Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 182, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 11 September 1946 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES Wednesday, Sept. 11, 1946.
SULLIVAN, INDIANA
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 Bryant R. Allen Editor Paul Poynter .- Publisher 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: r ' 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 ....,;'..'..'...' $1.75 Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 30 Cents By Mail Elsewhere Year1 $4.00 Six Months . $2.25 Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 40 Cents " All mail subscriptions strictly in advance
SEASONAL FIFTH COLUMN '-. ; Let them say what they will about their equinoxes, autumn doesn't aiways wait. A mist on the meadow' in the morning, a feeling almost of frost in the air. and someone says, "It might as well be fall." For a moment it is. But the phlox that lights the garden through, the relative boredom of August still crowds the beds. Do we need further proof that summer is still very much with us? Then behold it in those, extremely f oresighted "ads" that sellers of fur coats regularly print while prospective wearers are still in bathing suits. Despite- these seasonal certainties, however, that breath of autumn makes one look at the calendar again. And, sure enough, it won't be long now. That meadow mist and frosty feeling are warnings i that, spies have crossed the frontiers of summer. They are planning golden ruin where the maple stands. They are plotting with tfie chrysanthemums W supplant summer's banners with hardier colors. Rumors -rustle in the trees' i; - ' For a moment a man ifeels an ordeiiy.rand provident impulse to telephone the cofd-wood dealer, o? to find out what good coal for fireplace grates will cost this year. But then he checks himself, as if on the verge of a premature surrender. "Mother," he calls, "get out the picnic basket. Johnny, don't forget your water wings. I'm going down to the service station and get ga f or the car." Like an army called upon to
make, j, Jsjjafk tlie family responds. And the spies of au
tumn, seeing resistance to their.
HOOSIER THEATRE SHELBURN
Ending Tonight
THE ; -GREATEST LOVE STORY OF THE YEAR! 7eccW
de HAVILLAND
H IDA
LUPINO ' NANCY COLEMAN and PAUL i! p it n i p n
f , -
Sidney f GREENSTREET pfK Arthur KENNEDY Da Mo, ' X 4 WHITTY ' FRANCEN I J J
a while
plots.mountirur. ..retreat, for
for a while. Christian Science Monitor.
WE SELL ARMY SHOES We buy men's shoes and slippers. If you have them to spare, look in your closet and bring them in. They make you no money lying there. We pay cash for shoes in good condition. Benney DeFrank Shoe Shop First Door South of Index
Chenille CRIB SPREADS $3.49 the JQJ shop Vi Blocks South of Square On Main - -' ...
Gats Wanted
1 Dollar Each For Full Grown Cats. Griggs Hatchery Saturday, September 14 None Purchased From Minors. T t- ,,... n '' ' t; :: .'''
- ? . -tt -1- r-r w-y,-; , . . - .
BABY CHICKS No, we are not HATCHING now but we can buy chicks on order, 13c each. We havei to offer the buying public our good MAN-A-MAR FEED. We have Starting and Growing, Laying Mash and 32 Supplement. Feed Man-a-Mar and really
get results.
Plus Latest RKO News, Comedy, Chapter 4
"OPERATOR NO. 99"
Thurs. Only, Sara Haden - Una O'Connor . in.
"She Wolf Of M London" Plus March of Time "THE ATOMIC POWER" Comedy & Late News 100 GOOrTjREASONS For You To See This Sw
; '"S t
Football OVER THE STATE
nd Slop Dosinrj Your Stomach With Soda and AUtalizera Don't pupwt tot rHT rnlinf from hnadw.tie, ftrnr !(.MVi:i."ht gan and had breath by Ukinz r.'ia ai"l other oikilisrrs if tlie true cause of yiu ,'.ni!.io is ninslipntinn. In tills caw, your nml tfoublfi' Is rot, in' the k imnrh M i.ll. Jlut in the intestinal tract v.'tiiirf of your food is di(fstpd. And whpn the lower piirt nta blocked faod aisy fail to direst nroperly. - Whiit you want for real relief is something to "utiblork" your lower intestinal tract. Somi'thing to clean it out effectively help Mature gr:t bark Oil her feet..: Get Carter's Pills right . TaVe them as d:rectid. They gently &nd effectively "unMock" your digestive tract. This permits all & of Nature's own digestive juices- to mix better with your food. You get genuine relief from indigestion So you cm feel rettVu good again. Get Carter's Pills at any drugstore 25t "Unblock" your intestinal tract for real relief from indigestion. ... . , .
INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 11 It was like old times Sept. 3 at Butler University when Trainer
'James .Morris threw open his stockroom window and issued football gear to some fifteen to ' tw,?n)y Bulldog, veterans vet- , crans in the real sense of the word men who have returned I from the wars to take up the gridiron rivalries they were conducting in 1941 and 1942. ' : Thers was many a tale told in the locker room tales of Africa,
Anzio, Cmaha Beach, Leyts, New
Guinea, Okinowa and not all
the eld boys were there, lhe medical ingredients. Thes ThrP(
NEURITIS PAINS LIKE I AN ELECTRIC SHOCK ' TO LOCAL WOMAN Just recently a middle-aged woman of this vicinity, told us that she had suffered 3 years of torture with neuritic pains. She said she felt like a sharp knift was being gouged into her muscles, ' and sometimes these pains would strike her like an electric shock. She said one could hardly stand it. Today this lady is again enjoying life, and she says the change is due to taking RHUAID. Her pains are gone now. No more feeling like a knife gouged into her muscles. She is entirely free of her misery, thanks to this remarkable new compound. RHU-AID is the new liquid
formula containing three valuable
SPRINGER
GQUOKENOUR CO.
PRESENTS CIIATlilil
POLITICAL COMMENT
'
same coaching staff was on hand however, to greet the returning veterans as ' well as the many newcomers expected to make up the largest squad in Butler history.
BLOOMINGTON. Ind.. Sept. 11 j Bo MoMillin. head coach of Indiana's defending Western j
Conference football champions, is hoping that his silver coach-
,ine anniversary wm aiso Drins
Great medicines, all blended into one, go right to the very cause
of rheumatic and neuritic aches and pains. Miserable people soon feel different all over. ' So doii't go on suffering! Get RHU-AID. 1 Bennett's Drug Store Adv. I
They're new . . ; and tliey prove that CHATHAM fcelievesj just as you do, that nothing's too good for Baby. Baby CHATHAM blankets are made p 100 virgin viwl that's as eoft ad light as Junior himself. ; . yet they're as Warm and snug as your own CHATHAM blankets. Bassinet size. 36 x 54". Fink, liie, white. Rayon eaSto bound around all four sides. 95.95
LOCALS
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Richmond
Grcss Income Receipt Important Importance to local communities of Indiana's gross income tax receipts is being realized more and more as township, county and municipal government taxes
rise. t , t,)at rr0verbial silver lining. "A have returned from a visit on Farmers, particularly, are cog-lcjlver lining," rays McMillin, "in Pontiac Lake, Michigan, with izant of the faci tliat the Demof :the form 0f two ends and an their son and family, who have
cratic-enacted income tax law honest-to-oodness left half- Deen spending tne summer mere,
has served, since 1933, to keep back." property (axes af a ' lower level Thf -meny Vcrambl? amon?
and nas Deen largely le&pvnwme , Ind!an.s a5pirants to these three
for keeping public school opera
tion at a higher state of efficiency than that which prevailed in the dark days of the HooverRepublican depression. There is a cloud in the sky, however. Persons close to Governor Ralph F. Gates are aware that
he is opposed to the gross income gqUa(j
lax ana zavuis a suits, ui ucucr
vacancies still goes on with only six practice days left before the Sept. 21 opening with the University of Cincinnati Bearcats. But despite Bo's inability at the moment to put his finger on the three most likely candidates, it's certain there will be soma new
standouts on the 1946
TERRFi HAUTE, Sept. 11 (Special) The sudden, pungent I tincie of Autumn is in the air
and the t'mc i- an-roacMn" when the leaves start falling and
Time, 7:00 p. m.; (CST)
described "nuisance" tax. Al
though the Governor has not yet recommended enactment of a
sales tax on all the necessities of
life, he has told numerous grpups I. I i lnnlU . 4l.nl Via
would favor that type of taxa- to tolnn at Ind,an!
