Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 260, Decatur, Adams County, 4 November 1958 — Page 8

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Bowling Scores Classic Le«rr* W L Pts. Foot-So-Port Shoes 18 9, 25 West End Rest. 17 10 23 Decatur Farms 16 11 22 Indiana Rod & Wire -16 11 20 Budget Loan Co. -— 12 15 18 Leland Smith Ins. ... 12 15 17 Acker Cement— 13 14 15 Don’s Texaco Service 12 15 15 Stan's Men Wear .... 11 16 14 Peterson Grain Co. .. 8 19 11 High series: Bob Eyanson 653 < 245-196-2121; Roily Ladd 616 (235-168-213). High games: T. Fennig 222-216, R. Lord 293, A. Appleman 208, J. Beery 221, W. Petrie 205, W. Tutewiler 216, R. Werling 216, L. Hoffman 203, V. Roe 213, R. Parrish 201, R. Beauchot 202, D. Graber 223. W. Snyder 203, D. Reidenbach 211, T. Lehman 211, E. Graber 201206, P. Bleeke 224, H. Scheumann 201. Bob Eyanson rolled a new high series of 653. Don Reidenbach converted the difficult 7-10 split. Rural League W L Pts

Public Auction 35—GUERNSEY DAIRY CATTLE—3S 70—HEAD FEEDER PIGS—7O ’ SOME PERSONAL PROPERTY SALE WILL BE HELD UNDER TENT Wednesday, November 12th, 1958 1 P. M. (Fast Time) LOCATION: 2 Miles West of Bluffton. Indiana on Road No. 124 to Merridian Road, then North 1 mile, then West ¥4 mile. All the following cattle were raised on this farm; artificially bred by Curtis Candy Co., and they are TB and Bangs tested and young cattle are Calfhood vaccinated. CATTLE: Brenda, 4 yrs. old, calf by side, milking 40 lbs. per day. Cheeta, 4 yrs. old, will be fresh by day of sale, will milk 40 lbs. per day. Claudie, 3 yr. old, will be fresh Feb. 5, 1959, will milk 40 lbs. per day. Jean, 5 yrs. old, due March 30, 1959, milking 24 lbs. per day, will give 40 lbs. when fresh. Finese, 7 yrs. old, due March 30, 1959, milking 40 lbs. per day. Delight, 8 yrs. old, due April 21, 1959, milking 22 lbs. per day, will milk 40 lbs. when fresh. Betsy, 4 yrs. old, due Jan. 2, 1959, will milk 40 lbs. when fresh. Corrine, 3 yrs. old, due June 2, 1959, milking 24 lbs. per day, will milk 40 lbs. per day when fresh. Daisy, 7 yrs. old, due June 13, 1959, milking 25 lbs. per day, will milk 40 lbs. when fresh. Becky, 5 yrs. old, due Aug. 1, 1959, milking 26 lbs. per day, will milk 40 lbs. per day when fresh. ~,, ~ Beauty, 4 yrs. old, due July 31, 1959, milking 23 lbs. per day, will milk 40 lbs. per day when fresh, 1 Christine, 3 yrs. old, due Feb. 9, 1959,. milking 20 lbs. per day, will milk 32 lbs. per day when fresh. Betty, 4 yrs. old, due July 23, 1959, milking 24 lbs..per day, will milk 40 tbs. per day when fresh Butter Ball, 6 yrs. old, due July 17, 1959, milking 32 lbs. per day, will milk 40 lbs. when fresh. Carol, 3 yrs. old, due June 25, 1959, milking 40 lbs. per day, will milk 40 lbs. per day when fresh. Baassey, 7 yrs. old, due July 11, 1959, milking 30 lbs. per day, will milk 40 its. when fresh. Darlene, 3 yrs. old, due July 22, 1959, milking 20 lbs. per day, will give 32 lbs. when fresh. Merlines First, 6 yrs. old, due July 28. 1959, milking 40 tbs. per day. 4 Bred Heifers due from Feb. to April. 3 Open Heifers. 6 Yearling Heifers. 2- 6 mo. old Heifers. 2-6 mo. old Bulls. 70 —HOGS —7O 70 Head of Feeder Pigs, wt. from 65 to 75 lbs., double immuned. MILKING EQUIPMENT 12 Can Aeroflow Milk Cooler; 10 Gal. Elec. Heater: 2 Wash Tanks; Surge Milker and Compressor, 3 unit capacity; 3 Surge units. TERMS—CASH. Gerald Strickler, D. S. Blair—Auctioneers 4.j—v ■’ f Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Graham, Owners fcverett Faulkner—Clerk C. W. Kent, Sales Mgr. Sale Conducted by The Kent Realty & Auction Co. Decatur, Indiana Phone 3-3390 Not responsible for accidents. 4 10

