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Dixon Evening Telegraph from Dixon, Illinois • Page 2

Location:
Dixon, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Page Two MARKETS Chicago Produce Chicago. Jan. The spot butter and egg markets were nominally unchanged today. Receipts unavailable. Chicago Livestock Chicago.

Jan. Cattle, hogs and sheep were steady todav, with receipts estimated at 3.000 hogs. 500 cattle and o00 sheep. Bulk of hog sales ranged from 514.75 to the ceiling. Ur.offu'iaHv estimated salaole receicts for Mondav: hogs cattle 4.00C.

sheep 4,000. Chicago Grain Table (By The Associated Press) Open Close Close Todav Yesterday Year Ago Mav l.SO^ 1.S04 1.60", Julv l.S0*S l.SO's 1.51'; Sept l.SOi, 1.804 1.50 1.21 1.21 Wall Street Close fBv The Associated Press) Al Ch Dye 201 Allis Ch 54 Am Can 99 Am Loco Am Smelt 704 Am Too 91 Bendix 54. 34 Beth Stl 102 Borden 504 Borg Warner 534 Case 454 404 Corn Prod 67 Curt Wr 94 Douglas Aircr 93 Du Pont 1ST 4 Eastman 242 48 4 Gen Foods 544 Marshall Field Mont Ward 78 Nat Bis 33 "4 Nat Dairv Prod 414 Sears 424 US Rubber 704 US Steel 884. PERSONALS Harry Lager who has been a patient at the Katherine Shaw Bethea hospital for the past month, is making satisfactory Mrs. George Kersten of Ashton was teethe Katherine Bethea hospital two weeks ago for observation and treatment, is greatly improved in health.

Henry Kelly of East Grove township was a Dixon business caller Fred Kersten and daughter Miss Carol of Ashton township were Dixon shoppers yesterday after-Mrs. Thomas B. McDonald and two children of Washington. D. C.

passed throughh DLxon last evening enroute to Honolulu. Hawaii. Mrs. McDonald is a daughter of Mrs. J.

T. Warren, well known in DLxon. Commander General Thomas B. McDonald now in the service stationed in Calcutta. India for the past two years, will be released from service in March and will join his family in Hawaii.

Newest Jet Fighter Roars Through Test Muroc Dry Lake. Jan. 26 One of the newest and. most powerful jet fighter planes. Consolidated Vultee's XP-81 designed for the Army air forces.

yesterday as millitary observers watched approvingly. The all-metal, low-wing mono-piane with a 50 '--2 foot wingspread combines the pui! of a propeller whirled by a revolutionary gas turbine (prop jet i and the tail after its wheels the plane disappeared shook the hangars 's flight test base. Its 8th Army 45 Pointers Get Set to Come Home yesterday for return to ei States for discharge, tcrs announced tonight. Also called in were -r. that date.

North Carolina and Washin have legislation against the riage of tubercular persons. voted exdussveiv to the busi of promoting and managing 1 Announci W. H. the the op- Fin DIXON" EVENING TELEGRAPH Dixon, Illinois, Saturday, January 1946 Fastidious Five Army Radar Contacts Moon Strikers Picket Union Hall Poet's Corner Western Michigan College rack designed by trainer Don Scott does awav with throwing towels out on basketball floor or using sn-eatv ba" which thev become mixed up, spells cleanliness and sanitation. Freshening up are.

left to right: Ralph Bennett, Don Boven, Mel Van Dis, Swift Noble and Bob Fitch. Prints Photos Directly on Wall Photo murals can now be printed directly on a wall, just as you would make a print on a piece of paper Scientists at the Glenn L. Martin Company's Baltimore laboratory perfected a jelly-like emulsion which, when melted, may be applied to the wall surface with a brush, sponge or rag. When it dries, the negative is held against this sensitized surface, light is applied and development of the picture proceeds normally The entire operation is carried out under darkroom conditions, with ruby light. Above, an operator is making a print on a walL Terse News southern Illinois and visits in St.

Louis and Kansas City. Mr. Simmons will address a meeting of power engineers at the latter today were completing the redec-oration of the office of Sheriff L. E. Bates.

