Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 178, Decatur, Adams County, 30 July 1959 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

4-H FAIR NOT£S goers and exhibitors alike get a chance to hear the judge express his opinion in away besides his placing of the entrants when the livestock judging is going on, as in the beef show Wednesday afternoon, when the judge explained to the spectators and exhibitors just what he thought good, and what could be improved, in the show animals. —oOo— A new exhibit this year accompanied the farm shop and electricity exhibits in the Adams Central school building: home grounds improvement. This is the first year

PEACHES 1 »J** AjAj ■ d miowcu I WE GIVE HOLDEN RED STAMPS WITH I --■SWt] JjLJ ™«- E*C" ’0 CENT FOOD PURCHASE ** 9 **® B APPLE SAUCE 2 25 CRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS == 2-3 G. sAIPKKWISD t - ' n RESERVE *—" P "*— ‘ 4R > | W THI RIGHT FRUIT COCKTAIL 2 - 49/ g ■“ W K g <ss. ' CALIFORNIA PEARS 2- 49 L±JEs?SLJ I NEW p A Q- CHERRIES s CORN | PINEAPPLE -MT- 2™ 39/ I A AM I CALIFORNIA PMIMS | GOLDER •M M3 M K B Cream Style FRESH J PWBW ■ Ilf ■amiaia I BifA IdSDEEBi stemikl STRAWBERRIES GREEN PEAS <MEBI HEMO I 1 ® SWEETENED JP FEES. JW/ SPINACH VEGETABLES LEMONADE ™ 10/ LMEON MEAT 2 75 9 B FISH " 2 49 9 TOMATO CATSUP 2 25< I FREE STAMPS X/B FREE STAMPS Xgl FREE STAMPS I | WITH COUPON BELOW WITH BELOW WITH COUPON BELOW | I I 1 AND THE ■ FREK AND THE ! FREE >! AND THE ■ RE6 ■ PURCHASE OF ... lu* M SO HOLDEN RED STAMPS g I PURCHASE OF .. . ■ 85*" u 50 HOLDEN RED STAMPS g|l DiioruACß AC - 50 HOLDEN RED STAMPS SJ ■ 25 or 10 LB. BAG (Any Kind) ■ S ™““ puxcmah o: ga 2 LBS. (OR MORE) J|§| aug. jnd unon *I B 2 MORTON FROZEN |S AUO 2ND porchamw E M 4IT m m A-w limit TH NW*T<l (And Kind) 25 or TO lb Bag I§ ■ ARAH.IM ■ !! U lw ,, aSSl* MORE) s3| "fg LIMIT (1) FWQZIN J MORTON FROZEN Si M | FOiAiGES ■ DIMMERS

for such an exhibit, ag instructor and 4-H leader Doyle Lehman explained Wednesday, adding thaf this was not an entirely new project. Jeannie winning display, shows how she improved the looks of a shed by painting it. cutting down weeds and taking away scrap boards, trimming the lawn in front of it, and planting some plants alongside the building. In addition to the before and after pictures she took of the improvement project, she included mounted samples of grass, weeds, evergreen and deciduous trees. This; will be one of the projects that will I be exhibited at the 4-H fair in September.

Judging was completed late this morning in these projects, in addition to the dairy: food preservation, food preparation, health- and personality improvement. The judge was Miss Nancy Peters, of Winchester. evening the final judging will be for one of the new events for this year’s fair: the public speaking contest. Scheduled for the intermission of the concert of the Monmouth high school band, the contest will see six 4-H’ers giving five to seven-minute speeches on various phases of agriculture and 4-H work. The top boy and girl will compete in the st ate fair contest. Paul Gehman, speech instructor from Berne, will be the judge.

DSCAftm DAILY DtMOCItAT. MCAfUR, INDIANA

Only a few more hours to keep the fingers crossed for fair weather! And perhaps a general sigh of relief will go up, from exhibitors and leaders alike, for although the fair is fun, it takes a lot of hard work—and in these ninetydegree temperatures, the work is eyen harder. Rain now would raise the humidity, and offet only temporary relief. So, make it a few's more hours, Mister weatherman, how bout it? •—oOo>— < By the way—getting out of the 4-H line a little, if there were a prize for the biggest horned owl , caught in this area, one that El-1 mer Beineke, route one, of Preble]

township, caught this morning would probably take it. The monster of a bird, killed in a brooder house where it was after som® early breakfast, has a 56-inch wing spread. COURT NEWS Marriage Application Keith LaVern Frey, 24, of Decatur, and Shirley Ann Wass, 21, of route 2, Monroeville. o "' - ~ i ■' o 20 Years Ago Today o ; n July 30, 1939 was Sunday and no paper was published.

Appeals Court Rules Against Red Party WASHINGTON (UPD—The U. S. Court of Appeals ruled today that the U.S. Communist Party Is under foreign domination and must register its membership with the government, open its books for inspection and label its propaganda. The 2-1 decision upheld the findings of the Subversive Activities Control Board and marked another step in a legal battle which has been going on for nearly nine years.

The ruling undoubtedly will be appealed to the Supreme Court by the Communist Party. Chief Judge E. Barrett Prettyman was joined in today’s opinion by Circuit Judge John A. Danaher. Circuit Judge David L. Bazelon dissented. He urged sending the case back to the Subversive Activities Control Board for a fourth round of bearings. Prettyman declared that the U. S. party has never repudiated its foreign ties and except in one instance, “has never differed from the program and policy, of the Communist Party abroad.” The law creating the Subversive Activities Control Board was passed by Congress in 1950. Since then, the government has engaged

THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1959

in prolonged legal maneuvers in an effort to force the party to register its membership and comply with other proviaions of the law. Dr. Ralph A. Morgen Rose Poly President TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (UPI) — Dr. Ralph A. Morgan, director of the Purdue University Research Foundation, has been appointed president of Rose Polytechnic Institute, board chairman Dr. Paul N. Bogart said today. Morgen, also assistant to the president for research at Purdue, succeeds the late Ford L. Wilkinson, who died last Sept. 1.