Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 41, Number 56, Decatur, Adams County, 6 March 1943 — Page 5

Ituhday. ma * ch 61941

iarkel Reports M .11* REPORT 0F LOC * L g*,o FO«E |GN MARKETS I, • e 7* ■F Ho«gi* nd ,r,d wn ,h W r At 12 NOW,. corrected *' Bn: "ts **® **** IS 40 »' 0 HU ■ W 900 IS 50 E m'h k — !$• - ■ BtdJ Brothers mxvketn ■VI b* op<-n wery d,jr ■ uttl further notice. BwhOLSSALE £OO AMD ■poultry quotations ■ ftruWMd by Bvtu Egg 4 Poultry Co., MOMtvr Phon* 154 ■ corrected March « Si lyre Wtiite <(£•> S’ Hr B 0»*»V I K K nixed '<g». >4fSe ■’* c hose 17c HiylKS 23r rprlngers, barred or rock, stnocth. 6'4 Ibe. ■;-r Sn”'*r — ISc ■Uficr. roosters. lb »■ Stf ixkx. 5 lb«., end over ... 18< K jesse, 12 lbs and over— 18c ■ local GRAIN market ■ IURK ELEVATOR CO. Cerrected March 6 ■ lu:.< ssbject to rhsnge S during day. delivered at elevator. |B: lino Bl tod *.i-c 1 61 Bl fe.low Corn 1.33 ■ l fv.rn 1.19 ■il.lj>» l orn 1.17 Bi.-:.-- 1.66 B U’» 331 b test. .54 ■ S'r! 171 .... .............. .58 B nit .41 per bushel lose. ■ Con; .04 per 100 leas. B f o b. farm. ■ ANSWERS TO * 3 “DO YOU KNOW?” B~ - --e B Cdeen. B JoMtbxn B hsi B Ababa ui Blob ■Home Education A tuccoM’u! Marriage B» t.*- <IIS. . Ix-iwp. n man ■tbfloaer ar. -n.ils is in the fact ■’.'•or.aktj No one would think ■hribtitißK the fact of a pemon borer. 4 <•;>» or a monkey. B *•' • ••th man Each man ■W iled M a person. It i* also ■ttllut it takes socli relations ' ■**► Personality which .alls for ■ wiaafe rels’lcn or marrlag* 1 mau >n isolation on an ill■BHt Is a failure since he na* 8111B 1111 *' 1 * **' *•**>thing more ■ * Phyaiia: being *“’■ J M,r ’ ”< man’, existence *’ “Pi*” t'tnitie* are aSordS *’*“’’*l to the highest social ■ ■c*al appei’a, aut h as the ■>«(ords S 4 *° * r,;u ««'**nd that the petiCAaiity te th* result of ■ **" as: k a penion, Jeaui ’hat maniMa ie a -uu- ■ alien the light relations ■J',*" s-en m each member ■* <«Mly BjL> a «Aooa Town - I M. A. BIXLER 1 1,. HOVM: R 1 1? 1 * WIBSsSiSB | ••‘wdeye, S:SS »a. I T «Mhine m f **■**<—* Menu metae pW | I XX ,Ib f ■ Tsw ■ nedan F Eigiit Coach [Saylors

| WANT AQS|

LWAL CLAUIFItb ADVERTISING RATES ■■ One Time. Per Word I'/,t I Minimum foe first Insertion 304 | Additional Insertlone Per Word, Per Day 14 | — Card of Thanks 404 Obituaries, Versea, ReooluI fleas- Si Menus, run menu style— 11 I Notfeea, Cep Hoads, S-pt. body . — SOS | (U picas deep, one column) t FOR SALE FOR SALE — 12-in. Oliv r tractor plow. Theodore Kwell, 1 mile north of Preble. 54-Sti 529 Nuttman Avenue, Fort Wayne. Indiana. 56-g3t FOE BA fat—fired gihv. trial.- hog. some sboats. Harry Kershner I'j mile northwest of Copposs service station. .Monroe phone 11-0 55-3tx FOH SALE — All-white - porcelain gas stove; several coal raugee; baby beds; high chairs; several oil ranges. Decatur Vpholstry Shop. 146 8. Second. Phone 420. 5«-2t FOR 6ALte—2 roan colts, * .inTifg 3 year old. Oscar Scherrer. 2 miles south of Poe or 2% miles north of Echo. 55t3x FOR RENT~ F*dß Rik’T—Bleeping room, north of court house. 228 Madison St. or phone 464. l> 54 .it frOR RENT - Sleeping room in modern home Also garage 603 N. Second St. Phone 384. b 55-3 t RJBNT Two sleeping . oonw* In modern home. 331 North Sixth street. Phone 742. Ssg2t. ■■■Sl ■ Q— Revival Services At Church Os God Bev. C. Lowry Quinn, pastor of the church of God at Lima. Ohio will be the speaker each evening at the local Church of God during the evangelistic campaign which will begin Sunday. Services will begin each evening at 7:30 The public to invited to attend. ■ —o Forces Door to Office Biddeford Me.—(UPl—The door of the old police station here, locked only once m 40 years, finally hat been scrapped for a new one The locking bar was latched when city marshal Daniel ('rote protested hie ousting by the governor. The new appointee. Charles B Harmon had to force his way into office. FOR SALE i SVjxll—Manila Second Sheets Sac Keam | lb White Typewriter Paper -90 c Ream IHxll—2o lb. White Typewriter Paper — 1.15 Ream 4*4x14-16 1b White Type writer Paper — I 20 Ream j fb. White Typewriter Paper —1 45 Ream B*4xll—3o n> White Mir.*o graph Paper — 100 Ream Decatur Daily Democrat 104 North Second Street

