Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 205, Decatur, Adams County, 30 August 1945 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Seek Settlement 01 Fort Wayne Disputes » ’Magnavox And Inca » Workers On Strike Jort Wayne, Ind., Aug. 3D (I P) Jjleetings of employes of both . ►(s> Magnavox company and the In*u division of Phelps Dodge (’Miper Product# corporation are b<flig held in their respective
PUBLIC AUCTION « HOUSEHOLD GOODS * 703 Cleveland St., Decatur, Indiana SATURDAY, SEPT. 1 ■ 6p. m. ft FURNITURE: 2 Piece Velour Living Room Suite, Wine. Occasional Chair. Complete Bed Room Suite. Studio Couch. Breakfast Set, 4 < mil's. Odd Bed complete. 2 Stands. 3 Lamps. Mirrors. Whatnots. KBGS, CURTAINS and DRAPES: 9x12 Wine Rug and Mat. 12x12 Ltaoleum. 5 Pair Drapes. 5 Panels of Curtains. 3 pair Curtains. MISCELLANEOUS: Oil Stove, 5 Burner. Heating Stove. Cabinet. Gllss Jars. Tricycle. 3 Smail Rabbit Pens. Large Pen 10x7. .TERMS—(’ASH. : Noel Andrews c OWNER. J.jf. Sanmann—Auctioneer C—W. Kent—Sales Manager Sme conducted by Midwest Realty Auction Co. Dflbatur, Indiana. ■i"■"■ ' " - •4 ++++ 4. +++ .:.+4.d.++4.d.4.4-4-4.+-M.4.4-+++M>+++4"H-++*++++++<fr+ |: Attention Shoppers! ii t« Effective this week we will remain :: i OPEN as FRIDAY i .. ~ I OF EACH WEEK for your shopping “ < t* convenience. •• •> • BE ■ > t e We will make every effort to have an T j ( • ■ ample supply of meat for everyone. This i i ( I!* wili enable you to personally make your ;; i ;; meat purchases Friday and Saturday ;; ( • • instead of ordering. ! • ; :: ;; . Gerber Meat Market •• c ■ > * ++ 4.4.. ; . + 4.4. +++++ 4.4. +++ ++ + 4 4-d-+-H"H-d'++++++4"HH-+++++++ 1 PUBLIC AUCTION HOUSEHOLD GOODS ft 1115 W. Adams St., Decatur, Indiana TUES., SEPT. 4 - 5:00 p. m. FURNITURE—Good 2 piece Green Living Room Suite; Dining Room “ Gme Leg Table and 6 Upholstered Chairs: Buffet; Knee Hole Desk; 2Upholstered Rockers; 2 • 3 Piece Bed Room Suites with benches; * 2Jqner Spring Mattresses; 1 Felt Mattress; Good Springs; Breakfast j Set, 4 chairs. I RiGS—9xl2 Wilton Rug; 9x12 Dining Room Rug; 2 Throw Rugs; (Ifpd Stair Carpet. Good Wilton Throw Rug. ■ G W E. CONSOLE RADIO. HOOVER ELECTRIC SWEEPER. G. E. i PORTABLE IRONER. G. E. WAFLE IRON. MISCELLANEOUS ARTICLES—Rubber Tired Lawn Mower; 2 Steel Lawn Chairs; Floor Lamps; Bridge Lamps; and many other items. TERMS—CASH. j r JJr. and Mrs. Arthur Breiner I 6 OWNERS. J.J 71 . Sanmann—Auctioneer . C.*W. Kent—Sales Manager ( Sfte conducted by Midwest Realty Auction Co. . Dyatur, Indiana. ( B ‘—————— ———————— , IKB.lilO!liWU«HHiHlHffl«WMlinilimymillK£»lllHlihMHlUnßUiißiEl«l3|, ■ YOU’RE SURE TO LIKE IT! : la *■- — - ' 5 I • jiilKS 9. “THE CAKE 1 OF THE | WEEK” : Black Walnut Cake Yum, Yum! That’s what you’ll say when you eat it. Simply delicious. Ask for < BLACK WALNUT CAKE at any local independent food store or at our bakery, 39c 58c Stewart’s Bakery |
|plants today in an effort to setth 11heir dispute# with the companies Officials of the Magnavox com pany made u proposal to the re J presentatives of local 910, united ’ electrical, radio and machine, work ers of America, at a meeting Wed nesday morning in the office oi Mayor Harry Baals. This proposal, which ha# not yet been made public, will be presented to the j I employes at their meeting today, /land immediately afterwards another meeting will be held in the I mayor's office. “I Magnavox ha# been idle since 9 'Saturday as a result of the dispute e
