The Mail-Journal, Volume 73, Number 3, Milford, Kosciusko County, 18 January 1962 — Page 8

The Milford Mail PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT MILFORD, INDIANA Democratic ARCTHTR AT.n E. BAUMGARTNER Publisher and Owner Entered as Second Class matter at the Post Office at Milford, Indian* Subscription: $3.00 per year in all zones, payable in advance. RURAL NEWS CORRESPONDENTS NEW SALEM—Mrs. Ray Ferverda % mmwmm MvtenstNO untsenfMvts EDITORIALS Enough Said!

As a feature article ina recent issue of U. S. News & World Report observes, all kinds of changes were aired in the Senate investigation of the ethical-drug industry — “There were allegations of fixed prices, of excessive profits, of monopoly on “wonder drugs’, of gouging of the public.” An examiner for the Federal Trade Commission was appointed to make an exhaustive investigation of these extremely serious charges. The FTC file on the case — which covered six of the principal pharmaceutical companies — filled 1,200 pages, along with transcript of hearings running to 11,000 pages and 8,000 pages Os exhibits. This, it would seem, is about

Praises Paid Circulation Phil S White, the able publisher of the Tuscola (Ill.) Journal (circ. 3,875), a consistant award winner, often gets off editorials we feel are worthy of publication for our readers here. Such an editorial appeared recently ' in which Pfiil took the so-called shoppers to task for bragging about ridiculous circulation figures and readership. We’ve contended the readership bf these throw-away shoppers is abominably small, and-that merchants who use them in lieu of the local newspaper are doing a disservice to the community in which they hope to gain their business. They are betraying their home community. Here’s what Phil said: “Paid circulation is keystone of

PATRIOTISM IS A VANISHING SPECIES IN OUR SCHOOLS. HEROES ARE DEBUNKED. TEACHING PROFESSION IS BRAIN WASHED. STRANGE THEORIES ARE ADVANCED. PATRIOTISM KICKED OUT OF MANY SCHOOLS NOW Married to a former teacher, a daughter now teaching, coverings top’echelon education in Indiana, W| I am not about to Bf. " ■ sell short the AMfe ft great school sys- ■ ill tern that has done ■ II s 0 mu ch to make MgP* America great. s I At the same time, I am frightened at what I ■ see going on in HhA JBM many our M schools. Patriot- | ism is a vanishing F. WHITE species. There is an organized movement to induce students to leave God at the edge of the campus. In my township we have a $5 million dollar high school with 1,800 pupils. The ROTO has been down-graded as for inferior student minds. Required subjects are so arranged that only 34 students can take ROTC. The ROTC produces some of our very best officers for the armed forces. Our. nation is in peril and there is a whale <Jf a difference in being an officer and a private in our military, yhe superintendent of the high school was.in the armed forces a.„, short period when our country was in deafly peril and he hated every day of it Our schoolmen should get down on their knees and thank God that brave Americans underwent Valley Forge, died at Gettysburg, Belleau Woods and Corregidor, that we may have million dollar high schools. Th&fOihould nightly thank God for the military forces of the IL S. that alone stand between free nations andcommunist enslavement. EDUCATOR POINTS OUT ILLS BESETTING SCHOOLS Dr. Max Rafferty, a California superintendent of schools, is on a

as thorough as one can get. Result: The examiner recommends that all the charges , against the companies be dismissed. In his words, as quoted by U. S. News: “Under the economic system in our country, it is apparent that profit is essential for the survival of the system. Economically, a company or an industry cannot exist without profit. . .. Consequently it seems evident that a desire to make a profit, and unilateral decisions aimed at that goal, cannot justify an inference of price fixing or a conspiracy to eliminate competition.” Enough said!

advertising value for any printed publication. It is the only standard recognized by the advertising industry. “It is as simple as this. If people pay for a publication they will read it. If they do not pay for it, it may not even get in the home. “When I hear people talk about circulars, I think of all of them that may be found in the bushes near a front step. I also think of the five or six copies I often find in my garbage can and of the many, many other cans readily available for such distribution. “The newspaper that is paid for goes into the home and stays there for several days. It goes to a ready-made audience of readers who respect and depend upon the material it contains.” . ♦

