Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 21, Decatur, Adams County, 26 January 1959 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
Pope Summons Church leaders Info Council - .>r • • ”' A First Ecumenical Council Os Catholic Church In 89 Years VATICAN CITY (UPI) -*• Pope John XXIII launched the Roman Catholic world today on a new offensive to win back the Eastern Orthodox and Western Protestant churches into the church of Rome. He called the church’s 1,800 cardinals, archbishops, bishops, patriarchs and other top spiritual leaders to the Vatican fqr Jbe first ecuinenical council ir. 39 years. An ecumenical council is the most important meeting of church leaders in Roman Catholic dogma. Cnly 20 have been held in the history of the church and ecumenical decrees passed with the Pope's approval are considered infallible. - Last Time Tonight • Terrifying in COLOR! ‘THE BLOB’ & “I MARRIED A MONSTER FROM OUTER SPACE” ——o-0— Starting Fri. for 4 Days! Cecil B. DeMille’s Epic “THE TEN COMMANDMENTS” At The Lowest Prices Ever Shown—Only 50c and 81.00 One Show Fri. Nite at 7:30 Continuous Sat. & Sun. from 1. ■. - ~ 7 " I zz Special - Carry Out r Something lip-smackin’ good! A Whole Barbecued Chicken (freshly cooked—no breading —no grease) Fairway Restaurant and Don’t forget the ~t . barbecued ribs! Served With or Without Barbecue Sauce.
PUBLIC SALE I, the undersigned, since I am going to quit farming and ™°vm g to town, will sell my farm machinery at auction located 2 miles west, H mile south of Berne, Indiana, oir THURSDAY, JANUARY 29,1959 10:30 Fast Time Farm Machinery — 2 TRACTORS — _ x _ . 1956 John Deere 70 tractor with 800 hours on. This factor is fully equipped with power steering; has cultivators for tractor, 2 Whe i9s3 D. 45 Allis Chalmers tractor wlth , w^e fort cover; 3 wheel weights; 3-bottom 14-in. plow with yetter colters, 4-row Allis Chalmers rear mounted corn planter with fertiliz r attachment. COMBINE, HAY BALER, CORN PICKER 1958 Allis Chalmers 7-ft. combine with auger, have recleaner, combined less than 100 acres. 1958 New Idea 1-row corn picker, used one season. 1954 New Holland No. 66 power take-off hay baler. FARM MACHINERY . Myers hay crusher, used one season;> .John Deere 17-hole grain ] drill with one-way single disc, used tvfo seasons; two-row Me- , Cormick-Deering power-lift corn planter with fertilizer attachment. New Idea No. 15 power take-off manure spreader, 125 bu. size, used two seasons; Kewanee TO-ft."wheel wheel disc; 10%-ft. Brillion trailer type cultimulcher; 8-ft. Brillion cultirnulcher, Burch 4-row rotary hoe; John Deere 40-ft. elevator with drag and 1-horse electlc motor; New Idea 4-bar side delivery rake on steel. New Idea 7-ft. semi-mounted mower; 2 rubber tired wagons with grain beds,and high sides and false endgates; Massey Harris 2 14-in. bottom plow on rubber tires; 10-ft. lime spreader; 11-ft. spike tooth harrow; orchard sprayer on trailer, has power take-off pump, with 100-gal. tank; Comfort weed sprayer; heavy 2-wheel trailer;, 16-ft Harvester elevator with %-horse motor; stock trailer; grain blower; spring tooth harrow. TRUCK . , 1952 International % ton pick-up truck with 4-speed transmission in A-l shape. MISCELLANEOUS 7 h.p. Roto tiller; Clinton chain saw, like new; air compressor on cart; International weed chopper; fence charger;. 1-ton chain hoist; Clipper fanning mill; power drill press; copper kettle with jacket; 2-wheel milk cart; cream separator; jack screw; tackle block; some junk iron; some shop tools. HOUSEHOLD GOODS Studio couch; 3 beds with springs and mattress; Singer sewing machine; chest drawers; 2 gal. ice cream freezer; home made quilts, new and used; clocks. HAY 800 bales of mixed hay. AUCTIONEERS NOTE: This is a good line'of farm machinery, most of iteUka hew. If you arq interested in some good used farm machinery don’t miss this sale. Farm machinery can be inspected anytime before sale day. TERMS—CASH. Not responsible for accidents. AMOS A. NEUENSCHWANDER, Owner Phil Neuenschwander, Auctioneer, Berne, Indiana. D. S. Bisir, Auctioneer, petnolaum, Indiana.
