Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 143, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 19 July 1945 — Page 6
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"Relax in Cool Comfort At The Lyric"
f ' VMHSl SATURDAY EVENING. ftfci"Sl jg Adults 33c Children. 16c
Tonight, Friday
jjahuaun i-KiLJiS 30c TONIGHT. - FROM 6:45 to 7:15 AND SAT. MATINEE.
a v"- n ll Ptnirrin HfT" Something to m Apr" 1L...1 ' .;. BETTY in i I lethnkokr! Vy . Plus t Cartoon and Paramount News. KK rn hit I htriiiiil ifl tmr"- p- fr Mr. and Mrs. George Bertram Indianapolis, and Mr. arid Mrs. Doug Bell of Sullivan, were supper guests .:, last Wednesday evening of Mrs. Pauline Richards and Mrs. Anna Eslinger. ' - Mr. and Mrs. Bill Johnson and daughters and their house guest, Mrs. Beth Boltjes, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wampler and family, Jack Pirile and Wayne Johnson enjoyed a picnic supper and swim ft tfce Cooper-Lisman Pit Sunday evening. "i-,".' -..'o Mrs. ' Lex Arnett who is em3 NO DANCE AT A VO N DALE INN GRAYSVILLE, IND. UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE csed because of proprietor's illness and hospitalization. Watch Times for opening announcement. Hervey Rideway, Prop,
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No - Mark Soles
HUH - BRIli SHOE CO
Quality Quality-Style-Service
And Saturday.
tinnim niurnu fl -5 Y H n - 5 .K' J ployed in Indianapolis' is spendher vacation here with Mr. and Mrs. Clem Arnett and Lex. Sgt. Burke Coyner returned Tuesday , to Wendover Field, Utah after spending his furlough here with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Coyner. Mrs. Pauline Richards spent the week-end in Terre Haute with relatives and friends. C. F. Vickrey and children and Norma Daugherty spent Sun day with Rev. and Mrs. A. P. Beritley and son, Bill, at Prince ton.1 . Mrs.' Clara Ault and daughter Thelma, 1 spent' the ' week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dison of hear Rose Chapel. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Bibson of Prnell, Illinois, are guests this week of Mrs. Myrtle Harrison and family and other relatives. Alice Parker is spending a few days here with her mother, Mrs. Virginia Parker and family. Mrs. Anna McCammon is spending this week in Terre Haute with relatives. Lewis Smiley returned to his work at Allisons in Indianapolis Wednesday morning after being layed off for , the past two 'months. Reva Bates of Vincennes, spenl the week-end here with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Willard Spark' of Indianapolis, spent the weekend here with relatives. Their soji, Phil, returned home with them after spending the past twc weeks here with relatives. Rex Apple left Saturday for Miami Beach, Fla., after spending his fu:lough here with his Save Expenses SELL MORE POUNDS TAKE YOUR HOGS TO Home Packing TERRE HAUTE, IND. Our Yards Are Open From Monday Till Friday Noon. MEAT SCRAPS
Style ' Service Expert Shoe Repairing
SHERMAN
Nights, 30c; Saturday Matinee, 30c; Children, 14c. All Prices Tax Paid.
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Plus Chapter 4, "Jungle Queen"
.Associate wife and his mother, Mrs. Mayme Apple and family. FACTOGRAPHS The latest- enterprise of the-: United States Coast Guard is the formation of an air-sea rescue agency to aid pilots and mariners in distress. The only ship building, repair and alteration plant operated by the United States uoasi oiu is the Coast Guard Yard, Curtlfl Bay, Md. . ' 1 Williamsburg, Va., was Bettied in 1633 as Middle Plantation, and an outpost palisade against the Indians. It is thought that stained Klass came from the Near East, which is the home of tHe glass industry. - Bits Of News ; (Continued from Page 1) ied the presentation of the medal read; "For heroic achievement In action on 1G April 1945 near Le Mandris, Italy.' On this night Sergeant Stwalley was a member of the lead platoon in the attack on the heavily formed and dominating heights at Le Mandrie. The enemy allowed two platoons to pass through the;r outposts and then trapped ,them in the crossfire of four machine guns, blasting from the right flank and c Summer Sale Or HATS Every hat reduced to $1.00 and 50c. DRESSES Not many left but they are reduced. "Hydi Hyde" Shorts cf California, reduced to $5.98. Peasant Blouses reduced to $1.50. Fall Dresses, skirts, blouses and . sweaters arriving daily. Also have HOSE 1 pair to customer, as long as they last. RUBY'S SHOP
STJLUV4N DAILY TIMES-. THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1945.
