Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 128, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 28 June 1945 — Page 4

OTEFOUR

DODD BRIDGE

Sunday School at 10:00 a. m. Prayer meeting Tuesday night.. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Hayden and Paul Hayden called on Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Wood Monday night. ATHLETES FOOT ITCH I Made This 5 Minute Test "It STINGS. Its STRONG It PENETRATES. It REACHES MORE GERMS. Sucfresfful treatments MUST be mobile. MUST PENETRATE. Alcohol-Is VERT MOBILE. Te-ol containp 90. Fee)' it take hold.';, "Biggest seller in years" say druggists everywhere. Test it for itchy, sweaty or smelly feet. Get 35c worth today at Bennett's. -

- Save Expenses SELL MORE POUNDS TAKE YOUR HOGS TO Home Packing Co. TERRE HAUTE, IND. Our Yards Are Open From Monday Till Friday Noon, MEAT SCRAPS

m OF 1 WW

BY UNCLE BOB of the Kraft Dairy Farm Service

Remember the old "meller-draro-mers" way back when, and how the cruel old man drove the heroine out in a blizzard? I can gJt up a lot of sympathy, too, for a clf turned out to shift for itself. Some folks turn a, calf, out to pasture with little care, as soon as it is through milk feeding. If you want the youngster to turn into a top producer, however, you'll pay more attention to its care and feeding. ' Purdue University recommends keeping calves out of pasture until they are four months old. After they are weaned, and until four months of age, feed them good forage and four pounds of grain daily. Then they may be pastured but should get three pounds of grain daily until a year old. If they are on good pasture or have high quality roughage they will not need grain supplement until freshening time. This is one of the many advantages of fall-dropped calves. By the time they are at the proper age, spring pastures are ready and they can be moved into proper feeding without delay. It is best to keep young heifers away from the rest of the herd. They need plenty of water and should have shade during hot weather. "Cool and collected' is I lie watchword for dairy farmers this year. Keeping milk cool is one of the most important things for the dairyman to do. The way dairymen are collecting their share of War Bonds completes the slogan very nicely This being July. I can't help but start singing my favorite song again "Get it Cool Quick." The faster you get the temperature of milk down below 60 degrees the less chance there is for the milk to go to waste. If milk stays warm, bacteria increase at a tremendous rate, but they increase slowly at temperatures below 60 degrees. Cold running water is the ideal way to cool a can of milk. If you do not have enough milk to require a cooling tank, then a barrel cooler will solve your problem.

PUBLISHED NOW AND THEN BY THE O AFT CUUn COMPANY

Mrs. Hattie Strain called on

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Myers Tues day of last week. Dennis Hayden spent Tuesday .with Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Davis and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wade, Luvisa Wood and Abe Wilkey were in Sullivan Saturday. Mrs.- Iva -Myers, who has been a patient in .the Union Hospital of Terre Haute, came home last Friday. Mrs. Jessie Wood was the guest of her father, her son, Raymond and daughter, and Mrs. , Lillie Burton and son, Tuesday. Albert Foe vas the guest of Lawrence Davis Tuesday. Mrs. Roy Walker called Zylma Woodard, Monday. on Fred Liston Saturday. -.vas in Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Roy Clark and daughter are visiting their parents and other relatives this week. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Vowell visiting their parents here. are The following bulletins show you how to make, a simple cooler of this ,; type: Circular 274, Alabama Poly- -technic Institute, Auburn Ala., i and Leaflet 191, Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind. : Even a cow with a boarding house reach cannot get all the salt it needs unless the stuff is made available. Salt, says the University of Wisconsin, is the one mineral most likely to be missing in livestock rations. Most of us think of salt as something that makes food taste better, but actually it is a most important item in your diet and the d iet of your cows. AH you have to do is eliminate salt entirely from your dairy rat ions, and watch milk production go down and animal condition get poor. The extension experts recommend adding one-per cent salt to the grain ration and in addition put- a supply of salt out where the cows can get it whenever they choose. ' When cows are on pasture, a salt box should be placed in the barnyard or in the pasture, and kept well filled at all times. Loose (granulated) salt is preferred over block salt, but either is much better than none. Ti u -t July 22 has been set aside as Na-1 tional Farm Safety Week. Fingers which get tangled up with a piece of machinery or a A foot which got in the way of an ax, aren't much help around a dairy farm. Another important thing to remember is to put poisons used for sprays, out of the reach of the youngsters. NOTE( Thera usually is a 5c charge for pamphlets mailed to non-residents of a stale; but possibly your own state has a free pamphleton the same subject. Ask your

