Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 21, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 29 January 1945 — Page 4
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SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES--' MONDAY,, JANi-29, 1945,
I Buy War Bonds Stamps
ENDING TONIGHT! Adults 3-lc Children, 16c. Tax raid. F ...--.-.-.. 1 1' TUESDAY AND WED. Come Early! . ...ftamv .,.. oo ft i u V rV 'jihmyIybon ; ' ,. ;2MBAMJELDEN ENDING TONIGHT! Adults, ;i.rc Children, 11c. Tax Paid. jr "mm . iv Ml 44 IW MlllCE OF.APrOINTME.VT Nntui. i..r j-.oivby !?iV'-n Hint the Ali i:v.-rf;tnr of (r,o 5r!t of Pranlt J-'-: " 'a'iffl l;:lf i f Sullivan Cuur.ty, T::fi:i.iiu. SaJU estate 13 BUp-pcj.-.il to L.i S ilVCMlt. 1'RAMK P.. BLEDSOR. AflriHiiistiMtor ;niil Tcjinia. Attoi'lu-vs. 1st Irts l-i3-a-3i. , J i t, it , 7; - .-'fN.' ! i 4 h'.. t!s'i J The Milker Designed v for Sanitation J A clean milking machine mean) lower bacteria count . . . lower bacteria count means' more profit!, Tlrat'j Why we say, "Better Milk with Clean-Easy". You'll Hire the gleaming while enamel finish, the tparKIing glass milk pails, th ease of keeping Clean-Easy sanitary. See us at once for ditai's. i H R u h ii I2 fl eJ Feed & Implement Co. - Linton, Indiana
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Extra red points can hs!p to much. Get 2 red pomta for each pound of used fat3 you turn in. Keep Saving Used Fatsi For the Fighting Front! Bits Of News it.'ontinued from Page 1) Suilivan, Indiana soldier decided h,e right medicine for the 20 mm would be an American heayy nachine gun. Under continuous enemy fire, 'uglies dragged a heavy machine un up to point. blank range. Then. ie turned it loose, and drove the 'trauts from their long-prepared position, causing them plenty of casualities, and enabling his buddies to move into the next (own without trouble. Hughes received th Bronze Star Medal. AWARDED COMBAT BADGE HOMETOWN NEWS FROM THE SEVENTH ARMY FRONT, France Pfc. George J. Walters,' with the 100th Division of tho Seventh Army in France, was recently awarded the Combat Badge. He is the husband of Mrs. Anna E. Walters, 116 North Wollenberger St., Sullivan Indiana. The local soldier's division is one of the newest on the front of Lt. General Alexander M. Patch's American Seventh Army. He has recently been wounded in action according to notification received by the wife. " SOLDIER WINS AWARD WITH THE 80TH INFANTRY DIVISION. FranceMajor General Horace L. McBride, Commanding General of the 80th Infantry Division, has announced Uiat Private First Class Joe Buczek, of Headquarters Company. 2nd Eatfalion of the .317th Infantry Regiment, has been awarded the Combat Infantryman Badge for exemplary conduct in action in France' from September 29 to November 18, 1944. He is the son of Mrs. Mary A. Buczek of Box 269, Shelburn, Indiana. He graduated in 1931 from the Shelburn High School and entered the Service on September 28, 1942. WITH NOTED E03K?EX GROUP 15th AAF IN ITALY. Cpl. SonnetF. Faught, 20 son of Mr. and Mrs. Amos Faught, 424 E. Hartley St., Sullivan, Ind.. is a memher r,f the ordnance Department with a Jj--4 Liberator heavy bombardment group which has completed its , 400th mission asainst tho enpmy. The O roup's outstanding achieMiv.Kf:?K 1 IIIV; F,NiVL KFI'ORT Tiu sii:i; or the liroGKRMAUTIX 'OAt COMPANY Notice it hereby Riven lo tiro crwlilors, siift-e-hoi'-tfrs anil oUirr Inlwpntod pailira that the unrlersisne.), Quincy J. Milohc), Tri'stce un,l,..r th Tt f" "t'-l hv Ihp Tru.st A.ivemHiit of the UttSSW-Martin Coil Coinpanv ct al eiated April l.". 19SI. has tiiis day filed his Finl Report as puch Trustee 1n the Ciiruit Court of Sullivan Countv l)i(li.'iii:i, and that f.iid CiHirt litis .set .nut! hm.-il RiK,it i'.-n- liraiing Feb-Mi.-uy 28., Ifi-iil. and (li.-ii within thirty du,Vi! fiiim She t!at of Idiu? s,nd Final Report :my ereiiilor. slii'velio'def or extreptioiiB In writing la the matters :iu i.-u riys conuunea m sunn Ji"rt lllld to liie TnmlA.V Fin-d tJmrein reiiortcd, and if uu.-h obh-i acts or cxcci it i 0:1s are not filed -within lliii't.y day, same shrfll be for all mirpo." n fin ever baiT"d. WITNESS i'iy 4ii:nd anl rivil of r-.'iid court ilii.a aitli ihiv of .l.umary, i'MU JAMES II. RINGER. Clerk. ,Siulian Circuit Court. 1 in.? 1-22-4" 3t cms ' tmm M for CAR ft REPAIRS FIX IT UPLET US PAY THE D1LU REPAY US MONTHLY, Come In Or Phone For At Auto-Repalr Loan, NOW I 1 Fidelity Loan Co Upstairs Midle East Side Sq
