Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 183, Decatur, Adams County, 4 August 1964 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

Humphrey - The Best Choice Before the 1960 convention we heartily supported Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey for the Democratic nom : ination for president of the United States. We felt very strongly that he personally personified the conscience of America in the Congress of the United States, and that he would make the best president, if nominated and elected. Sen. Humphrey was not as popular with the public in West Virginia and Wisconsin primary races with then - Sen.' Kennedy, and was defeated for the nomination. But he campaigned hard for the future president, and was his greatest asset in Congress in pushing hard for the Kennedy program. As Democratic whip, his abiljty to get along with Southerners and Northerners alike has been invaluable. And today, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, Democratic Senate whip, and senior senator from the state of Minnesota, is our choice for vice-presi-dent on the Democratic ticket. We think he would make an outstanding presiding officer for the U.S. Senate, and would be the very best man to succeed his friend, PrM&wit Johnson, if he were unable to fulfill office of president. ~~ Sen. Humphrey represents the great midwestern farm - manufacturing - vacation state of Minnesota, a state much like our own northern Indiana, a land of lakes. In 15 years as a nationally famous figure, Sen. Humphrey has buiJL. up an astonishing record of success in substantive matters. He is versatile, well-in-formed, and the most articulate spokesman for social justice in the Senate today. A warm, outgoing, optimistic extrovert, he is genuine, friendly, and open. In this Humphrey contrasts so greatly with the secretive, unknown, reserved Republican vicepresidential candidate, a man of no national stature, who must be explained before he is introduced, that he would be a great asset to the Democratic ticket. . Humphrey possesses the same fantastic energy that has made Lyndon Johnson master of the president’s office, an office that held the less Dwight ,D. Eisenhower captive for four years. He would thus be eminently fitted to succeed President Johnson, should he be unable at any time to fulfill his duties as president. He and President Johnson agree on main issues, and would work well together. As author of the National Defense Education Act, the peace corps, (three months before President Kennedy took it up), nuclear test ban treaty, Arms control and disarmament, and many, many other bills. In this farm area, he will be long remembered as one of the chief critics of the “soft” farm policy pf Ezra Taft Benson, whose ideas still depress the farm markets today, where they are used. In short, Sen. Humphrey combines many of the finest talents in such away that his nomination would greatly strengthen the Democratic ticket, and America, if that ticket is the choice of the people this Fall. Editorial Written by- Wok Heller * 1 — , ' —■ P — 1 1 ' ' * " -U- ■ -

PROGRAMS Central Daylight Time

TV

WANE-TV Channel 15 » TUESDAY Evening «:#(> Bachelor Father fi :B<| CBS Ni'»» 7:00 Bia Nvwh 7:80- Death Vulli'y l>aya 0:00 Peltlvoul Junction 9 2u Jack Benny Show 10:00- -Hollywihhl: The Eabuloua h'.rH 11:00 Big Ncwh Final 11:JO Award Theatre: “Devil nrtd the WEDNESDAY Morning 7:3X1 -Dally Word 7:30 —Summer Semester Kangaroo 9:00 -Sugarfoot 10:00" —Sounding Board 1o; 30—r Love Lucy 11:00 —The McCoys 11:30 —Pete and Gladye Afternoon 12:00 —Love of Life 12:35—C8S News 12:30—-Search for Tomorrow 12:45—Guiding Light I:oo—Ann Cotone Show . 1:35 —Mid-day News 1:30 —As the World Tuma 2:oo—Password _ 2:3o—Houseparty 3:00—To Tell the Truth 3:2S—CBS News 3:30 Edge of Night 4 00—Secret Storm 4:30 -Early Show: "Duck b'lllp Evening 800 - Bachelor Father -* 6 30.“ CBS News , 7joo Big News 7:30 CBS lieports 8:30 Suspense 9:00 Beverly Hillbillies 9:30 Dick Van Dyke Stfow 10:00 on Broadway Tonight 11 :o<b,-Jtlg News Final 11:30— Award Theatres "The Good ' Fellows” WKJG-TV Channel 33 TUESDAY Evening 6:00 News 6:ls—Gateaway to Sports 6:2s—Weatherman 6:30 —Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:00 —Battle Line 7:30 —Mr Novak 8:30 —Moment of Fear ; 9:oo—Richard Boone 10;00 —The Telephone Hour 11:00—News 4 Weather 11:15—Sports Today with Dick, DeFay 11:20—Tonight Show WEDNESDAY Morning 7:00 —Today ' 9:00—Bozo Show 9:30 —Jane Flantngan Show 9:55 —Faith To Live By 10:00—Make Room for Daddy 10:80—Word For Word 10:55—NBC News 11:00—Concentration ■< 11:30 —Jeopardy ■

