Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 30, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 11 February 1947 — Page 1

CLOUDY, WARMER Indiana: Increasing cloudiness with slowly rising1 temperatures tonight. Wednesday inostly, cloudy V'ith occasional light snow in extreme southwestern portion of stale. ij VOL. XLIX-No. 30 UNITED PRESS SERVICE SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES TUESDAY, FEB. 11, 1947. INTERNATIONAL PICTURE SERVICE PRICE THREE CENTS

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NAME PERSONS TO APPEAR FOR FEB. TERM OF COURT

It was announced today by the clerk's office that the following people are to appear at the Court House February 25th at 9:00 a. m. to serve as. petit jurors for the February term of the Sullivan Circuit Court. Atie Hauger of Shelburn, R. 2, Clayton Rumple . of Graysville, John L. Easter of Sullivan, R. 4, Harold C. Dowhes of Sullivan, R. 4, Walter Steele of Sullivan, R. 2, Stanley Daugherty of Cass, Dorean -Nichols of Fairbanks, R. 1, Margaret Ellerick of Sullivan, R. 5, Effie Hornbeck of SandLorn, R. 1, Lawrence W. Hutchins of Shelburn, R. 1. Kitty McGrcw of Sullivan, R. 2, Emory Hawkins of ShclbXirn. Robert L. Martin of Fairbanks, R. 1, Raymond T. Chambers of Sullivan, R. 3. Hattie Jeffries of Farmersburg. R. 1, Letty Hamilton of Carlisle, R James G. Forbes of Farmersburg, R. 1, Delbert II. Freeze of Shelburn, A. 1. Gilbert Latshaw fcf Car lisle, Robert Carlisle of Sullivan,

( n. o, uynuna anisic oi sum- j0n t. Ayers, Shelbyville, manal van, R. 5, Hubert G. Ileadley of gor of tho shelbyville Daily

Lanisie, k. z, u rea vision or 4. Ull UUlli.f A v0n, R. 1. Fairbanks, Carl Dixon of Sulli Fish And Game rClub Contracts Out For Year INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Feb n. YKnAfinll No nairJ rltih contracts for rearing of game birds A f!cK ,ill k viaraA V.V Iho till. Ai.Tl AlgllVU J IMV .Indiana Department of Conserva-; Cilon this year, Donald R. Hughes,' director of the division of fish and game, has announced. 1 t Hughes said Conservation club

Nsecretaries have been notified off

fine change in policy and said the vade the Community Gym to Jov& was necessary because of night for a second meeting with ( the acute fund shortage resulting the Golden Arrows after van"YtVert;i variance- of 315,000 .' free quishing the "formidable Shelrhunting and fishing "permits to. burn Panthers, 32-30, last Friday I veterans. ' . I night. I Pointing out that the program, The first contest between the

Yy which millions of fish and Arrows and New Lebanon took , yundreds of thousands of quail place in the Wabash Valley sec- j J nd pheasants have been reared tional played here January 17. tid released in past years by The Tigers won this encounter, conservation clubs under state 27-21, and went on to cop the Antract, cost the division some . tournament here the next night. 1 .1,000 last year, , Hughes said, I In view of the Tiger's record "There simply is,, not enough this season and their upset vicnoney available to carry it on." tory over Shelburn, they will

iAunta auuiv M'v ivgui uitoa Y-of any action which may be takJ n by the Legislature to cure the

rvisions financial ills, additionjil money would not be available 1 time to meet contract obligasuiw. . ... . . . ... i Clubs will be provided with lay-old game, bird chicks for! Varing without compensation, ons. ...'. . . . ' . .'

j luetics saia, upon application.. Disabled Veterans ) Entitled To Tax ) Exemptions VA

r. Disabled veterans who are re ceivingV disability compensation ?re entitled to a $1,000 reduction any such eteran are also entitl ed to the same rights. Every vet'eran who N receives disability compensationis also exempted from payment of any and all poll tax. Veterans and widows who are entitled to exemption should procure a letter or cerWicate from the Veterans Administration and file it with the county auditor sometime between the fihjt day of March and the first Motiday ,:n May. , Requests for certificates can be nade at the Veterans Admin istration Contact Office, 415 Star Building, 601 Ohio Street, Tcrre Jflaute, Indiana. Lesion Post Doing Well p HARTLAND, Minn., (UP) The official 'population of Hart- ; land, Minn.,, is 224, and the membership of the Hartland American Legion Post is 223. Si AVERAGE NET PAID CIRCULATION FOR January, 1947 4515

Idaho Senator To Address Demo. Editorial Ass'n.

