Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 212, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 23 October 1946 — Page 5
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Sullivan, Indiana
SULLIVAN DAILY. TIMES--
PAGE FIVE
f Quit paying rent and own yoni
home. Special bargains on property! on Installment plan. Also farms for sale. W. T. MELLOTT
NEW SUITS ; Regional Agriculture Credit Corp. of Washington, D. C. vs. Claude Smith. Complaint on note. - ' William L. Hunter vs. Linus Rehmel. Complaint for damages. George W. Booker vs.. . Noel Pigg. Complaint for damages.
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Reelect Congressman Landis (Member of House Committee on Un-American , Activities) . '
t lie Warns America of Dangers ot Communism
We have our choice between American Christian principles
. or Communism. The danger of Communism to America is real;
it is Imminent. It threatens everything for which our boys have
!beeu fighting. It can happen here. Anything can, happen any
where at any time'if cur citizens will not organize, fight and take
the trouble to vote. It happened in Russia when about 200,000
Communists took , over Russia in 1918. Today we have 50,000 , Communist members holding cards. We have 500,000 fellow travelers and 150,000 under-ground workers In America. These fellow travelers are more dangerous than Communist members. Among Communists in this country there are many who be. came such out of an original sense of justice, but who are now most unhappy that they belong. Communism is being subsidized
I by many cf our best people and laughed off by many others
who persist that it cannot happen here. The CIO-Folitical Action Committee is one of the most dangerous organizations in America. The Communists are workling with this group in the coming election,. The Communist Party will be ready for action in 1948. The CIO-Folitical Action Committee boasts of having 6,000,000 to spend in the 1946 election. Some of this New York Communist money will be spent in Indiana to try to defeat the Republican Members of Congress. The voters of Indiana and America will decide at the polls in November whether or not the Commuuist-CIO-PAC is going to run the country. ' '. The New Deal has coddled subversive activities too long in
America. It is time for all Americans to wake up. If necessary, 1
we should double the forces of the FBI. We should remove the reds from the federal payrolls immediately. These subversive groups want to take over our churches, schools, labor unions, movie irdustry, radio industry, transportation and business institutions. They would like to regiment our farmers and workers. Today we need the help of every American and every patriotic organization to protect our teir.ples of liberty. We should rededicate ourselves to bur God, to our country, and to our homes with the inspiration of Lincoln's words when he said, "Many free countries have lost their liberty and ours may lose hers; but if she shall be it my proudest plume not that I was the last to desert her but that I NEVER deserted her." , , Paid Pol. Adv.
SOCIETY ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT OF FRANCES SOUTH Mr. and Mrs. Earl South of Carlisle, . Indiana announce the engagement of their daughter, Frances, to James M, Weaver, son of John A Weaver of Pitts
burgh, Pennsylvania. Miss South , attended Indiana State Teachers College at Terre Haute where she was affiliated
with the Epsilon Delta sorority
and Central Business College in Indianapolis. She is now employ
ed as secretary to Bowman Elder
in Indianapolis.
Mr.. Weaver attended Duquesne University in, Pittsburgh, prior to forty months service in the Army where he held the rank of First Lieutenant. He is now a reserve officer, and is employed by the Veterans Administration in Columbus, Ohio. No date has been set for the wedding.
whefl he answers the phone. Thenhe discovered he had been an- r nouncing, without much pause between the words: "Hollywood -Wolfe!"
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I "A J , Itl 'feVtjOr, ' I y" HOLLYWOOD (UP) James 1 ? n,t44 S.,?-J''t'r) '-ivt 1 V L I D. Wolfe, desk officer at the po. &i4 fKXi ltr'$a. ! Iice stati0I here, says hfe wond-
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POINTING TO THE POLAR AREA on a large globe, President Truman discusses the possibility of future flights over the Arctic regions with members of the crew of the "Pacusan Dreamboat" who recently completed a nonstop hop over the top of the world from Honolulu to Cairo. Pictured in the White House with the President are: (L to r.) MSgt. Gordon S. Fish, Appleton, Wise; Ma:. R. B. Snodgrass, Seattle, Wash.; MSgt. Edward G. Vasse, Huntsville, Mo.; Maj. Jas. T. Brothers, Knoxville, Tenn.; Lt. Col. Frank J. Shannon, Philadelphia, Pa.; President Truman; CoL C. S. Irvine, St. Paul, Neb., pilot; Col. Beverly H. Warren, Omaha, Neb.; Maj. Jas. H. Kerr, Arcadia, Calif.; Maj. N. P. Hays, Seneca, Mo.; Maj. Jas. R. Dale, Jr, Wise, Va. (International)
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BOYS GIRLS' Bibbed Long
Pants Sizes 2 to'6x
$1.40
cod weight cotton ma
tpitel . . . sanforized for perfect fit . . . suspeiider
cnt.
Girls'
Coverall ? Striped "3iih:l.ni sunl'or-
ized , mtitLT nt . . . appliqped front . . . rll odces securely bound , . . si.:3s 2 . to 6 . . .
