Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 168, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 22 August 1946 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES THURSDAY, AUG. 22, 1946. SUXLTVAN, INDIANS

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FRIDAY & 0l gfl JJ J ADULTS 35c SATURDAY &WwWlwwV Children 16c - TWO GRAND FEATURES -

.THERE'S NOTHING LIKE A

HOMICIDE!

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Thrill Chapter 7 THE PHANTOM RIDER",

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Pliic- "Speaking Of Animals" riUb "paffy Duck Cartoon - News Tonight - Fri. - Sat.

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Comfort

DODD BRIDGE

- Sunday School at 9:30 a. m., Prayer meeting at 7:00 p. m. Mr. end Mrs. Bill Wade and

I INSURANCE

ALL FORMSTRY OUR SERVICE Alvin "Al" Spainhour Rm. 6 Phone 71 Sullivan State Bank Bldg. Sullivan, Ind. ,

, grandchildren' have returned to : Indianapolis.

Mr. and Mrs, Malcolm Malone of Illinois, spent the week-end her visiting friehds and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Pad Parr and Ross had as their guests this week Mrs. Parr's sister and daughter of Terre Haute, Mr. and Mrs. Ray McClure called on Mrs. Luvisa Wood and

Ate Wilkey Friday.

i Mrs I u visa Vnnd was the

guest Friday of Mr. and . Mrs

LIST TEACHERS miiMiurU from Huge un

tioned, will also teach 7th and 8th grade Vocal Music and High School Chorus; Clotil Reimers, 7th and 8th grade mathematics; Ruth Hinkle and Burl Myers,

Science and Mathematics; Perle

Fisher, Science; Dale Billman, Science and Vocational Guidance; William Keck and Frank Laughlin, Social Studies; Alvan Callahan, Mary Templeton and Mary IWright, Commerce: C. N. Creamer, Harold Martin and Gabor Takats, Vocational Subjects; Mona Stull, Home Economics; Lee French, Health and

Safety; Letha Coakley, Librarian. 1 gamzation at 9 A. M., Thursday,

August 29. Principals and

girls' drum and bugle corps. George Walters and Harry Jarr:.tt will elso assist the coaching staff in the direction of intramural tports. Special emphasis is to be placed on extra-curricular activities in the senior high school and extensive participation cf sprior hi?h school students in these worthwhile activities will be encouraged. There still remains a vacancy in art. and it is hoped that an art supervisor for the entire twelve grades may be employed in the near future. The schedule for the onening of the schools remains .unchanged. All teachers will report to the senior high school for or-

Junior High Elementary School H. E. St.Clair Principal and Grade 6; Faye Ringer, Grade 6; Edith Exline, Grade 5; Josephine Lowdermilk, Grade 5; Effie Douthitt, Grade 4; Bessie Vincent, Grade 3 Reva Lee, Grade 2, Ruby Price, Grade 2; Helen Willis, Grade 1; Maria Graham, Grade 1.

. Gymnasium Grade

Rosetta Ford, Principal

teachers will be in their respective buildings to ' enroll pupils new to the Sullivan school system Thursday afternoon from 1 to 3 P. M. All pupils report to their various buildings for class organization and the procurement . of textbook lists -at 8:30 A. M. Friday morning. August

30. School will be dismissed at School noon s0 tnat textbooks may be

purchased. There will be no

WASHABLE

CONDE

IAIN

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WINDOW BLINDS 36" x 17" DARK ECRU 35c each Q COUNTY HARDWARE VAUGHN F. JONES

and bookkeeping. Mr. Hays left ( the teaching profession in 1875 to practice law. Prof. Cain be-; came principal at that time. j

and

Bill Fautz and family.

LOW-HEEL

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9-98

These are fhe "high" styles both daughters and mothers are wearing! Daughters from grammar school up, mothers of every age! Daughters O.K. their looks, mothers approve their comfort! Moccasin-casuals in rich brown. Saddles in classic brown-white. Sizes 3-9.

