat — Eve ArdeffN “Our Miss Brooka” B "Five Guns West” — CMor! ' * *O l . 1 'd 11 — . .L Sun. & Mon. — Dan Dailey N "Meet Me in Las Vegas” n _.—_—. —— I — Last Time Tonight -»- I Cinemascope & Color! i "RAINS OF RANCHIPUR" ] Lana Turner, Fred Mac Murray b : , THURS. & FRL 1 f i itwfwrocit tttrr&NifwiNAt wnnifif A VfwvtKwAL i?V* —ADDED THRILLER—STRANGELY POWERFUL... 4 gW ‘ RM'" Htt tafcia imkri IQMMdfcon ■ I L*l I<i 1 ■ swwTICHHICOLOR iSMRCW ■UXmJM ’>• " _0 O» Sat— a Color Hl’S—“Lawless Street” A. “Yeliowneek"

LATEST TYPE OF FARM BUILDINGS

with summer still officially eight days away. Residents from the Great Plains to the Atlantic Seaboard tugged jat their collars and wondered what it would be like when summer really got started June 21. The temperature soared into the mid and upper 90s tn the midwest and past 100 in the Dakotas Tuesday. It set records of 97 degree's , lit Chicago, 95 at Milwaukee; and 93.8 at Detroit, ft was 98 degrees ' at Marquette, in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula vacationland, 103 at ' Huron, N. D., and past 90 at Boston. The weatherman predicted more of the Mme today. Thousands of heat sufferers crammed the beaches. Cases of drowning and heat prostration jumped. And many areas reported critical water shortages. In Chicago, a neavuy burdenec I power generator went dead at the i height of the heat. The failure : knoc) <sd o'.t air conditioners and ‘ fans for 125.1J0 persons in a cityI suburban area and killed a helpless polio victim when the chest respirator which kept him breathing went dead. The Chicago suburbs of Dnlton. South Holland and Skokie rep irt jd water shortages. At Dolton, where residents complained ther had no water pressure on the second fldor, a spat broke out with Chicago officials over whether the big city was hogging too much water, ! More water shortages were re ported at Shenandoah, lowa, where residents were asked to I conserve their supplies, and in the suburb of Riverdale. Thousands of p< rsons jamme< Michigan’s many beaches and siof thtm drowned. One was a man who ate six hotdogs, dowsed three beers, and then took a dip to coo off in the Detroit river. In lowa, state officials and em P’oyes had trouble keeping in step With, the rising temperature. u While the mercury went intc the 90s, the state board of con- \ #n V. idea i in mart footwaar (Th«y f-l-«-x with your foot) OSo gay and comfortable you’ll WMf them everywhere . . . for aportswaar, chopping, lounging. Straps can be changed to match your oostumo in 9 fashion colors. Unique "FlexLHlnpbend with your footl Silent, non (kid DuPont Nooprenp crops soles. Flexlclogs are lightweight, washable-last for years. Styles for men, women and children. Ask me for a demonstration—no cost or obligation. (*®SSqCj R. T. STANLEY 225 N. 10th St PHONE 3-3441 - ? .p 1,.. l ~.W ll .N. „.l, ~!, U U■ , .N.... (

trol received bids on 102,000 totjs of coal to be used next winter. State office building employes dragged out sweaters and complained of the cold when the air conditioning system dropped the temperatures to 75. Seeking Clues To Southport Bandit Seek Clever Bandit In $66,546 Holdup SOUTHPORT. Ind. (UPS — Law enforcement authorities ran tround in circles today sniffing for the Ice-cold trail of a clever bandit who staged Indiana's second biggest bank holdup in history Tuesday. The gunman who stole 365,546 from the Southport State Bank in u carefully arranged seven-hour holdup vanished into thin air. leaving no clues which promised to help police catch him. A handful of burglar tools which gave the man entry to the home of bank president John A. Whalen, and a stocking mask he wore during the robbery, were 'e on!- important clues. But u ;y shed ».o light on the Identity of the criminal. Whalen, 67, and his wife, were awakened at 2 a. m. by an intruder who forced them to dress and take him to the bank. The three sat around for nearly seven hours waiting for the time clock mechanism on the vault door t« open. By the time it did, the gunman had the Whalens and 11 women employes of the bank lined up in an inner office and covered with hie nickel plated revolver. The' committee asked the justice department to determine whether Boudin coniniitteu perjury in his’ qualified denial of membership in the Communist patty. Boudin is serving as Robeson’s attorney in the singer’s attempt to obtain a new passport.

