SOUTH BEND PUBLIC L1BRA1Y, 1 304 S.MAIN ST., CITY. SIXTY MILLION JOBS NOT SO MANY WHEN "WHITE COLLAR" BOYS GET MOSCLED IN

SERVICE OUTWEIGHS SOLIDS

FRIDAY, MARCH 16th, 1945 *££??*« FACTORY HANOS ONLY 25% of NEEOFOL at NATION'S RESIDENT ROOSEVELT'S 60,000,000 post­ the president wasn't talking so big after all. It ELIEVE IT war challenge, thrown at the country meant only about 8,000,000 more jobs than pre­ P mid-campaign, and which the opposition war, all manner of jobs considered, and these at OR ELSE undertook to laugh down, has now been taken up gainful employment instead of WPA. by American industry to the tune of 56,000,000 Notwithstanding the greatly increased labor ME A T O' THE COCONUT —and out of the wash conies the knowledge that (On Page Four)

-.-• BY -:- WITHERSPOON I Conquered Countries Finger Noses at Rescuers "Herm New- OT Russia, not Poland, or Holland, or Ar­ please, and already has the "big three" wonder­ some and Al. "GO FEATHER YOUR gentina, but France appears more and ing just how big was their possible mistakes Doyle are N more the big stumbling block on the road when after Africa, they took on Gen. Charles de plannin' to NEST" MADE G.O.P, to post-war peace. She'is getting cockey as you Gaulle, self-setup leader of the Free French un­ quit their jobs ANTHEM BY AUTHOR in the court derground, and sort of passed house, come I CAUSE AND EFFECT! up Gen. Henry Honore Gi- OF NEW COURT LAW April 2nd, an' raud. De Gaulle is proving himself exactly the adven­ the idear ain't original with them either," as Abe Martin, would put it,—and speakin' of I Cohered Cooties y,' J'j; turer, and "man of fortune," "th' ejjucashunal value of newspapers," that many feared. A growing might add, "jus' look 'ow they egsaggerated mystery surrounds de Gaulle's th' death and burial of John, Barleycorn." attitude and actions of France, However, people do die, and are buried, and now that American and Brit­ more or less certain, where there is a divorce, ish troops have freed that na­ or should be, John enters in—and the county tion from control by Germany. gets the children. Wherefore the new probate- This mystery was only juvenile court that has been foisted upon us deepened when Gen. de Gaulle, —and how much that we see by the papers, provisional head of France, can be depended upon? "In Ex-Editur Cale snubbed the president of the Fluhart's day," said Ken Hubbard (whom United States by refusing a7* Abe Martin aped), "they meant their words, invitation to meet with him. i but newspaperin' like evvurything else, seems It previously had taken on real bein' modernized." importance when the general Watch the new boy, the "emergency" boy, announced that France would ease in, with his retinue and take over. Well, turn Dakar into a great the Republicans gave us Superior Court No. French military base—a move 2 to make a job for a Republican, by ap­ that was regarded as a slap at pointment from the governor, and it has this country, with her deep in­ never had but one Republican judge since. * * * * terest in that spot. The story is There was mystery, too, WHO CAST DECIDING anonymous ; suroundiiig the exclusive deal one of those that General de Gaulle made "DIE" IN BRINGING things that with Premier Josef Stalin, act­ you can't quite ing for Russia. After that pin down. I deal, the French demanded " • PROBATE-JUVENILE don't believe "permanent presence of COURT TO REALITY it but it is cur­ French forces from one end of rent, that Gov. Ralph F. Gates had Senate the Rhine to the other," which Bill No. 200 on the "pocket veto" file until would .give France a dominant he got the "go sign" from a certain South voice in control of the Rhine- Bend man-—not National Committeeman E. land, Ruhr and Saar. They in­ M. Morris either. Maybe Morris just "passed sisted that France share the buck." "You have had a great deal tc (On Page Three) say in your paper in apparent opposition to the probate-juvenile court bill for St. (On Page Two) For People Whose Bowels "Bellyache" Their Brains HISPERING Jennies" of the G. O. Being crippled doesn't necessarily affect longev­ Street Scene P., who have been busy in every ity. Loss of some function of the body seems be­ (Copyright^ "W:presidentia l campaign, since and in- times to strengthen others. Now, however, the presi­ :luding 1932, consigning President Roosevelt to the dent is saving his energy for tasks ahead, and mak­ graveyard, have their answer in a recent account in By JAMES F. FARRELL ing wider use of the wheel chair; let the gossips AY, do I belong to the human race?" the the United States News (Washington),—remind­ old man asked himself aloud as he stood ing them of how badly they have been fooled, or whinney. He is going in for more relaxation and a 'S at the corner of Ninth Street and Michi- gossiped for scare purposes, many of the beliers hav­ different attitude toward the handicaps that resulted gan. It was an Indian summer afternoon. Across ing gone to their tombs while he survives. The can­ from infantile paralysis; his drawback. He has to fee street in Grant Park, there was a playograph recording the World Series base ball game be­ didate that they had, for instance, in 1940, would see officials, generals, admirals. Policing Germany, tween the St. Louis Cardinals and the New* York never have seen his term through, had he been moving troops from the European to the Pacific area (On Page Seven) elected. (On Page Five) II 4

