Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 252, Decatur, Adams County, 25 October 1963 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
CALL US FOR GRAIN PRICES 3EFORE SELLING. Hauling oats, wheat, and soybeans 3c per bushel and corn 7c per 100 lbs. BURK ELEVATOR CO. Phone 3-3121, 3-3112
Elect a Working Team B vote for Dr. R. E. Allisois Democratic Candidate for Councilman Ist District Dr. R. E. Allison • Honest • Courteous • Efficient OteCATUR DEMOCRATIC COMMITTEE-171 N, 2nd St. Tools, Furniture and Miscellaneous AUCTION Saturday, November 2 Starting at 12:00 Noon At the farm located 3 miles north of Berne on U. S. 27, then 1 2 mile west, or 3 miles south of Coppess Corner, then 1/2 mile west. * Tools and Miscellaneous New Dewait power shop radial saw; Porter Cable electric 8" hand saw; Sprunger 8" bench saw; -Miller Falls mitre box; Black & Decker electric drill; 4" jointer with i -j h.p. electric motor; bench grinder; electric motors; garden tractor with cultivators; carpenter tools; bench vice; Duro water pump; power rotary lawn mower; ladders; platform scales; 12 ga. shotgun; 2 wheel trailer with stock rack; hog fountains and feeders; milk cans; new nails; stanchions; shaving horse; steel cable; rope; spades; shovels; post auger; picket cribbing; o steel posts; corn sheller; window sash; copper kettle with jacket; cast iron kettle; used lumber; electric water heater; kerosene water heater; garden-hose. Household Goods Q Dining rodm suite with buffet; Westinghouse electric range; kitchen table and 4 chrome chairs; 3 pc. bamboo porch set; church bench; solid wood chairs; coffee table; occasional table; table lamps; 2 metal beds with springs; dresser; mantel clock; piano stool; old secretary-bookcase; antique .cupboard; dry sink; commode; laundry tubs; fruit jars; crocks; lard cans; baskets; crates; kerosene lamps; dutch oven; wool bats for comforters. TERMS—CASH Mrs. Dan (Catherine) Steury, Owner Sale Conducted by Mel Liechty and Associates, Berne. — Mel Liechty, Auctioneer First Bank of Berne, Clerk Emerson Lehman, Auctioneer
K4< A * yffß PH ILCO fftw COOLfoHASSIS 19 in* TV with allthese features at such a low’ ’’H KZ PRICE! 1 I 17Q 95 I X i 1 1/7 j x FALL Bk *> j KF' fcrjk - ■'■'■■ tI . tw Tl E* B I jffiillKiF T COOL CHASSIS .. . beats the heat, B Fl <> B I g wllffllli /> ,? /\ i major cause of TV breakdown 70% * W*W* -• W■ W 9 11* ' LESS I*UBE BURN OUTS in quality confe “ V/V./v / : trol t es,s ‘j Molded Cabinet. Beautiful ■ ft B Jft B Bl** T | Vc'z' 1 Driftwood Mute I rnish. Front Controls, >E fl 111 M jBkBF s XX —Front Sound .. . Targe 5x3" speaker. H Z 'K M /fA Sculptured Sound Projector. . » f A ®|i|iilfe \(Vy' i ! • 114“ Aluminized Picture Tube... A StO Z ‘ Saiety Glass filter ■ >w g ~• Viv'd Vision Pietum Black Level Circuitry I • Dual IrameGiul I . "i.lrameGridl.F. I ■ V I • Modern Copper I nf.rjved Circuits...» '. . H I ' > ! imi"' ' „ warranted 5 years! Isa ..... <H \\\\\ \\\V\\\V\\y\V\\\ \ * ' )ln ' ’’ H- ’iaH Diagonal Measurement, HBk ! I^’ S( l in Viewable Atea , I i ■ i ” • Built In Telescoping Pivotenna (Tmk) Hhk ■>iß a^ H \\ ""^^^^^"f^HlLCOJbO^inwoodWmte^R 8v —“*I . M 5 VEAR CIRCUIT || ■ M O B W M BOARD GUARANTEE H H ff HFATINfi Rl y $ purchaser lor 90 days E9 "■■•i I IIIV9 Fj .it Philco option bil JWL ni llMfllAlfl IB pvt or lobe defective in M ; 1 ,.:^x'..?. 1 ■ ■ O V M ■ > AIR CONDITIONING I I 209 N. 13th St. Phone 3-3316 ITBII'IBII WII[Q!L I. ! JJ II J UUUU WIL LI 1 1
Parchment Shades Parchment lampshades will clean much more easily if you’ll first coat them with a thin film of colorless shellac. Then you can clean them merely by wiping over them with a damp cloth.
