Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 44, Number 210, Decatur, Adams County, 6 September 1946 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Pabliaked Bvwy BvMiig ■leapt Sunday By TH® DKCATUR DEMOCRAT CO Uoorpw*:ad ■ntered at ths Dseatur. IM, Pori Office aa Second Class Matter. J. H. Haller Preaident A. B. Holtbouae. Sec y A Bus. Mar Dick D. Heller .. VlcaPrealdent •übaerlptlen Ratea By mall, tn Adama and adjoin tag eountiea i one year, IB; al* montha, till; 3 mont ha, 11.71. By mall, beyond Adami and ad joining eountiea: One year, |7; I montha, >3.75; I montha, 32. By mail to aervicemen, any place In the world: one year, >3.60; all montha, 11.75; three montha, |l. Single eoplee 4 eenti. By carrier, 10 eanta per week We sure *i»«d two or ilirv | Wr<‘ka "f warmer weather In lore. Jack Frost to work II -o He iin to qualify to vol. II you are not properly regutt< r> <! you should 'all at tile comity clerks office soon and that your raid lit In order. o o — Prize for nerve in llri'i S'* * •" I the Hungarian delegation to tin Paris conf'relic. Tin Huiigariaiis j waniHl a clause In-eried in the! peace treaty “honoring Hungary for her war effort." o <> Indiana han very few uin in [doyvd according I" Maurice Early Who han surveyed tin- nituaiion lie says there Is a lark of men in northern Indiana and tin utn’in ployed lift In southern Indiana i» no greater than it was on V J bay a year airo. o n Four hiat' b, New York. Nevada Vermont and South Carolina held political conventions and primar lea Iliin week in preparation* for the fall latnpaign Preliminaries will soon lie conclud'd and the main bout will be held November slh. — o o The county council has reduced the tax rate for |!«I7 six cols by cutting the budget. A few more cuta would bring the total rate for Decatur down below the three dollar mark but it will probably not be posaible. Coats have in- < reused for government the .same a in every thing else. o o — Willie H'-irens is legally sain affording to a board of psychiatrists who examined him for ever al days under Chicago court or tiers. Perhaps th« y caught him during a period when he was not having one of his "murder spell Surely, no normal person could have deliberately killed and robbed as he did. o o The world has not settl'd down according to reports. With riots raging in a half dozen countrle and with Yugoslavia strutting a round with a chip on her shoulder as other nations smile, with near revolutions on In Greece and Brazil. the future doesn't look too secure If t'N’f) tails we may have
Penicillin Speeds "Trench Mouth" Cure
By Herman N Bundesen, M. D. Bores m the month and. pur-j ticulurly, on the tonHln, plu- an Is offensive breath, ueuully add up! < in the doctor's book to trench Ig mouth or Vincent's angPis a pain it ful ami sometimes very obstinate ( ti Infection. ’ tl Its exact cause « not known, al I though two germs, a bacillus <ll.ll rod-shaped organism, nnd a splril <1 linn «r corkecrew-shaped germ, are believed to be responsible. Or- t tainly they can always be found in u a smear taken from the mouth n of a patient suffering from this 1 trouble. v Dr. Lewis 11, Bronstein of New t York City treated 105 patients t who had Vincent's angina with in- t jectioun of penicillin given into a r muscle, He compared the remits of this treatment with those obtained In a group of patients who t were treated with peroxide and u perborate gargles, dental atten- « lion to the gums and large dimes o of vitamin C, niacin and vitamin | B-l. t Penicillin Doses I The penicillin was given every c three hours for either 8 or 16 b doses, depending on the severity of the condition. At the end of the li course of treatment, smeans were ti taken from the mouth and ft was. b luuud that the U umber of bacilli Ji watt greatly reduced while the i w
