The Mail-Journal, Volume 3, Number 38, Milford, Kosciusko County, 29 October 1964 — Page 10
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THE MAIL-JOURNAL
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BUILDING COMES DOWN — The old storage building, located on the south side of east Main street. Syracuse.. fame down during the past yeek. Shown in the above ph<Mo arc Joe Hughes, on tractor, and Richard
t Spotlight on Improving Business ... < > . p < : Newspaper Readership Up As ; i Economic Level Gets Higher ; i By ARCH BAUMGARTNER < Publisher of THE MAIL-JOURNAL t J
The recent decision of a large air line to switch the major portion ol 4 newspapers is understandable when the nature of the newspaper reading audience is considered. ■ pany which has studied markets and advertising media ’ has found tli.i’. newspaper readership increases as the educational, and economic level of a' public becomes higher. It doc* not take much imagination to reach the conclusion that the majority of people who are regular air line customers are in the higher economic and social brackets. They are the people who have the money and the need to travel by air. They are the people who subscribe to new qxipers as a matter of routine pr.TcUce They are people who read newspapers be* ause their work and social relationships require that they
THE JUNIOR CLASS OF. SYRACUSE HIGH SCHOOL — PRESENTS — Girl Shy A Comedy in Three Acts by Katherine Kavanaugh FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1964 8:00 P M. CAST OF CHARACTERS TQM ARSDALE Jameson M&uzy OKE STIMPSON . . Rick Workman AUNT CAROLINE Jayne Poynter ANTHONY ARSDALE « Jim WiLson SYLVIA WEBSTER Lucy Kitson DEAN MARLOW ’.J R. Koher PEACHES CARTER Charlotte Hulley ASMA Mary* Barb Immel BIRDIE LaVEßNEClaudia Kistler BABS SANFORD Kathy Dorsey ALFRED TENNYSON MURGA TOYD Max Bfower CHUCK MAYO Dave GibeJ BACKSTAGE DIRECTOR: Mrs. Max Ellen Wagner ASSISTANT DIRECTOR: Jo Ellen Schoeff PROMPTERS; Debb Leer and Mary Kay Bushong STAGE CREW: Roger Stiver, chairman STAGE PROPS: Bob Folger, chairman HAND PROPS: Jean Eppley, chairman SOUND EFFECTS: Dave Gibe! MAKE-UP: Sue Traster. chairman COSTUMES: Sue Frye, chairman . USHERS: Sue Cutter, chairman PUBLICITY: Sally Searfoss. chairman TICKETS. Marinelie Meredith, chairman •5- ■ . SPONSORED AS A PUBLIC SERVICE BY TOM SOCKS SPORTSWEAR Wawasee Village South of Syracuse ,
Thursday, October 29, 1964
Hughes and Bernard Cannon, on the wrecker detail. The site will be landscaped by Ken Harkless. who recently built a new home on the w est side of the old building. Mr. Harkless provided The Mail-
■ have a depth of understanding about if current events—local as well as nao tional—which can not be obtained n elsewhere. S There is another important reason, however, why the’ local r newspaper - may be the best medium for conJ sistent airline advertising. Who ret members even a simple airline sche- - dule? Practically no one who. is busy < enough to be flying by air. ~ The newspaper is important in re- - pealing airline schedules for the ’ same reason that it is invaluable r. for advertising movies, television ■ programs, and grocery prices. It is a ready reference which relieves die , public of recalling details which will r not or can not be remembered. Hie local newspaper is retained in ? the home until the next issue arrives i largely to sene as a substitute for 1 imperfect memory.
Journal with the bottom photo, showing the old frame building on. the same site, token about 1913. Left to right in the photo are John McClintic, Dot Jones, Harry McClintic. Ken Harkless, and his father, Sheldon Harkless.
