Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 187, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 18 September 1946 — Page 3
SULLIVAN, INDIANA
.Rlill ISiill jBiliil
For smooth, even Power all year 'roundYou've got to hand the prize to Phillips 66!
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Greasing Porter's, ctric Supplies ' ' NEW LEBANON Mrs. Alice Parks came Sunday Irom Chicago to visit her Vpther, Mrs. Bertha Piei'son. I Jack McClure of Indianapolis, Wnt the week-end here with is wife, Helen. VMr. and Mrs. Orville Riggs. nd Mrs. Marjone Bailey and liildren, Kay and Clark, were fi Vincennes Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bohemier Sid daughter, Sallie Lou, of rreelandville, visited Mr. and Ws. H. J. Siner Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Shorter and laughter, Pattie, of Sullivan, horter and family one day last Cf "iwrs. Eslie Stedman returned liome triaay trom tne union Iospital in Terre Haute. She is fnproving nicely. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Roberts fad sons were dinner guests unday of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
REELECT CONGRESSMAN GERALD W. LANDIS
! W f i, ,v y I Ac, v- 'A " i Ik ' i I v I,
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REPRESENTATIVE GERALD W. LANDIS A Stalwart Champion of Constitutional Gov't. An Experienced Legislator. A Champion of the Old Folks. An Authority on Post-War Problems. A Veteran of the First World War.
Phillips engineers and scientists control Phillips 66 match it to your driving conditions for greater efficiency each season of the year! Try this "laboratory-controlled" gasoline. See if it doesn't mean smoother operation in hot weather, quicker starts in cold. Get it at the orange-and-black sign of "66".
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. ' INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 18. (UP) Hogs, 500; steady; 100 lbs. up at $16.25 ceiling. ' Cattle, 300; calves, 300; yearlings about steady; few good yearlings, $17.50 $19.00; common and medium, $12.00 $16.50; cows less active;, weak to 25c lower; few good fceef cows, $14.50; common and medium, $10.00 $12.75; vealers active, mostly 50c higher; good and choice, $17.50 $18.50; common and medium, $11.00 $17.00. Sheep, 1,000; fat lambs active and strong; good and choice, $17.50 $18.50; medium and good, 514.00 $17.00; slaughter ewes from $6.00 $8.00. Want a Squash-Shaped Egg? WEST HANOVER, Mass. (UP) Albert Lundin is trying to find a use for squash-shaped eggs. By crossing two lines of fowl he developed a cross-bred hen, and one of the first eggs it laid was in the shape of a squash.
TODAYS MARKETS
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Lubrication Service sAuto Accessories Merchants Meet Jewelers Here This Week-End The Sullivan Merchants will swing into action again next Sunday when they tangle with the revamped Schmidts Jewelers of Terre Haute here. The game Sunday ' will be the j last game of the season before i the Merchants and Little Betty Miners play a two-out-of-three post season series. Since the Western Indiana League schedule is finished the visitors have loaded up with new life in their line-up and will be out to avenge a loss suffered . here earlier in the season. Frankie Coreleski will hurl l'for the Jewelers with Joe Shesitock doing the receiving. Mana'ger "Sailor" Ferree, of the Merchants, will send Big Tom Osborne to the hill and Bill Thewlis behind the bat. Game time will be 2:30 P. M. College Has Rare Beaver Skull , TIFFIN, O. (UP) One of the i few rare giant beaver skulls in existence, dating 25,000 to 50,000 years ago when mastodons and giant sloths roamed the United States, is owned by Heidelberg , College. AFL Seamen
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pits! ft-." mMVi $i i(S&mm p wj
CRANES OPERATED by members of the AFL enter a New York pier, which is being picketed by CIO Maritime men, right. The CIO's National Maritime union called 90,000 members out on
SULLIVANJ)AILY TTMES - i -
BROADWAY MIGHTS BY AXEL STORM
Distributed bj The case of the amazingly versatile Ben Hecht rates top consideration in the events of the Broadway week. Represented at the moment by four dramatic creations which point in as many directions as the faces of Shiva or the dial of a compass, Hecht displays the protean virtuosity of a ventriloquistic contortionist playing a Stradivarius at the North Pole and a kazoo at the South Pole while, at the same moment, seeking to straddle the Equator. If this seems to be something out of Merlin's bag of tricks it is! Let's take a look at the evidence: At the Royale Theatre is to be seen a revival of the. Hecht-Mac-Arthur "Front Page," which after a 12-year absence is as rowdy and profane, as hilarious and sus- ' penseful as ever. It