Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 213, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 24 October 1947 — Page 1

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" WEATHER ; WARMER SATURDAY Indiana: Partly cloudy tonigh and Saturday. Warmer Saturday Only DUy . Newspaper In SULLIVAN COUNTY INTERNATIONAL PICTURE SERVICE PRICE THREE CENTS VOL. XLJX No. 213 UNITED PRESS SERVICE SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES FRIDAY, OCT. 24, 1947.

LIONS CLUB ENTERTAINS 4 H MEMBERS

The Sullivan Lions Club spon-

sored a banquet held at the Davis every home owner can take Jn hotel dining room Thursday eve-.helping to meet what may de. ning, October 23, honoring out- ve)op into a critical situation are. standing 4-H Club members of h ge that all uel bing Sullivan County. storage tanks are filled before The room was beautifully dec- the start of lhe heating season, orated with 4-H Club colors of and that they are kept filled to green and white name cards, pro- capac;ty during the early fall grams, and candles which were months before seVere weather placed on the tables. A bouquet sets in This win help particuiar of flowers was on each table, ly because of the transportation bringing out the green and white, bottleneck. At each 4-H Club girl's and . 2. Refrain from ' converting lady's plate were corsages bring- jfrom coal to gas or fuel oil burning out the colors of the Lions ers because of the particular Club, lavender and ...gold. The shortage of these fuels, flowers for the occasion were do-1 3 See that your heating plants nated by the Service Green- are put in a condition where they houses. , I can produce a maximum with a Forest Garey, president of the ( minimum of fuel. . Sullivan Lions Club, acted . as j Caulk cracks, arouhd windows toastmaster,' giving the welcome and door frames, shut off unused

address to 4-H Club members snd others present. Richard Phegley, 4-H Club ' member of Gill Township, gave the response. Each Lions Club member introduced himself and his guest. Shirley Ann Greggs, Curry Township 4-H Club member, led

the group in singing. Steven tention and careful study of your Nowlin, Turman Township 4-H State Government for the past Club member, was then present- several months. We have followed and gaye three piano numbers, ed the situation closely, and Gene Easter, accompanied by .after consulting with some forty Charlotte Phillips, both Turman odd executives of oil companies Township 4-H Club members, in my office. I believe I can asgave a vocal number. All num-sure you with authority that the

bers were very well received by those in attendance. Lowell Taylor, field representative of the Producers' Commission Association of Evansville, gave the main address of the

evening, bringing out the great) by necessity banned almost a. service the Lions Club was doing year ago. Previous strikes and in sponsoring such a banquet. He , transportation shortages have also stressed the value of work-1 als0 seroiusly injured coal reing together, sportsmanship, and serves. These facts have tended the importance of boys and girls to cause a tremendous increase making friends for the future. in tne conversion by our people L At the; close Of the( meeting, to fuel oil heating systems. Few inwards were given to 'two 4-Hof our citizens realize that the v Club members by the Lions Club. AmteWah public is today conA fountain pen and pencil set in I sumig more barrels of petroleum recogition of their outstanding 1 products dav than the Peak achievement was presented to ' consumption rached during the each.. These awarde were pre-!war- S,nce the liftin of ration-

sented to Shirley Ann Greggs of Curry Township and Bob Towns ley, Jefferson Township, by Gib Riley, past president of the Lions Club. Fifty-four 4-H Club members, Lions Club members and guests were in attendance. STATE 4-H'ERS WIN $5,100 IN , SCHOLARSHIPS Members of the 4-H Clubs in Indiana and the eleven other States in the central extension section have gained much from educational awards since . 1940, having won $30,600.00 in college scholarships.' ' ' In Indiana alone, club members received $5,100.00 in scholarships provided as f national 4-H awards in Achievement by National Committee Boys and Girls Club Work; Leadership by Edward Foss Wilson; Girls' Record by Montgomery Ward; Canning by Kerr Glass; Food Preparation by Servel; Clothing , by Spool Cotton Company; Meat Animal by Thos. E. Wilson; Better Methods Electric by Westinghouse; Dairy Production by Kraft Foods Co.; Farm Safety by General Motors;, Soil Conservation by Firestone; Poultry by Swift and Company; and Farm Accounting by International Harvester. During the same period, in all four Extension sections, scholarships worth $93,500.00 were "awarded in the National 4-H Programs. These programs are conducted annually under the direction of the Extension Service. AG MEETING MONDAY NIGHT County Agent O. K. Anderson announced today that farmers should not forget the agriculture outlook meeting to be held in the Court House auditorium at Sullivan Monday night, October 27th at 7:30 o'clock. Very important problems will De aiscusea Dy u. w. ocnoeii, Agricultural Economist of Purdue University. The meeting is to be held for both Sullivan and Greene Counties and it is anticipated that a large group will be present. TODAY'S TEMPERATURES , The unofficial temperatures in Sullivan today were: . ,- , at 7:30 a. m 58 degrees at noon ... 70 degrees

