Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 115, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 10 June 1946 — Page 4
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EULTJVAK DAILT BMBfr- MONDA. -.JONS 10, 1948. EDLHVA"Ni INDIANA 1,1 1 " Merchants Win Wild Game 13-12 SB TONIGHT Thru THURS. Miro-Matic amaaaasf.
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This great medicine is famous to relieve pain, nervous distress and weak, cranky, 'dragged out' feelings, ot such days when due to fenutl functional monthly disturbances. ' Shelburn Couple Married Sunday In Pretty Ritual
In a game that saw a total of 16 errors, ten being charged against the locals, the Merchants defeated the Seabury Markets ressun iiiiiiiSilws from Terre Haute yesterday, 13
llus Color Cartoon & News
TUES. & WED. - ComevEarly . ERRRD EIITERTRininEnT! HIIW DALE EVANS TAYLOR SOCIETY Fhilathea Notice . - " The Phjlathpa class meeting has been postponed from Tuesday, June, llth.to JuneUtK;4. Poeahdntas Notice ? Wetpn, Council' No. k 40 will meet in regular session this evening at; 7.;30: I-here will be 'election of. officers. Each'1 member please bring' some small gift to be sent to the ''veteran ' hospital at Evansville, Indiana.' ' ? j '. Pocahontas Club -- ? ,. , , The Pocahontas Club will be entertained by. Nettie .Kable Thursday night ' at six o'clock, please -bring own table service.
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And there s no need to cash in those -precious ' .... war bonds to pay your tax. Simply borrow the desired amount from Security Loan Co. on your signature. Quick service.
Security Upstairs New Oakley Bid?.
Tune in WBOW every Friday Evening: at 6:30 - for the Security Half -Hour.
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ATTENTION
Legionnaires Special Meeting TUESDAY, JUNE 11 ... ' " i 8:00 P.M. EVERY Legionnaire should be present at this meeting as very important business concerning YOUR POST is to be acted on. We need your help at this important meeting. PLAN TO ATTEND! 1 '
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FORD Iff ' George V MACREADY
Plus 1 Color Cartoon & News INDIANAPOLIS, June 10.-4-.fUP Livestock: .., t?Hog8. , 5,000; active,., steady; good 'and 'choice bu'tcheri 100 lbs. up,;$l4;85;'good and choice sows, $14.10. i . . -,;?'.' Cattle. 800: calves, ' 500: good yearlings, $17.00 $175; good gradejsteers, $io.uu-io.d; mixed steers, heifers and cows, $14.40; good beef cows $13.75$15.00; common ' and rnedium, $10.00 $13.50; -vealers ' active, mostly 50c higher; good and choice. $17.50 $18.00. a . Sheep, 50; choice spring lambs, $15.00 $16.00; shorn slaughtef ewes, -$8.00 $8.50.
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Thb Situation Is .
WELL INHAND
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ns COUNTY HARDWARE Vauchn Jones HOSPITAL NOTES . Admitted June 7: John McGraw of Shelburn, R. 2; Rein Page of 315 West Graysville Street; Ward Pittman of Lyons, R. 1, Indiana; Walter McCammon of Sullivan, R. 3. Admitted June 8: Ben LaFollette of Sullivan, R. 4; Ralph Reeves of 324 Indiana Ave. Dismissed June 7: Bobby Patton of Sullivan, R. 5. Dismissed June 8: Leland Bedwell of Sullivan, R. 3; Sam Fergeson of Dugger; Mrs. Gerald Knowles and son of Linton; Mrs. George Shoemaker and son of Ft. Shores, Michigan. ' Dismissed June 9: Mrs. Perry Harris and daughter of Carlisle; Mrs. Fred Snyder and daughter of Paxton; Mrs. George Mason Jr. and daughter of New Leba non; Mrs. Winfred Fergeson of Dugger. PACIFIC VETS TO BE REASSIGNED TOKYO, June 10 (UP) Enlised men in the Pacific theater with 24 months active service as nf .TnW 1 will hp spnt 'tn the TTnitoH statoc fnr rpnsifnmpnt by the first available transportation it was announced today. , .
' This Morning's Headlines ; ;
. KING OF SIAM SHOT TQ DEATH ing Ananda Mahidol, 20-, tapering lines fashioned of silk year-old ruler of Siam, was found dead'of a bullet wound yesterday 'jersey and they carried ' bouin the Royal Palace, and 12 hours later the Siamese . Legislature quets of sweet peas. The flower named his Boston-born brother, Prince Phumiphon Aduldet, 18, as girls wore gowns of white satin the new king. The Siamese police director general told an emerge n4 crepe. eaatnn t tvw, Bnoi wiciatnro last nisht that the kine's A prelude of bridal airs was
death was accidental and that the bullet went through the center of NewShen.TdTanand" his forehead. Thomas McCullough, also of The young king, whose death came on the eve of a projected (New Goshen rendered vocal trip to the United States, had been indisposed for the past two days. J selections. He arose at 6:00 a. m. Sunday and took some medicine. Nothing was known of his actions from that time until his body was found by' A f closf of the tcery ... . tji ' .the bride and groom knelt bea servant in the bedroom of the Barompinan Palace. .
