Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 44, Number 267, Decatur, Adams County, 12 November 1946 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
DEAD MARINE'S (Continued From Png* On*) guide secretary Byrura In his work. I pray for the little people. They ha»e taken too much wondered too long. Roon their hearts will be crushed with burdens they can't bear. I pray tor a junt peavw treaty to come noon. I pray that all might be fed and clothed. I <an't ace hungry people even if they were eiumie*. Hunger doesn't make go- d people It breed* hate. Ive been repairing clothe* Now I'm making qulltg that I can M-nd over there wherever they be needed. . . . "We have seven children yet J can't give him up—he la one of us. We have been a poor family .., but we were a happy family and laughter came easy to u* alllaughter and sympathy. for we knew what it was to go without ” The dead marine ws* Pfe. G<>r-
II 1 roooHtl . < i i WOODHUE... I Fez suits and sweaters and romance-getlers ..Faberge's woodsy, wonderful ' Woodhue" 9 • Cologne .. . 1 75 to 10 00’ Bath Powder J ISO’ Perfume . . . •SO and Id 00* p’wia km) . 3J(r y-ue SMITH DRUG CO.
PUBLIC AUCTION 10 ACRE FARM and PERSONAL PROPERTY hu< to Hl health. I. the undersigned. will sell at Public Auction niy farm ami tin- following personal property 5 tuib-a Eant of Monroe, Indiana, on stale road 121 or l'» miles Weal of Willshire, Ohio, on Friday, November 22,1946 Starting at 10:00 A. M. Real Estate sells at 1:00 P. M. — REAL ESTATE — 4o Acre Fann: Located on a good black top highway. This is a nice level farm with good productive soil, lb acres of woods and pasture, balance all under cultivation. improvements 5 room frame house with 2 enclosed porches. New barn 30x42 with aluminum roof; concrete floors and stanchions for 7 cows. Garage 10x24. Chicken house. Brooder house, and a wood bouse; drove well and soft water cistern Note: New 14 ft. built-in kitchen cabinet ready for Installation, lavatory, stool, medicine cabinet, 100 ft. sewer tile, new window sash • and plenty of new 8” redwood siding to side the house. This house I can be made modern with just a little labor as the alwive materials will J be sold with the farm Electricity available from either Indiana Her , vice or 11. E. M. C. | 22—HEAD OF CATTLE—22 Holstein cow, 2 yrs. old, bred March 28: Holstein cow. 3 yrs. old. J bred April 12; Holstein heifer, breed June 21: Holstein cow 3 yrs old, , bred September 8; Holstein cow 2 yr- old with calf by side: Holstein ; cow. 3 yrs old, bred March 18: Holstein heifer, bred May 30; Holstein , cow. 3 yrs old. bred June 28: Holstein heifer, bred July >: Holstein < heifer bred Heptember 14: 2 bred heifers coming 2 yrs old; 4 year- J ling heifers: 2 heifers. I* mos old. 1 yearling bull: 1 bull !» mos. old. < This is an outstanding herd of cat th. J HOGS AND FEED 1 Du roc Sow and « pigs ! 2(W bales Clover hay. wire tie: 1 : 50 bales of straw. < IMPLEMENTS and MISCELLANEOUS 1 10-20 McDeerlng tractor: 14" Oliver 2 bottom tractor plow: one ; horse wagon: Maytag motor and pump jack: Chief tank heater: Ham- , jner Mill: stock tank: hog house 8x8; 75 wood posts; lawn mower: < Harden piow; wire corn crib, Htglfi; some new and used lumber; , •tore wood. HOUSEHOLD GOODS M. W. Electric 7 cu. ft. refrigerator; table top auto gas stove; ; 7 tube Zenith console radio; Nappanee kitchen cabinet breakfast set; , New Home drop head Hewing Machine; 8 pc. Walnut dining room 1 suite like new; Htudio couch: 9x12 Linoleum. 9x12 Axminster rug: J Walnut occasional table; end tables; magazine rock; 4 pc. Walnut < bedroom suite with box springs and Innerspring mattress, like new; J Dresser; iron bed with springs and innerspring mattress; Round Oak < heating stove; Hgveoii pore elain table top 5 burner kerosene stove j with oven; many other articles. TERMS: Personal Property—Cash. Real Estate —1/3 cash day of sale, balance on or before January ( 1, 1*47. Possession on or before March 1, 1847. Ralph Egley > • OWNER : Jtoy A Ned Johnson— Auctioneer* Melvin Ltechty. Auct k Equipment , Bryce Daniels. Clerk. . 1 Lunch by Woods Chapel. . *
