Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 210, Decatur, Adams County, 6 September 1956 — Page 10

PAGE TWO-A

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Dvary Bvenin* Bxcept Saaday By TUB DSC AT UR DBMQCBAT CO- DiO. alter’d at the Decatar. fad., Pott Otic* aa Seeotd Class Matter Dick D. Matter - — — Praaidant J. H. Halter VlcwPreafdent Cka* Holthonsa Secretary Treasurer ■; _ *. Subscription Metre: _ — ay Mall la Adame and Adjoining Counttea: One y*ar. |Bot| Ktx month*, HW: 8 months. IMS, t M < By Mail, beyond Adame and Adjotnla* Counties: One year. 00; 6 months. 14.75; » months. 1154. By Carrier: 10 cents per week- Single copies, 4 oQate.

Despite partly unfavorable weather conditions, the Decatur Canning Factory is going ahead full steam. Numerous women of the area are engaged in the tomato canning process and indication# are tins local factory wilt continue operation for another month. The Decatur operation is regarded as one of the best in Indiana. 0 ok—- ♦ The Bierly building on Second street, which houses the law and abstract offices of G. Remy Bierly is undergoing a face-lift-ing. A new red brick front in being erecte£ to a height of about three feet from the base and the balance of the new front will be plate glass. Reports also are current that other business section buildings will be remodelled soon. These are signs of a prosperous city. O_ft G.O.P. leaders have announced the opening of their national campaign effort to re-elect their presidential and vice-presidential candidates. Four hundred select G.O.P. stalwarts have been invited to attend the campaign opening at the Eisenhower estate in Pennsylvania. You can bet your last dime that there won't be any Joe Smith’s mingling in the millions of dollars of wealth represented there. . —-0 0 Hundreds of Decatur friends of head coach Robert Worthman. Decattr high school athletic department. are’hoping for an early recovery for the popular Decatur man. He fl confined to ff ’ WaymLhmUsl-yDb. S -iW ift: jury. During his absence Jerry Leitz. assistant football mentor has charge of the Yellow Jacket squad, which is preparing for the season'opener at Auburn Friday night. Coach Worthman will be out of.action for several it is reported. 0 0 Hon. Forrest Elxey, former Mayor of Decatur, who has been ill at his home for several months visited in the business' section early this week. Mayor Elzey is just as interested in the affairs of Decatur as ever and he has kept informed on municipal affairs since his Illness. His host of friends both Republicans and Democrats are glad that he is

rrn programs UmM (Centra) Daylight Time)

WKJG - TV (Channel 33) TNIRSDAY Even i lift ' 6:00— Joatesway to Sports 6:l.s—Jack Gray, News 6:2-s—fltie Weatherman 6; 30—‘Bnoukie Lansoft 6:4s—News Caravan 7:09 —Best ot Groucho 7:3ft—Dragnet 6* 00—*h e People's Choice S:3o—Ford Theater 9-00—-Lux Theater Ifcuo—Ttaur. .JBww-eaae lo:3o—glories of Hie Century 11:00—-4<awa & Weather 11:15—Itoorts Today • . 11:20—*€ , aU o£_ tire Syittl Keas" ... FRIDAY r Mvraiajk I 7.o9—Today 9:oo—Ding Dong School 9:30 — Bandstand 10:00—Home 1.1:00 —Tic. Tac Doagli 11:30 —It Could be You Afternm>a 13:0u —Forma and Farming 12:15—The Weatherman 12:20: —Gayle MAloy Reporting 12:30 —Ho vie time 1-15— Behind the Camera 1-25 —Show Business 1:30 —Tennessee Brnie Ford 2 09—SW’MaUtie* Theater 3:W—Qweeti for a Day. 3:l.s—Here's Charlie. 4-o(i —Coimedv Ttnrie. 4;30— “Ray Miliand Show" s;(m—c-ftoon Express s:ls—Two Gun Playhouse Evening , 6.oo—<Mrtesway to. Sport* 6:15 —lack Gray, News 25—The Weatherman 6 ; 3o—Eddie Fisher- —. » - *:4.s—»*s Caravan 7:o®—Truth or Consequences t Sn—i.lte .»f. Riley S :00—Alar Stage s.lo—Big Story StOOHarold Carter vs. Johhnj Stiintiterlin 9:4s—Bed Barber In ; «o—Celebrity t’layhouse 10:30—intta hay .Hutton 5 ~ — & Weather II .13--sfer T-hr _.. IlaJO—"Body and Sou!*

