Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 230, Decatur, Adams County, 30 September 1959 — Page 12

PAGE FOUR-A

PUBLIC i SALE Ute Model Farm Implements, Mostly Like New I havequit farming. I, the undersigned will sell nt Public Auction, on the farm located 3% miles West of Monroeville, Indiana, on the Monroeville Road, on SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3,1959 Commencing at 10:30 A. M. 2 Tractor*, Picker, Combine, Baler, Implements John Deere 1951 Model A tractor: John Deere 1950 AR tractor: John Deere 2 row cultivator; John Deere No. 55, 3 bottom plows; 2 Coby 12 ft. Wheel Discs; 2 cylinders; John Deere No. 226 Corn Picker; John Deere, Van Brunt 17 disc grain drill; Massey Harris 50 Clipper Combine; John Deere Baler; John Deere 4 row fertilizer corn planter; New Idea No. 17 Manure Spreader; John Deere No. 45 Manure Loader: Brillion Cultimulcher: Viking grain elevator; New Idea No. 61 Chopper; John Deere No. 5 mounted Mower; John Deere side delivery rake; 4 section spike tooth harrow; Rotary hoe; 2 rubber tire wagons with grain beds; John Deere hammer mill; Drive belt; Diston 11 h.p. chain saw; Buzz saw; Mounted sprayer; Fuel tank on stand; Fanning Mill with motor. MISCELLANEOUS— 2 hog feeders, new; cattle oiler; platform scales; grindstone; corn sheller; Grease; Oil; pile 4 in. tile; Several Cord good solid buzzed wood; 2 chicken crates; heavy chain hoist; forks; shovels. Truck Ford 1955 V-8, F6OO. 2 ton truck with grain bed and stock rack, with only 11,871 actual miles FEED— 4SO bales straw; 125 bales hay; 38 bu. wheat; bu. grass seed; 5 bags Murphy’s feed. Household Goods American Deep Freeze; Large power Meat Saw; 2 pc. living room suite; 9 x 12 ft. rug; Emerson television; Living room chairs; Stands; Lamps; Crosley Shelvador electric refrigerator: Skelgas bottle gas stove; Copper Clad kitchen range; glass door cupboard; Sewing Machine; kitchen cabinet; table; chairs; buffet; 3 beds; 3 dressers; chest of drawers; dressing table; Maytag electric washer tubs; and many other numerous articles. TERMS—CASH. Not Responsible In Case of Accidents. Auctioneers Note: Plan to attend this sale as we have an extra good full line of late model Farm Machinery, been well taken care of and ready to use. Household Goods to be sold first. Elmer J. “Mick” Girardol, Owner Glenn C. Merica, Auctioneer. Monroeville. Indiana. Phone 5603. Lunch Served. ——W——— ■ l ■ ■ l ■ Public Auction Now & Used Farm Implements & Tractors Moser Oliver Sales, Bluffton, Indiana A* our Machinery Lot is full of used implements we wish to dear the tot for the winter months and to make room for our new Spring Business. We are also offering some New Implements for sale as we are over stocked. New and Used Machinery will be backed by our written guarantee. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3,1959 Salo Starting at 11:00 A.M. TRACTORS 1958 new Oliver 880 demonstrator with adj. front wheels, P.T.O. hydraulic, pwr. traction hitch & pwr. booster drive; 1959 new Oliver 550 tractor with 3 point hook-up; 1952 Oliver 77 tractor; 1949 Oliver 77 tractor; Co-op C tractor with 2-row cultivators; F-20 Farmall tractor with 2-row cultivators; Silver King (single plow or garden size). M » CORN PICKERS 2 Oliver 2-row No. 4 mounted corn pickers; 2 Oliver 1-row pull-type corn picker; Woods Bros, i-row pull-type corn picker; Oliver 1-row semi-mounted, late model, corn picker (fits Oliver 55 & Ford-Fergu-son 3-point); Allis Chalmers 1-row snapper corn picker, • *** COMBINES Oliver Model 15. 