Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 38, Decatur, Adams County, 14 February 1958 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
One Minor Accident Reported By Police The city police investigated one accident Thursday, the collision occur Ing at 4:OL p.m. at the intersection of Patterson and Winchester streets. A car, operated by James Thomas. Burk, 16, Decatur, was making a right turn off Winchester onto Patterson street and was struck by a vehicle, driven by Barbara Cole 22, Decatur, as she pulled aw/ trom the curb. Damage was estimated at 640 to the Burk car and $5 to the Cole auto. Put Social Security Numbers on Returns Taxpayers of Indiana were reminded today by district director Sterling M. Dietrich of the internal revenue service that all necessary social security numbers should be entered on their federal income tax returns when filing. He also reminded taxpayers that April 15 is still the deadline for receipt * *
DWELLING HOUSE SALE Three bedroom, all modern 7 room home and garage on full 66 x 132 lot 1015 West Monroe Street, Decatur, Indiana. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25 at 2:00 P.M. Central Daylight Time Sale will be made by virtue of an order of the Adams Circuit Court in cause No. 20565 Alice A. Schott vs. Ray A. Schott, at the law office of Hubert R. McQenahan, 116 South Third Street, Decatur, Ind. This home, just across the street from the Zion Lutheran Church is in first class condition. It is nicely arranged with built-in features, oak finished throughout, recently decorated and painted. The first i floor consists of kitchen, dining room, living room and den, with 3 large bedrooms, bath and sewing room upstairs. Gas fired hot air furnace in basement. Gas permit sold with the house. I Commissioners deed approved by the Adams Circuit Court and , abstract of title will be provided purchaser. I Property may be inspected at any time by inquiring at the premises. , Present owners not Interested in buying. - ] Possession—3o days. TERMS OF SALE— 2O% down on dav of sale; balance upon delivery of j Commissioners deed and abstract of title. .. A large FHA Loan with small monthly payments, which includes 1 Interest, insurance and taxes in the payments, may be assumed. : Low interest rate on loan. HUBERT R. McCLENAHAN . SEVERIN H. SCHURGER 14 20 I COMMISSIONERS. ‘ — — ——— f Public Sale COMPLETE DISPERSAL *As 1 have quit farming I will sell my entire herd of registered Guernsey cattle and the following personal property at public auction at my farm located 2 miles north and 2% miles west of Portland, Indiana, on THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20,1958 At 10:30 O’clock 40 — Registered Guernsey Cattle — 40 These cattle consists of 16 cows, ranging from 2 to 7 years of age. all good producers, fine quality with production records of from 400 to 500 lbs. of fat; 12 bred heifers; 6 coming yearling heifers; 4 club heifers; a few calves. ' The above cattle are strictly Longwater blood lines and have, been oh D. H. I. A. tests tor years. One of Eastern Indiana’s better herds. Full information on all animals given day of sale. - Farm Machinery — 1 Ford tractor complete with cultivators and breaking plows; 1- 3 point hitch grader blade; 1 forge scoop; 1 Case field chopper with com and grass head; 1 Case blower. These 2 implements are In excellent condition. 1 Woods Bros, combine with motor and pickup reel; 1 John Deere manure spreader; 1 rubber tired and bed; 1 I.H.C. semi-mount 7 ft. mower; 1 Oliver 13 run fertilizer grain drill; 1 I.H.C 7 ft. disc; 1 Blackhawk corn planter; 1 Case corn planter; 1 side delivery hay rake; 1 corn binder; 2 rotary hoes; 2 hay racks and self unloading endgates; 1 jack for wagon unloader; 1 buck rake for Ford; 1- 4 cylinder air compressor; 1- 80 gal. compression tank; feed racks; 1- 2 wheel trailer; 1 lawn mower; 1 lard press; 60 gal. kettle. I - 6 can milk cooler; 10 - 10 gal. cans; 1 power cream separator; 1 electric water heater and other milking equipment. 500 bu. more or less of corn; 50 bales of second cutting alfalfa. TERMS OF SALE—CASH. ALBERT DEGLER E. T. Wallace, Sales Mgr. Ray Elliott & Ernest Loy—Auctioneers Dorsey MeAfee—Clerk.— . — _r_ 14 sun - & m ° n - V * 1 Continuous Sun. from 1:15 Fe» ONLY 15c -50 c a A ■ » ©ENERAL* H Findest GS RIOT IN H thins that his most HILARIOUS ever hippeoed ROLE! fdrWMk to Jerry and (4 ' Ji 1 1VjOliMW * W/ PHYLLIS KIRK-PETER LORRE-JOE MANTELL-GENE EVANS. A •• 0 —O— • — TONIGHT AND SATURDAY — * Great Entertainment in TWO Pictures! “HARLEM GLOBETROTTERS” World’s Best Basketball Players in a Feature of Fun and Excitement! & “BLACK PATCH” Western With Geo. Montgomery.
