Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 44, Number 101, Decatur, Adams County, 29 April 1946 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Roxas Election Is Conceded By Osmena First President Os Philippine Republic Manila, April 2» HPi ttrrglo ()*m< nu today conceded the elec !l<>n of Manuel \ Roxas a* the first president <>f the Phllipplnlt>pohll<. After »einlliiz >• letter ol ion Ki alulalion* to Roxae, Osmena Maid, "the people hUVM -pokell Mll«i w«- must abide by till- decision. m Thiii l« democracy.” (lament, Incumbent peealdent ol the < omiiioowriiitli. »»• trailing by more than ISd.IHMi »i»l ■*. »ln-n he coin piled. Iloxaa *aid he was happy for the victory < f the liberal party," and renewed his pledtre lo "promote the freedom mid welfare of till out people." 11,- Haiti his election meant that io- hud "won Ihr opportunity ami , the privilege ol wrruir the Filippino people dll: Illi; them* ari|,-|;il lime*." The Philippine* are st hedilled lo get their independence from tile I R~ Notice! We art buying all grades of paper stock at present market prices. Also want Scrap Iron. Rags. Rubber, Batteries. Auto Radistors, Brass, Copper. Aluminum, Zinc, Lead Babbitt, etc. We accept Wire and Tin—But NOT tin cans. We are also buyers of beef hides, calf skin, sheep pelts, tab low, fats, greases, oils, lard, etc. The Maier Hide & Fur Co. 71J W. Monroe St. Phone 442
- Vi<jnji «hk^ - W i v f h Rl till i ifliSan/ ZZs WATER W WEAT H E II PRO OF Two coats of aaamd—a thia 41m only 1/50 of to tach — that's all that protects your porch from the destruction of wear sad weather. Make it the beat protective film that cor devised—make it Kytaiu for loog life, self sotoothtaf booocy. JCyeefer Porch aod Deck Inaaael la easy to apply? It’s naif smoothing—leaves no ridges—oo brash marks. Dries ovoo> sight with a smooth beautifel Metre aod will wieheeaM heavy foot trafic asd rough treat. Available in eight colors. Kohne Drug Store
REXALL Ic SALE STARTS WED.
11 ntied Ftste July < Hossa called on nil FUipitiaa, "irrespective of Party." lo aid In •tretirtiieninv democratic Inslltu- | lion* and in rebuild Ina "front Ihr* ruin* of war." I '* Hawaii Ready for Statehood j According to an editorial in the Ja<k>otivill« iFla .» Tribune. Hu wall has lushly developed wealth ami resource*. a hlah quality of public education, ami make* u urouter tax contribution to the Fedetal government than some states. o — - Once Considered Poisonous The tomato wan first Introduced into the I'nlted States from Pent, For a lona period after Its introdmtion it was known as the "love apple." and »»< considered poisonon*. - — - - - u—-Anti-Slavery Settlers The city of Toiaka. Kansas, wa* first settled by anti-slavery people from the eastern part of the i’nlt- - ed States in INM, soon utter the 1 passage by Congress of the Kan-sas-Nebraska bill. o— !
'Trade It a Good Town Decatur REGISTERED HOUSTEIN SALE TVESIMY. MAY 7. 1946 at 11:30 A. M. EST. One mile northeast of Bryan. 0.. on Highway No. 2 and 127. At Sale Barn. 70 Registered cows and heifers, fresh ami close tip Young with quality. Cow* like. "Taylorholm Leapyear" with KOI* record of 15. fun n>s milk at ISI teat. Fresh by day of sale. Many others with just as a«od records. 3 Hulls with KO P records. One of the Ih*sl bred and show hulls, to he sold in this sale. Records on both sire and dam of 7SB to #<*•• It>* butterfat. 3w Canadian Grades, fresh and close up. Very good. This sale includes the Itesl cattle I have ever sold as lo quality and breeding All cattle listed are T. P... Ilanas and Mastitis tested. Many calfhood vaccinated. George V. Mellott, Owner.
