Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 183, Decatur, Adams County, 4 August 1962 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
Central Soya dedicated its new Indianapolis feed mill this afternoon, with speeches by Congressman Ralph Harvey, a cousin of Mrs. Gail Grabill, and speeches by Central Soya President Dale W. McMillen, Jr., and board chairman, Harold W. McMillen, Located at 1160 18th street in Indianapolis, the new mill will provide continued good service for the Indiana livestock and poultry industry. It is next to the company’s soybean processing and grain merchandising facilities. Stressing accessibility and efficiency, the new feed mill provides a complete 1 i n e of animal and poultry feeds for Master Mix dealers in an area extending west to the Illinois border, east to Ohio, south to Kentucky, and north to the Lafayette area. Bulk or bag feed will be shipped by rail, company truck, or dealer truck. Planned for a capacity of 500 tons a day, the mill has an electronically controlled proportioning system to. utilize properly micro-ingredients (anti-biotics, vitamins, and trace minerals) which are important in concentrates and complete feeds. There is also 15,000 square feet of warehouse space. Ceptral Soya is now the second largest Indi-ana-based corporation, with sales of S3OO million a year, and the 162nd corporation in size in the country. Central Soya is one of the great companies contributing to the marketing system that allows Americans to pay only 20% of the i r paychecks for food—while Rusians pay 50%, French and English 30%, and still don’t get the meaty diets of the Americans. Editorial Writer Today Dick D. Heller, Jr.
TV PROGRAMS Central Daylight Time
WANE-TV Channel IS SATURDAY Afternoon 12::00—Sky King 12:30- CBS News 12:45 —TV Playhouse I:ls—Baseball 4:oo—Mystery Matinee 5:30 —Big Time Wrestling of the Bride 7:oo—San Francisco Beat 7:30 —Perry Mason B:3o—Defenders _. 9:3o—Have Gun Will Travel 10:00—Gunsmoke 11:00—Tom Calenberg — News 11:15—Ministry of Fear SUNDAY Morning 9:00 —Faith for Today 9:3o—This is the Life 10:00—Lamp Unto My Feet 10:30 —Look Up and Live 11:00—Camera 3 11:30—Washington Conversation 12:00 —TV Playhouse Afternoon 12:30—Social Security in Action 12:45—Baseball 3:3o—Mystery Matinee S:OO—TV Playhouse s:3o—Amateur Hour Evening 9:oo—2oth Century 6:3o—Mr. Ed 7:oo—Lassie 7:3o—Dennis the Menace 8:00—Ed Sullivan Show 9:OO—G.E. Theater 9:3o—Who in the World 10:00—Candid Camera 10:30—What’s My Line 11:00—CBS News 11:15—Wings in the Dark MONDAY wu Word 7:56—80b Carlin —if ewe B:oo—Captain Kangaroo 9:oo—Coffee CujJ Theater 10:25—Bob Carlin News 10:30—I Love Lucy 11:00—The Verdict is Yeurs 11:30—Brighter Day 11:55—CBS News Afternoon 12:00—Love of Life 12:30—Search for Tomorrow 12:45—Guiding Light I:oo—Ann Colone Show I:2s—News 1:30 —As the World Turns 2:oo—Password 2:Bo—Houseparty B:oo—.The Millionaire 3:30—T0 Tell the Truth 3:SS—CBS News 4:oo—Secret Storm 4:3o—Edge of Night s:oo—Dance Date ef Riley 6:3o—Phil Wilson — News 6:4s—Walter Cronkite — News 7:oo—Shotgun Slade 7:30—T0 Tell the Truth B:oo—Pete & Gladys