Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 113, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 6 June 1945 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES- WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1943

Mm Jaila Mmt$.

tfuUivau, Indiana .'' Telephone 12 Paul Poynter 1 ... ......... ..... . . Publisher Joe H. Adams Editor Eleanor Poynter Jamison ... Manager and Assistant Editor Published daily except Saturday and Sunday at 115 West Jackson St.

il.

Entered as eecond-ciass matter July .1, 1908 in" the Postoiiice at Sullivan, Indiana, under the Act of .Congress of March 3, 1879. , ' United Press Wire Service. 1 National Advertising Representative: Theis and Simpson, 393 Seventh Avenue, New York (1) N. Y. Subscription Rate: By carrier, per week ...... -. 15 Cents In City - By Mail in Sullivan And Adjoining Counties: ,8ix- Month ..: $1.50 -Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) ....... 30 Cents "Year .'.. . . . J3.00 By Mail Elsewhere: ". Year : $4-00 Stx Months . . $2.00 . Month (with Times furnishing envelope) 35 Cents - PIUCE CONTROL AND RATIONING Congress is going to have to decide whether or not to keep price control and rationing until VJ-Day, or VJ-Day

t phis some unspecified period oi time. Interest group pres

1 lie as a whole seems to realize the necessity of their contin1- 1 il. , i 1 x'.. .. ,....,..:. J? . . . J . 1 J ....... ..

uhukv ua&eu on uic uwu hh sending iuou ana uespeiniei.v ,, needed consumer goods to Europe (see Gallup poll April 26). Certain consumer goods are undoubtedly in short supply

scarce, although per capita consumption has gone up during the war. Abolition of controls would have two effects: It would increase the difficulties of sending food to Europe and supplying our-own 'armed forces. It would result in inflation such as happened after the last war, ending in a higher cost cf li ving, a lower level of real wages, and in the end another depression, ;; ,

. HICKORY . .. Mr. and Mrs, Dale Wolfe and Mrs.' Floyd Tryon of Michigan, aio Robert .Wolfe -oi the ' Navy, 'stationed in Chicago, were guests of their parents, Mr, and Mrs.; Ora Wolfe over the week-end' .and attended services here Sunday. . ' . ; - " Mrs. NeHie- Wilson of Terre 'Haute,, visited relatives and friends here over, the week-end.

Quit . paying rent' and own ' home. Special bargains oi property on Installment plan. Also farms for sale. W. T MELI.OTT ;

'Mrs. Mary Booker is moving 1 to -Sullivan this week. J Arthur Robertson, Marjorie and John were guests of Mrs. Zille Cooksey and Cpl. and Mrs. Floyd Smith and Elena Rae recently. I Miss Patty Harlow spent Sunday with friends on a ''picnic at Shakamak Parp. ...'..' , j ' ' " '" ': '1 i , Mr. "and. Mrs. Herschel .Lynn j were, guests of Mr.' and Mrs. Ed j White Sunday. j Mrs. Myrtle Stutesman visited

Mr, . and Mrs. . . Wm. Stutesman and family in Terre Haute Sunday. ' :'..,' ' ' - : ,' ' Mrs. Fred Moore . and Mrs. Gerald Usrey visited Mrs. Charles Dayidson and family in Sullivan recently. ' , '. , , . , . ; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Stanley were in Sullivan Saturday evening.' ''

