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SOUTH BEND PUBLiC LIBRARY, 304 S.MAIN ST., CITY. IS HITLER DELAYING SURRENDER IN HOPE OF AIDING DEWEY'S ELECTION? noRAnother G.O.P. "Ladies Aid " FRIDAY, AUGUST 11th, 1944 IS "AMEWA FIRST" PARTY A REPUDLICAN "GOAT"? HE Master of Berchtesgaden is disconsolate. The reports from his fighting fronts are not ELIEVE IT what they used to be. The colors of the rainbow have faded to white on black. -Different Tthan when his minions were subduing the Balkans, the Netherlands, conquering Africa, driving toward Moscow, enlisting the cupidity of Japan, slaughtering the Poles. They're now fast OR ELSE on their way back, through Italy, in'France, driven from Russia. The color scheme doesn't suit der Fuehrer. His color taste remains; would rather something different MEAT O' THE COCONUT Some great artists have come from BY 'Reports, Mine Fuehrer!' Germany; painters, musicians, sculp­ SILAS WITHERSPOON I tors,—but this one is inherently from Brest fell Sat­ Austria. His favorite color is blood- UNION BUS PORTER urday; topic red ; his ambition to conquer the world for the Sun­ by it—not a bow down in tribute to his TELLS PASSENGERS day morning artistic genius* but kow tow to his mili­ headlines. By tary prowess. He had the world pretty GREYHOUND BUSES. mid - forenoon well buffaloed for a season. "Lippy" the colored Lindy, for instance, told us to run; RUN RIGHT ON TO porter (also that he was unlickable. bus announc- He thought^«o himself, but until PARIS AND BERLIN er) at the then he hadn't recokned fully with his Union Bus latest host. America was just begin­ SINCE BREST Wlmmmm ning her lease-lend aid and comfort tp*-'*-.' registered. "Bus going east," he called. "Miz- his enemies, and indeed, he had quite hywaka, Osceola, Elkhart, La Grange, An- a propaganda force within her, bear­ goly, Tojedo, Erie, New York,—and (hesi­ ing down; all but threatening revolt. tating) Brest, Rennes, Paris and Berlin." However, they were not in the saddle The crowd roared, cheered; it was as though of government as were the Quislings victory had been announced, and an armis­ of Norway, and when he enticed Japan tice signed. Laughter filled the .station where to hand us that Pearl Harbor dose, and several score were in waiting. "Wat you all then backed her up by declaring war— laughin' at," the porter grinned, turning on the crowd. "Ain't it so? We may 'ave to "in her behalf,"—upon us, he misun­ wait awhile in Paris to change buses fir Ber^ derstood his target. lin but we'll make it," — and as the bus We still have those among us who pulled out those left behind milled out to wTould almost rather see Hitler win the street and waved it bon voyage, just as (On Page Three) though Berlin were its certain destination. * * * * There is more Jackie Cooper and Navy Provoke Morals Crusade TIP FOR POST-WAR serious«ense in that current HAT Jackie Cooper affair, in partnership with .George Bender, Notre Dame naval trainees, RECONVERSION AND bit of noncha­ is securing for Jackie some national prominence. It ought to help him immensely when the lant wit and Twar is over and he gets back into the movies. Meanwhile, from current reports he seemed EXPANSION GABISTS humor brewed likely to escape the scourge of the civil authorities, navy officers appearing indisposed to­ in that colored ward the civil demands for the corpus;"corpus,"not "corpse." OF BOTH POLITICAL porter's brain You know the story. Cooper and Bender enticed by some —• the sort of teen-girls—or were enticed by them—to go on a drinking "To Dissent Is to AND FINANCIAL KIN thing that has spree, etc. Two of the teen-girls being under 18, come under kept America's chin up,—than all the flow of the juvenile court and the boys are wanted for contributing Die"—Good Enough gab and effort at economic maneuvering that TP '•' to juvenile delinquency; nothing more. evolved at Ihis week's conference of C. E. D. Cooper is 21, Bender 24, old enough at that to know bet­ For Such Rascals (Committee of Economic Development) at ter even if, as they* claim to the naval authorities, it was the Purdue university, highlighted by these men girls, not them, who did the enticing. However, instead of re­ of recognized "quality"; MART boys of Germany who leasing the trainees for civil reprimand, they were said to have Mr. Louis Ruthen-burg, chairman, and tied up with Adolf Hitler to president of Servel, Inc., Evansville, Ind.; been transferred to Great Lakes Training Station, Chicago, S rule the world and divide the Paul G. Hoffman, of South Bend, president perhaps to remove them from so much temptation. power and emoluments, under a "dis­ <&n Pas*** Two) On to Washington. Executive Officer Walter S. Gabel, sent and die" pact, are welcome-to Naval V-12 training* unit at Notre Dame, announced that the the firing squads and hangman's warrants for arrest would have to be "processed at the 9th nooses that they're getting these days SALVATORE naval district headquarters at Great Lakes, which in turn at the hands of the Nazi high com­ By SOMERSET MAUGHAM will submit them to the secretary of the navy." Secretary mand. Horse sense would have taught James V. Forrestal, said good-bye to Cooper and Bender and them that a man who would lead WONDER if I can ;do it. | knew Sal­ released them for discipline by the -state. -?mm such a conspiracy would be unscru­ vatore first when he *was a boy of«nfteen Of course, we know nothing about who enticed, or who did pulous enough to carry out the threat. I with a pleasant, ugly face, a laughing the enticing, but in our opinion it would be no credit to the Reports from the various fronts mouth and carefree eyes. He used to spend navy, or its training schools, to encourage by protection either glimmered rainbow in those days; the morning lying about the beach with next th© temptor or the tempted in hilarities of such kind. Maybe days; were not all white on black. to nothing on and his brown body was as the navy had it held onto the young men might have done The color scheme looking to the (On Page Eight) (On Page Three) (On Page Five) Page Two THE MIRROR

borrqwe$~ #&&• He alwf ys kept # ^Tte a doctor with him, but he had a ELJEVE IT 90NPS OVSR AMERICA * fine disdain -for doctors. Apropos of one of his junkets, he said: "When I left Manila the doc­ mVR ELSE! tors told me that I could, drink Ply mouth Rock M emoria I n©9ung iiitexieaiing. • "^"hen I (From Page One) sreacRed Java I saw a doctor and On the sea coast of Mas­ of the Studehajkef corporation and faj-:r*n§f national C. E. P. he told me a glass of begr would sachusetts, atPlymouth, not hur*£. So I drank beer from chairman; £>$•. Edwa*£c| C. Elliott, president °f Purdue uni­ stands this memorial preserving the rock tha( Java to Pasis. In Paris * another versity; Herman B. Wells, president of Indji&na university; acted as a stepping doctor said, .'You should ftbt drink stone t^ freedom, of wor­ beer; w*&e is the thing.' Dean A. A. Potter, o,f the Purdue schools of engineering; ship yfe.n the Pilgrims "Then I reached the United Clarence A. Jackson, ejjecutive vice president of the Indiana landed in 1620. States and the physicians said, 'Don't drink tvines or beer at all, State Chamber of Commerce and Indiana, vice chairman of but only whisky.' So now if I C. E. Dr, Walter G. Koch, vice present of the International want a drink all I have to do is to decide which physician I shall Steel company and chairman of Evansville's C. E. D. actiosri obey." committee; R. H. McMurtrie, president of the Huntington He died the father of his coun­ Furniture company; David G. Wylie, president of the Bloom- try, and the hero of bed-ridden patients \n tuberculosis hospitals ington Limestone corporation, and H. Don Forse, president all over the world. of the Forse Corporation, Anderson. Ifhere is no place for When such men speak it is as "one having authority," and tolerance and individu­ SEN. BENNET *CHUMP" al freedoms in fascist CLARJi PEFI-ATOli'FOK what did they say? Well, in short, Uncle Sam should do it Germany. We will win, ISOLATIONIST ACTION all, but keep his nose out and do nothing; private enterprise For the Four Freedoms— or have Hitler's way forced upon us. (Chicago, S\ui) will take care of the situation, if left alone, freed from inter­ Buy War Bonds EFEAT of Senator Bennet ference, but the government should take hold with money Champ Clark in tfre Mis­ D souri Democratic primary is and measures, subsidizing capital, docilizing labor, and pau­ the most sensational event in perizing penury, that industry may be free and untrammeled. red tape, and other folderols. The way to jfeconvert from war­ what seems to be developing as a substantial Taxes on profits must be cut to the bone that investments time to peace-time activity is to reconvert, and the way to expand, trend may be encouraged; mergers and monopolies, encouraged and develop, is to expand and develop — on to Brest, Rennes, against Paris and Berlin. co n g r e s- rather than disturbed, and all glory be to the high-lights of sicnal tory- finance. The colored porter had a better and more effective * *T "•* *** isolation- program; "roll on." Mighty opportunities will be open ists. There We have beard a lot in recent years in are increas­ post-war, like a Greyhound bus line, jumping the pond, land­ DPWPU DomflnHo ingly em- ing in Brest, and on to Rennes, Paris, Berlin,—and he might Demands p h*a tic Uunujf liullidllUu damnation of "planned economies," and signs, in have added Moscow and Tokyo (if any). "business controls," and pretty much ev­ state pri­ Government at maries, that Post-Civil War, when the nation went somewhat Green­ erything governmental, except, of course, the people back, there was a great demand for the resumption of specie RFC, which has been serving big business haye awak­ Once Put Free ened to the payments. Horace Greeley and his New York Tribune were so beneficently; sort of "good angel" threat of hammering the gizzard out of President Grant and Stcretary fashion—in matters of resumption, con­ r e a c tion, Enterprise on and there. of the Treasury Boutwell. Congress fiddled to find a way. version, expansion, and so on. There is increas­ Boutwell enraged, wired Greeley: has been no super-capitalistic demand-far ing hope Post-War Feet for the "You are so smart. Just tell us how to go about it to abandonment of HFC. It is SEC (the election of a new congress capable resume specie payments." G. 0. P. Fashion Securities Exchange Commission) that of helping create a decent, stable should go; that and NLRB, FSA, FCA, peace. Greeley's answer was clear: "The way to resume specie Four of the most narrow nation­ payments is to resume them." ETC., that have been lending some aid and comfort to labor, the alists in the senate have now been farmer, and occasional other under-dogs,—in hinderance of occa­ forced out. Qaudy Bob Reynolds And that is what they finally did, eliminating a lot of the quit in North Carolina, Rufus sional high financial exploits. No they don't want -any of this Holman of Oregon was beaten by "planned economy," it is socialistic, communistic; that is,"unless the brilliant liberal, Wayne Morse, G. O. P. Half-Truth-Worse Than Whole Lie and D. Worth Clark was defeated in aid of, rather than control of business exploitations. in Idaho. Bennet Clark's debacle Mr. _Thomas E. Dewey, back on his Quaker Hill Farm in is, up to this point, the climax, for his native abilities made him in­ PawUng, N. Y., after having absorbed the admiration of the comparably the most dangerous of Republican governors that met him in St. Louis, might well have the quartet. His family name— his own and his father's—was so waited a day or two and stoppect off at the Purdue G. O. P. rally. strong a tradition in Missouri without having the spirit that prevailed at St. Louis the least Democratic politics, furthermore, that his defeat can be explained disturbed. They also discussed reconversion and business expan­ only on the basis of a profound sion at St. Louis. "When the wi(r ends there will he a stoppage revolution in the electorate. " in the manufacture of war equipment," Mr. Dewey says, just as Nor are these griefs and trou­ bles the only ones suffered by re­ though he had discovered something. Everybody else has been actionaries and nationalists. Sen­ thinking that we would keep right on with war production. ator Nye., who barely squeaked (On Page Four) through the Republican primary in North Dakota (note that it was a Republican primary) faces for­ midable November opposition from Gov. Moses, the Democratic nom­ inee. In Arkansas, Senator Cara­ way—an administration supporter but lacking qualities of leadership —has been beaten, and the favored candidate in a runoff primary is Representative Fullbright The house, as well as the senate, has been improved in prospect. HERO OF TUBERCULOSIS WORLD Three members of the Dies com­ mittee have been eliminated. Rep. By Kenesaw Mountain Landis II Quezon didn't go to bed. Before Lamberson of Kansas, one of the ANUEL QUEZON (inset) he was out of his teens he was worst G. 0. P. tories, was beaten died Tuesday, August 1, of fighting the Spaniards in the cause this week in his own party. Ham M tuberculosis, at the age of of Philippine independence. When Fish suffered a greatly reduced 65. Unless you. know something the Americans took over he fought plurality in his New York primary about his long illness, you will them, landing in a military prison and is in danger in the election. - miss the full where he spent six months. It is a dangerous error to deduce triumph of the How he survived the experience political "trends" from insufficient first president no one knows, but after he got out data. But the case of Bennet of the Philip­ he studied law, and was next Clark, at least, allows Clear con­ pine Cornrnpn- heard from—in 1904—prosecuting clusions* wealth, and an American attorney for -fraud. Mr. Clark is reported to have think only of The hero of his people, he made neglected some of his constituents. the tragedy himself the most powerful orator He has hysterically attempted to that he couldn't in the islands in any of three lan­ blaiie J&s defeat on the C. I. O. live a year or guage—English, Spanish, and Ta- Political' Action committee. The two longer — galog. And all the time he had a fact remains that the fight against BOVE is a beautiful campaign lie being distributed as propaganda long enough to disease which was eating away his him was conducted on the clear- A by the National Association of Manufacturers—for political pur­ see the Japs lungs. cut issue of his isolationist and poses Ladies' Aid Society to the G. O. P. In other words, it is a half- driven out. generally anti-New Deal record. 1 Quezon's triumphs over tuber­ truth, worse than a whole lie. Purely civilian employment has in­ H The miracle culosis were greater than his suc­ St. Louis and outstate newspapers, creased scarcely at all since the late '30s, and the difference between m. is that Quezon cess in lobbying through Congress which in previous years had cham­ 800,000 and 3,500,000 as quoted (2,700,000), is, employed ifl war agen­ || didn't die of tu­ the various home rule bills which pioned him as a liberal, swung cies; the government looking after war production, etc. WPB, WMPC, ff berculosis back finally culminated in the Philip­ hard against him as a man unfitted OPA, WLB, ODT, OWI, and so on, in war wort; quite as important to || in the days of pine independence charter of 1934. for the peacemaking days to come. the war effort as the armed forces themselves, are employing these H Spanish rule i A lobbyist must live a hectic He made belated grabs at the people in their various activities. Many of them too are volunteers, H when he was a life, and to the amazement of president's coattails, but the voters working without pay. poor schoolboy "lungers" all over the world Que­ were warned that, on his record, Of what use is an army, or uavy, or air pilots, without equipment, on the island of Luzon. His nick­ zon earned a reputation as one of he might become the new Henry and how are they to get the equipment without production? Prac­ name was "Gulerato"—bluffer. the best poker players in Wash­ Cabot Lodge to lead irreconcila- tically all of that 2,700,000. will disappear from the government pay­ He was bright enough, but the ington. Where did he get his rest? bles again^.a cooperative world rolls as soon as the war ends, and perhaps some of the others, the teachers couldn't understand why He didn't. He Was one of the organization. He was vulnerable activities of these latter having been accentuated by the war effort. he was so lazy. Doctors will tell best ballroom dancers - in the to that charge, he was beaten on But -hen the G. O. P. never did want any war preparations anyway; you that the disease was even then world, once taking out 16 of Ar­ .that charge—and it is worth notic­ did all it could to hinder them right up to ^earl Harbor. Would it sapping his energies.. If doetctrs* thur Murray's, dance instructors on ing, that his defeat occurred in the discontinue them now in aid of der fuehrer? The "big boy," by Col­ had young Manuel today they a single party. heart of the socalled "nationalist'' lier, in face of the facts, js jusj; another Republican "wind-bag." would put him to bed. And he knew he was living on midw-e«. -gfe*.- I AUGUST 11, 1944 Page Three Is Hitler Delaying Surrender in Hope of Aiding Dewey's Election? From Page One They're just all "het up," and serv­ mittee on Non-Essential Expendi­ a New Deal acquaintance, and it isi than for America to conquer, espe­ ing their country, on their "own tures), George Peck/George Ben­ oh so damnable that the New Deal* cially under the present adminis­ hook," — though conspicuously, son, and a half dozen others; all should have any hook-ups. But tration banner, but November will when examined, preaching some anxious to serve the press and the NCPAC at least admits the favor-, decide whether they are still fre­ phase of Republican doctrine; G. dinner clubs with their claptrap, itism ancl doesn't go sneaking quent enough to render him much 0. P. propaganda in disguise. free of charge, in exposure always around under false pretenses; a masterful service. There is NAM (National Asso­ of some New Deal calamity. "wolf in sheep's clothing." They tell us it is our ''uncondi­ ciation of Manufacturers), AHF Is the "America First" party an Congress recently compelled CIO tional surrender" demands that is (American Home Front), USCC impossibility as another such ca­ to cast off its Political Action Com­ keeping Germany in the fight; that (United States Chamber of Com­ mouflaged instrumentality? They mittee; limited it to labor activi­ we should accede to a "negotiated merce), CPCG (Committee for the roar and, rave about the NCPAC ties and warned it to keep away peace," quit the blood-shed, 'and Preservation of Constitutional Gov­ (National Citizens Political Action from "direct action" in politics; no resume .."friendly relations,"— ernment) t CCNEE (Citizens' Com­ Committee), formerly CIO-PAC, as more half million dollar campaign snubbing our allies, we suppose, contributions like that of John something after the f a s h i on, Llewellyn Lewis' UMWA to the though they do not say it, of our Jackie Cooper and Navy Provoke Democratic campaign fund in 1936. surrender that they negotiated in Morals Crusade Hurrah for congress, and mind Berlin in 1921. you, it was a New Deal congress. But Hitler knows What "uncon­ (From Page One) It was a New Deal congress too ditional surrender" means; that it something about it by court martial but it would still be no credit that passed the Hatch law with­ means "military surrender," not to the navy. drawing all federal employes and necessary civilian subjection to ob- appointees from political activity. Indeed it is quite current "gossip" that wherever there are army Would Old Shufflers ever have liateration or slavery. He is not or navy schools, or training camps, or what not, girls are none too thinking about that so much as the done such a thing to their own det­ possibility that if he can maintain safe in the vicinity — being too often rather soft in the arms of a riment ? Never! the war until after the American uniform. Residents in the vicinity of Great Lakes are cautious We have had a little stench lo­ elections, his party may get in, and about their daughters. ||||| cally over this NCPAC activity re­ cently; Congressman "Bob" Grant as was the case the last time, in­ Army and navy discipline is reputed sometimes lax in dealing stead of demilitarizing Germany, stirred it up. It seems that when we will again demilitarize our­ with infractions of civil law outside the camps—even to criminal UAW-CIO (the automobile work­ selves. law. There have been a good many clashes between the civil and ers) sent out its bills for dues it Germany is holding off now, not military authorities over which should have jurisdiction over civil enclosed an invitation to members in the hope of winning against the offenses. to join the national organization NCPAC,—as a voluntary act, how­ Allies by force, but by an Amer­ "In an aggravated case," says Attorney Gen. Francis Biddle, "the ican election; that if she can stave ever; not as an assessment. things off long enough his Quis­ military authorities should perhaps accede to the civil demands, Congressman Grant's father lings in America may get in— using judgment as to how aggravated the case is," and in the works at Bendix, is a member of whereupon he can surrender with­ Cooper-Bender affair there isn't much promise that anyone was very UAW and got one of the invita­ out much fear of being hurt. It is much exasperated. tions ; wow! The committee is the peace that he is figuring upon openly for the New Deal, there­ winning now moreso than the war. Had Naval Secretary Forrestal turned the demand of Prosecutor fore, says "Bob," characteristical­ Gerald L. K. Smith and his Scheer down; well, parents, there would still be a navy training school ly, "they wanted to assess my fa­ "America First" party with Smith at Notre Dame, and it might be very well to keep a weather ther to fight against his son." Paul and Gov. John W. Bricker of Ohio, eye on the young foF.s, and who they go out with, and whereto. Neff, recording secretary of UAW- the presidential and vice presiden­ CIO, Bendix Local No. 9, ditto^ tial nominees, is merely an exag­ But poor Olie Lowery, waiter in the Brandywine room at the George F. Addes, international sec-" gerated case of Axism at work. LaSalle, where the spree started. He served the drinks. Of course retary - treasurer, challenge the Disconsolate, fanatically .anxious, the LaSalle tar didn't sell them, nor did the hotel house the bar— statement, as to the "assessment." . Congressman Grant's father the Quislings at least pretensively, nor did the people vote them their drinks back there in the 1933 wasn't "assessed"; his member­ ask an open and shut fight on the plebicite. If the state of Indiana couldn't have Cooper and Bender ship in UAW was not endangered issue; not the stradling, contra- it would seem that the naval authorities should take over, by bayo­ should he refuse to join,—but thfji pretensive maneuvers of the G. O. net if necessary, Lowery and the girls for contributing to the delin­ when it comes to politics Congress­ Pv — where Governor Bricker is quency of the trainees. man Grant has been reckless with again in the vice presidential race. the truth, confusing situations, "Rabble Rouser" SmitK, as Mr. All in all it is considerable of a "tempest in a teapot," we guess, long before this. His last campaign Thomas E. Dewey terms him, in seeing as is that such goings on are not so uncommon regardless for election was a hodgepodgs of it apparent disdain, didn't pick Mr. right up to election morning. Bricker for his running mate with­ of army and navy connections. Girls are pretty rattle-brained be­ out being somewhat satisfied that times, when they see a boy coming, and especially if he has a uni­ It is mentioned here, however, down, deep in Bricker's heart, they form on—and a Jackie Cooper. Parents too are occasionally derelict only in passing. The abandon with were pretty well mated on the ma­ at their watchouts. which the G. O. P. resorts to "side jor issue involved by the action. kicks" in disguise, and the possi­ Back, however, to the main question; that of the navy depart­ bility, indeed probability, that the Smith wanted Bricker nominated ment having surrendered the men to take their medicine,—and from in Chicago; threatened the party "America First" party is another that turned him down. the civil community that they have offended. The community feels one of them, tuned to operate by Former Huey Long protege, in much better about it, and it enhances the moral standing, and perhaps reverse action, is brought into the Louisiana, Smith follows the tac­ standards, of the navy, and possibly will give the girls a little scare open by the comparison. tics that he learned before he left in the bargain. W*& Oh yes, the "America Firsts" in a party of their own, ostensibly be­ a place to which it would be un­ Of course, we all knew that it never could happen with Volstead- healthy for him to return. It would cause convinced that the G. 0. P. be typical of Long, and scarcely ism in its grave, and Volstead, and Morris Sheppard, and Frank platform is too "international" and less so of the G. 0. P., for him to Wright, and the late Rev. Edward S. Shumaker, in their graves with very "anti-isolationist," may serve set up his "America First" party, it. Drinking was to stop immediately it was made easy. to quiet some of the fears of Re­ publicans that it is too isolationist to detract fire from the Republi­ It was in the "cause of temperance" and to "protect public mor­ cans, and leave them freer to go on —and thus tie their vote to the Re­ als" that Indiana passed its post-Volstead act without much as waiting publican ticket. with their double-dealing. for the plebiscite. Who knows, save Smith, the G. It may at the same time make 0. P. high comand, and maybe God Haven't we got it? And Uncle Sam's navy gets out of the way some votes for Dewey among Dem­ and Satan, but that the "America of our reprimanding the delinquents — or the contributors to'it. ocrats who don't like Roosevelt or First" party is just another Re­ And there is another thing from which no one can stop us. We're the New Deal, but who have been publican "ladies aid," operating in­ afraid of that "taciturn" gentle­ going to have a morals drive. man and his "taciturnity" on the dependently, apparently, to get the By order of the board of public safety and works, Chief of Police story across, while serving as a isolationist question. target for the opposition; in other Harry T. Everett is going to institute a drive, and .Ernest G. Merri- And Herr Hitler, disconsolate of words, the "goat." Bricker on both ner, chief of the Indiana state excise police, is going to cooperate. the blackness at his fronts, is wait­ tickets will serve as bait for the Liquor for minors is to be taboo. We think this is about the ing, anxiously waiting, and hang­ G. O. P., to those who would like ing on,—-for the election returns to forty-eleventh time in as many years that we have staged such come in. If he can out-wind the to vote "America First" but know drives, but Jackie Cooper, George Bender, and Olie Lowery, stil^, it would be of no use. campaign; well, he can still sur­ came to visit us. ,\^| render, yes, and "unconditionally," We said "another Republican Why not a little of what Mary Pickford advised: "Try out God" if his chance is lost — while if he ladies aid." The woods are full of wins, glory be. them; ostensible "independents," —but oh, that might run into Morris Sheppard, Andrew Volstead, and "non-partisan," and so on. Rev. E. S. Shumaker, and Frank Wright again. G. 0. P. spokesmen, Mr. Herbert (On Page Pour)

Publishers: Mirror Press, Inc., 307 West Jefferson Boulevard, South Bend, Indiana, Phone 3-2635. Entered at the South Bend (Ind.) post office, Sep­ tember 2, 1909, as second class mail under act of congress of March 3, 1879 JOHN HENRY ZUVER, Sr., ESitor •—and of the independence of the United States the 103rd.

