Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 67, Decatur, Adams County, 20 March 1959 — 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 John a Heller Vice-President Chan Holthouse Secretary-Treasurer Subscription Rates: By Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year. 88.00; Six months, 84.25; 3 months, 82.25. 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, 8 cents. •'■ • • " The “Bank” Is Out Some people have been seriously considering the possibility of not building a sub-station here in case the voters of tyecatur want to keep the electric utility. They have felt that it might be possible to step down the 33,000 kilowatt I&M power to 2,300 and 13,800 kilowatts through the present “bank” of controls at the city steam plant and the bank at the diesel plant. This just won’t work at all. The breaker that failed to work last Monday, probably causing the damage to the generator which caused the Wednesday stoppage, is a 25,000 wilowatt breaker. It isn’t adequate at all. At least 250,000 or even 500„000 kilowatt breakers are needed to safeguard our power. That is why the substation is necessary. And the station, when it is built, and whether it is built by the city, or a private power company, mqst be built to allow for anticipated electrical expansion. Otherwise, bond issue will follow bond issue in a continuing, expensive wave, eventually bringing the city to business stagnation and ruin. ■ ' ' ’ „ T-S.AI / So, we must plan on building a substation, at a cost of at least $450,000. This doesn’t count the cost of bringing the present lines to the substation, and preparing them to handle 13,800 kilowatts. It doesn’t count the rebuilding of the city and rural lines, the latter urgently needed. The minimum that the city could rebond for, then, would be $1 million, including the present $692,000 issue. And the interest and annual amount set aside to repay the principal in, say, 25 years, would run about SBO,OOO a year minimum. ,The most that it is estimated -the city could make from purchasing power is $125,000 a year and that is after a two-year no-profit period of changeover. This would leave only $45,000 a year to rebuild the lines, and at least SIOO,OOO is needed for ten years! If the city keeps the plant, taxes and/or rates will have to be raised.

(TO PROGRAMS Central Daylight Time

WANE-TV CHANNEL 15 FRIDAY gvealnir 8:00—Our Miss Brooks 6:3ft—Tills l>ay 1969 6:4s—Doug Edwards-News 7:oft—'Mike Hanuner 7:3o—Hit Bar axle B:oo—Rawhide 9:oo,—Phil JSttvers Show 9:3(h—Dine I n 10:0ft—Line-Up 10:30 —'Person to Person 11:00—ChrlftOmas Holiday SATI'HOA V Morning B:3o—Agriculture U.S.A. 8:00 —Kartoon Klub’ 9:3o—Captain Kangaroo 10:30—Mighty Mouse 11:00—Heckle & deckle 11:3ft —Robin Hood Afternoon . 12:0ft—Roy lingers I:oft—O'Henry Playhouse ; 11:3(8 —Week - End Wrap Up I:lS—Hockey Preview 2:o9—Hockey — s:oft—Dr Christian a:.'JO—This Is Alice Evening 8:00 —Annie Oakley 6:3ft—Life Os Riley 7:oo—Jeff’s Collie 7:3o—'Perry Mason 8:30 —Wanted-Dead or Alive J:00— Gale Storm :30—Have Gun Will Travel 10:00—Gunsmoke 10:30—Flight ll:fro—How Green Was my Valley SUNDAY M — S.l MjvlurfsißJj B:3o—Christophers B:oo—Faith tor Today 9:3o—This Is The Life 10:00—Lamp U*to My Feet 10:30—-l»ok Up and Live 11:00—Kartoon Klub — Afternoon 12:00—'Dollar Debates 1 :oft—iWihat’s The I<aiL I:3o—My Little Margie „ .2:oo—Talkback. . — . ' — 2:30 —Award Matinee .4:00 —Small World . 4:3o—New York Philharmonic s:oo—College Quizs Bowl 4:3o—Amatur Hour Evening 6:oo—Elektra Club 6:30—20th Century 7:oo—Lassie 7:3o—dock Benny 8:00—lai Sullivan 9:OO—G. E. Theatre 9:3o—Alfred Hitchcock 10:00—Richard Diamond JO:3o—What’s My Line —ll:oo—Sunday News Special 11>15—iBattle of Broadway WKJG-TV CHANNEL 33 FRIDAY Evening 6:o(l—Gatesway to Sports 6:ls—(News, Jack Gray 6:2s—Weather 6:3o—Yesterday's Newsreel 6:4S—NBC News - 7:oo—State Trooper 7:3o—Northwest Passage 8:00—'Bob- Hope 9:OO—M-Squad 9:30—-The Thin Man W.-00—Boxing 10:45—Sports Corner 11:15—Sirnrts Today 11:20—The Jack Parr Show SATURDAY Meriting B:3o—Kat Careom 5 , 9:oo—Tweeker's Circus .9:3o—(Bugs Bunny 10:00—Howdy Doody • ( 10:30—Ruff and Reddy 11 —Fury