lan atomic war long before »ny nation la ready for It. ■ 0 —<i The schools arc wll filled thia year with happy children and Hie work of Instructing them la tin- | dvrway With an excellent corps of I teachers and with all preparations • mid repairs to the buildings and grounds flnish-d. we are getting . H way t" a good start to prepare I the youngsters for the education that will enable them to render greater good to the community I oid slate. J —o --o — * Only two thousand faits raw Hie best game of the season at Chicago tho other day when the White Sox and the Detroit Tigers battl'd i sixteen innings with the Sox taking it I to 3. The game was tied ~i two all at the end Ot tin ninth and not a runner crossed home ! plait- until the sixteenth when the! i Tigers scored once and the Sox I pu-lied two across on three ! doubles. It s a great game — o-- o— - The took inatk't look it." big i gi st dip Tuesday since HU" and the queer thing üboui it is that t ; no one seems to be aide to say exactly what the cause was. Evidently a 10l of investors who . n holding on for several v. | v.hib the pricks gj-adtially in j <it ;i'> d det ide<! all ul once to cash * I it and taki a profit Large iudu- ; tri. wh,eh lt.*i th' ir st"-k • have been having a rather difficult time;' I V met ting demands ol increas' d "’*• , of materials and labor and may j mil show tin profits anticipated This may or may not enter into ( flic call ->• for (lie le.’ ill"! II will be intcre ting to watch the 1 results the next few day* ami to se» if r'loviiy follows the ill- i news. o o Taking It To Them Children of < anadiuti Irapp'-ts. I I'tmbei jacks ami miner in North- , cm Ontario have thrir schools I com* to them. Early in September seven coaches hitch' d to regular . engines and equipped with desks, black boards and books roll into - the "hush'" to be siiuu'ed to aid- ■ ings. Pupils in the area utrive by taitoe in mild wrath t on -now shoes or by dog team in winter. They study han! for om week, then homework to last a month is assigned and the train moves to another wilderness outpost. Each place is visited ten limes before the school years ends. The teachers lives al om- '-nd . of the school car, made snug enough to withstand temperatures as low as 55 degrees below zero I ' Supjtlies for teachers and pupil* J and tit'- t'-acher’s salary of |2,(MN> ate furnished by the provincial 1 government. > During the war Canada dis- . covered a high rate of illiteracy among h'-r woodsmen soldier*. The i ■ : i holds on wheels are designed to ' counteract this in their children
<pir:lii were completely alsoit. Al iwo-day intervals, the smeui were repeated and in no i.r-- were any of the cauf s ;'l ! ' germs found in these later exu ination-. Tbu»- with the penicillin treatment. It seems iha’ the Infer11 n is overcome within a few days. In the control group, the germs usually disappeared In about five days. With the penicillin treatment, the relief obtained seemed to Is? as remarkable as the rapid disnppearance of the gehns. Within 12 to 15 hours practically all pain wa - gone and the patient was able to take hssl by mouth. According to Dr. Bronstein, It tapes a longer time for the tonsil* to regain their normal appearance. Attention to Gums In the penidilindreated cases the average was about six days and in the patients treated in other ways, in about eight days. He recommends that. In addition to the penicillin treatment, some attention be given to the condition of the gums by the dentist. The |feniciliia can lie given satisfactorily by mouth. Il would appear that penicillin Is a very useful substance In the treatment of Vincents infection, but should I* employed In conjunction with dental measures* when the guau are affected.
