Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 49, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 10 March 1947 — Page 3
Page two
SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES MONDAY, MAR. 10, 1947.
SULLIVAN. INDIANA
f uHMn gaila $ime& A Home Owned Democratic Newtf tper ealllvmo Daily Timci, founded 190S, h the dally edltUn pf tht
, , Sullivan Democrat, founded 1851 United Press Wire Senica Eleanor Poynter Jamison ........ Manager and Assistant Editor Homer II. Murray , Editor I'aul 1'oynter Publisher ru Wished dally except Saturday and Sunday at 115 West Jackson St. Sullivan, Indiana ' ' Telephone 12
Entered as second-class matter at the Poitoffice, Sullivan, Indiana National Advertising- Representative! Tbeis and Simpson, 393 Seventh Avenue, New York (1). N. Y, Subscription Rate: . - By carrier, per week '. 15 cents In City By Mall In Siillvan And Adjelnlng Coutiei Vear ,,., $3.00 Six Months $1.75 Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) IB Cents By Mail Elsewhere Year . . . . . ..,..,..;. : $4.00 Six Months .:... $2.25
Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 40 Cents
All mail subscriptions strictly In advance
SOCIETY TURMAN TOWNSHIP TRIPLE L CLUD MEETS
Judith Arnelt, Miiude Whitman, Bertha Burton, Mabel Howard, Ecrnice Patton, Fern Monk, Mae Shcu, Mabel Burton, Martha
Huff, Mayme Clayton, Tressa ; n.Ji ht TV 1 1 1 eVU-
The Turman Township Triple L een u M,e , hostess, Cora Burton. Visitors club met at the home of Mrs. ;werfi duh Harnnl) Roxie Kel. Cora Burton on March 6th with H FH Rate. I
i The April meeting will be held on Thursday, April 3rd at Holt
Hall in.Merom.
iipimnmff
D10ESTIVE MO
And Stop Dosing Your Stomach With Soda and Alkalizers Don't expect to get real relief from headache, sour Btomach, gas and bad breath by takini Boda and other alkaiizera ii the true cause of your trouble is constipation. ,
Btomach at ail. But in the intestinal tract the vice president, Iva Myers. I ilMtto I The Lord's Prayer was repeated
U(W W"W piv f f , nit , ,
One Foundation" was sung by all.
visited her grandmother, Mrs. Kate Howard, over tha weekend.
a covered dish luncheon at the noon hour. After dinner the meeting was called to order by
Mr. and Mrs. Ilinkle C. Hays left today for Daytona Beach, Florida, where they will spend a
month's vacation. . " :
Mr. and Mrs. 'Van Sant Riche-' IF BACK ACHES
son of St. Louis, Missouri, spent, PUfc. I U IVlUMl-lO
Flush Them Out This Doctor's Way
the week-end in Sullivan.
FIGHT MISERY
where you feel it-rub t 1 I E? throat, chest and 11 back, with time-tested V VapoRub
Mr. and Mrs. John Allen and Mr. and Mrs. Sam Springer will leave the last of the week for a motor trip through the West.
- What you want lor real relief Is something to "unblock" jmr lower Intestinal tract. Something to clean it out effectively help Nature get hack on her feet. Get Carter's Pills right now. Take as directed. They gently and effectively "unblock your digestive tract. This permits all 6 of Nature's own digestive juices to mix better with your food. You get genuine roller from indigestion so you can feel really good again. ' Buy Carter's Pills today. "Unblock" your Intestinal tract for real relief from indigestion.
