Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 276, Decatur, Adams County, 22 November 1957 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
REGISTER TONIGHT I -W M SATURDAY for I FREE PRIZES —— at — PRICE MEN'S WEAR Nothing to Buy—Need Not Be Present to Win! ' ~ ' ■'« Public Auction Sew & USED CARS — GARAGE EQUIPMENT I STUDEBAKER and PACKARD PARTS | of THE HUTKER AUTO SALES MONDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 25th | ' <:3O P. M. ■3CBTTON—MIIe South of De«alur, Indiana cHy limits on Highway g, .SN». 27. Known a* the Hutker Auto Sales. IfcIW"«CABB—I9SB Studebaker Commander 4 door, radio, heater, twin tEction; 1958 Studebaker Silver Hawk, heater, twin signals, baek qp iwhQi. 1957 Studebaker Golden Hawk, radio, heater, automatic transAssion; 1957 Studebaker 3 E 5 Pick-up truck, heater, turn signals, moot bed; 1957 Studebaker Champion Tudor Deluxe, heater, turn sigAls These cars are all on certificate of origin. WED CABS—I9SS Plymouth Belvedere 4 door, auto-transmission. Adio, heater, white walls; 1949 4 door Plymouth; 1939 Chevrolet Sdoor. ABGE INVENTOR! of Studebaker and' Packard parts which include lady parts, bumpers, chrome head and tail lights, engine bearings. Astons, connecting rods, gaskets, assortment of lens, wheel and mas- *- cylinder kits, spark plugs, ignition parts, tail pipes, exhaust pipes r mufflers. fan belts, radiator hose. Prestone anti-freeze, Shell At NcißTlen oils, and other* misc. parts. CABAGE EQUIPMENT—2 Floor Creepers; Creeper Seat; Vi in. Elec. Will; % in. Elcc. Drill; Set of Taps and Dies; Snap on Tourque wrench 9-150; Kent Vacuum & Pressure Gauge; Allen Compression Aster At Adaptors; 2 Adjustable Car Stands; 2 Manley Ajustable Car Stands; Wheel Puller; 12 ft. Work Bench; 2 Tool CabArts. Tire Tools; Battery Hydromiter; 900 TV. Freeye D. Teeter; StTfONAL CASH REGISTER; Show Case; Billing Machine; 2 Elec Sockfc OFFICE SAFE; Typewriter; 3 Desks; 2 Filing Cabinets; Sven Bhauty Automatic Battery Charger, Model 275; Hanson TachnAeteAdt Dwell Meter; Hanson Volt Ar Amp. Meter; Hanson Conden£r & Coil Tester; Allen Timing Light; Exhaust Analyzer; Vixen Sark Plug Cleaner & Tester; Armature Lathe; Electric Bench winder At Buffer; Snap* on hard seat grinder; Craftsman Welding Anks Ac mixing gauges & hose; Complete line of Studebaker Auto AafflT*Transmission Tools; Hydralic Transmission Jack; Bay lift air Sck; Ton Blackhawk floor jack; Moto floor jack, and other misc. ytiHff that are equipment of agency and garage. AERMS—CASH I HUTKER AUTO SALES, Owners Gerald Strickler. D. S Blair—Auctioneers i> ,^. rS .. r Xftrt. Auction, Mgr, f" . Sale Conducted by The Kent. Realty At Auction Co. ? Decatur, Indiana Phone 3-3390 •w Not responsible for accidents. J
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r • • W ..grlE.lt ■ To Dedicate Purdue Evaluation Station New Swine Station Dedication Monday George Doup. Columbus, presi-dent-elect of the Indiana Farm Bureau, will be mhster of ceremonies at a dedicatory program, Nov 25. for Purdue University's new swine evaluation station. The 96-pen station, 'Situnted on the j University's livestock 1 ’ farm five miles northwest of the enmpus, will be open to public inspection that afternoon. The dedicatory ceremonies will start at 2 p.m. Doup was chairman of a statewide committee which sponsored the drive to establish the station at Purdue. It was made possible through financial aid from farm organizations and swine producers and breeders’ groups. An honor roll of financial contributors will be unveiled at the ceremonies. Speakers will be President Frederick L. Hovde of Purdue, dean Earl L. Butz, director of agricultural activities at Purdue; Hassil E’ Schenck, Lebanon, who retires January 1 as president of the Indiana Farm Bureau, and Leland A Jessup. Mooresville, president of the Indiana swine breeders’ association. * The station received its first test litter October 2. Eighty-nine purebred litters have been nominated for testing at the station, purpose of which is to es,tablish the quality of breeding stock. Twenty-five litters already are on test. One hundred ninetytwo pigs can be tested at one time. Only purebred breeders are eligible to place hogs in the station. Each breeder can enter two pigs each from litters which have been nominated and retained eligibility. Both pigs are weighed and started on test at 62-64 days of age and will remain on test until a market weight of 200-220 pounds is reached by each pig. Eaqfi of the pigs in a litter must iteigh 200 pounds at a maximum of 180 days and gain at least 100 pounds for each 370 pounds of feed consumed. If each pig in the pair meets all requirements, the litter from which they are taken will be certified. . i The Blockhouse Museum at the j Saotlaga >snuefi^ ; ,«ea..r §chux-_, ierville. N. Y. hauses a wide assortment of delics of the major battle which turned the tide of victory in Jacor of the American forces during the Revolution.