Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 51, Number 174, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 1 September 1949 — Page 5
jULUVAN, INDIANA
SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES THURSDAY, SEPT. 1, 1949
CLASSIFIED ADS
CLASSIFIED AD RATE Minimum eharre 18 words or less. 35c, first Insertion . So for each
additional word, first insertion. IS words or lest 7lo for three insertions, 4o for each additional I m a m 1 , f Xl a
wora ior wee insertions, ocaa casa, money urucr, vr gucck wita vraer.
Card of Thanks $1.00. Obituaries, In Memorlam, Eesolutlons 2o per word, minimum $1.51.
An additional charge of lOo will be added to classified ads that are not paid for by "the end of
,he month, excepting firms and organizations that carry regular charge accounts.
An additional charge of Z5o will be made for the use of box numbers.
PAGE FIVE
BLONDIE
FOR SALE
;IVE US your rail fertilizer
er now. See us for weed, brier
sprout killer. See us for re
ined Balbo rye seed. Farm
eau Co-op.
ROZEN FOOD CONT AIM-
IS We have a complete line
Accommodate your locker stor-
needs. Ascorbic acid for ches. " RICKARD , FROZEN
PD. SERVICE, across from
ion Home, Sullivan.
.11 insurance IS NOT alike: e with each new auto policy tten a road ATLAS of all es. Policy is good all states Canada, with permit issued
L;o to Mexico at no additional I. Nationwide claim service.
d Hall, Coffman Bldg., Sulli-
FOR SALE 1941 International ne and half ton truck. Has tan-
rlems, 825x20 tires, 16-foot bed
vith grain sides and stock racks,
yo speed axle. All in good con-
lion and priced right. Also two Actor tires, 900x24, like new. C & T Wrecking Co.
FOR SALE Austra-White young laying hens; fresh eggs; antique bed; new Harrison 42 in. sink, left drakiboard, $75. Sunset Tourist Court, Rt. 5. Highway 41, Paxton.
RENEWALS, MAGAZINE RENEWALS! I appreciate magazine renewals too. Just phone Glenn Creamer, 724-A. FOR SALE Used washer, electric sweeper, 2 feather beds, air filter for hay fever, used cars, tires and parts. Welding and repairing. Mason Auto Exchange, Phone 141R, Carlisle. FOR SALE 1946 Chevrolet club coupe. Radio, heater. Reasonable. Phone 449.
Miscellaneous
. Need a new battery for winter? We have them. Also Firestone tires, tubes and accessories. Come in and see us. Sullivan County
IFOR SALE 0-20-0 superphos-
ate, delivered and spread. 'Ask
prices. Ellis Hatchery, Car
le, Ind.
FOR SALE Large Estate Heat-
a. Used only one winter. Good
ndition. William Gibbons, ill
Mill, Shelburn. '
OR SALE General Electric lbinet radio and phonograph;
ee-piece bedroom suite. . 430
Lr Ave.
IJOHNSON Production Bred
IICKS HATCH EVERY MON-
1Y, at $12.50 per hundred. 13c
less than 100. Johnson Feed & pply Co., 115 So. Court St.
hone bUb. -
FOR SALE One 9x12 wool
g and one Venetian blind size
1 wide and 68" long. All in
od condition. Priced cheap, irry Frakes, 7Vfe miles west of
Hi van on. state road 154.
J
i?OR SALE 37 acres 3 miles
fithwest of Fairbanks; Storm
Jllar, . furniture,, Frigiddjre and
lectric stove, oil furnace. Barn
r')x60 with milking machine in-
iuded. Also 3 cows, one to fresh-
ih October, 2 in March; 13
f dare of crop.
100 acres, 4 rooms and barn.
mail and school bus route. 75
res in corn, acres DacK ot
vee. will trade for city proper-
Half of corn to buyer.
Also some. good city, property.
larry M. Brown, 012 jn. section.
used auto
txre
J:
Motor Sales, U. S. 41.
