Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 268, Decatur, Adams County, 13 November 1956 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Public Auction Am leaving the farm and will sell the following described property: LIVESTOCK, FARM MACHINERY AND SOME HOUSEHOLD GOODS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1:00 PH. LOCATION: One-Fourth mile South of Bobo, Indiana and U mile East >n the Piqua Road. Or, H mile East of the intersection of 101 Highway and the Piqua Road. \ . • LIVESTOCK: 15 HEAD OF CATTLE— 6 HOLSTEIN Cows; 2 will be fresh in 60 days, 4 recently fresh and rebred. 2 GUERNSEY Cows, recently fresh and rebred. 6 Calves. GOOD HOLSTEIN BULL. 10 HEAD HOGS— One Tried Sow, 2 Gilts, 7 Feeder Pigs. RABBITS and Pens. COME HAY AND STRAW. Some Corn dnd Oats. FARM MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT: F-20 Tractor on rubber,, Starter, Lights, Road Gear and Power Take-Off. MMR. Tractor with '">rn Plows with power take off with starter and lights. Two Row NEW IDEA Corn Picker. OLIVER Corn Planter with Fertilizer Attachment. Rubber Tired Wagon. NEW IDEA Manure Spreader. HOOSIER Fertilizer 10 Hole Grain Drill. Two Wheel Trailer. OLIVER 12” I ' ractor Plow. LITTLE GENIUS 14” Tractor Plow. Tractor Disk.' ' Id Disc Harrow. 5 Ft. No. 4 JOHN DEERE Mower, and many other• articles. ' OME HOUSEHOLD GOODS AND FURNITURE. TERMS—CASH. I ELMER HIRSCHY, Owner J. F. Sanmann—Auctioneer George C. Thomas—Representative. Sale Conducted by Midwest Realty Auction Co., Decatur, Indiana. 7 13,
Ist SALE SALE starts r ends - - AND ARE WE PROUD WE CAN OFFER YOU THESE TREMENDOUS VALUES. YOU SAVE $$ IN EVERY DEPARTMENT Hfijk _____ - — MEN’S — ■JjESrwm mfm’C MIR sport mtn a -r Bo y» K Jfe GOATS wool \ G s^ r ’J FLANNEL 16 su|Ts sIMS HfIUU SQQ OO 1 ’ IB,BB ■ 10 Q</o TliiWlw Regularly Priced ReguUr, M/R B j m9sV a lu . 1 , M 9.95 <. »24. 95 Longs and S 1 J\ M Another Value That Shorts. ~ We Defy Anyone To A ,T, O** 5 MWTI Cannot Be Repeated. f i L KK Made Q WHilWl > J Duplieate Thia Value! «|' 34 to J |M||< Sizes 35 to 44. 1 & 2 Button Models ® in^e C enter Vent IwcwßMMf. S & Double Vent Models. ■ _. . . ... wt < California Styled ■ ______ A Variety of the Newest, In Th. NewLt 1 BOY S Most Popular Light and J Mosl Altering Jk L CORDUROY SHIRTS Dark Shadw. IM*. HI S I«W Minor Alterations Free! ■ V'vM HI MEN’S “I I »1 . / LONG SLEEVE «CO* eta "** a « RrtVQ M n» 1 SPORT SHIRTS IL«« " W >y Z)J or uni on mi a ALL WOOL BOMANZA 2forH.OO Wiib SPORTCOATS I Bsiyton % for nilVO Values to 4.98 W J®secU BUYS k d vSG i * s<•»< some irregulars S? BM*°\ santo rte „ a »99 !N K<l d ' fWSg® SUBURBAN COATS VALUES THROUGHOUT THE STORE \JO|ro *9.88 The Largest Selection ' K. HHHIHHHHHMHHBHHHHEBBHI / W F I of Styles and Colors \ f I. J Regularly Priced / 'if i I Unbeatable Lowest Prices I / H Va,ues Anywhere. 1/1 LU We Guarantee It. I ■ .. Sizes 6 to 18. Sizes 34 to 46. - ’ 9 131-135 N. 2nd St. Decatur, Ind. Phone 3-2900
