Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 246, Decatur, Adams County, 18 October 1963 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. Watered at the Decatur, Ind.; Post Office as Second Class Dick D. Heller, Jr. President John G. Heller Vice President Chas. E. Holthouse Secretary-Treasurer Subscription 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; 6 months, $6.00; 3 months, $3.25. By Carrier, 35 cents per week. Single copies, 7 cents The Meaning of Words The editor received a very interesting letter this morning from a person who disagrees with his philosophy of language and action. Let me state immediately that this has nothing to do with politics, religion, etc., directly, but with philology and semantics. And let me state that the editor’s philosophy of language is not closed, but growing. First of all, to my way of thinking, which is neo-positivist, perhaps, a word, in itself, does not have a meaning, it eliminates some false meanings! Think a You probably believe that a word signifies a specific concept. This is a very strong subjective feeling in most of us. But if I say “hand”, what do you think of? But isn’t this only one aspect of the term “hand”? Did you think of a fat hand, a thin hand, a live hand, a dead one, a bony hand, a hand with varicose veins, the hand of fate, the hand of God, a bridge hand, etc.? But of course you did not think of a foot— the term hand eliminated the idea of “foot.” Actually, it is a sentence that really has meaning — you must take the word in the context of the sentence, and paragraph, etc., to find what the author means. And that last clause is the key: a word in itself has no meaning, but an author has meaning. He tries, through words, which have very-roughly-agreed-upon meanings to some people, to allow the reader or listener to rearrange his own experiences in his mind, and experience an idea similar to that of the speaker or writer. This is somewhat complicated for those not given to philosophical recollections but was inspired by the sentence: “But words are symbols of definite ideas which are created by their meanings and they should not because other than to say what the mean.” Since the writer does not share this philosophy, it makes it very difficult for him to communicate with those who do; since the author has a completely differ- ' ent set of frames of reference, he cannot think exactly with the reader, but can only hope he is being understood. Editorial written by 2 Dick Heller
TV PROGRAMS
WANE-TV Channel 15 FRIDAY Even! nic - F —— — o:00- Bachelor Father «:30—CBS News 7 :00—Big News 7:3U. The ...Great Adventure B:3o—Route 66 —Twilight Zone I 0:00 —Alfred Hitchcock 11:00 Big News Final 11:3'1 Award Theater SATURDAY Morning 7:30 —Sunrise Semester B:oo—Captain Kangaroo 9;oo—The Alvin Show •i:3O Tennessee Tuxedo 10:00—Quick Draw McGraw 10:30—Mighty Mouse Playhouse 11:00—Rin Tin Tin II :30 Roy Rogers 12:00- Sky King AI lernuun 12:30—D0 You Know 1 ;<»<•- Footljall Preview 1:15 NCAA Football 3:15 College Fodtball Scoreboard 4:<>o American Doctor 4 :30 -Conversation Piece 7.:"0..1aik Powell Show Btrulnit > \\ li: rlybi rd s 6:30 Fractured Flickers 7:oo—San Francisco Beat 7:30 Jackie Gleason 8;*0 .1 Phil - Silvers ft:00 ..1 'efenders 10:00—>7unsmoke 11:30—Laite News 11:45—Award Theater SUNDAY Morning 