Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 73, Decatur, Adams County, 27 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 G. Heller Vice-President Chas. Holthouse — —— Secretary-Treasurer Subscription Rates: By Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 18.00; Six months, $4.25; 3 months, >2.25. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, >9.00; 6 months, >4.75; 3 months, >2.50. By Carrier, 30 cents per week. Single copies, 6 cents. The Primary Election The Democratic party will have a complete ticket this spring for the consideration of those who vote in the Democratic primary, including three candidates for mayor. The candidacy of Mrs. Morgan, the first woman to ever file here on either ticket, came as a surprise to the Democratic leaders in the city. The biggest surprise, of course, was the candidate on the Republican ticket. For years Republicans have held back on nominating their local candidates, waiting until the Democrats work out theirs, then in the fall nominate a full slate picked to beat those who stood up in the Democratic primary. There have even been charges that some Republicans vote in the Democratic primary and to nominate a poor candidate so that their hand-picked choice can win. 4 In fact, the rumor is current that the Republican candidate for mayor was encouraged to run by several persons who felt that Republicans had encouraged one of the three Democratic candidates. Turn about is fair play, they commented. At least this should bring out to the public the very serious fact that the Republican party, which has elected its candidate for mayor in three of the last five elections, should most certainly place its candidates up for nomination in the primary, so that those people who are Republicans have a choice. Otherwise, the handpicked henchmen of the party machine, coming out after the issues have already been fought out, have an unfair advantage. The purpose of allowing the party to “fill” the ticket in the fall is just that. If no candidate can be found, as in Berne, for one councilmanic district, any party should be allowed to fill its ticket. But to purposely wait until the fall election, and then spring a complete ticket on the public, smells of collusion. Whether or not the Republican candidate, Harry Hirschey, is on the primary or fall ticket, is not nearly as important as the fact which it emphasizes: when any party so neglects its duty of providing at least a full slate of candidates in the primary, it cannot disclaim indirect responsibility for the results.
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, — ■■■»_ W*. • t ■ J — a J J rate K m §g CAPITOL'S EASTERLY FRONT— This crater on the east front of the Capitol seems to be one of Washington's top tourist attractions these days. The east front is being extended way out to there.
Timber wolves can outrun fT" \ \ THE FLEETEST DOG . OVER MOUNTAINOUS /Jjk. * v country,. wwa / iMBa ' ■ THEY GAIN DISTANCE BY TOBOGGANING DOWN THE STEEPER SLOPES M/LS. Z * /OF *F DOZEN BLACK WIDOW SPIDERS AT THE ARMY ENGINEER DEPOL ■ granite coy, hl, is saving THOUSANDS OF TM DOLLARS... ONE SPIDER CAN PRODUCE ABOUT J6O FE£T QF )N X OF SECONDS, THE MARKET PRICE . \OF WHICH IS FOR 100 FEET.' i mentor--wtS -itib the half-tone process, JJW WHICH FIRST MADE POSSIBLE THE REPRODUCTION r WiWtM 0F PHOTOGRAPHS in A NEWSPAPERS, NTOffiMreqf WAS INVENTED BY 7\ FREDERIC E. IVES . V in SLttpr 8K - ’V Tm. Rm U S. M O« * • Cm» •’*’ A*
From the novel published by Macmillan Co. ©!«• 79^-,% I Steve r ’ Mire - Distributed by King Features Sy””*** Z
CHAPTER 29 WHAT happened to Joe Hassell?" Rhoda Marsh asked Mortlecai Pric& “Shandy rubbed him out, Fm thinking," said Mordecal. “Emil Frederick never seen mm. Letourneau says Parson Bill rode Ms horse back to camp, claiming he found it loose. Could be them Oglalas got him, but that’s a long chance.” “You think it was Jim Shandy, though?" “Yup." “So you’ll kill him ?’’ “Yup." Rhoda kept studying him. “What else is there to do?’’ Mordecal asked. “You don't have to carry all the woes of the Rocky Mountain Fur Company, Mordecal. Shandy has disgraced himself. Everybody will know it, and he’ll be shunned and hated as a traitor. 1 don’t see why you must kill him.” “Mainly because it’ll do him good.” Mordecal said. “There was some excuse for what you had to do back there on the Platte. 