Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 79, Decatur, Adams County, 3 April 1945 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Democrat Want Ads (let Results ■ • ♦ •”* <?Vv ar» **vy /. **V* fy Sample piles n.”ed notwrsck and tortureyou W , . with maddening itch, burn and irritation. J r. Sntrn’t Pyramid Suppositories bring A ‘ quick, welcome relief, their grand modi- r| | fl cation means real comfort, reduces strain, ra [ helps tighten relaxed membrane*, gently j 1 I . lubricates and softens. Protective end fl autiH-hsClnr, so easy to use. Get genuine gj Stuart's Pyramid Suppositories rt your W <b v4’tore without de'ay—6oc end $1.20 — j oxi tnrlur’s money-back guarantee jB

.— I Wailpapers cleaned perfectly I IT SEEMS LIKE ■■ ■ | SEjJWBEfe MAGIC, BUT IT’S sSLixr GETS WALLS f E A lu SKafif wwtii Leaves no oily smudge..,does not streak Marigold is the different wallpaper cleaner ... completely removes soot and dirt, easily, and at low cost*. Leaves no smudge. Harmless to hands. Made by the makers of the famous Imperial Washable Wallpapers. See it work at our showrooms. Try it in your own home! SMITH DRUG CO. 1,..— m- ii - ....... i i I 'SlEsilliS'liliilitaiSiliSßiilll : FREE I ~ .3 New Rose Dawn Plants u Please enclose 25 cents to help cover packing. ® postage, handling and advertising expense. I To Advertise our unique method of selling direct from nursery ■ F Uo you through the mail we’ll semi you three well-rooted Rose 9 gi Dawn perennial flower plants, ready to set out in your yard. a. "These are the new Howers you have been hearing about through . *’ .radio stations and the garden magazines of the country. They ■ «£row two to three feet high and bear loads of silver pink flow- || wj grs from April to August. Fine for cutting or for yard decora- J tion. Ideal planting time now. ■ F wp Want you to have three of these plants to transplant in fl j» your yard, so you can see what strong, healthy flowers we g, raise- Current catalog value •><♦ cents. Now you may have = ” , three selected hardy specimens, shipped postpaid for 25 cents B £. incidental expense as above. • ■ jsy Offer Good during brief shipping period only. Send your re- i . quest, enclosing 25 cents, to: ~ K fl S CLARK GARDNER • Route 1. Bo* 1051 OSAGE, IOWA " Fl fl tat « K S S B K » B ■ Qi 0 9 « R ■ ■ B R ■ TE B J j 4 pflTc IF. ) > ! ] .u .'--41 Hri \ i v- #f?fW ■ MOm. ) I ' MPffl ( , iiii j ' * Ij p j 1 "V i r I gSr l 4 Everything For f | BABY / Visit Schafer’s for a complete selection i / of Baby Furniture. Our showing is com- ) > plete, with ( ■ Z ' ■ ■ fl C BABY BEDS MATTRESSES ) I CARRIAGES HIGH CHAIRS 7 ( BASSINETS TRAINING CHAIRS ( J - - and other items. ( J All the Newest Creations and Built for Sturdy Use. | ( COME IN TOMORROW. ( ■ B 1874 ’

Road To Berlin j . . . t l By United Press The nearest distances to Berlin ; from advanced Allied lines today. 1 Eastern front: 31 miles (from i Zaei kerick l. , Western front: 152 miles (from i Werra river). Italian front: slti miles (from near Cotnaechitil. — o 1 Trade in a flood Town — Decatur ——■'.—

Accordion Artist Here Thursday \* • ill iif'ht , I ].. HW ■ E*|SaSmK K ■P > > u - i ; 'W 5- m I ;A*-. ■ • *fl '1 Miss Iris .Jeannette, popular young' accord'onisf and soprano, will appear on two special programs in Decatur Thursday. She will first appear at the junior-senior high school at a special chapel program and will then be the featured artist at the ladies’ night program of the Decatur Rotary club Thursday evening at the K. of P. home.' Her concerts include selections ranging from Wagnerian favorites to the ever popular “Stardust.”

