Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 258, Decatur, Adams County, 1 November 1945 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

It I* Impossible io drown lu the Great Halt l««ke m Utah, where th* water In 35 percent salt, hut Il la possible to at runale. o ■■ The flrat American champagne waa produced in a small winery In Cincinnati, <>., in 1R42 hy Nicholas Loneworth.

lani'ilK W<*| I ll« /^ P r/ecHon\ The Cracker |W Wil y /cct io A I JRSaii’* e | ON SALE AT YON I f D FAVORITE GROCERS I Vl' r in the nrM pneknue!

EM INDIANA HI FAVORITf ■S BLEND Bifli w,tm / |&£| BONUS / 1 Kb ’<*’ -'iMifl S Tune in “The MODERN HOME FORUM" WOWO, 1 p.m. Mon. thru Frl. ■ »■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ Rich, Taste-Tempting ■ : Malted Milk Cake ■ ■ The Cake ■ * CsSSSH 39c : : ssc 5 Simply Delicious. Serve it to the ■ family this week-end. At your ■ local independent food store or at ■ I , our bakery. « ■ : Stewart’s Bakery ; I ■■■■-■■■■■■■■■■•■■ M ■ ■ ■ ■ • Hi THE BASIC FACTORS OF || Hl OUR FUNERAL SERVICE • f are professional experience, a ‘ modern funeral home, and prices. (f that afford a definite financial |k saving. Any family permitting us fM , to serve them has the advantage >■ of those superior facilities AND THIS LOWER COST. j] 0 WgTu i 0X N I ffl F? funeral NOME - fi I PtCXTUt a > rHo|llt 7,4 I

DECATUR DA'LY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA THURSDAY, NOVEMB ER 1,1945.

Newark, N. J., i« the nation's leading lumber port. ■ o ■ ——— -■ i . The first town In San Francisco hay, Yuerlm Buena, wan founded in 1776 three miles from Mission Dolores. The two later grew together Into the city of San Francisco.

Condition Os 111 ■ Baby Is Unchanged Muncie Babe Still - Remains In Coma Munlce. Ind , Nov. 1 (UP)— Physicians said today that (iayie Eleanor Harvey, 17-month-old tubercular meningitis victim tinder treatment with the new drug, streptomycin, might languish for days before Owe would be any change in her condition. The baby, to whose aid the nation rallied when Dr. (Jerald Young called for a backlog of the still unproved drug as a last resort to save her life, r- mained In a coma hut appeared to be holding her own against the ailmentThe medical world, meantime, was watching closely every step In treatment ot the child with streptomycin, an earth mold derivitive much like penicillin. Th- - has been used in various forma of tuberculosis but this Is the first major test of its powers in tuMrettlar meningitis. Gayle is the daughter of Mrs. Jean Harvey, Muncie, a former women's army corps member and widow of Sgt, Thomas Harvey, killed in Germany. 0 Wave Os Terrorism {aging In Palestine Railroads Cut By

Jewish Extremists Jerusalem., Nov. 1 I IT)- Jewish extremists cut Palestine railways at 50 places from Dan to Beersheba, wrecked trait* and blew up police boats in a aeries of coordinated attacks laat night and early today. British authorities said casualties so far reported included four and perhaps five persons killed and eight wounded, one of them perhaps fatally. The dead comprised one British soldier, one and posalhly two policemen and two Palestinian railway crewmen. Another soldier, a policeman and six railway staffers were Wounded. Authorities said Jewish extremists have been looting <piantiti<« of explosives from army duni|H TSTfINBHfD tWeK» - -Jrs finish vicwK : bnhfl' n 9 ‘> u ’ \ !NO UNCERTAINTY. No guesswork. Here are ail the dry c; ingredients for pie crust, pre-| ■ cision-mised for sure results. ' Nothing to add but water. If • your grocer hasn't Ftsko (or B Flakorn) today, check with* g him again tomorrow. I ■ & ****• * ,e •** *** dry ingredients tor com muffins.* CANTKEEP GRANDMA IN, KBuSMZ Now hoe Backache ia better Near cofferers relieve nacstn* backache Ouickly. once they diecovor that th. real c*uee of their trouble mar be tired kldneye. The kidaeyo are Nature's chief way of tak.' In* the nun adds and waste out of the blood. TTwy bfflp Boat people pass about a ***Wien diaorirr of kldaey function permitc Peieoaouatßatt.r to remain fa your Mood. It BMkT CMM MCSI ng MCurat, rMUfIMtM jMtns. tag patoML lom otpeg tad «mry, gottfag up aisbto. oweiMac puflacto under the epee, aecdarheo and dtsxlacm Frequent or acaaty PMCBM with amartlaa aed burning eoaMtbaea Shows there is cnasethin* wrong with your kidaeyu or Madder. Doo'* waitl Aok year druwiet for Doan'e .Pilla. a eUiaulant diuretic, used euuwfoll/ 'hr muttons for ocorM nors. Doan'e yiee youLod. Oat ™

