Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 59, Number 157, Decatur, Adams County, 6 July 1961 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

ORDINANCE ftbert Title: An Ordinance Annexin* Continuous Territory to the City •f Decatur, Adams County, IndiBR IT ORDAINED by the Common Council of the City of Decatur, Indiana, as follows: Meetloa 1. That the following described real estate which Is eontlauous to the City of Decatur, Indiana, in hereby annexed and Biade n part of the City of Decatur, a..Oak Ridge Place Addition as previously platted by Ueland L. Frank and Esther C. Frank, being land located In Washington Township, Adams County, Indiana, consisting of fifteen (15) lots, numbered 1 to 15, noth Inclusive, which plat was duly recorded on November 9. I*sl in Plat Book 3 at pages 1«6. 167, and 1«» in the office of tne Recorder of Adams County, Indiana, which plat is described as being Lot* I through 15 both inclusive in said Oak Ridge Place, and which when originally platted consist-,, ed of the following metes and bounds description, being located in Adams County, Indiana, to-wit: Commencing 40 rods south of the northeast corner of the west hAlf of the northeast quarter of Section 4, Township 87 North, Range 14 East, thence west parallel with the north line of said quarter section 28 rods and 8 links, thence south 57 rods to the center of the Bluffton and Decatur Road, thence a northeasterly course along the center of said Road to the east line of said west half of said northeast quarter, thence north 48 rods to the place of beginning. Except therefrom the following three parcels: Commencing in the center of of the Bluffton and Decatur Road at the southeast corner of .the -Decatur Cemetery, also known as the Maplewood Cemetery, thenee east IS degreea north in the center of said road It) rods, thence north 1 degree 41 minutes west 11 rods to the located ditch,, thence a northwesterly course in the center of said ditch 20 rods to the '»:*YBa«V‘ Mne or said Maplewood Cemetery Grounds, thence south 1 degree 41 minutes east 28 rods to the place of beginning,Tnntatning 1.87 acres. Commencing In the center of the Bluffton and Decatur Road at*a point 184.1 feet south 78 degrees 5 minutes west of a point where the center of said road crosses the east line of the west half of the -northeast quart er of Hectlon 4, Township 27 North, Range 14 East thence north 7 degrees 26 minutes west 170 feet, thence south 81 degrees 5 minutes went 90 feet; thence south 1 degree 13 minutes east 177.4 feet to the center of lire Bluffton and Decatur Road; thence north 78 degrees 5 minutes east In the center of said road ltd feet to the place of beginning containing 0.40 acres more or less. Commencing in the center of the Bluffton and Decatur Road at a point 244.1 feet south <8 degrees 5 minutes west of a point where the center of said road croseda the east line of the west half, of the Wortb,-.. east quarter of Section 4. Township 1 87 NOfth, Range 14 East; thence north 1 degree IS minutes west 177.4 feet, thence minutes east 181.5 feet to the south 81 degrees 5 minutes west 69.8 feet, thence south I degree 18 minutes east 181.5

