Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 29, Decatur, Adams County, 4 February 1952 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

I\ » “FOR COMPLETE PROTECTION” BURKE INSURANCE j SERVICE I Phone 3-3050 612 N. Third St. j I Decatur, Ind. | |

(Make Your Next Movel 'I DOWN TO OUR STORE WHEN IN DECATUR FOR Deratin' Bargain Days I WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY I I f ANAHIST BBBBj| HILL’S VICKS Tablets COLD ■■■B VAPO-RUB 55c. 99c B Tablets 33c. $1.98 30c ' SE29 ■ Our Own BHBR 11HB I COUGH M||K MULSION HKggj SYRUP ffiSß' 57c | 49c, 98c ' $1.09 | , I Hot Water ■■■■ GROVE S ■■£■& 4-Way Bottles |ißi|i BROMO- |g||gg® COM) Aj | !|HkK|| OfIMNE Tablets ■ Prices ' i 39c ■' . 2,Jc ■ ■■KB Vick ’ s HU One-A-Day ||s&gagnlfi Va-Tro-Nol li Multiple Nose Drops ■■9H£ ■ Bl I ■ B I Kohne Drug Store 9f B AVkstinghouse o-179-w >< Famous ■> - . E .Westinghouse ' "'LI • Quality ‘ /f Electric Timer for -/T /I A.—- (§t I ' i. « Automatic Control ,' 1111 r „ Kj u. -utiT — ■— s»l ° f O'”” J Alli ._ — 3 Fast "Corox” Unit. ■ /> I■ W N. I — ■■ ’• ■ — ~ I 6-Quart Econo* B I ■ If 7 7T—Cooker i y ■ IB ■' QhMMJUgSSJ—I* ;; ; ■ — ■ X 111 ■ , .;. 1 j "‘‘“J ~i. Miracle Sealed Oven • - - AW • ■ !; > 3LargeStorage’ ■ 1 B I - Drawers |Hr \ 3.800-Watt Speed i F /fl|B| ' ' ' Broiler || W 1 Tel-A-Glance J I Controls ' ( ' ft. Bl ’"’— "" — Appliance Outlet 1 f B w —— — Single Dial Oven r “ ' - I ' / ' l ’ 1 ; Loek-Stop, Non-Sag ■ ’ / I / \ • !i I h ~~2n ’ Oven Shelves / I / \ ■: i; —nl I \ ~^ = - > t \ Modal F B 74 I" Z — —L USE YOUR OLD RANGE G ®‘ A Dependable I FOR DOWN PAYMENT Weetinghouee ! I Only A Few Available I ONLYS IO . 79 Per th At Th,7 * | you can be SUHE..IF rri H ' (d —« ■ ICT T7MIT9C s J* ■ ■ .' 7 . . . ’ ;- - i H r ; ' '* ■• ■ : L - ' ' ‘ ;.. :. ,h \i. , , . ... *,. L • . ■ • '■ '? 7 I . ' '■ : 'S' ;■ S M

EX-SECRETARY (C-oattnoed From Page One) Ickes answered the president with a 2,0()OO word ifetter of resignation. . . '■ —- - i > Democrat Want Ads Bring Results

1 : Jr • I ■. 11, ■■ . i 'L J DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA'

