Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 100, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 20 May 1946 — Page 6
PAGES SDL
SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES MONDAY, MA? 20, 1946. SULLIVAN. INDIANA WOULD STAY WITH LEPER-WIFE Fire - ENDS TONIGHT TONIGHT THRU THURS.J '...lit WWbasters
lJlus Cartoon & News TUES. & WED. - Come Early -
Hockey vs. Hollywood! 'Back To Civvies.' .ITTFRUY DISCHARGES r.iTn T'rrnpTrnv. Ti-d'a"a. Mfn' ?0 Amnrttr Tnrliana men di :ffiarffpl nt the' Atlerbury Sens, ration? Ceqtep. Thursday, May Ifith wa: : Pf t Enice H. Brown, Thomas Walters- Shelburn. -V ' ppprp t jirirc Air""1; parons id,h,i,ed from M ppvgL 5P"vi"e Mav 16, 1946 at tHe "ertrr whose homes are in Indiana were: , Rodman E. Stanley, S 1c, R. 1,'Merom. V .. . ' Earl T. Osburn.SF 3c, R. 2, Shelburn, ?.. Ivan L. Alexander,, SM 3c; R. 1, Sullivan. '." V.TVEN DISd'ARGK T-TPrinn Ralph Trent, MoMM3'p, son nf Mr., and Mrs. Charles,Trent of Sfmdbnrri, fnd. arrivedTnpsrfnv. May 1 with an honorable discharge after having served two years on an LCT in. the South Pacific. -; On May H. Sgt. Ralph E. H-am received his discharge at; Camp Beala. California after serving almost twenty-three months in the Army. The former Sergeant was in charge on his shift of all motor vehicles of the Post Motor Pool of Camp Stoneman. Cali-f'W-ia, the San Francisco Port of Embarkation. .'Upon discharge, Mr. Ham was offered his same job back as a y - Tinr, ..ii mn rnrrrn
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JEAN ROGERS sT - &F 'V -v, - - I PlusNews & Cartoon ' " ' 'V" 1 1111 1 W MWMMMMOUWMMUM
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COLEMAN 720 No. Section St. Sullivan, SYMBOL of SERVICE
n n n p f r U U U I I il WkVTtiT n ft II I It tim tAmn feffear'f ! cv'War. "B'i? v wife.' ti e forfYiei Edith Huff of Turmsn Townshiu, 'alo is .employed at the carnp r.s j accounts clerk , of. -pll incoming ;and outgoing food for the troops I of thecarrrp.-, v ' v-; 1 Thy are making their home at 136 West Fourth Street, Pijts- . burg,; Cat? fornia . Within" "a '' few months, they are coming back to Sullivan County to make their home near their parents, Mr. and is.- Fred Ham of It. R. 5 and Mr.' and Mrs. Elihu W. Huff, of V... R. 2. -? f HOSPITAL NOTES Admitted Mav 17: Mrs. Coleman Nash 'of 217 West Wolfe Street. Admitted May IP: Mrs. 'Alice Burns of 11 North State Street. '" Admitted May ISv Laurel Whitman of Sullivan, R. 4; Samuel Ferguson of Dugger; George Kearney, Jr., of 314 West Giles Street; Mrs. ' Paul Tlncher of Indianapolis'. v i ' Dismi sed May 17: Roy Ulrich of Paxtcm; Mrs. Phillip Stoelting of Oaktown; James Daniels r f i Dugger; Mrs. Howard Laughlin I and sort of Shelburn; Mrs. Vir- ' ginia .Eaton of 334 South Main Street.' Dismissed May 18: Tv'.'rs. Charles Hamilton of Carlisle, R. 2; Mrs. Clara Branson of Hymera: Mrs Gail Ammerman and daughter of Dugger: Mrs. Arthur Wolverton ana aaugnter ot nutsonville, Illinois. Dismissed May 19: Mrs. Arthur Nash of Paxton; Mrs, Charles Haughton of Indianapolis. A TYPE A"? SIZE 0l VftY Mrh NASH Indiana Phone 875 MARK of QUALITY
I Famed Actor lh
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WILLIM S. HART, famous two;guh star of the silent screen westerns, is seriously ill at his ranch near Hollywood where he lives in seclusion. Hart, 73, has. been ailing for months. (International) RIGHT (HAND)
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WHSN he tried to slug 71-year-old Superior Court Judge Homer E. ' Sackett, left, In Gary, Ind., court, Virgil Underwood, 35,' right, a , tavern operator, failed to reckon. with the good, right-hand of the jurist and as a result Underwood was floored twice. The judge then floored him again when he gave him a 90-day jail sentence for contempt of court . : , r . (International) ,
HUG AND KISS
BECAUSE tliey objected to Director Albert Lewin forcing them to wear corsets in the picture, "Bel Ami," these live glamor gals of the screen picketed their Hollywood studio dressed in the scanty costumes shown. The girls ar left to rieht, Suzanne Ridgway. Judy Cook, Darleen De Mos, Norma Brown and Marie .Wilson , . Qntemtipnall
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COUNTY HARDWARE Yaturhn Jones (Couuiiut-o iroi'i i-hlv One; all want to thank the Democrats of the State for ths honor Vhey have conferred upon me and the ornort.nr'iry tl ey have given to me to serve the Party which I pledge to do with ieleiitless , devotion.. "It shall be my sincere purpose to unite our forces and to welcome every Democrat and every ppon in the tate who desre iaffiliate with the progressive and constructive program o$ , tne Democratic Party'. ": ' "I want to make it very clear at the; outset that as State Chair-, man I" shall insist that our plat-' form 'to be adopted at the com-1 ing state convention shall go on record in no uncertain terms in divorcing politics from the beer and liquor business in Indiana IS MIGHT, TOO MAY BE OKAY, BUT
HERO of the Bataan "death march," Maj. Hans G. Hornbostel awaits . . word from Washington for an answer to his plea that he be permitted to spend the rest of his days with his wife, Gertrude, in leper colony. Mrs. Hornbostel, who married the veteran of two wars 33 years ago, contracted the disease while a prisoner of the Japanese in the Philippines. Mrs. Hornbostel, shown with her mate in San Francisco, awaits transfer to colony at Carville, La. (International
