Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 85, Decatur, Adams County, 10 April 1958 — Page 8

PAGE TWO-A

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every EveningKxcwt Sunday By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. Entered at the Decatur, tad.. Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller — President j. H. Heller - . Vice-President Chas. Holthouse. — Secretary-Treasurer Subscription Rates: By Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $8.00; Six months, $4.15; 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.

— Maybe we'll get in some high school baseball games between now and the end of the two school periods. Let s hope so. _—o o-— The Adams county civic music group is planning a county-wide membership campaign. One hundred volunteer workers under the direction of Mrs. Roy Kalver and Mrs. Dan Tyndall co-chairmen will meet Monday night for final instructions at the Community Center. —-o ■ The Decatur Plan Board hopes to offer some amendments to the zoning ordinance which will clarify a lot of problems. The board is considering the question of inviting some persons , other than board members who h.ave been interested in zoning amf'its many problems into a meeting. Out of this meeting, it is hoped to get some suggestions for recommended amendments to be presented to the council. ' —o—o— ' O: Frank Hetvie of South Bend, has been elected to succeed Clarence Ziner of Decatar as district governor of Rotary and Mr. Ziner has been named district representative on the council on legislation at the international convention early in June at Dallas, Texas. The Decatur man made an enviable record during his year in office and it will be a fine one to shoot at for governors to come. o 0 Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Boardman, . ..as is. their usual custom, are celebrating their wedding anniversary with a two-day sale of sewing machines at their business establishment on North First street. This is their fiftythird anniversary. The Boardmans have been in business in Decatur for a lonlg time and they ’■*- have established a large sewing machine business in this area. We join their many friends in wishing the Boardmans many, many more happy and successful years. • -

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WANE-TV CHANNEL 15 THL'KSDAY «ve*l*c 6:00 —Marti* 6:30 —News 6:4» —Weather «:4ft—Douglas Edwards 7:oo—Highway f*atrol 7.30 —Sgt. Prestan 6:oo—Richard Diamond 6:3o—CHma* o:3o—l’l*yhoU«e *0 ll:00-A«rat4 ThM|«r Narnia* 7:4s—Cartoon Capers 8:00 —captain Kaagaroh B:4s—pdvpermint Theater 9:00 —Captain Kangaroo 9:45—<1*6 News I<>:oo—Garry Moore Show 11:00 —Arthur Godfrey 11:30—Dotto Afternoon 12:00—News & Market* 12:15—Love of Life 12:30—Search for Tomorrow 12:45—Guiding Light 1:00 —Women's Page—--13# —As the World Turn* 2:oo—rßeat the Clock 2:3o—House Party -3jW—The Big Paye«_ _ 3:3o—The Verdict Is Tour* 4:oo—Brighter Day 4:ls—Secret Storm 4:3o—The Edge Os Night s:oo—Jack's Show Ereaing 3:oo—Margie 6:3o—News 6:4o—Weather 6:4s—Dougias Edwards 7:oo—Annie Oakley — 7:3o—(Dick and the Duchess B:oo—Trackdown B:3o—Zane Gray 9:oo—Phil Slivers Show 9:30 —Mickey Spilane 10:00—Lineup 10:341—Person to Person 11:00—Award Theater WKJG-TV CHANNEL 33 THURSDAY «:f»o —Gatesway to Sports 6:ls—News, Jack Gray ■ t—--6 :J5 —Weatherman 6:3n—Cartoon Express 6:4S—NBC News 7 :((<>—friioti Pacific 7:3o—Tie Tac 1 tough B:<Wt —Tou Bet Your Lif* 8:30—Bob Hope Show 9:30 —Tennessee Ernie Ford 10:00—Koeemary Clooney 11 jio—News * Weather — — 11:15—Sports Today 11:20— TOnlgtif FRIDAY Moral** t> 7:oo—Today 9:oo—ftofflpi r Itoorn '

One thing is pretty certain and that is the worst of whiter is over and while we might still have some cold mornings the real bad part of winter is over. o o-— Plans are being made to start the printing of Adams county election ballpts either late this week or next Monday. The commission has completed the preliminary work and has everything ready for the printer. The Daily Democrat which has had the ballot contract for many ( years will again print the county and township ballots. o d Spring is making an effort to chase winter out of the weather picture and while rain is forecast for late today, the promise is for mild temperatures. Probably a little rain wouldn’t be a bad idea and then the trees will start budding and spring might be here. Agriculturists say that we should wait a couple of weeks yet before setting out tomato plants and other garden seed and this is probably a good suggestion, if you don’t want to have to do the work all over. o o—— It Adams county can qualify its county home with the various state departments, the occupants will qualify for certain help, which virtually eliminate any payments by the various townships where the residents are from originally. The way it would work would be a certain amount from the state welfare department and the balance from the county department, which is state money. The home will have to submit to certain regulations and subject itself to certain state inspections. If the state accepted the county home, it then would pay for each occupant. This would save confor each township and also the county. It certainly is worth a thorough, investigation and if the qualifications were not “too drastic, they should certainly be worth a try.