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Feb. 11 Senator Glen H. Taylor, Democrat, Idaho, will address the annual mid-winter meeting of the Indiana Democratic Editorial Association here Saturday night, Feb. 15, Robert P. O'Bannon Corydon, president of the association, announced today. The "Idaho Cowboy," as he is known in the U. S. Senate, will speak at the association's annual banquet in the Riley Room of the Claypool Hotel. In addition to members of the editorial group, Democratic leaders from over the state and Democratic members of the 1947 Indiana General Assembly, now in session, will attend. Mr. O'Bannon said, indications are that the attendance will equal or. surpass records established in pre-war years. The dinner will follow the an nual business meeting of the editors to be held at 2:30 p. m. Officers will be elected at the business session and the membership will adopt resolutions and act on proposed revisions to the organization's by-laws. Mr. u uannon, retiring nresij dent,' will be succeeded by Mar Democrat, Herbert Hi Harris, Greenwood, heads the general committee in charge of arrangements for the meeting. Other committee members are George Schwin, Rockville; Reid Hudler, Noblesville; Mrs. Vera Hall, Danville and Mrs. Eleanor Jamison, Sullivan. Mr. O'Bannon said the remaining list of committee would be announced within a few days. Maw. I nkonnn TV llCW LtCUClllUll 1U f lnwT JQ I rtn Clrm "IVaUe L,OCai WOl TnnirrKf R'flrt P M 1 OOlglll, O.lU r. 1VI. . New Lebanon's Tigers will inicuvc uic j.iuui da Xavvl ilea a gainst an Arrow five which has been weakened by resignations.. Arrfljws Lose in T. If. Friday night Gerstmeyer's Black Cats dealt the.. .Arrows a ........ T' .. . . 1 . . crusiuug oeieai in ine vranicia gymnasium, 54-23. - This game marked the complcte supremacy over the Arrows In basketball this year, climaxing losses to Garfield, State High and Wiley in previous games. Soutjiwood jumped into the scoring light in this game with nine points for Arrow scoring honors. He hit the basket three times from the field and once from the foul line. Hummell, I usually a constant scoring threat, I was held to but one point dur ing the entire contest. Coach Gordotl Keck used h mores them during the game, giving for future experience teams. ' The Darts were defeated by the Kittens, 25-20, in the curtainraiser Friday night. Airports at Sullivan, Linton, Bicknell and Brazil ' Jasonville, will be constructed or improved during the next three years, the Civil Aeronautics Administration announced today, according to a United Press dispatch from Washington, D. C. The CAA said that these projects should be undertaken on a priority basis as Congress appropriates federal funds to be matched by money from local sponsors. There are 93 of these projects in the state of Indiana. The Indiana list includes 29 which do not exist at present or do not conform to requirements for a Class I airport. Classes are based on the length of runways, ranging from . 1600 feet minimum for Class I to more than 6,500 feet for Class VI.

