The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 September 1965 — Page 6

Pag* 6 Th« Daily Bannar, Greaneastla, Indiana Tuesday, September 14, 1965 Greencastle Wins 3rd Straight Cross Country

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NATIONAL LEAGUE

XV. L. Pet. GB

The Greencastle School Cross Country runners chalked up their third consecutive victory of the season Friday when they beat out Linton and Bainbridge in a three way meet held on the Greencastle course. >- | Coach McCracken commented |hat the victory was a duplicate 6f the two seasons wins in that the Cub team efforts provided the difference with balanced ^coring. ** Greencastle tallied a low 24 faints while Linton chalked up 17 for a second and Bainbridge captured a high 57 for third. | *_ The Cubs were paced by» £tike Blose who covered the two inile course in less than 11 minJites. Following Blose were

Phillips and Troyer. Terry San Francisco 84 Dowty and Jim Shonkwiler Los Angeles .. 82 burst through the last stretch' Cincinnati .... 81 to finish seventh and eighth. Milwaukee .... i9 David Baughman, a Linton Pittsburgh .... 79 senior who set the pace all Philadelphia .. 74

through the meet, raced over the course in 10:43 to capture

first place honors.

Bainbridge’s Don Albin led the Pointers with fifth place. Results of the meet were:

59 .587 62 .569 63 .563 64 .552 67 .541 68 .521

73 .490 14 81 .445 20 1 i

AMERICAN LEAGUE

W. L. Pet. GB

Minnesota .... 92

2>i Chicago 83

Baltimore .... 81

5 I Detroit 80 6 ' Cleveland .... 77 9 V, New York .... 71

Los Angeles .. 67 Washington .. 64

.630

.568 9

.566 9 Vi

.556 11 .542 13

.483 21 li

St. Louis 70 Chicago 65

Houston 61 64 .421 24 Boston 56 New York .... 46 100 .315 39Vi 'Kansas City .. 53

54 63 62 64 65 76 79 81

90 .384 36 90 .371 371

over foreign laborer! Mexican ‘•braceros,” Canadian potatodiggers, West Indian < fruitpickers and the like imported to work on the nation’s farms. With Humphrey voting, the Senate decided 46 to 45 to adopt the Bass amendment, thus striking out a provision of the farm bill which would have shifted the control of the foreign labor program to the agriculture department. ij Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirtz has come under heavy fire this year from various

1 Baughman 2 Blose 3 Phillips 4 Troyer 5 Albin 6 Miller 7 Dowty 8 Shonkwiler 9 Hanks 10 Moore

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BOWLING NEWS

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Women's Tues. League Sept. 9, 1965

NO.

XV

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J2, Steinbaker ....

22

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4 Sutherlin

20

4

6 Lewis

12

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Jl Friend

10

14

f>. Lambert

6

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£. Hatfield 1

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Veep Vote Breaks Tie In Senate WASHINGTON UPI — Administration forces, saved from defeat on a key amendment by Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, were confident of final Senate approval today of the

farm bill.

But before the final vote, probably late in the day, the Senate had to dispose of a number of other amendments to the big package of farm programs. And some of these could touch

off a fight.

The most controversial of the

with the which the

High Individual Game: J. Bums 192 |

400 & Over: P. Huxford 525. | amendments dealt G. Lancaster 516. J. Green 492, minimum price at

B. Cooper 467. J. Rossok 460, J. government sells its surplus Burns 454, E. Shillings 452, K. wheat. Sen. Karl E. Mundt, RHopkins 447, M. York 434, C. S.D., sought to raise the price Steinbaker 433, D. Cody 424, B. from the present 105 per cent Alderfer 422. E. Roach 421, D of the price support loan rate

Johnson 412, J. Sutherlin 402. to 115 per cent.

If Mundt's proposal, which was opposed by the administration, is defeated, wheat belt senators were prepared to try again with an amendment by Sen. Frank Carlson, R-Kan., to raise the resale price of wheat to 110 per cent of supports. Other amendments would limit the amount of government subsidies to individual farmers. Sen. Daniel B. Brewster, D-Md., proposed a $10,000 yearly limit; Sen. A. Willis Robertson. D-Va., would make the limit $25,000 for individuals and nothing for

co-operatives.

