Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 36, Decatur, Adams County, 12 February 1957 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT 00, INC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Poet Office aa Second Class Matter Dick D. Holler — — President J. H. Heller Vice-President Chas. Holthouse Secretary-Treasurer Subscription Rates: By Mall tn Adams and Adjoining Counties: Ono year, M.M; Six months, 14.15; 8 months, 8115. 'ly Mall, beyond Adamo and Adjoining Counties: Ono year, B*. 00; • months, *4.75; * months, *1.50. By Carrier: 10 cents per week. Single copies, « cents. ' BimiiiMW—mijjmiwwmii. r J.rnn-|i.. i * ■ '— "

State Senator Von Eichhorn mentioned some very good points in his speech here Saturday night. The Senator stated that big business issues screams of anguish at the mention of government control—and howls Just twice as loud when it receives no government contracts. You cannot have your cake and eat it, too. If big business wants government contracts, If merchants want workers to receive high wages from producing goods for the government, then some controls must be enforced. < O'" O"-— Perhaps, some of the people in this country have made a serious mistake. President Eisenhower had never been a church member, and joined only after he was dected Persident, joining the one closest to the White House for convenience. He attends when not playing golf. So far he’s been in office only one month of a second term and has invited Communist Tito here, wined and dined all the heathen Arabs he could attract here. and offered up a doctrine* to Congress to authorize him to send American boys to the Middle East to fight over oil. Containing Communism is very important, but a Christian, approach is the answer. o ' 'o——Republican governor Harold Handley is asking that each of us ’Contribute 2 more cents for every gallon of gasoline we buy for our passenger cars to help build transcontinental highways across the state. There is presently seven cents tax on every ■ gallon we buy. Four of this is , . MAmWlte Unite* t States definitely needs good transcontinental highways. It neeßb them for military purposes, and™so that trucks, buses, and other carriers can make the trip in better time. Also, when workers and businessmen get their annual two week vacation, they -occasionally have enough money MP left to take a long trip, two or three times in a lifetime. It would seem that the Republicans who control the legislature would spend their time better finding a wag .to tax those who desire and us« transcontinental highways meat to pay most of the cost, raAer than argue about the time question. —f- 1 .'.L

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** WKJG-TV (Channel 33) TUESDAY Evening . . 4:oo—Gatesway to Sport* 4:ls—Jac ft Gray, News 6?lfc—The Weatherman , Souther* 7:3o—Jonathan Winter* 7:4S—NBC New* B:oo—Th* Bi* SurpriN B:3o—Noah’s Ark , 9:oo—Jan* Wyrnan' 9:30 —Kaiser Aluminum Hour 10:30—IHgtayay Patrol 11:00—New* and Weather c„..v Wn»TSBDAV Morning 7:00 —Today B:ss—Faith to Live By 9:00 —Liberate 9:3o—Janet Dean 10:00—Home 10:25—window la Home 19:30 —•Home 11:00 —The Price is Right 11:30—Truth or Consequence* A fteranon 12:00—News 12:10 —The W’eatherman 12:15—Farms and Farming 12 30—It Could &« You 4 ;»o^ll*atar < Bev ue“s' 4:45 —Here's Charlie s:oo—Csrtoon Bxaresg s:ls—The Tex Maloy ShoV e'-OO—Sateaway to Sport* 4:ls—Naw* . 4:2s—Ken Ke vendor* 4:39—Kit Carson 7:M—CoAeThree 7:80— 7:45—-NIBC New* SSSJ’b... 10:20—Crunch and De* 11:00—The New* and Weather 11:35—«nort* Today 11 >2<i—"TlWt s My Mau”

