Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 65, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 1 April 1947 — Page 3

STJIXTVAN. INDIANA

SULLIVAN DAILY TMLS - TUESDAY, APRIL 1. 1947.

'E5GETHREB

Gity; School News

ELM PARK NEWS

First Grade:

The first erade has been very

regular in attendance until this last week. We hope Connie Tho

mas, Carol Asbury, Billy Joe Sanders, Dickie Neal, and Jerry,

Collins will soon be able to be back in school. We were glad to have Judith

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Irvine's mother and little sister visit us this week. We wiph more parents would come to see how we work. Second Grade: Mrs. Otto Irvine was a visitor in our second grade Friday afternoon. We played the story "The Rabbit Who Wanted Wings" for her. The characters were:

Little" Rabbit Ronald Irvine. Mother Rabbit Barbara Mason. I Bobby Squirrel Bobby Hansford. Mrs. Goose Micki McClaskey. Mrs. Duck Barbara Pheglsy. Mr. Groundhog Eddie Wright. Red Bird Josephine Kennedy, Third Grade: . The children in the third grade who havs been neither tardy nor absent are: Buddy Engle, JoAnn Keene, Judy Killion, Darrell Lawhorn, Sharon Raves Wilma Reed, Patsy Saucerman, Nancy Shake, James Leo Southwood,

James Harvey Smith, and Harvey Willis. Sandra Anderson, Bobby Engle, and Boyd Johnson ruined their perfect records this . week with the flu. We are planning a play about gardening. The children having parts are Dickie Wilden, Clara Ti1 ' .Tomoe W .Qmith "Rnhhv

Engle, Richard Arnett, and Bud!dy Engle. ' '

Fourth Grade: By popular choice the new canary, which arrived this week has been named Donny. Phyllis Lawhorn was elected chairman for this week. ' Children who have been absent all week or nearly all .week are Harriet McDonald, Phyllis Thomas, Tommy Gadberry and Edward Thornberry. Science Club The 2nd period eighth grade Science club met Friday, March 28 in R 103. Mildred Miller, club president, called the meeting to order. Vivian Meeks was in charge of the program. Ralph Lewellyn discussed a clipping on

"Devices for Quick Test of Ve1 hides." . Virginia Miesenhelder

1 also reported on a clipping. Susan I Phillips showed the group a picture of the Army Jet Bomber ix B-26. Jean Long and Wilma Olson performed "an experiment with a milk bottle and a candle. I The lighted candle was placed in a pan containing water. The 'milk bottle was inverted over

the candle. As soon as all the oxygen, was used up by the candle, the candle went out. Water rose in the jar replacing the oxygen. Jerry Johnson and Don Howard gave a very good experiment showing the pressure of water at different depths. They used a tall square-shaped can and had 4 holes on one side, one above the other. The can was filled with water. The pressure at the bottom was the greatest as shown by the distance out that the stream of water shot. Jack McCammon, Ralph Lewellyn and Wayne Knotts gave a

j demonstration of the telegraph, i They sent messages to each other

' in morse code, then interpreted ' them for the other club members. , Robert Hulett set up the musical scale with test tubes each having a different amount of water in it. He wouldn't play ' anything but the scale for us 'though.

I Wayne Knotts and Jack McCammon gave two experiments, one, to show that air expands when it gets warm. A rubber balloon was fitted over the mouth of a pop bottle. The bottle I was then stood in a pan of hot (water. The balloon was blown up by the expanding air. The other J experiment was a clever balance trick, in which they balanced a fork and a spoon on a toothpick on the edse of a beaker. ! DeLee Moses and Don McClure

made a small storage battery. It worked too. Reporter, Marjorie Phillip3.

additional reports came from former GI's who were back on industrial payrolls for the first time, Mr. Sturdevant said. The average payment for each 1946 report was $38.25 as compared to the $36.48 average for the previous year. Receipts reported today boost the total collections made under the provisions of the Indiana Gross Income Tax Law since its enactment in 1933 to $399,727,809.43. Compara

tive figures follow: Year ending ColMar. 31 lections

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Handkerchiefs . . .

Gloves . . .

White or printed hankies in extra Bacmo gloves in pigskin or kid of large sizes ... hand rolled hems, precision workmanship and beauty.

