Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 135, Decatur, Adams County, 8 June 1964 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. Bntered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller, Jr. President Mrs. John Shirk .J. Vice President Mrs. A. R. Holthouse Secretary Chas. E. Holthousei" Treasurer Subscription Kates By Mail, in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $10.00; Six months, $5.50; 3 months, v s3.oo. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $11.25; 6 months, 16.00; 3 months, $3.25. By Carrier, 35 cents per week. Single copies, 7 cents.
Evil Old Suntan If you’re roasting away this summer the mistaken notion that the sun is good for your health, you’re in for a real suprise. While its a completely safe prediction that at least ten million Americans roasted themselves to a turn on the first really warm weekend this June at beach, pool, or even in their gardens, they probably didn’t realize what they were doing. Even the conservative AMA points out that the slim possible benefits of limited tanning are more than offset by its potential hazards. Continued tanning brings gradual changes in the blood vessels of the exposed surfaces. The connective tissue of the skin degenerates, causing wrinkles, and a coarsening of texture. The “V” of the neck becomes permanently reddened and frec-kle-like dark spots appear on the skin. These sports can sometimes be the start of skin cancer. Sun bleaches the hair, too, and over a period of time the sun-bleached hair becomes brittle and unmanageable. However, the damaged hair will eventually grow out. As more and more people become aware of the facts, the fair, creamy complexion that once was cherished by our grandmothers will again be in vogue. After all, the only really beneficial effect of sunlight on the skin is formation of vitamin D, but our overladen diets here in America already provide a more-than-adequate supply of this vitamin. Despite the adverse physical indications, doctors are well aware that many patients will continue to work on a Suntan each summer. They will welcome you as a patient when you get sunburned so badly you cannot stand the pain. The sun bums just as thoroughly as any other white-hot fije. K you still feel that you must get tanned, remember the basic rule of gradual exposure to the sun, starting with about 15 minutes a day, avoiding the noon-hour heat, when the rays are directly overhead. Increase exposure about one-third each day. With a little care, it may be possible to tan without too much burning and peeling. Editorial written by— Dick Heder
TV PROGRAMS
WANE-TV Channel 15 MONDAY Evtalßf 6 ;90—Bachelor Father 6:30 —Walter Cronkite — News 7:oo—The Big News 7:30—T0 Tell the Truth 8:00—I've Got a Secret 8: JO—Lucy Show 9:oo—Danny Thomas Show 9:So—Andy Griffith Show 10:00 —Detectives 11:00—Big News 11 :So—Track Talk 11:40—Adventures in Paradise TUESDAY Mersing 7:2s—Daily Word 7:80 —Summer Semester B:oo—CiptalnK angaroo 9:oo—Sugarfoot 10:00 —CBS News . 10:30—I Love Lucy 11:00 —The McCoys 11:80—Pete and Gladys Afternoon 12:00—Love of Life 12:25—C8S News 12:30 —Search for Tomorrow 12:45 —Guiding Light 1:00 —Ann Colone Show 1:25 —News 1:80 —As the World Turns 2:9o—Password 2:30 —Houseparty 3:00—To Tell the Truth 3.25—C8S News 3:3o—Edge of Night 4:0O‘-=-Secret Storm 4:30 —Early Show “Queen of the Mob" _ Evening — : ' : : 6:oo—Bachelor Father 6:30 —CBS News ■> 7:oo—Big' News 7:3#—Death Valley Days B:oo—Red Skelton Show 9:00 —Petticoat Junction 9:30 —“Campaign ’64" 10:00 —Gary Moore Show 11:00 —The Big News 11:30 —Award Theatre “Men without Names" WKJG-TV Channel 33 MONDAY Evening 6:oo—News 6:ls—Gatesway to Sports 6:2s—Weatherman 6:3o—Huntley-Brlnklqy Report 7:00 —Sea Hunt „>/■ 7:3o—Monday Night at th* Movies: “fcingin' in the Rain" 9:3o—Hollywood and the Stars 10:00—Sing Along with Mitch 11:00 —News & Weather 11:15—Sports Today 11:20—Tonight Show TUESDAY Show 9:00 —Bozo Show 9:Bo—Jane Flaningan Show B:ss—Faith To Live By 10:00 —Say When 10:25—NBC News
Central Daylight Time
