Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 174, Decatur, Adams County, 25 July 1958 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By THE DECATOR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller .... President J. H. Heller Vice-President Chas. Hoithouse Secretary-Treasurer Subscription Rates: By Mall in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 18.00; Six months. 84.25; 3 months, $2.25. 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. ft vents

Republicans are expected to be a silent party at this election. Their famous old campaign issues are gone now. It would sound a little silly to hear a Republican preach about honesty in government, peace, prosperity, economy in government, or the Washington mess! o o Fear that the present Lebanon situation may result in open warfare seems to have moved the public to renewed interest in 1958 model cars. Many buyers can still remember the 1940 s, when no amount of money could buy a new car, and used cars were even hard to buy. —o—o If a natural disaster, such as earthquake, tornado, or rainstorm, suddenly wiped out every man, woman, and child in Decatur or Bluffton, the whole world would be profoundly shocked. Yet every year there are 95,000 accidental deaths in the U.S., ten times the population of Decatur. —_o o How important is foreign trade to inland communities such as Decatur and Adams county? Is foreign trade important to farmers? U. S. merchant ships and foreign trade affect the jobs of 450.000 factory workers and 300,000 farmers in the states of Kansas and Missouri, about one-third of the working population there. Foreign trade is vital to a healthy economy. o o State representative David R. Thayer, Democrat of Hope, charged Tuesday that Indiana University is feeding textbooks

mPROGRAMS Central Daylight Time

WANE-TV CHANNEL 15 FRIDAY Evening 6:oo—Margie 6:3o—This Day 7:oo—Sgt. Preston 7:3o—Destiny 3:00—FIJI Silvers B:3o—(DuPont Show 10:00—Trackdown 10:30—Harbor Command 11:00—Award Theatre SATURDAY Morning B:oo—Agriculture B:3o—Willy Wonderful B:4s—Through the Porthole 11:00—Heckle and Jeckle 9:3o—(Mighty Mouse. 1-o:oo—Captain Kangroo 11:00—Jimmy Dean Afternoon 12:00—Western Playhouse I:ls—Baseball Prevue I:2s—Game of the Week ■ 3::»o—Race of Week 4:oo—The Big Picture ~ >s:3o—Ainoti & Andy Evening 6:oo—Annie Oakley 6:3o—San Francisco Beat 7:oo—Lass|e 7:3o—Tup Dollar B:oo—Susanna B:3o—Have Gun 9:0 O—G tin sow k e 9:3o—Sheriff of Cochise 10:00—-Perry Mason I'l:oo—Award Theatre SUNDAY Morning B:oo—Faith for Today B:3o—This is The Life 9:00-—Lamp Unto My Feet 9:3o—Look Up & Live 10:00—Eye on New York 10;3O —Criatophers 11:00—Hawkeye 11:30—Gene Autry o Afternoon I(2:ls—>Ua>N<'ball Prevue 13:25—Game of. W eek 4:oo—Last Word 4 130—Fa>-e the Nation 5 :oo—The Search 5:26 —News - Robert Trout 5:30—-20th Century Evening 6:oo—Our Miss Brooks 6:3o—The Brothers 7:oo—Ed Sullivan 8:00—GE Theatre B:3o—Alfred Hitchcock 9.00—864,000 Challenge 9:3o—(What’s My Line 10:00—Sunday News Special 14:15—Award Theatre wkJg-tv CHANNEL 33 >. — FRIDAY Evening 6:00 —Gatesway to Sports 6:ls—News. Jack Gray 6:2s—Weathei 6:3o—Cartoon Express 8:45 —NBC News 7:oo—State Trooper 7:3o—Boots & Saddles ; B:oo—Jefferson Drum j--B:3o—Life of Riley ' 9:oo—Boxing 9:4s—(Past Fight Beat 10:00—M-Squad ' '■ 10:30—The Thin Man 11:00—News and Weather 11:15—Snorts Today IT :20 —.The Jack Paar Show 3ATUHUAI Morning B:3o—Johnny Mack Brown 11:30—Bugs Bunny 10:00—tlowdy Doody 10:30—Ruff and Reddy Show 11 :<(o—Fury 11:30—Blondie Afternoon 13:00—(Cartoon Time 1:0"-—Coiintry Style

