Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 244, Decatur, Adams County, 15 October 1964 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
\ v L 11 i j a »/ Il -B A . i/l 5 /■■F a EtaTH! J t W m Wv i Ih WBHdBB *BBBIIf JI %ND IT COMES OUT HEBE— locator Dally Denio-rat publisher Dick D Heller demonstrates a Ludlow typecasting machine to pupils of the Northwest school sb th grade class and their teacher, Lee Hoopingarner The tour was conducted as part of the paper’s observance of National newspaper week, Oct. 11-17. The demonstration trip was another part of the Democrat’s newspaper education program, which includes a series of explanatory film strips shown to local school children. — <Photo by Mac Lean)
SERIES <Continued from Page One) rors, one left. Yankees Fourth Gibson threw out Mantle. Howard grounded out, Maxvill to White. Pepitone popped to Maxvill. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Cardinals Fo:”''' K. Boyer singled to center on lhe first pitch. Groat walked on four straight pitches. Al Downing and Roland Sheldon started warming up in the Yankee bullpen. McCarver forced Groat at second, Pepitone to Linz. When Linz threw the ball wide at first, K. Boyer scored to give the Cards a 1-0 lead. Linz was
Wy/a VARCONi ESSOTfI Permanent J sg*sgjfi Anti-Freeze d «t the d| HS lowest! PRICES 1 ,n 1 I ■^■j° wh (J B> 50-50 mixture protects to 34* eow zero! Guardi againit mt and corrosion too, Won't vaporate —1 filling lasts all dnter. Ethylene glycol base. II VARCON METHANOL Dependable protec- dF tlon at the lowest VhU* possible price. G - FAMOUS PRESTONE Forcomplete protection all winter! Won't foam or boil away; prevents rust, corrosion. 4 H (A ft\ 12k GAS LINE STARTING WINDSHIELD ANTI-FREEZE FLUID DE-ICER 6k>. H ft 57< Uv 49< Cleans, protects fuel For Instant starts, less Easy-to-use spray con, •’ systems all year longl battery wear. Spray. Won t harm car finish, 4-UH 4-9560 9-9944 __ ft _| L I 1 ' J H CZ3B W\ TANK-TYPE BOOSTER THERMOSTATS ENGINE HEATER CABLE SET -MOST CARS $265 $2 49 s]49 „ s]s9 Hooks up to cooling Safa, handy! Tor 6,12 . Available In ltd., hisystem for fast starts. ’• batteries. 8 long. temp, extra hi-temp. esws ’■'*• »-rn». moo. m.m. iK is “Prk,i and otf,rs apply to al Gembl«-own«d slor.s, end In most Dollar rtoroi *
charged with an error. Shannon singled to right, McCarver going to" third. The Cards worked a double steal on first pitch to Maxvill, McCarver scoring and Shannon going to second. Maxvill singled to right, scoring Shannon to give St. Louis a 3-0 lead. Maxvill went to second on the throw to the plate. Gibson popped out to Pepitone. Richardson threw out Flood Three runs, three hits, one error, one left. Yankees Fifth Tre h drew Gibson's first walk of the -game. C. Boyer flied out to Flood in short leftcenter. Mike Hegan batted for Stottlemyre and walked. Linz lined out to Shannon, who dou-
bled Tresh off second with a quick throw to Groat. No runs, no hits, no erjors, one left. Cardinals Fifth Downing replaced Stottlemyre as the Yankee pitcher. Brock homered to give St. Louis a 4-0 lead. He .hit Downing’s first pitch atop the roof in right center. It was about a 400-foot drive. White also hit the first P'tch for a single to center. K. Boyer doubled to right center, moving White to third. Mantle's throw to the plate sailed over Howard's head but Downing, backing up the plate, prevented White from scoring. Sheldon replaced Downing. Richardson threw out Groat, White scoring to give St. Louis a 5-0 lead. K. Boyer moved to third. McCarver filed out to Mantle. K. Boyer scoring on the sacrifice fly to increase St. Louis’ lead to 6-0. Shannon struck out. Three Tuns, three hits, no errors, none left. Styled to Slim Printed Pattern j y # ’/r x /I \ UH-24W nr *TI tnj IHaa’i*** TflkslfM Dash about during the day in the jumper and blouse—wear jumper alone as a dress for evening, cruise climes. Printed Pattern 9067: Half Sizes 14V*. 16V4, 18V*, 20V*. 22V*. 24V*. Size 16V* jumper 2% yds. 45-in.; blouse 1% yds. 35-inch. FIFTY LENTS in coins for this pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Marian Martin, Decatur Daily Demoplainly Name, Address with Zone, Size and Style Number. FREE PATTERN DIRECT TO YOUR DOOR—choose it from 300 design ideal in new Fall-Winter Catalog i School, casual, cateer, dressy styles —all siaes!
