Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 44, Number 95, Decatur, Adams County, 22 April 1946 — Page 7
1 / s* MM *'O*# »* *.,.. * Hh 4» f ' . f from nine forest fires raging near Cape Cod. Mars, ns fifteen fire departments and 1,000 the flaniua under control Many summer > ■ -tU ;• > wen <!■ i ...ed as the tires swept over a
-KjiEASTER IS — |'r..»> > *Br l|||flV ■ I • r * ! II si^^H. . . r. i H Ibm> tE!) i !Lifr> i '’■ Hr Grouchy KIDNEYS — ■ I • iar For a . < . . to VI i ,vt < n
■ Claude Hudson * I Veterinarian ■ ■ Gottschalk Supply Co. Bldg. Berne, Ind. Phone 200 phone 1072—Sam Nussbaum Residence ■F Day or nighi calls accepted. S ■■■■■■■■■»■■■ ■ ■ ■■ “ r. - L -. IT PAYS TO USE \ ■4YFLOWER : ■ WALL PAPER H I he.' laat longer because the' arc C B I precoated which makes them last 7 ’ to light. 1 When you buy MAYFLOWER ( '■BF I * l! * pe! '’ .'<’u are sure the.' are cor- g ■M ri *ct in style. * J r MBilTricvd to Fit Your Budget: ( sane Drug Store j ■tch xs opening: Ks GARAGE & MOTOR SALES J ■ VERY SOON ■ Entirely New and Modern. a B *4 Mile South of Decatur a ML.. Phone 103. «
mI. The wellie included i.oi--. f<> tin* tiny tola. arranged in .< < groups, and th*- egghunt. which climaxed an afternoon as fun and entertainment for the children and their pa mils The egg hunt will be -tai- d again next Vear, condition |>< r 1 mining. members of tin- Imkstated. o - DECLARES IRAN I laiulinurd Vt»m i‘*ae Ourr case. Modgson also is tli> au'hor of the resolution calling for a tivenallon council sulx-ommittve investigation of I’lfland < <>nir i plaint against the Franco ieg|m<- . in Spain I The general ohjcitivi of tlii resolution already have won wide support in the council. which will I take action in it after Russia’ ■ demand for withdraw <1 of the Iranian case is dfspored Brushwiller Tailoring Shcp siorth Second SI. OPEN FOR BUSINESS We'll ,be glad to be of service to youL*— ■■
Jet-Propelled Plane ! Cracks Old Record | Averages 480 Miles Per Hour On Flight H .!-hington. April 22 <t T> All army jet propelled P-M» •'sh<Mit | ing star" flew from New York to 1 Washington yesterday in 2R millet... and 15 second- beating by nearly half an hour the previous lei-ord for tin- 22" miles, ( apt Martin L. Smith of Kidder. Mo. ami Wrllgh Field. <>. pilot of the propeliorless tighter plane, t o’ off I. >nt New York's L.iGuardla fl.-id at 3 59 p. m tEHTi and landed at Bolling army air held lore at I 2b: 15. This average ► po. | w.t about I'm miles an hour. Smith sliced 29 minutes and 23 seconds from the present official record of 5* minutes and 28 seconds >t by Maj. Alexander I’, lie Sever-ky on May I*. 193 k in a .tripped down. gasoline-motored < rafe he Seversky's m ord was beaten unofficially las' mouth when a TWA constellation made the New York Washington flight in 5o minute- flat Ralph t'ohen. official timer for the National Kronautics assmla lion, clocked Smith in at 2« minu< .nd 15 seconds, although army ~ir force tffi.e s saW the flight took only 27'a minuter. - - - o - w Trade In a Good Town — Decatur
••“-w. 2 * ■ - 4 I - . J »• .’ T ■M. • ' ~ ’ --a '/A " - - ,J£». V. •■ ‘ 1 IDLE BUSSES are jammed bumper to bumper in the yards of the Hint Tt< l!<y Coach Co. after 170 drivers and maintenance me” in the Michigan city walked out in protest over the discharge of a driver. Shortly before the trolley strike, a similar walkout occurred la Elints Peoples Cab Co., leaving the city's transportation paraI V zsd . (I nt er national Soundphoto) . K I I ▼ W . • rjjß ** L '"•■ -N • • • •“.’K ’■ L —- WITH TWI COM STRIKE ON, Frank Cook of Pittsburgh, his daughter Ivy, ?, and his wife, Mrs. Lottie Cook, get together to figure out i budget that will stretch their funds over the duration of the walkout Cook is employed at the Montour, No. 10 mine, of the Pittsburg) Coal company. A 12-year-old son, Jamas, is not shown in the fam Uy group. (International Soundphoto.
’ DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA
Balanced Budgel 1$ Urged By Governors Joint Request By Thirty Governors Hpringfleld, 111.. April 23—<VTP> - liepublican and D«-ino< ratlc governor* of 30 st a ten joined today In requesting a balanced national budget to prevent tax iutreaaea and inflation The requests were disebmed here by Gov Dwight H Green. It.. 111. They were made by 17 other Hepublican* -. and 12 Democrat* at I thi-lr reapectlve state capital*. Green ami Gov Ralph Galea. It . Indiana, Imuied stiiti-ireuta that ' were almost Identical. They charted the federal government with i "unaound fls< nl practices'' and urged that the budget lie balanced by July I. start of the next fiscal year, to insure national solvency. Green and (Sates said the proposed federal budget for the flacal year of 1,94t1-47 would add |3,t>00,. 000,OAO to the national debt. Gate*’ i stat' IfTnt said in part: “Vnsound federal fiscal practice* ate a constant menace to the constitutional position of our commonwealth and local governments, and a thicat to their liuanclal iwlven- • y" .Green said he was convinced: ‘ "That further delicit spending and continued borrowing are major threats to the nation's welfare; "Thai the alarming growth of i Inflationary trends is Increasingly ! aggravated by unsound federal tis- < il p.actices; "Thai the further use of -m h practices Is a constant menace to the constitutionul provision of our state and local governments, and a threat to their llscul solvency: | ami. "That if these trends and pract- . Ices continue, they will lead inevitably to im reused cost. Increased prices ami increased taxes; and this will affect adversely every in dividual in this country.'* Green's statement listed the fol i i lowing governors as indorsing his stand Chauncey M Sparks. D.. Ala lama. li<-iijamin T Laney. !>.. Arkansas; John ('. Vivian, It.. Colorado; Haymond E. Baldwin. R . Connecticut; alter W Bacon, R.. Delaware; Dwight 11. Green. F.. Illinois, Ralph M Gates. It., Indiana: Robert D. Blue. 11.. Iowa: .Simeon S. Willis, It., Kentucky; llorpce A. Hildreth, R. Maine; Weibert R O'Connor. D. .Maryland, Edward J Thye. R.. Minnesota; Thomas L. Bailey, D., Missr issippi, Sam C. Ford. R . Mont-
ana; Dwight Griswold, it. Neb-1 raska; Vail Pittman, D . Nevada: | Charles M. Dale, It., New Hamp ehire; Walter Edge. R., New Jer-| aey; H Gregg Cherry, !)., North Carolina;, Fred G. Aaudalil. R.i No:tli D.ik. .n < 11. hI Snail. It gon; Edwaid Martin. R. Pennsyl vania: Ransome J, William', D.. South Carolina; M. Q. Sharpe, R.. South Dakota; Jim Jame McCord. D.. Tennessee; Coke R Stevenson. D., Texas; Herbert 11. Maw D. Utah; Mortimer It Proctor, R.I Vermont; William M Tuck, D.j Virginia; and Lester C. Hunt, D. Wyoming. —o —- - Only Three Deaths Mar Hoosier Easter I Only One Death Is Caused By Traffic By United Press Only three deaths marred the Easter holiday weekend in Indiana although Hoosier highways Were choked with traffic both Saturday and yesterday. Aneth-1 er Hoosier was killed In an outslate accident. Only one death in the state was attributed to automobile mishaps , An 80-year-old Aurora woman. Mrs. Margaret Schaeffer, was killeit instantly when she stepped into the path of an automobile in Aurora Haiurday. The deaths of two men were still under investigation today i by authorities. Coroner Ralph Mattingly delayed until today an inquest in the death of Jesse Glazebrook, 34. whose body was found yesterday along the New York Central rail- i road tracks near Anderson. Railroad workers said they believed In- had been struck by a 1 train. At Hammond, police inveuhgat- j ed the death of Harold Swinehart 49. a railroad employe for 21 years. .Memiiers of a New York Central train crew found his body lying beside the track. They ■aid he apparently had been struck by an engine in the freight yards. Herbert Charles Kline, 2'l. Earl Park. Ind., was killed in an auto accident in Illinois, near Kankakee. The car he was driving struck a cement abutment. James Collins. 28. Fowler. Ind., his companion. was crith ally injured. The Easter bunny himself was held partially responislde for a casualty in Huntington. Two-year-old Janet Lou Riggers fell during an egg hunt in a park and fractured her leg.
