Newspaper Page Text
§UNDAY, JULY 31, 1949,
A"*Ol' Boyl.. JACHIE
/—‘—"-— o
e
The Poor Man’s Philosopher
AN OLD LADY WITH A BRIGHT FAITH
/‘______-—-—————v——vv,
NEW YORK = (AP) =— People
_metimes say: -
qune only way you can get in
¢ newspapers is to hold up a
~ug store or elope with a movie
ar'v!
So today I'd like to tell you the
ory of a simple heart-—the story
¢ iMrs, Van.” She isa fine old
dy who never robbed a bank or
n against Harry Truman for
resident.
«But I've had a wonderful life,”
e said. It might not seem S 0 to
yme people. but it does to her.
She has a long Dutch name, but
e is shy and asked me not to
se it. So I'll just call her “Mrs.
ran’—as everybody does.
Mrs. Van is a practical nurse.
he is white-haired and 63, but
or skin is as fair as milk. I got
, know her when she came to stay
ith a young neighbor couple ex
ecting their second child. She
ould only accept $lO a week.
When the baby came, the young
nother gaid:
“Do you know what Mrs. Van
id with half of her first week'’s
jay? She bought me flowers.”
Money doesn’t mean much any
nore to Mrs. Van. But being
ielpful does.
No Discipline
She likes the younger generation
_and disapproves of it.
“I don’t think they can face life
¢ we did,” she said. “They don’t
\ave discipline. If I had lived as
oung girls do today I would never
.ave been able to confront the
sroblems 1 met with in my mar
jed lite—no, never.”
Mrs. Van was born in Molland
nd married a carpenter at 21,
They had five children when he
.ame to the Unifed States to found
Relicve
ITCHING, BURNING ofg
ASK
FOR
- GENUINE
—acne pimples,
oumps (blacke= AND
leads), ’“l'fll’;)le BI'A(I(
1 yorm, Ugly bro=
s{re}gv-‘out skin (eXe lm'
ernally caused).
Blackand White Oint«
‘:‘.emz Si: l:oo¢thindg. ‘lmstiimuccl‘ aids lé:hl;
ng. 25¢, an . Cle,
with Black and White Bicin Soap.
P~ FINANCE @&j/ j
VST G-\ |
RCLTIT RTN S
i T a.re [T T
i. SSRGS |
Y .
it Citivins & Sovruean Nationar Rark
lITT2Ens & Sournern NarionaL Banx
BEE THESE BARGAINS AT OUR NEW LOT ON
BROAD STREET, NEXT TO THE BUS STATION
b 1947 DODGE CONY. COUPE
- 1947 CHEVROLET CLUB COUPE
1942 DODGE SEDAN
- 1941 CHEVROLET SEDAN
"~ 1940 FORD COACH
1941 PLYMOUTH COACH :
Y THESE AND MANY OTHER USED CAR BARGAINS ARE
A O O P
OPEN UNTIL 9 P. M.
J. SWANTON IVY, Inc.
USED CAR LOT NEXT TO BUS STATION
Shop In The Cool On This Daylight Spof
Open Until 9 P. M. J. SWANTON IVY, INC.
a new home here, It was just at
the time America entered the first
world war, and for two years he
couldn’t send money back to his
family. “I had to move into an
abandoned schoolhouse,” said Mrs.
Van. “We had no breakfast, and
the children took a carrot or a
turnip to school. For lunch we
had potatoes, and I saved the peel
ings and cooked them for supper.
Healthy Family
The neighbors felt sorry for us,
but I was happy. We were all to
gether—the children and I—and
we were healthy.”
' After the war she and the chil
dren came over, and the family
seitied in Pennsyivania. Mrs. Van
had twins at the age of 39, and
one died. Later her husband lost
his mind. He spent five years in
a mental institution before his
death, and Mrs. Van had to sup
port the family.
“I didn’t know the language
well,” she said. “So I had to work
as a scrubwoman and do washing.
Then I studied the language with
the children and I became a prac
tical nurse. But I never wag in
want of a job.”
“Now the children don’t want
me to work. They say I worked
all my life for them, and now I
should rest. But I like to help
where I can.”
Serene Faith
She has a serene faith that never
faltered in her long years of trou
ble.
“You just have to have courage
and responsibility,” she said.
“Without courage there is noth
in""
Mrs. Van has no desire to revisit
Europe.
“Here if you work you can have
the same things as the rich man,”
she said. “You can’t over there.
You don’t even buy your groceries
at the same store.”
She is sturdily indifferent to the
present plight of the world.
“I believe the Lord will have
to come and settle it,” said Mrs.
Van. “And the way the world is
going, I don't think it will be long.
