Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 195, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 2 October 1945 — Page 4

PAGE FOUE

SULUVAN DAILY TBIES TUESDAY, OCT. 2, 1945.

SOCIETY Old Friends Club The Old Friends Club will meet at the .city park in the shelter house at noon Thursday, October 4th. Weiners, doughnuts, rolls and coffee will be furnished. Please bring own table service.

Triple L Club The Triple L Club of Turman Township will meet with Ruth Brown Thursday, October 4th. Everyone welcome, Jefferson War Mothers The War Mothers' Club of Jef-

an all-day meeting on October 5. Officers will be elected for the next year. All members are asked to bring or send their dues as

this will be the last meeting of the year. -All mothers are urged j to attend these meetings. Dinner Guests i I Mr. and Mrs. Ross Kattman of .Poland, Indiana, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Dressier of Terre Haute, jand Miss Margaret Parker of 'Indianapolis, ware dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Boothe and ' family of West Johnson Street Sunday.

COMMERCIAL SEED

PLENTIFUL IN 194ft

Daughters Of America Loyal Council, No. 44, Dau-

ferson Township have decided to ghters of America will meet in continue with their work until regular session tonight at M. W. the boys all return home. They of A. Hall at 7:15. All officers will meet at the rock house for and members are asked to attend.

LAFAYETTE, Ind., Many a

home gardener will have an eye to saving seed this fall, but the production of high grade seed is a job for the commercial seed-! man, ; warns W. B. Ward, exten- ' sion horticulturist. The workers must guard against disease and' cross pollination of (the vegetable varieties and strive for purity and high germination as well. The home gardener is not equipped to do this and should not trust too much on home seed. 1 There will be no fear of a short seed supply for 1946 with the recent report of a carry-over of 41 out of 50 vegetable seeds as of September, 1945. This is also above the average for previous years. A few varieties, however, of beans, peas, melons and celery will not be as plentiful as usual.

BROADWAY NTGHTSj By AXEL STORM

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LOCALS

Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Charlton and son, Jackie, Ray of Carlisle R. 1, spent Sunday visiting relatives in Linton. Curl F. Booker of Indianapulis, spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dude Booker and his daughter, Sue Ann. Mrs. Booker, who has been very ill for the last ten days is still tonfined to her home.

I

. KEEP IT COMING! American housewives saved approximately 170.614,000 pounds of used cooking Cut in 1941. That la almost double the amount saved in 1943. And it doesn't count the 52,000.000 pounds saved by' Army and Navy. . This year the Army and Navy aren't around In such numbers; the men are overseas, using the materials that used cooking fat helps to make. They need plenty of It need It fast. That is why the government Is asking housewives to redouble efforts scrape, skim and scoop every drop of used cooking fat to replace the industrial fats and oils formerly Imported from Islands of the Pacific .

NEW YORK. Three turkeys opened the theatrical season with such resounding silence that even their names have been forgotten, but the season got under way officially last week with an equal number of earnest, if not topflight efforts. First of the lot was "The Ryan Girl" by Edmund Goulding, who wrote "Dancing Mothers" for Miss Helen Hayes a long, long time ago, then left for the coast to write for the movies. "The Ryan Girl" seemed to be more movie than play and not very much of either. It gave Miss June Havoc her first legitimate role, and brought back Mr. Edmond Lowe, who had been away from the Broadway stage many a year, and from the movies not a few. The play, about a thug whose abandoned child turns out to be the winner of a Congressional Medal of Honor, a couple of noble if rather unconventional women, and a faithful theatrical dresser turned ladies maid, never rises above the Grade B movie level, nor does the acting achieve maturer heights. Miss Havoc was infinitely better as the clever and original comedienne in "Pal Joey." Mr. Lowe struggled manfully with the improbable role of , a pretty flat heel, and Miss Doris Dalton likewise was noble and unhappy. Tennessee Williams, whose

"Glass Menagerie" won all the prizes in sight last season, has done over a D. H. Lawrence short story, with the aid of Donald Windham, into a "romantic

comedy" called "You Touched Me" which was produced and directed by Guthrie McClintic at

the Booth. It's the story of a

hard-drinking old sea salt whose spinster sister has shut him into an English country house with his daughter, and of the young orphan lad turned flier who

comes and sets the daughter free.

Williams and Windham have suc

ceeded in turning all the characters into caricatures that waver between poesy and farce, and

there's a great deal of what

seemed to this writer to be rather childish symbolism about the whole thing. Perhaps the fact

that the program says the play was "suggested oy. a short story

of the same name by D. H. Lawrence" has something to do with it. The farcical moments, which are not at all necessary to the story, were the must amusing

and interesting parts of the play.

Edmund Gwenn as the captain

roars and shouts and has a jay old time. Montgomery Clift as the orphan lad again displays a feeling for the theatre and a

fine recognition of emotional values. Miss Catherine Wiliard plays the maiden lady as a cari

cature, which It is, and Miss

Norah Howard struggles fitfully with the improbable role of the

daughter. In all, "You Touched Me" can be written off by Mr. Williams as not much of a play, nor very well realized.

The authors of "Tomorrow

the World,"- Arnaud d'Usceau

and. James Gow gave Broad-ray

something to think about In

Deep Are the Roots" but it can

not by any stretch of the imagination be called a good play. It concerns the return of a Negro lieutenant to the plantation in

the South where he had oeen

brought up and where his mother

had been a sort of Aunt jemima retainer in the family of a Senator. Gordon Heath as Brett Charles, the lieutenant, had

learned much while winning the

Congressional Medal in action m Italy, and there was much to do for his people in the South. He sets out to do it, but in the doing the authors have turned to melodrama which seems somehow to

be artificially superimposed upon the characters in the play, and while the sentiments expre.-ced are worthy and noble, the pecple

who say them seem to laJK

solidity and real purpose, lne acting is on a high level, with a beautiful performance turned in

by pretty Miss Barbara tst wearies in the role of an understand

ing and sympathetic daughter

who had been orougnt up mm the Negro boy. Others in die cast were Charles Waldron, Evelyn Ellis, Helen Martin, Carol Goodner and Lloyd Gough. The play was staged by Elia Ka.rz.-a. While the authors didn't quite realize their aim, they have stated a question which is of increasing importance to the country and which should be heard with re

speck ;;1a-.:--ti.

One-Minute Test

; 1. When an SOS is sent by heliograph, is it a wireless message, a telegram, signaled with a flag or flashed with a mirror? 2. In what nursery rhymes does a stringed trio entertain royalty? 3. Which musical' instrument reaches the highest note? .- Words of Wisdom ' A fool may have his coat embroidered with gold, but it is a fool's! coat still Rivarol.,

. Hints on Etlauette

When other people are rudeto you, don't follow their example. Keep your temper and treat them with studied politeness. ;

. ' Today's Horoscope A birthday today gives a'love for peace and harmony, a sunny disposition and an even temper. You avoid - conflicts. Quarrels make you feel Repressed. Literature and music interest you. You are devoted to your .loved ones

1' !"','''5''"ii 'A'

and theyT In turn, esteem " you." Should any plans or appointments go awry today, do not start ructions over the matter. Try to straighten them out logically and sensibly, without causing a great emotional upheaval at a trying1

cost.

Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.,

, One-itflnute Test Answers 1

J. Flashed with a mirror.

2. '"Old King Cole;; 3, The yiolin. j ' "

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