I The Pope did not set a date fry the council, but Vatican sources said it probably would be held this year. They said several months of intense preparation would be needed before the gathering could take place. Announces Forthcoming Council ~ r Pope John announced the forthcoming council in a speech to. 21 cardinals Sunday during a visit to the Rome Basilica of St. Paul outside the Vatican. In addition to calling the council, the Pope, as bishop of Rome, summoned a diocesan synod for the city to discuss the "grave problems” and "increasing men- , aces” to the spiritual life of the J faithful. , A summary of his address issued by. the Vatican press office said the ecumenical council would ’ aim “not only toward the edification of the Christian people, but likewise wishes to be an invitation to separate communities for ; die search of unity which so many souls today afrdently desire from all points of the earth.” 1 Vatican sources said the Pope’s first aim appeared to be a reunion with the Eastern orthodox ' churches which split off from the Roman Church about 900 years ago. The 17th ecumenical council held in Florence, Italy, from 1438 to 1443 brought about a reconciliation Vfith the Eastern dissidents but the schism opened again within two or three years. Keep Own Liturgies The Eastern Catholics, who number about 50 million excluding the Russian Orthodox Church, are as fully and completely Catholics as those of the West, but they keep their own liturgies, cannon law and customs. Vatican sources said that the Pope also looked forward to a . possible reconciliation with the Western Protestant churches, but that possibilities of a reunion with the Protestants appeared more remote. The ecumenical councils have issued the most important edicts of the Roman Catholic Church. The last council was held in 1869-70 and declared the infallibility of the pope. The Emperor Constantine convened the First Council of Nicaea 1 in 325 A.D. It laid down the Catholic doctrine in a formula later expanded into the Nicene Creed and set the date for Easter. The Third Council of Ephesus in 431 declared the Virgin Mary the mother of God, while the J Fourth Council of Chaicedon in 451 defined the nature and person of Christ and recognized the .supremacy of the Pope. Wrong Dream BRISTOL. Conn. — (UPI) — After Elmer Madsen lost his wallet containing 810, he dreamed it was lying in a parking lot. Next day, he went to the lot where, sure enough,, he found a wallet rbut it wasn’t his. Trade in a good town — Decatur.]
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Eisenhower Exerts . More Leadership Is Now Exercising More Direct Hold WASHINGTON (UPD-Friends and associates of President Eisenhower say the Chief Executive is wading into operational areas of government and politics more than at any time since he has been in the White House. Why? These sources say a part of the answer is: No Sherman Adams. Last fall, after the Republicans took their lumps from the Democrats in the congressional elections, top White House sources told United Press International that Eisenhower would exercise more direct control over his administration during his final two years in office than ever before. The departure of Adams was given then as partial support for this theory. When the former New Hampshire governor served as assistant to the President, he handled a vast number of government; i tnd political . problems without referring them to Eisenhower. • ’ ■. • Staff Reorganized After Adams resigned under fire because of his connections with Bernard Goldfine, not only was the White House staff reorganized but the President also began to take on a heavier work load. Republicans in Congress felt decidedly better about the President’s increased role in government. But they kept quiet about it for a tim because they did not want to convey the idea that Eisenhower had not been overly active when Adams was on the scene. Senate Republican Whip Thomas H. Kuchel (Calif.) discussed the situation openly on a weekend radio interview. He said that in his opinion Eisenhower was exerting noticeably more vigorous leadershp since Adams left to be succeeded by geniial, good-hu-mored and wise-in-the-ways-of-Congress Wilton B. Persons. Praises Change Kuchel said he thought it was a good thing that Adams got out of the White House. He said he was happy to see the President taking a tighter grip on the reins; of government and party. "It is a tonic