Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 104, Decatur, Adams County, 2 May 1945 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

JURY DISAGREES IN (Continued From Page One) etl by Mr. Steele to Decatur churches. A contest was later filed and later an agreetnent was reached that the original bequest of 82,000 each tie reduced to $1,200 to each church The pleasure in love is in loving. * I Iteciietoe.i autd. L,

*’ -A . • ■»».. '“"$1.10 1 U 1.. r u, Wiiin i)7C'C:W 'i‘ll J'l! | |j4 jHKSMkI It’s washable! Fingerprints, smudges and dirt come right ■ o££ liC’ffC olic/TiiJIRS MELbO-GLOSS wit’, soap and water. Keeps the beauty c£ its satiny lustre after re- , peated cleanings. Its im- . proved, easy-flowing and non-fading qualities make ; MELLO-GLOSS more than I ever a stand-out value at this price. HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.

From the brewery vats come not only pure, refreshing beer but Brewers’ Yeast as well. Once regarded as waste, difficult to dispose of, Brewers’ Yeast has been found to be rich in vitamins of the B-complex group. Dc-bittered. it is an adjunct to daily diet—a source t of both vitamins and protein. It is used to fortify many of the concentrated foods going to the men in the front lines overseas. It is valuable as a supplement to stock feeds—especially for cattle, hogs and poultry. Even though its worth has been established, science has not yet written the whole story that Brewers’ Yeast will play in diets of the future. For domestic use it can be found in compressed or dried form in most drug stores and groceries. The breweries of Indiana are now producing this new-found dietary supplement but its full development awaits the days of peace. * BEER IS A BEVERAGE OF MODERATION • BUY IT ONLY FROM LAW-ABIDING PERMITTEES THE INDIANA BREWERS ASSOCIATION 712 Chamber of Commerce Bldg., Indianapolis 4, Ind. zl Hey!—How \ ■jffj Lon S Do I Have to Stay Around this Place! a There’s less money in long-fed hogs • ’—and a lot more work! That’s why • e successful hog men supplement the •• feeding values of home grown grains »• with Pillsbury’s BEST —a great line * specialized feeds for sows, for pigs and for a fast, profitable market finish. ,A ioM it Pillsbury’s BEST We recommend the practical Pillsbury’s HUM I kIaVV BEST Wry for all livestock and poultry. SOLD BY Cash Coal Feed & Supply Monroe at Eighth St.

Civilian Defense Office Is Closed Truman Orders End Os Office By June 30 Washington. May 2—(UiP) -The « nd of tile ot'fie ■ of civilian defense by June 30 wa,< ordered today by President Truman. Mr. Truman sent a letter to eonyr. -- withdrawing .1 $3(19.0 U bud- _, , ~ ,ja. fa 1 LX’D la the next r -.-;il year it ein’tha.’lteo. ,i< wever. the continued need for volunter work in state-; and comtnuni-ties. ■Recent developments .11 Ute I'-'iirop' an war and the efficient operat ion of . ,ie volunteer fore-s in tile communities made possible the decision ilia; federal -supervision of civilian defense is no longer ne-ei,-.-:tty." a White House stat-m nt said. Tite President praised the velunt e members of the < ifizers delei.se corps, civilian war services, and OU.l) personnel. Oil), currently under the dir c-,' on of William N. Haskell, w:us established May 20. 1941. 0— Anything a.s valuable as life has back of it design and purpose. I

