Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 267, Decatur, Adams County, 12 November 1959 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT CO., INC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller, Jr.... President John G. Heller Vice-President Chas. Holthouse Secretary-Treasurer Subscription Bates By Mall In Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year $8 00Six months. 14.25; 3 months, $2 25. ’ By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year $9.00; 6 months. $4.75; 3 months, $2.50. ' By Carirer, 30 cents per week. Single copies. 6 oents. Around Town Bob Gay, Washington township trustee, mentioned to us the other day that with cold weather starting in, a number of litle children in our local schools will be literally freezing on their way to school. Their parents are unable to keep them clothed properly, and the little tykes struggles against the cold with thin shoes or sandals, no coats, and worn, dirty clothes. If you have any coats, boots, shoes, or heavy winter clothing for little children, why not drop it off at the township trustee’s office, or call him and ask him to pick it up? He’ll be happy that you wer able to help a little child. Name On Map? Are there any houses in Adams county built between 1868 and 1900? If there are, and you have a snapshot, and can give the name of the owner, date of construction and its location, we may be able to put Adams county “on the map” in a publication planned by " the Indiana Historical Society. The society is collecting data on Indiana architecture for that period—they want pictures of small houses, not just the bigger elaborate—ones—typical Victorian homes. They would like 15 or 20 from Adams county. If anyone has any, or knows of such a house, please write to the Democrat, and we will see that the information is forwarded. • • • • CROP Drive The county CROP drive, to raise funds to supply the hungry people in many foreign countries with food through Christian agencies of all churches, is now on. This is one of the most worthy rural projects ever started. Rural people have a chance to help their fellow men, women, and children in countries where starvation is so common that few children ever reach the adult state. When your local church or solicitor asks you to give a few bushels of corn, think of what corn will do for those in real need. ■ • ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ YOUR BALLOT (Please mail to the Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur, Ind.; your choice will be tabulated with all those received, and the resists printed, if enough returns are received). —-Matthew Welsh Bert Steinwedel John Walsh ___Ralph Tucker Von Eichhorn

TTV Programas “ Central Daylight Time

WANE-TV Channel 15 THURSDAY J:0 o—s mo a and Andy • :30 —Tom Calenberg News • :45—Dour Edwarde-Nawa 7:oo—Highway Patrol • :30—To Tell The Truth 4:oo—Betty Hutton 4:3o—Johnny Ringo 4:30 —Playhouse 90 4:3o—The Big Party 11:00—Phil Wilson News 11:15—Sea Hawk FRIDAY Morning 1:30 —Peppermint Theatre :45—Willy Wonderful :00—CBS News :15—Captain Kangaroo :00—Peppermint Theater 4:ls—Captain Kangaroo • :30—Our Miss Brooks 10:00—Breakfast in Ft. Wayne 14:30—0n The Go 11:00—I Love Lucy ll:3(F—December Bride Afternoon 13:00—Love Os Life 13:30—Search For Tomorrow 13:45—Guiding Light I:oo—Ann Colone 1:25 —News I:3o—As the World Turns 1:00—For Better or Worse 3:3o—Houseparty 3:oo—The Millionaire 3:3o—Verdict Is Yours 4:oo—Brighter Day 4:ls—Secret Storm 4:3o—Edge Os Night 4:oo—Dance Date 4:oo—Amoe and Andy 4:3o—Tom Calenberg News 4:4s—Doug Ed wards-News 7:00 —San Francisco Beat 7:3o—Rawhide 4:3o—New York Confidential 3:oo—Desf-Lu Playhouse 13:00—Twilight Hour 10:30—Person To Person J 1:00—Phil Wilson News 11:15—High Moon 13:30 —Key Man WKJG-TV Channel 33 THURSDAY Uveelsg 3:oo—Gatesway to Sports 4:15 —News, Jack Gray 3:3s—The Weatherman 4:3o—Yesterday's Newsreels 4:45 —Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:oo—Jeffs Collie 7:3o—Law of the Plainsman 3:oo—Bat '•Masterson 3:3o—Staccato 4:oo—Bachelor Father 3:30 —Tennessee Ernie Ford 10:00 —You Bet Your Life 10:30—Manhunt 11:00—News and Weather 11:15 —Sports Today 11:30 —Jack Parr Show FRIDAY 4:30 —Continental Classroom t:oo—Today 4:oo—Ding Dong School

