Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 145, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 22 July 1947 — Page 2

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PAGE TWO

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES TUESDAY. JULY 22, 1947.

SULLIVAN, INDIANA'

A Home Owned ftemocratlo Newspaper ,- Sullivan Daily Times, founded 1905, as the daily edition of the Sullivan Democrat, founded 1854 PAUL POTNTER Publisher ELEANOR fOYNTER JAMISON Manaeer and Assistant Kditor HOMER H. MURRAY Editor Entered as second-class matter at the Postofttce, Sullivan, Indiana Published daily except Saturday and Sunday at US West Jackson St SuUlvan. Indiana , Telephone U

United Press Wire Berries ' National Bepresrauttlve: , Theis and Simpson, New York

SUBSCRIPTION BATE;' ' By Carrier, per week 15c By Mall Elsewhere I By Mail In Snllivan nitA a..t... And Adjoining Coanties ' . The Valted 8tt' m Year $4.00 Six Months $2.25 Six Months J2.75 One Month 40 One Month -SO All Mail Subscriptions Strictly In Advance. Opportunity As Well As Need

1 lion.

t It is, regrettable that President Truman's message' to Mr. Henley is but one of , a Congress, asking for a' prompt start on a 10-year program to number of Republican public ofrhPfk flnnHs tha ATiseieomni hnsin anH narnpcc pyppsb wn. ficials in Indiana who are serving

ter for proactive useshas been transmitted so close to adjournment. The time element makes action at this session doubtful.

Political Comment

A Republican policy of dual

job-holding, bitterly attacked in .the last session of the Indiana General Assembly, again" was brought sharply to the attention of Indiana voters in a recent exchange of statements by Pleas E. Greenlee. Indiana Democratic

state chairman and George W. Henley, Bloomington lawyer. Mr. Greenlee, in a statement, called attention to the fact that Mr. Henley, Republican floor leader in the Indiana House of

Representatives, also is serving the state as a member of the , board of trustees of Indiana UniIversity, a situation which Mr. Greenlee declared, is in direct violation of Indiana's Constitu-

POLIO VICTIM VISITS ROOSEVELT'S GRAVE

the state in dual, and even multiple capacities. Seats of five members of the Indiana General Assembly were challenged by the Democratic minority when the 1947 session convened but the protests promptly were sidetracked by the top-

' I kyiisim)

. It if regreUable, also, that the president withheld form al recommendation for passage of the pending Missouri Val ley" Authority bill, wh;h would fit admirably into the pro

posed program and enhance its usefulness. Mr. Truman, has heaw ReDubiican maioritv

said he favors MVA bur metre than informal endorsement is That did not end matters, howneeded to get it through Congress in the face of persistent ever. The Republican Auditor of

uppusiuuii liuiii private power interests. i state, aiter investigating nis von- . TT -V . , , 1, I , , ' stitutional duties, decided he is in hi h t t d th t Suliivan the United States has been im-. would be even more difficult to lie specuicany points out, nowever, mat nooa control violation of the law. if he should " : ; ' flono nnn rvrtrti-ncf rvirt-o m1 than trt Vlnro I no! 4rif ril tViat ie tJrira if Pliccia

embraces widespread opportunity as well as need, saying: pay the salaries of these two-way o ' . tav That dops ,ook been exporting? Now, stop and i in from the West Coast to ease

f flrxrxAa i rY -Y stl A tir a " . j.i i rr n e : a j : :i iu.' l i

STRICKEN WITH INFANTILE PARALYSIS two years ago, 24-year-old Genevieve Eldredge of Rutland, Vt., visits Franklin D. Roosevelt's grave at Hyde Park, N. Y. As result of treatment under auspices of the national foundation for infantile paralysis whicH the late President Roosevelt promoted, Miss Eldredge is able to stand and walk a short distance. , (International)

HICKORY Mrs. Myrtle Stutsman visited her sister, Mrs, Stella Goins, in Illinois a part of last week. Miss Joan Goodman is yisiting in Indianapolis. , Mrs. Sdith Stutsman and Bill of Terre Haute, spent the weekend with Mrs. Myrtle Stutsman and Dave. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Smith attended the uneral of the former's uncle, Newton Smith, at Jasonville Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Zella Cooksey spent a

few days with Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Bedwell and family last week. M.. ana Mrs. Emil Bortier, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Faidherbe, and Mrs. Emil Hilier of Bicknall, ' were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mehey Tuesday. Week-end guests of Mrs. Myr- ! tie Stutsman and Dave were Mrs. j Wm. Stutsman and Bill, Rosalie and Carol Lou, of Terre , Haute, MrT and Mrs. Jqe Ladson ' and son, Mr. nd Mrs. Herman Mason and family of Connersville. Ms. and Mrs. Wilson McClel- ! Ian moved this week to their new home on North Court Street in Sullivan. ' Mr. and Mrs. Charles Selby ;have purchased and moved into :the property formerly owned by ,

Mr. and Mrs. Wilson McClellan. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Daniels and Bill of Muncie, Mrs. Mae Usrey and Nina Marie Butler were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Usrey. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Inman of Bedford, and Sue and Dean

i-Moore were Sunday guests of

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Moore.