MOST OF HESSE JEWELS FOUND, SEIZE MAJOR The F.B.I. 1 announced the arrest of a third officer last night in the case of the , looted Hessian crown jewels and busily weighed royal gems by the boxful to see how near final solution it was in the "greatest jewel . robbery of modern times."
Announcement of the new arrest came from Frankfurt, Germany, where officers said Maj. David F. Watson of Burlinggame, Cal., was taken into custody. ,' In Washington the principal activity was preparation of a detailed inventory of the treasure, most of which was recovered from a dime-in-the-slot checking locker in Chicago, to see if any of the $1,500,000 worth of jewels from ancient JCrc-nberg Castle are still missing. ' Detained in Washington were newly wedded Lt. Col. Jack W. Durant and WAC Capt. Kathleen B. Nash Durant, along whose honeymoon course officers trailed. They recovered "practically all" of the stolen crown jewels and other heirlooms handed down in a family closly connected with that of Kaiser Wilhelm II o! World War I. i '
PLANE CRASH IN PANAMA KILLS 23 An Army rescue party had recovered 19 bodies from the wreckage of a C-54 plane from Morrison Field, West Palm Beach, Fla., which crashed on a mountainside on Taboga Island, Panama. All 23 persons aboard, including 17 passengers and six crew members were believed to have perished. The plane, on a routine flight, carried one Army colonel; two West Point cadets, one civilian, six crew members and 23 enlisted men. vs
CHICAGO FIRE TOLL REACHES 61 Jerry Tyler, 45, Niles, Michigan, industrialists, died in St. Luke's Hospital, Chicago, ,;6f burns and injuries suffered in the La Salle Hotel fire Wednesday, raising to 61 the toll from the blaze
PREDICT MEAT FAMINE WITHIN WEEK A meat famine will hit the nation within a week if cattle and hog producers continue to withhold their animals from the market, a spokesman for the Office of Economic Stabilization said. He said there appears to
be a universal feeling among ranchers and farmers that if they hold off until July 1, price controls will be lifted or so weakened that prices will soar. He said the hold-back scheme has grown steadily worse for several weeks and "if it continues, we will have a meat famine a week from now." The situation is further aggravated, he said, because there also is withholding at the packer level in anticipation that OPA controls will be removed.
I 11 KILLED, MANY HURT IN FREAK STORM IN EAST ' Eleven persons were killed and scores injured Saturday night when a freak hail and lightning storm swept over New England, uproof-
lng trees, disrupting power lines
lars damage. The death toll mounted with disclosure that five per sons drowned near Salisbury, Conn., when their fishing boat over, turned during the height of the storm
to 12. , The Merchants jumped on Lefty Jarvis in their half of the first inning and drove im to the showers with a barrage of five hits and five runs with two outj,
when Callahan took over and retired the side. The visitors came back .strong in the second with four runs and tied it five-all in the third,' going into the lead 8-5 with a three-run cluster. Osborne was relieved by Vowell at this time. The locals scored once in the fifth -and tied it at 8-all when Thewlis slammed a home run, scoring Takats ahead of him. Seabury then came back in the outseventh with a three-run burst, making it 11-8. The Mer - chants were not to be denied, vie tory and pushed over five runs, taking a 13-11 lead and driving Callahan from the hill. He was replaced by Spence. The visitors mnrerl nnp run in th piehth and the final score was 13-12, Mer - chants Thewlis, Merchant catcher, got a home run and two singles while Taylor, shortstop, connected for a triple, driving in two runs. This win gives the Merchants a three won and one lost standing in the' Western Indiana League. Next Sunday the Terre Haute Police will play here in another league game. Practice is called for Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings of this week. The score, Sunday's game: Clubs R. H. E. Seabury M. 041 300 31012 15 6 Merchants 500 012 50 13 15 10 Batteries: Markets Jarvis, , Hallahan. Snence and Shestock; Mprrhants Osborne. Vowell and; Thewlis. Winning pitcher, Vowell; losing pitcher, Jarvis. and causine several thousand dni,
The First Methodist Church in Shelburn Sunday afternoon was the scene of a beautiful formal wedding uniting in marriage Miss Jean Clark of Shelburn and Gerald Hamby of Terre Haute, formerly of Shelburn.
