Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 51, Number 156, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 8 August 1949 — Page 3
SULLIVAN. INDIANA
SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES MONDAY, AUG. 8. 1949.
PAGE THREE
INDIAN PRAIRIE SCHOOL REUNION
The second annual reunion of
reunion started teaching with an enrollment of 14. A few . years later it was consolidated. The VmiTirxr i nnai tnrn down and
former pupils and teachers of In- the ground -. owned by Arthur dian Prairie School, Jefferson Watt is farmed. Aunt viola township, Sullivan County, was Cleveland of Sullivan, mother of held at the Linton City Park July geven children who attended 31, with a basket dinner at noon. ' at Indian Prairie was preApproximately seventy persons ' ghe had a spelling book were present. used by Uncle Samuel Enochs, ' The meeting in the afternoon er father, when he taught , A , , . ; school. Several brought pictures was called to order by Georgia fak duri the years
donnwn flajnuBxi iiiiBuiB -u i wnich all enjoyed.
scxiooi ceil owneo oy tveieu
Jones that was his stepmother's, who taught school in the county 25 years. Clarence Howard of Carlisle had charge of the meeting in the absence of the president, Arthur Watt, whose father was buried Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Hamet Hinkle were guests in the afternoon. His father went to school at Indian Prairie in 1852. There were four teachers present, Mrs. Grace Enoch and son Everett, of Carlisle R. R., Mrs. Georgie Johnson
Mrs. Walt died in April; she was Barnhart of Indianapolis, who is
88 and Mr.- Watt was 90. They lived on the farm where the old
sehoolhouse stood, it having beenJ
abandoned for several years. They were the parents of seven children, most of whom attended Indian Prairie School. ' Clarence Howard gave a talk. He started to school in 1885, with Bill MeCammon teaching. He told about the old school first being located where the church now stands and in 1870 a brick building was erected a short distance
from the church. In 1897 the old
still teaching; Bessie Booker Neal and Miss LaVerne Bedwell, who is now teaching at Freelandville. All gave short talks and express-
fed their desire to continue the re
union. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Buster Cleveland, Linton;
Air Force Twins: For Big Bomb Loads and Big Troop Loads
TWO Of WORLD'S LARGEST planes. Air Force s six-engine Consoli-dated-Vultee B-36 (left) and its cargo counterpart, six-engined Consolidated-Vultee XC-99, fly over Caswell Air Base at Fort Worth, Tex. The B-36, designed to carry 10.000 pounds of aomos
10.000 miles at 350 mph, has actually lifted 84,000 pounds. The XC-99, world's largest land-based plane, can carry 400 fullyequipped combat troops. With reduced loads it has, a maximum range of 8.000 miles. (International)
Grace Enoch and son Everett, of Carlisle R. R.; Mr. and Mrs. Albert Booker and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Cleveland of Paxton, R. R.; Mr. and Mrs. Hilbert Prior, Sidney, 111.; Mr. and Mrs. Lee Douthitt, Freelandville; Mrs. Dosia
i Tedrick. Carlisle: Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Morton Whitehouse, OrisNeal (Bessie Booker), George and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Cleveland, ; Booker, Carlisle R. R.; , Mr. and
Carlisle; Mr. and Mrs. George
i.--t. j o torna MrOiiown and Mrs. Viola Cleve-
building was erected. At that land of Sullivan; Mr. and Mrs. time there was around fifty en- Russell Cleveland, Sandborn; Mrs. rolled, and around 1920 LaVerne Orville Usrey, Phoenix, Ariz., Bedwell, who was present r.t the Ralph Wells, Oaktown; Mrs.