COURT HOUSE Suit for Damages A suit for damages has been til-1 ed in the Adams circuit gourt by William G. White vs. Reihert D. ' Workinger. seeking $2,500 damages i for personal injuries as a result of i an automobile accident. The plain-1 tiff alleges that on Jan. 5,11)44, he] and William White. Jr.. Dorothy; White and Glendola White were, tiding with the defendant in the latter’s automobile in a funeral procession from Berne to Portland on U. S. .highway 27. About threequarters of a mile north-of Portland the defendant’s car -’kidded on ’ the highway and threw the plaintiff against the car. injuring life hack and shoulder. The plaintiff allege-- that as a result of his injuries lie ha-s flteen unalble to resume his work at the Central Soya company, where he earned 75 cents an hour. He also sets out in his com-

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By HARRISON CARROIL King F’eatnres Syndicate Writer HOLLYWOO D—The Keenan ft'ynn accident has left the studios io jittery that Warners have paid Henn Ford S3OO for the motorcycle he was riding to MMEWWI and from work on M A Stolen WHrc Life.” And that I is a laugh, because Glenn alWolS ready was trying to get rid of Blw the machine—--8L::for S2OO. gp: S '-iXwSB| Joel McCrea W** WMWi n& . the on ly movie rancher Htmijon Carrott to make good. Walter Huston, here for “Dragonwyck,” but who usually hangs his hat in a threeroom house near Poterville, sold $35,000 worth of steers to the government in 1945. It was six years ago when the Hustons sold their Beverly home, Complete with a swimming -pool and a lot of guests they didn’t know, to buy a 3,000-acre ranch in the San Joaquin valley. The property has grown to 8,000 acres and the actor has 1,000 head of cattle in addition to those he sold. Penicillin has cured Merle Oberon’s throat-and she is back at work on "A Night in Paradise.” Have a hunch Merle Will be off for Reno and a divorce as soon as the picture is finished. Anyway, she is planning an eight-week ■ trip away from Hollywood. Somebody ought to introduce John Hodiak to Sandra Paloway, the very pretty Twentieth CenturyFox actress who used ’to be Zanuck’a secretary, before she decided on a screen career. Back in Detroit,. Sandra’s father was a retail coal dealer, and Sandra and her brother Walter used to deliver coal to the Hodiak family The.Hodiaks then lived in the suburb of Hamtramck. Ingrid Bergman -eame too close to injury when a falling hand-mike

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA.

; plaint that he paid out $l4O for help on hfe farm and slo'3 for medical care, and asks judgment for $2,500 (A suit to quiet title hao been fil- ■ ed by Retl’ien J. Meyer and Mabie i O. Meyer vs. John Everhart. NoI tice by pvtbiieation was ordered. — i . in tlie divorce action of Florenz . T. Leonard v-s Hildegarde H. LeonI aid. th- matter was eel for hearing I on April 7. o U. S, INVASION J ■ X->.s> ’ ’ ’ j (Continued From Page One) said. ... '. It was indicated the troops had seized control of the nortliern face of the Awasi hill mass dbminating the Bisha Gawa valley and territory to-the north. The victory firmly anchored the American beachhead 362 miles southwest of Japan proper. Democrat Want Ads Ge- Results

ana a steei roa nnssea net oy incnes on the ‘‘Bells of St. Mary’s” set. . . . Bonita Granville and Edmund O’Brien are seeing a lot of each other in the east. . . . Playing angels proved dangerous business for Myrna Dell and Donna Lee on "The Amorous Ghost” set at R-K-O. The gals backed into a piece of electrical equipment and set fire to their wings. . . . To date, he has seen nothing but a photograph, but Capt. Owen Ward has a new home in the valley. Brenda Joyce bought it since he left for Camp Gordon in Georgia. . . • The Dan Duryeas were so worried about their baby that Dan cracked rocks all day to fill the swimming pool. His back was so sore they had to shoot around him on the Deanna Durbin picture, "Lady on a Train.” Can’t wait to see Barry Fitzgerald, who lives in the simplest manner. play an eccentric millionaire with a huge mansion and a blocklong automobile in “Stork Club.” Good thing that Louise Allbritton has finished her part in “Men in Her Diary.” She has the mumps. Being a European, Helmut Dantine is proud of a letter he received on "Hotel Berlin.” It’s from former Empress ata of Austria'Jf she’s the mother of the Archduke Otto, who now is living in Canada. »t <r, ■ - s ” HOLLYWOOD HI JINKS: Louis Kaufman, Warners studio: violinist, has written an inSf ruction book, to aid convalescent service men in learning how to play stringed im struments. Volume will be privately published and distributed by a group of music-minded citizens. . . . The Don Cares (Marie "Bjjtch” Austin) have signed 'a ! property settlement, AH set for the Jimmy McHugh swimming meet to be an annual; event.» : That was Lorraine Breecher (once' ' engaged to Busby Berkeley) at the . Crillon ■ with George Raft. : Olivia De Havilland'with Ludwig Beipehnan st the-Mocambo. . « Gang at the Biltmore Bowl are get-ting-up acelebratomfor i meji. In» April, jie .begjns’Ws Uth > year as an orchestra leader.

