Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 195, Decatur, Adams County, 19 August 1958 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller, Jr. - President J. H. Heller Vice-President Chas. Holthouse Secretary-Treasurer Subscription Rates: By Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 88.00; Six months, $4.25; 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, 6 cents.

A cabbage weighing 17 pounds has been raised in Huntington county, and holds the record over there this year. Have any that large or larger been raised in Adams county? ——o o The passing of Henry M. Crownover leaves many grieved friends and former students. The grand old gentleman would have celebrated his 91st birthday next month. For many years a teacher in Blue Creek and St. Mary’s • townships, he always farmed his fine land and until this past summer remained quite active. Mr. and Mrs. Crownover have been known for many years for their excellent collection of antiques and books. Their Christian charity in opening their home to the needy is one of the great human stories of Adams county. The community mourns its loss. o o Anyone who has completed two years of college and desires further. undergraduate or graduate work may study right in Decatur this Fall. By enrolling Sept. 8 at 8:30 p.m. in the home ec room of the Decatur high school for an extension course, you may add credits to your college record, and increase your knowledge. The course is entitled “Current Movements in Education.” Considering the present interest in Russian education, and criticism of the American system, it should prove quite stimulating. The fourth national Catholic social action conference will be held at Notre Dame University Sept. 5-7, and will include addresses by Bishop Leo A. Pursley of Fort Wayne and Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell. Rural life, employer organizations, la-bor-management education, urban community planning, lay action organizations, and the role of diocesan social action directors will be discussed. The social action leaders of the Catholic church have been a powerful force for helping to bring about needed’ changes, and in helping to organize these changes.

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About 76.5% of the people in Indiana now have some form of insurance to help pay hospital and doctor bills. o o NIPSCO, owner of the local Gas company, will list its stock on the Midwest Stock Exchange this month. It previously had been traded over-the-counter. There are 35,000 stockholders in the company at the present time. o o A $4.5 million credit with the Export-Import Bank will enable Brazil to purchase U. S. made machine tools for teaching purposes. This will provide 111 industrial schools in Brazil with the tools they need to improve that country's skilled labor force. Brazil, like many South American countries,., urgently needs skilled and semi-skilled workers. Only then can she begin the purchase of the millions and millions of dollars worth of equipment which her people desire. Our trade policy will either permit or hamper her improvement, depending upon our tariffs. • o o The county CROP committee will meet Thursday evening at 8 p.m. to plan the county CROP program. This fine group collects pledges from farmers over the entire county of a portion of their crop to be given to overseas direct relief through the religious body of their choice. The goal for Adams county this year, set by We board itsciT, Ts ar carload us soybeans. Those who pledge to give will be allowed to do so right at the elevator, with credit for so many bushels. This may be given in any grain, but will be converted into soybeans for the county gift. When a torrential rain fell on Hamada, Japan, CROP aid of food, flour, and clothing helped the 22,000 persons who lost their property in the floods. The Japan Church World Service, American Friends Service Committee, and Catholic Relief Services joined forces to provide the aid. Gifts will be distributed 100% through the agency designated by the giver.

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20 Years Ago Today O • Aug. 19, 1938 — Graduation exercises were held today for the 52 students of the Reppert school autioneering at the conclusion of the semi-annual three-weck session. The Union Chapel United Brethren church parsonage, 121 South Fourth street, which has been remodeled, will be formally dedicated Sunday. City policeman Ed Miller was one of the successful hunters yesterday, returning with two squirrels. Mrs. Henry Heller, Mrs. Martin Zimmerman, Mrs. Floyd Arnold, Mrs. Fred Hancher, Mrs. Lawrence Green, Mrs. Roy Runyon and Mrs. Ransom Barkley attended the Berne flower show. COURT NEWS Marriage Applications Samuel M. Wickey, 21, route one, Bryant; Amanada H. Schwartz, 17, route two, Geneva. John Key Petrie, 25, Columbus, O.; Zenana Mae Hawkins, 21, Decatur. Kenneth Rigcl Mitchel, 49, Lipia, O.; Jane Anna Ballinger, 28, Lakeview, O. o ' o I Household Scrapbook = t ßy ROBERTA LEE f o . -o Blistered Woodwork A hot sun will blister a piece of furniture, or any wodwork. if it is subjected to it throughout the summer. But warm olive oil rubbed gently into the wood will help wonderfully to restore it. It is often necessary to repeat this treatment several times a week to get satisfactory results. Kills Weeds If grass and weeds are growing between the bricks on your garden walk, they can killed and prevented from regrowing by pouring gasoline along the cracks. Bluing Dissolve a lump of soda in the bluing water on washing and it' will prevent the bluing from streaking the clothes. Rumors Garcia To Be Murdered By Huks MANILA (UPb — The Manila police department announced today it has alerted all its units to be on the lookout for six Communist Huks who are rumored to be in Manila to assassinate Presi- ... ..d£DL Carios-Pe-Qarcia.

