Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 145, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 23 July 1945 — Page 4

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Cool and Comfortable. ENDING TONIGHT I Aduit3 35c Children 16c Tax Paid. MlW GARLAND TUESDAY AND WED. Come Early! PlusSelected Shorts. SHERMAN ENDING TONIGHT! Adults, 35c Children, 14c Tax Paid. r TCRAIG. REED MAIN! .. JAftfS NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned Administrator of the estate of Anna E. Allan has tills day filed in the office of the clerk or the SullU van Circuit Court his final report of his account with said ' estate, and that the same will be heard by the Sullivan Circuit Court on the 8th day of September, the same being the 6th judicial dny of the September term cl said court. Crnditors, heirs and legatees of paid decedent therefore are hereby notified to appear in said court on said day and show cause why said said report should not be approved. FRANK W. ALLAN, Administrator. Witness my hand and seal of said court at Sullivan this 16th day of July, 11)45. JAMES H. RINGER. Cleric of Sullivan Circuit Court. P'SS & Tennis, Attorneys. .. 1st ins 7-16-45 2t

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NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS THE STATE OF INDIANA. STTLLIVAN COUNTY. In the Sullivan Circuit Court. May Term, 1945. State of Indiana on the Relation of J.'ime.s McfJarvey, as Auditor of Sullivan County, Indiana vs. Isaac N. Hayes, Adam Grafe, William D. Scudamore. Anna R. Scudamore. Mary E Tramp. Sullivan County Rural Electric' Membership Corporation. Oscar A. Marr, Joseph S. Mix, Adella Williams, Mary Williams. Edna Swan. Hudson A. . Bland, as. Treasurer of Sullivan County, Indiana. Complaint No. 30424 Cause of Action Complaint to Foreclose School Fund Mortgage. EE IT KNOWN, That on this 6th day of July, in the year 1945. the above named plaintiff, by Norval K. Harris, Bedwell, Bedwell & Haines. Attorneys filed In the office of the Clerk of the Sullivan Circuit Court his complaint apralnst the defendant In the above entitled cause, together with an affidavit of a competent person that the residence of said defendant Mary E. Trump, upon diligent inquiry is unknown. . Snld defendant therefore Is hereby notified .of the filing' and pendency of said complaint against her said cause of action bein? Complaint to Foreclose School , Fund Mortgase The Northwest Quarter of the Northeast Quarter of Section Eight (8). Townfchip Eight (8) North. Range Eight (8) west, excepting the coal and other minerals and also the right of way of the E. and T. H. Railroad, and that unless she appears and answers or demurs thereto at the calling of said cause at the Court House in Sullivan County, and State of Indiana, on the 3rd day of September, 1945. sajd complaint, and the matters and things therein contained and alleged, will be heard and determined in her absence. WITNESS, the Clerk and Seal of said Court, thlB 6th day of July, 1945 JAMES H. RINGER. Cleric of Sullivan Circuit Court. Norval K. Harris, Bedwell, Bedwell & Haines, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Jst Ins .7-9-45 3t. .''U-

SOCIETY Birthday Club Meets The Birthday Club met Wednesday, July 18, at the home of Mrs. Helen Phillips. A covered dish dinner was served at the noon hour with Rev. Donaldson offering thanks. Quilting and

