The Palmer Rustler (Palmer, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 21, 1956 Page: 6 of 6
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-mf. fai.mtr *r«TLrR—TTinrftday, June *1. 1956
County ASC Office To Administer Soil Bank Program
Ike’s Doctors |
Re-affirm Verdict
He’s Fit to Run !
Requirement* tor participa*, 1956 allotment for winter wheatj acreage or 50 acres. The min-
tion in th< IAcreage Reserve and certifies that this was done mum is the larger of 10 per cent
Program unde; the Sod Bank because of adverse weather con- j of the base acreage or 5 acres.
Act' . Public Law 540 have been ditions; or ,, . ,
announced by .secretary of Agn 3 He has complied with his u lcat- die maximum is j v> ,wr,
culture f-./ra Tail Bens.,n Conn Soil Bank corn base or his farm ! l,le *.heat • President Eisenhower’s doctors
ty Agricultural Stabli/ation and allotment for a particular crop | ,r *in havo reaffirmed their earlier
ronservation rommittic which but an ac reage of the crop was 1 ' ,ar7 1 u ,H u 1,11, verdict that he is nhvsicallv fit
program ><•>-* of the allotment or 5 acres
du n th<
WASHINGTON. D. C. (UP).
Tito and Russ Leaders
Vow Their Friendship
the
acreage ot the crop
not harvested because of des-
truction by natural causes, or
t The farmer is ;r. ar, area
Conservation
util administer
rill announce 1
program agreements are avail-
able for signature by farmers ...
in Ihrcounv. Mthattimo "hl‘"' ‘•?al>hsh‘,<l final <*»»«“
they will have full information J*' ,or ,hff has'1' commodity for
on Ik, torn,- an.) mn.lH.om '« May
In annmiminy |,a, •input,on •» l,i,ms <>r <",<’nvlse
fur the 195b \, re- Physically incorporates the crop
verdict that he is physically fit
I to run for re-election.
For cotton, the maximum is; The President’s physicians
the* larger of half the allotment bluntly threw nut the sugge*-
or 10 acres. tions of some medical authori-
The minimum is the larger of ties that the President stands a]
1ft percent of the allotment of good chance of getting another
acres. intestinal attack—similar to the
tram. Secretary
requirement
age Reserve Pr
Benson stated
“We have proceeded with all
possible haste since enactment
of the Soil Bank h em l.dion to
present a sound 11*5ft program
to farmers It e true however
that the program fm thi
The payment which a farmer
one which sent him to Walter
into the soil, or clips, mows, or
cuis the crop after May 28 and Acreage Reserve will be deter-
prior to .lune 30 or the establish- mined by multiplying a base
rd final dale, whichever is later unit rate’by a yield factor. The
tin established final date will national average rates for 1956
be the same as the last date on crops are; Corn. 9ft cents per
which the acreage of a basic bushel; cotton, 15 cents per
. ,h„ nrn-nm for tins v croP ma>' bo adjusted in order pound; wheat. $1.20 per bushel:
! m a Sill sue, ,a] oro-ram brintf lf ,n,° comP,,ant'c w,th rice. 52 25 per hundred weight;
‘ ' ’ ' ! * 1 he acreage allotment of the re- peanuts. 3 cents per pound; and
program I. tobacco, varying rates per pound
Maximum and minimum acre b’r difterent tvlle> idetails in
nuy earn for participating tn Hie Ravdin. the Phila-
delphia surgeon who helped per-
form the operation—said he has
“never seen’ 'a recurrence of
ileitis after successful surgery
in a man of Mr. Eisenhower’s
age The President is 65.
The President’s doctors said
they have “no intention” of get-
ting into a “controversy” with
other medical authorities on the
mm ■ V1 ”
'■
• *.r v, *
designed to meet tin time limi-
tations and the requirements of
the legislation for 1656. Maximum and minimum acre- }'/' , ‘1TcTVa -T j chances of a recurrence of Mr
“For that n -m. 1656 will ages of the basic crops which ' / IMt"Vs lcJ, ’ ls Eisenhower’s trouble,
not present a fair •;..■! o! w hat max be placed in the Acreage >u#\ a'’ ’ U,K ’ ’; Major General Leonard Heat-
the program can .vvon.plish The Reserve have been established l *u’ pay ment will be deter-, nt1 one of the doctors who per-
rates set are for the 1956 pro as follows except that where the niirJ* d as follows formed the operation, had said
gram only Before next year's allotment is less than the speci- l°r underplanting the earlier he could see no medical
crops are plant' d however, in- fied acreage minimum or maxi- baso or tbo allotment for cot-. reason why the President should
eluding fall sordine of wheat mum. the total allotment shall *°n. rice, tobacco, peanuts, or noj ru(1 for another term,
this year we will have an op- he considered as the minimum "heap "ben planted to spring j Major General Howard Snv
portunity to plan and develop or the maximum). wheat . the payment rate will be dor the President’s personal
a more comprcnhe^ivo program ______, ^_______________ based on the normal yield for physician, was quick to empha-
H-Year-OW Girl
Has Gun Battle
14-year-old Baltimore girl has
staged a wild shotgun battle with
police. She finally was subdued
after being shot in the ankle.