designed to favor socialism as a form of government to prospective teachers. A close analysis of his statements show that it was based, first, on a complete ignorance of the meaning of the word “socialism,” and secondly, on a perusal of only seven books from the large number present in the school of education reading room at I.U. Further, he admitted that the books were only supplemental reading, not regular texts, and as substantiating his claim that the books fostered socialism, he charged that they emphasized equality of the entire human race instead of patriotism towards one nation. The same book, the added, urged more equal distribution of income. Another favored federal aid to medicine and education. Apparently Rep. Thayer is one of many persons who does not understand the meaning of the word socialism, and has confused it with everything to which he is personally opposed. Many who are not socialists in any sense of the word will be found on both sides of the four major questions of equality of races, distribution of income, and aid to medicine and education. Socialism does not include or exclude any of these. It deals only with ownership, and specifically with ownership of utilities, transportation, and basic industries. Certainly prospective teachers should be familiar with conservative views, such as Thayer’s, with liberal views as expressed in the books he mentions, and with every other political and economic view, so that they may be explained to students in terms of our own form of government and economic structure.

I:ls—iWiicaties Sports Page 1 :30—.Major League Baseball 4:oo—(Monmouth Handicap 4:30—8-ig Pictures s:oo—Westling Evening 6:oo—Saturday TV Theatre 7:oo—African Patrol 7:30 -People Are Funny 8:00—Bob Crosby 9:oo—Opening Night 9:3o—Turning Point 10:00—Suttle Monya Race SUNDAY Morning 9: 00—Christophers 9:3o—Man to Man 9:4s—Christian Science 10:00—Sacred Heart 10:15—Industry on Parade 10:30—This Is the Life 11:00—Cartoon Tune M ftrmonn 12:00— Two Gun Playhouse 2:oo—Sunday TV 4:oo—Mr. Wizard 4:30-—Youth Wants to Know s:oo—Frontier of Faith 5:3-o—Comment (■3 enlng 6:oo—Roy Rogers 6:3o—Kit Carson 7:oo—(Noah’s Ark 7:30—N0 Warning B:oo—Steve Allen 9:oo—Chevy Show 10:00—.Decision 10:30—Badge 714 11:00—News Special 11:10—Sports Today 11 15—Armchair Theater WPTA-TV CHANNEL 21 FRIDAY Rieninn 6:oo—The Jingle* Show 7:00—-Tales of Texas Rangers 7:3o—Riri Tin Tin B:oo—Jim Bowie B:3o—(Stars of Jazz 9:OO—BS.P 9:3o—Suzle 10:00—Gray Ghost , 10:30—10:30 Report 10:45—Scoreboard 10:00—Movietl-me SATURDAY Afternoon 3:oo—lndiana University 4:3o—(Action Theatre Evening 6:3o—Susie 7:00 —Colonel March 7:3o—Dick Clark Show B:oo—Country Music 9:oo—Lawrence Welk 10:00—"Club 21” SUNDAY Afternoon 4:oo—John Hopkins Fils 4:3o—Oral Roberts 5:00—Global Frontiers s:3o—Off to Adventure s:ls—'Repeat Preformance Evening 6:oo—Repeat Performance 7:3o—Maverick , B:3o—Anybody Can Play 9 :(>o—Traffic Court c--9:3o—Open Hearing 10:Oi>—(tfeatlnnd Yard 10:50—Movietime MOVIES' —ADAMS—"Renvenge of Frankenstein" Fri at 7 P.M. 9:50 Sat at 1:15 4:35 7:25 10:1'5 "The Snorkel" Fri at 8:39 Sat 3:25. 6:1 5 9 :0.1 "(Peter -Pan" Sun at 1 :-55 4:00 6:05 8:10 10:15 Mon at 7: IO 9:45 —DRIVE-IN—-"Shootout at Medicine Bend” & “Black Tent” Fri * Sat at dusk •'Marca'lbo" & "Another Time, Another Place" Sun & Mon at diisk