61 Indiana Mayors Seeking Reelection
By BOYD GILL United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPD— Six-ty-one Indiana mayors seek reelection Nov. 5 in the municipal balloting among the state’s 111 including two Democrats who lost in the primaries last May and came back to run independent of party labels. But the luckiest man among the more than 225 candidates seeking to control the Hoosier cities next year is City Councilman Don Sell of Angola, a Republican. Sell announced for mayor after Mayor G. Wendell Jacob declined to seek renomihNational Honor For Local Insurance Man S. J. Hain, Decatur representa- , tive of the Lincoln National Life Insurance company and a member of E. B. Bingham & Associates of Fort Wayne, gained national recognition for his record of personal production for September. it has just been announced by Henry W. Persons, vice president and director of agencies. Hain ranked seventeenth in total sales. This honor „was won in direct competition with all of the company’s more than 2500 sales representatives throughout the country. ■ ' ■ Truck, Taxi Are Involved In Wreck A truck and a taxi were damaged in an accident a t 8:18 a. m. today at the intersection of Monroe and Second streets. James Closson, 33, of 616 W. Monroe St., was driving the taxi west on Monroe street and had stopped at Second street in the right lane to v discharge a passenger. A west bound truck driven by Richard L. Marbach, 27, route 5, Decatur, was in the center lane and failed to see the taxi and both attempted a right turn onto Second street and collided. Damages were estimated at S2OO to the taxi and $5 to the truck.
WHERE'S OUR NEW INDUSTRY? Elect CARL GERBER and the Democratic team who will start the program to get a new water source for Decatur VOTE DEMOCRATIC
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
ation. Sell attracted no opponents for- the May primary, and the Democrats put up nobody against him this fall, so he got both the nomination and the election without turning a hand. The 61 mayors who are running include 43 Democrats and 18 Republicans. However, the Democrats include Mayor M. Jack Edwards of Maribn and Mayor Arthur J, Ferguson of Ligonier, who were defeated in the primaries and refused to give up without a struggle as candidates for independent parties. Prohls Field Two Edwards and Ferguson are among about a dozen independents running this fall, including ‘ a couple of Prohibition Party nominees in Lake County, and Sam Unger in the state’s largest city—lndianapolis. Besides Sell at Angola, one present Democratic mayor is assured of reelection for lack of Republican opposition. He is Mayor Charles W. Decker of Bluffton. Also unopposed is Avery Smith of Loogootee, a Democrat but not a current mayor. The field of mayors seeking new terms when the primaries started last spring was a bumper 74.' But 12 Democrats and 3 Republicans were beaten in the May voting. For awhile, it looks as if James L. Lightner of Batesville, a Democrat, was going to be in the same enviable position as Sell at Angola. He won the primary without opposition and the Republicans didn’t field a candidate to run against him. But an independent candidate filed in the person of John P, Currin. 9 Ex-Mayors Running Nine former mayors, most of whom lost in re-election bids in 1959 or some earlier year, also are seeking to return to their old city hall posts in Alexandria, Evansville, Huntington, Jasper, LaPorte, Lebanon, M.i tc h e 11, Monticello and Portland. Three woman are among the candidates—Mayor Mary Alice Cunlap of Bloomington and Mayor Mary Bercik of, Whiting, and Mrs. Margaret H. Prickett, a supermarket owner at Mishawaka. Mrs. Prickett is a Republican and has to battle it out with Mayor Joseph Canfield. The other ladies already hold office and have the natural advantage of patronage. Mrs. Bercik has won mayoralty elections before, "but Mrs. Dunlap was appointed to fill a vacancy due to a resignation and this is her first ballotbox test for mayor, although she’s won elections for lesser offices before.
Federal Grants For Hospitals Revealed FRENCH LICK, IND. — Federal grants for construction by Indiana hospitals, authorized since the start of fiscal 1963, some to $6,809,736, Senator Vance Hartke <D-Ind.) revealed today in a speech before the Indiana hospital association at 'lts convention here. The total value of hospital construction involved is near S2O million, spread among 10 hospitals in as many Indiana cities: Bloomington, Elkhart, Marion, Peru, Rensselaer, Evansville, Fort Wayne, Terre Haute, Connersville and Corydon. The senior senator from Indiana described to the convention three bills with implications for the state enacted within the past month. Together they “comprise a vital and surprisingly large achievement” in the public health field, he said. Under the mental retardation facilities and community mental health centers construction act of 1963, Indiana will be allotted on a matching grant basis funds building facilities to serve tie totaling nearly $3.5 million fj» mentally retarded and for woinl at the community level on mental? health problems. • “Never before,” said Senator Hartke, “have we had a federal program aimed at strengthening the much-needed attack on these great sore spots in our pubic health program. It would be hard to overestimate the importance of the entry into this area for the first time by the national government.” Another of the recent passed bills is the health professions edvcatiohal assistance act of 1963, aimed to increase the number of doctors, dentists, nurses, and related health workers trained in teaching institutions. “To maintain the present ratio of 137 physicians and 56 dentists for every 100,000 persons,” said the senator, “we must produce 50 per cent more doctors in the next 10 years than 'in the last ten. and double the number of dentists trained.’ The third majbr health bill passed in this session of congress Senator Hartke identified as the maternal and child health and mental retardation act, which was sent to the President for signiny on October 15. Indiana's expected share in the grants of this' act over the next five years will come to about $6.5 million. “Ih all of these matters.” concluded .Senator Hartke, “you will find that I have worked and voted consistently for the improvement of health services to the residents both of Indiana and ofthe nation as a whole.’
