Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 39, Number 157, Decatur, Adams County, 3 July 1941 — Page 5

l>| TBURSDAY, JULY 3, 1941.

ISOLATIONISTS URGING PEACE ed Negotiated Peace Repudi* Md In Washington I And London u» ’ July (t'l’i NonMt senator* returned Urtfr dMnpaign for • negotiated peace today denpito r). of such xuggeatlona heroMßd In London. •eeTGerald P. Nye. R. N D, b prafMOd that Preaideot Roosevelt July 4 home defence fc», •poeeh a plea for peace. Sea. Bur*, tou |uW heeler. D.. Montana, aald 4 tuMUated peace would be the _ •'puttß|Bt and evreal way to dofentHlHer." •MM of the tire waa taken out to obtain a aenale naval affai ommlttee investigation ot laoStary of navy Frank Knox wkeiro emphatically denied that tha M*F liaa fceen fighting German submarine craft In the Tbo|bp<’:' !h,t “ n American deadropped a depth bomb oe «.<pnii.»b submarine had peratoflßere for week*. Wheeler. whokM ai> inveattgation reaoiution pending before the naval attain committee. inelated that Knox' dental bad not eliminated the need tor Mpury chairman David I. Waiah. P Mace. baa said that Kaoa WuM be called next week ,» U tboi inveatigatiou taken place nit ■wiU.dfrteud. also, to the aocretarjfafMP<>sal that the navy under--1 taka at anco “to clear the Atlantic ot the frermau menace.'' Knox i« itaadiDC Pal on that proposition. Mr. BoMeveJt han refused to com J meat It. •ea. •affxrt A. Taft. R. 0., an Isor'laUoatetr like Wheeler and Nye. said MrJ Roosevelt should explore thn Mjßbliitiea of peace. He said Greal*lts. 'icouid .-xi>«<t Just M ffooff jMtac< terms now at "after a , Nta**, in Russia"-and that »*>•> word from the President at this tlma«Mouisiting a ptace undertak* tnc**MM have a mighty effect.” - SET QUOTA FOR j » >• —■— ~ f \ OOdnflWUEb FROM PAOB <>nb .-for those tbouMOds of young men .edwho are-Riving at least a year of their Ilvee to these United States i»Mf our*. 1 rsu "MUtter? training Is essential, wo all IMw. to the perpetuity ot iur Mt lon and our way of life, but . .such training can go far off the detired course unless there is InaUilad into the thousadsn of boys that "*«plrß. that morale, that will make -them glad to serve their country. . Thai la the Job of U. S O, and it »b a job we can undertake as a 1 ' jrlvilago, a right and a duty." £ XttNOVER27 — cmfTfWnEn from paoe onb < Hm‘ 4Ui*>ei t Dailey Frlslnger Md U4)i— John Henry Johnson Hit—Gordon John Fog Ralph Frederick Levy <C-l!te— Bernard Grefftry Staub 114#—Charles Edgar Raker 11U-<hlllp Ger Greene h - 11M-—Xyetua Charles Meyer HW—Vorost Arden Kenworthy " llffb—Virgil Jessie Uhrick ,Xllte-H« cold Rbynard | 18»l-f4ark David Coichln unS , mb—lX. nlei Edward McAfee ng 4J4d—Boi-wln Theodore , , [ I Rtoppeilhagen G-orge Frank Loshe Jm- James William Tutweller tM--John William McMillen Mf4i-*arl Rex UjM“~Aloy»‘ii» Charles flelmer V l-Sl •-Hffrweot Clinton * Lautxcnhciscr ’u f 4IJ>-Merrll Emory Jotaeon INtb-rlmater James Habegger lij 114B—/atne* Edward Garbodin " C-t>o-»jLrthf< r Fred Flothe ■ Ruber* Orvule Rmndyherry ItW—RolMrrt Wilson Bowman (•IFra—Herman Edward Bertsch ' (1A.0) ' Jiff?—ffatwrencn Stacey Smith ibjb-Mloland Robert Ryf . ' HBt-tLewia Butler Fennlg l«b--Ix>uix william 2wlck .■C-ldM—CV Ivo Muldln McGill I®—Rfchard Leo HMs 13 A4dl~JiillUK Franklin Teeple r» 1..U8-Walter Francis Baker lft Sylvester Boring *! 14TB—Robert Glen Bailey. ■ 6 LW. —* — M. S. PILOTS IN | n >"<XXmilrVKD FltOM PAGB ONK) /it>t"Ak> 4 ped. hIH cockpit hood , -roke’oi’f and the plane went rashlag to\lhe ground on Its side. 4 I.eOO fe« Gio pilot balled out s* Ud the youiVest Eagle climbed K- wt§r so regain his position with ua." ■ WrE.lv min U try quoted the I 1 !' ounfbt Eagle at folio**: "The (German) Pilot seemed to loat out of his mteblne. I didn't -alt t» see what hVPPened to his I was Wi<e satisfied bad hot him." \- 8 «< «, tutted Press di p,'»aich from xmfcm Idbt Oct, «. identifying ' °f fhu Eagle said Gregory *Viguotus States ombes »r. ftflHhs then the youngest

