Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 14, Decatur, Adams County, 17 January 1958 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC -.== Entered at the Dtcatur/Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D Heller .... ---- Presiae*» J H. Heller Vice-President Chas. Holthouse Secretary-Treasurer Subscription Rates: By Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $8.00; Six months, $4.25: 3 months, $2.25. By, Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year. $9.00; 6 months, $4.75; 3 months. $2.50. By Carrier: 30 cents per week. Single copies, 6 cents.

If you want scores of any county tourney games, call 3-2171. o o Fred Kolter, able and efficient Secretary of the Decatur Chamber of Commerce has been reappointed to that post. Mr. Kolter has done a good job and often times under pretty trying circumstances. He has managed to stay neutral in the various controversies and has limited his work to membership collections and the carrying out of Chamber requests from the directors. Mr. Kolter is on the job every day and has all the loose ends of such an office well in hand, We congratulate the directors on their wisdom in rehiring such an efficient and hard working employe. —-o—o Now the Administration wants the ceiling on our indebtedness increased five billion dollars, just like it was change for a quarter. With a good sized depression on our hands and with most everybody economy-minded, it seems like a poor time to ask for money in addition to the giant sized budget already presented. The people surely are entitled to know just where we’re going with the expenditure of these mountains of money. During all this demand for more and more money, administration leaders are still squabbling over who is boss in the missile department and who . will get to light the sky-rocket. Seefns sort of silly to demand large sums and not know what we're going to do with the appropriations.

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WANE-TV CHANNEL 15 FRIDAY Evening 6 :UV—Margie 6:3o—News 6:40--Weather 6 Edward®,, 7 An.nie Oakley . 7:3o—Leave It to Beaver ** — BWM>— Trackdown s3O Zane Grey - 9:oo—Mr. Adame and Eve 9:3-o—Sea, Hunt . tu.vi.—Lineup ' 10:30 Person to Person *ll:oo—Nitecap SATURDAY Morning B:3o—Sermons from Science 9:oo— —Cartoon Cupels 9:ls—Willie Wonderful 9:3o—Captain Kangaroo 10:30—Mighty Mdlise 11:00—Susan s Show 11:30—Movie Museum 4 11:45—Learn ,to Draw l UTIHXHI 12:00—Young People Concert 1:00 —-Western Playhouse I:4s—preview ’ ' 2:00;—Pro Hockey 4:3o—Bowling _ 6:3o—Willy Boning 6:o9—Atnos *n' Andy ,'.30-Sub 1- l ancibi, ♦ ■ Beal i :00—Lassie ■ ■ ’ ’’ ' . I:3o—Perry Mason 1:30—-Qtek and the Duchess J:00—Oh Susanna 9:3<| Have Gun Will Travel Ip :00—Gunsmoke lii 30—Sheriff of Cochise ’_i 11:00 —S**niM Theater SIMMY Morning 0 —Faith For Today- --» ——— “10:00—Lamp Unto My Feei 16:30--Look Up and Li ve 11:00—UN In Action s ll:.°o—This Is The Life - As ternoon, _TI“ J!LeUs_Take _AT rll ■ '.i! :3t>—Cartoon Cajiers ■i• no -.a ~t m n on Sunday 2:oo—Award Matinee 3:30*-The Laet Word 4 :oU—Face the Nation 4:3O—World New® ~i, , s:oo—Conquest — ’.. .. 7 Evening 6:oo—Beat the Clock 6:30—20th Century “ 7 tOi>- -iM a ma. —“““ —-———- 7:3o—Baetielor Father 8:00—Ed Sullivan 0:9-0—G.E. Theater 9:30—A1 fred Hitchcock 19:00 —|61,000 ..Challenge 10:30—What's My Line U:do—CBS News 11:1a—-Award Theater . WKJG-TV .......... CHANNEL 33 FRIDAY t Evening 6:oo—Gatesway to Sports 6:ls—News. Jack Gray * 6:2s—Weather ’ - - -6:3o—Cartoon EXprsss ------ jj ; — 6 :45— NBC News 7:oo—State Trooper —-v—■—r--7*:3o—Boots and Saddles B:oo—Court of Last ReSott 8:30 —Life of Riley 9:OO—M-Squad — t 9:3o—The Thin Man / 10:00 —.Boxing 10:45—Red Barber’s Corner 11:0(0—News & Weather 11:1F—.Sports Today > r, .’(•—*n>nigl>t SATURDAY Morning S.OO—Johnny Mack Brown Show 10:00—Howdy Doody ' 1I»;.:0- -Huff and Iliildi a

