Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 223, Decatur, Adams County, 22 September 1959 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

> " iMF r ' 1 a*--.., ‘•jjMnHbrri 1 v fef- aRFs■ «? <r jroSaw P?‘. >' jr . 'QfraaP a- •’tl 4r £JW k|, - ■ > i i NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV WILL VISIT HERE— This is the Roswell Garst farm at Coon Rapids, Ila., one of the visit stopovers on the tour schedule of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. Garst is a hybrid seed com producer. Aside from President Eisenhower, Garst is the only person in the U. S. that Khrushchev is believed to have asked specifically to see.

Handley To Offer Local Tax Reform INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—Governor Handley told mayors and other city officials today that he will present to the 1961 Indiana Legislature a ‘complete recommendation for local tax reform," but that he won’t be around long enough to see it through. Handley told the opening session of the Indiana Municipal League he has instructed the Indiana Tax Study Commision to prepare a complete recommendation for local tax reform. ‘I feel that Indiana property owners should be relieved of part of the local tax burden, but certainly not al of it," Handley said. ‘I feel that local units of government should be permitted to pursue isuplementary tax programs. But I also feel that if new

Chevy’s done the next best thine to paving every read »n Amertea l Uli llllf I First they threw out the front axle and put in torsion-spring lllllw. .111 > independent suspension. Then they built wide-base coil rear ■ ■ ■ W • • • springs into most light-duty models, variable-rate leaf springs — _ into heavies. That made it-a ride that completely eliminates Flf AAI FTr I-beam shimmy and wheel fight, lets you move faster over EnH r W ICI II ■" | any ground to get more work done in a day. Brawnier bulldozer build! They’re tougher than any Chevy trucks ever made. Frames ■ ■ I ■ ■ are stronger, cabs 67% more rigid. Front wheels and tires ■v ■I ■ IK are precision-balanced. And that new suspension cushions ■ W ■ I ■ ■ fl — jars and road shock that used to spell slow death for the 111 ■ 11f truck’s body*end sheet metal. WITH REVOLUTIONARY Easier to hop in and out of too. Many models are a whole 7 __ _. inches lower outside. Yet there’s more head room inside, plus mMwf TIIDCIIIM-QDDINu. nlore wl(ith for shoulders and hips. The windshield’s bigger, I Vl\vlUll Ur HI Illi with a wider, safer sweep of vision. Suspended pedals give you more foot room. QIICPEMQIAN Big in the power department! VV VI LUUIVII With the industry’s most advanced gas-saving 6’s. With hightorque Workmaster V 8 performance in heavyweights. With THAT GIVES ASTONISHING NEW new or V 8 power available in new Low Cab Forward niodels. More models than ever! Afll II -|1 VMI fl ir New 4-wheel-drive models and tandems and high-styled SubVii VVIII lIWI urban Carryalls. It’s the handsomest, hardest working Chevy fleet ever to report for duty. See your dealer for the whole H Nl HW 9 story and, by all means, take a ride. It’s something! Av 1I VIW •••••. Anything less is an old-fashioned truck! See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer QUALITY CHEVROLET-BUICK, Inc. 305 N. 13th STREET DECATUR, IND. PHONE 3-3145

forms of taxation result only in an increase in the total taxes paid, the people will rise up in their wrath and defeat those responsible." Handley reminded his audience, "I will not be governor by the time the 1961 Indiana 'Legislature gets very far with its labors. But at least some of you will be mayors and city councilmen then. It is up to you to insist that the next Legislature enacts an equitable, praclcal and suficient reform of local taxation so as to enable you to handle your local afairs properly.” Handley’s term of office ends Jan. 9. 1961. and he cannot succeed himself. Handley also lambasted what he termed "the reckless and radical spenders in Congress,” in addition to discusing local taxation with the municipal officials, a majority of whom are Democratic. ‘Something must be done very soon about the runaway spending D y Congress in an era of boom

