Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 46, Number 175, Decatur, Adams County, 26 July 1948 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR daily DEMOCRAT Published Even Evening Except Sunday By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Incorporated Entered at the Decatur. Ind.. Poet Office as Second Claw Matter I. H. Heller—Preaident A. R. Holthouse, Sec'y. 4 Bus. Mur Dick D HellerVlce-Preeident •übacrlptlon Rates By Mall in Adams and Adjointog Counties: One year, $3; Six nonths, $3 25; 3 months, 91.7*. By Mail, beyond Adame and Ad Joining eountiea: One year, SI; I months, *8.75; 3 months, 12.00. By carrier, 20 cents per week. Single copies, 4 cents. Welcome to the 4-H'ers. o o The tented city Is here. See the Free Acte at the Fair. 0 0 Visit the Health and Safety exhibits. Now. Philadelphia can “rest out" the balance of the summer. Q O— — A mile of midway is Jammed with attractions tor your entertainment.

If accident occurs, or if you become ill, the Red Cross nurse is ready to serve you. After participating in seven murders, the ingratiating smile of handcuffed Muri Daniels, one of the Ohio killers, is out of place. The kill-crazy hoodlum should be placed in solitary confinement until brought before the court. 0 o—— The Van Wert sheriff and police of that city performed wonderful public service in the capture of the two ruthless Ohio killers They were brave men to risk death before the blazing guns of savage pair who massacred at least seven persons The public sincerely hopes for the recovery of the wounded officials. —-o General Elsenhower and General Clay see eye-to-eye on the RussianBerlin situation. Hoth stand for firmness in dealing with the Soviet leaders, while neglecting no angle toward solution of the trouble arising from the Berlin blockade. General Clay has returned to Germany. after reporting to President Truman, expressing himself that he "wasn't sent over there to start a war." Food will be blown in to Berlin and the people will be fed. the American commander assured the President. O O' “They'll have an American trial, said Federal Judge Vincent Lelbell in New York when six Communists were arraigned before him on charges of advocating the

Proper Food In Keeping Liver Heolthy

By Herman N. Bundeten, M. D. t THE more we learn of the body t and its functions, the more clearly c we see the importance of propoi I food to health. Give the body! < enough of the tools it needs In the i form of proteins, vitamins, and i minerals, and it will use them i to build a state of robust health. < Deprive it of these things and it i not only fails to function as it | should during the period of priva- 1 tion but may even suffer permanent damage which can never be , made good. ( This Is particularly true of the liver, largest of the l*ody's vital or- , gans. and one of the most com-! plex During the recent research which has centered around this organ, it has been found that certain substances in every well-bal anced diet play a signal role in keeping the liver healthy. They are called lipotropic factors be cause they aid In the body's use of fats. Among these health building lipotropic substances are choline, a part of that powerful bundle of vitamins known ss the H-coasplex and the amino acid called methionine. The amino acids are the building block of the protein found principally and abundantly in such foods as meat. milk, and eggs. When a diet which does not sontain enough of these lipotropic factors is given to animals, a great amount of fat is deposited in the liver with the gradual formation of non functioning scar tissue In place of working llvnr cells. Ultimately. large areas of the liver are hardened in this way and the condition known as cirrhosis is produced Not only can these changes bo brought about !* anl «als by witholding cflollßd «4

overthrow of the government. We don't know how much It zneans to the accused Communists to be as- . sured of an American trial, but it means a great deal to the rest of us. That very privilege of a fair and honest trial is one of the rights which would be lost If the United States should ever suecumb to any such political doctrine as that which Communists have put Into practice in Europe 0 o Toxas bees, increasing to billion population, and every one as busy as possible, are working themselves out of Jobs. The price of their sweet product in Lone Star State markets has dropped to a third of the price of last year Added to a 62-miilion-pound national holdover of honey, ail tbis has Texas growers worried. But the Department of Agriculture wants to see many more bees raised in other parts of the country. Important though the bees' honey is. it is secondary to the insects value as crop stimulators. Clover

