Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 51, Number 142, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 19 July 1949 — Page 3

SULLIVAN, INDIANA

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1949.

PAGE THREE

Henry Wall

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ay Seek few

By Lyle C. Wilson United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 19 (UP) .Henry A Wallace was prepared today to set off another crusade to pay off an old score a- ' gainst President Truman and the Democratic party. 1 Wallace reportedlv is slated for nomination for U. S. Senator from New York by the Communist-sparked Americsa Labor party. If he makes the race, one of his running mates wili be Rep. Vito Mareantoruo, the ALP candidate for mayor of New York.. They evidently hope to siphon enough votes from Democratic candidates for those offices to deprive Mr. Truman's party of the mayoralty and the seat in

eked By

( Senate Seal

Reds,

the Senate so long held by Robert F. Wagner. The elections come next November and a lot of political prestige is riding on each of them. The Senate vacancy was created by Wagnsi's resignation because of illness. A Republican triumph in New York's Senatoral and rnavoral electons would get the GOP off to a better start toward the general electons next year. Marcantonio is a fellow traveler of the Communist party, notorious for his support of Soviet Russian policies. He also is a smart operator who knows he hasn i x snowball's cha iue of being elected mayor of New York. . A lot of people do not renrd Wallace as a rsalist, but he unquestionably knows New Yrrk

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The Briar Patch (Tamar DeHart) The heat ans the chiggers" have slowed up the cemetery-census.

It is remarkable how little information is given on the tombstones;

also how much. So many seem to regard the date of coming and going as the main events of life. A few include the place of birth; one

gave the date and place of her birth, date and place of marriage,

date and place of death. data like that delights the genealogist.

There js a lot of wry humor to be found there, too. The man and wife who never spoke to each other without a fight are lying peace

fully side by side. One fellow did it with an extra flourish: he didn't die, he "diede" according to the inscription. (The monument maker was evidently proud of his work, since his name was as jplain as the owner's.) Then there are so many where 'his' name' is on the front of the stone with a wife on the north and another on the south, but the fellow who had one on the east too had "Rest in Peace" inscribed under his name. Some of the women hated to give up their maiden name, so they included both. Somtimes the married daughter was included in the same plot with her parents. When the husband was included in his in-laws line, somehow it gave me the impression that he was hen-pecked. " There is tragedy too. The little girl who was choked to death when the sliding boards in the granary door caught her as she was playing there; the boy who died of tetanus after he cut his foot as he was chopping wood; the young man who 'was cruelly murdered because of his political opinion' (during the Civil War); mothers dying in childbirth; a family wiped out by the 'slows' also known as 'milk-sick'; .often several children in the same family died at about the same time, . which may have meant they had typhoid, diphtheria, or flux some one of the many diseases which the medical profession has now banished. The spelling of the names is interesting: Plugh became Plew, Ernst changed to Earnest, Dicks turned to Dix. Most of the names are mine-run, but once in a while up pops a Samson instead of Samuel, Minerva and Evadna, Reason or Philander, Amazon and Allegra, but the one that meant heartache after all these years was this: "Little Joe." - ... Bu I'm still puzzled about the one: So and So, Father and Mother of - . No dates, just as though their sole reason for being remembered was because they produced . I guess maybe these stones cost so much they have to be used as is regardless of how it sounds to a stranger. And I guess, also, most of us hope that the children we produce will amount to enough to pay for all the chances we bungled, the dreams that failed to materialize, and the general frustrations that eternally plague us. Along with word of an old graveyard on the Perry Low'dermilk farm, came the discharge of an uncle, dated 1865, whose 'services were no longer needed' and a bit of paper covered with my father's handwriting, and almost as old as I.

Divine Strategy: No soul can be forever banned, Eternally bereft; Whoever falls from God's right hand . Is caught into His left. Edwin Markham

Everybody's Going All-Electric!

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voters wi'l refuse io send him lo the Senate ntxt November. Marcantonio and Wallace also know past election statistics and how they can Jam:ige the Democratic party. William . O'Dwyer, Demrx'iat, was elected mayor of New York in 1945 with the support of the American Labor party. Tha ALP rolled up 257,000 votes for O'Dwyer and the Democrats r.ave him 867,000 more for a total of approximately 1,124,000. , Two other candidates polled an aggregate pf 840,000 votes , As the mayoralty contest now shapes up, the forces behind those two other candidates will be behind a single starter next November. That may make it a horse race because O'Dwyer will not have the .LP votes to push him far out in front. Wallace's candidacy eoul.i be deadly , to the Democratic Sena

torial nominee. He out the squeeze on Mr. Truman in the 1948 Presidential election with a third party candidacy. New York state returns from last year's Truman-Dewey contest suggest that if Wallace had not been a third candidate, New York would have cast its electoral for the President.

