Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 31, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 12 February 1945 — Page 2

AGE TWO

, SULLIVAN IU1LY TIMES MONDAY, FEB. 12, 1945.

illivan, Indiana . Telephone 12 nil Poynter .' Publisher ieanor Poynter Jamison ; . . Manager and Assistant Editor e II. Adams ......... Editor itered as second-class matter July 1, 1908 in the Postoffice at Ilivan, Indiana, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. iblished daily except Saturday and Sunday at 115 West Jackson St. United Press Wire Service. National Advertising: Representative: Thcis and Simpson, 393 Seventh Avenue,- New York (1) N. Y. Subscription Rate : carrier, per week 1 : . ... 15 Cents in City By Mail In Sullivan And Adjoining Counties; x Months $1.50 unth (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) ..'...".. 30 Cents ar ?3.00 By Mail Elsewhere: . ;ar . . . . . . :.; $4.00 x Months $2.00 onth (with Times furnishing envelope) i .. . 35 Cents DOG INCIDENT MUCH MAGNIFIED Coi. Elliott Roosevelt's promotion to the rank of brig-a-er genera is slated td come . up in the Senate this week, ter the postponement granted, at the, insi stance of Repuban senators, who .made much of . the highly publicized trip the colonel's mastiff, Blaze;, with an "A", priority. Revelation th-tt the priorities system is sometimes used does not excuse the manifest ill nature and unfairness hich has influenced partisan and columnist; critics of , Col. oosevelt. They have unanimously failed to lving out the ilient points of this incident: ' . . (1) The plane which carried Elliott's mastiff Was not lpposed to carry, passengers. It was a freight plane and the iree soldiers who were displaced, by the dog were hitchking'. '. . . .... .. (2) As disclosed by the Washington Post, which is far om being pro-Roosevelt, arrangements for the dog's trip iv made by M'.s. Anna P.oettiger, Elliott's sister. She loner! Col. R. W. Ireland of the ATC, who made the necesry spnce available. - , (3) The "A'! priority was voluntarily granted by officials id was not requested either by Col. Roosevelt or his, sister. (1) The man who put the soldiers off the plane was-act-X under a system whose rules he could not ignore. (5) Nobody could possibly have known when the dog is shipper!. that he would displace human passengers.

(b),llie clog incident was entirely ignored by the Senate litary affairs committee which approved the promotion of )1. Roosevelt to the rank of brigadier general. Viewed, in the light of .facts the incident: seems trivial ough, yet the hate-Roosevelt press has devoted more space it than to many' world events , of genuine importance.1 It o has served to delay the promotion of 77-other' colonels one-star rank: .. When the vastness of the global conflict is considered ! furor created by this trivial incident is illuminating. No ddent can lie too trivial to supply ammunition to the Rooselt haters. . , (

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BY AUTHOR-DISTRIBUTED BY KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. -

CHAPTER FORTY-ONE "May I ask a few more questions, Mrs. Chivery?" began Nugent and, as she gave a birdlike nod, he asked liei pointblank if she knew anything of a man named Frederic Miller. After she thought for a moment, fixing her bright eyes lipon him; and then said no, he told her of the checks and showed them to her. Maud looked at them for so long a time and with such intent, that I was suddenly conscious of listening anxiously for her reply. And so were Nugent and Craig. But when she looked up she said flatly, "No, I don't know anything about them." Nugent said slowly, "Mrs. Chivery. is there anything odd about those checks?" "N-no.'; "You're sure?" "Yes. That is . . ," she hesitated, then said wi.th a .kind of plunge, "Thal.is, for a moment I thought but I was (uile mistaken." "What did you think?" asked Nujjent: gently. "1 was mistaken," said Maud. "The dates are wrong." ''Wrong for what?" "Wrong for well," replied Maun again with a kind of, burst, "wrong for the kind of investment I thought, he might have been making " Nugent leaned back in his chair. ' You'd better tell me exactly what yoi: mean. Mrs. Chivery." "Hut it it has nothing to do with the murder. I can't tell you. I . . ." "What investment?" pressed Nugent. And I remembered Maud's luay phrases about Spain and jewels, and asked suddenly, surprising myself, "Spanish jewels?" At which she shot me a dark, intent look, then said, "Yes." And before anyone could say anything Mrs, Chivery got tip. "I can't teli you the whole storv," she said.

