Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 220, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 4 November 1947 — Page 2

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A Home Owned Democratic Newspaper Snilivan Daily Times, founded 1905, as the daily edition of the Sullivan Democrat, "founded 1854 PAUL POYNTER ..; ...... ... ....... Publish ELEANOR jfOYNTER JAMISON Manager and AMiatant Editor HOMER H. MURRAY , , Editor XnUred aa 'aecond-claaa matter at the Poatoffloa. Sullivan, Indiana 'Publiahed dally azeept Sativday and Bunday at 118 Waat Jackaon .8t SuUivan. Indiana . , Talepnone 13

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' , ' . SUBSCBIPTION BATE: Br Carrier, per week 15o By Mall Elsewhere In By Mall In Sullivan B.. And Adininin. r.n.ti.. : . United Statet.

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Doe Month 40 One Month M All Mail Subscriptions Strictly In Advance.

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES TUESDAY, NOV. 4, 1947.

SULLIVAN. INDIANA

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WEDDING CAKE READY FOR ELIZABETH AND PHILIP

Combating the Mob Spirit ' i Every American who believes in our democratic heritage

should read and ponder the ','book of the year." This is a re-j port, "To Secure These Rights," just published by the PresP

denrrcommittee on Civil Rights, headed by Charles E. WilsoTpresident of General Electric. I Of the four basic rights which the committee savs must

lie strengthened, the first is "the right to safety and securi- j

ty oi the person. In theory, nobody questions it. But, as the committee says, "too many of our people still live under the harrowing fear of violence or death at the hands of a mob or of bi ti.tat treatment by police officers." " , One thinks instantly of the South,, where most lynchings occur,. where justice'often is one thing for the white man ajid another for the Negro. Understandably enough, the committee recommends, among other measures, passage of a federal anti-lynching law. ' But prejudice is not sectional. North as well as South, East as well as West, the mob spirit at times infringes individual rights. s Every city that has had a riot or near-riot has violated 'he right to safety and security of the person." Every. town jhcs pclfce treat citizens. cf one race differently from citi"iens of another, whose courts deal anything less than evenliarided justice to people of all creeds and colors, is guilty of discrimination. . ;, J There is -no quarreling with the proposition that equahbefore the law means exactly that. Most of us have the ency to be ashamed of mob violence when it happens. Our jjl'nsibility is to express that sense of shame in tangible ways by enacting statutes that will discourage men from taking the law into their, own hands: by day-to-day conduct that will steadily uproot the prejudice and hatred from which the mob spirit springs. , -! A number of things can be done. The federal statute which makes it a crime for ..several., persons to conspire against any citizen's constitutional rights can be vigorously enforced, and amended so that it will also apply to acts of a single person. . Police forces can be trained to act' without prejudice themselves, and to deal intelligently with outbreaks of prejudice among others.-- ' "'xJ,;. , . : , ..... .. ...... . - To protect all the basic .rights, the committee proposes -strengthening of government. machinery all along the line. It would expand the Civil Rights section of the U. S. Department of Justice, and set up similar agencies in the states.It suggests a permanent presidential commission and a joint congressional committee on civil rights, and again , recommends that the states -and cities follow the example. "All of our governments, federal, state and local, must be uncompromising enemies., of discrimination," says the committee. For though education and understanding are necessary to eliminate prejudice in the. long run, the existence of prejudice is no excuse for. the violation of civil rights. And the legal recognition of those rights is itself a means of speeding up the educational process. The challenge cannot be ignored. Not only the position of minorities, but the welfare of the nation as a whole is at stake. "Our American heritage," the committee wisely says, "teaches that to be secure in the rights he wishes for himself each man must be willing to respect the rights of other men.'' The Chicago Sir

EXLINE CORNER , Frank,, Creager of Sullivar Mr and Mi- Ruel Pigg of visited in Dugger Saturday. Cass, visited in Dugger recently.! George Jones was in Dugger Mr. and Mrs, Everett Houldson Saturday. . . and son were in Dugger Wed- . Lefty Clark of Cass, visited ir nrsday. v Dugger Friday. ,Mack Moore was in Dugger ' . Mrs. Robinson is visiting in recently. Michigan.

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Tonight & Wednesday "STALLION ROAD"

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Scene trom current Hoosier pic stfirring RONALD REAT.IN A I PYTC CMTTII oJ 7(flHDV CTflTT xT.

Tonight's & Tuesday's feature was mistakenly listed as "Stepchild" in yesterday's Times.) . : . " :

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

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Wedding cake is four tiers nigh.

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Philip's monogram (top); Elizabeth's symbol (bortom).

