Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 53, Number 238, Decatur, Adams County, 10 October 1955 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
Suddenly...you’ll firdiscover how lovely f What a bright ne* pronuse TIZ-Mist QF ■ hoW * for Jrou ~®" «® tirel y ncw hßd 01 / beaifty for gray and white hair! Not a X p 'W '“I tint, not a dye. TIZ-Mist with its creme I base eovufitioiu your hair mit corrects | f /j) I yellow streaks and imparts subtle, shimLXXX mating toms. Spcay 50... brush in... ORk >nd > . na& jj ever giaing, _ // nibs off. or affects per- >1 •] 3 X Z Wl ®*not waving results. I . t __ jr-Bj T"* rt • oon! J ' ■ SLATE CIIOR MIST b|K TIZ-Mitl comtt in a full range of colort . for liaht. smoky lustre BKM f or a ll thadtl of hair. TIZ-Browm (LifM. ■LACK MIST Medium, Copper?, Dark)... TIZ-Cnftmr lor deep, smoky tones • - ■ OM-Mfcmdm raiiMsr I ■■■ m 1 ... n H ■ for shimmering bril- ’ Hence and lustre without changing hair color SMITH DRUG CO.
®BE RIGHT... GET ‘SUPER RIGHT! .... ... . V ....... _ - Come See, A&P’s “SUPER - RIGHT* IS A RELIBLE STANDARD OF TOP Come Save MEAT VALUE. “SUPER - RIGHT” ASSURES YOU OF MEATS ~ ~ , THAT ARE QUALITY RIGHT . . . CONTROLLED RIGHT . . . PREat A&P ! PARED RIGHT . . . SOLD RIGHT and PRICED RIGHT I I “SUPER-RIGHT,” FRESH PURE PORK Sausage a ?9 C Country Style .... lb. 39c Little Pig Links .. lb. 49c “SUPER-RIGHT” QUALITY “SUPER-RIGHT” SLICED BUTTS Smoked Picnics .. . lb. 29c Pork Steak lb. 39c “SUPER-RIGHT,” LEAN, MEATY • FRESH-FROZEN, DRESSED Spare Ribs lb. 39c Whiting 2 lbs. 23c " JANE PARKER . FLORIDA, DUNCAN, 45-54 Size DoluTs Grapefruit 4 39c RED-RIPE CALIFORNIA 29c Tokay Grapes il 10c RED-RIPE JONATHAN JANE PARKER jAkI9B9I6S 5 Bag 49< WHITE — BREAD I SULTANA BRAND—Dozen $2.33 *£M7c Prune Plums 2 Cans 39c L —“——— — A& P BRAND—Dozen $1.45 Apple Sauce 4 49c LONGHORN STYLE ■ " MILD I IONA HALVES—Dozen $3.10 cheese Apricots 3 X 79c Lb. A Cr* iona CUT — 1)026,1 sll9 —' Green Beans "KMO* • ALL POPULAR 5c VARIETIES yuF 15 Candy Bars 89c DRESSING PRICES GOOD M’ AM. A & P ff S SWWISF Qt age I STORES IN 17IT * AivvA CRSAT ATLANTIC 3 PACIFIC Ts A COMPANY
Three Accidents Are Reported In County Three Injured In Accident Series Three accidents occurred in Adams county Sunday afternoon and early Monday morning, causing injuries and extensive property 4amage. The first was at 3:45 p.m. Sunday two miles north of Geneva on U. S. highway 27 at a county road intersection. A truck driven by Charles ConnaUey, 28. of Monroe, slowed suddenly to allow tba car ahead of him to make a right turn. A car driven by Dale A. Jones, 16, of Auburn, was unable to stop in time and hit the truck in the rear. Damage was estimated at $l5O to the Jones car and S2O to the truck. Sheriff Merle AttOlder and state trooper Walter Schind-
TEEPLE MOVING & TRUCKING Local and Long Distance j PHONE 3-2607
THB DUCATUB DAJELT DHMOCBAT, DDCATUB, INDIANA
ler investigated. Reggis K Myers, 20. of Berta, sustained cuts on his right ear and Up when the car which he was driving went out of control at 12:10 a.m. today on U. S. 27 a mile and a half north of Berne. Myers told investigating officers that the car dropped off the berm and then went out of control, turning over. Sheriff Affolder, who investigated, stated that damage amounted to S6OO to the Myers car and S2O to fence and a post. Two persons were injured in a one-car accident which totally demolished a 1955 model car at 2:40 a.tn. today on U. S. highway 224 at the state line. An east-bound car driven by Curt T. Logsdon, S 3, of Fort Wayne, weot out of control at the state line curve. The vehicle rolled over several times, causing injury to two passengers in the car. The two were Guy Veron, Jr., 29, of Fort Wayne, who sustained a possible back injury, and Jerry Muldoon, 21. of Fort Wayne, who received a cut on the head. Both were treated at the Adams county memorial hospital, where Veron is being held for further observation. The accident was Investigated by Sheriff Affolder and state troopers Gene (Rash and Dan Kwasneskl.