6-ft. combine with recleaner; Case Model A-6 6-ft. combine; Case 8-ft. auger type combine with motor and recleaner; Woods Bros., 2 combines. 1 with pick-up attachment. BALER Oliver No. 60-T twine tie demonstrator baler, baled less than 200 bales. MULCHERS 12 ft. Kewanee heavy duty wheel mulcher, new; New 10 ft. Ottawa Wheel mulcher, sealed bearings; 8 ft. Dunham pull-type mulcher, used. PLOWS (River new trip bottom Raydex 3-bottom 14” plow (3—Btm); Oliver demonstrator trip bottom Raydex 3-bottom 14” plow <3—4Btm.); (River demonstrator semi-mounted 4-bottom trip bottom Raydex No. 5440 plow, fits new Oliver pwr. tractor hitch or New International hook ups; 3-bottom used- Massey Harris plow; 3-bottom used AllisChalmers plow, pull-type A-l condition; 3, 2-bottom used Oliver Raydex plows; 2-bottom used Co-op plow. DISCS • ft. Kewanee wheel disc, used; 9’6” Moline wheel disc, used, A-l; 9 ft. 9-A International disc, used; 2, 8 ft. Moline used pull-type discs; lift-type Allis-Chalmers disc, A-l; used Dunham disc; 11 blade Towner offset disc, like new. WAGONS — BOXES & BEDS 5-ton new running gears: 4 ton new running gears; used home made wagon running gears; new 125 bu. galvanized all bolted gravity box (unloading auger may be added, good box); used 14 ft flatbed. CULTIVATORS 4-row used Oliver pipe cultivators; 2, 2-row International cultivators. OTHER FARM IMPLEMENTS New PTO rotary hoe, tomato & bean cultivator; 3 used 2-row rotary hbes; 40 ft. New Kewanee galvanized grain elevator; 32 ft. used American Std. elevator; 16 ft. used aluminum elevator; 17 x 7 new Oliver fertilizer grain drill (Worlds most wanted drill); 13x 7 new Oliver fertilizer grain drill; Oliver new side delivery rake, ground driven; 10 ft. Oliver new fertilizer & lime spreader; 120 bu. Oliver new PTO manure spreader: rotary stalk shredder demonstrator; 10’8” Oliver new spring tooth harrow; used spring tooth harrow; few section New Kewanee spike tooth harrows with steel eveners; used International spike tooth harrow; 2-row John Deere corn planter, late model;2. 2-row corn planters; Stan-Hoist manure loader, fits most Oliver tractors; 7 ft. used Oliver PTO mower. A-l; 7 ft. used New Idea pull-type mower; New Idea hay loader, good condition: 2-row' Oliver new fertilizer aide dressing attachment, for pipe cultivator. MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS: 5 h.p. new Wisconsin gas engine: 2 Life Lake end gate unloaders; 1, new and 1 used h.p. electric motor; small quantity chemickls. Dieldrin. Premerge & Ester Brush Killer: used Comfort covers for (River & Farmall H; many, other articles not mentioned. TERMS— AII Small Sales CASH. Large Items, % down, balance on time payment terms. Not responsible for accidents. Lunch will be served. ~ MOSER OLIVER SALES WBBT BILVEB BT. at SOUTH BOND ST.. BLUFFTON. IND. EDanberger Bros., Auctioneers Old First National Bank, Clerk Bluffton phone 543-Fort Wayne phone K-5512

