Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 215, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 28 October 1946 — Page 4

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SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES MONDAY, OCT. 28, 1946. $

Game State Imports Turkeys SEATTLE (UP) State game department officials have imported wild turkeys to add to Washington's already abundant wildlife population. One hundred birds, hatched from eggs donated by a game farm operator, are being released in arid, rolling Klickitat county.

OPPOSED RUSSIA OR VETO DEBATE

Candidate For Co. Treasurer

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Loren C. (Fuzz) Harris Republican nominee for the office of Sullivan County Treasurer, was born and reared in Turman Township of Sullivan County. He graduated from the Graysville High School in 1931. He is married to the former Anna Lois Knox and they have two sons. Mr. Harris is widely known throughout the entire county, Doth in his community activities and the business world. He has officiated basketball games throughout the entire Wabash Valley and this section of Indiana. For the past twelve years he has been a business man in the City of Sullivan and by this

business experience through serving the public

and front acquiring the much needed education to personally conduct the business of so important an office, he is adequately Qualified to do so, . ' lie solicits the support ci each and every voter ii'nd pledges it elected to serve you helpfully, honestly aniT efficiently at all times. Paid Pol. Adv.

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CONFERRING DURING A SESSION of the U.N. General Assembly at Flushing Meadows, N. Y., are (1. to r.) : Senator Warren R. Austin, head of the U. S. delegation; Sir Hartley Shawcross, Great Britain; and V. K. Wellington Koo, China. They opposed a move by Russia to bar debate on the veto power of the Big Five. The matter has been retained on the General Assembly agenda for future consideration. (International)

Italian Flood Kills 40, Injures Over Thousand ROME, Italy, Oct. 28 (UP) Rescue workers counted at least 40 dead, more than one thousand injured, and thousands homeless today following a violent weekend rain storm that covered two Italian islands na dthe Tyrrhenian coast of Italy's mainland near Leghorn. Thirty-three persons were killed and a thousand injured on Sardinia where the worst damage occurred. Authorities said thousands of cattle were drowned and sections of the main line railway washed out when the Masseu River flooded its banks near the Sardinian capital,

Cagliari, and left nine feet of water in the suburb of Elmas. NEW SUITS George A. Ellis, Zylpha A. Ellis vs. Betty Chastain. Complaint to quiet title. Allen and Steen Acceptance Co. v3. Guy Achcraft. Complaint on. note. John Sutch vs. Sarah Elizabeth Belle Pirtle. Petition for appointment of guardian on account of infirmity.

HigK Steaks

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READY MIXED CONCRETE Delivered in Sullivan 4 Bag Mix Per Yd. $8.50 5 Bag Mix Per Yd. $9.00 4'z Bag Mix Per Yd. $8.75 5H Bag Mix Per Yd. 9.50 6 Bag Mix Ter Yd. $10.00 CONCRETE BLOCKS Smooth Face 18c Each Above price is for 8 x 8 xl6" block. , Rock Face Blocks, Bullnose Corners, Partition Blocks 4 x 8 x 16" and Line Blocks 8 x 4 x 16" also available. CALL OR WRITE CARL A. NEWLIN Phone 20 Hutsonville, Illinois

"WORTH WAITING FOR" (And Jnst A Short Wait, At That.)

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JACK HOFFMAN, 4-H Club member of Ida Grove, la., ia richer by $42,600 following sale of T. O. ; Pride, his 1,200-pound grand champion steer, to a Kansas City meat packing company. Steer cost -$35.50 a pound, (International

IN MEMORIAM In memory of our loved one, Staff Sergeant Alonzo Abel, Jr., killed in action Octooer 28th, 1944 while serving with the 324th Infantry's 44th Division of the American Army in France. "Till memory fades and life departs.

He will live forever in our

hearts; Time takes away the edge of grief. . .

But memory turns back every

leaf." The Abel Family.

MONROE'S Maytag Service

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Sullivan

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THE

BY AXEL STORM

fDislribateU by KJne Featurt. Inc.!

