Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 12, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 16 January 1946 — Page 3
SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES WEDNESDAY, Jan. 16, 1946.
T B is ST
ForYeiirGoiigli
Creomulsion relieves niompttv be
cause it goes right to the seat of tha
trouDie to help loosen cna expel serm. ladea phlegm, and aid ratura to soothe and heal raw, tenctr, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your Cvu-yrt't to rril you n bnf.r.'ir.f nn'nrrnitr.luri "alf.i tha iirr
I"oerstancung you iuu-t nze me V7r.y 15 culckly alleys the cough o jcu aio to have your money tack.
forCoughs, Chest CoWs, Bronchitis
PISTOL PACKIN' POSTER BO
IT WAS V-E DAY MINUS NINE
FACTOGP.AFHS A gardener of Henry VIII Is credited with bringing the first apricots to England in 1524. They were recorded as growing in Virginia in 1720. "The Worthies of England" is the ' greatest work of Thomas Fuller, a voluminous collection of national biographies, published in 1662. During 1D00, the maximum year of production, the gold output of the Yukon totaled 1,077,563 ore ounces. The X-ray is used in detection of fraud in painting as it shows imrtorpainUng not visible ch the out-far!
T . largest animal of the deer
Bona Fide literally means "in
feood faith."
cmon Juke Slecipe
thctks ftheumetic
PeSn Quickly j 1 If yon suiter frr-m rhpumntlc. arthritis or 'iirltle pain, try tfiU simple Inexpensive fiome , !pe that thrtimiids are uMna. Get & p:iekof Ru-Ex f Miijponfit!, a two-wk supply, klt'.y. 'Js It v.lirt ii fiuurt of writer. fm! the wo of 4 V mona. lf'H :isv. No triable fit
1 and plwt3M.it. You hwd only 3 taliU'sponn-
yia ivu l i iiicn a tiny, vjuvii v. iuuu ta uuiirrt sometlmea ovorrtelit splendid results nro tbtaliifcL It the p;i!u9 tlj not quicidy lenvo Kati ii you tlo tuit fret better, return the mpty pitekupo end Hu-Kx will cost yui nutiim; to try as It is sold by your riruRxist under
a absolute innpy-liacli guaranty. Ru-Ex ompound is (or e:,I3 and rotuniiLcniJetl by
-twtt's rimrmsi'T tn't nn stores ewrywtatTP.
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OF INTEREST TO FARMERS
LITTLE DONALD ANDERSON, 6, who recovered from an attacK of infantile paralysis to become the child model for the 1946 March of Dimes campaign poster. Is shown "holding up" Mayor William O'Dwyer at New York City hall for a contribution to the fund to aid sufferers of the dread disease. , (International)
BENNETT-RING
UESTKICTv PYRAMID CLIMB
CAIRO (UP) The days of inAnnouncement has been made 'discriminate climbing to the top
ul iuc vjreat rymmm ai vjizu are , at an end.
of the marriage of Shirley Ring,
si -3't -j ?f;t.r.S5tr t8 tmgm& iUi$ fhmmt z-xi sum
daughter of Mr. ana Mrs. naroia In view of the many deaths that
Ring of Terre Haute R. R., and have occurred among inexperiRichard Bennett, son of Mrs. enced sightseers carrying out this
A REPRODUCTION OF PAPERS uncovered by military Intelligence men which were dictated by Adolf Hitler to secretary of the Fuehrer,
Viol-, Rpnnrtt of FarmersburB climb- the department of Antiqui- Reichsleiter Martin Bormann, is shown above. At the top is a for. Viola Bennett of Farmersburg, irictirt lhnt- ward bv Bormann. who now is being tried in absentia at Nuernberg,
R. R 1, and Virgil Bennett, Terre n0 one may attmpt the climb addressed to the grand admiral and reads: -Since all ur dWrions
except when escorted by a guide.
Haute.
