Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 123, Decatur, Adams County, 24 May 1945 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Krcp Out Os Tiuiible There are tew ways in which a mart can be more innocently employed than in getting money.—Samuel Johnson.

no FALSE TEETH Rock, Slide or Slip? FASTEETH, an improved powder to be sprinkled on upper or lower plates, | holds .false teeth more firmly in place. Do not slide, slip or rock. No gummy, j laste or feelmg. FASTl-. r.TJI is alkaline (pon-acid). Does not sour. Cheuks piate odor" (denture ! breath). Get FASTEETII at any drug - •tore.

*★*★★**★**★ V'wKl i 3 Tb ‘ s advettis-. meet. reprinted ' ' ;, ->i l ‘ e,e a * 3 • e,v,ce - ,s 3n ;V/„-,;';tTsSfe’’3WwWl *&.<% Waptsttoo or a noteworthy (3 I .wnM MH published in Lite a BMRftlft j a^**** n ' >r>os .. . ck"<-A ? Sy gjrifed makers of the Precision Watch i tkrtM 4t ■ 1 MjSL. ,T ajcK-Jjg • antl Ptacisiou instruments 8? £ !» I _ ■ I I ..jr- 4 • ffigF- Mt" • .Js> |g | j HUM sk*& Sm C MIHMS Listen*...You can hear it so plain... You can’t forget those voices!... • If. .be ™ m bl.„ E »1 guns act™. .He sea. H Its the tramp of marching feet... "Are you with us? ...Are you with us?* • i It’s shaking the earth tonight and it’s coining closer and closer. Answer them! Answer them!... You must... Listen... The sound of voices... TeH them ye 6 ...tell them they’re not Voices from the beachheads... voices from ® lo “ e ’’ ’ , ... .. „ „ si .i. the foxholes Tell them you re Icking them up with the tox , more bonds than ever before... Voices of the living ... voices of the dead Bonds {or attack BontJs for victory... L They’re talking to you... they're saying it Bonds for the future of the world, fct again and again... Tell them now... now, while there’s still "Are you with us? ... Are you with us? ... time . . .. Are ycu with us?” Now, when every ounce of effort is needed! Have you any idea what it costs to run a war? Have you ever thought how much it takes to buy a bomber—a tank-an alligator ? Well, a B-29 bomber-the kind of air ship that’s been blasting away at Tokyo—costs $600,000. An M 4 tank—just one tank—with bulldozer blades runs, roughly speaking, about $67.000. And an "alligator" takes just $30,000 out of Uncle Sam's pockets! And that's why you and you and you have been asked to lend—not give—more of your money in this 7th War Loan! Answer them... buy more War Bonds! Make the mighty 7th War Loan a knockout blow; Pumphrey Jewelry Store TF * Say a'SwWafch 7; .to try*.»

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Big Three Meeting Definitely Planned Truman Secretary Makes Announcement Washington. May 24 — (UP) —| I j The White House said today that ' , i a big three meeting is “definitely j ] ; in the works.” | • Presidential press secretary! ! Charles G. Ross emphasized that j

Hie London and Moscow diplomatic missions of Joseph E. Davies and Harry L. Hopkins, announced by Mr. Truman yesterday. do not in any way take the place of tile projected big three meeting. Hot li President Truman and Prime Minister Winston Churchill recently have expressed desire for a meeting with Premier Josef Stalin, but Ross’ statement was t lie first official revelation that plans for such a conference were "in Hie works.” Hopkins, for years the late

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA.

President Roosevelt’s most intimate adviser, and Davies, former IT. S. ambassador to Russia, will undertake their missions as "part of the general pattern of the coming big three conference,” Ross said. This apparently means that they will lay the groundwork for the Stalin-Truman-Churchill meeting on the subject of which only Stalin thus far has remained silent. Hopkins left for Russia yesterday morning with Ambassador W. Averell Harriman. Davies left for London during the night. While he said he had no idea of when and where the big three will get together, Ross said he did not believe the British elections in July would affect the date of the conference. Asked whether this meant that a definite decision had been reached on the big three meeting, Ross said "it is being projected.” The President, eager himself for a personal meeting with the British and Russian loaders, assigned the two emissaries to look into “matters now under discussion” among the Big Three. His action left no doubt as to tthe magnitude of Big Three differences which has iblossomed in Europe since the defeat of Nazi Germany. Tlie Allies are deadlocked over the reorganization of Poland's Sov-iet-hacked provisional government. They lack agreement on German occupation plans. There is AngloAmerican concern over 'Russia’s dominant role in Austria where the Big Three and France had agreed to work jointly. The Hopkins and Davies Mission- appeared to partly confirm the belief that Prime Minister Winston Churchill would be unable to break loose for a meeting with Mr. Truiman and Stalin before Britain's general elections next July. Churchill's position as British leader will then be at stake. Observers here did not rule out, however, the possibility that Hopkins and Davies had been sent to make arrangements with Stalin and Churchill for president Truman’s first conference with them.

