Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 46, Number 35, Decatur, Adams County, 11 February 1948 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Warn On 'Hooking' Rides With Sleds City police today issued a request for the cooperation of parents in preventing children from ‘‘hooking rides with their sleds. Numerous complaints have been received by officers that the youngsters grab-1 bed the rear of autos to slide along | the slippery pavement on their feet.

V « JiW Loved \ 1 ( The standards of high Z 'VI v yrajjl endeavor and selflessj. ' iV 4 Win ness ••• ° f toierance if ‘ IT for h is f e H° wmen ’ b e " B u t ' JhF queathed to us by this F ? f » /MIRf great American are U brought forcefully to > [ | j our attentions, today, \ / f as the nation celebrates tSx r i : hiS birthday. I Adams SML W P° s t 43 By Sheets Cleaners 1 P YgS, AFTER WE'RE MARRIED I Jilft I • =h Ll WATCH MV PERSONAL APPEARANCES i ' - I MORE-SEND MV CLOTHES TO THE H W 7 ; -I cleaners-isn’Ttmat right, — \CV / \ fW whig HQ hFcREEPIN 6 ■ I l Tea * Cu P s ■ 9Hraiii/iB p ,nc h opp I 1 M fc wJl PAIRY PROFiTS B SURGE W cups DON I CHEEP/ This is a cross-seaion view of a long-tube, claw-type teat cup that has crept up on the teat and pinched off the milk. There goes part of the profits a it pinched off by creeping teat cups! j SURGE Teat Cups don't creep! The downward and forward Tug and Pull of the SURGE gets the milk! Maybe I can and maybe I can’t—but I’d sure like a shot at showing you how SURGE milks any cows you have to milk by hand with your present machine* When can I come out to your farm and do some milk* > ing for you ? SURGE STORE Corvin Briner «/ 2 mile North of Bluffton on Road 1 Phone 954

a,-, well as attaching sleds. Police pointed out the danger involved in this practice and urged parents to instruct their children to refrain from taking this risk. Parents can offord an invaluable aid to authorities by pointing out the danger to their own children, I officers declared, £\nd by endeavorI ing to keep in contact wdth their whereabouts. 11 ■ 1 i

— ! " FLORIDA ' WEST INDIES WASHINGTON. 0. C. M-fl WASHINCTON. 0. C. STATUTE MRES If -Ti~ tk o iw no KEY Y' -f A BOCA CHICA NAVAL f AIR BASE AND SUB- =T&.'^^= L: F | MA » IN t BASj J—- An OCIAN ~ —al St" u -=- <9 CHARLOTTE AMALIE Ty NAVAL 2j~unriT.iri.-inTJ ‘**ll & * I * / 1 ■= — l .- l Jamaica ~ ~^ s —•—'----i sT L ' L ’rar-l CARIBBEAN SEA “/T T" g — * Following air trip to Florida, Truman wiU board yacht for Caribbean cruise. > 4 ’ '("LT. - w !^<aiit * < : - _ o ~ TrnpßßWßi V oo«frWS|P: 1 • • •■••■ - ■: • •-■ ■ . IT ~T7 -•'... " - >s : ~... p™ call for week’s vacation at Key West (above) at end of tour. j COMBINING AIR AND SEA TRAVEL, President Truman will leave Washington, D. C., Feb. 20 for an extemled tour olUie Caribbean.' Arriving at Key West on the first day of his trip, Truman will fly to d Puerto Rico, Feb. 21, and there board the presidential yacht Williamsburg for cruise to the Virgin Islands, then to Cuba, from where he will fly to Key West for a weeks rest. (International)

Sub-Zero Blizzard In Western Kansas Sub-Zero Weather Montana Eastward By United Press A sub-zero blizzard roared through western Kansas today and down into Oklahoma and Texas. At Goodland. Kan., the center of the storm area, the north winds reached velocities of 40 miles per hour. Motoriste were warned to stay off highways as the temperature dropped to three degrees below zero and the driving snow reduced visibility to a minimum. No casualties were reported early today. The sub-zero weather extended from Montana eastward to New England. Bangor, mA, was the coldest spot ,in the nation early today with a reading of 23 degrees below zero. It was -19 at Custer, Mont.; -16 at Dickenson, N. D., -12 at Minot, N. D.: -9 at Philip, S. D.; and -6 at Akron, Colo. The cold area in the middlewestern states was accompanied by light snows but winds north of

Say it with FLOWERS For VALENTINE From 1 I f jCzM r C .Ti V PF* M i I - I T ' v • l I BBpibi & Ik a , *s* ; a-« LITTLE Melissa Ann Montgomery will have to do some tall growing to fit into the western costume her father, Actor George Montgomery, holds up for her approval. Singer Dinah Shore holds her daughter for the baby’s first picture at the couple’s ranch home near Encino. Cal. (International Soundphoto)

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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIAN

Kansas were not strong. The new cold which swept southeastward across the nation was expected to moderate considerably before reaching the eastern seaboard, the U. S. weather bureau said. Temperatures rose considerably in the gulf states today as southerly winds warmed the area which suffered near-freezing weather yesterday. At Oceanside, Cal., a heavy surf overturned five marine corps amphibious tractors during landing maneuvers yesterday, killing at least one marine and injuring at least 20 others. Another marine still was missing today. Marine physicians said Cpl. Sterling E. Dailey, 19, Austin, Tex., died shortly before he was taken to the camp Pendleton hospital. Four of the injured men were hospitalized. One was reported to be hurt seriously. A sharp earthquake shook the Tahachapi‘mountain area 165 miles south of Fresno, Cal., last night and geologists warned motorists that the quake would cause “considerable danger” of snowslides in roads in the region. At Cincinnati, rivermen stood a 24-hour watch on the ice-jammed Ohio river, waiting for a gigantic ice pack to break loose endangering river shipping.