She merely shook her head obstinately with its high black pompadour and refused to tell him. Craig remarked wearily, '"You "can't withhold information, you know." But, Maud queried, "Can't I?" And did. So in the end Nugent let the thing rest and asked her what she knew of Drue's disappearance, and she insisted that she knew nothing. Finally they let her go. Nugent looked baffled and""Craig angry. It was then that the state trooper, who'd been on guard in the hall the night before, came to Nugent. I hadn't realized until I saw him in the direct gray light from the win: dows how young he was. . But he had the courage to tell Nugent the truth: The point was that Anna had. gone to Drue's room about eleven (to turn down the beds, she'd told the trooper), she'd stayed with Drue for a while. Then she'd gone away but later very much later, perhaps two in the morning had brought him some coffee. lie drank it, of course; and presently remembered sitting in a chair which faced Drue's door. And that was all he'd remembered until he awoke, with a queer taste in his mouth, about six in the morning. Nobody knew what Anna had put in the coffee, until I went and looked in -my little instrument bag and some sedative I'd had harmless in itself wasn't there. And when they sent for Anna, she was gone, too. They found then some time after noon it was a bloodstained, yellow string glove the mate" to the one found near Claud Chivery; it was hidden under Anna's, mattress. ' But they didn't find Anna. She had been ill and hysterical the day before; Becvens had told her to take that dav o(f, to stay in

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en Foot Vein Of Coal Found In Clay Co. RAZIL, Ind., Feb. 12. Codrnl wilii the announcement I the Ayrshire Collieries Corp. larthed a 16-foot vein of bilinous cool came the word t the G. & F. Corporation is 'king a previously unheard-of kness of Brazil Block coal, t week the srippers at the oil rated by the G. & F. north of ulcyville on the Harmony :i got into a ten-foot stratum, eh is yielding large blocks of. i. t one point the coal stratum U.S. as if a stream or valley in listoric days had been filled ,aCTriJt;'m.i..mliujiawiii

- Your . TOWNS UN D PAPER Is Now On Sale Each Week ,, At .... Turner's News Nook

with vegetation to bring it up to the level of the surrounding surface at that time. As the strippors moved across the field in previous cuts they encountered this .heavy stratum which has run as deep as seven fee(. But latt week, the loading shovel dipper sank its teeth into a wall of solid coal ten feet thick. The pit has yielded, coal .from a seam 4 1-2 to 7 feet. Operators generally are pleased- to find the block coal in strata as thick as three feet. SOCIETY Triple T. Club '. ., : .' . i The, Triple ,T Home Economics Club will meet Wednesday, February Hth for a covered dish dinner with Mrs. Geneva Spencer. All members are urged . to be present. Visitors are always welcome. . -

Aiiiioiine- Fusairc'inent LONG BEACH, Calif. Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Gambill, 325 W. 10th St., ie-rmcily of Sullivan, Indiana, announce the engagement of tiieir daughter, Mildred, to Sgt. John

preached about an investment, and I believe that Conrad might have

beer, approached, too. But these dates are all wrong. The Spanish jewels well, never mind that . . ." Nugent got up, too, and said, "You'll have to explain what you mean. At once." "No," said Maud. "I don't have to. That's enough, I don't know anything. about your Frederic Miller checks. Have you heard from the girl?" "Miss Cable? No," answered Nugent, looked quickly at Craig and said,1 "That is, not yet." Maud said, "Look here. Lieutenant. I've thought from the beginning that the gjrl, Drue Cahlc, killed Conrad, tiut somehow I-V well, I don't think . she killed Claud. Xtic only thing that I know of, and haven't wanted to tell you, is the matter of the investment I spoke of just now. But I'll tell you all about that ., . . tomorrow." "Why tomorrow?" "No reason," answered Maud alter a moment. "1 merely prefer n that way." ' ; i-iiU Nugent could not shake, her.

