Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 143, Decatur, Adams County, 18 June 1953 — Page 9
SECTION TWO
Today's Lumberjack Has Improved Lot Power-Driven Saws Used By Lumberjacks > SAN FRANCISCO. Calif.. UP — Today’s lumberjack is no sissy, but his lot is far better than that of his grandpappy. In driving several hundred miles through redwoods and sugar pines I didn't see a single man having at a tree with a hand ax. Mostly they were manning power-driven saws, although I understand the ax is not entirely out of date in this lumber country.
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DEC ATI.' H DA ILY DEMOCRAT
The treeman of today can cuss just as effectively as his forebearers and he chn spit a curve into the windi too. But the “jacks” of these times don't sleep on a bed of bows ;in a lean-to. They bed ' down on ia foam mattress, covered with fresh sheets, and pillow their heads oh a ;bunch of fluffed-up ' goose feathers, instead of a tree ‘ stump, j . ! Our 1h53 lumberman lives in a home that is either heated by steam, cdal, yp oil and doesn't have to warm; his hands over a camp fire or fix his sow belly and beans over san}e. lie has electricity or gas. His plumbing is confined to indoors, and his wife and kids enjoy the domfqrts of life with him. In the old days a woman or a kid around the pldce might have called for a around the neck.
Villages in which the lumbermen i live are up to date. There are daily milk deliveries. Stores are handy. The “jack” doesn’t have 1 to read a six-month-old paper. A small flings a paper at his ' stoop each morning. But |Lhe lumberman hasn’t lost all of his heritage. He has retained the lingo of old. \ Here are a few phrases gathered at random from forestry terminol.°gy: 5 . ■ j Widow-maker —A tree that falls i the way it wasn't supposed to fall [ and knocks off the head of the i family. ; Culture— Something manmade as compared to the natural jfeatures of an area. j Face —The lowfer concave por- * tkon of a •saw-totfth, saw. | Girdle—To encircle the stem of
Decatur, Indiana, Thursday, June 18/1953.
a living tree with cuts that completely sever the bark and often are carried into the Renter of the wood. Considerate Car MENDHAM. N. J . UP -Firemen racing to put out an automobile fire in a used car lot were astom ished to see the blazing, unoccupied vehicle suddenly back away from other cars into a clear space. The heat apparently : shotted the ignition and started up the'engine. Rocky Going * NORWALK, Conn., UP 4— East Rocks overpass on a state highway here is well named- George R. Gage complained tq police that vandals threw rocks at his car as he drove by the overpass.
Final Concert Sunday By G. E. Aeolian Choir [ _ T __ ; BST ?y ? c va I ;'i 11 fi t ■ -'■ Ifi lil KJ ■ ; | I ' 11 u •••-■■ J 1 -I ' ■ " ■ -r■ ull The sixty voice Aenliaij Choir of the General Electric company’s Decatur plant will close their 1952-1953 season'with a public concert ..unday evening. h3O at the Trinity Evangelical United Brethren church. Ninth and Madison streets. I'his. is the choir’s mnth consecutive season and Sunday’s program, under the direction of David C. Embler, will feature the male chorus, all girl choir, and piano and organ groups by Evangeline Embler and Eileen Freeby. » . .
Avocation Pays GREENWLLE. UP — To while away the hout£ of boredom while working as a projectionist at Theater here, Robert Woodward decided to make, tiny chaars and sell them as pin cushions. The business became so good 'that -he
rmrMd, > * 1 R k r' 1 * fell jUssb 5 11 h *S ll® If Bflw I ■JB Mi '™™ese BmERbSSEIk ®H amazing FEATURES 0 "flfcW Wb?/ Jl f iL _KbBmI \-My iWffnn KEozmHi LvMmL .1 '' Ec l ui PPed I B. yßMift 'wl BI Wliy venturi I Ib- vl_| ,hat BkkßObk3Cbl Fl f 'WwMmßf \ swirls ■ the air 1 ■ ' I <7 1 |Gitt mot vaum »fc> w« 1 I w.-.. F -d i. w- «;;* urdv . I R » rt - we I B?W1 J . In J g thoonlyuortontf*™ |l r//7/zXj Wsl” 11 lUilB E .1! Ihroe » 9‘| I I |L 4 Lf| g I I PBJ Ea I for lb. office or bom*. <■■ l«Wyf« I I IMBBBBB g chW .en. uncondffionau, acoronleed II I | |OJUAI| |EI fcr one II mMHM ■ a | 50c 00 WN — SOO A WEEK < • I OUR PRICES INCLUDE FEDERAL TAX • . ■ y z ■. ■ ! ..-■ ■ DECATUR — — FORT WAYNE
has been joined by his wife and George D. i Cain, his boss. Still No Such Thing KNOXVILLE, Tenn., UP — Rumors that a “perpetual motion machine” was to be installed at a ; TVA dam near- here swept this
efty, recently. The gossip reached such proportions that the manufacturers of the neWy installed reversible pump-turbfne sent an engineer to Knoxville to deny publicly any such thing. Danny's mother bought an expensive set of children’s books
which included a guide for parents on child behavior. She consulted the guide religiously for a week. One day Danny, a very normal 3-year-old, was cutting some pretty wild capers around the house, and He ‘Shouted: “Hey, Mother, look in the book and see whdt I’m doing’’’ At Bunked Hill Gen. John Stark commanded New Hampshire troops that comprised <wo-thirds of the total American < soldiers engasged. ■At Bennington, the General was in supreme, command and threefifths of the total American soldiers were from his Granite State.
For I ‘Day >■ A •I SMOKED ELK • * ‘ OR TAN . ' .1 i Cushion Crepe Soles sl2-95 FATHER’S DAY SUGfGESTIOftS House Slippers - from $2.65 ■ l‘ ' Thick Crepe Sole Washable Oxfords r $4.95 — - — Dress and Work v Socks KAYE’S jSHOE STORE “Shdes for the Entire Family” 154 N. Second Decatur