9:3o—Cartoon Express 9:4s—The Editor's Desk •*- 9:ss—Faith To Live By 10:00—Dough Re Mi 10:30—Treasure Hunt 11:00—The Price Is Right 11:30—Concentration Afternoon 12:00—News & Weather 12:15—Farms and Farming 12:30—1s Could Be You I:3o—Burns and Allan Show 2:oo—Queen For A Day 2:3o—The Thin Man 3:oo—Young Dr. Malone 3:3o—From These Roots 4:oo—House on High Street 4:30—Bozo Evening 4:oo—Gatesway To Sports 6:ls—News. Jack Gray 6:2s—The Weatherman 6:3o—Yesterday's Newsreels 6:4s—Huntley-Brinkley Jteport 7:oo—Take A Good Look 7:3o—People Are Funny B:oo—Trouble Shooters B:3o—Art Carney in "Our Town” 9:3O—M-Squad 10:00—Shubert Alley 11:00—News and Weather 11:15—Sports Today 11:20—Best of Paar WPTA-TV Channel 21 THURSDAY Evening 6:oo—Fun ‘N Stuff 6:BO—H uckelberry Hound 7:oo—Fun & Stuff 7:ls—Tom Atkins Reporting 7:3o—Gale Storm B:oo—Donna Reed B:3o—The Real McCoy* 9:oo—Pat Boone 9:3o—The Untouchables - 10:30—Return of the Bad Men 12:00—Sherlock Holmes FRIDAY Morning 10:30—Susie 11:00—Romper Room 11:50—News Afternoon 12:00—Restless Gun 12:30—Love That Bob I:oo—Music Bingo I:3o—‘Kingdom of the Sea 2:oo—Day In Court 2:3o—Gale Storm 3:oo—Beat the Clock 3:3o—Who Do You Trust 4:oo—'American Bandstand s:oo—Little Rascals s:3o—Rin Tin Tin Evening 6:oo—Fun 'N Stuff 7:ls—Tom Atkins Reporting 7:3o—Disney Presents B:3o—Man From Blackhawk 9:00—77 Sunset Strip 10:00—The Dectectlnes 10:30—"10-4" 11:00—House of Dracula MOVIES ADAMS "Yellowstone Kelly" Frl. at 7:30; 9:30 Sat. at 3:15; 4:15; 6:15; 8:15: 10:15 ’ I

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Conservationists To Meet At Purdue LAFAYETTE, Ind.—Several hundred Indiana conservationists will attend the 17th annual meeting of soil conservation district supervisors at Purdue University's memorial center Nov. 15-17. The annual meeting is sponsored by the state soil conservation committee and the state association of soil conservation district supervisors. Association officers, directors and committee chairman will meet the night of Nov. 15, according to R. O. Cole, specialist in soil conservation at Purdue and executive secretary of the state committee. The morning session Nov. 16, will get underway at 10 a m. with Dr. Earl L. Butz, dean of agriculture at Purdue, welcoming the delegates. O. B. Riggs, Sullivan, association president, will give his annual report. This will be followed by a panel discussion on “Minimum Tillage.” Hugo Bulmahn ot Adams county will serve on this panel. A panel discussion on “Urban land use’’ will open the afternoon session with C. E. Swain, Indianapolis. state conservationist, as moderator. This will be followed by a talk on “The rural Development program in Indiana,” by L. T. Wallace, Purdue agricultural economist. The women’s auxiliary will take a campus tour. A series of committee meetings will complete the afternoon program. Leon J. McDonald, Stillwater, Okla., assistant state conservationist of the Oklahoma soil conservation service, will be principal speaker at the banquet the night of Nov. 16. Lt. Gov. Crawford F. Parker will also speak and make introductions. Awards and certificates will be presented. Officers of the state association for 1960 will be chosen at a meeting following the banquet. William E. Richards, Holdrege, Neb., president of the national association of soil conservation districts, will open the Tuesday, Nov. 17, morning session with a talk on the watershed program. Harry Moore, Indianapolis, assistant state conservationist, will discuss the watershed situation in Indiana, and Charles R. Williams, Salem, will report experiences in the Elk Creek watershed program in the Washington county, Indiana soil conservation district. Reports of previous day's sessions of committees will be given, and a business meeting of the state association will conclude the morning session.