ing for Drue they had ' not (in

formed of Anna's illness by Gertrude) entered Anna's room. Nugent was furious and so were the troopers responsible for the omission, especially when they found the glove, which certainly ought to prove something and didn't except it pointed suspicion toward Anna in a definite, material way that ail my own odd encounters with the maid had never suggested. Certainly, however, Anna's disappearance completed our demoralization. Craig said, "They went together. They must have gone together. So Drue's not alone . . ." and something like hope quickened in his eyes. : - . . But I was afraid. So I told Nugent in detail all I knew of Annafootsteps running from the meadow in the du.sk a black eye an impression that someone was in her room with her and that she was frightened. ' . Nugent looked at the small, black notebook again. "We've questioned the servants," he said, "over and over. Anna was nervous but she

seemed to know nothing1 . . ." he stopped, frowning, and then read aloud: "William Fanshawe Beevens British birtb, age fifty-four; Gertrude Schieffel, American birth. Mrs. ' Lydia Deithaler that's the cook; here we are: Anna Haub, German birth, age thirty-six, came to America from Bavaria fourteen years ago, in employ of Conrad Brent since 1929, no former police record. That's all." Nugent looked up from his notebook with an expression of interrogation at Craig who commented slowly, "I don't think she belonged to any bund. She must have left some kind of family in Germany but if so I can't remember ever hearing of any of them. No, I don't think Anna would be likely to know anything of the Frederic Miller checks. Anna wasn't smart enough, in just that way, I mean. She was shrewd but not not scheming. Not clever." "What do you think has happened to her?" , "Lord knows," said Craig. "If they're together though, she and Drue,' there's some hope . . ." I had let him get upigaiu and sit in a chair, wrapped in a long camel's hair dressing-gown; he put his face then in his hands with a kind of desperate, gesture. Twice that day (when I was out of the room) he'd tried to walk once getting as far as the linen room and the second time halfway down the stairs where he was found sitting! clinging to the bannisters, by one of the troopers and brought back. The third time, late in the afternoon, with still no news, he sent me on a pretext to the kitchen, and this time he got as far as trousers ami a sweater, and the fireplace bench of the lower hall. I found him there grimly upright, clinging to the bench with his eyes shut as if the room were going around him. Peter helped me get him hack to his room. And it was then that we had our long, illuminating, and yet baffling talk. It was growing dusk in the room, although it was still light outside with the clear, coid light of a winter's afternoon. Peter eased Craig down into a chair and then stood looking ruefully down at him. "You'd better go to bed." I said, but Craig shook his head obstinately. "Well, then' volunteered Peter "let me be your leg man. Just tell me whatever, you want me to do and I'll do it. If I can." "Find Drue," said Craig, 'tis head back against the cushion m i his face white. I got some spirits of ammonia and in my agitation '.v A'h bottle too close to his nose. iat up abruptly, gasuing, and P..T r said soberly, "I wish I could. I'vehelped look, you know. My opinion is that she went away of! her own will. Voluntarily. She must uve gone like that because otherwise she'd have screamed or made -:onio kind of noisy struggle. All cu us would have heard it." (To be continued) Copyright M M,zn.,n fl KUt.n.at:

P.OWEL CLEANING POWER

Ui' ijHU-iijrjijr pivjLiiniu A man recently took ERBHELP and said afterward that he never would have believed his body contains so much filthy subEtance. His stomach, intestines, bowels and whole system were thoroughly cleansed. His headaches ended, several skin eruptions on his face dried up overnight. At present he is an alto

gether different man, feeling fine in every way. j ERB-HELP contains' 12 Great1 Herbs; so don't go on suffering! . Get this new medicine. Bennett's

i Drug Store. Sold in Carlisle at j

i Anderson's Drug Store. .1

I served to the following: Mr. and jMrs. Virgil Chowning and son,

(Philip, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ellliott, Joseph, George and Mary

Lou, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Dix, Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt Dix and Dorothy, Mr. and Mrs. Ristie Pinkston, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wyman, Mr. and Mrs. Emory Benson, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Bell. James Bell, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dix, Mr, and Mrs. Dolph Sluder, Mr. and Mrs. Abe Boyer, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Hall, Mr., and Mrs. Harry McCullough, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dix, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Morin, Mr. and Mrs. Jim HazelRigg, Mr. and Mrs. Denny Thomson and Tommy, Mr... and Mrs. Cleo Woodard and daughter. War Mothers:"' ' " ! , The , Hamilton War Mother's Service Club will meet Tuesday. February 13th, in the Court House basement. Important businesswill be . discussed at this

I meeting and it is desired that all ' members be present.