“There is an awful tribulation
coming, but it won’t get me. The
Lord will come and take me away
first. He will take eare of his
own.”
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JUST LOWER THE BOOM—A spray-painting service in Lincoln, |
{ IIL, is throwing its ladders and scaffolding right out the window. |
| It developed this aerial telescope boom that eliminates such para- !
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Mgl s e RIS TN w ol
President’s Sister Has Good Record
0f Taking Up Where Truman Left Off
GRANDVIEW, Mo.—(NEA) —
Ii President Truma:i were looking
for a personal goodwill ambassa
dor he wouldn’'t have to go out
side his own family to find one.
His sister, Miss Mary Jane Tru
man, has a good record of taking
u?t where her famous brother left
off.
When Harry volunteered for
service in World War I, his sister
took over the operation of the
family’s 600 acre farm near
Grandviev. She was quile suc
cessful, relinquishing the duties
only after the return of h r
brother in May 1919.
One of Miss Truman’s many
farm duties wasg assisting her
mother in the preparation of meals
for harvesters. She recalled that
when a cook failed to show up at
the farm on Harry’s wedding day,
she helped feed farmhands be
fore attending the late afternoon
ceremony.
The President served as post
master of Grandview in 1814. His
sister was assistant postmaster of
Grandview from 1938 to 1942.
Next dyear Miss Truman will be
installed as the Worthy Grand
Matron of the Order of the East
ern Star in Missouri, the Order’s
highest office in the state, after
80 years of service in various
chapter potions. Harry was
Grand Master of the Most Wor
shpful Grand Lodge, A. F. and A.
M., of Missour!, the highest Ma
sonic office in the state, in 1940.
But unlike the President, who
has been beaten for a golitical
office only once, she was defeated
twice before she was elected to a
line office of the Grand Chapter of
Missouri. She never was defeated
for a local office, however.
% * »*
Miss Trumeun is quick to em
phasize th e defeats,” explaining
that she always has been elected
on her own and doesn’t want her
position as the Chief Executive’s
sister to influence her record.
Although she was born in 1889,
Miss Truman looks much younger
than her years. she resembles
Harry and has the infectious Tru
man smile, t‘!)lus a pair of dashing
hazel eyes that reflect he: vitality.
She walks erectly and glnierly.
She chooses trim, simply-tailored
ciothes in size IZ.
While she modestly resumed a
strenuous schedule of activities,
suppressed during the illness of
her mother who died at the age
of 96 on July 26, 1947,
It is not unusual for “Miss
Mary” to write 30 business and
personal letters in longhand in
one day. Bhe does her own house
THE BANNER-AERALD. ATHENS, GEORGIA. =
work, drives her own car and
travels frequently. Her lodge in
terests have taken her into eight
states in recent months.
She likes to visit Washington.
She says her most fascinating
Washington experiences, next to!
witnessing the President’s inau
guration, have been watching sev
eral of the President’s news con=
ferences. :
“I loved them,” she comme:nt-4.
“They were lots of fun.”
“Miss Mary” receives a heavy
volume of daily mail. Most of the
“outside’” correspondence in form
persons trying to reach President
Truman through her.
* *® *
Mary Jane and Harry studied
piano together as children ond
played duets at community affairs
She shares her brother’s fondness
for “The Missouri Waltz.”
Harry always liked music and
never had to be made to prac
tice,” she recalled.
A Secret Service man is sta
tioned at all times at the Grand
view cottage where Mary has
lived alone since the death of her
mother. A wire fence with pad
locked gates surrounds the house.
Admittance in gained only
through a buzzer >perated inside
the house or by the Secret Service
man.
Miss Truman explaiied th at
these means to assure privacy
were inaugurated after her aged
moth, with characteristic hos
pitality, invited the curious into
her home. Mary cared for her
mother throughout the declining
years of her life.
Recently a nephew, Gilbert
Truman gave Mary Jane and a
friend of hers pet dogs. Miss Tru
man named her dog “Bark” short
for Barkley, after her friend
named her dog ‘“True” an ab
breviation for Truman.
Mary Jane move: sbout near
by Kansas City without apparent
recognition by strangers. Her
autograph, however, often is
sought after she has been identi
fied at public gatherings. Because
of her refusal to capitalize on her
relationship to the President, she
often takes a “back seat.”
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BIG MOMENT—This & just
about the bl;ghmt moment in
a soldier’s e. Cpi. William
Feldkamp leans out the window
of a bus in Chicago and gets a
hearty kiss from his girl friend,
Gloria Joy, 17, while a not-so
‘ortunate buddy stares with anvy.
Feldkamp is bound for Camp
McCoy for two weeks training
with 10,000 other National
~ Guardsmen.
