The Mail-Journal, Volume 1, Number 30, Milford, Kosciusko County, 13 September 1962 — Page 4

THE MAIL-JOURNAL Thursday, September 13, 1952

4

PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY Democratic ARCHIBALD E. BAUMGARTNER, Bdttor and Publisher DELLA BAUMGARTNER. Business Manager ■ t Entered as Second Class matter at the Post Office at Syracuse, Indiana Subscription: $3.00 per year in Kosciusko County; $3.50 Outside County MMIQMM AOVUTISINO UFftESCtfTATIVa

Welcome To Indiana, Ike!

Welcome to Indiana, Ike! We give this resounding welcome to former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, along with several million other Hoosiers, as he appears today (Thursday) at Rensselaer, the home town of his old friend Charlie Halleck. The former president appearing ostensibly to lay a cornerstone at the Charlie Halleck building at St. Joseph college at Rensselaer, and to pay tribute to a man who helped him put much of his program through congress during the eight years he was president. The occasion today will be the first

Trade With Cuba

Russia has become embarrassed by the fact that the only Communist nation on the Western Hemisphere, Cuba, has moved steadily toward economic chaos. Cuba is no Communist show piece. The sugar crop in Cuba has fallen far below normal. It has been necessary to have food rationing in Cuban cities. Many factories have had to shut down and guerillas are now active again. Apparently now Moscow has decided to attempt to bail Cuba out. There has been a sharp rise in the. number of Communist vessels delivering personnel and supplies to Cuba during the past month. ELLICOTTVILLE, N. Y., POST: “From one of our readers comes the story of the little robin who hated digging for worms. One day he heard a voice: “I’ll trade you a worm for a feather.’ A feather? ‘That’s nothing,’ cried the robin. ‘I accept.’ Each day the same offer the LENNOX, S. D., INDEPENDENT: “Government bureaus succeed in keeping more and more people ‘busy’ these days in making available to us all sorts of interesting and valuable information. For example, a study just completed at a cost of $1,400 and 300 man hours gives us this

FARM j-ljf NOTEslGi2r= 1 •'*»». U.HHlH.iiiUii Hit

By DONALD FRANTZ Agriculture Extension Agent Fall lawn care is important this year. We went through an extended drought and lawns are in need of some help in making a good fall growth so they can go through the winter in good shape. We ought to always remember that we don’t have a good lawn, we grow a good lawn. It is constantly growing with new green leaves replacing the older ones that are dying and that a lawn is growing and alive and all the rules of life and death apply to lawns. Blue grass is a cool weather

asdf sadf

“Wear White After Dark” is the theme of the May safety poster distributed by the Chicago Motor Club to some 88.000 grade school classrooms in Illinois and Indiana. At night, all bicycle riders always should wear some piece of white dothing to make themselves more visible to motorists. White dothing reflects light coming from car headlamps and street lights. Avoid accidents by being seen.

EDITORIALS

plant and it makes its best growth in spring and fall. For this reason, it needs feeding in the fall just as much as in the spring and in these seasons where it has been hurt by drought, it especially needs it in order to recover quickly. On a good lawn, use 10 pounds of a good lawn fertilizer per 1,000 square feet. On a poor one, double the rate. It should be done as soon as convenient to give the bluegrass as much growing time as it can have. ♦ * * I have been asked many times what the trees are that have been so widely advertised for ordering out of the east. They are one of the family called Robinia and that makes it a locust. These are apparently a fast growing hybrid dwarf locust and I would see no reason why they aren’t all right if the price is reasonable.

It doesn’t look like . the best business in the world to order

pronouncement made by Ike since his return from Europe where he leisurely visited old battle grounds and friends he knew during World War 11. His remarks tday will be heard around the world. Anyone who has read our editorials over the years knows we have taken sharp exception to the former president and his Rensselaer friend on more than one occasion. This is our job as a member of the free press. And we will do so again. But we are Americans first, and when a former president comes to our state we want to be among those standing up to cheer him.

