Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 195, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 30 September 1947 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES TUESDAY, SEPT. 30, 1947. SULLIVAN, INDIANA"
3
Unbleached Gotten Toweling Red Border , . . 17 Inches Wide
Only l oC Yard
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KLEINERTS DRY DOWN PADS, 9x12 4 for 98c KLEINERTS DRY DOWN PADS, 12x14 3 for 98c KLEINERTS QUILTED RUBBER PADS, 18x27 ...... 79c ea. BABY BOOKS, Pink and Blue 98c INFANTS' FELT SHOES, White, Pink and Blue 98c r KNIT BABY SHOES, All Wool, Pink and Blue 98c HANKSCRAFT AUTOMATIC BOTTLE WARMERS .... $198 BOTTLE HOLDER, Pink and Blue 98c INFANTS' JUICER SET '. . 49c BIB HOLDERS . . 49c pr. SHEET & BLANKET FASTENERS 98c pr. INFANTS' SHAWL, All Wool 98c BABY PANTS, Gripper Fasteners, Small, Med. & Large . . . 59c KNIT ROMPERS, Size 1 & 2 $1.29 ' " ' "t-1 . '
-atinde;
CHILDREN'S RIBBED MERCERIZED ANKLETS, turn-down cuff, Fall shades, size 6 to 82 25c pr. MEN'S HEAVY WORK SOX, Blue & Brown 25c pr. MEN'S COTTON ANKLETS, Elastic Knit Cuff, Natural Color, Size 10 to 12 23c pr. BOYS' & MEN'S WINTER CAPS . . 79c to $1.98 CORDUROY OVERALLS, Size 2 to 8 $1.69 and $1.98 SWEATSHIRTS .1.. $1.49 WHITE SHEET BLANKETS, Single $1.98 COTTON BLANKETS, Double Bed Size $2.98 & $3.49 pr. MENU'S OUTING PAJAMAS $3.98 -FELLALUMINUM CAKE PANS 10c &.25c GRANITE ROASTERS, Large Size $1.98 ALUMINUM, ROASTERS 98c GRANITE WATER PAILS, 10 qt $1.19 GRANITE SINK STRAINERS 49c PAPER TOWEL HOLDERS 39c HEAVY TIN FUNNELS 5c & 10c ALUMINUM -MEASURING CUPS, 1 & 2 Cups 10c & 15c WHITE ENAMEL CUPS ..... ... ........ . . jt. . . 15c-19c-23c GRANITE DIPPERS 25c . . IRON SKILLETS . . . . . ........ . . 49c, 69c, 79c & 98c FLASHLIGHTS, complete with batteries .... . 73c, $1.00, $1.25 ALUMINUM DRINKING CUPS .". . . 15c GRANITE WASH PANS ,. 49c GRANITE DISH PANS ..... ................. 79c, 89c & 98c aluminum drip-o-lators , $l19 Aluminum percolators $1.19 iWITH THE , PURITAN CROCHET THREAD, 250 yds. 25c INFANTS' KNITTING WOOL, Pink, Blue & White 39c COTTON RUG YARN . '.7 25c KNITTING WOOL 29c & 39c EMBROIDERY FLOSS 2 for 5c CLARK'S CROCHET THREAD, Plain & Variegated 29c SNAP FASTENERS 10c SAFETY PINS, All Sizes ' -10c SCISSORS 29c & 39c BIAS FOLD TAPE, Single & Double Fold .10c RIC-RAC 10c -FALLKLEENEX TISSUES, 2fl0's 16c PONDS TISSUES, 400's 29c SCOTTIES, 400's 29c v -SEASONHALLOWE'EN PUMPKIN LANTERNS .'. 10c HALLOWE'EN CAT LANTERNS 10c FALSE FACES 5, 10c,d5c & 25c NOISE MAKERS V....... 10c t CANDY! CANDY CINNAMON IMPERIALS 33c lb. CINNAMON BALLS .' 40c lb. BUTTER BALLS 40c lb. NUT GOODIES 50c lb. SPANISH SALTED PEANUTS .' 30c lb.
Tonight & Wed, $$ COME EARLY $$
ADVENTURE AND THRILLS IN THE SONG-FILLED GOLDEN WEST!
