Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 35, Decatur, Adams County, 11 February 1954 — Page 10
PAGE TEN
DON’T TAKE A CHANCE TAKE PLENAMINS , Smith Drug Co. TEEPLE MOVING a TRUCKING I ...* gug Lang Distance PHONE 3-WO7 SHRIMP EVERY FRIDAY CHICKEN EVERY SATURDAY BILL & BENS VERA CRUZ, IND. "Where The Better People Go” Q
MEL’S PLACE 124 N. 2nd Street-Decatur Music Every Friday Nite WE SERVE CHICKEN — SHRIMP — STEAKS ' ANY TIME/ Mel and LulaWalchle PIGS PIGS PIGS FLUSH FLUSH FLUSH Pigs not up to 100% par, FLUSH. It utilizes the acid condition, it inflates and stretches and deans the intestinal tract, the crevices full of filth and breeding place for Necro germs are cleaned out, enables the pigs to simulate the good out of the feed. You can expect 50% returns from every 1% invested in Honeggers Alka — Flush. Available only at your Honegger Dealers Detain Fams Tad Balmahn Gerber Feed Store
Thanks A Million! to the following Merchants, Individuals and Organizations who so generously donated to our Cancer Fund Party. Firestone Home & Auto Supply Schwartz Ford Company, Inc. Knapp Service Station Decatur Volunteer Firemen Jani Lyn Sheets Dry Cleaners Two Brothers Babers Jewelry Store West End Restaurant Cole’s Meat Market Halterman’s Kelly Dry Cleaners Lee Hardware Peterson Clothing Store Dick Mansfield Motor Sales Niblick & Company Decatur Auto Supply Al Anderson Industries Stewart’s Rakery . * Gerber’s Meat Market Saylors’ Motor Sales Decatur Super Service Wylie Furniture Company Bob’s Standard Service Colchin’s Package Liquor Store Kane Paint & Wallpaper Store Mazelin Heating Service Bob’s Place Beaver’s Oil Service Treon Poultry Market Mies Recreation Decatur Gift Center Haugk Heating & Appliances McConnell & Sons Fager Maytag Sales Ideal Dairy Products Co. Decatur Dully Duwcrat FuUenkamp’s (Frickle’s Place) Gay’s Mobil Service Anspaugh Studios Baxter ' s Barber Shop D& T S ' an<lard Servi « Bower Jewelry Store Bud’s Place Decatur Floral Company Wertabttffer Confectionery ' L " l ' s '’lowers Hahegger hardware The *** Rentz Florist L & 0 Shop St<lts Ciffßr StOrC Clarence Ziner Uhrick Bros. MeFs PlaCe o E,mt> Smith City News Agency BMlton’s Jewelry Store The American Legion Zintsmaster Motor Sales Goodin’s Food Market Loyal Order of Moose The A & P Miller & Jones Knights of Columbus Riverview Garden. Kaye’s Shoe Store H. P. Schmitt Market 4 Hite’s Grocery E. F. Gaus Ready to Wear Locker Service Fairway Restaurant ' Kohne Drug Store Emblem Club Ehinger 4 Kortenher Holthouse-Seh.lte Company Gecode Club Holthouse Drug Company Phil Mac Win Company js' or . Indiana Public Service Co. The Why Store The Schafer Co., Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Dale Death Smith Drug Company CuHigan Soft Water Service Petrie Oil Comnanv 7 HdfUch & Morissey Duo Therm Shoe store Ixwds Women’s Apparel Wall’s Bakery . k Goodyear Service Store Murphy Barber Shop The i ,r>t State Bank HO DONORS HAVE INTENTIONALLY BEEN OMITTED B. P. 0. Elks No. 993 / L -- , • 1.,.-
Big Reserves Os Lithium In U. S. Is Key Material Os Hydrogen Era WASHINGTON. UP — This country is rich in a key material of the hydrogen era. The material is lithium, lightest of metals. A check at the bureau of mines today disclosed that the United States has big reserves of It - Lithium is doubly important in the manufacture of hydrogen bomba. It is a raw- material from which is produced one prime ingredient (tritium) of H-bombs,-and is believed to be a prime ingredient itself in at least one version of the super weapon. This soft, silvery metal, similar in appearance and chemical conduct to sodium, would be important even if there were no H-bomb.
