Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 81, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 23 April 1946 — Page 4
SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES- TUESDAY. APEIL' ?3, 1946. SUELTVAN. INDIANA
SATJfl FOUR
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Breakfasts V4
Shrimp Cocktail Hot Meat Dishes
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Evening Meals will be resumed shortly. Watch for announcement. The Tomlee Tap Room Mixes Your Favorite Drink
IF YOU WERE STARVING WOULDN'T YOU? HOME Buy only snough bread to meet family needs and 122 every slice? Save just l.a!f a rli.-r ": j.read a day? (The National daily serving cf half a :nilliotf Suncb would be actomplis'uod) Save bread bv carbohydrate foods in its lacc? (Ore potato's food alus is etc'ut, equal ,to a .dizc j." oread) Sava fab by serving :'evr.r fried foods? Use thos? few extn slices of bread in casserole .'lislics, croquettes and d:sert3 !.nslcful of throwing them in -Je garbage? r FARM 'aye ' feed hy r.r'keVrz i"'C tcck lit "i eter .eights? fh,- hepvier the :.nini:il, -.he flower the raie of fjain .Cor ised fad.) Keep only the producers? (Cullout the 1 cn that-doesn't lay dispo-e of ih3 :aargir.l c'airv cow.) ' RFMEMF r-- busr-d of wheat will provide reveii -ms as much food when ?d to people as when fed io j v-.-str-W. "1 , PELTA THETA "JOIfJ. THE FUN! -
Announces the opening of their Coffee Shop for breakfasts and lunches, under the supervision of
served from 7-9 A.
SALAD
Special Parties and Banquets by
TOWN CLOGS. DAE&ENED MILTON. Pa (tJF) The town clock has little value after nightfall, unless the Borough Council changes the budget by-laws Lights of the big timepiece located in the steeple of the Firsl Presbyterian Church, were orC -red extinguished by church 'officials, who said Council refused td contribute toward upkeep. The budget makes no provision for that sort of thing, Council said. American housewltes eared pproximfttely 170,614,000 pounds of oed cooking fat in 1944. Ttiat la almost double the mount saved in 1943. And it doesn't count the 52,000,000 pounds iavwd t7" Army nJ Navy. . i; This year tho Army and Navy art-D'i around in such numbers; Uio men are overseas, using tlie materials that used cooking fat helps to make. They need plenty of i i need It fast That is why the government Is asking housewiVes to redouble ieforts scrape, skim and scoop every drop of used cooking fat to replace the Industrial fats and oils formerly tmportedfrpmJsla&ds of tis.Paciflc.J' TAU SORORITY $1.80 PER COUPLE
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Burger Baskets Delicious Salads
Acs Missing ' I THE RAF has opened a search fori James Mollison, above, noted Brit-J ish aviator, who has been report-j ed missing on a flight from Cairo to Karachi, India. Mollison, who' made the solo flight across the North Atlantic from Europe to, th8 U: S. in 1932, has made record-breaking flights from England to Australia, England to Cape Town and - England to South America. (International)
Lunches served from 11 -
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Our Own Special Barbecue Pies and Hotel Rolls
Reservation INDIANAPOLIS, April 23. (UP) Livestock: ' ' I Hogs. 9,500: bulk good and choice butchers sealing 100 lbs. and above, $14.B5; low good 100IS0 lbs. scheduled $13.25 $14.50; good and choice sows and good stags, $14.10. Cattle, 1,500; calves, 400; steer "and heifer- trad2 active; liberal share 25c to 35c higher for two days; advance mainly on average Cod grades; choice weighty steers, S17.00; top good and choice, $17.00 $17.25; good light to me dium weight offerings, $10.25 -$l'j.65; .v.o loads 'good heifers, $16.00 516.2.5; cows steady; jgocd beof cows, $34 59 $15 00; com. mon and medium, S3.7j $13.25; bulk good, $13.50 $14.30; vealers active and .. steady, good . and "choice, $17.50 $18.05. Sheep, 200; fat lambs opening around 50c ljwer on meager jiipply; .lau2hter ewes steady; good "to low choice wocled Jambs, ,$15.50 $18.00; common and medium offerings, $12.50 $14.50; medium to good shorn lambs, $12.00 $12.50; good and choice wool?d slaushter ewes. $8.00 00 $9.00.