VOL. XL—35th YEAR AUGUST 11, 1944 No. 32 SOUTH BEND, INDIANA WEEKLY $1.50 A YEAR; COPY, 5c Page Four *mE MIRROR

suggestion that what the Deweyites will constitute their interest and pro­ peace to war-time activity. Hysteria are airping a.t is disagreement instead tection in the post-war world. Our hit us when the Japs hit Pearl Har­ QELIEVE IT of concord among the high contract­ part in the great conference is no job bor; the demand was to drop every­ ing powers. for an amateur or an isolationist. thing else and gird for the 'Axis. In other,, words what they are Experience, tact, and mutual respect "Business as usual" was taboo; "all- DQR ELSE looking for is an oblique way to re­ are elements that are bound to figure out-for-war" the order of the day. peat the maneuver of twenty-five" in the final decision. Excitement ran high both inside and Nat Shells DeLuxe years ago when the isolationists of The peace that is to come is outside government circles, and, well, that period effected the defeat of fraught with such grave consequences we're putting it over and it is worth to ourselves and the rest of the world, the squall, but why keep it up now, (From Page Two) Woodrow Wilson's League of Na­ tions covenant. that there is no room for domestic chasing after another bugaboo. I Surely he isn't giving the New Deal experience of the sort after World guess NMA (the National Manufac­ credit for sense enough to stop it. They know that the people of this War I,—and we are paying for it in country now realize that that piece of turers Association), "ladies aid" to But the worst is yet to come. "The sort—and we are paying for it in the the G. O. P. in shouting for "private situation will be one which the New political strategy made possible—if lives of American boys in every quar­ it did not make certain—that Ger­ business" and "free enterprise" is at Deal will be wholly incompetent to ter of the globe. Every drop of blood least 49% right, that it can solve the handle." many would again essay her purpose spilled in this war is on the hands of conquering the world and making problem, including jobs, if left to do Hurrah! What pcst-war needs is that minority of the United States it, free from government "dictator­ Dewey, Brownell, and other young it subservient to German supremacy. senate, and the president, who in They know that if the American del­ ship" etc., but it should stick to its Republican "squirts," that know all 1921, set up, what Mr. Brownell text; plan practicing what it preaches. the answers. While his train rolled egation to the peace conference brings would seemingly have Mr. Dewey back a document proclaiming inter­ set up; a separate peace, defiant of our It is all to noticeable that while through the Mohawk valley, back to NMA wants business left alone it the farm, the Republican presidential national cooperation capable of curb­ allies and apologetic to the foe. ing the satanic ambitions of would- Think not that the G. O. P. in wants it carried around on a gold- nominee said "machinery for recon­ platter. SEC (the Securities Exchange version must be scheduled at once; be world conquerors, that no United emphasizing reconversion and expan­ States senate could, in the face of sion of the internal post-war econ­ Commission) says industry listed on that its administration will require a the stock exchange has reserves and high degree of competence," — and popular insistence on such a peace, omy ;— is forgetting all about the refuse to ratify it. So the alternative peace tables, or its international de­ surpluses to finance their own recon­ that the change-over should start as version, but "oh no," saith FRB (the soon as Germany is defeated. of a deadlock is the apparent aim of signs. the narrow-minded successors of the -|s 5jS Sj< 5JC Federal Reserve Board, big business "Each unit in each production group that a generation ago sank controlled), "they must have gov­ field," he said, "must be handled more American warships than the ernment aid, and some favorable with speed and competence. The job Fasci-Nazi gang has done in this war. We're Making SfSpl legislation, such as labor control, and requires a degree of competence never decimated our army and would have sumption of tax reductions." NMA and FRB yet shown by the present national ad­ left us well-nigh helpless on the ad­ Mountains of civilian indus­ want "free enterprise" under "private ministration." vent of the present struggle, but for try is bound to control" given an untied hand, but Aye, there's the crux. With the the foresight of Franklin D. Roose­ Molehills in be something of they want it filled with RFC (Recon­ end of the war in sight, much closer velt. a problem, my struction Finance) money, presents up than Hoover's prosperity—"just estimation is of war plants built by the govern­ It is going to take unbounded pa­ that a moun­ around the corner,"—was in 1932, tience, indomitable.resolution and in­ Our Post-War ment, and NLRB (The Labor Rela­ it is time to shift castors from war to tain is being tions Board) revamped and reper- finite diplomatic skill to arrive at a made out of a peace. Voters must be made to see peace that will satisfy all countries in Philandering sonneled to serve the employer—^and that the "incompetent" men or ad­ molehill, just as the employe be damned. view of their various ideas of what was done in the conversfon from ministration in Washington that tot­ Big business and high finance are ed the war to victory, can never be putting up a great pow wow, with, trusted with the resumption of peace Is Hitler Delaying Surrender in Hope the G. O. P., -for a political flashlight, activity. Only Republicans who pre- about post-war reconversion and bus­ Pearl Harbor and somewhat since, iness expansion, calculating to ac­ have indulged their best licks to make Of Aiding Dewey's Election? quire for themselves, if possible, spe­ the winning of the war difficult,—for (From Page Three) cial advantages in the outcome. It is those Washington "incompetents"*— why? Why does Hitler want a dust storm that their high wind is can be trusted to negotiate the peace Brownell, Jr., bright, young, hand- Dewey ? j^ii picked by Dewey; take him for in­ serving us with. Let us get back to "••or, handle a post-war economic situ­ Is surender being delayed else work—on to "Brest, 'Rennes, Paris ation. An administration that con­ stance! He is terribly depressed victory may aid Roosevelt, and hin­ that Stalin and Churchill should and Berlin,"—and stop maneuvering verted^ nation militarily on its up­ der Dewey at the polls ? To a man to pick pockets, especially not Uncle pers largely through Republican con­ speak well of Mr. Roosevelt and who cares so little for human life, want him reelected — but how Sam's pocket, in the performance. nivance; converted it ,from peace to. except his own — what is another Remember, the world came to where about Herr Hitler's worry, and t&irteen weeks of slaughter? war, and successfully prosecuted that it is-out-ef nowhere; it is anevolu- war tp victory; certainly such an ad­ tion, not a sky-rocket, and it wasn't ministration isn't intelligent enough all done in a day. It isn't necessary, to reconvert it from war to peace. nor scarcely desirable that we be Mr. Dewey can see through that just The Farmer and War Bonds switched back to conditions pre-war as clear as crystal; bright boy, young, in a single night. vigorous, knows it all! Men will be jobless will they? •^ -S> ?K *•!"• hy Mr. A. S. Goss Some! I believe in taking good care By compara­ of returning veterans, but the war- Brownell and tives, Mr. Dew­ Master of the National Grange workejf, at the wages they have been ey's logic in getting, who hasn't laid up enough such matter, tf> care fer himself through a short Dewey Assume hinges in w«lf reconversion unemployment — needs with that pi his E FREQUENTLY hear ton­ aside to make payments on learn the lesson that the ant taught Good-Will of young, en^fgeti. Wers raise the question as .to existing debts when they fall to the cricket: and wise cam­ whether or not they should buy due. In fact, quite aside from paign manager, War Bonds as long as they are in the patriotic appeal, it is good Allies Heads debt. The answer to this question Business to buy Bonds father Said the ant to the cricket, "I'm your Mr. _-fe;pbert should depe&d in large measure than make pre-payments on servant and friend, Brown*?.-. Mr. upon the nature of the debt and debt, because the time may But we ants never borrow, and we Is Detriment Brownell, in­ whether or not it is current. If part come when the ready cash is never lend. censed that the leaders of the nations of it is pa§t $ae, and the borrower needed and the money tied up expects to experience difficulty in in pre-payments cannot be re­ Pray tell me dear cricket, did you lay allied with us in this war should meeting past due payments, he turned. If this money is in­ nothing by think well of President Roosevelt, probably should bring his debt into vested in Bonds, it can be con­ verted into cash to meet any When the weather was warm?" and wish that they might continue current positipn before investing Quoth the cricket: "Not I. to deal with him in settling the peace. in Bonds. If, however, his pay­ needs which may arise. ments ar.£ current, there seems to If everyone followed the policy My heart was so light that I sang He sees in it a case of their butting be no reason why farmers should day and night, into our internal affairs, trying to run of buying no War Bonds until their not buy as many Bonds as they debts were paid, few Bonds would For all nature looked gay"—- America; wherefore Mr. Roosevelt are able. Most individual invest­ be sold to the public. We have an "You sang, sir, you say? should be dumped instanter. We ors in government Bonds are car­ obligation to help finance this war should be at political war with our rying debt in one form or an­ which is vastly more important Go then," said the said the ant, "and other, at rates higher than the than the income we may receive dance winter away." allies though deeply in love with Bonds Estill yield. This is as it on the investment of money in them in fighting the enemy. If they should be if the purchaser is in an War Bonds. We're being unduly excited about like Roosevelt they can't like Dewey*, earning position which permits the Farmers are finding it impossi­ a lit of things that amount to less therefore Dewey should be elected. accumulation of some surplus, for we all owe it ta our government :ble to maintain their machinery thin nothing- The busy-bodie-s have They're sure trying to set up another aja$ buildings in a satisfactory to do our utmost _h "the financing state of repair. They are finding to have spmething to spout about. Harding to impossibilize internation­ of the war, even though the trans­ Remember that the things that you action may result in our paying that they c__3_io*fc ueplace worn-out al comity in preserving the peace. equipment except at e^essiyely worry about most seldom happens. some extra interest' on outstand­ high cost. * It's a simple fact that when Ger­ ing debts. (§ Keep your blood-pressure down; your It would seem to be sound spirits up. We'll make Brest, Rennes, many and Japan, either jointly or When a farmer owes money, he and conservative business severally, have been defeated it will is always concerned as to whether Paris and Berlin, and get back to bus­ his crops wi& s^ety at* prices w-J-pch practice to lay aside money be necessary for the head of our na­ wiH enable him to repay his debt. to make the repairs and re­ iness without a hell of a lot of dis­ tion to sit down with Stalin, G_^urc__-; place worn-out equipment location if we just keep our eye on When prices are high it is good when materia^ and machines ill and Chiang Kai Shek and arrange business .and conservative finance are again available. No safer the road, foot on the gas, and hand the terms of peace and the measures to J^ue-_Tthe debt as rapidly as place can be found to lay aside on the steering-wheel. that must be taken to guarantee that possible because when prices are money fot^suen purposes than low,' it takes more crops and hic^re You'H he seem' me. . . . some future Hitler __*#? not arise tq efforts to make the payments," '' in government Bonds. plunge the world again into chaos. We should not forget, how­ Every time we buy a Bond we —SILAS. The suggestion that an individual t& ever, that a government Bond are not only assisting in ^_fi^_acm^ will pay off an equal amount the )$>§£>. fcut we are ipso doing our whom they are hostile is better fitted of dollars of debt, no matter bit to prevent that most dreaded SUBSCRIBE FOR to come to agreement with these heads whether prices are high or economic disaster called inflation. of the countries that are associated whether prices are low. It is, ff eaSah. Oftfc.o* us, would invest as with us in winning the W^str, than an therefore,' a sound and con­ much as we could in government %imon servative practice to buy gov­ __on__s,. the- danger Of inflation executive they know and have cfealf ernment Bonds and lay them with, is either the extreme of gro- m would be greatly reduced. • •1,50 by the Year tesqueness -— or carries the sinister U. S. Treasury Department AUGUST 11, 1944 Page Five

feated in the primary for nomi­ Muszer. The suggested budget is budget with a tax levy three cents The school city's bonded indebt­ nation for the office of treasurer $1,213,143.98. This is $6,675.62 lower than the rate collected for edness as of today stands at $720,- by Michael J. Barany, former chief higher than the present budget of this year. Public heating will be 000 as compared with $4,294,000 in ULTUM deputy, who will be giving much $1,206,468.36. However, the coun­ held at 4 p. Thursday, Aug. 31, in 1930 when Monroe school was attention during the fall to his ty council and the county and the school city administration completed. By Dec. 31, this year, campaign for election. state tax adjustment boards may building. The 1945 budget calls the indebtedness will have been <_¥ m make some changes before the for total expenditures of $2,134,- Pajakowski was first elected reduced to $654,000 and by the treasurer in November, 1940, and budget takes its final form. It is 887.50 and a tax rate of $1,075 as end of the 1945 budget period it reelected in 1942, only two suc­ possible to raise more money with compared With expenditures of will have been cut to $468,000. 'W'PARVO cessive terms being - allowable. a lower tax rate. The tax valuation $2,403,175 and a levy of $1,105 in has swelled $3,636,120 and now 1944. The decrease in tax rate is Previously he had been Barrett reflected jn the reduction of the ST. JOE CpUNTY LISTED law clerk under Treasurer Peter totals to $237,871,370. FOR STATE __OSPITAL: A. Beczkiewicz, now member of The bonded debt has receded bond fund levy troth 16 to 13 cents. A total Of $207,107.50 will be St. Joseph county is listed as the High Spots in News the state tax board. He is 2 years from a high water mark of $ 2,- sought for thfe bond fund .for 1945 site for the proposed northern hos­ old and lives with his wife, and 937,635 in 1931 to $413,000 at the in comparison with $256,325 this pital for crippled children authOr- two children, Thomas 6, and Vic­ present. According to the bond re­ year. (On Page Six) toria 2, on Olive road, southwest tirement schedules, the county will COUNTY TREASURER of South Bend. be debt free in 1950 unless new TAKES OWI JOB AT bonds are issued. As stands the NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES RECONSTRUCTION: Cdunty will owe only $22,500 on GRAND G. O. P. RALLY In the matter of determining the tax 1 ______< UGENE J. PAJAKOWSKI (in­ TO SAVE BOB GRANT: road bonds after 1947. rates for cert-ih purposes by Centre set), St. Joseph county treas­ In the budget, but not to be Township, St. Joseph County, Indiana }• Before the Township Advisory Board That grand Republican rally to raised by real and personal prop­ I E urer, left Monday for New save Congressman "Bob" Grant, NOTICE is. hereby given the taxpayers of Centre Township, St. Joseph [York, from whence after a couple scheduled for Pottawatomi park, erty taxes, is $296,472 for the County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said municipality, at their months county highway department. It regular meet-fig place, fch the 2Sth day of August, 1944, will consider the fol­ Sunday, will really start Satur­ will come from state-collected gas­ lowing budget: _•*!_____ training for day night with a reception at Re­ XOWJffSHIP BUDGET CLASSIFICATION OWI for­ oline tax and other motor vehicle . Township Fund Special School Fund eign serivce publican campaign headquarters, revenue. The 1944 budget was Salary of Trustee $ 600.00 Repair of Buildings and care 323 S. Main St. The reception; $277,112. Office Rent .____ 60.00 of Grounds , $12 000.00 he will open to the public, will be held Trustee's Traveling, ^Expense.. 125.00 Repair of Equipment, except leave for under the auspices of the St. Jo­ Proposed levies for the four Office Suoplies, Printing and School Buses , . 400.00 London. funds into which the county bud­ Advertising A 260.00 School Furniture and Equip­ seph county council of Republican Pay of Advisory Board 75.00 ment, except School Bqses.. 400.00 His prob­ clubs. Slated to attend are Homer get is divided are: Assessor's Compensation 325.00 School Supplies, other than able u 11 i- E. Capehart, nominee for United Fund Levy To Be Raised Care of Cemeteries 50.00 Janitors' Supplies 400.00 mate is Po­ General $0.37.3 $ 887,260.21 KvamJnation of Records 75.00 Janitor Supplies 400.00 land where States senator; Ralph F. Gates, Sinkiig .00.3 7,136.14 Miscellaneous :__ 165.00 Fuel for Schools •__' 1 400.00 nominee for governor; Richard Road Bonds .00.4 9,514.85 Ldans, Interest and insurance 200.00 he will aid James, nominee for lieutenant Welfare .13 309,232.78 Total Township Fund $ 1,735.00 Janitor Service 1 ,850.00 in the re- Transportation of Children 8 governor; Rue Alexander, nomi­ -Total .51 $1,213,143.98 Tuition Fund ,500,-etL c cnstruc- Pay of Teachers $21,000.00 Light and Power 400.00 tion of that nee for secretary of state; Fred The general fund budget is up School Transfers 13,0.0/30 Contingencies 500.00 Mills, nominee for treasurer, and nearlyt $.23,860, due primarily to Miscellaneous 335.00 country James Emmert, nominee for attor­ an increase in the budget sought Total Tuitibii Fund $34,000.00 after Ger­ ney-general. E. M. Morris, Repub­ for the airport. The airport budget Bond Fund Total Special School Fund__$15,.85.00 many has been driven out — lican national committeeman will of 1944 was $37,360 and it has Principal $ 1,265*30 Poor Relief Fund though he has no such definite Interest . 100.00 >. Direct Relief: assignment. also attend. jumped to $236,715 as an aviation Bl. Medical; Hospital and cdmmission seeks to clear the way Total Bond Fund . $ 1,375.00 Burial $ 550.00 Treasurer Pajakowski Will re­ for expansion and modernization I-... Protection Fun8 C. Other Relief: tain his local office, however, to COUNTY TAX RATE DOWN Fire Protection $ 600.00 CI. Commissary or Store_$ 450.00 BUT BUDGET HIGHER: of the port for the postwar era of the end of his term, January 1, air transportation. Total Fire Protection Fund_$ 600.00 held permissible by Attorney Gen. The proposed 1945 tax budget Total Poor Relief Fund.—$ 1,000.00 James Emmert. He has elevated ESTIMATE OF FUNDS TO BE RAISED for St. Joseph county is slightly FUNDS.REQUIRED FOR Stanley J. Mezykowski, one of his higher than that of the current SOUTH BEND SCHOOL EXPENSES Special Fire deputies, to the post of chief dep­ year, but it calls for a one-cent LEVY IS ALSO DOWN: August 1, present ye£r to Township School Tuition Bond Pro­ uty, and placed him in charge of lower levy of 51 cents, according The South Bend board of educa­ December 31, of ensuing year Fund Fund Fund * Fund tection the office. Mezykowski was de­ 1. Total Budget Estimate to County Auditor Nicholas A. tion proposes a 1945 school city for Incoming Year $1,735.00 $15,985.00 $34,000.00 $1,365.00 $600iOO 2. Necessary Expenditures to be made from Ap­ propriations Unexpend­ Pf ed July 31, of present "To Dissent Is to year .____ 1,175.00 7,095.00 21,660.00 275.00 3. Addition*^ Appropria­ tions to be made August 1, to December 31, of if. Good Enough for Such Rascals present year ___ 1,005.00 4. Outstanding - Temporary (From Page One) Loans to be paid before Tne hanged officers were Field Marshal Er­ December 31, of present Balkans, the Netherlands, Africa, and already year, not included in win voh Wittlebefi, aforementioned, forfneHy Lines 2 or 3 contemplating Russia, Britain and the Amer­ in command on the western front; Col. Gen. 5. Total Stands Required icas, glimmered glorious. There would be Erich Hoeppner, Lt. Gen. Karl von Hase, Mij: (Add Lii.es 1,2,3 knd 4) 2,910.00 23,080.00 56,665.00 1,365.150 875.00 thrones enough for all. World War I would -be FUNDS ON HAND AND Gen. Stieff, Lt. Col. Bernardis, Capt. Friedrich TO BE RECfclVED FROM revenged arid the conquered of then become the Karl Klausing, Lt. Albrecht von Hagen and Lt. SOURCES OTHER THAN THE PROPOSED RATE OF Victors in the new. dalwn. C_>#ht York von Wartenburg. Eight genetais TAX LEVY There have been other purges n Germany, had gone before. ^ 6. Actual Balance, July 31, present year 579.00 2,857.00 13,298.00 310.00 291.00 of dissenters who wanted to edge out and op­ There shortly will be similar p^3C*__*_liti*|S 7. Taxes tb. He Coll_*bt_d, pose the enormities, and these generals, etc., not against five other officers, expelled by the aSrfriy present year (December Settlement) . 598.00 ,753.00 4,567.00 499.00 321.00 yet sensible to the plight into which they were cdf-tft of BdfiOr from the Wehrmacht. These 8. Miscellaneous Revenue, plunging, stood by and approved; some oi^thttti v other than frdfh Tax were Malj. Gen. Von Thesckow, of coh._h _m4*__;- Levy, . to be received even commanding the shot. Such was Field tions ti^oips Gen. Fellgiebel, Coiofiel of the from August 1 of pres- eitt year to December 31, Marshal Erwin von Witzkbeh, lately deceased. General Staff Hansen, Major of the Geheratt of ensuing year. (See schedule in Trustee's The Nazi slaughter of discontent has been Staff Hayessen and Lt. Count von der S_f_.t--.__- Office.) going on ever since Hitler became chancellor. burg. (a) Special Taxes (See Russia never held a candle to it, even in its elim­ The_-£ J_ -every reason to believe the blo&d Schedules) .00 -0.00 14,-10.00 7.00 1 (b) All Other Revenue ination df the Czars. To lift a finger against purge HH11 continue until the final doom of ink • - (See Schedules) __ 6,000.00 6,110.00 9. Total Funds (Add Lines a Hitletialn demand has meant death repeatedly. Nazis. Among sensational disclosures, at the 6, 7, 8a and 8fe)__ 1,179.00 11,650.00 38,285.00 816.00 612.00' An over act meant somebody must go; if not the 10 Net Amount to be raised trial was that Karl Goerdeler, the missing for­ for expenses to Decem­ real culprit then a meneuvered "suspect." mer mayor of Leipzig, for whom, a reward of ber 31, ol ensuing year 1,731.00 11,450.00 18,3 549.00 263.-S' 11. Operating Balance (Not Disagreement in the Nazi high court could 1,000,000 marks (abOut $400,000) is out­ in excess of Expense January 1, to June 30, not exist. The majority ruled and Hitler was standing, was slated to be Reich chancellor of Less Miscellaneous Rev­ the majority. Unanymity was the word. No the government. enue for same Period). 111.00 328.00 7,180.00 11.00 20.00 12. Amount to be raised by monarch of time eve'r wielded such a violent The "tfial" of the eight officers hanged was Tax Levy _ 1,842.00 11,758.00 18,420.00 560.00 283.00 septer. Cooperation of the Elbert Hubbard vari­ burlesque on justice as known in other coun­ PROPOSED LEVIES Net Valuation on Taxable Propert y .$2,833,080.00 ety—"do as I tell you and no back talk,"— tries. The result was a foregone conclusion. The Number of Taxable Polls 519 was a vital tenet of Nate, discipline. It was "all Levy on Amount to case for the prosecution was h-hidled not only FUNDS Property Be Raised fos one and one for none" in the Hitrelian vo­ by the state attorney general but &y the presi­ Township _2 . $ .065 7 1,842.00 Special School . .415 11.758.00 cabulary. dent of the court, Roland Freysing, a notorious Tuition .65 18,420.00 Yet these men went in, agreeable to the "dis­ Nazi and close friend of Gestapo Chief Heinrich Bond :-->.;--. .02 560.00 Fire Protection .01 283.00 sent and die" dittat. Rewards were ahead for Himmler, of bloody fame. Even the defense Total $1.16 $32,863.00 those who did der fu.her best,—but tJiei. from attorneys made no attempt to plead on h-half COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF TAXES COLLECTED the war clouds other cannon began to boOm of the accttsed men, but admitted their clients' AND TO BE COLLECTED To-Be and blackness enveloped the Nazi horizons. gtl.lt and themselves acted as sufieinxmiptary Collected Collected Collected Collected From east, west, north*, south, even the Asiatic accusers. FUNDS __fc_-_is^1941 1942 1943 1944 Townsh%. $ 1,1*40.00 $ 1,272,00 $ 1,215.00 $ 1,674.00 seas3_:ame sureties o fdsiaster. The official Nazi agency DNB broadcast Special Scndb'l 5,194.00 7,420.00 9,002.00 8,468.00 •And then a conspiracy within the conspi­ thousands of words of "testimony" in the case, Tuition 7,252.00 8,480.00 9,720.00 ;-UJ347.0O Bond »— 2,352.00 3,604.00 3,159.00 1,674.00 racy began to develop; you have r__k_ before of all tending to prove the guilt of tne accused and Ffre Protection 837.00 what happens w3_*_r_ thieves fall out. There is obviously doctored and incomplet.* The trial Tdtal .: .$15,938.00 $20,776.00 $23,096.00 $26,600.00 a price on Adolf Hitler's head, and on Goer- was held in secret, and! the. DNB version .of the Taxpayers appearing shall have a right to be heard thereon. After the tasc ing's, and Goebbel's, and Himmler's (hope it case is probably the only orie tne World will ever levies have keen determined, and presented to the County Auditor not later tHan two days prior to the second Monday in September, and the levy fixed by is true that the assassin got him, and too bad if know. the County Tax Adjustment Board, or on their failure so to do, by the County the Goering wound doesn't prove fatal), ahd •Vuditor, pan or more taxpayers ieehrtg themselves aggrieved by such levies, The "testimony" brought etna that the plot may appeal to the State Board of. Tax Commissioners for further and final all the other criminals. to kill Hitler began as. long.as a year ago. Also hearing thereon, by filing a petitioh with the County Auditor not later thaii Could anybddf \)e fool enough to expect 0_t_fce_* 15j mni. the State Board will fix a date for hearing in this County. for trie ntst tinie in Nazi accounts it was ad­ H. C. MATTHfcw^S, Trustee, Centre Township. that the "big shot" would offer his neck for mitted the plb'ttets pilaf-ried to itt£itipt peace Dated August 8th, 1944. 8:11-18 the noose? Not Adolf! Assassinate him and with the Allies on both fronts. NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF ADDITIONAL APPROPRIATIONS clear the way thus? Such chosen alternative is That would be nice and perhaps we should NOTICE is hereby given the taxpayers of Centre Township, St. Joseph. not uncommon among gangsters. The Ku Klux be generous to the memory of the departed, but County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said municipality at their regular rn*_-irig place, on 29th day of August, 1944, will consider the following Klan had its killings. Chicago gangsters had d-fetafeftful if any peace made With men of their additional appropriations which salid officers consider necessary to meet the their St. Valentine's day massacres. calibre would be worth the paper that registered extraordinary emergency existing at this time. ??^ff?** Execution by hanging, normally reserved for it. They and their ilk would turn On us at their Tuition Fund—For Teachers Compensation j $1,005.00 "the lowest criminals, constituted the worst af­ first convenience just as they turned on Hitler— Taxpayers appearing at such meeting shall have a right to be heard therecifc front the vengeful fuehrer could have adminis­ or sign up with another Hitler, for revenge, just The additional appropriation as finally made will be automatically referred to the State Board of Tax Commissioners, which Board will hold a further hearing tered to the German army.'The normal mode of as they signed up with this one. within fifteen days at the County Auditor's office of St. Joseph County, Indiana, or at such other place as may be designated. At such hearing, taxpayers ob­ execution for soldiers is by firing squad. Hang­ Exterminating their families, as Hitler is do­ jecting to any of such additional appropriations may be heard and interested ing is regarded as an even greater disgrace than taxpayers may inquire of the County Auditor when and where such hearing ing, is carrying things pretty far, but how about will be held. beheading, usually inflicted on those guilty of the famlies they help exterminate? "Chickens H. C. MATTHEWS, treason..,.* come home to roost." Trustee Centre Township, St. Joseph County, Indiana. 8:11-18 Page Six THE MIRROR

Soviet troops carved new chunk Ricocheted Dead out of the Baltic area held by the nazis as Hitler shifted reinforce­ Of » )EEK OF Gr** lAR^ ments to eastern front. * * * Invading Yanks completed the I \JCs at a glance MV it 1 conquest of Guam while in China the Americans joined the battle to OVER WEEK END Total of German U-boats sunk reopen the Burma road. by the Allied forces since war be­ MERICAN armored forces Ace of Aces gan has leached more than 500, were in an open drive for A Paris as they turned Ger­ including 17 submarines sunk man left flank in Brittany in 50- while attempting to interfere with ULTUM mile advance and pushed toward Allied shipping from Britain to JLe- Mans, rail center 110 miles •£%] France. west of the capital. German gar­ Sw " '«•(' * ^8 &***s|&* ' J in While American fighters ranged rison at Lorient, submarine base, r broadcast an offer to surrender. \ - '^W mm KT <%', over French bat le area and Brit­ American units took Vannes, while ish bombers attacked robot sta­ PARVO others assaulted the strongly de­ \^ tions, fuel depots and submarine (From Page Five) fended cities of Brest, Nantes and \~ pens in France, some 1,200 Amer­ ized by the Indiana legislature in St. Nazaire. British naval forces ^^/s^______f~- - '^ ican heavy bombers attacked air. its 1943 session. It means that the broke up attempt to evacuate St. oil and industrial targets in south hospital not only will be built Nazaire. ern Germany, Belgium, Hungary within the county but probably in and Yugoslavia. South Bend unless certain factors Fourth Ukrainian Army, under in the central part of the state do new commander, Col. Gen. Petrov, Reinforced by Nazi tanks and everything they can to keep the captured Drohobycz, great Polish hospital from being erected at all. ^*^^^^__^4-^^^^^^k^ :W! infantry rushed from central Ger­ oil refinery city in Carpathian many, German troops were coun­ The decision was made in a foothills. Other Soviet forces ter-attacking in great strength to meeting of the commission held at cleared 200-mile stretch of east prevent a Red army invasion* of Lake Manitou near Rochester, bank of Vistula River for great East Prussia, but Russian forces Ind., and was the culmination of drive to Krakow and Silesian coal­ were repelling all attacks. meetings held in various locations fields. ^^^^^^^^^^y N •>•••\' \ in northern Indiana desirous of I'r securing the hospital. Present at • Eighth Army troops crossed ^&*>J In Italy, fight for Florence ap­ the meeting were Senators Charles Arno River over one remaining peared to hinge on bends of Arno A. Phelps, Fort Wayne; Marker bridge into heart of Florence. Ger­ river at Pontassieve to east and Sunderland, Muneie, and Thurman mans were shelling southern part ^^^^^^B between Empilo and Montelupo to C. Crook, South Bend, and Repre­ of great cultural center with big­ west, where Germans fought grim­ A shell glanced off the tree be­ sentatives Alpha Hoessel, Kewan- gest guns they have in Italy. ly to keep from being pushed off hind his head and killed this Jap na; Thomas M. Long, Elkhart; south bank. plumb dead. He's one of the Frank J. O'Rourke, Hammond, and * * * Soviet Lt.-Col. Alexandre Po- * * * Some 2,806 American bombers kryshkin is credited with shoot­ more than 7066 Nips casualtied Louis F. Schultz, Mishawaka. The and fighters from bases in Britain ing down 59 Nazi planes, 48 Japanese resistance ended on for keeps in early stages of the only member absent was I. Floyd and Italy attacked half-dozen while flying one of our P-39 Guam except for small inland Saipan invasion. Garrott, of Battle Ground. warplant targets in Germany and Airacobras. pocket, on which American forces communication targets in France were closing. Conquest of island, Said Private Buck to private and Germany. which, began July 20, cost Japa­ THURSDAY Bill: "Have you ever wondered but there was no Allied frontal at­ * * * nese more than 10,000 dead. Jap­ American armies surrounded what you would do if you had tack, apparently ,to prevent any anese shelled Chinese positions in­ Rockefeller's income?" MONDAY damage to city's art treasures. side Hengyang, contradicting their Nantes, Angers and big U-boat Answered Private Bill: "No, but American troops in France fell Germans, however, had destroyed claims that conquest at important base at Lorient in a drive which I've often wondered what Rocke­ back three miles before German's some oldest and most beautifat rail junction was complete. may outflank the French capital. feller would do if he had mine." fiercest counter-attack of cam­ structures. Italian partisans were paign, but enemy was being held reported operating on large scale in a great battle of tanks. Nazis in northern Italy. struck hinge of Yank lines reach­ * * * ing toward Paris with at least four panzer divisions. German assault Some 2,500 Ameriesm bombers apparently was desperate effort to and fighters from Britain and Italy break through 20 miles to sea be­ raided German" oil installations yond Avranches and cut off arm­ and other targets from northern ored columns mopping up Birt- France to German Silesia. tany and driving toward Paris. On Pacific fronts American advanced nearly three miles on Russian forces, opened new at­ Guam, reducing Japanese-held tacks in southern Latvia, where area to one-tenth of island. Two they cut important supply line for month offensive by U. S. bombers German troops trapped in north­ apparently has neutralized Yap ern Baltic states northwest of B.i- island in Carolines. Chinese de­ alystok created new threat to East fenders of Hengyang held out Prussia, and in Carpathian foot­ against continuing Japanese at­ hills on approaches to old Czecho­ tacks. slovak frontier. * * * TUESDAY Eighth Army troops threatened Canadian troops opened their to outflank and encircle Florence, phase of Allied drive to win Paris by ripping through six miles of the German lines below Caen. As­ Death Dive Fails sault followed heaviest bomber barrage ever laid across battle­ field. British 2d Army in center of 90-mile line and masses of American tanks to southwest swept to points little more than 100 miles from the French capital. American heavy bombers plas­ tered German positions south of Caen, adding to destruction which British planes had rained on same area few hours earlier. Other tar­ gets in north France also were hit. HI The Americans' second Britain- to-Russia-to-Italy shuttle was completed during day with attack on Romanian airdromes. Will they invade Russians launched three-direc­ tional assault on Riga, capturing Latvian rail center of Krustpils and defeating attempt by German forces to escape from Baltic en­ circlement. Russian bridgehead on your sleep tonight ? Vistula river was widened. Ger­ man resistance increased on en­ tire eastern front. The bloodiest, costliest hours of the war You won't sleep well tonight—if you In Italy Allied forces battled to eliminate last German strong point are upon us. let them down. The only way to rest easy south of Arno river, an 18-square- is to do your duty to the full. mile pocket in river loop near Our fighting men are giving every Florence. ounce of their strength, straining every # *£ H* Buy War Bonds. More than you ever On Pacific fronts, American Lib­ nerve to win. erator bombers made their first bought before. Enough so that you can raid of the war against Shanghai. And they expect us to wage the look every returning soldier in the eye Chinese commander at Hengyang same kind of fight with our dollars! and say: "I did my share!" conceded destruction of his be- leagured garrison. American troops on Guam drove enemy into an 18- square-mile pocket. U. S. bombers attacked Halmahera island, be­ tween Philippines and Dutch New Guinea. Buy your Invasion Bonds today! WEDNESDAY Chalking up their biggest single day's gains American columns A burning Jap plane vainly at­ sweeping across France captured tempts to crash-dive into & U. rail hub of Le Mans, port of St. S. carrier west of the Marianas Malo and the naval port of Nantes, Islands. The picture was taker, and penetrated port of Angers. from another carrier, fore­ Together with Canadians, they ground. (Navy photo.) reached 87 miles of Paris. This is an official U.S Treas urj _ dverti-etnexxt-ptepared under auspices of Treasury Department and Wat AdrertUinl Council AUGUST 11, 1944 Pake SevefF

