Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 160, Decatur, Adams County, 8 July 1960 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
■ DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT .. .iSmWSaWBc. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dog Poisoner In Town A report has been made to the Decatur Daily Democrat that someone has poisoned a pet dog here in town. This is a regrettable occurrence in any family. A pet, raised, and tenderly nourished by the entire family, is a joy and a part of life to every youngster. To have that pet cruelly murdered is quite a shock. However, sometimes the fault does not all lie with the poisoner. Perhaps the culprit felt that he* had ample cause. Not everyone cares to raise dogs or cats. Some pride themselves on well-kept lawns, beautiful flowers, or shrubbery. Picture the feelings of a man or woman who devotes hours and hours each day to his property, only to have a dog or cat come by and tear up the flower bed, and damage the trees and shrubs. Pet owners are responsible for their animals, which must be licensed and kept at home by fence or leash. No ohe would think of allowing a young child with no sense of respect for property or its own life to roam at large; neither should they allow their pets to roam at large. The problem is one of two-fold extremes. Dogs should not be allowed to roam. Neighbors should not resort to poison. Pet owners should fence their yards, and allow their dogs the same freedom they allow their children—a freedom that is restricted by their learning and experience of the child or pet. And those who are bothered by dogs, if they de- ' sire beautiful lawns and fldwer beds, may fence in their own yards, or call the police and report stray pets. But malicious harm to the property of others, either by poison or by allowing pets to roam, can cause ill feelings between neighbors. It should not be allowed to do this. If you have either problem, take the initiative yourself, and take which either course you desire. But do not try to make two wrongs cause a right. It may temporarily ease your besieged and embittered mind, but it will cause only more problems in the long-run. Kindness to the pets, or to the property and * hobbies of others, is a must in society which, as its population increases, grows closer and closer together. .We must learn to get along with others, or become outcasts of society. Taking the law into your own hands .to satisfy *• the wrong which you believe done to you will not solve the problem, but compound it.
TV PROGRAMS
* . WANE-TV Channel 15 ~ FRIDAY Uvsahig Life of Riley : S-Now I’ll Tell One 1: o—Tom Calenberg Nevi 0: s—Doug Ed wards-Newe T: Of —Death Valley Daye 7:Bo*—Rawhide , B:3oj— Mike Hammer 9:9o—Friday Nlgtit Showcase 9:3os—December Bride 10:6 ft—Twilight Zone 10:30—Pereon To Person 11:00—Phil Wilson News 11: S—The Unsuapected 13: :®-Cagt. John Smith & ■ Pocahantas SATURDAY 7*lO—Agrlculturs U.B.A 8 :#o—Captain Kangaroo »:«o—Kartoon Klub o:oo—Heckle & Jeckle ? ¥°S, M I:oO—The Lone Ranger I:3O—CBS News I 3:fo— Sky King 2:|ok—Armchair Adventure 12:4 30—Baseball M.aSa Pp ° y Lea ’ KUe Baseball 6:00—Colonel Flack o:lo—Science Fiction Theater 7:00 —San Francisco Boat T: SO—Perry Maison B:Bo—Wanted Dead or Alive 9:30— WUI Travel 10:00—Gunsmoke 10:00—Miss Universe Contest OTO 12:60 —Ellery Queen •L’MDAT I:oo—Faith For Today 1:30 —This la The Life 9:9o—Lamp Unto My Feet 9:3o—Look Up And Live 10:00—Frontiers of Science 10:30 —Camera 1 10:55—News 11:00—Arizona Kid _ Performance — 12. Adventure 12:05 —Baseball 3:Bo—Willy 4:oo—Star Performance 4:lo—Charlie Chan s:6o—Science Fiction Theater -a. JI tlftsr-Eyewitnoas—Report -— — Evening 6:oo—Convention Preview 1:80—20th Century 7 :oo—Lassie 9:OO—G.E. Theater 9:lo—Alfred Hitchcock 10:00—Lucy in 10:80—What’s My U». 