Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 114, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 9 June 1947 — Page 4
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OPEN FORUM DAILY TIMES Letters from ministers and others, interested in local option, are especially. Invited for this column. Letters and Interviews of 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. All articles tent tn the Open Forum must be signed and address given,' In order that the editor may know the writer, however, the writer's name will not be published If requested.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. Editor, Daily Times: ' . I see where one Jack Stokes stands up for Henry (Sced-Corn) Wallace. - The trouble with Henry is that he is away behind the times. Henry wants peace and prosperity and happy children. Ail that "do-gooder" stuff is old-fashioned. This is 1947 the year of the Truman doctrine which will be remembered for all time to come as the brilliant plan which caus"ed the USA to intervene in FLUSH OUT KIDNEYS THIS DOCTOR'S WAY Backache, loss of the old pep, getting up . nights, and headache are often caused by nothing more than improper kidney ac tion due to excess acid in the urine. Tha kidneys are one of Nature's ways of removing impurities from the blood. And when these impurities back up, trouble may start. So if you have these troubles, give your kidneys and bladder a good flushing out by taking Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. It works on the kidneys to flush them out : . . increasing the flow of urine to help relieve that excess acidity and ease that burning sensation when you pass water ; . . helps that bladder irritation that makes you, get up nights. Made of 16 herbs, roots, vegetables, and balsams, Swamp-Root is absolutely nonhabit forming. Millions have taken it for 3 generations . . . often with wonderful results. Caution : take as directed. For free trial supply, send to Dept. Y, Kilmer Ss Co., Inc., Box 1255, Stamford, Conn. Or get full-sired bottle of Swamp- . Root today at your drugstore. LAWN MOWERS Pirtle t Thomson "66" Service Corner Section & - Washington
SULLIVAN Motor Supply 10 East Jackson St." Q BRAKE DRUM GRINDING SMALL Oxvpen & Acetylene TANKS FOR SALE WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS
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FUNERAL HOMES "Striving To Befriend The Families Wc Serve." Sliclburn & Hymcra PHONE 31 PHONE 111
III TO SELL III li We are ha vine many calls for farms in Sullivan and neighboring counties. If you want to sell, list with the
NO FARM TOO LARGE OR TOO SMALL. Our r.atien-vvide adveitis'nc;, the circulation of our famous catalog, and tlie benefit of our years of experience in serving the public, brings buyers for all types of real estate. ' ..-.'' ; ' . jas. W. LaFollette Rural Route 4, Sullivan Phone 9075 3 Miles North On 41.
Greece, Turkey, China, Italy, Iran, Argentina, Korea, Bulgaria, Hungary, Rumania, Albania, and a few other places which I can't remember off-hand. : This great Truman doctrine which has the hearty blessing of Standard Oil, the Du Ponts, Wall Street, Capehart, Jenner and Landis is a great thing for the common people. All we have to do is pay the taxes to send $400,-
000,000 to Greece and Turkey; $500,000,000 to Korea; $300,000,000 to Italy; $30,000,000 to Iran; etc., etc., etc. (each "etc." stands for- $100,000,000.! ' Then on top of that, we have the honor and privilege of furnishing our boys to fight and die in Greece and, Turkey and China and Korea so that Standard Oil investments will be safe and secure. Any boy that doesn't want to travel four or five thousand miles to storm the beach-heads and risk his life for Free Enterprise is not 100 percent patriotic. And don't forget, after World War HI, our heroes will again be welcomed with big parades, and will be permitted to sleep in b o x-cars, trailers, court-house parks, and will get some nice bonds payable in five or ten or twenty years. (The reason the boys of World War II can't cash their bonds is that the money is needed to keep the Greek king and queen on the throne. Hurray!) Let's have a county-wide mass meeting to praise the Truman doctrine, and to congraulate Capehart, Jenner and Landis for "getting .tough" with Russia, labor and the veterans. Major Iloople. (Known to Editor) I