Page Two THE MIRROiR

Here is what Sen­ lew Lop How to "Unscramble ators Mead (D. ELIEVE IT N. Y.), Ferguson (R. Mich.) and OR ELSE! Egg" Has Senatorial Mitchell (D. Wash.) learned in (From Page One) Committee Stumped Detroit from their county," the governor addressed the scribe or four days of hearings on the man-power situa­ words to that effect. "Now how do you really tion, seeking from management and labor sug­ stand on it? Do you want it or don't you? I'm gestion on how best to utilize the. man-power on told that you want it but don't want to offend hand. They found that: certain people. If you want it you can have it." 1. There apparently is a limit to the average war And the answer was, "I want it." worker's interest in money. If true it is an exhibition of duplicity, insin­ William Scott, superintendent of Chevrolet's forge cerity, and false pretense, that should forever con­ shop, testified that his workers stopped production sign the influence of that paper to "suspicion." after they earned $18 a day in ineentive pay. It can be settled by the voice of the paper itself. Carl Wilber of Timken-Detroit Axle Co. said his The man who is said to have said "I want it," men produced only their quota despite piecework is the man in supreme authority over there; no rates. *'!ff*'ii''. 2. ' War plant workers frequently loaf during the mere reporter. I'm not saying where or who but last hour of a shift. Spokesmen for the United Auto­ it isn't here—or situs of any South Bend paper mobile Workers (CIO) admitted it was a general that spiels weekly, or "weakly." If St. Joseph practice. The union contends it is entirely a man­ county owes that court to such double-cross, or agement problem. don't, it should know it. If the story is true the 3. Management unanimously believes that fac­ tories can produce from 10 to 35 per cent more war bill was all but dead when the voice in question goods on present manpower if the men will work performed not only a resurrection but ascension. harder. The bill is a law now. The paper owes it to it­ 4. The UAW-CIO believe auto manufacturers self, as well as the public, to affirm or deny its have joined in a concerted effort to "break" the responsibility. At present I am in doubL Please union during the post-war era. remove my doubt. 5. The auto manufacturers believe that the UAW- * * * * CIO is trying to take over management functions. With that information at hand the sena|§g^ 7 having investigated first hand, should know'ft^^ Better Sense Would ^TP ^ &y what to go about, and go about it,—but how? d n Monkey-business from the beginning, govern­ Have Given Superior bL\^ $U * mental, unionistic and industrial, all, are respon­ perhaps, than Adolf Hitler and Yoshihito Hirohito. Talk about sible, and as the elder J. Pierpont Morgan told Ail "i i is, right now, seeka-t militarism; they're employing the tactics of all four. It is mili­ Teddy Roosevelt when the latter set about to bi^fe Court Juvenile and j»st° **«*<* tarism politicalized. They're using it, with the club of patriot­ the North American Railway combine: "Yoif _ least excuse the 1m- ism in its support, to effect a post-war situation favorable to can't unscramble an egg." b their newdeological control. No, WLB and WPB didn't solve the loafing Probate Jurisdiction :^%J^ & That 900,000 boys, and on up, purportedly needed for the problem by their "incentive" allowance,—anoth­ fies. We have no more use for such a court than armed forces, savors of a plan for compulsory military training er way to get around the "Little Steel" formula a cat has of two tails, but assuming that probate lor pretty much everybody, whether congress orders such train­ without throwing down the bars to the mine workers, and others really more deserving of wage and juvenile matters should be handled by a ing or not; that is, pretty much everybody presently within the court, and not be referees of another court, why allowance?. And it is what we get from the pro­ not confer the jurisdiction especially upon one of age limits. And what they're doing to industry, private indus­ visos quite WLB forced into "collective contracts, the