Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 180, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 11 September 1945 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR SULLIVAN DAILY TRIES- TUESDAY, SEPT. 11, 1945.
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r . JKT A . ment and of Street Commissioner Dart in Arrow wniMiow. I NeWS ARTICLE VIII ! ' Duties of Officers Section 1 The title of Mayor of Herewith is the third install-( Dart n Arrow has the same mean-' ment of Constitution and By-Jing as the title of president in Laws. Duties of Treasurer, and similar non-municipal organizaChiefs of Police and Fire Depart- tions, and the duties are such as' 1 I
are implied by the title of president. The Mayor shall appoint all committees for which appointment is not otherwise authorized. A Councilman chosen by the members of the Council shall act for the Mayor in his absence. Section 2 The Councilmen shall' act as Reception Committee and promote good fellowship at all times; shall act in an advisory capacity and on the Executive Committee as prescribed herein; shall, with the Mayor, seek to promote the purposes of Dart 'n Arrow; shall assist the Supervisor in maintaining decorum and in dealing with problems affecting the good of the order of Dart 'n Arrow; and shall perform such other duties as may be by proper authority assigned to them. Section 3 The Clerk shall keep minutes of meetings" of Dart 'n Arrow and of sych committees of which he shall be a member; shall receive applications for membership, together with membership fees, and issue membership cards upon the approval of the Executive Committee and the Supervisor, turning over all moneys to the Supervisor the day the same are received; shall assist the Supervisor in keeping records and files, and perform such other duties as usually pertain to a secretary of a like organization, or as may be by proper authority assigned to him. He may, with the approval of the Mayor or the Supervisor, appoint such assistants as may be needed.
LOOKING UP THE TRA CKS
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To Demobilization To you returning Veterans we feel the same urgent
responsibility for getting you Home as we did for getting you to the Front. There are inspiration and satisfaction in the happy ending of a job that only yesterday had nothing but the grimmest aspects. Count on u to keep the supply linea open and to serve you faithfully.
To Reconversion To Industry we say it is bur purpose to gear our opera-
. tipns with yours, in order to smooth and shorten the route to Reconversion and Peacetime Commerce. We will provide the type of transportation required by manufacturers for the prompt delivery of needed raw material and for the economic distribution of finished goods.
TO Modernization To Travelers, as soon as demobilization permits, we
pledge a full and quick transition of passenger service tuned to the times and to the traditions of The Milwaukee Road . . To old friends, who at times relinquished their privilege to travel in their accustomed style, we convey our gratitude for their patience and understanding . . . Good days of comfort and hospitality for all Milwaukee Road patrons are ahead. The Milwaukee Road looks forward to being unceasingly busy in performing these jobs. A long-term program of development and modernization of plant and facilities is being carried forward. Later plans, rfow in the making, will be progressively unfolded. .
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Arrows To Drill Under Arcs Here Wednesday Night Sullivan football fans will have an opportunity to look over the 1945 football edition of Sullivan high school Golden' Arrows Wednesday night when Coach Bill Jones will send his charges through a "polishing up" session under the lights at Sportland
Field preparatory to launching
the season against the Washington Hatchets at Washington Fri
day night The Wednesday night
drill will open at seven o'clock. Washington's husky Hatchets
will have the advantage of havy
ing played one game when they meet the Arrows Friday night They dropped a 7-0 verdict to Jeffersonville in a game at
Washington last night to launch their season. The Arrows have been hard at
work for several weeks and were
to hold their last hard workout
before the opener this afternoon.
They face a rugged schedule of
nine games and Coach Jones is faced with ironing out many rough spots due to Inexperience.
Local fans are beginning to
develope the gridiron fever with the advent of Autumn breezes
and a number of boosters will
follow the Arrows to the Daviess county metropolis Friday night. The entire squad will go to Washington, although all the boys will not dress for action,
Jones said today.
Two Backs Injured The S. H. S. mentor had some
thing to sing the blues about this week, as his backfield as a whole is a question mark at this time. Injuries have added to the
problem, with Anderson, a junioii
and Don Cochran, a senior, both leaving the squad recently. Anderson suffered several fractured toes in a scrimmage session
and Cochran broke an arm while
cranking an automobile Sunday. Both are backs. The rest of the
squad is in good shape at this time and eager for their baptism of fire against the highly regarded Hatchets. Sullivan's "Downtown Quarterbacks" will dine . and , talk football tonight at the Davis Hotel at 6:30 in their first huddlf of the season with Coach Jones and his assistant, William Keck supplying the pigskin dope, . . 1945 FOOTBALL
SCHEDULE OF THE. SULLIVAN H. SCHOOL
This Morning's Headlines MEAT SUPPLIES UP, RATIONING MAY END Some officials reported that an end of meat rationing is "possible" by Oct. 1, but OPA and the Agriculture Department said no definite date-could be predicted. In New York, however, a food dealers' spokesman declared the meat supply had improved so much in recent weeks that the commodity "could be taken off rationing entirely."
