Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 263, Decatur, Adams County, 7 November 1957 — Page 15

THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 7. 1957

ffIMM ■|l - ' ■ stt - Jt ' -^■'“W JH "-' *v T * Ifi 'MUmß#’’ "' l ' f ‘ *' r ' %> '- e - ' f ’?z£?'i's^M :; '> PERSONS WHO MADE the Erie-Democrat sponsored trip to New York last August met October 29 at the shelter house in Hanna-Nuttman park for a Halloween party. Mrs. 0. K. Baker, Mrs. Austin Merriman, and Mrs. Elmer Beer were in charge of arrangements. A marshmallow and wiener roast, and games were enjoyed. Pictured above are part of the group, including, from left to right, Elmer Beer, Mrs. Leo King, Mrs. Clara Bowman, Mrs. 0. K. Baker, Mrs. Austin Merriman, Mrs. Nellie Krumann, Mrs. Elmer Beer, Tommie Eichhorn, Mrs. Charles Lobsiger, Mrs. H. 0. Burgett, and Mrs. Rachel Eichhorn. Not pictured but present were Leo King, Austin Merriman, and 0. K. Baker.—(Picture by Baker)

SCHOOL REPORTER Joyce Kirchner, and Sue Miller. Thanks, kids, for helping make the play a really big success. —M.H.S.— Honors were brought to MHS last Thursday night when the band won second place in the Halloween parade. This year was the second year for the showing of the MHS band in the parade. Looking very slick in their new black and gold uniforms, the band gave a splendid showing under the expert direction of Darrell Gerig. Really keen going, band. Keep up the wonderful work. • —M.H.S.— The November meeting of PTA was held Tuesday, November 5, at the Monmouth school. An interesting, educational and informative

Public Auction HOME—PERSONAL PROPERTY—EXTRA LOT THE SARAH SCHNITZ ESTATE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9,1:30 P.M. 1134 W. MADISON STREET, DECATUR, INDIANA This home consists of five rooms on the first floor, two rooms on the second floor, small basement. It is on a foundation and is in good repair, but not modern. The lot is 50 x 220 feet with a tool shed on the rear. If you want a moderate priced home in the west side of Decatur close to Worthman play grounds and the Lutheran Church, let us show this one to you. It can be inspected at anytime, if you will contact the auctioneers. Also to be sold at the same time, is a vacant lot next door which is 50 x 220 feet. PERSONAL PROPERTY: 3 Pc. Living Room Suite; Nearly New Studio Couch; 4 - 9x12 Rugs; Radio; Victrola; Humidor; Nearly new Duo Therm Space Heater; Rockers; Library Table; Lamps; 3 Complete Beds; 3 Dressers; Dining Room Suite, 6 chairs; Glider; White Sewing Machine; Buffet; Refrigerator; Combination Gas and Coal stove; 3 Kitchen Cupboards; Kitchen Table with 5 chairs; Kitchen Step Stool; Washing Machine; Tubs; Kitchen Metal Unit; Elec. Clock; Pictures; Mirrors; Garden Tools: Hose; Lawn Mower; Stepladder; Pots, Pans and other misc. articles. TERMS—ReaI Estate, 20% Cash on day of auction, balance upon delivery of Marketable Title. Personal Property—Cash. WILHELMINA K. BEETH, Executrix of the Sarah Schnitz Estate Gerald Strickler, D. S. Blair—Auctioneers C. W. Kent, Sales Mgr. Severin H. Sehurger, Attorney Everett Faulkner, Clerk Sale Conducted by The Kent Realty & Auction Co. Decatur, Indiana Phone 3-3390 Not responsible for accidents. 26 2 4 7