10:30—Word for Word 11:00—Concentration 11:30.—Jeopardy , Afternoon 12:00 —News at Noon 12:10 —Weatherman 12:15—Wayne Rothgeb Show 12:3o -TruUi or Consequences 1:00—Best of Groucho I:3o—Your First Impression 2:00 —Let's Make a Deal 2:30 —The Doctors 3:o(Kt— Another World 3:3o—You Don't Say 4:00- —Match flame 4:30—-Make Room for Daddy 5 :Oo—‘.‘Mighty Hercules” 5:30 — Rifleman Evening 6:oo—News 6:15 —Gatesway to Sports 6:23—The—Wwithcrman 6:3o'—Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:00 —Battle Line 7:30 —Mr. Novak ~ B:3o—Moment of Fear9:00 —Richard Boone Show 10:00 —The Red, White and Blue 11:00 —News and Weather 11:15—Sports Today 11:20—Tonight Show WPTA-TV Channel 21 ■ MONDAY Evening 6:oo—Ron Cochran — News 6:15—21 News Report 6:3o—.Woody - Wflorfpwleer---7:oo—True Adventure .7:3Q -(iiiter Limits Br3<r—Wagon Train 10:<M» —Breaking Point 11 :00 —Bob Young — News 11:10 —Local News 11:15 —Steve Allen Show ■ Tl ESI* AY Morning 9:00- Fun Time 9:3.Q—The Jack La Lanne . ShoW 10:(Mh —Father Knows Best 10:30 —The Price is Right Jl-00- —Get the Message 11:30—Missing Links A.fternoon 12:00—Noon Show ° 12:30 —Tennessee Ernie Ford 1 :00 —Mid-day Matinee 1:30—“60" News Headlines 2:25 —Agricultural News 2:30 —Day in Court 2:55 —News 3:oo—General Hospital 3:30 —-Queen for a Day 4:oo—Trailmaster 5:00 —Mickey Mouse Club 5:30—-Lone Rang,or Evening 6:oo—Ron Cochran News 6:15—21 News Report 6:3o—Yogi Bear 7 :00—Zoorama 7:3o—Combat 8:30-—McHale’s Navy 9:oo—Greatest Shottf on Earth 10:00—The Fugitive 11:00 —News — Bob Young 11:10 —Local News 11:15—Steve Allen, Show.
Chief Justice Warren Talks To Jack Ruby DALLAS (UPD — The chief justice of the United States set out in an assassin’s footsteps Sunday, then talked- for more than three hours with Jack Ruby, the presumed assassin’s killer. Chief Justice Earl Warren visited the Texas Schoolbook Depository. It was reported he aimed a rifle from the sixth floor death window toward the spot in the street outside where two shots struck President John Kennedy. Then he interviewed Ruby in the county jail across the street. Ruby was reported "wild eyed and staring” during the meeting. Warren, head of the commission investigating the President's death, flew to Dallas from Washington. He spent about two hours in the schoolbook depository, from where the fatal shots were fired. Then he and his aides met with Ruby in a small conference room only steps away from the sixth-floor cell where the baldish, 54-year-old former striptease club operator is being held during his legal fight to escape - the electric chair. Afterward, Warren made brief stops at the apartment house where Ruby lived; at the house where Oswald had been living and at the Texas Theater, a movie house where Oswald was captured. He did not go in any of the places. , * r ~ 4 What Warren and the commission learned in the long meeting with Ruby was not revealed. J. Lee Rankin, chief counsel for the commission investigating the assassination, said only that the group “took the testimony of Jack Ruby.” Warren, who left the jail with a big smile on his face, declined to comment. Joe H. Tonahill, one of the two defense lawyers who sat in on the conference, said later he doubted that Warren was able to get t satisfactory answers to his questions because “Jack was in bad shape today. He was wild-eyed and staring, neither responsive nor coherent.” Ruby has been taking medicine for depression, although he refused to do so for a while.
Youth, Policeman Slain In Gun Duel AMARILLO, Tex. (UPD—A 14-year-old orphan, chased by police after bragging about a murder, was killed today by submachinegun bullets. Onj of the pursuing' policemen also was slain. The youth’s 15-year-old companion was seriously wounded by police chasing the boys who had terrorized a ranch family and stolen their pickup truck. A search party was organized th find the body of a cowboy the youths bragged they had killed and left on the rangeland. Six squad cars chased the two boys sos 15 miles at high speed around Amarillo and into the country to the south. They fired at the fleeing truck with revolvers. rifles, shotguns and finally—angered by the deadly fire from the boys—a fully automatic Army carbine. Dead were policeman William S. Meadows. 23, and Jimmy Mays, 14. Felix Wesley Fesmire Jr., 15, suffered shoulder and arm wounds. Both boys were from Bovs Ranch, a private institution fqr_. homeless boys 38 miles northwest of Amarillo. The boys had terrorized Melvin Kohler, his wife and baby at their ranch outside Dumas, Tex. They were not harmed. The Kohlers said the two boys had held them at gunpoint and tore out the telephone before stealing their truck. They said the pair, threatened them and said they had already killed the cowboy while crossing the remote, rangeland—near — Channing, Tex., on the Canadian River while escaping from Boys- Ranch.
