Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 106, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 28 May 1945 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES MONDAY, MAY 28, 1945.

Sullivan, Indiana

Paul Poynter v Publisher loe H. Adams Editor Sleacor Poynter Jamison ... Manager and Assistant Editor Published daily except Saturday and Sunday at 115 West Jackson St,

Entered as second-class matter July Sullivan, Indiana, under the Act of

United Press Wire Service. . " National Advertising Representative: fhels and Simpson, 393 Seventh Avenue. New York (1) N. Y. Subscription Kate:

3y carrier; per week ; By Mail In Sullivan And six . Months .......

Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 30 Cents

("ear By Mall few Six Months

Month (with Times furnishing envelope) 35 'Cents

SMALL BUSINESS Strong demands vecentlv esearch as a means of helping ;i supplying- the "sixty million

I Commerce Wallace has proposed to utilize the tremendous acilities of the Bureau of Standards to do for small business hat the scientific bureaus of the Department of Agriculture ave done and are doing for farmers in solving their technial pioblems and in developing new methods and new pro-

lucts.

In a recent address, Maury Maevrick, head of the Sniallv War Plants corporation, asserted that small business is a

ure safeguard of free enterprise and that "every little town

unst have whatever factories and plants its resources make Possible- That means that little business must be permitted to ive. .... In the SWPC we have given technical advice to housands of little businesses." ' ; - Maverick called for federal government research service i'or small businesses "because they cannot keep up the huge aboratories of the big businesses and . the monopolies." Mavrick insisted that he was not "fighting big business", but Lftat,he was "hired to aggressively represent little business."

ln old legend told how Barbarossa, .asleep in his cave

iear Salzburg, would rise in the

m of Germany. However, this wasn't, apparently,' the kind f Germany old Barby promised to rescue. .V :. .

One report has a grocer resenibling Hitler, taking his place and dying in the Battle of Berlin. Evidently, the Nazis

jion't. think as much of their grocers as.we.do. .. .

Just before" war's end the hat "breathed" under water. TODAY'S MARKETS INDIANAPOLIS, May 23.-(U.R Produce: Poultry Broilers, fryers and casters under 5 lbs. and Barred And White Rock springers, 29.78 .-piling. Colored and Leghorn pringers, 25c; heavy breed hens, .'6.28; Leghorn' hens, 24.28; cocks, 15c. ; ; . Butterfat, No. 1, 51c. Butter, 45.63c for No. 1 and V - ikrt -

tECAVSE , THE? SAVE TOV. MONEY and do a IHer, Ibw eoil feeding iob lion any complete feed w can offer ya. Murphy's Csi centratM furnish the extra protein, mineral and vitamin fubstancei to balance up yow own fam grains and tep up jeiultt. .. ,, , ,.' You need pay out for feed only one thin dime from every do&ir Income irom your livestock and poultry when you feed your own borne frown grains and '. : - : ;,:'-.: .: v, ' : . . .. Murphy' Vig-O-Ray Concentrate for Pouitry Murphy's Cf-Cosr Coneerr for Livestock

-AIUlRl:itllVStTOClfl

MARTIN'S FEED STORE

" Sheiburn, Ind. , ; - . WE BUf POULTRY. AND EGGS.

Telephone 12

1, 1908 In the Postoffice at Congress of March 3, 1879. , 15 Cents In City Adjoining Counties: .: - l-5" $3.00 Elsewhere: ..J $4.0Q , 00 RESEARCH TOO have been made for scientific small businesses do their part jobs" after the war. Secretary . .... hour, of need and come to the Germans invented a .U-boat A sort of last gasp? . ; 45.13c for No. 2. Eggs, 31c' ' INDIANAPOLIS, May 28. 1U.R) Livestock: , , . . '. Hogs, 7,000; ; good and choice 160 lbs. andabove and bulk 140160 lbs., $14.80; 100-140 lbs., $13.50 $14.50; good and choice sows, $14.05. , . . . ... , Cattle, 1,300; calves, 700; good end choice steers 15 to 25c higher: few loads choice steers, $17.60; bulk good and choice yearlings, $15.85317.00; odd lot heifers, $16.00 $16.50; good cows, $13.00 - Jt ,.v-: I ; jop In and see bw yon can sore feed dollars. let us ebo yoa how the extra substance. . Murphy's Concentrates furnish enrich your ration so that youf livestock can grow and pro due note ior you.

