Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 187, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 18 September 1946 — Page 2
PAGE TWO'
SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES WEDNESDAY, Sept. 18, 1946
SULLIVAN, INDIANA
Mitel fails Swine?.
A Home Owned Democratic Newspaper Sullivan Daily Times, founded 1905, as the daily edition of the x ' 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. j knees and hips were stiff and
Sullivan, Indiana Telephone 12 sore, but the pains were mostly - . : : .. j in the back of his necit and across Entered as second-class matter at the Postoffice, Sullivan, Indiana j his shoulders. Now, however, his
National Advertising Representative: suffering is entirely gone and he
MAN RAISES HIS ARMS ABOVE HIS HEAD FOR FIRST TIME IN YEARS A few days ago a man said the rheumatic pains in his arms and shoulders disappeared and now he can raise his arms above hfs head for the first time in years. He said the pains he used to have from this rheumatism were simply awful. Sometimes his
BRITISH TOMMIES ARREST SQUATTER RINGLEADERS
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Ending Tonight
int zm mtll tn,Wn
says the change is due to taking RHU-AID, "Oh! What relief!" states this man. "Why don't other rheumatic sufferers get RHU-
AID." 1 RHU-AID is a new formula.
I It contains Three Great Ingredi-
Theis and Simpson, 393 Seventh Avenue, New York (1). N. Y, Subscription Rale: By carrier, per week 15 cents in City By Mail In Sullivan And Adjoining Counties Year $3,00 Six Months $i.75
TIT 11- "1 Hl II 1 I
iiumu v wuii innes iurnismng stamped envelope uenis ents so it is almost like taking
By Mail fclsewnere I three medicines in one. It goes 'ear $4.00 right to the source of rheumatic Six Months $2.25 aches and pains. Miserable peoMonth (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 40 Cents pie soon feel different all over. All mail subscriptions strictly in advance i So dn't go n suffering! Get , . ; I RHU-AID. Bennett's Drug Store. PRICES AND THE FREE MARKET j -Adv. Writing in the New York Times, Henry Hazlitt said:
"We are today operating under a price control law that is 1 badly drawn and full of inconsistencies. . . . Supply and demand come into balance only at a price. That price is the one established in a free market. To hold any commodity below its free-market price is almost necessarily to make the supply of it smaller than the demand. . ' . "The way to decontrol is to decontrol. We must begin 1 sometime and somewhere. If the Price Decontrol Board al-! lows meats, milk and grains to go back under controls ... 1 it will be taking a backward -step." j Since that was written, the PDB has taken that "backward step" so far as meat is concerned. It has reinstated subsidies that economically vicious practice whereby all the taxpayers pay part of the cost of what you, as an indi- J : vidual, buy. It was obvious during the debate over extension : of the OPA that Congress clearly .intended that all com-' . modities be decontrolled as 'rapidly. 'as possible. It's equally!; obvious now that that intent is not' .being carried out. High , OPA officials are attempting to exercise full war powers If
mat no longer exist.
FACTOGRAPKS Marietta Holley was an American author, born near Adams, N. Y. She became well known by her contributions to magazines on the adventures of "Samantha" and "Josiah Allen's Wife." The scarlet snake resembles the deadly oral snake, but Is harmless. Its red and yellow bands do not touch as do those of the coral snake. It lives mostly in the southeast U. S.
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Sullivan Countv's Historical Theatre Home
OOSSEM. THEATRE
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TOMMY MORTON, identified as an active member of the Communist party, is shown being taken to a London police station after his arrest outside Ivanhole hotel, which is occupied by CommuniEt-Ied squatters. Morton was the first to be arrested as police sought to halt the squatter epidemic in the British capital. 'International Soundchoto)
GOLD PROSPECTORS OF '46
f Edward Arnold Ann Harding
Robert Benchley
4
VVilh The Colors
Geyserite is a name given to a variety of opal that occurs in concretionary deposits around the geysers of Iceland, New Zealand arid in the Yellowstone Na-
. Prices must eventually find their own level in a free-: tioual Park.
market. The normal processes of competition are, in the long j run, the protector of the consumer. No manufacturer has a 1 monopoly of anything others are trying to cut the price I
and increase their , own sales. And in "the vital retail field, competitiGjKs 'given us extraordinarily high levels of efficiency, and economy.