Mr. Bennett is a veteran, recently honorably discharged af
ter serving many months in the ! China-Burma-India theater .of j war. I
EXLINE CORNER
Max Dunder and Charles Hurst were in Dugger Monday. Mrs. Roy Dyer of Dugger,
Mrs. Bennett is employed at visited Mr. and Mrs. Alexander from the Navy soon, the Eli Lilly Company in Ind- Brown Monday. iT , j ianapolis, where the young cou- John West, son of Mrs Harry James Moody' son of Mr' and pie are residing. , , " West,' will get his discharge Mrs- William Moody, has receiv- - ed his discharge after two years
failed to appear our situation seems to be beyond hope. The Fuehrer
dictated the political attached testament last mgnt. - it is a&iea April 29, 1945. The lower photo shows the start of Hitler's testament which reads: "More than 30 years have passed since I employed my modest powers as a volunteer in 1914 In the first World war forced upon the Reich." . (Inter national Soundphoto)
and eight months service in the U. S. Navy. Ronald Swan visited Mr. and
1 Mrs. Fred Dunder Sunday.
REVISED G. I. BILL HELPS AGRICULTURE LAFAYETTE, Ind., Jan. 16 County agricultural advisory committees and county agricultural agents will likely revise their recommendations to veterans in regard to purchasing farms in light of the recently revised G. .1. law, it was predicted today by Dr. J. E. Losey, Purdue ' University extension agricultural economist. The major change affecting agricultural loans raises the
$3,000 loan guarantee to $4,000. This permits an $8,000 loan, with the government guaranteeing one-half, which will give i veterans more money to buy farms, stated Losey. It will also emphasize the importance of the advisory committees composed of 500 Indiana farmers who have been giving practical advice to the veterans about the future of agriculture. Losey called attention to other changes in the bill. There is sub- , stituted "reasonable value" as j the basic consideration instead ' of the "normal value" on farm land purchases. The bill also changes he loaning procedure so that an agreement between
the leader, the veteran, and the local appraiser of the Veterans' Administration makes the trans
action binding. An important change in the legislation, Losey points out, is the extension of time wherein the - veteran can apply for a guaranteed loan from two to ten years after termination of the war. Thus the veteran can obtain his training and still have ample time to get a loan which will enable him to go into business.
"in view fo this change, it is expected that committees will recommend that veterans who are eligible should take advantage of the educational features of the G. I. Bill to secure additional agricultural training. Such training would be , possible in vocational agricultural classes the night schools or in short
This Morning's Headlines 14 DIE IN WEST VIRGINIA MINE, 200 ESCAPE Thirteen men were killed and another died later in a hospital at Welch, Va., while more than 200 escaped in the most unusual catastrophe recorded in a century of coal mining in the state. Twenty-two additional men working deep inside the Havaco No 9 mine of the New River Pocahontas Consolidated Coal Company were injured in an explosion which was so great that it wrecked buildings in the immediate area. School children in a building 500 feet away were injured by flying , glass. Five women and children in the company grocery store were taken to a Welch hospital for treatment of various injuries resulting from the terrific blast.
. TRUMAN SEES HOPE IN STEEL, GM DISPUTES President Truman expressed the twin hopes that the steel wage dispute will be settled without a strike and that General Motors later will accept the fact-finding board's proposals it now rejects. Showing no signs of discouragement over failure of his fact-finding formula to settle a strike in its initial test, Mr. Truman told his news conference he has no proposals for going beyond that in dealing with the current situation.
UNO STUDIES ATOM ROLE IN KEEPING PEACE Use of atomic weapons to keep the peace was suggested to United Nations General Assembly delegates as world statesmen pleaded for rapid establishment of a commission to control atomic energy. Australian Navy Minister N. J. Q. Makin, destined to become the first president of the all-powerful Security Council which will control the world police force, said in a statement there was "nothing in the nature of atomic weapons which excludes them" from the police force arsenal.
ASSAIL FEDERAL HOUSING PLANS The Administration's national housing plan today faced a congressional inquiry as one administration supporter declared: "It won't get the Job done." The House banking committee, now studying proposed bills to remedy the current housing shortage, decided to investigate the price and priority program set up by reconversion officials. The program went into effect yesterday.
TRUMAN WOULD KEEP JAP ISLES U. S. NEEDS President Truman said this government's policy regarding conquered Japanese islands will be in favor of retaining those we need and placing the others under a United Nations collective trusteeship.
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS JOF SULLI VAN COUNTY
i
Notice is hereby given that the. TAX DUPLICATES for State, County, Townships, Schools and Corporations of SULLIVAN COUNTY, for the year 1945, and payable in 10 1G, are now being prepared, and when completed will be in the hands of the COUNTY TREASURER, who will receive the taxes charged thereon. The following table shows the rate of taxation on each $100.00 worth of taxable real and personal property, and each Poll in the several units. DUE JANUARY -, 1946 FIRST INSTALLMENT DELINQUENT AFTER FIRST MONDAY IN MAY SECOND INSTALLMENT DELINQUENT AFTER FIRST MONDAY IN NOVEMBER. , CLEVE LEWELLYN, Treasurer of Sullivan County.
