Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 197, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 2 October 1946 — Page 4

eAGE FOUR

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES WEDNESDAY, OCT. 2, 1946. - SULUVAN,TINDIA

Quit paying rent and own your home. Special bargains on property on installment plan. Also farms for sale. W. T. MELLOTT

"BABIES" HONOR : DOCTOR

1

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CHILLICOTHE, O. (UP) Eleven hundred of the approximately 5,000 babies Dr. C. E. Leggett has 'brought into the world paid honors to the 68. year-old physician at the Rogs county fair. The "babies" paraded at the fair; Youngest was Kathleen Whitten, 10-day-old baby of Chillicothe.

! Football OVER THE STATE l '

Some of the prep teams who

will see action in this weekend's array of grid tilts are: Vincennes vs. Reitz of Evansville; Brazil vs. Garfield; Wiley vs. Clinton. Linton has an open date this week-end.

I

'Relief At .Last , i "for Your Cough

Next best thing to a long distance call, , only Si to say it

Creomulsion relieves promptly because it goes right to the seat of the trnnhln VipIti Inn.qpn find PXDfil

I germ laden phlegm, and aid nature i .. 1 U .... i

tu isuuux iuiu Aicai. iaw, bcuuci, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to sell you Ei, bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are

10 nave your mone duck.

or Ccuzhs, Chest Co!ds, Bronchitis

PURDUE GRIDDERS

I ACE ROCKY ROAD

AGAINST, ILLINOIS

LAFAYETTE, Ind., Oct. 2. Purdue's football forces, disrupted by an almost unprecedented series of injuries to key backfield men, face a rocky road in attempting to hit the comeback path against a veteranstudded Illinois eleven at Champaign on Saturday in the second of five successive games on the road for the Boilermakers . i Coach Cecil Isbel's backfield ' troubles, which started in preseason drills when two leading left halfback candidates, Bill ) Canfield, veteran who garnered

3 lesfTa

m 4 fiti

WE CAN USE YOUR HATCHING EGGS THIS FALL j

AND ALL YOU CAN PRODUCE, OF ANY BREED, IN 1947. WE BUY HATCHING EGGS 10 Months of the year, and PAY 10c ABOVE Terre Haute Prices for current receipts

delivered at our Hatchery, or 9c ABOVE at your door. I

WE DELIVER FEEDS TO YOU when we call for your eggs, if so desired. We have flock owners who have been with us the past 10 years. If they make money, SO CAN YOU! Why sell your eggs at market price, when we will gladly PAY YOU 9c or 10c MORE PER DOZEN. COME AND LET US EXPLAIN IT TO YOU. GRIGGS HATCHERY

a . ' good share ;.of the .. Big Nine statistical honors last fall, and .Bill Barnard, -.iproniising . sophomore, werey shelved.1 for an, indefinite period by knee injuries, have been aggravated as a result of casualties suffered in the Iowa encounter. . George . Papach, promising sophomore fullback, now has his knee encased in a cast, and has joined the sideline backfield quartet that in addition to Canfield and Barnard includes Bob (Stormy) Pfohl, No. 1 pre-sea-son right halfback choice, who fractured a bone in his foot in the Miami opener. Due to his backfield woes, Isbell has a real problem in attempting to hurriedly fashion a ball carrying combination capable of staging a steady drive. Emphasis in this week's intensive drills has been placed on gearing up a running attack that has failed to click with any consistency in the two "games so far this season. I

State InNeed Of)4500 Mare ; Hospital Beds

LOCALS

17 E. JACKSON ST.

SULLIVAN, IND.j

BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct. 2. A scholarship in memory of the late William Menke, of Huntingburg, an All-America center on Indiana university's basketball team of 1941, has been established through gifts to the Indiana University Foundation by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Menke and the City Securities Corporation, of Indianapolis. Lt. Menke was killed in a Navy plane crash off the coast of Puerto Rico on Jan. 7, 1945. He was associated with the City Securities Corporation following his graduation from Indiana university in 1941. The earnings on the fund will be given to the student who most nearly re

presents the ideals of Menke, according to the terms of the. gift.

In line with findings of the National Commission on Hos.