PROGRAMS Centra] Daylight Tine

10:00—Arlene Francis Show 10:30 —Treasure Hunt 11:00—The Price Is Hight -U* 11:30—Truth or Consequences 1Afternoon 12:00—Tic Tac Dough 12:30—1t Could Be You l:oo—Farms and Farming I:ls—News 1 :25—The Weatherman I:3o—Warner Bios. Matlne* 2:so—Editor’s Desk 3:00 —Matinee Theater 4:00 tjuecn for a Day t 4:45-—Modern Romances s:oo—Bugs Bunny Theater s:ls—Tex Maloy Show Evenlag 6:oo—Gatesway to Sports 6:ls—Jack Gray, News 6:2s—Weatherman 6:3o—Cartoon Express 6:45 —NBC News 7:oo—Ktate Trooper 7:3o—Boots and Saddles B:oo—Court of Last liesort B:3o—Lire of Kiley 9:OO—M-Squad 9:3o—The Thin Man 10:00—Boxing 10:45—T1SA H:OU=-News & Weather 11:15—Sports Today Ht 24> —Jact-4?aar_ShowL ——WPTAaTV—CHANNEL 21 THURSDAY Evening 6:(H»—Jingles 7:oo—Rocky Jones 7:3o—Circus Boy 8:00—Zorro B:3o—McCoys — - 9:oo—Pat Boone 9:3o—Modern Science Theater 10:00—Sword of Freedom 10:30—”10:30 Report” 10:45—Movietime FRIDAY Afternoon 3:oo—American Bandstand 3:30—D0 You Trust Your Wife? 4 :(H» —American Bandstand s:oo—Buccaneers s:3o—Mickey Mouse Club Evening 6:oo—Jingles L 7:oo—Texas'’Rangers 7:3o—Rin Tin Tin B:oo—Jim Howie 8:30—Col t 45 r 9:<to—Frank Sinatra -4.. , 9:3(l—iSusie 10:00—«rav Gliowt 10130— ”10:30 Report" 10:45—M0 Vietime MOVIES .— xUIMHo.. "Ladv Takes a Elver" Thtirs 7:34 ' !•: 12 I >rst i Fid 7 Ha tat 1; t’* 1:IA «: -* ’♦ S-:U 1<» , ’lleturn to VVariH?* Fri «t 5:00 7j£j» 0

Planned Play Net Delinquency Cure Soys More Inclusive Frogram Is Needed By GAY PAULEY United Preu Womea’a Editor NEW YORK (UP> — Planned play for teen agers is only a halfway treatment, not a cure, for juvenile delinquency, says one experienced hand at working with youth. . Daniel Brisker, 36. is education director for one of the 20 youth’ villages in the 10-year-old state of Israel and a leader in a program to resettle the thousands of youngsters who have poured into the country as part of a huge post-war immigration. “In this nation, the concentration in youth programs is on recreation,” he said. “But it isn’t enough just to give a kid a basketball and tell him to go play for a couple of hours. To keep children off the Streets and out of trouble, a program must be more inclusive .. • must provide some work, some schooling too.” Israeli Problems Similar Brisker said Israeli youth faces problems strikingly similar to those in our own big cities where there is a mass immigration. There are housing shortages, overcrowded schools, the language barrier, and the whole family's task of fitting into a new country, new jobs. Israel's government meets its youth problems three ways — with the villages, which are miniature communities, where a teen-ager is cared for until his or her parents get settled; with settlements, which operate similarly but are located right in a child's home area, draw from his own social and economic group and provide that he can go home at the end of a day; and day centers. These provide schooling in the morning hours for youngsters past 14, the compulsory school age in Israel, a few hours paid daily employment on farm or in factory, and supervised recreation. “One thing is to be stressed,’ said Brisker. “None of the programs is in any way compulsory. All are strictly volunteer. Help Normal Children “And none is a correctional institution .. ■ a reform school as you have here. Our youth villagers are not children who have run into trouble with the law or have extreme emotional and psychological problems. We are just trying to help normal children adjust to a new land.” Brisker said the youth village (or kibbutzi program began Secretly in the lute 1930 s when thousands oi children escaped | ■_ . —.....