BY GUNS ALONE Wjpr /Qt ' ~ By Barker ' WQ) © 1955, E. M. Parker; published by arrangement with Paul , I K. Reynold! 4 Son; distributed by King Features Syndicate J

CHAPTER 22 MARTHA KILGORE tipped the mirror on the wide old walnut dresser until she could get a full-length view of herself in the new riding clothes her grandmother had bought her the day before. She could see that in a daring way they were becoming to her slim, tall figure, but she wasn’t quite sure she liked them. Her grandmother was very unconventional about some things, and these clothes were a good example of IL She didn’t seem to care tn the least what other women might say about her, and in her own youth she would probably have cared even less if some strange man had thought her bold or immodest If a woman was going to ride horseback, and enjoy it, Rachel had said flatly, she needed to sit astraddle of a horse and wear the same kind of simple, sensible clothes men wore. She had laughed at the long, full-legged brown corduroy riding skirt and tan velveteen blouse that Martha had brought with her, and ordered the old housekeeper to turn them to keep the girl from wearing them. And there wasn’t a woman's side-saddle on the place. In town she had fitted Martha out with what she considered proper riding gear: man’s blue levis, a plain blue cotton shirt, a flaverowned black Stetson, and a pair of soft leathered brown cowboy boots. She had ordered a new saddle for the girl, and Jim Ned Wheeler had picked out a special horse for her, a tall, deep-chested bay, who was lively yet entirely safe for an inexperienced rider. Martha set the Stetson firmly down on her shining black hair, twisted round for another look at herself, and wished with a feeling of embarrassment that the levis didn’t fit quite so tight Then she went down the hall and stopped in front of her grandmother’s door. This morning, for the first time since Martha had been here, Rachel Kilgore hadn’t got up for breakfast. But she was awake, sitting up in bed, propped against a couple of huge pillows. The trip to town the day before had tired her. There were blue shadows under her fine old eyes, and lines that Martha had never noticed before showed in her white cheeks. She half squinted her eyes and looked the girl slowly up and down, then nodded her approval. “Pretty nice," she said and chuckled. Martha blushed. “Granny, you are plain indecent!" The old lady laughed. “Maybe,” she agreed. “But I’ve had a lot of fun in my day. Jim Ned’s

THE BBCATOB DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

AN OSTRICH WEIGHS ] X THt _ _ about spoundg V Wvw AND I 6 EQUAL. IN /.Of In U V H8N6J669 / Lcaw _ MEDICAL \\\ V, / PROFESSIONS,THE CLERSY I AND fiENTLEMENOFSOCIETY.../iTUliily' Mp. ZL . "THE MEMBERS WALK. THE / '> I 6TREETS FOR 3 PAYS PRIOR / I, \ -so AN EYECUTiON.COUECIINfi / . MONEY WHICH IS USED IN \a \ CHURCH SERVICES FOR-te /fff \ REPOSE OFTHE CONDEMNED / ' ' 7WWJ 1 \ mans soul andt© / / (// /fl / \ provide funds for / Jra pty < \ Hie FAMILY/ ' theory that _ trSKw I&nOMC. SPRINGS DERIVE. THEIR. WATER T 7 jfiMWgWIW. FROIA RAIN AND SNOW WHICH * W WJBt" FILTERS THROUGH THE SOIL AND ROCK Jf ■ &OES BPiCR. To THE ROMAN ENGINEER, IB BWM MARCUS POLLIO VITRUVIUS, WHO I ■ kWMEFVx UVED ABOUT Tit TiViE; OF CHRIST- >■ TtTTHE IDEA WAS NOT GENERALLY Ji® ACCEPTED BY SCIENTISTS UNTIL Jlflp 1,600 YEARS HATER/ 9

