Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 151, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 31 July 1945 — Page 4
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' "Relax In Cool Comfort At The Lyric"
TONIGHT AND WED. lYQUllMftW AW 4 ''SSSi. 4 V
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Jobs For Returning Servicemen (Fill in this coupon and mail at once to the Mayors' Office, City Hall, Sullivan, as an assistance to Sullivan's Job Survey.)
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New Home Major Remodeling Repairs Roof New Barn Insulation Concrete Work '
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Midnight Show Only! MONDAY, AUG. 6th. Buy Your Tickets Now. Avoid Waiting.
In PERSON Lon' STAGE!. On Screen: Lon Chaney in "The Mummy's Ghost" Tickets Now on Sale at Box Office All Seats 60c Only Capacity Will Be Sold. DAVIS-MEYER The marriage of Miss Adaline Davis and Lowell Meyer was solemnized Sunday afternoon at 4:00 o'clock at the home of the bride's mother. The bride is the daughter of Mrs., Harry B. Davis of Prairie Creek, and the bridegroom is the son of Bryan Meyer of Clay City. Rev. George Thomas Tade officiated using the double ring ceremony. They .were attended by Miss Lela Meyer, I sister of the groom and Richard lOsley of Terre Haute. The bride wore a street length blue eyelet dress with a corsage of ..pink roses. .The bridesmaid wore a street' length yelldw dress with a corsage of Talisman roses. Immediately following the ceremony, a reception was held. The refreshment table held the attractively decorated bridal cake. Those present were Mrs. Leon Davis and children, Nancy Ellen, Wendell and Gary Alan, Mrs. Harry B. Davis, Mrs. William Hines, Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Meyer, Dale Griffith, Miss Lela Meyer, Miss Lois Knust, Richard Osley and Rev. George Thomas Tade. Both the bride and groom are graduates of Indiana State Teachers College with the class of 1844. Immediately after the reception they left on a short trip. Upon their return they will make their home in Prairie Creek. "OPEN HOUSE" TO MARK A.A.F. FOUNDING AT GEORGE FIELD GEORGE FIELD, LAWRENCEVILLE, 111. Plans have been completed for this Troop Carrier base's open house and formal review Wednesday afternoon in celebration of the 38th anniversary of the founding of the Army Air Forces. f Beginning at 1 o'clock and con-
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All Forms of INSURANCE AlSpainhour (Try Our Service) Boom 6 Phone 71 Sullivan State Bank Bid?.'
SULLIVAN DAILY
LIFE'S Little TROUBLES -CAIi'T SLEEPNo need to lie in bed toesworry and fret because CON- ! STIPATION or GAS PRESSURE won't let you eleep. Be sensible get up take a dash of ADLER-I-KA 1 to relieve the pressure of large I intestines on nerves and organs of ' the digestive tract. Adlerika assists '. old food wastes and gas through ' a comfortable bowel movement so j that bowels return to normal size and the discomforts of pressure stop. Before you know it, you are asleep. Morning finds you feeling , clean refreshed and ready for a , good day's work or fun. Caution, use only as directed. Get Adltrika from year dratlM today. Smith Dru? ' Store, "in Bugger 'at Mason's Quality Drug Store. tinuing until 7, the field will be open to civilians in an open house int. visitors with
the type of training which bases leased from service on August 15, the War ' Department said last of General Willi m D. Old's Troop night. The War Department said that its decision to release RooseCarrier Command give to TCC velt was made before "the appearance of recent publicity with recrews. ; v 1 spect to certain financial transactions." Climax to the afternoon's , .
events will come with a review' and presentation of honors at 5:30 Sfi-fcluTAU CadroS on the base will pass in review while planes overhead will fly in tight formation in honor of the AAF. j Overseas heroes will be award-1 ed military decorations at the Wednesday review. Cargo craft and equipment will be open for inspection on a special area of the flight line with 25 , qualified personnel acting as guides. Commentator (Continued from Page One) tion of the moisture through the plant. We're told that there's no substitute for the. real thing, and that goes for newspapers as well as a lot of other things, - it has been aptly pointed out. . "
During the recent period when One of our favorite lines from New YoBkers were without news- Kin Hubbard is capsule history! of papers a' survey was made among journalism: "Tilford Moots wufc t' the people who ordinarily " read th' Henry ville .poor.: farm th' oththem. . ' er day t' see an' ole friend o' his The main question asked in the tnet used t' publish a newspaper survey was whether or hot . the thet pleased ever'buddy." radio was filling the need while mm
tne newspapers were not avail able. The reply was emphatic It was no! Of the number asked this ques tion,' 89.2 percent said the radio wasn't serving the same: purpose, and 10.8 percent were satisfied. . - The ads, as well as' news, were missed. Among the women readers, 79.1 percent said they 'rriissed the newspaper advertising;, Then, there's another angle which may prove interesting j to'
explore. A recent survey shcjws Dismissed July 30: r Harry that the small daily paper is read ( Cummins of Paxton; Mrs. Roy more thoroughly than the larger Akers and daughter of Sheldsalies. The little papers (such' as burn; W. D. Terrell of Sullivan this) are the ones which get them- rural route five; Harry Thomas of selves read "from cver to cover .".Sullivan rural route three.
