Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 122, Decatur, Adams County, 22 May 1952 — Page 12
i <*> i |M—bM': BfSm ■ % s%£ tJiSre i liMRIH |1 H ’ t I fe -: wf wW' rl I t , '^B"®^ ,l, ' y ® h * illsß 1 5 Il k m r ' ;i | ' ' ’ ' i ! ' ’ t |i J -1 ■ ~ :'' POIWB<|B whwlgk HOLDING A FLOPPY DOLL, fireman Frank Griesback stands amid charred ruins of what was a tw!<hstpry frame! house’in Bogota, N. J. The doll belonged to 2-year-old twihs, Janet and Joyce Patton, killed ,ih the fire along with sisters Claire, 9, and Eileen, 6, and an overnight yisitor, Bernard Nelson, 60, of Hoboken, N. J. The parents, |"~ Tlfr. and Mrs. John Patton, and a son, John, Jr., escaped. (Inter national)
j O|d Friend No Friend ;< paytoA, O. (UP) — When an old T * f'tend showed up at the home of. Mjr. and Mrs. Sylvan Seaman apd tiSfted l<b stay for the night, the Mamuns said sure) The next morni i|i Sgaihan awoke and found the till flierd had gone. S 6 had Mrs. , I lam;in'; billfold, containing ' ?'•*», ■ | ' ,/■ ■ . ’■’ J | Makes Quick Stop P |llettin ter, N. I). (UP) - Kenneth 7 Nall. Stroll, ,S. I)., intended to ntjip ove-night at 1 the Yellowstone !tel he didn’t stop soon ough. His truck skidjied and ished Into the front door 0f the pu .'.; . i J ■ ,A , 1.. • L .• .'
fiL-**C* "fi r vjh " iQw 4w ! J’ P £ jT £ /~ r / - • Warr / • / F' fef *> r- •■ •■X ■ I : I I : ' rry.... •■■ J&3 i' '< X > u 4? ; £'ji I AHMED HUSSEIN, who once hailed ; lltler and Mussolini and now cslls k liifnself a Socialist, is on trial j!or 1 his; life ih Cairo as -leader of |ihc |’ lifts of b&nuary. [ (International! .Ji-*- —£_- I. ’\PTICE MF FIVAL SETTI.EMF.tT | OF ESTATE I i I No. i |57 I '.. 1 tire fa lif-vby- trlvon to tfif* itors, j heirs anti legatees ‘ sos <tiaii Eicher, deceased to appear le lAdairris Circuit Court, h*ld kt tur, I fiilia tut, Vii the>l4tti tlay j’fi . IM’] and show cause. If anfv; the MINAI, -StHTMEM-RNT. ACf vrs Vvlth the estate of sa|d de <|dent should not lx* approvj'il; :rn|l4s;tj<l h<‘jrs are* jiot ifietl to then 'and i there inake* proof of liH-sliip; ’-ana;receive their distributive shai'ek i RAYMOND EK'HER | ■J'JMjIF. JEICIIEIIt E'jceeijtoi.'i Peri tur, Indiana, May 11, 1952. H iA*tiornev HD A. BOSSE? . My 15--2|' ' - V
i en r tines I Schafer’s I '~ \ r ' - I. Blue Tango , A‘Guy is A Guy ‘j. Wheel of Fortune t Blacksmith Blues 4 Kiss of Fire f.' ; I’ll Walk Alone /. 7. I’m Yours 8. Fcirgive Me [K Delicado 1 (>„ Anytime. . u - ■ >*T | - '
Makes Trolley Hard Way , Flint,-Mich., (jtJP) — Mildred . Stanley caught he|r trolley but her sthoes didn't quite make it. As the* young miss dashed for the car,'her; shoe's gOt stuck in the mud and; stayed behind. A polite operator waited while retrieved her’ Whoes; I ■!;. N; I;-/. ■ ■ . ’ ? It’s An Old Custom Starkville, Miss; (UP) —- Modern day fathers needn’t think its anything new-fangled for students to write hohie for money. Dr. John Bettersworth of Mississippi State College says they’ve been doing it for centuries. Betiersworth says that during the njiddle ages the' wprd student was with (beggar. i . ■ ■■• -1 • '. '; 'll i'. ! One antrtmobile cigarette lighter is tested to reach a temperature of ’ 1.400 degrees in not less \ than 10 nor more than 12 seconds.
