Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 152, Decatur, Adams County, 28 June 1945 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Notice I have today assumed ownership and management of the Bruce Grill 234 North Second St. and will operate under the following hours: Open 6 a. m.—Close 9 p. m. Monday through Friday Open t> a. m.—Close 12 p. ni. Saturday I cordially invite everyone to visit me for fine foods and courteous service. The Family Grill Jeannette Plasterer I

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Moos of hie Moment BY UNCLE 808 ' of the Kraft Dairy Farm Service jff 1M?

Sing a song of dairymen With pastures full of rye. Lots and lots of green feed Seeded in July* When the rye is pastured, The milk begins—and how! Now isn’t that a paying fare To set before a cow? (*Poetic license. Seed it in August in most stales—but August don’t rhyme.) An increasing number of dairyA men"each year include rye in their grazuig program, for several very good 'reasons. Every spring. I get an urge to get out and get into the open. Cows get a hankering for green forage. Rye is the answer, since it gives about the first possible good forage in early spring. Rye should be seeded in late summer, so I bring it up now to remind you to include rye as you make your late planting plans. Rye works in perfectly in a rotation grazing program. It gives forage in the fall, when your native pasture rests. Aftsr the spring grazing, the plot can.Ke seeded to Sudan grass, for mid-summer grazing. In Indiana, they figGSJ this system is worth SIOO per tempts me to add “and thaFain’t hay.” your county agent on the best-rye variety for your county. Balbo iSjie most popular kind in many amnions, but some other may be preferred in your area. There are some fine new varieties available which approving milch better than the older Strains. You'woeen folks in the city who speed when the yellow light flashes-m a traffic signal, with the mistakfflOdea that the yellow is a sign ttrbteat the rtd. I’m afraid someaflSat the same idea has got aroundTra few places regarding the “correct-milking” process. I’vefieard of a few farmers who have epCsded up Che number of pulssHiens of their milking machos, thinking they were supposed to Ao this, to get done —*

FUIUSHtD NOW *NO THW IV TH( kraft cheese company

$250,000 Estate Left By Recluse Flophouse Habitue Is Revealed Rich Chicago, June 2X. (UP) —CTtelestino Chiesa, a 20 cent a night flophouse habitue, goes to his grave today a neat blue serge replacing the tattered rags lie wore until it was disclosed he had left a $250,000 estate. Chiesa, 75, died last week in the

Tired Kidneys Often Bring Steepless Nights Doctors say your kidney’s contain 15 miles of tiny tubes or filters which help to purify the blood and keep you healthy. When they get tired and don t work right in the daytime, many people have to get up nights. Frequent or scanty passages with smarting and burning sometimes shows there is something wrong with your kidneys or bladder. Don’t neglect this condition and lose valuable, restful sleep. When disorder of kidney function permits poisonous matter to remain in your blood, it may also cause nagging backacde, rheumutio pains, leg pains, loss of prp and energy, swelling, puffiness under the eyes, headaches and dizziness. Don’t waitl Ash your druggist for Doan's Pills, used successfully by millions for over 40 years. They give happy relief and will help the 15 miles of kidney tultes flush out poisonous waste from your blood. Get Doan* Filb.

quicker. Maybe it is because the program was called “faster milking” at one time. The folks who worked out this better way of milking did not intend to speed up the actual rate of operation. Massaging and washing udders with warm water starts the milk flowing. This means you’ll get the same amount of milk in less time bid at the same milker speed. I f you speed up the milker you may injure a teat. Such injury can lead to mastitis and create a lot of trouble. Your county agent probably has a leaflet giving complete instructions on the steps to follow in the "correct milking” process. “Mowing” your hair may not produce better brainwork, but clipping your pastures will surely bring more dollars in milk. The Mississippi Experiment Station has just reported on a test which showed conclusively that a pasture which is mowed will produce more food per acre than pastures in which weeds are permitted to grow without check. Weeds do their best to get the food out of the ground before grass can get it. Mississippi mowed only part of a pasture and then checked the amount of forage grazed. The cattle took 80% of the forage from the mowed area, but only 50% from the unmowed part. The test showed cows got 1,000 lbs. more forage per acre from the 11 clippedareathanfromtheunclipped. Naturally enough, the greater amount of food produced more milk. The time to mow your pasture is about the same as the time to get a haircut —when it is needed. When weeds begin to get some heighth, and particularly before they start to go to seed, then is the time to get the mower into the pasture. You’ll get divideads in more milk.