three county courts that we have; Superioi try, not engaged in war work, has all the earmarks of a wreck­ providing for "union maintenance" though Court No. 2, for instance—which from the start ing party similar to the one which under cover of the Federal avowing that they did not require union mem­ has been sort of 5th wheel on the county judicial Reserve system, launched the depression of 1929. While they bership. system anyway. It was created by a Republican prate loudly about small business, and what they're going to Go ahead and "unscramble the egg," bright assembly away back there in the early 20s to give do for it post-war, their process of leading up to it presages few boys. I never did like scrambled eggs anyhow. G. O. P. County Chairman Fred Klein a judicial if any of such businesses left to do with. ?|jfe status—something after the fashion of the present new court. Since Judge Lenn J. Oare resigned It is the old Eugene V. Debs formula to a "t". Give big business the leaway to swallow up, eliminate the little boys, and Admiral Jonas Ing­ back in 1923, to make better use of his time, the ram, commander of bench has been held down by Democrats (out­ when they've grown big enough, and powerful enough to pur­ Take Nothing from sue their natural oppression, the public will demand their pro­ Atlantic Fleet, is still side a brief appointment period) ; appointment apprehensive. He seeming quite the major way of Republican law­ scription, take-over, and that way socialism will come to power. Nothing and Count warned us Jan'y 8th yer getting anywhere in this county, with one Fred Vinson is head of the RFC loan agencies;' he is going to do that the eastern sea­ exception, since Judge Walter A. Funk. wonders for small business "employing from 100 up," and we What You Have Left board was in dange? Of course, to have amended the law creating guess, probably as has been, mostly to the "ups." Jesse Jones of V-bombs within 60 days, and now he says Superior Court No. 2. making it a probate-juve­ held it to those "needing $50,000 or more." "the danger is no less possible or probable now nile court, would have left no opening for a Re­ than then." What I would like to know is how publican judge. It is manned until 1946 — so When does a small business begin, and where does it end; how big must a small business be to be detectible, and how lit­ much "less" it could be? Nothing minus noth­ they saw to it that the judicial appointee of the ing isn't much. governor would hold not only until then but tle must a big business be. to be small ? Page Messrs. Byrnes and two years longer, — apparently contemplating McNutt, and page Fred Vinson. What are they working to­ Guess, however, we needed the scare just then. that henceforth the g. o. p. would be out forever. ward anyway? Is their goal to win the war or sack the country? War Mobilizer Byrnes and Manpower Commis­ Ordinarily such ad interim appointments end sioner McNutt made good use of it in promoting with the next general election, but not in this the demand of the Srmy and navy for 900,000 instance; nosirree! more men in-the armed forces, and combined with Otherwise, why the long ad interim term, and WPB, a "work or fight" program for everybody why not Superior Court No. 2 revamped into a else. And maybe it is just as well to keep the probate-juvenile court, saving the salary of the threat alive. Washington tells us the American judge, and the salaries of some if not most of the people are allergic to patriotic action until they clerks that it will need? Records could keep on at least think their backs are to the-wall. Calam­ moving through the county clerk's office same as ity, such as that, might also contribute to a na­ now, - - but oh no, that would never do. It tional anxiety for universal military training. It would eliminate jobs for several Republican might scare people, impromptu, into the labor clerks,—and that isn't what the bill was for. It unions, and acceptance of any or all sorts of re­ isn't what the law is for,—and to improve the gimentation, and no squawk about rations. service isn't what it is for either. It is a political plum grown on a crabapple tree. But we can forgive much in Admiral Ingram. Sure, whatever is, in this mundane world, is There hasn't been much excitement in the Atlan­ bound to have some faults. Nobody with a thing tic, this side, for quite a while, and he is no one­ to do can do it to please everybody—and especial - ly not those to whom only faults are visible. On sided admiral. Over in Germany the manpower the whole, however, the probate commissioner shortage is becoming "acuter" than it is here; the' and juvenile referee have been handling their absentee problem especially. Every day a few work satisfactorily: witness the testimony