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Sullivan County Tax Rates For Year 1945 Payable In Year 1946
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STATE RATES
1 School Revenue 1-07 (.07 .07 1.07 (.07 .07 .07 .07 .2 ! State Board of Agriculture .0035.0035.0035.0035.0035.0035.0035.0035 3 i State Foresty .0050l.0050.0050.0050.0050.00501. 00501.0050 4 Teachers Retirement .0415.0415l.0415.0415.0415.0415 .04151.0415 5 War Memorial .01 .01 1.01 1.01 1.01 1.01 .01 1.01
.07 1.07 1.07 1.07 1.07 .07 .00351.00351.00351.00351.00351.0035
L0050.0050.0050.0050.0050.0050
.0415 .0415.0415.0415 .0415.0415 .01 1.01 1.01 1.01 .01 .01
.07 1.07 .00351.0035 .00501.0050 .04151.0415 .01 1.01
II TOTAL STATE RATE .13 .13 .13 (.13 (.13 (.13 .13 .13 1.13 (.13 .13 .13 .13 (.13 .13 .13 imw 1 General Fund 1.59 .69 (.59 .59 (.59 (.59 .59 .59 .59 .59 .59 .59 .59 .59 .59 .59 LUUiNiY 2 Court House Construction Bonds 1.06 (.06 (.06' .06 (.06 .06 .06 .06 .06 .06 .06 .06 .06 .06 .06 .06 DATI-C 3 Court House Equipment Bonds .03 .03 .03 .03 .03 (.03 .03 .03 .03 .03 .03 .03 .03 .03 .03 .03 KAIELO 4 Public Welfare 1.22 .22 .22 .22 .22 f.22 .22 .22 .22 .22 .22 .22 .22 .22 .22 .22 TOTAL COUNTY RATE (.90 (.90 .90 ,H.90 .90 (.90 .90 (.90 .90 (.90 (.90 .90 (.90 .90 .90 .90 r .i 1 Township Fund .15 .14 .14 .13 AO M 25 A7 13 .10 1.15 Ti 15 .13 .14 .06 AVi 2 Poor Relief Fund .06 I TrtmcKir 3 Poor Advancement Fund (.01 .02 , .02 .01 .01 .02 .02 .02 lUWIlbllip 4 Fire Protection ,; .10 .01. .05 Rates I I TOTAL CIVIL TWP. RATE .., .16 .16 .20 (.13 (.20, .07 .27 (.23 (.13 .1Q ' (.16 (.16 (.27. (.IS .16 .06
DEATH OF INFANTS AT "BABY FARMS CHARGED TO GERMANS" Four hundred and sixty-two infants died from "wilful neglect" at two German "baby farms" and 16 men and three women connected with the camps have been arrested for war crimes trial, British investigators said. The children were born to slave laborers working on farms and in a factory near Brunswick, Germany and were considered illegitimate. i Separated from their mothers at ases'of 10
the children were taken to two "farms or clinics" in the villages of Velpke and Ruehen. Out of 144 placed in wooden huts at Velpke, 92 died, and alj of the 370 placed in corrugated iron sheds at Ruehen
suciiunuea. .
V JAPS SENT 9,000 BALLOONS TOWARD U. S. The Japanese launched 9,000 bomb-carrying balloons against the United States between mid-1942 and March, 1945, the Allied Headquarters Intelligence Section revealed. . ,
courses and regular courses at Purdue University. Committees will continue to recommend the possibilities of part time farming in the field of rural services. Among the services suggested are hauling and trucking, custom work, machinery repair shops,, portable seed testing and treating, sheering and sheep dipping, processing of food and various produce marketing services. In addition, elevators, implement stores, feed and seed business and other
similar rural .enterprises, would
De excellent opportunities for
the returned veteran interested
in agriculture.