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'km- fwj Wonderfully quick KS1-iL' a little Va-tro-nol up each no.sti-il helps open rasa! pas-saaes-mBfces l)teau:uv-c eaiaer wlteti your liead fills uq with stufty u-ansient rongetstionl Vu-tro-mil gives grand relief," too. from srii.Hy. sneszy distress or head colds.-Follow directions in folder. vemenfs are: First TJSAAF unit to be based on the African continent, to bomb target:? in Europe, the Italian fleet, Rommel's supply bases st Benghazi and Tobruk, enemy convoys in the Mediterranean Sea, Crete, Greece and the first heavy bombardment group to be on the European continent.' Cpl. Faught was graduated from Sullivan High School, Since being overseas, he wears the Distinguished Unit Badge, Good Conduct Medal, and the European-African-Middle Eastern theater ribbon. AWARDED MEDALS SOMEWHERE IN THE PHILIPPINES. Two Sullivan, Indiana, men, members of a crack Infantry company of a well known Division here, have been awarded the Philippine Liberation Medal. They are: . Private First Class Charles P. Robinson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Robinson, 450 South Troll Street; and Technical Sergeant DOnald E. Truelock, son of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Truelock, and husband of Mrs. Rosemary Truelock, 408 North Olive Street. They also hold the Expert Infantry Badge, the American Defense Medal for service before Pearl Harbor, and the Asiatic Pacific Medal. They have been overseas for the past fourteen months. you wmHIM! HE HEEDSJW Affer Turndown FORMER Vice President Uc-nry A. I Wallace is shown in New Yoiv. City I after receiving the news that the I Commerce Committee of the Sen ate had voted to reject his nomination as Secretary of Commerce. Members o the Committee voted 14 to 5 against him. (International) 1 Vrf V German troops holding forth in 1 "'i.'6i wuhiwuv ui macKjui,
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DRIVE ON RUHR MAY BEGIN Si
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AS AMERICAN NINTH ARWif troops captured the last four-mile section of the Siegfried Line before them, and British troops cleared a lengthy stretch of the west bank of the Roer River from Holland to below Duren, ' Allied military leaders predicted that a concerted drive on the Ruhr is ( imminent. According to Gen, Brehon B. Somervell, U. S. chief of services and supplies, the Allies now have enough men and materiel for a major offensive. Coupled with the withdrawal of Nazi troops to their faltering eastern front, the way appears clear for an offensive that will probably result in the overrunning of the vital Nazi industrial zone. Arrows show probable direction of future Allied drives. (International).
WABASH VALLEY TOUltNEY SCORES (Quarter-Finals.) Bridgeport, 111., 48; Spencer, 43. Loogootee, 28; Linton, 27. : ' Garfield, 43; Sullivan, 31. Covington, 37; Clinton, 29. (Semi-Finals.) Garfield, 39; Covington, 23. Bridgeport, 52; Loogootee, 42. (Finals.) Garfield, 40; Bridgeport, 30. . Other Secies. Bosse, Evansville, 41; Jasper, 39. Vincennes, 35; Washington, 32.
This Morning's Headlines CHIANG HAILS END OF SIEGE NAMES ROAD FOR STILWELL. Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, Maj. Gen. Albert C. Wedemcyer and U. S. Ambassador, Patrick J. Hurley hailed the breaking of the land blockade to China at ceremonies Sunday night marking the opening of the Ledo-Burma Road which the generalissimo suggested be renamed in honor of Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell. Immediately accepting the suggesstion, Major General Hurley thanked Chiang ''for the honor he just conferred upon America" by naming the land route into China in honor of Stilwell, former commander of American forces in the China-Burma-India theater and now head of all American ground forces.