umm

0 , . SYNOPSIS , Ian Cray, First Secretary to the American Minister to Austria, is concerned over the infatuation of his colleague, Leonard Holt, for the notorious Countess Lolita von Waldeck. ; ; . But, when Ian -meets ihe Countess at the Austrian Ministry, he, too, is fascinated by her deauty and cannot understand how one so lovely and naive could cause the tragedy and heart break with which she is credited. He asks her if she realizes that be;ause of her, Leonard is jeopardizing his position and his engagement lo Ilya Zichonyi, lovely daughter of a Hungarian Minister. For an instant Lolita's manner changed permitting Ian to glimpse a woman who by choice or under pressure of circumstances was thinking along practical lines. Almost at once the expression passed and Lolita was again the confused, innocent girl, Then "mockingly she says, "I am jing to devour your helpless little limb to the last bit o wool." Much to Ian's surprise, she invites him to her cousin's residence the next afternoon, asking hira to say nothing to Leonard. Try as he might, Leonard could not refuse. While they are talking, Colonel SobelorT of the Bulgarian Royal Guards, breaks In upon them, flashing a revolver and crying. "Lolita has beFooUd her la;.t lover." Ian fells him witli a blow.. "You struck me. Monsieur Gray", the Colonel exclaims. "That means I Shall have to kill you." "Don't be a fool" snaps Ian, as he turns on his heel and got3 off. Upon leaving the ministry, Ian discovers his keys ure missing so he stops off at his office for a duplicate one to his attartm;nt. As he is about to enter rite main office, a strong, warm Cloth is dropp'd over his throat aM he is jerked backwards. In fal'in. his fiad strikes a corner of a.de-ik. When he comes to every-t';i-; apfars as it should be: the (l?:k' and safe ' apparently unCciclr!... . A ' white' silk; sc?rf, t,"ri v.-ith Orchidoes Noires lay on liia bor.om. ' ; riiAfTKrt.vni ;' --ia'iii!y whs a nasty-frock.'' he Mmiv-Si-.. vihil" his (ingprs tested n J'.'trip ih;tt promised to soon exceed ike ronventional pigeon's ee in KV... There was Mood, tod,' on his .ufTr tips. ' He blinked. Those red Vlni'1? nn-phow collected his scat-1-rrpH rKtctinns.- "Let's see if anyth'i' been touched. " ,;: I.ips ?ft in a tigh mirthless smile t'tv emssed to his (lesk and from it s!"ictod his ihiolieate hm.jfe keys. "D-'mr.cd nui;.:ihec to lose those lr--r." , , 'His1 rem'f inin? self pos.-cssion .fur h?r shnkon.-aa he recalled r'-;;t t'l" l;ry fur his particular com--Ti h"ht in the afe had heen on f.r. 't. fiii'r. Cord thing the key (Was )., y'-itno'i'. Knowieuge oil me .-.,-.' Mrti! inn to the safe's outer door. We'!. I" would act a new lock tut ' n in the oriinp". ' Liicfey'-he had If th tevt of the new ,ll-..y;r-Aiiei"ertn . Trade Treaty icf rt-di"7 Soviet (roods jot into the r"iT-iT t:i-il there'll be assorted 'jr? of hell ponninj. The State ')f iii UVient would' have some' tall j-pl-;nriiir to tin arid if (here was ''vlh'n'r the State Department i Uyl Ifss than explaining Ian had i,:i i'lra w i-'t .that was. - In fn effort to clear his head he . 'it i ci?rtte and was about to E0 l-op. wh?n with a trickle of ice wa'cr i-ii-'-ulatine throueh his heart 'ho noticed that thf dial of the safe wr.-i. pet at the last numeral of the uprrt'nn cnmlii,:aHon! Chilled with sudden presentiment Of disaster, 'lie ' erippod the lock's nickel arm rr.d wa-i sickened to find that, the ,-lnor 'fwnnjr open without the least e.Tott. Greater srrew his fear when V" knelt, peered inside, and beheld ili? lid of the steel box in his comp:i lament vid. open.- ' V j i h trcniMintr (infers, hut with !yo th.-'t wore steady, he ran over the cedents of that ! small bright t"-l coi!.i;ner. All at once it seemed that a ic;i:l-cl:i(l fist 'cold as the box in hi hands had seized his heart ml wai squeey.injr the life blood out (,f it. Stupidly! incredulously, he ani-d at the fat sheaf of typewritten paces. - Lying sedately in its place was the second half of Trade Treaty X-2, but the first half had completely disappeared. For the second time that night, myriad lights swam before Ian (Iray's . staring and. now horror-? stricken eyes as he came to realize the magnitude of the catastrophe : which had befallen him. Great heavens! Stat secrets entrusted to $14.25; common and medium, $9.25 $12.75; . canners and ' cutters, $7.00 $9.25; vealers top, $17.00. Sheep, 900; load shorn lambs unsold; odd lots medium grades, spring lambs, $13J)P. JVIALICOAT-SYESTER LINTON, Ind., May 28. The Kev.'W. A. Mallcoat of Linton is announcing the marriage of his daughter, Myrtle Jane and Robert G. Syester of Sheiburn. 'The marriage took place, at the Little Flock Primitive Baptist Church near Spencer on May 13, the Rev W. A. Malicoat hearing the vows! ' Mr., and Mrs. E. -W. Cunningham of Bloomingtori acted as at- : tendants. j . Mrs, Syester. graduated from' both Linton High School and Ind- ' iana University and has taught in the: -Linton . Stockton high 1 school for a number of years. Mr. ' Syester is employed in the local coal fields. .They plan to make