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Truman Recommends Budget Reductions — Sweeping Economic Campaign Started 1 Washington. May 2. (UP) President Truman today .recommended budget reductions of more than $7,090,000,000 for 10 top war agencies of the government. This was part of the preparation for transition from a two-war to a one-war basis. In rapid succession today the president: 1. Recommended that congress cut the funds now available to the maritime commission for ship ..oust ruction by more titan $7,000,000,0110. 2. Recommended a rede ml ■>! more than $80,000,000 in the 1946 budget estimates of eight agencies. | This included proposals for sharp | slashes in the funds of the office of | war information, the war prod'v--1 lion board, the office of censorship I and the office of defense transpor--1 tation. .1 3. Ordered the abolition of the I office c'' eivi'ian defense by June 30. j withdrawing its proposed budget of ' $3(19.000 for tite next fiscal year. i Tite cut recommended in mail-1 | lime commission shipbuilding funds i left available to tiie commission $2.I 212.500.000 tor completing the preseat shipbuilding program and $600.000.000 for possible future ship construction, reconversion of vessels 1 and restoration of shipbuilding facilities. Starting a .sweeping economic. campaign geared to changing war] conditions, the president recom- ‘ mended elimination of some vctri agency activities and sharp curt-til- ■ meats in proposed expenditures for > others. The recommendations followed a review of the 1946 fiscal situation by the president and the budget bureau. The 1946 fiscal year be gins on July 1 this year. “As tite war progresses," the White House statement said, “the activities of all agencies will be continually reviewed to achieve economies where they will not in- ' terfere with the prosecution of the war. It is anticipated that tn add ■ lion to tiie cuts in the 1916 budget, reserves of many millions of dollars . can be set up tor the current fiscal year ending June 30.” < -o— GEN. VON RUNSTEDT (Continued From Page One)

lured two other German field mar shals. Wilhelm Ritter Von Lecb and Wilhelm List, as well as ,li" foime' regent of Hungary. Admiral Nicholas Horthy. They also to tk two lieutenant generals mid three major generals. Von Rnndsted. was relieved >i bw command for the secon 1 time since the western invasion tn Marell after the American fir-' army won the Itemagcn bridgebe, I across tiie Rhine. He was replace I by Field Marsha' Albert Kesselring. in December of last y< ar Von Runds'edt launched the German counter-offensive in the Ardennes, which came iaugerousiy near .0 taking Liege and cutting across .th--Meuse The attack was the wi- . i setnack the Allied armies -itffercd in the entire western European campaign. NAZI PORTS OF (Continued From Page Ono) correspondent reported. The Sixth airborne division sprinted to Wismar in a few hours, the front report said. There they were 58 miles northeast of Hamburg and about 30 miles from Rostock. in the area of which was the vanguard of the second White Russian army. Supreme headquarters said airmen spotted swarms of motor transport fleeing northwestward to Denmark through the closing gap below Luebeck. To the west, the U. S. Seventh army cracked through the German defenses south of Munich to within 66 miles of Berchtesgaden and drove an armored spearhead less thhn nine miles from Innslnuck in a bid to seal off the Brenner Pass escape road for the broken Nazi forces in Italy. Far to the north. British Second army troops and supporting American units were closing fast on the Baltic seaport of Luebeck in a drive that carried more than 166 miles beyond their Elbe river bridgehead. Canadian First army forces on

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA.

I the British left flank broltp the eu- : I einy defenses before Wilhelmshav- ! en and Emden with twin drives 1 that captured Bad Zwisehenahn, . seven miles west of Oldenburg, and 1 carried within two miles of the latter stronghold. The Canadians also pushed out seven miles beyond captured Leer to outflank Emden from the northeast and eliminated a stubborn Ger- ' man pocket at Delfzyl. on the west side of the Ems river estuary op- ( posite Emden. Fighting in western Holland ap- , peared to have been halted at least , temporarily by a mysteriously-ar- ‘ ranged truce under which the Ger-1 mans agreed to permit the transit. ‘ of Allied trucks, ships and planes with food for the (starving- Dutch people. German resistance at both ends of the western front appeared to be crumbling rapidly in the wake of the Hamburg radio announcement that Adolf Hitler had been killed in Berlin and that Grand Admiral Karl Doenitz had succeeded , him. 1 Field dispatches said enemy, troops were surrendering in in-| creasing numbers, although Nazi 1 resistance stiffened unexpectedly I at a few points on the American ! Third army line before Linz. Gen. George S. Fatton's Third ■ army troops ran into a savage tank | battle at Wegscheid and Kramer-i schlag, near the Austrian border about 30 miles northwest of Linz. I Fighting in a bitter spring snow-! storm, the Americans were forced I to scale 4.000-foot mountain peaks I and envelop both towns before j their Nazi defenders quit. —o Difficulties are things that show what men ate. -Plutarch. Mau has two good physicians — temperance and labor. —-Rosseau. 1 0 — TOKYO REPORTS ■ (Continued From Page One) deep into Japanese-held Mataban' gulf. Paratroops paved the way for the landings. They jumped from low-1 flying transport planes yesterday I and knocked out defenses covering j the invasion beaches, a special | southeast Asia command com- : munique revealed. A British naval task fc.ee also'supported the invasion with heavy •

