Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 47, Number 119, Decatur, Adams County, 20 May 1949 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
CRUCIAL (Cont. From Page One) . . cil agenda. These broadcasts disclosed: 1. The Americans and British last* month approached the Russians in New Ydrk with a suggestion for discussing a possible settlement of the Greek civil war.
ARE 1,000-MILE OIL DRAINS NECESSARY? Motor Oils Don’t Wear Out— But They Do Get Contaminated 100% £* $ *2* Vi Vi* ■ MS 74% 5£ ft S ‘’*lll H ||||| IMI !S% —| 5000 Miles Results of simple test conducted by research laboratory on sludge formation and sediment in motor oil are shown above. Samples were taken from crankcases after being used for 1,000 miles. 2,500 miles and 5,000 miles. After standing for six days the different samples showed the following percentages of thick, black sludge or sediment: 1,000-mile sample, 25 percent sludge; 2.500-mile sample, 61 percent sludge or sediment; 5,000-mile sample, 74 percent sludge or sediment. Change Oil Regularly CHANGE TO MOBIL OIL AT Bay’s Nihil take 13th & MONROE PHONE 318 "A HOME FOR EVERY CAR”
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Moscow said the Soviet United Nations delegate/Andrei A. Gromyko, suggested a possible settlement formula and the west agreed to study it. 2. The Soviet Union is prepared to repatriate all the remaining Japanese prisoners of war it holds by next November. Only those" subject to suspicion of being war
Allen County Home Physician Ousted Negligence Charged By Commissioners Fort Wayne, Ind., May 20 — (UP)—Dr. Noah Zehr, the physician assigned to the old people’s home where 29 deaths were reported recently in a 34-day period, said he would resign today. Allen county commissioners demanded yesterday that Zehr resign his post. Commissioner William E. Roussey said Zehr was negligent in not reporting that food served at the home was not of the necessary quality for the elderly patients. Zehr said “they fired the wrong fellow.” He blamed the unusual number of deaths at the home oif the “political setup" which he said left the 300 inmates without proper care and diets. / "I’m going to resign,” said Zehr, “but I’m going to request an explanation of the facts the commissioners used to arrive at their conclusions.” “The public apparently is behind me," Zehr said. “My phone has been ringing constantly. People say they want to know what’s going on.” criminals will be held. There is little chance that either of these subjects will be added to the formal agenda of the council of foreign ministers. But there appeared a strong likelihood the ministers would discuss these problems as well as others in informal talks outside council meetings. The Korean question may be discussed too. The latest dispatch from Seoul said that the United Nations commission on Korea has attempted to open discussions with the Soviet-sponsored North IGNORED V \ I I A happy marriage k £3J/ and lucceisful career can be /W youril The case "RecoMtruction Method" often correcti crou eyes In one dayl Over 9,000 successful treatments, all agei. lion on this Nonprofit Institution. Writs— CROSS EYE FOUNDATION 703 Community Bank Bldg., Pontiac, Mich. ,
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J %- A- J Wl " - W\ . 1 ■ V J ,/* . I > \ ft ' ■v-.-A. 1 i j -J WHILE DOCTORS search "for a remedy, 14-year-old Michael Hippisley, London schoolboy, sneezes without relief 20 times every minute—and that has been going on for days. Michael’s only res* pite from the constant sneezing has been when doses of drugs put him to sleep. (International)
Korean government. Purpose of the discussions is to carry out an on-the-spbt investigation of the situation in North Korea, the commission announced. However, American officials here have indicated they would oppose any suggestion that the big four powers discuss the Greek problem in a council meeting at which the Greek government was not represented. Their immediate reaction was that the Greek case still is before the United Nations and that a special United Nations commission on Greece exists. They pointed out that the council of foreign ministers was created to draft peace treaties and not to settle other problems.
