Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 137, Decatur, Adams County, 10 June 1964 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
* BJi if nft r t J <&* ■** J^Wv' ' wrX?-IW w B’rJSfjUjkmjO »aS — yBB? ’’BBS"® CONTEST WINNER — Bill Macklin, son of Mr. and Mrs. David Macklin, of 512 Marshall St., right, is shown with Dale Morrissey, as the two use the Kolonel Kids walkie-talkie set the youngster won in a recent drawing held at the Hiflich and Morrissey shoe store. Felicia Ann Costello, of 1710 W. Madison St., won the girl’s drawing and will receive a talking Bozo the clown doll. The local shoe store held the contest in cooperation with U. S. Keds. — (Photo by McLean)
June is Dairy Month Enjoy The BEST from f •„. IP; i 3 JT A < ■ ■ Ay A/| HBk ill * Jjw xjFjp ? RMMHW Featuring The Widest Variety of X r- ~l QUALITY Products IMP • Homogenized Milk i j® • Skim Milk • HaH and Half • Soar Cream • Malii-Vilamin 2% Milk • Chocolate Milk • Collage Cheese ( • • Bntlermilk • Chip‘n’Dip • And Many Other Prodncls pJ r June is national Dairy Month and we at Home Dairy want you to celebrate with us. Home Dairy is offering moneysaving specials this month to let you try our top quality dairy products. Ask your Home Dairy Milkman or Dealer BJf about them. Once you try Home Dairy products youll agree ( Zft " that they are the finest available at any price. j QUALITY - The Home of Quality Products
Ballot Results At State Convention
INDIANAPOLIS (UPD- Results of ballot contests fqp- state ticket ’ nominations at Tuesday’s Republican state convention: State auditor— Align Lindley, Westfield, 1,450, nominated; Clyde Black, Logansport, 709. School superintendent— James R. Beasley, Odon. 1,215. nominated; King Telle, Valparaiso, 968. Supreme Court judge— Janies C. Cooper, Rushville. 1,446,/nominated ; Gerald Lawrenceburg, 687. Governor —First ballot: Rickard O. Ristine, Crawfordsville, 839; Robert E. Hughes, Greenwood, 428; William G. Bray, Martinsville, 356; Charles O. Hendricks. Speed. 205; Robert E. Gates. Columbia City, 196; G. Richard Ellis, Kokomo, 156; Earl F. Landgrebe, Valparaiso, 30. Ristine 267 votes short of nomination. Second ballot : Ristine, 915: Hughes, 512; Bray, 346: Hendricks, 172; Ellis, 152; Gates, 113; Landgrebe, 6. Ris-
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA
tine 193 votes short of nomination. Third ballot: Ristine, 1,212, nominated; Hughes, 599; Bray, 266; Ellis, 70; Gates, 29; Hendricks. 15; Landgrebe, 1. Senator—First ballot: Donald C. Bruce, Indianapolis, 851; D. Russell Pontrager, Elkhart, 831; Edgar D. Whitcomb, Seymour, 473 Bruce 227 votes short of nomination. Second ballot: Bontrager, 963: Bruce, 852; Whitcomb, 364. Bontrager 122 votes short of nomination. Third ballot: Bontrager 1,142, nominated; Bruce, 850: Whitcomb, 178. Secretary of state—First ballot:. Gerald Powell, Peru, 964; John Gallagher, Munster, 770; William J. Fields, South Bend. 328; David Colosimo, Gary, 121. Powell 128 votes short of nomination. Second ba Hot : Powell, 1.094, nominated; Gallagher, 884 Fields, 146; Colosimo, 146. State treasurer —First ballot: Richard E. Folz, Evansville, 820 John K. Snyder, Washington, 485; Walter McColley, Monticello, 373t_ Albert Harrigan. Hobart 372; Edward A. Mitchell, Evansville, 145. Folz 278 votes short of nomination. Second ballot: Folz, 884; Snyder, 527; Harrigan, 329; McColley, 264; Mitchell. 38: Folz 138 votes short of nomination. Third ballot: Folz, 927: Snyder, 735; Harrigan, 180; McColley, 70: Mitchell, 27. Folz 43 votes short of nomination. Fourth ballot: Folz 902; Snyder. 897; McColley, 7; Harrigan, 6; Mitchell, 5. Folz 7 votes short of nomination. Fifth ballot: Snyder, 529, nominated; Folz, 456; Harrigan, 2; Mitchell 1; McColley, 1. Adams Central Swim Class Opens Monday Swimmirfg classes for the Adams Central district will be held at the Berne poool Monday and Wednesday mornings for six or eight weeks, begining next Monday. The cost wil be 25 cents per day. The pickup and time schedule will be as follows: Blue Creek and Washington township children will be picked up at 7:30 am. at the intersection of highways 124 and 101, or at 7:45 at"lhe Adams Central school. Swimming time will be 8:15-9. ~ St. Mary’s township children will be picked up at 8:15 a.m. at the Pleasant Mills school. Their swimming time will be 9-9:45. Kirkland township children will be picked up at 9 a m at the Pleasant Dale parish hall, with swimming from 9:45-10:30. Monroe and French township children will be picked up at 9:45 a m. at the Adams Central school or along U. S. highway 27. Swimming will be from 10:3011:15. Any child whose parents will furnish transportation directly to the pool is asked to come during this 10:30-11:15 period. Monroe town students only will be picked up at 10:45 at the Adams Central school and wil swim from 11:15 to 12 noon. It will take the students 15 minutes to shower and dress after swimming, and buses will return them to the pickup points immediately after the lessons. Students are asked to go with their own township areas assigned for the first session June 15. Necessary changes may be made after the first day.