PORTRAYING incidents In the lives of Britain's Princess Elizabeth and her consort-to-be, Lt. Philip Mountbatten, the decorations on the four-tiered cake for the royal, couple's Nov. 20 wedding are completed. Ingredients for the pastry masterpiece came from all over British empire, (lntemationni)

TODAYS

INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 4. ttJ.R) Hogs, 7,000; moderately active, generally 50c lower on weights

of 160 lbs. and up; lighter weights 25c lower; good and choice 190-1 250 lbs., $26.00; 160-190 lbs. and I 250-350 lbs., $25.50 $25.75; 350400 lbs., $25.25; 100-160 lbs., $22.75 $24.00; sows weak, 50c to 75c lower; bulk good and choice, $23.25 :$24.25; early top, $24.50. Cattle, 2,100; calves, 600; selling strong to 50c higher; grassers steady to 25c lower; ten load at $29.50; small lots, . $32.00; good beef cows, $15,50 $17 50; vealers only moderately active, mostly 50c lower; early sales good and choice, $27.00 $29.50; common and medium, $16.50 $26.50. Sheep, 2,500; fat lamps opened 50c lower some spots more; good and choice, $20.00 $23.00;' medium and good; $18.00 $19.50; slaughter ewes, 50c to $1 lower.

TEXAS GOES TO TRUMAN'S HEAD

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Fisherman's Luck NEW YORK(UP) Patrolman Geoffrey Pfciffer went fishing when he answered an emergency call at the home of Mrs. George Horning. Mrs. Homing's $1,000 diamond ring had gone down the kitchen drain .while she was; washig her hands. The policeman I fel i r , t ...uu 1 u-l

iisueu lui cm uuui witu a ieiim.ii of wire before he got a "bite" and pulled up the ring.

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Hawk's Kotfoot is BI?ckout TEKOA, Wash. (UP) A hawk got a high-voltage hotfoot when it landed on ' a power pole near here, and few birds have raised sdeh a rumpus in the act of getting killed. The hawk alighted on an insulator. A short circuit seared high-voltage lines. The main fuse in the area's substation blew. Lights and power went out in nine communities.

PRESIDENT TRUMAN tries on his new hat for size upon receiving the 10-gallon headgear from John Ben Sheppard (right), Longview, Tex., president of the Junior Board of Commerce. Sheppard's visit to the White House climaxes his fifth croos-country freedom flight to mobilize veterans to strengthen democracy. (International)

It Took Time , PITTSFIELD, Mass. ' ' (UP) Joseph R. Powers was unofficial foreman of the public works department sewer division for 13 years before he was. given a permanent rating in the job.

Quit paying rent and ow your home. ..Special ..bargain on property . on installmen1 plan. Also farms for sale. W. T. MELLOTT

. ' service'

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TELEPHONE 5 PLEASAMTViLE, INDIANA

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If more tractors are . available next season, we'll have our share here. 'But that's a mighty big "if" . so you'll be wise to check your old tractor now and see that it's in shape. Give us the list of

new parts you'll need... of course you'll

want genuine 1H parts . . . and let us set a date now for any needed shop work.

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MCbUhiYilift uttniNu rciHunin" PARTS AND SERVICE

720 NORTH SECTION

PHONE 210

LOCALS

I Johnson and her father, Harve ! Brockton team. He threw one ball Thompson. . i and was taken out with a brok- ! en arm.

' Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ferguson Entry Fee Paid and daughter, Mary, and .Mr. and GOSHEN, Ind. (UP) Police ' Mrs. Earl Ridgeley and daugh- adrnitted they had something new ter, Earline, spent Sunday in 1,M,.u,in Tv,iocc ,hn i

Terre Haut as guests of Mr. and tered the county farm bureau Mrs. Bernard Boles and family. cooperative mill left emptyj Miss Ida Crawford of Los handed. They left behind the two Angeles, California, who has new screw drivers they used to spent the past few months in St in. Sullivan and Palestine, Illinois ' ; :

visiting relatives and friends, s spending this week with Miss Clio Crawford.

I Eddie Kerlin, who is employ- j

ed in Indianapolis, spent the week-end with his mother, Mrs. Dorothy Kerlin. ' Mrs. Dallas Stewart, wno has been the guest of her niece, Mrs. Frances Clerk, in Indianapolis, has returned home. Miss Essie Williams of Indianapolis, was' the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Donnelly and Mr. and Mrs. Hartley Williams over the week-end. I Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Boyle and family of Keensburg, . Illinois, were guests of Mrs. Boyle's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Ruddell and other relatives in Sullivan Sunday. I Mrs. Joe Douthitt of Detroit, Michigan, has ' returned . home after a visit in Sullivan and

Switz City with relatives and friends. .Mr. and Mrs. Herb. Davis of Bloomington, Indiana, were guests Sunday of Dr. and Mrs. Robert E.Henderson and daughter. Ann. . Raymond Waidner attended the Illinois-Michigan football game in Champaign, Illinois Saturday. . Mrs. Thomas Brennan and Misses Fannie Dussard. Betty Roberts and Grace Shaffer ' of

Bedford, Indiana, were euests

Saturday of Mis. Herschel V. Bennett. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Kerlin of Terre Haute, visited their parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Kerlin and Mr. and Mrs. James Durham, over, the week-end. Mrs. Anna Franklin of Indiana? no'is. spent the week-end in Sullivan visiting her father, C. D. i Hunt. ! Miss Betty Booher, a student! at Indiana State at Terre Haute, ! was the week-end guest of her, mother, Mrs. Ruth Booher., I Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Beasley of i Winchester, Indiana, visited relatives in Sullivan over the weekend. 1 Ida May Lamberg of Chicago, , was here over the week-end the, guest of her sister, Mrs. Sarah'

One Pitch Breaks Arm BROCKTON, Mass. (UP) James Keefe, a pitcher for the Whitman Carlyles of the Old Colony League, was sent in as a relief hurler In a game with a

Complete Service By Trained Mechanics LUBRICATION MUFFLERS & TAILPIPES SHOCK ABSORBER SERVICE W. S. JARED Implement Sales 19 N. Section

Hiding Jfands...or Jfoldirifl Hands ?

