Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 35, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 18 February 1947 — Page 3

Mge two

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES TUESDAY, FEB. 18, 1947.

SULLIVAN. INDIANA

( CONTRAST IS "A' FREQUENT THEME IN SPRING SUITS

, . A Home Owned Democratic Newspaper gnllivma Daily Times,, founded 1905, as the dally 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 itecond-clast 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 .... , 18 cents in City By Mail In Sullivan And Adjoining Counties Year ..................... ;.,..V .' $3.00 Six Months ........ , $1.79 Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 80 Cents By Mail Elsewhere Year . ; $00 Six Months .,.'. $2.25 Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) ........ 40 Cents All mail subscriptions strictly in advance

Kentucky Political Testing Course

Only two, states will hold general elections this year, Kentucky and Mississippi, both of which will choose governors.-In Bilbo's domain, this contest will be decided in the Democratic primaries. But the Blue Grass state will provide a bipartisan contest, a trial heat for the big political derby in 1948. . -,. ' Although Kentucky is normally a Democratic state, its governor, junior United States senator and three of its representatives, including the Louisville congressman, are Republicans. This is the best. showing the GOP has made there since 1926, when the party held both Senate seats and three in the House although the governor then was a. Democrat. Governor Simeon S. Willis, who i.s not eligible to succeed himself, was elected in 1943 by the slim plurality of . 8,619,

with 552,908 Kentuckians part'eipating in this contest- His s victory was labeled an upset,: but it had been , tipped when i

many uemocrats registered dissatisfaction over, their nominee'J. Lyter. Donaldson. Last November. Republican John Sherman Cooper was elected to the Senate with the help of numerous political enemies of John Young Brown, the Democrats candidate. Both contests illustrate the strong Kentucky tendency .to vote against rather than for. This is particularly the case among Democrats, who are now studying reactions to a possible race for their gubernatorial nomination' between Earle C. Clements, a member of Congress; and Harry, Lee Waterfield, speaker of the, State House of Representatives.. To many observers, congressional ch'strict elections are better indicators of political trends in the Blue Grass state than' its gubernatorial or senatorial contests, which are so influenced by personalities. On that score, the. Republicans were entitled to some jubilation over trends in Kentucky last

" year, when John M. Robsion, then their lone member of the

national House of Representatives, was re-elected and the COP. recaptured two other districts which thev had held in

past years of .Republican ascendency. At least as significant, '

aivnougn little noticed outside the state, was the ' narrow margin by which the Democrats retained some of their normally ."safe" districts. Kentucky's value as a political testing course is disputed. Although an important border state which sometimes indicates national trends, it? election returns have to be evalu-

L-meu on uie oasis oi personalities, wnicn frequently have J r jrore influence than issues. But since it offers the only bi-

p:u mm contest this year lor. a major office, both Republicans and Democrats will be clocking every political move next fall.

gt - , it -' , - f t ' - - - U - j ' ? f ,

- i a x t j

GRAB BAG

One-Minute Test 1. What is a varlet? 2. What is a upas? 3. What is a succentor?.

Words of Wisdom ' , It is not helps, but obstacles, not facilities but difficulties, that make men. W. Mathews.

'Hints on Etiquette It is correct to say "man and wife" when referring: to husband and wife. The use of "man" in the sense of . "husband'! has the lanction of time,

Today's Horoscope If this is the anniversary of your birth, you are conscientious, reliable and you plod along in your work faithfully. You like travel and a change of scene. You are honest and whole-hearted in your love, and it will bring joy and contentment to you. Personal and money matters must be handled carefully today, as the influences are not too favorable. In your next year you wiU experU ence both good and ill fortune. Unfavorable vibrations can, be minimized by caution and restraint in friendships and careful

scrutiny in business. Unexpected gain is portended. Born on this date a child will manifest much ingenuity, an exceptionally keen imagination, love of novelty, change, and ultra-modern conceptions. He or she will, in short, be a remarkable character.

One-Minute Test Answers 1. Originally a servant or attendant; now a scoundrel or knave. 2. A poisonous Javanese tree. 3. An accompanier in singing; also a. percenter's assistant, in some cathedrals. " .

SEEKS $200,000 FROM CIH

left, flannel suit in contrasting hues; blue end brown worsted suit; green ensemble, red lined topper, Contrast is often the theme of the early spring suits shown by American designers. Conventional lines; are also ignored in these smart models. Above at left is a contrasting jacket and skirt of wool flannel, by California designer Gabrielle Vallon. Conventional lines are ignored in the combination of standing collar, full shirt-cuff sleeves, clearly denned waistline and exaggerated pockets that cover the jacketfront Mary Jane Croft, of the radio, is the model. Modeled by Romola Robb, radio actress, and de-j signed by Paul Parnes is the second suit, the jacket of which is a combination of soft blue and brown birdseye worsted. It has balloon sleeves, accenting the curved torso lines with bronze dart at either end. The plain, fitted brown wool dress with longer and fuller skirt, repeats the bronze bead detail. Maurice Rentner concentrates interest in the sleeves of both dress and jacket of the third ensemble,' in green wool, worn by Mary Jane Croft for early spring. Wide barrister sleeves distinguish the top-' (perjvhich is lined. in bright .red silk matching the.dressllongwool arm coverage! . (I titer nations! KISSING THE CARDINAL'S RUO , County Ag. Agent