20 Years Ago 1 Today o —o July 25, 1938 — The school town of Berne has filed application for a PWA grant of $49,095 to provide 45 per cent of the cost of constructing a new high and grade school in Berne. The building with 22 classrooms and a communitygymnasium, would be built at the northwest corner of the junction of U. S. highway 27 and state highway 118. Cash and merchandise were stolen in a breakin at Riverview Gardens over the weekend. Herman Meyer, owner, reported that sls in cash, 10 or 12 cartoons of cigarettes, .three cases of beer, three boxes of candy, some ice cream, notions, handkerchiefs, chewing gum and other items were missing. Erection of livestock tents for the annual street fair was started today. o— —— o Household Scrapbook | By ROBERTA LEE | o————————— o Tender Hands If you have tender hands that are subjectito calluses when using a broom or anything with a handle, cover the upper part of the handle with any soft material, sewing it firmly, and tacking the lower end of the material to the handle. Tight Shoes If the toe of a shoe binds, wriing out a cloth in hot water, fold it, and lay across the toe while the shoe is on the foot. This will let the leather expand and conform to the shape of the foot. Tile Clean the tiles in the bathroom or kitchen by using a soft cloth dipped in keronsepe. Then wash them with warm water and wipe dry with a soft cloth. Water Lines The unsightly lines that persist in forming at the top of the water in fish bowls and aquariums can easily be removed by means of vinegar. Vinegar will also remove lime spots and stains from drinking glasses. Double Blankets Double blankets will be easier to handle, both in laundering and on the bed. if they are cut apart and bound separately. Then, if both prove to be too warm, one of them may be removed. Linens The linens will have a beautiful luster after they are ironed, if a little salt is added to the starch. -

BV GUNS ALONE By E.M. Barker */F 1958 ' E M - Barker; published by arrangement with Paul Z R. Reynolds & Son; distributed by King Feature*

CHAPTER 13 'T’O Slade Considine, most of ' * Mrs. Kilgore's Walking K range was new. ft seemed a crazy country, criss-crossed as It was with countless rough, scrub oak-covered ridges that fanned out In all directions without any established pattern like that of his Uncle Nick's higher 143 range. He had not ridden long before he was aware, by that sixth sense most outdoorsmen have, that someone was behind him. Rachel Kilgore, of course, had a perfect right to send someone after him to keep an eye on him, but the idea of being stealthily followed and spied on was somehow unpleasant As he came up on to the rim of a tall, bald-topped, rocky ridge, he suddenly put the spurs to the little sorrel and sent him down the hillside at a sliding, pebbleloosening run. Under cover of a thick patch of scrub oak he pulled up and dismounted so that his head would not be above the tops of the brush. He had a good ten minutes to wait before the rider came into the open. Slade watched the man stop and lean far sideways, scanning the rocky ground for tracks. Then he led the little sorrel out of the scrub oak, and stepped into his saddle again. The man on the ridge top saw w him, seemed to hesitate for a second as if trying to make up his mind what to do. Then he threw up an arm and waved. As the men rode to meet each other, Slade saw to his surprise that it was Pat Guajardo from Wynn Thomason’s T Anchor instead of one of the Walking K bands. “Hallo, Slade!” the slim Mexican vaquero called as soon as he was within hailing distance. “What you doin' here? Gettin' ready to butcher you some bull meat to sell to the poor gents in Barrancas?" Slade grinned. "Just riding,” he said. ‘‘Me, I’m lookin’ for a whiteface bull," Pat explained. "Ain’t seen one, have you?" Slade shook his head. Pat shrugged, and shoved his hat back off his narrow brown forehead. "The ol’ lady sent Wynn word yesterday that one of our bulls was over here on her place a-flghtin’ her longhorns, an* to please come get him.” It was a reasonable enough explanation, but Slade didn't for a minute believe it. Pat certainly hadn’t been following a bull track when he topped the ridge. "As long as we seem to be riding the same way, Pat, we might as well ride together,” he suggested, and was a little surprised when the little vaquero nodded Quick agreement.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA ■ - - - - r-, . . —

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Modern Etiquette I By ROBERTA LEE | o— — o Q. When a business girl visits an old friend over a week-end, a very close friend who she has known for years, is it necessary then for her to write a bread-and -butter letter? A. Certainly. This is one of the most important indications of good breeding, and no matter how well you know a person or how often you visit her for an overnight stay, that bread-and-butter letter is in order each time. - -. Q. A young woman I know has the habit of calling her husband “Sugar” and “Sweetie” in front of everyone, even casual acquaintances. Isn't this out-of-place? A. Yes; this is not in good taste at all. Q. The church in which our daughter is to be married is directly across the street from our home. Would it be all right for her and her attendants to walk ■ across the street to the church, or are they supposed to be driven up in a car? A. There is nothing at all wrong with their walking across the street.

