Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 46, Number 46, Decatur, Adams County, 24 February 1948 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
f 'iw ...t. ... EX-BULGARIAN party leader, Georgi Dimitrov, tells House un- ■ American activities subcommit- | tee that the United States is the | "Number One" target of Russian communism. (International)
LITTLE BROOK & TRELAWN FARM Holstein Dispersal Sale 2 — HERDS — 2 Sale at Little Brook Farm 1 mile south of Ohio City, Ohio Thur., March 4,1948 12 Noon E. S. T. 50—REGISTERED HOLSTEINS—SO Calf Vac. & Bangs Free 25 Cows, 10 Bred Heifers, 10 Open Heifers, 5 Bulls. DHIA Records, Suitable club calves. Write for Catalogue 0. H. High & Sons & Walter Arn Ohio City, Ohio Convoy, Ohio Roy S. Johnson & Son —Auctioneers Decatur. Indiana % Public Auction As I have rented my fields. 1 will sell the following personal property at my farm located 1% miles East of Berne on 118, on Thursday, Feb. 26,1948 Beginning at 10:00 A. M. This auction will be held under a tent in inclement weather. DAIRY CATTLE T. B. and Bangs Tested Five head Registered Holstein Cows, 2 yrs. old, carrying second calves, milking now. Breeding dates will be given day of sale. One registered cow with heifer calf by side. 5% gallon cow. One Holstein cow, 3 years old, 6 gallon cow. One Holstein cow, 3' years old, 6 gallon cow. One Holstein cow, 4 years old, 6 gallon cow. One Holstein cow, 3 years old. fresh February 20. One Jersey cow, 3 years old, fresh February 18. One roan cow, 3 years old. fresh February 20. One Guernsey cow. 3 years old, fresh February 18. One Holstein cow, 3 years old. fresh February 27. One Holstein cow, 3 years old, 3 gallon cow. One Holstein cow, 6 years old, 5 gallon cow. One brindle cow. 3 years old, 4 gallon cow. One Holstein cow, 6 years old, 6 gallon cow when fresh. One Guernsey cow. 7 years old, 2 gallon cow. One Guernsey cow, 8 years old, 5 gallon cow. One Jersey cow, 8 years old, fresh in April. One Holstein and Jersey cow. 1 year old. HORSES Team of grays, 8 years old, extra good workers. HOGS One belted sow; one black sow due to farrow in April. HAY AND GRAIN 299 bushels yellow corn; 7 ton early made timothy hay, baled; 75 ita'.es shredded fodder; 4 bushels DeKalb seed corn. IMPLEMENTS McCormick-Deering, 8-foot combine on rubber, with pickup reel, a 'good one; John Deere model A tractor on new rubber in A-l condition; John Deere cultivators; John Deere 14" plows on rubber; Olivet 14*’ plows on steel; John Deere 8-foot disk; Cultimulcher, a real tool; 2-afectlon spring tooth harrow. 23 teeth; Hoosier 12-disk drill; haj tedder; rotary hoe; Deering binder; John Deere manure spreader: New Idea manure spreader; rubber tire wagon with hay ladders ant grain bed; McCormick 6-foot mower, tractor drawn; John Deere 6-foo mower, horse drawn; Case Hammer mill, 14 inches, with sacker, liki new; hay rake; tractor grass seeder; milking machine; tank heater baling wire, new and used; bob sled; 1939 Ford panel truck: Nasi pickup truck; two-wheel horse trailer; corn sled; electric brooder; hard coal brooder; 2 sets metal chicken nests; platform scales; on< sdt work harness, collars; hog fountain; 25 gallon No. 20 oil; 50-gallot drum fiber pitch; milk cooler; pump jack; fuel tanks; hand pressun pupip; 45-gallon kettle with jacket; electric fly catcher. HOUSEHOLD GOODS . Lounge chair; 2-piece rose frieze living room suite, very goo: condition; walnut desk and chair, good as new; walnut writing desk two mahogany end tables and one mahogany coffee tabel, very goo: condition; walnut chest of drawers; walnut Jenny Lind bed; Magnc vox console radio-phonograph, mahogany finish. 10-tuhe and twi speakers; Philco table model radio and phonograph combination, mt hoeany finish, like new. TERMS—CASH. Andy Habegger OWNER Elleuberger Bros.. Auctioneers L. W. Baumgartner, Clerk. Net respoasible Tor accidents. Luneb will be served. 21 2
Southern Governors Fight Civil Rights Resist Proposals Os Administration Washington, Feb. 24 — (UP) Southern anger at President Truman’s civil rights program brought the first formal crack in the Democratic "solid south" today and there were threats of more to come. The most ominous warning came from the delegation of southern governors who tried — and failed — yetserday to force the Democratic high command to back down on administration anti-discrimination proposals. "The present leadership of the Democratic party,” the governors said in a fighting statement, “will soon realize that the south is no longer in the bag." Gov. J. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, who headed the delegation, said they would propose an early conference of all southern governors to discuss the most effective means of "resisting” the civil rights program. Perhaps as a prelude of things to
