Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 122, Decatur, Adams County, 23 May 1960 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

ON METHODIST CONFERENCE PROGRAM IT KOKOMO -4J! * J* n* nitro«"«'«**• “■'*/"- CWm»< Motto*** Tr*ri« O’ ttodw *••»* ****** 4 >, m\IQFnrt RRTTWa**

Os This And That Ry UMS FOLK Cranty Hwme Demonstration We’re taking a trip, but where now until the middle of June. Home DcmonstrnUon club women will be voting to see which trip we should take. The travel com-; mlttee consisting of Mrs. Elmer Rich, Mrs. Leo King. Sr.. Mrs. Henrv Heiman. Mrs. Joseph Hunter. Mrs. Hugh David Moaner, and Mrs. Dan Striker has planned three trips from which we can Chicago heads the list for a|

DO YOU KNOW THAT—A tombstone in on English village cemetery has the following inscription: Here lies a miser who lived for himself and cared for nothing but gathering pelf. Now, where he is or how he fares Nobody knows and nobody cares. THAT—Your friendly Motorists Mutual insurance agent cares for your welfare and proves it when you need him. - SEE - BURKE INSURANCE SERVICE Don Burke 239 N. 11th St. Phone 3-3050 REPRESENTING MOTORISTS MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY COLUMBUS, OHIO

Mercury’s the better low-price car and you can proveit! JbK ■tw i J m fll IF k - J». & A flk fla. •.. jbf VALUES: Just stop in at COMPARE MERCURYS U)W PRICES: prices start .nd r«L praof Snrthand. Open the front . 6 3 tO’66’below even the lowest-pric«<! V-8 door of a Mercury_it’s up to 5 inches wider than other I powered Plymouth Fury or Chevrolet Impala. 'nd w~ -rt ‘» lki "« > b °“‘ • M Slide into the front seat. Notice now me man *~,. _._i™ mmrarirnn is based on a de luxe-appointed Mercury has been moved far forward. What other car gives you Monterey whiTluxurious nylon interior and thick wall-to-feding of spaciousness? Now accept ourmvitation to go on carpeting. So why settle for less? Get all your money a private demonstration. Notice the steady, silent smooth- Mercury-the better low-price car. sees of the ride. That’s because Mercury has a 7-to-S-inch t n„ L( | fl - ■■■ ■ ■■-«««-»-■*— longer wheelbase than other low-price cars-is up to 494 pounds heavier, and has far more sound-proofing all- XWI W _IT weather insulation. r Try the brakes. They're up to 2GT tarper in a Mercury. j&gggMM Aft> 4 1 Notice the view. Mercury's windshield and windows give you up to 21% greater virabihty than other low-price cars. — for the beat news of aU, just keep ou reeding . .* ■ ■ . QWF Tiff MBR >H®CUBTJH« BETTER AT-*- 1 WO******* SCHWARTZ FORD CO., Inc. 1410 NUTTMAN AVENUE

thrrr du* Um by bug. During the I Uhicnro »» can M-r the Hoard of Tiauk Mu'i um of Scirnc* and Induatn * Gai field Conwrv story. I Mrrrhandbr Mart. Chinatown.! Getto. Chh-sgo Mura-um of Natural Scu-ncr .iQd many othei intoresHna If vou enjov traveling by train | vou can vale for th** trip to Detroit Here we would visit the Ford Mu-eum. Greenfield Village. Bell Isle Detroit Zoo. nnd have a | short visit to Windsor, Canada. | Three days of fun. For a longer trip we can spend | six days in Michigan visiting, Battle Creek and the Kcllog plant. I Lansing. Machinac Island. Mock-j inac City. Sault Ste Marie. Sool Junction. Tahquamcnon Falls, the locks and home through Marshall.; Michigan. Each of these trips sound like

