Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 192, Decatur, Adams County, 14 August 1952 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Commercial production of a new textile fiber spun from zein, a corn protein, is now under way. About 15 per 4ent of the new fiber produced is used to make med’s hats. SPECIAL FOR DOLLAR DAY/ MURAL TONE WALL PAINT ■ SSf I . WTj'PHONE 3-3030 S. 2nd St.

FRIDAY and SATURDAY are r 'R ANNUAL SMASH ■■ \J ' as usua ' “Best Buys” are at ET\ THE WHY / Regular $6.95 and $7.95 Summer Slacks - H Swl l : ' n Crisp, cool Rayons, Gabardines and $ M Sharkskin blends! All taken from I Wwl ■”* £T 01,1 regular Stock! All perfectly t HI WW § ! &11 tailored and finished! Plenty of ’ HWs| • new I’ att erns and sizes to choose ' ' 1- Bw Kiwi! I from. w1/ i1 • W M Reg. $2.98 ' \ W M i jl JB TV STRAW f £ > SZI ■;r ♦ I BB|w i k v J&ssfflK&g Your choice of k> |» / i fcslpp any straw hat U HH in our f i n e 0 H / EH H. Only I J I1 s Tk to El /i / A Regular Mr ■| ji / 5,98 r JHMHniafl II OB polo JWB SHIRTS Reg. 3,e I I feSKW Jif FANCY > H \sBL sox g| ISOL 5 Pairs B yk»||jjAW The most outstanding BAR- 1 GAIN BUY in town! Extra Bl ' fine quali,y •tasi;hel string- j|||g|k "" * knit Polo Shirts! A tremen- .’Fancy patterns dous assortment of patterns and solid colors and colors to choose from! - in Novelty ankSome sold for $2.49 origin- ■ IMII lets. A ally. ' J| Regular $3.98 Sport Shirts mJLJFIK v " '■•UbA W Re 0' 59c 1 II • > VBfcWfe' y - / ABM B \ white i IwBBCTR. B t shirts I a AH taken from our regular stock! ctaajk w ' BB^^BBBr F*i ne Quality Rayons and Gabar- « 21*1 < H nes in l° n K sleeve styles. Nov- f° r * elty patterns and solid colors in Fine quality, broken assortments. A REAL <—flat-ribbed Bargain! T - Shirts \• , ' » I : I ideal to \ wear MM the ’round. Reg- 1-69 SPORT SHIRTS MM DVI V Reg * 1,49 POLO shirts ' Reg. 1.69 JIMMYALLS M | \ Reg. 2.98 POPLIN JACKETS ,„1 \ Men’s PAJAMAS R X r,y L?l if f v ■ . a 7 | SWEATEES M Men’s Regular $3.49 WORK PANTS -2 < ... ’L ■ j n p aS tel \ M shades. Men’s Men’s JACKETS "X ’ ’2 k_“" '" " A i— ' \ QB,. . W' j" MjBW <»' BOYS JO JR Blaek Rubber 'lEw Rain Coals C /|taksWßa . *2 jRbK Regularly $4.98 t-- ' 1 jMiaaMaWß ' —raWpCjr&C f" 1 MiR/M 4MBM WwffaHy'jK s Sizes to 16. - - '\ " • ’ -■■?-; •.J• . • . >

CANNING COI (Continued From One) j off the tops. At one time, said Hutchersons, his plant was the largest canner ojt fancy tomatoes in the country, emiploying over 2,000 workers. Even now, he added, ’they ship: from coast-to-coast and north and south. The two most popular brand labelk appearing on his products are Preble Brand and Crossroads Branii. He said there are others that appear on them, but .they are put op separately by individual buyers. He said they also can Hutcherson said he has contracted to buy 30b acres of i tomatoes from the Adams county area and some out of town. He said very good tomatoes are grown in this part of the country and he gets very good results. i '. / The Decatur Canning Co., begins next week, last year canned 400,000 units. C. L. Thorn? is id charge of the local canning plant. Trade in a Good Town —Decatur

Studebaker Official ' Killed In Accident STURBRIDGE/ Mass. UP — Stanwood Sparrow, of South Bend, Ind., 63-yeaiMild vice president in charge of engineering fpr the Studebaker Corp., was killed today when his automobile swerved from the .highway and overturned. He died at a Southbridge hospital shortly after the accident. Idaho’s first permanent tion system was a canal four miles long, built by Mormon pioneers at Franklin. > ’ Whaling was a big Spitsbergen industry in the days of Henry Hudson, but hunting was so intense that by 163& most of the great mammals had been killed or driven far out' into Arctic waters. Contrary to popular opinion, the most important factor in the preservation dt Egyptian mummies was the unusually dry climate of the Nile area and (he absence of bacteria in the sand and the air.

