Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 138, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 11 July 1946 — Page 2
SULLIVAN. INDIANA PAGE TWO
BULUVAN DAILY TIMES- THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1946.
A Borne Owned Democratic Newspaper. "Sullivan Daiijr 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 dally except Saturday and Sunday at 113 West Jackson St .Sullivan, Indiana , Telephone 12 Entered as second-class matter at the Postofflce, Sullivan, Indiana. Z , . , National Advertising Representative: . Theis and Slmpsoa, 393 Seventh Avenue, New York (1) N. Y. Subscription Rate: -By carrier, per week 15 Cents in City By Mall Itf Sullivan And Adjoining Countieat Year .... : . $3.00 "Six Month! ...'. $1.75 " Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 80 Cent By Mail Elsewherei "Year . , 4.00 . Six Months $259 Month (with Times furnishing envelope) 40 Cents . All mall subscriptions strictly In advance.
KAYSONS'-
C OPINION AND COMMENT ., ".' Dean Acheson, Under Secretary of State " Congress ' does not confine itself to laying down general principles of government, but instead becomes involved in the very administrative detail which it knows it cannot handle." , Dr. Howard Mumford Jones, Professor cf English at Bai-vard University "I think it is high time that we got over cur silly fear of Russia and set ourselves seriously and sympathetically to study that vast empire."
DAILY TIMES OPEN FORUM
mensurate to the task they are
told they are performing for the
country and humanity then they
should receive the highest wages
. j - ' . ' of any group, especially during 7' Letters and Interviews of a war time when they carry the - siiliahle nature and nroDer news- brunt of suffering and risk. If
- ranor inirrpst am sought for this i occupation of Germany and Ja
column, the editor reservin? the
- right to censor or reject any artijele 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 or- - der thatlti&' editor may know " t,he wftiwever, the writer's naraeSxNrKfti.be published if re- - , ' Articles published herein do u:not necessarily express the seutlv ment of the Daily Times and this . paper may or may not agree with - statements contained herein.
ASBESTOS v STOVE PADS Gaily - decorated metal backs harmonize with any
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6 S. Court.St. Ph. 213
In Bank Merger
, I s3
FISHERMEN EXPECT .streams have been consistently. , this time,
ANOTHER VVKEK-KNJI milky or muddy, leaving me.sdynui
OF POOR CATCHES highly-prized bass and blue gill . interested in neither worms, nor I INDIANAPOLIS, Ind , July 11 artificial bait. Many lakes, too, i (Special) Indiana fishermen ,have been muddy" day.a"er daytoday were looking forward with and ,n most cases Perlodlc raln" confidence to another week-end fal1 has kept the water from of poor catches. clearing. As one experienced' angbr i Another important factor, exforecast, "The boys 'roughing if ! perts say, is the late spawning will be eating more beans than season which is delaying the big bass. I hardly needed a skillet ones in the reliable "holeslast week-end, and it looks like which some fishermen go back
more oi tne same.
Muddy waters are the principal cause for poor sport this year, according to Indiana Department of Conservation officials. Since the beginning of the
but the old-timers
SHARP EYES PAY OFF
HUMMELSTOWN, Pa. (UP) The ancient, salt cellar appeared rather battered, so the auctioneer let David B. Riegel, a painter, have it for $3.75.
Riegel streaked to an antique dealer and dickered his way into selling the odd glassware for $125.
to every year. . On the Fourth of July week
end, banks and piers Were cov-! He said neither the auctioneer ered with a weaving mass, of j nor the crowd noticed that th2 cane poles and expensive rods, ! salt cellar had been made by the but generally speaking the fish late Baron Siegel of Manheim, stayed at home. It may be better Pa., giving is particular value.
NEW SUITS , Frank W. Allen vs. Luclla Burnett Reed. Complaint to quiet
title to real estate.
Now She Shops "Cash and Carry" Without Painful Backache When disorder of kidney f unction pormits poisonous matter to remain in your blood, it rnaycauernE5tin(r backache, rheumatiopains, lest pains, loss of pep and energy, getting up nights, swelling, puffiness under the eyes, headaches and dizziness. Frequent or scanty passages with smarting and burning sometimes shows there is something wrong with your kidneys or bladder. Don't wait! Ask your druggist for Doan's Fills, a stimulant diuretic, used successfully by millions for over 40 years. Doah'B' give happy relief and will help the 15 miles of kidney tubes flush out poisonous waste from your blood. Get Doan's Pills. -
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BY ELIZABETH JANEWAY ILLUSTRATIONS BY JAMES MONTGOMERY HA SO
HiSll PlPl SLiB
pan is as necessary lor ireeaom
and justice for humanity as(wc aija told, then let us pay buck
pifVates not less than $200
month and if we did that, there
would be no need for conscription at all, and there would be plenty of. replacements. If we conscript men, let us also conscript labor, industry, pro
fitsbut don't be foolish, that would spoil the whole structure
and purpose of war for those who see that propoganda and lies continue the war system, where the big man makes the profits, and the little man does the dying and t' paying for it. (Read Nye's instigation of the Munitions Trusts in the first World War; and follow the investigation now under way of those same trusts in the last war.)
