Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 167, Decatur, Adams County, 17 July 1956 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Angola Youth Dies In Fall At Capital Foils From Window In YMCA Building INDIANAPOI.tS fUPI — David K. D«> J e«. IS. Assvla. pluarwi W feet to his death today from a thtrMloor window in the YMCA DePew w«b Milled n few honrsbefore tie wax to e uer, the air force. , z He was one of <7. Indiana youths who arrived Monday nUht' to await induction. DePew and eight other youths

TIRE SALE AT BAMAIN PUCES! 670x15—Goodyear Super Cushion $17.90 670x15—Goodyear Deluxe $21.00 Deluxe Tubeless 670x15-—Goodvear—Black - $23.70 670x15—Goodyear—White $28.00 670x15—Firestone—White $28.00 710x15—Goodrich—White $31.30 710x15—Goodrich—Black ' $25.00 c " These are all 100 Level Tires — Above pricer include federal tax. TERMS ON TIRES BATTERIES — BATTERY CHARGING WASSON’S MOBIL STATION CRAIGVILLE, INDIANA

YOUR INVESTMENT HOLDS — ■’ I . WHEN YOU GO OVER TO OLDS - . • '» ’, . #*‘-"7 z* — ■”' " r *~ ll T* _ l iiiiw¥iiiii! l>|,|lli '" K ______ t i\l - —,_ „.. 9 J. * -- l |llll>— — r ' . J T ' .— <— } ~>S_'.. —-,UI *•** fa. '*- : ..._-^ = - > /^— —.<•—•> 5 - ' X/x'-/.' r 4<\v I I *JMRmP// WW —B * * ...,- : , !<w > : ~ ■■• "■— \fifa.^ , -‘ , '-’ r < '* H§F~— -~-2 • - -------- “*7* a , „ ~j^2fcj|ft<"'..'- Vjf?v *’73?* • \ *9l J' ;' >,* *•%'' • . t ‘ • i ,’ ; .7.ri . >* '' -. jEgP**"’ X*-* 11 "^r-> a y'"■ ■ .'•> "- ■. 3 —* ■ jjj MF ’ ‘ - \ .. - ■ .- jS-WW, **•“ HOLIDAY SEDAN Don*t put off the shrill of owning o new oar '•. r 3 t ;.,^’'L v -7 7: ■ -.•>*/•*■ «*. t ■■•■ ••■*—• • 0 _ ' jg& any longer! Come in today-we can show you why -this is -the month -to Olilj I • X” ' . — . • • ■ — - - . —“. • - -NMHr -Trr i. - • TjEEN playing a waiting game? You’ll worlds for the action you II enjoy. You 11 B 3 f t> know the time for waiting is ever 11 1 find all the features to -held your investment - |gj|-|O| the time for action is here::; when you try in driving pleasure high. < LOWEST \ |9 U * an Ohls e *Aß*\ It's the ear you've Mailed for ®llit H RftICED ;;. the smart time to get it is riftht notv! Surely now is the time to trade ;: : now j:k » , while the value of your present car has hit ROCKET Myw’ra Uk« most wide-awake folks, you’ll its summer high .; . while there are so many ! gj L |*| ENGINE be pleased to see how little it takes to drive weeks of pleasant driving ahead. this Oldsmobile home. Especially after you .;. 7’* 1 ’ tT , \ sample its bigness. For there’s no cOtnpro- So why wait? W aiting can dUt you A x mise with power, comfort, and performance money and dnjoymeht. Common says ® -|B|| B »,. ■ in this one. hen you step up l" an ’BB , it s smart to get your Rocket Engine Olds g| m g you rate a Rocket Engine, and that says :: ; anti get it note! B , ■■ ■ . - O LD S M O B I l_E -A QUALITY PRODUCT brought to you by AN OLDSMOBILE QUALITY DEALER -< Evt «t omUnary tM» tvmmar.,. _ I ZINTSM ASTER MOTORS Ist and Monroe Slreets £s^**** PHONE 3-2003 - ■ ',' j "■■■■

checknd iirtn the rosss about three knurs toeforw DePew Mt. All nine name fro» the Fort Wayna indnet‘o6 c««t»r. „ Ona of the others. Wayne Hoffwan. 18, Columbia City, fold authorities l*Pew had complain<*d about the heat and said he wished he could sleep on a tire csoapa Jbst outside the. window. Hoffman believed DePew may have Mien w*He wylnfi to climb onto the tire escape. Hoffman and Richard Noble. *?. l?ort Wayne, told authorities they saw their roommate fall. Hoffman said he saw him croucheft in the window a moment before the plunge. Night clerk E. R. Kirby told police others in the room told hmi

