Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 49, Number 230, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 18 November 1947 — Page 2

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES TUESDAY, NOV. 18. 1947. SULLIVAN, INDIANA

PAGE TWO

A Horns Owned Democratic Nwsfper Sullivan Dally Timet, founded 1995, as the dally edition of tht Sullivan Democrat, fonnded 1854

PATTT. POTtrnn) ELEANOR rt)NTBR JAMISON HOMER H. MURRAY Entered a lecond-claM matter at rucuanea aauy wj Bativoay and BulMvan. Indiana .... United Frew Wise ferric Vatlenal Bepreenattt . Xkeli and Blmpaen. New Yerfc SUBSCRIPT By Carrier, per week 15c ft?,'," B"H5!5 -Tear ....r.. S4.00 Six. Months J2.25 One Month .40 All Mail Subscriptions

That Special Session

.:; as congress convenes in special session citizens oi trie United States have a vital interest at stake the matter of taking effective steps to halt the commodity price spiral that .followed an experience with Republican decontrol poli-

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... . Hiveivone is aware mat nric.es sti i are on r.ne increase

and -that Europe constantly is

eyeey quarter it is agreed that if present conditions continue, ;i the average American wage-earner or salaried, worker faces - 'C1t'.-nn Jli- ' . i

For years the American citizen has heard the voices of J reactionary Republican leaders crying out against socialism, ; radicalism, regimentation and bureaucracy. These words i ,,aA ;u ......4.U5 j A i

- cpiwicto oiuccu cvciuuiig ueaigneu iv ueneII t;$$y average citizen the "little fellow" such as social securityfjafm security, rural electrification, flood control, pub- I

ut nouoiiij;, puuiic iicaim, miiuinuia wage legislation ana

4 price control.

.Verv often, in their viciousness. these critics have even

.: shrieked of Communism lurking in the hot lunch program : i for-public school children and adequate pay for public t Schod teachers.

m f!1 notwithstandmg their bitter criticism they havelwit with wnter white and black ; failed to come forward with a program. Repeal all humane ' accessories. The bridesmaid wore ,r legislation, they demanded, and permit free enterprise, to grey with black accessories. Both : enrich us and the law of, supply and demand protect us. wore corsages of red roses. The : These are the same leaders who led the nation into the bridegroom wore a navy blue inflation and the depression which followed World War I. business suit and the best man l Now, they are offering more inflation and a bigger de- wore a grey business suit. pression. ' ' , rs- Stultz is a graduate of . 1 - : - . - i Carlisle High School with the

STATE COLLEGE PLANS ORCH. FALL RECITAL

i'.r CAINS UKUH.

- 'TERRE HAUTE, Nov. '.Indiana Ktafp Tpanhprs CoUm

t ou ,-Will present the College Orches"tra In its plpvpnth annual Fall

. ... -concert at 3:00 p. m. on Sunday, ,Noy. 23 in the Student . Union - tsuiaing auanorium, unaer tne direction of Arthur D. Hill, de.apartment of music. : Soloists for the concert will be Robert W.. Scott, baritone; John 7j Pearce' bantoneuthann riarn - i son sopranor and- Siiri Sahlman t' HAlm v Ir 1 ITl nlnnW nrrtn ItMll Ui ."."u, w.. w.xi i supply the commentary for the j orchestra's presentation of "A Tribute to Jean Sibelius." -j The program, "Contrasts in t Orchestral Music", will include J Sacchirtf-Franko's Overture to "! Oedipus in Col.onus; First Suite i from Carmen by Bizet; Robert C. Scott singing "But Who May j Abide the Messiah" by Handel; I A fantasy on Six Spirituals by Gould; Schubert's first move-

The answer is simple. Thousands of Bushels of Valuable and High Priced Grain is wasted by Feeding alone or mixing in poorly balanced rations. lt wt I Follow the JOHNSON FEEDING PROGRAMS for Poultry, Dairy and Hogs and you will produce more gain at less cost. Whether you desire to feed a supplement or a complete finished feed, we can supply you the best and SAVE YOU MONEY.

