Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 269, Decatur, Adams County, 14 November 1957 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

L International Show Opens November 27 New Facilities At International Show Homier corn growers, champtons 27 timet since 1919 at the in* ternational grain and hay show at Chicago have special inspiration to show Indiana’s best this year. Splendid new exhibition facilities will stimulate entries from throughout the corn belt. Spacious new quarters on the ground floor level of the international livestock exposition building will house the show for the first time, according to W. E. Ogilvie, exposition manHarpel of Montgomery

'■•MM r-"\ I \ /MfeSR THANKSGIVING CARDS A Thanksgiving is remem/Zll 'bUsT Bering time, and the / / ' < nicest way to remember I 1 * 8 with a Hallmark / J Thanksgiving Card from py V>7 our com P^ e,c selection, r/ / Smith Drug Co.

— f;en. - — ' tl . r ■ • ... , - ' ' ; ' W ' ; - ■ ' - •s/y- - ■ ■ - i /; nw f < ' ffV\. W' -x W”* ———* •"""""gSe’SBSSX «■■——■» — v *>>••■>■■■•■■*>■» JW,J£SSwi> M— * *—****———,, H-'ki* . 9w ■> W \ -qjQfflioaijijiijjiOMk """‘ """' '**"* P. ■ ' : ' py • ■ •* ts?y ” H jjtfrP'j* >ffa PLYMOUTH RAN 58,000 MILES-EQUAL TO MORE THAN TWICE |. :zw • ' • •. ""J 1 xwftMlilMffßß , : __ __ _ _ - _ rn HAS MB BWH HSBI AROUND The WORLD AND IT DROVE EVERY INCH OF THE WAY I . Ba

We knew this car was tough. We designed it that way. That’s why we weren’t afraid to give Plymouth the toughest, true test run of all time ... with all America as the “track.” We didn’t coddle this Plymouth. Didn’t crate it . and ship it carefully from place to place. Instead, we aimed-it out of Los Angeles one misty morning and sent it through a course that ran 58,000 miles through 37 states. The lime limit? Only 58 days. A thousand miles a day!

Star of the Forward Look. ahead for keeps! ... “ » . "

county, 1956 and 19*7 corn champion, wiH compete with other past corp kings from Indiana and outstanding exhibitors from elsewhere in the corn belt. Floyd Hiner and Newt Halterman, Rush county; Arthur Steward, Decatur county; C. N. Fischer, Shelby county; C. E. Troyer, Wabash county; William Curry, Tipton county, and Marshall Vogler and Ralph Heilman, Bartholomew county, are Indiana international champions still eligible to complete with more recent good com exhibition for international honors. The big “show window of agriclture” is slated for November 29 through December 7 this year. It will be the 35th annual grain and hay show, but the 58th edition of the livestock exhibition. New grain show quarters are in Donovan Hall, a 110,006-aquare-

foot addition to the Amphitheatre adjoining the cattle hall to the south of the main building. A refurnishing job is now in process to make the grain show more attractive than in other years, according to Ogilvie. More than enough to accomodate the grain show, the new hall will also house the international wool show which promises several new features this year, and top cafload lots of livestock which will be brought in from the stock yards, according to present plans. “Additional room which places the entire show, other than regular stock yard exhibits under one roof greatly enables the international to better display the world’s finest in livestock and crops,” Oglivie states. Country Music At Jefferson School The Kentucky Ramblers, of Hodgeville, Ky., will present a country music program at the Jefferson township school, Saturday, at 7:30 p.m. Rolland Engle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Engle, of Decatur, will serve as master of ceremonies for the program. " Co-sponsors of the evening are the Jefferson P.T.A. and the Band Boosters organization. The public is invited to attend. Court Nows Eaton Estate A petition has been filed for letters of administration for the estate of Bertha Eaton. A bond in the sum of 91,000 has been submitted and letters have been ordered issued to Tony Eaton. Forbing Estate The estate of Anthony J. Forbing. a former resident of Decatur, is being probated in the Kosciusko county circuit court at Warsaw. The net value of the estate is 951.299.36 with a total of 91,028.87 due in taxes. Among the heirs are Decatur residents, Elmo, Estella and Virginia Smith and Cathleen Smith. Marilyn Smith of Santa Monica. Calif., a former Decatur resident, is also an heir.

The equivalent of 6 years* driving crammed into little more than 8 weeks! Three times this car crossed the Rockies. Three times it wound its way across the country... through more than 1200 cities and towns. Whipping over turnpikes ... creeping through city traffic... arrowing down superhighways ... feeling its way through rutted detours. At the end, it still looked, ran and rode like new. This is what lasting value really means. The ability to take everything that American roads and weather can dish out—and come up grinning. Why don’t you give Plymouth a test drive yourself—today? You’ll see what we mean.

