Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 45, Number 177, Decatur, Adams County, 29 July 1947 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
DEMOCRAT WANT ADS BRING RESULTS * I'/ / 1B ■KII«. COL O N ■ 1 J*k I I ' r ’*P ,n< ’ M re ‘— XBjjia >t~"v —l-entheric’* tingling, •♦ 7- r ij I fragrant cologne, JSCS\Id I to make you feel //-''H {'•' ( cool, and aloof on t \\j)i l iceberg ; * UNTHfiMC 5 *»®t, dissolving days. I 7P~ , j | > The big 8 ws. Ixrtdr . 2.25 I ]p—( l Ihs I us. bottle .• •L 25 Ufa* a Smith Drug Co. Al! prices flue tease
-ft************ ♦ « » ♦ * Have you noticed? * —that more and more Decatur * families are turning to Zwick in * time of sorrow? The reasons are » found in Zwick’a high standards « of service, their reputation for fairness in financial dealings, and their capability assured by ID years of service. i 'W i » * * ZWICK ‘fawiat “Ww aoaiar i. iwica —— iobist a. maar Sine* lltl * 520 North Second A Fhoee 41 and WO * » ♦ **★★★*★♦*★**<
TWO GREAT TIRES f., safe A Summer Driving vXwßr This Rugged-Long-Weanng-Safe I f THOROBREDbi/ w I Saltan 1U « Down I Top quality * Special prices 1 ' " ' | Mu A-nu saieiy ™.-.~r.r.’. THOROBRED bu =j-“: : w//fRB ÜBOtOll IHi Hs fAwl HHb • SdanWFldftW y Wawdad <bwi« // j j kS ■s' * / .. . . .. .... »»vnS» with mere natural /){J jS g’W* A hlgfeMt wwiiry tire built etpeciollr to metch f^r 9>f , b<Mwr ) / Zj LI JdWffidg •Im •*••<! end RWtr of *«•*'• modern ten. All , MStM Mitt 'I*S M' * the new feetvret « new tire »he«l4 hove. W I IfSfftAl r«A»« IN AllowAMCfß I *O VW DOWN t | M.r r.... to row cowwmnc. Termß tjlMHljffl&dy > Porter Tire Co., 334 N. Second St Ziner Home Appliances & Tires, 147 S. 2nd St. **' t Eastern Indiana Oil < Sapply Co„ Geneva, Ind., Disl.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
M -* ■ . «<| lb*otaMMkvemA -*.'**** - IN THIS QUIET, chatty spot at Forrest HU! cemetery tn Kansas City, Mo., Mrs. Martha E. Truman, mother of the preaident, U hurled beside the grave of her hueband. Burial followed private funeral service* in the Grandview, Mo., cottage where she died following ■ her tllneiM. (international Soundphoto)
Berne Residence Sole Is Announced Berne, Ind.. July 29 — Mrs. Everett Rich of Berne has purchased from the ilierie heirs a house on Franklin street here which has l>een occupied by Supt. E. M. Webb and family for several years. .Mr. Webb, head of the Berne schools, is looking for a new place to live. BRITISH HANG tt'aatlaarU frees fawe II long prison sentences. British troops frantically worked throughout the night to locate the 'two British sergeants whom the underground promised to kill. Sp<>t raids, however, failed to uncover any trace of the men Mervin Palce and Clifford Martin—who were kidnaped June 12 at Nathanya. Refuse To Land Port De Bouc, France. July 29. —(UPl—Some 4.500 Jewish refugees arrived today aboard three British freighters and told French authorities they would not land on French soil alive. The refugees were transported here by the British who intercepted them aboard the President Warfield as they sought to reach Palestine. The Jews flatly informed the French they would not leave the ships anchored in the harbor here and said they would go ashore nowhere but in Palestine. Rene Colaveri. secretary-general of the Prefecture of the depart* ment -of Bouche- Du Rhone, visited the three ships today. He said
he had given the refugees a message from Premier Paul Ramadier offering them asylum In France and that the offer was rejected. — — TRUMAN RETURNS (Centleeeg -runt rear I* or would continue to live in the cottage where she cared for their mother. The liody of the mother lay in a tree-shaded grave tn Kansas City’s Forest Hill cemetery, beside the father who died in 1914 while Mr. Truman was running the family farm here. The president, his wife and daughter and other members of the immediate family sat in the kitchen of the little (ream-color-ed cottage that had l>een his mother's home during the brief funeral ceremony yesterday. The Rev. Welbern Bowman, pastor of the Grandview Baptist church. stood beneath the arched doorway that separated the living and sitting rooms. Behind him was the metal casket in the bedroom where Martha Truman died. Other members of her family sat on folding chairs in the living room and the adjoining sitting room. “laird thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations,” the Rev. Bowman began, reading lb verses of the 90th Psalm. Then he read a brief obituary prepared by the president's sister, Miss Mary Jane Truman. The services took only 20 minutes. There was no music. The minister offered a prayer, then read the 23rd Psalm.