Related in name and food looks-the new COMPACT CORVAIR and CHEVROLET ■EI.. ' SHk W WW’-:

A strong family resemblance between the allnew Corvair and Chevrolet’s conventional line of passenger cars for 1960 is evident in this unusual Erofile view. At 180 inches, however, the Corvair i more than two and one-half feet snorter, while its 108-inch wheelbase compares with 119 on the Impala Sport Sedan with which it appears.

Man Must Harness Newfound Powers NEW YORK (UPI) — Six renowned thinkers agreed today that mankind must harness its new-iound scientific powers for peaceful purposes or face possible extinction. They warned that man, in taking advantage of science’s spectacular advances, must be careful not to let Science become his master. The six panel members, participating in a symposium on "The Future of Men,” offered a variety of proposals designed to cope with challenges expected to face mankind in the near future. They were poet Robert Frost, author and biologist Sir Julian Huxley, philosopher Lord Bertrand Russell, zoologist Dr. Hermann J .Muller, anthropologist Dr. Ashley Montagu and Devereux Josephs, former chairman of the New York Life Insurance Co. and former president of the Carnegie Corp. Establishment of a powerful world authority, a world population policy, a system of worldwide education and increased government planning were among the proposals advanced by the panel members in the symposium held at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. In an introductory address. Dr. Milton S. Eisenhower, president of Johns Hopkins University and c h'a irm a n of the symposium, called for a program that will yield "peace with justice and the constructive use of our new-found power.” The alternative, he said, is “to toil in fear—fear that terrible forces will, by design or miscalculation. break loose and destroy mankind.” Lord Russell, 87. a Nobel Prize winner in 1950, said that mankind must choose, within a few decades, whether to accept extinction or create a powerful world authority with a monopoly on the major weapons of war. He participated by rpeans of video tape and short-wave radio from London. Montagu said a system of worldwide education was the key toward elimination of war. Josephs said mankind’s future depends on its adaptability to change, “because It will come at an even faster pace.”

■ |M||9fih M n ' I* ■ iM'. • M DOESN'T UKE HER JOB—Dona Isabel Urcuyo de Somoza, 34, the First Lady ot Nicaragua, doesn’t like her job but was quick to add that being the President’s wife gives her a chance to do a lot of good work. She said that in an interview during a trip to New York. The mother ot seven children, ranging from 13 to one year, she supervises IS servants, plans meals, entertains four days a week, works for charity, attends receptions and political meetings.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. ffECATUR, INDIANA

Huxley said a world population policy would be necessary to prevent erosion of the world’s resources. Frost, a four - time Pulitzer Prize winner, suggested that mankind may have progressed far enough. "If we are thought to have matured to a point where we can take control of our own evolution and go on with,” he said, “why can’t it be to stop ourselves in our tracks, if there isn't too much the matter with us as we are.” Required Training Urged For Parents By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK (UPD— A woman lawyer and former prosecutor today suggested one method of curbing the nation’s soaring juvenile crime rate—a required course for parents in parenthood. "Juvenile delinquency begins at home. It’s been said before, but it's all true,” said Mrs. Lillian

Outlook fookfo will show you why r ' psa saHfSl Kj Bhr f-flf M ■ gam IM & $ o sr li mKB S» 8 1 M Ok B 111 f f ■ BBJg IR 8* a. MW P s KB » B W I >****/* kFM ■ I jaowt titMi^ OUTHEAT-OUTLAST ALL OTHERS! Behind the gleaming, porcelain cabinet, you’ll find a patented inner unit that makes traveling floor heat possible. Look at the big, furnace-type blower that drives the air through a battery of inner heat tubes that set right in the heart of the fire! Siegler doesn’t wait for the heat to come out... it goes right in after it, then forces it over your floors! Come in and see for yourself why Siegler outheato—outlasts all others! _ MONTY BACK OUAKANTUI GUARANTtt MOM Honßt heat Win ov « you * FIOORSI

Elegance and chassis refinements characterize the larger Chevrolets in an offering of 16 passenger models. The Corvair introduces an array of compact mechanical innovations designed to provide the riding and driving qualities demanded by the American buyer. Hie Corvair and conventional model will be in dealer showrooms Oct. 2.

