Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 52, Decatur, Adams County, 3 March 1958 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By ■ THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CCh/INC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Poet Office aa Second OaM Matter Dick D Heller Presides J. H. Heller Vice-President Chas. Holthouse ... Secretary-Treasurer _ . Subscription Rates: By Mall in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 88.00; Six months, 14.25; 3 months, 82.25. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, _ 89.00; 6 months, 84-75; 3 months, 82.50. By Carrier: 30 cents per week. Single copies, 6 cents.

According to a recent newspaper account, a large high school in the east spent more money on athletics than on mathematics and science combined. This is not unusual and it happens in lots of schools. — <! 0 0 The tragedy of the Kentucky school bus plunge into a flooded river, claiming at least 23 lives was one of the worst in the nation’s history. It is another costly proof that we can't be too careful on slippery highways. —o o You now should have your county tax bills. Remember when you open them, County treasurer Neal merely sends out the bad news, he doesn’t set the rate. If you are one of the many who feels our rates are getting out of control, you should start right now attempting to ascertain what you as a taxpayer should do to get lower rates next year. We the citizens actually govern the rate setting and if we sit idly by, naturally our rates will continue to climb. If we show an interest in every dime asked for and attend the hearings we can again have lower rates before too long at the county level, . —<o © Mr. and Mrs. Bert Haley, prominent and well-known Decatur couple celebrated their golden wedding anniversary Sunday at their home on High street. The three daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Haley and everyone of their grand-children were on hand for the open house attended by many Decatur people and visitors. Mrs. Haley has long been active in club affairs of Decatur, Adams county and northern Indiana and Mr. Haley is also well known throughout this area. The three daughters attending the observance included Mrs. Ed Zanette, of Auburn, Mrs. Buster Hetrick of Garrett and Mrs. Robert Gay” of Decatur. We join their many friends in congratulating this fine couple for the exemplary life they have lived in our community and wish for them and their family many many happy years.

m PROGRAMS Daylight Time —

WANE-TV CHANNEL 15 MONDAY Evenln* 6 : 00— 6:30— News 6:4o—Weather . < 6:4s—Douglas Edwards 7100—Harbor Command 7:3o—Adventures of Robin Hood B:oo—Burns and Allen B:Bo—Talent Scouts 9:oo—JJanny Thomas 9:3o—(December Bride 10:00—etudio One 11:00 —Award Theater TUESDAY Morning 7:4s—(Cartoon lOapera 8:00 —Captain Kangaroo -—B:45—Peppermint Theatre 9:oo—Captain Kangaroo 9:4S—CBS News 10:00—G*rry Moore Show 10:30—Arthur Godfrey Time 11:30—DoMo 12:00—News A Market 13:15—Love of Life 12:80—Search for Tomorrow 12:4t> —Guiding Light Afternoon / I:oo—Women's Page I:3o—As the World Turn* 2:oo—Beat the Clock 2:3o—House Party 3:oo—<The Big Payoff 3:30 —The Verdict is Youra 4:oo—Brighter Oay 4:ls—Secret Storm 4:3o—The Edge Os Night ■s:oo—Jack’s Show Evening 6:oo—Margie 6:30 —News 6:40 —Weather 6:4s—Douglas Edwards 7 :no—(Honeymooners 7:3o—Name that Tune 8:00—Mr Ada in & Eve 8:30 —Eve Arden Show 9:00— To Tel! the Truth 9:3o—l'on Atneche 10:00—364,000 Question 10:34 —Sea Hunt 11:00—Award Theater WKJG-TV CHANNEL 33 MONDAY Evening 6 oo—Gatesway to Sporta 6:ls—Newa 6:2s—The Weatherman 6:3o—Cartoon Express 6:4S—NBC News — 7 00—Silent Service 7:3o—The Price la Right B:oo—Restless Gun B:3o—Wells Fargo 9:00—“21” <i an- -Good yea I Theater 10:00—Suspicion 11:00 —News & Weather 11:15 —Sports Today

