Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 292, Decatur, Adams County, 12 December 1956 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

Name Room Mothers For Lincoln School Will Be In Charge Os Holiday Parties Room mothers have been named for the Lincoln Parent-Teacher association for the coming year. The room mothers will have BnnonEinnonnn' Bell & Howell I WILSHIRE I Bmm MOVIE CAMERA t ■ 1 I K Sj-ls NOW only Just drop in your film, set the Sun Dial, sight—-and shoot You’ll get good pictures in beautiful color the very first time. - • wide-angle lens — 56% more picture on your film o big Picture-Window viewftfidsr o long 10-foot film run • die-cast aluminum construction Biy mw ob easy terms at HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.

’ ICWWWWWMMWWW^CMtogWWWMMWWM*^****************************************** l **! • iBBMHBBMBBBBHMK 1 1 j] I : ?ef« Tv U 1 : •- - / £.y 11 MWh i BHBH t' » BW - ;# SIhI 1 mmb ' ■ MT**' 1 ' \ l» ■ "A 1 ■ W Z» »«!< t ,• r ////a...;./.'V / ~ JU * ! se&e, I i VERY SPECIAL... FOR CHRISTMAS |' T 16 PIECE SERVICE FOR 4 <J| Qg L PIUS STUNNING SALT AND I"Vo7mB « i- --- -PEPPER GIFT SET • -*~t •-■• •--• •reg. $18.75 open stock value j| | Yes, we hove the gift "most-wanted" by every smart homemaker — beautiful, practically « | unbreakable Boontonware Belle dinnerware, melmac dinnerware at its finest I Dramatically I ' designed in smart squared-circle shape. Handsomely styled in new decorator-inspired 1 "Gourmet Colors." Created to last next to forever, it's safe in a dishwasher's hottest water, ■ j in the hands of youngsters. For, this is the dinnerware that's acfua/fy guaranteed against \ ‘ breakage.* Choice of: Honeydew Green, Butter Yellow, Bon-bon pink, Smokey Charcoal, —' Turquoisette or mixed color Harlequin set i— - ! I Written Guarantee With Every Purchase « J J MYERS BUME & AUTO«I i * ACROSS THE STREET — EAST OF THE COURT HOUSE I OPEN EVENINGS ’TILL CHRISTMAS j Si ■ , : *•

charge of the Christmas party for each classroom the day before the Christmas vacation begins. They will also be in charge of other holiday parties. The P.T.A. will donate the ice cream for the parties and the mothers will provide the cookies, cake or candies. The room mothers kindergarten 1, are Mrs. Myles Parrish & Mrs. William Brown; kindergarten two, Mrs. Arthur Girod and Mrs. Dave Heller; kindergarten three, Mrs. * Robert Holthouse and Mrs. David Terveer; kindergarten five, Mrs. Lewis L. Smith and Mrs. James 1 Kocher. Jr. Grade 1-A, Mrs. Jack Nelson and Mrs. David Kaye; 1-B, Mrs. Herb Banning and Mrs. Ray qjan; 1-C, Mrs. B. A. Townsend apd Mrs. Warren Young; 2-A. Mrs. Jim Kolter and Mrs. Jim Helm; 2-B, Mrs. Joe Krick and Mrs. R. D. Frisinger; 2-C. Mrs. Jim Halberstadt and Mrs. Delbert Augsburger. ' . Grade 3-A Mrs. Cleo Heffner and Mrs. Gerald Smith; 3-B, Mrs. James Beery and Mrs. David Langston; 4-A, Mrs. Elmer Winteregg and Mrs. Norbert Aumann; 4-B, Mrs. John DeVoss and Mrs. Robert Anderson; 4-C, Mrs. Vernon Affolder and Mrs. Gene Rash. Grade 3-C and 5-C, Mrs. Edwaad Wolfe and Mrs. Jack Kline; 5-A, Mrs. R. J. Macklin and Mrs. Walter Kiess; 5-B, Mrs. Bryce Daniels and Mrs. Eugene Melchi; 6-A, Mrs. Don Beery and Sirs. Miriam Gay; 6-B, Mrs. Gerald Ross and Mrs. Virgil Andrews. Grade 7-A, Mrs. C. I. Finlayson and Mrs. Chet Kleinknight; 7-B, Mrs. Roger Kelly and Mrs. John Mays, and 7-C, Mrs. Jeanne Azbell and Mrs. Marilyn Tutewiler. Off And On PROVO, Utah — (IP — The mystery of flashing lights at Timpanogos school has been solved. Science is the culprit. An electric eye rigged to turn lights on at darkness and off again at sunrise was so sensitive,itrifaCted to itself, turning lights on, then immediately flicking them off again. TWO-WAY AUTO LAKE SHORE, Mich. — (UP) — Leonard LePage, 37, drives his 1951 Buick convertible on land and water. It took three years of spare time to produce the amphibious creation. LePage, a tool and die worker. moved the motor to the rear, added a propeller, installed retractable wheels and a leak-proof undercarriage. He values the vehicle j j at $6,000.

