Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 273, Decatur, Adams County, 19 November 1957 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

RURAL YOUTH FB ADVISORS ;J *’‘ V A iL r • y ■ Jr I wll- ' Jim » ...W® wwO® / '■ *T ■ / 1 |SH *•* wfe ■* ’ r< I BOwi t * J ? 1 hJF > IB • I < ■< ./ i ' T7}. 1 B f - ■XBw 4w W fc - I iK II -I U Bi®LI L jut.l Ml Me/I—iJIKII IL i... lit Jiwßit ADVISORS TO THE RURAL YOUTH include representatives of both the county extension board and the county Farm Bureau, co-sponsors of the organization. Pictured above are the Farm Bureau advisors, from left to right, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Crownover, of Monroe; Mr. and Mrs. Merle Kuhn, of Wabash township: and Mr. and Mrs. William Boeiger, of Root township. Extension advisors are county agent Leo N. Seltenright and home agent Miss Lois Folk. The picture was taken at tne annual installation banquet for rural youth officers Saturday night at the Moose home in Decatur. The advisors attend all rural youth functions, including the annual trips and parties. —(Staff Photo)

Support Move For Egypt-Syria Union Urge Political As Well As Military By WALTER LOGAN United Press Staff Correspondent The Egyptian and Syrian governments will shortly adopt a parliamentary resolution urging political as well as military union of the two Arab nations. Damascus dispatches reported today. # The Syrian 'parliament and a delegation of 40 Egyptian parliament members unanimously supported a motion Monday night calling for a federal union. The Egyptian national assembly in Cairo voted unanimously for the move shortly afterwards. Informed sources in Damascus said the two governments were

% : fMtejg' - . tb Wk ; ‘ '••s - ' ■;«* v.xjr ■■ .081 gk mbobww 'Kir -- ■„ Thit neui-type concrete road will laet 50 yean... and more. Drive it on America's new Interstate System highways! • ■” ■ -': ■ s’ *7' ‘t a,, . , -... ._ f . New-type, sound-conditioned 81 . concrete will still be fun to drive in ’75 Not o “thunrfp" to be hoard on this confinuous-laid concrete. Built-in safety It's almost like riding above the pavement, instead of on it. for Indiana highway* , The grainy texture of new-type conconcrete has no the highway engineers who helped when wjtNo joints that you can feel or hear... develop it will be building thou- It reflectß Hght t(XJ . Y ou see up to 4 only tiny cushion spaces sawed into sands of miles more as the highway times better at night on light-colored the surface for the quietest, program moves ahead. concrete thaA on a dark surface. — smoothest ride ever. Another The Interstate System is planned [___ _______ modern process, “air-entrain- for the traffic of 1975 . . . when ment/’protectsthissmoothness— concrete laid today will still be prevents roughening from freezing, “new” and fun to drive. For newthawing and de-icers. The special type concrete will last 50 years granular base under new-type and more. Maintenance costs are W 1 -> t** ‘ concrete gives it that good, solid low. No wonder it’s the preferred feel. laid flat, concrete stays flat. pavement for the new Interstate You’ll want to drive it soon. System that will link 209 major Many miles are ready now... and cities throughout 48 states. -?’ ■• ' 7 •.*-*•> -if •• f.. ( DADTI A bin f* CM FAIT ACCAAIATIAN #l2 *«*««» ■«* «t-. In«snspolls 4. Indian I vfl I LA"|f WmlvlKblw I Mvv Wlfll IVII A national organization to improve and extend the uu» of concrete

now expected to announce the formation of joint committees to draft a constitution and make necessary plans for realization' of the union. The sources said the projected union would cover defense, economic and cultural affairs and leave the internal administration of each country to the present governments. Whether this move toward a "greater Syria" would have any immediate effects on the tense situation in Jordan remained to be seen. Many of the 500.000 Palestinian refugees there have hoped for such a union to which Jordan would adhere. But diplomatic dispatches reaching Nicosia, Cyprus, said the latest Egyptian attacks on Hussein have had the effect of rallying „the people of Jordan more than ever around the king—and turned many persons away from Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser.