9:00- Faith for Today 9:3o:—This Is the Life 10:00—Lamp Unto My Feet 10:30 Look L'p and Live 11:00—Camera Three ll:3o . F;o e the—Nation A ft emoon 12:<0> The Bible Answers 12.30 Now 111 Tell fine 1 :«><> K iplinger Repot t 1:15 Pre Foot ball ’ K lekoff 1 :«0 N F L. Football ‘ 4;oo cross Exam 4:30 - Aitrgtr Room 5:00 Sunday Sports Spot tamular s:3'> HI Quiz Evening tijui Twentieth Century 6:3o—Mister Ed 7 :00—Lassie 7:30 My Favorite Marlain '8:011 Ed Sullivan Show lidrr- Judy (larlafid Show 10/'O—Candid Camera 10:30—'Vpat'S My Line 11:00—CBS News 11:15—Surfside Six WKJG-TV Channel 33 FRIDAY Evening 6:00— News 6:ls—Gatesway to Sports 6:25 Weatherman 6:3O—H unt ley- Brinkley Report 7:oo—Ripcord 7:30 International Showtime 8:30 Bob Hope Special 9:30 -Harry's GfHr 10:00 —-Jack Parr Show 11:00—News & Weather 11:15—Sports Today 11:20 —Tonight Show SATURDAY Morning 8:00 December Bride 8:30 Bozo Cartoon Time 8:45 —It's Light Time B:oo—The Heckle and Jeckle Show 9:3o—Ruff & Ready Show 1(>:00 The Hector Heathcote Show 10:30 —Fireball XL-5 11:00 Dennis the Menace 11:30 Fury Afternoon 12:<>o -Sgt. Preston 12:30—The Bullwinkle Show 1 :oo—Exploring 2:oo—dlr. Wizard 2:30 — Best of Gfottclio 8:oo Mr. Lucky 3:30—Touchdown
Central Daylight Time
4:00— Bowling ' " .. 5700— NFL Highlights s:3o—Captain Gallaht Evening 1 6 oo—W rest Ung 7:oo—The Depu f y 7:3o—The Lieutenant B:3o—Joey Bishop Shew 9:oo—Saturday Night Movie 11:10—Saturday Edition 11:50—Saturday Night Movie ■Chi DAT 4:oo—Sacred Heart Program 9:15 —The Chrlitophere 9.3o—Americana at Work 9:4s—Man to Man 10:00— For Tour Informatloa 10:15—Industry on Parade 10:30—This Is the Lite ■■ , 11:00—Cartoon Time Afternoon 12:00—December Bride 12:30 The Catholic Hour 1:00—Best of Groucho I:3o—Dragnet 2:oo—Bowling 3:oo—Ladles ’Golf 4:3o—The Big Picture 5:00 Wild KI ngdoin S:3O—G-E College Bowl 6:00 Special 6:3o—Bat Masterson 7:on Bill Dana Show _ _»JLe— Wait Disney '' ' 8:30- Grlndl •"" Itonsnsa , in:oo—Show of the Week 11:00—Sunday Edition 11:15—Sunday Night at the Movies WPTA-TV Channel 21 FRIDAY Evening 6:00—6 P.M. Report 6:ls—Ron Cochran — News 6:3o—Mr Magoo ' I 7:00—Bold Journey 7:30 -77 Sunset Strip 8:30 Burke's Law 9:30 Farmer's Daiigltl.er IFight ..f sh- u>-k 10:45 Maki- That Spare 11:00—Murphy Martin — News 11 :10—Weathervane 11:15—Steve Allen Show ■ATURDAB Morning 9:oo—Little Lord Fontleroy 10:80 The Jetsons 1.1:00 —Casper Show 11:30 Beany and Cecil Afternoon 12:00- —Bugs Bunny 1:0(1 My Friend Flleka 1 30 American Bandstand 2:3o—Al's Acres 3:00 Jalopy. .Races 3:3,0- Roller Derby 4:30 AFL Highlights s:oo—Wide World of Bporta Evening | 6:30 Pre-Qlympic Show ’ ■ V 7 JOI Saturday Night Movie . 8:30 Lawrence Welk 9 30 Jerry Lewis 11:30—Peter Gunn MUNDAY Morning 9:00 -Religious Nows Digest ,9:15 —Light Time 9:3o—lndiana University • 10:00—World Playhouse 11 .30—. Discovery Afternoon 12:00—Insight 12:30 - Oral Roberts 1 :30—The Story 2:oo—Manion Forms 2:15—21 News Special 2:3o—Fopt ball s:Bo—Frontier Circus Evening 6:00—All Pro Scoreboard 6:3o—The Rebel 7:00 -Edie Adams Show 7:30 -Travels of Jamie McPheetera B:oo—Jane Wyman B:Bo—Arrest and Trial » I ,10:00—100 Grand 10:30 Hootenanny 11:00—Dan Smoot Report 11:15 -Sunday Night Movie drive-in ••Hootnany hoot" Ft! A- Sat. 7:00, 9:50; "Festival of Fun" 8:40.j
