Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 136, Decatur, Adams County, 10 June 1963 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
June 14 Deadline Retail Filing
Alex J. Ingram, director of the sales tax division of the Indiana department of state revenue, announced today that thousands of persons who should be filing for application to register as retail merchants have not yet dene so. Midnight, June 14, is the final day for nearly 170 thousand persons in Indiana to file as retail merchants. A retail merchant is now defined as anyone engaged in a regularly conducted business. This includes. Wholesalers. Manufactureres. i Public Utilities. Hotels, motels and other persons regularly renting for periods of less than thirty days. Governmental. charitable or educational organizations which AMERICA'S GROWING 200 URBANIZATION—--4 175 —POPULATION » IN MILLIONS ; / 150 /— .125 — ioo —— 75 i 50 Xi RURAL * et —n— ol J ————— 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 CITY FOLK — The growing divergence between rural and urban populations in the U.S. is strikingly shown in Newschart, above. Last census figure was for 1960; broken lines in shaded portion are estimates up to 1980. At that time, there tyill be as many people (185 million) living in cities as there was total population in 1962.
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: perform private selling activities. The sales tax division wishes , to make it clear that those per. sons who have not filed for a ■ retail merchant certificate and do not have one in their possession ! on July 1 will not be able to furnish an exemption certificate for ' their purchases. It. other words, if a retail merchant does not have the authority to issue an exempr- ; tion certificate on his purchases after July 1, 1963, the supplier will be required to collect 2 per I cent from him and consider it a ! retail sale. This means- that if a retailer is not able to buy at wholesale, he wilt have to pay his wholesaler 2 per cent to get ' the merchandise and then he is ■ still going to be assessed 2 per i cent as a retailer. Applications are available at ; any bank in the state of Indiana. Any applications received by the i department after June 14, will be j in a critical period, and the dei partment may not be able to sup- . ply the retail merchant certificate i to the applicants by July 1, 1963. B Fatalities On Highways Over Weekend By United Press International A 13-fatality weekend in Indiana traffic was followed today by another death in the first few hours of the new week. Donna Murray, 29. Chesterton, was killed before dawn when her car jumped a curve along U.S. 20 in Porter County and overturned. Walter Wetzel, 34, Portage, riding with her, was injured slightly. The death raised the state toll for the year to, ai least 486 compared with 451 this time last Year.. Mrs. Myrtle Burton. 64, Adams, was injured fatally Sunday when a car in which she was riding went out of control near Columbus and crashed into a utility pole a mile north of Elizabethtown. Police said Mrs. Burton was thrown through the windshield of the car driven by her son-ih-law, Henry Schmid, 45, R.R. 1. Greensburg. Freeman Hummel, 38, Anderson, was killed when a car went off Indiana 9 about 10 miles west of Columbus Sunday. Police said he was thrown through a window and landed on a' barbed wire fence. Edward Lee Thompson, 26, Rockville, was killed Sunday when he apparently fell asleep at the wheel and his car smashed into a bridge on U.S. 36 near Rockville. Joseph Humbles, 41, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Linda Kay Hearld, 17. Noblesville, were injured fatally Saturday night when their cars collided on Indiana 37A, six miles south of Noblesville. Humbles dieci at the scene, and Mrs. Hearld died several hours later.
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THE WATER’S FINE!— An estimated 600 to 700 persons spent Sunday afternoon at Pine Lake, located west of Berne in an attempt to “beat the heat.” The above photo depicts the “full house.” — Photo by Mac Lean)
Bernardette Buhr, 3, died after a car driven by her father ran over her as he backed it out of the family garage at Celestine. James Kent Gardner, 19, Anderson. was killed Saturday night in a two-car crash near Anderson on Indiana 32. Mrs. Margie Bisel, 48, Portland, was killed in a iwo-car crasn Saturday in Jay Countv. Police i .said her husband was driving the auto when it collided.witn a car ; driven bv a Portland teenager. Earl S. Howerton, 60, R.R. 1, West Point, was killed Saturday when his car collided near Riverside with one driven by David Brinkman, 17, R.R. 2, Attica. Three persons were killed Saturday in a head on crash near Rushville on Indiana 3. They were John T, Stallings, 51, Inkster, Mich.; his wife, Mildred, 46, and James R. Cole, 23, New Castle. Charles C. Beasley, 47, Williams, died Saturday night of injuries suffered the night before when the car in which he was riding crashed on Indiana 450, four miles west of Bedford. Marcia Stultz, 7, Carlisle, died during the weekend at Sullivan from injuries suffered in the collision Friday afternoon of a big truck and a pickup truck in which she and five other children were riding on U.S. 41 south of Carlisle.
