Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 93, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 9 May 1945 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
gm m stain Mn. Sullivan, Indiana - ' . . Telephone 12 Paul Poynter . Publisher Joe II. Adams ... Editor Eleanor Poynter Jamison ... Manager and Assistant Editor Published daily except Saturday and Sunday at 115 West Jackson St,
: Entered as second-class matter July 1, 1908 in the Postoff ice at Sullivan, Indiana, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879, t ; United Press Wire Service. , i National Advertising Representative: . ! . i Thels and Simpson,' 393 Seventh Avenue, New York (1) N. Y. , j Subscription Rate: ; By carrier, per week,, '." 15 Cents in City j . By Mail In Sullivan And Adjoining Counties: . ---j ! Six Months . :', .-', . . . ... .... $1.50 ' Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) ..... .. 30 Cents1 I Year ..' ..' .v ...... $3.00 v By Mail Elsewhere: ! 'Year ':. v . $100.' -Six Months .................. $2.00 I Month (with Times furnishing envelope) 35 Cents' ( Alt HI mentarv chemistry. hygiene.
Many More W rVLJJ1 11CCUCU; ' Secretary of the Navy .James i V. Forrestal today advised -the 1 Office of Naval Officer Procure-,1
ment, Chicago, of the reopening Qualifications for women who of WAVES recruiting on a wide ! volunteer to enter the WAVES scale, with, 2.000 WAVES a are the same as heretofore. They month needed nationally to fill ! must be- 20 to 30 years of age, current requirements. .The new j have two years of high school or monthly quota will extend the equivalent; and no children throughout the balance of this j under 18 years of age,- and be an year,, as the Navy girds for a : American citifctii. Complete ini"iig, "revere war still ahead of us'! formation may be obtained from .ri the Pacific. ' .the Office of Naval Officer ProvTre increase in the strength of ; curement, Board of Trade Buildtlic Women's Reserve of the ; ing. 141 W. Jackson Blvd., Chi-
avy, it was pointed out, is made j necessary because the : aeeelera- ! :inn of the war in the Pacific has'j ioplctcd the numbers of person- f. jel at- shore . stations, , in this i .' oountfv Fit the time when de- ': mauds on these' stations ire the' heaviest of the war. More than 82.000 WAVES are now on active i
tuty.andtho outstanding per-,0"e
ormar.ee and service rendered by', 'hem has made it possible for j he Navy to release more than f-fi.OOO men for duty afloat and ishore overseas. Approximately one-half of the vonic'n selected tm; the WAVES mdev the new procurement junta will be chosen lor the Hos pital Coi'psl At present, ' some 3,000 WAVES are now giving nlonrliH sprviep in thk hranch .long with nearly 120,000 male ilospital Corpsmen, but the need tr thousands more tu care lor he current and future casualties eturning to Naval Hospitals in , His country from the battle- j vonts is most pressing. All of the nevvly-i'i'ilisted
WAVES will receive eight weeks tended church in Sullivan Sat,f" training at the U. S. Nav:il tnday evening: :
jrraining School (NR.). Tlie Jronx. N. Y.,On iMmplet.ion of his recruit training those ot se'ecj,ed for the Hospital Corps . v i 11 go directly to a duty station r a school for other specialized' i;nnin? - WAVES assigned to the Hosrital Corns will, after finishing ecruit training receive an addiional two m.inths of hospital 'raining. Instruction in this ourse will ..cover, anatomy,, ,e)e-, - , r mv XTnii v minrvn ', Aiiw hA tfwwiw'ir nic 11 Uh 1U hlW.VlAlll lAS One lady said she used to be - aaa.a io go to oea. ne was swoten wna stomacn gas ana tne gas vould rise up in her throat after ;
she lay down and would nearly scnt to lh , Open Forum must be choke her. Had to prop herself up slgned ,d ,ddress eiven. in orone pillows to breathe. Recently der that the editor . may know
tins lady got n.KH-HEi.r ana now, says, gas is gone, stomach feels
fine,-bowels are regular and she quested. can sleep soundly. i .'' ERB-HELP contains 12 Great Articles published Herein ' do Herbs; so don't suffer! Get this; not necessarily express the sentl;iew medicine Bennett's Drug; went of the Daily Times and th I Store. Sold in Carlisle at Ander-; paper may or may not agree with son's Drug Store. . ,! tatement contained herein. .