It has not been revealed whether anyone younger ba* joined the squadron since.) The Americans were credited with damaging two other German planes yesterday In addition to those they shot down. Their artoln. however, waa only one ptiase of a series ot combats In which ap proximately 40 Messerschmitts. In aectlona of four, challenged the British raiders and fought them across North France mid the channel to the British coast on their way home. One of the British pilots was quoted that the fight waa "just like the old Dunkirk days.” Os the 1# German fighters shot down. British fighters accounted tbr II and British bombers for two The British loat two bombers and eight fighters, two of which collided and crashed In France STALIN CALLS ON (CONTtNCBn FROM PAGE ONB) siderably behind the advance guard i fighting, apparently still is in Russian hands. Its capture has not! been claimed hy Berlin nor has its I loss been admitted by Moscow. There was no report of substantial advances by the Germans on the Baltic front or on the fur northern front where a drive against Murmansk Is In progress. However. London expressed concern regarding a German drive from Dvinsk toward Leningrad and reported that the central smash toward Moscow from the Minsk > area did not seem to be losing impetus. Brltslh military observers feared that the large Russian army corps which resisted the original Nasi break through et the frontier have now been surrounded by the Germans and cut off. They believed that the chances that these bodies nt Soviet troops would be able to snap the German communications lines and break through the Naxi ring are diminishing rapidly. The British believed that the Orman armies operating on the Mlnsk-to-Moscow line have been given orders to crack through to the Soviet capital at any coat. They suspected that the Nail vanguard is being fed. fueled and sup plied by airplane in order to keep up Ito speedy pace. In this situation Stalin broadcast his first address to the Russian people since IMS The Soviet leader frankly ad- i milled that the Germans have smashed ahead until they already hold Lithuania, much of laitvia. | western White Russia and the i western Ukraine regions which formed part of former Poland. But. he asserted, the Red army j has wmashed some of the finest fighting units In the Wehrmacht. He scoffed at the Idea that the German army fs invincible. No army, he said, hi Invincible al-: though the armies of Napoleon and of Germany during the world war | once were thought to lie. Russia .he said, is fighting for her life and before this fight is over | Germany will be smashed and 4he oppressed people of toirope will' lie liberated. He called on Russians in the [rath of the invaders to adopt a policy of scorched earth —■ the same policy with which China met the Japanese Invasion. He called on Ruslans to destroy or remove from the German path all railroad roiling stock, sll machines, all engines, all metals, all food, ah gasoline, all cattle, all grain. These supples, he said, must be evacuated ahead of the Germans but K there Is not sufficient time they must be destroyed. In those areas overrun by the Germans, he said. Russians must organise themselves in guerilla bands and make the task of the Nasi occupying forces so dangerous and difficult that they will be compelled to leave Russian soil. (Walin paid tribute to the pledges of aid from Britain and the United States and saM Russia had the supimrt nil peoples ot the world, including many within Germany. u s. ARMY CHIEF - tCONTINUED FROM FAGB OW) field and antiwircrafl units, engineers. signal troops, etc; 147. mu) men in the air corps; 44.000 men manning heritor defenses; 1*20,000 in overseas garrisons. Including Alaska and Newfoundland. 160.000 to maintain and operate some K» poets or stat lons, the supply depots, and ports of embarkation, and from 100,000 to 200,000 salectees under recruit training in replacement training centers. Marshall said. — o— Dr. Ernest Franz Will Is Probated The *will of the late Dr. Ernest Frans was prdbated today In Adams circuit court. Ths will provides first for the payment of ddbts and expenses; second, it gives to a daughter. Ernestine, a bouse and lot in Berne; third, a player piano and records to another daughter. Irleue Frans—Whitesell and fourth, bequeaths the rest ot the estate to two sons and six daughters, share and -share alike. Application tor letter estimated the estate at 21.* 000 personal property and 15.000 real estate .1..!. 0- — ■■ Trade la a Good lowp — Decatur ,