Nehru Plans Visit e To United States Definite Date Is As Yet Unsettled WASHINGTON (UP) — Indian Ambassador G.L. Mehta said at , the White House today that President Elsenhower and Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of India will meet in this country “prob- • abl>before the end of the year.” Mehta discussed the forthcom,ing meeting with President Eisenhower in a brief White House call. Nehru originally was scheduled to visit Mr. Eisenhower last July but the meeting had to be postIponed because of the President's ’ileitis operation. : Mehta told newsmen that a defi- . nite date and place for the meeting (has not yet been decided. He said a detailed agenda has not yet been drawn up but"the (leaders undoubtedly will discuss [the Middle East situation among pother problems. 1 An announcement giving details k
TTTF. DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
of the meeting probably will be made within a week, Mehta said. The July meeting was to have) been held at Camp David. Mr. I Eisenhower's weekend retreat in the Catoctin Mountains near Thur-| mont, Md. ' Mehta said the forthcoming meeting may be held in Washing-' ton or some other place. PIKUP 4th pgh: U.S.-Indian relati Moose To Conduct Memorial Services Members of the local Moose Lodge will conduct memorial services at the Gillig and Doan funeral home this evening at 7:45 o’-, clock for Leo Bogner. All members have been requested to attend. Attend Conference For Girl Scouts Mrs. R. C. Hersh, Decatur Girl Scout leader, and two senior Girl Scouts, Judy Rhoades Small, left Monday morning to attend a three-day Girl Scout conference at Milwaukee, Wis.
Rules Aulo Dealers May Sell Insurance Ruling f «ued By State High Court INDIANAPOLIS <UP>—The Indiana Supreme Court ruled today that automobile dealers may sell car insurance. The high court upheld a lower court ruling in Marion County that the State Insurance Department should be restrained from turning down applications from auto dealers for licenses to sell insurance. The court ruled that the insurance department acted “without statutory authority” when it issued a regulation denying licenses to about 500 General Motors Corp, dealers to sell insurance of Motros Insurance Corp., a G-M affiliate. “We do not believe the fact that an applicant for an insurance agent's license is an automobile dealer is a ‘good cause’ for denying him the right to engage in the business of writing automobile insurance,” the high court said.
Motors Insurance Corp, had filed a suit in Marion Circuit Court seek* ing to prevent the State Insurance Department from refusing to consider license applications filed by auto dealers. Marion Circuit Court issued a temporary 1”*”' against the insurance department. The iugn vu u * v said denying dealers the right to sell insurance was a violation of the Indiana Constitution. The regulation was issued during the administration of former insurance commissioner Harry E. Wells. Hie present commissioner, William J. Davey, had endorsed Wells' decision and about 500 license applications had been rejected. U. S. Expected < Continued Iron, Pane One> tary stab into the Suez Canal Zone. Despite these factors against an early meeting with Britain and France, there is one important factor weighing in favor of the conference. That is the need for repairing the damaged U.S.-Brit-ish-French alliance.
