Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 244, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 6 December 1946 — Page 6
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PAGE BIX SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES-FRIDAY, DEC. 6, 1946. SULLIVAN, INDIANA.
SnSaSfira ' SUNDAY I rTOi?rar SUNDAY I
sySLMiswl And Monday . -And Monday ;, f 1 MI RAM : I tef INK : &;t Plus Color Cartoon - Oddity - Sport - News yhiLA A I, dJsfakrl, ttittyafoifrrWClf """" ! mi r JL M THE HOOSIER HOTSHOTS - Tonight & Saturday - 1 Jf$p Fr0m The National Barn Dance rW-rrn w'JiMjm -J. - -' '" j ADDED COMEDY TcOLOlTcARTOON - NEWS . Cf -Tonight&Saturday. Lm-Jl2igSSLlS!.?..L. port ' 0ddity ' News " tJ ilii&l M&s&iMbM
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTI.F.MKNT I Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Executrix of the estate of W. J. Jennings has this day' tiled in the office of the clerk of the, Sullivan Circuit Court lier final report of her account with said estate, and that, the tame, will be heard by the Sullivan Circuit Court on the 4th day of January, 3947 the same being the 35th judicial day of thn November term 1-M6 of said court. Creditors, heirs and legatees of paid decedent and all persons interest ed in said estate therefore, are hereby notified iq appear in said court on said day and show cause why said report should not be approved. LUCRETIA A. JENNINGS, Executrix. Witness my hand and seal of said I
court at Sullivan this 6th xlay of:" seie diuidDecember. 1946. I mette and niece, Mrs. Evelyn
ni r,r sniiivan firfnit fnnrt Lewis E. Chowning, Attorney. : 1st ins 12-6-46 2t. ' r Eraai u
HOME APPLIANCES'. With a loan from us, you buy from the dealers, of your choice on a "cash sale" basis. Then repay with a single monthly amount. Come in or phone
for fast service ... confidential service friendly service! Fidelity Loan Co. Upstairs Middle East Side Sq.
First Christian Church Sullivan, Ind. i . "A Busy Church . . . Always Serving!"
k Is God coming back to Earth! "raise ye your Cible-school 9 :30 voices in praises , , , , . to Jehovah." Worship and Communion 10:10 Enjoy the Choir Anthem. i. , Enjoy the Girls' Trio.
"When thou Prayest . .
Mrs. Evelyn Ougren and sons, Barry and Randy, of Aurora, Illinois, are visiting relatives and friends in Sullivan. They are stopping at the Hotel Sullivan. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bledsoe of North State Street had as their guests. Thursday Mrs. Bled-
ii.. r: iRi'rrv inri -ugita ana sons, Randy, of Aurora, Illinois. .-'a,flft yt to Buy new
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"WHAT IS GOD LIKE?" Hear this sermon Sunday morning. What is you idea of God? What do you think about Him? WThat will He be like when He returns?
. Pray Without Ceasing!"
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SOCIETY
Miss Norma Sevier, Editor Call 12
THANKSGIVING GUESTS J. A. Crawford and daughter, I clio' nad as their Thanksgiving fucu.a jyii. anu iviio. ivuAscii Crawford and daughter, Nancy, of Dayton, Ohio, ' Mrs. Maude Steele, Mr. and Mrs. William McPherson and daughters, Mary Jo and Sally, of Chillicothe, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. James Steele of . Lafayette, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Pinkston, Mr. and Mrs. Ferd Usrey and Betty and Joe of Sullivan. PRISCILLA EMBROIDERY CLUB The Priscilla Embroiderv club was entertained at the home of Mrs. Otis Hall with a one o'clock luncheon. Gay Christmas decorations were used throughout and sifts piled high upon the mantel. New officers were elected for the coming year as , follows: Faye 7ku OCpi&s SHOP IN COMFORT let us fit you with a pair of the . Arch Restorers Soft, flexible, light and comfortable. No metal. Nothing awkward or rigid to restrict the natural action of your feet. RELIEF GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY REFUNDED EXPERTLY FITTED MAXWELtBEVISSHOE CO. Quality, Style, Service Expert Shoe Repairing
Wise, President; Iona Jared, Vice-President; Faye Dugger,
Secretary. Christmas songs were aung anu me gin exuiiange neiu. After the contest, which was won by Accie Rains, sewing and knitting was resumed. Twenty members and three guests, Pearl Newsome , Millie Frakes and daughter and Cleotis Hamilton were present. NOTICE Ladies on the committee of Mrs. Clayton's please do not bring any food to the December 12 meeting of the Birthday Club unless you contact Maureen ,KeW THANKSGIVING DINNER Mr. and Mrs. Cecil McCammon entertained the following guests Thanksgiving day, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar McCammon and sons of Hymera, Ossie Dean of Sullivan, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil McCammon and son of Cass, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Knotts of Carlisle, Phyllis and Gary McCammon. Afternoon callers were Mr. and Mrs. Her bert Zaayer and sons. , Ready to Quit jWHSON WYATT, housing expediter, is reported ready to resign as 'a result of failure to get powers he demanded from President Truman tQ jush the housing proEriSk ' (I attrmioBfl).