le over wage increases. s. The INCA dispute entered its i- third day today, and union presia- dent Harold Broxon, local 933, d UERMWA, eaid that the company c- still refused to meet with the union 1- in an effort to settle the dispute if which he. said arose over war pro >- visions in the contract in regard e to overtime payment for operators on the swing shift. , Both management and the union are charging the other with violaB ' tions of the contract. War Veterans Draw Much Compensation Disabled Veterans Leader Lashes Bill Washington, Aug. 30— |(UP) — World War II veterans are drawing unemployment compensation, under the GI bill of rights, at a rate almost, three times that of non-veterans. A disabled American veterans spokesman said today the figures indicated some veterans are loafing in order to collect the S2O weekly benefit allowed them under the GI bill. This, he said, is a reflection not on the veteran hut on the bill, which he said offers the exserviceman an incentive to remain unemployed. The veterans administration, which pays the GI benefits, attached no significance to the figures, which showed for a typical week in August that 1.52 percent of the estimated 3,000,000 veterans drew readjustment allowances while only .56 percent of the 36,000,000 covered non-veterans drew unemployment insurance. The loafing charge came from Millard W. Rice, national service director of the disabled American veterans. He said the tendency was easily understandable. “Many veterans feel that the only way they can get the money due them under the GI bill as a readjustment allowance is to be unemployed,’’ Rice said. “So there is no inclination to find work.” As a remedy DAV will back a bill now in the house veterans committee under which veterans can take either the benefits now provided in the GI bill or adjusted compensation, through an Insurance policy, based on length and type of service. Compensation would be at the rate of $3 a day for domestic service and $4 a day for overseas service, with a maximum credit of $5,000. Against an insurance policy in this amount the veteran
BBehind the
By HARRISON CARROLL |1 / Ring Features Syndicate Writes 1 1 HOLLYWOOD. —So loud and . unanimous is the GI protest against t a heavy dramatic role for Rita 1 Hayworth, their official pin-up girl, 1 in “Gilda” that <
something is 1 going to be done 1 about it. Rita 1 still makes the 1 picture but they are writing in a sequence where she goes to a night club, sings a song i and does a solo dance. You could
■K M9i Harriion Carroll
i have dropped a trayfull of dishes and still not drowned out the noise of wagging tongues when Sonja Hehie showed up at the Mocambo after Lorena Danker’s cocktail party with Bob Walker. However, says Sonja, think nothing of it. She went to the party with Kay Williams and just happened to ride in Bob’s car when everybody decided to go on to Charlie Morrison’s bistro for a late supper and a spot of dancing. According to Sonja, her groom, Capt. Dan Topping, returns from Honolulu in October, if not before. Meanwhile she goes east for her skating tour. When it closes in New York, Feb. 8, she returns here for a picture. I Errol Flynn’s man, Alex, who saved Pat Farrell after her asserted suicide attempt, is quite a character. He loves to play the races, sometimes concentrating on his hobby to the extent that he hears only parr of telephone conversations. The other day, after the death of an actor, a call came asking if Flynn would be a pallbearer at the funeral. b Alex, his mind seething with parlays, responded absently, “For cocktails or dinner”?, Strong but unconfirmed rumor that M-G-M wants to buy the big Douglas plant in Long Beach. ~. The "Doctor Watson” in the movie Sherlock Holmes series, won't be so roley-poley next time out. Nigel Bruce, who plays him, has dropped 25 pounds. « « « Jackie Morgan’s ex-wife, Terry, is the new receptionist jrt ttg qf Publicist
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA.
