Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 14, Decatur, Adams County, 17 January 1962 — Page 5
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY it.
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Four Speeches In Indiana By Sen. Goldwater By EUGENE J. CADOU United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) — Indiana Republicans will have the opportunity to watch Sen. Barry Goldwater in action four times during the first half of this year, beginning tonight. Goldwater, the leading conservative possibility for the GOP presidential nomination in 1984, will address an awards banquet of the Muncie Junior Chamber of Commerce tonight and will make speeches later in South Bend, Indianapolis and Fort Wayne. At the Republican National Con* vention of 1960, former Sen. William E. Jenner tried to persuade fellow Republican to dicard Richard M. Nixon and nominate Goldwater, now his favorite for 1964. Both Goldwater and Nixon have Hoosier ties. Mrs. Gold water is a former resident of Muncie. Nixon’s mother was born in Jennings County. The Arizona senator will speak at the Lincoln Day dinner at the Indiana Club in ’ South Bend Feb. 6 under sponsorship of the Young Republican Chib of the University of Notre Dame, at which GOP students probably are in the minority, according to the politicos. Few Far Public In 1960, Goldwater accepted an
PUBLIC SALE Since I have decided to quit the Dairy Business* and devote more time to the Auction and Beal Estate business, 1 will sell at Pubkc Auction the follow tag. located 4%- mites West of Decatur, on U. S. 224 to Preble, then North 1 mile, then West IV6 miles, or South of Fort Wayne on State Road No. 1 to Ossian, then East 7 miles on locker plant road, then South,l mile, th.?nEast Ist farm, watch for signs, on SATURDAY, JANUARY2O,I962 AT 12 NOON 42 Registered & tH-Oracle Holstein Cattle T. B. aid Bangs tested, Most of them Calfhood Vaccinated De Koi Pabst Fayne Laura, Registered Cow, 5 years old, milking 56 lbs milk per day, due to freshen September 2; Glencote Duchess Star, Registered Cow, 10 years old, milking 41 Tbs. milk per day, due to freshen July 21; Ttay. 6 years old, milking 83 lbs. milk per day, just fresh; Blackie, 6 years old. miltang 68 lbs. milk per day, due to freshen October 7; Judy, 6 years old, milking 66 lbs. milk per day, due to freshen October 4; Susie, 5 years old, hulking 60 lbs. milk per day. just fresh; Seven, 3 years old, milking 61 lbs. milk per day, due to freshen September 87; Tamie, 3 years old, milking 58 lbs. milk per day, due to freshen October 6; Patsy. 3 years old, milking 51 lbs. milk per day, due to freshen September 6; Nellie, 3 years old, milling 44 lbs. milk per day, due to freshen September 14; Ginger, 3 years old. milking 42 lbs. milk per day, due to freshen Aug. 31; Whitey, 3 years old milking 55 lbs. milk per day, just fresh; Nigger, 3 yr. old, milking 52 lbs. milk per day, just fresh; Brownie, 4 years old, milking 50 lbs milk per day, just fresh; Sadie, 6 years old, milking 46 Tbs. milk per day, due to freshen October 5; Queente, 2 year old Heifer, just fresh, milking 52 lbs. milk per day; Penny, 2 year old Heifer, just fresh, milking 42 lbs. milk pet day; Mabel, 2 year old Heifer, milking 43 tbs. milk per day, due to freshen October -3; Honey, 2 year old Heifer, just fresh, milking 36 lbs. milk per day; Maggie, 3 years old, milking 20 lbs. milk per day, due to freshen Maroh 6; Babe, 3 years old, milking 25 lbs. milk per due to freshen June 15; Spotty, Holstein Cow, 7 years old, due to freshen January 24. M Hdlstein Helfers with size and lot of quality to start freshening by day of sale. HOGS—S Hampshire Gilts to farrow in February. Hogs and Dairy Equipment will be sold first. NOTE: Most of the above cows have been Bred by A.fc.S. Wis. Captain Bull. You are welcome to inspect this fine Dairy Herd any time prior to sate. Bulk Tank A Dairy Equipment Solar 240 Gal. Bulk Tank, like ntew. with large Compressor: Large Surge 3 unit Milker pmp; 3 Surge. Seamless Pail Milker Units; Wash Tank; Milk Strainer; Jet Air Bottle Gas Heater. CONSIGNED: 1955 Chevrolet 2 door Automatic Transmission in.. A-l WALTER WIEGMANN, Owner Orville Strtlm. Dell Shaw, Bob Marhanke, Ed Sprunger—Auctioneers. Ralph Mesing and Elmer Bultemeier, Clerk and Cashier. TERMS CASH Sale Will Be Held Inside. There* Will Be Covered Trucks Available. Not Responsible for Accidents. Lunch Served by Preble Ladies Aid.