AFTER ‘MATH" OR THE WAR
AFTER "MATH" OR THE WAR
S. pt tl. 1!'-G wax UtlMir Day I 0 I Modern Ettiquette • ' By ROBERTA LEE * - i' q Wh.n - "i ' dt"P* a knite". „ ■ ok. .ml th' host's, is serving I without the a sistame'd a servant.] 1 . "'toiild l"• ;’U‘"t pick io the dtop , ....I ~ni. I.I 1 A Ye*, a* quietly t'.s possible. | and wit .mt displaying embarrass p im nt. q Is it piopei to a woman to letiii-n th' w-dding Jir. M ilts when there is a divorce"’ A No; but -he should return the I imily he .Lome given by the relatlv, "f he hu-mtnd. q How uhotiid H Ilian 4 ( woman in amending a street-vat or: ’”**■ . i ' A By a light tomh on her cl-, bow. 0 Scrapbook By ROBERTA LEE • ' A Meat Sandwich lin. cold roast meat. 2 table.poon* peanut butler, 'v-cup finely ground raw carrots, salad drmtsing. salt, and lettuce Whip the peanut butter with salad dressing until i leamy. then mid to th« salted carr- is and im at Quilt Patterns "I i. using u good ink blotter wh.-n making a pattern foi cutting quilt block* B will rt ek to the material much better than paper. The Coffee Pot If the coffee put and the tea kettle are washed with the pots and pan- after each tneal no nedimenl will collet t in them. Aged Indiana Woman Is Killed By Train Shelbyville Ind . S'-pt « HP) S' rvit e* were arranged today for Mrs. Dora Flanagan. 73, who w.i. Injured fatally late yesterday when struck by a Big Four passenger train in nearby Fairland. SEEK H’untln.is'l From I'aa* One) slon with Generalissimo Stalin tn Moscow .Molotov returned only yesterday aß"f several days In the Soviet capital fl < ■ a*, understmxi the . 'K-duled at the i.i of vlolotov anil II was e*p,-cted a final decision on Hi general assembly meetir* would be reached. I N general sei rotary Trygvlo Die has an noiinced that in the absenie of a formal request for post|K)lieinent plans an going forward to
■ i M COME HEAR ■ THE MELOI)V M|TES ” 1 ! SUNDAY, Sept. Bth ® f■ k ,n Morning Service at 9:30 a. m. ■ B IWv r„Jr, ■ ■ It ..U-er H ,n Evening Service at 7:30 p. m. I *. T*. »jfl The Trio is composed of. Anne Lee Niccum. high ■ *■ and 7 year* o| d: Linda Heinmger, first alto: Ina May II ■ JR-sK tfl Niecum, second alto. They have been smgmg 3 part har j ■ mony for over 2 years. | ■ ITVIwmI CHVRC'H <)E THE NAZARENE ] Si “ ■ M 1 North 7th and Marshall „ Heratur. Ind.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. IN Di AM A
hold the meeting on the scheduled date. Httssta has favored ti postponement on ground* she does not have sufficient diplomatic personnel to staff two major international gatherings simultaneously The conference sessions today were marked by more bickering over Trieste. Hector McNeil. British undersecretary for foreign affairs, warned the Italian polltl<al commission that If it accepted e Yugoslav proposal which would pm Trieste for all practical pur].ose* under Yugoslav control Britain would reserve the right to review the whole Trieste issue polish delegate Wladyslaw Wi i.iewicz strongly backed the Yugoslav proposal.
MOTHERS... we’ve gone , to the Seat of the trouble/ \X f 1 And from flO* on, the “seat” is no trouble st all Hot, rubberized baby pants are now out of date, j Playtax baby pants overcome all the old complaints. They’re tissuethin, soft, non-chafing and cool to wear. Made of that amazing material, S-T-R-E-T-C-H to give y*>ur baby perfect comfort They’re waterproof, 1 .Iff and r ' eane< * w * tha Bec ' I ■ end rinse. No seams or ’ binding stitches, yet all C edge# are seamlessly rein- I / forced for durability. And * *’ \ how they wear! 4 sizes: /L small, medium, large and \i X- / estra large. Gift packaged 4 T \» «n silver color boxes. A tO ttcand rinte . . . end ths/rs mw -gam' g . p ants i ' 1 I Mail and Phone Ordert Filled • Niblick & Co.
