Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 54, Decatur, Adams County, 5 March 1962 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT CO., INC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller, Jr. ..... President John G. Heller Vice President ' Chas. Holthouse Secretary-Treasurer -- Subacriptioti Rates By Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, >10.00; . Six months, >5.50; 3 months, >3.00. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, >11.25; • months, >6.00; 3 months, >3.25. By Carrier, 35 cents per week. Single copies, 7 cents. A Look Downhill There are many people who try to rationalize fear away with the old saw that “it’s all in the head.” In a sense, it is, but psychologically, fear is a definite reality. It is the final culmination of negative thinking. Fear can invade a whole town, if there are enough individuals, preaching the negative side of things. And, if allowed to continue, it can eventually ruin a town. There are too many people who fear Decatur might lose an industry. There are merchants who fear that business might get worse, instead of better. There are many citizens who fear that the tax rate might increase. And, believe it or not, there are those who fear that the city might progress. The biggest evil connected with fear in particular and negative thinking in general is the fact that if we fear something long enough, it will become a reality. We can condition our minds to the point where we actually act to bring about our worst fears — if we have fears. All of which sounds pretty frightening. But the opposite is just as true, and certainly much brighter. Those people, those businesses, those cities that have an aura of confidence, a feeling of success, are the winners. Those merchants who feel that business is good are the ones that have good business. Those communities that appreciate industry for its positive additions and contributions are the ones that obtain and keep industry. And those industries that stay postive, stay healthy and prosperous. The successful person does not think in terms of success because he is successful — he is successful because he thinks in terms of success. That sounds ridiculously easy, and it is. In fact, it’s so simple that many will not believe it. They will not believe every great philosophy from the Bible through the ancient Greeks and into the moderns. Each one of these philosophies has somewhere in it, in almost identical words, the fact that a man’s life is the result of his thoughts. It follows, that the results of a group of men’s efforts are what they thought. Despite every positive example that this philosophy is true and workable, there is that group of people that do not really want success for themselves or others. This group would rather wallow in their own excuses, their own self-pity than look forward with enthusiasm to a bright and prosperous future. The breaks come to those people, businesses and cities that are prepared for them and looking for them. The others deserve a floating glance of sorrow for having so little self-respect — nothing else.
Editorial Writer Today John G. Heller
T V PROGRAMS Central Daylight Timo
WANE-TV Channel 15 ■OTDAI of Riley hrss: 7:oo—Shotgun Slade I :*0 -To Tell The Trutn B:oo—Pete and Gladys B:Bo—Father Knows Best B:9o—Danny Thomae »:30—Andy Griffith 10 ;00—Henneaaey 10:80—I’ve Got a Secret 11:00—Phil Wilson—New* 11:15—Vic Sterling Sports 11:30— Wake bland fVBIUAY —~ 7:ls—Dally Word 7:20—80b Carlin—News 7:3s—College of the Air 7:55 —Bob Carlin—News B:oo—Captain Kangaroo — ——- S:i»U—Col Lee Cup Theater 10:00—Breakfast in Fort Wayne 10:30—I Love Lucy 11:00—Video Village - 11:30 Clear Horizon 11:58—CBS - NOWS IT oT—Love Os lase 12:30—Search For Tomorrow 18:45— Guiding Light I:oo—Ann Colone's Woman s Page - i I:3o—As The World Turns I:oo—Password I:3o—iHo useparty B:3B— Verticals Yours 4:oo—Brighter Day ’ 6:oo—Life of Riley 8:30 —Tom Calen berg—News B:4s— Doug Edwards—Nows 7:oo— Trackdown 7:Bo— Marshall Dillon B:oo—Password S:3O— Dobie Gillis :00—Bed Skelton 10:00—Garry Moore Show 11:00—Phil Wilson News 11:15—Vic Sterling Sports 11:88—Asphalt Jungle WKJG-TV Channel 33 _ BOMBAY '8:0|— Gateeway To Sports B:lß—News. Jack Gray 8 J s—Weather B:Bo—Pete Smith Show 6:46— Huntley-Brinkley Report 7 B:oo—National Velvet B:Bo— The Price Is Right 0:00—87th Precinct h* 3l * Rental Classroom *♦3l—Pnitf* Tw Live By 10:00—Say Whcn >o:Bß—Play Tour Hunch