Truck Driver Fined On Traffic Charge Bob K. Moroska, route 1, Fortville, was fined $25 and costs by justice of peace Floyd Hunter on a charge of having “no operating authority on person or in Jruck.” Kokomo Man Killed In Traffic Crash KOKOMO (IB - Max A. McKay. 33, Kokomo, was killed today when an automobile plowed into the rear of his stalled car on U. S. 35 three miles east of here. Carl F. Mau, 34, Chesterfield, driver of the second car, was injured. Police investigated to determine if there was inadequate taillighting on McKay’s car. McKay died of a skull fracture, internal injuries and crushed legs. Trade in a good town — Decatur

TOS DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA

Pedestrian Killed When Struck By Car INDIANAPOLIS «P — Oliver Hughes, 78, was killed Monday night when he was struck by an automobile while crossing a city street. Mrs. Joan Bush. '42, the motorist, told police she was rushing a son to a hospital for treatment of an elbow wound and saw Hughes too late to stop. Monroeville Legion Plans Supper, Dance Keith Brown Post 420, American Legion, at Monroeville, will hold its annual Thanksgiving -supper and dance at the Legion hall Saturday evening. The banquet will be served from 5 to 7:30 o'clock, with the dance starting at 9 p.m., with music by the Bob Colvin orchestra. Tickets may be obtained from members or at the door Saturday night. • Safes Blown Open In Labor Union Hall ANDERSON W — Two safes were blown open in a labor union hall today and $2,100 was stolen. Burglars used explosives to ion Manlove, financial secretary of crack a safe in the office of MarLocal No. 662, United Auto Workers Union, where they got $1,300. A safe in Murnan’s Bowling Alley office, located in the same building, yielded SBOO. In Luck BOURBON, Ind — (W — Mrs. Vivian Lemler wonders how a billfold lost in Luck. Wis., was near the post office here. Only thf owner's name and family pictures' were in the billfold. Mrs. Lemler returned the lost wallet and got a letter from the owner, Ruth and Hansen. Tine, which read: “Dear Mrs. Lqmler: 1 received your letter along with my billfold you sent me. I lost it here in Luck where I live. I sure was glad to get it back as I ( received the billfold from my grandmother for my birthday.” y t .-i Mashsachusetts was the last state to adopt a written constitutiem, <1780) yet it is the only state that still governs by the original instrument.

