Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 199, Decatur, Adams County, 23 August 1962 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
■■ I 1 ■ ■ ■ ; * AGRICULTURAL MINISTRY OFFICIALS talked with the group and answered questions for two hours Friday morning after arrival. The deputy minister, who planned to be present, could not because he was called before the Japanese diet, or congresses which was considering the agricultural bill. Pictured left to right are Wayne Rothgeb, WKJG, Jiro Hashiguchi, official, and Fukuitsu , Aoki, interpreter. »a: a j fl fl fl [ ; . a ■ YUICHI NISHIMURA, with whom Jack Dailey visited as a summer exchange student in 1959. is pictured here as he arrived to greet the Indiana agricultural delegation Friday morning after they came to Tokyo. Nishimura visited in Decatur during the summer of 1960. •
TOURISTS (Continued frcin Page One) 67% of the hides and skins; 30%
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of the wheat, 91% of the beef tallow; 27% of the corn, 53% of the popcorn; 95%' of the soybeans, 71% of the eaf tobacco, 94% of the
noMpt dry milkjl% tiff fee cheese; 1% st the butter; and 1% of the pineegple. He explained that the Japanese prefer the corn from southeast Asia, because it is a darker yellow, end cheaper. 4-H Program Also, the 4-H program in Japan, which was going strong during occupation, fell off, and incudes only children out of school, or over ninth grade age, and therefore much older than Adams county 4-H. Aoki has been working on a new program to improve the 4-H club work. County agents are now working in every area .about 4,000 in Japan; originally they had little green bicycles, and now they have motorcycles. There are very few home agents. Most of the county agents and home agents have just completed one of the 22 special agricultural high schools, rather than college; every high school has some course or other in agriculture, which still occupies a large number Os the people. Farm To City Hashiguchi explained that the biggest problem facing argiculture in Japan is the same problem facing the U.S.-the orderly transfer of a large number farmers from the farm to the factory. After spending the morning m a discussion of farming, we descended the elevator, where the elevator girl told us that only eight Americans could ride, because they are too big to get 10 safely in an elevator. The little bus, which seated us all comfortably, with aisle seats left, is practically rectangular in shape. The driver sits on tbe right, since in Japan they drive to the left. This respresented a positive hazard to all of the group, which was apt to step off the curb into a traffic lane while looking the other way. Khrushchev Is Studying Over UN Attendance By K. C. Thaler United Press International LONDON — Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev is probably deciding this week whether or not to go to New York for the United Nations General Assembly, opening Sept. 18. U.N. Secretary General U Thant who is due in Moscow for talks with Khrushchev, will most likely get the. decision personally soon. The Kremlin has put out feelers for a Khrushchev trip to the United States in recent weeks, , but has diplomatically left the door open so far. If Khrushchev decides to fly to . New York he can be expected to , be concocting a major propaganda . drive, as well as a meeting with President John F. Kennedy for a new cold war policy review. His prestige enhanced by the latest Soviet space success, the Soviet leader may find it desirable to make a new pitch for support from neutral and uncommitted nations at the world assembly. Two years ago when he angrily banged his shoe against the table at the New York assembly he startled many of tbe leaders of newly emerging nations. Neutral and African diplomats have on closer acquaintance, in fact, cooled off towards Russian policies. Especially in Africa, Moscow has to all appearances not been doing too well. Russia suffered outright setbacks in the Congo and in Guinea. The neutrals have also appeared disenchanted with Soviet policies in Geneva where they have When Ym Travel Ga CAREFREE / WITH F TRAVEL ( ! INSURANCE \ f ACCIDENT I I ’ / “ nd I i / PERSONAL EFFECTS | . CALL or SEE I ’ ' George C. Thomas Agent For MARYLAND CASUALTY PHONE 9*211* | ' 12S Madison Street 1 ( Decatur, Indiana * i
