Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 202, Decatur, Adams County, 27 August 1959 — Page 11

Thursday, August 27, m

TV Cowboy Stars Want Movie Roles By VERNON SCOTT UFI Hollywood Correspondent HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Tain’t the coyotes howling on movieland’s lone prairie, it’s TV cowboys wailing to quit their shoot-’em-up series. Commonest sound along western street sets, out on location and in soundstage saloons is the mournful plaint of horse opera heroes who want to unsaddle their talents to become movie stars. Hugh O’Brian, Clint Walker, Jim Garner, Jim Arness and a barnful of other gun-slingers publicly and privately chafe at the bit to ditch their successful programs. They object to the long hours, small salaries, identification with a single role and the ever-lovin’ monotony. To all this Jack Kelly • who co-stars in "Maverick” with Garner — says "Baloney!” Kelly is an affable character who’s collected his lumps in movies for years. Working spasmodically, then sitting around between pictures, Jack knows a good thing, and a steady paycheck, when he sees it "Those other guys don’t really want out,” he surmised. “They

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just want more money. And who can blame them. I’d like more dough myself.” ! r Kelly hauls down a comfortable 12,000 weekly, but in bigtime movie circles the stars earn in the neighborhood of $50,000 per picture — and that is the neighborhood the oat bin boys covet. “They’d be crazy to give up going concerns like their TV shows to gamble on pictures,” Kelly continued. “Personally, I’d like to stay in ‘Maverick’ for another 18 or 20 years. We could retitle it ’Son of Maverick’. I’d be foolish to leave for something of less scopre than our series.” Jack is confident westerns will be with us forever, pointing out dthesage brush sagas have been around since the first motion picture was made. He's No Gambler MONTPELIER, Vt. (UPD-State Sen. Frank Jones received the following letter. "Should the parimutuel bill come to your attention, 1 would appreciate your favorable consideration. As one of your constituents this is my prerogative, is it not? "This matter seems to have general approval amonk the people I have talked to, but then again I have been careful to whom I have talked. This you can understand.”

Indiana 60P Plans For Fund Campaign By HORTENSE MTERS United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPl)—Hoosier Republicans said today they plan a drive for funds with the big donors to pay expenses at the state and national level and the little givers to support local party operations. The GOP State Central Committee worked out the plan here late Tuesday and also scheduled the 1960 state Republican convention for June 24 as expected. The committee left candidates’ assessment fees unchanged. Kurt Pantzer, Indianapolis banker and chairman of the Republican Citizens Finance Committee, outlined the plan by which his group would toy to raise $230,000 through an organization of 47 prominent party men. Pantzer’s committee would go after the big donors while the local party organisations would try for the small donations. George W. Stark, treasurer of the central committee, explained that the “Committee of 47” would be concerned solely with prospective donors of SIOO <x more and try to solve two big state party headaches. One is the $60,000 debt

THE DECATUR DAILY MMDCRAT. DRCATUR, BOXAMA

owed by the party and the other is an SIIO,OOO assessment which must be paid to the national GOP. The remaining $60,000 of the drive goal would be used for statelevel expenses. ' Stark said county and district finance officers would concentrate on remaining givers. “Small givers, $5 to $10... anyi thing under $100... can be asi sured their money will remain in the counties,” Stark said, “This is an attempt to have the State Citizens Finance Committee work more directly with the district and county treasurers. "It’s a grass roots move,” he said. “The municipal elections are local problems. The state committee felt this would be the finest working arrangement.” Stark said the committee also decided that no big money-raising dinner would be held until after the first of the year, a move seen as a further aid for local party 1 fund-raisers faced with the task of financing the fall mayoralty elections. ’ The mjority of the state’s city halls now are in Democratic ■ hands. The committee approved its June 24 convention date at the Fairgrounds Coliseum after arrangements were worked out by GOP Chairman Robert Matthews and Detnocratic Chairman Charles Skillen, whose party convention ■ will be held June 21. a-