11:00—The Price is Right 11:30—Concentration Afternoon 18:00—News 18:10—The Weatherman 18:15 —The Wayne Rothgeb Show 18:30—Truth or Consequences 18.55—N8C News Day Report 1:00» Your First Impression I:3o—The Peoples' Choice B:oo—Jan Murray Show B:3o—Loretta Young 3:oo—Young Dr. Malone 3:3o—Our Five Daughters 4:oo—Make Room for Daddy 4:3o—Here’s Hollywood 4:SS—NBC News s:oo—Kukla & OHie s:os—The Bozo Show Kvealag . —a 6:00—-Gatesway to Sports 6:ls—News 6:Bs—Weather 6:80 —Pete Smith Show 6:45 —Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:oo—Ripcord 7:3Q—-L*a.ramie 6:3o—Alfred Hitchcock Presents 9:oo—The Dick Powell Show 10:00—Cain's Hundred 11:00—News and Weather 11:15—Sports Today 11:30—Jack Paar WPTA-TV Channel 21 * • MGBHOAY Kvenlsr 6:oo—Popeye Show 6:Bo—Quick Draw McGraw 7:oo—Mr. Magoo 7:05—81 Evening Report 7:IS—ABC Evening Report 7:Bo—Cheyenne B:3o—Rifleman 9:oo—Surfside 6 10:00—Ben Casey 11:00—ABC News 11:12—What>s the Weather 11:17—Tarzan & the Amazons TbEMDAt Morn tn* 9:s7—Headline Shooter l’:oo—The Texan 11:30—Yours for a Song Afternoon 18:00—Camouflage 18130 —.Make a Face I:oo—Day in Court I:26 —ABC News I:3o—Three Missions West 3:oo—Jane Wyman Show 3:3o—Seven Keys 3-90—Queen for a Day 3:3o— Who Do You True* 4:00 American Bandstand 4:30—R.1.P. s:oo—Cimarr6n City Evening 6:oo—Popeye Show 6:3o—Yogi Bear 7:oo—Mr. Magoo 7:05—31 Evening report 7:IS—ABC Evening Report 7:80 —Bugs Bunny 8:00—Bachelor Father ■ * B:3o—The New Breed B:3o—Yours for a Song 10:00—Alcoa Premiere 10:30—TBA 11:43—ABC News .11:12—What's the Weather 11:17—Big Time Wrestling from 21 ADAMS "Exodus" Mon. & Tues, at 7:40.
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LACKLAND AFB, Tex.—Airman Basic Jerry P. Angle, son at the Rev. and Mrs. Kenneth P. Angle of 121 S. Fourth St., Decatur, Ind., is being assigned to a technical training course for refrigeration specialists at Ft. Belvoir, Va. Airman Angle, who has completed his basic military training here, was selected for the advanced course on the basis of his interests and aptitudes. The airman is a graduate of Decatur high school.
Blizzard-Like Storm Pounds Midwest Area By United Press International A blizzard - like storm blocked roads in at least five Midwest states today. Polar cold pushing south behind the snow dropped temperatures below zero in the Northern Plains. Heavy rains washed portions of Dixie and the Pacific Northwest. Miami, Fla., had .75 of an inch of rain in six hours. Tatoosh Island, Wash., had an inch of rain in 12 hours. Seattle, Wash., had .62 of an inch. The mercury quickly dipped back below zero in portions of Montana and the Dakotas. Bismarck, N.D., had a high of 9 degrees Sunday. Roads were blocked by the storm, packing 40 mile winds, in parts of lowa. Nebraska. Minnesota, Illinois and Wisconsin. Occupants of a dozen autos were rescued by snow plow crews when the cars stalled near Geneva, Hl. Nineteen Girl Scouts got an extra day of winter outing when snow prevented their bus from reaching their camp near East Troy, Wis. lowa called in its snow plow crews in many areas when drifts closed in behind them and visibility was cut at zero. Minneapolis, Minn , had a 6-inch snowfall and the Minnesota Highway Department urged motorists to stay home, as did highway officials in Wisconsin. lowa and Nebraska. Near Cincinnati, Ohio, authorities continued a search in the Winton- Woods County Park for a man whose car was found partly submerged in a rain-swollen creek over the weekend. At least 20 families were evacuated over the weekend at New Albany, Ind., where the Ohio River was expected to crest today. Further evacuations were expected at Evansville and Mount Vernon, Ind. Twenty Indiana roads were reported blocked by high water. The Ohio River was rapidly returning to its banks at Cincinnati, Ohio, and authorities Sunday began the clean up job. The flood crest on the Ohio was expected to move on toward Cairo. 111., from Louisville, Ky. today. The Kentucky River also was receding but many Kentucky highways remained blocked by high water. Fined For Failure To Obey Stop Sign Freeman H. Walters. 83. route 1. Monroe, paid a fine of $1 and costs, totaling $19.75, in the Decatur city court this morning on a charge of failing to obey a stop sign. Walters was arrested recently by the Indiana state police and pleaded guilty to the charge in court this morning.
