Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 59, Number 77, Decatur, Adams County, 1 April 1961 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT PUbUabed Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT CO.. INC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Port Office as Second Class Matter Dtek D. Heller. Jr. President John G. HellerVice-President Chai. HoitbouseSecretary-Treasurer Bebseriptfon Rate* By Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $8.00; Six months, $4.25; 3 months, $2.25. As Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $8.00; • months, $4.75; 3 months, $2.50. By Carrier, 35 cents per week. Single copies, 7 cents. Surplus Food President Kennedy and his Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman have done wonders in less than three months in working with the problem of surplus food. And they have done it in a thoroughly Christian way. First, the administration announced that more of our surplus would be made available to our needy right here at home. Those out of work, jobless, many for more than six months, will be the first to benefit from the great American agricultural surplus. In fact, township trustees, even here in Indiana, already have a considerably improved “menu” for distribution to those who really need it. Secondly, Kennedy has released vegetable shortening and oils for voluntary agencies; these agencies pay for shipping the material overseas. Albert W. Farmer, national CROP director, explained just what this means to Church World Service: the allocation to Church World Service from the government surplus will likely be about 40 times the amount of CROP gifts provided in 1960. This is a tremendous boost to Christian service, and means that Christian missionary centers overseas, of every denomination, not just CWS, will have more food and clothes to distribute this next year. A truly “Happy Easter” message for everyone to know that at last our “great problem” of agricultural surplus is being put to work in a Christian way to help the needy here at home and all over the world. Editorial Writer Today — Dick D. Heller, Jr.

TV PROGRAMS

Central Daylight Timo

WANE-TV Channel 15 (SATURDAY fternnon 2:66—Sky Kin* Be PUyhou - I:36—Crosz Examination 2:6o—Award Matinoe I:lo—Mystery Matinee 4:so—Willy 8:00—Our Mias Brooks 8:10—I Love Lucy ■sses.™ 6:lo—Johny Midnight 7:oo—San Francisco Beat 7:lo—Perry Mason B:Bo—Checkmate I:Bo—Have Gun—Will Travel 10:00—Guns moke 10:80—Brothers Brannagan 11:00—Adventures of Mark Twain BUNDAY Meraia* B:oo—Faith for Today B:lo—This is ths Life 10:00—Easter Service Afteraasa 12:00—Focus 12:80—Accent ( 12:55—C8S News ' X I:oo—Seven Last Words of Christ 2:00 —Talkback I:Bo—Bunday Sports Spectacular 4:00— MIT Anniversary B:oo—Amateur Hour s:3o—Hi Quia Evealag 6:oo—Polka Parade 6:30—20th Century 7:oo—Lassie 7:lo—Dennis the Menace 8:00—Ed Sullivan B:OO—G.E. Theater B:2o—Jack Benny lOiOO —Candid Camera 10:30—What’s My Un* ll:00 J ‘-Bunday News Special 11:18—Kid From Kansas MONDAY Morale* 7:os—This Day ’6l 8:00—CBS Nows 10:30—Video Village 11:00—Double Exposure 11:10—Your Surprise Package Afternooe 12:00—Love of Life 12:80—Search for Tomorrow 12:45—Guiding Light I:oo—Ann Colone Show I:2s—News 1:80—As the World Turns 2:00 —Face the Facts 2:3o—Houseparty 8:00 —Millionaire B:Bo—Verdict Is Yours 4:oo—Brighter Day 4:ls—SecrOt Storm 4:80 —Edge of Night s:oo—Dance Date Evening , 6:oo—Life of Riley 6:Bo—Tom Calenberg—news 6:4s—Doug Edwards —news 7:oo—Johnny Midnight 7:30 —To Tell The Truth 8:00 —Pete and Gladys 8:30 —Bringing Up Buddy B:oo—Danny Thomas 9:Bo—Andy Griffith 10:00 —Hennesev 10:80 —June Allyson 11:00—Phil Wilson—News 11:15 —Blond Ransom WKJG-TV Channel 33 SATURDAY Afternoon 12:00—True Story 12:30—Detectives Diary 1:00—Two-Gun Playhouse 2:OO—NBA Basketball 4:oo—The Big Picture 4:Bo—Bowling Stars s:Bo—Captain Gallant s:Bo—Saturday Prom Evening 6:oo—Wrestling from Chicago 7:oo—Cannonball 7 :>ff Nenanwa » B:3o—The Tall Man 9:oo—Deputy 9Jft —Our American Heritage 10:00—Eleven Frightened Men 10:30 Silents, Please 11:15—A Nnght at the Opera SUNDAY B:46—How ChrietUa Bcienee Heal* 10:00—Sacred Heart Program 11100—Easter Sunday Service Afterneen 12:00—Two Gun Playhouse 1:00—Hopalong Cassidy I:BB—Frontiers of Faith 2:00 —Sunday with Smith 2:lß—lnside Basketball 2:BO—NBA Basketball 4:4o—Ask Washington 5 Cpantmunlam l.ookK at Youth s:Bo—Chet Huntly Reporting th,