B:3o—Father Knows Best 9:00 —Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour 10:00—Hennesey 10:30—I’ve Got a Secret 11:00—Tom Calenberg — News 11:15—Sports 11:20—Lone Cowboy WKJG-TV Channel 33 SATURDAY Afternoon 12:00—Watch Mr. Wizard little 12:30—The People’s Choice 1:00—Big League Baseball for Little Leaguers 1 s:oo—Championship Bowling jkOO—Saturday News —Wrestling from Chicago 7:oo—Beachcomber isasTra Taf *"•■> • 11:15—Hello, Frisco. Hello SUNDAY Sacred Heart Program • —The Christophers Americans at Work 9:4s—Man to Man 12 —For Your Information - '»:is—lndustry on Parade —l hlß 18 the Life 11:®®—Cartoon Time 11 Relieve gOa’alSS. —Two Gun Playhouse 6:oo—Meet the Press
8:30 —Adventures of Sir Frances Drake 9:oo—Bonanza 10:00—Show of the Week 11:00—Sunday Edition 11:15—Pigskin Parade MONDAY Morning 7:oo—Today 9:oo—Enainesr John 9:3o—Editor's Desk 9:ss—Faith to Live By 10:00—Say When 10:30—Play Your Hunch 11:0#—The Price is Right 11:30—Concentration Afternoon 12:00—News 12:10—The Weatherman 112:15—Wayne Rothgeb Show 12:30—Truth or Consequences 12:55—N8C News 1:00 —Your First Impression I:3o—The Peoples Choice 2:oo—Jan Murray Show 2:2S—NBC News 2:3o—Loretta Young Show 3:oo—Youn Dr. Malone 3:3o—Our Five Daughters 4:oo—Make Room for Daddy 4:3o—Here’s Holly wood--4:SS—NBC News 5:00—Bozo Show B to Sports 6:ls—Jack Gray — News 6:2s—The Weatherman 6:30 —Pete Smith Show 6:4s—Huntley Brinkley Report 7:oo—Sea Hunt 7:3o—Searchlight B:oo—National Velvet 8:30 —The Price Is Right 9:oo—B7th Precinct 10:00—Self Portrait 11:00—News & Weather 11:15—Sports Today 11:20 —Tonight Show
WPTA-TV Channel 21 SATURDAY Afternoon » 12:00—Bugs Bunny 12:30—Al’s Acres I:oo—Theatre 30 I:3o—Baseball 4:3o—Little League Baseball s:oo—Championship Bowling Evening 6:oo—Beany & Cecil _ 6:3o—Top Plays of the Year 7:00 —M-Squad 7:3o—Calvin and the Colonel 5:00—Room for One More 8 >3o—Leave It To Beaver 9;00 —Lawrence Welk 10:00—Fights 10:45—Saturday Sports Final 11:00—Hong Kong SUNDAY Morning 11:00—Herald of Truth 11:30—Tour via Wings Afteraoo* 12:00—Indiana University 12:30 —Assembly of God 1:00 —The Story .1:30—Oral Roberts 2:oo—Your Neighbor, the World 2:3o—Little Western 3:oo—Summer Harvest 3:3o—Editor s Choice 4:oo—lssues & Answers 4:3o—Little League Baseball S:OO—ABC Wide World of Sports *6:3?^—Jalopy • Races 7:30—Follow the Sun — -—== 8:30—Hollywood Special | , 10:30—Lawman 11:00 —World Playhouse MONDAY ? Days Leave 11:00—Tennessee Ernie Ford 11:30 —Your for a Song — 1i2:00 —21 Noon Report 12:30—Camouflage 12:55—A8C News I:oo—Jane Wyman • I:3o—The Good Luck Kid 2:oo—Day in Court 2:3o—Seven Keyr 8:00 —Queen for a Day 3:3o—Who Do You Trust 4:oo—American Bandstand 4:3O—M-Squad , J’ s:oo—Riverboat I 6:ok,—Popeye Show 6:3o—Quick Draw McGraw 7:oo—Mr. Magoo 7:05—21 Evening Report 7:IL—ABC Evening Report 7:Bo —Cheyenne B:3o—Law of the Plainsman 9:oo—Surfside 6 10:00—Ben CAsey the Weather 11:17—Woman and the Hunter (IDIUT IN Mia* “4 Horsemen of Apocalypse” Tllurs. 9 P.M. "Young Doctors” Fri. & Sat. 8:30 "Man Who Shot Liberty Valance” 10 P.M. Sat. — "W P*™. "Sad Sadk” 8:30; ‘‘Delicate Delinquent” 10:15.
