Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 219, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 5 November 1945 — Page 2
United Press Wire Service. Eleanor Poynter Jamison. Manager and Assistant Editor Paul Poynter : Publisher Joe H. Adams Editor Published daily except.Saturday and Sunday at 115 West Jackson St. Sullivan, Indiana ' Telephone 12
Entered as .second-class matter July 1, 1908 in the Postoffice at Sullivan, Indiana, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. National Advertising Representative: ,. Theii and Simpson, 393 Seventh Avenue, New York (1) N. Y. Subscription Rate: Hy carrier, per week 15 Cents in Citj By Mail In Sullivan And Adjoining Counties: Year 3.00 Six Months $1-75 Montii (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 30 Cents
By Mall year
Six Months-.. .' 52-25 Month (with Times furnishing envelope) 40 Cents
HXnil I M Ml I lllll I III. II ART OF PLAYING
Many tired, middle aged business men are grouchy in their homes and also their offices because they have never learned to play. In early youth, they decided to amount to "something" and went at business with a dead seriousness,
as though the making of huge sums oi money were the only mission in life. They, considered it a crusade and not a game, a means to an end and not the end itself. They didn't learn that rest periods were necessary. - They forgot to laugh, to relax and play with the result that now they are not even pleasant companions for .themselves. They sense the futility of their existence and find thmselves facing the end of life with years devoted to futile purposes. They, long for social contacts no longer available.
They are the loneliest of lonely ray and get along with their rjjg prokakiv belongs on
a man who took a train for New York five minutes before starting time, the other day, and got a seat.
?e don't' understand' what fvhich serve fish, spaghetti, binations want with red points Those who criticize union trol their membership might pake their children or .dogs News Of The City Schools AMERICAN EDUCATION WEEK Next week, November lit to 17 inclusive, marks the twentyftnrrtfrTWWMfr . iwUnloservance of iAmerican 'Education Week, at which, time patrons and friends are extended a special invitation to visit local schools. -. -Parents are urged to . observe the actual classroom procedure qn whatever day and hour they find most convenient.' At 3:09 P. M. on Tuesday,' November. there will be a convocation program in the high school auditorium. The program follows: Musia "America, My-Wondrous Land'' High School Chorus. Address;, ; (,- "Education Opens up a Wider Horizon" Supt. J. A. Campbell. Film: "Pop Kings the Bell." . Patrons and friencs visiting the high school for the assembly program, on Tuesday of American Education Week ' are invited to attend an open house in the high - a
VICTORY LOAN BONDS We heartily recommend the purchase of these . bonds the best bonds in the whole world. Tins bank will gladly help you any way we possibly can we must make this final Victory Bond Drive the howling success that it so richly deserves. SliLLiVAN STATE BANK Safe Since 1875 . , . .', Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Elsewhere:
4 nA II. II I . I I MUST BE LEARNED men. .They never learn'ed to fellow men. a news page, but we heard of those bittteiless restaurants Spanish chicken, and egg com anyhow. leaders for inability t.n con ask themselves how well they obey. '-school library immediately after the program in the auditorium. PLAY REHEARSALS Under the direction of Miss Mable Nowlin rehearsals are progressing for the performance of "Almost Eighteen," the three-act comedy to be presented by the junior class in the high, school auditorium o'n Tuesday evening, November 29. One change has been made in the ', Vast. Phyllis Valentine, originally scheduled to play the I part of Mrs. Dalrymple, has withdrawn because of conflict in employment and rehearsal hours. Beulah Deckard will take the role of Mrs. Dalrymple. I AKKUVV SALtS j A check by the yearbook staff j reveals that "Arrow" sales now I total slightly under two hundred ATjfbal of three " hundred has been set, so the -sales . campaign is being extended another week. ! It is the opinio of the staff that the low sales total is due to student negligence rathei- than to actual lack of interest in owning a yearbook. A huge thermometer in the lower hall records the number of books sold to date, Clocks drawn on the study-hall blackboard indicate percentage of students
"SOME MEN THINK HOME IS A SWEET PLACE WHERE YOU CAN GROWL FOR SERVICE WITHOUT TIPPING!" You get prompt service when you come here for a loan. " .There i no needless delay, no red tape. If you need a loan of $5 to $300 drop in and talk it over. Immediate service on cash loans.
Wit t Easy to Pay tht SicurjtyJVay g
ClS?o7'KocEiik : SuHH"Ii. .. Attica. . 81 and Ezra, TCBOW, 5:S0 Each -Sight Except Satnrday, Sunday.
