Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 281, Decatur, Adams County, 29 November 1962 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Neighborhood Reunion 'wwpyiiyr • -’''"‘'WmMHK'RP*''' it..,'; , < .ftf 'JrXirit } w> ~!■ ■ I IS* J y. Ymt A: IlJe §| The 25th annual neighborhood reunion was held this fall at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Egly of route 2, Ohio City, O. The reunion was started in the fall of 1937. Earlier in that year, three -families, living side by side on the Indiana and Ohm state line, north of 224, all moved to different locations. They were the families of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Egly, Mr. and Mrs Orley Barkley and Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey Clem. Every year since that time the three families and their families have met at the diffeient nomes. All members of the three families were present for this reunion. > ■ _ , „ „ Front row: Larry and Dale Myers: Cheryl DeBolt; Kent, Judy and Susan Egley; David Soldner; Carl Myers; Danny and Bussell Strickler; Jerry and John Barkley. ' . , . , . _ — n T„io Back row: Linda and Becky Soldner: Roger and Vonola Myers; Wayne and Eileen Egley; Lee, Audrey and baby Rene. Deßolt, L,oia and Glen Egley; Frances Soldner; Garnetta Barkley; Weldon Soldner; Orley Barkley; Chauncey and Marilyn Clem; Lois and James Strickler; Norma and James Barkley: Janice Soldner. Baby Ann Louise Barkley wasn’t in the picture. 'Photo by Johnson)

Battle Looms On Rail Rule

CHICAGO (UPI) — More legal battles between the nation’s railroads and five big unions loomed today following a court ruling that the carriers may institute “anti-featherbedding” work rule changes. The U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Wednesday the railroads have the right to impose the sweeping changes — which eventually would eliminate up to 80,000 jobs — without the consent of the unions. The ruling upheld a decision by federal District / Court Judge Joseph Sam Perry. J. E. Wolfe, chief railroad negotiator, said the carriers would “move promptly” to matte the changes as soon as the appeals „ - court dissolves a temporary injunction against such action. The five brotherhoods, representing 212,b0d on-train employes, have threatened a nationwide rail strike should the rules be put into effect unilaterally. May Delay Showdown But union attorneys said they would file for a re-hearing in the appeals court, which would keep the injunction in force until a second ruling. Thus an immediate showdown on the issue would be forestalled, The three judges Wednesday upheld the injunction blocking the carriers from putting the rules into effpct while the appeals court considered the case. The appeals court probably will not dissolve the injunction until it rules on the union request for a rehearing, and even then the unions could ask the U,S. &yh preme or Appellate court for an extension of the restraining order.

__ YOUR HOME TOWN FIRST Nevar have our merchants had a better selection of Christmas merchandise. Never have they counted more on your support. Justify their faith in you by doing your Christmas shopping at home. Remember, nothing «- ever paid greater dividends or more handsome returns than toycrfty to your community. - ' i STATE BANK Established 1883 MIMMR MEMBER P. D. 1. C w Federal Reserve I •

Wolfe said, however, “he issue on which the appeals court ruled . . .was so clear cut I believe there is a serious question as to whether either court would continue the injunction.” “As soon as the lower court’s injunction is dissolved, the carriers will move promptly to make effective these rules. . .” he said. “The moment a threat of a strike occurs it will be in the President’s hands,” he added. Should Postpone Walkout President Kennedy could postpone a walkout for at least 60 days by appointing an emergency board to investigate the threeyear dispute over work rules and make non-binding recommendations for settlement. The 195 railroads involved have estimated the rules changes could save them nearly S6OO million a year. The changes—proposed in part by a presidential railroad commission Feb. 28 — would wipe out the c jobs of 13,000 locomotive firemen within a year and eventually the positions of from 65,000 to 80,000 other employes. The court decision Wednesday came on an appeal of Perry’s ruling filed by the Brotherhoods of Locomotive Engineers, Locomotive Firerrien and Enginemen, and Railway Trainmen; the Order of Railway Conductors and the Switchmen’s Union of North America. . —ls- you have sometnmg to- sell or trade — use the Democrat Wa ads — they get BIG resuits.