for WORK... for SPORTS £ wear 5 BROTHER matching Z/ shirt and pants tailored In I .I STEVENS ! Hg twist tw,ll Deita Fini » hed viM. I J heavy, long-wearing quality fabric so easy I QsA to launder. Sanforized for permanent fit, \ \ // vat-dyed for color fastness. /> / Matching set full cut for ease and com- /< / 11 \ \ fort can double as a work uniform or //f / II ll leisure outfit. The shirt is sure to stay //> / •' Il ’d your trousers and never pull out be111 l* ’ I cause of its exclusive FLEXSLEEVE || 1 J I * feature. Rugged construction through- || | . 1 I SET out .. . Dap pockets with pencil button- || I1 A | holes, non-rip sleeve facings, non-twist U J A sleeve, and interlined collar . . guar■jv ZA antees long wear. Pants have serged Asm IRi scams, 19 bartacks at points of strain, |H Hi. • Silver Grey and genuine 2.50 weight boat sail pockHu V■. Spr “ Ce Cr ” n 6-oz. Shirt, size 14-20 .... $2.98 IV H Ar l OrCC Blue B'/i-oz. Papts, size 29-50 .. $3.69 Unlined Jgcket $3.98 Lined Jacket __ $5.95 Cap._79c BROTHER Nowhere but . ARMY TWILL SET jijiiiiuimv $5.47 -jlllilKWllllfc Matched set In lighter wight fabric has all the special features that make - 5 BROTHER uniforms comfortable and MULLIGAN, Mgr, long wearing Khaki or dm k grey r OPEN: FRI. & SAT. NIGHTS TILL 9

program was presented by Paul Erdei a missionary from Esmeraldas, Ecuador, South America. Erdei has been a substitute teacher several times this year at the school. Slides were shown along with the lecture dealing with the yearly theme, ‘'Let’s appreciate our schools.” Special music was presented by the second grade. —M.H.S.Hey all you basketball Uns. remember that the sale of season tickets is going on right now and will continue until November 15, MHS’s first home game. The tickets may also be purchased that evening at the game. The prices of the tickets are $3.75 for adults and SI.BO for students. If you haven't purchased your season ticket yet, get on the ole ball and pull

out that $3.75 or SI.BO for those MHS tickets. —M.H.S.— Last Friday, November 1, a special assembly program was presented to grades 4 through 12. The topic was “Juvenile delinquency, everyone's problem.” The program was presented to the student body by Jack Boggs, of-Stock-port, Ohio, Accompanying his lecture was a silent picture revealing facts about the Ohio penitentiary, those who work there, and those who stay there. Afterwards a discussion was held and many questions were asked, such as, “How old must a person be to be admitted?” The answer was, 'Old enough to know right from wrong." Guess somebody was getting worried. —M.H.S.— Bev Stevens, the candidate for girls* -state this past summer, was the speaker at the American Legion Auxiliary recently, she talked for approximately 10 minutes to the 20 women present. Whew, a 10 minute speech, imagine that. —M.H.S.— Last Monday night the Bth grade had their first class party after school. Games were played and refreshments were served. A nice time was enjoyed by all. A thanks’’ goes out to Jim Arnold for chaperoning this- party. (By Helen Reppert) —M.H.S.— Well, the time for Constitution speeches is here once again. The speech students have been collecting ideas on what phase of the constitution they wish to discuss. The search is on for interesting and worthwhile background material for this greatest American document. See you at toe library —seniors!! —M.H.S.— The success made In any walk of life is measured exactly by toe amount of hard work put into it. The lowliest work is made noble if done with high motives. Genius may conceive, but labor must consummate. — MannTrade in a good town — Decatur