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feet to the center of the Bluffton and Decatur Road, thence north 78 degrees 5 minutes east In the center of said road 70 feet to the place of beginning, containing 0.28 acres more or less. b. The following described real estate which Is owned by Fay Mu tackler Baker, as shown by a deed recorded . May 8, .1853 In Deed Record 181 at page 92 In the office of the Recorder of Adams -County, Indiana, and legally described ax the following described real estate located In Adams-County, Indiana, to-wlt: Commencing in the center of the B)ufftofi * Decatur Road at a point 184.1 feet Routh 78 degreea 5 minutes west of a point where the center of said road crosses the East line of' the West half of the Northeast quarter of Hectlon 4. Township 27 North, Range 14 East; thence North 7 degrees 26 minutes West 170 feet, thenee Routh 81 degrees 5 minutes West 90 feet, thence Routh 1 degree 13 minutes East 177.4 feet to the center of the Bluffton Mr Decatur Road, thenee North ,8 degrees 5 minutes East In the center of said road 110 feet to the place of beginning, containing 0.40 acres more or less. e. Land being purchased by Hubert F. Gilpin and Beatrice M. Gilpin, husband and wife, from Decatur Chamber of Commerce. Inc., un Indiana corporation, which property Is more fiarticularly described as the oilowing described real estate ocated In Adams County. Indiana, to-wlt: . ~ Commencing on the north line of the southeast quarter of Hectlon 4. Township 2i North, Range 14 East In Adams County. ... Indiana, at a point which Is 1327 feet west of the northeast corner of said quarter section; thence west along the north line of said quarter section 706.5 feet to the wesT line of the second parcel of land as described and conveyed In Deed Record 124 at page 284 of the Records of Adams County, Indiana; thence south at an angle of 90 degrees 42 minutes left, and along said west line, 610 feet to the northerly right of way of the New York. Chicago and St. Loiilh Railroad Company; thence north 73 degrees 27 minutes east along said right of way, 150 feet to a point of tangency with a curve to left of 13,407.19 feet radius; thence northeasterly on said curve and following the northerly side of said right of wav, 580.2 feet to the werft line of the lands of Decatur Industries, Inc... as deserlbedin Deed Record 127 at page 291 of said Records of Adams County; thence north along said west line, 403 feet more or less to the place of beginning. containing 8.2 acres more or less, and being a part of the north-west quarter of the southeast quarter of said Section 4. Section 2. Alli of the various restrictive convenants. set-back lines originally contained in the Oak Ridge Place Addition referred to In paragraph la above shall continue and be In full force and effect, and this ordinance is also In furtherance and In compliance with n certain contract between the City of Decatur. Indiana, and the owners of all the lots In the sold Oak Ridge Place and Fay Mutachler Baker, which contract has been duly recorded on May 3, .1961 in Miscellaneous Record 8 at pages 213- 219 in the office of the Recorder of Adams County, Indiana. Hectlon !t. This ordinance 1h additional and supplemental to any and all other existing ordinances pertaining to the boundary lines to the City of Decatur, Indiana, and does not purport to define the entire boundary lines of the Citv of Decatur, Indiana but the I above hind is hereby annexed and I shall be in addition to other land now In the City of Decatur, Indi-’ ana. _ , ~ MecHon 4, This ordinance shall be In full force and effect from and after its passage, approval by the Mayor and publication for two consecutive weeks In a dally newspaper of general circulation published In the City of Decatur, Adams County, Indiana. Duly adopted by the Common Council of the City of, Decatur, Indiana this 20 day of June, 1961. Donnld F. Wage, Presiding Officer ATTEST* , ~ La urn A. Bosse. Clerk-Treasurer Approved by me this 20 day of June, 1961. 4 Donnld F. Onge, Mayor ATTEST: I.nurn A. Bosse, Clerk-Treasurer June 29. July 6.

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Hoffa Crushes All W -’•'r-vts- . - -J / Union Opposition