M^Tffl^KS I'M LAZVi . WMM WV.I THOUflHT VOL) WEfcE DM&KnT.ru. STOW HlER. vvORj-INiS .AND BROUGHT V<_£> TODW JUST H0W WUCB SON^Wi-MON ADE - ^©-hpfc &_._ ^N'TGONNK .as*** WIORK. I CAN tSOf 0© -^ LICK b^ f f^^<_r.J SRKME 6N vouf / WO£< A_3A!N *S LONG A6 , t I LIVE.' ivi 5

SUNDAY SCHOOL By O.W.I. LESSON

Where IS Your Share (QM) Th§ Story of Eli Of the eight nuillioh tons of pa­ per needed for salvage in 1944, the Example of Good War Production Board says 38 per cent is in hiding in American And Bad Ministers homes and farms, while the other 62 per cent is to be found in the The International Sunday Schoo^^p^^ files and store rooms of American Lesson for Aug. 13 industry. If the fioy Scouts or the Girl Scouts don't find those home- lest: I Samuel 2:27-30, 3_>; 4:12- •'i£**Wl hidden hoards of waste pape? "UH3* 18 _n£a_ fore next fall, Softool CftftdFteii * * * hope to dig them out. •TpHB lfessons for the coming three weeks will- deal, re- ,'ljjm Victory Gardens for Patl spectively, with the priest, the ; prophet, and the king in the life .? WFA wants more Fall Victory .ASr^^— Gardens, especially in the South of Israel. -r**Jfe*6 where late Summer plantings of I look at a bihi _tt a fcPfee*. and tikf The lessons center around the Lettiice, Cabbage, Kale, Beets, ''THAT is tH _ way td 11%.*' Th? W*4 lives of three men, Eli the priest,' ->?&_-" Spinach, Turnip,, Collards and S?muel the prophet, Saul the flies wherever it wiStleS, Mf-Hi-tfc fclrlg. Carrots will produce fresh produce nobody, buiHing its nest, raising until the ground freezes. WFA If Eli is not the highest rep­ •wahts to increase th£ Victory Gar­ baby birds, hustling for food., sing­ resentative of the priestly clasS'-iPS* den harvest 25 per cent. ing, rejoicing; in Israel, in himself ahd in hiS-i-^t I would hot want to be a bird in a career he offers art excellent case study of rniiiig_&rial life, Horses and Mules "Demobilize" cage, even with free birdiseed. ideals and character, and inci--f^«^i Mechanization of the army re­ People have a right to every pos­ dei-tally of the tragedy of failure. ,.*||M3^ sulted in a surplus stock of 17,000 sible bit of this same _J.t*t of na.U__-l There is no higher type among horses. Dealers bought the horses freedom. men than the faithful priest or at sales and sold three-fourths of 'Well, girls, this is goodby—my induction notice came minister of God, sincerely serv­ them to farmers. Between 600 and People who do not harm d-hfers ing his fellowmen. But there is 7Q0 mules, also displaced by army t-gday." should have _ih _tb_bltlte minimt_n_ nothing' lower among men than meehanization, have beeh au_ti©__- 'iiihouii. tit restraint by others. the unfaithful priest who maH^ii, ed off. week-day prices, those concerns i Ceilings On Used Farm Equipment We should be free to dream, cre- his position the occasion for.-jblS^:' that charged more for Sunday j Regardless of who --the seller ate, invent, originate, initiate, grow, own interest. Ceilings On Restaurant Prices meals may continue such extra J rriay be, OPA now has established In the story of Eh both types charge. Exempt from the regula­ ceiling prices on the following expand ahd give full expression to '%$ August 16 every eating and ©ur natures insofar aft they are good. are exemplified. Eli at his best drihking establishment in the tion under certain conditions are items of used farm equipment, is the faithful priest, so devoted country is required to post its ceil­ places operated- by schools, col­ viz: farm and garden tractors (ex­ Every fibre of every real Ameri­ to his religious service and to his ing prices on 40 basic meals and leges, fraternities, hospitals, pri­ cept track-type); tractor-mounted can's soul tells him this. Every fibre people that he falls from his seat j,~2_^M food items on an official poster vate clubs and recognized eharft* rb.owers, including semi-mounted bf h-_. Soul rebels against the kind backward, breaking his neck, able, religious and cultural organ­ (power take-off driven) rriowers; when a runner brings the news supplied by the War Price and Ra­ izations. combines; corn binders; corn piek- of regimentation Which has been tioning Board. Prices are to be tried in sbme parts of the world. that Israel has been completely ers; hay loaders; manure spread­ defeated in battle, and that the thfe Same as those charged during ers; side delivery rakes; and a the week, April 4-10, 1943, except G. I. Vets Want Education Ark of the Lord has been taken,^.^: that coffee is to be five cents a cup More than 1,000 Veteran G. 1. combination of any of these items by the Philistines. But he was a or pot unless the establishment Joes already have applied to the with other items of farm equip­ failure as a .Either, and he al­ charged more during the week, Veterans Administration for edu­ ment specifically designed for lowed the priestly office to b<5^§Kg, October 4-10, 1942. While ceiling cational benefits offered them un­ mounting thereon, where the com­ Test Your 1. Q. corrupted aad perverted in his prices on their posters must be der the socalled G.I. Bill of Rights. bination is sold as a unit. sons. In addition, 4,00d wtf-ttfeh inquiries The indictment of Eli is that--.- and many additional telephone iri- New School Buses at Last 1. H<»i8*- many of __* are ai ''his sons made themselves vilef j quir.e"s abotft benefits offered un­ Today's Pattern After almost total labk of new least partially color blind? and he restrained th_m not." der the Bill have been received. 2. Which or our armed -Serv­ Thesg Soils of Eli wfefe, ihde.d, To be1 eligible for educational be­ school buses for two years, WPB approved a 1944 production quota ices AMI captured prisoners in deep-dyed rascals; sheer hypo­ nefits, a v&tisran must have had tHii w-tf? crites who liSd no eare for re­ his education interrupted - and of 5,000, of which mote than 2,400 11—17 "already have been released to 3. f-__i our "miracle" war pro­ ligion at all but to use it for thgi£;. g must have had 90 days active bwH l.nflS. « 12—18 service since September 16, 1940, schools where new buses were duction affected cost? with separation under conditions needed to prevent absences and 4. What did the SpaittarttS, The average minister is a.good other than dishonorable, veterans, replace unsafe equipment. firfet owners, call the Paiau man, dolhg his bfiSt accdtding to Islands? his faith and his limitations. His who entered service before they : _». What nuts rank highest _tt is a divihe callihg, but he's hu- f|i§|| were S^ajears old are presumed f to have had their education inter­ Pear Prices Down ood value? man. Congregatibns in the main '^f||-{ • get the sort of priests or min- rupted. Fresh pears for your, table (Answers on Page __) should cost no more than 15 cents j istefs that they deserve. a pound until September 10, and Cut Wood; fe-tVfe Cttal after that until next April, no Every extra cord of fire wood more than 17 cents a pound, OPA American farmers supply for fuel says. With fresh pears for table can save from one-half to a tori use under jgriee control for the of coal. Coal supplies this year first time, OPA looks for a reduc­ will be shaft and vitally needed by tion of about 20 per cent from last essential war industries. year's retail prices. WAR PRICE AND RATION GUIDE DATES TO RER_EMBER AND WttY MEATS, FATS: Red 10-pOint stamps A8 through Z8 good indefinitely. 4.5. B5 and C5, good indefinitely. PROCESSED FOODS: Blue stamps A8 through Z8, and A3 through F5 good indefinitely. SUGAR: Stamps No. 30, 31 ahd 32 in Book Four are good for 5 pounds indefinitely. Stamp .No. 40 in Book Four is good for five pounds of canning sugar through Feb. 28, next year. SHOES: Stamps Nb. 1 and 2 on Airplane sheet In Book No. 3 good indefin­ itely. FUEL OIL: Period 4 and 5 coupons are good in all areas through Sept. 30. No. 1 coupons for 1944-45 good soon as received. GASOLINE: No. 12A good through Sept. 21, "B" and "C" for 5 gallons. Pattern 928] In Jlinior rfilss sizes OPA DIRECTORY •11 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18 8M 13 Rent Control Office, fifth floor, Pythian building. Phone 4-0154—4-0185. jumper. 2% yds. 39-in . blouse 1*4 War Price and Ration Board No. 1, fdf all South Bend and Portage town­ yd*, 35-tn . bows l/4 yard conf --_ ship west of Lafay.tte bouleyafd and German and Warren townships, 106 West This pattern together u it it * Monroe street. Imone 4-0173. needle*8rii pattern f u.fcful an_ WAr Price and Ration Beard No.v2,Jfc_*i* all Sbtfth Bend ahd Portage town- () Ship east of Lafayette boUleVard and Olive, Greeny Gentre, Liberty Lincoln decorative motifs for linens and and Union townships, 106 West Monroe street. Phone 3-821_*. fcarment* TWENTY CENTS War Priee and Ration Board No. 3, for all Of Mishawaka and Penn township i Send TWENTY CENTS in coins and Clay, Harris and Madison township's, 202 Lincoln Way East, Mishawaka. lot these patterns io 170 News­ Phofie 5.2116 paper Pattern Dept.. 232 West 18th The war paries and ration btfards ration sugar tif_S, automobiles* gasoliiie, St. N.fc York 11. N V Write -fuel, oil, bicycles and rubber boots -^nd are price control agencies. plainly SIZE. NAME, ADDRESS i ^^•-^•Jl^'_l-%;-'GTHER WA*'iAGENCIES .TYLi NUMBfift. WarTh-pduction Boaird Office, 2__-__; SherlaijS building. rAll pri__it___.J > Send FIFT____J. GSNtS mof* tef f*_»one 2-14__. * «.. Marian Martin new and bigger Office of Defense Transportation, Towef building feomrhercial Vehicle- Bummer P-ittern BodiL 32-Pages, only). Phone 2-3383. pasy-to-make styles, free pattern War Manpower Commission Office, J. M. S. building. Phone 2-1463. -T'__tef scenery is doing you good, KJotz." 1 _$age Eight THE MIRROR

Yes, that was why he was back; Lookit, a Watch! was it not a piece of luck? Oh, Proud Papa at 82 but they had heard that he would $atmta*e> never be quite well again. The doctors talked a lot of nonsense, (From Page One) but he knew very well that now t&in as a rail. He was full of he was home again he would re­ grace. He was in and out of the cover. They were sileYit for a lit­ sea all the time, swimming with tle, and then the mother nudged the clumsy, effortless stroke com­ the girl. She did not try to soften mon to the fisher boys. Scrambling the blow. She told him straight up: the jagged rocks on his hard out, with the blunt directness of feet, for except on Sundays he her race, that she could not marry never wore shoes, he would throw a man who would never be strong himself into the deep water with enough to work like a man. They a cry of delight. His father was a had made up their minds, her fisherman who owned his own lit— mother and father and she, and tie vineyard and Salvatore acted her father would never give his as nursemaid to his two younger consent. brothers. He shouted to them* to When Salvatore went home he come in shore when they ventured found that they all knew. The out too far and made them dress girl's father had been to tell them when it was time to climb the hot what they had decided, but they viijBce-clad hill f6r the frugal mid­ had lacked the courage to tell him day meal. themselves. He wept on his moth­ But boys in those Southern er's bosom. He was terribly un­ pacts grow apace and in a little happy, but he did not blame the while he was madly in love with girl. A fisherman's life is hard a pretty girl who lived on the and it needs strength and endur­ Grande Marina. She had eyes like ance. He knew very well that a fewest pools and held herself like girl could not afford to marry a a daughter of the Caesars. They man who might not be able to were affianced, but they could not support her. His smile was very m__ery till Salvatore had done his sad and his eyes had the look of .Cavitary service, and when he left a dog that has been beaten, but tbife island which he had never left he did not complain, and he never in: bis life before, to become a sail- said a hard word of the girl he or in the navy of King Victor Em- had loved so well. Then, a few Dr. Earl E. Dudding, 82, eight times a father, holds his 2%-month- majauel, he wept like a child. It months later, when he had settled old daughter Mary Ann, while his 36-year-old wife looks on. Mary was hard for one who had never down tb the common round, work­ Ann has a brother 50, is great-aunt to seven service men. Dr. Dud­ been less free than the birds to be ing in his father's vineyard and ding is director of the Prisoners Relief Society in Washington. at the beck and call of others; it AAF Lt. Emile Bouchard can fishing, his mother told him that there was a young woman in the was harder still to live in a bat­ hardly wait to get home on ton, coarse and hard from con­ tleship with strangers instead of leave from England, we betcha, village who was willing to marry him. Her name was Assunta. stant toil, but when he bathed his in a little white cottage among the for he is to marry Miss Rita children, holding them so tender­ v4pes; and when he was ashore, to Daigle, above, of Lowell. Mass.; "She's as ugly as the devil," he ly, drying them with delicate care, walk in noisy, friendless cities selected "Miss Stardust" in said. upon my word they were like with streets so crowded that he somebody's contest to find the She was older than he, twenty-r flowers. He would seat the naked was frightened to cross them, most beautiful service man's four or twenty-five, and she had baby on the palm of his hand and \aehen he had been used to silent sweetheart. Pal, isn't that a been engaged to a man who, while hold him up, laughing a little at paths and the mountains and the mighty pretty wrist watch? doing his military service, had his smallness, and his laugh was Most of the conditions that sea*. I suppose it had never struck been killed in Africa. She had a like the laughter of an angel. His cause accidents on our highways hitn that Ischia, which he looked little money of her own and if back to the little island he loved eyes then were as candid as his are created by us. We, the driv­ at every evening (it was like a Salvatore married her she could child's. ers, are responsible for the stead­ fairy island in the sunset) to see so well and the girl who was wait­ buy him a boat of his own and ing for him? I started by saying that I won­ ily mounting national traffic toll. TWhat the weather would be like they could take a vineyard that by dered if I could do it and now I For instance, how many times next day, or Vesuvius, pearly in When he got into the rowing- a happy chance happened at that boat that met the steamer from must tell you what it is that I have have you come upon highway tits dawn, had anything to do with moment to be without a tenant. tried to do. I wanted to see wheth­ "visitors" — two cars parked di­ him at all; but when he ceased to Naples and was rowed ashore he His mother told him that Assunta saw his father and mother stand­ er I could hold your attention for rectly opposite each other and _fc*ve them before his eyes he real­ had seen him at the festa and had a few pages while I drew for you headed in opposite directions? One ized in some dim fashion that they ing on the jetty and his two broth­ fallen in love with him. Salvatore ers, big boys now, and he waved to the portrait of a man, just an or­ may be on the shoulder and the •were as much part of him as his smiled his sweet smile and said he dinary Italian fisherman who pos­ other directly in the traffic lane. them. His eyes searched among would think about it. On the fol­ ; hands and his feet. He was dread­ the crowd that waited there for sessed nothing in the world ex­ At the same time, two other cars lowing Sunday, dressed in the stiff cept a quality which is the rarest, going in opposite directions are fully homesick. But it was hard- the girl., He could not see her. black clothes in which he looked est of all to be parted from the There was a great deal of kissiug the most precious and the loveliest about to meet at this point, and so much less well than in j_ae rag­ that anyone can have. Heaven because these "gab fests" are fre­ gjrl he loved with all his passion- when he jumped up the steps and ged shirt and trousers of every ate young heart. He wrote to her they all, emotional creatures, cried only knows why he should so quently .over the brow of the hill, day, he went up to High Mass at strangely and unexpectedly have ifls too late to stop. The result is (in his childlike handwriting) a little as they exchanged their the parish church and placed him­ long, ill-spelt letters in which he greetings. He asked where the possessed it. All I know is that a smash-up—a real "get-together" self so that he could have, a good it shone in him with a radiance —involving four cars. told her how constantly he thought girl was. His mother told him look at the young woman. When c«| her and how much he longed that she did not know; they had that, if it had not been so uncon­ Many of these highway acci­ he came down again he told his scious and so humble, would have dents could have been prevented tq be badfe He was sent here and not seen her for two or three mother that he was willing. tfeere, to Spezzia, to Venice, to weeks; so in the evening when the been to the common run of men had those involved used more care Bjari and finally to China. Here moon was shining over the placid Well, they were married and hardly bearabe. And in case ypu and common sense. his fell ill of some mysterious ail- sea and the lights of Naples twin­ they settled down in a tiny white­ have not guessed what the quality Let's put an end to thoughtless­ rnent that kept him in hospital for kled in the distance he walked washed house in the middle of a was I will tell you. Goodness, ness. Let's use our heads and nwmths. He bore it with the mute down to the Grande Marina to her handsome vineyard. Salvatore was just goodness. save our lives. and uncomprehending patience of house. She was sitting on the now a great big husky fellow, tall (End) a dog. -When he learnt that it was doorstep with her mother. He was and broad, but still with that in­ Governor Dewey says, "We a form of rheumatism that made a little shy because he had not genuous smile and those trusting, PPAfiENTLY that order tot are making gratifying progress him unfit for further service his seen her for so long. He asked kindly eyes that he had had as a A German soldiers to adopt in the fighting of the war, but ijj&rt exulted, for he could go her if she had not received the let­ boy. He had the most beautiful rh« Nazi salute was taken too governmentally we are making home; and he did not bother, in ter that he had written to her to manners I have ever seen in my much to heart by the fanatical no progress for what will fol­ fact he scarcely listened, when the say that he was coming home. Yes, life. Assunta was a grim-visaged SS troops. It is reported that low." What the candidate means doctors told him that he would they had received a letter, and female, with decided features, and is: let's have a new deck, new she looked old for her years. But in France they are heiling with ©.ever again be quite well. # What they had been told by another of both hands. shuffle, and new players. ctintlBfe'Care when he was going the island boys that he was ill. she had a good heart and she was no fool. I used to be amused by the little smile of devotion that she gave her husband when he was being very masculine and OF masterful; she never ceased to be **POCKtT&00& touched by his gentle sweetness. But she could not bear the girl who had thrown him over, and notwithstanding Salvatore's smil­ ing expostulations she had noth­ ing but harsh words for her. Pres­ ently children were born to them. It was a hard enough life. All through the fishing season towards evening he set out in his boat with one of his brothers for the fishing grounds. It was a long pull of six or seven miles and he spent the night catching the profitable cuttlefish. Then there was the long row back again in order to sell the catch in time for it to go on the early boat to Naples. At other times he was working in his vineyard from dawn till the heat drove him to rest and then again, when it was a trifle cooler, till dusk. Often his rheumatism pre­ vented him from doing anything at all and then he would lie about the beach, smoking cigarettes, with a pleasant word for everyone notwithstanding the pain that racked his limbs. The foreigners oa-y-me who came down to bathe and saw NONPROFIT him ,there said that these Italian 1INSTITUTE fishermen were lazy devils. HAS DEPART­ Sometimes he used to bring his MENTS OF children down to give them a bath. 50CJAL WELFARE, They were both boys and at this HOME TEACHING, time the elder was three and the BUSINESS GUIDANCE, younger less than two. They PRINTING/ DEVELOPS J/S£///C T//£tf££PSOFOTH£fiS, sprawled about at the water's edge stark naked and Salvatore, stand­ APPLIANCES FOR THE ing'on a rock, would dip them in BUND- REDOUNDS' TO ro/z H/weii? S&OUGHTJOV the water. The elder one bore THE BENEFIT OF THE it with stoicism, but the baby BLIND OF THE ENGLISH- J AAffi £AIPLOy*/£AIT TO WS/M£C& screamed lustily. Salvator had SPEAKING WORLD. jjj *5&f/l/IRLY UAJF08TUNAT£. jf enormous hands, like legs of mut- £§$ PUBLIC i% _ AUGUST 11, 1944 sni ITK matter Page Nine

WILL YOU HAVE r SURE WILL \ THIS PERSONAL fMARYLOO »N TEM PUT IN Z^FACT /U 5£r THE PAPER FOE) IT UP WWSBLF- ME??