. Local merchants should be pleased to know that Democratic Senator Thomas C. Hennings, Jr. of Missouri, has introduced a bill that will provide for the release of surplus goods, not through a Federal agency, but through local merchants. The Hennings bill, Senate bill 1005, provides for issuing food and fiber certificates worth *lO a month to recipients' of public assistance, and certain others who need It. It plans to improve dietary standards, reduce agricultural surpluses, and increase the buying power of our poorest citizens. Senator Hennings said, ’ Ours is a land of plenty. Yet in our country millions of aged, jobless, dependent children, and disabled people suffer from dietary insufficiencies. I know that the concept of a food-stamp plan has great support in the Senate, and I am hopeful that we shall be able to enact such a measure during the present session of Congress.” o A question asked of Senator Eichhorn Saturday night was by county assessor Walter Koos was, ‘‘Why doesn’t the state appoint a commission to regulate the price of gasoline in Indiana, so that the price would not vary from 28.9 cents near the Ohio river, where there are no refineries) to 31.9 cents in Lake county (where the refineries are)? The problem, of course, is almost too big for even the federal government. Democratic Representative Charles A. Vanik, of Ohio, touched on - the question before Congress recently. i* He pointed out that on February 6 President Eisenhower had a state dinner for heathen King Saud of Arabia and 16 members of his official family, and other men, only oil men, to be exact. He listed two paragraphs of names which included the heads of all the big oil companies in the United States, and some of their bankers. He concluded, “In between niblets of beef tenderloin and savarin, the boys probably discussed ways and means of keeping the King solid on his throne, to insure that a renegotiation of his oil royalty contracts with American financial interests need not occur.

PROGRAMS (Central Daylight Time) 4

WINT - TV (Channel 15) „ , TUESDAY Brewing 6:oo—Heart of the City 4:3o—Th* News, Hickox 4:4o—Sports Extra B:Bo—The Brother* 9:00—To Tell the Truth 9:3o—<All-Star Theater 10:00—864,000 Question 10:30—I Led Three Lives 11:00—Orient Express . 11:30—Late News . WEDNESDAY Morning 7:00—Good Morning J : ?0 —Captain Kangaroo »:00—My Little Margie * : ?o— 'Star* in the Morning 10:00—Garry Moore JO:30 —Arthur Godfrey Tim* 11:30—Strike It Rich 12:00—A’aliant Jjaiy 12:15—Love of Life 12:30—Search for Tomorrow 12:45—Guiding Light * 1:00—CBS News 1:10—Open House I:3o—As the World Turn* 2:oo—Our Miss Brook* 2:3o—House Party iOpSa&S? ’ iifcSs Evening 4:oo—The Whistler S : ?o— (The New*, Hickox 6:4o—Sports Extra, Grossman 6:4»—Douglas Edwards 7:oo—Giant Step 7:3o—Disneyland SL i * n £?..„ Ii ' lction Theater 9:oo—The Millionaire 9:3o—l've Got A Secret .10:00—L.S. Steel Hour IltOO-JFabian of Scotland Yard 11:30—Late News MOVIES ADAMS “Seventh Cavalry” Tues. and Wed. at ( b>o; 9: ...