honorary membership in the organization and received a special certificate from the club. A limited number of tickets Will be available to the general public at 610 each. The Butler University Fieldhouse probably will be crowded the night of March 5 when Goldwater will speak on the Voice of Freedom program of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce. Goldwater next will be the chief Speaker at a 4th District GOP fund-raising dinner at the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum in Fort Wayne the night of May 4 at which the cost will be $25 a plate. Fort Wayne is the home town of Republican State Chairman Thomas A. Gallmeyer. which indicates that Goldwater is not bereft of organization favor in this state. Also, Robert Gates, 4th District chairman and son of former Gov. Ralph F. Gate, who served as Indiana national committeeman for many years, will preside. Goldwater will be introduced by Clifford B. Ward, editor of the Fort Wayne News-Sen-tinel. Spate at Terre Haute The Arizona senator addressed a similar fund-raising meeting of the 6th District at Terre Haute early last summer. Other nationally-prominent GOP leaders have aided Hoosier Republicans in their attempt to slash the party’s $300,000 deficit. During the pat year, Kentucky Sen. Thruston Morton helped the 9th District Republicans at Austin; youthful Sen. John Tower of Texas.- the 7th District at New Whiteland; Rep. Charles A. Halleck the 10th District at Muncie and National Chairman William E.
Miller, a New York congressman, the 2nd District at Lafayette and the 3rd District at South Bend. Also, Nixon addressed the Republican "Spectacular” at the State Fairgrounds in Indianapolis Nov. 14. Europe Market Toward Goal Os Welding Lands By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst A train rumbles northward from Italy, through France and into West Germany’s Ruhr district carrying Italian workers to fill a labor shortage in Germany. The French Renault competes on even terms in Germany with the Volkswagen. Belgian coal, closer than the nearest French source, feeds a French industry—free of restrictive tariffs or other nationalistic protective measures. This is part of the 1969 goal of the European Common Market which already has advanced far toward its goal of welding the 170 million people of West Germany, France, Italy, Luxembourg, The Netherlands and Belgium into a single economic unit. This week the six nations of die Common Market passed another important milestone. They reached agreement on a general farm policy Which on July 1 will lift’ import controls from wheat, Other grains, pork, poultry, eggs and high-quality fruits and vegetables.
MAN to MAN "Haw tan I know Pm qualifitd {roin *V —Reader It’s Important to you—and to the Army—to make sure you are suited for the job in whiehyou will be trained. This is determined with aptitude tests, which measure your potential ability to do well in a given area. This way you can know that the odds are for you before you begin; but the final success, of course, depends on your own efforts. ~ — ; —- When you enlist in the Army you choose the job training you want. Then you’re given aptitude tests, to make sure you’re qualified to take the training you pick. We cheek, too, to make sure there’s an opening in the course of training you select. This way yon knew you’re qualified for the job training you ’choose. You know you’ll get it, too. You can be sure of this because the Army gives you a written guarantee for the technical training of your choice — be/ore you enlist. There’s no obligation, even after you get the guarantee, so drop by my office and I’ll tell you num. *-Ypur Army Recruiter -■ Post Office Building Fort Wayne, Ind. (or contact local Selective Service office).
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Pres. Kennedy Qualifies As Top Politician By LYLE C. WILSON United Presa Internati—al WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Catholic Free Press of Worcester, Mass., counsels members of that faith to judge President Kennedy as a politician, not to judge him as a Catholic. That is good advice for Protestants, too; for everyone. John F. Kennedy is the President of the United States, not the Catholic President of the United States. There has been no act of his in the White House that would justify thinking of Kennedy as the Catholic President. He deserves, however, to be called a politician. That is an honorable description and it fits the President well. Kennedy has credentials to qualify as a politician, perhaps the best President - politician of this century. That is a high mark because in this century Kennedy must be measured against two of the best, a pair of Roosevelts, TR and FDR. It is not necessary to look behind the door to discover the political motivation of most of Kennedy’s maneuvers. They are legitimate, they are effective and they are a great bar against the political objectives of the Republican party. Will Visit California Consider a recent announcement by Pierre Salinger, White House press secretary: Salinger announced a March 19 speaking engagement for Kennedy in Berkeley, Calif., and a hefty federal contribution to California’s $1.7 billion water project. President Kennedy had approved a Department of Army
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SYMPHONY CONCERT HERE JANUARY 23—One of the feature, attractions of the Adams county Civic Music Association’s concert series will be the appearance of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra in Decatur Tuesday night, January 23. The concert will be presented at the Decatur high school gymnasium-auditorium at 8 p. m. Ordinarily, the civic association’s concerts are presented at the Youth and Community Center, but facilities of the Center are inadequate for such a production. Seniors of the Adams Central, Pleasant Mills, Geneva and Hartford Center high schools have been invited to attend the concert as guests of the association. Seniors from the other high schools in the county were guests when the Purdue varsity glee club appeared here several weeks ago. The Indianapolis Symphony was founded in 1930 as a semi-profession, cooperative group. Since that time the orchestra has developed, expanded, and stepped into the orchestral major leagues. Since 1937 it has traveled more than any orchestra in, the U.S., to almost every nation end in Canada. Izler Solomon has been permanent conductor of the orchestra since 1956. He formerly headed such outstanding symphonies as the Columbus, Illinois, Lansing, Chicago Women’s, and New Orleans summer. Renato Pacini is the associate conductor.
