Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 61, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 26 March 1947 — Page 3

5ULUVAN. INDIANA SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES- WEDNESDAY, Mar. 26, 1947 PAGE THREE

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HOME APPLIANCES AUTO ACCESSORIES Max & Jack's Phillip 66 Service Southeast Corner Section & Washington

LUBRICATION

BATTERY CHARGING

SOCIETY

Mlsa Norma Sevier, Editor Call 12

Sullivan Club Meetings FOR THIS WEEK

The D.A.R. will Thursday afternoon, Mrs. Gus Lofwry.

meet 2:30,

Pythian Sisters, Thursday niffht, March 27. Every member urged to attend the program.

Senior High School Missionary circle of the Christian church (will meet Thursday night, 7:30, home of Joan Reed, 301 South Court Street. A good program has been planned.

II. B. Campbell class party, covered dish dinner, Thursday night, home of Faye Coryell, 503 Sylvandell St. Hostesses will furnish the' meat. Bring own table service.

Presbyterian Women's Association, covered dish luncheon, Friday, March 28, 12:30 p. m. Annual meeting. New officers will be installed.

Pocahontas Club, home of Martha Deckard, Thursday, 6:30 p. m. Bring cup, fork and spoon.

URPRISE PARTY A surprise party was held at

he home of Mr. and Mrs. Ken-

ieth Davis Monday- night in

Bionor of their daughter, Phyllis's

6th birthday. Refreshments of cake, ice ream and pop were served to

he following: Mr. and Mrs. Wal-

er Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Charles

Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond

Nixon and children, Lester Ray

jnd Diana, Charles Lambert, ftodger Gallion, Jack Alumbaugh,

Knna Lou Morgan, Wilma Rus-

ell, Joan Wheaton, Mary Jane

Keid, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth

Davis and sons, Donald and

Richard, and the honored guest, Phyllis Davis. She received many lice gifts.

Drain Tile, 5" & 6"; Bldg. TUe,

various colors & sizes; - "Fluel

Tile, standard sizes. All kindl of brick. Deliveries made very!

reasonable. West Side Tile

Yard, 3rd & Locust, C-9014,

Terre Haute.

MISSIONARY SOCIETY The Baptist Missionary Society met at the home of Mrs. Ross Harbaugh on March 20th for a one o'clock luncheon with 25 members and four visitors present. The president called the meeting to order by the group singing "I Love To Tell , The Story." Mrs. Harbaugh gave a short topic on "The Future of Our Home Missionary." The thought for the month was given by Mrs. Margaret Alsman, her topic being "The American Indian" which was very interesting. The meeting was closed by repeating the Mizpah benediction. ' l Those present were Mrs. Wy-1 man Hull, Helen Simmers and Sally, Tressa Spencer, Gladys Pinkston; Pearl Wise, Elsie Pendelton, Jennie Wright, Reva Livingston, Marcella Cox, Belva Lewellyn, Frances Wright, Lois Dale, Sylvia Goodman, Ruth. Gadberry, Estella Wolfe, Arlie By Collins,-Maude Simmers, Bar-, bara Colvin, Miss Iva .."Drake,'

IN BOTTLES AND AT FOUNTAINS

Margaret Alsman, May Todd, Dora Douthitt, Fern Collins, Mildred Faught, Ellen Sendmeyer and Rose Haskett.

GRAYSVILLE CLUB ELECTS OFFICERS The Graysville 4-H Lads and Lassies Club met Monday and elected officers for the coming year. Charlotte Phillips was elected president. Other officers elected were: Dwight Burton, vicepresident; Rose Pierce, secretary and reporter; Gene Easter, treas

urer; song leaders, Lucille Huff pnd John Coffman, and recreation directors, John Ransford and Duane Monk. A report on the Chicago trip was given by John Ransford, and Charlotte Phillips reported on the District 4-H Leadership Conference. Forty-two members were present. FRANCES REBEKAH LODGE MEETS The Frances Rebekah Lodge of Hymera, met in regular session March 18th with Josephine Spinks presiding. Plans were made to attend and take part n the District Meeting at Dugger in April. Out of town members present were Mrs. Violet Gibbons, Past Assembly President

of Indiana Rebekahs, Mr. Gibbons

and' Mrs. Faustina Shaw, of Terre Haute. Mrs. Ollie Crist ; was',' a visitor from Shelburn. Refresh-

Mary E. Davis, Past Matrons club, Friday, March 29, home of Mrs. Joe McCoskey Iwith Mrs. Clyde Setty as assistant hostess.

ments were served by Mesdames Gordon and Stwalley.