CONSERVE FUEL, GOVERNOR ASKS With the first chill winds of fall arriving, Governor Ralph F. Gates has issued a state-wide appeal to all citizens of Indiana, asking that they join fh helping to conserve fuel during the coming winter season. Amone snme of thA stpns ont-

,inM hv ih. nnvpnr whih spaces, and keep heat temperatures as low as possible. In commenting on the necessity for these precautionary steps the Governor had the following to say, "I feel obliged to 3dvise the citizens of Indiana of a situation which has received the at shortage of fuel oil is very real and that there is sufficient pessimism on the part of reliable sources of information to war rant every precautinary measure. Additional gas installations were "B l".c use Peiroieum prooucts has risen with such leaps and bounds, that our oil wells, our refining capacities.'and our transportation facilities are hard put to cope with the demand. "Indiana and. the middle west are importers of "oil. We do not produce nearly enough for our needs and must depend on the great oil producing states of Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Kansas, Arkansas and others for our needs. This necessitates long haul transportation through pipelines, by tank cars, and barges and the shortage of steel in the post war era has retarded all of these media. "I sincerely urge that all Hoosiers join with their neighbors throughout the mid-west in helping to meet this problem, and thus minimize the hardship which might otherwise result. This is not a scare program, but we must be realistic about the problem facing us, for it is our problem and it is real. "The plain unvarnished facts are that no fuel, in whatever catagory it falls, will be available in any super-abundance, so that some degree of responsibility falls on all of us, to use all fuels with intelligent discretion, and to conserve to the best of our ability, these .vital resources, which are so essential to the health, comfort, and welfare of our people." NAME TICKETS FOR DUGGER ' TOWN ELECTION Two independent tickets have been named for the ballots for the Dugger town elections on Nov. 4. The two parties are the People's party and the Citizens party. 1 On the People's party ticket there are candidates for trustee ships of the three wards, as follows: Trustee first ward, O. E. Dugger; second ward, W. J. Coyner, and third ward, Frank Put- ! ff On the Citizens ticket, candidates for the three wards are: Trustee first ward, Frank C. Parsons; second ward, Elmer Lewellyn, and third ward, George Risinger. Mrs. Verna L. Hammack, who is the present clerk-treasurer for Dugger, is a candidate for reelection on the People's party ticket. She Is opposed by E. O. , Chowning, the candidate, for the ' Citizens party.

BAR HARBOR RESIDENTS FLEE FIRES BAR HARBOR, Me., Oct. 24. (UP) A ten-mile wall of fire