The present OPA law says categorically that "the gen-! eral control of prices .and the use of subsidy powers shall . . . 1
be terminated as rapidly as possible. It is the duty of the decontrol board to carry out that plain mandate.
Naples, Italy,; has been called the most densely populated city
' . . ' Mr and Mrr,. Rov Pope . of
South Carolina was once the Terre Haute rbute three received
home of 28 tribes of Indians.
M. J. Aikin & Son
FUNERAL HOME Dagger "Alkln'i Service Cost Nt More."
In Mercy Killing
24 HOUR Taxi Service Call 470 BUS DEPOT CAFE
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word that their son, T4 bgt.
James M. Pope is now stationed in Korea. He is now on a four
teen-day furlough in Japan and gr
will leave for home as soon as he returns to his base. I FARMERSBURG
Noel Huntwork returned to Northwestern University, where he is a student, after a visit with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wi.nHirnrk . . " V
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Mrs. Mable Sargent is visiting in Flint, Michigan, with Mr. and Mrs. Carl Monk and family.
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Pepzi-Coh Company, Long Island City, N. Y. Franchiscd Bottler: TEPSI-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF VINCENNES
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yUnUCiH I It H I t i) Designed to supply in a ration those essential nutrients , usually lacking in grains alone vitamins, proteins, minerals that hens need for heavy egg production.'
Master Mix formulas assure correct proportions and efficient use of home grains.'
A:k about the MASTER MIX FEEOiKS MM
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Griggs Hatchery
17 E. Jackson St.
Sullivan, Ind.
Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Greggs and Mr. and Mrs. Chester Bolinger and children spent Sunday at McCormick's Creek park. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Reed have had as their guests. Mr. find Mrs. Jesse A. Reed of Niles, Michigan. James Moore of Indianapolis, is visiting here with his mother, Mrs. Delia Moore. Mr. and Mrs Ray Reed were
wffpimg tn nnli station fn T-ns eeiyvuie sunday visiting
'Angeles after she had been booked Mrs. Susan Land. ' on suspicion of murder la Mrs. 1 '
Jeanetts Paz, 21, a former taxi 'dancer. Police say she confessed to
atrangung ner aaugnter, juoy, o, a anphftfr o itpV spastic paralytic. She was quoted MANCHESTER, O. (UP) bv the tiolice as savins. "It was a Tne moral is that if you want to
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Plus Comedy, News
Another Episode of "OPERATOR 99"
BR0DER1CK CRAWFORD FRANK McHUGH GEORGE CLEVELAND NANA BRYANT JOAN fULTON
Comedy, News & Added Attractions & 100 GOODREASONS For You To See This Show
tfttmirMTjnirinjmiiriiniiiiiiiiiiii
Screenplay by Arthur T. Horman ond Sam HeHman Original Story by Arthur T. Horrr.an end Walter Wiw Directed by CHARLES LAMONT Produced by JOE GERSHENSO
TIME, 7:00 P. M. (CST)
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DAILY TIMES iOPEN FORUM
MORE
MR- AND MRS. JOE MILLER, Alvin Farley ami Jo- Azva.v., v. examine a gold deposit in a pan at Crescent u.ty, cr.:.( v;c?v days of 1849 have come alive again in a new sicnrri'a Tom Cronin's discovery of gold this month. r
Letters ami Interview of a ' suitable nature and trcpr ns-.vf-i paper interr-t ae sc?lit for t!ii-. 'cnJttmii. (he etl'Sor rrsrrvhig the right to censor or reject any sir-' tide he may dsem is not :.uiU! and proper. Articles of 500 worili or less are ptp??rrFd. Att."af'tT:la-i prt .o (hn Open I'orurh must h ; rigneil d sdrlrms eiven, in order that th c 'iter may know t'i writer, however,, the writer's name will not bs published if requested. ftrl'-Jftr- p?i!: -iiert h-relti tin not nf rn -a - ify ';.-t'sf- r iit:ms't of the Diiv Tlrae:: an! tbii l-;ij--pr may cr amy uoi asree with statement contained Iierein.
