Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 73, Decatur, Adams County, 26 March 1964 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Todays Market P. B STEWART A CO. Corrected March 26 160 to 17® 13.00 170 to 180 13.50 180 to 190 14.00 • 190 to 220 14.50 220 to 240 14.00 240 to 250 - 14.00 250 to 260 ....13.00 260 to 270 12.75 270 to 280 . 12.50 280 to 290 12 25 290 to 300 12.00 . Roughs 300 down 12.25 300 to 330 12.25 330 to 360 12.00 360 to 400 . 11.50 400 to 450 11.00 450 to 500 10.75 500 to 550 10.50 550 up 10.25 Stags 9.50 Boarsß.so to 9.50 WHOLESALE EGO QUOTATIONS Furnished By DECATUR FARMS Corrected March 26 Large White Eggs .28 Large Brown Eggs .28 Medium White .23 Pullet .21 • Pontiac • (MNC New & Used Can * Trucks EVANS Soles ft Service, I Fhgt n. i . Es You Want To 1 IT SMOKIN6 I try SMOKELESS .OZENGES earless aid that may help E k the smoking habit. g. of 15 no A Only OU H ■ —SMITH Drug Co.

jawm F ; t aFOWI! I '' ('sw* t. ‘ JMk/f Mr z K i V JL- * £ I *' ■ JM? I fl IfIPIi ■ H .<45 ■ IMI B Win , e whKT . s'4’? Mb w w I % JKf ' z - junior coats by any other name are not the same BUTTONED-UP LOOK, never more timely, never more perfectly detailed with cuffed sleeves and stitch detailing. New-season waffle weave pattern in white, pink, blue, yellow. Junior sizes 5 to 15. SPRINGTIME FAVORITE, the Chanel-type suit in the slim, look, in loop fabric bound in hand-woven-look brdfd.-ln white, beige, pink, blue, yellow. Junior sizes 5 to 15. NEW FAN to keep the plaid-fad fire going, the 2-buf-ton flare-back coat with wide flap pockets. In springtime combinations of white with green and c6ral overplaid, or white with blue and yellow overplaid. Junior sizes 5 to 15. NIBLICK & CO. FOR SMART FASHIONS ,

Chicago Produce CHICAGO (UPD—Produce: Live (poultry too few receipts to report prices. Cheese processed loaf 3943%; brick 38-44; Swiss Grade A 5254; B 50-54. Butter steady: 93\ score 57%; 92 score 57%; 90 score 56y 4 ; 89 score 55. Eggs unsettled: white large extras 34%; mixed large extras 34%; mediums 29; standards 30. Chicago Livestock CHICAGO (UPD—Livestock: Hogs 4,500; mostly 25 higher but few closing sales steady; mostly No 1-2 200-225 lb 15.2515.50; 200 head at 15.50; bulk No 1-3 190-230 lb 14.75-15.25; 230-250 lb 14.25-14.75; No 2-3 250-270 lb 13.75-14.25. Cattle 500, no calves; not enough any class for market test. Sheep 200; few sales wooled slaughter lambs about steady; but not enough any class offered for market test: good and choice 80-105 lb slaughter lambs 21.00-23.00. Indianapolis Livestock INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—Livestock: Hogs 4,000: steady to 25 higher: 1-2 190-225 lb 15.25-15.50, few 15.75; 1-3 190-230 lb 14.7515.25; 230-260 lb 14.25-14.75, few 15.00; sows steady to 25 higher; 1-3 300400 lb 12.50-13.50, 2-3 400600 lb 11.50-12.50. Cattle 300; calves 25; steers about steady; heifers scarce; choice steers 22.50; few good 20.00-21.00; standard to good 18.00-20.00; choice mixed steers and heifers 21.75; cows steadyutility and commercial 13.0015.00; canners and cutters 12.00-14.50; bulls steady; cutter to commercial 17.00-19.50, few 20.00; vealers scarce: few standard to choice 20.00-30.00. Sheep 25; scarce* New York Stock Exchange Price MIDDAY PRICES A. T. & T., 138%; DuPont, 260; Ford, 55%; General Electric. 86%; General Motors, 82%; Gulf Oil, 53%; Standard Oil Ind., 62%; Standard Oil N. J., 84%; U. S. Steel, 60V4.