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CHAPTER 26 MR. POTTER had returned to hi* Gramercy Park house. In the morning, he decided, he would drive back to the inn. He stood for * moment staring at the stairway. As he did so. he found himself thinking of another stairway, of a woman pitching headlong to her death. Abruptly, he turned and went out in the street to his car. The streets were nearly deserted at this hour except for stray taxis and the Inevitable heavy trucking. On the Westside Highway, he pressed his foot down firmly on the gas pedal and with a deepthroated roar the red Jaguar leaped ahead, eating up the road. No matter how he tried to reason with himself, Mr. Potter could not argue away a growing uneasiness, an impression that haste was necessary. This is ridiculous, he thought. Nothing can happen. But a part of his mind cried, “Hurry, hurry," and he obeyed it as he always had, overruling the admonition of his common sense and reason. His thoughts churned wildly while his hands were steady on the wheel, going over the information he had picked up during the day. The drive seemed endless and there was no telling what might be going on at the Inn. For a momenthe was tempted to stop at the first house along the road and call Captain Foote, send him posthaste to the inn. And suppose, he reminded himself, the State Trooper would like to know why. Do I tell him 1 have a hunch, a nice attack of girlish Jitters? Where the parkway ended and ' Route 22 began, he had to slow down, creep through villages with sharp curves and - low spe e d limits. Wherever thr road opened he speeded up. Nothing, he told himself firmly, could possibly go wrong. After Mrs. Riddle’s murder, it would be too dangerous. Queer how Collinge had cleared out of Sardi’s. The man who called himself Tom Jones had acquired a loyal friend there, but a friend who wanted no part in murder. And there was no longer any doubt that Tom Jones had some association with Candy Kendrick; With, a feeling of profound relief Mr. Potter turned in the entrance to the inn grounds and narked his ear. The Connecticut State Police had gene, every--Ihing was quiej, and the bmidt tag was dark. The car clock

\ - ' ' ' ME DECATUR DAILY MMWBAT, DECATUR, —>IANK

I ' ; 1 ' I- i ... -■* ’ vf' ' ' *- ’ i Jhl. A jt-j JI I LEST Wt FOkOET—Just in case the Iron Curtain is getting to be a meaningless catchword, take a look at this section between West Germany and Communist-governed Czechoslovakia. Upper: A watchtower along the border, and the barbed wire fence that keeps the Czechs in and the Germans out. Lower: Communist soldiers Iqy mines to blast escapees. » The photos were made by a Radio Free Europe photographer from a hidden vantage point on free side. (International)

Germany, although few of their parents could follow. When the British mandate over Palestine ended in 1948, and Israel became a nation, the villages be came open and were expanded. Today they care for close to 6,000 children. "There are thousands more to be helped,” said Brisker, who is on a speaking tour in this country to help raise money for the United Jewish Appeal. UJA helps support an immigrant aid program in Israel. A native of Romania. aßrisker migrated in 1940, followed a few years later by his parents- A youth village was his first home and after nearly five years with the British Army in World War | II, he.returned to the kibbutz. He ..... ? . — —

showed three - thirty. Everyone was in bed and asleep. All at once he felt embarrassed at the fear which had propelled him along the road at breakneck speed. He was wide awake now, in no mood for bed. He strolled around the inn, saw a square of light and looked up. Someone was still awake. He tried to remember to whom the room belonged. One of the Demings, he thought. He let himself in quietly and crept up the stairs. It seemed to him that he made no noise but he must have been wrong about that for, as he reached the second floor, a door opened and Deming, in dressing gown and pajamas, looked out at him. “Oh,” he said flatly, “it’s you.” “Having a sleepless night?” Mr, Potter asked, Deming stared at him for a moment as though he had not grasped the other man’s meaning, Then he grunted, “Feel like talking?” “By all means.” Deming waved him to the only comfortable chair and sat on the side of the bed. “You got out just in time,” Deming said. “You stirred up the animals, trapped Frank into an admission that he knew the girl . Candy. Stuart Young came back i here, foaming at the mouth, and raised the devil. He got hold of Captain Foote. Now they've taken my boy lo the State Police ■ barracks for questioning.’’ "Foote is an honest man,” Mr. Potter said. “He’ll watch his step.” “How deep in was he with that girl?” Deming asked. "I think he was genuinely in love with her," Mr. Potter said soberly, “but that it was onesided. A number of people seem to have been in love with Candy Kendrick, not only Frank but Ives, Bert Huger and, quite possibly, Tom Jones,” . • ” “I fired Jones today," Deming said and then added sharply, "You say he knew the girl, too?” “Must have.” Mr. Potter took an envelope from his pocket and drfew out the sketch he had appropriated from the portfolio Os Candy’s drawing*. It represented a tali, dark young man dressed in eighteenth century costume, an arresting figure with its power and its grace, a memorable face with its curious mingling of devil-may-care humor and implacability. Ths face, like the costume, belonged to aruMher century. ."What’s this ?" Deming asked.

