Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 207, Decatur, Adams County, 2 September 1959 — Page 12

' WEDNESDAY, BEPT. *, 195*

Congratulations . to Central Soya Co., Inc. On Tfcnir 25th Silver Anniversary And Te Mr. Mae For Helping Make Deealnr A Fine Town For Onr Teenagers. TEEN TOGS 121 N. Second St. It Was Our Privilege to be the ROOFING CONTRACTOR FOR THE NEW MODERN OFFICE BUILDING OF CENTRAL SOYA CO., INC. and MoMILLEN FEED MILLS DECATUR," INDIANA We Extend Our Best Wishes to these firms at the opening of their new office building. d L Sdiost Co., Inr. INDUSTRIAL ROOFING SHEET METAL CONTRACTORS & FABRICATORS I 2300 Taylor St. Phone A-2491 * -* * Fort Wayne, Indiana CggJl-- j- "■ -lii-'l' ' >'

Congratulations to Mr. Mae and all Employees of Central Soya Company on the 25th Anniversary ir t _ • r During the years t heir Contributions to Our Community have been tremendous. pmwas / ..JH BEAVERS OIL SERVICE, INC-

Deny GOP Stymies Civil Rights Bill By RAYMOND LAHR United Preen International WASHINGTON <UPI)-Republi-can lenders in Congress are insisting that they are not dragging their feet or making deals to prei vent the passage of a civil rights bill. GOP Leader Everett M. Dirk{sen of Illinois told the Senate this week there was no truth to a ! newspaper report that the admin- ] istration was not interested in passing a bill now because it felt ,it could get a better one in the 1 1960 election year. I The Democrats, he reminded, 'are in control of Congress. I And House Republican Leader Charles A. Halleck of Indiana, using the White House as a forum, has denied that House Republicans would help stave off a civil rights bill this year in exchange for southern Democratic votes on the labor reform ijaill. When asked if the Republicans on the rules committee would ! vote to send the bill to the floor, Ihe said he didn't know but pointed out that the committee is * 8 to 4 democratic. Shows Coalition Revival Regardless of a “deal,” spoken or unspoken, the House vote for the administration - backed labor bill was the best evidence yet of revival of the coalition of Republican and southern Democrats which once plagued presidents Roosevelt and Truman. Now it plagues the liberal Democrats who up to a few months ago had thought the 1958 election had put them back in the saddle. There was ample evidence last winter that House GOP leaders were in no mood to crusade for a civil rights bill this year. It could be that they wanted help from southern conservatives to keep the Democratic New Dealers from running the show. In any case, they have had most of the help they needed. Until 1957 when the Senate — and Congress — passed the first civil rights bill since the Reconstruction years, the civil rights issue provided a good football. Rights Issue Agreement With southern Democrats dissenting, each party declared itself against racial discrimination, but few in Congress took the commitment very seriously. Among men who had to live with each other on dozens of I other issues, it was easy to losif | a civil rights bill in the cumbersome machinery of Congress. Now the pressure has grown greater and the racial and labor groups demanding civil rights legislation seem more aware of how the congressional machinery is used. William F. Knowland, then Senate Republican leader, forced the 1957 showdown in the Senate, where all civil rights bills had died for years, although he later had to yield management of the bill to Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson. In his Senate speech this week, Dirksen applauded Knowland for his “daring step” in 1957. Yet he has contented himself so far this year with applying the needle on Democrats rather than taking the lead to force a showdown. President Elsenhower repeatedly has listed a civil rights bill as an essential part of the legislative program for this year. But he has not applied the pressure on Congress like that used on such issues as the budget, labor reform. housing, highways, the wheat surplus, and interest rates. Garden Markers Shellac comes in handy in the garden, too. Shellac the empty seed packets to row markers, and then shellac the outside surfaces of the packets. The packets will stapp in place and be legible for i as long as you need them. - 1—-