ENJOY ELECTRIC HOT WATER HEAT WITHOUT PLUMBING Th* INTERNATIONAL U=^-— ■ • -y- - Hot Water Hoot Is an ontiroly n«W heating concept. Each unit is a complete Circulatlen hot water system hermetically sealed Io eliminate evaporation, leakage er framtlng. Installed with separate thermostat controls rar each room. • HEALTHIEST • SAFEST • ECONOMICAL MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY Fifar’a Electrical and pfumbhii'" "’< i R. R. 2 Docatur, Ind. Phono 3-9104 I an interested In electrical heat. ! Noma j Address— * Phono >
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA
Decatur Democrat Is School Program Aid
Listen, and you’ll hear the sound of the future. It’s a aound made up of the rumble of feet in school corridors .... teacher voice* calling roll .... the clink of laboratory glassware . . and the declamations of a beardless Caesar strutting on the school stage It’s the sound of the next generation coming on fast. Adults hear that sound with mingled nostalgia and hope — hope that maybe our children will be able to untangle some of the knots of the world with which we’ve struggled so long and unsuccessfully. How well-prepared will our youngste-s be to grapple with problems of our community, our country, and the world? To help insure that students will cope successfully with tomorrow, the Decatur Daily Democrat is cooperating with teachers in a special educational program. Through this program, young people of the community are kept interested and informed about national and world events.
A new filmstrip program is distributed weekly to each participating school during the school year. The filmstrip is projected in the classroom. It has photographs of significant national tmd world events that have occurred just a few days — sometimes hours — before the filmstrip arIsbell Leaves Florida After Heavy Damage MIAMI (UPD—Hurricane Isbell pointed its 100 mile-an-hour winds into the open Atlantic today, leaving Florida counting injuries and property damage from its third storm lashing of the season. Tornadoes that spread scattershot fashion ahead of Isbell’s northeastward slash across the Florida peninsula accounted for most of at least 50 injuries and the batering given buildings, house trailers, airplanes vehicles from Cape Kennedy to Miami. There was one fatality in Florida attributed to the storm, 62-yeau-old Paul Kartisof Lake Worth, who suffered a fatal heart attack while boarding up his home. Isbell, ninth tropical storm and sixth hurricane of the season, also left at least four dead and heavy crop damage in western Cuba, which it crossed Tuesday. The damage in Florida was uncounted. Civil defense authorities and local officials set out today to assess the battering, but it appeared scattered rather rather than general. At 9 a.m. EDT, Isbell's center was located kbout 250 miles east of Jacksonville Beach, Fla. It moved on a north-north-easterly course at 20 m.p.h. and forecasters said it would turn northeasterly tonight over the open ocean. Highe t winds were still at 100 miles an hour and the Weather Bureau warned small craft to remain in port from Florida to Cape Hatteras. FOR MALAYSIA — This is one of two stamps issued by the government of Malaysia to commemorate the country’s new monument in Kaula Lumpur. The stamp is printed on a pale blue background.