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CHAPTER XIV "You adorable child," he 'murmured, drawing close her warm softness. She pressed her face against his and maile as though to kiss the hair above his ear. Tiny as the rustle of a mouse in a corn crib came her whisper. "God bless you! Bobkhine will make a copy inside the next hour, then he will come to send the teleCram. T will have him do it here." "I'll go for him then," whispered Ian. "Try to lock the servants in some room or closet go out when I mention the word 'Paris'." She treated him to -a taut smile and nodded, then, infinitely graceful, seated herself on the broad settee and beckonedV carelessly. In her role of temptress she wore a daring, filmy tea gown so thin that it betrayed the outline of her garters, but that cleverly hinted at, rather than exposed, the charms of her figure, But for all her easy pose there were anxious lights in her eyes and she was watching him narrowly, he realized. "You did bring the right treaty?" she whispered anxiously. "Yes," he assured her and bent to shower her ringless hands with kisses. "Your safety; darling, is the only thing in life that really matters, I've come to realize." .Side by side on the broad settee they talked with that sublime disregard for time that makes life an uncial paradise for lovers. It seemed she could not tear her eyes from the darkly lender face beside her and when her small finger tips touched that half moon scar on his chin, he laughed and, for the first time, told a woman how he got it in battle. . All at once there sounded a little knock at the door. Ian had just time to turn aside and straighten his necktie when in strode that curious, pink little man he had met as the Baron von Bradensee. Beaming and looking' jolly as a beardless Father Christmas, Bobkhine hurried forward to shake hands,, his pink bald head gleaming like that of a freshly washed baby. "Such a pleasure to meet you again, Monsieur Gray," he declared. "I saw entirely too little of you at the dinner party last night." .'"A great pleasure," replied Ian, conscious that Lolita von Waldeck was watching him very intently. He got to his feet with the deliberation of a lazy mastiff. He was thinking: "And this pink-faced, hairless little man has murdered countless hundreds of people!" It seemed somehow utterly impossible.. ' "You have been working, Cousin Ernst?" demanded Lolita in a low voice that quivered just a;littl. 1 "Yes, my dear, I am glad to say the wprk is done. By the way, I just remembered. 1 Don't you want me to telegraph those friends of yours at Poldolsk?" - Lolita nodded quickly, "Yes. Would it be too much trouble to send it at once?" ' " Bowing affably, the round little man bustled across the room to a telephone and, after consulting the directory, called the telegraph office. Speaking in German, he said: "The telegram is addressed to T. Gregrod, Podolsk, U. S. S. R. 'Request Kyriloffs take ten o'clock train Tor Kolomyja tonight. All is well. Signed Bazanoff.' You will send

that telegram," he instructed the

operator, at once. Ian crossed his arms and the fin

gers of his right hand delved inside they edge of his coat perhaps four

inches from the butt of the .32.

: "It is such . a beautiful spring evening I think I shall take a little drive," announced Bobkhine

through the smoke of a long ciga

rette. "I am sure you would rather

discuss whatever you are discuss- , ing, alone." His eye jiaused in pass- ' ing on the young American's standing so straight beside the' settee.

f'But it wcftiid be improper to leave rny fair cousin without chaperones,

n ext ee pasr

lan started. romething was 'wrong better act. His hand started

towards the pistol holstered under his left arm, but the voice of Comrade Bobkhine cut in, silkily dangerous, "If you are reaching for anything but your cigarette case," he remarked with a depreciating smile, "I advise you to wait, for you see, my dear young American, I don't trust you. If you move your hand another inch to the left, why, I shall be forced to shoot you very unwillingly, of course." There was no doubt that Bob-

khine's hand which lay in the pocket

of his gray travelling suit gripped a pistol. Ian, wise enough not to force matters under such unfavorable conditions, merely smiled affably. "Dear me, you are very suspicious." "I am fifty-six years old," Bobkhine stated, his pink face the pic-., ture of good nature, "because of

that fact. You seem to enjoy it so

much here, my good friend, I'm goinir to leave vou and mv dear little

cousin Lolita to enjoy this delightful apartment for half an hour,

which will give me time for a drive I have been planning to take." He drew a long puff on his cigarette but did not remove his suddenly menacing pale blue eyes from Ian. "In the brief case outside my dear First Secretary you will find the original copies of a certain document. You perceive you are now able to return them to the safe with no one the wiser. It will be a great mystery how the news got out, no? You, if you are clever, will blame the leakage on the Hungarian negotiator and he,., most emphatically, will blame it on your minister." The round little man raised his voice. "Michael! Come here! You will learn," he continued with a mock apologetic air, "that- Michael and Leon are excellent company. They will be delighted to entertain you, sir, for exactly half an hour." Inwardly raging, Ian made a little bow. No use to fight. Of course, Lolita had given the show away he felt disgusted, he could not hate her for it she wasn't looking at all happy. "Very well," he said. "I could think of far less pleasant things than talking to the beautiful Countess von Waldeck I'm thinking I need a guardian.". , Bobkhine laughed so Heartily that his pink face flushed. "A graceful admission, Monsieur. Lolita , is irresistible, eh!;. She has done her: part most successfully. yAh.j here is our friend, Michael!" In the door appeared the' footman, but this time minus his livery and clad in a rough dark gray suit. With him and also in mufti was the giant butler who had first admitted Ian to Number , 73 Kerrepesi Ut. They regarded the Ameriea'a with beady, watchful eyes. 1 "Much as I regret the necessity," remarked the Soviet agent', 'II fear we are forced to become melodramatic. Michael, please draw your pistol and keep Monsieur Gray covered, while our efficient Leon extracts the pistol he carries a I'americaine in a shoulder holster. "Ah, Lolita, why look so sad? Are your dear brother and sister not on their way to the happy republic of Poland? What does it matter if you have pleasantly betrayed this gentleman? I am sure he enjoyed - it and will forgive you. Your vjctims generally do. Smile, that's better, golubcheck!" In a . moment more, the whole ghastly farce was over and Ian found himself seated in an armchair confronted by the huge butler whose hairy paw held a Luger automatic squai-ely in line with his heart. The other was helping Bobkhine into a fur lined coat a fact which gave the seated prisoner food for thought a fur lined coat in June. Why? When Bobkhine, with a mocking bow and a wave of the hand had disappeared, he who had masqueraded as a footman watched intently from the window. Meanwhile thab strange girl