Today's Sport Parade (Reg. U-S. Pat. Off.) By OSCAR FRALEY UPI Sports Writer NEW YORK (UPI) — Snow fell thickly, screening the line of trucks which had halted briefly as it neared the ever-shifting front lines in Korea. Col.' O. C. (Ockje) Krueger stepped from his jeep and stomped back and forth in a futile attempt to get warm. Not long earlier he had been graduate manager of athletics at West Point but now he was leading his infantry regiment into action. Suddenly he was startled by a resounding whoop and a Marine liaison officer jigged toward him in the ankle deep snow. “We won,” he yelled. “We won.” Krueger stared at him uncomprehendingly. “What do you mean, we womi’ ’ j Krueger demanded. “If we won, how come those snipers are still firing?” “Not ‘we,’ ” exulted the Marine officer. “Us. The word just -came through. Navy beat" Army, 7 tod.” After his return to the states, Krueger’s voice was low and choked with emotion as he recalled that night in the snow. Close To Game “All of a sudden, I was colder than ever,” he remembered. “Maybe I was closer to it than the others for I had only recently left West Point. I knew most of those kids who played in that game. And I knew how bad they must be feeling. “And yet,” he added, “it gives you an idea of the kind of things guys hold onto when the going is tough. And what something li'ke ‘the game’ means to soldiers, sailors and Marines whereever they may be.” Which brings us to Saturday at 1:30 p.m. EST in the sprawling concrete horseshoe which is Philadelphia’s Municipal Stadium when Army and Navy go at it again, on the gridiron. There’s no shooting going on this time but at posts around the world and aboard all the ships at sea ears will be cocked to radios although it will be 6:30 p.m. in Berlin, 1:30 a.m. Sunday morning lin Tokyo and 3:30 a.m. on the i Sabbath in troubled Laos.

\ ' • '4jKs JBev I \ •• |f| J| I V,/. : [ .■ SMbM tiff ■ Ir i^R’ ; , x£dfßiiiß : - Jife'' . l hKi jjfl } RESERVE GRAND CHAMPION—Miss Kaye Pollock, 17, Mt Auburn, lowa, shows “This *L’ Do,” her senior short- ■ Rom calf which was judged reserve grand champion at the International Live Stock Show in Chicago, Miss Pollock had tbe gHifld arn j* n p gteec in tbe show two xobxs

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, WDIAWA

For as one of its valued services, Armed Forces Radio Service will carry the big one from coast to coast — around the world “the hard way.” Meaning that the game is not broadcast across the United States. Thus it goes from New York to Los Angeles byway of Guantanamo, Berlin, New Delhi, Laos, Tokyo, Okinawa and the Aleutians. Many Appreciative Listeners Annually the broadcast brings an avalanche of appreciative mail from servicemen abroad, naval vessels, merchant mariners, civilian government personnel and even missionaries. Many vessels pick up the broadcast and put it on the public address system to all parts of the ship. The play-by-play will be handled this year by Red Barber, who is no stranger to the men in uniform. Barber, who broadcasts New York Yankee Baseball games and has volunteered to describe the game for those football fanatics away from home, has made four USO trips overseas. He visited military installations in Europe in'l946, the Far East in ’SB, North Africa in 1959 and the Far East again last year. Siding him in describing the “color” of the game will be J. Gordon Bridge, AFRS sports director. Col. Krueger, now retired in Milwaukee, will see it on television. But his most poignant memory will be one he didn t see on a snowy night in Korea. Former Policeman Is Adjudged Insane FORT WAYNE, Ind. (UPI) — Former policeman Robert C. Elder, 32, who admitted more than 60 burglaries between 1960 and 1962, was found to be insane today and committed to Norman Beatty Hospital at Westville. Special Judge Paul Nieter ruled Elder insane in Allen Circuit Court after hearing testimony from three doctors. Prosecutor Bryon Hayes did not oppose the ruling. If you have something to sell or trace — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results

AMA Pledges Renewed Fight On Medicare LOS ANGELES <UPI> — The American Medical Association was committed officially today to throw itself into another fight against President Kennedy's program for medical care for the aged financed with Social Security funds. The AMA House of Delegates, its policy-making body, adopted a report Wednesday stating its members must ‘‘face the 1963-64 congressional campaign without defeatism or complacency.” Another section of the report said that if American physicians are ‘‘confronted with a serious threat which would conscript them into involuntary servitude," the House of Delegates should be called into emergency session to take counter-action. The House of Delegates session was hfeld on the final day of a four day AMA clinical meeting during which reports were read on advances in the fight against virtually all diseases which afflict mankind. The delegates also reaffirmed a previously stated position to the effect that AMA members “will not be a willing party to implementing any system which is detrimental to the public welfare.’’ This wordage was calculated to get the members set for an expected fight next year when the Kennedy administration will make its second attempt to get through Congress its legislation on medical care. The administrationsponsored King - Anderson bill, which the AMA objected to, was rejected in the last Congress. The committee which presented the report to the house of delegates chose to bypass some resolutions which were more strongly worded against the administration than the final draft. One of these was a resolution introduced by Dr Harry Mantz, delegate from Illinois. It called for signing of a pledge by AMA members, saying in part: “I pledge that I will not dispose of my services to any patient regardless of his economic circumstances under conditions or plans which cause or tend to cause a deterioration in the extent or quality of that (medical) care. “I believe that the federal government has no constitutional right to intrude itself into the medical care of American citizens and that such intrusion will cause a deterioration of such care. Therefore 1 pledge that I will actively oppose the nationalization of medical care in any form.”

