Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 207, Decatur, Adams County, 3 September 1963 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
County Agent’s Corner
SEED WHEAT: It will soon be time to get that wheat seeded. You've probably got the seed wheat cleaned and ready to go. If you’re in doubt on variety, there are several good • “ ones. Monon has yielded well and is the shortest strawed, earliest wheat. Reed is our newest wheat, a week later than Monon, taller in straw, but a high yielding variety. LaPorte is tallest in straw, has loose smut resistance and is a high yielder. Red coat is similar to Monon, a little taller and about two days later in maturity. Vermillion probably responds best to very late seeding or following soybeans. Duel has yielded well and will continue to do a good job. Certified seed can be obtained from our certified growers Elmer Isch, R. 4, Bluffton; Winfred Gerke, R. 3, Decatur; Hugo Bulmahn, R, 2, Decatur, and Bulmahn Farm Supply, R. 2, Decatur. CORN INSECTS: Recently I had some insect specimens from the corn field which can be of serious concern. They were the adult beetles of the northern corn root worm. If the adult beetles are there now, there certainly were the root worms feeding earlier in the season. They feed on corn roots, sapping the strength of the plant and making it more easily blown over this fall. This just points out the fact that we should be more concerned with using soil insecticide at planting time. I certainly don’t recommend using insecticides unless you have the problem, but let’s check up this fall on lodging and what caused it. CORN SILAGE ECONOMICAL FEED: Plan to make maximum use of corn silage in feeding your dairy cows and replacement stock, reminds Dr. Willard Dillon, Purdue University extension dairyman. On suitable land, com harvested for silage provides the most economical source of energy for milk production. Corn should be harvested for silage as soon as most of the kernels are dented and before many of the leaves have dried. At this stage, , eorn contains 25 to 30 per cent dry matter and yields the greatest tonnage per acre of feed which will store well and be eaten read- » flyExcellent corn silage can be ;J .. ,/nade in stacks, bunkers, trench or upright silos by adequately packing. Dillon says it, usually pays to rf’ use a plastic cover, well anchored sdt with sawbdust, soil and sand or >< used tires. When maximum corn silage is fed and hay is limited to five • j pounds per cow daily, then an 18 j,j per cent total protein grain mix Should be fed at a rate of one i
TV PROGRAMS
WANE-TV Channel 15 TUESDAY Evening <6:oo—Bachelor Father '6:3o—Early Evening News 6:4s—Walter Cronkite — News *:oo—Sugarfoot 8:00—Lloyd Bridges Show B:3o—Talent Scouts 9:3o—Picture This ,10:00 —Keef Brasselle Show 11:00—Late News 11:15—Sports 11:26—X3nlf Tins 11:25—Award Theater WEDNESDAY Morning 7:ls—Daily Word 7:20 — Bob Carlin — News 7:2s—College of the Air 7:55—80b Carlin — News B:oo—Captain Kangaroo 9:oo—Adventures in Jaradise 10:00—Sounding Board 10:30—I Love Lucy 11:00—The McCoys 11:30—Pete & Gladys Afternoon 12:00—Love Os Life 12:25—C8S News 12:30—Search For Tomorrow 12:45—Guiding Light I:oo—Ann Colone I:2s—‘News I:3o—As The World Turns 2:oo—Password 2:3o—Houseparty 3:00—To Tell the Truth 3:2S—CBS News 3:3o—Edge of Night 4 :00—Secret Storm 4:3o—Millionaire 5:00 —Jack Powell Show 5:55—G01f Tips Evening 6:oo—Bachelor Father 6:3o—Early Evening News 6:45—-Walter Cronkite — News 7:oo—Whirly birds 7:3O—CBS Iteports B:3o—Dobie Gillis 9:oo—The 111111, 1111 es 9:3o—Dick Van Dyke Show 10:00—Circle Theater 11:00—Late News 11:15— Sports 11:20—Golf Tips 11:25—Award Theater WKJG-TV Channel 33 TUESDAY Evening s:4s—December Bride 6:ls—Gatesway to Sports 6:2s—Jack Gray & the News 6:4o—The Weatherman 6:4s—Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:oo—Best or Grouc.hu 7:3o—Laramie B:3o—Empire 9:Bo—Dick Powelh Theatre 10:30—Special 11:00—News & Weather 11:15—Sports Today — 11:20—Tonight Show WEDNESDAY Morning . 7:oo—Today 9:oo—Engineer John 9:3o—Edltot-'s Desk 9:ss—Faith to Live By 10:00—Say When 10:25—NBC News 10:30 —Play Your Hunch
