The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 April 1955 — Page 3
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1955
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NEW SENSATION IN DBAPERIES
New Thermoseal Built-in with Milium Lining ke^pn heat out in summer, yet cheaper than regular lined drapes, C'ustom-made to fit any size window. New 1955 pattern from Joanna Western Mills and Waverly Bonded Fabrics. Guaranteed sunfast and Washable.
ART FURNITURE SHOP
5 West Franklin St.
MUSICIANS TRAVEL
residents of this sparsely popu-j^avel 130 miles weekly to at-j Symphony has been making lated part of Humboldt County ; rehearsals. Made up of i music in the northernmost part
of California since 1933.
EUREKA. Calif — (UP) — j that some of the 60 members of M‘0usewives. ministers, teachers |
Music means so much to the h.he Humboldt Little Symphony -and retired persons, the Little j THE BANNER ADS
DAILY BANNER CIRCULATION REACHES
K i* r «*
5.030
• • • • <
• • • • • • •
. 2,107
(02
TOTAL PAID
DISTRIBUTED AS FOLLOWS: • BY 32 CARRIER BOYS (IN GREENCASTLE AND VICINITY)
• OTHER TOWNS (IN PUTNAM COUNTY)
• FOUR MOTOR ROUTES (77 • BY MAIL 1,(14 • RETAIL SALES 30 (AND EMPLOYES COPIES)
5,030
3416 SUBSCRIBERS RECEIVE THE DAILY BANNER ON DAY OF PUBLICATION.
NOTE: There are approximately 5,000 families in Putnam County - - ■ ■ "Everyone Reads The Daily Banner---!" WHERE DO YOU GET MORE FOR YOUR MONEY THAN FROM YOUR DAILY BANNER!
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Fairly Spoken Language and Sound Changes With Hi-Fi By Margaret Latrobe “Hi-Fi” is in no sense a greeting or a pal named Philo. The “Tweeters and woofers” ailment bears no resemblance to the hoof and mouth disease. “Coaxial speaker” does not refer to the gent chatting over the cable of the same name. AVC is no government agency. The whole new lingo simply means that somebody is listening to the phonograph. And making a production of it! “Righ fidelity” can be an inexpensive means of enjoying recorded music, just as fishing can by done with a bit of string and a bent pin. But once that first fish is caught, it gives a man ideas about what some real tackle would fetch from the briny. Once a person is exposed to hi-fi recordings on a modestly 1 priced set—out come the carpenter tools, the better to chop out the wall; out goes the money, the better to purchase “low impedance cathode followers,” binaural systems and preamplifiers. And by the time the folks are permitted to hear some music, there is some question as to whether it mightn’t have been cheaper just to send for the whole Philharmonic Orchestra, in person. For the “in person” idea is the desired goal of the whole thing. High fidelity music means that it’s nearest thing to sitting in the band, hearing the sounds as they originated. And the funny thing is that men who are now Rachmaninoffs — come-lately, busy with their ear phones and high priced gadgets, wouldn’t be caught dead at an actual symphony concert. It reminds me of the brontosauric era when everybody had an untuned upright piano for the small fry to practice “Old Oaken Bucket” and “Fifth Nocturne.” The days when a curly maple “bedroom suite” and a horned table model phonograph were items no real home could be without. Galli-Curci and Caruso scratchily soared in arias from “Lucia,” “Meditation” from “Thais” and the “Wang Wang Blues” gave the record “collection’’ a bit of the old zip. About the only “fidelity” lurking nearby was a small child stationed handily near the machine to shove the tone arm past dust clots and congenital defects in the records, faithfully (hanging from soprano to fiddler to Sousa's band. Nobody ever heard of an entire symphony at one sitting. Too monotonous, eh? “Isn’t high fidelity the greatest ? Except for a touch of azimuth misalignment, our set is perfect’”
it was declarer's turn to lead, declarer goes right ahead and leads—and the card led out of turn becomes a penalty card. If it was the other defender’s turn, declarer can forbid the lead of that suit or he can treat the card led out of turn as a penalty card. He is entitled to think it over and to choose the penalty which will serve him best. INSUFFICIENT BID: If you make an insufficient bid you are lequired to substitute either a sufficient bid or a pass. You have three choices as fallows: If you substitute the lowest sufficient bid in the same denomination, there is no penalty. If you make any other bid, your partner is barred as before and if you end up defending on the hand, declarer can either forbid or require the lead of whichever suit he chooses. DUMMY’S RIGHTS: Dummy should not enter into the actual play of the hand by suggestion or by touching a card or cards or in any other manner. However he has a few important rights. He can question any other player about revokes. He can participate in a discussion about the laws or about the facts of a case. And he can point out an irregularity or attempt to keep one from occurring. For example, if his partner is about to lead from the wrong hand, he can speak up and issue a warning. This is something to remember —if a penalty is assessed and later found to have been incorrect, it still stands. So get it right the first time.