From where I Safurday night Is openEouse for erce men at Dad and Ma Hoskins'. They spread out sliced tu key and chicken, hothreads and rake, sweet cider and ice-cold beer -and let any sen-ice man v-ho wants to, come and. help himself. Borne, townsfolk tfiortght tli feUows might Ret ohstreperons Of take advantage of the Hos tins' hospitality. But the men r quick to recognize that here's a real American home, where friendliness and moderation are just naturally observed. So. 116 of a Series Copyngtil,
. rev
:, minor surgery, bacteriology, and' j
other related subjects. On compietion they will be sent to Naval Hospitals throughout the country for general work, including the assisting of nurses in patient care. ' ' ' cago, or the nearest Navy Recruiting Station -,., , , MX. CALVARY' ' , ; . : A Service Flag dedication will be held here Sunday afternoon, 1Jln. uura' 'J' welcome, 1 he program vvu' oe anm.uncea iue... ) Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rawles jnad as thejj. guests last week end Mrs. Vickrey and . son , of West Tcrre Haute. " Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Skinner attended services at. the Pilgrim Holiness Church Thursday evening. Prayer , meeting here each Tuesday evening. .. Rcv anc, Mrs vunk Wimp and daughter, Shirley Ruth' were cimner guests sunnay 01 mi. ana Mrs. Clarence Spencer. . Mr. and Mrs. Elie Yates and Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Creager stMrs. Grate Rawles is some improved. Mr. and Mrs. Scott McGarvey were in Sullivan Saturday evening. " " DAILY TIMES OPEN) FORUM . ' " i ' Letters "nd ' interviews of suiteblft nature nd proprr news. paper tr.ret are sought for this column, the editor reservine th , tn nsn, r ... lc,e ,,e may -eem ,8 not miUhu and proper Artic!es 01 500 wordi nr ... Dref.ri.ed. All artielei the writMi however, the writer'i nalne wil! not b. Dubliihed If re sit ...ly Joe Marst
The Hoskins v .... M,-. - ; v t are a One-Family USO
And do tbey appreciate It! A touch of home life, hospitality, good food, a -pleasant glass of beer or cider-and, afterwards,maybe a sing around the piano, or a chat before the five. From where I ,U, lot more families cvnld fate a tip from the Hopkins', and give our serv-' ice men a chance to ppend off hours in homelike . snrrD)Jings, in an atmosphere of moderation and good fellowship. I'Jio, United Stuiei brewers I'oundaiiU
This Morning's Headlines - HITLER'S BODY BELIEVED FOUND IN BERLIN. Dispatches from the British 2nd Army front said a Russian general had disclosed that a body purported to be that of Adolf Hitler had been found by Red Army troops in the ruins of Berlin. The general was reported to have said that photographs taken of the body would be studied in Moscow.
RUSS OBSERVE V-E DAY
ing the German capitulation to the Russian people for the first time, j said- early Wednesday that unconditional surrender articles had been j signed by the Nazi high command at Berlin. The announcement, made: in behalf of Commander in Chief Stalin, but not by the premier ' marshal personally, said the surrender-was signed yesterday. i
' MOBS LOOT STORES IN HALIFAX. Looting mobs, growing out of Halifax, Nova Scotia's boisterous V-E Day celebration, raged through the business districts Tuesday, smashing store windows, battling police and causing loss unofficially estimated in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
... VICTORY COST. 150,000 KILLED. War against Germany, end- L
ing Tuesday, cost this nation over ualties, some 150,000 of them dead. -. BOAT-BLAST KILLED 49. tcrs of the Atlantic ocean on! v CXDlosion snlit thfir Maw Facrln wnm nvi ritw f th
. . ; 7 , 7" Ui '. direct to any Federal Reserve ciew. of the patrol ship PE-06 survived the mysterious blast thatig, or branch) or lo tne Trea. came April 23. during a noon lull in target practice maneuvers. Many surer of the United States
perished in the frigid water.
