The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 June 1965 — Page 4
4 The Daily Banner, Greeneastle, Indiana Friday, June 4, 1965 On The U. S. Farm Front
By Gaylord P. Godwii^ WASHINGTON JPI — Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman has announced the department will hire “at least 1,150” young persons this summer under President Johnson's youth opportunity program. Department agencies were directed to contact their local state employment offices and begin the hiring immediately. Freeman said all positions are to be filled "as early this month as possible.” Johnson recently called on both public and private agencies to provide at least 500.000
! jobs this summer for young persons 16 to 21 years old. The jobs were to be in addition to i any summer hiring that had
been planned earlier.
Freeman said preference will be given those "who need jobs the most because of educational or economic disadvantages.” He said every consideration should be given to opportunity for equal employment "regardless of race, creed, or color.” "The goal is to keeo boys and girls who are out of school for the summer off the streets: to provide those who need money
to return to school this fall an opportunity to earn it; and to give work experience to those who are entering the job mar-
ket,” Freeman said.
The Foreign Agricultural Service has forecast world tobacco harvest in the first half of calendar year 1965 — mainly in the southern hemisphere — at 3.1 billion pounds. This is up only slightly from the 3 bil-
result in more effective use of manpower, plants and equipment.
SANTO DOMINGO UPI — A new’ inter-American negotiating
lion pounds of last season, but : team sought a solution to the is almost 30 per cent larger j Dominican crisis today. The U.S.
Seek Solution In Santo Domingo
than the 1955-59 average of 2.4 billion pounds.
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MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. UPI — Officials of Honeywell, Inc., Minneapolis, said Thursday they plan to move part of the company’s engineering and manufacturing division to
Wabash, Ind. , _ , . __ Plans call for custom panel ™ th Jose A - Mora - secretary
and I general of the Organization of
Marines remaining here prepared to pack up and go home. The negotiators — Ellsworth | f Bunker of the United Stats, IImar Penna Marinho of Brazil and Ramon de Clairmont Duenas of El Salvador — were ex- | pected to confer at once with leaders of the rival Dominican
factions.
Soon after its arrival here Thursday, the team conferred
American States, who has spent about two weeks trying to set-
design, panel assembly sheet metal work to be consoli-
dated at Wabash.
A spokesman said the consol- tie the situaion here, idation of operations now scat- ! The Bunker-Penna-Clairmont tered a several locations in I party is the second such comMinneapolis into facilities at mittee the OAS has sent here. Wabash and also Chicago will A five-man team which also in-
one of Bogalusa’s upper-income neighborhoods. Moore and Rogers, both Negroes, were the first members of their race to be hired as deputies in Loisiana’s Washington Parish county. In Chicago, about 150 civil rights demonstrators Thursday night picketed the lakefront Exhibition Hall where President Johnson was attending a Democratic party rally. They also staged an automobile "stall-in”
but police averted a major traffic jam by towing away one car and threatening to arrest the drivers of the other “stalled” cars. The demonstration, called by Negro comedian Dick Gregory, was to protest to the President against the rehiring of Chicago’s controversial school Supt. Benjamin C. Willis. Negroes claim Willis supports a school policy which furthers de facto segregation.
9*iiide. WASHINGTON MARCH OF EVENTS
CONGRESSIONAL PRESSURES SIDETRACK LBJ's IDEAS
PRESIDENT COUNTERMANDS TWO OF HIS OWN ORDERS
MOOSE DANCE Saturday, June 5tb 9:30 to 12:30 Music by "TOWN CRIERS" By Special Request FRIDAY NIGHT DANCE
Friday, June 11th, 9:30 to 12:30 Music by the "Cut Out Combe"
Members and invtied guests
Air Cenditioned
By LESTER L. COLEMAN, MJD.
These Are Your Questions WHAT causes an excess | works is not known but it seems
•mount of hair on the lips and
face of young women?
This condition, called hirsutism, can be caused by an imbalance of the hormones that are secreted by the endocrine
glands.
Sometimes, it is severe emoIH tional stress 1 that further upsets the delicate hormone balI ance and may i! b e responsible
M for the produc tion of excess
hair.
