Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 8, Decatur, Adams County, 10 January 1964 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
COURT NfWS Beal Estate Transfers Doyle R. Hartzog etux to Alvin M. Adami etux. Pt. Inlot 470-471 Decatur. Fredd Ladd etux to Clifton E NuMbaum «tux, Berne a pt SE-4 SW-4 Section 33 Township 26 Range 14. Richard A. Ditto etux to Clifford R. Ditto etux. tot. S-2 NE-4 Section 9 Township 28 Range 15, 80 ac-es. True M; Andrews etux to Lee W. Sprunger etux. Inlot 22 Sunnibrook Acres. Richard J. Moser etux to Jacob L. Schwartz etux. W-2 NE-4 Section 15 Township 25 Range 14, 80 acres. Christian G. Schwartz etux to Jacob L. Schwartz etux, Pt. SE-4 Section 15 Township 25 Range 14, 80 acres. Roger Bluhm etux to Ruth Gottschalk. N-2 NW-4 Section 13 Township 26 Range 14. 80 adres. Ruth Gottschalk to Roger Bluhm etux, N-2 NW-4 Section 13 Township 36 Range 14. 80 acres. George P. Schlemmer etux to Aaron L. Sutton etux, Pt. N-2 NE--4; Pt. NE-4 Sec. 3; Pt. fr. Sec. 2 Township 28 Range 15, 113 acres. Oscar F. Lankenau to Lynford G. Bracey etux. Pts. Inlots 725-726 Dscstur. Jonas Graber etux to William E. Hethcote etux, .pt. N-2 NE-4; Pt. NE-4 NW-4 (21) Pt. S-2 SE-4 <l6) Township 35 Range 14, 57 acres.
\ S ® Wil III! SI ik’ BE f aBl T - fist ; vMk? : 17 j mIOMI ••• ■ .47ft JOTJ Mfr I U £'■ - uMlff ■ I IKBw v. -wBMMk ' i' '7 Nal MBsOwi'. wt .■ .‘Sig-tl'- \\ w W jWMjBH ■ ctK/ -■ | ■Wk Mroli”Wg' " u _W v r WRWHiw 1 ■*- FMh_HH*iiiijnii I .J 11 IIILJII ■' |f i I-...TT ~ ~° **']g ' - 6 , cita'ruiet Impala Sport Sedan and (background) hnpala Coneertiblo Jet-smooth Luxury Chevrolet Wkrt does il lake to make a car a great highway per-. f Nobody «» or .soup lheso irthe car happens to be a ’64 'Chevrolet, one thing tobe driven by you-on the kinds of drive on. li A htoLTv And that’s really the test of a great highway You’ll S everything else already neatly packaged former: Just about anyone can gi±.a kick out of driving for you-on the cai exactly as you ptok fc u on. o .y . (f(ei . a]l> is the kin 4 of performance you’d ThessaSoice of seven-engines-all the way up to a expect from Chevrolet. The greater satisfaction and taviiJSXb high-compression 425-hp VB/-and four trans- enjoyment bui t into these cars is borne out year after .Ste including a finely honed 4-speed .slick shift - year by the h.gher resale they brmg over other makes Amri-underhing it' nrtrrerr nein. _ • iHraSEP 5 * evi “""™ ? l "‘“«srimXs'“osmis as csgsx al frtra cost THE GREAT HIGHWAY PERFORMERS Chevrolet • Chevelle • Chevy II • Corvair • Corvette See them at your Chcrrolet Shoirrooni ' ~ BILL ZOSS CHEVROLET-BUICK, inc. 305 N. 13th St. Decatur Phone 3-3148
" aB ' *...-> j* s a owF i **■* z . .■ ’ --n - 1 TOUGH SLEDDING— Banked snow at Concord makes the going rough for Sen. Barry Go> dwa,er u recu P er w at '" g H f s®“ a foot operation, on his political run through New Hampshire At right the Arizona Republican s campaign chairman for New Hampshire, Sen. Norns Cotton.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA
Miller Challenges I Johnson To Debate I
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Re- , publican National Chairman William E. Miller called on President Johnson today to honor John F. Kennedy’s “commitment” for television debates between the presidential candidates in 1964. Miller said it was Johnson, then a contender for the Democratic presidential nomination, who insisted, on such confrontations with Kenhedy prior to the 1960 Democratic National Convention. “Mr. Johnson also urged repeatedly in 1960 that there be more than four television debates between the two presidential candidates,” Miller said in a speech prepared for delivery at a session of the GOP National Committee. Kennedy and former Vice '—President Richard M. Nixon, the Republican presidential candidate, met four times on television during the 1960 campaign. Many political experts believe that Kennedy’s performance during the debates was a principal factor to his victory.