and other stores for some time in preparation for Just such a wave of terrorism In an attempt to force Britain to permit tinllml’ed Jewish emigration to Palestine. The heaviest attack was made. at the Lydda railway station, ' bwV ®MI ■f v. J \ / ,' ■ ■k W f '1 & bbil MVOtUHONISTS who overthrew the government of President Jsalas Medina in Venezuela are holding former President Gen. Elezar Lopez Contreras, along with about 200 other prominent persons, as a hostage. Contreras is the conservative party candidate in the coming akccU-."- 1 (International)

MoQs of iße Moment

BY UNCLE 808 ot tho Kraft Dairy Farm Service %/>' » >- Ai v'/J ih

There are acme things which need a scrub, barn floors, born walla or maybe boya’ ear*. But one "scrub” we can get along without is a bcrub cow. Some year* ago, the USDA estimated that there were ten million scrub* in United States dairy herd*. They figured these cow* cost dairy farmer* a billion dollar*—half of it in the cost of feed and the other half in labor, housing, equipment and so on. Return from these cows probably didn’t equal anywhere near this cost of feed, care and shelter. That’s a lot of cash to go down the throats of low-producing animals. You can’t go out and knock ten million cows in the head, but every dairyman can improve his own situation, by eliminating boarders from his herd or replacing these scrubs with better producers. Al! the college* have figures which show that the high-producing cow I i* the cheapest cow to own, in the ! long run. Take Idaho’s figures, ft* instance. Careful check of many cows showed that a cow with an annual fat production of 150 pounds cost $46 to feed and returned 127 above this to pay for labor, shelter and all other coats. A cow producing 260 pound* of fat had a feed cost of SSO, returned $45 over this cost. So it went in each fat production bracket until we get to the 450pound cow. This animal cost $75 to feed, but returned 1134 over feed coet and for every dollar’s worth of feed brought its owner S2.NO! The owner of such a cow get* a good return for hia labor after paying all expense*. I Aa You don’t have to be any better at figuring than 1 am to see clearly that these better cow* are the one* to have in your own herd. There’s a lot lea* work to milking ten 350pound cows than there i* to milking twenty 175-pound cow*. Tout butterfat production would be the ’ tame in these two cases, but total profit would be much greater with • the ten heavier producer*. We still need lots of milk but in ( view of the feed and labor situation* on farms, now would be a mighty good time to check each cow in your herd, find out which one* are returning very little over coet, and get rid of *uch boarder*. 1

A • PUBLISHED NOW AND THEN IT THE KRAFT POODS COMPANY

where a signal box, t train and three locomotives w<-->- damti.? d heavily, u locomotive ch--d »«t afire and other locomotives mind. Half way between Jerusalem and Lydda, an armed party ->f Jew* dressed In uniforms “Id up “ train and exchanged h<»ts with the crew shortly afte, midnight. V v WBr - ' ./t* 1 ' HAPPY NOW that the whole thing is over, little Karen Liberty, 3Mr, tells | her mother in a Chicago hospital how she swallowed a harmonica which lodged in her stomach. When she complained of pains, an examination disclosed the source of the trouble and a successful operation followed. (International)

And along that line, you need accurate records to help decide which cow* can be elirahutcu The September-October Kraftsman included a fine barn chart, printed on heavy paper, which is Just the thing you’ll want to keep track of each cow’s record. If you did not get the isnue, write Uncle Bob at 500 Peshtigo Court, Chicago 90, 111., and ask for a barn chart. ) t Somebody figured out a few years back that in view of lat>or and equipment shortage* it would be impossible for dairy farmers to produce a* much milk as was nettled during the war. But the dairy farmer didn't know it was impossible, so he just went ahead and dki it. So now that this job has been done, we can all turn to the next one—supplying a lot of consumers who gladly cut their consumption during the war years. In order to help supply a bigger need, and who are hungry now for high quality dairy products. With the large production of milk now available for civilian use we have an opportunity to boost consumption of dairy products a lot higher than ever before. Authorities on nutrition tell us that the American people never have used as much mtik and dairy products a* they really need. High quality dafry products will do much to encourage greater consumption. There's no surer way to bring the consumer back for more cheeae, more milk, more butter, or more ice cream than to give her a product with a flavor and quality she can't resist. Quality of dairy product* of course starts on the farm so in the next few issues of this column I am going over again the step-by-step pr<jgram of producing quality milk which we've talked about before. Sanitation and proper handling are the two points which tell the story. Clean barns, clean cows, clean utensils and dean workers, proper cooling and handling are some of the things well bring up again, with some new angles and some new literature to talk about on these important point*.

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