UNFINISHED PAINTING OF F. D. R.
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PRESIDENT FRANKLIN 0. ROOSEVELT waa sitting for this portrait at Warm Springs, Ga., when he was stricken with his fatal cerebral hemorrhage last April. Above, Elizabeth Shoumatoff, the artist, stands beside the unfinished portrait as it is unveiled for the public at a New York dejpartmenstore;..-.. - .. (iDternatioail);
TUESDAY, JULY SX, 1945.
This Morning's Headlines SENATORS ASK U. S. BACK JOBS FOR ALL. A group , of Senators urged in public hearings Monday that the government guarantee enough work for all who need jobs. They said that private enterprise stands or falls on the experiment. Senate leaders saw the issue of post-war employment as the primary factor in the British election upheaval which ousted the Churchill government.
RUSS TO ENTER WAR. CAPEH ART. Russian entry into the Pacific war by Sept. 1 unless the Japanese high command accepts the Allied surrender terms is predicted by United States Senator Homer E. Capehart of Indiana. The Senr.tor arrived at Indianapolis yesterday.
' ARMY TAKES OVER RUBBER PLANT. The Army Monday seized the picketed United States Rubber Company plant at Detroit where an 18-day strike "over a jurisdictional dispute halted production of B-29 bomber tires. Throughout the nation more than 37,000 workers remained idle in 27 work stoppages.
HOLLYWOOD MESSENGER youthful gunmen, one dressed as a oiaie xsann messengers oi !iii,3uu
checkcashing agency near Lockheed Aircraft Corporation at Burbank, California, police reported. The victims, who .escaped after they were bound and left on a deserted foothill roadway, walked for two hours to report the robbery to police.
, . UJN. ROOSEVELT GIVEN
Roosevelt, the late president's second son and the center of much
congressional censure during his
. MILLION YANKS COMING HOME. A million American troops will Jeave Europe for cou remaini f, months f J945' s '1 f transportation, who s31d it would leave almost 900,000 to be moved durinS tne following four months to complete . redeployment from EurPe by May, 1946. ZOO BEAR MANGLES KEEPER. A 500-pound bear leaped on its keeper in an exhibition cage at a Chicago zoo Monday, mangling the victim's head and arms severely before a park policeman shot and killed the animal. The keeper, Anton Rauch, was ' in a serious condition,
CHURCHILL REFUSES KNIGHTHOOD. Winston Churchill broke, a 600-year tradition last night when he turned down King George's offer of a Knighthood of the Garter, highest honor which can be given a commoner. It was believed that by his decision Churchill gave Implicit notice that, after his stinging tefeat in the general election, he intended to remain in politics as leader of the
i opposition to work for the ousting j The survey showed . that both leaumg matter ana aas in tne small daily paper get about twice the percentage of attention as the same type of material in the newspapers with a lot of pages. HOSPITAL NOTES Admitted July 30: Carl StoeltTing of Carlisle," for treatment; James Sluder of Sullivan rural route four, for. treatment; Ruth Ann Hampton of Sullivan rural route five, for treatment; Mrs. Arlie Williamson of - Shelburn, for treatment. . Dismissed 'July 29: George Raley of Paxton.