DODD BRIDGE

American Legion . Auxiliary, public games, Thursday night, March 27, 8:00 o'clock, Legion Home. Door prize. Refreshments. PLEAS ANTVILLE Surprise Party Mrs. Willard Andis of Pleasantville was honored recently

with a surprise birthday dinner when a group of friends gathered at her home in celebration of her 36th birthday. The table was centered with a beautiful decorated cake. The afternoon was spent socially. Those present

were Mesdames Lois Smith and

son, Allen, Mary Foster, Helen

Pahmier, Cordia Bedwell and

daughter, Judy, Zelma Hale and daughter, Carol, Goldie Price,

Vivian Cox and daughter, Brenda,

Ina Garrison, Neta Bedwell, Hazel Newkirk, Mary Jackson, Julia Brown, Iris Carrithers, Zil-

pha . Bennett, Thelma Benefiel,.

Stella Alsman, Melissa Jones, Lorene Benefiel and son, Danny,

Murl James apd.son, Danny ilVern Spencer, Lola Bedwell and son, Jimmy, Ethel Benefiel, Dorothy Timmerman, Opal Trimble and

son, Ronald, Miss Edith Ann

Bicknell and the guest of honor,

Mrs. Willard Andis and daughter, Wilma Louise. Mrs. Andis

received a number of nice gifts.

Pepsi-Cola Company, Long Island City, N. Y. Franchiiied Bottler: PEPSI-COLA BOTTTLING CO. OF VINCENNES

PUBLIC SALE I will sell at Public Auction mile south of Graysville on Road 63 on WEDNESDAY, APR. 2, 1947 Sale to begin at 10:30. Farm Implements 1 Massey-Harris tractor 101, twin power 1939; 1 wagon with bed; 1 John Deere 3-horse plow; 1 John Deere 1-row cultivator; 1 Oliver seven-foot disc; 1 International corn planter, power If ft for II or M tractor; 1 sulky hay rake; 1 set dehorners; 1 wagon with flat; 1 Avery horse-drawn corn planter, check row and fertilizer attachments; 1 lot of windows and shutters; 1 set grain sides for truck bed; some baled straw; 1 set harness; 1 team of work horses. Household Goods 1 leather davenport, can be made into a bed; 1 day bed; 1 dining table, six chairs and buffet; 1 dresser; 1 antique dresser; 2 rocking chairs; 1 oak bookcase; 4 oak dining chairs; 1 library table, oak; 1 book rack; 2 wardrobes; 1 iron bed; 2 sets bed springs; 1 chest of drawers; 2 feather mattresses; 3 11-3 x 12 rugs; 1 9 x 12 rug; 1 9 x 6 rug; 1 Hall rug; throw rugs; 1 2-piece living room suite; 1 piano and bench; 1 sewing machine; 1 electric sweeper; 1 wardrobe trunk; 1 Copper Clad heating stove; 1 Round Oak heating stove; 1 small coal stove; 1 Majestic kitchen range; 1 kitchen table and s'x chairs; 2 wood cabinets; 1 steel cabinet; 1 round table; linoleum; 1 set of double tubs; 1 Economy Queen electric 1 unit milker; canned fruit and vegetables. TERMS OF SALE CASH Lunch will be served. Owner, COMMODORE MONK Auctioneers, Harrison & Drake Not responsible in case of accidents.

Sunday School at 9:30 a. m. Prayer meeting Tuesday night.

IV! -s. Jessie Wood, Raymond

Thompson and Mr. and Mrs,

Harold Thompson were in Terre

Haute Monday,

Mrs. Luvisa Wood, Abe Wilkey

and Mr. and Mrs.. Jessie Wood

attended the funeral of Mrs, Ollie Franklin, Friday. .

Mr. and Mrs. Don Butler and son, Kenny, spent the week-end with her mother, Mrs. Jessie Wood. They called on her grand

father, Charles Harris, and bro ther, Raymond Thompson.

Harry Brown and Fern called

on Mr. Brown's brother who is ill

recently.

Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Davis

and family are ill with the flu

Public Auction Sale I will offer for sale to the highest bidder, the entire lot of household goods, beds, bedding, tables, chairs, rockers, dishes, cooking utensils, cook stove, heater, many outside tools, ladders, 50-ft. lawn hose, fruit and 101 articles too numerous to mention. Sale to begin promptly at 12:1-5 Thursday, March 27th at my residence 1 block east of Kraft Cheese Factory. Must vacate property and everything goes, cash on day of sale. OWNER, Claude Shake Auctioneer, Col. Dillingham Clerk, Mrs. Ray Hix

Mrs. Freal Frye spent Sunday

afternoon in Washington the

guest of Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Singleton.

Freal Frye Jr. spent Sunday

in Evansville the guest of Miss June McCammon.

Mrs. Phoebe Brown and Mjrs.

Mable Reel, who have been

spending the winter in Chicago,

returned home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Hale accompaied them here for a short visit.

Mrs. Ray Timmerman and

Edith Ann called on Mrs. Karns

Friday afternoon. Mrs. Karns

has been confined to her home for the last few days with flu.

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Price

were supper guests Sunday of

Mr. and Mrs. Noah Garrison.

Mrs. Callie Timmerman was

the dinner guest Sunday of Mrs. Arlie Spencer.

Rev. and Mrs. Karns, Mrs. Ray

Timmerman and Mrs. Frank Howard attended the funeral of

Rev. Watkins last week at Wash

ington, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Newkirk and Mr. and Mrs. Bud Brust were in

Terre Haute Saturday. They

visited Mrs. Newkirk's mother,

Mrs. Ella Dunbar, it being her birthday. Mrs. Charlotte Page was in Linton Friday. Mrs. Ray Timmerman, Mrs. Ray Newkirk, Mrs. Albert Price, Mrs. Dewey Benefiel, Mrs. Aria Lester, Mrs. Jim Corbin, Mrs. Julia Brown, Miss Blanche Daugherty, Edith Ann Bicknell, Mrs. Frank Howard visited Sunday afternoon in Linton, at the Glenburn Mission. " editing and mating" of the prairie chicken Is at its peak Mr the northern U. S. In April, and egg laying begins. Ninety seconds are required to go a mile at 40 miles an hour; at 100 miles an hour the time: la 36 seconds. . Dunkirk, fortified seaport' of France, on the Straits of Dover,' means ."church of, the dunes.'-

HeCULES" IS AERIAL COLOSSUS

I !

BUILT with secrecy, rivaling the Manhattan atom-bomb project, this 450,000-pound aerial colossus nears completion at Los Angeles, where Its designer, Howard Hughes, expects to fly it in tests this summer. This exclusive overhead view shows tremendous wing-spread in the $20,000,000 "Hercules," which Is capable of carrying 750 fully equipped troops non-stop from New 'Xork to Alaska. (International

EX-GI TO GET GOLD PAY-OFF

,5R V - ' ! r t I 1 1 - S HI ; 1 t - . 41

Reserve Chaplains Offered Chance For Active Duty

INDIANAPOLIS, Mar. 26 Army Reserve Chaplains may apply now for 15 day periods of active (Juty training at Reserve Officers Training Corps summer corps. ' Fifteen day training periods between June 21 and August 16 will be opened, consistent with available funds, at Fort George G. Meade, Maryland; Camp Campbell, Kentucky; Camp Lee, Virginia; Fort Belvoir, Virginia; Edgewood - Arsenal, Maryland, and Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland. ' Mayl is the deadline Reserve Chaplains may apply for this duty. Letters of application should be, mailed through the Senior Instructor, Headquarters Indiana Military District, Indianapolis, Indiana to Headquarters Second Army, Attention:

Commanding General, AIACH,

Baltimore 2, Maryland.

The University or Wisconsin Is beginning its 99th year. It has ui all-time record enrollment of learly 18,000 students cn the Madison campus, and over 6.000 In extension centers located throughout the state. About hall are veterans returned from war duties.

The American Indians always combined turquoise with silver; the Orientals have always used gold,.

DUItOUPREDDlOOu TO GET MORE 8?QGC36'u1a) If your blood LACKS IRON! You girls and women who suffer so from simple anemia that you're pale, weak, "dragged out" this may be due to lack of blood-Iron. So try Lydla E. Pinkham'a TABLETS one of the best home ways to build up red blood In such cases. Plnkham' - Tablets are one of the greatest bloodIron tonics you can buy I Buy them

at any drugstore, worth trying i

1 tydia L Pinkham's 7AG8.G?S

BACK IN NEW YORK, Charles and Pete Schwerdt examine some of the gold ore with which they will pay off ex-GI Theodore Elbert, 31-year-old San Francisco painter, who staked the prospecting brothers in 1942 when they were operating a roadstand on the Alcan hignwav. They estimate Elbert's share will be $100,000. (International)

