Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 261, Decatur, Adams County, 5 November 1959 — Page 12

PAGE FOUR-A

Heavy Type Protein Foods Are Best Buys WASHINGTON (UPD — With colder weather across the nation, top values this week-end appear to be the heavier type protein foods, such as pork, beef, lamb and poultry. But eggs, too, continue an excellent buy. In beef, numerous features are planned in sirloin, round and Tbone steaks, while chuck roasts and ground beef will also merit attention. Pork loins, hams, bacon and sausage will be top values, as will legs of lamb and chops at many marketinc centers. Broiler-fryers and turkeys continue popular, too, and prices favor the family food budget. And eggs also hold to their excellent values in menu-planning In the fruit line, apples, grapefruit and oranges are excellent choices, while increasing supplies of cranberries are being featured now. Grhpes are an excellent choice also, and many markets

PUBLIC SALE We. the undersigned, are going to quit farming and move to town, will sell at public auction, located 7 miles east and one-half mile north of Berne; or 1 mile west of the Ohio state line on 118, then one-half mile north, on SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 14,1959 at 1 O'clock P. M. Farm Machinery 1952 Oliver 77 tractor, less than 1300 hours, complete with 2-row cultivators and hydraulic lift, live power take-off, belt pulley, all in very good condition; Oliver No. 452 4-row corn planter; 3-bottom John Deere No. 55 H plow on rubber; 9-ft. No. 8 Kewanee wheel disc; John Deere 13-hde model “FB” fertilizer grain drill on rubber; 10-ft. Brillion cultimulcher with transport lift; John Deere No. 953 wagon with bed and Life unloader; rotary hoe; John Deere 2-section spike tooth harrow; implement trailer on John Deere chassis with power or hand winch; Aro high pressure portable garage type grease gun; heat houser for Oliver tractor; Yale one-ton chain hoist; 2 hand grease guns; tool boxes; tods; log chains; 20-ft. cable; pump jack; gas cans; 25 lbs. grease; hydraulic and hand jacks; used tires, 15-in. and 18-in., and many other articles not mentioned. 1949 F-3 FORD PICK-UP TRUCK with attached air compressor, in good shape. TERMS— CASH. Not responsible for accidents. Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Sipe, Owners Phil Neuenschwander. Auctioneer First Bank of Berne, Clerk D. S. Blair. Miz Lehman—Auctioneers 5 12

PUBLIC SALE COMPLETE CLOSE OUT SALE We. the undersigned, since we are going to quit farming, will sell at auction located 4 miles west, then 1 mile south, then miles west of Geneva, Indiana, or 1 mile south, then 1% miles west of PerryviUe, on > THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1959 10:30 A. M. 30 Head of Registered and High Grade Cattle 20 HEAD OF REGISTERED & HIGH GRADE HOLSTEIN CATTLE. 4 registered Holstein cows, 4 yrs. old, 3 cows are fresh with calves by side, 1 due to freshen January 1. 5 Holstein grade cows, 6 yrs. old, 2 to freshen by sale day, 3 cows to freshen by January 1. 5 Holstein heifers, 18 months old and bred. 3 Holstein heifers, 1-year-old, selling open. 3 Holstein heifer calves can be registered, 11 weeks old. 10 HEAD HIGH GRADE GUERNSEY CATTLE 3 Guernsey cows, 4 years-old, fresh with calves by side. 2 Guernsey cows, 5 yrs. old. 1 fresh with calf by side, others to freshen February 1. 2 Guernsey cows, 7 yrs. old, due to freshen soon after sale day. 1 Guernsey heifer, 18 months old, open. , 2 Guernsey heifer calves, 6 weeks old. These cattle are tested for T.B. and Bangs. Most of cattle are out of A.B.S. breeding and all rebred back to A.8.5., breeding dates and milk records will be given on sale day. Some of these cows will milk 9 gal. when fresh. So if you are looking for some dairy cattle don’t miss this sale. Cattle can be inspected any time before sale day. Milking Equipment Two unit Surge milker, B-can Westinghouse milk cooler, 10 milk cans. Hay and Straw 900 bales mixed hay. 450 bales wheat straw. 2 Tractors - Combine - Pickup Truck 1954 (River 88 tractor with live power, hydroelectric ram, heat houser, wheel weights. 1957 W. C. Allis Chalmers tractor with cultivators. All Crop model 60 Allis Chalmers combine. 1948 G. M. C. pickup truck. Farm Machinery Kewanee model 10, 11-ft. 2-in. wheel disc; Case 3-bottom 14-in. plow on rubber; Dunham 8-ft. cultimulcher; 290 John Deere corn planter; No. 12A New Idea tractor manure spreader; John Deere 4-bar side delivery rake; Oliver 7-ft. semi-mounted mower; John Deere rubber tired wagon with grain bed; Industrial 40-ft. elevator with gas motor; Cardinal Junior elevator with electric motor; John Deere rotary hoe; power com sheller. Miscellaneous %-in. electric drill; hog feeders: hog troughs; metal 10-hole hen nests; other poultry equipment; 300 gal. gas tank; kerosene tank heater; electric tank heater; belt; pump jack; and many articles not mentioned. TERMS—CASH. Not responsible for accidents. ~‘ r JOHN PRICE, Owner ~ Phil Neuenschwander, D. S. Blair, Miz Lehman—Auctioneers Lunch will be served. First Bank of Berne, Clerk Cattle will be sold under tent. 5 10

