Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 237, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 29 November 1945 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES- THURSDAY, NOV. 29, 1945.

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United Press Wire Service. i 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 at the Postoffice, Sullivan, Indiana. 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: Year - $3.00 Six Months S1-75 Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) .... 30 Cents , . By Mail Elsewhere: Year .' '". : ?400 Six Months ... ?2-25 Month (with Times furnishing envelope) 4 40 Cents All mail subscriptions strictly in advance.

UNITED NATIONS PARTICIPATION ACT The Senate Foreign Relations Committee has voted unanimously to report a bill which makes concrete provisJons for United States participation in the work of the United Nations Organization. "The United Nations Participation Act of 1945" provides for (1) the appointment of a delegate to the Security Council by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate, (2) authorizing that delegate to vote, on the direction of the President, for economic sanctions against an aggressor nation, (3) authorizing him to vote on the same terms for the use of U. S. military force by the Security Council, (4) authorizing the President, subject to the apbrpval of Congressional Act or Joint Resolution, to negotiate agreements with the Security Council providing the specific, kinds and amounts of military force which we will contribute to the Organization, (5) authorizing the. appropriation of funds necessary for our. share in the expenses of uo. ; . ; fcTlle unanimous import of the committee indicates that thij&pegislation is oiT,to a good start, and it seems likely that it Will safely pass both houses of Congress. This is no accident, but is rather the;Tesult of careful planning between the Fopign, Relations Committee and the State Department. Ou& preparation" for the., United Nations has-been, from the beginning, an excellent example both of legislative-executive cooperation and of a bi-partisan approach to foreign policy. Trends (National League of Women Voters).

Cold Preparations

Liquid, Tablets, Salve, Nose Drops. Caution Use Only As Directed

DAILY TIMES OPEN FORUM Letters and Interviews of

suitable nature and proper newspaper Interest are sought for this column, the editor reserving the right to censor or reject any ar

tide he may deem is not suitable and proper. Articles of 500 words or less are preferred. Ail article sent to the Open Forum must be signed and address given, in order that the editor may know thr writer, however, the writer's name will not be published lr re quested. Articles publishes herein do not necessarily express the sentiment of the Daily Times and this paper may or may not agree witb statements contained herein.

Bits Of News

(Continusd from Page 1)

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RECOVER INSTRUMENTS ,and the instruments were found STOLEN FROM CAR OF 'hidden at the parking lot.' If LOCAL .BAND DIRECTOR they had be3n disposed of before the theft was discovered it , . would have been almost imWilfred Perigo, band director j possible to recover them and in the Sullivan schools, has re- Mr. Perigo feels indeed fortuturned from Chicago where he nate that he happened to notice secured several instruments for j tne loss before leaving the city, the schools as well as others

that had been repaired there. DRESS REHEARSAL I

ne reveaied upon nis return FOR JUNIOR PLYi that approximately $700 worth o ' instruments had been . stolen j Rehearsals are winding up for from his car while it was in the junior class play, "Almost a Chicago parking lot, however, j Eighteen" which will be prothe instruments' were recovered I duced under the direction of and returned to him after an in- j Miss Mabel Nowlin of the high vestigation by police detectives, school faculty on Friday evening Two colored attendants at the 0f this week' at the high school parking lot are being held in ' auditorium, connection with the theft, he j Reserved seats are selling fast, sa'd- ' although there are many good

The instruments had been ! seats still available. The play is taken from their cases and it a delightful comedy well played was only by chance that Mr. by these twelve members of this Perigo inspected the cases be- ' year's junior class: Jack Turpen, fore leaving for Sullivan. He Bill Theal, Jane BeJwell, Barimmediately notified authorities bara Brown, Bill Mcl'roeklin,

Joe Scully, .eAnn Wible, Patty Rogers, Beulah Deckard, Norma Sappenfield, Joann Reed and, Joe Raley.

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night engagement in Surigao Strait. The Edwards also had the distinction of being in action at Okinawa for 128 days, longer than any other destroyer of the Fleet. The ship returned to, Seattle, Washington, recently from Ominato Naval Base, northern Honshu, Japan. She was with the North Pacific forces during the September occupation of Japan.

This Morning's Headlines GREW SAW HOPE TO AVERT JAP WAR Joseph C. Grew said he thought it was a "good gamble" in 1941 that a personal meeting of President Roosevelt and Japanese Prime Minister Konoye might mmr-tfrt msr in the Pnr-ifir From the tall, crav-mustached for-

' mer ambassador to Tokyo the joint congressional committee investi- ' gating Pearl Harbor also learned that: ( 1. Baron Hiranuma, then Japan's premier, suggested in . 1939 : a world conference aimed at heading off war in Europe. ' j i 2. The American Embassy in Tokyo began destroying its codes ' . . ... . - A J 1 -

a step usually taken only when a break in relations is expeciea-d "few days" before Pearl Harbor. ;

NOTICE

Effective Dec. 3rd our opening and closing hours will be as follows: ' Open -7:30A.M. Close 4:30 P.M. Open until noon Saturdays : o- ; ' Deliveries each day except Saturday.

WILKINSON LUMBER COMPANY

Sullivan, Indiana

Phone 36.