of the more war factories fail to show up for work— bar association rendered recently by almost unan­ and New York, Boston and even Chicago, have imous vote—-and the lawyers have about as much dealings with them as anybody; indeed, more never felt a shock. Take to your foxholes. Tha than everybody else. However, we have it, and danger is no less than it ever was. the best is the worse that we can afford to do WL So don't get cockey; we may be bombed yet.' with it. Germany said we would be; said it long ago—- and we used to have "blackouts," and drills, etc., Am more and in preparation of the emergency. Didn't "Lippy" Undermining Republic m 0 r e con­ Lindy tell us Germany would lick us, and didn't vinced with each' setting of our hero know everything. It is a wonder that By Newdeological Whim the sun that in we were ever able to get anybody overseas, lest in the category of their absence we might be attacked in New York, And Pleas to Loyalty undermining Boston, Washington, and elsewhere, as we were the Republic and reducing it to a totalitarian rat­ at Peafl Harbor. ing, War Mobilizer Jimmie Byrnes and Man­ power Commissioner Paul McNutt are the Al. You'll be seein' me- Capones and John Dillingers—better understood, —SILAS. MARCH 16, 1945 Page Three Snear at Herbert Hoover's "Rugged Individualism" and You Cynicize God AN of affairs at home for the evening, tired from, the day's thing. Put the men together and you have the world. WTien Herbert wranglings—but not too tired for his evening newspaper,— floover coined the term "rugged individualism" he pronounced the M was being pestered pink by his little daughter tickling his salvation of the human race—cynics and misanthorpes, soured and knee and asking "foolish" questions. Spying a map of European war dehumanized, notwithstnding. Hoover said a mouthful. ifjg activities on the front page, he tore it out, and into bits, and- says he, In London a large concourse of wise men were in conference. An "here is a jig-saw puzzle. Put it together." For a while he was. re­ Oxford philosopher arose, and said he, "in the light of astronomy, lieved to absorb the goings on of the day. man is negligible." It took. These men weren't egotists,, self-centered, The little girl, a first-grader, knew about as much about maps, and or superiority complexed. But then an astronomer arose, and "that Europe, as a theologian does about the map of heaven, but presently is interesting,"he interpolated, "but what of the astronomer? What she began jumping up and down, and clapping her hands: "Daddy 1 would astronomy be without him? Wrould there be any astronomy? did it! Daddy I did it!" Of course, the man of affairs, astounded, Is astronomy a Frankenstein ? Is the organized understanding of as­ switched his attention from the news to his own little girl. She had tronomy, creature of the man, obliterating the discoverer?" done it. She "must be a comer." The learned men were already becoming cynical of the Oxford "How did you do it ?" he asked almost begging. "Why," said the philosopher, but a geologist arose. "I might add," he said, "that geol­ youthful daughter, "there was a man on the other side of the sheet. ogy is wonderful, but; who made trie discoveries and, organized an un­ I put the man together and then turned it over." derstanding* of it ? I am a geologist. Am I negligible in the light of And there you have it. There is a man on the other side of every- the inanimate that I have pieced together for an understanding of BUY THE MIRROR AT NEWSSTANDS this mighty world?" A horticultifralist wanted Luther Burbank and John Buroughs Conquered Countries Finger paged. He told the story of the American bishop, Rev. William Quayle, D.D., of the Methodist church, who had a garden full of weeds, rare Noses at Rescuers specimen from all over the world, that he grew and cultivated, "just to prove the possibilities of training1 the wild." "It was one of the (From Pago OneJ Gaulle wants lend-lease assistance equally in the occupation of Aus­ in equipping a new French army. most beautiful collections of flowers and greenery that I ever looked tria. They sought to restore He also wants relief supplies, i rail­ at," he said. French leadership of the smaller road equipment, machinery and And even a mathematician took issue with the Oxford giant oij nations of Eastern Europe. raw materials to speed up economic learning. "Who put it down that two and two make four?' Mathe­ Although defeated in war, reconstruction in France. Despite France is demanding equality of the fact that Mr., Roosevelt has matics are indispensable to the performances of man and that is why position with the victors, and even stressed U. S. interest in the future we have them. Man worked it out. He is the premier of exactness. is seeking a special position by of Dakar, Martinique and Indo- You all call on him; man, the mathematician, when you want' to know playing one victor against another. China, General de Gaulle will de­ how little or how much. 