MIAMI BEACH (UPI)-James R. Hoffa was armed today with a sl2 million dues increase, a pay raise and vastly greater powers to start his new organizing and political offensive. The Teamsters president crushed all opposition Wednesday night in an overtime session at the union’s convention that awarded him a $25,000 a year pay increase in less time than it takes to count it. His outnumbered opponents protested that Hoffa-backed changes in the Teamsters constitution would stifle rank and file participation. They were routed in a series of one-sided votes. Hoffa, hoarse but happy after Wednesday night's display of his iron-clad grip on the convention, set Friday for the election that will keep him in the top job for another five years. The strongest opposition developed against his demand for a compulsory $1 a month dues increase on each member of the nation’s biggest union except for "hardship cases.” Speaks For Dissenters Edward H. Painter of Oakland, Calif., Local 770 spoke for many dissenting delegates when he told Hoffa: "Inch by inch you’ve taken away our local autonomy. And now you want us to pay the freight." £? The 48-year-old union leader rejected the claims and said the additional funds will be used to provide ft pension plan for local union officers, raise strike benefits, expand organizing drives and increase political action programs. Allies of Hoffa buried a demand for a referendum among the 1.7 million Teamsters to choose the top officers. This was a bitter defeat for Hoffa’s only announced rival for the presidency, Milton J. Lift of Newark, N.J., who demanded the secret ballot referendum. Turn Down Referendum Delegates turned it dowh with a deafening "no.” Hoffa's major victory was convention approval of a sl2-million revenue-raising plan that he advocated. ' 1 - 4t-calls for_6o-cent monthly increases in the present 40-cent tax imposed on each member and a boost in minimum dues from $3 to -$5 a month for virtually all of I the 887 locals. I Hoffa gaveled through his own pay raise to $75,000 a year and i an unlimited expense account I without any debate. Salaries of , the 13 Teamsters vice presidents were doubled. British Warships Sail Through Suez CAIRO, U.A.R. (U.PI) — Six • British warships completed a peaceful passage through the Suez Canal today without interference from the United Arab Republic and headed for the waters off troubled Kuwait.h The convoy included an aircraft carrier and several support ships. It made up the largest single royal navy transit of the canal • since the 1956 Suez crisis. The U.A.R. has demanded that Britain get its forces out of Kuwait and some difficulty had been feared. However, the U.A.R. adhered to the terms of the inter- ! national convention of 1888 which guarantees freedom of t r a n sit through the canal to the warships of all nations whether in peace or war. (In London, British Prime Minister Harold Macmilan called First Lord of the Admiralty Lord Carrington into a cabinet session, apparently to discuss the U.A.R. demand for British withdrawal from Kuwait.)

■ •»-- 111 " '**'** fej.il y ■I . ■ v I •i ■■»«F ■<. <-. A|H|' I '’** HKmI HiS:^Ml jm B*a7'Ji ■■■•■•;<•■ . If M/ijH /- lit Ifißy w tHKHMP* w* f inEHr - w Bl . if > - J THREE FOR ONE— A small nuclear power plant is is attached to the base of the Transit IV-A satellite at Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in Baltimore, Md. Ibis and two other satellites were orbited from Cape .Canaveral, Fla., to gather radiation data from space. ,

188 DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. IWDIAHA

Midwest Areas Are Plagued By Bad Weather By United Press International Winds up to 50 miles per hour sliced out of the wheatlands into Kansas City, Mo., funnel clouds hopped across Kansas and hot weather spawned drought and grasshopper woes today in a midwestern weather onslaught. The U.S. Weather Bureau forecast higher temperatures in the southern Great Lakes and plateau states mixed* with showers and thunderstorms along a broad band from the central Great Plains to New Jersey and the northern Virginias. In Wisconsin, Gov. Gaylord Nelson and the state Agricultural Disaster Committee appealed for federal assistance to permit extended purchases of surplus grain by drought-plagued livestock farmers. In Indiana, Purdue University entomologists warned migratory grasshoppers, more worrisome than those invading the northern Plains, are hatching in hot weather and threaten severe crop damage. Early morning storms at KansasCity lashed the city with 2 inches of rain and 50 m.p.h. gusts. Heavy winds unroofed the Grand River mutual Telephone Corp, at Mount Moriah, Mo., knocking out service to Eagleville, Ridgeway and Mount Moriah. At Trenton, Mo., hail measured an inch thick and the temperature dropped 20 degrees in 16 minutes. Water stood a foot deep in streets at Gault, Mo., just east of Trenton. Chillicothe, Mo., lost a third of its power from utility pole damage and winds were clocked at 75 m.p.h. Wednesday night at Lamoni, lowa. Two funnel clouds threatened Topeka, Kan., but did not touch ground. Weather east of the Mississippi River generally was mild, with scattered showers in the north central Atlantic states and Florala peninsula. Readings dropped to 47 at Lebanon, N.H., and 48 at Bradford, Pa., Elmira, N.Y., and Old Town, Maine. The Weather Bureau predicted mostly ffir to occasionaly cloudy weather from the southwestern plateau states to the central and southern Pacific Coast. Chilling was in store for the Ohio Valley and northern Rocky Mountains. Central Soya Union Holds Annual Picnic Members of the Brewery Workers Union, Local 261, held their second annual picnic at Sunset park July 4. Over 700 people were present for the picnic dinner of barbecued beef, potato salad, baked beans, and all the soft drinks and ice cream that could be eaten. In the afternoon, the adults played games, with the children participating in games according to age groups. Forrest Hawkins was in charge of the food committee, and Oral Fulton headed the games committee. MODERN ETIQUETTE Q. 'At a recent college prom, while I was dancing with my escort, another boy cut in on us, and then before that dance was over still another boy cut in. I have been criticized since for permitting that second “cut.” Was I I wrong? A. Properly, you should have politely refused the second "cutin” during that one particular dance number.