Afternoon 12:00—News at Noon 12:10 The Weatherman 13:15 The Wayne Rothgeb Show 12:30—Truth or Gonaequencea 12:55 NBC News 1:00 Beat of Groucho 1:80 -Lot's Make a Deal 1:55 NBC News 2:00 Loretta Young Theatre. 2:30 The Doetora 3:00 Another World 3 :o You Hnn'l Say 4:00 Match Game 4:25 NBC News 4:311 Foreign l.eglonairo 5:00 Mighty Hercules 5:311 The Rifleman Evening 6:00 New a fi:ts Gatesway to Sports 6:25 The Wiqtlhcrman i> 6:30 Huntley Brinkley Report 7:00 Men Into Space 7:30 The Virginian 9:110 Espionage 10:00 The Eleventh Hour 11:00 News Weather 11:15 -Sports Today with Dick De Fa y 11 so—Tonight- Show WPTA-TV Channel 21 TUESDAY Evening — Newt 6:15- 21 News Report 9:3o—YogLßear 7 :00— Zu ora m a 7:30 Combat 8 30 McHales Navy ,9:orf Greatoat Show on Earth 10:00 Ti e Fugitive 11:00 -News Bob Young 11 io -Local News 11 15 l,ampllte Theatre: Ihe Hulfltreed" WEDNESDAY Morning 9:00— Fun Tima 9:Bo—The Jack IgiLann. Show 10:00- Father Knows Best 10:30—The Price Is Kight 11:00—Get the Message 11:30— Missing Links Afternoon 12:00—The Noon Show 12:30 -Tennessee Ernie For® 100 The Mike Douglas Show B:3o—Day In Court 2:55— News 3:oo—General Hospital 3:30 Queen for a Day 4:00 Trailmaster „ 5:00— Mickey Mouse Club s:3o—Lone Rangel* Evening 6:oo—Ron Cochran — News 6: It —21 News Report B:3o—Dick Tracy 7:00—Bold Journey 7:30 Ossie and Harriet B:oo—Patty Duke Show » 8:30 - Farmer's Daughter 9:oo—Ben Casey 10:00—77 Sunset Strip 11:00—-Bob Young — News 11:10—Local News 11:15 —Lampllte Theatre: "Magni fleent Ambersons"- — DRIVE-IN — "Wil’d and Wonderful" Mon A Tues. 8:30. "Young and Willing' 1U;15.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office ai Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller, Jr President Mrs. John Shirk ----- Vice President Mrs. A R. Holthouse Secretary Ralph W. Sauer Treasurer Subscriptton Rates By Mail, In Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 110.00; Six months, 15.50; 3 months, 13.00. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 111.25; 6 months, 16.00; 3 months, 13.25. By Carrier, 35 cents per week. Single copitee, 7 cents.