Wilson Still Puzzled Over Moon Flight Former Secretary Has No Curiosity PETOSKEY, Mich. <UPI) - Former Defense Secretary Charles E. Wilson says he can’t see why everyone is so eager to send a rocket around the moon. “Maybe I'm old and not as curious as I was,” Wilson told the Petoskey Service Club Monday night, “but I think the other side of the moon is much like this one.” The free-wheeling ex- secretary and former General Motors president indicated the moon rockets, just like the American satellites and Russian Sputniks', were not military weapons. The only pain the United States suffered when Russia sent up the first satellite was a blow to its “false pride,” Wilson said. “The competition to launch the first satellite was strictly between “two bunches of Germans—those i with Russia and those with us,” I he added.

riding today. I told him I thought you might want to go along.” , “I’d love it,” Martha said. “I was going for a ride by myself anyhow, but I would much rather go with him.” Rachel Kilgore nodded. “This place will all be yours some day, you know. I would like for you to see what it looks like before then." Her eyes were unusually gentle and tender as she smiled up at the girl. Martha dropped to her knees beside the bed. She put a strong, brown hand over her grandmother’s slender white one. “That isn’t the reason I came here. You know that, don’t you?” “I wouldn’t be making any promises if I didn’t! The main reason I wanted to go to town yesterday was to see my lawyer. I have made a new will. When a person gets to be my age they have no business wasting time,, Now run along with you. 1 expect Jim Ned is waiting, and I know I am ready to get up. This is the latest I have laid abed since I was a baby." Martha leaned over and impulsively kissed the white forehead before she got to her feet. “Granny—l’m glad I came to the Chupaderos. I’m glad we have had this chance to get to know—and love each other!” Mrs. Kilgore nodded, smiling. In the doorway Martha turned again. “Granny—did you swear out a warrant for Slade Considine’s arrest yesterday?” The old lady’s eyes sharpened as she looked at the girl, then she shook her head. “No. I decided to wait a while—until I have had time to think It over. If I could have learned to do that when I was younger I might have saved myself a lot of trouble — and heartache.” She heaved a deep sigh that sounded tired. “I am pot as sure that 1 am always right as 1 used to be, Martha." Jim Ned Wheeler was sitting on the porch waiting for Martha. He had saddled a tall, sturdylooking dun for himself and put Rachel Kilgore’s own saddle on the bay for Martha. Although there were no clouds In sight, there were rolled slickers tied on behind each saddle--and lunch in a bulging saddlebag. ' I The old foreman looked at the girl a little doubtfully. “Are you I up to a pretty long ride?” “Sure. Where are we going?" i Jim Ned gathered his reins, swung up across the dun and touched him lightly with the i spurs. “We’re going bull hunti Ing," he said and grinned.

Wilson warned that the whole concept of U.S.-Russian competition must be changed. - "AMHoifr arms race between Russia and the U.S. is not the answer to the world’s problems,” he said. Such races led to 22 wars in the past and war today would be a ‘’world disaster worse than the dark ages that followed the collapse of the Greek and Roman empires.” "We must learn to live together in a not-so-competitive way.” said Wilson. The world struggle, he said, “is not like a golf match but right now its worse than strip poker.” <&Josrital" Admitted Miss Cheri Jacobs, Decatur; Dick Bbch, Decatur; Mrs. James Elberson, Decatur; Mrs. Esther Best,; Decatur. Dismissed ■ Mrsr Ralph Ross and baby boy, Decatur; Mrs. Salvador Jaurigui and baby boy, Decatur; Mrs. Jane Emenhiser. Hoagland; Mrs. Reyel Roman and baby girl, Convoy.