Todays Market P. B. STEWART & CO. Corrected October 18 100-160 lbs _ 10.00-12.00 160 to 170 lbs 13.75 170 to 180 lbs 14.25 180 to 190 lbs ... 14.75 190 to 200 lbs. 15.00 200 to 230 lbs. 15.25 230 to 240 lbs. 15.00 250 to 260 lbs. 14.75 250 to 260 lbs. 14.50 260 to 270 lbs. 14.25 270 to 280 lbs. 14.00 280 to 300 lbs. 13.75 Roughs 300 down 14.00 300 to 330 lbs. 13.50 330 to 360 lbs. .....L 12.75 360 to 400 lbs. .......... 12.00 400 to 450 lbs. 11.50 450 to 500 lbs. 11.00 500 to 550 lbs. ..... 10.50 550 lbs up 10.25 Stags 10.00 Boars 9-10 WHOLESALE EGG QUOTATIONS Furnished By^~ — DECATUR FARMS Corrected October 18 Grade A Large Whites ...... .31 Grade A .Large Browns .31 Grade A Mediums .24 Grade A Pullets .18 GRAIN PRICES Furnished By BURK ELEVATOR CO. Corrected October 18 No. 1 Wheat 1.98 No. 2 Wheat 1.97 Corn 1.45 36 lbs. Oats .60 Soybeans 2.60 COURT NEWS Marriage Applications Raymond Paul Lanternier, Marion, and FranCile Gayle Custer, Decatur. Kenneth James Laird, Columbus, 0., and Sandqa Lee Land, Columbus, 0. ......... Berne-Geneva Livestock Report Prices paid Oct. 15 Top veals 33.75 Top lambs 18.80 Top steers and heifers 22.50 Top bulls 18.50 Good cows 13.50-15.00 Canners and cutters 10.00-13.50 Top hogs 16.45 Top sows ... 15.20 Male hogs 10.90-13.50 Chicago Produce* CHICAGO (UPD — Produce: Live poultry too few receipts to report prices. Cheese processed loaf 39%-44; brick 40-45; Swiss grade A SO--55; B 50-54. Butter steady; 93 score 58; 92 score 58; 90 socre 56%; 89 score 55%. Eggs about steady, .white large extras 37; mixed large extras 36%; mediums 29%; standards 33%. Indlananollß Livestock INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—Livestock: Hogs 6,800; fully 25-5; lower; 1 and 2, 190-225 lb 15.85-16.25; 1, 2 and 3, 190-250 lb 15.50-16.00; sows uneven, about steady to 25 lower; 300-400 lb 14.00-14.75; 400600 lb 13.25-14.00. Cattle 250; calves 15; not enough to fully test market; good and choice heifers 21.5022.50; high choice 23.00; cows steady to weak; canner, cutter and utility 11.50-14.00, few 14.50. Sheep 325; generally steady; choice and prime wooled lambs 18.50Chicago Llveatorlr CHICAGO (UPD—Livestock: Hogs 9.500; butchers 25 to 50 lower; U.S. no 1-2 200- 225 lb butchers 15.75-16.00, around 300 head at 16.00; mixed no 1- 3 180-250 lb 15.25-15.85; bulk 200230 lb 15.50-15.75; no 2-3 250-280 lb 14.85-15.25. Cattle 6,000; calves 25; slaughter steers and heifers steady to 25 lower; cows steady to 50 lower; bulls steady; few feeders about steady; hround 7 loads prime 1150-1350 lb slaughter steers 25 25; high choice and prime 1050 - 1325 lb 24.5025.00; couple of loads prime 1425-1450 lb 23.00 - 23.50; load prime 1350 lb 25.00; bulk choice 950-1300 lb 23.50 - 24.50; comparable grades 1300 - 1450 lb 22.50- choice 1400-1500 lb 22.00-22.25; 3 loads choice 16001650 lb 21.25; good 900-1250 lb 24.25 - 23.5; load high choice and prime 994 lb heifers 3.75; choice 800-1100 lb mostly 22.50-23.50; 23.50; couple loads at 23.50 carried, small end prime; good 21.25-22.00; canner and cutter mostly 11.00-13.50; shelly canter 10.00 - 11.00; utility and commercials bulls 17 00-19.00; load choice 475 lb feeding steer calves 26.00; 120 head string 500 lb choice heifer -calves 24.00. 1 Sheep 200; hardly enough on offer for market test; good and choice 80-100 lb 'wooled slaughter lambs 18.00 - 19.00; few choice and prime 19.50.
