Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 75, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 15 April 1946 — Page 6
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SULUVAN DAILY TIMES MONDAY, APRIL 15, 1946. SULtLiVAN. INDIANA SHERMAN I teim ILYRIC THRIVING BABY OF POLIO VICTIM ENDS TONIGHT ENDS TONIGHT niectnc MASTEBPIECE OT gale r-m SUSPENSE STORiMGAN
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Plus Color Cartoon - News TUESDAY AND WED.
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OBLIGATION
Plus Color CartoOn - News J
LOCALS
NUSBAUM-IIALL
- Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Nusbaum of Sullivan R. R. 5, announce the marriage of their daughter, Bctte Lou, to Robert E. Hall, son of Joseph Hall of Dugger. The . double ring ceremony was per
formed at the Cass Methodist J church by the Rev. C. W. Oskins, j
f i wviyinQ, a o dJ visit in tha nvncrarmi rf thin. tmtYloniata 1
- v.. bandi EnsiRn J0hn A
Charles D. Hunt "has returned home after a visit in St. Petersburg, Fla. Mr. Hunt came by plane to Indianapolis last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Taylor of Indiana Avenue spent the weekend in Terre Haute the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lowry.
Mrs. Ray 'Barcus spent the week-end in Hoopeston, 111., the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Conley. Mr. and Mrs. Conley are1 former
residents of Sullivan. , Mrs. Eleanor Wyman and son, Billy, Mrs. Sarah Sout and Mr. ' and Mrs. Granville Hendricks are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur jWoodard in Pontiac,, Michigan. Mrs. Mary Jean Lowry Markey
will leave tomorrow for Phila
delphia, Pa., to visit with her hus-
Markey,
who is stationed there. Miss Minnie Mattix has moved into the Nicholson Apartments on North Court St.
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TODAYS MARKETS
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The bride, wore an egg-shell colored dressmaker suit with navy blue accessories. She carried a white Bible topped with gardenias. The Bible was a gift from, a
former roommate in college, Mrs. i
G. E. Oswald, Jr., of Princeton. Mrs. Hall attened Indiana University in Bloomington, where she . was a member of the Alpha Omicron Pi sorority and graduated from Indiana University Training School for Nurses in Indianapolis. ' Mr. TTrtll nttAnHnH TTnnop Tr,;a
College before serving in the U. . Dr- and Mrs. D. B. O'Connor of
S. Army Air Forces. He plans to "VC1"C. "e par-
Pocahontas Club Th Pofahonta" club will be entertained by Freid-T Grepgs nt her home on West Beech Street Tuesday night at seven o'clock. Bring own table service. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT
INDIANAPOLIS, April 15. (UP) Livestock: Hogs, 6,000; active, steady; good , and choice 160 lbs. up and lighter weights, $14.85 ceiling; 100-160 lbs. scheduled $13.25 $14.50; good and choice sows and good stags, $14.10. . I Cattle, 1,900; calves, 600; steers and heifers active, strong; ' good light to medium weight steers, $16.00 $17.00; medium to good, $15.25 $15.75; choice heifers,
$17.00; good and choice, $16.25
$16.50; cows strong; good
cows, $13.50 $14.50; common and
medium, $9.75 $13.25; vealers active, steady; good and choice, $17.25 $18.05. Sheep, 100; quotable steady on fat lambs, 50c higher on slaughter ewes; good wooled lambs, $16.00; good and choice 78-lb. spring lambs, $17.00; wooled slaughter ewes to $8.50; shorn offerings, $6.50 down.
SIX WEEKS after her birth to a paralyzed mother, Leslie Ann Betty ts thriving in Milburn, N. J., faithfully tended above by her 2-year-old uncle, Terry Price, and Tina, his dog. The baby's mother, Mrs. Kichard Betty, had both legs, her left arm and bapk and stomach miHcies paralyzed in an Infantile paralysis attack last August Her
Churns See Them Today COUNTY HARDWARE
Vaughn Jones
SCOTT CITY REVIVAL
fcther is a former Navy man.
