Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 46, Number 282, Decatur, Adams County, 30 November 1948 — Page 7
| BveMBER :!0 ' 1943
Ost Buyers ■nf Cars I Beils Probers Primary | :?u—(UP) — BhK u>fe v that oDly B» ii 'B ( . ; . r s liave °. 8 . t 0 wa *’* n * r W S,: ;B C . 31 months. K ! '®m was made by B '“Km:, treasurer of the B’lnr Arlington. Va.. ■P'Bealer He testified committeo inves- « !E K ((l i:il>le liade prac ' g B his company B^Et.s "bevond regui!,. said those B'.BL people. such as gp Business mem " !1 " had K .’■'firm in the past. K* Be had incurred obliK Be car, of old service W''B r? " h " fe,t insult ’ E* >’ ut down
liblic Sale K. Ksigned Executrix of the last will and testament of Isaac K.Kd. under and by virtue of powers in her vested by said EK'Bheirs of sai l decedent, will offer for sale at public auctet' Bteniises. on BL lie 11th day of December 1948 Boßat one o'clock P, M„ the following lands known as the BKituated in Dublin Township. Mercer County, Ohio, to-wit: the east lialf of ,he sou,llwest Quarter and the ■ Bwest quarter of the southwest quarter of Section k Hwn 4 South, Range 2 East, containing 120 acres K .Kd. more or less, subject to legal highways and f: Bents thereon. ■LB adjoins the Village of Rockford, Ohio, lying immediately BBiillage. on a concrete road, a rich black loam soil, well BBtains the following buildings: Ity story frame dwelling BBe and concrete foundation; frame barn 36x64; hog barn Bißhed and corn crib attached 18 feet in width; granary, "'”<><l house combined 14x30; poultry house, garage and K Kir! drove well and concrete cistern. K BK was recently appraised at $200.00 per acre. delivery of deed. Immediate possession. fit Burther information write or call on B I MARTHA E. SANFT, Executrix of the ® estate of Isaac Sanft, deceased. I MARGARET ANN BURY, Mendon. Ohio, RFD I CATHERINE SANFT, Rockford. Ohio. Attorney 2; 30 3 9 B Give a CoJorfu! Gift! 1 B fj ! ; f | ii 7? I ■■ ■k ; -‘ rj 1 |k Jl line of Prang Textile Paints. Complete IB of colors, tracing papers and 'brushes. fcs&BmL PRINT SHOP Bsn Second Phone 745 Bjoy The Long Winter Days IN ROOMS MADE ■RACTIVE WITH FRESH NEW BALL ■ft PER ■ WWF B,I r "AVE A Bmplete A II lwe sT ° p a- - | Tomorrow IOHNE DRUG STORE
a deposit and get on a waiting list,” he said. xvenyon said the company followed the policy of taking title to a large number of automobiles delivered from the factory. These cars were* then classed as “demonstrators”—automobiles driven by employes of his company as a form of advertising. After they had been driven for a while, he said, they could be sold as used cars. These “used cars” carried a full new car guarantee, he said, and could be sold to customers not on the waiting list. Kenyon said the average de> posit put up by customers was SIOO. He said he had banked about $16,000 of such deposits. This sum, he added, has drawn $33 in interest. He said General Motors officials had objected to the "demonstrator” policy and it was discontinued about three months ago. He quoted these officials as saying "it was contrary to General Motors policy." Rep. W. Kingsland Macy, R„ N. Y. .chairman of the committee, said the company’s record showed that approximately 70 percent of
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DISEMBARKING FROM A CONVOY of trucks on Guam, U. S. Marines prepare to board the transport USS Bayfield for China. The Leathernecks will reinforce the American garrison at Tsingtao while •Chinese civil war rages between Nationalists, Reds. U. S. Navy photo. (International Radiophoto)
its automobiles were sold as "demonstrators.” Kenyon neither disputed nor affirmed, the figure. Committee counsel John T. M. Reddan asked Kenyon whether the 1 fact most of the demonstrators were sold on a trade-in basis, had something to do with establishing the demonstrator policy. “I think it is important to try to even our business up with good profitable deals on trade-ins,” Kenyon replied. “That’s why we are in business.” He said that his salesmen are instructed to sell all extras and accessories that possibly can be sold to the customer. Kenyon vigorously defended automobile dealers and said that it is a difficult business. "I feel that the legitimate automobile dealer is entitled to any money he can get out of the automobile business," he said. Earlier, a investigator said that veterans have been the chief victims of the auto dealers’ practice of demanding trade-ins from new car customers. Macy said his committee is doing everything possible to discourage the practice. At present, he said, men who were overseas often can’t get cars because they have nothing to trade. > "■ IOWA BOYS (Cnflt From P&rre Onr) bull, won grand championship honors in the Aberdeen-Angus breeding competition. The animal is owned by R. H. Schlesing, Char'ottewllle, Va. Purdue University won the reserve championship in the Berkshire hog competition, and Ohio State University entered the championship pen of harrows. In the Chester White hog contest. Tip Top Farms of Flora, Ind., ■wept all honors, entering the ■hampion barrow, the reserve ■hampion and the best pen of hree. » The grand champion carload of barrows was exhibited by Walter Schlickting, Apple River, 111., for ‘he second consecutive year. He won the event with a carload of ’’oland Chinas. Texan Saves Day Chicago. Nov. 30 —(UP*—An en--ared steer which leaped a fence ; nto the midst of terrified spectaors at the International Livestock -,how was bulldogged and subdued ' last night by an heroic Texas stockman. Police said the quick thinking ind courage of Lloyd Jinkens. 