Patrolman Thomas Matthew/s
Moscow with vows of eternal f°ur,d Norma Ruth in Patterson
friendship between the Soviet
Unfon and his own nation.
MOSCOW, Russia. (UP).—Mar-
shal Tito of Yugoslavia has
wound up his official visit to
J»Uv "v , <v $
‘The Soil Bank makes avail- ^°r corn ’j10 maximum is ihe the designated acreage. For un-
(NEA Telephoto)
HEAP PROTOCOL- West Germany's chancellor, Konrad
Adenauer, gets the full treatment reserved for “brave” pale-
faces from Morris Wheelock. chief of the United Tribes of
Wisconsin, as Adenauer becomes an honorary chief in cere-
monies at Marquette University. Milwaukee, Wis. His second
honor of the day, the first was a more conventional nature—
an honorary doctor of laws degree from the University.
size to newsmen that politics
able beginning especially in 1957 birger of half the corn base derplanting 1956 winter wheat. had nothing to do with the mod
a way to reduce ■»u 1 farm sur-
pluses. to safeguard our soil and
water resource) to gi\c a lift
to farm prices
Under the 1956 Acreage Re-
serve farmers who are eligible
to take part in the pro-ram max
earn payments in connection
with one or more of the com
moditios specified in the law.
corn, wheat upland ( extra
long staple cotton peanuts ex-
cept Virginia.- and V.-.leneias for
which there is no Mirplus: rue.
and most type
brH.r.mc of adverse weather, the ioal t)p<nion. As he put it. “We
payment will be 5-4 per acre. can’t recognize a Democrat from
For destruction due to natural a Republican.”
causes or for plowing or other- Snyder said the President may
wise physically incorporating the iPave the hospital bv “the mid-
crop into the soil or for clipping. dje of next week.” He added:
mowing, or cutting the crop, the
payment w ill be based on the ' these days
smaller of an appraised yield Earlier. Mr. Eisenhower had a
\L'STI\ Tev il'Pi__Counsel ^or the field or the normal yield hearty laugh when he was piv- .
, , r ,, „ b,r the farm, but will not be less cn a book of photographs which >wc’° lc,il
for the Gulf. Colorado and Santa than $6 per acre ..
Santa Fe Seeks
More Argument
In Union Case
Airman No-Billed
In Scalding Death
Of Sweetheart
GULFPORT. Miss- (UP). An
Provisions of the Conservation son David, playing golf
Fe Railway Company has asked
tli.i' time allotted for arguments Reserve part of the Soil Bank
(■! lobareo. ! \ before the State .Supreme Court be announced as soon as
acreage of the in a far-reaching railroad labor practical. Under this part of the
be extended.
lIc'sJook.Hg pretty sharp 1B.v(,aM|d wis,(lnslI1 Ajrmat.
has been cleared of crime for
placing his pretty 17-vear old
into a bathtub of
howed liis eight-year-old grand- scalding waler
Johnny O'Brien told a grand
Before that, he worked for
Gulfport. Mississippi.
reducing then
crop below the farm's establish- case be extended. program, a farmer will be able
ed allotment or base acreage _ . . . . , . . to earn two types of payment—
In the case of corn. ,1C railroad urged the high an annual payment to help com-
Under the basic rule s of eh- couh to allow attorneys for each pensate for income w hich he
gibility established in keeping sldvc }*? jlours- Plus 30 nunutes would have received if the “re-
with the law acreage de-gnated ';’u”a: mi° •l‘r ,,u‘ railroad serxed” land had been in crop
for the Acreage Reserve must u!“ '' ^-arguemms are present- and a payment representing a
(li Be representative of the land eU on ' une “<th- percentage of the cost of estab-'
used for the crop. *2* result in The Supreme Court will hear Siting conservation practices on
the harvesting of an acreage of arguments for a second time on sucb land.
the basic crop less than the farm that date in a suit in which the ^be same atteage on a farm
allotment or corn ba«- acreage railroad and a group of Amarillo ma' not be included under both
and i3> not l>e crazed cut ior employes seek to bar signing of ibe At 1 eag0 Reserve and the
hay or cropped for t he
19.>6 calendar >car Noxious the railroad and 16 non-operat- boo Lank
weeds must also be controlled on mg unions T B Spain. Chairman of the
the "reserved aert
In order to parti
Acreage Reserve a
comply with all
nients or corn bas
for the farm
The1 1956 progra
ed by the law cot
provisions and pav
enable farnit
tins xear \ny fart
vise complies wi
tons of the \creai1
l>*- eligible foi pay
1 lb- hi
Soil Bank 1
t for
about 45 minutes on government
business with White House
aides.