■BKt* ..... w ~ jjjgmy ... .. J ■ j ’W|M ft >•> jww ; ENDEAVORING TO DIVE his plane onto the deck of a U. S. Pacific fleet warship, this suicide-bent Jap pilot misses his target. It was in this manner that another Jap suicide plane struck an American hospital ship oil Okinawa, killing 29 and wounding 33 Yank casualties being removed from the battles on the Ryukyu island. This is an official United Stnt°s Na.vy photo. (International Soundnhoto) H f "HB I is I ’ I OB *lm tj -■ I'oolirWiWaißi hF4 *' I jgWMjr* l ■ ' 1 i VSi ‘4n* ~a, - -•■ «Sm« jy - - ;<V-‘ i : < K A ; ■ ■_' MS t . WiW*--. wtw - * ITALIAN PATRIOTS wrote the last chapter to the career of Benito Mussolini when they stood him up before a firing squad near the Italian village of Don go and, as a postscript to .the One-time dictator’s "book,” the partisans strung him up by his heels in. Use center of Milan, above, along with the body As his mistress, Claretta Fatecci, and four other Fascist victims of the patriots' firing squad. This is tn official United States Array Signal Corps radiophoto. (International Soundphoto)

air and sea bombardments of great, Nicobar island, 675 miles southeast. 1 of Rangoon, and I’m I Biair in tite , I Andaman islands. 425 miles south-j I east of the occupied capital. 0 1 1 , 1 NAZIS OPEN I (Continued I’rmn Psge Que) day. i The conferees, headed by Lt. 1 Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, chief of staff to Gen. Dwight D. Eisen-1 1 bower, and Arthur Seyss-lnquart, j ; Nazi commissar tor Holland, met | in an unnamed Dutch village to arrange the relief deliveries. Headquarters spokesmen said high Russia, British and Nether-1 1

! ..ags > W ! r& 1 'll Hf jo illp* Will " lay ’ n I Hl HMMIr x 4 .jO ” as } . HANS GOEBBELS, a major general of the Nazi Strum Abteilung, is shown above in the custody of MP Pvt. William Keene, New Haven, Conn., who is taking him to headquarters for questioning. The prisoner is a brother of the Reich's propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels. Army Signal Corps radiophoto. (International Souudphoto)

lands military officials also attended the meeting. It was the first announced face-to-face conference between top-ranking Allied and enemy cemmanders, and its implications at this stage of the war were obvious. 0 HITLERS DEATH (Continued From Page One) fated a report that propaganda minister Paul Joseph Goebbels probably had died in Berlin with Adolf Hitler. Radio Hamburg, voice of the new Doenitz government, said the admiral had appointed Britisheducated Count Ludwig (also

known as Lutz) Schwerin von Krosigk, 58-year-old nephew of the late Kaiser Wilhelm, as; foreign minister. Like all members of the Hitler government, Schwerin von Krosigk was made a member of the Nazi party. But he was regarded (lie least Nazi of those in the cabinet. Radio Hamburg made no mention of Ribbentrop. He last was

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 2 ,

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