rives in the school. These photos are used in current affairs discussions. Narration guides, in various vocabulary levels, supply background materials for the teacher to use in conducting her class. The f’mt news filmstrin packages arrived in the schools September 14. Each package contains an jntrcdu'’tor’' filmstrip, “What’s Going On?” Tlrs lively story illustrates the importance of being an Informed citizen and keeping up-to-date about events. Each week thereafter, the school receiver? a news filmstrin iskue with very current news pictures and discussion guides. The news filmstrio program is a complete, ready-to-use current affairs unit which has been used successfully in thousands of schools in the United States and overseas since 1952. It is produced by Visual Education Consultants, Inc., Madison Wis. Teach-er-users say that it is remarkably effective in making students interested in the news. Many instructional materials accompany the basic program. Each month the school receives a study filmstrip which discusses a specific news-related subject in depth. These cover such subjects as congress, current surveys of foreign nations, conservation. curent news maps, etc. The study filmstrips, like the news filmstrips, become part of the school’s basic audio-visual library for use again and again, as needed, In this way, many schools have accumulated large filmstrin reference libraries that would be financially impossible for them to have otherwise. The news program provides something for parents, also. Each week, the Decatur Daily Democrat publishes a news quiz. Questions in the quiz relate to news subjects which students are discussing in school. When parents take the quiz, they will find they become informed both about the news and about subjects which their children are studying in school. Educators believe such parent interest helps stimulate students to do better school work. Students are encouraged to take the quiz, also, and save it for review material at semester examination time. The news filmstrip, the study filmstrips, and the news quiz are provided free of charge by the Decatur Daily Democrat as an educational service for schools in this area. More Contributions To Community fund Decatur Community Fund chairman Mabie Murray reported this morning that work done by Rev. J. O. Penrod, head of the drive’s ministerial division, has done much to insure the campaign’s success. Mrs. Murray, citing the work done by Rev. Penrod, *also mentioned sizeable contributions by Bag Service, Decatur Industries and Duo, Inc.
R’l ll* I iiito LIGHTING THE SKY— The new 150-foot-high control tower at New York City’s LaGuardia Airport cost $1.6 million and reportedly is the last word in airport design.
SUDDUTH’S MARKET “ 513 S. 13th St. Phone 3-2706 x » 3 * S 69C and WIEDERS 5 LRS S I PATT,ES 49e and WIENERS LBS. A NECK BONE* __ 2 IBs. 29c JOWL BACON, Grade A Medium $1 .00 LIVER, _____ 18. 23c EGGS 3 dos. * HOME MADE SAUSAGE t GROUND BEEF .2. 18. 29c FRESH CASING SAUSAGE. ' PARROT SLICING BOLOGNA ... lb. i» 79c|“«”‘ ----- »• 39c
t wW WRW £•? O***w>4 * . 'lliljßk ■ 1 w ■ J^^k. k JBBlMfefit mF,
SERIES THIEVERY— Yankee Bobby Richardson slides safely into second base as he steals m the first inning of the sixth World Series game Wednesday. Making futile tag on throw from catcher Tim MeCarver is Cardinal Dick Groat. Umpire is Bill McKinley. — (UPI Telephoto)
Major Kremlin Development Is Hinted Today
MOSCOW (UPI) — The government newspaper Izvestia announced it is not publishing an edition tonight. Such action usually precedes major Kremlin developments. There was no indiction what, if anything, was afoot, Western observers said. In London the Evening News reported there were Moscow signs of government changes that could affect Premier Nikita S. Khruschev. The Evening News dispatch said speculation was heightened by Khrushchev’s absence from the public scene for the last two days. The Soviet news agency Tass said Wednesday, however, that Khrushchev was vacationing at his home in the Crimean resort of Sochi. Khruschev last was seen by a Westerner two days ago at his Black Sea retreat of Pitsunde. The visitor was Gaston Palewsky, French minister of science. The soviet premier arid party leader received Palewsky briefly and told him he was rushing off to meet the three Soviet cosmonauts who completed their space flights the day before. Western Communist correspondents in Moscow were alerted tonight to stand by the radio to await an important announcement. Khrushchev’s portrait has not been posfl® in Red Square yet in conection with decorations for the welcoming ceremonies of the new Soviet cosmonauts expected Saturday. But the decoration of the square has not been completed. Western observers said it may be premature to attach any signifiance to this at the moment.
