Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 261, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 2 January 1946 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES WEDNESDAY, JAN. 2, 1946.

TONIGHT

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Co-Feature : "CALL OF THE WILD" with Clark Gable - Loretta Young - Jack Oakie

Quit paying rent nd own your home. Special bargains on property on installment plan. Also farms for sale. W. T. MELLOTT 'TT is just as

I soap shortages

continue to be one of our most important sources of supply for the manufacture of soap and for other industrial uses. It may be many months before we can obtain adequate supplies of imported fats and oils for these uses. Meanwhile, housewives can help prevent soap shortages by turning in used fats, and dealers can help by continuing collections."

( som,ms.-mm (savins osep fats JU I my swnys so is jostas f A LOW, I CAN 6m IMPORTANT NWr& ' 1 1 ONLY ONE MR AS mm TKE X

WE'RE STILL far below the minimum requirements in our supply of industrial fats. Any letup in saving used fats will lower this . supply. . . may mean less soap, for your used fats are needed to help make soap. Here's what you as a . housewife can da I

Where there's fat, there's soap Keep Turning In Used Fats To Help Make More Soap

Come Early! Thursday and Friday Nights 30c From 6 :45 to 7 :15 p. m. i Tax Inclusive! i

3 PlusParamount News Events. FATAL SHOOTING at txttit a xt a oat to A l irsuiAlNAl UL1& TTVrnTANAPnT.TS .Tan 9Ona ,,!,,, j ' 1U wa ",,u sr , dl ol!r persons wounaea as jjia.anapoiis residents celebrated New Year's r . .. - I

4 $3fekVj

says CLINTON P. ANDERSON

Secretory of AgricuJure

important now as when lats

JL and oils were rationed to save and turn in every bit of used kitchen fat. Used fats

EVERY DROP of used fats you save helps the soap supply . . . helps bring back more soap to your dealer's shelves sooner. So keep on your fat-salvage job help yourself get more soaps. And remember, you get 4c a pound when you turn in used fat to your butcher.

SHERMAN !

TONIGHT & THWtS. Adults, 35c Children, 14c, Tax Faid. I The real , . . the genuine . . . t?t human story of two lovable kids! 4 ; v . 3 e t Joan Robert LESLIE HUTTON with Dolorej Harry Rosemary MORAN DAVENPORT DeCAMP Eve. Two policemen tacked. were atBenjamin Rogers, 30 years old, lirois cV,r, ; Elizabeth Ratliff, 27, who was arrested on a murdpr charge arrested on a murder charge. lllc woiiiau luiu punce xnat The woman told Rogers entered her home- and started after her with a knife and a gun.; he said she wrested ,, , v t,w gun vifi mill UHLi mv-v two shots. Police said she told them she then fired several 1 , . .,. . 1 shots, one of which struck Rogars in the chest. France's Foreign George Bidault, Foreign Secre - tary in the French Cabinet, is shown as he was married to his 1 former secretary, Mile. Suzanne'

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It Takes EXPERIENCE Knowledge of one's profession or avocation, although vital, can never be fully utilized except through experience. Skill at the piano or organ is achieved only through countless hours of practice. Likewise in funeral service, years of service in the community are necessary before a funeral director can make the best use of his knowledge of modern methods, facilities, and service. . The Billman organization has served the' people of Sullivan and Sullivan County since 1906. SULLIVAN, I NO.

Just Received

CHARTER OAK

COOK

STOVES HEATERS COUNTS HARDWARE Vaughn Jones 1 OmriniitN from Page One! Instructors will be Lieut. Dave Laughlin, Indianapolis post commander, and Sgt. Loreh Ayers, Lafayette post, who will complete a five-month course at the Northwestern University Traffic Institute this month. I The state police official as'serted that prospects are that traffic deaths will increase this vear. He related that national experts are predicting that m the next decade the nation's traffic volume will double the . 1941 peaK. dt XniS transpires, ) present conception control will have to be review d , jhted t '.ZA x '- lUilUIlS UL C1IIUI UCIIHTUt ftCTIlcies will be lost unless motorists' accept a share of the respond , ..." , , , . . . .... bihtv for safe driving." Col. Kilt.' j i idii wuru, xii uuvu.8 au Secretary Weds Borel in a religious ceremony at St. Francois de Xavier Church in Paris. (International Soundphoto.) '

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Kelps build up resistance against MONTHLY When taken regularly!

tydla E. Pinkhara's Vegetable Compo'ind Dors mohe than relieve monthly pain when due tg functional periodic disturbances. It also relieves accompanying weafe, tired, nervous, Jittery feelings of such nature. Taken regularly-Pinkham'a Compound helps build up resistance against such monthly distress. Pinkham's Compoun is fcorti trjfinp for "driver cooperation."' I Incomplete state police statistics yesterday showed that 51,000 motor vehicle accidents were reported last year, as compared with 46,000 in 1944. The traffic volume count for last November was only 17 per cent under the figure for November. 1941, the all-time high year for traffic. Unrestricted travel was blamed for an increase in traffic victims since the end of the war. Of the 840 traffic victims last year, 45 per cent died after V-J day, August 14, following which motoring restrictions were halted. In this period, the traffic volume jumped 42 per cent. A total of 527 persons died in rural accidents last year, while 213 died in the more congested areas, Col. Killian reported. Collisions of more than one vehicle claimed 265 lives to lead in a break-down by type of accident. Pedestrian fatalities, with 252 dropped to second place after leading during the war years. Grade crossing crashes involving railroad trains and motor vehides were responsible for 116 deaths in 1944. A sharp increase in this type accident was noted - wltn e advent of subnormal temperatures and icy pavements

