Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 219, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 1 November 1946 — Page 2

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SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES FEIDAY, NOV. 1, 1946.

SULLIVAN. INDIANA

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A Home Owned Democratic Newspaper

Sullivan Daily Times, founded 1905, as'the daily edition of the 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. Sullivan, Indiana Telephone 12 Entered as second-class matter at the Posloffice, Sullivan, Indiana National Advertising Representative: Theia and Simpson, 393 Seventh Avenue, New York (1). N. Yr Subscription Rate: By tarrier, per week , 15 cents In City By Mail In Sullivan And Adjoining Counties Year $3.00 Six Months $1.75 Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 30 Cents By Mail Elsewhere Yearx $4.00 Six Months ; $2.25 Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 40 Cents All mail subscriptions strictly in advance

DEMOCRATIC TICKET

STATE OFFICERS ; ' U. S. Senator j M. Clifford Townsend Secy, of State Harry E. McClain Treasurer . . . Thriothy P. Sexton Auditor George Barnhart Supt. Public Instruction I Edward S. Furnish

Clerk of Courts JacK JS.aie Geo. W. Long Supreme Court Judge .'. Geo. W. Long Appellate Court Judges Harry

H. Stilley, Fay Leas, Warren

Martin, Matthew E. Welsh.

And He Asks For Re-election .In the October 30th issue of the Daily Times, Gerald W. Landis, candidate for Congress, makes the following assertion in his advertisement : "Butter has been scarce and butter prices have been high due to OPA bungling and New Deal shipment of 321,645 pounds of butter to foreign countries the first seven months cf 1946. (Department of Commerce figures.)" ; In other words, in 212 days, 312,645 pounds of butter was shipped. If divided' up among the 130,000,000 people of the United States (our population in 1946 is even higher than that) it would mean that each day, due to foreign shipment, we gave up .00001 of a pound of butter per person. Now, it would be interesting to know whether that would be a smell of butter to each of us, let alone a, taste. It is a sorry spectacle when a member of Congress, who is representing the 7th District and who is now asking the voters to again re-elect him, resorts to discussing the trivial .butter situation instead of discussing the vast problems now confronting the United States Congress. - We feel that it is a challenge to the intelligence of the people of Sullivan county. '

DISTRICT AND COUNTY

Congressman . - James E. Noland Joint Senator Jack O'Grady State Representative . . Ora Sims Prosecutor . . John Knox Purcell Clerk Earl A. Engle Auditor Hubert Sevier

Treasurer Cleve Lewellyn

Recorder Paul B. Owens Sheriff Harold Reynolds Cordner Stanley B. Jewell

Surveyor William L. Sisson Assessor . . . Charles L. Davis Jr. Assessor Hamilton Twp Dillon M. Routt Com'r 1st Dist . .' Garland D. Scott Com'r 2nd Dist E. Lowell Turpin Com'r 3rd Dist John R. Howard Co. Councilmen J. Walker McHugh, Herbert Edwards, Lexie O. Robbins, Owen W. Collins, John P. Curry, Marion H. Bedwell, Hugh P. McCreery.

REPUBLICAN TICKET STATE TICKET United States Senator William E. Jenner Secretary of State Thomas E. Bath, Jr. Treasurer of State Frank T. Millis Auditor of State ... A. V. Burch Superintendent of Public Instruction Ben H. Watt Clerk of Courts Thomas C. Williams Supreme Court Judge James A. Emmert Appellate Court Judges Wilbur A. Royse, Donald Bowen, Harry Crumpackcr, Floyd S. Draper.

DAILY TIMES OPEN FORUM Letters and Interviews of a suitable nature and proper nnwsMpcr interest are sought lor this columu, the edUor reserving the right to censor or reject any article he may deem is not suitable and proper. Articles of 500 words wr less are preferred. All articles ;nt to the Open Forum must be '.ignd and address given. in order that the editor may know the rilcr, however, the writer's name will not be published if requested. Articles pubilslied herein do not necessarily express the sentiment of the Daily Times and this

Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On Creomulsion relieves promptly because it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel

I germ laden phlegm, and aid nature

to sootne ana neai raw, tenaer, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis

Captured Documents Reveal Break Between Hitler And Mussolini

WASHINGTON, (UP) Captured German documents have disclosed that Adolph Hit- ; lev " ntar olopmfi K.r fKo A II jnj '

invasion of Sicily and gave Beni- i to Mussolini a severe pre-break- ! fast tongue-lashing on the "un- i soldierly" conduct of Italian , troops.

