Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 243, Decatur, Adams County, 14 October 1964 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

' THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO.. INC. .3 Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office aa Second dasi Matter . Dick D. HeUer, Jr President Mrs. John Shirk Vice President Mrs. A. R. Holthouse Secretary Ralph W. Sauer Treasurer Subscription Rates 3y Mail, in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 110.00; Six months, >5.50; S months, >3.00. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, >11.85; 6 months, >6.00; 3 months, >3.25. By Carrier, 35 cents per week. Single copies, 7 cents.

NOTICE OF ADMINISTR A TOK'S PUBLIC SALK OF REAL ESTATE IN The ADAMS CIRCUIT COURT NO. 598* IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF JENNIE I. KIEFER, DECEASED Notice Is herby nlven that th* UnderHluned Adtnlnlxt rator of the Mtatn of Jennie I. Kiefer, deceased, will offer for Hale at pubifc auction, at the location of the premises, the following deacrlbed y»nl cntate belonging to aald deeedent on Saturday, November 7, 1964, at 1:10 o'clock I'M, the following deacribed real estate with the Improvement* thereon: ’ The South thirty-five (35) feet of Inlot number One Hundred Fifty-Nine , (IM) In Joseph Crabb'a Second Weetern Addition to the town (now city) of Decatur, Adam* County, Indiana. > Said real outate ehall be Mold to the highest and beat bidder on the following term*: Twenty per cent (20%) of the purchaac money to be paid on the day of Hale, and the balance to he paid upon delivery as marketable abatract of title and Administrator’* deed ' The Seller ahall pay the flrat installment of the 19114 taxea due and payable In 1045, and the Purchaser ehall assume the second Installment of the 1964 taxon du* and - payable In 1»B5. Hald real estate shall sell for not less than two-third (%) of the full apptalMOd value thereof. Thia sals ■in made subject to the approval Os tha Adams Circuit Court. Pos- ; seaelon ahall be taken upon final settlement. Brice Bnusermsn, Administrator of tha Estate of Jennie 1. Kiefer, deceased. Howard E. Baumgartner Attorney Neil C. Johnson Auctioneer 10/14, 21, 28. NOTICK TO TAXPAYER* OF ADDITIONAL APPROPRIATION Notice La hereby given to th* taxpayers of Berne, Adam* County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said municipality nt tt regular meeting In the City Hall at 7:80 o'clock P.M.. on the 28th day of October, 1984, will consider the following additional appropriations which said officers consider necessary to meet the extraordinary emergency existing at this time. General Fund Fire No. 12 (wage* temporary) 1i.u00.00. Fire No.. 32 (garage and motor) *loo.<M>. Common Council No. 22 (heat, light, power) *IOO.OO, Common Council No, 24 (advertising) *IOO.OO. Clerk Treasurer No. 3tl (office supplies) *IOO.OO. Police No. 11 (wagiH) *9OO 00. Sanitation No. 25 (repairs) *BOO,OO. Total General Fund *3,000 1)0, Street Fund No 20 (contractural services) >4400.00. No. 82 (garage A motor) *IOO.OO. No. 44 (other materials) **oo.oo

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Total Street Fund *5,000.00. Recreation Fund No 22 (Heat, light and power) *200.00. No. 51 (Insurance) *150.00. No. T 2 (Equipment) *650.90. Total Recreation Fund *1,800.00. Taxpayers appearing at such meeting shall have ths right to be heard thereon The additional appropriation as finally made will be automatically referred to the State Board of Tax Commissioners, which Board will hold a further hearing within fifteen days at the County Auditor’s Office of Adams County, Indiana, or such other place as may he designated. At such hearing, taxpayers objecting to any of such additional appropriations may he heard and Interested taxpayers may Inquire of the County Auditor when and where such hearing will be held. THE CITY OF BERNE, INDIANA Doris D. Stucky, City ClerkTreasurer 19/H, 21. , NOTICE OF HALE OF REAL KATATH RY EXECUTRIX NOTICE Is hereby given that lite undersigned Executrix of ths Estate of Mary A. Tague, Doceased, which Estate Is pending on the Probate Docket of the Adams Circuit Court as Estate No. 5971, will pursuant to the order of sold Court St the hour of 1:80 o’clock P.M, <>n Saturday, November 7, 1964. offer for sale at public, auction on the promises In Washington Township. Adams County, Indiana, the following described real estate belonging to said Decedent, to. wit The north half (%) of (he southeast quarter (*4 ) of H"''tlon twenty four (24) In Township twenty seven (27) North, Range fourteen (14) East, containing eighty (80) acres, mor« or less Maid Heal Estate will (hen be offered for sale and sold to the highest bidder and best bldtjir, for eakh and upon the following terms: Twenty per cent (20%) of the purchase money shall he paid In cash on the day of sale anti the balance shall bo paid upon delivery of a merchantable abstract of title and deed of this Executrix approved by the Court Said sale shall be made free and clear of nil Hons and encumbrances save and twteept the 1964 taxes due and payable In 1965, which taxes the purchaser shall assume and pay The purchaser will l receive Landlord's possession of the house on the real estate to be sold, on or before Devmher 1, 1964, and possession of the outbuildings and fields on or before March 1, 1965. & The sale of the above descrlhed real estate shall In all things be made subject to the approval of the Adams Circuit Court and for not less than twothlrds (%) of the full appraised vnlne thereof Hazel Kimmel. Executrix of the Estate of Mary A. Tague CUSTER AND SMITH attorneys 10/14, 11, **.