WCATUH DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Jm 1 War fr " BAR PRESIDENT —New president of the American Bar aaaocia* tion, elected at convention Ml Miami Beach, Fla., la John OB Randall. Cedar Rapid* la. t • ; Shortage Os Tomato > Pickers In Indiana \ INDIANAPOLIS <UPl>— A cur--5 rent shortage of 500 tomato pickers and a future shortage totaling 900 was reported today by he 1 Indiana Employment Security Dir vision in its weekly farm labor r bulletin. ( The division reported that hot » days and nights have been rough s on both tomatoes and pickers. 5 The weather slowed the pickers and scalded some of the crop. By the end of last week, 9,242 - out-of-area workers were in the s Indiana harvest areas, including i 1,618 in the Fort Wayne area, more than 1,200 each in the Kokomo and Muncie areas, nearly ‘ 1,000 each in the Anderson and s Marion area, and smaller numJ bers in the Indianapolis, South 1 Bend, Logansport and Lafayette * areas. 5 The situation by areas: Logansport— Tomatoes ripening | rapidly. Pickle picking nearly over. South Bend — Pickle picking . over. Excessive heat lowering to- ; mate quality. Rain needed. Lafayette — Sweet com pack ended Aug. 26, quality average, yield average 2Vz tons per acre. Extreme heat lowering tomato quality. Anderson—Tomato crop goqd yield heavy. Hot weather reduced quality. Some growers reporting 20-ton yields. Fort Wayne— Tomato quality reduced by scalding and sun-burn-ing. Quantity of crop to date greater than in past several years. Indianapolis — Tomato processing plants running to capacity with yield and quality good. Peak should come next week. Hot nights causing some fruit to soften. Sweet corn processing should end this week. Good prospects for pumpkin crop. Kokomo — Tomato crop very heavy. Sweet com harvest continues with good quality and yield. Lima bean harvest starting. Marion — Some tomato fields being picked weekly instead of every two weeks. Expect some early planted fields to be finished ; by Sept. 15. Cooler weather needed for late planted tomatoes. Muncie—Three weeks of 90-de-gree heat taking toll on tomato , crop. New Castle—Tomato yield very good. Picking and processing progressing very well. Columbus—Corn and tomatoes still plentiful and very good. Canners and growers say could be thtf best crops ever, if they can be harvested and processed. Some fields need moisture, others show effects of too much. Connersville —Weather hot and dry but does not seem to affect sweet corn and tomatoes. Vincennes — Cantaloupe harvest finished. Watermelon demand ex--1 ceeds supply, market best in ; years. Peach harvest completed, t market good. Apples maturing ■ later than usual. Cooler nights needed to ripen and color fruit.

Indiana Women Plan Meeting Bit HOKTENSE MYERS United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)—A woman may never become president of the U.S.A. in real life. But Mrs. Birch Bayh, wife of the Indiana speaker of the House, will achieve this distinction Sept. II in a play. The farce, "Jenny for President,” is part of a two-day conference sponsored by the Women’s Division of the Indiana Democratic State Central Committee in Indianapolis. Die men get shoved to a supplementary role in Jenny's cabinet, once she takes the rudder. She names only one man, the postmaster general. This role is assigned to an actor with experience in running the postal system, if not as a thespian. Walter Myers, Sr., Indianapolis, former assistant postmaster general, is

DRAPERIES I FOR THE NEW OFFICE BUILDING OF THE CENTRAL SOYA CO., INC. and McMILLEN FEED MILLS _ - FURNISHED BY HABEGGEti FURNITURE, INC. BERNE, IND. - Thanks and Congratulations to CENTRAL SOYA CO., INC. & McMILLEN FEED MILLS on Their 25th Anidvorsary.

HAUGKS PLUMBING, HEATING, APPUANCES, AIR CONDITIONING 209 N. 13th Si Decatur, Ind. «!K Plumbing Contractors FM THE DEW T OFFICE BUILDING r. y . i OF Central Soya Company, Inc. and McMillen Feed Mills DECATUR* IND. \ tyacatydfocm CABINETS furnished by HAUGKS , We Are Proud to have had a part in Constructing This Building and Oir Best Wishes on the 25th Anniversary of CENTRAL SOYA COMPANY, INC., and McMILLEH FEED WILLS. _

to play this part. Mrs. Katie Louchheim, national Democratic vice-chairman; Paul Butler, national chairman, and two Congressmen— Joseph Barr, 11th District; and John Brademas, 3rd, are headliners for the two-day event. That would seem to give the men the major speaking rolefi, but Mrs. Louchheim appears three times on the program, and will be flanked by several Indiana Democratic women. Mrs. Luella G. Cotton, Qrawfordsville, first woman to serve as principal clerk of the Indiana House of Representatives; Mrs. Howard Whitecotton clerk of the Supreme and Appellate Courts and State Rep. Marie Lauck, Indianapolis, also are to speak. Democratic state vice-chairman Georgia Arnsman said men will be welcome members of the conference audience Sept. 11-12 in the Claypool Hotel. , Everybody finds out, sooner or later, that all success worth having is founded on Christian rules of conduct. — H. M. Field.

BUILDING MATERIAL AND MILLWORK FOR THE BEAUTIFUL, NEW OFFICE BUILDING of CENTRAL SOYA CO., INC. and McMILLEN FEED MILLS FURNISHED BY ADAMS BUILDERS SUPPLY IM. 309 S. 13th St. Decatur, Ind. I THANKS... We Are Proud to Have Jlad A Part in the Building of This Beautiful Structure.

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