J .7845,:' W. Misissippik .Ave., i . DenTfer14,"Cdft r ' - - July 8, 1946.- ' "Sam" . co Editor, Sullivan -Times, "' Sullivan, Indiana. T- O .
c-x oam. "Sam", I have every respect for
... IOTu,.,g ,u, ' those who sincerely uphold the
your question oi some weens anv. . . ; V, .i r, ,r wi.h war system and serve in it, sin "T-Tnvu RrmK 1 if Rnvs Home With. I . ' . .
. . . r vs f. . o. cerely believing that they are
out tiXtension or aeiecuve ux- . ... . j u t 41.,. i milfH -;ho I serving their country and human
- ... : ; , ' : uy-but i shaii do my fighting on
i l j: i i an
so would bke to r ... . , , ... .
iruiH as iney xiik.cu
your question,
- add it at this late date: If war is actually fought for I freedom, justice and preservation - of our country (and not for the . " ptofit of a few) then service in ", the armed orces should be the - most responsible and most imporr tant job of the nation whether I in war or in peace. Yet, in 1917 - a young man was facing bullets for a dollar- a day while his 14 ." year-old kid brother was pitching " wheat bundles for six dollars a day, and many workers were T earning as high as $18 or $25 a " day, and some industries were .turning in profits almost beyond calculation. f SQSf3 RJy point is, if men in the armed services received pay com-
A MERGER of the Mellon National bank and the Union Trust company of Pittsburgh, with Richard. K. Mellon, above, as board chairman, will result in a billion- i dollar bank. To be voted on by stockholders Sept. 16, the proposal has been approved by directors of the two institutions. The new company will nave the great- . est amount of capital funds in re- , lation to deposits of any bank In
the U. S. (Internationa) l
Daisy found herself growing restless . . . IN the fall of 1941, Pete went to North Carolina to a big, raw new encampment. His letters were very cheerful and Daisy wrote back in the same ve'in. They hid their hurt quite well and both knew what the other never said. But as her ache eased a little, Daisy found herself growing restless. The apartment was too big. She wandered desolately back and forth in it, hoping the telephone would ring. Her friends Usually greeted .her with "Daisy, my poor darling, how is the war widow, what do you hear from Pete, is he hating it?" This became less and less possible for her to answer politely ... Of course she worked, but perversely she seemed to get through things faster, to do more in less time, than ever before. She felt at loose ends all the time. One day, Mary said, "Why don't you go back north?"
She worked hard, unpacking. "Oh, I couldn't," Daisy said. "I couldn't stand it." "Well, perhaps it is a little too much to ask you to go straight back to the same place, to JVostalpte-SHr-Tiier, but why don't you leave New York if you hate it so? Go up to Connecticut. I'd come up weekends." "Oh, I couldn't," Daisy repeated. "I'd be so lonesome." But the idea stayed with her. And a few weeks later, the opportunity presented itself. Mary told her of a house she could get from a youhg man in Wilton, Conn. He had been drafted (this made Daisy feel well disposed toward him at once.) And the Whitings, their friends from the Vineyard, had a big place nearby. Daisy took it. She drove loads of odds and ends up to the country. She worked hard to get the place into shape. Mary was right, she found, about the benefits of physical
"The Japs," said Marie. "They bombed some place!" 1 exercise. When you were really tired down to your bones you slept. This was the way things 'stood on December 7, 1941, when Daisy, working hard in the country at unpacking china, did not bother to connect the radio, thus enjoying peace much longer than her countrymen. . . . Dan had been drinking more heavily all the time. He was in the library of his apartment staring sullenly at the Sunday papers and drinking scotch when his daughters burst in with the news. Lucile was right behind them. "The Japs! The Japs!" said Marie. "They bombed some place!" Rosamund said, "Pearl Harbor!" "I don't believe it," Dan said. They turned on the confirming radio. Then he said, "Get out. I've got work to d0 " (Continued Monday)
Drawings copyright, 1846. by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Text copyright, 1945, by Elizabeth Janeway. Published by permission of Doubleday, Doran t Co., Ine.
on theirs,
then I deserve . everything which
has been said about "yellow
bellied conscientious objectors to
war". Your3 for an Atomic Age of Peace and Prosperity, Carl J. Landes, 7845 W. Mississippi Ave.,
Denver, Colo.
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