Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 6, Decatur, Adams County, 8 January 1957 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Pabliihed Every Bveniag Except Sunday By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. ■wtered a* the Decatur, Ind., Peet Office aa Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller ——President J H. Heller — Vice-President Chas. Holthouee — Secretary-Treasurer Subscription Ritu: Ry Mall tn AdaßA and Adjoining Uowties: Ono year, SIM; Rix months, J4JS; I months, It JI By Mail. beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: Ono year, H.M; 6 months, EM.75; 3 months, 11.60. By Carrier: SO cents per week. Single copies, 0 cents.
■ • ■ ‘ ■■ •. x **' It’s easier to prevent a cold than it is to cure one and much more economical. ■ ■ O ■ 'O'— ■ , All highways tn this area are reported th be in good condition after the week-end snowfalls. The age-old Warning is out however— Drive with caution! ' ii i ii ii ana— Sunday, June IS has been designated as Father’s Day for 1957. Sponsors of Father’s Day have Jumped the gun and started first in the designation of the numerous special occasions honoring Just about everybody. r . —O——o Many 1957 Auto license plates can be seen now and the annual sale is less than a week old. It k» iRd idea to shop early tor the plates and avoid the tang lines Airing the last few days. Remember must have your county tax receipt It is a state law And the branch manager cannot issut your plates witnout . ft ■ ... ' " o o 3 Ground was broken yesterday tor construction of the new addition to the Adams county Me-■Ainji-L-Fn* tinea Rai asul tehar r>JUtn_ jnonai nospnai. ana wnen compie ted, it will be one of the most modern hospitals in northern Indiana. Beds, office space and other faculties are being added and the trustees are leaving nothing ttodone to provide tor quick recovery of patients. It’s another reason in our contention that we five in one of the finest communities in the worid. o o America is going right ahead v . planning'tor' a bigger 1957. Business experts see no> let-up. and manufacturers are planning for large expansions. Taxes, while high are not considered out of line with earnings, and away we *>! Some researchers express concern over continued inflation and others are fearful th at agriculture’s income will continue to fade. But wages and income in general will rise. The net result probably will be higher profits, higher wages and higher taxes. The big danger lies in the possibility of a quick drop in any of the three which Would throw all three out of line. That bridge, however can be crossed when we get there.
fin PROGRAMS MJBmF (Central Daylight Time)
WKJG-TV (Channel 83) TUESDAY I. to Sports ray, Nows *tt>«rnt&n * Bouthwn m Winters ftieater i&psa., J ' WEDNESDAY ~~ ■ to 1/ve By »:80 — Janet Dean in Home l?:oo—Th*epri<e U Right 14 >ao—Truth -or Consequences ' !?<ts|TVfo*tlierman • -1 :U—Farm* and Farming 1 ' Star Revue ... I>* Maloy Show upr te Sports SLJfcnqlirs Best IpSwJ&fo \... —
We aU better start thinking about taxes and tax paying. Indiana gross income tax is due by the end of this month and first installment of county taxes are due early in May. In between in April comes federal tax payments. The next few months will probably cut into your savings account. • o o The Canadian railroad strike is adding new worries to American newspaper publishers, who depend on much of their newsprint supply from Canada. There will be a temporary shortage, while the strike lasts and newspapers, especially in the larger cities will be faced with reducing the size of their issues, which means quite a loss in advertising revenues. Most of the large Canadian mills are running only part-time and are faced with a serious storage problem. ■"O' oWinter sports enthusiasts report large crowds at northern Indiana lakes the last several days. Ice fishing, skating and tobogganing are the most popular sports in this area. Many fishermen are driving farther north into Michigan, especially those with a few days extra for winter sports. Winter vacationers are urged to check with Conservation officers at their destination concerning the safety of ice and availability of good snow for skiiing and tobogganing. o.o ' Regardless of politics, all of us can be of great service to mankind, in these coming days of the Indiana General Assembly. ■ -i- ■ ... ..... Everyone wants more safety on the highways and* fewer deaths from needless auto mishaps. At the last general conference of Governors, held last summer, a” committee was formed to study proposed methods of putting a national safety program into effect. This feport will be in the hands of each legislator of each state, as a. guide to creating much needed legislation pertaining to safer motoring. You are urged to contact your legislators to make sure they give this matter prompt attention. Certainly, if every state has an effective driving code, with safety emphasized, much good will be derived and many lives will be saved.
