Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 109, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 2 June 1947 — Page 3

ITJLUVAN, INDIANS

ibs ht3c scienuncaiiy constryctsf ?a burner was invented 'tar A.' Arrand of Geneva in 17 SU 'scpording to the Encyclopedia , uMer on pean is me nara, iridescent internal layer of vashells .such as the pearl oysters and other pearl-bearing re You Tormented IV With Its Nervous Crankv: Weak FpaKmpc? Then listen-Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is famous to relieve cramps, headache, backache and those nervous, restless tired feelings, of such days when

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CRASH HIRO" RESTS llhl HSSPfTAl

ONE OF THE OUTSTANDING HEROES following the crash of a DC-4 transport at LaGuardia Field, N. Y, was, Edward McGrath, 43, of Jackson Heights, N. Y. Pictured at Queens General Hospital where he is resting, McGrath, one of the first to reach the burning plane and rescue some of the passengers, tells Nurse Ruth Dalzell all about it. (International)

LOCALS . Shadrack Bledsoe of Canton, i Ohio, Mrs. Bill . Harris of West Terre Haute and Mrs. Earl M',ison of Mt. Calvary called on Mr. and Mrs. Mason Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Ml B. Mason JARS, CAPS, LIDS and Rubbers Canning Success when yow follov instructions in the Ball Blue Book. Buy one at your grocer's or send 10t with name and address to: BALI B80THERS COMPANY Munclt, Indiana

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SULUVAN DAILY TIMES-MONDAY, JUNE 2, 1947.

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called on Mr. and Mrs. Al WoocV all of Merom Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Hudson and daughter spent last Tuesday and Wednesday in Indianapolis attending the Masonic Grand Lodge meeting. m Mr. and Mrs. Charles Snavely spent the week end visiting their daughter, Mrs. . D. W. Gilmore and family at Peoria, Illinois. James F. Neff of Indianapolis was the guest of his mother, Mrs, J H. Neff this week end. Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Van Keuran and children of Indianapolis spent the week end with W. R Herbert. Mrs. William Fitts o'f Winchester, Indiana is visiting W. R. Herbert. Miss Lida Durham of Purdue University visited here over the week end. Mrs. Harry Leslie of Indiana polis is the guest of Mrs. Hinkle C. Hays. Joe R. Crowder returned to Sullivan Sunday from Forest City, Iowa, where he has been i student at Waldorf College. Mrs. Clyde Moon, and dauglv ter, Sondra of Indianapolis are guests of Mrs. Moon's mother, Mrg.i Dillon Routt. , Mrs. Thomas Lippiatt is spend ing the week in Indianapolis. H. W. Dutton of Evanston, 111., came Thursday evening to visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Dutton. Mrs. lone Dutton and son, Bob, and daughter, Janet, of Chicago, and. Dick Deucher of Beloit, Wisconsin, spent Friday and Saturday with Mr. and ' Mrs. H. E. Dutton. f? INDIANAPOLIS, June 2. (UP) Hogs, 1,000; active, generally steady; good and choice sows largely $17.50 $19.00; barrows and gilts, 160-225 lbs., $24.25; 225-300 lbs., $21.75 $24.00; 300 lbs. up, $20.25 $21.25; 100-160 lbs., $22.00 $23.00. Cattle, 2,500; calves, 800; steers and heifers generally active, mostly 50c higher; choice medium steers, $26.00; most top good light and medium weights, $25.00 $25.50; bulk low medium to just good light weight, $23.50 $24.50; load medium down to $22.50; good heifers, $24.50; bulk medium and good, $23.00 $24.00; cows active, geenrally 50c higher; good beef cows, $17.25 $19.00; vealers active and steady; good and choice largely $23.50 $26.00; common and medium, $12.00 $23.00. Sheep, 300; fed lambs and slaughter ewes' about steady; load good and choice fed shorn lambs, number 1 pelt, near 91 lb., $21.50; odd lots medium, $16.00 $20.00; good wooled lambs, $22.00; shorn slaughter - ewes, $7.00 down. I Chrlstoph Willibald Cluck opera composer, was 27 years old when his first opera, "ArtaBerse" "was produced at La Scala. This led to commissions for other works, and within five years he produced eight operas. A powerful rocket motor, "Moby Dick," with a thrust onethird greater than the push behind V-2 rockets, reached the experimental stage recently. The life of a house type electric meter has been estimated as 22 years. : ,. In 1686 the first bank In Boston and first In the colonies was chartered..:; -

TODAY S MARKETS

This Morning's Headlines TORNADOES ARE CUTTING through the Southwest again. Yesterday, two, followed each other in short succession near Pine Bluff, Ark. It is estimated that some twenty-seven persons died in the twisters. In Leedey, Okla., another tornado that followed the path of the one that rocked Woodward, Okla., last month, caused six deaths and injured about twenty-five. The use of a siren is credited with saving many lives in the Oklahoma town. A telephone worker saw the storm approaching, sounded a siren and shouted warnings over a loudspeaker. Most of the town's residents went into , storm cellars.

A PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION has recommended adoption of universal military training as- an. "essential element" in the program of . national security. The commission's proposal, if it is ad opted by Congress, would require all physically and mentally qualified young men to take a six-months period of basic training on reaching the age of eighteen. It would be followed by periods of advanced training in the reserve or the national guard. However, even though the program has the endorsement of the American Legion

and the Veterans of Foreign Wars, bility that the Congress will adopt THE RESULT OF THE WET, Department of. Agriculture, is to Truman that Congress continue authority to control the export

expire June 30. Otherwise, officials say, the United States might see its supplies raided by foreign buyers, causing new shortages ' and

higher prices. Under existing controls, the department allocates supplies of scarce goods among the foreign countries.