County Rural Youth , Will Meet Thursday I Decorate Christmas Tree At Meeting The Adams county rural youth will meet Thursday at 7:30 p. m. I at the Farm Bureau Coop build- I ing in Monroe. A film on the 1956 I tournament of the roses parade at > Pasadena, Calif., will be shown. » A special feature of the meeting will be the decorating of a Christ- 1 mas tree. Each member of the < club has been asked to bring an I item for the decoration. •; I Also on the agenda is the pack- ' ing of Christmas boxes for two i members of the organization who are in service, Paul Busse and < Dallas Neuenschwander. Each' member of the group win contri- * bute food for the packages. Plans will be discussed for the 1 Christmas caroling Dec. 2Q, the * New Year’s Eve party, the dis- 1 trict Christmas party Dec. 18 and state youth day at Purdue Uni- 1 versity Jan. 3. The committee in charge of ’ Thursday’s meeting will be Nancy ’ Shoaf. mixers; Legora Markle, group singing; Gloria Koeneman, special feature; Sally McCullough, educational feature; Earl Yoder, recreation, and Dorothy Fleming, refreshments. | Clarence Habegger Funeral Thursday Funeral services for Clarence Habegger, of Berne, who died Monday in an Indianapolis hospital, will be held at 2 p. m. ) Thursday at the First Mennonite ' church in Berne, the Rev. Olin A. Krehbiel officiating. Burial will be in the MRE cemetery. r^:i FIRST OF 15,000 <Continued fr«M» VUK* »■«> , your suffering and those of your ’ fellow countrymen. Our people 1 everywhere in America earnestly • desire to do all in their power to 1 help you start your new life in our country. I repeat: You are among ] friends!” i Newsmen, including this one, ; who bad watched the refugees en- < ter Munich and had flowp with them in tins first milltiry lift, knew that they needed friends. ( They had pitifully few belongings —ana many of those were ill- i fitting and even makeshift clothing. -' “■ —— *' ' — I

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Additional Power Reactors Urged Atom Energy Head Urges Expansion WASHINGTON (UP)-Chairman Lewis L. Strauss of the Atomic Energy Commission Tuesday night proposed a new surge forward in America's drive for cheap, commercial atomic power. In a speech to the American Nuclear Society, he called for the construction of five more nuclear power reactors and outlined a program of expanded government aid to help private industry get them into operation by mid-1962. One atomic power plant—at Shippingport, Pa.,—Already is nearing completion and will begin furnishing 65,000 electrical kilowatts to homes and industries in the Pittsburgh area next year. Seventeen others are in various stages of planning and negotiation. Strauss said he hoped his pro posal for additional power reactors would win the unanimous support of other members of the AEC and of the House-Senate Atomic Energy Committee. Production Code Os Films Changed First Revision In Code Since 1930 NEW YORK (UP)—The motion picture industry was operating under a ’’modern’’ production code today which allowed certain portrayals of drug addicts, abortion and kidnaping. It was the first change in the code since 1930 when Will H. Hays was president of the Motion Picture Association of America. It was his name which was given to the self-regulatory production standards known from then on as the “Hays code.’’ Although the newly revised code has erased some previous taboos, it provides for tighter regulations' against portrayal of religious bigotry, prostitution and crime. -t. Among the taboos lifted are: 1. Scenes depicting child birth and the filming of nude infants. 2. Illegal drug traffic and drug addiction. .3. Abortion (although it is ; not “a proper subject” and should be • discouraged” and "never be more than suggested.”) 4. Surgical operations, but to be treated with “discretion and restraint.” , 5. Kidnaping of children, when the subject is handled with “dis--cretion” and the child is returned unharmed. The Palisades, which make up the lower part of the west bank of the Hudson River are said by geologists to contain rocks about 150,000,000 years old.

