Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 254, Decatur, Adams County, 27 October 1964 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Tfroiy-'---r*“ JjKH fjy** •' jQfl LEAD SERVICES— The Rev. and Mrs. Laston L. Dennis, of Indianapolis, will lead special services at the Wren Church of the Nazarene, on state road 49, south of Wren, 0., at 7:30 p. m. daily, Oct. 28 through Nov. 8. Rev. Dennis, an elder in the Churcn of the Nazarene. has been in the ministry since 1936. He has been a full-time evangelist since 1961. Mrs. Dennis leads the congregational singing and sings special songs. The Rev, Joseph Dotson, pastor of the church, invites the public to attend.
K3f I V ' w jHRf fsHHIMHBB!" . 'w. POLICE HOLD GUNS on Norman Commadore. 32, (shown with hands protruding from window walb. Passersby saw Commadore break into a rear door of a Racine, Wis . tavern and called police. ~ear gas was tossed-into the building and Commadore was captured—lUPl Telephotdi. " — .
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Halloween Parade Al Wren Saturday The Wren. 0., Lions club is sponsoring a Halloween parade, to | be held Saturday night at 7:30 o’clock, A prize will be given to all masked persons in the parade, which will be followed by a record hop Free cider and doughnuts will be given to all. Seventeen different categories have been set up for prizes to paraders. with prizes in each category of T 2 to first place, $1 fr second place, and 50 cents for third lace The cate'mri s are as follows: Hob :, tr d>r 12 yearn of age: h”bo. 12 years of ave and older: clown, under 12; clown. 12 and Over: ghost, unde 12; ghost. 12 ;nd older; animal, under 12; animal. 12 and older; witch, under 12; witch, 12 and older; bride and groom, under 12; bride and groom. 12 and o’der; fattest person. under 12; fattest person, 12 and older; most unique costume, under 12; most unique costume, 12 and older; best family group, any age.
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATIM, INDIANA
$29,441 Taxes Paid Here By NIPSCO Northern Indiana Public Service company has paid almost nl’e million dollars in real estate and personal property taxes this year ayi its contribution toward the successful operation of Indiana's eities, schools, towns and counties, Mitchell, NIPSCO chairman and president announced today. The utility's November installment of $4,477,748, added to the spring payment of $4,477,769, brings the company's total state and local property tax bill so 1964 to $8,955,515. ’’This makes NIPSCO one of the largest taxpayers in the state of Indiana.’’ Mitchell said. “Just as with every other taxpaying company in America, these tax dollars are collected from customers as a part of their service bill. In Tact, almost 20 cents out of every dollar of revenue received from customers goes for federal, state and local taxes.’’ Richard M. Reetz, NIPSCO Decatur district manager, said that total local taxes paid by the utility in Adams county in 1964 amounted to $29,441, of which $22,610 went to the city of Decatur. Tax payment checks have been sent to NIPSCO district managers well ahead of the November 2 deadline to make sure county treasurers received them in plenty of time.
Lady Bird Johnson In Oklahoma Today ABOARD THE LADY BIRD SPECIAL (UPI) —Campaigning Lady Bird Johnson flew to Tulsa and McAlester, Okla., today to boost the political stock of the President and all Democratic candidates in Oklahoma. In a speech prepared for delivery at a rally at the new Tulsa Civic Center, the First Lady said the test in this election is whether “we shall move forward”—or “move backward toward a denial of each other’s needs into a national climate of fear, distrust and dislike,” With the election, only one week away, Mrs. Johnson was exhorting Democratic supporters to get out and work. She headed down the home stretch of "the campaign, winding up her solo flying whistlestop today after she makes other appeairnces In Fort Smith and Little Rock, Ark., and Henderson,- Ky. President Johnson will join up with her at a late rally tonight at the Evansville. Ind., airport and -loie’her they will head for Albp<jjMirque, N.M. and more cainMngning in the West. ‘ ‘llxfeems to me that. what is afoot ,Jn this coming election is not really a contest between two poll’leal parties, but rather a contest between the philosophies of 'yes, certainly’ and the philosophy of 'no, never!’ ” she said. ’’Oklahomans ought to understand that better than anybody, This state was built by Soonets — not the people who said ’later’ and ‘no, never',” The Oklahomans • got their nickname "Sooners” from the way they rushed into the territory to stake out land when it was opened for settlement, starting together in an epic “land race.’’ “We are testing," she continued, "whether as a nation we shall move forward with understanding of each other and each other’s needs, ever increasing our total power — economic, social, military—in common Wst and faith; or whether we shall move backward toward .a denial of each other's needs into a national climate of fear, distrust and dislike.” "This is, I believe," she added. “a contest between the positive and the negative, between the yes and the no.”
