Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 44, Number 7, Decatur, Adams County, 9 January 1946 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
TRADE IN A GOOD CITY—DECATUR :: A JgT~~ IO I . , A hit And miss method of repairing plumbing or heating fix- ; < ► tures is always costly. From minor repairs to installing a < J [ complete system, our policy is always the same — complete ( • > satisfaction. ! < • _____________________
WALTER PLUMBING & I II HEATING CO. ■ f Plumbing & Heating Stoker, & Oil Burner, B lit P^ on * Decatur, Indian* 254 N Second St. ,
SALE ANNOUNCEMENTS Al La Fontaine. Indiana HORSE SALE EVERY FRIDAY Hao 160 head latt Friday. Market *as active and everything told. (’at tie, lldß'. and Sheep. Every Tuesday LaFontame n on State Road 15. ten miles south o* Wabaih; eight miles north of Marion. C. W. SI’EK HER ROYAL L ALEXANDER COMPLETE ( LOSING OUT PUBLIC SALE I have u< < t-pled a |>osHl<m aa h*-id»t!iH!i for the Gb-n Miller Guernsey herd and will sell at puldli auction I miles xouthw-st of Payne. <>. on Road No .'*•"< or 24 mihg -mith and *, mile east of Edgerton. Ind., on the Paul line Hoad FRIDAY, JAN. 11,1946 Commencing at 12:30 P. M., E.T. SELECT HERO REGISTERED JERSEY CATTLE T. B. and BANGS TESTED No 1. HERD HIRE. Woll Enoch Sultan 44742 m. Born Dec. lit. 1941. Hix site ha* 17 texted daughter*, average 47! Pix. fat. Dam has 839 !t»x. fat a* syr old, and her sire ha 12 daughter* average 600 tt»x fat. This In a (Two Start bull, classified very good No. 2 Pioneer Arllfie Pern, t’ow Born Jan 3. 1943. Milking 25 tba. Due June Ik No 3. Betty Voiuntiet Dream, cow Born Jan 27. 1942. milking 25 tti*. Due May 2N Her dam made 446 3 Pat a* 3 yr. old No. 4. Daisy. Born Feb. 14. 1939. Record 451» !t>». fat at 3 yr. a, k mo. Due to freshen Feb 22. No 5. Volunteer Gentle Bonny, cow. Born Nov. 29. 1941. milking 30 Jlix. Due to calf August 2”. Her dam has 497 4 fat ax 3 yr. old. No. 8. Beautiful Shirley. Born (let, 16. 1943 (Being Registered! milking 22 ttix. Her Dam has 242 lbs. fat iztt day*, a* 3 yr. old. Due to freshen July !•». No. 7- Foremost Pioneer Beas, Born Aug 3!, 1941. Due to freshen Aug 21. milking JO 11m Her dam ha* 324.1 Fat In 21k days as 2yr old. No. 8. Mary Jeanne Rae, Born May 2<t. 1945. a real show heifer. Her dam in No 2 cow Maternal Grand Dam ha* 42M fat 270 day*. 3 years old No. 9. Yearling Bull, (being registered) Ready for service. His dam Tlldlywifik Bybil You'll Do. 500 tbs. fat. No. Iff. Red. a grade cow lm<- .March 20th Thia I* a high quality herd of tattle for both type and pr xluctiou Further details regarding the bloodlines will be given day of sale. HOGS 9 Feeder hogs about 80 lbs. each TRACTOR 4 IMPLEMENTS Allis-Chalmers W C. Tractor, in first condition. A. C. ."> foot combine with pickup attachment, first <■)»*»; A (' Cultivator for this tractor, power lift J Deere 7 ft. disc, like new; Kentucky in hole grain drill, good; Factory built roller In-arlng rubber tire wagon new tire*; Steel tire wagon A- IIP bed: Allla-Chaltner factory built buck rake; Me Deering aide delivery rake. good. Walking plow 12"; Merril feed grinder No. 2; Hand rorn shelter; Dt-Lavai cream separator. No. 2; Oil burning brooder stove; Waynette milk bottle) and capper; Green Giant pump jack am’ motoi; Double burner coal oil heater in cabinet; Perfection oil heater; Single corn cultivator: Oliver 2 row l»et plow , 5 ft. mower; Submarine tank heater; fin gai. Never-Frceae hog fountain. TERMS— CASH. RICHARD WINANS OWNER Roy 8. Johnson A Son Amts. Paul Stouffer Amr C. C. Lehman—Clerk.