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Thornfown Gorilla Demented -Woman

"THORNTOWN. Ind., July 19.

(UP) A "gorilla" which terrorized the community for several weeks and provoked a Sunday morning "safari" of shotgunarmed farmers was a mentallyill woman, authorities said today. Boone County Sheriff Rush Robinson said the woman had been committed , to an institution. He reported that Town Marshals Ralph Davison and Sam Alien caught the "gorilla woman" at midnight last Saturday but were trying "to hush this gorilla thing up." Allen denied the report. "Allen was pretty mad at the newspapers for the widesread publicity," Robinson said.

TODAY'S GRAB BAG

THE ANSWER, QUICK!

L Who was the author of The KTSFT

a me D ITU I 2. In sports, what is meant by giving a player a handicap? ' 3. If a person gives you a

check and dies before you cash

it, can you get the money? 4. About what subject was the 13th amendment to the United States Constitution? 5. How. many of these cities are capital of their states : Trenton, Albany. Baltimore, ' Topeka, Chicago?

FOLKS OF FAME GUESS THE NAME

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By LILIAN CAMPBELL Central Press VWfer 1925. He originated the amateur radio show that bore his name in 1934. The following year he was voted the most popular personality on the air. The

programs introduced a numoer

ul aiiiabcuia vv r ' I some of whom have been successful. He was also manager of a

New York theater. He died in 1946. What was his name? (Names at bottom of column)

. IT'S BEEN SAID M one is satisfied with his fortune, nor dissatisfied with his int tellect. Antoinette Deshoulieres. ' ' HAPPY BIRTHDAY Ernest Hemingway, novelist; Frances Parkinson Keyes, novelist; C. Aubrey Smith, actor, and Harold (Jug) McSpaden, golfer, rate happy birthdays today.

YOUR FUTURE Financial improvement is promised by the influences at work in your next year, and a child born today is most likely to evince many fine traits.

WATCH YOUR LANGUAGE TRANQUIL ( TR AN-kwil ) Quiet, calm, undisturbed; not agitated Origin: Latin Tranquillus.

1 A world-renowned actress, she was born in Paris. Oct. 22, 1845. She entered the Paris Conservatoire at 13 where she gained a. prize for tragedy and one for comedy. She made her debut on the stage in 1862, but her first definite success was as Ophelia in Shakespeare's King Lear. After the Franco-Prussian war she steadily, increased her reputation and began world tours to England, America, Denmark, Russia acclaimed everywhere she went. In her later years an accident led to the amputation of a leg. In 1922, she played a young man's part in Verneuil's Daniel. She died in Paris on March 26, 1934. Who was she? This man did a great deal to help young people during the depression of the early thirties. He was born in San Francisco, Cal., and began a radio career in

IT HAPPENED TODAY 1831 Belgian Independence Day, when Leopold was proclaimed king, following separation of Belgium and Holland. 1861 First Battle cf Bull Run in American Civil wai victory for Confederates. 1943 Adm. William D. Leahy named President Roosevelt's chief of staff. 1944 Harry L. Truman nominated for vice-president at Democratic convention in Philadelphia. 1945 United States served Japan with unconditional surrender ultimatum on Potsd2fi terms.

HOW'D YOU MAKE OUT? 1. Maurice Maeterlinck. 2. Allowance of time, weight, distance or strokes made to inferior competitors in the sport. 3. Only by filing a claim against the estate. 4. Slavery. 5. Trenton, N. J.; Albany, N. Y.; Topeka, Kansas. pjB.P3 jofsw -1 pu.ui3g MJS 'I

Knox Consolidated Mine Inspected Several suggestions for expanding the good over-all safety program at the Knox Consolidated Coal Corporation's 3,200-ton-a-day No. 1 mine near BicKnell, Ind., are presented in a Federal reinspection report issued today by the Bureau of Mines. At the time of the May safety survey by Insp.jctrrs James A. McCune and James A. Q'Connor, the Knox County mine employed 416 men.