CATTLE CEILING PRICES INVOKED. The OPA issued regulations complying with Stabilization Director Vinson's order to establish a flat price ceiling for live cattle, effective today. Based on a ceiling of $18 a hundredweight at Chicago, the regulations set forth the "over riding" maximum prices on cattle and calves for 24 zone and ten market centers. These ceilings will continue in effect until July-2 when they will be lowered 50 cents a hundred pounds. The regulations will also establish a limit on the amount a slaughterer may pay for all cattle kjlled during a monthly accounting period.
This provision is known as "drove
BULGAR PRINCE DOOMED. The Swiss radio said that Prince Cyril, former regent of Bulgaria! had been condemned to death by a special tribunal in Sofia. He had been chauged with atrocities against Bulgarian patriots, crimes against the United Nations, collaboration with the Axis and delaying an ultimate break with Germany.
WARD DECISION MAY DOOM WLB. The War Labor Board, alarntfd by the potsntialities of the Chicago Federal Court decision in the Montgomery Ward and Company seizure, looked to Congress to clothe President Roosevelt with authority to enforce peaceful settlement of all labor disputes and hoped meanwhile that labor "will keep its feet on the ground." The decision invalidated government seizure of Ward properties, on grounds that they are not war plants and raised the prospect that thousands of non-war businesses dealing with labor through WLB directives will challenge the board's authority. Labor might be provoked into serious work stoppages. -
British Troops Rush Enemy
Belgium, are being driven out by onusu iroops aavancmg among
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fyr DOGS ATTACK SIIELBURN WOMAN TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Jan. 29. Attack by three large, longhaired dogs in the 1600 block on South Fourth Street was reported to police officers Sunday about noon by Mrs. Essie Uash, 61 years old, of Shelburn, Ind., who was visiting at 1222 South Fourth Street. These are the same dogs police said, that other persons in the neighborhood have complained .of their ferociousness. compliance." r ! I: 1 1 U - f '1 the ruins of houses. (International sounapnoto.)
Garfield Wins Valley Title; Arrows Fall
Garfield of Terre Haute, ' won their first Wabash Valley basketball championship in 30 years with a sparkling 40 to 30 victory over Bridgeport, Illinois, in tho final tourney tussle at the Indiana State gymnasium in Terre Haute Saturday night. The Purple Eagles were not pressed after the first quarter of the championship game and their victory returns tho crowh to Indiana, the Robinson, 111., Maroons winning the trophy list year. The northside Terre Haute school's team was in fine fettle throughout the Terre Haute tournament and came through with ease against all opponents. Roachdale, Sullivan, and Covington were their other victims. , , Principal upsets in the tourney were turned in by Covington and Loogootee, who defeated Robinson and Linton, the pre-tourney favorites. Sullivan high school's Golden Arrows turned back the Shelburn high Panthers in their first round game at Terre Haute but dimmed out in the quarter-finals, losing to Garfield by a 43-31 score. Sullivan suffered acutely from basket blindness as the Purple Eagles rolled up a 12 to 2 lead by the end of the first quarter. The Arrows and Garfield each scored 12 points in the second quarter but the champs stretched their lead to' 39-19 at the end of the third quarter and coasted in with a team of reserves on the floor. Summary, Sullivan - Garfield game: Garfield (43) FG FT PF ti 1 . . t A n o , JJttiU, i. ................ i & Bland, g 4 2 1 Swift, f 0 .0 0 Chestnut, c . . . 1 1 3 Lovelette, c 1 1 2 McGinn, g 2 4 2 Neff, g 1 3 4 Nicoson, g 1 0 1 Elakeley, g 0 2 1 Kiburis, g 0 0 1 Totals .14 15 17
Sullivan (31) FG FT PF 7-" - Robertson, f 2 1 5 j Smith, f 0 0 3 h " ! Moore, f 0 0 1 - Libke, f . . . . : '. . . 2 0 0 - Sims, f 3 4 3 ' 5 Hincs, g 2 1 2 ' Hoesman, g : . 0 2 1 Alexander, g 2 0 0 t"' A 1 Bitlman, g ..0 0 0 Kerlin, g 6 1 I) , .1 i vt , Totals 11 9 15 Referee, Klinck; umpire, tf