and that the platform further declares that our Party go on record as favoring legislation so positive in its meaning that there can never again be the slightest chance of any connection between these forces and government. "I want further to declare that the state convention will be an open convention at which fiy Democrat or his friends will be free to enter his name in the convention for any of the offices to be nominated. It will be use less for any aspiring candidate to ack that I as State Chairman or the state organization use our position to nominate. him or; to block out ' any other person desirous of a nomination. "T sall bend every effort to heal all Party differences and I shall continuously endeavor to keep the Party in the hands of the people and trulv representative of the -Four Freedoms and the other humani'carian 'principiss so valiantly foupht : for by Hir late beloved President, Franklin Delano Roosevelt." . The district leaders adopted n resolution praising Bays. It i-ead in part: , "That -. the Democratic , state central ' committee express its sincere regret at losing such a faithful and able executive, and hereby extend to Fred F. Bays our 1 deep --appreciation for his splendid' service, his keen terest, Im never faille -petard for the high principles which we stand committed to carry on, and the effective and efficient manner . in which he conducted the responsibilities of his office." LOCAL WOMEN NAMED , Four .new -district chairmsn and seven vice-chairmen were elected, at the district meetings throughout the statte last week. Those named in the Seventh District were: A. B. Taylor, one-time Vincewries mayor, and Miss Telia Haines of. Sullivan were renamed chairman . and vice-chairman. , Mrs. Eleanor Jamison of Sullivan was named secretary and Patrick O'Hern of Lintoji treasurer1. NOT SQUEEZING
DESCRIBES HOW THE
WILD POPPY BECAME MEMORIAL FLOWER How the wild poppy of France and Belgium became the memorial flower of America's dead of the world wars was described by Mary Parks, Poppy Chairman of Sullivan Unit of the American Legion Auxiliary, as the Unit went forward with preparations for observance of Poppy Day here May 25. "Amid the drsolation of the war," said she, "the poppies were the one touch of nature's beauty that survived. The little red flowers grew along the trenches and shell holes, and over the raw fearth of the battle graves. In -.he minds of the men fighting there, the poppies became associated with their dead comrades. "Expression was given to this sentiment by Colonpl John McCrae, Canadian medical officer, in his immortal poem, with its lines: " 'In; Flanders fields the poppi&s blow, Between the crosses 'row on row ' 1 . "Replicas, of the Flanders field poppy W.ere first worn in America in honor of the war dead in 1918, and the wearing of these flowers on the Saturday before Memorial Day soon became a nation-wide custom. The poppy is also the memorial flower of Great Britian and is worn throughout the British 1 Empire Armistice Day.! "When the second world war began claiming American lives, the poppy, quite naturally,' became the symbol of these rdded sacrifices for the nation. The largest part of the World War II battle deaths also occurred :n northern Europe where the poppy grows, but no matter where Americans died, the poppy pays tribute to them. "Disabled veterans of both wars now make the poppy to be worn in memory of the dead o both wars. Poppy Day contributions aid the disabled of both wars, their families, and the families of the dead. Millions of Americans will wear the veteran made 'poppies of .the American Legion Auxiliary this year in silent tribute to those who lie beneath the crosses in Flanders fields and in the American war cemeteries throughout the world." SOCIETY Class Party All members of Mrs. Wood's Sunday School class of the Baptist Church are invited to attend the party (to be held in vhe church basement Tuesday evening, May 21st at seven o'clock, visitors are welcome. Used Fat Makes Soap One pound of salweed fat makes approximately one 24 oz. package M oap chips. Save all used fat? BIRTH CERTIFICATE NOTICE Petition No. !302 Anna Woodward has filed her petition in the Sullivan Circuit Poin t to linvn I tne place and time of her birth determined. Said petition is set for hearing on May 31st. 1946 at 9:00 A. M. Dated this 20th day of May. 1946. JAMES H. RINGER. Clerk Sullivan Circuit Court. Norval K. Harris. Petitioner's Attorney.
4r Perhaps overeating is
dietary indiscretion. The natural result of overeating is obesity. It has been said that we in America eat ourselves into a premature grave. The pendulum then frequently swings back to the other extreme. We go on a diet. Many self-imposed reducing diets wouldn't
keep a bird alive, and often serious vitamin, mineral, and protein deficiencies result. In recent years great strides have been made in our knowledge of nutrition. For the maintenance of optimal health one must be assured that proper balance of various foods is maintained. For dietary advice of any kind see your physician. You can then be certain that all bodily needs are being adequately met. Bring your prescriptions to us. BennettT Pharmacy A Dependable Drug Store Since 1914
Phone 96
4niiHIIIII.
COAL RELIEVES CHICAGO SHORTAGES
FiRST TRAINUOAD OF COAL to above, waiting conversion mxo
Hotel Sullivan No'w serving meals every day except Sunday from 7 a. m. to 9 p. m. GOOD FOOD OUR SPECIALTY , Call 718 for Reservations.
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