Boerger Reelected ] Circuit President I j j ' ' ' " ,' ’ y Annual Meeting Os I I Lutheran Circuit 1 I [Hugo Boerger was reelected’ pref I sident of Circuit A, an organiza< I t»n of the li) Lutheran churches ir| I the Decatur area, at the group’s.anj I nldal meeting Sunday afternoon ai| I St. Peters Lutheran church ift I R<j)ot township. Simeon Dettmer| I o|f[ Bethlehem Lutheran church a,| I Ossian, Ivas vice-presidenlg I and Don Hoile, of St. John’s Luth* I elrhn church, Bipgen, will serve a& I the new secretary. I ' The 1952 program committee cogi I s|iffts of Herbert Witte, St.)Jbhn’< I Bingen, Hilbert Hoile, St. John's I Monroeville: Paul Becker, Si| I foul's Preble, and Adolph I Emmanuel, ftoest. This group is re* I sponsible; for arranging speaker.* I for each of the three meetings hel<| I year on the first Sundays q| I February, May, and November. J fj jA rising vote of thanks, alongj' I With nunierous favorable I from the various pastors and I men, was extended to Oscar I uau, of Zion, becatur., w’ho con-? I eluded 23 years of service as th**, I gloup’s setretary-tHusurer. I I ; "The Rev. W. G. Sehwfehn, I (i»f St. Jfihn’s Bingen, presented ai| I interesting essay on the duties I Hie various church officers, 1 fol 4 I towed by a! question and I period. Thefßisv. Harry Behniug;.; I (j.d reuit chairman for the, I 110.000,<KW) “Conquest for Chris 1 .”? I dclleciion. reemphasized the rnany.; ! missionaiy opportunities wnihlh I hi ve become available aince World I \Var 11, especially in Japan, New| I Guinea and ' the Philippines., Clr| I visitor 6. C.JBus'se commenced.] I briefly on circuit affairs and urged: I £a|ch congregation to appoint I delegate to the central district con- : I yelntion to be held in Fort Wayne in I Aqne. . The Rev. F.. Droegemm Iler.: I of[ the host congregation, conducted ih|e oplenjing-devotional service. The! grjpup’b next meeting Will be htelda May 4 qt Zion. Friedheim. , • n ■ “~r~. 1 ' ; Motorists Fined On Traffic Counts • C*arl Bitler, arrested Saturday morning on a charge of reckless? driving, pleaded guilty Saturday. [ ittjernoon in justice of peace court' ; anh was fined fl, and costs, j to $11.75. Max Ted Stucky, arrested -Friday night on a charge red-kless driving, was found guilty,; bu|t a fine was withheld temporarijyl uritil a further investigation coul*d: be! made. ; Gilbert Roddrgus, Decatur, was* (firmed $5 and costs on a charge pL reckless driving adn Don W’hite.: Fojrt .Wayne,; was assessed a firie ; " of [ SI.OO and costs tor running ; a ‘ nd light:, jn othef justice of peace jco'brt cases. Charles W., Gollitt.' becatur, ropte 6, will appear iat 4:2<> o’clockthis afternoon to an-. Swler to ,a charge of reckless driving. He was arrested Sunday. [ Four Crawfordsville Fires Investigated (Crawfordsville, Ind., Feb. 4.—■ (l[P) —The state (ire marshals, office opened an . investigation? he|re tpday i to determine if an arsonist set: four Area which de-, stpoyed $865,000 worth of property* Xi a five-day period. < The latest fire caused , $750.0,00 \daimage, destroying a Montgomery. Ward Co. warhouse,, the Hillside* Manufacturing Co., and the Indiana Printing Co. Eight neighboring fire commpanies helped bring the flames in the penter of the business district under control Saturday. Fire marshal Alex Houghland arid fire chief Leslie Stopt joinedl ini an investigation to see it a “firebug" started j Crowfordsvill.e’s j fourth major fire in five dayk.j Stout said there was a SIOO,OOOI blaze at Dawson-Manufacturing (|p.i Tuesday, a SIO,OOO fire at a hatdhery AVednesday, and a $5,000 fire at a poultry company Thursday.; ’ — > Trade in a Good Town — Decatur | . • ’ ■ ■ • ; ikAvViTulCji 1 Tonight & Tuesday i , In Exciting Technicolor! . I GARY COOPER “DISTANT DRUMS” I / ' Mari Aldon, Richard Webb . | *ALSO—Shorts 14c-44c Inc. Tax'.' | . o—6— . I “Wed. & Thurs.-—Glenn Ford, | “Secret of Convict Lake” First Show Wed. at 6:30 Continuous Thurs. from 1:30 BE SURE TO ATTENDI ■ [. g ' - Coming Sun. — 808 HOPE “My Favorite Spy”