ASCS Farm Notes
ASCS FAFRM NOTES COMMUNITY COMMITTEE ELECTIONS: Township meeting will be held during the week of August 13 for the election of 1963 community committeemen. Community committeemen are elected each year to represent farmers from each township. These committeemen assist the county committee in administering the various programs of the United States department of Agriculture which are operated through the agriculture stabilization and conservation service offices, known as the ASCS offices. It is important to all farmers to attend the meeting in their respecive townships and assist in electing willing farmers to represent them. Meetings have been scheduled as follows:Blue Creek, conservation club building-August 16; FrenchElection school-August 17; Hartford, Hartford high school-August 13; Jefferson, Jefferson schoolAugust 15; Kirkland, Adams Central school-August 16; Monroe, Adams Central school-August 13; Preble, Magley school-August 14; Root, Monmouth school-August 13; St. Mary’s Bobo school, August 15; Union, Emanuel Lutheran schoolAugust 14; Wabash, Geneva high school-August 16; and Washington, Adams Central, August 14. All meetings will start at 8 p.m. 1961 SHORN WOOL PAYMENTS: Drafts have been mailed to applicants who have filed applications for shorn wood payments in the county office. Additional information is required on applications for which payments have not been made. Any person who filed an application and has not received his payment should call at the county office to furnish information. This will enable county office personnel to issue payments without delay. 1961 UNSHORN LAMB PAYMENTS: Payments to applicants who have filed applications for unshorn lamb payments will be made during the week of August 6th. PAYMENTS EARNED OF LESS THAN $3.00: Applicants whose final payments amounts to less than $3 will be ineligible to receive payments under either the shorn wool or unshorn lamb program. Etch payment is computed separately. 1962 FEED GRAIN PROGRAM: Field work under the 1962 feed grain program is practically completed. Exceptions are those farms which have been visited by the farm reporter and he could not locate the owner of the farm. Work is progressing in the county office and notices of acreages measured under this program are being mailed daily. All participants will receive a notice after the work is completed in the office. Payments will be made after 1 September 1,1962. 1962 WHEAT STABILIZATION PROGRAM: Participants who signed an intention to participate in the wheat stablization program are advised that payments under this program will be made after September 1. Maby inquiries have been received in the county office relative to the time of payment. 1962 SOYBEAN PRICE SUPPORT: We again remind producers that, to be eligible for price support on .soybeans under the 1962 program, soybeans must be produced in 1962 and the producer in 1962 must maintain his 1959-60 average acre-
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FIRST STRlNG—Actress Hope Lange enjoys a jam session with some musicians in Nice, France, during a Rehearsal for a film, "The *«Crand Duke and Me. Pimm.’
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age of conserving and idle land on the farm. This same requirement was in effect for the 1961-crop soybean program. As in the past, prices support will be carried out through farm and warehouse-storage loans and purchase agreements and will be available from harvest through January 31, 1963. The maturity date for loans will be May 31, 1963. Adams county rate is $2.25 per bushel for soybeans grading No. 2 and containing from 13.8 to 14.0 per cent moisture. 1962 WHEAT PRICE SUPPORT: Wheat producers, who have participated in the wheat stabilization program and met all requirements of such program, are eligible for price support on 1962 wheat provided the wheat meets the required specifications. Applications are being accepted, by the county office. Price support may be secured by farm or warehouse stored loans or purchase agreements. Adams county rate is $2.02 per bushel for No. 1 wheat. UNINTED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE--1862-1962: 100 years of progress-the United States department of agriculture was 100 years old in July. Soil conservation seeds sown by early American conservationists were slow to germinate. Although Jared Elliot, a minister and doctor of Killings worth, Con., recognized erosion of topsoil in the muddy waters from a bare hillside and Thomas Jefferson taught conservation farming at Monticello, it took more than 100 years before a nation was aroused to the need to take steps to save the soil that was being washed away and wasted through erosion. It took such men as Hugh Bennet, Gifford Pinchot, and others to turn the tide of exploitation and waste of our natural resaurces. As long as there was land farther west and mountains covered with trees, womout and eroded farms and cutover forests could be abandoned and the farmers and lumbermen could move on to new lands and new timber sources. Finally the conservation seeds began to swell and sprout. A federal appropriation was made in 1929 to study the effects of erosion and ways to control it. Eight ero-sion-control experiment stations were set up in representative areas. The soil erosion service
IWMW .-'■-■lll! 1 iiIMW .-J .'.'J----:-'-.-.-.--i-i .. iiiii'i-l LU i.. J. L-i.l ... i.lll . %-.</ • z " a. > ' .• ,i. | IhIMl s w Bfit T i ii SWEET VIOLETS—Mr s.'Willis Alderman of Casper, Wyo.» tends some of the more than 400 varieties of African violets she raises by artificial light in her basement.