6:3o—People Are Funny 7:oo—Shirley Temple Show B:oO—Marineland Circus B:oo—Chevy Show 10:60—Loretta Young 10:30—This is Your Life 11:90—The Sunday Edition 11:15—Keeper of the- Flame » MONDAY Moralas 6:30 —Continental Classroom 7:oo—Today B:oo—Engineer John B:Bo—Editor's Desk B:ss—Faith to Live By 10:00—Say When 10:30—Play Your Hunch 11:00—The Price la Right 11 JO—-Concentration Afternoon 12:00—News 12 Uo—Weatherman 12:15 —Farms and Farmin* 12:30—1t Could Be You 12:55—News I:oo—Truth or Consequences 1:30— The Burns and Allen Show 2:oo—Jan Murray 2:3o—Loretta Young 3:oo—Young Dr. Malone 3:3o—From These Roots 4:oo—Make Room For Daddy , 4:3o—Here’s Hollywood 5:00—Bozo Show Bveaix 6:oo—Gatesway to Sporta ' 6:ls—Jack Gray—News 6:2s—Weather 6:3o—Pete Smith 6:4s—Huntly-Brinkley Report 7:oo—Brave Stallion 7:3o—The Americans B:3o—Tales of Wells Fargo 9:oo—Acapulco 9:3o—Dante 10:00—Barbara Stanwyck 10:90—Best of the Post 11:00—News & Weather 11:15—Sports Today 11:20—Jack Paar WPTA-TV Channel 21 SATURDAY Afternoon 13:00—Gateway to Opportunity 1:00 —Little Western 2:00 —Buck Jones Theater 3:00 —Easter Part 111 4:00 —Matty’s Funday Funnies 4:BoContrails 5:00 —All Star Golf Evening 6:00 —The Big Picture 6:3o—Expedition 7:oo—The Law and Mr. Jonee 7:Bo —Roaring 20's B:Bo—Leave it to Beaver 9:00 —Lawrence Welk LOlOO—Fight of the Week 10:45—Make That Spare 11:00—Big Time Wrestling 12:00—Confidential File SUNDAY Afternoon 11:00 —Herald of Truth 11:30—Oral Roberts 12:00 —Assembly of God 12:30—Pip, the Piper I:oo—Directions ’6l 2:oo—Wings to Germany 2:3O—TV Hour of Stars . 3:3o—The Other Adolph 4:00 —Championship Bridge 4:30 —The Story s:oo—Matty’s Funday Funnies Js:Bo— Rocky and His Friends Evening 6:oo—Sunday Showcase 6:3o—Walt Disney 7:3o—Maverick 8:30— Lawman 9:oo—Rebel 9:3o—The Asphalt Jungle 10:30—Winston Churchill 11:00 —Farmer's Daughter .. MONDAY Morning 9:47—5.0.5. Coast Guard 11:00—Morning Court 11:30 —Love that Bob Afternoon 12 .’oo—Camouflage 12:80—Number Please I:6o—About Faces -I:2S—ABC News ~ 1:30 —Forced Landing 2:oo—Day la Court 8:30 —Seven Keys" 3:00 —Queen for a Day 3:3o—Who Do You Trust 4:oo—American Bandstand ’ s:oo—Step Father s:3o—Rin Tin Tin Cvrutng . 6:oo—Popeye and Rascals Show 6:3o—Quick Draw McGraw 7:oo—Popeye A Rascals Show 7:lo—Clutch Cargo 7:l6r—News > „ 7:36—Cheyenne B:39—Surfside 6 9:3o—Adventures ln‘ Paradise 10:30—Peter Gunn 11:00—Tarzan and the Leopard Woman MOVIES ADAMS "Ten Cammandmeiits’’ Sun. 1:00; 5:00; 9:00,

