Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 176, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 5 September 1945 — Page 4
PAGE FOUH
SULLIVAN DAILY TME& 'WEDNESDAY, Sept. 5, 1945.
"Relax in Cool Comfort At The Lyric"
Come Early! ENDING TONIGHT!
ADULTS. 35c CHILDREN, 16c Tax Inclusive.
ircffgmnro
Coming Thursday, Friday, Saturday It Pays To Be Early Thursday and Friday Nights. It's Only 30c From 6:45 to 7:15.
SLAZINfi ACBOSI THE SCREEN
Plus Paramount News. J&s tESmF
.'Associate Feature.
Ruth TERRY-Robert LIVINGSTON
wurm
I1
Famous to relieve MONTHLY
FEMALE misery
(Also fine Stomachic Tonic!) tydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is famous to relievo not ouly monthly pain but also accompanying nervous, tired, hlghstrung feelings when due to functional periodic disturbances. Taken regularly It helps build up resistance against such distress. Pinkham's Compound helps nature Follow label directions. Try it! CQMPDUNO
WHJCAUSIS
JEPIIIPSY?
This Morning's Headlines ARMY MAY CUT RETIREMENT AGE To attract more volun-
and returned home Monday evening. ,. ' Donald Joe Massey of Vlrtcennes, has been spending a few days with his father at his grand-
mother's home, 104 S. Crowder St.
here. Miss Eunice Stigler is spending this week with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Pinkston of Freelandville. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ward of Anderson, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. A. W, Lovelace.
Mrs. Maude Mason of the
u. dM.a,. An ihi. :..,.,!:- ,ul,; eers xne colors, uie nouse ivimiary ommiuee remauveiy voiea
will b tnt FREE, while they last, to ony
reader writing to the Educational Division, 535 Fifth Ave., New York. N.Y., DceL
Commissioners (Continued from Page 1)
the; Joe Marshall ,et al school fund real estate (NE 14 of Sec. ! 17-T8N-R8W), forty acres and
to liberalize the Army's retirement system. A soldier would be allowed to retire voluntarily after 20 years. For the rest or his life he would draw half the average annual pay he received during his last six months of service. At present a man can retire after 20 years but only if he is disabled. Automatic retirement comes after 30 years at three-quarters pay. Demands continued for a halt to the draft right now. Sen. Homer Ferguson, R., Mich., urged a 60-day moratorium on inductions "to see what we can do with volunteers."
PREACHER'S DEATH BLAMED ON SECT SNAKE CEREMONIES WoirH KnalcA-hanHiino ritps nf a rplieiniis sent wpre
requested order authorizing said blamed for the death of a Tennessee man as Virginia officers Invesreal estate to be appraised ana tigated the death of a woman who was bitten in demonstrations Sat-
same being granted,
urday. Lewis E. Ford, 32, lay preacher of the Dolly Pond Tennessee
partlow et al was approved and
executed. ! The auditor asked authority to
advertise for bids for furnishing
coal for county buildings for, the winter of 1945-46 and trie request was granted and he was directed to advertise for bids to be opened Monday October, 1, 1945 at 1:30
Springer-Gouckenour store . has P. M. for Sullivan County union
returned to work after a two-
weeks' vacation.
Mr. and Mrs.
Deed of county real estate to ' Church of God died shortly after being bitten by a rattlesnake in a
mined coai.
; Olcve opiuaii, muuij man James Robert Supt, submitted a requisition and
Mason and children of Chicago, specification for a crawler type have returned home after spend-J tractor and motor patrol gradtr. ing two weeks with his parents, The same was approved and the Mr. and Mrs. Clell Mason. . J auditor ordered to advertise for Mrs. Orval Amyette and son, blAs to be opened Monday Sept. Tommy, of Fort Wayne, have been 17' 1945 at 8:0 PMspending the summer here1. With j Sherwood-Templeton Coal. Co. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Lovelace: Mrs. fled a Petition for release of Amyette received a cablegram bond furnished guaranteeing refrom her husband, Capt. Orval location of a highway in Jackson Amyette, stating that he is on his township in petition. The matter way home and will join her m, continued to the October term. Fort Wayne. Ralph Smith submitted com
pensation insurance policies ana
same were accepted and approved subject to appropriations by county council and approved by State Tax Board. ,
religious service. Wise, Virginia authorities reported the wife of the Rev. H. O. Kirk was bitten on the wrist in a snake handling demonstration Saturday. She gave birth to a child Monday. The child died a few moments later and Mrs. Kirk died an hour afterward.
