Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 46, Number 24, Decatur, Adams County, 29 January 1948 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

List Honor Students For Pleasant Mills 26 Pupils Listed On Term Os Six Weeks The hon the third six weeks ter 'trst semester ■at the Pie high school was annou. '<! y by Haneel Eoley, princ There are 2o otudents on the honor roll, which is as follows: A’s B’s Esther Foreman 4 Aleta Ratcliff 4 Ruth Roebuck 4 Marjorie Merritts 4 Robert Young 4 Barbara Wolfe 4 Roger Bollenbacher 3 1 Donald Sipe 3 1 Dorothy Myers 3 1 Bill Sipe 3 1 Lois Bauman 2 2 Margaret Luginbill 2 2 Mildred Deßoo 2 2

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Phyllis Heimann 2 2 Virginia Railing 2 2 Rose Raudtsnbush ’ 2 2 Helen Railing 1 3 Alta Jones 1 3 Charles Ripley 1 3 Patricia Gephart 4 Bryce Miller 4 David Ripley 4 John Johnson 4 Ruth Gephart 4 Gloria Merriman 4 Betty Roebuck 4 0 Nelson Appointed As Judge Pro Tern Nathan C. Nelson, local attorney, has been named judge pro tern of the Adams circuit court for the balance of the week. The appointment was made by regular judge Earl B. Adams. The February term of court opens next Monday. o A method of concentrating the feed value in alfalfa has been developed by research workers. Alfalfa juice is extracted and then dried so the powder can be mixed in livestock or poultry feeds.

One Minor Accident Reported By Police Bryant Man Is Fined On Speeding Charge One accident, one man fined and another arrested made up the report of city anti county police departments today from activities late Wednesday. Cars driven by Donald Liechty, 20, Decatur, and Jim R. Colter, 21, 1 also of this city, were involved in ! a minor wreck at the intersection of Rugg and Winchester streets about 9:45 o’clock last night. Damage was estimated at S3O. Officer Roy Chilcote, of the city 1 i>olice force, investigated. The Rev. John R. Bunsold, Bryant, arrested Wednesday morning by officer Dale Death on a charge of driving 70 miles per hour in a 30-mile zone on Thirteenth street, was fined $1 and costs last evening by justice of peace Floyd B. Hunter, when he pleaded guilty to 1 the charge. Robert Ebersole, Rockford, 0., 1 was arrested Wednesday afternoon 1 by sheriff Herman Bowman on a 2 charge of speeding. The sheriff £ charged Ebersole with driving 60 1 miles per hour on Winchester a street. He will be arraigned in jus- 1 tice of peace court this evening. c

Resigned Librarian Denies Statement It was erroneously stated in Wednesday evening’s edition that Miss Esther Eichenberger, local libarian, will return to Berne for a short rest following her resignation February 7. Miss Eichenberger denied the statement and made no comment on future plans. o SAYS ESTIMATE (Continued from Page 1) ministration’s estimate, a figure about six per cent less in commodities imports and 22 percent less in equipment. 2. The bank believes that exports from western Europe to the western hemisphere will be about $600,000,000 less than does the administration. 3. The bank believes the administration estimates of aid to Europe from western hemisphere nations is “high rather than low,” because it does not believe that $500,000,000 in credit from Canada and Latin America will be forthcoming. Meanwhile, Marshall was sticking to the administration’s estimate that $6,800,000,000 is needed for the first 15 months and nothing can be cut.

—o

NEW COLD WAVE (Continued rrom Page 1) Grande valley was covered by a thin sheath of ice from after freezing rains. One agricultural authority said he “wouldn’t give a dollar an acre for tomatoes,” and the citrus crops

Get Well Ksi QUICKER V Cy From Your Couth Xjpf. Due to a Cold mi pv’Q Honey&Tar I VLL I Q Cough Compound F"' I<= I SALE < * if usW! sUOS ONE PACKAGE AT qo > REGULAR PRICE - 158 * uhl PACKAGE £* SOTH FOR... 39 < Scheiman Bros. Market South 13th

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

also were feared damaged. Weather forecasters, however, said temperatures in Texas would rise slowly tonight and tomorrow. At Washington, the petroleum industry advisory committee announced a voluntary program to limit consumers wherever possible to two-week supplies on hand. The program also includes stepping up fuel oil production by limiting gasoline output and crude oil inventories. and working seven days I a week loading and unloading tank cars. ’ Approximately 200.000 workers were laid off in the Detroit automobile area at midnight last night when industrial plants shut down again in compliance with a request | by. the Michigan Consolidated Gas | Co. The company said it did not have enough oil to make sufficient arti- ■ ficial gas for the area. Domestic users may be hit hard “within a 1 few days,” the company said, unless they cut down wherever pos- j sible.

The East Ohio gas company limited (factories in northeastern Ohio’s heavy industrial section to maintenance supplies of fuel only. In Dayton and East Liverpool, no gas was allowed for industrial use and only limited amounts were available for commercial users, at least 20,000 workers were laid off at Dayton. Akron, Massillon, Cleveland. Youngstown, Niles and other cities. At Buffalo, N. Y„ more than 1.000 workers were idled by a fuel curtailment for industrial plants. The Ohio river valley was one of the coldest regions in the nation today, and the situation there was getting worse. More than 20,000 steelworkers, miners and rivermen were idled in .the Pittsburgh area for the third consecutive day. Eleven coal mines shut down in western Pennsylvania when ice choked the rivers and prevented barges from hauling out coal. Production was cut by an estimated 40,000 tons a day. Thousands of homes were without heat throughout the nation. In many cities, gas companies asked residents to shut off their hot water heaters and conserve fuel any way possible. The fuel oil shortage extended over the entire country. Even Texas, where most of the nation’s natural gas is produced, suffered from the acute shortage.

WHAT CAUSES EPILEPSY? > A booklet containing the opinions of fa* mous doctors on this interesting subject will be sent FREE, while they last, to any reader writing to the Educational Division, 537 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y„ Dept. A-493 Morning Glory Apron | 9091 ONE SIZE, MEDIUM J

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THURSDAY; JANUARY x