Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 107, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 29 May 1947 — Page 4

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)tate Will Get shades Park ' INDIANAPOLIS. May 29. The , lades, 1,452-acre weeded tract j ar Crawfordsville, eventually ill become a part of Indiana's i-flung network of state parks the result of financial backing a group of Indianapolis phillthropists. Governor Gates disclosed that rthiir 'R. Baxter, Indianapolis isinessrnan, acting for himself d associates, has agreed to admce $255,000 for purchase of e property, which will be 3scd lo the state for operation a park. Tlie Governor said the lease ould contain a specified rental, d that eventually the property juld be added to the park sysm. The Baxter associates alHdy have made a $25,000 clown ' yment to the Garland Dell literal Springs Association,1 .ners of the land. Owners of The Shades had ofed the property to timber opators after the American Lem and the state Conservation parlment permitted their op ns to purchase at $300,000 ex re several weeks ago. Meanwhile, State Forester lph F. Wilcox and a crew ben a timber cruise to determine . actly what timber is on the! iperty, which is made up of 00 acres of woodland and the nainder of farm land. 1 VjJjJ." C OJLEE VlNNERS -8 out of 10 tirjes IN COMPETITIVE FIELD TESTS Ellis Hatchery Carlisle, Ind. PURE 0.1 A NG E t:.in.1Ui4A, nun Baby Pullets

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32 Baby Chick Supple

ments. 35 Hog (Mash or Pellet)' Supplements. : 32 Dairy Supplements. 20 Dairy Feed. 16 Dairy Feed. 17 Rabbit Pellets.

' 34 Egg Mash Supple

ments. 17 E. Jackson St.

I WISHING WELLI

Registered U.

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HERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every day. It is a numerical puzzle designed to spell out your fortune. Count the letters in your first name. If the number of letters is 6 or -more, subtract 4. If the number is less than 6, add 3. The result is your key number. Start at the upper left-hand corner of the rectangle and check every one of your key numbers, left to right. Then read the message the letters under the checked figures give you. Copyright 1847. by William J. Miller. Distributed b Kin VhOm. Inc. JK-29

Manatees produce only one young annually, but it is nursed and guarded by, the mother with great care. The young seem to be entirely helpless, but have few enemies (but man) after' they attain their growth. . I There is a Franco-Ethiopian railroad (487 miles long) which carries the bulk of Ethiopia's produce from the Interior to the coast, but many caravan routes . are still widely traveled. The Atlantic ocean Is named for Atlas, mythical giant who held the world on his shoulders.! 1 1 The name Christopher means "Christ bearer.Famed Raider Dies HERO and leader of the famed Carlson's Raiders of World War II, Brig. Gen. Evans F. Carlson, 51, died at Emanuel hospital In Portland, Ore., from a heart ailment. (International) iyjBSfi)ie I,' VyV-tfrJ FROM :

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, U.'S. Approved-Pullorum Controlled Hatchery Inasmuch ns the out-of-state hatcheries, to whom we have been seUinc: hatching c;"-s, sre discontinuing operations for the hreed'ng season, we are in position to furnish von our U. S. APPROVED-PULLORUM CONTROLLED BABY CHICKS at reduced prices for the remainder of the season. ALSO REDUCED PRICES ON

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20 Egg Mash .

Save Money On Feeds By Buying In Ton Lots .also:' " Peat Litter aiul Servali Litter, Rolled Oats, . Shelled Corn, . . . .. OacUed Corn, Bran & Shorts. POULTRY REMEDIES AND POULTRY MERCHANDISE OF ALL KINDS Such as: Brooder Si oves, Feeders, Water Founts, Wafers, Thermometers. Brooder Light Bulbs. Heaters, etc. ' ; V -IT PAYS TO BUY THE BEST;