piecing quilt blocks was the occupation of the day! Mrs. Chloe Burke, Christine Medsker, Mary Wible, Morine Kelly, Sarah Ferree and Mabel Howard were new members to join the club. In the afternoon the meeting was called to order by the presi dent, Mrs. Tressa Patton and the following program was given: Song by club, "Blest Be The Tie" led by Mary , Wible with Lelah Hawk at the piano. Reading of minutes Glen Vail. Treasurer report Glen Eno. Roll-call was given by Mrs. Anna Cushman and was answered with Bible questions and answers. The Bible speaks to you Mrs. Marie Shields. A reading "This is Friend ship" Mrs. Clayton. Personality check-up Mary Boles. Music by Charlotte and Bobby Phillips. Vocal solo by Mary Wible. Helen Phillips had charge of the entertainment program. The president distributed leaf lets to the club. For the Sugarless Dessert and Saccharin Canning leaflet. Club Prayer was given by Mrs. Grace Knox. Those attending the meeting were Katherine Piety, Christine and Sallie Medsker, Kathryn Murdock, Helen Donaldson, Grace Knox,. Beulah Badger, Mary Foutz. Glen Eno. Johanna Med sker, Anna Cushman, Sarah and Frances Ferree, Josie Arnett, Fylura Foutz, Lillie Thompson, Maude Whitman. Lelah Howk, Grace Whitlock, Chloe Burke, Marie Boles, ; Ella Eno, Marie Shields, Mary Wible, Josie Eno, Mabel Howard, Edith Bicknell, Mayme Clayton, Bertha Burton, TVToviVia Mnnrnp Flmira Toliuai ,uw v . bert, Rachel West, Pauline Phillips, Frances Burton, Maude; KpIIv Glen VaiL Velma Godfrey and son, Jerry, Morine Kelly and i son, Mike, Kathleen Kirton and j daughter, Jane, Tressa Patton, ) Rose Pierce. ' Joyce Murdock, , Mary Emily Badger, Phyllis and Dale Phillips, -Max Whitman, Larry Whitlock, Charlotte and Bobby Phillips, and the hostess, Mrs. Helen Phillips. ' The next meeting will be held August 22, at. the home of -Mrs. Beulah Badger. VYeton Council 1 Weton Council No. 405 will meet in regular session tonight at 7:30. - Pocahontas Club ' ; The Pocahontas Club will be entertained Tuesday evening, July 24th, at 7:30 by Mrs Alma McDanicls. Please bring own table servr Ice. . ., ,.' War Mothers ''' The .Hamilton Township War Mothers' Service Club will meet Tuesday afternoon, July 24th, at two o'clock in their old room of the Sullivan County Court House. H. B. Campbell Class The H. B. Campbell class will meet with Mrs. James Black, 320 North French Street, Tuesday evening at six o'clock. Bring covered dish, own table service and sugar for tea. Announce Engagement Mrs. Harry B. Davis of Prairie Creek, is announcing the engage ment and approaching marriage of her daughter, Adeline, to Lowell E. Meyer, son of Bryan Meyer of Clay City., Both are graduates of Indiana Shate Teachers College with the class of 1944. Miss Davis taught Home Economics and Mr. Meyer was the coach at Fairbanks High School last year, where they directed boys and girls 4-H Club work. They both plan to continue teaching at Fairbanks this year. mam Bits Of News (Continued from Page 1) man-held targets throughout southern Europe and the Balkans. ' The veteran unit is being returned to the States for a period of training and receipt, of new equipment before jumping into the battle against Japan. The training and additional equipment hs been made necessary because of the changed tactical situations which ground and air men of the group will experience in the Pacific Theaters. The group has flown 238 combat missions since entering the Mediterranean Theater of Operations, having bombed such vital targets as Vienna, Austria; Wiener Neustadt, Austria; Munich,

