Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 40, Number 124, Decatur, Adams County, 25 May 1942 — Page 5
J DA Y may 25.1942.
■ Musi Plan '■Vat World Wfieqc Graduates SM} Milo Pedins - ■•'•■< u!lv " 111 ■1 ... '■ •' eonomlc SB””., . r . '.xi.iy that '■! MJyL •::•>!<•• ■’ mtl’r-pro- ’^£. r .. ' ,aia ' p,:iln ■' , aantcd to ■K' take ... ' lp - and a BB? standard ■■ , . ■Es , ■ i. »"■< ius, MB, •,. « 1,1 di- »■?, • 'rued how ... . BBKk , i.p’ion poor , *.ir he «ai<l 'BHK ’-..■ * ‘■H . I of young ■^E,,-..- the ■■: ' the . ■ . most that It JHK’ w.r always -
K/0IV4& SPOTLIGHT E turns on beet sugar BL-—.—“ ■**■ "■ ■ — ■ - —— — -- '/J) flr 3w*~ii"3iw JCb - J""'' 'J * f » » m in wMeh sugar beats art grown In the United Statta.
”■■:■' '’in acres by 100.. Mr r ' •■ .-rn. sugar bet SJ® “ ,hrl " doubled sS'Vi W»r J It it antleiireorij’.r.s to the United - n A-socia'ion. that 9M •» tn "» ementeney Pro lit! will top the peak |R ■ of early four billion BL**-- »t
i———■■ - ————, I Decatur Stores Will Close Saturday, May 30, Memorial Day I For Your Convenience Shores Will Remain Open FRIDAY UNTIL 9 o’clock p.M. I The Decatur Merchants Urge You To Keep This In Mind I And To Make Your Purchases Before May 30. Stores Will Remain I Open FRIDAY NIGHT To Give Everyone The Usual Opportunity I To Visit Them In The Evening. I Friday Will Be Saturday In Decatur This Week [ Decatur Chamber ot Commerce
duced at th® end of thia war and divide it among the people who ■will be alive to share it,” he con tinned, “we shall be within reach of a vary good standard of living for the first time In all history That win be the moat important material thing that’s happened to the human race since the discovery of fire and the invention of the wheel.” Perkins Is executive director of the organization which is headed : by Vice President Henri A. Wai I face. The BEW Is waging the ! economic war now and planning • for the inevitable economic probi lems which will follow His ad dress to the Swarthmore graduates i although In geenrallzed terms, was i an Interesting preview of post war ■ economic thought within the administration. 1 Perkins emphasized throughout I his address the “crime” of Idleness In the post war world—the i need for “full employment.” "Idleness, he ft of men or money or machines, will be the one unforgiveabie sin of the postwar > world . . . "The plain people of this earth know what they want In the postwar perod Above all else they want to be wanted: they want a chance to work and be useful. They want an income which will give them enough food and doth Ing and shelter and medical care to drive the fear of want from their fireside. And they want these simple things within a o< icty that guarantees thdr civil liberties. "The plain people will he understanding about the problems of readjustment They will work hard for all this and they will walk any reasonable roads to there ends. But the chains of the ag<-.s have snapped The one thing they won’t
sugar will be more than sufficient, with a ration of eight ounce* a week, to meet th* household stirar allowance of every consumer In the United State* for a year Beet «u<ar. produced within the border* of the continental United Stntea, la aubject to none of the hazard* of war time .hipping, and can always be made Available to consumers.
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I Four Hoosiers Die In Auto Accident Violent Death Toll Heavy Over Weekend i By United Press) At least 11 persons met violent | death In Indiana over the week- | end. Including four who were kill- I «-d in a traffic accident near Walk I ert on. Geraldine Gerlach. 39. and het IS in-nths old eon. and Hazel Conn/ all of Logansport. and Carl Cron ■ inger, 55. Deer Creek, were injured fatally Sunday when their automo- ; idle crashed Into an abument on - rout fi went of Walkerton. State ’ police believed Mis* Conn was the , driver of the car and that she had ; fallen asleep at the wheel Tw ' Camden. Mich fanner* Emery Hunt e. 7s, and Jacob Brunk 75. were kill'd Saturday when their <ar collided with a Greyhound bus on t*. S 2<t nine miles east of do la take 'no' sot a final answei to their cry for full employment Not after all this suffering; not when they see themselves sur- - rounded later on by too much of what Is needed most and yet no' ; be able to get ■ ■ ■
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Angola. Police eald Brunk failed i to atop at the Intersection. Bus passengers were bruised only slightly. Donald Dunford, 11. West Lafayett-. watt struck anil killed by a hit-and-run driver Sunday as be was riding hl« bicycle with a companion Clayton M. Belsch. 3*. West Lafayette, war worker, was seized two hours later and was charged with rei klcss homicide. , Police said a drunkometer test i showed that he wae Intoxicated. At Connersville, Raymond Castle, 15<'. Chiilnnatl. was injured fatally Saturday when Ills motorcycle skidded and nlung'd into a ditch. Robert Kegley, 10, Franklin,: ' died last night a few minutes as- ■ i ter he stumbled and fell on his | i pocket knife as h was returning i home from a coiner grocery. Wit-, ' nemo's said he started t > run as he crossed a street. The blade ; pierced an artery near his heart. Ei moi: C. It'ed, '• >, Elkhart, died Saturday of a self iufli' ted bullet ’ wound Friends said he was worried about meeting government re-quit.-mi nts to p-t p Ice ceilings In bls grocery. Tlie body of William Cheater' S«-yb« rt, IS, was found Saturday. | hanging m 'lie barn on his farm near Alexandria. His family said In had lie'-ii despondent over ill health Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
