Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 51, Number 187, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 20 September 1949 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES TUESDAY, SEPT. 20,1949.

SULLIVAN, INDIANA:

A Home Owned Democratic Newspaper . Sullivan Daily Times, founded 190S, as the daily edition of the Sullivan Democrat, founded 1854 PAtJli POTNTER . Publisher BLlijANOR POTOTER JAMESON"' ...... Manager and Assistant Editor HOMER H. MURRAY EdiUr -Entered as second-class matter at the Postoftice, Sullivan, Indiana Published daily except Saturday and Sunday at 115 West Jackson St. Sullivan, Ind. Telepnone 12

United' Press Wire Service National Representative: Theli and Simpson, New York

SUBSCRIPTION BATE: By Carrier, per week 15o

By Mu in aallivan And) Adjoining Counties: Year $4.00 Six-Months . . . . $2.25 One Month 40

TODAY'S GRAB BAG

THE ANSWER, OUICK! . . 1. Of what use is garlic? 2. How much food does a person eat in a year? - 3. Did Columbus get paid for discovering America? 4. How does blueing make clothes whiter? 5. Are pennies legal tender in settlement of a debt?

FOLKS OF FAME-GUESS THE NAME

By Mall Elsewhere In The United States: Year Six Months ,

One Month

All Mail Subscriptions Strictly Jn Advance

15.00 .. $2.75 .. .60

Z LEWIS Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wheaton an9 Janice were in Jasonville Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Lawrence ofTerre Haute, visited his mother,Mrs. Delia Lawrence, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Char.es Peiers and Mrs. Sedalia WolvcrtO;i were in ITerre- Haute Tuesday. Mrs. Hastel Foreman end Mrs.

THEATRE

Z Shelburn, Indiana

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" Tues. & Wed. - SEPT. 20 -21 : "Knock On I Any Door" Z Humphrey Bogart " John Derek ' " Arlene Roberts

Winona Knight were in Jas6nville Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Harris. Wheaton and Mrs. Anna Pigg were in Antioch Sunday afternoon. Ed Knight is ill. Mrs. Myrtle Bedweil accompanied her son, Danzi.1, to Indianapolis Wednesday afteruon. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Krught entertained the following at dinner Sunday, Mr . and Mrs. Herb Knight, Mr. and Mrs. Hastel Foreman and Mr. and Mrs. Charles William Foreman. The dinner was in honor of their daughter, Priscilla Sue's second birthday.

IT HAPPENED TODAY 1196 President George Washington issued his farewell address to people of United States. 1803 Lajos (Louis) Kossuth, Hungarian statesman and revolutionist, born. 1931 Japan seized Mukden, Manchuria, 1938 Great Britain and France, after parley, urged Czechoslovakia to surrender the Sudeten land to Germany. 1941 Germans took Kiev and Poltava, Russia.

Three Persons Die As Home Burns CHICAGO, Sept. 19 (UP) Three persons burned to death today in a tar paper-covered shack rented to them after it had been condemned by the city. ; The victims were identified as Sylvester Partee, age f9. 1 coal hiker, Lorraine Campbell, ae 57. and Virginia Station, ege 35, all Negroes. : The one stiry house was to be torn down because of its dan-

WATCH YOUR LANGUAGE- . HYPOCHONDRIA (HI-po-KON-dree-a) Morbid depression of mind or spirits; specifically, morbid anxiety as to one's own health, with conjuring up of imaginary ailments. Origin: Latin, plural of abdomen, supposed formerly to be the seat of hypochondria; from Greek Hypochondria, plural from Hypochondrias.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY Massino Freccia, conductor; Joseph Pasternack, screen frodveer, and Ernest Truex, actor, share birthday greetings today.