Ipital Care reporting the need for j construction over the United , States of general hospitals with a total capacity of 195,000 beds, Indiana requires approximately 4,500 niore beds to bring it up to I near standard quota. Dr. Martha O'Malley, director iof the division of hospital and ! institutional services of the State Board of Health, yesterday an- ' nounced that a survey to deter- : mine the future course of im- ! provements in this all-important field has been completed. Now it is the duty of the division with assistance of an advisory council, to create a master plan setj ting forth the entire Indiana hosI pital needs, the priorities for conistruction and the relative imiportance of the types of hospitals recommended. -j. This will lead to Indiana participation in Federal funds for such work under the Hill-Burton jAct. The state's share for surveys, already appropriated but not yet received, is $36,904. This

is estimated as one-third the to

tal survey and planning expense, j

lotal amount Indiana is scheduled to get for construction is $1,728,075. This has been earmarked by Congressional formula, but it will require additional action by the national legislative bodies to appropriate the money. The 1945 Indiana General Assembly voted to push the survey. More legislation will be mandatory in 1947, however, to permit Indiana to accept the Federal funds provided in the HillBurton national law.

f Mr.' and. Mrs: '.Guy Cv'Wall and

son,- Guy Jr. have;; returjie'dta'

their home in Jeanette, Pennsylvania after visiting here with Mrs. W. H. Wees and other relatives and friends and with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Wall of Terre Haute. Mrs. Carl French has returned home after spending some time in Springfield, Ohio with her daughter, Wilma Clark and husband. Mr. Clark, who has been seriously ill the past three weeks is slowly improving in the City Hospital. Judy Clark accompanied her grandmother home to spend the winter and attend school. Mr. and Mrs. Arley D. Wall, Stewart Gregory and Eleanor, and Miss Eleanor Gregory spent Sunday with Mrs. H. M. Stewart. Afternoon callers were Mr. and Mrs. White of San Francisco, who were en route to their home. 'Mrs. White and Mrs. Stewart are cousins. Ed Newsome, of the Buster Mayfield Barber Shop, has gone to San Diego, California for a months visit with his son, George Newsome, and family. . Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Somers of Paxton, visited relatives in Sullivan Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Dale of Lansing, Illinois, have been on their vacation touring the south. They stopped over in Sullivan over the week-end and visited their parents and relatives. , Mrs. Martha McCammon and Mrs. Eva Banther returned home with them.

B.- C.J "Dust j Bowl";: Feared , , NEW. WESTMINSTER, f B. T,'C

LttJPI-Fear .that British iColiim-i

;b.ia.i;mitb'ee(Mne another'rdust bowl" was" ' expressed here by Frank Putnam, minister of agriculture. Putnam warned farmers that the clearing of large areas of brush on the prairie land has set up conditions that result in blowing of dust. He recommended that shelter belts of bush be left standing to protect the land.

M. J. Aikin & Son FUNERAL HOME Dogger "Aikln's Service Costs N More."

"Daddy, what's 'double indem nity'?"

MacTavish, out of town on his wife's birthday, sent her a check fnr a millinn Iriccoc A Kif

"That, my son, is what's paid miffed she wiTed: by a man who is fool enough to Thanks for check. Milkman get married a second time." cashed it."

1875 1946 NO INFLATION HERE

Bankloan Plan

AS THE COST OF LIVING GOES UP KEEP THE

COST OF YOUR. BORROWING DOWN BY FINANC

ING YOUR PURCHASES WITH A LOW COST BANK

LOAN. , WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY ON LOANS. A $7,000,000.00 BANK IS HERE TO SERVE YOU. Sisllivaii State Bank .Safe Since 1875 Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 1S75 1946

We Have

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- r-. X Zpeewl cars or trains can be arranged S.Wf' I . H .ATI Q1'l Ttfl TO

Smr, 7nf."rTr 1 ua The Milwaukee Road. It's the safe, fvAHVW VlllVVll UL CIX

mS30(: fun-JiHedumyjorfootballfanstotrmel. - . M Y . . . i . r at

ISoatl II .