MONTGOMERY, Pvt. Robt., 24, of 225 SHOCK, Pfc. Raymond, son of Mr. and Erskine park, with a 71; Kenny May Alby Davis, 4387, (Restaurant), S. Carroll, has been wounded in Mrs. Elvin Shock, 723 Somerset, 1040 Western Ave., South Bend — France while serving with the Air- - Mish., has been wounded in action Young, a 76; and Joe Papai, of Beer, Liquor, Wine Retailer. / Borne troops. in France. " -^'-«* Erskine, 75. IspJ Bert Bednarek, 4408, (Paekage MOUROS, Pfc. Chris. G., son of Mr. STERNAL, Pvt. Gerhart, 22, son of Mrs. Store), 1124 Western Ave., South and Mrs. S. Mouros, 812 N. Elm, Emma Sternal, 315 W. LaSalle, was Charles Samson and Louis Bend—Liquor, Wine Dealer. -Mish., was wounded on Saipan, July wounded in France July 11. Indiana Club, 4243, (Restaurant), 16. STROM, Corp. John C, 29, husband of Chreist, champion and runner- 320 W. Jefferson Blvd., South Marian Strom, R. R. 1, was wounded up in the 1944 touniament, ad­ Bend—Beer, Liquor,Wine Retailer. NOGGLE, Corp. Harold L., 23, son of in action near St. Lo, France, July 17. Raymond Abbiehl, 4261, (Restau­ Mrs. Emma Noggle, 111 Woodside SZERENCSE, Pfc. Emery, 22, son of vanced to the semi-finals and rant), State "Highway No. 31, (The following men nave either *_jtt» St., was wounded in action in France Mr. and Mrs. Martin Szerencse, 1729 quarter-finals of the annual St. Lakeville—B'eer, Wine Retailer. listed or been called to active duty June 9. S. Walnut, was wounded in action Joseph Valley tennis meet with with the United States armed forces.) OGLE, Pvt. Ora E., 34, son of Henry in France. triumphs yesterday on the Lee­ SAID INVESTIGATION WILL BE Ogle, 213 E. Calvert, was seriously THOMPSON, Pvt. Lawrence E., hus QPI5N TO THE PUBLIC, AND PUBLIC "band of Doris Thompson, 516 E. 3rd, per park courts on Sunday. PARTICIPATION IS REQUESTED. DRAFTEES wounded in France July 14. Mish., was seriously wounded on Sai- PILARSKI, T/Sgt. Clem, 25, son of Mr. Samson, former Big 10 singles ARMY Pan July 4. ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COM­ and Mrs. Michael Pilarski, 128 N. WHITE, Pfc. Donald, 30, husband of champion while at Ohio State MISSION OF INDIANA Carlisle, was wounded in action in Helen White, 2702 W. Eiwood Ave., university, swept aside Fred LOWELL TULLY, 716 W. Fairmont; France July 11. wounded in action in France July 17. Lindahl, 6-1, 6-0, and Chuck By JOHN F. NOONAN, DWIGHT HARDY, 724 Elizabeth; FRED Secretary. SCOTT, 221 S. Elder; BERL KNEPPER, Christman, 6-3, 6-4. Chreist de­ BERNARD E. DOYLE, 2199 Ingle wood PL, South Bend; ROB­ feated Eddie Kukuk, 6-1, 6-0. 8:11 Excise Administrator. ERT J. FARRELL, JR., 207 S. Mason; James Gates, former Univer­ JOHN I. LITTLE, 229 E. Eighth; CARL LEGAL NOTICE OP PUBLIC R. de YOUNG, S. R. 1, Osceola; RON­ sity of Illinois net ace, also HEARING ALD NIFONG/ 708 Cottage Grove, So moved into the quarter-finals NOTICE is hereby given that the Lo­ Bend; ROBERT BONNEY, _14 Chris- as did Lieut. Joseph Beery. cal Alcoholic Beverage Board of St. tyann; JOE CLELAND, 411S Vistula; Joseph County, Indiana, will, at 2:00 RALPH R. WEAVER, R. R. 19, Clover P. M. Central War Time, on the 23rc_ road; ROBERT WILLIAMS, 1417 Ches - Stanley Dubicki, Purdue's place- day of August, 1944, at the City Hall, nut; HERBERT G. ACREY, 902 law- kicking left halfback, holds the in the City of Mishawaka, -in said rence; ROBERT AUSTIN, 1022 Oak­ IN THE WORLD *rOF SPORTS County, begin investigation of the ap­ land, South Bend; ROBERT CORYELL, distinction of having played on plications of the following named, per­ 3910 Lincoln W. %x JACOB JACOB, two successive undefeated collegi­ sons, requesting the issue to the ap­ 204 E. Sixth; ARTHUR KATT, 2009 ate elevens. As a freshman in plicants, at the locations hereina_te:r Panama; ROBERT J. BALLANTYNE, T REQUIRES only a casual been famous for its upsets, and set out, of the Alcoholic Beverage Per­ 318 Lincoln W. E.; BILLY HELFRICH, glance at Purdue's football the Boilermakers then take to 1942, the former Washington high mits of the classes hereinafter desig*--- 313 W. Battell; ANDY COLE, 921 E. I schedule for this fall to reveal the road to meet Northwestern's school, South Bend, star was nated and will, at said time and place, Jefferson; NEAL KIZER, 305 Harrison; the fact that Cecil Isbell, colorful Wildcats on Armistice Day and named as the most valuable back receive information concerning the fit­ LOUIS A. Iuston, 421 E. Iflth; ANTHO­ on the undefeated Shurtleff Col­ ness of said applicants, and the propri­ NY ZAPFIA, 918 N. Division; CARL A. new director of Boilermaker grid­ Navy's powerful combination at ety of issuing the permits applied foe ROWE, 802 W. Borley.-and JOON L. iron destinies, is due for a rugged Baltimore on Nov. 18. lege (111.) eleven. Last fall, as a to such applicants at the premises RALSTON, JR., of Detroit, Mich. Marine V-12 trainee, his educated named: initiation in his debut as a head The usual climax will be pro­ football coacn. toe and sweeping end runs earned NAVY vided in the Ross-Ade stadium on him a major letter on Prudue's Meyer Bros. Co., Inc., 3990, -tDrug WILLIAM SCOTT, 316 Niles Ave.; "If we have a team as tough as November 25 as the Boilermakers Store), 102 Lincolnway West, WILLIAM DUVALL, 416 Park; JOHN Big Ten co-championship squad Mishawaka—Liquor, Wine Dealer. -: our schedule, it will be a great attempt to add another "P" link Thad. Kosciuszko Benevolent Soci- • "* REIFSNIDER, 610»/2 N. Main; JOHN J. year," commented Isbell with a which topped the nation's select EILER, 809 N. Main; WALTER ED­ to the ever-lengthening chain on list of undefeated, untied elevens. ety, 4118, (Club), 410 S. Laurel WARDS, 127 W. Eighth. |_^^ smile and a shudder as he glanced the Old Oaken Bucket in the for­ St., Mishawaka — Beer, Liquor, over the amfeitious ten-game card ty seventh renewal of the Hoosier Wine Retailer. MARINES gridiron classic with Indiana. HERMAN A. DeVLIEGHER, 302 E. which includes six conference en­ LEGAL NOTICES SAID INVESTIGATION WILL RB Tenth St. counters along with assignments * * * OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, AND PUBLIC LEGAL. NOTICE OF PUBLIC PARTICIPATION IS REQUESTED. KILLED against Great Lakes, NaVy, Iowa Clint Milliken, of Erskine park, HEARING COIL, Pfc. Gaylord R., 21, son of Mr. Pre-Flight, and Marquette. led a field of 32 shotmakers into NOTICE is hereby given that the Lo­ ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COMMIS­ and Drs. Clem Coil, Osceola, was cal Alcoholic Beverage Board of St. SION OF INDIANA killed July 16, in France. Complicating Isbell's schedule the opening round of match play Joseph Gounty, Indiana, will, at 9:00 FOHRER, John C, 23, son of Mr. and worries is the fact that he has over the Erskine park links Mon­ A.M. Central War Time, on the 30th day By JOHN F.- NOONAN, Mrs. John C. Fohrer, 1707 Sunnymede day after shooting a two-under of August, 1944 at the Commissioners' more enthusiasm than experi­ Room, Gourt House, in the City of Secretary. Ave., was killed in action in France BERNARD E. DOY__Ej*££ July 6. ence on the record-breaking par 69 to win the medal prize from South Bend, in said County, begin in­ FORE, Pfc. Millard E., 22, son of Mr. squad of 146 candidates that _____ a field of 112 contestants in the vestigation of the applications of the 8:11 Excise Administrator. following named persons, requesting and Mrs. Millard V. Fore, 117 S. West reported for summer drill. qualifying round of the men's an­ NOTICE St., Mish., was killed- in action in the issue to the applicants, at the loca­ 3 France on July 16. Frank Bauman, rugged right nual city tournament. tions hereinafter set out, of the Alco­ No. 6951? e LUCZKOWSKL Pvt. Edw., 24, son of -end, one of the greatest wing- Milliken's 69, the lowest quali­ holic Beverage Permits of the classes STATE OF INDIANA > Mr. and Mrs. Vern Luczkowski, 825 men in the game, and Boris fying score recorded in the three hereinafter designated and will, at said ST .JOSEPH COUNTY ,SS: S. Pulaski, was killed in action in time and place, receive information In the St. Joseph Circuit Court, Franca July 14. "Babe" Dimancheff, race horse years the meet has been sponsored concerning the fitness of said appli­ May Term, 1944 ROWAN, Pvt, Wm. M_, 20, son of Mrs. right halfback, one of the na­ by the Men's City Golf association, cants, and the propriety of issuing the Helen Rowan, 813 N. Division, Mish., tion's leading ground gainers was composed of a two-under 33 permits applied for to such applicants PETITION OF ETHEL JEANNE has been killed in France. at the premises named: FEATHER TO CHANGE NAME TRITTIPO, Marine Pfc. LaVerne E., 20, last season, are the only hold­ on the front nine and an even par son of Mr. and. Mrs. H. E. Trittipo, R. over all-season regular from 36 coming home. Gust Demas, 4392, (Restaurant), 433 Notice is hereby given that I have R. 2, Mish., 'wais killed in action some last fall's conference co-cham­ Don Ransberger, twice former E. LaSalle St., South Bend— applied to the above named court _•_> where in the South Pacific Beer, Wine Retailer. have my name changed from Ethel TRIPAPI, Pvt. Jos., 28, son of Mr. and pionship squad which topped city champion, failed to reach the Charles Buysse, 4386, (Restaurant), Jeanne Feather to Ethel Jeanne Kohl, Mrs. Rocco M. Tripapi, 202 E. Grove, the nation's select list of unde­ title bracket as he scored an 82. 1502 Western Ave., South-Bend — and that said petition and application Mish., was killed on Saipan. feated, united teams, although Beer, Liquor, Wine Retailor. will be presented to and heard by said Three other champions joined Mil­ Albert R. Briese, 4389, (Restaurant). court on the 29th day of September, VARGO, Pfc. Jos*, 32, son of Mrs. Jos. 1944. Vargo, Granger, was killed in action there are 11 other major letter- liken in reaching the title flign.. 441 E. LaSalle St., South Bend— in France July 3. men available who saw consi­ They were Stanley Majewski, of Beer, Liquor, Wine Retailer. Dated this 3rd day of August, 1944. VERVYNCKT, Sgt. August A., 30, son derable action during the latter 8:11-18-25 Ethel Jeanne _*-%_thlr-; of Mr. and Mrs. C. Vervynckt, 417 part of the campaign. NOTICE OF HEARING ON PETSfTlOS. Kosciuszko, was willed in action in Ten major games in as many TO VACATE EDGE STREET ANI» France June 26. PORTS WOODS, Pvt. Jack, son of Mr. and Mrs:. Saturdays provide the assignment LAKE SHORE DRIVE JK ST. JO*- Luther Woods, Osceola, was killed in S OUT OF | SEPH LAKE PLACE, ST. JOSEPH for the reconstructed Boilermak-1 COUNTY, INDIANA. France on July 5. ers, who will operate from Isbell's ADAM'S HAT NOTICE is hereby given by the un­ MISSING version of the T formation, which dersigned that a petition was filed ti­ GRANT, Second Lieut. Robert Tit, hus­ places the emphasis on speed and the office of County Auditor of St. band of Virginia Grant, 309 E. Boka****- Joseph County, Indiana, to vacate Edge deception. The Boilermakers will Street and Lake Shore Drive in St. gon, his been missing in action over v Germany since July 21. receive the acid test in their first Joseph Lake Place, St. Joseph Coutft3__ RENTSCHLER, Second Lieut. Donald start of the season as they attempt Indiana. A., 26, brotftai- of Mrs. Lester E. Men- WHITEHEAD JJearing will be held before the zie, 81$ E. Corby, has been missing in to duplicate last season's triumph Board of Commissioners of St. Joseph action over France since June 27. over Great Lakes, the nation's No. (13 LETTERS) County, Indiana, in the Court House, WON 13 AND Room 1, in the City of South Bend, In­ WOUNDED 1 service eleven and conqueror of diana, at ten o'clock a. m., on the 21st ATKINSON, Pfc. Wm., husband of Mrs. Notre Dame, at the Naval Train­ LOST 13 IN day of August, 1944. -Atkinson, 727 Grand Blvd., Mish., ing Center on Sept. 23. EACH OF HIS Dated this 8th day of August, 1944. NICHOLAS A. MUSZER, was wounded in France. FIRST TWO BATES, P8c. Wm. 9J 22, son of Mr. An unusually attractive four Auditor, St. Joseph County, Indiana. and Mrs. Fred A. Bates, 516 W. llth, SEASONS 8:11-18 Mish., was seriously wounded in game home schedule will be France on July"" '*«&.- launched on Sept. 30 against WITH THE BIRTH CERTIFICATE NOTICE BELlJ6^Kc. Steven E., 29, son of Mrs. Marquette, which according to CHICA60 Cause No. 3836 Rose Bella, R. R. 5, was wounded in Notice is hereby given that Albert France July. 5. - mid-summer reports has un­ WHITE ! Jones has filed his peti'tfefh' in the St. Joseph Circuit Court to have the tim» COLESONr Pfc. Ray, 22, brother of usually promising prospects. SOX/ Mrs. H. Wallace, 112 E. Tutt, was The Boilermakers then open de­ and place of his birth determrne'd- wounded in action in France. Said petition is set for hearing August COOPER, P*vt. Wm., 18, son of Glenna fense of their conference co- 17, 1944. Cooper, 315 E. Sample, was wounded championship against Illinois at Dated this Sth day of August, 1944. in action in France July 15. Champaign on Oct. 7 before re­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, DOLDE, Pvt. Edw. C, 25, sno of Mr. Clerk of the St. Joseph Circuit Courfc- and Mrs. Wm. A. Dolde, 1020 E. Law­ turning to the Ross-Ade stadium HEAVVWE/6HT CHAMPlOM JOE LOUIS Zilford Carter, Atty. 8:11 • rence, awas wounded in action in on Oct. 14 for the second home WAS BORN ON MAV 43THV WON France July 10. BIRTH CERTIFICATE NOTICE # stand against Iowa Pre-Flight, THE AMATEUR, LIOHT-HEAWWEISHT Cause No. 3835 f GILLESPIE, First Lieut. Harry J., 23, CROWN ON FRIDAV-. son ofperry A. Gillespie, Jefferson named as the nation's No. 2 ele­ Notice is hereby given that Eva B* Hotel, has been wounded in action in ven last fall in a poll of sports " THE 13fH (APRIL McLochlin has filed her petition in. -France July 15. , . writers. The first half of the \ /930J AMD Hb. the St. Joseph Circuit Court to havs* HAASLFvt. A. J., 35, husband of Claire >•"*< the time and place of her birth detea****. Haas, 905 Sherman Ave., wounded card will be wound up on the BECAME mined. Said petition is set for hear-* in action in France July 13. road in a renewal of the Iowa FIRST ing August 17, 1944. ] HEINZlSfAN, Pvt. George, 33, husband series. MAN Dated this 9th day of August, 1944, I of Evelyn Heinzman, 1049 Diamond FRANK J. BRUGGNER, •&»? Ave., was wounded in action in July. One of ^-toe. highlights of the sea­ TO K.O. Clerk of the St. Joseph Circuit Cour^ HORNYAK, Pfc. Anton, 25, husband «€ son will undoubtedly be provided PAULINO George Sands, Atty. 8:11 f Mrs. Lorraine Hornyak, 825 Pulaski, on Oct. 28 when the Boilermakers tfZCUDUN was seriously wounded in action in NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION § Franee June 30. journey to Ann Arbor to settle OH m Estate No. 8353 KROMKOWSI-l* ,Pvt. Alfred J., 23, matters w~.flx the Michigan eleven FRIDAY NOTICE is hereby given that the um*« husband of Phyllis, 548 Si Harris, has that sh__fffijpalhe conference title S THE / EDDIE ROMMELL, FORMER dersigned has been appointed by th<§* been wounded in action in France Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo* June 23. tie with Purdue last fall. PITCHING STAR OF THE seph County, State of Indiana, Execu«* KRZYZEWSKI, S/Sgt. Vincent M., 26, A'S AND NOW AN UMP tor of the estate of William T. Furej^ son of Alex Krzyzewskt*, 1209* W. November Will be a partic­ mm late of St. Joseph county, deceased. Dunham, was wounded in action in ularly rigorous month. Wiscon­ DECEMBER] WAS BOTH BORN AND Said Estate is supposed to be solvent*;oiven_».. •fiance. ^__*"_V-i) sin's Badgers invade the Ross- WED OH A FRIDAY, 1?*E i.w Michael T. Cun>rnings, Executor;utor.. i MILLIKEN, Pfc. Albert E.i_26, husband \d935// August 4th, 1-844. of AnnabeUe MUHk-rt, R. R. 3, was Ade Stadium on Nov. 4 for the ^V Joseph W. Nyikos, wounded in action in France July 12. renewal of a series that has A Attorney for Executor. ;l,-lt' 1 Paga Ten THE MIRROR A Weekly Collection of "Dripping Sands" that "Mark Time" in Passing ^iSt Vital tatistics

Time Doesn't Fly; It Stands Still; The World Moves.

. R. T. Keathley, 413 W. Uth, Mish., Frank Flowers, 516 Grant to Lex­ E. Johnson ahd J. Taylor; 232 N.Misfc . Ave., and Carl Sharrar, 18361/. S. and Betty N. Nally, 536 W. Colfax. ington, O. v Mich., rebuild floor, $3,©00. William. John V. Jackson and Opal Paulson, Dick Evarco, 1917 E. Donald to New E. B. Johnson;. 211 W. Walnut, en­ Colfax at Michigan — Vernon John­ HELLO, EVERYBODY! both of Bremen, Ind. Albine, Ia. large basement, $106. son, 613 S. 31st and Alfred Carter, 262f- -Steven S. Krismunich, 601 Neddo Ct., Devere Wynn, 630 32nd to 536 E. Mrs. A. Damp, 1117 E. Birdsell, ga­ Birch way. • BIRTHS ahd Vt_ibria Lakovits, 1817 S. William. Dayton. rage, $196. T.T* V. - AU*<* 5 X TOTAX. BfRTkS IN FIRST SEVEN Alfred C Olmstead, 517 W. Marion, Vern Kush, 1017 N. O'Brien to 1417 Albert Evans, 1341 Calvert, garage, lc a a sh MONTHS ENDING JULY __••__, 1,569 ™*5 -,«; 4 W. . --^ougjas Armstrong, ahd Sue K. Freeman, 409 W. Colfax. Oalii. $400. 3323 W. Washington and Robt. Terry, Frank Yukasx*, 305 LaPorte, and Jane Axel Olson, 3025 Northslde to Wash*- A. J. Berta, 908 Thomas, enclose fl. R. 2, Box 5. To the: Mark, R. R. 2. ington, D. C. pOrCh, $100. Ray A. Baker's, 3314 Putman, son, Mi_h_gen at Bropson—Lester "Goddale Jarnes Kapczynski, 1622 Florence, and Stanley Rakowski, 710 S. Camden to Eli Horvath, 1025 Washington, rebuild New Carltele and Zora vitfe, iJuchanan! James -Howard, Aug. 1. \fe--___tea Nowacki, 616 S. Olive. 5lf Lake. porch, $190. Claude P.Hildebridle's, 915i2 Carroll, Joe Williams, 424 So. Bend Ave., and Stanley J. Gorski, 842 Sancome to Frahk Lisek, 521 Warren, garage $100. son, Aron Barry, Aug. 1. _ Western at Wllham—John Robles, R. Vivian Lewis, 1103 S. Main. 705 LaPorte. Andrew Lupa, 501 Harris, enclose R. 5, and Russell Hunt, 815 Ashland. Chas. L. Green's, 202 N. BrookHfe.d, Norbert J. Spencer, Indianapolis, T. E. Dillon, 1418 N- Brookfield to St. pOrch $150. daughter, Darlene EVell, Aug. 1. ahd Agnes D. Koeppen, 211 S. West St., Paul, Minn. A. Schick, 1337 Huey, reroof hdus-fc, .500 blk Western Si Matt. Dowdy In Raipft G. Riddle's, 325 S. 33th, daugh** Mish. Jos. Anderson, 1113 E. Sorin to 1102 $100. ter, Michelle Mae, Aug. 2. dianapolis, attd.N. 3. Gard, 1107 High. L. N. Jackson, 509 W. Wash., and Birdsell. C. Cripe, 3810 N. Mich., garage, $300. L. Poturalski, 2618 Kenwood Avenue Timothy Cotter's, 416 Peashway, edhj Frances Beyer, 512 **/ Washington. Joe Schialtz, 1049 W. Sample to 727 K. Schafer, 816 Cleveland, enlarge Timothy Wm., Aug. 2. 2 T^F6 wa fil5*^,% f * II?8 E- Jefferson Harry .fLCarwffi, fr. and Shirley M. W. JeffersOn. basement. $140. Jos. Wenscits, 311 W. Ewing with Jos. Burkus', 1028 Kinyon, son, Jos. Davis, of Palm Beach, Fla. O. Camparone, 708 W. Indiana to 727 M. H. Lndberg, 2226 Pleasant, build Eugene, Aug. 2. Fraiik B. Ford, Dallas, Texas, and Indiana Ave. stairs, $200. ^Ken^le°Wned by C" C" Ch^chill« Richard Hardman's, 740 N. Olive, Helen L. Stephenson, Parsons, Kan. :%.¥•• Kulezka, 1807 W. Fisher io 401 Genevieve Ebel, 901 W. Garst, add. 1V< 519 S Mi son, Howard Richard, Aug. 2. Warren F. Colles, 1384 E. Altgeld, and E. Pemi. to house, $150, rvtZZS S° &. I - <*- With Aloysius KromkOwski's, 5OT S. Meade, Betty J. Rogers, 123 E. Dayton. Jos. Wittergren, 803 S. Ironwood to F. Miller, 116 S. St. Louis, rebuild ed by WHa son, Francis Anthony, Aug. 8. Br^m^Mich ^ 1805 S. Olive. bbr_h aha" chimn_-y, $450. Aug. 7 Stephen Lechtanski'g* 433 S. Walnut, ClaudeTHauger, 3421 W. Sample to 726 Ba daughter, Jacqualine Marie, Aug. 2. T-4 -Ji ker, 735 32nd and F. C Colu-mbia. ™f_ily' lil8 E- wayne, 800 blk Wash Edmund Jaroszewski's, 714 32nd St., Wm. H. Jones, 526 24th to 1851 S. «i« _?tternJ.1* William—Walter Frasz, daughter, Marsha Ann, Aug. 1. Fellews. S* »•?• Bendix ^d JOe Socalle, i_25 S. Raymond Fogle's, 222 .£. 6th, Mish.i M. Higgihbotham, 411 S. Taylor to Main. daughter*. Sharon Lou, Aug. 3. THE RED DEVIL DEATHS 2326 Kenwood. k K Sylvejst-r jFaSsnacht's, 216 Gernhart, * TOTAL DEATHS IN FIRST SEVEN Chas. Waggone, 2326 Kenwood to 235 T WW »l w Wu^~^- H"tcfilhs, 1215 Mish., daughter, Susan Marie, Aug. 8. FIRES BY.!8?*? ?^fel P°8SS, 383 Cleveland. lAONTHS ENDING JULY 1944, 597. Huey. Paul Hertel, 1316 Fellows and Geo. Louis C. Pippinger's, Nappanee, Ind., F. Sigrint, 631 Leland to 611 Portage. , ESTIMATED' FIRE DAMAGE IN daughter, Elaine Jo, Ai_g. 3. Bassion, i_i3 Ifesh. D. Snyder, 1114 S. Main, age 44, F. Piers, 52* Cleveland to R. R. 3,_TRS T SEVEN MONTHS ENDING Mack Bethel's, 215 S. Kentucky, son, Box 279. JULY 1944, $_0,-_7. Re_l_ ItfdSll, Aug. 3. Aug, 1. John RobisOn, 205 Palzier, age 56, . M.. Paidle, 1812 S. Taylor to 819»/2 Wirt. Dors<_h*_. 717 35th, son, John W. Napieit, Aug. 1. Joseph J. Tomber shoe repair Michael, Aug. 2. Aug. 1. .'*?_L_1__\ Herman J. Lance, Browhs Valley, C Troeger, 506Va S. Rush to 1418Ve N. stdre; 111 W. Sample; childfeh playing TRANSFER OF REALTY Harold J. Reasdfs* Nappanee, sohi Brookfield. with matches outside store ignited pa­ Terrance ,L*ee, Aug. 4. Minn., age 32. Aug. 1. Fred Ehmke, LaPorte, Ind., age 82; E. White, 1206 N. Adams to 2130 per \frhich spreatj 10 store, damage $15. DEEDS Chas. Mey_t', Tll}^ George, daugh­ Parkvie^. Aug. 3, auto fire at Michigan and ter, Barbara Ann, Aug. 1. Aug. 1. Js'^j TOTAL DEED TRANSFERS TNT «!ri Helen Baumgartner*, 1112 W. Jeffer- T. Tobin, 1509 E. Donald tp 1917 E. (JOifa-.; owned by H. D. Cbrlfette, Chi­ DEND IN rmST^VEN kONTHS Morton A. Keltner's, 290. Fredrick- Donald. cago; short circuit in ignition; damage MUNTHS soh, daughter, Sherry Lynne, Aug. 2. son; age 64, Aug. 1.' ENDING JULY 1.447 4;8&3 Manuel Lopez, Jr., Mayflower Rd., ,C. Gi_*erSki, 2313 W. Rogers to 1__0 $10. Gordon Weist s, 346 Tonti, son, F_ed- N. Sarah, Mish. age 13 days, AUg. 1. Aug. 4, chicken eOOp at the resi­ ,-, ^ Aug. 4 El_aft*_*r Singer, 2.11 N. My.tl_, fcgfc E. A. Plummer, 1110 S. Carroll to dence of R. S. Swift, 92_. E. Calvert; Todd P. Mclntyre's, ; 619 N. Mich., I Milburn Ave. discarded cigarette; no chickens harm­ r,tG^dn« Howard to Lucy Williams son, Buddy Richard, Aug. 1. 48, Aug. 1. Michael D. Cover, 526 Allen, age 84, A; KHfaards, 226 Pagin to 1332 Fass­ ed; damage $5. Howard M. aerbe's, 1726 S. Leer, nacht; VjlLrti^ Aug. 5; rubbish.* Oh tb^ of one-story j t daughter, Cheryl Lynn, Aug. 1. Aug. 1. _*. . building at 125 W. Washington Ave. Ernest Repine'Sj, Niles, Mich., son, Savannah Mayfield, 2022 Kenwood- Federal Bakery; discarded cigarette; «^. a_nft& _*gt *anr. Jerry Lee, July 27. age 50, Aug. 2. damage $25. Mauriee VanperHayden's, 709 South Louis Chlehowski, 1207 Washington, Aug. 6, short c_rt_rit m wiring of Wells, Mish., daughter, Rosalie June, age 58, Aug. %. PERMITS TO BUILD re_iti_nce of Irving Sobecki, 3ti* !*-r*- July 27. Wanda Niezgodsfci, 1228 W. Thomas, Curtiss Dr. No damage. -jB-oht. Lightner'sy R. R. 4, son, Robt. age 61, AUg. 3. TOTAL BUILDING .PERMITS IS­ Fradk, Juiy 28. Minnie E. Bell, LaPorte, Ind., age SUED IN FIRST SEVEN MONTHS Marion Thornton's, Bremen, Ihd*., BOO 49, Aug. 8. ENDING JULY 1944, 1,065, VALUE, Dixon Marion, July 29. John E. Waters, Michiana Hotel, age $1,392,652. Hershel Sharp's, 825 N. Mich., son, 48, Aug. 3. BANKING ACTIVITIES r 6t ta Ronald Lefe July 29. Clara Guenther, 709 N. O'Brien, s\_% Roseland Lbr. Co., 1207 Goodland, tef «4 ogg^rh » P"d C»BP. 41, Aug. _.v South Bend Clearing House Weston Richardson's, 206 S. Chicago, t add to »-%:, $___-. daughter,*>Toni Marie, July 29.- Edna T. Bradley, •S87-/B N- HH1, age R. King, 115 NV Adams, add to houfete, Raymond Lindsley's, Walkerton, Ind., 60, Aug. 5. $109. - Total clearings irom July 30 to Aug. Km daughter, Linda Liane, July 29. Glen Henry TenEyck, 939 Va LWE, age M. Witwer, 1031 E. Jeff., remodel 4i ift'clusive, $3,751,87!.. -S-STA fcrtj.-rigA*^f - Fred Rehmel Jr.'s, R. R. 5, son, Ter- 54, July 30. house, $_,000. Tbtal transactions from July 30 tb rence Eugene, July 29... Frances Prekowitz, 732 Napier, age Bunte Shoe BtOre, 108 N. Mich., di_- August 9, $15,192,619. Howard Milliken's, R. R. 2, daughter, 57, July 31^ tEay wmdow, $120. .. iV>i.' Andriane Rosette, July 29. Robert Wade, 512 Taylor, age 79, Wm. Gibson, 1245 Fremont, build ga­ Chas. Schmeltz's, LaPorte; Ind., son, JUly 31. rage, $195. Earl, July 30. Robt. Shultz, Jr., 805 N. St. Peter, TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS Frank Bielejski's, 737 N. Johnson, add. to house, $£00. .. son, wayhe Francis, July 30. Iprs. C. Arch, 2133 Taylor, build ga­ rage $180. NUMBER TRAFF?€ ACfclDENTS IN ^&m^im_tM Bernard Badke's, 846y2 Forrest, THE MOVING VAN SOUTH BEND IN FIRST . SEVEN daughte.; Barbara Ann;jruly 29. HOLC, 514-516 W. Wayne, conv. house into apt., $5,400. . MONTHS ENDING JUI*Y 1944, 1,122. Clarence Daukert's, 2628 Fern Way, MOVING PERMITS i daughter, Gohfiie Eve, July 31. fik P. Earles, 14ia /2 W. Washington, NUMBEft INJURED, i85; KILLEO, li. ,s Ted B. Kmitta's. 305 Chestnut, Kath- TOT A.L MOVING PERMITS IN repair garage, $100. lefai Mathilga, July 29. FIRST SEVEN MONTHS ENDING Delbert Schafer, 1404 LWE, repair AUg. 3 *____y^* *t!B&!*' J_dw. F. Mossman's, Edwardsburg, JULY 1944, 644. and reroof house, $500. Olive at Wa_h. — Catherinfc Annly. Mich., son, Edw. Francis, July 29..' M. S. Taylor* 830 S. Rush., enlarge Grape Rd., Mish., and Clarence H. s Geo. E. Murphey's, 3D»-*4 Mish., Chas. Collner, 826 Chapin to 123 E. basement, $150. Price, 517 & Mich. T. Pensmore, 1223 Van Buren, en­ v* ni? ___m?g»*i daughter, Mary Grace, July 29. Dubail. Aug. 4 ErTJohh Horvath's, il4 S. Meade, son, Jos. Pallo, 4061 _ N. Scott to 816 */ W. close porch, $100. Westgate Syndicate Inc to Fr-fnt T / 2 J. Hornitz, 417-419 Wayne, conv. Mi_h. at Irdhwood—Chas. R. Jdhes, Bernard Allan, July _.. Moiirbe. 1-03 3l_t. ahd M. tH&hei, 1_33 _ »"" "»* H«J£ Wm. G. Senior's, 2026 Pleasant, 0 Gert daughter, Mariiyh Jeanne, July 31. lof'fof lilln"^ ™<"= Martir Elmer S. Bella's, 1727 Chapin, daugh­ CIRCUIT AN1> SUPERIOR COURTS ter fearren Lynn, July 31. ,^ Tea H. Jozwiak's, 1548 W. Sample, ^&V_S\i%S__ "it™ daughter, Msiyarme, July 31. 69502 Loretta "C. Pashi v Ewald SUPERIOR COURT NO. 2 , Pashi, divorce, J. C. Potts, Aug. 2. 69503 Chas. Anderson v Rose An- NEW CIVIL CASES FILED IN'SU­ •f-r~s «ft-i>,«^*»- COURT MINUTES derson, 'di¥_¥_fe> Pawlowski, Aug^ 2. PERIOR COURT N0i 2 IN FIRST SEV­ 69512 Wm. Felters v Levi Fldor, EN MONTHS ENDING JULY 1944, 512. HONEYMOON EXPRESS SUPERIOR COURT NO. 1 _0mblt. of possession, Metcalf, Aug. 2. iSf^-^i03vr„4B-^ Friday, JUlJr 21 69516 Fernando Baker v Mary Belle 60490 Georgette Jl Ritchie by n. f. MARRIAGE LICENSES Tr. 1827 In the matter of the test, Baker, divctfBe, Metcalf, Aug. 2. Nellie Ruggles v Chas. W. Ritchie, di­ TOTAL MARRIACfE LICENSES IN tr. Of Sarah L. Kirby. Pet granted. 09517 M. 3. Feather, change Of name, vorce, Parker, Aug. 1. •FIRST SEVEN MONTHS ENDING Est. 7066 Futter. J. P. Lechner named JO&B, Aug. '$. M^g 69491 John T. jasidski v Victoria >££?$%>% f^J^ 1 JULY 1944, 1,108. inh. tax appraiser and schedule re 69523 Charlotte Kurdys v Joseph Jasihski, divorce, Kowalski, Aug. 1. ferrtfd to him. , Kurdys, d-Vbrcej Pawlowski. Aug. 4. 69494 Elverna Green v Emmet Green, Tow«r F,Shli?0"*b, * Ka'lW m- • Peter Van Sen Bos and Vera Ja- Est. 2121 Podell. Gdn. files amended 69524 JOs. Kurdys v Charlotte Ktir- divoree, A&A, July 31. •Quays, Both of Kalamazoo, Mich. durrent report. dys, divorce, Kurtz, Aug. 5. 69495 Harry Wedel v Eva Wedel, s, te B Mike Pinter, 1509 Chapin, and Anna Est. 8045 Nabieht. Pet. granted. 69528 Herman Sprowl v Alice complt., Parker, Aug. 1. 5few-inSe C {_Ar ^ isg Sprowl, div_r__i,Baer, Aug. 7. fc 1 .Vargo, "2012 Kenwood. Est. 7896 Wetttbk. Pet. granted. 69497 Arnold-Barrett Law.. •'»Ha c : IS '^bSSiVC ? Harvefr" L. Sanrrer, Jr., 1602 Mar- Est. 8099 Augustine. Su. fdg. for pe­ 69529 Sylvia Platz v Gale L. Platz, 69498 Katherine Hoover v LeRoy E. Ibt 318 Roseland Pk -J^tch. •Quette, and Lucille E. Jones, Ehfrood, titioner and order of Sale. divorce, Baer, Aug. 7. Hoover, divorce, Lamberson, Aug. 2. Ib^^o^a^W0 °aniel ^fe Ind. Est. 8078 O'Bri-n. Pet. grant.d. 69380 Jos. Pricipte, Jr. v Afton Pri- 69499 Mathilda J. Vaszari v Jtilius Karl Richards and Winona Taye, Est. 7739 Baker. Report of salfe ap­ cipe, sep from room and board, Baer, Vas_ari, divorce, Sands, Aug. 2. lotIS!.egeoioKniaW&^tl0 Eldrid^e' both .*$* Indianapolis, Hid; proved and sale confirmed. Aug. 7. 69500 Jane E. Brack v J. William 8©_31 Leah W. Daniels v Lester J. Brock, divorce, Aug. 2. John Huemmer et ux to Wm S Ned L. Wade, 219 E. Grove, Mish., Est. 7669 Sack. Pet. No. 7 granted. ux> iot 3i and pt and Elfanor J. Biggs,* 1915 N. Merri- Est. 8160 Sack. Pet. No. 2 granted. Daniels, divorce, Baer, Aug. 7. 69505 Frank Banaszak v Vincent Alex Horikath, Nfifes, Mich., and Bar- G-an. 1173 Jaronick. Gdnship cont'd. Leddowski, complt., G. Sands, Aug. 2. fete a - h 30 field, M&h. Est. 7608 Milton. Pet. granted. SUPERIOR COURT NO. 1 69506 TTlelma -Wellman v Carl Well- 71CQu eSsaboro0 GraCe Barr°n' Tr> lot NEW CIVIL CASES FfLED JJJ SU­ man, divorce, Bingham, Aug. 2. e bara Ferenee, 1844 E. Randolph. Est. 8133 Beck. Report approved Gr e ar n Tr to Chas Cas CwrtiSnR. Shook, 1717 E. Wayne, ahd and order entered det. value of est. PERIOR COURT NO. 1 IN FIRST SEV­ 6.507 Marguerite Ameigh v James ux, fntlot 71^ , ^?Queensboro' ^ . - s et 0 Ameigh, divorce, Ceok, Aug; 2. Barbara Waid, 1608 LaSalle. and fdg. that there is no liability for EN MONTHS ENDING JULY 1944, 278. Ray* E Babarch to Harold Brundydge Alfred O. Olmstead, 517 Marion, and pav'i. on inh. tax upOn est. 6-611 Beulah Smith v Eugene G. steC. 11, twp. 38 R 2 E. Est. 7924 Schafer. Same. Smith, divorce, Allen & Allen, Aug. 2. Sue K. Freeman, 409 Colfax. 69496 M&ry Louise Netoman as ad­ .Wm. Million et ux to Josephine Fra­ -Jesse Harrell, Jr., 1721 Bbuglas, ?nd Est. 7941 Rerick. Same. 69514 Vertie M. Fahcil v John F. mrx. of the est. of Harold William Fancil, divorce, Pfa., Aug. 3. zier, sec, -28, twp. 7, R 16 W Margaret Wroblewski, 1309 W. 3efl. .Wm. Million et ux to Josephine Fra­ Lawrefice Good Mail, New York, and Swarririgtdn dee'd v Ind. & Mich. Elec. 69519 Ora WinrBtte v Lola Winrotte, Co., wrongful death, Hasley & Flynn, divorce, Jansen; Aug. 4. zier; lot 12 Victory add. Joan E. Masters, 809 Emerson. Seymour Jansen et ux to James C "•ftbbt. .Chmilewski, 313 Meade, and AiSfL i: 6-220 Esther Huston v Marion Hus- 69510 Douglas Gitters V Johanna torft divorce, Jansen, Aug. 4: Strieker et ux, lot 75 Broadway «ts Esther Springer, 1310 Fisher. NEW CASES FILED Arden McNirieh et ux to Wm. *E» Wm. Caldwell, Notre Dame, and Mary Gitters, divorce, Hemphling & Smith, 69532 Juanita B. Ballo v Wm. D. Ballon, divorce, Hagerty, Aug. 7. Ganinder et ux, sec. 22, twp. 38 R 2 E Baylor, 839 Colfax. Aug. *.- Frank J. Bratina, Jr. to Frederick K. CIRCUIT COURT 69309 Jeannette Pavelich v Jos Pave- -Delbert Sheldon, R. R. 5, and Irene NEW CIVIL CASES FILED IN ClR; Baer, tr., sec. 16, twp. 38 R 3 E Johnson R. R. 5. Ilfch, Hernphling & Smith, Aug. 2. Frederick E. Baer, tr., to James E. CUIT COURT IN FIRST SEVEN HbWSra E. Mteredith v Beulah M. Lloyd Biggs, Jr., 1913 Merrifield, and MONTHS FNDltfG _"ULY 1944, 55& Bratina et ux,- sec. 16, twp. 38 R 3 E. Anna M. Cook, R. R. 2, Mish. Meredith, divorfee, Hemphling & Smith, Aug. 5 •S Clinton Manuel and Frances Griffin, •AM** 2. PROBATE MATTERS So. Bend Accept. Corp. to Moldhaven both of Niles, Mich. - 69492 Carson Van Dusen v Emma 69504 .Geheral Arts Dist. Corp. v Homes Co., sec. 23, twp. 38 R SE. j- a*Milo Sappington, 513 N. Hill, and Van Dusen, divor_e. Harmon, Jury tl. PhiHip and Marie Colbert, complt. on ESTATES ADMITTED TO PROBATE Florence Zimmerrnan et al to Mar Jean Casper, 913 Luther Ct. 69493 Fredk. B. Harwood v Rose M. edn^-act, Sands, Aug. 2. IN FIRST SEVEN MONTHS ENDING tin Blod, 2 parcels of land sec. 16, two. Casimir E. Kusz, 2626 Huron, and HarwpO-t. Givorfce. Potts, Aug. 1. 69321 Wm. Widupeld v Richard Ful- JULY 1944, 272. ,37 R 2 E. "Virginia M. Tindall, 315 E. Wayne. 69515 Lodise Williams V Wm. Wil- ker, complaint, D_,vis, Aug. 4. Glen Moore to Gerald Felters et ux, Jack Grubbs, 319 E. Howard, arid barofe divorce, Metcalf, Aug. •_. 69323 Kathleen Stive V Fred Stive, lot 108 Englewood add. 69313 Gertrude Roeme v Wm.Roeme 8343 Est. of Franciszek Jankowski, Oiga Sykonnyk, 803y2 E. Battell,-Mish. divorce, Rulise-n, Aug. 5. Chester L. DuComb, Ex. to Irvin W\ divorce, Metealf, Aug. 2. inh. tax Harrv Flowers, 2115 Rogers, and 69526 Dorothy Anderson v Frances 8356 sat. of Jeanette K. Horowitz, Jackson, sec. 36, twp. 37 R 2 E. Irene P'V/h--sz. 611 N. Johtison. 69301 Audrey J. Domkowski v syl- Jos. Andersen, divorce, Taylor, Aug. 7. Wm. J. Miseher et ux to Hillis S. vestfef Domkowski, divotce, Sands, Garttitz __ Krueger Executors, $26,000, O^n Bskf" ~"d Cora Whiteman, both 69527 Dorothy Mudgett v Paul Mud- Garnitz & Krueger, Attys. (On Page Eleven) Of Elkhart. Ird. Aug. 2. gett, divoree, Taylor, Aug. 7. 'AUGUST 11, 1944 Page Eleven

