Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 199, Decatur, Adams County, 24 August 1959 — Page 3
MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 1959
I Production Records By Four County Cows Four registered Holstein cows in Adams county have completed outstanding official production records, the Holstein-Friesian association of America has announced. Air View Ormsby Burke Segis 3437612 produced 16,968 pounds of milk and" 683 pounds of butterfat in 319 days on twice daily milking. n»e six year old Holstein is owned by Benjamin and Lydia Gerke, route 5. Paul E. Liechty and son, route one, Berne, own Liechtyvale Aaggie Burke 3645094. This five fear old Holstein produced 16,601
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pounds of milk and 564 pounds of butterfat in 318 days on twice daily milking. Bell Mary Burke 3760275 and Inka Fobes Segis Creamelle 3105000 five year old and ten year old cows , owned by Rolandes Liechty, route ! two, both completed outstanding . records. The five year old produc- . ed 17,619 pounds of milk and 672 pounds of butterfat in 323 days on twice daily milking. The ten year old produced 17,604 pounds of milk and 810 pounds of butterfat in 365 days on twice daily milking. Over 2,500 Dally Democrats are sold and delivered in Decatur each day. It you have something to sell os rooms for rent, try a Democrat each day.
■■■ JI | II" 11 ■ £ —• -W— — Motorists Are Fined On Traffic Charges The state police arrested three motorists Sunday afternoon and evening and all received fines in justice of the peace court following their pleas of guilty to the charges. Jerry W. Burkhead, 77, of Toledo, 0., received a $1 and costs assessment for failure to yield the right of way at the intersection of U. S. 224 and 27. Richard F. Sommers, 22, of oFuntain, Colo., paid $5 and costs for speeding 80 miles an hour in a 65-zone on U.S. 224, 3 miles west of Decatur at 1:15 p.m. Dorothy R. McClung, 50, of Leavittsburg, 0., paid $1 and costs for speeding on U. S. 224, near Preble, Sunday afternoon. A IJprt Wayne motorist had his case continued to Sept. 11, on a charge of speeding on U. S. 27 on July 5. Eugene J. Johnson was slated to appear last week in court. A second Fort Wayne driver, Jack W. Vought, 32, failed to appear to answer a speeding charge which occurred July 31 on U. S. 33. Three area motorists received $1 fines and cost charges for various violations in justice of the peace court after being arrested by the state police last week. Michael L. Beery, 18, of Decatur, was stopped for speeding on U. S. 33 and appeared in court on the 21st. He pleaded guilty to the charge. Leroy J. Wolfe, 44, Dayton, 0., paid a $1 fine and costs for speeding on U. S. 33, after he pleaded guilty to the charge. Three other motorists were slated for appearances earlier last week. Sundar D. Singh, 34, of Fort Wayne appeared and pleaded not guilty to a charge of no tail lights, or improper tail lights. The court took the plea under advisement. Henry Crawford. 23, of Payne, 0., failed to appear last week to answer an improper passing charge. James A. Samuels, likewise, failed to appear on a speeding charge. Samuels is from Fairfield, Ky. Three-Car Accident Here Sunday Night City police reported a three-car accident Sunday evening at the intersection of U.S. 33 and 27 on 13th street, causing about S4OO in damages to two of the cars. The driver of the third car was charged with reckless driving, and fined $1 and costs at justice of the peace court later Sunday evening. Ella Bainter Dines, 62, of Goshen, pleaded guilty to the reckless driving charge when her automobile struck the rear of the machine being driven by Arbye Helen Velez, 47, of route 2, Berne, causing it to strike the rear of the vehicle driven by Leroy Vernon Hoagland, 37, of Monroe. The first two cars had slowed up in the northbound lane as another car was attempting a turn into a motel. Each car sustained S2OO in damages. The Dines machine escaped with minor damages. $250 Damage When Truck Hits Auto A Geneva truck driver failed to notice a car stopped behind his truck, and rammed into the car, causing about $250 damages to the car Saturday at 3:20 p.m. «on county road 21 in Linn Grove. Sheriffs police reported that Theodore McCune, 54, of route 1, Geneva, had stopped his truck about 900 feet past the driveway to his residence and was about to back up to the entrance when the car driven by Harvey L. Garboden 76, of route 1, Geneva appeared on the scene. The Garboden vehicle stopped behind the stopped truck. McCune told the sheriff that he had not noticed the Garboden car pull up behind him. I.U. Freshmen To Get-Acquainted Meet Local Indiana University fresh-men-to-be have been incited to attend a “get acquainted” meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 1, at the I.Ur Center, 1120, S. Barr St., Fort Wayne. Al Moellering, 310 Lincoln Bank Tower, and Phil Clark, 127 S. Cornell Circle, Fort Wayne, are co-chairmen of the meeting. Purpose of the meeting is to orient incoming students to campus traditions, customs, curricula and regulations and to answer questions of students and thenparents. Representing the university will be Clum Bucher, Associate dean of the junior (freshmen) division, and K. William Rinne, field secretary of the I. U. alumni office. Students are encouraged to bring their parents. 9 to 11 P.M. Special! STEAK FRIES - SALAD $1.25 FAIRWAY