11:30—Circus Boy Afternoon 12:00—Sky King 12: 30—Tournament 11 i ghMgli ts 12-Finals 3 :3ft—AVrestliiig 4:oo—Basket ImR Evening 6:oft—Bowling - 7:oo—African Patrol 7 130—(fwnamen t H ighllgh'ts 8:00-- Final 9:3o—Cimarron City 10:30—The D A s Man 11:00—Saturday Edition 11:13—Shine On Harvest Moon SUNDAY Horning 9:oo—The Christophers 9’3o—Americans At Work 9. *s—Christian Science 10:00—Sa< red Heart Program 10:15—Industry on Parade 10:30—This Is the Life 11:00—Cartoon Time Afternoon 12;O0—Two Gun Playhouse I:o(t—Russian Revolution I:3o—Frontier of Faith 2:oo—Tactic 2:3o—Pro Basketball 4:3o—Ask Washin.gton 3:oo—Unclatimed Goddess Evening 6:oo—'Bobo's Cartoon Storybook 6:3o—Cisco Kid 7:oo—Saber of London 7:3o—Steve Alien 9:oo—Dinah Shore 10:00'—(Loretta Young 10:30—Medic » 11:00—Sunday News Special >l:lo—Sports Today, Bob Banko I'l ilio—Gentlemen Jim wpta-tv CHANNEL 21 FRIDAY Evening B:oo—Fun ’N Stuff 7:ls—Tom Atkins Reporting 7:3o—Rin Tin Tin 8:00—Walt Disney Presents 9:oft—Tombstone Territory —4U30—77 Sunset Strip — ———- 10:30—Decoy I(l:oo—Jnvtsable Mar: SATURDAY Afternoon 11:0ft—Uncle Al 12:00—Gene Autry 12:80 —Jungle Jim I:oo—.Rocky Jones I:3o—Jet Jackson 2:ftfr —'Brave Eagle 2:3ft—Action Theatre 4:3O—(TUA ■4:4o—(lVrpeye - " ~: " 5:00—Golf Evening 6:15—1 Spy 6:3o—Sherbnk Holmes 7:oo—Confidential file 7:3o—The Dick Clark Show B:oo—Jubilee U.S A 9:oo—Lawrence Welk 16:00—Billy Graham 10:30—Club 21 SUNDAY Afternoon 2:80—Oral Roberts 3:00 —Fr Francis Edward Nugent 8:30—Roller Derby 4:3o—Bowling Stars 5 : 2?~E opej ' e i s:3o—«3omimand Performance Evening 6:3o—Cameo Theatre 7:oo—Texas Rangers 7:3o—Maverick '♦ B:3o—Lawman . ■ ■’ .. . 9:00—Colt ,45 9:3o—Big Western 14:00—'When Guiiiiglund Strikes MOVIES ADAMS “In (the Motley” Fri 6:55 9:25 Sat <1:15 4J5 6:45 9.15 “Apache Tewltwy” Frt 7:-5.1 10:25 Sait '3: 85 5:15 7:15 10:15