which flamed 200 feet high swept in a eiant Dincers aeainst Mt. ! Desert Island today, leaving $10,000,000 in damages in this smoldering ghost town from which 3,500 townf oik had fled. Behind them were the ruins of homes, stores, hotels, and palatial estates which had made this picturesque coastal village a vacation land for persons of wealth. They were driven to the rockbound coast where they were ringed in by a curtain of flame. The villagers spent five terrorfilled hours before they escaped by sea or over land by a road hacked through the fire. Most of the frightened residents were led to safety by a he roic band of soldiers from Dow Field who drove their bulldozers through a ring of flames to make a road to safety. Others were taken off the island by coast guard boats and fishing vessels. Then the volunteers went back to take a stand on the harbor road, facing the flames with shovels, dynamite and axes. There was no prospect of rain for drought-parched New England and at dawn today more than thirty fires in six states were still blazing. The fires are in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Mjassachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut. Eight persons have died in the fires, including six in yesterday's fires. Residents said it is 5 miracle that, more have not died. INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 24. (U.R) Hogs, 5,000; barrows and gilts steady to strong, good and choice 225-275 lbs., $27.50; .170-225 lbs, and 275-400 lbs... $26.75 $27.25;, 160-170 lbs., $26.50; 100-160 lbs.,' $23.75 $25.00; sows' strong to 50c higher; bulk, $21.25 $26.00; choice light weights, $26.25 $26.50. Cattle. 300: calves, 300; not enough steers or heifers to establish a value; good beef cows, $15.75 $17.00; common and medium, $12.75 $15.50; vealers moderately active, strong; good and choice, $26.50 $29.00; common and medium, $16.00 $26.00. Sheep, 2,500; active; fat lambs strong to 50c higher; bulk good and choice, $23.00 $25.00; medium to good. $21.00 $23.00; common to medium. $16.50 $20.50; I slaughter ewes ,mostly strong to $6.50 $9.00. TAX GROUP GOES TO TAX HEARING Members of the Sullivan County Tax Association attended the hearings of the State Tax Board on the Sullivan County budgets, which was held in the Commissioners court room on Tuesday, October 21st. The rates that were finally fixed bv the State Tax Board will show a substantial reduction from the advertised budgets and from the rates established by the Tax Adjustment Board, affecting ev ery taxing unit in the county. The County Auditor will be advised in a very short time of the exact rates fixed by the State Tax Board, which undoubtedly will be published so that the people will be informed of the saving effected. . . Grandma Chuckles JEANNETTE, Pa. (UP) They whistle at grandma in Jeannette, and slim, chic Grandma Natalie Lauffer smiles with appreciative nonchalance. Mrs. Lauffer became a grandmother at 35 when her 18-year-old daughter, Mrs. Eugene Dietz, became a mother. Education Spreads ERIE, Pa. (UP) Gannon College here boasts two husbandwife teams on its faculty. The faculty quartet, including the Gerald J. Webers and the T. D. Dowes, list Harvard, the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Pittsburgh, Ohio State, and the University of Vienna' as their almta maters. ENLISTS IN NAVY James Ephlin of Greenwood, Ind., a grandson of Willard Eph,lin of Sullivan, has enlisted in the Navy and has been sent to Great Lakes, 111., for training. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Max ;L. Ephlin, former residents of 'Sullivan.

TODAY'S INKER

TAKE PART IN CEREMONY

SftiiMlllill1 ' Is if 1

Miss Patricia Rogers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Rogers, 300 North Broad Street, recently participated in the laying of a cornerstone at MacMurray ' C01r lege, Jacksonville, where she Is 'a freshman. " The cornerstone laying ceremony was part of the construction of a new dormitory for' the college. It is expected that' the new dormitory will be completed in 1948. It will house 128 additional students. FILM PEOPLE NAME REDS IN MOVIELAND WASHINGTON, Oct. 24. (UP) Film Star Ginger Rogers' mother today asked Congress to outlaw the Communist party and : "preserve the Bill of Rights for those for whom it was intended." Mrs. Lela Rogers, a trim bjue-f suited woman with a trim sveptback 'blonde coiffure,- told M net House ' un-American '"'' activities committee that Communists in Hollywood and she named Writer Clifford Odets "tried to influence our unions, our scripts, and our productions." Under questioning by Comr mittee Counsel Robert Stripling, she said that Communists ought to be "outlawed as an agent for a foreign 'government." Also called to appear after Mrs. Rogers in the fifth day of hearings on Communist activities in Hollywood were Cartoonist Walt Disney and Union Official Roy Brewer. Mrs. Rogers, a veteran of thirty-one years in Hollywood, described her occupation as "manager of my daughter's affairs and a writer of sorts." She is a native of Council Bluffs, Iowa. WON'T DIVERT CARS FOR COAL WASHINGTON, Oct. 24. (UP) Despite pleas by the coal industry, the Office of Defense Transportation said today that it had no plan for assigning railroad cars -to carry coal to areas that are short of supply. An O.D.T. spokesman said Di rector J. Monroe Johnson was opposed to diverjing any open, cars from their present assignment of carrying housing and road building materials. Johnson was said to feel such a move would cause a "furor" in the construction industry. Coal industry representatives urged yesterday that the government provide more coal cars immediately. They said the industry lacked 36,000 cars. CHURCH PLANS FRIENDSHIP MEETING The Full Gospel Mission will hold a fiendship meeting at the church Friday, October 24. The Rev. Noah Beadle will bring the message and music will be provided on Saturday night. The Rev. Ready will be the speaker. Rev. Jack Anderson will have charge of the services on Tuesday night. Evoryone is invited to attend any or all of these services. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENTS Mr. and Mrs. Harold Griffith of Dugger R. 1, are the parents of a daughter, Connie Jean, born October 22 at the Mary Sherman Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Robbinsl of 1206 North State Street announce the birth of a son, Stephen Michael, born October 4 at the Mary Sherman Hospital.