OPEN FORUM DAILY TIMES
I GILL HOMEIUAKERS An all-day meeting of the Gill Homemakers will be held with Mrs. Robert Wilson March
barrassing moment. The poultry; " and nJ rirrnrt rviaatmtT vonnrf uroc
The call
club creed was given, was answered by an
Roll em-
Congratulations. Panthers
1 Sullivan County is proud of the Shelburn Panthers. , It is the first time in many years that a Sullivan County team has won a regional tourney, if not the first time they ever have. It" was a good game, and . the .. Panthers . played smart ball. - . , , . ........ The boys on the Panther teant are smart players. They play the game the way they want to. They have a good coach in Paul Weekley, a coach who teaches them to play- clean, hard basketball. ; : The Times congratulates the Panthers and -"Shelburn. The Times is proud of them for the glory they have brought SJielburn and Sullivan County. We will all. be pulling for you when you play in the semifinals in Bloomington this week-end. Go to it, Panthers, win "that one too!
i Letters from ministers and othBrs. interested In local option,
are especially column.
Invited for this
Suppoi
rt The Red Cross
lomorrow the Red Cross will start its house-to-house canvass in Sullivan to raise money for the Red Cross. The drive will .be to raise the. quota of $1,701.70 that has been set for the city. The money is urgently needed so that the Red Cress can continue its work around the world and in .our own country,.. , . .. ..: . To help the Red Cross, and to put Sullivan over the top in, this drive, please try to be at home when one of your neighbors calls on you Tuesday night. Give to the Red Cross!
. -i l '-t - ' - . Letters i and interviews of a suitable nature and proper newspaper interest are sought for this column, the editor reserving; the right to censor or reject any article he may deem Is not suitable and proper. Articles of 500 words or less are preferred. AH articles
sent t" the Open Forum must be siened and address '. riven, - In
order that the editor may know the writer, however, the writer's name will .not be- published If requested.. . . .. ? Articles - published herein do dot necessarily express the sentiment of the Daily Times and this paper may or may not agree with statements contained herein.
and ' garden meeting report was
given by Maureen Kelley, Lenora Patton and Martha Huff. Contests were conducted by Tressa Patton. It was approved to donate $5.00 to the Red Cross. The closing prayer was given by Vern Mc-
Clure.
Members present were Iva
Myers, Vern McClure, Octavia
Sakel, Dillie Brown, Frances Huff, Clara Anderson and sons, Freida Hayden --and Laconda, Ruth Brown, Tracy Underwood, Pauline Parr and Jimmy, Emma Cox, Girtha Parr, Ella Eno, Helen ' Ridgeway, Esther Woner, Mary Foutz, Edna Houpt, Mary Wible, Josie Eno, Ruth Pigg,
Miss Gentry will show interesting film on freezing and preparation of freezing. mmm ii LOCALS j Bill George of Ball State spent the week-end at home. Dick Billman was in Chicago over the week-end where he sang with the Wabash Glee Club, j Junior Jones and Burris Walker of DeForrest College at Chi1 cago, spent the week-end at home. j Mr. and Mrs. Bill Leach were I in Indianapolis over the week- ; end the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Swayze.
Ruth Houston of Indianapolis, visited here over the week-end. Mrs. Robert Noe and son, Johnnie, of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Bernard Hoilman and son, David, of Terre Haute, were Sunday guests of Mrs. Zada Dixon. I Mr. and Mrs. Donald Howard of Connersville, Indiana, spent the week-end here with Mrs. j Kate Howard. I Sharon Howard of Terre Haute,
If excess acidity of your urine makes your back ache o you groan ... so you get up 3 or 4 times a night to pass water, now be of good cheer. 1 Three generations ago a famous doctor noticed that hundreds of his patients had this backache. He developed a medicine made of exactiy the right amount of 16 herbs, roots, vegetables, balsams truly Nature's own way to relief. Now millions have used it. The medicine is Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. InBtantly you take it, it starts to work flushing out those excess acids that may be causing your backache . . . increasing the flow of urine to help ease that burning sensation when you pass water . . . and bladder irritation that makes you get up nights. Caution: take as directed. You'll say it's really marvelous. For free trial supply, send to Dept. W, Kilmer & Co., Inc., Box 1255, Stamford, Conn. Or get full-sized bottle of SwampKoot today at your drugstore.