Methodist Choir To Give Concert Sunday • . • The senior choir of the First Methodist church will present its annual Easter program of sacred music at the church Palm Sunday afternoon March 22. at 4 o’clock. The choir is directed by Leland Neuen. The program Is as follows: “Cross of Jesus,” by Stainer—the choir. “Behold the Lamb of God,” by Handel—choir. “He Was Despised,” by Handel —Miss Helen Haubold. “Go to Dark Gethsemane,” by Noble—choir. “Surely He Hath Born Our Griefs,” by Handel—choir. “Thy Rebuke,” “Behold and See,” and “Thou Didst Not Leave His Soul,” by Handel—Leland Neuen. “Since By Man Came Death,” by Handel—choir. Offering. “The Trumpet Shall Sound, ’’ by Handel—Lyman Hann. “I Know That My Redeemer Liveth,” by Handel—Mrs. Walter J. Krick. “Worthy Is My Lamb,” by Handel—choir. “Hallelujah,” by Handel—choir. Recover Bodies Os Two Crash Victims GREENCASTLE, Ind. (UPD—A private plane found wrecked in a wooded ravine near here Thursday yielded the bodies of its two Illinois occupants. Pilot Kenneth Dale Reed, 29, Shelbyville, 111., and Robert Daugherty, 30, Pana, 111., were killed when the plane clipped a tree top and crashed northeast of here on a flight from Ohio to Illinois last Monday night. The plane apparently was caught in a snowstorm. It had been sought since Tuesday when authorities reported it missing. Over 2,50 v Dally Democrats are sold and delivered in Decatur each day.

A Powerful Western TT IF* jKTXZJ ZE TZVQTTS'I ———•-■5-—^——————— s. the novel published by Ma cm lllre Co. ©IBSI V' I Bteve Frazoe Diatributed by King Features Syndicate.

c CHAPTER 25 - THE HERD was raising dust a tn the sage. In one way It was good. Any small bunch of prowling Indians could mistake It from afar for mounted men. In another way it was bad. Any Crow or Sioux or any other Indian worth scalping would get tn close enough to find out it was a pony herd with only seven men and one squaw along. The bad outweighed the good, and then the good slipped a mite more when the Snakes discovered where five Sioux had camped recently. In spite of Three Horns' counsel—he had twenty-seven ponies in the herd—three of the Snakes began to paint up for glory. “Can’t you make them stay?" Rhoda Marsh asked Mordecai Price. “Make 'em, my foot!” He watched the three eager ones ride off to find themselves some Sioux He’d promised them hair. It waa out there if they could get it Three Snakes left now. Seventy. ponies. Wear 'em down to the hocks and it would still be three days to Deer Creek. Four to get back this far. Two more, crowding things, to make rendezvous where the Popo met the Wind. Nine days. The Hudson’s Bay Co. pack train might be come and gons by then. Two night camps. That would be the time. If somebody cut tn and run off a batch of the ponies, Mordecai knew just what the Snakes would say: Your ponies, Big Buffalo. You didn't pay for them but they were yours from the time we left the camp of Three Horns. That was why they weren’t overconcerned about helpt Ing him get the herd-to the Rocky Mountain Fur Co. pack train, but no matter what happened they'd want to be paid. Mordecai knew how high the odds against him were. He didn’t know for sure where either Hudson’s, Bay or the American Fur Co. pack train was. "How far do you think Mr. Yenzer has come since we left the pack train?” Rhoda asked. "I’m thinking he made it to Deer Creek.” "That's a long way from here.” It was for a fact. Mordecai watched the three coup-happy Snakes disappear into the hills. He said to Rhoda, "You wouldn’t eat so much dust up ahead there.” "I’U stay with you.” Mordecai sort of liked the way she said it, though he guessed it didnt mean much. He watched Beaver Tails and the others. They were driving ths ponies real loose, in the Indian fashion, and they were keeping a sharp eye out all around them. This wasn’t their country, there were few of them, and they weren’t feeling easy about things. They stopped that night close to the Devil’s Gate, where the