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1:30 P. M. V (1 fe ! hn STATE'S GENERAL FUND HITS RECORD INDIANAPOLIS, .April 23 j (AP) The stat auditor's office announced that on March SI tne Indiana general fund totaled $62,003,725.71, the largasf in iha ! state's history. On March 31, 1945, the :!ur.d was. $35,452,863.53 and the votol in May, 1940, was a little move than $19,000,000, W. A. Owens, assistant auditor, .reported. The preMrit general :rund m'rcludes an unappropriated surplus of $31,139,322.92 and unexpended appropriations of $14,403,069.14. Owens said approximately $12,000,000 of the total would ba paid out in July, the beginning of the new fiscal year, for Luition support of local i:hool units.., Tbe previous .ajl-tiirf H1balance in the general fund was in Jjur.e, 1943,. when the state had $37,000,000.. OLU TUG SgKVES AGAIN .'. NEW ORLEANS, Echo, a Ftearri tug (UJ?5 Th! relic of Tne hiahmasted tailing "vessel cn has been put into service on .he Missisanpi River. .Originally taken to Mobile, AI3., in 1882, the lOQ-foot-long Echo was chased by a New Orleans :urirm and returned here for new and returned here for new ser i vice.
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This Morning's Headlines FOOD DRIVE MAPPED FOR INDIANA Salvation of the world's starving millions now facing famine death will be the aim of one of the most intensive drives in Hoosier historyUnder direction of a state organization, Indiana will be organized down to sub-divisions of its 92 counties to appeal for gifts of foods to relieve the hungry abroad. The food Indiana residents save will be picked up in one of the most extensive house-to-house collection drives ever staged. May 12 has been set as a tentative date for the collection a particularly significant date since it also is Mother's Day in the United States. The mothers of America will be asked to remember the sufferings of mothers overseas whose children are tortured by hunger and malnutrition.
DEATH OF JUSTICE STONE IS SHOCK President Truman said last night that he was "shocked" at the "grievous loss" to the nation in the death of Chief Justice Harlan F. Stone, according to a dispatch from NBC Reporter David Brinkley, aboard the cruiser Princeton in the Atlantic, where Mr. Truman is witnessing naval maneuvers. Chief Justice Stone, 73, died last night of a cerebral hemorrhage a few hours after he had been stricken ill on tne bench of the Supreme Court. His ailment had originally been diagnosed as "a small attack of indigestion."
EX-SUITOR WOUNDS GIRL, KILLS SELF A 26-year-old Wells County, Indiana, man shot and critically wounded his 19-year-bld former sweetheart last night and then killed himself, Sheriff Samuel Gray of Deleware County reported. Sheriff Gray identified the dead man as Kenneth Fear of Nottingham, and the wounded girl as Betty Jean Tatman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Tatman of near Selma, Ind. The shooting occurred in the kitchen of the Tatman home.
EXPRESS STRIKE LOOMS THURSDAY Representatives of 65,000 members of the A.F.L. Brotherhood of Railway and Steamship Clerks throughout the nation asked Grand President George M. Harrison, Cincinnati, to call a general strike against the Railway Express Agency at 12:01 A. M. Thursday.
DIVERT COTTON YARNS TO government launched a three-way of a 50 per cent increase in output
freeze order restores a yartime control which had been dropped last
August. It is being revived "to check a 13 per cent drop in yarn output during the past year." j . CPA said its new yarn freeze will assure fabrics for such cotton ; items as shirts, shorts, pajamas, dresses and work clothing. In ad. I dition, the agency said, it is designed to help provide cotton materials used in men's suits and in hosiery, underwear, shoe fabrics, zipper tapes, furniture fabrics, webbings, fish nets, tire cord, to- 1
bacco cord, cotton duck, corduroy, nets, rubberized fabrics and shpe
ASKS MINERS. PRODUCE COAL FOR UNRRA Fiorello LaGuardia, director general of UNRRA, asked idle coal miners and operators to produce 500,000 tons a month for countries being aided by his organization. He made his request "in the name of suffering humanity."
U. S. PLANE ESCAPES RUSS BULLETS Four fighter planes said to have been piloted by Russians fired on an American C-47
transport as it came in for a landing at Tulln Airfield near Vienna .vesterdav. but the Diane lanripd withnnt
, r : - . . said to be the second time in two Soviet fired on American planes.
United States headquarters immediately lodged a protest with '
, Soviet authorities, who sent a liaison officer to Tulln to investigate.