U II THE LARGEST ILLEGAL liquor still to be raided in North Carolina in three years was destroyed near Nashville. ATU and ABC officers from two counties destroyed the still which had contaihed nearly 20,000 gallons of mash and was capable of making 1.950 gallons of spirits a day. Output of the distillery caused a tax loss daily to the government of 419,960. —(UPI Telephoto)

Chicago Produce CHICAGO (UPI) - Produce: Live poultry, hen turkeys 24; young turkeys 23; White Rock fryers 18%; barred rock fryers 22. Cheese, processed loaf 41 %- 45%; brick 41%-46%; Swiss 80100 lb blocks Grade A 49%; B 47-50. Butter, steady: 93 score 59%; 92 score 59%; 90 score 58%; 88 score 58%. Eggs, steady; white large extras 36%; mixed large extras 36%; mediums 29; standards 30%. Indianapolis Livestock INDIANAPOLIS (UPD-LiVe-stock: Hogs 6,000: strong to 25 higher; 1-2 190-230 lb 16.50-16.75, few to 17.00; 1-2 190-250 lb 16.0016.65; sows mostly steady to 25 higher: 1-3 350-425 lb 13.25-14.00; 2-3 400-600 lb 12.50-13.50. Cattle 1,500; calves 75; steers weak to 25 lower; heifers steady to weak; choice steers 24.50-25.00; high good and low choice 23.75-24.50; few good 22.00-23.75; mixed high good and low choice heifers 22.00-23.00; few choice 23.50; good 19.5022.00; cows strong to 25 higher; utility and commercial 11.2512.50, few 13.00; bulls fully steady; utility and commercial 14.(10-16.50; vealers generally steady; good and choice 23.0027.00. “ Sheep 600; steady; choice and prime wooled iambs 20.00-21.00; good and choice 18.00-20.00.

TM DECATUR DAILY DgMDCRAT.DECATtm. IWDUJrA

1-HCUIB Joint Meeting Enrollment meeting of the Root township 4-H clubs, Roving Rangers and Merry Maids, will be held at the Monmouth school at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. The final sign-up date for the girls is October 31. All members are urged tn attend this meeting. “If you cannot be present and wish to join one of these clubs, fill out the form and send it along with someone who plans to attend.” Chicago Livestock CHICAGO (UPl)—Livestock: Hogs 6,000; steady to strong; mostly No 1-2 200-225 lb 16.5016.75; 20 head at 17.00; mixed No. 1-3 190-230 lb 16.00-16.50; 230250 lb 15.50-16.00; No. 2-3 250-280 lb 15.00-15.50 ; 280-300 lb 14.5015.00. Cattle 1,100, calves 50; Slaughter steers and heifers steady to mostly 50 lower; 6 loads prime 1235-1325 lb slaughter steers 26.75; high choice and prime 1200-1425 lb 26.00-26.50; several loads of mixed choice and prime 1100-1200 lb 25.7526.25; bulk choice 1100-1450 lb 24.75-25.75; choice 900-1100 lb 24.00-25.00; load choice with few

' COURT NEWS Marriage Applications James Lee Bailer, 224 N. Seventh St., and Ann Elizabeth Omlor, 648 Mercer Ave. Paul Lester Hawkins, Berne, and Glenna Dean Neuenschwander, Fort Wayne. Clayeon John Carroll, route 1, Berne, and Effie May Corbett, Berne. Gale Nelson Riley, route 1, Monroe, and Margaret Janelie Roth, Monroe. Monroe Methodists Mark Laymen's Day Sunday will be laymen’s day at the Monroe Methodist church, with laymen and laywomen of the church conducting the morning worship services at 9:30 o’clock, with the church lay leader in charge. The speaker will be Vernon Zurcher, Adams Central high school coach, and teacher of the Christian Homemakers class of the Church. prime 1100 lb 25 50: good 21.25 23.50; few loads or mixed choice and prime 900-1000 lb heifers 23.75-24.00; most most choice 800 - 1050 lb 22.50 - 23.50; good 20.50-22.00; canner and cutter cows 9.50-12.00. Sheep 500; wool slaughter lambs, steady L choice and prime 80-100 lb 21.50-22.00; good and choice 20.00-21.50; good 19.0021.00.