won jd 6jEKCIED OF U.S

ONE OF OLDEST COUNTY DOCTORS DIES LAST NIGHT

The death of Dr. Ernest Melvin Deputy last night at 11:30 o'clock at the family residence in Dugger marked the passing of one of Sullivan county's oldest medical men and the town of Dugger's most benevolent civic personali ty. Dr. Deputy, who for more than forty years had ministered to the sick of Dugger and vicinity, died quietly last night following a lingering heart condition of some four years' duration. Still his will to do for those who were in need kept him at his - practice until little less than a month and a half ago. Born August 5, 1877 on a farm near Paris Crossing in Jennings county, the son of Sylvester and Sarah Hudspn Deputy, both deceased, this noted Sullivan county physician came to Dugger in 1903 following his graduation from the Louisville Medical School and established his practice. At the time of deatli he was 69 years of age. Eminent in ; the eyes of his townsmen, Dr. Deputy was most active in church activities there, being for some time instructor of the adult class of the Dugger First Baptist Church. He was a Past Master of the Dugger Masonic Lodge and a Past Worthy Patron of the Dugger Order of Eastern Star, , He had served as president of the Dugger Bank during its establishment there and had held the same office on the Dugger public library board for which institution he worked diligently to secure it for the town. The beautiful park with picnic areas and playground facilities there were made possible by his real estate donation to the town. He was highly esteemed by his Sullivan county medical colleagues with whom he was associated in the Sullivan ., County Medical Society. He was also a member of the Indiana State Medical Society, was a fellow in the American Medical Association and was a member of the Wa bash Valley Aesculapean Society. He is survived by the widow, Mrs. Fletie Staples Deputy, whom he married in December of 1904; one daughter, Mrs. Corinne Adams of Whiting, Indiana; one son, Sherrill Deputy of Elkhart; seven grandchildren and a number of -nieces arid nephews. The body was taken to the M. J. Aikin &-Son Funeral Home in Dugger and will be returned to the residence ; on North Section Street there Wednesday -morning to lie in state and where funeral services will be conducted Thursday afternoon at two o'clock. Interment will be made in the Dugger cemetery. Junior High B.B. Fives Win Double Bill Over Fbanks Sullivan's Junior Hight Darts won both games over Fairbanks Juniors here last night in the i Community Gym. The Dart varsity scored a 35-20 win over their opponents while the Sullivan Dart B's clipped Fairbanks's Junior B's 22-14. Coach Harry Jarrett's Dart B's were led by Paul Brown, who connected four times from thefield and twice at the foul line to amass 10 points and scoring honors. He is a guard. Wayne Knotts, B center, followed Brown j with six points and Earl Cummings contributed four points to the Dart scoreboard. ' ' The final game on last night's card? saw the Varsity Darts win . their eighth straight triumph, a game which the Darts led all the way. Dick Morgan, forward, was the big torn in this fray with 14 points. Others contributing points i were Larry Harris, five; Don McClure, three; Stewart Moore, four and Vaino Grayam, five. The halftime score was 19-5 in favor of Sullivan. Chowning of Fairbanks, stood out for the visitors as the evening's high score ace. He hit for 15 of his team's 20 points. Coach Jarrett used 20 boys in! the second team game which I opened the contests. A game fs pending with Merom next week and another, with Graysville later. Coach Jarrett announced that plans are being- made for a Junior High school tournament,

I LATE NEWS I

RESUME WORK IN INDIANA INDUSTRIES . INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 11. (UP) Indiana's 23,000 weather-idled workers started back to Hoosier industrial plants today as a gas crisis eased as1 temperatures moderated. The mercury climbed up near the freezing point yesterday for the first time in four days. Temporary orders curtailing the use of gas by industry so that an adequate supply would be available for home heating during the zero weather, were rescinded or modified by many utilities.

OA. GOVERNOR DECISION DUE TOMORROW McDONALD, Ga., Feb. 11. (UP) The fate of Herman Talmadge's gubernatorial regime rested today with Superior Judge Waller Hendrix,'who plans to hand down a ruling in Georgra's dual governor wrangle tomorrow at 10 a. m. Counsel for Acting Governor Melvin E. Thompson completed arguments seeking Talmadge's ouster on the strength that the General Assembly had no right to elect a governor to succeed the late Governor-elect Eugene Talmadge. WILL INVESTIGATE STATE DEPARTMENT WASHINGTON, Feb. 11. (UP) The House Un-American Activities Committee will investigote whether the State Department "through connivance or bureaucratic red tape" made it easy for a Communist spy ring to operate in this country, it was learned today. I . ' ' A veteran committee member said the question will be explored thoroughly at the committee's next meeting slated tentatively for Feb. 19. .

PATTERSON URGES LILIENTHAL APPROVAL WASHINGTON, Feb. 11. (UP) Secretary of War Robert P. Patterson today urged speedy Senate confirmation of David E. Lilienthal as chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission. Patterson said the Army' always found Lilienthal cooperative during his administration of the TVA. CHURCHILL'S DAUGHTER WEDS TODAY LONDON, Feb. 11. (UP) Mary Churchill, youngest daughter of the former prime minister, was married today to Capt. Christopher Soames of the; Cold Stream Guards.