f Niblick a Co-f JI 3 t | I .’.JG>r Sala > | ALL LEATHER QUALITY BAGS I * You’ll score a hit this Yuletide with a gift of a Rambler handbag. ff ,1 We’ve all sizes and styles. II B ..J5 o w 1 Jmk m nm «U* Wu Sn 2 swagger pockets, 1 xipper. Framed,. 2 swagger pockets, 21 Total, 7 pockets. extra outside pocket, 2 rip-” jft W xiW $5.95 pers. Total, 7 pockets. >£> - 11” X B%” ..... - $7.95aJ CLUTCH BAGS SI.OO to M Also Selection of Handbags in plastic IS) or leather at $3.00 to I Niblick & Co. 1 § _ OPEN EVENINGS ’TILL CHRISTMAS g. "'■" ' iiri ' VISIT TOYLAND ON OUR SECOND FLOOR g K NEW GAMES, DOLLS, MECHANICAL TOYS, Etc.|| » AT POPULAR PRICES’ 3

Fort Wayne Council Okays Trail Route Only Allen County Approval Needed The formal approval of the Anthony Wayne Trail in .Indiana came within one step of being final with approval by the Fort Wayne city council Tuesday night of the route through the territory under its jurisdiction. G. Remy Bierly, Decatur attorney and chairman of the Anthony Wayne Parkway commisison,’ said today that only the approval by the Allen county board of commissioners is necessary for its adoption. It is expected that Allen county members of the commission will present the approval to the commissioners there before the first of the year. Recently, the Adams county board of commissioners approved the trail where it passes over county roads here. Ex-officio members of the commission include the state highway commission chairman, who has signed the resolution. When finally approved, this will complete a drive which has been underway for more than 10 years by the state commission to connect the Indiana portion of the trail with the extensive route in Ohio, extending from Cincinnati to Toledo. The route will enter Indiana- in Allen county on U.S. highway 24, go east to Fort Wayne. It will go through Fort Wayne towards Hoagland and then south out of Hoagland to U. S. highway 27, which it will follow to the Monmouth road. It will then follow the Piqua road to Willshire, Ohio, where it will connect again with the Ohio route. As. soon as the Allen county commissioners approve the project, road signs, similar to those used in Ohio, will be offered the various units of government to install along the Indiana route. Decatur Dealers Attend Meeting Fred Ashbaucher and Bob Ashbaucher, of Ashbauchers tin shop. Decatur, recently met with 300 other authorized dealers at a twoday heating-cooling school and sales meeting, conducted by the Majestic Co., Ind., at Huntington. SOVIET UNION Austria, authorized Hammarskjold Jp negotiate the Hungarian situation with the aid of any U.N. member rt’poft to thb assembly before the Christmas recess. I« the -Security Council, meanwhile, Japan, one of the oldest nations in the world, was poised for its first step toward becoming the newest member of the U.N. PlKup 2nd pgh: Barring an _ ' ■ '■ ■■ .. .