The documents, made public by the State Department, sliowcd that the Italian partner of the Rome-Berlin axis was summoned before the one-time leader of the German state for a conference in northern Italy on July 19, 1943 nine days after Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's forces stormed ashore in Sicily. Their "conversation" consisted largely of a long and bitter har- - angue by Hitler who for perhaps the first time, openly expressed qualms about eventual victory. He had committed large numbers .of his own best troops to the Sicilian campaign and was .wavering toward a full evacuation as wiser than an all-out assault designed to push the invaders into the sea But he feared that "setbacks" on the "fringes" of the temporary German state would only add to his troubles at home a growing shortage of raw materials, uprising by partisans in the Balkans, heavy losses inflicted by the Russians in the east and even

COUNTY TICKET Concressman

Gerald W. Landis j paper may or may not asree with Joint Senator Otis Cook statement contained herein. State Representative I ........ Leslie Lyle Turner ; Edi Times

prosecuting Attorney Joe W. Lowdermilk Clerk of the Circuit Court James H. Ringer

Sullivan, Indiana Dear Sir:

TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES Hamilton Jesse E. Smith Jackson Gene Slack Jefferson Rush Enochs Curry Basil Hayes Haddon William L. Lanham Cass Gerald J. Usrey Gill ... Frank . McKinley Turman James Kennett Fairbanks Herman Drake

LEWIS

On the beginning of a family

Auditor .. Eugene L. Smallwood ' plantation. in the South GreatTreasurer Loren C. Harris Recorder Lorella Hallbeck ; great-grandtalher built a home. Sheriff Virgil L. Johnson; It was in Indian days- With no Coroner' Hud T. Hill j roads, not even horseback trails, Surveyor ... Paul T. Vermillion , no nails were available. Wooden Assessor Claude F. Tipton , pegs were substituted. Joints Assessor Hamilton Twp j were mortised and tenoned. In Leland Ferguson Great-granddad's time, the exCom'r 1st Dist. ... Alex Davison jpanded family demanded more Com'r 2nd Dist I rooms. Sawmills had arrived. Lawrence Huff Sawn lumber was obtainable. The Com'r 3rd Dist new general-merchandise store Ray Timmcrman : stocked barrels of nails that Co. Councilmen Mike Crowder, 1 came, up-bayou, by steamer. In Thomas K. Cushman, Samuel Granddad's time a cyclone struck. ' M. Springer, Phillip Hill, H. ; All the hoi)se was leveled save

A. Bland, F. M. Dukes, George the mortise-and-tenoned center. S. Shepherd. .Though this later had been plast'ered, even its plaster had not

TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES jbeen cracked by the tornado. Hamilton Harold Boone I THE OLD PIONEERS BUILDED Jackson Charles E. Sharpe I SOLIDLY. Curry Walter E. Thompson I . , , t Fairbanks Cecil Fuson ! As w. h their dwellings, they , Turman .... William W. Watson also built our nation wisely. With Haddon ..Loyd William Stafford , adequate-sized families they fillCass Ernest M. Edds ed with spaces between the Vir- ! Jefferson Leslie Jones ginia . tidelands, and, eventually, Gill E. B. Walters across the prairies and the

Rockies, to the Oregon and the California Coasts. Today weaklings among the pioneers' descendants, dominated by hyphenates, propose eliminating all immigration barriers. To allow our land to be invaded by a horde of immigrants from lowwage areas, would that not mean extinction of our present American stock? Very earnestly, ! CM. Goethe, i Sacramento, Calif. I NORTH BUCKTOWN

difficulty in convincing German natfal officers that he knew what he was doing.

He was perplexed lest a deple

tion of raw materials would "mean the end of the Axis' capacity to carry on the war," and specifically worried over north

ern Norway, where iron ore was transhipped from Sweden, nickel and "'copper deposits from Finland and Balkan copper and chrome.

On top of all this, he told II Duce, he was having trouble convincing the German ' navy tltat ;he proud cruisers should be used for troop transports and that naval rifles should be stripped from battleships for use in coastal defenses. Flaying Mussolini for the "unskillful and unsoldierly" conduct of Italian troops, he recommended that the Italian leader use "barbaric severity" in improving their shortcomings. He was particularly incensed by the Italian slowness in repairing bomb damage to airstrips and tbte heavy loss of German fighter planes through inept handling' by ground crews.

Four gases make up natural gas: methane, ethane, propane aiiu butane.

Mrs. Jennie Boston is visiting relatives in Terre Haute. Mrs. Martha Pierson and Mrs.

Ruth Ladd and daughters visited Mammouth Cave . during their vacation- i I ! 1 Mr. and Mrs. Ed Lawrence and 'Mrs. Anna Pigg transacted, busi- 1 ness in Terre Haute Friday j Mrs. Mary Grunell and daug'h'-i 1 , ter and Mr. and Mrs. Herb' Kr.ight spent Sunday in Indianapolis with Mr. and Mrs. Karl Hemerly. Mrs. Stella Givens of Terre ' Haute, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs- Harris Wheaton. Mr. nnfl Mrs. Judge Criss of Terra Haut, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Criss.

Mrs. M?ry Wolverton and dau- i ghter of Prairieton, were week- i end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Wolverton. The Masons held their annual ! Lads and Dads meeting at tha ! Mafpnic Hall Saturday night. A clilic'ous supper was served by the Eastern Star chapter. Music 1 was furnished by the Swigart family, the Coalmont quartet and 1 Robert Riehey- The address was given by John Knox Purcell of Sullivan.

