Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 42, Number 201, Decatur, Adams County, 24 August 1944 — Page 3
UftSPAY. AUGUST 24, 1944.
TO.SOCIETV » jyl \
MA MEETS evening ,MK Kg -m \ -hor' hit-, "w® •id 'I tcl-r ll' < HH ■k, ■ • x ■" * '''' i 'I An.h W 'I I"' |W, \. ■■ i |MrI !'•> w ... 188 1 " i m ' 1 •’■" ißw •■•nun" i
I fired Kidneys Wen Bring Beepless Nights ' ' A,‘n*\« r. ntam I*i rr.ikß ! . ’ .’. Lrip !■ i purify th* * : "‘ r D ti.ry grt '* r <M »n the daytime. ■ r gi t*. H«*iu*ut gj S» -f’ ■ I? ir.'l burning » n.rtliing wrung 1 • !• f I > -n f ne«le< I ■-*. i*. fH-lf J air.-.,, - t n |*ff: •« J- till it! V>ur Lhrtjd, it -■ A ! »>»3'-l*.rbwnitw hr f * "■■ • -• ‘I f*P * n ' l energy, - * > V* if <truggi»t for .«■ •. : s n lihorm for over 4‘) B- W » f */ < e ' ‘l’? ■ rr L*f *»d Wil] help * b-> '< t huah «>ut puiarjg. S • ’MU I: ■■'-* J - bi "*1 Gel ■ I'Ub-
Os Course You Like Cake... and you'll like this week's Special i ” rAKK ~F 'jfL mi. ui i h Ask I'or CHERRY CAKE —at your local independent food store or stop in at our bakery. Better than home-made cake. I’ure. wholesome ingredients M-ientitically blended and baked to PQ e* perfection. Y®* Stewart’s Bakery ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■aaB**CMMO«MBtaNR.« ■ ■ ■ ■ MM ■ A r iW g# SJm . t Ar > • f . parluma pat with the crowd ..dings like a burr to iweoten, •nd woolensl "“dhue PerfumeZ. 14.50 to 512.00 dram size. 51.50 —purse size, 52.50 '••odhue Daytime Perfumes3.so to 515.00 lighter but lasting. SMITH DRUG CO>
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Phone* 1000 — 1001 Wednesday Mother* of world war two, Moo«o home. h ji m. Red (Tom .-‘•wine (»•«»«•• Legion, I p m Thursday Kurali-’.«• Study filth. Me Herman (lehner, 8 ji m Men’* Inion t'rayer Service, groound floor public library, 7;30 p m American Li-gion Auxiliary. Mrs Edward Shoaf, 8 p. m. Friday St Mary's Twit. home econocic* club picnic, Pleasant Mi'i* high school. 7 p. nt. tained wiih a dinner Wednesday evening for Pvt and Mrr. E. Carl Hann, and Mr and Mrs Fred E King and son Richard Ms. Hann nerved a delicious thn e-cour*.' < hieketi dinner. The table wae centered with a white lake with a bride and groom in the ren’er. I’vt Hann leave- today for Camp San Luis, Obispo. Calif o I • 0 Adams County Memorial Hospital Admitted Harold S. Hu'kmae'i r ’Geneva; Eill.-n F l!u< ktnatter. Geneva. IMbert Whltty, route 3, Margaret Mo—s. route 1. Thomae Lee brew route 3. Dismissed Mi-n Sharon Scham erloh. 1010 Monroe St Honnl" Whittetlberger. High St.. Wanda t Whittenliargar, High St., G-rald i Baker, all Indiana St.. Kathleen (’Ole. 738 Mercer Ave. Carol Cole: i Mr* George Hoh-rn and l»by daugh I ter.