“ The polio fund drive is on in full force. It is a worthy project gnd of course will be necessary for several years yet because the results of polio are still with us, even though the disease is now controlled. Drop your spare dimes in the many, cannisters scattered through the business district. ——io oi— Gov. Harold Handley has announced that he will seek the G. O. P. senatorial nomination. Handley, an ally of retiring wildman, anti everything Jenner starts out in the shoes of the man he would like to succeed. It doesn’t look too favorable for him or any other GO P. candidate right now since there is no Eisenhower to hang onto. .» o— —o Byard H. Smith, prominent Fort -Wayne -security company executive and former Decatur resident will return to Decatur ' February 6 to deliver the principal address at the annual meeting of the Chamber of Commerce. Mr- Smith was raised in Decatur and received his early education here. He is a son of the late Judge and Mrs. D. E. Smith and for a while after he received his education he returned to this county and served as principal of Monroe high school and then Decatur high school. Mr. Smith has never lost his love for Decatur and while he has not resided here for many years, he,, never fails to visit his home town _ at least once a year. We know he will have a timely~mb?sage and being a security executive, his address “Our Present Economy,” will be of great interest to his audience.

PROGRAMS Central Daylight Time

tlrOO—Fury 11:30—Sky King Afternoon 12:00—Cartoon Time 1:00—Two Gun Playhouse 2:oo—Pistons vs Hawks •I:oo—The Big Picture 5:00—-Bowling . , IB riling „ 6 rO-il—-W res tl in g "-6:3o—Variety Voyage 7:oo—Kit Carson “ :8\ r oo—lAUen County Tourney , - uiseie MacKeusK, 10:00—End, oj Rainbow 10 Ji.i— Y<»ur Hit Parade 11.00— Badge 714 11:30~~Warner Bros. Theater— SUNDAY Morning 8:00—-Crlstophers 8:30— -Mission ■at Mld-Ceiftury ii :ii'i --T.re Answer . J):3o—Man to Man 9 45- i lil'islian Science 10:00—Sacred Heart 10:15—The Pastor 10:30—This la The Life 11:00--Cartoon Time \ Ifernoon 12:00-~?Two Gun Playhouse . I:oo—Florian Zabach 1:30—-Libei ace 2:119— Musical Moments 2 :■! s—Hockey I:3o— J.j niWide Wide World. s:3o—< Bea ulah . I.« riling 6:fto—Cisco Kid ■6:3o— Life with Elizabeth n 7:oo—My Friend' Flicka 7:3o—sally B:oo—Steve Allen :■ i>u i iieyv show 10:00—Loretta Young 10:30—Janet Dean 14 i'll—- News Special 11-.10-Tr-Sports Today _ 11:1.5—Armchair Theater WPTA-TV - 2 CHANNEL 21 - - t'B entng — —— 6:6o—The Jingles Whow — 7 nhUTexas Rangers T7 7:30-—Rin Tin Tin B:oo—Jim Bowie B:3o—(Walter Winchell a nn-.-Frank Sinatra 0:30-—Patrice Murael in no—-Colt 45 , • u 10:30—“10:30 Report" - Ltt42r=-»Mrrvrtßi-mr —— SATURDAY \ f Ipriiiitiii 3:00—Full Western Movie 4:00 —1 ndi a na Univ era H- — 4:3o—(Big 10 Basketball I B ehl ng 6:15—A1l Star Golf 7:ls—Verity, Time 7:3o—Keep It tn The Family B:oo—Country Music 9:o,o—Lawrence Welk i o: Mike JWaUace— -—- 10:30—"Club 21" SUNDAY Afternoon 4 :no—Oral Roberts 4:3o—Wings of Heeling s:oo—Bowling. Stars ■ _ . — s:3('—lndiana University —= IB enl n g ' - - 6:00 —Repeat Performance 7’Mi -Maverick B:3o—Adventures in Scott Island 9:00—.All Star Bowling Finals io:ihi—Scotland Yard ‘ 10:30—Movietime “movies - ... ADAMS ■‘Monetei' that Clifttlenged 4’he World" Fri at 7;i,i'O.ltM).S4Lt.±:Js.._Lis. 7:2.-. 10 15 "The Vatiupi-iT'’ 'l''ri'at lb-50. 11:13 Sal T 22 6:22 0.U2 '. • I

