Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 45, Number 241, Decatur, Adams County, 13 October 1947 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Incorporated Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter J. H. Heller President A. R. Holthouse, Sec’y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller .. Vice-President Subscription Rates By Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, *6; Six months, $3.25; 3 months, $1.75. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining counties: One Year, $7; 6 months, $3.75; 3 months. $2.00. By carrier, 20 cents per week. Single copies, 4 cents. Help Keep Your City Clean. It takes more than salesmanship to curb the appetite. — o—o—7 0 — o —7 Join the parade of champions Wednesday evening and celebrate the Moose victory. o o Enjoy these wonderful October days, a gift from the Maker, when everything seems to be in tune with nature. o- o Since Indiana’s Dr. Thurman B. Rice debunked any miracle forming qualities in spinach, we’d like to know if he is ready to start a feud with Pop Eye. o o The foliage in Adams County is as colorful as found any place in the state, nature lovers have a treat in store if they take a drive along the river road and on side roads in the various parts of the county. o ——o The agriculture department reports that the corn crop is faring a little better than prospects indicated a month ago. The production estimate has been increased and the harvest will be about 2,100.000,000 bushels. The country can use every bushel. o o H. Clark Springer, Republican state chairman, is seeing things differently than other political leaders. He declares that the party must battle with CIO workers and not the Democrats in the fall elections. Have the tickets been changed in his county? o o One of the best known men in the state passed from the scene in the death of Earl M. Crawford, former state legislator, political leader. successful farmer and banker. Mr. Crawford visited this county many times and had a host of
For the Children's Lunch Box
By Herman N. Bundesen, M. D. Now that schools have opened again, mothers are faced with the dayin-day-out problems of supplying a healthful noon meal which can be carried in the email compass of the lunch box. It is not always an easy one. In the first place, such lunches are usually packed just at the height of the morning rush to get. off to school when mother is likely to have many interruptions and other demands on her time. In the second place, her ingenuity is taxed to avoid monotony in the food served to her children in this way because it must be something that is easily carried. Well-Balanced Lunch Nevertheless mothers should realize that the child's nutrition will suffer if he does not have a well-balanced lunch. This meal should supply about one-third of the daily food. If it does not, it is very doubtful that the lack can be made up at the other two. Now what foods should a good lunch contain? First of all, the child needs meat or a meat substitute because these things contain protein for the repair of worn-out tissue and the building of new tissue. Sandwiches of meat, cheese or eggs will fill this requirement. Mothers should remember, how'ever, that the child cannot eat the same type of sandwich every day, sa that it is well to vary them as much as possible. Sometimes, for instance, give the child his meat in some other form, such as a piece of fried chicken, putting in a plain bread and butter sandwich to go with it Raw Vegetable The lunch should also supply a raw vegetable. Carrot or celerjeither plain or stuffed with cheese.
friends., in both political cans**. He died of a heart attack and was only 66 years old. o c European nations should quickly grasp the difference between our form of government and the Russians. The United States hands Italy 28 million dollars in gold which Hitler stole from that country, later captured by the American Fifth Army. Has Russia ever given anything back to any country? o o Commenting on the scarcity of nurses, the Indiana State Nursing Association states, “There are more nurses at work in the profession now than ever before. The trouble is that there is more hospital work. Industries employ more nurses. Doctors are employing professional nurses in their offices.” When this country has 60 million people at work, there can't be much unemployment. o o Two up and four down, is the standing of the Yellow Jackets, a very good showing in their first football season under Coach Bob Worthman. Victories, which are sweet to fans and players, are coming easier and in larger doses, as shown by the score in the Columbia City game. With two more games on the schedule, the Jackets stand more than an even chance of taking both. Let’s give them the old fashioned Brooklyntype support. o o As the flag-draped steel cas : kets with the precious remains of soldier and sailor, dead arrive in this country, Americans are again reminded that these men paid the supreme sacrifice for their country's cause. They are the real heroes. They must never be forgotten. As they are laid to final rest, each cemetery becomes more sacred in each community, a hallowed place enhanced by those who sleep under nature’s blanket. o o Results of the Connecticut municipal elections, where Democrats elected city and town officials in several cities for the first time in political history, show a national and local trend to Democratic successes in Indiana’s fall elections. Bristol, a city of 30,000 population, placed every Democratic candidate in office for the first time in its history. Similar results were reported from Wallingford, Danville and Ridgefield. In the latter town. Democratic selectmen were chosen for the first time in the town's 238-year history.