County Agent’s Corner

By LEO N. SELTENBIGHT Judging Contests The 4-H and FFA judging contests for Adams county are now completed. We will have 12 teams participating in the Fort Wayne district contest to be held April 29 in Kosciusko county. The teams, members and coaches are as follows: Dairy judging: Decatur — Denny Bollenbacher, Fred Lehrman, Charles Bischoff and Kathryn Bischoff, coached by Bill Journay; Berne-French — Gregg Liechty, Richard Yoder, Dean Beer and Dave Brooks, coached by Doyle Lehman. livestock judging: Hartford Center — David Fox, Jerry Alberson, David Fields and Ronnie Habegger coached by Byron Bunker; Adams Central — Rene Brown, Gene Wolfe, Gerald Tonner and Arlen Gerber, coached by Martin Watson. Crops judging: Adams Central — Paul Hirschy, Dwight Moser, Roger Pyle and Gary Workinger coached by Martin Watson; Berne-French — John Rumple, Stanley Isch, Max Reinhard and Earl Kennel coached by Doyle Lehman. Poultry and egg judging: Berne-French — DeWayne Lehman, Adrian Biberstein, Norval Lehman and Charles Hartman, coached by Doyle Lehman; Adams Central — Stan Biberstein, Sam Meyerly, Dave Heyerly and Junior Lantz, coached by Martin Watson. Forestry identification: Decatur — Mary Eichenauer and David Swickard, coached by Bill Journay; Hartford Center — Mary Ann Duff and Erma Stauffer, coached by Byron Bunker. Insect identification is Adams Central with two teams — David Sommers, Neil VonGunten, Ben Bluhm and Roger Shoaf, coached by Martin Watson. I am sure that Adams county will do a good job in the district contest. French Twp. 4-H Meeting I had a chance to speak to the French township Happy Hoosiers 4-H club last Monday evening. They had all members present except one. The club is planning on meeting in the homes of members this year and this meeting was at the Erwin Isch home. They have a good program going under leaders Chester Isch and Howard Kennel. Junior Leaders

The 4-H Junior Leaders will meet Tuesday, April 4 at 7:30 p.m. at the Lincoln school in Decatur. The program will be the Share-The-Fun entertainment contest. A.B.A. Annual Meeting The 13th annual meeting of the Adams county Artificial Breeders association will be held Tuesday, April 4 at 7:45 p.m. at the Decatur Community Center. Entertainment will be by the Four Alarmers, from Muncie. Refreshments and door prizes in addition. 4-H Dairy Banquet The annual 4-H dairy calf club banquet will be held Thursday evening, April 6 at 6:45 p.m. at the Geneva school. Speaker will be Mauri Williamson, Purdue Ag. Alumni field secretary. Get your ticket from a calf committee member or the extension office. Arbor Day Arbor Day is a day set for planting trees.. This year it is April 14 in Indiana. How about planting a tree or giving the youngsters a chance to plant a tree. I think they will be the better for the tree planting experience. Keep America Green! Starting Seeds Indoors If you want vigorous flower and vegetable plants to transplant this spring, try starting seeds indoors. The seeds may be planted in clap pots, aluminum trays or wooden flats. Petunias, calendulas, asters, salvia and snapdragons may be ■ sown now for early summer out-1 door bloo m s. Strawblower and \ statice seeded indoors will bloom | outdoors this fall and can be dried and used next winter for inside arrangements. Among vegetables, cabbage, cauliflower and broccoli may be started indoors at this time. Sufficient moisture and proper temperature are essential

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for seed germination. Mort vegetables and flowers germinate at 65 degrees fahrenheit. Be sure to keep seeds moist until they have germinated and while seedlings are still small. Flower or vegetable media, such as vermiculite or shredded shpagnum moss. Don’t cover small seeds; no seeds should be planted deeper than twice their diameter. After the first two seed leaves have appeared and a third leaf is fairly large, transplant into peat pots containing soil or a soil mixture. Later the pot and its contents can be transplanted outside and the plant will continue to grow with little disturbance. Here and There Around The Hoose Does your lawn look brown and patchy — as if it needs a spring cleaning? If so, it probably does. Homeowners can easily clean up their lawn by mowing it at a one inch height. Then they should sweep up and remove the grass clippings. This also will take care of sticks, stones and leaves that have accumulated over the winter. Shrubs and trees add value to your home and their careful transplanting will protect your investment. First, dig a sufficiently large hole — one twice as wide and twice as deep as the root spread or the size of the ball. Prune broken roots and set the plant two or three inches deeper than it grew in the nursery. Soil to be put back into the hole should be good topsoil, containing about one-fourth peat moss. Two level teaspoons of 10-8-6 fertilizer should be added for each bushel of soil-peat mixture. Work the topsoil carefully around and under the roots and settle the soil firmly by flooding with water. This reduces air pockets. Don’t pack the soil with your feet, you might break the roots. You may prefer to add fertilizer to the water. If you do, use a solution containing two teaspoonsful of commercially available soluble fertilizer per gallon of water. Finally, fill in with soil loosely to the ground level, leaving a saucershaped depression for future watering. Don’t cut the leader back on shade trees. Wrap the tree trunks to the first branch with commercial tree wrap and brace or stake trees larger than an inch in diameter so the wind will not whip them and loosen their roots.