HOLC to Wm. H. Buqheian. Aug. 7 U TURN: HOLC to H. Raymond Brown. John Krzyzaneak, dis. con., $20 &e. (One Dollar Fines) HOLC to Harry C. Mclntyre. A. E. Dill, imp. plates, $1 &c. Peter Dinger, Harry John Gielow, M. Dowdy, drunk driving, $25 &c. Kenneth Smith, Thomas Dranginea. Herbert Walsh, drunk, $5. ITAL STATISTICS Robt. L. Richardson, using car with­ GOOD MORNING, JUDGE! out owner's consent, $15 & c; 6 m. prob. LEGAL NOTICES -•• Continued NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Estate No. 8358 CITY COURT NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ TOTAL CASES DISPOSED OF IN dersigned has been appointed by -the CITY COURT IN FIRST SIX Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ Taylor Johnson to St. Jos. Bk. & Tr., MONTHS ENDING JUNE 1944, 729. lot 96 No. Shore Terrace. $5,400. OVERTIME PARKING: seph, County, state of Indiana, Co-Ex- Cecil O. Barnes et ux to Harold W. ecUtors of the estate of Teresa Frances Aug. 1 (Two Dollar Fines) TRANSFER OF REALTY Holderman, sec. 10, twp. 37 R 3 E. $477. W. E. Hesselgrove, Harold Means, Rigley, late of St. Joseph county, de­ Jos. J. Palkowski et ux to Indus. Benj. Deranek, assault and battery, ceased. $5 &c; 10 days. Martin Klein. DEEDS Sav. & Loan, lot 71 Hazelton. $1,400. JAY WALKING: Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. Elmer Sivers et ux to Albert H. Stanley Fenimore, public intcxica~ Edward Landon Rigley and St. Joseph (From Page Ten) (One Dollar Fines) Huges, lot 36 Grandiers add. $1,000. tion, $1 &c. T Bank and Trust Company, Co-Ex­ Knoblock, sec. 12, twp. 35 R 3 E. Melvin Morris et al to Mish. Bldg. & Clarence Stone, fail to yield right of Ruth Meyer,, Emma Nemeth «. H. ecutors. Tower Fed. Sav. & Loan to Walter E. Loan, lot 126. Lincoln Gardens. -•^4,500, way, S5 &c. Sadke, H. Horvath, C. Horva. Don August 9th, 1944. Bryon, lot "212 Pk. add-?*o Navarre PI. Wm. S. Mathias et ux to Mish. Bldg. Paul McKinley, drunk. $1 &c. Morrow, Loyal Wilson, Tom iv_,raris, Farabaugh, Pettengill, Chapleau and John C. Horchky et ux to Anthony & Loan, lot31 and pt. of 30 Taylor's R. Dickey, making U turn, $1 &c. Betty Price, Oscar Wittscotch, P. J. Roper, fAttys. for Estai&g*: 8:ll~_8-25"''".. Jlosinsktviat 13 G. W. Swygart's add. 1st. $2,500. Geo. Barns, firing fire arms in city, Wentland, Bertha Heckmann, Amos Wm. G. Metzgu to Earl Brown et ux. Harry C. Mlllage to Mish. Bldg. & $5. Hafer, Frank Ruemmler, Constance NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT sec. _0^irwp. 3/ RIE. Loan, lot 404 Milburn PI. $315. Val. Palicki, drunk, $1. Barker, Vanna Pruitt, E. R. Bird, Estate No. 7927 Rachel Niles to Jessie C. Faulknor, W£n. E. Geminder et ux to So. Bend Wm. Hershberger, speeding, $10. Chas. S. Stickler, John Meyer, Hilda Estate Of Eva S. Goodrick. tr., lot 9, pt. of lots 10-11-12-13. Highland, sec. 22, twp. 38, R 2 E. $2000. John Anglin, speeding, $15. Stunmetz, John McDermott, Mary By direction of Thomas A. Goodrick, * .Jessie C. Faulknor, tr., to Earl H. James E. Bratina et ux to Frank J. Geo. Hodge, reckless driving, $5 &c. Arch, Chas. Weninger. administrator of the estate of Eva S. Niles et ux^lot 3, pt. of lots 10-11-12-13. Bratina Jr., sec. 16 twp. 38 R 3 E. Aug. 2 PARK IN NO PARKING ZONE: Goodrick, late of St. Joseph county, tn Chas. Davis et ux to Donald Hirsch $3,262.50. i Everett Susdorf, assault and battery, (One Dollar Fines) the state of Indiana, deceased. et al, S1/. lots 5 and 6, blk. 54, Laurence Aug. 7 $10. Bernard L. Hardy, Lucille Goss, NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, /<& Battell. Leo I. Burmore et ux to First Fed. Alfred Chartz, speeding. $10. Chester Van Lopik, Fred Coffield, C. C. legatees and devisees of the said dece-*- Warren Townsend et ux to Paul -W. Sav. & Loan, lot 405 Berner Grove. John Palkav drunk. $5 &c. Hill,* Mrs. E. Robinson, Jos. Harris, dent, and all other persons interested Hazen et ux, sec. 16, twp. 37 R *1 £. $2,000. James Clark, speeding, $5. Freda Herzer, Leland Churchill, Ray­ in the said estate, that said administra­ • Ora Mincotto et ux to Seymour Jan­ Raymond E. Reed et ux to Indus. A;ig. 3 WMt mond Connly. tor has filed in this court his account sen, lot 1 blk 4 Towles 1st add. Sav. & Lqan, lot 46 Dreamwold Hts. Kenneth Hanyzewski, drunk, $1 &c. PASSING STOP SIGN: and vouchers for the final settlement of Royce Chubbock to Jos. Palkowski, $2,600. Raymond Kyle, begging, $25 &c. (Five Dollar Fines) said estate, and they are hereby re­ lot 71 Hazelton. Linden Dale Irvin to—HOLC, lot sec. Louis Palvetti, reck, driv., $5. Eric Carlson, Wm. A. Reinke, E. C. quired to be and appear in said court 2 Forest G. Hay et ux to Edgar A. 5, twp. 37, R 3 E. $1,005.66. on the llth day of September, 1944, Aug. 4 Hunter. E. L. Miles, Albert Taylor, E. when the same will be heard and make Duker et ux, lot 18 Forest Pk. 1st. Harold L. Nedderman to South Bend Alex Toth, speeding, $2$ &c. C. Pask,i, Milton Dykhnizen, Edgar Ray E. Shoemaker et ux to Melvin Fed. Sav. & Loan, lot 100 Miami Hts. proof of their heirship, or claim to any Floyd Crothers, pub intox., $10. Sandus. part of said estate, and show cause if E Morris et al, lot 126 Lincoln Gardens. $3,200. Geo. Long, drunk driving, $35 &c. PASSING RED LIGHT: Warren S. Smith et ux to Carolina there be, why said account and vouch­ Aug. 7 Aug. 5 (Five Dollar Fines) ers should not be approved. Inez C. Hanson et ux to Henry L. Bergstedt, lot 29 Miami add. $2,700. Ida L. Cofer._and hus. to Indus. Sav. Leonard Brock, drunk, $1 &c. Jos. Bucso, James Cook, John Raabe, Witness, the clerk and the seal of the Szybowtez et ux, land sec. 26, twp. "37 • Alfred Werner, speeding, $5 &c. Earl V. Eckenrade, Jos. Caponcar, E. R 2 E. & Loan, lot 207 S. L. Cottrell's add. St. Joseph Circuit Court at South $3,000. Victor Richaert, speeding, $5 &c. Aldridge, Louis B rockeveldt, George Bend, Indiana, 7th day of August, 1944. Westgate Syndicate to Clara Harrah Claude Parks, speeding, $5. &c. Penisen, Fred J. Zwakler, James Hill, et ux, lot 139 blk F Belleville Gardens. Chas. W. Palmiter et ux to HOLC, FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. sec. 5, twp. 37, R 2 E. $2,682.58. Harry Lister, drunk, $1 &c. Peter Grotkowski, Heory Harlockey, JOHN E. HANLEY Deputy. .- Francis R. Allen et ux to Samuel - Virgil Turner, drunk, $5 &c. James Troxel, Geo. Washington, Rilta Crumpacker, May, Carlisle, and Vodichi lot 103 Armstrong 3rd. Aug. 8 C. Wood, drunk, $1. Achille C. Colpaert to Vernon R. Angelo J. Guiccone to Tower Fed. Scofield. Beamer, Attys. for Estate. 8:11-18 .Vaughn et ux, lot 28 Sterelys add. Sav. & Loan, pt. of lot 11 Sam'l Cot­ a Chas. W. Palmiter et ux to HOLC, trell's add. #325. land sec. 5, twp. 37 R 2. E. Jos. E. Thompson et ux to St. Jos. NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES G. A. Davidson et ux to Raymond E. Bank & Tr., pt. of lots 2 and 3 Oak In the matter of determining the tax rates BEFORE THE BOARD Reed, lot 46 Deamwold Hts. Park. $4,400. for school purposes by the School City of OF SCHOOL TRUSTEES Geo. Lerner to Ida Witz, pt. of lots Elmer Kelsoi to Willis Roberts, lot South Bend, St. Joseph County, Indiana. THEREOF: 118-119-120 O. P. Lowell. 1127 Summit PI. 4th. $1,700. Mary Wengleaz to Henry Kerfll, land Jos. M.' Bowen et ux to First Fed. NOTICE is hereby given to the taxpayers of the School City of South Bend, St. Joseph County, Indiana, that the Bee. 31, twp. 38 R 3 E. Sav. & Loan, lot 80 Niles Realty Co. proper legal officers of said School Corporation, at their regular meeting place in the School Administration Building, Maybelle VanDusen to Dot Frances $2,900. 226-228 South St. Joseph Street, South Bend, Indiana, on the 31st day of August, 1944 at 4:00 o'clock p. m., will consi­ White, lots 25 and 26 O. P. * Martin E. Niemier- et ux to Sobieski der the following budget: HOLC to Linden Dale Irvin et ux, Fed. Sav. & Loan, Ey2 lot 33 College BUDGET CLASSIFICATION FOR THE YEAR 1945 Grove. $1,200. land sec. 5, twp. 3J, R 2 E. I—TUITION FUND E—FIXED CHARGES Wm. F. Salt to Harold L. Nedder- Stanley Piecuck et ux to Sobieski A—Teachers, Principals, Supervisors and Nurses 1. Insurance jnan, lot 100 Mimi Hts. Fed. Sav. & Loan, lot 384 Summit PI. Salaries $1,439,000.80 6,000.00 Fred J. Sumption et ux to Warren S. 2nd. $2,300. B—Transfer Tuition - 6,000.00 2. Taxes and assessments Smith et ux, lot 29 Miami add. Royal D. Maddox et ux to HOLC, lot' 3. Rents 3.000.00 4. Interest on temporary loans Garden Homes Inei-to Belleville Inv. 50 O'Neill Schwab's, $1,971.34. TOTAL EXPENDITURES FROM TUITION 500.00 Co., 17 lots Belleville 4th. Raymond L. Markey to First Fed. F—CO-ORDINATE AND AUXILIARY AGENCIES j Everett F. Grant et ux to Otto Curl Sav. & Loan, parcel of land Cedar FUND ._.f .$1,445,000 CO et ux, lots 210-11 S. L. Cottrell. Hts. $4,300. II—-BOND FUND 1. Nurses' supplies = '3,000.00 Aug. g Willard L. McOonough to A Amer­ A—Payment on Bonds _ $ 186,000.00 2. Recreation 16,000.00 ican Trust Co., lot 24 Klingel's sub. B—-Interest on Bonds 21,107.50 3. "Cafeterias and bookstores 150 100.00 Preachers Aid Soc. to Geo. Syson et $3,000. 4. *Other expense 12,500.00 fax, pt. of lots 113-114 Sorin's 2nd. TOTAL EXPENDITURES FROM BOND FUND.$ 207,107.50 5. *War production training CO.GOO.OO Robt. Malott et ux to Raymond Smo- Hugh G. Bosworth to HOLC, lot 228 gor et ux, pt. of lot 32 Grouses add. Navarre PI. $2,697.31. III—SPECIAL FUND G—CAPITAL OUTLAY LaVaughan Boulden to Elizabeth A—GENERAL ADMINISTRATION Doris L. Bair Whitmer to Jay Car­ Walter, pt. of lot 293 Saml. Cottrell'. 1. Land and new buildings penter et ux, lot 122 Bowman's 5th. 1. Officers salaries ____ $ 25,500.00 2. Equipment of^new buildings 1st. $1,400. 2. Cierks salaries __" , 15,_80.00 Fred B. Shives et ux to Angelo J. LaVaughan Boulden to Elizabeth 3. Equipment of old buildings 20 000.00 Gutccino et ux, pt. of lot 11 Samuel 3. Supplies ____ . 3,230.00 Walter, lot 46 Eckman. $2,000. 4. Other expense 7,000.00 Cottrell's add. Gerald D. Crockett et ux to First TOTAL EXPENDITURES FROM SPECIAL Victor Van Lake et ux to John M. Nat'l Bk. of Mish., lot 32 Broadview B—INSTRUCTION &S&> ' FUND $ 764,780.00 Steinhofer, lot 31, Lincoln Pk. add. add. $1,400. , 1. Supplies, books, and other expense 35,000.00 (*) Self supporting. No levy made for these Edith B. Miller et al to Geo. M. 2. Clerks and supplies for principals and items. Not considered in determining rate. Clarke et al, tr., undiv 5/6 int. lot 30 MORTGAGE RELEASES supervisors :_ 33,500.00 Deniston. 3. Evening school 5,000.00 V—PUBLIC LIBRARY GENERAL FUND American Tr. Co., adm. to Geo. M. Aug. 4 People's Fed. Sav. Loan to Walter C—OPERATION OF SCHOOL PLANT A—General Public Library Fund $ 119,000.00 Clarke et al tr., und. 1/6 int. lot 30 1. Wages of janitors and engineers 163,000.00 Denniston. • R. Arnold et ux. HOLC to Clyde L. Smith et ux. 2. Fuel, water, light, and power 102,-00.80 TOTAL EXPENDITURES FROM PUBLIC Alfred Ray tr. to Kenneth Connor, 3. Janitors supplies and other expense 38,050.00 lot 30 Denniston Fellow. HOLC to Gust Anton et ux. LIBRARY GENERAL FUND ..$• 119 000 00 Geo. M. Clarke et ux to Modern Food HOLC to James F. McCady. D—MAINTENANCE OF SCHOOL PLANT TOTAL EXPENDITURES FROM ALL FUNDS—$2,535,887.50 Processing, lot 30 Denniston Fellows. Peoples Bldg. & Loan to Ray Ritchey 1. Upkeep of grounds 3,000.00 Harry A. Edris et ux to Minnie C. et ux. 2. Repair and replacement of buildings 30,000.00 ADDITIONAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR 1944 Pane, lot 105 Edris 2nd. Diito—to Oscar Neland et ux. 3. Repair and replacement of heating, light III—SPECIAL FUND Chas. McClune et al to Mark 43. Garn, First Bk. & Tr. Co. to Francis Giri- ing, and plumbing _... _ 22.000.00 lot 86 and pt. of 85 Oak Pk. add. dleberger. 4 Repair and replacement of furniture G—CAPITAL OUTLAY Emil Weher et ux to Jos. Thomp­ Nat'l Bk. & Tr. to Maris L. Meadore. and other expenses 10,009.00 3. Equipment of old buildings _$ 0,900.00 American Tr. Co. to Francis Hen- son, pt. of lots 2 and 3 Oak Park. ESTIMATE OF FUNDS TO BE RAISED Wm. Caspert et ux to Herman W. ningfeed. Jones et ux, lot 43 Martin's 1st. Ditto—---to Bert P. Dick et ux. FUNDS REQUIRED FOR EXPENSE Colfax Mtg. Co. to Crown Dev. Inc. TO DEC. 31st OF INCOMING YEAR Eric Johnson to Ralph E. Johnson, Tuition Fund Bond Fund Special Fund Bldg. & Grd. Public Library Total lot 12 Gearharts 1st add. Morris Plan to Harriet Moo. Ditto—to Leroy Lenher. 1. Total Budget Estimate for year, Ralph E. ohnson to Eric ohnson, lot Jan. 1 to Dec. 31, 1945 $1,445,000.00 $207,107.50 $764,780.00 $119,000.00 $2,535,387.50 12 Gearharts 1st add. Ditto—to Calista Gleason and hus. Ditto—to Fred E, Vight et ux. 2. Necessary Expenditures Aug. 1 .'jgSJBi Sterena Waldenrecci to Frank Can- to Dec. 31, 1944 (approved) 606,858.54 73,762.50 333,574.54 ,51,517.21 1,065,712.79 brecci et ux, lot 56 Mclnerny Engel­ Ditto—to Michael Horvath. Ditto—to Bernice Wheeloek. 3. Necessary Expenditures in ad­ drum's. dition to line 2 present year 6,000.00 6,000.00 Frank Canarecci to Sterling Villa, Ditto—to Jos. Gyori et ux. Ditto—to Cal Chapman. 4. Total Estimated Expenditures lot 56 Mclnerny Engeldrum's. (add lines 1, 2, and 3) 2,05l;858.54 280,870.00 1,104,354.54 170,517.21 3,307,600.29 : Chester Perkins to Jos. Kitchmark, Ditto—to Lottie Sternpirh. Jot 31 John Prast's sub. Peoples Bldg. & Loan to Grover C. Hambright. FUNDS ON HAND AND TO BE *&$&% - -Chas. F. Post to Portage Realty Corp., RECEIVED FROM SOURCES OTH­ lots 38-40-41 Roanoke Hts. Ditto—to Walter Arnold et ux. ER THAN PROPOSED TAX LEVY: Ralph C. Eby et ux to Portage Realty St. Jos. Bk. & Tr. to Lewis W. Iwan. Corp.. lots 54-55-56 Roanoke Hts. So. Bend Fed Sav. & Loan to Bessie 5. Cash Balance July 31, 1944 478,3^8.77 22,350.44 203,240.01 25,909.04 37,931.27 768,009.53 Michael Niemier to Martin E. Nie- L. Wells and hus. 6. Taxes to be collected, present fnier et ux, EV2 lot 33 College Grove. Ditto—to Lloyd C. Beatty. year (December settlement) — 329,260.49 91,364.77 193,337.40 41,470.74 655,433.40 Harriet Moo to Martin E. Niemier et Aug. 5 7. Miscellaneous Revenue to be Ux, EV2 lot 33 College Grove. Prudential Ins. to Robert Wukomlch received Aug. 1, 1944 to Dec. 31 HOLC to Royal D. Maddox et ux, lot et ux. of next school year (Schedule j 60 O'Neil Schwab's. Fred Smith et al, Tr. to Lewis A. on file in office of School Robert C. Hughes et ux to Mildred Funk, et ux. Board) s|§£^i£ E- Copp, lot 50 So. East add. Lila J. Finch to Julius Nemeth et ux. a. Special Taxes (See Sched­ Margaret A. Meyer to John Palace HOLC to John Hoffman et ux. ule) 600.385.50 4,525.00 336,148.56 4,855.30 945,914.36 et ux, lots 8 and 9 Battell Hills. HOLC to Jos. A. Wachs et ux. b. Transfer Tuition and all Dept. of Fin. Inst, to James McCor- HOLC to Jos. S. Opaczewski et ux. other Revenue (See Sched­ mick, lot 277.-356 Lafayette PI. HOLC to John Rameida et ux. ule) 57,055.46 57,055.46 Jacob I. __evy et al to Willard L. HOLC to Rolland R. Guenin. 8. Total funds (add lines 5, 6, 7a, iM McDonoufih, lot 24, Klingel's sub. HOLC to Louis Yaffe et ux. and 7b) — ______1,465,280.22 118,240.21 732,725.97 25,909.04 84,257.31 2,426,412.75 P. G. Lipelenick et ux to-Owen HOLC to Carl A; Hierlring. 9. Net Amount required to be Nellans et ux, lot 339 Milburn PI. ""•. HOLC to Mike DeKan. raised for expense to December Andrew A. Daniels to Arthur F. HOLC to John E. Vance et ux. 31 of ensuing year (deduct line Daniels et ux. lot 426 Marquette Hts. HOLC to Matalis Nowak et ux. 8 from line 4) _ 586,578.32 162,629.79 371,628.57 86,259.90 1,207,096.58 HOLC to Hugh G. Bosworth et ux HOLC to Robt. A. Anderson. 10. Operating Balance (not to be lot 228 Navarre PI. '-*••£& Nat'l Bk. & Tr. Co. to Louis Piser in excess of expense from Jan. Harlpn L. Sbencer to Liberty Coach et ux. 1 to June 30, less Miscellaneous , _„ Co., xVEV_ 0f2|jS of NWy4 sec. 4, twp. St. Jos. Bk. & Tr. to Wm. C. Coverts. Revenue for same period) 257,597.78 35,105.15 116,324.40 27,817.95 486,845.28 85, R 4 E. Ditto—to Anthony C. Rozewicz. 11. Amount to be raised by Tax . . nmn „„„ „„ Myron Ford to Irene J. Klockowski, Ditto—to John Swygart et ux. Lew (add lines 9 and, 1C) __ 844,176.10 197,734.94 487,952.97 114,077.85 1,643,941.38 lot 12 Hammond Whitcomb. Ditto—to Peter J. Ditchie. NET TAXABLE PROPERTY —$152,103,360.^0 Irene J. Klockowski, tr. to Myron Ditto—to Chas. Eddy. NUMBER OF TAXABLE POLLS _•__ 17,652 Ford et ux. lot 12 Hammond Whitcomb. Ditto—to Frank J. Carcely. PROPOSED LEVIES LaVau?hn Bouden to Re^ce F. Chub- Aug. 7 buck et ux, lot 46 Eckman. Levy on Levy on Amount to be HOLC to Margariute H. Boone. FUNDS Polls Property Raised Achille C. Colpaert to Gerald HOLC to Elon Meeske et ux. Crockett et ux, lot 32 Broadnier add. Tuition _ „ _ $ -555 $ 844,176.10 HOLC to Bertha E. Bickell. Bond 13 - 197,734.94 MORTGAGES HOLC to Frank Kesik et ux. Special" " " ""- "~ --" $ .50 .315 487,952.97 Ditto—to Alex Augustyniak et ux. Ubrary ^l-Hl-^-^-^XI^^^EI.^::...'. -075 114,077.35 Aug. 4 Ditto—to Jos. W?*Nyikos et ux. Paul R.JDonaho et al to American Tr? Mish. Bldg. & Loan to Richard E. TOTALS —— $ .50 $1,075 $1,643,941.86 Co., lot 12 Sorden Lister sub. $2,600. Coil et ux. Ray E. Shoemaker et ux to Wilber HOLC to Ted Linen. COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF TAXES COLLECTED AND TO BE COLLECTED J_ehman, sec. 23, twp. 36 R 2 E. $3,300. HOLC to Glenola E. Smith and hus. ~pg* Abstract Abstract Abstract To Be Collected Hazel O. Orrison to Maurice Tucker, HOLC to John E. Kollar et ux. NAME OF FUND 1942 Levy 1843 Levy 1944 Levy 1945 Levy lots 35 and ^fO-Wenger & Kreighbaum. Wm. J. Walsh, Recorder to Peter Tuition - $ 682,467.96 $ 808,272.98 $ 844,176.42 $ 844,17_l8g $4,500. Van Overmele. Bond _ 371,402.02 348,521.38 243,366.18 197,734.9*' Bert R. Beck et ux to American Tr. Aug. 8 Special" ' 1 "___ "" -'____ "__•__ 427,028.85 461,756.76 496,593.35 487,952.97 Co., lot 208 Mayr's Mich. Ave. $2,000. S Union Central Life Ins. Co. to Leon Library _ - 96,537.71 103,814.88 106,472.70 114,077.85 Perry D. Stahl et ux to Myrtle Penne, V. Kingsbury. gee. 34, twp. 38 R 2 E. $1,000. New York lafe las. Co. to Virgil C. TOTALS — .- $1,577,436.54 $1,722,366.00 $1,690,608.65 $1,643,-41.86 Thomas J. Jeffries et ux to Pruden­ Drais et ux. tial Ins. Co., lot 6 Polis 1st sub. $3,989. State of Indiana to Walenty Paja Taxpayers appearing shall have a right to be heard thereon. After the tax levies have been determined and pre­ - Estlo Aldridge to First Fed. Sav. Ln., kgfwski. sented to the County Auditor not later than two days prior to the second Monday in September, and the levy fixed by lot 51 Colonial Gardens. $2,000. State of Ind. to Clarence Shawgo. the County Tax Adjustment Board, or on their failure to do so, by the County Auditor, ten or more taxpayers :.eeling Aug. 5 Nellie Kizer to Chas. Phillips. themselves aggrieved by such levies* may appeal to the State Board of Tax Commissioners for further and final near- Orville C. Denniston et ux to St. Jas. Nat'l Ek. & Tr. Co. to C. Arnold inggthereon by filing of petition with the County Auditor not later than October 15, and the State Board will nx a Bk. & Tr., lot 3 and pt. of 2 Pleasant Thompson. date for hearing in this County. SCHOOL CITY OF SOUTH BEND, INDIANA Home. $20,000. Indus. Sav. & Loan to C. A. Davidson Taylor Johnson to St. Jos. Bk. & Tr , Ditto—to Ida L. Cofer and hus. K&Ptjjj FRED J. HELMEN, President. Jot 103 No. Shore Terrace. $5,400. HOLC to Walter L. Gulku. ELLA L. MORRIS, Treasurer. Taylor Johnson to St. Jos. Bk. & Tr., HOLC to Freda I. Rupley et ux. L. J. HABWOOD, Secretary. lot 105 No. Shore Terrace. $5,400. HOLC to Robt. Milliken et ux. ORLO R.*DEAHL, Member. Taylor Johnson to St. Jos. Bk. & Tr., HOLC to John Nemeth et ux. RUSSEL H. DOWNEY, Member. Jbt 299 Parkovash add. $5,400. HOLC to Thos. I. Huston et ux. Dated this 5th day of August, 1S44. 8:11-18 Page Twelve THE MIRROR

