Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 51, Number 155, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 5 August 1949 — Page 8
"PAGE EIGHT
BMBjEiEXlSE
3233
ass
wmm
SUNDAY And Monday!
FI8HT1SI LOVING! LOOTING!
their outlaw
rniiivo lull v
the fiery feme of.'. - tho WEST!
i v-
f 1 -v jU . r ,
81 kAISwI
& v- - - fM? -K
iiii i . ... n-
Sullivan Club Meetings FOR TUB WEEK
The Triple "T" Home Economics club will meet Wednesday, August 10th at the Sullivan City Park. A covered dish dinner will be 6erved at nocn. Visitors are are always welcome.
The American Legion Auxiliary and their families will ho'.d a six o'clock basket dinner at the Legion Home Sunday evening honoring 'the I.ayton family, who will be leaving Sullivan soon.
Village Homemakers will meet in regular session August 9Ji at the city park shelter house at 6:30 p. m. This will be a pot luck . supper with the members' families invited.
The B. &. V.. W. summer picnic will be held August 8 instead of August 9 as slated in Echo. The picnic will be held at (he home of' Doris Scott. Plan to eat at G:30 prompt. Bring own table service and be sjre to include a knife and dessert dish. If transportation is needed contact committee.
The .Past Presidents' parley of the American Legion Auxiliary will meet Tuesday night at the home , of Ellen Staggs. ,
Annual family picnic of the
Club will be li2ld at the City Park Tuesday, Aug. 9th at C:20.
VVclon Council 405 Degree of Pocahontas will meet Monday night, Aug. 8 at 7:30 o'clock. All members of Degree team please be present for Practice.
Royal Neighbors will meet In regular session Friday right at 7:30. A good attendance is desired as there are olfijes to bs filled.
The Paula Ann Club "will meet August Dth instead of August 10th. The bus will leave She'.burn at 10 o'clock.
Called meeting cf he War Mothers Club of , Himslton Township Friday night at 7:20 at the court house. All who can please attend for war memorial discussion.
The W. St C. S. of Longs Chapel and Cass churches will hold their annual picnic at the Sullivan Park on Wednesday, August 10th. Bring a well-filled basket and guests with you. . Old members especially welcome also.
Hud Crowder W. R. C, No. 275 will meet Wednesday, August 10th at 2 o'clock. All officers and members please attend.-'
SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES
FRIDAY, AUG. 5, 1949.
5TONITEI
&SAT.
&.' an rrr.
YVONNE Ds CARLO -HOWARD DUFF - DOROTHY IIART-WILLARD PARKER-LLOYD BRIDGES AT QA! LATEST NEWS - COLOR CARTOON AND MUSICAL SHORT!
I SAT. MATINEE g a 1MB8IB
fext: GLENN I - &p,
1 0
F0CH
LjomesWHITMORE
David WOLFE
COIUM1IA PiCIU9t
ADDED! NEWS
CARTOON & TRAVEL REEL!
Matinee 2:00 P. M. Simdar
A NEW SUNDAY AND MONDAY PROGRAM POLICY! TWO FIRST-RUN SMASH KITS ON THE SAME PROGRAM AT NO ADVANCE LN REGULAR PRICES!
AdUIfS UC r-
1:45 to 5:00 P. M.i
!&SAT.
BLAZING SIX-GUN ACTION HIT!
CklU-rUUd. BulUt-BUilng ACTION!
NO HII SILUON .tlACK JACK' -gt, y-p JW
.IA IDOT WAILI . MIIOMO COIES A KfulllC CIUE-'
PLUS SMASH JUNGLE PICTURE!
While Goddess of a Savage Empire 1
32 Polio Deaths
Reporfed; Warn Againsi Hysteria
Lois HALL lames CARS WELL Sheldon LEONARD
AIO! CHArlER 13 "CONGO BILL"
health commissioner, said polio had reached epidemic proportions in only three Hoosier counties, although cases had been reported in 51 other, widely dispersed counties. Burney visited Muncie, Portland and Winchester today with Dr. Carl Kuhen, also of the state board, to discuss the situation
with local health officers. ,. I Meanwhile at Camp AUerbury, , where the Indiana National I Guard was in the midst of its an- , nual maneuvers, the 38th Divis
ion surgeon announced that the members of guard unit3 from Muncie, Portland and Winchester would not be permitted, to
I ler.ve the camp this weekends
The three hardest hit counties were Jay, Randolph and Union. Delaware County was also hard hit, but its greater population
, meant the disease was not epi
demic there.
INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 5 (U.R) Death claimed its 32nd Hoosier victim today and the Board of Health reported five new cases to bring the state total to 309. ' Edgar Effenburger, age 24, of Fort Wayne, died in the St. Joseph Hospital at Fort Wayne. He was the fourth fatality among the 12 Allen County polio cases, one of which was added today. . Other cases today were one in Jay County, to bring that county's total to 54; one in Howard to make 12 cases there, and one each in Putnam and Adams Counties. The State Board said a special ward in the General Hospital at Marion was being 'set up to take care , of polio patients. There have been four cases but no deaths in Grant County. Polio experts agi-eed that "hysteria" was an uniortunate comnsnion of polio's spread through Indiana. Have Discussion ' The experts, who participated in a round table discussion of infantile paralysis over Radio Station WIP.E last night, said normal precautions were necessary, but extreme measures . such as business boycotts would not curb polio. Dr. Leroy E. Burney, state
Blasts at Moscow
GLOBE GLEANERS
9 South Main
trw A UI A mt An -'-'b' a
W -mm
JackSmfth -Phone47Tj f isWI !
THE BANANA HOUSE : C ..i--...
Merchants To Play Prison Nine Sonda The Merchants will hit the
road again Sunday when they play the Warriors of the U. S. . Prison in a game that will have
I a lot of bearing on who will bs crowned the Southern Division champions of the red hot league raqe. - - ' . , The Merchants dropped their first meeting by a 13 to 8- score and will be out to avenge the , loss. i I The Warriors are holding, the second position and will be -out s to knock the Merchants from the
lead. Mgr. Carl Taylor will probably send Max Cooley against the Warriors with Thewlis doing the catching.
! As this pame will start at 12:30, Mgr. Taylor asks all players meet at the bus station at
10:30 sharp.' The game with Pfizer Chemi
cals that was scheduled to be played at Terre Haute on Sunday August 14, has been shifted tn Sullivan and will be played .at Pavilion Field.
THAT ROWDY, HILARIOUS TEAM l Wf0- ; 'x II DSAMA or l0VE AND mzm m (M WALLACE j
llh.A"C. tis! (IMIIIRH A n A A r
" Vcnessa BROWN
SULLIVAN, INDIANA (
OPEN SUNDAY -AUG. 7th
Carry Home Packages Of
ADOW GOLD
M m A'
Ice Cream
Vanilla Chocolate Strawberry Fudge Ripple Whitehrmse Maple Nut . Pineapple Sherbet Pints 25c Quarts 50c
Genuine Eastman KODAK FILM (All Sizes)
L.
Bennett's Pharmacy
SINCE 1914
f V-4
Hnmiir'in i
2ND BIG HIT! GENE AUTRY AT HIS BEST!
LOCALS
. they have been attending 'Sunset Hill camp meeting.
thJ
Aurnvx
This Ghost Town's I1'
Haunted..
By Killers!
A.
OUR GRAND OPENING
WILL BE AUG. 6 Come in and se our quality fruits and vegetables. "BANANAS OUR SPECIALTY" SOUTH SECTION ON DIAMOND BAR-B-Q CORNER
yqwi'yfiWP nilffwun.wiw'wi i iim i i . mi
AN OPENING GUN In what may be a "war" to wrest control of the Balkans from Moscow is seen in speech of Marshal Tito (above), Yugoslav dictator, at Macedonian congress in Skoplje. He promised to help his Slav neighbors, the Albanians and Bulgarians, remove individuals responsible for "impeding the creation of brotherly relations with Yugoslavia." Both nations have been at odds with Tito since the Moscow-sponsored cominform attacked him as a traitor to Communism, and there are reports of pro-Tito movements in both. (International)
ADDED! CARTOON AND NEWS
-,
I A COLUMdiA riClUDE iW
.th H USLiE TKSISSTOil HiUi
Wo Pa3se Fion?
1 '
t T "i
DAILY -TIMES
Rurvj
Letters" from ministers and others interested in local option, are especially invited for this column. Letters and interviews of a suitable nature and proper newspaper interest are sought for this column, the editor reserving the right to censor or reject any article he may deem is not suitable and proper. Articles of 500 words or less are preferred. All articles sent to the Open Forum must be signed and address given, in order that the editor may know the writer; however, the writer's name will not be published if requested. Articles published herein do not necessarily express the sentiment of the Daily Times and this paper may or may not agree with statements contained herein.