House Group Says
Administration
Plays Favorites
WASHINGTON. D C. (UP.)—
A House subcommittee has ac-
cused the Eisenhower admini-
stration of political favoritism”
that lie didn't know the water
was hot enough to fatally burn
Sonia Sande. a University of
Houston freshman from Met*
ton Wisconsin.
The grand jury refused to in-
dict O’Brien of Hart land. Wis-
consin He said lie put her in
the tub after a drinking party
The girl had come from the
University of Houston
YOU CAN SAY
THAT AGAIN
I.ONtiVIKW, Tox. (UP». —
Owner Pat Ferchill of-the Re-
liable Motor Supply Store in
Longview is still trying to get
over having a motorist come
crashing through two big
plate glass windows of his
store. What really started
Ferchill as much as having
$300 worth of damage done to
his store was having the mo-
torist crawl from the wreck-
age and say: “I need two cups
for brake cylinders on
that car.”
At an official farewell recep-
tion today at Moscow’s Big
Sports Stadium. Soviet Party
Chief Khrushchev and Premier
Bulganin praised Yugoslavia as a
“county of heroes.” Both
pledged eternal friendship for
Tito’s nation. Khrushchev also
attacked the friendship of “cer-
tain capitalistic countries” for
Yugoslavia as being motivated
Park. She was carrying a shot-
gun. Matthews said he had trou-
ble with Norma before and that
she had been reported missing
from her home at least once.
As he approached, Norma
backed off and warned him: "I
have got two shots in here.”
She fired at him twice, from
only 12 feet, but missed both
times. Police cars came with
screaming sirens and the battle
was on. Norma had more sheels
in her pocket. She fled down
by the hope that Yugoslavia I alleys and fired again at the
would turn from the Commu- police who were firing pistols at
nist fold. her.
n,,i , Startled pedestrians ducked
Tito was I,el,I las, ,„Kl,t 'lTotoeol: i"1" »"J|
was tossed out Ihe window. Vod-: J>(M"'I(; ca"l'd hZ,„ PZZw I
K* ■"Itr88"*nowed into 1 WEiM* rtWih!
. i ankle and she was taken to a
roasts wore proposed to just hospital, weeping hysterically,
about everything—women, fish-
erman peace, and humanity. At
one point Khrushchev suggested
that Western correspondents
and Soviet newsmen should get
drunk together to promote
friendship.
71-Year-Old Retired Doctor
Charged With Murder
MINERAL WELLS, Tex. (UP).
—A 71 -year-old retired Mineral
Wells doctor has denied shoot-
Thc House government oper-
during ation subcommittee also charged
the Justice Depart ment with im-
properly withholding
to marry him in nearby Biloxi
When O'Brien discovered that
ihe girl was in pain, he called
When Tito’s prolocal chief ing an Air Force Sergeant who
suggested that the marshal leave was visiting in the doctor’s home,
because the hour was laic -! Even so, District Attorney Sam
Khrushchev told him: “Down Cleveland has charged Doctor
with protocol'! j K. H. Boaz with murder.
At one point during the party. I According to Cleveland. Boaz
United States Ambassador Char- shot 29-year-old vSergcant First
les Bohlen reminded Khrush-j (’lass Elmer Shaffer when the
chev that the United States and J Sergeant intervened during an
Russia are close neighbors, sep-1 argument between the doctor
arated only by the Bering Strait. | and Mrs. Boaz. The physician
“We shall always be friends," J told Cleveland he has served
Khrushchev replied. ”1 firmly j time for killing another man in
believe it will be like that.” : 1918.
Among the Communist. Parly] ................. ----------
chief’s toasls was: “May Mar- POLITICAL
shals he unemployed” and “may ' AKi|ki^| iMrcuCMT
defense ministers become peace MININ wUINv>ClVICfM I
ministers." Marshal l’uo raised The following announcements
his glass to that—and Khrush-j are authorized by the candidate
chev added “May the ministers j whose names are listed below
of defense busy themselves with j and are made subject to the
certain
papers which is said—might j ON APPEAL
disclose other “irregularities.