NaonMayße 1968 Nominee If Barry Loses By EUGENE J. CADOU univra tress internauHMii INDIANAPOLIS (UPD— Those who sniff the political winds say Richard M. Nixon may run for the IM Republican presidential nomination, if Sen. Barry M. Goldwater loses in November. The former vice-president and 1960 GOP standard bearer will be in the Hoosier spotlight Thursday when he speaks in behalf of Sen. Goldwater in Fort Wayne, Elkhart and Marion. Nixon is speaking in many other parts of the nation these days. He made a vigorous speaking appearance with Goldwater on a television a week ago. A number of observers opined that Nixon rivaled the presidential nominee in the television program. Indiana Republican Gov. Harold W. Handley was a pioneer Nixon leader long before he won the GOP Whitehouse nomination and kept Indiana in line all the way. This state was the banner state for Nixon in the election with his largest per capita victory over John F. Kennedy —a lead of 222,762 votes. The fact that Nixon’s mother was beam in Jennings County helped the nomiqee. Nixon Bridges Gap It has been pointed out that Nixon probably could bridge the huge gap between the conservative and the eastern liberal factions of the Republican party. His formidable drive for Sen. Goldwater cannot help but endear him to the fervent backers of the Arizona senator, and he likewise has rather close ties with the liberals of the party. In 1960, Nixon flew to New York to confer with New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller. The result was that Nixon agreed to accept a number of the liberal planks in the party’s national platform . Nixon’s loser stigma, resulting from his abortive bid for governor of California, seems to be fading and his move to New York eventually may further his political career. He is considered by observers to be less of a carpetbagger in New York than Robert F. Kennedy, Democrat, now striving to be elected U. S. senator with only a token residence in the Empire State. Nixon, at least, has practiced law and lived in New York several years, they say. Rockefeller Fading The marital status of Rockefeller appear to remain a frustration for his political future, since custody of his wife’s children was awarded by a court decision to her first husband. Pennsylvania Gov. William Scranton seems never to have caught fire with the GOP leaders and Michigan Gov. George Romney will be mighty lucky if he wins reelection. Former Massachusetts Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge remains a lieutenant of President Johnson’s administration after service tn Viet Nam and now as a roving ambassador to explain the situation there to our allies. There are no others on the 1968 horizon for the GOP, if Barry loses. Then, who but Nixon? New York Stock Exchange MIDDAY PRICES A. T. & T., 68%; Du Pont 273%; Ford, 61; General Electric 86%; General Motors 100%; Gulf Oil, 59; Standard Oil Ind., 85%; Standard Oil N. J., 88%; U. S. Steel, 61%. Nickel Plate To Be Dissolved On Friday CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPD— The Nickel Plate Railroad will be dissolved Friday in a merger which will combine three major railroads and three minor roads. The Nickel Plate, which has operated with headquarters here since. 1882, will become the Nickel Plate region of the Norfolk & Western. NAW directors will elect a vice president to head this region. Included in the merger are die N&W. Nickel Plate and Wabash, along with the Akron, Canton & Youngstown, the Pittsburgh & West Virginia and the Sandusky Line. The roads comprise 7,900 miles of track and have assets of $1.9 billion. The roads operate in 14 states and Ontario, Canada. The unified properties extend from Buffalo and Norfolk in the East to Cleveland, Chicago. St. Louis and Omaha. Herman H. Pevler, president of N&W. will be chief executive officer of the entire new system and will operate from his present headquarters at Roanoke, . Va. |