■L \ 1 B MAA ■. i Bi jj| I Vm K‘ - wH|K jfc’ flf Hr yX jHRL’... L. JWHmb Iwk 11 /■! I I M aJp A PHOTO STORY of John Arvanites, 25, getting "some air" on the George Washington bridge cable in New York, and how his airing was brought to an end. Left: Arvanites teeters, boxed In by two electricians, Ed Krause and Paul Troiano. Bridge is 200 feet below. Middle: Arvanites eludes them by leaping to a light pole. Right: Arvanites struggles as captors pull'him from the pole. He was put in Bellevue hospital. Imagine,what a traffic jam all this produced (InternationalSoundphotos)

they believed DePew fell while walkjjig in his sleep. i tiesk clerks at the YMCA said five of the others assigned to the roiim. wrote their names on the ledges as Thurston Peebleo, Ronald G Boleyn, Edward C, Kroll, .fahies Roedeger. Herbert JaraJ. A sixth "name was difficult )a decipher but appeared to be Frank Fartey Spfe They did not fist th»ir hometowns but all were believed tq.be from Fort Wayne and nearby towns and cities. " . Three hundred gailona of jet fuel are needed to taxi a current tjet bomber from the warmup ramp to the end of a runway for takeoff. usually a distance of about one arid one-half miles. ‘

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA

Bunker Hill Infant Is Killed By Burns PERU. Ind (UP) — Cynthia Elaine Boyer. 11 months, Bunker Httl, wits killed Sunday by burns sustained in a utility room accident in her home. The child died in an ambulance enroute to Riley hospital at Indianapolis shortly after she tipped over a can of gasoline used to soften paint brushes. The fluid seeped beneath a hot water heater and burst, into flames. Cynthia's father. Thomas Boyer, was burned severely on hands and arms when he tired to save his daughter. -

Reports Deep Freeze Unit Disconnected A report was made to the city police department Monday afternoon byDr. Joe Morris that someone entered his garage while be and his family were away from home for two weeks. Dr. Morris reported in his complaint that the deep freeze unit was disconnected. Fruit and meat stored in the freezer were spoiled. Nothing was reported missing from the garage, which was left open so that a neighbor could get to the lawn mower. Traae m a Good Town Decatur

Demand Ike's Doctors Submit To Questioning Democrat National Committee Lashes Reports On Health WASHINGTON (UP)—The Democratic national committee has demanded. that President Eisenhower's doctors submit to news conference questioning again on the status of the President’s health. The committee, in its official publication, the Democratic Digest, accused the White house Monday of conducting a politically motivated "snow job" to gloss over the President's condition. The committee said so many conflicting opinions prevail among physicians about ileitis, the President's recent ailment, that there is need for “amplification and clarification" on Mr. Elsenhower's case. It said the President’s doctors should submit to another, news conference because questions have airsen about the optimistic report they gave on Mr. Eisenhower's condition soon after his operation. Other political developments: • At a pre-convention caucus Monday night, New ork Gov. Averell Harriman and Sen. Estes Kefauver, rivals tor the Democratic presidential nomination, made personal pleas to New Jersey’s unpledged delegates for their support at the party’s national convention. Adiai E. Stevenson was represented at the meeting by his campaign manager, James D. Finnegan. - “ L Harriman cited his governmental experience op national and state levels, in domestic and foreign fields as the main argument ' for his candidacy. - Kefauver said his campaign was based primarily on a belief "in the little people of this world and nation." ~ Finnegan stressed- Stevenson’s "vote — getting ability" and his “wide experience" in government. Gov. jf P. Coleman, a backer of Stevenson, won a victory Monday over extereme states lighters at Jhe Mississippi Democratic coi.- . vea#">’ •'He . prevailed in Jiis demands for an-uninstructed delegation to the national convention and for recessing 'the state convention on call rather than to a certain date. The future meeting, which would decide what steps to takO if the Democratic candidate is unacceptable to Mississippi, could be called only if 20 per cetit of the delegates or a majority of the 18-man state executive committee approved. •Joseph L. Raud Jr., chairman of Americans for Democratic Action, said Monday that the Eisenhower administration “has played politics" on "the civil rights Issue and "done a shabbier job than I have ever seen in our time." He said the administration was seeking passage of a civil rights bill which it knows it cannot get through congress. Heart Attack Fatal To Mrs. Pearl Hardy Mrs. Pearl Shoemaker Hardy. 79, stepmother of Frederick Hardy, operator of a Geneva home, died suddenly of a heart attack Monday at her home near Bryant. She was a member of the Geneva Methodist church. Surviving are the husband. Fred: two stepsons. Frederick of Geneva and Carroll Hardy of Washington, D. C.: a stepdaughter, Mrs. Harry Kamman of Geneva, and five step;grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p.m Wednesday at the Hardy & Hardy funeral home, with burial in Gravel Hill cemetery, west ot Bryant.