Orders Board Count Amended Returns ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI) — The Minnesota Supreme Court today ordered the state canvassing board in effect to certify Republican Gov. Elmer L. Anderson as winner of Minnesota’s Nov. 6 gubernatorial election. The court ordered the canvassing board to count disputed amended vote returns from 10 'counties. The amended returns had put Anderson ahead of his Democratic- Farmer- Labor rival, Lt. Gov. Karl Rolvaag. Rolvaag’s attorneys had contended before the court that the amended returns from the 10 counties should not be counted. If the original returns from the counties were to stay in effect, Rolvaag would be ahead in the vote count. The final outcome of the cliff hanger election will probably be decided by a recount. Rolvaag is expected to demand a recount and this count could run until late December or January. Andersen leads by about 140 votes in the unofficial returns, including the canvass amendments in the several counties. But the BFL contended the amended returns were not legal. If the amendments had been thrown out, jthe DEL held, Rolvaag would lead by 58 votes. Overshoes Dingy-looking rubber overshoes can be made presentable by washing them with water containing a few drops of ammonia, and then giving them a thin coating of liquid shoe dressing*

WEEKEND SPECIAL FRIDAY AND SATURDAY FILET MIQNON Includes: Potato, Salad, Hot Roll, Drink QJff Regular 2.50 - A 9 ** | — FISH DINNER 1 Includes: Potato, Salad, Hot Roll, Drink - Regular 1.25 ——— TONY'S TAP 916 N. 13th St.

11 1 ■" '| • _ . i - . * • # * V 1 \ )•••'•■ 4 . . .. 7 nfc i- r „ *.» \ » „ . 1 * e— *r* UNDERGROUND BLAST—This is a picture of what results in an ex P l ° s *°*? f „° ( f p a nf th t e h r ' monuclear device of approximately 100 kilotons_ yield 635 feet below the . b t Nevada desert. Large bubble, 600 to 800 feet m diameter rose t 6 a height of about 290 feet three seconds after detonation. Structures at right are 10 feet men.

Wwi ! .4 > * INHERITS MILLION — Miss Evelyn Mitchell, secretary to the late millionaire Arthur Vining Davis, learned in Miami, Fla., that Davis left her more than $1 million in his will. Robert J. Martz Completes Course MEMPHIS, Tenn. (FHTNC) — Robert J. Martz, airman, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Martz of route 6, Decatur, Ind., was graduated, Nov. 15, from aviation mechanical fundamentals school at the Naval Air Technical Training, Center, Memphis, Tenn. The four-week course covers the Russians Call For German Settlement MOSCOW (UPI) — The Soviet Union formally called today for a German peace settlement for the first time since the Cuban crisis in moderately worded notes to the United States, Britain and France. The identical notes asked for “normalization of the situation in West Berlin,” but contained neither a time limit nor any specific proposals. The contents were distributed by the official Soviet news agency Tass and broadcast by Moscow Radio, SOVIET DEPUTY (Continued from Page One) — estimated at more than 30 — out of the island by Dec. 22. Support Castro Demand However, the Russians have been supporting Cuban Premier Fidel Castro’s demand that any United Nations inspection of his territory to verify elimination of the nuclear threat must be accompanied by similar inspection of other Caribbean areas, including Florida. The United States flatly rejects this idea. Officials said the only way the Communists can ever get the U.S. to agree to U.N. inspection of American bases would be to permit similar U.N. inspection of strategic sites in Russia. The State, Department—and White House brush aside Castro’s assertions as immaterial in the SovietAmerican — dash and — resulting agreement. The United States continues to insist that it must maintain close aerial and naval surveillance of the island until some form of reliable verification and an agreed process guarding against reintroduction of weapons is set up. Until then, Kennedy refuses to give the no-invasion of Cuba pledge which Khrushchev requested. ' • ' .-*• " T: ■ ■'