Martha stared at him. "Did you say bull hunting?” ‘‘Yep. That’s right We are going to round up and pen all we can. Your grandma had a buyer for them down in Mexico —where they came from. Those we can't gather we will have to shoot” He grinned again at the bewilderment on the girl’s face. “1 wasn’t sure I heard right when she told me either —although I ought to have known better, as long as I have known her. Your grandma talks like a sassy little old fireeater, but when it comes to actions you can count on her to do the right thing—give her time. She is not going to let her bulls be the bones the other dogs fight over. Getting rid of them ought to clear the air some." They had been riding at a steady, easy trot as they talked. Now the old foreman drew his horse up on the peak of a sharp little knoll. He waved his arm back toward the hills to the north and cast beyond the spread of ranch buildings. “Hud and Julio are scouting out that way. We have already got forty of the bulls Inside a fence, but eight of the worst ones are still to be rounded up and herded in." "Does this mean that Granny’s given up the idea of fighting the Forest Service?” A glint of amusement showed momentarily Ln the old cowman’s gray eyes. “She doesn't give up that easy or that quick,” he said dryly. “It just means that she • has caught on that somebody is trying to keep us so busy fighting among ourselves that we I won’t notice anything else that is i going on. And as long as she has . them bulls, that’s what is going [ to happen. Yesterday one of them . broke down a five-wire fence for : Nick Considine —at least that’s > what he claims —and got into the . pasture with his new Prince i Domino Hereford, fought and [ killed him. They shot our black i bull, but that doesn't even up the score. The Hereford was worth five hundred dollars, and Rachel - paid twenty-five for the long- ’ horn.” . He paused to roll and light a t smoke. "The funny part of it is i that I saw that black longhorn i down at the foot of Escabrosa , Canyon night before last He 1 would have had to travel about i eight miles through some mighty rough country in order to get on } the 143. I don’t think he would i have done Lt unless he was driven!" , ( Jim Ned thought be knew i what be was beading into as s he reined his horse up the trail. Continue the story here tomorrow. __

OLD DECATUR. (Continued from Fx» o—) has done much work for new homes being constructed in the area. What is needed to take care of the machines, keep them in good shape for many years, and to work around the saws (which rotate about 5,000 revolutions per minute in some cases) in safety and to turn out the variety of carefully-made items—is a master. Peter Kirsch was the first such one to work with these pieces of equipment. Ernest High took over the business tn 1948. Mr. and Mrs. High came from Fort Wayne in the cold months of 1949 when the mill was sold. They stayed upstairs in the old mill, with a pot-bellied stove for warmth in the' large quarters, which was all one room. (It now houses two apartments, one of three bedrooms, and one of two bedroom capacity, with separate heating units and kitchens and living rooms.) A basement was later built underneath. This was the mill when the Highs took over. There was the cider mill, and the woodworking and planing business to take care of. Mr. High had mechanic’s experience when he came, but Mr. Kirsch, now unable to handle the mill work, taught him the cider making, which came yearly from about the first of September until Halloween. Although there was no cider making in 1948. it has continued each year since then. With one helper, Mr. High estimated, he has made about 1100 to 1200 gallons of cider in some days, when the apples were really coming in. He also recalls when work in the woodworking department was going strong. He and his helpers had to sweat it out, he states, working two shifts on one job for the government. He estimates the mill had made approximately 100 engineers’ benches in one assignment. Other pieces of equipment for the government have included blueprint room tables. One unusual bit of custom work was repairing a walnut antique bed. It was brought in with one post missing, and he made a sev-en-and-a-half-foot post to complete the bed, after finding the materials. For his own home, he had made four canopy bed posts for one bed.