The vows of the double ring ceremony solemnized at three 'clck were reaa" hy Rev. Clar ence Kiinon ana excnangea in tne Presence of a large assembly !"' revives ..d friend, of both the bride and groom. The bride, only daughter of Mr. and . Mrs. Sam Clark of Shelburn, was attended by Miss Pauline Stevenson as her maid of honor and the Misses Veronica 1 Andrusyk, Doris -Ward, Jane lO'Laughlin and Betty Marshall las bridesmaids. All are close friends of the bride. The groom, son of Mr. and Mr?. Horace Hamby of Terre J Haute, was attended by his brother, Harold Hamby, as best man and the Messrs Laverne Hamby (also a brother of the groom), Sherill Thompson, Eugene Stout and Milton Bennett served as ushers. Little Miss Judy Clark, niece of the bride, and Marilyn Ham by, cousin of the groom, were flower girls. The bride, lovely in a gown of flowing whii;e rayon crepe, was given in marriage by her father and entered to the impressive tones of Lohengrin's Wedding March. Her gown was of princess fashion with a large bustle bow and a white net top. Her finger-tip veil flowed from a ! heart-shaped white crown. On white Bible she earned a pur ple centered orchid. - Her maid of honor and brides maids wore pastel dresses of impressively sang ' the beautiful "Lord's Prayer." Both the bride and groom are graduates of Shelburn High I School where they were popular land active in' school affairs. The j bride attended the Terre Haute Commercial Business College. later accepting a secretarial position with the Hays & Hays Law Firm here. Mr. ' Hamby enlisted in the United States Navy, following the course of his two brothers, and served more than two years in all theaters of war. He plans to enroll at the Indiana State Teachers' College immediately. Following the wedding ceremony, a reception was held at the home of the bride's parents, , at the conclusion of which Mr. and Mrs. Hamby left to take up j their new residence in Terre Haute. Out-of-town guests at the wedding included: Mrs. Thos. McCullough of New Goshen; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest McPeak, Mrs. Mary Johns and daughter,. Biy Ann, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest 'Fagg, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Fags. jr., Mr. and Mrs. Hal and Tommy Trimble. Tomes, ' all of ,
ierre Haute; Miss Lela Marks, j served our government honorMiss Regina Gardner, Mrs. Mon- 1 ably. I again appear to you Mr. ty Weir, Mis3 Jane VanHorn, ' and Mrs. Public to write to your Mr. and Mrs. Walter Leach and. Senators and Congressmen to Mr. and Mrs. Granville Hend-'get after the Indianapolis office ricks, all of Sullivan. i to see that our bovs eet the ius-
TO-THE QWnf.rs atjt urvr twdo 2FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS. OF THE. SULLIVAN SCHOOL REALTY Company OP SULLIVAN. IND-1 IAL: c.,..;.... ou,i ,. pany has called for redemption all of ' id ued'by fir"tSmortgead e ""ven November 1. 1927. r!aidmbondsgewui'Vbe Sulff 1 on" Ju." ialid win cease 10 draw interest after that itJL?0 otif'?1 present yonr bonds for redempt on at said time and place. ' " " SSooSSSI BY J. H. CROWDER, President!
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JjEY'RE STILl OMIHG HOME DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS Having brought before the public's attention the indifference ior inefficiency of the veterans I A miniotratinn nn a number Of i . . w rpa(1 Ul-tasiuiia iiu uvwvi, jv - with very little interest. But when you read last baturaay night where a hit and run driver sniffed out the lives of two of our children it made you set your teeth and declare vengeance on anyone that would do such. Now let's look at this case straight from the shoulder. Ralph Frisbie Jr. was discharged with ! a blue discharge and his case I was pending in this office. On hvTo,r 9nrl nf this vp9r wp notified )the Veteran-S Administration through their Major D. R. Adams by proper papers and advice of a local physician, who is recognized by the Veteran's Administration as a competent doctor, that this man needed mental care, we stated the kind of discharge he had but advised that this was an urgent case and needed to hear from them immediately. Mind you, needed hearing from them immediately. aHaving not heard from tnem on May 17th again we notified the same Major D. R. Adams about not hearing from him on this case and when the trouble happened .'as yet we had ever heard from the Veteran's Administration. Now they can't say that this was addressed to the wrong person, as they claim now, and before this accident, that all mail goesi to one central office and is opened and routed to the proper place. So proper place would mean if it was not addressed to the proper person or place this would have been routed so. So it only goes to show you that our Indianapolis office still needs men like Stelle to tell the world that our vets are not getting justice. Now Mr. and Mrs. Public, this is getting close to home when we have our children killed outright, but do you think that a heartless group who have robbed veterans that are nhvsically unable to work j out of their meager existence, have refused hospitalization to those who need it and have died for the want of it are going to be disturbed over the death of two innocent children. Don't you blame society for this. Anyone who can rob the veteran out of his meager existence is going to still do so. As Headley, their representative, stated here in the office at the court house he was trying to get the boys to start their training under Public Law 346 with their service connected handicaps, so that after two or three months when they were switched over to Public Law 16 tiiev haH snvprt that much monev on them. So we are to chisel on the boys, their wounds, their suffering and all their hardships is not appreciated by the very government, in which they sery ed.v Everything that they get is given in such a way that it makes us' feel that we are pauDers instead of men who have tice at home they so gallantly fought for, for us over there. We are demandine that an investl nation nf th riplav in the Friqhie allon 01 tne ae;ay ln lne nsDIe case be made. Remember that we are in the Court house on the top floor to help yoU- Bring y0ur discharSe papers with you if you want us 1? lu- No. interviews before -,,u caul mumuis uuc iu vui mail being so heavy that we use t. . . the time first to answer our mail. Th0Sp M. Jenntaw,. County Director.
