Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 274, Decatur, Adams County, 20 November 1959 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
Our Friends (Continued) Little Guy Compensates “Such mild antagonism is the price a big man must always pay when he bumps into a small man in close quarters. The big guy feels inflated and awkward about his size. The little guy wants to sound bigger than he really is to compensate for the difference in stature. “Neither can help himself. They just grew that way. “This is something like the situation that exists between Canada and the United States. “In terms of wealth, influence and armies, the U.S. is the big guy. Canada is the little one. “They just grew that way. “All the petty differences that exist between big men and small men exist between Canada’s man on the street and America’s man on the street. “Fortunately, these differences are largely forgotten at the government level and these countries have become so irrevocably bound together in matters of defense and foreign and domestic policy that there is virtually no difference between them. They can argue in the privacy of the boudoir, but the marriage is a well-established one as far as the rest of the world is concerned. “Canada might, at times, act like a reluctant bridge, but her heart is in the right place. “Both countries are united against Communism. “Both are committed to the Democratic idea. “Both are intensely proud of themselves. “Now an unguarded border some 3,000 miles long is a hard thing to find anywhere else in the world. Even if it isn’t a tourist attraction, it still remains a monument to the ability of two nations to take mutual advantage of their promity.” • • * • YOUR BALLOT (Please mail to the Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur, Ind.; your choice will be tabulated with all those received, and the results printed, if enough returns are received). Matthew Welsh Bert Steinwedel John Walsh Ralph Tucker Von Eichhom
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\ J\. U.S.S.R. TO MOSCOW Paris yTxLKH * T A/MIUBjg conH TO PEIPING-1 J -12,300 ;.RM.L^ »*^^wdoL'Skins "7~ (f / »herats=-_C>3^*^<Wkaiull kashmir ! Y~ PAGRAM MILITARY.y.r=^C , ’F/,v|>«r*'£* 1 rs Na *Oa nr jj r »- if* / — Si r yjf / -7 Pakistan' / / ITO NEW DELHI tl) J J INDIA / AlD)rgrJ \1 700 AIR MILES f J SinuiA Jj NtWSMAP] 0 100 LAND ON TOP OF THE WORLD— Newsmap above focuses on Afghanistan, one of the nations President Eisenhower will visit on his trip to Europe and Asia in December. A Texas-sized, mountainous, undeveloped nation of some 12 million, mostly Moslems, Afghanistan maintains a delicate balance between the free and Communist worlds, readily accepting aid from both. U.S. aid, totaling $145 million, includes the building of dams, an airport, 500 miles of roads and technical help. Competing Russian aid includes arms, roads, a military airport and S3OO million in grants and loans. Half of Afghanistan’s trade is with the Soviet Union. King Mohammed Zahir Shah is a constitutional monarch, but the strong man is his cousin. Prime Minister Sadar Mohammed Daud.
DfcCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT CO.. JVC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller. Jr. .. President John G. Heller V ice-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, $9 00 : 6 months, $4.75; 3 months, $2.50. By Carirer, 30 cents per week. Single copies. 6 cents.
20 Years Ago I Today ) ■■ — - -o Nov. 20, 1939—The union Thanksgiving service, sponsored by the Decatur ministerial association, will be held at 8 o'clock Thanksgiving morning at the First Methodist church. Peter N. Moser, 73, prominent Adams county farmer, died at his home near Berne following a long illness. Dr. and Mrs. Robert Meyers, of Indianapolis, visited in Decatur over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. George Foos of Gibson City, 111., were weekend visitors in Decatur. The town of WiUshire, 0., has made application for a WPA grant to aid in construction of a town waterworks plant. Seven more merchant ships have been sunk, with loss of 200 lives, as the naval warfare grows in European waters. Notify Dealers Os Defective Heaters INDIANAPOLIS <UPI> — The Indiana State Board of Health sought today to contact trailer manufacturers and dealers to warn them of the danger from lethal fumes Os a bottled gas heater described as “defective.” Dr. A. C. Offutt, state health commissioner, said about 30 companies in Indiana received heaters from the Thurm Manufacturing Co., Elkhart, that were determined to be a model with a combustion fault. "Some heaters produced by the (Thurm) company have proven to be defective,” Offutt said, “and should not be used until they are rendered safe for use.” Offutt said Indiana authorities have notified health officers in states outside of Indiana in which the heaters were distributed, listing dealers who bought the heaters presumably for