spent 1956-57 studying social work at Columbia University and working with problem children on New York’s Lower East Side. No Sock? HARTFORD, Conn. (IB — Some Connecticut motorists appear to •be pessimists, Among the states auto registration plates are those lettered “OUCH,” “BAM,” “POW" and "WHEW." o ■. o 20 Years Ago Today O -L-LL. — TT-0 April 10, 1938 was Sunday and no paper was published.

“Don’t you recognize him’" "Os course, it's that tutor of mine. What is he supposed to be, an actor?" - "That’s one of the sketches Candy made for an illustrated edition of Fielding’s Tom Jones.” “I’ll be darned,’’ Deming said bleakly. "Then who is he really?" “I haven’t the remotest idea," Mr. Potter admitted. "But I think he was in love with the girl, or at least, she was in love with him. She knew him well to be able to catch his basic qualities as she did. I suspect he owned the picture of Candy which was given to Nora. I think he came here, like a fool, to avenge her murder himself.” “And killed Olive by mistake?” “I don’t know. But I’m afraid we'll have to do something fairly drastic about Tom Jones. We can’t have any more deaths here.” He raised his head, listened, then went to the door and eased it open. "What is it?" Deming asked in a low tone. “Someone moving around." Mr. Potter slipped out into the hallway and closed the door noiselessly behind him. There was no • sound at all. Then he heard a door open, water running, a faint : tinkle. A crack of light gleamed under i Miss Garrison s door. He pushed it open. The room was dark, the tight coming from the open door of the bathroomwhich connected the. two rooms. The nurse, in pink pajamas, was standing in the bathroom, drying a glass. She set it on a shelf and stood looking into the other room, motionless, as though listening. Mr. Potter moved, cautiously, the carpet deadening the sound Os his feet. Abruptly, the nurse went into the other room, going toward the bed. Mr. Potter heard it then, the sound <jf stentorious breathing. He was in Nora’s bedroom now, flipped the switch at the door, came back. Garry's mouth opened to scream. “Quiet,” he said, and bent over the bed. Nora lay on ’her back, mouth open, breathing heavily. He shook het, yelled in her ear “Nora! Nora!” He turned to the nurse. "Get a doctor with a -stomach pump A*, once! Then make strong coffee and get back here as fast as j ou can!” i Tomorrow; Th-n f h mn.-r -s rmt to Nora, and the ms- >m>rade Ik over for Torn Junes,