I 20 Years Ago Today Feb. 12. 1937 —for the fifteenth straight year, French Quinn, Decatur abstractor, delivers Lincoln day address at Decatur high school chapel exercise. Jimmie Everett, eight year old son of Mr. and Mrs. James Everett, Pleasant Mills badly injured when struck by an auto. Peter B. Lehman toastmasters annual farmers dinner at Geneva high school. Capacity crowd attends. County assessor Ernest Worthman announces there will be no re-assessment of real this year. Lawrence Anspaugh is named president of Evangelical Christian Endeavor Society. Food Tips Offered -■ By Nutrition Expert This is the time of the year when it takes planning and imagination to keep the family interested in vegetables, Miss Lois Oberhelman, extension nutrition specialist at Purdue University, reminds homemakers. With variety limited, wise cooks turn to new and different methods of preparation to keep appetite appeal high. Canned and frozen vegetables are particularly easy to prepare in different ways because of the short cooking time they need. Vegetable soup is a good choice for cold Weather meals and can be made from almost any vegetable a homemaker happens to have on hand. For a cream soup, add equal parts of mashed or strained vegetables to a thin white sauce. To make soup with meat stock, combine vegetables in any proportion desired. Another dish for hearty appetites is scalloped vegetables. Use two cups of vegetables to one cup of medium white sauce and arrange in alternate layers in a baking dish. Cover with buttered crumbs and bake in a moderate ovdn. A Combination of vegetables may be scalloped, or eggs, meat or cheese can be added to make a good one-dish meal combination. Vegetables such as peas, carrots, onions and potatoes take in a new life when served with a smooth, well-seasoned cream sauce. To make the sauce, allow two tablespoons each of flour and fat to each cup of milk or combination of milk and vegetable juice. Season to taste. Two to four ounces of grated or diced cheese added to the sauce turns it into cheese sauce for cauliflower, broccoli or asparagus, in addition to the vegetables already named. Vegetable souflles are made by adding beaten egg yokes and vegetable pulp to a thick white sauce and folding ta beaten egg whites. Bake in a slow oven until set and serve at once. Carrots, sweet potatoes and parsnips are ideal vegetables for glazing. Cut the partially cooked vegetables lengthwise and {dace in a baking dish. Pour over the vegetable a syrup made of onehalf cup each of white sugar, brown sugar and water. Add two tablespoons butter and bake in a moderate oven. WRONG MAN NORTHAMPTON, Mass (W — A man went to jail here because, posing as a state trooper, he stopped a motorist for spedeing. The motorist proved to be State Trooper Johr H. Driscoll. Trad', in a good town — Decatur 76th Anniversary k NATURAL REST j » MATTRESS Year after year... REGULARLY SOLD FOR $ 59 50 Once again drastically reduced to SOQ9S UHRICK BROS. “Complete Home Furnishings”

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, IWBCATUR, INDIANA

' New Step To Ban U.S. Competition I Review Is Asked By Head Os Budget 1 WASHINGTON (UP)—President ’ Eisenhower Monday night ordered another step in the administra- , tion's drive to get the government out of competition with private in- ' dustry. At the direction of the President, Budget Director Percival Brundage i requested all government departments and agencies to evaluate ' their commercial and industrial , activities with a view toward dropping as many as possible. Reports on the review, an expansion of a continuing administration study of the problem, are due by April 15. The Budget Bureau said a special time schedule will be set for the Defense Department. Brundage said the new order is based on administration policy that “the federal government will not start or carry on any com-mercial-industrial activity to provide a service or product for its own use if such product or service can be procured from private enterprise through ordinary business channels.” “Exceptions to this policy,” he said, "shall be made by the head of the agency only where it is clearly demonstrated in each case that it is not in the public interest to procure such product or service from private enterprise.” A DOG’S LIFE PORTLAND. Me. (ffl — Mr and Mrs. John Richards were somewhat surprised when their missing German shepherd, Rinny, arrived home in a taxicab. It seems that a woman had noticed a number oo the dog’s collar, obtained the address of the Richards family, and sent Rinny home by cab. The average family car is driven 7,800 miles a year.

V Ji \ B ■nr uperss holiday coupe H’» tht moat exciting engine development since the first Rocket was launched I Engineers have dreamed for of an engine smooth, of the Rocket-—with the fuel that combined exceptional’horsepower and economy of dual-jet carburetion and a 10-to-l * torque potential with outstanding fuel economy compression ratio. But beyond all this there’s in normal operation. The first big step towards a "second stage’’ in J-2 operation to meet the this goal came from Oldsmobile when the first exceptional driving situation. Just open the Rocket Engine ushered in the modern high- accelerator beyond the % point and two addicompression era. tional carburetors automatically jet into action. And today , o| ds ig ready wit h the new J-2 There’s an instant boost in torque and power. TR , FU«.MC T , °M w«.«RV« MWIR! Rocket .s You’ll find that'in operation, it’s YouU appreciate the immediate response as I ' at a modest extra cost. Try it! a»74* r-«o «<* »«*•» •** 300 .w «>«» m* m Me; c,v. OI—DSiVIOBI i-E II YOU CAN COUNT ON "RID CARPIT” TRIATMINT AT YOUR OLDSMOBILE QUALITY DEALER'S I > ( ZINTSMASTER MOTORS ™’ - •** s,,tE,s pIiONE 3-2003 BE OLDSMOBILCS GUEST FOR "THE TV IMMY NOMINATIONS ALL-STAR SHOW” • NBC-TV • SAT. EVE., FEB. 16! * I ?