MASONIC Regular Stated MEETING Tuesday, June 9 7:30 P. M. Niland Ochsenrider, W. M. ‘
TUB DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA — * . ii . .. II I, I ,11
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CHIEF ENGINEMAN Cyrus F. Paul, USN, of the Fort Wayne recruiting station announced today that Bruce Devere Lautzenheiser enlisted in the U. S. Navy May 28 at the main NAVY recruiting station at Indianapolis. Bruce is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Lautzenheiser of route 2, and is a 1964 graduate of Decatur high school. He will undergo recruit training at the U. S. Naval Training Station, San Diego, Calif. The Navy has many occupations to choose from, the nuclear field, electronics field. Polaris field and many others. Chief Paul will discuss the various programs with those who are interested during his stay in Decatur every Monday from 10 a. m. to 12 noon at the selective service office.
Women Gardeners Outnumbering Men By GAY PAULEY UPI Women's Editor NEW YORK (UPD — More women than men belong to the dig-we-must set, reversing the man with the hoe trend. A study of 11.000 gardening families in 50 states shows women today make up ( 54 per cent of the green thumbers. Just a year and a half ago, it was the other way around with men constituting 55 per cent of those working front lawns and backyard plots. A garden tools producer, which did the study, said there were s everal reasons women gardeners outnumbered men. More -women now work parttime or are not holding jobs outside the home at all. as automation eliminates the positions they once held. Vegetable growing is a standby stretcher of the budget. Women want to keep in shape and find that gardening is a good way to get exercise and suntan simultaneously. There are more women’s clubs in the nation; more garden clubs. With some one million new homes being built each year, new home-owners take pride in making their grass greener than their neighbors. The study revealed changes in gardening habits too. There has been a sudden, hefty increase in growing vegetables for home consumption. Today, vegetables are being grown by 33 million families <B6 per cent of home garden households). The manufacturer’s last study showed some 14 million families <36 per cent of gardening households) growing vegetables. More vegetables are being planted than flowers, which are next in popularity. Then come fruit trees, shrubbery, berries, nut trees and lawn care. Researchers found that most —B2 per cent —gardeners are married. Os the married gardeners, 91 per cent had two or more children, 34 per cent with four or more children. The study did not show how much "participation there is by the youngsters.
ATTENTION - — • High School Graduates • Returning College Students • Teachers Many courses for beginning freshmen . . . for college students home on vacation . . . for teachers or those interested - m -beeoming teaehe rs.- •■ G,a in- eojlege--credits. —Make - your summer hours count. At the Fort Wayne Campus you can complete at least two full years of college in . . . AI.B.IIMn LIBERAL ARTS SUMMER — a ■■ ms ECONOMICS SESSION PRE-paratory —LAW June 22 - Aug. 14 —DENTISTRY —PHARMACY Enroll June 18,19,20 Write for Schedule Social Security NiirnTHURS., FRI., ber ’ s required to 9a.m.-7 p. m. ofO complete credit' registration. SATURDAY R ji w INDIANA FORT WAYNE CAMPUS 1120 S. Barr St. Phone 742-7452 H
Sanity Test Sought For Youthful Slayer KALAMAZOO. Mich. (UPDA sanity test was to be asked today for Larry Lee Ranes, a 19-year • old Kalamazoo youth who confessed to the murders of five men. Ranes* court-appointed attorney, Eugene Field, said he is not convinced Ranes actually committed all the murders he has confessed. Field revealed Sunday that two psychiatrists from the Kalamazoo State Hospital visited Ranes shortly after his confession Friday, but he refused to divulge their findings. Authorities Saturday took Ranes on a four-hour re-enact-ment of the shooting of 30-year-old Plymouth, Mich., schoolteacher Gary Albert Smock. He is formally charged with the Memorial Day killing of Smock, a junior high school teacher and Church of God youth leader. He has confessed to shooting Smock in the head with a 22 caliber pistol because he was making “a lot of noise” in the trunk of a car. Ranes also confessed driving to Elkhart, Ind., with Smock’s body still in the car trunk and slaying gas station attendant Charles Snider, 33. Ranes also admitted killing Southfield Airman 3C Vernon La Benne on the night of April 6. La Benne was working part time in a Battle Creek, Mich., gas