Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 46, Number 65, Decatur, Adams County, 17 March 1948 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

SALE CALENDAR MAR. 19—Implement Auction. Decatur Sale Barn. MAR; 19—Elmore Harris, 7 miles west of Berne, Ind., then 1 mile north, then first house west. Personal property. Ellenberger Bros., Aucts. MAR. 20 —Merl D. Kraft. Denver. Ind. Welding and Machine Shop, completely equipped. Two Story Concrete Block Bldg, and 9 Room Modern Home. Midwest Realty Auction Co., J. F. Sanmann —Auctioneer. MAR. 23— George V. Mellott, la mile east of Bryan. Ohio on Rts. 2 & 127—78 young dairy cattle. Roy and Ned Johnson and Melvin Liechty, Aucts. MAR. 24—0. N. Smith & Son, 1 mile south of Berne on U. S. highway No. 27. 217 acre farm and personal property. Roy Johnson & Son and Melvin Liechty, Aucts. MAR 25 —Martha Freewalt, administratrix, sale of Estate. 1 mile east of Mercer, Ohio. Purdy and Cisco, Aucts.

DEMOCRAT WANT ADS BRING RESULTS R IMMEDIATE DELIVERY - on - Sa Maytag Washers, Bottle and Natural __ L Gas Stoves, Deep Freezers, Ironers. Arrived. Trade in your old one. Time Payments. Kitchen & Son Appliances 238 N. Second St. Phone 95 MODERN AS TOMORROW Personal Property Floater Insurance Kenneth Runyon, Phone 385, K. C. Bldg.

• • In Ping Pong or GASOLINE OS 7HATCOMV7S' V - v\ ’fe-i; V?\\ Vx. \ J ■’. ’Ski i f I #-<■->> M"'- JbcA / " PHILLIPS 66 IS COMROUED* FOR QUICK STARTS AND PLENTY OF POWER! It takes a pretty neat touch to keep that little white ball on the table . . . and it takes plenty of control to build a gasoline as good as Phillips 66, too! The trick we use is to control the blending of the high-quality components that go into Phillips 66 to fit your driving needs in hot weather or cold! Give your car a break with Phillips 66 Gasoline next time. The proof’s in * —k the performance! : ? ■ ?--y "VOLATILITY CONTROLLED" 70 GIVE YOU FAST STARTS! jg nu

Egley’s Knapp Phil L. Macklin Super-Service Service Co. Cur. 3rd 4 Maison Cer 2nd & Jackson First & Madison St. - Decatur. Ind. Decatur, Ird» Decatur, Ind.

i Miss Emma Reusser 3 Dies This Morning i Funeral Services At Berne Friday ♦ Miss Emma Reusser, 57, former Berne seamstress, died at 1 o’clock this morning at the Richmond state hospital, where she had been a patient for 20 years. She had been bedfast since January 1. She was born in Berne Dec. 17, 1890, a daughter of William and Sarah Kirschoffer - Reusser and had never married. Surviving are three sisters, Mrs. Adam Bixler, Mrs. Clem- Gottschalk and Mrs. Andrew Habegger, all of Berne, and a brother, Elmer Reusser, address unknown. Funeral services will be held at 10 a.m. Friday at the First Missionary church in Berne, with the Rev. C. H. Wiederkehr officiating. Burial will be in the MRE cemetery. The body will be removed this evening from the Yager funeral home to the Adam Bixler residence. _o CHURCH NEWS Church of God The revival meetings at the Church of God, with the Rev. Maurice Bergquist as evangelist, will continue tonight. Thursday and Friday evenings, at 7:30 o’clock. Rev. Bergquist has stirred the hearts of his audience with his messages and the uniqueness of his methods have won for him scores of friends. The public is urged to hear this young Evangelist at the church on Cleveland street, two blocks northwest of hospital. 1 Pleasant Mills Baptist The Rev. Albert Swenson, pastor . of the Pleasant Mills Baptist 1