Friday and Sat. Feature. direct front. A terrific mortar and artillery barrage .-was. -directed on the helpless platoons and eight were killed and twentyfive wounded. The' platoons became panic-stricken ,and disor- . ganized, and when Sergeant Stwalley received the order, to withdraw he moved forward to' an exposed and untenable position where, by firing his rifle to ! divert heavy enemy fire he asj sured the safe removal of the many casualties. j "When he was sure that nil casualties had been moved out of the line of enemy fire, Sergeant Stwalley returned to his men and assisted in evacuating the wounded although the the route to the aid station was across a mine infested field and under direct enemy observation. . "Sergeant Stwalley's magnificent courage and steadfast devotion to the, wounded comrades reflect great credit upon himself and is ,jn,. keeping with the highest military ' traditions." - ' LOCALS 3 Mr. and Mrs. 'Lee Kluesner and children, Bobby Lee and . Ethel Louise, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Kleusner and daughter, Rita, of Anderson, they also visited Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Kleusner and family of near Anderson. ' Miss Juanita Charlton spent the week-end with Dr. and Mrs. J. L. Blige of New Castle.
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This Morning's Headlines
NEW BILLS HIKE MINIMUM WAGE ' RATE. Legislation to raise the minimum wage under the 'Fair Labor Standards Act from 40 to 65 cents an hour was introduced in Congress. The amendment also provides an increase of 5 cents an hour each year until a minimum of 75 cents is reached. " s '
BLIMP SEARCHES FOR CHILD. A Navy blimp and a Coast
Guard helicopter droned to and fro areas in search of 2-year-old Judy night at Marshfield, Mass. 1 ;
iV HIGH TENSION WIRE KILLS TWO. Donald E. Dowdy, 24, a sailor home, on leave, and his brother, Carl Dowdy, Jr., 18, were killed at Peru, Ind., when a high tension wire carrying 15,000 volts fell across a metal tank they were helping install at a soybean processing plant. They were assisting their father, a.Kokomo contractor. The father, was inside the tank and escaped injury when a board on which he was standing provided insulation.
TWO KILLED, MANY HURT AS BUS DIVES INTO FLOOD. A Greyhound bus carrying 52 persons broke through 'an undermined bridge across normally Email Gillies Ceek within the city limits of Richmond, Va., in pre-dawn darkness and was swept 100 yards downstream by flood waters. Two persons were killed. . Forty-six others were hurt, none seriously. ' ' ;
INDIANA SEVENTH STATE IN WAR PRODUCTION. Indiana is still near the top in forming the machinery of war. The state's $3,200,000,000 in outstanding war contracts ranks seventh in the nation as to total value and third on the basis of population.
APPROVE REVISED GI EILL-A revised GI Bill of Rights ' kimmed through the House by unanimous voice vote, although sevral members complained about the procedure which brought the neasure up Without advance notice. Its major provisions are deigned to liberalize the loan and education sections of the over-all veterans' benefits measure enacted last year.'
Found in Berlin .