Stoffl Kfifii family ■SS3 dollars ■FrSI »Jg There is something special about those you have in reserve for the immediate protection of your loved • < ones. You want them safe, in* sured safe. ißi/ You want them handy, ready to use without penearning a steady income. You want the security of a stron 9 b an k •• • °ur bank. \ 'Zteazu&i-. Established 1883 - MEMBER MEMBER if. D. I. C. Federal Reserve
was created in 1933 and the soil conservation service in 1885. Under the agricultural adjustment act of 1933, soil-repleting crops were recognized, and both the soil conservation and domestic allotment act of 1936 and the agricultural adjustment act of 1938 provided funds for sharing the cost of carrying out soil and water conserving practices. The agricultural conservation program, cost-sharing for conservation practices, is administered by ASC county committees. FARM SAFETY: Farmers with ponds and other water-conservation structures on their land need particularly to be “safety” conscious. Open bodies of water have a fascination for people generally—expecially children, which means that the operator has an obligation to be alert to the danger as well as to the benefits of water-storage practices and structures around the farm. Water conservation is being practiced more and more on the farms of the nation, as indicated by the various practices carried out under the government’s agricultural conservation program. In recent years, farmers have been completing from 50,000 to 60,000 water-storage structures a year under the program, for which they receive AEP cost-sharing assistance. From 1936 through 1961, around 1.7 million such structures have been built under the AC program. These include primarily livestock water ponds, storage-type erosioncontrol dams, and irrigation water reservoirs. Besides meeting the primary purpose for which they were built, such structures help prevent floods, alleviate drought problems, supply aid in controlling forest fires, and provide water storage for fish and wildlife. Their recreational benefits also are extensive. The great value of these waterstorage reservoirs must not blind us to the hazards they may present or to the safety precautions that should be taken to prevent drownings or other water accidents. FARM PONDS IN ADAMS COUNTY: 10 farm ponds have been established under die AC cost-sharing in Adams county. Farmers are reminded that banks of such ponds shall be seeded to grasses and maintained in order to prevent erosion. Ponds are checked periodically be representatives of ASC county committees to see that they are propertly maintained.
ZOYMrsAgo Today Aug. 4,l942—Adams county commisioners will purchase three used metal voting booths from Lake county to replace wornout booths here. Approximately 200 persons from the northern part of Adams county registered for sugar rations for fall canning purposes on the first day of registration. The Rev. David Grether, pastor of the Salem Evangelical and Reformed church at Magley for the past 17 years, has resigned to become pastor at the Evangelical and Reformed church in Colby, Wis. The state health board has submitted a proposal to the city council for a “grade A” milk ordinance in the city. Petitions and endorsenments for employing two county health nurses have been filed with the county commissioners. Egg Stains Egg stains can easily be removed by the following method: Scrape off the excess egg with cleaning fluid, then launder. Do not use hot water as this coagulates the albumin which makes it difficult to remove the stain.
'as I * i' 3 5 # ' iif ? jRBw? »/ L' 1 Z > CLEMENCY DENIED —California Gov. Edmund G. Brown has refused to intervene in the scheduled execution of Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Duncan, 58, who was convicted of hiring two men, also condemned to death, to murder her daughter-in-law in 1958 over jealousy for her son’s affections.
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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Sc. Bntered at the Decatur. Ind., Poet Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Hailer, Jr. President Chas. Holthouse Becretary-IreMurar By Mall in Adams and Adjoining Counties: Ono year, 810.00; Six months, 85.50: 3 months, 88.00. By Mall, beyond Adams and Adjoining CouiMes: One year, 8U.25; 6 months, 8600; 8 months, 83J5. By Carrier, 35 cents per week. Single copies, 7 cents.
I Modern Etiquette I By Roberta tee I Q. How should wedding invitations be worded if the bride is a young widow? A. They should be Issued in the names of her parents, just as the invitations to her first wedding were. Thus: “Mr. and Mrs. John P. Harris request the honor of your presence at the marriage of their daughter, Mary Harris Shafer, to, etc.” Q. When a hostess is serving cocktails and knows that one or two of her guests do not drink, what should she do? A. A good hostess is always prepared for such eventualities—she serves these guests soft drinks. Q. Is it all right for a man to use
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only his initials when signing social correspondence, as “H.J. Brown”? A. No; he should sign his full name. QrWare going to entertain the parents of our daughter’s fiapce at dinner. How should the six ot us be seated? A. You seat the father of your daughter’s fiance at your right, and your future son-in-law at your left. To your husband's right sits the mother of your daughter’s fiance, and to his left sits your daughter. Q. My husband and I recently attended a party given by his niece and her husband. She introduced us to her friends simply as “Mr. and Mrs. Butler.” Shouldn’t she have introduced us as her aunt and uncle? A. Definitely, yes.