of returns by his office. “Many returns are filed in Which both husband and wife earned income during 1957 and often one of the social security numbers is omitted,” Dietrich said. “Along with checking other entries on the ; return, taxpayers should be very careful to make sure that social security numbers are ccmplete and accurate. • "Social security numbers are required whether or not this type of tax has actually been paid or whether the filer is subject to such taxes, due to job changes, computation space is provided for the application of the overpayment to any income tax owed or to obtain a refund." ECONOMY (Continued from page o.e) allowed were adequate in view of the Atomic- Energy Commission's recent assertion that known do- . mestic reserves of uranium are adequate for at -least a 10 year supplyTrade in a good town — Decatu.
Pump-Priming By Government Is Predicted Ike Administration Is Confronted With Hard Political Fact By LYLE C. WILSON , United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON < UP)—Look for more pump - priming by the government in the inflationary tradition of Franklin D. Roosevelt and look for it soon if President Eisenhower is disappointed in his hope for a business upturn next month. The hard political fact confronting the administration today is this: ■Die Republican Party probably could not survive serious depression and unemployment in the term of office of the first Republican president elected since 1928. If inflationary government spending, pump priming, is necessary to avoid such a situation, the younger elements of the Republican Party most likely will be in favor of priming the pump. Such younger elements of the party as Vice President Richard M. Nixon reasonably may believe that their political futures still lie before them, to be realized only if the Republican Party continues as a going concern. Nixon Would Invest Count Nixon among the top level of administration men who would Invest right now considerably more in recovery than the two-billion-dollar program already announced. Something around five billion dollars would be more in line with the vice president’s thinking and there are urgent demands from Congress for even bigger outlays. Eisenhower’s chin’s up review this week of administration shot-in-the-arm actions had a builtin trigger for bold additional measures in a matter of six to eight weeks. The unemployment figures for March will prove the President right or wrong in his belief that a business upturn will overtake the recession in that month. If proved wrong, Eisenhower will have no alternative to quick further action. Pump priming on the scale discussed by some responsible persons ih Washington would bounce the public debt weil above the new limit at which the administration desires Congress to fix it That new limit would be 280 billioadollars. ----- FDR's New Deal conceived pump priming as a depression cure. It did not work very well in the depths of business calamity during which Roosevelt applied it but it might do better in the less urgent circumstances in which it is being used today. Votes Large Sums Roosevelt spent between 15 and 20 billion dolls.rs on emergency 1 relief and recovery during his first eight years in office. * Congress still was voting large relief sums, however, as late as the summer of 1939. The appropriation for the fiscal year 1940 was $1,700,000,000.. Government recovery loans of nearly one billion dollars for fiscal 1940 were authorized for such projects as water works, sewage disposal, bridges, hospitals, toll roads, bypasses, purchase of equipment to be sold of leased to railways, rural electrification, promotion of American exports. Depression and unemployment resisted FDR’s free spending political magic although the voters fell wholly under its spell. The disaster of war finally pulled the United States out of economic trouble and onto the boomtime plateau of full employment which continued until almost now. Another busted boom probably would put Democrats In the White House again for more than the many Roosevelt - Truman years. B COUNTY (Continued from Pag* On«) farm land by the Miami conservancy district. In 1938 he moved to Indiana as vice-president and field manager of the Central Sugar company. He later became associated with the Central Soya company as agronomist and since March 1, 1948, has been managing director of the National Soybean crop improvement council. He was appointed a member of