NORWAY'S QUISLING REPORTED HELD. Vidkun Quisling,
the puppet prime minister of Norway and .the war's No. 1 traitor, is
being held under house arrest at Bydgoey, the Swedish radio said
Fir,st World War Veterans. t Reminded Of Maturity Redemption Of Adjusted Service Bonds Of 1945
j... Veterans of the First . World War -who 'hold 3 percent Adjust ed Service Bonds of 1945, issued ift payment of amounts due on Adjusted Service' Certificates, are reminded that the- bonds which are dated June 15, 1936, will nature on June 15, 1945, when the face amount of the bonds and interest for the full 9-year period will be payable. The amount due on each bond is $63.50, which includes $50 principal and $13.50 . CHAPTER FORTY Aggie shot the bolt. He pushed he door open. 'Ahead was a long, lownsloping- passage. He followed t for a hundred yards. Its walls ecame rock. -Cut in the wall, at hat point, was a door; and on the loor, another new bolt, as well as i heavy beam. He lifted the beam ind slid the bolt. This door opened tut. ' ' ' Behind it was a chamber. The vails were rock. Ends of freshly troken roots spiked the ceiling. 'rom somewhere inside came gur;ling of water. Aggie's torch, moving across the loor, touched a heap of opened tin mns and an old chair and held for i moment on the opposite corner where a pool of water flowed slowly nit of sight in a cayern no more ;han a foot high. The air in the jlaee was tinged with a chemical niell, but it was not foul. "Mr. Bogarly !' boomed Aggie.' There was no answer. He stepped !nto the room and moved his light. Then he held it very still. Stretched nit on the floor raggedly bearded ind in filthy clothes lay a man. t his side was a pail set on two itones and under it was an empty (oliilified-alcohol cau. The man did lot look like the Hank Bogarty of '.he photographs Aggie had seen iut it was Hank.' Aggie thought for moment that he was dead. ' Aggie knelt and took the man's wrist. Hank's pulse was feeble. He nad been there, Aggie thought, for iveeks supplied with food by his captor and with canned heat, for :ooking it.' There was a mound of candle grease on the ground near by. Aggie thought, for a moment, that exhaustion fear fury ihock-had prostrated Hank. Then he saw the real reason. " Hank's head lolled. On the side of it, toward the back, was a savage wound that had not healed The wound was infected. Reddish streaks ran into Hank's scalp and down his neck. Aggie considered two courses: Hank was a heavy man and unconscious. ' To take him out would be a -tremendous task and a rough journey for the sick man. To leave him might mean that his captor would check up on the prisoner and See the hole in the bricked win dow. Ajrcie knew enough about Hank's captor to shudder. Then, taking a deep breath, Plum rolled Hank on his lace, wormed underneath him, wrapped his right arm around a thigh and seized a wrist with his right hand. He Ticked up his light with his left hand and lifted, mightily. - ... , - - Aggie went back up the passage t a running walk. He climbed the steps swiftly. To lift Hank up and into the bid window seemed at first impossible. Then Aggie saw he could do it by removing more bricks He worked with frrnsy. The radio ouai-Kaad waj till jroins tha feet
SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES-
TODAY. Moscow radio, announc three-quarters of a million cas Forty-nine died in the frieid wa three milfs offshorp nftpr a WrifiV hnaf amiriehine in MQ, VnrfA' t. , ,Sm, .u. ,.. .u his private residence at Gimle . Tuesday. interest. No further interest will arcnn sftpr .Tmif 1 S 1Q4?1 The bonds may be presented at any post office in the United States, where, after proper identification, the requests for payment on tne ' backs of the bonds may be executed, that is, signed by the registered owner in the presence of th postmaster who will certify to the signature. i The postmaster will issue a rej ccipt for the bonds and will for-
&f4i trAurnorlH3rieurto or xineriATuaet syndicate,