station to earn money for his honeymoon. Police said Ranes also said he killed men in Frankfort, Ky., and Las Vegas, Nev. Authorities said they definitely determined that Smock was killed in Kalamazoo County, where the victim picked up the hitch-hiking youth. * Ranes, police said, pointed out the general vicinity of the slaying as west of the U.S. 131 expressway and south of Michigan 43. Authorities have been unable to determine whether the Kentucky and Nevada victims exist as Ranes claims. He was vague in details about the alleged slayings, they said. Field said he also is concerned about reports Ranes had demonstrated a streak of insanity in the Army. The attorney said he heard reports Ranes attempted suicide, tried to knife another soldier and suffered a mental breakdown while in the service. Two Men Fined For Disorderly Conduct Two men paid fines in city court this morning after their arrest Saturday evening on disorderly conduct charges. Ernesto Garcia Ochao and Alfredo E. Ojeda, both charged with disorderly conduct, were each fined $5 and costs, totaling $25, after pleading quilty to their charges. Ochao and Ojeda were arrested by special sheriff’s deputy Palmer Schwartz, after they became involved in a “scuffle” at a dance at Sunset Park, south of town, Saturday night. The fight developed after Ojeda had returned from the Adams county hospital, where he had been treated for bruises received in an earlier fight. new York Stock Exchange Price MIDDAY PRICES A. T. & T. 137%; Du Pont 253%; Ford 52; General Electric 79%; General Motors 85%; Gulf Oil 56%; Standard Oil Ind 77; Standard Oil N. J. 84%; U. S. Steel 54%.
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BEHEMOTH OF THE FlELDS—Harvesting sugar cane a J s ° u n^ e mJwagons Florida’s Lake Okeechobee is easy, with the aid of these hulktag logons. The wagons, equipped with fat, low-pressure tires,,each carry 4,000 pounds o f J?? loaded by tilting in about two minutes. The carts are linked in four-wagon trains.
Savannah On First
Voyage To Europe
NEW YORK (UPD—The NS Savannah, the first U.S. nuclear powered passenger-cargo vessel, sails today on her maiden voyage to Europe, eager to prove the atom the maritime fuel of th4 future just as her namesake demonstrated 145 years ago that steam marked the end of the sailing era. The atomic pioneer, built by the U.S. government at an estimated cost of $53 million, is expected to complete its first transatlantic crossing in 10 days with its first port of call Bremerhaven, Germany. Aboard the flag decorated vessel are 33 paying passengers and 250 tons of cargo. After five days in Bremerhaven, the ship will sail to Hamburg, Dublin, and Southampton betore returning to New York July 21. Two more European cruises are planned this year to give the gleaming white rakish vessel as much public exposure as possible. The Savannah, a joint project of . the. Atomic Energy Commission and the Maritime Administration. already has called at ports on the U.S. Pacific, Gulf and Atlantic coasts. More than 105,000 persons have inspected its large cabins, broad decks and the science-fiction-like operations room where engineers control the nuclear reactor. Officers of American EJxport Isbrandtsen Lines, which operates the Savannah for the government, said more than 36,000 persons visited the ship while it was in New, York on the eve of its historic voyage. The handsome 22,000 ton vessel was designed and built as part of the U.S. . Atoms for Peace program announced in 1955. Government officials acknowledge that the Savannah is an expensive ship for her class, but they consider her a pioneer that will be an example for future commercial nuclear ships.
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i . to--; ! • . 1 r 3an j I - zqq 1 ji I ® VijrW 10l BQHF ’ 1 llUAdk- ■> ■ - : ’ NOW IT GOES FOUR TIMES AS FAR - '[ Imagine a golfer who could drive a ball 1000 yards! Just as golfers continually try to improve their game, Indiana’s Five Investor-Owned Electric Companies strive to improve operating efficiencies. In recent years, methods have been developed to make a ton of coal produce nearly four times more elec- - tricity than it did in 1920. Advances such as this are just one reason why the average price per kilo-watt-hour of electricity has steadily gone dawn. Research, coupled with large investments in expansion and modernization results in more efficiency with the best possible service at the lowest possible ! ■ - > rates for you. ’ . # l <SUT 7 I* W.M Ej/£ • . ■■ v ■ Afl tnvstor-Owned Public VtHify * AMIBtGAN uccwttc svstwi
MONDAY, JUNE 8, 1864