CHINESE AND l Continued From fugs 1> wipe out the Allied bases from which more air attacks might be directed against Tokyo and other Japanese centers. A broadcast Tokyo announce inent predicted the early fall of . Klnhwa and said the battle of Chcklrng province rapidly was nearing a climax The German controlled Paris radio raid 'he Japanese already were in Kinhwa but this was not confirmed In any Other quarter. On the other end of th' 1 Sonmile Chinese front. th« Allie ' air and ground foes held the Initiative I in sonthwestern Yunnan, province where American volunteer "flying tiger" pilots blasted Japanesi 1 troops ami artillery emplacements ion the west bank of the Salween | river. BRITISH VIEW i (Continued From t'ago 1) ■ break its wartime trie • ■ and with ’draw from the Churchill govern inent collapsed tmlay when the I party's 11. t annual <-onfereni-< voted to i-oiitlnui support of th< government. The conference voted 2 119 mm | to Itil.oiiu, In favor of continued participation after hearing spec In -1 b> minority »p"k<.-men *iiji i tin
party led by Lord S' alsd-f. labor whip in the lion •<- ot Im d I tging abandonment of tin time which has existed among Britain's leading |sdlt|ial panic- ;nd the establish men t of a parliamentary opposition. Strabolgi -aid "The time has come when we must seriously consider withdiaw ~ log our inemliei - from the govern- , men’ and forming a constructive ! opposition in parliament." Several lalmrites ate Im Imled In j the I'hnri hiil gov■: nm> 'it. im liid ing .Maj Cl'iit'ic It. V lee deputy . prime minf-t'-r and d nnini >t|s secJ letary. , j Tit' d- i« a us tin d'-mands for a break in ’h- political truce was not lum xp'ited in vie* of the inar-ii' , bloc of ion s wield' d by the trade unions which 1 HitrlliiC' tin bulk of tire labor party's fund and whose leader, a i fa mole can tfous than the party ink and fib The conference iinanlmoii-ly ap t i proved ail iX' illtive cotnmittei , in*-inoianduin oiilliniiu- a •In nn for <o'l- d of 'ln Itiiti-h (mining iiidii' y wi h regional I I luHttda -p e-'-ming tin government. owners and mlm r» I Tin- plan alii.idv hi 1 eti -ub initted to the g iti rnai'ill blit has I no' bei n lp|e OV'd >| \m< : lean hotels hand! u arly ' -<> y .mmia! > .uni iate for til 15.imii.imii • ] .•< wli'l attetid th- tn
Minor Accidents Are Reported By Police I Weekend Traffic Accidents Reported - — Only one person was hurt, not •iorlosuly. in a s< rh-s of accidents in and near the city over the weekend Injured was Helen Lelehtv. of Ho-<-.it ii. who sustained a sca'.p wound when the < ar in which trite was ridinc driven by Mildred Hay. 3f», also >f 'his city, collided with another i driven by Mary Ellen Eiler. 25, of Peru. The a.. dent occurred ab >ut 1 :30 p m Sunday at the corner of Nuttman avenue and I'. 8- by-naas 27. The Itay car, after the collision, oiled over on its side when it rin k a < urblng. Die drivers . scaped unhurt as i <i i M liorothy f'attlun and her young daughter, Joyce, also of Peru who weie riding in the Eiler ■ i: Tlie Decatur car was enroute east of Nuttman avenue and the I’e. n < ar north on the by pass. Poll' <: chief James Hordern invest!-
< /BwMWMtthZjArWvfiWß BlMli iffl itaw 8 L k Hl / IVi I k r , 1I I T ' * 1/ ,■'P tw > / I\\ \ \< ■ ' w» ‘ /MH *v t S wItEC ar Jf liKMti?' WEATHERPROOF . Two coats of enamel —a thin film only 1/90 of an Inch — that's all that protects your porch from the destruction of weir and weather. Make it the best protective film that can bo devised—make it Kyanitt for long life, self smoothing beauty. Kyanizt Porch and Deck Enamel is easy to apply. It’s self smoothing—leaves no ridges —no brush marks. Dries overnight with a smooth beautiful lustre and will withstand heavy foot traffic and rough wear. Available la eight colors. Kohne Drug Store
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gated. No on»‘ wa» hurt Saturday evening at 7 o’clock when a car driven by Lloyd Edwards, 19. of Wads worth, Ohio rammed into the rear of an auto driven by Albert N. Sprunger, 06, of Berne. The accident accurred two miles north of P.i-rnc Mrs. Sprunger and a twomonths old baby escaped injuries. Sheriff Ed Miller investigated. A car driven by RusSefJ Hendricks. 18, of Monroe route one, rammed into the rear of a car driven by Arthur Heller. 2-1. of Monroe route one at the traffic light intersection of Second street and the Fort Wayne road about 1.45 a. m. Sunday. No one was hurt. far driven by Geneva Shockey, 20. of Fairmount and Frank K. Braun. 52. of Decatur, route four, collided on West Madison street about 7:30 o’clock Sunday morningNo one was hurt- • o If all the 17 'billion tin cans emptied in a year were dumped In New Yoik City, the entire metropolis would tie covered three feet deep with containers, says the Census Bureau. Dance at Silver Pavilion Wed. and Sat. nights. M F