Jolly Juniors The Preble Jolly Juniors boys and girls club will meet at the Magley school Thursday evening at 7 o'clock. County Pony League Will Meet Tuesday All managers and coaches of the seven teams in the Adams county Pony League are requested to be present at a meeting Tuesday night which will be held in the athletic office of Adams Central high school, beginning at 7:30, league president R. O. Wynn announced this morning. Officers for this year will be elected and the schedule will be drawn up for the coming season. Plans for a third Decatur team, the Cubs, will be discussed at the meeting, so it is hoped that all managers and coaches will attend. With the addition of a third Decatur team, the league will be upped to seven teams this summer. The teams include the Cubs, Braves and Cardinals, all from Decatur, the Berne Merchants, the Geneva Dodgers, the Monmouth Eagles and Adams Central.

Os This And That

• 1 By LOB M. FOLK Home Demonetrattm Anal Have you noticed the brilliance of color that is beginning to show now that spring has arrived. The trees are yellow and red as they burst with bud. The forsythia is yellow with flowers and tulips are beginning to bloom. Keep your eyes alert for these and other signs ot spring lovliness. Home Demonstration Council The home demonstration council plans to meet, Tuesday, April 4 to finish planning for. summer activities. The ladies will meet in the Farm Bureau Co-op basement, beginning at 1:30 p.m. Items of business include: homemakers conference, special interest lesson, National Home Demonstration Week, and the home demonstration picnic. A Better Ton Plans have been completed for a special interest lesson on “A Better You.” Miss La Veda Cook of Warner Beauty College will speak to home demonstration women in the Berne-French school cafeteria Tuesday evening, April 27. Be sure and circle this date as you won’t want to miss this meeting. The meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. Spring Housecleaning If you are in the midst of spring housecleaning remember don’t plan too much for one day. This only results in your feeling tired, worn out and cranky for two or three i days later. You will accomplish) more if you take It easier and work at a steady even pace. Also here is a poem by Dr. Henry Van Dyke which might help brighten your day. WORK Let me do my work from day to day In field or forest, at desk or loom, In roaring market-place or tranquil room; Let me but find it in my heart to say, When vagrant wishes becken me astray, “This is my work; my blessing, not my doom; Os all who live, I am the one by whom . This work can best be done in the right way.” Your Easter Bonnet Unless you are wearing ybur new Easter bonnet at the moment, chances are you should turn it upside down. Most women store their hats right side up, but placing it upside down helps preserve the brim’s shape and protects the trimmings. Keep your hat looking new by storing it in a box with tissue paper stuffed in its crown. Now and again air the closet it is kept in, as humidity can cause hats to shrink. You can place more than one hat in a box if each has enough room. Nest them with one crown inside another and tissue paper between them. Your hat will need a bit of pampering to continue to look its best. To freshen up a veil, place it between two pieces of wax paper and press with a warm iron. The wax will stiffen the veiling. Hats should be brushed occasionally to remove dust. With felt hats, brush round and round with the nap. If a hat shows soil, rub it with a cloth dampened with cleaning fluid, perhaps first removing the trimmings. Hie color of a straw hat may be renewed by rubbing it with a cloth dampened in denatured alcohol. And you can stiffen and brighten a slighted tired straw with a light coat of clear shellac. Tips For You If cutting hard-cooked eggs into smooth slices, dip the knife in hot water. Use a mattress pad with a foam rubber mattress, rather than a cover. A mattress cover may seal in air and cause the rubber to develop unpleasant odors. It takes 19. times more energy to stoop to three inches from the floor to reach a pot or pan than to take an article off a shelf straight ahead of you.