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finding that the federal government should contribute 988 million toward the building of Oroville dam on the Feather River. Congress has authorised but not appropriated the money. The authorization stipulated that the Army and the President must ap prove. The political fact is that the water project is a major reactor in California politics. It is wholly identified with Gov. Edmund G. (Pat) Brown, Democrat, who probably will oppose Richard M. Nixon in this year’s gubernatorial election. The money and the President’s visit to California should be worth votes to all Democratic candidates, especially Brown. The Ohio Trip Consider Kennedy’s recent visit to Columbus, Ohio, to speak at a birthday dinner for Democratic Gov. Michael V. Di Salle. Di Salle is the midwestern governor who put a lot of muscle in Kennedy’s 1960 pre - convention campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination. Pending when Kennedy went to Ohio was a question whether Di Salle would seek re-election. Other aspiring Democrats complained angrily that the President's visit was a build - up toward announcement that Di Salle would run again. Last week. Di Salle announced he would run. A good politician never forgets. Kennedy did not forget that he owed Di Salle something. A good politician always delivers. Kennedy delivered for Di Salle by going to his birthday party. Kennedy was a good enough politician to turn the religious issue to his own advantage in the 1960 campaign. He is good enough now to shy away from some of his platform promises, notably on civil rights, without losing the support of Negro voters without whose votes he would not have been elected. Kennedy had to out - maneuver Eleanor Roosevelt, Harry S. Truman and Sam Raybum to be nominated in 1960. That qualified him as a pro.
Series Os Articles To Acquaint People To Know City Better
J mil VMler (Editor’s Note: thta is the tatoodMtery to a series of articles designed to make Ike people to Deouter mon aware of the many fine businesses and lainstilui in our town. * wM start with the industries in Decatur, throe, places that iuratab the flnancial wherewithal to keep the city moving- Next, the utißty and Mail establishments will be covered.) What is Decatur? This question can be answered in a thousand diDerent degrees of complexity. The simplest is that Data* is a cRy in northeastern Indiana. But, to those who live here, it ts mMh more. Most of the residents are, by human nature and the demands of economics, limited to a relatively narrow view to this city—a view that is confined to their home and their work. Occasionally, they broaden their view, and are surprised by the bigger picture Any one of the many Decatur industries is a complex organization. Some are more involved than ethers, but even the simplest contains a quantity of engineering, science and economics that is amazing. Even more amazing is the way these complexes are blended together to form a nucleus tor the ceraMiunity.
Retail Involvment Along with the industry of a city, the retail establishments also are more involved than they appear on the surface. In varying degrees, the stores of Decatur use the techniques of marketing, bookkeeping, displaying and merchandising that are available. Far from the ordinary concept, they do not just open the doors each morning. Added to these interesting and involved facets to the Mb of Decatur are the school systems, the churches, social and service dubs, the fraternal and veterans organisations, various elements of national, state, county and city government, and possibly the most complicated of all, the total home lives. It all adds up to much more
than meets the eye. Crow From Where? One of the major concerns of Decatur is that of possible industrial gabwth. Various factors that might be deterrents to growth, ranging from general attitude through labor difficulties to water supply, • have been mentioned. Tills series will attempt to . present some of the reasons far growth. And it win atao attempt to present the city of Decatur as it ta today lie plateau we have reached, and from which we hope to exit pill present these industries, retail establishments mid organisations in a positive manner. This will not be _ done in an attempt to cover bp any of the Inadequacies or injustices of any particular place. It is done became with die admitted shortcomings, all of these estabtikb* meats offer much more ta the way of good than they do bad. . R is also done because the various stores and industries are aware of these shortcomings — and are attempting to correct them, from the iiiside. As long as an internal problem remains in perspective, it should remain internal. It is osfly when these problems become large enough to affect the ether complexes of the city that they should be publicly condemned. > A Mate <MT Mind Progress, growth and prosperity are actually more a state of mind ta titair beginnings than they are a reality* When people feel that times are good, they are good, and when they think negatively, times are bad. This series will attempt to show the multitude of good things Decater has. They are so numerous that there is really no room for anything but optimism. Another purpose is to attempt to remove the “smal
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town” idea from many al the citiaens of Deoaiur. We are a aaaati city ta population and area, but we have puaotirel ly all of the features to any city, Um mate difference is ta population and area. These articles will net run in any partictdnr sequence as to size or age of the industries. It will be determined mostly by when an interview is available. Every industry in Decatur wfll be given the opportunity to tarnish Information seen fit. If a certain Industry is omitted, ft will be by their choice, not any selectton of the Democrat. AB Over The World While many people overlook the fact, Decatur does business with the entirt world, both directly and indirectly. W. Lowell Harper, president of Bag Service, Inc., recently returned from India, where he was negotiating for materials for his industry. Small motors from the Decatur General Electric are used in heme appliances around the world. And the diet of the world has been supplemented with protein extracts from soybeans, with much of the research and production initially done by Central Soya of Decatur. There are only a few to the ways Decatur has brereae • cosmopolitan city, hi thia respect, we are actaatiy qtote a bit different than a tat of small cities, in a very reef sense, the world is our euotetoer, and we are the woaMte customer. And we have aw unlimited future.
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