Winter is making a game fight to stay in the weather picture and there is considerable snow on north of Decatur, especially near Lake Michigan. Temperatures have not been so cold recently though and everything points to some nice spring weather soon. It will be welcomed by almost everyone. o—o— Si Heemstra, Fort Wayne, former Decatur resident, will be the guest speaker at a Chamber of Commerce membership kick-off dinner next Tuesday night. Dave Moore, retail chairman has announced an interesting program. Herman Krueckeberg will serve as toastmaster for the dinner and music will be furnished by the Decatur Music House. Tickets for the event can be secured from the Chamber office or any of the retail committee. It should be a bang-up meeting. o o— Stewart W. McMillen, 53. Decatur manufacturer and oldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale W. McMillen of Fort Wayne died following a siege of pneumonia at Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., where the McMillens were spending the winter. Mr. McMillen was founder and president of Bag Service, a large concern here which processes grain bags for re-use and also manufactures new grain bags. The McMillen family resides just south of Decatur on federal highway 33. The Decatur man was a member of First Presbyterian church here and the Scottish Rite and Shrine in Fort ♦ Wayne. He was Active in civic affairs and the family was a large contributor the Youth and Community Center. In addition to Mrs. McMillen, there are two daughters and a son surviving. We join their friends in offering sympathy to Mrs. McMillen and her children. Services will be held at ■> Ft. Lauderdale and graveside services will be held at Fort Wayne, where Rev. John Meister, pastor of First Presbyterian ~church ofthat .city- will preside.

11:20—Jack Baar Show Tuesday Morning <?. B:ss—Faith To Live By 9:oo—Romper Room 10:00 —The Allene Francis Show 10:30—Treasure Hunt ,11:00—The Price Is Right 11:30—Truth or Consequences Afternoon 12:00—Tic Tac Dough 12:30— It Could Be You I:oo—Farms and Farming I:ls—News I:2s—The Weatherman I:3o—Warner Bros. Matinee 2:50 Desk 3:OO—NBC Matinee Theatre "4:oo—Queen for a Day 4:4s—Modern Romances s:oo—(Bugs Bunny Theater s:ls—Tex Moloy Evening 6:oo—Gatesway to Sporte 6:ls—News 6:2s—The Weatherman 6:3o—Cartoon Express 6:4S—NBC News 7:oo—Casey Jones 7:3o—Treasure Hunt KrfrO—George Gobei Show 9:oo—Meet McGraw 9:30—80b Cummings 10:00—The Californians 10:30—2’6 Men 91:00—’News & Weather 11:15—Sports Today 11:20—Jack Parr Show WPTA-TV , 4 CHANNEL 21 MONDAY Evening 6:oo—Jingles 7 00—Foreign I/egionaire 7:3o—Official Detective B.oo—B'A*d Jouney 8:30—"J/Ove that. Jill” 9:00—Fl restone 9:3o—Top Tunes 10:30—‘‘10:30 Report" 10: In—(Mov let im e TUESDAY c . Afternoon 3:oo—American Bandstand 3:30—D0 You Trust Your Wife? 4:oo—(American Bandstand » s:oo—Sir Lancelot s:Bo—Mickey Mutiss -—, 1 Evening 6:oo—.Tingles 7:oo—Ramar 7 :’3o—Mugurrool B:3o—Wyatt Earp 9:oo—(Broken Arrow' 9:3o—Colonel March 10:00—AVest Point 10:30—‘10:30 Report'" 10:46—flM ovie.tl me MOVIES .. ABA MN .. “Ihin't <>s» Xvir the Water** Kun T::J2: 3:35: 5:35: 7:11; 9:l I. Monday at 17

Z* etwiwN / < move FORWARD IS INCHES A Wf- /■( beetle mountain— FT W V J * FREEZE BABY*— \ MOORE, WHOSE mchuer BTOfk WAS PACKED IN ICE FOR 0 DAW FOLLOW INS AN ACCIDENT AND REMAINED IN A COMA \ FOR 169 DAY« \ before he WAS BORN, IwWWlt > ( ' < ' \V I ' K 1$ Now A - X I Z'k THRIVING . ONE-YEAR-OLD/ I /VtHa -Nt Ute nd,. 1 dIIX jO England■Vgwiii 1 tea.