Newspaper Legals Protect Citizens

By John Mahan Feature Writer, Free Press Assn. “Muzzling” of the press has taken a new form. These are those who would silence the small newspaper through the elimination of “legals.” Richard W. Cardwed, general coun-1 man of the public notice advertissel for the Hoosier State Press association, Indianapolis, and chairing committee of the National Editoral Association said this week, Legal advertising is a part of the basic right? of the people to know what their government does with tax money under the American system.” "Honest public officials,” Cardwell said, “gladly seize the opportunity to render a public statement of their acts to show the efficiency, honesty and good judgement they have exercised.” But there are public officials who would like to eliminate the disciplinary effect of the publication of budgets and financial reports, as well as other public notices, in newspaper legals. So far, these efforts are not significant, but the goal is the strangulation of the influential, financially weaker small-town press. While many newspaper publishers find legals unprofitable and an unimportant fraction of revenue, the drive, has begun with ah appeal to the local taxpayer.

Grand Champ Steer Onto Auction Block CHICAGO (UPI) — The grand champion steer of the International Live Stock Exposition goes to the auction block today. The auction of Lyle Miller’s Aberdeen Angus steer, “Top of lowa,” was today’s main event. . Last year’s winner, an Angus owned by lowa State University, sold for sl4 a pound. The top price ever paid was in 1957 when Mrs. Sue Secondino, West Terre Haute, Ind., received S3O a pqund for her steer, “Honeymoon.”' ’ Also to be auctioned today was the reserve champion steer, a Hereford - Shorthorn crossbred owned by Kaye Pollock, 17, Mount Auburn, lowa. In 1960, Miss Pollock received $16,725 for her grand champion steer, “Herky,” a Hereford. Miller, 32, Osceola, lowa, declined to predict what his steer might bring. The top price paid at Wednesday’s auction at the 63rd annual international was SIOO,OOO for a half interest in the show’s grand champion Angus bull. The animal, “An*konian Eclipse,” was shown by Ankony Farms, Rhinebeek, N.Y. The half interest was purchased by Keefauver Brothers, Jonesboro, Tenn. The reserve champion Angus Bar Ranches, Trinidad, Colo., for $51.000. It was shown by Haystack Angus Ranch, Longmont, Colo. The grand champion Shorthorn

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THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 39, «9«

According to Cardwell, the publication cost of legal notices is almost negligible. "The publication of a school budget, for example.” he said, “of a hundred thousand dollars or more is ordinarily less than one-thousandth of the total budget even in a small town.” - Few readers of newspapers are aware of the many kinds of legals and the ways in which legals protect the citizens’ rights, Cardwell said. Public notices announce traffic laws, public hearings, special elections, taxation rates, financial reports, notices to bank depositors, purchasing and bids, missing persons and many other classifications. to eliminate legals is not expected to get very far according to editors, if the public is aware of the safeguards built into this traditional American system. Alert to the potential danger of this new action, they point out that attempts to suppress news have been tried for years. "Destructive criticism of the press," remarked Donald I. Rogers, financial columnist, “has been going on for years. It started, perhaps, with the ‘press’ department in Time magaaine, was snapped up by Newsweek, and has been further devpI loped into a science by television 'pundits.”

bull, shown by Malcolm, Tupker & Son, Brought only $2,500 when sold to Dan & W.G. McCubbin, Gretna and Elkhorn, Neb. Jewel Tea Co., Chicago, gave Roy Keppy, Davenport, lowa, $15.75 a pound for his grand champion barrow. The hog weighed 230 pounds. E.E. Johnson and Sons, Clarks Hill, Ind., got sl.lO a pound for their reserve champion. The National Livestock & Meat Co., Oklahoma City, paid SB.IO a pound for the show’s grand champion wether, shown by Oklahoma State U n ive r s it y. The lamb weighed 100 pounds, Michigan State University’s reserve champion brought 75 cents a pound. Convictions Os 42 Negroes Overruled COLUMBIA, S. C. (UPI) - The state Supreme Court Wednesday threw out the convictions of 42 Negro students for staging sit-in demonstrations at lunch counters in Sumter. The Morris College students had been fined SIOO each and sentenced to 30 days in jail for breach of the peace. “In no instance did it appear that any of the Negroes committed any act of violence,” said Associate Justice J. Woodrow Lewis in writing the high court’s unammimous opinion. Painting Furniture When painting small pieces of furniture, turn them upside-down and paint the underneath portions first. Much more convient and efficient.