Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 92, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 8 May 1946 — Page 2
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SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1946. page two
- '. A Home Owned Democratic Newspaper. ,. Sullivan Daily Times, founded 1905, as the daily edition of the Sullivan Democrat, founded 1854. ' . 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 at the Postoffice, Sullivan, Indiana. National Advertising Representative: Theis and Simpson, 393 Seventh Avenue, New York (1) N. Y. Subscription Rate: JBy carrier, per week '.15 Cents in City By Mail In Sullivan And Adjoinlnf Counties: Year $3.00 Six Month $1.75 Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) .... 30 Cents By Mail Elsewhere! ear $4.00 Six Months $2.25 Month (with Times furnishing envelope) 40 Cents : ' All mail subscriptions strictly in advance.
HOOSIER THEATRE SIIELBURN HHPIHi in' iiH mm hi i ii i n 1 1 ii i ii i imiiiniinnir ENDING TONIGHT A PICTURE YOU'LL NEVER
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! ; WIN IN STATE
I Ludlow
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WHAT LEADERS THINK ' : . Henry A. Wallace, Secretary of Commerce, asks a nation of plenty to feed the world's starving people i: , "I am here as a member of President Truman's cabinet urging your wholehearted support of the President's effort to prevent mass starvation in many parts of the world. I am also here as an individual citizen one who believes that his fellow citizens have both the high purpose and the plain "guts to see this job through. " - . "Some years ago, Newton D. Baker used, a few simple Avords which describe fully my own position. 'I am standing here in the House of Have,' he said, 'pleading for the Have:OtS.'. " "The people, .all of the people, will demand, and will have, their full political debate on other issues. But I am certain that all decent-minded citizens will unite in a non-partisan approach to end the imminent threat of mass starvation throughout the world. We have the heritage of a Christian nation. We could not follow any other course." . Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach states an em
phatic' view bout the anti-labor bill introduced by Rep. j Francis Case, Republican, of South Dakota : l "I have expressed to this committee on other occasions my conviction that the road to industrial peace lies in the procedures of collective bargaining, with government control lvept. to a minimum. The principal causes for the industrial Misputls of today are not to be found in a desire on the part of labor for unruly behavior, but rather in the difficulty of the substantive issues about which the disputes arise. It is no splution to these issues- to ignore the changes in the national industrial picture which have occurred in the past quarter-century, and it would be courting disaster to reverse "the progress of the past fifteen years. I urge the committee to reject this ill-advised piece of legislation." .. . Representative Adolph J. Sabath, Democrat, of Illinois,
who has not a single farm in his; congressional district, urges
the unity ot the farmers and workers ot the country: ." "It has always been,' clear to n)e that we must all live to- ' gether. There is no reasdn that the; people of the cities should .be at odds with the dwellers of the countryside. We are interdependent. We are one nation, indivisible. A prosperous farm population is essential to a prosperous city population, and farmers cannot produce at a profit when the urban populations have no money to buy with. We who live in the big cities are benefited, ultimately, by appropriations made directly to help the farmers." . .
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Could. Be
Casualty; Vote Is Light. INDIANAPOLIS, May 3 (UP)
Indiana's incumbent Congress
men rede rough-shod over all rivals in yesterday's Hoosier Congressional primary, by margins as great or greater .ihan
thos-e of 1944.
Eight of the ten who sought to
stay in the national House of
Represents Lives won either , op
position or with the- greatest of
eare.