is quite satisfactory. Then, too, a! salad may be carried in a glass jar or a coered paper cup, such as those used commercially as icecream containers. A salad adds zest to the lunch and supplies vegetables which, inturn, furnish minerals and vitamins. Milk may also be put into a small glass jar with a tightly fitting cover. However, the child, in many cases, will be able to purchase milk at lunch time. Stewed fruit may also be carried in a jar if desired, but some kind of raw fruit in season is just as healthful and more convenient. Sandwiches, as I mentioned, have always been the main part of lunchbox meals, because they are easy to prepare and easy to carry. There are many varieties of sandwiches which may be used. The type of bread also may be varied, using white, whole-wheat, rye, graham or raisin. Os course, the bread should be spread with butter or fortified margarine. Here are some general suggestions which doubtless may be found useful in preparing the child's lunch or luncheon to be taken on picni&s or outings: 1. Wrap each sandwich separately in waxed paper. 2. Include a napkin. 3. Vary the lunch as much as possible by using different fillings for sandwiches. 4. Make everything ae appetizing as possible. 5. Include in the lunch all the essentials of a well-balanced diet, milk, vegetables, fruits and meat or meat substitutes. Such a lunch provides minerals, protein, vitamins, fats and sufficient carbohydrates or starches and sugar to maintain the child's energy
[ Modern Etiquette j By ROBERTA LEE I O O Q. Is it proper for a divorcee to wear the engagement and wedding rings of her first husband, after she had become engaged again? A. The wedding ring should be abandoned, of course. The engagement ring may still be worn, on the right hand, if the new fiance does not object. Q. What should be on the luncheon table when the guests are seated ? A. The service platee, silver, water glasses, bread and butter plates, and napkins. Q. When a man is signing a hotel register, should he uee the prefix "Mr."? A. No. Just sign, J. L. Porter, Cleveland, O. o O — O 1 Household Scrapbook ! By ROBERTA LEE I O n Softening Toothpaste When the top of the tube of toothpaste has been left off and the contents so hardened that squeezing it will punch holfts elsewhere. try holding it under hot water for a minute. This softens it and it will come out at the top. Stamps Stuck Together If postage stamps become glued together, lay a thin paper over them and run a hot iron over them. The mucilage will not be hurt. Setting Green Dyes To set the color in green dyes, use four ounces of alum to a tub full of water. o Oct. 13 — Lou Gehrig of the New York Yankees is voted the most valuable player for 1927. Ruth Elder’s plane “American Girl” is forced down at sea and she is rescued by nearby ship. President Coolidge speaks at Pittsburgh. A Buick car stolen from E. W. Jeffry, Berne, two years ago is recovered at Atlanta, Ga. Macy and Poling conclude 10,000 mile non-stop trip in Reo car. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Cloud of Fort Wayne are in Decatur. o
CHURCH NEWS First Methodist Dr. M. O. Lester, pastor, explained to the Methodist congregation Sunday morning the program of the reserve pension plan for incapacitated and retired ministers of the conference. Beginning next Sunday, October 19, 15 teams of two each will visit the membership of the church to receive their subscriptions. The reserve pension is being promoted in the whole state of Indiana, and every Methodist church is included in the program. The Niorth Indiana conferenice must raise a sum of $500,0'00 to enter into the plan. Subscriptions are to be made so that payment may be within three calendar years, making it possible for subscribers to deduct their benevolent payment in making out their federal income tax report. There is every reason to believe that the local church will meet its quota in this program. Decatur Methodism always measures up to | what is expected. The apportionment of the local Methodist church is about one half of the current expense budget. Payments are to be made in three equal installments, on or before the Dec. 15, 1947; second, on or before April 15, 1948; third, on or before Jan. 15, 1949. The general conference of the Methodist church has authorized and urged upon the conference the establishing of a ‘‘reserve pension plan” for retired and incapacitated ministers. Through the years the church has sponsored a pension, but it has been very fluctuating. Some years it was very low. In the last 36 years the rate of pension has fluctuated from $6 per active year to $25 per active year served. It is the purpose of the reserve fund to keep the pension on an even basis, give it a solid foundation, establishing continuity, ■ stability and certainty at the greatest possible economy to the church itself. — 0 District Meeting Os Funeral Directors Funeral directors, their employes and families of this county, will attend a district meeting in Fort Wayne at the Chamber of Commerce building, Thursday evening at 6:30 o’clock. J. Jerome Yager of Berne, is chairman of district six, which includes Adams. Blackfoi-d, Grant, Huntington. Wabash and. Wells counties. Dusty Miller of Wilmington, Ohio, will be the speaker. Q The light of a single 100-watt ftulb matches the output of 129 • candles.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
CIO CHIEFTAIN < Continued from Pane 1) said. A He also told the convention that “money is essential” and that the CIO political action committee must collect funds through voluntary contributions. Murray brushed aside talk of internal dissension between left and right wings and said he thought all questions could be resolved amicably. The CIO, he said, "is not only loyal to our country and our flag but to our form of government, our constitution and our basic democratic institutions.” Murray also urged the convention to go on record in support of
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the United Nations committee report on Palestine and to call for the United Stated to tak£ the lead in winning UN adoption of the report. The Catholic archbishop of Boston opened the convention with an implied attack on the Taft-Hartley act on the grounds that labor could set its own house in order. The Most Rev. Richard J. Cushing told the more than 600 CIO delegates that labor, educational, industrial, management and religious groups have “a common monitor, the law.” But the labor movement, he added, does not need “special monitors.” “Labor is perfectly able to set its own house in order and to run that house as well as any other
house in the American community,” he said. < The convention was expected to greet secretary of state George C. Marshall with a foreign policy declaration, parallel to Cushing’s views, and cutting a middle course between left and right wing CIO factions. Trade In « t.mra iown — TJeeatur O BOMB EXPLODES (Continued from Pnire ians could see their campfires twinkling across the desert all night. Reports of Arab maneuvers came from the border towns of Metula, Kefar-Giladi, Dan, Dafne, Kefar-
Blum and Deganiya. The report from Kefar-Blum said armored cars could be seen moving about on the other side of the frontier. A United Press correspondent at Kefar-Giladi saw ground forces maneuvering. The Habana, which claims to have a total of 75,000 Jews enrolled, alerted its followers to the center of Palestine, saying: “Os course these maneuvers at this time and this place are a continuation of the war of nerves started at Beirut last week.” o PRESENT BUDGET (Coutlnued from Pair- 1» e. Large contributions have been made by factory employes
MONDAY,
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