MRS. EVELYN DICK, 26. is shown leaving' a Hamjuon, Ont., cy.irt'room .after being sentenced to dio on the gallows in connection with the slaying of her husband, John, whose body was found hacked to pieces in a .'wooded; mountain area. , ' (International)
Hoss to Grand
PSI IOTA XI Monday evening the local chapter of Psi Iota Xi observed their annual art study. ' Several members motored to Terre Hauta and visited the Swope Art Gallery.. Miss Hazel Dodge, curator of the gallery, . conducted the group through the gallsry and made comments on the pictures which added greatly to their interest. The party then went to the McFall room at the new
fee were served. Plans were discusred for attending the Southern Province meeting which will be hsld at Franklin November 2. Mary Scott, local president, and Mabel Nowlin, publicity chairman, will be delegates. Two tickets for the Indianapolis Symphony were purchased by the oororiiy. These tickets will be used by patients of Wakeman's hospital. . ' ' ' , Those attending were: Kathleen Sims ' Pauline.. Stanbvgb Monn'Slnll,. Millie Taylor. ,Ma.y
Templcton, Ruth Thayer, Evelyn . Weathers,' Monty Weir, Marie I Yaw, Darlene Williams, TSllen ' Boyd, 'Peggy'" Enochs, Harriet ,
Ford, Mildred ' Frames, Blanche Hawtin, .Gwendolyn '. Hilgediek, 1 Eleanor Hoilman. Pat?y KeU'.y, ,
peat.t, Besky Martin, "Pauline Medsker, Beverly McCammon, Tinny .MeCuire, ' R'tth McVicker,
HE'S AN HONORARY MARINE
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Printed Coveralls Prlntca c:dh . , , oavtp hutlox c Email, kediuia and large
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Githf Pajamas
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M;.ibel Nowlin, Fr?nces Phillips, i
Am Pierre,' Mary' T-.'.vci.vn P'K'i, Detcv Rofj, Mary B. Scott, Norma Sevier, and Sarah "'Vfarlin. The committed in. charge. re; Pauline Medsker, Pauline Stanbaufrh, Norma Sevier and Millie Taylor. Churchill Says Russ' Have 209 War Divisions
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COMING UP SMARTIY In salute "rom hia bed in a New York hospital is 18-year-old Harold Bernhard 83 Brig. Gen. William E. Riley, ha--tidnal recruiting officer, USMC; prerents him with a plaque making the youth an honorary inemb:-r ot t!io Marine Corps. A few minutes after enlisting in the corps. Bernhard was walking the recruiting office when 'ah automobile jumped-the curb and smashed turn against a building. He loct nls k-ft. foot,. and doctors say he may lose ' tha' right foot Cv lo ex...., ..cat:o.i (International SounJphoto )
What Slakes Serge Shiny
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MlIiNEAPOLIS (UP) It's neitLcr the year 3 nor the 'dry .dean, ing that makes that blue serge suit shiny. It's just plain wear. A R co-opcraiive st';dy .by agricul-
; tural experiment stations in Wuv
"'-'that Russia hps more than 200 divisions on a vnr footing n t e rccupkd trrritorics of Europe "from the Baltic to Vienna tuid from Vienna to the '."At ".. Sea." . Churchill, vart!;r;e Primo Aimift-r a,nd opposition leader in Commons accused th3 Rusii of breaking iheir pledges in the Yalta Conference. He spoke in Commons -'ehats on foreign "affairs after Prims
nesota and; South Dakota proved
that age ad cleaning have little effect,'" on strength, thickness or ebUity tc stretch of serge matli.l. , ''.!,
Granddaughter Obliges
U'ar Service Rewarded
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COLUMBUS, O.s (UP) Aoproximately 100,. former inmaleo of Ohio penal institutions who served honorably in the armed forces during the war while they were on parole, will be granted executive clemency ' by ,' Gov. Frank E. Lausche.:, ' ,. ':
Old Folks Step Out
LONG BEACH, j Cal. ' (UP)
, ' Proving that "you're as;' old as ' ' - 1 , you feel," Mr. and Mrs. Al 'Schick ROS1CLARE, 111. (UP) Mrs. went' out to dinner ,on;'. Mrs. Nancy Smtthf 66, and J. C. Long, Schick's 60th" birthday and camn
PI. obtained a marriage license. home with a pair of nylons for
Minister Clement Atllce called from the bride's granddaughter, winning a .fast fox trot dance
upon the United Nations for ac
tion to prevent miru:e of ih
2 M veto on the UN Security Council. 4 . , -
Normafee Ilenson, 19, a deputy contest.
county clerk.
r -Thursday! .
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FROM HOSS OPERA to .-rand opera is a transition accomplish!, by Anne. Jeffreys, abbvcw.ho finishes a Hollyvyood film to Ica a for New York and an enga jerii-ii t in the lead role of "La Tosca." Ai- ' though . the pretty b!onde actress studied for grand' opera 'prior to her '.screen career, this is her -first ' operatic', singing . with , an all-pro-
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Obviously threes a crowd in this scene from "Two Guys From Milwaukee.'
-CgnJMy rorQjrtcc starring Dennis Morgan Jam Leslie and J.ick Carsoa'
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WEATHERSTPJPPING
For One Frort I and One Rear Door With Every $1W Installed Insulation Job Come in arid! ask for details of this offer and arrange for a fvae estimate of ths cost of
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