Humphrey bailed the administration out of a tight spot Monday when he cast the tiebreaking vote to assure adoption of an amendment sponsored by Sen. Ross Bass, D-Tenn. It

.459 25

441 27 ^ growers and some farm state

legislators because of his policy of restricting the number of foreign laborers who come to the United States to help with the harvest. Wirtz has argued that this work should be done by

jobless Americans.

Awarded Contracts WASHINGTON UPI The Army Monday notified Sen. Vance Hartke, D-Ind., of contracts totaling $10.2 million awarded two firms for work in Indiana. The Firestone plant at Noblesville will produce 179,564 tank assemblies under a $4.4 million contract. A. $5.8 million contract calls for production of 238,000 tank assemblies at Goodyear Tire Co.’s Muncie plant.

Pope Paul In New Peace Plea VATICAN CITY UPI — Pope Paul VI today opened the fourth and final session of the Ecumenical Council with a new' plea for peace — a theme he will carry to United Nations headquarters next month. Informed Vatican sources said the Pope will extend his stay in New York to at least two days i and perhaps longer. Speaking in the splendor of St. Peter's Basilica, the pontiff offered “the fervent wish . . . that peace which is in these very days being wounded and bleeding” will return to the world. The prayer underscored the importance the Pope attaches to his journey to New York on Oct. 4 where he will issue a general call for peace.

On The U. S. Farm Front

More than 90.000 students

was only the second time this j have received bachelor and adsession the vice president has ; vanced degrees from the Unihad to vote. versity of Washington in SeBass’ proposal wmuld continue attle since its establishment In

the Labor Department’s control 1 1861.

Nothing you can buy...

by the dozen, - ■■ ■ ■ — « quart,

peck,

...is a bigger value per dollar than your electric service.

When yon pay your electric bill, your dollars are buying M/2 times more electricity than they would have bought 30 years ago! Smart homemakers know a bargain when they see it. Today's average family is using 6 TIMES MORE electricity than m 1935. Electric Powcr...Iridiana's Most Abundant Resource.

0

PUBLIC SERVICE INDIANA

Card of Thanks We w'ant to take this means to thank each and every one for the visits, cards, gifts, flowers and telephone calls on our Golden Wedding Anniversary on September 9th. Our special thanks goes to the Clinton and Madison Friendly Club members for remembering us. All our friends and relatives were very kind. Thank you again. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Boswell

WASHINGTON UPI—Chicken farmers have cut potential egg prdouction for the remainder of 1965 and the early part of 1966, but have expanded broiler output substantially for the same period. In a review of the poultry and egg situation, the Agriculture Department said egg production during the frist seven months of 1965 was the same as during the same period a year earlieh. But egg volune during the rest of the year and into early 1966 ptorobly will be shrinking because producers are expected to raise 7 per cent fewer flock replacement chickens than the 320 million in 1964. This w'ould be the smallest number on record. The department said the country’s egg-laying flock Will not decline by 7 per cent, because when fewer replacements are raised, farmers generally keep their older layers in production longer. The agency estimated egg production this fall and winter probably would be 2 per cent below that of a year earlier, since the hate of lay problem wil continue its upward trend.

The department said broiler production probably will continue to run substantially above a year earlier at least well into 1966. About 12 per cent more broilers will be ave’lable for slaughter in September-No-vember this year than last Egg prices to farmers during the first quarter cuaraed of 1965 averaged 30.7 cents per dozen, 5.5 cents below' a year earlier and the lowest for the period since World War II Since then eggs prices have gone up a little, hovever a little departthe 1964 average. The department said the uarises are likely to advance during most of the remainnig months of 1955, and average higer than a year earlier. Farm bzroiler prices in Jan-uary-August averaged 14.7. cents per pound, compared with 14.2 cents in the same period last year Higher prices for broilers this year stemmed from sharply reduced supplies and higher prices for red meats as well as from a continued increase in population and in com sumers’ incomes.

Cost Cutting

WASHINGTON UPI—President Johnson, in a renewed effort to hold down government costs, has told his cabinet members “we can all make do with a little bit less if we try.” Johnson told the agency heads in * statement that he wanted them to concentrate their attention on a “relentless” campaign to weed out marginal programs, to hold dowm federal employment, and to reduce travel costs of government employees.

ST .R HOLLYWOOD UPI — Gaptoothed Terry-Thomas will star in “Easy Come, Easy Go” for ‘•'aramount with the young musical team of Jan and Dean.

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