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THI DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. DIDIARA
Seek Further Liberalization Ot Document VATICAN CITY (UPD—The Ecumenical Council today sent back for “further liberalization” a document authorizing the use of modern languages at Catholic weddings, baptisms other sacraments, and funerals. As presented to the council today, the document placed only one restriction on the use of modern languages in the Catholic sacraments. It provided that Latin must continue to be used for the “essential Verbal formula” of the rite. Many prelates of the council’s “liberal” bloc had let it be known they would like to eliminate even this vestige of Latin and allow all sacraments to be entirely in the language of the people. The vote on the document _was 1,130 yes, 1,054 yes-with-reservations, and 300 no. Under council rules, prelates who vote yes with reservations are required to submit a written description of the change they wish made in the document before giving it final approval. Council experts said that unquestionably a very large percentage of the reservations were voiced by bishops who want to eliminate Latin entirely from the administration of Catholic sacraments. They said the campaign for a large number of reservation votes had been quietly conducted by liberal bishops from Western Europe in preparation for today’s vote. The document and the reservations now go back to the council’s , liturgical commission which will attempt to draft an amendment expressing the view represented by the largest number of reservations. This amendment will then be put to a' vote and like all proposals will require a two-third majority to carry. Even though the unqualified yes votes today slightly outnumbered the reservations, they fell far short of the necessary two-thirds for final approval of the document. Russian Military Automobile Blocked BERLIN (UPD — American military police today blocked a Russian military automobile in West Berlin ahd held it for 20 ...minutes in retaliation for East German harassment of .American military sedans in East Berlin. The new Communist harassment of military traffic in East Berlin was disclosed as the U.§. Army sent a convoy to Berlin from the West in a demonstration of Western access rights. Twenty-four soldiers in 12 trucks passed through Russian check-points at each end of the 110-mile highway through. East Germany without difficulty, an Army spokesman said. Russian border guards passed the convoy quickly and there was no repetition of last week’s holdup of an American convoy when the Russians demanded soldiers leave their trucks to be counted. Only Slight Damage When Autos Collide One of two cars involved in an accident at 12:45 p.m. Thursday at the Five Points intersection was damaged. Cars driven by Larry Gene Mankey. 21, route 2, Decatur, and Arthur Daniel Suttles, Jr., 54, of 433 Bollman St. were northbound on Winchester street and had stopped at the Five Points intersection. Mankey started to pull away, then stopped for a car on Mercer Ave., Suttles failed to see him stop again and his car struck the Mankey ear in the rear. Mankey’s vehicle was the only one damaged, and it was estimated at $45. Aged Elkhart Lady Is Burned To Death ELKHART, Ind. (UPD — Mrs. Fatima Franz, 88, burned to death in the kitchen of her home here Thursday when she apparently spilled a pan of flaming grease on her clothing. A daughter discovered the woman’s body.
g 9 20 Years Ago Today 0 0 Qct. 18, 1943 — Four persons were killed and seven injured in a near head-on collision just west of the Indiana-Ohio state line on U. S. highway 224. Dead were Homer Clyde Ainsworth, 51, of Convoy, O.; Pete Soto, 19, Victor Soto, 8, and Pauline Soto, 14, all of Rockford, O. The 11th annual run of the Central Sugar Co. plant in this city was started this morning, with more than 9,000 tons of sugar beets already in the yards. Two Ohio men being held in the Bluffton jail have admitted robberies at filling stations in Magley, Craigville, Tocsin and Bluffton. Decatur and Adams county public schools will be closed Thursday and Friday while teachers attend the annual teachers’ conventions in the state. Fifteen persons were killed in traffic accidents on Indiana highways over the weekend. Sentry Satellite Patrols Orbit Beat CAPE CANAVERAL (UPD— America’s first sentry satellite patrolled an historic 60,000-mile high beat around earth today to “watch” for any nqclear explosion jn space. A companion satellite was en route and expected to reach the same orbit, the highest circular orbit around earth ever achieved by a satellite, by Saturday morning. And the final phase of a spectacular triple-header launching here Wednesday night, a small Tetra Hedron (TRS) satellite about the size of a grapefruit, orbited earth in a long eliptical path ranging from 200 miles to 50,000 miles high. Its task is to trap radiation in the Van Allen Belt around earth. The two super-secret “watchdog” satellites are the first in a series of such moonlets to be sent aloft by the United States to enforce the nuclear test ban treaty. Detection equipment on the satellites is so sensitive, scientists said it can record nuclear explosions as small a 10 kiloton, equal to about 10,000 tons of TNT, at distances of up to 200 million miles in space. The first satellite attained its orbit, about a quarter of the way to the moon, at about 4:04 p.m. EDT Thursday. The second moonlet needed one more rocket “kick” to reach its goal.