Therefore, don’t forget to be pre-M-nt and vote on the trip you want to take at your next club meeting Your club president has more in formation on each trip, including dates and cost. Gardening There's a big wide wonderful; arc an armchair gordenrr or the’ real dirt kind, when you visit your I public library. Whether you nre| planning lawns, gardens or plant-’ ing trees there arc a lot of new books on the library shelves. Some 1 of these found in the Dcgaturi Library arc: "The Gardener's World'* by| Joseph Wood Krutch. Mr. Krutch is one of America’s most distinguish'd men of letters. In this book he has given 128 selections by i 103 authors telling about man in I nature nnd man, the gardener. Here are the stories about the 1 fashions in gardening, the plant i exptorations, the myths, fantisies ’ and history. "Light and Plant Growth” by R Van DerVeen, and G. Meijer. Light plays a dominant part in the many biological processes that take place in plants. Phenomena 'or, stages) such as germination, I growth, flowering and dormancy not only depend on temperature but also on light. "Plants That Changed the World” by Bertha S. Dodge. This ! book describes sofrie of the plant products that have helped make history. This is an interesting book to read, but is also a valuable book to everyone. “The Grasses" by Alma Chesnut Moore. This informative book deals with the entire grass family, (

THE DEC*ATTN DAILY WM'<‘*aT DFfATVN INDIAN

iHi tuutiAfl mH ttwi tt iiftt Chit Sir ■ th< biisu «4 <w Hflrcliy <*•*!• Md I whiHl KB luiditrcl |w»ii kA <B< ItW fnfl'ftt AUBm aUUfTf DBtFf A-1 tJif liVf ill tiMF CYMMNjf I tort that vt*l CAD read ftw th« i F.BUM»rl«lty far (ireflAatre mins of you at<* beginning to pi..n you begin to purrhare good china, glass, or flatware, remember to that the china ha« the same type the whole table blends t'>gcther eour table is s<*t Very formal or Flatware, whether sterling. Silver ulate or stainless steel, is beat bought by the place setting A btkir might reasonably start with one or two add more as needed Glassware is usually sold in fours, eights, and dozens, also it is void in blacc setting*. Sterling silver has tong been! appreciated for its liminous beauty | and its lasting value All silvefware marked sterling" must contain 925 parts pure silver and TS, parts copper,. Solid silver would I be much too soft for practical use : Machine* methods have spr'eded up the manufacture of sterling and thus reduced the cost. But the I final finishing is always done by' hand Sterling silver is always the. result of master craftsmanship. Silver plate is accomplished by electrically depositing several lay-, ers of silver on a non-precious me-' tai The value of silver plated ‘ flatware depends upon the thick-1 nes of the silver coating. "Inlaid” and "over-laid” pieces generally ! are of a better value as small 1 stealing inserts are placed at points of stress. Stainless steel, an alloy of steel, | chromium and nickel, is the modern metal which has risen to popularitv American design in stain-i les steel is more sculptural in • feeling and uses more ornamentation than European designs. In-1 lays, engraving and embossing are typical of the American approach The finish may be highly , polished or have a lustrous satiny effect. Today stainless steel can be purchased in many patterns to I

/j < BREEZY—Bift open-weave rtraw doesn’t keep out the soft cummer breeze*—or the sun, the raiti or anything. It waa dosigned by Canessa of Rome. — • _______

I create the most formal or informal dinner table. Regardless of the type of silver I you purchase, remember that it i ' must last for years and years; 1 therefore look at the pattern you like several times before you pur-j ' chase it. Next week watch for a . continuation of Especially for \ Graduates for information on buy- : mg glassware. 2nd Finch, Tregoff Trial Slated Today LOS ANGELES ' UPD—Wealthy l Dr. R. Bernard Finch and . his j paramour Carole Tregoff were scheduled to return to court today I for the start of their second trial! on charges of murdering Finch’s wife for Jove and money, but de-1 sense objections could cause a delay. The first trial of red - haired Miss Tregoff ,23-year-old former model and receptionist. and Finch. 42. lasted three months and ended March 12 in a mistrial. The second trial was expected to last just as long or longer. The first jury favored conviction for the handsome, tennisplaying physician and acquittal for Carole in the July 18 gunshot slaying of Mrs Barbara Jean, Finch. 33, but the five men and seven women jurors failed to reach unanimous agreement. Attorneys for Miss Tregoff expected a ruling before the trial’s | start on their appeal to the Cali-: fornia Supreme Court to disqualify ■ presiding Judgfc Le Roy Dawson, A ruling favoring the defense j would delay the-trial for an in-: definite period until another judge ■ was Should the state's high court : rale against Miss Tregoff’s attorneys and allow the triaT to get underway, Finch's attorney, Grant Cooper, indicated tie would argue before Dawson that the retrial should be held in another area. He claimed in an unsuccessful change of venue argument before the first trial that Finch was unable to get a fair hearing in Los Angeles or surrounding counties because of widespread prejudice. Courtroom observers predicted the same intense excitement and interest would surround the second trial as the first — when long lines of the curious waited each day to witness the courtroom drama.