CREAMERY GRANULATED BUTTER SUGAR 38c lb -57 c RHODES SPECIAL BLEND ‘ PASTRY COFFEE FLOUR HOT or ICED _ || RHODE’S *‘g(WN to town” with these Yankee Doodle Dandy value*—quality food* at 94 »» I Im 2 lbs. priceu that mean hang-up HavinffM ... extra cash for lun and frolic on the fourth. It'a ID. I 111 07 a SEl.libration in the American tradition of plenty. No ration card* ... no reatrirI IM , z- , Hona in our land of the free. Buy a* muchaa you want, confident that your Declara* ▼ ‘ * tion of Independence from budget bugaboo ia written in our low price*. MbIF WE NEVER CLOSE-24 HOUR SERVICE PORK & BEANS tall cans Eg -PURE EGG NOODLES Lb. |Q C FRUIT JARS i’ts. Doz. HOMINY ... No. 2 can Mg MACARONI & Spaghetti 2 lb. box jQg PEN JEL Box jQg RED BEANS tall can Mg COCOA 2 lb. box | SALT 1(H) lb. bag TOMATOES tall can £g RlCE—Blue Rose cello bag JJg OYSTER SHELLS .... 100 lb. bag SAUERKRAUT tall can MARSHMALLOWS J bags JCg BLOCK SALT 50 lbs. RAISINS-Seedless J lbs. JJg CHOCOLATE DROP CANDY.Jb. |Qg IVORY SOAP J giant bars JJg PRUNES— Med. size J lbs. J CRACKER JACK J boxes JQg P& <• SOAP J giant bars JQg APPLEBUTTER Qt. JMg CANDY BARS Asst J bars JQg FELS-NAITHA SOAP ... Q bars JMg WAX PAPER Roll Mg CARMEL CORN cello bag jQg CAMAY TOILET SOAP .. * bars |Rg CORN FLAKES ... J large boxes 2$C KO °L-ADE-all flavors £g BABBETS CLENZER .... * cans jQg BABY FOOD Jeans JQg j PAR-T-JELX)—6 flavors .. J box JQg RED SEAL LYE. JcansgQg I oJSR!® LUNCH meat j DILL PICKLES i Gai. jar 2sc Enjoy the finer flavor of fine meats without budging on your We buy Fruita and Vegetable* direct from the farmer, thus food budget. It'a easy—Just chooao your meato here where _ __ cutting out the middle man'* profit and handling, making it quality and economy are the "buy-word” and our reputation A potaible for you to buy “Sun Ripened" to the perfection, for dependability i* your guarantee of aatiefaction. Build 111 Bfl B■ IB ■■ M I II [ M Uavorful fruit* anj vegetable*, and naturally rich in healthtonight'* dinner around one of theee epocial value*. II I Ilf Isl ill I fl I% I I ful vitamin*, at the lowe*t poatible co*t. f lUITInIU uHluUl , STEAK—FIavo-Rite Beef lb. , BAN AN Ab Golden Ripe ___ ff lbs. large bottles T-BONE STEAKS—Choice Cuts lb. 39c CTCIJMBEKS .............. ..... each 5c HAMBURGER lb. PREPARED TOMATOES- 5 ine Ripe lb. SMOKED SAUSAGE—PoIish... lb. VI C J*Z * AMU ORANGES Doz. a SunKist — Extra Juicy — SPARE RlßS—Extra Meaty . tb. lie QT. 10c t.RAPEFRI IT— l.ar K s size I for 25c BOILING BEEF lb. 1 C c L E M O N S Doz. jg c BACON—Lay er Sliced lb. 29c SAI All 1 ,MKS - doz. 29c JOWL BACON lb. 1 unidflu UIUdOOIHU POTATOES U. S. No. 1-10 lbs. •J® Boz.jarlOf? Full Qt. >V WEINERS lb. 21c BW Jb A V CELERY hunch 5c OLEO—Keener Brand 1 >s ’lsC if* I • I if* I WATERMELON each 9 FRANKS 2 lb*. 27c Ssfldwich SprCdd i HEAD LETTI'CE' 2 head* 15c BOIjOGNA— Fresh Ring lb. H <>z. jar |Q C Full Qt. II ANTALOUPE |q c TOILET TISSUE Trolls 15c MATCHES - 6 boxes 15c u. ■ -....— I FLY RIBBONS doz. 19c DOG FOOD 6 cans 25c >. ■ff f<2' * *jt <* a * . FLY TOX -Tzß9c gal. RHODES M An9el k SELF SERVICE SUPER MARKET L--J special 9Rc Opposite Court House i fIMI

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA.

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