The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 June 1965 — Page 6
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The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Tuesday, June 8, 1965
from the hotel In their auite, such as fruit or flowers. “Guests don’t want to be made to feel at home,” says Bromber. “They want to feel much more pampered than that.”
“MISS EUROPE” — Juliane Herm, 20-year-old green-eyed model from Germany, sits on her throne as "Miss Europe” In Nice, France, after winning the title from a field of 19 from various European countries. Next, the “Miss World” contest in Miami F'*’
Paper Strike May Be Settled TERRE HAUTE UPI—One of the longest newspaper strikes in national history and probably the longest in Indiana may be settled Wednesday when members of the International Typographical Union i vote on an agreement reached with the Terre Haute Publishing Co. Union and company officials reached a tentative agreement Monday at a meeting at Indianapolis called by the Federal Mediation Service. If the typographers ratify the agreement Wednesday, a strike which began last Oct. 22 would be ended. Louis Keifer, general manager at the Terre Haute newspapers, said publication would resume with editions of The Star Monday morning, followed by the afternoon Tribune. Agreements had been reached previously with the American Newspaper Guild and the stereotypers. The pressmen and the Teamsters did not strike.
“OFF LIMITS”—A Negro youth seems undaunted as Ku Klux Klansmen give him speculative stares at a rally in Atlanta, Ga. He was one of several Negroes present.
Bit Of Paris In New York NEW YORK (UPIl—A Fifth Avenue hostelry noted for its Continental style of operation has brought another touch of the Old World to New York by opening the city's newest sidewalk cafe. Located across from Central Park and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the new Cafe du Parc at the Stanhope Hotel has a distinct French flavor, with flower boxes, a red. white and blue striped canopy and
sidewalk tables and chairs. White wrought iron railings with plantings enclose the area. The cafe is the latest in a series of innovations by Frank C. Bromber. who manages the Stanhope along European lines. Guests can leave their shoes in front of their room doors at night and find them shined in the morning. A Rolls Royce takes guests to midtown. A baggagemaster helps those arriving by ships with their baggage and through customs. Desk clerks are bi-lingual and all guests who will be staying for three days or more receive a gift
More Showers Are In Prospect By United Presj International Another round of scattered i thundershowers was in prospect for Indiana today — but only after temperatures have soared into the middle and upper 80s. The thundershowers, scheduled to begin in the afternoon, will be followed by cooler temperatures in the 70s Wednesday, j Fair to partly cloudy was the I outlook for Thursday, with a I "chance” of thundershowers in the extreme south and “rather
cool.”
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Only scattered light rain was reported Monday, with the mercury in the middle and upper 80s. The Louisville area measured 07 of an inch for the 24-hour period ending at 7 a. m. Lafayette had .06. Evansville .04. Cincinnati .02 and South Bend j .01. | Moderate to heavy fog covered the Indianapolis area this morning but lifted as the temperature rose into the 60s. Overnight lows this morning j ranged from 59 at Fort Wayne to 65 at Louisville.
On The U. S. Farm Front By Gaylord P. Godwin WASHINGTON UPI — The Foreign Agricultural Service lists West Germany as the biggest buyer of U S. food and other farm products in 1964. FAS said West Germany spent a record $587 million in 1964 for the bounty of American farms and food processing firms. This was $103.8 million, or 22 per cent, above the Ger- ! man purchases of the previous
year.
Soybeans accounted for one- | fourth of the total value of i Germany’s farm imports from ! the United States last year, i FAS said. About one-third of the increase in value of products purchased stemmed from soybeans. The United States in 1964 was the chief German supplier of practically all the items most important in U. S-German farm 1 trade, FAS said. It furnished ; nearly all the soybeans and cottonseed oil Germany imported; three-fourths or more of the 1 soybean meal, flaxseed, and tallow” and nearly half the tobacco, corn, rice, grain sorghums, rye. and variety meats. Only a very small part of the ; perishable farm imports such as fresh fruits and vegetables, fresh meat, dairy products, and eggs came from the United
States.