Handley May Oust Craig Lieutenants Expect Republicans To Resume Scraps By SAM NEWLUND United Press Staff Correspondent INDIANAPOLIS (UP )—W it h Democratic scalps hanging from their belts, Indiana Republicans now can be expected to resume scrapping among themselves. For years, GOP forces aligned with Governor Craig have staged a running battle with the party wing headed by Lt. Gov. Harold Handley and Sen. William E. Jenner. The huge Republican sweep a week ago today that put Handley in the governor’s chair and swept the GOP to power in nearly all other offices was also another telling blow for the Craig forces. They were trounced last June, tho, when Handley was nominated at the state convention over lastditch Craig opposition. < Handley probably could, if he wanted to, sweep out GOP state headquarters and install four new top officers when the state committee holds its first meeting after the election. The 22-man committee is expected to meet possibly within tiro weeks after Handley returns from a Florida vacation. Cast Well Regarded It was no secret before the election that Handley wanted state treasurer Thomas Mahaffey Jr., years ago wehn Craig seized conmitteewoman Mrs. Cecil Harden, Covington, replaced. But Handley backers failed in that move last July after Handley’s nomination. Vice chairman Mrs. Von L. Snyder, Indianapolis, also has been tagged for removal at various times by Handley backers. Alvin C. Cast, Kentland, was elected chairman more than two years ago when Craig sezicd control of the committee. But he has become a successful “fence straddler” since then and was gene’-alJv regarded as acceptable to Handley. Reports said Rep. Charles Halleck was seeking a federal appointment for Cast and that former Gov. Ralph Gates was approached by some committeemen to take Cast's job. Gates is Republican national committeeman from Indiana. Observers figured Mahaffey, accused of working against Handley’s nomination, was most vulnerable and might resign rather than get the ax. The fate of state secretary John V. Sellers, Franklin, was in doubt. Skillen to Stay? Meanwhile, state Democratic leadership appeared more peaceful. Terre Haute Mayor Ralph Tucker, defeated candidate for governor, wanted state chairman Charles Skillen ousted at the start of the campaign. But he settled for keeping Skillen plus assurance of a stepped-up campaign. Had Tucker won, he could have removed Skillen and organized the state committee to his liking with committeemen eajger to line up with the resultant influence and patronage. As it is. Democratic leadership is in doubt—unless a rumor that Skillen will resign is true. Skillen was relected to a third two-year term last May. Also elected then were Mrs. Lawrence .Arnsman, Lebanon, vice-chairman; Thomas Faulconer 111, Indianapolis, secretary, and Eugene Crowe, Bedford, treasurer.— Postmaster General Undergoes Operation ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP) — Postmaster General Arthur E. Summerfield was reported in “good condition and resting comfortably” today after undergoing a successful throat operation. Officials at the University of Michigan Hospital said they expected Summerfield to be out of the hospital “in*a week or 10 days.” They said he would have to convalesce at his Flint, Mich., home for several weeks. g Trade »n a wooo •»#*.’ Decatuf
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TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 13. 1950
Youth Arrested On Charge At Bluffton Richard A. Simerman, 18, of Decatur, was arrested by city police in Bluffton early Monday morning on a charge -of unnecessary noise with an auto in a hospital zone. He will appear in court later. Arab World Leaders Seek United Policy Summit Conference Opened In Lebanon BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP)—Kings, premiers, presidents and high state officials of the Arab world opened a summit conference here today to work out a united Arab policy in the Middle East crisis. Assembled at the request of President Camille Chamoun of Lebanon, they were expected to take a firm stand in support of Egypt and to discuss the question of an oil boycott against Britain and France. Attending the meeting besides Chamoun were President Shukri El Kuwatly of Syria, Syrian Premier Sabri Assail, King Feisal of Iraq, King Hussein of Jordan, King Saud of Saudi Arabia, Libya Premier Mustafa Ben Halim, and various other legislative leaders and high government officials of the Arab world. The Sudan sent a representative, and Egypt was represented by its ambassador to Lebanon, Gen. Abdel Hamid Ghaleb. Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser also sent a personal message to the meeting. The Yemen delegation had not arrived by the time the meeting got under way in the big yellow’ stone palace of the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. It was expected to be headed by Crown Prince and Foreign Minister Mohammed Saif El Badr. The question of an oil boycott was expected to be one of the more delicate problems of the two-day conference. To Designate Route Os Anthony Wayne At a meeting of the Anthony Wayne Parkway commission Monday evening in the office of G. Remy Bierly, chairman, it was decided to officially designate the route through Adams and Allen county. A resolution is to be prepared to be submitted to all members of the commission for final approval. This will then be handed to the boards of county commissioners in Adams and Allen counties, the Fort Wayne city council and the Indiana state highway department. Special markers will then be installed along the route. It was also voted to give a supply of special folders prepared by the commission to the Decatur public library and other institutions in the county for distribution among school children and others interested in history. ’—_
‘ON’l TAKE A CHANCE TAKE PLENAMINS Smith Drug Co lUY and SELL THROUGH CLASSIFIED ADS IN THE ■ DAILY DEMOCRAT