the net amount received for hogs, i based on March 1. U.S.D.A. esttPoultry industry should take | mates as a percentage of 1954 on new hope with egg prices ex- j planting to be 100.2 for corn, pected to rise substantially in | 100.8 for oats. 108.7 for barley. July. However, broiler place- ^ 107.2 for grain sorghums and ments have been running slightly ' 106.5 for soybeans. With this above the high levels of a year j small increase in corn acreage ago. which means a heavy mar- j and with average weather, the ket supply and further weaken- 1955 corn crop is expected to be ing in prices in the weeks ahead. | about 3.1 billion bushels. The anRange conditions in the 17 nual disappearance of corn has western states continue very poor been a little less than 3.1 bushels
Unless conditions improve con- {in recent years,
siderably during the spring | Price supports for 1955 will be months some liquidation of beef : $2.04 for soybeans, $2.06 for cow herds and early movement j wheat $0.61 for oats, $0.94 for of feeder cattle out of this area | barley, $1.18 for rye, and $1.98
seem probable. The current mar- | for corn.
ket for “warmed up” cattle that ! it was suggested by the Purcan be finished by late summer i dte agronomy department that or early fall offers some oppor- | more corn can he grown per acre tunity for reasonable profits. | by properly adjusting planting Crop control programs in 1954 ra t e to fertility and water holdtook approximately 14 million i ng capacity on 75 bushel com acres out of wheat production and j i an(1 in 40 jnch rows drill at 15 another 6 million acres out of I inches; on 100 bushel land. 10 in-
cotton production compared with 1953. However, since these acres were used to produce crops which compete with the cornbelt, the 1S54 reduction of more than two million acres of corn in the corn
ches; ani on 125 bushel land, every 8 inches in tne row. It was also pointed out that fertilizer dollars can be spent more intelligently by fertilizing according to phosphate, potash and lime
Purdue Issues Market Forecast Look for a stronger hog market price-wise the next two or three months, higher egg prices beginning about July, reasonable profits by early fall for finishing “feeder cattle,” a shift in crop production, and lower government purchases of dairy products That is what the column “marketing guides” predicts in the April issue of Purdue University's “Economic and Marketing.’’ [Purdue University’s agridultural economics department calls attention to farmers to be aware of-the various practices followed at a hog market. A recent study of hog prices in Indiana showed the Indianapolis market price averaged higher than on other markets, but was not higher on some days. Yardage and commission fees at a posted market varied from a high of 71 cents per head at Louisville to a low of 43 per head at Muncie. Sorting practices also vary and influence
tension offices.
belt was more than offset by in- j need of soiJt and that uge of th , creased acreages of corn outside j Purdue Soil Test Laboratory is the corn-belt. Therefore, total available through Luc county ex-
acreage of corn planted in 1954 actually increased .2 per cent over 1953; oats acreage was up .8 per
cent; barley up 50 per cent; grain sorghum up 70 per cent; and bean*: increased 15 per cent. Government purchases of dairy products in recent weeks have been below those of a year ago. | because of high, inventory and j will be a distressing factor in the j market throughout 1955. Gov- I ernment inventories show an in- | crease of 48 million pounds of butter in January 1955 as com- j pared to January 1954. Cheese inventory for the same dates I shows an increase of 95 million | pounds. Condensed and evaporat- | ed milk inventories for the same dates are down 50 million pounds ! and non-fat dry milk solids in- j ventories are down 25 million I pounds. Marketing guides also pointed out 1955 crop planting intentions 1
PENNEYS Wednesday Morning FEATURES
REAANANTS
ALL FROM OI K STOCK
25
YD.
Womens New Spring blouses t oo
It s Blackwood On Bridge Here is a brief summary of he bridge laws referred to in be past few columns. According io my mail these are the laws most frequently broken and it may be helpful to you to check over these most common in- j fractions and the penalties there- j
or.
REVOKE: You revoke when vou fail to follow suit although able to do so. A revoke is established when the offender or his partner leads ar plays to the next trick. Penalty: Two tricks, won after the revoke, are translerred to the non-offending side. EXPOSED CARDS: If you are playing a hand as declarer no '-ard of yours ever becomes a penalty card. If you wish, you can spread your whole hand face up on the table—although frankly I c*an see no advantage in it. But 'S a defender exposes a card or sec's a card of his part- | ner’s before he should, that card becomes a penalty card and must be left face up and played at the first legal opportunity. LEAD FROM WRONG HAND BY DECLARER If the lead is in the closed hand and declarer leads from dummy (or viceversa) he must, if required by a j defender, lead from the proper hand and. if possible, he must lead the same suit which he at- j tempted to lead before LEAD OUT OF TURN BY DEFENDER: If this happens when
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Vou Know 1 About This l
YOUR 1954 COST OF LIVING up 90.8%* over 1940 * Consumers’ Price Index, U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
♦ but bm you beaut this?
psci's 1954 WOOD POLES COST $34 12 each
! WATS A 114% INCREASE!
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