Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 216, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 29 October 1946 — Page 2

iGE TWO

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES TUESDAY, OCT. 29, 1946. BULLTVAFT INDT5N2

' A Home Owned Democratic Newspaper

Sullivan Daily Times, founded 1905, as the daily edition of the Sullivan Democrat, founded 1854

United Press Wire Service ieanor Poynter Jamison Manager and Assistant Editor ryant R. Allen ....... Editor aul l3oynter Publisher jblished daily except Saturday and Sunday at 115 West Jackson St. illivan, Indiana Telephone 12 atered as second-class matter at the Postoffice, Sullivan, Indiana National Advertising Representative: . Theis and Simpson, 393 Seventh Avenue, New York (1). N. Y, Subscription Rate: y carrier, per week 15 cents in City

. By Mail In Sullivan And Adjoining Counties ear . $3.00 ix Months $1.75 onth(with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 30 Cents

. " By Mall Elsewhere ear J $4.00 ix Months ............. $2.25 lonth (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 40 Cents All mail subscriptions strictly in advance

DEMOCRATIC TICKET

STATE OFFICERS

REPUBLICAN TICKET I AfAI STATE TICKET LV WTtJ-J United States Senator . . Mr. and Mrs. E.' Murray SanWilliam E. Jenner His1.v ,ft tndav for jackson-

U. S. Senator Secretary of State , iU "j

M. Clifford Townsend I Thomas E. Bath, Jr. v,uie' 5?" w,e "lcy T"

Secy, of State Treasurer of State .,.,,,.- mmr n.tt

. . Harry E. McClain j Frank T. Millis ' formerly lived . Timothy P. Sexton Auditor of State ... A. V. Burch To1 Jf1s- , If,

Superintendent of Public Instruc- j John ciaggett. J10" Be" H" Wait Mr. and Mrs. Sandusky are go-

.1

HOOSIER

-SHELBURN THEATRE

TUESDAY '& WEDNESDAY

OCT. u0

Treasurer

Auditor George Barnhart Supt. Public Instruction .

Clerk Courts:::: JacSKaT I . " . Nomas' C Wiliiams the- for the benefit of Mr.

Geo. W. Long Supreme Court Judge Supreme Court Judge j James A. Emmert Mr and Mrs. Frank Love of

leo. w. L,ong Appellate Court Judges Wilbur Indianapolis, spent the week-

i Appellate Court Judges Harry H. Stilley, Fay Leas, Warren

j Martin, Matthew E. Welsh.

DISTRICT AND COUNTY

I

A. Royse, Donald Bowen, Har- en(i wjth Mr. and Mrs. George ry Crumpacker, Floyd S. Dra- y Brown of east of the city, perMr. and Mrs. John Brown of

Shelburn,' were Sunday guests of

COUNTY TICKET

Congressman . . James E. Noland Congressman

Mr. and Mrs. George W. Brown.

iTfmi III! IW " " r---. .

fiwf.WIU BE BASED

onrx" ' ' IA

i Joint Senator .... Jack O'Grady ' craia w. iancus . mr. ana Mrs. w. ti. uavies oi i State Representative .. Ora Sims Joint Senator Otis Cook Bloomington, Indiana, spent last

Prosecutor . . John Knox Purcell iatc representative . . work m i crre Haute witn Airs. Clerk Earl A. Engle Leslie Lyle Turner B. F. Lance who is at the home Auditor Hubert Sevier Prosecuting Attorney of her daughter, Mrs. Charlas Treasurer . . Cleve Lewellyn ' Joe W, Lowdermilk Cooley, who is seriously ill. Recorder Paul B. Owens Clerk of the Circuit Court . , ...

Sheriff Harold Reynolds James ti. ttmger ivJla' ""- Coroner' .':::: :'stanleyB. Jewell Auditor .. Eugene L, Smallwood f lJrl TJ' Surveyor ..... William L. Sisson Treasurer Loren C. Harris varied ,Mr . Chailes Cooley SatAssessor I.! Charles L. Davis Jr. Recorder Lorella Hallbeck urday. Mrs. J. H Gadbe r y of

Assessor Hamilton. Twp Sheriff Virgil L. Johnson ouiuvu.., w j

: Dillon M. Routt coroner nua i. mu Mr and Mrs James E UUer.

lit tn

It Mra

WMSm

"WHAT IS THIS world mmm to?"