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NELSON 1LONA
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EDDY-MASSEY
wtth
JOSEPH SCHILDKRAUT i:
ELSA LANCHESTER
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Plus Leon EitoI Comedy - Screen Snapshots
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Quick Kicks
jterference ;and flattened Big Cal
And so the Arrows lost their thfrd game of the season. It was
a disappointing performance, when it is stacked up against the game that the Arrows turned in against Washington the week before. The Eagles aren't a good ball club, and frankly, we think the Hatchets would beat them. Bet, if the Arrows had played acainst the Hatchets the way thy played against the Eagles, Sullivan would be still, looking, for that first lain. It is true, that in Frew, the. Eaeles. have a. good passer, but against the Arrows he bras helped considerably by shoddy pass defense. Then, the Arrows weren't blocking the way they did against Washington. On two occasions,. Brodie threw screen passes to Hilgediek that should have pick ed up a lot of yardage, but someone slipped up each time, and a defense man got through the in-
BEAUTIFY YOUR FLOORS with Tile-Tex or Rubber Tile. THOMAS TILE-TEX SALES 27 E. Jackson Phone 745
The defense was fairly good
after the first Eagle v score, but there was no reason for that first j touchdrn. If the boys had been I cn their toes, it could have been avoided. The other two scores were the .result of passes. Only once in the game did the' Arrows show any offensive power, and jthat came after the Eagles had , piled up all their points.
- The locals must improve a ?ot, and play a much sharper ,'brand of football if they hope to be able to cope with the rest of the schedule. The easy teams have all been met, and the rough ones are still coming up. Tech clipped Clinton last week, and the" Black Cats are the next team for the Arrows. Brazil has not a single victory. Evansvrlle Central, Wiley, and Bloomington have stopped Max Kidd's boys, and the Imps still haven't scored. Wiley smashed a fair Crawfordsville team after
nos?ng Brazil and losing to Vincennes. The Alices have been stopped only by Evansville Central, and last week nosed out J Princeton. Linton trimmed two of the three teams to . stop the I Arrows. Warfield fell to the
Miners, and last week BickneIl was beaten by 19-7. In Clinton, the Arrows will meet another disappointing team. It is hard to imagine a football season in which both the Arrows and the Wildcats start their Qc,tober. slate with., only a single
1 ; A lare ' number I of people can gathI er at our Funeral I Home without beI ins crowded. Sat-
Sullivan Club Meetings FOR THIS WEEK
Priscilla Embroidery club will meet Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Lex Robbins at 1 q'clock.
Fidelis class of the Christian church, covered dish dinner at the church basement, Wednesday at 6:30. Bring table service. N Guests welcome.
victory apiece. But that is the situation this year. Those Washington Hatchets are probably glad they aren't playing any more county football teams this year. In two games, all the Hatchets could manage was a tie with the Bulldogs, and that fwhen they came from behind twice to tie up the game Friday night. It ended 12 to 12. Some of the Arrows looked like they had been rjlavine with
sandpaper after the eame in -.he
sandy Memorial Stadium Friday
night. They said that when ihe sand from the infield got inside the hip pads, shoes, and rib pads,
it rubbed just like sandpaper. In
fact, the team was dirtier after that game than after any other this season. That place must be rough for a game after a clight sprinkle. Then we hear, it is like
playing in a sea of mud.
TODAY'S MARKETS
Notice. Sullivan Lodge No. 263, F. & A. M. Called meeting Tuesday, September 30, 1947 at 6:30 p. m. Work' in the M. M. degree. AH members urged to attend, visitors welcome. Morris Hudson, W. M., Russell Inbody, Sec.
G. H. club meeting will be postponed until October 9th.
Regular meeting of the Royal Neighbors of America, Friday, October 3, 7 p. mAll officers be present for practice.
Frank Neff W.R.C. No. 155, Wednesday, 2 o'clock, Woodman Hall.
Notice. Sullivan Saddle Club will hold - a special meeting Wednesday night, 7 o'clock, 4-H Club Grounds.
Sullivan Rebekah Lodge No. 252, will meet Thursday evening, Octobe 2, at 7:30 o'clock. All members urged to attend.
--J- i i i 'ft ii i n 1 1 u ii ii ' r ii i r n i inn m rifii 'iiki m
? o
See The New Laundromat
by WESTING HOUSE
gr t M
Washing is done like a song . . . easy, smooth, pleasantly .. . with the WESTINGHOUSE LAUNDROMAT. Fully automatic, Laundromat washes your clothes and dries them. Don't miss adding this appliance to your labor saving wash-room. Gets clothes whiter, faster. COUNTY , HARDWARE VAUGHN F. JONES
INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 30. ! (UP) Hogs, 6,500; barrows and 1 gilts steady; good and choice 225-275 lbs., $28.75; strictly choice, $29.00; 170-225 lbs. and 275-400 lbs., $28.00 $28.50; 160170 lbs., $27.75; 100-160 lbs., $24.75$26.00; sows opened steady, later bids 25c to 50c lower; good and choice, $25.00 ' $27.00; choice light weights, $27.25 $27.50. . Cattle, 1,800; calves, 600; steers and heifers active, 25c to 50c higher; load light steers, $32.00; bulk good grain fed, $29.00 $30.50; medium good short fed and grassers, $24.00 $27.00: load strictly choice heifers, $29.00; . medium to good short feds, $25.00 $27.35; cows uneven, generally ' steady; early bids, $16.00 $18.00; common and medium, $13.25 $16.00; vealers active, steady; good and choice, $25.50 $28.00; common and medium, $15.00 $25.00. ' Sheep, 1,500;; opened, steady; ! good fat native Spring lambs, ; $21.00 $22.50; choice, $23.00; medium to good, $18.00$20.00; common, $17.00 down; feeders, $15.00 $16.00; slaughter ewes steady, $5.00 $7.00.