- — - RjHzljlluJk ***** *° 0M v HEATED EVENIYI ffc CENTRAL HEATING The New and Revolutionary Way to \ Heat Your Home Automatically at •t t i • £•• L Unbelievably Low Cost I pH’ *" ■ i ■ , A WKGIC n A- - >A bi^° £ L-3 i ■ w vHB "7 Who SAID you cannot afford jugs central heating! Inspect this ' / I .revolutionary new low-cost * i BLEND AIR system that’s simple and easy to n | J e»stall. It’s low-cost automatic heating for the Uk I entire home, giving new modumatic comfort! ]fel a VIV» | - 1 x s - -1 Here’s why Blend-Air costs less! NEW 3V 2 .INCH HOT AIR DUCTS FIT ANY |/ CONSTRUCTION! A revolution in heat trans- f mission! A new idea in pipe installation! Pre- pjioD^ *’* £t | engineered,'pre-fabricated, they're standardized to save costly on-the-job labor. **• ' MAGIC BLENDERS GIVE EVEN CIRCULATED p" WARMTH! Say good-by to stale, static, sickly - ;: J ® room atmosphere that packs unhealthfully in =S > hot layers at the ceiling. Blend-Air moves . e=g f |U warm air for clean, circulated warmth. Inside „ E~ r 9E the blender in each room heating magic takes .-j place—it pulls in the room air, blends it with | fifil fresh hot air front the furnace, and re-circulates '■ it, giving even floor-to-ceilihg warinth. POWERFUL SPACE-SAVING FURNACE! Coleman’s Modumatic warm » air furnace filters cold air, heats it and forces it through individual ducts to each room. Fits anywhere-kitchen, closet, utility room—- | saves headroom. Ga? and oil models. | J , \ • Blend-Air is pre-engineered and pre-fabricated. Comes to you complete? Ready to install. Blend-Air saves you as much as SIOO on installation costs alone. ; 4 No money down... pays for itself in comfort and economy in and see Blend-Air— See why comfort costs so little with a Coleman! ■ i! I nil Mj - [ • — CONVERSION GAS & OIL BURNERS? V WALL and FLOOR FURNACES “Heat The Same Day” ASHBAUCHER’S (TIN SHOP j Installers of Quality Heating Since 1915 ROOFING—SIDING—SPOUTING j. PHONE 3-2615 1 * I 116 N. FIRST BT. ■ ——l— L: .1 'l l ' 1
Navy Preferred j Rapid City. S. D.—(UP)—M/Sgt. Chauncey Case, army and air force recruiter, can’t hlaim his wjord'is law around his home. His three sons, Olan, 21, Raymohd, 20, apd Warren, 19, are all in the navy. \ If the Territory of Hawaii becomes an American state 15 or more obscure islets will join the Union along with the larger, betterknown islands of Hawaii, Maui, i Molokai, Oahu, Lanai, and Kauai. Lightning may strike many times in the same place, says the National Geographic Society. It has harmlessly hit the 'Empire Sifate Building in New York city i as|! many'as 12 times in 20 minutes. * Ostriches — largest j and most powerful of the flightless birds — hajve been kept in enclosures and "farmed” since 1857. i.' I The Army’s 12,000 Wacs are stationed in Japan, Germany, Aus--triia. France, Italy and in the Caribbean area as well as at Army installations in this country. Fourteen privately owned toll roads still exist in the Upited Stites, most of them access roads to : mountain tops or seashore reI sorts. Their total length is 7% miles. The United States Military Academy at West Point is America’s oldest permanent military <post. i ■ i ii H
TRY OUR MARKS FILM SERVICE FOR QUALITY { PHOTO FINISHING Smith Rexall Drags GOOD USED I TIRES 600 - 16 j 650 - 16 670 - 15 650 -f5 A i 7 760 -15 up GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Frankfurt Observing Hot Dog Anniversary