TO GET MORE If your blood LACKS IRON! You girls and women who suffer so from simple anemia that you'ra palo, weak, "dragged out" this may be due to lack of blood-iron. So try Lydia E. Pinkham's TABLETS one of the best home ways to build up red blood in such cases. Plnkhamtt Tablets are one of the greatest bloodiron tonics you can buy I Buy them at any drugstore. Worth trying! Lydia E. Pinkham's TA31675
-"A- A
Contrasting Stories There arc two contrasting stories on foreign affairs in today's paper. One deals with the departure of Secretary Marshall for the Moscow conference. : . ...
The other deals with President Truman's visit to Mexico. Secretary Marshall left Washington .by plane in a grim mood. He openly expressed doubti if a peace treaty for Germany can be written at the conference. He said he was conscious that negotiations will be extremely difficult. The whole picture is gloomy, full of suspicion and mistrust. Just the opposite is reported from Mexico City. There the news is just about as happy as the other is gloomy. . ' .. . . .. . Our President is being received with great enthusiasm. Crowds were so great two people were killed in the crush. United States needs Mexico for a good friend. We need all the Americas. President Truman is serving his country well, with this mission. How unfortunate it is that there is such a variety of languages among our neighbors to the south. If we were of all one tongue, our solidarity would be as solid as that with Canada. Yes the Tower of Babel was man's greatest disaster. If all peoples spoke the same language, source of much
of the misunderstandings and, conflict would be avoided ir
the world. .. .. How much, farther. Secretary Marshall would get, if he and Russians cculd converse without, interpreters. , President Truman likewise is also handicapped because lie and the President of Mexico can't talk man to man either. There always has to be an interpreter. Uut Mr. Truman does have-an international gr'.n. It's a grin of cordiality and sincerity and a fondness of his fellow man. Those are things which are translatable. From Vincennes Sun-Commercial
"BLESSING ON THE DAY I POUND RHU-AID" HER RHEUMATIC PAINS END! One lady recently took RHUAID three days and said afterward that she never would have believed such a "wonderful medicine" existed. She says she couldn't raise her left arm more than a few inches. Rheumatic pains afflicted the muscles of her shoulder and arm. She could hardly move the fingers on her left hand. ' Now this lady's rheumatic pains are all gone since she got RHU-AID and she says she can use her left arm as well as
her right, in fact, she says she simply blesses the day she got
this medicine and she feels like
an altogether different woman. ;
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 neuritic aches
and pains. Miserable people soon I
feel different all over. So don tl
go on suffering! uet khu-aiu. Bennett's Drug Store. Adv.
1875
1946
NO INFLATION HERE
Bahkloan Plan AS THE COST OF LIVING GOES UP KEEP THE COST OF YOUR BORROWING DOWN BY FINANCING YOUR PURCHASES WITH A LOW COST BANK LOAN. - WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY ON LOANS. A $7,000,000.00 BANK. IS HERE TO SERVE YOU. Siilliy an State Bank Safe Since 1875 Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 1X75 . r..3;.!. i " , 194 -
Deafened Now Hear with Tiny Single Unit Science has now made it possible for the deafened to .hear faint sounds. It is a hearing device so small that it fits in the hand an enables thousands to en
joy sermons,' music and friendly
comDanionshiD. Accepted by the
Council on Physical Medicine of
the American Medical Associa
tion. This device does not require separate battery pack, battery wire, case or garment to bulge on.-, weigh you down. The
tone is clear and powerful. - So
made that you can adjust it yourself to suit your hearing as your hearing changes.. The makers of Bcltone, Dept. 2139, 1450 W. 19lh St., Chicago 8, In., are so proud of their achievement that they will gladly send free descriptive booklet and explain how you may get a full demonstration of this remarkable hearing device "in your own home without risking a penny. Write Beltone today. " (Adv.)
Sx tom RED CROSS CAN CARRY ON
THIS war against calamity never ends! For 65 years the Red Cross has fought human suffering in over 4,000 disasters. New calamities will strike This Year! Who'll reduce the toll . . . ease the pain . . . soften the suffering? The
Red Cross will . . . w
Your Help! Give!
