Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 221, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 5 November 1946 — Page 2

1'AGE TWO

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES- TUESDAY, NOV. 5, 1946. SULT2VAN, INDIANS

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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 Postoffice, Sullivan, Indiana National Advertising Representative: - Theis and Simpson, 393 Seventh Avenue, New York (1). N. Y, Subscription Rate: By carrier, per week 15 cents in City By Mail In Sullivan And Adjoining Counties fc'ear $3.00 Six Months . . -. ; , $1.75 Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 30 Cents ' By Mail Elsewhere Vear . 14.00 Six Months $2.25 Month (with .Times furnishing stamped envelope) .... 40 Cents All mail subscriptions strictly in advance

HHITLOCK-FIGG VOWS READ OCTOBER 24

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kromer are announcing the marriage of their . daughter, Erma Jewell Whitlock, to James Gordon Figg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Figg ,of Paxton.. The vows were read October 24th in the newly furnished home of Mr. and, Mrs. FiggThe Rev. Jack Anderson read the vows of the single ring ceremony. Their attendants were Janet Figg, sister of the groom and Robert McCammon, friend of the groom and Mr. and Mrs. Frank ivromer, the bride's parents. The bride wore a black wool suit with aqua accessories. , Her

corsage was of white and pink i carnations and baby breath. 1 Miss Figg wore a grey dress- ' makers suit with a corsage oit pink roses. 1 Mrs. Figg is a graduate of the Carlisle High School with the class of 1945. She won a special merits scholarship to Indiana University, a trophy for the most outstanding senior and a medal for making the highest grades lor gills in her four years of high school work. 1 Mr. Figg graduated from the Carlisle High School with the class of 1943. He is a veteran of World War II, serving 23 months overseas- He was awarded - the PUrple Heart and the Bronze Star. Mr. and Mrs. Figg will reside one mile east of Paxton.

DAILY TIMES OPEN FORUM

MRS. ROOSEVELT AND FALA VIEW ' UN WREATHS 1 onnnaDBaiigBEEHisBBisiraassBESBHHa

Letters and Interviews of a

suitable nature and proper news

paper interest are sought lor this

column, the editor reserving the

right to censor or reject any article he may deem is not suitable and proper. Articles of -i' O words or less are preferred. All articles sent to the Open Forum must be signed and address given, in order that the editor may know the writer, however, the writer's name will hot be. published if requested. Article published herein do not neccssaiily express the sentiment of the Iaily Times arid this paper may or may not agree with statement contained herein.

THE 1947 Indiana Calendar o : a - . : pictorial REVIEW I ' . of :beautiful"indiana $1.50

This unique descriptive account of Indiana's scenic beauty will make ideal Christmas gifts. Place your older now with

QUAYS

MARKETS

THE

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TIMES

. INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 5. (UP) Hogs, 5,000. Good and choice barrows and gilts, all weights, $23.50; sows largely $22.00. Cattle, 1,600; calves, 500; i,0501b. choice steers, $28.00; good and rhcicc lightweig-.i t:ecrs, $20.00 $24.50; good beef cows to $15.00; good and choice vealers, $21.50 $23.50", common and medium, $13.50 $21.00. Shesp, 2,000; early sales good choice fat lambs, $20.00 $21.50; good and choice slaughter ewes, $5.50 $6.50. Traffic Expert Nods LIGONIER, Ind. (UP) A registrar of drivers' licenses from Lima, O., was fined 011 a traffic charge at Ligonier. Charles O'Conncll pleaded guilty to reckless driving and passing on a hill. He paid $9. Peach Landing OK BOISE, Ida. (UPJ-j-Linda Orr, p?ed three, leaned cut of a windaw too far and fell 17 feet but everything is peachy- She plopped into a basket of peaches and escaped with a cut on the cheek and a black eye.

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Located in Rooms No. 201-202-203 SHERMAN .BUILDING' We solicit liot onlv your gift tiortldits btit yitit continuous patronage ih all phfttogrhic woik, including copying and eniargndi; of your old ?hd shighly treasured portraits. See us aboiit itJ