Ofi

him had been lost! In his mind's eye he could foresee the furor, the outcry that would be raised in half of Europe's chancelleries. The fact that the first section was practically uselts3 without the second, made no difference; there was enough in it to convince those shrewd, clearsighted and unforgiving autocrats in Moscow that America had dealt them yet another stinging- rebuff. Feeling as he had that time a Prussian guardsman had driven a rifle butt into his solar plexus, Ian Gray remained utterly devoid of motion. Then great beads of perspiration commenced to form on his brow as he realized that he was now liable to not only dishonorable dismissal from the Foreign Service, but prosecution for criminal, if not treasonable, carelessness. That he had been the victim of a series of accidents over which he had no control would make not a whit of difference to those grim old men back in Washington. For several dazed minutes he sat slumped in a swivel chair, hopelessly bewildered by the gathering avalanche of ill fortune that had overwhelmed him since. the cocktail hour. He suddenly sat bolt upright. Alert and clear-headed once more. f'The only thing to do," he told himself as lie got up methodically, returned his compartment to its place aiid then twirled the combination of the safe, "is to go home and get some black coffee and reason this thing out logically." ' He retrieved from the floor his battered opera hat, dusted it and winced when its- brim encountered that bump on the back of his head. "May as well take this scarf along a clue. Wish to heaven there was one of those blasted dime novel detectives around might be able to tell all about the crime from this scarf." .--" As ill luck would have it, he was in the act of shutting the Ministry's ponderous front door when Baskerville, the attache from whom he had borrowed the key, came sauntering I by, homeward bound. "Hello," he greeted with a brief nod. ' "You must have been upstairs quite a while. Thought you were home and in the feathers long ago. Mice- taxi bill you'll have." Ian had hard work to force a nmile to his lips, That treaty! "Yes, but you know how it is saw some unfinished work on my desk and, for no good reason, stopped to finish it up. Forgot all about this infernal taxi. See you in the morning." The explanation sounded thin, he realized that- very well, and guessed that Baskerville, who was nobody's fool, was looking after him with a puzzled expression. - ."The devil with him!"he said savagely. "Iet him think." - , On regaining his flat, Ian slipped out of his clothes and into a dress ing gown, then bathed his wounded head. After that he dropped into an'arm chair before the grate and sianea to mins. i ne more ne thought, the less happy he became. Obviously the theft had been committed by someone who was perfectly familiar with the embassy', who knew the combination to the safe's outer door. Who had found his Ian's keys and who knew that the key to the strong box was among them. ' Ergo, it' mnst be an employee of the ministry. Well, who would be likely to know about his keys? Into his face came the blank and horrified look of a man who, having just caught a train, recalls he has left tickets and wallet on the chiffonier at home. He pulled out the black and white scarf with a savage jerk and after scanning it groaned. "Oh lord, hoy, how could you have done this?" Ian Gray dropped his battered head - between his hands and groaned. A thousand infernal voices shrieked that his best friend, whom he trusted as himself, had undoubtedly betrayed both self and friend. Soul sick, the man before the fire lifted a haggard face to stare into the sleepily winking coals in the grate before him. Why? What had driven gay, carefree Leonard to this criminal and fatal step? From the scarf in his lap arose a faint scene Orchideef Noires? Now he remembered. Moonlight and Orchidees Noire Lolita's innocent appearing face lifted to his. What was d'Armonot had said about Lolita von Waldeck? "My government keeps track of such people," or something like that. In his chair Ian straightened, so it was not for nothing that all of Lolita's victims had been, ia some degree, dinlomats. You Save in 5 r t Ways on Security

