Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 191, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 24 September 1947 — Page 4

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SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES WEDNESDAY, Sept. 24, 1947

SULLIVAN, INDIANA"

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This Week's Schedule Friday: c a Sullivan at Garfield, a Tech at Clinton. Dugger at Washington. Bicknell at Linton. Brazil at Bloomington. Wiley at Crawfordsville. Vincennes at Princeton. Reitz (Evansville) at East Chicago Roosevelt. a Western Indiana (Conference games. - S. I. A. C. game.

backs in the last half. All the Terra Haute schools are, green this year, according to the Terre Haute papers, but they will be bigger than the . Arrows, who have one "of the smaller teams in the Valley this year. From all reports, the Tigers were just too big for Coach lOabe Takats Bulldogs. But, if Princeton played against Washington as they did against . the . Bulldogs, then they might; be a pretty fair club, but one that fwon't set the world afire. In fact, Vincennes will be odds-on favorite to take out on the Tigers iwhat they couldn't take out on the Central Bears. ,' Takats said that he was going

to wear overalls, hip-boots, a .raincoat, and a fireman's hat io Princeton, just in case it rained

the way it did at Jeffersonville

The Arrows will be looking at the . week before. But if he did Linton and Bloomington Friday wear them he didn't need them, night to get a line on what chance The only sign of a storm at they might have against two Princeton was the one the Tigers future opponents. Linton's Miners worked Up.

play host to the Bicknell Bull- j , ; dogs, while the Brazil Imps tra- When the Golden Arrows go up vel to play Bloomington's Pan- against the Garfield Purple Eathevs. After losing to both- the gies Friday night, they will be Bulldogs and the Panthers, local playing one of the two teams on fans will be looking to see how this year's schedule that has wdn the Miners and the Imps make more games from the Arrows

The Briar Patch Th? recent hurricane in the Florida Everglades'

I MT. CALVARY with her daughter, Mrs. Ger- I A large crowd attended the trude Eaton, of Palestine, Illinois. more ' . , . a ! hit CIU T3Usin- 4r- pnnnrf- I

services ai mi. iajvary ounaay mis. naiyu uunamti or.?-- i

ing a few days at Freelandvme

this week.

seems

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ago. Okeechobee is next in size to Salt Lake, but so shallow that it 'QUartet from Vincennes. can be waded almost half way on one side. This is range country; J jyr. an(j Mrs. 'Floyd Skinner We saw a thatched roof, real honest-to-goodness long-horn cattle, and Max Leon ,and Miss Jean and a draw-bridge at Moore'9 Haven. Wild iris was blooming in the Alexander of Sullivan were dinditches of the roadside; water hyacinth, the bane of the irrigation ner guests Sunday of Mr. and

ditches, was narched and withered, some beds were entirely dry. Mrs. G. C. Russell and xainily

The dirt in the Everglades is black as coal. This is the fertile trucking region. Large fields of cabbage, . rows of sunflowers or corn or sometimes weeds alternated with five rows of beans, a dredging

being Russell's

L. V. Creager remains about

out.

The occasion

birthday. Rev. Rosier filled his regular Annnint.ment. at this nlaee Sundav

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macnine Cleaning waier-nyacimn out 01 tne irrigation aucnes, iieius ming

or sugar-cane ail these were mixed in with swamps ana cattle

ranges. Wherever crops were grown, there were the irrigation the same

ditches. There were no orange groves here, the land was too low. I Mr. and Mrs. Will Alsman nnd , Clewiston is the town where the U. S. Sugar Corporation has Mr. and-Mrs. Anthony ' Alsman one of its large sugarmills. But the restaurant where we ate lunch attended the singing at Mt. Calwas as short of sugar as I. She was peeved about it that and vaJ. ch"" Su"day nis'lt ... darky help. She'd gone-down to the Negro quarters to find someone ' Mlss Thelma Morgan of .sulli- , , , , . , x , , , . van was the week-end guest of to do her washing. They told her they, were looking for someone to her pamitSi Ml. and Mrs Gkthpl do theifs. . . . The Negroes' shacks here were the most' desolate of Morgan and family. all we saw in the South. The Jamaican camps were 1 numerous, I though. It seems the native blacks regard the Jamaicans just as we

can 'set' and rest his feed; every back yard has its wash-kettle and bench for tin washtubs. The sugar-mill was very interesting. Visitors were allowed to go through on the hour; they registered and signed a no-responsibility slip at the door. The girl who acted as guide told us what to expect; the noise would stop any description after we got inside. The cars of cane were unloaded in a pit; men with long handled

Herbert Mason and son, Herbie1

of West Terre Haute, visited Monday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Mason ;and family. ' ' ' Mr, and Mrs. Bernard Williams were in Sullivan Monday. f

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Mr. and Mrs. Henry Seewer have returned from a motor vrip in the West. ' i Mr. and Mrs! Hubert Padgett of Chicago, spent the week-end with relatives here.