Adams County Farmers’ Corner
pound of grain for each three pounds of milk produced per cow per day. This grain mix can be made by grinding and mixing 650 pounds of corn and cob with 250 pounds of soybean oil meal, 15 pounds of sale and 15 pounds of steamed bone meal. GET CORN, SOYBEAN STORAGES READY: Grain storage bins should be clean and insect-free before placing newly harvested corn and soybeans in them, reminds Dave Matthew, Purdue University extension entomologist. Now is a good time to clean out bins and surrounding areas. Spray interior of the bins with either 2% per cent methoxychlor or 1% per cent premium grade malathion insecticides. Use one pint of the 57 per cent premium grade malathion emulsion concentrate in three gallons of water or mix one quart of the 25 per cent methoxychlor concentrate in three gallons of water. Spray binds to “run-off” to insure adequate coverage. Ear corn that becomes infested in open crib storage should be shelled, placed in tight bins and fumigated. In steel bins, use five gallons of the 80-20 fumigant mixture or six gallons of the 75-25 mixture per 1,000 bushels of grain. In wooden bins, increase the amount to six and eight gallons respectively, Matthew recommends. To protect grain from attack by Indiana meal moth or other sur-face-infesting insects apply a per cent malathion spray at the rate of one quart per 1,000 square feet of grain surface. Wheat in storage should be examined at this time of year to detect any possible beginning of insect infestations. Where infestations are found, fumigate bins as soon as possible, Purdue Mimeo E-66, “The Control of Stored Grain Insects,” contains more detailed information. 0 20 Years Ago Today 0 0 Sept. 3, 1943 — The Adams county war bond quota was oversubscribed by $578, with total purchase of 104,949. Mrs. Minnie Venis suffered a broken leg in a fall at her home on North Seventh street. A. J. Baker, former commander of Adams Post 43, American Legion, has been appointed southern vice commander of the fourth district of the Legion. Mr. and Mrs. J. Ward Calland have returned home from a several days’ visit in the east. Thousands of Allied troops pour across Messina Strait into Italy. .
Central Daylight Time
11:00—The Price Is Right 11:30—Concentration Afternoon v 12:00—Noon News 12:10—The Weatherman 12:15—Wayne Rothgeb 12:30—Truth or Consequences 12:55—N8C News 1:00—Best of Groucho I:3o—Your First Impression 2:oo—Ben Jerrod 2:2S—NBC News 2:3o—The Doctors 3:oo—Loretta Young Theater 3:3o—You Don’t Say 4:oo—Match Game 4:2s—News 4:3o—Make Room for Daddy 5:00—Bozo the Clown s:4s—December Bride Fvrnlnic —Gatesway to Sports 6:25 Jack Gray and the News 6:4o—The Weatherman 6:4s—Huntley-Brinkley Report ° 7:oo—Bat Masterson 7:3o—The Virginian 9:oo—Kraft Mystery Theatre 10:00- Eleventh Hour' 11:00—News and Weather 11:15—Sport Today 11:20- March to Washington 12:00 Tonight Show WPTA-TV Channel 21 / TUESDAY Evening 6:00—6 P.M. Report 6:ls—Ron Cochran — News 6:3o—Yogi Bear 7:oo—Zoora ma 7:30, —Combat B:3o—Hawaiian Eye 9:3o—Untouchables 10:30—Focus on America 11:00 —News — Murphy Martin 11:10—Weathervane 11:15—Steve Allen Show WEDNESDAY Morning •9:oo—Fun Time 11:30—The Jack LnLanne Show lojio Ladies Day 10:30- Mom's Morning Movie 11:30—Seven Keys A itrrnoon 12:00—21 Noon Report 12:30—Father Knows Best i:0,0 —General Hospital I:3o—Tennessee Ernie Ford 2:oo—Day In Court 2:24—Alex Drier — News 2:3o—Jane Wyman 3:oo—Queen For a Day 3:3o—Who Do You Trust 4:oo—American Bandstand 4:3o—Discovery '63 4 :55—American Newsstand s:oo—Mickey Mouse Club u:3o—Superman Evening 6:00—6 P.M. Report 6:ls—Ron Cochran — News 6:3o—Dick Tracy 7:00—Bold Journey 7:3o—Wagon Train B:3o—“Going My Way” 9:3o—Our Man Higgins 10:00—Naked Citi —fiP*" — Mutphy Martin 11:10—-Weathervane 11:15—Stave Allen Show DRIVE-IN ~."The Chapman lieport" Tues. »ed. Thum. 7:55. Repeated nt 10:30.