Giveaway Shows On <• Television Increase New Home Viewers Gievoway Launched NEW YORK (UP) —The horses and singers can start moving over. Television shows suspicious signs of embarking on a new cycle—the giveaway for home viewersThe tip-off took place this week when CBS-TV dumped the veteran “Strike It Rich,” and launched “Dotto,” a daytime quiz with emcee Jack Narz. “Dotto,” a fairly dreary little number, doles out cash to its studio contestants, but even more significant, it has an “extra” in its half-hour — the big prize for the home viewer equipped with a postcard and luck. This makes “Dotto” the third network program in recent months to dangle lodt in front of ail you folks out there in television-land. Ne Big Money Shows It was only a few seasons back that the TV programmers, inspired (I use the word with reservations) by the success of CBSTV’s “The $64,000 Question,” -turned to the manufacture of other big money shows. Most of the big mon e y imitations—faded out; “Twenty One” and “The $64,000 Challenge’' are about the only survivors) and the cycle dribbled to a close. This season not a single new big money show was launched by the networks. But while the straight money shows were slumping, something strange began happening in the NBC-TV cellar last year: A daily daytime quiz, “The Price Is Right” began pulling in fantastic mail and a solid rating. I /Loot Via Post Cards The anlwer—was—pret^—simple. “The Price Is Right,” a kind of auction game, not only offered prizes to its stage guests, it also, gave home viewers a shot at some of the loot via postcard bids. When 1 the cards began pouring in by the millions, NBC-TV decided this season to give the show nighttime exposure each Monday in addition to I its five-a-week day spread. On Dec- 24, NBC-TV moved an-1 other daytime quizzer, “Treasure iHunt," into an additional evening! spot. This show, too, now offers ewers at home a shot at moae; j via postcard. Tuesday night, a I New Jersey viewer had his postcard picked from a pile and got " a chance at SI2IOCO. He didn’t win - ft. incidentally, but wound up with a movie camera-. “Dotto” presently is offering a

JAMES KEENE'S powerful new novel JUSTICE, MT BBOTHEH! • Copyrltht IM?, by J.mea Xefcne; reprinted by of the wd'i publisher, random \ ■ —- ' * Mouse. Inc., diMntuted by Kme