LINTON

dihii.v.... Manager and AwUtant Editor i - Editor the Fontatflca, HuHiTan, Indiana I Bnnday at 110 weat jacoon tn. , ....... Talephona 13 . fON RATE: By Mall EUewaere In The United Statee: g 22 on jnomos &io One Month JO Strictly In Advance. 1 H J .. ' .. ' growing hungrier. In almost , ment from the B Major 4 SymI phony: Czech Rhapsody by Weinberger; and the Tribute to Si- ' John Pearce and Ruthann Harri18 son. Bach's Air for O Strings and ..u a tiuvciiy numuer caiiea dingles A11 the Way," by special peri. i J: u HiistiuLi vi variuus rauiu snuws uslng singing commercials, will complete the program. . ' j JERICHO wred Moore was in Dugger re- - v - ,. T ' ' . Howard Keene of Anderson, - - - ? 1. V 1 - . 1 visuea in mugger recenuy.

. Mrs. Nellie Robbins and child- r.eion and were repulsed by poren visited Mrs. Rena Broshears 'ce Bonfire.

Sunday- , Lewis Lewellyn visited in Du8ger recently. - I George Jones and John Armstrong were in Dugger Saturday. Everett Houldson Jr. was in Dugger one day last week. W. T. Mellott of Sullivan was in Dugger one day last week.

lin nils

You can easily Co-operate with the President's SAVE MORE GRAIN PROGRAM and still make more Money 4

JOHNSON

Feed & Supply

. Feed Manufacturers i Direct Factory Stores at: SULLIVAN. BICKNELL

HUNTING SEASON HAS GOOD START INDIANAPOLIS. Ind.. Nov. 17 The greatest hilnting pressure in Indiana history was indicated

today as Indiana Department of Conservation officials began to tally early reports on the new season, which opened Nov. 10. cmar rahhits and nuail heean . vt witji a record number of licensed sportsmen in the field, the birds rand beasts didn't have much chance. Hoping to spread out the kill fairly and seeking to cut down "market hunting," Conservation Department director John H. Nigh, changed the cottontail bag limit from 10 to five. The rabbit is Hoosier hunters' favorite quarry. ; The bob-white quail, Indiana's number one upland game bird. may be killed at the rate of 10 per aay, dui me suu oca Dec; 20- Rabbits may be hunted untiI Jan- 10: Jffrpovg JSiS S" 1 1 A AI Ariin There is no open season on i v.: - : pirtle-sttjltz vows read ATJ r TK1mn Tcono "Pirtlo Hnttshter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond p.irt1' f 9arllsle' J1;.1, . h J: Siul tmn Calvin E. Stultz, of Sullivan, R. 1 were united in marriage Satu'r(3ay, November 8th at 8 p. m. The' double ring ceremony was performed oy tne nev. oacK Anderson at the parsonage. Their only attendants were Miss Mary Catherine Pirtie, sister of the bride Jo? Re?le.'; of Sulh" va friend of the bridegroom. class of ia4b. bhe is now employed in the Treasurer's office at Sullivan. Mr. Stultz is a graduate of New Lebanon High School with the class of 1940. He is a veteran of World War II. na ,s "uw empi.uyea He is now employed as a milk nanlpr at fho Tfraft rhoncn Cn 'T d ml f l taS are Hvins mr ana Mrs- o1" re living a oiq South Spction Sullivan ' Street in 'HE I I C03IMUNISTS RIOT Ix ITALY AGA!N ROME. Italy, Nov. 16(UP) ! Communists-led riots broke out afresh in Italy today when a mob of rover 5 000 attacked th ? Uce barracks in Corata in the Pnlia BEAUTIFY YOUR FLOORS with Tile-Tex or , Rubber Tile. ' , THOMAS TILE-TEX SALES 27 E. Jackson Phone 745 Co BLOOMFIELD

