The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 August 1965 — Page 3
On The U. S. Farm Front
WASHINGTON UPI - The Agriculture Department said food for peace exports of agricultural commodities under Public Law 480 amounted to about 5.46 million metric tons during the first half of 1965. The shipments included: Wheat, 166.4 million bushels; wheat flour, 2.4 million hundredweight; com 6 million bushels; grain sorghums, 3.89 million bushels; barley, 1.5 million bushels; soybean oil, 262.2 million pounds; cottonseed oil, 17.2 million pounds; tallow. 80 million pounds; tobacco. 1.69 million pounds; rice, 6.4 million hundredweight; non-fat dry milk. 2.58 million pounds; condensed milk, 28.7 million pounds; evaporated milk, 1.2 million pounds: dry whole milk, 1.8 million pounds; beef, 10.5 million pounds; cotton, 266,000 bales.
ARS said this may explain some of the losses that often occur when turkey producers move poults from starter batteries to floor brooders. Some of the poults apparently fail to find water right away in their new quarters. When they do find it, they drink too much.
The Agriculture Department already has bought sizeable amounts of canned apricots, canned green beans, and canned and frozen red tart pitted cherries for the school lunch, and has advertised for offers for canned or dehydrated sweet potatoes, canned com, and canned peaches.
Dillon Rules On Fees Increase INDIANAPOLIS UPI—Atty. Gen. John J. Dillon ruled Thursday that an increase in fees for nursing and rest homes does not have to be paid unitl 1966. The interpretation of a 1965 law hinged on the phrase “from and after July 1, 1965.” The opinions said “the more recent and better considered cases hold that ‘from and after’ a day named means beginning the day after the day named.” By this interpretation, new fees which range up to J75 replacing a former flat rate of $25 wall not become effective until July 1, 1966. A license purchased by July 1 is good for the calendar year beginning on that date.
The Agricultural Research Service said turkey poults 11 to 22 days old can drink themselves to death when they get water after going without it for a day or longer.
Labor Complaint Is Turned Down WASHINGTON UPI — Trial
IN GtCENCASTU SINCE 1900
PRIZE WINNERS IN OUR 'Horn* Fashion" Department Opening
lit Prise 2nd Prise ■rd Prise 4Hi Prise Mi Prise Ml Prise 7Hi Prise •ill Prise Mi Prise lOrii Prise lltli Prise 12* Prise 12ili Prise 14rti Prise 19tli Prise
Pieldcrest Electric Blanket, Mrs. Inet Pruitt, Fillmore, Indiene Amerken Teuriiter Lugfege, Mrs. Jemee Wheeler, Fillmore, Indiene "Heuie Beautiful" Oametk ToMedeth. Mrs. Helen Stone, Coetetville, Indiana Cotton Blanket, Mrs. Grace Hered, Greencaitle, Indiana Striped Beach Jewel, Mrs. Mary Blue, Greencaitle, Indiana lace Edge Tablecloth Set, Mm. Martha lewii, Greencaitle, Indiana Lace Edge Tablecloth Set, Mm. Paul Heaney, Greencaitle, Indiana Checkered Beach Towel, Mm. Freda Hunt, Greencaitle, Indians PiHaw Caie Set, Mm. Reba Kivett, Greencaitle, Indiana Pdiew Caie Set, Mm. Maytne Reed, Claverdale, Indiana Luncheon Cloth Set. Mrs Louiie Beeher, Greencaitle, Indiana Bath Towel, Mm. Freda F. Cole, Clovedale, Indiana Bath Towel, Mm. Keith Cooper, Stileiville, Indiana Satin Covered Hangem, Eileen Shuee, Greencaitle, Indiana PiMow Caie Set, Retha Wagle, Greencaitle, Indiana
THANK YOU Greencaitle and Putnam Ceunty women for making thk opening a jeyout and luccenful affair.
Be really safe!
with real perspiration protection A nem anfl-perspirant fbat really works! Solves underarm problems lor many who had despaired of effeeN*b help, yuchum Anti-Perspirant keeps underarms absolutely dry tor thousands of grateful users. Positive •etiOG coupled with complete gentleness to norms/ aMt end complete safety to ctothmg is made possible by a aew type of formula produced by a trustworthy •G-year-oftf laboratory. Remember, it stops excessive -and is a hrily effective deodorant, too.