New Modernism On Christianity Hit

By LOUIS CASSELS United Press International To a mere layman, it seems incredible that anyone should undertake to defend Christianity by abandoning its basic precepts. But that is What some clergymen and theologians apparently are trying to do. In the avowed hope of making the Christian faith more acceptable to "the modern mind," they are casting overboard doctrines which have been at the core of the church’s teaching for 2,000 years. Tliis attempt to "re-in-terpret" the Christian Gospel has been underway for a good many years. But until comparatively recently, it was carried on in theological doubletalk which few layment could follow. The new modernism first attracted widespread public attention last year when a Church of England bishop, John A T. Robinson, published a book ironically entitled, "Honest to God.” Bishop Robinson argued that the Christian concept of God as a personal Being is outmoded and should be scrapped. Me failed to make clear what concept, if any, he would put in its place. This led one review- \ i ' ■ ARTY SIDEWALKS - Kais erstrasse in Lichterfelde, Germany, is now a pretty fancy street. Some 20b chi’-j dren tried pavement paint-1 ing during festival weeks in the Steglitz district, where Lichterfelde is located.

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er of his book, Prof. Alaadair Maclntyre of Oxford University, to welcome the bishop into the atheist fold. Rejecting the welcome, Bishop Robinson has insisted that he is not an athiest, and that he simply wants to revise the "imagery" used in speaking about God. But the archbishop of Canterbury says he doesn’t see how the Robinson book can be read as anything other than a repudiation of orthodox Christian belief. Whatever Bishop Rrjbihson may have meant to say in "Honest to God,” there is no doubt about the stand taken by a well-known American clergyman, Dr Deane William Ferm, in a recent article published by the Christian Century Magazin.e.. Dr. Ferm, who is dean of the chapel at Mounty Holyoke College in Massachusetts, said he regards several major doctrines of the Christian faith as "false, meaningless and irrelevant.” He argued that these beliefs should be abandoned, or at least "radically . re-interp-reted," so that the church can be intellectually respectable and get on with "weightie/* matters” such as the struggle for social justice. Among the beliefs which Dr. Ferm proposed to jettison were: 1, "The traditional notion that God is a personal being ‘out there’ beyond nature and beyond history, a being who ’controls history and occasionally ’enters into’ nature and history.” 2. The doctrine of the incarnation, which holds that Jesus was "both fully god and fully man." Dr. Ferm was prepared to attribute divinity to Jesus only in the sense that "to be genuinely human is to be divine." Laymen who are distressed to see basic Christian beliefs under attack by ordained ministers of the church should know that Bishop Robinson and Dr. Ferm are members of a .small if highly vocal minority. Most ■> Biblical feel that the Christian Gospel has been confirmed rather than contradicted by the experience p of Twentieth Century man. Chicago Produce CHICAGO (UPD—Produce Live poultry, roasters 23-25; special fed White Rock fryers .18-19; barred rock fryers 2222*4; White Rock fryers 18-18Mj; fryer-roaster turkeys 27. Cheese, processed loaf 39*443Mi; brick 39%-44*4; Swiss wheels too few to report. Butter, steady; 93 score 58; 92 score 5814; 90 score 57%; 89 score 55%. Eggs, steady to firm; white large extras 3414; mixed large extras 3414; mediums 29; standards 27%.

COURT NEWS Complaint Case An amended complaint was filed in the complaint on account case of Oral H. Meyer, doing business as Oral H. Meyer Co., vs Ernest Hofstetter, doing business as Hofstetter Bros. Farm Store. PeOtton Filed A report of distribution and petition for discharge was filed in the estate of Clara Eiting, and were submitted, examined and approved. The administratrix was released and discharged and the estate closed. Bond Filed In the Rebecca Schindler estate, a petition for issuance! of letters of administration was filed and the bond was filed in the penal sum of $2,500 with Henry Schindler and Carl H. Muselman, as resident free surities. The bond was submitted, examined and approved and the letters of administration filed. Notice Proof Proof of mailirig of notice of the final settlement was filed in the estate of May Funk, and proofs of publication of appointment and of the final settlement were also filed. The final report was submitted, examined and approved and the distribution ordered made. 4 File Schedule A schedule to determine inheritance tax was filed with reference to the county assessor in the estate of Elizabeth K. Habegger. Waiver of Notice In the Ruth Habegger estate, Apetition for authority to sell real Wate was filed and a waiver of notice of hearing on the petition was filed, submitted, examined and approved. Schedule Filed A schedule to determine inheritance tax was filed with reference to the county assessor in the Rufus Schindler estate. Marriage Applications Ronald L, Braun, route 4, Decatur, and Anita Kay Fennig, 18, . route 1, Monroe. James Arthur Brown. 22, route 4. Decatur, and Janet Ellen Oaks, 22, Dayton, O. Gordon Alonzo McMillen, 49. Van Wert, 0., and Edna Perleve Young, 38, route 1, Monroe. Walter Glen Joseph, 23, Convoy, 0., and Karen Sue Shoaf, 19, route 4, Decatur. New York Stock Exchange Price MIDDAY PRICES A. T. % T. 71, Du Pont 263%, Ford 50%, General Electric 83. General Motors 93*4, Gulf Oil 5814, Standard OH Ind. 82*4, Standard Oil N.J. 87*/ 4 , U. S. Steel 57%.