Mrs. F. F. Stoelting and daughter, Connie Beth, of Bedford, Ind.;
i Mr nnarl Mrs Flzn Shako TTnrm-
daughter, Wilma Ruth Wilson, of ersburg; LaVerne Bedwell, Car-
Terre Haute; Mary and Hap Fred
rick of Pleasantville, and grand-
ANNUAL REPORT OF RFOE1PTS AND EXPENDITURES U OF THE SCLl.IVAN CITY) SCHOOLS
From August 1, " "
I. SPECIAL FUND:
Balance August 1. Receipts August 1,
: J 11.243.38
1943. to July 31. 1949
08.904.99
Total Receipts and Balance ., ,
Expenditures: . , . 1. Administration: Salaries of Superintendent and Clerks Office Supplies and Other Expenses... I 8.914.U 2. Operation: Janitors' Salaries. Coal, Water, m Light and Power. Janitor Supplies, etc 21.0W). Ti 3. Instruction and Supervision . o,D.io 4. Maintenance; Repair buildings, heating plants, replacement furniture, instructional apparatus 5. Fixed Charges: Rents. Insurance imntn 6. Auxiliary Activities ' S 7. Capital Outlay, New and Alterations aim. a Total Expenditures , 5V12 Balance .Tu'v 31. 1949 d.mm.oj II. TUITION FUND: K1 44S )R Balance-August 1. 1948 iwnnsw Receipts August 1. 1948, to July 31, 1949 1o7.00d.38
Total Pwelpts and Balance SntlS Expenditures laiMM.w
Palnnc" .Tn'v 31, III. BOND FUND: Ralance August 1
Receipts August 1. 1918 to July. 31
1949 : 51.400.96
1918
1919
3.001.46 7,132.34
Total Receipts and Balance n,?' Expenditures Payment of bonds and interest 9.43o.0O
Balan"e .Inly R1. 1949 .. IV. VOCATIONAL FUND: Balance August J. 1948 Roceipts August 1, 1948,
to July 31. 1949
1.964.21 4,332.18
Total Receipts and Balance Expenditures: 1. Instruction 3.027.24 2. Supplies and Operation 1.605.80 .Total Expenditures .'. ,
6,296.39
4.633.04
Balance July 31. 1949 CUMULATIVE BUILDINO FUND: Balance August 1. 1948 Receipts August 1. 1918. to July 31.
1949
1,633.35 " None 18.490.45
18.490.45 None
13.490.45
Total Receipts and Balance Expenditures: Balance Ju'y 31, 1919
OUTSTANDING DF1BT, August 1. 1948 $13,000.00 , DEBT CREATED during Year 1948-49 None " TOTAL 33,000.00 . DEBT PAID during Year 1948-49 9,030.00 OUTSTANDING DEBT, August 1. 1949 24.000.00 A. report of re-eip's and disbursements of the Sullivan City Schools for the fiscal year 1948-49 is on file in the office of; the County Auditor, and is open for public, inspection. Claims for the expenditures and a copy of the warrants issued are on file in th office of the Superintendent of Schools, and are open for public inspection. PORD OF SCHOOL TRUSTEES .T. H. OowdfT. Pres. f F Fi-her. Treas. II. W. Branstetter, Secretary
lisle, R. R.; Mr. and Mrs. Hamet Hinkle, Vincennes; Dr. and Mrs. Frank Arnold, Lawrenceville, 111.; Mr. and Mrs. Bob Wilson and son, Robert, and Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Barnhart (Georgie Johnson) of Indianapolis; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jones and daughter, Terre Haute; ' Claud and Mary Howard, Dayton, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Grover Howard, Cambridge, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Jess Boone, Carlisle R. R.; Clarence Howard, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Stoelting, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Cleveland, and Mr. and Mrs. Mervin Howard, all of Carlisle; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Henderson and Mr. and Mrs. Rollie Douthitt, Carlisle R. R.; Mr. and
Mrs. Leslie Jones, Mr. and Mrs. John Hargis, Carlisle, R. R. The reunion next year will be held the last Sunday in July at the Carlisle Park. Remember the date next year and make an effort to attend if you are a former pupil or teacher of Indian Prairie School.