German Open Cily Is Surrendered ; ‘ War's Devastation Is Avoided By City Ahlen. Germany. Mar. 31. —(Delayed)—(Via courier) —(UP)—This hospital city mt the fringes of the Ruhr became perhaps the first open city in Germany today when it surrendered and escaped the devastation of war. The city has a civilian population of nearly 30,000 and contains 14 military hospitals which house at least 3,000 military convalescents and 2.000 army medical personnel. Col. Sidney Hinda, leader <lf combat command B of the second armored division, issued a surrender ultimatum to the city last night when his outfit reached the outskirts. Civilian leaders carried the ultimatum to the ranking German officer who agreed to evacuate the city if given until 4 a. tn. Hinds refused the time extension and said the attack would start at mid l night and if opposed the city would be levelled. A few miles west of Ahlen, a few fanatical young troops from a German officer candidate school attempted a suicide stand with assault gnus, mortars and automatic weapons against the American armor. But the German army, which could have made Ahlen a tough nut to crack, abandoned the city, although they apparently had no time or facilities to evacuate the wounded. When Hinds’ jeep reached a crossroads south of the town at noon, he pa. 3 flagged down by a j German medical lieutenant colonel wearing a dashing cape, gleaming jackboots and rows of medals. He asked Hinds to accept the surrender. Hinds’ jeep followed the Prussian’s limousine into town whei’e the people gave the German car ■ the automatic seal-flipped Nazi! salute. A huge Red Cross flag was i flying from the church steeple and white flags fluttered throughout the city. The American commander immediately ordered all German army personnel confined to hospitals. By then American combat troops were I moving into the city and even the i German soldiers joined in waving] at the Yanks. The doughboys were amazed at i German officers and men swarming around the streets, clicking their ! heels and saluting American officers. Occasionally a one-armed German soldier nodded his head stiffly or a one-legged soldier, learning to use crutches, tried his best to salute. u Danville Man Held For Slaying Wife ■. - Z , t _. , • ' . 'Danville, Ind., April 3—(UP)— Herman Burgin, 51. was held in Hendricks county jail here today in connection with the shotgun death yesterday of his wife. Mayiue, 49, and the stabbing of her son, Cpl. Chester Miller. Allis. Burgin was killed by two gun wounds in her body. Iler son was slashed with a knife. • ,—-o —• Trade in a Good Town — Decatur I

i 1 t , I t * i • I ■ I t - ’ * ,£f/ '. <''• • , « i w- mi ■ i »/ ts ,' ’ , i I ’ '■ i liS , ♦ • ii -..- 1 Li ; ' -i®* < I ~ 9 & 1 Aifr*? ,i -** ' v' x O r x x » x < -» i' '/i \:’' 4 ’' . PARACHUTES AH the skies as members of the First Allied' Airbornr Army descend on the east bank of the River Rhine during the early < phase of the: great offensive. This photo, just released, shows the paratroopers jnst after their jump from gliders whisk carried them to the drop zone, »( ? ' -.t .• r —— (Igtertiatioiial)

Leads Revival f■» 1 4’ * ,I T* Rev. K. Roy Johnson, evangelist of Spencerville, 0., will conduct l special revival services ht the Mt. Zion United Brethren church (Bobo), from April 4 to 15, inclusive. Services wilt begin each evening at 7:45 o'clock. Rev. Gilbert A. Eddy is pastor of the church, a member of the Rivarre circuit.- '

JAPS SQUEEZED IN . — (Continued From Page One) idy oyer open rice fields. MacNider’s drive was aimed at effecting a junction with first cavalry and 11th airborne division troops fanning east and southeast through the island below Laguna bay. The lacerated Japanese units which fled to southern Luzon when the sixth and eighth armies cleared most of the central section of the island, including Manila, were trapped in a steel vice between the converging American forces. o Cabbage Leaves The wrapper leaves of the cabbage are higher in vitamins than the head.

HELP YOURSELF TO A Vta? SOKKIfURSnK aewfa&it’ i Get first-hand evidence of the new beauty Sofskin brings to your hands. This rich, delicately scented cream guards the skin against cold weather and work-a-d»y dryness—keeps it «mooth and enchanting. Won’t you come in today for a free application? We know you’ll be convinced of J Sofskin’s effectiveness once you try it. In the Black and Gold Jars 35< . 60« . $1.06 SIZES phMtflt- I At Btautj Salins and Cismetic Counters SOFSKIN COMPANY FINDLAY OHIO i ». I— il» l.*R iy