Down
Memorial Services Held For Mine Dead Illinois Town Holds Services For Miners West Frankfort, a ill., July 29(l’P> —A somber quiet pervaded the tree-lined streets of this mining town today as citizens observed a day of mourning for the 2” men who died in the eiplosion at Old Ben Mine No. S last week. All except the most essential business firms were closed as the town held services for the victims of the worst disaster in Its history. Away on the fringes of the town. bnt dominating 'he thoughts of every man and woman who congregated at the First Baptist church, were the mines which provide the source df living for most of the town. Black-dressed women bowed their heads and repeated their eternal prayer, that for theli men-folks the mines would not also provide the source of dying. The church where most of the 15.000 inhabitants met for combined non-denominationsl services was somber and austere. The altar held no flowers. Florists explained that they simply could not get any more flowers in a town which had buried the last of Its 2* dead only yesterday. The church Itself seemed to provide a perfect setting for the grim ceremonies. Five years ago the old building was gutted by fire and the rebuilding left It with an Interwoven texture 01* the old and the new. The church fathers, like the people of the town, had rebuilt after disaster struck, leaving a grim reminder of the past as they prepared to carry on in the future.
TraUr la a <-«Hl Towa — Deeaiei
LUCKY STRIKE presents THE MAN WHO KNOWS* SI I THE TOBACCO MWOHEEK : : | ”1 was born on a tobacco farm // \ \ «*•and I’ve sold tobacco at auctions i I I for over 19 years. In all that time -r\\J3 ’ |L—~z . i I I / \ \ fw- </ \l Vs,/ 2 • i L-U-L_JJ I’ve seen the makers of Lucky //A\ \ 1\ P // \\ \ *A\ \/ II || Strike buy fine,good-tastin’ tobac- Z\ u rjl Ijj co».. tobacco that’s got quality, . 4 real quality.” 7/ , r J L.CDMMINB. INDKFKNDK«T TORACCO ArcHONETR ' 4-5 1 C: J \ of Cynthiono. Kentwliy MA-.A \ IV' A' <22 »eaks a lucky f YVEr = '" I |TTPH 1 - W Jr a htl: UeW d JiJ ii ‘ K r D • "><* ’// 1 1// kiZsPV x *y P '•■■ *. <N / r iwi A.- Vv \r» ’ \a X 7p >1 i z *- z >yzj i j6i >w si khm fau-er /> u.7'ip ~ » Ju^v .■if-i mT/ OS K ‘ 1 .**WtTV JV Y FINE TOBACCO is what counts in a cigarette JOHN CUMMINS IS«»HTl...And!iiehim, scores of other experts ... who really ***** know tobacco ... have seen the makers HF \f/ 1 of Lucky Strike buy “tobacco that’s got I B f quality.” I ftk !■ |4 / IttfVX ¥• After all that’s what you want in a cigarette ... the honest, deep-down \ SXIKVM» J enjoyment of fine tobacco. F 1® X/W^ lo^ 10 / I Albans Tobacco Sc Round; So Firm; So Fully Racked*Ba . v..y ruckea-so Fro* and Easy an the Oraw
Moose Convention In Columbus In August Ernst J. Worthman and Tom Titus, of the local .Moose lodge, will lead the Decatur delegation of Ixtyal Order of Moose members to the 59th inTernational convention of the organization at Columbus. O.' August 17 to 21. It was announced today by officers of that organist* | tlon. Mr. Worthman and Mr. Titus will be the delegates from the lo< al lodge, but several automobile] loads of members also are expected to Join the official delegates on the ttlp. Thomas J Herbert, governor of, Ohio, and James ,M. Rhodes, mayor of Columbus, will roil out the red carpet to welcome 25,000 Moose at the annual International convention. State and city officials, many of them members of the Moose, will greet the visitors. 0I. U. PLANS (Ceatlaeed frnm I’age D eventual enrollment will be housed in permanent dormitories once the new projects were completed, he said. The new buildings will replace trailer homes and other temporary dwellings for students. The units might be ready for occupancy within a year, provided building materials and enough labor were available, he said. Films Developed, Printed and Enlarged All work done in our own plant right here in Decatur. Fast Service HOLTHOt SE DRUG CO.
TRADE IN DECATIJs >■**■l . - wr - Expert Tree Work Os Indiana Tree Service . - - Shade Tree Preservation -.. Insured ALL BRUSH REMOVE!) FREE ESTIMATE I'HONg J h pi in nt automatic storage UIUUIII WATER HEATERS I Now Available! All the hot water you want’ for laundry, diahea, bath or shower... at Q the temperature you desire. Act now ... aee the Bryant—you’// wans it! • COMPLETELY AUTOMATIC, thermostat controlled. • GLEAMING WHITE enamel finish. • FLAT-BASED to eliminate cleaning underneath. _ *77.54 /CT* H AUGKS|
TUESDAY. JUj „
