Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 245, Decatur, Adams County, 17 October 1962 — Page 11
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1861
(Continued From Pag* Two-A) SCOOL REPORTER tors and juniors to avail themseves of a worthwhile opportunity. — D.C.H.S. - The first session of the speech arts seminar was held Wednesday, October 10. This group of students will learn bow to use the art of speech in the various occupations such as drama, radio broadcasting, debating, and other public speaking. The students wish to thank Rev. Robert Content, assistant pastor, for this opportunity. They are certain that they will .acquire a skill to help them in the future. ,l< — D.C.H.S. - Friday, October 12, the national honor society held its induction ceremony at 2 in the afternoon for all junior and high school students. Ttie program opened by the band led by Edward Heimamj playing “On D.C.H.S." '-t V Th l ls My Country.” "Carnival . oLJMutes,”’ and concluding with a mtdley of semtelassical music. Next on the program was a panel, led by Mary Lou Lengerich, president of N.H.S., discussing the N.H.S. The panel members and topics are as follows: Joyce Veintor on what it is and its his]l tory, Sarah Sutton and Mary z Sehurger on its aims, Judith SelkIng bn the advantages of the N.H43, Fred Schurger on scholarship, Sharon Miller on leadership, Jerome Geimer on character, and Mary Ann Holthouse on servto&| The induction ceremony followed I in which Joyce Geimer, Judy Selking, Louise Wilder, and Agnes Therese Hain lit the candles of leadership, scholarship, serving, and character from the symbolic torch of knowledge lit last year by charter members. Those in» ducted were: Sarah Sutton, Ma»y 2. Schurger, Fred Schurger, John La Fontaine, Dale Harshman, Mary Ann Holthouse, Lawrence Gase, and James Geimer. The chorus and members of the N.H S. then sang “One Little Candle.” Monsignor Schmitt then spoke to the student body, commenting favorably upon what had taken place. The ceremony concluded with everyone Singing "God Bless American.*' ‘ djC.h.s. — St. Francis College in Fort Wayne has invited the Seniors to its annual senior day. The students will
< JUG MILK 0 $ In Sparkling Glass... 3«c V 4 gallon AT YOUR NEARBY EQUITY STORE
PUBLIC SALE 17 HEAD OF HIGH GRADE HOLSTEIN COWS -1 BULL OTHER EQUIPMENT W I, the undersigned, will sell my entire herd of high grade Holstein cows, and other articles at auction, located 2% miles west of Berne, Indiana, on Friday Evening, October 26,1962 7 O’CLOCK 17—HEAD OF GOOD HOLSTEIN MILK COWS-17 6 Holstein cows, 2 to 5 years old, fresh in September. 4 Holstein cows, 3 to 4 yrs. old, due to freshen by sale day. 2 Holstein heifers, 2 yrs. old, fresh in August. 3 Holstein cows, 5 yrs. old, rebred and on good flow of milk. 1 Holstein cow, 5 yrs. old, due to freshen to December. 1 Holstein cow, 2 yrs. old, fresh in June. 1 Good Holstein bull, 1 yr. old, a good breeder. This is a good herd of milk cows, all are young cows and'lots of size. All cows are milking from 5 gal. to 9 gal. of milk a day, breeding dates and what each cow is milking will be given on sale day. This herd of cows can be inspected anytime before sale day. All W C Allis Chalmers tractor with mechanical lift cultivators. 1951 4-dobr Plymouth car in good running condition. 3 yr old bay gelding with saddle, well broke. Universal 2-unit milker complete, Esco 4-can milk cooler, double wash tank, milk strainer. TERMS —CASH Not responsible for accidents. E. M. REINHARD, Owser Phil Neuenschwander, Auctioneer , Maynard Rehman, Auctioneer First Bank of Berne, Clerk
be shown around the college and given a general idea ot what Itos ahead ot them in collage. I am sure it will prove to be both interesting and educational. - D.C.H.fi. - Says Today's Woman Truly Weaker Sex By GAT PAULEY UPI Women** Editor NEW YORK (UPl)—Virginia C. Gildersleeve, who spent 36 years as dean of a woman’s college, holds the strong opinion that today’s woman truly la the weaker sex. _ • This, she said, Is true despite the “lip service (paid) to the equality of woman with man in education and careers.” Miss Gildersleeve deplores this weakness, from the standpoint of developing and using much-need-ad feminine brains, as well as masculine. “When is today’s