THE DECATUB DAILY DEMOCBAT. DECATUB, INDIANA

Russian Boss Pokes Jibes At West Nations Twits Newsmen On U.S. Lagging On Missile Program MOSCOW (UP) — Communist Party chief Nikita S Khrushchev took his wife out for one of her rare public appearances Wednesday night and spent the evening making jibes at the West. He said it would be a long time before the West ever caught up on rocket development. While Mrs. Khrushchev stayed on the sidelines at an Egyptian embassy reception, a grinning fftid jocular Khrushchev twitted Western reporters about the United States lagging in the missile field and Britain taking a back seat in world politics. The reception was for Egyptian Minister of War Maj. Gen. Abdel Hakim Amer but Khrushchev was the life of the party. Khrushchev glibly told newsmen that the Soviet Union is well in advance of the United States in rocket development but he said Russia would be willing to agree with the United States that all the rockets 6f both countries “be sunk in the sea.” He was particularly playful with British reporters and told them “Britain doesn’t have an independent foreign policy any more.” “In the Soviet Union we have Sputniks and in the West you have satellites,” he said. Asked whether he meant Britain was a satellite of the United States, Khrushchev replied: “Do you dbout it? Does Macmillan visit Eisenhdwer or does Eisenhower visit Macmillan?” Mum On Znuxov Future Khrushchev refused to be drawn out on what plans the government had for Marshal Georgi Zhukov who was ousted from the Presidium, the Central Committee and his post as defense minister but he did say Zhukov now is in Mos-

lih > n />inrr\ 1 i il That’s the Plymouth “track”... and just look at that route! Every possible road and weather condition. Plymouth ran every inch of that murderous route 3 times in just 58 days. IP hat greater proof of lasting, built-in stamina! >

cow “although be can go anywhere he likes.” He said the Soviet Union would always give Zhukov credit for his military prowess but “he didn’t make out so well as a political figure ’’ Asked whether he would like to visit the United States, Khrushchev replied: “I have been asked this question a million times. Whether I want to or not, I can’t go as a private citizen.” But he said Russia would be glad to receive President Eisenhower and Secretary of State Jobs Foster Dulles as “dear friends.’ Report Os Accident Proves False Alarm A report to the sheriff’s department of a truck accident on U.S. highway 224 about six miles east of Decatur Thursday shortly after 8 p. m. proved to be a false alarm. It was reported to the department that a large truck had gone out of control, had jack-knifed and was stalled across the highway, holding up both lanes of traffic. However, When deputy sheriff Robert Meyer and state trooper Al Coppes arrived on the scene the truck was not there and there was nothing to indicate an accident.

High School Band Entertains Friday The Decatur high school band will play Friday night before the Decatur-Geneva game, it was announced today. A special number will be “Etude in Boogie,” by Harold Walters, the chief arranger of the U. S. Navy band. This number will feature Kay Wynn at the piano, and the rhythm section including Joe Smith, on the drums, John Paul McAhren, bass viol, and Joe McNerney, guitar. The 70-piece band will accompany them. The band is sponsoring a dance after the game at the Community Center. A special jazz band will be featured, and also records. Admission will be 25 cents per person and 45 cents per couple. The dance is called the “basketball bop” And the ballroom will be decorated with appropriate decorations.

Joint Extension Center Is Studied Budget Committee Meeting At Capitol INDIANAPOLIS (UP) - The State Budget Committee was slated to meet here today to discuss plans for a new joint university extension center at Fort Wayne and a request to expand the staff of parole officers and to raise minimum salaries. Indiana and Purdue University officials were scheduled to make appearances before the committee in favop of the joint center. Both now have separate extension buildings in Fort Wayne, but they contend the buildings cannot accomodate future enrollments. *lhe site favored by IU and PU .officials is a 225-acre tract of land northeast of Fort Wayne now owned by the Fort Wayne State School for mentally retarded children. Mental health officials said a new mental institution has been planned for the site, but they were reported to be willing to shift plans to an adjoining state-owned 160-acre tract An IU spokesman said once the committee approves the project, it will require “at least two years’* for planning and construction. He said it is too early to discuss the size of the center, enrollments or cost estimates. The parole division is seeking pay raises of $lO to SSO a month. It also has requested five more officers, three investigators and six more district and sub-district offices

Prof. George Kinzle, a former resident of Decatur, has been appointed dean of the school of journalism at Ohio State University. Prof. Kinzle is the son of the late George Kinzle, Sr., a former Adams county treasurer. Prof. Kinzle and his wife visited in Decatur Wednesday afternoon. Gail Grabill, superintendent of the Adams county school system, is in Indianapolis today attending the state trustees convention. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lose and children Linnea, Greg and Ricky, of Cincinnati, Ohio, have returned to their home, after visiting with' Charles Lose and other relatives. Harold Mclntosh, of Monroe, is spending a week’s vacation hunting in the wooded areas near Monroe. NATIONS (Continued tram rage One) add Belgium, Italy, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Argentina, Brazil, Burma, India, Australia and Tunisia. The Soviet Union’s position was unknown and India objected to the last two countries. The Western powers objected to the proposals.