SOVIETS TO GET KURILES ISLES Secretary of State James F. Byrnes revealed that the United States and Russia reached an understanding at Yalta six months before the Russian declaration of war on Japan to let the Soviet Union regain the Kuriles and the southern part of Sakhalin Island; He also said that he intends to appoint a special assistant whose task, in effect, will be to avoid future "Pearl Harbor" by implementing future decisions of the secretaries of War, Navy and State.
.milium uiihiii im.i.,,1 im ,i.pi.nmi iwir
A STAR
Alan MOWBRAY Franklin PANGBORN lial Eddit MARR Adrian BOOTH ' Aurora I
TODAY'S MARKETS
The Board authorized repair
of rooms to be occupied by con
struction of door , between two rooms on third floor of the Court
House. The work to be under supervision of Hod Tennis, court
house custodian. The auditor was
directed to see , that said rooms
INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 5. KU.R) Produce: . :
Poultry Broilers, fryers and roasters under 5 lbs. and Barred and White Rock springers, 29.78 ceiling. Colored and Leghorn
springers, 25c; heavy breed hens, ! are properly furnished.
26.28; Leghorn hens, 24.28; cocks, i
15c.
Butterfat, No. 1, 81c. Butter, 45.63c for No. 1 and
45.13c for No- 2.
Eggs, 33c.
Bits Of News
. (Continued from. Page I) bases in the North' African Division of ATC. At . Casablanca alone, a fleet of nearly 100 fourengine C-54 "Skymaster" transports is being maintained for the flights across the Atlantic. Each
1 -fcettotfAW
GOLF Tournament First Round SUNDAY, Sept. 9 One P.M. SULLIVAN CO. GOLF CLUB
6' '!'!'T vT a"m'mmmmmvp,m'mm
planes is '; capable of 40 passengers in com-
of these carrying
fort.. , , ,' A former employee of Trukaway . Corp., S. Sanford St., Pontiac, ' Michigan, Sergeant Monk left to enter the army in February 1943. His wife, Mrs. Phyllis A. Monk, maintains their home at 310 S. State St., Sullivan Ind.
LOCALS
' Mr. and. Mrs.;.E.JV.. Fleming and
children, Jim and Doris Ann, of Kentucky, spent the past : week visiting Mrs. Fleming's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Griggs and other relatives. They also visited Mrs. . Fleming's brothers and sisters, Mrs. Leo Sanders, Mrs. Helen Keenan and Monroe and Jesse Griggs and relatives of Mr! Flem
ing, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Plrtle and Mrs. Stella Johnson of Merom. Mrs. Gertrude Massey accompanied Sgt. and Mrs. Gerald L. Massey to Indianapolis Sunday
INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. .' 5.-4U.R)
Livestock: ....
Hogs, 5,500; active, steady; good and choice 160 lbs. up and bulk
140-160 lbs., $14.80; 100-140 lbs., $13.50 $14.50; good and choice
sows and stags, $14.05.
Cattle, 1,200; calves, 600; steady;
several loads good 1,000-lb. steers,
$16.35 $16.65; odd small lots choice 4-H Club yearlings, $17.00
$17.50; some held higher; me
dium and good, $14.00 $1555;
few medium and good heifers
ibu.uu $10.20; odd good grass
cows, $12.25 $13.00; bulk com
mon and medium, $9.00 $12.00 canners and cutters, $6.50 $8.75
veaiers active and steady; most
good and choice, $15.50 $16.00.
QUALITY, PRICE SERVICE RUSK'S LIBERTY SERVICE Opposite Hospital
Just like old times . . . Have a Coca-Cola
n
... meeting up at the neighborhood eatery Neighborhood meeting place! That's where your G. I., home on furloughj Can get back in touch with the local goings'on. That's where the words Have a Coe start new friendships and seal old ones. Ice-cold Coca-Cola is the center of attraction. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO., of Terre Haute
J
Board determined to continue
in session subject to call ofthe auditor..'- -j.-.-t I: -:;t' hi:
REVIVAL AT JASONVILLE
A revival began at JasonviUe
Pilgrim Holiness Chlirch TueSday, A o JJj- '-Li - ;
aepv. i. opeciai music una sing
ing is enjoyed each , evening.
Services Begin at 7:30 p. m. 1 The
meetings are conducted by. Rev. R.
