Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 94, Decatur, Adams County, 20 April 1964 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE fISCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CQ.. INC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller, Jr. President Mrs. John Shirk-Vice President Mrs. A. R. Holthouse Secretary Chas. E. Holthouse Treasurer Snbscriptien Rates 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, 111.25; 6 months, $6.00; 3 months, $3.25. By Carrier, 35 cents per week. Single copies, 7 cents. Spotlight on Indiana The national spotlight will be on Indiana on May ' 5, when we go to the polls to register our choices for president in the Democratic primary. ** President Lyndon B. Johnson has done a very fine job so far, considering the circumstances under which he had to take office. He will undoubtedly be nominated on the first ballot, probably by acclamation after the required number of votes. Few people other than the most bldtant Republican partisans would say that he does not deserve one. full term on his own. Yes, the Democratic national convention will nominate Johnsoif, a moderate, and the country will show its support for his fine job by electing him in November. But where will Indiana be in the picture? Will Indiana support Johnson? His bitter enemy and critic, the self-appointed “savior,” Gov. Wallace, whose action resulted in violence and bloodshed in his own state, is trying to win votes from „ Johnson in Indiana. Remember how ashamed the people of Wisconsin were when it was learned he had taken almost a quarter of a million votes there? We certainly don’t want Indiana voting for the “little midget” Wallace, who even as he campaigns in Indiana is drawing a “disability” pension from the Federal government for “mental nerves” which he developed in military service. No, Wallace is not quali- " fied, and it would be a great mistake if any Democrat voted f6r him in the primary. Which brings up another important question: Who should vote in primaries? The law is very clear on that. In Indiana, only Democrats and Republicans are supposed to vote, and they are supposed to vote in their own primaries, and choose their own candidates. is illegal, immoral, and absolutely wrong to vote in a primary election if you do not fully intend to support a majority of that party’s candidates in the . fall 1 It would be wrong for the editor to vote in the Republican’ primary, to try to “stop Goldwater, and the Republican election clerk should challenge him if he should try to do so. And the Democrat election officials should challenge anyone voting in the Democratic primary who is not a party member. In Wisconsin, few votes in the Republican primary, although in the Fall the Republicans sweep the election! This is illegal in Indiana. No one but a cheat would vote in the party of another, hoping to adversely affect the nominations, so that the will of the people would be thwarted in the fall. Editorial written by Dick Heller TV PROGRAMS Central Daylight Time

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ASCS Farm Notes

IM4 WHEAT PROGRAM: Everyone is asking about the 1964 wheat program recently passed by congress! The program is voluntary and offers participating wheat producers: 1. Payments tot diverting wheat acres to conservation uses. 2. Price support through loans and purchase agreements. 3. Cashable certificates for wheat to be consumed domestically. 4. Cashable certificates for wheat to be sold for export. Wheat producers who desire to participate in the program will need to sign an application and agreement. There is no automatic participation. FARM ALLOTMENT AND YIELD: The farm allotments and yields issued prior to the marketing quota referendum in May of 1963 are to be used as a basis for participation. DIVERSION OF ACREAGE: A producer who produces an acreage of wheat within the farm allotment and devotes an acreage equal to 11.11 per cent of the allotment to conserving uses, in addition to the farms normal conserving base, the 11.11 per cent will be the classified diverted acreage. Additional acreage may be diverted but cannot exceed 20 per cent of the farm wheat allotment. Diversion payments will be made if the producer diverts as many acres as he' indicates in the “intention to participate” form and carries out all other program provisions. ELIGIBILITY FOR PRICE SUPPORT AND CERTIFICATES: To be eligible for price support loans and certificates: 1. An "intention to participate form must be signed. 2. Produce within the farm wheat allotment. 3. Produce within the wheat allotment on any other farm in which the producer has an interest. 4. Meet the program’s conservation-use provisions. FARM WHEAT MARKETING ALLOCATION: A wheat marketing allocation for a farm is 90 per cent Os the normal production (the yield established by the county committee) of the farm wheat allotment. The marketing certificates issued cannot exceed the farm marketing allocation but may be less? WHEAT MARKETING CERTIFICATES: Two classes of marketing certificates will be issed to eligible producers: 1. Domestic marketing certificates for the 50 per cent of the farm wheat allocation representing food products for consumption in the United States and 2. Export marketing certificates for the 50 per cent of the farm wheat marketing allocation to be exported: Domestic marketing certificates will have a value of 70 cents per bushel and export marketing certificates will have a of 25 cents per bushel. Marketing certificates will be redeemed for cash at the ASCS county offices. SIGNUP PERIOD: No date has been set for the beginning of the signup. However, the final date to sign will be May 15, 1964. WILL ATTEND A MEETING ON THt NEW PROGRAM: County office personnel will attend a meeting a Wabash next Tuesday, to receive additional information relative to the program. U. S. WHEAT FEEDS NEEDY THkOtGH NEW’ OLD USES: Approximately 11.7 million bushels of wheat have been used over the past 3 years in providing two of our newest means of fighting malnutrition and hunger around the world and at the same time opening new outlets for surplus wheat. Bulgar and rolled wheat were recently added to the food donation programs- here at home and abroad. Both products are being processed from hard red spring and hard red winter wheat, two varieties which are in oversupply. Bulgar — man’s oldest way of using wheat, is processed by boiling wheat, drying it, removing some of the bran and cracking the grain into meal. For centuries it has been eaten by people who live in and around the Black Sea and the eastern shores of the Mediterranean. It was first served as a cereal. More recently it has been combined with spices, vegetables, meats, poultry, and fish to make gourmet dishes.

