Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 258, Decatur, Adams County, 1 November 1956 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

COURT NEWS ?• Marriage License Harold E. Brorein, 23, Rockford, 0., route one, and Vera L. Harvey, 21, Monroe route one. Alias Summons In the complaint for damages of Henry S. Hattiex against Marcus Brodbeck, an alias summons has been ordered issued to Emma Hattiex, cross-defendant, returnable Nov. 19. ■ Citation Proceedings In the contempt of court proceedings against Menno S. Eicher, defendant in a divorce case by Sara S. Eicher, the report of a psychiatrist has been filed showing him to be of sound mind, responsible for his acts and his comprehension to understand the proAMAZING DISCOVERY IN HAIR CARE ...takes 60 seconds "Lite ■ ■ m*. nnv, MIRACLE HAIR TREATMEHI New LIFE treats the hair, inside and cut, to add strength and body. That’s why it’s so amazingly easier to manage-easier to comb out, set and style—-snarl-free-and so radiantly alive. AU in just 60 tecondt! JBL n TREATMENT llPw BOTTLE IBa si2s oMMM ■ plus ■ TAX Wherever Hip toilet rm art sold SMITH DRUG CO.

VALUABLE SAVINGS AT Failing's Meat Market 206 So. Second Street THIS WEEKEND ONLY! One Lb. of Home Cured Bacon Free With Each 55.00 Purchase — = EXTRA SPECIAL VALUES Ground Beef 3 lbs. 85c Pan Sausage 3 lbs. 85c Pure Lard (Homo Rendered) 4 lbs. for 0n1y......... 49c MONEY SAVING PRICES Confer Chuck Roast lb. 39c Rond Swiss Steak lb. 57c Sirloin Steak lb. 59c Pork Shoulder Steak lb. 47c Lean Frosh Side lb. 39c Hickory Smoked Sausage lb. 43c Homemade Ring Bologna - Plain or Garlic lb. 39c Fresh Lean Link Sausage'T’only lb. 59c OPEN SUNDAYS

reedings. The contempt of court charge has been submitted and the court has ruled that he was n<f guilty of criminal contempt and that the proceedings should be dismissed. The plaintiff has filed a motion for change of venue and the court has ruled that the parties agree on the change in three days. Set for Argument In the complaint to foreclose mechanic’s lien by Harry Soucie, doing business as Harry Soucie Construction company, against Stewart W. and Elizabeth McMillen, the defendant's motion to separate and strike* parts of the complaint has been set for argument Nov. 30. Estate Cases Proof of the notices of appointment and final settlement has been filed in the estate of Julius Reichert The final report and the report of distribution have been submitted and approved. The executor has been discharged and the estate is closed. A petition for the approval of a compromise of claim and an order authorizing the administrator to settle the claim in the Jeanette Nevil estate has been filed and approved. Girl Scout Rews Girl Scout troop 11 met Tuesday after school at the Lincoln school. We opened the meeting with the Girl Scout promise, after which ' we had roll call and collection of dues. We repeated the Girl Scout laws. We started plans for acting out a play. Rebecca Rumple was hostess for a party. We played a game and she served refreshments The meeting closed with the “friendship circle’’ and the singing of taps. Scribe: Rebecca Rumple. Brownie troop 24 met at the Lincoln school Tuesday. Games were played. Our treat was furnished by Carol Harmon. We closed with the Brownie song. Scribe: Margaret Kline. Brownie troop 12 met Tuesday after school at the Lincoln school. We had a Halloween party. After we had guessed each person we collected dues. We went out to the playground and played some games. When we came in we had a treat from our Brownie leaders. Scribe: Patty Beam County Home Buys Registered Bull PETERBOROUGH, N. H. — The Adams county home, Decatur, Ind., has just purchased the registered Guernsey bull, Valorous’s P. Augustin, according to the American Guernsey cattle club. The new sire was bought from Peter B.'Lehman, Decatto, Ind. This bull is out of the fine Guernsey cow. Signet’s M. Petunia, that has an official production record of 9,663 pounds of milk and 532 pounds of fat, made on two times daily milking in 365 days. He was sired by Signet's Loraine’s Valorous.