» ~,, — ——-e | 20 Xears Ago Today 8- —e March 3, 1938—Governor Townsend visits Decatur today to purchase horses for farm. He was accompanied here by son, Max, and William Settle, president of Indiana Farm Bureau. Fogle service station in Decatur is robbed for second time. Roy Hall, president of Central Soya, will address Rotary club here this week. Mrs. Ben Devor is hostess to Historical club. Mrs. Burt Townsend entertains Shakespeare club. Mrs. Harry Sipe of near Berne was a Decatur visitor today. State police superintendent Don Stiver asks for 50 additional state policemen. r» — — — ■" ™"-o i Household Scrapbook • BY ROBERTA LEE Taking' Down Pictures When a number of pictures are to be removed from the wall, much time in moving the step-lad-

I Rae Foley’s new mystery novel M W ttffi MW © 1957 by Rae Foley. Reprinted by perniwkm of Dodd. Mead k Co. (Kinj Features Syndicate] ' /

C'" ~~ WAT ft AS BATTENED Nora Pendleton knew someone wanted her to die. Until the night of October 12th. she had never known fear for herself. She had never had a care in the world until she met Stuart Young, an unemployed -former medical student Within five weeks , they were engaged. Then Stuart was arrested for the murder of a young girl, "Candy” Kendrick. Nora's i friends and kin believed Stuart to be guilty. But they had also thought him to be a fortune hunter, interested . in Nora because of her wealth. Nora had testified atStuart's trial , that he'd been with her on a picnic at the time Candy was killed. But her cousin. Charles Deming, swore that he had seen Stuart and Candy just before the supposed time of the - crime. The murder happened near the Connecticut inn run by Bert and Hazel Huger, distant cousins of Nora's. Charles' young son, Frank, was there: and the local druggist, Howard Ives: and Nora's aunt. Olive Riddle, who had served as her joint guardian with Lawyer "Finn'' Black until Nora came of age. As the story continues, Nora is at the inn, awaiting a phone call that will tell her of the jury's verdict and Stuart’s fata. CHAPTER 2 r T' , HE telephone rang, jerking 1 Nora out of her chair. She ran, stumbling, across the living room out to the office. At last she said, "Hello,” in a voice so faint it was barely audible; ‘‘That you, Nora?” Finley Black asked. “Yes, is he—?” "Acquitted, of course. I'm driving Stuart to the inn for a few days. We’ll be there in time for dinner.” —i—- " Oh." Nora sagged against the counter. "I told you all along not to worry. After your testimony, there was nothing the jury could do but let him go. Get some rest so Stuart will see you blooming, not that ghost who’s been haunting us lately." Nora's voice, usually repressed, rang with triumph. "Oh, Finn, I can really rest now. And we'll get married at once, Stuart and 'I, just a quiet wedding.” "Now don't rush things,’* Finn warned her. “You’ve been as close to a nervous breakdown as I hope you’ll ever get Stay at the inn and take it easy for a while." “But I want to go away,” Nora said. “I only came back because it began here; somchdw it should end here. Anyhow, the Hugers count on us to pay expenses during October. We’ve always done it So," she started to say, “so has Cousin Charles.” But he would never dare come to the Inn again, coine back to face her. “I want to go some place where nothing awful has ever happened," she concluded. “You'd have to look in the fourth dimension. There ain’t no such animal. You must stay at the' inn for the time being.” "Why?” It was a wail of disappointment, of protest. 1© 1967 by Rae Foley. Reprii

THE DECATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

1 der around will be saved if one takes a long stick and cuts a notch in one end for hooking under the wire or cord. fans Be sure and start right in scouring the new pans, outside as well as inside, and you will never j accumulate that ugly brown stain on the bottoms of the pans. i , Modern Etiquette | i I BY ROBERTA LEE | > Q. lam a 15-year-old boy. At a party recently in a friend’s home, , 1 rose when his mother entered the room to greet us guests — and I was the only boy who did so. I felt rather conspicuous. Was I , wrong? A. The other boys who failed to rise should have felt "conspicuous" for their lack of good manners. Q. I have received a wedding announcement from the family of a girl whofn we know only casually. Am I supposed to sent a gift? A. A marriage announcement never requires a gift.