Of Dairy Plans

For your own protection buy today;

FHA

Approved Mortgagee V

Insist on FHA's expert, unbiased! oppraisal...FHA'$ examination J - -(Of site, neighborhood... FHA's I inspections for compliance with J . 'FHA's property standards. for toutid home financing ee.

nint ;:;h Jiiiiiiiiai iiii P v- If hh -ijSffi..i tMMl'&

; 'MMf-;;: I '-'-HH.i--'- ' X:HHH HHWk

i- 'TV 'k . Vt - - V V

Arab Emir find Sultan Abd el Kader, 1807-83, fought fiercely against French power in Algeria.

AWFUL RHEUMATIC

i PAIN LEFT MAN'S ! BODY IN 8 HOURS

"For years I had rheumatic pains in the muscles of my shoulders, legs and ankles, which finally got so stiff, sore and painful that when I walked I would Clinch with agony. I got RHUAID and started taking it, and the rheumatic pains began leaving my body in eight hours. Now the pains are gone from my muscles entirely. I feel like some other person, and I praise RHUAID to the sky." This is a genuine testimonial from a man living right here in this vicinity. RHU-AID is the new ' liquid formula containing three valuable medical ingredients. These Three Great Medicines, all blended into one, go right to the very cause of rheumatic and neuritis aches and pains. Miserable people soon feel different all over. So don't go on suffering! Get RHU-AID. Bennett's Drug Store. Adv.

BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT

" O, . Anderron, Sullivan County Agricultural Agent, yesterday discussed to Rotarians tlia advantages of artificial insemination as a cnunty-wide organiza- . tifin in Sullivan county. Banging the Sullivan businessman into the picture, Mr. And-

illustrated how increased efficiency in dairy herds in the Mr. and Mrs. Delmas Carrithers "T.inty would bring increased of Sandborn, Indiana announce revenues into the county of sev- the birth of a son born at the "T.l thousand dollars per year. Freeman-Greene County Hospital .Tnf acled ircome. would b an- at Linton February 13th. He ''her tooi for business here, weighed ! nine pounds and twelve "-Tr. Anderson said, as well as ounces and has been named ?dcted nrcfit? for the dairyman. Roger Kay. ..Tohn S. Tsylor preceded Mr.. 1 ,

THE VICTIM of a "camera-gun" shooting some months ago, Mrs. Olga Ruocco is shown recuperating in Roosevelt Hospital just before she entered a claim against the city of New York for $200,000 charging lack of police protection. Her left leg was amputated as a result of the shooting, which was plotted by her husband, Alphonse, who was later slain by officers. She claims that police failed to provide adequate protection when she told them of her late husband's threats- (International)

Many years ago experiments were made with compressed paper wheels for locomotives. They were not practical because of the great weight and speed of the engines.

Anderson's talk with, a discussion j on Kotciry's organization and n'ms for the benefit of new , trcmbors. He urscd all members read the article in Rotary's

Tiarrazine wnJch was written oy .Founder Peul Harris just before bis -?th in January. About 40 members met at the

'":;!2r Monday luncneon. Mrs. Tr--pi-tto TVemz nrcsided at the

hp.o during the program.

".TIAGS LTCENSES

Goodbye, Please

Quit paying rent nd jwa !, bomi. Special bargains . on property on Installment plan Also farms for ule. W. T. HKLLOTT

1

'42'

Make It Over The life of a chair isn't over, as long as its framework and seat construction are worth using. Fieupholstering will make, it over, in your choice of our fine fabrics. ' P& A STORE 103 So. Main

CHAMBERSBURG, Pa. (UP) A tall youth walked intoj 70-year-old Mrs. Mary Clark's store, pointed a gun at her and . demanded money. Mrs. Clark firmly steered .him to the door, advising him to "get out of here and don't come back." He went. ;

illvan State Bank'

Safe Since 1875 Hcmbrr Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 1875 ' 1S46

swjiiiiwMwprifiiiW!?!

PUBLIC SALE

Harinj poor health, I have decided to sell at Public!