TRUMAN TO ADDRESS THE NATION TONIGHT WASHINGTON, Oct. 24 (UP) Congress greeted President

Truman's call for a special session today with a sign of willingness to tackle the problem of high prices, but without reviv ing price control and rationing. From both the White House and Congress came indications that serious consideration would be given 4o the problem, probably to an allocation program a quota system for buying steel, grain, arid other scarce goods. The aim would be to prevent buyers from bidding freely against each other and forcing prices up. Despite the great interest in prices, there was no evidence that Congress . would shy away from accomplishing a foreign relief program although the Republican majority demanded detailed cases before supporting requests for emergency aid. President Truman's provided for recalling Congress to convene on Nov. 17, the first special session since 1939. He will speak over all the major radio net works tonight at 9 o'clock (CST). Then he will explain, his de cision to recall Congress to consider "the alarming and continuing increase in prices," and the economic crisis in Western Europe. Congressional leaders who attended Mr. Truman's pre-an-nouncement conference at the White House yesterday, came away with the impression to recommend an allocation program to deal with prices. TEACHERS WILL Ml OFFICERS AT CONVENTION INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 24 (UP) Indiana's school teachers were expected to elect new officials today with a minimum of politics, but opposition to several proposed resolutions promised to enliven the closing .sessions of the five state conventions. - A Terre Haute junior high tpdnnl instnirtnr Miss fiertrndf" McComb was the only nominee placed before the 15,000 teacher delegates by the nomination committee for the State Association presidency. At Gary, South Bend, and Evansville, regional nominations for officers were expected to be approved formally at sessions today. Carl Stallman, Auburn, was elected yesterday at Fort Wayne as Northeast Association president. "Body" Is Flour Sack NEW YORK (UP) A police alarm reporting a ' human torso floating ,in the East River hrnnffht. out two radio cars, a carfuU of detectives and a police launch. It turned out to be a sack of fluor which apparently had faljen off a ship 'Stays in Place with an so-year-oia corsw u.MM -1.9 1 YTT, Virs . rtytn mamey appruauiiea uie new look decreed by fashion designers. (International).

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SHELTON DEATH MAY LEAD TO NEW GANG WAR FAIRFIELD, 111.," Oct. 24. (UP) A new gang war threatened to break the peace of 'south