Your choke LIQUID or CREAM
Q
Eeck w phrs tar
*000
phts
tor 90-day soppy
GREENCASTLE SINCE 1900
examiner Phil Saunders ha* recommended to the National Labor Relations Board that it dismiss an unfair labor practices complaint filed by a former employe of the Indiana Gear Works at Indianapolis was fired for posting “insult-
ing, sarcastic and malicious” cartoons at the plant. The employe was Jerry W. Packard, who lost his job last Nov. 14, the day after the cartoons appeared. Sauders said the evidence at a hearing on the complaint “shows that the
cartoons . . . were pointedly aimed And directed at the company president, John Buehler, holding him up to contemptuous ridicule . . . and showing a clear disloyalty to the company and indefensible by all accepted standards of conduct.”
. tye&t ' 'VectiitK* 1865
63-A
‘‘After leaving his horn® in April of 1861 as colonel of the 21st Regiment of Illinois Infantry, he did not return to it until August 1865. The reception given him when he reached Galena was one of the most brilliant ovations ever given to any man in this country.” said a leading article in Harper’s Monthly soon afterward. “Immense numbers of people were present not only from all parts of Illinois, but from the adjoining states. The enthusiasm was unbounded.” The welcoming speech was made by Elihu Washbume, one of the remarkable brothers
from Maine who rose high in governmental affairs in other states. U. S. Grant, who had no liking for public speaking, had his response given by Rev. John H. Vincent (who was to earn an enduring reputation as founder of the "Chautaqua”). It bespoke Grant’s gratitude for the neighbors and friends who had stood by him loyally “through good and ill report.” Grant had resigned from the Army in 1854 to avoid a court martial for drunken neglect of duty. He had not fared well in business in St. Louis and had been reduced to working in his father’s leather store in Galena. When in 1861 he volunteered his services to the Army, no reply came from the War Department. Representations made to the governor in his behalf had gained him a colonelcy in the militia from which he rose to his fame and grateful acknowledgements in Galena. CLARK KINNAIRD. Galena, III., Aug. 18. 1865, depicted by an artist for Harper’s Monthly.
Distributed by King Features Syndicate
DROUGHT SEVERITY
m
.v-'v
jl
■
r • i v! - r ! < I
Wl
m r; \,. : U S. D£f»ART*FNT OF COBULFRCE fttVIftONMENTAl SCIINCf SERVICES ADMINISTRATION WeoAof Bure**
£1 WHD MODERATE SEVERE EXTREME
THIS GOVERNMENT MAP locates the drought areas of the northeast. The drought Is continuing into its fourth year, with reservoirs, wells, and watercourses ebbing to new lows.
2nd ORBIT
SEALAB EXPERIMENT GIANT EYE CHART
VISIBLE NIGHT ORBITS
GEMINI-5 HIGHLIGHTS—Here are highlights of the Gemini-5 flight, scheduled Aug. 19 for eight days and 121 orbits. Top: A six-hour rendezvous practice session with a specially built pod carried by the Geminl-5 itself. The pod has two high intensity lights and radar. Left: Radio communication test with astronaut Scott Carpenter, who will be in the Navy’s diving bell Sealab-2 beneath the Pacific. Middle: Visibility experiments with two ground charts plowed in the open near Laredo. Tex., and Carnarvon, Australia. They will be 2,000 feet square, within which will be squares 1 by 4 feet. The patterns will be changed from orbit to orbit. Right: Several orbits will be visible over North America in a night sky.
Fincastle News By Mrs. Ernest Heber Mrs. Doris Boiler entertained the Canasta Club Wednesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. John Harless and family and Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Corley and family were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Meyers Mrs. Mary Virginia Clodfelter and Mrs. Maude Brothers, accompanied Mrs. James Carroll and daughters, Mrs. Hazel Sutherlin and Mrs. Bertha Clodfelter to Lafayette shopping Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Leroy Shillings and daughter, and Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Ward and sons and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Black were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Shillings and family. Richard Turner and his mother, Mrs. Lola Turner of Vero Beach, Florida, called on relatives here Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Brothers and children, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Buser. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Max Call and sons. They attended the annual Putnam County Little League baseball jamboree in Russellville in the afternoon. Mrs. John Williams was at the bedside of her sister. Mrs. Kathleen Allen in the Clinton Hospital Sunday. Sara Baird spent Saturday night and Sunday with her grandmother, Mrs. Olive Baird. They called on Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Jefferies in the evening. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Jefferies COMMISSIONERS CLAIMS The Putnam County Board of Commissioners will meet in regular session Monday. August 16. 1965. at 9:00 legal time at the Court House in Greencastle. Indiana to consider the followin claims: HIGHWAY
The Daily Banner, GraaneastlG, Indiana Friday, August 13, 1965 FOREIGN NEWS COMMENTARY
By K. C. THALER LONDON UPI — Despite the Viet Nam war Britain still thinks Red China should be in the United Nations. Prime Minister Harold Wilson, himself one of the staunchest supporters of American Southeast Asia policy, told parliament in a foreign affairs re- ; view that Communist China ! should be represented in the world organization “despite everything.” In stressing this view the Labor government does not intend to embarrass the United States. The British government view, and especially that of Wilson personally is that things might have been better in Viet Nam if the Communists could have been contacted in the corridors of the U.N. or its major agencies in New York or Geneva. Wilson, who has made it his business to push a Viet Nam peace campaign wherever possible — though with no discernible success to date — takes the line that the first thing to do is to establish some channel or communication with the Communists of Peking and or Han or. His argument has been all
visited Mr. and Mrs. Bernice Gooding Monday. Mrs. Mary Virginia Clodfelter and Mrs. Maude Brothers acJ companied Mrs. Ruth Brothers and Mr. and Mrs. William McCall to north Webster Sunday where they spent until Monday with the Richard Turner family on Lake Tippecanoe.