Security

Upstairs North Side Kroner Bldg. Across from Index. Tune in on Station WBOVV oach Friday evenin? at 6:30 ,r... - fcr the Security. Half .Hour. ' . ..

SHOT

3 Eevolted and distracted at teon ard's incredible madness, Ian struggled on to fill in the obvious links. Until it became unescapably clear that,' for all her amazing air of simplicity, innocence and gentleness, Lolita von Waldeck was in fact a subtle adventuress, calculating and mirthless as a tigress. Good Lord, what a horrible thingshe had done! In the course of a single evening she had hopelessly corrupted Leonard Holt's sense of honor. That his. own Ian Gray's career was blasted as well, evidently bothered neither the lover nor this woman in the least, loo well Ian realized that when Mr. King, the austere and sternly puritannical American Minister, learned what had happened, two diplomatic careers would end in a blaze of fatal and shameful notoriety. Well, he was damned if he'd take it lying down ! There was yet time to stave off disaster. Maybe. The theft wasn't known. Too bad Baskervule had seen him there at the Ministry it would look bad. At the end of an unforgettable hour's thought, the drawn faced man before the fire perceived that, in his struggle for the immediate re covery of the missing part of the treaty, there was one powerful card in- his favor namely, that the Countess von Waldeck and her jolly, pink and white "cousin" only possessed half of the treaty. Undoubtedly they would not rest with the job half done. He started. Downstairs the door had rattled and, in fury mingled with pity, Ian listened to the traitor's familiar step mounting the worn stone stairs the dull thud of each step seemed to be imprinted upon his . chilled and anguished brain. How could Leonard good steady old Leonard, have played the callous rotter so deliberately? How he dreaded the next few minutes. There certainly was nothing more tragic than the betravai and end of a long and perfect friendship. With a queer sense of unreality that all this was some wretchedly realistic nightmare, Ian watched the wrought brass door handle move and then drop. The door swung open and revealed Leonard Holt, very good looking in his perfectly tailored dress suit and with a faintly perplexed smile on his features. "Hullo, boldat, he greeted, fling ing his opera cloak upon a chair by the door. "Why the vigil ingrow ing conscience or unrequited love? Jan remained silent, before the fireplace. ' Somehow he could not bring himself to speak. Until this ghastly moment he had not realized how much he loved that gay and ir responsible youngster, now engaged in stripping off his gloves. So he remained where he was, one elbow resting on the yellow marble mantelpiece and looking fixedly at his roommate. Then Leonard's eyes ret his. - - . . A silence of the first magnitude ensued,' and when a piece of coal crackled in the grate it sounded loud as a small pistol shot. "You're late had a good time?" observed Ian at last. Funny,' he had to think of each word before he said it! . - . . . , . 'Why yes," said the other, with color welling slowly into his features. He paused in the act of undoing his white pique waistcoat, fingers suddenly stiffened. "What's up, Soldat? Why do you look at me like that?" "Better go in and make yourself comfortable." Ian had to fight to g?t out the words, so sharp was the pain in his heart. . "There's something I want to talk about it may take some time." Suddenly a perceptible change came over the younger man's face, the smile faded and his lower lip trembled. Ian read an abrupt bewilderment as Leonard's gray eyes blinked quickly two or three times. He looked like a man just aroused from a deep sleep. "Be with you in a moment." At the bedroom door he paused, looking all at once very gray and old; the starch gone out of his figure. "What's what's on your mind?" "Tell you later" "All right," said Leonard in the hushed voice of immense bewilderment. "Just a minute I I'm going to take off this infernal boiled shirt." Then with, a Jerked nod, the younger man vanished into the bedroom leaving behind a very faint suggestion of that perfume called Orchidees Noires. (To Be Continued) 14$ CoprrlsM, l3i. kr I. V. W. Hum 4 Distributed by KIm Tettmx (.-wtyttX Wl 1'

