Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 293, Decatur, Adams County, 13 December 1945 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Pabltobsd ©very treated Escepl Kuaday By THE MtCATTR DEMOCRAT CO Incorporate Ihtorod at th* Decatur. tod, Poet Office M Second Cl*** Matter. J R Heller Pra*ldeo' A. R ftafthouse. Boc*y. * But Mgr Dick I) Hdler Vice-President Sobocriptien Rate* dingle Copiea I .01 One week by carrier — -I" By Mall la Adana. Allee. Jay and Walk wua'lee Indiana and Mercer and Vm Wart muntins, Ohio. 14. to pei year; 12 SO tor Ml month*; Sl:3!> tor three month*. 50 cent* tor un< month. Elsewhere: 16 50 per year; ISO tor six month*; fl *5 for tbre< uonth*. to rent- ter me tnon'h Men and women In the arnieo force* |3 50 per year oi 1100 P»r three month* Advertising Rate* Made Keawe ow Application. National Representative SCHESRER A CO. 15 Ueaington Avenue, New Yer* M E Wacker Drive. Chicago. II 1 You can shop eaalrr and to better advantage right here in Decater than anywhere else. Only a mere ten shopping day* left before Christmas, ha your' Move. O—O Santa Claus Is on the way. Help him spread Good Will over the World. It’s so much better to live, to peace O—O This is the Christmas season Millions have been waiting for •ver since Pearl Harbor Make It a happy one. If you are putzfod In selecting Christmas gifts, remember that Victory bonds, still available, will • fill the bill now and after while. —o Use Christmas seals. They not i only brighten your letters and packages but they bring help to those who suffer from tuberculosis. During the past quarter century they have saved thousand* of lives. Jim Armstrong who ha* been Senator Capehart's secretary the past year like* Washington so w 11 ■ he would like tn stay there He is •erioualy thinking of running for Cougrese in the ninth district. O—O Some of the boy* who have seen Service during th* war really like the business and many will coaUn no in the army. The oth-r day | More than 4,000 veterans, who had volunteered, were sworn in for •notber three years at Okinawa. -0 Highway oMctei* plan to make highway* safe for driving slaty Miles per hour In flat areas and •sty over rolling lands Sound* Alright bat they don't tell us just how to hold the speed to thoee Iguree —* w Larry Ungle, IT-mouth oM Harrisburg youngster swallowed a alckle and coughed up a penny. Now if he cOuM just turn that •round and keep it up. think what • profit hr eonid pile up the n e gt tw-aly year*. —O—O John L. Lewis doesn’t agree with President Truman on fact finding bit that'* not news. He lias never Agreed with any one but himself. Hi* job seems to be to oppose every thing, and that's aanoytog for this ported when the natten ought to be pnlltag togeth•r. O—O The fls sootns to have eased •one sad aft schools ia tbs county are again operating. Don’t get careless however. If you ealtb a cold start treating if imntediaUly. test and don't mingle with crowds. We can have • recurrence of the epidemic most any time the nest several mouth*

Ths flu I* no respector of person* It goi started in th<- federal court room at Fort Wayne where the Durham conspiracy case I* In proarea* and spread all the way from the judge to the Itslliff. taking In member* of the jury, lawyers, witnesses and other* and forcing a delay -0 The strikes are spreading and it look* Ilk- a gloomy Christman for many who are directly affected. Itemember the needy at Christmas time. There are not so many thia year but If you know of a family that med* aid. see that they are taken care of for the holiday or report them to on« of the service organisation*. -0 According to Goering, and uo uouht he knows. Hitler planned in 194” to bomb New York City by plane, tried to get Japan to attack Itusaia, but wer a* much surprised a* we were when the Nips hit Pearl Harbor. The Nuernberg evidence sound* like a hunch of ex-cit-d wild young men drunk with the td-A. checked and proved, that they could rule the world Th* air chief failed to state just why I plans were changed on the attack In Am»rlcan port* but It never materialised -0 1 With 1916 calendars uow being i distributed we realize that the New Year la near. What will it bring? During the past twelve month* many important thing* have happen'd. including the ending of World War two If reconversion progresses a* it should the next few weeks, look for the busiest. ; liveliest year you have ever known i We cannot predict hut we Lei sure I there will be many news Items that will boos interest and that much of the success of each individual will depend on the effort made by | each. We hope to * rve you. —o We are well over the top for the Victory Loan if all pledges uow outstanding are redeemed. While we have until th- 29th to do this. Mr Grallker, county chairman. I urges that the pledge* be taken up a* soon as possible so we can anI nounce completion of the drive More Christmas. It ha* been wonderful. said the chairman and be and his assistants appreciate the splendid cooperation given by every one No county in the midwest ' has a better record than Adams ' and few can equal it. We have met every demand and every request. Hold on to your bonds for your own good They are saL and wiU gain In value a* the months and years roll by -0 Can't Dodge I tilts just possible that, although they certainly weren’t in Japan at the time, American political bosses of both major parties may have been among the victims of the atomic bomb* that fell on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Th; existence of political liosmo ha* always be-n made easier by Cleartut issues separating one party fro® aßateer High tariff verse* low tariff, and so on. Such i issuro have made politics easy. AU a politician had to do was to find an issue to which a majority ot the people * -emrd sympathetic | and then and a candidate to spearhead it. Usfortuuaiely. since that atomic-ally-lit high noon in Hiroshima, no iaaue lute «o < <>s*iatently and completely occupied Americans’ thinking as saving Buffalo and New Orlmm*. Tacoma and Jacksonville, from a similar fate. All the evidence suggests that a llepublican is just as afraid vt being vaporised a* a Democrat. and that a Democrat can to- slOUUcallr annihilated just as Instantaneously as a ilepublican. which mean* that the Arst likely-fouMiig bhl of Presidential timtosr who mmum out with an ta-