Indiana University Delays Fall Opening — Housing Units For Students Incomplete 1 IJlmnnlngt'm. Ind. Sept « Hl’' . President Herman II Wells raid today that Indiana rniver*lty* tall semester opening would l»" delayed because ticw stud' nt housing units were not yet <-<>mpl"f'd. Classes had been •u hedultd to start Sept, 23. but Hie date was changed to Oct. 11 I" enable enroll inent of the maximum number of students ■with a minimum of housing Inconvenience." Wells said. The delay in achool opening will have no effect on the football schedule, he added. Coach Bo McMllllns lloosletw. defending big ten champions, open their season at home Sept 21 against Cincinnati, play at Michi gait on the 28th. at Minnesota on Oct 5 and then are hosts to Illinois Oct. 12. Wells said that new students at l-U now will atari their orientation period Oct 11. former Mudents will register Oct Hi and ciasses will begin Oct. 18. The opening of the Indian.' I" schools of dentistry and medicine at Indianapolis wll he delayed similarly because of incomplete housing vt the medical center campti' Extension center classes, however, will start as sclleduhd. •'The delayed opening." Wells said, "will allow ur to complete the major portion of the university housing program both here und at Indianapolis without resorting to makeshift provisions such as the use of gymnasiums The new I C housing program imlud'* IttM separate structures, including dormitories, aparlntctits and dining hall* At Lafayette, president Fi"de rick Ilovde of Purdue I Diversity said classes would open as scheduled.
CONSTABLE (Continu'd from Pagf D the face. . was taken I" a hospital where he *«« treated for a IIK . h knife wmtntl running from hi, to Hi* chiu. Hi* ‘ was not serious. Shortly before the alleged a ...uH Jaeger., I"- Iff'"’ , lltty „r sim. 11.11 shot himself In bis ivflhe. corom-r Frank Tyler said -laeg.nt, who had been Hl |(ir several month*, reportedly »n«. worried üboui hl* effort* to hull] gambling. He had threatened to; fire the entire city |'"H" f " r, ‘ unless they cleaned out all gamld Ing place*. Jaeger* M'cratary. Ml** Doris Million. t"ld jsdice he finished hi* routine lm*ine*s morning, then baked himself in. hi* office She heard a whot. she said, and summon'd p'dic chief Beu Wolfe and city < lerk treasun I James F< rrell. > They broke down the door and found Jaeger-v sl'tmpe.l over hl* desk. Il ■•l*' '.iLbel' pistol lit lib hand He had been shot through the li<-ad Tyler rul' d the death a sub ide THOUSANDS OF o'..ntln'l'd From Or"') would be laid off within a week Swift slaughterer! I"" cattle th *' week compared with I Mui la-’ week Wilson killed 25 < omparerl with 2.5W1 the week before. Milw.iuk'-e Wi*. Cmlahy said no employ ■ wi re laid off but many work'<l only 12 to 15 hour* this week as slaualiterlng wax <ut M) percent. St Ixiul- about a.mat packing house workers were idle. Armour and Swift wild they had "almost topped slaughtering' Almost no deliveries of fresh meat Were t' be made Hii* weekend M hob idlers had only uiff :r.'- "tie hand Ht Paul about 1 I"" • liacking house worker* were laid off at Swift. Armour and Cmlahy. Cnion official* expect'd addition al layoff* this we» keinl "f a many a* s'«i workers. Detroit few workirs were ■ laid off. and many pack'-i* hop'-d tor greater upplie* t"-xt week I If the meat does not appear, how ever, drastic layoffs were anti, i
lilawfoaUen’A Dauqmk •5 by t , V_- • -- --- -- - — ■■■■■ *■ II