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Judgment Awarded > In Circuit Court ■ SIOO Is Awarded For : Accident Injuries 1 Judge J Fred Fntcht- in \«iam» [ (Inuit court late Tuesday after • 11., I, awa l"l •' h’dcmeilt of II"" [ to til. plahtttff 111 a damage suit. ' , • " ■ 1 I'lelti oh ! au "I I-'- riw mH.* ; Bluffton last September. > The judgment given Esther [ Bleeke, aged 12. t f •-l 1 Bleeke, her father and plaintiff in [lihe litigation. Defendants. In the J action were Jessie anil Paul Dick- • i-ns [ In til. Hint, fil’d ye.triday and I immediately heard before Judge ['Fruchte, if was contend,d that the n defendants were negligent in the ’’operation of their auto, which col’'lid”l with the Bleeke vehicle. > The suit averred that the young ['girl sustained Injuries to her fare. II nose and mouth and asked for ['damages of I2<”> G. H’tny Blerly 1 represented the plaintiff and NevJ. rin II Schurger the defendant. i _ . Z . " . Fruit Production Spotty In Stote Lafayette. Ind. Jan 9— tl'Pt— | Indiana's commercial apple production In 1945 was the second smalllest on record, Purdu, University I reported today University statistician* uaid that : fruit produetinn In gent ial for the state was somewhat spotty. Th" peach yield was relatively high, and pears and grapes were about half the average crop. The Hoo-j taler apple crop for commercial pur- | poses was X2s.""’i bushel* last yeai 39 per cent less than 1941 and 16 percent less titan average. Purdue said <i • — CONTINUE DEMANDS ,« nuliaurd Krum Page Oust «hecked But others agreed With the President that the army was doing a g’Mal job They xympathiz ed with hmteslck Gia but thought mass demonstration* were carrying their gripes too far. Rep. James W Wadsworth, R„ N Y. aaid tie »aw no need for a < <mgr> xxional investigation. He added that "we must not get hysterical about thia thins" "Some radical got hold of those fellows in Manila and got them egefted," he said. "They'll Im- all ' right und it won't be long until | they will Im- hom " The President said In a format statement yesterday that this conn try cannot step up th" dkwharge of deinonstratlng GT. and still meet its obligation* in preserving the peace He *aid the wonder was that demobilization I* as far along ax it I* Nevertheh-.s, houoe Democratic whip John J S|Mirkm..n. 0.. Ala , predicted t lat the House Military Affairs committee would call on th'- War Department to explain why it was necessary to keep so many men in service. Sparkman, a membst of the com inittee. s H |d it would no*, be an investigation. ‘We will probably havq them (office:* in charge of demobilisation > itefote the committee and ask them, is it true you need these people," he said. Chairman Elben D. Thomas, D , Utah, of the Senate Military Affairs committee, took a “hands off" attitude Hl* stand wa* in the face of strong pressure by some committee member* to look into the controvmey. "The army already has demobilised faster than anyone in the army said it could,” Thomas said in that connection, a United Pre., survey *ho*ed that th« army, navy, marine corp* and coast guard hare discharged 6,342. it it men and women more than half their peak strength — since the shooting stopped in Europe and in the Pacific. The demobilization controversy, touched off t>y the ma«s 01 demon st rations In Manila and sustained by other protests elsewhere, did give some individual congressmen a further chance to air their pet dksc-harge plan*. There was increasing sentiment among some Republicans io declare an official end to the war. That would start ticking off the six months at the end of which the army would be obliged to release men drafted “ftp- the luratlon and six month!." Sen. Kenneth H. Wherry, R., Neb., said he might introduce such a resolution. OVER 100 MiLLION BOHLH SOLO! YIMPLV GREAT FOR MONTHLY MIH Lydia K. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound toss Most than relieve monthly pain «!wn due to female functiousl periodic die turbancei. It also reHevea accompanying weak, ’.trad nervous, cranky feelings cl atwb nature Taken regularly- - Compomid helps build i up raeMance against such distress. Xl l Milo • fSMfc totUfil
