Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 178, Decatur, Adams County, 30 July 1957 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Mann Plans Appeal Os Township Case Trustee Os Wabash Township To Appeal L. A. "Gus” Mann, trustee of Wabash township, has announced his intentions of carrying the Wabash-Monroe township line dispute to a higher court. Mann recently lost a writ of mandamus suit in the Adam*circuit court when Judge Myles F. Parrish refused to grant tne writ. All costs of the action were assessed against Wabash township, and Parrish ruled that the pres-| TOMORROW is TOT’S DAY ’ AT Edward's Studio

PUBLIC SALE HOUSEHOLD GOODS, ANTIQUES, TOOLS, ETC. ' LOCATED:—IN CRAIG VILLE, INDIANA-5 miles East of Bluffton, Indiana on State Road No. 124, then 2 miles north on No. 301—(Sale ’ will be held at the Old School House on the Main Street*. FRIDAY NIGHT, AUGUST 2,7:00 P.M.: HOUSEHOLD GOODS:— 2 Hollywood beds, complete; mahogany 4poster bed. springs and mattress: walnut secretary; walnut coffee table: porcelain top table; kitchen cabinet; lime oak vanity chair; pedestal; foot stool; Boston rocker; 2 mattress pads; music rack; electric mangle ironer, in good condition; Princess dresser; table; Norge oil space heater; quilting frames: pressure cooker, large size; electric light fixtures; table; ton air conditioner, in good condition; several floor lamps: drapes; 2 baskets; toaster; grass rug; green canopy; bed spreads: comforts; pillows; golf clubs; dishes; utensils: other household goods not mentioned. ANTIQUES:— MarbIe top commode; blue base rocker; 2 Boston rockers; light teakwood stand; rocker; round table; spinning wheel; painted lamp shade; plate rack; Beleek vase, (Ireland); English toilet set, complete: many dishes and miscellaneous Antique pieces not mentioned. GARDEN TRACTOR—SMALL TOOLS, ETC.— Bob Cat 4 H.P. garden tractor, complete with cultivators: breaking plow; spade lug wheels; 30” buzz saw attachment; Bolen Huski, 4 H.P. garden tractor with cultivators & disc; power weed mower; Brock 1-wheel garden tractor: 30" Wood lathe with motor and stand; 2 sets wood turning tools; work bench: new 18 ft - ladder: Mull electric drill; 1000 lb. platform scale; 100’ of 48" wire netting; W new. Black & Decker drill; many wrenches; drills, small hand tools; steel-wood bits; mahogany gun case with glass doors, new; 12-2, new Romex wire; electric switches; switch plates; hundreds of miscellaneous articles not mentioned. Antiques and some furniture consigned by Mrs. D. E. Martin. TERMS—CASH. Not responsible for accidents. Lunch will be served on grounds. RAYMOND AKER, Owner Ellenberger Bros., Auctioneers Farmers & Merchants Bank, Clerk Herman Strahm. Auctioneer (