mfr luffiSS hM Flying Fortress Pilot Second Lt Hubert If Hunte', 20. eon of Mr and Mtv Floyd B. Hun- ’■ . 321 Flr-t St. i- .i tn< mber of In- upper claec undergoing Flying Fmii'e- pilot training.it H tidricks Field. Subring. Fla Lt Hunter, a Iti-cutur high school graduate, wsi, a General Electric Co employe before ellteling the ■service in February. I!»4.l He received hi« army wing- and comniiseion lael April at Turner Field. Ga First Lt Walter Hawtbaker, son of M: and Mm Charbw lltwbaker. southwest of Berne, wae wounded in action in France recently anil has been award-d the Purple Heart, according to a letter received by hi- pa rente. Ixtren lluduon. M M 2 c son of Mr. and Mie Ixirwn Hudson hae been transferrod from Itavievllle I! I to 4!tlh Battalion. X X <• i 11. ft It Camp Park*. Calif Pfc Charles V Mcßride. No I 92701 - -on of Mr and -Mtw Ira McBride route K. be.utur, te now stationed a- 9th. MAW. FMF, MCAS. Cherry Point X C . where he was transferred from Goleta Calif Pvt. Keith It Hammond. No 3'i24SU5, is now attatloned at Com ' patty K 125th Infantry, Camp i Maxey, Texas He was recently i transferred from Camp Fannin. Texas. Cpl Ambni-e Meyere. formerly ’■ationed at Itaniel Field. Augusta. Ga , lute lieett trantrferred to the following addre-s: 700 \ \F Base Fnit Se<-, G Wright Field. Dayton. t> T Sgt Jim Highland. I s.MC. son of Mt and Mrs. Ed Highland, who ! ha- been in the South Pacific for i 17 month* arrived in San Francisco ‘ Auguat 81. ami is now loiated at the following addr>ws M W S. S 3 Per Gip; M F A W C M C A. I* Mantnar. San Diego. 15 California ! Mr and Mrs. J c M.t-ilyn and daughter ar.- viei’tng the former’s parent- Mt and Mie V I. Marilyn of Fort Dodge. lowa T’o-y will • 'urn to this city Monday to visit Mte Maellyn'- jmretite Mt and M » ItetJ Shtoyt le-fo'o tiurniiig o their hollo- in Knoxvilh. 'l'ollll Mr- 11 F Lu igh. London. Ontario. Canada. 1- ajo-nding —veral week* with her daughter Mie Leo I I Miller wlio I- making Io 1 home With Mt and Mr- Char I Miller, while her husband is ill - ' Vice 'Mies Gaynel l.atikenau It >e ae her gm el thia we.-k Mi • Sharon Carwon of For' Wayne Daniel E Hurt. S 1 c winter home Jr. Miss Pattern > ’ \\ 9039 > Ia i ,ZfS '4l • 1 G '» i v\ v / n \ Mnfw /J. 11 1 B 1 ' ■ 1 ' nlHi /J I / I 1 MARIAN MARTIN Pattern MM iw the wort of amart Jumper frock that ratrv high with the Junior miMH crowd, wo easy to new. Long or ahort-aleeved hlouae. Pattern 9H39 cornea in Junior miaa aiSM. 11, IZ. 13. 14. 15. 1«. 17. 13. Site 13. Jumper, takea Zfe yards 39-inch fabric; hlouae, 1 % yard* 35-lnch. Thia pattern, together with a nedlework pattern of useful and decorative motifs for linens and garments. TWENTY CINTS Send TWENTY CENT* In coins for these patterns to the Decatur Dally Democrat. Pattern Dept. 135 N. Jefferson St.. Chicago 80, IN. Write plainly SIZE. NAME. AD. DRESS. STYLE NI’MBER. Send FIFTEEN CENTS more for the Marian Martin new and bigger Summer Pattern Book. 32. Pages. easy.to.make styles. Free pattern printed In book.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
1 In Boot Training i f Jl^3l Vi ix'ster Essex. A S. who •uttered servi< <- .him- 22 of this year, tn tak mg his Isiot training at Sampson. N. 1 He is the son of Mi and Mrs Clifford Essex. <»f *2l Madison St. and his wife, the former Miss Kathryn Boss, also resides in this city His address is Lester Essex A S. Co ;>::7<; 11m C. s. N T c Sampson. N. Y is in Bluffton, visit.d with Mi and Mrs Fran, i.- Eady and daughter 'Jayne last evening He ba b.-en on active duty th'- pant 10 nmti'be Ronald New to. 11. lot al farm *'■ curjfy administration office manager. was at Purdue university, confering with state officials Mia- Aloha Kan-, d.iuhtei of Mi and Mih Thomas Kane of Lafayette. formerly of this city, is taking a tourae at the Milo Bennett Linotype school at Maumee. <> Mi- David Adams and daughter Miss Marjorie Miller, are enjoying a few days with friends at Like 1 George. Miss Miller is 011 vacation front her duties as a chemist with Eli Lilly A company of Indianapolis. In Van Wert the YMCA boys artgathering scraji paj>er thi- week Eat h one who gets s<m jstunds will be given a free triji to Cincinnati September 2 to ultend tin- Chicagte Cincinnati ball game c T Michand has been apjminted hy tlie Berne council to investigate the progress being made to procure an airjtort for Adams counwo Mr. and Mrs Rtut-cll Edgell of 512 North Third Street are the j»arettt- of a baby tmy born thisi mornI ing at I Id -t m .1' t1 • Adams 1 county m--mori.il hospital. He I weigh-d <i jioitml-. lie outlie- and bar been b.tm-il Thomas Wayne 1 1 o DEFENSES OF (Cnotlnuw. vroß rags I) pation of the port was imminent. 