It is also interesting to note that a short time ago Mr. Ernesto Guevara, Cuban Minister of Industry, arrived in Moscow. He stated that the purpose of his visit was to discuss Soviet aid in the form of construction of a steel plant. It would appear that the Soviet Union is establishing in Cuba a sizeable military mission, which would compare with the United States’ military assistant mission in countries like Laos. It is believed that in the Soviet mission, there are high ranking officers, non-commissioned officers and privates to advise and help operate the training program. same acceptance. Suddenly came winter. The robin cried out for his feathers. No answer. Soon the robin, once feather-cov-ered, was snow-covered — dead! To get something for nothing, he gave everything — his life. stirring information: The average man’s posterior covers 179.4 square inches and exerts an average pressure of .92 pounds per square inch. We are sure this will add immeasurably to the gross national product and raise our standard of living to an all time high.”

these things out of a news advertising when‘we have such capable nurserymen right here. Trees are living things, too, and they respond to good treatment just as you and I do. * * * Starlings are beginning to be a real concern for livestock feeders. They have congregated in large numbers in cattle lots and cause considerable waste of feed. This occurs by both actual feeding and by contamination. Studies have been made on the seriousness of this problem and it has been found that one starling can cause a loss of as much as one-fourth pound of feed per day. This isn’t as estimate; this was found to have happened in a severe infestation. If you think this is not serious, multiply this by ten thousand which is an estimate on some of the larger flocks and you get a figure of 2,500 pounds of feed per day lost by bird feeding, waste and contamination. These are big figures but an uncontrolled situation could be that bad. There is also reasonably good evidence that starlings harbor and spreadsome livestock diseases. There is strong evidence that TGE is one of thesdj||jhk anything that can be done to bird proof farrowing houses should be done, ♦• » - The date for the Annual Outlook meeting will be October 15. We had a lot of fun last year on our price forecasting and I have the results tabulated. WE’LL DO IT AGAIN THIS YEAR. * * * I would certainly like to know how many new silos have been built in the past couple of years in this county. There have been a lot of them, representing thousands of tons of capacity. Most of them will be used for cattle feeding and this trend to silage feeding represents a change in thinking concerning handling of cattle. The trend is away from the use of an all-grain ration and a heavy prime grade of cattle. There are a couple of good reasons for this and one simply is that people do not want fat meat. The other good reason is that we can produce more beef from an acre of com silage than we can from an acre of corn harvested in the ear. A contributing factor is Dr. Mac Beeson’s development of a silage supplement

(hl

SHE’S A GOLD DIGGER... ADMITS IT!

Dear Amy: I am married to my second husband because I couldn’t live with my first husband. To be perfectly honest with you, I’m a gold digger and he didn’t have enough money to keep me happy. y Now I’m having the same trouble with my second husband. Since my first husband has more money than my second husband, I phoned my first husband and suggested we make-up, but he wouldn’t listen. What do I do now? Candie Dear Candie: There isn’t a man living with enough money to keep a dizzy dame like you happy. Hold on to the guy you’ve got. I doubt that anyone else would want you! • • • Dear Amy: I am to be married shortly and recently was given a bridal shower by some friends of my future inlaws. Here is the problem. We are having a dinner reception and therefore the number of guests has to be limited. (My future inlaws are aware of this and had been prior to the shower.) Am I now obligated to include the people who attended this shower and who previously had not been on the guest list? This would increase the number quite some. Thank you, Miss E. T. Dear Miss E. T.: You are not obligated to invite these people. It’s impossible to invite a friend of a friend of a friend (as the saying goes). Your future in-laws were aware of the fact that these people were not to be invited to the reception so there should be no hard feelings on their part. Leave your plans and guest list as is. • • • Dear Amy: My girlfriend Beverly and I would like to join the U.S. Navy, after high school. But our mothers seem to think that becoming a Wave is not a career for a good girl. Amy, do you agree? Barbara Flowers