yield, for example, is said to be j raised ten times when bees are B present. .Many fruit trees will not bear successfully without the aid of bees. 1 i l IX 1 I Japan Results • j The Americans have been oc- ' cupying Japan long enough now to have made a definite change in j the physical characteristics of the ' people there, according to an f American correspondent. t There has always been a noticeable contrast between American- ( horn Japanese and thong who were i i native to their islands. The latter (l are stunted in growth and peculiar ly proportioned, owing partly to their racial origin and partly to * their restricted diet. Nutrition experts have seen to it that the Japanese diet has been better balanced and the soldiers have sponsored outdoor sports which have aided posture and development. The freedom to which Americans have been accustomed has filtered ' through to the Japanese minds to ' some extent, also. The native po- • lice have unbent from their for- ' mer forbidding attitude. Young people have begun to marry for ’ love instead of by arrangement, and the girts arc reported to be ' blossoming under the new regime. The generation now growing up 1 in the occupied countries should have at least the basic benefit of sound bodies. Through such benei fits for the victims as well as the I victors of war, we can prove that t we were willing to engage in war > for the good of man. rather than i for national gain.

methionine, but the first step In this process which is the deposit of fat In the liver can be reversed by adding them once again to the diet. Naturally, the scar tissue already formed will remain permanently. hut the giving of choline and methionine will cause a rapid disappearance of fat from the liver and a regeneration of cells which have been injured rather than killed. A number of other observations seem to show the relation between the absence of these lipotropic factors and the development of liver damage. For example, in such countries as India. Syria, and China, where the diet is poor in vitamins and proteins, a great deal of cirrhosis develops In a certain gran in South Africa, the natives live, for the moat part, on starchy foods, principally ground meal, and only very small amounts of milk Meat is rarely oaten. Thus, the diet of those natives Is greatly defictont in proteins and vitamins. In these people, it has been found that cirrhosis of the liver was present in four out of five of the men who died and were examined after death There has also been some suggestion that the liver damage may bo due to the use of alcoholic beverages. but It has not boon possible i to show that alcobolism by Itself ’ can produce cirrhosis of the liver. I It Is likely that a food deficiency develops because such people are too busy drinking to eat. Modern research indicates that too little food rather than too much drtnk io the basic cause of the liver damage so often found ssoag aUoI boiks.

MONKEY BUSINESS fggv.' _■ ”* z flimMal Whim ■ '' * ’ ? AnL wl iwV xMlll I

Household Scrapbook By ROBERTA LEE ft « Ants Ants can he exterminated by keeping a small hag of sulphur in drawers and boxes. Or dampen a sponge in a solution of sugar and water, put It in a saucer and place near the haunts, it will soon be full of ants and can then be plunged into ladling water. Rust To remove rust from steel, rub it with linseed oil and allow it to soak for several days. Wipe off. then polish with powdered. unsla< ked lime until the rust is loosened. Prevents Cracking To prevent the wall paper from cracking when driving a nail into it. first dip the nail In real hot water for a minute or two before driving it. The Christian life exacts much, but it promises more.

= COLVER

NYNOPbIM I Anne Femtor Xml become ••gaged la LlaaleaMl Commaader Alee Our« ■■•a teUealag • whirlwind «aartabip la Hawaii avar • yaar age. Bccaatl, he had cabled h«a from tb« Far Laat u ba ready to raarry him aaoa at Xtoa« Uoaaa, bia taaUly'a ••tote la J«re«y. J alia, bia awlber, waa •••«- toxm. Whaw Aaa« aaceplrd her iavltotlsa to etay with thrm. Her departure trem New York waa a Mew to cynical Deaald Ogdea, wbe had toag bcea to lave with her. htoae Heaee had bcea la the Deremde lamily ter geaeratloaa aaa the beauty et He acne et aaedal taraUaada thrilled Aaaa ae deha. Atoe'e oU*4*dl ell It aaeaat to him. Bealdca deha. Ma wife, Helea aad dady, their email daegbtor, the haaaahald eeaeiated at Aiec'a percale, dalle aad Hecry Deremae; Hcary'e mother, “Cram'* Daremaa, aad dalla'a nether, Nadame Klageley. It was eeea evldeet to Aaae that Helea'a ealy iatereat waa her baalacM career la a New Verb pabliehleg heaee, aad sympathy tar deha •urged through her et the reallaatiea hie marriage wee net a happy eae. As the wecha passed a bead et eader•taadlag based ea their maleal tore •t bteae Heaee termed belweaa them. Whea word tram Alec arrived aaylag Ma discharge had bees peetpaeed. Aaae theagM •* retaralag to Am Jeb aad gpartaseat la New Verh. bat della to the email aalte ei rwetea ahe aad Alee weald ecrapy whea they married. Helea’a eager at deba'e reteaal to Use la towa dertag the slater reached a aew Mgb eae etormy evealag whea •be waa dritlag beam tram the eHee.

