Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 44, Number 115, Decatur, Adams County, 15 May 1946 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

SPEECH STUDENTS (Continued Krom Psge Ono) Kchuite and Hebert Zwick; director, John Halil-immi and Dr. H. Frohnapfel ‘ .Mfmbpn of the pomlnailng

Two simpit stops in building Sturdy Bodies! _ Ji J fl X ’» RICH. RtC \ tqaßSfl " M JL OCJ! ; gHB YOUNG PEOPLE,«.specially those of grammar and high school age, an- prone to ha- deficient in stomach digestive juices and red-blood. In such cases Nature needs extra help. If an organic trouble or focal infection is suspected, consult your physician. Tissue foods must be digested and rich, red-blood must be present to build sturdy bodies. SS S I onic is especially designed (I) to promote the How of VITAL DIGESTIVE /VICES in the stomach and (2) to buildup BLOOD STRENGTH jfi when deficient. It helps nature work faster when extra help is needed. You can start today ... at drug stores in 10 and 20 or. sizes. S.S.S. Co. Tilil < a •UHO stutor HIMTH «»a (top StsIWAI! • SttAOV - StIONG I r c c ta m i r '“•ip' JoJ. J. IVHI V STURDY HEALTH

'Yf TO HOME OWNERS f • • x •; 1 i A safer -f nryrcS W 1 ““ %/e kaue 6ee*t, || lr<J EXCLUSIVE DEALER ffi | h £E [M Lennox We know good heating equipment when !*§£-* IIJ If) H we see it—and this new Lennox line is 1" L the finest and most complete we havS r .ver .eon. U|j j| . I '''J' i E Think of it!... 200 different styles and ill OL sizes of furnaces and air conditioners J Mr to choose from. Every single one I designed for its own special purpose by Lennox engineers who for more than 40 . years have pioneered the development w GA9 of efficient, LEAK-PROOF steel fur- r-HcgSßaA. naces and residential air conditioners. j!j With a line as complete and modem as this ... with our own proved success as I „ heating engineers and installers ... we . S I K can give you a heating system complete- I !y and perfectly suited to your home, at td g J M the price you want to pay. I HK* l MORE FOR YORR HEATIHG NUM $Am >/<. J Kasten Furnace Co. Decatur Branch Manager D. R. SMITH , 517 W. Monroe St. Phone 1440 , £■-— ..... u • .

I committee are: Watson Maddox. I IT. J. Metxler and Deane Dor win 1 - o ■ MORE CLOTHING (Turn To Paa* t, Column 4) for low-coat production of millions of girls and wuim-na atreyt

I diessea blouses, shirts, wilsta, ! rayon slips. and house dramwe. Hosiery: price controls have been removed from alia nonlery. But only three million pairs of edit hosiery are expected io be made available >o consumers In the next three month* compared with a monthly production of 54,0*0.000 rayon • and cotton shakings. Shoes: CPA recently• lifted a shoe order in the hope of conserving material and keeping a good supply of low-cost shoes on the market OPA is expected to I<‘hu>- another shoe order which will tend to increase the quality c.f lowcost shoes. A small price j in< reuse will be passed on to consumers.

GAY’S MOBIL SERVICE MONROE and 13th Sta. PHONE 318 See u« when in need of ♦ Complete Lubrication ♦ Oil Change ♦ Wash end Wax ♦ Fan Belts • Batteries ♦ Toes and Tira Repair ♦ Recspplng Service. PROMPT and COURTEOUS SERVICE

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Assail Requisition Os 1946 Wheat Crop House Group Flans Food Investigation Washington. .May 16 — (UP) Two farm suite Republican senators charged angrily today that government plans to requisition 25 percent of all 1»4« wheat marketed smacked of "dictatorship" and “totalitartnalom**. Their charges were hurled as the House sgrtcnltnre committee announced It Would open an Investigation tomorrow Into the entire domestic and International food situation to find out 'lust who is <alHng the shots on onr country's food policies.” The government’s wheat requls Itlon plan was assailed by Sen Clyde M Reed. R. Kans., junior senator from 'the nation's largest wheat-producing state, as "th-j, way of dictators In totalltailan states." "This drastic and far-reaching order was made without consulting either the producers, the grain trade or the millers." he said. Sen. Kenneth R. Wherry. Melt., Republican whip, said the govern inent's action was "dictatorial" and Mionld "convince us we are in the hands of totalitarianism.” He sold secretary of agricnlture Clinton P. Anderson had "gone squarely against a promise" not to requisition wheat. Vnder the program, a farmer delivering wheat to a country elevator would be required to Sell at least half of It outright Instead of permitting the elevator Io store It for him. The elevator operator, it) turn, would have to sell the government half of his wheat pm chase. The result would be that the government would get 25 (percent of all Xfttti wheat marketed. There Would be nothing to make the farmer sell the rest of this wheat. Chairman Chester C. Davis of President Truman's famine emergency committee praised the plan. "1 think it's a splendid thing that the department Is out ki advance with a program for the IMS crop." he raid at a news conference. lie .aid former President Herbert Hoover also L»vi>n-d the idea of taking the wheat at Its source and then conditioning the nation to get along on what is left. flop. Anton J. Johnson, IL. 111.. tesefOd that the action was taken with no previous consultation with congress. He said It Is time "for! congress to have a voice in these matters."