Purple Penning; By: Pasty. Lee Leaders County Extension Agent Home Economics This being “Better Breakfast Month” I hope everyone has decided to start eating a nutritionally sound breakfast — particularly the people who are starting back to school. The lesson leaders who attended the training meeting for the two club lessons on “Family Food Needs” were treated to an excellent demonstration given by Erma Stauffer from the Hartford Happy Go Lucky 4-H club. Erma gave her demonstration on “magic meals’ at the district demonstration contest early this summer. COMMUNISM: Please circle November 18 on your calendar as that is the date that J. O. Dunbar, Purdue University specialist, will give a talk on “Meeting the Communist Challenge.” ~ Originally this was scheduled for November 15, but I wrote Mr. Dunbar that was the evening of the Decatur - Adams Central basketball game. He very kindly changed the date to Monday evening, November 18. at 8 p.m. in the Community Center. The public is invited. (N STATE FAIR GIRLS SCHOOL: During the state fair week three girls from Adams county were fortunate enough to be able to attend the state fair girls school. The three honor girls were: Rita Norquest, Joan Brown, and Judy Selking. Mrs. Esther Sohl, Noblesville, was the director of this year's school. In addition to regular classes, the director scheduled field trips to hospitals, settlement houses and institutions specializing in rehabilitation as well as an art institute.
Some 22 scholarships are offered to girls attending the sehool. The Indiana home demonstration association provides one scholarship. The Indiana state fair board offers 12 scholarships* for honor girls plus one scholarship to an honor girl to return as assistant director for the suceeding yeag. Under the auspices of the state fair board the schools for girls is run co-operatively with Purdue University. The school’s advisory board consists of Miss Eva L. Goble .assistant director of extension at Purdue; Miss Mary Frances Smith, 4-H staff advisor, Purdue; Mrs. Hortense Wetzel, Indianapolis; Mrs. Kathleen Hendericks, county extension agent-
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home economics, Columbus, and Mrs. Ida Wright, state fair board, Franklin. “BAKE YOUR - WAY TO A 8.A.”: The entry blanks for the Pyrofax Gas company’s baking contest have just arrived in the office. Each teenage girl should take advantage of this because she might win. The company will give three $2,000 college scholarship? and several other prizes — including three trips for two to the 1964 New York World’s Fair. All teenagers are invited to enter (including boys.) What one must do is submit an essay in a hundred words or less mased on the theme. “Why I want to go to College” and with a recipe (which does not have to be original) for cake, pie, bread or cookies, and a completed entry blank. TOMATO RELISH (A traditional Indiana Relish) 6 ripe tomatoes, peeled and sliced 3 cucumbers, peeeled and sliced 3 medium sweet onions, sliced 1/3 cup cider vinegar 1/2 c. water 1/4 c. sugar 1/2 tsp. salt 1/4 tsp. pepper Alternate slices of tomatoes, cucumbers and onions in large bowl. Combine remaining ingredients and shake well; pour over vegetables. Refrigerate at least 24 hours, turning once or twice to distribute flavors. Makes 12 servings. LANGUAGE CLASSES: In 1964 one of our leader lessons will be devoted to “International Understanding” and some club members expressed an interest in learning another language. At the present time I have been able to contact Miss Catherine Weidler who would be willing to teach German. The classes would be Thursday from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. from October 1 to February 1. The fee for the entire course would be S2O, plus the cost of the text book. Those of you who have considered taking another language course will realize that this is quite reasonable. If anyone is interested, please contact the county extension office before September 20. SOMEONE SAID: “Service is the price you pay for the space you occupy.”