Shelburn, Ind., on
IF YOUR car heats or your radiator leaks see Wayne Kennedy, Nu-Cor Radiator Shop, 925
North Main, Sullivan.
Motor Reboring, brake drums reground, hard seat grinding, oxygen and acetylene cylinders. Parts for all cars. Sullivan Motor Supply, 10 E. Jackson St.
The old experienced painter calls for Benjamin Moore's Paints Superior Quality since 1883. Rent our NEW floor 1 sanding equipment. Sullivan Decorating Co., West Side of Square.
CESSPOOL, septic tank, government toilet cleaning. Modern pumping equipment. Box 20 care Times.
Ride to work, ride to play. It's fun to ride the WHIZZER way. Authorized sales and service. Schwinn bicycles. Bike parts and repairing. Inquire about our new LAY AWAY PLAN. Oscar Norris & Sons, 8 N. Main.
RESOLUTIONS OF RESPECT Green be the memory in the Order's heart, You loved so well through all your true life's span. Blessed by your rest who acted well your part, Who honored God in doing good to man. IN MEMORY OF NETTIE KABLE, who died August 11, 1949. Once again the Great Spirit hath summoned through death, a Sister Pocahontas, to take the long trail to the Happy Hunting Grounds; to the Kingdom of Poneamh, to live in the land of hereafter. She has been a diligent and faithful worker in our councils of labors, of Freedom, Friendship and Charity for over six years, and has received the plaudits of "Well done" from the Great Spirit; and whereas the all wise and merciful Father has called our beloved and respected Sister home and she having been a true and faithful member of our mystic order, therefbre be it resolved that, Weton Council No. 405 Degree of Pocahontas of Sullivan, Indiana, in testimony of our loss tender to the family of our deceased Sister, our sincere condolence in their deep affliction and that a copy of these Resolutions be sent the family. Committee: Jessie Walker . Cecil Hughes. Beulah Banther
gsjp I ...... """ "
1 1 ' . . N lVINGAB VwANTSaV, W?vg6tTO ) . 'i WHAT CAN I! SAV M . VJSIZFW
JotT-i wkf' rj: -SmjWtPT' j 1 ) J t!t '. .. I v miiii-h? jtS. 3 Copr I94Q, King Fealurci Syndicate. Inc., World ri.ghh rncrvei 1 f fc " ; RIP KIRBY THE DOCTOR I'AA HEARTSICK' I I IS THAT YOU, 'Wffforf!$W I HAVE " I IF JOHN LIVES, I HAVE DECIDED STOP! STOP YOU , 1 LET NO ONE SEE " J I SOT TO KNOW MADELON? M f " w '"fl SOMETHING WE CANNOT GO ON WITH THIS J DON'T KNOW WHAT . JOHM SMITH EXCEPT HIS 7 THEM BOTH hjtfi' i TO TELL J FURTIVE LIFE ANYMORE! WE YOU'RE SAY I NG!. Y V'IFE. THEY SAY THE WELL... SHE'S A Kjg&gJpJ,, vi.k Vt3U S MUST SO BACK TO FACE IT YOU DON'T KNOW ( POOR FELLOW MAY NOT A DARLINS...AND Y Pl'Fi Wm i ALL...THE POLICE...THE A WHO ELSE IS y ' V PULL THROUGH ZC XT HE.. HE.. J pSsyV ) TWYZy$ LAW...THE MANGLER ANDj HERE A', jfe 1$
as the climate, and cold outside.
brother
Corn Crop Safe, Bulletin Says
Speeders Give Up To Policeman . INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. (UP) Two speeders who at an officer who tried to them surrendered today
Do you find ' doing dishes a drudgery? Make this daily task easy by using Servall, the ' new all-purpose cleaner.
BREED YOUR DAIRY COWS ARTIFICIALLY. Contact the county agent's office or any director of the breeding association for information.