egg incubators
/Ml in all it was quite a party
QUICK RESULTS
pate m tht
i farmer muv
acreage allot
s»Cf JSliCK
in awarding a government con
.rf, 1 , ^ Conservation Reserve Darts of ’(act in t uba. It referred to a authorities at Keesler \jr Force
entire a union shop agreement between : , \ . 11 nescixt pans 01 . , t _.r.anfi autnormes ai ixksici ,\u torn
$43 000. id contrac, to expand pasp where she was taken for The report said that one of
a government-owned nickel treatment. the construction firms had to
_____. _____ plant A contract that eventually Miss Sande was later moved to prove to GOP Chairman Leonard
\t’orne>> for each side nor- not tee emphasizes the fact that uen’ t0 Merritt-( hapman and prf)0^e Army Medical Center in Hall that it was not—what the
i: . ,. . ,.r< allowed 30 minutes to since Texa.- in not in the Com- 0 controlled by Fi- %qan Antonio. She died January subcommittee called—a "New
M i.t their case with 15 min- mercial Corn area the Acreage nanc*cr Louis Wolfson. The sub- 23rd some three weeks after the Deal-Fair Deal” company. Then
Ellis County ASC County Corn-
action of the Democratic primary
July 28, 1956:
STATE REPRESENTATIVE
Virginia Duff. (Re-Election
SHERIFF:
Burl White. (Re-Election).
Wayne McCollum.
ite
to
lents wh
part K ip
w ho ot V
the pro’
\rgum<
heard in
fall How 1
nt
ttal time for the partx Reserve Program will not be ap- committee charged that delay in stajding
ti,( Supreme Court plicable to Corn in Texas Al- awarding the contract cost the
xo any reference to Spring government lO.ftftOftOO pounds
Wheat in the foregoing Article critically-needed nickel,
does not apply to Texas.
Spain also Mated that proce-
dures on detail parts of the pro-
gram a> iefurred to in this an WHITNEY. Tex <UP
m mi' < ru ■ ’ w 1 he released to Searchers recovered the body
( 11 'y 5S| offieer< as soon as of 31-year old Joe Krayer of I)ai
it got the contract.
NORWICH. CONN. (UP). -
After broadcasting an appeal: TAX ASSESSOR-COLLECTOR:
from the parents of a missing Homer Tanner,
boy. Announcer Tom Phalen re- A. Dupree Davis,
called seeing a lad outside the; W 0 Ralston. (Re-Election),
studio a few minutes before He COMMISSIONER, Pet. No. 1
dashed out and sure enough
was the missing boy.
Jack Risinger, Re-election
C. 0. (Clifford) Nash
were originally
santa F'e case last
the court ordered
: > aid afier the
Supreme court
Searchers Recover
Body From Lake Whitney
th
underp
lot ment f
pi-ainU" 1
to spring
that h* u
npai u*n
19\l !
Cio.st !
tiom 01
? is .v.a.:,Pile in the State ASC
)ffiee It; the meantifhe agree-
rn n*s 0 farmers cannot be
:gned until Forms and regula-
Kiii" are available to County 1 >f-
and approvals where ne<
- a j v are given bv the State
las from 4ft feet of water in Lake
Whitney this morning He had
gone boating with his bride of
two months yesterday, and go*
out of the boat to take a swim
His wife "aid tie got in trouble
and went under before she could
reach turn
Houston Automobile Mon
Sues Police Chief Heard
Education Expert Says High School
Should Have At Least 300 Students
Model vliui - i-ion, i"8:4” box
VTION T* x
Texas A x M
C o F ,i/
*11! \
a small portion of t h e
l districts in the nation
11 per «ent in 1954 55,
o’i| 40 or more teachers
ore nms
* reettgui
i/eu
bits hod in
recent v»
derahly si
tmrt of
t tie
are ie<«**i
tmende«t
penker sai
d ttii«t
t tie
Texas It
ax made
in
the mm
Umt of
itx
Model Jin«
Ilf!
on
o| districts is nut star
irdmg to information
ft for use in the '
u* Conference on Kitu<
five states had a larger per
d , 1
1 U'J
that P
Three Members of Family
Drown Near San Angelo
i*hi m I M
*i ii
rhi
it
frswtt
lit Hie
I ani
pr*H'
tn ii,
uti
* ta * tffielas * cannot *
«»n Rotierto nent fro
h'ldrtn yot pnm* an<
iat those of tba* an
»<teqii.ii*»ty self-suffi
in edui atinnat stand
iat it
i %»« riVlurt ii
on in the
f their arhf
ml districts
1 tn 1955. ii
it KUH "!Vx
15 (list nets
hut in m »5
i ji rrilurt
ton ot fi t i
k**r in the
same |*eri-
a-..king of
fexa ttir
•f «»ne-tea<i
lie* wrhtiol*
«*d from I
jn<i tn |17
i r of wlm
«»*l distr eta
,i s« h«M*i r
r<*m '(MSi tn
n *>0 amt
ih** per*eit
diftrtetx
not m it* ml
mploying <
to oi more
,as more th
so don Med
.see mdieat
hit, * n| \|g
Range nr
mapir ivn
ts in the
xt kool ad
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Ftrriia Tuu
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The Palmer Rustler (Palmer, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 21, 1956, newspaper, June 21, 1956; Palmer, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth801271/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ennis Public Library.