Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 158, Decatur, Adams County, 6 July 1962 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

' T’ ' -.J— , —-F -■ . . ■sK 'Ji BL*I Joi JB ■ WiPMKv BEGIN ESTES INQUIRY—Sen. John McClellan, D-Ark., left, subcommittee chairman, confers with Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., as the Senate Government Operations subcommittee begins its investigation of the Billie Sol Estes case in Washington, D.C.

More Burglaries By Fori Wayne Officer FORT WAYNE, Ind. (UPD—Authorities today continued delving into the burglarizing activities of a Fort Wayne policeman after he admitted Thursday staging at least 45 more l>reak-ins than was originally believed. Detectives also said Thursday that Robert C. Elder, 32, netted more than $22,000 from his robberies of city firms instead of $3,000 as was first thought. The new developments in the case were announced shortly after Elder’s arraignment on seconddegree burglary charges in City Court. He was freed on $2,000 bond, and the case was continued to July 12. The eight-year veteran of the police force told detectives at the time of his arrest Wednesday that he had committed 18 burglaries, many of them at supply firms but others at a drug store, sandwich shop, two insurance firms and two ‘

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NOTICE TO WATER CUSTOMERS THE WATER PRESSURE WILL BE OFF FROM 8:00 AM * to 10:00* Saturday, July 7,1962 A 12” CROSS WILL BE INSTALLED IN THE WATER MAIN AT THIS TIME. PLEASE DRAW ENOUGH WATER TO SATISFY YOUR NEEDS BEFORE 8 A. M, RALPH E. ROOP WATER SUPERINTENDENT

furniture stores. He said he burglarized the firms just before midnight after getting off his shift which ended at 10 p.m. Most of the time he was in uniform, he said. Police Chief Paul Clark said detectives first became suspicious of Elder because he reported more burglaries than the average officer. Clark said Elder would report the burglaries to headquarters after staging them and then help out in the investigation. Elder was dismissed from the force after his arrest by Patrolman Richard Hatcher who caught him stealing SSO from a hearing aid firm. Mayor Paul M. Burns said Elder had "desecrated the police department” and he said he hoped the former officer would get a fair and speedy trial and that the maximum sentence would be carried out. Quick Drying In order to dry your stockings more quickly, wring them out as dry as possible and roll tightly in a turkish towel for five minutes. Then hang them in an airy place, and they will dry in jig time.

CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THK ADAMS COUMTY COMMISSION HRS ON' JVLY 11M2 CitUens Telephone Co H 1.38 Indians A Michigan Electric 144.24 Coverall Rental Ser. Inc., clr ct 3.60 Citizens Telephone Co., do .. 32.92 Doreen R. Reiff cl cl '54.00 May Myera do ; &122 Recordak Corporation cl op 10.63 Poatmaater do .........;45.00 Haywood Publishing Co. do 170.80 Commercial Print Shop do .. 93.80 The Suttles Co., Inc 4W.93 Haywood Publishing Co. au op 55.00 Decatur Democrat Co. do .... 27.60 Edward F. Jaberg do mH ■— I.M Postmaster do op 20.00 Haywood Pub. Co. Treas. op. 2<6.60 Photostat Corp. Rec. op. . 342.08 Raymond O. Durr sher mJ pr 48.10 Roger Singleton do t 45.60 Robert Meyer do 6. >9 Rlesen & Schug Inc. do op .... 11.70 Zurcher’s Mobil Service do 50.83 Mobil Oil Co. do 10.56 Motorola C. * E do ...... v ..... 35.00 Kelly’s Dry Cleaner do 3.50 Commercial Print Shop do .. 6.08 Beavers Oil Service Inc. do 114.98 Severin H. Schurger pr at op 12.60 Richard J. Sullivan dep pr at 225.00 Bobbs-Merrlll Co. Inc. do op-32.00 Haywood Pub. Co. Asses, op 453.15 R. L. ;Pblk & Co. do ;.. 25.00 Walter r Koos do mil — 60.88 TreaK." ,li State of Indiana do .. 1.73 Cardrhaster Co. Co. Supt schl 1.86 Bobbs-Merrlll Co. Inc. do .. 2.00 Leo N. Seltenright Co ag mil 80.36 Citizens Telephone Co. do ot> 27.44 Commercial Print Shop do;.. 22.30 Lois M. Folk H. D. Ag. mil. 83.37 N. E. Beaver, M.D. Co hlth of 182.93 Geraldine Schindler do asst 30.00 Mel Kohler Cust C. H 325.00 Edna Werst Matron do 110.00 I Louie Drake watchman do 10.00 I Bobby Heller C. H. oper. .. 428.00 1 Jerome Nussbaum do 4.95 A. J. Zelt do 4.80 Coverall Rental Ser. Inc. do 16.00 Sears, Roebuck & Co. do .... 5.76 Lester W. Auman & Sons do 94.60 Haugk Pl_bg. & Co. Inc. do 30.90 Sanco Products Co. Inc. do .. 40.50 Habegger Schafers do 23.97 Burk Elevator Co. do ... 10.50 Mrs. Catherine Murphy J. mat 38.00 City of Decatur do op 22.75 Kelly’s, do 8.68 Jt”!. Holcomb Mfg. Co. Inc. do 167.07 Northern Ind. Public Ser. do 14.32 Andrew Schrock do 594.57 Adams Bldrs. Supply, Inc., do 456.55 Charles Morgan Co Ho Supt 225.00 Luella Morgan do matron .... 166.66 Hilda Smith do help 145.00 Connie Kirk do 145.00 George W. Fry do 145.00 Grover Kelley do 20.00 Habegger-Schafers do op 33.93 Kohne Drug Store do _ 9.03 Gerbers Supermarket do 169.11 Paul L. Meyers do 280.00 Smith Pure Milk Co. do 89.25 Beavers Oil Service Inc. do .. 67.35 Teeple Truck Lines Inc. do .. 3.50 I Gifford's IGA Supermarket do 63.75 Jerome Nussbaum do 20.72 Hammond Ft. Mkt. do 79.01 Haugk Plbg. & Htg. Inc. do 35.51 J. I. Holcomb Mfg. Co. Inc. do-102.35 Coverall Rental Service Inc. do 5.00 I Myers Home & Auto Supply do 6.00 orcatur Blue Flame do 25.02 Niblick & Co. do 29.53 I Bowers Hardware Co. Inc. do 7.94 Burk Elevator Cd. do 58.42 Will Winnes Assessing .7. 183.33 Will Winnes do per diem mil 1 10.20 Adolph Schamerloh do 20.00 Thomas A. Sheehan elect exp 5.00 ‘Sprlinger Lehman-44»-»«de——r- —1.97Frank Myers Trustee salary 168.75 Raymond E. Moser do 168.75 V. Eugene Burry do 200.00 Floyd Baker do 168.75 Theodore Heller do 168.75 Silvan Sprunger do .... 262.50 Robert M. Kolter do 200.00 Omer Merriman do .. 225.50 Lester~BrunnA>r do 200.001 Wilbur Blakey do 168.75 James Lybarger do 262.50 Minnie E. Myers dep assessor 100.00 Catherine Burry do 100.00 Josephine Baker do 100.00 Jeanette Heller do 100.00 Pauline Kolter do , 100.00 Flossie Lybarger do 200.00 David A. Macklin Co. At 166.67 Tom Sullivan Brd of rev. .... 152.00 David J. Schwarts do 168.00 James K. Staley ser- of 111.89 Decatur Democrat Co. leg ad 114.70 Berne Witness Inc. do 101.75 Zwlck Funeral Home Sol bur 200.00 Irene Byron Hos. care pat .. 208.00 R. E. Allison, D.V.M. TB test 6.00 M. A. Lehman, D.V.M. do ..100.70 Robert Marquardt, Fox bounty 9.00 Arthur W. Werling do 6.00 Hugh Myers do 3.00 Ernest Roe do 3.00 Martin J. Graber do 3.00 Roland Tumbleson do 6.00 Arthur W. Werling do 6.00 John Geels do - 15.00 Virgil Hawkins do 3.00 Irvin M. Worthman do 3.00 Re-Assessment M. F. Gallmeyer 347.89 Gerald V. Zimmerman ............ 317.25 Barbara J. Kershner 210.00 Frances L. Kruse ->... 225.00 Kathleen Brunstrup 230.00 Linda Lee Reber 235.00 Patricia Darlene Smitley 230.00 Ell Dubach 12.00 Richard N. Glendenlng 14.56 Arman Habegger 48.00 Virginia Schurger 2 92’22 Tom Sullivan mil 1 ? ? 4 David J. Schwartz do 12.00 Monroe Cal Mach. Co. op .. 140.00 Walter Koos postage 36.30 Welfare Bernice Nelson Mileage .... 26.19 Mary J. Strickler do 37.40 Mabel Marshall do 28.90 Barbara B. Nicks do —r 36.65