FOR SALE Plenty of
tiVes, tubes, batteries and
parts. '38 Ford, A Model Ford and trailers. Scrapping for parts '40 Pontiac, '37 Ply., '37 Chev., '35 Dodge, '36 Chev., Mst. and Std. lor new or used parts see us. Mason Auto Exchange, Carlisle. v FOR SALE 13 shoats, around 100 Jbs. each. Ernest Smith, Carlisle R. 2. Phone 16F3. t, PLENTY of good friers on
hands now. Strictly fresh. virgin
Qs 58c doz. Elza Hawkins, 2
miles north, Vi mile west. Brick
iiouse. Phone 8061.
BENNY DEFRANK SHOE REPAIRING. One door south of Index. .
It's that time again. Is your car ready for fall and winter? Let qualified mechanics handle it for you at the Sullivan County Motor Sales in Shelburn on U. S. 41.
the policeman ments.
WANTED
'Secref Photo Found In Bar WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 (UP) The Navy made it clear today that enemy spies who want a bomber's view of Washington from 49,000 feet will have to ret it somewhere else namely from a saloon hard by the White House. Embarrassed Navy - officials said the ' Defense Department still refuses to release the nowcelebrated stratospheric photograph taken from a' Navy jet plane over the capital two week3 ago. They stuck to that despite the fact that for a full week the picture has been plastered across the wall of the Club 400, a popular dine and drink emporium in downtown Washington. . The United Press discovered the "secret" photograph on display in the club yesterday The
! proprietor said it had been given
to him by a Naval officer who
offered no ohiertion tn Win it
, 44 opened firo with
revolvers.
"They don't want their love; second hand from Hollywood out here where the nights are six
months long," one of the operat-! MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 1. (U.R) ors said. i The Cargill Crop Bulletin said 'today that "well over half" the But they'll load up with pop- crop jn the corn belt now is safe corn and peanuts and sit twice fr0m frost damage, but that rethrough a rip-snorting thriller t cent hot weather will cut some
where Roy Rogers and his horse
Trigger get chased by Indians, They cheer the Indians.
1 shot arrest when
got rcinforce-
Patrolman William T. Babbitt said he sawtwo 1949 autj.rnobilei racing out Broad Riople Ave. as he walked his beat at 3 a. m'. and commandeered a third cut to follow them. After a wild, five-mile chase into the country, lhe j.peecting
cars pulled into a residential j duce
miveway ana jsaooiu lu.uoweci
yields. "Early fields are. nearly ripe, with stalks drying rapidly," the publication said.i;"Only in parts of Nebraska, where excessive moisture delayed planting, is the corn crop later than last year." , ' The bulletin said, however, that late fields have been hurt "some-' by hot weather and have been pushed to prematurity. "Some reduction in estimated production frof a ' month ago seems in line," the bulletin said, "and will no doubt be indicated in government crop report to be issued Sept. 9. Conditions vary from only fair to very good in Jwest sections, and yields will be below 1948." The bulletin said the corn crop has been about-two weeks ahead
l of normal since early June and
recent weather has "advanced it even more."
Such early maturity will pro-
a crop of good quality with
News Of Surrounding Communities
HYMERA ! ME
ON
Nell Gordon and
visited Mr. and
band in Terre Haute Wednesday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Holbert and
ctularen of south Bene, spent a i
few days with Mrs. Holbert's sisler, Mrs. Bert Stwalley.
Lynn, of Indianapolis, and Mrs. i Henry Snyder and son, Ga.y, of i Sullivan. 1 Mrs. Anna Dillion and sons of Terre Haute, were wesk-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ores Houpt.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon LaDuke and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hoasman family of Crown Point, Indiana, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. were week-end guests of Mr. and Clarence Milton and farrly at
I Mr. and Mrs. Paul Terrell have Elsie Kay! or movefi !nf0 the recentlv mm-
Mrs. Bill .Hus- pleted home of Paul Gettinger.
Mrs. Charles McKee.
