Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 245, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 9 December 1946 — Page 6

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PAGE SIX SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES MONDAY, DEC. 9, 1946. SULLIVAN. INDIANA

- Ends Tonight

Plus Cartoon - Sport - News

Tues. & Wed.

- Come Early -

ITS JOYOUS... ' rf WITH LOVE'S VJam ELLISON jfM JWilli

Extra Pro Football CARDINALS vs BEARS

Also Andy Clyde Comedy

- Ends Tonight -

The Hoosier Hotshots

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7

Ken CURTIS

b.raGuinn WILLIAMS

Jeff DONNELL

Guy KIBBEE

Plus Cartoon - News Edgar Kennedy' Comedy

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

Telephone service day and night Call Carri-Cab Anywhere Any Time to. - Tine

470 Station

BEAUTIFUL CHINA-BASE Table Lamps with " silk shades 5.93 to 9.95 Gamble's "The Friendly Store"

Holifaymml

for

SEE US NOW for a cash loan to take ,

care of holiday purchases and all kinds of seasonal and "year-end" ex-

pcnatTs. Takes only a few minutes to complete the trans-. jiKtion. Convenient repayments. Friendly service. Come $nor phone ! "

FIDELITY LOAN COMPANY

Up stairs east side souare.

Sullivan

55

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" The 'NEWEST in fflfts For Ihe Dtcmt Utile Ciri You Knwt

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Only 13 Shopping Days Till Christmas Shop NOW Use Our Lay-Away Plan.

Independents To Meet In Tourney At Fairbanks Gym

Independent basketball clubs of the county will meet in a tourney at Fairbanks beginning December 11th and continuing through December 14, it was announced today. The tournament is being sponsored by the American Legion Post at Fairbanks and the first game is to be played between Frairie Creek and Hymera at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday evpning. Following is a schedule of the games and dates: Wednesday Night Game one 7:30, Prairie Creek vs. Hymera. Game two 8:30, Fairbanks vs. Farmersburg. Thursday Night Game three 7:30, Merom vs. Shelburn. Game four 8:30, Graysville- vs. Dueger. Friday Night Game five 7:30, winner game one vs. winner game two. Game six 7:30, winner game three vs. winner game four. Saturday Night Game seven 7:30, loser game five vs. loser game six.' Game eight 8:30, winner game five vs. winner game six. Cowboys Using1 Nylon

"RUSSELL" Bull Halters TO CONTROL MEAN BULLS

COUNTY HARDWARE Vaughn Jones

TOOTHACHE, STAY AWAY!

WILMINGTON, Del. (UP) Even cowhands are using nylon these days nylon lariats. The Dupont Co. reports that . cowhands, particularly on ranges of the west and southwest, are beginning to rope with nylon, now being fabricated into superior lariats.

CHEYENNE, Wyo. (UP) The Wyoming state health and nutrition committee warns that there are about 8,657 people in Wyoming who'd better not have toothaches. Based on population figures, those unlucky ones represent two counties without dentists. EGGS COULDN'T TAKE IT

GOSHEN, Ind. (UP) John A. Wemple and Davis Arthur Shank were uninjured when their cars collided, but the 30 dozen- eggs Wemple had in his ear were well scrambled . 1 M FACTO GRAPHS Motorboats are utilizing Jet propulsion. The water-jet outboard motor is considered a cheap means of obtaining faster water transport, says Industrial and Engineering Chemistry. J . The first cotton imported In the American colonies was In 1633 at Salem, Mass., and the earliest record of cloth was made In the colonies in 1641. . Airplane pilots are aided by nearly 5,000 farmers who volunr tarily make daily observations for the U. S. weather bureau. . Three farm people are Injured In accidents each minute of the day. ' , - The more than 30 Indian tribes in the state of Oklahoma compose almost one-fifth of the Indian population of the U. S.

John Deere Day THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19TH

1 fiHt 6flflfi$IV9& GALE bobbins - I 0$L$ EwJlP SCOTT ELLIOTT I mid lalkhizj Animafo

i

mid "Talking Animal

AND A PREVIEW OF

WHAT'S NEW IN JOHN DEERE TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT

and other Interesting Talking Pictures

If you don't have tickets or need more, ask us for them. W. S. JARED implement Sales 19 N. Section St.

Mist Norma Sevier, Editor Call 12

Miss Doris Ward Becomes Bride Of Frank Zenor Sunday Afternoon In Candlelight Ceremony At four-thirty o'clock Sunday afternoon, the Shelburn First Methodist Church was the scene of beautiful candlelight nuptials uniting in marriage Miss Doris Ward, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Ward, and Frank Zenor, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Zenor of Terre Haute. The vows of the double ring ceremony were read by Rev. L. N. Abel before an altar adorned with white draperies and tall candelabra and banked by greenery. Some two hundred and fifty wedding guests witnessed the exchange of vows.