telllgent and forthright plan for saving tba world from destruciloi Is g ilng to cut sc, os* party line, so fast and so thoroughly ns to catch th- politicians with their Is sue* down. — o ——— I Twenty Years Ago Today * December 13. IMI was Sunday ,i -—a-o — — ro--— B —•• • —• • I Modern Etiquette «y ROBERTA Lil Q. I* ft 111-bred when -me M talk Ing with * person, fir thto portion | to show a ia-k of inteivwt In *h« is being said? A. Yes, this 1* one of the moat frequent act* of discourtesy Ti be a g<> <1 II tenor 1* one of th *un-*t ways to gain friends. anJ I* just as important *» to Im- si rood speaker, Q Whom should a bride giv- | preference a* a maid cl honor at I her wedding? A Iler slater should to- given preference; otherwise, her most] intimate friend. q I* it in good ta*t<- to make, n rning •kmlhl calls? A. They are not popular. . —— o — — • * I Household Scrapbook •v WOBBRTA Lid — The Baby If the baby's stomach n fuse-1 to hold milk while he to teething I beat the white of an egg until -tiff, add a f< w drops of orange I fulcv :ind a little sugar, and feed t to him with a spnon It i* pala ! able and will strengt iec him J Date Pie A delicious pie can be made by : filling a pie shell with chopped i date*, and a inartngiie made es -wo table-poo no of powdered *u--ar and two egg white*. Brown in i slow oven. Cutting Fur When cutting fur. never use the I‘sor*. An old ragor blade or a ery sharp knife should b- use to cut through the skin at the I ’Mick. O TRUMAN TO ASK (Turn To Page J. Column 5) »y the navy. Consequently, the President's re•onimetidatfons may no’ he too spe Iflc. but suffirfr-ntly general to al low congress plenty of elasticity within which to op-ra-c it finally -stabli*hiug a anlficd fighting force. _ o Trade In a Good Town — Decatur MUMI MW)*-*’ ro LITTU WoMUt rW iiMnY4iiNT» J-s* ' ii H«F« MfT - YX f-Q r I IB! Mt yI I I PAcsAßb SQOO 'J® 1 SRHTN MUG CO.

