Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 20, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 28 January 1947 — Page 12

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Tonight & Wed. . - Come Early - " Hl'Pip.jBf ptw Mi"TTttll 7 8838?' Added "TREES AND MEN'" & BAY VVIIITLEY MUSICAL Sullivan Club Meetings FOR THIS WEEK The Red Cross sewing room is open every Thursday. Sullivan American Legion Auxiliary No. 139, Tuesday, January 28th, 7:30 p. m Legion Home. Bring: January issue of Auxiliary News. Business and social hour. Needlecraft Club, Wednesday, January 29, 2:00 p. m., Mrs. John Harbough. Delta Thela Tau guest night, Friday, February 3, Davis Hotel, 7:30. Call 469 or 471 before Friday, January 31 if you caifhot attend or if you are bringing a guest. The Young Married Couples class of the Baptist church will hold their monthly party Thursday night at the church, 6:00. It will be a chili supper. All members urged to attend. Woman's Club, Tuesday, (January 28, 2:15, club room of the library. Mrs. Ruth Brown, hostess. : II. B. Campbell Sunday School class party, Baptist church, Tuesday night, January 2 8tli. . Pocahontas Club, Freida Greggs, Thursday night, 6:30. . Bring cup, fork and spoon. Important meeting of all parents of . canteen meirpbers, Wednesday, January 29, 7:30 at the canteen. Purpose of meeting to explain : the plans of the Canteen Parents Association for the year. , . Presbyterian Wcmen's Association, Friday, 2:30, at the church. Mary 'o Enochs Sim- ' ons will speak on the Presbyterian Missionary Educati( n in India. (Note Send your club notice? to the Times Saturday before week club meets.) NOTICE OF APPOIVTM EXT Notice is hereby givrn that tho nnfktsiraed hns hefn appointed Rxeeu(or of the fwtnle of John C. Campbell deceased late of Sullivan County Indiana. Said estate is supposed to lie solvent. MALCOLM CAMPBELL. Executor Hays and Hays. Attorneys. 1st Ins 1-21-47 St. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE OF KEAI. ESTATE AT ITRLIf) AtTTIOJ. - The undersismed, Floyd Pinkston as administrator of the Estate o Allen L. Pinkston, deceased, by vlrtu of an order of the Sullivan Cireui Court of Sullivan County, Indiana made and entered in a cause therei pending entitled Floyd Pinkston. ad mlnistrator of the Estate of Allen I Pinkston, deceased vs. Jesse Ro Pinkston. Rollie W. Pinkston, Floy Pinkston and numbered 30999 upo the dockets thereof, hereby givf notice that at the late residence r the said decedent, Allen L. Pinkstc In the town of Merom, Sullivan Coun ty, Indiana on THURSDAY. THE 6TH DAY -OF FEBRUARY, 1917 at 2:00 o'clock P. M. on said date, h will offer for sale at public sale th following described ral estate situat in Sullivan County, State of Indiana to-wit : Lot Number 129 In the original town of Merom ns the same appears on the recorded pint of said town. TERMS OF SALE Said real' estate will be sold fo cash, free of all liens, except the taxe for the year 1846 due and payable b the year 1947, which the purchase shall assume, and agree to pay an subject to the approval of the Sulllvai Circuit Court of Sullivan County Indiana. FLOYD PINKSTON Administrator of the estate 01 Allen L. Pinkston, deceased PiE-g & Tennis, Attorneys for Administrator. 1st ins 1-7-17 It. DR. A. C. McPHAIL Will be in onr store. WEDNESDAY MAXWELL-BEVIS SHOE CO.

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TONIGHT THRU T2TURS.