the board of trustees of Purdue University in 1947. Calland is past chairman of the agronomy section, American society of sugar beet technologists, member of American ‘society of agronomists, soil science society of America, council for agricultural and chemical research, and honorary life member of American soybean association. He has been called upon over the past ten years to speak before a great many agricultural groups throughout the midwest. —“-IL.:. -.... _,.v Leaders of Adams county will be attending the day’s conference as guests of the Decatur and Berne Rotary clubs. If you have something to sell or rooms torrent, try a Democrat Want Ad — They bring results.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA
College Choir At . Methodist Church Initial Service Os Lent Season Sunday * * - Prof. Herman Baker The Marion College choir, composed of 22 singers and its director, will present a program of sacred music for the first service of the Sunday evening Lenten series at the First Methodist church Sunday night at 7:30 o’clock. On this* occasion the people of Decatur and surrounding community will have the opportunity of bearing a group of singers that is recognized as one of the outstanding college musical organizations specializing in sacred song. The sincerity of their singing brings inspiration to every audience. In order to attain the high standard of singing, which the director has set as an objective for the choir, special emphasis is constantly placed on perfect diction, flexibility of rhythm, pure resonant tone and sincere expression of a positive belief in spiritual truth. ? This choral organization was founded by Prof. Herman Baker, its present conductor, and director of the Marion College school of music. Prof. Baker has his master of music degree from Northwestern University and is a former member of the famous Northwestern University a capella choir, which was then under the leadership of the late Peter Christian Lutkin. .. .. ... ~ The program will include a wide variety of the most interesting musical selections, ranging from the simplicity of the best gospel hymns, the vigor of negro spirituals, to the grandeur of standard anthems. > Prior tc the evening worship service there will be a fellowship supper in the church dining room tor members of the church and the choir- The supper will begin at 6 o’clock. Chairmen of the supper committee are Mr. and Mrs. John Doan and Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Hetrick. The Wesleyan Service Guild will serve as the committee on decorations and the members of the youth fellowship will be the table committee. A welcome is extended to the public to attend the supper and the program by the choir. FOURTH < , i,, page one, covered Tallahassee, Fla., Thursday and two to three inches hit parts of Georgia and Louisiana. The wintry weather also affected baseball’s spring training camps. >At St. Petersburg, Fla,, rookies in the St. Louis Cardlh’til camp worked out indoors at a YMCA basketball court and Yankee Manager Casey Stengel gave his 36-man rookie contingent a day off. The cold and stormy weather continued to take a grim toll. A United Press count showed at least 129 persons dead from weather - caused traffic accidents and fires, explosure and overexertion since Feb 6. New York reported 26 deaths, New England 16, Texas and Oklahoma 12 each, Ohio 11, Indiana 10, Pennsylvania 7, North Carolina and Michigan 6 each. South Carolina and Virginia 5 each, Missouri 4, Illinois 3, Maryland 2. and Alabama, South Dakota, Tennessee and Wisconsin 1 each. More Snow in New York Fires took a heavy toll in lives and property. Five persons died Thursday in a fire at Danville, Va,, and three persons burned to death Thursday night in Oklahoma when a pot-bellied stove exploded in a farmhouse. Upstate New York, still digging out of a blizzard that hit earlier in the week, Thursday got fresh snow ranging up to 10 Inches. Temperatures skidded as low as 25 degrees below zero and brisk winds added to the discomfort. Helicopters flew supplies to about 100 families marooned in isolated regions of upstate New York. A 16-ton bulldozer cleared a patch to 33 snowbound persons near South Bend, Ind. An ice jam on the Illinois River which stalled 20, barges between Ottawa and Marseilles, 111., began breaking up Thursday, permitting river traffic to resume. If you have something to sell or rooms torrent, try a Democrat Want Ad — They bring results.