11:00—Sunday News Special 1115—Khyber Patrol WKJG-TV Channel 13 FRIDAY Evening f :00—Gatesway To Sports s:ls—News, Jack Gray o:3o—Yesterday’s Newsreel • ; 45—Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:oo—Take A Good Look 7:Bo—Play Your Hunch 8:00—-Head of the Class 8:30 —Cimmaron City 9:Bo—Masquerade Party 10:90—Moment of Fear «, i:?u-p e o w r:. a %d^r th - r 11:20—Jack Paar •ATU3U3AY I:3o—Cartoon Time >■ |0:0O —Howdy Doody 10:80—Ruff and Reddy 11:00—Fury ... |1:80 —Circus Bey
r«l Davl.ml** Tlmsa wiiiiui wayugni lima B Afternoon 13:00—True Story 12:30—Baseball 3:oft —Adventure Parade Men Toward the Light 4^4—Rollet Derby s:oo—Detective’s Diary s:3o—Wrestling Evenleg - -— 0:30—Football 7:3o—Bapansa B:3o—Man and the Challenge 9:oo—The Deputy , —Democratic Convention 10:30—Interpol 11:00—The Saturday Edition 11:15—The Sailor Takes a Wife Morale »UNDAI 9:oo—The Christopher* 9:3o—Americana eit Work 9:4s—How Christian Science Heals 16:00—Sacred Heart Program MU!*—lJL d , u, , trT . on P*r»do 10:30—This la the Life U:oo—Cartoon Time Lttemoon 13:30 —Inside Sports l? : H~T he On-Deck Circle 12:35—Baseball 4:o«—Hopalong Cassidy ~ 4:3o—Sunday TV Theater s:oo—Summer Incident s:3o—The Silent Voice evening 6:oo—Meet The Press 6:3o—Edwin Newman Reporting 7:oo—Overland Trail B:oo—Music On Ice 9:oo—Chevy Show 10:00—Loretta Young Show 10:30—U.S. Border Patrol 11:00—The Sunday Edition 11:15—Bewitched WPTA-TV Channel 21 FRIDAY Evening 4:oo—Popeye And Rascals Club 7:oo—Baseball 9:00—77 Sunset Strip 10:00—Detectives 19:30—Ten-4 — 11:00—The Mummy ___ _ SATURDAY ■ '-< Ifternnen 11:80—Pro Football 12:00—Little Western 2:oo—Racing From 21 3:oO—Baseball ■vowing 0 oo—Little Western 7:00—77 Bengel Lancers’ 7:3o—Dick Clark B:oo—High Road ! ; fS —Leave It To Beaver 9:oo—Lawrence Welk 10:00—Jubilee U.S.A 10:30—Convention City 11:00—Club 21 13:00—Confidential File MUj> StIBDAI 12:00—Herald of Truth 12:30—Oral Roberts 1:00—Baseball }-J® —Campaign Roundup J-OO —Hopalong Cassidy' s:oo—Matty’s Funday Funnies s:3o—Lone Ranger < Ewe bi ms o:oo—Comedy Time o:Bo—Cisco Kid —These Arc The Men 7:3o—Maverick 3:3o—Lawman 9:oo—Rebel 9:Bo—Alaskans J® : ?t' —ri , r,y Staccato 11:00—Altair In ltctii| MOVIES DRIVE-IN “Tarzan’s Greatest Adventure” ►rl. * Sat. 8:35 "Tonka" 10:00 Sat. Mldnlte "Young As We Are” “Darby O’Gill ,& Little People” bun. & Mon. at 8:35 "Because They’re Young" at 10:15
Banks Are Largest Lenders To Farmers Indiana banks were serving farmers with 14 per cent more production credit than a year previous on January 1 of this year, according to T. F. Graliker. president of the First State Bank of Decatur, who represents the Indiana bankers association as Adams county agricultural key banker. During 1959, the state's banks maintained their leadership in farm credit services. Based on the 19th annual farm lending summary of the agricultural commission of the American bankers association, Graliker reported that “at the beginning of the year, Indiana bankers were supply farmers with 63 per cent of the production credit provided by institutionaltenders. - Total bdnk credit to the state’s farmers stood at $205-million. 