l7f's Their T m. - . breafesf! 'CROSBY FRED ASTAIRE JOAN CAULFIELD mm mitk BILLY DeWOLFE OLGA SAN JUAN ROBERT BENCHLEY 32 IRVING iifcKLIN TUNES Added Cartoon In Color & Flicker Flashback ACQ - SCIENTISTS BERKELEY (UP) A description of American life 200,000,000 years ago, when a large part of Arizona was swamp ruled by amphibious reptiles, is being written by paleontologists at the University of California. Basis for the prehistoric history was provided by fossils found at Meteor Crater and near Cameron and Holbrook, Arizona. Dr. Samuel P. Welles, senior curator of the U. C. Museum of Paleontology, is preparing a payer to be released this month by the University of California Press on the 20,000,000 years just prior to the 100,000,000-year reign of the dinosaurs. Included among Dr. Welles' specimens are skulls of a group known as psuedo-sochians, reptiles which were developing into j two-legged creatures. They prob ably stood about four feet high and had a wicked set of serrated teeth. According to Dr. Welles, these creatures inhabited a swampy flood plain in Arizona about 200,000,000 years ago. At that time the Pacific Ocean formed its western border. These snaggle-toothed beasts are described by Dr. Welles as the early ancestors of the great dinosaurs which ruled the reptile world for 100,000,000 years, later giving way to the age of mammals about 50,000,000 years ago. TTnntlto 11 Taom A11f oo-inn LINCOLN, Neb. (UP)-The j University of Nebraska 35-man football team last fall to a man belonged to American Legion posts, Department Adjutant R. C. Patterson announced. N SPECIAL CIIILDKENS SERVICES AT PAXTON There will be a special service fnr the chilrlrpn nf the Pnvtnn

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200,000,000 YRS

Methodist Church Sunday morn- Easton-ing.

Pastor Eli Yates requests that all mothers of children present be there if possible. Suit-able for Her FILM ACTRESS Llzabeth Scott wean i suit designed for her by Jean -ouis In which the reverse side of erey-blue wool is used, with the self stripe employed in unusual .jhimi. A black beret from Paris lops the ensemble. (International).

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J? 1.4 Soils Depleted By War Crops . CHICAGO "Pay Day" is becoming due for Midwestern soils which have suffered fertility losses through intensified wartime croppings and record-breaking world food demands since the advent of peace, according to a statement made public here by the Middle West Soil Im provement Committee. "Farmers today are producing a third more foodstuffs, fibers and other products than they did before Pearl Harbor," the statement points out. "They have been doing this with fewer workers and with only a small increase in the acreage under cultivation. "The heavy crop production schedules of recent years have made serious inroads into the fertility resources of existing crop acreage. Although the use of mixed fertilizers has been steadily increasing and has been in a large measure responsible for the record harvests, the amount of plant food returned to the soil has not kept pace with the quantities removed' by growing crops. "It is obvious, therefore, that a long-range soil rebuilding job lies ahead. Farmers with an eye to the future are taking inven-' tory of the needs of their land. They are planning measures to pay back to their soil the fertility they have pulled out in the period of intensified cropping. "One of the Important steps will be the steady application of plant foods containing nitrogen, phosporus and potash, as needed. Another will be a return to,, a regular rotation In which deep rooted legumes play a major role on soils that have been repeated-1 ly .cropped to corn and other grains. This step will neip Duiia nitrogen resources and replenish organic matter in addition to providing valuable feed for livestock. Other conservation measures will include liming, the use of manures and contour plowing where necessary." Bowls Along at 80 SCRANTON, Pa. (UP) Sportsloving Dan Gelbert marked his 80th birthday by rolling his weekly games with a druggists' bowling league. He is an uncle of Charley Gelbert, former major league infielder, now head baseball coach at Lafayette College, Pa. Mrs. Wm. Theal 420 North Section

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SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES

3 Wringer Type MOP BUCKETS COUNTY HARDWARE Vaughn Jones DETROIT ing housing to solve the (UP) The continushortage has failed mystery of why a eomforable-looking, two-J.-itory residential house in a Detroit district has stood vacant since it was built 16 years ago. For the solution to the mystery, don't go to Otto E. Schilawske, the owner, who turns deaf ears to the pleas of desperate homehunters. He shows up at the well-built house every Saturday. In winter, he shovels the snow off the path and stoop. In summer, he cuts the grass and pulls weeds from the lawn. Schilawske, a man who knows how to keep a secret, meets inquiries with a flat: "It's none of Torture The above postcard, signed "Black Dahlia Avenger" and indicating that the torture-murder

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Mrs. Floyd Willis Phone 137

' TUESDAY, JAN. 28, 1947.

