Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 134, Decatur, Adams County, 7 June 1963 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
May Raise Wheat Value, Without Law By BERNARD BRENNER United Press International WASHINGTON (UPD — Agri culture Secretary Orville L. Free man may be able to add S2OO mil lion to S3OO million to the valui of the 1964 wheat crop by activat ing a plan approved by Congres: last year, informed sources esti Simeon J. Main REPRESENTATIVE Lincoln National Life Insurance Co. . • Life S Group X • Retirement Annuity YV 3 • Morteare • Hospitalization • Health & Accident
• =- '62 Corvair Monza Coupe 4-speed transmission. 102 H. P. motor. Local one owner car. Like new. '62 Studebaker Lark 4-Door Station Wagon Very low mileage. Like new in every respect. '62 Chevrolet Impala Sport Sedan 23,000 miles. Power steering and power brakes. Radio and heater. Automatic transmission. Save many $ here. '62 Chevrolet Bel Air 4-Door V-8 engine. Powerglide transmission. Radio and heater. Solid light green. Don't lose SBOO on a new car! Buy this! '62 Falcon 4-Door Station Wagon Standard transmission. Radio and heater. All black finish. Gan be bought reasonable. '62 Pontiac Vista 4-Door Hardtop Full power. Fully equipped. Maroon bottom with white top. Really sharp. '6l Monza Coupe Powerglide transmission. Radio and heater. Light beige in color. A-l condition. New car trade. '6l Chevrolet Bel Air 4-Door V-8 engine. Poweralide transmission. Radio and heater. This car is like new.. White with tan interior. '6l Ford Fairlane 500 2-Door 6-cylinder engine. Standard transmission. Radio and heater. Real economy here. '6l Chevrolet Bel Air 4-Door V-8 engine. Factory air conditioning. Powerglide » transmission. Radio and heater. Very clean. '6O Ford 2-Door Hardtop Starliner V-8 enaine. Straight transmission. Radio and heater. All red finish. 'po ftp a. Door Hardtop Solid black Fully equipped. One owner new car trade-in. '6O Ford Convertible Couoe A-I,condition throughout. Full power. Very nice car. '6O Chevro'et Impala 4-Door Hardtop Powerglide transmission. Radio and heater. Bronze bottom with beige top. Very clean. '59 F©-«f 4-Door 6-cvlinder engine. Automatic transmission. Radio and heater. Economy car. Priced to sell. '59 ftMepoblle 4-Door Hardtop Power steerinq and power brakes. Automatic'/transmission. Radio and heater. Clean. v 59 Chevrolet 4-Door Station Wagon V-8 engine. Automatic transmission. Radio and heater. A nice family car. ’56 Pr»Ar;F?»l 4-Door Power steerina and power brakes. Radio and heater. This is a nice clean car. — Many, many more to choose from. There are many used cars on today's market, but there's not a surplus of good cars by any means.. Anyone can sell junk cheap, but good comes considerably higher. OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 9 P. M. MORNINCSTAR AUTO SALES 957 N. 13th St. Phone 3-2046
. NO MONEY DOWN - Up to 6 Months To Pay (■ CUT - PACKAGED - FROZEN BEEF 49*
mated today. This move would, if put into effect, soften the income blow facing wheat farmers next year fol'fbwing their rejection of a program coupling high price supports with mandatory production controls. In the 1962 wheat law, Congress provided that farmers could be allowed to plant price-supported wheat on feed grain acreage in years when a feed grain acreagereduction program was in effect. A 1964 feed grain program was approved by Congress last month. The wheat law gives Freeman authority to allow the substitution | if he finds it would not threaten i successful operation of the wheat | program. I Agriculure Department officials have not completeo their studies jof the probable effect of this and other steps which Freeman I might take to protect 1964 wheat i prices. No final decision on whether to authorize use of the wheatfeed grain interchange has been made. However, experts estimated that use of the substitution authoritv might raise the cost of the 1964 wheat program about sll million, and boost the over all value of ! the wheat crop by S2OO million to S3OO million. The same experts estimated