PANTIE PICKETS IN PROTEST ! B EjS xWiW ’.■? W # w I I k \ ’. 31 MfflSHft kwynvHMO aniitov the curtailment of fuel allotments for chapes New Toth mothers attached some sign.* to the bucks .. « >a>«r ——a... of their infanta and brought them to .Vang Queens ■torourX FHaMent James FiUgeralc s office The mother cxplaiced •he dtsaer aroWem is serious especially lor young mothers who maj niitAiF* fM*r jo mto the Army. Jlattrn»u»aaH

A ★ h/Uat 'lfau, WiM, WAR BONDS ★ ★ Our Army has Die most efficient hospital service in th* history of warfare. Every fa'ibty fur th* nv-st modern and advunced medical xijf surgical treatment for our men h*s been provided and devei'-pmer. - et new drugs, new antiseptics has miraculous recoveries possible \ A 400-bcd held hospital, tented, with all equipment costs approximately 841.800. It must be staffed with doctors, nurses, orderlies, cook.’, : etc. Your purchase of War Bonds I helps to provide medicine and sur- I gery for our wounded boys. Your I War Bond may save some soldier's | Use. It may be your own son. Buy more and more War Bonds every Payday. “You've Done You, Bit Now Do Your Best.'' U. S. Treoiurf Dfftrlmu WANTED WANTED — Rad 1□ a to repair. Vlirlch Bros. wanted T** rent mo® n ho ■ • or apartment. Address Box 110 care Democrat. 54-3tX WANTED —To buy son.* SrS horses. Afeo hay. Telephone 573-8, b , r .4-3tx W \NTED To liny 13 x 1 > !■ ■’ r i-’ in good condition. Telephone 57. 54-b3t WANTED To KENT I’inn nSTr Decatur, ion to 120 acres. Responsible party. Phom- 1577. 54t4 Q_ Business Services WIRE j war! Return on*- with *a< h older. We aleo pay 1c each for all extra ones you have to sell. Sheets Bros., Cleaners. Phone 359. 52-ts TRY VAI’OBATH f-.i colds, eland, bladder trouble, ekin disease. TH. with in.i.sMigc. Herman C Weber Bath H use. 107 S Second St.. Phone 120. 51-ts ■ —o MISC’ELLANEOIS FARM LOANS at 4% for 10 years * \’o exp'-nse to borrower. C. D Lewton, Decatur, Ind. 15-b-ts f’XRMERS _ ATTENT!ON W* re move dead horses, cows, hogs, etc. I Decatur phene 2000. We pay all phone charges. The Stadler Pro'ducts Co. 15-ts i FARM MMNS at'4Vfor _ lTy“»r*. No commtoston charge. Sec John ■ W. Tyndall. Room 7, Peoples Loan 4 Trust Bldg. A Kansan inventor has obtained a patent for an eoclosed automobile that can b<- driven through water by a propeller geared to its motor, the car being kept afloat by buoy- . ant tanks.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA

New Books Obtainable At The Decatur Public Library

THORN-APPLE TREE By Grace Campbell. This S< tlish Canadian idyll of pioneer days In Glenarry is a homespun tab- of rare beauty, with an atmosphere au winsome as it is wholesome. While the story Is pure romance set In what we llhe to regard as a leisurely age, the action moves vividly and swiftly through a wide range of moed and Ins.dent. Basically, "Thorn-Apple Tree” Is a dramtlc record of how the Canadians live a century ago. | Th*- language is pleasantly colloi <|uial In the Canadian idiom, which jis not dialect. Within the perfectly balanced framework of the narrative there are lovely descriptions of Canada at every season, and scores of incidents are related with the delicate, sure tom h of a writer who relies on the simplicity of | truth. The reader soon becomes conscious that these scenes huv«* net been invented but lived. The mellow fragrance of Grace Campbell’s style suggests that this story has ripened with th*- years, till a remembered • xpericnce has reachi ed its essential and inevitable form, i In "Thorn-Apple Tree" the publtah- | era ar- proud to sponsor what they ; believe to he a work of art of a ■ high order of literary merit —cn which not only presents a new writer of talent but expresses something authentic and vital about the soul of Canada in the making. GOODBYE MY SON—By Marjorie Coryn. This is the alnry of a soldier, from the day cf his birth through his half-pathetic, liulf-arrogant youth, his meteor-sweep to power. hU spectacular faTT. and his lonely death. But it is a soldier seen not through th** calculating or admiring ey«w of the world, but as he appear* d to his own family, and m ->t unforgetably of all to his mother. Th** squallingq baby; the thinshanked nervous little boy. the nosey meddler who was constantly spilling things and plaging his ! brothers and sinters; th-n the ironwilled young recruit, stern and strangely remote, yet still on oci.isloii returning to his mother fcr her word <*f sanction or rebuke and for tin- strong, patient hands that patched his uniform and sew*.*d his buttoiM on; finally and by degrees.

NEW GUINEA AREA WHERE BIG JAP CONVOY WAS SUNK - - ■- — THIS At RIAL VIEW SHOWS tTNSCHAtTN, New Guinea, near which U. S. airmen destroyed a large JaDMiese convoy of 10 warahips and 12 tranaports Action took plac. in Humank sea. (International)

- [| . 11l ---- - . rr - . THIMBLE THEATER Now Showing “POPEYE STICKS OUT HIS CHIN” r A MIKIUTf MEREfe Amothee barnacle"] lallihAftadotociet] fAHOV HRAMGTH£ )| AU.THTiP:r4ACHD 7 ZS.U)HALESkIN y- fO,OOOIGTOPCOV£; KITCHEN KfV* “i > \ I zCY ('?> O THAN HIM 57<GM? >- cnppZc ) S’*' < ><) 1 * THA6 r V c? 5( SEFOREWOU ) \<29 \ \oX-tef c &/\ fri* r\ 1 Awry a $ - B 0 j o) I / /( / flz/iZlz j?c n _ #"""‘“ ,< u ~~ “~l \\ I r k ntx g=? 1-- WfTrafti — • ’ - - BLONDIE DAISY STALKS BLONDIE’S PREY! By Chic Young ' ’’Hli wowwueaEi6c*<Gw3oP? T [ _, i|lJ*k mams JuUlii- fl I X ',C TWEMMJTE ! WANT HIM R> < Rl 111 ( GO OM SCffAM ) M' O' l*<A ( 3£>r R?IENP.-J . M, LJ AJWfr HEM* ME WITU THE DISHES M| W > WORE MOTA / I Ji ‘ aVWS*i. \ U'JMM > < .—. <U ?> ME DISAPPEARS t—lgLf - ( ADIMTER'owr ) & C | DUE MAGIC BtrS' P. KOP*JG Z I s —X^_F- >CJ JL ; ' 1 art ' rll » •= e ®. 31 |JLz 4buiP| | a ;, ~4sn Jifcs

the general, the master of men. but just the same the bewildered slave of a wanton who mad*- him the butt of secret ridicule anti the recipient of open straight-talk from the one person who never flattered or feared him. On through th*- years of bis power this mother, with the warm heart and the steady brain, cave him guidance when he would acct.-pt it. sympathy and understanding always. but spelling and indulgence, never. The overwhelming weight of his conquests, the power that made him a god. awed her not at all. and when long after his death the mother, old and blind, In her turn lay dying, her steadfast Inner sight saw nut a conquerer but a shabby little boy whose nose often needed wiping and who was always meddling. Here to the timeless mother-and-son relationship. d<--Gets Divorce "'yW v - * •' ■ SCREEN ACTRESS Karen Morley, above, has been granted a divorce in Los Angeles from Director Charles Vidor. Now in South Carolina on war work. Miss Morley did not appear in court. It was .lisclosed that the uetresa and Vidor reached a property settlement and agreed to joint custody of their son. (Inttrnational)

