Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 134, Decatur, Adams County, 8 June 1959 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO.. INC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller, Jr President John G. Heller — Vice-President Chas. Holthouse Secretary-Treasurer Subscription Rates: By Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $8.00; Six months, $4.25; 3 months, $2.25. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $8.00; 8 months, $4.75; 3 months, $2.50. By Carrier, 30c cents oer week. Single copies, 6 cents. The Pony League Recent criticism of the fact that Decatur has only two Jiony league teams, instead of four or six which it might well support, ,has led to the discovery of some very interesting information. In the first place, money is available for more teams, many Decatur merchants have promised. It is not a question of money. It is a much bigger question, one that cannot be solved with money, What is needed, and ,badly needed, are people who will give, not money, but time. It takes four adults to train a baseball team. It takes individuals who are willing to forego their usual evening and weekend pleasures of TV, movies, bowling, golf, etc., to help youngsters. And it brings up another big problem. Are our schools, community center, Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, 4-H, Little League, and Pony League being used by parents? Are volunteers expected to be unpaid baby sitters while parents stay at home? The volunteers who help with Little League and Pony League, and the many, many other youth programs in Decatur, are to be complimented for giving their own free time to help the youth of Decatur. Decatur merchants work hard to provide Ihe money for many of the local programs. Whenever staffs for more teams are available, they will gladly support them. But they need some help from the parents, too. After all, there are 15 players on a team, with nearly that many fathers. It would seem that three or four of them, if theirsons wanted to play badly enough, would be glad to volunteer to help train them. And many parents do help u with the leagues. But, really, doesn’t it sound a little silly to criticize businessmen for such a thing? Do workers ever stop to think that the average shopkeeper puts in 50-65 hours ■ a week, with no overtime? And businessmen give freely of their time and money to help many constructive and valuable programs—even though they well that these same people who benefit from the programs will often not even help, but will even use the time to drive to another city, and patronize its merchants, Decatur businessman is working with their children! But of course no Decatur merchant would complain about this —it wouldn’t be ethical., Another problem, in addition to the lack of cadre, may be noted. Other organized teams take up most of the time on the diamonds. Decatur really has too few baseball diamonds for its population. This is being remedied, by transforming a vacant field in Hanna-Nuttman park into an athletic field. Yes, there is a problem. We do need more pony league teams. We need them badly. But it isn’t the lack of funds, it is the lack of volunteers to help every day to train the teams, that is missing. And then fields must be provided on which our-young people may practice, If you know of anyone who would like to help train a pony league team, have him contact R. O. WyiTta', of 904 Adams street.

CD 1 WANE-TV Channel 15 HOAIUAV Evfnlnic 6:oo—\moa & Andy 6:3o—News at 6:30 6:4s—Doug Ktlwards-Newa 7:OO—U. S. Marshall . 7:3o—Name That Tune 6:00-—The Texan B:3o—Father Knows ‘‘Best 6:oo—Danny Thomas Show 9:3o—Ann Southern 10:00—Due.v A: Desi 11:00—The Steel Cage TUESDAY 141 liming 7:oo—Sunrise Semester 7:3o—lh'i>Mrirvint Theatre 7;45 —Willy Wonderful 8:00—CBS News B:ls —Capta!n Kangaroo 9:oo—4>ur Miss .Brooks 9:3o—Star and The Story 10:00—-On the do 10:30—Sam Devenson 11:00 —1 Dove Ducy 11:30—Top Dollar Afternoon 13:00—Dove Os Dife 12:30—Search For Tomorrow 12:45—Guiding Dlght I:oo—Ann Chahjtre'H W-wm-n'-a Page I:26—News I:3o—As The World Turn* 2:oo—Jimmy Dean Show 2:3o—Houaeparty .3:oo—Big Bay-Off -3:3o—Verdict Is Youth •4:oo—Brighter Day 4:i6—Secret Storm i 4:3o—Edge Os Night f 6:oo—Dante Date Evening 6: (HI—A rnos & Andy 6:3o—News at 6:30 6:4s—l*oug Edwarde-New* 7:oo—(Hotpoint Dlayhouse 7:3o—Shirley Temple 9:oo—Pecks Bad Girl 9:3o—lied Skelton 10:00r—Garry Mwre 11:00 —Return to Paradise WKJG-TV Channel 33 MONDAI KvmfiuCj o:oo—Gatesway To Sports 6:l6—News, Jafck Gray •6:26—The Weatherman '6:3o—Buckskin 7:oo—Beetles* Gunj 7:80 —Tales of Welts Fargo * -.oo—Peter Gunn 8:30 — f loot!ycaD T heatre 9:oo—Tire Arthur Muriay, Party 9t50 —Sheriff of Cochitfe 0 10 :<B—Silent'Sendee f t . 10:30—News and Weather \ 10:45—Sports Today 10:6® —The Jaek Paar Show TVSEDAY Morning 7; 00— Today 9:oo— Dough Re Ml rt ■ 9:Bo—Treasure Hunt

