Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 14, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 20 January 1947 — Page 7

PAGE FOUE

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES MONDAY, JAN. SO', 1947 T SULLIVAN, INDIANA

NONESUCH

Mrs. Albert Oaks spent several clays with her son and family in Evansville recently. Airs. Joe Nelson and Mrs. Elmer Taylor visited with Mrs. Robert Pugh one afternoon last week. Staff Sgt. Malcolm Harris Fort Eelvoir, Virginia, spent a few days furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oral Harris, of Shelburn, recently. Bob Pugh was in Sullivan Tuesday.

Child's Colds

Relieve Misery : -Rub on Time -Tested

CS

VapoRub

MICE

CITY TAXI PHONE 239 ON T HE JOB DAY . . . and . . . NIGHT Dependable Courteous o Reliable

Mr. and Mrs. Roland Hall and daughter, Patty, were Sunday afternoon guests of KJr. and Mrs. Ferd Hall. A. large crowd attended the funeral services for Mrs. Maggie Marts at Shelburn Sunday. Bro, Frank Adamson officiated. Mrs. Marts was a former resident of this vicinity. Mr. and Mrs. Damon Pugh and children were Sunday afternoon guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pugh. Reba Jennings, Ed Chambers, Bill Wilber, Gerald Jennings and Shirley Mayer were recent supper guests of Mr, and M(rs. Eno McKinney and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Ferd Hall entertained with a Christmas party Tuesday evening, December 24. Refreshments of sandwiches, coffee, candy and apples were served. Gifts were exchanged.

ML J. Aikin & Son FUNERAL HOME Dagger "Aikln'i Service Coats K Um."

K!DS STILL ROOTING FOR BABE

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LITTLE JACK DE FEO, 11, accompanied by a group of his friends, smilingly gives a message to Babe Ruth's night nurse, Sonya Oliker, at French Hospital in New York. One of his pals (right) nonchalantly maneuvers his bubble gum as the note is passed. The youngsters are but a few of many who turn up constantly at the hospital to inquire about the Babe following his recent serious operation. (International)

It's easy to choose praise-winning foods at your A&P. Self -Service Market, for it's cram-full of good things. Take our bakery treats,' for example (and you'll want to take plenty when you see 'em!) From delicious Marvel Bread to tempting Jane Parker Donuts, everything is fresh from our own ovens. Speaking of freshnessthat's an important "-buy-word" at A&P. So is high quality! Yet prices are surprisingly low. Stop in today and see!

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GOLDEN RIPE Rananas

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FLORIDA ISO Sim Granges doi. 35c

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OXYDOL DUZ RINSO Soap Powder 35

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BLUE BEAUTY Cice 2 Lb. 27e

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OF INTEREST TO FARTHERS

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ANSWERS QUESTIONS ON FLOWERING PLANTS LAFAYETTE, Ind., Jan. 17. Announcement recently of the new bulletin "Home Care of Greenhouse Flowering Pot Plants" by the department of jhorticulture, Purdue University, brought hundreds of requests and also many questions to the University from Hoosiers. Those questions of general interest and their answers are given by Gordon Milne, extension horticulturist, who compiled the bulletin. Why do begonias fail to bloom?

If leaves and stems of the green

leaf varieties take on a reddish cast and growth is retarded, the trouble may be too much sun

light together with insufficient

water.

When leaves and flowers fade in color, the growth becomes long-jointed and spindly, the flowers small or they" fail to

bloom entirely, the plant is suf

fering from lack of light, too high a room temperature, too

much soil moisture or a combin

ation of these factors.

Why didn't my Christmas cac

tus bloom this year? It is imper

ative that the plant be subjected to a drying off period in late fall and early winter to produce flower buds for the Christmas blooms. After the last bloom falls, normal watering can be resumed and carried on through

out the year until the succeeding fall when it is dried off again. Cool temperatures of 60 to 65 degrees in the home are conducive to better growth.

What causes the flower buds of the geranium to dry, failing

i to develop? Success with geran-

, iums can be expected if placed in a sunny window and .the room

. temperature stays very low, 55

1 degrees. At the normal room

temperature of 70 degrees, the

flower buds dry instead of open ing.

in the hen house for setting hens.

The poultryman ' recommends that eggs be gathered at least

three times a day in winter as

well as summer. On very cold days there is danger of the eggs being chilled or frozen. On days when this danger can be ignored, there is the possibility of the eggs being kept warm for too long a time under the hens.

Hoosier Library Group Seeks More Indiana Facilities

small towns have a per capita income of less than fifty cents, while the American Library Association sets the lowest figure

methods for nominating state' officials and. U. S. senators, began calling meetings, writing letters, and contacting their

essential to the maintenance of 1 legislators, to make known farm minimum library service at one Views. t dollar per capita. Seventy cents Commenting on the need for per capita is the average for all 'a direct primary law in Indiana, libraries of Indiana. These facts Hassil E. Schenck, a Boone counmean that the library service in'ty farmer and president of the

many communities is far below , Indiana Farm Bureau, declared,

"Too many politicians have stumped the state, preaching 'Let's return the government to the people' and then fight dili-

what it should be.