Macmillan Returns To Scandal Crisis
LONDON (UPD — Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, returned from a holiday today to face the music in the growing security and sex scandal which caused the resignation of his war minister. The scandal now appears to have implications linked to the Cuban crisis last autumn and Soviet efforts to split Western unity. Pressure built up for Macmillan to resign because of the scandal, which was said tc have started when War Minister 'John Profumo 48, began chasing a scantily clad redhead around a moonlit swimming pool. The connection .between the reignation of Profumo last week and Cuba was disclosed in an exchange of letters between the earl of Home, British foreign secretary, and the earl of Arran, a director of the London Daily -Mail. The letters were published in the Mail today v Seeks Summit Meeting A letter from Arran to Home I dated Oct. 31, 1962, showed that i Soviet diplomat Eugene Ivanov “aided by Dr. Stephen Ward, ostensibly tried to arrange a London ‘summit meeting’ at the height of the Cuban crisis.” Home’s reply, of Nov. 7,1962, said he thought Ivanov’s maneuver was meant to “drive a wedge” between London and Washington and test our resolve and to lay a bait to our vanity ...” Ivanov is a former assistant naval attache at the Soviet Embassy here who shared with Profumo the favors of red-haired Christine Keeler, a 21-year-old call girl. Ward, 50, a society osteopath with numerous well-known clients,
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA
Cooler Weather Is Promised Hoosiers By United Press International A 10-day hot spell that came into Indiana with June was due to vanish in a wave pf cooler air to- ' night and Tuesday. Temperatures soared to the fringe of ICO degrees Sunday as oppressive heat and humidity wrung the energy out of all but the young. It was 98 at Terre Haute and Chicago, 97 at Evansville, 92 at Fort Wayne, Lafayette and Louisville, 91 at Southßend, Indianapolis and Cincinnati. Overnight lows this morning were all in the uncomfortable 70s for the hottest night of the year. Highs Saturday ranged from 88 . over the north portion to 97 at . Evansville. The mercury will hit the 90s again today all around the state before the cooler an seeps in, first in the north and later in the south. If you have something to sell or trade’ — use the Democrat Want . ads — they get BIG results.
i was the man who introduced Profumo to Miss Keeler and was the key figure in exposing the relationship between the two. Faces Court Action Ward was charged during the weekend with living off the earnings. of prostitutes and was ordered into court this morning. The court ordered Ward held without bail for a week. Chief inspector Samuel Herbert told a crowded court room he feared Ward would interfere with prosecution witnesses if allowed bail, and added “there are likely to be a number of more serious Charges.” It was in Ward’s apartment that Profumo and Miss Keeler held some of their rendezvous. Ward was quoted in the News of the World, a Sunday newspaper as saying Profumo chased a scantily clad Miss Keeler around a moonlit swimming pool at Lord Astor’s Cleveden estate on their first meeting. Exposure of the scandal last Wednesday rocked Macmillan's Conservative party government, and brought the nation its gravest political crisis in deaades. The prime minister returned from a vacation in Scotland by train this morning, to hold urgent conferences With Deputy Prime Minister R. A. Butler and party Chief Whip Martin Redmayne on the security aspects of the Profumo case. A full debate will be held next Monday when the House of Com- • mons returns from the Whitsun holiday recess. Main concern now j is on the security implications of • the Profumo-Keeler-Ivanov trianI gle.
Conference Os Mayors Backs Kennedy Plea I ' HONOLULU (UPD — President! Kennedy’s plea for support of a j grass-roots program to promote I racial equality won support today ' from delegates to the National Conference of Mayors. “Very reasonable,” said Vice Mayor Sam Massell of Atlanta, | Ga. In his most pointed statement yet on the civil rights crisis, Kennedy told the 650 mayors and other municipal officials Sunday that even if proposed federal civil rights legislation is enacted “the final responsibility . . . will still rest with you at the local level.” Outlines Program The President outlined a fixstep local level program to guide the “peaceful revolution” under way by Negroes. He said every local government should: —Establish a biracial human relations committee to identify community tensions before they reach the crisis stage. —Make certain its ordinances are in accord with constitutional law. —Follow — non - discriminatory practices in the employment and promotion of its municipal workers. —Enact equal opportunity ordinances to spell out the civil rights of all who live in that community. —Undertake a special campaign this summer to lessen unemployment among the unskilled of both races by reducing school dropouts. Moment of Crisis “We face a moment of moral and constitutional crisis,” the President said, “and men of generosity and vision must make themselves heard in every part of the land. I do not say that all men are equal in their ability, character and motivation. I do say that every American should be given a fair chance to develop in full whatever talents- -he-has- and' to share equally in the American dream.” Vice Mayor Massell said Atlanta had implemented for the most part much of what Kennedy suggested. “It’s workable.” he said. “It has to be workable. It makes it easier . .. some people need courage.” Memorial Day Fall Fatal To Young Man INDIANA POLIS (UPD —Dennis Lynch, 20, Amo, who fell from a tree on Memorial Day while waiting for the gates to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway to open for the 500-mile race, died Sunday in General Hospital. He had been in critical condition from a skull fracture since the fall occurred apparently when he dozed.