ern Illinois today as a result of the assassination of Carl Shelton. 59-year-old farmer, gunman, and bootlegger, who battled his rivals with tanks, armored cars, and airplanes. Southern counties of the state have a long tradition of violence born in crime wars and personal feuds. Authorities feared today that the tradition would be continued by the cohorts of the slain gangster, who might seek their own vengeance on those who riddled him with fifteen or twenty slugs as he drove his jeep along a Busty country road yesterday. Police and sheriff's officers were investigating two possibilities for the slaying: , 1. It was known that Shelton had been actively interested in Peoria County gambling, established during recent years, despite his claim that he had retired from lawlessness and had settled down as a prosperous farmer. Police thought he might have been killed by rival gangs intent on eliminating him from business. 2. Shelton. had been involved in squabbles recently with neighbors over cattle which had strayed off his huge White CounJ ty farm and ranged on their property. A nephew, Earl Shelton, Jr., witnessed the slaying from a distance and was a target for several slugs himself. He told newsmen: "We know who did it." It was reported that authorities were searching for Charlie Harris, one of the neighbors involved in the squabble with Shelton over the cattle. 28 KILLED. IN LONDON WRECK LONDON, Oct. 24. (UP)-Twenty-eight persons were killed today and more than 150 persons j injured when a soutrern nanroad commuters' train, speeding through a dense fog on London's outskirts, crashed into the rear of another passenger train and crushed two coaches. Sixty of the injured were taken to hospitals. Th'e others were able to go home after first aid treatment by physicians and nurses summoned from hospitals in and around South Croydon. It was at the station in South Croydon, on the south edge of London, where the wreck occurred. RESTAURANTS SAY MEAT EATING DOWN CHICAGO, Oct. 24. (UP) Forty-nine out of ninety restaurants in nine cities reported today that customers were eating less meat than before President Truman put his voluntary food program into effect three weeks ago. The survey included every kind of eating house from hamburger joint to steak houses. Thirty-one proprietors said the orders on meat dishes remained unchanged, and six said they ' were selling more meat than before the program started. Double Duty Promised LATROBE, Pa. (UP) Anthony Davanti, 26-year-old student at St. Vincent's College here and a Republican nominee for city school director, says he has plen-p ty of time for both studies and politics. Davanti, a veteran and a father, has promised voters he will "carry out the duties of elective office as effectively as those required in the armed forces," if elected. Atlanta Not Optimistic ATLANTA, Ga. (UP) A joint survey by the Chamber of Commerce and the Atlanta Journal shows that even at the jesent record-breaking rate of home building Atlanta's critical housing shortage will not be fully reliev ed until Jan. 1,.,1954. Pennies Plilt Up FORT WAYNE, Ind. (UP) When Mrs. Herman Harter bought her new post-war stove she paid for it with 12,000 pennies and 47 silver dollars she had saved in "an old sock" during the past five years. Scooter Speeded In Court NEWTON, Mass. (UP) A motor scooter operator was charged with speeding here in the first case of . its Vind, in Massachusette.

SET POOLE RITES FOR SATURDAY Funeral services for John Poole. 27-year-old resident of

North Court Street, Sullivan, who died of a broken neck yesterday the result of a fall from a 28foot utility pole on which he was working north of Lewis, will be held at the Billman Funeral chapel Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Rev. Jack Anderson of the Sullivan First Christian Church will officiate He will be Robert B. assisted by Rev, Baldridge of Linton. Burial will be made in Center Ridge Ceme tery. The deceased was a native of Linton. He was a veteran of World War II and had been employed by the Public Service Company as a lineman for about eight months. TOW TUG SAVES CREW AFTER SEA COLLISION MONTEREY, Calif., Oct. 24 (UP) Thirty-five crew members of the crippled and burning tanker S. S. Sparrows Poont were removed from three lifeboats before dawn today in a skillful and daring rescue operation directed by a Coast Guard tow tug. The fate of four other crew members was unknown. The Coast Guard buoy tender, U.S.S. Minnetonka, radioed to Coast Guard headquarters that it was searching for the four men mising after the tanker collided with the Canadian Liberty ship, Manx Fisher. Other members of the thirtynine man crew were picked up by the light of torches and the of the burning after the colflickering glow ship five hours lision. The rescue was accomplished in a moderate swell after a densa fog lifted over the collision area ten miles southwest of Rocky

Point, Calif .' It ' was hampered by -frig - pre-convention - primaries the fact that the Minnetonka was j whei'e other Republican aspirnot ordinarily used for rescue ants might afford opposition.

work and was towing a decom missioned Coast Guard cutter. HOME EC CLUBS ATTEND SESSION Thirty-three leaders representing seventeen of the nineten Home Economics clubs of the county, attended the leader training meeting held at the Home Economics Department of the Sullivan High School Thursday, Oct. 23. Miss Lois Oberhelman, Purdue University Extension Specialist on Nutrition, was present and gave the lesson. She emphasized points to be considered in selecting various cuts of meats as well as type of cookery to be used for the different cuts. She stated that all meats is tender if it is cooked correctly.