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, IWPMMA

Questions, Answers Over Project Argus

WASHINGTON (UPD — Here are some questions and answers on Project Argus: Q. What happened in Project Argus? A. Three low - yield atomic bombs were exploded more than 300 miles above the South Atlantic. Each was equal to about 1,000 tons of TNT. The bombs, provided by the Atomic Energy Commission, were fired Aug. 27,| Aug. 30, and Sept. 6. ' X Q. Where was the project carried out and how? A. The bombs were launched aloft by three - stage research rocket from the decks of the Navy missile ship, the Norton Sound. It was about 2,000 miles east and a little south of Bahia Blanca, Argentina. Q. What was the purpose of the experiment? A. To observe the effects of nuclear explosions above the atmosphere. Q. What were some of these effects? A. Electrons ejected in enormous surges into the earth’s magnetic field quickly formed a thin shield of radiation around the planet, open only at the polar regions where the magnetic lines of force dip toward the earth. Q. What did this indicate? A. That man can create artificial radiation zones comparable to the natural belts discovered by satellite and moon probe experiments. Q. What visible manifestations were there of the Argus shots? _A. Artificial auroral displays appeared over the ships of the i task force and at the “conjugate 'point" of the magnetic field pattern in the Northern Hemisphere. This point was over the Azores. It was not officially disclosed whether there was a brilliant flash of light in the sky when the I bombs exploded, but presumably I there was. Q. Would injection of electrons from the explosions into the earth's curving magnetic field have any effect on radio .communications? A. Yes. The electrons which entered the ionosphere (electrified layers of the atmosphere)

Sweetwater swept down between tight rock walls. The Snakes, who had et about as much grizzly ' hair as any tribe, wanted to hud- . die up instead of spreading wide around the herd. Mordecai had to keep talking to them to keep them widened out some. Late that afternoon they’d seen a single rider, far off. Sioux scout, of course, who by now had rounded up help. Mordecai was inclined to believe the Snakes were right. Beaver Tails remembered a bad thing he had seen during the day, sage-hen feathers caught in brush and crossed in an evil manner. — — i Mordecai made one slow prowl around the camp after dark. It was as good a place as he could have selected. One side was against a steep rock bluff. The other side was grassy land sloping to the solid blackness of the trees along the river. If the Snakes kept strung out. nobody would have much chance to creep in across the open ground between the herd and the stream. Beaver Tails came to where Mordecai was sitting. “Let us go on by night. Big Buffalo.” “The hills are rough. We would lose many ponies.” “This is an evil place.” Beaver Tails repeated the story about the sage-hen feathers. “It is a good place,” Mordecai said, "Any camp is good when Big Buffalo has brave fighters with him." He built it up as much as he could. Beaver Tails listened but he didn’t show any sign of becoming less uneasy. He went away disgruntled when Mordecai refused a second time to move on. They would bunch up solid and mutter about bad medicine, Mordecai knew. Pony-stealing time, was any time Injuns of any tribe could get at 'em, so Mordecai couldn’t set himself for any critical period of the night. Though he dozed some, a part of him was alert. Mainly he sat still at the edge of the herd, facing the river with his rifle, Old Belcher, across his knees. Rhoda was lying over by the bluff. She had asked if she could help guard the ponies. "Everything’s all right,” Mordecai had told her. With the night more than half gone, the ponies began to stir. It wasn’t much at first, no more than if a wolf was prowling the edge of the herd and the animals were bunching Inward to defend themselves. Mordecai heard them bumping against each other, hoofs thumping as the ponies veered away from something. The excitement began to spread to the side of the herd where be was standing. Whatever it waa, the source was about in the middle of the herd, and over toward the bluff, over there where Rhoda was sleeping. The ponies broke as Mordecai