i CHAPTER ELEVEN 1 HELEN'S mind went back. Six 1 years ago, before America got into 1 the war. she had gone to a Protn 1 at the college where John was a student in the Agricultural Department He had not been present at the dance but she had seen him on campus, swinging along tn slacks and a turtle-neck black sweater, and something about him, his air of self-containment, perhaps. had impelled her to direct her steps toward him. She was loot, she told him. She had missed connections with her escort, somehow. Could be—flashing her dimple and her white smile and her great, dark eyes—help her get to the TH Deit horse? "I can take you there," he had said, gravely courteous. "It’s right on my way." His soberness had piqued her. Was be shy? Yet his composure denied that He was. she decided, just one of those who was bard to impress. That made him a challenge so that she worked bard on that short walk. But to no avail Once at the entrance be had caolly left her, never seeking a date, never even asking her name. It bad been a severe shock to her vanity, and. staring after him tn hot humiliation. she had thought TO make that man marry see if its the last thing 1 dor It had taken two yearn But his resistance bad only strengthened her desire that not even her Brat visit to Stone House bad waakeasd. He wouldn't alwsg* baa former, she had thought iwiMsnf

THE DBCATEE DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUB, INDIANA

Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE Q Having finished eating, where should one place the knife and fork ? A They are placed a little to the right of the center of the dinner plate. The tinea of the fork should point upward, and the cutting adse of the knife should face toward the center of the plate. Q. Which aisle should be used by the wedding party. If the church has two main aisles? A. One of the aisles may be disregarded using the other aisle for hoth the processional and recessional. Q In the salutary phrase of a letter, may one use an abbreviation such as "Dear Smith”? A No; write "Dear Doctor Smith." Happines is a by product of other duties; it has no direct aimit is gained on the way.

ly. Oncg they were married the would perruade him to give that up and get a decent Job in New York. In a bank, maybe. Or radio. Something, anyway! She had been very aura of herkU, for John's paaaion, finally aroused, had the quality of humble adoration, and she had believed his subjugation was complete. But after a month or two aa his wife she had discovered how mistaken she was. “Sell Stone House? Work in the city? Live there? Never." “But John " He had put her from him and gone across the room and faced her, astonishment—«nd something more—clear m htn gray tye*. “I thought you knew how I felt about things here. I thought I had explained to you what I have to do.” "You did, but if Tin not happy " He had said slowly, Tm very sorry you're not happy. But it'a up to me to provide a living for you. For you and my whole family. And here is where I know how to do IL Here." He had been kind but as Immovable as a rock. Even tears had been utterly useless. And when she had finally lost her temper, he had, after looking at her in silence, tn dazed surprise, walked out and left her. It was , not the reaction she bad anticipated and for a while she had