PROGRAMS

Central Daylight Time 10:00—The .Price Is lilght 10:30—Concentration 11:00—Tic Tac Dough 11:30—It Could Be You , Afternoon 12:00—News and Weather 12:15—Farms and Farming 12:30—Yesterday's Newsreel 12:45—Editor’s Desk 12:56—Faith To Dive By I:oo—Queen For A Day I:3o—Haggis Baggis 2:oo—Young Dr. Malone 2:3o—From These Boots 3:oo—Truth or Consequences 3:3o—Romper Hoorn 4:00—1 Married Joan 4:30— Bozo .6:4S—NBC News Evening 6:oo—Gatesway To Sports 6:ls—News, Jack Gray 6:2s—The Weatherman 6:3o—Dragnet 7:oo—Steve Canyon 7:3o'—The Jimmie Kodgers Show B:oo—The Californians 8:30—Bob Cummings 9:oo—David NiYin 9:30 —Rescue 8 HMOO—Whirly birds 10:30 —News and Weather 10;4fe—Sports Today 10:60—The Jack Paar Show WPTA-TV Channel 21 MONDAY Evening 6:oo—.Fun ‘n Stuff 7 :Cs—Torn Atkins Reporting 7:3o—Shirley Temple 8:30—Bold Journey 9:oo —I ’untomine Quiz 9:3(B—TV Hour of Stars 11:00—Gambler and the Dady 1 TUE9DA* Morning 10:00—Mom’s Morning Movie 11:30—Big Rascals A ftrrnuon 12:00— Across The Board O 12:30- I’antotnlne Quiz I:oo—Music Bingo I:3o—Susie 2:oo—Day In Court 2:30 —Gale Storm 3:oo—Beat the Clock 3:3o—Who Do You Truet 4:oo—American Bandstand s:oo—Woody Woodpecker 6:3o—Adventure Time Evening 6:oo—Fun *n Stuff 7:ls—Tom Atkina Reporting 7:30 -Sugarfodt B:3o—Wyatt Earp 9:oo—Rifleman 4 9:3o—Alcoa Presents ' ■ i 10:00 —.Wrestling from 21 11:30—Mr D. A. MOVIES — DRIVE-IN — ‘■Bridge on the River Kwai" Mon First Feature at 9:30 ‘•Geisha Bay" & "1984" Tues \\ ed Thurs at dusk

Editors To Meet in Seminar On Traffic INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — The power of the press will be organized to battle the highway death toll at the Indiana Editor and Publisher Highway Traffic Safety Seminar here Thursday through Saturday. Scores of Hoosier newsmen will hear nationally - known speakers discuss various aspects of the safety problem. Governor Handley proclaimed Friday as “Editors’ Traffic Safety Day,”, saying: “The seminar is dedicated to saving more lives on our streets and highways by the employment of every facility of each daily and weekly newspaper and industrial publication.” Two Noted Toastmasters Two noted Hoosier toasmasters will be in action. The are C. Walter McCarty, editor of the Indianapolis News, who is chairman of the 19-member seminar sponsoring committee, and John A. Scott, vice-president of the Elkhart Truth. _> RJiilip Maxwell, editorial promotion manager of the Chicago Tribune, a former Hoosier, will speak on "Traveling Through the Pages of a Newspaper” and with Mrs. Maxwell will present their new Indiana song with a background of Indiana music by the Purdue University Glee Club. Richard T. James, secretary - manager of the Hoosier Motor Club, will open the seminar and Prof. Amos E. Neyhart, Pennsylvania State University, known as the "father of high school driver education,” will be the keynote speaker. Handley will speak briefly. Experts To Talk Other speakers will be Dr. Bernard I. Loft, Indiana University, “Utilizing Mass Media Communication in Driver and Traffic Safety Education”; Matthew C. Seilski. Chicago Motor Club, president of the Institute of Traffic Engineers, "What Your Readers Should Know About Expressway Drivng”; James E. Bulger. Chicago Motor Club, “Illinois Editors Organize for Safety.” W. 'Earl Hall, editor. Mason City, lowa. Globe-Gazette: Dr. ; Shelby Gallien, director of the: Public Safety Institute. Purdue University, “We Interview Newspaper Reporters”, Karl M. Richards, Automobile Manufacturers Association, “The Anatomy of Traffic Safety”; Albert E. Huber, director, Indiana Safety Foundation, “Rural and Urban Accident Percentages.” , .. Joseph B. Bidwell. General Motors Research Laboratories, “Engineering and Vehicular Safety , j j Cavanaugh, president, Chicago Motor Club: Gen. George C. Stewart, executive vice-president, National Safety Council, “The Power of the Press”; Burton W. ■Marsh. American Automobile Association, “The Pedestrian in the Accident Pciture, and Robert L McMahan former commissioner of the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles, “Indiana’s Point System and the Procedures followed in the Bureau of Motor Vehicles.” NATO Inadequate To Deal With Reds