Lourdes Is One Os Leading Shrines Ranks Second Only To Rome As Shine By LOUIS CASSELS United Press Staff Correspondent One hundred years ago this week, a 14-year-old peasant girl named Bernadette Soubirous set out from the village of Lourdes, France, to gather firewood along the banks of a stream in the Pyrenees Mountains. She came home with a story that baffled and disturbed her parents—a story that many people are still unable to believe. Bernadette said she saw a vision of the Virgin Mary in a stone grotto. Her experience was repeated 17 times in the next few weeks. During one of these visits to the grotto, Bernadette dug witk her hands in the rock—at the lnstructions of the vision, she said —and uncovered a spring Becomes A Shrine Today this spring, still flowing at a rate of 8,000 gallons a day, is second only to Rome as a pilgrimage place for Roman Catholics throughout the world. It also draws many Protestants and nonChristians —a total of some two million visitors a year. Lourdes has become a shrine because thousands of desperately sick people have become well after plunging into the icy water’s of Bernadette’s spring. Fifty-four of these cures have been formally accepted by the Catholic Chur"' as miracles. The church s standards for proclamation of a miracle are very strict. They require, among other things, that the patient fhust have been suffering from a clearly organic ailment, such as cancer or a bone deformity rather than any condition like paralysis that might have a psychosomatic cause. Requires Medical Proof There also must be detailed medical documentation, including;
get the best ei ■ *sj CWj Buick*. Award-Winning Air-Cooled Aluminum Brakes* • w g gu . conservatively, a lOOX Imfnrnecazor provement over conventional Detroit brakes." SPORTS CARS IIXUSTRATEO, Feb. Iwl&.QntftG&n't After makln 8 22 emergency stops from 60 MPH In a 1958 Buick t .*<* . Century, SCI tells Its readers: . "This was by far the most severe - -- test we ever have submitted a ' sedan’s brakes to, but after It was ‘ overthe Buick’s brakes functioned perfectly." . pg---— ' ‘i'll, ■< ’ grwy window al mrj Sulci l» iAfCTY Olw* Look at everything you can have in the B-58 — no wonder it’s Buick’s year to cheer B-58 DYNASTAR GRILLE - stunning highlight of "VELVET WALL” SOUND WLENCING-scientifically the new face of fashion. r seals out road poises, heat and vibration. MIGHTY B-12000 ENGINE-develops 12,000 SAFETY PLATE GLASS ALL AROUND - protects pbunds of thrust behind each power stroke. you and your family—gives distortion-free visibility. SPECTACULAR FLIGHT PITCH DYNAFLOW*- SPARKLING NEW LUCITE PAINTS - that retain switches the pitch a million ways automatically - their luster far longer-optional at very little cost, provides perfect power delivery. rOMD-S HNEST POFBR ACCESSORIES - offer MIRACLE CHASSIS PLUS AIR RIDE* — automati- you y Our choice of power options for steering, brakcally adjusts itself to every road and load, cradles in g> windows, seat adjustment, automatic head-lamp your ride on 4 columns of air. dimmer—even a power radio antenna. RUGGED X-BRACED CHASSIS WITH FAMOUS All entered to the standards of BUICK ROTOFLOW TORQUE-TUBE DRIVE-glves and iet by Butck you the air ride at its buoyant best e _„ - ★Plight Pitch Dynaflow standard on LIMITED bW ROADMASTER DUAL VISTA-VISION HEAD LAMPS — have 50% 73 > °i> * on other Senes. Buick air ride optional , • at extra cost on all Series. Alutrtknum Front Brakes standard on all stronger wights —25% stronger low beam. Series except special. tn|oy Buick’* 2 TV Show*-"The Fairlea Mutual Shaw," ttarrlng Patrie* Mutual, on ABC-TV and "Jala* al Wall* Fargo," starring Dale Robertton, on NBC-TV -Hi ' * —■ - W WhM letter aatMwbßßsaretaßt / VA Buick will build then x. 818 YOUR AUTHORIZED BUICK DEALER ( . T ' . ... . ~ . A.- .