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Gross Income Tax Payments Go Up 7 Million In M6

INDIANAPOLIS, April 1. Collections by the Indiana Gross Income Tax Division on receipts of taxpayers during the 1946 calendar year exceeded all other comparative 12-month periods pnd made the agency a million-dollar-a-week revenue producer, Walter L. Sturdevant, chief deputy of the tax unit, announced here today. The $52,317,538.89 total represent ed an increase of nearly sev

en millions of dollars over collections for the previous calendar year. Each quarter during the

past 12 months established a new record for comparative periods since the introduction of the tax in 1933. High prices of merchandise and big payrolls played important parts in accounting for the record collection, Mr. Sturdevant said. The tax receipts are a positive indication that the dollar volume of business in the state during 1946 was the greatest in history. This increased revenue means that the state can meet the bigger teacher tuition appropriations established by the last session of

the general assembly without dipping into its accumulated reserve. ... :. During the past 12 months the Gross Income Tax Division processed a total of 1,367,754 reports or 117,700 more than during the 1945 calendar year. Many of these

1934 $ 7,860,307.93 1935 13.220,933.28 1936 16.012,773.69 1937 19.942,597.10 1938 22.958.724.08 1939 19,880,152.93 1940 23,179.713.66 1941 25,299,101.45 1942 34,043.863.20 1943 33,336.742.10 1944 40.488,792.06 1945 45.580,012.35 1946 45.606,556.71 1947 52,317,538.89 Mr. Sturdevant also

No. 533,431 575.708 625,287 723.381 656.551 766,080 809.823 1.038.484 1.145,845 1,266.478 1,286,029 1.250.054 1,367,754 reminded

a French; composer, "born ln Par1 is. He "bs friend and con-jj temporary o Debussy, and wasj considered one of the leaders ofj ttem6derrt French school,'

' ,Dust Is always present to the atmosphere, not merely In houses and near . the ground out of doors, but Over the ocean and even on the tops of mountains.;

" 1

rAifcraft"saw first use inactive military operations with the 1915

Pershing PurutWeKxpedtionto Mexico.' ' ' ....Tuujuirt.

1 The" ancient Phoenicians" were a Semitic people. They were the first great sea traders, f

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residents of the state that gross income tax obligations for the first quarter of 1947 became due March 31 and must be paid not later than April 30 by all individuals and business organizations whose tax exceeds $10 for the quarter.

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SPOON

AT ALL BORDEN DEALERS

A MESSAGE FROM THE CHIEF OF STAFF

:; sj: J j

The Selective Service System, which helped build so magnificent a wartime Army, is being discontinued as an immediate source of men for Army service. Its record is one1 of distinction, and the Nation's gratitude goes out to all those responsible for the efficient administration of that system, as well as to the millions of selected men who served with such courage and devotion. From now on we are engaged in a great test, to see whether a system traditionally American in peacetime the volunteer systemcan give us the stable, well-trained Regular Army our current international commitments require. We have come to a crucial turning point in the development of our military establishment. Building an all-volunteer Regular Army is not a job forthe War Department alone ; it is a job for the American people a task of writing the insurance against the chaos of another war.

Here are the basic facts: To carry out our present assignments, we . must maintain the Regular Army at a strength of 1,070,000 men. This will require a constant flow into the Army of 30,000 men a month. These men must be of high quality, and every one must be a volunteer. Thus we face a persistent question: ; Can we do the job? The task is enormous. Never before have we even considered raising and maintaining a peacetime Regular Army of a million volunteers. There are no sign-posts to go by, no experience on which to base sure forecasts. But such obstacles have never deterred this Nation before. I have confidence in the young men of America, whose opportunity it is to choose this fine profession. And I believe we can do the job if we have three things: public understanding, public support and public action J ' k

National observance of Army Day and Army Week is made possible by public support. This has come from the fine young soldiers who have volunteered, from individuals, and from organized groups. Now, as we strive to build a Regular Army to help enforce world peace and security, I ask those who have given so generously of their help to redouble their efforts. They can do so in the knowledge . that the United States Army offers able young Americans not only three things every man wants good pay, a real career, a chance for advancementbut also the honor and dignity which is associated with national service in time of need. The time of need is now. CHIEF OF STAFF

VISIT LOCAL ARMY WEEK EXHIBITS APRIL 7-12 FOR FULL INFORMATION REGARDING VOLUNTARY ENLISTMENT, CALL AT ANY U. S. ARMY RECRUITING STATION

315 P. O. Building Terre Haute, Ind.