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Continuation Os U.N. Force In Mideast Urged Canadian Official Presents Resolution By Western Powers united nations <up>-Can-ada told the General Assembly today the assembly's decision on the future of the United Nations Emergency Force in the Middle East will demonstrate whether the world organization has the strength to carry out its principles Canadian External Affairs Secretary Sidney E. Smith presented , a 21-power resolution calling for continuation of UNEF with its expenses to be borne henceforth by ■ assessment of all U.N. members on the regular scale of contributions. The United States has offered 12 ' million dollars toward costs of the I force to date. Britain has put up an additional millton. The Soviet i bloc has refused to contribute. An estimated 18 million dollars is required until the end of this year. I The resolution provides that • UNEF funds shall be raised on the j regular assessment scale from now until Dec. 31 up to a total of 813,500,000 and in the same manner thereafter to a maximum of j 25 million dollars. Rep A. S. J. Carnahan <D-Mo.l, speaking for the United States, hailed UNEF as “a historic success” since it was created a year j ago without a single dissenting vote in the assembyl. He added: "It is not sufficient merely to create UNEF and give it tasks to perform. The members must also i support it financially and it is I their responsibility to agree to the ; means of doing this.” If support for the emergency ; force were assessed on the same basis as the general U. N. budget, the United States would pay about one-third of UNEF's budget. The Soviet Union and its satellites are the only countries which have expressed outright opposition to the principle of the emergency force. But a number of other nations have balked at the amount they are expected to contribute to the I upkeep of the force. ' . An overwhelming majority of the Latin American nations ' agreed at a caucus Thursday that ’ Utey cduld riot afford to contribute hte total $1,500,000 expected ,of them. i UNEF was created last December to police the truce between
College Students Protest Dance Ban Edict Is Issued By Baptist Convention WINSTON-SALEM. N.C. (UP>-Bunny-hoppirtg Wake Forest College students moved oft campus Thursday night “out of respect” for their faculty to stage a third high-stepping protest to the state .Baptist Convention's edict against I dancing. About 500 students spilled out of their cars and snaked their way around a suburban shopping center parking lot. They began their dancing without music but there were promises of a band It failed to show up. Instead one of the students rigged up a loudspeaker to an automobile radio and sent music blaring over the dance area ringed by parked cars. Earlier in the day. a morning chapel session broke tip when the students filed out to the stepped-up tempo of the choir singers. The demonstration was planned and the campus music director, Dr. Thane McDonald, cooperated by cutting t/e program short. The chapel demonstration was the third in the series which began Wednesday night shortly after the convention ban was voted. After the chapel outbreak the Wake Forest executive committee asked the students to "cease and desist.” Wake Forest President Harold W. Tribble, in Raleigh for the Baptist Convention, said he was not seriously concerned about the demonstrations. He said the students, 70 per cent«of them Baptist, would be "reasonable.” He said the school has a "fine student body which wants to do what is right ” Many of the students demonstrating on < the campus shouted “To hell with the Baptists.” Investigate Death Os Truck Driver GREENSBURG ®> — Claude Whitlock, 68. Jackson. Mich., was killed Thursday when his loaded apple truck ran off Ind. 3 and overturned south of here. But authorities said injuries caused in the accident were not sufficient to result in death. An investigation has been scheduled to determine whether Whitlock died of a heart attack or other natural causes prior to the accident. Israel and Egypt- It now has apjjhdxtmately 6,000 men patrolling the* demarcation lihes.