Monv parents ore making the same mistake'

Mrs. Blake did trying to keep their Boys and

fllrlt innarent thru innnrnnre. ThU ?(nrv was rinned

' from the pages of every-day life. It will awaken you.

Com'r 1st Dist Surveyor

Paul T. Vermillion

back went to Indianapolis yestsr-

Garland D. Scott Assessor Claude F . Tipton , v . Mr TIttprhark Pnter

Com'r 2nd Dist Assessor Hamilton Twp. . ed the Vctcrans Hospital at Ft. E. Lowell Turuin Leland Ferguson Dsi,m) TJarrisnn for trratmont.

Com'r 3rd Dist Com'r 1st Dist. .... Alex Davison Mri uttcrback returned to Sulli-

John R.Howard womr na uisi. yan lagt nj ht

Co. Councilmen J. Walker. Mc- Lawrence nun .

Hugh, Herbert Edwards, Lexie Com r 3rd Dist. Pvt. Paul Berry who is stattonO. Robbins, Owen W. Collins, Rav Timmerman ed at Scott Field, spent the John P. Curry, Marion H. Bed- Co- Councilmen Mike Crowder, week-end with his mother, Mrs.

well, Hugh P. McCreery.

TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES Hamilton Jesse E. Smith

Jackson Gene Slack

Thomas K. Cushman, Samuel Mary Berry.

M. Springer, Phillip Hill, H. , A. Bland, F. M. Dukes, George Mr- and Ml"s- Dud1fy Sr-

S. Shepherd.

spent the past week in Alexan

dria, Indiana the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Dudlay Jr. and

the

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w .. -M .z. ma mmm m m.- sm.- tr..

,"D!D YOU HAVE A NICE TRIP. JOAN?"

TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES

Tjtj! ..-u tt u- t t ... TT , , . riaiitfmpr npv awn snpnr

jeiiKtson .... .... rvusu jnutus riamuton riaroia Jtsoone -c---- - ,

Curry Basil Hayes Jackson Charles E. Sharpe wetK-cnu m xiuuai.s w.ui Haddon ..... William L. Lanham Curry Walter E. Thompson thoir daughter; Helen M. Dudley Cass ..... . : . : . , Gerald J. Usrey ' Fairbanks . .' Cecil Fuson and Garnet Hale and family. Gill Frank McKinley Wurman .... William W. Watson,-, ' Turman James Kennett Haddon . . Lovd William Stafford

Fairbanks

Herman Drake

With The Colors

RESTORATION SUNDAY: Sunday, November 3rd, has been desigtialed bv the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. as a time to give and j pray for the moral and religious restoration of the world. . . , .

Overgrown Triwk. froMcm BROpKI4NEt Mas-s. (UP) It's cos tin?, this town $3,175 more V-r itfi-rriTd to buy a' new 100foot firo laddrr tniok. The town discovcied vtc: lb" 'truck arrived that it -wis too Ions to fit

in the- garage. Carpenter are: fl'.rnad. Tho job required about a building an. extension. ' year. -

Crocheting: As Is Crocheting j JOHXSTOWX. Pa. (UP) A CovUeman cf the crochet hook ';ince way back when, Fred Kabcrkorn smile3 proudly on his Is tost ei oation--a full-sised bed5.;'fed twirleti from 21 miles of

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pope of Terre Haute, R. R. 3, have received word that their son, Sgt. James M. Pope is on his way home from Korea. Sgt. Pope is expected to arrive home about November 9th. He is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Pope of Sullivan, K. R. 5.'

Cass .. Ernest M. Edds

Jefferson . Leslie Jones Gill E. B. Walters

Good for Evil

Mr. and Mrs. Dean Moore announce the birth of a son born October 24th at the Mary Sherman Hospital. He weighed six pounds and thirteen ounces. He has been named Michael Brent. '

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I09AIS MARKETS

, INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 29 (UP) Hogs 10,000: market not established. Ct.ttt. 2,200; calves 500; 1,090 lb. -steers at 'now all-time )iigh if $33.00; scvu'al loads good to

choice steers $23.00 $24.00; com- ; mon and medium yearlings $13.00 $18.00; good beef cows $15.00r $17.00; good and choice j . vealers $22.00 $23.00; heavy slaughter calves $19.00 down. Sheep 2,500; good and choice fat . lambs $2o,.oo y24.00; top $25,00; good and choice slaughter .ewes $7.00 $8.00; common and medium $6.00 $7.00. j

