Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 52, Decatur, Adams County, 3 March 1958 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

North Korea Refuses To Release Hostages Pull Diplomatic Doublecross Today PANMUNJOM, Korea (UP) — The Communists pulled a diplomatic doublecross today by refusing to release 27 persons—includ-

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ing two Americans and two Germans—kidnapped by Red gunmen who hijacked an airliner last month. US. Navy Capt. George W. Kehl called in vain for the release of the travelers. He said they <tre being held by the Reds as "hostages' for political pur- ' poses.’* Kehl •tried at first to arrange ' J the immediate release of the pris- ' ’ Oners, then proposed that the Americana and the Germans be ' i released at 11:30 am. Tuesday. ■I He dropped, both demands when i Communist spokesmen would say : only that they have "no authori- ; ty" to release the captives; He ; said Allied representatives arc ! ready to receive the prisoners any ' time the Reds decide to set thm free. Th Communists in a radio broadcast Saturday had promised to set all or most of the pris- , oners free. American and German diploi mats and some Korean Red Cross ! officials accompanied Kehl to to,l day's futile meeting of the Uhited Nations truce secretariat here in I the hope that the Communists would keep their word. Red Col. Kim Joom Kyung. ! however, merely • repeated the , Communist demand that South: Korea dicker with the Comma-; : ni.sts for the release of the cap-; .tives. >I — ! Ohio Authorities Expected For Boys Juvenile authorities from War-! ton. O . were expected to arrive j in Decatur to pick up two youths, I '' 13 and 16 years o]d. who wete ■ ! arrested in Geneva Wednesday i I by state police who found a pistol on one of the boys. The older boy is wanted in Ohio for parole violation, and both are Wanted. there for break-ins. If is understood that the two; , j ouths arrived in this county about 8:30 p. m. Tuesday, and spent the night in a car parked kin an alley in Berne. Then they | started for Geneva, where they wi re picked tip. The youths were I lodged in the Adams county jail.

Leads Expedition Across Antarctica British Explorer To Be Paid Honor McMURDO. SOUND (UP > —British explorer Vivian Fuchs, first man ever to lead an expedition clear across Antarctica, began preparing today to return to Britain where public acclaim and a knighthood await him. The Fuchs party is expected to leave by ship later this week for New Zealand, where the explorer will board an England - bound plane An ice breakup has made air travel from here difficult and dangerous. Fuchs' 2,100-mile trans-Antarctic trek ended Sunday at New Zealand's base on the Antarctic coast, a few miles from the U.S. camp here. 1 U.S. and British photographers | swarmed out of the base to meet him, and the washboards and garbage-canlids of an American "marching and welcoming band" played him in. Queen Elizabeth; '’Prime Minister Harold Macmillan and the j Royal Geographical Society radioed congratulations to Fuchs. The i RGS also congratulated Sir Edmund Hillary, New Zealand's conqueror of Mt. Everest, who guidled the Fuchs party over the last : stages of the journey. Fuchs was notified that the Queen will knight him when he ■ returns to London, - . , Hillary, who urged Fuchs to ! up the trip when worsening weather multiplied the dangers of Antarctic travel, was glad to acknowledge his mistake. "There were times when 1 thought you wouldn’t get here, ! Bunny,” he told Fuctjs- "I’m very I happy to have been proved wrong.” and ho local will be filed against them if the Ohio authorities arrive. Trade in a good town — Decatu*

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Notre Dame Reveals Huge Expansion Plan SOUTH BEND — (IP) The University of Notre Dame today announced a 66 million dollar 10year development program. The Rev. Theodore N. Hesburg, uni- ' versity president, said two-thirds of the money will be used for "in-y ternal growth’ and 27 millions for new buildings and additions. Two Make Escape From State Prison Leave Dormitory Outside Os Prison MICHIGAN CITY (IP) — T w o convicts at Indiana State Prison with previous escape records walked away Sunday night from a dormitary outside the institution walls. They' were identified as Harry Spaulding, sentenced from Johnson County in 1954 to 2 to 5 years' for second-degree burglary, and , James Denton, sentenced from Putnam County in 1955 to 1 to 5 . years for escaping from the state . farm. „ Both prisoners were due to be . released on parole in a few days. Spaulding was paroled effective ■March 10. Denton’s parole was ■ effective March 17, pending a ■ satisfactory parole program in- ' eluding employi-hehtr I Spaulding previously had es- : capedUfrom the prison in August,; ' 1954. . 1 In Indianapolis. State Cbrrec-; tion Board member Arthur Campbel) said Spaulding and Denton. were trusties living in the but-; side dormitory and both failed.Jo; 1 appear at a head-count Sunday! night. _ T . ; "They just walked away from, the outside dormitory.” Campbell said. "They were trusties but' some of them can't be trusted.” .. T-rm L Trade in a good town — Decatur