WINT - TV (Channel 15) TUESDAY EvMiag 6:o9—Curtain Call 6:3o—The News, Hlckox 6:4o—Sports Extra 6:4s—(Douglaa Edwards 1 7:00—Bold Journey 7:3o—Name that Tune 3:oo—Phil Silvera B:3o—The Brothers --- 9:oo—Nothing But the Truth 9:3o—lAJbStar Theater 10:00 —864,000 Question 10:30 —-I Led Three -Lives 11:00—Orient Express ■ Morning B:oo—Captain Kangaroo »:lt«tare' 1 ln le the a J& i rning Wrey Tim. 11:30—Strike It Rich Lady 14:il5—Love of Life 14:30—Search for Tomorrow o:4s—Guiding Light 1:00—CBS News 1:10—Open House I:3o—As the World Turns 2 Mies BtO’OltS ~ 3:Sa-iHouee Party 3:oo—The Big Payoff 3:30—80b Crodby Show 4:oo—Slighter Day 4:ls—Secret Storm 4:Bo—The Edge of Night —s :oO—Bar •15 Ranch Evening 4:0»-The Whietler 6:3o—The News, Hickox 6:4o—Sports Extra, Grossman 6:4s—Douglas Edwards I:3o—defence Fiction Theater 9:oo—The Millionaire 9:3o—l’ve Got A Secret lOrOP—U, & Steel Hour ; 11 :oo—Eabian of Scotland Yard 11:30—Late New s a „ , . ■—.....—— MOVIES ADAMS “Hollywood or Bust” Tues, and Wei at L 25; 0:35
o — 20 Years Ago Today o f January 8, 1937 — Arthur L. Brentlinger, 61, former Decatur school teacher dies at Columbia City. Alice Baker, Mary K. Garner, Donald Bixler, Lawrence Anspaugh, David Macklin, Robert Franz, Catherine Murphy, Kathryn Kohls, Catherine Jackson, Virginia Breiner, Monroe Furhman and Harold Zimmerman. Decatur high school seniors, will present class play next Tuesday night. Postmaster Phil Macklin announces that post office lobby will remain open each night untii 8 o'clock. St. Mary's rives rises seven feet, as rains continue. County commissioners buy four new trucks for county highway department. —— District Knights of Pythias meetting is planned for Decatur on January 28. Delegates from eight northern Indiana lodges will attend. Mrs. T. L. Metzler entertains So Cha Rea club. Retiring Gov. Paul McNutt delivers final message to state general assembly. At the Adams county memorial hospital: Vernon and Mary Ellen Schnepp Kiser of 215 South Eleventh street are the parents of a six pound, three and a half ounce son, born this morning at 9:42 o’clock. Add Hospital Votes Admitted Mrs. Ethel Christen, Decatur; Edwin Booth, Decatur; Roy Nevil, Geneva; Bill Bedwell, Ohio City, Ohio; Mrs. Raymond Crist, Monroe. Dismissed — Mrs. Albert Egly and baby girl, Berne; Perry Hunt, Wren, Ohio; Joe H. Schwartz and baby boy, Geneva. Subscribes For 59th Year For Democrat aSA former Adams county resident, now living in Fort Wayne, reports that she has been taking the Decatur Daily Democrat for 59 years. Mrs. Daniel Noffsinger, 86-year-old widow, reports that her husband subscribed to the Democrat for 47 years, and after his death 12 years ago she continued the subscription. Mrs. Noffsinger reports that she is in fairly good health. Trade in a wood Town — necatu.