Teacher's Pay Issues To Get More Action

INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 11 (UP) A joint committee from the Indiana House and Senate announced today that it was getting ready to do something about the . major issues of raising teachers' salaries. The House and Senate Education Committee met jointly and a spokesman said . they wanted to "get something done" about the teacher pay bills pending in the 85th General Assembly. The committee will try to push all the bills touching on teachers salaries out of committee and herd them into one group for study. . . ' . . Meanwhile, the Senate passed a bill eliminating- the central Vote counting system used by seven Hoosier counties to tabulate the results of primary elections. The bill originated in the Senate and has now been sent to the Ho'use. In addition to eliminating the central counting law the bill repeals the wartime soldier vote machinery, extends the time for voting by absent ballot and allows political parties 30 days more time to fill vacancies on tickets. Central counting was authorized in a 1943 act for Marion, Vanderburg, Vigo, Allen, St. Joseph, Lake and Madison counties. Wm. Williamson Dies Monday P. M, William Williamson, 64-year-old resident of Sullivan rural route, died at the residence six miles northwest of the city yesterday .afternoon at three o'clock following an extended illness. Mr. Williamson was . born in Marion County, Illinois coming to Sullivan with his parents when he was two years of age. The remainder of his lifetime had been spent in and around Sullivan where he was active in agriculture and had for a time operated the Williamson Grocery at 10 East Washington Street here now known as the Dailey Grocery. He is survived by, the widow, Mrs. Laura Williamson; and two half-brothers, Gus and Ed Burton, both of Farmersburg. The body was taken to the Billman Funeral Home and was removed to the residence this evening where it ' now lies in state. It will be returned to the funeral home Thursday morning for services in the chapel at two o'clock. Rev. L. A. Donaldson of the Graysville Methodist Church will officiate assisted by Rev. J. M.. Smith of the Sullivan Pentecostal Church. Burial -win be made in the Merom cemetery.

Tumbling Club To Perform Again At Game Tonight ? . The Freshman Tumbling. Clyb -will again perform tonight at the Sullivan-New Lebanon basketball game be- . tween halves, it was announced today. . .. Sullivan h i g h school's band will 'accompany the girls as they ' perform the following acrobatic acts: . .' Pyramids, using the falling balances; stomach balances; back bend balances; flying angel balances; as-; sisted hand stands; head stands,' table stands; girls ; working in 'couples will perform difficult stands on ' partner's shoulders, and knee shoulder-stands. - The first appearance of '. this group publicly was held at the Sullivan-Linton game here Jan. 31 and was given a big ovation from the audience, w Tonight the following girls will be included in the program: Ruth Anderson, Betty Brown, Bernice Christy, Ramona Hummell, Anna Lou Morgan, Betty Peters, Joan Pinkerton, Opal Ridge and Rose Wade. Poultry School To Be Held Here Friday, Feb. 14 Sullivan County men and women are invited to attend the poultry and garden school to be held in the Court House Auditorium ih Sullivan Friday, February 14 from 10:00 A. M. to 3:00 P. M. W. B. Ward of the Purdue Horticulture Department will talk on

the better varieties of vegetables; to plant in the home garden, pest control, common vegetable diseases, and methods of storing after harvest. Melvin B. Flock, of the Purdue University ' Poultry Department, will talk on chick management during the morning and poultry pastures during the afternoon. His subject will cover care and feeding of chicks from hatching to maturity, His morning subject will be preparation of the poultry house, relative merits of various types of brooder stoves and litters, and what to do when the brooder house cannot be moved. His afternoon subject will cover the characteristics of a goodj poultry pasture, temporary , and permanent pastures, and colored slides on Indiana Ladino clover pastures. Both town and rural gardeners and poultry raisers are urged to attend this meeting.