Several of the departments arc- to receive new coats of paint and the Circuit court room is to be completely redecorated. Fred Hobbs was awarded the contract for the decorating by the building committee of the board of supervisors. van announced today )f a new business in y. The new firm will plete line of roofing, siding, insulation, and stokers. Mr.

Sullivan, for the past nine years with the Frazier Co. of this' citv. will be associated with his son. John, who has been in the service for the last three years. Bomb Attempt Started Hitler's Mental Lapse starter.

HstSei bomb exploded arrested by i roi.ee several i whe.ej iaw student I the British to Gold Mine Olympia. Police asked Fred Holm if there was anything of value in the car he had reported stolen. "Well I'm not so worried about the said Holm, nd I guess the thief make for a bruise I lc' left- handed golf clubs, but I hope you catch him before he eats my ten pounds of AP President Hits At Control of News Durham. N. Jan (API-Robert McLean, president of the Associated Press, cautioned here that the United States may become engaged in a "propaganda race with other nations'' if it includes news in its foreign informational services.

Such a race, he stressed in an address before the North Carolina press association last night, would "becloud, rather than clarify, fo- McLean. publisher of the Phila delphia Bulletin, said such a aganda race might follow diss ination of news abroad if wave broadcasting should "bee a deliberate instrument of foreign He reviewed the internet information program as proposed by Assistant Secretary of St; William Benton and comment' "It is only in the field of ne broadcasting by the governrm that the program has been riously Tne Philadelphia publisher not engage SHF.r.TH r. esawPHitler CTSiSt CtlCe night and got 20 Radar antenna used by Army Signal Corps to make radar contact with the moon, and moon itself in right background, at Bradley, N. J. (NEA Telephoto).

Radar Experts Contact Moon i Col. W. A. Simpson. Maj.

Gen. Van Dusen, and Lt. Col. L. H.

DeWitt (left to right), three of scientists who made radar contact with the moon In Army. Signal Corps experiment. (NEA Telephoto). Iran New (Continued from Page 1) ated directly with Moscow for a settlement. Interferences Denied Direct negotiation was advocated by Russia in a Jetter to the security council yesterday.

Russia denied charges of interference in the internal affairs of Iran and said she was "categorically opposed" to council consideration of the case. One possibility known to have received consideration by Britain is that if the Iranian case is withdrawn from the council by the Iranians themselves, it might be refiled by some other nation on the ground that the dispute endangers world peace and security This was the ground on which the Soviet union and the Ukraine asked the council to investigate British activities in Greece and the Dutch East Indies. The security council agreed unanimously yesterday to take up the Iranian case Monday and decide whether the charges warrant an investigation. 193,000 CIO (Continued from Page 1) Also in Detroit, the Packard Motor Car Co. yesterday laid off the first 8.000 workers scheduled to be mane idle next week because of a shortage of parts obtained from General Motors, whose 170.000 CIO workers have been on strike for more than two Wage negotiations between Kentucky Utilities company and United Construction Workers un-! ion officials broke down in Pine-I viiie.

and the union indicat-; ed it would go ahead with a strike of 200 key workers in Kentucky and western Virginia tomorrow. The Violence Rife in powe Fights 0 is 83 and horn to retire and was bleeding. ght'TR called a physi-d Ryan had been shot, which had caused a- Ryan's chest, rd. said his condition GOP, Big Business (Continued from Page I) replied. Smith Protests "Smear" Sen.

Smith also protested- what he the "smearing statement" on Vandenberg. When Thomas attempted to de fend his statement. Sen. Donnell (R-Mo) objected to the witness deciding on admissibility of testi mony and asked Chairman Murray for a ruling. Murray then directed Thomas to eliminate remarks about Sen.