Dame. Fashion's Forecast
For Milady Is Fascinating
The American woman will wear
more jewelry this Fall and in 1850
than she has in many Enrs This
gredscfian was made by Martha
ercilla, Fashion Director of the
Jewelry Industry Council .in a
:feech before the National Asso
ation of Credit Jewelers’ Con
vention in Chicago, July 26th.
“This season, jewelry is more
than an important accessory in the
fashion picture,” she said. “It is
a definite part es the silhouette.”
The Council’s Fashion Director
told the jewelers: “In the fashion
world, we like to use the term
‘there is a feeling for’' this or that.
The term oftentimes is overwork
ed, but that doubtless is because it
is so truly expressive.”
“It is the case this year,” she
explained, “tha. there is a feel
ing for jewery, more and larger
pieces of it. There are several
very sound reasons sow this and
let me say, before 1 go any further,
that there is a definite reason for
almost every fashion trend, sickie
as they may someiimes seemi”
Science As Well
Miss Percilla went on to tell
her audie .ce: “To the casual ob
server, fashions in women’s cloth
es and accessories may seem like
utter folly based merely on the
whimsy of somé Parisian dress
maker. Acfually this is far from
true. Fashion is an art . . . its is
a creative thing *and in the past
few decades, when the American
fashion market has grown to ma
turity, fashion has become & scCi
ence as well. Because of its very
nature, each season evolves and
develops something refreshingly
new . .. an expression of a pre
vailing spirit. It is not mere hap
penstance that Christian Dior is
the most talked of name in the
post war fashion world, !
“It is because Dior is an artist
and a little of a scientist as well.
It is because Dior realizes that
contrary to the uninformed opin
ion of many people, women will
not wear just anything simply be
cause they are told it is fashion
able.
“After the war, when the
French couture was struggling to
right itself in the midst of star
vation and upheaval, Dior set out
to make a study of the woman for
whom he was about to design his
new collection. He studied the
mood she was in, the influeaces
which were strongest in her life
. . . the ways in vhich she was
most likely to seek release and
happiness in a newly peaceful
world.
“He realized that outside of his
own French market, the women of
America were the ones who would
have the money to buy his cloth
es. He realized also that many of
France's smartest and wealthiest
women had ’{Fent a great deal of
time in the U. 8. during the war,
and that they had learned the
American way of doing things and
te like American clothes.
Greatest Guide
“Having concluded that the
temper and feeling of the Ameri
can woman was the gre test
guide to the ereation of a success
ful collection, Dior came to the U,
S. He visited in New York, he
went to Dallas, he made a trip
tn San Francisco and stopped over
in Los Angeles.
“By the time his visit was over,
his head was buzzing with ideas
. ..Iresh new conceptions of fash
jon . .. of the type of clothes we
women ‘would have a feeling for’
that season.
“He sensed the desire for free
dom after wartime regimentation.
Because goverr.ment restrictions
had limited the length and width
of skirts to skimpy proportions in
war years, he sensed that women
would be thrilled to have hemlines
that were down to their ankles
and skirts that were yards and
yards wide.
“He sensed these and a thous
and other things that made him
go back to Paris and create cloth
es that were the complete reverse
of every other collection in the
French cepitol, The results are his
tory.
“Overnight Dior was a sensa
tion . . . the toast of the fashion
world . . . the designer of the de
cade. He had, with complete suc
cess, captured the ‘nood,” ‘the
temper’, ‘the cadence’ of an im
portant era in our lives.
“This year, fashion is in a cas
ual mood. The new clothes are
designed to be worn wiih & casuai
air. But the casualness of a dress
ed up one. Our hair is cropped
close to our heads in a casual,
youthful manner. But it is rot a
mannish casualties, itisa femine
one. We will dress it up' with long,
drop earrings to soften the new
line of short, short hair . . . to fill
in the silhouette made by little
helmet like hats.
Now ItSs Tweeds
“The most important single
fashion story of the season is
tweeds. Tweeds, not as the Amer
ican woman is accustomed to see
ing and wearing them, but in a
new, dressed up type of clothes
that rm&: even into twilight
gowns. ey are the kind of
ciothes a women will accesorize
with heavy gold jewelry and big
pins with colored stones chosen
to highlight the favorite fleck of
color in her tweeds.
“You will see daytime dresses
made of camel’s hair with neck
lines' scooped out to the danger
point. The very lushness of the
fabric, the weight of its folds and
the boldness of its cut will call for
bold sccessories. Large loops of
gold chains, big tortoise or amber
beads, colored stones and pearls
all will seem right, looped several
times about thé neck.
“Because short hair and scoop
ed out necklines make necks seem
longer, necklines have new impor
tance in our fashion wardrobe..