’ ’ jflh if r* i O, SEI < 1X iJr Kp3 .& f| 9* << yp" S , r sB < HR Was WRi>*?V ■ fyjli jfl ' *> 1 r '-»' 7* " s WWW * -ay 1 '■ a IBK wWIMI WM fll wl W : EHLM -Hi ’ ■ 188 " i <?n. NO, NOT MORE!—Hope springs eternal and so, ® ri J* s !l youngsters who profess to sing for a living. This quintet, called the .5 T y! out-Beatles the Beatles in at least one category—its tangled cottectm of coiffures The -Stones,” now touring the United States, are (left to right) Bill Wjman, Charlie Watts, Mick Jagger (Hie leader), Brian Jones and Keith Richard. ,—
itW’s y> ’ ‘ <Ofc $ «8 Brel y v ~ ■ w ■ ? t * r s I *i t s* s t.- « O w 'M& '"*ite** -, W *'f j I* ■•—* V \ < *'^E3Sflj^ fc ■ ' B % ML. . ■_* 1•*•*-* * * ■*' Jt F 1 m«m UmH^^wlHHlm^-■< Baby likes the sun, in small doses. After his sunbath, dab exposed areas with a baking soda solution. This helps soothe his skin and also takes the itch out of heat rash, that worrisome summer problem.
Four Children Are Slain, Mother Held MIDLAND, Pa. (UPD—Four young children, all shot in the chest while they apparently slept, were found dead today in their Ohioville Borough home near this Beaver County community. The Midland police chief identified the victims as the children of Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Zlatovich. Authorities said the mother, Mary, 24, was being held in jail here. Investigating officers said the four children, ranging in age from two to five years, had been shot in the left chest “probably through their hearts” with a 32-caliber revolver. Their bodies were found in their beds. A fifth child, eight months old, was not harmed. ’■ The dead youngsters were listed as Jean Elkins, 5, Gary Elkins, 4, Virginia Louise Zlatbvich, 3, and Robert Zlatovich, 2. The Elkins children we r e Mrs. Zlatovich’s by a previous marriage. Th°e child who survived was John Edward Zlatovich, eight months. Authorities said Mrs. Zlato'Vich telephoned her sister-in-law early this morning and said, “I did it.” She then told of the shootings. When Ohioville Borough officers arrived . at the Zlatovich home they found Mrs. Zlatovich holding the surviving baby. They said she appeared in a dazed condition. It was learned later that the woman and her husband had argued and after he left the house the shootings occurred about 5:30 a.m. EDT. Mrs. Zlatovich was brought to the jail here, but police said they were unable to question her. “She’s been in a complete daze," the Midland polled chief said. Zlatovich. an electrician employed at a steel plant in Midland, was identified as the brother of Ohioville Police Chief Bernard Zlatovich. Midland is a small industrial cbmmunity located in western Pennsylvania near the Ohio state line.
