The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 May 1965 — Page 6
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Th« Daily Banner, Graaneastla, Indiana Thursday, May 20,1965
121 Perish In Airliner Crash CAIRO, U. A. R. UPI — At least 121 of the 127 persons aboard a Pakistan Airlines jetI liner were killed today when the plane crashed in a hilly area of the desert while approaching Cairo Airport. The boeing 720B was on an inaugural flight linking Communist China with the Middle East.
mh-iii f DISCUSSIONS go on in the United Nations and Washington, the fighting goes on in Santo Domingo. These loyal troops fire through a shell-shattered wall (Cablephoto)
On The U. S. Farm Front
By Gaylord P. Godwin
WASHINGTON UPI — The Agriculture Department predicts that per capita food con-
sumption in the l nited States meat consum ption is indicated during I960 will be slightly less Qf ^ 5 to 6 pound de _
than it was in 1964.
; clme predicted for pork. There
This is the department's way just aren’t as many hogs on the of saying there will not be as hoof to boost the 1965 pork sup-
ply as there were a year ago.
of reduced supplies. But prices of meat declined an average of
, . , 2 per cent, chiefly because of of two years ago. I ? , ^ . „ . .. vi a shopping amount of beef.
Beef consumption probably " 6
will increase only slightly from The department said price
the 100 pounds per person last year. But some decline in total
much food this year as last. Per capita consumption is determined by the available sup-
ply.
In food
a review situation.
The department said retail food prices probably will continue their gradual uptrend of
of the national recent years. They rose an avthe department erage of 1.2 per cent in 1964.
said declines in consumption of food from animal products — principally pork and lamb — are expected to be offset partly by increased consumption of food from crops. A much larger consumption of citrus fruit is expected this year, because production is recovering from the severe freeze
In January-February-March of 1965 they averaged .8 of 1 per cent above the first quarter of
1964.
The department said last year's average price increases were centered among crops. Fruits and vegetables rose an
average of 4 per cent. Potato spent for food in 1964, an inprices rose 23 per cent because cr ease of $16 from a year earl-
ier.
patterns will be different this year. Potato prices are expected to work downward going into the late summer and fall months of peak production. But price increases can be anticipated for pork and some of the other meats because of a sizable reduction in pork supply. The food bill this year is expected to be in the neighborhood of $83 billion, up $3 billion from 1964. The bill for alcoholic beverages last year was about $2 billion. This is expected to go up in 1965, chiefly because the drinking population
is larger.
The department said an average of $417 per person was
Q. What is the name of this cut of meat? A. Beef porterhouse steak. Q. Where does it come from? How is it identified? A. This steak is the largest from the short loin section. It has the distinction of having the largest tenderloin muscle of any steak. This is the smaller muscle which lies to the left of the T-shaped bone. To the right of the bone is the larger portion of meat, known as the loin eye muscle. A change from older meat cutting methods has eliminated the flank muscle, often called the “tail” of the porterhouse steak. Q. What is the difference between the porterhouse and T-bone steak? d. Often the designations are used interchangeably. If the two steaks Eire side by side, the one with larger tenderloin muscle is called porter-
house.
How is porterhouse steak prepared? By broiling. Porterhouse steaks which are 1 inch thick need 18 to 20 minutes total broiling time for rare and 20 to 25 minutes for mediumdone. Do not preheat broiler. Season with salt and pepper liter browning.
There were no aboard the plane,
Americans
SUPPORT
YOUR /X' MENTAL '4
HEALTH
ASSOCIATION
>SS° C ,
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— By WILLIAM RUT — Central Praia Writer
THE U.S. for the first time since 1930, will begin production of silver dollars—45 million of ’em in the first batch. That’s good news—and here’s hoping some of those cartwheels start rolling: your way. ! ! ! Juniata College freshmen defeated a sophomore team 618599 in an ^indoor” baseball game that lasted 50\i hours. That’s playing sofbaU the hard way. ill Humming bird wings beat 60 times a second—nature item. That's a lot of energy packed into so small an objecH III The world’s first Iron warships, according to an historian, were owned by Mexico back in 1840. Good grief:—don’t tell us,
PEACE SEEKERS—Coat in hand, Thomas C. Mann, undersecretary of State for Economic Affairs, is at the U. S. Embassy in Santo Domingo with John Martin (right), former ambassador and President Johnson's special emissary. Mann is a member of the President’s four-man fact-finding team sent to seek a basis for formation of a provisional government embracing both rival factions in Dominican Republic.
SHRIMP PARTY Friday, May 21 V.F.W. POST 1550 ENTERTAINMENT! New Canteen Hours: 1:00 P.M. to 200 A M.
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MORRISON’S TIRE 0 RETREADING Go.
that the Battle of the Merrimac and the Monitor was just another myth! ! ! ! Sometimes it's little things that bring us greatest joylike a tiny golf ball popping into a small cup in just one stroke. r • r Mora than 15 million corncob pipas are produced annually in tho U. S.—Fact ©graphs. Wal, I swanl ! ! ! On reading that Oberlin College in Ohio will permit consumption of 3.2 beer in dormitories and in a rathskeller, now under construction, F. E. F. wonders out loud if this could mean really “higher” education.
you're Telling mei
Six gravely injured survivors
were removed from the plane’* charred wreckage, which was scattered over a half-mile area of Halzouny Valley near the Suez Road about 10 mil. , from the airport. It was the third worst single air crash in aviation history. The worst occurred June 3, 1962, at Orley Airport near Paris. A chartered Boeing 707 jet hurtled off the Orly runway and crashed, killing 130 persons, including 121 from Atlanta, Ga., who were touring European art centers. The sweptwing jetliner which crashed today was carrying 115 passengers and a crew of 12.
Friday Truce Agreed Upon SANTO DOMINGO UPI — Government and rebel leaders have agreed to a dawn-to-dusk truce Friday to enable the Red Cross to collect dead and wounded casualties of t h is week’s heavy fighting. Maj. Gen. Antonio Imbert Barreas, head of the militarycivilian junta, and rebel Col. Francisco Caamano Deno were to sign separte agreements today providing for “cessation of hostilities” during 12 daylight
hour*. No precise hour had been set for the start of the cease-fire, but it appeared it would become effective at dawn. Casualties have been reported heavy in the junta’s campaign to mop up rebel forcee in northern Santo Domingo, but it is unlikely that the full toll will ever be known. Many bodies have been buried in back yards and patios or burned in t h • streets as a precaution against disease. It has been impossible to recover other bodies because they lie in exposed places under constant fire from one or both sides.
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