til it ? Wh \ lit Si • - Vilf II Ul I / * i JSsSBM ‘ % LATROBE, PA., HOSPITAL nurses display the three girls and a boy born to 25-year-old Mrs. Andrew Zavada by Caesarean section. Delivered a month prior to their scheduled arrival, the quads weighed a total of 13% pounds. They are reported “doing well.” (International Soundphoto)
come, the Democratic committee of Jasper ■county, S. C., formally quit the national party and called on the entire south to go along. It was the first formal break to result from the current dispute. H. Klugh Purdy, county Democratic leader, absolved Mr. Truman of responsibility of the civil rights issue. “He is compelled to get the negro vote in the north this year or lose the election. He has been forced into this by spineless leaders who lay aside all honor in any political campaign.” Chairman J. Howard McGrath of the Democratic national committee met with the southern governors for 90 minutes yesterday. Although he turned down their request for help in winning concessions from the president, McGrath said he believed the conference was a good thing and a step toward restoring party harmony. But the governors blasted his harmony hopes. Shortly after the meeting, they issued their statement of warning that the south was “roused" and would soon translate its feelings into action. “Each southern state, under the framework of an overall program, will work out the most effective means of resisting the proposals of the present leadership of 1 the party," the statement said, "but resist them we will.” Thurmond said the program would be worked out at a conference to be called in the near future by Gov. William Preston Lane, Jr., of Maryland, chairman of the conference of southern governors. An aid to the governors group said he believed the "die of the southern revolt is cast.”
Salesman For Berne : irm Dies Suddenly Berne, Feb. 24 — Charles Finn. 47, of Detroit, a salesman for the Smith Furniture company of Berne for the past 15 years, died suddenly from a heart attaclZ He covered the Detroit area for the local firm and was regarded as one of the best furniture saleemen in the midwest. o Don’t take less than the best . . . Don’t take less than a Lee Hat.—Cal E. Peterson clothier. 1 • • - " ’ - Im- : I STRICKEN with infantile paralysis last December, 5-year-old Jane Springer returns to New York with her mother, Mrs. Marion Springer, Bronx, N. Y., from the Sister Kenney institute in Minneapolis, where she was completely cured. The Child hid been unable to walk or use her right arm. (International)
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA,
Nine Berne Students Given Good Ratings Berne, Feb. 24—Nine Berne high school students received a rating of superior in the state solo and ensemble contest at Fort Wayne Saturday. Twenty students from Berne participated. Nine received an excellent rating and two a
fc - j *■ - J a I •; ' • Wb M 1 'W W r f ■... VISITING IN CHICAGO, Prince Peter (foreground) of Greece gets workout as Leon Mandel, Pessimists team member, tries to ride him off the ball at Chicago Avenue armory. (International)
SB • nfl i weeping the nation \ I*l • | I in on the excitement. See a new kind of motor car — IK @ Vy |gfi | I I*© • VF on ly fi ve feet from ground to top, but with more inside 1 VV I■ W* 111 W • head room and roomier seats than in any other mass-produced car built today! Q £ £ Hudson is the only American-built car you step down into when M A entering, not up on—yet it maintains road clearance. Hudson’s new, all steel Monobilt body-and-frame* is the only w v CwF w ff &ff S W motor-car construction that completely encircles you, even outw r w v w w side the rear wheels, with a rugged, box-steel foundation frame. A £ You ride within this frame—cradled between axles—not on top Jg of the frame as in other cars. And as you ride, Hudson’s comat, bination of unique construction and comfort features gives you gs a sensation of snug safety and serene, smooth going unlike anyW thing you ve laiowll before! V g w g Treat yourself to the thrill of riding behind Hudson’s all-new ” Super-Six engine — the most powerful six built today — or the ■ I • better-than-ever Super-Eight. Find out about automatic gear the car you step down into I “Drive-Master” transmission. P Step into the nearest Hudson showroom. You’ll see why, across the nation, they’re exclaiming, “This time it’s Hudson!” •Tred« Mark and Patent. p»"dmg HyMb < KI: v <■ ■ . KA AUTOMOTIVE TRIUMPH AT THE HUDSON DEALERS LISTED BELOW: “ ZIN ISM ASTIR MOTOR SALES Fust and Monroe ,
I rating of good. Those receiving superior ratings were Waneta Nussbaum, Delora Graber, Robert Schindler, James Shoemaker and Tom Zehr, all vocal solos, Arline Habegger and Ruth Inniger, piano solos, the boys’ quartet and the woodwind quartet. 0 Upheavals outwardly tell of a wrong condition inwardly.