OVER 100 MILLION BOTTLES SOLD! SIMPLY GREAT FOR MONTHLY MIX Lydia E. Pinkham'* Veg- ljble Com uound M>«a »<•«» than tetter* monthly pain shen due to fetncl* functional i*rto-iic <n»turbanc«*. I also rebecs* accompanying wgai tired, nervmi* cranky feeling*—<> .ueh U-autc. Taken F ' Pinkham'* Compound h«*je bulk up re*L-t«n*e ag*ln*i »urh uuuea. I Ilk sb" * sreat romaente tontcl
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NO M9FICTM OF DIPLOMATIC IMMUNITY is New York City traffic. Proving the point. Dr. Pedro Velloso, United Nations Security Council delegate, displays the dressing hiding lacerations of the face he received in ■ Uii accident Australian delegate Lt Col. William R. Hodgson kids the Brasilian about it st a council meeting. (International)
Fort Wayne Man Heads Anti-Noise Week Typographical Union On In Evansville
Terre Haute. Ind, April 29—H’. pl Charles Alb».* *d Fort Wayne Galay headed the ><-lalloti of Indiana Typographical unions a* newly-slecte% president. Other officers elected at the organization's 72nd semiannual con vention which closed yesterday were Ruasell Martin. Huntington; Howard E. Brown, South Bend, ami Robert E. Welch. Terre Haute, first, second and third vice-presi-dents. respectively. Charles F Letts. Evansville, was re-elected secretary-treaaurer Alliert succeed* Paul Pr<dchett of Terre Hattie as president. -* — —qe—— — North America's Birthright The St. Lawrence and the Great Laker are *he Midwest's and North America's birthright. They must be obtained and used for the American people Chicago Sun.
A KISS FOR FREDDIE’S D!?ID3
■M I jHMfek Mk\~ ILx hK Illw**
WHRS HIS FAMILY RANTS, Freddie Bartholomew. 22. and his 28-year-o!d thrice-married bride, Maely. are blissfully enjoying lite at her Fan Fernando valley, California, cottage following their elopement to Iz’s Vegas. Nev. Bartholomew, whose portrayal of "Little Lord Fauntleroy" 12 years ago knocked the movie going public for a loop, kisses his bride, above, while at the groom s home, his aunt, Mlm Mylllcent Bartholomew, who brought him to this country from England, sobbingly wii bed them happiness, saying, "I wanted him to marry soma sweet young girl his own sge." (Inirrnationtl Soumipboto)
jk’wT Ik hxmßSeut iplflbi THIS IS THE CONHfiINCi TAMS In the Palais du Luxembourg at I’cria, where foreign ministers of the world's Big Four nations are seated tn break the dradlocks over the drafting of treaties with Italy and other vanquished nations. On the left edge of t re photo, partially shown with his back to the camera, Is Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevui of Giyat Britain, while left to right facing the camera are V. M. Molotov, foreign minister as PaiMia. with two of his advisers: James Dunn of ths U. S. state department. Sen. Tom Connally of Tens*. U 8 Secretary of State James F Byrnes, and center front with his back to the camera. French Foreien Minister Georees Ihrtaiilt. Hadioohoto. flnuriwmnil)
DECATI'R DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATI’R. INDIANA
