Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 84, Decatur, Adams County, 9 April 1945 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
| ACTIVITIES OF I I ADAMS COUNTY | 4-H CLUBS I ♦ i • Kirkland Will'd h:m 'been received from Phyllis Bcineke that she will acetpt the leadership of the girl.! 4-. H cluli in Kiißland township. M>.« Beincke. a home economies t-s'udenf j at'lndiana University. is a dangi)-, ter of Mr. and Mrs. Albeit B ineke i of Kirkland township. Because of | the rearrangement of semester I plans at 'h University. Miss Beiti- i eke will 'be at home from the last I week in April to the I'i’.st of Sep-1 teir.iber, giving h r time to supervise'the major part of tile dub activities!. 'Anna K. Williams county club. leader, will visit >he ui-hools of the township this wo k and arrange the enrollment, -o that the club can have i's organization meeting 'before the first of May. Rural Youth Tlie Adam- comity ;ural youth! will hold its April meeting at the | Lincoln school Thursday. April 12 | at 8 p. m. Til's meeting will be in the form I of a ' Huddl- Puddle" in keeping ! with rainy -April 'weather. After the | bimine-;a meeting the officers. Mel-I vin Werling. Bill Arnold. Helen Rutle Haines. Enid Ripley and Jack
Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On; Creomulston relieves promptly because it goes right to the seat of the trov.ble to help loosen and expej germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, in- , flamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to sell you ■ p bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding you must like the way it tjuickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION (or Coughs. Chest Colds, Bronchitis PERIODIC PAINS Rheumatism, Neuritis. Arthritis, j Neuralgia. Lumbago and all oth- i er Itches and pains are quickly I relived with Art’s Compound I Wc G. Tablets. Guaranteed | AU Al! Ding Stores.. or send ; sl*oo to Union Pliarmacal Co. | Bluffton. Indiana. ;
Sf JHHHMDB& S* jaKRSF ay y - BkA ft JSSPw » ’Sil ' '. WSHRY CotnpUH'y, Lo/iJ island Ctty, N. Y. buiitii: Pepsi Cola Bottling Co., of Fort Wayne. NOW IN OUR mlffig & S H OWROO M M Come in and see our V 1 lovely, colorful Imperial r Ly- < 7j k « A f A <k^V«(J^Cr-ya 4 ', \ papers. You'll find that \ each pattern offers a \ p ’ annei ’ co ' or rec 'P e ” / U \ %tC t 0 E' ve y°ur home that I j . \ up-to-date look, ’ All lninen.il H’.: ’.- I able Wallpapers are Color-Lockdl— - I guaranteed washable r and light-resistant for 5 years so their jB Kl if* I beauty really lasts! \ |/ I (( | d SMITH DRUG CO.
, ! Beini'kn, 'will conduct a punnel dis j cm-' -don on rural youth organlzaI tions and activities. At this meeting I u prize will be awarded to the I youth bringing the most belt buck > lessor the'box being sent to Wilkeman general hospital. After th- discussion recreation ! will follow. Tile meeting is open to all Adams county rural young peo11’le. i li iis suggested that those attend- • Ing w m Hiiibei'is and bring an urnI VAST GERMAN GOLD j (Continued Krom Page One) ! century, was the second treasure I trove uncovered by the third army in three days. Gold bullion worth $100,000,000, paintings and other treasures were found Saturday in a salt mine at Merkers. The Jewish collection had served as the basis for the psuedo-scieii-titic attacks made by Dr. Alfred Rosenberg, notorious Nazi propagandist, against world Jewry. With the (oilection was seized a | clipping bureau of foreign newst papers conducted by Dr. Berthold ; Guensehe. Most clippings concernI ed Jewish activities all over the I world. EIGHT TONS OF PAPER: I (Continued From Page One) i T ! T - ~ 7.........
Next Saturday the city trucks and Scouts will go to Preble to pick up the waste paper and residents there were asked io have the bundles ready for them. Flattened title will also be gathered. Last Saturday's drive was sponsored by the Lions club and the one on April 2S will be sponsored | by* Adams Post of- the American i Legion. The Scouts were fed a'l the K. of P. home by a committee from tlie club. PLAN EIGHTH GRADE (Continued From Page One) this county. Trustees also are permitted under a new law to include five percent of the valuation of their school buildings, to be assessed oy tlie county assessor, in their per capita costs for transfers. Insurance costs may also be in- ■ hided in The transfer charges, the law provides.
