Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 153, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 1 August 1946 — Page 3

fill ' 'VAN.' IN ULAN A

BULL1YAN DAILY THURSDAY, AUG. 1, 1916. PAGE THREE

A PAXTON L Mr. and Mrs. Lee Hiatt were

-.w., wii uuanicas x liesday.

L Mr. and Mrs. Wilfnrrt TVTaf now

of Sullivan, called on L. C. Mat-

ney, jr., and family, Tuesday af

ternoon.

'Mr. and Mrs. r. 5? PniwJnn

spent last week in Shelburn with

BIRTH CERTIFICATE NOTICE Petition No. 2321

Notice is hereby given that Rebecca

Sullivan Circuit Caurt to have the

tilaoe and time, of her birth determin-

Said petition is set for hearing Aueust 16. 1946 at 8 A. M. Dated this 31 day of July, 1946. JAMES H. RINGER Clerk Sullivan Circuit Court

their daughter, Mrs Mabel Lewis and family and attended church there. Floyd Figg and Frank Kromer were in Terre Haute Wednesday on business. Miss Dixie Lee and Master Dickie Hiatt spent Tuesday night with Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Goodman. Mrs. W. G. Wilson was in Terre Haute, Wednesday Mrs. Paul LaFollette of Sullivan, spent Thursday and Friday with Mrs. Elsie Stone and family. Mrs. Annie Cox spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Hannah Cra-go.

ASK THOSE WE HAVE SERVED The purpose of the Railsbaek Funeral Home is to put funeral costs at a figure that does not extract the last dollar from the family that pays the bill. You are wf lcome to examine our stock, and see what your money buys.

RAILSBACK FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Phone 89 Sullivan

! Mrs. C. M. Rudolph of Evansville, spent last week here visitiing her parents. Mr. and Mrs. L. IP. Orr and Bobette. j Mrs. Cecil Cox spent last week in Indianapolis with Mr. Cox at the Government Hospital and visited Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gillstrap. Mr. Cox was returned to his home here Saturday in the Newkirk ambulance. He is much improved. j Mr. and Mrs. Floyd trans, Mrs. Albert Snyder and Miss Norma Lee Snyder were in Terre Haute

Thursday. , Chief Boatswain Mate Leon and Mrs. Ferguson of New London, Conn., are here on 30-day leave visiting Mr. and Mrs. Arville Ferguson and family and other relatives.

Mr. and Mrs. Eric Thewlis of Sullivan, called on friends here Friday night. I Mrs. W. G. Wilson shopped in Sullivan Friday afternoon. Miss Evelyn Sexton of Indianapolis, was the week-end guest of Herb Snyder and family. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Cox of Carlisle were Sunday afternoon guests at the Snyder home. I Mr. and Mrs. Arch Collins and j Mr. and Mrs. Harry Shields of ;

Terre Haute, called on Mr. and i Mrs. Roy Ulrich Sunday after-!

noon Misses LaVaughn Hiatt, Mary McDonald and Mrs. Connie Sheetz of Indianapolis, and Miss Mary Loudermilk of Terre Haute, spent the ' week-end at tneir homes here. Miss Pamelia LeDune of Sullivan, spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Ulrich. Mr. and Mrs. Hilary' lee and Mr. and Mrs. "Fuzzy" Bedwell of East Chicago, spent the weekend here with relatives. A good crowd attended the

The Snake

l: Beek-of-5ke-

BY MARY JANE WARD

(.LUSTRATIONS BY FRANK GODWIN

Fit -:-

"You can make water say anything," Virginia said. yvO you hear voices?" he asked. She said, "Of course, JL I hear yours." It was hard to keep on being civil. He had been asking questions such a long time. Now he was explaining that he did not mean real voices. Fantastic. He seemed determined that she should hear them. "You can make water say anything," she said. That should appeal to his childish fancy. And now the water rushed from the quiet pool of his voice to a stone-cluttered bed uneasy for fishes. The song of the brook soared to a rapid soprano and his voice was ' changing him into a small boy. Dreadful. She tried not to look, but at last her eyes turned irresistibly and, with horror, saw him a gjrl. She had suspected him of magic gr'i now she knew. Never mind. The sun is the chief thing. The sunshine

She must be very poor to wear that apron . . . was a warm bath of thick gold. On the bench with her was a pretty girl. She might be beautiful if she were not so pale. If I knew her, I would suggest liver; perhaps she hates it as much as I do. Robert likes it I should fix it for him "of tener. She must be very poor only a poor girl would go to a public park in a wrap-around apron. Virginia looked down at her own garment. Not this old rag. Virginia Stuart Cunningham, Mrs. Robert P. Cunningham to you . . . This young writer from the very proper city of Evanston, Illinois . . . Look, Ginger, you wouldn't wear this old thing out to the park, even a New York park. What was I thinking when I dashed out' I must have been in a rush, but then wny sit in the sun? The fair girl on the bc?nch was not anyone you had ever seen before, but she appeared to be talking to you. This

This was the real question where exactly was she? . city full of people who talked to you knocked your hat off. Even so, Virginia Stuart Cunningham was not the type to pick up strangers in the park. Secretly, not to disturb the girl, she began to look for her groceries and her pocketbook. It was possible that she had not gone to the store yet but not possible that she had come away from home without her purse. Her eyes were acting up. From the sun. It was as if she hadn't her glasses on. She put her hands up to her eyes, and her glasses were not there. What are you doing going around without your glasses? Trying to be pretty? Where was her pocketbook? Where this was the real question that gnawed through the artificial frivolity where exactly was she? (Continued tomorrow)

Kna datura Syndicate, Inc. Text copvritrht, 1946. by Mary Jane Ward Published by permission of Random House. Inc.

shower for Mr. and Mrs. Shoptaw at the home of Mrs. Jessie Flath, Thursday. Mrs. Helen. VanMeter and daughter of Indianapolis, are visiting Mr, and Mrs. Tom Leslie ana other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Smith were in Sullivan Friday morning. A large crowd attended the singing at the Church of Christ Sunday afternoon.

YOUNG THIEVES SCORN BEER

CINCINNATI (UP) Prowlers who forced entrance to a local brewery recently must have been juveniles, according to Cincinnati police. The thieves scorned hundreds of cases of scarce beer to loot a vending machine of six cartons of milk and a small sum of cash.

AIRMAIL COSTS $900

WORMS BIG BUSINESS

PORTLAND, Ore. (UP) Mrs. ' Mary Anholt received a registered airmail letter from her cousin, B. Dedeva, in Mukden, Manchuria. The entire back of the ! letter was covered with 18 stamps each reported to cost 50 Chinese dollars, or a total of $900. I

PORTLAND, Me. (UP) Every time the worm turns around in Maine, he makes someone a dollar:' or two. i The cash return from the worm crop in this state has run as high as $250,000 a year. The industry employs hundreds of diggers, shippers and dealers.

YELLOWSTONE BY AIR

CHEYENNE, Wyo. (UP) World-famous Yellowstone Park

has once again been linked with I the nation's airline network, j Western Air Lines has started 2 , flights daily to the West Yellowstone airport. Service was suspended in 1941 as a war-time . measure.

Fall

691

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