Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 237, Decatur, Adams County, 8 October 1953 — Page 10

PAGE TWO-A

EQUITY’S t f h Strawberry Marble ■\ ICE CREAM ALSO '/» IN BULK /9C Gal. l:[ this WEEKS OCTOBER F SMcU| n NATIONAL I r~*T~T7 Chess* Month ’ 1 EQUITY'S OWN , I L SODAS - Umghorn and Daisy j. CREAM CHEESE 15C LB* s»e . SWISS CHEESE m. 17c I* n-4 Nhurui bnick cheese .... m. <7c UCI. 3th to Oct. ISth COTTAGE CHEESE 2 *•- 29c Equity Dairy Store Frank Lybarger, Mgr. DECATUR The Salvation Army Red Shield Store '238 N. 2nd Street Deeat ar, Ind. Reconditioned Fanfare Clothing Shoes - Dishes Miscellaneous Items , PRICED REASONABLY " Ji ' ■■ • ; ~ 111 11 TO CALL TRUCK FOR PICK-UP OF CLOTHING, PAPERS, Ete. PHONE 3-3240 ■ I ■ ■? l— l j *'■ ■ i ■■■ ■■■!■■■t , in iii in—— '■■Ji 11 i 1 V — -ew. ■*?■■»* . — M

~~ - , —. ■ — ‘ ( , . \ : ' J-J ' OiL '' ’ ■ ; ' '— . . ■ ' '' h jaff jfr ..;•. -fry *m jfVWJp mKIBwkhBSwK' ' wfIW?W vW^y^WF< ■ ’ st- BRA . -1 ■ 1 . ■_. . LOW DOWN PAYMENT UP TO 24 MONTHS TO PAY ■■ :l ■! ~-t" >, 't "' ! . ' " 1 ■ 1952 1951 1951 1951 Plymouth Oldsmobile Plymouth Ford ‘>co» Arrian I II : Tu,tof Lea-led will, Extras » ed «" Cu «°” Seda " 1951 1951 1950 1949 i Plymouth Dodge Plymouth Oldsmobile Club Coo*e , * Auto. Traos. ' S«4an t 4-Door H" '. f lull II . ! **■'■"■""■*■ nil y— ■> liwmj. n Jwi m I ; ' PLYMOUTH , z - 1947 DODGE Sedan SsdGF '■■•'. ->£ABpO NEW PAINT 1946 FQRI) Tudor Motor Overhauled __ . i.-.;. ■ ■ . 1 MOST CARS HAVE RADIOS AND HEATERS • Ul' . I .1, T 11., I ‘ , ,„ , , ,„„„„„ P . Mansfield Motor Sales ir b . I b| ■ ■ ■ ■ ■■■■ \ -.- | ■■ ■ • ■ i 251 NORTH 2nd STREET I OPEN ——"' • l . J . ' r • •S II p ‘ ■' ' '* ■' -'' : ~ -

“GRANDMA” r HffoH.MY,'.' !’m"7 I |LAND SAKES, 1 JUST CAN’T I AM, I KHOW MOW, BUTfT HAD IT WAS THAT EXTRA PACKAGE DI Q GETTING J UNDERSTAND WHY t SHOULD ME WORRIED FOR A MINUTE/ z O’ HAIRPINS t FQOGOT A>£ A £3D HEAVIERJ GAIN SO !fy LEFT IN MY APRON POCKtTX'/ -- f i mJL o — AA ? H\ r-#-’ h 2®-'’ — fl 'O-8 j! J I - — &s<• LJH Bm WM M ■mmc

Mail Box Jokers Irk Postmaster Cleveland Pions For Crackdown CLEVELAND, 0., UP — Postmaster (Joseph. Prosser Is fed up with some of the “jokers” who have been mailing cats, dogs, cigar butts, report cards and billfolds and intends to crack down. . There are 1,600 mailboxes and annually the department is flooded with items that bear no resemblance to letters or packages. “From now on,” Prosser said, “We will keep a closer scrutiny on our mail collection boxes. Any jokers caught mailing dogs, cats and lighted cigar and cigarette butts will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.” Prosser reported on a recent incident where an unwary postman opened a letter box and found a frantic tomcat inside. “When our man came along and opened the box to get the mail, the eat leaped out and ed him to death,” Prosser said, “That was bad enough, but the cat had ruined about all the mail in the box. Why, the last the mailman saw of him, he was racing down the street with several letters stuck to his claws. Report Cards, Too :\ ' He was particularly bitter about those who can't pass a mailbox without tossing a lighted cigaret or cigar into the slit. “Tbit's destroying government property,” he pointed out, ‘•punishable by; up to |S(M) fine, plus costs and maybe one year in prison.” Pickpockets like to use mailboxes to get rid of the billfolds and' purses they have emptied. Indians played at home, we picked “The last time the Cleveland up more than 100 stolen billfolds, from our downtown boxes and returned nearly all of them,” Prosser said. The claims and inquiries department makes these returns for a charge of from 10 to 50 cents, depending on the weight. \

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA?

