Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 175, Decatur, Adams County, 25 July 1964 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
TV PROGRAMS Central Daylight Time
WANE-TV Channel 15 SATURDAY Afteraooß Fs:#a—West of Key West 12:16—Baseball 3:3O—TV Playhouse 4:oo—The Woman Who Played God 4:2o—The Big Picture 5:00 —Fractured Flickers 6:2o—Tightrope Kxealac ~ — — 6:oo—Saturday Show: "Dr. Cyclops” 7:JO —bucy-Desl Comedy Hour B:3o—Defenders 9:Bo—Summer Playhouse 10:00 —Gunsmoke 11:00 —Big News Final 11:15—Award Theatre: “Rainbow Island" SUNDAY Morelng 9:oo—Faith for Today 9:3o—This Is the Life 10:00 —Lamp Unto My Feet 10:30—Look Up and Live 11:00—Camera Three 11:30 —Social Security In Action 11:46—Baseball Afternoon 2:3o—Admiral In An Outboard 8:00 —Holiday In Hawaii 3:30 —TV Playhouse 4:00--Cross Exam 4:3o—Magic Room S:OO—CBS Sports Spectacular s:3o—Amateur Hour Evening 6:oo—Twentieth Century 6:30 Mister Ed 7:00 —Lassie 7:Bo—My Favorite Martian 8:00—Ed Sullivan 9:oo—Celebrity Game 9:3o—Brenner 10:00 —Candid Camera 10:30—What's My Line 11:00—CBS News 11:15—Award Theatre: "Horse Features" MONDAY Morning 7:2s—Dally Word 7 :3{K—Summer Semester 8:00- Captain Kangaroo 9:oo—Sugarfoot 10:00 —Sounding Board 10:30 —I Love Lucy 11:00 —The McCoys 11:30—Pete & Gladys Afternoon 13:00 Love of Life 12:25 CBS News 12:30—Search for Tomorrow 12:45— Guiding Light 1:00 Ann Colone Show 1:25 Mid-Day News 1:30 As tile World Turns 2:oo—Password 2:3o—Houseparty 8:00 —To Tell the Truth 3:26- • CBS News 3:3o—Edge of Night 4:oo—Secret Storm 4:30 —Early Show: “Easy Come, Easy Go" Evening 6:00 —Bachelor Father 6:30 CBS News 7:00 —Big News 7:30—T0 Tell the Truth 8:00 I’ve Got A Secret 8:30 —Vacation Playhouse 9:00— Danny Thomas Show 9:3o—Andy Griffith Show 10:00 -The Detectives It ;3ir—Award Theatre:' "Design for Living” WKJG-TV Channel 33 SATURDAY Afternoon 12:00—Bull winkle 411:80 Mr Wise rd 1 :oo Trophy Elk 1:15-—Ernie Harwell Show 1:8O—Baseball 4:00 The Illg Picture 5:30 NBC Sports Special Evening 6:00 Wrestling Champions 7:00-—Mr. Lucky - —- 7:30 The Lieutenant „ B:3o—The Joey Bishop Show “ 9:00— Saturday Night at the Movies: "Until They Sall" 11:00—Saturday Edition 11:30 -Part ll: "Fgber Without n Cause” * SUNDAY 9:00 —Sacred Heart Program 9:l6—The Christophers 9:30 —Americans at Work 9:4s—lndustry on Parade 10:00 —For Your Information 10:30— This 1s the Life 11:00 —Cartoon Time Afternoon 12:00>—In U.S. Hit nds 12:30 —-Frontiers of Faith 7:00—20 Years of World Series Thrills 1:30— Baseball 4:00- Two Gun Playhouse 5:00 Sunday Evening 6:00— Meet the Press 6:30 Putt and Take —■44oo— Bill Dana 7:3o—Walt Disney B:3o—Grlndl
I fll I| l Sf I t; JIA 9' z*"S '\ -wi Bfc * i flh X ■% -’/ 1 |kx_ rj li'fl ■ ■ I > sst r . ww ;; "’ ■' v ’’ : ',» •?■'■’■■■' s t wbKOt.::— MOTHER INSTINCT— With a universal gesture and a quick right hand, Mrs. George Hearn brings decorum back to the proceedings .- Yes, that’s the President in. the rear. As he was going through the ceremony of swearing in George Hearn as a member of the Federal Maritime Commission in Washington, George Jr.,*3, got loose (the krllipop dodge didn't work.) Mom snagged him with oaa ->ure, swift snatch.
