Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 149, Decatur, Adams County, 25 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 mosths, 84 25; 3 months, 32.25. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 39.00; 3 months, 34.75; 3 month'. 32.50. By Carrier, 30c cents per week. Single copies, 6 cents. V Hardened Action Very few Hoosiers realize that a month ago state' treasurer Jack Haymaker, a Democrat elected last fall, suffered a severe stroke. He has been in the hospital since then, and was recently transferred to the Ford Foundation hospital. It is now hoped that he will be able to recover well enough to return to his office. However, the overanxious statehouse politicians, always ready to play politics, Announced in a prominent Indianapolis newspaper who the Republican appointee would be to succeed him when he dies. Needless to say, this was quite a shock to his wife and family, who are earnestly praying for his speedy recovery. Judge G. Remy Bierly, who is quite close to the state political picture, asks everyone who is interested in the sick to send a card to Mrs. Jack Haymaker, State Treasurer’s Office, Indianapolis 4, Indiana, wishing her husband a speedy recovery. Mrs. Haymaker’s shock was quite great at the callous treatment of her husband. • * * * Understanding Economics One of the biggest problems of Democracy is the responsibility it places upon every citizen to understand government in general. Unfortunately, we all tend to interpret Democracy as meaning the “right not to take part in government if we so desire.” This leads right back to oligarchy, or rule by the few, but it is permissive oligarchy, since we originally give up our rights by failure to learn, understand, and take part. A good example is the fiscal policy of the United States. Few people would even pretend to understand it. And few of those who did pretend to, would be right. But surely, we say, the economists understand the situation, and they would inform us if anything were wrong. Congressman Hays, in commenting on economists recently in Congressional debate, said, “You know, I had a professor at Ohio State who taught economics out there for thirty years. He gave the same questions in the final examination every year for thirty years. You might wonder why everybody did not get an A. The reason was he changed the answers every year for thirty years.” - Mr. Hays mentioned this in answer to a Congressman who had qualified himself on a question by saying he was a graduate in economics. But this answer points out the very fact that in a Democracy it is what each of believes, and expresses through voting for candidates that believe and act as we want them to, that makes representative Democracy work. If our elected representatives do not propose legislation that meets with our approval, or if we do not study the questions deeply enough to know whether they are right or wrong, we are in for serious trouble sooner or later.
WANE-TV ■< Channel 15 THURSDAY Evening 6:00 —-Amos and Andy 6:3o—News at 6:30 6:4s—lVoug itJdwarde-Ne vs 7:oo—Highway Patrol 7:3o—lnvisible Man B:oo—December Bride 8:30 —Yancy Derringer 9:oo—Zane Gray Theatre 9:3o—Playhouse 90 11:00—Last of the Red Men FRIDAY Morning 7:45.—Wi11y Wonderful 8:00—CBS News «:15—Captain Kangaroo 9:oo—Our Mias Brooks 9:3o—Star and the Story 10:00—St. Lawrence Seaway Afternoon U2:O0 —'Love Os Life 12:30—Starch For Tomorrow I>2:ls—Guiding Light I:oo—Ann Colone 1 • 9 "i—•MbtVK I:3o—<As the World Turns 2:oo—Jimmy Dean Show 2:3o—Houseparty 3:oo—Big Pay-Off B:3o—Verdict Is Yours 4 :00—Brighter Day 4:15—-Secret Storm 4:3o—Edge Os Night 6:oo—Dance Date Evening 6:00—-Amon and Andy 6:3o—News at «:»u 6:4s—(Doug Edwarda-News 7:00 —San Francisco Heat 7:3o—Rawhide X. 8:80 —New York Confidential / 9:oo—Phil Slivers t 9:30 —Mike Hammer \. 