Three Arrested In Night Club Holdup | Cairo, 111., Club Robbed Early Today CAIRO. 111. 'UP> — Three men who were captured 22 minutes after the holdup of the El Patio night club here here early today have been charged with armed robbery: The in,ej) were identified b y Alexander County Sheriff Carl Clutts as Thomas Sloan, 20. Chicago, William John Kendrick, 23, Cambridge, Mass, and John Joseph Rooney, Lynn, Mass.' It was the second holdup of an Alexander County night club within four days. State policeman Thomas Stilley and officer Donald Thady of Anna, who made the arrest, recovered $1,505 from a cash box in the car of the three men. Stilley said it was the same amount taken from the El Patio. The officers arrested the three 'men near Thebes, 17 miles north--west of Cairo, after hearing an alert on the robbery over their police radio. Stilley approached the car as Thady covered him with a sawed-off shotgun. Stilley said one of the men remarked: “Let's give* up. They have us covered with a shotgun.” Stilley said the meh were armed with .22 and .38 caliber pistols. Sheriff Clutts said the bandits entered the/ El Patio and announced"’nilsis a heist. " 'lTiey | took money from a cash drawer I and robbed five patrons Irom Mayfield. Ky , Clutts said. i Authorities said Abstract Ranfsdrri, manager of the club, was ■ in a vestibule phone booth making la call when the bandits came in. | They did not notice him. When I Ransom heard the word “heist'' he left the club and notified authorities. “We almost got them i inside the club,'’ Clutts said. | The bandits hit Robert Wise, a !bartehder, in the mouth, but he was not seriously hurt. f —Clutts said the three men had 'between 500 and 600 dollars on

V, . them besides the mosey in the cash box. , -g, Five armed bandits robbed the Thunderbird Club northwest of Cairo of some $14,000, including $3,000 from patrons, early last Thursday. Harold E. Fields, 41, Marshall, has been charged with armed robbery in connection with that holdup. - Authorities are still searching for the bandits. Clutts said he did not think ; the three men arrested early to--1 day were involved in the Thunderbird holdup, but added that patrons will be asked to look at the men. Farm Price Parity Ratio Is Improved Situation Somewhat Better In February i WASHINGTON lip — The farm ' price situation bettered somewhat ; during February despite a jump in living and production costs to ■ a new all-time high. The Agriculture Departmeht’s 1 monthly price report shows that prices farmers received for crops 1 and livestock went up 2 per cent 1 in the month ended Feb. 15. “Substantially” higher prices ’ for meat animals, orange, snap beans and potatoes were primar- . ily responsible for the increase. Partially offsetting were lower . prices for cotton, eggs, and milk. | Farm prices in February were , 8 per cent above February a year . ago and at their highest level , since May, 1954. The farm cost of living went . up one-third of 1 per cent. The, : index of prices paid, based on the ; 1910-14 average, rose to 302 per cent, an all-time high. i Prices paid for both living and ' production goods advanced slight- ■ ly during the month, primarily as i a result of moderate increases in food prices and further substani tial increases in feeder livestock “ prices. The February farm costs were 3 per cent higher than those I of a year ago. The parity ratio—the relationship between prices received and prices paid—advanced to 83 per cent of parity. Parity is the price needed to put commodities sold entiirely satisfied with the invenby farmers on a par with the cost of things they must buy—theoretically a fair return for their products. Hogs on the hoof were up $1.20 a hundredweight during the ji-jnonth. to sl9 70. Beef cattle were up 90 cents a hundredweight to $20.60. Shah Os Iran Will Visit United States THERAN. Iran — IIP* — Shah Mohammed Riza Pahevi has accepted an invitation from President Eisenhower to visit the United States, the government announced Sunday. No date was set ' for the visit. -7. — 7 NATIONAL <Con tintied from page one) ger, and Chester Isch; Hartford township. Mrs. Dale Mertz and David Alberson; Jefferson townstip. Carl Baker. Robert Lautzenhesier, Mrs. Robert Stuber and Mrs. Henry Rumple; Kirkland township. Mrs. Leroy Kolter, Mrs. Richard Borne.’.Oscar Brown, and Joseph Hazelwood; Monroe township: Mrs. Mike Ehrsam. Mrs. Clifford Exxes. Chloe Ellen Neuensewander. Mrs. Stanley Arnold. Mrs. Elmer Inniger. Alice Joan Sprunger, Harold Schwartz and Lynn Lehman: Preble township. Mrs. A. A Fenner. Mrs. Marvin oCnrad. Mrs. Milton Krutezman. Mrs. Irvin Worthman. Irvin Schuller and Wilber Selking; Root township, Mrs. Paul Herder-1 horst. Mrs. Richard Harkless, Mrs. Ed Selking, Mrs. Frank Bitt ne r. Fred Meier, and Everett Singleton; St. Mary’s township, Mrs. Russell Edgel, Mrs Gale Cook. Mrs. John King, Mrs. Gerald Hart. Charles Morrison. Doyle Lehman and Paul Rich. Union township; Mrs. Arthur Krueckeberg, Mrs., Richard Marbach, Mrs. Ed Gerbers, Edgar Krueckeberg, Emerson Wass, and Ed _ Gerbers: Wabash township, Mrs. Raymond VanEmon. Mrs. Lorene Fenstermaker. Mrs. Sherman Neuenschwander, Wilbur Kirchhofer. Jerome Hawbaker and Ardon Mostownship, Mrs. Gerald Cook, Mrs. Don Smith Paul Kohne and Eugene Arnold, and Berne Girls, Miss Mary Schlagenhauf. People 60 to 80 Tear Out This Ad . . . and mail it today to find out how you can still apply for a SI,OOO life insurance policy to help take care of final expenses Without burdening your family. You handle the entire transaction by mail with OLD AMERICAN of KANSAS CITY. No obligation. No one will call on you! Write today. simply giving your name, address and year of (birth. Mail to Old American Insurance Co.. 3 West 9th, Dept. L 3138, Kansas City, Mo.