Save worry and credit by bonowin hi Secuiity when you need $ to $300. ; - Save obligation no outsiders or co-signers required to borrow money here. Save because there are 110 "extra", charges tacked on one combination rate crvers complete cost. Save embarrassment -r no longwinded investigation and a simple business transaction. Save . time loans a;re made anywhere from 10 minutes to 2 hours from time application is received.

Lda

G6

h

DAILY TIMES. OPEN FORUM

Letters and interviews of . suitable nature and proper newspaper interest are sought for this column, the editor reserving the right to censor or reject any ar dele he may deem Is not suitable and proper. Articles ol 500 word or less are preferred. All articles sent to the Open Forum roust be signed and address given, In order that the editor ma; know (he writer, however, Ihe writer's name will not be published If re Quested. . Articles published Herein do not necessarily express the senti ment of the Daily Times and this paper may or may not agree with uateroenU contained herein. A SOLDIER'S VIEW OF WAR I left the lines only a few hours ago; in a few more hours I'll go back to take my place. This is why I'm writing this. I want to share with you the anxiety, the bitterness,' the impressions I have brought away with me. Yes, I know V-E Day has been declared. But that hasn't ..made much change. There is still a war going or. here and in the Pacific,' and someone's father, someone's son, or you may have to take a place beside me in that line. The four" freedoms must be preserved. I look out my window, I see a soldier standing guard at the gate. Feet apart, head tilted slightly forward, and giving the impression that he - is listening constantly for sounds which I do not hear. All soldiers acquire the Cautious habit of listening. At the hour of Victory, there is no gaiety lef in , soldiers, no noise. All is dead seriousness. I wonder if he is thinking about, the four freedoms, about post-war plans. PerT haps not. He is thinking ' of his mates left in the mud grime of battle. , , . i . . . ' General Sherman once, said, "War is Hell." A teacher said that he made this statement . after watching some of hi? ablest men die on a . battlefield. Another pointed out that he made this statement after the Confederates nod captured a large portion of his army's rations, A third argues that he watched troops burn and drown while trying to cross a burning bridge. One. of the Generals in this theater has said, "War . is one Dercent hell. . and ninety-nine percent boredom." Of course, that is the opinion of one individual, is differed by others. I have met it close up, not through the headlines of morning newspapers. I hate it as all my mates hate it. with a deep, hot, personal hatred. No man can ever go through places and fire . like there was in Normandy, the Manchan Forest, or stand off counter attacks made on bridge-heads like those made on every bridgehead from Normandy to the Elbe, and still say, "war is one percent hell, and ninety-nine1 percent boredom:" It is all just plain undiluted hell.:' I guess I'm ' hot thinking much about the four freedoms, or post-war plans. ' I have met war close up and it is most unpleasant.' Every time I look at a magazine or hear about victories on the radio, I get pretty sore. There's no mud, no stench, no blood. Nothing but victories. This is just attitudes and heroics. I know first hand the cost. I have seen results, not in number of towns or prisoners taken, in number of men wounded and killed. I met war face to face at St. Anthony in France, at Echternach in Luxembourg, at Humane in Belgium, and again in the Hurtgan Forest. At these places there was mud, blood ,and grime. It WEsn't prettied up either. i Continue with me, let's look at some drama. At Wreschen I saw parts of war that you cannot see in magazines. There I saw in one 1 . j, T. .. i ; . , liaige giuup vi Italians, no less than thirty ornately uniformed generals, their hands tucked in their resplendent tunics according to Napoleonic custom. They spent most of their time striding through the fields in search of potatoes. Occasionally one would strike a stance and hum a .few I bars from a Neopolitan opera, but usually they stalked about in sijlence, speaking to, no one and 'paying little attention to anything save their quest of potatoes', il have seen many groups of displaced French, Russians, Belgians,' I nd others gleaning from the fields. I can believe, now that Germany did have a large number of slaves. At another, town which I shall call Neuss, a Ger- ' man civilian shot a medic who Quit paying rent and own home. Special bargains ; 01 property on Installment plan. Also farms for, sale. ' .W. f MEIXOTT, . .