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( THE DECATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT, DBdAtUA INDIANA —... ...... I I" I W.JCFW. 1 * ,11 111 mu
Premier Chou J I Meets Soviet Leaders Today Talks Are Believed Designed At Halting Sweeping Discontent LONDON (UP>—Chinese Communist Premier Chou En-lai met Soviet leaders today in Moscow for talks believed aimed at halting the discontent sweeping the Communist empire. The strategy being mapped behind the Kremlin walls by leaders of the world’s two largest Communist parties may determine the path of world Communism, observers said in London. Chou arrived in Moscow Monday with a 26-man delegation and received an ecstatic welcome from the worried men in the Kremlin who have seen their destalinization policy lead to uprisings in Poland and revolution in Hungary. Western observers said it was obvious Chou was called in as a fireman to help extinguish the discontent that has spread from East Germany and the other satellites to North Viet Nam in Southi east Asia. A dispatch from Warsaw said Polish leaders already were becoming . apprehensive about the Moscow talks and Chou s visit to the Polish capital later this week, Poland achieve* * measure of, independence for its Communist regime, but the Sino-Russian talks in the Kremlin may mean back . pedaling for the Polish government, observers said in Warsaw. One of the principal topics believed up for talks between Chou and Soviet Communist Party Boss Nikita S. Khrushchev was a new outline of relations between the Communist states. This was expected to involve a partial return to the harsh bonds of Stalinism. Moscow dispatches indicated the two parties would seek to set up a looser version of the old Comin- ■ form which Moscow used to tie . the satellites together before it ! was shoved to the wayside by ' Khrushchev’s de-stalinization. ‘ Associated Churches • Will Meet Thursday • Members of the Associated ' Churches of Decatur will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Zion Evangelical and Reformed church. All members are urged to attend. I
COURT NEWS Marriage Licenses Frank Leon Hoos 18, Columbus. 0., and Nancy Haye Pierce, 18, Columbus, 0. Robert Charles Lutz, 11, Tippecanoe, 0., and Dorios Kay Dobbins, 18, Tippecanoe, O. Case Continued The divorce case of Gene R. Daugherty against Jeananne D. Daugherty, venued from Allen county, has been continued to Feb. 18. Set for Trial Hie divorce case of Jean Huffman against Vern Huffman has been set for trial Jan. 19. Support Ordered In the divorce complaint of Christens Hollopeter against John Stanley Hollopeter, the court has ruled that the defendant pay S2O per week support of the plaintiff and minor children. He has also been ordered to pay attorney fees. Divorce Trial Re-Set The divorce trial of Leland JE. Welker against Mildred A. Welker has been continued and re-set for Jan. 12. Cause Continued , The court has granted a continuance in the divorce case of Carole Pifer against Richard Pifer. Estate' Cases The schedule to determine inheritance tax jtor the estate of Jesse Elmer Eckrote has been filed with reference to the county assessor. The net value of the estate is $15,725.72, with four sons and a daughter as heirs. The schedule to determine inheritance tax for the estate of Frank W. Bauserman has been filed with reference to the county assessor. The widow, five sons and two daughters are heirs. The personal representative’s li£ ventory for the John D. Mason estate has been filed and approved. It shows S4O in household goods, SIOO in crops, 910,000 in corporate stock and $7,68f.74 in money for a total value of $17,821.74. A petition to sell personal property at private sale has been submitted and approved. The inventory filed for the estate of Willis D. Glendening shows a tdtal value of $1,400 in money.
