Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 59, Number 105, Decatur, Adams County, 4 May 1961 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

wSVi BUT THKOUGM AM j gggQ^H^WAtS EOTOMEMTS , *l| BoLlv/1 . UA * WAVE SHOWM THAT AM r a m<Ai * TWO uwdekwatk Missile f capitals—- , MAY DOUBLE ITS SPEED I SUCRE, THE LEGAL CAPITAL, IF ENCASED IW AM 4 I AND LA PAX, THE SEAT OP £ EMVELOPE OF GAS/ i" -/ W- B >,.„. .——. -..—. ■ — —' ■ — • • Sen. Goldwater’s Program We recently received, mailed at government (yours and mine) expense, copies of two statements, running nearly eight pages in length, giving the position of Sen, Barry Goldwater, Arizona Republican and leader of the so-called “Conservative” faction of his party, on education. Now the educational assumptions of Sen. Goldwater and his group are basically wrong, to begin with, as we will show. Sen. Goldwater includes a statement by Ernest L. Wilkinson, president of *Brigham Young University, and vice chairman of the Republican national platform subcommittee on education, science and technology. Mr. Wilkinson, and a 7-4 majority of his subcommittee, favored a statement in the Republican national platform flatly opposing Federal aid to education for either payment of school teachers’ salaries or construction of elementary and secondary schools. The minority view of the subcommittee was finally adopted by the platform committee, favoring aid for construction only. The Goldwater Conservatives gave four reasons for their opposition to Federal aid to schools. , “1. They felt that Federal aid to schools was inconsistent with the time-honored tradition of our country and the spirit of our Constitution. Local support and control of education has been and is about the most cherished of governmental functions which, up to the present, the States have preserved. “2. They believed that Federal Aid to schools would ultimately be accompanied by Federal control. “3. The uncontradicted facts showed that either the shortage of classroom space in the country had been grossly exaggerated or had dramatically decreased in the last 6 years. “4. The majority of the committee was convinced, after a realistic appraisal of the situation, that unless heavy additional Federal taxes are levied, the Federal government is in a less favored position to assume this financial obligation than are the states...” On the surface, these appear to be valid reasons. Mos.t of us, with a hazy knowledge at best jof school development, th&t “Federal aid to schools is inconsistant with the time-honored tradition of our country and the spirit of our Constitution.. But on closer examination, nothing could be further from the truth. The truth is, few states today would even have public schools, had it not been for the Federal government. Now this statement bears explanation. Before our present Federal government was formed in 1787, the Continental Congresses formed our loose Confederation. When they provided a basic law for the Northwest Territory, which includes, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin, they wisely included that the 16th section of every township would be used for school purposes. Money from this section, the rent of it originally, went into a school fund, to help provide free education for aIL Additional townships were later provided for higher education. *>.. w Early acts enabling territories to become a state contained the proviso that no state would be approved unless its state constitution provided for support of free schools. Then came the Morrill act, for agricultural schools, Federal schools for Indiana, extension agents, or teachers, to get the land-grant-college information to every farmer regardless of age, vocational agriculture, vocational home economics. — -i President Jackson, when he distributed the national surplus in 1836-37, specified that the money go into another school fund. Money from the sale of the salt licks of the states, on Federal land, went to another school fund. Thus, Federal aid to education, on all levels, of all ’ types, has been common since our Constitution-writing forefathers’ days. And Federal controls are still practically nil, except for reports to show that the money is not being wasted, or spent for other than its intended purposes. “ l Tomorrow we will consider the third and fourth points of the Conservative’s statement on education. editorial Writor Today * Dick D. Heller, Jr.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT . '"f ~ L 4, : , | j \f*i v ' Published Every Evening Except Sunday fay THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT CO., INC. Entered at the Decatur, lad.. Post Office es Second Oats Matter Dick D. Heller, Jr 1 President John G. Heller Vice-President Chas. Holthouae Secretary-Treasurer ' : T\ . V~”~ . ’ ' r 4 r Sabserlption Rates By Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $8.00; Six months, 14.25; 3 months, $2.25. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 19.00; 6 months, $4.75; 3 months, $2.50. By Carrier. 35 cents per week. Single copies, 7 cents.