No One Injured In Two Auto Crashes Two Autos Collide East Os Decatur No one was injured in two county traffic crashes reported today by sheriff Herman Bowman. Richard Allen, 18. Berne, route two, escaped unhurt about 9:30 p. m. Monday when he lost control of his ayto while driving on state road 116, two miles west of Geneva. The car plunged into a fence and bowled over a fence post. MASONIC Master Masons tonight at 7 o’clock. Lunch will be served. 1 Walter Lister, W. M. Dr. Clyde J. DeVaux Physiotherapist To Open Office In Decatur .-T r ’ —.—J Dr. Clyde J. DeVaux, Physiotherapist, of Fort Wayne, will open a branch office in Decatur to accomodate patients who have been coming to his Fort Wayne office for treatments, and other persons who may be interested in medical and general therapeutic massage. GENERAL MASSAGE is not a luxury. It is a specific aid in maintaining good health by promoting circulation of the blood and lymph, improving metabolism, as well as relaxing tense muscles and nerves. MEDICAL MASSAGE is a scientific means of overcoming pain and discomfort following certain acute ills and conditions, such as neuritis, lumbago, muscular spasm, facial paralysis, strokes of apoplexy, broken and fractured bones, etc. Dr. DeVaux will be available on Thursdays and Saturdays at the residence of Mrs. Wm. Parent, 317 W. Adams, Phone 227. Mrs. Parent will take appointments by phone in advance for the above mentioned days for hours between 9 a. m. and 8 p. m.
Damage to the auto was estimated at SIOO by the sheriff. This morning at 7:40 o’clock cars driven by Paul Bleeke. route three, Decatur, and Er.-in Zimmerman. 52, route one, Decatur, collided at a county road intersection one mile east of the city. Damage to the Bleeke car wa • estimated at $75 and that to th other auto at $65. Neither driver was injured. o REASSESSMENT (Continued from Page 1) with low valuations will come up and those with high valuations will go down. “Such an assessment should be equally beneficial to all types of property and should not materially affect our total tax bills,” he concluded. 0 LEGION TO REMOVE (Continued rrom Page 11 home. Lawrence Rash, post membership chairman, reported last night that 957 members are enrolled in the local organization at present. o Secaur-Upholstering Phone 1686 T
Public Sale! I As the farm has been sold we are quitting farming and will sell at • V< public auction on the farm located 5 miles North of Decatur on Road I 27, on Thur., Feb. 26 I Sale to Begin at 1 P. M. Prompt CATTLE—I 2 HEAD 7 Holstein cows from 6 to 9 years old, 6 gal. cows; 3 Holstein and hi Ayrshire cows coming with 2nd calves; 2 Holstein heifers coming with HH their Ist calf. These cattle are all pasture bred to a Holstein Bull and I could start freshening by day of sale or shortly after. Herd T. B. I * accredited. Guernsey Cow, 5 years old, due middle of March. 9 Shropshire Ewes, due to lamb in April. HOGS—I 9 HEAD 3 Brood Sows due to farrow in May; 10 shoats, weigh 75 lbs., i I weigh 50 lbs. — FEED — 400 bu. good Corn; 200 bales Wheat Straw; 15 Ton Insilage. IMPLEMENTS AND MISCELLANEOUS Allis-Chalmers W. C. Tractor with belt pulley and power lift cut I tivators; Avery two bottom 14 in. Tractor Plow; Dunham 14 Tractol I ‘ Disc; Massey-Harris Tractor Manure Spreader; McD. Side Deliver! ■ ' Rake; Dain Mower and Hay Loader; Buckeye 8 hoe Fertilizer Grain I ’ Drill; J. D. Corn Planter; Cultivators; Harrows; Cultipacker; Moline I Manure Spreader; Rubber Tire Wagon and rack; Steel Wheel Wagon I and box; Bobsled; Two sets of Work Harness; Grapple Hay Fork; Corn Sheller; 12x16 Brooder House; Hog House; Feed Cooker; Power j Sausage Grinder; Walnut Antique Bed; Milk Cans; and many othei articles. M| TERMS—CASH. Orley Walters & Anna Berning I OWNERS Chris Bohnke and T. D. Schieferstein—Auctioneers. 17 20 24 Edgar Krueckeberg—Clerk.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, i 94g
We can make IMMEDIATE I INSTALLATION I Iron Fireman STOKERS i 1 OIL BURNERS Williamson Round or Square Furnaces ‘ p For Gravity or Forced Air c PAY NOTHING NOW and NO PAYMENTS f W need be made until OCTOBER Ba lelephone us for a free heating lurv , y I •nd full information ‘ HAUGKS |j