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PRES. JOHNSON (Continued from Page One) necessary risks with the future ... we must restore the health of our two-party system.” Johnson sounded similar rhemes next in Macon and Augusta, Ga.. and in Columbia. In the two Georgia cities, he was hindered slightly by demonstrators chanting “we want Barry.” But at Augusta he silenced them by likening the chanters to “diseased” hecklers who spat upon him and his wife at Dallas, Tex., in the 1960 campaign. At Columbia Monday night, Johnson stood in a Goldwater stronghold to accuse his Republican rival of “gambling with human destiny" by proposing nuclear "brinkmanship.” Appearing before about 60,000 person" at the South Carolina state capital, Johnson combined some philosophizing about the election with a taunt at Goldwater. All Will Go “All the slander, all the smear, all the television and all the propaganda somehow or other will go by the wayside Tuesday week,” Johnson said. “They will be a mass of old banners, old pictures and old television films—if they haven’t been cancelled between now and next Tuesday.” The latter point apparently referred to Goldwater’s repudiation of a GOP campaign film called “choice” which Democratic officials called salacioug —but which the GOP candidate rejec ed as racist. Through his three-state Southern campaign jaunt, Johnson emphasized the need for “binding up old wounds” left since the Civil War. He accused Goldwater of advancing the most radical and dangerous domestic and international ideas since that .time. Miller On Whirlwind Windup To Campaign ST. CHARLES, Mo. (UPD— Rep. William E. Miller, claiming ■ the Democratic party has been “taken over by extremist?,” stumps for Republican votes „ in three Midwestern states today. The GOP vice presidential candidate, who skipped through three states in the Deep South Monday, plans a whirlwind windup to the presidential campaign. He will hit 17 more states from Pennsylvania to California by the weekend. Miller cancelled his scheduled Drought Conditions Hazardous In State LAFAYETTE, In. (UPD— Forestry experts said today that drought conditions in Indiana "have resul.ed in what might easily become explosive forest and field fire danger.” State extension forester E. J. Lott said the situation call for "every possible precaution with fire.” Lott urged that Landowners wait to bum brush until later in the fall or winter when the fire dangen is lessened. He recommended that motorists use car ash trays for discarding cigarettes or cigars, and that hunters grind out their smokes in exposed earth. A repo’t by s’ate climatologist L. A. Schaal showed that rainfall departures from normal still are most pronounced in central areas. Over the last 13 weeks, the east central portion has received only 2.1 inches of rain and is 6.9 inches short. West central received 3.4 inches and is 6.5 inches short. Central got 3.1 inches and is 6 inches short. Other areas considerably short were south central 5.4 inches, southwest 5.2, southeast 4.8 and northeast 4.4. Northwest portion was in th'* best shape with 7.7 inches of rain in :he past 13 weeks, short only 2.3 inches. North central was second best with 6.3 inches, and a shortage of 3.1 inches.
Sharp Attack On President By Goldwater EN ROUTE WITH GOLDWATER (UPD — Republican presidential nominee Barry Goldwater today described President Johnson as the "most power hungry man in American politics” who will “contenance anything" to achieve “total power over your total lives.” In a speech prepared for delivery at Bristol, Tenn., Goldwater launched one of his sharpest attacks to date on the President. He flew to Tennessre after a tumultuous, cheering, foot-stamping reception at the traditional final-week rally in New York Rith’s Madison Square Garden. Goldwater used some of his toughest talk of the campaign in attacking John on at Bristol, just one week from election day: “If you want a president who will do anything, countenance anything to further his own political ambi’ions and fortunes, then vote for Lyndon Johnson. If you want a president who campaign speech nere today due to continuing rain on the outdoor fairgrounds. Miller was to speak at the outdoor grounds shortly after noon and then fly to Champaign, 111. Aide Berkeley Baker said Miller may still go to the Illinois stop but “I’m not really sure so I shouldn’t say definitely.” Miller was also scheduled to make a stop at Detroit, Mich., in the evening. On his Southern tour, the New congressman hit hard at President Johnson. He said the survival of the United States depends upon the election of Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, the Republican candidate. Miller said at a fund-raising dinner in New Orleans Monday night that Johnson and his run-ning-mate, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, would owe “political lOU’s” to the Socialist party of the United' States, the Americans for Democratic Action (ADA) and to United Auto Work *r s Pj<esident Whiter Reuther ,if the Democratic ticket is victorious. He said the payment of such political debts "could never be good for America.”
Voters Os Adams County For Security ... Morality and Better Government .. We Give You These Candidates... y ; T- ? ■ ■ President .I,Barry Goldwater Vice President... Wm. E. Miller SenatorD. R. Bontrager Governor .... Dick 0. Ristins Congressman E. Ross Adair State Representative Luther Yager Auditor Lee Neuen Surveyor Wayne Carpenter Commissioner Ist Dill .... Wm. Fritzinger Commissioner 3rd Diet.. ... H. David Mosser SUPPORT OUR CANDIDATES IN NOVEMBER 3rd ELECTION ADAMS ’’’H REPUBLICAN GENUAL COMMITTEE Goy L Frtcw» Chairman p o |. Advt.
will cover up corruption, then vote for Lyndon Johnson — and remember when you do, that you are voting to bury forever the facts in the Bobby Baker case, in the Billie Sol Estes scandal, in the kickback charges against Matt McCloskey, in the use of defense contracts for political ends — remember all those things and vthen forget it, for that’s what Lyndon Johnson will do if he gets 4he crown, if he gets the power he seeks. "If you want a president who will stoop even to political lies then vote for Lyndon * Johnson," Goldwater said. {Jokiwater said Johnson won’t be a’isfled with an election, “he wants to be crowned!
BACK ON TOP— Lenny Moore of the Baltimore Colts is free of injuries this year and has regained the spot he once held among VJ the elite backs f, ' f I in the National * v ' Football League. f ? 1 ★★★★★★★★★ HONEST — EFFICIENT — SINCERE ■A ■■■ VOTE FOR A * JEj leland *■ (Lee) NEUEN T Republican Candidate for ★ Auditor of Adams County a W aBL’ November Election . . Thank You. YOUR VOTE AND INFLUENCE APPRECIATED • 1 A ★★★★★★★★★
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1964
“He has asked for a mandate. He wants total trust, total love, total power over your total lives,” the senator said. He said “your choice, America’s choice is clear and stark. Do we want raw and naked power and ambition in the White House; power stripped of humility, stripped of common honesty, devoid of any morality except the morality to get, the morality of grab, and the morality of grab, and the morality of gifts for the favored few? “That’s what Lynon Johnson really means when he says: ‘Let us continue’ let us continue on his terms, on his course, at his price, and at his pace,” the senator said, adding that Johnson’s course is “too far left.”
