Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 46, Number 60, Decatur, Adams County, 11 March 1948 — Page 7

[RSDAY, MARCH 11, 1948

■ CURTAIL CITY I Bcontin upJ from ]> start”at 8:30 f“ s k Friday night and there will nortji bus each hour until i/including 11:30 o’clock. ry Hauser announced that there IK be no change at present in W. and daytime schedules as ■ provided by the company. K, are doing everything possible

Stop Look and Listen To all the People who Save at our Market is the best place in town, to get •eally fresh Meat, Groceries & Produce. Open till 11:00 P. M. Saturday and from 8 A. M. to 12:00 Noon Sunday Sunday afternoon from 2 till 6. Why battle the snow and slush when you can park at our front door? Scheiman Bros. Market U. S. 27 Store Phone 3081

I -tip Ij rW- CREST TIRE SALE! I WrII I w#*W ill "I OS hi 2 11 : ’r/o." si ITo :-a«s <k . I MIX MluW** $ f^& ■ 1® * Est» gJL forth. t. ? *" ,n,H& <^il *** •*** 6001,14 ** j|lj| • Same First Line Quality! • Same Thrifty Payment Plan! • Same Liberal Trade-In! • Same Double Guarantee! • |fs low in price with all the high priced features! S® • Save on all sizes at eur law sale prices I mO' * HEAVY 18 GAUGE 7 Th* s heav y a' urn ' numware does wonders in saving fuel—and cooking-time! Every piece is made to give satisfaction... start a set today! IRONING BOARD PAD and COVER 8-CUP PERCOLATOR 1.39 Wl3 /-s. SsS- '■■’ Our Reg. Law Price 1.69 L ,j / | Cotton cover over heavy pad I — 5-QUART TEAKETTLE I ... elasticized edge for smooth Wt Wide opening for easy I fit! 15"X52*. Wir O W fi,l d| 9 ••• noburn 3.25 * gSS Wl__3 6-CUP |WI DRIP-O-LATOR favorite of coffee O AC lovers. Get yours today! || Cl COVERED ®L JI SAUCEPAN I For Mixing—or Serving! 9 Cooks everything from 1.39 . . soup to sauce ... 4-qt. 4-Piece BOWL SET : 00/ COMBINATION 7 0’" COOKER d~... • swH 5*5L J) ;X•U.;:." d .. 3 .■’. , : 1-98 | Pattern; 6,7,8,9 . I YOUR HOUSEWARES SAVE NOW AT HEADQUARTERS!! v JU CtA^V OUR LOW PRICES.

rPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ORIENTAL SPICE CAKE - - - CE* Z DELICIOUS LAYERS - BUTTER SCOTCH ICING **** . Southern Saltißising Bread -STEWART’S BAKERY • PHONE 1

to keep the buses operating in Decatur,” Hauser stated. 0 GIRL SCOUTS (Continued from Page 1) public appeals for clothing will be made tomorrow. The nation’s Girl Scouts plan to make, mend, re-make or rehabilitate a total of 100,000 complete wardrobes of 10

tween the ages of one and 14. The American Friends service committee is handling distribution of the garments overseas. o DICK HELLER (Continued from Page 1) to broadcast the opening of the 1948

We can make IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION ' of Iron Fireman STOKERS • OIL BURNERS Williamson Round or Square Furnaces For Gravity or Forced Air PAY NOTHING NOW and NO PAYMENTS need be made until OCTOBER telephone u« far a free heating survey •nd full Information HAUGKS

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA ’

fair over one of the Fort Wayne radio broadcasting stations. Additional personnel of committees will be named soon by Mr. Lane and a general meeting will be called in connection with a Chamber of Commerce directors meeting, so that final plans for the vent can be completed, and each committee will be assigned certain duties to perform. 0 SNOWBOUND (Continued from Page 1) “A big red robbin,” according to Mrs. Braden, calmly stood on her snow-surrounded p orc h taroughout most of the morning hours, munching on bread crumbs which had been tossed him from the family table. There’s a suspicion around the Braden household that the feathered fellow may have his calendar dates wrong and should still be in the Sunny South. John Bixler, courthouse custodian, was one of the hardest working men in Decatur this morning. Decaturites who “sweat out” theii little "around-the-house” and that tiny bit of public sidewalk in front took some solace from watching John at his gargantuan