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Dr. Kilgore Heads Psychiatric Center A Hoosier psychiatrist, Byron ! Kilgore, M. D., has been appoint - 1 ed chief psychiatrist-director of the newly formed adult peyhiatric center of Northeast Indiana. Announcement o< the appoint ment was made today by the center's board president. Rev. Ervin E. Petznik, who said that the the agency, to be located in the Foellinger center for community servises in Fort Wayne, will serve residents of Adams as well as five other counties in Northeast Indiana. Dr. Kilgore comes to Northeast Indiana after two years of psychiatric training at the Topeka, Kan., Veterans administration hospital, where he was also a fellow in the Menninger school of psychiatry. He graduated from Menninger on June 16. Dr. Kilgore began his psychiatric training at Laßue Carter and Central state hospitals in Inffianapolis after previously serving in private medical practice for 12 years in that city. A captain in the medical corps during World War 11, Dr. Kilgore participated in the Normandy invasion and other European action. While stationed in England, be attended the Army’s school for hand-, ling psychiatric casualties. Dr. Kilgore’s extensive academic and clinical training while at Menninger included all phases of caring for emotionally disturbed or mentally ill patients He also attended Lechworth Village near New York City during his training where he gained knowledge about the problems of mental retardation. Specital courses at Menninger included psychiatry and the law, criminal psychiatry, and religion and psychiatry. As director of the adult psychiatric center of Northeast Indiana, Dr. Kilgore win head a staff composed of two clinical psychologists, five social workers, and several clerical employes. It is expected that the agency will be ready to accept a limited number of cases by this fall. Rev. Petznik said that Dr. Kilgore's appointment corned after an i extensive recruitment and evalu- : ation program by the six-man personnel committee of tbe center’s : board of directors. I Cdebratira Marred By Ward Os Death 11 WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (U?l> , —Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Kem- j mer were celebrating their 36th 3 wedding anniversary Wednesday < when a telegram was delivered to , their home. s But it wasn’t & congratulatory message. It was notification from j Washington that their son, Navy Lt Alvin Ernest Kemmer, 24, was ( killed in a jet plane accident “ h the Western Pacific. < Kemmer was a pilot since i 960 ( stationed with the Navy in California. He was a graduate of West , Lafayette High School and Miami j University of Ohio. His father is j West Lrfayette city attorney. , 4 ago. He has since been confronted with the new administration’s determination to resist Soviet pressures in Berlin, been asked to participate in nuclear test ban negotiations. They have seen for themselves that failure to reach a test ban is not all due to Western feet dragging. Khrushchev may want to wipe out some of these impressions with a new propaganda campaign on peace and arms-cut designs. Moreover, Khrushchev has not met with Kennedy since the tough conference in Vienna, two years IndienopoKs Livesloek INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — Livestock: , Hqgs 6,500; 200-230 lb 18.50-18.75; 190-260 lb 18;0W8.50; 170-190 lb , 17.25-18.25: 150-170 lb 15.5017.00; sows 275350 lb 16.50-17.25 ; 350-400 lb 15.5016.50; 400-550 lb 15.004.75. Cattle 900; calves 75; steers, steady; heifers net fully established; choice steers 27.50; high , good to choice 27.00; few loads I mixed good and choice 26.00-1 26.65; choice steers and heifers 26.50-27.00; cows and bulls steady to 50 lower; utility and commer<cial cows 14;AO-15.SO; canners and cutters 12(9044.00; few 14 JO; utility and commercial bulls 18.0020.00; vealers unevenly steady to' 1:60 higher; choice 31.00; good and i Choice 26.60-30.00. Sheep 'OOO lambs week to 50 lower; choice 22.00; good and mixed good and choice 16.00-18.00. 1