ROBBED OF $111,300. Two soldier, robbed two Hollywood
as tney were delivering it to a . RELEASE. Brig. Gen. Elliott five years in the Army, will be reof the new labor government. PAUL O. TAYLOR CIVILIAN AGAIN Technical Sergeant Paul O. Taylor, husband of Mrs. Edna Weathers Taylor of Sullivan, and son of . Mrs. Mary M. Taylor of Shelburn rual route two, was honorably discharged Saturday, July 28th, at the Camp Atterbury Separatiorn Center in accordance witn regulations releasing men rom service who are 40 years of age or over. TSgt. Taylor was discharged with a total of 109 points under the military point system. He served twenty-one months overseas as a member of the United i axaies ArtRy Air Corps, taking parW..aei"?aL.action. .over Nor NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS THE STATE OF INDIANA. SULLI VAN COUNTY. In the Sullivan Circuit uran. in vacation Term, 19-15. Rush McCammon ': vs. The Indiana Southern Coal Com pany Alliance Coal Company, . Monon Coal Company. - Complaint No. 30503. Cause of Action , Complaint to Quiet line. BE IT KNOWN. That on this Slth day of July, in the year 1945. the above named plaintiff, by Bfrtweli, Bedwell & Haines. Attorneys, filed In (he office of the Clerk of the Sullivan Circuit Court his complaint against the defendants in the abnve entitled cause, together with an affidavit of a competent person that said defendant. Alliance Coal Company is not resident of th Stte of Inrliana Said defendant therefore is hereby notified of the filins and pendency of said complaint against tnem. saia psnse of action beln Complaint to Ouiet Title The southwest quarter of the southwest auarter of Section Twenty. Township Eight North, Range Eight West and that unless thpy appear and answer or demur thereto at tr calling of said cause at the Court House in Sullivan fourty. and State of Indiana, on the 24th day of September, 1945 said complaint, and the matters and things therein contained and alleeed. will be heard and dots-mined in their absence. WITNESS, the Cleric and Sea' said Court, this 30th day of July; 1945. JAMES H. RINOKR. Clerk SuIMven Circuit Court. Bedwell, Bedwell & Haines, Attornevs for Plaintiff. . 1st ins 7-31-45 3t. K. B. SMITH, Jeweler
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AUNT SUE'S DRY CLEANER
A Dry Cleaner of many
tleans CLOTHES. DRAPERIES, FURNITURE ancl
RUGS. Use it to remove wax from floors. Gallon 64c 2 Gallon $1.19 This Drug Store Will Open At 6:00 p.m. Thursday Bennett's Pharmacy
A Dependable Drug 1 Phone C mandv. Holland, Bastogne, Central Europe, the Ruhr and the Rhine. Taylor wears the Air Medal with three Oak Leaf Clusters in lieu of the additional Air Medal awards, the Good Conduct Medal, the Presidential Citation Badge, and five bronze battle stars to his European Theater of ' Operations ribbon.' A graduate of Sullivan High School, Taylor was employed by
Sears, Roebuck & Company of Jonn wimam oomswcK. wmChicago before entering military, Plaint for divorce, custody and
scrvicp Aueust 25th. 1942. The local airman is a member of the Sullivan Masonic Lodge No. 263. ANNOUNCE SUM fV MHMTHT.Y RAPT AT. SECURITY PAYMENTS TERRE HAUTE, July 31. Monthly benefits at the rate of $500,000 a year have' been sward - ed to 2,352 residents of Sullivan and seven other counties served by the Terre Haute field office of the Social Security Board, James
WANT rFRIENDHY SERVICE
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SINCLAIR
Does a man who is ill see a feed man about his ailments? Certainly not. He consults a doctor. When your auto ails bring it to Sinclair where auto ills have been studied over a period of years and where friendly service and advice that will prolong the life of your car, can be obtained. DRIVE IN FOR 0 Complete Chassis Lubrication Q Check Brakes, Inspect and Adjust Shock Absorbers iQ Check Battery and Charge i Friendly Mechanical Advice! !
SI $E
WILSON CATLIN
102 N. Section
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purposes that is easy to use. Store Since 96 1914 E. Snider, Manager, announced on the approach of the tenth birthday. of Social Security in America. National figures on monthly pay ments to retired workers,
s, their J of & n
families and to survivors ceased workers show $24 millions to 1,258,000 beneficiaries. To 271 rents of Sullivan county is paid $4,751.32 a month 1 ' ' ' ' NEW amis - ra Louise i-omsiucK vs.: support money Edgar Hux vs. Otis M. Sebring,' Norman German, The Texas Oil Co. Complaint for accounting and damages. Rush McCammon vs. The Indlana outnern oai w,u Coal Co- Monon Coal Co. CornPlaint to quiev title. 1 mmm Awegon Garlen Club The Awegon Garden Club will meet Thursday afternoon at 2:30 with Mrs. Malcolm Campbell. Phone 79
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