4 November 194G Dear sir, "The old pioneers" (avers Mr. C. M. Goethe in the Times Friday) "builded solidly." The innocent reader, coasting along on his effortless argument, gathers that the reason the old pioneers builded solidly was due to their being of fine old stock. Mr. Goethe then denounces the elements which would permit further immigration to "extinguish" this fine American stock (quotes: ". . . .a horde of immigrants from low-wage areas" would mean "extinction of our present American stock.") Tt ic intrpctinff in pnnciHpr

hew a stocK, originally hardy and rugged and able like our old settlers, can (according to Mr. Goethe) degenerate into a greenbouse potted plant that now requires constant care and shelter against any outside forces which want to corrupt it. Putting aside all consideration of Mr. Goethe's criterion of the pioneer type of man (whether or not a man can build a house with wooden pegs instead of nails), we come next to the question of where did these original settlers come from? these original old pioneers whom Mr. Goethe . so enthusiastically applauds? Apparently Mr. Goethe (like too many other reasonable citizens) shrinks from the almost universal assumption that the old pioneers of this country were themselves immigrants. Ip fact, from Mr. Goethe's outcijp, we might be led to believe that the old pioneers were not immigrants at all. but were the divine fruits of a kind of wholesale immaculate .conception arising from the meeting of the pure air of the prairies with the clean sweet waters of American creeks and streams. Either this, or that they I sprang out from under an upturned stone which, all evi- I rterice weighed, is by far the less ' fantastic of the two. Now, this view of the origin of present-day American species may be flattering to a certain type of ego (though I am quite happy, to have had an ordinary viviparous birth): but historically, of course, it is open to doubt by mean old materialists like your mean old undersigned. Kbwevcr sordid a proposition to face, Mr. Goethe, you very likely got here the way I got here by descending generatively from an ancestor who moved to this country from another country Models Organize

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...i'iNG THE GRAVE OF HER HUSBAND at Hyde Park, N. Y., Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt walks with I'.' a. pet scottie of the late president, past the wreaths laid at Roosevelt's grave by United Nations ,- ---:ci (International Soundpboto '"spooky does her part in national CAT WEEK

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THEATRE

"Sullivan County's Historical Theatre Home"

Tonight & Wednesday

tgftyi DANGEROUS WOMAN..,

DESPERATE MEN,.. '

defytn bullets and noost

for love and . loot!

na urns .. tMl-i), ,

EVELYN KEVES WILLARD PARKER LARRY PARKS EDGAR BUCHANAN

Scrteflpliy b Milvin Levy ind FrtMiS Edwitds fififjtj ty MICHEL KRAIKE - pw t, GEORGE SHERMAN

Plus COMEDY & LATEST NEWS TIME, 7:00 P. M.

to Anderson by the serious ill- Hallie, of Sullivan, spent a few

ners of her sister, Mrs. Hattie days last week with Mary and Cushman. Fylura Foutz. Mrs. Irene Dudley y i Mr. and Mrs- Gene Steel and and lary Elsie were supper I Michael Eugene, Mr. and Mrs. ; guests Friday night. Junior Foutz and children, Pam- Mrs. Dorothy Chennoweth ela Sue and Barry Steven, were sPent Tuesday with her sister, ' dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and 1 Mrs. Ruth Borders.' " , t ; Mrs. Durham Foutz. Mr. and jMrs. Walter Steel and Patricia I JERICHO called in the afternoon. ! " ' ,

George Jones and John Arm-,

THE ANNUA! CELEBRATIOM of "National Cat Week" Is taken seriously by Spooky, who boasts some Persian background. The feline mother calls on Topsy, a dachshund mother of eight puppies, who i3 too ill to care for her litter in Santa Monica, CaL Topsy watches, above, as Spooky feeds the eight little dachshunds, " (International Soundphoto;

I Mrs. Dorothy Chennoweth and son, Dale, Mrs. Ruth Borders and daughter, Genie, visited relatives 'in Lynn, Indiana several days last week. ! Ramona Triptett spent a few days last week with her grandmother. Mrs. Fmmn Harris I

Mrs. JUlly Dennon, Mrs. Ruth I Mr? and Mrs. . Tony Dudley v' of

Nichols and Mrs. Fern Monk Sullivan, visited Mrs. Bedwell, called on .Mrs. Annie Patton j Sunday. ' Monday afternoon., i John Sheffler was in- Dugger Mrs. Mary Fish and daughter, recently.

strong were in Dugger Saturday. Walter Sheffler, . Siv was in Dugger one day last week. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Robbitis :

wire 111 uuggcr recenriy. ' ( j

vi,iai i; xxuim vioiieu in lyu-

Eer Recently. )

,1 number and arrancement of let-

(yes, perhaps a low-wage area,.'ters m a man,s name or the geo.

So much for the Way we got here, kiddies. Now as to whether this constant immigration has tended , to "extinguish" the American stock: Has it up to this point? If Mr. Goethe says yes, then what hope is there? Is all the world outside the U. S. to continue to go down hill, growing more depraved with each-generation? And if Mr. Goethe says yes, then what does he say in the face of such evidence as immigrants Einstein, T. Mann, E. Bok,

BEECH GROVE

graphical location of a man's ori- I Rev Donaldson will hold a regin, has nothing to do with a . vival meeting beginning Monday man's fitness to become an Am- n;ght, November 4th at Union erican. Chapel- Rev. Chauricey Morin One thing more: This business vil1 assist. with ' the meeting , .,, , Everyone is welcome. Come and of building a house with wooden nelp make thig meeting a success pegs instead of nails. May I re-1 . . . . mind the gentleman from Cali- j- Mr. and Mrs Gene Steel and fornia that if our modern stock 1 f"1' Mlchael Eu8ene- of Terre no longer sees fit to 'prove its!Haute were week-end guests of

ineir parents, uu. aim

CAR OF Osl Treated Stoker

picneering ability by attempting to build houses with vooden

Mrs.