"You see, now mat Stuart is acquitted, the whole thing will start again. All that has been proved," he explained, “is that Stuart didn’t do it But someone did. Someone killed the girl. The police will want to question everyone. So you'll have to remain where you are. Be seeing yon.” As Nora set down the telephone the Um, which had seemed to hold its breath all afternoon, erupted into life. Aunt Olive came running down the steep stairs. At the same moment the outside door was flung open and Nora was made aware that several people had tramped into the lobby. “Charles Deming!” Aunt Olive cried. “What are you doing here?” “Hello, Olive,” Cousin Charles said as though they had met only the day before. "I rather thought you would be here.” He rolled his gloves neatly and put them in the pocket of his topcoat "How are you, Nora? Quite recovered, I hope.” Without haste he removed his topcoat, opened the door of the closet under the stairs and reached for a hanger. When he moved, Nora saw the young men behind him. One was his son, Frank, who gave her a quick, embarrassed smile. The other was a stranger, a tall man who leaned idly against the door frame and looked straight at her with the coldest, most implacable eyes she had ever seen. Nora went swiftly toward the stairs. She had almost reached them before Aunt Olive caught her arm. “Nora, what did Finn say?” "Acquittal. Finn will bring Stuart here in time for dinner.” "Thank heaven! Though I told you all along there was nothing to worry about” Did you indeed, Nora thought ironically. But Aunt Olive always managed to believe whatever suited her. On the death of her husband she had convinced herself that she was in imminent danger of privation, if not starvation, on an income of ten thousand a year. Her methods of saving money, from wearing Nora’s clothes, though they rarely suited her, to coming to the inn at Nora’s expense, though she hated the country, were a constant source of amusement and exasperation to her niece. She was, : Nora supposed, well meaning, though it was an awful judgment of anyone. Olive Riddle turned to Cousin i Charles. "Why on earth did you . come here ?” “But I always come here in October,” he said calmly “Well, you can t come this Ocinted by permission of Dodd, Mead & C

Housewives Paying Higher Meat Prices Blame Weather For Increased Prices CHICAGO (UP) — You’re paying more for round steak and pork chops and it appears you can blame the weather. There are fewer pigs and cows coming to market because of drought in the Southwest and too much rain in the corn belt, livestock authorities said today. And—as far as the is concerned—the situation will get worse before it gets better. Both beef and pork cost more at the meat counter than a year /ago, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics. But the butcher is paying more too. List Some Comparisons Here’s the different in retail price per pound for December, 1957, latest available, and the same month a year earlier: — Dec. '56 Dec. ’57 Round steak 89.9 96.9 Pork chops 77.7 85.2 ■'This is the national average, according to the Labor Department which also reported these wholesale meat price comparisons: 1947-49 100 Jan ’57 82 Dec. 57 95 -Z , Jan.*’sß 102 Thus, an order of meat that cost your butcher SB2 in January, 1957, cost him $25 more last month. Now take a look at another table, from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, on livestock shipments into Chicago: Jan. ’57 Jan. ’SB Cattle 223.830 190.915 Hogs 215.737 205.889 Ram Creates Shortages What caused the decrease: The I livestock authorities explained it this way. Heavy' rains last year restored good grazing conditions to the Southwest. This enabled the ranchers to restock their herds The ranchers are keeping cattle on the range to get them fatter and also to breed more cattle. Rain affected the ; pigs too. In We com belt heavy rains last fall created storage problems. The corn was moist and there was a lot of it. Since it couldn’t be stored it had to be fed to the livestock. ' . : This brought on a favorable condition for pig raising. For years farmers considered they could