would greatly increase its electrical conductivity. This in turn would affect the ionosphere’s ability to reflect radio waves without distortion. Q. Is this something like the magnetic storms created in the ionosphere by charged particles from solar flares? A. Yes. Scientists say big nuclear explosions would disrupt high frequency radio communications in away similar to the effects caused by giant solar flares. Q. Would high atomic explosions mess up electronic guidance of the still-to-be-perfected NikeZeus anti-missile missile. A. Military authorities say the answer is No. But if man-made ionospheric storms impaired radar early warning systems, NikeZeus would be grounded. Q. Would high altitude nuclear explosions create a snare for incoming hydrogen missiles? A. This is highly problematical. It used to be thought neutrons from such explosions might prematurely trigger the fission charge of enemy missiles. Scientists now believe this would take an unachievable density of neutrons. Electrical impulses from nuclear explosions might fire high explosive components of a warhead’s triggering system. But blocks against such impulses could easily be installed. Q. Are high altitude atomic explosions detectable? — A. Yes—if you’re looking for them. The Russians apparently did not detect the Argus shots. Satellite detective patrols are feasible against high altitude tests. Q. Do high Altitude tests pose a fallout threat? A. No. Any particles big enough to escape entrapment in the magnetic field would remain aloft indefinitely, circling the earth as tiny satellites. Q. How long did the radiation zone created by Project Argus continue in existence? A. It was still detectable as late as December. It eventually dissipated. Authorities would not state its exact lifetime. Q. Would the magnetic disturb-

was working his wpy around the bulge that had started toward the river. In a moment the chill night was bitter with dust and rocketing hoofs. Dark bodies flashed past him. He stood still, trusting the nimbleness of the ponies, rather than his own motion, to avoid being knocked down. One of the Snakes fired his trade musket. The roar served to scare the herd even more. The ponies were crashing among the trees and bushes at the river in no time. Mordecal had never seen the beat of it Na Indian yells, no snorting from the herd, no cries of any kind. Just the pounding of hoofs when the ponies broke, and that one shot He ran toward the bluff to find Rhoda. She had run back into the rocks. Mordecai was casting around her sleeping place when she called to him. “Did you see ’em?” he asked. “1 heard someone come out of — the rocks. At first I thought It was you.” “One man? You’re sure you heard just one man?” he asked. “I’m sure 1 heard only one man.” Mordecai trotted to where he had left his and Rhoda's ponies. They were still picketed. He mounted up jbareback and went to find the Snakes. Their ponies had been picketed too, although Iron Hawk's had broken loose. “1 fired the shot," Beaver Tails said. “One man.” Some of the herd had stopped in the trees. Mordecai and the Snakes gathered up about twenty of them and brought them back to the grass. “Not Sioux,’’ Beaver Tails said. “No shouts.” Later on. he decided that an evil spirit had run the ponies away. Mordecai knew there was no use to argue about it until daylight. By then the matter settled itself, for one of the Snakes found a buffalo robe trampled in the dust. The Indians handled it excitedly. It had been tanned by Blackfeet, Beaver Tails said. Yes, a cowardly Blackfoot had waved it at the ponies. A fluttering, ghostly trick that would scare horses even in daylight. None of the Snakes wanted to stay with the recovered ponies. They had Blackfeet on the brain now. “I’ll watch the ponies,” Rhoda said. •' ’ Mordecai didn't want to lefve her alone but he had to. Before he rode away with the Snakes, he gave her his pistol. He thought • of a lot of advice to give her, but all he said was, "Forget everything and ride after us if trouble comes.” The Snakes ride out for a scalp and return with a strange, tale-bearing captive as “Rendeavous” continues teasorrow.