WAINWRIGHT AWARDED CONGRESSIONAL MEDAL OF HONOR Gen. Jonathan M. Wainwright came back to Washington from the bitter defeat of Corregidor and the agony of long Japanese captivity to receive a hero's welcome and the nation's highest military decoration the Medal of Honor. President Truman personally bestowed the coveted medal on the haggard hero of Bataan and Corregidor in a surprise White House ceremony that climaxed a fourhour welcome home celebration; . '
' REPORT UNDERGROUND IN JAPAN REAL DANGER ABC Correspondent Norman Paige reported in a broadcast from Tokyo Monday that an organized underground movement was developing in Japan and that its members were told it would "not be long" before they would have control of a "super-atomic bomb." "There is an underground movement here in Japan," Paige said. "Presumably it is being developed by the former war lords. An underground more sinister in its plan than were those long-drawn preparations which led to Pearl Harbor." Paige, who is living in Yokohama with a family of so-called liberal Japanese, said they were continually warning him that the United States must be more stern with the Japanese, must oust the presen political regime and the military minded who do remain in power in Japan.
FIRST RECONVERSION BILL GAINS HOUSE APPROVAL The first reconversion bill, to let a single boss get rid of leftover war supplies, sailed unopposed through the House Monday.
PURCHASE OF CHICKEN than all the Kleig lights in HollyMAKES HER FORGET $200 wood could ever be. Leave it to the American G.I. to master any BOSTON (UP) Chicken for situation.
Sunday dinner cost Mrs. Anne Ghelfi of Hyde Park $200. The woman told police she got
so excited at the market to find
"We traveled to Bar-Le-Duc, France around Christmas. That's where most of the fighting took
BVl cauicu at tuc maind w linn , . , . Tiri.:i chickens available that she forgot 5
hot eho V,iH hor rw-Whnnb- ho. 1CIC wc '""f"0""
VUQ 1 illU i.t. svr.n-b wvria, tween the pickets of a North iEnd fence. When she remembered it, the purse was gone.
Tells Worth (Continued from Page 1)
Friday, Sept. 14 Washington, there. Friday, Sept. .' 21 Bicknell, there. . Friday, Sept. 28 Garfield, t. 11., there. Friday, Oct. 5 Gerstmeyer, T. H.; here.' ': .. , ; ; Friday Oct.! 12-Brazil, ' there. Friday, Oct 19 Wiley, T. H., here, Friday, Nov. 2 Viricennes, here. . Monday, Nov. 12 Linton, here. , Thursday, Nov. 22 Clinton, there.
.(All except the Linton and Clinton games are night games.) COLLEGE PROVIDES HOUSING
thing happened on Christmas Eve that makes me feel warm and grateful every time I think about , it. We gave our show at eight o'clock and then put on another j at nine-thirty. Ordinarily the men would be in bed "by then, but this night they were permitted to stay 1 up. While the show was going on,
we heard a plane overhead and them coming. then a rat-tat-tat of bullets strik"We first went to Liverpool, jng gucjj things were common England, where we stayed for a occurrences about that time, so month, playing for the air corps, the show kept right on. However, Most of the men had been over- SOmeone went out to investigate seas for two and three years and an(j ;t turned out that one ward the manner in which our jperr na(j been splattered with bullets formance was received thrilled fr0m the plane. But every soldier me to the tips of my toes. I'm fy0m that ward was in seeing the afraid the audiences I've , had show. That' was the plane the overseas will spoil me for spme men called 'Bed Check Charley.' time to come. He came around every night "They were so starved for the about that time but didn't always sight of American entertainment get low enough to shoot. There that it took almost five minutes was one boy in particular whose
before I would get them quiet bed was riddled wim Duneis. a enough to start my songs. The boy I knew from home. I'll never hospitals we played in England cease to be thankful that a kind were filled with men who had Providence had us put on that exjust ' returned from battle in tra show that night. France. It was shortly after D-day "We did several shows one day then. And seeing them made me in a town called Mulheim, in Ger'nntnari " than pvpr to many and there we visited the
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pital circuit make sure that wounded and convalescent G.I.'s in 180 Army and Naval Hospitals in this country are supplied with the best available entertainment.