1,350 Students Expected To Register At Purdue Fort Wayne Center Approximately 1,350 students are expected to register this week for courses offered through Fort Wayne Center of Purdue university, it was announced today by Dr. Robert L. Ewigleben, director. The 1,350 figure will represent an increase of almost 20 per cent over the enrollment a. year ago, according to Noland T. Cooper, registrar. Nearly 450 students will be taking full-time programs of 12 or more credit hours for an increase of more than 25 per cent over the 1961 full-time enrollment. For the second straight year the increase in enrollment of full-time

THIS NEWSPAPER. Ki gfcw ® t o * l * you** children to the place and at **** *‘ me 9' ven fcol° w * ■Hi ® Several pose* will be taken FREE of charge lU" H by an expert children'* photographer from - WOLTZ STUDIOS. • All proof* will be »hown . . . Select your favorite po*e for publication and your child'* picture will appear in thi* newspaper at a * i'Jgl later date. VJM • ‘ You may, if you wish, order photograph* for WP S'*** or keep*ake» from the Studio •• • but •* ®"tirely up to you. HERE IS THE TIME AND PLACE FRIDAY, SEPT. 21, 1962 10 A.M. TOS P. M. Kitson Tourist Home SYRACUSE, INDIANA SATURDAY, SEPT. 22, 1%2 10 A. M. TO 5 P. M. Grange Hall MILFORD, INDIANA

Dear Barbara: Certainly not! Serving as a Wave in the U.S. Navy is a highly respectable career for any girl. Good and bad are found in every walk of life. A good girl doesn’t change her stripes at home or abroad. • • • Dear Amy: Please tell me what to do with my 17 year old son before he winds up with,, stomach trouble. He has a terrible obsession for spaghetti and meatballs. Some mornings I have to leave the house early before he gets up. He goes to the refrigerator and eats the left-over spaghetti and meatballs for breakfast . . . cold! I get sick when I think about it. This has been going on for some time. I can’t very Well hide the pot so what should I do. He’s a six-footer (God bless him) with an appetite to match. Mrs. R. T. Dear Mrs. R. T.: You can’t hide the pot and he’s too big to pat his hide, so use your noodle! Just prepare enough for the evening meal or close your eyes to the leftovers. If this has been going on for some time and he has suffered no ill effects, stop worrying. He has a cast iron stomach! • • • Dear Amy: I live ih a fishing village near the ocean. There are many boats of all shapes and sizes at the wharves. When the men talk about the boats they always call them ‘she’. I want to know why isn’t a boat a ‘he’ but I’m too ashamed to ask. Andrew (age 9) Dear Andrew: A ship is always referred to as ‘she’ because it takes a man to run her! • • • Please address all letters to: AMY ADAMS c/o THIS NEWSPAPER For a personal reply enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope.

students can be partly attributed to the shortage of housing on the Lafayette campus, according to the center officials. In addition to day and evening schedules in Fort Wayne, courses also are being offered in three communities in the northeastern Indiana district served by the center. Five courses are available in Wabash, three in Elkhart and two in Bluffton.