I

. V.

i

JACOB DESHAZER of Madras, Ore., one of the Doolittle raiders who ppent years in filthy Jap prisons, and his wife enter their veterans" housing unit home at Seattle, where they are preparing for missionary work. The couple's destination is the same Japan, where Deshazer hopes to repay good for evil. (International)

THE 1917 Indiana Calendar A PICTORIAL REVIEW of BEAUTIFUL INDIANA

DAILY 11m OPEN FORUM

$1.50 This unique descriptive iccount of Indiana's scenic beauty will make ideal Christmas gifts. Place your order now with THE SULLIVAN 01? TIMES

Letters and Iir.ervtevt'S of a 1 .suitable nature and rr"P?r newspaper interest are soujlif Jor this column, the' editor ''reserving the right to censor or reject any article he may deem is not suitable n:fl proper. Articles of 509 words or less are preferred. AH articles put to the Open' Forum must he. .isifrt ami adrrrttss given, in or

der' that the r(litr m.v know t.V u rUM'. ' hvrvr, the writer';, name will not bp piiMMiPd il t'q'u-i'Sl'Mi. v Articles pub;i;if-d , hi'tnin tin tot necessarily express the sen!!netii uf the Daily Times and tM paper may or may not agree witli latenifnt nonUined hrrfin.

EAD THE ADS

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" l- k it ' i ' V v f" ' - '

Before you buy, see

Sullivan State Ban!

Sullivan, Ind. Branch Bank Carlisle, Ind.

Bflef on the powerful, bsf-selling novef of nagnn cgainst Christian in ancient Syria

BY I. R. PSRKIMS IUUSTRATIONS BY NEIL O'KEEFFC

&nUozh Actress.-: V , mtm .

lliM MjW kKLPl

Just C's-o;1 t 1 .f 9ssviw 'W r it " m k-'- - it iv?'CJii fi.v .

- "The gods shake the earth," she said.

WE were worried that the Christians persisted in meeting despite the ban on unlicensed assemblies. "Isn't there some way you can forestall Galli?" Marcus asked Cornelius. i "Not without exciting suspicion," Cornelius said. We finished our meal deep in thought and left. As Fannia and I paused on the bridge I again felt the span sway with a faint shock. Fannia gripped my arm. "The gods always shake the earth-before something of great importance is to happen," she said .. , Sunday, the Christians' Lord's Day, was bleak and foreboding. The Lebsnons off to the south of Antioch were veiled in gray nft and the city itself was blanketed in fog. I remained indoors, taking refuge in the" poems of Horace, reading again the melancholy lines, ."All must be left-

four Nubians carried our litter toward the church . , .'

lands, home, beloved wife All le behind when we have done with life I thought of Rome; of the pathetic lines on so many of the gravestones along the Appian Way; and then my thoughts turned to the strange Christian cult I was helping to destroy, a people with high faith that there is something beyond the cypress laid upon the grave. Cynthia came for me well after dark. "My Nubians and litter are at the dooE " she said. "We will join Galli and his incites right in front of .the bishop's house." I donned my cloak and we left. The night was so dark that an extra slave with a slow-burning torch had been procured to go just in advance of us. We crossed the river and entered the town. The flares along Caesar's Way did little to light up our path.

A torch-bearer went before us.

The stones were slippery and there was considerable lurching by the litter bearers. "What a fine night for the Nubians to slit our throats," I remarked. Well down toward the turn in the street we sighted other torches and soon joined Galli and his band, heavily armed. y They also carried blacksmith tools, iron levers sharpened at one end, great hammers and thick wedges. "You see how punctual the famous actress is," Galli said to his men as we got out of the litter and stood in the circle of light of the torches. "We should all be." "Then let's lose no time entering the bishop's house," Cynthia remarked, staring at the unlighted church and the stone house beside it. "We may have to break down the door..." (Continued tomorrow),

Drtwingf copyright, 1946, bj King Futurea Syndicate, hue. Tsxt oopyrigM, 1949, bj tint Bobbs-MerrlU Compter.

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