“GRANDMA" )' By CHARLIG KUHN J > OH, SI It FORGOT T’ HANG OUT TH’) IBEFORII GO SMOPPIN’t MU«T?| I*”""" Kl a i H (GOODNESS'? LITTLE SIGN t PAINTED....'PUT ITUP WHERE ALL U ,iH R B ’ kids can see... z hsOii I lAWf-CJ O & I c ,WJ ' - A*• I‘WWw] M ft&LWOi — — rAI f ! BKB L-J-Lffl L ia MFa r .• i i MB ,• • MHR uoji'J I W.l SSHs =AB ffl ■■ BACKONTWII ' '•■•■l xIY | / ] - L EjssaZ—JSBEEE-i^L--— i . amCSas-a——Jl LnuwA .■■ ■CC~ t S£T. . i .. . —— . ■*.. .... . -
It has many industrial uses, particularly in the manufacture of ceramics, glass, enamels, and greases. According to -the ' bureau of mines, there is enough lithium in this country, not to mention other tree nations, to satisfy all atomic and commercial demands in the foreseeable future. Flying Tigers May Go To Indochina May Fly For French In Indochina War HONGKONG, UP — Successors Jo the famous “Flying Tigers” may fly again for the French in Indochina, it was reported today. Reliable sources said Maj. Gen. Claire I* Chennault's civil air' transport, a peacetime holdover of the “Tigers,” was asked if it could supply pilots and crews to operate C-119 Flying Boxcars. The answer was “yes.” No formal arrangement has been made as yet, the sources said. They said CAT? which employs many American pilots, was sounded out on the deal by Brig. Gen. Thomas Trapnell. chief of the U.S. military mission in Indochina and former commander of the 187th airborne combat team in Korea. They added It was not certain whether Trapnell had tlon to close a deal. CAT took on a similar job last spring when the Communists launched an offensive against Laos. At that time, the U. S. air force sent a number of Flying Boxcars to Indochina from American bases in the Far East. Air force men did not fly them because of possible retaliation by Red China. CAT was asked- to do the job of flying supplies and troops to critical areas. It was reported in Washington Tuesday that France again has j
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
J Ji /881 ■ lb ■ ■ ■■* | | FORMER PRESIDENT Harry S. Truman is shown with his daughter, Margaret, and Sen. Herbert H. Lehman, as they attended the sixth annual Roosevelt Day dinner of the Americans for Democratic Action in New York Truman accused the Eisenhower Administration of staging a “hoax" on security dismissals and of abandoning the policy of the last two Democratic Presidents of raising the Income level of the farmer and the working man. He charged that “our national wealth and income are now being redistributed in reverse, from the ooor to the rich"
asked for pilots to handle the C-119s. Some congressmen objected. however, on the grounds that U. S. airmen might fly the planes in combat and thereby give the Chinese Communists grounds for entering the war. _ Spare Rod CHESTER. Pa.. UP — A state game protector. Robert Yake, stopped four youthful hunters for a routine license inspection. Three had the hunting permits — the fourth did not. When Yake—in-' quired, the offender replied: “Oh, I’m not hunting. I’m Just carrying I a spare gun for my buddy.” - — X. . .
Danger Os Rabies Outbreak Greater ■- This Time Os Year Danger of rabies outbreaks are potentially greater in February and March than any other time of the year, states county agent L. E. Archbold. This is the mating season for dogs. They roani more this time of year than any other. Health authorities agree, says Archbold, that the stray or tramp dog population is the great reservoir of rabies. ■--Chicago today is learning this lesson in a costly fashion. Press and radio report that many people have been bitten by rabid dogs in that area. These unfortunate people must be given Pasteur’s anti’ rabies treatment or they will die a most horrible death. Rabies can be controlled by annual vaccination of dogs that people want to keep, pins the elimination of the stray or tramp dogs. Adams county had an outbreak of rabies among dogs and other farm animals early in February of 1950. The extension office took an active part in setting up a county committee to promote a campaign for the vaccination of dogs people wantbd to keep. They also campaigned for the elimination of stray or tramp dogs. Other agencies and people such as the state board of health, county health office. farm bureau, county schools, and local veterinarians cooperated in the campaign. The last reported rabies case reported in Adams county in 1960 occured on April 8. 1 During the campaign over 670 dogs were vaccinated against ra- 1 bies. The best indication on the elimination of stray dogs came * in 1951. In 1951 the claims for ' losses in livestock were <I,OOO 1 less than in the previous year, 1 ~~ : t ■fW ■ 1 -•> ' M -1 ' „ ■“^J^****’' 1 M iifiViiif ■£&•££.•.■». . < SECRETARY of Health, Education and Welfare Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby tells the Hough com- 1 * merce committee in Washing- i ton that the nation’s greatest i health need is facilities for treatment of the chronically ill i She endorsed a bill to authorize i spending of 1182,000,000 Iff the I next three years on hospitals . and other programs of medical i service. (International J <