■ Illi ■LJ ’ j Beats W major cause of W breakdowns W other W 1 , ' ,< ' pa "' lf ' ' ' W *‘ | *• 11 ||||||||| .' '>•' ' \ v• | * ■l' ■> ,; '> 1 ' "■ |t|| . ■ ■•>' i■■ t•■ mL Just keep TV parts cooler ■ ~ and they’ll last longer. So Philco designed the COOL ■■ ■ CHASSIS to automatically ventilate itself. IIH E]| 70% reduction / |Sg I Um l in TUBE , W mlglj 'jlMf I rf burnouts W bB ffin i wßKe* ' i LtjJ 1 ' n Q ua *fty ||l ptgp ' Pl l Tests IM'S W I II * ithPhi| c° M B I Upm z / 11 patented COOL B n Bra I w. chassis n-F i_ ■ ft-, I PMI , rA ii 5 Vl • Walnut Wood Grained 1 J “ ’249” u TRADE 16” COURIER loy H A U G K "^"* g ■ ■ V Wl I > AIR CONDITIONING 206 N. 13th St. Phone 3-3316
Goulart’s Position Almost Impossible
UPI Foreign News Analyst Back in April, 1962, when Brazilian President Joao Goulart paid a state visit to the United States, 4. Brazilian newsman pleaded: “Give him a chance. He is trying to be a friend.” During the two years of his presidency, Goulart’s chief difficulty has been that in the extremes of Brazilian politics he has been forced to walk a tightrope between right and left. And in the last two weeks there have been definite signs that the rope is becoming frayed. On both the extreme right and extreme left, Gpulart was a man without a friend. Comlicating the already chaotic state of affairs in South America’s largest nation was the fact that maneuvering already has started for the presidential elections scheduled for October, 1965. This week Goulart’s minister ol education, Paulo de Tarso, quit in what was interpreted as a left-wing protest against Gbulart’s “opening toward the center?’ Charges Death Plot In Rio de Janeiro, capital of Guanabara State,* Gov. Carlos Lacerda, militantly anti-Com-munist and an avowed presidential candidate, accused unidentified authorities “directly linked” with Goulart of plotting to assassinate him. Lacerda freely has predicted total collapse of the Goulart regime. Whether or not another man might have done better, it must be admitted that Goulart’s position has been an almost impossible one. When the United States bailed him out early this year with a pledge of more than S4OO million in aid, it was on the promise that an austerity campaign would at least slow down Brazil’s galloping inflation and that tax and land reform programs would follow. Instead inflation jumped nearly 50 per cent in the first eight months of the year. Labor unions attacked Goulart for his resistance to wage demands, and conservative and right-wing elements in congress effectively blocked land reform. Loudest Critic Among his critics, Lacerda has been the loudest. As governor of Guanabara State, Lacerda has established' a good record of building schools, clearing slums and pressing public works. Mandatory wage _increases _ and a “13th month” of extra pay has in general kept workers quiet. Lacerda expects a swing to
the political right and will use his record as governor to help his presidential ambitions. As for Goulart, there are signs that he is working toward cooperation with the middle-road Social Democrats of former President Juscelino Kubitschek. Kubitschek is an amiable medic who has no personal enemies. It was he who led Brazil into the forced-draft industrialization which plunged it so deeply into debt. Kubitschek also is a presidential candidate for 1965. Savings Bond Sales Increase In County T. F. Graliker, chairman of the Adams county U.S. savings bonds committee, has received a report revealing that the county’s savings bonds sales for September were $66,578, compared with $35,129 for the corresponding period of last year. The state’s sales for September were $11,769,463. Last September’s sales were $9,996,415 which gives .an increase of 17.7 percent over last year. Sixty-one of the state’s 92 counties reported sales gains for the month when compared with sales of September, 1962. New Tone Stock Exchange Prices MIDDAY PRICES A. T. & T.. 130%; Central Soya, 27%; DuPont, 246%; Ford, 53%; General Electric, 80%; General Motors 79%; Gulf Oil, 48%; Standard Oil Ind., 63%; Standard Oil N. J., 70; U. S. Steel, 56.
MME ' ' - ■■ MER API CHARLES H. STONETREET
Sponsored by The Republican City Committee Rice Hotel, Decatur, Ind. . Herman Lankenau, chairman Mrs. John M. Doan, vice chairman Robert S. Anderson, secretary-treasurer
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18. 1963
“ZINTSMASTER SPECIAL” 1962 CADILLAC 4-door sedan You must come in to appreciate the beauty of this local one owner, low mileage car. Phone 3-2003 PROTECTION FOR YOUR HOME ALL-IN-ONE PACKAGE THE BROAD / HOMEOWNERS INSURANCE POLICY COWENS INSURANCE AGENCY 209 Court Street PHONE 3-3601 L. A. COWENS JIM COWENS
To The People of Decatur — “As an ordinary workingman, a family man, and an active church member, I feci that I reflect the faith of Decatur people in our ability to better ourselves by hard work and a Christian life. “If you elect me to represent you on the Decatur city council, I promise to do all I can to reflect your thinking concerning the needs of our city, and to translate them into action. “I will appreciate your vote, support and confidence in the November 5 election, and the four years of hard work which will follow. Please support me and my fellow Republican candidates.”