■»y the navy

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

W of the MoMEHT BY UNCLI 808 of tho Kraft Dairy Farm Service

T»ey tell me twn microbe* once 1 met each other and started up I a converaation. After a time, the tint microbe said: ; "Say. haven't I teen you someplace before?" t "You probably have," the second microbe replied. "I've been there lots ot times." A* the story point* out, there’s hardly a “someplace" that bacteria ever miaa. And unclean milk utensils offer a choice "someplace" for bacteria to Rather and multiply. Particularly. if you allow milk to stick to the sides of your pall* and other utensil*. So it will pay you to follow the standard recommendation* for cleaning your milk utentils that have been set up by all the colh-ffe* and dairy plant*. Here they are: Immediately after using, the utensil* tJtould he rinsed tn clean cold water. Than scrub the utensils tin* oughly with a brush, umng dean liot water and a good soapteß washing powder. After scrubbing, rinse tto-m in clean liot water, then drain and store litem in a sanitary place. JtM before the next milking, sterilize the uteawh with a hot chkrine solution, ft Tiif standard sterilizins solution can !se made by following the manufacturer's directions. For a good iwmitldet on thi* subject, write for I‘utdue Leaflet No. 2Goon "CJeanmg and Sterilizing Dairy Utensils", Extemam Service. Purdue L'mv*rsiiy. ixnaymß* ino.’ UY wtitt 818 at 500 Peshtigo Ct.. Chicago RO, 111., and ask for "Car* <rf MRk «a the Farm." It will be sent to you srilhout charge. I used to lißve • Rico head of hair. Than aomwthlmfl I*n<M*fca<* she "h" out of it and now 1 have a nice head of airAll of which is neither hair nor there, except that it gives me an opportunity to aay that your dairy utensil* need air more than 1 need hair. And thßt's mying a kt. So one 4 _ '

•3S

PUBUSHtO NOW AND TNN BY TNI KRWSr FOODS COMPANY

o e*k 0 The People’! Voice Thi* eolwma tor tee tee el ear

reedsrs who wtok 10 Make s«gBMtteM ter tee peed or dtecuM queetteM of inter--1 oct Pleese sign your aame to , show sutbeatlclty It will set I bs used it yow prefer tket It ■ot bo. 0 0 Rev. Yoder Tells o« Trip D-ar Frtendo: It Is .tn « ndle*s task to write to our many friend* and *0 we are ■lending this letier to all of them - Church Page Sponsor!, Fluherinee Club aiembora, and friends everyi« here. We left Ohio October 18. arriving hero November 21 on the way 37 day*; we called on many nwwa papers enroute which accounts tor our long lime getting her*. From our cxr we made the following oljservatinns by states: Indians I* much like Ohio only having more -ouutry »cho-»<; llllool* has rich soil and large cornfields; Ml-uourl i» a state of mule*; lowa to a rolling prairie; Kassas (the eastern parti ha* modern tostui with wide str-eta and landscaped homes, and instead of our corn they grow kaffir corn which bears the grains In the ta>i*o|- Oklahoma nbound* In oil wells; New Mexico and Arizona are desert ntatsa but in them are found m;iuy tdace* of great iniere-it -Banta F* found-

of the best things you can get for the proper staring of your dairy utensil-. unleH you han a milk house, h an airing rack. This will permit the air to circulate freely in and around your dairy utensils while they are waiting to be used. One of the simplest plans for building g rack of this type come* from Alabama Polytechnic liutimte. It doe* not require much lumber mad call* for wire cloth which permin tho free cirastation of air and la also easy to clean. I auggest you write EatenMon Sstvicv. Alabama Polytechnic Inatitute, Auburn. Alabama, for • copy of tho leaflet trill ng how to build • "Sanitary Airing Rack for Dairy Utoneila."* I tmagme that sometime in your hie you have watched a Wackwmth shoeing horses. And yeu probably rtfllcfiWfT tnßl iw vOOH?C! iTIC ecu ml’ shoes from the forge by plunging them into water Even in the msdd! of the winter, with the temperature tar briew freezing, he never allowed the shoes to coos in the ah. That's because the shoes had to be cool-d qutcMy to be tn gvoa quality. Mflk has to be cooled quickly, too, Hit ie to be of good quality■ Even in the middle of winter, air-cooling to not fast enough. Water or an electrical cooler, W you have une, wril always do the job much better. Cooling fresh milk down to 50 degrees as quickly a* possible is an important part of your quality pn> gram Mhk thatis not cooled quiddy enough offers a Oat opportunity for bacteria to breed and multiply in a hurry; And, as you know. milk with a high bacteria count does not produce high doaiity dairy products. *NMli4kwe sawfly te • 8* dwrg* for /Lm/l iBo4-