COOKED A FINE DINNER; , THEN THREW IT TO DOG i A lady said she used to throw

her own dinner. to the dog most. of the time. It made her sick just j I to look at food. She was swollen ' Jwith gas, felt worn out and was; badly constipated. She got ERB-1 HELP and now eats everything in sight. Bowels are regular and she' enjoys life once more since tak-j ing this new medicine. ERB-HELP contains 12 Great Herbs; so don't go on suffering! 1 Bennett's Drug Store. Sold in Carlisle at Anderson's Prug Store. was trying to case the suffering of a dying tanker. Not an hour had passed until another German civilian limped up and asked a member of the dead man's squad to take him to a doctor. This soldier led him down the street to the dead medic, pointed and said, "There's your doctor," . then he turned and walked away to look for more Germans. In the Ardennes, at Petite Langlar, Belgium, a medic for our platoon was called to the forward oiltpost to render aid to some wounded. When he neared the corner of the woods, he was told, "Keep quiet and don't go too near the edges." German tanks were machine gunning and firing 88's direct fire on the area when troops moved too close to the edges. .A sergeant pointed to a foxhole and said, "When you have finished dressing Mack, take a look at that fellow in there." .While dressing Mack's shoulder chad to answer such Questions s: "Am I bleeding much? Did the h as: "Am I bleeding shrapnel go all the way through? Do you think I'll live?". Before he had finished dressing Mack, another medic had looked in the foxhole indicated by the sergeant a;id said, "This one is dead." Our medic convinced Mack that he would live and that he was not really hurt by showing him his hands were not very bloody. Mack took one look and seeing very little blood, asked another question. "Will you help carry me to the aid station?" He was helped up and walked to litter, put on a jeep which took him back to an aid station. When Mack left thai cold evening the look in his eyes recalled the words of the Psalm: "Thou, hast delivered my soul from death, mine eyes from tears, and my feet from failing." Mack wasn't the only G.I. car ried out of the Ardennes that aay. Nor: was there ,only one marked KIA. The next day at the edge-of the forest ; there were marked sixteen KIA. No, War !S rtrr t : iilr inii'a thnn rtnn novnnnt certainly more than one percent Hell! Morning newspapers, magazines and the radio do not tell about the costs. . So until Victory in the Pacific let all of us do our upmost. Sent by,Gardette Smith. SOCIETY Focahonlas Lodge Weton Council 405 will meet in! regular session tonight at 7:30. Mark 43rd . . Wedding Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Warrick Plew of east of Sullivan celebrated their 43rd wedding anniversary at their home Thursday, May 24th. " mma Sullivan Home Ec. Club The Sullivan Home Economics Club met at the home of Mrs.1 Kenry Mercer with 19 members' aijid one guest present. The meet-; ir.g opened by all singing "AmeriI ca," followed by the club creed in I unison . Roll call was answered by "My favorite flower." The president discussed the cancer fund drive, and the club voted to donate $5.00. A lesson on salads Was- given by Mrs, McCammon . Those present were Mrs. Stella Price, Mrs. Ola Wilson, Mrs. Faye Martin, Mrs. C. W. Usrey, Mrs. Earl Allen, Mrs! Harry Richmond,

Miss Lola Brewer, Mrs. Emory, ana Jerry, ana miss tseuy iviarThomson, Mrs. Cort Nichols, Mrs. shall of Sheiburn, spent last MonStuart Moore, Mrs.- Fred Worth- y visiting Mr. and Mrs. Claude ington, . Mrs. Gilbert Simmers, Walters and family of Paris, 111.

r 1 -

i y

?