'Negligible ?' I say indispensable, fundamen­ Out of this situation the mystery mand that France be acknowledged tal; all-important." has grown. "Yet inquiry discloses as the undisputed owner of those there need be no mystery, if Gen­ possessions. In return, he is ready And there you have it. Man isn't negligible anywhere. If you eral de Gaulle's aims are under­ to offer stepped-up French partici­ are at all theological, God made man after He had practiced on every­ stood," says United States News pation in the war against both Ger­ thing else—but woman,—and orthodoxically, He made him in His (Washington). "It is discovered many and Japan, and to relieve the own image. When you sneer at Herbert Hoover's "rugged individual­ that he apparently knows what he U. S. of part of the burden of post­ is after and is making shrewd war policing of Germany. ism" you cynicize at God,—but all theological aspects aside, man, the moves to.get it." Abbrevited: Here General de Gaulle's bar­ individual, the astronomer, the geologist, the botanist, mathematician, gaining power is weaker, and the educator, lawyer, physician, industrialist, or what not, is a scientific WHAT FRENCHMAN deals with Mr. Stalin and Mr. Chur­ indispensability to a world of intelligence or serviceable performance. SEEMS DRIVING AT chill may not help. That is said to Some people can't think, act, or anything, save in the terms of a Move No. 1 was a deal with Mr. be the reaj inside reason why Gen­ Stalin. In that deal, General de eral de Gaulle declined to meet Mr. mob. It is true that in "union there is strength," but the strength, Gaulle won recognition for France Roosevelt at Algiers. He felt he lies in the basic character of the individual units. "The whole is but as one of the two powers most in­ would be in a better bargaining po­ the sum of all its parts"; the weakest link in the chain determines terested in keeping Germany dis­ sition if he dealt with Mr. Roose­ its strength and the faultiest trait in a man's character measures the armed. He also obtained Russian velt at long range and retained a man. help in keeping the Communists in free hand to accept or reject any France friendly to his regime. propositions made. Monocracy, bureacracy, regimentation, economic security and so­ Thus, he made sure he would be in­ cial safety, or any totalitarianism, dictatorial or "democratically" cluded in post-war plans for Ger­ PLAYING DOUBLE-CROSS MAY NOT HELP HIM administered, undermine character by taking away the essential of many and reduced the threat of a self-reliance and substituting dependence on the dependable. Life left-wing revolution at home. This series of maneuvers by was never intended to be one of ease. Character, the consequence, In return, General de Gaulle General de Gaulle raises a question formed an alliance with Russia and as to whether France really can be like the physique, the citadel, develops from exercise. thereby removed Mr. Stalin's fears restored to her old rank as one of Babylon fell when pleasure and feasting became her big ambition; that France would join Britain in a the world's great powers. It also ease was substituted for energy. Rome followed a like decline. France closed western European bloc that raises a question whether General has been on the skids for fifty years. The German invasion was de Gaulle's snub of President might be aimed at Russia. temporarily a consummation—and fearsome that it will take more Move No. 2, now being planned Roosevelt and his indirect criti­ cisms of Prime Minister Churchill than a de Gaulle, as an appendix to the Big Three, and American lease- by General de Gaulle, is a deal with lend, to reestablish her self-reliant responsibility. Prime Minister Churchill, of Bri­ and Premier Stalin will hurt his ef­ tain. With the Russian treaty in forts to rebuild France. Will he And America! Look out, folks. Our newdeology is edging us his pocket, General.de Gaulle feels stand up much better than Marshal mighty close to the brink of mob incipiency. There is nothing1 new, Petain ? that he is in a position! to win im­ in the whole of history, to the trend. Confucious tried to pull China portant concessions from Mr. Chur­ Fundamentally, France is weak in several vital ways, and these out of it. Dependence of the individual on the government instead chill. He wants British consent to of the government on the individual, wipes out the individual. It a dominant position for France in points of weakness must be over­ control of the Rhineland and Ruhr. come if General de Gaulle is to be becomes one