j Red Cross To Assist Ij i Flood-Hit Families I - Indianapolis, Feb. 4..—(UP*)-"" I Red Cross disaster relief officials. I today prepared to aid. some7oo families who suffered property damage 'in recent floods in Ohio and Indiana. : i , After a three-day survey Os flood conditions, Ralph Brandt, of Red Cross eastern, area * disaster service, said about '6OO * families hit by. the Ohio river ; flood, from Cincinnati to Steubenl ville, O.» would be given relief. ; Brant said half of these wprq ex* i-juried to be in the area. L He .said another TOO families * driven from their homes by a ! .flash flood of the White river in [ the Columbus, Ind., area would be ! aided. . ; V j- , . j'-h-ALLIED AND ’ (Coatiwed From , PaAe Quel - ' ; ■ sitil resisted U. N. efforts to Sprite ; safeguards Into I the civilian 'pro* ! gram. 8 - The XT. N offered to trim, its proposed morthly troop rotation itistbre from 75,000 to 00,000 including rest trips and'temporary duty Bwant to limit total rotation' to assignments. The, Communists ■ ‘25.000. i . 3- The allies offered to : down {he number of “pdinto pf • entry”, for troops and? supplies to J be inspected during an armistice j ■ from 12 to 10 on side. The ; Reds want only three bn aide. . ,■ * J <./; ■ . r KIDNAPPED tCotitlunM Front Pw»e O»»1 : 'Soul the U.S. zone continued * r casting his description. . 'Mies Shelton said the gunjrtan had a “rough• complexionand was? jabout five feet eight inches tall,! The radio broadcasts descjdJjpd liim as “armed, dangerous Tdnd desperate.” They warped anyone spotting him not to attempt so him but to report at police to U.S. or German police. •L. The kidnaped girl is the step-. Taiighter of M|Sgt. Frank* B. Burns of Hot Springs, Va., member of the 73415 t ordnance .procurement depot \in Hanau, ' Erosion Loss in U. S. ' Estimates are that the U. S. is ' losing two hundred 40-acre fanins (8.000 acres) a day through erosion. i Boron Deficiencies Thirty-one states in the U. S. and six provinces in Canada have reported boron deficiencies in over 40 . . different crops. — '■

■ ' 11,1 ■■■ 'I I" HBARGAIN DAYSII ■ Il ■ at Ph era H ■ — s n ■ • V: rM' I B H BOY'S SUITS . ' J Men's Suede Flafntiel I r Site* a- 13 I 11 SHIRTS All Wool Sizes 14 i/ 2 t 0 ' Values to 13.95 2.95 value B ’4>s 1.95 H MBH’s odd Lot DRESS SHIRTS I SLIP-OVER r F.ncr.rtw.h.whu. . i 'MI L_> 1 ■ 'ah wool.■■ M 195 ■ 1.00 B IM ■ THEN’S.; . i . ■ MENS UkllT E*DIE?E*S£ mm, firil I aw.aaa.iA ~ r~ —r— — flB ' -'I Athletic Shirt* Values to 2.4& t, HmB 2 ‘l-co ■ ■ I K MWMBMBMBBi WH IFIIT TII—IWi iMUM—!■ if , i 7 | ■ ’ j ' .’ — MEN’S ’ Men’s Blue Chambray I work; pants work shirts SMb'29 -42 Sizes 14>/ 2 -1/ ■■ ■ 3.sO : values Limit One i ■■ ■ 195 *I.OO II ■ 4. v ' ‘ U BBMBMMBBMBM MMMMKBHBMMi c 7 ‘ ! HI | Begun's Clothing Store | ; - ! FTj ' : I*

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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1952