Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 51, Number 146, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 25 July 1949 — Page 1

SULLIVAN COUNTY'S ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER

0 ff ,

WEATHER WARM, HlSIll) Indiana: Mostly fair, warm, and humid tonight and Tuesday.

VOL. 51 No. 146

UNITED PRESS SERVICE

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES MONDAY, JULY 25, 1949.

INTERNATIONAL PICTURE SERVICE PRICE THREE CENTS

i

NEWS OF SULLIVAN COUNTY Oil Pays

Two wells, one in Vigo Coun

ty and the other just north of Paxton are ready for setting pipe today with good oil shows being reported in both instances.

Indiana Polio Toll Mounts;

Report 157 Cases

INDIANAPOLIS, July 25 (UP) Indiana's infantile paralysis toll mounted higher today with another week to go before the normal rate for the inci

dence peak.

While three new counties were

represented during the weekend

to;Gecre Heap, the well is at a,in the latest tabulation of known

depth of 1202 feet and is expect- cases now aoove iou communed to be a good well. Th pipe ities affected or near the danger

will be- set and then tests Will be zones l00K aaaiuonai sieps to made of the well,. j prevent spread of the disease. Dunkirk churches held services In the Vigo County well, a ' .usual yesterday. But Sunday depth of 1984 feet was reached, ! School classes were limited to and pipe is being set. Casing was adult3 Children were k.ept home set on that well at 1977 feet, and,in resp0nse to an -appeal by the testing is expected to b edone ministerial- association of the

soon, mat wea is on me L.oren town which is located in,

The welt near Paxton is in Section 2J,. T clanship 7. North, Range 7 west, located on the Ruben Jchnson farm. According

Indianapolis Hero Is Related Here Chanrey E. LaFollette, age 19, of Indianapolis, whose picture was on the front page of The Indianapolis Star last week for

saving a fellow worker from death, is related here, it has

been learned.

He is the son of Chauncey Em-

II

Hot Weather

Huntworth farm.

one

of the worst-hit counties Jay.

Frederick Cline is moving a I Cases Increase

rig onto the B. A. Hcgue. farm, The State Board .of Health re

Section 23, Tciwnship. 9 North, ported 157 confirmed cases to-

Range 10 West to begin opera- day, eight more than Saturday's tions. The farm is located, near compilatio'n. Jay County led the the Drake Church south of Fair-1 list with 32, Randolph 24, Delabanks. .ware 21, Howard seven, and Union and Madison six each.

Twelve deaths from polio are

Drillers have reached a depth a' 21R2 nn lhp Clair Merrill farm

north of Sullivan. Drilling is.listed on the board's records, continuing and it is expected Some communities cancelled that it will be a day or two be.- Plans for county and street fairsfore anything is known. The;others took preoautions by orGilliam Drilling Co, et al, is in d chemical sprays of the

charge of the operations. The b1""""" w"clc WCIC w

location of the drilling is Section

9, Township 8

West.

North, Range 9

Another well on the Dean

be held,

Blackford County, which has sprayed a film of oil over stagnent water to kill fly and mosquito breeding places, planned a

Chancy farm just north of the meeting tonight for further pre-

4-H Fairgrounds was nluereed as:ventive measures. Blachford ad

it came in dry. The depth reached on the well, located in Section 28, Township 8 North, Range 10 West, was 2490 feet.

Linda Weisbecker To Attend Milliken U.

' I Miss Linda Weisbeckek dau

ghter of Rev. and Mrs. Hpmer G.j 'Weisbecker of Sullivan, has matriculated at the James Mili- ' kin Univ I sity for the semester beginning September of 199. ; Miss Weisbecker id a graduate of Sullivan High School with the ; class of 49, and plans to work toward a Bachelor of Arts degree at Millikin. Miss Nancy Zi of Swetow, 4 China, who has been residing with Rev. Homer Weisbecker,

has also matriculated at James Millikin University

the semester beginning September of 1949. Miss Zi is a graduate of Sacred Heart High School, Shanghai, China, with the class . of 1948, and plans to work toward a Bachelor of Music degree, with a major in voice, at Milli

kin.

joins Jay County. Peak About Aug. 1 Adams County's second polio

death occurred last Friday when Sherrill Ann Corson, age 12, died in a South Haven, Mich, hospital. The girl became ill two days

after she went to Michigan to

attend a religious camp.

