Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 50, Number 157, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 9 August 1948 — Page 2

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A Home Owned Democratic Newspaper

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Sullivan Democrat, founded 1854 PAUL POINTER Publisher ELEANOR POYNTER JAMISON Manager and Assistant Editor HOMER H. MURRAY ..: .". Editor Entered as second-class matter at the Postoffice, Sullivan, Indiana Published daily except Saturday and Sunday at 115 West Jackson St. Sullivan, Ind. Telephone 12

TJnKod Pren Wire Service National Representative: Taelt and Simpson, New York

SUBSCRIPTION BATE: By Carrier, per week 15c By Mall Elisewhere In By Mali in Sullivan The United States: And Adjoining Counties Tear $5.00 J.ear S9 Six Month 2.75 Six Month 2.26 One Month 40 One Month 50 All Mail Subscriptions Strictly In Advance

LEWIS Mrs. Ollie Wheatqn of Paxton spent the week-end with her sister, Mrs. Anna Pigg. Mr. and Mrs. Herb Knight and Mrs. Fern Crable and son, Bob, attended a surprise birthday dinner in Kokomo Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. James Sharp and daughter spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wheaton. . ... Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Lawrence I of Terre Haute spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Lawrence. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wheaton and daughter and Mr. and Mrs. James Sharpe and daughter called on Mr. and Mrs. George j Barrick of Sullivan one Sunday evening. , I Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wheaton . of Sullivan and Hinkle Wheaton of Paxton spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Harris Wheaton. Rev. and Mrs. Oakley Russell have returned home from Indianapolis where they visited their children. Mr. and Mrs. H. L. ' Burnes spent Sunday with her parents in Linton. ' Mr. and Mrs. Justice Boston and Mr. and Mrs. Pete Fields attended the ball game at Terre Haute Friday night. Mr. and Mrs. Lem Mahan, Mr. and Mrs. Omar Barnes and Mr, and. Mrs. Hoffey Freeze spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Briley. The occasion being Mr. Briley's birthday. FORBES CORNER The basket dinner and homecoming was well attended Sunday at Nyes Chapel Church. A former pastor of the church, he Rev. Oakley Russell, spoke and a quartetAMCoalmoht was present for the afternoon service. 'W Mrs. Homer Perkins is ill. ' Helen Vanderpool and Helen Forbes called on Mrs. Homer Perkins Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Huntworth, Mr. and Mrs. Harley Huntworth and Mr. and Mrs. Charley Huntworth attended the funeral of their aunt at. Rosedale Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Vanderpool and Mary Huntworth were in Terre Haute Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. William Raines of Shelburn, Mr. and Mrs". Loren Raines and daughter of Terre Haute, Mr. and Mrs. Ber.cie Pinkston and Charlie Sharpe were Sunday evening guests of Mrs. Helen Vanderpool. Mrs. Ann Pinkston and Mrs. Effie Pinkston were in .Terre Haute Wednesday. Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Gilman and son Wednesday evening were Mr. and Mrs: Bob Gilman, Helen Vanderpool and Charlie Sharpe. It was the birthday of Bruce Gilman. Always Problem WINTHROP, Mass. (UP) The ladies were troubled by their weight in Civil War days, too. In 1he historic Dean Winthrop House here is a blue-tinted mirror once owned by President Abraham Lincoln's wife. It is so constructed that it tends to make a person standing before it look slimmer.

WHATTODO! When Bills Are Overdue! Take a tip come to us you may decide not to borrow or that you will but get the information about a Security Loan learn the cost, terms-all the facts think it over without obligation without' cost!.'. . ' $5 to $300 C ; Security Loan Company J Upstairs, North Oakley Bldg., Sullivan, iind.

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IMS. aa tho rtailv edition nf the ISZ s'ZW K Tf Y&i IIYMERA CLASS OF '39 TO HOLD REUNION I The 1939 class of Hymera High School will hold their annual reunion August 15th at Shakamak State Park. A covered dish dinner win be served at I the noon hour and annual round of reminiscing conversation will j comprise the day's agenda. All I members and their families and friends are urged to attend. Hungary Reds Gain COMMUNISM'S hold on Hungary is- strengthened with nomination of Vice Premier Arpad Szakasits as . president to succeed Zoltan Tildy, who quit over charges of treason against his son-in-law. Tildy, president two years and last leader of the Smallholders party to leave the government, "co-operated" with Communist policies, however. (International) CAA Hearing Held A CAA HEARING Is being held in Los Angeles to determine whether stunt flyer Paul Mantz, winner of the Lot Angeles-to-Cleveland Bendix trophy race at the National air races In 1946 and 1947, will lose his pilot's license. The hearing was called over an accident at Santa Monica, Cal., March 11 in which Mantz's plane collided on a runway with plane of Ernest McQuistion. 52.- killing McQutstion. . McQuiction's widow is sums for 553.417. (!?trnttonl) WWW