1 Lindon radio teport unconfirmed by Alll.-d official -oitri'csaid American ami French troops also hid liber.tl-d the Fr-ltch we.t ettas' jstrt i'i Berd" aux Mm It of Toulon already has been liherati-d Gen. Sir Henry Maitland Wilson announced in hi daily commnnique. and front tejtort- -aid Freni It lori es Anally had over whelmed giant concrete fortifications ea-t of the city and smashed into the eastern and northca-tern outskirts after a foltr-day battle To Hie west. American armored spearheads swept 30 miles beyond newly captun-d Marseille into the delta of Hu- Rhone river some 2" miles from Arles. Salon 27 miles northwest of Marseille, was cap Hired, along with a mimtier of smaller hamlets Allied headquarters again clamji ed a protective cloak of Secrecy around the American columns which liberated Grenoble in a spectacular dasli 14<t miles inland from the Riviera, hul they were believed fanning out toward the lug 1 ommiinii at ions center of 1 Lyon. 58 miles to the northwest, j and Chambery. 27 miles to the north on the last German held railway between France and Italy (The clandestine Atlantic radio said American tanks have occupied Lyon The Algiers radio re juirted merely that the advance on Lyon had begun and it was anticipated that Maquis pat ruling the Lyon area soon would make contact with the Americans > The latest Allied advances increased the Allied bridgehead in 1 southern France to 3,000 to 3,000 ' square nitles—an average of nearly 1.000 square miles a day liberated since the invasion forces swarmed ashore Auk. In 1 French forces had the last fanatic defenders of Toulon hemmed Into the old port area, where they ‘ were being hammered mercilessly j by thousands of tons of bombs and shells from planes, warships ! and land artillery. An early intensification of the > bombardment from the sea was anticipated with the surrender of . the German garrison of more than 200 on the Island of Porquerelles. 16 miles southeast of Toulon, to an American cruiser. ; o Trade ia a Good Town — Decatv
Patton's Style 01 Warfare Described Throwback To Bill Cody, Jeb Stuart 'Editors note Robert Richards | of Hie I tilted I’ci-hs is with on- of G-neral I’atlon's daslitiii: armoi*‘l spearlu-ail- which are oji- iai t: in u military blackout so to hit Hu-r i-onfu-e Ho • tu-my It- rhi- dt-si ription of life in .-ii an ••d lamjl Ili-I'JI iiraile h l •.!■' ■ oilli try i By Robert Richards With American \iiuoi (In The Seim, Aug 2'i i Delay-d i tl I’i This is an almost unbi-liev aide kind of warfare being waged by the Hying armoreq columns knifing deejt inside the German lines around Pans > Its the jierfecHon of modern war making ami yet I think « coujde of fine old tight.-is tiant-d Buffalo Bill an<l Col J. I. Stuart would somehow feel at home in i this camp tonight. We are Idvoitai ked in .1 wheat field under the l.ianihes of apple ■ trees Our tanks ar.- drawti around j In a piotntln re.-iuuglf m-i ||K. they used to do with the lov.-i-d wagons in Indian country The Jeeps amt reconnaissance ' cars are out restlessly jirobing the surrounding roads like advance i scouts in the days of Buffalo Bill i Now and then a jeep conies rolling hack into camji with tour or five prisoners sitting sullenly on its hood Codv would have had his war-painted prisoners on tin- ••nd jof a lariat but the illusion is