firing line where the battle is hot between communisms and patriotic school patrons. He related that in the yesterdays in our schools we read the words of Nathan Hale when a rope was around his neck as he was about to be hanged for spying for our country. Hale said: “I regret that I have but' one life to lose for my country.” Today the U-2 pilot downed in the Soviet, pleaded: “I didn’t know what I was doing; I know now that I was risking world peace; - my superiors were responsible.” We know how American tum- • coats in Korea made broadcast ’ records praising communism and - accusing the IL S. falsely of using germ warfare. Kicked out of our schools are songs like “Columbia Gem of the Ocean”—and the stirring words of 1 Stephen Decatur who said: • “Our country! In her intercourse with foreign nations may she al- ’ ways be in the right; but our ’ country, right° or wrong.” ' What has been substituted? ‘ > About nine years ago we started , ; teaching something called “social • living” even in the seventh grade j of American schools. We taught . “adjusted to their peer groups and [ competition is bad and cooperation , i supremely good.” THEORIES TAUGHT NOW ’ ARE POOR SUBSTITUTES < 1 Children are led to believe that. , 1 somehow the world will soon be one happy family. They are not . told that in this big, bad tempered, i battling world there are millions . . who hate our American insides. ‘ i We are not taught survival. Any • mention of American capitalism is * i with curled lip. Educators for three decades have been debunk- ( ing American heroes. ■ Our teaching profession has been ( i brainwashed with slogans like: < 1 There are no eternal varieties; J 1 everything is relative; teach the ] ’ child, not the subject. ■ i ' Our flag and national noses 1 ’ have been rubbed ,in the dust by I comic opera small nations like ’ Chiba. 1 Whether .we; Wait er not we 1 1 are to blame!'We nave feeen turn- ' duck spineless&lux- . r ury loving spiritless 1 1 coming right Out of our class* 8 rooms. They neither’know or care, ’ 1 that America is in deadly pdril. HM a : | As a substitute for kicking pa- < 8! triotism but of schools, we have 1 suffered loss of sharp young peo- ’ pie, informed, disciplined and 1 alert, militant for freedom, clear 1 eyed to the filthy communist men- 1 ace. . Read the CLASSIFIEDS!

I FARM NOTESlSiurx • I ll' HtillhfKtlflTii 11:1

By DONALD FRANTZ Agriculture Extension Agent Our congratulations go to Mr. and Mrs. Dale Mikel. He was named the Outstanding Young Farmer of Kosciusko County by the Warsaw Junior Chamber of Commerce. These awards are based on ability in farming, community service and improvement in volume and efficiency. A lot of other things go into this selection too. A young farmer could be the most capable, most' efficient and the biggest operator in the county and not get a look in if he was not sincerely interested in his community. Dale lives in Jefferson township, just west of Milford, and he succeeds his neighbor as the county winner. Jesse Beer was the outstanding young farmer last year. We are real proud of them. A program on life insurance will be offered on January 23 at the Women’s exhibit building on the fairgrounds. This started out as a special interest lesson for home demonstration clubs but there is so much interest that it has been made open to anyone. We get many questions, especially from the Better Farming-Bet-ter Living group, on life insurance. There are many kinds and variations of policies including group, guaranteed income and others. Richard Weigle of the Purdue economics staff will discuss insurance in general and tie in the present Social Security program to insurance needs. Robert Hall of the Robert Hall agency and Gordon Brubaker, Farm Bureau insurance manager, will also be on the program to discuss insurance programs. The speakers will then form a panel to answer questions. We anticipate a lot of interest. The program will begin at 1 p. Mentone has probably as large r concentration of feed manufacturing as-any town in this state. There are three firms of considerable isize making feed there for livestock and poultry. The 1961 corn season has brought up a lot of questions for which we have no good answer. We simply do not know which hybrids will respond best under the kind of season 1962 is going to be. There is a world of interest in single cross hybrids. They did a wonder-