LONDON lUPI' - NATO Secretary General Paul-Henri Spaak today said the alliance is inadequate to withstand the Communist challenge. “The alliance is no longer an adequate reply to communism," Spaak told the political committee of the NATO-sponsored Atlantic Congress. “We are making progress but 1 believe, alas, we jnust realize that events are marching forward despite our progress.” Spaak told the committee that the NATO nations’ conflict with communism has spread beyond Europe. “Nowadays the ■ real Dattle will be outside the geographical field of the alliance,” he said. He said the organization must “ad deconomic, social and cultural efforts” to its military bases. Earlier, Sen. Vance Hartke said the current Atlantic Congress may go down in history as the springboard which launched the West’s answer to the economic challenge of communism. The Indiana Democrat reflected the views of many of the more than 600 delegate's from 14 nations that the West must pour more aid into underdeveloped countries to prevent their going Communist. “We in the West must devel%p an economic plan or they <the Communists) will be successful," said Hartke, a member of the Senate Finance Committee. “We must act if we are to survive as a free world.” The Atlantic Congress is composed of educators, doctors, politicians. clergymen and the like examining NATO policies of the past and trying to determine where the Atlantic Alliance should go in the future. Its decisions will be advisory only. Committees continued work today on proposals for a NATO “Marshal Plan" for" underdeveloped nations: a court of justice to settle international disputes among NATO members and a tightening of political bonds.

188 BSCATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT, —CATO. BOttAEA -.■■■..A a a, l.

■ "*! *>, ... .. ■; •' i Boy Scouts, from troop 62, sponsored by the Decatur Lions club, and troop 63, sponsored by Adams Post 43 of the American Legion, marched in the Memorial Day parade this year. Behind Uie troops are Nelson Doty and Robert Roudenbush, Legion Scout leaders. The flags earned by the boys are provided through the Legion for the people of the county for the national holiday celebration.

Rotary International Convention Opened NEW YORK ClTY—With an attendance of more than 16,000 Rotarians and members of their families from most of the 112 countries in which there are Rotary clubs, the 50th annual convention of Rotary International convened here Sunday. j Keynote of this five-day gathering of business and professional executives—whp represent 10,200 Rotary clubs- with a membership of 477,000 Rotarians—will be the internationaUtjf of the Rotary organization. Throughout the convention program, emphasis will be given to the opportunities which Rotarians around the world have to work for the achievement of one of the principal goals of Rotary—the advancement of international understanding, good will and peace. The Rotary convention program includes addresses by outstanding speakers, discussion forums, election of officers, and special entertainment features. Rotarians also will study the common , problems of their various businesses and professions, and.the many communitybetterment activities engaged in by Rotary clubs throughout the world. Among the speakers scheduled to address the Rotary conversion are Dag Harhmarskjold, secretary general of ithe United Nations; Dr. Werner von Braun, world-famed space age authority: Pearl S. Buck, Nobel prize author; Nelson A. Rockefeller, governor of New ! York: Robert F. Wagner, mayor of New York City: Kenneth G. Crawford, moderator of Newsweek's “Periscope, Panel;” Dr. Marcus Bach, professor of religion at the University of Iowa; and Rotarians from seven countries. The president of Rotary International. Clifford A. Randall of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S.A., to day announced that during the past eleven months, 313 new Rotary clubs have been organized in 47 countries, bringing the membership of'this world-wide service organization to an all-time high of 10,200 Rotary clubs.

Unhappy with r your wash? jjl If so, don’t blame your washer, soap or detergent... ? .. ; maybe it’s your water heater that’s causing the trouble! Usually, a "greyish” wash is not the fault of your washer . . . nor the soap or detergent you use. More often it’s a case of not 'Wft ’ jBBf enough hot water. Authorities on laundering say that wash water % 1 jr I has to be Hbt ... 160 degrees ... to get clothes really white and m\ l 1 clean. If your water heater is too old, too small, or too slow, you’re # not going to have enough good hot water to take care of load after ft load of clothes ... and you won’t get a really white wash. K'i j M,4 p,.r i | you get really hot water... fast ~~ water heater jft’t j|| MOUTHIEH INDIANA 9UHK StEVICI COMPANY