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Cold f PieparationTas&irecte$

Signal Corps Phoio American soldiers stand hy as Italian civilians clear rubble after Nazi air attack in Northern Italy. War Bond money helps hold off the Germans. V. S. Treasury Vci'.n tinent

NORTH BUCKTOWN

R. Wees, son of Mrs. Roy Lowdermilk of Sullivan, Indiana. Sgt. Wees is in the Coast Artillery, now stationed at Seattle, Washington.'

.The date for their wedding' has ' piogrnm

not been set.

Club met at the home of Mrs. Don Borroughs for their regular meeting. The meeting was called to order by the president, Mrs. Raymond Neiwald. The following

was given:

l'-.tidon Home Ee. Club On i Thursday, Jan. East Haddon Home

18th, the ; Economics '

Song, "America the Beautiful." Home Ec. Club Creed, in uhispn. ' Song of the month, "A Merry Life." Roll call: "My, most useful

HOSPITAL REFUSES NIESI, DR. QUITS

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Christmas gift." Minutes of last meeting. Business meeting. Report of Purdue Trip Trcacy Robbins. Lesson, "What Play Means to Children in Wartime" Lill Woodward. Thought of the month Lill Woodward. The name of the service boy drawn to receive gift from club for January was Joe Kaiser. Club prayer in unison, and dismissal. During the social hour, delici ious refreshments were served by the hostess. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Everett Rotiamel on Feb. 15th.

Presbyterian Party. ' , . Miss Kitty Barnes and Mrs. R. W. Springer will be hostesses for the Westminster class party Tuesday evening, February 13th. There will be a covered dish dinner at 6:30 in the church dining room. All Members are cordially invited. Announce Engagement. Mrs. David Wilson i3 announcing, the engagement of her daughter, Mary Evelyn Wjlson. to Edgar Earl Mathews S 1c, son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Mathews cf Terre Haute! Neidlscrafi Club . The Needfecraft'elub will meet with Mrs. ' W. B. Richeson on North State Street Wednesday afternoon. Woman's Club '.Woman's Club will meet Tuesday, February 13th nt the Library with Mrs. Waldo Wheeler as hostess. ,

I Mrs. Wilber Payne 'and children spent Wednesday with Mrs. Eliza Houldson. I Mrs. Dennis Fordice spent Wednesday with Mrs. Henry Pergal. i .... Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hale ! visited Mrs. Lillie Hale of Linton R. R., Wednesday afternoon. ' Mrs. Claude Foster and son visited Mrs. Mack Mayfield and daughter Thursday evening. ' Mr. and Mrs. Mack Mayfield and : daughter spent Thursday with iMr. and Mrs.. Bill Moore of Dugi ger. Other guests were, Mrs. Lcxie Cullison and baby, Mrs:" Opal ! Mcore and children, Mrs. Ola ; Marsh and children, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Moore and Mr. and Mrs. Archie Moore' and sons. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Davidson and Mrs. Robert Price and son visited ' Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hale Thursday evening. Mr. Hale is confined to his home by illness. Mr. ' and Mrs. Tom Jerrels visited Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Jerrels and children in Linton Friday night. I Joan Cadwell of Gambill spent ' Friday night with Virginia Jerrels and visited school at Pleasant ville. Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Miller. Dillard and Elene ritanlon, Paul

Pahmier, Joan -Cadwell and Virginia Jerrels attended the ball game at Jasonville Friday night. Mrs. Delmas Jerrels visited Mrs. Claude Foster Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Donald Pahmier called on Mrs. Leo Hale Friday afternoon, Mrs. Amanda Roach visited

Mrs. Arthur Karns and family Sunday afternoon. Other visitors 'were Miss La Verne Bedwell.