DURHAM CORP. (Continued From Page One) sects were concealed by welding and machining to prevent detection. Tlie two processes, the indictment alleged, tended to cause metal fatigue in the products, making them unfit for use. "We have no evidence that any of our men lost their lives because of the defective shells, rocket bombs and propeller shafts,” Campbell said, "but the danger of a catastrophe was present wherever this equipment was used.” Named in the conspiracy indict-1 meiit, in addition to~the company, i were DeWitte Clinton Brown, general manager and vice-presi-dent; Herman Lessell Gillespie, chief inspector; Ross Ernest Cross, night superintendent; Carroll Ralph Howell, plant superintendent; company’ inspectors Almond Potts, Paul Johnson and Max Hitt and plant foremen George Hinds, Raymond Clifford Swain, Walter Leroy Bates, Richard Eugene Manning, and Arthur Joseph Hentzler. tinder the indictment, the defendants, if convicted, would face a maximum penalty of two years imprisonment and a SIO,OOO fine, j The investigation was handled by Tom C. Clark, newly-appointed I'. S. attorney general, and John Darsey, chief of the war frauds section of the department,of justice. Campbell, who supervised presentation of evidence to the grand I jury, directed the war frauds prosecution of the Anaconda I Wire and Cable Co., in which five ! company officials were fined $lll,OOO each and placed on probation. CHICAGO UNION (Continued From Page One) hearing ;o -reconsider union demands for higher wages. The WLB last week granted the : drivers an increase of $4.08 for 51 i hours, but the men asked a $5 boost | for a 48-hour week. They also I sought a two-week paid vacation. A telegram from Taylor, how- ! ever, emphasized that "the board ; can JXftLxixe. AIL. ftpsU.i ajwe

CAN'T KEEP GRANDMA IH HER CHAIR She’s as Lively os « Youngster—] Now her Backache is better Masy sufferers relieve nagging backache quickly, once they discover that the real cause of their trouble may be tired kidneys. The kidneys are Nature’s chief way of taking the excess acids and waste out of the blood. They help most people pace about 3 p When duorder ol kidney function permits poisonous matter to remain in your blood, it may cause nagging backache, rheumatic pains, leg pains, loss of pep end energy, getting up ! nights, swelling, puffiness .under the eyes, ■ headaches and dizziness. F'eequent or scanty Plages wuh smarting and burning sometimes shows there ip something wrong with . your kMaeye or bladder, the 15 miles of kidney flushout neaogous waste from your blood. Get beak s rub.

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the outcome of the hearing.” Ellis T. Longenecker, assistant director of the ODT highway transport division, was named by director J. Monroe Johnson to operate the lines. He was ell route here from Minneapolis. Longenecker served as federal manager of truck lines in several midwestern states under ODT operation last fall. The seizure order was considered broad enough to include operation of trucks whose drivers are members of local 705, International Brotherhood of Teameters Union (A FL). Although teamsters union officials condemned the strike, many of its j members stayed away from their jobs in sympathy or in fear of picket violence. The IBT local was similarly effected by the wage increase, which both unions scorned a<s “inadequate.” Some of the strikers returned to work last night after receiving word that the strike had ended. A spokesman for one large Chicago grocery firm reported that 32 trucks carrying 300,000 pounds of fruits and vegetables moved from' its warehouse night. Tjie strike, Chicago's worst in