Hitler Death Described By Freed Servant Personal Servant < Tells Os Suicide, Burning Os Corpse BERLIN (INS)—On the afternoon of April 30, 1945, Adolf Hitler. maintaining: an icy calm, placed a pistol in his mouth, pulled the trigger and literally blew his head off. So said Heins Linge, Hitler’s personal servant, on his return to Germany from 10 years of confinement in a Soviet prison camp. The handsome. 42-year-old onetime Nail laughed at reports which said Hitler had flown into rages and chewed on rugs during his last hours in a Berlin bunker 10 years ago. Linge said the dictator was “completely calm and sober” and had “complete control” of himself. He said Hitler was in poor physical condition but "knew what he was doing.” Linge asserted that Hitler asked him before committing suicide to burn his body and that of Eva Braun, the mistress Hitler married the same day they both took their own lives. The valet said he waited In the hallway of the air raid shelter while Hitler committed suicide. He declared:.“I heard one shot. “When I entered the fuehrer’s bedroom I saw him lying on a couch. It was full of blood. The fuehrer had shot himself through the mouth with a pistol." He said Eva Braun had taken poison. Linge claimed he carried Hitler's blanket-wrapped body from the bomb-scarred bunker to a funeral pyre, poured gasoline over the Nazi leader and Miss Braun, and watched while they were burned beyond recognition. Linge said that before he threw the blanket over Hitler he saw the fuehrer's head was “bloody end shattered.” He declared that Hitler was wearing his usual black trousers which “others in the hallway outside recognized.” He said both bodies were taken to the garden upstairs. Linge added: “Gasoline was poured over both corpses. Someone threw a match on both bodies and flames shot up. “We saluted and went Sack into the bomb shelter because thb-Rus-sians were bombarding the area. Russian troops were closing in on the bomb shelter." He said a special detachment of SS troops buried the ashes but that he did’ not .know the exact location. Linge's story added to the statements by Hitler's chief personal pilot, Hans Bauer, on the fuehrer's last momenta The pilot said Hitler "looked me gravely in the eyes, shook my hand, said good-bye and shot himthe body burned. Linge also threw light on Martin Bormann, one of Hitler's closest friends. He said Bormann tried to escape the bunker after Hitler’s suicide. He explained: “I saw Bormann climb into a Tiger tank. A few minutes later it was hit by a Russian shell and burst into flames. No one got out. Everyone in the tank was killed.” Testimony from Linge and Bauer may allow West German courts to declare Hitler legally dead so that his estate can be settled. The estate includes a mountaintop retreat at Berchtesgaden, a large house in Munich and royalties from Hitler's book. "Mein Kampf.” Previous courtroom testimony on Hitler's death has not been allowed because the witness had not seen the corpse inside the blanket. Gary Woman, Held In Husband's Death < GARY, Ind. (INS) —William Patterson, 28. now dead, was on the wrong spot at the wrong time in the wrong company Sunday night in Gary. His wife. Lavina, is being held on an open charge of murder after she allegedly stabbed him to death after usrprising him with another woman in a bootji at a case. Studebaker Starts On 1956 Production SOOTH BEND, Ind. (INS) — More than 1,000 workers returned to work today at the Studebaker plant as production of he 1956 models go under way with he morning shift. An approximately 2,000 others have been steadily at work on retooling 'and <Jie-stamping Sept. 27 when both rtuck and passenger lines were closed down. When the change-over betw-een the 1955 and 1956 models is completed the estimated plant labor force will near the 10.000 mark, Studebaker plaiH officials estimated. .