is, indeed, the newspaper play to end newspaper plays and is the first hit of the new'season. At the Republic is a film titled, "Specter of the Rose." Here Hecht was turned loose with a small budget and an old ballet theme to turn ou a picture packed with psychopathic overtones and undertones. Hecht, for reasons best known to himself, went ."arty" and his product was greeted with mildly-muted "boos." At the Radio City Music Hall, Hecht, teaming with thrill-master Alfred Hitchcock, has turned out "Notorious" a thriller-diller that left critics pitching their hats in the air. But it is on Hecht's "A Flag Is Born" that our attention will be focused for the moment. Here is Crusader Ben Hecht with all stops removed and with anger and passion in his heart pleading for the opening of Palestine as a homeland for the Jewish nation. Presented for a brief season at the Alvin Theatre, under the auspices of the American League for a Free Pc'cstine, of which Een is one of the most volatile leaders, here is. a rousing pageant and a ringing protest against the plight of Europe's homeless Jews. Hecht, like the members of the League, has only bitter rebuke for those who kick the Palestine issue around in "agendas." His heart is with the underground fighters of Haifa and Jerusalem and it is his Intent that the Jewish refugees get to Palestine; that they be furnished with boats to take them there and that the so-called "ter HERO CHAPLAIN
THE ONLY CHAPLAIN to receive the Medal of Honor, Comdr. Joseph T. O'Callahan (right), bids goodbye to Capt. Albert M. Van Eaton in Boston after the former was discharged. Father O'Callahan won the nation's highest honor for heroism aboard the carrier Franklin. (International)
Pass Through CIO Picket Line in
WEDNESDAY, Sept. 13, 1948
hint Feature, lov rorists" battle it out with the British to a show-down. And since the presentation of "A Flag Is Born" is aimed at raising funds for this purpose while carrying his message, the props surrounding its production are a bit unique for Broadway. Thus, wrapped with our program, we found a photo of one of the ships bought with the funds, we found a blank check awaiting our signature, while, on the rear wall of the theatre, was to be seen a large placard declaring flatly: "Give us the money and we'll get them there." Similar blunt challenges were to be found in pamphlets handed out by the ushers and il would not have surprised us if th doorman had turned out to be i recruiting officer in disguise. From which it will be gatherec that this is a propaganda drama It's a little more than that In hia pageant, Hecht has taken a typiI cal wandering Jew out of the ages and to this patriarchal old fellow come visions of the Biblical days of Saul and David and Solomon. Driven from Germany, stumbling tragically toward Palestine with his fragile wife, old Tevya tells of the persecutions, the humiliations and the homelessness of his people. Through him, and a young refugee he meets, Hecht also vents his scorn on well-heeled Jews of the world who have stayed silent that they might stay safe while their brethren were dying by the millions at the hands of persecutors. Finally Tevya, who is played magnificent ly by Paul Muni finds himself in one of the most spectacular tableau scenes Broadway has looked upon in some time. The world diplomats are sitting in a huge Court of Nations and upon theii political bickerings and their agendas the patriarch heaps his contempt and his indignation. He leaves the world to face its conscience. All of this is excellent theatre and Grade A pageant; but any pageant is bound to be uneven J and to shift in mood and interest. it is in this variation ot tempo and scene that the production's weakness lies. For poignant and heart-breaking as it often is, it turns out to be more touching than shocking. And Hecht undoubtedly intended to land a knockout. It is, however, written by a man who has great pride in the achievements of the Jews throughout the years and who would have Jews hold their heads . high in pride with him. ; LEAVES NAVY
strike to seek parity wages with those won by two AFL unions in an eight-day strike that brought on the present shipping crisis and wound up in a down-the-line AFL victory. (International)