Mrs. Marion O'Neal and daughters and Miss Jackie O'Neal left Wednesday for their home in Warner Robins, Ga'., after spending the past week with Mrs. Stella Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Toru of Greencastle, Mrs. Edijh Carpenter and Mrs. Bessie James of Clay Ciy, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gill and Mi.Suid Mrs. Jim Stwalley of Terre "Haute, and Gerald Hopkins of Indianapolis, were
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and i accompanied him
Mrs. Bert Stwalley.
Rae Hoilman spent the weekend in Bluffton, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. James Landes and family
home for a
Farmer City. Illinois.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Pinkston. Grover Vickrey and Mary E. and Willis Jones attended the Naomi Smith-Wayne Johns in wedding in Indianapolis Sunday afternoon. . Mrs. Charlie ' McClure and grandson, Joe citarf ts, an visiting Mr. and Mrs ' Woodrow Stevens and son at Omaha, Neb.
New Pay Scale lo Affect Many
WANTED i-L Brick and Block laying, Plastering. Free estimates. Elton Call, 318 Glen St., Shelburn. Phone 34-H.
piano.
' FOR SALE Upright
Very cheap. Call 957-B.
FOR SALE Hale Haven, Elberta peaches, $2.00 bu. 1st house west of County Home. Phone 9283. "TOR SALE New Idea corn jpicker, two-row. In good shape. Durham Foutz, Graysville phone. FOR SALE 7-room bungalow, 12 lots. Plenty of outbuildings. All in good repair. Lace Good--fcian, Dugger. "ONE" WEEk SPECIAL Full fjize bottle gas range installed With 100 lbs. of gas, $89.95. See his ard other models at Thomas Upholstering Shop, ' Dugger, Ind. Terms if desired.
WANTED A modern 4 or 5-
Iroom unfurnished apartment or
I house by Sept. 8th. Box 840 care Times.
WANTED A ride to Terre Haute. Must be there by 7:00 a.m. Telephone 556-Y. v
WANTED Person to do light ; publication.
wiccuuus wuik. iur omces in ouilivan. Good wages. Apply Meadowlark Farms, 'inc.
used as a mural
Air Force veterans took a look at tne picture, believed -to be the highest altitude shot ever made
! from an airplane,, and hailed it
as "a joy to any bombardier." Covering an area of 121 square miles, it defined clearly every potential target in the national capital, from the White House grounds to the Naval Ordnance Plant. Although ever: newspaper in town promptly published pictures of the "secret" mural against a background of prel'.y waitresses, the Navy stubbornly insisted that the photograpi was not for
owner, ana. nis Wlie, A.ma, Ege
.38 caliber
low moisture content which means
As he approach-id, " Walter R. ' one tnat wil1 be easy t0 store, Williams, 48-yeai-oId tavern 1 Prvided storage can be found for
. it- " thn hit a(i .....W
it, life yuuciiil oam. . ; The soybean crop continues to make good progress and harvesting of small grains in late sections is all ' but completed, the bulletin reported. However, heavy fains in eastern North Dakota de
cayed threshing and combining : locally, it said.
WANTED TO BUY From I owner, 5 or 6-room modern house. Box 94 care Times.
"V FOR-SALE Grocery stock and
Vctures. Well located. Small
own payment. Would consider!
property as exchange. Inquire 424 S. Court.
LOST
LOST A little male pig, white j with black spots, somewhere I south of Shelburn. Call Jas. Lafollette, Sullivan Phone 9075. Re
ward.
. FOR SALE Buscher cornet. A-l condition. Inquire at Leo's yCafe in mornings. Phone 239. FOR SALE Vi" shaker screen oal $6.00 per ton; mine run $5.50. Delivered to Sullivan. Ervin Mayfield, Phone 9122. R. R. 5. ' c
We Pay For Dead Animals 'all Monroe Feed Service, ullivan phone 332 or Craw-
ord 8201, Terre Haute. We
ayall phone charges. 24
iour service.
Mi Mm Wachtel Co.