THIS LOOKS LIKE A HAPPY THREESOME, BUT
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POPE REUNION The annual Pope reunion will be held Sunday August 21 at the Sullivan city park. Relatives and friends invited. Basket dinner at noon.
iN i ? ,&? -.3;-
PLANS FOR DIVORCE have divided this happy looking threesome, shown In Hollywood. Ingrid Bergman announced in Rome she will divorce her husband ot 12 years, Dr. Peter Lindstrom (right) and quit films. It is believed she will marry Italian director Roberto Rossellini (left). Bergman and Rossellinl recently finished a picture on the Island of Stromboli, and during filming Lindstrom flew to Italy to try to straighten out the marital tangle. She ia 32 and Rossellini is 43. (International)
POUND REUNION The Pound reunion will be held at the Sullivan city park Sunday, August 14th.
Quit paying rent and own your home. Special bargains on property on installment plan. Also farms for aale. W. T. MELLOTT
FAIRBANKS Mrs. Lou Johnson and daughter, Reva, and Mrs. Mabel Drake returned home Thursday after visiting in Chicago. Miss Sara Rose Johnson is working as a typist at the O'Donnell Printing Company in
Terre Haute. " - '
Miss Ramona Bohn is -working
at a resturant in Farmersburg. .( Miss Leora Russell is spending her. vacation with her sister, Mrs. Ruby Whalen and other friends. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Guedelhoefer from near Indianapolis spent, the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Powers. Miss Ruth Clouse visited with friends in our community last week. Miss Sara Rose Johnson entertained with a party at her home Saturday evening. Guests were Marjorie Tarleton, Ramona
Wonderful New Comfort
New Convenience! Easiest car ever made to get into and om of. Women enter and leave with diatuty. Common sense engineering of wider doorways, and natural step-in entrances make it seem absurd ever to have to wrestle your way in and out of a car.
I s . M . New Yorker 4-Joor sedan with Kwy
Bohn, Floyd Halberstadt, Bob Halberstadt and Malcolm Sullivan. Mr. 'and Mrs. Ellis Holmes were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Lloyd Wednesday. Mrs. Lula Piety of Prairie Creek called on.. Mrs. Luticia
IWjlfon, and ,.Mrs.... Effie Dilley
Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Dilley spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Ira Wilfon near Cory. Mr. Crew was a dinner, guest of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Johnson i
Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Elijah Pi ttman called on Mrs. Gladys Thomson Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Etta Harris and Mr. and Mrs. Cleva Drake, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Johnson, Jane Anderson, and Elva Drake attended the funeral of Mrs. Mary Thomson at Tuscola, 111., Saturday afternoon. Those attending the Graysville O. E. S. Thursday evening -were Mrs. Cecil Fuson and daughter, Dorothy, Mrs. Ellis Holmes, Mr3. Effie Dilley, Mrs. Mae Drake, Mrs. Hazel Holmes, Mrs. Gladys Thomson and Miss Lois Pound. Mrs. Effie Diiley spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. George Minger at Seelyville. Miss Ola Bradbury is visiting in Detroit, Michigan.
Shot by Ex-Patient
New Wider Chair-Helghf Seals) We don't fold you up like a "jackknife." You sit comfortably in seats the height of your easy chairs at home. We ve more headroom, legroom, and shoulder room for you. And
no other car has ever been so completely engineered from the fundamentals up for your comfort, your convenience, your peace of mind.
New Yorker 4-rfoor sedan with
PRESTOMATIC FLUID DRIVE TRANSMISSION drive without shifting
New Smoother Driving! Chrysler's '
New Easier Steering! In one of the great advances since the war, we give you new "center control" steering. For the first time, tie rods
of equal length give you balanced control. There's no wheel fight. There's "greater road stability, easier handling, less road shock. Yes, and greater safety, too for everything about this car is designed for safer driving.
wife
mighty Spitfire engine now has' still h igher compression for fas ter acceleration, smoother response.