Evansville, *lnd.. April J 9 tt'Pl * -An anfi-n >'se week was under f way in EvaiMVille today * A committee of lor.■! burllleramen sit aside the we<*k of April -2. Mto May las "noise abatem *nt week” in national < ampi-tltl n with r other cities to eliminate unneces►ary noises. Last year the idly won an honorable mention rating. "Noise U a menace to the pub- . lie's health." A I’. Ebc.liu. secre tary-manager of th« member of , commerce said. "We do tod wint , to make this a one-weak drive. We I should make an eff rt to curry it on throughout the year." Q i,...... illil The Aequistion of Florida I That |>art of the I'nlted States i known as Florida became a part of l the nation in IMIS, when it was - purchased from Spain for the sum of 5 million dollars
, Production Os Steel j Shows Further Drop Chicago. April » • I’P' Th< I estimate*! national rale of steel I ; pitalm lion drop ped 4 percent last week and to 7» percent of capacity, a survey by the magazine uteel reveal* d Galay. That is the lowest national pro dmtion has fallen since the end of the steel strike, the mazazimuu Id. "Home districts have lu-eh able to maintain exceptionally high op erati ns during April, but the fuel supply is being exhausted rapidly 'and unless there Is < arly adjust- ' ment of th** coal dispute, the tonj nage loss in May will be fur greatler than the estimated Ims for I April,” the magazine said. — o— — —- Hunger Strike On In Landsberg Camp Two Persons Die, 20 Hurt tn Riot Munich. April 2#-il'Pl Twen■ty Jews today went on a hunger iatrike at Landsberg In a followup of yesterday’s riot in which two persons were killed and ab>ut 40 Injured and i'NRK ( officials warned that further trouble appeared to Im- brewing. The hunger strikers were In the camp jail of the displaced persona tamp at latndsh rg. Nineteen of the group were admitted to the Jali at theli own request in a protest gesture agaiiiHt the arrest of the twentieth person. Cause of the ilot y»-«ierday In wiiic.i the Jew* attacked German civilians on the laindslierg at reel* still was obscure. Repo;l, the L--000 Jew* lid the attach were ininimlzed by Lea Hrole, I NKRA welfare di:actor al the camp. Hrole i-itimated that several hundred Jew < were involved. Hrole said the Jewish anger against American military authorities wt , risint, again, t’. g. troops brought yesterday s demonstration to an end by firing over the heads of the crowd. Military government officials refused to comment on the outbreak, •laying they had been instructed jby a public relat'ons officer in 'Berlin to say nothing. Military , pokesmen at Frankfurt and HeidI eliterg a!>io refused to <omment. Among those stoned by the demonstrators was Cook Glasagold, .New V rk City, an CNKKA off! «ial who is himoelf Jewish. He wa* stoned but not injured when he mounted a truck and pleaded with the demonstrator.* to return > to their camp. Federal Department of Labor I '• • . . The Vnhed States Depai Unant ! of Labor, with its head designated as a Cabinet member, was etahlihed in 1913. during the first adtaint «tration of President Woodrow 1 —-o — Pumpkin was an old dish in tbe New World when Columbus came. Leave frozen fruit in the sealed container while thawing it as air tends to destroy tbe fresh flavor. If the package is borken, protect it from exposure to air. Wear and tear on blankets mav lu- lessened if a strip of soft, washable material Is basted over tbe top of a comforter or blanket so it may be removed easily for washing. The U. S. department of agriculture will reaume publication of its yearbooks of agriculture late in 194« or early in 1947. The first yearbooks was Issued in 1999. Fresh, green vegetables should be served while fresh Wilted vegetables lose much of their vitamin content.