tober and that’s all there is to ft" “The matter is hardly for you to decide. The inn belongs to the Hugers, not to you. I imagine they find my money just as attractive as yours—or, I suppose, Nora pays for you, too." “But Stuart Young is coming here tonight!” s‘So I heard.” Cousin Charles turned to Nora and said, unbeTiermbly, Nora. She made no reply, leaning against the newel post, looking gravely at him. With the first trace of uncertainty he had shown, he looked away from her. “You can’t stay here, Charles!” Olive sputtered. “After your testimony. After you neatly sent Stuart to the electric chair.” “That's what I’ve been trying to tell him,” Frank said, and they looked at him in surprise. At twenty-three, Frank Deming was so completely negative that one was apt to forget he was there. Charles Deming paid scant attention to any point of view but his own and none at all to his son’s. “Don’t be ridiculous,” he said shortly. “Young can't be so unreasonable as to blame me for doing my duty. Apparently I was mistaken. It’s unfortunate, but that’s all there is to it” And that, Nora realized, was really all there was to it, from Cousin Charles’ viewpoint. Something about him was not quite human. Frank gave his father a queer look and then said, “Tom, let me introduce you to Mrs. Riddle, And my cousin, Nora Pendleton. This is Tom Jones who is going to tutor me until Christmas.” “How do you do?” Olive said automatically. “Though why Frank needs tutoring after he has graduated from college I can’t imagine,, unless he can't break the habit Just the same, Charles,” she returned to the charge; “you simply can’t stay here.” “Aunt Olive,” Nora choked, "please stop. It's over. It’s —” She clutched at the newel post, hung on. “What’s wrong?” Olive asked sharply. ‘Td forgotten. It’s not over. It's just beginning. Finn told me. The police are re-opening the case and we can't leave here; we’ve all got to stay until the police let us go.” Nora turned and caught Charles Deming momentarily off guard. A few minutes before, he had been determined to remain at the inn, regardless of his lack of welcome. But he had not been prepared for Finn's message. Ho looked, Nora thought, trapped. 1 (To Be Continued) >. [King Features Syndicate]

BHO-fKI' 1 D BOY SCOUTS from troop 65 held a supper and program at the Trinity E. U. B_J*"** of Bov Scout week Feb. 7 There were 65 scouts and family members present A film of the last scout iamboree at Valley Forge was shown. John Carlson, south district executive, spoke Pictured standing from left to right, arc Vernie HiU Stanley Hill. *nnis Morgam Mark Frauhiger, Allan Garner, David Smith, Daniel Butcher, Ronnie Ball, and T 1 1?™? ® 8 to ’ front, kneeling, Kenny Hill, Ernie Sautbine, David Wynn, Robert Hill, and James Jackson.