woman going to have time to be a Madame Curie?’’, asked the internationally famous educator. She has just observed her 85th birthday. ”1 think women are worse off now than they were 30 or 40 years ago,” she said in a telephone interview from her home in Bedford Village, N.Y. “Professionally and educationally, women are not going onward and upward. P attribute this partly to the overemphasis on sex. . .women think OiLi getting married. If you remain single, as I did, you're something odd.” r Pressure To Marry ‘‘There is a great deal of pressure to get married,” she continued. “Women now marry younger. i , TWe need ;the educated housewire certainly. ' **But in our times, there aren’t enough brains to go around... Somewhere along the line, we’ve got to catch or re-catch the best brains...” Miss Gildersleeve explores the nature of today’s woma in her new book, “A Hoard For Winter” (Columbia University Press), 13 essays ’she wrpte between her 75th and;B2pd ye'ara ud dedicated to her at Barnard College, New Ybrk. She was graduated from Barnard in 1899 and was dean of the college, the woman’s branch of Columbia, from 1911 until her retirement ’in 1947. Miss Gildersleeve first joined the college staff as English instfuctor in 1900. ? . * Have More Worir In her essays, she ’observes that “the - vast majority of American women'today are by force of circumstances* compelled to labor more continuously, in arid out of the home, than any woman of the past in a society with a comparable standard of living.” Miss Gildersleeve is outspoken* on subjects other than today’s woman. Education, for instance. “My impressiori is that it's flabby,” she said, “Too easy. Parents and teachers dbn’t want to make children work. Some of the professional educators have strange habits. They’re more interested in adjusting us to society than to training minds. I have a thing about trained minds.” « On the world’s future—“l'm an optimist.” She reminded that she helped charter the United Nations 17 years ago and added that it is “man’s best chance for peace and well-being” along with the world’s “hope for survival.” Sense Os Adventure On having reached 85 years of age—“As I approach the tip end of-dife itself, I find that I can loqk out into the unknown reach;«sr*of eternity with something of 'friy old eager sense of high {adventure." The dean emeritus lives in a Bedford Village house built by John Jay, first chief justice of tfte United States. It is believed to have been designed by Thomas Jefferson. Miss Gildersleeve’s father was a justice of the Supreme Court of New York state
Birch Bayh Is Working Long Hours Daily By EUGENE J. CADOU United Frees International INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — Indiana’s senatorial campaigning these days is at the most feverish of any since Sen. Vance Hartke swamped Gov. Harold W. Handley in 1958. Emulating Hartke, who was one of the hardest-working candidates in Hoosier history. Democratic nominee Birch E. Bayh spends 16 to 20 hours a day campaigning and his pretty wife, Marvella, toils almost as long. Bayh rises about 5=30 a.m. to shake hands with workers arriving at factories and then embarks on a program of four or five speeches a day, interspersed w ith more hand shaking and strategic conferences with party leaders. Comparatively unknown except for activity in the legislature, Bayh has fought from under against the veteran Republican Sen. Homer E. Capehart. Bayh No Pushover There is no doubt now that Bayh has become known to the voters who formerly did not even know how to pronounce his name. Capehart fully realizes that young Bayh will be no pushover. The Republican nominee is campaigning as hard as his rival, although he is almost twice as old as Bayh. However, Bayh needs to gain much ground before Nov. 6, and he woud be the last man to deny it. Big Marion County seems safe for the Republicans and farm areas wll go for the GOP. There arie sure to be big slashes in the customary Democratic margins in Lake County, where party leaders are facing federal trials from 1894 to 1909. On the telephone, she sounded many years younger than her 85 but confessed “I wobble a bit wheq I walk.” I told her I’d call her again to wish her a .happy birthday when she reached 90.” “Oh, do!/’ she replied.