BTz/1. fJBy bKfwßviE wo-JW B' Wi y *” J 4Mt*4** * j., 7”F * J jjk' ‘ .jLSfeB " BIT ? ~ |pF ■ £ v * £ ■' | Bfclp ■ • 5 * I '* *< s&W W ONCE OVER LIGHTLY—AIIan Hay, 5, isn’t impressed by this chandelier at the 27th annual Chicago Antiques exposition. It was made about 1900 by famed glass worker Louis Tiffany of New York. It was valued at IL2QO when new. '

Soviet Press, Radio Heaping Abuse On Ike MOSCOW <UPD — The Soviet j press and radio heaped abuse on President Eisenhower today but ! pledged to keep Germany out of , the crisis stage pending another I summit conference. The attack against Eisenhower ! pictured him as a hypocrate, a general rattier than a president and not a very good general at . that, a false friend of the Soviet I Upton and a man who is trying [to continue the cold war. Articles in the government newspaper Izvestia Sunday and the Communist Party newspaper Pravda today said Eisenhower had duped the Soviet Union into thinking he wanted to ease world tensions Up to the time of the downing of the U-2 spy plane on Soviet territory May 1 the Soviet Press had depicted Eisenhower as a good intentioned man who was receiving some bad advice from Pentagon militarists. Despite the attack on EisenI hower. Moscow Radio said Sunday night that Russia did not intend to sign a separate peace 'treaty with East Germany without further consultations with the Western allies. “Premier Khrushchev has agreed that a peace treaty would ’be signed only after negotiations with the wartime allies," the broadcast said. "The Soviet* Union keeps its promises. The peace treaty is a means to ease tensions, .not to increase them. . ." Londoners Parade For Ban On Weapons LONDON <UPI) — Nearly 2,000 persons Sunday marched through London to urge a ban on nuclear weapons and a new attempt at holding summit talks. The marchers, organized by the London Regional Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, shouted slogans demanding the removal from Britain of American troops. One of the slogans was, “Yankee pack your cases—we don’t want your bases.