place in the universe, where man, the individual, really He also wants British support for completely successful. His real test does degenerate into the negligible—as the Oxford philosopher failed France to recover her empire in­ is at home. to spot him among the stars. Economic problems are the most tact, including special rights in Sy­ "What is everybody's business is nobody's business," said Aesop. ria and Lebanon. In return, he is immediate. The French people are prepared to bring France into a hungry and cold and poorly clothed. And what is nobody's business isn't anybody's—the spot at which limited economic grouping of west­ The railroads are just beginning to man ceases to function. If you're looking for a listless, aimless, all- ern Europe, and he may back Brit­ operate again. French industry, wise destitute humanity fifty or a hundred years hence—follow the ish claims to former Italian colo­ lacking raw materials, is almost at newdeological band. a standstill. nies. All these matters are being The music listens beautiful, and at that is more elevating to har­ discussed by General de Gaulle in Then, there is a sharp cleavage his current conversations with between the view3 of industrial mony, than the oldeological dirge. We can have a "rugged individual­ British leaders. workers on the left and those of ism," without the reputed Hooverian trimmings; "rugged" for the factory owners, farmers and small­ few and "ragged" for the many. Individualism in broad sense, wasl Move No. 3, if it goes through, town people on the right. That fairly well defined by Harum when he said "there is as much will be a deal with Mr. Roosevelt. cleavage, before 1939, several times From this country, General de (On Page Four) iuman nature in some folks as there is in others and sometimes more.**!

Publishers: Mirror Press, Inc., 307 West Jefferson Boulevard, South Bend, Indiana, Phone 3-2635. -Entered at the South Bend (Ind.) post office, Sep­ FSJ tember 2, 1909, as second class mail under act of congress of March 3, 1879 JOHN HENRY ZUVER. 5r, E&U* —and of the independence of the United States the 103rd. VOL. XLI—36th YEAR MARCH 16, 1945 No. 11 SOUTH BEND, INDIANA WEEKLY $1.50 A YEAR; COPY, 5c

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Conquered Countries Bonds Factory Hands Only 25% of # Finger Noses at Over America Needfyl at Nation's Work (From Page Four) for factories to employ these mil­ escuers productivity which wartime tech­ lions of people in the production of (From Page Three) nological advances have created, peacetime goods. threatened to plunge France into America's privately-owned manu­ "Second, that this fact is noth­ civil war. It still is a source of facturing industry will provide ing to cause despair. For the first danger to French national unity. from 3,400,000 to 4,400,000 more essential of a healthy post-war In this situation, General de jobs after reconversion from war economy is that our workers be Gaulle is urging the French people to peace than it did in 1939, ac­ properly distributed among the to refrain from impetuous action cording to Ira Mosher, president of various occupations which make up that might deepen divisions among the National Association of Manu­ that economy; and the best distri­ them. Some collaborationists have facturers. He so points out in re­ bution will be one in which a small­ been tried and sentenced, but thery vealing results of a fact-finding er proportion of Americans is en­ has been no indiscriminate purge survey of the plans of 1,756 indi­ gaged in manufacturing and a lar­ or massacre. Right now, General vidual manufacturers located in 43 ger proportion engaged in the serv­ de Gaulle is setting up a series of states. ice industries. industry commissions, run largely Since manufacturing normally "Thirl, that our main attention by labor commissioners, and is employs about 25 per cent of the must be concentrated upon giving backing a plan to place corpora­ nation's total working force, post­ these service industries every op­ tions under the joint control of war employment could be put at portunity to expand." owners, workers and representa­ 56,000,000, Mr. Mosher said, if oth­ The service industries include tives of the public. These meas­ KITTY HAWK er elements of the nation's econ­ everybody in wholesale or retail ures, however, go only a litle way, Distance was annihilated, war rev­ omy should make similar increases. trade; everybody working in trans­ toward the complete nationaliza­ olutionized by three years of glider Thus some 75% of that 56,000,- portation and communication; flights and a 59-second motorized tion of industry demanded by left- aeroplane test by the Wright broth­ 000 can be counted "white collar" bankers, brokers and insurance wing groups. Thus, General