CONGRESS ASKEO TO PASS HEALTH MSI) Iff Bill

WASHINGTON, Feb. 11. (UP) The Social Security Board asked Congress today for a nationwide program of Federal Health Insurance - including 1 disability payments to cover all wage losses caused by injuries. v In its annual report . to Congress, the board also recommended that all wage earners and all employers be included in the social security program. The board's recommendations were in line' with those iirged by President Truman for the past year. But the health plan was spurned in advance by Sen. Robert A. Taft (R.-O.) and three other Senate Republicans. They introduced a bill for a more limited health insurance program offering federal aid to states. Pairings for the Legion tournament, to be held here starting tomorrow night, were drawn last night at the American Legion Home north of the city. Six of the better independent basketball fives will meet in this tourney, first of its kind to be held in the county, and fans are promised plenty of fast and tricky hardwood activity. Tomorrow night Farmersburg and TTvmora will tnkf thf flnnr nf. 7:00 p. m. followed by Shelburn vs. Fairbanks in the nightcap. Thursday night the Sullivan Legion team will tangle with

LEGI TOURHEY OPENS toihw

nnor in the first eamft nnrt!i Iar sigmea planning.

r a - v " o the second tilt will be between the winners of Wednesday's contests. rFriday night the tourney will be postponed until Saturday due to. high school activities in the Community. Gym. Saturday night the losers of tho two Thurs day games will play a consola jj feature the championship confives, ' The players- entered in the tournament -are all required to be yftPrfns and members of their local Lesion Post. This tourney is a, sectional for the State" Legion tourney. The winners of. the county, tournaments, which must ; all be held before Feb.; 16, will meet in a district tournament to be held prior to March 11. The semifinals will then be held before March 23 and the state finals will be held on March 30. The time and place of the district, semi-finals and finals have not been set yet and will be announced later. Doors will open at the Community Gym at 6:30 tomorrow night. Cancel Scheduled Game Announcement was made today of the cancellation of Keek's Independents and the Shelburn American Legion basketball tilt originally planned for tomorrow night in the Shelburn gym due to the opening of the Sullivan County American "Legion Basketball Tournament here the same evening. The playoff for Keek's men and the Shelburn Legionnaires has been set tentatively for Wednesday evening, February 19th, same time and place, with he Shelburn Junior high school seventh and eighth grade teams presenting a curtain raiser duel. Mine Employee Hurt In Accident Sunday Afternoon , Claude Otis "Dode" Turner, 24 years old, of Farmersburg, is recovering at the Mary Sherman Hospital from a serious body injury sustained Sunday afternoon at the Blackhawk coal mine in Vigo county. Relatives today stated his hurts were suffered in a leap from a motor when, in some unknown manner his clothing became caught on the motor mechanism. He is en employee of the Cardox Corporation out of Chicago whose job it is to shoot air into gasfilled mines for clearance.

Truman

May Clasli On Rent Control

BRIMS FUEL CRISIS BECOMES IRE CRITICAL

BULLETIN! ' LONDON, Feb. 11 (UP) The government announced today that Britain was barely holding her own in a fuel crisis which has idled some 5,000,000 workers and warned that industrial blackouts might spread throughout the country within three days. 1 The fuel ministry reported that the first day's shutoff of power to, all but essential users, saved 22,500 tons pf coal or about one-third of the usual daily consumption. . LONDON Feb. 11 (UP) The wheels of British industry slowed toward a halt today and informed sources said the deepening fuel crisis may force a shutdown of power in those regions of Scotland, Wales and England thus far unaffected by restrictions which have thrown an estimated 5,000,000 workers into idleness. The fuel shortage confounded the labor government with a political crisis of growing magnitude. Conservative party membrs under tfie leadership of I w "n wurenm anguiy ed t0 attack the government for ' ineptitude, inefficiency and lack No end was in sight to the crippling power restrictions about one-third of British inwhich already have closed down dustry and left homes with only restricted ; heating and light. Record High Of I qI KfOdUCtlOn Coal rroductioi Hit in January TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Feb. 11. Exceeding any month's coal production in 1944, a record year for Indiana, the coal mines of the Hoosier state produced an estimated 2,585,000 tons during January,-according to a report of the Coal Trade Association of Indiana. ' i Labor trouble and car. shortage were at a minimum during the month with operating time maintained at practically all major mines. "A maintenance of the January production schedule through February will assist materially in the rebuilding of stock piles which were drawn upon so heavily during the November and December strike," stated C. C. Lydick, Managing Director of the Coal Trade Association. "Steam coal supply has been tight for some time .but with a continuation of the current production rote this condition will be improved." Indiana production in December 1946 amounted to an estimated 1,849,000 while in January a year ago the total was approximately 2,445,000. MAY DEVELOP PITT.P INDUSTRY IN ALASKA FOR MORE NEWSPRINT CHICAGO, Feb. 11 (UP) Secretary of the Interior J. A. Krug said last night that development of a pulp and paper industry in southeastern Alaska would save many small U. S. publications now' threatened with extermination by "newsprint anemia." Krug said timber in pub- ' lie forests there was sufficient to permanently supply about 25 percent of the present newsprint demand of the United States. HOSPITAL NOTES Admitted Feb. 10: Grace. Hiatt of 450 South Stratton Street, for treatment; Saxton Stickler of Paris route two, for treatment. Dismissed Feb. 10: Mrs. Irene Figg and son of Paxton; Lucy Maynard of 611 West Beech Street; Bob Johnson of J2 West Wall Street; Mrs. Frieda Boston of 429 North Main Street; Mrs. Kathleen Driver and son of Dugger.