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Holstein Sets Production Record Belbrook Fayne Ann 4757252, a four-year-old Registered Holstein cow owned by Lester F. Week, Ohio City, Ohio, has produced a noteworthy record of 17,402 lbs. of milk and 706 lbs. at butterfat in 360 days. Ohio State University supervised the production, weighing, and testing operations, in cooperation with the official breed improvement programs of The HolsteinFriesian Association of America. This level of production may be compared to the average U. S. dairy cow’s estimated annual output of 7,500 lbs. of milk containing 275 lbs. of butterfat. Chicago livestock CHICAGO (UPI) —Livestock: Hogs 3,500; strong to 50 higher; No 1-2 190-225 lb 17.50-17.75; mixed No 1-2 190-230 lb 16.7517.50; 230-260 lb 16.25-17.00. Cattle 2,500, calves none; slaughter steers steady to 25 higher; heifers about steady; high choice and prime 1150-1250 lb slaughter steers 24.50-25.00; choice 1100-1250 lb 23.50-24.50; 900-1100 lb 23.00-23.50; good and choice 22.50-23.25; mostly good 20.50-22.50; few loads choice 850975 slaughter heifers 21.50-22.75; good and choice 20.50 - 21.25; mostly good 18.50-20.50; cutter cows 12.50-13.25; canner 11.5012.75. Sheep 400; spring slaughter lambs 50 lower; a few lots j choice and prime 80 - 100 lb [ 24.50; good and choice 22.00- , 24.00; good 20.00-21.50. I Indianapolis Livestock INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — Live- - stock: ' - Hogs 4,500; barrows and gilts steady to mostly 25 higher; 1-2, 200-225 lb 17.25-17.50; 1-3, 190-240 - lb 16.75-17.25 ; 2-3, 220-280 lb . 16.25-16.75, few 280-300 lb 16.0016.25; sows 1-3 , 280-350 lb 14.25- - 15.25; few 15.50; 350-450 lb 13.25- . 14.25: 2-3, 400-550 lb 12.25-13.25. Cattle 2,200; calves 75; steers ■ and heifers steady to 25 higher; - choice steers 23 25-24.00; good and low choice 22.25-23.00; good - 20.25-22.25; few mostly choice , heifers 21.50-22.50; good and low choice 12.00-21.50; mostly good 19.00-21.00; utility and few commerciol cows 13.00-14.00; canner and cutter 11.00-13.00; bulls 25-50 higher; utility and commercial 16.00-17.50; vealers 50 , higher; good and choice 21.00- . 24.50; few choice and prime 1 25.00. Sheep 600; full steady; choice .§ and prime lambs 21.00-23.00; few Slow good 20.00-21.00.

