Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 198, Decatur, Adams County, 21 August 1952 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
\ Church Conference - At North Manchester The Rev. Russell Weller ? *— . and Ed Arnold are attending, conference of the Church * y>l the Quality Photo Finishing when it’s see-worthy \ < Snap It!* HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.
fl kk / ■ This Year INDOORS au' fl MEMORIAL V fl COLISEUM fl W FORT WAYNE W \ OCTOBER 1 thru 9 \ 10 Performances —Including Sunday Matinee fIR ,—J CHOICE SEATS ORDER Zss a J<OW>(S!!L'.. ! . ■ HOLIDAY ON ICE OF 1953 ■ ZOLLNER TICKET OFFICE, crt Vim Sporting Goods Store, i ! J 1027 S. CALHOUN STREET, FORT WAYNE 2, INDIANA. J £ Enclosed And check or money order totaling $ ■ ; In payment for tickets at $ ««*>• ■' ■ Date of Performance desired -- — JJ ■ | All Seats Reserved — $3.00, $2.50, $2.00 and $1.50. | J ■ NAME /•'. *-—* — *—' ■ S ADDRESS i ■ \ 5 CITY -- STATE ; ■ f ■ Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope' ■ . a (Make Checks Payable to Holiday Ort Icet , ■■■■■■■^■■■■■Baaaanaßaaa.«Rl9B«9R>>> ■■•■■■■ ■■■■■*■ ■ ■■uni «■■■»■ ini , ;ii| I ui i.i ,ii ini..., j ' j. LILLI" *• Itgp Jwssf dWSj if ii. i l . stWm Locker Service Friday & Saturday Specials We will have a nice assortment of cuts of fresh dressed Home-killed Beef, Pork, and Veal. Also a good supply of our Home Sugar Cured, iHickory Smoked, Pig -Hams; lean Slab or Sliced Bacon; Smoked Tongues, 2 •to 3 lbs, each, special at 59c lb. Tender Chuck or Arm Beef Roast, 59c lb. All Hog Sausage, 39g; ? lb. and Pure Ground Beef at 55c lb. We have available some Lockers For Rent at the same rental fee we have charged for the last few years at $15.00 and $18.(K) a Year. As a special inducement to rent and fin up one of these lockers or your home freeze-unit, we have on hand at our wholesale plant, North on US 27, a of nice young Steers and Heifers, fresh dressed quarters weighing from 75 to a 100 lbs. each, special this week end for 53c lb. for front- quarters and 58c lb. for hind quarters. Take advantage of these favorable prices on this high quality home dressed Beef by renting a locker or filling up ~ your home freezer unit. Our usual price of cutting up. wrappirtg and sharp-freezing is 5c lb. Also we will have a nice assortment of Pdrk Cuts, "such as, Pork Loins, Fresh Hains or Shoulders and Chunks; half quarters of Beef, such as Beef Rounds, Chucks, Loins and Beef Plates. Make our Wholesale Plant on High- - way 27 North, your Headquarters for fresh slaughtered, home-killed, Adams Cbunfy Meats, at wholesale prices. Special this; weekend, 5 LBS. LARD 65c. 25 lb. or 50 lb. can 12c lb. of Good* Fresh Rendered Lard in new cans. y
.... SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY & SATURDAY i n I CHERRY CAKE ■■ 65c Starts Bakery WEEK TRY gun DONUTS-FRESH A T YOUR GROCERS EVERY BAY PHONE S4SOB
Brethren of thia erea as delegates trom the Pleasant Dale church at North Manchester. Thirty eight churches of this area meet annual ly for the planning and carrying on of the program in each department of the'churcn lite. The delegates Vote in the btislsessions and the election of officials. Other members of the local church will participate in other parts of the conference. Don Yager will serve as chairman ot the Youth meeting on Friday evening when Congressman John V. J • ■ C ; ' . DON’T TAKE A CHANCE '' TAKE J PLENAMINS Smith Drug Co.
Beamer of the Fifth congressional district will be the speaker. Eight Charges Filed Against Ft. Wayne Men FORT WAYNE, Ind. UP —Eight’ charges were ori file today against two rtien in connection with the alleged rape of a 13-year-old baby' sitter. ‘ Prosecutor John G. Reiher said the charges, baked on medical Evidence find bbspital reports, were filed against Howard Wariief, 20, and his cousin, Homer Zartman, 21, both of Fort Wayne. The attacks occurred last Friday night, the girt told police. McGRANERY (Cantlnued From Paite uncovered some questionable dealings by a “responsible official who holds a position of trust in the Justice Department.” He said he was not talking about Mullally, a native of Grand Forks, N. D.