Among many ill in Indiana's hospitals were numerous persons

from Michigan and Ohio points

near the Indiana state line. The

Hoosier -hospitals were closer

than hospitals in their own states. Meanwhile, health experts wondered if the .normal pattern of polio incidences would be followed this year. Dr. W. C. Anderson, director of the board's chronic diseases division, said ' the peak usually is reached around Aug. 1 and that the number of new cases

the begins dropping,

for

Spreads East To j Atlantic Coast (By United Press) A heat wave with 100-degree temperatures at its northern

frinups moved slowlv eastward

est LaFollette, formerly of Shel-'toward the Atlantic seaboard to-

burn; the grandson of Mrs. Voor-'d

bees Creager of Sullivan, R. 5,1 and a nephew of James W. La- Weathermen at Chicago said

Follette of Sullivan, R. 4. warm and humid weather was Young LaFollette, who is em- general east of the Rocky Mounployed in Union Station in Ind-ain barrier. Temperatures were ianapolis, made a flying tackle slightly lower on the Pacific

to save a news butcher from. Coast

falling beneath the wheels of a

frain in the station. The news

butcher, Charles Bader, age 46,

siattcu cci uii vii tj.aiu j ii . , . , . . , j

began' to pull out of the station, I tt ' . w "

but the train began to move so fast that he could neither iun.p

New Yorkers, found the week

end weather cooler and drier than in previous weeks of the

that it would not last.

The heat which drove Midwest

without the danger of falling ty aweners to pants ana ro.ine under the wheels or Dull him- beaches was advancing toward

self back onto the train.

LaSollette, spotting Bader's predicament from the train plat

form, took off after him. He T.n

three car lengths, then

cet in a flying tackle

Bader's waist.

the Eastern seaboard, pushing the drier, cooler air ahead of it. A Hot Sunday Great Plains states had temperatures in the 90's and the 100's.

left his Chicago weathermen said that on to grab Sunday a reading of 110 was recorded at Phillip, S. D. Miles

,, . , City reported 104; Pierre, S. D, When he pulled Bader off the '

train Bader s left foot sUppea Chicago onto the tracks, and thiee toes . , ... ' . o . .

mt . . inau. 7i. Willi a iui tv-uoi iv mv. were run over. They were ampu- ; Louis ha(J tated, but otherwise he was un- Denyer 90 Boston 87 Los 1.. . v,o 'Angeles 83 and San Francisco 64.

.xduci WW uai unci"; v -.:.. n ,.i,l

OJ1 r . i i i . .. i rr .. .1

luunu ii naraer 10 tuoi un wueii

was leing lifted into an

ance that he was lucky aiie;

smt

to

bt

16 Persons Die In Accidents Over Weekend

!an outbreak of polio forced of

ficials to close all playgrounds and swimming pools. Texas cotton farmers feared that rains in the lower Rio Grande Valley would hamper gathering of a prospective half-million-bale crop. The Sabine River at Gladewater was six feet above flood stage.

Hold Rites For Charles Vowell, Wreck Victim

.Funeral services were held this afternoon at the Billman funeral chapel for Charles Edward

Vowell, age 31, who was killed in an auto accident Saturday

morning at 1:30 o'clock south of Terre Haute. Services were in charge of the Rev. T. M. Jennings assisted by the Rev. Edwin Barker. Burial was in Center Ridge Cemetery. Younff Vowell was a veteran of the U. S. Army, a member of the Sullivan Elks Club, American Legion and the She.lburn Masonic Lodge. He was em

ployed at- the Regent mine at the

time of his death. Surviving are the wife, Audrey; the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie . Vowell of Sullivan, R. 4; four sisters, Mrs. Mona Malone of Sullivan, R. 4, Mrs. Velma Mddox of Evansville. Mrs. Opal Russell of Noblesville, Indiana, and Mrs. Florence Hendrickson of Frankfort, Indiana, and one brother, Donnelly Vowell of Shelburn, R. 2.

Name Entry For Terrace Conlesl

It was announced today that Carl Wampler, Gill township farmer will represent Sullivan County .in the State Terracing Contest, Friday, July 29. Mr. Wampler is being sponsored by - Rader Tractor Sales. They are furnishing the tractor and transportation expenses. . The contest is being held one and one-half miles southwest of Princeton on the Albert Dugan farm. The contest will begin at 11 a.' m. It is being sponsored by the State Soil Conservation Committee, the Evansville Cour

ier, Agricultural extension ter

vice, and the Soil Service.