Although furnituremaking is not the main part of his business, he has also finished a modern sewing bench and round coffee table for his home. In one main project, planing wood for area residents. he recalls having processed i&;909 beard feet of lumber in one day, and a 16,009-board-foot assignment for one job. Now the piles of lumber in the mill are diminishing, as he has let the stock run down Th preparation for the closing. “Among the last pieces of work done there have been sets of kitchen cabinets and mahogany paneling for the apartments which he is building upstairs now and which will take the place of the mill equipment downstairs later on. Reminiscing over the business and the ten years of woodworking and saw and lawn mower work, in addition to the planing and cider mill, Mr. High said one thing he wanted especially to do: to “thank all my friends and customers,” and there are many of them. Later on. he will do a little light work in the saw and mower work, but that will wait until the apartments are finished. Eivdence of the craftsman and the perfectionist have been carried out in the new venture. To the questions of why he is replacing the mill with an apartment house, he answers just what he had said before; the business is becoming too much for one person. And the business cannot be expanded, as the result of the recent te-zoning ordinance naming the area around the mill a residential district. The logical thing is to turn it into a residence. The result was the plan for an apartment set-up, for the 85-foot by 158foot and 24 foot by 80-foot structure. There will be four apartments, he plans, two three-bed-room apartments, and two twobedroom parts. In his blueprints are separate heating units for each apartment, and knotty pine in the kitchen, mahogany paneling for the other rooms. Signs of the craftsman and perfectionist showing here?—-the final hint of that is his statement that “we want the people to feel just as if they were coming into a new house.” So the Decatur landmark will not be completely removed, but will be remodeled so that there will be only memories of the mill

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left. The idle machinery, the diminishing stock of wood both say that the era of the woodworking craftsman in Decatur is dwindling. One question remains, and you can sense it after you see the equipment and talk to someone who knew the founder and the bne who took over the business from him and made it successful. The quection: might there be someone who is willing to take over the 65-year-old business at a new location, someone who is willing to take time and care to custom make things which the area still wants? There is the very slimmest chance. Tomorrow’!} auction at 630 North Third will decide that.

Sledgehammer Killer Arrested In Seymour 16-Year-Old Boy Slays Part-time Boss SEYMOUR, Ind. (UPI) — State police said Joe Hollin, 16, was held today in the sledge-hammer slaying of his part-time employer. Hollin was quoted as saying he thought "someone should knock him in the head.” Don Meadows, 26, who owned a farm two miles north of Crothersville in southern Jackson County, was killed Monday by a blow on the back of his head by a sledge hammer. Hollin got on a tractor after the killing on Meadows’ farm and drove to Crothersvills where he reported the slaying. Hollin, now living in Crothersville and formerly of Manchester, Ky.. told state police he killed Meadows in anger over sl2. Hollin said he had worked for Meadows before July 8 and he still had sl2 pay coming. He said he had tried to collect the money “several times,” but Meadows would not pay him. “We didn’t argue, but when I went away I thought someone should knock him in the head,” Hollin was quoted as saying by state police. Hollin said he cut timber for Meadows on his farm Monday because he thought he might get

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TUESDAY, AUGUST 19. 1958

his money. He said while they were resting Meadows “bragged how he did people out of money.” Hollin said he picked up the hammer and his Meadows in the head, then hit him again after Meadows fell. 27 KLM Victims Buried Al Galway Unidentified Bodies Given Five Services 27 KLM VICTIMS GALWAY, Ireland (UPI) -Business stopped here today for the mass funeral of 27 unidentified victims of last Thursday’s KLM plane crash which killed 99 persons. Exact cause of the crash was still unknown. A coroner’s jury found Monday that the victims died as the result of “multiple injuries caused by violent impact,” but said there was “no evidence to show cause of impact.” The unidentified bodies were taken to the small cemetery of St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Church in downtown Galway for burial in one grave. The bodies of three Americans, two Dutch nationals, a Mexican and a man tentatively listed as an Iraqi were among the 34 recovered from the Atlantic off Irelarid hear the spot where the fourengine Super-Constellation hit the water. They will be flown to the victims’ homelands later this week. Five denominational services were organized at the mass grave —Roman Catholic, Jewish, Church of Ireland, Moslem and Non-Con-formist. Trade in a good town — Decatur.

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