Durham Foutz.

pegs, neither does it any longer Mr. and Mrs. Hubert iripieu

. . .... 1 1 u:u-., D.r.

or the thousands of first and sec- Prve a woman to De a wncn Dy u uiimi,, ,,,,., c..j.., ond generation Americans who, throwing her, bound, into the Monty James and Linms Eugene recently died to defend Mr river (as our illustrious strong Mr. and Mrs. Ray Harvey and Goethe's too - much - advertised ancestors had a habit of doing), son, Charles Ray, were dinner fine American stock Perhaps all this comes under the guests Sunday of their, mother, heading of "Times Change" or, Mrs- Emma Harris. Mr. Goethe of California, so "Time Changes." ' Mr. and Mrs. Carl Vaught of long as your argument against Shelburn have moved to the immigration is based only on the Sincerely, farm of Mr. and Mrs. Jerd Easter, fear of pollution, we cannot even jack T I Mrs. Nora Crowe and Margaret consider your case. We know: too ' called on Mrs. Annie Patton well that the type and amount of , P. S. May I anticipate you? No, Sunday afternoon, pigment in a man's skin, or the I am not a Communist. Mrs. Bill Bosstick was called

COAL

ON TRACK WITH THE MINE SITUATION AS IT IS TODAY IT WOULD BE WISE TO ORDER NOW!! Also Gar of Lump Coal On Trach

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PHONE 14

Antaodf Actress

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Bosed on the powerful, besMelling novel of pagan against Christian in ancient Syria

.TrT,r 330

BY J. S. PERKINS , - ILlUSTRATtONS BY NEIl O'KEEFFf I .'

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ROSALIE DRACKERT, dancer and free-lance model, as spokesman for the newly-formed San Francisco Models association, is asking for a minimum and unifom wages and a centralized hiring system to improve the quality and reliability of models. She !s asking for a $2-an-hour minimum wage. . (international)

. "I've heard rumors," Cynthia told me.

THE morning of the assembly of the Syrian pontiffs found me confronted with an obnoxious task. I had to go with the actress to Daphne and remain with her through- . out the ceremonies at the Temple of Apollo. As we rode in her carriage, she asked, "Do you suppose the Colonel and Marcus will go out to Daphne for today's ceremonies?" ,. , "I haven't the slightest idea." ' ."Well, I have," she said. "I think they will be at the bishop's house. I've heaixi rumors that they have been going there." I tried to get her off of this dangerous subject. Then, at last, from a vantage point, we watched the procession of pontiffs headed by Caesar. A throng of priests and priestesses moved out Herod's Way. In their wake came thou- .

A throng of priests and priestesses moved out Herod's Way.

sands of votaries, and the broad colonnaded highway was a moving mass of color. There were the priest and priestesses of Cybele-Attis; of Atargatis-Hadad; of Isis-Osiris; there was the pontiff of Rome's masculine and military faith, Mithraism, and the followers of the Aphrodite-Apollo cult. "The Christians should have been compelled to join the procession," Cynthia sneered. "Especially the Bishop of Antioch." ' ' Though I was tempted to tell her that if Ignatius had been . in the group of pontiffs now toiling up the road to Daphne her theatrical mission to Antioch would be over, I kept my counsel. , ' Soon, at the great white temple with its marble statue of Apollo, great throngs witnessed an unprecedented scene

They shouted as Caesar emerged.

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a score of priests of nearly as many faiths in ministrations at the same altar, all praying for the health and life and glory of the Emperor. Caesar himself offered a sacrifice. The people shouted as he emerged from the semi-darkness of the structure into the hard brilliancy of the November sun, and in the noise

I knew that the Emperor believed all the people thus gave sanction to his coming war in which so many of their sons'fl would die. As he came down the steps in his spotless robes he seemed &

a guu, emu waiuuia wuuugij uie aur a goa. Ana l also knew that the rejection of his aims by the Christians and 4 the absence of Ignatius, the one pontiff he hoped to win to his cause, still rankled in his heart " (Continued tomorrow)

Erawiaa coDjrlrh. 1918, by Sine Feataret Syndicate, Inc. Text copyright, 1946, by the Bobbt-Merrfll Company.

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