Fund Started For Girl With Cancer

A cuuniy wide fund to aanre Uw and ‘urglral ear# of llyearoM Ctanna Ma* l ttougb. daughlci <4 Mr and Mr» 1 Ivan <Pat» Hough. of Geneva. received » dunatawu over «*• Weekend. The movement WM rtarted in Geneva by the paatar and rongregatWM of u* Geneva Church at th«- Namrenc to help <h«’ young girt, already In oxygm. who la dying inch by meh from canrer ol the bone and the Wood ( The young girl does not kn<»« ( her true condition, and every rs- i, fort haa been made to keep it j fn»m her. though death may comc| j pT aimart any time Her lung* Vr been filling wtth fluid, and to administered continu-1, mirtv to keep her from smother ( Thg to death Two tank, are uacd | each day < IxM-aUm of Caantatera Cannirter* to help the young girl are located in Decatur a» ( i follow* Kocher Lumber Co . t Gerber« Market. HoUhouac on - the Highway, Harmon* Market,; First State Bank. Goodin * Mar- 1 ket Decatur Sport Center. MAC ' Truck Stop. Shaffer Restaurant, i Holthouse Drug Store, and Wertz-/ berger Confectionery The Rev Roy E Baker, pastor r of the Geneva Nazarene church, has been looking after the transportation and hooking up of the oxygen tanks, which have been used, two a day. at home when the girl begged to be brought home from the hospital. Sore On Foot Until about a year ago Donna Mae was a strong, healthy girl. Then she complained of a sore foot, which failed to heal. The condition was diagnosed as cancer of the bone seven months ago. The girl was taken to Ball . Memorial hospital, in Muncie,, where Dr. John Walker, bone specialist, and Dr. Donald Tay-. lor. cancer specialist, performed. surgery. Doctors from the Bluff- ( ton Clinic and Chicago were called into consultation. Everything that medical science, could do has been done, including; a series of 56 therapy at Muncie, but her case is now: hopeless and all that can be done' is to make her last days as com-1 sortable as possible. Burden On Family The care necessary for the young girl has imposed a tremendous burden on the family Hough is a carpenter of limited means. The people of the county, feeling that the girl needed help, have organized under the leadership of the Geneva pastor of the Hough’s church to give that help. Cannisters have been placed I throughout Berne and Geneva, as Well as Decatur. Some of the gifts presented so far include: Andy’s Place. $44; General Electric. second shift. $32.50: Kozy Korner, S3O; Mrs. Harold Mattox. $5; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dellinger.' $L Rev. Baker will have complete charge of the disbursal of the funds for the young girl. Deaths Are Termed Murder And Suicide GARY, Ind. * UPD — George Harris, 29, Gary, and his estranged wife, Daisy, 33, were shot to death Saturday in what police termed a murder-suicide. Police said the couple had been separated about two months and Mrs. Harris was sharing an apartment with Rosalie Little, a girl friend. Miss’ Little told authorities Harris asked to see his wife, but was rebuffed. She said he returned about 20 minutes later with a shotgun and she fled for help. When police arrived the couple was dead They theorized that Harris shot his wife in the head and then killed himself. NEAR INCH Continued from page one reported one inch of rain falling last week, with .8 from Thursday on. , The rain, which was general throughout the county, was expected to delay planting four or five days at best.

ASSOCIATE BSC DEGREES 1- ■ f *” *•*"•• ta— ' * Business Administration & Finance * Executive Secretarial * Professional Accounting

MONDAY, MAY B

Sen. Kennedy, Rivals Scrap For Delegates WASHINGTON (UP! I —The c«x»tert tor toe Democratic preside*tiai n«Mnto«tton moved into • new Arena today with Sen John F. Kennedy and hi* rival* ready to ■crarnbte tor delegate* rtill uncommitted or *UU to be ehewen The Oregon vote last Friday was the last of the major prr«idcntlal primary contort* Uli* year before the Democratic national convention open* at Lxia Angele* seven week* from today Twenty of the SO state* rtill must cbooae delegate*, although the delegation* from two of there — Indiana and Maryland—•alreadv are committed to Kennedy for at least one baltot by their presidential preference vote* Kennedy’s victory in Oregon was hi* seventh without a defeat, although he had major contests in only four state*. He started the campaign a* the man to beat and the primaries served to stretch his lead over such actual or prospective rivals as Sen. Stuart Symington, Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson and Adlai E Stevenson. After two defeats apiece by Kennedy. Sens Hubert H. Humphrev and Wayne L. Morse both bowed out as candidates for the presidential nomination. The United Pres* International count of committed and known I first ballot preferences now show* Kennedy with 3034 convention votes. Johnson with 984 ana I Symington with 614- A candidate needs 761 votes to win the Demo- ■ cratic nomination. 1 These figures do not tell the 'whole story because sentiment has jelled in some states which have I not yet cho*en delegates. In state > conventions next month, for example. Texas will provide 61 votes ! for Johnson and Connecticut 21 for Kennedy.’ The Evangelical Lutheran church has a baptized membership of 1 153.566. It gained 34.445 members during 1959. an increase of 3.07 per cent over 1958.

Quality I Photo Finishings Alt Work Left Before 8:00 p. m. Monday Ready Wednesday at 10 a. m. Holthouse Drug Co. L - , JH-I ■ ~ -~- • I <••»»««•- -■ *■ *" - -»•• •• pflirtcarvedl DIAMOND RINGS I | BOWER |