were still thumping but Aggie did not feel safe in that place. When his task was ended and he was ready to try lifting Hank again, Aggie heard a slight creak a sound disoriented from the others. Instantly, he switched off his light and peered up in the darkness. He saw some distance away, between two of the floor joists that made the ceiling a long thin wedge of dim light that disappeared as he looked at it. ' Grimly, he lifted Hank again and thrust his head into the hole. Fiercely, he levered, the big man up to it and pushed him through. He plunged after Hank even before the latter had fallen limply on the other side. There w as some sort of trap door that opened into the clubhouse. Under a rug, probably. And whoever bad put Hank down there had opened the trap a little had seen Ags;ie s light and closed it. The professor thought of yelling. But it might take the people up stairs many minutes to find him. In the meanwhile' whoever had opened the trap door would have conie out, and around the club. 1 hen what? The thing to do was to drag Hank to the hole under the sill, leave him there for a moment's reconnoiterincr, and 'come back. The tunnel would have to be enlarged for Hank Aggie squirmed out. He stood, in the sumacs, panting, sopping wet with sweat. He heard nothing. He waited, hiding against the side of the building. Still nothing. He ven tured to crawl back and shine his light at Hank and the space under the solarium. Hank lay still, breath ing rapidly. Aggie began to widen the hole and listen and work again. Ten minutes later he dragged Hank through it. Plum paused once more to con sidcr. Suppose he picked up Hank again walked boldly into the light carried him around to the veranda took him into the club? But . . . was -someone' waiting for him out on the shadowy golf course with a rifle? Would there be a cou pie of shots and somebody running away in the night? It was better, Aggie decided, to slip along the side of the club with Hank, and into the lilacs, and through them to where the sumacs met, and from there, down into the woods. He caught his breath and struggled to lift the man. Thenshadow among the black shadows he began to move. ' Half an hour later, at the edge of the road in front of Sarah s cot tage, Aggie waited for a car to pass and went across. He kicked at the screen door, and Sarah opened it. He staggered through the liv ing room and into the butler's pantry where he stretched Hank on the floor and lay fiat beside the man struggling for breath. - - ine pr.ote?sors appearance dirtv, sweat-covered, bramble-torn
WEDNESDAY, MAY 9,
Poor Digestion? Headachy? Sour or Upset? Tired-Listless? po you feel headachy and upset due to poorly digested food? To feel cheerful and happy again your food must be digested properly. Eachday, Naturemustproclureabout two pinta of a vital digestive juice to help digest your food. If Nature fails, your food may remain, undigested v leaving you headachy arid irritable. Therefore, you must increase the flow of this digestive juice. Carter's Little Liver Pills increase this flow quickly often in as little as 30 minutes. And, you're on the road to feeling better. . Don't depend on artificial aids to counteract indigestion when Carter's Little Liver Pills aid digestion after Nature's own order. Take Carter's Littlo Liver Pills as directed. Got them at any , drugstore. Only 2ot. ward them to the appropriate Federal Reserve Bank .for payment without charge to the 1 veeran- The bonds, of course, ; may b Presented by the owners Washington, D. C, after the requests for payment on the backs of the bonds have been properly 1 executed in' the presence of an ' autllorized certifying officer. ; Payment will be maae, in each I instance, by a check drawn to I the order of. the registered owner ; and mailed to his address. I Because of considerable number of Adjusted Service Bonds outstanding which may be presented for redemption on June 15, in order to avoid the possibility of congestion and to in- ""' , -- are ul'ged t0 brlnS tneir bo.ncls well in advance of that date, but not before May 15. Any Adjusted Service Bonds received on 'or aiter May 15, will be assumed to be presented for redemption on June 15, unless specific instructions for earlier redemption are given by the ownr. inc." ' m - and his behavior -were a test of Sarah's nerve. But she understood, at least partly. To have possession of Hank Bogarty, now, was to be in as grave danger as Calder had once been and George Davis. She pulled the blind on the one window in the pantry. She made a quick examination of Bogarty and said, "No word yet from Wes! I've sent as urgent a message as I could to get them trailing him. " Sarah telephoned then for an ambulance. When she came back from the phone, Aggie was breath ing with less violence. He knelt over Bogarty. "Blood poisoning. From that sock on the back of his head. Ambulance coming?" VI told 'em " said