The Welcome Wagon Hostess Will Knock on Your Door with Gifts A Greetings from Friendly Business Neighbors and Your Civic and Social Welfare Leaders On thf tcctuian tft The Birth of a Baby Sixteenth Birthdays Engagement Announcement! Change of reeidenoe Arrivals of Newcomers tt Qty t Phone 3-3196 or 3-3479 m—BBS , IW i! j;■ jib.

Mrs. Mary Scherger Is Taken By Death Mrs. Mary C. Scherger, 80, of Delphos, 0., a native of Decatur, died Saturday at a Lima, 0.. hospital following an illness of two weeks. She was born In Decatur July 18, 1875, a daughter of John 8. and Gertrude Goebel. Her husband, John A. Scherger, died in 1946. Surviving are two daughters. Mrs. Leone Lange of Delphos and Mrs. Ruth Welsgerber of Hillsdale. Mich.; three sisters, Mrs. Frances Fosnaught, Mrs. Martha Hoffeldere and Mrs. Agnes Thompson, all of Toledo, 0., and one brother Joseph Goebel of Delphos. Services will be held at 8:30 a.m. Wednesday in St. John’s Catholic church at Delphos, with burial in St. John’s cemetery. Friends may call at the Kolkmeyer funeral home in Delphos. Girl Fatally Hurt As Horse Runs Away LEBANON, Ind. (UP)-JMarjorle Lou Hawn. 12, was Injured fatally Friday when a horse ran away with her and she hit a gate post on her parents' dairy farm northeast ot here. Marjorie was riding with her twin sister. Marilyn, and teen-age uncle, Jack Hawn, when her horse suddenly ran. When it came to an open gate. Marjorie either fell or jumped off. She struck a gate post.

lon r CALL TO . . Rock Bottom On Summer r urniture ■ Aluminum :hair..2 for 89.95 Metal Glider Metal Spring iair $4.95 Yacht Chair $4.95 Aluminum Chair.. 2 for $9.95 Upholstered $39.95 Solid Oak ....$17.95 Peel Cane *89.95 Yacht Chairs ver Chairs.l $2.95 Aluminum hairs.. 2 for $13.55 High Back m Chair .. $9.95 Upholstered - $12.95 You Can Buy On Convenient Credit Terms, Too! OPEN WED. & SAT. EVENINGS Wylie Furniture Co. 152 S. Second St. Decatur, Ind. \\\YY||j | ill//J V fI Z I Diamonds SIIO.OO up 1 ‘ CirCletS " $52 ’ 50 U P I —- ON DISPLAY IN OUR WINDOW — / Other Diamond Rings - $42.50 up Other Brides Circletss 8.00 up K* ’ BOWER JEWELRY STORE OPEN WED. & SAT. EVENINGS ’TILL 9:00

•TUESDAY? JULY 1?, 1956

Man's Body Is Found On Railroad Tracks PRINCETON, Ind. (UP) — The body of Harold Howard Reed, 46. Evansville, was found along railroad tracks at ths south edge of Princeton Monday. Authorities said Reed apparently was hit by a train about midnight. Hoosier Employment 1,397,000 In June INDIANAPOLIS (UP) — The Indiana employment security division reported today that non-farm employment in Hoosierland on June 15'totaled 1,397,000 and average hourly earning of production workers were estimated at $2.12. Thg earnings were a record amount and the employment was “one of the highest figures ever reached in the month of June” according to division director William C. Stalnaker.

BACKACHE Mri*. MM K-. Mg, »■?* ■ffg? mlm toH Mbl •NNftt pNNNHV reHettH !■ HW* SMITH DRUG CO.