earlier that if neither t£e Agriculture Department nor Congress takes any new action, wheat income on the 1964 crop might plunge to about $1.6 billion—a S7OO million drop. If the acreage - interchange is authorized, farmers who want to participate would first have to enroll in the 1964 feed grain program by agreeing to idle a fixed percentage — probably about 20 per cent—of their average 1959-60 plantings of corn and other feed grains. The remaining feed grain acreage could then be planted to the grain normally grown on the land, or to wheat at the 1964 support price of $1.25 per bushel. Farmers could, in addition, get the same support price for wheat planted on their regular wheat acreage allotments. Wheat price supports in 1963 are $2 a bushel for farmers who planted within allotments based on a national total of 49.5 million acres. For 1964, with mandatory controls rejected, price .supports drop to $1.25 per bushel and are available only to growers who voluntarily plant within allotments based on the same national total of 49.5 million acres. Services Thursday _ For Clinton Bierie
Clinton L. Bierie, 58, of Fort Wayne, husband of the former Muriel Pontius of Geneva, died early Monday morning at his home. He had been -ill for two years and had been receiving oxygen for the past few weeks. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Eli Bierie, he was born in Wells county. He married Muriel Pontius in 1938 and they resided in Fort Wayne. A retired employee of the Howard Sober Trucking Co., ho wa p n n-iemhor of tho Croceent A"p. FTTR rhii-rh. the i T ni*°d rvirnn-iprntqi Travelers and the Bh'ffton Moncp Trvlffp Survivin'* t)peir}po h’s wife are a cic+w Mrs. S. T 3 Hoffman of TCorf Wpvne: a Annohter Mrs. Pohert Fnnvpn. of h’nrt Wavpe: two wnnHchildren and one greatgrawtrjiilf}. R®v, A. Hunter Colnitfs offici qtpfi at fnne’*al porviopr Thursfiav mornina in th® D O. MnComh & Cone Funeral home. Fo-t Wavn® ■Ri.r-ial was in the Bluffton Six Mile cemetery. LITTLE LEAGUE fContinued from Pace 7) D Fpttibohe. rs, c 3 110 Mcßride ss, lb 12 0 1 Bperv. lb 1112 Moser, ss 10 0 1 ,T. W®nf?®r of 3 0 0 0 Arriaca, If 3 o n fl T.nndrum. n 1 0 0 '-0 Baxter, rs, p 10 0 0 TOTAis 20 4 2 4 srOHE BY INNINGS Timers 1 0 2 0 5 4—l? Senators ? ‘ 03 01 01)—4 YANKEES AB R TT F. Rich, cf 2 0 0 0 Snvder. cf Wolpert. If 3 0 11 Gpimer rs 2 0 0 0 RoAwell, r>h 10 0 0 Call. 3b, c "7“~ 3 110 Flotnher. p 10 10 Hess, 1b 10 0 0 Rickord, c 10 0 0 Tohicnn 2b 0 0 0 0! Wolfe, lb, p 110 1 Frisinger. ss 0 0 0 0 j Classen, ss, n 2 0 0 0 McConnell. 2b 110 1 Augsburge-, 3b 0 0 0 0 TOTALS. 20 3 3 3 WHITE BOX AB R H E Tester, c 2 2 10 Fisher, ss 3 2 10 Winteregg, cf 3 2 10 I. Schultz, rs . 2 110 Smith. Ib, 3b 3 0 2 0 Ri Archer, p 3 0 0 0 Mendez, 2b 2 0 0 1 J. Fisher, If 10 0 0 Ro. Archer, If 2 2 10 R. Gehrig, 3b 10 0 0 Lutes, lb 2 10 0 TOTALS 24 10 71 SCORE BY INNINGS Yankees 0021 00— 3 White Sox 0 0 4 51 x—lo JEHOVAH’S W rrv FSSES Kinzriom Hall Carner Monroe and Ninth Sundav 3:00 p.m.: “The Future in the Licht of Bible Prophecv” will be the subject of a public Bible lecture to be given bv Clyde D. Steele, local presiding minister. Sunday 4T5 p.m.: Watchtower study and discussion on the isub ject. “Sneaking the Truth Unites.” One of the scripture texts for conj sideration wfll be Ephesians 4:25, “Speak truth each one of you with his neighbor ” Tuesday 8:00 p.m.: Area studies in Bible study aid, “Let Your Name Be ' Sanctified.” Friday 7:30 p.m.: Theocratic 1 Ministry School fololwed by the i Kingdom Service Meeting. All meetings open to the public.