laboratory tests, of the patient’s physical condition before and after bathing in the spring. Followup medical examinations are conducted for at least three years after the alleged cure to ascertain that It is permanent. A medical bureau at Lourdes examines all pilgrims who claim to have undergone miraculous cures. Since this bureau was set up 22 years ago, it has recorded more than 3,000 recoveries from dis- 1 ease or deformity which doctors held to be beyond explanation by medical science. The Catholic Chtirch has taken: pains to emphasize to centennial year pilgrims that, for at least 999 * but' of each thousand who go there, Lourdes has only spiritual benefits to offer. But how do you account for the thousandth person wjsfo goes into the baths an invalid and comes out whole? For those who do not believe in miracles, Lourdes remains a great unanswered questtan- — : JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES Kingdom Hall Corner Monroe and Ninth Sunday, 2:30 p.m.: "Communism or Christianity, Which Shall It Be?" public Bible lecture by R. C. Steele, local Watchtower represenative. Sunday, 3:45 p.m.: Watchtower Bible study and discussion on the subject, "Endurance Serves to Prove Integrity.” One of the scriptures for consideration will be I ?eter 2:21, New World Trans., “In fact, to this course you were called, because even Christ suffered for you, leaving you a model for you to fallow his steps closely." Tuesday, 8 pjn.: Bible study using the study aid, "This Means Everlasting Life." Friday, 7:30 p.m.: Theocratic Ministry school followed by Kingdom Service meeting. If you have something to sell or rooms forrent, try a Democrat Want Al — They bring results.
Steady Customer PITTSBURGH — to — Dr. Marion K. McKay, president erf the Civil Service Commission, and a retired University of Pittsburgh
INSURANCE Strong Stock Companies and Prompt Service When Loss Occurs. Consult This Agency Today! COWENS INSORANCE AGENCY L. A. COWENS r JIM COWENS 209 Court St. Phone 3-3601 . Decatur, Ind. ...■j■ - ■ - — Public Auction As T have decided to quit farming and am working at the G. E. in Decatur, Indiana, therefore will sell the following farm equipment at my farm located Vt mile East of Wren, O. and 1% miles South, on MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17,1958 I Commencing at 1:00 TWO TRACTORS: 1954 Minneapolis-Moline Model ZB, equipped with 112x38 tires, live power take-off & hydraulic pump; Minneapolis-Moline i Model R tractor, power lift cultivators; 1954 MINNEAPOLIS-MOLINE COMBINE: 1955 BELLE CITY SINGLE ROW CORN PICKER. OTHER FARM EQUIPMENT—I9S6 4 section M-M rotary hoe, used i less than 100 acres: 1955 Cross 30 ft. double chain, bale or grain elevator with 5 h.p. Briggs-Stratton engine; 1954 13-7 M-M double disc grain drill with fertilizer attachment, double power lift; International semi-mounted power mower; International Model 241 tractor corn planter with fertilizer attachment, will check or drill; Int. 3-12 in. Little Genius tractor plow, with No. 8 plow chief bottoms; 2 section 1 M-M steel spike tooth harrow; 4 section flexible steel drag harrow; 3 ‘section spring tooth harrow; Int. No. 9A 8 ft. disc, in good condition; 1 8 ft. double roller Dunham cultipacker; 3 ton Grove Economy rubber tired wagon and 16 ft. grain bed equipped with a Jiffy dump; implement sled with railroad iron runners: 15 ft. land drag made of railroad iron: other odd pieces of railroad iron; 6 Jamesway cow stanchions: Arrow bucket type pressure grease gun; other articles not mentioned. I TERMS—CASH. GERHARD MEYERS, Owner Auctioneers—Merl Knittie and Don Mox. Clerk—Otto Feigert. 14
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14. 1958
I economics professor, has missed I only one home Panther football ’ game since 1920. He has paid for the seame seat at Pitt Stadium since it was built in 1920. I ■ .