Nrfne's A Mouthful FORT WORTH, Tex., (UP) Marino Anderson of vuito, Ecua-

Texas Christian University here; seldom tries to sign his full name.It is Carlos Rogue Raul Jenaro Marino Anderson. Ribadeneira . won Klessel Marques de Trasta-mara.

FLASHES?

Are you going thru the functional 'middle-age' period peculiar to women (38-52 yrs.) ? Does this make you suffer from hot flashes, feel so nervous, high-strung, tired? Then DO try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms! Pinkham's Comnound also has what

I Doctors call a stomachic tonic effect! LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S compound

like a lot of money, but when think, it all loreign tracte m on, tne snortage.

von fi sure that there are at least from which gasoline is mads,

"Fortunately the means available to us for control of floods job-holders.

in many cases furnish the ooDortunitv for use of water for He held up their checks and

. J - Ll ' : i.i 1 1 1 1. f 1 1 , viAiir thaa Inmrlitfiro olen eavxrmel " j , i ij

mh;u . ; : j i.i j ii 1 in other state caoacities have . .nnM tv,D Th tViot . . . . . ..

jjuwci. muit, yie-u&e icseivuiis piuuuce uiesf aim uiuer uene- , maKes an average 01 omy a.ou -' -" "v Chicago had some neckties on

tits, including the improvement of municipal and industrial " "ups'" per worker a year. Now, divide import wouia oe lost. I sale at a mere $75 a piece They

water supplies, new recreational areas, and opportunities, the . that by the number of weeks m . , were fancy ta;ngs, all covered preservation of fish and wild life, and the abatement Of pol- Ind,ana ns feraUy are a year and see just what the ! By government records, it has . with sequins. He are waiting for

lution " pretiy mum ai&gusiea wuii uidi average weekly saving would be. been shown that oil has been the local men's stores to start j ." ' . I kind of state government admin- Not verv much, is it. i shipped out at h rate of less than , storkins tiiem. We nlan on eivins

; The nation has spent many hundreds of millions of dol- j ration. Most of thern feel that lare on flood control, must less upon flood prevention and wj,en .eyt. vot?d, a RePblan i.;n 1 ., , , , .-i x, . . , administration into power they still .less upon attaining benefits that can come out of suckwere entitled t0) and shouid re.

piDjcutb. me large eApeiiuiiuies lor ouiiumg ana jnaiiULain-

Ahd when you take the num-

ceive better treatment.

1 1,500 barehls a day, as compared with the 6,889 barels daily flior

ber of persons in the county who ., , . . . - .. u r. a tnese shipments are causing the earn more than the average, and V . . ... ,

take' what they make and their flMl-. c

them for Christmas, need about fifty.

and will

inS lui fttiaigiiiciiiiiB iivw uwimeia auu ujr- Their answer wlu be outright " '"ZrlZ tie the Hepubliians say ptoses have had m some cases only limited and temporary repudiation of : such tactics in saving , the average httie, 4

advantages, inese measures emphasized protection rather 1948.

than prevention

man just won't get enough more

each week to even bother with

' 1

. 1 it r 1

i 5 j ' 1 ' ' ' ;'. ' ' ' Lightly

1

course they are, because the big business, whose members will really benefit by the tax reduc-

; tion, want that bill. It will mean

a big slice to them. "? : We are still hearing' a number

of yelps about the snortage of

f gasoline, and the fact that shipImenls to Russia have caused the

Th haf tlp river thp inpom e lax ' shorfage. Again it ' is a case of

What can be achieved in the way of prevention was em

phasized about a quarter-century ago in the completion of

tne iviiami Valley conservancy project in southwestern Ohio. Here' was a small regional development, which, through the use of retarding dams and basins, has prevented disastrous flood in the Jim?.ted area which it servesV Opponents of public power development, however, prevented the impounding": of waters' for that purpose. ". v I . The Tennessee Valley Authority,' once under: the direction, of 'Arthur E. Morgan; who designed and built the Miami valley dams, achieved muchVJarger- pnd-MasthJg benefits

tnrougflrer panveircomtjatmg erosion7 developmg rec- reduction bill brought out some some people just yelling without reation facilities and the like. "This was and remains a reg- interesting statements by various a complete knowledge of the lonal undertaking, although financed nationally Mt is region- persons that sounded very fine situation, and our own ' Senator ally controlled, also, a fact whicli is the basis of some opposi- when read straight, but when Homer Capehart is a very good tion which has been persistently encountered in Washington, analyzed didn't seem so good, example of that.