Cut Japs' Escape In Southern Luzon Little Resistance Met By Cavalrymen Manila, Apr. 9 — IUP I —First cavalry division troops neared a junction with airborne forces I along Tayabas bay today after a 17-mile advance which cut all Japanese escape routes from southern Luzon. Front reports said the cavalryj men were meeting little resistI .nice in the rapid advance which carried from Cavinti, on the southeast coast of Laguna bay. to within five miles of the 11th airborne troops holding Lucena, capital of Tayabas province. A juncture of the two forces would complete the encirclement of virtually all the battered Japanese' garrison in Luzon's Bicol peninsula. The compressing drives by the 14th corps at the northern end of tlie peninsula and the 15Sth regimental combat team at the south I was taking a heavy toll of the I enemy's dwindling forces, j Headquarters revealed that the jJSth troops seized the town of Bacon. Philippines entry point of
the Trans-Pacific cable, after a 22 miles amphibious hop from Legaspi, which was captured Easter Sunday. (A Japanese Doniei agency dispatch, recorded by the FCC, claimed that American; forces suffered 10.242 casualties during March in the campaign around . Balete Pass in northern Luzon.) | . —o Two Motorcyclists Killed Last Night Columbus. Ind., Apr. 9. —I UP I — Two motorcyclists. Virgil Wasson, 38. and Ray Miller. 38. both of Hope, were killed last night when they collided head-on with an automobile operated by Mi*. Maxine E. Myrick. 21. Westport. — — — Democrat Want Ads Gei ResuUs P'.. ■’’’"l I * A ■Het;' ... . SKS fag Sj. X ';, I El jfl K 9 9L. fll B B 111 ENRAGED by the murder of her husband, ex-convict Maurice Barad, Mas. Florence Jackson Barad has broken gangland’* oode, according to Chicago police, and revealed the details of 5 underworld slayings and given other information nn crimes.- -< International) 1 9bv ’■ sk F - . x JK JOSEPH KENNEDY, above, former (J. S. ambassador to Great Brilaifi, is reported,.to have thg inside tra<?k for appointment -as federal.loan ajdminist,rator to sueeecd Fred M... Vinson when u the Senate-confirms his appointment is director ot War Mobilization ind Reconversion. Vinson will replace the- resigned James F. Byrnes. With a 30-year business experience in bahking and industrial enterprises as well as federalservice, Kennedy was relieved erf his post in. England in 1940 because he differed with the New Deal o-er-tJce course ? the y» Sshould pursue with regard to the war.
DeeXTUR DAILY DtMOCRAT,
Purdue University Scholarship Awards Ronald Stucky of Decatur and Edith Alocechbcrger of Berne, have been named as Mate scholarship appointees to Purdue University for 1945; it was announced today by Dr. H. H. Rimmers, director of the division of educational reference. Appointees are exempted from the payment of fees amounting to S3O per term. The appointments are valid for two terms, but may lie renewed upon the recommendation of the committee on (scholar* shipH. The alternates for the appointments are Harold T. Fields of Geneva and Mary Smith of Decatur. o iiktt ctf yiiiwA (Continued From Page One) engaged in heavy fighting." The free Austria radio said Inhabitants of Vienna were rising against the Gormans. Angry crowds demonstrated in the streets of the occupied portion of the capital ,nnd hand grenades were thrown at German troops, the broadcast said. Radio Moscow reported that. SS Gen. Sepp Dietrich, ruthless Nazi, commander in Vienna, had been assasstaatad-- -by - patriot*- -wbe-l
