Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 268, Decatur, Adams County, 13 November 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 Q. Heller Vice President Chas. Holthouse Secretary-Treasurer Subscription Rates By Mail, in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $10.00; Six months, $5.50; S months, $3.00. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $11.25; 8 months, $6.00; 3 months, $3.25. By Carrier, 35 cents per week. Single copies, 7 cents. Winning the World Monday we discusse dthe need for a positive program to win the world to capitalism, Democracy, and Christianity. This perhaps sounds nebulous to the ears of those who have not thought of this before. There is nothing nebulous intended. Two weeks ago, the United States threw the Communist world off-guard, by exposing the aggressive, warlike moves of the Soviet Union in Cuba. The Soviet Union countered by partially dismantling its agressive weapons in Cuba. 1 This means that it is time for the West to take another step. May we give a suggestion? The uncommitted nations of Africa are toying with Communism, or unaligned state socialism, often with very anti-Democratic, as well as anti-capitalist, overtones. How can we gain their support? First of all, there is the question of Southwest Africa. This former German territory was mandated to the British and the Union of South Africa after World War I for development by the League of Nations. In the 1930’5, the League of Nations collapsed. The Union of South Africa took over administration of Southwest Africa lock, stock, and barrel. They now consider it outside of the United Nations, an internal problem of their country. The United Nations, on the other hand, as late as last week, asked all nations of the world to vote economic sanctions against South Africa for failing to give the Negroes of their mandated possession any rights. These Negroes, more than half a million o f them, cannot own property, vote, or even walk on . the sidewalks without a written pass. They cannot become educated, or improve their lot. They are more restricted than slaves in pre-1860 Amer, ica, or serfs in pre-1860 Russia. If the United States is sincerely interested in freedom, we can immediately reverse our UN position, and vote with those freedom-loving countries who desire to return Southwest Africa to effective UN control, with eventual self-determination for the people of that area. This would effectively counter Communist propaganda concerning the United States, it would win the friendship and gratitude of the budding African nations, and would place Khrushchev in the position of either voting with us or favoring the racist state of South Africa. Editorial Writer Today Dick D. Heller, Jr.
T V PROGRAMS
Central Daylight Time
WANE-TV Channel 15 TUESDAY Ivnlu 6:00—-Bachelor Father 6:3o—Early Evening News 6:4s—Walter Cronkite — News 7:oo—Sugarfoot 8:00—Lloyd Bridges Show 8:30 —Red Skelton Show 9:3o—Jack Benny 10:00—Garry Moore Show 11:00 —Late News 11:15—Sports 11:20 —"Captain China” WEDNESDAY Mcralig 7:ls—Daily Word 7:20—80b Carlin — News 7:2s—College of the Air 7:55—80b Carlin —News 8:00 —Captain Kangaroo 9:oo—Coffee Cup Theatre 10:00—Breakfast in Fort Wayne .0:30—1 Love Lucy 11:00—The McCoys 11:30 —Pete & Gladys Afternoon 12:00 —-Love Os Life 12:35—C8S News 13:80—Search For Tomorrow 18:46—Guiding Light 1:00 —Ann Colons I:Bs—News 1:30 —An The World Turaa 3:00 —Password 3:3o—Houseparty B:oo—Millionaire 8:30—To Tell the Truth 3:IS—CBS News 4:00 —-Secret Storm % Father 6:30 —Early Evening News 6:45—-Walter Cronkite — New* 7:oo—Whirlybirds 7:3o —Post-Election Bpeclal B:Bo—Dobie Gillis 9:oo—The Hillbillies _ 9:3o—Dick Van Dyke Show 10:00—U.S. Steel Hour 11:00—Late News J 11:1^—"£ady* in the Dark” WKJG-TV TUESDAY 5 : 45—December Bride S:15 —Gatesway to Sports :35 —Jack Gray A the News 6:49 —The Weatherman 6:45 —Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:00 —The Deputy 7:Bo—Laramie B:3o—Empire 9:8:0 —(Dick Powell Show 10:80—Chet Huntley Reporting 11:90—News & Weather 11:16—Sports Today 11:30—Tonight Show — _ Wednesday 6:30 —-American Government 7:oo—Today 9:99—Engineer John I* 80—Editor's Derk ?° Ut* By 89:90 4>ay Whoa