Local Man Injured In Auto Accident Robert Young. 32. of thi* city, wax (rented at the Adami county memorfcil hospital late Tuesday afternoon for injuries received in »n auto-truck crash north of Decatur. The local man buffered Itruixex and cut* alutut the face when hi* anto collided with a milk truck at the Hessen f'aescl church, north of Decatur on federal road 27 The accident Occurred when the milk truck, driven by Kenneth Trenary, Kort Wayne, started to make a left turn and the Young auto crashed Into the rear end of the truck bed Trenary wan Unhurt The force of the impart locked the two vehicles together. At ter tmlng separated. the Young auto wax towed by a local garage, toung wax brought here by a pa axing irtotorhl. Deputy Sheiiff For. dye* Harris of Allen county Investigated o J. Charles Brock Is Reported Improving J. Charles Brock. 73. veteran Decatur merchant, la reported recove Ing at the Adams county memorial hospital. where he wax taken Sunday morning after becoming 111 Hi expect a to be released from the hospital In two or three days.

TAKI cast Os VOUSS WITH

I L a Dott ’ t • ttumes *" with f 08? hard-to-ropisco Boovee Cloanor. Otvo tt only genuine Booth Comgray Service. Wo are the euthoriifd Hoover BMtko Agency here, comptotly oqwpptti with ipocM tooh and f enutne ptrtt. Work it quick, futrW<FB f VATFvrFICIy rCOnf/rrllCW*

SchafcM

ESISnh a A LI 'I ‘ . It’s smart to dtangs ywr jQMvm - uY® ■■ T motor oil NOW and it’s smart k nrl to change to PHILLIPS 66 |\ | ■tos 'Kg Sure, get thst old, tired winter rmxor oil out ol your crankcase. Fill up wi«h s fresh new J \sl change for the bard, hot driving ahead. K.# 1 \ \ Y Im An<> brother-here’s a piece of free advice VMW I I \ 19 tha* * uorlh something! When you change, \ ] \ 1 MUHIIEzH. M change to PMUifn Nd Met* Oil! It a a rugged, WA IBM ' I \ I atand-up-and-take-lt oil from "deep in the 1 \ 1 | BbjO 1 heart of Oklahoma." You couldn’t make a \1 \l gy \<3 O / amarttr dmngt! W | I \ \ Phillip fa

Alfred Rauch Leads Famine Relief Drive Alfred Rauch, Root township tanner, leads In Adams county In lib solicitation for famine relief, accatdlng to reporte received today by Phil Sauer, county ( hairman of the relief campaign. Mr. Rauch was named solicitor in section 5 of Root township. which Is a square mile of the township Including the town of Williams. JJe collected |.:i in cash. , This Is tile largest rural square mile collection made to date. Another square mile in Root town ship yielded |7 in caal, and a number of other sections reported better than average donations. <’ar| Fry, ht Mary's township. hue called a meeting of her workers and other interested Person* for Friday night at 8 o'clock 3! Pleasant Mills high school. At that time St, Mary'>v township will Im* organised Into sections for the drive for ftoney and canned goods Phil Sauer will be tho speaker. 0 Decatur Man Begins Penal Farm Sentence Delmar Fisher, Walnut street, was taken to Putnamville Tuesday by Sheriff Leo Gflllg to begin serving a 90-day sentence Imposed by Judge J. Fred Fruchte in Adams circuit court on charges of reckless driving and leaving the scene of an accident. The court imposed a 90-day sentence nn each count, but the sentences are lo run concurrently A fine of |lO was also meted out on each charge. o Trade In a Good Town — Decatui SOME PROGRESS (Cea(lamg Pres Page Owe) switchmen have since reif-we’i their demand sos |1.20 a day in addition to the »1.28 already awarded and paid. DENIES (Ceatlaaeg Pram Page Owe) bt considered a potential threat." Derevyanko charged also that MacArthur was falling to carry out terms of the Moscow conference by his refusal to give the control council more than 48 hours advance not ire on his directives. The Soviet representative said MacArthur’s shorty notice gave (ouncll members no time In