Smart girls, with hand-holding notions, don't go around hiding red roughened hands behind their backs. They us Dorothy Perkins Weather lotion l ; . make their hands "show-off" lovely. This creamy lotion will ' do the same for your hands, too I It gets to work fast, banishing red roughness, smoothing and softening your hands 'o new, satin-touch beauty. For face, arms, and legs, tool

WEATHER LOTION $ 1 O O p'us to For "Show-off Hands

. 1, WEATHER LOTION

ONCE-A-YEAR EVENT

Oh Sale 50c

FOR . LIMITED TIME ONLY

: GOUCKENOUR CO,

Johnson Sea Horse Outboard Motors Sales & Service

Bose's Super Market

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And Sporting Goods Store

Fine Fishing Tatkle and Reel Parts

c610 N, Main St.

SURE SHOT, SHOTGUN SHELLS. 12-16-20-410, Box $1.75 NITRO EXPRESS HEAVY LOADS, Box $1.85 LONG RIFLE HOLLOW POINT HI SPEED .22 SHELLS, Box A 50c 12 Ga. REMINGTON AUTOMATIC 28 MOD. SHOTGUN $9 L00 16 Ga. REMINGTON AUTOMATIC SHOTGUN, 28 in. with Polly Choke $110.00 410 SHOTGUN .22 Rifle over and under . , $28.40 SINGLE SHOT .22 RIFLE REMINGTON TArGETMASTER $11.93 REMINGTON SCOREMASTER CLIP .22 RIFLE $19.95

REMINGTON SPORTMASTER MAGAZINE LOADING .22 RIFLE $24.93

DRYBAK HUNTING COATS; Brown Color. .'. $8.95 and $10.93 SHOTGUN CASES $3.95 and SHEEPLINED CASES $8.93 LACE ON RECOIL PADS, Shotgun and Rifle .. 93c .22 - .27 Cal. COMBINATION RIFLE & PISTOL CLEANING RODS 95c 12-16-20 Ga. SHOTGUN CLEANING RODS, only :.. $1.23

HUNTING CAPS, only $1.00

1 USED .22 LONG RIFLE AUTjDM4Tic,M0SSBERG witli 4 Power Mossberg scope in good condition'. Complete Outfit $39.95:

SCOUT AXES, Special Low Price, only each $1.39,

SCOUT KNIVES, Special Low Price, only each $1.39 TRUE TEMPER VALEAN FIRE HARDENED AXES $2.73 HUNTING KNIVES . . . .'. ......... $2.50 MARBLE HUNTING KNIVES . . . . $3.00 SKATE-MATE BALL BEARING ROLLER SKATES, Pair $3.95 GOOD CASTING arid FLY RODS lust Arrived $5.95 up

See. The. New 1948 Delude 5 horsepower Johnson Sea Horse -Outboard Motor, now on display here. Trie finest fishing motor ever built. Price only $160.00. Also 1 used 5. horsepower ,1947 tpdel and used 16 horsepower 1947 model Johnson Sea Horse outboard motors. Priced to sell.

WHITE OUTSIDE HOUSE J'AlNT,;, Close Out, 9 Gal. (a) $3.73 each

8-CUP WHITE ENAMEL COFFEE POTS,; only 95c

lU-wr.,WHIIE ENAMEL WATER BUCKETS, on v , $1.19

REVERE SOLID, COPPER CHROME PLATED TEA KETTLE, only $2.93 PORCELAIN WHITE ENAMELED 5-h-l DOUBLE COOKER $1.19 LUNCH KITS with Vacuum. Jiottle,, complete $2.25 EXTRA HEAVY ALUMINUM LARGE, SIZE MINERS' BUCKETS $2.03

"1 Z 1 A T 1 T a t niiriTT rumr' ,

i-incn ualiV. uaij liuciviia, special . Soc

FOOT TUBS

59c i-No.-2 TUBS-

$1.29 No. 3 TUBS only

$1.69

6 & 7 in. STOVE PIPE, also 7 in. STOVE PIPE SPECIAL JOINT 23c

SUGAR, 10 lbs.

95c w BEANS," 10 lbs.

$1.59 BIG HERSHEY BARS 25c

CAMELS, LUCKY STRIKE, CHESTERFIELD, OLD COLD CIGARETTES, carton $1.69

We issue Fishing, and Hunting licenses. Open 8:30. A. fM- Close 7:30 P. M. Open until noon on Sunday. Drive up. Plenty parking space.