sdf

in oASs/ntm J NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF ADDITIONAL APPROPRIATIONS Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Syracuse, Kosciusko county, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said municipality at their regular meeting place at 7:30 p.m. on the 2nd day of October, 1962, will consider the following Ordinance covering additional appropriations October 15, 1062 to December 31, 1962 and fixing a time when same shall take effect. General Fund — No. 19 (bldg. eom.) $200.06 No. 19 (plan comm.) 600.00 No. 28 (Heat, light) 400.00 No. 26 (Radio, Garbage Col.) 600.00 No. SI (OU, gasoline) 600.00 No. 60 (OASI) 300.00 Sewage and Disposal Plant — No. 20 (new work) (32,667.60 FROM FUND UNEXPENDED Trustee Turkey Creek Twp.s6oo.oo Gen. No. 26 426.00 Gen. No. 52)_•1,575.60 Accumulative Sewer Fund 32,657.60 Taxpayers appearing at such meeting shaU have a right to be heard thereon. The additional appropriations as finally made will be automatically referred to the State Board of Tax Commissioners, whicn Board will hold a further hearing within fifteen (15) days at the county auditors office of Kosciusko County, Indiana, or at such other place as may be designated. At such hearing taxpayers objecting to any of such additional appropriations may be heard and interested taxpayers may inquire of the County Auditor when and where such hearing will be held. Attest: J. BARTON COX Clerk-Treasurer A. BYRON CONNOLLY LOREN LONGENBAUGH HARRY L. COY Members of Board of Trustees ’X Town of Syracuse, Indiana MJ & PP S. 6 *l3 NEW AND USED FORD TRACTORS & Equipment 1953 Ford 1951 Ford 1941 Ford Ferg. 1950 John Deere “B” 1948 Massey-Harris “44” with 4-row cult Used Meyer Hay Conditioner Used Ford Mowers Used Semi Mdt Mowers Ford Baler Allis Chalmers Chopper with com & hay heads Wagon and grain box 42R Combine F-2 Case Combine “F 4 Case Combine New Wheel Discs De Good Tractor Sales Warsaw, Ph.: 267-8443 North on State Road 15

KATHRYN SHOPPE LOCATED AT 136 SO. MAIN ST., GOSHEN $40,000 GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE RACKS OF DRESSES $7.88 or 2 for $15.00 LINGERIE — Slips, Gowns, Briefs JEWELRY — Beautiful Items % Price SPORTSWEAR — Shorts, Anklers, Shirts, Swim Suits by Jantzen HOSIERY s 69d to s* l9 HATS — New Fall Hats Reduced Another Big Cut In Prices CTADE UAIIDC. DAILY 9A. M. TO6 P. M. jIUIIL nUUIIJ. SATURDAY 9A. M. TO9 P.M.

NOW... make the change to CLEAN GAS HEAT ’BRf . I and be all set to enjoy man y ac | van t a ge S NOW.. . when your furnace is shut down ... is an excellent time to have automatic gas heating equipment installed in your home. By doing so now, you will avoid the rush when the new heating season starts. Gas costs less... is fully automatic, too! NORTHERN S&wice COMPANY •- 1 .whi.n ~ •*-*•** ** . - ~

State Unemployment Down During August First estimates of the number of Hoosiers working on non-farm jobs at mid-August indicate a drop of about 4,300 from the July total. Lewis F. Nicolini, director of the Indiana Employment Security Division, said that the preliminary reports for last month showed a 1,433,400 non-agricultur-al employment total. Some factories, especially food processors, were adding workers last month but many others were in shutdown periods for vacations, model change, or inventory so manufacturing employment was under the July figure. Small seasonal losses in non-manufacturing establishments exceeded gains reported. At the same time, Mr. Nicolini

Me Cormick-Cutter 15

w \ \ 666 seToUToFiUe HOUGH AND ONTO THE GRGCNA? McCormicMufer A deal with McCormick-Cutter is straight down the fairway . . . come in now and deal with the dealer who is dealing! Trade for a like-new OK used car in top condition!

McCormick-Cutter, Inc. IOOT"SOUTH HUNTINGTON yg g” A57 ' 37 ’ 7 *57-3735

said, unemployment dropped to an estimated 88,700, about 8,000 down from the July level. The August unemployment rate was 4.9 per cent of the labor forces compared to 5.2 per cent in July. SYRACUSE School Menu Monday - Sloppy Joes, buttered x>tatoes, fruit, gingerbread, milk. Tuesday- Fried potatoes, cottage cheese, emerald salad, cold meat sandwich, milk. Wednesday - Italian spaghetti, green beans, applesauce, bread and butter. Thursday - Beef and noodles, mashed potatoes, green limas, cookie, bread and butter, milk. Friday-- Toasted cheese sandwich, bean salad, fruit, cake, milk.