Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 82, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 24 April 1946 — Page 4
.tKGd FOUR ' ; SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES- WDNESPAY, April 24, 1946
SULTJVAN. INDIANS
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(UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT)
Announces the opening of their Coffee Shop for breakfasts and lunches, z under the supervision of
Breakfasts served from 7-9 A.
Lunches served from 11-1:30 P. M.
tass &;.',
Shrimp Cocktail Hot Meat Dishe
Burger Baskets Delicious Salads
Our Own Special Barbecue Pies and Hotel Rolls
AMPLE PRIZES FOR lfans because of his triumph in SPEEDWAY CLASSIC ! the 1936 Roosevelt Raceway
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., April 24. A cash prize fund of more than $100,000 appears to be assured for the annual 500-mile race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on May 30th as the result of additions today to the lap prize fund and the list of accessory awards. Members of the - Indianapolis Citizens' Speedway Committee have obtained 33 additional sub
scriptions for the lap prize fund, boosting that total to $7,700, and
event.
NEW LEBANON
Lance Lisman of Terre Haute, was the week-end guest of his father, H. V. Lisman. Mr. and 'Mrs. Ernest Stanley of Graysville, visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Bud Shake and daughter.
and Mrs. Lloyd Roberts and sons', Paul and George, of Terre Haute Mr, and Mrs. Bud Mason and son, Herbie, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne' Arnett and daughter, Shirley, Mr. and Mrs. Junior Mason, Mr. and Mrs. Butch Shryock, Miss Kathleen Mason of Indianapolis, Mary Lou and Helen Dean Mason. Mrs. Gertrude Eaton of Robinson, 111., and Mellie Eaton of Terre Haute, were dinner guests Sunday of the former's mother, Mrs. Bertha Pierson.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Pigg and son of Sullivan, visited Mr. and Mrs.
the accessory awards now total jvainus Pigg, Sunday evening.
$22,950 as the result of cash prizes Mr. and Mrs. George Mason ' Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Siner Sunday amounting to $7,100 from the had as dinner guests Sunday, Mr. I evening. . MacMillan Petroleum Corpora- I '
tion. I These amounts, plus the $60,000 ' guaranteed by the Speedway, in- ) crease the present prize total to $90,650 with approximately $15,000 more anticipated. I
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bohmeier and daughter, Sallie Lou, visited
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EUROPEAN CHAMP ENTERS j INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., April 24 Rudolf Caracciola of Switzerland, the automobile racing champion of Europe during the last two years prior to the start of World War II, will make his first bid for victory at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on May 30. j His official entry tlank arrived , at the Speedway office today and he will drive an eight-cylinder Mercedes which Wilbur Shaw believes will be one of the fastest cars ever sent roaring around the two-and-a-half-mile oval. Mrs. Alice Caracciola-Trobeck, wife of the European champion, is listed as the owner of the car and she plans to accompany her husband to Indianapolis. She was a member of Louis Chiron's party when the French pilot took seventh place in a Delage at Indianapolis in 1929, but. "Rudi" will see the local track for the first time when he comes to Indianapolis next month. With Tazio Nuvolari of Italy regarded as a probable entrant, despite the fact that his official entry blank has not yet been received, Caracciola's decision to compete here sets the stage for the most spectacular "race within a race" in Speedway history. They are the keenest rivals in
fr all of Europe and Nuvolari's skill
is known to American .. racing
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' Special Parties and Banquets by Reservation r Evening Meals will be resumed shortly. Watch for announcement. The-Tomlee "Tap Room Mixes Your Fkvorite Drink
wlMr1' Sis
HP FOR YOUR-. REFRESHMENT.
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Vote For Lyman E. Dailey For Sheriff A Veteran of World War II Three years of fighting on the Islands of the Pacific. This ad paid for by veteran friends of "Pete" Dailey
Let's talk chicken
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RIGHT CANNING
METHODS AID WORLD FOOD SUPPLY
U -poi! t oca use :t was iol
proves is so ir.cc;i nod
i
tics on food i?ri;scrvatton. cr ice of such canning, methods' as i oytmDjcd tannine mbiho ni.
f-ab fruits and tomatoes, ' processing open kettle canning; lor XruivS. c"sfully is just as like'v to lave
trartad from th2 world supply, in the boiiirg water bath jivi.j oven canning of foods, and cold wholesale spoilage of fcod as is Even when an individual horn the best finished product, '..'or packing. All are antiquated and ..u beginner.
LAFAYETTE, Ind. -i:. c!'s haye u r .vv tc f to' do 9 v:.h of
:ive!;iari this year.