6 OUT OF 7 I ARE CHEATING. 1 . . ON RED POINTS tjjT sM, Among housewives recently Interviewed, 6 out of 7 Vera cheating .themselves passing up extra red points because they did not save all their used, fats, These women were saving only the easy amounts from frying bacon or broiling. They were throwing away the little blta rTflj the meat trimmings and table scraps. Yet those small amounts, saved and melted down, can fill fat salvage cans In no time at all! Have you been cheating yourself? Then start saving every scrap todayl Our country needs field and home-front csseutlal3. Mrs. Ruth Gadberry, Mrs. Jennie Wright, Mrs. Estella Wolfe, Mrs. Rose Haskett, Mrs. Jean Mercer, Mrs. Trelma McCammon and Mis. Hazel Haddon, a guest. LOCALS Mr. and Mrs. Frank Webb of Petersburg, Ind., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sims of South Main St. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gallagher transacted business in Chicago last. week. lT-o ITlcr,,-, TYTn,'io-r j-,f rinnssp-. , j, -fnd h;is ccme to Sullivan h . ious ulnes3 of her 1 ,iI r, ur w ti ...,v, Friends and relatives of Mr. end Mrs. W. S. Jared who attended the Commencement of their enn R A Tjrorl PVirlnv (.vpninU . V, ' ' Tf. r; A1Io , 1 Mrs. Bernie Curtis, Mrs. Ernest Hodge and Miss Josephine Hodge of Paris, 111., Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Jared and daughter, Mrs. C. Price and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kemp of Terre Haute. " ' Mrs. Mabel French of West Graysville St., has returned from a' few days' visit in Springfield, 111., with her son, Nelson French and family. Mrs. Tom Brown,' Sr., spent several days last week in Indianapolis Visiting her son and daughter-in-law. Midshipman and Mrs. Tom Brown, Jr. Miss Whilma Snavely was in Indianapolis last week attending L,..,e . 1 Mr and Mrs Wm c,, Jamiso and . hlerSi Ann. and Mary. , AJke ,eft FrM ' , . . " J few weeks visit with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Poynter of St. Petersburg, Fla. : Miss Ann Golish of Indianapolis, is spending a week's vacation with Mr. and Mrs. Ai Brown. Mrs. Floyd Cummins of Norfolk, Virginia, is visiting her father,' W. T. Mellolt. Her daughter, Jean, of New York, spent a few days here last week. Mrs. Cummins is the former Beulah Mellott. Miss Minnie Mattix has' resumed her work at the Sullivan State Bank after enjoying a two weeks' vacation. Mrs. Nora Carrithers of Graysville, transacted business In Sullivan Saturday. Mrs. Clarence Johnston of Pontiac, Mich., arrived in Sullivan today'to'spend Memorial day with her- daughter-in-law, Mrs. Jack E. Johnston and son, J.ackie. Mr. and Mrs. James Uarvcy Smith and family of InclianaDolis, were - week-end guests of their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Roy I Taylor and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith i Mrs. Milburn Pirlle . and Suzanne of Merom, Cpl. Wendell Gambill of Baer Field, Mrs. Cecil GEmbill,, Mrs. Wilma Thornberry GOSPEL MEETING May 20 June 3 . : Evening 8:15 Place CHURCH OF CHRIST' PAXTON, INDIANA Minister J; W. GALLAGHER Barnesville, Ohio Song Leader W,Wt Adamson, ,Slielburn ' We Invite You To Attend These Services

ir.

; 1

their home here. .,..

i . ... ' ........