Secret Orders For

Secret Orders For Select 852 trews Targets In Russia Are Well Defined Editor’s note: This is a dispatch by a veteran United Press Correspondent who recently visited the strategic Air Command’s securitytigfat 852 base near Merced, Calif. By GLENN STACKHOUSE United Press Staff Correspondent CASTLE AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. <UP)—For many months each pilot of the Strategic Air Command’s “select” 852 crews has had the name of a certain city or industrial center in Russia engraved in his mind as his personal target for destruction—if and when a war comes. Each navigator and bombardier lives with his secret orders day and night. For one it may be Moscow; for another Leningrad, another Port Arthur. The day Russia makes its first hostile move toward the United States, Gen. Curtis E. LeMay, the boss of SAC, will push the fire alarm that will touch off “massive retaliation.” The Air Force figures it will have six hours, from the time the distant early warning radar net reports enemy bombers overhead, to get the 52s loaded and on their way. That’s plenty of time for the job. SAC isn’t saying how many, of these top efficiency crews nave been assigned targets, but a wellinformed officer from LeMay's own headquarters in Omaha assures: ‘‘We’U blanket the country.” “These select crews,” he says, “are the cream of the Strategic Air Command force. For months they have had their targets assigned; been briefed on the route, and even the general weather conditions they can expect along the way. “They are constantly practicing for the job. Actually, about 15 ger cent of SAC’s planes are constantly in the air.” Each crew makes its practice flights over exactly the same number of air miles as it is from base to target. The training flight, possibly a swing around North America, is laid out so that the planes will fly through approximately the same weather conditions it could expect to meet on an actual mission. Despite the awesome destructive power of SAC'S nuclear and tfcermonuclear bombs, the crews are drilled over and over on pinpoint ; bombing from altitudes of 50,000 feet and higher. SAC has no intention of unleashing its weapons in a, scattershot, mapner. The 852 s 'practice their pinpoint bombing nightly, using U.S- cities as their mock targets. "A lot of people don’t realize major city in the country has been theoretically wiped off the face of the earth hundreds of times by the 8525.

Butler’s Garage Actually Paid At The Rate Os $ 30,000 0< A BUSHEL FOR SOYBEANS lllsh * jg ‘ tWTT A ; Iv mr - BWIi 4 Ml® SL&W* W ilßrll. W*‘ /'■'<.-/■ ir’ f - Vi". During last week’s first soybean festival, Butler’s Garage offered a pickup truck at a large discount plus 1 pound of soybeans. Mr. Winfred Gerke, prominent Adams county farmer, is shown presenting a “Bag of Soybeans’’ to Joe Kaehr, Manager of Butler’s Garage, in receipt of the keys to his new 1956 GMC Pickup. Mr. Gerke purchased the truck at 2:00 p. m. Friday and took deli very of; his" new GMC the foil owing r day; Butler’s Garage 126-128 South First St. Phone 3-2506

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Bt J r I '' 1 J z JOSEF Cardinal Mindszenty has been liberated by Hungarian revolutionary troops and has returned to Budapest. The Roman Catholic primate of Hungary was arrested the day after Christmas, 1948, by the Hungarian Communist government, and was sent to prison for life on treason and black market charges in February of 1949. (international/ Sweeping Program For Health Studies National Health Service Program WASHINGTON W — The Public health service today announced a sweeping, multi-million-dollar program to find the causes of cerebral palsy, mental retardation, and some forms of blindness and deafness. It said the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Blindness plans to spend more than 1 million dollars annually for the next 10 to'2o years on the big project. As a starter, Surgeon General Leroy E. Burney announced that more than $700,000 has been awarded to Yale and Brown universities for an intensive fouryear investigation. When the program really gets going, he said, more than 6,000 persons will be studied over long periods by many hospitals and research institutions. For years, cerebral palsy and mental retardation were regarded as virtually s hopeless. Very little research was done. Recently, however, there has been mounting evidence that many cases of cerebral palsy stem front preventable defects which occur to the prenatal, natal, or postnatal phase of a child’s development.

Says U. S. Foreign Policy Is Bankrupt Kefauver Indicts Foreign Policies BOSTON (IB - Sen. Estes Kefauver charged today that U. S. foreign policy has become “utterly bankrupt” under the Eisenhower administration and that “never in my memory has our leadership sunk so low.” The Democratic vice presidential nominee in a speech prepared for a rally at Boston University, delivered an all-out indictment of the GOP foreign policy. He accused the Eisenhower administration of letting the- North Atlantic Treaty Organization decline to "tatters” and of permitting Soviet Russia to gain "a foothold in .the Middle East that it has sought tor centuries.” Kefauver brought his .homestretch campaign into politically important Massachusetts and "Rhode Island today, ignoring sometimes murky weather for an all-out bid to brjng the two states back into the Democratic column. The Democratic vice presidential nominee, campaigning in .Michigan Wednesday night, accused President Eisenhower of practicing golf on the White House . lawn while developments were pushing toward actual war in the Near East. He flew to Boston immediately afterwards. •In his speech prepared for delivery at Boston University, Kefauver said Mr. Eisenhower “publicly admitted” in his televised speech Wednesday night “the distressing fact” that NATO had gone to pot under "four years of Republican mismanagement.” Two Minor Accidents r In Decatur Wednesday i Two minor accidents occurred in the city Wednesday, one resultt in? in an arrest. Harry Myers, 21, . of Decatur route two, was charged with reckless driving and leaving s the scene of an accident after an ; accident at Meibers and 10th street at 11:15 p.m. Arthur M. Butl ler, 58, of Decatur, was attemptt ing to make a right turn when i Myers started to pais him on the right side. Damage was estimated - at S2OO to the Myers car and S3O to the Butler vehicle. Myers will ; appear in city court Saturday. ) A similar accident occurred as ; the corner of 11th and Monroe - streets at 4:10 p.m. when cars driven by Nolan G. Ginter, 25, of I Decatur route two, and Verda L Beineke, 68, of Decatur, collided. * Mrs. Beineke was starting a right turn but her turn signals were not s operating properly and indicated a t left turn. Ginter attempted to pass ' on the right side. Damage from the > resulting impact was estimated at , a total of $45. ;1 .. —.—— I Trade in a Good Town — Decata

