Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 158, Decatur, Adams County, 6 July 1956 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Vu\\> jUL° M I'iirs 1956 STUDEBAKER Flight Hawk Overdrive. Radio. Heater. White wall tires. 52,295.00 STIIBEBAKER Commander White wall tires and overdrive. Two-tone paint. $1,595.00 1955 DODGE Hardtop Two-tone paint. Really sharp. $1,995.00 1955 DODGE Hajdtop Royal Lancer. ... Tri-tone paint. White wall tires. Overdrive. R. H. Plastic Covers. Like new. $2,295.00 1955 DODGE Club Sedan Two-tone paint. Radio. Heater. 51 1954 PLYMOUTH 4 Door. R. & H. Power steering. Niw and clean. $1,195.00 PLYMOUTH CranbrOok Radio & Heater. $895.00 1952 HASH RAMBLER Station Wagon $695.00 1955 PLYMOUTH Convertible Powerflite. Power steering. W/W/T. Radio and Heater. $2,295.00 1949 DODGE Convertible New top. W/WT. Radio and Heater. $445.00 ’sl KAISER $295.00 ’49 DODGE 195.00 ’4B CHEVROLET 145.00 ’SO BUICK -____* 295.00 ’sl HENRY J. 195.00 ’SO OLDSMOBILE 345.00 ’52 DODGE CORONET 09.00 •52 PLYMOUTH T / i-door 695.00 Beery MOTOR SALES OPEN EVENINGS WE FINANCE

1952

10 County Students Earn High Rating Purdue Scholastic Index Rates High LAFAYETTE, Ind—Ten stu/ent from Adams gounty attained the distinguished fating In their

rMoosrn 1311 home Sunset Park SUNDAY JULY Bth All Moose members and families art trfVlted to attend. Luncheon Served from 11:30 o'clock on. . Your Paid-Up Moose Receipt Is your admltt- , ance. (Checked at the gate.) Please remember, yeur duea for the 3rd Quan- - ter are payable on July tsth or before.

The Only Bargain In Insurance ... is to be found in the service of the agency in whom you place your confidence. We strive to make our service the best! J GOWENS INSURANCE AGENCY L. A, COWENB JIM COWENS SOI Court St Phone 3-3601 Decatur, Ind. PRIVATE SALE OF O. V. DILLING FARM • -a Dorothy Drabenstot, Administratrix of the estate of Oliver V. Dilling, deceased, hereby gives notice that she is selling at private sale, the real estate owned by the late Oliver V. Dilling, located in Kirkland Township, Adams County, Ind. The said farm win be offered for sale at the hour of 2:00 o’clock P. M. on the 19th day of July, 194$ at the office of Howard E. Baumgartner, Attorney, 108 S. J offer eon Street, Berne, Indiana, and from day to day thereafter until sold. Farm consists of about 77 acres. Highly productive land, well drained, with approximately 4 to 5 acres of woods. Farm is well located near the Pleasant Dale Church of the Brethren and near the old Kirkland School. Located approximately 3 miles south arid 4% miles west of Decatur and about 3 miles north and 6% miles east of Bluffton. - ’. t Buildings: 8 aoea frame house full basement, aemi-modefni good Majestic furnace, electric water jystem, slate roof, large closets KI tcheticabihets'reser ved from sale Water piped to all main buildings. Largd bam with good foundation. Han house, incubator cellar and iiHgb. | brooder houses and feed room- Wood Louie “ffii wash house. Good graaery and shop. Corn crib ! and wagon shed in woods. Nice shade trees and solid stoned driveway. Terms: 20% on the date contract is signed and balance on delivery of Administratrix's Deed and merchantable abstract of title. Purchaser assumes 1956 taxes due and payable in 1957. Purchaser shall take the real estate subject to the rights of the tenant in possession but the Purchaser shall receive the landlord's share of the crops now growing on the-premises. Possession of dwelling "house in about 30 days from date of sale. , x _ For inspection or information see Mrs. O. V. Dilling on the premises. DOROTHY DRABENSTOT Hewafd E. Baumgartner Administratrix Attorney B 11 15