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Agriculture Department To Get New Feed Grain Program Started

Following the signing into law of the emergency feed grain program, Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman moved quickly to put the legislation into action in the field. Three area meetings with field personnel were held on March 23, 24, and 37, in Omaha, Denver and Atlanta, with the secretary attending the first meeting. Also attending were representatives of USDA offices in 43 states, including State Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation committeemen and State ASC office technicians, as well as State Extension Service personnel. In announcing the feed grain program, Secretary Freeman said the legislation represents a workaide response of the Congress to the request of President Kennedy to stop the drift toward chaos in the feed grain and livestock sectors ot the economy. "I am sure that farmers appreciate the action and will cooperate to make the program effective. With’ about 3 billion bushels of feed grains in government loan and inventory stocks, representing an investment of more than $4 million,

Indiana Fanners Cash Receipts Up In 1960

Lafayette, Ind. Indiana farmers received an estimated $1,099 million from 1960 marketings, six percent above the 1959 total, according to state-federal agricultur-

Say Is Relumed To Farmer-Committee In line with objectives set forth by President Kennedy in his March 16 message to the Congress, Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman has announced steps to strengthen the farm-er-committee operation of national production-adjustment and price-support programs. According to James Garboden, chairman of the county agricultural stabilization and conservation committee, amendments the secretary has made in the administrative regulations governing ASC county and community committees will have the following direct effects: (1) County and community election boards are eliminated and authority to conduct elections now is vested in ASC county committees, <2> Officers of general farm organizations now become elgibile to serve as county committeemen, and (3) The authority to assign duties to community committees is put in the bonds of county committees instead of county office managers. In announcing the amended regulations, Secretary Freeman said: “The whole purpose in amending the administrative regulations is to return to ASC county committees important responsibilities which they are best qualified to discharge. Yet all the improvements we hope for in farm program administration cannot be brought about by regulation—what we seek and must have is a change in the spirit governing the administration of farm programs—“We intend to actively encourage all committees to assume their full responsibilities — County committees will be expected to determine policies and assume overall responsibility and office managers will be expected to carry out these policies and to supervise the day-today operations of the county offices.” Pointing out that the aim is to utilize the talents of committeemen fully in getting understanding of farm programs by farmers and the general public, the Secretary continued: “It is our firm belief that the ASC farmer-com-mittee swstem is the most effective and economical method Art operation if it operates as originally conceived under the enabling legislation. We intend to see that the committee system functions with full authority and responsibility in the days ahead.

it is time for action in the interest of the farmer and the other taxpayers. “Unless the present drift is stopped, it promises to become only worse and theatens the entire feed grain and livestock industry. It ultimately threatens the consumer as well. “These stocks will be reduced by the new program, but they will still be large. Consumers can rest assured that their interest will be protected through continuing abundant production of meat, poultry, eggs and dairy products. According to James Garboden, chairman of the county ASC Committee, the new program in general provides for payment to producers who divert a specified amount of corn and grain sorghum acreage to a conserving use. Only those com and grain sorghum producers who cooperate in the program will be eligible for support prices on their normal production of these two crops this year. Jp .add’tiec, corn and grain sorghum producers will be eligible for support On the other feed grain (oats, barley and

SI statisticians at Purdue University. Indiana ranked tenth in the nation in total cash income from farm markings and 1960 was the tenth consecutive year that figure exceeded one billion dollars. Both realized net income per farm, including government payments, and gross operating expenses increased. The 1960 realized net income per farm averaged $2,523, 15 percent higher than the 1959 average of $2,191. Gross operating expenses last year averaged s6,247—five percent more than in 1959. Larger receipts from hogs, dairy products, eggs, corn, soybeans and wheat more than offset declines in income from cattle, broilers and turkeys. Production expenses — particularly those for purchased feed, hired labor, taxes, interest, depreciation and many miscellaneous items —rose. _ Cash receipts from livestock and livestock products totaled $686,535,000 in 1960, compared to $669,008,000 in 1959. For crops Indiana farmers received last year $412,883.000, as against $370,117,000 in 1959. Direct government payments to Indiana farmers amounted to $16.829,000—5300,000 less than the 1959 total. The average realized net farm income of U. S. farmers last year amounted to $2,568, compared to $2,437 in 1959.

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rye) only if they participate in the feed grain program. The diverted acreage cannot be harvested or pastured, and it must be in addition to the average 1959-60 acreage devoted to soil-conserving uses on 'the farm. The payments will be in the form of negotiable certificates for which producers may receive grain or a cash equivalent of grain. Half of the estimated total payment for a farm will be offered to the producer as soon as he signifies that he will cooperate in the program. Chairman Garboden said that details of the program and the county payment rates will be sent to county ASC offices as soon as possible, so that farmers may learn bow they may participate in the program.

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