Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 210, Decatur, Adams County, 6 September 1956 — Page 11

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, USB

Record Employment Reported In August Record Number Os Americans At Work WASHINGTON (UP) — The census bureau reported today that a record number of Americana held jobs in August for the third straight month. i The total at work was 00,752,000, the previous all-time high — and a gain of about 100,000 over Julyrecord. Unemployment was put at 2,195,000, down 638,000 from July and

SECOND ANNUAL SALE ADAMS COUNTY HOLSTEIN ASSOCIATION AT THE ADAMS COUNTY 4-H DAIRY BARN, MONROE, INDIANA (Monroe Is located 6 miles South of Decatur on U. S. 27 then y 2 mile East). / 12 Noon - Tuesday Sept. 11 —1956-12 Noon 33 Registered and 13 Grade Holsteins 36 Cows and Springing Heifers, fresh by day of sale or very soon after. Records up to 600 lbs. 8 Coming Yearling Heifers. 3 Bulls (2 of Serviceable Age). Featuring these great bulls and bloodlines: Curtiss Candy and Carmel Stud Bulls, Budd Farm Master Dean. Weejee Gracious Wintering, Treasure Model. Wis Whirlwind, Jonabell Knight. Pabst Jess Wayne, Pabst Roamer and Pabst Regal. A select offering from the heart of the herds of 25 individual consignors. Don’t miss this sale of good cattle. Catalogs available at sale. TERMS—CASH. Not Responsible for Accidents. Lunch Served. Roy S. * Ned C. Johnson Herb Miller Auctioneers Pedigrees ADAMS COUNTY HOLSTEIN ASSOCIATION

SEPTEMBER SPECIAL FEATURE GOLDEN VANILLA ICE CREAM FIRST IN THIS COMMUNITY 4Oc Q UART 79c-2 quarts STAR FLECK.VANH.LA ICE CREAM a FULL QUARTS $ J.OO EQUITY “TOP OF OHIO” LONGHORN CHEESE 49c •(MILD-TASTY-GOOD) WISCONSIN SWISS CHEESE GOOD tb. 59c GRADE A—CELLO WRAP BACON QUALITY 49c THE BEST—ALL MEAT WIENERS PACKAGE 49c BONELESS—COOKED—SMOKED IIAI4 OUTSTANDING HAWI QUALITY lb. ““C BEST QUALITY (ALL MEAT) ... BOLOGNA 49c SPICED LUNCHEON MEAT lb. 39c CHOPPED HAM lb. 79c PICKLE & PIMENTO LOAF lb. 59c POPCORN cd, ( ,i. k . 21c DELICA CARRY HOME CONE CUPS (PKG. 12) 18c EACH FRIDAY - SATURDAY ONLY JAR 6 Oz. Cocktail Glass SOLICIOUS RED CHERRIES 19c FRIDAY - SATURDAY ONLY (SAVE 10c) JAR 6 Oz. Jar Cocktail Glass STUFFED OLIVES 19c Equity Dairy] AND DELICATESSEN STORE

A TRY OUR FOR SSSS*

the lowest since October, 1955, when the total was 3,181,000. It was also 42,000 below the unemployment total of August a year ago. Employment ranks are normally swollen during August, particularly by school-age children holding summer jobs. The decline in unemployment tn August was about equally divided between teen-agers and adults and Vas one of the largest July-August declines in the postwar period. The census bureau said the decline in joblessness among adults was “somewhat greater" than usual, traceable to "brisk hiring’’ In manufacturing. Employment the first eight 'months of this year has run steadily above the levels of last year,