ROMANS PROTEST LIVING COST

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INDICATIVE OF THE INTERNAL strife in Italy, stressed by former Premiei Gasperi during his recent American visit, is this big demonstration in Rome against high living costs. At left Giuseppe de Vittoria, Communist secretary of the Workmen's Confederation, orates while thousands march with huge, signs condemning conditions. ( International)

your business. There's nothing I anyone can do about it. It's my house and I'll do with it as I please." Pressed further, he may mention some "estate trouble" that prevents him from leaving his present address and moving to i nu in UKianr n;ncn - n nn onwia times adds: "There is also a sentimental reason.' ' But that's all Schilawske will say. : ' A Bradford Repeats BOSTON (UP) Massachusetts' new governor, Robert F. Bradford, is a great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandson of William Bradford, who was the second governor 325 years ago. Survive Freak Accident CHESTER, Pa. (UP) Noble Hunter's car skidded, went into an acrobatic spin and hung itself on a seven-foot iron picket fence, hind-end upward. Hunter and his two passengers were uninjured. Murderer Says He'll v$:: WW. er of Elizabeth Short intended to surrender, was delivered to the - fc. Tl

LOCALS

Mr. and Mrs. David Hopewell Mrs. Minnie Bell and Miss Alice Grimes were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mison Sun day. Mrs. Amy Osborne and son Russell, and Hazel Wilkey and son, Joe, were supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Wolfe and children, Betty Lou and JerryLee recently. Mr. and Mrs. Junior Hopewell and daughter, Diane Sua, and Mr. and Mrs. John Wolfe and children, Betty Lou and Jerry Lee attended v the show at Shelburn Sunday evening. ' Mary Imogene Carter spent Sunday with Betty Lou and Jerry Lee Wolfe. Mr. and Mrs. VV. B. Shepherd of New Lebanon have returned home after spending a few months in Texas. Give Up Los Angeles Examiner. (International Sound"photo.) nnwnwiiim t two v & Ui

POET'S CORNER

(Editor's note: This column is being conducted for publication of poems submitted by Sullivan county residents. Poems will be printed here as far as available space permits end the Times reserves the right to reject any ,poem deemed unsuitable. Copies of poems sent in will not be returned, therefore all persons are requested to make copies to keep for their own files before submitting for publication.) THE DRAFTEE When I was a boy of only three I listened as mother told thesd things to me, Sonny, my lad, you are just a small boy And what you have there is a tin soldier boy. ! How tall and strong he looks in uniform, But I'm sure down deep in his heart there muft bp a thorn. When his country calls then he mi'of po Tn sll kinds of weather to fight the foe. ' x i As I t b" the fire in my red rorkina chair. T rtpH mv head on rfbor there. T razed in the fir?? till I could har her no more. nd mv tin soldier, boy fell off in the floor. Days passed and year, . I had crown to be a man Yo'ir country is calling said Unr-le Sam, T beein to wonder 'and like a maeic drt, T,knrw the meaning of a thorn in the heart. i T felt as tho I was pierced through and through. But what was there left for me to do- . : MV thoughts went back to mother j that rdeM As we sat bv tho fire that w;is , burning bright. I V'nt off to camp with the other boys,' And we shared each others sorrows and joys, To the ones at home we bid a fo-PWfll And told them wed serve our lountry well. yICTrs. Floyd FRATERNAL ORDER Or EAGLES F.O.E. will meet in regular session on January 30th at 7;00 p. m. in the Eagles Home. There will be initiation of new members following the business meeting. A splendid program has been arranged. Refreshments Will be served by the club. Let3 have a good attendance.

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420 NORTH COURT

SULLIVAN, INDIAN.A

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O No tSflde-handling hazcrd Cleans ins!arti!y just rinS3 Double ihick b!cdes lest 3 times lonser BENNETT' ARMACY SINCE 1914 No Gratitude PROVIDENCE -R. I. (UP)--y Tony Bahrv-S5, , of Providence reported to police that he h?' been held uo at gun-point an robbed of S50 hv a Fall River. Mass.. youth whom . he savedf from idrowning 15' years' aJ fcjrway! DECT; Ind. (UP) Officer

James Bonders mi'ht have been saying "Don't Fence Mo Li." when he dived through the rail-' road gates that had been lowered while his squad car stalled, on-f the railroad tracks. The tr;:i.i

was coming. Quit pylnf rrnt and own your home. Special bargains on property on Installment plan Also farms for sale. W. T. MELLOTT.

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