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ACTRESS CAROLE LAND1S smilei !or the camera after getting hei Uvorce at Las Vegas, Nev., from jlaj. Thomas Wallace, Army flyei Vhom she met entertaining Tanks )n England. The couple was married in London on January 5, 1943.'' (International). , Germany; Ploesti, Romania; coastal fortifications on southern France before D-Day; as well as , numerous other pin-point bombing on enemy troops concentrations in northern Italy. In all. the group bombed over 126 different targets, draining nearly 14,000 tons of bombs. Gunners destroyed 130 enemy airplanes, probably destroyed 53 and damaged 65 others. The group has been authorized six battle participations stars, and was awarded the Distinguished Unit Citation for its "outstanding performance of duty in bombing aircraft fac tories at Wiener Neustadt, -Aus tria, last May." . The group completed operations in the MTO with a perfect (100 per . cent within 1,000 feet) bombing assault op Tarvisio Motor Transport Depot in r northern Italy, RETURNS TO CAMP Private First Class Arthur J. Robertson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Robertson of Linton rural route two, and formerly of Sullivan, has returned to his station at Camp Franklin, Texas after enjoying a 14-day furlough; with his parents of Linton and his grandfather, Richard Shef- j fler of Sullivan and other rela- j tives and friends. - . . During his visit here Pfc. Ro- . bertson was joined by his bro- i the.r, Pfc. Harry E. Robertson, who arrived at his home July 15, following twenty-four months of overseas duty in the European Theater. AWARDED BRONZE STAR Yeoman 2c Robert (Bob) Adams, of the U. S. Navy, serving in the Philippines has been awarded the Bronze Star to wear on his Philippine Liberation ribbon, his mother, Mrs. Ruby Adams of Shelburn Route one, has been notified by the Navy Department. Yeoman Adams has been overseas 14 months. FETE MILLIONTH 5 i ft rftV v . ' f a was try

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RIDING THROUGH PARIS, Jules Carron, the millionth Frenchman to b

liberated and returned from captivity in Germany, acknowledges the ! plaudits of the crowds lining the streets. The photo was taken as the 1 cavalcade drove through the Place De L'Opera. (International)

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES

Death Summons Clifford E. Mahan . HYMERA, Ind., July 23. Clifford E. Mahan, 40 years old, who lived four miles east of Hymera. died at the .Mary Sherman Hospital at 4:30 o'clock Friday afternoon. He is survived by the widI ow, Mae; five daughters, Mrs. I Louise Champman of Terre Haute, Mrs. C. W. Thomley of Dallas, Tex.; Mrs. Carl Fougerousse, Jasonville; Miss Corinne Mahan, who is a member of the WAC stationed in France, and Patricia, at home; one son, George, in the , United States Army overseas; One sister, Mrs. Naomi Brown of Dana, and five grandchildren. He was a member of the Odd Fellows Lodge, of Hymera. The body was removed to the McHugh Funeral Home, Funeral services were held , at Shiloh church at 2:20 o'clock this afternoon. .' : CHARLES W. ROGERS JASONVILLE, Ind., July 23. Charles W. Rogers, 81 years old, died at 10:30 o'clock Friday night at the residence, R. R. 1, Jasoriville. He is survived by the wife, Mary; two daughters, Mrs, Frances Lynn of South Bend, and Mrs. Esther Edmondson of Jasonville; four sons, Hershal of Chicago, and Curt, Miles and Kenneth, all of Jasonville, and two sisters, Mrs. Lilly JohnsOn of Jasonville and Mrs. Louis Parr of Shelburn. . The body was taken to the Mathers Funeral Home. Funeral services were hpld at 2:00 n'rlnr-k v,f. afternoon , . AXNA KATHERINE FRANCE BRAZIL, Ind., July 23. Mrs. Anna Katherine France, 66 years old wife of Charles France of Knightsville, died early Friday at the Clay County Hospital following a long illness. She was born in Stuttgart, Germany, a daughter of Lewis and Mary Stearley, who came to this country when she was 1 year old and settled in Jackson Township. Mrs. France had resided at 1 Knightsville! for the past 42 years and was a member of the St. John Reformed and Evangelical Church. Survivors include a brother, Fred Stearley of Sullivan., ? , , Rites were held Sunday. HIDES L MOVIES ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UP) For two days coastguardsmen using four airplanes searched the Mississippi River and adjacent badlands.for missing 11-year-old Gerald ; D Ashlock. , Then the search ended abruptly. The lad was found in a St. Louis movie. MISSION CHURCH East Washington St. 1 ' Services on Sunday, Tuesday and Friday nights. ' Bro. Gene Dickerson of Shelburn is expected Tuesday night. Kev. Noah Beadle of Jasonville. nday night Good preaching and good sing ing. . - - The publ:ic is invited. : Ira E. Watson, Pastor. mm m min LIBERATED POILU A . ? , '

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MONDAY. JUl$ 23, 1945.