j along that while it mav have been possible to establtsn, meanspicuously, some suen c et had there been a pipeline in existence, it is a very different matter to get a formal conference going under the full glare of world publicity. Peking and Hanoi have in fact been saying they don’t want to sit down at a conference table with the Americans. This argument tends to overlook, however, one important point. Britain has diplomatic relations with Red China and has a charge d'affaires in Peking. Red China in turn has a diplo1 platic representative in London. The fact is Britain has been unable to “reach” the Peking regime through this established channel because the Communists simply refuse to talk. The same seems to apply even to France. President Charles de Gaulle went out of his way to establish full-dress diplomatic relations with Red China, on full ambassadorial level. But all the available evidence is the French got no further in Peking than the British. The fact is that the hard-line Communist leaders — and this certainly applies to the Peking rulers — follow their own rules. ' They talk w’hen they w’ant to ! and they remain unreachable when they don’t.
RECTOR FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE SERVICE PHONE Ol 3-4SI0
Joe Spencer. Salary
S1&7.50
Floyd L Allen
157 50
James Curtis Boiler
. . . .
131 40
Robert Boiler
162.00
Dean L Branham .
165 00
Olyn Campbell
137 70
Ralph Delp
93.60
Paul Hassler
153 13
Clarence Marshall .
196.10
Jesse McGuire .
154 70
Frank Nelson
119.00
Vernie Larkin
162 75
Arthur Prather
153 00
George Talbott
153.00
Eugene Miller
145 80
Don Mangus
146 20
Ronald D Dove ...
146.20
Richard Gray
145.80
Clayton Sutton
....
139.40
John Walsh
150 50
Woodson Buttery ...
167.45
Glen Crawley
153.00
Kenneth Broadstreet
137 70
Thompson Allen ...
144 80
Noble Austin
. . ..
86.40
Harold Goodman ...
....
145.60
William Griffin ....
145.60
James Marcum ....
137.60
Buryi Guy
. . . .
129 60
Harry Miller
144 00
Roy Weller
. . . .
144.00
Virgil Walters
144.80
Kenneth R Boiler .
. . . .
144 00
Jerry Hurst
144.00
DeWayne Costin ...
130.50
Everett Cornett
....
129.60
Floyd Richardson ..
. . ..
135.00
Gerald Miethe
129 60
Robert Overpeck
84 00
John O. Shinn
135 00
BAINBRIDGE TAP LOUNGE BAINBKIDGE. INDIANA The Finest Steak and Catfish Dinners Family Room Available For Reservations Call 522-9292
NOTICE! Y-PALACE RESTAURANT & SINCLAIR SERVICE at JCT.OF U. S. 36 AND 43 UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Enjoy our Home Cooked Dinner! and Home Made Piei Now air conditioned for your comfort. Open 24 hour! a day for your convenience.
At last! The fit you've always wanted... with new comfort you never expected!
IN NAVY AND COLORS
NEVER BIND! ...no matter how snug they fit...no matter how active you are! NEVER BAG! ...snap back into original shape...no saggy seat or knees! f "Men"* Wear on xclusively S the Square" u f LfVl'S n •fGtS'Eerp **» tnir 0 . s p*tcnt omcc *no cr^orcs gapmenis M*rr only by levi it»a %% t zo . en batteby $?., ban pbancUco «
\