LOVELY G I F T
MORE ITEMS
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GALLAGHER
JEWELER Si
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DODD BRIDGE
WORM PICKER CRASHES
Wood last week were Mr. and Mrs! Pad Parr, Dillie Milam,
Sunday School 3t 0:30 a. m., Mrs. Zylrna .Woodard and Joe rrsye'r meeting Tuesday night. Krayse. and Mrs. Bill Wade had as Connie Hayden, daughter of their guests last week, their Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Hayden is nisce, Miss Golda Chicka- ill. ' ' botT'of SrefHTut and Will Wade were both nurses at Terre Kfiitc, dmner guests of Mrs. Wades
and Mrs.. Vernon Hayden m'5" uvlsd "oou' d,iu . Willfpv Sunriav
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.t.........ij en fishinp flip vnur nmrm an H-nnl-,fo tothrv.n qIIoI " imcj kjuinaj .
4welL" (Internafionot goundprioto) don't try to pick them from trees, on Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Wood Mr. and Mrs. Dan Butler and " ' W. Z. Drake Of Blanchester Sunday. son nf Tndianannlis. snpnt thP
I broke his arm trying to get bait.. Mrs. Floyd Hardy is confined week with her Barents. Mr. and
a ladder while to the Mary Sherman Hospital. Mrs. Jessie Wood. They returned
Those who called on Luvisa home Saturday.
Wed in Hollywood
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BETTY NEWLING, 22-year-old act- . ress, and Alfred Bloomingdale, 30, film producer and scion of the Bloomingdale family of New York, eeal their marriage ceremony at Anita Louise'! Hollywood home ith a USB, (ijtetnttiofial)
He fell from
hunting worms on a catalpa tree.
NO INFLATION MERE Bankioan F'hn
AS THE COST OF IJVIMJ CO.;:s l.TKMEi' THE!3 COST OF YOUR KOKItOWINC DOWN SY FINANC1NG YOUR PURCHASES WITH A LOW COST UANKf LOAN. I '
WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY ON LOANS. A $7,000,000.00 BANK IS HERE TO SERVE YOU.
Snfe Since 1873
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
."Si.
1875
The'Snohe R
1946 ,i
WARY JA?JE VRD J ILi.USTF.ATiONS BY FRANK OOOWiM 4 j
L'r.. 'JLJ T 1
You ate as fast as you could and then raced back.
FOR a week it appeared that the only diversions offered the ladies in Building Thirty-three were the races tnrough the weird tunnel to the cafeteria. You ate as fast as you could and then raced back. The nurses .were not very particular. They seldom raised their voices except to announce meals or stop the occasional drifts toward violence: On the whole, the ladies were well behaved. The singer sang. The ladies who made "cat's cradles" worked at their strings. The lady who made dolls made dolls all day long. And the dancer danced. Once Virginia got to see young Dr. Terry, her hew physician. She didn't like him. She wanted Dr. Kik. Once she went to a popcorn party and once to a knitting class. But at last she was taken to see Dr. Kik himself. She tried to tell him how she could not remember things.
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"Good-bye, Mrs. Cunningham," he said. He was displeased. "You dramatize," he said. "You recall something you have read and you attempt to fit the facts into that pattern. You remember everything." "I'm sorry," she said. "But you're mistaken." Suddenly she understood that he wantad her to leave. He was no longer interested in her as a case or as a person. . She was acutely conscious of her poor appearance. She had never before seen him out of his white jacket and now he was beautifully dressed in a plaid coat and flannel trousers. She got up. "Good-bye," she said. She wanted to run from this elegant man. He stood up. "Good-bye, Mrs, Cunningham," he said. There were quite a few persons to avoid in Building Thirty-three. There was the husky young one who punched you and the one who insisted on giving you apple cores
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"Grace," she wailed. "I thought you'd gone." j and stood by to watch you eat them. Virginia was thinking about these dangers when she returned from dinner that night through the tunnel She had fallen behind the crowd that was running back. So she was pretty much alone when she saw Grace. Grace, the fair girl who had sat beside her on the bench in the sun who had been almost well enough to go back to her job. Grace was on the other side of a wire partition separating two parts of the tunnel. "Oh, Grace," wailed Virginia. The girl stood very still and looked through the fence "But I thought you'd gone home," said Virginia. "Months and months ago." . " Grace stared at her ...
(Continued Monday)
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Drwinw eop7rth. IH. tar Kin J-.tu Sradic. Ine. Tort aoprrkl by Utrj Wri PuilUhed bj permission of Random Hons. Ise.