SIB,OOO Rolls-Royce Makes Up Into Bed One Os Features Os International Show By DOC QUIGG United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK (UP) —l’ve seen a lot of things in New York’s great showcase Coliseum, but I never expected *to be introduced to an SIB,OOO Rolls-Royce that makes up into a double bed. This is absolutely on the level. The thing has seats that fold in all directions. Single beds, double bed, lounging chairs. You fold the back seats forward and the whole back section becomes an extension of the luggage compartment —space for 15 suiteases. Its glass partition between front and back seats is detachable, in case you want to get chummy with the chaffeur. This Rolls is also the most expensive catch-all ever built. It has built-in writing tables, electric razor, picnic table, espresso coffee maker with butane, gas stove, sewing kit, mineral water cabinet, and scores of other necessitiesShow in Full Throttle As you may have guessed, the International Automobile Show is in full throttle at the Coliseum this week. On the first floor alone, you are greeted by the great names of Skoda. Simca, Vespa, Maico, Volkswagon, Citroen. Mereedes-Benz, Studebaker, and Packard. There are tiny buglike cars from foreign climes; big four-eyed blunderbusses from America; cars blooming with gardens of gadgetry and chrome; cars with a sack-dress look. There is a Citroen (the pride of France) with a jonquil - green body and a sort of leopard upholstery and a front end that looks remarkably like a bullfrog—bulging eyes and a wide, shovel snout and mouth. A spare tire fits under the point of the snout. Hard by the Citroen show is its subsidiary make, Panhard. It features a “Dyna” model whose front wheels are driven by a twocylinder engine—52 horsepower, aluminum, air-cooled, and pancaked in design so that the two cylinders operate horizontally tar stead of being, upright or in a V. It has a tested top speed of 87 m.p.h., cruises at 70, gets (according to the Frenchman I spoke with) 40 to 42 miles to the gallon. ( Gravitate to Rolls 1 Since English is the only foreign language I speak with any fluency, I gravitated to the hallowed Rolls - Royce bailiwick. i where I feel in with Harold Radford, head of Radford Coach Builders, Ltd., who dreamed up the aforementioned all-purpose Rolls model He took me on a guided tour of his creation, and believe me it took all morning. He has taken the standard fivepassenger, $13,550 Rolls and added “adaptations” that bring his Countryman model to $17,716. fob. New York. He has used every bit of space available. All the doors have lockers in them, holding flasks, glasses, wash basins, soap, towel, first-aid kit, icecube thermos, camera, field glasses,-and lots more. Twice And Out BELLAIRE, Mich. «Pl — Luck finally ran out for an eight-point buck killed near here by Thane Reiley of Flint. Reiley found a .22 caliber bullet imbedded in fat about a quarter of an inch from the buck's heart where he apparently was hit during the 1956 deer season. < Bh. ■ ' - .S 3 ay i. ■■■ RADAR FINDER — Daune Yeman of Roma, N. Y-, Air Development Center models a new experimental Ground Observer Corps aircraft detection helmet. The unit detects reflation of airborne radar within a 100mile range. (International)

g' ii * ' County Agents Column o — » Transplant Shrubs Now is the time to be transplanting shrubs in the lawn, according to N. W. Marty, Purdue Universiity horticulturist. Shrubs may be transplanted anytime after the leaves have fallen in the fall and before the buds break in the spring if the temperature is above freezing. In all parts of Indiana, shrubs may be planted in the fall as well as in the spring, although spring planting is sometimes considered the best in the northern part of the state. Fall planting is generally recommended because the soil is usually in good working condition. It is usually a longer season than in the spring, ®eweather is often more favorable, and the plants are more likely to be freshly dug. Spring planting, on the other land, insures plants starting growth promptly, and they will not have to remain in the soil for an extended length of time before starting to grow. Shrubs do well if they are planted in rich, mellow soil where there is plenty of organic material from roted leaves or manure. Marty suggests that bushed of well rotted manure and three handful of 10-8-4 fertilizer be spaded into each square yard of the shrub bed. If well-rotted manure is not available, one part peat moss can be added to every three to five parts of average soil, and can be mixed thoroughly. Shrubs are sometimes set too closely together. This forces the plants to grow abnormally tall and unshapely shrubs result. Shrubs should be planted far enough apart so that none of the shrubs will have to be transplanted at a later date because of overcrowding.

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THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1958

When transplanting shrubs from the heme garden, all of the dried and brateM iVßtt should be eut off. The branches should be thinned and cut back to reduce the leaf surafee by onb-third. Topsoil should be worked in and tamped firmly around the roots. When all of the roots have been covered, the »il should be soaked and the remainder of the hole filled with water. When the water has spaked in, the hole should be filled with dirt. A mulch of rotten manure or compost should be plared around the shrub to hold the soil mositure and stimulate growth. Peat moss, ground lorn cobs or sawdust can also be used as a mulch with several handsful of 'completed or nitrogen fertilizer spread over the top of the mulch. O- 1 "O Household Scrapbook By ROBERTA LEE o-— ——— ■——-■ Mayonnaise Dressing Try heating some sour milk into mayonnaise dressing and see what a delicious flavor it will impart. Roach Powder A good roach powder that has proved itself very effective is made of equal parts of plaster of Paris and powdered sugar. Winter Window Washing A little salt added to hot water will permit you to wash windows even in the coldest weather without any danger of their freezing. Mashed . Potatoes, Mashed potatoes, or any other similar vegetable, can be made light and fluffy by adding Mrteaspoonul of baking powder to every three cups of the mashed vegetable. Cleaning Chinchilla Borated talcum powder is a good medium to use for cleaning chinchilla.