S. Patent Office.

FAIRBANKS Mr. and Mrs. Ray B. Drake spent the week end with their son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Drake of Hammond, Indiana. i Mrs. Clara Scott is on the sick list at this writing. The Memorial Services were well attended at the Pogue Cemetery Sunday evening. ! Rev. Alsman filled Rev. Stone's 'pulpit at the Drake Church Sunday morning. Rev. Stone was unable to be here. ! Mr. and Mrs. George .Minger spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Homer Dilley Mrs. IR. G. DeHart called in the af1 ternoon. Mrs. Effie Dilley called on her 1 sister, Mrs. Cecil Kirkham at i Prairie Creek last Thursday evening. Artie and George Wilfon and Homer Dilley were at the Masonic initiation last Thursday at Prairie Creek. Mrs. Alice Johnson and Mrs. Bertha Horner called on Mrs. Clara Scott Saturday morning. Mrs. Anna Drake of terre Haute is visiting her children this week. Mra Janey Bales and Mrs. Clava Scott were in Sullivan Monday afternoon. . Harry Dilley, of Gary Indiana called on his brother, Homer Dilley Satuday night. Artie Wilfon is attending Grand Lodge at Indianapolis this week. ...... , - The reason why wind blws more furiously around tall buildings is because the buildings obstruct the free 'flow and shunt it around their sides and between themselves and other buildings, where it moves faster, as a , stream of water filling a pipe is fastest where the pipe is constricted or smallest. . St - J1!1'"?!!1 - '.1 ii'mu ypy i!3 Baby Cockerels

19 Starter Mash 17 Starter Grower. 20 Broiler Ration. 18 PIG MEAL. Baby Chick Cracked Corn POULTRY SCRATCH TURKEY STARTER TURKEY GROWER.

Sullivan, Indiana

SULLIVAN nSIET TIMES

SCOTT CITY Phillip Tipton and family end brother, Bob, of Princeton, were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Orr. Mrs. Fred Thompson and children, Joe and Sue, called on Mr. and . Mrs. Floyd Owens Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Eldridge and family visited Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bailey and son, Jimmie, of Plainfield, Sunday Gene and Jane Hauger and Russell , and Lela Black spent Sunday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hauger and Bennie. Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey Frakes and Mr. and Mrs. Othel Pound visited Mr. and Mrs. Forest Drake and children Monday evening. Mrs. Frank Tarrh died Sunday morning at 9:20. Funeral services were held Tuesday afternoon at Middletown. Mrs. Dean and Mrs.. Rinerson were in Terre Haute Tuesday, attending open house at the parsonage. I JVIr. a JVIr. and Mrs. John Watson were in Shelburn Monday afternoon. I t ' - Mrs. Ora Benson was a dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. John Watson and Pauline, recently. Mrs. Kate Drake went to Indi anapolis Sunday. She will return to California in June. Mr .and Mrs. Orville .Eldridge were in Sullivan Monday. Mrs. Josephine Eldridge and Pauline Watson called on Mrs. tt . Hannah Floyd Owens and Mrs, Archer Tuesday morning. Florence Haddon and Ruth Anderson of Sullivan, called on Mr. and Mrs. Frank Orr, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. James Walker were in' Sullivan Saturday. Essie Williams of Sullivan, called on Bonnie Walker Thursday afternoon. Its awkward shape gave the ' lump sucker or. lumpfish its name. It is oval in shape, and with the .in studded with conical bon tubercles. It is numerous on both sides of the north Atlantic, where it always stays on rocky shores, clinging to the bottom, moving slowly, and preying on smaller fish. The English were required by law to eat fish on 155 days of the year in the time of Queen Elizabeth. In 1946 more persons were fingerprinted than during any year In the past decade. The FBI recorded 645,431 arrest records in that year. Giovanni de Marignolli was an Italia traveler, born at Florence. He was one of four Legates of Pope Benedict XII to the court bf the Khan of Cathay. Starting in 1338, he reached Peking in 1342 and remainei there three or four years. In Greek mythology, Vests, goddess of fire, had under Tier special care a famous statue of Minerva, before which the Vestal Virgins kept a fire constantly burning. :'. To help produce more sugar In 1947, United States farmers arc being asked to plant an acreage of sugar beets about 15 per cent above that of last year. The beautiful birds of paralise, natives of Australia and mrrounding islands, vary in siz from that of a erow to that of 8 sparrow. They spend their time and make their nests in the forest tree-tops. . . , The accordion was invented in Vienna in 1829.

F2I 'D 700-YEAR-OLD INDIAN BONES

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PERFECTLY-PRESERVED skeletonvof a young Indian woman of about 21 is uncovered -by . students to a ceremonial burial mound on Beloit, Wis.. :collese campus. Pottery fragments found with Bkeleton indi

cate the giri died during the thirteenth century. (International).

THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1947,

Political Comment Pehaps one of the most direct and acurate descriptions of legislation enacted during the 1947 session of the Indiana General Assembly is that of Judge James A. Emmert of the Indiana Suprerne Court The former attorney-general, addressing a meeting of Republican women in Indianapolis, said the legislature' passed 393 acts, or, "three carloads of paper -mrli it "wlfl" take six weexs to print and bind." l He placed no other value on tbf 1947 acts other than that attached to the paper, printing and binding costs. The Supreme Court judge hit another note in the address which probably will find little response among Hoosier citizens who still are shaking their heads when the recent "do-nothing" session of the legislature is mentioned. He told the group of Republican women "sixty-one days is an inadequate time for a general legislative session," and that "at least ninety days is necessary to give careful consideraion to the bills up for passage." On the other hand, we might point but to Judge Emmert that another thirty days probably would just add another ton and a half of paper and another three weeks of printing and binu,"s """-"V"1 6'vl"s payers anything more constructive han added cost. . , . ... i. He said sessions in "many oth er states extend , over a six iiiontns period, so that mechanical difficullies which occur in a shorter session are eliminated." A suggestion that Indiana be subjected to six months of the kind of legislaion dished up in the last sixty-one-day -session scares most folks because honestly Judge, to use one' of your pet expressions of the fall of 1946, they've "Had enough". Deep Drilling Moves Ahead I HOUSTON, Tex. (UP) -A survey among American oil opera- ; tions has revealed that more than $100,000,000 has been spent in I exploring the earth's crust below the 12,000-foot level., The survey showed that 326 wells in this deep-drilling class have cost from $89,000 to more than $1,000,000 a well. The average cost , was $250,000. Flying Suit Floats . WRIGHT FIELD, DAYTON, O. (UP) The latest development at the - Air Material Command, Wright Field, is a new flying suit; with built-in inflation bladders which- keep the - wearer afloat and face up at all times. The suit Incorporates the func tions of 'the light flying suit, the me vest ana tne emergency sustenance vest. The sovereign of Nepal is Maharajadhiraja Tribhubana 3ir Kikram, who was born in 1906. He succeeded his father in 1911. All power is held by the prime minister, who is always a member of the ruling family, succession being determined under special rules. ' ; An electronic ' reading aid which converts printed letters Into distinctive sounds, was developed last year for blind readers, ; . ; . - James Watt, inventor of the modern condensing steam engine, also claims recognition as the discoverer of the -composition of water. ? ? 0'- S

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SOCIETY

PEGG-REEVES VOWS READ ' Mr- a" Mrs- 0rval E- piSg of Sullivan R. 3, announce the mar riage of their daughter, Naomi Irene, to Walden Lee Reeves, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Reeves of Bloomington, R. 3. The vows of the double ring ceremony were read by the Rev. C. E. Griswald of the MteDoel Baptist Church at 2 o'clock May 24th. , The bride wore a blue suit with brown accessories and a corsage of pink roses. i The groom wore a grey suit. Mrs. Clotha Terrell and .Lester Terrell were their attendants. Mrs. Terrell wore a blue suit with black and white accessories. Her corsage was of pink roses. Mr. Terrell wore a grey suit The bride is a graduate of Union High School at Dugger, OLD HICKORY 4-H CLUB NEWS The Old Hickory 4-H Club held a meeting Tuesday afternoon at the Hymera High School. The meeting was called to order by the president, Estella Crowder. Linda Enstrom was elected new recreation leader. i A demonstration was given by Jane Barnett and Shirley Worth gave a demonstration on how to measure shortening. Health papers were given out by the Health and Safety leader, Suz-: anne Baine. There were nine- f teen members present. I DODD BRIDGE Coleman Nash of Sullivan was the guest of Mrs. Luvisa Wood and his mother, Mrs. Anna Nash of Dodd Bridge recently. Mrs. Wood and Mlrs. Nash are cousins. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wade and, son, Lloyd were guests last Sunday of Miss Galey ; Chickone of Terre Haute. . . Miss Frances troit, Michigan Barrett of De is visiting with friends and relatives, Mrs. Verna McClure was the guest of MJrs. Luvisa Wood and Mrs. Anna Nash Tuesday. Mrs. Floyd Hardy and daughter called on Mrs. Ray Walker Tuesday. Mrs. Walker is ill but is better at this time. Mrs. Verna McClure was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Max McClure. ... j Mrs. Luvisa Wood and Mrs. i Anna Nash and Abe Wilkey were i dinner .guests of Mr. and Mrs. ! Will Wade and son, Lloyd, Sunday. . . : j Harry Brown and daughter, Fern, shopped in Sullivan Saturday. ' . " Mr. and Mrs. Ben Pogue were in Farmersburg Friday evening. anorty Hauger was ill a few days last week. Mrs. Nell Garrett called on her lather, Charley Curry Monday. ' Ury-ice fragments against a cloud of supercooled droplets in a laboratory cold chamber formed ice crystals that fell like snow. The process may be useful in clearing dangerous .super- ' cooled clouds over airfields. - - . The world's year round hot place is the island of Massawa In the Red Sea. The mean annual temperature is about 86 degrees Fahrenheit. r Last year hemophilia victims, treated with globulin and thrombin from blood plasma, survived operations without hemorrhages. ,,, The woman's name, CristabaJ, means "fair Christian." Hot Rolls - FRIDAY. MAY 30 . : ' . MENU - : FEATURES Fried Chicken ; CREAM GRAVY ( -.; Roast Pork TRIED APPLES Jack Salmon Fish LEMON SAUCE ' CHOICE PieS-

