Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 130, Decatur, Adams County, 2 June 1964 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Cefebwtiitii wtth ValuM. • • 5« AfflftmswlMa Q 7 Q •i_i 4 '” V? STARTS THURSDAY, JUNE 4th ni|- li i i»i ■— ' VHhY 1) V wl F L \ i) Ha? ' 1 ''—■SSP* l ' big 20x40-INCH 1 CANNON BATH TOWELS =-»=w.-x=Q7 SSES--3 QQc fthfldiH* i• • P***< Y*’ A ■ a V> I I make up sets for gifts too O I top and 9* ptenfy te fj > |b V-F'V-F candy dishes and TV snack. MATCHING WASH CLOTHS .... 3 for 29* i. a , tiii ain ■■ ■ _i..\_ - ■mi *■<■■ 1 "’J •——■'■>■■ ■ 1 " /i v “? Auuv&mm big 18-inch vYvM-~ JR folding. /£/ i oirooM wiuj MBH *3" ■ / \ BmjjfMß B . .. k. II inches ,\ /.'".Vl;, 7 tf tt)MhAREM99c with crank lift ad- '•"'-///. BOX of IS KING SIZED. * jostmtnt for pr*- -/jZ/ Grretihfl Cords tßAytasles *** **’' -- 47 c “—— — J . , , t 1M Many^iydesigns!Folding 7 piece Cream Filled g£SSW C.rolin.Moo« ROLLS ■ J SEAMLESS Yummy Ch-y Camel -■ - - Rolls with Melt-m-Your White - Pastel uw| SUB I I Mouth Centers. COSTUME "™» i™in |Bo .rd Tic Pound ■M.AaMi ak«a Mttotnekh ot R«tul<tr hj|g| JEWELRY stikh in Lovejy Shades. I HU Dressy - Casual WS£s*£s ’\«* c COVER SETS mod ” n Pq,r » Whi,e Waffle-Knit fad Carolina" Crush" and ing Earrings. J# txtra an< | D ur - "Deerskin" Plastics in A Xtfh/s P las Wteh’h aWe - Sum Met Colors. 3 for w“C tak Short Sleeve $ t-47 I s l.9Y± Sport iamaica Hlsh <iuaiiiy SPORT SHIRTS ' "ST PERCALES VB«»W 36 . nch _g o tf,read SnlV IX An Outsfcihdihg Group Sizes 7 to 14 count. Prints and Solid sA d U Regular $1.98 "Pel- Jamaica Shorts, "Pop- Colors. Sew and Save Solid Colors ana Stripes. ham" Shirts. over" Tops In Prints, with this Sunny VersaSizes 6 to 16. — Str pes, Solids. tile Assortment. 99C r $ 3-®® SSCyarf aitwi a^afifcaMi^aafai—i ~, ■ .■ . w " i ESMWHMBM Keep Cool ; ■ <1 f L^Pr b ' in These MjJt | WWajhiL 1 //y<l Sleeveless H| ’d w ! %■* HA Os Shirtwaist 1 ' ; ... w W $ Styles 111 ufiw fiWB 1 \7 Z < - ■ - MaaUMaflteU r "'-' Bl WBfifelN FULLY LINED ■“““"L $ HbM-V. Plastic Drapes - o AA SHOES --- i nwKL'zl f>,re yyc •144 .1 M WHSr t\ W^fron”U», ; T’dy-rn >’ *>«,!. JL H ™ U ..de panel 36 i„«W • i.. * * 1 v wide with 36-mch center Sizes sto 9 Piimps or eyelet tie of sail- '»* i<* L. ° ' scenic and embossed pat- . . cloth or mesh ballerinas. .j‘ V\v £- terns ' with textured film Ribbed rubber soles. » *' 'AIX A ’ ' plastic lining. « ■ ■ ■ J* < • ‘ • * ' ' ■' IS! - Its North Seesna street Decatur, Indiana __ . .. * . « e rt* » a1- ~ - -a ea» - - - -»■- ——————

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA

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MISS JEANNIE SMITH, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clark Smith of route 4, is one of 84 to graduate from Western Pennsylvania school of nursing in Pittsburgh, Pa., May 23. She is a 1960 graduate of Adams Central high school and she attended Hanover College for one year. She plans to continue her studies in the fall. Mr. and Mrs. Clark Smith and daughter, Deborah, attended the graduation exercises.