im-birrtH - J// ff X f r J J J . T ,v. 75. < v-7 v 7 JI /Joi. x -WVI ■ 'jn lhr>TTi±' < x IxJA- ' J / || ?< — —-— ‘ ' • ■■ ; ■ finally Believed His Eyes and Ears I He has heard and read a great many wonderful A curve in the road ahead? He simply follows things about this new 1957 Cadillac since it made it with the arc of his hands and the car responds its first appearance a few brief weeks ago— with perfect obedience. —about its magnificent new luxury, for instance A hill in the offing? He just nudges the acceler- . ~ . i| s brilliant new power and responsiveness ... ator and the car sweeps up and over as effortlessly its marvelous new handling ease ... and its as if it were traveling the level road. extraordinary new smoothness of ride. A stop light coming up? He presses his toe— : • * And so, quite frankly, he began to wonder if it ]ever so gently—on the broad braking pedal and weren’t all too good.t9.bc J comes to the smoothest, surest stop ima^m^ltt^.. car be as wonderfill as this latest “car of cars’’ Yes, it’s true what they say about this newest was reputed to be? of Cadillacs. ?%(> if Jar and away the finest motor Well, he’s decided to put his eyes and ears to ' to traoel the world's highways. the test today. And the verdict is unmistakable! * ♦ ♦ tilt's a joy just to lean back into those deep, soft How about you? Have you heard the wonderful cushions and look out over that graceful hood things they’re saying about the 1957 Cadillac? > into the beckoning highway. Well, the proof is in the driving—and the facts And what a revelation the car is to drivel about Cadillac have never been more convincing. ; y " ■ ■ , ■_ r . /- ' ■ t"' r„- — I< I; ,. ay , ZINTSMASTER MOTORS FIRST AND MONROE STREETS DECATUR, IND. hl HI IIIIIIIIS- * mi 1.1 I ■mi— WW • i'.: ~ ■ , '*’/ " i •' • • • *• ——
Tbs petition to sell personal property from the Leah P. Schwartz estate at public sale has been submitted and approved. The inventory for the Cora Meyer estate has been filed, showing $2,100 in real estate and S2O in money for a total value of $2,120. The supplemental report of distribution for the estate of Oliver V. Dilling has been filed and approved. The administrator has been discharged and the estate is closed. The report of the sale of corporate stock tn the Mary A. Steiner estate has been filed and approved and the court Has ordered that the stock be transferred te P ur * chaser. Delores Kintz, student nurse at Good Samaritan Hospital at Cincinnati, 0., returned after spend-
■ —————— ii t | Revival!! Revival!! Revival!! I ■ Beginning Today, Jan. 8 - through Jan. 20 * Every Night at 7:45 ■ At The ASSEMBLY OF GOD I CHURCH 1210 W. Elm St. ■ Dynamic: preaemng uy Preacher** Don Whitlow ★ Special prayer for the sick ■ You are cordially Invited to I those services B S Evangelist Don Whitlow George Yarian, Pastor Tel. 3*4771 O
ing two weeks with her parents, M. and Mrs. John ipntz. Cornelius Bertsch of route 1, Berne, was admitted to the Bluffton Clinic hospital Saturday to undergo surgery. Mr. and Mrs. George Bair, Jr., recently moved to Dallas, Tex., and not Mr. and Mrs. George Bair, Sr. The younger Bair has accepted a position with the American Income Life Insurance Company at Dallas. Mr. Bair. Sr., Is still associated with Wylie Furniture company in Decatur. Patil Germann, Jr., Eugene Fuelling, Larry Myers, and Dick Landis have resumed their studies at DeVry Institute of Technology, at Chicago. They are also employed at the First National Bank in Chicago. City Light Post Is Damaged Last Night A city light post at the corner of Monroe and Third was damaged when it was hit by a car dri-
WaSDAY, JANUARY t, Mt? ,
, ven by Alice J. Wisener, M, M Van Wert, 0., at 19:|0 p.au The , Wisener car baked into the post . to permit another car to enter . Monroe street from a service station driveway. » Jit -I il-., - 1 - 1 — i DON’T TAKE A CHANCE ' * v TAKB 5 PLENAMINS ; Smith Drug Co. ■ FALSETEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many waerats of salsa taatli have tuffered real embarraaamant because their plate dropped, allpped or wobbled at juat the wrong time. Do not r platee. Hold false tooth most A&V. r ao thoy feel more oomfortableTDoie - not aour. Chocka “plate odor" (denture breath). Get FAHTM'ra at any .drug counter.