" * Closeout Sale! Complete Line of . . . z MSSB INSIDE and OUTSIDE PAINT, PSSSS) ’ GIFTS and GARDEN WARE! . rSr . - Must Sall Because of Other Easiness Interests! uHtf &*aßg§s* —— ALL NEW STOCK! NOT A CLEARANCE! —— — NOTICE ! EVERYTHING WILL SELL FOR I "ALE CONTRACTORS ON and PAINTERS /f| A THE TONIGHT You Can Pay AT Y DOLLAR And Continues More But You g Until AU Can’t Buy r» * ' - stock b So,dl Better I EXAMPLE:— Regular NOW Dutch Standard One Coat White . $7.59 $5.32 . ■' Dutch Standard Analyzed House and Trim . 6.79 4.75 DIIV £TAD | Country Estate White — Ideal for Farm Use 4.69 3.29 D|| I VlUi ■ Wall Charm Satin Latex 6.19 4.34 Alkyd Flat Wallx 5.90 4.20 NAU| CUAD I Semi g,OBS Enamel 6.85 1.79 lIVII VllVi ■ Porch and Floor Enamel ; r __ 6.79 4.75 and CAU E I PAINT BRUSHES, All Sizes from 7c up. SAVE vHWfa ■ All Other Brushes and Sandries Reduced Accordingly! -7- I Reg. ; NOW' S LO ° Gifts — Now --. *7O L I | I 1 'l '1 I 1 |g J 2.00 Gifts—Now __ 1.40 fW V s SH «L < Bird Ba,hs * 395 $2 75 3.00 Gifts—Now 2.10 ' CS* IPF 8 Flamingoes, Pair 5.95 4.20 00 Gifts—Now 2.80 |||tP 1 Wall Plaques 4.45 3.10 5.00 Gifts—Now 3.50 A j£| T. V. Lamps 6.95 4.85 ETC. WSOiKMWW CASH and CARRY Riiy's Pain! &Gift SliirrHU cTnDC iiniiDQ* Monday through Friday, 12 Noon tin Bp. m. STURE HuUKd. SATURDAY 9:00 A. M. till 5:00 P. M. ■ ■

ent county auditor. Edward Jaberg, and all future auditors, are not to transfer parcels of land in Wabash township into Monroe township, following their I annexation into the city of Berne. In the original mandamus suit ' filed against Jaberg and against Monroe township. Mann charged that the transferring of Wabash township property into Monroe civil township, robbed Wabash township of considerable assessed valuation. The cose was filed May 29. started Ju-ite 8, continued to June 26. again continued to July 1, tried for three days, and then rested until the final decision was announced by Parrish July 20. If you have sumetning to sell or ' rooms tor rent, try a Democrat , Want Ad, it brings results.

Prisoners Relate Cellmate Murder Murder Charges On Pair Os Prisoners REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (UPI- - pair of young prisoners accused of murdering a cellmate in a weird ' kangaroo court" execution explained today they were "merely havin' some fun. man.” "It was just a game, man,” said Jose yeitenheimer, 19, who acted as “prosecutor” in last Friday’s trial that resulted 24 hours later in the strangling of Robert Young, a 38-year-old machinist. Yeitenheimer was charged Monday with murder, along with Dan Howard, 18, a narcotics user who has “born to hate cops" tattooed across his abdomen, and Vern C. ' Williams, 20. The execution took place in a cell in the San Mateo County jail. Young was serving a 10-day sentence for vagrancy. The others were in on various felony charges. “You know, man, we were just havin’ some fun,” said Howard, who served as “judge” in the trial. “We didn’t mean to kill him ” Police Chief William Faulstich I said the three “have no more re- 1 morse than if they’d killed a fly.” Three other men who acted as | “jurors" in the trial were Walter I White, 22, Alfred Martinez, 21, and Ernest Lopez, 20. They said they hid their faces under their blankets to avoid seeing Young get strangled. “It was terrible," Martinez said. "It made me sick and I pulled my < blanket over my head.” < Young incurred the hospitality of ] his cellmates apparently because he considered them “criminals” . and beneath his notice. On many ‘ occasions, he did not reply to their ‘ jibes. ( - Coroner Paul B. Jensen suggested that Young did not reply simply because he was hard of hearing. • His hearing aid was in the jail safe with his other personal effects. After being found guilty at his “trial,” Young’s cellmates strung , him to the top cell bar with a ( blanket and pushed him off a , bunk. His 170-pound weight ripped j the blanket This was Friday night. , During the next day, deputies . said Yeitenheimer engaged in “baseball practice,” hurling tin cups at Young. On Saturday night Howard and i Yeitenheimer took turns choking < Young while Williams held his arms, deputies said. Then they : tried to make it look as though ; Young had committed suicide. However, guards were suspicious 1 and the story came to light Sun- ] day. i

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VICTOR BALTZELL and his nephew, Jerry Sharp, of St. Mary’s, 0., tie together the fencing for the show ring for the sheep and swine show at the Adams county 4-H fair. Behind the post is another helper, Dan Kauffman, and Ronald Ray, with Ronald Habegger holding the pliers. The show tent was set up Monday afternoon, just before the sheep tent was put up, Quite a few interested men and boys from all parW of the county pitched in to get the work done.—(Staff Photo)