MAY'S KIN AT GARSSOM HEARING

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! Mrs. Mack Mayfield and daughters spent Thursday with her mother, Mrs. William Moore of Dugger. Mrs. Ada Stanton of Linton,

spent the week-end with Mr. i

and Mrs. Wendell Miller and family and attended the revival at Mt. Moriah. Mrs. Lawrence Brewer and Mrs. Claude Foster visited Mrs. Bessie Prose at Sullivan Saturday morning. j Mrs- Sam Dickie returned to her home in Toledo, Ohio Friday after spending a few days with her mother, Mrs. Lillie Hale, and other relatives. 1 . Mrs. Donald Pahmier and Mrs. Owren King visited Mrs. Wayne Cox in the Vincennes hospital Monday. Her condition is reported improved. J Mrs. Thede Justus and sons and -Mrs. Lawrence Brewer reI turned home Sunday after spend

ing the school holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hale. Mrs. Dennis Fordice was called to Mt. Vernqn, Indiana Monday due the serious illness of her

! mother, Mrs. Redman,

Miss Helen Waverly and Rev. and Mrs. Harry Karns were supper guests Wednesday of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pahmier and sons.

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OOSDER

"Sullivan County's Historical Theatre Home"

Nov- SUNDAY & MONDAY Nr

I do i what I please,

when

I please 1

W' ' ' if6 . CQiOMBIA

ImRj Rita umm

WMS tmeits

Great as i her powerful dramauc portrayalgreat, too, is this dancing Hayworth singing 'Put the Blame on Mame"!

FORD

FOR SALE USED ARMY 2 buckle COMBAT BOOTS & ARMY SHOES first class condition The Army Makes The Best We Dye Shoes and Ladies Purses Any color to match your dress Shoe Repairing, any kind. BENNY DE FRANK SHOE REPAIRING Established 23 Years 1st Door South Index.

Glenn

GEORGE MACREAOY - JOSEPH CUIEI Screened by MylW PinonMt Produced by Dincfid bf VIRGINIA VAN UFP CHARLLS VIC03

Plus "Tiny Terrors of the Timberland" Specialty, Comedy, Latest News & Selected Shorts

Tonight & Saturday DOUBLE FEATURE

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1 JSICSlA

starring ROY ACUFF

And hii Smoky Mountain Boys 'i A REPUBLIC PICTURE rius Lpte News, Comedy & Added Shorts

Sat Midnight 11:3Q P. M. Admission 30c Jinx Falkenberg Jess Barker in "Talk About A Lady" Plus Comedy & Late News

TIME: 7:00 P. M. Fri. & Mon.: 6:00 P. M. Satj 2:00 P. M. Sunday

THE SPECIAL GRAND JURY investigating the Garsson munitions combine heard testimony from A. J. "Little Jack" May, nephew of Rep. A. J. May of Kentucky, and his wife, who worked for the Cumber-' land Lumber Co., a Garsson subsidiary for which the congressman acted as agent. The couple is shown on the steps of the District Court building, where the jury 13 in session, (International),

NEW TIRES Just received shipment of popular sizes in passenger -car tires and tube.?.

G3BB3-

QTATIAN

MOBIL GAS AND MOBIL OIL CARLISLE, INDIANA Acros from High School Open 7 A. M. to 9 P. M

PLUMMETING COTTON PRICES CLOSE EXCHANGES

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- ANNOUNCING ' Tl2 Opening On

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The Hunter Studio cf Porh ?it ::nd CnnimcrcjaJ Photography. . Loc-:l at 201-2-3 Sherman Building;. Here v.e !?'jpc t? meet many old friends and form .'lientbMps. rt shIl be nur pleasure to endeavor ,to give 1 u Ksod cci vice friendly service at prices fair to you .vd. fair to us. Ms and Mrs. John J. Hunter

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$ $165

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5 -"V 1. : s B s 0 2-YR HIGH . 1 V A 1 39.13c LB. 1g i bale sop m. I v . ac i - ;

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WiTH WniTE HOUSE PLEDGES for federal action in an attempt to stanlltee the soutlVs biggest crop of cottont the nation's major ml ton evrlmti"" r'r.-r.i down aftfr a month of falling prirps. TIip rbT-t above shows the trend of spot prices on the Nbw XotU exchanga during October at a time when warehouses, as the one aUyve, ure tiauiJutU viui uie uiiuuriaui ciun. (Inteinottonun

Si 4

Frozen Foods - Fresh Fruits and Vegetables QUALITY MEATS

Fresh Shoulder Hams and Loins Country Dressed Chickens for Baking Bulk Candies and Fresh Cookies Angel Food and Devils Food Cakes Sweet Rolls Jelly Rolls Navy Beans, Northern, Lima and Red Bsans Country Sorghum Miracle Whip Dressin g

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SAVE

Phone 456

Free Delivery

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