Pat Guajardo was a help. He seemed to know the Kilgore range as well as he should have known Wynn Thomason’s T Anchor. By mid-afternoon they had covered a lot of ground and Slade had learned two things. The first was that the Kilgore cattle, including most of the bulls, were now being kept on their own range. The second, Pat Guajardo noticed and mentioned. He pointed to half a dozen steers grazing in a grassy vega. “The ol’ lady’s sure cut her herd in two tn the last year. She’s got.three times as much grass as she needs now.” He slid his roguish black eyes around to Slade. “The Forest Service, she got some kind of ruling about that—no 7 They take some of this grass away from her if she don’t use it —no?” Slade was sorry now that Pat was with him. There was such a Forest Service ruling, and if Wynn Thomason wanted to stir up a new batch of trouble, it would be easy to do. Wynn was supposed to hate the Forest Service. but Slade felt sure if he saw a chance to grab a new slice of range for himself, he could change sides mighty quick. He saw Pat was waiting for an answer to his question. He shrugged. “Maybe. Maybe not,” he said noncommittally. He reined the little sorrel about. “1 think I’ll ride on down to Frenchy’s now, Pat. 1 rode of? without bringing lunch this morning and I’m getting hungry. You coming, too, or are you going to hunt some more for your bull?” Pat shrugged. “I come, too. I think maybe the old iady she lyin’ about that bull anyhow.” Slade was puzzled and suspicious. Pat hadn't been riding with him today just for fun nor to hunt any white-faced bull either. But whatever Pat had up his sleeve, his job seemed to be done as soon as they got off the Kilgore land. With a flashing, white-toothed smile and a vague excuse of having to hurry home, he turned off on a short-cut trail to the T Anchor. Slade had not ridden far before something else drove the strange behavior of Pat Guajardo completely out of his mind. He was about two miles from Frenchy's cabin when he first noticed the two ravens circling over the next tittle ridge. At first he was interested but not suspicious. The way the birds were acting was almost a sure sign that there was a kill somewhere in that next little cove. But when, a half-mile farther down, he saw a big splotch of blood on a rock beside the trail, he reined the sorrel up to look at it. It had beep spilled there

COURT NEWS Real Estate Transfers Rose Fuhrer Hirschy to The Alberson Cemetery Assn., land in Hartford Twp. Carl W. Faurote to Anthony J. Faurote etux. 1 acre in Root Twp. Harold C. Long etux to Mabel D. Yager, inlots 14 & 15 in Rainbow Lake Subdiv. Paul O. Busse etux to Ralph E. Busse etux, land in Washington Twp. Edna E. Haviland to Arthur D. Suttles etux, inlot 889 in Decatur. Harold C. Long etux to Dorsey Bisel etux, inlot 9 in Rainbow Lake Subdiv. Harold C. Long etux to Howard E. Edwards etux, inlot 23 in Rainbow Lake Subdiv. Harold C. Long etux to William C. Thompson, inlot 29 in Rainbow Lake Subdiv. Baby Record CLEVELAND. Ohio — (IP) — Patrolman Chester W. Krause, 58, holds an all-time record for the Clevealnd Police Department. He has helped deliver 143 babies in his 39 years as an officer.