Prescribed by State Board of Account. Town F ® g r “ Notice To Taxpayers Os Tax Levies In the matter of determining the tax rates for certain purposes hy Monroe Civil Town, Adams County, Indiana. Before the Board of T ° Wn hereby given the taxpayers of Monroe, Indiana Civil Town, Adams County, Indiana, that the proper officers of said civil town, at their regular meeting place/ on th. 11 day of August, |964, will consider the following budget: GENERAL FUND Current Charges Salary of Town Trustee. ...» 340.0# Current Obligations 1,643.51 Salary of Clerk-Treasurer 340.0# »ihhu Salary of Marshal A Total Deputy Marshal. 240.0# STREET FUND Compensation of Supplies - -.51,344.39 Compensation of A T< ’ t *L£l£n t m* I’**” 1 ’**” Town Hall Janitor 120.00 HIGHWAY FUND Firemen Clothing Services Personal » 800.00 Allowance 1,200.00 Materials 46 Other Compensation 10.00 Total Motor Vehicle Services Contractual 2,39$ 34 Highway Fund $3,623 4 6 Supplies 475.00 Complete detail of budget estimates may be seen ih office of ClerkTreasurer. ESTIMATE <»F FUNDS TO BE RAISED FUNDS REQUIRED FOR EXPEN- „ SES TO DEC. 31 OF INCOMING Vehicle T l ß Total budget estimate for Incom- General S J. re n e } H X’’n'd ay Inclusive J “" l>ec : ”* s '. SX. » 1,854.39 » 8.623 46 2. Necessary expenditures, July 1 to Dec. 31 of present year, to be made from appropriations unexpended v 4, do> t. Additional appropriations to be made July 1 to Dec. 31 of present year - 4. Outstanding temporary loans to be paid before Dec. 31 or present year - - 1.50 . 5. Total Funds Required (Add lines ituti 1,2, 3 and 4) 12,217.63 4,514.88 __ __ FUNDS 'ON HAND AND TO BE RECEIVED FROM SOURCES OTHER , THAN PROPOSED TAX LEVY 6 Ua \a a r lanCe ' J””® ° f Pre ’ 3.192.59 1,890.5# 7. Taxes' to be collected, present year (Dec. Settlement) ■■■■■■ 4,198.11 8. Miscellaneous revenue to be received July 1 of present year to Dec. 31 of Incoming year—Schedules on file a. Special taxes M.R.F.D. Diet 268.50 M.V.F.D. Diet ■■■■■ 6IW.W b ' ’ InT’sb™ 8 (A<s<s 1ine . 8 .. 6 ’.. 7 :. 8a 9,183.33 3,411.18 . 10. NET AMOUNT REQUIRED TO k BE RAISED FOR EXPENSES TO DEC. 31 OF INCOMING YEAR (Deduct line 9 from line 5) 10,034.30 1,103.70 11. Operating Balance (Not in excess of expenses from Jan. 1 to 1 June 30, less misc. revenue for , same period) .. 3,989.27 . 12. AMOUNT TO BE RAISED BY ' TAX LEVY (Add lines 10 and > ,7/ »14,023.57 $ 1,103.70 PROPOSED LEVIES Net Taxable PropertjD ■■ ■" Annrox o 90 ’ Number of Taxable Polls — - ™ NDS Property ATbM ‘ al None s2 .n ’"iWO | 8t None 32.33 315,127.27 1 Comparative Statement of Taxen Collected and To Be Collected — k IO Collected Collected Collected Collected ' FtTNDS 1961 1962 1963 1964 I General $6,223.22 $6,242.28 $5,814.60 Taxpayers appearing shall have a right to be beard thereon. After the tax levies have been determined, and presented to the County Audl- > tor not later than two days prior to the second Monday In September, and . the levy fixed by the County Tax Adjustment Board, or on their failure . so to do, by the County Auditor, ten or more taxpayers 9*2,™" ' selves aggrieved by such levies, may appeal to the State Board of lax ■ Commissioners for further and final hearing thereon by filing of p > tion with the county auditor on oh before the fourth Monday of B p tember or on or before the tenth day after publication by the county auditor of tax rates charged, whichever date is later, and the state board » of tax commissioners will fix a date for hearing in tbl* Dated Julv 27 1964 Arthur,XV. MpeWCHberger ’ August 4, 11 Clerk-Trfeasurer

TUMDAY, AUGUST 4, IM4