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DAY'S MARKETS

INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 9.(UP) Mr,. 7 nnn- n.noH nnlv mnHpr. ately active, ' barrows and ' gilts j 170 lbs. up 50c-75c lower than j Friday's average; early bulk good and choice 170-240 lbs., $29.00 $29.25, several loads choice 200220 lbs., $29.50, top $29.50; bulk 210-270 lbs., $28.00 $29.00; 270300 lbs., $27.50 $28.50; sows 400 lbs. down weak to 50c lower, others steady,, good and choice these weights $23.50 $25.50. Cattle, 1,800; calves, 500; top medium and good short fed steers fully steady, spots 25c-50c higher on weights around 900 lbs., odd head choice yeaning steers to $30.50; three loads good and choice near 1025-lb. steers $37.50; bulk medium and good short fed steers 1100 lbs., down $30.00 $36.00; beef cows scarce, weak to lower; early sales good beef cows $22.00 $23.00; vealers fairly active, steady, good and choice $30.50 $32..00. Sheep. 1,000; fat lambs not fully established; early sales spring lambs steady to $1.00 lower, quality considered; choiqe closely sorted kinds scarce, few lots good to choice $25.00 $27.50, couple lots $28.00; slaughter ewes mostly 50c lower, good to choice lightweights $8.50 $10.50. Stcrk Has Assistant FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP) Hershall Miller, who runs an ambulance service, is a handy man to have around when the stork is flying. Twice within 24 hours as his ambulance hurried expectant mothers to the hospital, Miller had to deliver the babies. - It Pays to Be Polite PLYMOUTH, Ind. (UP) A new $5 bill will be given every day to the automobile driver observed as the most courteous-on Plymouth streets. ' 'D0N7 BUY!' IS

BUTCHER SHOP BOYCOTTS are being organized in cities over the nation as 'meat prices soar to alltime highs. Map locates cities in which organized action is being taken by women's clubs, citizens groups, unions (Camden, Dallas), and even by anti-high price butchers themselves. And, says Agriculture Secretary Charles F. Brannan, meat will go even higher before summer is over. (International)

HAVE

WERE 7.75

If you've been planning to build a trailer, here's your buy of the year. They are a bargain for worn wheel replacements or a number of engineering features around your home, farm or business.

YOUR

6-20 South Section'

SULLIVAN DAIL1 TIMES-"

The Briar Patch

Statisticians come up with some they may be right. But-t-t Take listed by Mrs. Christine Frederick, first: sex love; mother love; love of

personal adornment; love of change, style, modernity, prestige, reputation; hospitality; sociability; curiosity; rivalry, envy, jealousy; pride, ostentation, and display; exclusiveness, social ambition, snobbery; tenderness, sympathy and pity; cleanliness, sanitation and purity; practicality, economy, thrift, and orderliness; with love of beauty at the end of the list. This is interesting, too: 20 of us are can-openers;. 15 are naggers; 207c are drudges; 15 are the doll-baby type; 30 are homemakers. I agree with her when she accuses us of considering ourselves as individuals, but not as citizens. The picture is brighter when she gets into what we want: abolish war, alcoholic drink, child-labor, infant mortality, bad housing, malnutrition, lack of sanitation, disease, ugliness and ignorance. That is a dream that we do not work at with sufficient determination to make it come true. We believe in these things but we divorce our actions from our beliefs. Like the hero of Raintree County, our outward manifestations are so amazingly different from our inmost thoughts that only a novelist could tie them together in the same person. : . . Some folk have more wont-power than will-power. ... It is better to take people at face value than to distrust everyone. . . . We all have what might rightly be called "our more intelligent moments." . . . They say the louder a man swears the lower is his courage and confidence in himself. A recent Sunday School lessoa recommended reading VanDyke': poem "Work"; it is very good for all those who wonder if the work they have to do is worth while. Let me but do my best from day to day In field or forest, at the desk or loom, In roaring marketplace or tranquil room; Let me but find it in my heart to say, When flagrant wishes beckon me astray: "This is my work; my blessing, not my doom; Of all who live, I am the one by whom This work can best be done in the right way." Then shall I see it not too great, nor small, To suit my spirit and' to prove my powers; Then shall I cheerful greet the labouring hours, And cheerful turn,; when the long shadows fall , At eventide, to play and love and rest, Because for me I know my work is best.

THE BUTCHER SHOP-BOYCOTT CRY

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MONDAY, AUG. 9, 1948.

odd conclusions; for all I know this list of feminine instincts as assuming she placed first things , homemaking; vanity and love of j Inch Telephone 28

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SULLIVAN. INDIANA

OPEN FORUM DAILY TIMES Letters from ministers and others, interested in local optionf are especially invited for this column. Letters and interviews of a 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 a!-e preferred. Ail articles sent to 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 not necessarily express the sentiment of the Daily Times and this paper may or may not agree with statements contained herein. Not Too Old to Learn HANSON, Mass. (UP) The oldest student of state-sponsored vocational training in Massachusetts is Mrs. Mary Cushman, 92, of Whitman, who is taking a weekly art course here. $zcwtae BOTTLING CO. Chicago, 111.

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