Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 51, Number 196, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 3 October 1949 — Page 2

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SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES -MONDAY. OCT. 3, 1949.

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SULLIVAN. INDIANA

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A Home Owned Democratic Newspaper ' Sullivan Daily Times, founded 1905, as the daily edition of the Sullivan Democrat, founded 1854 PAUL, POYNTER Publisher ELEANOR POYNTER JAMISON Manager and Assistant Editor HOMER H. MURRAY Editor F.ntm-ert a sfinnnd-nlasa matter at the Postoffice. Sullivan. Indiana

Published daily except Saturday and Sunday at 115 West Jackson St

Sullivan, Ind.

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United Preti Wire Service National Bcpreeentative: Iheli and Simpion, New York

SUBSCRIPTION KATE:

By Carrier, per week 15c

My mull in Sullivan ' My mall Eisewnere in And' Adjoining Counties: The United States:

Vcor i S4 00 Year

Ri Months S2.2S Si Months S2.7E

One Month 40 One Month 50

All Mail Subscriptions Strictly In Advance A Woman for President? Sen.' Margaret Chase Smith of Maine isn't the first per

son to suggest that the United States should have a woman

President.

In a recent issue of Look Magazine, Vincent Sheeah, not

ed war correspondent and author, advanced the same idea.

Mr. Sheean persuasively argued at length that the election of

a woman Chief Executive would be the greatest possible con

tribution the people of the United States could make to world peace. - Everyone throughout the world, Sheean reasons, knows that women are opposed to war. If we were to elect a woman President, the whole world would know that this nation desired peace. In many nations and particularly in Russia the "mother -symbol" is of vast importance. Our adoption of a sort of "national mother" would have a profound effect, Sheean believes. - Whether this theory is right or not and it seems reasonablewe see nothing incongruous in thinking of a woman President. Wyoming and Texas have both had women governors, and while "Ma" Ferguson was no great shakes, Nellie layloe Ross, now Director of the Mint, was highly capable. Women have successfully directed major business enterprises for many years. It is common knowledge that about three-fourths of the nation's wealth is controlled by women.

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Yankees Win

A. L.

Pennon!

Truman or Cards?

wmmmmmmmm

JUST 19 hours old, this baby lamb portrays spirit of spring as it leaps in pasture outside Melbourne, Australia. Down under, spring is

gently bowing In, while in U. S., brrrrrl j'

. (International)

DAILY TINES OPEN FORUM

FT. R. A. COLLINS SOLDIER OF WEEK

By Carl Lundquist United Press Sport Writeir

NEW YORK, Oct. 3. (UP) If there is a tougher way to win a

! pennant than by knocking off the j two best pitchers in baseball on : successive days or in beating the

nottest stretcn team since 19 n leave it to the New York Yankees. And they"ll probably . come through. Nobody would have given a nickel for New York's chances last Friday after a loss to the second division Philadelphia Athletics that figured to finish them once and for all. Nor would anybody have been very optmistic on Saturday when the Red Sox took an early 4 to 0 lead in the game that could have clinched the pennant for them without further ado. That was the end cf the rope it seemed, but the Yankees never let go of the rope. Instead they climbed back up and won the Saturday thriller, 5 to 4, then delivered the crusher yes

terday at Yankee Stadium, when they won 5 to 3 behind the lionhearted pitching of Vic Raschi.

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WISHING WELL

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WITH THE 24TH DIVISION CN KYUSHU,' Japan Pvt. Raymond A. Collins, Sullivan soldier, was selected "Soldier of the