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THE DECATUR DAILY DfrfoCßAt, DECATUR, TOANA
U. S. Over • Matched In Stalin Dealings
By LYLE C. WILSON i United Piwm laternattoaal | WASHINGTON (UPI) - Recommended for reading today mv “The Cardinal Spellman story" in the current Look magazin* *nd a 50<ent paperback published by the Henry Regnery Co. of Chicago, titled “Roosevelt’s Road to Russia.” The cardtaal’s story relates FDR’s idea that the poetwar i world would be divided in four parts with the Soviet Union domi- . nant in Europe. Great Britain, the i United States and China each, I were to be top dogs in three other areas: Africa, the Pacific and Asia. The new Regnery paperback was written by George N. Crocker. It Is fierce and bluntly worded. The book will be offensive to FDR’s defenders because it challenges their hero as the architect of World War II strategies that left the world in the now-prevail-ing condition, which is a mess. The theme of Crocker's book is that FDR was a gullible stooge for J.V. Stalin’s master plan to dominate the postwar world or M much of it as possible. The cardinal’s story seems to tie in there. U.S. Was Over-Matahed “Roosevelt’s Road to Russia” is a chronicle of the men around FDR and of the wartime conferences at which these men matched wits, notably with Sta- | lin and V.M. Molotov. Crocker [ finds the U.S. team out-played i and over-matched. He especially ' tags the late Harry Hopkins as a safety man who forever was dropping tile ball for lack of the will to catch it. "That a web of subversion was spun over Washington during Roosevelt’s administration is now beyond question,” Crocker writes. ‘J. Edgar Hoover’s ‘Masters of Deceit’ is but one of many authoritative sources which verify that the government was infiltrated by both Communist agents and Communist sympathizers and that U.S. jrfans, policies and official attitudes were not only influenced by these infiltrations but also promptly reported to Moscow. “If Franklin D. Roosevelt became, as war went on, Stalin’* favorite fellow-traveller, it was not necessarily because any ideas logical conversion occurred. s? Pro-Russian Atmosphere , “The pro - Russiap atmosphere’ in Washington ... was galling to many, including the frustrated secretary of Navy, James V. Forrestall. His diaries reveal that in September, 1944, he had written that: ‘lf any American suggests that we act in accord with our; own interests, he is apt to be called a ... fascist or imperialist, while if Uncle Joe (Stalin) suggests that be needs the Baltic provinces, half of Poland, all of Bessarabia, and access to the Mediterranean, all hands in Washington agree that he is a fine, frank, candided and generally delightful fellow.’ Such was the frame of mind Roosevelt took to Yalta.” The publishers believe that many people will be made angry by this paperback. That is a reasonable expectation. The book was published originally in hard covers at $5 and had a large sale. The paperback at 50 cents is expected to do better. Look should do well with the cardinal’s story, too. It relates, that FDR told Spellman in 1943 that at the least Stalin would gobble up Finland, the Baltic states, half of Poland and Bessarabia. FDR expected Stalin to appoint Communist governments for Germany and Austria. No counter - move was contemplated. Driver Uninjured As Car Hits Fence Raymond V. Cook, 17, route 5, Decatur, escaped injury but nearly demolished his car in a one-ve-hicle accident at 1:35 a.m. Sunday, one mile east of Bobo on county road B’/i. at its intersection with county road 27. Cook was traveling east on IBV2 when he lost control of his car in the loose stone, and smashed into a fence in the northeast corner of the The car suffered approximately S6OO damages, which may be a total loss. Two rods of fence and three’ posts owned by Chuck Wagner, route 5, Decatur, received approximately $75 damage. Sheriff Meric Affolder investigated.
MAICO HEARING SERVICE CENTER To bo held: Rice Hotel, Decatur, Indiana Time: 1:00 to 4:30 P. M. Friday, March 9,1962 By: Mr. John Kenwood, a certified heating aid audiologist from Maico, 217 W. Wayne St., Fort Wayne, Indiana. Visit him for a demonstration of the newest in a complete range of hearing aids. Supplies and repairs for all makes of hearing aids are available.