Edgar Purcell Dies At Carlisle

friends watched helplessly as he

sank. Richard Pea, age 47, Indianapolis, was found dead along the Baltimore and Ohio tracks near Rushville. Authorities said that a train hit him.

Edgar Purcell. age 75. died at1 Two motorcyclists were killed

the residence' in Carlisle at 3:55 in separate accidents a day and o'clock this morning. He was a only a few miles apart near Delnative of Sullivan County and phi. The victims were Rose Clutwas the son of the late Thomas ter, age 22, Til ton, 111, who. was

Pur-

Purcell and Sarah Mosier

cell. He is survived by the widow,

Myrtle; a daughter, Mrs.

Stull of Evansville; two

Harold Pirtle Named Area Wheat Champ

It has been announced that

Harold Pirtle, Sullivan, R. 5, is the Area Wheat Champion for southwestern' Indiana. This is the first time that this honor has ever gone to a Sullivan County farmer. Mr. Pirtle's 10 acre field of Vigo wheat was located on the Frank Mason farm on the east' side of U. S. Highway 41, txtm anA nne-Vinlf milpc smith nf

Westviile while swimming. Three SuUivan '

There wre 320 farmers enrolled in the contest this year from Davies. Gibson, Knox, Pike Posey, Vanderburg, Warrick, and Sullivan County. Forty-six were entered from Sullivan County. . The fields were scored acording to their general appearance, uniformity of stand, weeds, crop mixtures, diseases, seeding on the contour (if necessary, stand of legumes, lodging, cultural practices followed, and etc. These factors determine 50

(By United Press) ACCIDENTS wiped out more lives in Indiana during a bloody week-end topped by a double fatality in an auto race at Salem. . . At least 16 persons were killed, including two in the race,

three who drowned, a pedestrian j

hit by a railroad train, and

seven in highway traffic. Tommy Mattson, age 32, Wilmington, Del, and Christian Barbo, age 33, Seattle, Wash, died soon after their cars locked wheels in a terrific crash witnessed by more than 7,000 fans. Van Dameron, age 21, Chicago, drowned in Clear Lake near

killed when her husband's cycle and an automobile collided, and

Philip White, age 24, Delphi who

Ruth, was killed when his cycle went

sons, out of control,

Roscoe Purcell of Fox Lake, 111, John Newman, age 37, Walloon and Wilbur Purcell, of Blooming-, Lake, Mich, died in a Peru hoston, 111,, and three grandchild-pital of shock and burns sufren. ' ' fered in a truck accident. The The body was taken - to the big truck hit a bridge abutment Schulze Funeral Home and was on U. S. 31, and plunged burnremoved to the residence. Fu- ing into a creek, neral services will be held at 2 Frank Marshall, age 21 East o'clock Wednesday afternoon at Chicago, was killed in a two-car the Fairview United Brethren 'collision near Hammond on U. SChurch with the Rev. William 1 41; William Parson, age 31, of Barker officiating. Burial will Terre Haute, was killed on Ind.

Merchants Beat Seabury Markets The Merchants chalked up vic

tory number seven yesterday in

their drive for the southern division leadership in the league when they defeated the Seabury Markets 11-3.

Young BiU Shipman coasted to

an easy victory as his mates Washington.

jumped in a seven-run leao, scoring one run in the first and three in the second and third.

Mrs. Roosevelt Denies Cardinal Bigotry Charge NEW YORK, July 25. (UP)

Eleanor Roosevelt flatly -denied

Francis " Cardinal fapellmans

charges of anti-Catholicism today and cited as proof her support of

the late Alfred E. Smith, a Roman Catholic. . "I have no ill feeling toward any religion," she said in her syndicated newspaper column, "or toward any people of high or low estate because they belong to any religious group." The Archbishop of New York in a letter to Mrs. Roosevelt last Thursday accused the widow of the late President of anti-Catholicism in her stand against Federal aid to private schools, including parochial schools." Mrs. Roosevelt reiterated her stand that she believed in complete freedom of religion in the United States, but at the same time believed in complete separation of church and state. "My record," Mrs. Roosevelt said, "is that of support of Alfred E. Smith, a Roman Catholic governor of this stated in every campaign that he made. I spoke from many platforms for him, and 1 ran the women's work for him when he was candidate for President of the United States. "I was shocked in that campaign by the extent of what I