"As far as the army of occupation is concerned I think that will be the toughest job of the war. I feel that the need for entertain-j ment overseas will be even greater if that is possible, than during the war. The men will have plenty j of time to get lonesome. Now is j when they win. need USO Camp Shows, because as a National War Fund Agency, it is sending over
many large shows and musical comedies. Some with casts of 40 and 50 people. "I can't tell you how proud I feel to have played a small part f in an organization that I know, from experience, to be really important. . . . You should feel proud, too, because even thougli your boys are in alien lands, thousands of miles away, you have made it possible through gifts to" your Community War Fund and I hope will continue to make it possible for a genuine bit of 'home' to be sent across to them."
get to France.
Gestapo Headquarters. It was a
CHICAGO fUP) A si nnnnnn
! housing program, to provide 75
homes for purchase by members of the faculty and staff of Northwestern University, has been announced by Harry L. Wells, vicepresident and business manager of the University. The homes, which will range in sales price from $11,750 to $15,000, are scheduled for construction as soon as priorities can be obtained.
MISSOURI WONDER POLE BEANS For Canning $1.50 Bushel Bring Container lIHEf 17 So. Section Sullivan LOU BURRIS, Prop.
c
"ThPr was one fellow in Dar- very interesting place as under-
ticular that I remember. Just be- neath the building were a hundred fore the show one of the G. I.'s steps leading to a tunnel that was asked me to sing 'Stardust' for a nine miles long. There was everybuddy of his. I sang the number thing imaginable for living there and after the show went out into for any length of time. Operating the audience to talk to the men. rooms and telephone booths, map I met the one who had requested rooms and little carts on tracks, fh sons. He was in a wheel chair' "We were given strict orders
and I noticed after speaking with while in Germany while the war
him for a while that he had but was still on, to be in tne nouse
one arm, and it turned out he had before dark, as there were snipers
been a pianist with a name band about and tne streets were to be in the States, before the war. ; cleared at night. We were given "There were many times when the password every day though, it became difficult to hide my just in case we were delayed in
feelings. But I had to for I knew getting to our quarters. ' we were there to try to bring a bit , "We lived in one town in Gerof cheer and it certainly wouldn't many called Gardelegan; right do for us to break down, no mat- outside of the town was a hu?e ter how we felt. I stone barn where a short while ". . . Believe me when I tell before the S.S. Trooners had put you that just seeing our show not eleven hundred and fifty-six peoonly cheered the men while they pie to death. It seems they were were seeing us, but gave them , retreating and they had all these some things to discuss for some prisoners with' them. So someon" time to come. There were many got the idea of putting them all times when we hopped into jeeps in the barn and burning them. If and were driven to an isolated anyone tried to get out they were post to do an impromptu show for shot by guards posted outside the the few men who couldn't get barn. away. We traveled with just an "It is inconceivable that anyaccordionist so that no matter one could do a thing like that and under what circumstances we' still be a human being. But that found ourselves we could still put is just one of manv atrocities that on a show. I never thought I could were committed. There were the pet dressed in five minutes before concentration camps too numerous but. when you have to do some- to mention. But that is past althing, I find you usually do it. No though it will remain in our memfuss, no bother, you make up in ories for some time to come, the truck and that's it. So many "As of July 28, 1945 there were people have been asked if there 1.769 entertainers overseas in 276 was any particular experience different units or shows. Since the
that was considered thrilling. I , inception of camp shows there
recall one. We were, in Cher- have been 3.792 entertainers overbourg then and we had a theatre seas in 637 different units. Twen-
the Americans had taken over, ty-six camp show entertainers
There were lights too, but some-. landed on the beach at Normandy
iff - i A:; t& I Please return your I 4 t i empty cases and f bottles to ybur I " Ttf J
'
thing just went wrong with them,
just as I was being announced and
48 days after D-day
"I'd say. all in all a total audi-
I had to walk onto the stage in ence of 135 million servicemen at 1 J . l 1 S l. 1 t 1 , . .
uumpieie aarttness. i nauii i beeinome ano aDroaa nave seen campi
out tnere a minute tnougn, wnen snows. There are over 600 perflashlights appeared all through formers on the domestic circuits, the audience. And two men held Victory and Hospital Shows on their lishts over the piano as we , the Victory circuit entertain G.I.'s were using one that night. They in 450 Army camps and naval looked like so many tiny fireflies. ( bases throughout the United And to me, thejr were brighter States while 24 revues on the Hos-
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