No Report Received Here On Autopsy County coroner Elmer Winteregg, Jr., said this morning he has not received as yet any report from the Fort Wayne pathologist who i£ performing an autopsy on the body of Larry E. Roe, 18, who was found shot to death at his home Monday afternoon. Winteregg said Tuesday that he would make no ruling on the fatal shooting until the autopsy report was received by him. Dr. Grice, of the Lutheran hospital and one of three pathologists in Fort Wayne, was to have performed the autopsy Tuesday. U. S. Fighter Pilot Dies After Rescue PRESTWICK, Scotland (UPD — An American fighter pilot died abroad a rescue ship today after bailing out of his stricken FIDO Super Sabrejet and battling winds and huge waves for 13 hours in a tiny rubber dingy. A U. S. Air Force spokesman reported the death of Capt. James H.‘ Davis, 32. of Washington, D. C., several hours after he was picked up by the weather ship Juliet 420 miles west of Ireland. . The spokesman said Davis died of exposure. His FIOO Super Sabrejet developed trouble late Tuesday on a flight to Orland, Norway, from Myrtle Beach, S. C. Reports said Davis was one of 18 pilots engaged in the non-stop flight for an exercise called “Operation Express.” Davis ejected successfully into the stormy Atlantic. Other pilots in his formation saw him go down and reported his position. - Two Drowned In State Tuesday Night By United Press International Indiana counted a drowning death toll of five in the frist two davs of this week. Miller Wilson, 18, R. R. 3, LaGrange, and Jamse M. Eads. 6, South Whittier, Calif., were the latest swimming victims. Bo t h drowned Tuesday night, Wilson in Merkling’s Beach on Pretty Lake near LaGrange, and the California boy in Long-acre Park pool on the south edge of Indianapolis. Three teen-age boys downed in separate water accidents Monday.
Big Pay-TV Gamble • Scheduled July 1
By BICK DU BROW United Frees International HOLLYWOOD (UPD — The biggest pay-TV gamble of all is approaching its schehuled opening date — July 1—- amid such sound and fury, political repercussions and a huge dream of a new era in entertainment It will not be merely a hit or a miss, but rather a boom or a bust. For the West Coast operation —in Los Angeles and San Francisco — is a multimillion dollar business aiming for eventual national saturation. It all depends on whether the public will buy the programs—with baseball the big come-on—and on whether anti-pay-TV voters have enough strength to ban it in November. If Subscription Television Inc. (STV) fails, big scale payTV may well be hard to resurrect for a long time. Spokesman for STV say they are still counting on the July 1 starting date for Los Angeles, and though baseball is only one aspect of. a vast promised Russian Cosmonelte Gives Birth To Girl .MOSCOW (UPD—Soviet cosMonette Valentina Tereshkova Nikolayev has given birth to a daughter, the world’s first space baby, it was announced today. The official Soviet news agency Thss said the infant was born Monday. “There has been an addition to the cosmic family,” Tass reported. “A daughter was born to Valentina Nikolayev and Andrian Nikolayev on June 8. Both mother and child were reported “doing well.” The 27-year-old Valentina, an attractive brunette with a, round face and a dimpled smile, is the first and only woman ever to orbit the earth- Her 34-year-old husband circled the globe in a separate flight. < The baby, first in history born of parents who have flown in outer space, is expected to be studied closely by Soviet scientists to see if radiation and other hazards of the cosmos has any effect on offspring. The couple was married on Nov. 3, 1963.
SAVE S JUNE BUYS 20 - INCH 50’ Plastic FANS GARDEN HOSE 16*93 1-98 Caulking Bernz Propane COMPOUND TANK REFILL ,31c I*l9 House & Garden Canvas Cover Bug Killer Folding RAID CAMP STOOL I**9 74c Father’s Day Special YARD LAMP Black & Decker i/ 4 ” DRILL and POST 9.88 10*88 ARNOLD LUMBER CO., INC. "Your Complete Builders Supply Department Store" Winchester St. at Erie R. R. Crossing—Open Fri. Night 'til ALWAYS PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, IW4
entertainment schedule, it is still the key at the beginning. Champtom Stumble Ironically, unless the slumping Los Angeles Dodgers improve their game, the quality of the attraction could be diminished by this unexpected factor. Last year’s world champions are floundering this season. The San Francisco operation, which is not as far advanced as the Los Angeles setup, may not get under way until midAugust. STV has its main headquarters in Santa Monica, not far from Los Angeles. Its boss is Sylvester (Pkt) Weaver, the creative former president of NBC. The pay-TV firm hoped to have about 20,000 homes wired (it does not operate over the airways) by July 1, but various complications are expected to cut this opening number to between 7,000 and 8,000. Not Counting On Culture The area that is being wired is an indication that, at least at the start, STV is not really going to depend heavily on cultural attractions to bring in the loot. Though there may be a number of these attractions, down-to-earth programming is the immediate requirement because the area in question is not what might be termed the high-rent district. The battle of pro-and anti-pay-TV forces has been truly fierce, encompassing advertising, petitions, letter s-to-the-edi-tor and name-calling. Proponents of pay-TV argue that this is a free enterprise venture and has a right to be accepted or rejected by the public as any other business. They claim it will have little effect on the programming of commercial television. Opponents maintain , that viewers will soon wind up paying for what they now get free because the huge financial potential of pay-TV will lure the biggest stars and shows to the new medium.
1962 Ford Falcon 4-DOOR 6-cylinder engine. Standard transmission. This Week Only! ‘989 Zintsmaster Motors