This, then. Dr. Coleman becomes the basis for the occasional use of specific hormones to try to remedy the con-
dition.
Teenage girls are exceedingly sensitive about superfluous hair. They need gentle psychological support in addition to the simple, safe methods of removing tha hair.
• • •
Is it possible to prevent repeated attacks of canker sores? How can they be treated? Unfortunately the cause of canker sores, or aphthous ulcers, is not known. Virus infections, dietary indiscretions and intestinal upsets have been suspected and even indicted as the cause, without any real proof. They just seem to happen and are probably the most troublesome and painful nuisances that occur in the mouth. The ulcers have been cauterized and anesthetized with only moderate, short-lived success, A treatment that has been fairly successful is the acidophilus lactobacillus, taken in powdered or pill form. How it
(© 1965, King Features Syndicate. Inc.)
BABY’S ARM RE-PLANTED—Recovering from surgery to reimplant her severed left arm, Oralia Garcia, 21 months old, feeds herself, under the watchful eyes of her mother, Mrs. Ida May Garcia, at Colorado General Hospital in Denver. Success of the efforts rests with pending surgery to restore severed nerves. Oralia lost her am In a ear-train accident.
NO SINGING—Fhyllis McGuire of the singing McGuire Sisters threads through a throng of reporters to appear a second time as a witness at the Grand Jury investigation of Momo Salvatore Giancana, but the alleged crime syndicate czar was hustled off to jail (lower, dark glasses) when he refused to answer any questions. Appearing May 19, Miss McGuire testified that she and Giancana had traveled together to vacation spas abroad.
eluded Penna gave up the task
before Mora tackled it.
iff near Bogalusa, La. A search continued today for other susThe Dominican problem also P ects ’
has been approached by the Ernest R. McElveen, 41 of United Nations and such top Bogalusa. was arrested in TyU.S. negotiators as McGeorge lertown, Miss., about 20 miles
By HENRY CATHCART Central Press Washington Writer TV’TASHINGTON — President Johnson’s toughness with his W own staff and subordinates in federal government agencies has resulted in several instances in which the White House has had to countermand its owm orders. In the most recent one, the President ordered the use of scarce silver in minting $45 million silver dollars only to have to reverse his field six days later because of the uproar in Congress. Earlier this year, the President ordered the closing of some veterans hospitals only to have to change under similar congressional
pressures.
Despite the President’s widely publicized effort to run the government on the basis of "consensus,” his approach to executive decisions like those cited above is extremely dogmatic. He’s likely to listen too strongly to the side that appeals to him and wave away of-
ficials with opposing view’s.
This wouldn’t be too bad, except, as in the case of the veterans hospitals, when the action had to be rescinded, the official to whom he didn’t listen was criticized for not arguing his side of the story more forcefully. It is a fact
tfiat some people high in the Veterans Administration axe in the
White House dog house for this very reason.
If history teaches us anything, some Treasury officials will find themselves in that same crowded kennel for not arguing with more vigor against the silver dollar minting decision. It’s awfully hard for anyone to work with a boss who makes
The Capitol
Congress Jrowned
Bundy and John Bartlov’ Mar- from Bogalusa, less than an
tin, so far without notable re- hour after the killing Wednes- up his mind before hearing all sides of a discussion. Ask vir-
day night. He denied any con
suit.
to relieve the pain and promote
faster healing.
• • •
Is there really an “ulcer type” personality? The characteristic stomach •ulcer type" is a thin, energetic, bright-eyed, high-strung, tense
person.
But ulcers are foolers. They occur even in apparently wellcontrolled, solid, stable personalities.
• • •
What is impetigo? Is it con-
tagious?
Impetigo is an exceedingly contagious skin condition. It occurs mostly in children, but adults are not immune to it. Small clusters of blisters appear on the skin and quickly spread to other parts of the body, by self-inoculation. Antibiotics are used to prevent the blisters from becoming
infected.
Do pinworms of the Intestines occur only in Southern climates? This is a misconception. It is surprising how frequently pinworm and other parasites are found in the intestinal tracts of children and adults in Northern
climates.