Dr. John B. Spaulding announces the Association of Dr. Harold W. Bohnke In The Practice of General Dentistry * 227 S. 2nd St. Phone 3-2978 |

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

J EATS HIS “HAT”— Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell nibbles a piece of hat-shaped cake in Washington. He is fulfilling a pledge that he would eat his hat if unemployment reached three million in October. It did. Hold Art Workshop Saturday, Nov. 21 The second annual art workshop, sponsored by the art education association of Adams county, will be held Saturday morning, Nov. 21, from 8:30 a.m. to 12 noon at the Adams Central cafeteria. Harold Radatz, assistant art supervisor of the Fort Wayne schools, will again be in charge. This year’s theme is on “Christmas Ideas” and “New approaches to common materials in the classroom.” Elementary teachers in all schools in the county are invited. Reservation slips are being distributed, and reservations may be made by calling Hubert Feasel, 3-3829. Coffee and doughnuts will be served. COURT NEWS Real Estate Transfers Harold A. Baker etux to Hilbert R. Frey etux, inlot 66 in Decatur. Leland A. Neuen etux to Berne Lumber Co., part out lot 3 in Berne. Lawrence A. Braun etux to Victor H. Eicher, inlot 15 in Decatur. Mary M. Haflich etvir to Frieda Lehmann, inlot 152 in Geneva. Frieda Lehmann to L. Vaughn Haflich etux, inlot 152 in Geneva. Wendell S. Sheehan etux to Kenneth D. Sheehan etux, 80 acres in Root Tp.

Says Unions Seek To Control Farm Labor INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—An official of the American Farm Bureau Federation said today that ‘•irresponsible” labor unions are attempting to gain control of the farm labor supply. Matt Triggs, assistant legislative director for the federation, told delegates to the 41st annual convention of the Indiana Farm Bureau that the AFL-CIO not only has been campaigning to organize farm labor, but has been pressuring Congress and the federal government to apply federal minimum wage and hours laws to farm labor and to prohibit the employment of minors under 16 years of age. “You can’t close down a farm like you can a factory,” Triggs complained. “For this reason any effective organization of farm workers would mean the subservience of farmers to labor union leaders.” Trigg* warned that if the Secretary of Labor succeeds in denying the services of State or Federal Employment Offices to farmers to recruit out-of-state labor unless they meet specified wage and housing and transportation conditions, then the farm community is in danger of being placed under a personal dictatorship. “Too Much Power” “This is too much power for any one man to have over farmers,” Triggs said. “The next Secretary of Labor could be a protege - of Walter Reuther." He said demands for the regulation of farm employment have come normally from liberal Democrats, and not from a Republican Secretary of Labor, “egged on by a self-righteous and empire-build-ing bureaucracy, and apparently motivated by political ambition.” Triggs also condemned labor unions as being largely responsible for such attempts at regulation and said unions are “for every socialist proposal considered by the Congress. Labor unions,” he said, “have been for more public power, for more public housing •.. and for free medical care.” Triggs then called for more stringent “labor reform” legislation which would place unions under the anti-trust laws. In speeches before the convention Wednesday U.S. Surgeon General L.E. Burney told the dangers of mechanization to farm help and agricultural writer John Strohm described Communist China's efforts to modernize her farms. Tells of China Burney, who was Indiana health commissioner before going to Washington, warned that “rural people are increasingly exposed to hazards of an industrial type but lack the supervision given the industrial workers. Because of this, he said, farm accidents are increasing due to the influx of machinery and toxic chemicals. “Few or no precautions are taken to protect the farmer and his workers from heavy exposure to poisonous dusts, mists, and fumes,” Burney said. The Surgeon General also warned that Indiana may have only 85 physicians per 100,000 population by 1970 compared to 97 at the present time. Strohm, a Woodstock, 111., man who has traveled in 70 countries, said that the hate-America campaign “is persuasively logical to cocky Chinese who are feeling their oats after centuries of foreign domination and being run over by their own warlords. “Agriculture is the key to China’s future,” Strohm said. “Her hopes rest squarely on the frenzied efforts of 500 million hoeswinging peasants who are working harder than any people I’ve ever seen.”