In Coldest Zone North Dakota la 4h« only state located entirely in weather zone 1. the coldest zone in the United Slates. fast relief From Too Frequent Urination, Backache, Run-Down Feeling —due io irritation of the Madder tauied by e«e»» acidity in the wrici famou* dMttr; dr»»»wry •» *** tidnw md Mp, *W ,r “" «**“"« *Anf you oufforiof unnocoaoary dloconil«rt dlotrooo from boekacho, burniaa wine, frequent deefre to p*«* water l >ttinf up often »t *!* ,«n> may bo coueed by bhdder irritation iuo to oxcooo ncid in the urfn». Thon try that famous doctor’s discovery •— DR. KILMER’S SWAMP ROOT. Famous for many year», Swamp Root io » carefully blended combination of herbe, WiSX’SBJj ’’s.ni ,« Ina. pripetd wmpls TODAVI Like tboueando of otbere you 11 be flad that you did. Send name and addreea to Department F. Kitanerg .Cn« lac. Mmi 1255, Stamford, Conh. Offer limited. Send .. All druaeiata aell Swamp Root.

it once. All orucfieu eon awamp ' What is Wrong I When Prayer Fail

Thirty years ago, in Forbidden Tibet, behind the highest mountains in tire world, a young Englishman named Edwin J. Dingle found the answer to this question. A great mystic opened his eyes. A great change came over him. He realized the strange Power that Knowledge gives. That Power, he says, call transform the life of anyone. Questions. whatever they are, can be answered. The problems of health, death, poverty and wrong, can be solved. In his own ease, he was brought back to splendid health. He acquired wealth, too, as well as world-wide professional recognition. ‘ Thirty years ago, he was sick as- a man could be and live. Once his coffin was bought. Years of almost continuous tropical fevers, broken bones, near blindness, privation and danger had made a human wreck of him, physically and mentally. He was about to be sent back to England to die, when a strange message came—“ They are waiting for you in Tibet.” He wants to tell the whole world what he learned there, under the guidance

• Important statutory changes have been made by the Indiana Legislature with regard to minors and alcoholic beverages. They became effective April 1, but because their full import may not be generally known the Indiana Brewers Association, in accordance with its custom of urging complete compliance with the statuses, takes this opportunity to summarize the amendments. 1. It is unlawful to sell or give a minor alcoholic beverages. ■’ e • 2. It is unlawful for a parent, guardian or other person to take a child under 18 into any night dub, roadhouse, tavern, bar room or public place where 'alcoholic* beverages are sold or given away, ahd likewise the permittee is liable for permitting such visits. 3. It is unlawful for a minor under 21, except members ofthe armed forces, to be in any night dub, roadhouse, tavefn, bar room or public place where alcoholic beverages are sold or given away, and likewise the permittee is liable. 4. Penalties are mandatory suspension of a permit for 30 days on the first offense, and mandatory revocation fora second offense committed within the same year. For non-permittees the penalty is a fine up to which may be added imprisonment up to six months. 5. Minors, however, may enter that part of a hotel or restaurant which is separated from the room wherein is located a bar over which alcoho i beverages are dispensed by the drink, as we a clubs, dining cars, drug stores and groceries. 6. It is unlawful for "any retail permittee to P er mit a minor under 21 to be in his place ate being warnedin writing by a parentor guar t ito exclude the minor from the premises. Fena , is mandatory* revocation for the first offense. W?i ’* ** * copy •* n,w oe ’ fw full ’ Beer Is a Beverage of Moderation jr Buy It only from 'Law-abiding Permittees I HSSOCI4TIGN jfjj ■ 712 Chamber of Commerce Bldg-, Indianapolis t, Ind. I ( ~

TUESDAY, APR| L ] J

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i of the-gri’aifst niysiic • encountered during lij s • one years in the f ar East’ll ■ wants everyone to experieaceH . greater health and Hie . which there came to hin. ;i Ss Within ten years, he was JH ■ to retire to this country fortune. lie had been • fellowships in the ■ ing geographic,l >'>< i"iies. : work as a geographer. Aajfl ' day, 30 years la I er. lie is still fl athletic, capable of so work, so young in : is hard to believe he has livMfl ’ long. B i - As a first step in their proflß • toward the Powr that Knowfifl : gives. Mr. Dingle wants to jfl to readers of this pawr a RM , word treatise. He says the 4fl : has come for it to be rrleaseifl • the Western World, and offtfifl . send it. free of cost or obligtffl , to sincere readers of this ufifl For your free copy, addrest Isl . Institute of Mentalphysics. ■ South Hobart Blvd.. Dept. R4fl ■ Los Angeles 4. Calif. Readers fl urged to write promptly, aasfl . a limited number of the, isl : books have been printed, dfl