MASONIC ENTERED APPRENTICE DEGREE TUESDAY, 7:00 P. M. APRIL 21 Niland Ochsenrider, W. M.

m DECATUR DAWT DEMOCRAT, DBCATVR, INDIANA

Rolled wheat. R whole grain cereal, may be served as a hot cereal similar to rolled oats and may be used in baked products such as cookies, bread, rolls and muffins, or as an extender in meat loaves and meat patties. s' BEEF IMPORTS TO DROP IN 1964: Secretary of agriculture, Orville L. Freeman recently issued the folowing statement: “We have been advised by the government of Australia that Australian shipments to the United States of beef, veal, mutton and lamb for 1964 are expected to be 29 per cent, or About 170 million pounds, below shipments in 1963. The situation is much the same for New Zealand’s exports to the United States market. Our infermation indicates that New Zealand’s shipments of beef and veal to the United States in 1964 are likely to be 22 per cent or about 50 million pounds below exports in 1963. x The reduction in exports is already showing up in our U. S. import data. In February, imports of these products from Australia and New Zealand decreased 40 million pounds from January, a drop of 63 per cent. Preliminary information indicates that the imports in March and April are continuing to run well below the level of last year. EMERGENCY SHIPMENT TO ALASKA: Nearly 17 tons of USDA-donated foods are being shipped from Seattle to Alaska for emergency feeding of earthquake disaster victims to two native villages. The foods being shipped by the bureau of Indian affairs on the S. S. North Star headed for Old Harbor on Kodiak Island and for Tapilek near Anchorage. It is estimated that about 80 per cent of the food will be used by BIA for emergency purposes at Old Harbor. The foods, totaling 33,124 pounds include: processed cheese, butter, corn meal, all purpose flour, whole wheat flour, dry milk, rice, peanut butter, dry beans, dried eggs, canned chopped meat and lard. These food stocks were made available by the state of Washington from supplies of USDA foods on hand for regular within-state distribution programs. WHAT IS MODERN FARMING? The nation’s largest industry: employes 7 million workers — more than the combined employment in transportation, public utilities, the steer industry, and the automobile industry. 3.7 million producers: This, the largest of the nation’s industries, is composed of 3.7 million independent producers. A good customer: The farmers spend $27 to S2B billion a yea r for goods and services to produce crops and livestock; another sls billion a year for the same things that city people buy — food, clothing, drugs, furniture, appliances and many other products and services. A creator of employment: 4 out of every 10 jobs in private employment are related to agriculture. 10 million people have jobs storing, transporting, processing, and merchandising the products of agriculture. 6 million people have jobs providing the supplies farmers use. CHANGES IN USDA PESTICIDES REGULATIONS: Greater consumer protection is the goal of revisions in federal

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regulations governing the registration of pesticides announced by the U. S. department of agriculture. the hew regulations require key warning and caution statements to be placed prominently on the front panel of the pesticide label These must include the statement keep out Os reach of children, of it’s equivalent and a “signal” word — stlch as danger, caution, or warning — which draws the user’s attention to the need to handle the material carefully. Warning and caution statements must be easy to read. “Signal” words the warning to keep the product away from children must conform to specified minimum type sizes. Use of pesticides in and around homes hy the general public has increased rapidly in recent years, making it essential that consumers know how to handle them safely. For this reason, the department is now requiring the expanded precautionary information be placed on the label — in a place where it is easily seen. ALTHOUGH PROFIT IS AN IMPORTANT GUIDE, OTHER FACTS AFFECT FARM DECISIONS: Profit may be the most important guide to decisions on the farm, but it isn’t the only one. Personal preference alone is an important element in making decisions and plays a significant part in the way farms are operated. The second most important influence in decisions is the lack of knowledge about possible returns from alternative choices. Decisions are sometimes limited to lack of information. Third, an aversion to borrowing money is an element in decisionmaking. A taste for leisure is sometimes important enough to determine plans to some degree. Disagreement between operators and their partners or landlords also plays an important part in management decisions. PUT THE farm PARTNERSHIP IN WRITING: Draw up partnership papers? Why bother? As far as the law is concerned two men who are known to be farming together already form a partnership, subject to all the legal responsibilities whether or not they have ever bothered with a written agreement. Here are some good reasons for spelling out the working arrangements of a partnership in a formal contract: 1. A contract clarifies the responsibility of each partner before misunderstandings have a chance to occur. 2. A contract provides an outline of the way, the. business is intended to function. 3. The ritual of signing partnership papers helps to put the operation on a businesslike basis. 4. A contract is evidence of the intention to form a contract and reminds members of their legal responsibilities. Partnership papers provide a record of the contributions and duties of each partner: such as cash, amount of land or Jivestock, labor and management contribut-