The ice pack extended along 80 miles of the river and army engineers said rising temperatures today would increase the danger.. Trapped in the ice were a score of ore barges loaded with coal, numerous tug boats and hundreds of small pleasure craft. Approximately 175,000 industrial workers in the nation still were idle because of the acute fuel oil shortage and householders stormed emergency offices for fuel. The commerce department reinforced its embargo of oil shipments from east coast ports by asking foreign countries to cut. down their purchase of U. S. oil. The New York police department received 4,217 emergency requests for fuel oil yesterday. Q — UN To Carry Out Partitioning Plan UN Secretary Says Problem Is Serious Lake Success, N. Y. t Feb. 11.— (UP) — Secretary-general Trygve Lie of the United Nations said today he was determined to do “everything” possible to carry out the partition of Palestine in the face of growing Arab resistance. Lie said he made this clear to Great Britain in a recent private talk with minister of state Hector McNeil. The UN chief told a news conference he had established an advance mission of four UN officials and two secretaries, which will go to the Holy Cand “at an early date” to begin negotiations with the British government there concerning the carrying out of partition. Lie said he considered Palestine “a serious problem for the United Nations.” “It is my duty to do everything possible to carry out the will of the United Nations general assembly, as expressed in the Palestine partition decision,” Lie said. “And I intend to carry out that duty.” Lie said he had no knowledge of the policy the United States intends to follow when the UN security council tackles the question of sending a UN anny into Palestine to enforce partition. “I do not know what any governments will do,” he said. 0 Contentment is natural wealth; luxury, artificial poverty. — Socates. ARE YOU PALE WEAK.TIRED due to MONTHLY LOSSES? You girls and women who lose so much during monthly periods that you’re pale, weak, “dragged out”— this may be due to lack of bloodiron. So try Lydia E. Pinkham’s TABLETS — one of the best home ways to help build up red blood to get more strength and energy—in such cases. Pinkham’s Tablets are one of the greatest blood-iron tonics you can buy I At all drugstores. Lydia E. Pinkham’s TAatCTS

Movie Slump Hits ; Bosses* Salaries ; 1 Goldwyn Announces 50 Percent Slash Hollywood, Feb. 11 (UP) , The box-office slump hit the push- . lined offices at Samuel Goldwyn’s studio today, with every executive . — from Goldwyn on down — taking a 50 percent slash in his paycheck. It was the fist big-scale cut in movie - making costs since hard times, brought on by the collapse of the British market and the nosedive of ticket sales at home, hit the land of mink and imported limousines. Up to now, the big-wiga in the front offices have been chopping off the budget .by Oring messenger girls and assistant secretaries. Henceforth. Goldwyn said, all corporate executives working for him will find their checks will buy just half as much caviar come next payday. And that includes his own. He was putting teeth into his recent blast that movies will have to be twice a«s good and cost half as much of the industry will collapse. "I practice what I preach,” proclaimed Goldwyn. The wage-cut applies only to salaries. Movie executives won’t have to mortgage their swimming pools if they make movies the customers will pay to see, because they will keep on drawing dividends from the Goldwyn corporation. And the less they take out on payday, plus the, more tickets they ■ IM J '■! —Ji V DECLARING “the south’s back is , to the wall,” Senator James O. Eastland (D), Miss., calls for , southern mass meetings to create an all-southern political organization to withhold electoral votes from both parties. (International) o ’ Household Goods insurance. ‘ Kenneth Runyon, K. C. Bldg. 33t3 i ll"‘llllll ~11 1 l 1 s i zy ? i WINTER SPORTS MAY f BE COSTLY 1 ‘ If you or some member of your immediate family should injure someone accidentally, you might 1 ‘ face a costly damage suit. This is only one of the haz- ; ards covered by our Comprehensive Personal _ Liability Insurance Policy. THE SUTTLES CO. Agents Niblick Store Bldg. Decatur, Ind. Representing The /Etna Casualty and . Surety Company of Hanford. Conn. . Illlllftllllll

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY n, 15

sell, the bigger the corporation s profits will be — and the fatter those dividend coupons. Goldwyn assured his employes below the coupon-clipping class that the wage-slashing isn’t the beginning of the down-the-line economy wave. Their checks, he said, will be as big as they ever were. “My high-salaried employes have agreed to join me in an effort to cut down picture costs to a reasonable level,” he eaid on his return yesterday from a long ■■ acation in

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the highest quality l )i ctUl . ( ? all i sible.” . roll He said his corporate o{f .. I had taken the blow to their » ?| books with good grace b “,"’ they “know their future den™ upon It.” 0 __ The heroic can not b e COIIIIto nor the common The only weapon,, that win <», n live atomic force are tr:,th a n(i |*