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Robert M- Kelter do 4.J0 Francis E. Shell do 6.00 Lenora Glendenlng do 10.80 Clinton D. fiteury do 12.00 Citizens Telephone Co. op 48.03 Bluff. Gift A Type Cen., 0p... >7.00 Public Employee*’ retire, fund 177.12 Ml KVEYOH'M DEPT. JVNR 2d. 1»CI Burke Insurance 17.50 Lybarger Gravel A Readymix 167.38 Herman Moellering 38.08 Rudy Deßolt - . 75.45 Leroy Bollenbacher 4.54 Decatur Ready-Mix Corp 6.95 Preble Equity Exchange 16.00 Bulmahn Farm Supply 7.95 Charles Thieme 18.75 Burk Elevator .....dm—=av.»... 60.75 Krick-Tyndall Tile Co. 177.76 Commercial Print Shop ...'.— 16.20 Yost Gravel-Readymlx, Inc. 244.80 Lybarger Gravel & Readymix 109.38 Herman Moellering >0.24 Zurchers Mobil Service lies. 34 Mossman Yarnelle Co. ._. 3.56 Decatur Auto Supply Co 9 34 Elmer Rich 1.Y4 Stock bet-ger Mach. Inc 32.46 Albert E. Rich 20.82 Beavers Oil Supply Co 83.30 Elmer Rl'bh -..a-, 172.55 Carl Burkhart ■■ 95.20 Alfred Hlrschy 49.30 Austin Merßiman 1 133.13 Lawrence Smith 93.60 HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT Lawrence Noll ...... 229.16 Robert Furhman 200.04) Paul Bryan 177.08 Wendell Abbott .......... 118.75 DeWayne Beer 183.60 Harold Burger 188.70 Edward Faurote 178.50 Don Harvey „ 198.90 Dale Hlrschy > 178.10 Ell Hlrschy 181.90 Raymond Kolter 201.25 Vern Linker ~. 181.90 Chris Meshberger 137.00 Rooert Meshberger . 196.00 Russell Moser 158.10 Homer Rauch 161.00 llaymond Shoaf 199.50 Samuel Yager , 190.75 Clifford Death - 181.50 Robert Fields 135.00 Frederick Fuelling 143.50 Paul Longsworth 171.60 Larry Macklin 174.90 Lawrence McCullough 179.85 Joe Smith — Joe Sprunger. .......................... 67-50 Chris Zurcner 181.50 Citizens Telephone Co 22.80 Adolph Hannie J 9.60 Indiana & Michigan Elec. Co. 14-69 Commercial Print Shop •*l;80 Mossman-Yarnelle Co 54.30 Berne Auto Supply 179.31 Evans Sales and Service 103.24 Felber Machine and Welding 85.15 Dierkes Implement Sales 33.20 Decatur Auto Supply 18.48 Auburn Burner Co 5.12 Eddiann Equipment Sales .... 15.78 Motorola 59.00 Stockberger Machinery. Co. -22>.23 Carl Faurote Radiator Shop 19.2a Moser Motor Sales 6.18 Rotanium Electric Products H’ 2 ? Yarnelle Supply Co 37.85 Mac Allister Machinery Co. 2.9:> | Decatur Equipment 183.45 Zurchers Mobil Service .151.46 Ohio Oil Co. 9 ? 8 -W Motor Fuel Tax Division 40.68 Haywood Publishing Co. .... 80.20 Meshberger Bro. Stone - .... 24589.»2 John W. Karch Stone Corp. 763.42 Yost -Gravel-Readymlx 224.64 Logansport Metal Cui. Co. 122i.93 Krick-Tyndall Co 46.18 Berne Ready Mix '....... 2o ' „ -Adams Builders Supply 38.13 Habegger-Schafers 6.39 Minn. Mining and Mfg. Co. 220.00 Cumulative Bridge Armco Steel Corp Yost Gravel-Readymlx 356.40 Lybarger Gravel-Readymlx .. 59.38 Berne Ready Mix — Decatur Ready Mix 17.8a Walter Gilliom . . . 375.00 gpVer * Schultz, Inc. 2774.28 Certified to before me this sth day of July, 1962. I.dward F, Jaberg, Auditor July 6. —- — — Midwest Hit Last Night By Severe Storms

