Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 90, Decatur, Adams County, 16 April 1945 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Male Trio To Sing I l*T 1 i IF * Vi I v JEB|MaSiK A male I rio. . omposcd of Rev. ’ 11. L. Johnston. R.v, Walter! Moore and Rev. J. 'l'. Trueax, and formerly known .: . th. ’Olivet Harmony Trio' will >ing tonight Forth: e, y.-ars th. y were repre-s.-ntativt -of the Olivet Naz.iit-r-. Colle-- now hn ated at Kallkak. - 111. mid I raveled in ;i> interrst Tjiougliout ilf . • niral st a t <•- Tin 1 publh is invil. d io Imai ’hem a: tln ! )ei at in ("hni < h of th< NazMarshall and Seventh streets. BODY OF ROOSEVELT n'm in i- ■•! Fr ■ P..„, One) assistant- and heads of :lb- armed i If Antinmy w- ~ ing tin- bi i k cassock while surp ire and blank skirl e;ij. ij iae Episcopal i liur< :i. hi rati his proyt r. ".'.ii ilia : :In Fa ' h-r give: h me sicill come io :n--.' he hit med. ’■ , ginning th-- Episcopal committal. 'Tnto Almighty God." the lb--.. Anthony began. A bomlle overhead swing low d oped in date and almost drown”\Ve commend the -oul of ''■■■ brother lepai't -d a ;d we comm.his body io the ground; earth 'e earth, ashes to ashes and dust >.> dns:. In sin,- and i ertain hope of ’1 (■ i i I I illlUt rtf'i’liii iil'‘. through on. Loe Jesus Christ. wince coming in glorious muj-~.y io judge lite world, the earth an I sea shall give up tin ;r dead and the I-H i 'll p! 1 b *’■ bellies of those wb.O sleep in iniri shall be changed and nrnae i.ke his glorious body, aceo .1i:ig to the Almighty whereby he is able to subdue all things to himself." Then followed the I.ora'. Prayer, and th.ci other short players.

SALE CALENDAR APR. 17—Orchard Lawn Farms, Muncie, Ind. Guernsey catlie disAPR. 19 —Chalmer Sheets ana Lulu Smitley. farm equipment and household goods 1 mile we.-: o f Pleasant .Mills. Lester Suman, amt. persal salt . Roy Johnson, auct tom er. APR. 21 -Ellis J. Emerick. Hoagland. Ind Good 7 room house and aim per- i. ' propiriy, I 1 M. J. F. Sanmann. am t. APR. 27 Wm. J. Pfister, 1 miles North of Capron. 111.. Well Improved 2mi A< i< Black Land Farm. J. F. Sanmann, Auct. MAY s—Gerhard T. Marback. 20ft East Spring St.. Bluffton. Ind. Good Fiv< Room House and Household Goods 1 30 p. m. J. F. Sanmann, auct. sasaitsEKaNaiKiiasiißßßßaßßi : FREE I • 3 New Rose Dawn Plants " Please enclose 25 cents to help cover packing. I postage, handling and advertising exense. ■ ■ ■ To Advertise our unique im hod of silling direct from nursery ■ P to you through Hu mail, we'll send you :hre< well-rooted Rose ■ UJi Dawn perennial flowei plants. i-.idy io set out in your yard. .„ These ,iri tlie new flowers you ha- 1,..,.), hearing about through “ ■ radio stations ami tin gurdei: magazines of the country. They ■ *) grow two or Hire., feet high and beat loads of silver pink flow- gj gj ers from April to August. Fine tor cutting or for yard decoration Ideal planting time now. ■ ® We Want you to have three of tn -< plants to transplant in jg g) your yard, so you can see what strong. healthy flowers we . raise. Current catalog value flu cents. Now you may have " w three selected hardy specimens. shipped postpaid for 25 cents ■ S incidental expense as above a H Offer Good dining brief shipping period only. Semi your re- *- quest, enclosing 25 rente. ■ ;CLARK GARDNER• H Route 1. Box 1061 OSAGE. IOWA fiBRRHRBBBRaBRBBBBRRIIBZIHI PUBLIC SALE THE EMERICK PROPERTY HOAGLAND, INDIANA SATURDAY, APRIL 21, ’45 6:30 P. M. on Premises LOCATED: in Hoagland. Indiana, two blocks west of the Standard Oil Station. Or. two blocks east of the English Lutheran Church. DESCRIPTION: Good seven room House, Electricity. Sink. Cistern. Home is in Good Repair. A. Shingle Sic ’Te tot. some fruit trees and a Strawberry bed Fine garden p . PERSONAL PROPERTY including a Good WEBER Wagon. Shovels. Tools, Some Coal and Wootl and Many other articles. TERMS — Home. 15 r < day of sale, balance upon delivery of good title. Personal Property —Cash. ELLIS J. EMERICK, Owner J. F. Sanmann —Auctioneer. A C. W. Kent —SaTee 7'laiwjet. , Sale conducted by Midwest Realty .Auction Co. Decatur. Indiana, 4