..yin' -■ —— - -7 T Oh'ri Av A ■ 'I WILLIAM H. GINGHER, left, district governor of the northern Indiana Lions clubs, and his wife chat with Merlin C, Sieling, dent of the Decatur Lions club, and Mrs. Sieling Monday ftlght The governor made his annual visit here this week, and desci ibed . the 180,000 projects by which Lions helped their own communities throughout the world this past year.—'Staff Photo) Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Finds Healing Substance That Relieves Pain* Stops Itching as it Shrinks Hemorrhoids

Nov Y*k, N. T. (Sr«UI) - For the 1 first time science has found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids, atop itchinc, and relieve pain - without surgery. In case after case, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction (shrinkage) took place. Moat vnazinc of all — reaulta were so thorough that aufferera

Public Sale ■ ' ■ We, the undersigned, will sell the following personal property at the farm, located 2 miles east of Ohio City. Ohio on Route 127, or the first house north of the Nickel Plate Railroad on Route 127, on THURSDAY, MARCH 6,1958 Starting at 1:00 P.M. v BARN 40x80 WITH A 16x50 SHED ATTACHED. This barn has a lot of " good lumber throughout, good metal roofing and the shed attached can easily be detached a and moved as is. This barn has a board floor and mows arc lofted. FARM EQUIPMENT — 1946 Minneapolis-Moline Model R tractor and cultivators; John Deere No. 290 corn planter with fertilizer attachment; John beers 2-12 in. tractor plow; John Deere 13 hoe fertilizer grain drill: John Deere 1 3 section steel harrow; Minneapolis-Moline 7 ft. tractor disc; 2 section, rotary hoe: 3 section spring tooth harrow; 8 ft. cuitimulcher: tractor grass seeder; corn shelter: barrel type sprayer. 140 fL-qf brand new hay rope; some loose lumber; ,old doors, etc., and other items. . CONSIGNED TO THIS SALE BY A NEIGHBOR. MR. ROBERT EBER. WHO IS QUITTING FARMING j- 1952 Model U Minneapolis Moline ip good mechanical condition; Minneapolis-Moline 4 row powertrol cultivators; M-M 3-14 in. • tractor plow, rubber tires and powertropJohnDeere tractor manure spreader. only 1 yr. oldrM-M 2 section rotary hoe! M-M 7 ft. tractor disc; John Deere corn planter with .tractor. hitch; power field sprayer NEW IDEA 2 ROW CORN PICKER. ALSO CONSIGNED TO THIS SALE BY MRS. HUGH ELDER: Co-op 8 row field sprayer and brush gun: New Idea rubber tire wagon '6 and 8 ply tires* 16 f. grain bed; No. 14 2-14 in. J. Were plow; No. 4B 2-14 in. J. Deere plow, both tractor plows on rubber tires; 100 gal. winter I type hog fountain. ‘ TERMS—CASH. No.t responsible for accidents. DARREL PRIOR and ROBERT EBER Owners Merl Knittie and Don Mox— Auctioneers Donald Sutten—Clerk — —— ——3 Public Sale As we are quitting farming we will sell at Public Auction all our equipment on the Vallyd Farms —Located 5 miles south of the Fort Wayne City Limits on South Anthony Extended: or 2 miles north of Poe, Indiana on South Anthony Extended; or 10 miles northwest of Decatur, Indiana on the Winchester Road to Poe, then 2 miles north, on Monday, March 10 at 12:30 P.M. D.S.T. 3 TRACTORS and EQUIPMENT 1955 Ford 860 tiactor with 13" tires, and only 420 actual hours, in A-l I condition. 