By United Press International Tornadoes skipped across the southern Plains into Dixie during the night and the Midwest was hit by severe thunderstorms. Funnel clouds were spotted in Texas, Kansas and Missouri, the U.S. Weather Bureau reported. The Missouri Highway Patrol reported a twister spotted near Mount Vernon, but it apparently failed to touch ground. However, another knocked down power lines and damaged the roof of a bowling alley at Cabool, Mo. A tornado-like storm hit Black Rock, Ai»k„ and minor damage was reported. A tornado was reported near Shamrock, Tex., but the area apparently escaped damage. Southern California was warned to prepare for tides 4 feet above normal today as a result of tropical storms in the Pacific Ocean. Earlier, a heat wave gripped Arkansas, sending the temperature to 102 degrees at Fort Smith. Charles Larkin, 62, a farmhand, died of heat prostration while at work near Manila, Ark. North Carolina's Neuse River was as much as 4 feet above flood stage and another 3-foot rise was expected in the Smithfield area. The lower Cape Fear River was to crest at Elizabethtown, N. C., some 4 feet ,above flood stage tonight. lowa’s Little Sioux River crested 6 feet above flood stage at Spencer, lowa, during the night. Holdrege, Neb., had an inch and a half of rain in 30 minutes in a storm which snapped tree limbs and dropped hail stones large enough to break car windows. Earlier, an electrical storm hit St. Louis, knocking out power to 53,000 homes. Forty-mile winds uprooted trees and flattened street signs. An inch and a half of rain flooded some streets. Lightning struck three radio towers at Wood River, 111., knocking radio station WBBY off the ait. Lightning touched off fires in to 1.37 inches of rain fell, Evener Distribution To keep fruits, nuts, adn raisins from sinking to the bottoms of cakes and puddings, heat them in the oven before adding them to your batter. Some cooks insure the even distribution of these nuts and fruits by rolling them in flour before adding them to the cake batter. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.

New Tool Controls Body Temperatures

By HOBTENSE MYERS United Preu International INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — The concept of placing a human in suspended animation through near* freezing by use of some mysterious machine has moved from the realm of science fiction to nearreality. A group of practical and successful men have banded together here and are turning out such a device just as routinely as another firm might produce a cement mixer. Walter O. Higgins, former General Motors and Studebaker Corp, executive, is the president. Dr. Robert L. Fuson, formerly of Indiana University Medical Center and now at Duke University, is vice president of the University of South Carolina. So far, the temperature control machine has been used for cardiac surgery, neuro-surgery, acute head trauma, brain surgery, control of bleeding ulcers, internal hemorrhage control and isolation of infection. Potential “Fantastic” “The potential applications this one little device has are fantastic,” Fuson said, “I would not be surprised if someday a device like this would be used to get a man on Mars. If body functions could be suspended, a man would not need food or oxygen. His temperature control could be timed so he would arrive on Mars in the same condition as when he left Earth.” But Fuson and his associates are at the moment concerned only with the immediate medical h«o" to which the temperature control device can be put on this planet. The National Institutes of Health, Veterans Administration, Navy Bureau of Medicine, Naval Medical Research Center and several universities and hospitals have seen demonstrations of the new device and have units in operation or on order. The British Health Service inquired about the possibility of placing the machine in government hospitals. The unit is housed in a portable cabinet, and so far, researchers have developed four attachments id this combination refrigerator and heat pump. One is a blanket with square tubing which allows total body temperature control. sembling a space helmet, which permits cerebral cooling. Cites “Brain Power” Dr. Robert Campbell of the I<U. Department of Neurosurgery has developed data showing that cooling of the head and neck permits intra-cerebral temperatures to be dropped from 5 to 8 degrees below the rest of the body. A double tube with gastric balloon and thermistor is used to lower the stomach temperature.