Vandenberg and "confine yourself to General Motors." Thomas had joined President C. E. Wilson of the General Motors corporation in opposing adoption of President Truman's suggested fact finding legislation. General Motors plants are closed by a strike of CIO-UAW for higher "On the Wrong Track" Thomas declared the 30 day "cooling off" provision of the bill "merely extends the period during which we fail to deal with real issues." He added: "If you follow the legislation now before you, you will be going off on the wrong track." The union leader said he believed government agencies al ready have all the facts necessary to deal with labor disputes. Wilson a few minutes earlier had asserted he did not believ.

fact finding would solve present industrial problems. He called stead for a restatement of govt ment policy on wages and prices, adding: "The real question is how much inflation do you want in this country?" Would Agree to Arbitrate After long period of question ing on what he believed should be done by congress to meet the la bor crisis. Wilson finally said he would accept arbitration of the General Motors strike "if ci gress said that was the thing do." He told the committee that "if you want higher wages paid you are going to have to have higher prices." Wilson said he is opposed to fact finding, compulsory arbitration, or extension of the war time Presidential powers for government seizure, and operation of industry during strikes. He said the. pending bill to give, statutory being to fact finding boards would "seriously interfere with collective bargaining" and tends "toward a socialistic state." Wilson observed that one of the difficulties in set tling- labor disputes by arbitration was a belief by both management and labor that impartial arbitrators were difficult to find.

At one point Wilson said that if the country was going to "hold the line on prices we'll have to worry along with strikes and all take a big loss." He added: "I think we're going to have seme awful bad strikes before the men go back to work at the wages at which they were working before." Wilson Expects No Refund Chairman Murray said Genera) Motors waa in an "impregnable Revolting St. Louis, truck drivers picket their union headquarters in protest against their leaders' proposal to end 18-day strike. Telephoto). Will Operate Seized Packing Houses 5 Gayle G. Armstrong (center) of the U.

S. Department of Agriculture, who was chosen to operate strike-bound packing plants after seizure by government on January 26. at Washington, D. airport before departure for Chicago with assistants, Robert H. Shields (left) and Ralph S.

Trigg. 1 NEA Telephoto) situation" because during the strike period it could recover excess profits taxes to offset the losses. "That had nothing to do with our case," Wilson replied. "You may think it funny, but I did not figure on getting any money back." Murray said that the corporation could recover taxes even if the strike lasted a year. "I dont think the strike is going to last a year," Wilson said.

"What bothers me is plans for plant modernization. Wre have not enough money in General Motors to carry out those plans." In opposing fact-finding legislation, Wilson observed that since the General Motors fact-finding board recommended a cent wage increase, "nobody's been able to settle for anything less than that." Progressive Mine (Continued from Page 1) 000 during recent years. Lewis Interviewed Lewis said in an interview at Mobile. while enroute from Springfield, to Miami, that the readmission was "a step of major magnitude" and would be "of great moral value in promoting unification of labor's policies." He made no specific comment on his union's future relations with the Progressives. The Progressives broke away from the United Miners and Lewis in 1932 after thousands of dissatisfied miners refused to recognize a Lewis declaration that a referendum had approved a daily basic wage scale.

They voted to continue a strike for 56.10. The United Miner headquarters then voided the rebels' local union charters. A bloody civil war ensued in Central and southern Illinois mine fields, with bombings, slayings and riots. Late in 1932 the striking faction, claiming to represent 40,000 to 50.000 workers. seceded from the United Mine Workers and organized the Progressives at Gillespie, 111.

The bitter rivalry between the two mine unions continued ana was marked occasionally with gunfire and bombings during later years. Recently. feud has been comparatively mild and limited to verbal dissei between the Illinois headquarters of the two unions at Springfield. Sub Zero (Continued from Page 1) fho fireflt Lakes area. Sample temperatures about the nation went like 0 Chicago 6 and still dropping; Wichi ta 2o ana wty both marks were falling: r.itv Sfi- New York City 37; Des Moines 2 Fargo N.

19 below. Orio-inallv a brocue was a light simp formed of one piece of half- tanned leather gathered around the ankle. SOCIETY NEW BOOKS The library has made known the addition of several books to the Dixon readers may be interested in the following ones: New Novels Before the Sun Goes Down A Pennsylvania town in the 1880's; the "be3t" families on one side, the "others" on the other. a young doctor who knew them all. Spencer Tracy to play the doctor.

Arch of Triumph Remarque. A long story of pre-war Paris as experienced by a refugee German surgeon who had no credentials. By the author of All Quiet on the Western Front. The Seton. The story of the Scottish-Mexican girl who gave her name to the Santa Fe railroad.