’TTLTT? iniL HOOSIER DAY A. WHITE HOW DID OFFICIAL Washington react to two days that shook the world with some four events that have not been approached since the assassinationi of President Kennedy? For a closeup I talked to John V. Wilson, a newspaper staffer of the Scripps-Howard for Indiana papers, to V. S. Senator Vance Hartke, his administrative assistant Mace Brodie. former newsman, to at least two Indiana congressmen and others too numerous to mention here. The following paragraphs are a composite of my conversations and vv hat I have read on the subject of these four earth shaking events. There will be a major effort on the part of the new Soviet basses to stress co-existence with the West and peaceful intent. Although Khrushchev never deviated from the overall communist plan to bury the United States he was considered safer than Stalin or those who preceded him. As in the missle crisis he bowed to U. S. power and did not touch off a nuclear war. Leonid Brezhnev, 57, Secretary' of the Communist Central Commitee, and .Aleksei Kosign 60. who had served as first Deputy Premier, may continue an uncertain quantity for the U. S. for four or five years until one of them gets total command. Brezhnev is known to advocate a tougher line toward the West. ONE OF THE lingering memories of Khrushchev that Hartke holds is the “earthliness” of Nikita’s conversation. In a small group meeting Hartke attended where questions were asked. Khrushchev' put it this way: “We do some things better than you do and some not so good. For instance our Russian people have found out you have soft toilet paper.
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We do not manufacture it. They want soft toilet paper and we will start making it”. It was Khrushchev’s insistence on spending more for consumer comforts instead of heavy war machinery’ that was a factor in his ouster. At this WTiting some believe he may be dead. When the terrible personal tragedy of Senior Staff Man Walter W. Jenkins broke, Hoosiers observed most of the Washingtonians were at first incredulous, then shocked, filled with compassion for Jenkins’ good wife Marjorie and the six children, and finally disturbed that there might have been a leak in our security. Gov. John Connally of Texas thought it might be a frameup. But the details unraveled. Jenkins had cocktails at a party dedicating a new building of a news magazine. It was learned that two plain clothesmen of the Metropolitan force had a key to an unused shower and from J it could look into the pay toilets of I the stinking 9 x 11 restroom at a YMCA. THROUGH TWO peepholes they eyewitnessed the reprehensible homosexuality of one Andy Choka, 60-year-old war veteran, and Jenkins. A sharp-eyed reporter caught the entry on the police blotter five minutes before it might have been erased. In time the United Press International moved the scandal story on its wire and it was splashed on front pages' over the nation. Washington is more blase to homosexuality than ! the midwest. President Johnson was a hard taskmaster to Jenkins who had devoted his entire life to him since 11939. He worked seven days a week and had a phone in his car when driving home. He had refused his ’ doctcfr's orders to talft? a rest. He was ill. In the two times he was known to have been compromised by homosexuality. he had consumed alcohol. Mrs. Johnson, the President’s wife, phoned Mrs. Jenkins with kind words and Luci Baines Johnson phoned' Beth Jenkins, her close friend in j classes at Marquette uniyt Washingtonians accepted the report i of J. Edgar Hoover, FBI, that there I had been no leak of security secrets in the tragedv that befell Jenkins. j THOSE I TALKED TO believed the bitter conflict between Red Russia and Red China, despite any pretense of unity, is deeper than one of idealology. They figure Red China has won a big round in the dispute of control of the communists? This came with China’s nuclear blast. It is considered Great Britain’s winner Labor Party Leader Harold Wilson will be harder to work with. However; the USA and Britain will remain closest of allies. IN THE TUMULT of the final stages of a general election, what the 88th Congress did before it adjourned has been overlooked largely. The 88th Congress, elected in was the last for 11th District Congressman Donald Bruce, who lost a
GET TRULY EFFECTIVE REPRESENTATION FOR (SUK COUNTIES. SEND A POSITIVE LEADER TO THE STATE SENATE. ELECT WILL ERWIN' REPUBLICAN FOR JOINT SENATOR, KOS-CIUSKO-MARSHALL COUNTIES. PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT BY THE EKIEXUS OF WILL ERWIN COMMITTEE, J ft, R«v«-t>'tine. < ; Mr. William La ram ore. Vice Chairman: T»r»-d Robinson. Tr**MM*r.