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
i ■ ■ I 1 JI Tracy Turner, former teacher s at Pleasant Mills high school, has t accepted the head coaching and j teaching position in the Pioneer, . 0., high school. Turner will teach biology and U.S. history, and will ; coach the baseball and basketball varsity squads. ’ Turner taught at Pleasant Mills 1 last year and formerly taught in the Churubusco school and spent ‘ five years coaching in Randolph county at Spartanburg, and Wayne ‘ township. Turner and his family, Janet, Jerry, Terry, Russell, Tommy, and Sandy, will move to Pioneer in the near future. School starts there on August 28. Ike Dragging Feet On Fallout Combat WASHINGTON (UPD—A con- ■ gressional atomic subcommittee has said the Eisenhower admin- . isfration is dragging its feet in efforts to combat “small but harmful” radioactive fallout. A report by the House-Senate , radiation subcommittee also suggested that if instruments can be developed to get information back to earth, nuclear tests might be conducted in space halfway to the moon or farther to avoid hazards. “While the Atomic Energy Commission has accelerated its efforts in fallout research in the past two years,” the report said, “the fallout program as a whole ap- • parently has not received the high ! administrative level support it i needs to give it the necessary imi petus.” » The subcommittee, headed by I Rep. Chet Holifield .(D - Calif.), [ said better co-ordination of fallout X | information is essential. It advocated better staffing in - the AEC biology and medicine 5 division, more use of other agen- . cies, greater attention to radia- > tion in milk, and increased emphasis on the “hot spot problem,” [ localities where fallout is unusual- , ly tense. While stating that artificial coni tamination of the atmosphere so j far was small compared to natu- . ral sources of radioactivity, the . subcommittee noted that until this year the rate of testing had ben ' increasing sharply Conamination in 1957-58 exceeded that for all previous years, it said. Swimming Party By. Rural Youth Thursday i ’ . : August's special activity for the , county rural youth will be a swlm- > ming party at Pine Lake Thursday i evening. John Kipfer is chairman bf the August activity, and assistt ing him are Harold Dick and Gail , Hammond. Swimming is from 7 to t 9 o’clock Thursday evening for the r rural youth, and refreshments will > be served afterward. > Saturday the ice cream social t was a success, the rural youth rei ported this morning. Forty-seven » freezers of ice cream were consumed, in addition to the ham > sandwiches, baked beans, sliced . tomatoes, pie, cake and coffee that made up the meal menu for the social. On the calendar for September is a hayride and weiner roast September 12, before the September business meeting. — I
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Hospital Costs At An All-Time High NEW YORK (UPD — Hospital costs—at an all-time high — will continue to spiral at about 5 per cent a year, the new president of the American Hospital Assn, said 1 today. To assure the public that its hospital bill “isn't being padded,” Dr. Russell A. Nelson of Baltimore, also said he favors a “bank examiner” system for hospitals across the nation. It is understandable that “the public will resist further increases in hospital costs.” Dr. Nelson, director of Johns Hopkins Hospital, explained during an interview as the 61st annual meeting of the AHA convened in New York. That is why, he said, the bankexaminer system, “functioning something like the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval, would help to clear the air.” It would be “one more guarantee,” he said, that people aren’t “being charged twice for something they get once.” “Let’s face it,” he said, “most hospital bills read like a Chinese treaty—and people mistrust them.” Returning to the bigger pain in the pocketbook in months and years ahead, Dr. Nelson said that three forces are bound to boost hospital costs. They are: Bigger salaries for non - professional workers, inflation, and advances in medical ‘ science. The latter, he said, will mean more intense and costlier care. Inflation, he stated, can’t be dodged in a hospital