THB DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Crooks Pose As Police In Stale INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — Four men were held today on accusa. tions of operating an extortion racket in which they passed themselves off as policemen to get money from their victims. Authorities said the suspects, arrested Thursday, would pry on unsuspecting persons in public places, then accuse them of a moral violation or other crime and accept payoff money after flashing phony police ciedentials. The four suspects were identified as Lewis Kozuszek, 50, Carlisle, 111., Clifford W. Dok, Niles, Mich., John L. Honchell, 50, Fort Worth, Fla., all charged with obtaining money under false pre-
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tenses, and Willard M. Moore, 36, Miami, charged with grand larceny. Lt. Henry Wolff said the ring was well known in the eastern United States and has been operating in the Indianapolis are for several months. He said Kozuszek and Dok were in possession of phony police badges and identification papers. Police said they found faked criminal records in Honchell’s car and theorized they were used in their rigged “investigations.” Moore also had a fake police badge and identification, they said. Wolff described the suspects as “careful workers and smooth talkers” , and said they were believed involved in several extortion cases in the area. They managed to pry thousands of dollars out of some of their victims, he said. If you have something to sell oi trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.
Students Caught ! In Cemetery GREENFIELD, Ind. (UPI)—Po- > lice broke up a congregation of 61 high school students in a country cemetery early today and threatened to file trespassing and disorderly conduct charges against them. Indiana State Police said there , had been complaints of vandalism at the Hays Cemetery in the northeast corner of Hancock County for some time, and when : area residents saw cars pulling i up at the cemetery after midnight • they called officers. Police said there were about 25 i cars at the cemetery when troop- . ers arrived. The youths, about 16 to 20 years old and all described as from Anderson High School which held commencement exercises for its seniors Thursday night, were taken to jail at Greeni field In a school bus. Porsecutor George Lewis with-
held the filing of charges and or- i dered all 61 youths to show up at < the cemetery Saturday to work at s a cleanup job removing litter and 1 repairing broken tombstones. 1 Lewis said anyone who failed to report for duty would be prosecuted. • * Authorities said some of the * youths admitted they had been * there before. Iran Crushes I 1 1 Riots, Revolt Tehran, Iran (UPI) — Tehran’s military governor said today, the j shah's army has crushed religious rioting which flared for four days 1 and is prepared tc follow “shoot to kill” orders to keep the uneasy peace. “I now am confident order is I restored,” said Gen. Nematollah Nassiri, the military governor, “but I still hold the shah’s ‘shoot to kill’ order.” Nassiri reported more troop-1
FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1963
rioter clashes at the southern city of Shiraz Thursday night. But he said the nation’s casualty toll in the rioting remained 86 killed and 193 injured. “Minor disturbances quickly broken up by the troops with no casualties,” Nassiri said of Thursday night’s Shiraz dlßordyg.S»-^. He said there were no' reports of new disturbances elsewhere in the nation Thursday night. -Day-to-day life returned to Tehran as the army withdrew its machine gun emplacements and barbed-wire entanglements from around trouble spots. But dozens of tanks rumbled through the streets and military patrols in jeeps dashed about behind police cars with wailing sirens. Martial law remained in effect and was expected to continue in force for another month to allow military, rather than civilian, | courts try the estimated 200 persons arrested. I Trade In a good town — Decatur.