WHAT IS HAPPENINQ I Until now, no, woman except their ' widowed mother nas lived on the ' ranch that the three O Dare,..-brothers ivork in wild Oklahoma renjitory of •the 1900s' ’ Cord the eldest, is the ladiej" man but Luther the mildmannered second brother is the first to-take a wife Card oickcd out the ondr Edna Shore and Luther ?otirted bei oy mail Luther and fedha were married in Ponca City the ; lay she arrived by train from Chii —22 ——After, the" - wedding there s trouble I between Cord and Bill Hageman 1 »hose aistei Julie is one ol the women Attracted to Cord Other men nave : real or fancied reasons tor dislikinn Cord, one of the men twine bis voung. i »st bftither. Smoke. Smoke is telling . the story. » . CHAPTER 7 “QMOKE. take Bill to the horse Q trough and clean Him up,” Cord said to me. 1 stared at him, wondering why tie should even care. He made an impatient gesture with his hand. "Go on. do as you're told now ” | 1 put my hands under Bill’s (■ armpits and with a little grunting staggered outside with nim. The ‘news.of the fight .had spread,: exactly how always remained a ; ntystery with me as no one had i left Lananan s place since it had started A dozen of pohea City’s citizens were stomping down the boardwalk as 1 got Bill around j ... i. the hitch rail .and on th.e..edg.e_bt.l {.he trough. The water wasn't 1 what f'd choose to wash with, out - this wasn't the time to get fussy ■ r let Bill down as easy as I could, but he slipped and* fell in. One of the men aughed and I i rooked- at -him "You “ -.PasiietLL Jtojpm.ay: < wonder about niy taking Bill's side this way. but 1 ought to explain about me. if you haven’t already guessed it: 1 like everybody; that's my failing. Don't ha ve an enemy in the world. —P—— Bill Hageman was sputtering and trying to sit up now I took off his neckerchief and bathed ms face. Cord nad made a real mess_ of it and Bill was going to wear a few scars as a reminder for the rest of his life. His eyes were be-' ginning to focus and he looked at .2 “ me. All ,he saw way that 1 was an O'Dare and he knocked my hands away from him. At another time this would have made me sore, but not then. 1 stood there' Z" and waited and when he began to'sag again. 1 helped him sit up He knew he couldn’t make-it alone and he said, "Will you help me. Smoke?” Now 1 figure it takes a pretty p big man to put his feelings aside like that, so 1 hoisted him to ms feet and we started across the ■ street to Julie's buggy. The.prowd followed out 1 paid them tittle mind. Bill couldn't do anything but lay down so T helped him 1 settle, iii-Uic back of Uie rig. He

' b ' THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA

M iff *Cf-5 1 A COLOR-BLIND PERSON IS WORE SUCCESSFUL ££ °° DETECTING CAMOUFLAGE S? ORMAL^VIsSn/ * J j Jar a OF Inland,. / n? FOR INOCULATING 'yx EMPRESS CATHARINE AND X*. > THE GRAND DUKE PAUL, oFftSM' y 'J? S RECEIVED IftOOO POUNDS, Wa AN ANNUITY OF 500 POUNDS X7 AND 2,000 POUNDS FOR jSgZt’ IK 7 EXPENSES, IN ADDITION / \ TO JEWELS AND THE /a ,V ” / / HEREDITARY TTLE OF I / BARON, NOW BORNE. Zk fN / D BY HIS DESCENDANT i - ;-/7 & Mt

trip around the world aS its bait - for: is that if your postcard is picked, you are then telephoned during the show and asked to identify a mystery celebrity whose picture is only partly sketched. ___ —..-” l —<■ -- ?0 y eart Aar ... T nfiav January 17, 1938 — Robert Heller, Daily Democrat employe, announce his candidacy for joint representative from Adams and Wells counties. David Borders, 77, Blue Creek township and father of James Borders, dies today. Joe Wuprphy and Joe Murphy and Casper Miller are elected trustees of St. Mary's Catholic church. I, John W. Blakey announces his candidacy for county treasurer. | Charles Dailey, attorney for the state industrial board, visited in ; Decatur today. Francis and Ray Wertzberger attended the ski tournament at| Carey, 111., yesterday. I Roy Price has returned from Layafette, where he attended the state convention of Jersey cattle breeders.