INDIANAPOLIS, June 9. (U,R) i Hogs, 7,500; market steady and active; good and choice barrows land gilts, 160-250 lbs., $23.75 ! $24.25; 250-325 lbs., $21.50 $23.50; 325-400 -lbs., $20.25 ,$21.00; 100-160 lbs., $21.00 $22.50; ' good and choice sows, $17.50 $18.50. Cattle, 300; calves, 800; steers and heifers evenly strong to 50c higher; top good and choice light and medium weights, $23.25; bulk medium and low good, $23.25 $24.75; . average good, $24.73 $25.50; common and medium light weights, $21.25 $23.00; good heifers, $24.50 $24.75; medium to good, $22.00 $23.75; cows uneven, rather slow, most bids 50c- or more lower; limited early sales steady to 50c lower; good young beef cows.v $22.00; bulk good. $17.50 $20.50; common and medium. $13.25 $17.50; vealers active, fully steady; , good and choice, $24.00 $27.00; common and medium, $12.50 $24.00. Sheep, 100; fat lambs ; opened about steady; few lots good and choice Spring lambs, $24.00 $25,00; shorn slaughter ewes weak to 50c lower at $6.50 down.
TODAY'S MARKOS
Sullivan Club Meetings FOR THIS WEEK
Sullivan Chapter No. 188 ' O. E. S. will meet Monday, June 9 for their regular stated meeting:. Officers please be prompt. Time 7:30 p.m. Village Homemakers, Tuesday, June 10th, Davis Hotel Dining: Room, 7:30. Friendship Class of the Methodist church will hold their social with a covered dish dinner Tuesday, June 10th at 6:30 in the church parlor. A book review will be given by Mrs. S. E. Llndley. Gymnasium P. T. A. will have a covered dish supper at the city park Tuesday, June 10th at 6:30 p. m. Bring: food and own table service. AH persons who are interested in the organization are cordially invited to attend. The Weton Council 405 will meet in regular session Monday night, June 9, at 7:00 Degree will be given to all candidates that have not taken the work. All candidates are urged to be present. Sullivan Lodge No. 263,' F. & A. M. Called meeting Tuesday, June 10, 1947 at 5:00 p. m. Work in the M. M. Degree. The 1st section will be conferred at 5:00 p. m. Dinner irt honor of the Past (Masters will he served at 6 p.m. All mcmers urged to attend. Visitors welcome. ' Morris Hudson, W. M., Russell Inbody, Sec. G. H. club will go to Bloomfield, Thursday, June 12th, Mrs. Florence, Richmond hostess. . Contact Irene Chaney at 892. Birthday club, Thursday, June 12, home of Mabel Gorham. . The Elm Park P. T. A., will (meet in the shelter house at the city park, Thursday, June 12 at 7:30 p. m. for a weiner roast ' and business session. Bring your own weiners and hmnv Drinks will be furnished. AH members and persons interested urged to attend. The VFW Auxiliary will meet Thursday, June 12th at the teen canteen. AH members are urged to attend.' Peppy Peppers Give ' Us Vitamins, Too tf-r w i4 ' K ft. 14 AV, 'A F 5 Green Peppers Turn Red or Orange I As They Ripen.. A few plants of sweet peppers, set ' out in the garden after danger ol frost is sver, will give big returns for the space they occupy. They are among the richest of vegetables in vitamins A and C and can be served raw in salads and cooked in many appetizing ways. : . Early varieties can be grown from seed sown outdoors, after the ground warms up, but it is better to start plants indoors or buy them in the market. The plants are very tender, and should not be set outdoors until it is safe for tomatoes. Space the plants 18 inches apart in the row and give them fraquent cultivation. They like a rich, heavy soil, but. thrive in lighter soils ii given plenty of water. The pepper is one plant which likes a bath, wr and then; it can be washed eft with the hose and will thrive the better for it. , They grow rapidly and once they begin to bear they continue to produce fruit until frost kills the plants in the fall. A dozen plants will usually be sufficient for a family of four. They have a long season during which they are in good condition; the color changes from green to red and the vitamin A content increases with this . change. The red peppers are highly decorative, and there are also attractive orange varieties.- -. .. The. only-insect likely to attack peppers is a flea beetle, which can be discouraged by spraying or dusti ing with nicotine or D.D.T. There : are no diseases likely to bother. ( Hot peppers are seldom grown in gardens, but if you wish to try them the same general cultural methods I srJi suffice .
SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES MONDAY, JUNE 9, 1947.
The Gold Bricker As Summer draws ' near some of the main local attractions are the beautiful flower gardens. The back yard of Dr. LINDLEY at 400 W. Washington Street is probably the most beautiful in the city. There are various types of flowers set off by an illuminous crystal ball in their midst. A trellis of pink roses covers one corner of the garage. Speaking of roses, It would be hard to decide whether to give the prize to Mr. B. F. RILEY . of 326 Main or to Miss LUCILLE SMITH of 218 N. State Street. Both yards are adorned with the beautiful flowers. Then' of course, there is Mrs. BERT SMITH at 246 S. State Street, who always has a fine assortment of -roses as well as many other kinds of flowers. Probably one of the greatest improved yards in the city is at the FRANK CAULDWELL home on West Washington Street. -For merly the yard was Uneven and creviced by erosion. A large tree obstructed the view of the front of the house. Now the tree has been removed and the yard has been leveled and landscaped with shrubs and evergreens. It took Mr. CAULDWELL several months to beautify his home, but his efforts have been rewarded. KENTON RIGGS is not. only the Mayor of the Teen Canteen, but he is also the proud owner of a litter of guinea pigs. KENNY has had the hobby for quite some time and he has several of the fine specimen. He keeps the pigs in a small building behind his home east of town. KENNY bought three or four of the pigs several months ago and now the litter has greatly increased to approximately twenty or twentyfive. Guinea pigs are noted for their rapid multiplication. KEN NY feeds them fresh vegetables and a special mash. Guinea pigs and rabbits have many of the same habits. As the litter increases, KENNY sells the guinea pigs, so if anyone would be interested in starting a new hobby they might see KENNY. GOLDBRICKER almost lost his full week's wages when he went into the J. C. Penney store Friday afternoon. He has decided that Mr. FIGHTMASTERS, Penney's new manager, is the most high pressure salesman in town. .Whew! President Calls j Safety Conference The Action Program group of the President's Highway Safety Conference will meet in Washington, June 18, 19 and 20 to evaluate results of a year's nationwide effort to reduce death and injury on the highways and to plan a further attack on traffic accidents. The meeting has been called by President Truman at the request of the three national committees on highway safety formed at the instance of the first conference which was held in Washington in May, 1946 the State Officials' National Highway Safety Committee, the National Committee for Traffic Safety, and the Federal Committee on Highway Safety. In calling the 1947 conference President Truman pointed out that 6,600 lives had been saved in 1946 and urged a minimum TRADITIONAL CAP
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HIGH IN THE AIR go the caps of newly-commissioned Navy ensigns and Marine Corps 2nd lieutenant at the conclusion of graduation esercises in Dahlgren Hall at Annapolis, Md. At right, Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal hands a commission to James W. Hawthorne, of Greenwich, Conn., No. 1 man of the Naval Acad tmjr'j class of 1947. The graduation, marked, the eod of the war program of three-xear classes. .CZnterr-StiansIX :