, the unknown heirs of David I named and described in the complaint Schwartz, late of St. Joseph county, in and make proof of their heirship, or LEGAL NOTICES M. Houser, as against all claims, demands and the state of Indiana, deceased. claim to any part of said estate, and EVELINE HOUSER, wife of David claimants whatsoever, which lands are NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, show cause, if there be, why said ac­ NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT M. Houser, described'in said complaint as follows: legatees and devisees of the said dece­ count and vouchers should not be ap­ Estate No. 8083 ROY B. LEATHERMAN, .Part of the North haM•(•*>_) of the dent, and all other persons interested proved. Estate of Mary E. Vandewalle. Leatherman, the unknown SOUtJiW-St quarter (V.) of Section in tiie said estate, that said administra­ WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of By direction of Lawrence A. Vande­ wife Of Roy B. Leatherman, Thirtjjohe (31) Township Thirty tor 4_as filed in this court his account the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South walle, administrator of the estate of MARGARETTE LEATHERMAN, six J36) North, Range Two (2) East, and vouchers for the final settlement ot Bend, Indiana, 4th' day of August, 1944. Mary E. Vandewalt-*, late of St. Joseph , widow of Roy Leatherman Wliicli lies North of the right of way said estate, and they are hereby re­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. County, in the state of Indiana, de­ The unknown widower, widow, chil­ of the Wabash Railroad as it is now quired tb be and appear in said Court JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. ceased. dren, descendants and heirs, sur­ located,. and described as follows: on the __th day «* September, 1944, Iden S. Bornig,, NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, viving spouses, creditors and ad­ The North half (V_) of the South­ when the same will be heard and Attorney for Estate. 8:11-16 legatees -_nd devisees of the said dece­ ministrators of the estate, devisees, west quarter (\_) of Section Thirty- m&ke proof of their heirship, or claim dent*, and all other persons intefrested legatees, trustees and executors of one (31), Township Thirty six (36) to any part of said estate, and show NON-BESIDENT NOTICE in the said estate, that said administra­ the last will and testament and North, Range Two (2) East, except­ cause if there be, why said aceount Cause No. 69518 tor has filed in this codri his account successors in interest and assigns ing the right of way of the Wabash and vouchers should not be approved. STATE OF INDIANA and vouchers for the final setttaient of respectively of the above named Railroad. Also excepting the follow­ WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of COUNT?Y OF ST. JOSEPH, SS: -_5ai*4ge_ta«_, and they are h-^feby re­ the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South In the St. Josejai Circuit Court, .. quired to be and appear in said Court defendants, all of whom are un- ing: Beginning at the Southwest i known to these plafnt_f_s. cbrner of the North half (-v.) of said Bend, Indiana, 3rd day xH August, 1944. May Term, 1944 on the llth day of September, 1944, quarter section; thence North one FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. when the same will be heard and make The spouses of all of the f»_r_ons hundred Ninety two (192) feet to JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. LEROY MATHEWS •prodf.of their heirship, Or claim to any above named, described and des- the right of way of the Wabash Rail­ Arthur F. Scheer, . vs. . . part of said estate, and show cause if deSignated as defendants to this road Company, thence Northeast Attorney for estate. 8:11-18 EDNA V. MATHEWS there be, why said account and vouch- action, who are married, the names along right of way to where it «_s should not be approved. of all of whom are unknown to crosses the center line of said sec­ NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT Be It Known, That the above-named WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal rf these plaintiffs. tion; thence South along the center Estate No. 6437 _?_a_ntif_. lias filed in the office of the the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South All persons and corporations who as­ line of sajd section Six Hundred Estate of Lydia B. Altner. clerk of said court complaint against Bend, Indiana, 9th day of August, 1944 sert or might assert airy titlfe, claim Forty (640) feet to the Southeast By direction of Frederick E. Bui*- said defendant in the above cause to-** FRANK J. I3RIKK-NER, Clerk. dr interest tn or Ben upon the real -eOnier of the North half (\_) of the genef, executor of the estate of Lydia gether with a proper affidavit that By JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. estate described in the cOm0laiht Southwest quarter (V_) of said sec­ B. Altner, latd of St. Joseph county, in said defendant is a non resident of the •Joseph W. Nyikos, in this action by, under or through tion; thence west to the place of be­ the state of Indiana, deceased. state of Indiana. Attorney for Estate. 8:11-18 any of the defendants to this ac­ ginning containing Twenty five and . NOTICE is hereby given to the heirS, Said defendant .3 hereby notified that tion named, described and desig­ Twenty-one hundredths (25.21) acres, legatees and devisees of the said dece­ said cause _v__t stand for trial on the NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION nated id Said complairrt, the names containing in all 48.7 acres, more or dent. _ nd all other persons . interested 9th day of October, 1944, the same be­ Estate No. __3?, of all of whom are unknowii to less. in the said estate, that said executor ing at the city of South Bend on NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ these plaintiffs. Subject to legal highways. h_te filed in this court his ac­ which day said defendant is required dersigned has been appointed by the Each and all of said defendants are FRANK J. BRUGGNER, count and Vouchers for the final: set­ to appear to, said action.: ,. Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ notified that said cause of action is Clerk of St. Joseph Superior Court tlement . of said estate, and they are FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. seph county, state of Indiana, executrix now pending in the St. Joseph Su­ No. 2. hereby required to be and appear in By Marie Stansbury, Deputy. of the estate of John F; O'Connell, late perior Court No. 2, and that Said cause Orie Parker, Atty. 8:—18 25 said court on the llth day el Septem­ Sherwood Slate, iJ$_, JosePh county, deceased. will stand for trial on the 5th day of ber, 1944, when the same will be hoard Attorhey for Plaintiff. 8:11-18-25 Said Estate is supposed to be solvent October, 1944, on which said day said NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT Laura V. O'Connell, Executrix. defendants are required to appear to Estate No. 6092 August 9th, 1944. said action. -%S5La Estate of Elizabeth Schwartz. NOTICE TO TAXPAYE&S OF TAX LEVIES •Clifford V. DuComb, That this suit is brdught for the By direction of Max Schwartz, ad­ Atty. for Estate. 8:11-18 25 purpose of quieting title to the lands ministrator of the estate of Elizabeth In the matter of determining the. tax rates for certain purposes by Clay \- Before the Township Advisory Board NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Township, St. Joseph County, Indiana j Estate No. _3_7 NOTICE is hereby given that the un- NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES NOTICE is hereby given the taxpayers of Clay Township, St. Joseph Coun­ •dersigned has been appointed by the In the matter of determining the tax 1 ty, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said municipality, at their regular Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ meeting place, on the 29th day of August, 1944, will consider the following state o£ rates for certain purposes by Harris \ Before the Township Advisory Board seph County, Indiana, executor Township, St. Joseph County, Indiana j budget: _. _. _ of the estate of Amelia Klockow, late TOWNSHIP BUDGET CLASSIFICATION of St. Joseph county, deceased. NOTICE is hereby given the taxpayers of Harris Township, St. Joseph Township Fund Poor -belief Fund Said Estate is supposed tb be solvent County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said municipality, at their A. Administration Expense: Harvey R. Klockow, Executor. regular meeting place, on the 29th day of Augwst, 1944, will consider the fol­ Salary of Trustee $ 900.00 Al. Personal Service $ 1,500.00 August 7th, 1944. lowing budget: Office Rent _20.80 A2. Other Operating Ex­ IV. JL. Miller, TOWNSHIP BUDGfiT CLASSIFICATION Clerk Hire 100.86 pense 360.60 Attorney for Estate. 8:1118-25 Township Fund Tuition Fund B.Direct Relief: Trustee's Traveling Expense— 150.00 Bl. Medical, Hospital and NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Salary of Trustee $ 600.00 Pay of Teachers $ 7^30.00 J. P. Salary and Supplies 80.00 Burial ____ 1,275.00. Estate No. 833. Office Rent 60.00 School transfers 3;0OO.00 Other Direct Relief— 9,210.09 Trustee's Traveling Expense.. 125.Q0 Office Supplies, Printing and B2. NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ Total Tuition Fund $10,530.00 Advertising 400.00 dersigned has been appointed by the Office Supplies, Printing and Total Poor Relief Judge of the Superior Court No 1 of Advertising 200.00 Bond Fund Pay of Advisory Board 75.00 S oseph Fund $12,345.00 • Ll County, State of Indiana, Pay of Advisory Board 75.00 Principal $ 5,000.00 Telephone 100.00 administrator of the estate of Ohis H Fire Protection 100.00 Special School Fund Snyder, late of St. Joseph county, de- Assessor's Compensation 325.00 Total Bond Fund Fire Protection 2,000.00 New Buildings $ 3,050.09 $ 5,000.00 Repair of Buildings and care •ceased. Care of Cemeteries 50.00 Special Schobl Fund Care of Cemeteries _* ._ 100.00 Examination of Records 50.00 Of Grounds _— 3,900.99 Said Estate is supposed to be solvent Repair of Buildings and care Examination of Records 350.00 Repair of Equipment, except Glenn A. Snyder, Administrator. Miscellaneous 255.00 of Grounds $ 500.00 Miscellaneous 1,000.00 School Buses 600.00 August 8th, 1944. Repair of Equipment, except School Furniture and Equip­ Lewis W. Hammond, Total Township Fund .$ 1,840.00 School Buses 200.00 Total Township Fund $ 5,375.00 ment, exeept School Buses__ 1,500.09 Attorney for Estate. 8:11-18-25 Poor Relief Fund School Furniture and Equip­ Bond Fund School Supplies, other than ment, except School Buses__ 200.00 Janitors' Supplies 1,800.00 JggflCfe OF PUBLIC HEARING A. Administration Expense: School Supplies, other than Principal $ 2,800.00 Janitor Supplies -* 1,200.00 i__ Notice; is hereby given that the Com­ Al. Personal Service .$ _O0.60 Janitors' Supplies 200.06 interest 11,750.0. Fuel for Schools .— 3,400.00 mon Council of the city of South Bend, Direct Relief: Janitor Supplies 200.00 Loans, Interest and Insurance 900.00 ^d}aIiaf\ ?? the 28th day °* August, Bl. Medical, Hospital and Fuel for Schools 700.Q0 Total Bond Fund $14,550.00 Janitor Service , 8,650.09 1944 at 7:30 p. m: in the Council Cham­ Burial 600.00 Loans, Interest and Insurance 300.00 Tuition Fund Transportation of Children __ 11,880.00 Janitor Service 960.00 bers in the City HaH, South Bend, will B2. Other Direct Relief __ 600.00 Pay of Teachers $84,700.00 Light and Power 1,800.08 -consider at public hearing the follow­ Transportation of Children __ 3,500.00 Contingencies 500.09 ing proposed Ordinances: B3. Total Direct Relief Light and Power 90.00 Substitute Teachers — 1,000.00 Miscellaneous 1,780.00 1. An ordinance trattsfferrhtg certain (Total Bl and B2)___ 1,20*0".00 Contingencies 100.00 School Transfers 600.00 School Library Books 800.00 specified am_rmts from the General Miscellaneous 450.00 Funds of the City of South Bend, In­ Tbtai Poor Relief Total Tuition Fund $86,300.00 Total Special School Fund__$40,860.00 diana, to various accounts; appropYiat- Fund .$ 1,400.00 Total Spedal School Fund__$ 7,400.00 ing the said amounts to said account- ESTIMATE dF FUNDS TO BE RAISED declaring a_i emergency. ESTIMATE OF FUNDS TO BE RAISED 2. An ordinance reducing the ap­ FUNDS REQUIRED FOR FUNDS REQUIRED FOR propriations for the budgetary year EXPENSES EXPENSES 1944 in the budget of the Street Depart­ August 1, present year, to Township Special Tuition Bond August 1, present year, to TownsMfc Special Tuition Bond ment in the amount of $975; transfer­ December 31, of ensuing year Fund School Fund Fund Fund December 31, oi e^stttng year Fund School Fund Fund Fund ring ^same to Street ana Traffic Depart­ 1. Total Budget Estimate for 1. Total Budget Estimate for ment; transferring fu/ids from the Incoming Year $ 1,840.00 $ 7,400.00 $10,530.00 $ 5,000.00 Incoming Year_,:_- $ 5,873.00 $40,860.00 $86,300.00 $14,550.00 Street and Traffic FttttQ to certain ac­ 2. Necessary Expenditures to 2. Necessary Expenditures to counts in the budget of the Street De­ be made from Appropria­ be made from Appropria­ partment. tions Unexpended July 31, tions Unexpended July SI; MARIE H. NELSON, of present year 475.00 3,300.00 6,100.00 Of present year __— 2.836.C0 16,__B.00 37,9-3.09 8,810.99 Clerk of the Common Council. 3. Additional Appropriations 3. Additional Appropriations 8:11 City of South Bend, Indiana. to be made August 1, to to be made August 1, to '$____!_' December 31, of present % December 31, of present i-_im OS 4755 SHERIFF'S SALE year 500.00 • year 2,275.00 1,440.00 By . virtue of an order of sale 4. Outstanding Temporary £j!pis 4. Outstanding Temporary'*^ to me directed ttHM th_ clerk's Office Loans to be paid before Loans to be paid before of the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2 Dcember 31, of present December 31, of present of St. Joseph County, Ihdianaf I will year, not included in Lines year, not included in Lines expose to Public Sale on Saturday the 2 or 3 2 or 3 ' 2nd day of September A. D., 1944, be­ 5. Total Funds Required (Add 5. TotaM Funds Required (Add tween the hours of ten o'clock A M Lines 1, 2, 3 and 4) 2,315.00 10,700.00 17,130.00 5,000.00 Lines 1, 2, 3 and 4) 8.211.C0 59,273.00 125,553.00 23,360.00 and four o'clock P. M., of said, day, at the door of the Court House, in the FUNDS ON HAND AND TO BE FUNDS ON HAND AND TO BE city of South Bend, St. Joseph County, RECEIVED FROM SOURCES RECEIVED FROM SOURCES Indiana, the rents and profits for a OTHER THAN THE PRO­ OTHER THAN THE PRO­ term not exceeding seven years, of the POSED RATE OF TAX LEVY POSED RATE OF TAX LEVY following described Real Estate situate ^fe St. Joseph county, state of Indiana, 6. Actual Balance, July 31, Actual Balance, July 31, I TO-wit: present year 349.00 564.00 6,177.00 present year _, i 3,026.00 3,228.00 30,615.00 9,446.00 Lots numbered Thirty-one (31), 7. Taxes to be Collected, pres- •!' 7. Taxes to be Collected, pres­ Thirty-two (32), Thirty-three (33), ent year (December Settle­ ent year (December Settle­ Thirty-four (34), Eightv-seven (87), ment) 648.00 2,107.00 1,922.00 2,040.00 ment) — 1,935.00 12,817.00 12,981.00 4,449.00 Eighty-eight (88), in the Kronewit- 8. Miscellaneous Revenue, Miscellaneous Revenue, ter-fi 2nd Plat in the city of Misha­ other than from Tax Levy, Other than from Tax Levy, waka, Indiana. to be received from August to be received from August And. on failure to realize the full 1 of present year to De­ i of preS_nt year to De­ amount of judgment, interest and cember 31, of ensuing year. cember 31, of ensuing year. costs thereon, I will expose to Public (See schedule in Trustee's (Sfee schedule in Trustee's Sale, at the same tirta. and place, to Office.) Office.) the-highest bidder, the fee simple of (a) Special Taxes (See (a) Special Taxes