tnrew an artn across-ms race to keep off the sun. v I turned around and looked at everyone m general. "Ain't you > people got business someplace I else?"* < ! Sam Buckner, who ran the feed i stole, squinted at me. "You l, O'Dares is gettm pretty pecky, i ■ ain't- you. Smoke-?’’—■ . i f "You'd Better drift, — Sam,” —1 * i said, and meant, it. Normally i < idon't pick fights, but f’m cap,able of handling those that come i my way. j For a minute 1 , thought Sam . I was going to try me toi size, out ; ‘finally tie scratched his nead and ■ said, "Hell, where s the profit ?ii .You fight one O’DAre and you: ' got to fight em all. Too not tor ! that," He turned and pushed nis i way through and others followed i him until 1 was alone by the I btiggy. 5 Not alone exactly, for Julie 1 ! came out ot the Bon—Marche, saw the crowd breaking up tmd came on with a quickened step. By j the time she was near enough to ■ see BUI stretched out, she lust ■ let go of her parcels and parasol and ran toward him. She looked at her brothel and then at nig j and the glance she gave me was i meant to kill me_ dead j.a_©>uld 1 be. There wasn’t anything 1 rcould-say i- the best thing was to 1 leave her alone and give her time to figure out it wasn’t my fault. ISo 1 went along the walk and i gathered up the things she'd dropped and placed-them m the . buggy. She was angry. As angry as I’d ever seen her, but she no longer pointed her anger at me. Z’Smoße," she said with frightening quietness, "just give me me good reason why this happened.” "Argument,” 1 said, being purposely vague. “Honest, Julie, Ithere wasn’t anything do. They just lit into each other." •’l’ve been praying this would never happen." she said. Thenshe looked past me, toward Hanahan's, and from the way her expression hardened', 1 knew that Cord had stepped, out. Now some men would < have walked a wide berth around Julie until she cooled oft, out Cord wasn’t ouilt that «®y,„ He untied our 'horses and led them across the street. When 1 looked at him his face was expressionless and If he was a bit sorry for wnat he nad done, • then he sure wasn’t showing any of it to either of us. . 4 « Jiihe faced him "You gave me your pipimse that there wouldn’t be trouble. IS this all your word’s worth. Cord?” “Y6ii knew this had to happen.” he said. , C

Authorize Foreign Ships Enter Midway Allow Entrance For Emergency Repairs AGANA, Guam (V) — The U. S government today authorized three foreign ships—two of them Russian—to put into the restricted port at Midway Island for emergency repairs. i The Russian ships reported Thursday they were in trouble in heavy seas 700 miles northwest , of Midway. Shortly after, a third I ship, the British freighter Ripley, •reported she was running low on fuel because of severe storms. Adm. Maurice Curts, commander., in chief of the Pacific Fleet, j gave all three ships permission to enter Midway in view of their Plight. A Civilian ships may ‘hot put into f Midway because of security reasons except in an emergency. The Navy is building an installation I there for its airborne early ! warning wing. The Russian ships were the Gen. Panfilov and Odessa, both grain freighters. «../

"ir 1 was a man I'd snoot you,* Julie Hageman said evenly. Cord smiled faintly. He stooc with nis nead tipped forward, the lock of hair bobbing slightly. HU eyes held Julie's, as though there were so many secrets between . them that a little thing like his beating up her brother wasn't going to destroy them. He spoke so softly that 1 almost didn't catch his words. “Would you. Julie? Would you really shoot me?” He didn't wait for an answer; 1 guess ne knew it. and 1 could guess close enough. He Just stepped around nis horse *nd swung up. There wasn't anything 1 could do but to follow. Julie stood by the back ot the buggy, ner eyes never leaving Cord’s face. 1 said. “I'm sure sorry. Julie.” 1 doubt that she even heard ! me. Cord rode out and 1 sided him and at the end of the street il looked back in time to see Julie turn to her brother. For a time Cord and I rode without speaking. The mid-rftbm-ing sun was scalding and 1 pulled my hat low to cut the mounting glare. After a while Cord paused to roll a smoke. 1 said, “You really think Bill Hageman's a rustler. Cord?" "Somfeone is.” he said. ’“Cattle don't just disappear. Smoke." I "Hell, Vince Randolt could . ..” "Vince jlon't nave the guts," jcbrd said quickly. He puffed on the cigarette. “Figure it out tor yoursMf, Smoke. A calf is weaned. then disappears. No brand, nothing to identify him.” He paused to scan the Vast stretch ot flats. “There's a hundred gullies out there, Smoke. Gullies where ~a-~man _ £ould_nu!d_a_feyy_ head for a week or so -Without there being one chance in a hundred ot their being found." "But where would the rustler ■ sell ’em ?" He looked at me, kind of squinty-dyed. "One ot these days i think I'll take a nde up to Rindo's Springs and nave a talk with. Heck Overland. There may be some shipping going on there that we dond know about.” He grinned at me. “You make tight ot what happened tn Lanahan’s in case Ma should ask you, you understand?” ‘'Sure, Cord. Anything you say.” He laughed then and rapped me. on the shouldet with his fist. “Come on, let's get home. We got a new Woman tn the house, and she ain't at all hard to look at.” He jabbed nis norse with his heels and rode ahead of »me, letting me cat his dwst ~ iTo Be Continued)