/ SsMIBH Bra IBBr BBK L 11: ■ME I TEXAS REACH—President Kennedy makes'with the big stretch as El Paso turns out to wish him well on the next leg of his western tour, following the Texas visit.
PRES. KENNEDY (Continued from Page One) if it is sufficiently in the interest of its signers — offer far more security and far fewer risks than an unabated, uncontrolled, unpredictable arms race,” Kennedy said He said the world knows the United States will never start a war. “We do not now expect a war,” Kennedy said, but “we shall be prepared for war, if others wish it. We shall be alert to try to stop it. But we shall also do our part io build a world of peace where the weak are safe and the strong are just.” The chief executive made his address to the graduating students shortly after arriving from Honolulu where he appealed to the nation’s mayors to help reduce racial tensions. The presidential jet landed at nearby Andrews Air Force Base, Md., at 8:51 a.m. EDT after a nbn-stop flight which took just nine hours and three minutes. Face Moral Crisis In addressing the U. S. conference of mayors Sunday, Kennedy urged them to “move to fulfill the rights of your Negro citizens in a peaceful and constructive manner.” He said “we face a moment of moral and constitutional crisis.” • While Kennedy did not go into detail as to what American negotiators will propose at the Moscow talks, administration policy makers have been considering a two-fold approach to the test ban issue: —An offer to hold additional meetings with the Russians at any level below the summit itself. —At declaration that the United States would not hold further nuclear tests in the atmosphere unless it had reason to believe the Russians were doing so. If you have something to sell 01 trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.
JUNE IS NATIONAL DAIRY MONTH! During the second week of June, employees and management of Home Dairy 'kNL will offer you a Home Dairy Special in celebration of National Dairy Month and the opening of our new, modern plant. Watch your newspaper. Here is this week's special .... HOME DAIRY SPECIAL! WEEK OF JUNE 10th THROUGH JUNE ISth HOME DAIRY COTTAGE 1Q C CHEESE I ONE POUND CARTON ■ NUTRITIOUS ANO REFRESHING FOR THOSE SALADS AND SNAGKS! YOU’RE CORDIALLY INVITED •> I TO VISIT OUR HEW AND | _ / MODERN PLANT, ONE MILE SOUTH OF HERNE VS-jT ON U.S. HIGHWAY 27. Have you tried Home Dairy Quality Chek'd Products? Order some today from your favorite food store or one of our courteous route salesmen or at our new retail store between Berne and Geneva. HOME DAIRY PRODUCTS, INC. BERNE, INDIANA PHONE 2-2162 \ .. • . . x -
Storms leave Trail Os Death I Over Midwest By United Press International Thunderstorms and tornadoes ( left a trail of death and destrus- . i tion in the Midwest today. Tornadoes touched down in ! Michigan, Minnesota and North Dakota Sunday. The twisters . struck three times in the area I i around Grand Rapids, Mich., and . 1.70--inches of rain fell there in' . six hours ending this morning, i I, The tornado caused SIOO,OOO damage at Belmont, Mich., five I t• miles north of Grand Rapids, j Lightning destroyed a service sta-| i tion and several persons were in-1 > jured, two seriously. { A tornado also was sighted near Cascade Twp., east of Grand Rapids, and at Hudsonville, on | , the southwest edge of town. UnI confirmed tornadoes were report- . ed over Howard City and in ’ Michigan’s Newaygo County. Many Drownings The drowning toll alone ran into the dozens during the week- , > end. ~ Two accidents in Wisconsin I took three drowning victims each. ' ’ Three men drowned in Lake Win- ( nebago Saturday night. A father , and his two children drowned in i the Wisconsin River near Spring [ : Green. Ten persons drowned in Ohio, 1 and the toll in Indiana was nine ‘ [ water deaths. A powerful wind shook« an . American Airlines plane that was i , landing in Chicago’s O’Hare, Field. A stewardess and two passengers suffered bruises and were ■; treated at a hospital. Thunderstorms lashed scattered parts of New England Sunday on . i the 10th anniversary of the Wor- i cester tornado. That twister, ing
MONDAY, JUNE 10, 1963
1953, killed 94 persons, injured 140, and did about $75-million damage. Teen-Ager Killed A teen-ager was killed in a head - on collision in Tyngsboro, Mass., during a driving rainstorm. Minor flooding and washouts were reported in the same western Massachusetts area. Rainfall amounts for the 24 hours ending late Sunday included Denver .90, Milwaukee .87. Amarillo, Tex., .78; Boston .69, Cleveland .66 and Detroit .56. Trade in a good tewn — Decatur.
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