The arrangement allows the two . parties to cooperate with each other in cutting convention ex- ) peases. Fees to be charged for candidates entering the GOP conven- ; tion were unchanged: r Governor, $2,000; Supreme Court Judge, $1,600; Appellate Court judge, $1,050; lieutenant governor * apd attorney general, SI,OOO each; i secretary of state, state auditor, state treasurer, superintendent of ■ public insruction and Supreme : and Appellate Court reporters, I $750 each; national convention delegates, SSOO, and alternate dele- ; gates, S3OO. Stained Sinks ' If you have some general or ■ unidentifiable stains in your kitchen sink, try putting the stopper in ‘ the drain and filling the sink at , bedtime with a mixure of vinegar ’ and laundry bleach. In the morning, pull the plug out and the , chances are the stains will go down , the drain with the liquid. Sharper Crease : You produce an extra-special * crease in men’s trousers by placing r a dampened newspaper over the ) garment, then a dry one on top of ) this, and finally pressing over this * with an iron.

McKinney Denies Branigan Switch By EUGENE J. CADOU United Preu International INDIANAPOLIS (UPD— "We’re going all the way with Matt Welsh.” That was the word today from former Democratic national chairman Frank E. McKinney concerning his sponsorship of the candidacy of Sen. Matthew E. Welsh of Vincennes for the 1960 Indiana Democratic gubernatorial nomination. The statement came two days before the start of the fall meeting of the Indiana Democratic Editorial Association at French Lick next weekend. It gave the lie to reports that McKinney and his ally, Frank M. McHale, former Indiana national committeeman, might switch to Roger D. Branigan, Lafayette attorney. Reflecting the contentions of a number of Democratic mayors that 1960 campaigning should be postponed until after the 1959 municipal elections, McKinney added: “Lie Under A Log” "We have suggested that Matt lie under a log and do nothing about his candidacy until after the city elections.” McKinney also is backing the presidential bid of Sen. Stuart Symington, who will be the banquet speaker at the editors’ gathering Saturday night. Symington may not arrive in French Lick until shortly before his speech because of an expected vote on the controversial labor reform bill, according to McKniney. There will be conferences and oratory galore during the French Lick meeting. State chairman Charles E. Skillen has scheduled a breakfast Saturday morning at which the state committee will entertain all Democratic state officials; members of Congress and nominees for mayor. Then the editors themselves will hold a meeting at which the first woman president of their organization will preside. She is Mrs. Eleanor P. Jamison, publisher of the Sullivan Times. Other Banquet Speakers Other banquet speakers will be Skillen, Sen. Vance Hartke, national chairman Paul M. Butler, Rep. Ray J. Madden, and secretary of State John R. Walsh. Symington is expected to further his campaign for Midwest delegates and Butler to reiterate bis stand that the party should stay by liberal principles. Hartke, Madden and Walsh are likely to speak, similarly. Welsh and Sen. Nelson Grills of Indianapolis, the only two announced gubernatorial bidders, will be campaigning along the bert Steinwedel of Seymour, likewise regarded as candidates for governor, also are apt to be in action. Walsh will b pondering over whether to run for governor or to wait two years and bid for U.S. Senator. His present preference is the senatorship. In similar status is Sen. S. Hugh Dillin of Petersburg. The candidates for mayor and other posts this fall are expected to argue fiercely for more attention to 1959 and less to 1960. Beef Included In Week's Good Buys WASHINGTON (UPD Thrifty shoppers will find beef in the front ranks of best protein food buys this weekend. Beef is taking its place alongside pork, broiler-fryers, lamb, and eggs. Markets are offering specials right now on round and rib steaks, chuck and rib roasts and ground beef. And in pork roasts, bacon, frankfurthers, chops, and hams will look very attractive to menu-planners. In addition to broiler - fryers, many markets are offering good values in turkeys this weekend. Eggs continue an excellent buy, along with cheese and other dairy products. Fruit bins offer a wide variety, too. Look for good buys in new crop apples, Bartlett pears, plums, peaches, grapes and oranges. Some markets are featuring nectarines, oranges and watermelons. In vegetables, excellent values are offered in potatoes, sweet potatoes, onions, cucumbers, tomatoes, lettuce, celery, pole beans, eggplant, squash, carrots, cabbage corn okra, green peppers and cauliflower. At the fish counter, look for plentiful supplies of shrimp, fish sticks, and canned tuna. Mosquito Bites The sting can be taken out of mosquito bites if a little household ammonia is added to the water with which the skin is washed. DON’T TAKE A CHANCE TAKE PLE NAMINS Smith Drug Co.