10:25—NBC News ■o:3o—Play Your Hunch 11:00—The Price Is Right 11:30—Concentration Afternoon 12:00—Noon News 12:10—The Weatherman 12:15—Wayne Rothgeb 12:30 —Truth or Consequences 12:55—N8C News 1:00—Your First Impression I:3o—People’s Choice ■2:O0 —Merv Griffin Show 2:SS—NBC News 3:00 —Special for Women 4:oo—Make Room for Daddy 4:3o—Bezo Show 4:SS—NBC News 5:00—Bozo the Clown s:4s—December Bride Evening 6:ls—Gatesway to Sports 6:2s—Jack Gray & the News 6:40 —The Weatherman 6:4s—Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:oo—Dragnet 7:3o—The Virginian 9:oo—Perry Como 10:00 —-Eleventh Hour 11:00 —News and Weather 11:15—Sports Today : — 11:20 —Tonight Show WPTA-TV Channel 21 TUESDAY Evening 6:oo—Popeye dhow 6:Bo—Yogi Bear 7:00—21 Evening Report 7:10—'21 Evening Sports Report 7:IS—ABC Evening Report 7:3o—Combat B:3o—Hawaiian Eye 9:3o—Untouchables 10:90—Bell & Howell Close-up 11:4J—ABC News 11:10—What's the Weather 11:17—Inlanders WEDNESDAY ■MgiEE ■<-< 9:oo—Fun Time 9:3o—The Jack LaLanne Show . 1 ft •ft fl I ? . .v --jrVrW -Ofry Jyntvurc 11:00—Tennessee Ernie Ford 11:30—Yours for a Song Afternoon 12:00—21 Noon Report . 13:30—Camouflage 12:55—A8C Sews —— I:oo—Jane Wyman I:3o—My Little Margie 2:oo—Day in Court 3:3o—Seven Keys B:o9—Gueen For A Day 8:80—who Do You Trust 4:oo—American Bandstand 4::3O—Discovery '62 4 :sa—American Newsstand S:OO—M-Squad 5:30 —Peter Gunn Evening 6:00 —Popeye Show 6:3o—Dick Tracey 7:00—21 Evening Report 7:10—21 Evening Sports Report 7:IS—ABC Evening Report 7:3o—Wagon Train B:3o—Going My Way Msn Higgins 10:00—Naloed City 11:00—A BC News 11:10—What's the Weather 11:17—Frontier Circus
Rank Rockefeller As Leading Contender
United Press International ALBANY, N.Y. (UPP — New Yerk Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller ranks as a leading, if not the jleading. contender for the Republican presidential nomination two years from now. Republican leaders in his state think he is THE man to beat for the nomination and the man to challenge President Kennedy in the 1964 presidential election. Rockefeller isn’t talking about 1964. “I like to cross bridges when I get to them,” he says. The campaign by the New York Republican leaders to put Rockefeller in the White House began only a few hours after he was elected governor — his first political office— in 1958. There have been reverses. There may be others. But there has been no let up. Rockefeller once was asked when he first decided he might be presidential timber. “When I read your stories the day after election,” he said with the grin that has become a trademaik. When the 54-year-old Rockefeller, millionaire, handsome and a gregarious campaigner, defeated
WMREVSRIN rH£ WORLD THERE IS NEED... % - • '■£ jg l *!* I» / x /\ \ M ¥ JgF. \WTO /jg gk y r-3 •’ftl’Kl »/ L ffHL—JWwSI /♦ • Iff HffiilPAP M r HBI f| iWi /}' \ \ i l-u VwifMi /will -w Al <\f J ILi IxvlirlA-Q 11 UwT A 'WBBwWS jUi $4 i .<> iWi) i if JMI hEB M'dlMn fcilMl i Uli kBBHBmL "i > n ) \ ~ • z vlP ) ’ll ' ■* l itX L n .J ~ CATHOLIC RELIEF SERVICES COVERS THE WORLD WITH YOUR GIFTS OF CLOTHING. The needy and destitute of 67 countries are being clothed by you through the annual Catholic Bishops’ Thanksgiving Clothing Collection. Millions of men, women and children throughout the world have never known what it is to own a coat or wear shoes or sleep under warm blankets. You can help by taking your contribution of wearable used clothing, shoes or bedding materials to the nearest Catholic Church during Thanksgiving Week, November 18 to 25th. SO LITTLE FOR YOU TO GIVE—SO MUCH FOR THEM TO RECEIVE.