Use Os Radioactive Pills Is Predicted Pills Will Aid In Disease Diagnosis HAZLETON, Pa. (UP*—Atomic Commissioner Willard F. Libby today predicted use of "radioactive pills” for diagnosis of disease. A radioactive sugar pill, for example, would “furnish an easy and particularly illuminating way” of diagnosing certain ills involving the body's use of sugarLibby forecast the radioactive pill in a speech at the opening of the first privately owned plant for large-scale manufacture of beryllium Corp. The atomic commissioner said use of radioactive materials (radioisotopes) in industry, agriculture and medicine is mushrooming. They are used as gauges, tracers, drugs, chemical agents and flaw detectors. These materials, produced as byproducts of the atomic energy project, already account for savings of 500 million dollars in agriculture and industry alone. Libby said: Their cost to the government is only three million dollars. Three years from now. he sai<L the savings will be five billion doF lars a year and the cost to hte government 20 million dollars. ,

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TATZUMBIE DUPEA Is shown M she celebrated her 108th birthday at her home in Los Angeles. She told reporters that she spends most of her time waiting to be called as an extra for the movies. The centenarian said she lived 25 years in Death Valley with her grandmother during the Indian fighting of the mid10th century. _ (Internationa!*

I Authority On Drugs Warns Auto Drivers• Pills Can Be As Dangerous As Drink I By DELOS SMITH United Press Science Editor NEW YORK (UP) -Pills as well I as alcohol can make unsafe autoJ mobile drivers out of otherwise reI liable ones, an authority on drugs said in urging doctors to warn their patients — when necessary—“against driving while under medication.'* I Dr. W. JR. Camp, professor of [ pharmacology. University of Illinois School of Medicine, put barbiturates at the head of the list of drugs which can decrease the ' ability to drive safely. Barbitur- > ates are commonly prescirbed as sleeping pills. I, This drug has “an action closely . paralleling that of alcohol — pure . depression (of the central nervous . system,) and often leaving a hangI over,” he said. , “Many patients are on a daily diet of barbiturates with resulting - laziness in thought, forgetfulness, and slowing of reflexes. There may even be signs and symptoms of , inebriation, depending on dosage, but without the aroma of alcohol and of course with a negative breath-alcohol test.” Breed Obituaries Should a person has had i barbiturates, take a drink “the effect of the two substances is at least additive” he continued—and it may be that one will greatly multiply the effect of the other. For his money, he said, “barbiturates breed too many obituaries.” . .2 . Anti - histimines. commonly prescribed for allergic conditions, also depress and add to “a fatigued and perhaps disconsolate state resulting from the alergy.” Pharmacological science has recognized this by adding mild stimulants to antihistimines. But “use of stimulating drugs is also of concern, since over-dosages of amphetamine and similar substances are apt to affect a highly reactive state in which mental, processes and reflexes may be grossly disturbed,” he continued in the technical journal. Post-Grad-uate Medicine “One might also question the wisdom of a person driving while; he is taking so-called tranqulizing agents, which are not without side | actions and are known to produce. a ‘don't give a damn’ attitude.” Other Dangerous Drugs ■ i His point was that “while alcohol is a serious problem” in “this use-' less slaughter” resulting from au- I tomobile accidents, “we should not | forget other drugs.” In some ways,’ he said, alcohol is not the most' dangerous drug potentially in the " driver because “the effects of over indulgence are usually obvious,” which is not so of the other drugs. “Many persons, of their own vo- | lition. or on advice of a physician, are taking drugs which have a definite effect on the central nervous system,” he said. “We need not Stress that users of./ 1 marihuana, ; morphone, heroin or cocaine have no business driving a car, but insufficient thought has been given to the effect of more commonly used drugs.” He didn't think that all the efforts to educate the public on the dangers of mixing drinking' and driving, were getting very far, since the “use of alcoholic drinks 'sis so common." The public seems indifferent, and “drinkers continue to drive, and drivers to drink, and with an indifference that endangers themselves and others.” STRATTON TO GIVE (Cnntlnned from Pnice One) muted hds 99-year sentence to 85 years. Leopold was 19 and Loeb 18 on May 21, 1924, when they lured their 14-year-old victim into an automobile, killed him and threw ' his body inot a culvert. The two murderers were captured when a pair of eyeglasses found near the body was traced to Leopold. The two youths were spared