The Rev. Anthony then lead the ' firm verse of a hymnal: "Now the labourer's task is o'er I ".X’ow the battle day is past Now upon the farther ' "Lunds the voyager at last "Father in thy gracious keeping "l.i ave we now. thy set want I sleeping. ' At lb: Id tin- traditional three volley- were fired ovt i the grade. A minute later, tup- .sounded softly i through the gulden. Tin crowd turned away Mrs. Roo-evelt v. IP to the -ide of Mis. Jam. - Roosevelt and a few minutes la'e. walked, chin firm. head e. ci . Hom the garden. Mi- Roosevelt wore a small black hat mid a flowing black veil. Mis Hoe:: c. - wore a black skull cap and -mailer veil The daughteisllbi.iW wore no Vell«s. ,\ii. the ciowds had departed. 51:- Roosevelt returned. She stood : >r evt a' miiiut"s in silence, lookbg at her husband's grave. She joined her family for the lonely trip b.c k -o Washington. NEW PRESIDENT -u.ntiim <1 From Page 1 >ne) -uiely know how I feel, he said] ■.» the joint session. "(inly with your help cun I hop.- to complete .me of Ibe greatest tasks ever as.-igned to a public servant With divine guidance ami your] h ip. we will tind the new passage to u tar better world, a kindly and friendly wot id. with just and lasting peace. ... ( , Teacher Suspended For Roosevelt Slur East Chicago Woman Is Under Suspension :-. ,-: i ,i: -ugo. Ind . \pril i 11 pi A .1.- y- .."old h : gh school <.. ,|. .v i- . ' d .emporarily ri.: 11 i■ i in ■ ... p; - ..'ported that ~h :id r«-. -M at the la'e Pre- . |e-n• Rue- vc;: d'lring i memorial -,-v . e Friday. I . .- X'.-ll.e I. Mlle. .1 • ii < r . :a- and -ophomore - up v .ill-mi' i d -aying. F . F - nib- in 12 years I can hold up my mind mid ph' Ige i’ i a ..in '-> i in- fiag.” John 1 )ree-,-eti. pi -.ideiit of ’he -ehool board said. Sii -.v.ir miopended t mporarily >. ii" - iioib board Saturday and vv .<s a p -.r: ul that tlie federal i , ' i-t o: in vest ig.i: i in had b en u-ked io iii.t-e'iga i- he - activities.