1 don’t know how it could have been settled otherwise,’’ Rhoda said, "but you don’t have to kill Shandy." “On account his brother is a preacher, you mean?” “Perhaps 1 thought of that, yes, but mostly I’m trying to determine whether you’re a savage at heart or by necessity." “Some of both," Mordecal said. Not kill Jim Shandy? What kind of thinking was that ? If he didn’t do it, somebody else sure would when they heard the story. Os course, that wasn’t looking square at the thing Rhoda was talking about Take it when you wiped out a bunch of troublesome Injuns: sometimes you let one or two go ao’s they could scoot back to the main band and tell what hard doin’a it was to tangle with trappers. Or you take an Injun that showed himself a big coward fighting other Injuns: like as not they’d whack him some with their bows and let him live, ao’a he could remember all the rest of his life what a coward he was. Neither one of them things fitted what Rhoda was after, though. What she wanted was for Mordecal not to kill Shandy as a matter oi principle, like being merciful There was a point there. Mordecal allowed, but it didn't shine much. Get all tangled up witt being merciful, and a man might end up crying over the beavers that lost toes and feet tn traps, instead of cussin’ them for cheating you out of prime plews. Yup, killing would do Jim Shandy good, and Mordecal wasn’t changing his waya because a woman snapped her fingers; but dang It an, aha still had him FKMI tte nMhlWthfl Th# I
trying to think over the good and I . bad of the thing! The next thing, < 1 it he wasn’t careful, ne’d be setting on a hill waiting to have him- i j self a vision that would straight- ' j en everything out. “You’ve seen an Injun or two ( s since we started,” Mordecal said. . e "Do you figure a little preaching ; 3 and singing is going to fix 'em j up with a spanking-new religion ?’’ , ', Tam not the judge of that,’’ , Rhoda answered quickly. | “You’d better start being one. Ten days or so you’ll be meeting . this missionary of yours." “That soon?" ’> “Yup. Then if you hurry you can make it to the mission just j U in time for the rain." n "You make it sound very un- ( y pleasant. You act like you don’t ' y want me to fulfill my promise." ( i 1 don’t" It came out of Mor- , e decai without any conscious , prompting from his brain. j They looked at each other , steadily, until Rhoda’s gaze fal- , r tered. "How far to the next , n camp?” she asked. t “Quite away." Mordecal turned , . back to confer with Big Nose ( t Yenzer about something. When he got to the clerk he couldn't rea member what the problem was. They camped on the Sweetwai, ter that night. It had been a long - day against a gritty wind. In j t spite of Big Nose’s constant urging, the train had made no more ' I. than twenty—miles. Mordecal ’ j doubted that they would do as t well tomorrow. 1 He watched two packers unf loading a mule. It stood with its 1 e feet wide-braced, trembling. When 5 the packers dragged the packsad- ' die oft and stripped the aplsha- ] a more, the flattened hair of its : back was steaming. There were ' o many more like that one, horses e and mules that had done their 1 share on the first long stretches 1 -of the Platte trail, and twice their ' t share during the five killing days ' 1 from below Laramie Fork to Red ' t Buttes. , r Shots came from near the river e where packers were killing four I f animals that had reached camp I only because their packs had been 1 s redistributed on other beasts at * nooning that day. Hard doin’s and 1 r tough meat. I 1 ' The Snakes came in with the I ? choice parts of a buffalo cow. 1 I. They said that Bun-ln-the-Face, 1 t a* they called Emil Frederick, 1 p was now only a short ride away. 1 3 Big Nose mulled over an idea 1 e "We can leave the worst of the ’ a pack horses here and make a- run r for it with just the Injun ponies." i. Then he shook his head. “Even so, i Frederick could beat ua, and it t wouldn’t do much good to get to i rendezvous with just part of the t packs." > Any way you laid your sights, Macmillan Co, C ISSB Steve Frazee, DUt
Carnegie Course To Open Here Tuesday Thirty local people of a proposed . class of 40 persons, have enrolled in Decatur’s first Dale Carnegie course class being organized for Decatur area men and women. Approximately 10 persons may still enroll in the course on human relations before the first class is held at 7 o’clock Tuesday evening at the American Legion post home. The class will be held each Tuesday evening for a 14-week period, with each evening class approximately four hours in length. The course provides training to students to improve speech, human relations, and leadership methods. Several neighboring cities In this community have featured the course during the -past few years. The class being organized here is one of such courses presented by the Northeast Indiana Institute. More information may be obtain'tsd about the class by writing to Dale Carnegie Courses, 821 Greenlawn, Fort Wayne, or by calling Eastbrook 8850 (collect) in Fort Wayne.