Letters from ministers and others interested in local option, are especially invited for this column. ' Letters and interviews of a suitable nature and proper news-

firm m-in-V, 4-u4. .L..1 " , , I Paper interest are sousrn. ior mis

e, or,; rS i , corlLr01 m onto 1UU per cent Ot column, the editor reserving the bpencung tne nation s income., -Appropriately the, United right to censor or reject any arbtates lreasurer is a woman. v , tide he may deem is not suitable Our principal regret is that women aren't more active in and proper. Articles of 500 words politics than they are. We'll venture to say that if about half ior less are preferred, ah articles

tne State legislators were on the distaff side tho lrthhvist..o .sent to the Open Forum must b

would have a tougher roe.to hoe. And somehow we can't see a would-be briber having he nerve to proposition a lady. It probably will be a long time before we have a Madame President in Washington. But it's an idea worth keeping alive.

today's Markets INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 3. (UP) Hogs 12,000; fairly active; barrows and gilts -25-40 cents lower;

bulk good and choice 180-270 pounds, $19.00 $19.25 top; light mixed weights around 165-190 lbs. down to $18.50 $18.75; . 100-160 lbs. near steady at $15.00 $16.50; sows uneven, weak to 25c lower; most sales $16.00 $18.00; choice lightweight higher; odd big weights down to $15.25 $15.50. Cattfe 2,600; calves 500; ' good and choice steers and heifers about steady, 'active; medium short fed and bulk grassers slow; good to mostly choice 1310 lb. steers $32.00; low good to low

choice 800-1250 lb. steers and mixed yearlings $28.00 $30.00; medium to just good short feds $25.00 $27.50, barely steady; common and medium grassers $19.00 $23.50; mostly good heifers $26.50 $27.00; medium short

feds $25.00 $25.50; cows active,!

strong; odd good beef cows $16.50 $17.00; common and medium $14.50 $16.50; vealers $1.00-$2.00 lower; good and choice $28.00 $30.00; common and medium $20.00 $27.50. Sheep 1,500; active, steady; fat lambs steady; good and choice mixed weights $23.50 $23.75; me-

jdium and good $21.00 $22.50; cemmon $17.50 $20.00; medium ! to mostly good 84-lb. fall shorn southwestern lambs 18.00; slaughter ewes $5.00 $8.00.

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 senti

ment of the Daily Times and this paper may or may not agree with statements contained herein.

While that was happening the Dodgers, winning 'their fourth National League pennant, had to go all out to deefat the Philadel-

Week" in his battery for the week11? ?his f to in 1 innings,

HERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every day. It is a numerical puzzle designed to spell out your fortune. Count the letters in your first name. If the number of letters is 6 or, more, subtract 4. If the number is less than 6, add 3. The result is your key number. Start at the upper left-hand corner of the rectangle and check every one of your key numbers, left to right. Then read the message the letters under the checked figures give you. Copyright IMf, by William J. lilltr. DbtribuM by Ktnc Fratum, Im. 10 '5

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oi 4 September to j.o oeptemoer 1948, announced his battery commander. Having won this honor, Pvt. Collins was presented a three days pass at which he will spend at the at the Karatsu Seaside Hotel. .

Had the Dodgers lost, the Nation

al League would have been up against its second pennant playoff series in three seasons and with the same two teams as opponents.

Pvt. Collins is the son of

and Mrs. Charles R. Collins who i

reside at 915 East Dorothy Street in Sullivan. Before being inducted into the Army he owned and ran a I small lumbering business in Sullivan. After completing basic training, he was assigned at Camp Breckenridge, Kentucky for five months. He was then sent to the Far East Command and assigned here with the 26th A.A.A. (AW) Bn. at Camp Hakata where his present fiosition is an Anti-Aircraft Gunner 7J.ech.anic.

In the dramatic finale at the

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were just nui 10 ue uenieu. iney

had to beat Ellis Kinder, Boston's ace right hander who had won 23 games and lost but five all season, just as they had to knock off Mel Parnell, the Boston 25-game winner on the previous day. And they also had to top a team two days in a row that played baseball at a spectacular .735 percentage from July 4 until the finish, winning 61 games and losing 22. No club had finished that fact since the 1914 Boston Braves. But the Yankees played as if they knew not the odds, get-

A HOTEl employe inadvertently flew the United States flag upside down, a signal of distress, a,t the St. Louis hotel where President Truman stayed overnight before attending Masonic rites. The flag at the right is the President's emblem. Was the employe thinking of the Cards? (International)

ting to Kinder in the very first inning on a walk and little Phil Rizzuto's boomng triple for a 1 to 0 lead. That's all the margin Raschi needed until the Yankees made it secure for him in the eighth with four big tallies on a Tommy Henrich homer and a three-run double by Jerry Coleman.