Cook county hospital charity ward after a heart attack. It appeared the state old age pension division would have to pay his funeral expenses. But Inst night the fortune he had amassed was revealed. Known t o acquaintances a s "Chester,” Chiesa lived on cheap food in a seven by four foot cubicle of a south State street flophouse. So penurious was he that he was known to Walk miles to save carfare. An undertaker who took charge of Chiesa's body found a key in the man's dirty torn trousers. Turned over to the state public administrator, the key wae found to fit a Continental Illinois state bank vault. There Jack Rubens, chief investigator tor the administrator, opened a safe deposit box from which cascaded gilt-edged stocks and bonds, property deeds and the miser’s will. In a building owned by Chiesa, investigators found documents indicating he had amassed the fortune from $13,500 he inherited in 1900 from his father. ’ For ?1 years Chiesa had worked as a guard for the Chicago elevated lines, but he quit to manage his numerous financial interests many years ago. Chiesa, to lie buried at Calvary cemetery in a SI,OOO bronze coffin despite his earthly frugality, left a will providing a SSOO bequest to the Catholic church and dividing the estate between a brother, John, and a steter, Mary. The will directed, however, that if both these relatives were dead — and investigators said they were —the estate goes to the Catholic archbishop of Chicago. Paradoxically, the man who himself lived so |>oorly provided in his last testament that his secret wealth be used by the church to care for the poor. TRUMAN (Continued From Page One) to the federal building at 8:40 a. m. The president goes back to Washington Sunday, sends the United Nations charter to the senate on Monday and probably will nominate his old friend James F. Byrnes as the new secretary of state on Tuesday. He announced the resignation of E. R. Sfettinius. Jr., as secretary of state in Independence yesterday, and also the appointment of Stettinius as the American representative to the United Nations organization when it is formed. After working in his office during the early forenoon today, Mr. Truman planned to visit the University of Kansas City where he studied law from 1923 to 1925 i for the celebration of the law ; school’s 50 th anniversary. He planned to join the alumni and students in a picnic lunch on the campus. Tonight at the Kansas City municipal auditorium the president will receive an honorary Lili. D. from the university during a homecoming and convocation sponsored jointly by the school and the merchants association. He will speak at this ceremony, then attend a public reception in the little theatre quarter of the auditorium. o Mishawaka Girl Is Drowned In River Mishawaka. Ind.. June 28 —(UP) —Jane Ensminger, 10, daughter of J. D. Enominger. was drowned yesterday in St. Joseph river when she slipped while wading. .She and her twin sister, Joan, were returning from a picnic outing and stopped to play in the river. 1

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA.

20 Persons Injured In Illinois Tornado Rural Section Is Hard Hit By Storm Princeton, 111., June 28.—(UP) — Twenty persons, mostly farmel-s. were injured when a tornado cut through a rural section north of here shortly before midnight, the sheriff's office said today. Deputy Sheriff Art Nelson said the damage was "terrific.” “Almost everything in that section was wiped out and floods damaged what was left,” he said. Nelson said the stricken area extended from a point about five miles north of here to about nine miles north. The path cut by the tornado was not very wide, he said. The damage was estimated “way up in the thousands,” the deputy said. Much livestock was killed and most of the remainder was so badly crippled that it will have to be shot. Nelson said hardly any farm in the area escaped the fury of the winds. First reports of the storm came from the Illinois highway patrol. The patrol said several farm homes were levelled by the tornadic winds which swept northeast to strike Lamoille, 111., disrupting communications and power lines, about 11 o’clock last night. Accompanied by heavy rainfall, the tornado hurled moving cattle trucks from highways and scattered cattle over the adjacent fields, highway patrolmen said. 0 MAKES IMPASSIONED (Continued From Page One) gressor in the event that peaceful measures fail. Connally defended vigorously the “veto” provision and trusteeship arrangements over which United Nations delegatee at San Francisco differed. He said the voting arrangement within the council, by which any of the Big Five nations can veto council action, was more liberal than the provisions in the old League of Nations.

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LIBERATION OF (Continued From Page One) and 19 days after American troops

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landed at Lingayen gulf on Jam | Ou the other active front In the southwest Pacific, on northwest Borneo, Australian troops contin-

- THURSDAY . JUNE 2 8 ~.HS DAJ

ued to advance against very little opposition. Patrols fanning out from the captured oil center of Bella took Kuala Belait, a river port seven milee to the southwest.

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