Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 75, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 15 April 1946 — Page 4
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TAGlfi FOUR iff
SULLIVAN PAILY TTME3--M0NDAY, APRIL 15, 1946."
SUI1IVAN. INDIANA
M. J. Aikin & Son FUNERAL HOME Dugger "Aikln's Service Costs No
Former Sullivan (Continued from Page 1)
New Discovery In A Hearing Aid
the war but by .that time his squadron was practically inactive. One week later his group
was transferred new field with
ways. They never got to use it in the war against Japan.
Casablanca they were flown to ing a plane directly over our Cairo where they stopped over, heads, 'is a P-61.' About that for two or three days. While at ; time the plane over our heads Cairo, Keller took the opportune . cut loose with a load of bombs." ity to visit the pyramids there. The Japanese bombers killed a The fighter group's next stop couple of . Chinese working in was Abadan, Iran, where they the rice paddies at the end of the were once more delayed for two runway and damaged a few
to a beautiful days. They were supposed to ily planes parked on the field.
5,000 foot run- on to Karachi, India, but it was
at the beginning of the Monsoon searon and the city was "under
IOWAN SLAYS FOUR IN HIS FAMILY i
Keller's group was now rent as replacements to the fields in
OJB unP'uvemeui iias ucci. in August of 1944 with el.2v.2n made in a hearing aid now wel-othcr p.40 piIots of om fom corned by thousands. Accepted by were killed and two injured. the Council on Physical Medicine They were transportpd by the of the American Medical Assort- Transport Command in a ation. It is a new hearing aid that cs4 Bcross Atlantic, taking does not require separate, battery off from Miami( Florida and pack, battery wire, battery case landing at Casablanca. From
down. So small it fits in the hand. The tone is clear and powerful. So made that you can adjust- it yourself to suit your hearing as your hearing changes. The makers of Beltone, Dept. 3322, 1450 W. 19th Street, Chicago 8, 111., are so proud of their achievement that they will gladly send free descriptive booklet and explain how you may get a full demonstration of this remarkable hearing device in your own home
Beftone today. (Adv.)
water" so they had to wait until 1 the China Theater. Keller had
WOMEN! WHO SUFFER FIERY MISERY OF
Tf t.hfi functional "middw-afre
pcrioH peculiar to women ctiuit s you to suffer from hot flashes, nervous tension, irritability try famous Lydia E, Pinkuam's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. Pinkham's Compound is one of the best known medicines for this purpose. Also a grand stomachic tonic I
i i , ,, " ii ri ii imiiiiwii mill "I T-1' .1 IIIJIIHJI1 IMpWMiliMM.,-"J.lf.IIM - im-i .7,?.iaftf-
the plane dried out.
At Karachi they were issued P-51 fighter planes and remained there for three months before they were isruad new P-51's vo fly into China. On the way to the hump the flyers 'stopped at Agra, India, where one of the pilots "knocked a landing gear off his plane. This accident gave the American pilots a chance to visit the famous Taj Mahal.
The group of P-51's set down '
at Mohanbari, the last stop before the flight over the hump into China. They flew into Kun- i ming, China, just in time to catch ' the first Japanese raid on the ! field in almost a year. The Japanese came ovsr at night while tie sir was filled with transport planes. The pilots of these transport!-, some of them prac- j tically out cf gasoline, tried to get down and. w?re ordered i away into the mountains. The j field was protected by P-61's ' (night fighters) but they were :
been trained to fly P-40's in -tfie
States, had been transported io India where he was issued a P-51 to fly to India, and now he found himself assigned to a P-47 group "sitting alerts," or . protecting the home base, on a B-29 bombing squadron. Keller moved to Sian, the farthest north of all American bases in China, in February, 1945. The squadron's main duty here was to attack enemy transportation. The P-47's would take off in groups of four, loaded with gasoline and ammunition, and strafe any Japanese locomotives they caught on the ' rails. The Japs ffnally were losing so many engines that they did all their railroading at night and pulled the trains into well protected yards during the day time. To overcome this the P-47's had to take off at three or four o'clock in the morning with 600 or so gallons of gasoline and a full load of ammuni-
SULLIVAN AMERICAN
LEGION POST No. 139 will hold its regular bi-monthly
Meeting Tuesday Evening 8:00 P. M. In The Legicn Home North Of The City
swux.i&miijM hums m--j J-v-sty--ai'a)fcir
unable to pick up the invaders I llon- lnese missions cover -d as because of the confusion, much as 900 t0 1200 miles "lnd . I lasted five and six hours. Despite "Over in our trench,"- says the night manuever of the Tps Keller, "There was a fellow ex- the American fighters were bagpounding how well he could ging about a dozen supply trains
detect enemy planes by the ; a day.