Early Starting Os Chicks Profitable More Egg Profits From Early Chicks An analysis of U. S. government records shows that pullet flocks which are started as early as January and no later than early March earn substantially more egg profits than flocks started later, according to D. H. Callow, local chick and teed dealer. "Flockowners can figure on S2O to S4O extra profit per 100 pullets by starting chicks early," he said, "simply by taking advantage of peaks in seasonal market trends." Figures issued by the U. 8. government show that egg. prices have consistently averaged higher in September, October, November and December than they have during the next four winter months, he pointed out. Year after year, this early price difference over the country averages 12 cents per dozen, and in some areas the differenceisas high as 15 to 20 cents. Chicks started in February should lay at least 20 more early fall eggs than April started chicks which is a gain of. 2tr cents per bird or S2O per 100 pullets. January chicks should lay 40 more eggs during the high priced months than would April chicks, which represents a 40 cents per bird increase. The U. 8. government report of average prices for the past five years shows October and November to be the best egg months, each having a 52 cents per dosen average. December is next with a 51 cents average, and September is close behind at 49 cents. The report shows that egg prices drop sharply after December to 42 cents per dozen in January, and 38 cents in February, March and April. Flockowners who plan their operations to get maximum volume of eggs to market during the early high-price months will start their chicks in January, February or early March, Callow said. Proper cold weather management of chicks is becoming of greater importance to pullet flockowners, now that the profit advantages of early-started chicks are becoming more widely known, according to Callow, who sells chicks and feed to many poultry keepers in this area. More and more flockowners are starting their chicks in January, February or early March so that they will have eggs to market from September to December, when prices are highest of the year, he skid. “This means that there is an extra month or so during cold weather when chicks will be in brooder houses," Callow said. "It does not involve extra equipment, but merely extends the -period of cold weather management.” The dealer said that in view of the profit advantages in starting chicks early, he has obtained a supply of pamphlets on proper cold weather handling of chicks which he will distribute to anyone interested. The local dealer pointed out that a few yean, ago flockowners who wanted to start their chicks early often were unable to find them at that time of the season. But now with the trend to earlier starting, he is stocking an ample supply of chicks to fill the early requests. Average egg prices by months over the past five years, according I to U. S. government reports, reflect that prices from September; through December are at least 1|; cents higher than those from Jan- i uary through April. This means that chicks started in January, j February and early March will [ 'produce eggs for the early peakprice period, resulting in a gain of S2O to S4O per 100 pullets over April-started chicks. Early starting also offers the advantages of pi ore time for the flockowner to care for the chicks in winter months before the busy crop arid garden season, and fuller use of range, as chicks will be read)- for the range just when spring grm-ses and legumes are beginning to shoot. Spud Exhibit NW BRITAIN. Conn.. UP — Levio Bessoni brought two large’ potatoes,, .complete with 'budding! sprouts, to the office of the pub|ic I works commissioner to back up a ; charge that he can’t keep potatoes in his basement. He said this was the fault of the department because a defective sewer or a brook near his home keeps his ' cellar damp. . ,
Suggests Surplus Food Sent Abroad Director Os CARE Makes Suggestion NEW YORK, UP —CARE, the organization which sends food abroad, suggested today that the nation’* surplus farm comrhodlt-i ies be channeled through* private American agencies to the hungry peoples of the world. In an analysis to be presented to congress, Paul Comly French, executive director of the organisation, said the program could be financed by a combination of “savings in storage fees; private negotiations with recipient countries to pay as much of the coat as they can; some fund-raising among the American people, as CARE has often done, and direct congressional appropriations to fill the gap, aS pert of the nation's international friendship French said normal American farm exports could be protected through the channeling of surplus foods to refugees and other blocks of distressed persons, to those entirely without Income to buy the products, and to special groups such as undernourished mothers and children, sick, aged and unemployed. The report suggested that the use of ‘farm surpluses tn this way would eventually open new markets for American farmers by improving the health of the recipient, thereby increasing their productivity so they could afford to buy more American products. It suggested further that the use of private agencies would cut through much of the red tape of government operations and wxiuld remove any possible charge of political meddling with the food distribution. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings result*.
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1054 .
FILM Loft Today Ready Tomorrow at 3:00 Closed All Day Thursday EDWARDS STUDIO Open R:so a. m. to 0:00 p. m. MOOSE SQUARE DANCE AND r PARTY NITE FRIDAY I MOVIE FOR THE KIDS OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, FEB. 13 A SPECIAL FLOOR SHOW IS BOOKED FOR THIS NITE. ONE OF Members Brlnp Yaur Guests DANCE Every Wed. Party Nite LIFE MEMBERSHIPS WILL BE GIVEN AWAY NEXT TUESq 8 F. M, FEB. 16 DANCE “Nine Milers” 9:00 to 12:00 FRIDAY February 12th x * — also — / CAKE WALK ' . Members and Gu*ets I r- i ■ - r- -