""'"'i ncouiig onangc , ucuteuuws, neips power ui mciu,woi .vv j -interests to delay action on the similar. MVA project. ' Indiana state Chamber of Com-

Irrigation is an old and continuing need in the west, ' from which come the flood waters that harass the lower Misn j souri and Mississippi valleys. It is closely linked with flood : control, and could be a closely linked with rower develop-! mfint. There are vast areas in the Mississippi basin that would ' lend themselves to opportunities perhaps surpassing those 1

grasped by TV A, and would benefit indirectly the entire nation. t " .'.; r So the program advocated by President Truman is highly: commendable, as far as it goes. But it is regrettablethat he did not include a call for prompt action in MVA, which would fit so' appropriately into the program.

I : The whole difficulty is that the

But,- the Republicans are accus- transportation situation has being Mr. Truman of playing poli- come tight. It is impossible to tics when he vetoed the bill. Of get enough oil from Oklahoma

and Texas into the Midwest (o ease the situation at the .refin

eries,., and that suggests that it of the money.

Flashy Sir Flashes TAUNTON, Mass. (UP) Perhaps the most consistent performer in the field of sports is a dog the racing greyhound Flashy Sir. In 63 starts, the dog won 49 times. He finished second eight times and third once. On only three occasions did he finish out

NE WORK'S F

SERVICE

0 0 0 000 0 0 0

PLEASANTVILiuE, EftolANA

H,OTll,'tf,

For example, do you know that

WISHING WELL

Registered U. S. Patent Office.

Ten Years Ago i Today .July 22, 1937: 'A "mystery plane" was reported; today to be flying the Atlantic; toward Europe. interest and participation ' in the Community playground work is increasing and Paul Kelly, director of the project, , has his baseball program for boys in full swing. ..The Chinese fear early declaration of war by the Japanese Government. TCarolyn Sue, three year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Davis, of South Court Street, was almost instantly killed shortly before noon today when . she jumped from the back of an ice truck parked near her parents' home and darted into the pato of an automobile driven by Richard Smith, 23, of Sullivan. Ben H. Rilenge, of Sullivan, is in Philadelphia where he is engaged in work for the Committee for Industrial Organization.

NEW LEBANON Mrs. Gertrude aton of Robinson, Illinois, visited her sister, Mrs. Emma Mason, a few days thi week. . Mrs. Bertha Pierson returned home Friday after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hart of Rose Chapel. Mr. and Mrs. Harlen Eddine-

pton and sons of Indianapolis,

were the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Pirtle and family. . Mr. and Mrs. Alba Parkhurst of Terre Haute, visited Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Siner, Sunday. Miss Kathleen Mason of' Indianapolis, was the week-end guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Mason tend family. Mrs. Cora Gray and Harry Clark of Terre Haute, visited Mr. and Mrs. Louis Baker Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Orville Biggs and Mrs. Marjorie Bailey and children were in Terre Haute Monday. . , ' " . ''.f '

S 7 6 4 8 2 5 3 7 2 8,4 5 B A A C ,A tt D A R O B A A 6 1 2 6 1 S 1 2 6 4 5 f2 R A N Z M Y PGA It Z I I ST 7 6 2 7 i 8 5 2 7 36 L I AiCNN ONI G TR E 1 7 8 i 2T 6 8 i 6 f F I N R T A O M O E I" G ' P $ 2 7 3 S S S2 4 5 7 2 4 T R R C WT H O E R O I .1 2 S 5 i B 2 ' 7 6 , 5 32 4 8 D E L D A li V T V E ' O E S 7 i 1 2 6 5 4 7 2" 7 5 6 f E AM V O E S E E N L P T

the "Beer i

Drinker's" Beer STERLING BREWERS, INC, Evanwilli, IbiL

HERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every day. It is a numerical puzzle designed to spell out your fortune. Count the letters in your first name. If the number of letters is 6 or more, subtract 4. If the number Is less than 6, add 3. The result i your key number. Start at the upner left-hand corner of the recttngle and check every one of your key numbers, left to right. Then. r?ad the message the letters under the checked figures give you.

DEAD ANIMALS REMOVED Prompt Sanitary Truck Service. We Pick Up targe and Small Animals call Greek Fertilizer Co. . . Sull'van Phone No. 9 WE PAY ALL PHONE CHARGES

TOMATOES

Fresh" 2 lb 35C Soid ' ,

Watermelons, lb. '. ... 3c Corn on' Cob, Aoz. . . . ."' 50c Lemons, doz. ...... 350

Cucumbers, 2 for . .'. . . 15c

Cabbage, lb.

Apples, 2 lb.' 25c

5c Peaches, 2 !b. 25c

Bananas, lb.

15c

Oranges, doz.

25c

W Y M A N r S MRK E T South Section Street, Next to I. C, Railroad ; Phone 963 : : "WE DELIVER" ' . ' t ' ' :

-im mi turn 0EUEQ LETS VOfl DCOn

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Jjoo's tor the t f Perma-lift inset V"' li-V

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it is made without uncomfortable bones yes, it stays up without

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41 1 IUI.WH1 ifii'iriiffcahif fit

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