to me to see the President put forth his own point of view,” Kuchel said. Other top Republicans, however, said the President has become increasingly conscious of the threat to the record of his administration, his .own standing with the people and history because of political opposition of the and some Republiccans, too. He doesn’t like the situation and , intends to do what he can to imi prove it. Hence, there has been I a discussion in high White House ■ circles of plans for the President ito maintain a steady and frequent series of appearances before the public in behalf of his program. Air Express BLUFFALO, N. Y. — (UPI) - Jack B. Prior used two helicopters to move his furniture from his suburban home to a new apartment eight miles away. $150,000 Continued from pa<e on* juries suffered in the collision in a Fort Wayne hospital April 19, 1958. A request for a jury trial was also listed in the original com-, plaint, which seeks $150,000 in damages. Attorneys for the plaintiff are Jackson and Parrish, of Fort Wayne, and Howard E. Baumgartner, of Berne. After a trip abroad, William H. . Seward, President Lincoln’s Sec- | retary of State, reportedly de- , scribed Skaneateles Lake as “the ] most beautiful body of water in ; the world.” to V :»a , ft ; Ji rZW INFANTRY MASCOT-Chariie II 18-month-old lion cub from Frankfurt, Germany, who they say was weaned on beer is shown on his arrival in New York. Mascot of the Mortar Battery, Ist BattlF Group, Sth Infantry, he is en route to the' Cincinnati, Ohio, zoo, where hell stay for 30 days before rejoining his owner, Sp. Clarence Watson at Ft. Riley, Kan. |
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA
j |-J ; j j || ' WINS VALPARAISO BCHOLARBHIP-William R. Jacobs, Decatur high school senior and son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Jacobs, is shown receiving the Lutheran laymen league’s Valparaiso scholarship. Pictured with Jacobs are Earl Caston, left, laymen’s zone president, and Rudy Meyer, scholarship chairman for the Decatur zone. The Lutheran laymen’s league awards scholarships on the national, district and zone levels. This year, for the first time, the services of the educational testing, service of Princeton, N. J., administered, scored and rated the examination, which was given to high school seniors Oct. 21. There were 3,182 seniors taking the exam as compared to about 600 applicants in previous years.
Two Minor Wrecks Reported In City Icy Streets Blamed For Two Accidents Two minor accidents were recorded by the city police department over the weekend. Damage to the autos involved was considered slight by the investigating officers. One accident occurred Saturday at 10:40 a.m. in an alley between 10th and 11th streets. A car driven by Roy Carl Kocher, 51, Decatur, and an auto driven by Otto F. Koenemann, 73, Decatur, collided at the intersection of the two alleys due to the iey conditions of the road surface. Koenemann was headed south and Kocher was westbound when the mishap occurred. The officers called to the scene estimated damages to the Kocher auto at SSO and no damages were recorded to the Koenemann car. A rearend collision occurred Sunday at 3:34 p.m. at the intersection of Monroe and Second streets. A car driven by Esther A. Etzkorn, 49, route one,.Delphos, 0., struck an auto stopped at the stop light and driven by Thomas Jay Swoveland, 20, route three, Decatur, when unable to stop due to the ice on the city street. Th* report shows S4O damages to the Swoveland auto and no damages occurred to the Etzkorn vehicle. Webelos Will Meet Wednesday Evening Webelos of all Cub Scout Packs will meet Wednesday evening at 7 o’clock in the Lincoln grade school auditorium, Marion Robinson, said today. All Cubs over 10*£ years of age are urged to attend the meeting, Robinson stated. Meetings for Webelos will be held the second and fourth Wednesdays of every month. to Sus fer Fractures In Falls On Ice Two persons from Adams county were admitted to the Adams coun- ; ty memorial hospital Sunday eve-, ning for fractures after falling op the ice earlier in the day. Mrs. Victor Kneuss, of 736 Cleveland street, fell on the ice and received a fractured left wrist. Mrs. Paul Striker, of Geneva, fractured. her right elbow after falling on] the ice Sunday. Both persons are still patients at the Adams county hospital. According to hospital authorities, both patients entered the hospital at approximately 5:15 p.m. Sunday.