of traffici1" uecemoer, wnen 21 persons

piderits. r4Um r4n1l4.. ;7. ?B h, f.' 2, animal drawn yeuiue, e., oiuyt-it;, 40; annual, o: iix- , .,'.'. . '1'. .' ' wievi, to; overturned in roaa, 17. ran off roadway( 109; other non-collision. 22, and miscellaneous, 1. RE-ENLISTS WILLIAMS FIELD, Ariz. Pvt. Garland E. Raley of 317 W. Donaldson Street, Sullivan, reenlisted for a one year enlistment period in the Army Air Forces at Williams Field recently. He received the usual benefits and allowances granted to army re-enlistees. Pvt. Raley has had more than 18 months of active service to his credit, as his original enlistment was in June of 1944. Pvt. Raley is spending his 30day re-enlistment furlough at his home in Sullivan. STATIONED IN AFRICA Private Max E. Pierce, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Pierce of Sullivan rural route three, has been transferred to overseas duty and is now stationed in Casablanca, North Africa, with the 684th Quartermaster Depot group Max, who graduated last year from Sullivan High School, is enjoying the "land of the Dark Continent" very much from his post in the seacoast city. His address is: Pyt. Max E. Pierce, 135992898, 684th Qt. Depot, A.P.O. 600 c-o Postmaster, New York, N. Y. BACK IN STATES , Mrs. Guy Boles has received word from her husband that he has arrived in New York. Sgt. Boles has been in the U. S. Army three and one-half years, serving one year in the India-Burma Theater. TRY A TIMES WANT

AD

FIREMEN SAVE MANHOLE VICTIM

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SEVERELY INJURED by a fall of 40-feet into a New York City manhole, Hans P. Herz of Chappaqua. N. Y., is lifted from the sewer by firemen who. rescued him. Herz, 45, grabbed a projection in the sewer as the current swept him along and held on for 20 minutes until firemen not to him. He suffered severe back and leg injuries. (intemotionui)

l T I vTcLCK 1 ram IS r :l 1. O fV' a-'ClcHICU, u LiC BLANEY, South Carolina, Jan. 2.(UP)The Silver Meteor, luxury streamliner of the Seaboard Railroad, was derailed four miles north of here at 5:15 a. m. today. Two persons were killed

Announcing a Springer Motor Sales

I nj0 South Main Street Phone 178 SERVICEMEN VARD BOLES "DOC" WILLIAMS - We welcome our appointment as a Pack- pi&iam . 1 ard dealer here, with the opportunity it Ef S'i fc. ' brings for helping to keep vital trans- H p I portation rolling. jj -,L-. j .. ) Never before has expert, careful service j -J, jM A If meant so much to motorists! Pf 1 Skilled Mechanics 1 33 1 , Our service staff knows how to keep jj 1 your car in top-notch condition. They II B J m . ... --.- ArL- 4tt a luriA Auini An a Pi "M

I have the experience, the 'know-how" m jj 11 with the official factory data and tools ... , , H 1 1 ' - g Wartime driving has proved g J

Genuine Parts Our large stock of genuine Packard replacement parts is another assurance of dependable, low-cost service. Quality parts wear better, last longer. Drop In I Thousands of cars are still going out of service every day! So even when new car production hits full stride, the present demand could not be met for a long time. That's why we say: take good care of your car! It may have to last you a lot ' longer than you think. Drive in, soon. Let us help you catch little troubles before they grow up into big ones.

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a- - ?1 y "IT , and 20 injured. The dead were Mrs. Helen E. Wilson of Now York City and her infant daughter, Beverly. Tha MotAfir marine lhrniieh ...tu mm vrir I " " . . j .V -t to Miami bounced off the rails at a curve. The railroad said cause of the derailment was being mvestigated. Piiiiniini

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COLOR HARMONY MAKE-UP . 1 Powder. Rouge and lipstick in lifelike color-tones that harmo- -ji nize with each type of blonde, f trunette,brownette and redhead. ; i Face Powder ....... 1 1-0 Rouge 500 ' Tru4xIor Upsticfc . . . $1.00 !

BENNETT'S '? PHARMACY j SAVE ON DRUGS EVERYDAY Since 1914.'

HEAVY OVERCOATS Also Blue Serge Uniforms, Like New, formerly used by Republic Plant Protection. Wholesale or Retail. Also Sam Browne Belts and Holsters. ELMO WALKER 618 E. Franklin St. Ph. 3-4764 EVANSVILLE, IND.

Wartime driving has proved that Packard ownership pays off in dependable, economical transportation. Look at these facts revealed by a nation-wide survey among owners of Packard and the other makes of cars studied: 1. Packard cars are standing up better; 2. Packard owners have needed service less often; 3. Packard owners have spent less on service. Those three facts are worth keeping in mind the next time you buy a new car.

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