The lesson given to the leaders bill which he sponsored and carentitled, "Meat Cookery" will be ried to passage in the Senate.

given in eacn oi tne nineteen j ciuds ot tne county aunng November. CHURCHES TO HONOR DR. WOODWORTH On -Tuesday, October 28, Dr. Woodworth will be 90 years old. Not many towns have a minister and missionary 90 years of age who plants and cultivates a large garden, mows a spacious lawn, rides a bicycle to town, and still preaches. In recognition of his birthday the congregation of the I Congregational Christian- Chureb of Robinson will unite v;!th theMerom people in a church service at which Dr. Woodworth will preach. This service will be in Hatton unapei at iu:ao on Sunday morning, October 26. Following the service there will be a basket luncheon in honor of Dr. Woodworth to which all are cordially invited. HOSPITAL NOTES Dismissed Oct. 23: Beverly Shelton of Merom R. 1, Mrs. Norma uonahay and son of Carlisle R. 1, Mrs. Helen Griffith and daughter of Dugger. t Dismissed Oct. 24: Mrs. Mar1 garet Krause and son of RagsI dale, Indiana, Mrs. Juanita Robbins and son of North State St. ATTEND DISTRICT AGENTS MEETING Mr. and Mrs. James W. LaFollette, of Sullivan, attended the regional meeting for representatives of the United Farm Agency, as Moberly, Missouri, on Oct. 10 and 11. The meeting was for representatives from Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Colorada, Indiana,' and Nebraska.

CHICKENLESS DAY TO STAY IN PROGRAM WASHINGTON, Oct. 24. (UP) President Truman's food committee today refused , to drop poultryless Thursdays from its grain conservation program and immediately bumped into a new

challenge from the nations tur key growers. Brushing aside the objections of the poultry industry, Committee Chairman Charles Luckman said there is evidence that the poultryless Thursdays are saving grain for Europe. He said no proposal made by the industrywould save as much grain as the present plan. R. E. James of Austin, Tex., representing the nation's turkey industry, said that Luckman may be right as far as chickens are concerned, but said the nation's 5,000 turkey producers provided an entirely different proposition. Unless turkeys are removed from the poultry ban, the Department of Agriculture will be forced to go into the market to support turkey prices, at a cost to the taxpayer and the turkey grower. TAFT ASKS FOR REPUBLICAN NOMINATION WASHINGTON, Oct. 24 (UP) Senator Robert A. Taft, R., Ohio, today announced his candidacy for 'next year's Republican presidential nomination. He is 58 years old, and the son of a former president, William Howard Taft, 1909 to 1913. vTaft keyed his announcement to "a cautious campaign of avoidHis announcement came in ihe . i face of determined insistence by !by many influential Republicans that Taft would be a weak candiy- ! date. His supporters responded that Taft is already the most in- I fluential man in the pSrty. 4 They insist the 1948 Republi can campaign must be largely a Taf t-platform because the most effective job in shaping much of the ; legislation during the past session of Congress was done by him. , - The Taft supporters face a strong political fight. To some, he is a wild and woolly radical. That is what the opponents of public' housing think of him. To others, Taft is a Tory. To many of his follow citizens, Taft looks liko me most competent legislator in Congress. The greatest weakness in his race may be the labor control Organized labor and its Organized spokesmen appear to be boiling mad at Taft. BICKNELL PLAYS DARTS MONDAY Sullivan's Golden Darts will play their last home football game of the season Monday night when they tangle with the Bullpups from Bicknell. The game will start at 7 p. m. The Bicknell bunch has played foy games this season, and has won three of them. The Pups have split a pair vith' Vincennes, and have downed Bulger and Washington. ' The Darts showed considersbla improvement when they held the strong Linton Miners to a 12 to 6 decision last Monday night, and will be out to chalk up a win in their final "appearance before the home fans. H. C. Gilmore, principal of the high schocl, sa.id that there will be a small admission charge for tne game. CHILDREN HAVE TONSILLECTOMIES - lhe following children from Sullivan county were admitted to the Mary Sherman Hospital yesterday and today for tonsil lectomies: Delores Dillon of Car lisle, Patricia and Mary K. Doyle I of West Graysville Street, Jerry Banks of 800 South State Street, Tommy Wernz of West Thomp son Street, Donny R. Beef well of I Dugger, Sharon and Darrell-Mc-Cammon of Paxton R. 1, and Jer-J ry Lee Brown of 471 South Section Street. ,

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