PUBLIC AUCTION HOUSEHOLD GOODS, TOOLS, AND MISCELLANEOUS EQUIPMENT AND MATERIALS THURSDAY, JUNE 21 -12:30 P.M. LOCATION: 1% miles East and 1% miles North of Decatur, Indiana. Or, 1 mile North of the Dent school -bouse on the premises of the HILLTOP FARM. 1 HOUSEHOLD GOODS: Desk and chair. . Overst’.ffed Mohair chair, Majtte chair and lamp, End tables, Walnut coffee table, CHROME Dicing set and 4 chairs, 6 CHROME kitchen chairs, Kitchen telephone desk, MAPLE Twin beds and chest with matching coffee, table and 2 end tables. Chest of Drawers, BIRDSEYE MAPLE dresser, 2 Boudoir chairs. 4 chairs, Utility table. Clothes Hamper, Carpet Sweeper, Table and tubs. Wood stove, Fuel oil stove, Steam cooker. Kerosene lamp, Floor table, Dresser and pin-up lamps, Curtains, Mirrors, Pillows, Hassock, Lunch cloths, Napkins, 5 Throw rugs, Vases, Pottery, Fruit jars, dishes, cooking utensils, and many other articles. < Electric Toaster. Waff e fton, 2 Cornpoppers, Electric Small Radios, Portable Phonograph, Electric Floor Fan, Hammock, Porch Furniture, Glider and chairs. 2 Step Stools, mops, dust mops, 2 egg baskets, meat block, 4 car food traya, 2 mail boxes, and many other items. TOOLS AND MISCELLANEOUS EQUIPMENT & MATERIALS: GMS' den tools. Garden cart, Electric hedge trimmer; 1 ' JARI Lawn Mower, Tree Trimmer, Weed Burner, 2 Ornamental Steel Gates, Steel Tripod for Butchering, 3 Garbage Cans, 300 Pickets 6 ft. by 3 inch. Rubber Hose, Some Paint, Varnish and Hoof paint. PLUMBING Tools, Large Pipe Wrenches, Used Lumber, Doors, ‘Hog Fountain, Pressure Tank, 3 Rolls New Barbed Wire. OTTAWA Brush Saw with 7 h.p. motor. 3 Ton Hydraulic Jack, Small Brush Saw, Pipe, Dies and Cutters; Electric Motor '-i h.p., Electric Motor with emery wheel and stand. Small Air Compressor, >4 h.p. motor. Chain hoist. Log chains, Bolt nippers, and many other items. . TERMS—CASH. MR. and MRS. BEN. SHROYER Owners J l . F. Sanmann —Auctioneer , I Sale Conducted by Midwest Realty Auction Co., Decatur, Indiana. 13 19