11 per cent more than a'year previous. The total included $133-million in production loans and $72-million in farm mortgages. At the same time, $l3B- - in farm, loans were held by insurance companies; $73-mil-lion by Federal Land Banks; $67million by Production Credit Associations; and s2l-million by the Farmers Hbrile Administration.” Graliker reports that “more and more, the banks in Indiana find that farmers need a new type of credit to help finance farm capital requirements. To meet this changing need, an increasing amount of farm credit from Indiana banks is on an intermediateterm repayment basis. “Intermediate-term loans • are most frequently needed for farm machinery and equipment, livestock , sbfl improvements; additional land, and refinancing short-term notes. Over one-half of all bank farm mortgage loans are used to finance these intermediate - type capital expenses. ‘‘As a further service to help farmers improve their operations, about one-third of all other bank farm loans have a repayment program longer than one year. Banks serve farmers with far more in-termediate-term credit than any other group of lenders." Graliker believes that “farmers and bankers working together in this way help make Indiana agriculture more prosperous.” He reported that 99 per cent of the insured commercial banks in Indiana are serving farmers with agricultural loans. Mishawaka Youth Is Drowned In Lagoon MISHAWAKA, Ind. (UPD—Solomon Jacobs, 19, Mishawaka, drowned in Bittersweet Lagoon near the St. Joseph River Thursday while swimming with several companions. Police said David Eby, 15, and his brother, Lawrence. 13, told them Jacobs yelled for help twice, and each time laughed when they swam toward him and they ignored him when he called for help th,e third time.
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THt MbCAttm DAILY DgMOCRAt, DgCAttm, OrPIANA
Leading Cubans In Political Exile
By PHIL NEWSOM DPI Foreign Editor The man-of-the-week; Jose Miro! Cardona, former Cuban ambassa-dor-designate to the United States. Hie place: Havana. The quote: “Hie ideological divergencies between the policies of the government and my conscience are already insoluble.” Having thus penned his letter of resignation as Cuba’s ambassador to the United States and another resigning as professor of criminal law at Havana University, Dr. Jose Miro Cardona made lus waypast Cuban policemen outside the Argentine embassy and at 7:35 sum. on Tuesday joined another, distinguished fellow countryman in political exile. Hie other man was Sergio Rojas Santa marina, former Cuban ambassador to Britain, who on June 28 sought asylum in the same embassy. Both men had been dedicated revolutionaries against the Batista dictatorship, but neither now was able to stomach the dictaorship of Fidel Castro nor stomach Cuba’s swift passage into the Communist orbit. Rojas had called the Cuban government “in its preserd form definitely Communist.” ' Miro Cardona’s defection probably was the most damaging yet to Castro’s prestige. Miro Cardona had been the Castro regime’s first prime minister, resigning without rancor when he found he could not effectively fill his office when policies were being changed minute-to-minute by Castro at the television microphone. Miro Cardona was, in addition, one of Cuba’s most outstanding lawyers and had been dean of Havana University’s law school. His resignation was one more evidence of the stresses within the Castro government, and, for Latin American nations who have viewed with detachment if not with sympathy Castro’s assaults against the United States, further proof that Castro long ago had deserted the ideals of the revolution for which Miro Cardona and others had fought. No One Injured In Two-Auto Collision At 6:50 p.m. Thursday, Paul Walter Germann, 21, route 4, Decatur, pulled out of a private drive onto county road 27 and was struck by a car driven by Edward Fredrick Marbach, 28. No one was injured, but there was approximately S7OO combined damage done to the cars.