Discipline Pointers Given For Parents Common Mistakes Os Parents Outlined EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the third and last of a aerie* of articles on misbehavior. Today Dr. Frits Redi rives parents some pointers on discipline. By LOUIS CASSELS United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON (UP) - Do you always think of discipline as a system of and punishments? Do you “drag the kitchen sink” into every conflict you have with your child? Do you find it hard to give a child "a clean yes or a clean no?” These, according to Dr. Fritz Redl, are three of the most common mistakes that parents make in disciplining their children. Redl is chief of the Laboratory for Child Research at the National Institute of Mental Health. Here are some of his views on discipline, based on 30 years of research on childhood behavior problems: Try “Toleration” Parents should not always go to one extreme or the other in reacting to a child's conduct There are occasions “when a child should be praised or rewarded, and times when he should be scolded or punished. But there are a great many instances in which behavior should be neihter approved nor disapproved, but simply tolerated” "Toleration” is a good way to treat misbehavior that is part of a child's normal growing pains, fr is “symptomatic" of inner stress or worry. A child won’t “get his values confused” if you fail to crack down hard on each act of misbehavior. Every child, even one who is seriously disturbed, “is capable of distinguishing between toleration and approval." The fact that you tolerate a certain kind of behavior doesn’t mean that yqu never intervene to control it. On the contrary, it frequently is necessary to “set and enforce clear limits” to let a child know that you will put up with "so much and no more” on his "age-typicar’ or “steam - releasing” antics. - Stick To The Subject "Kitchen - sinkism” is Redl's term for the tendency of parents to recount all of a child’s sins and shortcomings each time he gets into trouble, instead of focusing disapproval on the “single Clear issue” involved in the immediate misbehavior. • A’ daughter who comes homelater for supper is violating family rules and "ought to be bawled out for it." But it is not the time "to YeVive that old wrangle about too much lipstick, or her choice of girl 'friends, or has she done her homework.” “Every time you broaden an issue unnecessarily, you lay yourself open to ah alibi that begs that question. Kids are much better at this type of argument than you are, so stay out of it.' The Clean Yes And Clean No "If your child wants to do something, and you, are a little dubious about it but have decided to let him do it, give your permission graciously and keep your reservations to yourself If you hedge your ‘yes’ about with all sorts of grumbling and dire warnings, he wiD not regard it as a privilege granted by his parent, but as a victory he has won over a surly opponent. "On the other hand, if you are going to say no, then say no. You can explain your reasons in a polite way, but don't get bogged down in a lot of arguments, and don't be apologetic for trying to .protect your child from harm. “Try to be equally clean - cut when you are setting limits—the homecoming hour, or the amount of television to be watched, for example. Some parents seem to think that they have to be angry, aggressive and accusing to convince a child they mean business about enforcing a limit. But a terrific fuss doesn’t make a limit any more effective. Clarity does. Punishment * Does Redl believe in physical punishment? “That's like asking me if I approve of whiskey for 4-year-olds. I have to say no on principle, but I don’t mean to imply that an occasional spanking will traumatize a child. "My main objection to physical punishment is that it is a very poor way of communicating a message to a child. The instinctive reaction of a human being to physical hurt is to focus his aggression on the source of the hurt That's why a little child kicks the chair he has tripped over. . "When you are disciplining a child, you want him to get mad at himself — and specifically at the conduct which got him into trouble. ' "He is more likely to blame his own behavior for his punishment if the paffent remains in the role of fair-minded dispenser of necessary justice, rather than an angry executioner who is inflicting physical pain.” One For Hohl HOLLAND, “ Mich. — ®‘— Hohl shot a hole-in-one. Vern Hohl scored a hole-in-dne with a 195yard drive to the seventh hole of Milwaukee’s Brown Deer golf course. ■

NEW OFFICERS TAKE OVER . iKpBVj Si Ja&L. fl «HI - w HENRY GETTING, left, county president of the rural youth in 1951, and district president in 1954, installed the new officers of the Adams county rural youth Saturday night. The impressive candlelight ceremony followed a banquet, and preceded rhe starlight prornenade square dance. Pictured above are the new officers, as follows, left to right Getting, Shirley Workinger, song l«afer, Janiee Busick, news reporter: Linda McKean, devotional .'eader; Legora Markle, newsletter editor. Alice Kukelhan and Roger Habegger, recreation leade.s; Kathleen Boerger, secretary; Jerry Sprungcr, vice-president; Barbara Lewton, treasurer; am Alan Miller, president.—Utaff Photo)

Mrs. Ora E. Purdy [ Dies At Rockford Mrs. Ora Ellen Purdy, 76, died Sunday night at her home Rockford, 0,, following a heart attack. She had been in failing health several months. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. John Shank of Shelby,’ 0.; three sons, Dwight Purdy of Midland. Mich., J. Dolan Purdy of Rockford, and Robert Purdy of Dayton, O.; a brother, James Ruthledge ofLima, 0., and six grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Ketcham funeral home at Rockford, the Rev. Donald Weller officiating. Burial will be in Riverside cemetery at Rockford. Autos Collide At Street Intersection Mrs. Bonnie Lou Rich, 29, of Monroe, was taken to the Adams county memorial hospital this morning suffering shock following an accident at 10:20 a.m. at the intersection of Bollman and Russell streets. Mrs. Rich, headed east on Bollman, and a car driven by Kenneth L. Deßolt, 32, 403 Gage street, collided in the middle of the intefshetion, (Which is unmarked. Damage was estimated at SSOO to the Deßolt car and S3OO to the Rich vehicle. There was also slight damage to the yard of the Homer Fichert property on Bollman street. Cfty police investigated. Questions PIERRE. S. D. — (W - State Comptroller John Penne said the

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giving away of 204 pints of wine by the municipal liquor store in Pierpont at Christmas, 1956, was

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 19*57

“wholly unauthorized.” And he "questioned” claims paid by the town for Christmas candy and decorations.