Slaps At Johnson Miller accused Johnson of at-, I tempting to ride two or three horses at once by offering bigger federal programs for everyone with lower taxes and a lower budget. The chairman's political broadside at the new President came during a national committee. session which was part of a four-day meeting of GOP leaders to prepare for the 1964 campaign. The party leadership also was getting a look at actual or potential contenders for the presidential nomination. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York was booked for a speech today before the National Press Club, where Gov. George Romney of Michigan spoke Tuesday. Rockefeller and Sen. Barry M. Goldwater of Arizona, the only two announced contenders. get a chance to exchange handshakes tonight at a national committee reception to which both were invited. Attends Reception Gov. William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania, generally considered a presidential possibility, attended a similar committee reception Thursday night. Scranton declined a request from his state’s Republican congressional delegation to become an active candidate by convention time. He backed, instead, a plan to send an uncommitted delegation to the GOP national convention. Earlier in the day, at Harrisburg. Pa., Scranton declared he is not a presidential candidate and he indicated he had cracked down on members of his staff who have been secretly pushing his hat toward ring. ? g: Worlhman Is Head f Os Preble Firemen | Irvin Worthman, newly elected president of the Preble fire de- " partment. conducted the opening, meeting of the year. The following officers were elected with 'him: Donald Werling, vice president; Gerhard Werling, secretary; -'Eugene Sommer, treasurer; Hugo Bulmahn, trustee; Harold Hoffman fire chief; Edgar Ewell, assistant chief; and Severin Schurger, resident agent for the corporation. Chief Hoffman reported that fire run contracts had been signed ’with Preble, Kirkland and Root ' —townships. A total oT 17 runs were made during the year; eight* grass fires, four vehicle fires and five building fires. Decatur, Monroe, Monroe rural" and Poe fire departments have g been contacted by Victor Biebe-1 j rich for the purpose of getting g all Adams county roads * marked | so that fire equipment can get to 3 the scene of the fire through 3 a simpler form of directions. Ir-s \in Worthman. Gerhard Werling. | and Hugo Bulmahn wqr.e appoint-1 ed to meet with committees ap-g pointed from the Mother depart- g ments to present a plan to the ? county commissioners at a fu- - ture date. It was announced that the 7th t district meeting will be held in ■ Roanoke January 20 at 8 p.m. -
(■ * i i ■ I i i • ts MM > ' 5 ' * MKsßgr i ahkok 'mbE** * '• I : j * MOnr JBb .aJ. t HEM* | ..ju, Hf Bw; Up* <I ?*uM fr~ tFnrWt .Mb<t *» jfiHiMMg zjwWflß *Wmw ; , ®r SBBEHHMRBRIHMMMImI READY TO GO— Shown here are the two stages.pf the Titan-11, - reeket tbefced-4nto- thch'idati^-firing-stands on the “pads for simultaneous firings from Cape Kennedy. Fla.v The Titan-II booster is thatrwhich wiil be used to latffich two astronauts in the Gemini capsule some lime this year. '
Clayton Bank Is Robbed Os Nearly $30,000 CLAYTON, Ind; (UPI) — A widespread search was underway today for a pair of “old " pro” bank bandits who bound bank employes and customers with twine and adhesive tape, sprayed them with ether and then fled with almost $30,000. The bandits, armed with sawed-off shotguns, took their time cleaning out the vault of the Clayton branch of the Danville State Bank and relieving the two customers of their cash. Fred Shelton, president of the bank, said at Danville, “They were in the branch 20-25 minutes. They were a couple of old pros and were in no hurry at all:” „ V. ♦ Branch manager Hubert Fleece told Shelton that the two men entered the bank minutes before closing time, grabbed the lone customer, tavern owner Dale Unger, and ordered the five employes present to move behind the front counter. When another customer, Steve Clark, entered, he was forced to join the others behind the counter. All seven were forced to lie on the floor and the bandits bound their hands with twine and taped their mouths. Shelton said they then sprayed windshield de-icer fluid over the tape. The banker said police told him the fluid is 90 per cent ether. » While one bandit emptied coins and bills from a cash drawer, the other cleaned out the vault. They also took Unger’s wallet which contained $l5O. Shelffcn said the loot totaled $29,587. The victims were unable to free themselves until almost a . half-hour after the robbery, a - spokesman for the Hendricks • County sheriff’s office said. s Fleece described the bandits ? as being about 35 years old. He