1954 Freeman manure loader, for Ford tractor; Ford culti- : vators; Dearborne 14” 3-bottom tractor plow; Dearborne 7 ft. power mower; grader blade; slip scoop; Ford heat houser. 1950 W. D. Allis Chalmers tractor, in exfoa-gdod-condition-. Cultivators for A. C. tractor; tractor umbrella; 1950 Allis Chalmers 2-row mounted fertilizer corn planter. 1945 Model M Farmall tractor, newly painted, in extra good condition. 2-wheel weights, wiae front end for M or H. FORAGE HARVESTER - COMBINE - PICKER 1952 Allis Chalmers Forage Harvester with both grass pickup attachment and corn head, quick change attachment; 1952 Allis Chalmers blower with 50 ft. of pipe. 1950 Allis Chalmers mounted corn picker. 1950 Allis Chalmers Model 60 combine with hydraulic header and recleaner. FARM IMPLEMENTS 1952 Case 13-hole fertilizer grain drill; 1953 Case manure spreader 12ft .bu., on j-übben; 1954 Birch 8 ft. wheel disc;. 1952 Peck power takeI off self unloading wagon; 1950 Allis Chalmers power take-off side deI livery; 1955 Soil Surgeon, used 1 season: hay rake on rubber; Graham I home plow; G. O. field sprayer complete with hand boom, like new . 1956 Palls Grove portable elevator drag, like new; Case 14“ tractor plow; Roderick lean aisc; Brillion cultipacker; spring tooth harrow; spike tooth harrow; factory built implement trailer, tilt top and wench;’32 ft. Universal elevator, with 5 h.p. Wise engine- International l-row pull-type ensilage cutter; farm wagon with rack and false end gate; Papec hammer mill, like new; Clipper fanning mili- 12-hole htig feeder; winter hog fountain; chicken feeders and fountains; SimI plicity garden tractor with cultivators dnd mower; two 500-chick brooders; power corn shelleri grain, blower and 3 h.p. single phase electric motor; Martin 500 bu. metal corn crib; Sears 1100 bu. corn I crib; buzz saw; 30 ft. belt; milk cans; many, many miscellaneous items not mentioned. ! CORN—HAY—STRAW — 800 bu. corn in crib: 600 bales alfalfa and • I brome hay; 60 bales - wheat straw. . j DAIRY EQUIPMENT & SULKING PARLOR: 1953 DeLaval 2 unit pipp.Hine milking machine; 2 Surge stainless steel milking units- Productioni Acres 4-unit walk-through stalls; 1953 Masterbuilt 3-can side door milk i cooler; bottled gas 32 gal. water heater; double wash tank ?*H£ K: J? s< ', For,l P ic . k ' u P truck - in condition, with good rubber NOTE-TTiis farm equipment is in good condition. Most of it has not been used for the past 2 seasons. * TERMS—CASH. Not responsible for accidents. F. C. VALENTINE and F. E. MENZE, Owners '■

MONDAY, MARCH 3, 1958

made astonishing statements like “Piles have ceased to be a problem!" The secret is a new healing substance ( Bio-Dyne*)-discovery of a world-famous research institute. This substance is now available in tuppotitory or oinimeat /arm under the name Preparation H* At your driifgitt. Money back guarantee. •Beg. U.S. Pat OR.