Under New Ix7 11 GJ ■ MM !— 1 Management Meyer’s Shell Service Corner 13th & Dayton Streets (ON U. S. 27—NORTH) ■ - V’---'.'* 52 ■■-.J— . r—• ■; . B . » -. t VV ' ' '9 ‘ .■ . . . I

work at Purdue University for the second semester of the 1955-54 academic year, according to the list of such students announced by the office of the registrar. To attain tb|s rating, the student must make : a Scholastic Index of "5" hr higher for all work carried in the semeatoy. . Adkms county students winning this honor with an index of "|F pr higher ; but less than "6", with their class standing for the semester and special field of work, are as follow: BERNE—Wallace D. Flueckiger, 663 Lehman. sophomore in electrical engineering; Patsy Jane Rumple, R. 2. junior in home economics, and Max N. Yoder, R. 1, freshman in engineering. BLUFFTON— Bill Gene Kipfer. R. 3, senior in agriculture. DECATUR—Thomas K. Baylee. 934 Walnut St., sophomore in chemical engineering; James L Brentlinger, 1110 W. Monroe 9t> Writor in agriculture; Philip J. Brunton, 109 S. 4thth., sophomore in pharmacy; Allan R. Cole, 127 Limberlost Trail, junior in mechanical engineering; Richard D. Knapp, 327 Stratton Way, senior in civil engineering, and Dale A. Schnepf, 364 Winchester St., junior in agriculture. Irada in a gooc Town — Decatu>

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Annual County Plow Match Sei July 26 Level Lurid MatchOn Hugo Gerke Farm The second annual Adams etngaty level land plowing match jill be held Thursday, July 26, beginning at 12:30 p.m. This year's match trill be held on the Hugo Gerke farm. 2% miles 'north of Clem's Lake.-Z .Av?* ski. This eVent Is jointly sponJrM by the Adams soil district and the farm implement dealers of the Trophies will be presented! to the first add second place plowmen. The Bwner will be eligible to enter ,tbe Northeastern Indiana level lagd contest in Allen 4% Augpst. The second ,place winqer* will be eligible to filter the area plowing since no match will be held In Adams coupty this year. ~■■■./♦ / - 7 1 I Below is an entry blank for wone who is interested in plowing in the 1956 match. Entry should be sent to the county extensionjoffice in Decatur by Tuesday, JuK 24. There will be no entry 4M. Plowmen are urged to confit their implement dbater* ts they desire assistance for the content. Entry blank: ' ' Name JL Address Make of and plow -i—SX —- Signature If r ' Open I nvestigation On Communist Efforts WASHINGTON (UP) — The senate internal security subeommittee will open an investigation Monday on Communist efforts to infiltrate agriculture and farm organisations. The subcommittee plans to question witnesses in closed session Monday and possibly in putjHp Tuesday, subcommittee counsel Robert Morris reported. Other : sources spij #re witnesses ip been called, including officials or former officials of the National Farmers’ Union. Gamble . „ STELLA, Neb. (UP) A three-? way coin toss was used to decide who would fill the two vacancies on the village board here after an election. Dan Sullivan lost MRSullivan, Albert Duerfeldt, and JS. Kimsey, had polled 29 votes each. - - — ..T.Ar» ... • The westernmost point in the United States is Gape Alava in, Washington at 124 dt-greH 44 mln-: ntes west longitude.

Kenneth Hirschy Is Home From Hospital Kenneth Hirschy. well known Decatur man,, ha* returnedjo home here After a .several week siege at a Fort Wayne hospital, where he underwent a spinal operation. The Deeatur man is recovering at his home Odi Fifth street. He will probably be able to return to his work at Central Soya Co. in about four weeks. Some Papers Take Issue With Brownell Doubt Propriety Os Announcement On TV By UNTIED PRESS Some newspapers today took i»ane with attorney general Herbert Brownell for using a commerciallysponsored television program to break a, major news story — the government's intention to file an anti-trust Sult against General Motors. •. 1 ' ‘ Brownell announced the poming suit on the program “Press Conference** Wednesday night over the NBC television network. He said the suit will charge GM with monopolising the manufacture of buses. The Now York Times questioned whether it wae “proper for an official to withhold, until it can benefit and extend the future audience of a sponsored program, a news announcement of such impact that it la sure to make page IT'Tba Times said questions raised by BrowheU*s action “would not apply to the general free-for-all questioning on other issues that camo later in the program Jlr. Brownell took part in** but said “they do apply to the news that ho, on his own motion, voluntarily and by his own design, chose to delay and then turn loose in an introductory statement on