SEE . “Natural Color” Bargains on page 3
COURT HfWS Real Estate Transfers Noah J. Schrock etux to Charles J. Leonard inlot 699 in-Decatur. Hubert V. Sutton etux to Central Soya Co., Inc., inlot 48 in Decatur. Oren Moser etux to Frieda Lehmann. 81.99 acres in Monroe Twp. Frieda Lehmann to Oren Moser etux, 81.99 acres in Monroe Twp. Claud L. W evaeras Claud L. Weaver as Admr. to William Mac Smith etux, inlot 304 in Geneva $3,350. James Jerome Yager etal to Yager, Bros. Ine., lots in Berne > and land in Wabash & Monroe Twps. Harold C. Long etux to William C. Thompson, lots 6 & 7 in Rainbow Lake Subdiv. Anthony J. Faurote etux to Richard L. Wasson etux, inlot 124 in Decatur. City of Decatur, to Indiana & Michigan Electric Co., property in Decatur, $2,051,191. Willard D. Walker etux to Orville Robinson Co., land in Geneva. Wayne M. Price etux to Charles M. McFarren etux, inlot 15 in Decatur. Ivan M. Hakes etux to Samuel P. Gilbert etux, .76 acre in Root Twp. George F. Medler etux to James L. Zuercher etux, lot 13 in Rainbow Lake Subdiv. • Arthur C. Wittwer to Jake J. Schwartz Jr., etux, inlot 654 in Berne. ■ . J. Jerome Yager etal to Keith Amstutz etux, inlot 848 in Berne. Foster To Remain In State Highway Post INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—Governor Handley today announced that he has pursuaded George M. Foster to remain as executive director of the Indiana State Highway,Department. Foster resigned recently from his SIB,OOO a year position to accept a job with “Highways For Survival,” a group working for better and safer highways. Foster said he has advised the organization he will not be able to serve • as its national secretary.
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Peppy Pals The Preble Peppy Pals met July 2 at the home of Clarence Bultemeir. Judy Bultemeier was in charge of the meeting, the pledges were led by Judy Bultemeier and Shirley Gallmeyer, and the group singing was led by Kay Bultemeier. The roll call was answered with a favorite song. Demonstrations were given by’Tdfm Sdheumann and Dianne Fuhrman. Following the meeting the members went swimming in the Bultemeier lake. The next meeting will be held July 16 at 2 p.m. in the Friedheim Lutheran school. Reporter; Janice Miller ; —— . h ■■ ■ -o 20 Years Aga | Today I a I'., ■ ■ ■ ' July 8, 1940 — An engine and seven freight cars of the Erie railroad were derailed near Magley and traffic was halted on the Erie
Erie Railroad Offers Tourists Special Rate for New York Visit! Ofc t i, ■ ■ JL-1 - BwE fa wSMBiL ■ i • Jill BLiiMKiw pUMMLWi . ERIE RAILROAD and DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT BARGAIN WEEKEND VACATION TOUR TO NEW YORK CITY FREEDOMLAND U. S. A. august 5-8 Adults $52.25 Children 5 & Under 12 $35.25 TAX INCLUDED TO MAKE YOUR RESERVATION I FILL OUT COUPON AND ENCLOSE A SIO.OO DEPOSIT PER PERSON. ) MAKE CHECK OR MONEY ORDER PAYABLE TO ERIE RAILROAD AND ( FORWARD TO DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. Descriptive Folder will J . be furnished on request or with reservation. 1 NAME......... ( ADDRESS ) PHONE r i._„.........1....... ’ ) . V... Check Type of Room J Twin Beds Q Double Beds \A Single Room ($2.50 Extra) / If you wish to room with someone, place that \ person's name below. f ■
for several hours until the wreckage was cleared and tracks repaired. Rural schools of Adams county will have their preliminary opening Aug. 29 and classes will start Sept. 3. Two Fort Wayne young men were sentenced to 1-10 year prison i terms after pleading guilty to 1 breaking and entering the General Electric Co. plant here. Township trustees have endorsed a proposal to hire a public health nurse tor Adams county. The first in a series of union services, sponsored by several of the Protestant churches of Decatur, was held here, with Dr. William Cullen Dennis, Earlham College president, as guest speaker.
held -
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