Frenchmen Battling To Clear Bordeaux Flying Fortresses Hit Nazi Positions k Faris. Apr. Hi — (l’P> — Tanks and troops of the French second armored division battled inside ' Royan today in a drive to clear ''one of tie two points blocking '■ the coastal entry to Bordeaux l harbor. # ' I About I'm flying fortresses. I operating without 1 fighter escort. ' attacked German positions in the 1 Point He Grave area north ol i Bordeaux today. ■ ! It was the third straight day ' of air operations in support of the Gironde clearing operation. Maj. Gen. Jacques Leclerc’s 1 veterans of the North African and western front campaigns stormed into the city’ last night .ifier a near-record air. naval and artillery bombardment to split tin- Nazi pocket around the Gi | rondo estuary. At the same time, other units lof Gen. lie C A. De Larminat’s | French forces on the "forgotten I front" crossed the treacherous j marshes on the other side of the I estuary under cover of French I naval guns and opened an attack ion an estimated J.bmj Germans holding out in the Pointe de Grave pocket. Leclerc s armored forces swept into the battered fortress ol Royan after seizing the town of St. George's de Didonne. less than two miles to the south. Royan was virtually flattened by the terrific bombardment sparked by more than 1 Jot’ eighth air force liberators and flying fortresses using liquid fire bombs in the European theater for the first time. Extensive areas around German gunposts. trenches and pillboxes were turned into a mass of flame as the American heavy bombers spread in excess of fibi.orm gallons of liquid over the sector. Tib- raid, which was made i without lighter escort, was the I second heavy aerial attack in two . | days. Approximately 115(1 liberi ators and flying fortresses rocked ! tile Gironde pocket with ?>,st'O tons of high explosives ami inI • cendiaries on Saturday. Air artillery spotters said the one-hour raid left a smoke pall that completely obscured the g round. o — AMERICANS CLOSE (Continued From Page One) I lyzed the city's communications | with 387 tons of bombs. Tile atI tacks were carried out by all 1 types of planes from the far east- [ ern air force, which flew more I than 250 sorties in the two days. Long-range liberators continued tile blockade of China Sea shipping delivered the first Philip-pines-based blow on the Chinese port of Canton and again hit the , battered doeks at Hong Kong. Lt. Col. Carl Ekstrand, Lyons, I Neb., a veteran of 9') missions I and deputy commander of the | famed “Jolly Roger" group, led .1 the Canton force which compris- ! ed more than 70 liberators and I lightnings. | .-o I Shipments of dry <-ells for military batteries reached an cftim.itI ed high of 200,000.000 cells in JanltI ary. 1915. This total still does no | meet increasing military requi'c- • ments. I’ockei knives of various types I I are vital equipment for men in ail j branches of the services and in all I the war theaters. I A hearing to determine if t-h<- | should b ■suspended permanently I will be held May 17. Th incident was called to the at- ■ teiFion of school authorities by I Mios Milks' indignant pupils who II stalked from the room and booed | her after nhe* allegedly made th. remark about Mr. Roosevelt. I The students also aei-us* d her of saying that President Roosevelt wa.s I oblatne for the war with Japa n. The school board suggested that , Miss Milks resign. Drecsen said, but she refused. She has been teaching for 32 years. 1(1 yeans at East Chicago, and 22 years elsewhere, and she could resign on a pension of slls monthly. If she teaches three more years she would be entitled to a pension of $13(1 monthly. Her permanent expulsion would deprive her of all pension rights. Relief At Last For Your Cough Creomulsion relieves promptly be- ! cause it goes right to the seat of the I trouble to help loosen and expel ! germ laden phlegm, and aid nature ' to soothe and heal raw. tender, in- , flamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA.

Franz Von Papen Is Captured By Allies Topflight Nazis Are Now In Allied Hands London. Apr. 16 — H'l’i —The roster of big name Germans in Allied hands today began reading like a who’s who of the imperial Reich and included a mounting array of topflight Nazis. Now on the roll were Empress Hermine, widow of Kaiser Wilhelm of World War I notoriety: Marshal August Von Mai-kensen. 95-year old German army commander in that war: Prince August Wilhelm of Prussia, son of the kaiser; and Dr. Mannfred Zapp chief Nazi propagandist in tlm L'nited States from 1936 to 1 s 11. They joined a company already including Baron Franz Von Papen. ace diplomat and troubleshooter for the Nazi regime. Responsible sources here said his capture would prevent him from plotting a revival of German