Frankfurt, Germany (U.P.)r-(Jet out the hot dogs and bring oh the The lowly frankfurter celebrates its 100th anniversary this month. The elongated, pork-filled, se-cretly-smoked product has made this city on the Main River more famous than any of its illustrious sons, Including; Maier Arrischel Rothschild, who started his backing business here, and the ’poetplaywright Johann Wolfgang Goethe. Hans Wirth, red-faced, 300-poynd owner of Frankfurt's biggest frankfurter factory and a student of frankfurter history, said the German butchers guild developed the glorious sausage in 1852 for t,he growing force of industrial workers. The butcher who lilt on the final shape was inspired by his dog, a dachshund. The frankfurter’s hig jump to international fame came at the 1 ■ . - - • -
lh ,i ; - i' j ’ - '’ l i • ■ 'iM'' I Illi I I II v ' '' COME TO ’®fe DECATUR’S SPRING FESTIVAL I MAY 26 'TO 31'1 I ' 5 ' \ ■ ! i • . M ' : ! ■ ’ ■' h •■ -- • A H ’ ' ; < I j ; ' 1 I A ‘ Hffl inii ■ J . * i * ' V ' • ) \ ■ - • r~~ r •- \ ■■r- -■ ■ [-f- ■ ■ L - . " • Ia 1 ■- 1 ■■ ? 1 ’ / OM ..• V " L , ‘A I- -‘I ' ■ t- i" I. hi < > H ■ ~ | I ■■! I" ■ I■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ' A RIDES 11 Entertainment ■ ' hr Young and Old I \■' p-' ' : '■ v'' : . • 7 a . B ' | 7 ; U ; • ■ . 7 Aft’. . 1 s r -I '; ;h .u,.? *■• H ? ; n fl Illi I ' AROUND THE EVERYONE COURTHOUSE WELCOME! mu \ ~ i i ■ i ■ \ ' i * mm II 1 j ( \ | ! ’ |; . >|| i ’ i ! I ■ \ >■ ' ' *
1893 Chicago world’s fair, where -the imported model and its United States imitations were devoured by the thousands. According to Wirth’s history, there IS a Romeo-Juliet romance connected with ithe red-skinned wurst. During thellast century two of the largest manufacturers feud* ed for years and did not speak to each other. i'One turned out a long, skinny wiener, the ; other a short, fat model and each tried to drive the other out of business. One frankfurter maker had a son and the other a daughter. met and fell in love. After the wedding the two papas got together aiid in celebration of the occasion frankfurters ever since have been made in pairs. *’A good iramcturter sd.ould snap whtn you bite it,” Wirth said. "Our beet' frankfurter skins used to come from Russian and Chinese - ■-
«■■■■!■■ UH I ■!!■ >ll II I ■ lambs. We can't get them now but we are getting some from Persia.” Suddenly turning sad, Wirth deplored the pale, sometimes wrinkled U.S. wiener. "It can’t even be compared,” he said, shaking his head. "No flavor, no texture, no snap.” Wirth exports frankfurters ’to Africg, South America, Australia, Portugal and the United States. Frankfurter manufacturers keep their formula a secret, In addition to the Persian casings, Wirth would admit only that he usee nothing but finely-ground pork from electri-cally-killed pigs and spiced prepared by a trusted cook. “The real secret is the smoking,” Wirth claimed. He refused to tell what wood he used or allow a reporter into the smoke room. Asked if there was any chance that his competitors or he might slip in some horse meat to increase the profits, Wirth drew up to his full 300 pounds: “Horsefurters . . . Never. We butchers are craftsmen — not chiseleraL*’ { - ( IXTrade In a Good Town—Decatur!
Special One Cent Sale ’ | / ON Wall Paper You Pay The Regular Price for a Double Roll—Plus One Cent for the Next. This Does Not Apply To Ceilings, Borders and Special Orders. L -- ’ ' A 1 K ’' F-- ''■ * ' ■ Smith Rexall Drug Store i 11 .II 1 ,.' 1
THURSDAY, MAY 22, 1952