\ i‘l ’ ' ’’ 1 ' DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Baby Girl Born In Airliner Rest Room Mother, Daughter ; Are Reported Well | NEW YORK, UP — A 25-year-old woman gave birth unattended to a girl early today in the rest room of a Pan-American airliner flying from San Juan, P. R., to New York. iMrs. Lidia Serpa, New York, and her new daughter were reported doing fine at a hospital where they were taken after the plane landed at Idlewild airport. Passengers and crew members were not aware of the child’s birth until they heard the cries of the newborn baby coming from the lavatory on the four-engined plane. Barbara ' Giron, stewardess on the flight said Mrs. Serpa told her pt midnight that she was having pains. But the pregnant vtiDiaan, whose hugband was scheduled 'to meet her at tl|e airport in New York, said she wasn’t worried., because the baby was not due. for two more months. . — y | Mark Sullivan Dies Wednesday Night Heart Attack Fatal To Noted Columnist WEST CHESTER, Pa. UP — Mark Sullivan, newspaperman, columnist and historian, died Wednesday night in the same town where he began his newspaper ' career more than 60 years ago. A nationally-syndicated columnist for the New York HeraldTribune, Sullivan would have been 79 years old next month. He suffered a heart attack on his farm in nearby Avondale, Pa., Wednesday afternoon a’nd was rushed to the Chester county hospital here in an ambulance. \ One of the most respected writers on international and national affairs, Sullivan was author of the six-volume book “Our Times." Sullivan was born on the same Avondale farm where he had made his home for the past six or seven years. He began his newspaper career on the West Chester Morning Republican shortly after graduating from the West Chester State Normal School in 1892. /' His> wife, the former Marie McMechen Buchanan, died \in 1940. He is survived by a son, Mark Jr. of Washington, D.C.; and two daughters, Mrs. Narciss Slegchrist, Randolph, Vt., and Mrs. Sydney Parker, of Brussels, Belgium, where her husband is attached to the U.S. embassy. Funeral services will be held in West Grove, Pav, Saturday at 10 a.m. '' \ ' ? ■ Trade In a Good Town —Decatur’. You’ll Live in It w il I In I *\ pEE I iU\ Alli 1 liiviV ■ J/vIC 111 I l\\l \ rl3f* I 111 11 lull ui i r*|A 111 1 IBV w AA iili BBV *\. • I* v • vl Wl2-20.30-41 It’s a breeze to sew! Youfl depend oh this casual for shopping, church, spectator sports. Deep yoke, big pockets are smarty fashion details. Have it in cotton or one of the new dylons that wash in a wink, hardly need ironing! Send noW, wear it soon! Patetrn R 9361: Misses’ sizes 12, il4, 16, 1«, 20; 30, 32. 34. 36, 38, 40, 42. Size 16 takes 4% yards 35-in. This easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit. Complete, Sew Chart shbwg you every step. Send Thirty-five cents in colna for thia pattern to Marian Martin care Daily Democrat, Pattern Dept P.O. Box 6740, Chicago 80, 111. Print plainly YOUR NAME, ADDRESS, ZONE, SIZE Wd Style Number. >

; The socalled “falls” of the United States* grbat east coast rivers are seldom more than rapids but they mark the departure of the .streams from highlands to coastal plaih, and usually from swift to navigable water. The scientific name for the common dog is cants familiaris. IKE PLANS (C«wtinned From Page One) man of the GOP congressional committee, have “heartily endorsed’ the plan, Summerfield said. Party leaders meeting with Eisenhower Thursday in Kansas 'City will come from North and South Dakota, Nebraska, lowa, Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma.

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to t&c.... 4-H CLUB MEMBERS FOR A JOB WELL DONE! Reserve Grand Champion Champion ANGUS HEREFORD r | | RAISED BY RAISED BY BILL SIPE KATHLEEN ADLER t Route 2 —Berne, Ind. : r Route 4—Decatur, Ind. ' .Jw ■J*w| •1' "> SOS U I B< A / ‘lf ’ z ** Bl J| dH— ■ 1 . . .......... .. . . Jr r™wn***ft i«„ o. W"’* ;s "'“■ ■ . . < < rf* d fl Isl F ffivysSllwflj* •!*’ 1 F % ' f .... A. ■jit' 8# * ■ 1 Li f fIH ■mM W? BLiv W V . * v. ' V'3hS' z - ' w SL -•■O BBBBk <>i - ■■ -& W... W-Z Kn Sk**»«|| | .fHHHHHMB'-. HM HHHHHHHHF ! _ - " . V .. ■ ■ . > ' r ■.. ■ . . : 'aea /<* ' ytj. x We Have Purchased These Two Steers >* ) and Beginning Friday We Will Feature ( jS !?□ ) \JK Z— \Jk x**z / . This 4-H Beef On Our Menu. TUC . Kv [ THE BrM — THE ‘‘-h jßcy c~~r < " i iferss 4-h Bsn7 CLUB CUB p 7 IBEST1 BEST \ M C*T«I IN If AN| ~ -dSRBSS

IKE REFUSES TContianed From Fare One) yearn.” Eisenhower told the man who as commander-in-chief, was the boss when Eisenhower wan a five-star general. '‘The decision rests between the Republican nominee and the candidate you and your cabinet are supporting and with whom you conferred before sending your message. “In such circumstances and in such a period I believe our communications should be only those which are known to all the American people. Consequently I think it would be unwise and result in, confusion in the public mind if I were to attend the meeting in the White House to which you have invited me."'

ADLAI SCOFFS (Co»ttsned From Fare Ore) Labor day speeches indicated the Democrats will .open their campaign with a bid fdr labor support and a statelment on views on labor legislation. REPORT CROPS (Coatiawed From l‘»te Ore) frost before maturity. GRAIN SORGHUMS—-The grain sorghum crop in the southwest is suffering generally from lack of moisture. Prospects are down, but rains in the immediate future would permit fair recovery of many late fields. A crop of 73,000,000 bushels, less than the site of last year’s crop of 159,000,000 bushels is expected.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, \ 1952

Michigan and Wisconsin are recognising non-resident as well as resident fishing licenses issued by both states\ on border waters under terms of a new reciprocal agreement. MMUHM DOMT \ MISS IT SAT. NIGHT AT THE MOOSE