' In a bulletir, ksued February ' The Sycamores are looking ' 9, 1945. while the Indiana gen- forward to .thKeir frst P-war ia assembly was in session, the ,. . ., j , Sept. 21. when they meet the Indiana Reta.l Grocers and Meat Re Bjrdf of nHnois Normal
Harve Thompson is spending
his vacation in Sulphur Springs, Texas, as the guest of his brother, Porter Thompson and family. Mrs. Ernest Lamberg has returned to her home in Chicago after spending the past week here the guest of -Mr. and Mrs. Edward Johnson and family.
Fred Bays was the dinner guest Friday, of Mr. and Mrs. - i i r-1 i i t: . t o .. ' '
Hoosier 'J"11 oueti. miss jecin ociuy I of Indianapolis, was a caller at the Street home Saturday.
I Miss Ruby Paige has purchased the apartment house , at the corner of Beech and Section streets from Mrs. Jane Jones. Mrs. Maggie , Brummctt , of North Court Street is visiting i her daughter, Mrs. A. D. Hubert 'and family of Aurora Illinois. I Mrs. Essie Wilson Roberts, a
EIRTH ANNOUNCEMENTS Mr. and Mrs. Jennings Brodie of 42 South Bell Street are the parents of a daughter, Shirley Lee, born September 10th at th Mary Sherman Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Hixon of Jasonville announce the birth of a son born at the Mary Sherman Hospital September 11th. He has been named Jerry Lee.
Council
. 73
Sullivan Council No. 73 R. S. M. stated meeting Thursday, September 12 at 7:30 p. m. All members urged to attend. VisiU ors welcome. Clyde Cooksey, I. M. Earl Handford, Sec.
resident, now
SHIMMY?
CAOSES ACCIDENTS
REMEDIES
We are still carrying remedies and disinfectants. , "Come in and talk chicken."
i . ii .
UBl
A
E
Phone 39?:.WMa,X.St. juJUTanlji
The ear' that V. weaves " er ''wanders" will cause tad accidents. Have us remove lhe '.'shimmy from your ear and drive, iafely. . Specialist service.' - ' ;'
CITIZENS GARAGE
118 So, Main Phone 98
; on a conference
'ernor during which a committee ' sought a reduction in gross income tax payments, quoted Governor Gates as follows: i "iThe Governor stated - confidentially that he feels that a j sales tax, such as is used in j seme other states, is more equitaIble. The Governor is of the opinion that the gross income tax j will kill itself, so to speak, by I the next session of the legislature." . In a later bulletin, issued Septl ember 7, 1945, the association
rLported that "our state associa
tion executive committee was advjsed during the lart session of the state legislature that a sales tax would be introduced at the next regular session.", . . If introduction of. a sales tax is planned for the 1947 legislation session, Governor Gates and
his Statehou.se crowd should have included such a recommendation in the Party's state platform in order that taxpayers could be informed, as to the administration's taxing plans. j 'Golden Crescent' States ' Of the 3,000,000 electrified farms, in America, 17 per cent are located in Ohio, Michigan ' and Pennsylvania, the so-called
"Golden Crescent" states.
After the lean
war vears during which State's
Standard was bcurnc somewhat preccriously by inexperience:!
and indifferently organized Navy rctu d home Tuesday
It'Hms, itic lime is uuic nu'ie when the Sycamores can launch football grid iil pre-war style.
former Sullivan
of Washington, D. C, is visiting
friends and relatives here. Max Crowder of Pekin, Illinois, visited his mother, Mrs. Amelia Crowder, last week-end. Ray Russell, who has spent the
past two months in California;
Tools For the Atomic Age New tools for electronic and atomic scientists include instruments that record weights within 100,000th of an ounce and thicknesses as minute as 1100,000,000 of an inch.
-)-v
I Mis.; Anna Hunt Franklin of , Indianapolis, is spending a week's
vacation in Sullivan the guest of her father, C. D. Hunt.
, HOSPITAL NOTES Admitted Sept. 9: Mrs. Minnie Bartley of Switz City, Indiana: Miss Janet O'Dell of (?re?ncastle, Indiana.