known as Lolita von Waldeck reclined gracefully upon the settee and lit a cigarette, apparently quite indifferent to the proceedings. Next she turned lazily on her side and exposing, perhaps consciously, a, long silk clad leg, poured liqueur cognac into two of the long stemmed glasses. Sickened, revolted at her treachery, Ian glowered straight before him. So her love had been simulated. What an actress! She, no doubt, would disappear with those two large limbed satellites who were now mounting guard. Well, he would wait until that Russian's gun got out of line and then he would start things. A sickening sensation of defeat chilled his soul as he heard the whir of a' motor starting and then the slam of a car door. In the street below gears moaned softly and- he knew that Comrade Bobkhine had started on his way to the sinister powers at Moscow and with him was a copy of Treaty X-2. Poor Leonard! He wondered how the boy was coming along. Certainly if Ilya's love and tenderness could pull him through, he would survive, but to face disgrace the hopeless blasting of his career. Bitterly he cursed his trust his inexcusable weakness. He had thought "Well, wore petit I -an," Lolita von Waldeck addressed him serenely through a haze of blue cigarette smoke. "It seems that you have lost." .. ; The two guards grinned and relaxed a trifle, the ex-footman even stooping to select a cigar. Ian nodded. "I deserve to lose," he said bitterly. "I was fool enough to believe in you in spite of a hundred warnings." ; "The first thing a diplomat should learn," were the girl's next words, "is that a diplomat should trust no one. It is a primary rule of the game, mon cher. You Americans are far too trusting to deceive you is almost as easy as to cheat children." ' Ian started as though a red hot iron had touched him. Great God! Lolita was actually laughing as, very feminine Indeed, she arose and, with almost feline grace, came sauntering across the floor, her bright lips curled in, derision at the scarlet faced American rigid on his chair. L "So," she jeered and mocked him through half lowered, blue veined lids., "You thought to let us hav the second part of the treaty to recover the first, Dieu, but you and your, love , talk were funny." A cruel smjle twisted her vivid mouth wheri he; writhed. "I could scare play, my: part for laughing." Beautiful land graceful as ar Ionic column she stood above hintsmall head tilted to one side. Ian's senses stirred yet his heart was cold and hard as granite. ."Congratulations, Mademoiselle !" he managed to say through dry lips. "You carried your part out perfectly. Being a fool, I deserved a fool's fate." . , "Would you wish to become my lover even now?" So derisive were the glints in her eyes that both the Russians commenced to chuckle. "Try me " was his quivering reply. "Try you? Bah! You would not' amuse me one short hour." More violent grew Lolita's merriment until the ash of her cigarette tumbled off. Deliberately, she turned her back on him and leaving behind a faint aura of Orchidees Noire swayed back' to the settee. Humming a little Russian song, Lolita von Waldeck selected another cigarette, tapped it on her almondshaped thumb nail and lit it. Furious beyond bounds at this, mockery, Ian gathered himself for a desperate effort, but that menacing gun muzzle anticipated his attack. (To Be Continued) . Copjrirtt, 1953, fcj I". V. W. Masoa ; Distributed bjr Kinc Ftattow Srodiau. Ins, ''

1USHOP URGES STERILIZATION OF DEFECTIVES

NOTTINGHAM, England (UP) The 71-year-old Bishop of Birmingham, Dr. E. W. Barnes, recently advocated at an annual meeting of the Co-operative Congress, a policy of "easy death and medically controlled sterilization" for the medical defectives in

! Britain.