. THREE MEMBERS OF THE eluding Indiana's Gerald Landis,

in the Senate restaurant and would have to go to the House restaurant. The other two members of the party were Representatives Hoffman of Michigan, and Barden of North Carolina. They had to march

700 feet through the Capitol to

they took it pretty much as a joke, with no hard feelings.

THE BRITISH AMBASSADOR yesterday defended the British Empire to the Midwest Institute of International Relations as the first example of the United Nations organization. He claimed that the Commonwealth of Nations, which the members of the British Empire call themselves, is really a United Nations in miniature. The British Empire, Lord Inverchapel said, is not a tight little isle of some 50,000,000 persons, but six nations scattered around the wprld.

BROADWAY MIGHTS . By AXEL STORK

Distributed by Hollywood's Vine Street and New York's Broadway are now closer to merging than at any ilme in the history of the two famous amusevwnTwv s mpnt nrterips. This is not merely because a recent trend toward realism in backgrounds has sent location sleuths, directors, cameramen and actors scrambling all over the sidewalks of: New York, ' from the Battery to the Harlem River. DOROTHY McGUIRE There's been plenty of streetscreening in Manhattan since Hollywood awakened to the obvious fact that holding the mirror to life is a considerable improvement over the phony mirror tricks of the studios. But each week it becomes more apparent that the Gotham invasion has just begun and that movie making is returning to the East in a bigger-and-better fashion. ! Thus, Mark Hellinger has been reported prowling about, the town, checking up on locations for "Homicide," while . Darryl Zanuck's publicists have phoned the information that, sometime in June, Dorothy McGuire and Gregory Peck will begin a made-in-Manhattan production of the best-seller, "Gentleman's Agreement." And there are many others of lesser stature. All of which Is grand news to Broadway. Grand news particularly to actors and show business moguls. Realizing that a new screen-stage collaboration is practically at hand, new casting offices have mushroomed around town to provide character people and assorted lesser roles. The smarter Broadway gents have known for a long time that Hollywood considers the stage to be the best training school for film players. And smart Hollywood gents have been alarmed for a long time by the growing scarcity of new Grade-A talent from Broadway. Producers have Iparned that movie gold has lured awav vouncr playwrights, who scratched for lunch on Broad. way, as well as major writers who found making their first million preferable to taking a long chance in the showshops, So it has gone. , i , But recently there have been a number of demonstrations of how an interchange of talent be. tween stage and films can be made to work to the advantage 1875

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there seems to be slight possi

it. cold Spring, say officials of the emphasize the request by President for another year the government's of scarce goods, now scheduled to HOUSE of Representatives, in. were told that they could not eat reach the House beanery. They said Klnf Features, Inc.; of all concerned. An Instance is the New York Critics' Circle prize play, "All My Sons." But for film-stage cooperation, it might never have been produced. Also Arthur Kennedy, whose performance in the drama is outstanding, has been catalogued as. "movie property." As such, he had been shipped East for a big role in "Boomerang," which was turned in Connecticut and was one of the first new-trend screen productions of Louis de Rochemont, , who used documentary film patterns in making three pictures. With Kennedy in the Broadway neighborhood, the "All My Sons" producers went after him and Hollywood loaned him to the theatre. Now everybody's happy. ... ' As for the Hollywood invasion, De Rochemont's pioneering showed quick box office results and the gold rush was on. As early as last Thanksgiving, little Natalie Wood might have been observed sitting in the window of a big Fifth Avenue hotel, with John Payne, being "shot" lor scenes in "Miracle in " 34th Street." Outside the annual preNATALIE WOOD Christmas balloon parade was passing and even Santa Claus was 100 per cent HollywoodEdmund Gwenn, to be exact,. In the late weeks of Winter, Central Park's frozen lakes were cluttered with huge sleds carrying equipment for the filming ol "Portrait of Jennie," featuring Joseph Cotten and Jennifer Jones. The spectacle of tnese two skating was completely overlooked by the fan brigade. .Everything from Grant's Tomb to the Chrysler Building, with a Greenwich Village studio thrown in, went into the making of "Kiss of Death," during the reeling of which Victor Mature, Patricia Morrison and Brian Donlevy went about with mounted police guards. Generally speaking, the New York crowds have been cooperative in keeping their distance unless wanted for background material. One of the major obstacles was, at first, the relative inexperience of New York gaffers, technicians,, property men and such in working on full-length productions. . Crews of experts were shipped in from Hollywood and latest reports are that the local boys are giving the cinema capital brigade a few pointers. . 1948

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tator A U. S. GOVERNMENT BUREAU REPORT announces the discovery of a new tannic acid treatment for ivy poisoning, The treatment has been found excellent; it is gentle and safe, dries up the blisters in a surprisingly short time ; often within 24 hours. These government findings are incor porated in the new product IVY-DRY At your drugstore, 59c. irr-DRr u h m coup Uomckk. a. .. r.ti: associated infA anv tovtrnmntt orfitnijatiort. Qalt raying rent and own fomt home. Special bargain . property n Installment Bias, Alo farms for nle. W. T. MELLOTT inter

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