j CHAPTER THIRTY-THRE2 | FLO 8A1!) a little cx< it • l!y, I j "Neil, why don't you write a bou„ about your own life?” j “My life!" Neil gave a short . laugh. “Yes! You make It seem so — |. ' rtch! The things you've said about i your grandmother and your relatives. And then your going to New York. . . . You said that that had ups and downs. You said something about ‘starving,’ you and C01e....’’ Flo stopped, seeing Neil's lips straighten. She remembered that, whenever Neil had spoken of Cole, she had said only so much and then abruptly had talked of something else. She'd do that now But Neil said, “I did get that erack off, didn't I? At that cocktail party, where I met you. 1 suppose I couldn't resist the opportuni ity to remind Cole of it It wasn't I actual starving, of course, but it was pretty thir. eating." Again Flo held her breath, fearful that Neil would pull her blind down, laugh, apeak of something else. I But Nell went on, In a tone of I figuring it out aloud, "Maybe I was a little jealous of you that day. You I were everything Cole likes — your I looks, your clothes, a sort of cool j j defiance about you. At least you | ; had It that day. Yes, I might have | l been jealous, even after all this I time." "Os me! How silly!" protested | Flo, warmly. “You, with yopr ij brains! Writing a book like 'Joyful I Fields.’" Neil said, with some disgust, "It | Is silly—but not for the reasons you I put! Let's sit down.” She dropped I down on the grassy slope beside the I road, circled her knees. “Why, I hadn't seen Cole for over six years! I'd been In Hollywood doing some script work and then I went up to ■ Carmel to write that book — and ' wouldn't you think I'd have got him _ out of my system in that time? 7 That’s what is silly!” “Oh, don't I knew!” cried Flo, 1 but so low that the other did not I bear it M Nell went on, In her considering I tone, "It may be a hangover from 0 the Idea 1 used to have that 1 had Ito take care of him. That's what held him as long as 1 had him. 1 knew it at the time. And it's what he came to hate. Naturally he'd bate it. . . .- Flo was marveling at the detachmint with which Neil could speak of It But to hear her defend Cole was a little too much. She cried, Indignantly, “I should think you'd have hated him, if he wasn't even grateful!" Neil shook her head. "No. I knew just how he’d feel—l knew him so well, you see. It never was with us the kind of passion that swept us off our feet—if it had been, it would have been easy to hate him and I then forget him.” “You mean. . . .” Flo’s voice . broke. Her and Dan's love for each Id I alhtr had sweat them off their feet
pated next we. k One plant plan ned to clog® B the supply does not improve. Ctdiimbu*. o iinlim officials aid 'W to 'hit already had hen made Idle. Large pn< kers said slaughter was off in to 15 per | cent from two week* ago. »— - SEAMEN UNION (Continued from Pige 1) , lore I’residetii Truman the pis | •dbility of vailing on the armed | lones to man troofi eupply ami t foreign relief v< *els stranded In Pat isle, Gulf and east 'oast port* In New York alone, 238 Ameri lean and mi foreign ships were lw>t iMI up by the walkout, and I N HKA reported that 125 chartered ship* in 15 |M>rt* had been im ; mobilized The lellef chips had 1 het n schedul'd to ea'ry aupplhv to Gieme. Albania, China and ! Italy. Forth" third -mice s.ve day, the! iLo thgflcs Herald Express failed I : to appear on the m-wr tnnds ae i<* nit of ,t stitk" of editorial and eommenhil employe*. Street sal" it tile "her d.iilit-* li touted. \ meeting was scheduled with I S. conciliator Hairy Mahoin lit' nt effoit to reach agtei-ment In
. 'ap • -w— — m , r DO THAT ' Decorating Mi; • SEE OBR WIDE VARIETY 0F... SMITH DRUG CO.