10:00—Yankee Doodle Dandy WKJG-TV Channel 33 THURSDAY Evening 6:oo—Gatesway to Sports 6:ls—News, Jack Gray 6:2s—The Weatherman 6:3o—Roy Rogers Show 7:oo—The Lawless Years 7:30—T00 Young To Go Steady 8:00—Bachelor Father B:3o—Tennessee Ernie Ford 9:oo—Groucho Marx 9:3o—Masquerade Party 10:00—Mac Kenzle’s Raiders 10:30—News and Weather 10:45—Sports Today 10:50—The Jack Paar Show FRIDAY 7:oo—Today ,2— ... . 9:oo—Dough Re'Tßi ....- -9:Bo—Treasure Hunt 10:3 o—Concentration 11:00 —Tic Tac Dough 11:30—It Could Be You
PROGRAMS Central Daylight Time Afternoon 12:00—St. Lawrence Seaway 12.30—News I.2:4>s—Farms and Farming I:oo—Queen For A Day I:3o—Court of Human Relations 2:oo—Young Dr. Malone 2:3o—From These Roots .3:00 —Truth or Consequences B:3o—County Fair 4:00—I Married Joan 4 :30—Bozo S:4S—NBC News -t Evening * 6:oo—Gatesway To Sports 6:ls—tNwws, J ack G ray 6:2s—The Weatherman 6:30-r-Northwest Passage 7:oo—Elery Queen 8:00—M-Squad B:3o—The Thin Man 9:oo—Boxing 9:4s—Jackpot Bowling 10:00—Cjty Detective 10:30—News and Weather 10:45-—Sports Today 10:50—The Jack Paar Show WPTA-TV Channel 21 THURSDAY Evening 6:o’o—Fun *N Stuff 7:ls—Tom Reporting 7:30 —(Leave It To Beaver .8:00—-Zorro B:3o—The Real McCoys 9:oo—Pat 80-one 9:3o—Rough Riders \ 10:00—Hideout 11:00—Confidential File FHIDAI Merning 10:00—Mom's Morning Movie 11:30—Big Rascals • « < Afternoon 12-loo—Across The Hoard 12:30—Pantomine Quiz I:oo—Music Bingo 1:30—21 Leisure Lane 2:oo—Day In. Court' 2:30 —Gale Sffirm 3:oo—'Beat the Clock 3:3o—AViho Bo You Trust 4:oo—'American Bandstand 6 :00—Superman 5:30—-Mickey Mouse Evening 6:oo—'Fun ‘N Stuff 7Gs—Tom Atkins Reporting 7:3o—Rin Tin Tin 8:00—-Wialt Disney Presents 9:oo—Tombstone -Territory 9:30-—77 Sunset Strip 10:30—dieooy . 11:00—Calling Dr.,Death < MOVIES — DRIVE-I*.— “Hound and the Fury" Thors at 9:30 "High School Confidential” A “Man With Gun" ‘Fri & Sat at dusk “Great St. Louis Bank Robbery" „ Sat at Midnite
Lutheran Stand On Lodges Reaffirmed SAN FRANCISCO (bPD—Delegates to the 44th convention of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod ’have defeated a resolution which would allow members of its churches to belong to Masonic lodges or similar organizations. The resolution was proposed Wednesday by Theo Borchardt, a layman of Fairmont, Minn. It proposed that members be allowed to join lodges—but that they be educated against lodge philosophy. The delegates voted instead to endorse the recommendation of a floor committee to reaffirm the. traditional stand against lodges. They are opposed by the Synod in the belief that they tend toward deism, rather than trinitarlanlsm. The Rev. Walter T. Luebkeman, of Hayward, Calif., asked the delegates to go home and “follow through on the resolution.” He charged that the “lodge problem was Gating away at some congregations like a cancer.” The convention also: —Voted to affirm its position that each congregation decide for itself whether or not to sponsor a Boy Scout troop. —PasSed a resolution to create a new junior college in the Detroit a/ea. / —Postponed debate for one day 'on the controversial book, “Engagement and Marriage, Q jjust published by the church. —Deferred action on the question of membership in the Lutheran World Federation until the reports of the committee on doctrinal unity have been received. ANDERSON, Ind. (UPI) —David Lee Robbins, 18, Daleville, died in an Indianapolis hospital Wednesday of injuries sustained June 14 when a speeding automobile went out of control on Ind. 32 east of here and overturned.