FAS said the Common Market’s share of the West German market in 1964 was far above
the average share of the European Economic Community countries in 1959-62. The ComMon Market countries of France, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg supplied West Germany, their Common Market fellow member, in 1963 and 1964 with most of that country’s imports of vegetables, fruit, eggs, meat, poultry, cheese, barley, butter and wine. FAS is skeptical of the chances of the United States enjoying a record farm export year in 1965 with West Germany on the buying end. The agency said several factors contribute to this outlook. Crop production in West Germany and the other Common Market countries was good in in 1964 and looks good for 1965. FAS said the German government may continue or in some cases stiffen its highly protective measures restrictive of U. S. products — for example, the increased supplemental levies on poultry. Furthermore, Germany had relatively large stocks of farm products at the beginning of 1965. The U. S. dock strike, reducing shipments from the United States in January and February, probably shifted German purchasers to other sources, at least temporarily.
kidney transplant from a gambler who was shot to death by his girlfriend Monday night. Three hours after James Toney, 34, died at Mt. Sinai Hosipital, his kidney was removed, i cooled, bathed in special solui tions, packed in an icy saline solution and rushed to the dying woman at Cleveland Clinic. Permission for the transplant was granted by Toney's es- | tranged wife, Geraldine. A clinic spokesman said it would take two days to two weeks to determine if the transplant was succesful. Toney was shot and killed by Mrs. Rosemary Evans, 37, in her east side apartment followi ing an argument. She is being : held and has admitted the j shooting, police said. Detectives said Toney and Mrs. Evans argued over money he had demanded to bet on horses. She gave him $20 and then alegedly shot him when he tried to take more from her purse. “We don’t have suitable cases every day,” Dr. Lester Adelson, deputy coroner, said. “This is a case of a dead man being of some help in keeping someone else alive maybe for months, or even years.”
College Relations and Recruitment of the U.S. Civil Service, at a conference at the University of Michigan.
The wedding ring is a pledge of the sealing of the marriage pact.
The United States ha* th« highest death rate from cardiovr.scular diseases of any country in the world and among the states, South Carolina rank* highest in cardiovascular death rate, reports the American Heart Association.
Woman Gets Man's Kidney CLEVELAND, Ohio UPI — A 28-year-old woman was alive today thanks to an emergency
JOBS TO CHANGE NEW YORK UPI—Within the next generation, 60 million jobs will change in character. Six-year-olds now starting to school can expect their vocations to change three times during their lifetime. These forecasts were made by Robert E. Mello, director of
VIET CONG VICTIM—A South Vietnamese soldier carries a wounded comrade from a helicopter after the comrade and some 200 other casualties were airlifted from the Quang Ngai battle area south of Da Nang. (Hadiophota/
Why was Grandpa always so tired? Most grandfathers a generation ago did so much hard, physical labor that little energy was left for fun with the family in the evening. Low-cost electricity now does most of the drudgery in factories and on farms. The result is a new generation of “grandpas” who aren’t old before their tim# —and a generation of grandchildren who know how much fun energetic grandpas can be. Public Sendee Indiana is proud of the part it has played in making the life of the farmer and factory worker easier... through the ever lowering cost of electric power.
ELECTRIC POWER Indiana's Most Abundant Resource
OFFICE CLOSED for Vacation June 12-July 13 Dr. W. R. Tipton
\bu don’t have to like golf to like onrBiiick”Swinging Sales Spree’’ Just driving. (And saving money.)
Proposed legislation to reduce excise tax on new passenger automobiles provides ■ refund ot such tax reduction where a passenger automobile is sold to a retail purchaser after May 14, 1965 and before July I, 1965, when the excise tax reduction becomes effective. Where a refund is authorized by this legislation, General Motors Corporation will make a cash payment to such a purchaser in the amount of the excise tax reduction. Enjoy your new Buick now! There’s an authorized Buick dealer near you. See his >; Double-Checked used cars, too. — JIM HARRIS CHEVROLET-BUICK 115 NORTH JACKSON ST, GREENCASTLE, IND —————— ^See the Buick Exhibit at the General Motors _ New York World’s Fair