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Warning On Use Os Tranquilizing Drugs Latest Warning Out To Family Doctors By DELOS SMITH United Press Science Editor NEW YORK (UP)-It takes an expert to recognize a depressed person and even experts run the risk of confusing a depressed person with an anxious one. This striking insight into people was contained in the newest warning to family doctors to go easy on giving "happy pills" to toe depressed. Dr. Frank J. Ayd Jr., wellknown psychiatric specialist of Baltimore, said toe "happy pills’* (and he included the whole family of tranquilizing drugs) were “depressants" of the sympathetic nervous system and were dangerous when given to depressed persons. A depressed person already is suffering from under-reactivity of the sympathetic system, he said, and so “to superimpose a drug which is a sympathetic depressant cftily aggravates the existing emotional depression and increases the risk of suicide." |- . Miss The Symptoms ' Yet family doctors continue to' prescribe them for people who, shouldn’t have them, he said. Ayd assumed these doctors either ■were confusing the tranquillizing drugs with the family of stimuIla ting drugs, or didn’t recognize I depression when they saw it. I If it were the latter, it was understandable, he said. Depressions are hard io recognize in other people although they are “among the most common Illnesses” the general medical man sees. One reason is that, toe depressed person has at least one set. of engaging physical symptoms when he goes to a doctor and will, the chances are, try to hide his depression. Nevertheless "everything about his appearance and behavior Suggests otherwise,” Ayd said in "Current Medical Digest”. “He may force himself to talk, not to cry, to smile, to appear cheerful, yet he walks slowly, reacts sluggishly and appears dull and lacking in vitality. During an interview it is evident that his thinking is retarded as well.” Anxious persons also go to doctors with sets of physical symptoms which will also prove unjustified when investigation turns up no bodily causes for them. These anxious persons can be helped by “happy pills” whereas the depressed are harmed. So the two must be told apart. ; -- Must Study Maode Look at moods. Ayd said. In lone the mood is primarily depressed, and anyiety is secondlary. In toe other, anxiety is outstanding and depression is secondary. The depressed usually are reluctant to talk about their symptoms but the anxious are eager to talk about them. The depressed person will be critical of himself and blame himself but the anxious person will think he's an all right Joe and blame other people. The depressed person has lost his interests and no matter what is happening, he pays very little attention to what goes on around him. But toe anxious person usually hangs onto his interests and he responds to what happens around him. The depressed person feels worse In the morning; toe anxious person, in toe evening. The depressed person can be helped by proper treatment, Ayd said, but he is not going to be helped if he is told: “There is , nothing really wrong with you. Get a hold on yourself. Stop worrying. Get a hobby. Go out more. You have to cure yourself." “Such platitudes,* 1 Ayd continued. “are a grave injustice to toe patient and an admission to medical ignorance. It causes relatives to pressure toe patient to attempt to do things which be is i unable to do. This increases his feelings of inadequacy and hope-: lessness." Trade in a good tow — Decatur

PLOWING Demonstration] ALL MY SATURDAY, ROD. 9 At The W- A. PRESDORF and FLOYD ENGLE Farm 4 Miles West of Coppess Corner then ft Mile South err THE NEW ALLISCHALMERSD-17 TRACTOR 5 PLOW POWER ALSO SEE THE . DYRAMIC 014 la Aetna Affolder & Miller U. S. 27—SOUTH OF BERNE ....