I round of their motors. 'They 'sound ju:t like a washing machine motor. They're easy to tU from our planes. That one up there, for instance,' indicat-
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REPAYMENTS ARRANGED TO FIT INCOME
Security Loan Co.
Upstairs N. Side Oakley Bids.'
The biggest "rjripe" of the fighlev pilots in Chiii.T was :"ood.
I All the -food had to be cooked. They could not cat any 'resh food at all for foar of dysentary. I Their focd was prepared by Chinese cooks and was a far cry from the meals they got in the States. The pilots would find beautiful, tempting peaches in the Chinese cities and could hot resist buying them. On the way back to thb fisld, however, they were likely to find adeder
4- f I Arf$ t -4 ; :M s m " ' -ij l VK v UJ1 ?v , $ v. t s ( -"-4 t i I ? t 4 x s w V 1
Ucjuld Tablets Salve
Noee Drops ..... Used by millions lot years Works Great works last Caution, Us only cs dree'ed
Today's Traffic Tip (Distributed by United Press) Heed your speed! A speed violation is reported in about one out of every three fatal traffic accidents. The faster you go, the longer it takes to stop and the harder you bit when you don't. Get the slow-down on safety. National Safety Council.
24 HOUR f Taxi Service Call 470 BUS DEPOT CAFE
LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY!
WITHOUT EXERCISE
Toke of? weight each week. Eat plenty. No
fj drugs. No
fives.
Don't wear voursell
out with exercises Don't pive tin all "
I "J the looas you likt
Eat plenty not too much. In clinical lists undrt the direction of medical doctors more than 2ffl persons lost 14 to 1 b lbs. average in a few weeks time with the AYDS Vitamin Candy Reducing Plan. Try the AYDS Vitamin Candy way your6df. j0 day supply, 42.25. Phone or call at
BENNETT'S:
PHARMACY Since 1914.
"A STRONG BANK" Where You Can Bank With Absolute Safety Where You Can Borrow Money At The Lowest Interest Rates We Can Save You Money On Good Sound Loans A 6,500,000.00 Bank Is Here To Serve You. Sullivan State Bank Safe Since 1S73 Serving Sullivan County 71 Years Without Loss To A Customer. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
fife-: : : a A-aftx?: jiaaad
"GOD HAD ORDERED ME TO KILL MY FAMILY," said William C. Irwin after hacking to death his wife, mother and two sons, John, 8, and Henry, 5, in the front yard of their Des Moines, la., home. Handcuffed and shackled, Irwin is shown awaiting treatment for a gun wound in his leg, received in a neighborhood gun duel before police captured him. Lower picture was taken -as ambulance attendants picked up the body of Mrs. Irwin. (International)
rm.
PUBLIC
SALE
O 1
Si flpeer r ale
And ivlieat alone can solve the problem of feeding the world's hungry
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XictuaUy wheat has never Been a large item in the brewing process only f the entire U. S. wheat crop waa used in 1945j In accordance with United States Governmcnt policy, the brewing industry has used no wheat whatever since March 1, 1946. OTHER MATERIALS CUT 30 ": The other grains used have been reduced bv 30-that is, to 70 of the 1915 amount. Wheat alone can solve the problem of feeding the hungry. The grains to which the industry is now restricted, are of a variety and grade not normally consumed by the people of the world as food. LESS BEER AND ALE Altogether, the brewing industry 'is using 30
less materials than in 1945. This results in a proportionately lower production. But since the current demand for beer and ale is about 25 greater than a year ago, the real shortage is nearer 50. J Consequently your dealer will not be able to supply you wilh all the beer and ale you would like. We know you will understand the reason for this. ( ., I Your,' attention is earnestly directed to the recommendations of President Truman's Famine Emergency Committee which are summarized in the box below. . . if.This statement teDs in clear, simple terms
what each of us individually can do to help
.1 .i "iSi
ourmg tnej emergency. j
What the President's Famine Emergency Committee i asks us all to do
. 1. Save and share wheat and fet products Go light on all foods that take wheat, fats and oils save breads, macaroni,. cakes, cookies; pastries and deep-fried foods. Use drippings for pan-frying. Save salad oil use boiled dressings; 2. Buy and serve more plentiful foods ; i ; Balance diets with the piore plentiful foods, such as potatoes, f resh f 'ruits and vegetables: , 3. Waste NO food . . ; Press up today's leftovers for tomorrow. Makeyevery crust count with mdba toast. crumb.tanninesi tuvnit ni,Mn nml
stuffings. Take no mqre than you can eat. Qean your plate. TurwM UniLSnUp fnt xnlinao nrnninlhr t
UNITED STATES " BREWERS FOUNDATION
washing his supply of peach as in a stream tliat was being used for a bathing place a little upstream. Farther up the pilots might find a dead body lying at the waters edge. All manner of filth floated in the Chinese rivers.