Smart Wardrobe PRINTED PATTERN wXl* Ky %• ♦ -0 ♦7 M J* I \ JpV** **r\ /ll** • * **A * /«♦♦ *B*/Vi\ /w ♦* >*4raT*V\ /!»*♦ ♦ llrr I ♦’Mti /♦® * u U4*i* 'lw-ra ; •AHi* ♦•♦♦ is • n* illllfi 9213 ■fsHUB 1 sizes “ 42-46 Inj Sew a whole wardrobe of smart dresses from this Printed Pattern. Jukt vary the neckline from collar version to a scoop style—it's an ideal all-season dress. Make it casual or dressy. Printed Pattern 9213: Misses’ Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 40, 42, 44, 46. Size 18 takes 4% yards 39inch fabric. Send Thirty five cents in coins for tihs pattern—add 5 cents for each pattern for Ist-class mailing. Send to Marian Martin, care of Decatur Diily Democrat, Pattern Dept. 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER.

Lights And Power Off Few Minutes Lights and power in a small area in the west part of the city were turned off for a few minutes Thursday night when trouble developed at a light pole at 128 South 13th street. A wire caught fire at the pole and the power wgs turned off while repairs were being made. Trade in a good town — Decatur

PUBLIC SALE — A COMPLETE CLOSE-OUT — We are quitting farming therefore will hold a complete close-out sale on our farm known as the Lane Farm—Located 4 miles South of Fort Wayne on U. S. Highway No. 24 to Times Corners, then 4 miles west*on the Covington Road; or 3 miles south of Arcola, on MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18 Sale Starting at 10:00 A. M. 43 — Holstein Cattle — 43 T. B. A Bangs Tested 14 Holstein dairy cows. 3 to 8 years old, 5 in production now, several due to freshen soon. 5 Holstein heifers, 3 years old, due to freshen soon. 1 Holstein heifer, 2 years old, calf by side. 17 large Holstein heifers. 2 years old, bred, several due to freshen soon. 3 yearling Holstein heifers. 1 yearling Holstein steer. 2 bull calves. This is a good herd of Purebred, not registered Holstein Dairy Cattle. They are large, nicely marked and good producers. Records will be given day of sale. All bred cows and heifers are artificially bred to A. B. A. bulls. — Hogs - Hampshire sow with 7 pigs by side; 3 Hampshire sows, due to farrow by day of sale. 1 Berkshire & Poland China boar. POULTRY—6O head White Rock pullets, laying good. HAY—OATS—7OO bushels Bentland oats; 1000 bales hay. - Two Tractors - 1956 Farmall 300 tractor, like new; 1956 cultivators. 1946 Farmall Model H tractor, good condition, good rubber, heat houser. * -Farm Implements — McCormick Deering No. 52 combine with motor. McCormick Deering No. 14 1-row corn picker. Case 14" tractor plow on rubber; Case 8 ft. heavy tractor disc; Case fertilizer corn planter; John Deere Van Brunt 12-hole fertilizer grain drill; 1953 New Idea 12A manure spreader; McCormick Deering 7 ft. power mower; McCormick 6 ft: mower; two 2-section spike tooth harrows; rubber tire farm wagon and rack; Case side delivery hay rake; rotary hoe; Case 32 ft. elevator, like new, with electric motor; double disc; mounted 14” plow for Farmall A tractor; Midwest manure loader; good slip scoop; 275 gal. overhead gas tank; dump rake; 2 water tanks; electric grass seeder: power buzz saw; Wetmore hammer mill; 6" belt; 6 hog houses; old spike tooth harrow; fence stretchers; 2 Lantz coulters; platform scales; hog feeder; hog troughs; hand corn shelter; 2 metal baskets; 2 electric brooder stoves; 100 ft. heavy 220 electric cord; 25 gal. No. 20 motor oil; 1 case Mota-Klenz;’gentelizer; sprayer; funnel; forks; small tools;, many miscellaneous articles not mentioned. DAIRY EQUlPMENT—Frigidaire 6-can electric milk cooler; Sears 6-can electric milk cooler; Marlow 2-unit milking machine, complete, in good condition; Santi-Matic water heater; 5 milk cans; can rack. TERMS—CASH. , Not responsible for accidents. (CLIP THIS AD FOR FUTURE REFERENCE) Lunch Will Be Served On Grounds. LATZ and NEIMAN, Owners WESLEY TOMLINSON, Herdsman ELLENBERGER BROS., AUCTIONEERS Fort Wayne phone K-5512—Bluffton phone 543 - OSSIAN STATE BANK-CLERK. . ♦

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1157

REVIVAL SERVICE Tonight, 7:30 Church of the NAZARENE 7th A Marshall WELCOME I