Terre Haute, Indiana
9x12 Floor Covering 6.95
Grable's Legs Leave Indians Cold CROSS LAKE, Man., Sept. 1. (UP) The operators of the local motion picture house reported to-
aay tnai muiaiis wuu i yaj a
plugged coon-skin to see Betty Grable's legs.
i They want shoot-'em-up WestI ems before they plunk down I their choice muskrat hides. I , The operators, who came to the
frozen north last summer to make their fortune showing the glamor
of Hollywood to the Indians, reviewed their experiences today and changed their plans to fit the community. , First, they applied for a fur dealer's license. The Indians have no regard for money. But they are willing to trade a muskrat pelt for a season ticket.' Betty Grable, Lana Turner and Ginger Rogers leave them as cold
Babbitt said he called out that he was a police officer, but they answered by firing three mote shots. He dived into a drainage ditch, went bjck f-j tHe commandeered car and drovj back to Indianapolis to call f or help.
; Additional ooliee ' and two deputy sheriffs answered the tall and went with Babbitt to the Williams residence oh Sast Goth
Street. Williams said he fired once at Babbitt, and Mrs. Williams admitted firing three shots, police said. The couple said they had been fillowed on other occasions whsn they left their tavern early in the morning, and feared holdup men. But they told police they were not carrying large
sums of money this morning.
visit. . " Mr. and Mrs. Lee Booker entertained Sunday at their home with a dinner in honor of the latter's .father, . ' John Owens. Their guests were Mr. and Mrs. Albert Owens, Mr. and Mrs. Don Owens and son of Terre Haute,
WASHINGTON, Sept. 1. (U.R) j Mr. and Mrs. Nip Dowling and More than 1,000,000 workers, 1 children, Jay and Beverly, of now earning less than 75 cents an Luna Pier,, Michigan, Mr. and hour, will be in line for a pay ( Mrs. John Bennett and daughter,, boost when Congress completes
action on the new minimum wage bill.
DUGG
mauue uiivcin aim iei 1 1 n l rr i .
Kathryn, had as dinner guests , Sunday Rev. and Mrs. J. E. Douglas of Washington, Indiana, Mrs. Ada Ashburn of Terre Haute, Mrs. Tom Robinson and Mrs. Nancy Ashburn.
Isaak Walton Speaker Named
EVANSVILLE, Ind., Sept 1 (UP) iFormer Governor Leslie A. Miller of Wyoming was named today as principal speaker for the2th annual convention of the Isaac Walton League's Indiana division here on Sept. 10 and 11. Miller served on the Hoover Commission recently 3s" chair-
' man of the conservation committee. '
l -
Sen. Claude Pepper, D., Fla
estimated that the version approved by the Senate last night would raise the pay of 1,250,000 employes by about $300,000,000 a year. The Labor Department's wage and hour division calculated that some 1,300,000 workers would benefit from the measure approved by the House on Aug. 11. Both versions would raise the minimum wage from the present 40 cents to 75 cents an hour for employes in interstate commerce. But the Senate bill would make fewet changes narrowing the coverage of the Wage-Hour Act, which now applies to 22,000,000 workers. The Senate bill would exempt about 200,000 workers now covered by the law. The House bill would remove about 1,000,000 from coverage.
WISHING
WELUW
Registered U. S. Patent Office,
2 8 4 75 2 63 8 45 7 6. HSR BFAGAU IULR 5 6 8 2 7 3 4 7 2 5 -8 i6 4 LAP- PENCSPLEN R 1 8 35 8 1 2 8 4 7 3 4 2 E R D S B S Y S X E E P T -? 2 8 3 4 6 8 2 5 6 4 7 5D R U A OCIATJNE I 6 8 i 5 7 3 6 4-8 5 2 6 7 . T C S L RLLIEAUO A ,7 4 7 8 6 2 i 5 7 3 4 7 2 F VQ SOMEHREYY P - Z T5 2 4 15 7 3 4 5 7 5 4 A SEHEKOFA AUD R
HERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every day. It is a numerical puzzle designed to spell out your fortuneCount the letters in your first name. If the number of letters is 6 ormore, subtract 4. If the number is less than 6, add 3. The result is your key number. Start at the upper left-hand corner of the rectangle and check every one of your key numbers, left to right. Ihea read the message the lettets under the checked figures give you. Copyright 1949. by WillUra J. Milltr. Ditributed by King Fetur, Ine."'