END IN fj TONKJIIT.

BoRart & Lizabeth Scott in

Dead Heckoning"

than they have lost to them'. In

spme twenty-five years of comOne thing is sure, the Arrows petition, the record stands eleven looked better Friday night than victories for the Arrows, thirteen

j they had in the ether two games, f or the Eagles, and a lone tie.

A null's eye in your beau eye side draped black skirt beneath a pastel blouse (rayon crepe) both highlighted by a sunburst of gold braid Exclusively Outs...

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Compa

ny

While that performance Iwouldn't

have stopped Bloomipgton,. it But the record doesn't tell the might have been too much f o.r the story of supremacy that the ArBulldogs, but that, is all water rows have had over the Eagles under the bridge, and the thing jn the past ten years. In the perto do is try to beat teams that jC!i start.:ng 'with the season of

step them.

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hooks dragged out what remained in. the car which was tilted over " ' "u j"";- .. ., , , . A ., . , . I and son and Mr. and Mrs. Walter the pit with one Side rack open. Elevators brought the dirty stalks pIorner spent last week-end in forward and up to where long claws dragged them into the crushers. I Smoky Mountains

This juice was heated, the sediment discarded, reheated and cleaned 1

. ivir. ana Mrs. Max faiuder and son were guests of his parents Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Seewer spent a couple of days last week near Indianapolis with- their daughter, Mrs. Anna Brown and family.

Thurs. Only 100 GOOD REASONS For Vrt" To Soo TM Show

three times. The sediment was returned to the fields for fertilizer,

the water re-airated and used again and again; the residue of the

One of the Arrow backs came up with a shiny new haircut Saturday. He had said that he wouldn't get one until the Arrows 'won a game, and we'll bet the teachers at the high school are glad the Arrows won. The lad was beginning to look like a mangy sheep dog.

stalks was used as fuel in the mill. There was a lot of machinery involved, but not many men were to be seen. The company owned the cane fields. We saw a carload of sweet potatoes waiting to be unloaded at the nearby starch factory a new industry. We went on down to Canal Point. There we foud a former Sullivan County boy who gave us cocoanuts and showed us banana

193J, the Arrows have won seven trees in bloom and fruit. He saidl he had, sold a thousand dollars of ten games from. the. Eagles, worth of tomatoes from his garden plot at $14 a bushel! The hurand have played one- tie. In fact, ; Hcane of nineteen vears aero did so mtirti riarrtaep that a Ipvpp had

I been erected around the lake. The road was outside the levee until

we were more tnan halfway around. The lake is very beautiful; the

the Eagles, scored eight of their thirteen wins over the Arrows in the first ten years of competion.

t And so the Arrows, .

with

The scores, year by year are: 1922 Garfield 20, Sullivan 7.

1923 Garfield 3, Sullivan 0. 1924 Garfield 19, Sullivan 6. 1925 Garfield '14, Sullivan 0

1926 Sullivan 14, Garfield 0

clear water mirrored the clouds until it. was not easy to distinguish Lent

NEW LEBANON Miss Marion Lisman left Friday to enter Franklin College at Franklin, Indiana. She is a

graduate of Sullivan High School and a former New Lebanon stu-

where sky left off and water began. The levee must have saved

many lives this time; hurricanes in Florida, earthquakes in California, and tornadoes in Indiana!!

Mrs. Bertha Pierson returned to her home Sunday after a visit

record of one !win and two losses 1927 Sullivan 12, Garfield 6.

hi S.I.A.C. comentition, start

playing in the "Western Indiana Conference.' Friday they meet tKp; fjrft of fTOr successive W.I.C. teams, with two at home and two away. The. slate is clean as far

1928 Garfield 13, Sullivan 0. 1929 Garfield 10, Sullivan 0. 1930 Garfield 12, Sullivan 0. 1931 Garfield 16, Sullivan 0. 1932 Sul'ivan 13, Garfield 7.