- ■■■' 1 ■ ■ ■ ‘ ~' Series Os Articles On Need Os Price Increase (This is the seventh and last — —- i ■ —
in a series of articles on the need for a price, increase for farm products, which grew out of a recent farm program de- 1 velopment conference held at Purdue University under the leadership of the Indiana Farmers Union. The effect of farm prices and spending by farmers, which affects businessmen, manufacturers, and workers, was explainedsJT* - ' The second day of the conference started with a summary of firstday activities. The recorder of each separate session during the preceding afternoon read his notes. These included the concrete suggestions of dirt farmers. This occupied the morning session. Following lunch, sessions were again held on dairying, grain, and and poultry. At the end of the afternoon session the recorders met with Charles Brannan, who then took the combined notes, and presented the conference proposals to .the entire group. There were 13 major proposals, some new and different, and some which have been reported all over the country in the program development meetings. They were: 1. Adoption of a total feed grain program, with permissible interchangeability of crops within the established aggregate limit. 2. Use of unit limitations (bushels, pounds, etc.) where deemed advisable, in setting production limits. 3. Establishment of price supports with use of direct payments where feasible, to approach much more closely the objective of parity income. 4. Restoration to farmer-elect-ed committees of full control of the local administration of farm programs. 5. Make available to meat animal producers (other than sheepmen who already have it* a program of compensatory payments and a sales checkoff for financing research and promotion. 6. Require grade labeling of retail goods to match the present system of grading raw farm products. 7. Continue the export assistance program, J*. L. 480. until something better can be developed. -eff a national food allotment or stamp plan to improve the diets of low-income people >,. . 9 Creation of a federal farm income boards, preferably with powers independent of the secretary of agriculture, to deal with farm price and incortie problems. 10. Authorization to facilitate concerted action by dairy farmers in regulating volume of milk deliveries. when necessary to pro-
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tect price levels. 11. Consideration by Congress of a self-help program under which dairy farmers might use a check-off system to divert surplus milk from the domestic market. 12. Enlarged participation by farmers through their own plarits in the bottling or processing of milk. 13. Special consideration for the family farm in establishing production allotments and program payments. This list, of course, does not include all the suggestions made in all the meetings. It is only a condensed list. But it does show that dirt farmers are thinking, and are wanting a bigger voice in the processes which decide what the price of their goods will be. - Rules Kendallville Can Invest Funds INDIANAPOLIS W — Atty. Gen. Edwin Steers ruled today the City of Kendallville can legally invest certain electric utility funds in government bonds. The city said money received from sale of its municipal utility and other utility funds /Were appropriated for 1958 but will not be spent until next March. Steers was asked if all or part of the money can be invested in government securities. Steers said he found no legal reason why such investments could not be made. Two Bandits Loot Tavern'Of $4,600 HAMMOND — (W — Two bandits robbed the Southtown Tavern of 34,600 today and wrapped the loot in the proprietor’s coat. Carl Larson reported to police that he and two janitors were cleaning up after the tavern closed early this morning when two men with a sawed-off shotgun and a revolver forced their way tn through a back door and made him open a safe. They got $4,000 in currency and S6OO in dimes, folded the money .in Larson’s coat and left after snipping the telephone line-
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FRIDAY. NOVEMMR
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