Auction at my farm, three mi!e3 east, of. Graysville, y2 mile north cf.Mt. Tabor church, on ' : MONDAY, FEB. 24, 1947 " at 12:30. P. M. the following described, property: 2 hoises; 2 cows, fresh in May: 1 wagon with bed; 1-hayrack: 1 three-hore disc; 1 mower, 5 ft. cut; I riditig plow; 2 -walking plows; 1 spike, tooth harrow, '8 ft.;

1 '?ul rake; 1 -cultivator; 1 garden harrow; 1 bar plow;(

llduable 3hovelJ 1 scoop endgate.; 1 set. chain harness; 2 cfiiU'is; 1 steel water tank; 19 pieces of. new galvanized nt;j('i!,o. 8 ft; 60 bales clover stubble hay ; 20 bales timef'iy liny, and other articles too numerous to mention.TLUMS OF SALK CASH. Net responsible in case of accidents. EZRA BURNETT, Owner

PAUL DIX, Clerk

UTTIE ELIZABETH DISCO, 3, prepares to kiss Comad Cardinal Von Preysing's ring at National Headquarters of the War Relief Services in New York as Cardinal Spellman looks on. The German Bishop of Berlin, in the U.S. for a month's tour, is noted for his defiance of Hitler and Nazism before and during .the war. He declared that the condition of the German people is desperate at present. ' 'intcrnof.'onaZ)

, Harry Edwin Ham'lton, Sullivn, R. 4, farmer and Marie T'c:-maii, 436 West Johnson Street. ; Leonard Edward Dudley, Sullivan, R. 4. laborer and Mary Anre C'Brien, Sullivan, R. 4, switchboard operator. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT

Injured in Fail

COL. DILLINGHAM, Auctioneer

--' ' "I -10 ' ' ' i ' . I i ' " I I I k 1 f .' ,'t ' ' - A - I I I ' - " I 4 i I f 1

Abraham Lincoln was born in Kentucky, but his home from his eighth year until shortly after his 21st birthday, was in Indiana,

! Mr. and Mr?. Everett Rea of 320 North State Street announce the birth of a daughter born February 16th at the Mary Sherman Hospital. She has been named Betty Louise. . ,

The most valuable crown in the world is the imperial state crown made for Queen Victoria, in 1838. It contains a ruby as large as a small hen's egg, a diamond weighing 309 carats, and more than 2,500 smaller diamonds, with emeralds, sapphires and pearls, accordinig to the Encyclopedia Britannica, .'", Walt Whitman, American poet, learned carpentry and , printing, and at 17 years old waa teaching in Long Island and writing for newspapers .. and magazines. The name of Toronto, Canadian city, is Indian in origin and means "a place of meeting

a

FUNEE4L

IF:-

,1'

0 0 0 O 0 0 O 0 0

59

TELEPHONE'.

PLEASANTVBLJE,

- ',11

v.

Dosed on a teiccnon of Jhe Liierory Guild

L in-: ;

1 i

0 TVX ' Tv

r

Ralls returned iheir fire .

I called,. "The bars are down! Give her sail,".

THE PRESIDENT'S MOTHER, Mrs. ! Martha E. Truman (above), 94, suf- ' fered a fractured .'hip after falling in her home in Grandview, Mo. The Chief Executive received the news of the accident by telephone from his sister, Miss Mary Truman, who i reported that Mrs. Truman was ' - coirortabia. '-. . : (International) '!

GUNFIRE from the FJores was intensified. and Ralls returned it with a pistol. I yellrd for him to spring sail and take the wheel. "I got somebody," he said. I turned again to the circle of light before me, realizing for the first time what a target I made. A bullet popped the water within a yard of me. "Easy to po:t." I said, welcoming the turn -that would put the schooner between me and the fire. A shot ended with a ping on the chain near my head. "Close," I said, "Too damned close!" The ship labored again under canvas too heavy for her track; it was plain crazy sailing all the way with me sweating and staring hard into the light beams ahead. Then the firing subsided as we drove out into the lagoon. "Ralls," I said,. "better slow her.", The first bar should ; be near. I peered down into the water, perplexed. The bars

were down fiat, like fallen tombstones in a lonely graveyard. Teleia! I guessed. She must have got to toe donkey . engine that controlled them, . , - "Rails! The bars are down! Give her sail." . "Sure you don't want to come alqng?" , AGood luck, Ralls," I said. "See you someday, maybe."' With that I shoved oil in the small boat, slowly pulling oar toward the outline of the sandbar near the lagoon mouth. "The same to you," Ralls called. "Here's to you, partner." I said nothing but rowed on; then pulled my boat up on., the shelf and turned to watch the Quean; She was clear, of the lagoon and safe. The. red glow of a cigarette told me that Ralls stood easily on. deck, I thought of the Flores and . said aloud, "Why don't they make some move?" - . "So long, Sam," cried Ralls. "See you in Singapore." -J

The Queen's stern rose out of the water . . . ' . As he said it, a second Rare illuminated the whole world. I stared at the Quean's stern as the ship slid out to sea, and then it happened ' ' The earth shook, and the Quean's stern, literally rose out of the water, splitting in half, it seemed. The rudder held to one piece high in tbj air, and it leaned toward me with a strange companion, a long gray shark. A piece of flying metal tore an oarlock from my boat before striking hard at my shoulder. Almost at the same moment, something grazed my head. A scream, then another, and in the light of a fourth flare '' the Quedw of Melbourne, listed, heavily and slowly went under, 11 of her, into countless fathoms to find her grave. Then everything went black : , (Continued tomorrow)

; D.-wu:jj ccpr(iht,19ik to King JFuVjtm SyndiciU, Inc. Ttxt copyright, 1946, bj Qarjtnd Rowk. Published bj LItu, Bror and Company.

T J