Authorities Report On Two Accidents' Only Minor Damage Done In Accidents One accident was investigated by the sheriff's department in Monroe, as the automobiles were leaving the county tourney at 10 p. m. Thursday. A car, operated by Irmi) D. Shifferly, 36, route 3, Decatur, stopped in the lane of traffic, and was struck in the rear by a vehicle, driven by Laura Neuenschwander, of Geneva, who was unable to stop in time. Damage was estimated at apiproximately SIOO to the Neuenschwander car. Trooper Gene Rash and deputy Charles Arnold investigated. One accident was reported to the city police Thursday afternoon. A car driven by John Wayne Ladd, 19, Decatur, hit a pedestrian, David Jacobs, 10. route 5,% Decatur, near the Lincoln school at noon. The Jacobs boy suffered a skinned left wrist and was treated at the Lincoln school. The department reported that a boy’s bicycle had been recovered east of the St. Mary's river bridge. A J. C. Higgins English type bicycle, colored' maroon and gold, . was found and taken to the city hall. Spinster Charged With Owing Taxes Claims Only Playing [ Os Good Fairy Role J OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. <Upi s —A plump, dark-haired spinster, ' charged with owing the govern- ■ ment $196,339 back income taxes, 1 testified Thursday she played a “good fairy'’ role in distributing • thousands of dollars to charity . for a Chicago socialite. , i Miss Luerana Pigman of sub- ■ urban Bethany admitted handling large sums of money during the > years 1947 to 1952, but said it all ■ came from Mrs. Fanny May Sco- ■ ville of Chicago. i Miss Pigman said she didn’t keep track of how much money she passed out to individuals and . organizations, but the governmentaccused her of failjng to report income totaling $246,000 • She testified Mrs. Scoville sent her money over a period of several years and that she deposited it under her own name in banks in California, Illinois and Oklahoma City. She said she wrote checks on the accounts as she was instructed to do. by Mrs. Scoville. ’ She said she put the money in 4he- banks under her own name because “Mrs. Scoville didn't watjt "her name on anything." Miss Pig man said Mrs. Scoville didn't want her name connected with the donations to charity because s/ie was afraid her relatives were trying to send her to a mental institution. When the government claim was first filed in June. 1956. Mrs. Scoville termed Miss Pigman’s story “fantastic" and refused to discuss it. After testimony from both sides was complete. Tax Court Judge Morton P Fisher allowed 90 day's for original briefs to be filed and an additional 30 days for reply! briefs.

FRtE.Jor All farmers oi Ihir Families BE OUR GUEST on JOHN DEERE DAY! - J— 1 p ..... I. "■ -i- ■■ A ,r ' ' V'V' FREE SHOW! <■«..« u „.. D „ Tuesday, „ _ program which features the latest JANUARY 21 I IINPU I *" ""’ <,cr " equipment and wKli I & I lllfak LUIfVII ■ unusual farming practices over 9:30 Uje world, is‘the western musical AT THE EijM FAR comedy, “The Ace Ranchero.’' Decatur Youth ■ ■ *n Shown here is a dude ranch scene alm* EVERYONE! Community Center SPRUNGER IMPLEMENT CO.