goal of 10,000 lives saved for this year. ' - - '" Governors of the 48 States or their representatives, State motor vehicle administrators, ' State highway engineers and enforcement officials and representatives) of unofficial organizations long identified with the highway safety movement, will attend the meeting. Each State will report its highway safety activity during the past year and submit recommendations for further strengthening the program. Thirty-two State highway traffic safety conferences have been held since the, President's meeting last May. ' Major General Philip B. Fleming, Administrator of the Federal Works Agency is General Chairman of the President's Highway Safety Conference. Governor Millard F. Caldwell of Florida, President of the United States Conference of. Governors, will act as vice-chairman. Thomas H. McDonald, Commissioner of
the Public Roads Administration, ! F. W. A., is chairman of the co- ' ordinating committee. Alfred W. Bohlen, executive director of the American Association of Motor Vehicles, is executive director of the conference. Additional stimulus to a con tinuing campaign against traffic deaths this year is expected from ! the concerted support of State Press Associations of the nation, which are planning a national educational campaign this summer. . " , " ' . Although traffic deaths totaled 33,500 in 1946, the fatality curve turned downward after the Conference in May of that year. : Catacombs, tombs hewn In' solid rock, were used by the Etruscans as family burial places. Later the term was applied to all subterranean cemeteries. The most famous catacombs are in Rome, and form a vast labyrinth of narrow galleries with small chambers excavated at different levels. Hot summer day3 are prob- : ably called "dog days" because they occur when Sirius, the dog star, rises in conjunction with the sun, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica. ;
AFTERMATH OF EXPRESS COLLISION
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ONE MAN WAS DEAD and many passengers badly shaken when nlno cars of this Buffalo-Chicago express on the New York Central line derailed in a collision at Huron, O. Cars piled up behind overturned locomotive. Engineer Jamea Williams was killed. (International)
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Ohio Valley Board Meets In Capital INDIANAPOLIS, June 9. Indianapolis will be the scene of one of the most important rail transportation meetings of 1947, when the Ohio Valley Transpor
tation Advisory Board holds its 82nd regular meeting at the Lin coin Hotel here on Tuesday, June 10. Hundreds of prominent Industrialists and railroad officials from Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia will meet for the bettermen of transportation, marketing railroad car supply and to discuss and forecast business conditions for the third quarter of 1947. Sponsoring the June 10 meeting at Indianapolis are the Traffic Club, Board of Trade, and the Chambers of Commerce of Indiana and Indianapolis. Various committees of the Ohio Valley Board met in Indianapolis this morning and in the afternoon the executive and railroad contact committees held a joint session. However, the largest meeting will be held Tuesday morning, followed by a luncheon at 12:15 p. m., daylight time, at the Lincoln Hotel, at which Governor Ralph F. Gates will welcome the representatives of the four states to Indianapolis. - -" Presiding at the luncheon will be the president of the. Traffic Club, Slade Freer, Jr., of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Mr. Freer will present Governor Gates and will introduce Howard C. Greer, vice president of Kingan & Company, who is a director of the Monon (Chicago, Indianapolis & Louisville Railway). Mr. Greer, in turn, will introduce the principal speaker,' John W Barriger, president of : the Monon. Mr. Barriger's subject will be "Grooming the Iron Horse to Win." . Freeman Bradford, general manager of the : Indianapolis Board of Trade, is chairman of the arrangements committee and is being assisted by thirty of the most prominent industrialists and railroad representatives in Indianapolis. , , i ; ; ; .