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Democrats Os USafesln ir Weekend Meet By EUGENI J. CADOU United Frew Intematiam* FRENCH LICK, Ind. (UPD— Democratic leaders from 14 states of the Midwest opened a meeting here today in hopes of weakening past Republican leads i n that area. Nearly all of tile states represented voted against President Kennedy in 1960 and the congressional lineup now is 80 Republicans and 61 Democrats. However, there are 16 Democratic and 12 GOP senators and the standing in governors is 10 Democrats and four Republicans. Aloe meeting Saturday are members of the Indiana Democratic Editorial Association who are scheduled to elect Richard Wise, Union City Times and Winchester News and Journal publisher. as president succeeding Roland A. Brodhecker, publisher of the Brownstown Banner. Hoosier Democrats triad hardest to entice President Kennedy to headline the Midwest gathering but got the red light on the eve of the meeing. The congressional leaders of the party, who had been expected to attend, likewise will be absent because of important pending legislation. They are Sen. Mike Mansfield, Montana, and Rep. John W. McCormack, Massachusetts. Other party celebrities will be here during the gathering which will extend through Sunday. They include Secretary of Agriculture Orville M. Freeman; Lawrence O’Brien, special assistant to President Kennedy; Sen. Vance Hartke, chairman of the Senatorial Campaign Committee; Gov. Otto Kerner of Illinois, who will address the Friday night meeting; National Chairman John W. Bailey, National Vice Chairman Mrs. Margaret Price and Governor Welsh. O’Brien is to speak at a Friday luncheon and Freeman at lunch Saturday. Welsh will address the banquet session of the party edi-' tors Saturday night. There will be numerous workshops on registration, polling and campaign issues. Election of conference officials and adoption of rsolutions are slated for Sunday morning. Ray Hemenway of Minnesota is this year’s conference chairman. More than 1,000 registrations have been received for the editors’ banquet. Alex Campbell of Fort Wayne, national committeeman, is scheduled to arrive today and to plunge into his campaigning to land the 1964 party gubernatorial nomination for Dr. Herman B Wells, former president of Indiana University. Other gubernatorial possibilities are Cinton Green, chief aide to Welsh; Roger D. Branigin, Lafayette, former president of the Indiana State Bar Association; and State Sen. Marshall Kizer, Plymouth. Represerited are the following states; North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, lowa, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Minnesota,, Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, West Virginia and Indiana. Charges Failure To Report As Objector CHARGES FAILURE TO NEW ALBANY. Ind. 'UPD — Ralph Gilbert Miller, Jeffersonville, was arrested Wednesday and placed in bond at a U.S. commissioner’s hearing in New Albany on charges of failing to report for civilian wonk as a conscientious objector. Authorities said Miller was indicted recently by a federal grand jury at Indianapolis which found that he classified himself as an objector to military service as a member of Jehovah’s Witnesses and refused when ordered to report for civilian work test April.
—’ -r—» i ■ EVERTI . FRIDAY Nwmr JoSlmly COMBO 9:30 p.m. VICTORY BAR <A¥ and Al CONRAD ' m W. Madison ft.; , <
Platform Shared By Iranian, Goldwater CHICAGO (UPD—Former President Harry S. Truman shared the same speaking platform with Senate GOP Campaign Chairman Barry Goldwater Wednesday night and said he had nothing against the Republicans, ‘‘they’re Just wrong." Truman and Goldwater chatted warmly and animatedly between separate news conferences and after their speeches at the grand banquet of the American Hellenic Educational Progressive Association (AHEPA). But in between they swapped sharp political digs. “Utey're trying to ruin you,” Truman quipped to Goldwater when photographers asked them to pose for one more picture i shaking hands. During the news conference . Truman was chided for becoming ,i friendly with Republicans. “!’m , trying to make Democrats of them,” he replied. Goldwater spoke first at the . banquet, attended by more than > 1,500 persons, drawing his theme from the contributions of the classical Greeks to Western civil- ■ ization. / He rejected what he termed the ; “cynical, c ocksure attitudes of > reformers who describe any ideas inherited from the past as ‘horse and buggy’.” “We conservatives believe there , is something great and something , valuable to be conserved from the past,” he said. “We do not believe we were born