ft Hack in grandfather's time, during the final quarter of the last century, things' were quite different. There were no movies, no airplanes, no automobiles, few bathrooms, practically no efficient electrical appliances. If you contracted diabetes or pernicious anemia, your, days were numbered. Your blood just "changed to sugar"
in the former, "to water" n the latter. There was little protection against virulent epidemics. Smallpox vaccine was the only biological on the market. When diphtheria or typhoid ravaged a community, there was nothing to do but wait it our in hope and dread. Yes, a return to the "good old days" would mean, among other things, the sacrifice of the major portion of the contribution of medicine and pharmacy to your health and well-being. Bennett's Pharmacy "Your Druggist Is More Than A Merchant." Phone 96
LOCALS Mrs. Cecil Hughes spent the week-end at Purdue University where she visited her daughter, Eileen, who is enrolled in school there. They attended the Philadelphia Symphony concert. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Gambill, Mr. and Mrs. George L. Hoyt and little daughter, Sharon Lee, of Oak Park, Illinois, are visiting Mrs. Laura K. Snow and Mr. and Mrs. I. C. Maxwell. Sharon Lee is the great-grand- 1 daughter of Mrs. Snow. I Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Krantz jof Sellarsburg, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Chowning Tuesday. They . were accompanied home by Mr. and Mrs. Bruce D. Chowning and daughters, Janet and Elaine, who have been the guests of Mr. Chowning's parents for the past two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shepherd have returned from their trip north. While away they visited Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Hummell in Gary. Mr. and Mrs. Hummell accompanied them to Mill Creek, where they were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ismmal ' Osborn, former Dugger residents, and to Flint, Michigan, where they were guests of Mrs. Bergan and Mrs Fabian, who are also former residents of Dugger. Mrs. Abigail Chowning and Mrs. Vera Graham were hostesses for the J. W. G. club Tuesday evening. The following members and guests were present: Misses Mae and Oris Hendrickson, Eva Taylor, Syl Yung, Mrs. Ida -Hannah, Dola Yung, Mrs. Irene Chowning and daughters, Janet and Elaine and Mrs. Ruth Hacker. Refreshments of ice cream, wafers and grape juice were served by the hostesses.
DUGGER
PUBLIC SALE Will sell at public auction at the Anna Reed residence one block east and two blocks north of the Methodist Church in Hymera, Ind., ' ' ' ) ' JUNE 12, 1946 Commencing at 1 O'Clock P. M. Living room suite, rockers and other chairs, stand tables, 2 bedroom suites, bed clothing, dining room suite, kitchen cabinet, coal range, 2-burner oil stove, electric iron, 2 9x12 rugs, linoleum rug 9x12, 1 electric table lamp, 2 floor sweepers, dishes, canned fruit, lawn mower, garden tools, and many other articles. ,
Emmet Power, Auctioneer
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SOCIETY Triple T. Home Ec. Club The Triple T. Home Economics Club will meet Wednesday afternoon, June 12 at the home of Mrs. Vera Reeves. All members are urged to attend. Visitors welcome. SCOOTERS! . AH Metal , . Rubber Tires PO OQ . Streamlined KAYSONS' INC. 6 S. Court St. - Ph. 213 r fo Give You Smooth I Sailing This Summer See us for the money to make your financial course easier during the pleasant months ahead. We make loans to pay scattered bills, make home and car repairs, buy seasonal clothes, pay vacation expenses and for all other seasonal needs. Prompt, private service. Monthly repayment. Come in or phone for the cash von neea inuvv. Fidelity Loan Co. Upstairs Midle East Side Sq Bert Barcus, Manager Nellie Power, Clerk