W BRINGS OUT f p / wBELx ™ ■ we imyoui ~- * • How sporty can a car get? Just take a look at the new F-85 Cutlass OLDSMOBILE for’63! Rakish new silhouette ... comfort-contoured, bucket seats ... center control console* give it the look and feel of a thoroughbred sports car. And its Cutlass V-8 turns out performance to match! « —>— Coupe or convertible, the 1963 Cutlass is Oldsmobile’s lowest-priced -- , . Exciting new blend of beauty sports car. At your Olds Dealer s now! *OpLonqiai uirocwt and action..;in the low-price field I THERE’S “SOMETHING EXTRA” ABOUT OWNING AN OLDSMOBILE! SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED OLDSMOBILE QUALITY DEALER———————— ZINTSMASTER MOTORS, FIRST & MONROE STREETS
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Democrat W. Averell Harriman, the incumbent governor, by 573,600' votes four years ago he emerged as a new face on the national political scene. The Rockefeller campaign for the presidency has followed a carefully-charted course during those four years. With former President Eisenhower leaving Washington, the New York governor began a nationwide tour, sounding out sentiment among national leaders. He found that they favored Richard M. Nixon, then the vice president. Two days after Christmas in 1959, Rockefeller told reporters he was convinced Nixon would be the candidate and that the “great majority of those who will control the Republican (national) convention stand opposed to any contest for the nominatidn.” Nixon became the candidate and lost to President Kennedy. Rockefeller and his backers feel the New Yorker could have won. Since 1960, activity for Rockefeller on the national scene has picked up. He has repeatedly refused to commit himself to a full four-year term which he starts Jan. 1. With his 500,006-plus vote vic-
tory for a new term over Democrat Robert Morgenthau a week ago and Nixon’s defeat in the California governor’s race, Rockefeller supporters will keep his Washington drive going. His big job of the future, aside from running New York state is to keep his name before the people of the country and winning over national GOP leaders. Many opposed him in 1959 because they thought" he was “too liberal.” Rockefeller is accustomed to the long pull to attain a goal. He campaigned for reelection for nearly two years even though state party nominating conventions and the election are only seven weeks apart. The governor built his state campaign around the theme of “economic growth” in the state during his administration. Heavy emphasis was placed on his “pay-as-you-go” policy. The governor pledged there would be no state tax increase needed in the next four years. In 1959, Rockefeller persuaded the state legislature to approve an increase in state income taxes. The result was a split in upstate Republican legislative ranks. The tax increase has remained a thorny subject. The governor carefully explained that the additional funds were needed because the outgoing Deocratic admini’s' tration left a deficit budget calling for S7OO million more in spending than anticipated reve-
nue. The tax controversy provided some of the momentum for creation of a new party —a splinter from the parent GOP and this new “conservative party” attracted more than 100,000 votes in last week’s balloting. His margin over Morgenthau was 518,000 votes and Rockefeller made gains in many of the state’s large cities, where national political experts say elections can be won or lost. An exception was Buffalo, with a heavy Roman Catholic population, where unemployment and the governor’s divorce after 31 years of marriage are thought to have figured in the results. Rockefeller’s opponent did not mention the divorce and the governor, when the question came up said he considered it a personal matter and preferred to stand on his record in office. Some Republicans scorn Rockefeller as a political maverick whose views sometimes seem more Democratic than Republican. “I think those words — liberal and conservative — have little meaning in relation to present day problems,” Rockefeller said. "It’s like saying ‘Don’t confuse me with J:acts; . I don't want to thipk/ When*T~fhake a decision, I think: ’lt’s humarl it’s right, it’s neither liberal noy conservative, but it’s the right/thing to do’." A a... ; I .20 Years Ago 4 Today j Nov. 13, 1942 — The city council has approved sale of the plat for new war production workers homes to be built on the South Ward lots, formerly owned by the city. Sixteen homes are to be constructed. The annual fall concert by the Decatur high school glee club will be presented in the school auditor, ium Nov.’ 24. The Decatur Garden club will hold its closing meeting of the year, a carry in dinner at the home of Mrs. Henry Heller. Dr. Robert Daniel, former Deecatur physician, has been promoted to lieutenant colonel in the Army medical corps and will be commanding officer at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo. Tobruk, the big Libyan supply port near the Egyptian border, has been captured by British forces. I Modern Etiquette I By Roberta Lee I Q. My wife and I are compelled to decline an invitation to be weekend guests of another couple in the near future. Must we give a reason? A. It’s always much nicer if you do give a reason for your inability to accept an invitation. A refusal without a reason is just too blunt, and somehow intimates you do not want anything to do with the other person. Q. I am always uncertain about the lettuce on which a salad is served. I like lettuce, but I wonder fi it is really proper to eat it. A. Since the lettuce is as much a part of the salad as any other of the ingredients, it is perfectly proper to eat it. . Q. Would it be all right for a bride to have both a matron and a maid of honor at her wedding? A. Yes, if the wedding is a very large and formal one. Q. Does a woman ever take the aisle seat when she is attending the theater with a man? A. Never. She always enters the row first, and her escort takes the aisle seat.