able to be active again, and wish for him, continued physical improvement. ■—o 4 Mrs. Mildred Foley, Adams county attendance officer is back at her desk as schools resume operation all over the county. Mrs. Foley, has the unpleasant job of investigating absences of pupils. According to the statute in Indiana a minor must attend school until 16 years of age. It is the duty of the attendance officer to enforce this statute. Often. the parents don’t cooperate and often it is not a pleasant job. However, Mrs. Foley has done a hard job well for several years and the people of Adams county have every reason to believe that she will continue during the present school year to carry out the purpose of her office, 0 4 Many members of the medical profession and numerous organizations dealing with alcoholism believe that drinking to excess is a disease. To aid sufferers of alcoholism. the state of Indiana has a program. First requisite is that an acute alcoholic must voluntarily ask for aid. If the addict applies to a circuit court judge, committment papers are issued and the patient is sent first to Logansport where he becomes acquainted with the program of rehabilitatiop. After a few weeks, the patient is then sent to another state institution in Henry county where he is placed under supervision of experts. After several weeks, the patient is reeianiyied and in many cases he is decJared “eared”. Ofcourse when the patients become an expatient. he still must use a lot of will power to tetrain from use of _ alcoholic beverages. The state institutions do strengthen his body and prepare him to face the crucial test which is still up to the individual. Judge Myles F. Parrish, of Adams circuit court, who has been an ardent supporter of the state institution and who has been responsible for completing the details of committment, after volunteers have sought aid, states that of the score of applicants * sent from Adams county only one patient has returned here and become an alcoholic again. All of the others are living a normal and useful life.

WINT - TV (Channel 15) THVRSDAY Evening 6:0V —llie News, Hlckox 6; 10—Sports Bxtra, Grossman 6; 15—Douglas Edwards 6:3o—Mayor of the Town 7:oo—Robert Cummings 7; 3ft—Climax 3:2ft —Four Star Playhouse 9; 00—. Arthur Murray 9:3o—Screen Directors Playhouse 19:00—-It’s Polka Time 10:30—Starlight Theater ll;30 —News, Weather, Sports FRIDAY Worthing • —: ; ?-<>0 —Good Morning 9;ou—Captain Kangaroo 9:00—Of All Things 141:30—strike It Rich 11:00—Valiant Lady 11:15—Love of Idle 11:30 —Search for Tomorrow 11 ; 4o—Guiding Light Afternoon 12:00—CBS News. 12:10 —Open House 12:30—As the World Turns I:oo—Johnny Carson Show 1:30 —House Party 2 : oo—The Big Payoff 2:3Q—Bob Crosby Show 3:oo—Brighter Day 3:ls—Secret Storm imn—The F.dre of N’rht 4:00 —My Little Margie 4; 30—Bar la Ranch Evening 6:oo—The News. Hickox 6:lo—Sports Extra, Grossman 6:ls—Douglas Edwards 6:3o—My Friend Flhka . —■ 7:00—Hollywood Summer Theater 7; 30—Our Miss Brooks S 09 —Crusader ; 30—I Ix*d Three Lives . 9;Qo—Undercurrent —.— 9:3o—Pantomime Qaiix iOfOO—"Jack London” ll;3 4 0—News, Weather, Spoils. MOVIES aha ns “Fastest Gun Alive” Thurs. 1:1ft; 3:43; 5.46; 5:62; 441.00. “Quiivnhrion, Frontier Seo tit" & "verexbosed" FH. at 6:3.5. DRIVE IN "Moonfleel.'* & "Glory" Ttiurs. fc FrUiU diufr.

STRANGE AS IT SEEMS , By Eide Hiv fl U X \NOMhN 1 CAPTURED 6 S-:,- SINGLE-HANDED! nHer6o'«, ' • : I/-'' ‘ ~ ,‘>4. XT DIGGING - DANDELIONS... € ;E THEIR MID h -firn/ *FIAME* f*i flw AToPTHE EMPIRES - k BUILDING THAT CAM BH I Ik BE SEEN M FAR M«tf / J* ■ AG BoSTbN AMD f BALTIMORE.. ''‘-.IASESfROWffiEBYteIo ' -• BRAIN TRAVEL OVERTkE Bp' “ f. NERVE. ATTRS KATE OF M"T ■IF Int I - H.O.rZDO PEET PER 6ECOND EL-2B /