Marshal Henri Petain Goes On Trial

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This radiophoto from Paris' shows a regular police van such as is used to take burglars and murderers to court as it brings Marshal Henri Petain, former!

This Morning's Headlines

URGE NIPS QUIT BEFORE mu. T r : , 3 o , . : . t

ine uuiicu ics wdiimig iu uayau Ldiiing iui uiiiiicuiciit: suireiiuei, erd of Shelburn rural route one broadcast from Washington by a naval officer, was viewed as part of for treatment. President Truman's strategy at Potsdam to secure American aims in ) Admitted July 21: John Ford of the Far East. The broadcast, intimating to Japanese leaders that theyOaktown, for observation; Mrs. would not be able to deal with the United States alone unless they Glena Cruse of Shelburn rural

surrendered promptly, was known Truman's full knowledge.

ULTIMATUM PROMISES ATLANTIC CHARTER PRINCIPLES. No fundamental change in what constitutes unconditional surrender for the Japanese was embodied in the latest of a series of American broadcasts to Nippon, both the State Department and OWI agreed at Washington yesterday. But there was no disavowal of the

broadcast bv Capt. E. M. Zacharais,

surrender was linked with the fundamental principles of

lantic Charter,

; JAPS PLAN WOODEN PLANES. Japan has been rebuffed in indirect efforts through three neutral channels to learn American peace terms short of unconditional surrender, London dispatches said as Tokyo reported-that Japanese shipyards have turned to the poduction of wooden planes to meet an expected invasion.

DISCHARGE POINT REDUCTION NEAR. Soldiers with slightly less than 85 points will become eligible for discharge within a few days. The promised revision! of the "critical score" set at 85 in May, will be made before the end of this mpnth, War Department spokesmen said last night.- ' ' ? ' ; ' ; -i

CAPTURED BUNDSMAN SUICIDE. Ludwig Keuhner, former

leader of the German-American Bund in Milwaukee and confessed spy for the German Consulate in Chicago, hanged himself in the Mosbach jail in Germany shortly after he was captured by the Eighty-Fourth Infantry 'Division, it was announced Sunday night. He strangled himself with a necktie and handkerchief noose attached Xo the""wfndo'w of his cell a few minutes after he signed a statement admitting he began spreading the Nazi gospel in Milwaukee in 1927 through the German Army Veterans Society he formed. AIRCRAFT BACKS AMERICAN RULE IN EUROPE. An air force of 2,500 planes, backed by 106.000 officers and men, will police

the skies over the American occupation zone in Germany and Aus- j

Plan Job Survey In Sullivan In Behalf Of Returning Servicemen JOBS FOR RETURNING SERVICEMEN is the purpose of a job survey in Sullivan, in which Mayor Arthur McGuire and Jesse Boston, Re-employment Committeeman for Sullivan County," have asked the Daily Times and the general public to assist. No, the war is not over, but nevertheless it is not too early to take stock of ourselves and see what we are prepared to do locally for the men as they return from the fighting. The public has an obligation to cur fighting men to assist in this enterprise. Included in the list of prospective work which might provide at least temporary jobs are the following: new dwellings, repairs, roofing, concrete work, repainting, remodeling, new fencing in fact, anything that would create a job and at the same time is a necessity. It has been estimated that the total which will be expended in the city of Sullivan alone, for the above, will reach into the hundreds of thousands of dollars. : PLEASE FILL OUT THE COUPON BELOW, marking an X in the square after the items you probably will undertake within the next year. This is not binding in any way and the information therein will be held in confidence. ; i PLEASE RESPOND Fill out the coupon below and mail to: MAYOR'S OFFICE, Sullivan, Indiana.