We Are Now OPEN AT OUR NEW LOCATION 222 N. 3rd. Street (Formerly Mansfield Motor Sales Bldg.) SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE OF GOODYEAR TIRES, BATTERIES and ACCESSORIES © APPLIANCES GOODYEAR S store E I I I 222 N. 3rd St. Phone 3-2000

Conrad's "66" 19 8 24 McConnell H 10 23 Chuck’S Marathon ... 14 13 21 Mirror Inn —-- 14 13 19 Erie R. R. —-* 14 13 19 Petrie Oil 13 14 18 Schrock Builders 13 14 18 Stucky & Co. -- .12 15 15 Limberlost Archery —l2 15 15 Steckley’s .— 7 20 8 High gjimes: Erv Anderson 220200, Enos Schrock ?10, Ken Mills .210. .1 Merchant League W L Pts. Slick’s Drive Inn .... 19 8 24 Preble Restaurant 15 12 22 Painters 15 12 20 Lynch Box —ls 12 20 Price Men's Wear _..14 “13 18 Western Auto 14 13 17 State Gardens—- 12 15 16 Citizens Telephone -.10 17 15 Begun’s Clothing .... 11 16 15 Krick Tyndall 10 17 13 ■ Lynch Box won 2 from Krick Tyndall, Slick’s won 3 from Citizens Telephone, Western Auto won 2 from Painters, Preble Restaurant won 3 from State Gardens. Begun’s won 2 from Price Men’s Wear.

High games: M. Heare 211; A. Wendel 215; R. Webster 208; K. Butcher 211; T. Moreland 202, J. Baker 212. American Legion League Mies Recreation won three from Meyers Firestone, Macklins won two from Cowens Insurance, Burke Insurance won two from First State Bank, Burke Standard won three from Ashbauchers. W L Pts. Burke Insurance .... 18 9 24 Fjrst State Bank .... 16 11 23 Cowens Insurance ... 16 11 21 Mies Recreation 15 12 20 Ashbauchers 4. 12 15 16 Macklins 11 16 14 Burke Standard ----- 10 17 13 Meyers Firestone .... 10 17 13 200 scores: W. Frauhiger 200, E. Bulmahn 200, D. Reidenbach 202, W. Schnepf 202, R. Fuelling 205, C. Marbach 225-203, W. Tutewiler 211, F. Hoffman 203, J. Meyer 200, J. Cochran 213, R. Hess 205, A. Baker 204. j Minor League W L Pts. Wolff Hardware .. 20 7 26 Dunbar Furniture .. 18 9 25 Holthouse on High. 17% 9% 24% Moose No. 2 15% 11% 20% Fager Sport. Goods 15 12 20 Clem Hdwe. 14 13 20 Decatur Lumber ... 8 19 12 R&S Service 10 17 12 Smith Pure Milk ..10 17 11 Moose No. 17 20 9 Moose 2 won four points from Clem; Dunbar four from Smith; Decatur Lumber three from Moose 1; Wolff three from Fager; Holthouse three from R&S. High games: D. Miller 223-208, Sprunger 2- £■. Wolff 210, Kirchhofer 20C 'j. E. ALLEYS G k,. Fraternal League W L Peterson Elevator 17 7 West End Restaurant ... 17 7 G. E. Club— 13 11 Teeple Truck Lines 12 12 Kelly Cleaners 9 15 Red Men.... 4 20 Teeple won 3 from Red Men; West End won 3 from G. E. Club; Peterson won 3 from Kelly by forfeit. 200 scores: Laurent 212-203; Murphy 216, Baumgartner 211-215-202; Buuck 210, Macklin 224. 600 series: Baumgartner 628 (211-215-202); Laurent 600 ( 212-203-185). Sugar Bowl Father Is Taken By Death NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — Fred Digby, ‘‘father of the Sugar Bowl" and veteran sports writer, died here Monday at the age of 65 after a lifetime of promotion and • devotion to every athletic event. Funeral services are scheduled to be held Wednesday. At the time of his death, Digby was general manager of the Midwinter Sports Association, sponsor of the week - long Sugar Bowl events, and historian for the Football Writers Association of America. He was one of the most honored Sports writers in the nation. He began as a sls a week cub reporter on the old New Orleans Item in 1912. "I worked for three years at that salary," he said recently, "and never thought to ask for more.” Shortly after he became a reporter, Digby organized the Amateur Baseball Association, and was active in establishing the local Golden Gloves contests, prep relays, intersectional Catholic footbali games and tennis tournaments. | He and hts editor, Wil R. Hamilton, drew up a set of boxing

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

POSTER CHILD LEADS MDAA APPEAL h iij 4) r«w, W 1 B ’ fl 11 Bfl JBL. fl flp flk, fl > This appealing poster, showing four-year-old Alan Kowalski of Warren, Mich., will be displayed throughout the country in the Thanksgiving MARCH FOR MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY. As 1958 Poster Child of Muscular Dystrophy Associations of America, Inc. Alan symbolizes nearly a quarter million American victims of » this progressively crippling disease whose cause is obscure and for which there is. as yet. no effective treatment

the sport in Louisiana. Digby personally covered most of the world’s heavyweight title fights and was one of the few to chose Gene Tunney in 1927 to beat Jack Dempsey. His greatest achievement came when he masterminded and named the first Sugar Bowl football classic in New Orleans on New Year’s Day, 1935.