t I 1 'I f w, w w w w w w w > \ 0 Im h ’ ' I r * dBT’TT’T 1 1'771 ■ t f . \ \A" e V—4 •/* 1 I F 'V W 1 J «4 1 [ • I • 7 i’fajbM ijaS-rb •• ■' <w t \ s(p-V jnU Ideal for School Wear Made toi lutigh -ersice Boyi Smartly Striped If ’ --..m B POLO SHIRTS 17 7 TOMMY-ALLS I SF-89* 5139 W WW Plain and Colored Prints laW • Knit of good quality vaw — ~ . .. , ~ eomt.dew.on yarn, .ncol- Jft MISS DRESSES .inalib'm.d"™l». ' fMi rnl orful striped patterns. Crew a *•* and rooms. Bar-tacked at neck. AU sue*. • These bright, washable cotton ft flft «" P<>'n«-»f strain. frocks are both pretty and prac- f 8 J School Supplies tica * Neatly tailored, sturdy |{ u , Schisd v .. . k- i school dresses. Bright piping, ■ww Sow on Sale „h. r , v << . L Supplies Now collar trim Full skirts. Prints, stripes and dots. Sues 7-14 yrs. fl- A 25t M X. Jn 1 ’ < I w, ’ / v W* 1 *»" C< Pronounced Favorites in j r . Miss Water Repellent h. MISS HATS HEAD 'KERCHIEFS • Smart styled felts for school I ) or dress. Choose the clever beret. I s< nulh "’r> 1 fl water repellent head scarfs T the smart ptllbox. bonnet, calot. | " Ftne quahty crown t „ ted or military Scottie. All new Fall a J B B rayon challis . . . guarantied models, tn Auturni. shades. . . . washable. Assorted colors on bght or dark grounds S!?TBn? r nTnM^nTrF^x , irwrrTMPTWF i s i,, p
irn-s. apatite The armored men from Kan.-a and Nebraska and Missouri and 1 Liulsialla look uji from their at | tempts Io get a sponge bath on' of a tin hat but tlleif iy hold Aelioim for till ■ Jlll-IIIH 1 i Some oi tb*-m mullci t'hrisi more lleini. Like Hie Jdainv;n>-ti >y in" mote l.ioufli- to I<< : am: hand to w.itili These an- mobile fight. Who must keep going la ' if th. y want to live and jiri-om i in- th.-tn dow n Tlie German they firm? in ,n. scattered, di iirganiz.-d 10l I'vt Joseph I! Daighl'e ol I'l.n mein La. lounls eight diff«--nti divisions in on.- liati h We know there aren't Hia' many dtvi-iotis around In n owi also know these men ;>n- liadls 'disorganized and Ho- non mo tly wandering aiml-■ -iy lie sayAbout Ho- time you try to go; to s)ei-|> the log Kilns on Hie Olli skills of cumji begin to boom a th-y draw bead on important road f intersections in flu- area This j-! I Calle d lllle-l dlelloli |t 11111-l b. terrifying to ..n .-neiny alii iiijiiin'.to s.iamlde out with a wind.- -kin i under . over of darktiesWifti darkness too < om« th* ; German air juitrols trying to i search out our lo.ation titn a. k l i in k gunm-is don t fit. uni. Hiplanes drop flares, so as not to r. i i veal our j.osilion Out on the Hanks the men at.- ■ alert tn th.- turrets of the i.ig Sh.-i - man Men with l.azooka lie in ■ i thi- grass alongside th.-tn waiting < lor German tanks to apjitoa. b : Sonii-tim. there is brisk brush on th.- flank and lhe Germans us. - i ’he flash of Hi*- bazooka rockets - • I to set their sights on Hi.- . m-iny I Sl-i-j. comes easiest just before -'dawn because by then von ar.
' ici-iistomed tn the inferdlcHon fir ! i iiv Bui before daylight corn's a ■lour fa. .-d old sergeant with a i linyonet al his tall to link, your ' shoulder and say G.-t up ir Yoh rut. your ,y. . ;md w..i<h | th.- r<. otinai--am < <ai- and half ;iiaiks -wing out with ilodr radio int.-nu.'i.' Hiipj.ini- ;> >ti.- tanks i 1..-KII. to warm up tl,. ir muloi for 'lie day run and ->>m. i.ow you that feeling you have -.. u Hu•irmy wsnglng out for i.ntH.- with ■ tin- am.- L'tillatit i.i -h in Hi. | ! mov:• with horses >OU • I til to feel 11,;.' ,|<-b I -' 1..i t - < avalrym.-n in < onfi-derat. :■ > v would f. e| .if lioim with this | -..-tn and would limit, a'a.aid and I ; mb- away humming, .line th, < avail > o Indiana Military Head Transferred Bloomington. Ind Aug 21 tlT’i! 4'<d It I. Slioemaki-r, head of In
S If ••tlliff A lhi;in service hrinifs gs >mi dependable help in xotir wSjjw |?Mf times of trouble. £*l I Giliig & Doan 1 F- M .Morticians CS Marshall St. Phones 794 and 1041 AMBULANCE SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT
PAGE THREE
-liana I'nivei-slty'- urinary depart- ; nt annmim • d today that th<- ' ■ depa: fni-’-n- ha - given him ord- ' ■ tor a tranef- r to an iindirw lotted ■a .gn-lienf offecti.e Xug.l-t 11. .•■make, -will he l< .I" ded by Maj F> aw - k 'I Re.-d battalion mum.>iid> of '- <• -■ tool's IHTP .nd .! n I . .f T. r. II I'. K-ed •v . .• -< ;.i'd»s--oi of milifary ami ta-'i-s ami 'omfnariib thi- RICH and AXTF ITo-.i! '. -isth o' all railway a' k ■ n 'h. I m uditig riding I y. i|. .......r.'. .1 to 4'is 975 ' i.d. .ft I'H'i
PERMANENTWAVE Nia'iiral urla and *» >.» s now r ts.iy t w.i ly <ornfort.iMy ( •it lion b Ijo i* yuufM if rite ariuiung wave mit T rent.iin.. vrrviliir<>.iur>er<! — prrmsnrnt wavs *-■; f"f i 'it.f ! wU'trnpia und wave *rt. Ea*/ ■ ; yirtjf h.nr up tncurlerw Ineut on the .• uinn* f harm-Kurl hnteftcu’g largr*! m-ll-h.< fwitnr |M-rm;ineni wav* ki? Ot onr today at I. I I