Horse and RODEO jp|* Sunday, May 22 W., RAIN DATE MAY 29 FORT RECOVERY, OHIO GRAND PARADE AT 1 P. M. . DANCE • # Saturday, May 21 MORRIS McCLURE and HIS ORCHESTRA 9-12 Membership Card it Your Admission AMERICAN LEGION Adams Post 43 L—SPECIAL! FOR SAT. & SUN. ONLY SLICING BOLOGNA, lb JQC PICNIC HAMS lb. 2Q C 4 to « lb. weight - SLICED SKINLESS WEINERS 1b...45c TASTI LOAF !b.__69c GERMAN HAM Ib.__ssc PORK STEAK lb.__49c . PORK CHOPS - The Rest.....'. 1b...65c NECK RIBS !b.__l9c ROUND AND MINUTE STEAK tb.__69c LIMBURGER CHEESE - The Stinky Kind Ib. brick Complete line of Groceries and Produce Open Sat. Nite Till 10 And All Day Sunday SCHEIMAN’S MARKET U. S. 27 Phone 3081 CASH AND CARRY - -
Rainfall Brightens Outlook For Crops Rain Big Help To Indiana Farmers Indianapolis, May 20.—(UP)— Rains drenched most of Indiana today and brightened the crop outlook for Hoosier farmers. Paul A. Miller, chief of the forecasters here, said rains last night ranged from 1.63 inches at Monticello to a trace at Paoli. “It definitely was a big nelp to the farmers,” Miller said. “It should be sufficient moisture to get corn germinating, and to get the soybeans well started. The northern part of the state was extremely dry, and the south—which didn't get any rain—didn't need it nearly so much.” Miller said there were few reports of rain south of U. S. 40, but that showers were expected in the extreme southern and southeastern areas today. The mass of cold air which brought the rain sent temperatures down to the middle 40’s, but Miller said he doubted if a further drop to frost could be expected. He said, however, that killing frosts had been noted later in the year than this. In a long range outlook, Miller forecast that temperatures would range slightly above normal maximums of 74 to 49 degrees, and minimums of 50 to 54 degrees for the next five days. “It will be warmer Saturday, cooler Sunday and Monday, and then warmer again on Tuesday and Wednesday," Miller said. “Precipitation will average between onequarter and three-quarters of an inch, occurring as showers or scattered thunderstorms Sunday or Monday and again Wednesday. "More moisture in the central part of the state would be beneficial,” Miller said, “but we can’t guarantee that all areas will get enough to relieve dry conditions. The extreme eastern portion of the central sections looks good from a moisture standpoint, but the remainder is not so good.” Points in the state which reported an inch or more of rain last night included Portland, 1.15 inches; Crawfordsville, 1.02; Monticello, 1.6 R; Muncie, 1.15; Warsaw, 1.54, and Wabash, 1.
PHYSICIAN BEGINS (Cont. From Page One) death, but apparently she wanted to be spared hearing the details of the slaying from her husband’s lips. Leaning forward in the witness chair, Rutledge said he was "heartbroken and very much upset” when his wife told him Hattman had forcibly seduced her in the Rutledge apartment last July. He frequently turned to the jury as he testified in a low but steady voice. He said he Goodrich in September, 1f)45, fell in love with her "almost at once,” and married her at Hannibal, Mo., June 17, 1946. “Do you still love her!” defense attorney R. S. Miller asked. “Yes, sir," Rutledge answered. He said he had "no suspicious whatsoever” of his wife’s affair with Hattman until Aug. 10, 1948, when he overheard acquaintances talking in a Norwood country club locker room. "What did they say, in substance?” Milner asked. “That my wife had been out with Hattman and that Hattman had been bragging around the plant (Emercon Electric Co.) about it.” He asked his wife about it, Rutledge said, and she “told me the whole story.” SPIiU! Boiling Beef, lb. 29c T-Bone Steak, lb. 52c & 55c Minute Steak, lb 65c Chuck Roast, lb. 43e RENDERED LARD, lb 12'/ 2 c HOME RENDERED Fresh Side, lb 33c Smoked Sausage, lb. ___ 49c (Our Own) Smoked Ham 69c (Our Own) Veal Round Steak, lb. __ 65c Slicing Bologna 39c Luncheon Meats 49c Veal Liver, .lb. 55c Celery • Lettuce ■ Carrots Cabbage-Oranges-Grapefruit Open Saturday evening till 10 Sudduth MEAT MARKET a 13th St. Phone 22« ... O
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TWO PERSONS DEAD (Cont. From Page One) in a single day. Earlier it was lashed on tne westside by a tornado which damaged four cabins a hotel and a restaurant in a large park. The storm's fury in Oklahoma was felt most in Washington county, where the farm house of Walter Brown near Wann was partly destroyed. Brown’s five-year-old daughter was in the house but
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sighted J and Ear Man down °n th. Kansas IJS' storm cau Bed hlt ' hq at sever al th \ Chetopa i„ f> j building w as U M glass front, blown in. ~ 01 Trade i n a r ""B Good \,