plcted truly and beautifully. That this son happened to be Napoleon Bonaparte and this women L* tizia his mother, and m* ther of other kings as well, adds fire and thund er to th*- story, but its universal- ' ity lf<*H deeper. Today- its power ! and poignancy come like a bugle j call. Not every soldier can lie a I Napoleon, but ev. ry mother Is L«-t I izia Bonaparate as she blds her son good-bye. ITALY FROM WITHIN By Rich aid G. Ma-sork. From a spot under .Mussolini’s balcony, Richard Masroi-k. chief of the Rome Bureau of the Associated Press from 1938 to I) i-ember. 1941. I heard II Dure declare war on th*United Stales. During the intern ' ment that 'olluwi-d, he had time to | review the various crises in tin ■ career of Mussolini and the history of Fasciu' Italy which iod to > !K ' trash' enmity with the United States. This book outlines the rise and decline of Fascism in Italy; the years of war In Ethiopia. Spain and now the whrle world, hrouah which .Mussolini has dragged tin- patient, hard-working Italian people; ami the low estate to which h*- has brought hltnuelf as a valet of Hit b*r. It describes the diplomatic maneuvering of Italy in the years before the present war. rurieiit i wartime conditions, the Ilf*- of th* I per pie, and the private live -of th*' I dictator and his henchmen. Mr | Massock discusses a« well th*- posihility of an eventual revolt within th<- country, chances o( a liberating invasion of Italy, mean of a new leadership, and the position of the Royal Family. By keeping his «txry as far as possible factual and objective h<- gives the reader a good understanding of what hi - happened to Italy and of what may 'happen within the country before ; ' the last bomb falls in World War I ' 11. 1 LIVE AGAIN—By Warwisk Di* |> Ing In this remarkable nov* I Deeping has written four love stories which are related in a v. ,y subtle and strange way In the first a footman's pass! n for a noble lady is fulfilled, but as a r suit she be trays him and allows him to die tor a crime for which In- w,i.'> not responsible. In the o-* ond. a great financiers passion for * Spantoh dancer leads to hi I** tray al and death without th. fulfilltiu nt ot his desire. In the thlt l i scholar is saved from an igticl.le passion and he finds true fulfillment in a love

BIG, WOODEN BLIMP HANGARS r ■ —w 1 I . r ’s’l 4 J s ft •• -1 et - 1 m? Yn K < idal - ■‘‘■Tv * Sillßp! Va:? GIANT WOODEN HANGARS, made of fire-resistant timbers instead of vital steel, are being constructed along the U. 8. seacoasts to house the Navy’s expanding blimp fleet. The hangars are about 1,000 feet long and are baaed on concrete frames. Ten football games could be played at once on the huge floor space. (International)

that survived lif*- Itself, in the last, a youug artist found nut only lov. hut the meaning of faith in n time of terror and ruin. To explain how the-e four love stories i are connected— it w the chief charj acter* in them ar. related—would he to give away much of the dram- ■ a tic suspense aud mystery of the novel. Suffice it to say that Deejs Ing has never written anything quite so original and ettrprising, o .I Jehovah's Witnesses 122 N. 9th Street Sunday. March 7, 1943—7.30 p. tn. Watchtower Blhlv -tudy using J he February 1. 1943 Watchtower.

PUBLIC SALE CALENDAR MAK S—Martin Ka: er. 3 miles west of Wapakoneta, Ohio. Roy John-on. auctioneer. MAK 8 J W Porter, 54<t Acres. 6 miles east of Francisville. Indiana. J. F. Sanin.inn. Auctioneer. •MAK. 9 -Ed. Thieme, 6’4 miles east of Decatur on th<* old DecaturVan W» rt road ’ a mile north of road 224; ’ a milt west of State Line. Roy Johnson, auct. MAK. lu Harvey riarwoM. '| mile • <«t, 2 miles south of Wren, Ohio, l.estei "Bud" Human, auctioneer MAR. ii W:.i Ohler. 2 ,;..ie< cast of Decatur. Roy, Johnson. auct 2 miles north of Wren. Ohio* on road No. 49 or 1 mil, south of road No. 224 or !•> miler east of State Line Hoy 8. Johnson, auctioneer. MAK. 12 Mathias Thomas. 1 mile east. S mile north of Monroe on Mud Pike. !,ester "Bud" Human, Auct MAK 2" Maytne Terveer. Business building at ISS North Second St. and Residence property yat sth and Madison St.. Decatur. Roy 8. Johnson auctioneer. i ,Ss,===S==,======= = !===== a a «,«UQr XKJt» « -o %MX RJWtX XJLXXitXXX M st >rx ;rr> x MX v MXNMJO®. WANTED ! GOOD, CLEAN, BIG HAGS, Suitable for Cleaning Machinery. -f « Cannot use underwear, stockings, pants, * 5 coats, overalls, or any similar material. | J Will Pay £ c ib . f i Decatur Daily Democrat I XX « a '.r x a-..- XXX :K n p„X K KJi MT « X «TX KKS M K 4 «. «JCS X.K * <VUi

PAGE FIVE

jiuragratihe 1 to 20 inclusive Subject. "Faith of the Nation Tried.” S< rlptnre text: “That the trial f your faith, being much more precious than of gold that perishyth, though it be tried with Are. might be found unto praise and honour and glory at the appearing of Jeans Christ "—I Peter 1.7. All people of good will ate invited to attend this finely Bible study. o It Is estimated that from 1930 to 1980. the proportion of the population of persons under 20 years j of age will decrease from 38.8 percent tn 26.1 percent.