Ji ‘ > -Z- rragi iHi" I FRESHER... IN THE KAN !♦’• Mill in. the freshly roasted bean Rew ad IKJ W .x’ wtwn you buy I to naturally mellow . f BOKAR IN THI thrifty 1. PICK OF/PLfcHrATIONS Aivor... buy your coffee in the beao. KJz* To pet first fineu WYOW COFFEEPOT —pick of piarHltwa-rA&P F«sh)y ground the moment you buy ■■ IT" jMfhc If if® SwyMwL “S* *** I* 1 ?*! Eight O'clock, 3 lb. bog 59c goes the hMt, out comp, tteiteß» !s*...and’jonwiy grouad-*tH Rd Ci | 2 | b 47 MffliaiWEiM! richer flavor every ume! vtrcie ids. tic __—--n “ «...1 £“ : ? vout fresh ♦«*•*? •*“| o gg re ens ’«• IVUni pkg. 23® I | TOILET SOW 3 21c ■ QQr® R,HSO « !3t dighos, * U><b ' ond _ SNOW ".“ gpi ftULjEU EA. Q V WATER SOFTENER i 1-sstf“’.t'B.9B CMUWJHL 4-1 !S? s » | PWaPPLE - • afe - H 45c | ...» I ffi® - 34 Ss"“ol5»l — liHffixr “ 3 ?‘ nHis 3»19c j qQ ■ ■ GRM’E™"** „ . Tini ee ' 3us3wC 1 PUFFED WHE4T ‘iS«t te&SUSU- —e...SYRUP ‘Vut 26c FLfi-VOR-AID ... 3 P k g s. 10c g Jtjui&h Afiom ffuJt (BoksJty g STAEtEY’S CREAM . tiOLUEN CENTER TOASTED S V = CORN STARCH 9c WHEAT GERMS: 2Sc S x L I 006 row is 11* flour sm ■ I TREET“ e » 34c PAHCAKE FLOUR... 1c ■ - I cWibATS 12c COCOaT “ 10c ■ - I ScfGEMS 10c «MF“. 25& 28c I I □7— K~~~SOAP GKANULES I ■ W| CLEANSER | OXYDOL 2 g c | Boz e I 240Z m* | POTATO CHIPS . BAG^C | Pl «\ p[ PKG- ■ Dfjgljjjj 1 K “ ““"““big ZS'- /2 j“j 1 IC I ‘TZeVogotable I 1 Kj I CRISCO I SNOW I DOHUTS 10 I *J lb JL A I *5 B /point jMiib! QruL Cfoort | 1 PKG. ( Sf You'll not a real prize when . . , ■j; - si yo“ select your fish for to- § — morrow nioht's dinner at your g i. ’LL "I, "" I I A&P! But whatever day you § Pure Vegetable Shortening I I SOAP FLAKES H ro**" to find a f n VW H ■ ■ft 1= t’" e assortment of fresh and - § H I 1 I X S wa,er favorites, as well g ■ H ■■ 235 os many delicious sea foods. 1 LB. JAR. 24c M BE By serving fish often, you not 4L Aftvfl 1 I JAR A PK G Visit your A&P Fish Department tomorrow! I— @ SONEEBS9—NO WASTE . * QfiC § Wlonl n^ tlO A ’ I FRESH HARBOUR FILLETS| nUaLL fXt, vCtry! = mediem sums—fresh cavc.ht 33C old-fhi'm loaf ... .«c|SMStoZ::»I MttFUKMI .... • 47t | WWfflm “i Pc jin KB4UT u 7- I BCfWAStn 1,3 I SOMMER SAUSAGE .... -39 c

several years, tied ut> freight shipments as fpr west as Kansas City, ODT oflhlalH said. Principal lons, however, was to the hundreds of thousands of pounds of perishable food which rotted in warehouses throughout the city. o — Strained Koney . Strained honey may be substituted for part of the sugar in fruit cakes, and the liquid Correspondingly reduced. Fruit cake made with honey stays moist longer.

Clean DENTAL g PLATES This Easy Way... At l»st, a scientific way to clean dental plates and briUgeH REALLV clean. Jngt pwt j<Htr nlete tn a rlaM of water. Add a little quick-acting KI.EENITE. With magic-like speed, discoloration.stains and denture odors vanish — the original clean , brightness is restored I It’s easy, economical and safe. (i-'t KIJHIGN'ITE today at Smith Drug Company. Hoß'house Drug Company ami all good druggists.

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