ning on graduate work this :"all with the alternate goal of becoming a personal manager. EXLINE COKNLR
, Brown was in
Mrs. David
Dugger Monday. Mrs. Ernest Edds went to Terre Haute Tuesday. Mrs. George Young was in Linton Saturday.. ' David Houston was in Linton Saturday. Mrs. Esther Brown and daughter visited Mrs. Alexander
The dead body is no figment of the imagination. "Life is China is very cheap." Keller' explains. "One can find old people straggling along th'2 rood as though they were about to topple over. Often you see the body of some
old man or woman that had gone Brown Monday.
as far as he could. They just get i Mrs. George Young visited off to the side of the road and, Mrs. Joe Ran.ard Friday evening. die." The Chinese let the bodies lie where they fall and eventual- :
ly, after about a week, . they dkapear. Keller enlisted in the Air Corps in July of 1942 but was hot called until February, 193. He got back to the United States in Ssptcmber of 1945 and cccived his discharge on January 1. 1046. He re-entered Franklin Ccllego for the sprinn semester. ,
Quit paying- rent fcnd own jam home. Special bargains oa property on Installment plan. Also farms for sale, W. T. MELLOTT
I will offer for sale at Public Auction at my farm, miles south of Faimersburg on U. S. 41, the follow
ing personal property beginning at 11:00 a. m., on Wednesday, april n 1 Corn Planter; 1 Wheat Drill; 1 Rotary Hoe; 1 8-foot Harrow; 1 Walking Plow; 1 Mowing Machine; 1 Wagon and Rack; 1 Iron Wheel Wagon; 1 Cultipacker; 1 Sulky Rake; 2 Water Tanks; 2 Water, Tank Heaters; 1 Pump Jack; 1 set Tug Harness; 2 Horses, smooth mouthed; 1 Shorthorn Cow, 8 years old; 2 Shorthorn Cows, 7 years old; 1 Guernsey Cow, 6 years old ;1 Guernsey & Angus Cow, 5 years old; 1 Jersey & Angus,' 4' years old; 1 Guernsey Heifer, 2 years old, to freshen soon; 1 Shorthorn Bull; 8 head of Shoats; 1 Universal Single Unit Milking Machine; 5 Hog Troughs; some Household Furniture and other articles too numerous to mention. TERMS CASH Not responsible in case of accidents! PAUL R. MITCHELL, Owner EMJ'ETT 'HARRISON, Auctioneer Luneli served by Ebe.ezer Ladies Aid
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He first entered college hero in the fall of 1940. He 1 as served as president of his "ntrnitv
(Kappa Delta Rho), war- a m:m-
ber of the debate team, was ,n member of the- intar-frx'niity council, won two major letters in varsity baseball, was elected eenior clas: president et the beginning of this sewerter and wa; recently tapped for Blue :!Cv, men's honorary , fraternity.. An economic? major, Keller is plan-
Envoy From Russia
M
oior Freight Corporation Wishes To Announce
NG OF A TERMINAL
IN
i. t K "if I i i , ' -w : v ' ' " a-l x Ik f , j P i U 1 rv ?Z S ' '
'4 XL 41
RUSSIA'S new ambassador to Washington, Nikolai V. Novikov, above, succeeds Andrei A.
! Groymko ?ho has been appointed
I Russia's permanent UNO reprei .eeiiSatiye. (InternatieBil)
EFFECTIVE APRIL 8th And The Appointment Of GILES TRANSFER
As Their Agent PHONE 355 To .better serve our local receivers and shippers ef freight. FOE BETTER SERVICE, ONE LINE, DAILY TO OS FFOM CHICAGO, EVANSVILLE, INDIANAPOLIS, TERRE HAUTE and VINCENNES, ROUTE YOUR ORDERS:
otor Freight Corp'
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