The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 April 1965 — Page 4

Th« Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Wednesday, April 21,1965

McNamara To Report To LBJ WASHnrcrrON UPI — Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara arrived back in Washington today to report to President Johnson the results of his high-level Viet Nam strategy

talks. ' '

McNamara’s jet transport landed at nearby Andrews Air Force Base, Md„ after a flight from Honolulu, where he met with ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor. Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the U. S. military commanders in South Viet Nam

and in the Pacific.

The defense chief was scheduled to confer with the President. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and McGeorge Bundy, Johnson's national security adviser, at the White House at

11:1$ a. m. today.

IT. S. officials reported last week that a sjte for Soviet missiles, presumably of the highaltitude (SAM) surface-to-air variety, was under construction near the Hanoi area in Communist North Viet Nam. McNamara said Tuesday he

MAKE SPRING AUTO SAFETY RESOLUTIONS

Washington. D. C., was our national capital before it became a true city, and there are people who maintain that the gap has never been closed. They say that the city has never

caught up with government, o

BACK TO PRISON - Leroy Dunlap, 64. who escaped during his trial in 1920 in Akron, Ohio and was sentenced to the electric chair as trigger man 10 a holdup murder, now is under sentence of 1 to 20 years—the first degree murder conviction reduced to manslaughter. Dunlap was found m an old soldiers home in Washington after all those years of law abiding freedom.

Imoose I I SOCIAL I

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could not say whether the missiles are now “operationaL” He said, however, that the Russian missiles were not a topic of discussion at his Honoj lulu meeting Tuesday with i Ambasador Maxwell D. Taylor; ; Gen. William C. Westmoreland, U. S. military chief in South Viet Nam; Adm. Ulysses S. Grant Sharp, commander of 1 U. S. Pacific forces, and Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of

the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Terming the day-long session a “very profitable conference,” McNamara indicated that there would be a major step-up in efforts to block the long South

Vietnamese coastline.

and that it lacks the capacity for graceful living that other international capitals, such as

Paris and Rome, have. Rut things are changing be-

side the Potomac, and one of the most dramatic proofs of this change is the $66 million Watergate project now rising above the Washington skyline.

Soaring over one of the most

spectacular sites anywhere—a 10-acre triangle beside the Potomac and right across the street from the new John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts which will go into construction this year— Watergate promises a luxury and style to Washington that

it has not known before.

| Designed by Luigi Moretti, of Rome, and Coming, Moore, Elmore and Fischer, of WashI j ington, D. C., Watergate has abandoned traditional rectangular block forms for gracefully curved structures. Three of the five Watergate buildings wilt be devoted to cooperative apartments ranging in price from $20,000 to more than $200,000. There will also be an office building and a

( residential hotel.

One of the largest xeal es-

tate investments in the country—a total of $44 million— has been put into Watergate by The John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co., and every appurtenance of urban life is

being incorpoi-ated.

Commercial facilities as well as specialty shops and restaurants will be contained in a pleasant shopping mall, and there will be parking space for 1200 cars below ground. Residents will have the use of three outdoor swimming pools, as well as a year-round indoor pool as part of a health club. Watergate is a cooperative apartment community. Those who purchase apartments will also own an equity in the nonprofit corporation that will administer the cooperative. What's more, interest and real estate taxes are deductible in-

come tax items.

The first Watergate building—one with 238 cooperative apartments—was begun early in 1964. Work on the office building and residential hotel has just begun. The first apartment building will open in the early fall. The office building and hotel will be completed iu

May, 1966.

AFTER

SPECIALS THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY F. K. WUERTZ 5c TO $1.00 EAST SIDE O FTHE SQUARE, GREENCASTLE Iron On Jean Patch Bondex Pkg. of 26”x7" Patches 29^1 W STOCK UP N0W!

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LADIES 5 SEW HOUSEHOLD BROOMS . . . .only 99c

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Wanted: Better Beef Livers

The beef industry will lose more than $7 million in income in 1965 because of a disease complex few cattlemen ever see evidence of on the hoof. It is estimated that Rumenitis, or liver abscess complex, occurs in approximately 5 per cent of ail beef

slaughtered in the r"

United States.

The paradox of this disease is that the first signs are usually observed at slaughter, when hundreds of thousands of livers must be condemned. While no visible symptoms of sickness will normally occur in the live animal, except in severe cases, the cattle feeder’s profits are definitely affected in the feedlot. For cattle with liver abscesses are less than economical gainers and take extra feed to make a pound of gain. Scientists have noted over the years that cattle on rations of 3 to 1 concentrate to roughage, or greater, appear to be more susceptible to this condition. Also, when cattle go into the feedlot, the rapid change in diet from roughage to concentrate often causes

liver abscesses.

Dr. Ralph Elliott, manager of animal industries for American Cyanamid Company, says good feedlot sanitation and management are of definite value in preventing liver abscesses. He notes that the continuous feeding of supplements containing a low level of the broad spectrum antibiotic Aureomycin has proved highly effective in killing the causative organisms. Results of trials

with 1,190 animals have shown that Aureomycin reduced condemnations for liver abscesses by 56 per cent. Today, meat packers are alerting cattle producers to the seriousness of a disease complex that causes them to discard thousands of condemned livers. The answer for cattlemen lies in this philosophy: start cattle as you would drive your car or truck: begin in low gear. Move cautiously from a roughage to concentrates. And secondly — use continuous medication. A broad-ranee antibiotic.