make money if the price of 12 bushels of corn equaled the price of 100 pounds of live hog. The present ratio, according to the Department of Agriculture, is 18.2 to I, and a private source said it was closer to 22 to 1. With feed so cheap, farmers are taking renewed interest in the pig business and one authority said there was a danger of excessive farrowing, which might lead to a dpressed market by next fall. “Thus.” he said, "the same situation which is currently contributing to higher livestock and meat prices will within a relatively few months cause lower prices and particularly in the case of hogs, may bring drastic price declines.” Now They Believe SYRACUSE, N. Y. —(UP) —Detectives Manuel Leone and Harold Flavin were frankly skeptical when Robert Lyman, 4, told them he was responsible for the shotgun blast that ripped a hole in his family s apartment ceiling. They asked to be shown. So young Robert picked up the shotgun, climbed atop a i dresser to get a shell, loaded and cocked the gun, aimed and , . ■ . The officers quickly grabbed the [ shotgun. ! Crude glass lamps were manufactured in Peabody, Mass., as early as 1638- - The first ready-to-wear suits for men were made in Boston about 1830 by Johnn Simmons, founder of Simmons College. . ( — — .1., COUfn NEWS Estate Case In the estate of Albert W, Liechty, the last will and testament was offered for probate. The court ordered the last will and testament probated' and placled_of record. An affidavit of death and proof of the will by a subscribing witness was filed. Petition for Drain In the case of Calvin Coppess on a petition for drainage, a request for an extension of time to report was filed. Order on petition requesting extension of time was filed. Damage Complaints In the complaint for damages of the Associates Investment Co. vs Harry O. Irwin, the court overruled the defendant’s motion to strike parts of the plaintiiffs complaint. The court sustained the defendant’s motion for a bill of particulars. In the complaint for damages of Mel Liechty. doing business as Mel’s Realty Auction Co. vs William H. Stavenik and Frieda Stavenik. the court overruled the defendants’ motion to strike parts of the plaintiffs complaint. The court overruled the motion for an abstract of title. The court sustained the defendants’ motion to make parts of the plaintiff’s complaint more specific. Trust Estate In the matter of the trust estate of Dorothy I. Wells, a report of the sale of real estate at private sale was filed. A deed was ord-' ered and reported,-examined and approved. The deed was ordered delivered upon payment of the purchase price in full. Hoatragrr & Spohn. Elkhart, Indiana Voglewrdr W AndefHon. Jleeatur, Indiana Attorneys ESTATE NO. 5270 NOTICE TO Al.I. PERSONS INTERESTED INI THE ESTATE OF Fl, AH A .1. FI.AFDING In tlw Circuit Court of Adams bounty -s February Tenni. lISSS In the .matter of the Estate of Clara J. Flattd,inic deceased. Notice is hereby iriven tiwt Charlew Eger as Administrator of the above named estate, has presented and filed his final account in 'final settlement of said estate, and that the same will I'ome up for; the examination and action of said Adams Circuit Court, on the 2lth of March, li>sß, at which time all persons interested in aid estate are required to appear in said court and show cause, if any there H>>, why said aceoimi slmulrt not be appro veil. Atrd the heirs' ot said decedent and all others interested are also required to appear and make proof of their heirship n > claim to any part of said estate < hnrles Ejrnr Personal llepresentat ive Myles F. Parrish •ItKlae .March 3 - If *

: Missile Age Is Shoving Jet Age Out Back Door

By JIM KLOCKENKEMPER '■ United Press Staff Correspondent ' WARREN. Mich (UP'—Good- . by Jet Age. Hello rockets. i At this sprawling 28-acre gov- ■ ernment - owned, Chrysler Corp - operated plant just eight miles . from Detroit, they're shoving the . jet age out the back door to make ■ way for the missile age. i Here is where they build the [ 200- mile range Jupiter rockets like the one which started Amer- : leg’s first satellite ite guN ! bit j Here is where they will soon be producing the intermediate range ,(1,500 mile) ballistic missile, which looks like a "cannon cracki er" alongside the "penny crackver” Redstone. I You don’t have to go past the ; front door to find out that jets ' ■ are becoming just second - rate, earthbound transportation The handwriting is on the walls. "Chrysler jet engine plant. Naval Industrial Reserve Aircraft plant,” reads the old, permanenti type sign over the door. “U.S. Army Missile plant. De,troit Ordnance District. Chrysler Corp” reads the newer, tempoi rary-type sign over the door. /Install New Tools As if the Navy hasn't suffered ; enough humiliation in the satellite race, inside the plant they are shoving aside machines for making Navy J 47 jet engines and putnew tools for making Army missiles. It isn’t necessary to hear from Army Col. Edward D. Mohlere, ordnance district commander, or from Chrysler missile division chief C. A. Brady to know this is just the beginning. You can see that it's an infant industry from the painstaking, cautious way they build giant rockets. The men on the line, the foremen, the engineers, all feel j they are pioneering a new industry. There are about 5,300 employes working on the Chrysler RedstoneJupiter program, with 500 of these at the Army Ballistic Missile Center at Huntsville. Ala. Under Chrysler, there are 350 subcontractors on the Jupiter program and 1,675 subcontractors in the Redstone program. The total subcontractor 1 employes are not known.