W. Brown, former pastor, and
Mrs. Brown, and Rev. A.;D.iS.tin
nett, present, pastor,.-and pMrs
Stinnett.. . . ., .-,,..
HOSPITAL NOTES
tan :
in.
ARMY SOFTENS OVERSEAS POLICY The Army gave guarantees last night to an estimated 665,000 older soldiers and men with high discharge points that they won't go overseas. And another 1,100,000 eligible for immediate discharge won't go
over, or can come home if they already are abroad.
From now on, the Army ordered, enlisted men with these qual
ifications will not be sent overseas:
Those who had 45 or more points as of May 12. .Those who are 37 years old. Those who are in the age group 34 to1 36 years, inclusive, and
have at least one year military service.
' No more WACs will be sent overseas. . -The War Department said it would start Immediately screening
out, from units scheduled for Pacific duty, the men affected by the new order. '
Eye-Witness Reveals Hiroshima In
.Utter Ruin; Thousands Still Dying
e' "qr
GENUINE
In All Sizes. Be sure to bring your camera. OUR OVERSIZE PHOTO FINISH. ING Gives Best Results.
8 Print Rolls 39c Extra Prints 5c each. o .
Bennett's Pharmacy "Always A Drug Store First" ' Phone 96
By James McGlincy
United Press Staff Correspondent
HIROSHIMA, Sept. 3. (UP)
Hiroshima" is all the ruined cities
of the world put together and spread out. . Yet only one bomb did it a single atomic bomb dropped by
an American Superfortress on August first, the atomic bomb to be loosed on a hostile land. We drove into the center of what a month ago a prosperous, modern city and for two miles in every direction found nothing but complete and utter ruin. By August 20, the Japanese had counted 33,000 dead among these ruins. The total reached 53,000 last Saturday and more still dying every day in hospitals around Hiroshima. Thirty-thousand persons are missing. No one ; knows how many were wounded. Japanese doctors fear that everyone wounded, no matter how slight, is
doomed. They say the death toll ultimately may exceed 150,000, nearly half of Hiroshima's pra wor population. The doctors tell of how the ; wounded's hair drops out, their ( gums bleed, how the number of their white corpuscles are found to total only one-seventith of what they should be, how they i grow weaker and weaker, and j finally die. We cannot check on the accuracy of the doctor's testimony just yet. But we can. confirm Japanese accounts of the terrible destruction wrought by that ; lone bomb a month ogo.
Admitted Sept. 4th: Mrs.. Wal
ter . Blackwood of " Marco, - .Ind.; Mrs. Tom Land of Merom.' : Dismissed Sept. 4th: . . Mrs.
George Frederick and daughter, of Merom; Joe Ralph Land of Sullivan R. 5. - . : . .
CONSERVATION CLUB
The ' Sullivan " Conservation Club will meet Thursday, . Sept. 6th, 7:30 p. m. in the Powell Radiator Shop Building. Reports on activities at the District Conference will be given regarding post-war work in this area, and all members are urged to attend this important session. '- '
mm-
BtHl-.l-em
the per
formance of our duties
your assurance of satisfactory
balminq and a smoothly
conducted funeral. LUe invite your confidence.
Mi
mmmmmm
r
6 o
You naturtllv heir CoCoU
'f;rjLiACo)u Both mean the quality pnd-
UatAf uct of The CocfrCoU Compwy.
OPEN 7:00 A. M.12:00 MIDNIGHT
Your Dealer Says
BEST IN ETHYL GASOLINE
AND MM WZMZ CAM H mmt py consistent R CAR
Motor Oil, Greases, Regular GasTire Repairing DEP ROCK SERE STATION
520 So. Section
N. C. SMITH, Station Agent
CARS & TRUCKS WASHED LUBRICATED REPAIRED Sullivan, Ind.
THE ;
Will Close At Midnight Every Night Until Further Notice.
iyt,LWi'',iJ W.y.B.O.W'WHHI. nj'l il.lliTJ,!li.MlltiWBM'..Jl!llliMili
WHEAT FER
TILIZER
2-12-6, $30.69 ton and 0-12-12, $31.35 ton.
ir u n t&w wu
Play safe. Fertilizer is still scarce
and hard to get, so get your supply to
day or tomorrow. Phone us your needs.
1 WW of Aozuxuy?7a.
MANUFACTURERS
DISTRIBUTORS