TV PROGRAMS

Control Daylight Time WANE-TV Channel 15 THURSDAY Smlac 6:oo—Life of Riley 6:3o—Tom Calenberg - News 6:46—Doug Edwards - News 7:oo—State Trooper 7:3o—Summer Sports Spectacular B:3o—Zane Grey Theater 9:oo—Gunslinger 10:00—Address by Vice President Johnson 10*30—Vista '6l 11:00—Phil Wilson - New* 11:15—Cowboy from Brooklyn Fever FRIDAY Day '6l ! :OO—CBS News B:ls—Captain Kangaroo 9:oo—Coffee Cup Theater 10:00—Garden Jargon 10:15—Debbie Drake Show 10:30—Video Village 11:00—Double Exposure 11:30—Your Surprise Package afternoon 12:00—Love of Life 12:30—Search for Tomorrow 12:45—Guiding Light I:oo—Ann Oolone Show 1:25—80b Carlin —News I:3o—As the World Turns 2:oo—Face the Facts 8:80 —Houseparty 1:00 —The Millionaire B:Bo—The Verdict Ie Yours 4:oo—Brighter Day 4:l6—Secret Storm 4:Bo—Edge of Night 6:oo—Dance Date Bnalss 6:oo—Life of Riley 1 C:?o—Tom Calenberg News 6: *s—Doug Edwards-News 7:oo—Pioneers 7:3o—Rawhide B:3o—Route 66 9:3o—Way Out 10:00—Twilight Zone 10:30—Eyewitness to History 1:00—-Phil Wilson New. 11:15—Daughters Courageous WKJG-TV Channel 33 THURSDAY Bvnlss 6:oo—Gatesway to Sports 6:15 —News, Jack Gray 6:3B—Weather _——,—. 6:80 —The Pete Smith Show 6:45 —Huntley-Brlnkley Report 7:oo—Jeff’s Collie 7:3o—The Outlaws B:3o—Bat Masterson 9:oo—Bachelor Father 9:30 —-Tennessee Ernie Ford 1-0:60 —Groucho Show 10:30—Manhunt 1 :t<o—News and Weather 1:M —Sports Today 11:20 —Jack Paar Show FRIDAY s:3o—Continental Classroom 1 -00 —Today . ’ - . ' . 9:00 —Engineer John 9:3o—Editor's Desk 9:s6—Faith To Live By 10:00 —Say When V>:30 —Play Your Hunch 11:00—Price Is Right

TRADE IN DECATUR

Yteui&MipSALE! EVERGREEN ti. ■ v . - .. " ’■ »..y ■ • _ - SHRUBS and TREES Hardy Mature Plants Packed in Moisture-Retaining Soil I 4vmfiST? KVIROIIIIN SHRUBS... include spreading Holly, upright ■ I rHPPNjTerrific values at the price. on* In bag 97c I I REST RILLING TRIIS... include Birch, Willow, Red I * Maple, Ash. All easy to transplant! Rf« 97* B I >***1 1 -dL/i MULTI FLORAL ROSE RUSHES... make gorgeous, colorful B hedges, are easy to grow lOlnbag 97c defay-gsf here fast—these will be a sell-outl ‘ . , - ,

ttt DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA

11 :!o—Concentration lAfteraooa 13:00—News with John Sterner 13:10—Weather 13:16—Farm* and Farming 13:30—1t Could Be You ,18:55 —NBC News-Day Report I:oo—Truth or Consequent'** I:3o—The Burns and Allen Show 2:oo—Jan Murray 2:3o—Loretta Young Theatre 3:oo—Young Dr. Malone 3:3o—From These Roots 4:oo—Make Room For Daddy 4:3o—Here's Hollywood 6:00—Bo so Show Evening 6:oo—Gatesway To Bporta 6:ls—News, Jack Gray 6:B6—Weather 6:60 —The Pete Smith Show 6:46—Huntley-Brlnkley Report 7:00—Blue Angels 7:3o—Happy B:3o—Hallmark Hall of Fame B:3o—Westlnghouse Playhouse 9:oo—County Chairman 10:00 —Michael Shayne 11:00—Newe and Weather 11:16 —Sports Today 11:20—Best of Paar WPTA-TV Channal 21 THURSDAY Evening 6:oo—Popeye and Rascals Shove 6:3o—Huckleberry Hound 7:oo—Popeye and Rascals Show 7:lo—Clutch Cargo 7:ls—News 7:3o—Guestward Ho! B:oo—Donna Reed B:3o—The real McCoys 9:oo—My Three Sons 9:3o—Untouchables 10:30—Miami Undercover 11:00—Helifire FRIDAY 9:4l—Bachelor Apartment 1 11:00—Morning Court IJ:3? —Love That Bob Afternoon 12:00—Camouflage 12:25—A8C News 12:30—Number, Please 1:00 —About Faces I:2s—News 1:30 —Front Page Father 2:oo—Day In Court 2:3o—Seven Keys 3:00 —Queen for a Day 3:3o—Who Do You Trust 4:oo—American Bands*""* 5:00—Alold is Where You Find It 5:30 —Rin Tin Tin Evening 6:oo—Popeye and Rascals "Show 7:lo—Clutch Cargo 7:ls—News 7:3o—Dangerous Robin 8:00 —Harrigan and Son B:Bo—Flints tones 9:00 —77 Sunset Strip 10:00 The Detectives , 10:30—Ten-4 11:00 —Daniel Boone—TrailbUzer MOVIES ADAMS ‘*lol Dalmations” Fri. 7:35; 9:10 Sat. 1:45; 3:40; 5:35; 7:30; 9:25. DRIVE Iff “Tess of the Storm Country” Fri. & Sat. 8:15; "Marriage-Go Hound” 9:45.