The People’s Voice Thia column is •*«*«*< our iMdsini wte wish th maid grod of discuss questions of Without signaMM < Trash Letton To the voters of Indiana: On Saturday, October 3, IM, a letter was published in the Decatur Daily Democrat, describing the horrible sights that met my eyes at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This letter was meant to awaken people, but apparently to no avail. I have received anonymous letters with material that only a member of the John Birth society could stomaeh. They were packed with trash that no right-think-ing American citizen would be found dead with. I don’t blame these persons for not signing their names, so I won’t even‘quote from their trash because it would leave a bad taste in my mouth. I did receive a couple of letters from people who have the courage to sign, (and boy it would take courage to identify themselves with this rubble.) I have been informed by one of these writers that Barry did not say that he would use nuclear weapons.! believe if this person would only check the record she would find that Goldwater did say that nuclear weapons should be used in Viet Nam to defoliate the trees and bushes. She said that Barry did not say that he thought the time would come when such a weapon would have to be used. I wonder what Barry had in mind when in May, 1961, he said during a newspaper interview: (quote) — “Someday, I am convinced, there will either be a war or we will be subjugated without war — real nuclear war — I don’t see how it can be avoided — perhaps five or ten years from now.” I have at hand Goldwater’s book (The Conscience of a Conservative) in which he says, and again I quote “A shooting war may cause the death of many millions of people including our own. But we cannot, for that reason make avoidance of a shooting war our chief objective” — end quote. These people who have been writing me have missed the message I tried to get to them apparantly for they write about everything but the issue in question. One writer went back to Hiroshima and Nagasaki and bemoaned the fact that these people were not even warned. I believe if she would get her facts straight she would find that both cities were warned days before the bomb was dropped. Even though they did nM heed this warning, it still does not make the suffering these innocent kids went through, and shall go though the rest of their lives, any easier. This lady who has facts all mixed up, says that “Probably more than 95 per cent of the general public do not know the state and national -candidates personally. We judge them by what they say and what othens say, also what was done by them in the pest.” I agree with you wholeheatedly Mrs. B„ so again I refer you and all others who do not have their facts straight to read Barry’s book, “The Conscience of a Conservative.” I do not have the time nor the inclination to quote hie book, so my advice is get it and read it for yourselves, and keep it handy so you can check his answers on television with the views in the book then I believe in your heart you will wonder what he is right about. In your letter you quoted from the Bibig, which is good, but I believe your motive was not godly but politically inspired. I will certainly be the first to admit that neither political party has a monopoly on virtue, no not even the Democratic party. Will you say the same about the Republican party? If Barry is unable to do anything about the high crime rate in his home town of Phoenix Arizona, how does he propose to do it nationwide? Now about Billy Sol Estes, and Bobby Bgker, I must admit that I don’t have all the facts so like Will Rogers “all I know is what I read.” I wonder what happened to the scandal that Bill Miller was mixed up in with that Felt company, and also the Wurlitzer Juke Box Co. Speaking

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1984 f 111 Itol i Rlt »< !■*! 1 ls r1 "* "MAtohM —*

Insurance Offer To VkfimsOf Blast INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — An insurance company has made a conditional offer to make avail- . able the full amount of its 11,500,000 coverage for distribution to victims of the Indiana State Fairgrounds Coliseum explosion last Oct. 31 which killed 74 and injured hundreds. Letters from lawyers for the Indiana State Fair Board and the Coliseum Corp, were sent to attorneys for some of more than 150 persons who have filed claims for damages as a result of the blast. The offer was contingent on all claimants signing a document releasing Indiana Insurance Co. from any further liability. The money would be turned over to a fund in Federal Judge S. Hugh Dillin’s court here which already includes $1,020,000. Earlier, two insurance companies which held $1 million coverage for Discount Gas Corp, posted bond with Dillin representing the full coverage sum which would be available for paying off claims of the injured and kin of the dead. In addition, another insurance firm rpresenting Dußay Inc., which formerly sold bottled gas to Discount, deposited $20,000, the full amount of its liability ! coverage. More than 100 damage suits on file in state courts are being ' held in abeyance pending the outcome of federal court action. Five Marion Superior Court judges and Marion Circuit Judge John Niblack decided months ago that all suits would ; be handled as a single test case for the purpose of determining ' financial liability. ; of LBJs friends, I read that Barry has a few, or I should say had, for two of them are no longer with qs, having gone the way of all 1 good gangsters. I am speaking of Willie Bioff and Gus Greenbaum. Both of the Phoenix Gazette and the Arizona Republic in describing Greenbaum’s funeral reported (quote) “Among the mourners were Sen. Goldwater and his brother Bob, president of ! Goldwater’s Department Store.” I ’ believe that soon you may also : read in Life Magazine about some ’ other. .unsavory ; that 1 Barry and his brother Are ’ quite chummp with, in fact even in ' business with. J > I was very happy, Mrs. 8., to read in your letter that Barry was no saint. A man could hardly be 1 classified as a saint, who plays ' footsy with people who condone ’ the bombing of churches, and the ! murder of their fellow men whose ’ only crime was that they were born another color. I remember ; the Negro kids who died in their Sunday school room in Alabama ! when some degenerate threw a ' bomb. These same people are the 1 ones who are working the hardest • to elect Barry Goldwater. Now Mrs. 8., I am going to stick my neck way out with this ’ statement lam about to make and J perhaps lose some friends, but here goes and let the chips fall ' where they may. I honestly can- • not see how anyone who claims ; to be a follower of the Prince of • Peace could with a clear concience vote for a man who has the kind ' of a following that Barry Gold- [ water is cuddling up to. Lase Grimm ; R. R. 2 Decatur, Ind.

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