8d maKer loses only a tow j?.rs o. non-acid ioods pressure cannsr unsafe metnods ot canning, ..i:a j Home food from snoilatr. '.'-e processing is safest, a well as lead to an excels amount of "sibili- quantity let in a community or being a time and fuel saver. AH spoilage. 0"en canning is.ospEC- ( -; . ':. county may be enough to pro-" foods should be canned by :hi tally undssirabls, both because
That is "iJie vide many maals for the hi
j-v of LoU Oberiielmn. peoples in other ' parts of
Purdue Unrverity extension world, nutritionist. Eveiy jnr of home Two methods of canning are canned food that is allowed . to today recommended by authori-
gry hot pack method in which : it leads to more food aroitajjo the food goes into the jar precooked and becaure of the danger Df - and hot. plosion of jars during prossss-
Miss Obcrhelman wt s
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ing. The homemaker who insists
No.v, in adva'ice of the
ring teason, is the tiias to check Mi 'yUa ma tautjiii.t, cauraa Bithod3, and prccir.fj- JtrJ.s tables. Informa'ioji on tLsso subjects ia available from count agricultural extenrion offices or
makers to discontinue the pract- that ihs has always used ihese from Purdue University.
Eased on iha romontie. besf-sellina slarv of one of America's mas exiling wsmen
r BY STOJiiX ILLUSTRATIONS BY F. R. GRUGER
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He held her half-fainiing m his arms.
She placed it in the window ...
IF JDIIN were dead, then for Jessie Fremont all the world was dead. For days, she was numb with anxiety. Then suddenly, it broke. She told them, "I know he is safe." She threw herself into a happy fever of preparation for his return after almost a year on the trail. She had the , house cleaned. A log fire was kept burning in the parlor. Each night she placed her reading lamp in the window As weeks and months went by with still no word, her friends began seriously to fear for her. f In the early morning of August 7, she heard excited voices in the hallway. She put on a robe and went down. ' The old coachman was telling a servant, "I hear pebbles egainst my window ... I look out. There Lieutenant Fremont. He ask can I let him in without I wake the family?" y Jessie demanded, "You say you saw Lieutenant Fre-
Drwirig cnnyrigM, 1948, by Ktrj Future SyndicaU, Inc. Text oopyrisht, 15-14, by Irving Stone. Published by permiiiioa of Daubltd&y, Dora A QovtfWt Is
mont? What time was it? Why didn't you bring him to me?" "It must be three o'clock, Miss Jessie. He say he walk downtown till dawn." , Then she heard the sound for which her ears had been attuned for 14 months; footsteps running up the front stairs; and John was in the hallway. He held her half -fainting in his arms, then carried her to a chair. Jessie's happiness returned in a great rush. The waiting was over now, all the uncertainty gone. Word spread around town almost as fast as though a cannon had been
fired. Friends began thronging into the Benton, home. By eight in the morning it had turned into a, full-scale receps-
You Can't SEE Official Flock Inspection No, you can't . . . but ntale and female birds in all Dillingham flocks are rigidly and thoroughly selected, for ccnstituticnel vigor (the hens for egg production factors) acd ctaadan! bred vaiaes. Official TJ, f. (Put due) laspec tcrs dc Uib job, Only U. 3. Appro? ed eg from U. S, Approved - FuiJcium Controlled breeders are set in our
jrxclriies. Associate Breeders cooperate cn feeding, breed ir.g, sziiiiatfozi and culling. This fine group cf producers and the c".re they t:.ke to mesh with the National Pcuitiy Inpvo vemcr.t o;l;va,l,. give us the '"cretm" ir h::chin3 cjjts. Like bezels iikc; is un old breeding rule bat ifc there! YOU POCKET IN FUTURE PROFITS and eajcy the satisfaction that ccir.e; hero, keeprng fine chickear, Buy quickly while thick prices for U S, Approved vul:o:i;;:i Controlled - Uirdj are at k.v suiamer levels.
Motor Sales Inc.
John told how they had dragged the cannon across the Sierras.
sage she had sent to Kaw's landing telling John to tak v
the trail early. She told about the letter concerning the j cannon. She asked, ?'Did I do right?' " J "Right!" he shouted. "You would have been a fool if you
hadn't. You saved the day for all of us." "Good! What happened to the cannon? Was it valuable?. - OTTT T JV A M PlinMF QO Were you able to bring it back?" OUU.LilV.rVH rnJMEj6
. 3'"Yes and ho: it staved off one Indian attack; we could have survived it, but it might have cost us several men ' We pulled that cannon from Kaw's landing fifteen hundred
miles to the Dalles on the Columbia, then another foui hundred miles through the snow and icy passes going
tion, with people laughing and crying and everybody talk south from Oregon to the east side of the Rockies. We go! ins at once. it halfway across the Sierras, then lost it in snowdrifts 1! .
When they were gone, Jessie explained about the mes- feet high..." ' (Continued tomorrow),
am-
C. O. DILLINGHAM, Prop. '
15 N. Main St. Sullivan. Ind.
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