Articles Inform Public Os Services Os Lawyer

(Editor’s note: This to another in a series of articles presented as a public service by the Adams county bar asociation. These articles are not intended to answer individual problems which require specific advice.) QUALIFICATIONS A glance at the yellow pages in the telephone directory under **Attornys” will indicate there are a number of practicing attorneys in Adams county. Who are these persons? What schooling have they? How long does it take to become a lawyer? These and other questions regarding the qualifications of lawyers have probably crossed your mind at one time or another. It is not possible within the space of this article to describe all of the details from the first moment an individual developes the desire to bcome a lawyer until the day he hangs his shingle cm his office wall, but a thumb-nail sketch may give you some of the answers to your questions. An Indiana attorney must be a graduate oi an approved law school. Approved law schools are those which have met the rigid requirements set up by the American Bar Association to assure the highest calibre of legal training. In the state of Indiana, there are four such law schools: Indiana University, Bloomington division; Indiana University, Indianapolis division; University of Notre Dame and Valparaiso University. Most of the attorneys in Adams county are graduates of these four schools. No matter from which accredited school the lawyer may graduate, mere graduation does not give him the automatic right to commence practicing law. He first must pass the bar examination as prescribed by th elndiana law xamining committee. This examination is given in Indianapolis approximately two times a year and lasts two days. Illis a written examination covering all general fields of law, and is exceedingly comprehensive. Only one thoroughly trained in the law could hope to pass. In addition to receiving a satisfactory grade on this examination, the lawyer must also appear before an examiner who investigates the applicant’s character and fitness. This constitutes a personal interview with the examiner, and the lawyer’s background is carefully checked to determine whether he is truly a fit and proper person to be afforded the privilege ofprac-

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f ticing law in this state. j The normal schooling of an attor- . ney takes six or seven years. Three . or four of these years are spent , in undergraduate training leading to an A.B. or B.S. degree, depending on which of two avenues the lawyer prospect may be inclined to study. It is normally possible ( to reach law school through the . school of business or through the ! school at arts and sciences, or a 1 combination of these two. In the . school of business, the lawyer pros- , pect will encounter accounting 5 courses, studies in corporate fin- ' ance, money and banking, and . many others. In the school of arts I and sciences, the lawyer prospect will encounter courses in political scence, local, state and federal > government, philosophy and many • others. All of these courses are dei signed to acquaint the lawyer with > practical problems he will eventu--3 ally face when he is engaged in the , active practice, as well as provide > the lawyer prospect with a fundar mental background far the study of law. i After the prospective lawyer has r completed his undergraduate train- > ing, he will apply for admission to 1 a law school. Many law Schools - have certain aptitude tests the > applicant will be required to take . in an effort to determine whether > he is fundamentally the type of i person who will be successful in ; law school, and whether his apti- ; tude is such that he is sufficiently • cut out for the law practice to t come. If he passes all of the tests, > and if the law school feels his grades and character merit admission, the prospective lawyer I wiU be admitted to file law school • Mere admission is only the begin--1 ning to a long, hard grind of throe ! years on nothing but law subjects, j This period of three years in law 1 school will take the prospective - lawyer through all of the funda--1 mental law courses, such as con- > tracts, torts, criminal law, real • estate, moot cour, seminars, re- - search techniques, etc., etc. Thea 3 after three years of the law, our f prospective lawyer obtains his law ' degree, provided, erf course, his grades were satisfactory from the beginning to the end. > So, you see the yellow pages of s the telephone book revealed the B names of attorneys truly sHRed ’• and trained in the law. They are v capable of finding the answers to e your legal problems. Cal your y attorney wtih confidenc, for he has e stood the test of many hard years 0 of studying, training and testing. •