Nixon Silent Amid Storm Os Protest NEW YORK (UPD - Richard M. Nixon remained silent today amid the storm of protest caused when Alger Hiss was among those selected to comment on the former vice president’s political career. The American Broadcasting Co. (ABC) said Nixon could have equal time, if he asks for it, to reply to statements made by Hiss and others on the program. “The Political Obituary of Richard Nixon,” beamed to a nationwide television audience Sunday night. ABC and many of its affiliates were deluged with messages of protest both before and after the telecast. Hiss, convicted of perjury 12 years ago after a relentless congressional investigation headed by Nixon, said on the program he felt Nixon’s part in the probe was politically motivated. “We gave both sides a fair presentation on this show,” an ABC spokesman said here. Herbert G. Klein, Nixon’s former press secretary, replied from Los Angeles that the program reached “ a new low in undistinguished reporting.” He said the show “set out to kick Richard Nixon and accomplished its goal bu substituting imuendo for fact." Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, D-Conn., urged the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to investigate the network “because of my own feeling of personal disgust, and because of the countless objections made to me by Connecticut citizens. . . ” Hiss’ conviction In 1950 came after he denied any connection with a 1938 Soviet spy ring. Nixon, then a congressman from California, spent two years as chief investigator of Hiss’ activities. Klein said Nixon would not comment on the program, although James C. Hagerty, ABC vice president in charge of news, said the recently defeated California gubernatorial candidate could have equal time “any time, of course.” Robert H. Finch, Nixon’s 1960 presidential campaign manager., said in Los Angeles the equal time offer was an “atrocious, pathetic gesture.” He said it “has the effect of placing Alger Hiss, a convicted perjurer who appeared on this show, on the same footing as a former vice president of the United States.” Howard K. Smith, who served as moderator for the program, said he thought it was “a little over-balanced in favor of Nixon.” Television stations in Columbus and Cincinnati, Ohio, and New Haven, Conn., and Philadelphia did not carry the show. New York Stock Exchange Prices — MIDDAY PRICES A. T. & T. 113%: Central Soya 28%; du Pont 225; Ford 43%: General Electric 71%; General Motors 54%; Gulf Oil 36%; Standard Oil Ind. 42%; Standard Oil N. J. 54; U. S. Steel 43%.
V Zu/ICK 'llemhe’i | J0S?”. IHHIIIIItK —of THE I GniDHifluif It’s A Sacred Trust Serving a bereaved fam- I ily is a sacred trust, and we 7 are grateful for the confidence shown in Zwick’s by so many. Each time we are called, we respect this trust, and serve just as we would our . own families. 24 HOUR EMERGENCY “ CE n PR ' VATE SERVICE 72 PAR KI NG HWaS! 1 fOhlß hgMtfgM
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1962
COURT NEWS Fee Waived In a divorce action filed by Dorothy Roop vs Clarence Roop an affadavit in lieu of filing fee was filed, submitted, examined and sustained and the court granted the plaintiff leave of court to file a complaint without security of paying the advance court fee, and the fee was waived. A complaint for separation from bed and board was filed along with an affidavit of residence. A summons was ordered issued to the sheriff for the defendant, returnable Nov. 24. Motion To Dismiss A motion to dismiss was filed by the plaintiff in the divorce case of Elizabeth N. Peck J. CHICAGO PRODUCE CHICAGO (UPD—Produce: Live poultry roasters 27-28; special fed White Rock fryers 1919%; hen turkeys 28%-29%; geese 32-34. Cheese single daisies 40 - 41%; longhorns 41% - 42; processed loaf 39%-40%; Swiss Grade A 4549; B 43-47. Butter steady; 93 score 57%; 92 score 57%; 90 score 56%; 89 score 55%. Eggs steady to firm; white large extras 44; mixed large extras 42%; mediums 32; standards 36. Chicago Livestock CHICAGO (UPD—Livestock: Hogs 8,000; weak to 25 lower; No 1-2 190-220 lb 17.25-17.50; couple hundred head at 17.50; 19 head at 17.60; mixed No 1-3 190230 lb 16.75-17.25 ; 230-260 lb 16.2516.75; No 2-3 240-290 lb 16.00-16.50. Cattle 2,500, calves 50; slaughter steers steady; heifers about steady; vealers steady: few feeders little changed; loadlots choice 1100-1225 lb steers 30.00-31.50; couple head prime 32.00; choice 9001075 lb 29.00-30.00; load mixed good and choice 1075 lb 28.50; few good 26.00-28.00; choice 900-1050 lb heifers 28.25-29.00; good 25.5027.50; few standard and good vealers 20.00-25.00; load good 640 lb feeding steer calves 25.00. Sheep 1,300; slaughter lambs about steady: two decks choice and prime 105-113 lb woo 1e d slaughter lambs 20.00; good and choice natives 17.00-19.00; double deck choice and prime 105 lb shorn slaughter lambs No 1 pelts >- 20.00; package prime around 100 lb No 1-2 pelts 20.00. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.
BUILD Up Your Resistance To Colds with GERITOL Tablets and Liquid KOHNE DRUG STORE
