Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 47, Number 40, Decatur, Adams County, 17 February 1949 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
40 MILLIONS (Cont. From Page One) door activities start up next month. Some officials feel it will lecuire 60 days to determine' the signifi-
NEWBERRY SPECIALS ON SALE AT THESE PRICES FRIDAY & SATURDAY
INFANT TRAINING PANTIES pr.forsJ.OO MEN’S WHITE HANDKERCHIEFS f for $ J ,00 Re?- 15c CHILDRENS 3 Pc. WARM SLEEPERS 5j.77 Reg. $2.49 LADIES OUTING GOWNS •$j,77 Reg. $2.19 CHILDRENS COAT SWEATERS Sizes 2-6 SRC SPECIAL LADIES COTTON BLOUSES Ass’t. Colors $ J .00 SPECIAL BOY’S OVERALL PANTS Sizes 2-6 Reg. $1.59 LARGE FACE TOWELS J for $ J .00 Reg* 49c MEN’S FANCY DRESS SOCKS 4 pr. $ j .00 Reg* 35c
SPE.CIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY CHERRY CAKE -65 c DUTCH BREAD ■ PECAN ROLLS STEWARTS BAKERY • PHONE 1
canae of current unemployment and how far it will go beyond the usual seasonal layoffs. Chairman Thomas B. .McCabe of the federal reserve board yesterday described recent price a
THIS IS ALL CLEAN - NEW MERCHANDISE J. J. Newberry Cd.
sign the nation is “going through a healthy period of readjustment." He brushed aside suggestions that the declines might mark the start of a recession. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
LADIES TAFFETA SLIPS $139 Reg. $1.79 LADIES RAYON GOWNS $1.17 Reg. $1.59 LADIES RAYON PANTIES Jpr.sJ.OO Reg. 49c CHILDRENS SNOOZER SLEEPERS Sizes 2-6 Reg. $1.39 LADIES 51 Gauge NYLON HOSE 9Sc R< «- sl - 29 LADIES PINT DRESSES Sites 14-44 $1.77 SPECIAL LADIES COTTON HOSE J pr. $ J .00 Reg. 39c CANNON WASH CLOTHS 2 for 25c Reg * lsc LADIES PRINT APRONS 39c & 49c Reg *
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
U. S MINISTER (Cont. From Page One) I feel certain both the Hungarian and American peoples fervently desire, have not borne fruit."
Price Os Meal At. Wholesale Rises Butter Prices Also Higher At New York I j Chicago, Feb. 17 — (UP) — 1 Wholesale meat prices rose again today and butter on the New York I wholesale market reached the highest level of the year. At Chicago, wholesale beef was up $1 to $2 per hundred pounds in a continuation of the steady recovery from the slump early" this month. Pork and lamb were unchanged. At the Mg cornbelt livestock markets, price trends were irregular but generally steady. Grain prices on the Chicago .board of trade were slightly higher. At New York, wholesale butter rose l-% to l-% cents a pound. On the New York merchantile exchange grade “A” 92-score rose to 65-% cents a pound, compared with the previous .high of 66 cents a pound established Dec. 31, 1948. The current price is 4-’/i cents a pound above the lofr of 61 cents a pound established Jan. 25. Grade "AA” higher than 92 score was quoted at 65-% cents a pound; grade B at 65-*4 cents and grade C at 64-*4 cents a pound. To Salvage Liner New York Hamburg, (UP) — Tug boats with bloating cranes have started work in Kiel harbor in an attempt to recover the 22,000-ton former Hamburg-America liner New York. The New York, once the line’s fourth biggest liner, was bombed during the war by British planes and burned out. She capsized and| sank.
Seems everybody... everywhere... is saying is tie most Beautiful of all rZbi /i/k'vgK fw/Sn ziyoi (Sfex A I >Jf eA a J 4 Ip? STVtaiNE DE I 4-0001 SEDAN
lit IsmrtHal BUY hr Styflug Millions of people ill across America—and undoubtedly your friends and neighbors, too—are hailing the “luxury look" of Chevrolet for '49. It's the beautyleader, all right—lnside, outside, and from every point of view! For the bodies are by Fisher— final of all car bodiu—lomd only on Chevrolet and higherpriced cars. * At msf Btwtffof BUY for Cmforf You’ll enjoy a new and finer kind of comfort in this car. The perfectly relaxed comfort of “Five-Foot Seats" plus extra-generous head, leg and elbowroom. Moreover, it's a “car that breathes" for an advanced heating* and ventilating system inhales outside air and exhalet itale air. •(Heater and defroster units optional at extra cost.)
Charles Chapman Is Taken By Death Charles Chapman, a former De catur resident, died at 9:15 p.m. Wednesday at the home of his son, John Chapman, in Yoder. He was 80. Surviving are three daughters and the son. His wife, the former Ida Ahr, preceded him in death. Several relatives reside here. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Schuman and Von Buskirk funeral home, Fort Wayne. Juvenile Confesses To Theft Os Radio A 16-year old boy who lives northwest of Berne will face a hearing in juvenile court Saturday morning on petty larceny charges filed by sheriff Herman Bowman. He confessed this morning to the theft of a radio from Paul Yoder's garage, in Lind Grove. He had been seen in the garage around the time of the theft Wednesday evening. He admitted the crime under questioning. WOMAN FOUND (Cont. From Page One) white blouse and knit scarf. On her left hand was a wedding band and on her right a ruby ring. She was described as about five feet one inch tall, blue-eyed, weighing abouj 110 pounds. L Keller said there was no blood on the highway near the point where the body was found. This indicated, he said, that it might have been dumped from another car. He said the fact the shoes were found some distance away indicated the woman may have been hit by a vehicle after she died.
First Jar Quality at Lowest Cost AMERICA'S CHOICE FOR II YEARS SAYLORS CHEVROLET SALES 116 S. First St Decatur, Ind.
(Sy-f JaMr IBM . ...... I . «• ....T LT. E. W. FRANK, Oceanside, Cal., cooks soup in the snow on Aimß maneuvers in frigid Alaska. Corp. William Renner, Altoona, stands by with a full 50-pound pack on his back. (Interna!jo M ]jß*
The body was found on a northsouth road about two miles from the park entrance and between U. S. 12 and U. S. 20, arterial northerh Indiana highways. Police said the woman's watch was stopped at 3:15 a.m„ about three hours before Barlow found the body. But they added it had run down and the time it stopped apparently had nothing to do with the time of death. The body was taken to a Chesterton mortuary for an autopsy.
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 11 1|
E. T. Johnson, a deputy said the left side of her face tX mutilated. There was a wuuM X the temple, her jaw was bnX and her chest crushed. ■* The state of North Lakota leX all other states in the productX of spring and durum w,. ~t and ■ second in production of rye X flaxseed. Other agricultural X ducts are potatoes, hay, oats, ItatX and corn.
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