The Pack meeting of the Cub Scout Pack No. 51 will be held Wednesday evening at 7:30, at the Christian church. v
Friday Afternoon club will meet for a 1 o'clock luncheon October 3, with Mrs. Lex Robbins.
Choir rehearsal at Christian church Wednesday at 7:30 p. m.
Zelma Harbaugh Missionary Society of Christian church I'.vill meet Friday evening at 7:30, home of Mrs. Fred Hanger, 202 N. Section St.
Jittery Baker
Boys Primp Too DALLAS, Tex. (UP) Women aren't the only ones who delve deeply into the use of cosmetic?; cologne, hair tonic and othef toiletries, according to Charles Rozier, a sales representative for a leading men's cosmetics firm, told an audience here that his company recently brought a line of merchandise for boys in the 13-17 year bracket which outsold women's cosmetics.
KINGSTON, Pa. (UP)
beneath the Kingston
district were getting on owner Reuben H. Levy's Levy wanted to prevent mining in the weakened he bought the mines, tunnel under 225 acres.
Mines
business
bakery nerves, further area so which
; A "registry of good deeds" containing 25,000 cards, and considered the largest of its kind In the world, is. maintained at ' the Chicago offices of the Pu!!- ) man company. The cards reprei sent lifetime records of the company's conductors and portats, Mid are made possible by letters .of commendation received from travelers at the end of their trips. More than 3,000 letters were received in 1946. . There are estimated to be 1,171,000 more qualified women voters in the United States than men.
MOW ON DISPLAY
r- BEAUTIFUL
Ju -... , c T I - o1 drug counts. 1 MODERN PLASTIC 7 CM mail-in coupon 5
ana oox top tram yGjfiat p.ir "WJr '
Spoon and fork
over 9 inches long kle like expensive crystal.
Pepsodent Antiseptic sa;c-ur.rJj L:cat!i, fLts cold misery.
W ah
'Pon-CoVe... -Ssss
Trode Mark
Reg U.S.
Pol. OH.
it ... u ' t
BENHETT'S
PHARMACY
Since 1914
LOCALS Mr. and Mrs. Duane Spencer
and son, Pat, of Chicago, werew dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and TT
inia. iiiujuas vx . J'cri.rv ai u ui Shelburn. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Hixon and Ada Mae of Sullivan, R. 3, spent Sunday in Terre Hauta. Mr. and Mrs. Del McCammon of Sullivan, ft. 3, spent Sunday in Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bardsley and son, Jim, of Dayton, Ohio,"Y were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Pittman and sons Friday evening.
Mildred Scott arrived here Sunday evening from Tucson, Arizona for a visit with her parents, Dr and Mrs. G. D. Scott. '
The Women's Bureau of the V. S. Department of Labor was X organized in July, 1918, as a war
service, and made a permanent J bureau in June, 1920. The bureau is charged with responsibility otf developing policies and stand.'
ards jand conducting investigar tions in the industries of the United States which shall safeguard the interests of women workers and thus" make their service effective for the national good. " . . No earthly laboratory can produce the high, temperatures that j exist in the sun. . s The first fully automatic electrie range was produced in 1917J
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5c & 10c
INDEX
25c to $1.
. War-time wiedical research In three years has saved mora American lives than the number killed In the United States armed forces during the war (312,000), according "to Prof. Vern O. Knudson of the University of California. The world's arable land is estimated today at 4 per cent of Its surface.
Tipsy Bikp Rider LEWISTON, Me. (UP) A 16
year-old boy was in juvinilr ?
court here for riding a bicycl
while under liquor,
the influence
HJ.I..II1PH Ml i linn III iiiliw pliiiliBlMi in m mi I TnrrWTlTwrrn-TgwwTtii)firgr
JAYCEES
6:30 P. M., 4-H FAIRGROUNDS Plenty of Parking Space TEAMS Starting (if not fin'shing) Line-ups
KRAFT
ss lb 2b 3b
Grayson Willis Alumbaugh Pierce
If Henderson cf Kelley rf Sevier c Lee French p Bob Herr .
RULES All players except pitcher and catcher ride mules. When the batter gts a hit he must mount his donkey and ride around the bases in proper order if he can. There are no strike-outs or walks. Fielders must ride to within a step of the ball before dismounting and must remount before throwing the ball. Soft-ball is used. Nine players on each team. Game plays 5 to 7 innings approximately one hour and a half. v
rf Garey If Bergstrom cf George Llsman 3b Earl Ford
ss Bill Wilbur lb James Banther 2b John Resler c Shang Moore p Mason Taylor
r