considered bigotry against the Roman Catholic Church, and 1 certainly do net wish to encourage anything of that kind." The controversy between Mrs. Roosevelt and the cardinal was a subject for discussion yesterday

in puipits in New York and

Federal Jud

lent C

omro

The visitors scored their runs in the fifth, shoving across two. and scoring a single in the seventh. The Merchants br6ke out with four more in the eighth to salt the game away. .- ; Next .'Sunday the Merchants4 .wpll play:at Riverview in. a game that should provide plenty of. thrills and excitement as these two teams always give the fans a run for their money. Mgr. Taylor has requested that all members of the club report for practice at 5 o'clock Wednesday. Sunday's score: R H E Markets . . 000 020.100 3 6 6 Merchants 133 000 04x 11 10 2 Batteries: Markets Wickard and Higginbottom; Merchants ampman and Jordon.

James Frew, 61, Dies Sunday James Frew, 61 years old,

Sullivan, died at his home,

of 730

Street Sunday

North Section morning.

He is survived by two brothers, Phillip Frew of Terre

of the weight on the score card. Haute and Robert Frew of ScotThe other 50 of the score is land, and two sisters, Margaret

determined by the yield. Yield samples were made in 12 different places in the field. It was estimated that Mr. Pirtle's yield was 57.5 bushels per acre. Mr. Pirtle himself did not determine his own yield. Mr. Pirtle applied 350 lbs. of 3-12-12 fertilizer and seeded

Hollett and Mary Yettman of

Scotland. The body was taken to the Billman Funeral Home where funeral services will be conducted Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock in the funeral chapel. The Rev. Jack Anderson of the Sullivan

First Christian Church will offi-

be in Morris Chapel Cemetery.

DF.S MOINES PAPER

Conservation AS CENTEuNIAL

DES MOINES, la.; July 25. (UP) A 180-page centennial is

sue of The Des Moines Register set a new circulation record for

the-paper-with a press run of 555,000 copies, General Manager Luther L. Hill said today. The big 1 1 1 A I T A.

n i - r,.jj t DflDer aisiriDUteci uiruuuiiuui

V Cole, age 76, who died Saturday, I Jowa yesterday included a 64- ' - have heen nnstnnned to await ! Page album-of historic front pag-

David L. Cole Rites Postponed

46, and Charles Strong, age 59.

Lafayette, died in a Lebanon hospital of injuries received in an auto-truck collision last week.

i the arrival of

to

relatives

from

t i r

Oregon. The rites previously had been set for Tuesday af?rnoon. The body was taken to the residence at Oaktown, R. 1, this morning from the Schulze Funeral Home at Carlisle.

BONUS BLANKS

A representative of Veterans

Affairs will be in the following

places with typists to assist in

filling out state bonus papers. All veterans are reminded to

bring original discharge papers

and all separation papers with them. The meetings will be held

from 7:00 to 9:00 o'clock each

evening:

Veterans must have their

TODAY'S TEMPERATURES award of compensation or pen-

The unofficial temperatures in-sion papers and their . Veterans

Sullivan today were: Administration C number to ap-

at 7:30 a.m 77 degrees Ply for the extra 100 clause.

about October 8, the field was in j ciate. Bual will be in Wood-

soybeans in 1948, and corn dur- iawn Cemetery at Terre Haute.

ing 1947, and had been in alfalfa

for three years previous. Ammonium nitrate was applied March 1 at the rate of 100 lbs.

per acre.

Mr. Pirtle will be, crowned

Area Wheat King at the banquet

in Princeton this fall.

ter's files-.

i

DAMAGE SUIT VFNUED HERE

A damage' suit filed by James Shiel against May Blackburn doing business as the Submarine Tavern in Terre Haute has been

s venued to the ' Sullivan Circuit

Court from the Vigo County Superior Court.