OADW AY NIGHTS

By AXEL Distributed bj There are times when the romantic legends of the press agents seem entirely plausible. Thus, after srein and hearing Eiiillr Piaf, the pint-sized riot brought to Broadway from Franco by Impresarii) Clifford Fischer, L chroFC to bolieye that slie wns the ilauj-'iiter of an itinerant circus acrnhr.t and that rle litrinlly svrs horn on the pnveir.fnts of Paris with .two frenrinrrncs as midwives. It seems "ni'" as errdlhie tlni. at the age rf 1n. $!.( wrs a hungry strpet i-v'trr go-in: Phtiut paring' the :;t for few sons. Nor does f s""tn tni' ir.h::h!e iiiat one 'day, r" slip rr.n'i a'nrT the Rue Tryon. 0 f;!irr" -d Ire at'ention of 'i.jis l.e re. ov. rer o.' a swanky i'"!ki, vlio r1!'.- Tred her on the n:7i;-c't:l. f.rnr wliore she i r'"'; t a tiny, fo 'orn firrui e in a I tv.-:y sv.or.trr and a frayed skirt. Ar-1. of emu s", s.ie wowed Them. Hie is s;iJl waving them in r':-.v York lVom the diamond drifrr.: ccrrlnso trade to the wo:';ing girls in tlie upper balconies. And any story told .inout her in helis'vahle because, on stng, she is the perfect heroine of any tale whether, fictional or real. Mile Piaf is able to do this because, being a most unusual artist, she is past master of the art of simplicity. She arrives on stage in an extremely plain black dress. Her dark hair is parted in the middle and no alluring make-up is used. A five-footer, she becomes immediately a lone, dynamic figure on a huge stage. She plants her French- feet solidly on the boards and there they stay until she has done her last ballad. The rest is hands and eyes and particularly hands, plus a voice and a "something-else." -The "something else" comes from way down deep In the emotions. It Is not torch. Arid I don't go along with the management when they bill her as a "chanteuse." This gal is an actress who knows how to get any audience to share the sorrows and small hopes and anxieties and tragedies of "the women she portrays in her songs. They say that in Paris she attracted the shop girls and the charwomen and the girls who write to lovelorn columns and all that. That's quite possible. Because what she sings about has a universal theme and commands sympathy and tenderness whether dne can or cannot on-

CHRISTMAS Basket Benefit

BOYLE'S NEWS STAND vs.

Basketball Game i SPONSORED BY Sullivan Jaycees Thursday, Ncv. 20, 8:00 P. M. Community Gym Regardless of the appaient prosperity of our times, ther are always those who due to unavoidable circumstance, are not able to enjoy a Christmas full of the good things the day, in part, stands for. These children, the Sullivan Jaycees are determined, shall, as much as possible, have their share of Christmas joy. 50 of the proceeds? from Thursday evening's hardwood engagement will be used to provide food baskets for these persons Christmas morning' . . " . ,

Admission .'. . 50c ' Advance Tickets on Sale at Boyle's News Stand or. May Fe Secured From Any. Member of the. Suflitan Jaycees.

storm

Kln( Features, Inc.; 19 KDITH FIAF derstand French. It was so in Sweden and in Italy. It was so when she sang for the GI's. It is so on Broadway. Also she hae brought with her some ot the most refreshingly amusing singing comedians lo appear hereabouts in quite some time Les Compagnons de la Chanson. ' England also sent to the Big Street something for the' more exacting theatregoers. It's a cast of players whose teamwork has not been duplicated in our showshops In many a month. They appear in Terence Rattigan's "The Winslow Boy," which won the British drama prize last year. The play is taken from a famous "cause celebre" the Archer-Shee case, which rocked London about the time of World War I. . It seems that a young Naval Academy cadet was wrongfully accused of a theft and was dismissed. As ' dramatized, this shock to the family honor causes the father, a man of great integrity but small means, to take up cudgels against all the forces of red tape and fight them to a finish. To clear his son's name, the father gets the greatest barrister in London and, to the amazement of millions, the matter gets to the House of Commons where, at long last, the youngster gets a fair trial , and is exonerated. As the father, Alan Webb, who heads an allBritish cast. Is something worth bringing over. The Winslow boy, one Michael Newell, is quite likely to attract Hollywood attention. SULLIVAN CO SPORTSMEN