j church, will conduct a pre-Easter evangelistic series, opening Sunday and continuing through March 28, with services each evening at 7:30 'o’clock. Special music will be presented at each service, and the public is invited to attend. 0 Trade iu a Good Town — Decatur it Ait rfw 111] h LsSJ INVEST IN U2£a BOIBs Lady’s Arm Was Bent Up Double Like A Jack-Knife One * lady recently stated that her arm used to become doubled up like a jack-knife. She couldn’t move her arm up or down because her muscles were stiff with rheumatic pains and the joints of her elbow and shoulder were swollen. She said she was ashamed to leave her house because people would stare at her. Finally she got TRU-AID and says she now j can raise her arm above her head | and the swelling left her elbow and shoulder. The awful pain and stiffness is gone. She is enjoying life once more and feels like “some other woman’’ since taking this New Compound. TRU-AID contains Three Great Medicinal Ingredients which go right to the very source of rheumatic aches and pains. Miserable people soon feel different all over. So don't go on suffering! Get TRU-AID. Sold by all Drug Stores here in Decatur. FILLED/J fcwr be beat/ 7r tuois I, PIMPLES AS IT DUES,-' mmß R//rs wMDitm)L.7tD?\ KLEfRfX MAKcS PIMPLIS , DISAPPEAR FAST/ f ( WOTS THUM AS IT Here’s How to get Early i Spring Delivery on a New EVIN R U D E Get in ahead of the spring rush when there are never enough Evinrudes to go around! Call and choose your motor now. A 20 C deposit will give you prii | ority delivery on a sparki ! ling new '4B Evinrude. Be I all set to go with a new i Outboard Motor when the I ! boating season arrives. ZINTSMASTER Motor Sales

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Lenten Service At Bethany Church A Lenten service will be held at 7 o’clock this evening at the Bethany Evangelical United Brethren church. A film, entitled “Thy Will be Done,” will be shown and the pastor, the Rev. F. H. Willard, invited the public to attend. r o- ‘ Agree On Expansion Os U. S. Air Forces 1 / 1 Blueprint Approved By Chiefs Os Staff - ... f Washington March 17. —(UP) — ■ The nation’s defense chiefs were agreed today on a plan for im- : mediate expansion of the air forces ■ and congress appeared ready to > back it up with money. Informed sources said the joint chiefs of staff have approved a 1 blueprint that would bring America's air power close to the 20.500plane strength recommended by the president’s air policy commission. At the same time, house Republican leaders pledged themselves to appropriate enough money to provide the armed forces with “absolutely everything needed” for the national security. They said they would urge the house to approve the full $11,000,000,600 budget asked by President Truman, plus an additional sum for air. forces expansion. Under an agreement reached at the recent Key West, Fla., con- i ference of military leaders, it was i said, the air forces would be almost doubled in plane potential and the navy’s air arm would be ; vastly improved. ; The joint chiefs agreed that the present air force is inadequate in the face of the increasingly serious world situation. It consists of ; 360,000 officers and men —40,000 t under its present authorized

strength. It is equipped with 10,800 planes, including about 580 bombers and 2,30 ff fighters. The president’s air police commission’s report called for enlargement of the present 55 air groups to 70 by 1953. This served as a basis for the discussion at the Key West conference. A decision to support an expansion program with funds came at a meeting of the house GOP steering committee late yesterday. Speaker Joseph W. Martin, Jr., told newsmen the conferees agreed that the army and navy must be maintained and that' the air force must be built up to effective fighting strength. “We agreed,” he said, “that we want to give the armed services absolutely everything needed to put the country in a good defensive position." Sen. Robert A- Taft, chairman of the senate Republican steering committee, already is on record in favor of a $5,000,000,000 air forces budget. That is $2,000,000,000 more that Mr. Truman recommended. 0 | Trade In a Good Town — Decatur ———o ———— Closed Thursday anfi Friday for redecorating. Re-open Saturday morning.--EHLERS ; 11 ; Pl’ / BOUQUET TWEED One of the famous Tweed h I coterie for dressing table and bath. §1.25 to §4.00 piusTmw Smith Drug Co.