Reporting that rerailers had lamps by all underground em-

been provided for the locomotives and that employees did not unload from moving cars, Inspectors McCune and O'Connor also credited the mine with several long-standing ' precautions. These included conformance with the systematic timbering plan and frequent roof testing, safe blasting, practices, an effective ventilation system and preshift, on-shift and , weekly examinations for hazards, application of rock dust to within 80 feet of the faces, provision of clean shelter holes, adequate fire protection underground, and

use of permissible electric cap

ployees. To help correct the relatively few remaining hazards, the inspectors advised more rock dust for some places, a ban on riding on the trolley-wire sid'; of open man-cars, more effective gtia;ding of the trolley wire, universal wearing of safel-me shoes, and eye protection for certain employees. Although smoking was prohibited in the mine, burr.t matches an.l cigarette bults wi:re observed in all -octics, the inspectors noted, snd they recommended that employees and officials cooper v.e in enforcing the "no-smoking" rule.

WOMAN KILLED IN STOVE BLAST SOUTH BEND, July 19 (UP) An oil stove explosion . yes

terday killed Mrs. Irene Faust,

age 23. She died of burns in St.

Joseph's Hospital. Mrs. Dee Highland, age 27, a resident it hte Faust home, suffered minor arm and face burns. Mrs. Faust's home near New Carlisle was gutted by fire which followed the blast. . .

NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Executor of the estate of George G. Billman has this day filed in the office of the clerk of the Sullivan Circuit Court his final report of his account with said estate, and that the same will be heard by the Sullivan Ciicuit Court on the 6th day of September, the same being the 2nd judicial day of the September term 1U49 of said court. Crditors. heirs and legatees of said decedent therefore are hereby notified to appear in said court on said day and show cause why said report should not be approved. DALE C. BILLMAN, Executor. Witness my hand and seal of said " court at Suiiivan this 12th day of July, 1949. EARL A. ENGLE, Clerk of Sullivan Circuit Court. Telia C. Haines, Attorney. 1st ins 7-12-49 2t. '

Wins Title!

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"When the neighbors voted my washline the whitest on the block," says, Mrs. Bowne Mercer, 1285 Abbington Rd., Detroit, "I gave credit to my new helper, Perk Soap. Perk removes that grayness that builds up . . . works fast . . . saves time and scrubbing. Now, most all the washes in our 'neighborhood are 'Perk Champions'." You can lighten your work, , just as Mrs. Mercer has. Perk contains Armocel, new miracle ingredient ' that takes grayness out, puts new whiteness in your clothes. Get won- , , derful Perk today J

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT 'Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed Administrator of the estate of Blanche Cartwright, deceased late of Sullivan County, Indiana. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. j FRANK LEACH. - Administrator. Joe W. Lowdermilk, Attorney. 1st ins 7-5-49 St.

NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Administrator of the estate of Harley N. Hardin has this day filed in the office of the clerk of the Sul

livan Circuit Court his final report afJ his account with said estate, and thaO

me same win De neara Dy tne auuivan Circuit Court on the 6th day of September, the same being the 2nd iudlcinl day of the September term 1949 of said court Crditors. heirs and legatees of said decedent therefore are hereby notif'ed to appear in said count on said day and show cause why said report should not be approved. CHARLES H. HARDIN. Administrator. Wltness my hand and sea! of said court at Sullivan this 12th day of July, 1949. EARL A.' ENGLE. Clerk of Sullivan Circuit Court. Telo C. Haines. Attorney. 1st ins 7-12-49 2t.

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YeSj at tobacco auctions Lucky Strike pays millions of dollars more than official parity prices for fine tobacco! ... There's no finer cigarette in the world today than Lucky Strike! To bring you this finer cigarette, the makers

of Lucky Strike go after fine, light, naturally mild tobacco and pay millions of dollars more than official parity prices to get it! So buy a carton of Luckies today. See for yourself how much finer and smoother Luckies really are how much more real deep-down smoking enjoyment they give you. Yes, smoke a Lucky!

You'll agree it's a finer, milder, more ' "v

enjoyable cigarette!

J. WAYNE ADAMS of South Boston, Va., 22 years an independent warehouseman, says: "I've seen the makers of Luckies buy fine quality tobacco that makes a real smoke!" Mr. Adams has been a Lucky smoker for 15 years. Here's more evidence that Luckies are a finer cigarette!

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So round, so firm, so fully packed so free and easy on the draw '

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