) f the world-fcmow laboratories O/J — \ \ \I jMb A It C - A J Breeze -wash ed colors ) ARE brighter colors I / C —" V ' . 1- Precious new WOOLENS stay A IS % softer, COLORS BRIGHTER, W s'ir than with the costliest soaps! / Jy 2. MOUNTAINS of gentle SUDS J&a | i eitw r that LAST and LAST! WSWI ‘■kip / 3. MILDER than the MILDEST ** WrBA Beauty Soaps! st f I The HARBER the water- - A >K ' > the BETTER Breeze SUDS! w- 1 — f ♦ a? it/ It' j Y< ’ u ’ 11 Want ,o livc in SW£ATERS! / 'A Breeze’s gentle suds pamper your «• 'A' r ? 1° ' * jJp prettiest woolens more gently than the k "» J. y fW ' mildest soap suds! And at so little cost! \ *ilf ! 1t if -■ <■S " t Ki > I K , zrx 1' I m II i I . 1 ' # A'” 2 Nothing’s Too Good for Your NYLONS! ;■ i ■■ g V 1 4 That’s why Breeze was born —to J,* I keep/Ae>n and all your most a»,. \ [—■— precious washables lovely .. . \ For a new suds experience—say, ‘ "Breeze, Ade I* ANOTHER FINE PRODUCT OF LEVtR BROTHERS COMPANI— ,' '< * BREEZE IS PROTECTED BY PATENTS

task of “making walks”'-on six entrmces to the courthouse —long end wide ones —in addition to the public walks on four sides. • If county highway superintendent Phil Sauer had to be ill, he picked a “darned good time to <lo it,” according to reports this morning. Superintendent Sauer had suffered from a cold, but returned to work too soon. He had a “backset” and was unable to

Public Sale 217 ACRE—WABASH VALLEY FARM—2I7 ACRE DAIRY HERD—TRACTORS—IMPLEMENTS—FEED WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1948 Personal Property Sale 10 A. M. Farm 12:30 P. M. LOCATION—One mile South of Berne, Ind., on U. S. Road No. 27. Highly improved 217 acre farm. Fine Dairy Herd, Dairy Equipment. 2 Tractors. Full line extra good implements. Feed, Poultry, etc. Write for folder giving full description to owner or auctioneers. Immediate possession of farm. O. N. SMITH & SON—Owners BERNE, IND. Roy S. Johnson & Son—Auctioneers, Decatur, Ind. Melvin Liechty—Auctioneer, Berne, Ind. 9 11 15

report for duty this morning — one of the busiest for his department with its snowplows, and “Diesel jobs.” o ARAB LEADERS (Continued from Page 1) Arab countries, troops for guerrilla warfare. The training schedule has been completed for thousands of these men and they are now filtering across the border into

Palestine. These troops are well equipped, armed with rifles, automatic weapons, grenades and machine guns. They are highly mobile units. There is no shortage of volun-

; \ From where I sit ...//Joe Marsh Ben's Bride Gets Chickenhearted

Ben Ryder was mighty proud of his young bride when she offered to care for his new flock of baby chicks. “Just like a mother with her brood,” he boasts. Then came market time for fryers —and the crisis! Sue simply wouldn’t let Ben near her chickens with an axe. She’d raised them as babes . . . she’d named them . .. they were her very own ! Ben poured himself a glass of beer, to think things over sensibly. He hated to lose the price on fryers ...but he figured Sue had put up

men from all over the middle east teers for the Arab armies. Tribeshave swarmed in to volunteer. Shooting a gun has always been preferred by the Arabs to hoeing corn.

with hie peculiarities, he guessed he could put up with her fondness for the chickens. So now Ben has the nicest brood of laying hens in town, and from where I sit, one of the most successful marriages, too. All because he “lived-and-let-live”—literally. And whenever he wants fried chicken, he takes his bride over to Andy’s Garden Tavern for a crisp wing and a glass of beer.

CoDvrieht. 1948. United States Brewers Foundation

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