Concert On Friday At Adams Central Hie music organizations of the Adams Central junior and seidor high schools are preparing for the annusQ spring concert which will be held Friday at 8 p. m. A feature of the senior band will be a performance by the twirlers. The A. C. twirlers have won several top awards in recent twirling contests in Indiana and Ohio. A trumpet duet by two eighth grade students, Regie Converse and Art Ringger, will be featured in “An English March for American Trumpets” played by the senior band. The junior band composed of 7th and Bth grade students will also play several selections. The instrumental program at Adams Central is under the direction of Don Gerig. The concert choir will appear twice on the program. The first group will be sacred and patriotic choral selections. The concluding portion of the concert will be a presentation by the concert choir of southern folksongs and novelty numbers entitled, “A Southern Songfest.” The 7th and Bth grade junior choir will also take part in the concert. Leon Gerig directs the choral program at Adams Central. A highlight of the concert will be the awarding of letters and chevrons to senior band and concert choir members. The John Fhi lip Sousa award will be presented by the Monroe Lions club to the outstanding senior in the high school band. A trophy will also be presented to the senior who has contributed most to the choral program of the school. The concert will be given at the Adams Central gym. Tickets are being sold by members of the various bands and choirs. Adult tick-, ets will be 65 cents and student tickets will be 40 cents. Tickets will also be available at the door. Long-Time Prisoner Os Red China Dies MANILA (UPl)—Robert E. McCann, an American businessman who spent 10 years in a Communist Chinese prison on espionage charges, died of cancer today at the Clark Air Base Hospital in Luzon, the U.S. Air Force reported. He was 60. Death came to McCann just 28 days after he was carried into the free world on a stretcher after being released by his Red Chinese captors. The Communists cut short h i s prison term for what they described as “humanitarian rea-! sons after it was discovered last January that he had rapidly spreading cancer. McCanns wife went into Communist China early in April and i brought him out to Hong Kong, j . He was flown from Hong Kong : to the Philippines where he J lingered in semi-consciousness until the end. McCann, of Altadena, Calif., was released from Tientsin Prison

French Writer His Philosophy On Love By GAT PAULEY UP! Women’s Editor NEW YORK (UPl)—The great French writer Colette devoted most of her life to writing about glamour. Her daughter hasn’t set down on paper any of her thoughts on the subject. But, in an interview, she said she has a philosophy about love — "It is that you can’t be objective about the subject until you’re 100 and detached from it. Colette de Jouvenal is the only child of the author of “Gigi” and “Cheri” and numerous other works. She is in the United States on business. It is her second visit to New York and her first to other parts of the country which will include stops In Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Has Many Interests Mrs., de Jouvenal, a divorcee, is a pert-faced woman with merry brown eyes and an interest in a multitude of things. She said that when she is at home she is busy scouting for furnishings for a “broken-down chateau’ (“France is full of bro-ken-down chateaus”) which she is refurnishing in the period of Louis XIV when it was built. The crumbling structure is at Herouville, about 20 miles from Paris. She and her step-father (she is the child from the second of her mother’s three marriages) also are editing volurAinous correspondence and supervising theater and movie adaptations of her mother’s works. And, on this trip, she is promoting the French perfume industry, in a trip sponsored by Harper’s Bazaar and Air France Airlines, i Have Special Way “It would be rude of me to come to America and tell your women how to use perfume,” she said. “But we French women do have a special way of using and choosing, according to the mood, the season, the clothes. Everything has to be improved in life, including our scents sense. “I say, folow the advice of friends and husbands. “And lovers. . .” “Many women,” she continued, “are faithful to one perfume all their life. My mother was. The memory of a perfume is like a fragment of a melody. ."It helps to recall a certain happy moment.” in north China April 3 after serving 10 years of a 15-year prison term on charges of spying for the United State.. His son and two daughters flew to the Philippines to see him be-_ fore his death. 81 McCann never got to see his six grandchildren. Born in China in 1901 of U.S. missionary parents, McCann did inot got to the United States until 1918 when he entered Pomona 1 'Calif.) College. McCann returned to China after ! his graduation in 1922 to work on ! the Yellow River project building 1 dikes.