4-4 And along with its better all-
around performance goes au
amazing new Waterproof Ignition System : 1 that's exclusive with Chrysler. You can drive through high water but it won't stall. You get quicker starling, even in dampest weather, smoother idling, longer life. ayrol Fluid D'i"e
' pi Hi 4
POLICEMEN carry Dr. Louis Blitzman from his New York apartment after he was shot by an expatient whom he had treated for a mental disorder. The gunman, David Kaplan, surrendered voluntarily to police a few hours after the shooting. (International)
HELD IN $20,000 BANK ROBBERY
Created
by
CHRYSLER
BOYLL & SON MOTOR COMPANY .418 South Section ' " Sullivan. Ind.
JAMES E. BLACKWELl (right), 10, Is being held on bond with two alleged accomplices, Pasquel Rice (left), 22, and Cliff . Rice, 17, following arrest with part of the loot from the $20,657 holdup of the Scottish bank of Tembroke, N. C, where Blackwell was employed as teller. Of the loot $13,533 was recovered from the Rice farm near Pembroke, according to FBI, and Pasquel, said to be the one who staged the holdup, was carrying $7,000. Blackwell had told authorities he had been kidnaped by the robbers and tied to a Ire 25 miles from Pemhroke. He was arrested when KiitJMritfat f?'i'.d."t?9I?a?y. .Mlea".iB his story, (Intenutiootl isnnfikktSA
AvnrRov OWENS VOWS AEE SAID Rosalie Anderson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert L. Anderson, of Sullivan, and Charles Owens, son of Mr. and Mrs. Luther Owens, of Merom, were united in marriage by the Rev. Ray Montgomery in the First Christian Church in Vincennes Thursday evening at 7 p.m. Mrs. Montgomery played bridal music before the ceremony and Miss Doris Montgomery sang "Because." The bride wore a blue satin street length dress with black accessories and carried a bouquet of pink roses. Mrs. James James, matron of honor, wore a grey crepe dress with a corsage of yellow roses. James James served as best man. The bride is a graduate of the Sullivan High School. She attended Indiana State Teachers College. She is now employed in the office of the county clerk. The bridegroom is a graduate of Merom High School and Ball State Teachers College. He is a veteran of World War II. He will
teach in the New Lebanon schools this fall. After a short wedding trip
through the South, the couple will reside at 116 West Wall Street. Those attending the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Earl Engle, Miss Frances Whitlock, and Miss Mary Lou Hinkle.
SAFE DEPENDABLE ARROW COACHES From TERRE HAUTE to EVANSVILLE ARROW COACH LINES . Sullivan Station City Taxi Phone 239 For Schedule Information
WHY NOT Buy and shop without "Running Bills' ... Get What It Takes From Us MONEY
to
$300
SECURITY LOAN CO. Upstairs North Side Oakley Bid.
t m
Going to the great Chicago Railroad Fair this
summer? Would you like to be a guest of the
Hotel Sherman at the Railroad Fair absolutely , free? Then Stop . . . Look . . . listen ... Here's how you get your free tickets to the Railroad Fair:
Slay at the Hotel Sherman when you visit the great Chicago Railroad Fair. '
When you register at the Hotel .Sherman, say the magic words, "RAILROAD FAIR." Then, the Hotel Sherman gives every member of your family a free ticket to the great Chicago Railroad Fair. -
j Say "Railroad Fair"
Say "Railroad Fair"
Sav "Railroad Fair
. This is the Hotel Sher- " man's way of welcoming yog to the great Chicago Railroad Fair ; . . . it's free . . . no ether charges., '. just remom- -bar the magic words "RailreocJ Fair'; '
II
m
hotel (hermaii
Don't Wait for Cold Weather to Catch Y Unprepared
os modern J J, I w , L -as tomorrow JP q JL T
Meets every requirement for modern winter air-conditioned comfort! For homes with or without basements; . supplies perfect comfort even when central location is impossible. Blowers force a constant but imperceptible heat flow through small pipes to any desired register location. Approved by Underwriters' Laboratories for "zero clearance" installation against combustible building materials. A full line; see it today!
WORLD'S LARGEST HAHUFACTUIE1S
AND ENGINEERS OF WARM AIR NEATINI SYSTEMS
A. Schu St Son
PHONE 177
CARLISLE, IND.
