The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 24 October 1963 — Page 6

THE DAILY BANNER

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA

THURS., OCT. 24, 1963. Page 6

Shipping Costs Snag Wheat Sale WASHINGTON UPI — U. S. and Soviet officials appeared optimistic today about prospects for American wheat sales to Russia, but the nagging problem of shipping costs was still unresolved. The Commerce Department authorized the sale of 1.2 million bushels of yellow corn, valued at $1,929,384, to Communist Hungary Wednesday. The department, by custom, declined to list the name of the private American grain trader who received the sale permit. Informed sources said a second and even larger deal send-

ing corn too Hungary was pending in the Commerce Department. An export license application also has been pending for sale of about 5.000 tons of soybean meal to Hungary with approval expected soon. Hungary avoided the shipping problem with its corn purchase because other grains are exempt from the condition, laid down by President Kennedy, that wheat flour sold to the Soviet bloc must be carried in U. S. flag vessels “When available.” Weather Retards Winter Wheat LAFWETTE UPI — Crop experts reported today that only about one-third as much of the

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DIMES GIRL—Winsome Mary Lou Graves, 5, the 1964 March of Dimes poster child, has a talk with her pediatrician, Dr. Paul Morin, in Flint, Mich. Mary Lou, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Graves, was born with an open spine. She had surgery, and now is learning to walk.

rood Sense a Not Nonsense

All the Blocks a Child Can Use Building blocks are more than playthings for Baby Jamie and fast-growing John-John. They can be the nutrients in food called amino acids. Readily at hand is a way to develop for infants and toddlers a new and economical food, custom-made from wheat, which contains all the building blocks a child needs to grow and develop-and nearly all the other nutrients to boot. The schematic for this food has l>een drawn up by research, at the American Institute of Baking in Chicago, on the amino acids in wheat’s proteins. Dr. William Bradley, scientific director of the Institute, has suggested that nutritionists can put into action this schematic for feeding infants and children. At a recent nutrition conference in California on the Role of Wheat in the World's Food Supply, he reported that the milling process sifts out certain wheat flours with an especially high nutritional value. Being concentrated. these flours contain a substantially higher amount of the building block, lysine-apt to be short in cereal grains-than does the wheat berry itself. With cooked cereals made from these flours, infants and toddlers would satisfy their higher protein and lysine requirements, he proposed. That traditional wheat foods materially meet the nufrient requirements of older children and adults is history. As the major f<><m of large population groups, grains made civilization possible. Wheat had all the building blocks man needed. In light of America’s food export program to underdeveloped and hungry nations, the value of wheat takes on added significance. The contribution that bread and other cereal foods can make here and abroad a* beinjj studied, recognized, and appreciated.

winter wheat has germinated in Indiana as usual for this time of year. The dry weather is the reason, according to Robert E. Straszheim, agricultural statistician at Purdue, who reported that about 15 per cent of the wheat is “up to stands compared to a usual of 45 per cent and last year's 55 per

cent.”

Seeding of the crop is 85 per cent finished, ahead of the usual 80 per cent. But much of it has been planted in dust w r ith germination slow because of lack of rain the last 10 weeks. Extension agronomist Cliff Spies reported that fertilizer injury has been observed on experimental wheat plots on the Purdue farm near Wanatah. Spies also said that while some of the wheat seed in dry ground obviously is just waiting for moisture, other fields may have received just enough moisture to swell the seed and germinate it with the plants dying before emergence. Straszheim said harvesting operations continued during another week of favorable weather for field work but the drought became more widespread with soil moisture reported short in all areas.

France, Switzerland and West Germany. IBM will request listing on the Bourse in Paris, the Frankfurt exchange in West Germany, the Zurich, Basle and Geneva exchangee in Switzerland, and the Toronto exchange in Canada. It is expected that these listings will become effective before the end of the

year.

xno new snares wall be offered and no increase in the number of outstanding shares will result from these listings. As of September 30, 1963 IBM had 27,763,507 shares of stock outstanding. IBM operates outside the United States through its wholly owned subsidiary, IBM World

Trade Corporation, which conducts business through subsidiaries and branches in 96 countries.

After using grits, corn meal or other items poured from a spout, tape the spout with a piece of cellephane tape. The ingredients will stay fresh longer.

IBM Is Seeking Foreign Listings International B u s i ness Machines Corporation today announced that it will apply for the listing of its capital stock on stock exchanges in Canada,

“TERRIBLE”—Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhu of South Viet Nam spreads her hands expressively in Washington as she says her visit to Harvard is the biggest disappointment of her U. S. tour. “It was absolutely terrible,” she tells reporters of her reception at Harvard Law School.

“REFEREE”—Ethiopia Emperor Haile Selassie, 72, salutes during a ceremony in Algiers, where he went to try to mediate Algeria’s border dispute with Morocco, Beside him ia Ahmed Ben Bella, Algeria president. (Radiophoto)

“OUTSIDE INTERESTS”—Sen. B. Everett Jordan (upper left), D-N.C., is chairman of the Senate Rules Committee investigating the “outside Interests” of Robert G. (Bobby) Baker (right), who resigned as Senate secretary. Preliminary information w’as gathered by Sen. John J. Williams (low’er lefn. R-Del. Baker resigned his $19,600-a-year post on disclosure of his Interest in a catering firm which does business with factories which have government contracts. His wife holds Senate committee staff post which pays $11,500 a year.

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STRAFING LOCALE—Ship symbol locates the area where a lone plane strafed the U. S.-owned ore carrier J. Louis for more than an hour. It w r as carrying a cargo of bauxite from Ocho Rios. Jamaica, tc home nort. Corpus Christi. Tex.

YOU'RE TELLING ME!

■By WILUAM R1TT. Central Press Writer

IT’S JUST BEEN revealed the U. S. government has spent $179,000 on a study of low-cost housing for Alaska Eskimos. How can you get any lower cost housing than igloos, which are made of blocks of ice period? ! ! ! Since it’s estimated there are only 15,000 Alaska Eskimos, the study came to about $11.61 per frost-bitten citizen. What's so “lovi-cost” about thatt ! ! ! Those headline writers who loved to call Macmillan “Mac” may find it a lot tougher to nickname his successor—Home. j i » Secretary of Commerce Luther Hodges reports there are now exactly 1,327 women pri-

vate detectives In the United States. Quick, Watson, the crocheting needle! ! I f Hodges also reports there are SOI women working as longshoremen. Good grief!—whatti they muscle in on nextt ! ! I An intellectual, says Grandpappy Jenkins, is a fellow who not only uses the word “ideology” but also knows what it means. ! ! 1 See where one of the larger Eastern college’s football team has yet to win a game though the season’s about half over. That’s what comes of letting too many students play.

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