installation in small-type travel trailers of the type commonly used by sportsmen. Offutt saie the board's staff members would “work throughout the weekend to contact trailer dealers so that they, in turn, may notify their customers of the dangers of the defective heaters.” Offutt said he would ask Indiana State Police to cooperate by stopping all cars pulling small trailer units and advising occupants of the danger and the steps to be taken “tb prevent illness or death.” In Michigan, statistics from the state’s health department indicated eight persons have been killed by gas from defective heaters and four others were seriously ill. Offutt identified the heaters as Offutt identified the heaters as Thurm 8M or Thurm BMNS models. Thurm spokesmen at Elkhart previously revealed that a simple modification in the firebox would restott complete combustion and stake the heaters harmless. The spokesman said telegrams and letters were sent six weeks ago to 82 manufacturers of mobile homes and distributors, and several thousand letters were sent in an effort to warn every person who had purchased one of the beaters-
188 BBCATUB DAILY DUOCBA f. DBGATUX IHttAHA
Washington Trip Given Glen Lehman Glen Lehman of Wabash Workers 4-H club will receive a trip to Washington, D C. for the national junior vegetable growers convention. announced Leo N. Seltenright, county agent, today. The trip will be December 5-10 and is sponsored by the Indiana canners’ association. Lehman is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Lehman of Wabash township and won the award and trip with his work in the 4-H tomato project. He will also receive a $lO certificate. Larry J. Beginton, Purdue University sophomore in horticulture, has won the 1959 Indiana 4-H canning tomato club championship with a yield of 29.94 tons an acre. Begington’s home is near Galveston, Cass county. The title winning yield is the second highest ever recorded for a 4-H tomato project in Indiana, according to Roscoe Fraser, Purdue University extension horticulturist, and W. R. Amick, associate in 4-H club work at Purdue. Beyington’s tomatoes, raised on a 7.1 acre field, graded 70.74 per cent U.S. No. 1. The Indiana canners’ association will present the 1959 champion with luggage at its state convention November 18 at French Lick. Devington’s father, Russell, was state tomato king in 1938,1939, and 1940. Ronny and Roger Schafer, Kokomo, tied for runner-up place in this year’s competition. Kglth Rush, also of Galvston, finished third. The 1959 winner* raised their tomatoes for Libby, MsNeill and Libby, Kowoma Fraser estimated that enough tomato juice was produced from Bevington’s field to fill a 4 Vi inch pipe line from the Kokomo factory to the Bevington farm 13.6 miles distant. Other 4-H tomato club winners receiving $lO each are William Etherington, Russia ville; Larry Brown, Converse; Ronald A. Winings .Walton; Larry Harts, Bunker Hill; David J. Kallner, Colfax; Richard Wood, Bunker Hill; Glen Lehman, Geneva; Jimmy Fraley, Converse; Robert Baker, Mt. Summit; John Yoars Bunker Hill; Michael Coblentz, Peru; William L. Jessup, Union City; Steve Maugams, Peru; Joe Comerford, Bunker Hill; Denny Middles worth, Greentown; Howard J. Currens, Swayzee, and Lee Hullinger, Greentown. Bevington, the Schafer brothers. Brown, Kallner, Lehman, George Aydelotte, Libby, McNeill and Libby fieldman, Kokomo, and J. E. Fraley, Converse, Brooks Foods fieldman, will receive trips from the canners assoc, to the national junior vegetable growers convention.
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High Court Reverses Contempt Citation INDIANAPOLIS, <UPI> — The Indiana Supreme Court late Thursday reversed a contempt of court citation by Noble Circuit Judge Kenneth A. King against an Auburn attorney. The attorney, Howard S. Grimm Jr., was fined SSO and was sentenced to 10 days in jail for alleged contempt of King’s court. Evidence showed that King was representing two men charged with spedeing violations when the incident leading to the contempt charge occurred. King told the two men, Dean Paulen and James H. Walton, that the reason he was setting their bond was because Grimm did not appear in court at a second arraignment on March 10, 1958, according to evidence the high court studied. < “That is not so; I was present,’’ Grimm told the two men. Grimm also told Paulen and Walton that King would not permit Grimm to enter a not guilty plea in behalf of the two men, according to a transcript of the record. King promptly cited Grimm for contempt, charging that his statements were “falsehoods.” In its opinion calling for a new trial for Grimm, the high court said "it is of the utmost importance in a free society that the power to punish for contempt be not misused as in cases when it is utilized to protect the personal or individual feelings of a judge." The high court said Grimm’s remarks were directed to his clients, not to King.