Comedian Ed Wynn To Be 71 Saturday Amazing Comeback Is Credited To TV By WILLIAM EWALD United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK (UP)—This Saturday, Ed-Wynn celebrates toe 71st year of his birth. But even more important, this autumn also marks toe first anniversary of Wynn’s re-birth. "I’ll be 71,” mused Wynn, “and here I am 56 years in the business and I find myself discovered all over again. It's like being reborn, you know. Do you know how many times I've been back and forth across the country this year? Six times. Why, I’ve worked more this year than the previous three. “This renaissance — or whatever you want to call it—of Ed Wynn is a remarkable thing. I go out in the strfeet nowadays and I seem to be as popular as Jayne Mansfield. Not as pretty, of course. But it shows toe power of this medium, television.” No Requiem For Him It was a dramatic role last fall on a “Playhouse 90” production of "Requiem For A Heavyweight” that jolted Wynn back to life as ‘an entertainer. A giant of toe vaudeville stage and racUo, Wynn dropped into semi-obscu'rity after his NBC-TV show folded a few years back. ‘lt was in 1953 that my NBC show stopped," recalled Wynn, “and I didn’t work again until I did a Red Skelton show that November. Then, two months later, George Gobel. Las Vegas and another Skelton show a year or so later. But that’s not much work. “I didn't need the money, but you know it was kind of a funny feeling. That period wa s so strange. And dreadful. I started getting imaginary aches and pains in my body and the doctor would come and look at me, but of course, he couldn't find anything. “But there was also this other feeling. Inside. I'd look at myself In the third person and say—‘Ed Wynn, what has happened to him? What in the world has happened to him’’ And I’d say—‘ls that it for Ed Wynn?' You see, Ed Wynn isn’t my real name (it’s Isaiah Edwin Leopold) and I’ve always looked at him from outside.” 'On Borrowed Time* Wynn landed a small role in toe picture, “Hie Great Man," when he was feeling at his lowest. “Somehow word leaked out that I had done this one big scene in the movie in one take,” said Byun, ‘ and they asked me to do the ‘Playhouse 90’ before the picture came out. "Well, the results of that one TV role was explosive. Really explosive. Everything happened after that. It's not like my radio days, of course, when I had two body guards to protect me —that’s when I was the 'Fire Chief.’ But it’s certainly remarkable in its own way. “And I think one of toe most valuable things about it all is that it should give some pause to those who think a man's value to his society is somehow lessened when he reaches a certain age — the sort of thing that calls for the retirement of people in their 50’s and 60'$. It’s good to upset that sort of conformist thinking. “Now, look at me, almost 71 and here I’U be doing ‘On Borrowed Time' on TV. After 56 years in the business, I’ve become a dramatic actor. ‘On Borrowed Time,’” Wynn said again. And he looked sad. “That’s kind of an appropriate title.” "Well, toe results of that one ITV role was explosive. Really explosive. Everything happened aft,’er that. It’s not like my radio days, of course, when I had two Big jobs usually go to men who prove their ability to outgrow ■ smaller ones. ' There are no elevators in toe , house of success — you must toil up a step at a time.

4-H ADULT LEADERS FETED s a< ' v z H& bMBMMS- W-'■■ ■;■ v - :; W®w ■-•.v.SwwikL 'MMMEy'jEflMgfeffi,. ‘ v jSjK?‘jSisS/*.aejffl ’’ : ' iBnBK' " l ’ sW '<■■?■ - Z :K -.; .rflwXw •■ ■ fflßßrjj-./■ • • 1 ' si< ; * •<®Sfc t ' ■'■■ '' ■ & w «' <ft JH. ‘JBR iW JPH MRS. STANLEY ARNOLD, cochairman of the county 4-H council, is congratulated by the Rev. Armin C. Oldsen, publicity director of Concordia College, for her 11 years of leadership in her 4-H club in Monroe township. Mrs. Mnold was one of three persons who completed 11 years service this year, the others being Ervin Schuller, of Preble, and Hugo Boerger of Root township. Looking on during the ceremony are, from left to right. Cliff Brewer, president of the Decatur Chamber of Commerce, sponsors of the recognition banquet for all 4-H leaders; Martin Sprunger, chairman of the annual program for recognition; Rev. Oldsen; Mrs. Arnold; Harold Schwartz, co-chairman with Mrs. Arnold of the 4-H council; and Louis Jacobs, toastmaster for the dinner.—(Staff Photo)