INTRODUCTORY /''TV SUCHER’^YUMMY Pickle Pimiento .... lb. 59c f * Old Fashion Loaf lb. ® 9c i \ I Pressed Haiti lb. Cold Meats For Those Fast to prepare Lunches! RIBSTEAKS79 PARROT ne ohar c coaT n pork TENDERETTES briquets STEAK lB 59c 10 u,s. 79c 1 M»n" d u 49c Hi I.G.A. SELF SERVICE STORE OPEN: MONDAY thru SATURDAY 830 a m. to 900 m. m. SUNDAY: 1:30 a. m. to 1:00 p. rh. — 4:30 p. m. to 7:00 p. m. '

mi* r ' are MEMBERS OF DEN 10. pack 3063, along with the den mothers and mascot, are shown following a todr of the Daily Democrat office Wednesday. Pictured from left to right in the back row they are: H. L. Ratliff, assistant den mother, and Mrs. Virgil Hawking, den mother: middle row, Terry Hawkins, Randy Gerhig, Tom Plasterer and Earl Ratliff; front row, Sylvia Ratliff, mascot.

PUBLIC AUCTION I will sell at Public Auction, located North of Ossian, on St. Rd. 1, to the first Black Top Road, then EaSt 1% miles, on MONDAY, MAY 8,1961 at 6:00 P. M. Prompt SHEEP, HAY, STRAW and OATS II Ewes, some with lambs: 1 Sheep Buck; 25 bales Hay: 50 bales Straw; 100 bu. Oats. TRACTOR, SELF-PROPELLED COMBINE and MACHINERY 1947 Sr. 101 Massey Harris tractor, with starter and lights, on good rubber: 1943 101 Jr. Massey Harris, with starter, lights and cultivators; 1950 Massey Harris Super 26 self-propelled 10 ft. combine with recleaner, this machine is in A-l shape; 2-row mounted G. I. corn picker; Massey Harris 7-ft. power mower; 1955 Co-op side rake on rubber; Case 13 hole grain drill on rubber with fertilizer and grass seed attachments, this drill is in A-l shape: Black Hawk 2-row corn planter with fertilizer attachments; Massey Harris 8-ft. disc: 3 section spring tooth harrow: 2 section rotary hoe: Dunham cultimulcHer: double cultipacker; Allis Chalmers 2-14 plow on rubber: rubber tired wagon, with 16-ft. rack; 32-ft. single chain elevator: John Deere manure spreader on steel; Massey Harris 10-in. hammer mill:'litter carrier, complete with track. GARDEN TRACTOR, BUILDINGS, LUMBER and CAR Simplicity garden tractor, like new, with gear shift and attachments; 12x14 brooder house: 7x7 hog house: Ixs gate boards: 2x4s. and lots of other used lumber: 1952 Studebaker Convertible, with overdrive. radio, heater and a good top. MISCELLANEOUS and HOUSEHOLD GOODS 18-in. Duo-Trim 4-cycle lawn mower: Farm Master 2 unit milker with pipe and stall cocks: Dairy scales: 1 h.p. electric motor: water tank; water hydrant: 500-ft. of No. 10 outside wire: set of tractor chains; 6—50-gal,, drums: chicken nests; chicken feeders: 3 cow stanchions: 2 rolls picket cribbing; 2 rolls of yard fence: 100 64-ft. steel fence posts; corner posts; several rolls of 6-in. Stay used fence: 8 gal. red barn paint: hog oiler: forks; shovels: lots of miscellaneous and old iron; 50 Electric fence posts. HOUSEHOLD GOODS— II-cu. ft. Kelvinator refrigerator: complete dining room suite; wrought iron. 5-pc. dinette set: square tub Maytag washer; bed with springs and mattress; cedar chest; dresser: chest of drawers: antique chest of drawers with marble top and white casters; Zenith console model radio; table lamps; floor lamps: child's desk and chair: child’s folding chairs and table, child's rocking chair: doll buggy; 4 kitchen chairs; 4 folding chairs; Hawiian guitar: 2 lawn rhm'-s- Thor ironer: ice cream freezer: paper hanging tools, sausage stuffer; meat grinder; large butchering cooker: set of old dishes, service for 12; other dishes; cooking utensils; pressure cooker: throw’ rugs; some diiapes: lots of other articles too numerous to mention. MRSe FLORA SCHULLER, Owner TERMS—CASH Not Responsible for Accidents. „ VLunCh served by Bethlehem Ladies Aid Ossian State Bank, Clerk and Cashier. Auctioneers: Walter Wiegmann, R. R. 1, Decatur, Ind, Phone Preble 56. Dell Shaw, Bluffton, Ind. Phone Bluffton 806. ,

THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1961