bid for the U. S. Senate. It could be the last for other of our 11th Indiana Congressmen and a Senator, all of whom are standing for re-elec-tion. President Johnson put new life in the bogged down 88th Congress and saw all 51 of the recommendations he asked passed by the Senate. The House, denied medicare tied to Social Security and some other measures. Congressman Charles A. Halleck of Rensselaer and Senator Everett Dirksen. Illinois, leading the Republican loyal opposition had southern state strength to halt some of the measures that did not pass. A tax cut of 11.5 million over this and next year, that President Kennedy had sought, was enacted. The civil rights of Negroes were greatly strengthened in the fields of accommodation in hotels, motels, restaurants, and other services. The Negroes were guaranteed against discrimination in bars and uinons and the Attorney General was given added powers to enforce the Civil Rights Act. Congress gave the President his pet measure of 947.5 million for ‘‘an antipoverty” war. That sum is for the first year, and the plan includes job corps for youth program, work-study program, and a domestic peace corps that U. S. Senator Vance Hartke authored. A pilot project of this program for youth is already underway at Camp Atterbury. Loans were provided for marginal farmers and small businessmen and a new program for wheat, fanners was enacted.. Farmers are guaranteed $2 a bushel for wheat used at home and $1.55 for that sold abroad. Here in brief is what Congress did: Raised salaries of members, those of federal executives, federal judges, civilian workers, and members of the armed forces, JThe tax cut of $11.5 billion dollars
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a year is for individuals and corporations, 1964-1965. Under the Civil Rights Act that has teeth, a cutoff of funds for federal aided programs is provided in areas where discrimination exists. Enforcement of voting rights is provided along with anti-discrimination in public schools and accommodation. A food stamp program to aid the needy in all 50 states was extended. The President's anti-poverty package was enacted. The wheat guarantee program was enacted, plus a wheat-cotton sale price quarantee and subsidy to textile mills. Indiana will share in the $1.4 billion dollar appropriation to states to help in construction and modernization of hospitals, health centers and nursing schools. THERE WAS EXPANDED and liberalized school aid under the National Defense Education Act and aid to impacted school districts. One of the most important acts of Congress in years was a wilderness preservation program setting aside 9.1 million acres of national parkland to be kept in a primitive state. Provision was made to enlarge this great conservation area. There was federal aid for mass transit systems in big cities and aid to the Pacific Northwest to build a power system to distribute electric power from northwest to southw est. Congress balked at hospital care for the aged, tied to Social Security; changes in immigration laws; constitutional amendment to permit prayers in public schools (tied in committee >; constitutional amendment to permit states to apportion one house of a legislature on a basis of geography and the other on basis
DID YOU KNOW? Since I Took Office In 1961, There Has Been A Total Os 165 Coroner’s Inquests In Kosciusko County. I Personally Have Made 158 Os These Calls. VOTE FOR EXPERIENCE DR. JOE R. MISHLER — BE DEAD SURE — Paid Pol. Ad.
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“La BOHEME” — “La Bobeme”, Giacomo Puccini's renowned opera of warmth and tenderness, -depicts a group of young artists in Paris during the nineteenth century, will be presented at the Warsaw high school auditorium on Monday, Nov. 9, at 8 p. m., sponsored by the Lakeland Civic Music Association. The opera follows Rodolfo, the poet of population; the constitutional amendment of U. S. Senator Birch Bayh on Presidential succession and setting up of a commission on ethics > to study the conduct of officials in the legislative, executive and judicial branches of government. Be sure to vote Nov. 3. J
RE-ELECT . DR. JOE B. Mishler (DEMOCRAT) r Coroner Kosciusko County
and the lovely, delicate Mimi, as they progress from timid encounter to a deepest commitment of eternal love, and on to Mimi's grave illness and final death. The opera is performed in English. Intimacy of style is stressed to reflect the flexible, natural quality of the drama and to parallel the subtle refinements of the score. / . Urban, suburbart- and rural boys work together in 4-H Clubs. They have a choice of nearly 50 projects ranging from electricity to livestock. 4-H boys and girls participate- in a widd variety of activities suitable to both city and- country’ living.