Mrs. Ada Stanton . and children and Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Miller were Sunday . guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Robertson near Paxton. Sgt. Max Usrey of Ohio is spending a ten-day furlough with his wife and baby, Mr', and Mrs.

Earl Hale and Mr. and Mrs. Usrey of Cass. Mrs. Raymond Hale and Mrs. I Hubert Hale spent Sunday with I Mr. and Mrs. Claude Foster and son. Mrs. Owren King, Rev. and Mrs. George Angerer and daujghter and Mrs. Claude Foster called on Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pahmier Sunday evening. Mrs. (Pahmier is confined to her home by illness.'. i Pvt. David Hale of Camp Croft, South Carolina returned home Monday to spend a furlough 'with his wife and daughter, his mother, Mrs. Elsie Hale and children and Mrs. Lillie Hale. Mr. and , Mrs. Delmas Jerrels t visited Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Jack-. .son of near Sullivan Tuesday, ,. Mrs. Ralph Browning, Mrs. 'Paul Wallace and son, Mrs, Mack Mayfield and daughter, Mrs. 1 Ed Davidson, Mrs. Delmas Jerrels, Mrs. Bill Bedwell, Mrs. j Ada Stanton and Mrs. Hubert jHale visited Mrs, Claude Foster and son Tuesday evening and ! quilted on the W.'S. C, S. work.

HICKORY

This Mornings Headlines

EXPECT F.-JD. R. TO VISIT FRANCE. President Roosevelt, it is generally believed in Paris, will visit both Italy and France on his return from the Black Sea conference and will confer with General De. Gaulle on France's aspirations in the post-war world and the attitude of the United States toward them. ' De Gaulle said he had no expectation of attending the Black Sea Big 3 conference of Roosevelt. Premier Stalin and Prime Minister Churchill. It is expected that Roosevelt will do his best to assuage-French disappointment over not being taken into the Black Sea meeting, and will tell De Gaulle there never was an intention of depriving France of a full voice in all matters affecting her.

LOANS FOR . .

EMERGENCY! ! NECESSITY! CONVENIENCE! A Plan for Every Need to $300.- " Security Loan Co. ; Slaits New Oakley l!Idg., N. W. Corner of Square

.-.:ixsi

LOANS FOR LESS Buy U. S. War Bonds Here Until It's Over Over There Sullivan State Bank SAFE SINCE 1873 Total Resources. in Excess of $5,400,000.00.

MEMBER OF FEDERAL DEPOSIT. INSURANCE CORP.

U'stoii Couneil

i Weton Council No. 405 will meet in regular session this eve- , 1 ning at 7:30 o'clock. Each member please bring a comic valentine. ... Refreshments will be served. .... j Pocahonla Club iIrs,., Becky Cprlin will enterfain th club Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock. Lesion Auxiliary . The .ladies of the American Legien Auxiliary will have a social meeting at the hall on Nf'.rth Court street Tuesday, Feb. 13th. Each member bring favorite eats, a comic valentine and two prizes for games! Dinner will be served at 7:00 o'clock. Hud Ciwt!?r ,, R. C. The, Hud Crowder Relief Corps

No, .275 will meet Wednesday, February 14th at 2 oclock. All members please be present. Refreshments will be served by the birthday committee.

DENIES WAGE CONTROL DIRECTIVE CHANGES ESTABLISHED U. S. POLICY. Stabilization Director Fred Vinson said to-

; day he was merely restating President Roosevelt's hold-the-line or- , der when he raised a bar. against price boosting "fringe" wage adjustments. by the WLB. His letter to the Wai Labor Board on that i subject, Vinson said in a statement, involved no change in standards ' for such wage changes but amounted to a suggestion for "better pro1 cedure to effectuate" the President's executive order. : The stabilization director has been under pressure to act in the meat packing and textile wage cases, now frozen in-WLB behind the Vinson instructions. .