CAKE SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY & SATURDAY Fresh Orange Cake 69c WITH COCONUT TOPPING \ I

ranging from about 1,800,009 in August to 8,700,900 in January. Gain la August — as it has tach month this year — unemployment has been below that of comparable months in 1955, ranging from more than 500,000 in January to only 100,000 in May. Hoosier fanners Enjoy Their Work Typical Man Says • Farming Good Life INDIANAPOLIS (UP) — Many Hoosier farmers thoroughly enjoy thfeir work. They say making money in agriculture is just a means to an end. Take Otis Richie, for instance. Richie is a dairy farmer in Harrison county. He has a herd of 60 purebred Guernseys. He bought some of them to the Indiana state fair this week, and he and bis son, Donald, 18, are showing them in competition with fellow farmers from all around the state, some of whom feel about their profession just like Richie does. “We’re not in farming to make a lot of money, but because it’s a good life,” Richie said, pausing at his work in the fair cattle barn to explain why he's been tilling the soil and raising livestock for 23 years. “There’s no /time off, that’s true. My wife, the boy and I do all the work ourselves do I never get a vacation. I’ve thought of doing something else, but I wouldn’t want to leave the farm'. I've been there all my life.” Besides the herd of cattle, the Richies have 106 acres of cropland. They also farm an additional 150 ( acres with no outside help.* A*side from cattle, Richie produces some grain but not enough to make him eligible to vote in a referendum this summer among wheat farmers to determine whether they want government price supports and marketing quotas. The trip to Indianapolis for the fair was a kind of vacation for Donald. He brought three heifers and a cow for 4-H competition. He plans to stay for the entire 10-day fair, living in a dormitory with 200 other 4-H lads from all around Hoosierland. Between grooming and tending his animals, Donald finds time to attend various entertainment features of the fair. Photographers have an open invitation to visit the basic training iasteltoHon at Fort Dtn,-N>‘J», on weekends and take shots of facilities and troop activities.

Baber’s has the ball pen every student wants I PARKER y// h ■! | jJr 'RJr 1 jlfll Writes Kim longer sHw t^ian ffff 5 IS!lff// ordinmy KW refills! Um • Stainless Steel bK • Nylon Barrel W • Choice of 4 points • Colors.-led, Blue, Grey, llil liirs Famous for Values Decatur - Fort Wayne

7101 DECATUR BMLt DOtOCRAT, DBCATOR, IHpUMA

r 'Twl ■■ !■ I.’ ~ A BRITISH PABATROOFEB, on sentry duty at the dock gates in Cyprus harbor, offers one French soldier a cigarette, while the other one •ats grapes. The Frenchmen are members of a small advance party of troopsthat will be stationed at Fumagusta, Cyprus, by agreement withthe British. France links the current Suet Canal dispute with th. Nationalist rebellion in Algeria. (International Radiophoto)

Deferred Payment Bonds For Church St Louis Church Uses Novel Idea ST. LOUIS— (UP)—The congregation of a suburban Presbyterian church has started construction on a new building that will be a monument to the ingenuity of the finance chairman. Professional bankers and fundraisers warned that the 8750,000 building program proposed by the First Presbyterian Church of Kirkwood would never get beyond the planning stage on the church’s operating budget. Fed Farrow, chairman of the finance committee and a veteran of 28 years in the investment business, had an idea. "I knew from past experience that the donation system wouldn’t produce the results we wanted.”

t Captain Kangaroo sayt—"Mother! You know they fit if i ''7 - they are Busier Browns.’’ I ! 4-»» 1 S S*95 • - The PONY J) For school or play .. cleans\ so easily. * ' HOW OUR lUSTER BROWN SIX.ROINT FITTING PROTECTS YOUR CHIU . • Mtaiurs bath fast, largest length and width fitted SEE THE j e Big toe joint fitted to widest inside fine of shoe Buster Brown e Small too fitted to widest outside line of shoe Captain Kangaroo • Fitted to alldw about ene-half Inch from end of Bhow E Saturday toe to end of shot) ~ m<s.rv o Heel fit checked for proper width at top and bottom Morning o Regular 90-day size check service recommended » ■«■■■■■■■■■«> 4HM^aamaßHqMMßißiMHßgaßmHiHamißaM>mmaMMmMMaßMßßmMa>Bmßm"*>>">* Hlß “BUY SHOES IN • A SHOE STORE” -mg 1 AIR STEP -— BUSTER BROWN DECATUR - BLUFFTON OPEN WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY Till 9 P. M.