Day Menu

Church Locked

w.w;"WM.'.i.wiuiiij lit PASTOR of St Michael's CarpathoRussian church in Detroit, Rev. Konstatlne Klumatyckl demonstrates how he was locked out of his church after a group of persons; who he charges are Reds, allegedly had thrown eggs at him. Sixteen persons, arraigned on egg-throwing charge, assert that Klumatycbi refuses to preach in English. ; (InternationalY Rusalkas "or Roussalkas," in Slavic folklore, are naiads or water nymphs endowed with perpetual youth and beauty who inhabit lakes and rivers. .5 ' : ., . .. . , . ' ' .' f A fire and water resistant fab-' ric made from asbastos and cotton, treated with chemical solutions of heavy-metal soaps, was Invented in 1946. In 1948 a study was begun to reduce noise in airplanes, Includ tug possible change in propeller shapes and engine mufflers. , Places where deer and other wild animals come to lick salt at outcroppings from the earth are called "licks."

WINS S OUT OF 10 TIMES ' In .2323 field tests in 9 states, Genuine Pfister yielded more shelled corn per acre, 8 out of 10 times. . -. . , , ,$1,00,000.00 fs spent on developing better Hybrids for you each year. FOR SALE AT ' ' " : pLLIS ' HATCHERY I '& feed" store "Where Austra-White Chick -Originated" - CARLISLE, INDIANA

1 Ss?i Angelfood and Layer Cake SATURDAY. MAY .11 ; ' MENU'..;, ; FEATURES;. Braised Beef S V: CARROTS Fried Chicken SCREAM GRAVY BROW GRAVY

OF 3 VEGETABLES & SALAD i , )

Pineapple Cream, Dutch Apple ; Apiicot, Cherry; 'Cocoanut

FLORENCE HAWKINS ELSIE

BULLTVAN, INDIANA

OPEN FORUM DAILY TIM! Letters from minister and others, interested in local option, .re rrla1ty Invited for this column. Letter and rntervtews of a ultable nature and proper newspaper inleiwst re (snneht for thli !oln?nn, thei editor reserving tb right to censor or reject any article he mar deem In not MillsiMe and proper. Article of 50(1 words r less are preferred. All article ent t the Open Forum must he Kilned and addres ' riven, In order that the editor may know the writer, however, the writer' nn me will not he publlnbed If requested. ' ' Articles published herein do ol necessarily express the sentiment of the Daily Times and this paper may or may not a ere with statement contained herein. - On early steam engines. th standard lubricant for pistons And cylinders was beef tallow. ATHLETES FOOT GERM HOW TO KILL IT. IN ONE HOUR, IF NOT PLEASED, your 85c back. Ask your, druggist for this STRONG fungicide. TE-OL. Made with 90 percent alcohol. It PENETRATES. Reaches and kills MORE germs faster. Today at Bennett's Pharmacy. DOCTOR'S DISCOVERY FOR BACKACHES DUE TO KIDNEYS If excess acidity of your urine makes your back ache so you groan ... so you get up 3 or 4 times a night to pass water, now be of good cheer. Three generations ago a famous doctor noticed that hundreds of his patients had 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, Kilmer & Co., Inc., Box 12S5, Stamford, Conn. Or get full-sized bottle of SwampRoot today at your drugstore. i , - 1 - 1 3 zn: I:'I - ed "Tea : SUNDAY, JUNE 1 ;. '..;. , MENU .. FEATURES Baked Ham ::V RAISIN SAUCE Roast Beef; SWEET POTATOES Fried Chicken ' "CREAM GRAVY ' J " CLARK

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