A romance with a historical back ground. In the Blazing White. Historical novel based on the life of the artist Goya. Good portraits of Goya and his contemporaries, and of the Spanish court and inquisition. Written on the Wilder.

A thriller based on a tragic case of national interest a decade ago. High in suspense and readability. New Non-Fiction Guaranteed Annual Wages Chernick. The outline of a system that might well be the solution to the labor unrest Gin Dairi The interaction of the Axis pow ers and behind-the-scenes acts and attitudes of the chief Fascists, set forth day by day from the war's beginning to Ciano's end in a "Verona jail. 101 Ways to Be Your Own Boss A practical, expert guide to small busineses that can be started with S200 to S5.000.

including exceptional, little-known opportunities in profitable, uncrowded fields. Governing of Leighton. An account of how the Japanese were governed at the Poston Relocation center in Arizona, told of human the tensions and frustrations of the administrators and the administered. The housefly vibrates its wings nore than 20.000 times a minute. ONE OF THE E.

T. O. tell vou about a chaD Who had fought in the E. T. O.

With the light Field Artillery Which are a fighting bunch, you know He had fought in few foreign Such places as Germany, Belgium And' while doing his job on tne battle fields No doubt took many a dangerous chance. But now that the job is finished And vou can bet that he is really glad To be back in the good old United States So he his Mother no doubt had prayed God watch over and guide her lov- And send him back to her waiting When his grisley work was done. Prentice Cloutier. FAITH I do his presence I'll abide. 1 I am tempted by sin, To do his will the day has passed night to praise and PLAT BOOKS of Lee County 50c.

B. SHAW PTG. CO. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY MIDDLE AGED MAN wanted for steady employment. Good rate of pay with overtime.

Working hours ranging between noon and midnight. The Borden Company, Milk Department. ROE'S CONSIGNMENT SALE Sale Barn, one mile east of Chana. EL 64 TUESDAY, JAN. 29 12 O'clock Siidrp! Stock and butcher breeds; veal v.

rL all hogs; feeder pies: boars: horses; poui try; baled hay and straw; 10 it power take off binder; Interna tional grinder; machinery tools. A good market. Call Oregon 9355 for truck. M. R.

ROE, Auct. CLOSING OUT SALE OF REAL ESTATE AND LIVESTOCK on Auslander farm, 1 mi. S. of Whitet Pines State Park; 7 mi. S.

W. of Oregon; 7 mi. E. of Polo; 8 ml N. of Dixon; 6 mi.

S. of Mt. Morris, on WEDNESDAY. JAN. 30th Beginning at 12:30 o'clock sharp.

420 ACRE STOCK FARM 250 acres under cultivation, 160 acres blue grass and timber pasture; water with 2 live springs in pasture, never failing well at buildings. 7 room house: horse and cow barn for 24 head: cattle sheds for 200 cattle; silo 14x30; 2 double corn cribs; machine shed: poultry house: garage; work shop: wash house. HEAD 81 Good saddle horse. 13 head Hol-stein and Durham cows, new milkers and springers; Shorthorn bull: 11 head Shorthorn heifers; 25 head Chester White bred sows; 30 head Chester White feeder pigs. HAY 3000 bushels good yellow corn: 500 bushels Columbia oats; 25 tons clover hay.

MACHINERY DeLavall magnet milking machine. 2 units: 3 gas engines; Bear Cat hammermill: 4 portable hog houses: 2 hog self-feeders- 1 cattle self-feeder; 4. feed hunks: grapple fork: hay rope; lumber; shingles- cedar posts and 100 other articles. TERMS Liberal terms on real estate made known day of sale. Possession of farm March 1.

1946. All personal property, cash. No prop-pvtv to be removed until settled for. AUSLANER LONG Roe's Auction Service, Chana, 111.. Auctioneers.

Polo National Bank. Clerk. Jijst Received HAGERS-TOWN ALMANACKS for 1946 BUCK'S BOOK SHOP NOTICE Our Factory Has Reopened We rebuild cotton and innerspring mattresses, chair and davenport cushions. STERLING MATTRESS FACTORY 1208 4Th ST. STERLING PHONE 1242 NeW8PA.PE8.RR CH I.

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Pages Available:
251,916
Years Available:
1886-1977