"David Copperfleld," produced In 1850, is said to be Charles Dickens' favorite among his own works. Dickens was born in 1812, and died in 1870. The ears of the western mule deer are 8 inches long and well covered with hair. It gets Its name because of these large ears. The first time the U. S. Congress met in Washington, D. O, was the second session of the sixth Congress, Nov. 7, 1800. Economist Dead LORD KEYNES, above, . noted Brit-' ish economist, who was credited, with playing an important part in influencing Roosevelt's governr m3nt spending policies, died at his country home in Sussex, Engiana, after siiff ering a heart attack. The 62-year-old head of the British delegation to' the world monetary conferences, had just returned to Britain from the international monetary meeting In Savannah, Ga, (International),
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DANCING from 9:00
MEET LOW COST NEEDS The program to help achieve its goal
of inexpensive clothing. A spindle sewing thread, toweling, laundry laces. w v ""t)V v vupuciitiUiS, ii yv CI 3 days that aircraft presunfed to be .. ' 1 SOCIETY D. A. R.. Meeting Postr imed The April meeting of the D. A. R. will not be held Thursday, (t has been postponed until May 23. HUMAN RACE MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP) Do psople believe in signs? "No, uays Memphie police. When the traffic bureau here was moved, police erected a four-by-three-foot sign in .front I of police station. Persons entering the station had to walk a- ' round the rign, which reported the bureau's location in letters 1 four inches high. I The first day, 126 persons walked around the sign, into -he station and asked where .h? traffic bureau was located. FATHER RETURNS HONOR j WHITE RIVER JUNCTION, Vt. (UP) Back in 1319, Wilmer Aogc'l of Randolph came here to m::et his father on the-lattar's return from naval service in World War I. The othe; day the father cams here to meet son, Wilmer on -,ic latter's return from service in World War II. KEETJJCZ1T KONOSS P. D. R. FRANKFORT, Ky. (UP) Kentucky ir the- first ititfe to make Jan. 30, birthday of th ' n !: -id liooeviU, a' lvgal holiday. V measure setting the day aside was passed during the 1940 session of the legislature. ROLLS CUT TJIS BAESEL j ROCKLAND, Me. (UP) A store window the latest thing in men's ruits a new barrel, complete with hat, tie and gay suspenders.
to 12:00 P.M.
RIOTING ITALIAN PRISONERS THREATEN TO HANG HOSTAGES
MILAN, Italy, April 23 Holding army and police units at bay with light machine guns and erenaripr 2 500 rintins nrisoners in Milan's huge Vittore Jail ( threatened last night to hang A during the 24-hour-o!d revolt. ported dead and 25 others wounded as soldiers and police laid siege to the convict-held 1 jail. Carabiniere were reported en route from Turin, to help quell the riot. Prisoners eet fire to the jail and smoke curled from the roof as soldiers and police ' patrolled the area in light tanks and armored cars. During the day scattered shots were fired by the police against the barricades thrown up. by the rioters, who were reported to have seized enough ammunition and food to hold out for several days. Cardinal Shuster, archbishop of Milan, whose aid was sought by the prironers, replied that .their petitions should be directed to the government. Prisoners had asked him to arrange for I the release of political internees, dismissal of the jail manager and ' suppression of press reports on the riot. . FACTOGRAPHS iK James DeLancey, born in-New York in 1703, was an American jurist. He was educated in Cam-1: . bridge, England, and admitted to; ' the tngnsn par. He returned to V New York in 1729, and was one of the founders of King's college, now Columbia university. Charles Darwin, greatest English naturalist of the 19th century, was intended by his father for the church, but hereditary tendencies toward natural history led him in another direction, The South American electrlo eel has been studied for many years by the New York aquarium, and it is known to give as much as 450 volts of electricity, One of the most peculiar fishes known is the leaf fish, bo called from its leaf-shaped body. It is native of the tropical fresh waters of South America, ' The etiinca diet is not from I Guinea, arid is not a pig. It is a South American cavy, distantly related to the rabbit. ' ,A small British Island off the coast of Damaraland, German Southwest Africa, is named Roast Beef island, Money in circulation In the U S. rose from seven billion in July, 1939, to 20 billion In April, 1945.. ' ,j 9 9 9 i "Intoed" means having the toes turrtd Inward. WINNING BETS UNCLAIMED BOSTON bettors at (UP) A number of Massachusetts rac trackr were too hasty la tearing I up their iickets. ' State aud'Vr Thomas J. Euck-i ley announced that a total . of $399,197 in unclaimed winning vere on the books. He recom-L rnonded that the money be turn-i ed over to the state treasury. PEANUT CHARGE VANCOUVER, B. C. (UP) As for its importance, this story peanuts, but:' Vancouver police arrested Mike Vida and charged him with steal in? from a department store recently. I His loot consisted of two packages of peanuts worth 25 cents. LAW DAT BACK AGAIN COLU?.IE!A. Mo. (UF) La"f' Day, a four-year v;artime casualty at th? University of Missouri, wilt" be resumed with a program April?1 2G and 27. About 500 persons ar$" expected to attend the sessions,1 including most of the federal. slate and circuit judges in the1 slate. EAHTKS - ADULTS CHAUFFEURS 3 for 23c 10 No. Main Smllivan ...... fc;
FRIDAY,. APRIL 26TH SEMI - FORMAL
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Musk By Fred Cisck and His Orchestra
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