could draw for unemployment, or s for investment in home or busi- -- ness. The policy could be cashed I, outright in ten years. y Rice said the DAV proposal, a n frank admission of the nations e debt to its soldiers, would cost i 30 to 40 billion dollars. After inti evitable and unending amends ments, he said, the GI bill will cost 60 billion. 1 —o Gen. Short Defends Pearl Harbor Acts Statement Is Made By Army Commander Dallas, Tex., Aug. 30—(UP)— Maj. Gen. Walter T. Short, on whom an army board of inquiry placed partial blame for the Pearl Harbor disaster, said last night that he had acted “in accordance with information which was available to me.” Short, army commander at Pearl Harbor when the Japanese attacked on Dec. 7, 1941, said in a signed statement: “On Dec. 7, 1941, I was obeying my instructions from Washington as 1 understood them, and was
l i CIIIL*J *■ 5 ?5 Ap* jr* w ■' 4# ■ .... - usi JARS- - ff!UM an<l ' RUBBIRS J follow inetructiong in * (the'Baß Blue Book. To get ybur copy. A bend 10c with your name and addmato-
being • licensed pilot, she has ferried two planes for Gordon* . * a Friends expect Julie Gibson, former Paramount starlet, and Mike Shor, the advertising man, will marry any minute in the east. , « . Hoagey Carmichael’s book, "A Rhapsody in Mud," history of jazz music from the twenties, is well under way. The walls of Hoagey’s office are covered with tacked-up notes summarizing paragraphs and chapters. . . ■ Katharine Hepburn off for two months in New York and Connecticut. .. a The one-time blonde hair of Martha O’Driscoll, now is light brows, Charles Korvln headed for a tonsilectomy and another operaUu* after "As It Was Before.’* ’ The big hunt planned for Oct 14 by the Danish Royal Guard club at Calgary, Alberta, Canada, will havte at least two Hollywood representatives, Laurits Melchoir and M-G-M Executive Louis K. Sidney. They’ll shoot everything from partridges to big game. Before that, of course, Melchoir flies to Denmark for a command performance at the king’s seventyfifth birthday. HOLLYWOOD HI JINX: Jackie Coogan’s first night out of uniform was spent entertaining and i being a bus boy at the Hollywood ■ Canteen and, later, shaking hands with all the Gl’s at Artie Stebbin’s B’nai Brith servicemen’s ) dormitory. Latter spot, incidental- • ly, has been supplying beds for i 50,000 men a year.,,, Phil Regan s has .done 440 weeks of vaudeville i in the last 12 years but his appear- • ance at the local Orpheum is the - first time he has ever playet Los r Angeles..,. Marjorie Stewart, the i bride, back in town and receiving ■ congratulations at Charley Foy’s. She hopes her groom, Capt. Jerry i Jeroske, will be able to join her ber fore Christmas. . , , Dane Clark has bought a three-acre Brentwood place with a California adobe r house. < , . Giro’s planniing a big f victory ball for Sept. 23.... Doro- . thy Ford and Jack Diamond at the e Beverly Tropics.... Before Hollye wood sees her, Georgia Gibbs will 1 play the entire Hew England hosI pital circuit. *<. Sibyl Bowan un- ■ expectedly planed in to New York • from Paris but her marriage plana t with the major she met in jEfirpM
r acting in accordance with infor- . mation which was available to me I at that time. A commander must base his decisions on information i before him at the time. s “Although the entire facts are 1 yet. to be revealed to me and to • the public, the recent statement • of the Pearl Harbor board shows I beyond question that there was available to authorities in Washington before the attack, critical information which was not disclosed to me and which was vital to my decision. “My conscience is clear.” ——— Dr. Frank H. Sparks Is Named to Post Dr. Frank H. Sparks, president of Wabash College, is chairman of the Indiana constitution day committee to prepare for observance Sept. 17 of the anniversary of the adoption date of the federal con- : stitution. ; Dr. Sparks succeeds Harvey B. , Hartsock, of Indianapolis. The ( committee plans to place the ob- , servance on a state-wide basis through participation by the ( school# and a larger number of ci- ( vic organizations. Governor Ralph