IF YOU CAN’T STOP HIM, JOIN HIM

Dear Amy: My husband is always the first to volunteer for charity work. These drives last for weeks on end and he is in the thick at it. Consequently, we (our children and myself) just see him for an hour during supper. Now you have often said that a man leaves his home at night because something is lacking. I can’t get my husband to tell me what he finds outside that is more interesting than his family. He is a wonderful person and I know he loves us dearly. 1 ‘Widowed’ by Charity Dear ‘Widowed’: There is obviously nothing lacking. He is a good soul with a kind heart who enjoys helping others less fortunate than he. Join him when you can and appreciate him when he returns. Few men are so inclined inside and out. • • • Dear Am... I met a ooy at school and soon found out his parents knew my parents. One day when I went to his bouse, his parents sent us to the store. We got chummy and started kissing in the alley. I like him very much and would do it hgain. , When I told my mother and "older sister (she’s 21), they told me I should be ashamed and shouldn’t do it again. I disagree with them for I cannot just leave what I call love alone. I am only 11 but can think for myself (at times). J.S. Dear J.S.: If you can think for yourself (which I doubt), you had better think over what you were told. Girls your age should be sweet and shy but you’re as bold as brass! • • • Dear Amy: I have heard of men who snore in their sleep, talk in their sleep and walk in their sleep but I’ve never heard of a man who cackles in his sleep. Well, that’s my husband! He sounds just like a chicken. Do you know why he cackles? I told him but he doesn’t believe it. Sleepless Wife Dear Sleepless: The man who cackles in his sleep to probably hen-pecked!

ful job in 1961. They may again i 1962. The salesmen will prais them very highly and they reall will have a lot of accurate figure to prove their point. However, th figures for 1961 may not be th same as 1962. I can only guess but there ai two very popular inbreds ths probably go into most single eras* es. They are Wf9 and CllO3. As single cross this was outstandin last year both in yield and stanc ing ability. Guessing again I woul say that most true single crosst are this combination. Howeve we must remember that sing] crosses are not new and if the are really superior, why has ; taken 25 years to find out aboi it? The single crosses are more sei sitive to environmental conditior than double crosses and as a ru! they are less consistent from yes to year. They may be sensitive t draught, to thick planting and t poor seed bed .. .preparaion. Th seedlings may also be weake These are reasons why doub crosses have been the standard i the hybrid business. The amount of seed produce per acre in a single cross is muc less than in a conventional doub] cross. This is why it is so exper sive. As a rule, where single cros is a seed parent, only about one third as much seed can be madt A producer must, have about thre times as much per bushel or he wi

TRAVELLING MUCH? Keep in touch by telephone ips UH THS LOW-COST ««HOOSISR NIGHT RATS” 3.A St. IUH4JIO n ’Til 4:1111 — inWEER ar two rutEi nnii iwiai* UNITED TELEPHONE COMPANY OF INDIANA, INC. .mwuneimimumraiNUTß

Dear Amy: t I’m M years old and I went ■ with a boy for 3 years. We planned i to be married but my mother . would not sign. I then became i pregnant and went to live with i the boy (only 17 years old) and his parents. 1 After the birth, I returned to t their home. The baby became ill 1 because they were painting the ® house and his mother wanted to B give the baby some paregoric. I s put my foot down and said “No!” ? My boy friend put the baby and me in the car and brought us to my parents’ home and told me to “get out and stay out.” This 5 was 3 weeks ago. 1 Amy, I love him and want to ? marry him but every time I try 1 to get in touch with him, his B mother steps in. I know he loves 1 me because he by the. house but because of his mother, \ he will not come in. y I want the baby to have his a right father, but if that is impossible, my mother says to sue Q for non-support. Should I? Do you ’ think it would help any? Worried } t Dear Worried: . If this boy had any intentions of j marrying you, I doubt that he j will noW. If you can prove he is j the father of your child, he is e legally responsible for support e which would help you financially. f Yon need the assistance of a t lawyer or the Legal Aid Society. • * • Dear Amy: I have a problem — sticking f skillets —and I mean stickin*, r Everything and anything sticks * to the bottoms till half of the food t stays on the bottoms. s Do you have a solution? I have gone through the holidays feeling like I wanted to pull my hair out Mrs. W.K. J Dear Mrs. W.K.: ’ I do. There is a new non-sticking 5 skillet on the market. They’re 5 available at most department stores. They do the trick ... and * guarantee no-stick! t• • * Please address all letters to: Amy Adams c/o This Newspaper 5 For a personal reply enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope.

in not make it. se . v ly Many hybrids that are sold as single crosses are really three-way es crosses. An example of a good seed he is two strains of Wf9 as a seed he parent crossed with a pollinator. This has th,e advantage of a highre er seed yield per acre and the reat suits were pretty good on this is- cross. You can see that this is a technically not a three-way cross, ig either. A true three-way would d- involve three unrelated lines. Id _ I had test plots in three town'r> ships this year and used Indiana certified hybrids in all of them. e y There was no point in using commercial seed in which the breeding was secret. Two early varieties looked good. They were Indiana n- 253 and 219. My choice was 253. ns The old Indiana 620 was the worst de but then I only used it as a check ar to find out if stalk rot was presto ent. We knew that if any stalk rot to was around, it would find the 620. he it did. jr. , ® >le The Secretary of Labor ,-anin nounced that unemployment went up by 100,000 last month and that the number of people with jobs deed dined by 882,000. I am not sure eh whether this means that a lot of je people without jobs are employed n- or that a lot of the unemployed ss are working. In any event the sece- retary said it’s about normal for le. this time of year. ee — ill Read The Milford Mail.