School Library Rates
1 School Bonds I .20 .05 . 15 .10 .20 .05 .15 2 I Tuition Tax : .45 .40 .28 .18 .55 .50 .50 .60 , .50 .65 .45 .40 .50 .18 .40 .50 3 I Special School : 1 .90 .85 .95 1.00 .85 .50 .80 .90 .80 .70 .90 .85 .80 1.00 .85 .84 4 . Library I .02 .05 .08 .04 .10 .09 .12 1 .04 .09 5 Free Text Books I ,02 ' .02 6 Vocational , j .10
TOTAL SCHOOL AND LIBRARY 1.57 1.25 (1.23 1.30 1.63 1.04 (1.30 (1.50 11.30 (1.55 1.64 (1.37 (1.30 (1.29 1.25 1.68
fnmni-qtmn J 1 1 General Fund . (1.50 (1.15 1 .85 1 .84 (1.13 1.46 (1.09 corporation ( 2 I Park Fund I I 1 I I 1 ) .15 1 I .08 i i ' " I j TOTAL CORPORATION i j 1 , ( 1.50 1.15 (1.00 .84 (1.21 (1.46 (1.09 Total Rate I I TOTAL RATE 12.76 2.44 2.46 (2.46 2.86 12.14 2.60 (2.76 12.46 4.18 13.98 3.56 3,44 3.66 13.90 13.86
1 State 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 POLL 2 State School ..' .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 ( .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 3 County 50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 .50 TAY ' 4 Tuition 24 .24 .24 .24 .24 .24 . 24 .24 I .24 .24 .24 .24 .25 .24 .25 .25 liAA. 5 Special School 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 6 Corporation 1.00 1.00 1.50 .25 ' .25 .25,
commonly applied by growers
I using me corn planter ana an j analysis of 0-12-12 seemed to be popular with 100 pounds per
acre applications. How limestone increases fer
tilizer efficiency is shown by re
sults of a soybean experiment conducted under the direction of Purdue University agronomists in Deleware County. Soybean yield was increased 2.2 bushels by better management but no limestone spread. However, the yield for the same fertilizer application when the soil was
i limed was increased 5.5 bushels
per acre. , z
Contestants in the Indiana official soybean , yield contest used row planting almost exclusively and followed recommendations for row planting on highly fertile soils, said K. E. Beeson, Purdue University extension agronomist. The new Lincoln soybean seemed to be less handicapped with wide rows than the shorter growing Richland. Row widths varying from 8 inches to 40
inches ere used by winning con-
lehtants. fertilizer was rather
Enrolled in the Eight Weeks" Winter Short Course in Agriculture being held at Purdue University, are 176 students, with 74 registered for general agriculture, 62 in animal husbandry 26, dairy production, and 14, dairy manufacturers. This is a major increase over last year's total enrollment of 71. " It has been necessary to set up dormitories on the third floor of the agricultural engineering building to accommodate about 70 of these students.
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TOTAL POLL TAX 3.24 3.24 3.24 (3.24 3.24 3.24 (3.24 3.24 ' 3.24 (4.24 4.24 (4.74 (3.50 (3.24 (3.50 13.50
STATE OF INDIANA, SULLIVAN COUNTY, ss: I, James McGarvey, Auditor of Sullivan County, hereby certify that the above is a correct copy of all Tax Levies for the Taxes payable in the year 1946. .. ". JAMES McGAJRVEYf Auditor.
PUBLIC SALE Due to ill health I am selling my farm and household articles at public aucton at the Harry Wallace Farm located 34 miles northeast of Shelburn. Friday, January 18, 1946 Beginning At 10:30 A. M. 1 male hog; 1 bull; 2 calves; 5 cows; 1 sow with, 8 pigs; 1 1500-lb. smooth mouth mare; 1 black horse (1500 lbs.); 1 combine (1942); 2 wagons; 1 hay rack; 1 10-pole McCormick wheat drill; 1 John Deere corn planter; 1 Farmall F-20 tractor; 1 McCormick cultivator; 1 John Deere cultivator; 1 7-ft. John Deere disc; 5 sheets metal roofing (10 ft. long); 3 horse collars; 2 sets work harness; 1 power corn sheller; corn in crib 400 bushels, - more or less; 1 set of log bolster; 1 set triple block; 1 12-in. Oliver breaking plow; 1 oat tailgate seeder; 1 single shovel plow; 1 double shovel plow; 1 tile spoon; 4 steel wheels; 1 10-20 tractor; 1 International 2-bottom breaking plow; 1 McCormick mowing machine; 1 binder; 1 60-tooth harrow; 1 sulky plow; 1 F-20 tractor cultivator; 1 23-ft. belt; 1
set dehorners; baled hay; 2 hog houses (8' x 8'); some
household goods and other articles too numerous to men tion. 1 TERMS CASH Not responsible in case of accidents. JAMES BLUBAUGH, Owner
Harrison and Drake, Aucts. Walter Thompson, Clerk
JLuncrt win De served by Ebenezer Ladies' Aid.