SOCIETY
(Tnternatona)
Lesion Meeting Tufscfay Evening The Sullivan American Legion
beef post No. 139 will hold their
regular bi-monthly meeting Tuesday evening at eight o'clock in the Legion Home north of ihe city. Special initiation services will be a highlight of the evening and refreshments will be served. All legionnaires and eligible veterans are invited and urged to attend.
rian Shower For Ex-Soldier, British Bride
resume his studies in September.
Immediately following the ceremony the couple left for a two weeks' wedding trip in Wisconsin. .'.
ents of a son, Donavon Michael,
born March 31st. The, ybungster weighed seven pounds, 13 ounces. The mother was formerly Gladys Rector, daughter of Mrs. . Maude Rector of Sullivan. " - '
A shower will be given Wednesday night, April 17th, at the home of Paul Cleveland, Paxton, R. R. 1, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mounts, Paxton," R. R. 1.
Mr. Mounts, who is the son of the
late Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Mounts, was married to Winifred Deavin in London, England, June 1, 1945, the ceremony occurring at St. Augustine's church. The couple met in Oxford, England, in May 1944 while he was serving overseas and she was serving with the W.A.A.F. in her native country. Mrs. Mounts has recently come to Sullivan county to join her husband. She arrived in New York aboard the Queen Mary on April 4th. Her
WASHINGTON, IND. WOMAN SLAIN, MAN SLASHED Fire-: husband was in the service nearly
men who battled flames in a home at Washington, irid., early Sunday four years and was stationed in
This Mornings Headlines
; far 1 '
-4.
I
A" About that old prescription Dr. Jones
wrote for you two years ago. The bottle is on the shelf in your medicine cabinet, about one-fourth foil. It would be safer for you and your family to discard it. Someone might take it by mistake, or a child may be
attracted to it by the bright color and do himself harm. Many medicines deteriorate after exposure to light and air. On long standing, some compounds change their chemical structure. Yes, the safe thing to do is to throw it away. If illness again overtakes you, see your doctor. Bring his prescriptions to us for accurate compounding. Bennett's Pharmacy A Dependable Drug Store Since 1914 Phone 96
EMU
Veterans of Foreign Wars
Attend the
pedal- Meeting at the CITY HALL Monday Evening, 7:30 April 15
found the charred body of a 46-year-old woman who had been, beaten and burned to death, while a man, 68, suffering from 11 ax
wounds on the head, was discovered near the home in a pool of blood. The woman's body was tentatively identified as that of Mrs. Mildred Morgan. Daviess County Sheriff Alvin C. Armes said a large ciuantitv of kerosene had been poured oyer the body after it - had.
been placed on a davenport in the home. The man was- Arthur Morgan. He is in critical condition in Daviess Hospital. Before laps- ; ing into unconsciousness he was questioned briefly by the sheriff who I quoted him as saying: "I sure made a mess of things." State Patrol-, man Don Smiley said four of the 11 ax wounds sustained by Morgan
penetrated his skull and that the Woman also had a fractured skull. ?'he officer said Morgan, a retired orchardist, had ' been separated rom his wife about a year and that the husband had ' returned to Washington only last Monday after a six-month stay in Oregon.
England four months.
Rev. P. N. Isgrigg is holding
revival services at the Scott City
Pilgrim Holiness church each eve
ning at 7:30. The meetings began Sunday and will continue until
April 28th. Miss Shirley Baldwin is in charge of the singing and O.