40 Acre—FAßM —40 Acre AUCTION SATURDAY, JAN. 31,1959 2:00 P. M., D.S.T. Farm will be sold on the premises located 1 mile west of Willshire, Ohio then miles south and Vt mile west or 9% miles northeast of Berne, Ind., or 8 miles southeast of Monroe, Ind. or 1 mile southeast of the Blue Creek Stone Quarry, known as the Joseph Frank Hamrick (deceased) farm. DESCRIPTION— 4O acres of productive fanning land, all under cultivation except a few acres of woods. Comfortable home with spacious living room, kitchen with built-in cabinets. 2 bedrooms, full bath on first floor, several bedrooms on second floor,attractive new concrete front porch, enclosed back porch; soft water cistern, 2 drove wells, wash house, tool shed, corn criba and hog house combined, barn, several other small buildings. In Adams Central School district. For inspection of farm or loan information, call Mel Liechty, Auctioneer, Berne phone 2-8430 or Decatur 6-6354. Possession on or before March Ist, 1959. TERMS—2S% day of sale, balance upon delivery of marketable abstract of title dnd Executor’s deed. Sold subject to approval of Adams Circuit Court. —* ' ——? —— ' VIRSEL HAMRICK, Executor Sale conducted by Mel’s Realty Auction Co., Berne, Ind. Mel Liechty', Miz Lehman—Auctioneers Howard Baumgartner—Attorney. 20 26 29
Famous Orchestra Conductor Serious NEW YORK (UPI) — Dmitri Mitropoulos, 62, world - famous orchestra conductor, was reported still in serious condition today at ■ New York Hospital as the result! of a heart attack suffered last Fri- 4 . day. I _i “His condition is not changed.”, 2 a hospital spokesman said. “He ’ has had little pain since the first day, but he has not regained i strength. He sleeps a great deal , of the time.” !’ Driver Fined Here ' On Traffic Charge ■ Two Others Slated To Appear In Court - A Fort Wayne driver paid a fine r in justice of the peace court Sat- ? urday afternoon, two other offenders are scheduled to appear in i i court Saturday to charges filed - against them by law officers. I Terrance Harkenrider, 18 Fort : r Wayne, was arrested by the state . police January 18 on U. S. 224 ’, about % mile east of Decatur for : I driving left of center. She appear■ed in court Saturday afternoon, and II was taxed $16.75 for the offense. Robert W. Sprague, 22, Decatur,f was arrested by the city police de-' partment Saturday for driving 55 ' miles per hour in a posted zone of 30 miles per hour on 13th street at 5:50 p.m. He is to appear in court Saturday at 11 o’clock. Robert K. Francis, 26, .. Fort Wayne, was arrested by the state police January 11 at the junction of U. S. 224 and S. R. 101 for disregarding a stop sign. Francis is to appear Saturday at 8:30 p.m. in answer to the charge. URL'** Ji EFISCOP At, CHIEF- New presiding bishop of the Episcopal church in the U.S. is the Rt. Rev. Arthur C. Lichtenberger (above), bishop of St. Louis.
Indianapolis Civic Leader Dies Sunday INDIANAPOLIS (UPD - Evans Woollen Jr., 61, Indianapolis, died Sunday in St. Vincent’s Hospital here following a short illness. Woollen was board chairman of American Fletcher National Bank and served as chairman of the 1957 Indianapolis United Fund drive. Trade <• a good town — Decatur
-".Gerber's Market HAVANA CLUB SWIFTNING CRUSHED I shortening PINEAPPLE W » 10c NESTLE’S BURCO FLAVOR SWEET QUIK COFFEE MARGARINE DRIP or REGULAR 4 YELLOW QUARTERS 1 box 45c bag* 59c 2 lbs. 35c 1 LIBBY’S -zz-LT-m 10 oz - —- * FROZEN z -GS LEMONADE It ♦ * I 39c 3 35c BISCUIT MIX BM® I l/ 1 Vil 3 i 3 [fl SI 10c JIFFY - PANCAKE MIX MAXWELL HOUSE ® X 10c INSTANT ~ COFFEE 13®! Corn Muffin Mix " P?|VW|flJ size 10c \l flfflSS JIFFY 6 oz. CbCßa fie crust mix jar « ox joe RED or GOLDEN DELICIOUS, ROMES, WINESAP, JONATHAN YW APPLES 4 lbs. 49( CHOICE " ~ COLD WEATHER GERBER’S MEAT SPECIALS ! Try some of GERBER’S Own All servo your family a Pork Lean Sausage . . . seasoned VU" just like Home Made Sausage g g Hl Aw that used to be made on the farm. jAWMF A MAMS A i \ Try some with Pancakes or Was- Ig fles for Breakfast. ,-rirji i ■— rr \ ~^g/’ — GERBER’S GERBER’S ALL LEAN PORK LEAN ALL PORK BULK < CASING Sausage Sausage lb. 39c 55c Prices effective Mon. & Tues. Only. We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantity. GERBER’S MARKET 622 N. 13th St PLENTY of FREE PARKING OPEN 8:00 AM. to 0:00 PJW. DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY
PROTECT YOUR > POSSESSIONS WITH THE PROPER INSURANCE A n < COVERAGES ’ COWENS INSURANCE AGENCY ■m A c27E” r>~ : *■ |
MONDAY. JANUARY 26, 1959