\lFsaGieat Time bK V tO GifY H kIUCk U{ ,;+ ill 6 Possenger 2 Door R vicra . : . top three of America’s best-selling cars. Yet, youll find it priced right close to the well-known (And at the Best Buy Yet!/ ‘ That sure makes Buick a whale of a lot of car What’s in rr for you —if you step out and for the money. And look: buy yourself a 1956 Buick right now? Nowhere but in a ’56 Buickcan you get the * Well, first of all—the time is right. “ ' absolute smoothness and the electrifying per■n:-!.. A • i x i _xu formance of Buick’s terrific new Variable Pitch Right now, your present car is at its peak worth. Dynaflow* And, with the whole summer and almost half of Nowhere else can you get the obedient respon*s6 still ahead of you, you’ll get more enjoyment siveness of Buick’s-big and mighty new 322out of a spirited new Buick this year -if you cu bic-inch V 8 engine. Or Buick’s matchless new buy now. handling ease and ever-level ride buoyancy— Second, there’s the matter of how much more or Buick’s bold new sweep-ahead styling, and automobile your money buys in the best Buick solidity of .structure, and stretch-out roominess. Y et - Add it all up and the answer comes out the We tell you flatly that nowhere but in a ’56 same, any way you figure it: Now’s the time to Buick can you get so much bounty for so little buy your 1956 Buick. booty. ) Will you come in *- before another sun sets — For example, take the beauteous big ’56 Buick and get set with your best? buy yet? . —t SPECIAL pictured here. *New Advanced Variable Pitch Dynaflow is the only Dynaflow ' . _ . - . . , Buick builds today. It is standard on Roadmastcr, Super and — It S one Dig reason why Buick how ranks m the Century-optional at modest extra cost on the Special. ~ AJRCOMOmONING A w dVW '-SSa. \filest Buick Yet ./ nUOtpAIM CONOITIQNINq ... .• I 1 WHni MUSfi AUTOMOBILES AH BUILT BUICK WIU BUILD THEM . SAYLORS MOTOR SALES 13th Street and U. S. 27 “Established 1926” Decatur, Ind.

European Defenses Will Be Bolstered Smaller Dispersed Airfields Planned PARIS >(UP)—Buropetfn defense will be bolatered by a new dispersed system of “satellite’’ airfields, Gen. Courtlandt Van Renssaeler Schuyler revealed Thursday. Schuyler/' chief of staff of supreme beadquarters of Allied Power* .in Europe, outlined new thinkon atomic— age defense. He said SHAPE will emphasise more and smaller dispersed air-fields. He also revealed that; United States forces are now ready to back other troops in the North Atlantic treaty organisation with atomic weapons. “The Us. air forces are ready to drop nuclear bombs in close support of NATO forces from Norway to Turkey,** Schuyler declared The old airfield plan was to have 174 airfields ready for use by the end of this year, each capable ot supporting wings of 75 planes. Tho the sponsored program." The New York Dally News said Brownell’s disclosure of the Justice department’s plans on a sponsored program was “a naive, sim-ple-minded stunt.” The News said “government news Is, and should be, public property as fast as it breaks. All publication, mediashould have an equal . . .JJ?e hope this Browpell booboo will be the last of such.” The News added “This ... is not a case of sour grapes . . . We have i a television station.” ’“-‘J

“FOR THE BEST AT CLAIM TIME” BURKE INSURANCE SERVICE Don Burke " 239 N. 11th St. - Phone 3-3050

new concept, the SHAPE chief of staff said, is to have a total of about 250 fields, including smaller satellite units capable of supporting only 25 Rchuyler,-an American, revealed the plan Is a talk with correspondents accredited to 3HAPE shortly after It was announced that next November would be the date that Gen. LauVis Norstad will succeed Gen. Alfred M. Grlienther as supreme Allied commander In Europe. . He criticised'’ current talk that the north Atlantic treaty organisation should de-emphasibe its military power ttr meet new Soviet tactics on the economic and political front. ‘“We emphatically do not agree,” he said. MANAGEMENT (Contlßurd from «■«> O—> _ button to Graliker, Checks should /be made payable to Decatur Memorial Foundation. AH of the money will be used to make improvements at the Youth and Community Center. Foundation directors Joined in issuing an apology for the failure to compile, a complete mailing list.

DANCING MINSTER, OHIO Saturday, July 7, 1956 WflCt FlHuf* DANCING EVERY SATURDAY 9 to 12 YOU MUST BE 18 TO BE ADMITTED.

FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1956

If you have something to sen or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want A<|. It brings results.

EAGLES ROUND & SQUARE DANCE Saturday, July 7