NORTH BUCKTOWN

Mrs. Arthur Browning and sons j of Anderson, are spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Browning and family and Mr. and Mrs. John Mollet. Mrs. Hubert Hale returned ! home from' New Castle Thursday after spending a few days with her parents. Gary Justus of Indianapolis, accompanied her home to spend a couple of weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hale. Mrs.'Cleo Walters and children visited Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Miller recently. I Mr. . and Mrs. Delmas Jerrels ' spent rnursaay evening witn Mr. and, Mrs. Donald Pahmier.. v Lester Price of Indianapolis, spent the week-end with Mrs. Price and children. Mrs.' Mack Mayf ield returned home from the Mary Sherman Hospital Saturday evening. Mrs. Owen King, Mrs. Amanda Roach and Mr. and Mrs! John Rogers were in Bicknell Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Smith of Linton, spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and "Mrs. .Raymond Hale. Rev. and Mrs. George Angerer and daughter, Carol, spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pahmier and son. P -T Rnnlnr ntonHAr tile w. . -..v. annual conierence oi wieinoaists in Indianapolis over the weekend and was assigned to the Heltonville charee. Paul Loren Pahmeir and Dilliard Stanton, who are employed near Decker, Indiana, spent; Sunday with their parents here. Mr. and Mrs. Delmas Jerrels and children spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Jackson and family. Mrs. Charles Jergens of Chicago, spent the veek-end with her .mother, Mrs. Ada Stanton and family. Her sister, Georgia, accompanied her home for a visit. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pahmier and son, and Mrs.' Hubert Hale visited. Mrs. Floyd Bedwell Sunday even jug. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Fordice visited Mr, and Mrs. Mack Mayfield Monday evening. Mrs. Wilbur Payne and children spent Tuesday with Mrs. Eliza Ho'uldson. ; ANY BONDS TODAY?

Even U yoa can't tight, yoa'caa stall buy War Bondsl"

TRUMAN GREETS If ,

I " f - t 1

PRESIDENT HARRY S. TRUMAN pauses a moment at Hamilton hospital in San Francisco to shake the hand of Mike Sewick of Chattanooga, Tenn., a wounded veteran, as he tours the hospital during his visit in the California city. Highlight of. the president's visit, was his major foreign policy address which he gave to delegates of the United Nations conference following; their signing of the unanimously adopt- - pi peace, charter, - , - . (lutmitioeal Soundpkcto),

SULLIVAN DAILY TRIES

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f V $ I - i

r OmcialU.S.Nivy Photo Blasting Japs on Corregidor. Rear , Adm. r, s. Berkey, USN, watches cruisers and destroyers that War '. n 1 i 1 a L i . : 1 J -I : 4.1... I Donu? m w ":.UVVC lIIC.eu' emy from famous Philippine rock. V. S. Treasury Departmsiu OIL FIELD NEWS Keith Goodman of Merom, and Freida Malone of Prairie Creek, were week-end guests of the Stevens girls. . Pvt. and Mrs. Arlie Riggs and children called on Pvt. and Mrs. Max O. Sluder Sunday evening. Lois Morin and a girl friend of Indianapolis, were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. ( Ralph Morin and family. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Arnett and children and .Mr. and Mrs.' Francis Goodman and family' were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Stevens. i . Mrs. Maude Morrical has reBy Koy Kyser VET AT FRISCO

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THURSDAY, June 28,194$.

Tired Kidneys Often Bring ... Sleepless.Nights Doctors say your kidnera contain 1 5 miles nf tiny lubes or filters whirih help tonurify the blood and keep you healthy. When they gefc tired and don t work right in the duytime, many people have to set uo nights. Frequent or scanty passages w ith smarting and burning sometimes shows there is something wrong with your kidneys or bladder. Don't neglect this condition and lose valuable, restful sleep. when disorder of kidney function permits poisonous matter to remain in your blood, it may also cause nagging backache, rheumatio pains, leg pains, lots of pep and cncriry, swelling, pufuness under the eyes, headaches And dizzinegg. Don't wait! Ask your druggist for Doan's Pills, used successfully by millions for over 40 years. They give happy relief and will help the lo miles of kidney tubes flush out poisonous waste from your blood. Get Doan a I'illa, turned home from a visit with relatives in Muncie. Mr. and Mrs. Pearly Parker of Shelburn were guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Don Granby.

EJOY WATERMELON IU DECEMBER, TOO!