El Wafc M ft' ? S 1;W ~ f/JI I eV JHal PEACE PRIZER — Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Negro- civil rights leader and head of the Southern Christian Leadership Council, was awarded the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize. He is the 12th American and third Negro to win the award. Trade in a od town — Decatur
U. S„ German Profs Awarded Nobel Prizes STOCKHOLM, Sweden (UPI) —Prof. Konrad Bloch, a biochemist at Harvard University, and Prof. Feodor Lynen of the Max-Planck Institute in Munich, Germany, today won the 1964 Nobel Prize for medicine or physiology. The Caroline Institute’s Nobel Prize committee said they were awarded the prize for their discoveries concerning the mechanism and regulation of the cholesterol and fatty acid metabolism. Some medical authorities cite a high level of cholesterol as a cause of heart disease. The two professors will share the $52,500 which accompanies the award to be presented here Dec. 10 by Swedish King Gustaf VI Adolf. Born In Germany Bloch, 52, was born in Germany but emigrated to the United States in 199fc and became a naturalized American citizen in 1944. He has been a professor of biochemistry at Harvard since 1954. Lynen, 53, is director of cell chemistry at the Max Planck Institute, where he has been a professor since 1947. The teachers’ college of the Caroline Institute, which is the awarding body for the medicine prize, said Bloch and Lynen, in a series of brilliant investigations, have shown how cholesterol is built up in the body. The institute said Bloch also pioneered in the discovery that cholesterol was the direct precursor of a sex hormone, “a discovery that has opened up the field of steroid hormone biosynthesis.” The institute said the discoveries of Bloch and Lynen were of great importance in connection with circulatory disease. The award came one day after the Nobel Peace prize was awarded in Oslo, Norway, to Dr. Martin Luther King, a Negro leader of the civil rights movement. in the United States. Award Questioned The bestowal of. the peace prize to King brought questions from Norwegian newspapers about the timing and intent of the award by the Norwegian parliament. The Oslo Aftenposten said the timing of the King announcement, in view of the election campaign in the United States, “may raise some doubt.” “It would be most regrettable,” the newspaper said, “if this award turned out to be an agitated factor during the last weeks of the campaign.” King said Wednesday that “every penny” of the $54,600 prize money will be given to
For A Program of Efficient, . v Economical, ■ Impartial, ♦ \ Friendly, 1 I COUNTY Vote For HUGH DAVID(DAVEJMOSSEI^ - Republican Candidate for Adams County Commissioner, Third District . . Pol. Advt.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1964.
Golf Kings Off In Finale Today LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) — The kings of golf — Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Tony Lema and Ken Venturi — tee off today in their final big fling of the season for big money in the $77,777 Sahara Invitational tournament. Palmer, fresh from winning the world match play crown in England, has been installed as a co-favorite, with defending champion Nicklaus to take home top money of $12,000. If either man is ’ able to accomplish the feat, then he will nail down another championship — top money winner of the 1964 tour. Palmer is leading the official money-winning race with sllO,743 to his Credit. But Nicklaus is right on his heels with $107,717.83. The others aren’t far back but they couldn’t catch the leaders, even by winning. The new “big four” doesn’t have a lock on winning any tournament, however. Also competing here in the long, 7,069 yard Paradise Valley Country Club course are Billy Casper, third-leading , mdney-winner of P<U • by Nichols, who is right behind Casper in the, standings; and most of the rest of the country’s finest shot-makers. , Adams Central Plans Season Ticket Sales Season tickets for the 1964-65 basketball season at Adams Central high school will go on sale Oct. 26 and continue to and including Oct. 30. Tickets, both adult and student, will be sold at the principal’s office each day* from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. Open house will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 27, with a regulation intrasquad game by the high school basketball squad. At half-time of the game, a certified official will discuss the new rules. The public is invited to attend and participate in the rules discussion. Season tickets will also be on sale that evening. Rushville Physician Dies In Paris, France PARIS (UPI) — Dr. Clement Poston, 64, Rushville, Ind., died Wednesday at Orly Airport while waiting to board a jetliner to return to the United States. A U. S. Embassy spokesman said Poston, who was traveling alone, apparently suffered a heart attack. i the civil rights movement. He said he was “filled with keep humility and gratitude” on winning the award. King was informed he had won the peace prize in St. Joseph’s Infirmary in Atlanta where he was undergoing a routine physical checkup.