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Chlcago Produce CHICAGO (UPD—Produce: Live poultry special fed White Rock fryers 18%-20; roasters 23%-26. Cheese processed loaf 3D-43Vi; brick 38-44; Swiss Grade A 5254; B 50-52. Butter steady; 93 score 57%; 92 score 57%; 90 score 56%; 89 score 55. Eggs white large extras 29%; mixed large extras 29; mediums 27%; standards 28. New York Stock Exchange Price midday prices AT&T. 143%; Du Pont 261; Ford 58; General Electric 86%; General Motors 82; Gulf Oil 55%; Standard Oil tad. 71; Standard Oil N. J. 86 A, U. S. Steel 57%. __ ed by each partner. Partnership papers should specify the method by which profits and losses will be shared, who is going to keep the books and who has the power to sign checks arbitration, vacation, new partners, or expense accounts, the method of dissolving partnerships etc. A written contract is an insurance for all members of the partnership. . RURAL DEFENSE: An important item in rural defense preparedness is an emergency water supply 1. Store an emergency water supply now. 2. Protect your present water supply. 3. Be sure your home and community have a safe water supply now and in the future. 4. Learn how to decontaminate and purify water. Act now, to be sure you will have a safe water supply in an emergency. It’s just plain good insurance for survival in an emergency. THE SAFETY CORNER: Spring caution: Motorists need to be especially cautious during the first days of spring. Boys and girls seem to have stored up their energy all winter long, and when the cold weather finally breaks, their bubbling spirits appear ready to burst. Particular cautipn is urged in the vicinity of schools and playgrounds, where children congregate and play in groups. Today’s automobiles are finished products of considerable engineering skill plus the best manufacturing know-how the world has ever seen. Cars are built with gas tanks — not think tanks, so the way they are operated depends on the driver. Traffic accidents involving pedestrians and bike riders under 14 years of age make a considerable mark on the traffic injury and fatality toll.' In both instances, youthful impulsiveness is the most probable cause of the collision between a helpless child and a 2,000-pound metal missile. This, then, leaves the major responbility for young lives almost entirely in the hands of adults. Parents, teachers and motorists must all do their part to ensure the safety of the child pedestrian and bike rider whenever they are exposed to traffic. Spring is a good time to be alive and to stay alive. It will help to fasten your seat belt.

Indianapolis Livestock INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—Livestock: Hogs 7,100; barrows and gilts 190-230 lb steady to weak; 230 lb up steady to 25 lower; 1 and 2 190-225 lb 15.25-15.50 ; 47 head 15.65-15.75; 1 to 3 190-230 lb 14.75- 1 to 3 230-260 lb 14.25-14.75; sows steady to weak; 1 to 3 320-400 lb 13.00133.50; a few under 300 lb 13.75; 2 and 3 400-600 lb 12.00-13.00. Cattle 2,800; calves 75; steers and heifers not fully established; a few sales about steady; choice steers 21.5022.25; load choice 22.40; mixed good and low choice 21.00-21.75; good 19.00-2150; choice heifers 20.75- good and mixed good and low choice 18.50-20.50; cows steady to 50 higher; utility and commercial cows 13.0015.00; bulls strong to mostly 50 higher; utility and a few commercial 17.00-18.50; few high yield utility 19.00; vealers steady; good and choice 24.0029.00; high choice and prime 30.00-31.00. Sheep 200; supply largely shorn and slaughter ewes, slaughter lambs scarce; 25 head choice and prime spring lambs 24.00.

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MONDAY, APRIL 20, 1964

MOTICE OW ADMINISTRATION Estate No. 5919 In th® Adams Circuit Court of Adams County. Indiana, Notice is hereby given that Harold W. Niblick wan on the 17th day of April, 19*4, appointed: Executor of the will of KATHRYN L. NIBLICK, deceased. AH persons having claims agalnut said estate, whether or not now due, must file the same in said court within six months from the date or the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Dated at Decatur, Indiana, this 17th day of April, 1964. George M Bair ' Clerk of the Adams Circuit Court for Adams County, Indiana. John L. DeVoss, Attorney and Counsel for personal representative 4/20. 97, 5/4. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Estate No. 5940 In the Adams Circuit Court of Adams County, Indiana, Notice is hereby given that irgine F. Smith was on the 17th day of April. 1961 a PP°’ n ted; Admin Istra, trix of the estate of ESTELLE (ESTELLA) Smith, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due, must file the same in said court within » x months from the date of the first Publication of this notice or said claims will be forever b*" ed ... Dated at Decatur, Indiana, this 17th day of April, 1964. George M. Bair Clerk of the Adams Circuit Court for Adams County, Indiana. Robert S. Anderson, Attorney and Counsel for personal representative 4/20, 27, 5/4. ””If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results :