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TODAYS MARKETS
i INDIANAPOLIS, Dee. 6 (UP) Hogs 7,000; good and choice barrows and gilts 160250 lbs. $24.50 $25.00; light sows $22.00. Cattle 700: calves 400; good and choice 1,150 lb. steers $24.50; yearlings and light steers $23.00; medium and good lightweignt yearlings $18.00 $20.00; good beef cows $14.00 $15.50; good and choice vealers $27.50 $30.00. SheeD 1.500: good and choice fat lambs $23.00 $23.50; medium and good $16.00 $20.00; slaughter ewes largely $5.50 $7.00; price quotable to $7:50. Like Dewey for Business ALBANY, N. Y. (UP) According to a poll of Albany Business College students, Gov. Thomas E. Dewey is not only a business man, 1 but their "ideal" business man. The governor came out on top in a popularity poll conducted by the college newspaper, The Spotlight. Football Date Bail PROVIDENCE, R. I. (UP) When more girls than boys showed up for a dance at a 'teenage canteen, the Parent-Teachers Associaton siolved the problem the next week by offering a football as a door prize.
Navy Stores 6-Year Oil Supply In Pacific
HONOLULU (UP) Safe from atomic bombs, the United States Navy has a 250,000,000-gallon oil supply stored in its "Red Hill Underground," a vast Pearl Harbor "tank farm" buried under 200 feet of volcanic red ash. This capacity, with 12 smaller surface tanks, can fuel the Pacific Fleet for the next six years. Built at a cost of $42,000,000 and the lives of 16 men, the "underground", was a war-time top secret project which some 4,000 men labored almost three years to build, but which the Navy has now permitted a few outsiders to inspect. The 20 tanks are each 250 feet high, or approximately the height of a 20-story building. Cylindrical in shape, they are steel with concrete lining. They contain 4,000,000 pounds ' of structural steel and 21,000,000 pounds of reinforcing steel. The project, lacking any precedent for design, was supervised by , Lt. Comdr. Ben Rush, now Hawaii's territorial superintendent of public works. Over 1,690,000 cubic yards of earth had to be moved for the project and much of the material was removed from a depth of 500 feet. The job was done by hardrock miners from Colorado, ex pert tunnel men from Montana, Idaho and Nevada, and coal min
BYRD, MASCOT OFF TO ANTARCTIC - i
Sill if 4 Bill :::v::'.v:::&ft$v Mk&M? iy e&. PPAD A riM DtrUADn e OVOn hnM.
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ntoni. nwim in. vn bt w i uuiuij that will serve as mascot for the The Mount Olympus leaves Norfolk Rpbgrt uackenbqsh looks on,
30 Gallon RANGE BOILERS o COUNTY HARDWARE Vaughn Jones
LOOKED LIKE DEER'S TAIL SANFORD, Me. (UP) Lucius Lozier of Sandford lost three fingers of his left hand, when a hunter mistook the white fingers of his canvas work glove for the tail of a deer. COYOTE INVADES INDIANA GOSHEN, Ind. (UP) The coyote seems to have come to Indiana. The first ever reported in this region was killed near here. It was a female weighing 29 pounds. Coyotes usually are found only in the great plains I region of the United States. EE WITNESSED THE CYCLE SKOWEGAN, Me. (UP) When Charles Griffin joined the fire department 48 years ago, the equipment was drawn by hand. When he. became chief 22 years ago, it was drawn by a horse. When he retired the other day, the equipment had boon motorized. ers from Pennsylvania and West Virginia, aided by some 500 Jap- : anese-Amencans from Hawaii. Nerve Center Deep Down. The nerve center of the "underground" is also buried deep beneath a lava ridge. Here, in a vgiilt protected by massive bomb-proof doors, is the pump house. In this brightly-lighted command post, technicials man elaborate control panels which check on the flow of fuel through a three-mile tunnel linking the "underground" with Pearl Harbor piers. To facilitate maintenance of the huge fuel lines, a small railroad carries workmen and equipment through the 'tunnel and about the big tanks. Leaks in the tanks, which are 100 feet in diameter and spaced 200 feet apart, and in the lines can be instantly spotted with scientific detection apparatus. The tanks are so big that when a leak in one must be repaired, the fuel is withdrawn and water is pumped in up to the level of the leak. Workmen descend in a small boat which is lowered from the tank's ceiling. The last two fatalities occurred when a forced blast of air capsized a boat and the workrnen drowned before aid could reach them. X x 1,ft- Tl;V, Tmn o TTnelrv mm cjuav 1 1 1 j, , ""-"j rvr Navy's Antarctic expedition, as for the South Pole region. Capt. (International Soundphoto
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PARKER "51" FOUNTAIN TEN $12.50 GILLETTE RAZORS $1.00 to $3.79 BILLFOLDS $1.00 to $5.00 BABY BROWNIE SPECIAL CAMERA $1.85 SYNCRO REFLEX BROWNIE $7.85 SCOTY POCKET WATCH $1.95 NEW HAVEN POCKET WATCH $3.45 BIG BEN ALARM CLOCK (Luminous) $5.85
iiiwiwiiiii niiiwmii min ii uiimii i inm i m jynjiiuiLiiuiij GENUINE KODAK FILM V 120 33c V 116 38c V 620 33c V 616 38c V 127 27c NOT necessary to bring empty camera
Bennett's
"Tour Druggist Is More Than A Merchant." Phone 96
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At Sherman -Sunday and Monday
( A romantic mojucQC in this cer.c from . . - Jcli Donocll. Cu-t Ksbbcc
PECI
-Saturday-Only
DEVIL'S
! FOOD
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Note No phone calls observed!
Fritz
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Pha rmacy -Sa vS5l iik 'rak; 'it "Cowlvir Blues, with Len Cunts, and Cuiaa Williams. LIMITED AMOUNT
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