, Pvt. and Mrs. Donald Willis jand son. Max Warren who arc stationed in Wisconsin are spending a 16-day furlough with . Air. iand Mrs. ornie Willis and other j relatives a!nd friends.' Mr."and' Mrs.' Carrie Smith, Mr." 'and Mrs. Lester Smith and Neta jKay. Mrs. Cecil Bedwell and Marvin, Mrs. Dick Bedwell and daughter, Mrs". Bert Bedwell and .Mrs. Hubert Skinner called on ; Mrs. Lloyd Smith and daughter Elena Bae Sunday,

wiiDcn Kcocrtson and son, Winfred and John . Daughterly of Sullivan called on Mr. and Mrs.

Dora Figi Tuesday evcniim. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson MeClcllan vi: ited Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jennings jand family Tuesday. Mrs. Lillie Norris was in DuggerMonday. : Mr. and Mrs. Frank Willis were supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. i Charles Willis and family Wed- ' nesday. . Mrs. Mary Booker who has been ill the past few days is imnroved. Louis Hilaire of the U. S. Marines and Mr. and Mrs. Emil Hilaire of Bicknell were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Edward ! Mehey. Louis is spending a 30-day furlough. His first af ler three years in the South Pacific. , Mr. and Mrs. Roy Usrey called on Mrs. Gerald Usrey Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Gambill and Gary, called on Mr and ' Mrs. Fred Moore and family Sunday. Mr. .and Mrs. Dihone Price spent the past few days with ;lr. and Mrs. Jess' Price of the Burr is Chapel community.

RAIL CRASH HURTS 91. A head-on collision between the Southern Pacific's Chicago-to-Los Angeles passenger train, the Laiifornian, and an east-bound freight today injured 91 persons, 35. sufficiently to require hospitalization. .

URGE GERMAN RAILMEN STRIKE. An appeal to German railway workers to go on strike and sabotage the Nazi transportation system to help shorten the war was broadcast by the BBC- Sunday night under sponsorship of Allied Supreme Headquarters.

) QUELL CLERMONT RIOT. Deputy Sheriff James Martin said that State Police and county authorities had been called to. disperse a near-riot at the Indiana' Girls' School at Clermont, Indiana. Martin said police were summoned when a number of the Negro inmates refused to go to their rooms.

'DR. SELIG A. SHEVIN, above, examines Toyoko Murayama, 19 who he Charges was barred from a Chicago hospital because of her Jap ancestry. Dr. Shevin is preparing his resignation because he will have "nothing to do with intolerance." Miss Murayama is an AmerieanTjoni Japanese with 'mclc and cousin in the service and a. brother WMtttttoftoS-iaiicteiL : , ' (Intsinationa! Souadphoto)

Hold Housewarming A number of friends and neighbors gathered at the beautiful new home of Mr., and Mrs. Thurman Benson Saturday night, Feb. 3, for a "housewarming." Mr,' and Mrs. Benson were presented with a beauiful table lamp, Delicious" refresiiments were

FOUR GIRLS BURN TO DEATH AT INDIANAPOLIS. Fire that roared through the home of War .Worker Leonard Slinker in Indianapolis early Sunday morning claimed the lives of his fouf daughters and brought injuries to his son. The, girls', ages ranged from 5 to 20. The blaze, one of the most tragic in Indianapolis in recent years, began, while the 45-year-old father was at work on the night shift of the U. S. Tire and Rubber Company plant. The son, Richard, age 18, a high school senior, suffered cuts and a fractured right wrist when he leaped from a second floor window. On October 18. 1941, Mrs. Dessie Slinker, wife of Mr. Slinker and mother of the children, was injured fatally wheivstrucls by; -a 'train. ' ' !

DAILY TIMES OPEN FORUM Letters anil inloi virus of a suitable undue and proper newspaper interest are sought' for this column, (lie editor reserving the right to censor or rcjeei any article he may deem is not fiuilable and proper. Articles of 500 words or less are preferred. All article sent to the Open Foruui mnst be signed and address given, in order that the editor may know the writer, however, ilie writer's name will not be published if requested. , . , ' , . Articles published herein do not necessarily express the sentiment of the Daily Times and Urn paper may or niay not agree with itatements enntained herein.

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