■: . •.' ■ ■ i Important to all! fW NF* ■ & 1 MV r 1 '' a w Xr" Your newspaper is parfof the family circle ... '?*** fti .**• i<Bm I HH 1 i- A»i imi *- f f Trusted friend, counselor end guide to the family •. • that’s your news. / J paper! To each member of the circle, it brings features of special interest / .. ♦ news of business, politics and sports for Dad. •. fashion, home-making / ~ , . andjpeial! tews for Mother. •. features, too, of particular interest to the ” Wl / young people (even the toddler insists on having the comics “read” to him). To all, your newspaper provides a “front seat” on the passing show ) ° f eVen,S that 9 ‘ ves shape ' meanin9 and direch ’o n Io lhe world in which C K z ,h *7 * provides the most convenient way to bo well informed on • - <' w^at 9 oes 00 everywhere! £ V mWHMw Yous olsa helps tf>e family’s dollars go further by providing the most V MMwWllfln convenient and comprehensive shopping guide to the best values in town. A quick I \_ <My ite advertising cduaw tolls wto> sos wto* to «/• fitoto tor mucM *" DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT papers everywhere re- . dedicate themselves tat . y *Vfi*idPlf maintaining the freedom ~1 to .ZA » —' of the press ... the free- Ju dom on which all of our "TJ other cherished freedoms -- — • f T \ SK .nKA ” ; so directly depend! 1
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
p, ; j I STRANGER IN TOWN—Boy pauses to look at the “Cardinal” done by the contemporary Italian sculptor Giacomo Manzu. It was on display in the town at Spoleto, Italy. and local GOP leadership 1$ active, for a change, and in St. Joseph County, where party candidates likewise have been accused of political corruption. No Religion Issue ‘Nevertheless, Vanderburgh, Vigo and o ther metropolitan counties seem to be ready to give the *llBOBl Democratic totals of yore to Bayh. Vigo is his home county. l The anti - Catholic vote that spilled over from President Kten-
nedy to down numerous Democratic candidates in 1960 wifi be absent this year, which should be a big boost for Bayh. The voters will have a clearcut decision between the liberalism of Bayh and the conservatism of Capehart, and between youth and age. If Indiana is as conservative as it has been for a number of years, Bayh will lose. But don’t bet on it by any Capehart landslide. Household Scrapbook By Roberta Lee Keeping Salt Dry If your salt shaker persisits In clogging up because of damp or rainy weather, or because your
Public Sale 6 ROOM AU MODERN HOME PERSONAL PROPERTY I, the undersigned executor of the Alfred L. Tallman estate, will sell the real estate and personal property at auction, located at <66 Fulton Street in Berne, Indiana, on SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20,1962 t Personal Property 12:30 Real Estate 3 o’clock ——qfc REAL ESTATE: This is a good 6 room home. Have a nice kitchen with built-in cabinets, dining room, living room, bedroom and bath on first floor, 2 bedrooms upstairs with closets. Has full basement with oil fired hot water furnace. Has a 1 car garage and small shed on lot. This is a nice corner lot with plenty of shade trees. For further information or to see home call the auctioneers. TERMS—2O% down on sale day, balance when Executor’s deed and marketable abstract of title are delivered. POSSESSION—WiII be immediate after sale, TAXES—The purchaser shall assume the second installment of the 1962 taxes payable in 1963. PERSONAL PROPERTY - r‘ Frigidaire refrigerator; G. E. refrigerator; Grand gas stove; dinette set with 4 chairs; 2-piece Berne Furniture living room suite; good studio couch; upholstered chairs; rockers; 3 beds with springs and mattresses; dressers; wardrobe; sewing machine; buffet; chairs;' tables; electric window fan; electric fan; sweeper; rugs; electrit blankets; floor lamps; step stool; canner; Maytag Washing machine and tubs; porch glider; lawn sweeper; ladder; step ladder; garden tools; lot of carpenter tools; bedding; cooking utensils; dishes, and many articles not mentioned. 1950 4-door Plymouth cay. TERMS—CASH Not responsible for accidents. RIOHARD TALLMAN, Executor tit Hie ALFRED L TALLMAN Estate Owner Howard Baumgartner, Attorney Phil Neuenschwander, Auct. ■ Maynard Lehman, Auct. First Bapk of Berne, Clerk
cabin er camp is too close to the water, Invert a tumbler over the shaker when ft to not to use to insulate thesalt from theatmoepkeric moisture. Sparkling Diamonds If your diamond is to sparkle, ft must be kept scrupulously clean so that the fight striking at every facet breaks down into a rainbow colors. If the diamond is dirty and gummed up with soap, you might as well be wearing glass. A diamond that is worn every day needs special cleaning at least once a month. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.
I Nel PH I lICQ | I ELECTRIC RANCE I taaafi&ll ‘■MW the exact ■BBMBtryoM J TILT TOP JU * Top • Big, Bsnquct-Sta Owa 1 1 Lift Tun to ex- t -Thermostit Control •huMwtton Beta- | W>so fuH width H i Broil Seledor Switch • 0*« L| imUah nan 3 to* • High Speed Surfoco Onttl •F| Wi pea way TSmW * Appli,,n< " *“* || -”1 rJfe , ' aean tor' fata™ B y I acnss all 4. Wt De** Storage CmupurinoaL osty fn g to iwch • Ufts off for oust ctantng • F J J Kinged Own Unite NR M nd j , simplify ovm deoiling, | MMMMMedBg F . EASY sa $ 199” ,|| TERMS L ’■**"* W HAUGK HEATING, PLUMBING, APPLIANCES AIR CONDITIONING 209 N. 13th St. Phone 3-331 G
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