said they wore long tan top- - coats and black leather caps. o ~~ c j 20 Years Ago Today 0 ■ « Jan. 10, 1944 — Capt. Charles M. Prugh. U. S. Army chaplain, spoke on his army experiences at the Zion Evangelical and Reform-ed-church, where he formerly served as pastor. A district -meeting of the Improved Order of Red Men will be ■held at the Red Men’s hall here Wednesday. - L. A. Sprunger was reelected president and; E. W. Baumgartner, cashier, at the annual meeting of directors of the First Bank ?of Berne. s A farm riianagement and outi look extension school will be held sat the Lincoln school here Jan. g 26. with H. L. Bauman, of Purdue a University, as the speaker. S' The Berne Bears were defeated Jby Fort Wayne Central Catholic ® 53-39. y 1 -■ — Stale Raisins § When raisins and other dried 5 fruits get stale and hard, they can s can be freshened and used if you’ll | put them into a strainer and set f the strainer with a cover on it - over a pot of boiling water for about 15 minutes.
KNOWYOUR —* W/iillriWi STOPEKEEPEKS, MEM AMD WOMEM, KEEP M# OH THE MATERIAL MEEDS Os THE Un'l \J HAWJM KEEP/MG OOP SHIPS WELL SUPPLIED, THE SK IS PESPOMSIDU fOP » STOPIM6 AMD ISSUIMC AU TYPES Os * H STOPES, aOTH/MG, MECHAPICAL . !■ EQUIPMEMT AMD OTHEP ITEMS. HE ALSO / TAKES IMVEMTOPIES, PREPARES ORDERS, I SETS STOCK MUAMTITIES, AMD DETER- I IJf 1 W MIMES WAREHOUSUtffAUOMTIOMS. I V fly Wxle4y You, Your Child And The School
By DAVID NYDICK UPI Education Specialist Children first entering school have a whole new world before them. They are widely curious and ready to discover many new activities, friends, etc. This is truly a growth time. Parents will be fascinated by the enthusiasm of their child’s stories and conversations about their many new experiences. Parents have been the center of the child’s life up to this point. Their new job is to help the child widen his world. There will be a need for a great deal of support. This, age child may be somewhat confused. He wants independence but he is not sure he wants to leave the security of being a baby. He may fall back into, some of his baby activities. The parent should not be surprised if he wants to act self sufficient in front of others and demand help when others are. not present. The parent can be most helpful by going along with his desires. He will need reassurance especially at times when he fails* to accomplish a task by himself. Failure is a valuable experience. Let him know that all attempts do not have to be successful. He need not be embarrassed or frustrated. It is important for parents to realize their child’s activities, difficulties, and attitudes are similar to other children of the same age. A five- or six-year-old who has a temper tantrum is not unusual as long as the occurrence does not develop a regular pattern. What about tears and thumb sucking? Teachers can tell parents that these oc<<ir with many of their students even in the third grade. They happen less ana less as the children develop and grow. There are many pamphlets and books available from government and commercial sources which describe normal actions at various ages. Parents who have doubts should read these. Remember to be cautions. No child should be expected to conform to the exact standards of the average child described in these writings. These writings usually emphasize an age range. An additional caution is the realization that isolated events can happen at any time.
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FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1904
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Only if they become regular do they then deserve serious attention and investigation. Safety is a major concern for children of this age. The inevitable bruises and scratches cannot be avoided. A broken bone is fairly common. Proper care after the accident should be stressed. This is the best way to avoid serious complications. Parents and children should understand that one individual cannot do as well as everyone in everything and they cannot be liked by everyone. These early years can be exciting and interesting if understanding and patience are practiced.
“HIGH PRICED’’ . . . or real valued Some new drugs naturally cost more than others because of necessary research and development expendi- - tures. But they should be - — considered as one of the best values in the family budget because they are so effective in speeding recovery from illness. They usually reduce the total cost of sickness by reducing time a.way from work, hospitalization, etc. We invite your prescription patronage, and assure you of uniformly fair prices. Today's prescriptions are your biggest health value. HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.