ftirely ■ idea mart otwear

THE DECATUR DAILT DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA

Would Return Heart Victims To Duties Air Force Physician Favors Active Duty CHICAGO (UP)—An air force doctor said today that men 'who have cotnpletely recovered from heart attacks should be allowed to return to active duty. 14. Col. Philip G. Keil said such men should even be allowed “to serve as co-pilots. Keil attii Dr. Leon V. McVay, of the hospital at Maxwell aft force base, studied 197 heart Attack patients between 1951 and 1956. They repotted their findings today at the I'Xth annual meeting of the America.'. Medical Assn. Many of the heart attack patients were “highly qualified and motivated" commissioned and noneomraisfsiioned 1 officers, the two doctors said. j■; •, ■ If they have no subsequent symptoms and if they have normalsized hearts and normal circula-’ tion after recovery, they shohld not be relieved from duty, the doctors said. Nor should they be treated ps “invalids." they added. In another r -.per, Dr. Bernard Brofman, directo-. of cardiovascular research at Mount feinai hospital in Cleveland, said a delicate operation designed to ward off heart attack by improving the heart’s blood supply now can be considered safe and useful for a majority of ooronary disease o»tieuta. W* No longer should ft be regarded as a “last i*esort" or “salvage” procedure to be used only when 1 there is little ground for optimism, Brofman said. it r u ua«v »uiu"cmug u> sell 0: rooms ror rent, try a Democrat Wan- \d. ft brines results

Americans May Expect Report By Eisenhower Query On Political Plans Foreseen At First Conference WASHINGTON (UP) — President Eisenhower probably ' must tell the American people again whether he feels fit and ready to campaign for a second term. But, this time it may be differently staged. An off-the-cuff response to a news conference question seems now to be the likely manner in which Mr. Eisenhower will let the people know what is in his mind. He will be asked about his political plans, the next time he faces a news conference. x An elaborate television report on his own well being was arranged last February for the President to reveal that he felt sufficiently recovered from a tfewt attack to take on four more White House years.

Heart attacks are killers. When they do not kill they often bench their victims; The most enthusiastic Ike-men were willing back there in the autumn of 1955 to l»eHere that Mr. Eisenhower was lost to the Republican party. The popular belief alqp was that Mr. Eisi enhower could hot run again. A full dress response to that widespread doubt was essential and it was made by the Pi-esident in his television appearance of Feb. 29. Surgery is something else again, A successful operation'may leave the patient as strong or qven physically in better condition than before. Mr. Eisenhower’s attending doctors evidently consider their work to have been successful and that the President will gain physically rather than rose by reason of it. , | A more informal assurance of his willingness to run again is, therefore, indicated — assuming. “ of course, that Mr. Eisenhower’s excellent recovery continues. Just when the President next will submit himself to news questions is .not known. Harvard medical school professor David D. fHutStein said Tuesday in Cambridge that the forecast six-week period of recovery from surgery was the absolute minimum and too optimistic. Might lake two or three months. Dr: Rutstein said. A three-month convalescence from successful abdominal surgery surely would raise some serious doubts about the President's ; comeback powers and perhaps, about his fitness for another derm. His attending physicians are top flight men, however, and they are committed to the President’s recovery in terms of weeks instead of ftionths, Time will tell about that Rept lican leaders and Mr. ETsenhower’s White House associates are as confident in private as ' in public that the President will

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run again. They do not believe that a successful tout with the surgeons will lesson his vote-ap-peal. They argud that his physical reaction to the ordeal of surgery will be the best possible campaign proof that the Eisenhower heart is ticking on schedule. WITHDRAW LAST . <Continued from I'asfe Onrl tian “patriots" forced Britain to tome to final terms with Egypt and to relinquish its hold bn the itojeiiletjong wa||rway that connects the seas ofthe east and the west. If you have something t. sen <m rooms tor rent, try a Democrat Want. Ad. It brings result*.

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- London- It is believed that poliomyelitis; was first described by a London physician in 1784. Madison. Wia. — To control certain injurious insects, cranberry bogs are flooded regularly. Berkeley — Temperature of the sun's core has been computed to be 25,709,000 degree C. Washington — About two-thirds of the inhabitants of the world are now periodically counted by means of a census. Pierre —Area of South Dakota is greater than all the New England states combined. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

WEDNESDAY. JUNE 13; 195«

~4 “County Graduates Dance” for County Graduates and their Guests Fri. Nite June 15th 8:30—11:30 MOOSE HOME —I— —— ~~