1 This turn -of -the -century newspaperman, author and musical comedy librettist brought fame to his native Indiana through his humorous writings in the American vernacular, yet also wrote sparkling sophisticated prose. His stories "of the street and town" adapted from his Chicago newspaper column, won him wide acclaim in' this field of writing, as did his Immensely popular Fables in Slang. In addition to writing for the theater, he wrote movie scenarios. Among his best known plays were The College Widow, The County Chairman and Father and the Boys. He died in 1914. Who was he? ; , 2 Reading of a Lancaster, Mass., library copy of Darwin's Variation of Animals and Plants marked the turning point in the career of this famed American plant breeder who developed a long series of "new creations" in

By LILIAN CAMPBELL Central Pret$ Writer the various plants bearing his name. Raised as a farm boy. he bought a 17-acre tract of land near Lunenberg, Mass., at 21 years of age, and began his life work there with the development of a new type of potato, later settling in Santa Rosa, Cal. Here he established a small nursery garden and greenhouse which became world famous within the next half-century. His sole aim was production of more and better varieties of cultivated plants. Who was he? (Names at bottom ot column) IT'S BEEN SAID

' Jealousy sees things always with magnifying glasses which make little things large, of dwarfs giants, of suspicions, truths Saavedra M. de Cervantes YOUR FUTURE ' ' This Is the time to offer your help or suggestions that will aid a friend. In your next year you should enjoy good fortune, which you should be careful to use to the best advantage. Today's child Is likely to be fortunate.

DOUGLASS-GETTINGER VOWS READ

A lovely fall wedding was held groom's parents were recently at the First Presbyterian t attend.

Bickel represented the Gettinger family at the wedding since the

unable to

church in Fairbanks, Alaska when

Miss Patricia Louise Douglass became the bride, of Henry Nathaniel Gettinger during a ceremony performed at 8:30 by the Rev. N. Harry Champlin in the presence of nearly 100 relatives and frineds. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Max Douglass of

Army discharge recently and plans to resume his education, enrolling at the University of Alaska for the fall term.

Immediately after -the ceremony a reception was held at the home of the bride in Mooreland Acres. The bride, who has lived in

Alaska for two and a half years, i accompanied her parents from I June Lake, California .to Tok Junction, then to Fairbanks. They

have lived at their home on Rei-

Fairbanks and the bridegroom is ten Avenue, Mooreland Acres for the son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry the past year MrS- Gettinger was Gettinger of Sullivan. -i flrst associated with the First Na-

FILES SUIT FOR DAMAGES Mickje Hancock, by his next friend, Willie M. Brickford, has filed a damage suit against Leon Ormiston in the Sullivan Circuit Court, The suit asks $300 damages.

Pedestal baskets of pink and white gladioli were placed on either side of the altar while lighted candle tapers cast a glow about the church. Appropriate organ music was furnished throughout by Mrs. Russell Alexander whq also accompanied Mrs. Thomas R. Wilkins as she sang "All

"The Sweetest

HOW'D YOU MAKE OUT? 1. It stimulates the appetite and helps digestion. 2. Each adult consumes an average of 1,355 pounds. 3. Yes, about $320. 4. It neutralizes the yellow. 5. Yes, up to 25 cents. jfireqina jaiwni Z PV 8aoo X

gercus condition. Th occupants had rented it for.?5 wkly. Police said the man who rented it to them did no, awn it and bad no authority to rent it. All the bodies v.-rrs burne 1 beyond recognition aiiu were' scattered in rUtPren', roomr. of the fru bedr or' . h 'use. A I ther occupant oC the ho'.i'c; K - pr McDona.u, :c!d police he Eft lied smoke ovl escaped but hid no time to ? t ic thers. Fi.emen said th? Eire was of urdetermined or;gin.

The Briar Patch

Sullivan Store FALL FASHIONS

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f LINED COATS w ( Sfy Handsome Tailoring A P I vv Jk j Beautiful Fabric ' M P JgK Three quarter length ll 1 1 -Luxuriously .Lined,, I sleeve, plunging neckjQjf$jltkM- ; ; . ' H O line, three tier skirt X "More smart women are - finding out that this is rl with s:de peplum for ROOTS the coat find of the year. Wine IiLk ' slenderizing, - :S2f i?es 9 to 18. Assorted S tS