The only possible exception
was Kepr. L.ouis ijcuow, u,, Indianapolis, whose political fate
was : hrouded in the secrecy of
Marion County's slow moving central county bureau. But Lud
low, the dean of all Indiana con.-'
;ressmen, was .hardly exported
to fall victim to an upset in v;h? 11th District -while his associates
romped over all comsrs.. Ludlxv
had two rivals. ,-
Tabulations bore out pjredfer
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tions of a light vote over the state. But the ballot-casting was more brisk in some districts ihan
was expected.' For instance, in the 10th district the same GOP candidates who vied in 1944 polled a total of 37,700 votes in three-fourths of the" precincts, compared with 30,000. in all precincts two-years ago. .Republican, ballots predominated over most of the state.. One. of.i the eleven Hoosier ConWe-;mcn, Kepr. Chas.. M. LaFolletb, R., Evansville, dropped, out of the 1946 race to. run for a seat in the U. S. . Senate. The others, however,., tried for another 2-year term. All of vherh have been in Washington at least two terms or four years.
With THe Colors
DAILY TIMES OPEN FORUM
Modify State Brown-out Plan
iff!
CPL. LS'TAN HOME ' Cpl. till Alsman if home after being discharged. He served uvo years in the U. S. Army, and spent fifteen months in Germany. He was awarded the Purple Heart for wounds. .
Letters and Interviews of a suiiiable 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 of 500 words or less are preferred. All articles sent to the Open Forum must be signed and address given; in order that the editor may know the. writer, however, the writer's name will not be published if requested. , - Articles published herein do not .necessarily express the sentiment of the Daily Times and this paper may or may not agree with (statements contained herein. 4-H Club News The Friday Troubadours of New Lebanon held an all-day meeting May 2nd. We were glad to welcome our new 4-H leader, Miss Alice V. Parker of Merom. The morning was spent in baking and sewing. During the afternoon we held our meeting and filled cut the part required
in our record book, Wilma TJngef. gave a demonstration . on j how to make oatmeal drop cookies which proved to be very interesting and helpful. The next meeting will be held at 1;00 p. m. May 10th. ....... ,
INDIANAPOLIS, May 8 (UP) The Indiana Public Service Commitsion today modified its brown-out order for 22 northern counties to permit a partial :.-e-sumption of operation by; manyindustries and possible night hours for businesses. The order will make the brown-out more flexible, commission members said. Industries will be allowed to u?e as :nuch as 10 per cent of the power used in April provided they do ;;o within the 24-hour-a-weck use limit. t .
The previous order affecting the Northern Indiana Public Service Company limited industrial users to one-thirtieth of their April consumption,
SULLIVAN. JNDIANA ' College today while attorneys prepared to turn over the re- Ai ceipts from the vast estate. , Root, who served as a corporal and saw action with the Army in France and Germany, will, receive the bulk of the :"ortuna when he is 40. Root's father, ihef son of the firm's founder, Wm R. Root, lost his life in a plane' crash in 1932. I
"Back To Civvies."
TERRE HAUTE YOUNG MAN INHERITS A COOL 11 MILLION
TERRE HAUTE, May 8 (UP) An ex-G.I. college student turned 21 today and became ihe legal heir to the income from ; in estimated eleven million dollar Coca-Cola bottle manufacture estate.. Chapman. Shaw Root, grandson of the late Chapman J. ' Root, founder of a firm which held many Coca-Cola bottle patents, studied at Indiana State Teachers
SAILORS DISCHARGED GREAT LAKES, 111. Among ' persons discharged from the nav- ! al service May 5 at this center
whose homes are in Indiana t) were: I Ivr.n E. Marts, FC 3c, R. R. 2, 4, Sullivan. Thomas L. Collier, S 1c, R. R. Shelburn . i O. E. S. Correction
The Eastern Star District meeting will be held Tuesday afternoon and evening, May 14th, at
the Hymera lodge hall instead
j of May 9th as was rtatsd in yes-' erday's edition of the Times.
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"A STRONG BANK" Where You Can Bank With Absolute' Safety Where You Can Borrow Money At The Lowest Interest Rates We Can Save You Money On Good Sound Loans A $6,500,000.00 Bank Is Here to Serve You. Suiiivan State Bank Safe Since 1875 Serving Sullivan County 71 Years Without Loss To A Customer. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
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ames
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CL'rHr':'
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