Public health officials emphasize the need for strict hygiene and early treatment with modem efficient drugs in order to eradicate this common condi-
tion.
While Dr. Coleman cannot undertake to answer individual letters, he wiU use readers? questions in his column whenever possible and when they are of general interest. Address your letters to Dr. Coleman in care of this newspaper.
tually anyone in the higher echelons of the federal government in Washington. Stories such as the ones just recounted travel
The achievements of negotia- nection with the crime and re- fast< 6 J tion to date have been essentialy fused to waive extradition. • * * *
military — the conclusion of a • SING SING SINGERS—Washington is coming in for a most fairly successful cease-fire and J3eputy ° :Sei1 Moore was unusual evening of music. The local jail’s musical group, comthe neutralization of the Do killed and Deputy Creed Rogers prising some 60 male and female inmates, will stage a concert minican “White House." !-ounded in mnfire from a ^ SPOnSOrShiP ° f ‘ he ^
The OAS also has taken on such practical tasks as the payment of long-overdue wages to Dominican government workers and the collection of garbage that had accumulated for u r eeks j in the bullet-scarred streets of j old Santo Domingo.
No effective progress has I been made toward settlement of i the basic conflict between Maj ! Gen. Antonio Imbert Barrera's junta regime, which controls most of the Dominican Republic. and Col. Francisco Caamano ; Deno s rebels, who hold about ! two square miles of Santo Do- ; mingo.
pickup truck which swept past their patrol car. Rogers managed to radio for help and supplied a description of the truck which was stopped at Tyler-
town.
Police said McElveen, who served in the Marines in World War II, worked in a paper mill laboratory and operated an insurance agency in his home in
It will be the first time that so many prisoners will be allowed “outside" in a group, and there’ll be a lot of non-singing policemen in attendance. Inasmuch as the concert will be given from a stage floating on the river, many of the cops will be policing
the place from boats in the immediate vicinity.
The official in charge of the prisons says the concert idea has
been & terrific morale builder among the inmates.
More than 150 turned out for the first call for What's Next,
applicants. Some of them will play publicly for the first time musical instruments they have
learned to use since being confined.
Among the musical selections will be: "This is a Lovely Way to Spend an Evening,” and "I Believe.” Noticeably absent from the repertoire was "Sing- You Sinners.”
Tha “Jail
House Blues”?
Negro Deputy Shot To Death i By United Press International A white laboratory technician was charged with murder Thursday in the nightrider slaying of a Negro deputy sher- j
CJSN CONCRETE PRODUCTS For Prompt Delivery on CONCRETE BLOCKS, READY-MIX CONCRETE and Other BUILDING SUPPLIES Phone OL 3-6533 GREENCASTLE, R. R. 3
This chart will change your mind about Chrysler prices.
Make
Wheelbase
a:'*” Sfcts: .K,, 8 Displacement Payments
Difference Per Month
CHRYSLER NEWPORT
124'
218.2’
383
$65.67
—
FORD GALAXIE 500
119
210.0
289
58.94
$6.73
CHEVROLET IMPALA
119
213.1
283
58.94
6.73
OLDS F-85 CUTLASS
115
204.3
330
59.26
6.41
BUICK SPECIAL SKYLARK 115
203.4
300
58.65
7.02
BASIS OF COMPARISON—All models are 2-door hardtops equipped with V-8 engine, automatic transmission, power steering, power brakes, radio and heater. Monthly payments have been computed on manufacturers’ suggested retail price, one-third down and 36 monthly payments. Not included are the extras you pay for on practically any new car: whitewall tires, deluxe wheel covers, rear seat belts, destination charges, state and local taxes, interest, insurance and licensing fees.
CIDAA
and this chan will change your mind about Chrysler resale!
1964 Ford Galaxie 500 4-dr. sedan
$2160
1964 Chevy Impala 4-dr. sedan
2255
1964 CHRYSLER Newport 4-dr. sedan
2635
‘Based on average retail used car prices — cars equipped as mentioned shove — according to the N.A.D.A. Official Used Car Guidebook for April J965 Central Edition. See us. We deliver!! PUTNAM MOTOR SALES
118 NORTH INDIANA
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
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