September instead of January is the month for a gardener to make resolutions. It is also the month to begin practicing them. It is evident now whether you undertook more than you could comfortably do.' You can easily see whether you included enough late blooming flowers. It is not yet 'too late to get early spring bulbs into the ground. And these nice rains we've been having make the soil moist enough that plants can be moved if necessary this fall rather than in the spring when there is so much to be done. Lawns do best if renovated this month, too. Cone bearers can be moved this month if Eatered thoroughly as transplanted and never allowed to lack water until winter. Hardy annuals sown now give the early flowers; they are gone before the spring sown ones bloom. Anything that will lengthen the flowering time of the favorites is surely appreciated, for most flowers have all too short a season for blooming. Perhaps if they lasted longer, part of their charm would be lost. No one has all the good qualities usually there is something to even up any advantage. Snow-in-the-mountain lasts long enough, but its sticky sap irritates the skin of some people. This is the time to diyide perennials. If the peonies have black spots on the leaves, better cut them off and burn them before they fall. If any stalks have rotted at the base and fallen over, remove them as soon as possible. The topsoil around the plant should also be removed and a light application of hydrated lime applied. This disease spreads; it is most likely to occur during a prolonged wet season. - September is the time to get rid Of pigweed and smartweed "and the other heavy seeding weeds. If the seeds mature they will pester for years and years. Here an ounce of prevention is worth tons of cure. ... If you haven't a coldframe, this might be a good time to start one. . . ; If you had any mealy-bugs on window plants last spring, give the plant several heavy syringings with a fine hard Stream of water before bringing them back in for the winter Give poinsettas a good feed of well-rotted heifer-dust now; no nitrogen at this time. ' Chrysanthemum buds should be thinned now if you want to go to the trouble, but it must be done when the buds first appear if it is to result in bigger bloom; his is one flower that can be moved just as it begins to bloom without injury to its flowering season. Glad bulbs should be dug before he foliage turns brown; when the soil is dry, if possible; loosen the dirt with a spading fork and lift the bulbs by the foliage. Cut off the top close to the bulb; shake off any dirt left after a short drying period. The open mesh sacks which held potatoes are fine for storing them, but don't take chances on memory to tell which is which next spring mark them now. Clean them in two or three weeks and shake the sack once in a while this winter. We hope DDT was used on them last summer so there won't be any thrips about. Naphslene flakes are a lot of bother as they must be cleaned off the' bulbs after three weeks or. they will do as much damage as the thrips. Ideal storage is between 35 to 40 degrees temperature it must be DRY.

For You" and

Story Ever Told." The bride was lovely in a traditional wedding gown of heavy

.white satin made for the occasion

lass. -It was fashioned with a full skirt, train, sweetheart neckline and shirred cap sleeves complemented with white lace mitts. She wore a fingertip veil of bridal illusion edged with Chantilly lace, held in place with an orange blossom band worn by her mother at her own wedding. Jewelry consisted of gold nugget ear

rings and a gold lavalier with, seed pearl center which original-! ly belonged to her maternal greatgrandmother. In her arms the,

bride carried a bouquet of white chrysanthemums as she was escorted to the altar by her father. Miss Margaret Greenlees as maid of honor wore a floor length gown of pale blue marquisette ano carried an arm bouquet of yellow chrysanthemums while Mrs. Leroy Shebal as matron of

' honor wore pale pink marquisette 1 with lavender chrysanthemums. I Mrs. Douglass, mother of . the

bride, appeared in a floor length gewn of pink velvet with a corsage of white roses, while Mrs. J. Jay Bickel, a cousin of the groom, was dressed in a gown of lavender blue accented with a yellow gladiolus corsage. Mr. and Mrs:

tional Bank and is now. connected with the office of the comptroller at the University of Alaska. The bridegroom went to Alaska two years ago as a member of the 10th Rescue Squadron at Ladd Air Force Base. He received his FOR YOUR

PLUMBING NEEDS

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ATLAS TIRES AND BATTERIES Personalized Lubrication STAHUS Standard Service Corner Section and Wall

CARL HILGEDIEK Plumbing And Healing 105 S. Main St. Phone 317

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"What tho' our eyes with tears be wet! The sunrise never failed us yet."

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filtered U. S. Patent Office.

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HERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every day. It is a numerical puzzle designed to spell out your fortune. Count the letters in your first name. If the number of letters is 6 or more, subtract 4. If the number is less than 6, add 2. The result is your key number. Start at the upper left-hand corner of the rectangle and check every one of jtour key numbers, left to right. Then read the message the letters under the checked figures give you. Cowjriiiht 194,'by Willium J. Mtllsr. Distributed bj King Fntura, Inc. "19

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UcAU ANIMALS IjtlViUVtU Prompt Sanitary Truck Service. We Pick Up Large and Small Animals call Grfeek Fertilizer Co, Sullivan Phone No. 9 WE PAX ALL PHONE CHARGES

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