<> , Safe * / \ 4 >- MWWWakh w mmsMßm x.- > i ‘ •:«! • ' ■■■ Awn-... WITH A GLOBE symbolic of the occasion, President Elsenhower bids t goodby to Vice President Richard Nixon at the White House before ‘ Nixon’s midnight departure by plane on a globe-girdling tour. Nixon carries the President’s personal letters to heads of 16 nations included in his itinerary. (International Soundphoto)

k. ■ ~L , -,_ , - , . . ■ ’ With school uhderway once again, the mail boxes will be re- ' Reiving grade cards until next j smnnier. Prosser can’t understand how children think getting , the cards is going to prevent their ’ parents from finding out their marks. The cards are returned, he . said. ' t Germ Warfare Film Denials Are Readied Documentary Proof To United Nations I ' UNITED NATIONS. N. Y., UP— The -United States today made, ready filmed denials of Communist charges of germ warfare for the \rU. N. general assembly debate on ! the ..matter. Sound motion pictures of the personal experiences of five -American airmen forced by the Communists to “confess” to waging germ warfare were among the documentary proof the United States had to refute the Red charges before the U. N. The films, made in San FrancisCo, were screened Tuesday for top U. N. diplomats at the Wal-dorf-Aatoria. Soviet-bloc delegates, who stressed the “confessions” in earlierrU.N. meetings, were invited toqthe showing but none attended. Dr. Charles Mayo, who will handle the germ warfare issue when

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ff E ■■ jlr i ''' i " X 11 Wc & "W ™ W -1 REAR ADM. H. G. Rickover to scheduled to head the combined project of AEC, the U. S. Navy and a section of private industry in the first blg-scale attempt to build a peacetime nuclear power plant. He directed construction of the first submarine powered by atomic energy. (IntemdttMal)

the item comes up for discussion at the current general assembly session, said the repudiations were “additional evidence that the U. N. and we, the U. S. ( have never engaged in bacteriological warfare.” The five airmen made it cjear that the "confessions" were extracted by the Communists by

Horse-Buggy Era Prevails On Isle \ 6,200-Acre Island Is World By Itself NAUSHON ISLAND, Mass., UP -rThis 6,200-acre island, a little world by itself, is one of the few spots in the nation still in the horse and buggy era. It’s owned and populated entirely by members of the Forbes family of Boston, now headed by W. Cameron Forbes, millionaire former U. S. ambassador to Japan. The five trustees who handle the affairs of the island will allow no motor vehicles wilh the exception of a few farm machines. So members of the 15 Forbes households travel on horseback or in elegant carriages and buggies. Since no one manufactures buggies, keeping up the island's rolling stock has become a problem. The trustees have to keep an eye out for vehicles stored in barns . for many years. Also Has Ghost When a “aew” buggy is acquired, it often is dried up from lack of use. A Naushon remedy is to drop it into Mary’s Lake, a small fresh water pond, until it has soaked up enough water to moisten the wood again. Mary’s Lake is well stocked with bass, pickerel and perch and one successful angler there was Crown Prince Akihitd of Japan who visited Forbes on his American tour. The island, at\the mouth of Buzzards Bay, also fharbors wild turkey, foxes, otterfc and deer. One of the most intriguing denizens of the island, however, is the “ghost” of Massachusetts Gov. James Bowdoin, Revolutionary War hero who once owned the property. The “ghost” is reputed to wander at night in one of the rooms of the Forbes mansion, where he died. means of mental and physical torture. All five of the “confessions” were circulated by Soviet delegate Andrei Y. Vishinsky earlier this year as official documenta and “evidence” that the Allies were waging bacteriological warfare in Korea. Personal repudiations of the “confessions” w r ere given by Col. Frank H. Schwable of Arlington, Va., and Maj. Roy H. Bley, ot Cabool, Mo. U. 8. marines, and air force Lts. John S. Quinn of Altadena. Calif.,, Floyd B- O’Neal of Fairfax, 8. C.. and Paul R. Kniss of San Antonio, Tex. |

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