— ■!■■■ i f-geM MHr SRIOML: KOTOS ciMntd, tubrUated, new cartes broehee tastaSed MfTaTOK « mow OOU anaee tod iuUcated , Olli regtaeen IA6 dß»n«c CON. JWITCtt, ah steeMcm u». aeebone chocked SmMMIOt imprevet CUMMOTKIOW .odone an at aaariagiy low eooc.

Macklin Super Service Madison & Third Sts. 4

which to consult their governments concerning the various supreme command directives. Derevyanko requested that MacArthur xubmit to the council drafts ofo rders he Intends to Issue. The Soviet member said that the council could then discuss the orders at i*a regular bimonthly meetings. Individual j opinions, he said, could I* relay- 1 e<! to the general lfl ct/ev the' council reached no common de-’ vision. CONTINUE PROBE OF <£*Mlaa*4 Fr«m raw. Ow) Muncie on the day of hi* death have been verified here, but to date there has been no official cvi-' dence of an injury which he might 1 have incurred in the crash becoming a contributory facto, in hlx death. — . -o— ——— FORT WAYNE (('•■ttawed From Page Oael the new buAdlng. AFL officials, in turn, had dented the charge and set up a motorcade, threatening to run the CIO picket line. The state t gtopers assembled near die scene under orders of i Gov. Ralph F. Oates "to stand by in case of violenc e." 0 (CratteeW Fraas Png. Ora) nd. Byrnes said, in order to produce sufficient exports of foodatuffcs to pay for tha American I .imports Into Germany. They totaled l2tm.iMm.nhtt in the lawt year, he aald. Byrnes advanced Iris pr«»p"' , nl regarding Gerttaany at a threehour sexsinn of the council ttf, foreign ministers. , The ministers Were scheduled to meet again late today to take up Byrncn’ four-point pfbptwal fo'g the adjournment of th.- conference until June IS. setting a peace con i terrace for July 1 or 15. revision j ol Italian armistice terms and lu-' elusion of Austria on the program for the next council xexsion. SENATE PASSES *» • ((VHiilsMed Pram Pag* Oaa) group would yield a |mm>l of only 59. m ellglbles Selective service estimated that alrnut 50 percent would have to be deferred Itecause of physical or other reasons. The war department. even more pessimistic, predicted that only about 16 percent of the eligiblea—or alcout 10.000 men would be, fit for military duty. , • , Hershey instructed the boards to continue registration of 18 and IP year olds. The extension bill, described by even Its staunchest advocates as an unsatisfactory stop-gap. was driven through the senate when a threatened filibuster by Ben. William Langer, It. N. D„ ended after four hours. As the bill was rushed to the president's desk. White House press secretary Charles 0. Ross said Mr. Truman would sign the "bad bill" only as "the lesser of two evils" in order to avert the tonfusion that would result if the laW were allowed to lapse. The only outright opposition to the draft extenrlon was voiced by

Knapp Service 2nd & Jackson Sts.

Langer who attacked the army i caste system mid court martial procedure as well as peace time conscription and a variety of other subjects while adminUtra tlon leaders nervously eyed the

I 1 I/ -1 I sfeSn W. wßk 5 % i It takes only a few moments to look over the complete to of fixtures we keep in stock for your home, ind y#v wh I pleasantly surprised at the reasonable prices. Come is m see for yourself the fine values we offer.

WALTER PLUMBINGS HEATING CO. Plurnbinq & Heating Stokers 4 Oil Burner' Phone 207 Decatur. InJiana 254 N. Second Si

«a ■■ ■’■«■■■■■ ■ •»’ Now. . More Than Ever You need a New Roof to , bulldinxK that are hard to replH"There iff nothinr better than a Hbof applied hy our effperlenred appncatora. Call uo for free estimates. Arnold & Klenk i Phone 463 ■ ■■■ aruff o ■ * 11 * ll I I / St IF ML J . HMako yoof horaaj V ijjHgaa w bwk Kohne Drug Sto* 8

« RbNEsnAY. m a , u

Robert Kotin i’rebk. h(l

i clock llt;i laagrr h-mH : tirade ax eitdlenly i. g He quit at 4 13 p, m gjq. i xtalked from the chig|M I moment later th< wse» p the draft bill on » rok, m