9:oo—Bonanxa 10:00—Show of the Week: "The Takers" 11.00—Sunday Edition 11:15—Movie: "AB the Brother* Were Vallilnt” MONDAY Morning * 7:oo—Today 9:00—Bozo Show 9:30 —Jane Flanlngan Show 9:55- Faith to Live Bv 10:00--Make Room for Daddy 10:30 Word for Word 10:55- NBC News 11 :<>o—Concentration 11:80 Jeopardy Afternoon 12:00-* News at Noon 12:141 —The Weatherman 12:15 Wayne Rothgeb Show 12:30 Truth or Conseciuences 12:55 NBC Nows 1:00 —Best of Groueho 1:30 Lots Make a Deal 1:55 NBC News 2:00 Loretta Young Theatre 2:30 The Doctors 3:oo—Another World 3:30 -You Don’t Say 4:00—-Match Game 4:25 NB<’ News 4:30 Foreign Lcglonalro 5:00. Mighty Hercules ~Ttni — Rifleman Evening 6:00 ‘News !p Sp irts 6:2.7 Weatherman 630 Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:00 Sea limit 7:30 Monday Night nt the Movies: "Imitation Gem ini" 9:30 Hollywood and ’the Stare 10.00 Slug Along 'llo .lilt'll 11:00- News A Weather 11:15 Sports Today 11:2U— Tonight Show WPTA-TV Channel 21 SATURDAY A Hernonn 12:00 Bugs Bunny ’12:30 American Bandstand 1:30 Roller- Derby 3 30 S.i I m ils y Slio wen sc 5:00 Wide World of Sports Evening 6:30- Rebel 7:00 Saturday Night Movie 8:30 Lawrence Welk 9:30 U.S. Slimmer Olympic Trials 10:30 Sam lieiiedlel 11:30 Peter Gunn MUNDAY Morning 9:00- The Flslrer Family 9:30 Oral Roberts 10:00 Religious News Digest 10:15 - Light Time 10:30 Indiana University 11:00 Church In the Hupio 11:30 Norman Vincent Beale A ftrrnoon 12:048 --Showplace Homos 1:00 Word of Life 1:16-- March of Progress 1:80 The story 2:00 Manion Forum 2 :15 Dan Smoot . Reports 2:3o—lssues AAnswers 3:00—.4-11 Roundup 3:80 To Be Amimineo.l 4:00 Championship Bridge 4:3o—■Discovery, ■ 5:00 Checkmate ~ ■- ' ■ 6:00 Rebel 6:30--Hootenanny 7:80- U.S Summer Olympic Trlglg--8:30— Arrest and Trial i 10*00 US Summer Olympic Trials 11:00 —21 News Special 11:15 —Thriller: "Waxworks" MONDAY " | Morning 9:00- Fun Time 9:30 The Jack laiLanne Show 10:0ft—Father Knows Best 10 80 The Price Is Hight 11:00 Get The Message 11:30 Missing Linka A Hrrnoon 12'4'0 Nfton Show 12:30 Tennessee- Ernie vFofd 1:00 The Mike Douglas*-Show 1:80 60 "News Headlines"', 2:26 Agricultural News 2:30 Day In Court 2:66—News 8: oit--G e n ora 1 Hospi ta l 3:30 Qtifton For a Day 4:00 Trnllmaster 5:00 Mickey Mouse Club — i>:3o Lone Hanger — Evening 6:oo—Ron Cochran — Nows 6HA 21 News Report - 6:30 Woody Woodpecker < 7:00 True Adventure < 7:30 Outer Limits 1 8:30 Wngon Trilu ■7 Isl ;00 Breaking Point S 11:00 Bob Young with the News -2 11:10 Local News £11:15 Lmnpllto Theatre: "Bride U Walks Gut” 3 — DRIVE-IN — -. "Merlin Jones" Frl. A Sat. 8:40 5 "Summer Holiday" 10:30. < "The Longest Day" Suit A Mon. 8:35. (First Hour of Feature Re- — prated)
. v ? LOOTING CONTlNUES— Ransacked liquor store is examined by policeman in Brooklyn, N. Y. Protective steel fence was torn down and a garbage can was used to smash the windows. _
Three Persons Dead In Indiana Traffic By United Press International Three persons were killed in Indiana traffic accidents in the first few hours of the weekend, irtcreasing the state-wide highway death toll for the year to at lesat 659 compared with 666 a year ago . Thomas A. McKinney, 18. Noblesville, a bridegroom of two weeks, died in Robert Long Hospital at Indianapolis this morning, a few hours after his •truck collided with a car on a Hamilton County road. . Policp said McKinney was thrown from his truck, which rolled over on him. A South Bend, area man, Alan Moore, 31, was killed Friday when his pickup truck went out of control and rammed a tree in St. Joseph County. The weekend’s first two traffic victims included a member of the Muncie police force. James Brumback, 45, a mem-
A Million Jobs For 1965 By W WILLARD WIRTZ Secretary of Labor One million people a year will be added to the U.S. labor force in the next eight or ten years. Yet private enterprise has provided only about 176,000 new jobs a year for the past
■& *'' Hk z £ 1 " '"•<gKiErMpf. W Willard Wirti