- Last Time Tonight ■ “THE TANKS \ ARE COMING” Steve Cochran, Marl Aldon f ’ BLAZING EXCITEMENT IN 2 ACTION HITS! THEMM ’! STORY OF THE GREAT SIOUX INDIAN UPRISING! ! J i liiiHwSftW Preston Foster, Jack Oakie — ADDED THRILLER — ssFMohnny WEISSMULLER }/l) AtoufmMir krtrortKMt Boe WATWIUO mtk SHOA «YM • MCM VMim • ITU TMBCT m IMOAjnM THited Cfcwy) • Wntm to m terwn b, Sun. —Flr<t Decatur Showingl “Outlaw Brother” Mlckey» Rooney “Feudire’ Fools” Bowery Boys O—O""— I Children Under 12 Free
k%\ 11 11 Yf ■wy TODAY I .Sk> V 11 * I ulwflfl I “WHEN IN ROME” | wk W \ Van Johnson, Paul Douglas ALSO—Shorts 14c-50c Inc. Tax AIR CONDITIONED Continuous from 1:30 FRI. & SAT. „ Be T<> *“ en<l . One of the Year’s BIG Ones in TECHNICOLOR! i FHE "x, MF LOST WORLD ] M W OKEFENOKEE... WMBW HIDDEN TODAY HMK f MM BL IN GEORGIA’S fIBjML ~ i^k t i ™" o o ’ 7 Sdn. Mon. Tues,—Doris Day, Ronald Reagan, “Winning Team”
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Scientist Allows Burial Os Waste Radioactive Scarps Buried In Back Yard ST. LOUIS. UP — Only an atomic physicist would dare have radioactive waste materials buried in his own backyard. | Such" is the case at Washington University where Chancellor ,Ar* thur Holly Compton, one oT Ahoforemost scientists in the field of atbin-smashing, throws op«in the grounds surrounding his home to the burial about every two months. The process illustrates one of the pressing problems of the atom age: how to get rid of partially radioactive solids and liquids'left over from smashing the atofhf A. A. Schulke, engineer in charge of the university’s giant, 80-ton cyclotron, said the job really is not dangerous; but most people are timid about the. proximity of radioactivity. A Not so with Dr. Compton, one of the men whose research led to the A-bomb during World War 11. Schulke said there's no more to housecleaning at the cyclotron ■than there is to a housewife's cleaning outjhe attic. Liquids are the easiest so get rid of. he said. Just dilute the materials in a carrier which can absorb them. Metal, dust and powders are a problem. Radioactivity may wear off in a matter of seconds or may hang on for a thousand years. That’s why the cyclotron can’t sell its old metal for re-use by most business concerns. “Suppose a geiger counter irianufacturer bought it,” Schulke said. “They'd have a built-in reaction.” So e,Very two months the eerie burial ritual takes place. \: Men clad in respiratory masks, rubber gloves and boots and white laboratory frocks trudge off AT to Compton’s house with tall garbage pails of yraste. | One gingerly lowers receptacles of' material into a pit while the other keeps tab on radioactivity with a geiger counter. xwo fl WOUNDED IN ACTION at Chosen Reservoir in 195 b after which \he refused to be evacuated home. Marine Major William Earl Barber, 32, of West Liberty, Ky., is in Washington today (Aug. 20) to receive his I country's highest honor. Presi-" | dent Truman makes presenta-
tion of the Congressional Medal' of Honor at v a White House! ceremony. CASUALTIES ; (Contianed From Page, One) sing but returned to military service ■ 1 ■ \ MARINE CORPS — 19,859 cas[ ualties — 2,595 dead, 16,892 wounded. ‘352 jnissing, 20 previously nilssing b«t returned to service. >'»R FORCE — 1,242 casualties — 445. dead, 39 wounded, 713 mist slog, four captured, 41 previously musing but returned to service. QUINTUPLETS (Con tin wed From Page One) tQ learn that all five girls were alive, and added smilingly .that