ho said. “I figured it would take nine years and a lot of hard work.” Ho decided to use the method of selling bonds, but with a new twist —a deterred payment plan. “W« have a large number of young people who couldn’t afford to lend, much less give, 81,000 straight out,” he said. “But they could afford to invest <2OO a year at five per cent Interest.” Now, after a year and a half, bond sales are nearing the 8700,090 mark. Investments among the 800000 bond holders range In sise from 8100 to 824,000. The annual income of the church will be used to pay the interest and retire the principal, and bonds will be redeemed at any in cases of emergency. Farrow figures the church saved about 834,000 in broker's fees through its do-it-yourself plan. It is estimated that there are between 20,000 to 40,009 different species of fishes.

Indian Economics Instructor At Fair Teacher Impressed With Indiana Fair INDIANAPOLIS (UP) — Reverberations from the Indiana state fair this year may be heard as far away as India. The cause is Mira Bhalaika, an Indian farm home economics instructor, who was discovered at the women’s building at the fairgrounds thia week. Miss Bhalaik, who is styaing with* a farm family at Champaign. 111., came over for an unannounced one-day inspection of the fair. She was impressed with what she saw in Indiana. “American wives have a lot ot facilities,” she said. “I think it must be very, very easy for them. They have much spare time.” Miss Bhalaik came to America under the inter-farm youth associations exchange program. She said her four monthe in the United States, and her day at the fair, have provided her with useful experience for her work in "farm villages throughout India. She travels over rural areas in her native country, teaching new methods in maternity, child care, health, sanitation and other farmhome activities such as cooking and sewing. Her work is part of India's current five-year economic development program. Hoosierland's 4-H club achievements left the greatest impression on Miss Bhalaik of anything she saw at the fair. "In India we have had our biggest success with young people,’” she said. “They want more knowledge.” She said India has made tremendous strides in education and ijecentjly formed a farm youth organisation similar to the 4-H program. India also is making rapid gains in all farm work, she said. She believes studying farms in the United States can help speed up innovations in India because she feels America has the “greatest farm production progress and mechanization in the world." "Educational developments in

India have mads it easier to prdgresa," she said. “But sometimes it is hard to resist change. ‘’Recently I have gone into the villagee to demonstrate new kinds of stoves. The young people were enthusiastic, but the old ladles wanted to do it the old way.” Miss Bhalaik came to this country four monthe ago. She spent the first nine weeks visiting at farms in Colorado and then went to Illinois to live with four farm families by the time her six-

PUBLIC AUCTION 510 Studebaker Street, Decatur, Indiana AN ATTRACTIVE FIVE ROOM MODERN HOME THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, &00.P.M. LOCATION: 510 Studebaker Street, Decatur, Indians). DESCRIPTION: AN ATTRACTIVE, NICELY ARRANGED HOME. Has Modern Kitchen with Fine Built-in Features, Large Living' Room carpeted, Two Bedrooms, Lots of Closet Space, Complete Bath with latest type fixtures. FULL BASEMENT, LARGE RECREATION ROOM, OIL FURNACE, WATER HEATER. HOME IS COMPLETELY INSULATED, New Siding with Partial Stone Front trim, Storm Windows, Awnings, Nice Yard and Shade, Large Lot with fine Garden Spot. NEARLY NEW GARAGE. TERMS—2O% day of sale, balance upon delivery of good title. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. Liberal Loan can be arranged. MR. and MRS ALBERT SELKING — Owner* J. F. Sanmann—Auctioneer * George C. Thomas, Joe Costello—Representatives Sale Conducted by Midwest Realty Auction Co. ' Decatur, Indiana 1

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month stay is over. She i* one at numerous young farm workers who have visited between 36 countries under ITYA sponsorship. *1 am learning a lot about farm methods,” she Mid. But ehe feels the most important part of IFYA travel is a "better understanding in the wonld.” Dayton, Ohio, home of the Wright brothers, is considered the birthplace of aviation.

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