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Three-I League Clubs W. L. Danville . . . .. 21 8 Terre Haute ...... 19 13 Evansville ...... .. 18 14 Springfield ....... 21 17 Waterloo 17 19 Davenport .15 18 Quincy . . .15 20 . Decatur ...., 10 27 National League : W. L. Brooklyn ......... 26 18 New York ..i.. ... 25 18 Chicago 24 19 Boston 25 20 Philadelphia 21 26 Pittsburgh 19 25 Cincinnati 20 27 St. Louis 18 25 American League W. L. Detroit ... 26 17 New York . . . 26 20 Cleveland 19 18 Philadelphia ...... 22 23 Boston 21 22 Chicago ' 23 26 , Washington ....... 19 23 St. Louis 18 25 Pet .724 .594 .563 .553 .472 .455 .429 .270 Pet. .591 .581 .558 .556 .447 .432 .426 .419 Pet. .605 .565 :5i4 .489 .488 .479 .452 .419 YESTERDAY'S GAMES Three-I League ' Terre Haute, 16-4; Waterloo, 93. ..... - Danville, 3-5; Decatur, 0-2. Quincy, 5-2; Springfield, 4-3. Evansville, 7-2; Davenport, 6-3. . National League' Philadelphia, 5-4; Pittsburgh, 2-5. Cincinnati at Boston, ' postponed. ' ' . " St. Louis at New York, postponed. . Chicago" at Brooklyn, postponed, American League Washington, 1-2; Chicago, 0-8. (First game 18 innings.) Detroit, 5; Boston, 0. '..'. Philadelphia, . 4-0; - .Cleveland, 0-2. .. .: ,-.'.. .-'--,-':- . St. Louis, 9-4; New York, 2-5. ' Qlt Mrtnf rent and own font horn. Special bare mi -property a Installment alaa. Alas farma for sale. j W. T. MELLOTT SHIMMY CA0SES ACCIDENTS Tht tar that " wtavtt " r "wancUrt"v;Ut taust bad accidentt. ' Havt us rtmevt tht thimnj" rem your tar anddrivt tafely. SpttialUt Urvit; 118 So. Main Phone 98 HERE ARE BUILDINGS THAT ARE DIFFERENT! They DO. NOX COST Too Much and in long as dtiltod, In lj; xtonitom bii mm. wmwm .Whatever the need . . . ittn, workshop, office, warehouse, im plement shed, machine shop, animal shelter, boat house, 'garage, . vehicle shelter . . ."Qnonsets-' 11 ' the bill. Sheathed with sheet steeL nailed to Stran-Steel arch'' ribs,' joists, and purlias,' "Qupsstj" are easily, .quickly ereeted. "Quonsets''. are -tha answer to your immediate building problems. Call or write us todsyi VALLEY SUPPLY CO INC s; ; 944 Ohio St.; ' Terre Haute, Ind. , Phone C-5198
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"BLESSING ON THE DAY I FOUND RHU-AID" HER. RHEUMATIC PAINS END! One lady recently took RHUAID three days and said afterward that she never would hav believed such a "wonderful medicine" existed. She says she couldn't raise her left arm mora 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 lika an altogether different woman. RHU-AID is the new liquid formula containing three valuable medical ingredients. These Threa Great Medicines, all blended into one go right to the very cause of rheumatic and neuritic aches and pains. Miserable people soon feel different all over. So don't go on suffering! Get RHU-AID, Bennett's Drug Store. Adv. Anytime Any Place YELLOW CAB Phone 470 The Thinking Fellow Rides A Yellow 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 governmrnt findings are incor porated in the new product IVY-DRY At your drugstore, 59c. lYT-DRY U mlf. by lytCORP., l'o(jir, N. !., not nxtficiotcd with any govfimmtnt orfaniinlion. Well, What Are You ; a . i Waiting For? When it doesn't cost you any nioney, only your time. NOT ONE CENT DOWN 36 Months To Pay. Your credit will buy you storm windows, screen, or insulation. Call us for free estimate or demonstration. ' , PHONE 136 DUGGER Or Write Home Sales .1101 Wash. Ave. Vincennes, Ind. HOME CANNING'S piece metal M x 9 Use, this newost dovelopment in J. ( piece metal hdsl There's no doubt ef JltST a safe seat for vouf PRSSS ; TO hone -conned foods. Just press to test if DOMJ is down, jar It sealed! Fits any Atason cr,'. Easy to use b cause. It's sure. Cos more the eesy way with 8 ALL JARS ANO DOME t!0E! : ' ? TEST! AT YOUR
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