Victor Willis Dies At Hospital Victor Willis, 64 years old, formerly of Carlisle, died at 6:15 o'clock Sunday evening -at the Veternas Hospital in ' Indianapolis. He is survived by a sister, Miss Stella Willis of Carlisle, and a brother, Floyd Willis of Ander

son. The body was brought to the Schulze Funeral Home. Funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon at the Schulze' Funeral Home with the Carlisle American Legion Post No. 236 in charge of the military rites. The Rev. A. W. Stoneburner will officiate. Burial wili be in the I.O.O.F. Cemetery.

neon

stifufional

Terre Haute

Plant Faces

Strike Threat

WOMAN CELEBRATES 102ND BIRTHDAY CHILLECOTHE, Mo, July 25. (UP) Aunt Liza McKenzie, a spry little lady who attributes her long life to wearing a sunbonnet from dawn to sunset, celebrated her 102nd birthday today. Aunt Liza wore a new blue bonnet with white lace which was given her last night at a lawn dinner attended by almost 100 neighbors. Mrs. McKenzie didn't try to blo out the 102 flaming candles on her birthday cake. "I don't think I. have the wind anymore," she smiled.

CHICAGO, July 25. (UP) Federal Judge Elwyn.R.

Shaw today declared the Federal Rent Control Act unconsti

tutional.

He issued his ruling in a suit by Housing Expediter

Tighe E. Woods, against the Shoreline Apartments, Chicago,

whose owners attempted to evict tenants who refused to join a cooperative.

Shaw 12 days ago observed that he thought the local '

option section of the law was unconstitutional. The local option section lets states pass their own rent laws as substitutes for the Federal Act and thus provide for decontrol.

Had Congress desired and intended to continue rent

control without these local option clauses, it could have done

so by the simple act of extending the expiration date of the then existing law," said Shaw today. .

It fellows that I must necessarily find the entire act

invalid, and being invalid, the court has no jurisdiction."

District Attorney Otto Kerner,

Jr., who argued the case for the

housing expediter's office, said

an appeal would be made. .

Shaw said he is "assuming that Congress still has the power to enact a valid rent, control act." He said the act 'as now constituted does not properly meet with Congress' power to delegate" authority. ' This is the first case which has come to attention in which Congress has attempted to leave it to other legislative bodies arbitrarily to determine whether they will be in or out of the union so far as acts of Congress are concerned," said Shaw. Sees No Difference He said he could see' no difference in this and a situation in which Congress would pass a Selective Service law providing that any state which did not care to send soldiers could pass a law saying 'they did not wish to be involved in war. Shaw found that in setting up a rent control law, Congress acted within its war powers. "It is obvious to everyone that 'Viece rents controls are continued for economic reasons only and they have no real reference to the prosecution of the war anywhere," he said. "Since we have . signed , no 'reaties of peace, I assume wo are still at war and that Congress still possesses full war oowers. The only question is whether the present act is with;n the power granted to Congress to declare war and the implied power to take any act or -ass a"v Ipw to carrv that power or declaration into full force and effect. "In short, I am assuming that 'InnTess still has the power to enact a valid rent control act." .; War Powers Exist

TERRE HAUTE, Ind., July 25

(UP) The American Can

Company was threatened today

with a strike of 15.000 workers

in 28 of its plants in 13 states

and Canada.

Twenty-five local presidents

of the CIO United . Steelworkers Union voted to strike after

negotiations for a new contract

became stalemated. The strike

sction will be submitted to the inion's national headquarters in Pittsburgh. Jame Robb, Indianapolis, District 30 director of the union, aid the union seeks a general

wage increase, pension plan, lib

eral health and welfcre clauses and a uniform expiration date or all American Can union conracts. Involves 28 Plants The. company operates 60 plants in the United States and 'anada. The strike - threat - in

volves only 28. - Byron R. Japkson, manager of the plant here, said the com

pany signed separate l.ual twoyear contracts at various' timewith the steelworkers last yea: He said a clause permits reopening of wage neji)tii'ions one year after signing.

Jackson said mani2;nent was. ready to undertake further discussions at any time. Arnold Camoo, Oakland, Cal.,

acting chairman of the union s negotiating committee, said the

company "refused to bargain on wages." "It is nonsensical for us to run

all lover the country negotiating

the contracts one by one," Campo said. The company contends that

negotiations for wages must be

conducted separately for each contract in accordance with contract provisions. It has refused to discuss a uniform wage agreement.

BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT Mr. and Mrs. Frank Deckard of Sullivan, R. 5, are the parents of a daughter, Carmen Falena, born July 22nd at the Mary Sherman Hospital.

at noon 85 degrees

DIVORCE SUIT VENUED HERE

A divorce suit filed by Robert Johnson against Bertha Johnson has been venued to the Sullivan Circuit Court from the Vigo County Superior C&urt.