ll— —) minn. Z wis - ■ 86,730,000 V. ——— IOWA s —A NEB. \ 826,812,000 \ 1 oH | O 347,800,000 \ Bu * * * > .. I %59^6*. 000 | y \ 696,456,0001 l • ApJ — —-\ Bushels I C \ \ I *°- \ K ' I 244 915,000 \ x' /S/ r I Bushels { J —,—L-.«. »..? ; ‘ @ newsmap I I — I_f f CORN OF PLENTY—This year’s corn crop, the first to be harvested since all acreage con- 1 d tools were eliminated, continues to shape up as a record-breaking one. Newsmap above shows ■ the figures for the nine leading corn producing states, as estimated by the U.S. Agriculture H Department. Total crop, based on conditions at the beginning of November, will be around i 4.4 billion bushels. Although this is a drop of some 26 million bushels from the October 4 estimate, the harvest will still be 600 million bushels above the previous word aet to 19W. / Corn yield in 1959 is put at 52.2 bushels an acre, compared with 51.7 in 1958 and a iMiHW/ average of 40.6 bushels.

Chiropractors Case Delayed To Nov. 25 The case of the state of Ohio versus the five Mercer county chiropractors was continued to Nov. 25 by special judge Robert L. Harrington, of Van Wert, at the Celina court Tuesday. The five defendants, Drs. Charles Amato, John D. Rudd, Herald L. Miller, Orlan W. Geroux, and Albert M. Cochran, have been cited by the state on charges of practicing medicine within the state without a license. Chiropractors are not recognized by the American medical association as medical doctors. Dr. Geroux. serving as spokesman for the group, asked Judge Harrington for the extension, saying, “None of us has seen an attorney yet, but we have completed arrangements to do so.‘” The defendants -had only asked for a one-week stay, but Cecil D. Scott, who filed the complaint, will be

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unavailable next week, thus the two-week extension. The five waived the reading of the affidavits brought against them, each noting his familiarity with the charge. Judge Harrington informed the defendants that, if found guilty, they could be assessed fines ranging from $25 to SSOO for the first offense. It is believed that the group will plead not guilty and request a trial by jury, but this will not be certified until the hearing Nov. 25. It was not known whether the group would seek individual counsel or secure a single defense attorney. Judge Harrington was appointed to the case when Judge Carleton C. Reiser disqualified himself from sitting on the bench because he was personally acquainted with several of the defendants. o 0 20 Years Ago I Today O — —° Nov. 12, 1939 was Sunday and no paper was published.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1959

I > I 'Wy* UK *• ' I SHE SUES— Ethel Davidson, a New York lawyer and losing contestant on TV’s u 2l n quiz, is suing the show’s producers, sponsors and her victorious opponent for $1,200,000. She received a SIOO consolation prize when she was eliminated in her first appearance on the nowdefunct show.