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have good supplies bf lemons. Vegetable bins are not as overflowing as recently, but there are still good choices among such items as lettuce, tomatoes, cauliflower, potatoes and sweet potatoes, cabbage, celery, carrots, onions and cucumbers. The best values in fish this week-end include shrimp, fish sticks, and canned tuna. Hopeful NEW YORK (UPD—Elastase, an enzyme that may help control hardening of the arteries, can now be produced in quantity, Dr. Ines Mandi, of Columbia University, recently reported to the American Chemical Society. Bonus NEW YORK (UPD — Among other blessings of the 50th state. Hawaiians also boast that they TTve longer than niainlandAmericans. But it’s not exactly a man’s paradise. Hawaiian women, as in the mainland, live longer than the men.

Parents Set Reading Habits Os Children By GAY PAULEY UPI Women's Editor NEW YORK (UPD — Worried about junior scorning books for television? Could be it's a case of like parent, like child. A veteran editor of children's books believes parents set the reading habits of a child, the same way they determines whether he grows up brushing his teeth regularly, washing behind his ears and saying, "Yes, ma'am’’ and "Thank you.’’ “If adults read, the children will read,” said Mrs. Annis Duff, associate editor of children's books at Viking Press and author of two books on family reading. "The best influence toward reading is watching others enjoy a good book.” Mrs. Duff, who reared two children who love to read, does not believe television will replace or impair children's reading, as some authorities have predicted At least, she said, library and publishing figures show more children’s books in circulation than ever before. The Children’s Books Council Inc., sponsor of this year's celebration of Children's Book Week Nov. 1-7. reports that 1,500 "juveniles” were published this year, 200 more titles than last year. At present, there are 12,000 children’s books in print. Mrs. Duff doubted that such classics as "Alice in Wonderland,” "Tom Sawyer” and “Br’er Rabbit” were as widely read today as in other generations. There is a distinct trend towards books with a scientific and technical background, a reflection of the age in which we live. You can start a child on a book diet almost as soon as he's on a solids diet, said the editor. Most children love to leaf through books long before they know words. Surround the child with a variety of books — the classics, the new ones, some frivolous, some serious. And don’t worry about censoring a child's tastes, she said. He is not apt to stay with a book unless it interests him. 'Smelling Pictures' Battle Is Now On By DOC QUIGG United Press International NEW YORK (UPD—The “battle of the smelling pictures’’—a race between two movie producers with different systems of assaulting the national nostril—has rounded the last turn and headed into what some misanthropes might call the home stenchFirst we had the silent movies. Then the talkies. Come December, the smellies will be here. Die aromas, like the sounds, are cued to the action. Theaters will be ripe in sound, fury, and whiffery. Walter Reade Jr., son of a theater pioneer, on Dec. 2 opens at the Mayfair theater in New York a movie doused in a scent process called Aromarama, with 72 odor cues (“You’ve got to breathe it to believe it”). Mike Todd Jr., son of the late show-business mogul, on Dec. 22 opens at the Cinestage theater in Chicago a movie exhaling a process dubbed, by his press agent. "Glorious Smell-O-Vision!” Todd has trade-marked the term Smell-O-Vision 1, including the exclamation point. Reade thus has made reality of the rumor that he was out to beat Todd into the film fragrance field. He seems to have done it, if only by 20 days. However, Reade’s smell system is superimposed on a previously made movie—a semidocumentary about China called "Behind the Great Wall” that won two grand prizes at Brussels last year. Todd’s smell system is the center of his plot. Written specially for odor, and filmed completely on location in Spain, it’s about a young British tourist to that country who "turns detective when he scents a murder plot ” The Todd vehicle is called “Scent of Mystery.” The only two real clues the hero has to work with are the perfume of the girl in the case and the smell of the pipe tobacco the villain uses. Die film is billed as a comedy-mys-tery. Its 40 different odors will introduce, for the first time, movie “whiff-gags,” in which a scent triggers the laughter. The Aromarama fragrances will be loosed through the theater’s air distributing system, being automatically cued at the projector. An electronic air purifier will remove them immediately. A radar antenna 1,000 feet in diameter is planned for completion by early 1961 when Vensus will be nearest to the earth.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA

/ Hk ” hH BULW F * W fljfll ■ BIJbL W 9l Is Kx * 3| W -JE; /MKrJ WHALE BEACHED — Washed up on a New Jersey beach, this whale is one of four grounded at Keansburg. A policeman seems to be ordering the dead mammal to “keep moving.” The Coast Guard removed the animal*

More Os Population In Democrats' Rule INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—Despite the fact the Democrats made no net gains in the number of Indiana cities they will control next Jan. 1 as a result of the municipal elections, they made an increase of 175,000 in the population over which they will reign the next four years. Democrats elected mayors in 71 cities, the same umber- won in the 1955 (flection. But by taking away control of several of the state’s more populous areas, they

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increased thadaopulalien of cities over which mey will have jurisdiction frortrT,B9l,ooo to 2,066,000. On the other hand, although the Republicans U&h'ased their representation ifli?<Tayor offices from 32 at preseMFto 37 come next New Year’s Day, they suffered a net population loss of 167,000. Where they now have mayors in cities with a total population of 430,000, the population will be only 267,000 henceforth until they have a chance tg recoup, eight years of losses in the 1963 city elections. The main losses occurred in an upheaval involving four of the state’s 25 largest cities. Now the GOP has mayors in office in Fort Wayne, Elkhart, Lafayette and

Columbus, with a total population of 240,000. But the GOP lost all these and helped offset the loss only by snatching Kokomo, with a population of 44,000, away from the Democrats. In spite of all the facts and figures that proved the scope of the Democratic sweep, one rather unique statistic stood out in favor of the Republicans. Republicans took more cities away from the Democrats than the Democrats took away from the Republicans. Twenty-one presently Democratic cities did a turnabout, and only 17 presently Republican cities switched. Elsewhere, it was a question of the same party staying in power.

Political Greats In Stale Nov. 13 By EUGENE J. CADOU United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — Vice President Richard M. Nixon is expected to deliver an "important” speech before the national convention of the Sigma Delta Chi journalistic fraternity the night of Nov. 13. A number of Nixon’s Hoosier aides said they hope he will make his formal announcement for the Republican presidential nomination then. But others said the vice president may feel it is too early to take that important step. Nixon has agreed to run the. gantlet of a question-and-answer period following his address. Many important publishers and editors will be present and all indications are that there will be some pointed queries. Others politically great will participate in the journalistic session. Included are James C. Hagerty, President Eisenhower’s press secretary; David Brinkley, NBC new§ commentator, and Laurence Scott, publisher of the Manchester Guardian. Nixon Likes Midwest Nixon regards the Midwest as his private territory and probably will try to counteract the appearance of his chief presidential rival, New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, before the recent convention of the Inland Press Association in Chicago. Nixon has almost a clear field among the Hoosier GOP chiefs. The only Rockefeller boosters of any stature in Hoosierdom are Sen. Homer E Capehart and State Sen. Roy Conrad of Monticello. Now that the city elections are over, national and state issues for

Stewarts Bakm PHONE 3-2608

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1959

1960 are in the foreground and there will be little to restrain the politicos from rushing the 1960 season. Early events probably will be the announcements of two leaders for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination. They are Secretary of State John R. Walsh of Anderson and State Auditor Albert A. Steinwedel of Seymour. Gubernatorial bidders already announced among the Democrats are the present inside track man, Sen. Matthew E. Welsh of Vincennes, and Sen. Nelson Grills of Indianapolis, the Senate’s filibuster champion. Matthews A Target Republcian state chairman Robert W. Matthews is now the principal target of the Hoosier Democrats who have seized gleefully upon a denunciation of social security by Matthews in a speech at Minneapolis, Minn. On that occasion, Matthews said: “At the end of August. 1959, it was announced that 13,400,000 Americans were receiving social security checks- Who is going to pay the bills for this socialism? It is pretty clear that those who cannot qualify for subsidies are going to support those who can.” Many thousands of Hoosier voters are on social security and they maintain that they have paid through the years for this compensation in the twilight of their lives. They do not regard it as charity, and the Indiana Republican party may pay dearly for the hasty words of its state head. Turn It Down CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPD— Use of noise as a pain-reliever has shown promise in operatingroom trials. The patient controls the dosage—a mixture of tape recorded music and roaring random noise.