The Bishop, defending his convictions from tlie "Christian" standpoint said, "As I see the matter there is no objection to medically - controlled sterilization." He pointed out that "fairly often we hear of a child "being born pitiably defective in mind or body, and of the parents' relief when it dies." , Dr. Barnes warned that "bad racial stocks" were a growing anxiety to thoughtful men in every country where Western civilization prevailed. He .said he c.ould offer no clue how these bad sdocks had arisen, but . he had noticed that cattle, breeding at random, produced "scrub'' cattle. H said that it was now an offense for a farmer to. keep - a "scrub" bull, and implied that the s?me policy should be adopted in human society, . -.V ; r - -. Bishop Barnes reflected that in ether centuries, defective children could not survive the . prevalent, harsh conditions, hut . today our lmmane social services tended to

protect them, problem children growing up to produce problem families. ! Dr. Barnes concluded that war had eliminated the best on the battlefields, leaving the weak, feeble-minded youth behind to piosper and spawn. He foresaw a world of recklessly breeding sub-humans living in miserable

poverty unless civilized man helped nature . eliminate that which was, unfit to survive.

4 - H CUIB'NEWTS

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by Mr. Wagner before the meeting began. During the meeting Mrs. Simpson and Mr. Wagner made announcements concerning plans for the Round-Up and camp. Ann Osburn sang "Bell Bottom Trousers." After adjournment, refreshments were" served. Jean Godfrey, News Reporter

DAILY TIMES OPEN FORUM

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 oi 500 words or less are preferred. All articles scut to the Open Forum must be signed and address given, in order tbitt the editor may know the writer, however, the wriier'a name will not be published if reauested. Articles published ncretn do not riecessariiy express the sentiment of the Daily Times and this paper may or may not agree with statements contained herein.

LADY NEARLY CHOKED DUE TO STOMACH OA! One lady said she, used to b afraid to go to bed. She was swol len with stomach gas and the g;i would rise up in her throat afle she lay down and would near1 choke her. Had to prop herself u one pillows to breathe. Recentl this lady got ERB-IIELP and 1101 says gas is gone, stomach feu fine, bowels are regular and sh can sleep soundly. ERB-IIELP contains 12 Gre: Herbs; so don't sufftr! Get tin new medicine Bennett's Diu Store. Sold in Carlisle at Andei son's Drug Store.

1 The Friday Troubadours met at New Lebanon Friday, June 1. The roll call was answered by reciting a rhyme. - Two committees were appointed; Food for Achievement Day, Sara Sims, Marian Lisman and Patty Pirtle; Decorations for Achievement Day, Dorothy Unger, Mary Wolfe and Maxine Lambeth. The pledge to the flag and 4-II Club pledge were led by Wilma Hart. The 4-H Club Creed was read by Eva McClure. A-discussion of Health and Safety was read by Dorothy Unger. . The next meeting will be an ail-day meeting June 8th at the school building. , ; - ' ' ' Carol Hart, , News Reporter

' FA'CTOGRAPHS ' There are about 30 genera and 100 species of primroses. They .nave a wide distribution, in the 'northern- hemisphere, and a few occur, in southern South America and .Sua ill Afc-lea. ,

M. J. Aildn & Sor FUNERAL HOME Dugger "Aikin's Service Costs No More."

CLIP OUT THIS COUrON This Coupon and oOc will admit any child under 14 to Bailey Bros. Bis? 3 King Circus, Sullivan, Saturday, June 9th. Gallagher's Show Grounds. Afternoon only. Regular price for kids GOc. WITH THIS COUPON YOU SAVE 30c. .

SULLIVAN MT

Gallaghers Show Ground Plenty of Free Parking Space. 1

.fi'rirti:? da a sm

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IV.wyid Inland. Canaat - .province, is sup-'

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CI CAPTURES .NAMESAKE ROOSEVELT, Utah (UP) Pfc. Deloy Baumgaertel,- serving with U. S Army forces in Germany, wrote home to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Baumgaertel of Roosevelt, that the first German prisoner he captured gave hhi name as Hernum Baumgaertel, No relation though . the Utah soldier said. .

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