yesterday.” When Truman spoke he took less time than the man who in- ' troduced him, Democratic Mayor J Richard J. Daley of Chicago. “If the Greeks had done what, 1 we did under George Washington,” Truman said, “the Roman Empire would never have existed. They just couldn’t get together.” "See,” he said, turning to Goldwater, “I know as much about the Greeks as you do.” Truman read from his March, 1947, address to Congress asking for aid to help the Greek nation fight of communism. “’Biis conservative,” Truman said, gesturing at Goldwater three chairs away, “would have voted against this if he would have had the chance. But we stepped in and saved Greece for the free world.” Then Truman said he did not want to be “an amateur talking to you about things you already know more about,” and sat down. New York Stock Exchange Prices MIDDAY FKICEB A. T. & T., 115%; Central Soya, 28%; du Pont, 202; Ford, 45%; General Electric, 69%; General j Motors, 53%; Gulf Oil, 35%; Stan- i dard OU Ind., 44%; Standard Oil N. 1 J., 52%; U. S. Steel, 45. lowa Star Is Signed By Chicago Zephyrs CHICAGO (UPD — Don Nelson, ! the Chicago Zephyrs No. 3 draft , choice from lowa, has signed his ; 1962-63 contract with the National Basketball Aassociation club. The 6-6 Nelson average 23.8 points a game as a senior. CHICKEN BARBEQUE SATURDAY AUGUST 25 39.91. to? V. F. W. POST HONE Also Open House at The Post
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Protest Extended By Farmer Group
By United Preaa International The vocal National Farmers Organization extended its protest against a ‘leave-the-farm” proposal to a third industrial giant in eight midwestern states Wednesday and appeared to be winning some sympathy. Demonstrations were staged at Ford Motor Co. dealers in lowa, Illinois, Missouri, Nebraska, South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Indiana, said Oren Lee Staley, of Rea, Mo., NFO president. "Hie response (from Ford dealers) was better than we expected,” Staley said. The first of the protests was launched earlier this month at retail stores -of the nation’s two largest mai order house—Sears Roebuck & Co. and Montgomery Ward & Co. Catalogs of the firms were deposited in front of the stores in an effort to get company oficials to repudiate recommendations of the Committee for Economic Development. CED, a non-profit organization supported by contributions from ; 200 of the nation’s leading business firms, has been studying the ! nation’s economy and recommending changes in it for more than 20 years. Some of its recommendations have played a major part in the program of the Kennedy administration. It aroused agricultural ire with a report last spring on the farm problem. In CED’s 75-page report it recommended that two million farmers—a third of those working U.S. farms—be taken out of farming in the next five years and retrained for jobs in industry.
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This, Staley charged, would •’destroy all small business to the UR. and obliterate toe nation s small towns. The NFO appealed to members to launch protests against firms which help support the CED. In Wednesday’s demonstrations, farmers in Ford cars visited the company’s dealers in 18 lowa towns. They carried signs reading, “We own Ford cars and. request the company to repudiate the CED statement." “Our people did an excellent job of emphasizing that the protest was not a criticism of the local dealers,” Staley said. Ninety Ford cars and trucks delivered the protest to a Ford dealer at Madison. Wls. Fifty Fords loaded with farmers carried placards to a Ford dealer at Sioux Falls, S.D. NFO members lodged a protest with an Omaha, Neb., Ford dealer. The Ford company responded in a fashion similar to that of Montgomery Ward and Sears. It pointed out that it had no control over the CED and Dr. Theodore Yntema, a Ford vice president, was acting as a private citizen, not a company official, when he served as chairman of the CED committee which drafted the agriculture report. DON'T SCRATCH THAT ITCH! IN JUST 15 MINUTES, If the tteh needa aeratchin, your 4Mc hack at aay drug atore. You feel qulck-dryia* ITCH-MB-WOT take hold. Itchins auieta down. Antlaeptic action kill" aewna to help apeed healin*. Fine day or nlffht for ceaema. Inaect hitea, rinxweeiu, foot itch, other aurfaee raahea. NOW at Kohne Drua Store.