r- .■» I s MEATS ARE AGAIN | PLENTIFUL =. a# RmmmSm tliwt IVICI SHAMS m 4 ROASTS Itat y»u ui«d to buy at A&P Markets? Yes, they're available H 1 (»sarhp!u«manjoHi»4lntgu«lltJlt»««tit«iiil*lAOß'f ATTRACTIVi PRICIS. I h I H GRADE A SEES A A IL I I PORTERHOUSE 46 B H 5 LOCAL FRESH DRESSED FRYING « A H | CHICKENS .... 46 1 GRADE A STANDING RIB I BEEFROAST 28c fl FBitsn i| le Pock** BomI— VKAL Orada A BEEF SIBLOIX STEAK COD .. 1,, 1 I BREAST . „ 19c STEAK" . » 39c DRESSED Pil On»d» A VEAL BHOVEDEB Freeh Country Style FOEK WHIIIHU lb. I" f ] . . ».».?«« SAUSA9E_ >„ die ffigSS"' c ' tcw «t I [ StiF ScKVrCE | ; ib Mc BOLOGIMb v, n, 32c pickerel «t i Tm C» / ~ ' -J, g FOR SIZE FRESH HALE HAVEN _ -A | MARVEL ENRICHED |DfaA|_ II F Q freatoiw 9LV* |i i DINNER ROLLS I rtRU 111.0 «">•”' 0 j ■-I POTITOES 51c ft -= — ■ CAULIFLOWER ... 33c BREAD “Vafil® CAUFOBNIA Eotig Green Slicers-FRESH TENDER ROUND RED Jane Barker Plata rOICI !JL S GRAPES .... lb. lie CUCUMBERS 3 w . 29c RADISHES .. f CAKES ...1, 28C W? BARTLETT FRESH GREEN FRESH GOLDEN .. : 4 JANE PARKER SPANISH a* PEARS Fruit 2 i.. 29c PEASia’S 2 , b< 35c CARROTSKfUI'' M SOU ARES K 27ft 9 CAUr - WONDER GOOD QUALITY DRY TELLOW SWEET JCICE-CAIIEOT sH ■ PIPPERS .... 3 »,.29c ONIOHS 3 1S . 16c ORANGES | ftDEAn 15 ’ M ‘ 17ft S . GOLDEN Fresh From L J JANE PARKER** CELOMS ripened .. lb. 10c YAMS Can ylng* swc. 39c HEARTS MARVEL HOT DOG ROLLS... 2 ts 21C Si'li'iWn W marvel raisin. 11%-es, loaf BREAD 3u, 32c ) 9Vj Hfl MfU | CAKES 270 | BAUB MAID OBAOAM CHEESE...» TOC J ,ft / i CRACKERS »lOc -jfljlfagg. *9c < - *-'W JSYtiirit SsSSSr E,lt - ... V*.-.? CORR FLAKES IS 13c CHEESE „ . \ J WHEAT I2c S.»„yf»ld Hfel. S=«. Now.hrtiW ® AMHCOTS *K23c BUTTER A’allQljc BUY FOODS ~..» 0c £ INSECTICIDE...»I9C ■■ CLEANER «* 55c BORAX 25c CORN STARCH...» 9c JUICE» ‘ KARO BLUE LABEL HAND SOAP YARD BALL OR KERR t dot H| STROP£!34c NMXO» 13c DOGFOOD»llc MASON JARS >«" Pura Vegetable Shortening HBRB-OX BODILLOX ASSORTED A&P FRUIT ]| *» ..’SIbSc CUBES XI6C FLB-VOR-AIB 3 10c PECTIN SUNNYFIELD BOSCVL REG. OB DRIP ANN PAGE FOR CANNING iHUX RICE PUFFS» lie COFFEE»33e SPAGHETTI.... » 12c TEX WAX . STOKELY HONEY POD IONA FINESSE BING , PEAS PEAS CHERRIES MO *OI«« MO POINTS N 0 PODfTg time, ° _ cis n j I* > NO - 2 1 , NO - 2 no - ICAN< IJC , ICAN. IIC LCAN.4IC Üboi . H—lJ II ■■■■■nJ PfMIM I I || II ■
F. Gates has set ‘he day aside by proclamation to be observed as the ?58th anniversary of the Rig" ng of the constitution of the United States of America. 1 Cary Grant Divorced By Barbara Hutton Hollywood, Aug. 30— (UP) — Heiress Barbara Hutton today•divorced her fhird husband, handsome film actor Cary Grant. Miss Hutton charged with cau#ing her "grievous mental digress, suffering and anguish.” She testified that he would rather sit around upstairs than to talk to her- friends. Bryant Mail Carrier Is Taken By Death Funeral eervices will he held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Bryant M. p church for Clive Macklin, 60, well known Bryant rural mail carrier, who died unexpectedly Tuesday night at his home after a short illnes# of a heart ailment. He is survived by a son, twe daughters, his mother, three brothers and two sister#.
I DEMOCRAT WANT ADS ’ W ' 1- I jContl I ent p eop!e ered with ' k r ood will | h<> carriwi 1 IALSI ? T screa ms ; I 'H <' t fi | lET 11 IM SCREAM. | ■ '> P W — ■ — — I l : K S' GILLIG 6 DOANiI > fl “ FUNERAL HOME I « » S DECATUR PHONE ]||| 1
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