Frenchmen Kick On De Gaulle Handouts

By JOSEPH W. GRIGG ’ United Press International ’ 1 PARIS (UPD — President Charles de Gaulle of France is coming under heavy fire for trying to play “Uncle Sugar” too much and too often. He has been getting a lot of political mileage by showing that France, in proportion to its population, hands out more foreign aid than any other country — including the United States. Now, as De Gaulle sets out to win more friends and influence more people with additional largesSe to Latin America, Frenchmen are beginning to kick at picking up the tab. A hefty debate has been launched in the French press over assertions that De Gaulle’s program of economic handouts is bleeding France dry. Money Squandered Charged It is being charged that France is squandering money on palaces and armies for African rulers that could well be put to use on highways, schools and housing for this country. It is being asked why Frenchmen should pay out aid funds to Latin America when millions still are without proper housing in France itself. De Gaulle is well aware of the mounting storm of criticism. He tried to head it off in part in his Jan. 31 news conference by emphasizing the importance of France’s foreign aid effort. He plans a counterattack against critics of his foreign Three Are Arrested For Dynamite Trap MIAMI (UPD — A railrod union official and 10-year employe of the Florida East Coast Railway was arrested Wednesday and charged with setting a 50-pound dynamite bomb trap on a track south of Vero Beach March 12. Three other men were arrested within hours after the dynamite bomb was rigged under the noses of FBI agents who had staked out the tracks on a tip from an informer. But a fourth man escaped, agents said. John Katsikos. 40. recording secretary for Local 555 of the Brotherhood of Railroad Car Men at Miami, was apparently the fourth man. - Katsikos was charged both with conspiracy to set the dynamite trap 'and with actually placing the bomb on the railroad trestle spanning a canal south of Vero Beach. After FBI agents watched the bomb being set from their hiding places near the trestle, they said they followed Joseph Leo Vetter of Miami and John Wesley into Fort Pierce and arrested them. The next day, Hugh Winn of Miami was arrested. All three were former FEC employes and members of operating railroad unions. They are awaiting trial on federal train wreck charges under $50,000 bond each. Agents said Katsikos, a native of Cleveland, Ohio, was formerly employed by the sab-otage-plagued FEC for 10 years as a car inspector. He lost his FEC job after the carrier was struck Jan. 23, 1963, by members of 11 non-op-erating unions. The operating unions, including the Brotherhoodofßailroad Car Men, have refused to cross the picket lines set up by the non-op-erating unions.

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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

~ aid program in a series of t speeches during a meet - theI people tour of northeastern E France in April. Goes To Former Colonies France currently is spending more than $1.2 billion annually on foreign aid. Although the United States spends nearly three times that amount, it does, in fact, make France per head of population and in relation to her national income the world’s largest dispenser of foreign aid. Nearly all of it goes at the moment to France’s former African colonies. By far the greatest proportion of this—more than S2OO million annually—is given to Algeria under the 1962 Evian agreement, which gave the for-J mer French North African pos-* sion independence. •- But it is being asked now J why France has sent nearly J 30,000 school teachers to Afri-Jr ca—14,650 of them to Algeria— = at the French taxpayer’s ex-* pense when French schools and£ universities are desperately un--dermanned. 1 p Five Persons t Dead As Boat ! sl Is Capsized i BOYNTON BEACH; Fla | (UPD — The Coast Guard re-f sumes a search today for a pos-t sible fifth victim of an ill-fated I tourist fishing party that was' flung into the treacherous waters of Boynton Inlet from a capsized boat. Sheriff’s deputies searched without success along beaches Wednesday night for Jerry Sapp, 20, of Fort Lauderdale, the’ only one of 20 passengers and crewmen of the drift fishing boat Two Georges not accounted for. The 65-foot boat was bowled over by an 18 to 20 foot wave as it entered the inlet from a deep fcea fishing trip Wednesday. "R “I tried to beat it in, throttling th? whole way, it was just too close. It kept sucking the boat ... it caught us on the bottom and rolled us right over on the port side,” said Capt. James (Bill) Stevens "■■frdm'hishospitalbed. ‘‘There was nothing I could do. Nature had its way.” The deaa tvere Harry Williams. about 65 of Lyndhurst, Ohio: Ernest Jeffries, about 70, , of Boynton Beach, a retired Cleveland, Ohio, burial vault manufacturer; Mrs. Ernest (Mary Agnes) Whitman, about 70, of. East Boston, Mass., and Louis Paletta, 79, of ruraleMedford, N.J. Three others of the 15 survivors were hospitalized with Stevens, 46, a skipper in Florida waters for 25 years. His two crewmen aboard the drift fishing vessel, Don Lashchuk, 19, and Jim Scarborough, 20, both of Boynton Beach, survived. The mishap occurred just offshore from the inlet, where the water often is the roughest. Scarborough said the first giant wave which overran the Two Georges as it headed into the inlet to get to the intracoastal waterway cast the, craft broadside. “The next swell capsized uS,” said the mate.