Schricker Pleased Al Birthday Card Former Governor and Mrs. Henry F. Schricker were very pleased with the birthday card signed by a large number of those present at the Democratic rally last Thursday night, and spent an hour and a half Friday discussing old times, Ruby Meyer, who took the card to him reported today. Mr. and Mrs. Meyer spent the weekend with their daughter, Elinore, in Valparaiso, and on the way over stopped about noon at the Schricker home in Knox. They live in the home which they built 50 years ago. The former governor, celebrating his 80th birthday, came to the door, and insisted that the Meyers come in, and went across the street to escort Mrs. Meyer from the car. He asked all about his' old friends in Adams county, and discussed many of the events which he and Meyer could recall from his two terms as governor. Meyer retired this year after having served many years with the department of conservation and state highway departments. Despite his 80 years, the governor's memory was still very sharp, and he could even recall the names of neighbors of the Meyers who he had known decades ago. * • M -* - ? New York Stock * Exchange Price* MIDDAY PRICES A. T. & T., 124%; Central Soya, 27’b; DuPont, Ford, 54“ t ; General Electric, ,81%; General Motors, 76; Gulf Oil, 49'/ 4 ; Standard Oil Ind., 65>/4; Standard Oil N. J„ 71%; U. S. Steel, 5214.
President Os UE Scores GE Offer Albert J. Fitzgerald, general president of UER&MWA (UE), has issued the following statement on the General Electric Co.’s wage and contract offer made Aug. 28. “The wage and contract offer of the General Electric Co. for the next three year follows the steadily retrogressive pattern that has marked the company’s relations with its employees during the past 15 years. “This year, as every indication points to a new record profit peak for GE in 1963, the company offer is the cheapest to be made in collective bargaining (since.. 1948. It shortchanges GE employees even below the unsatisfactory 3% wage guidelines of the Kennedy administration, amounting to less than 2 per cent a year for the next three years. “On some of the fringe issues raised by the union the company has offered improvements, where the improvements could be made at negligible cost. On the major needs of the people, however, GE has done nothing, or next to nothing. “During the course of the three years since the last negotiations, GE employees have lost 10 cents an hour in real wages through the increase in the cost of living. The company .deprived them of cost of living protections three years ago. The 2 per cent offered for the next three years ignores this loss, and promises only further similar losses in the years ahead. “The company offers nothing to increase employment, or to provide added security on the job to people now working, or to protect the families of GE workers who are laid off. “The company takes a further backward step in demanding that vacations, as well as pensions, and insurance be sewed up in five year agreements, which would prevent the possibility of any improvements for the next five years. “And as a final emphasis to GE's backward outlook in labor relations, the company is seeking to make even this wretchedly inadequate package conditional upon the elimination of contract protections that have been in force for the past 15 to 20 years.” Two Men Fined In City Court Today A local man was fined for public intoxication and a Michigan man for driving while under the influence, by city court Judge John B. Stults this morning. Billy Gay Ashbrook, 33, of 821 N. 12th St., paid a fine of $lO and costs, amounting to S3O, on a conviction of public intoxication. Ashbrook was arrested by deputy sheriff Warren Kneuss on the Tile Mill Road Sunday evening, near Monroe, while he was riding in a car driven by his wife. Harold F. Sterling, 37-year-old resiednt of Galesburg, Mich., was fined SSO and costs, totaling 71.75, and sentenced to five days in jail. Sterling was actually sentenced tc six month, but all of the sentence with the exception of the five days were suspended on the condition that he leave town upon completing the term. He was remanded to jail when unable to pay the fine. Nabbed in Berne Sterling was arrested by Berne police chief Don Grove and officer Jerry Flueckiger in that city Saturday evening around 11 o’clock, and charged with driving while under the influence. In addition to the fine and sentence. Judge Stults picked up his driver’s license and will send it to the state bureau of motor vehicles with the recommendation that it ,be suspended for one year. Judge Stults explained in court this morning that under a new law which recently went into effect, anyone convicted of driving while under the influence must be sentenced to at least a five-day jail term, which was done in the case of Sterling.