20 Years Ago Today •— Sept. 6, 1936 was Sunday. 0 — < Household Scrapbook BY ROBERTA LEE • , i Acid on Marble Do not allow acids such as grapefruit or lemon to eome in contact with a marble surface. Such stains can sometimes be removed with ammonia if applied immediately. Quilt Patterne Try using a good ink blotter wheh making a pattern for cutting quilt blocks. It will stick to the material much better than paper. If the coffee pot and the tea kettle are washed with the pots and pans after each meal no sediment will collect in them. 0- __ C I Modern Etiquette | BY ROBERTA LEE 0 —. — I Q. Should .the wedding guests wait until the bridal party dances first-at the reception, or may every one join them on the dance floor and not wait’ for them to dance .first? A. If the bridal couple is still receiving, the guests are expected to dance. Sometimes, however, tire orchestra does not play until the

Challenge For Dr. Mays ® A new novel by ELIZABETH SEIFERT. / © IMS. by Eltetbeth Seifert. Reprinted by permission of the publish. WJ •r, Dodd, Mead & Co., Inc. Distributed by King Features Syndicate. _

CHAPTER 35 CHAD PAUSED and ran his fingers through his hair. The air in the room seemed to have heated, stilled, cleared even of the winds of emotion. In that dead calm, Dr. Mays spoke clearly in the soft voice of considered decision. “Naturally I asked why a man of What he calls his excellent record would want to hurt a project like oura? Our purpose is solely to help people. We know that. And he knows IL “Any man against such a purpose,” he said precisely, "has to be a gotten man. And a phony doctor! Now I am ready to fight dishonesty in any man but particularly in a doctor. In medicine there is no place for anything but the truth. Whether it is a matter of the pills he gives, the diagnosis he makes, or the treatment he oiitHnes and carries through for a patient, a doctor must be truly honest. And if he is not, and I find out about It. I’ll fight him! If you want to make anything of that, I'm your man! “You may be asking how such a doctor, in the position attained 1 by this man, eeuld get away with what he did. My answer _tothat is, he is not getting away with it! ■ And I ll tell you something else. Our boy here knew he wouldn't last. That is why he fought our clinic tooth and and told his lady patients to fight us. Why I had to fight him, and in any way that would be effective.” He turned to confront Dr. Wilkins-SmiUi, and took a step toward him. “As I say, I’ve diet your sort before. And I know from experience that the only way to fight you chaps is to get down below you and push! It’s filthy, mucky work, and not to my taste. But that's what I had to do, that's what I was doing. “Now, here you are, out in the open. Let’s see how you stand up and defend yourself. You have all the opportunity you want. Newspaper publicity and all. Let's see Whfit you have to say for yourself.” , ' But Dr. Wilkins-Smith sat deep in his x chair: the man's face was white -and his eigar hung from hig month in shreds, cliewed to pieces. And —he did not speak. For a kmg minute the room, was quite still, and then the distit. gu ish r d **nt Icm Anin the Palm Beach suit coughed a little for at-1

THB DBCATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, ETDIAMA

bride and groom are ready to dance, and in this case they may dance oncf around the floor before the guests join in. Q. Is it all right to eat an openface sandwich with -the fingers? A. No; it should be eaten with the knife and fork, never with the fingers. Q. Is it customary to tip ushers in a theater? A. Not in this country. It is a European custom. Sudden Fame BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (UP) — Auto dealer W. S. Moughon routinely bought an Alabama license tag from, Jefferson County officials and suddenly discovered he was the center of attention. He had bought the 200,000th tag sold in 1956, a new record. Give-away Price BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UP) — Norman Satterffeld became disgusted when the wholesale price of cantaloupes dropped to 25 cents a bushel. He left his stall at the Farmers’ Market here and drove to a residential area where he gave awky a truckload to clamorfog housewives- a »J The 1956 crop of spring pigs in North Dakota is estimated at 499,000.

tention, glanced' at the Chairman and got. tohisifeeLUe wasJieAnnounced, Chairman of the County Hospital Governing Board. Several in the room had been aware of his identity, but Chad was surprised and now smiled in pleasure. “I will urge you,” said this gentleman—his name was Murray—“not to condemn our hospital. It belongs to the people of the County. To most of you people now here in this room. The hospital was built by you and for you. It is run by the people yoii select. The Governing Board of the hospital chooses the staff doctors much, 1 suppose, as the directors or any private hospital select its staff. Doctors of certain training ahd qualifications are considered. We sometimes make mistakes in our appointments. Perhaps we are liable to more mistakes than a private hospital, because it is sometimes difficult to get a man—to get a Superintendent, particularly—to serve a hospital belonging to the people and directed by a Board politically appointed. “You can see the handicaps, 1 am sure, because at Itast one doctor tn this room has refused to serve on our staff for those very reasons.” He looked at no oriV. “It has become the regrettable fashion lately to assume and accept shadiness in all activities related to politics. In sone sense, that is unfair; in another sense it is a great advantage. To the people. Politically appointed boards, these days, lean backward in their efforts not only to seem honest, but to be pure in every detail. It Waa ifomewhat along the line of those efforts that I went to Dr. WilkinsSmith's office this afternoon concerning the lawsuit he had brought against this clinic. When the call came in with its invitatiori for him to discuss that matter with your Board, f—er—strongly urged him to attend. His attorneys concurred. . _ j “We came here. We have listened with —interest. And now I think I speak with exact authority as a representative.of my fellow board members when 1 agree with Dr. Mays that Dr. WilkinsSmith is not getting away with it. And I assure you now here In this room that the County Hospital will rtot KeftpW A Superintendent Who would use the methods