1933 Garfield 9, Sullivan 6.

as this conference is concerned, 1934 Sullivan 14. GarfislH 0.

and the Sullivan hoys are de- i935Garfield 21, Sullivan 0. termined to get' off on the right 1936Garfield 13, Sullivan 0.

managed to score more than three touchdowns in a "game against the Arrclws, and this year's team is determined to even the score for that trouncing. , The Eagles will be a big team,

I but then the Arrows should be jused to giving away weight in a

!game by now. They have done it

to a scoreless tie the week before. But, those comparative scores mean very little in football. Last year the Dogs nosed cut the Hatchets by 6 to 0. Up in Clinton, the folks are very disappointed over losing to Westville, 111. It appears as how the Wildcat fans had thought it

BEAUTIFY YOUR FLOORS with Tile-Tex or Rubber Tile. THOMAS Tir.TC.TtfY WAT

m.M.m..n.t a. MS j-M. I.J J S 1 J

127 E. Jackson Phone 74."

i tfaf M- ! r ' I1 r ' ' A-t'f4 1 QJA I

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foot against the Eagles.

Garfield held the r powerful Linton Miners for a half, but fell before the running of the Miner

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1937 Sullivan 25, Garfield 0 ' 1938 Sullivan 27, Garfield 7. 1939 Sullivan 20, Garfield 6. 1940 Sullivan 20, Garfield 0. 1941 Sullivan 38, Garfield 0. 1942 13 to 13 .tie. - 1943 Garfield 13, Sullivan 7. 1944 Sullivan 19, Garfield 13 ' 1943 Sullivan 12, Garfield 0.- - 194G Garfield 31, Sullivan 0. Last year's game marked, the frrst time that the Eagles have

in all three games they have would oe a snap to take the Illiplayed, and will probably do it in nois outfit, but maybe the hot all the other games they have sun the game was an afternoon scheduled. ; affair took too much out of the .. j Clinton lads. As the Clintonian

put 11, it was HKe playing in a Turkish bath.

;Muit. paying rent and own

j your home. Special bargains!

on property on insta llment I

; plan. Also farms for sale.

W. T. MELLOTT

starring

IOUIS BARBARA

HAYWARD-BDITTOH GEORGE MACREADY I'lus

"In Love," Speakinjr of Animals; "Racing Sleuth," Sport; Late News.

TIME, 7:C0 & 9:00 P.M.

For the second week in a row, the Washington Hatchets will be phying a Sullivan County team. This week th Dugger Bulldogs aifi the nnpw?iii!t If comparative sccres m??.n a thing, the Bulldogs will probably get beat, as Princeton, vhc wal!or.?d the Dogs 20 to 0 last week, played the Hatchets

Cnr. tl ing t?;p Arrows are hoping f'jr ir, .1 clear night on f';fd?y In fact, Coac-h Jones is hoi;i?i? that the authorities in Terre Harte dru't !de!tie to sprinkle Mcmorfa.1 Stadium any tints te-

tween now and the t'nie for (he

C 1 ' as " ,pn up were .t ' ' " " ' - I FrooaD,v 'wouldn't dry out in

mne ior in? jrarne l'riaay. 511a it is no fun trying to play a game in the mud.

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GET-TO-GETHER CLUB The September meeting of vhe Get-To-Gtber club was held Thursday, Septembar IStli at the home of Mrs. Dorothy Louder -milk, A covered dish dinner was sensed at; the noon hour follow

ed by a business rr.setin. i Those present were Mrs. Vern Steele, Edna Houpt, Georgia I Plew, June Gilkerson. Hazel Davis, Helen Wible and Judy, Jes- ' sie Poe, Helen Wilson. Dorothy I Wilson and Larry, Helen Whitman, Hazel Jewell, Ethel Eaton, Alma Christy, Minnie Denny, j Laura Williamson, Tressie Alii- I son. Fern Brown, Rachel Ungar I and Judy, Esther Bell, Gladys Huff and the hostess. The October meeting will be at j the 'home of Mrs. Alma Christy i on October 16th. It is hop3d that any member who has failed io get her mystery pal a present "j will do so at the next .meeting. I

Is REASON: " i llSC2l3S8! The needs of armors arc (riven first consideration in determining kind.? of p::icies, in seiiienicnt of claims, and'in everything affecting the interest of farmers. because: Lower insurance costs result from insuring farmers; also the manner of handling agency and management policies of the company. tiu53iiS2: the Hnonicr Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company, founded by the Indiana Farm Bureau, Inc., is your own organization, It's a good policy to support your own organization; primarily Lecau-c you benefit by doing so, and secondly agriculture generally receives the benefit. , ' .

Herbert J. KEifY IS N. Main St.

. 155 E. Market St. Indianapolis 9t Indiana

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