to their jobs tomorrow morning, over 4,000 of them will find that machines have moved in overnight to take the jobs they held. ■■ • In the automobile industry, 48 men now man machines that make automobile motor blocks. Ten years ago, it took 400 men and twice as much time. • It is currently said that 14 men make all the glass light bulbs used in this country. • Less than 10 years ago, it took 200 workers to produce 1,000 radios a day. Today it takes only two. If we accept these startling statistics as inevitable but necessary, we must equally accept an obligation to see that our displaced workers are ready and trained to take other jobs. If we accept the opportunities of automation, we must’support those efforts being made to strengthen our education system and provide job retraining for displaced workers, The Kennedy-Johnson Administration’s job training bill is a good beginning. It assigned S7OO million in Federal funds over the next four years. These funds will match state investments, resulting in an eventual total investment of $1.4 billion for use in training every kind of technician from auto mechanics and carpenters to practical nurses. But creating jobs is not the main business of the American government. Automation is a challenge to our private free enterprise economy. The Federal government must do what it can to encourage private enterprise. (The $11.5 billion Federal tax cut is a good example.) But the very words “free" and “private” mean that government should not attempt to provide the one million new jobs we need every year. A nation which provided the 20th Century with the know-how for mass production, will not hide from automation. We can be equally confident that oui free enterprise economy will make needed jobs available. . ... —.—
IM MCMUB BAM —rrWiT, MCATBB. IMUWA
ber of the Muncie police! department since 1948, was killed when he fell off a motorcycle driven by Wendell Futtrell, 23, Muncie. Police said Brumback apparently lost his balance and the cycle went out of control and struck a tree and utility pole. Futtrell was injured and hospitalized. Linn Modlin, 18, Pendleton, was killed when a car driven by her stepbrother, Ivan Haytcs, 35, collided headon with another car on Indiana 109 in Madison County. Carl Norman’ Off, 54, Wilkinson r the other driver, was critically injured when his car apparently crossing the center line, causing the wreck. Rivit Removal The old method of removing rivits with a hammer and cold chisel is not nearly so easy as using an electric drill. Center-punch the head of the rivet and select a drill the same size as the rivet. Drill just through the head, and ■ the rivet can then be punched out • without damaging the hole, which generally occurs when the head is ■ cut off.
five years. I'hese colliding statistics should concern every American and offer a particular challenge to our free enterprise economy. They are the statistics of a new era, the generation of more goods and services for less labor. They are the statistics that detail the opportunities and burden of automation. A few examples are useful: • When America’s workers return
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller, Jr. President 1 Mrs. John Shirk—Vice President Mrs. A. R. Holthouse Secretary Ralph W. Sauer ....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, $45.00; 3 months, $3.25. By Carrier, 35 cents per week. Single copies, 7 cents. Good News, Taxpayers! Adams county taxpayers got what can be good news for them, if they keep their eyes open during the next six weeks, when budgets are being fixed for 1965. Next year, a 1c levy, county-wide, will raise $5,147, compared with $5,008 this year. Thus each 1c on the rate is worth $139 more in taxes than it was a year ago. Each taxing unit had an increase in valuation. Let’s examine a few of them, starting with the school districts. Increase School District Valuation over 1964 % Increase North Adams $24,544,820 $711,620 2.9% Adams Central $12,735,180 * $286,200 2.2% South Adams $14,167,360 ■ $399,380 2.8% All three school districts are in good shape, and had good increases. Decatur’s 3% increase, of $455,630 in valuation, sparked North Adams’ 2.9% increase, while rural areas increased at a leser per cent. Decatur’s evaluation of $14,811,570 represents 60% of North Adams evaluation; Preble,Root, and Union have 33%, and the North Washington township area has 7%._ Board representation presently is 60% from Decatur, 40% from the rural area; this will alternate, with the fifth mem- • ber being selected by the other four members when he represents the rural area. If the four cannot agree, then the circuit court judge will appoint the fifth member, when he coqjes from the rural area. f \V Adams Central, the smallest unit in number of * pupils and assessed valuation is also growing at a slower rate than the others. This, of course, is because its only incorporated area is Monroe, whose rate of growth, in assessed valuation 4.8%, is much larger than Decatur’s 3% or Berne’s 2.5%, but whose total size is much, much smaller proportionately to the rural area involved. Township totals, including incorporated areas, are as,follows: Preble, $2,501,650; Root, SB,046,130; Union, $1,784,800; Kirkland, $2,442,410; Washington; $14,403,470; St. Mary’s, $2,245,240; French, $1,442,410; Monroe, $9,092,710; Blue Creek, $1,680,340; Hartford $1,786,620; Wabash, $4,136,330; Jefferson, $1,388,350. Editorial Written byDick Heller
