Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 114, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 7 June 1946 — Page 2

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PAGE TWO SULLIVAN DAILY TTMES-. FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1946. SULLIVAN. INDIANA

A Home Owned Democratic Newspaper. , . Sullivan Dall Times, founded 1995, as (he daily, edition of the ' Sullivan Democrat, founded 1854. I 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 v Telephone 12 1

Entered as second-class matter at the Postoff ice, Sullivan, Indiana. National Advertising Representative: Theis and Simpsom, 393 Seventh Avenue, New York (1) N. Y. . Subscription Rate:

By carrier, per week ... ... ... 15 Cents In City, By Mall In Solllvan And Adjoining Conntieai 1 Year $3.00 Six Months $1.75 Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 80 Cents By Mall Elsewheret Year 1 $4.00 Six Months .' $2.25 Month (with Times furnishing envelope) ' 40 Cents All mail subscriptions strictly In advance.

INTOLERANCE IS AN ISSUE ." The "revived" Ku Klux Klan, we read, has become a primary issue in Georgia's torrid gubernatorial race. How familiar that report sounds! ' Some 20 years ago the Klan was a major issue in many states. It was a dominant political factor in some of them. Prominent candidates for national and state offices wel

comed its support. Party conventions dodged the issue it 1

presented. Must we go through such a period again? The Klan in those rlavs was anti-Neerro. anti-Semitic.

anti-Catholic, against virtually everything that did not coh-, form to its distortions of American ideals and principles. Today; some spokesmen, for the "ne'w" EKK insist that tit is onlyfanti-Communistic, but it is easy to jsee that its defi-(, nition of communism takes-in most, if not all, of its trupi)?-., eted hatreds of a generation ago. j ' There is plenty of evidence that one aim of the Klan In Georgia and ,no doubt elsewhere, in the deep south is re- j tention !f the traditional "white Democratic primary." Fo,r

mer governor yene laimaage, amDiuous ior anomer lerin, has saidjhe, would welcome support from the Klan or anybne eie favoring cirdumventionot the. United States Supreme Court ruling that Negroes are ntitled " to vote in sputhjejn DemOcratie -primaries. So-fheprder of cotton night-skirtsiM-flaming crosses is out to override the nation's highest tribunal! Looking further, we note reports that brave hooded . -bands have intimidated Jewish merchants one of ' them a woman in Tennessee, The Klan has initiated members of the Atlanta police department sworn guardians of law and order and boasted of the fact. We haven't noted reports of ;iinti-Catholic activity as yet, but give the boys time. They may yet re-enact the touching drama staged in a small Indiana town back in the early 1920's, when Klansmen, escort-

. ed by their sisters and their cousins and their aunts,

marched t6 the railroad station. The occasion? A report that

.tne rope was due to arrive on the afternoon tram!

What has happened in Georgia, Tennessee and elsewhere .could happen tomorrow in Indiana. Waves of intimidation

could roll once more across the south, the Ohio valley and the

prairie states, .as we saw them roll ageneratioh ago. We can

not again tolerate such a condition in our democratic country.

. Fortunately there are forces which realize the menace

;iurkmg behind this revival of mumbo-jumbo and childish ritual. These forces are employing not only political but

"legal weapons against it. In Georgia the Klan's fight to a fra

ternal charter is under fire. The U. S. government is filing

;a $700,0000 bill for alleged unpaid taxes against the order.

The latter may be the most effective method of all, especially if it brings out fresh evidence of the millions which the KKK in its heyday milked from hundreds of thousands of citizens who, were the dupes of high-pressure nightshirt -salesmen and professed super-patriots. For, however credulous we Amreicans may be at times, we don't like being exposed before our neighbors and the world as suckers.

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3oc ; . . 53c ... 50c

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BATHOL, for men and women after CARA NOME BODY POWDER

bites bath

WKiSLEY'S LEG MAKE-UP SUTTON'S LEG MAKE-UP . DURATION LEG MAKE-UP .

Eexall Cream Deodorant '.. Arrid Deodorant .........

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HOOSIER

THEATRE

June 9 SUNDAY

SHELBURN

& MONDAY

June 10

I i 17?

tLr m mi-mw... COLOR ff

5

Glorious musical rcmows of daring days!

0 The .

iuJy sing

GIE1LS

J0HN HODIAK RAY BOLGER ANGELA LANSBURY PRESTON FOSTER VIRGINIA O'BRIEN KENNY BAKER MARJORIE MAIN

CHILL WILLS

; . ' io n9f Photographed in Technicolor StSSTWiy fiy 'fSMUNO MlOH NATHANIErCURTIS.'HARRY CRANeJAMES O'HANLON end SAMSON SAPHAELSON Addllional Diolosu by. Koy Von Ripf Bawd on Hi Book by Samuel Hopkint Adai ond Hit original story by Eltonoft Griffin end William Rankin Word and Muie by JOHNNY, MERCER - p,ond HARRYjWARREN Pirtd by CEORGE,5IOiEY.i ProdiKd by ARTHUR, f REED, , ; . . ' Pius-Comedy, Latest News & Added -Attractions .