GONNA GET MARRIED, IS WORD
TODAY'S GRAB BAG
0
i t.
The Friendly Store Authorized Dealer ' Frank & Bud Vanzo, Owner N. Side Square
WF, NOW HAVE WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC Water Heaters AIko American Standard Bathroom Equipment. We do repair work.
8 Sullivan Plumb
ing Co.
First Road South and East Of
Cheese Factory. Phone 259
f I If U Ms - r!tfflrrmniiiiiiiMiif,"- d i
I
. THE ANSWER, QUICK! 1. What is the second largest state (in area) in the United States ? 2. How long has Connie Mack managed the Philadelphia Athletics. 3. Where is the world's largest pipe organ located? 4. Where is the Finger Lakes region? 5. What English king was famed for his fondness for good food?
FOLKS OF FAME GUESS THE NAME
IT'S BEEN SAID Prosperity is no just scale; adversity is the only balance to weigh friends. Plutarch.
, YOUR FUTURE You can be an ideal business partner because you work well with others. Cultural interests, literature, music and congeniality make for an enjoyable home life. You usually avoid originality and stick to accepted methods.
WATCH YOUR LANGUAGE . THAUMATOLOGY ( THAW-ma-TOL-o-jy) Noun, the study of miracles. Origin Greek Thauihatos a wonder.
SKATER-ACTRESS Sonja Henie and socialite Winthrop Gardiner, reported on verge of marriage, are shown about to take off from Roosevelt Field, L. I., In Gardiner's monoplane; ' '(International)
, . HAPPY BIRTHDAY Stage and screen comedian Julius (Groucho) Marx is celebrating his natal anniversary on this Sept. 2. Congratulations, Grou-Chx)!
. This prince of ancient Troy is the hero of one of the most famous legends of all time. He was born the son of King Priam and Queen Hecuba. The legend hasit that he was to judge among the goddesses Hera, Ethcna and Aphrodite. Trying to bribe him, Hera promised him power, Athena wisdom and Aphrodite the most beautiful woman in the world, who was Helen, wife of King Menelaus of Sparta. He chose' Aphrodite Iii Menelaus' absence he carried off Helen. The vengeful Greeks laid siege to Troy After slaying the Greek hero, Achilles, he himself was mortally wounded. Name this ancient hero of song and story . 2 A great Russian novelist and moral philosopher ' was born of noble parentage in the prov-
By LILIAN CAMPBELL CenfraJ Press Wn'fer ince of Tula, Sept. 9, 1828. Dissatisfied with the idle, dissolute life of a young nobleman, he entered the army and served at the siege of Sevastopol. All this time he kept a diary out of which grew his literary work. Two of his novels are masterpieces, War and Peace and Anna Kdrenina. Another of his works is the Kreutser Sonata. Seeking a religious justification for his life he joined the orthodox church but soon left it to evolve a Christianity of his own. His last days were marked with bitter family discord, causing 'him to flee his home at the age of 82. Eleven days later Nov. 21, 19X0 he died. Who was he? (Names at bottom of column)
IT HAPPENED TODAY . . 1726 John Howard, English prison reformer, was born. 1839 Henry George, American economist and writer, was born. 1939 Britain and France sent Hitler an ultimatum to suspend hostilities, but the German army swept ahead in Poland and bombed Warsaw.
HOW LONG DID IT TAKE? 1.. California. 2. Since 1900. 3. Mormon tabernacle, Salt Lake City, Utah. i 4. In upstate New York. 5. Henry VIII. - Xojsiox OI lUtWQ j 'luti 'X