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f Statement of Condition of the : THE MIDLAND MUTUAL LIFE f INSURANCE COMPANY t Columba., Ohio 250 E. Broad St. - On the 31st day of December, 1963 C. O. SULLIVAN, President : R. C. WITHERSPOON, V. P. and Secretary Amount of Capital paid up 3 NONE Assets of Company Bonds (Schedule D) 3 47,862,036.88 Stocks (Schedule D) 3 NONE Mortgage Loans on Real Estate (Schedule B) 3 71.564,028.83 Real Etate owned ....$ 2,099,602.40 Policy loans 3 7,190,853.25 Premium Notes ...3 NONE Collateral loans (Schedule C) 3 NONE Cash and Bank Deposits 3 724,982.89 Agents! balances or uncoTTected premiums —3 3,143,339.03 Other assets $ 1,384,587.00 Total Assets 3133,969,430.28 Liabilities. .Surplus And Other Funds Aggregate reserve for life policies and contracts 3104,420,757.00 Aggregate reserve for accident and health policies 3 398,038.94 Supplementary contracts without iife contingencies ...$ 4,823,667.00 Policy and contract claims — Life .3 358,002.92 Accident and Health $ 35,133.48 Taxes, licenses and fees due —or accrued 571,218.35All other Liabilities $ 15,657,791.66 Total Liabilities .. .3126,264,909.35 Special Surplus Funds 3 NONE Capital Paid up or Statutory Deposit ..3 NONE Unassigned Funds (Surplus) 3 7,704,520.93 Surplus, as regards Policyholders $ 7,74)4,520.98 Total $133,969,430.28 STATE OF INDIANA, Office of Insurance Commissioner I, the undersigned. Insurance Commissioner of Indiana, hereby certify that the above is a correct copy of the Statement of the Condition of the above mentioned Comapny on the 31st day of December, 1963; as shown by the original statement and that the said original statement is POW on file in this office. IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I hereunto subscribe my name and affix my official seal, tills 30 day of June, 1964. SEAL Harry E. M<*( lain Insurance Commissioner 7/25, 8/1.
CHOOSE DECATUR READY-MIX CONCRETE The Next Time You Plan To Build On Your Farm • BARNYARDS • MILK HOUSES • GRANARIES • HOG HOUSES • CHICKEN HOUSES • SIDEWALKS & DRIVES DECATUR READY-MIX CORP. PHONE 3-2561 E. Oak & Fornax Sts. Decatur, Ind.
SATURDAY, JULY 28, 1964
Statment of Condition of th THE UNITED STATE* LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY IN TH CITY OF NEW YORK New York it*. New York 125 Malden Lane On the 31st day of December, 191 RAYMOND* H. BELKNAP, Preside! ANTHONY J. STILO, Secretal Amount of Capital paid up 3 3,325,190.3 Aa.et. of Company Bonds (Schedule D) ....$ 58,823,73 Stocks (Schedule D)....$ 3,091,23 Mortgage Loans on Real Estate (Schedule B) 3 58,128,38: Real Estate owned ....$ 2,791,151 Policy loans .......3 13,567,61! Premium Notes $ ( Collateral loans (Schedule C) — 3 ( Cash and Bank .D_ej)pslts —...$ 1,708,581 Agents' balances or uncollected premiums 3 4.758,891 Other assets $ 2,494,161 Total Assets 3145,3 63,7 « Liabilities. Surplus And Other Fund. Aggregate reserve for life policies and contracts .... T 5103,522,522 Aggregate reserve for accident and health policies $ 4,523,90® Supplementary contracts witnout life contingencies 3 2,817,128 Policy and contract claims -* Life $ 2,335,725 Accident and Health ..$ 2,068,50# Taxes, licenses and Zees due » or “accrued.......'.......““'T 1,817,87$ All other Lalbilities ... 3 8,016,866 Total Liabilities $125,102,518 Special Surplus Funds $ 1,218,518 Capital paid up or Statutory Deposit $ 3,325,19® Unassigned Funds (Surplus) $ 15,717,526 Surplus as regards .Policyholders $ 20,261,231 Total $145,363,74$ STATE OF INDIANA, Office of Insurance Commissioner I, the undersigned. Insurance Commissioner of Indiana, herebf certify thj.t the above is a col reot copy of the Statement of the Condition of the above mentioned Company on the 31st day December, 1963; as shown by th* original statement and that the said original statement Js_i_noW on file' fn "this office.IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I hereunto subscribe my name and affix my official seal, this 30 day of June, 1964. SEAL Harry E. MeClnln Insurance Commissioner. 7/25, 8/1.