rT — " . . v —IT m v" —r \\ 1 \ fl < \\ i |\ n \\ i \j X—JuhA \ a . ism* f&cr pun SAVE HARD RUBBING! Children’s Vj whiten* undies come snowy-white, sanitary V" I too—with Roman Cleanser Bleach. I remove stubborn stains, see label. 4 'W||HOJ9k
zSCH OOL TO GS —— j Start Them Off. On The Right Foot With Real Smart School JH Clothes At Real Sriiart Economy Prices ! 4|Jw School Slacks MBA \ Gaberdine ” , r w Neatly tailored In pleated olltin 1 Will tTTF models from sturdy 15 oz. Inplrnfc . Acetate rayon Gaberdine! , JalnClß Reinforced for longer wear! . . .„ .u- u„„ e hv. I wßsfel Choice of Brown, Tan, T he „ ♦>. ° Y ♦u Wil I f K -- rr.L (and the,r mothers too)! i / P/i 1> 6 t 16 Lustrous Satin twills, light |.. JSw*' L N no * n wei 9 ht and showerproof- |f liM \ $3.nS ed! Full zipper front with Ls!) * v . side pockets and adjustable 1 W 1 ’ \W ! 'z K ; Corduroys . CM,fc - 6t016 - _ > Durable thickset corduroys A Qll T v in all the popular colors. ".VV .-J 1 Strongly made and specially I* I W-- Pleated models , i WeqjSMCd , J f 1 OB,' I ln a " boys ' ••"•’i Ust arr,vef l first ship- ,1 lH QfX ment of Bovs Fall and I ‘ J Winter Jackets. Put I f lßlgy r Mooresville Plaids your choice in Lay-A-Dress-up Slacks (they sell re- * y ° W *- gularly for $5.95), MOORES- PAF a QAF I ' 4 ■ . VILLE fabrics are washable. 3 Mfl TQ Q JjZl aKHrak I - Perfectly tailored in pleated models . . . colors: Tan or ' Grey. All sizes. 11 — $ 4 - 98 Dungarees E Terry or String-Knit B wEJIM Zipper Fly Polo shirts sx"j u .r<> n, .rx-lx ■ ■• • k Terry cloth or string V \ SANFORIZED Bartack. < knits in a tremendous ed ane | peinfot-ced a t every assortment of new all ’ strain point. Made with over patterns. They re DOUBLE-KNEES and ZIPjust right to wear PER FLY. with Slacks Dun- A4 Wfb garees. All boys’ sizes. $1.79 '! | 98c-1.49 /. . M School Sweaters Raincoats t Coal Slyles , lr Positive protection in Black Rub- jJE 1 PuIIoVCTS “ ber raincoats or the lighter weight A clear plastics. Send him to school Coat styles jn 2-ply shaker knit ready for all kinds of weather. All yarns in solid colors! Button boys* sizes. front with two pockets. Pullovers ‘ gkgb are ' IOC % wool in new chest wO QQ ***.} rtripes and novelty patterns. Sizes OP&svU { A t from 6 to 16. Plastic Black Rubber $1.98 W” $2.98 ‘ 1 .. THE WHY Decatur
•'God's present wai too big for us?’ APPOINTMENT OF EXECUTOR Estate No. 4NOO Notice 1. hereby gives. That the underKigned has been appointed Executor pf the estate of Charles O. McKean late of Adame County, deceased. The estate ie probably solvent. CALVIN J. McKEAN, Executor G. REMY BIERLY, Attorney August 6, 1954. AUGUST 7—14—21 For Athlete’s Foot Use T-4-L for 3 to 5 days. If not pleased, your 40c back. Watch the old, tainted skin slough off to be replaced by healthy skin. Get Instant-drying T-4-L from any druggist. Now at Kohne Drug Store.
. • . ■;> -- V ! LITTLE CHIEF PONTIAC SAYSOnly a Craftsman Should Care For Your Pontiac!" 1 (IN FACT, ONLY A PONTIAC FACTORY-TRAINED CRAFTSMANIi v- ] i Your Pontiac is a fine car, built to serve you long finest of care —service, when it needs it, by a Pontiac bPMb Factory-Trained Craftsman. Our mechanics attend Pontiac Factory Schools in this area, do home* work, pass exams. They have learned everything from Hydraulics to Hydra-Matics. They are craftsmen in every sense of the word. DECATUR SUPER SERVICE 224 W. Monroe St. Phone 3-3618
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THURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 1952