and plenty," the governor said. "If we can't get back into the black ink in prosperous times, what happens to our dollar’s value in the lean years?” Handley noted that ‘the 1959 Congress has just appropriated a record 82 billions of dollars, although every member of it was aware that curent revenue would not raise nearly that amount.” PlKup 2nd pgh: Other speakers Railroad Brakeman Killed At Capital INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — Jack Dusenberg, 56. Indianapolis, a Pennsylvania Railroad brakeman, was killed late Monday when he was run over by the wlgels of two <£Bl cars. A railroad spokesman raid it was believed Dusenberg braked the coal cars to a halt and was run over when two tank cars rolled down the gravity'yard and ir.td the tank cars.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Grass Fire Results In Department Call ' The Decatur fire department answered a call at 7:30 p.m. Monday to a field across from the Wayne Novelty Co. on West Washington tsreet to extinguish a grass fire. The run lasted 15 minutes with no damage being reported and no one being injured. Gary City Attorney Dies Monday Night GARY, Ind. <UPI) — Paul Piazza. 52, Gary city attorney for eight years until Sept. 1 when he was 1 replaced because of illness, died I of cancer in Mercy Hospital Mon- ' day night. Piazza had been hospitalized since last April. Tickets Here For Sen. Kennedy Dinner A number of tickets have tieen received here for the October 3 dinm r for Sen. John Kennedy in Fort Wayne, Dr. Harry H. Hebble, • Democratic county chairman, announced .today. Th? tickets are available at $lO each, and include the dinner and reserved seats for the speech in the .auditorium seats 1.800. and is j expected to be quite full from re- | served seat sales. Persons desiri ing tickets are urged to ocntact i Dr. Hobble immediately, as the tickets must be accounted for before dinner. Houk Transferred To Memphis Plant The promotion of Robert C. Houk to the position of maintenance and repair superintendent at its Memphis, Tenn., plant has been announced by McMillen Feed Mills, the feed division of Central Soya Company, Inc., Fort Wayne. I Houk is a 19-year veteran of the company’s Decatur plant, where he was maintenance supervisor prior to his transfer to Memphis. He served in the U. S. Army during World War II and attended the Purdue University Center at Fort Wayne from 1956 to 1959. Houk, his wife, and four children pjlan to make their home in Memphis.

r, *-»y«'^ z ’'’******ww f **r ■"'i> fr '9 * b - I ■ r -JF x '= / \ / < ’| • • ' i ' Jp* : rL < 11 ■ f ! I • ' Isl 45 DAYS SOLITARY— Richard Lee Babic, 16, atarta a 45day solitary confinement sentence in Battle Creek, Mich. —milk, bread and water, no reading material except religious literature and the Bible, no visitors except a clergyman, attorney or physician. Judge Alfonso A. Magnotta sentenced the lad on conviction of breaking and entering. Juvenile court authorities waived jurisdiction when Babic was arrested, on parole from the court. Deputy Registration Officers Appointed Four Democratic and five Republican deputy registration officers have been appointed for the fall campaign, Richard D. Lewton, county clerk, said today. Appointed for the Democrats were Bernard Clark, Mrs. William Hunter, Miss Dianne Linn, and Clvde Drake; for the Republicans, Virginia A. Teeter, John M. Doan, Annabelle Doan Heller, Nida Deitsch, and Mrs. Lavelle Death. Glen Neuenschwander, Republican, of Berne, and Walter Hofstetter, Democrat, of Geneva, have also been appointed.

Ex-American League Slugger Found Dead UNICOI. Tenn. (UPI» — Funeral arrangements were being made today for Clarence William (Tilly 1 Walker, 72, former American League home run king, whose body was found Monday at the home of his brother. Walker apparently died from natural causes Sunday, according to physicians. The body was found by his brother W. F. Walker. Walker was a major leaguer for 13 years. He broke into the majors in 1911, and during his career played with Washington, the old Philadelphia Athletics, the old St. Louis Browns, and the Boston Red Sox.

PUBLIC SALE As we are quitting farming we will have a complete close out sale of our personal property on the farm located 7% miles South of Bluffton, Ind. on St. Road 1 to Countj road 750 S, then % mile East, or 1% miles South of Reifsburg to County road 750 S, then mile East, on FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25,1959 Sale to Begin at 1 P. M. TRACTORS and PLOWS 1951 Massey Harris tractor with Depth O Matic, recently overhauled with oversize pistons and in A-l condition; 3 bottom 14” mounted breaking plows with 3 point hitch; 1946'Massey Harris No. 81 tractor with cultivators. CORN PICKER, ELEVATOR and COMBINE 1954 two row pull type corn picker in A-l condition; single row Case corn picker; 1958 36 ft. elevator with Wisconsin motor, like new; Massey Harris 7 ft. combine in good condition. 4-Row Corn Planter, Drill and Other Machinery 1958 Oliver rubber tire wagon with McCurdy hopper bed; Int. steel wheel fertilizer 12 hole grain drill; J. D. 4 row corn planter; Oliver tractor manure spreader on rubber; 7 ft. Massey Harris semi mounted tractor mower; good 9 ft. Kewannee wheel disk; 6 row tractor weed sprayer; new 12 ft. auger elevator with % h.p. motor; New Idea tractor manure loader with blade and bucket; 8 ft. Dunham cultimulcher; 10 ft. soil surgeon; rotary hoe. Truck, Chain Saw and Miscellaneous 1950 Dodge 1% ton truck with grain bed and stock rack, in good condition; Clinton 20” chain saw with new blade; Papec 10” hammer mill with sacker; 2 wheel rubber tire trailer with steel dump bed; 275 gal. gas tank on stand with hose; rubber tire garden tractor with mower attachment, without motor; and many other articles. CATTLE Guernsey cow 5 yrs. old, artificially bred. T. B. and Bangs Tested. 7 weeks old bull calf. 130 —HEAD OF HOGS-130 70 head of good feeder pigs wt. about 25 to 50 lbs. 35 head, wt. about 70 lbs.; 20 head, wt. about 150 lbs.: 2 Hamp gilts with 11 pigs; 2 Hamp gilts due to farrow about Oct. 1; Full blooded Hamp male hog, 2 years bld. GRAIN and STRAW About 500 bu. of good oats; 150 bales of wheat straw. HOUSEHOLD GOODS 12 x 12 rug and pad, like new; 9x12 rug and pad; upright piano, and other articles. TERMS—CASH. Not Responsible for Accidents. Ralph Davison & Lester Clark, Owners D. S. Blair, Auctioneer, Petroleum, Ind. Phone 2251. Gerald Strickler, Auctioneer, Decatur, Ind. Phil Neuenschwander, Auctioneer, Berne, Ind. Old First National Bank, Clerk. (CLIP THIS AD)