Grade 4; Fayette McKinley, scnooi on Labor Day. Formal Grade fi; George Walters, Grade clasps- will, begin at 8:30 A. M.,

5; Jessie Bradley, Grade 3; Eve- uicsuay, September i. All pupils

lyn McRoberts, Grade 2; RUtH

Woolley, Grade 1. . Elm Park Grade School Esther . Hoke, Principal and Grade 1; Ollie McKee, Grade 4; Ann Pierce, Grade 3; Carol McCoy, Grade 2. William Jones will be head coach of football and he will be assisted by Gabor Takats. William Keck will be head coach of barketball and he will be assisted by Alvan Callahan. Mr. Callahan wilt also serve as faculty manager of athletics. Gabor Takats will coach the baseball

in grades 7 to 12. are to report

to the high school auditorium on Friday, the first day of jrhool. Elementary building and class assignments will be published next week.

nerstone. The name of the new school, first known as Ascension Seminary, later became the High School and eventually Central

. ., Took. School. A picture taken in the The earlier building on JacK-, . f me eui"CL o i spring of 1873 shows approxison street was a five-room, two- mately lg0 pupils and teachers, story brick structure with three jt became customary for many rooms below and two above, it young men, who taught in the was recalled. It was the only one-room district schools during school here prior to 1872. Teach-1 a few months in the winter, to ers in 1871 included Sally Cain, come to Ascension Seminary for grades 1 and 2, which were on further studies each spring. . j the first floor, southeast corner

of the building; Mrs. McClain, 3rd and 4th grades, north wing; Miss Kirk, 5th and 6th grades, southwest' corner of the building; Prof. Wood, 7th and 8th grades, north wing upstairs, and Prof. Cain (high school (nrobably a three-year course). Prof. Mclntire was principal, it was also recalled. The name of every teacher and

every pupil wno auenaea me first school were placed in the cornerstone at the Central when it was laid in 1871. The children marched to the site of the new

school for the laying of the cor- ist ins 8-22-46-3t.

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Notice is hereby given that the yndprsipned his been appointed rlmln'otratrix o' the pstate of Charles A. Reyno'ds. deeep'ed late of Sullivan Coimtv. I"'lian Sid estate is supposed to be solvent. LAVFRMR PHlPPS, Administratrix. Pie;g & Tetinis, Attorneys.lst ins 8-22-4&-3t.

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Notice is hereby ' Riven that the I undersigned has been appointed Administratrix of the esHte of JiilH

Reynolds, deceases me ot biunvan County, Indiana Said estate is supposed l3 be solvit LA VERNE PHIPPS. Administratrix.

Piee & Tenn'S, Attorneys.

PETONGA

$1.09

RHU-AID, ' ' i as

ERB-HELP : $1.35 PINKHAM VEGETABLE COMP 98c S.S.S. TONIC " 99c peruna 9sc

Dill Pickle Mix 10c

Bulk Turnip Seed

PEPSODENT TOOTH PASTE 39c IPANA TOOTH PASTE 39c KOLYNOS TOOTH PASTE 39c PEBECO TOOTH PASTE 39c

TONI COLD WAVE $1.23 PORTRAIT COLD WAVE $1.49 CROWNING GLORY WAVE $2.00 Plus Tax.

Bennett's Pharmacy "Your Druggist Is More Than A Merchant." Phone 96

120-Man Band for Pitt

This Morning's Headlines RETAIL MEAT LIDS GO ON SEPT. 9 Priee Administrator Paul Porter announced that retail meat price ceilings will be restored Sept. 9 and promised to "throw the book" at black marketeers. 1 ' "There is no substantial basis for reports that we are going back to widespread black markets," he said. "I hope packers will devote a substantial part of their energy to make recontrol work at least as much energy as they devoted to trying to get rid of controls." t BELIEVE SIX DIE IN BLAST Fire touched off highly explosive jet' assistance materials at the Aerojet Corporation plant' at

i.Azusa, California, and was believed by the Navy to have killed six

persons and injured many others. The fire started in a mixing room of the plant.