" ' v 'TOBQHUfIBEHSS&RHOHHEiI ''] V" / . n .jffl IKaaKSISMHBB^c.SaMS \ «« J’l ... ■ \ : ~ d Hr twill 1L / fSSHE jpgj g n i ■ Jr !t i h 1 I | t Bpiy 'i I 1 J Ur! ii “I { f Bate J’fh In M I in r i I v Bt io u oHmRHIMK i'-JlIt) ii IF' ?* I -w ÜBlO® / Ur* ? . ‘ hl f ' *FjHMn ArS'-Ut wfelt 'I H WOl ■ a ’ < W jr / twi fc tor . BbsBSBk x /esH I I ! i /' y . i » Av / j j i ? E r f . ]l. , a Borin y } e»B ©s, Htesht jWF I '■ x m j • T i rweF j 1 1l 1— shSMH ( ; * Kbw How to move a bed* F share of the War Bonds we II all havet* - - Ilf 1 buy to make this 7111 ar Luu a succe* »* and make your /- War Loan Quota i|| | | W|fUwi I t Americans on the Payroll Savings Plan Wiy is this War Loan going to be such a ~~ - ]'' HB have boosted their allotments to take care whopper? For two very good reasons: JF / / SH of part of their quota right now. , . , , , . v H 5 First, I nele bam needs just about as much v It s a smart way to do it. And you money this year to fight the war as he did j(-„ a j,,], n!) malb r li”" cau ’ to °- last. Even if our job in Germany were over (I( . klc J t i( - s t)ic i,, ls t we can <b t> H _ support our fighting men and M k”" 8 ltlll a C ' oS< h nme ' - - "* NfcMw ow ‘-i I Moving a bed upstairs can be a. pretty F / i /. A«rai« War Bond * a 2 H . e f |.„ IT tough job—if you try to move it all in >■ il! i 1 y 'II TW one piece. pßt month n: (canh va'on: It’s a lot easier to separate your burden I* { * -which it in not-wc still would need every s2s ° 87 1? 200 it into pieces and take care of each one cent we can spare to beat the Jap. * 225 ' 250 !*? „ 175 I”' senaratelv _ 1 210-225 13125 h * , The drive doesn t officially start until Second, there will be onlv 2 War Loans 200-210 H 2-50 ’ | .It s the same with your personal quota next month. But if you wait till then to this year, instead of the 3 there were in 9375 | f in the i th War Loan. Ihat quota will be the [ a k e ca re of your quota you'll find it a 1941. That means we’ve got to lend, in 140-180 75.00 j;) iJffijMti/ef. lot tougher job than if you get a head- 2 chunks approximately as much as’we „ ?« 75 25 Ii Recognizing this, the 2(1,000,000 patriotic start now. lent last year in 3. ner I—■ S< ; START SAVING NOW FOR THE MIGHTY ! I This Advertisement Sponsored in Honor of Adams County’s Fighting Men by The Decatur Casting Co. The First State Bank Burk Elevator Co. LANKENABS Light Gray Iron Caatinga Local Bond Issuing Agent Coal—Seed—Grain Th e Boston Kraft Cheese Company The Schafer Company The Krick-Tyndall Co. Central Soya Coy Manufacturers of Dairy Products Manufacture™ & Jobbers Drain Tile—Hollow Building Tile * Livestock lo c Cal E. Peterson Stucky & Co., Monroe Bag Service, Inc. Clothier Complete Home Furnishings North Second St. I This is an official U. S. Treasury advertisement—prepared under the auspices of Treasury Department and War Advertising

strciiglh for future wuih, nui would have no effect on this one. Von Mm-kviisen was taken in a I’.ii’inhuuse where he was hiding, field reports said. He was Had in a faded uniform of first world war vintage. He vvenl lo that area in February, leaving Stettin when it was threatened by the Russians. "(’tut you do something to stop the Russians from killing my chickens?" he complained querulously to the troops who rushed in on him. Liberated Russians were the only companions he had at the farmhouse. Radio Luxembourg reported the capture of Prince August Wilhelm of Prussia. 58. fourth son of Kaiser Wilhelm. A leading Nazi, he was taken near Kronberg. From the ... 5. th’rd army front l'nited Press correspondent Rob ert Richards reported the capture of Zapp. He was taken at Bad Berka. He had been working in the American section of the German foreign office, which was being moved to Bad Berka when the swift American advance caused a sudden change in plans Zapp headed thv Transocean news servile at one lime. He was ousted from the I nited

States in 1911 for failure to comply with the alien registration act. Riihards said he cl.vhned he no longer was in contact with Nazi leaders, and could give no elm to the whereabouts of Adolf Hitler. Another dispatch from Roberts revealed that the third army captured Karl Heinrich Von Loesca. who acted as translator for Naville Henderson. Loesca was taken on the estate of her plank, a German tenor, near Treffurt. I Road To Ber//r By l’nited Press The nearest distances to B< rlin from advanced Allied lines today ■ Eastern front: 31 miles (from Zaeckerick i. Western front: 15 miles 11'r on Elbe river). Italian front: 516 miles (from near Comai'chio). —o . - Dining 1911 there were 67.917 new passtmger automobileis authoized tor consumer delivery and 51975 certificates issued authmizinconsnmer purchase for specili- d ined 1912 cars. —m

; "j® USING A BENCH as a conference table, General Omar C. Bradi ev tuK W mander of the U. S. 12th Army Group, and Field Marshal Sir BewW 4 *® L. Montgomery, British commander of the 21st Army Group, a ™« battle plans on a propped-up chart during a meeting of Allied feB 6 W on the western front British Official Radiophoto.

MONDAY- APRIL U