The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 February 1966 — Page 8

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Mr. and Mrs. Albert Whitehead and daughter, Linda, were Thursday evening visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Whitehead and family of New Market. Week end visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Rex Call were Mr. and Mrs. Max Call and sons of near Roachdale and Mr. and Mrs. Phil King and daughter Lisa of Greencastle. Jay Clodfelter spent Sunday with his cousin, Wesley Smith of Greencastle. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Yochum and Mrs. D. P. Alexander and Mrs. Roscoe White were in Indianapolis Sunday afternoon to visit relatives. The Yochums and Mrs. Alexander called on Mr. and Mrs. Glen Crodian and grandson and Mrs. White visited her mother and sister at the home of her sister, Mrs. Marie Clark. Mr. and Mrs. Hubert McGaughey and family spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. McGaughey’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Keeney. Linda Sue Martin was a week-end guest of Linda Phipps. Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Goode, called on relatives Sunday afternoon who were ill, namely Mae Truex, Mrs. Good’s mother and her brother, Maynard Hurst, both of Mt. Meridian. Bob Call returned to his home in Greencastle Sunday afternoon after being in the Putnam County Hospital several days. George Kelley is a patient in the Putnam Co. Hospital. He had surgery last week and is improving satisfactorily. Ricky Stultz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stultz celebrated his

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6th birthday last Sunday with a dinner at his home. Those present for. the dinner were Mr. and Mrs. James Frazier and children, Joy and Ron, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Woodrum and sons all of North Salem. Marlyn Kincaid of Advance and Mrs. Dewey Stultz near Morton.Mrs. Stultz’s brother, Pvt. Ted Frazier of Ft. Gordon, Georgia and Pvt. Art Thomas of Ft. Ord, Calif., called by phone in the afternoon and talked with some of their relatives and their girl friends, Miss Kincaid and Miss Frazier. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Pelfrey of Hamilton, Ohio, called on A. C. Pelfrey Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Kelley were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Saddler. Mrs. Hazel Davis and daughter, Carolyn, and Mrs. Minnie Saddler attended the wedding of Miss Cherry Ham and Larry Fields at the Christian Church in Waynetown on Sunday afternoon.

Mrs. Noel Nicholson visited her mother, Mrs. W. S. Lawter | of Russellville on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Terhune and children, while enroute to Linton Sunday to visit Mr. Terhune’s parents, were involved in an automobile accident in which their car was a total loss. Mr.

and Mrs. Terhune received first aid from a doctor in Clay City and were in the Putnam County Hospital Monday morning for X-rays. Neither of the children were hurt. Week end visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Noel Nicholson were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hunt and family of Covington.

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By Gaylord P. Godwin WASHINGTON UPI — The Agriculture Department today estimated the cotton carryover Aug. 1 will total a record 3.6.5 million bales. The whopping carryover compares with 14.3 million bales carried into the 1965-66 marketing year last Aug. 1 and with the previous record of 14.5 million bales in 1956. Two months ago the department estimated the carryover Aug. 1 would be 16.2 million bales. The revised estimate stems from weakened prospects for U.S. cotton exports, which more than offset improved prospects for domestic mill con-

In a review of the agricultural outlook, the department said fed cattle prices likely will continue strong during the first half of 1966 and average about the same or a little higher than in October-D e c e m b e r, 1965, when choice steers at Chicago averaged $26.50 per 100 pounds. The department said hog slaughter is expected to continue at a reduced level through mid-1966, with hog prices averaging well above 1965 levels. The slaughter rates will begin to move above year-earlier levels during the summer months and then stay above for the rest

of the year, the department said. The higher slaughter rate* later this year are in prospect because of the 7 per cent increase expected in the December, 1965-May, 1966, pig crop. Pigs born during these months will supply the bulk of the slaughter hogs during July-De-cember. The department said hog producers are expanding their production in response to favorable prices. This expansion in numbers will cause prices to weaken in the second half of 1966.

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