O ■— ■ "■ »' < Household Scrapbook BY ROBMTA LSI .. . Q Ink Stain* an Fabrics Keep on hand for removing ink stains from white fabrics a solution of jounce each of sal ammoniac and salts of tartar. Place in a quart bottle half full of water and shake well, then fill bottle with water, shake again, and cork. Soak the material in this solution and then launder. After Shellacking Brushes which have been used for shellacking should be washed in denatured alcohol, then in soap and water. Straighten the bristles and put the brushes away dry. Ants To get rid of ants sprinkle oil of pennyroyal in the places infested by them.

Everything for Baby’s comfort and safety at WYLIE'S J? F H ... at prices that go easy on Pop's pocketbook! /v — 1 ill UtlUllffifTraw' Dropside Crib RII b L II I M I' u/ I 5 A regular heaven for baby! bI fi HI LI L i H IW’ 1 ffl "n Full P anel ends so no I H I ■■■ gk I I I r|r H W ' ‘ ** v drafts can reach him. Ifcßßi I■■ ■ C H i I i J,. Nw Double drop sides and 4R R iII ’ -«V -■» position adjustable spring Dll DB Hi ifpV.. for Mother’s convenience. I I Ilf ' * Comfortable inner spring IB W' mattress and bumper pad I’ designed especially for your 3-Pc. Outfit smu£.oo . Special 4<" — f — j 1 Ijl I H Sturdy Hardwood I HnwWmW p,ay Yard 1 111 II !■ 11l Illi I H Jt-iUHI I H I 0 Compact play yard for in- ! I I'l al MB j “■ I —' doors and out..’FMftMy-yet fl - US ffl M| i folds compactly when not in - S Hpn ml n|j pjBS L 1 use. Smooth hardboard njl ® V M floor. Easy rolling casters. 0 Sri dS fisHmll r Priced $ m .95 IUH I at 14 / Pla y Yard Pad-$2.98 BHigh Chair o,her Nursery Values All hardwood construction. Borch Gates $2.49 Safely designed for your sft p orch G t 2 j ß baby s use. Convenient adjustable tray. 7 ft. Porch Gates 3.49 Special $jM.95 Folding Nursery Chairs 5.95 Price a ' “* Deluxe Nursery Chairs 6.95 Kantwet Mattress 17.95 Folding Chrome Hi » h Chair Pad 2.98 . ■■■ i ai • Bumper Guard 2.98 i High Chairs «"* (:hesi «•»* \ ° Birch Chifforobe 454.50 A with stainless steel tray. Hardwood Rocker 9.95 Plastic upholstery, priced at 3-pc. Steel Bridge Set 11.95 $ W a .95 3-pc. Table & Chair set I A 4 Maple or 8irch15.95 .I' ‘ • ’ FLOOR COVERING CLEARANCE 9x12 Axminster Rugs, Reg. $69.95N0w $44.95 9x12 Axminster Rugs, Rog. $99.95N0w $79.95 9x12 Colton Rugs, Reg. $39.95N0w $32.95 9x12 Fibre Rugs, Rog. $22.95N0w $17.95 6 x 9 Fibre Rugs, Reg. $14.95 Now $11.95 Throw Rugs — Values to $9.95 Now $ 2.88 BUY ON CONVENIENT CREDIT PLAN Wylie Furniture Co. 152 So. Second St. Phone 3-2602

| Modern Etiquette BY ROBKRTA LBS CW- r— — o Q. At formal dinners, should one be very free and natural in one's speech and actions, or should one act more reserved and dignified? A. Always try to be natural and enjoy yourself without being conspicuous. Os course, there can be no harm in "dressing up” your manners as well as yourself in honor of a party, but you should avoid the necessity for any improvement over your everyday, speech and actions. Dressed-up manners have away of betraying their user. Q. How should the‘‘a t home’’ cards of a newly wed couple be wondered? A, They may read: "Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Webb will be at

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1. MM

home after the 10th of November at 1511 Bank Street, Center City. Q. How should one take an dive stone from the mouth? A. With the thumb and forefinger, and then laid on the plate. Paper made from papyrus stalks was invented some 4,000 years before the Christian era. It was partly superseded by vellum and parchment, which gave way in the 10th century to the type of paper used today. Trade in a OopTtowu — Deerttu DON’T TAKE A CBANCE TAKB PLENAMIN* Smith Drug C<v