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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Melville Sprunger On Dean's List 0 Melville D. Sprunger, Berne, is on the dean’s list of Indiana University for the second semester of the 1958-59 year. Dr. Ralph E. Broyles, director of the Fort Wayne Indiana University center, where Sprunger is a full time student, announced that he was one of 36 students who qualified for the high scholastic honors during the second semester of the past year. He will be honored at the Center’s annual studentfaculty banquet, and he and his parents will be invited to the Bloomington campus to participate in the University’s founders’ day exercises next May. — Floyd May Is Dead After Short Illness ’ Services will be conducted at 2 p. m. Saturday in the Church of God, Zanesville, the Rev. Harrold Mishler officiating, for Floyd May, 51, Zanesville. He died at 2:40 p. m. Wednesday in the Lutheran hospital, Fort Wayne, where he had been a patient 10 hours. A welder at the American Hoist and Derrick Co., he was a member of the Church of God. Surviving are the wife, Catherine; the parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. May, Monroeville; three daughters, Mrs. Oscar Ayers, Fort Wayne, Mrs. Robert Hoopingarner, route one, Ossian, and Miss Elaine, at home; two sisters, Mrs. Herman Guenther, Paducah, Ky„ and Mrs. Elsie Shifferly, Monroeville, and four grandchildren. Friends may call at the Elzey and Son funeral home, Ossian, from 7 p. m. today until noon Saturday, when the body will be removed to the church to lie in state before the services. Burial, will be in the Haverstock cemetery, Zanesville.
Satchmo Armstrong In Grave Condition SPOLETO,. Italy (UPJ) — Louis (Satchmo) Armstrong lay in- a coma today in “grave” condition with bronchial pneumonia complicated by heart trouble. The famous American Negro jazz musician parsed into uncon-' sciousness after suffering a second relapse this morning. Doctors kept him in an oxygen tent most of the time, and his breathing was reported to be labored. A communique said he encountered one crisis around 2 a.m. His condition was reported aS "stationary” five hours later, and he showed only “slight improvement” by 10:40 a.m. (4:40 a.m. c.d.t.). Three, hours later, his condition took another turn for the-worse, and a hospital spokesman said at Asks Commitment To State Hospital In a case charging disorderly conduct, in Sty court this morning, George Thomas Coy, of 418 Vz Elm street, pleaded guilty and voluntarily asked for permission to seek admittance to the state hospital for alcoholics. Mayor Robert D. Cole finer! the defendant $1 and costs and sentenced him to six months at the state farm, pending his request. The defendant has five days to gain access to the hospital or the judgment will be enforced. Sheriff Merle Affolder has custody of Coy until he completes his request or he starts his sentence. Mrs. Viola Coy, the defendant’s wife, signed the affidavit Wednesday night charging Coy with disorderly conduct. Deputy prosecuting attorney Lewis L. Smith requested that the court honor the defendant’s request. LEBANON, Ind. (UPI i—James Allen Martin. 12, Lebanqri, drowned late Wednesday while swimming in an Omaha,- Neb., swimming pool. The boy was dead on arrival at an Omaha hospital.
that time his co nd it i “grave.” The 59-year-old jazz trumpeter was stricken with branchial pneumonia two days ago and was hospitalized. j He was reported well on the road to recovery Wednesday, when he joked with visitors. But during the night, his condition became worse. A doctor summoned to his bedside at that time said a crisis was reached when the bronchial condition was complicated with “cardiac disturbances.” ' He held until the later crisis put him into a coma. Three f heart specialists were summppedi from Rome. His suddenly grave condition was in contrast to his bounce and cheerfulness Wednesday.
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Man Suffocated By Overturned Tractor ENGLISH, Ind. (UPl)—William Best, 37, English, suffocated Wednesday under his overturned tractor. Police said Best’s tractor overturned along a Crawfora County road and pinned, foim beneath it. Taxi Firm Owner Drowns Wednesday SEYMOUR, Ind. (UPI) — The body of Joseph Stout, 48, Seymour taxi firm operator, was recovered from White River today, about 100 yards downstream from where he toppled into the water late Wednesday while trying to install a motor in a boat.
THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1959
Humorist Impressed On Decatur Visit Decatur has been mentioned twice this week on the 7:30 a.m. program of Mack Sauer, humorist who addressed the Decatur Lions club Monday night. Sauer, who was very impressed with the Youth 'and Community Center, and the community effort it represents, has been’ high in his praise of the Decatur people. He broadcasts over a Leesburg, 0., station which can be heard in Decatur, and is located at about 810 on the radio dial. , Over 2,500 Daily Democrats are sold and delivered in Decatur | each day.