Study Shows Cows Have Taste Choices Dairy cows have highly developed taste preference in grass silage and will consume it on this basis. This is a conclusion shown by a recent feeding experiment at Purdue University involving nine cows and three different grass silages. - Carl Noiler, dairy scientist at Purdue, reporting on the study, points out that the silages were made from the same field, cut at the same stage of maturity and stored in upright silos. One silage was made with a chopper and eight pounds of sodium metabisulfite were added per ton. The other two were cut with a flail-type harvester. Metabisulfite was added to one and no preservative was added to the other. Purdue dairymen rated the silages which had metabisulfite added as better than the one to which no preservative was added. Each cow was fed all she would consume of each silage for a given period and then switched to another. No grain was fed. The cows consumed five pounds more ol the best silage daily than of the second best and 14 pounds more of the best than the poorest silage, Noiler reports. “The difference in consumption between the poorest and the best silage was enough to provide the necessary energy for about six pounds of milk dally," he says. Noiler stresses tfiat the Silages were made from the same initial material, but treated differently at the time of harvest. The difference in consumption of silage was due to different fermentations taking place in the silos. “There is no better measure of feed value than how well the cow likes it and how she will produce on it,” he points out. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad, it Lrings results.

Oil Furnace Blast Takes Life Os Man RICHMOND, Ind. iff) — Lawrence Harris, 28, burned to death early today when an oil stove ex-

hs Cherry festival jk -~g|| Cherry Nut CHERRY special SUNDAE ICE CREAM I KEO IDE CREAM ROLL ~ M.AC M GALLON A**»-*»\ Once you taste Equity Ice Wjte, -, *-*) SK L' : ". , Special! Cream, you’ll know why we're '*’SEjg||P Money Savior growing. Yes. just a taste of Price! mouth-watering Equity's Ice A real “glamor” dessert — >»* * Cream, and you won’t be satisi Equity’s Cherry Nut Sundae Ice fled with anything less. Folks Cream Roll. Delicious Equity — throughout the area have provCherry Ice Cream, roUed Ih v„l ed it for themselves. You can crunchy mixed nuts. Truly a For i our Valentine join the growing crowd of distinctive dessert for anyecca- Heart Center folk? who prefer Equity’s Ice sien. Try one today—you 11 love Cream. Try some today and It. ICe Vream enjoy the best in fine ice cream. \ \ \ ! Brick Quart You won't want to miss this lus- . \OF Oxi z A Valentine’s Day treat—a Ins- clous tasting flavor of the month—jy \ J Jr' /Z / cious Equity Vanilla Ice Cream deliciously different Equity CherBrick with a Red lee Cream ry lee Cream. We took bright red V>e, Heart center. Say ‘Be My Vai- Northern grown cherries, picked entine” with at the peak of their flavor and / this new and blended them into oui; own velvety • C ' different taste smooth vaniila ice cream. to** l - Cherry Sundae Al All Eqyhy Top of ISLI£ Ohio Dairy Stores nilla Ice Cream, cov151 N. 2nd Decatur, Ind. ered with gobs of lusEquity Top of Ohio Longhorn Cheese ;)rv Bring the whole family Properly aged to bring oui the finest flavor. Mild and meUow. Serve and enjoy this favorite It with pride to your family and guests. Everyone loves a piece of dessert often. You’ll really good longhorn Cheese. Once you try Equity Top of Ohio Long- love it. : horn Cheese, you’ll know you’re tasting the finest. ■*O<* Special « Pound Reg. 25c AJV

plosion set fire to fils house. | Two other men who shared the home with Harris escaped the flames. Fire chief Leslie Williams said apparently the wrong fuel was

TUESDAY

(used in the stove touching off an explosion in the zoom where Har- ' ris slept. Three fire companies were called to the scene to battle the blaze. i