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, IM DIANA
FEAR FURTHER 1 rr **° ***** _®"2L_ i Kentucky, Tennessee. Alabama Georgia. North Carolina* South Carolina, West Virginia, and Arkanags. For lhe second straight day torrential downpour* that drenched the southland were accompanied by unusually hot January 1 weather. New Orleans had a high temperature of 75 degree* Savannah and Mac on. Ga.. reported 75. At Augusta it was 73 Mont- ! gomery. Ala., had 72. while Chattanooga. Atlanta. Charleston, and charlotte had reading* In the . high 6ti'». ' RED CROSS MEETING (Continued From Pag* Oa*> 1 Roscoe Glendccnlng. treasurer, ' gave the financial report, show- ' Ing that the local chapter had a balance, including U. 8- botuD and junior Red Cross funds, of |5,R43. The national chapter reI ceivel 119.959.79 of the 123.R1R37 war fund raised last March Mr Bell announced that the county'* quota for lite 1946 drive, which will I* launched here and throughout the nation in March, had not yet been received. Plans are being made for the drive and the naming of a chairman to head the county-wide cam paign will be named hy Mr. Bell. — 0— — •— - Democrat Want Ads Oet
A "Look at the Books" I In. risk m I OR • real itMi "A Finger in the Pie”? * tmi M Which is the UAW-CIO really after? Is It seeking facts-or new * th economic power? Does It want to know things—or run things? ± These questions concern you as well as General Motors. I I
For years the facts about General Motors have been made public. In spite of this, the UAW-CIO demands a chance to look at our books, with the hint that we could meet Union demands “if the truth were really known.” Ue have firmly declined to recognize this as a basis for bargaining: 1 • The Full Facts are Published i low much General Motors takes in each year-how much it pays employes—how much it pays to stockholdcrs-how much it pays in taxes—how much net profit we make—and many other facts are plainly stated in annual reports and quarterly reports. These are broadcast to 425.000 stockholders from coast to coastsent to newspapers and libraries. Additional copies arc free for the asking. 2. All Figures are TherougMy Cheeked i Every General Motors annual statement is audited by outside auditors. Similar figures are filed with the Securities & Exchange Commission. Does the UAW-CIO honestly believe that General Moton wedd Or could deceive these experts? I • 3a Baste of Collective Bargaining Is Defined rhe Wagner Act lays down the rules lor collective bargaining. These cover such areas as rates of pay, hours of work, working conditions. No mention is made of earnings, prices, sales volume, taxes and tte like. These are recognized as the problems of management
Claretce Zlner. tire and elMtrfc appliance deafer. Iteadel the past two drives. Mrs. Ruth Hollingsworth, ex rcutive secretary of the Red Crosa. slated that calls for service ami aid to veterans and their families were Im teasing dally, referring to lhe 1.20 cases handled during the past seven months. NEW OUTBREAKS (Ceatiawed From Page !>■•» troop* demanded a cut of 10 points per month In the discharge point system. Lt. Gen Robert (’. Richardson. Jr. promised to send their protest to Gens. Dwight D. Eisenhower and Douglas MacArthur. In Frankfurt Gl’a distributed ’handbills for a msss protest march and meeting tonight declaring "if it take* a demonstration to help u* we will give them one to remember." Gne handbill was stuck In lhe four-star license plat« of Gen Joseph T M< Narney'a sedan. STEEL WORKERS ! Turn Te p *** *' *» 1946 He declined to suggest « fb gore or to disciu* whether a prl<<Imost would avert the threatened walkout of 700.000 UHW ineml»ers OPA source* *aid there had been discussion of s price Increase of 1250 a ton. The Industry has Insisted that II needed an Incresee of 47 a ton t" I I'-tx at cm
