Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 17, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 23 January 1946 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES WEDNESDA X 3 dail, iiOj 1'w'xU,
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LYRIC ENDING TONIGHT! Adults ; 33c. Children 16c. Tax Paid. in Hi THURS.-FRI.-SAT. ' Come Early! Thursday and Friday Nights 30c From 6:45 to 7:15. Tax Inclusive. JAMES CRAIG . I if ft AVA bAR .... . fDA'UND tlx i EST4 si- s Cfckhvt Javei Associate Feature ..'":k I i" ami Elsies Sk., tlH i I ' Plus Late Paramount News, B3S33B3 Quit paying rest and own your home. Special bargains on property on installment plan. Also farms for sale. W.T.MELLOTT
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8 t-Pfr fJ& W$& I1 As a further indication of 1 Vliiyr " j ' O&l I ' Pno freakish attacks, it was I frjfi? 3r .ClJ' 11 1 Pinted out that in the state's I ' 'ilf ipi I most severe outbreak in 1940
3 , "y fit S nart was struck hardest, while sales at a recent livestock sale r Mr . ' in 1945 these counties were com- here.
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I VALLN Nh !: 1 roR nRST STEEl STR,KERS on . L OF COURSE, YOU'RE ... ' ) Jk: GOING TO SEND VALENTINES n A WmtW'W'Mm ' PricedProra -fl4i-'-; - V1 v-iV-f'--
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And Stop Dosing Your Stomach With Soda and Alkalizers Don't expect to get real relief from headache, sour stomach, gas and bad , breath by taking Bods and other alializers if the true cause of your trouble is constipation. j ' In t his case, yovu real trouble is not in the stomach at ail. But in the intestinal tract where 80 ofyourfoodis digested. And when it gets blocked it fails to diicest properly. ..... What you want for real relief ia not eoda or an alkalizer but something to "unblock" your intestinal tract. Something to clean it out effectively help Nature get back on her feet. Get Carter's Pills right now. Take them as directed. They gently and effectively "unblock" your digestivo tract. This permit's your food to move along normally. Nature's own digestive juices ' canthen reach iL You get genuine relief that makes you feel really good again. Get Carter's PHls at. any drugstore 25. "Unblock" your intestinal tract for real relief from indigestion. JERICHO Mack Moore was in Dugger recently. Raymond Pieg and Betty Norris were in Dugger Saturday nifiht. Mrs. Nellie Robbins visited Mrs. Rena Broshears Friday. James Broshears is home on a furlough after being overseas. Charles Ashburn and daughter . were in Dugger Saturday. WHISTLING COP I DECATUR, 111. (UP) Policeman Arthur Travis doesn't need , a store-bought whistle to direct traffic. He ju3t puts his tongue i between his teeth and manufactures a brand of shrill whist- ; ling that surpasses all other traffic warning signals. Officer Travis admits that his tongue gets pretty tired, and when it docs, he takes a turn with a mechanical whistle. BIRTH CERTIFICATE NOTICK T ., , , Petition No. 3281 Notice is hereby given that Pauline Joe Cummins has filed her petition in the Sullivan Circuit Court to have the place and time of her birth determined. Said petition is set for hearing on January 30th, 19J6 at 9:00 A. M. Dated this 23rd day of January. 1946. JAMES H. RINGER. Clerk Sullivan Circuit. Court Nhrval K. Harris. Petitioner's Attorney.
Watch For Live 'S tock Sale Ad -Sale Feb. 27thRufus Johnson 1 mile east of Paxton
0 EA5S MISERY
OF CHILD'S COLD wicks IVapoRub SOCIETY Royal Neighbors Sunshine Camp 2821, Royal Neighbors, will have a called meeting Thursday night, Jan. 24, to install officers. The meeting will begin promptly &t 7:30. Camps from Merom, Carlisle, Oaktown and Lyons are invited. Each member please bring either pies or sandwiches for refreshments, also own table service. Pythian Sisters The Pythian Sisters will not meet Thursday night due to a misunderstanding concerning use of the hall. They will meet January 31 at which time installation of officers will be held. Please note change of time. WEATHER CALLS LEAD CHICAGO (UP) Seemingly, it is more important to know what the 1 weather is than to know what the time is in Chicago, since the records of these two services of the Illinois Bell Telephone Co. show that 12,000,0Q0 people a year call for weather reports and about 11,000,000 call for the time. KEEP IT COMING! American houtewlres saved approximately 170,614,000 pounds or used cooking tat in 1944. That U almost double the amount saved in 1943. And It doesn't count the 62,000,000 pounds saved by' Army and Navy. This year the Army and Navy aren't around in such numbers; the men are overseas, using the materials that used cooking fat helps to make. They need plenty of it need it fast That is why the government is asking housewives to redouble efforts scrape, skim and scoop every drop of used cooking fat to re place the Industrial fats and oils formerly Imported from Islands of the Pacific.; I
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Map Shows How Polio Has Struck In Various Parts Of This State
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INFANTILE PARALYSIS in ' INDIANA 1944-1345 3 O O X ;9a bo ooo o O o o
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No one can predict; where infantile paralysis ; will strike -next, it was emphasized today by Dean H. Mitchell, Indiana state chairman of the "March of Dimes" campaign to fight polio. The annual appeal "for funds extends from January 14 to 31 under auspices of county chapters of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis,, which provide year-round assistance for Hoosier polio victims. The map above, prepared by the Indiana office of the national foundation from reports made to they Indiana State Boardt of Health, shows that in 1944 infantile paralysis cases were largely centered in southern Indiana, with Dubois, Floyd, Clark and Vanderburgh counties bearing the brunt of the attack. In 1945, counties north of Indianapolis were hit most heavily, while cases dwindled to a minimum in the southern section: LaPorte ' county jumped from five cases of polio in 1944 to 46 in 1946, and Lake county j experienced a 50 per cent increase last year. In other of the more populous northern counties, Tippecanoe's cases increas ed from seven to 18, Madison's from seven to 14, and Deleware's from zero to 10. Allen county was the exception in the northern group, with 12 cases in 1944 and only two in 194S.