don Schnells, Co. I 3rd Bn . 4th .Marine*. His brother Lloyd, la now taking hi* basic training a* a marine at Han Diego. When one of Byrnes' aide* telephoned Mrs. Hchnelle laat night and a*ked permission for the secretary of state to read the letter, she wept. Byrne* told the delegates that America's greal nene lies in it* humble homed, and In »uch mothers a* this one who "prays tor our enemies and I* anxious to help then.” "May Cod guide us to grant her prayers.' he aaid. t When the American secretary had finished. Hu’slxu foreign minister V. M Molotov, Britain's Ernest llevln and other World leaders bowed for 4 moment in silent tribute to the marine and his fallen comrades. 0 Zollner Piston vs Chicago Collegians tickets on sale at Holt house Drug Co. (Jet yours now. 257-ts
Chicago’s ‘Man of Tomorrow’ mb " i W a fe. r ted *■. Bx ImM
Decatur'* high rating Hoy Scouts aud the many civic-minded persons who follow- scouting and aid in carrying out the organization* g'xxl citizenship program, will be interested iu learning that Paul Elsberry. 17-year-old son of Mr. and Mi*. Paul V. Elsberry, 5132 S. Fail field. Chicago, was selected ar "Chicago's .Man of Tomorrow." in a city-wide observance of "Trial Week" festivities. .An Eagle Scout. Paul received a certificate of honorary captaincy In the Capital Air Line* system and a plastic model of a DC-4 plane. In a ceremony at Chicago Muncipal airport. Eagle Scout Elsberry's father is national advertising tepresentaiive fur the Decatur Daily Democrat and a group of Indiana and Michigan dally newspaper*, that employ hl* company, Scheerer A Company, 35 E. Wa< ker Drive. Chicago, to represent them in the advertising field. The Southwest News-Herald, a Chicago suburban weekly, publishes the following account it; connection with the high honor awarded to i young Elsberry: "Official* of the Cuieago council, Elderly Man's Body Found By Hunters Albion, Ind, Nov. 13—(UP) Funeral service* were scheduled today for Albert Pochterman, 71. wh o*e body was discovered yester-
Need We repair and clean all makes of furnaces. Furnace ® e,t —trained workmen. All costs rurnaev based on actual materials used and labor. Repairs? Phone us now. /i7~vn — r“ 7—“tf Usvsr uncom^r * 2^e I "Th. Williamson Heatsr Compsny: g r-fT’T'rJ . W * h,v * • •Fdbamaaa Furntr Wr hut rd mir ■ Ijf:;; ff homr (f rooms sod brth) with J' z , ton-i B t CM / Iff I! /| ' an<f nover wti tbrrr r time when wr wtf not ■ ' ' "Kg- ■I comiortoblo—thonk, to th: her eootrt! ts ne I nu’ I I wasaaceaaary en.'y ’ r mrs . tr . a ' I I. > Signed—M. L, Davies, Indiana HAL’GK WILLIAMSON Heating & Appliances W FUBNACU Oecatur> <ndiana Furnaces Cleaned $3.75 up THE NEW 1947 I TELEPHONE DIRECTORY CLOSES i Friday, Nov. 15 > AU changes, affecting your present telephone ; service or listings, must be reported to our busi- ; ness office on or before the above dale, for ap- ; pearunce in the 1947 issue of the telephone directory which will be printed and distributed ;; the first of the year. I Please inform us at once of any change or correction you may . desire. I : Citizens Telephone Co;
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Boy Seoul*; of America, pointed out that I'-year old Paul Elsberry, selected from the rank* of the city’s scouts, is a worthy candidate for the title "man of tomorrow.” "Tall, blonde, and full of vitality. he is an all-around b »y, a senior at (rage Park high school who ha* achieved the rank of Eagle scout with two palms and the coveted scout life guard dudgnation. "lie |* an athlete and popular figure at Gage high, having football and track a* I,l* fa write sport*. He won the MSO-yard dash m last year* scholastic track competition and at the pre*, at time is on the football team. He is president of the senior cla*s. is a member of the Service club, and plays clarinet In the school band. “ I'm g dug to be a civil engineer,” says Paul very definitely when questioned alarut his future, 'and J hope to study at the Massachusetts institute of Technology." He ta a member of Scout Troop , 409. sponsored by the Gage Park Parents club, one of the oldest , troops in the country. day by hunters. Pocherman wandered away from Noble county farm nine days ago and had been aeen only once since then. County coroner John D. Hail I said the elderly man had been , dead of exposure since about November I.