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CALIFORNIA, FRESH

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NEW ' ' : , iJFORNlA "' F ' : YELLOW ONIONS - iOe ORANGES r.j " S Lb, 5 BALL MASON ' ) , ( STANDARD TWO-flECE CRISP ICEBERG &0 SIZE ) '. 'V FRUIT JArtS E.61c CAPS AND. LIDS m 21c HEAD LETTUCE ' E. ""in FRUIT JARS SQ Doa. 75e for sealing heavy with juice A'-P PREPARED FRUIT PECTIK , FRUIT PECTIN s7c SURE-JELL m. 12o ,wa,TC,r,rT. JANE GOODE , . . P fta Pl S"-' ESBSTTin Rich and i .Lb. 00 I - - Y 'ff 4 rMUi Bill lEtl c ja- ilfc r mK WHITE HOUSE FORTIFIED A T . L .. 4 .V BWHttAIED MILK 4 38c Jts , FRESH CREAMERY . ;i & Lb. lL-Av 0$SPr?"A-"" 1 1 ' ' ' MJ 3 SWEET AND DELICIOl i;' 'J-Jn I 111! fell' ' soscoRF : Lb. ic hEszmsr .4.

jtortei V ariotia IGNA IMITATION , ' VANILLA FLAVOR AriN PACE PUT5E '

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Bot. ANN PAGE WIT. . . ' ALriOND EaTHACT a r.F.Ai. value: 2-0?. I BOM COFFEE h WW 1 -Lb. Bog MIGHTY SOFT . .. . mw TISSUE WHEN 'AVAILABLE

SLICED ' BEETS' . IfyOz. -'ff Jar Ji&aM .

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Through clouds of tear-gas from

bombs tossed by . police, . Ross Martin, president of the strike

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WHOLE OR HALF

CI MARVEL twain rolls MARVEL ENRICHED V'HITE BREAD VZU JANE PARKER SUGARED DO ?i UTS JVNE PARKER mop COOKIES 15c 183 133 Dm. Dra. SOUR-TYPE, UNSLICED HYt BREAD . Ijmf rOAvtJT-FlLLED, BRAIDLD 29s ZZrrll CAKE 2 lia. MARVEL, BOSTON BHOWN BBZAD FUI L OF FRUIT 'DUMDEE CAXE BU'!-" " "'""CM PEC AM KULS 10. Or.. 1-1-Lmif l,C 2-Lh. t Cake' oi 9 va jrN.' BN;c"P ANN r AGS SPAGHETTI FCJ REF'it'SiHiVO IMoTfiNT AID HEPSM CCSC A ' BROWN SUG&3 s;.tnvsiocik FREStf EGGS 1 IS l-Lb. i2e DPINK? 4l'2l5 i Doi. Sic LUX FLAKES 23c " LIMITED SUPPLY

T Can I feTHQY . ' FR3H BOSTON

Employer Cra shes Picket Line

bound Northern Indiana .Brass

of Elkhart, Indiana, leads a group entrance.

of non-strikers through a picket photo.)

POUND

FANCY ERAL'rJSCHWEIEER DRV SALT FAT EA'!C LARGE " E0LCSJ3A Fresh. PORK SAUSAGE WHOLE . - DRESSED HADB3SK FULLY DRF.SSr.D. FaSIl LAKE' fill' LLET3 FRESH ROUAD LAKE GAB? FULLY DRESSED . SHEEPSHEAD FRESH NORTHERN VHITEFISH Lb. 17c Lb. 29 s Lb. 36 233 Lb. Lb. 12: Lb. Lb. 33c Lb. .0. SULTANA PRUNES A&P SEECLESS RAISES NBC RITZ CRACKERS HUNT CLUP. DOG FOOD SIMONIZ LIQUID FLOOR WAX -i.b. ;n I'ks.' .0 3 4 0. Pkg. ,s-c Box 'wC S-Lb. JCb Pkg. tQt. (? Bot. VANISHES TOILET BOWL ODORS VANISH ,2Co IVORY SOAP Lge. Bar 10c LIMITED SUPPLY

Co. , lino formed in front of the plant

(International Sound-

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It's easy to do simply make watermelon i pickles from the rind . . . here's the recipci 2 qls. prepared watermelon rind 3 cups vinegar 1 nt. salt water 1 tbs. whole allspice 4 cups sugar 1 ths. whole cloves 1 qt. water 1 stick cinnamon (3-inchcs) 1 tbs. crushed ginger root Trim skin from rind and cube rind. Soak overnight using 4 tbs. salt to 1 qt. writer. , Drain, rinse, cover with clear water, boil 1 hour. Boil 2 cups sugar, 1 qt. water, 1 cup vinegar fed spires tied in cheese cloth for 10 minr.-Add ligjlisimnicr 30 mln. Let stand overnight. Add remaining sugar and vinegar; conk till rind is clear and syrup Is thick. Add boiling water if tno thick before rind it tender and clear. Makes 2 pts. 17c 533 FRESH, R0j:iD YELLQW Pil'E. BOiLED Pi "1 3 riS,V--i-: v ..hj:. t'.-'..' j - 'v-' ;)'-i PIECTAi 54 -Lb. Pkg. SWAJ . SOAP ... 10c . t Bar LIMITED SUPPLY