"The Air Conditioned"
SHELBURN, IHUIANA ENDING TONIGHT I KEYS CT THE JOHN M. STAHL produced by JOSEPH L. KANK1EW1CZ ,20 CENT'JSY-FOX nCTUDE plus ' "Speaking Of Animals" & Latest News TIME Monday, 7:00 buying .'yearbooks in each class. At present the senior class is leading with fifty-six per cent of the class haying purchased annuals. The junior class is running a close second with fifty-three per cent. The sophomore per centage is . thirty-four, while twenty-nine per cent ' represents the freshman purchases. III-Y INITIATION Initiation of new members of the Hi-Y Club was held Tuesday evening, October 30, at the high school building. New members of the organisation ,.are: Charles Ballard, Jim Anderson, Marvin Leichty, Jack Herin.Doh Wilson, Harry Kirchner, Rex Piercs, Bill Theal, Raymond Hunter, Jack Heady, Bill Cauldwell and John Alexander. . Following the initianion cere 'How Many, Sir?1, FILLING gas tanks in cars instead of Nasis with lead, Charles "Commando" Kelly, who won fame on Europe's battlefields, is shown at his service station in Pittsburgh as ha waited on a customer. The Congressional Medal of Honor holder recently leased the gas station for a year. - International Seundyhoto),
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SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES
FOUR B-29'S BLAZE TRAIL FROM JAPAN IN 27 HOURS
I 1 v' ,i I r - 1 s : -rtfl'S trvtf 4l - i life ! I Kt i P ! 5tA w;'fJt TN f J
FLYING NON-STOP from Hokkaido. Japan, to Washington. D. C, four B-29 Superfortresses arrived in the capital bringing 43 tired but nappy men nome rrom me war. Leading ine group was Bps, uon. Frank A. Armstrong, Jr., a deputy commander of the 20th AAF, who is shown at the right above being Welcomed by his wife. At the left above, Lieutenant Trautner, an air officer, examines one of the tires on his B-29 that blew as his ship landed. The man on the left is a member of the crash crew that came out to investigate the blowout.' (International Soundphoto)
mony, there was a brief business meeting. The fourth Monday of each month was designated as the regular meeting date. j HONOR ROLL HonoT Roll for the first six weeks grading period, September 3, to October 22, 1945. Highest Distinction To attain this ranking the student must receive "A" in a least four fullcredit subjects, with the grade in no other subject carried, below "B' Also, he must have no unexcused turdies or absences. Betty Jo Anderson, , Nella Brashier, Nina Brasnier, Barbara Brown, Joe Ellis, Lois Golish, Audrey Hoesman, John man, Barbara Stark, Wiljie. ' McCamylfcnn l)istinction To attain this ranking the student must receive B" in at least four full-credit subjects with the grade irr no other subject carried, below, "C". Also, he must have no unexcused cardies or absences. . Rcsalie Anderson, Jane Bedwell, Suella Bledsoe, Ann Briggs, Rebecca Brum.nede, Becky Campbell, Nancy Carter, f Don Courtney, Whitney Courtney, Rcsemary Cox, Nancy Crowder, Beulah Deckard, i.eiand Ferguson, James Cettinger, Marcella Grayam, Phyllis Griggs, Dewey Hayhurst, Calvin Hilgcdiek,: Harold Huff, Bernadyne Hull, .'Mary A. Jamison, Nettie Johnson') Edward Lamb,. Myrna Lewcllyn, Joe Libke, Janet Little, .Terry McCammon, Phyllis McROberts, Patsy Mahan, Barbara .jYork, Jeanette Monk, Robert iPage, Norma Pirtle, Joseph .aley, William Daves, Joan Reed1 Virginia Robinson, Patricia Rogers, Norma Sappenfield, Barbara Scott, Joe Scully, Billy ivlack Smith, Betty Stewart, Margaret Stewart,, Thelma Tapley, Phyllis Valentine, Marilyn Waldorf LinJinny Marshland and Jodga Cass
Cass Tiiiik&rlciffi lV Sk-f-Sh-Miif h .
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UNTIL Jinny Marshland was called to the stand, the Judge was deplorably sleepy. The case of Miss Tilda Hatter vs. the City of Grand Republic had been yawning its way through testimony about a sidewalk and a certain lump of ice which had caused the plaintiff to slip. He was a young judge,' the Honorable Cass Timberlane Of the State of Minnesota. He was forty-one, in his first year on the bench after a; term in Congress and he looked like a tall Red Indian. He wished he were out fishing. Then the clerk was swearing in a witness who pricked His Honor into wakefulness. How did I ever .miss seeing her, in a city as small as( this? Certainly .not four girls in town as pretty, he reflected. The new witness was a halftamed hawk of a girl, twenty-three or -four, not tall, smiling, lively of eye. There was something daring in her deli
MONDAY, NOV. 5, 1945.