-TONIGHT & SATURDAY' Double Feature

..'Ji.v. IN tW laujhj Gclore

the Doys and

Ools go a courtin' down i r r h C

s i. !:!.

uigi k lima. . rT

June 8

HOOSIER THEATRE SHELBURN

SAT. MIDNIGHT

A Picfura with a punch!

New York Sufi

A Walk in

theJSun

tttirrint

iNA ANDREWS

Admission 30c (Tax Inc.) - Time 11:30 P. M.

lACKACHE

I1SERY tASED

BY WEtL. KNOWN HOME REMEDY ,trS KIDNEYS Whfn backache, headaches and frequent getting up nights make folks feel so miserable, many now get Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root medicine to relieve such distress when due' to the kidneys not eliminating as they should. For three generations Swamp Root has been the standby in millions of homes when loss of sleep causes folks to feel so nerroift, run-down and worn out. Many think there is nothing like the natural herbs combined in Swamp Root, for ttimulating kidneys' excreting function. TRY it! Try to get feeling better Vith a bottle of Swamp Root from the drug store.

OF INTEREST TO FARMERS

Saving, sharing, means life.

growing food

June 7 . . : '

i TRIO! . tfi f, SO o vrt,n' t if 11 mmnMjM 00 h.ns. f f)m

LKdil9i "ZrJjLfiP h " 1 1k ! , . Comedy,. LateuNews j M WJfW .. &. Selected Shorts fo

The account of what war did to the children of Europe and what is being done to help them is portrayed in' the newly released films ' "Suffer , Little Children", and "Freedom and Famine", both available from the Purdue University film library. Two' other new films of interest to civic mi'rfded' groups are "Bob Marshall Comes Home" and "This is Our Land."

as a part of the feed saving program, he declared that three 'ats will eat as much feed" as two Leghorn hens. In addition, he said that rats waste even more ."eed by gnawing feed bags or running over stored grain and that permitting them to waste feed is worse than keeping several cull hens in the laying flock.

"MAKE IT A MILLIOm" EH LIST M A GRADE WITH YOUR ARMY MOS

Army veterans who held certain Military Occupational Specialties may reenhst in a grade commensurate with their skill and experience, provided they W6r6 honorably discharged on or after May 12. 1945 and provided they reenlist before July 1, 1946. Over three-quarters ol a million men have joined the new Regular Army already. MAKE IT A MILLION! Full facts are at any Army Camp. Post, or Recruiting Station.

315 P. O. Bldjr. TERRE HAUTE, IND.

WANT . , . , Fried Chicken? Dine WitK Us Sunday

mow

WE

Ray & 'Verna Hunter

READY &1IXED CONCRETE Delivered in Sullivan 4 Bag. Mix Per Yd. $7.50. 5 Bag Mix Per Yd. $8.00 4i Bag Mix Per Yd $7.75. 5'z Bag Mix Per Yd. $8.50 6 Bag Mix Per Yd. $9.00 CONCRETE BLOCKS Rock Face 20c Smooth Face 18c Bullnose Corners 22c Above block prices are for 8 x 8 x 16" Partition blocks 4x8x16" and Line blocks 8 x 4 x 16" also available. CALL OR WRITE CARL A. NEWLIN Phone 20 Hutsonville, Illinois

TIME 7:00 P. M. Fri. & Mon ' 6:00 : P. M. Saturday 2 :00 P: M. Sunday

June 7.

INDIANAPOLIS,

(Tjp)Livestock: '

Hoes. " 3.500; . active, steady;

good and choice butchers 100 lbs.

up, $14.85; good, ana cnoice sows and good stags, $14.10.

Cattle, 225;' calves, 4Uu;- cnoice 1,100-lb. ' steers, $17.00; . medium arid good. $14.50 $16.50; beef cos, $13.75 $14.30; common and medium, .. $9.75 $13.50; . vealers active, steady; good and , choice, $17.00 $17.50. - -

Sheep,. 50; steady; good and choice spring laribs - quotable $15.50 $16.50; '' shorn slaughter

ewes,' $8.00 $8.50

4-HCLUBHEWS

.: The Sunbonnet Girls of . Cass townshipjheld their, fifth .general

session- June 5 ; at the Union; High School building.; - ' . , vThe; meeting, was called-to or

der by ' the president, ; Eleanor

Meurer:. Afters the- pledge to the flag1 and' the club pledge were giyeni '.response'. :tov'-the roll call was i made ;by telling. . one place

each ; girl -would like to ; visit on?

vacation; . Songs.; were . led , by the song . leader, Patty Harlow. , The business -of.. the xlub was .largely; ''appointing committees a"nd. making - plans' -for . ' the Achievement Day which is to be held tbis' month. . . 'Plaris were also made for hav

ing an au-aay meeung next

week. The girls are to come at 10:00 a. m. and bring something for a "pitch-in" dinner at noon.