CARLISLE Mrs. Minard Cooper has returned home from Fairfield, Ohio where she spent a week with her son, Charles and family. Robert Sproatt of Bryan, Ohio, came Sunday for a visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles V. Sproatt. Mrs. H. H. Hill left Monday for Clarendon, Arkansas, where she will visit her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Price, and her sister, Miss Emma Price, , Jesse Sherwood of New York, spent Monday and Tuesday visit

ing his parents, Mr. and Mrs. -B. R. Sherwood. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Willis of Lone Pine, California, arrived here last week-end for a visit with Mr Willis' cousin, Edwin Schu and wife, and other relatives. Mrs. Tressa Davidson , spent Sunday with her sister and bro-ther-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Inman, of Pleasantville. I Mrs. Jennie Carrico and Mrs. )john Trimble ano daughter were in Terre Haute Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Boone and family and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Pirtie and family attended a meeting at the Paxton Church of Christ Thursday night. Mr. and Mrs. John Trimble and family attended a meeting at the Paxton Church of Christ Wednesday night. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Weimier of Dugger were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Alsman Sun day. ! Mrs. Tom Stuck and son, and Mrs. Jennie Carrico . were in Sullivan Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin J. Stultz were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Pirtie and fam-1 i'y. .i Mr .and Mrs. Miles Curry and family called on Mr. and Mrs. Denver Willis and family Tues-, day night. j Mrs. Lee Wolfe and son called on Mrs. Denver Willis Thursday. .

S3,W imit'Tiu.

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leave you stalled or wrecked along the highway The high winter accident toll will be materially reduced if each motorist accepts the responsibility of i putt'ng his equipment in shape . . . or better still, drive in and let us make the following check, with repair or replacements of worn parts wherever needed.

O BRAKES should be carefully equalized and adjusted. i WINDSHIELD WIPER should be checked for effectiveness. Q HEADLIGHTS should be checked and focused. A hiah beam will be reflected back by snow or fog and blind the driver.

Brine 16-20 South Section

Ruth Gleaners Class Meets The Ruth Gleaners class of the Methodist church met Tuesday evening at the home of Kathryn South with Clara Buckles, Dorothy Knight and Jessie McCann as assisting hostesses. The-meeting opened by singing "America" followed by devotions by Opal Parnell. Her subject was "What is a Methodist Church?" The president, Mae Jones, presided at the meeting The class will have a bazaar and food sale Saturday, December 6th at the Griffin Store. Refreshments of date pudding with whipped cream and coffee were served to Doris Blacketer, Ruby Weir, Margaret Stoelting, Cecil Watt, Opal Parnell, Ruby Ross, Helen Mallory, Vesta Davidson, Mae Jones, Ida Griffith, Berniece Roberts, Fern Rotramel, Harriett Ogle, Marie Shields, Esther Hoke, Gladys Cooper and the hostesses.

Wesleyam Class Meets The Wesleyan class held their regular monthly meeting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert ( Solsman Tuesday night with a covered dish dinner and group singing. Those present were Rev. and Mrs. Claude McCallister, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Horton, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Nash, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Faris, Mr. and Mrs. John Andrews, Mr. and Mrs. Orval Finch, Mr. and Mrs. Max Ready, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Harris, Mr and Mrs. Kenneth Montague, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Sheets, Mr. and Mrs. VerI

You Can Get No Better Assurance Of Proper Auto Operation Than The Knowledge That It Has The Care Of Our Trained Men

Your Ford Home

non Long, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knight and son, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. Max Weir, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Beach of Sullivan, Misses Zelpha Robbins, Doris Keith, June Knight, Barbara South, Mrs. Mildred Grimes, Noble Edwards and the host and hostess, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Solsman.

Aureoles have'been'found with" the pictures of the gods on some of the coins of the Indian Kings iKanishka, Huvishka nd Vasu-. deva, 58 B. C. to A. D. 41. They( are also found in the depiction of Egyptian deities from which their use spread toGreeks ,and( ',Romans..'' 't.rtJ -'. Queenstown in Ireland "was formerly namea tjove or orK. It is a seaport town on the south sida of Great Island in Cork Harbor. The yacht club, the Royal Cork, is the oldest in the .world. Radiator & Heater Hose PIRTLE & THOMSON "66" SERVICE Corner Section & Washington

DEAD ANIMALS REMOVED Prompt Sanitary Truck Service. We Pick Up Large and Small Animals call Greek Fertilizer Co. r ... . Sullivan Phone No. 9 WE PAY ALL PHONE CHARGES

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B TIRES should be checked for tread and defects. Chains . are a good investment. $ MUFFLER & TAILPIPE leaks and defects ;n exhaust, gaskets, pipes, and mufflers should be repaired to prevent carbonmencxide poisoning. 0 ELECTRICAL SYSTEM should be checked for defective insulation or loose wiring.

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