.GOP

Reports Truman Will Veto GOP Rent Increases. WASHINGTON. Feb. 11. (UP) Congress got word today that President Truman might veto any bill calling for a general rent increase. Senator Glen II. Taylor (D.-Idaho) passed the word around .after ' visiting the president. He said Mr. Truman "is definitely opposed" to any across-the-board rent hike. Taylor said he "gained the impression that Mr. Truman nrobably might, veto" any bill authorizing one. If so, the president and Sennte Republicans are headed for a clash. A GOP-ruled Senate Banking sub-Committee is pelting ready to recommend just such an increase, according to Chairman C: Douglas Buck (R.Del.). ; The rent issue moved to the fore again amid these other congressional developments: The Senate Atomic Energy Commission heard a new burst of pros and cons in the increasingly hot fight' over the nomination of David E. Lilienthal to be head of the Federal Atomic Energy Commission. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee called Secretary of State George C. Marshall to a secret meeting Friday. Senator Wayne L. Morse (R.Ore.) said he disliked the closed shop but questioned the constitutionality of legislation to outlaw it. Newspaper Publisher J. David Stern said the American Newspaper Guild (CIO) has become "a cancerous ' growth" that threatened journalism. Advantages Of : A. I. Explained To County Farmers (This is the third in a series of articles regarding Artificial Insemination published by the County Extension Service.) ' At a meeting to be held at the Court House. Wednesday night, February 12 at 7:30 o'clock, two of the chief things which will be discussed are (1) What is expected of the Artificial Insemination Association, and (2) What is expected of its members. In most counties where there is an Artificial Insemination Assoc- -iation, the association has a Board of Supervisors composed of a chairman, vice-chairman, secretary-treasurer, and three directors. It is the reponsibility of this board to carry on the business of the association. One of the most important things which it has to do is to hire an Inseminator. The Inseminator is usually paid a flat salary per month, plus mileage expenses, telephone expenses, laboratory expenses, and postage. At the end of the year, he may also receive a bonus, depending upon his efficiency. Members of the association are required to pay a life membership, the amount determined by what the association thinks ' necessary. The number of cows does not have any effect upon the cost of membership. In addition to this, there will be a breeding fee which will be paid at the time of service. For a man who has less than fifteen cows, this cost will be much less over a period of a few months than what it would cost to keep a sire or use a neighbor's. Leroy Coplen, Field Representative of the Indiana Artificial Breeding Association, will be at the meeting to discuss different points in detail. At the close of the meeting, the Krafts Food Company , will serve refreshments to all present. Six Brothers Join Up WHITING, Ind., (UP) Sixbrothers, all of this city, were initiated together in Whiting Post 80 of i the American Legion. Andrew, J'ohn, Joseph, Milton, Stephen and Thomas Hruskocy were inducted with 170 other candidates. They served in the infantry, signal corps, air corps, field artillery and the Navy.

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