thij ye#F;;;fiigy>e Aas biq asQ! I f ; ‘ ■ 2 ■’ . . " E,l ( tv. i •'/. I H , . ■ r ; Ka W 9 I W'-i ■■ ■ I -*—-***• S' i “ MB w . . .I* T • .L' / Uncle Sam needs ju&t about as much But—to save time and work, there will I • to make 2as big as 3! » money thia year to fight the war as he be only 2 War Loans this year instead We’ve sot to lend, in 2 chunks, ap- 9 did last.. Whether we’re fighting Germans of 3, as there in 1344, proximately as much as we lent last year in 9 and Japs, or Japs atone, there’U fce no eas- X Which means that, in the approaching 9 ing uphill every last enemy is on his knees 7th War Loan, each of us will have to buy a ■ —or dead. BIGGER share of extra Bonds. E " ,,PI "" 1 ' 11 ' ' ' " **•< — —i, i ■— g ■ ' I d a J»> • j . . j ■ ' / eoS ** j US * fbOUt I . Oirnuc/9.». I &7ivo hans instted3 I in 1945!... I 1 ***** in I i) sachhan! I %Hh+ saving NOH/.»* I I JV il million smart Americans are get- B Come the 7tii War Low, these people ! Jemenandwomen > will be siting pretty. A good, part, df That's a very' smart way to handle it | thpir extra Bonds will H’S better for them-better for Unde thpir allotments for Apnl, May, and June— They won’t have to scrape so hard for extra Sam. If s the easiest way to fulfill our obh- I •a . that they can buy more Bonds, and cash-because they’re putting part of it gatton to fee meTSfio fight. Let’s all start s spread their buying : -over more piay checks. aside right now* saviiignpw for the 7& ! | — —F— I nw Mi rfe amny , This Advertisement Sponsored m Hon or of Adams County’s Fighting Meh by tte Decaur a*s Ci. WFiriltaM MBMrCi LAJKEHAFS Light Gray Iren Castings Local Bond Issuing Agent v Coal-'MSed—Grain The Boeton Store Kraft Cheese Manufe'cturere of Dairy Product! Manufacturer* A Jobber! Grain Tile—Hollow Building Tile Llveetock Food* Cal E, Peterson StW & Cd, » Bag Stfrviee, Inc. Clothier Complete Home* Furnishing* North. Second SB This is an official U. S. Treasury advertisement—prepared under the auspices of Treasury Department and War Advertising Lod :iL
pumped «*’’•» r<‘To' v * r * ho ”' into him al virtually point-blank i;ange while he war. en route to give a pep talk to his troops. Dtetrlgh, ope Qf Uitler> favorite commaiulerß, had been In corn* niand ot the sixth panjer army in t|he Anjenncs breakthrough last December before being shifted to Vienna. Moscow also broadcast an official declaration asserting that Red army troops had entered Austria as liberators with no territorial ambitions or claims. Russia will cooperate in restoring Austrias pre-Anscbluss independence, the declaration said. Tolbukhin issued a proclamation promising that Vienna’s liberation was near and calling upon the populace, to provont the Germans from mining the city, Idowing up bridges or looting. He said the Nazi party in Austria would be disbanded, but added, tl>at its members would not bo molested if they cooperated with the Red army. o BERLiNSAYS <€(MitinuKi From Page One) th? latter city in a thrust for a giapt Hermann Goering tank plaht 15 miles farther south. The Germans, shaken by easHirUJeti 4lurt. iwmdttuartew Hgwbes-
men estimated at a half-million killed, wounded or captured in the past 10 days alone, faced a new threat from the reported paratroop assault on the first army front. There was no immediate confirmation of the enemy report, which failed |o make the usual claim that the paratroops had been “wiped out.’The reported airborne operation apparently was intended to turn the Aberra river, southeastern tributary of the Wester, and link up with American third army forces in the Muehlhausen area. The first army, cloaked by a partial security blackout,,. already had shattered the German defenses along the Weser, river northeast of Jtopp-MuMeu and advanced 13 miles or more beyond ihe stream. A juncture with the third, army would plant, the t*° American forces on the Berlin side of the last important water barriers west of the Hlbe. 10ft miles jo thc east. The Kibe loops, back to within 43 miles of tlie German capital porth' of Magdeburg. Meanwhile, American ninth army troop? in-, the -nortli, , laid siege to Hannover and struck out beyond the city toward Drunsi wick, 104 miles west of Berlin, ' while tljo British opened their I owault. -on- -Wremenv — T:"
tSAi)E IN A GOOD —— -t—— lilli Igy ■■ ■ ' j | ! ■ -aT ■ EkLJ Re-.Y . ....... ' M THtS NAZI tAUWAY TRAIN carrying anti-aircraft guns w u LSI nit by the Second Armored division of the U. S. Ninth An.. MB A Men, Germany. Thc town fell so suddenly to the invading that the railroad men were unaware of its capture and tried trains through it. U. 8- S,C. radiophoto. (International So ua(
MON PAY, APRIL