the Rocky Mountain Fur Co. was done, beat by Shandy's treachery. Unless Jun Bndger showed up quick with plenty of horses, there was no hope left The Hudson's Bay Co. might be at rendezvous already. If they were, then there was some satistacuon id knowing that American wasn’t going to make a killing. Thing of it was, though, American could stand the loss. They could take their unsold goods on to Cass, their own post. Rocky Mountain had no place to go, and without any great fortune backing them they'd be ruined. "We’U go on," Mordecal said. "Hell yes!" Big Nose said angrily. “What else is there?” Wolves howled all night. A great herd of buffalo rumbled by somewhere to the west during the dark hours. At breakfast Mordecal saw a packer, cutting mule meat to roast on a stick, point with his Moody knife at a wolf watching, from a hill. In Injun thinking that was about as bad as you could <fo, point at a wolf with a knife. It was a heap worse than the white man’s superstition about busting a looking glass. Well, things couldn’t be much worse anyway. It turned out they were. The crippled Rocky Mountain pack train was moving sullenly two miles from their last camp when Beaver Tails, scouting ahead, signaled excitedly that he had sighted a large body of enemies. “Blackfeet, that’s what we need about now,” Big Nose growled. Klordecai went on ahead, conscious of how his pony was failing more every day. He joined Beaver Tails to look over the enemy. Mordecal wasn’t surprised when he saw the American Fur Co. pack train a mile ahead. With each puff of dust from the hoofs of the Mg mules, the lead was increasing. “Go in night,” Beaver Tails said. Mordecal got off his tired pony. He watched the rival train marching strongly toward the distant Mountains of the Wind. In desperation and in anger Big Nose and Mordecal kept the train going. If Frederick traveled even part of the night from now on, be would, Mordecal figured, be two days up on them at rendezvous. Two days would do it; there wouldn’t be anything left but grubby furs that nobody wanted. “They heard It coming from tte weM, a distant bumming •ound. and then a roartag that made the sttO air around them vibrate . . .• Yemerrow, tte story rnevea to a cßmax. tributed by King Fretiurre Syndtaat*.
Taylor University President Resigns UPLAND, Ind. (UPD—Dr. Evan H. Bergwall, president ot Taylor University since 1951, today announced his resignation to the board of trustees effective at the end of this school year. Bergwall said he expects to return to the Methodist ministry in Indiana. Trade in a good town — Decatur.
WILL YOU BEOUR GUEST 110l 10 TWll gs the Date DEMONSTRATION MEETING J J?™}}J ¥ °X Tuesday, March 31st I* k „ at 7:00 P.M. at the I 2. Conquer Fear I American Legion Home 14. Develop Self-Confidence Decaturf Ind. ■’• u eo Toß " elf and The purpose of this meeting is to improve Your Memory further acquaint you with the ' ■ 7. Improve Your Aibility to Dale Carnegie Course fca I tSi!™--In Leadership Training Mio. Prepare for Leadership There Is No Cost or Obligation To BKaM — You Are Our Quest You will see and hear an unusual demonstration of memory. A brief explanation of the course, and how classes are conducted. Five or 6 graduates will talk for 2 minutes and will tell you why they took the course and what they got out of it. « Here is your opportunity to learn how and why the Dale Carnegie Course has been the turning point in the lives of over one-half million ambitious men and women like yourself. For Free Reservations Call, Eastbrook 8860 Fort Wayne COLLECT And Let Us Know How Many Reservations You Wish To Make INDIANA INSTITUTE Representing Dale Carnegie Courses —— ■ ■ ; / THINK — YOU D J BETTER - LOOK AT ~ Wr~THE - USED CAR BARGAINS /N THE IIIHTIII IIUIA IBM FOR FAST RESULTS USE THE CLASSIFIED ADS! f T OEWOrds —OF £u 0R LESS S 3 DAYS a 2“ . I ■ DECATUR 4 . ... ' ■ ■ ■ ■ " ‘ * ■ .. DAILY DEMOCRAT I
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