Sweet Potatoes, 3 lbs. 25c Irish Potatoes, pk. 40c & 50c Green Beans, lb 15c 2 lbs. 25c Mangoes, doz. . . 30c & 40c Apples, 3 lbs 25c Cabbage, lb 4c Spanish Onions, 2 lbs. 15c Small Onions, 10 lbs. . . 30c Turnips, lb 5c 6 lbs 25c Celery, bunch . . 10c & 15c Pumpkins & Squashes, 20c up Pears, lb 5c 6 lbs. . .. 25c Popcorn, lb 15c Home-Grown Soup Beans Butter Beans WANTED TO BUY Some Pumpkins! ! ! Farmers Market 119 South Main St.

T A TWCT A T1AT TT A CI "", 0

T1?XTT t mi rrT TtT c :

l! '' i LIKE A JACKKNIl

i One lady.;-recently'-': stated ' tl

her arm used to become doubi

up like a jackknife. She could

move her arm up or down

cause her muscles were stiff w

rheumatic pains and the joK

oi her elbow and shoulder wq

swollen. She said she was ashsJ

ed to leave her house because p

pie would stare at her. Fina

she got RHU-AID and says now can raise her arm above he head and the swelling left her el

bow and shoulder. The awju

pain and stiffness is gone. She i

enjoying life once more and f!j like "some other woman". sirL

taking this New Compound.

RHU-AID contains Three Grd

Medicinal Ingredients which

right to the very source of rhed

matic aches and pains. Miserabi people soon feel different a over. So don't go on sufferiij!

Get RHU-AID. Bennett's Drd

Store. Aty

with

'Seven Up' Bottling M 501 Hartley Sullivan, lw Telephone 501 I

urses

The Shimmying " car is a dangerous car. The unusu

al strains, difficult driving i

discomfort cause accidents besides ruining your tires. , We correct " Shimmy " l properly. v

I GARAGE

118 So. Main Phone 08

A Good Supply Of T 8$ T

tock

..wlaeit yBi ride the Milwaukee

TET it rain, let it sleet, let it snow . . . the weathef stays fair in The Milwaukee Road's bright, clean, air-conditioned coaches. - i Next time you travel whether you are going to or from the campus or on business use The Milwaukee Road. Youll enjoy the friendly, congenial atmosphere, the all around comfort and convenience of train travel, the absence- of worry about 'weather hazards. You'll arrive rested and refreshed, ready for fun or business. Fares in modern, reclining chair coaches are thriftily low less than 2c a mile, round trip. So take it easy next time ydu travel. Let your nearest Milwaukee Road agent do the planning, and the engineer do the driving and the parking.

Popular MILWAUKEE ROAD trains ... including the famous IIiawathas serve

Chicagoi -Milwaukee Madison Green Bay,

La Crosse , St. Paul Minneapolis Northern Wisconsin Upper Michigan ' Pacific Northwest

Black Hills Cedar Rapids Davenport Des Moines Omaha Sioux City Sioux Falls Mason CityKansas City

tIVSPffM"

Ohimm

Hiiwaihas

Tetre Haute Ofiice: 300 Ha Bldg., Photw Cfawtord 2852 R. H. Harding, Division Pasnnger Agent the Milwaukee Road The friendly Railroad of the friendly West

These FEEDS are STILL SCARCE and "HARD-TO-GET." They will remain so for some time due to the shortage of all proteins. We also have PLENTY of FERTILIZER and GOENS SEED ( WHEAT for sale. This wheat is redesned and SMUT TREATED. We make deliveries on amounts of one ton sales or more. 1 CALL CARLISLE M-20 WE WILL BE GLAD TO SURVEY YOUR NEEDS! !

-iff 160

MILL

DEALERS IN Murphy's, Wayne's and Pratt's Feeds . . . Rauh and Federal Fertilizers

Plastic P

$2,98

PLUS TAX

in PATENTS or

f

CALF - SIMULATED ., pi

LEATHER - New Styles r.

In Black & Colors

Special Selling cf One Lot oj

$1.98

PlU3

PURSES y

x

S

Smart

GIFT HANDKERCHIEFS ; ' 35c to $1.25 Large sizes hi prints, many with scalloped edges, 'v CHINESE HANDKERCHIEFS $1.00

Shipment Of MEN'S FINE LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS desirable hand-made linen styles.

e Prints, yd, 33c

... IN NEW PATTERNS

RINGER - GQUCKENOUR CO.

0uc9M .Saatttt 7ewt9

1 MlIIElinBSiSilllll . V