Little Chats ON Public Notice By James E. Pollard Copyright 1960 Lowest And Best (No. 20 hr a Series) One of the most common forms of public notice, or legal advertising, is that which invites bids on such things as public works, improvements, equipment and supplies. Usually the notice specifies that the bids must be sealed, sets a time limit when they must be filed, in some cases calls for the filing of a performance bond, and gives other details. Such a public notice serves several purposes. It publicizes the intention of a branch of the government or other public or semipublic agency. In paritcular, in the kind of situation in question, it aims at competive bidding as in highway improvements or school building contracts. There is no guarantee, of course, that such legal advertising will produce bids. It happens sometimes, too, that the bids are nearly or actually identical. But the law generally gives authority to readvertise where the bids exceed the estimate or are otherwise unacceptable. The law often gives discretion also for the acceptance, by the proper authorities, of the "lowest and best” bid. The lowest bid may not be the best bid, everything considered, and the best, conversely, may not be the lowest. It is a major part of the function of the public notice, published in a bona fide newspaper of paid general circulation, to bring Out the: “lowest and best” bid. This is of great importance to the public which pays the bills. It is of importance also to other interested parties, including the bidders themselves. Post Office Rule Changes Are Announced It is going to cost publishers more to learn from the post office the new address of a subscriber who has moved. The increase is one of three changes authorized by the Post Office Department effective January 10. Other changes call for discontinuing the forwarding of thirdclass circulars and revised postage rates for handling certain fourthclass mail (parcel post.) Magazine and newspapers will continue to be forwarded to an addressee who has filed a new address and has guaranteed forwarding postage for such matter. But the charge for furnishing a change-of-address notice to the publisher will be 10 cents, a fivecent increase. The increased cost in the service is expected to result in stepped-up efforts by publishers to have sub-

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scribers notify them of changes of address in advance of the jnove. Third-class advertising Circulars and similar pieces of mail will no longer be forwarded, but will be returned to the sender for a minimum eight-cent return postage fee. The new address will be supplied upon request. If an addressee has not guaranteed forwarding postage for nonlocal parcel post, it will be returned to the sender with the correct address or the reasoft fbr non-de-livery written on it. The cost for return In either case will be a minimum of eight cents I PRIH T I H | OFFSET OR - LETTERPRESS Posters Booklets Forms Business P” 3 ! Stationery Cards Friattof I II ' for ett Programs I I | I jwrpSMS Tickets ’ ‘Name-on* Zy - I —T~i| Stationery n I for the ***>?* L?'■ Ladies Color Work Quick Service on Large or Small Jobs Syracuse Quality Printers, Inc. J. B. COX 112 E. Main St. Phone GL 7-3541 "Syracuse Printer Since 1940”

Help Wanted PRODUCTION WORKER Brunswick Boats, recently located in Warsaw, has need for well qualified men and women for factory position on the day shift. No previous experience required. Applicants must be dependable, conscientious and able to furnish good reference. z The position offers good working conditions, steady employment and liberal company benefits to those interested in building a secure future with a growing company. — APPLY — Brunswick Boats Division of Brunswick Corporation State Road 15, North, Warsaw, Indiana

or the return postage cost, whichever is higher. In the past, the mihimum return cost was three cents and a five-cent charge foi the new address. If the new address was not supplied, the fivecent. charge was not levied. Read the CLASSIFIEDS ' NEW AND USED FORD TRACTORS i & Equipment 1953 Ford , 1952‘‘60” John Deere J 1941 Ford Ferg. Ford Baler 50 ft. Rotary Cutter Used Spring Tooth ■u Hanrows Used Loaders for Fords 1 and 2-row Pickers Ford Mounted Picker* i No. 20 New Idea Picker Wagon and grain box 42R Combine F-2 Case Combine “F 4 Case Combine New Wheel Discs De Good Tractor Sales North on State Road 15 Warsaw, Ph.: AM 7-8443

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