Public Auction We have quit farming and will sell the following personal property at auction on our farm located 3 miles east of Monroe, Ind., then r 4*<2 miles south, or 4 miles east of Berne, Ind., then 4H miles north, or 5 miles west of Willshire. Ohio, then Hi miles south, on FRIDAY, MARCH 7 Sale Starting at 12:00 Noon, DST IMPLEMENTS 1951 Minneapolis Moline ZA tractor on new rubber; 1942 Farmall II tractor with cultivators, pulley and power take-off . 1954 Moline 2 bottom 14" plow on rubber; 1955 Allis Chalmers No. 66 combine with long grain spout; 1954 one row corn picker;l9s4 sixteen hoe International grain drill; 1956 No 290 John Deere corn planter. The above implements have been well cared for and are in excellent condition. 8’ No. 9A International disc; 7’ No. 10A International disc; 8’ International cultipacker with 18" packers; International 2 row rotary hoe: corn stalk shredder; 2 section spike tooth harrow; 3 section spring tooth harrow; Graham plow; 28 American Standard grain elevator with electric motor; 2 wheel trailer with stanchion stock rack: Moline horse drawn manure spreader; 2 steel tired wagons with grain beds; Vz h.p. electric motor. HOUSEHOLD GOODS 2 pc. upholstered living room suite: 11-3x12 Axminster rug flora! pattern; 12x18 Axminster rug; plastic upholstered rec'ining chair with ottoman: leather bottom rocker; oak library table; oak' buffet: 6 dining chairs; piano and bench; KENMORI DELUXE PUSH BUTTON ELECTRIC RANGE with double oven; 2 Duo Therm oil burning space beaters; bed with springs: antique kerosene lamps; 2 battery radios; sausage grinder; lard press; iron kt ttie with stand; meat table; fruit jars; crocks; lawn mower, gi ss seeder; many other articles. TERMS—CASH. Not responsiole for WM. NEADSTINE Sale conducted by Mel's Realty Auction Co., Berne, Ind Mel Liechty, Auctioneer E. W. Baumgartner, Clerk Ellenberger Bros.. Auctioneers " ■ 1 —-m——

MONDAY, MARCH I,

On Way Up “This thing is definitely on the way up,” Col Mohlere says. Chrysler last month, after getting contracts totaling 52 million dollars for Redstone-Jupiter production, elevated its missile operation to the status of a corporation “division.” Chrysler expects to boost its missiles payroll to about 9,000 by the year's end, up 4,000 from the Start of U»e ypar.-, A. v.. With’ tens of thousands being laid off daily in the auto plants of Michigan, missile plant employes feel they are lucky. “I certainly feel I'm a lot better off here than I would have been if I d stayed with Pontiac,” says Frank Chambeau, 40, a general foreman supervising the work of 60 others in building the fror|t section of the Redstones. (Tomorrow: Building the missiles.) John G. Carlson, 26. of Bluffton, scout executive for the south district, was arrested Friday by the state police for disregarding the ’ stop sign at state road 1 and U.S. 224. ' '■.? Mr. and Mrs. Homer A. Mark-' ley, of Bluffton, have been dismissed from the Lutheran hospital after receiving treatment for serious injuries suffered in an auto acciI dent Feb. 7 near Fort Wayne. Quick Change ENDICOTT. N. Y. — (UP> — Police Chief Leon Coleman said one of his officers stopped a speeding chaffeur-driven limousine and asked what all the hurry was for. The woman in the back seat explained that she was wearing her nightgown under a housecoat and wanted to get home quickly to change clothes. Wrong Night ST. JOHNSBURY. Vt. — (UP) — Fireman were called to put out a blaze of rubbish, wood and debris that was to mark a football rally when the .pile was ignited the night before it was scheduled to be burned