Hi-Way Trailer Court News Mr.and Mrs. Darvon Light will move in at 17 Krick St. next Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rice of Delphos, Ohio spent last Thursday with their daughter, Mrs. Gene Wilson, 44 Vindale Trail. Mr. and Mrs. -Earl Jones and family have returned from their vacation at Bechley, W. Va. Mrs. Agnes Wright has returned from a visit to her daughter, Mrs. Mary Jane Smith, and family in Columbus, Ohio, who returned with her for a brief visit. Mr. and Mrs. Rusty Clingman and family of Troy, Ohio were visiting friends here Monday. They are former residents of the court. Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Gerig and family spent the 4th at Auburn. Mrs. Roman Greullch of Delphos, Ohio spent last Thursday with her daughter, Mrs. Beverly Franks, 7 Detroiter Ave. Dan Highlen, 42 Vindale Trail, is enjoying his two week’s vacation. Miss Linda Lobdell of LaFontaine, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Vivian DeVor. The tennis court is finished and adds much to the joy of the tennis fans. Rev. Terry Smith and family spent the 4th with his grandmother, Mrs. Agnes Wright, at 6 Krick St. Master Dwayne Gerig, 519 S. 13 St., fell and broke his arm last Saturday, while trying to open the mail box while standing on his tricycle. Mr. and Mrs. Steve Brandenbury, 14 Krick St, spent the 4th at Pokagon state park. Chas. Peterson’s mother, Mrs. Mabel E. Peterson of Irwin, Pa. is visiting him and his family at 48 Vindale Trail. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hinkle, 14 Detroiter Ave., spent several days with their new boat at the lakes. The DeVor family reunion was held July 4th, with a 6 o’clock dinner in the recreation building, with 24 present. The annual fireworks display at the court here was witnessed by the largest crowd in its history. The display included 10 ground pieces, Niagara Falls, spinning wheels, American flag, falling stars and 34 aerial pieces. Passenger Killed As Bus Hits Tree CENTREVILLE, Va. (UPD—A Washington, D. C., woman was killed afid 28 other passengers were injured today when a Trailways bus skidded out of control and crashed into a tree near here. The dead woman was identified by Fairfax county police as Margie Biscoe, 52. Several jpther passengers were admitted to the hospital for treatment. The others were treated for cuts and bruises and were released according to Richard Foster, associate administrator of the Fairfax County hospital. The wreck occurred about a mile from Centreville, near Washington, D. C. Foster said “a number” of the Injured were children. The bus was bound for Washington from Charlotte, N. C. Police said the bus apparently went out of control during a steady rain. It whipped around in the middle of the road and the rear of the bus struck a tree. Dick Heller Attends Meetings In Capital Dick Heller left this morning for Indianapolis, where he will attend a meeting of the Indiana library and historical board today, and a meeting of the Indiana sesquicentennial committee Friday. Friday evening he will drive to Cleveland, O’, for the American library trustees association meeting Saturday, Sunday, and Monday.