The bride, given in marriage

by her father, was lovely in a street-length dress of white crepe with drape skirt style. She carried a purple orchid. She was attended by her sister, Mrs. La Verne Everly as matron, of honor. Mrs. Everly wore a dress of pure white and carried a colonial bouquet of mixed buds. ' The bridesmaids, Miss Gladys Campbell, close friend of the bride, and Miss Ila Zenor, sister of the groom, also wore streetlength dresses and carried colonial bouquets of pastel hues. The groom was attended by his brother, Harold N. Zenor as best man and by La Verne Everly and Nick Copra of Terre Haute. Irvin Elliott and Jack Beason of Terre Haute, close friends of the groom, acted as ushers. Preceding and during the ceremony a series of bridal airs was played by Miss Virginia Kruzan of Terre Haute. Miss Barbara Faust, also -of Terre Haute, beautifully sang "I Love You" and "Because." Immediately following the ceremony, a reception for some one hundred relatives and close friends was held at the home of the bride's parents. Out-of-town guests included Mrs. Hazel Sparks, Gerald Sparks, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Sparks, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hoesman, all of Merom; Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Watson and Mrs. Neta, Smith, of Farmersburg; Mr. and

Mrs. Bob Baker and children, Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Zenor, Nick Copra, Mrs. Wm. Britton, Mr.

and

and Mrs.

Mrs. Robert McKinney, Mr.

Bill Serban and child

ren and Miss Stan dan, all of Terre Haute; Mr. and Mrs. Ben Ward, of Hymera; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Grantham and daughter, Ernestine, of Clinton; and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Rotramel and children of Carlisle. At the close of the reception Mr. and Mrs. Zenor left on a brief wedding trip. For her going-away ensimble, the bride wore a blue wool dress with lizard accessories and a brown leopard-trimmed coat with an orchid corsage. The bride is a graduate of Shelburn High School with the class of 1944, following which she attended Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute. She has been employed in Terre Haute for some time.

CHILDREN'S STORY BOOKS 50c to $2.00 CHILDREIBIBLETORIES 50c to $2.75

BIBLES Self Pronouncing $2.30 to $7.50 White Bibles$2.00 to $3.50 RILEY'S JOYFUL POEMS FOR CHILDREN $2.00 per copy

lennett's Pharmacy Tour Druggist Is More Than A Merchant." Phone 96

rss. is itjsfe. iSBj. &a&& s23fc i53Ki

NOTICE The ladies of the Birthday club please bring soup bowls and service to the December 12th meeting.

ENOUGH IS ENOUGH CLIFTON, N. J. (UP) Almost every day, Edward Sprock, commuter,, took the same bus. Always, he paid his fare in pennies. Bus Driver Anthony Raia finally had enough. According to charges pending before the grand jury, Raia threw the pennies out of the window, then attacked Sprock with an axe. Toot, Toot! Here's the Grocer PORT CLINTON, O. (UP) Consumers here don't have to go out to market any more the

groceries are brought right to I their doors, thanks to Jack Var-

leys mobile grocery store. The operator bought a large bus, converted it into a store-on-wheels and added a set of musical horns to announce his arrival in a consumer area.

Sports-Minded Burglars BROOKLYN (UP) Burglars robbed a sporting goods store of ; $2,000 in merchandise and $500 in cash, and took time out to measures themselves for sports clothing with a tape measure.

Petrillo Is Winner

i - .

JAMES CAESAR PETRILLO, president of American Federation of Musicians, flashes a broad smile as he hears the report that Federal Judge Walter J. LaBuy has ruled the Lea act, passed by Congress in effort to restrict the music czar's powers, is unconstitutional, (International)

West Comforts East

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Frederics 3 minute miracle wave Frederics Tru-Curl oil machineless Frederics Vitron

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The mild, .harmless waving p.gents used in Frederics Im- ' perial Tru-Cuil are volatile." Nothing is left "on" or "in' Hie hair. Each curl is bathed in delicate lanolin bath which preserves and protects the life and loveliness of the hair. BREATH TAKING SILKY SOFT NO KINKS - NO FRIZZES

Cold Ray - Cold Waves FIRST NIGHT SPECIAL OCCASION COMMAND PERFORMANCE AH types of permanent waves . . . priced to suit your individual demand.

Shampoo & Individual Hair Style, Hair Shaping, Manicuring, Scalp Treatment and Facials.

SHAMPOOS Vita-Fluff, Admiracion, Oil or Lathering Lustre Cream (also for retail). REVLON Nail Polish, Oil Fast, Powder, Rouge and Lipsticks (also for retail).

KINDNESS and understanding are the bonds that bring East and West, or youth and age, together in this photo. Bishop Albert Bratcn, supervisor of St. Joseph's Hospital in Yokosuka, comforts an ailing Japanese child. His sympathy ior those under his care has won him scores , of friends. ' .(International!

COME IN OR

Phone 344

FOR APPOINTMENT

Monette's Beauty Shop

BEATRICE BEDWELL

Davis Hotel Bldg.

Monette Knotts !

DELORES McGARVEY NASH