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SISTER OF Mayor Fiorello LaGuar-. dia,of New York, Mrs. Emma Gluck, right, is shown with her daughter, Mrs. Jolanda Denas, and her grandson, Richard, after they were found in Berlin. Mrs. Gluck was arrested by the azia in Budapest in June, 1944, and spent 11 months in a Nazi prison camp at Revensbruck. Mrs. Denas also was arrested and kept in solitary confinement for nine months at the same prison, although neither mother1 nor daughter knew the other was there, (Intercatjonal)
above beaches and brush-covered I
Geagan, missing since Tuesday SULLIVAN COUNTY SCOUTS TAKE PART AT CAMP KRIETENSTEIN Boy Scouts of the Wabash Valley entered, Sunday afternoon, into the fourth week of camping at Camp Kriete.nstein with ninty-nine Scouts and three visiting Scouters participating in this week's program in addition to the six adult members of the staff. Each week the program is varied .enough-to make for interest for those Scouts staying over but carries out? the fundamentals of the regulatf weekly program. Beginning ..with 'an orientation, hike, and campfire on Sunday evening, athletics and water activities on Monday evening . practice stunt n'ight campfire on Tuesday, overnight camping trip for all campers, on Wednesday, big parents nighU special feature and stunt program Thursday evening, water and athletic events Friday, some type of a special feature on Saturday evening, and closing with the Sunday morning " Court of Honor program at 11:00 and the noon send-off dinner at ' 1:00. These features of the program are supplemented daily by the regular opportunity required, for Scout advancement requirements, under the leadership of expert counselors.' The staff this year includes Perle Fisher, of Sullivan, in charge of first aid and handicraft. J The following boys attended one or more of the first four weeks from Sullivan District: Bob Laughlin, Richard Thudium, Bruce Alumbaugh, Frank Harri son, Ronald Northrup, Bobby Butler, Ray Huffine, Forest Northrup, Arthur L. ' Meeks and .Billy Bedwell.
Iffrz " "J'-IJT' IHJJiJH.-ii-i--J-r,y I . .. . jj 'WW 'TTW jr -J Several from here attended I g F 11 J ll a f f';. i the funeral services for Robert J xsf7 LueJ JLL " , Cruse, whinh
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LILLYS SACCHARINE TABLETS Dissolve Quicker 1-4 Grain, 1-2 Grain, 1 Grain
Tri-Tox For Bean Beetles Bulk Pole Bean Seed GET RID
SAF-KILL for Rats 50c KRO Ready ta use .... 3"iC ELECTRIC RAT PASTE 33c RAT NIP 33 c TERRO ANT SYRUP 23r ANTROL ANT KILLER W FETERM AN'S ANT FOOD .............. 23c TERRO ROACH KILLER 3.3c GATOR ROACH HIVES 33c DIL KIL for Roaches 30c $1,000 ROACH POWDER 3.3c
Bennett's Dependable Drug Phone wft at the Billman Funeral chapel Saturday evening The body was taken to Martinsville for burial. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Seewer and granddaughter, Carolyn, are visiting in Ohio this week. . , Mrs. Floyd Fruitiger of Minnesota, Mrs. Wayne Jeffers, Mrs. John Timmons of Hymera and Millard Noel called on Charles Sluder Sunday evening. The Ohio Thrift Club met at the home of Mrs. Mina Wyman last Thursday. j A shower was given at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dix last luesday evening in honor of their daughter, Lois, who was recently married. . . . ... . . . . ! i FISH WAS SAVED j FRANKLIN, Me. (UP) When State Sen. Franklin P. Noyes of Franklin hooked a 14-pound togue at Tunk lake and found he had loft his net on shore, he and a
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Judd's Dill Pickle Mixture
Bulk Turnip Seed OF PESTS Ph armacy Store Since 1911 06 ma i m. i hi .1 y iv mi m n.
companion tipped their boat untilS it was level with the water. The I
nirn washed the fish into th craft just as the hook broke. ! - FACTOGRAPHS The distinguished French camposer, Gounod, was the son of an eminent painter and engraver, who died when Charles was five. Gounod ascribed his artistic success to his mother, who was a remarkable woman and an ascomplished musician. McGill university in Montreal, Canada, was opened to women in 1S83. Today aU Canadian universities are open to womer. ",.;' The father of 'General and President Ulysses S. Grant was a tanner and farmer. ?.r The ancient cities of Tyre and Sidon were celebrated lor theU glass.
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