SGT. McMAHAN COMING HOME Staff Sergeant Walter T. McMahan Jr., 22, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter McMahan Sr., of Sullivan R. R. 4, has reached the States after thirty-three months overseas duty. His parents received a telegram from

j him Wednesday morning stating S that he had landad in New York

and would receive his discharge and return home soon. Staff Sergeant McMahan wbs recently married in England, taking as his bride Miss Kathleen O'Reilly. The wedding occurred September 20, 1946. The former Miss O'Reilly is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry O'Reilly of Dublin. She expects to join her husband in the United States about January first. McMahan served with the

STEEL STRIKE WINS FAVOR The mammoth CIO. United Steel Workers Union was voting about 5 to, 1 in favor of a strike.' of its 700,000 members in support of a $2 daily wage boost demand, ion the basis of early returns. ' ., , ..; ' : ' - , :' AUSTRIAN PLOT BARED A tale of cold,' studied' treachery accusing German leaders and their Austrian "Quisling" Arthur Seyssingquart, of engineering the conquest of Austria was unfolded before the International Military Tribunal at Nuernberg. The American prosecution, methodically weaving a web of evidence to prove the 20 Nazi defendants guilty of planning deliberate, aggression, introduced document after document on Nazi plots to undermine the independence, of their little neighbor.

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MAY TRY HIROHlTOr-Whether Emperor Hirohito will be tried as a war criminal will be decided after Joseph B. Keenan, chief prosecutor of the Japanese war criminals, reaches Tokyo, Keenan said last night in a broadcast from Washington. Former Japanese Premier Tojp, his associates and predecessors, will find themselves in the prisoners' docket, Keenan said.

v.

YAMASHITA OWN FINAL WITNESS Defense counsel iri the atrocity trial of Towoyuki Yamashita rested after the former Japanese commander in the Philippines denied he had ordered execution of the entire Filipino race or that he was responsible for the indiscriminate slaughter of civilians by his troops.

LOCALS

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

359th Combat Engineers and has ,

xu t" ti l. i' Mr. and Mrs. Allen Buzard and in the ETO. He has seen service I

son, Vincent of Indianapolis, i visited Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Mcl.Guire and Mr. and Mrs. G. I. Buzard during the Thanksgiving

vacation.

All Kinds WELDING Truck bodies ' repaired and built. Drake Bros. 340 E. Desot Phone 335

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in nine countries and served on the front lines from D-day to

(the day of surrender with, the j exception of 25 days. Wounded j in action on the St. Lo river, he

nas Deen awarded tne rurpie Heart and the Gold Laurel Wreath, one of the highest decorations giveu for valor, in addition to numerous other battle awards and ribbons. Recently the parents received a letter from the Sergeant's Colonel in which he was highly commended for the distinguished battle service he has rendered. Staff . Sergeant McMahan graduated from the Sullivan high school in 1940. He is looking forward to a reunion with his many friends when he arrives home. '

FACTOAP:'5 In 1379 LaSalle virtilcrl llv locality of tlje prcpcr.t city i Buffalo. N. Y.. and built the:? the first ship that was navirjatiM on Lake EVie. a' small vessel o! 60 tons, called the Griffin. - The city of Buffalo wan the home for a time of Millard Fillmore and Grover Cleveland, the latter serving as mayor in 13C2 The highest dam in eastrrn America, fourth highest in the world, is TVA's new Font.ina dam in western North Carolina

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BY SINCLAIR LEWIS ILLUSTRATIONS BY JAMES MONTGOMERY FIA69

, pj -rr .f tOM j i i -t i j

Jinny and Cleo came tumbling down ,

JINNY chastened Laverick with dreadful effectiveness at the Yacht club dance when she yelled publicly, "Why Mr. La-ver-ick, are you trying to flirt with me? Back to your Irish bogs, ye little black diwle." " Laverick left her flat and went to the bar. Cass was . pleased. He said to Bradd, "I wish you'd speak, to Jay. He Luzzes around Jinny tap much." . - ' '.'1 certainly will,".Bradd said. "I've always loved Jinny lie an uncle, and I want, to protect her too." ' . It. was shortly afterward that Cass became rich for Cass. He came back from town and yelled "Jin-ee!" and brought her and Cleo tumbling down from, a tree. He said, '"Would you think $110,000 was a lot of money?". . r Jinny did. And Cass now had that much through, the sale tf orne property left by his father. The new wealth had

"Don't you dare leave me," she said.

'-' i-srm.'v- . i. a ;

its drawbacks, however. Cass reluctantly consented to leaving Bergheim, too, and buying a new and modern house. While the new place was being readied that fall he took Jinny on her first trip to New York City. They were excited and thrilled at Grand Central terminal. Jinny clung tq his arm and looked up in beatific idiocy. "Look! Up there! That must be. the Empire State Building or the Wrigley Building or something! Oh, jiminy, they are high. I never felt so small. Don't you dare leave me." But in the next few days, New York was not so pleasurable. The tempo of the city rattled thsm ... the hard glance, the high nasal voices . . . the imperious headwaiters. Their spirits paled within them. And then one afternoon Cass answered the telephone in their hotel room and shouted,

Bradd drew back. He said, "We didn't mean that."

"Jinny! It's Bradd Criley! He's in town and coming up." She sang, "That's the most beautiful thing that's happened to me in my life." Bradd came in like a fresh wind. Bradd took charge. There was a breathless, glorious round of theaters, night- , clubs and a pent-house party . . . and that moment when " she stepped out on the terrace to behold at dawn a New York new-born and celestial. Bradd spoke at her shoulder, "New York can be beautiful." "Yes, I didn't know until you showed it to me." He kissed her, and in gratitude she responded recklessly. Braid drew back. "We didn't mean that! I'm the fellow who thinks you're his sister. Are you?"

"Yes!" When Cass came out, he was pleased at their

fresh, dawn-cooled faces ... (Continued tomorrow)

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