Sarah, "that if they weren't here in ten minutes, I d shoot the driver." "Somebody saw me taking him out," Aggie gasped. "Opened a trap door. He was just where we figured he would be. So they know whoever it is that I've got him out. "That old exit from the hotel," he went on, "has a room off it. The brook runs in and out through a cave air comes up it but I don't imagine sound travels very far It's probably crooked like a muffler or gun silencer. Hank was in there. He would have died !" Sarah interrupted her nephew with, "Don't think about it now, Aggie. VeTl rush Hank to the hos pital" "You " he declared. "You get in that ambulance Go with Hank! Take Chillie too! I'll send old John away with Windle!" "You can't stay here! Your life isn't safe for a second!" she protested. Plum left the parttry quickly. He was in his room, changing his clothes, when the ambulance came. The feet of men carrying a stretcher pounded in the cottage. Then the murmuring siren faded away on the dirt road. Indian Stones was silent again. Ititook Aggie a considerable time to change. But, when he finished, he hurried downstairs and went to ' Sarah's teapot. The station wagon keys were gone. Windle and old John had used the station wagon for their departure.! He. ran to the barn, started the vintage lin'ousine, and drove up to the club, ' Aggie entered the main lounge and walked through the rooms. It was a quarter past eleven. The usual crowd had thinned. But the late-stayers were still on hand: Byron Waite reading a newspaper, Ralph and Beth at their interminable-game of table tennis, Mrs. Drayman shepherding her daughter and, in the exercise of that function, scolding Bill Calder. Danielle Coiiyrisbi. 1J43. by Philip Wjlle: wasn't there. Neither was Ja-k Browne. Distributed hy King italuras Syntht-ute, ilic ' ' '- (To be continued) ,
1943,
hatT)ecamea
gC.,"1 -'V.. '
. . . and the company that has helped build 1 1,000,000 war-time tires This pile of discarded automobile tires (the picture ' was tnken in 1936) is as non-existent today as the tig Rock Candy Mountains wliere the cigarette! grew on trees and the .rprings gushed pure lemonade. Maybe you remember driving past those junk yards where the homeless jalopies used to rust in the rain, and the pile of tires grew mountain-high. And then, one day in December, 1941, that m'juniain became a gold minc In a few ttrrible moments, America's access to tbejaw rubber of the Indies was cut completely. Throughout. America, junk yards, garages, and buck yards were scoured for every scrap of precious
.JY0U,,RrONlX Si 0; TRUTH TROVES ' i ; STRANGER THAN FICTION! . .q GEORGE FIELD, Lawrence-: ville, 111. Truth is oft times more strange than fiction. Such is the1 case of Mrs. Irene Beard, who ( drives one" of the vehicles at the! George Field motor poll. Some time ago she sent a letter to her brother-in-law who is in service in Burma, but the correspondence was lost in the shuffle. One day, Mrs. Beard's brolher-in-law was driving along the Burma Road when he spied a magazine lying in his path. He dismounted and picked up the periodical. Upon opening the pages, a letter dropped out onto the ground, When he examined the envelope, h!"fU"dT.bei.i?iVe,it r "0t' WaS addressed to him from Mrs. Beara. Ripley, take note. EEE INSPECTION 1 GETTING UNDERWAY ' THROUGHOUT STATE INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.. May 9. (Special) Annual inspection of Indiana's hundreds of thousands, of bee hives was started this week by the entomology division of the I Indiana Department of Conserva- I lion. .... , James Starkey, chief bee in spector, mot last week with field representatives at Auburn to make arrangements for inspection of hives owned by more than j 40,000 individuals throughout In- j diana. Indiana ranks from 7th to 17th on the nation's list of honey-pro- ! ducing states with the chief, source of honey in Hoosier clover! fields. Recent reports have ) indicated, Mr. Starkey said, that the' bi;'ck locust trees now blooming """fc in the southern part of the state j are furnishing a great deal of the present supply. ' ' ' NEW -U. S. STAMP BOOKLET AVAILABLE ' "' ' The public is advised of the' issuance of' .a revised edition of descriptions and illustrations of all United States postage stamps from the date of their tion in 1847 to April, eluding plate numbers and quantities issued of commemoralive and air-mail stamps. , The, new stamp booklet is be- ' ing issued to the public through the office of the Superintendent of Documents at 30c per copy, with paper binding, which includes the cost of delivery. All mail orders ' for this booklet! should1 be, addressed as follows: Superintendent of Documents, Government- Printing Office,! Washington 25, D. C. j Remittances accompanying or-