The date of the next meeting

will be Tuesday, June 11 instead

of Wednesday, June 12 as originally scheduled. .' '.

A good rule-of-thumb for planting corn, says S. R. Miles, Purdue University agronomisct, is one kernel of corn for every

42 inches of row in rows 42 1 inches apart for every expected

!20 bushels of yield. On "30 , . bushel" land, according to the ;

rule, four kernels per hill in rows checked 42 inches . apart would give about the highest possible yield. This would mean about 14,000 stalks per acre. The third National Green Thumb Contest will be sponsored uiis year by national, garden groups, according to word received at Purdue University by W. B.' Ward, extension horticulturist. The 1946 awards will be offered for both adult and junior classes. Junior garden enrollments in Indiana are expected to reach

7ono. Ward announced that General MacArthur medals will be available for the itop ten percent of all .boys and girls enrolled in supervised groups. All 4-il club gardeners are being urged to compete for the awards. Cabbage worms may be controlled by a three percent DDT dust at the rate of 40 . pounds per acre, applying when the worms appear and repeating if necessary. A spray using ' one pound of a 50 percent waterdispersible powder in 100 gallons of water is also recommended by George Gould, Purdue University. . ,

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DRENE Shampoo 49c .

IERGENS Lotion 39c

VITAL1S

39c

WHY FEED THE RAT? LAFAYETTE, Ind. Have a market for rats? Why feed them in the hen house, asks Ernest W. Anderson, Purdue University extension poultrymaii. In emphasizing the importance of killing rats

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50c Peptb Bismol ... 47c 60c Alka-Seltzer 49c $1.25 Pelrolager 98c 60c Sal Hepatica 49c 40c Fletcher Castoria . . . 7 31c 25c Ex-Lax 19c $1.25 S.S.S. Tonic 99c 75c Bayer Aspirin 59t $1.25 SERUTAN 98c $1.25 Nutrex Tablets .... 98c 50c DeWitls Kidney Pills 39c 25cFEENAMSNT". 19c

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CROWNING ' GLORY Cold Vave S2J0O

ImrnorksS Wife

Based on the romantic, best-selling 9fcry of one of America's most exciting women

BY IRVING STONS ILLUSTRATIONS BY F. R. CRUGER

A .V, X: ii t

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John turned to look back from the road . . .

JESSIE rented vine-covered house in Los Angeles. In the California sunshine, John recovered his health. They lived in modest comfort from an occasional article and small monthly checks sent by their sons row in the armed services. . . . . John grew increasingly restless. He wanted to travel to Washington and though his mind was vigorous at 77, Jessie knew his strength was brittle. Uneasily, she let him go. He , kissed her and turned to look back from the road. Jessie remained there quietly, waiting for his letters. At last one came telling her that John had been granted a government pension of $6,000 a year. She hugged it to her, .. knowing the joy it brought him. Now, she thought, he could come home and .they never would be parted gain. ' . But the weeks dragged by and John did not come home.

second telegram, was delivered; it read: FATHER IS DEAD.

She thought, A good marriage never ends.

Then suddenly, without warning, she received a telegram from their son, Charlie, on leave in Washington. It read: FATHER IS ILL. . : She sat in a rocker, unmoving, almost unbreathing. That he should be stricken without her to take care of him brought anguish. Three hours later, just as the bells of a near-by church began to chime of noon, a second telegram was delivered from Charlie. It read: FATHER IS DEAD. After a time she walked slowly into the house. She snt looking at their portraits, heartbroken that he had died away from her ... Jessie could not get across the country to New York in time for the funeral. She was reading John's last loving messages to her while her son buried him on a hill overlooking the Hudson ...

It was days later when she picked up a letter Charlie had written to Lily and saw Of what the effect is going to be on Mother, I don't dare think . ... They lived in each other ... I don't think there is any life for the one left. .. No Charlie, Jessie thought, you are wrong, I won't be unhappy. Your father is safe. There is no more poverty or uncertainty for him, no mnre hufniliation or disappointment or change of fortune. Ah, Charlie, we have lived so long together a full half-century nothing can separate us now. Do hot grieve for me, Charlie, any more than you would grieve for your father, who had a long and magnificent life. I will know what to do with my days; a good marriage never ends; it will fill my life just as beautifully as it has for the past fifty years, fill it until the day I die. The End

Prwlng copyright, 1940, by King Fwtures Sjrndieit, Inc. Text copyright, 1944, by Irving Ston. Published by permission "&( Doubled?, Doron A Company, In

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