T 5. ■ H «' jMM PINKY TlMt— Swiss watchmakers have come up with this new gimmick in the time field, finger watches with insignia on the lid. This one carries • Masonic emblem. Moke General Index In Recorder's Office An extensive project to provide better service is underway now in the Adams county recorder’s office, it was learned today. There are four plat books on file in the office, and formerly a person interested in looking up the plats had to look in each book, as there is no general index. Mrs Mabel Striker, recorder, and her deputy, Miss Rose Nesswald. are now in the process of copying all the entries from the four plat books to make a general index to all four books. It is expected that this job will take some time, as it is done in spare moments between waiting on those interested in recording, and in actual recording of documents received for safekeeping. About 60,000 Europeans live in the British Crown Colony of Kenya along with 185,000 Asians and Arabs and 6,000,000 Africans.

Iq -#- I | Il Z ll I All 1 Cow w i—— “I understand you’re looking for players for the third major league!”

KING OF THE NETTERS - - By Alan Mover - > 1 NATIONAL : Mr r#£ vX \\'V ’ AUss/E rue No. i 'W £ i /TH i L/ 'J .-.v--'!-' ' ' ; 7 ABOUT AU Sf.-it JSI S-■ ll LEFTGRASS-NEALE ’ I! SNA7CREO DAY/S CUP [ 3WA I ’I ALMOST SINGIEHANPER. I > W V*EBf RE ANO BRAZIL'S MAR/A i ■ -MF W OUENO WERE FIRST L *] Foreigners to take V if &OTN SINGLES IN (■ W < W/ SA ME FEAR-ANJO LA**? f J *4/ id WEN'S CPoMN LEFT W*./ I PL COUNTRY ? coN- Lw Jf * * I securiYE VN 1 | FOR FJRST TIME. F 1 W/Jk ( JMfriHtrf tn Kins fittum Syn4k«ta

10 Days Sick Leave To Indiana Teachers INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — Atty. Gen. Edwin K. Steers ruled late Monday that Hoosier school teachers will get 10 days sick leave for the first year they work for any school corporation after last Aug. 1. Supt. of Public Instruction William E. Wilson asked Steers for the opinion, and said some school officials believed the 1959 law referred to the year each teacher began teaching tn Indiana. Steers said the law passed by the last General Assembly pro-

Finished all around... SWIVELS clear around! J IBs hffll /fl PHILCO 3-SPEAKER CONSOLE . A full-dreis model ... the first conF~ -■—-/[ *ole with completely finished back. / •*•••••••* k-— Perfect as a room divider. It swivels QJ FS) iy clear,around .. . view from any w.*Tj angle! Pop-up tuner. Semi-Flat pic- | 3 ture tube. Predicta Chassis. Exclul— \7 sive 3-Speaker Wrap-Around sound. with trade • J|t • * • * • SPECIAL! I 2 Speakers! } | Finished Back! K| II Full draw Tabla TV yaan :-l| ahaad daiiga. Naw Predicta B chauli. Pop-wp tuner. Po*i- f five picture leek. Table available. 100’ 95 UjeaF with trade ■■ m heating, plumbing, M| flflfllllfl. air conditioning, ■ > APPLIANCES 269 N. 13th St. Phone 3-3316

TUESDAY, SEPT. 22. 1959

vides for teachers to accumulate up to 90 days sick leave at the rate of 10 days for the first year of service and 7 days per year thereafter. Under the old law. teachers could accumulate only 60 days of sick leave. “A teacher who resigns from a school corporation in Indiana and later is reemployed by the same system is entitled to 10 days sick leave for the first year of her reemployment if she has not already claimed such 10 days credit,” Steers said. “Teaching service in another school corporation in Indiana or elsewhere does not limit the eligibility of a teacher for 10 days sick leave during the first year in a different Indiana school system after Aug. 1, 1959,” he said.