Wages In Indiana Above U. S. Average Rport Is Made By Economic Council INDIANAiPOLTS (INS) —The Indiana economic council reported today that Indiana industrial wages average higher than national figures. A study by the council disclosed that the average industrial wage in Indlaaa was $1.96 an hour, compared to the national average of $1.31 per hour. The increase for this area between 1947 and 1953 was approximately 64 cents per hour. The net value of output per manhour of all industries tn Indiana was found to be $4.89. as against (he national average of $4.49. The council said that, generally speaking, output values were highest in those industries paying the best wage scales. The council also reported that the supposed trend of industry to the southwest and far west has affected Indiana's continued industrial growth very little, if at all. Th* council’s report also said: “Transportation equipment weighs most heavily in the manhour gains in Indiana. Man-hour increases in chemicals are in large part explained .by activation of powder-making plants, due to the Korean War. Drugs weight heavily in the Indiana figures. The state has scarcely participated in the growth of industrially Important inorganic chemicals, however.” The report also said that the electric machinery group has been more expansive than non-electrical machinery in Indiana. At present, about 35 per cent of the nation's exports, in terms of value, is in machinery and vehicles. Other large groups that have gained in labor requirements in Indiana are primary metals and fabricated metals, ta the nation, labor requirements increased in the furniture group and decreased in lumber and products except furniture. The opposite occurred in Indiana, however. The economic council’s report said: “An important consideration is that the kinds of industries that
safety belts . YOU CAN PROTECT YOUR FAMILY FROM WINDSHIELDS ARE TO SEE THROUGH... NOT CRASH THROUGH! Guard Against Painful Injuries or Passenger Fatalities in ... . COLLISION DOOR ACCIDENTS SUDDEN STOPS ''SXr More than 50% of all fatalities occur at speeds of 40 No more danger of being No more disabling head and miles per hour or less. An thrown out and under a car neck injuries from being SPI Safety Belt protects should it be overturned or thrown against the windyou and your passengers th * doors fly open as a re- jshield or roof due to colliagainst contact injury. sult of collision. sion or emergency highway stops. Stop in and Cot The Details on These S. P. I. SAFETY BELTS Now, for only a few dollars, you can purchase the finest in safety, protection and insurance against painful injury or death to you and yours, with a complete SPI Safety Belt installation. , DESIGNED TO FIT EVERY MAKE AND MODEL AUTO Parkway“66”ServiceStation 13th Street at Nuttman Ave. Phone 3*3682 AND Knapp Service Station 265 N. 2nd St. Phone 3-2601 1 I"”
are experiencing Increases in manpower requirements are types that are already strong and widely represented in Indiana. Most growth is from within the existing establishments. “Indiana is not in me position of being top-heavy with industries of a type with inelkstic <|emand, or types which are really declining in absolute importance.” One-half of the people of the world live in eastern Asia.
@ Man of Courage Columbus discover- if 1 efl that faith and . / /// determination paid / Z handsome returns | (A / in this land of op- yS portunity. They * still do for the man who saves. We will not be open for business Columbus Day. October 12th STATE BANK Established 1883 MEMBER MEMBER F. D. L C. Federal Reserve System
MONDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1955
Workers Return To Indianapolis Plant INDIANAPOLIS (IN'S) —Workers returned to their jabs at P. R. Mallory company plant, one and two today after a work stoppage at last week’s end. „ Robert Forftner, pre»iden|t of Local 1001 International Union of Electrical Workers, 010, had no comment on the work stoppage last Friday except to say it was a “minor misunderstanding."