COUPON Name Address . I plan the following work within the next year or as soon as restrictions and other conditions make it possible! New Home ' Bath Room I 1, . Major Remodeling " Heating Plant Repairs ' Kitchen Cabinets Roof Paint ' New Barn Other Farm Buildings f Insulation ' Storm sash combination doors Concrete Work

head of the Vichy regime of

France, to the Palais de Justice to stand trial. (International Soundphoto.) RUSS JOIN IN PACIFIC WAR. . r : j : . . . ' to have been made with President U. S. N., in which unconditional the At-

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LIQUID CHAPfiRONE, keep dogs away from Flowers, Bushes, Garbage Pails 50c POWDEIt CHAPERONE, a household blessing . for the deg owner. Keep dogs off furniture ..... 50c SUSSY SCAT, no more scratching of : Rugs or Furniture 50c .Ycu have been looking for something like these preparations.

Bennett's Pharma Dependable Drug Store Since ; . Phone 96

tria. Heavy and medium bomber

will comprise the occupation air force with the United States Ninth -Air Force at the basic organization to which will be added units from the Eighth, Twelfth and Fifteenth Air Forces. More than half, of the Ninth Air Force will be sent home, however, or redeployed to the Pacific.

HOSPITAL NOTES Admitted July 20: Mame Sheproute two, for observation; Fred Harbin of Pleasantville, for treatment. Admitted July 22: Nicol of Carlisle rural Walter route three, for observation; Rebecca Bennett of East Washington Street, for observation; Harry I Thomas of Sullivan rural route tWOj for treatment Dismissed July 20: Ruth An-'

derson of 703 South Main Street; min Holliday Blue has filed his prtiir;i.. ev r. u. r,..l Uon ln tile Sullivan Circuit Court o

menu.) u outrJieyiiuKia ui JJUgger. ' Dismissed July 21: Mary Lou Wesner of Merom: Oagie Hague Jr... of 229 North State Street: Er nest Bush of Pleas&ntville; Mrs. Otho Clark and daughter of

f PREVIEW Of 1946. jOLDSMOBlLE.L

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WONDERING what the new cars'Wil) be like? Here's front view of the new 1946 Oldsmobile showing die-cast grill and massive "wraparound" bumper. New feature la hydraulic drive which eliminates clutch pedal and affords full automatic shifting. (International)

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When you need cash, let us explain how simple it is to obtain it here. We make several types of loans, including auto, signature, furniture and co-maker loans. You can choose the plan best suited to your needs. Repay monthly, on terms adjusted to your in come. There'll be no tedious siting, no red tape, no annoying inquiries. , LOANS IN SMALL AMOUNTS OR UP IN THE HUNDREDS

FIDELITY LOAN COMPANY Up stairs east side square. Sullivan

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1914 units, together with fighter groups, Shelburn rural route one; Mrs. Donnis Lambeth and daughter of Merom. ' . . LOCALS Mrs. C". H. Robinson, 17-month

old twin sons, Tommy and Jerry J

and daughter, Beverly, of Pontiac. Michigan, are visiting : brieflv w'th . Mrs. Robinson's mot-ner Mrs. Nora Sparling of zjv west jat-Kson street. This is Mrs. Robinson's first visit to hernative city in eight years. BIRTH CERTIFICATE NOTICE ; Petition No. 2241 iNotice is hereby given that Benia have the place and time of his birth

determined. Said petition is set for I ' oil August 1Y, 19-la at 9;Ul) I A. M. .1 -limed -tills 23rd day of July. 3915.'

JAMES H. RINGER. Clerk Sullivan Circuit Court. Norval K. Harris, Petitioner's Attorney. It 7-23-45. '!

LOAN PLAN

TO FIT YOUR NEEDS

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