& created by high atomic exsaffect radio beams from earth satellites? A. Probably not. These beams are “highly directional’’ and presumably would pierce the disturbance area without being absorbed. Q. When win the public get a detailed report on the scientific results of Project Argus? A. They will be summarized at the annual meeting of the National Academy of Sciences here April 27. 28. and 29. 0- ■ O 20 Years Ago Today —> March 20, 1939—Lewis G. Ellingham, 71, founder of the Decatur! Daily Democrat, later publisher of the Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette, and Fort Wayne postmaster, died at his home in that city after a two ! weeks illness of bronchial pneumonia. Central Soya Co. officials have, announced plans for construction of a million bushel soybean storage silo, a feed ingredient warehouse. bulk meal storage tanks, and relocating of the six railroad switching tracks at the local plant. Samuel B. Hirschy. 85, well known retired school teacher, died at the home of a daughter in \ Berne. Frankfort, Evansville Bosse, ’ Franklin and Muncie Burris win way to final round of state high I school basketball tourney. The , Ossian Bears were defeated by! ! Kokomo, 30-29, in the first round of the semi-final tourney at Mun- . cie. • > — > I Household Scrapbook ! By ROBERTA LEE I > o ——— r Glossy Overshoes i The gloss on rubber overshoes is made by the use of a special i rubber varnish which is applied - before the shoes are vulcanized. - This gloss can be restored to some > extent by rubbing the shoes with glycerine. ) The Piano ; If one desires greater volume from the piano, then there should ; be no carpet under the instrument. r In a small room a rug under the t piano will soften its tone and prevent it from being too loud. Furniture Polish An excellent furniture polish that ’ can also be used on floors and woodwork is made from one part of beeswax mixed with two parts of turpentine. r- — o | Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE Q. I neglected to mail a wedding invitation to my bridegroom’s parents, thinking it was understood that they were to attend. I have been told this was rudeness on my part. What do you say? — A. They most certainly were entitled to the courtesy of an engraved invitation, the same as any other guests. Q. Should I have the privilege of introducing either ex-President Herbert Hoover or Harry Truman to someone, what title would I use for these two men? A. You would Introduce them simply as “Mr. Hoover” and “Mr. Truman.” • Q. When a businessman takes another man to lunch, who should give the order to the waiter? A. Each man gives iris own order.

MOR* THAH automatic ■ ■ ■ .- - M 8 NEWSPROGRAM ...IT CAR THINK! WESTINGHOUSE LAUNDROMAT AND ELECTRIC DRYER - jMilll ,■ New • Program Copiputara think i out and carry out custom laundry ~ programs to wash and dry every / X--. • - “T——.. fabric perfectly .. . easily! / j— ji jiiniyr . Laundromat’s Automatic Lint / f f*' .. ... Ejector cleans itself—no messy J / jw- fl I traps or filters to clean. / / W» W II I Suds ’N Water Saver measures f y f ; ' ' water to match size of load. I 11 I 9? i I Matching Electric Dryer has 8 Sep- £ fl f I arate drying programs for extra - ' ' t J drying convenience. 1 “******«<<»»«,». ****'' '"<■*■■■ . I I I i w I N0m0r«.,% JdWhf I — I »nd |t-l 20 Laundromat 8 I Protram Computoi I I piovidos sep»'« ,e I MatehSiorypr I custom washint I within own XIMMEVH < '■ ■'■. I program* tor-. I computer 1 A niankets 7 CoW W*** 1 Special credit I 1,2 Cotton* *®' . M w*ar C * cl * I I*™” waahihw action I 3 Silk* * Sn’oOn »Tin#« I gets dothes deaner AUTOMATIC I Synthet.e* eotipptr "L J than ever, yd you LINT EJECTOR I tin trust your most swoops out every trot* w..i.n.i>A.<u delicate things to its of lint ond scum. No action. I I traps or filters to dean. I WATCH 'WSnNWUSt LUCIIU B*U.-M*i AWM SHOWS" CBS TV SOWOAVS . trademark I. JI TRY* VT TKTVC! JSJLi'D.LN IS.O first