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A circulating four-inch wide plastic; bandage is an amputation unit or is used for automatic dressing temperature control. Fuson pointed out the temperature control device is the result of medical, engineering and business brains working together. Fuson himself is something of a combination of all three. During his boyhood in Greencastle, he became fascinated with radio and photography work. He worked for the local newspaper and while still a teen - ager, became Greencastle’s first police radio operator. He obtained B.A. and M.A. degrees from DePauw University before entering I.U. He credits a summer job in the laboratory of Dr. Harris B. Shumacker with channeling his interest into medical engineering research —that and having to carry ice while an extern. 162 Tons of Ice When Prison locus at the temperature control device he sees 162 tons of ice—the amount needed to hold the temperature of a patient at 91 degrees for three weeks. In addition to freedom from the cumbersome job of hauling ice, packing it into position and cleaning up the drip, the device has the advantage of avoiding “drift” —that dangerous tendency of the body temperature to go either beyond or below the desired level. A special electronic miniature computer keeps the temperature dialed with less than a half-degree - jiation and another gadget slows down the machine as it approaches the desired level so there will be no drift past the indicated temperature. JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES KINGDOM HALL Corner Monroe and Ninth Sunday 3:00 p.m.: “Basis For Belief in God’” will be the subject of a public Bible lecture to be given by Mr. Robert Ehrman, a visiting minister from the Fort Wayne, Indiana south unit of Jehoi vah’s Witnesses. Mr. Ehrman is J a Watchtower representative and an assistant presiding minister to the south unit congregation. Sunday 4:15 p.m.: Watchtower Bible study and discussion on toe subject, “Why Be Baptized?” One of the scripture texts for consideration will be Galatians 5:1, “For freedom did Christ set us free: stand fast therefore, and be not entangled again in a yoke of bondage.” F Tuesday 8:00 p.m.: Bible study • using toe study aid, "Let Your Name Be Sanctified.” Friday 7:30 p.m.: Theocratic Ministry School followed by toe Kingdom Ministry service meeting.

High Altitude Nuclear Test Is Postponed HONOLULU (UPD—The United States announced a 24-hour postponement Thursday night in its third effort to expldde a rocketborne nuclear device over Johnston Island in toe Pacific. Joint Tastk Force 8 gave no reason for toe postponement, but it came after a hold of first one hour and then, 30 minutes. The blast had been originally scheduled for 5 a.m. EDT today. • There were indications that the postponement may have been caused by unfavorable weather conditions. About five minutes before the first hold was announced, the countdown broadcaster commented that the weather “appeared to be improving.” Scientists had hoped to explode the megaton warhead at an altitude of about 300 miles, Which would have been the highest manmade blast in history. The warhead is equal to about a million tons of TNT. In toe two earlier tests, on June 3 and 19, the Thor rockets were launched — but both ended to failure. The rockets and their warheads were destroyed minutes after they left the launch pads because of malfunctions to the equipment. — JTFB officials were able to destroy the warheads without causing nuclear explosion and the debris fell harmlessly into the previously designated danger area. “It is not considered that the fragments will cause hazardous levels of radioactivity to the ocean water, nor will they constitute hazard to human life,” the officials said. Admits Slaying Durina Argument INDIANAPOLIS <UPD— A Service station attendant was scheduled to go to court today on a preliminary murder charge to the shooting of L. C. Rimmer, 33. Authorities said Leonard Means, 34, admitted the shooting June 29 during an argument over money. Rimmer died Thursday. Navy Man Dies In Fireworks Accident CRANE, Ind. (UPD — Officials have announced that an officer attached to the Naval Ammunition Depot here was injured fatally in a fireworks accident Wednesday night. The report said Lt. jg Roy P. Callaghan, 44, Minneapolis, died about on hour after the accident. Cause of the mishap was listed as “malfunction of a pyrotechnic device.” —

FRIDAY, JULY fl, IWB

Explorer Scouts On Four-Doy Coinpout Fifteen Explorer Scouts from post 2062, sponsored by toe Decatur Elks, returned Wednesday from a four-day trip to Cave River Valley, near Campbellsburg to southern Indiana. Dr. and Mrs. Mel Weisman, assistant leader Dave Mac Lean, and volunteer drivers Don Graber and Paul Habegger accompanied the group for their annual trip of exploration to the cave area. Those making the trip, and camping out for the fourdays, were Pat Buckley, Roger Death. John Eichenauer, Bary Frauhiger, Steve Geimer, Ken Habegger, Dean Harmon, Dan Hess, Bob Jauregui, Tom Macklin, Eugene Peterson, Gary Sheets, Jim WHliamson, Manuel iberra, and Allen Kreischer. NOTICE t Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned has applied to the ( lUsens Telephone Co. to issue a duplicate stock certificate to the undersigned for Stock Ortlflcate(A) number ('OI7B representing 30 shares of common stock in said Company, which Certificate has been lost or destroyed, and according to me records of the company is owned by Clement Voglewede. Any other person, firm, or corporation, and/or, their heirs, successors, assigns, legates, or personal representatives claiming any Interest present or future, In said purported lost or destroyed certificates shall make known their Interest In writing to the Secretary of said Citizens Telephone Co on or before the 20th day of July, l!lt>2 or else said claim of Interest shall be forever barred. n Dated this 111 day of June, 1962. CKDKIC VOdI.EWEDE June 20, July 6. ___ _

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