ed by th* Spaniards claims to ba the oldeat town in the United gtatsa regardless ot St. Augustin** claim; the painted desert la a colorful place the son'* r*r» being reflected by sand and stone to make the different bars; the petrified forest* with thousands of acres of *tons tog* made In th- past centuries, mineral water depositing different minerals in the wood space* and In time the woody fibers were dissolved The one outstanding <»!•«• luterest t« the Grand Canyon. 217 mile* long, a mile deep, from four to right mile* wide *IH> Mr»ta and formations of different rock which reflect many color*; Iwtow the Grand Canyon •everal hundred mile* to the Boulder Dam. the largest dam In the world backing up water which la directed to the aonthetß California and Arluna for ftrlsatlon pur pose*, the water fall to-lng utilized in transforming power which l« generated into electricity which by high tension wlrea furntshe* elmtriefty for hundred.* of miles in every direction; th* construction of thl* dam tv one of the great feats nf engineering in th* United State*. ft was a great relief to r. ach on? jratlnatfon; we parked our trailer in the first camp in southern California In San Hcroanlino. and eonld hardly believe 110 great contrast. We were greeted by waving (Palm trees; large beautiful rose* '«mil*d at u*: the wide street* with open arms welcomed u»: the l-altny air wa» a life elixir; th* 75 deerees of temperature was warm to soul and body; the presentation of fine fruit at roadside stand* and In the store* .barpen-J -ar eppet' - Han't, beat of al! th* prop! • seemed M> nappy to see a*, for "dl* taaee land* earhantmenf you know, uftvn we heard aom* owe say. "Abd yeu are from OM»? Whereabout* In Ohto? Did you know , . . There is •<» | lacs like Cnllfw nia for health, beauty, business, line clliMte. Menery and tbe many place* of greet interest and ; flee programs of alt kinds We hall not Attemp. to describe California In thia letter; If yoe want M to tell you about tbl* Ueavewty place we would he glad tp write mother letter more In detail- and let you knoar> It I* g*ld'. that • -isftor th* flrgt tjme .He cymbs is a knock-r. tke ocrond time He 1a a booeter and the third time he ta n liar •Iway* speaking In exaggerated superlative. This la my fourth visit. Sincerely, D.. Curl Yode • 6 6 6 COLD PREPARATIONS Liquid, Tablste, talvu, Note Drop* Cauttoo u*e only a* directed.

Coat Clearance I Sweeping redvrthms of the seaawn's finest Caala. Price* greatly reduced for immediate clearance. Every coat of the finest 100 < wool swede cloth*, perfect tail•ring and ail made by rehable manufacturers. It s the Gait Bur of the year. Buy a "Coat Gift” or for personal wear. ®

a e & !g I |H v tIHBi 1 - ff - 1. Ji > ■ -W \ ' K \ a \ * ■ I \ Mil 11 ?I I \ J w \

Niblick & Co* Li •

TWOJfOUNG iCowataeed Ftem PM,* Dae} Tuesday and Mrs Ammle Stewart. It, died the same day •' Lebanon of burn* sustained In a fire which destroyed an apartment building At least font other necson* were h<«pltalited with burn* iu Hie fa lai Hoosier fire*.

I-M B M-.M'M M M M M ■ ■ ■ ■ W B a , g # K Ladies Handbans I

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GIFT UMBRELLAS J Select front a new pcrouja of Myles*! New rayon taffeta • coverinffM, colorful plaids, check*, and color comhina- j liens. At popular gift prices! j 4-M..6-5®

Gift Aprons Sheer Ma I erlate, or Gingham. Color aright, coverall apronK. Piqaantlj pretty. I'nwMmNy hrge neterl foil.

NIBLICK & CO. ■■■••■•■••■•a • ■ • ■ acee

Choose Your Coat Tomorrow I AN ear Coals that ■ sold regalai up to <5 l| . 92435, now redoc- * k ed to * 9s S\ S ±?» 60 A Q 1 ! I iginaiiy priced up ■ *« $39.95, your • y choice in this clear- SB Br ance __.l. 'B Coats that former ■ JB H ly sold at 944.95 to *0 949.95, now offered at the .low price »f * • : K Children’s Coats I All prteoa areally reduced. Childrens 2 and : t’" , ‘‘- >■ W4a, (beys and atria), pood selection styles and com • , | bites 14 to JU, Vow choke I ’7.95 to ’12.95 II

THURSDAY, PECEMttttyJ

M»r-v oth», <h» *tat* r’-uted Ir ., M Indlaiup ,H, toS p'-’.. < 13 -f mt,,**’?•*■ Mroyod x »<■

I .eat her Handl, J N** top handle. (ir erarn, K s. imt Uppers' Other* iJJI ,M ’l 5-M I 7.50 I 10-oo I

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£ Gift I Hankie | i 89c MOies initial I Handkerrbwh I Mainly haM I <-mhroidwd I from Madtm 1 I'oriurai. Vi white. Urn >ire. full liw of initial'. ]