Roher, David Rohrar, David Ro­ of the persons above named, de­ in St. Joseph County and State of residence is unknown, and that &ou LEGAL NOTICES rer, George W. R. Fowler, George scribed and designated as defend­ Indiana, to-wit: are necessary parties to said proceed­ ^j^-jF' OS 4754 SHERIFF'S SALE Warren R. Fowler, George Warren ants to this action, the names of Thirty-two (32) feet off of the ing; and that said petition or com­ By virtue of an order of sale to me Raphael Fowler, G. W. R. Fowler, all of whom are unknown to entire East side of Lot Numbered plaint so filed, which is now pending, W directed from the Clerk's office of the whose true Christian name is un­ plaintiffs; all persons, firms, part­ Fifty-nine (59) in G. W. R. Fowler's is set for hearing in the St. Joseph St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2, of St. known, G. Warren R. Fowler, Har­ nerships and corporations who as­ First Addition to the City of Mish­ Superior Court No. 2 at the Court Joseph County, Indiana, I will expose riet Louise Campbell Fowler, H. sert or might assert any title awaka, together with the following House in the City of South Bend, St. to Public Sale on Saturday the 2nd day L. C. Fowler, whose true Chris­ claim or interest in or upon the described tract: Ten (10) feet taken Joseph County, Indiana, on the 26thv of September A. D. 1944, between the tian name is unknown, Isaac J. real estate described in the com­ off of and from the entire width of day of September, 1944, and you, and hours of ten o'clock a. m., and four Ullman, Delia M. Ullman, Chris­ plaint in this action, by, under or the rear portion (North end) of each of you, are hereby notified that . o'clock p. m., of said day, at the door tian Wilkie, Isaac Vanolinda, Wil­ through any of the defendants to the West Thirty-four (34) feet of unless you appear in said court on said of the Court House, in the city Of South lis S. Garrison, Edward F. Dibble, this action above named, the said Lot Number Fifty-nine (59) in last mentioned date to answer or. de­ Bend, St. Joseph County, Indiana, the Stephen H. Judkins, Elijah Taylor names of all of whpm are Un­ said G. W. R. Fowler's First Addi­ mur to said complaint, that the same rents and profits for a term not exceed­ Millia E. Taylor, Millia Emily known to plaintiffs; tion in said City of Mishawaka. will be heard and determined in your ing seven years, of the following de­ Taylor, Edwin R. Martin, Edward Said proceedings are being prose­ absence. scribed real estate situate in St. Joseph B. Martin',- Fanney Martin, Fannie You and each of you are hereby sev­ cuted to quiet the title to the real es­ I___ WITNESS WHEREOF, I have County, State of Indiana, to-wit: C. Martin, Joel Burdick, Joel B. erally notified that the above named tate in plaintiffs' said Complaint men­ hereunto set my hand and the seal of Lots numbered four hundred fifty- Burdick, Christian Burdkik, Chris­ plaintiffs have filed in the St. Joseph tioned and described, and above de­ said cpurt at South Bend, Indiana, on * nine (459), four hundred sixty (460), tiana BUrdick, Thurlow B. Mer­ Superior Court No. 2, of St. Joseph scribed, as against all demands, claims the 28th day of July, 1944. four hundred sis£ty-one (461), four rill T. B. Merrill, whose true County, Indiana, a Complaint making and claimants whatsoever. The plain­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER Clerkt;. hundred sixty-two (462), four hun­ Christian name is unknown, Ellen you and each of you defendants there­ tiffs in said action have averred, by an of the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2. dred sixty-three (463) and four hun­ S. Merrill, J. M. Eldridge. whose to, and praying therein a judgment and affidavit filed in this proceeding, that By GOLDA S. BUTLER, Deputy. dred sixty-four (4_4) in LaSalle true Christian name is unknown, decree of said court quieting the title you and each of you are non-residents G. W. Bingham, Park Additon to the City of South Jacob M. Eldridge, Mary H. El­ to the following described real estate of the State of Indiana, or that your Attorhey^for Plaintiffs. 8:4-11-18 Bend, Indiana. dridge, Lorenzo Dow Clements, ' And on failure to realize the full Lorenzo Don Clements, L. D. amount of judgment, interest and costs Clements, whose true Christian thereon, I will expose to public sale, at name is unknown, Lorenzo D. NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES the same time and place, to the high­ Clements, Rebecca (Clements, Re- In the matter of determining the tax rates for certain purposes \ Before the est bidder, the fee simple of. said real beca Clements, William H. Burket, foy Portage Tow_jship, St. Joseph County, Indiana. J Township Advisory Board. i estate. Nellie M. Burket, Nellie Burket, Jacob M. Galor, Ira E. Ruth, Mary NOTICE is hereby given the taxpayers of Portage Township, St. Joseph County, Indiana, that the proper legal Taken as the property of Thomas E. Ruth, James A. Snyder, Hattie officers of said municipality, at their regular meeting place, on the 29th day of August, 1944, will cqnsider the. follow­ Walters, Helen Walters at the suit of Snyder Louis Snyder, Henry Sny­ ing budget: jS^r** Josabel L. Read, et al. der, William Kerr, Henry Snyder, TOWNSHIP BUDGET CLASSIFICATION STEPHEN J. MOLNAR, JR., as Administrator of the estate of Sheriff of St. Joseph County, Indiana. Hattie Snyder, deceased, Wilber Township Fund* Bond Fund Special School Fund Helen N. Sibley Deputy. 8:11-18-25 Salary of Trustee $ 2,600.00 Principal j $ 4,000.00 Repair of Buildings and care G. VanTilbury, The unknown hus­ Interest • 300.00 bands and wives, widows and Office Rent—building Mainte­ of Grounds $ 1,000.00 NOTICE OF ACTION fQ QUIET widowers, children, descendents, Repair of Equipment, except nance and Operation 1,500.00 Total Bond Fund $ 4,300.00 " 'TITLE TO REAL ESTATE heirs, surviving spouses, creditors, Clerk Hice 1,950.00 Sphool Busies 500.00 Cause No. 69478 administrators of estates, devisees Trustee's Traveling Expense __ 500.00 Poor Relief Fund School' Furniture and Equip STATE OF INDIANA ' legatees, trustees, executors of the Expense Telephone Tolls and A. Administration Expense: ment, except School Buses 900.00 ST. JOSEPH COUNTY SS: last will and testament, successors Al. Personal Service ____$ 6,180.00 School Supplies, other than In the St. .Jpseph Superior Court No. 2 Telegrams 300.00 in interest and assigns, lessees, J. P. Salary and Supplies 9,450.00 A2. Other Operating Ex- Janitors' Supplies . 1,500.00 February Term, 1944. cestui qui trustent, respectively of , pense .*_ 1,280.00 Janitor Supplies 1,300.00 each of the foregoing named per­ Office Supplies, Printing and Fuel for Schools 2,750.00 WALTER HINER, et al, Advertising 600.00 A3. Properties 100.00 sons, the names of all of whom B. Direct Relief: Loans, Interest and Insurance 1,500.00 Plaintiffs, Pay of Advisory Board 75.00 7,560.00 are unknown to plaintiffs; all of Purchase of Building 20,000.00 Bl. Medical, Hospital and -T . Janitor Service the women once known by any of Burial 2 12,450.00 Transportation of Children — 6,570.00 JOSEPH RORER, et al, the names and designations above Care of Cemeteries 2,000.00 1,390.09 Examination of Records 500.00 B2. Other Direct Relief__ 35,250.00 Light and Power l^pyi^ Defendants. stated, whose names have been Total Direct Relief Contingencies - 220.00 Miscellaneous 1,150.00 B3. 900.09 TO: Joseph Rorer, Joseph Rohrar, Jo­ changed, and who are now known (Total Bl and B2) __ 47,700.00 Miscellaneous , by other names, the spouses of all Total Poor Relief seph Roher, Mary Rohrar, Mary Total Township Fund $40,625.00 Total Special School Fund__$26,000,0O Tuition Fund Fund $55,260.00 Judgment Bond Fund NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES Pay of Teachers —$42,170.00 Fire Protection Fund Payment of Principal $ 9,500.00 School Transfers 1,000.00 Fees for Fire Protection $ 1,000.00 Payment of Interest 700.00 In the matter of determining the tax 1 rates for certain purposes by German } Before the Township Advisory Board Total Tuition Fund $43,170.00 Total Fire Protection Fund_$ 1,000.60 Total Judgment Bond Fund_$10,200.00 Township, St. Joseph County, Indiana J NOTICE is hereby given the taxpayers of German Township, St. Joseph ESTIMATE OF FUNDS TO BE RAISED County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said municipality, at their Fire regular meeting place, on the 29th day of August, 1944, will consider the fol- FUNDS REQUIRED FOR EXPENSES Township Special Tuition Bond Judgment Protection August 1, present year, to December 31, of Fund School Fund Fund Fund Bonds Fund TOWNSHIP BUDGET CLASSIFICATION ensuing year 1. Total Budget Estimate for Incoming Year $40,625.00 $26,000.00 $43,170.00 $10,200.00 Township Fund Special School Fund 2. Necessary Expenditures to be made from $4,300.00 $1,000.00 Salary of Trustee $ 600.00 Repair of Buildings and care Appropriations Unexpended July 31, of Office Rent 60.00 of Grounds 615.00 present year 8,362.00 9,812.00 17,822.00 Trustee's Traveling Expense— 125.00 Repair of Equipment, except 3. Additional Appropriations to be made 1,000.00 850.00 Office Supplies, Printing and School Buses — 100.00 August 1, to December 31, of present-year 7,000.00 1,400.00 2,400.00 Advertising 280.00 School Furniture and Equip­ 4. Outstanding Temporary Loans to be paid I__y of Advisory Board 75.00 ment, exeept School Buses 500.00 before December 31, of present year, not Compensation for Assessing — 325.00 School Supplies, other than included in Lines 2 or 3 Fire Protection 500.00 Janitors' Supplies 200.00 5. Total Funds Required (Add Lines 1, 2, 3 Care of Cemeteries . 25.00 Janitor Supplies 200.00 and 4) 55,987.00 37,212.00 63,392.00 5.300.0Q 10,200.00 1,850.00 Examination of Records 200.00 Fuel for Schools 680.00 Miscellaneous 200.Q0 Loans, Interest and Insurance 100.60 FUNDS ON HAND AND TO BE RECEIVED School Transfers 2,000.00 FROM SOURCES OTHER THAN THE PRO­ Total Township Fund __. .$ 2,390.00 Janitor Service 1,345.00 POSED RATE OF TAX LEVY Transportation of Children — 3,362.00 Tuition Fund Light and Power 250.00 6. Actual Balance, July 31, present year ___ 9,237.00 3,302.00 14,997.00 O.D. 540.00 592.00 436.00 Pay of Teachers 9,582.00 Contingencies , 300.06 7. Taxes to be Collected, present year (De­ School Transfers 7,000.00 Miscellaneous 325.00 cember Settlement) 4,190.00 8,463.00 5,446.00 1,760.00 5,920.00 390.0Q 8. Miscellaneous Revenue, other than from •^!>,'^ y-\'2\••:•" Total Tuition Fund $16,582.00 Total Special School Fund—$ 9,977.00 Tax Levy, to be received from August 1 of present year to December 31, of en­ ESTIMATE OF FUNDS TQ BE RAISED suing year. (See schedule in Trustee's FUNDS REQUIRED FOR office ) EXPENSES (a) Special Taxes (See Schedules) 612.00 2£.260.00 357.00 : August 1, present year, to Closed (hi All Other Revenue (See Schedules) 4,500.00 7,050.00 December 31, of ensuing year Township Special Tuition Bank 9. Total"FundsT (Add Line. 6? T 8aand 8b} 17,927.00 12,377.00 53,753.00 1,220.00 6,869.00 736.00 Fund" School fund Fund Account 1. Total Budget Estimate for ?'---*•' l°- gliiJb^WSt.^w6-^™™ 38,060.00 24,835.00 9,639.00 4,080.00 3,331.00 1,114.00 Incoming Year $ 2,390.00 $ 9,977.00 $16,582.00 11. Operating Balance (Nbf in excess of Ex- 2. Necessary Expenditures to be made from Appropria­ FaSufSeveLe fo/sTme'peHod)^61' 8,608.00 1,315.00 2,367.00 339.00 4,447.00 34.08 tions Unexpended July 31, 12. A^lnt to be raiied by Tax K ______46,668.00 26,150.00 12,006.00 4,419.00 7,778.00 1,148.00 of present year 1,665.00 6,585.00 10,974.00 3. Additional Appropriations PROPOSED LEVIES l|i|s to be made August 1,. to South Bend Net Valuation of Taxable Property £ *^'I_«'_o2 December 31, of present year _' -2 ____—._ 100.00 Portage Net Valuation of Taxable Property _.-»«,--:. 4. Outstanding Temporary Total —. — - $155,586,680 Loans to be paid before 612 December 31, of present Number of Taxable Polls i year, not included in Lines Levy on Levy on Amount to 2 or 3 irTTT.r»cj Polls Property Be Raised 5. Total Funds Required (Add Township " $ 03 $46,668.00 Lines 1, 2, 3 and' _) 4,055.0,0 16,662.00 27,556.00 Ifflll SchoOf $100 75 26,159.00 FUNDS ON HAND AND TO BE 1900 RECEIVED FROM SOURCES Bond —— -""-"—------__------"------•-% M Tbwshfp'judgment" Bonds"_I--__ *°05 l'!l*nn OTHER THAN THE PRO­ GS3 POSED RATE OF TAX LEVY Fire Protecttcai 1,148.09 6. Actual Balance, July 31, Total _ 1 $1.00 $1.29 $98,169.00 present year 2,857.00 11,004.00 12, 814.00 4,536.14 7. Taxes to be Collected, pres­ COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF TAXES COLLECTED AND TO BE COLLECTED ent year (December Settle­ fo Be ment) 772.00 1,192.00 597.00 Collected Collected Collected Collected Miscellaneous Revenue, _-*irNTT-»<5 1941 19_8^5#^ 1943 1944 other than from Tax Levy, TWr-^hir*-. - - $ 6,648.00 $13,721.00 $ 7,5.30.00 $10,762.00 to be received from August ir^Hal School - 12,414.00 13,778.09 15,738.00 21,998.00 1 of present year to De­ T?Htinn * """ Z"_ 7,785.00 12,025.00 6,200.09 14,890.00 cember'SI*, of ensuing year. (See schedule in Trustee's i"'T •' • ."a 3,743.00 3;083.09 3,497.00 4,738.00 Office.) ToZshTp""jud"gmenV"Bo"n"d"s"::::::::--: _—: 13,296.00 e.seo.oo 7,530.00 15,375.00 (a) Special Taxes (See Fire Protection 616.00 794-00 778.00 Schedules) _ 7,098.00 Total $43,886.00 $50,083.00 $41,289.00 $68,541.00 (b) All Other Revenue (See Schedules) Taxpayers appearing shall have a right to be heard thereon. After the tax levies have been determined, and pre­ 9. Total Funds (Add Lines 6, sented to the County Auditor not later than two days prior to the second Monday in September, and the levy fixed by 7, 8a and 8b) 3,629.00 12,196.00 22,509.00 the-County Tax Adjustment Board, or on their failure so to do, by the County Auditor, ten or more taxpayers feeling 10. Net Amount to be raised themselves aggrieved by such levies, may appeal to the State Board of Tax Commissioners for further and final hear­ for expenses to December ing thereon, by filing a petition with the County Auditor hot later than October 15, and the State Board will fix a date 31, of ensuing year 326.00 4,466.00 5,047.00 for hearing in this County. STEPHEN C. GRZESKOWIAK, Trustee of Portage Township. 11 Operating ' Balance (Not in excess of Expense January Dated August llth, 1944. 8:11-18 1, to^tS*.-* 30, Less Miscel­ laneous Revenue for same 2,494.00 NOTICE TO THE TAXPAYERS OF PORTAGE TOWNSHIP NOTICE TO THE TAXPAYERS OF PORTAGE TOWNSHIP Period) 1,0*26.00 1,723.00 ST. JOSEPH COUNTY, INDIANA 12. Amount to be raised by ST. JOSEPH COUNTY, INDIANA ~ Tax Levy 1,352.00 6,189.00 7,541.00 NOTICE is hereby given by the undersigned that a NOTICE Is hereby given that on the 29th day pf Au­ • -__ss*-g . - i*w special meeting of the Portage Township Advisory Board PROPOSED LEVIES gust, 1944, at the office of the Township Trustee of Por­ .$1,352,010 wiH be held at the office of the Township, 405 N. Lafayette tage Township, St. Joseph County, Indiana, at the hour Net Valuation of Taxgple Property 210 Blvd., South Bend, Indiana, at the hour of one o'clock Number of Taxable Foils of 7:30 P. M. (CWT), the said Township Trustee and'the P. M. (CWT), on the. 22nd day of /(.ugust, 1944, for the Advisory Board of said township, wS_ meet for the pur- Levy on Levy on Amount to purpose of considering and passing ordinances for addi­ pose of fonsiderirtg additional appropriations in/for the FUNDS Polls Property | Be Raised tional appropriations out of the Township Fund, to meet Snowing funds: Township $ .10 $ 1,352.09 the extraordinary emergency existing at this time as follows:' Special School $ -50 .45 6,189.00 For Tuition Fund No. 28, for Teachers Com­ Tuition -*—_ - £0 .55 - 7,546.00 For down payment on real estate and im­ pensation $2,400.00 Total $106 $1.10 $15,082.00 provements fpr housing the administrative For Special School Fund No. 12, for Building Offices'of the civil, school township and poor Repairs 300.00 COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF TAXES COLLECTED relief administration $ 5,000.00 For Special School Fund No. 13, for Equipment AND TO BE COLLECTED For the final payment for above mentioned To Be real estate and improvements to be paid in RepairsI--™----—------—-—------100.00 Collected Collected Collected Collected January, 1945 204)00.00 For StPecial School Fund No. 14, for School v iqjNDS 1941 1942 1943 1944 For repair and improvements of said property 2,000.00 "?nrf_rture and |S*qu-pment 100.00 Tdwnship ,$ 1,343-00 $ 1,610.00 $ 1,782.00 $ 2,172.00 For Special School Fund No. 15, for School Special School 6,923.00 " 7,015.00 7,925.00 3,313.00 Taxpayers may -appear at the session of the Advisory Supplies ———... 600.00, tuition -6,720.00 6,320.00 4,933.00 7,164.00 Board to be held on the 22nd day of August, 1944, and shall have the right to be heard, in respect to said ordi­ Fpr Special S-chp-pl Fund No. 16, fpr •T_-Pitor nance. Any additional appropriations as finally made will SWPUes —- 306-QO Total $14,986.00 $14,945.00 $14,640.00 $12,649.00 be automatically, referred to the State Board of Ta£ Com­ missioners, which board will hold a further hearing with­ Taxpayers appearing shall have the right-to be heard Taxpayers appearing shall have a right to be heard the_*een. After the tax in ffetteen (If) days at the County Auditor's Office. At and ten or more taxpayers, other than those who pay levies have been determined, and-presented to the County Auditor not later such hearing taxpayers objecting to such ordinance or po^ tax only, who' may deem themselves aggrieved $>_•* than two days prior to the'second Monday in September, and the levy fixed adcfltibrtaT appropriations may be heard, and interested such additional appropriations as may be approved, haay by the County £-_a_ Adjustment Board, or" on theifrfflilure so to do, by tike taxpayers may inquire of the County Auditor when such petition the Indiana State Tax Board for a hearing therein. hearing will be held. County Auditor, ten ofi mare taxpayers feeling themselves aggrieved by such Dated tijis llth day of August, 1944. levies, may appeal to the State Board of Tax; Commissioners for further and Dated this llth day of August, 1944. final hearing thereon, try JWng a petition with the County Auditor -ngt later STEPHEN C. GRZESKOWIAK, ' STEPHEN C. GRZES_?OWIA_$, than O-tobes- 15, and the State Board will fix a date for hearing in this County. Township trustee, Portage Township, Township Trustee, Portage Township, WILLIAM F. SHIRK, Trustee, German Township. St. Jbseph County, Indiana. St. Joseph County, "Indiana. Dated August 8th, 1944. * 8:11-18 8:11-18 841.13 Page Fourteen THE MIRROR

Said defendant is hereby notified that in the said estate, that said Adminis­ WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of dersigned has been appointed by the LEGAL, NOTICES said cause will stand for trial on the trator has filed in this court his ac­ the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2 at Judge of the Circuit Court of St. _*t>? 25th day of September, 1944, the same count and vouchers for the final set­ South Bend, Indiana, 28th day of July, seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION being the 1st day of the September tlement of said estate, and they are 1944. istrator of the Estate of Mildred L. Estate No. 8343 term of said Court commencing at the iMWeby required to be and appear in FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. VanHuffel, late of St. Joseph County^- NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ city of South Bend, on which day siaid said court on the 25th day of Septem­ JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. deceased. dersigned has been appointed by the defendant is required to appear to said ber, 1944, when the same will be heard Garnitz and Krueger, Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ action. and make proof of their heirship, or Attorneys for Estate. . 8:4-11 Emerson J. _j"1mmerman, seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, clerk. claim to any part of said estate, and Administrator. istratrix of the Estate of Rodney H. By Golda S. Butler, Deputy. show cause if there be, why said ac­ NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION July 24th, 1944. Bmckford, late of St. Joseph County, Chester L. DuComb, count and vouchers should not be ap­ Estate No. 8340 Rollo BonDurant, deceased. Attorhey for Plaintiff. 7:28—8:4-11 proved. NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ Attorney for Estate. 8:4-11-18 SSaid estate is supposed to be solvent. Ruth C. Clayton, NON-RESIDENT NOTICE Administratrix. Cause No. 69486 NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES JTuly 26th 1944. STATE OF INDIANA Yjfilford V. Walz, COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: In the matter of determining the Tax Rates for Certain Purposes 1 Before the Attorney for Estate. 8:4-11-18 In the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1. by City of South Bend, Indiana J Common Council May in Vacation Term, 1944. NOTICE is hereby given the taxpayers of South Bend, St. Joseph County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers | NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Estate No. 8342 PATRICIA RAMSAY RUML ot said municipality, at their regular meeting place, on the 28th day of August, 1944, will consider the following budget: {NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ vs. ;|pv** BUDGET CLASSIFICATION FOR CITIES dersigned has been appointed by the WENTZLE RUML III . GENERAL FUND Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ Cemetery Department STREET AND TRAFFIC FUND seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ Be It Known, That the above-named Mayor's Office N3_? Personal Service - $ 11,932.00 Street Department istratrix of the Estate of Stephen F. plaintiff has filed in the office of^the Personal Service $ 6,176.00 Contractual Service 640.00 Contractual Service 560.00 Personal Service $141,818-17 Brown, late of St. Joseph County, de­ Clerk of said Court her complaint Supplies 1,420.00 Contractual Service *Jjs3 4,845.00 ceased. against said defendant in the abovt Supplies 50.00 Properties _-__ :__. 300.00 Current Charges 8.50 Supplies _?£ 13,025.00 Said estate is supposed to be solvent. cause together with a proper affidavit Material 28,000.00 that said defendant is a non-resident Police Department . Joanna V. Romine,; City Controller's Office Current Charges «K^-*: 30&J0O** Administratrix. of the State of Indiana. Personal Service $ 9,032.00 Personal Service $295,529.00 July 26th 1944. Said defendant is hereby notified that Contractual Service • 14,985.00 Contractual Service 11,230.00 Properties *•_ v '.-ZJF*-- 310,500.00 George A. Kurtz, said cause will stand for trial on the Supplies 1.200.00 Supplies 13,800.00 Traffic Department Attorney for Estate. 8:4-11-18 6th day of October, 1944, the same Current Charges 4,200.00 Properties . 9,350.00 Personal Service $ 11,565.00 being at the City of South Bend on .City Clerk's Office Contractual SteESFice 2-.4903BQ Fire Department Supplies 905.00 NON-RISSIDENT NOTICE which day said defendant is required Personal ^Service $ 6,864.00 Personal Service $347,066.00 Cause No. 69462 to appear to said action. Contractual Service 75.00 Contractual Service 6,700.00 Material _sj* - 1,290.00 STATE OF INDIANA FRANK J. BRUGGNER. Clerk. Supplies 800.00 Supplies 7,425.00 Properties 7,825.00 COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH, SS: By Marie Stansbury, Deputy. Current Charges 10.00 Properties , 17,000.00 OTHER BUDGETARY ITEMS 3_l the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2, Farabaugh, Pettengill, City Treasurer's Office May Term, 1944. Chapleau and Roper, Personal Service $ 7,970.00 Dog Pound Bond Fund Attorneys for Plaintiff. 8:4-11-18 Contractual Service 600.00 Personal Service $_1,728.00 Debt Payment and Interest—$526,000.00 Contractual Service ~ 75.00 CECIL J. WERNTZ Supplies 500.00 Park District Fund vs. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT Current Charges 1,000.00 Supplies 315.00 MARJORIE H. WERNTZ Estate No. 7605 Department of Weights and Measures Debt Payment and Interest__$ 32,059.08 Estate of Joan C. Andrzejewski. City Judge's Office Personal Service $ 1,760.00 City Plan Commission Be It Known, That the above-named By direction of Frank J. Allen, Ad­ Personal Service I i 8,336.00 Contractual Service 135.00 Personal Service $ 2,400.00 plaintiff has fiied in the office of the ministrator of the Estate of Joan C. Contractual Service 750.00 Supplies 200.00 Contractual Service 20.80. clerk of said court Superior No. 2 com­ Andrzejewski, late of St. Joseph Coun­ Supplies 100.00 Supplies 500.08 plaint against said defendant in the ty, in the State of Indiana, deceased. Properties 100.00 Electrical Department above cause together with a proper NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, Common Council Personal Service $ 18,742.00 Firemen's Pension Fund affidavit that said defendant is non­ legatees and devisees of the said dece­ Personal Servide^ : 4,500.00 Contractual Service 935.00 Personal Service $ 150.081 resident of state of Indiana. dent, and all other persons interested Contractual Service __ 100.00 Supplies^- 2,300.00 Contractual Service 275.00 Properties 612.50 Department of Law Supplies 25.00 Personal Service $ 7,518.00 Board of Health Current Charges 6-J&TASTI NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES Contractual Service 525.00 Personal Service $ 25,087.01 Policemen's Pension Fund Supplies 200.00 Contractual Service 7,935.00 In the matter of determining the tax 1 Personal Service $ 150.00 Department of Public Works Supplies 2,130.00 Contractual Service !1054J»i rates for certain purposes by Greene 5- Before the Township Advisory Board Current Charges « 98.73 Township, St. Joseph County, Indiana I and Safety Supplies 10(W0 Personal Service $ 9,573.33 Properties 230.00 Current Charges 66,048.87 NOTICE is hereby given the taxpayers of Greene Township, St. Joseph Contractual Service 157,201.00 Tuberculosis Clinic ADDITIONAL APPROPRIATIONS jf County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers-of said municipality, at their Supplies 1,900.00 Personal Service $ 6,300.00 FOR BALANCE OF 1944 regular meeting -place, on the 29th day of August, 1944, will consider the fol­ Current Charges 4,000.00 Contractual Service 2,500.00 lowing budget: Properties 500.00 Supplies 200.00 GENERAL FUND TOWNSHIP BUDGET CLASSIFICATION Sewer Department U. S. Public Health Clinic Township Fund Bond Fund Personal Service $ 25,123.00 Personal Service $ 8,786.91 8,900.00 Contractual Service 300.00 Board of Public Works and Safety Salary of Trustee $ 600.00 Principal Contractual Service i 745.00 Contractual Service $ 500.00 Interest 620.00 Supplies 1,075.00 Supplies _— 1,260.00 Office Rent 1 60.00 Material 2,000.00 Properties 175.00 Building Department Trustee's Traveling Expense _ 125.00 Total Bond Fund $ 9,520.00 Engineering Department 50.00 PARK MAINTENANCE FUND Contractual Service -_$ Office Supplies, Printing and Special School Fund Personal Service $ 21,593.00 Contractual Service 440.00 Fire Department Advertising 250.00 Repair* of Buildings and care Department of Parks • .$ 225.00 of Grounds 700-00 Supplies 625.00 Personal Service ,-$119,346.00 Contractual Service Pay of Advisory Board 75.00 Repair of Equipment, except Current Charges 15.00 Assessor's Compensation 325.00 Contractual Service 9,761.00 Electrical Department School Buses 250.00 Properties 800.00 Supplies 14,200.00 Supplies $ •' 75.00 Fire Protection 300.00 School Furniture and Equip­ Building Department Material _, 8,450.00 Care of Cemeteries 25.00 ment, except School Buses 400.00 Personal Service $11,900.00 Current Charges 2,540.00 STREET AND TRAFFIC FUND Examination of Records ' 150.00 School Supplies, other than Contractual Service 1,390.00 Current Obligations 1,300.00 Street Department Miscellaneous 400.00 Janitors' Supplies 600.00 Supplies 250.00. Properties 12,000.00. Contractual Service $ 975.00 Janitor Supplies 600.00 Complete detail of budget estimate may be seen in office of City Cleric or Controller. Total Township Fund $ 2,310.00 Fuel for Schools 1,300.00 Tuition Fund Janitor Service 1.950.00 ESTIMATE OF CIVIL CITY FUNDS TO BE RAISED Transportation of Children 8,300.00 Fire­ Police­ City Plan Pay- of Teachers .$28,000.00 Light and Power 600.00 FUNDS REQUIRED FOR EX­ Street and Park Park men's men's " Commis­ School Transfers 125.00 Miscellaneous 250.00 PENSES TO DECEMBER 31st Corporation Bond Traffic Maintenance District Pension Pension sion OF INCOMING YEAR: Fund Fund Fund Fund Fund Fund Fund Fund a' Total Tuition Fund $28,125.00 Total Special School Fund—$14,950.00 1. Total Budget Estimate for incoming year $1,119,487.00 $526,000.00 $222,363.67 $167j597.00 $32,059.08 $64,747.37 $66,403.87 $2,920.00 ESTIMATE OF FUNDS TO BE RAISED " 2. Necessary expenditures to FUNDS REQUIRED FOR be made from appropria- .EXPENSES - tions unexpended July 31st August 1, present year, to • of- present year . 467,453.68 263,800.00 108,946.41 66,942.59 25,147.16 24,550.00 23,604.00 185.00 December 31, of ensuing year Township Special Tuition Bond 3. Additional appropriations Fund School Fund Fund Fund necessary to be made Au­ 1. Total Budget Estimate for gust 1st to December 31st Incoming Year _ $ 2,310.00 $14,950.00 $28,125.00 $ 9,300.90 of present year 850.00 2. Necessary Expenditures to 4. Outstanding temporary be made from Appropria­ loans to be paid before tions Unexpended July 3l, Dec* 31_t of present year— of present year 1,460.00" 6,108.00 13,505.00 1,607.00 not included in lines 2 or 3 3. Additional Appropriations 5. Total Funds Required (add to be made August 1, to lines 1 2, 3, and 4> $1,587,790.68 $794,800.00 $331,310.08 $234,539059 $57,206.24 $89,297.37 $90,007:87 $3,105.00 December 31, J" of present year 320.00 FUNDS ON HAND AND TO BE 4. Outstanding Temporary RECEIVED FROM SOURCES Loans to be paid before OTHER THAN PROPOSED December 31, of present TAX LEVY: year, not included in Lines 2 or 3 6: Actual Balance, July 31st 5. Total Funds Required (Add of present year $ 219,494.61 $148,033.04 $87,850.82 /$ 40,464.66 $14,852.86 $10,381.08 $ 9,493.10 $2,663.43 Lines 1, 2, 3 and 4) 3,770.00 21,378.00 41,630.00 10,907.00 7. Taxes to be collected, present year (December FUNDS ON HAND AND TO BE settlement) ' 303,309.95 142,398.66 35,887.49 12,256.60 7,336.72 16,053.54 .00 ^RECEIVED FROM SOURCES 8. Miscellaneous Revenue to OTHER THAN THE PRO­ be received Aug. 1st of POSED RATE OF TAX LEVY present year to Dec. 31st 6. Actual Balance, July 31, of incoming year (Sched­ present year 1 821.00 2,107.00 8,510.00 377.00 ule on file in office of City 7. Taxes to be Collected, pres- Controller): a. Special Taxes (see - ent year (December Settle­ 9,025.00 245,000.00 2,010.00 623.00 440.00 1,265.00 .00 ment) •_ 1,083.00 5,861.00 6,159.00 3,016.00 Schedule) 168,000,00 b. Fees ahd all other rev­ 8. Miscellaneous Revenue, 29,444.23 5,857.50 §8 .00 other than from Tax Levy, enue (see Schedule) — 108.830.00 37,000.00 to be received from August T n ( S $115,362.15 $27,732.46 $47,602.03 $32,669.14 $2,663.43 1 of present year to De­ '• 7 ^^nd fb) --l!-!- -_- $ 799,634.56 $299,456.70 $332,850.82 cember 31, of ensuing year. 10. NET AMOUNT TO BE (See schedule in Trustee's RAISED FOR EXPENSES Office.) TO DEC. 31st OF INCOM- (a) Special Taxes (See R (d m e 9 119,177.-5 29,473.78 41,695.34 57,338.73 441.57 Schedules) 14,520.00 f?omY£t 5) !---_ - _- $ 788.156.12 $495,343.30 (b) All Other Revenue 11. Operating Balance (not in (See Schedules) 1,145.00 excess of expense Jan. 1st 9. Total Funds (Add Lines 6, to June 30th, less Misc. ™«11C ,n Q«,= o= 7,068.70 946.98 3,935.80 6,544.87 2,600.50 7, 8a and 8b) __- 1,904.00 7,968.00 30,334.00 3,393.90 Revenue for same period) 7_,_-i.__ -,,___._o 10. Net Amount to be raised 12. AMOUNT TO BE RAISED . for expenses to December Y 1 $126,246.15 $30,420.76 $45,631.14 $63,883.60 $3,042.07, 3l, of ensuing year 1,866.00 13,410.00 " 11,296.00 7,514.00 F_ and n^^i-l! --!! $ 860.607.28 $526,279.15 ~ 11. Operating Balance (Not in PROPOSED LEVIES excess of Expense January .$152,103,860.00 1, to June 30, Less Miscel­ Net Taxable Property __•_ . 17,652 laneous Revenue for same Number of Taxable Polls Period) 1 748.00 1,539.00 3,185.00 531.00 Levy on Amount to 12*. Amount to be raised by Polls Be Raised ; Tax Levy 2,614.00 14,949.00 14,481.00 8,045.00 NAME OF FUND $ .50 $ 860,607.28 General 526,279.15 PROPOSED LEVIES Bond l 12634815 Met Valuation of Taxable Property $2,011.W Park Maintenance 30,420.76 tfumber of Taxable Polls Park District ' 267 Firemen's Pension 45,631.14 Levy on Levy on Amount to Policemen's Pension .. 63,883.60 FUNDS Polls Property Be Raised City Plan Commission 3,042.07 Township $ .13 $ 2,614.00 Hospital 30,420.76 Special School $1.00 .73 14.949.00 $ .50 Tuition .72 14,481.00 TOTAL $1,103 $1,686,530.91 .40 8.045.00 Bond COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF TAXES COLLECTED AND TO BE COLLECTED Total $1.00 $1.98 $40,089.00 To Be Collected Collected Collected Collected COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF TAXES COLLECTED NAME OF FUND 1941 1942 1943 1944 AND TO BE COLLECTED To Be $ 780,514.35 $ 792,020.47 $ 785,029.38 General $ 825,930.70 Collected Collected Collected Collected Bond 131,360.13 171,16058 380,259150 FUNDS 1941 1942 1943 1944 70,263.14 97,862.50 101,180.35 92,783.32 Park Maintenance 1 .——- 89,586.37 Township $ $ $ 1,448.00 $ 2,565.00 Park District • * 36,161.06 30,083.78 31,941.80 Special School 12,127.08- 20,511.00 -*- 34,214.09 14408.17. 33,359.59 18,252.45 Firemen's Pension 26,402.79 Tuition 8,920.00 14,802.00 policemen's Pension — 26,884.61 41,496.35 5l.7_5.20 7,894.00 26,036.92 3,832.92 176.25 .00 Bond 9,412.00 City Plan Commission 219.50 Hospital 39,604.20 33,938.70 34,240.91 30,420.76 Total $31,907.00 $45,970.00 $1,124,662.44 i $1,203,718.28 $1,390,402.50 Taxpayers appearing shaliihave a right to be heard thereon. After the tax TOTAL * $1,112,257.71 lexies have been determined, and presented to the County Auditor not later Taxpayers appearing shall have a right to be heard thereon. After the tax levies have been determifted, and pre­ than two days prior to the second Monday in September, and the levy fixed by the County Tax Adjustment Board, or on their failure so to do, by the sented to the County Auditor not later than two days prior to the second Monday in September, and the levy fixed by County Auditor,,ten or more taxpayers feeling themselves aggrieved by such the County Tax Adjustment Board, or on their failure so to do, by the County Auditor, ten or more taxpayers feeling levies, may appeal to the State Board of Tax Commissioners for further and* themselves aggrieved by such levies, may appeal to the State Board of Tax Commissioners for further and final hear­ final hearing thereon, by filing a petition with the County Auditor not later ing'thereon, by filing of petition with the County Auditor not later than October 15, and the State Board vfflsfix a than October 15, and the State Board will fix a date for hearing in this County. date for hearing in this County, a _a_6._^L__k^B ,«,_ „ t „ ELDON YODER, Trustee, Greene Townshipi RALPH H. LONGFIELD, City Controller. Dated August 7th, 1944. 8:11-18 Dated August 1st, 1944. 8:4-11 AUGUST 11, 1944 Page Fifteen