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RIG. $2 98 LADIES DUSTERS only $2.66 SILICONE, WILL NOT SCORCH IRONING BOARD COVERS & PAD only 77c GENUINE SEMI-PRECIOUS STONES BRACELETS pt. only 79c Slants from all over the world.

NEW, STARDUST DIFFRACTION JEWELERY, pt. 69c-79c Pendants, earrings, pins.

F. K. WUERTZ 5c TO $1.00 East Side of Square, Greencastle

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What did you plan for spring? | To drive to your favorite picnic i grounds? Go camping or boat- I ing? Really visit those inlaws? Chemical researchers are helping to make your driving safer, and there is also much you can do. Allied Chemical Corporation researchers, for example, have been working with town fathers and highway superintendents across the country, introducing a chemical called Solvay calcium chloride that controls dust on the nation’s roads — two-thirds of which are unpaved. Allow yourself to carry out your spring plans safely by seeking dust - controlled roads and by making these motoring resolutions: 1. Let the spring air, not alcohol, intoxicate you. Studies prove that two-thirds of fatalities involving drunkenness were caused by only partial intoxication. 2. Test your eyes before driving, not when you’re at the wheel. Optometrists advise that small changes in vision can accumulate, become serious distortions; they recommend an eye check every two years for

those under 40, a yearly test for those older than 40. 3. Respect spring weather. Like winter ice, spring showers can slick roads and cause skids. That misty April dew can lie treacherously on the road. Remember that speed limits are posted for ideal, not rainy, conditions. 4. Check tires before leaving on even a short trip. All types of tires will last longer if you maintain recommended pressure and rotate them every 5,000 miles. 5. Care for your brakes; have them tested, tightened and relined frequently. Bear in mind that puddles of water can make brakes fail; if uncertain, test brakes by stopping several times on an empty stretch of road. 6 Refine your road manners: everyone likes that spring ride, so even small roads may at times be crowded. If someone else fails at his manners, don’t use your car to show your displeasure. 7. Concentrate on driving. Let a passenger hunt that perfect picnic spot — if you trv, you might never find it (or anything else again).

Gov. John Volpo

Has Close Call

NORTHAMPTON, Mass. UPI — Gov. John A. Volpe and three other men were shaken Tuesday night when their heli-

diers were thro^Tnto a^major' co P ter crashed in atl °P cn field

moments after takeoff.

A Navy spokesman said two missions were flown along Highway 101 in the sourthern part of North Viet Nam between 2 a. m. and 4:40 a. m. Pilots were unable to assess

the damage.

In South Viet Nam, two battalions of fresh Vietnamese sol-

The state - owned helicopter had traveled about only 100 yards when it plunged 40 feet back to earth on La Fleur Airport. The pityt si id a drive

battle with 3,000 Communist guerrillas less than 30 miles from the U. S. airbase at Da

Nang.

The reinforcements were or-

dered after Viet Cong troops ! shaft snapped,

outflanked a battalion of Viet-; The pilot, David W. Graham names rangers and almost of Nahant, kept the craft level trapped the unit’s American of- on descent. It hit bn one wheel ficer-adviser. first, ripping up a large chunk

of turf. An eyewitness said It

The Vietnamese fled but the

American stood his ground un til he realized that his posi-1 tion was hopeless and escaped just as the Viet Cong closed the!

net.

The battle started three days ago. Losses on both sides have been heavy.

_: almost flipped over on Its side.

-n—

RECTOR FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE SERVICE PHONE OL 3-4*10 ft

U. S. Planes Hit Red Convoys

dawn today, raking two Communist truck convoys with a barrage of rocket and cannon fire.

I It was the seventh consecuSAIGON LPI U. S. Na\y ^ ye ( j a y around-the-clock fighter planes prowled the skies raids on North Vietnamese terover North Viet Nam before ritory.

NOTICE

Having been re-instated in the Postal Service at Greencast'e, ! wish to announce the

sale of the

DAIRY CASTLE DRIVE IN To Mr. and Mrs. Howard Chase local residents of our city. I sincerely appreciate the many favors and patronage of our friends and patrons these past two years, since opening the Dairy Castle on May 30, 1963. I also hope and trust my past customers will continue their support of the Chases', in their effort to continue the business along the same lines and policies we initiated when opening the enterprise. We especially wish to thank all of our friends for their comforting words, thought and deed during our very recent loss of our loved one. Very Sincerely, JULIAN STEELE

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PENNIES A DAY KEEP YOU IN HOT WATER

The new, automatic quick-recovery electric water heaters are marvels of efficiency. They quickly heat water for baths, dishes, laundry and other household needs. And they do it the safe, flameless way, for just pennies a day—another example of the low cost of workfree, worryfree electricity.

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Calico cloth insulates first transformer! ’ Michael Faraday’s first transformer, built in 1831, consisted of an iron ring wpund with two coils of bare wire. The layers of wire were separated by calico and the turns, by twine! The electricity for Faraday’s transformer was generated from a^ primary battery circuit that was made, or broken to create induced current The electricity for many of today's giant transformers is generated by the atom. Working Together for Better Farming and Better living Electrically

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