"I DON'T WEAR falsies and I never will," Bebe Shopp, reigning "Miss America," told . London newsmen. Here she boards a plane at New York for a tour of the Riviera and other famous European beaches to study swimming fashions. (Inter national)
Today's Markets
INDIAN AFOLIS, Aug. 5.-4U.R) Hogs 6,000; midsession slightly more active than early, barrows and gilts around 250 lbs. down steady to about 25c higher, heavier weights mostly steady, sows steady to strong, bulk good and good and choice 180-240 lb. barrows and gilts $22.75 $23.25, largely $23.00 and above, top $23.50 sparingly, 240-290 lbs., $31.50 $22.75, 290-v40 lbs. around $19.50 $21.50, odd extremely heavy weights down to $18.50, 160-180 lbs.,' $22.25 $22.75; sows around 400 lbs. down, $17.25 $19.00; choice lightweights $19.50 sparingly, heavies $14.25 $17.50. Cattle 900, calves 300; generally steady on slaughter cattle and moderate cleanup trade, three loads mostly good to barely choice 800-850 lb. heifers $26.00 $26.15. Odds and ends medium and good shortfed steers $23.00 $25.50, odd head good beef cows $17.00, bulk common an medium $14.25 $16.00, light supply vealers active, steady, 'good and choice $25.50 $26.50, common and medium $19.00 $25.00, medium and good heavy beef calves $17.00 $23.50. Sheep 500, receipts mainly trucked in native spring lambs, demand confined to local killers, weak to 50c lower, liberal share good and choice mixed weight natives $25.50, few $26.00; scat tered medium to good ; $23.00 $24.50, slaughter ewes scarce, steady at $5.00 $8.00. .
Mr. and Mrs. Wm, K.- Shake spent the week-end in Detroit
the guests of Raymond T. Haight at the Book-Cadillac Hotel, i Mr. j Haight does announcing for race , j tracks, radio and television. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Strode and daughter, Marcia, of Stillwater, Oklahoma, were guests last week of Mr. and Mrs. Williiam Frame and Gail. I Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Elliott and son, Ray, of Royal Oak, Michigan, have returned home after "-"ndinf their vacation with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Frame and
Mr. and Mrs. Clell Leach. Mrs. Mervin Engle of Indianapolis, has come to Sullivan to make her home. John E. Smith i3 with the National Guard at Camp Atterbury for the annual two weeks training. Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Logan, Sr., left today for -Louisville, Ky., where they will spend the day
with their son and family, Mr. i and Mrs. R. F. Logan, Jr., en ' route to Fayetteville, N. C, where j they will visit their daughter and j son-in-law, Capt. and Mrs. A. F. 1
Faulsen. Merrill and J. R. Holycross are visiting their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. j Roscoe Holycross, in Covington, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Brown and Jimmy Brown of Marion, Ohio, spent Thursday in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Shaughnessy have returned from a visit with relatives in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Boyle 'and family of Morganfield, Ky., are spending their vacation in Sullivan visiting relatives. Miss Mary Schubert of Indianapolis, spent the week-end with her mother, Mrs. Agnes Schubert. Eddie Kenin, who is employed with the Index Store in Fairfield. 111., spent the week-end with his mother, Mrs. Dorothy Kerlin. Rev. and Mrs. J. M. Smith and family and Mrs. David Smith and daughter, Iris, have returned from Granite City, Ind., where
SEEKS WORD FROM CLASSMATES Nelson Miles Heikes, who wa
a student at Union Christian College at Morom from 1891 to 189:
is anxious to get in touch with! any who were' students at the! college at that time. He is at! present a , clergyman of the!
Christian Church in Albion, Me.
Lvkki JiJt i
is
FLlfORESCENT LIGHT FIXTURES
County
fliis'cl
ware
VAUGHN JONES No. Side Sq. Phone 47
'if out jok$;...
...or 'perhaps you'd rather not? Then it's time to be thinking about new linoleum. We have genuine inlaid Nairn Linoleum there's none finer in exciting decorator colorings. Our trained mechanics install it perfectly-a floor of truly lasting beauty. Nairn Linoleum is surprisingly inexpensive, too. Come in soon and bring your room measurements. We'll be glad to give you an estimate.
INLAID LINOLEUM
JOHN F. WHIPPS PLANING MILL 562 South Section St. , Phone 168 ' Sullivan, Ind.