Busick Pays Fine On Parking Violation Leo Busick, of Union township, probably the first Adams county resident ever jailed for failure to pay a parking ticket, relented Monday afternoon and was released from the Adams county jail. Ever since receiving the ticket, Busick refused to pay the fine, claiming he had paid it via the 25 cents in the envelope system, the day his vehicle was ticketed. After several notices, he was cited into city court, and Monday morning was fined $1 annd costs, totaling sll, for the meter violation by city court Judge John B. Stults. He still refused to pay the fine, and was remanded to the Adams county jail for three days, to “lay out” the fine. He relented around 2 o’clock Monday afternoon, however, and paid the fine, and was released from custody. •

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SUMMER ZlNG—Here’s a lively beach cover-up that is popular this season. Conceived in New York City and inspired by the man’s shirt, the topper is bright yellow and has long, billowy sleeves.

THE TAX TURNABOUT: ? FEDERAL PAYMENTS TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS CENT OF ALL STATE AND LOCAL GENERAL REVENUE, 1959 *lB3 / —2O 6W M,NH - /1W i . !////,{,/''/'///mW neb. \ ; j Y*- v 77;/s A ■tn V W Nfv - \ 152 I \- : wlf3 - " vM"- 8 \ w ii4 \ >7.0 KAN - ifeM \ xQiMW 156 \. f LESS THAN 12 °° i TEXAS ' 12 * 10 lts * ' .■• / H ’«% TO 235% : LOW STATE NEW JERSEY (6.4° 24% 0R MOKE HIGH STATES-ALASKA, WYOMING (32.3%) \ ", S A UNITED STATES AVERAGE 14.1% \ I / ? > MEDIAN STATE-NORTH CAROLINA (17.1%) ''<A *' New,map l ."• -•-- , - ■ / ~, / ■;- / . . ■. I n,: -i ■, v.

Federal payments to state and local governments, in the form of grants-in-aid, represent an average of 14.1 per cent of the letters' budgets, according to the U.S. Senate Committee on

New York City, St. Augustine, Florida, Have Same Problem

(EDITOR’S NOTE: The nation’s largest city and its oldest are caught up hi the first round of what Negro leaders have warned could be a “long hot summer” in the field of civil rights. The issues in St. Augustine, Fla., are dear. Those in New York are not as easily defined. A team of UPI reporters — Thomas D. Zumbo, Randolph Pendleton and Al Kuettner, examine the explosive problems in the two cities in the following in-depth report.) By AL KUETTNER United Press International At opposite ends of the East Coast- of the United States lie two cities that have little in common except a rich heritage. New York is a towering metropolis of 8 million. St. Augustine, Fla., is a normally easygoing tourist town of 16,000. New Yorkers travel south to ride in horse-drawn surreys and view St. Augustine’s old slave market, a massive Spanishbuilt fort and beautiful homes that line picturesque streets. The people of St. Augustine go north to ride the thundering subways and gawk at the glitter of New York’s World Fair and tall buildings— St. Augustine was 59 years old by the time the Dutch landed on Manhattan Island (they named it New Amsterdam) in 1624. The FLorida city spent the next 400 years becoming one of the nation’s sjnost picturesque tourist attractions. New York