Nationalists Raid Northern Ireland Posts Gun-Blazing Effort To Seize Fortress Os Arms Thwarted BELFAST. Northern Ireland <UP)- Irish nationalists attacked army, police and government installations across Northern Ireland today in a gundblazing attempt to seize a fortress full of arms. Sentries and police patrols foiled the main assault on a British army regimental headquarters at Armagh, but the nationalists seized 200 pounds of dynamite in one of 12 raids. They also destroyed a radio transmitter and damaged bridges. The raids, carried out under cover of a battering northern gale, was the biggest single campaign since Northern Ireland's six counties were separated from the rest of Ireland 34 years ago. Northern Ireland mobilized its emergency force of 12,000 police and police reserves. In Britain itself the Home Office alerted police and army posts throughout the country. The latest attack reported was near Enniskillen where the raiders, operating in one of a series of coordinated raids, seized 200 pounds of dynamite stored in a quarry. A nearby unoccupied national guard armory was blown up. Police patrols intercepted another raiding squad headed for the British Boyal Air Force radar station at Torr Head on one of Ireland's northernmost points. In this skirmish the raiders opened fire and police shot back. Three nationalists were captured. The radar station, one of NATO’s main watchdogs against attack from the East, was not harmed. Officials in Northern Ireland first identified the raiders as members of the outlawed Irish Republican Army (IRA) but informed sources said they were a similar group of active nationalists. The nationalist splinter group, like the IRA, seeks the return to Ireland by force if necessary of the six northern counties that are now part of the United Kingdom. Police described the raids as of “major importance.’* Cold Wave Sweeping West And Midwest Report Major Fires From Three Cities By UNITED PRESS A cold wave spilling out of Canada swept the West and Midwest today, borne on icy wind blasts of 40 miles per hour. The high winds fanned fires into major blazes at Superior, Wis., Keokuk, lowa, and Chicago. Firemen at Superior braved temperatures of 5 degrees below zero in battling a six-hour blaze that destroyed two downtown buildings. The fire routed about 12 apartment dwellers in one of the buildings and damages were estimated at more than $300,000. An explosion and fire destroyed a variety store in the heart of the Keokuk business district, but firemen prevented the wind-whipped flames from spreading to adjacent buildings. Two fires in Chicago were fanned into extra alarm blazes by high winds. One of them razed a garage on the Near North Side and the other destroyed a variety store on the South Side. The wave of frigid air extended from Washington state through the Great Lakes and forged as far south as northwest Texas. Temperatures plunged to near 15 degrees below zero, overnight near the Canadian border and ranged to pear 10 degrees in South Dakota and southern and Wisconsin. v k Snow flurries in the cold air area accumulated to about an inch from South Dakota through Colorado and westward through Idaho and Utah. Weathermen said a warming trend in the East will end as the cold air mass pushed into the central and north Atlantic Coast. They warned of freezing rain in the central plains and moderate snowfalls in Nebraska and lowa and from the Great Lakes eastward. Andreas Appointed McMillen Assistant John L. Andreas, assistant sec-retary-treasurer of Central Soya Company, Inc., and McMillen Feed Mills, will become assistant to the president, it was announced by Harold W. McMillen, chairman of the board. In his new position, created to expand the scope and size of overall operations, Andreas will assist Dale W. McMillen, Jy., in all phases of the company's activities and under the president’s direction will be working with all departments. A certified pubHc accountant, Andreas was active in the public accounting field Jn Fort Wayne for 16 years prior to joining Central Soya in 1952. New York has 1,850 miles of detailed tidal shoreline.

Money And Clothes Donated For Needy St. Mary's Parish Makes Contribution i A total of SBB4 wa» contributed in a special collection last weekend by members of St. Mary’s Catholic church to the Hungarian refugee relief program. The money has been sent In and win be added to that collection in Catholic parishes throughout the country over the weekend to buy food, medicine and clothing-Moi the destitute Hungarians who have fled their country during recent weeks. A report was also made today on the recent clothing drive sponsored by the parish in connection with the annual bishop’s relief project in the United States. Members of the Rosary society were in charge of the local drive which brought in 3.836 pounds ol clothing and bedding. These will be distributed throughout the world in needy areas. They included 2.873 articles of shoes and clothing for men, women, boys, girls and infants and bedding. The articles filled S 3 boxes, which were sent to central warehouses for further distribution. Trade in a Good Town — DecatM