48, fort Worth. Tex. cattle breede 1 -. ivert*d panic and possible death among the spectators. ! Ten-thousand spectators were watching a demonstration of how i VICE PRESIDENCY was almost in the bag for Gov- Earl Warren of California, before it slipped away from him. However, with the aid of Cripp, a pointer, he made sure these two pheasants were in the tag ca a hur.txg trip near WU-i-jufi, Cal. (Inttraatioatl)
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
a cowboy cuts out a steer from a, his mount to the fence. Leaping herd. Suddenly the exhibition turn-1 from the saddle he cleared the ed into a real life drama when the fence and landed on the steer’s 800-pound Hereford yearling shied, I neck. Digging his hands into the ran toward the crowd and leaped animal's eyes, he bulldogged it in the five-foot fence separating the true rodeo style, smashed its head spectators from the arena. against the fence to stun it, then Jinkens, riding Sugar, a famous ' l subdued back into the arena, exhibition quarter horse, spurred Spectators who had screamed in
as your home-town partneralways on the job! /• 0 Many folks think of the Erie as a friendly railroad / that stretches a thousand miles between New York r / and Chicago. ‘ y J®> ® $ 'wßr- . .?■■,, That’s true, of course—but the Erie is more than that. WKMBr X.M «||| It is also a local industry in your community! It rates (Jp&ffillw along with the corner drugstore, the butcher, the baker z ? *SO 4k and the industrial plants that make jobs in your ,X ? JI home town. kT , t* i v I wl jgSMrgMHf I 1 You’ll find that your neighbors, folks you went to k JC mJ ..jofeawjy school with, work for the Erie. And we’re sure the ’^£* r Erie folks you know are dependable citizens keenly * interested in the welfare of your locality. So the Erie Railroad, besides providing safe, depend- . Jfl S fltt able transportation also plays this extra role as a home- I ■< town partner-always on the job in every community . on the line! 6/T'\w R W/i iE h Erie Railroad Strving the Haart of Industrial America iffijß— A®) I DECAiai / ' I ’ - o, k of Progress ; 7* 1 I] \ *' a Ro'lrooding JaS— ■ .ir.,; rr 7- ■; ,„ —rr. -—r - ‘j ~; T7-LKWQBI_ THI fRIL YOUR HOMi TOWN PARTNW... MAKES JOBS ...MAINTAINS EMPLOYMENT... PAYS TAXES... ATTRACTS INDUSTKIES
terror seconds before applauded wildly. “I’ve been around cattle and horses all my life,” Jinkens said. “1 had to do something or for the rest of my life I’d have felt like a heel.” A 15-year-old boy was bruised when the steer sideswiped him and a woman's glasses were smashed when the steer struck her a glancing blow. Indiana Winners (From United Press dispatches) Hoosiers were among those who came out with high honors at the International livestock exposition in Chicago today. Among Indiana winners are: Keith B. Clark, Clark Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Hal B. Clark, Clark Hili; Tip Ton farms, Flora; B. Parker Newsom, Columbus; Glenn Cox and
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' son, Wabash; Dwight Smoker, Wanata; C. O. House, Arcadia; GreenI mere farms,’Oaktown; Newton L. I Halterman, Rushville; George J. I Sauennan, Crown Point; R. O. Bar- ! ker and sons, and Guy E. West and | son, both of Kokomo. NOTICE OF FIWAI. SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE NO. 432 S Notice is hereby given to the creditors, heirs and legatees of Eugene Kneuss, deceased to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur, Indiana, on the 11th day of December, 1948, and show cause, If any, I why the FINAL SETTLEMENT ACI COUNTS with the estate of said deIcedent should not be approved; and i said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares. Ed Stahly Executor Decatur, Indiana Nov. IP, IMS. Attorney Henry B. Heller. Nov. 23-30 Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
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NOTICE OF FINAL WITTLEMENT OF ESTATE NO. 4420 Notice is hereby given to the creditors, heirs and legatees of Ben S. Colter, deceased to appear in tne Adams circuit Court, held at Decatur, Indiana, on the 15th day of December 1948, and show cause, if any, whv the FINAL SETTLEMENT ACCOUNTS with the estate of said decedent should not be approved; and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirsnip, ana receive their distributive shares. Mary D. Colter Administrator Decatur. Indiana, Nov. 22, IMS. Attorney G. Hemy Blerly The railways which represent Great Britain’s largest undertaking at present operate 52,000 miles of tracks, over which its trains run 373,000,000 miles and carry 1,200,000,000 passengers and 226-000-000 tons of merchandise a year. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