Mussolini Castle Put Up For Sale .. Ransacked Castle Is Put On Block FORM, Italy (VP\ — A battered "for sale" sign hangs on a halfshattered gate leading into the Rocca delle Cann inate, one-time retreat of the late Fascist dictator, Benito Mussolini. It was In this medieval castle, fortified with solid battlements, that Mussolini was accustomed to retire in mediation before taking decisions which changed Italy’s history for many years. The castle, given to the dictator by the citizens of Forli, which is near the dictator’s home town of Predapplo, dates back at least four centuries. Here Mussolini kept a priceless collection of son venters which was ransacked by foreign soldiers during World War II and by Italians themselves. The dictator’s grey-haired widow, Rachele Mussolini, returned to the castle to sell it and what is still left. Rachele said that besides smashing furniture and taking the priceless souveniers, the "plunderers even stole" the three lions which Musdolini kept in a cage. The cage is now almost completely covered by a tangle of bushes and weeds. “I keep my rabbits in the cage now,” the 65-year-old widow said. “The castle itself w*as in such a state when I came here to sell it that I had to make my dwelling in the garage.” She said that most of all she is sorry about the loss of the priceless lantern in the shape of a huge pagoda which her husband had received from Emperor Hirohito of Japan. “It kept the entire garden softly illuminated,” she said. “I miss it very much. It was such a unique piece of art that I believe it could be easily found if the police really tried.” She recalls in a quite manner the days of glory Vwhen she used to come here to spend a few days vacation with'the dictator:' ”1 remember when we came here ithe first time in 1930, shortly after the birth of our son. (Romano. Benito was so proud of his new- son that he had a huge beacon built on top of Rocca delle Carm inate. Its light could be seen from a distance of 31 miles. That, too, had been torn down, perhaps to steal itg lans. Wlien the beacon was lit for WWiMPfifhe BeiftttJ Itagfed a huge party with fireworks. He was crazy about fireworks —just like a little boy.” r”'

which, by his own behavior here .thisaf ternoon, Dr. Wilkins- Sim th admits to having used. I ans sure he is prepared for that action.” The handsome gentleman paused, smiled a little and ducked his head toward Dr. Gaskins. “Again I speak for the Board,” he declared courteously, “in saying that I hope our hospital can in the future merit alliance with your clinic, sir.” ' Dr. Gaskins glanced down the table to Chad. i'll you clean house,"said the young man, almost carelessly, "you'd be welcome to the same sort of co-operative association that we enjoy with the big hospitals in the city. We’d put your name on our approved list,' and expect from you courteous and ethical consideration of our reports. That's ail it amounts to.” “We appreciate the privilege,” said Mr. Murray, “and look forward to a fruitful partnership.” “Thank you, sir,” said Chad in evident pleasure. Mr. Murray seemed to ponder another point. Then he shot a look toward Newell McCriliis. “I trust,” he said diffidently, “that wd may be accorded a certain amount of publicity—in respect to oiir new alliance with the clinic? bur indorsement of it?” McCrilliA stood up, hitched at his belt. “It would be as much as my job’s worth,” he murmured, "not to report on the new alliance, sir. Papers are always a little cagey about violating medical ethics concerning advertising, but in this case . . Except for Dr. Wilkins-Smith, every man in the room laughed. “I think you can hope for an intorvlew with Mr. Murray,” Chad drawled. Then he turned to face the Chairman. “I’m sorry, sir,” he said politely, "that my interruption of the business of this meeting has proven to be such a lengthy one. If you care to go on now to the consideration Os a certain lawsuit . . Cleansing laughter rolled through the room. Chairs scraped, the ordered ranks broke. The coat tails of the reporter disappeared into the hall. After him, briskly, hurried Dr; WilkinsSnfith, not pausing to speak to anyone. Chad watched him go. As the door opened, he lifted his voice to shout, “lj[ you're looking for Hazel, she went that-a-wiiyl*’ (To Be

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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1958