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And Stop Dosing Your Stomach With Soda and Alkalizers Don't expert to get real relief from headache, sour stomach, Ras and bad breath by taking soda and other alkalizers if the true cause of your trouble is constipation. r t t In this case, your real troublo is not in tne stomach at all. But in the intestinal tract where 80 of your food is digreted. And when the lower part gets bloditli food may fail to digest properly. . Whut you want for real relief is something to "unblock" your lower intestinal tract. Something to clean it out effectively help Nature gtt back on her feet. Get Carter's Pills rignt nuw. Take them aa directed. Thev gently and effectively "unblock" your digestive tract. This permits all 6 of Nature's own digestive juices to mix better with your food. ' Vou get genuine relief from indigestion so you can feel really ffood again. Get Carter's Pills at any drugstore 2.M. "Unblock" your intestinal tract for real relief from indigestion. Community Must Do Own Planning, Says Blucher LAPORTE, Ind., Sept. 18. Walter Blucher, executive director of the American Society of Planning Officials, outlined his conception of minimum social facilities for a community today. Blucher spoke on "A Professional Planner Looks at Planning" at the Northern Conference on Community Planning at LaPorte today. The gathering was charge of Kenneth L. Schellie, director of the Council, and Stephen C. Noland, of Indianapolis, Council chairman, presided at the luncheon session. Blucher said: "I believe there are certain minimum social facilities that every community in the United States ought to have. I think that in a country like the United States, and in a state like Indiana, which has a considerable amount of wealth, there are certain minimum facilities you ought to have and which I say you must have. "These are a decent supply of 1 water, a decent method of dis1 posal for your sewage and of your garbage, and decent educational, recreational arid health facilities. If there is any community in Indiana which has a reason of being an urban community, fnd cannot afford these things, then the State of Indiana or .tfte: United States ought to provide these minimum , facilities." Blucher said that too many plans are prepared for the community and too few are prepared by the community. He added: "The only way we are ever going to get effective planning is not by leaving it to George or the mayor or the council, but by participation of the people of the community in the making of plans. "Public participation doesn't mean some specialist making plans and bringing them to the service clubs or other groups for approval. The people of the community, through citizen organizations, actually have to help make the plans. You have to get to the citizens and explain what it is that is being done, why it is that they propose to do one thing and not another." Necktie Flood in Johnstown JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (UP) Earl McKillop has 210 military ties, autographed by former servicemen from eight states. McKillop started collecting ties when a group of servicemen held a gettogether in his restaurant. Flood of Dogs, Too JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (UP) John W. Daubert collects dogs. He has 1,000 ornamental miniatures and a live one, a cocker spaniel. New York City
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Are You
The last day of registration is October 7th. Today is September 18. That leaves just 17 more days for you
the general election November 5th. Don't let time run out on you. World War II veterans who have not voted for a year or more or who were not registered before entering service should be certain tq check their registrations along with those persons who have moved either from
one precinct to another or from one county to another. Voters will not be allowed to vote in the general election on affidavits as they did in the primaries. So. don't put it off any longer. Check today with the county clerk or one of the county registration officers and be sure you are qualified to exercise ycur voting privileges November 5th. --'"- jH
Blueback Salmon in Comeback ASTORIA, Ore. (UP) The blueback salmon, once given up as lost to the Pacific Northwest fishing industry because of flood control and darri projects, is reappearing in large numbers, fisheries officials reported.
IS A GOOD HABIT TO START YOUNGI There's nothing like a workshop to give a boy a lot of fun, but woodworking, like every other hobby makes strong demands on young eyes. Make sure the light is right! If every parent would take a few minutes to check over his lighting fixtures and bulbs and correct faulty equipment a lot of future eye trouble could be saved. Remember there is no substitute for good eyes, and it costs only pennies to safeguard the eyes of those you love. See your dealer for complete, safe, lighting information. PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF INDIANA, INC.
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SPECIALS
35c TOUGH, DUR- V US $2.00 Qualified? FIRE FLAYS NO FAVORITES SPRINGFIELD, O. (UP) Springfield firemen and policemen staged a benefit baseball game at the municipal stadium. I While they played, fire destroyed the garage and auto of one of the firemen.
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