Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 108, Decatur, Adams County, 7 May 1945 — Page 12
Bi. XS' v<J1 Cft> .v. i jn® ?Wrjjnj^*a|rjPr IT’S JUST THE SAME, ■p>l “Bill 1 ’ MSa*i€> -l a I pF* K A: fv- U| - Just the same . . . MBWI > , "<x.. ■ , JR'/l - - - «*JRwp ... ' ■ 'Sfe- tJ IImI’ ■ r <* ■h xi® : '^■■^' , ■ ■• - ■ ? s>i:;: ■ 8f I »’T |Bh> x' c "t ■ ‘7 x^liw||pM«it^^ffcj-. ■ ::%agjSjig»X ... ■ ' r o™^b:j4*l : x _>< |Fa||K\i J - ~- - wtHFS**' I HE old town is just as you left it, Bill. All the things you’ve been fighting for are just the same ... and we’re counting the days till you can take your place among them. she lights still shine in the drug store of an evening. The cars still park along the main stem. You can still wake up at night and hear the echoing whistle of the through-freight. And though the floodlights turn off a little earlier in the filling station than they used to, there’s still someone there to wipe your windshield off while the gas pump rings up the fare. Baseball and double-features, chicken on Sunday, and the church where you worshipped ... all these are just the same, too, Bill — and all the sights and sounds and, most of all, the friendliness that go to make up this American town — your own home-town! Os course, Bill, it won’t really be the same until you get back, until you step off the train in your uniform with its campaign ribbons, tanner, stronger, leaner, perhaps a bit taller than when you went away — but otherwise the same young fellow we used to know. So here we are, looking forward now to your homecoming. Looking forward to the day we can shake your hand, to the day when you will hang up those khakis or blues in the closet, resume your place among us and take up the good American life just where you left it. We’ve kept things for you just the way you knew them, Bill. We know you want it that way. - L ’ " . ■JT-KSSW 3t*es.<r ’■■’4^:*- —■*.••*■"• -' "1W8? ?*je3 B. P. O. ELKS No. 993 - DECATUR, IND.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