This Space Donated by '
INDIANA BREWERS ASSOCIATION 712 Chamber of Commerce Building Indionapolis i, Indiano
WHEN YOU SPEND IT VIA ILLINOIS CENTRAL
i it
1 - l
J V
v
OP IT , , .goes to pay the wages
of some 40,000 Illinois Central workers. They collect it for work in more than ,120 professions, trades and occupations, each essential to the functioning of the railroad aud proper service to the public. The wages paid these Illinois Central people are earned with tools (property and equipment) valued at roundly $20,000 per worker. These valuable tools in skilled hands make possible the fine quality of service the Illinois Central provides the public. W. A. Johnston, Pruidtni
for materiali ndqulpmn
ton to
,3
v' lot Intend
Jet ell ether vrpoim
3V
RAILROAD
s
I7c!ic of fhc Red VJilzh
CITY TAX 1 PHONE 2M ON THE JOB DAY... and... NIGHT Dependable Coin Icons o Reliable
Based en a lect'on Of the literary Guild
MAIN UNI OP MIO;AMfICA
BY GARLAND ROARK ILLUSTRATIONS BY F. R. GRUGER
!
"Give them to mel" he screamed.
SET
' 1
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Down she surged carrying Ralls to a cadaver's reunion.
THE hoist followed Ralls who was soon inside the Witch. The plane was reporting the patrol schooner driving in our direction when the, hoist came up with the first gold bars. "Give them to me!" screamed Sidneye. "Here!" The hoist plunged again and the 'boss diver reported, "Trouble. He's in trouble." Someone called for the diving bell and I tore my hands from the rail and rushed in with the director. We sank toward the dim hulk ... But Ralls again seemed all right. I'saw him moving out, tugging at a heavy bar. It was placed in the basket and again he disappeared through the hatch. Soon he was up with another bar ... He stood straight and threw his eye about him; as though ready to shout, "All sail!" and the Red Witch shuddered. Slowly, she came to life. So delicately balanced above
the abyss was she that removal of part of the gold was enough to raise her stern a fathom. Ralls moved forward, unafraid, but the Witch was fighting back.' She slid toward the brink and the man next nie spoke into the tube, "Up -with diver!" The cable jerked and the deck left Rails' feet. But perhaps the Witch had waited there for her master. It is said a ship rests better with her captain at the helm. Her bow reached out and she left. the ledge in the last launching of three gallant ships: the Quatrejoil, the Golden Hind and the Red Witch. : - - , .. But in the lift of her stern was retribution. The cable that strained with the weight of Ralls dug into the stump of the splintered mizzenmast.Then down moved the stump, following the cable like an engine of death on a greased
Drawings copyright, 1S46. by King Features Syndicet Ino. Text eopyriirht, 194&. by Garland Roark. Publiahed by LHUe, Brown and Compan.
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Free of the spell of Ralls, I found peace . . . track. Down she surged carrying Ralls to a cadaver's reunionand ship and gold, and Ralls, ended the long, long wake of Batjak's Red Witch. I thought, With Ralls the skipper of the winds of the sea, hurricanes could only howl the louder ... . . . Thus the curtain dropped on the Bismarck Sea. When next it lifted a lovelier scene emanated from a lovelier stage and the part seemed made to order for me. And Trader Sam Rosen obeyed his heart on that peaceful sea of love in the years that followed with Teleia by his side. In time their young lady lay in an ornate Dutch cradle Angelique Rosen a bit of the treasure pulled out of the long wake of the Red Witch. I. Sam Rosen, once free of the spell of Ralls, found peace and success where he had failed. , . (THE END)
3 rSk r ft3 ri S)kli
Made from pure rye and pumperriieklc flours
ON DIETS. See your local grocer. MADE BY-
. no sugar added, IDEAL FOR PEOPLE
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Sullivan, Indiana f. H .!..'")TJ am