COURT NEWS Divorce Caaes A citation was ordered issued to the sheriff of Adams county for the defendant in the case of Donna B. King vs Vaughn L. King, returnable March 31 at 9 o’clock. In the case of Rita Irwin vs Jimmie Irwin, a motion was filed by the defendant to make the complaint more specific and <to strike out certain matters. A complaint for divorce has been filed in the Adams circuit court by Darlene L. Linnemeier against David W. Linnemeier. A summons was ordered issued to the sheriff of Adams county for the defendant, returnable April 15. A verified petition for allowances pending suit and for attorney fees was filed by the plaintiff. A restraining order was submitted and approved. Criminal Case ana vs Francis J. Schmitt, two counts were filed, reckless driving and driving while under the influence of alcohol. The defendant entered a plea of not guilty to both counts. A bond of $250 was set and posted. - . Ditch Petition ~ The proof of service of notice was filed in the case of Calvin Coppess, etal, vs petition fbr drainage, bx parte. Complaint Case In the case of Mel Liechty, doing business as Mel’s Realty Auction company vs William H. Stavenik and Frieda Stavenik, the court reset the issue date to March 30 at 10 o’clock and stated that unless said cause is not at issue on or before said date and hour, and/or unless there has been an appearance of counsel for the defendants, that said defendants are subject to a default judgment.

READY-MIXED CONCRETE FREE ESTIMATES Delivered I I ready for concrete for that WALK, WHEN DRIVEWAY, TERRACE, STEPS, YOU WANT IT FOUNDATION - OR WHAT HAVE WAPiI II YOU—call us! We ll deliver prompt- Ml HF If F ly the type and amount of concrete nlllnllEa you need. For the best in Ready- watt WAVT IT 1 Mixed Concrete-CONTACT US TO- YOU WANI lr “PROVEN ~ ABILITY” 32561 DECATUR READY - MIX, INC. OAK ST, at FORNAX ST. DECATUR

FRIDAY, MARCH 90, >859

Real Estate Transfer* Clarence H. Brunner etux to Alice E. Merritt part inlot 181 in Decatur. * ’ Maynard L. Rich etux to Stanley H. Brenneman etux, inlot 778 in Berne. Homer C. Ginter etux to Mary Catherine Spangler, 1.99 acres in Kirkland Twp. Mary Catherine Spangler to Homer C. Ginter etux, 1.99 acres in JCirkland Twp. Philip A. Joray etux to William P. Joray etux, land in French Twp. Peter F. Moser to Harold Zeigler etux, 80 acres in French Twp. Jack A. Rosenberger etux to Arthur W. Lytle etux, inlot 56 in Decatur. Luther F. Brokaw etux to Bethany Evan. U. B. Church, land in Washington Twp. Ruth Drew etvir to Gilbert _ Franks etux, part inlot 141 in Geneva. Harold C. Long etux to Maurice Jones etux, inlot 26 in Rainbow Lake Subdiv. Yost Construction Co. to Samuel J. Yost etux, jnlots 33-34 & 61 in Oakwood Subdiv. Yost Construction Co. Inc. to Calvin L. Yost etux.y inlots 36-37-39-63 & 62 in Oakwood Subdiv. Yost Construction Co. Inc. to Robert L. Yost etux, inlots 38-57-58-59 & 60 in Oakwood Subdiv. Gilbert Franks etux to Walter E. Wheeler etux, inlot 342 & West part inlot 341 in Geneva. Victor Bleeke etal to Rosemary Spangler, land in Union Twp. , - Rosemary Spangler to Edward G. Bleeeke, land in Union Twp. Frederick N. Moser etux to Mar-tha-Moser, land in French Twp. Martha Moser to Frederick N. Moser etux, land in French Twp. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad — They bring results. _