SALE CALENDAR DEC. 13—12:00 Noon. Ronald Gallaway, % mile south of Ohio City, / Ohio on road 118. 50 high grade Guernseys, dairy and farm equipment and hogs. Roy & Ned Johnson, auctioneers; DEC. 12—Mr. & Mas. Earl Amman, One-half Mile North of Montpelier, Ind. on State Road 303 to the Stone Quarry then East to the first set of buildings on North Side of the Road. Well Improved 98 Acre Farm & Personal Property. l-QP PM. , (Farm will. seA »t 2:00 P. M.) Midwest Realty Auction Co.. 2 ■ ■J. F, Sanroam, Auctioneer. DEC. 13—Cora C.> Kline, 114 miles Southeast of Hicksville, Ohio on the Fountain Street Road. Well Improved 151 Acre Fang CWfll Sell as One unit or as an Improved 80 and Unimproved 71) t 3O Mid Yest Realty Auction Co., J. F. Sanmann, Auct. PEC. 14—Forrest Grogg. 5 miles North and 2 miles East of Rochester, Tfld. Improved 60 Acre Farm. 2:30 P. ML (Central Standard. , Rme). Midwest Realty Auction Co., J. F. Sanmann, Auctioneer. DEC. 15—1:30 p. m. Mr. & Mrs. Herbert Irwin, owners, 610 Line St; Decatur, Idd. 6 room modem home. Gerald Strickler, D. S. ; Blair, auctioneers C. W. Kent, sates mgr. . V DEC. 15—12:30 p. m Charles and Robert Johnlqz, owners; miles. west of Decatur on US 224. Purebred spotted Poland China hogs. Ellenberger Bros., auctioneers. r ' DEC. 15—L.H. Stucky, About H Block North of the Woodburn Bank in Woodburti, Ind. Nearly New Warehouse—lmplements and Equipment. 1:00 P. M- Midwest Realty Auction (>., J. Sanmann, Auctioneer. 7. t .. ‘ z * — DEC. 17—11:00 a. m. J. H. Zimmerman, owner, 5 miles west of Decatur on US 224, then 5 miles dbuth on Preble road. Tractors, ’ combine, corn picker, farm implements/' Ellenberger Bros., < it •/ _ ■ auctioneers, r •; ,c ’ _ arf r. -. f ■ DEC. 17—6:30 p. m. Williams Auto Sales, Hillsdale. Mich. Office and , , garage equipment. Ed Sprunger. Jefry Bixler, suets. * DEC. 20—12:00 Noon. James T. Byran, owner. 8 miles west of Celina, Ohio on Road 29 then south to first farm. Jersey cattle, ?■' ; hogX.sHri# r and feed. Roy 8. Jotfcson. Ned C. Johnson, - auctioneers. r , ;

I BMMFff!THTCTffIBMMi ! ’ « I ESI H "B P M| JJ iiiim:oiyi ; now with | t— 2 WAJH SPttDS! 5 J Yourehoieeof Nonnalor Slow w for wash, Nonaal or Slow for ~ ‘ spin.,.or any combination to £ M|| , . suitmsy waAMt fabric! w as little as | II *l-5* wZk [ B||O Cleans and re-eleans wash V hMI water Co giro you eleaner S ' -"'lt clothes. Lint is eaught in filter S ' tWO —not on your clothes. Sand g and soat> scum are automatic- E ally removed as wash water y wnti,,Mw| yCirculates. 9 NO LINT FUZZ ON CLOTHES! | • 50% mart data apocity than many other automata < g 1/ A Mffefmr C/omaf IfSF GwesAf n fl ■ W/f w nOTtr MfVtf Tw SHIOII IOC Cl * * onn oßd WttallMM Io tao hot water J • Fomou ’ W Acthrotor® Wlithing Action * • $-Yoar Wanpnty on seaMda tammltfion fl r> I M IMW|mM ; FAGER| 1 APPLIANCE SALES I ■ .', ' ■ ■>■'/' ;' ?■' ' “■" ' I ■ ' 1 ■' I 147 So. 2nd Street u :Phonje 3-4362 M

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Buys Health Bond Help Fight TB s j J Raiy Chrirtitwf Seeds d The K.of C. lodge has voted n purchase of a $lO health bond, of- ' e fidala of the Christmas seal sale y campaign in Adams county anr nouncod today. AU proceeds from ® the annual Christmas seal sale are used in the fight cm tuberculosis and to provide free clinics y and otherwise carry on the fight l - against the “white plague. 4 The sale is conducted by the Adama ** county tuberculosis association. i. - i ■ * COURT NEWS '1 Marriage Licenses “ Dwight Rollie Kaufman, 22. Fort e Wayne, and Janet Louise Lance, 20, Fort Wayne. < Gray Ray Mtßride. 23. Fort ► Wayne, and Sandy Kay Market, 1 18, Fort Wayne. 3■■ . ■ - J BENEFIT AUCTION at the Decatur Youth & Commun- • ity Center Tonight, at 7:30 i p. m. It