AUTO RACES
Terre Haute's New
MIDGET SPEEDWAY j. , ....North. 23th St. & Ft. Harrison Rcl. Every Thursday Night, 6:30 P. M. , 7 SPECTACULAR EVENTS 7 '.The. Leading 2.0iDrivers.inVho MJdye?t. Taved Track No Dust Plenty of Scats Plenty of Free Parking ., Space. Thrills and Maybe Spills. ' GENERAL' ADMISSION INCLUDING TAX 1.00. Gates Open 6 :30 P. M. Qualifying Starts 6 :30 P. M.
FOR
BASEMENT WALLS
ITTT
187.:
.:; ' : , - : ' " ' ' ' ; -: 1916
NO INFLATION HERE - Bankloan Plan AS THE COST OF LIVING GOES UP KEEP THE COST OF YOUR BORROWING DOWN BY FINANCING YOUR PURCHASES WITH A LOW COST BANK LOAN WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY ON LOANS. ' A $7,000,000.00 BANK IS HERE TO SERVE YOU. Sullivan State Bank Safe Sifice 1875 -Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 1875 ,vrj;-,v' - , . . .1916 -
Mfe-w$m
PepxirCda Company, Long Island city, N. Y. Franchised Dottier: PEPSI-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF VIXCEXXES
DAMP PROOFS and BEAUTIFIES! Yoo have been looking for this onecoat, easy to roll on or brush on dV.ofat':v9 finish for your basement. You can use TiteWaii dependably on concrete, cinder block or brick basement walls whether wet or dry in fact TitiWail thrives on moisture. Produces clean, dry, sanitary, beautiful basement interiors. In pure white and lints. ' 1 ' , Sullivan ;j "Insulation Go.
87 ?flAS?Y WARD ItiySTRAIICNJ or FKANK tiOCiS
jhe; Snake, Pit. -:- B&-?S-MSEi -v -; -:- miti.miU.V .1. I.IIJpWiy.JAiW4!JiJ.i i i JIM, i ... i , ,. , . ;
' ' " - .lii jr li -run- -Tinil"lHail -hi ' - -r - -- iu'--- -I '
The ladies just sat around and stared at nothing.
THE nurse who had caught Virginia consulted her chart. "Dry bed," she said. "Well, you might as well take that one," "Thank you," said Virginia. She never went back to pack. It goes to show that you have to use a little initiative. Also it goes to show that when there rre more wetpack patients than there are nurses to make up the packs you have a fair chance. ' . Not long after this, the tub days came to an end. During ;he daytime, Virginia stayed in the dayroom. Most of the ladies here just sat around and looked at nothing. . .That was Ward Twelve. In time, she was transferred to yard Eight. Eventually, she was sent out with a work squad. A nurse led them to a double row of red-brick houses. "Staff houses," said Virginia's marching partner. "We do Number Nine." . i.in.-t ...
"We do Number Nine," she said.
Inside, .Number Nine looked something like a bouse.From the hallway you could see a segment of a living room that was not at all a dayroom. Virginia hoped that some day she would get to enter this room ... They scrubbed floors and polished mirrors. After their work was done, Ward Eight was Liberty Hall. You could do whatever you liked in the dayroom. Some of the lsdies played bridge and Virginia was invited to join their club. They played a kind of bridge you had never encountered elsewhere. You could change trumps any time. A trick might consist of five cards, seven, three, one or none. Everyone was given the bidder's score and so everyone came out even and everyone was happy. : Tamara seemed the only dangerous lady in Ward Eight. She. was tall and muscular and the owner of a glowering
Tamara said, "Thank you, my friend."
expression. The nurses warned the others to stay awaj from her and they obeyed. Tamara had had five operations on her head, said th ladies, and was hopeless. They were very snobbish about hopeless cases. Their attitude about hopeless insanity was 1 very like the attitude outside. They 'hated Tamara foi being insane. Once Virginia had an experience with Tamara that made her wonder if there might bo a chance for Tamata if anyone bothered with her. Virginia played the piano and Tamara sat next to her and smiled, "Thank you so much, my friend," she said. A nurse came, warning. "Sometimes a sick animal knows more about how another sick animal should be treated," Virginia told her . . . )': " : (Continued tomorrow)
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