"The public library," Mr. Sea-

lock declares, "is an essential

part of the American eudcational i '

system. By selecting materials gently to keep the controls in the and organizing them for use, it hands of a. few. In the last conbecomes an indispensable educa- iventions of both political parties, tional agency for all the people. 'each nomination was a foregone The well-being of the country conclusion, because of the manip-

BROODY HENS PROBLEM IN WINTER AND SUMMER LAFAYETTE, Ind., Jan. .17. It's the forgotten hen, the "biddy" that goes broody, which can cause the problem in producing good quality market or hatching eggs. Ernest Anderson, Purdue University extension poultryman, says that whether it is summer or winter, the temperature under a setting hen is high enough to hatch fertile eggs into baby chicks. Infertile eggs, also, will deteriorate just as quickly under broody hens in winter, as in' summer. .. .v. V , The poultryman explained that in the fertile egg the germ spot continues to grow just as long as the temperature is suitable. If a fertile egg is taken from the nest and cooled, the germ growth

stops. It may either die or remain dormant until the egg is

warmed to 70 to 72 degrees. If it

jdies it may be that it developed

too much to stand . being cooled

and still live. If the growth goes past a certain point it cannot be cooled without killing it. Successful flock owners know that the eggs must be cooled as soon as possible to a temperature which will stop germ growth. Eggs should be gathered often and not 'left under other laying hens which might keep . them warm too long. There is no place

"Of the citizens of Indiana living on farms or in small towns of less than 2,500 population, approximately 778,000 have no access to the informational and recreational resources of a local public library," says Richard P. Sealock, city librarian of Gary, Indiana, and president of the Indiana Library Association. "This deplorable fact is true, despite the common belief that the public library is a practically universal institution in America." These figures were revealed by a survey of existing public library facilities in Indiana, recently conducted by the Indiana Library Association. Mr. Sealock comments upon the inequality of educational opportunity represented by these figures: "The child of every community, rural or urban, is assured education at public expense. The quality of this education is guaranteed by certain minimum standards for school buildings, courses of study, and trained teachers. A large propor

tion of the people of eighteen years and over living in rural communities, however, are de-1 nied the chance to extend their . education informally through the' informational and cultural re

sources of a well equipped public library."

More figures are produced by the Library Association to show the serious problem which con- ' fronts a large proportion of the small libraries of the state. Approximately half of the libraries cf Indiana receive an income of less than $2500 a year. This amount must pay salaries, maintain a building and buy books. According to the estimates of the Indiana Library Association, $25,000 a year is the minimum necessary to maintain an adequate modern library which ought to serve about 25,000 people. Many existing libraries in

demands that every citizen have opportunity and incentive, through the public library, to keep abreast of the vital problems which we face today and will face tomorrow. Adequate public library service, like public schools, should be the privilege of every man, woman, and child." The Indiana Library Association and the Indiana Trustees Association are jointly sponsoring legislation which will (1) improve the public library laws of Indiana, (2) seek state aid for libraries, (3) strengthen the State Library. ,

ulation of those at the top."

BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT

FARM BUREAU IS FOR DIRECT PRIMARY

Mr. and Mrs. George Buschur of Flint, Michigan, announce the arrival of a son, Richard Frank, born December 23. Mr. and Mrs. Buschur are former residents of Dugger. DOCTOR'S DISCOVERY FOR BACKACHES DUE TO KIDNEYS

INDIANAPOLIS, Jan

Organized Indiana Agriculture,

with the support of many other groups interested in strengthening democracy and good government, today put Itself squarely behind a direct primary bill, introduced last Thursday (Jan. 16) in the House of Representatives of the Hoosier legislature. Farm Bureau members throughout the state, eager to

abolish dictatorial

If excess acidity of your urine make your back ache so you groan ... so you get up 3 or times a night to pass water, now be of good cheer.

on I Three generations ago a tamous ooctor : l .-1. 1 -J-,l nt V.;n ,.Dfi,i Y.aA

I1UL1CCU lUai HUllUlwa V ... pat.wi.fca this backache. He compounded a medicine made of 16 herbs, roots, vegetables, balsams truly Nature's own way to relief. Millions have used it. The medicine is Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. Instantly you take it, it starts to work flushing out those excess acids that may cause your backache . . . increasing the flow of urine to help ease that burning sensation when you pass water . . . and that bladder irritation that makes you get up nights. Caution : take as directed. You'll say it's marvelous. For free trial supply, send Ito Dept. V, Cn. Inc.. Box 1255. Stamford.

convention I C0""- Or get f u 11-sized bottle of Swamp-

KOOt today t your urunaiuic.

SB3

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1875 ' 1946 . NO INFLATION HERE Bankloan Plan AS THE COST OF LIVING GOES UP KEEP THE COST OF YOUR BORROWING DOWN BY FINANCING 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. Sullivan State Bank Safe Since 1875 Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 1875 1946

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There are rumors circulated that I have sold my business known as Sullivan Monument Co., to James J. Durham, which I purchased from him in 1939. I was the stone cutter there when he purchased it from the Davis Brothers, so I feel with my 22 years in the business I can give the public what they want and not from pictures. My only partner is my son, Bob, a veteran of three and a half years, who is our own draftsman.We do all our engraving in our shop. We invite Monument customers at any time to come in and see their work finished before it is taken to the cemetery. Our helper, Mr. Ted Miller, w ho has been with me for four years, is the father of eight children. We do know and have proof that there have been outside contracts made listing our shop and telephone numbers on them. We ask customers to be careful what they sign, for this has to step using our address. Would advise customers to buy from an authorized dealer of long reliable standing . . . selling only the highest quality stone found on today's market. Established in Sullivan for generations to come.

LOVELY Lucille Eaiata models a new type polyethelene raincoat which she will wear when she competes i for the "Miss Plastics" title at the i national plastics show which is scheduled to open in Chicago on January 27. ' (International)

R. H. Clarkson & Son