Will Pay Benefits ■ To Kingan Workers 1— Indiana Agrees To Pay Compensation Indianapolis, Mar. 17 —(UP) The Indiana state employment security division agreed today to pay unemployment compensation to non-working employees of Indiana's largest meat packing plant. More than 2.000 United Packinghouse workers employed by Kingan and Co. filed for unemployment benefits when they agreed to continue working despite a meat packers’ strike, but were told by Kingan management that there was not enough work for them. The union members agreed shortly before the Monday midnight strike deadline to continue work during the course of negotiations, reserving the right to strike on 24 hours notice. However, when the 2.300 workers reported to their jobs yesterday. the plant sent all but 300 home because it had made preparations for a strike and was not buying livestock for processing. The state employment office accepted the 2,000 non-working union members on its S2O per week compensation rolls when each employee said he was willing to return to his job at anytime the company called him. The strike picture was unchanged elsewhere in the state. Peaceful picketing was reported at the Armour plant here, where 350 workers are on strike, and at Swift's in Evansville where 500 are out. Little Progress Fort Wayne, Ind., Mar. 17 — (UP) —Little progress was made in negotiations last night between the Marhoefer division of the

Todays biggest J power BSr Ny os you drin a if y«# wish > Xlfr 1 — L WR i- 1 • -WJ //7< a W > a V ‘/Unf r tL W-< i A # iWPV JgjW \ r Jak why we can make this offer a Out at the Buick plant, engine production is going Xf S 31 Complete Now Snick Engine great guns. It’s stepping along faster than com- • _■_ „ -- m plete car output. So we have these brand-new ana we u put it in Your car I engines ready to put in your car right now. at a Price You'll hardly Believe — Yes sir, here’s a big bargain snappiest car on the highways. for Buick owners —a brandnew straight • from - the - produc- hink what this will mean to you tion-line Fireball engine. We’ll * n com fort of driving —in new put it in any Buick from 1937 dependability in sheer fun. This 1948 ignition system models on up. Think of the extra worth of your jA. with centrifugal and vacuum car when it comes time to turn au,ornatic con,rol kk-nd We’ll take out your old mile- j t j n WJO/ and 9 ° ,n ‘° ~ . UJ/C/IZ get-away. weary engine, put this one in, /T&C'k and make your car brand-new As to cost — it’s so moderate it / 1 ' » again as far as power is concerned. makes this change-over today’s best power buy. Installation cost I ep and snap come back —right varies somewhat with car model. up to 1948 standards. You get But we’ll be glad to give you the An up-to-the-min- ITT* Wk new-engine mileage from every figure down t 0 the dollar if you>n u t # ,efficient car- F A gallon of gas. Oil consumption drive around buretor and air /'F 'A drops. And you enjoy the thrill smoo!h power and k rA //'I of the liveliest, most responsive Don’t put it off. Make up your most miles from every gallon of gas. /ka engine on the road today —the mind to drive a 1948-powered A same engine that makes Buick the car now. Come in and talk it over A smoothie" if there ever was IJj |( jJ\ 1 > one! This new clutch with its easy, x kJhkL toe-touch response makes driving /' 5s 1 more fun than ever. - * 1 I Unb-- t --i HUF AMERICA PRODUCE FOR PEACE-TURN IN YOUR SCRAP IRON AND <tT Cf) SAYLORS MOT OR COMPANY 116 S. First St - Decatur, Ind

Kuhner Packing Co. and the CIO United Packinghouse workers. Contract negotiations for the Muncie and Fort Wayne plants were opened in the district seven

It’s I Power on the grosadl that counts ,1m I That’s why Gardenaid engineers designed a tractor that ■gV gives you ground power with “MAXIMUM TRACTION." The amazin ß Gardenaid — with k » Wf 50% greater gear reduction and a simple implement hitch » ~~ d‘ rccts more power toward the ground ■ j*than any o,hel, tractor its ’*“• M -4-It V This extra tractor power means less manpower, \ considerable fuel savings and trouble-free performance. Write today for FREE LITERATURE SHEaX ' I X. All-ftirpose gfrMraAiD [bBwsJJIiSL TOicto/s I yy' , Gordenaid implements now | include 7" Plow, einht 12" | S ~ Discs, 12-Tooth Harrow, 6- S J £ ■ Tooth Cultivator, 48" Cutter- I <jft Sjifeja tor,a4-footSnowPlow-Gro<le, I ' IpSgScWA yKti and there’s o doubleV-Belf for t ■EPjW Power Take-Off. Addition- I jm \ al implements coming soon! I Fu,tenginß P° wen d forL I ARNOLD & KLENK, INC. 232 W. Madison Phone: 463

UPW offices between regional <li-j rector Wayne Thurman an.l L. N.i Clausen, executive vice pre. ideal of the company. Thurman said that no applic-,

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17

! able progress was made!?'® i the 800 workers would rem *® ; Ihe job pending further n | tions Friday night. — I Trade In a Good Town n I ~ —— —