U. S. Peace Corps Now In Business

By LOUIS CASSELS United Press International WASHINGTON (UPD — The Peace Corps is in business. Six months ago, it was just a campaign phrase that had fired the public imagination. Four months ago it came to life on paper, when President Kennedy signed an Executive order creating if, and named his brother-in-law, Sargent Shriver, as its director. Today the corps is a flesh-and-blood reality. It has a headquarters staff of 150 people bustling around on three floors of a commercial office building two blocks from the White House. And —more important — it has about 200 real live young Americans already in training, on college campuses in Texas, California and New Jersey, for voluntary service in underdeveloped countries. Several hundred . additional corps members will be selected and sent to training centers during July and August. By September, 1 the first contingent will go abroad. Five Projects Approved Five Peace Corps projects have been approved — in Ghana, the Philippines, Columbia, Chile and the Caribbean island of St. Lucia. Others are in the works for India, Pakistan, Thailand, Nigeria and several Latin American countries. Officials estimate that 1,000 corps members will be on the job overseer or en route" to foreign posts by the end of the year. In the transition from idea to actuality, the Peace Corps has undergone changes which have made it a little less romantic than the original dream but, in the opinion of congressmen and diplomats considerably more practical. There is no longer any talk of a vast army of enthusiastic youths swarming abroad to live in

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mud huts and perform menialmanual labor without pay. It is now clear that the Peace Corps will be a relatively small organization for the foreseeable future. Officials expect no more than 3,000 members by the end of 1962. Need Skilled Help It is also clear that'warm hearts and willing hands, although certainly needed, will not be enough to qualify for Peace Corps service. The underdeveloped countries have plenty of manpower for manual labor. What they need—and what the Peace Corps will try to supply — is skilled people who know how to teach school, build barns, survey roads, raise chickens, or handle other tasks requiring experience, training or technical proficiency. Living conditions for the Peace Corps, while rugged by American standards, will be well above the mud hut level. The rule of thumb is that corps members will receive allowances sufficient to enable them to maintain approximately the same standard of living as their counterparts in the countries in which they are serving. Thus the 300 Americans who are going to the Philippines to teach English will live like Filipino teachers, and not like primitive Bantok tribesmen of the mountain provinces. In addition to living allowances, corps members will receive a stipend of $75 a month, which will be held in escrow for payment when they are mustered out after two or three years service. Applications Pour In More than 11,000 Americans have applied for corps membership on these term, and new applications are still pouring in at a rate of more than 100 a day. This fact suggests to Shriver that it is time to stop calling America’s younger generation “security-

THURSDAY, JULY g, 1961

minded” and "uncommitted.” The tremendous response has made it possible for the corps to be highly selective. It is screening applicants carefully in an effort to insure that corps members will be physically hardy and emotionally stable, and that they will possess the maturity, knowledge and competence to serve as attractive representatives of America. This is a great relief to diplomatic officials and members of Congress who had feared that a horde of immature, politically unsophisticated youngsters might be sent abroad to wreak further damage on America’s image in the underdeveloped countries. Corps members wil receive fom tzo to four months of intensive training before they take up their duties abroad. They will study foreign languages and customs, brush up their knowledge of America’s history and institutions, and take refresher courses in their own skils or technical specialties. Adams Central Girls Attend Institute Miss Barbara Carver, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clair Carver, route 1, Monroe, and Miss Janice Ringger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ringger, also of route 1, Monroe, have been selected to represent Adams Central high school at the 15th annual high school journalism institute at Indiana University. The newspaper workshop, which both girls will attend, runs from July 9 to July 22. Miss Ringger is editor of the school newspaper. Greyhound Gazette, and Miss Carver is the business manager. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want Ads! They get Big results. ATHLETE'S FCOT GERM HOW TO KILL IT. IN 3 DAYS, Ts not pleased with strong, instantdrying T-4-L, your 48c back at any drug store. Watch infected skin slough off. Watch healthy ; skin replace It. Itch and burning are gone. Today at Kohne Drug Store.