this morning, for It was still bright red in color. There was only one fresh track going down the trail, made by an Iron horseshoe. There was only one horse that Slade could think of with a hoof that big: Frenchy Quebedeaux’s sway-backed bay! The circling, swooping birds and a plentiful trickle of blood spots led him straight back to the kill. There wasn't much left. Slade didn't bother to get off to look at it He swung the sorrel around again and touched him with the spurs. The big-footed bay was in the corral when he got down to Frenchy’s place. His back was dry but there were fresh sweat stains on him, and when the cowboy went into the barn he found the Frenchman’s saddle blanket still damp. Frenchy himself was nowhere in sight and the whole place had a deserted, mid-day look about it Slade started tor the house, then paused as from the little vega a half-mile or so east of the cabin came the sound of the cqjlie's sudden barking and the frightened bleating of the sheep. The next Instant Frenchy added an assortment of yells and French cusswords. To Slade ft sounded as if one of the Kilgore bulls was paying j a return visit When he went inside, the cabin was cold with the slightly stale smell of a house that has been shut up tight with the odor of fried bacon and pancakes still in it The stove and even the teakettle were stone cold as if Frenchy had not been inside since early morning. The key was still in the door that led to the little room behind. Slade had a momentary feeling of disgust for the things this new job of his seemed to require that he do. Last night he had been completely convinced that Frenchy was exactly what tie seemed—nothing more than an honest, kind - hearted, rough -talking sheepman. Now he wondered if he had let himself be too easily fooled. Within the last hour or two a calf had been butchered within a couple of miles of this place. The blood drops beside the trail had finally dwindled out, but not the big bay’s shoe-prints. To a man used to sign reading it was very plain that whoever had killed the calf had packed it in on Frenchy’s horse. “Siade . • . solved part of the mystery of the rustling in the Ohupaderos .-.* The story continues tomorrow, with Slade treading unwarily on dangerous grounds.

County Agent's Column O 11 1 ° Develop Panel* Interchangeable panels to make pole-type farm buildings more functional have been developed at Purdue University’s wood products research laboratory. The basic unit, explains S. K. Suddarth, laboratory director, is a panel 16x4 feet. The frame can be, made from common lumber and is strong enough to withstand 100 mile an hour winds. This frame can be covered with metal, plywood, hardboard, plastic film or reinforced plastic window covering, depending upon use planned for the building. One-quarter inch metal pins are used to attch the panels to the poles. The buttom panel is movThese pins permit removing panels or interchanging them as use requirements of the buildings change. Windows or other openings can be shifted without difficulty. And, if plastic film covering needs to be replaced, the panel can be taken down and recovered on the ground where the job is more easily done. The hardware is especially designed to allow for crooked, bowed or slightly misplaced poles. Suddarth says. Even though the poles may be as much as three inches out of line, the panels can be perfectly placed because the brackets are adjustable. Placement of the panels begins 'w)tth bkackdts fastened to the poles. The botttom panel is moved in first and the others are placed up the building in order. Initial installation takes about 15 minutes per panel per panel. Equipment usually found on any * farm—block and tackle, tractor with front end loader, etc. —can be used to put up the panels. Suddarth says each panel can be removed in about five minu-* tes. Since the project was developed in a research laboratory. Suddarth explains, complete costs were difficult to estimate. For instance, panels can be prefabricated in the workship during weather unfavorable for field construction. Surfacing a building with panels costs about 10-12 percent more for materials than conventional nailing-girt systems. If insula-; tion is added, the situation reverses : and the conventional type costs 14-16 percent more for materials and requires additional labor. Suddarth suggests that sharp

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pencil work precede acutal use of the prefabricated pole building panel method. Experimentally this panel system looks good, he adds. The panels will be exhibited in the Purdue University building at the Indiana State Fair in Indianapolis, Aug. 27-Sept. 4. Approximately 5,000 “wildcat wells” were drilled in Taxes last year. Only about 14 per cent of them struck oil or gas.

L-O-O-K If you have any merchandise to sell contact Preble Elevator or Peterson Elevator. Livestock, machinery, furniture, or anything you have we will sell It on commission. , Sale sponsored by the Preble Fire Department, August 14. INSURANCE ! PROTECTION That provides Peace of Mind. Consult This Agency Today. COWENS INSURANCE AGENCY L. A. COWENS COWENS 209 Court St. Phone 3-3601 Decatur, Ind. GAS PERMIT? For Complete, Carefree Automatic Heating Comfort without sacrificing your present furnace or boiler . . get our FREE ESTIMATE on a NEW MUELLER CLIMATROL GAS CONVERSION BURNER. LAWSON PLUMDING & HEATING

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FRIDAY, JULY 25.

Masachusetts Carnation BOSTON — «n —ls all the car* nations grown In Massachusetts In a single year were laid end to end, they would girdle the earth 12 times, says the Massachusetts Department of Commerce. The 292 growers in the state produce a total of about 65 million blooms annually. The carnations are valued at 84,800,000. Trade in a good town — Decatur