Two Break-ins Are Being Investigated The local police department and the county's sheriff department are investigating two weekend burglaries one in Decatur and the other at the Meshberger Bros. Stone CorpBlue Creek plant. Investigation is continuing in a break-in at the home of Lawrence Anspaugh, Homestead 9, which occurred between approximately 6 p.m. Friday and 0:30 p.m. Sunday. Anspaugh reported the incident to the city police at 7:09 p.m. Sunday. Investigation showed that entry had been gained by forcing open a window located in the rear porch at the home. A lamp was knocked over and damaged and $5 in change taken from a bank. Two small banks in the second floor were taken, one containing $5 and the other $lO. The thief or thieves then left through the back door, leaving it wide open. Was Out Os Town Anspaugh told investigating officers that he had left town about 1 o’clock Friday afternoon, but a carpenter was working at the home until 6 o’clock that night. The carpenter stated everything was alright when he left, and he locked the back door. The Anspaughs then returned about 6:30 p.m. Sunday. The sheriff’s department is investigating a break-in over the weekend at the Blue Creek plant of Meshberger Bros., located four and one-half miles south of Pleasant Mills. O. T. Reynolds, route 1, Monroe, plant manager, reported the burglary. Entrance was gained by breaking a padlock on the gate of the large fence surrounding the building. Die gate was then opened, and the office of the plant entered by prying open a window on the north side with a tire tool. Taken was some petty cash, the total of which was not known this morning, and some candy. The thieves attempted to steal the entire safe from the office. The safe was removed from the office and unsuccessfully attempted to be loader into a car, suing a portable hoist. Approximately 14 and one-half gallons of gasoline were also taken. Sheriff Merle Affolder and state detective Walter Schindler were continuing their investigation this morning. New York Stock Exchange Prices MIDDAY PRICES A. T. & T„ 132%; DuPont, 243: Ford, 103; General Electric, 76%; General Motors, 53%; Gulf Oil, 43%; Standard Oil Ind., 56*4; Standard Oil N. J., 55; U S Steel, 70. Chicago Livestock CHICAGO (UPl)—Livestock: Hogs 7.000; fairly active; butchers steady to 25 higher; advance mostly on weights under 240 lb; 30 head sorted out of 44-head lot U.S. No 1 around 215 lb butchers with high percentage of lean cut 18.25; mostly No 1-2 190-230 lb 17.25-17.50; around 150 head 17.50; mixed No 1-3 180-230 lb 16.75-17.25; 230-250 lb 16.50-16.75 Cattle 12,000, calves none: slaughter steers and heifers average choice and better fairly active, mostly 25-50 higher; low choice and below uneven, steady to 50 higher; other classes mostly steady; two loads prime 1275-1300 lb steers 3025 'and 30.50; load at 30.50, a new high since July, 1960; numerous loads prime and mixed choice and prime 1175-1400 lb 1 steers 29.00-30.00; bulk choice 9501400 lb 26.25-28.75; mixed good and choice 25.25-26.25; good 22.5025.25; load utility 1090 lb holsteins 2075; choice heifers 25.50-27.50; good and low choice 22.00-25.25; standard and good vealers unevenly 20.00-32.00; load choice 850 lb feeder steers 24.50. Sheep 2,000; moderately active: slaughter lambs steady; four decks choice and prime 102-104 lb fed western wooled lambs 18.50; choice and prime native wooled slaughter lambs 18.00-18.50; good and choice 16.00-18.00; five decks choice and prime 95-109 lb shorn fed lambs fall shorn pelts 18.00.
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GIFT FOR CAROLINE—A senior Girl Scout gives roses and a Brownie doll to President Kennedy at the White House as scout leader looks on. L About i< million Aweriatn tirli teve tew scouts to the wt W year* _
Indianapolis Livestock INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — Livestock: Hogs 8,500; barrows and gilts steady to 25 higher; uniform 185225 lb 16.75-17.15; 25 head 17.25; bulk 180-240 lb 16.25-16.85 ; 240-270 lb 15.75-16.50 ; 270-330 lb 15.00-1575; 150-170 lb 1425-16.50; sows steady; 300-400 lb 14.50-15.25 ; 400-600 lb 14.00-14.75. Cattle 2,00; calves 100; steers and heifers unevenly strong to 50 higher, mostly 25-50 higher; choice i steers 2650; mixed good and 1 choice 25.50-26.00; good 23.50-25.50; few loads 25.65; choice heifers 26.00; good and mixed good and choice 23.00-25.00; cows about steady; commercial 15.00-16.00; cutter and utility 14.50-16.00, few 16.50; canners 12.50-14.00; bulls about steady; utility and commercial 19.00-20.50; vealers fully steady; few choice 37.50; good and choice 30.00-37.00; standard and low good 24.00-30.00. Sheep 450; lambs steady; choice wooled lambs 17.50-18.00; good and mixed good and choice 14.00-17.00. Chicago Produce CHICAGO (UPD—Produce: — Live poultry: Roasters 29-31; special fed white rock fryers 2122%. * Cheese: Single daisies 40 - 42; longhorns 40 - 42; processed loaf 38%-40%; Cheddar: 40 lb block 39-40%; brick 3 9 - 42%; S wiss i
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Grade A 45-49; B 43-47; Grade C 39-45. Butter: steady. 93 score 59%; 92 score 59%; 90 score 58; 89
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MONDAY. MARCH 5. 1962
score 56%. Eggs: steady. White large extras 31; mixed large extras 29%; : mediums 28%; standards 28%.
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