■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ i OPEN WEDNESDAY 11 a. mJ I II I ■ ■ ■ COMPLETELY NEW AND J I REMODELED MODERN ■ ■ ■ 9 ■ ■ ■ ■ We are pleased hi announce that wg will again lie open for ■ • businenn, Wednenia.'. April 21. We have completely remodeled. installed new. modern furniture and fixtures and invite you l<> visit us for the finest foods in comfortable, clean and pleasant a I surroundings. « ■ ■ WE WILL CONTINUE AS IN THE PAST. SERVING a • * : Dinners - Shod Orders : • ■ ■ Steaks - Sandwiches ■ ■ ■ a We will be open and serve from 6 a. in to 12 p. m. daily. g ■ Sundays and Holidays from II a. m. Io 2 p. in. ■ and sp. in. to 11 p. m. ■ ■ : ★ : iEhler’s Restaurant! ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ • ■
y j * w ..., ~ o MAROARfT HURST, above, who posed as Hgt. Jerome Hurst, ha* btfen arrested in Kelso. Wash., for cashing bad checks. According to Vancouver, Wash, record*, the girl, disguised as a CI, married Mariya E Converse of Tacoma, Wash., March 4. (/nttrnttiontli Seek Hoodlums For Firing Into Homes Chicago, April 22 il'Pi High-1 way police searched today lor the men in ,i dark colored coupe who fired rifle and pistol shifts into 13 suburban homes during the weekend Police believed tile men might be the killers who fatally shot Nancy Lowrey, 12, Friday and wounded Donald Ostrand. 17. Saturday in a forost preserve o— -.— — Explorations of sulphur deposits liuve liven made near Thermopolis, Wyo. — .. . —. PRESIDENT CALLS H uullsaed Freda Page Oar I of I'onim'-ri-e Henry A Wailai - . with Mrs Franklin D Roosevelt and Herbert H lz-hman. former di rector' general of the t'nlh-d Nations relief anil Ivhabilltation ad ministration, serving as honorary chairmen Every city, town and village will lie asked to oct up receiving stations when- food gifts may lie I -ft. Proceeds of the collection will lie distributed through t'NRRA on th<basis of greatest ii<-ed. Meanwhile, the federal trade | commtssion chanted that ninny bakeries were continuing t<> waste , flour Dy disregarding the govern
■ v. r r I IF YOU'RI A STUDENT of physiology—or just a fellow who looks at the girU as they go by—you'll agree with dancer Flora Stuart that her legs are pretty ni<« and also valuable. Recently singled nut as the only woman in America whose legs possess the rare "third curve," which is located on the front of the leg just below the knee-cap. Flora has just insured her unique underpinnings for $1.000,000 with Lloyds of London. Sketching them in New York is illustrator James Bingham. (International)
moni ban on '‘conslgmneuf selllug." TnU the practice whereby iTidaller* ran u-turn unsold Imad to liukerie* without ciiarge. I In a repHt rviea*ed l>y Pi<--i-I dent Truman, th" commission said I roiintl' ss leaves of day old bread - still were being sold n« liveetoek feed or "thrown Into the river" an result of tlie practice Neverth'-less. Ihv commission , estimated that the govi rnmenl p oli'.biti'.n sue < eiled l i iv i n • I enough lir'-ad last yeai to give 1 loaves <-ai >i to 4»». 4i»7.u«yi» p.-r .enr Tlie laving* could hav< b'-i-n still ' greater, it oaid, il all bakers co-i.pe.ati-d. Tin- coiiiuii**i'iii called on tiaker • I official*, drivers and mailer* to r wipe out the pr»* - '<♦ prevent ■ needles' waste iii »-i*» current food emergency It al** ’ suggested that
PAGE SEVEN
Icongrem might look into the pj»isibilily <»( drafting L .d.iti'>u to ni.ik - the [>i thibi’i n permanent. "I lost 52 Lbs.! A WtAR Slit 14 AOAIH” W ■ MRS. C. O. Wtltt FT. WORTH «• tu««4 HM. \ 1,.... ■. — 5-. s .is _ I !>»»" 1 |_.t m».i. »»jw i-nur. there. weidMft W r.tn.r {■kJ| 1 ma II I AS lih S .nA 0.7.1.. .i d'• In- UM. ,1 !’♦ 1 / p.,.0a. I . •< I»IS »• m.t. 1 J L< tudiHind Plea »>th lhi< Awl. I’l.n »<w <tdr. t Ort BA m ...» 1 • >•■», '■''•'.’i MvL n.. lull.' ww. pl.lv. '«<«• lIVM > „..ra* *i T 4 ’•■i’L , w< ,t» IVa.ilMWßl'db. ia* SiMilb •»'«« <u. * "Tear out thin ad an a reminder.* >