W. Spencer is pastor of the church.
INDIANAPOLIS STREET CLEANERS STRIKE AS
CLEANUP WEEK BEGINS
INDIANAPOLIS, April 15 (UP) This city's annual "clean-up week" officially opened today, less than an hour after the employees of the city Street Cleaning Department walked out on a strike. . E. J. Williams, Secretary of the Teamsters' A. F. of L. Union's Local No. 135, said the rtrike , jwould eventually paralize the entire city sani
tation department unless city officials recognized the union as a bargaining unit. Mayor Robert Tyndall said Indiana State Laws prevented a municipality from signing a contract with a labor union. Civic leaders had publiciz- . ed plans for a citywide clean-up campaign for the' past month. The Street Cleaning Department workers were scheduled to begin . special trash pick-up at 7:30, just a half hour before the strike began.
SUGAR PLANT STRIKE AVERTED A strike that would have cut off more than half the cane sugar production in the nation was averted. Edgar L. Warren, chief government conciliator,, announced that representatives of the National and American Sugar Refining Companies reached a wage accord with AFL and CIO unions in midafternoon Sunday. The companies agreed to a 15-cent hourly .increase retroactive in general to February 15 at their plants which are located at Baltimore, Md.; Boston, Mass.; Philaledlphia, Pa., and Long Island, N. Y. .
TEEN AGERS DIE IN PLANE CRASH Robert Carcher, 18, died of burns in a hospital at Rockport, N. Y., the second . victim of a Sunday afternoon airplane crash which also took the life of Mary Wilson, 17. -
SBB OS FOR THE
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U. S..TO RISK RUSS RIFT ON WORLD ISSUES The United States and Britain are approaching a new and probably decisive series of clashes with Russia over the westward extension of Soviet influence. The outcome, officials believe, will affect vitally the political organizations of the world for generations. Two great issues control of the Mediterranean and control of strategic German territoryare shaping up first. Both will figure to some extent in the April 25 Foreign Ministers' meeting at Paris. Neither, it now appears," will be settled there.
SOUTH FORMING BLOC TQ REVISE POWERS OF. OPA Southern senators critical of restrictions on farm products began forming a bloc as the House prepared for a showdown over price contols starting tomorrow. With the . administration playing for its biggest stakes, House action appeared likely to consume most of the week and to produce a somewhat curtailed extension of the price authority that President Truman has said must be kept alive to avoid runaway inflation. - 1
TO PAY
those bills;
. . . Add up your scattered obli
gations, then come in and apply
for a loan so that you can mark them PAID. There's no red tape about getting the money, and the transaction is strictly private. Take as long cs eighteen monihs to repay, on most types of loans. f Come to oar office or pfcone TODAY. .
FIDELITY LOAN COMPANY Up stairs east side square. Sullivan
PRODUCTION AT NEW RECORD PACE-i-The Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion boosted its figures on national production and offered data to support its recent claim of an all-peacetime record. Despite admittedly great gaps in the supplies of manyconsumer goods, officials said first-quarter production actually is estimated at a $154,000,000,000 annual rate and this figure may be. increased as final reports come in.
VANDALS SMASH HOMES IN BUTTE, MONT. One person was wounded and property valued at thousands t of dollars was wrecked Saturday night and early Sunday at Butte, Montana, when apparently organized gangs of hoodlums including some, women, roamed Butte and its suburban areas, terrorizing neighborhoods without check. At least ten private homes suffered damage froirt a few broken windows to uncontrolled invasion 'and smashing of doors, glass mirrors, dishes and furniture in an orgy of lawlessness that has had on parallel in this city of 40,000. Some 3,000 workers have been on strike at Butte copper mines since Tuesday, but picketing has been peaceful and there was no intimation by public officials that the vandalism was related to the strike situation. Sheriff Al McLead told newsmen merely that flawless mobs of young men, teen-agers and women" did the raiding.
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Young People Of Sullivan Attend the Holy Week Service for Youth , Hear Chaplain Maj. Stewart Hartfelter Speak on the theme: "Young People at the Foot of the Cross." Hear William Krach of Terre Haute, sing two beautiful songs. "InPrayer," "He That Keepeth Israel" First Presbyterian Church Tuesday Night At 7:30 This meeting is especially for Young People and sponsored by the Young People of the First Presbyterian Church.