In the annual Broadway race for critical acclaim, Jose Ferrer's "Cyrano de Bergerac" wins by more than a nose. As the Schnozzola Durante of dear old Gascony (circa: 1640 to 1635), Mons. Ferrer turns out to be a fellow who not only can "chew the scenery," as the saying goes, but can blow irridescent bubbles from the resultant gum. The result is that, at this moment, Jose Ferrer is the most talked-about and written about Broadway figure with the single exception of Eugene O'Neill. Ferrer is an Actor (capital A) who was cavorting- through the farcical antics of "Charlie's Aunt" a few season ago, only to bob up a short time later as an unsually capable "Iago" in "Othello." The notion of reviving, staging, directing and starring in "Cyrano" took more than -. passing courage, since the Walter Hampden performance and presentation had become part of recent theatrical history. But take the chance he did, snapping up the Brian Hooker version of the classic here and there, giving a grandiose flourish to scenes and sets and, finally, giving to the role of "Cyrano" a new and exciting eloquence. Leave us face it: "Cyrano" is, was and always will be "ham." But this is Olympian "ham" the best the theatrical shops are likely to offer. Over periods of time, your reporter has considered "Cyrano" a classic which every ' generation should seeperhaps a day or two after "Hamlet." It is for the ages and Mons. Ferrer's achievement adapts it for today. Such general cheering as one has not heard in many a day rises from the Critics Circle, as the result. His capacity for mingling the poetic with lust swashbuckling, his swagger and tingling swordplay, add up to elegant theatre. k

In fact, at a time when Broadway has more revivals than an old Billy Sunday circuit, "Cyrano" injected new life into sagging show-shops. Of the others dragged in from days agone, Oscar Wilde's "Lady Windemere's Fan" offers something to look at but the listening depends entirely on the individual. To your correspondent, "The Importance of Being Earnest" is the only Wilde piece worth digging out of that writer's collection. Dressed and staged by the Cecil Beaton, who is quite a guy in London and Hollywood, it's something of an antiquarian's dream and a dressmaker's delight. Young Mr. Beaton's decorations for one of the current ballet groups have drawn little artistic enthusiasm in these parts. In "Lady Windemere," however, he has garbed it in a manner which no doubt would have . met the enthusiastic approval of the late Mr. Wilde. With such players as Cornelia Otis Skinner and Penelope Ward, the lines are given the most expert handling. Then there was "Lysistrata." Here's a piece many centuries old that has a way of bobbing up after each war. And this is understandable, since it relates to the gals of Sparta and Athens who grew weary of waiting at home while their husbands and lovers went to the battlefields and, so, went on strike. Readers may recall that it was not easy to keep the lonely hearts in line if and when any males showed up. But in this particular production, it was impossible to keep the performers in tune with their play. Also, in telling the tale of these women who vowed to remain aloof from men until the wars ended, the director was determined to put a discordantly loud accent on "sex." The results are syifiulajjy unfortunata,. -

CABINET

ISTER'S WIFE 'AT-WORK'

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SURGEON SLAYS TWO, KILLS SELF

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SULUVAN tNDIAf How To Relil i'Bronchim

i Creomulsion relieves promp'l cause it goes right to the seat 1 I trouble to help loosen and I ! perm la,den phlegm, and aid il

to sootne ana neai raw, tenaf flamed bronchial mucous il branes. Tell your druggist to se a bottle of Creomulsion with th derstanding you must like the wi quickly allays the cough or you to have your money back. 1 CREOMULSIOl for CousKChest iColds, BronchiH

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EXPIiESSING THE SS'T1AEHT that things done by oneself are well done, Mrs. Emmanuel Shinwell, wKe of the British Minister of -Fuel and Power, scrubs the entrance to her home in a London suburb. She does all the family's shopping and housework each day of the week. (International)

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Mr. and Mrs. Clate Gatlin were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alec Shafer Friday evening. Bob Scott left for Ord, Nebraska Wednesday on a hunting trip. Mrs. Emmaline Miller was in Terre Haute Saturday. ,Mr. and Mrs. Nolan McCammon and children of Hammond, visited Mr. and Mrs. Russell Scott recently. Word has been received here by relatives of the serious illness of Harry Douglas of Chicago. Rev, Lester N. Abel spent the past week in Washington, D. C. attending the U. S. Army Chaplains Convention. Mrs. Duane Scott was in Sulli

van Friday morning. Claude German was in Terre Haute Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Marts attended a banquet of the Bankers Association held at the Terre Haute House the past week.

INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. Z

(UP) Hogs 13,000: good a

choice barrows and gilts,

weights, 24.50; early bulk gd

and choice sows 23.0023.50,

Cattle 2,000; calves 600; g and choice steers and heif, light and medium weights, 21 28.00; choice around l,125i steers 30.00; bulk good 19.C 23.00; choice heifers 24.0025 , good to choice 20.0022.25; gl' beef cows 15.0017.00; comij and medium 10.50 14.50; got and choice vealers 22.002311

common and medium lo.oi

sneep z.ouu; gooa ana cnoi

fat lambs 21.0023.00; medii'

and good 18.0020.50; slaugh ewes 7.007.50; top 8.00. 1

MARRIAGE LICENSES Harold Hayden, Fairbanks

l, larmer ana juanita lioggt:

St. Louis, Missouri, at hon.e.

John Waiter Sheffler, Sulli

It. 5, farmer and Barbara Ell

Murdock, Linton.

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Republican Candidate RAY TIMMERMAN For COUNTY COMMISSIONER 3RD DISTRICT Sullivan County Election November 5, 1946.

(Paid Political Adv.)j

A StfALL CALIBRE RIFLE with a skeet-shooting attachment is examined by Detective George Erody after nationally-known surgeon Dr. Frank H. Lasher, 63, had used it to kill his wife, his mother-in-law, himself and wounded his son, Douglas (inset), in their home in Garden City, L. I., N. Y. Lasher was said to be brooding over an illness which had interrupted Douglas" medical career after he left the navy. (International)

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TIMES

Galli said, "I will get them t! lid tllllB."

THE condemnation of Herza was considered a personal triumph by Cynthia and Galli. They began to Work on their next plan, surprising the Christians at secret worship. Cynthia made it plain that she did not believe Colonel Cornelius would track them down. "I am beginning to think he is in sympathy With those fanatics," she said. I was still with Cynthia when Galli came in. The talk quickly got around to the Christians. "I am going to dig them out of their hiding places," Galli said. "I will get them this time without fail." - They agreed that the first day of the week would be the. time to invade the bishop's cellar. I was to accompany Cynthia on the hunt. I kept quiet but I doubted that she could find the hidden stone ... . l Jeft them still dxinking ana conversing and went to my

I mei rannia at tne bridge well after dark.

quarters. The loyal Fannia was there. "Marcus and the colonel will join you at the tavern in the.'Street of the River," she said. "Why can't I go with yoixl." "Impossible, Fannia." "Marcus doesn't think so. I asked him. He wants me to come." She kissed my forehead. "I, love you and Colonel Cornelius and Marcus very, very much. And I hate my mistress and Galli." Fannia and I did not leave the Palace together. I met her at the city end of the bridge well after dark, and, arm in arm, we turned into the Street, of the River. When we were seated with Marcus and the colonel, -1" told them of Galli's plans for catching the Christians iivillegal assembly on the first day of the week.. "Cynthia's memopfes are too, Vague. Galli won't be able

"Herza might purchase his freedom' Cornelius warned. 1 t to find the entrance to the crypt," Marcus declared. "Not unless someone who knows how to get in tells him," the colonel said. "Herza might purchase his freedom thjt way," he added soberly. The idea was a shock but we had to consider it. It was an ugly situation. If Herza told what he knew, we migflt trade places with him. But Cornelius had taken some precautions. "I sent Herza to Seleucia with my most trusted aide," he said. "At least he can't talk until he's aboard ship. The next thing to do is to warn the Christians that Galli and his vigiles are going to try to find them." , . "Then," I said, "they have.been worshipping secretlj; since the closing of their church?" "Yes. And they will do so the day after tomorrow. M i (Continued Monday