rent wage levela and a further increase to meet any additional raise in wages. Although only V. 8. Steel was Involved In the panel proceedings, the entire Industry would be »L faded by lhe union walkout scheduled for next Monday. The Ualted Electrical Workers <CIO) has called a strike, effective Tuesday, of 100 000 members employed by Genrial Electric. Westlnghggde snd General Motors corporation*. The United Packinghouse Worker* (0. I. 0 t has set Its strike of 200.000 members for the following day. Labor officials believed that settlement of the V. B Steel Corpora (lon dispute would lead to speedy settlement of otheiw While the steel panel marked 1 time, the tad-finding panels hand ling the General .Motor* and oil industry disputes were preparing 1 their reports. There Was no pros ped of settling the strike of 175.I 0"0 United Automobile Workers I (ClOt in General Moton* plant* until after the panel file* Its report which Is eipeded tomorrow or Friday. The oil industry panel completed hearings yesterday on lhe dispute between the International Oil ' Workers Union (CIO) and 10 ma- ■ Jor refining companies. Chairman I Frank P Graham said the panel hoped to file It* report by Jan. 15 but might need more time. Like the CIO electrical and packinghouse workers, the automobile land oil unions hare asked for wage I ln<-reastes of 30 percent.
4. Something New has been Added I The obvious fact is that the UAWCIO has gone beyond its rim under the law-and b reaching not for information but for powor-not for a look at past figures, but for the />«*■ to sit in on forecasting and planning the future. | A “look at the books'* b a clever catch phrase intended *» *■ opening wedge whereby Unions hope to pry their way into whole field of management “| 1 It bads surely to the day when Union bosses, under thro t of strike, will demand the right to tell u'AoZ we can make. j we can make it where we can make it, and how much we m* i charge you—all widi an eye on what labor can take out of * * business, rather than on the value that toes Mo the firotu ( I 5 1 • This Threatens AH Business II th. Union can do tbi, in the cm. ol Gwnl Motor., it gl do it to every business in this land of ours. b Is this just imagination? Union spokesmen have said. “Tk Union has stated time after time that this issue is bigger th* just an ordinary wage argument, that it is bigger than tb» Corporation and bigger than the Union." I-or Labor Unions to use the monopolistic power of their vast bership to extend die scope of wage negotiations to Include nw* than wages, hours and working conditions is the first step to* l * handing the management of buaineaa over to the Union bosses We therefore reject die idea of a “look at the hooks” not because *' have anything to hide hut because the idee itself hides a threat to GM to all business, and to you, the public. A as General Motors . “«OM ANO MITKA TMmSS FOO MOM MOPM* _
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY, E [
DEMOCRAT WANT ADS BRING
dge ß I TO YOU
IBV ra* I oute I rlct I ★ Words without appropriate action are — mea-aingleaa. Conhdeocc and tout arc built I J,k«r on performance, not promises. To continue rs** "Jto to merit a reputation for reliability in this H ‘JjJ community, we consider each prescription .I. ruan * r Smit brought to us a challenge. state Only the finest pharmaceuticals the marke. 1 are u»ed in your prescription. It is filled promptly S “ re ll competent pharmacist and carefully double-chtdzt wit for accuracy. Then, only, do *e feel our obligauoc;Aiie« you fulfilled. eMr aid HOLTHOUSE DRUG ft ar.