angrily considered leaving him, too. For good. There were other men! Only there was a hazard about those others that she had not dared to chance. For America was fighting by then and who knew how eoon the soldiers, streaming from the country, would return? Os even if they would at all? John was, at least, alive and whole. In the end she had compromised by getting a secretarial Job for herself tn New York. It was something to be there through the days, anyway, and John had not Objected. With that, and the exploitation at Stone House ae a place to which to invite servicemen for weekend parties, fife had become more bearaMc Julia had co-oper-ated h antoom sty, Helen Imd to admit that, and John had said. “Os course invite them out. It's a good idea. We have the space and plenty to oat And maybe somebody is doing the same thing foe Alec somewhere. Only 1 can't stay up late to betp entertain them. Helen. 1 have no help here, you know, and I have to get up early. If you’ll remember that " Impatiently she had promised. So it had been that every Saturday night the guest cottage aad Alec’s room had been full Sometimes. oven extra eoto bad boon set up In the third floor apartment where Anae was new and there had been gaiety and laughter under the old roof. Yes. tn spite of the dour Hoary aad the two old it hgd been amusing. Halen romembered, aad ghn being * oom-

20 YEARS AGO TODAY i> — July 23 — Coach and Mrs. William Bryan of Kirkland high return from a trip to California. Mayor Thompsons organlxation in Chicago is busting ' His police commissioner and other lieutenants resign. The Fort Wayne Shrines’ band will give a concert here September 15. Pope Pius XI Is suffering a sprained fort. Huntington golfers defeat Decatur. 59 to 13. Tanney wins over Tom Heeney in 11th round Heeney was all but out when referee Farber stopped the fight. 1 ■ a Estate Cases Inventory No. 1 wax Died. examined and approved in the estate of Troy Huey. In the estate of Martha Biberstein, the will was offered for probate. It will be probated subject to the court's approval at its next regular term. First Inventory in the estate of Joseph A. Kintz was filed, examined and approved. Petition to sell personal property by administrator was filed, submitted and sustained. Appraisers of the estate of John Henry Reiff found the Jtel estate ito be valued at $22,135 54. Inheritance tax of $53 78 each is due from Bert E. Reiff. Morley M. Reiff and Kenneth Reiff. No inheritance tax was found due the state of Indiana in the estate of Joseph Whiteman. The real estate was declared free of all lien* inposed by the inheritance and transfer tax laws of the state. In the estate of James M Rose, schedule to determine inheritance tax was filed and referred to the county assessor. A petition by executor to sell corporation stock was filed, submitted and sustained. The past is never wholly, if we use its misdeeds as stepping stones to nobler living.

muter, had managed to escape the extra work connected with IL AU she had had to do waa be the bright and chaivning hostess, a role that suited her admirably. But now the war was over and the need for parties ended. In* deed, her own pregnaney had end* ed them before the war had (an uncalculated mishap as far as she was concerned) and since Judy's birth dullness had fallen upon Stone House. She swerved to avoid a passing truck, then crept back onto the road again. Tea, it was duU there. The security and ease she enjoyed hardly compensated for that dullneaa. Nor had Anne's coming helped a bit Helen had thought, at first, that Anne might be com* pamonable, that she might go la to New York with her every day and be someone at least halfway congeniaL Instead—what? Anne had turned out to be nothing more nor leas than one of those goodygoody girls the Red Cross ranks were so filled with. Fitting in at Stone House in a disgustingly tiresome way. Helping Gram and Auntie in the kitchen. Helping Julia in the Mg house. Visiting with Madame Kingsley. Lending a hand outside, 100. Raking leaves. Picking apples. Rounding up the sheep when they got out of their field onto the highway one day—she and the men Driving Henry to the barber in the village. Even

OW Vila imivei mi uip Tillage. s»vcn taking charge of Judy now and then. And lovtng it Well, let her! All her model behavior wasn’t going to change Helen any. No one need think IL She never had been the milkmaid type and she didn’t propose to be at thia late date. Musing thus, she drove along at a mail's pace, strung to caution in the slippery dark. But as her tension incressed, her resentment increased with it Really! For John to make her live out in the country with him all winter was past enduring any longer! And why should she? She was making money enough to take care of herself if oho chase to stay in New York through the bad months. As aaetstant editor with an editorship just around the corner, aa eoon as she caught old Deaton making a few more careless mistakes—or as soon ss she could arrange mistakes and lay them at Denton's door! Yea, with an editorship she could easily manage. It was just John’s stubbornness, his Old-fasbkmed ; Wens about marriage And tt was all so perfectly ridiculous because she had never given him the least rojMu to question bet loyalty. She didn't dke men that way. He ’ Should know it well enough! It 1 was. actually, because she was ’ Judy's mother and aa such be oon- ! Mderad she had certain -dotte" . -But 1 can’t and won’t keep thia . up." she said to herself grimly. p "He’s got to face it too. He’s got to take hia choice-tonigbv-of Httmg me gvo ta Now Tert er , getng tn there with gp- ’ f- ■ O«MtaasdL