They will ¢climb higher and high
er about the throat.
“Dog collars and numerous
strands of hi{ih riding cl.okers will
balance the line of smaller look
ing heads . . . and hib like neck
laces will fill in the bareness of
shoulderless gowns and necklines
taat continue to drop iower aind
lower.
The slternate fashion favorite
for the very low neckline is the
very high one. They are either
very high or very low. There is
no in between, But here again the
high riding dog collar or the bib
necklace is right. The one to be
worn above the high r.eckline of a
dress or suit, the other to slip !
under the collar and hang decora- |
vely across the dress front. ’
Bold Teeling.
“The popularity of pushed up
sleeves spotiighis bpracelets and
the daring absence of any sleeve
at all even in some of the winter
woolens, forecasts an increasing
ly popularity for bold numbers
¢! bracelets particularly gold ban
gle ones.
! “In reporting the fall fashion
story it is difficult to keep the
‘adjective beld from recurring in
‘descriptions. For there is a defi
‘nite feeling of boldness in the
‘way fashion trends are heading.
“Perhaps it i: because we 'ave
taken new courage from the fact
that we finally got the nerve to
cut our hair short despite the hue
and cry of the male populace. At
any rate, we definitely are doing
things with a bold hand.
“Fashion is alvays a curious
synthesis of the artishc and the
practical, and at this particular
moment it is especially so. It is
unmarked by period cr nostalgic
influences, Although urdeniably
we still look to Paris for inspira
tion and design, Paris aiso now
looks to us for inspiration. As a
result today's fashions h.vea new
significance, Actually they are
American Mode:.
“The American woman is look
ing equally exciting from the jew
elry industry. She has a right to
expect in her jewelry the same re
freshing newness, the same under
stending of a new e&ra in fachion
. . . the same inspiration in de
sign. It is up to us to give it to
her. We can create fashion jewel
ry without making it fad jewelry.
“For one thing fashion has
fcund a wealth of new ways and
means for wearing lovely jewel
ry. It is very important on hats
this season. Hats are small and
often plain, and call for an im
portant clip or series of pins to
ornament them.
“There is a vogue for jewelry
at the belt line. Showers of coins
or pearls on a clip, or charm
bracelets worn as chatelaines be
tween two scatter pins. Watches,
like grandfather once wore, caught
up on heavy gold chains and held
at the belt by a fob. Interesting
things are being done with scat
ter pins. You'll sec a shoulder
line ablaze with little gold birds
fiying across the shoulder and up
onto the hat. Each one of these
ideas is a reason for increased
sales in your retail store.
Spending Carefully
“Not the least of the reasons
for increasing jewelry sales in
the months to come is the very
fact that wo.aen are spending
their money more carefully than
they have in a number of years.
There is more than ever a ten
dency to.buy a iew good smart
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A SURE FIRE WITH || WON'T HAVE TO 600 D,
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THE TPAVELLERS JUARTET, Ace Richmond, Eddie
Wallace, J. D. Summer and Horace Flovd . . . sing old
time hymns and folk tunes listeners love. See them on
the WSB Barn Dance Party at the Georgia Theatre in
Athens on August 4th! "
There will be big doings at the‘
Georgia Theatre on hursday,
August 4, when the “WSB Barn
Dance Party” arrives to entertain
the people of Athens and vicinity,
Cotton Carrier, populai emcee of
the party, leads the way in a pro
gram packed with fun and musiec.
Such WSB folk music stars
James and Martha, the Carrfi
family and the Smith brothers, the
Plantation Gang, the Travellers
quartet, and that tunntest of all
barn dance comics, Oscar Mec-
Gooney.
James and Martha, the barn
dance sweethearts, provide many
inspirational melodies written by
them.
clothes and change and refresh
thum with smart accessories,
“This is important to keep in
mind when you are selling jewel
ry to the woman of today. She is
more guality conscious and more
value conscious than she has been
in a long time, Remind her that
when she buys jeweiry to accos
sorize and glamourize her ward
robe she is making a sound in
vestment.
“The scarf she buys, the hand
bag she selects, the extra pair of
gloves, all will be bound to wear
out in a matter of months, But a
good jewrlry accessory, cerefully
chosen and bought at her relia
ble jeweler’s store, is . . . shall we
say . . . a thing of beauty and a
joy forever.”
PAGE SEVEN
Real music in the hoedown man
ner is offered by the Plantation
gang lead by Cotton, and featur
ing the steel guitar music of Dean
Bence.
Ac¢ an sdded attraction. the
“WSB Barn Dance Party” will re
cord a broadecast during their pro
gram at the Georgia Theatre for
I‘l‘.’<§Bthe following Saturday on
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