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Hi Neighbors! Grass is a wonderful plant. Its merits are expressed very well in the following quoation by an unknown author: “What a man, a community a nation can do, think, suffer, immgine of achieve depends upon what it eats. Bran-eaters and vegetarians are not kings of men. Rice and potatoes are diet of slaves. Die race that lives oh beef has ruled the world and the better the beef the greater the deeds they have done.” “The primary form of food is grass. Grass feeds the ox; the ox nourishes man; man dies and goes to grass again; and so the tide ofc life with everlasting; repetition in continuous circles, moves endlessly on and upward, and in more sense than one all flesh is grass.” Chicago Produce CHICAGO (UPD—Produce: Live poultry roasters 23-24; special fed White Rock fryers 19 %- 20; barred rock fryers 18; heavy hens 17%-18%. Cheese single daisies 41-44%; longhorns 42-43; processed loaf 39-44; Swiss Grade A 50-55; B 49-53. Butter steady; 93 score 57%; 92 score 57%; 90 score 56%, 89 score 55%. Eggs steadier; white large extras 39%; mixed large extras 39%; mediums 34; standards 33. Chicago Livestock CHICAGO (UPD — Livestock: Hogs 7,000. 25 to 35 lower; No 1-2 200-230 lb 17.00-17.25; No 1-3 190-260 lb 16.75-17.00; No 2-3 250-300 lb 16.00 - 16.75; No 13 180200 lb 16.50-16.75. Cattle 18,000, calves none; slaughter steers 1300 lb down mostly 25 lower with not enough sales of steers over 1300 lb to establish trend; heifers 25 lower; slaughter steers high choice and prime 1100-1300 lb 24.75-25.25; 5 loads at 2525; choice 900-1250 lb 24.00-24.75; few loads of choice 1250-1300 lb 24.00 - 24.25; high choice and prime around 1425 lb 24.00; a few sales good 22.0023.50; slaughter heifers chojce 850-1100 lb 23.00-23.75 ; 2 loads mostly high choice with a few prime 900-950 lb 24.00. Sheep 400; spring slaughter lambs 50 to 1.00 higher than Friday’s sharply lower close; deck choice and prime 104 lb spring slaughter lamb 21.00; bulk good and choice 80-100 18.50-20.00. Indianapolis Livestock . INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — Live* stock: Hogs 12,000; barrows aand gilts weak to 25 lower; 200-230 lb 17.0017.25; 190-260 lb 16.20-17.10; 170-190 lb 16.00-16.75; sows steady to 50 lower; 350-400 lb 14.50-15.50 ; 400500 lb 14.00-14.75; 450-600 lb 13.5014.25; 500-650 lb 13.00-13.50. Cattle 4,00; calves 100; steers and heifers steady to weak to 25 lower; average choice and prime steers 25.00; high good and choice 23.75-24.75; good 22.75-23.75; standard to low good 20.00-24.75; choice heifers 23.00-23.75; good and choice 22.50-23.00; good 21.2522.50; cows strong to 50 higher; utility and commercial 13.00-15.00; canners and cutters 13.00-14.00; bulls steady; cutter and commercial 16.50-18.50; vealers steady; good and choice 24.00-28.00; good 19.00-24.00. Sheep 1,600; spring lambs 59-1 1.00 lower; choice and prime , 19.00-20.00; good and choice 17.0019.00; low good 14.00-17.00.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller, Jr. President John G. Heller-Vice President Chas. E. HolthouseSecretary-Treasurer Subscription Bates By Mail, in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $10.00; Six months, $5.50; 3 months, $3.00. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $11.25; 6 months, $6.00; 3 months, $3.25. By Carrier, 35 cents per week. Single copies, 7 cents. Ancient Civilizations Western civilization has been so blinded by the glories of Greece and Rome that we frequently find ourselves feeling that there have really been no other great civilizations, and that blonde, blue-eyed men have evolved all civilizations. ’ Modern scholarship, while still not widely disseminated through public schools, has completely destroyed this image. In fact, this past year the enigmatic “Linear A” script from the early 3,500 B.C. Minoan civilization on Crete has been tentatively identified as a Semitic language. Not only that, modem man is not, potentially, the most intelligent creature to ever roam the earth —that ugly old fossil, the Neanderthal man, had a larger brain capacity. And while many* students used to claim that only modern man, Home sapiens, could i’eally be called man, in that he made tools and utilized fire, it has recently been discovered that the pebble tools of Africa were made by Australopithecines, erect-walking, short Ape-like beings that lived between 2 million and half a million years ago. - Other tools were created by those other greatuncles of modern men, the Pithecantropines-Pekin man, Java Man, and now the Sahara man, Atlantropus, a cousin of the first two. You see, until about 1,000-800 8.C., north Africa was a beautiful, warm savanna plain, with rivers and lakes. Modern men, of the types, they replaced the Neanderthal types stranded by the Flandrian transgression, still in existence, were found there a searly as 9,000 B.C. These includ- ■ ed both Negro and white tribles; and combinations ’ and imtermarriages of both. Evidence indicates that the latter may have played an important part in founding the pre-dynastic settlements in Upper Egypt, pre-dating the Pharoahs.’ Later, herdsmen from the East, possibly colored Ethiopians, arrived. During this period, the hunting-foood gathering, pastoral peoples were thickly populating North Africa. Elephant, rhinoceros, griaffe, wild ass, antelope, and hippopotamus were everywhere. About 1,200 8.C., just after our ancestors had raised the funerary altars at stonehenge in England to the great Mother Goddess, charioteers from Europe invaded North Africa, and their colonies soon forced the other peoples inland where today the Peul tribes of the Savannah, have many of the attributes, manners and customs of the ancient herdsmen of the Sahara. The new horsemen forced their way south to the Niger, and by the 6th century B.C. were riding horseback, as well as by chariot. The early Greek and Roman writers call them Libyans and Garamantes, and that they took part in Hannibal’s campaigns in Spain and Italy, as he crossed the Alps with elephants. By this time, however, the lush vegetation was drying up, and from about 600 B.C. the desert rapidly advanced in North Africa. Today, lonely isolated trees, some of them 3,000 to 4,000 years old, and thousands of rock pictures and carvings, are all that remain of the once flourishing Sahara.
®For GENERATION after GENERATION - after GENERATION r r vO FARM FAMILIES •*/' ' HAVE DEPENDED ON For 45 years, Land Bank Loans have set the pace in long-term farm financing. Nearly 2,000,000 farmers ,< |WwTT|TB have used Land Bank Loans to buy or add to farms, build or make improvements, refinance other debts and -other sound long-term purposes. Land Bank Loans give long terms, losv interest rates. There is no application fee, no appraisal fee, no loan gj| f-’j service fee, no closing fee ... No tat of ANY kind. Credit life insurance is available. See Your Nearest Federal Laud Bank Association or U'rite Federal Land Bank. 224 E. Broadway Louisville, Kentucky - SEE - THOMAS E. WILLIAMS, Mgr. ; ■ I j FEDERAL LAND BANK ASS’N. 216 S. Second St. DECATUR Phone 3-3784
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, IM3