Possible Showers Forecast Tuesday United Press International Indiana may get the first rain in about 10 days Tuesday, the weatherman predicted today, and the above - normal temperature trend will continue through most of this week. | Readings in the low 90s appeari ed possible in the five-day period ending Saturday. The extended outlook called for readings averaging 3 to 7 degrees above normal highs of 83 to 87 and normal lows of 55 to 58. Fair and w-arm was the prediction for today, followed by partly cloudy Tuesday, with somewhat humid conditions in all portions and scattered thundershowers likely downstate. “Continued quite warm until turning cooler toward weekend,” said the five-day outlook. The southern portion may get up to an inch of rain, the north portion about six-tenths of an inch, beginning Tuesday and spreading gradually to upstate regions. COURT NEWS Marriage Application Elmer Louis Lick, 35, of Cleveland, 0., an engineer, to Kathleen Lois Schulenberg. 25, a teacher, of Cleveland, O. Miss Schulenberg is the daughter of the Rev. Schulenberg, of route 1, Preble. Divorce * Cases - 7~ Clafence L. Uhrick was ordered

Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery „ Stops Itch—Relieves Pain, N. T. (Special) _ For the astonishing statements like “Pile* Irst time ecience has found a new have ceased to be a problem! 1 * healing: substance with the aston- The secret is a new healing subtshing ability to shrink hemor- stance (Bio-Dyne*)—discovery of rhoids, stop itching, and relieve a world-famous research institute, pain — without surgery. This substance is now available In case after case, while gently in suppository or ointment form relieving pain, actual reduction under the name Preparation H.* (shrinkage) took place. At your druggist. Money back Most amazing of all—results were guarantee. SO thorough that sufferers made *Re*. D. S. Pel. OC

released Friday by the Adams circuit court from Adams county sheriff’s custody. Uhrick was being held because he had failed to pay attorney fees and support of his wife and children. The action resulted after Uhrick’s lawyers showed the court that the defendant had no money or immediate means of attaining any. In the case of Doris Gillis vs Barney D. Gillis, a notice for application for an allowance was filed Friday. The plaintiff is asking a stipend for attorney fees and support. In the suit against Marshall D. Nash by Virginia M. Nash, the allocations were dismissed following full restitution by the defendant. The plaintiff was asking payment of attorney fees and back payments of support. Estate Cases The last will and testament of the Very Rev. Msgr. J. J. Seimetz was probated and placed on record. A bond of $3,300 was posted. In the separate cases, of Ada Stucky, Sephus Miller, and Caroline Sallot, the schedule to determine the amount of tax was filed with the county assessor, i -r— In the estate of Fannie Augsburger, a final report was filed. The notice was ordered returnable June 26. A petition for the sale of 1,200 bushels of grain was approved Friday in the estate of Vercil Hoblet. The grain was appraised at $1,248. >A petition of the initiation of administration in the Emil Christener estate was filed Friday along with the death notce, and a $20,666 bond.

\t Fort Bi'lvoir FORT BELVOIR, Va. (AHTNC) —Army Pvt. Joe L. Quinones, 23, whose wife, Virginia, and parents, Mr. and Mrs. Donato Quinones, live on route 2, Decatur, Jpd.. recently was assigned to tne 100th Engineer Company at Fort Belvolr, Va. He entered the Army last February. Quinones attended East Wapo (Tex.) high school. Before entering the Army, he was employed by Bluffton (Ind.) Food, Inc. Operation Halted Technical sergeant Herbert F. Kitson, of Decatur, a member of the 122nd tactical fighter group,

M am suspicious V m * ■ * && m; Iky WW! ■Fnp. — and why not? When auto insurance policies come in all varie* ties of coverage and prices, 1 get suspicious. Dad thought 1 was getting unduly alarmed —* hut then he checked with Farm Bureau Insurance. It was amazing what a coverage-for-coverage check showed. You can’t help wondering why some people buy without checking. • But when Farm Bureau Insurance gives you more coverage — really important coverage for lees money — much less money, you’ve got reason to wonder why everyone doesn’t buy Farm Bureau Insurance. When 63% of the farmers in Indiana insist on this protection, it must be good. My Dad isn’t a farmer — but he, too, can buy Farm Bureau Insurance^ *■ Get a quotation-no cost |X'S\ j j | Or obligation. Request this \ folder for full dstalls. F^Ee j SEE THE YELLOW PAGES TO FIND YOUR AGENT FOR Insurance HOME OFFICE. IN EAST WASHINGTON SWEET ♦ INDIANAFOUS t. INOIANA

l I MONDAY, JUNE >, lM

Indiana air national awA j. have participated in tha jolnt Army-Air Force manuever tott« Carolinas. The operation, toown as “dark cloud,” was partially completed, but halted after inclement weather conditions forced the curtailment. . Sergeant Kitson was recalled to active duty for a period from May 23 to June 6 while the exercise was attempted. Work Underway On New Law Building Work began today on the new Voglewede and Anderson law building at the corner of Third and Ma/ftcnn streets. Arnold Lumber company will construct the onestory building, which is on the site of the first court house erected in Adams county. ,