Malley Vernon, 49, a grandmother who is co - chairman of the women's division of the Police Athletic League Inc. Mrs. Vernon suggested in an interview that ‘‘What we need are courses in how to be parents. It is from the parent that the child must learn respect for others, respect for the law and authority, respect for other people’s property.” ‘‘l think we’re too inclined to spare the rod,” she said. ‘‘When I was a child, I always was told that if I were punished at school, I would get the same punishment when I got home. "Today, the parent attacks the teacher if the child is punished. "It seems to me that parents hate to admit they’re doing a poor job on their children. They blame everybody but themselves. They expect the teachers to do their job...qr expect agencies like ours to.take over. “PAL tries to help so do teachers, so do numerous other agencies interested in child welfare. But these is no' substitute for the parent.

Articles Inform Public Os Services Os Lawyer

(Editor’s note: This is another in a series of articles presented as a public service by the Adams county bar asociation. These articles are not intended to answer individual problems which require specific advice.) LOOKING AHEAD You can tell a lot about people by the way they regard time. Do they put stock mostly in the past—their record; the present—their direct joy in work or p*ay; or the future— their plans. Why not use all three dimensions of time? Past experience to guide, the present for zest, and the future to realize dreams. Lawyers report a sharp shift in the way peapie regard time and the law: Os old they thought of law in terms of past facts like failures to meet legal duties, misdeeds, etc.—facts useful chiefly in lawsuits. You still have to think of the record, since you may have to go to trial some time. So keep good records of your affairs. But more and more people now also think of the law in the future

mthe patented SIEGLER BB •: I -yl as ! HI 9 BaFii I *L*** rr i II) 1111 I f □ l l iU' ( JJ J J • J . (Tirni i MffifgM POURS 4 TIMES MORE HEAT OVER BHCttfflßH THE FLOOR than ever before! The revolutionary, new Siegler sends the air right through the heart of the fire twice to give you a ■■mKiiimb houseful of amazing SUPER Floor Heat! Here’s real furnace comfort in every room, without costly pipes and registers to install You save the high chimney, because Siegler’s patented Inner Heat * Tubes and built-in Blower system pours all the 9111 'l heat over your floors. Don’t make the mistake of buying a heater without Inner Heat Tubes or a built-in Blower system. Every Siegler Home ■99HW99M Heater has them. That’s why a Siegler pays for itself with the fuel it saves. And only Siegler gives you IU4M MONEY BACK GUARANTEE ■u‘iß9lil »PATENTEDOFORCED-AIK _ HOMEHEATER Came ia far a TREE RafdeiMstniHan! 1 * yL.4 iNSifTTOr • o Ha’

tense—in terms of built-in safeguards for plans which they want to go through without legal hitches. Our heavy income and death taxes have made people plart ahead legally, ratner than wait for the ax to fall. Arty time you buy oV sell a home or a business or make an investment you have choices of how you may do it—some wise, some not, in view of your circumstances. Should you insits on an abstract or accept or offer instead a title insurance policy? (Your lawyer has a definite part to play in either event.) Should you do business as a sole proprietor, a partnership, or corporation? Do your contracts set out ways of meeting unexpected events? How best may you serve your estate (and also carry out your wishes)—by a will or a trust, or by direct gifts? While all of these things point forward, the past in the form of court retords can serve you by showing where trouble may come from. As more and more people know the symptons of legal trouble—

( WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 30, 1959 -

where to look for legal hitches in plans before big trouble starts, there will be fewer law suits and and better human relations. And where, does trouble sometimes start? Most often where you lack a clear grasp of your relationship, your rights and duties, and your own and the other fellow’s resources—in transactions involving large personal or financial stakes. Remedy ST. CATHERINES, Ont. (UPD— Police traffic department inspector Frank Jarvis has a suggestion for eliminatingtraffic jams caused by long cars trying to fit into small metered parking spaces: Lengthen the spaces from 22 feet to 25. Staff members of the Wildlife Conservation Board said corvina abound in the 345-square-mile inland sea but that they are difficult to catch, except near the wreckage of an old Navy piling. So old auto bodies will be used to create other such artificial reefs. There is six times as much mountainous area in Colorado as there is in Switzerland. j Non-food items account for about 5.2 per cent of total sales in the average grocery.