PHILCO 1 H.P. AIR CONDITIONER COOLS 685 Sq. Ft. of FLOOR ■ I in HU HI : , Or ThJ(j Much \ 7T Area \ 1 oionoow <*■ iiii _ lecxii 1 * 30 X 24 '1 & W ci I g -Jr |l 'T?!3& u .*"|* 1 J 1 I AIR CONDITION J 3 NOMTAT THIS — LOW PRICE I NOW JUST $249.95 FOR A FULL 1 TON UNIT! Not a 3 / 4 or y 2 Tor! SMALL DOWN PAYMENT—ONLY $3.00 A WEEK. ALL INSTALLATIONS and SERVICE GUARANTEED Cl HEATING — PLUMBING njMktCWHWV AIR CONDITIONING and 209 N. 13th St. Phone 3-3316 APPLIANCES ||l . OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS TIIX 0:00

from the electric chair, largely through the persuasiveness of their defense lawyer, the famed Clarence Darrow. The two Young killers had plotted their “perfect” crime for several weeks before carrying it out for a "thrill.” Weather Postpones 11th Nuclear Blast LAS VEGAS Nev. (UP) - Adverse wind conditions have forced the Atomic Energy Commission to call a 24-hour postponement of the 11th nuclear blast in its summer test series at the Nevada proving groundScientists Monday rescheduled

3 BEDROOM HOME at AUCTION FRIDAY EVENING, AUGUST 9 at 6:30 P. M. LOCATED at 133 South Hth Street, Decatur, Indiana. IMPROVEMENTS:— Good frame house with basement. Living room, dining room, family room, kitchen with sink, bedroom with closet and bath on first floor, 2 bedrooms with closets on second floor, enclosed back porch, forced air furnace, gas water heater, city water. Barn on back of lot with garage space and storage. Don’t miss this sale if you are interested in a medium to low priced home which is well located and will make an ideal family home or rental. Close to grocery and athletic field. For inspection or further information call Mel Liechty, Auctioneer, Decatur Phong 6-6354. Possession upon final payment of purchase price. * Sold subject to approval of Adams County Circuit Court. TERMS—2S% day of sale, balance upon delivery of Guardian’s Deed and Merchantable Abstract of Title brought down to date of sale. Richard Keller and Leia Ludy, Guardian for DONALD KELLER Sale conducted by MEL’S REALTY AUCTION CO., Berne. Indiana Mel Liechty," Auctioneer Howard Baumgartner. Attorney Miz Lehman—Auctioneer. 30 2 8

REPAIR PROBLEMS???? KT as 'IBjmdMMUmMM*' _' "UNI Do It Yourself . and E ENOUGH DM W E for your VACATION! Mufflers Tail Pipes Batteries Tires FOR Generators rvn I < — - - Starter Motors Fuel Pumps POPULAR Water Pumps rWWSMI Brake Shoes CARS Master Cylinders Voltage Regulators Fan Belts and other items SHOP! COMPARE! -- —for QUALITY and PRICE — AT — rz.

TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1957

the shot for 4:45 a.m. p.d.t. Wednesday. They said winds would have carried a narrow strip of fallout over a temporary road construction camp 40 miles from where the device is to be detonated from a 500foot tower. Denies Connection With Five Slayings LAPORTE (UP) — An admitted filling station robber insisted today he had no connection with five slayings in New Mexico and California. State Police Det Sgt. Frank Wallace said he asked those states for more information as a basis for questioning George L. Hamilton, 22, Sacremento, Calif.