any more than it can in any other field. And with or without unionization, he said, there is a trend to boost salaries of non-professional workers in hospitals. Two Motorists Lose Driving Privileges Two Decatur motorists lost their driving privileges for two months, and a year respectively, when the Indiana bureau of motor vehicles suspended the license of tarry G. Hoffman, of route 4, and Benson E. South, of 521 S. 13th street. Hoffman lost it on a charge of. reckless driving, while South was charged with drunk driving. Hoffman’s dates are July 28 to September 26 this year, while South's suspension will expire July 17, 1960. Voglewede and Anderson Attorneys ESTATE NO. M2S NOTICE TO Al,I, PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF JAMES F. PARRISH In the Adams Circuit Court of Addms County Vacation Term. 1059 Tn the matter of the Estate of James F. Parrish, deceased. Notice is hereby given that Henry H. Parrish as Executor of the above, named estate, has presented and filed his final account in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Adams Circuit Court, on the 11 of September 19.5?, at which time all persons interested in said estate are required to appear in said court and show cause, if any there be, why said account should not be approved And the heirs of said decendent and all others interested are also required to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of said estate. Henry R. Parrish Personal Representative Myles F. Parrish, Judge August 24, 31 ova ioo BOWER JEWELRY STORE Decatur Indiana i ...T-.
- - -- ----- Decatur Students To Enter I.U. Center Three Decatur students took orientation tests at the Indiana University extension Saturday morning, preparing to enter classes at the center this fall semester. They are James Corah, son of! Mr. and Mrs. Fred Corah, pre-law; I John Paul McAhern, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. McAhern, physical therapy; and Harold Weidler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Wiedler, business. McAhern also took foreign language tests following the orientation tests Saturday. The three, along with Pat Franklin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence ■ Franklin, business, who took his tests on campus this summer, will enroll at the I.U. Center it Fort Wayne this fall. The four new students will be enrolled in the junior (freshman) division of the university for their first year of studies, although they have declared tentative majors. Accident Victims Show Improvement Sammy Schafer spent his seventh birthday in the Wells county hospital, but his spirits were bouyed up when he received a shower of cards and letters last Friday, his seventh birthday anniversary. Seven-year-old Sammy and his | mother, Mrs. Kenneth Schafer, Vera Cruz, are now showing considerable improvement, hospital spokesmen said, recovering from injuries sustained in a car-truck ! crash Saturday, August 15. Both I suffered multiple bruises and abr» I
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• sions and minor lacerations over their heads and bodies when the car Mrs, Schafer was driving was struck at a crossroad west of the Wells county state game preserve by a dairy truck. The boy still has not been told of the death of his sister. Rose Marie, in the crash. Earthquake Victim Contracts Infection WEST YELLOWSTONE, Mont. (UPD —At least one of the persons injured in Montana’s disastrous earthquake has contracted an infection resembling .gas ganI grene. United Press International learned Sunday night that special serum for treatment of the infection was rushed from Billings to Bozeman to be administered to one victim—and possibly his wife. The attending physician confirmed that the man's wound had developed "an organism like gas gangrene,” similar to gangrenous infections contracted by men suffering battlefield wounds. “We think his wife prrfbably suffered a mild case,” the doctor said. The physician said these apparently were the only surviving victims of the huge' landslides who suffered the infection. He said, I however, that two men who died in the Bozeman hospital “could have had it.” in addition to their other injuries. He said the infection in the man lat Bozeman appears to have been halted before it could spread. The ! doctor added that the victim r'looks better every day.”
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The U.S. Public Health Service reports that about 47 million Americans suffered injuries that required medical attention or caused them to restrict their usual activities for at least a day in 1958. Like To Sew? Be Individual! Make it BETTER for LESSI • Most Complete Showing of Piece Goods in Decatur. • Large Selection of Trimmings and Notions. • Make our store your shopping center for sewing needs. Ehinger’s The BOSTON STORE