NQT-PE OF ADMINISTRATION NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION .LEGAL NOTICES Estate No. 8346 Estate No. 8330 Notice To Taxpayers Of NOTICE OF FINAL AO60UNT ANSWERS TO NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ NOTICE is hereby given ttart the un­ Estate No. 6796 dersigned have been appointed by the dersigned has been appointed by the Tax Levies Estate of Hannah A. Kremer. Judge of the Superior Court No. 2 of Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ seph County, State oi Indiana, Execu­ In the matter of de- 1 By direction of The First National Test Your I. Q. St. Joseph County, State q_ Indiana, dermining the tax . Bank of Mishawaka, Executor of the Executors of the Estate of Jeanette tor of the estate of William A. Wie­ ^ Estate of Hannah A. Kremer", late oi Krueger Horowitz, late of St. Joseph gand, late of St. Joseph county, de­ rates for certain pur- | Before the St.}Joseph County, in the State of In- County, deceased. ceased. noses by the civil \. Board of ^dia_ia, deceased. 1. All of us. W^e all color Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. town of Roseland, St. j Ifown Trustees The" National Bank and Trust Joseph County, Indi- | IjOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, blind in the center of our eyes; Marvin A. Krueger and legatees and devisees of the said dece­ Irving Garnitz, Executors- Company, Executor. ana. ^**?iP j the color of a very tiny object July 31st, 1944. July 17th, 1944. dent, and all other persons interested NOTICE is hereby given the taxpay­ in ythe said estate, that said Execu­ is indistinguishable to a direct Garnitz and Krueger, Doran and Manion, -Attorneys for Estate. 8:11-18-25 Attorneys for Estate. 7g28—8:4-11 ers of Roseland, St. Joseph County, tor has filed in this court its ac­ scrutiny. Indiana, that the' proper legal officers count and vouchers for the final set­ of said municipality, at their regular tlement of said estate, and they -i|se 2._ Coast Guard; captured meeting placeT on the 28th day of Au­ hereby required to be and appear in German weather lookouts on NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES gust, 1944, will consider the following said court oh the llth day of Septem­ budget: ber, 1944, when the same will be heard Greenland. In the matter of determinipg the tax "j and make pr-ftM of thejjr "heirship, or 3. Plenty. The Garand rifle rates for certain purposes by Madison \ Before the Township Advisory Board BUDGET CLASSIFICATION FOR claim to any part of said estate, and involved 35 man-hours in 1939, Township. St. Joseph, County, IndiaAa J show cause if there he," why said ac­ TOWNS count and vouchers should not be .ap­ 12 in 1941, six now. JJO_^CE is hereby given the taxpayers of Madison Township, St. Joseph General Fund County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said municipality, at their proved. 4. Arreciferos. 1 SERVICES PERSONAL ^y**' -WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of regular meeting place, on the 28th day of August, 1944, will consider the fol­ 11 Salary of Trustees $ 90.00 5. Hazel and Brazil nut?; lowing budget: the §>t. Joseph Circuit Court at South 12 Salary, Clerk-Treasurer_ 120.00 Bend, Indiana, 25th day of July, 194* then yie chestnut, almond, wal-, TOWNSHIP BUDGET CLASSIFICATION : 13 Salary, Town Marshal ___ 120.00 sefc&KfK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. nut. and peanut. Township Fund Bond Fund 17 Compensation of Stre*et JQHJJ $. HANLElf, Deputy. Salary of Trustee $ 90Q.00 Principal —1 $ 4JJQ8..08. 300.00 C.*W. Bingham, (Questions On Pase 7) Office Rent . 120.90 Interest _ 1,000.00 18 Other Compensation 25.00 Attorney for Estate. 8:4-11 Clerk Hire _0ft._0 SERVICES CONTRACTUAL Trustees Traveling Expense 150.00 Total Bond Fund $ 5,500.00 22 Heat, Light, Power and NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Office Supplies, Printing and 952.40 "Estate No." 8351: • in the said estate, tha* said Adminis­ Advertising , __• . 255.00 Special School Fund 23 Printing and Advertising 173.00 •NOTICE is hereby given that "the un­ tratrix has filed in this court her ac­ Pay of Advisory Board 1 75.00 Repair of Buildings and Care SUPPLIES dersigned has been appointed by the count and vouchers for the final set­ Compensation for Assessing 325.80 of Grounds $ 500.00 31 Office Supplies 25.00 Jldge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo**' tlement of said estate, and they are Examination of Records 75.00 32 Other Supplies 18.00 seph County, State of Indiana, Admin- hereby required to be and appear in Miscellaneous 2T5.00 Repair of Equipment, except MATERIALS '-STrator of the Estate of Willie Ann said Court on the llth day of Septem­ . School Buses 300.00 42 Street, Alley and Sewer 1,600.00 BSone Finley, late of St. Joseph Coun­ ber, 1944, when the same will be heard Total Township Fund $ 2,275.00 School Furniture and Equip­ CURRENT CHARGES ty, deceased. 1 and make proof of their heirship, or ment, except School Buses _ 400.00 51 Insurance and Official Said Estate is supposed to tee solvent. Tuition Fund claim to any part of said estate,' and Fay Of Teachers __1* _,__„_$_S6,500.00 SehQOl Supplies, other than Bond Premium — 20.00 .Charles if. Wills, Administrator. show cause if there be, why said ac­ 52 Rents _ - - 10.00 August 3nd, 1944. count and vouchers should not be Janitor's Supplies 1,000.00 Total Tuition Fund $36,500.00 Janitor Supplies 750.00 53 Ind. Municipal League:- 10.00 Charles H. Wills, approved. DEBT PAYMENT Attorney for Estate. 8:4-11-18 WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal cf Poor Relief Fund Fuel for Schools 1,208.QQ 81 Principal on Bonds — 450.00 the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South 1. Direct Relief: Loans, Interest and Insurance 1,588.6ft 82 Interest on Bonds __ — 22.50 NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT/ Bend, Indiana, 28th day of July, 1944. Bl. Medical, Hospital and Janitor Service —— 2,400.00 Estate No. 2916 FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. Burial : 425.98 TOTAL GENERAL B2. Other'Direct Relief _ 500.00 Transportation of Children __ 18,550.00 Estate of Karolina Borsody. JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. Light and Power ___- -L_-,_~ 1.100.00 FUND $3,929.90 By direction of Michael Zahoran, Z. Dekelbaum, B3. Total Direct Relief iministrator de bonis non of the Attorney for Estate. * 8:4-11 (Total Bl and B2) 925.00 Contingencies ./^-ap^- 300.00 ESTIMATE OF TOTJ?N FUNDS TO BE Jrat_ of Karolina Borspdy, late of St. Miscellaneous J. \*,*#PJQ.OO W~T RAISED Reph County, in the State of Indiana, NON-RESIDENT NOTICE Total Poor Relief Fund .$ 925.00 /ol FUlW3_^BJEQUIRED FOR EX- deceased. Cause No. 69369 Total Special Schfol Fund__$29,0Q0.00 HE-NSBS TO T-l-t^iMBER 31st NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, STATE QF INDIANA General iJegatees and devisees of the said deee- ESTIMATE QF FUNDS TO BE RAISE? OF INCOMING YEART""»-«»- COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH, S&: _G_.'.r_S BS-it, and all .other persons interested In the St. Joseph Circuit Court, FUNDS REQUIRED FOR 1. Total Budget Estimate for in the said estate, that said Adminis­ May Term, 1944 EXPENSE* incoming year $3,929.90 trator has filed in this court his ac­ August 1, present year, to Township Special jjjf -Tuition Bond 2. Necessary expenditures to count and vouchers for the final set­ MARGARET DAGNEAU /, e r r a tlement of said estate, and they are '•fife December 31, of ensuing year Fus-IT School Funds* Fund Fund be raad from aPP °P i " hereby required to be and appear in Q. E. D-iGNEAU 1. Total Budget Estimate for tions unexpended July 31st said Court on the llth day erf'Septem­ Incoming Year $ 2,275.00 $29,000.00 $36,500.00 $ 5,500.00 of present year 1,873.25 ber, 1944, when the same'will be heard Be It Known, That 1-he above-named 2. Necessary Expenditures' to 3. Additional >. appropriations and make proof of their heirship, or Plaintiff has filed in the office __- the be made from Appropria­ necessary to be made Au­ claim to arty, part of said estate, and Clerk of said Court ____•• complaint tions unexpended July 31, gust 1st to December 31st show pause if there be, why said ac­ against said Defendant in the above of pr4_5*ant' year 781.08 14,246.i 14,164.00 4,050.00 of present year count and vouchers should not be cause together with a proper affidavit 3. Additional Appropriations 4. Outstanding temporary approved. that said Defendant is a non-resident to be made August %, to loans to be paid before of the State of Indiana. December 31, Oct pjjesent Dec. 31st of present year WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of year _!__. : —not included in lines 2 the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South Said defendant is hereby notified that said' cause wj_l stand for trial on 4. Outstanding Temporary or 3 7— Bend, Indiana, 2nd day of August, 1944. the 2nd day of October, 1944 of said Loans to be paid before J FRANK' J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. Court commencing at the City of South December $1, of present 5. Total Funds Required (add JOHN E HANLEY, Deputy. Bend on which day said defendant is year, not included in Lines lines 1, 2, 3 and 4) $5,803.15 nFoseph W. Nyikos, required to appear to said action. 2 or 3 '_' Attorney for Estate. Jr-fiP' 8:4--ll FUNDS ON HAND AND TO FRANK 3. BRUGGNER, Clerk. 5. Totai Funds Required (Add BV RECEIVED FROM Lines 1, 2, 3 and 4) ___. 3,056.00 43,246.00 50,664.00 9,550.00 NOTICEtJ&F FINAL ACCOUNT By Agnes M- Szamecki, Deputy. SOURCES OTHER THAN Estate No. 8064 J. Chester and Elizabeth F Allen, FUNDS ON HAND AND TO BE PROPOSED TAX LEVY: Estate of Themas Albert Elvingto-U Attorneys for Plaintiff. ' 7/_-8 8:4-11 RECEIVED FROM SOURCES 6. Actual Balance, July ".31st By direction of Harold A. Kimball, OTHER THAN THE PRO­ of present year $2,593.14 Administrator of the Estate of Thomas NON-RESIDENT NOTICE POSED BATE OF TAX LEVY 7. Taxes to be collected, Albert Elvington, late of St. Joseph Cause No. 69469 present year (December STATE OF INDIANA settlement) — 460.00 County, in the State of Injpana, de­ Actual Balance, July 31, ceased. COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH. QS: 8. Miscellaneous Revenue to In the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2, present year 610.00 ,702.00 10,958.00 5,501.00 be received Aug- 1st of NOTICE la hereby given to the'h-jsrs, Taxes to be Collected, pres­ [legatees a*hd devisees of the said dece- May Term, 1944. present year to Dec. 31st ent year (December Settle­ of incoming year. (Sched­ 'denty arid a_F- other persons interested, ment) 800.08 10,300.0ft 4,428.00 2,128.00 in tha said- estate, that said Adminis^ CHARLES C. RIGLEY ule on file in office of City vs. Miscellaneous Revenue, Controller): tratcr has filed in this court hl_ a_- other than from Tax Levy, ^ourt and vouchers for the final set­ -..«**»«_!_«_ m-OLE-" a. Special Taxes (see Be It Known, That-lfeo |W--i*«_s i- to be received from August Schedule) 2,2_8.96 tlement of sa_d estate, and they are i a 1 of present year to Decem- he-eby required to be and appear in plaintiff has filed in the office of TnW 9. Total Funds (add lines 6, Clerk of said Court Superior No. .2 gi^t^ ^i-^jjf ensuing year. _ Court on the llth day of Septem- Office.) .g -j~-___Hstee's o -, 1944, when the same will be heard eomplaint against said defendant in 7, 8a and 8b) $5,280.10 the above cause together with a proper (a) Special Ta*x«T-t^i. NET AMOUNT TO BE n.i make proof of their heirship, or Schedules 1%, Jaim to any part of said estate, and affidavit that said defendant is non­ K2S-3SEB- EOS -EXPENSES resident of the state of Indiana. (b) Air Other Revenue 78,... 22,010.00 (de fucx !\ow cause if there be, why said ac- (See Schedules .UJtit and vouchers should not be Said defendant is hereby notttted that ffrom Une %J£Zce~ (not in said cause will'stand for trial on the Total Funds (Add Lines 6, ; 18,952.00 44,620.8- 205.00 pr'oved.'*K>-JMJ-f 25th day of September, l-*44> the same t, 8a and 8b) .—r 1.488.00 WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of 10. Net Amount to be raised rf^n.lfM^, .... 184.27 being of said Court commencing at the 1,716.00 th;3 St. Joseph-Circuit Court at South city of So-nth Bend on which day said for expense* to December 1,410.0ft 24,294.00 6,044,00 _nd, Indiana, 2nd day of August, 1944. defendant is required to appear to 31, of ensuing year AMOUNT TO BE R-ev^g^v. FRANK J. BR-K3-GNER, Clerk. Operating Balance (Not in 12. JOHJt E. HANLEY, Deputy, a?t u. excess of Expense January BY TAX LEVY (add lin^r--. ****<* ^ANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. 10 and ID 707a2 -seph W. Nyikos, By Golda S. Butler, Deputy. 1, to June 30, Less Miscel­ Attorney for Estate. 8:4-11 Seymour Jahseh, laneous " Revenue for same 3,266.00 5,174.00 4,074.00 PROPOSE© LEVIES Period) ------Net Taxable Property ^^Tra NCTICE^F FINAL ACCOUNT Attorney for Plaintiff. 7:28—8:4-11 5,790.00 Amount to be raised by 27,560.00 11,218.00 Number of Taxable Polls IJi Estate No. 7847 Z Estat3 of *Est«te Steffey. NOTICE OF INSOLVENCY Tax Levy ~.M ' Levy Levy Amount By direction"^Bf Ida M. Barnes,. Ex-. No. 7269 on on to t»e In the St. Joseph Circuit Court $3,819,080.00 ccutrix pf the Estate of Estelle Steffey, Not Valuation of Taxable Brope 319 _ • j Pniis Property Rajsea late of St. JosephgCo^ty, ta the State IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE P P y OF WALTER STANEK, Deceased. - Number of Taxable Polls .-_ 5SJr.l--.SSf S 10 $707.32 of Indiana, deceased.' Amount %o NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, . MARY STSNfcK, Administratrix roMP-AmATIVE STATEMENT OF Notice is hereby given that upon pe­ Be Raised C legatees and devisees of the said dece­ $ 2,172.0ft °TAXES COLLBCTED AND TO dent, and all pther persons interested tition filed; in said Court by me Ad- FUNDS mlmstratr-X of said estate, setting up Township 27,560.00 BE COLLECTED ^ Be in the said estate, that said Executrix 11,218.00 has filed in this court her account and the insufficiency of the estate of said Special School Cat- Col- Col- Col­ decedent to pay the debts and liabili­ Tuition 5,790.00 Name d Vou;hers for the final settlement of lected lected lected ?ec*« said estate, and they are hereby re­ ties thereof, the Judge of said Court Bond ot quired to be and appear in said Court did on the 21st day of July, 1944, find $46,740.00* on the 1-lth day of September, 1944, said estate to be probably insolvent, Total _s_™-_»_a. tss. •«& tisu. and order the sasae to be settled ac­ when the same will be heard and make COW-^X^ST^EMENT^TAKES COLLECTED Taxpayers appearing shall have proof of their heirship, or claim to cordingly. The creditors of said estate he are therefore "hereby notified of such right to be heard thereon. After in« any part of said estate, and show cause tax levies have been determined, and if there be, why said account and insolvency ahd required to file their Collected Collected Collected claims against said estate for allowance. ££•£&? to ^e County Auditor not vouchers should not be approved. 1942 1943 laterthan two days prior to the sec WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal,of Witness the Clerk and seal of said FUNDS « l^OO $ 1,610.00 $ 1,710.00 Court at South Bend, Indiana, this ond Monday in September, and the the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South Township '.innono 16,279.00 20,520.00 few toed by the County Tax Adjust­ Bend, Indiana,- 31st day of July. 1944. 21st day of July. 1944. pe SCh 01 8,050.00 7,866.00 ^FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. 7,406.00 5,814.00 ment Board, or on their failure so to FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. % S«r\ ° 9'So- do by the County Aa^tttor, ten ormoffi JOHN E, HANLEY, Deputy- 7-.8: 8:4-11 Jones., Obenchain and Butler, taxpayers feeling themselves» aggrieves $46,158.00 by such levies, may appeal to the State Attorneys for Estate. 8:4-11 NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION $39,704.00 $33,345.00 $35,910.00 Estate No. 833F Total Board of Tax Commissioners for _ur- After the tax NQTICE^OF FINAL ACCOUNT NOTICE is/ hereby given that the -rihfi shall have a right to be heard hereon. After me w* therHand final hearing thereon, tar Al­ undersigned has been, appointed by the Taxpayers app It-rfktaed. and presented to the County Auditor not later tai of petition with % Coxmty Audi­ Estate No. 8042 levies nave been Es*a,te of Antoinette Gundeck. Judge of the,©ircuit Qburt of St. Jo­ r to the second Monday in September, and the levy fixed tor not later than October 18. wC.2.* seph county, state of Indiana, adminis­ than two days pr f iditictment Board or on their failure so to do, fay the State BoSrd will fix a date for baftrgfe By direction oi Qenevieve J. Gun- by the County " deck, Administratrix of the Estate of trator-oj the est*** of «-fta L. Row, late $%& County, --UB—SNY,*- of St. -Joseph county, deceased. BErK^M^OBST1 Antoinette Gundeck. late oi St. Joseph levies, may Cout®« ife*^-*'State of Indiana, de- Said Estate is. supposed to te solvent. ^8U_UflB__Mj_&»f bT fiS a petiti^with the County. Auditor notQ *late r J- • F. S_gl&;Trustees.- -Arthur fi. Row, Admin-Stratory nnafinali ww*«*hearings }h&teon, oy niius^ v *^./fi date for hearing in this Gounty. than October $7and the State Board jgSfe^T^ee. Madison TwngOj^ Dated this 3*d day et'tWAl**!*' J^'tg NOTICE is hereby giv*fA% & ifee heiflfe .^Mb?. fist, tw& _. legatees and devisees of the said decfc-** Hammerschmidt & Johnson. Dated August 7i]_, 1-44. deal,.and all othea-persons interested Attorneys for Estate. . 7_28—aA-11 THE MIRROR

New Russian Teachers Graduated: ••—British Speed Limit—20 Mfy Mrs. D. & Mrs. B. Of 25,000 young specialists grad­ Because the speed limit in bl AROUND THE WORLD uated from pedagogical institute^ up areas in Great Britain has in Russia, 50 per cent will be as­ 20 miles per hour during the signed to teach in liberated re­ many British children never IN THREE MINUTES gions where 2,500 schools will be known fast traffic on their re reopened this year, the Soviet on.-* So that the children may gej formation bulletin reports. ; j§iK2 customed to fast traffic aftei Men Wanted—90 Days Only GI's Overseas See More Movies war; the parliamentary secrt Twenty thousand strong, healthy . American service men overseas Rural Electrification in Manitoba to the Ministry of War Tranj American men are needed imme- see more and better pictures than suggests that the speed jdi^ly for _tt least 90 days to turn the folk back home and often see In connection with plans for ex­ should not be removed hastil out forgings and castings for cyl­ the films first. Overseas forces tension of rural electrification", inder blocf-S and heads for en­ usually see three new movies each home owners in the Province of gines in ships, planes, tanks, land­ week. Manitoba, Canada, are to provide A Berlin commentator fa ing craft and heavy trucks. These the Manitoba Power Commission 'We have no reason to fof workers arevxieeded in Buffalo, Netherlands Gets New Coins with a map of their property and the ostrich policy." He is , Chicago, Cleveland, Pitts­ adjoining areas. To install an wise. Just let the Nazis ge| burgh, Detroit, Milwaukee, Phila­ Coins minted from lend-lease average farm electric unit will THAT posiiion once and delphia, Muskegon, Indianapolis silver are being prepared in the cost about $675, and the monthly what happens! SGHH and many other industrial centers. United States for use when Allied service rate probably will not ex­ •ph-Hocal U. S. Employment Serv­ armies of Liberation enter Ger­ ceed $3.60. ice offices are now launching re­ man-occupied Holland. The Neth­ Quadruplets don't really nee cruiting •campaigns. erlands government will pay the each other. The four Keys si minting charges.' Japs Are Short of Cotton ters have proved by four mar­ While the United States seeks riages, that they are not interde-j Put Idle U. S. Tractors to Work U. S. Writers Wed Aussie Girls milkweed floss as a substitute for pendent, but on the contrary, ar Owners of idle used tractors Japanese-controlled kapok to use capable, happy individualists, sep*] either should sell or rent them Five American newspaper cor­ in life jackets, the Japs are trying arated or not. Read the story now that they can get a price that respondents in the southwest Pa­ to use kapok as a substitute for their lives, in The Americ. represents a fair return on their cific have married Australian girls cotton, official Netherlands and Weekly, the magazine distributee original investment. The price within a month,\the Australian Netherlands Indies News Agencies with next week's Sunday Chicagq maximum "as-is" price for 1939 News says. say. They recently have experi­ Herald-American. equipment, for example, is five mented in making absorbent cot­ per cent higher than that former­ British Cow Sets World Record ton from kapok. ly permitted for used equipment A 15-year-old British cow has irrespective of age. Four thou­ produced more than 20,000 gallons Mr*. Thomas E. Dewey, left, Glasses Correctly Fitted sand tractors are needed, and a of milk, thus establishing a world and Mrs. J oim W. Bricker, program is under way to get them record for a Shorthorn. Her rec­ mates c_f the G. O. P. running through voluntary sale, rental or ord milk yield for one year was WINDOW contracting. mate*, pose in the executive Est. 1900 2,000 gallons. garden at Albany, N. Y. CLEANING Sweet Potato in Asia How Many Do You Know? slavian especially, but there are J. Burke In Central Asia, the American The United Kingdom Informa­ Partisan groups in other countries, W. C. Bogardus sweet potato is more productive tion Office recently asked readers Greece and France, for example"; The Sooth Bend Window and requires less labor and care to give the nationality of the fol­ Evzones — Greek; Leathernecks — E. C. Beery than white potatoes. The sweet lowing six fighting groups—Parti­ American (nickname for Marines); Cleaning Company Optometrists & Mfg. Opticians potato is being grown in hot and sans, Evzones, Leathernecks, Cos­ Cossacks—Russian; Anzacs—Aus­ 129 North Main Street arid regions where conditions are sacks, Anzacs and Maquis. Then, tralian and New Zealand; Maquis 228 S. Michigan Street Phone 4-3251 not suitable for cultivating white the U. K. information people gave —"Frenchmen fighting the Ger­ EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT potatoes. the answers: Partisans — "Yugo- mans in* the mountains of France." Is iherServctntsDoor Open itiYourHous^

T^g&a, innumerable electric lighting, cooking, refrigeration, air condition­ ipjU____f_Fwill do your bidding at the touch ing—that will enrich family life and enhance Pof a switch—provided you invite them health and welfare. into your home through the open door of Mdequate Wiring-^ You should start thinking and planning* adequate wiring. Without enough electric now for Electrical Living, whether you intend the key to Mod' circuits having larde enough wires—without to build a new home or to remodel the old. enough outlets conveniently placed, you limit ern Homemaking. The Electrical Home of Tomorrow will run as ihe uses of electricity. Ample channels must smoothly and easily—will serve you as'un* be provided for all tne appliances that will obstrusively as Electricity itself—it, by wise /XDEQUAT_\^ be available to make 'living more enjoyable. foresight now and action as soon as possible The future will bring wew developments—in after the war, you provide Adequate Wiring,