Brooks. FACE VINCENNES, LINTON Sullivan will have no letup in basketball following the tourney and will play host to the Vincennes Alices in a game at the community gymnaium tomorrow night. The Arrows will be seeking their third S. I. A. C. victory against the Alices. Vincennes, like Sullivan, has dropped several contests and showed flashes of real power in other games. "A" and "B" games are scheduled at 6:45 and 8:00 p. m. On Friday night, February 2, Sullivan meets another S. I. A. C. foe, the Linton Miners, in another homo game. Prior to their upset in the Valley tourney the Minora were rated fine of the standout teams 111 southern Indiana. Sullivan and Linton rivalry, always fever-hot, prophesies one of the best games of the season this year. REA Chief tfe.v::UV-;:;:V:':fe : 1 1 I L 1 ftfiTft ht,: y..YJtvojB6wiilfehM.l AUBREY . WILLIAMS, 55, ' former head of the National Youth- Ad-' ministration, has been nominated by President Roosevelt to head the Rural Electrification Administration, succeeding- Harry Slattery, who resigned in December of last year. (International)
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SERVICES HONOR I ROY WILSON' Funeral services were conduct' ' ed Friday afternoon at two o'clock at the First Christian Church of Sullivan for Roy Wilson, age 58, well-known farmer of Sullivan rural route one, who died Tuesday afternoon. The services were in charge of Rev. Jack Anderson, pastor of the church. A beautiful song service was rendered by a male quartet composed of John and Ross Harbaugh, D. H. Brown and Arthur McGuire, accompanied by Mrs. Isabelle Adams at the piano. Flower bearers were Quindara Springer, Axie Raines, Sally Siner, Audrey Burk, Hazel Springer and Ruth Daugherty. Pallbearers were Everett Dillon, Wallace Springer, Jesse Springer, Hosea Siner, Henry Raines and George Daugherty. Burial was made in Center Ridge Cemetery. CHILD WHO SWALLOWED I LYE-WATER TREATED I AT HOSPITAL HERE The! ma Jean Tucker, 2-year-cld daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Tucker of Carlisle rural route two was admitted to the Mary Sherman Hospital yesterday afternoon at 5:30 p. m. where First to Preside HER MALE colleagues in the Puerto Rican House of Representatives recently honored Senorita Maria Libertad Gomez during a session to vote funds for continuing the island's war emergency program. She was chosen to preside over the House and thus became the first Latin woman to act in that important capacity. (Iniernattofial) Gift frorrt Grandma LOOKING a little surprised, young James Doohttle, 3rd, grandson of the commanding general of the U. S. 8th Air Force, is shown in his mother's lap with the War Bond sent to him by his grandmother in support of the "bonds for babies" campaign. They were photographed in an Antonio, Tex. (International) ;
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acy WriRsr SIGN OF A Cold Preparations as Ji' d she is receiving treatment. She ..rtinnTo a ffnpi onp"ity of poison four weeks ago. The child 'mbed upon the table at the Tucker home and drank a small ppiount of lye and water from a can, it was learned today. Mrs. Tucker said that she had been making soap and there had remained some of the lye in the can which she had been using and that she had poured water into the lye, setting it on the table. The little girl's condition became worse yesterday. Hospital personnel today reported her condition to be somewhat improved. RECEIVES FINE George Welch of Shelburn was arraigned this morning in City Court and fined $1 and costs nnd given a 30-day suspended sentence on charges of disorderly conduct in Shelburn Friday evening. Welch pleaded guilty to the charge that he turned in a filse fire alarm at the Cora Rich resi-., dence east of Shelburn in the Jackson Hill community about ' cloven o'clock Friday night. He tyas arrested by Town Marshal Rueben Crosby of Shel-. burn and members of the Indiana State Police force. .. law .. HOSPITAL NOTES Admitted Jan. 26: Gilbert Brown of 1605 North Main Street, for treatment; Vern Pierce of Oaktown, for treatment; Robert Banta of 828 North State Street, for treatment. Admitted Jan. 27: Alonzo Chastain of the County Infirmary, for observation. Admitted Jan, 28: Reba Jean Clark of Shelburn f0r tonsilectomy and observation; Dismissed Jan. 26: Mrs. Lillian Marshall of East Washington Street. ; Dismissed Jan. 27: Virgil Jenkins of Farmersburg; Mrs. Frank Abrams of Dugger. Dismissed Jan. 28: Mrs. Gar-' land Street of Merom rural route one; Mrs. W. H. Followell of Hymera; Mrs. Ernest Corbin and daughter of. 711 South Main Street; Mrs. Paul S. Cox and son of Merom rural route one; Mrs. , Reginald" Burk and son of 339 North Chase Street; Mrs. Floyd Hayden of Fairbanks rural route one. ittill yvh- ' :v,-uj m 9' 1 'i ...by NOT burning WASTE PAPER Each 100 lbs yon save makes 17 protective bands for 500Ib. bombs.
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