FOOT FROM TROUBLE ytf !ers ror lne Booklet may be lu the form of postal money orders- - 1 checks. (Postage stamps are not .$64 QUESTION AIR SERVICE ' COMMAND ITALY. Sgt. Dan Carmichael IN of Detroit spoke no Italian.- The Tt.Ttinn IPU'filrv tttni-o ntv,t-ii-ictr,f kc no English. So Carmichael had a tough time explaining that he- wanted "Italy 1945'., engraved on bis heavy gold school ring to send as a souvenir to 1 1 is wife in Pasadena, ' . : '. Then Cannici .u:l wanted to know how long the job would take. The" proprietor didn't' understand until the sergeant wrote out. hi: fM5ctirm on o clii , He told Carmichael' it would be no trouble at all, to return the' next day. - The following day the sergeant came back. The ring was ready. The old merchant handed it proudly across the counter. Carmichael took one brief look: In beautiful block letters right across the face of the ring were the words "HOW LONG." I)ODD KKIUGE Sunday School nt 10:00 a. . m I There is a revival meeting nt the 'Pentecost ' Church at Sullivan1 and many people are attending. ' Mrs Bill Wade who has been ill is some improved. " j Mr. and Mrs-Harold-Thompson : were in' Sullivan Saturday . Mr. and -Mrs; f Roy 'Clark and ! fsmily were guests of her ' mother, Mrs. Lilly .Thompson over the week-end. 1 Mrs. Ruth Brown and Mrs. ( Girtha Parr attended the Army . , .1 1 i ... ... " ; ' muiMiay anei noon. ( j Mr. and Mrs. Will Stevens and ! family of near Merom have moved to the properly recently vacated by Mr. and Mrs. Win, Kimmcll. . Mrs. Vei'na MeClure was in Sullivan Saturday. Mr. ai-.d Mrs. Joe Krause. Carl Thompson, Mr. and Mrs.' Vernon Hayden and . son called on Mr.
introduc- and Mrs.' Edwin Bailey one eve1945, in- ning last week.'
Mr.- and Mrs. Floyd Hayden and Laconda were in. Terre Haute one day last week, ' Harold Thompson is home on ' furlough visiting relatives and i friends. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Davis " are improving their house with porches. j Mr. and Mrs. Levi Pierce cal ed on Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Davis and daughter' Sunday.." Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Butler, Mr. and Mrs. Harry 'Adams, Ber- , tha Reel, Luvisa Wood, Mrs.
rubber that could be found. We were on a spot
bad one. . "i The fact that we got off the spot is due, to a great extent, to companies such as Phillips. For it was Phillips comical research ability and Phillips production facilities that produced an important share of the vital butadiene which is so essential to tine manufacture of synthetic rubber! Today, we think we have a well-earned right to stick ouc our chests because the Phillips Petroleum Company is one of the largest producers of butadiene in the United States! With today's ever-increasing emphasis on the chemical production of new and better things from petroleum, let the Phillips 66 Shield remind you that Phdlips refineries, in addition to producing gasolines, lubricants, and fuel oils ... are also gigantic chemical plants pouring out weapons for victory. ' ,
CHECK YOUZ 8XAKES! Wi HiiiVTifir ill.. Dorothy Bujjarrl and Mrs. Clifford Church -we're in Sullivan Saturday, r ' Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Parr called on Mrs. Matlie Qlark and family one day last week. Ural Hayclen has received two leteHs from his son, Jack Hay.den, who is overseas slating iliat he is well and getting along alright. SOCIETY NerfUrcraf't Club ' Nert'lcciart club will rut with .Uir.cl F.nisl on Wni-n Stale Street tomorrow afternoon. W: S. C. S. The Women's Society of (,'ln istJcm Service or the Sullivan Mcl'it dist Church will meet in the Youth Fellowship Room Thursday. May 10, at 2:30 p. m. A good piogram awaits all. The executive committee will meet at 1;"J0. Victory Club The Victory Club will meet Thursday night with Mrs. Nellie Wentz at, 118 South. Court Street. THE FRESH U STARR1N9 BA0MEY GRANT; Hi Zany Slae'gei !-. ilr -k Golden-voiced Vocoliilt -k, The 7-Vp Chorut k 30 Piece Orchestra -ftmm NEWEST-MOST J HILARIOUS VARiETY PROGRAM , 1 Krt?l lt? 1 on your did ? 7:.1() P.M. P' Frsnted by ' ( , ' ' " 'our 7-Up Bolllcr v your i