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Brain Research BUFFALO, N. Y. (UPI) — The Air Force has given a University of Buffalo Medical School profesj sor a $25,000 contract fcr basic research that may help man fly in outer space. Kansas produces about one-fifth of the nation’s wheat.

Sen. Knowland's Future In Balance Crucial Election On In California SAN FRANCISCO (UPl)—More than five million Californians flocked to the polls today to decide whether the nation’s second most populous state sticks with the Republican Party or jumps into the Democratic column. On the results of this crucial election hinged the political future of Sen. William Fife Knowland, the Republican Party leader in the Senate and its cadidate for governor, and the 1960-64 prospects of up-and-coming Democrat Edmund G. (Pat) Brown the senator’s opponent. Knowland often has been described as a passible GOP candidate for president in 1960 or 1964 —but if he loses today, his political career may be over. Brown, 53, the state's attorney general for eight years, is as yet almost unknown outside his own state, but if he scares a decisive victory In the election and return his party to power after a 15-year absence, he will be catapulted into national prominence. Election returns in this key state also will decide whether California reverses a long-standing Republican tradition and sends to the U. S. Senate for a six-year term Democratic Congressman Clair Engle or votes Into office Republican Gov. Goodwin J. Knight, 61. A major issue to be settled by the electorate is whether California. one of the nation’s most important industrial states, votes for or against a “right-to-work” initiative which would outlaw the union shop. Almost all of the odds, newspaper polls and surveys pointed to a Democratic victory—perhaps a sweep which would carry all of the pasty’s major candidates into office and deal a severe setback to the Republican Party, Knowland and even Vice President P ; chard M. Nixon. .\ixon is a native son and a favorite for the GOP presidential nomination in 1960. He made two campaign sorties into California in an effort to boost Republican chaces while Presidet Eisenhower also stumped in the state.

SENATE BATTLE (Oantlnu»d from page on>) tend to their 'regular chores on the farms and fail to vote. We shall see what will happen. The senatorial battle overshadowed the struggles for 11 congressional posts, five state administrative jobs, five seats on tate court benche, 100 tenures in the State House of Representatives, 25 candidacies for the 50 plates in the State Senate and 5,461 races for county and township offices. After the possibility of huge scratching in populous Marion County arose, H. Dale Brown, 11th District GOP chairman and member of the county election board, announced that the oneminute limit for voting machine balloting would be enforced strictly. Most political observers agreed) that the following GOP congressmen have the inside track. They are Charles A. Halleck, Rensselaer; E. Ross Adair, Fort Wayne; Mrs. Cecil Harden, Covington; .William G. Bray, Martinsville; and Ralph Harvey, New Castle. The general opinion also was that the two Democratic congressmen would be counted in easily. They are Ray J. Madden, Gary, and Winfield K. Denton, Evansville. John Brademas, South Bend Democrat, also was favored to beat Republican Congressman F. Jay Nimtz, South Bend. In uncertain status were the seats of the following GOP members of the national House, according to most so-called political experts; Three In Danger . John V. Beamer, Wabash; Earl Wilson, Bedford, and Charles B. Brownson, Indianapolis. A Republican State Senate and a Democratic House of Representatives likewise seemed to be in prospect. This situation is worrying the advocates of the right-to-work law. In this connection. Democratic Sen. Eugene Bainbridge, Munster, stirred up a late hornet’s nest by charging that proponents of the controversial bill spent nearly a third of a million dollars to obtain its passage tn the 1957 General Assembly. ■Riis allegation was promptly termed the “big-lie technique” by L.A. Hooser, vice-president of the Indiana Right-to-Work Committee. Hooser suggested that Bainbridge

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1958

investigate “the bundle of cash taken to the Statehouse in March 1957 by union officials who were determined to kill the right-to-work bill.’’ Elderly Woman Killed By Station Wagon BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPI> — Mrs. Cora Chasteen, 82, near Bloomington, died in Bloomington Hospital late Monday, several hours after she was struck by a station wagon as she crossed a county road to check the mailbox at her home. Frederick Mills, 33. Bloomington, said he came over a small and did not see the elderly woman until it was too late. Deputy Sheriff Joe Waldon said no charges were filed against Mills but the case would be turned over to the Morgan County coroner for investigation. Trade in a good town — Decatur

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