•■v.cit, 'l..it ktn<J o» -nt grow) deep r> '.i lit ya:" li re N I ; tcf’pe | to Rive her qu k l.iugl, "Hear me Hying dr wn tb« prir. ;■ pies ol love! As If I'd had a vast exp. in ner in all Its varieties!" Then the gave Flo a warm gl ice. "1 must Pel that we're really friends. Do I haven't stripped my soul like this to anyone before." Flo’s only answer was to nod her head. To say anything would spoil the moment. And the little silence into which each fell with mutual accord secrn«d to draw them closer Neil finally broke it. Sha sat straighter. "I might as well tell you the whole thing between Cole and me. Then you'd see that he would do what he did You know him well enough. I think, to see. He had a room in the house where I lived, sn old dump down on Bank Street in New York. We had met on the stairs a few times, talked some. But one night 1 heard him coughing h>* head off. I stood it until almost morning and then 1 barged In on him. I took over—he was a pretty sick boy for a week. I found out h° was down to his last cent, that he'd been haunting the booking offices for weeks on a practically empty stomach. When he was back on his feet, he didn't have any better luck I had a Job with a third-rate publishing house at the time, not much of a one, but It paid for my room and some food. I'd been cooking for myself on a gas-plate In my room—it was cheaper—so I cooked for the two of us Our diet was skimpy, but I put ten pounds on Cole that winter! 1 was writing evenings, so 1 got Cole to work on a play—he hadn't thought of it before. It was not so good, but It helped his morale!" She paused, loosened her hands around her knees, clasped them am in.
again. i "Cole was —sweet. He can be t quite a few different kinds of a person—but he was his real self, that little while. Then the next winter he got a part in a play that wax | , opening. It had a good enough run to put him in the money. He moved away from the Bank Street house ; The next year his own play came l out. That’s the story! And Cole I would tell you it’s ended, last curL tain down." I Flo felt a variety of feelings, but L indignation was uppermost and she 1 spoke It, hotly, "1 think he’s a heel!" - "No,” said Neil, with a quick t shake of her head. “He tried to pay e me hack—in money. He figured it I, out, what 1 must have spent. And 1 I wouldn't take It. That was where i I was blind—l didn’t see that it was the only way he knew to square vit all up—l left him feeling he was o in my debt I hung it around his s neck. So, to get free of it, he avoids eu me. I understood. I think I knew, d all the time we were together, that d it would happen. I was sorry we ran into each other, that day in e Stanton. It made him furious—and h you know now what it did to me! L Flo cried, almost incredulously.
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- it-,., '' h *»e to. e-prr„ n . / bi: j 'i i c hJEI H'illhmt*t MASoI h J Peaclii Michigan i vKh and Hile B 2-75 I "I h'i I’earhr* |<jfl 1 Bl'.hg' AMwl M \RKEI| i>u' Shari 4n» J
. ir. •. rJbeli® ■ 1 ''X" !.*afl !• 3 tnr* naj® . r. >'. .re ttM .‘ C > lie I ! ■ I for!.: J •■N i -.rouiatjO too: . ’;e ‘Q ■»«? "pi. .. ." X'J’OB "t.'iei it F!! her y.itio r* 5 the r< 1 1. "I vM ‘■'*“’’l wi’h i m—four ' kept It v - s’.fM'. l,< i n "P • ■■i!;:* • r A, <4 us. A:/' 1 broke it M was a tor. ftnisMag MJ ship at a h vp.tai he was g'Uig to » K-C.T.- ■ ■■ er ha 1 Hen doctor* was a -at ■.! tradltj®* carry on. He cowl with a doctor «»«»!! woul h.’»see mw-,f He didn’t have any _ have h id tn start. frea told him I riblv ar.grv—hurt ®" I think. If ' lf ou< I'.-nd'd love ■’ •- me h r nwhiP simply t «-•' ••Will, you mart- ' ing She finished : ?Len tforgolt«®gj [ Nell S»d quietly. , i haven't i faced .square . really I- , have thought ot y * i F'.<> t• h a- .1 Milt p J
to N< iling to her I* • , fended. thought of >'■' jnaftd* frankly. • • • of ourselves survive. P'^ P 1 -rm not with when its have always^ 0 all my l‘ fe •’ ' ty -< Neil P" t ?' ,r H t tD ;d L drew her (lon I the babes. *« a O ur way bacl ‘. She was ** that each l£ J L enough ' ntobPP f hakC l? She* herself- » ne »ot* r but to p'Jt. niiig. It the m ° r ht ,he That night cabin. seeM * life. 8-'-« u - bu,mnß To he