Garrett Boy Dies First Hunting Day Garrett. Ind.. Nov. 12 HP) — The death of a *lxy«sr«ld boy today marred the opening day of the Indian.; hunting season. Melvin Leo Greuter was; *hot when a rifle held by his sister, Eleanor, 11, discharged accidentally. The weapon had lieen used on a hunting trip yesterday, first day of the rabbit and pheasant aeason. Deputy coroner Forrest Zimmer man returned a verdict of accidental shooting The sister aaid she didn't know the gun was load ed. Melvin died in a Garrett hospital several hour* later. The par ent* three brothers, and five ataten survive. in ■■ Q ■■■ ...... Your Community Fund desene* your support. Give generously. —— 0 Many Options Open On Vets Insurance Settlement Plans Changed Under Act Donald V. Smith, contact representative In charge of the veterans administration office in Fort Wayne, today urged veterans who have national service life Insur ance to give careful consideration to the settlement provisions of their policies Smith explained that the Incur ance act of 1848 opened a la:ge field of new settlement option* designed to provide for the various needs and circumstances of veteran*' beneficiaries. The new optional settlement*, which went into effect August 1. range from lump *um payments to monthly installment* during the Ute of the first beneficiary. Under the original law. the only settlement* authorized wen monthly income * r annunlty payments. If the insu.el veteran ha* not selected one of the optional settlements and die*, the insurance is paid in 3fi equal monthly Installment* to hio beneficiary. Smith Raid the beneficiary may elect to receive Installments over a longer period. Utider no circumstances, however, may a designated beneficiary receive a lump sum settlement unletu the Instiled selected that type of option before he died., One of the main advantages oft the new settlement provisions,! Smith said, is that veteran* can' now select a combination of pay- , memo. Fo. Instance, they can specify that a certain am ,unt of their insurance be paid to their beneficiary in a lump sum at the . time of their death and that the, remainder be paid in monthly installments over a given period or during the lifetime of their beneficiary. W hen selecting a settlement option for G. I. insurance, the vetetan should consider what bis beneficiary's fu'ure circumstances may be, Smith said. Veteran* who wish t > obtain full information regarding the new national service life insurance optional settlement should contact their nearest A A office. The VA office in Fort Wayne L located at 31ti Utility Building. 116 East Wayne Street. Office hour* are b a m. tz 4:3V p.m., Monday through Saturday. p Gi’-e at leawt one day’# lake home pay to the Com-
I *• * ——. =— • |Jr /Ki —■ JF J/l V| SELZ" £g| j| \ fr ' I jLttoi dmM '' m!S «»»ijiiMi ~. It is becoming more and more comSSEBSX— mo " *►»••• d«ya to provide for the X»—Z service before need arise*. nrfT *~ Th « modern way avoids oonfusien j and hM *y deciaione in time of bereavement, and is everyone’s assurSgßSEs^- ,nee th,t hi * or h,r wishes will be gggggw— csrried out exsctly as planned. "KatHt ■oust j. Swick ——Roster g. retesv gaU|B— £_* Sine* 18H _ l? .e—iimi' ,» 320 North Stroud * Phone 61 and 100 H '
New Technique For ]' Blue Baby Operation • < Help 'Blue Babies Avoid Invalidism Chicago. Nov. 12 (UPI-A new J' lechlnique in operating on the crippled heart* of blue babies • promise* to save most >»f them from Invalidism or death, three Chicago physicians reporied today. The physician* said the new tech- ( nique heretofore considered Impossible had la-en developed by f experimenting on more than 30 f dog*. Dr*. Willi* J- Stain** j Smith and Stanley Gibson, connected with Children's memorial hospital and Northwestern University medical school, disclosed the new surgical technique in an article in the journal of the American medical aasocintion. Their development wa* based on the first epoch-making operation <n a "blue baby" by Dr. Alfred Blalock in John* Hopkins hospital In Baltimore two year* ago. the physician* eaid. The new method—also performed by entering the cheat cavity—achieve* the «ame results without entailing "the hazard of an Inadequate supply of bßod to the brain," the physicians reported. The smcalled "blue baby” suf- | fer* from a lack of oxygen. The baby's malformed heart cannot pump enough blood to the lung* i to pick up the vital -’Xygen the body need*. A* a result, he has blue fingernaita, clubbed finger up*, purple lip*, a bluish complexion and bloodshot eyes. Iu the Blalock opeiation the subclavian artery is joined to either the light or left pulmonary artery, thereby providing increased blood to the lunm< The Chicago physicians found they could achieve the same re- , suit* by makiug a direct union or , connection between the body's ] main artery, the aorta, and the < right or left plumonary artery. In J this operation the blood supply to < ihe arms or the brain is not dis- ] turbed. The doctors said they used their ( m-w technique on three children, J
■ •4m*. * Hegek;ah’« curely right! 'Drink pure milk for health ■nd might'!”—lays Billy Break O'Day. Q. Motts fey
two of whom survived "It seemed only fair tn choose those patients whose condition was! such that without aid their futu e was hopeless," they said "Th.- 1 two children who survived the! iperation hnve been 4reinendou»iy benefited.'' The do tors said that the open, i tlon would not benefit *|| "b|n<children." but would help the u ,, jorlty to overcome Invalidism and' untldp.ite a normal ui.d reason 1 ably active life U. S. SUPREME (Continued from I'ags l) the sugar firm's attorney. n >n. I tended that the seizure violated the constitution by taking propetty without due process of taw The SEC issue wa* pr< *ented in a case Involving lEtoctric Bond A Share Co., and its subsidiary. |
” BBDF Ayl’ ■ j 4-. 11 ’ "‘'Hr 'fl i JiWiSv*- Ojr . iflL I THf SfCMT of what has caused Millie Fir.cman't Hl-.,, <■ y-flf the past year has been revealed, a dozen doctors malady in a dozen dirterent ways, and it wasn't until ai<mg that Milhe was cured. Doctor No. l.t discovered » ''-'SB lodged in the child's nose, and it was then her fathe the disappearance of a screw when he was repairing t year ago. Millie, above, shows her doll an tried us remedies for her ailment-Uie tir.y screw. clrcis abova. Refinite | • ® i Water Softeners! (A GUARANTEED SOFTENER; K ! Kl water heater! i few i I 4 » ■!! T T U * wMlm"» *!w 1M l I I II I W•w ■ | ■ CjMBI !B r 1111 l ’ ’ J! 1111 l ill Mk PUBLIC AUCTION! FIVE ROOM RESIDENCE J 710 Line Street. Decatur, Indiana ■ Friday, Nov. 15, • 1:00 P.l NEARLY NEW FIVE ROOM HOME, full '“X,M room with stool and lavatory, when tub U imtalled tn ■ be completely modern. ■ HOME IS IN EXCELLENT REPAIR. NEWLY DEfOJATjB floors have just been refinished. Nice I*>l J ■ 24x30. ■ IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. | TERMS: 15% day of sale, balance upon delivry of gw-1 tita. ■ IVAN GARWOOM’i J. F. Sanmann—Auctioneer I C. W. Kent—Sales Manager I Sale conducted by Midwest Realty Auction Co. I Decatur, Indiana. PUBLIC SALE] A* 1 have decided to quit farming I north <4 p»-rty for public sale at my farm u J... n „ u th and *i thence ’?» mile east or 116 miles north o - I ted! Thursday, November 14, Starting at 10:30 A. M. - * OR9 -\ B T. 250. w und.«“*l Matched team of Bay Gelding*. ■ _■ I „ CATTLE - . 1 p • Holstein cow. 5 yr. with calf by YearliM »j; j calf by side; Holstein cow 10 yr.. n >" 1 .. Mlllwl e ,«l* •»» Helfers; Two Holstein Heifers. 8 1,1 I HOGS < SHEEP 1 Eight brood sow. with 71 pi(>; White male bog Eight breeding ewes. J IMPLEMENTS , very . ivrn»f i 3 New Idea manure spreader; Ca»e *•'" ynder: * hnl hoe; Deering web hay loader: 8 ft. ** er '"* hnin ; f J grain drill; Deering 5 ft. mower; I’ l "'' ’ 41QV .| p|o<»- n harorws; Tandem Disc; 2 spring hsrrows. plows; Implement trailer; 2 farm *“«""* *' J MISCELLANEOUS , Hand corn »heller; 3 sets w ‘?j{ ( .. hi ‘ r "7''y' U e! bsr^ 1 *" | mill; Hog feeder; Feed cutter; Milk <a . | and many other items too numerous to ff/t* AUGUST BOHNBTERMS— CASH. , ' I Auctioneer—Chris Bohnke 1 Auctioneer—T D Sciueferatata Clerk—Bryce Daniels. f . Au j_ / Lunch by 8L Peter* Ladw a» -
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