Court New* Marriage Licenses Menno M. Schwartz, 22, route 2. Berne, and Barbara Ann Eicher, 18, route 1, Berne. Sterling Edward Fenwick. Jr., 22, Auglaize. 0., and Mary Frances Payne, 30, Celina. O. Emil Kiefer, Jr., 24. Decatur, and Delilah Elizabeth Mylers Patesel, 21, Decatur. Robert James Bailer, 21, Decatur, and June Eleain Wolfe, 16, Fort Wayne. Gene Ivan Desgrange. 18, Arcadia, O:, and Katherine Irene Laws, 18, Bloomdale, O. Herbert H. Eichhorn. 29. Tippecanoe. and Rheba Louise Taylor, 29, Decatur. Complaint for Custody In thfe complaint for custody of minor children in the case of Carrie Baker vs Earl Baker, the defendant filed a petition for a change of custody. The court, after being sufficiently advised in the premisses, ordered that the plaintiff retain custody of said minor children. The defendant was given visiting rights at all reasonable times and places. The plaintiff was ordered not to remove the children from the jurisdiction of Adams circuit court-. All court costs were assessed against the defendant. Complaint on Note In the complaint-on.a promissory note, Richard C. Ehinger and Clem F. Kortenber, as partners, doing business as Ehinger and Kortenber vs Donald Jacobs, a motion to dismiss the cause was filed by the plaintiffs. The court, after examining the petition and being duly advised, ordered the cause of action to be dismissed, assessing thecdsts of said action, against the plaintiffs. , Estate Case In the estate of Dina Habegger. the inventory number sne was filed. A petition for authority to sell the personal property and real estate at public auction was filed. Real estate includes the east onehalf of in lot No. 372 in the 43rd addition to the city of Berne, valued at $7,200. Household goods were appraised at $323. stock was valued at $25 and mone.v in checking and savings accounts totaled

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 17. 1958

$7,774.11. The total appraised value of the estate was $15,322.11. Real Estate Transfers First Bank of Berne as trustee to Pearl Nichols etal, inlot 389 in tz etux, inlot 234 in Berne. —- Veronica Lantz etal to Earl LanBerne $5,275. E. W. Baumgartner as Admr. to Christian A. Inniger etux, 78.97 acres in Monroe Tp. $32,000. Martin L. Sprunger etux to Frieda Lehman, .50 acre in Monroe Tp. Frieda Lehman to Martin L. Sprunger etux,, 50 acre in Monroe Tp. ' Mabel Duff etal to Ruth Gottschalk, 40 acre in Jefferson tp. Ruth Gottschalk to Harvey S. Ineichen etux, 40 acres in Jefferson Tp. Jaocb L. Schwartz etux to Christian G. Schwartz etux, 19.18 acres in Hartford tp. '• James R. Crozier etux to Anna J. Nesswald, 100 acres in Union TPAnna J. Nesswald to James R. Crozier etux, 100 acres in Union Tp. Jerden F. Sanmann etux to Donna M. Folk, part out lot 73 in Decatur. Sharlene Ann Morrison etvir to Katharyme Nelson, a 2 acres in St. Mary’s Tp. * Katharyne Nelson to Sharlene Ann Morrison etvir. 2 acres in St. Mary’s Tp. Walter Messel etux to Anthony P. Koblick. inlot 215 in Geneva. Herman Bubck etux to Melvin E. Buuck etux, 85 acres in Preble Tp. Fred Busche etux to Gerber’s Super Market, Inc., inlot 3 and 4 . in Decatur. Ralph R. Grote etux to Louis S. Grote. .50 acre in Union Tp. Louise S. Grote to Gerald P, ■ Grote. 50 acres in Union Tp Louise S. Grote to Ralph R. > Grote etux, 80 acres in Union Tp. Stas? That Cough USE “OUR OWN” COUGH SYRUP j KOHNE DRUG STORE