da Weisbecker, Ben .Wernz, Deloris Worth. - ' , JUNIOR HIGH HONOR ROLL Sullivan Junior High Honor RU fr the period ending Octo- , ber 19, 1945: ' Eighth Grade Shirley Chowning, Zoe Coulson, Donnetta Elembaugh, Betty Ford, Carolyn Milam, 'Peggy Mood, John (Pat) Page, Jack Raley. Seventh Grade Mary Lou Hadden, Ralph Lewellyn, Sally
WAITING FOR MISSING MASTER
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ill j$r 7 1 III-' ?m"$xz f $ n
KEEPING A LOnElt ViGu beside litUe Dickie Turn Suden's kiddie car are his pet sheep dog and kitten. The three-year-old youngster mysteriously disappeared from the home of his socially-prominent parents at Downieville, Cal., while out for a walk with the dog. After the animal returned alone, an intensive search was begun for the boy. His parents believe he may have been kidnaped. (International Soundphoto)
Timberlane looked at each other
Drawings copyright, 1345, by King Features Syndicate, Ine,
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Patty- Pirtle, . Carolyn ELM FARK The first grade gave their play, "the Gingerbread Man" for the second grade Friday afternoon. . There is great competition between the first and second grades in the purchasing of war stamps.
(The first grade was the winner -naisey in tne iavy farads in this w'eek with, a total of. $10.30. Indianapolis on Saturday, OctoWe are very proud of the . way . Der 27the children from our school ! Leroy Zellars is recovering
Walking home, he thought
cate Roman nose, her fierce black hair. Counselor Plint said gloomily, "Will you please just give us your, uh, your name, please?" , . ; . "Jinny Marshland Virginia Marshland." ' Jinny and Judge Cass Timberlane looked at each other. He had been approving her voice. He continued to approve everything about her, including her fine ankles,, until she finished her testimony' and slipped out of the courtroom like a trout flicking down a stream. ... He thought about her when he walked home that nigljt as he usually did on amiable spring days in 1941. When he had reached Varennes Boulevard, circling along the cliffs on top of Ottawa Heights, he could see the whole city of Grand Republic, Minnesota, population 85,000, and even as he pondered on the city he loved through his medi-
Text copyright, 1045, by Sinclair Lewis. Published by rfandom House. Inc. A Book-of-the-Month Club (election.
WONDERFUL RELIEF
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1946
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SOUTH IE IIciGchcl Pirtle of her. "We'll call her
tation ran startled remembrance of Jinny on the stand. ; Ever since his divorce from the costly and clattering1 Blanche, he had been lonely. Could a Jinny Marshland, cure his loneliness? But why should a charming girlVave such a desire? Thus he raged and longed. It is understood j that the newer psychiatrists, like the older poets, believe i that patients do fall in love at first sight. As he came up the walk, a strange black kitten was sitting on the step. It said "meow" in a friendly mood and he scooped it up, taking it inside to Mrs. Higbee, his colored ; cook-general, "We'll call her 'Cleo,' " he said and later he ; thought of Jinny again as he cuddled the cat in his den. ; He said, "Too many ghosts in this house, Cleo. You must ; drive them out you and she. 1 have lived too. long among ' shadows . . ." (Continued tomorrow) . - -
ReliOf A
For Your Cough
Creomulsion relieves promptly because it goes right to the S3at of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ latiea phlegm, arid aid natara to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous mem lbranes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding you must liko the way it quickly allays the cough or you &re to have your money back. CREOMULSSOM for Coushs, Chest Cclds, Bronchitis until the popcorn . and applaswere passed. Then all "fell to" find stuffed themselves in quite the normal manner. ' Elm Park pupils md teachers extend n cordial invitation to patrons and . friends to visit school during American Education Week. . DAILY TIMES OPEN FORUM . Letters and Tuterviews of a suitable nature and proper newspaper interest are struaht for this t-iilumn, the editor reserving the rii;ht to censor or reject any article he may deem is not suitable and proper. Articles of 500 words or less are preferred. AH article sent to Hip Open Forum must Ki?nea ana aaaress civen. in or dcr that the editor may know tl writer, however, the . write name win noi De Duoasnea u r quested. Ariictes uuDusnea nerein i not necessarily express the sent ment of the Daily Times and thl paper may or may not agree wit statements contained herein. OPEN ALL NIGHT We have inaugurated this 24-hour service for your Convenience. the COFFEE shp - Florence Hawkins f Elsie Clin k -4 n RATOR i & Russell Inbody
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BY SINCLAIR LEWIS . IILUSTC&TIONS BY JAMES MONTGOMERY flAGO
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v.asi Toia mrs. niaoee.
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