iSIHl'' Mi |H| Ws| Irt* 1 ML ~ mi IkJDMb' WaSgg? mßp BIMI < I J#’ \ A O s exW* •- • =5 t AsS* ' ’ ■'T i 4 SPY FOUND GUILTY— Col. Rpdolf Ivanovich Abel, called Moscow’s top spy in the U. S., leaves Federal Court in Brooklyn, N, ¥., after he was found guilty on three counts of espionage. Hecouid be sentenced to death. Abel, 55, a Soviet citizen, showed no emotion as the verdict was announced. . . < eu«e X®. kkw Nolle* of Sal® at Real Estate in the Adams Circuit Court September Term, 1947 In the matter of the Katate of Sarah Sebnitz, deceased. The undersigned Executrix of the Eatate of Sarah Sehnitz, deceased, pereifant to an order of the Adams Circuit Court, will sell, the follow-)ng,<l«»‘-rlbed real estate at piibllc auct ion:“Inlot number six hundred thirty five (635) in Joseph Crabbs subdivi. •lon of Optlots Nos. 263 to 234, in Joseph Crabbe Western Addition to 4 he town, now. City of Decatur; AJ.SO. J.nlot number six ibundred thirty six (636) in Joseph Crabbs subdivision at Outlots Nos. 263 to 284 in Joseph Crabbs Western Addition to the town, now CHy of Decatur, ciaid sale to be held on the premises at 1134 W. Madison St.. Decatur, Indiana, at 1:30 .o’clock PM. on Saturday November 9. 1957 or from day,’to day thereafter until sold. TERMS: Twenty percent cash down on day of sale; Balance on delivery of deed and merchantable abstract of title. Immediate pos. session. Wilhelmina K. Reeth Executrix Reverin H. gchurger Attorney for Personal Representative Oct. 21. 31, and Nov. 7 •Q • . If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad — they bring results.

Pontiac ON FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8 .... A NEW 1958 Star Chief Catalina Will Be Presented To The “QUEEN” off The Day on Jack Bailey's “QUEEN FOR A DAY” Television Program STATION W.K.J.6.-T.V. CHANNEL 33 SEE THE BOLD NEW PONTIAC NOVEMBER 9th A1.... DECATUR SUPER SERVICE 221 WEST MONROE STREET

*- jHI ’--'' I' VjLaSk PARLEY VlEW—President Eisenhower and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan are shown at the White House during talks designed to bolster free world defenses, counter Russian scientific achievements, and figure the next play in the Turkey-Syria border situation. (International Soundphoto)

PUBLIC SALE ->-*** ' r ~ ■ ■ TQEHBn 43 —. HOLSTEIN CATTLE — 43 We will iell the following at Public Auction, located , on 'what is known as the Schafer Farm, 2 miles East of Decatur, Indiana to the Dent School, then 214 miles North (IVi miles North of Clem’s Lake) on SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1957 Twelve Noon (Fast Time) ’ 43 — HOLSTEIN CATTLE — 43 j Entire Herd Calfhood Vaccinated and Negative Eight First Calf Heifers, 4 are fresh. 4 due from now to Jaii; Diree Second Calf Heifers, fresh; Six Cows 4 to 6 years old— tpe above have all freshened in Sept. & Oct.; Four Cows 4 to 6 years old, due to freshen Nov., Dec. & Jan.; Six Heifers, Breeding Ag»; Ten Yearling Heifers; Two Heifer Calves, 2 months old; Two Buljs, Serviceable Age. Eligible to Register. This is an Outstanding Herd of Holsteins. All raised on this farm. AD Sired by Gerke Registered Bulls from one of the High Producing Herds in the State. Original Cows from Bell & Stoutenberry Herd and Fred Kukelhan herd. Individual Production w>il be given day of sale? Sale Held Inside. < Also Selling IHC 4-Can Milk Cooler. | HOGS— 3 Yorkshire and Tam worth Bred Gilts; One Tamworth Boar, 2’zi year old. 35 Fall Pigs. TERMS—CASH. Not Responsible for Accidents. BEN GERKE & ELMER KUKELHAN, Owners P.oy S. Johnson Ned C. Johnson, Ed Sprunger Auctioneers — Decatur, Ind. T. D. Schieferstein—Clerk Lunch Served by Ladies Aid of St. Peters Church.

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