Talking No Good New York - (VP) - When Mrs. Frances Purpura. 53. tried to talk a bandit out of robbing the Fizzarottl Travel Agency where she works, he knocked her unconscious with his pistol He got S4W.

IT HAS THAT smoked-in Country Flavor FRESH Smoked Sausage 59Cu. GERBER MEAT MARKET PHONE 9*7

n M* FVRx ™| u.. ». .j ( LEAM) — . ... «« Round or Square Type as MAHOGANY LAMP TABLES (7) Regular 17.95; Sale . 11 (2) Regular 17.95 fa MAHOGANY TIER TABLES sale B MAHOGANY Glass Top— Pie Crust Edge f a COCKTAIL TABLES (»> Regular 17.95; Sale U nwr-v ™ .Mahogany Finish — Pie Crust Design |4 END TABLES (2) Regular 17.95; Sale B Mahogany Finish i ROUND LAMP,TABLES (3> Regular 12.45$ Sale I - —Assortment ; j LAMP, COC KTAIL & END TABLES values to ixw; saiJ Four Compartment—. Mahogany Finish t MAGAZINE RAC KS Regular 4.49; Sale d LIVING ROOM SUITE LIVING ROOM SUITE at... Bl A Good Assortment of 2 Pc. in Tapestrv, Velour, or .Mohair < Aft LIVING ROOM SUITES at Just Received—A New Shipment Colorful Tapestry. I 1 PLATFORM ROCKERS Specially Priced For This Salt DURABELLE RUGS ail S2.so; sal. 5 12x15 six*. Floral Patterns Al I WOO! 4 CRESTHIGH RUGS 9 , "2 she Beautiful Walnut Veneer Modernistic Style, 3 pc.. All Dust <4 BEDROOM SUITES Proof, All Center Guides. Reg. 179 M 3 Pc. Walnut Veneer Waterfall Design—Pin Stripe 11 BEDROOM SUITE Reg. 154.50. Sale i Pr. CLJU Mani AII Drawers Dust Proofed—All Drawers'* .$ Ic. bond Maple Guittes Aiwa vs Practical—A ways 4 1 BEDROOM SUITE 4 Pc. Solid Walnut Twin Bed Style Q BEDROOM SUITE Reg. 134.00. Sale —— l Cotton Felted COTTON MATTRESS Values to 32*5. Sale -- Coil i INNERSPRING MATTRESS sd.-J INNERSPRING MATTRESS ‘sd. J BEDROOM SUPPER CHAIR BEDROOM BOUDOIR CHAIR INFANT’S FURNITURE BABY BED BABY CARRIAGE Solid Panel — INNERSPRING AO* TEETER BABE CRIB .MATTRESS -—- HIGH CHAIR « A BASSINET Maple or Birch lV’ 7? PLAY PEN JJ. 95 BATHINETTE ] BABY BED « Ag Maple Pintail - * < _ > DINETTE SETS s.* dinette sets GrcmtfiCeO, The Friendly Store

HAMMOND Bld — On the Highway U. S. No. 1 SOUTHERN ELBlrf PEACHES $1.99 Mt M GET 'EM WHILE THEY |. W . TOMATOES — Home Grown ■ TRANSPARENT APPLES jCH APRICOTS —7 Row J — 25 lb. |,ig ICE COLD WATERMELONS J Eath fl BANANAS J — pound H i