FAMILY PLANS FIRST VACATION

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yATCH THURSDAY'S NEWSPAPER!

PREPARING TO EMBARK on a cross-country lour to Los Angeles, Mr. and Mra.. Harry Bayly and their 14 children stand before their converted school bus at their home in Troy, N. Y. Marking the first vacation in 20 years, the Baylys intend to make a leisurely trip. (International)

Don't Wait for Cold Weather to Catch Yov Unprepared

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TODAY'S GRAB BAG

THE ANSWER, QUICK! 1., Who is president of Mexico? 2. What is the capital of Eire (Ireland)? 3. Who invented , the rocking chair? 4. What is a "cam" ? 5. Who was the only United States president to come from Pennsylvania?

FOLKS OF FAME GUESS THE NAME

HAPPY BIRTHDAY Dr. Virginia Gildersteeve, educator and humanitarian, and Henry Hull, actor, ar$ due to receive birthday greetings today.

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YOUR FUTURE No need for pessimism in your next year. Kely on your own judgment and Intuition. The child who Is born on this date will successfully overcome any difficulties or opposition which he or she may meet.

IT'S BEEN SAID Democracy has not failed; the intelligence of the racp has failed before the problems the race has raised. Robert M. Hutchins.

WATCH YOUR LANGUAGE THERAPEUTIC (THER-a-PEW-tik) To take care of, to treat medically; in medicine of or pertaining to the healing art; concerned ith remedies for diseases; curative. Origin: Greek therapeutikos; from therapentes, attendant, servant.

1 Passing m herself off as a Hindu dancing girl, disciple of Siva, god of evil, a tall, slim, beautifully formed girl gained eternal notoriety as a spy in World War I. She was really born at Leeuwarden, in the Netherlands, Aug. 7, 1876, daughter of a Dutch business man. Married to an elderly profligate, she divorced him and became a model and dancer in Paris. She attended , a German espionage school before World War I, and formed friendships with high officials of that country, France and the' Netherlands. Innocent appearing letters written to her daughter in Holland and conveyed in Dutch diplomatic pouches, gave valuable information to the Allies' enemies.- She wa3 . convicted as a spy in Paris ,and executed before a firing squad Oct. 15, 1917. What was her name? " '

By LILIAN CAMPBELL Central Press Wrfer . 2 He was born Sept. 27, 1903, in Sayula, Vera Cruz, Mexico, and attended the National university. He edited the school paper and finished the five-year -law course in three. He gained ' notice pleading cases for miners afflicted by silicosis against the mine owners. He was made a justice of the Supreme court of Vera' Cruz, then governor of the state, then senator. In 1946 he became president of his country. He was the first Mexican president to visit the United States capital and be a guest in ' the White House. What is his name? (Names at bottom of column)

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IT HAPPENED TODAY Feast of Ste. Therese of LIsIeux (Little Flower of Jesus) the children's saint. 1656 Miles Standish, English colonist and military leader of Pilgrims at Plymouth, died. 1854 William Crawford, sanitary engineer, but- i geon ( general of United States I Army, born. 1859 Eleanora Duse, noted Italian actress, lorn. 1935 Italians bombed Adowa, Ethiopia. .

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t HOW'D YOU MAKE OUT . 1. Miguel Aleman. : 2. Dublin. 3. Benjamin Franklin. ' 4. A rotating or sliding piece or projection, as on a wheel, for imparting or receiving motion. , 5. James Buchanan. ' nuiiv itnJm-j 'mil

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