High Prices Send Relief Costs Up Figures Show

CHICAGO (UP) Inflated pric

es are causing the nation's relief costs to soar by forcing more families onto the assistance rolls, the American Public Welfare Association reports. Individual assistance checks also have to be increased. The association said mounting relief costs were hitting federal,1 state and local governments. In addition, recent amendments to the Social Security Act provide for increased federal aid to indigents. Similar provisions are be-. ing made or requested on lower governmentar levels throughout the United States, the association said. j Wisconsin state welfare officials have estimated that total relief costs in the state may mount

to $89,000,000 for the next two years. That would be a $30,000,000 increase. Pennsylvania Costs Mount. Pennsylvania public assistance

expenditures for last October j alone totalled more than $7,000,000, an" $800,000 increase over September relief costs. Individual' assistance checks were boosted $2.50 during the month to help

cover rising food costs, and 5,000 new names were added to the list of cases. , I King County, Wash., welfare costs during October, 1946, were $260,000 more than in October,1 1946. Springfield, Mass., officials expect to spend more than $2,000,000 this year for child care. ' old-age assistance and general relief. j Inflated living costs and un-' employment also .are straining relief budgets in Arizona, the as-, sociation said, while Massachusetts, Iowa and Illinois have granted more funds for public

assistance.

w

TO SELL I

DAT M

We are having many calls for farms in Sullivan and neighboring counties. If you want to, sell, list with the United Farm Agency NO FARM TOO LARGE OR TOO SMALL. We also have calls for all types of public business. Our advertising covers the entire United States by radio, catalog, and special direct mailing. Call or see our bonded representative Jas. W. LaFollette

Rural Route 4. Sullivan . Phone 9075

3 Miles North On 41.

BEST BUYS FOR THURSDAY

SULLIVAN STORE

"ROOT'S HELP KEEP THE COST OF LIVING DOWN"

TODDLERS' KNIT SUITS Green or wine striped cotton knit suits. Size 4 to 6 Original 1.98 - v Root's Balcony

1.59

BROADCLOTH CREEPERS FOR TODDLERS White and blue, size 1 and 2 only. Original 1.98 Root's Balcony

1.00

PLASTIC HANDLE KNIFE AND FORK SET 12 piece set in ivory or red. Original 5.69 Root's Second Floor

3.98

ALUMINUM COOKIE SHEET Large size. Original 1.00 -J Root's Second Floor w

Original .89 fQ

SINK MATS All rubber in choice of colors Orig. .98 20" x 14" Now .49 Orig. .59 13V x 19" Now .39 v ' ' Root's Second Floor

Orig. 1.09 VACUUM BOTTLE 32 Pt. Size

.79

CHICKEN FRYER Made of heavy cast aluminum. Orig. 5.95 Root's Second Floor "

3.98

DRAPERY MATERIAL Colonial fabric, floral painted; -cotton . dranery material. YD Rose, natural, aqua, blue. Orig. .89

MEN'S WHITE SHIRTS! Sanforized white broadcloth shirts, size 14V2 to 17, O QQ sleeves 2, 3, 4, 5 Orig. 3.25 fci570

MEN'S FANCY STRIPED SHIRTS Fancy weave in sanforized shrunk cotton oxford cloth. Complete size range. Original 2.25 '

1.49

2 PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITE Deep seated comfort in this club style living room suite, upholstered in blue or mauve color striped mohair. 5 year moth proof- -4 rvr ing. Orig. 179.95 lOV.VO Root's Second Floor

KNEEHOLE DESKS Modern waterfall styling. 5 ply walnut veneered tops and fronts Root's Second Floor

49.95

SECTIONAL SOFA Custom built for the most in comfort Upholstered in figured mohair frieze . . . blond finish legs .... . Root's Second Floor

194.95

HASSOCKS For that added color touch and extra piece in living room or bedroom. Reduced to clear Root's Second Floor

V:

Orig. Price

Just Received Bicycles GIRLS' AND BOYS' BICYCLES Full size bikes . . . balloon tires . . chain guard . . . kick stand and light Maroon or blue. j Limited quantity OVOU Root's Second Floor

Just Received Wagons SILVER COMET ALL METAL WAGONS Large balloon type rubber tires, disc wheels, free running bearings, 36". x 17" - QQ body. Limited quantity J.O O , Root's Balcony