PITTSBURGH (UP) A 120-

instruments is being formed from the student body at the Univers-

tearn next spring. Frances Shep- ity of Pittsburgh. Camp training

herd expects to organize a girls'

athletic association and participate in G.A.A. state activities. Lee French will continue his

successful directorship of the

OFFICIALS HUNT POISON SOURCE Science and police

man band, to be equipped with joined forces to map plans for tracing tne source ot poison wnicn $10,000 worth of new matched might have been used in the Dupont mercury mystery, deaths of

which Mrs. Lottie (Tot) Lockman is accused. A meeting described as "preliminary" by Dr. R. N. Harger, toxicologist at the Indiana University School of Medicine, was held at the I. U. Medical Center to "talk over plans for trying to find where the mercury came from" in the case.

before the fall semester opens is included in an effort to return the college's "famous marching

band to its pre-war glory,"

announcement said.

Some Fish Don't Mind Noise

For Repairs &

Remodeling; ITCH FOR OUR RE-OPENING

TRAVELERS' LIFE Insurance Co. of Hartford, Conn. SEE ,.' Al Spainhour Rcjont 6 Phone 71 Sullivan State Bank Bldg.

BOSTON (UP) You don't always have to be quiet while fishing.

A group of youngsters were competing, in a city-sponsored "Hui-k Finn Fishing Contest." They shouted, threw rocks into the water and raced un and down the shoreline of the Charles River Basin and came up with a good haul.

STUDENT PILOT CRASH VICTIM A student pilot was killed and his flight instructor injured critically when their training plane crashed in a cornfield two miles northeast of Rochester, Indiana,

'! Wednesday. Dead is Donald Biirkett of Culver, 25-year-old World

i War II veteran who served four years as a mechanic in the Army

Air Forces. Injured is Miss Mary Jo Bardsley, 23, of Rochester, who

was teaching Burkett to fly.

TITO RECALLS GREEK ENVOY Premier Marshal Tito recalled Yugoslav Minister Isador Cankar, ,but diplomatic relations were being maintained between Greece and Yugoslavia. Cankar said that his recall was prompted by attacks on Tito and the Yugoslav regime by sectios of the Monarchist press in Greece.

K B. SMITH Jeweler

Never Disturbed By Noise And Racket Our funeral home although just a moment's walk from the center of town, is in a residence sectionjn a setting of lawns and trees and undisturbed by street noises and congestion. There are unlimited parking facili- . ties ?.nd no confusion from truck and auto traffic. RAILSBACK FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Phone 89 . Sullivan

I DELAY SPECIAL SESSION CALL Republican state adminisI tration leaders apparently eliminated one reason for a special sesi sion of the Legislature inability to participate in the school lunch

program but Governor Ralph F. Gates planned to call his key legislative leaders to the Capitol Monday for a final decision on

whether there would be an extra session. The Governor, hopeful of averting a special session, announced a plan utilizing the war-born I ;..;!: T r-t J l : V nnn 'rnn - - r - -1 l e j l '

wvman iieieiise iuuiicu 10 receive $i,o,uuu m leueiai iuiius allocated to Indiana for school lunches durig the approaching school

year. It had been thought that the Legislature might have to be

called to deal with this problem as well as that of matching increased federal grants for blind, aged and indigent children. The public welfare problem still remained unsolved.

I CUUJKT DEMANDS TOKEN WAR END A Superior Court

judge at Indianapolis ordered I James M. Dawson, lawyer, to quit offering Indianapolis street car operators metal tokens bought at a lower price than the fare the company now is charging. Dawson, cheered on by a crowd as he presented a metal token and rode a trolley in defiance of the company yesterday, said he was going to continue his fight but he hadn't decided how. "Peace and order must be maintained," Judge Walter Pritchard ruled, in issuing the restraining order which the Indianapolis Railways had asked.

BRITISH CUT OFF TEL AVIV REGION Strong British .military forces were reported to have surrounded the all-Jewish city of Tel Aviv and surrounding towns on Palestine's coastal plain. The reported movement of troops came a short time after a Jewish underground radio station declared that the British were about to start a new operation against the Jews with a "regime of the guillotine and death sentences." The broadcast asserted: "We are pre-

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