(ROUBLE CENTS..- - . AND MIODLF nJ hunoaiy i' 'T r 'hltf'R J,L V' \ X-XT' ROMANIA / ‘ r (VTL.TiR VcXV A I iU JI italy v fW - i * a , f » l■» "■""'''••I h PHSM.SU Q *SX3 a * ab,a * ANGLO-IGVFTtAN "'J ] Jll I V \zpVx\— vjz3' »Mt «rt .MOW* »MMMUn | V"” I"'**' aeeasuaawßwwwww was / 1 0 tiCAt r OF Mil ta I, 1 THIOFtA ZTF octa* • I - * --881——— -Mt | jt - f WHIII TH! 810 TOUR CONFtRENCfS In Paris face many difficult problems initlvmg ana boundaries, the Tutkish situation presents future coni plica I tons, in th* dark srtu ibmG, the three buffer states of the Near East and Middle East. Heit the strategic and economic >n*.wJa Ruesia and th* western powers meet. Russia s claims on Turkey are considered by many to wiM with pouibls dynamite. The Iranian troubles have altvady become familiar to the U. N J? ish interest In the affalrt of Greece sIjO have been widely front-paged. Control of tbe a vital issue, and Russia has sought to press claim *>n Turkey s eastern frontiers Anowaoa them show how use of the straits cuts 3.000 miles from the supply line to Russia. f/nter*- ~-7
Bl( Food Spoilage Approxiniaiely one-fourth of all fcod produced in the country is wailed. Part is wailed by being left unharvested: more in storage and in wholesale market! through improper handling. Some is watted in retail stores but the biggest waste is in the American home. —- —o — Trade In a Cond Town — Der-s'in * MMswMwanwv Parker Lifetime Pens Make Fine Graduation Gifts or for personal use. 8*75 r„ 11*5® s.. Bower Jewelry Store N. Second St. ., iSiSBI OUT FROM behind her last mountain of dishes comes Mrs. Alice Lauber Wagner • Miami Beach, Fla., hotel HMM* M she quits her interim care* to return to the real estate business which made her a legendary figure In New York realty circles. In 1926, Alice came from Switzerland with 1200 and a one-word English vocabulary of “yes.** She built the combination into a business netting 175,000 annually until the depresslop and poor health halted her career. (International)
SMITH DRUG CO
DEMOCRAT WANT ADS BRING RESH • JOHN C. AUGSBURGER ■ —of Hartford Township Democratic Candidate For I % County Commissioner ■ Third Dtatrict g A life long Democrat, and farmer of Adams Csustj Kindly asks for your vote and support ■ at the primary election ■ Primary Election May 7. 1946. IP'M Mt TRADE IN A GOOD CITY—DECATUI ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ •■■■■■■■■■ ■■■■■■•■ I I Stand On My Record ; Os Twenty Years’ I Party Service ■ For over 20 years I have served in the ranks of Oemetnef as Precinct Committeeman. Town Chairman. Secretary of the ■ County Central Committee and party worker. • At the same time I served the public regardless o' f*V ■ affiliation in varioue capacities; the last few years so g officer of the Adams County Ration Board. ■ I have sought to give impartial and efficient _ all times. If nominated and elected as Jomt Represent** I will give honest and fair repreientat on to all my cone J At the Primary Election Vote for • Chris H. Muselman Democratic Candidate for ‘ ’ JOINT REPRESENT* T VE, ADAMS AND WELLS COl NTIES I Never Held Remunerative Elective w , *■ • ■■•’•■•■•■•■ ■ ■ ■» 11 TRADE IN A GOOD CITY--DECATVt Real Estate Auctioi IMPROVED 80-ACRE FARM I f llrfft®. Located S«fe miles cart and IMs mile* " ■a mile south of Maple Grove church. Tuesday, May 7, w r 1:30 P M. ,ml •!><* * Description—Good B room house, with IM-.-.;* % B e» i bank ham 45i«0 with sherl 12x45 and crib a ’lons In the barn: milk house Utmost ne* • fWrri . poultry house IO»M; drove well and ->• mostly * Farm—Consists of BO acres all under «*** Clay loam, located in a desirable, prosper ms " • school bus service, only a few miles froni • isw** ket. A real opportunity to make a good ““ ' aß til ** Sale made subject to tenant rights to <>■' '* 11. 1947, purchaser to receive the landlord s»n f ulr. *** TERMS—23% of purchase price cash of & when deed and abstract will be delivered he assumed. E. A. & L. E. McCorjn* the alictioof* f ' For further information call or re* Jeff Liechty. Herne. Ind., Auctioneer.
MW «»V. AHn