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Cuba Tourist Trade Is Practically Nil NEW YORK OJPI) — American winter tourists by the tens of thousands have eliminated Cuba —for many years their favorite spot in the Caribbean sun — from their travel plans this winter. Cuban travel bookings for the record tourist season just beginning are so pathetically few that Fidel Castro is sending his chief of tourism to New York next week for a last chance effort to drum up trade. The Cuban premier, who has whipped up anti-American feeling in his country while spending millions of dollars to attract American tourists, wants Carlos Almoina to find out why: —Airplane bookings to Havana are off 90 per cent. —Seven major steamship lines have eliminated 31 Havana stopovers from winter cruise schedules in the last week. —American Express dropped its winter package tour of Havana Thursday and eliminated Havana from its escorted air tours of the Caribbean for 1960. —Travel agents are refusing to promote Cuba and are telling clients who insist on going that they “travel at your own risk.” —Puerto Rico, in particular, and other Caribbean neighbors such as Jamaica, the Virgin Islands, the Bahamas and Haiti are getting the bulk of the winter vacation trade. <-, , Church Deaconesses Meet With Minister The deaconesses of the First Christian church met Thursday night with their pastor, Rev. Edward Pacha, to discuss the work of this department for the coming year. Mrs. Paul Daniels was elected chairman. Some of the church “tasks” that the deaconesses will oversee are: care of the communion, church nursary, local benevolence, greeting to worshippers, church cleaning, and planning in missions and benevolence. Members of the Board of deaconesses are Mrs. Paul Daniels, Miss Florence Lichtenstiger, Mrs. Goldie Roop, Mrs. Herman Kraft, Mrs. Homer Ruhl, Mrs. John Rosier, Mrs. Wm. Kohls, and Mrs. James Anderson.
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Disc Jockeys Deny Taking Kickbacks
By United Pess International Have some of the nation’s disc jockey’s taken "payola” money for song pluggings? A United Press International spot check of DJ’s throughout the nation showed today many of them had heard about the practice, some had been approached for payoffs but none had accepted. They said a highly paid disc jockey would be foolish to put his career in jeopardy through payola. DJ’s in several cities said formula radio — where only the top 30 or 40 tunes are played each week — prevented under the table payments for plugging new songs. Record spinners in Dallas, San Francisco and Des Moines, lowa, said they didn’t believe their cities were “payola towns.” v “I’m sure there isn’t any payola down here because the records don’t break in this area,” said DJ Jerry Haynes of station WFAA-TV in Dallas. Cites Pittsburgh, Detroit Mortimer Hall, president of station KLAC in Los Angeles, singled out Pittsburgh and Detroit as payola cities. “As far as I know, Los Angeles is not a payola city,” Hall said “This is not one of the cities where hits are made. The hits are made in Pittsburgh and Detroit.” Peter Potter, a former Los Angeles disc jockey, said he did not know many people received payoffs but he said payola “has absolutely ruined the music business.” Ira Cook of Los Angeles, a board member of the Disc Jockeys of America, said he didn’t believe many DJ’s took payola. “I certainly don’t,” he said. “Not that I’m honorable. Just scared. If you start horsing around you endanger your main income.” A Washington, D.C., record spinner, Herb Davis, said he was
Friday. November so, iom
approached several years ago by a representative of a record company who wanted to give him $25 for playing what he liked of their records. Davis said he turned the record company down and doesn’t know of any disc jockey in Washington to take payola. Detroit DJ’s Differ Disc jockeys in Detroit differed sharply on whether there is payola in the Motor City. J. P. McCarthy, of WJR said he had never experienced any payola in Detroit. A spokesman for station WXYZ denied a payola charge by a former DJ, Ed McKenzie. Harry rjpson, general manager of WJBK, said a story in a national magazine that the Detroit station sells plugs was “a little distorted ” WJBK, however, fired its news director, Jac Le Goff for using a newscast to defend the broadcasting industry against the payola criticism. Congressional investigators, who have assigned agents to investigate payola charges, were accused of starting a witchhunt by Dick Driscoll of a Minneapolis station. Disc jockey Norm Bailey of WFEA in Manchester, N.H., sided with Driscoll. “It’s all a lot of nonsense,” he said. “The Russians are taking pictures of the moon and Congress is investigating disc jockeys. Where is our sense of proportion? Congress should busy itself with important things.” MAICO HEARING SERVICE Center To be held: Rice Hotel, Decatur, Indiana Time: Monday, November 23rd 2 to 5 p. m. By: Mr. John Kenwood, your regional Maico Hearing Aid Audiologist from Maico—2l7 West Wayne, Fort Wayne, Indiana. Vlalt him for ■ demonstration of the newest la a complete reave as hrarlaa aldn. Supplies and repalra for all make* of hearing alda are availt able.