WHEN WORKERS at the Jones and Laughlin Steel plant in Pittsburgh staged a walk-out In advance ol the national steel strike, employes arriving for varying srufts turned away- but left behind their lunches for the men and women ol the picket line. ilnternationai)
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lEN OOOO' O OO o '12000 O. o Bt.flc:i- 1JAY pELAViARE ICS SO 'O 1 wANOOLPIl e OOO OOOO OOO POO jHENRY WAYNE IMARION . IHAr.COCK ooo ee L,0oo ooooorico w gypooo, 'j b O '5 paiaiiveiy spared aespiie me large number of cases in neigh . . j : l . . i - j j boring LaPorte county. "The lesson behind the record," Mr. Mitchell said in urging public support for the "March of Dimes" campaign, "is that each j county should be prepared for j the time when infantile paralysis may strike at its children. I Treatment of infantile paralysis i is expensive and its costs fre- i quently go on for many months after the disease is contracted. The average family cannot bear ; these expenses without severe I hardship." j Half of all funds raised in the "March of Dimes" is retained by. the county chapter for use in aiding nolio victims in th county. The remainder is used by the national foundation for research into causes and treatment of polio, for education, and as a reserve fund from which money is sent to all counties where epidemics occur and local funds are exhausted. : 'SUGAR PROVES SAND TNDT ANA POT .TS 11TP Mpc 7 r lora i ernune wonaerea now sne came by that extra sack of sugar on her shelves. It was only after she had put some of it in her cooking that she discovered her husband had put a sack of white sand in the cupboard. 'WILD HORSES GO ON BLOCK WORLAND, Wyo. (UP) About 700 head of horses, many of them range animals brought in from roundings of wild stock,
"Gigged"
ONE OF THREE American soldiers in Honolulu, who were confined to their quarters as agitation for spefdier demobilization became a court-martial offense in the midPacirlo, Is Master Sgt. Joseph Nahem of Brooklyn, who is shown above. (International) Gen,Short On Stand Shown as he took the stand to. be sworn in as a witness in the! joint congressional investigation into the JaDanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Maj. Gen. Walter C. Short heeins his testimony in Washine-! ton. (International Soundphoto.) DODD BRIDGE Sunday ' School at at. 9:30 7:00 a. m. ' p. m. Prayer meeting Tuesday night. Charles Hardy and Abe Walker were in Terre Haute Monday. Mrs. May Martin and daughter and Miss Barbara Hardy spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Max Woodard and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Wood had as guests Sunday Charles Hauls and Ray Thompson. Mrs. Luvisa Wood was the guest of Mrs. Ida Thompson and Jesse Tnompson one day last week. I Mrs. May Martin called on her sister, Mrs. Ruth Walker last week. LEAVING CIO headquarters in Washington, Philip Murray makes a despairing gesture as he ann:iMnced that a nationwide steel . .vi. i,'e 'must lake place" following 4 I t l. .... . . . i -,-ici i hi puraimn s reject. hi .it Pi'iaidcm Truman's tiim-
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Just BALL BEARING $2.25 Bennett's
"Your Druggist Is More Than A Merchant." Phone 96
ARRIVE FOR TWO-MONTH STAY
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SREAT BRITAIN'S former prime minister, Winston Churchill, and his . wife are shown at microphones in New York after having arrived on the Queen Elizabeth en route to Florida, where they will be guests In the Col. Frank Clark home at Miami. The skipper of Eng. land's wartime government plans a two-month stay in the U. S., with a call on President Truman and a visit to the Hyde Park, N. grave of his colleague, the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt;
inciuaea on his date book, I
Dr.A.B.Libke Wishes to announce the reopening of his office in the Scott Medical Building at 117 '2 W. Washington St. Telephone 747.
' 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 servv ice in the community are necessary before a funeral director can make the best use of his , knowledge of modern methods, facilities,' and service. ' r The Billman organization has served the people of Sullivan and Sullivan County since 1906. : ' .
SULLIVANJND.
Arrived
ROLLER SKATES per pair Pharmacy
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