Jacksonville Seeks To Form Bi-Race Group By United Frew Ifeternattonal Negro and white businessmen in Jacksonville, Fla., worked today toward establishing a biracial committee to deal with racial problems magnified by a series of clashes that left one person dead and a score injured. In other major racial activity, Negro and white demonstrators ignored a tornado threat and a warning of arrest to march indie rain to open a new voter registration drive in Greenwood, Miss. There were no incidents. In Washington, a Pentagon survey reported housing discrimination in 90 per cent of - the communities near big milir tary bases and public accomi modations discrimination at t about 50 per cent. A spokesman ; said of the discrimination: “There is not much difference, ' North, East, South or West.” Trying To Talk ? Rober Milius, a JacksonviUe ■ businessman, said the bi-racial committee would be organized : "to lay down the lines of comi munications which have been r, choked in the city.” b “The communications lines | here between the races have s eroded,” he said. “We are try--3 ing desperately to keep up a 3 conversation between whites ~ and Negroes.” Jacksonville is the second f largest city in Florida. It is a ► seaport and has enjoyed a growing economy\_ It was struck t by a wave of violence and van- ’■ dalism Monday that continued '' sporadically through Wednes- : day. . . A white man, Lester Phillips, 51, was struck by a brick Wednesday during an attack by 12 to 15 young Negroes. His condition was described as fair in St. Luke’s Hospital. c • Negroe Woman Shot At the height of the violence on Monday, a Negro woman was shot to death from a passing automobile. A total of 320, mostly Negro teen-agers, have been arrested. Hie city gave signs of settling down Wednesday and police Inspector W. L. Bates said only five adult Negroes were arrested Wednesday in connection with racial incidents. At Greenwood, city policemenand auxiliary officers stood t guard around the Leflore County Courthouse as some 120 pickets, including several white out-of-state ministers, marched around the building.£ There were no attempts at ar-5 rest despite earlier warnings g that picketing would not be tol-g erated. Negro applicants filed g Inside the courthouse in groups g of two to take voter registra-| ' tion tests required by law. f Elsewhere: . -r New Orleans: David Dennis, a field secretary for the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) said* Wednesday the FBI is not doing the job it should do in Mississippi and that it would form its own investigative team to look into reports of violence. Dennis said the team would look into reports that as many as eight Negroes have been killed in southwest Mississippi in recent months “under mysterious circumstances.” Columbia, 8. C.; A woman delegate threw the South Carolina Democratic convention into an abrupt adjournment Wednesday when she urged greater participation by Negroes in party affairs. The suggestion by Mrs. Albert H. Holt of Clemson was met first by silence then by loud boos and catcalls. New York: New York &ity school principals have rejected the plan to transport children by bus to schools in neighbor- - hoods other than their own asan answer to de = classroom segregation. TheCouncil of Supervisory Associa--tions said the plan “will drivethe middle class Negro andg Puerto Rican and white, out of* the public schools and thusj

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Says New Book Os Etiquette Needed By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON (UPD—WtuT this country Lr ans book of etiquette- Kight, Emily Particularly is this true of the chapter on introductions. In my lifetime thus far I probably have been introduced to 8,000 people and I would guess that 5,000 others have been introduced to me. Yet I have never once learned anyone’s name during a formal introduction. Names uttered at those moments leave no more impression on my brain than the college algebra classes I once attended. If the hostess at a cocktail party introduces me to one of the guests, I always have to sidle up to the hostess later and whisper “What did you say that fellow’s name was?” That's if I’m lucky. < In most cases she wanders off and leaves me stuck with the person whose name I didn’t catch. Then another guest will join us and ask to be introduced. I’ll concede that my memory could never compete in an adhesive contest with the cheaper grades of flypaper. But I do say that I can ordinarily remember words no longer than most proper names for at least 15 seconds after I hear them. I blame the mental blackout that I experience during introductions on the cumbersome procedure set forth in the etiqu»tte books for performing this function. As soon as an introduction begins, I immediately start trying to decide how I am going to acknowledge it—whether I am going to say “How do you do,” “Pleased to meet you,” or “Charmed, I’m sure.” It is this preoccupation with the ritual of the introduction that causes me to miss the names. And the same is true when I am an introduction. I get so intent on trying to remember whether the lady is introduced to the man, or whether the older person is introduced to the younger, that I forget the names of the people I am introducing. With friends this is embarrassing and when one of the names that slip your mind happens to belong to the woman you married it is downright painful. Which is why I say that what this country needs is a new book of etiquette. The rules g should be rewritten to require g that when two or more persons I are introduced they must ce- | ment the acquaintance by Ingdian wrestling. ; | You will never forget the f name of anyone you have best9ed at Indian wrestling, or of anyone who has bested you. Besides that, it helps get a cocktail party off to a good start. Special Services A* Mt, Hooe Church Special services will be held at me Mt. Hope Church of the Nazarene Saturday and Sunday. Larry Brown, a ministerial student at Olivet Nazarene College, Kankakee, 111., will be special speaker at the services, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, and 10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Sunday. The Rev. Frank D. Voss, pastor, extends a welcome to the public to attend these services, sponsored by the young people’s society. The church is located five miles east and one mile north of Berne. make impossible the upgrading of our schools.” |j 1 St. Augustine, Fla.: Negro - and white integrationists from £ New England began a “vigil of 5 prayer and fasting” in a church . Wednesday. They also picketed =an information booth asking * tourists to bypass the 400-year- * old city and held a rally to pro*test jailing of a group of young ■ Negroes. Police said there was | no trouble.

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THURSDAY, MARCH 2«, 1964