became the ever-growing gateway to America. ~aj Ctttee an Oftottr You could hardly find two cities more opposite but today they share a common problem that is frightening and baffling to both. It is race—the Negro against the white, violence against law and order. If- the second summer of the Negro’s discontent has a stsirting point, these two cities will share the unwanted honors. “We’re scared about summer. This stuff is happening everywhere, ib’s getting out of hand,” said a New YOrker surveying a violent weekend in which roving Negro gangs attacked whites on subways with knives, bottles and fists. New York newspapers suggested armed patrols might be the only way for citizens in some sections of the city to protect themselves. Long months of Negro bitterness over the lack of jobs, ghetto schools and slum housing seemed on the verge of erupting. Madison S. Jones, executive director of the city’s Commission on Human Rights, said last weekend’s subway rioting was “spontaneous” reflections of this “hopeless frustration.” Sammer Brings Songs In the Florida city, the long, hot summer—usually the signal for the big onslaught of tourists —had arrived with the chant of “freedom” songs, Negro demonstrators in the streets and police dogs. The issues in St. Augustine, clouded somewhat by the changing patterns of racial demands, included Negro requests for open public accommodations, a Negro on the city’s 400th anniversary celebration committee and a general improvement of the Negro’s status. Focal point of the trouble was the old slave market —a pavilion in the downtown area. Elderly men play checks in its shade. Slaves were said to have been sold here by the Spaniards. “It symbolizes the evils of St. Augustine,” said Negro leaders. Said Mayor Joseph Shelly: “St. Augustine has been selected as a target, not because it is the most segregated city in America but because it is the oldest.” Toughs Cause Trouble In St. Augustine, as in New York, young toughs — white in Florida, Negro in New York—were accused by officials of being responsible for much of the violence. The summer beach cottage of integration leader Martin Luther King Jr. was riddled with 19 bullet holes. News photographers were beaten a n d threatened, their cameras confiscated dr smashed. King is due back this week, pledged to continue a massive “freedom” campaign. New York, accustomed to troubles from its restless minorities, has watched the latest

Government Operations. The Newsmap shows a breakdown for 1999, the latest year for which complete figures '■ are available. Payments range from 6:4 to 32.3 per cent.

TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1964

crisis build since last yeir when angry protests broke out over job hiring. Negroes chained themselves together at construction sites and sprawled on the steps of city hall. Recently it was disclosed that an organized band of militant young Negroes had turned to malicious attacks on whites. Two white deaths were thought to be the work of the gang. Police Commissioner Michael J. Murphy bolstered his forces. The force was raised to 26,500 men — compared to St. Augustine’s 27 — and a special 100man force of riot-control officers was assigned to the explosion shift: Dark to dawn. Meeting Is Scheduled A meeting between Murphy, Joseph O’Grady, chairman of the Transit Authority which operates the subways, and Mayor Robert Wagner is scheduled today. They seek to determine the city’s course in a losing battle to stem the tide of lawlessness. Psychologists offer many reasons for the trouble. Most agree that it is not basically a fight between white and black, but all acknowledged this is a factor. Example: lAre you white or black,” one of the subway marauders yelled at the motorman in his darkened cab. “White,” came the reply. “I’m going to cut off your head,” snarled the Negro intruder, waving a meat cleaver. But the motorman was not harmed because other youths persuaded the intruder to leave. Subways are a major target, but buses and some neighborhoods have been victimized. The Negroes, often reeking of alcohol, roam in packs of a dozen or more. The Hasidic Jews, whose male members wear broadbrimmed hats and long, black coats, organized night patrols to halt attacks on residents in their area of Brooklyn. Negroes in the adjoining Bedford-Stuy-vesant section bitterly Criticized the patrol as a “vigilante” group. r Troubles Seem Small St. Augu st i n e’s troubles seemed small but in their way were just as serious. One major problerrt in the Florida town was a group of whites, easily identified by their tight-fitting jeans and cowboy hats, that gathered to watch racial developments. Often they rode in cars with long atennas, indicating they had short wave radios and were monitoring police broadcasts. Officers sought to prevent_a tangle between the whites and the Negro demonstrators. The effort was successful thus far and the whites contended themselves with occasional warnings and violence aimed at newsmen. The next developments would come out of a federal court in Jacksonville where Negroes asked for a relief from a ban on “peaceful” demonstrations. Meanwhile the city council resurrected two old ordinances: A curfew requiring minors to be off the street by 9 p.m. and restricting parking downtown.