Parts Os Slate To Change Time Sunday By United Press International A zigzag line dividing Indiana iijto two time zones during the six cool months each year reappears this weekend, looking little different than it did a year ago. Except for a few changes pnostly ip areas where residents in 1962 submitted to the inconveniences of operating on > two different time zones in the same counties, the line takes in all or parts of 22 counties in the northwest, southwest and south central portions of the state. The change will be made at 2 a.m. Sunday. Unless alterations are made locally thereafter, Central Standard time will remain in effect in those areas until the last Sunday next April. The “slow” time zone will include all or parts of Lake, Porter, LaPorte, Starke, Jasper, Newton, Vermillion, Parke, Vigo Clay, Sullivan, Greene, Knox, Daviess, Gibson, Pike, Dubois, Perry, Spencer, Warrick, Vanderburgh and Posey Counties. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.
SHOULD SNOW BE REMOVED? Elect CARL GERBER and the Democratic team who will give you snow removal, street cleaning and weed cutting. VOTE DEMOCRATIC
You Are Invited To An ALL ELECTRIC ALLYUEATED OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27 Home Os Mr. & Mrs. Leo Thieme East on U.S. 224 to State Line, North % Mile, Then West First House on South Side OPEN HOUSE |" REFRESHMENTS DOOR PRIZE! ROAST PIG ZZ ELECTRIC and SAUERKRAUT KNIFE SHARPENER wilh MODERNIZATION SPECIAL $1 E for your Old ELECTRIC Healing System HEATING COOUNG PLUS • . . Guaranteed Heating Cost* DURING OPEN HOUSE Offer Limited to I A M Customers. FREE EVERYONE WHO ALLOWES AL’S ELECTRIC TO FIGURE CSOI THEIR HOUSE RECEIVES IWy/ * Indoor - Outdoor Thermometer Offer Limited to I & M Customers. ~ OPEN HOUSE HOURS SUNDAY 2 P.M. - 6 P.M. 7 P.M. - 8 P.M, RfIYWfILL ELECTRIC HEATING J EQUIPMENT KEEPS THIS HOME WARM and COMFORTABLE Installed By AL'S ELECTRIC _n L c E nr^?nX ERSET * S °S! J ELECTRIC AL CONTRACTORS R. R. 5, DECATUR PHONE MONROEVILLE 623-6524
I; —TONY'S TAP 1 PHONE 3-9785 I—s p.m.- 9 p.m. Daily Special—l I FISH DINNERS 99c I I DEL MONICO STEAKS 1-491 I PIZZAS Xs I ["eat HERE or CARRY OUT j KITCHEN CLOSES AT 1:15 A.M. | SALE CALENDAR OCT. 25—7 p. m. Ernie’s Auction, 2 miles east of Munroe on 124, then 5 miles south on blacktop and mile east. Emerson Lehman and Fritz Lehman, auctioneers. ■ OCT 25—7 p. m.—Troy, Ohio, Livestock Exchange, Route 55, west edge of Troy, Ohio. Stocker and Feeder Calf Sale. E. C. Doehrman, Auctioneer. ' . n OCT 26—12 Noon. Mrs. Frank Myers, owner. 6*6 miles east, 3 /4 mile north of Berne, or 3 miles south, 1 mile east of Salem. Farm Machinery and Household Goods. Phil & Miz Auction Co., Auctioneers OCT. 26—1 o’clock. Mrs. Orval Harruff, owner. 335 Line street, Decatur, Ind. Antiques, Furniture, Miscellaneous. Ned C. Johnson and Ed Sprunger, Aucts. OCT. 26—1 o’clock p. m.—Lugbill Auction, Archbold, Ohio, Special Feeder Cattle Sale. OCT. 29—7:30 p. m. Lugbill Auction, Columbus Grove, Ohio, Feeder Cattle Sale. OCT. 30—10:30 a.m. Harold A. Buhr Estate, 3 miles east of New Haven, on U. S. 24, then 2 miles north on the Brvlck rbad, then 3rd farm west on the 1 Stellhorn road. Complete dispersal. Ellenberger Bros., Aucts. NOV. 2—1:30 p. m. Patrick Gase, owner. 612 North Seventh St., Decatur, Ind. I>6 story frame house. Ned C. Johnson and Ed Sprunger, Aucts. NOV. 2—l o’clock. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Schuller, owners. ,*4 mile south of Hoagland on Minnich road. Seven room house, tractor and Personal Property. Walter Wiegmann and Orville Sturm, Aucts. i ’ - NOV. 8 — 12:30. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ehlerding, owners, 5 miles west of Decatur on U. S. 224, then south mile. Holstein dairy cattle, Milker and equipment, Hay tools. Walt Wiegmann and Orville Sturm, auctioneers.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25 , 1963