Monday, July25,Merom school

lunch room.

Tuesday, July 26, Farmersburg

Legion Home.

Wednesday, July 27, Fairbanks

Legion Home.

Thursday, July 28, Hymera

Legion Post.

Wednesday, Aug. 3, Carlisle

Legion Home.

Contributions For Shelburn Fund

The following contributions to the Shelburn tornado relief fund have been received by Orville

Turner, treasurer of the fund: Lions Club of Sullian,

Wendell L. Gambill, sec. $45.00

Loyal Women's Bible class

of the Methodist church,

Sullivan, Edythe Bledsoe treasurer

Samuel Stoll, Montgomery,

Ind

Elmer Taylor, Shelburn Rural Route .. ....... 10.00

Bethlehem Methodist Church SS Carlisle, Roscoe Carrithers, . treas... 10.00

25.00

15.00

The Sullivan Daily Times is sending you a copy of this edition of The Times to acquaint you with your county newspaper. .The Daily Times is the only daily newspaper published in Sullivan County. It is the only newspaper in the county that brings you a complete news coverage of the county. In addition, through its full leased wire of the United Press Service, The Daily Time1; brings you later news than any other evening paper that circulates in the county. . If you are not already a subscriber, we invite you to enter a trial subscription to The Times so that you may see for yourself what The Times has to offer. Subscription rates are $4.00 a year in Sullivan and . adjoining counties, $2.25 for six months, and 40 cents a month. Send your subscription to The Sullivan Daily Times, Sullivan, Indiana, and include:

Continuing in this vein f"i saying he had assumed that the war powers of Congress still exist, he said that it "becomes instantly necessary . to decide whether they mav be deleppted to state, municipalities or other subdivisions of the government."

He found, he said, that the Dowers which "'ere He!patd were not properly defined by limitations sent up in the bill. Pf said that "no definition is

IJ'II If" ! "ven as to wai r saie musi no Millflrd jDflrlinCI It0 Provide adequately for the

' iiicmiTHir-mre ot maximum rents.

and that there was "no guide as to what constitutes sufficient

Millard S. Sparling, age 57. of ! hsing or what should consti-

. . . nira tyi q v i rv 1 1 tm von r c?

r Dies Near Carlisle

'"'"rlisir- R 9 dir-d th's mr-iin(?

after an illness of eighteen -"onths. F was a coal miner. He was born in New River, Tenn., on August 2. 1891. He s survived by two sons, Bennie of Whiting, Indiana, and Charles of Paxton, R. 1: a brother. Charlps Sparling of Wilrt'"onH. Florida. nd one halfbrother, Roscoe Davidson. TVio Vinrlv was taWpn tn thp

Newkirk Funeral Home ini

Pleasantville and will be removed to the residence tomorrow where it will lie in state, funeral services will be held Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Jericho Pentecostal

Church. The Rev. John Jerrells will officiate. Burial will be in the Woodward Cemetery.

tute maximum rents.'

.One section of the bill, he paid, provides that anv'- state without reference to the war pffnrt may find through its legislature that Federal rent control no longer is necessary, and that all rent controls may mav be immediately dissolved. The effect of this, he said, was 'to leave the, matter up to

,!.any state and to legislatures to

"act reasonably or whimsically as they may . see fit without reference to any war effort." y . .

Name

Address

City

MARRIAGE LICENSES The following marriage licenses havp been issued by the county clerk:

Bonnie Hochstettler of Ham

mond, and Ned Edward Murday

of Jasonville. Norma Ruth Stinson of Sullivan, R. 3, and John C. Pirtle of Sullivan, R. 1. Evelyn C. Pierce of Shelburn, and Marion Lee Phegley of Carlisle, R. 3.

HOSPITAL NOTES Admitted July 21: Kate Ford of 104 South Crowder Street; Forrest Jennings of Shelburn, R. 2.

Admitted July 22: Mary Huff of Sullivan. R. 3. Admitted July 24: Frank Patton of Sullivan, R. 2; Raymond Wyatt of Dugger; Jap Boothe of 501 South Main Street. Admitted July 25: Frank Bruner of Sullivan, R. 1. Dismissed July 22: Ruby Peak of Shelburn, R. 2. Dismissed July 24: Joseph Worth of Hymera; Robert Tarrh of Shelburn, R. 1; Joe Reed of 405 West Johnson.

r