de ers at Kitty Hawk, N. C. In 1928 boys—and girls; office help, sales­ people; office workers generally; Gaulle is seeking to keep his left- residents of Kitty Hawk erected a men, merchants, bankers, ac­ monument to those historic tests: hotelkeepers and their staffs; do­ wing followers in line, and yet later the Federal Government dedi­ countants, clerks in stores; every­ mestic servants; teachers, publish­ avoid an extreme course that cated the Wright Memorial Monu­ thing that goes into our selling, ers, newspaper people, advertising would split France wide open. ment and a 350-acre park on Kill jobbing, wholesaling, merchandis­ Devil Hill "in commemoration of people; radio performers, every­ France's declining population is the conquest of air by the brothers ing, transportation, distribution, body in the movie arid theater busi­ another handicap. During this war, Wilbur and Orville Wright." Flights and currency and credit systems. ness; physicians, dentists, nurses; today of B-29's, fighter planes, If the customer demands it, serv­ the birth rate has been hit by the scouts and transports prove how ministers, social-service workers; absence of 2,500,000 French men vital were those tests and inspire ice is as essential to our economic artists, architects, authors, musi­ Americans to buy War Bonds for system as solids. cians, photographers. who are prisoners in Germany. In expansion of aviation to win com­ continental France there are now plete victory. £ U. S. Treasury Department "This volume of employment This list is far from complete. fewer than 40,000,000 people. Be­ must necessarily depend," the ma­ If you want to round it out for cause a large proportion of these nufacturers' head emphasized, yourself, consult your local classi­ are past military age, France is resources not found in continenta "upon a favorable economic cli­ fied telephone directory and see handicapped in any effort to raise a France. If the population of near­ mate; upon how quickly the gov­ what an infinity of service occupa­ big army. Moreover, within 25 by colonies is added in, France has ernment lifts its ban on reconver­ tions is represented. Somebody has years the French population may a total of 110,000,000 — enough to sion, and upon a national confi­ said that the classified directory drop to 35,000,000. That would be help her on her comeback road as dence shared by all elements of our should be required reading for only as much as the pre-war popu­ an industrial and~military power. society." economists, and the idea is good. It lation of Poland, substantially less Ninety-nine per cent of the 1,756 would help banish the idea that the PROPOSES BIG PORT manufacturers who reported their factory is everything. than that of Great Britain and IN POST-WAR GERMANY Italy, and only > half the pre-war post-war employment programs are You may have been struck with population of Germany. France's location on the Euro­ small to medium companies, Mr. the thought, "Why, most of the pean continent is the asset on Mosher explained, and the total people I know are engaged in the FRANCE ALSO HAS which General de Gaulle is relying does not include such major em­ service industries!" Of course. The ITS STRONG POINTS most, however. He knows that the ployers as General Motors, U. S. fact is that under peacetime condi­ Over against these French weak­ Big Three leaders do not want to Steel, General Electric, A. T. & T., tions some half of the workers of nesses are definite points of see continental Europe sink into and Westinghouse. America are engaged in them. strength, however. It is on these chaos or anarchy and that they Sixty-one per cent of the manu­ The proportion of Americans in that General de Gaulle is relying as want to keep Germany weaker than facturing concerns report they the service industries has shown, he tries to restore his country to her neighbors. On b e h a If of have no serious reconversion prob­ ever since 1870, a tendency to in­ a leading place in the world. France, he is offering! .to take a big lem, and could get the production crease ; and this is a sound develop­ part in the reconstruction of Eu­ of peacetime goods started "with­ ment. Two British economists, Al­ The French people themselves rope and to keep the smaller na­ have demonstrated repeatedly that out any delay." Twenty-eight per lan G. B. Fisher and Colin Clark, tions from falling again under the cent report they will require from have demonstrated that a compara­ they have the energy, resourceful­ sway of Germany. ness and spirit necessary to make one day to four weeks, and after tively primitive economy has a a rapid comeback from a national Taking everything together, eight weeks 95 per cent of all ma­ large proportion of its people en­ disaster. They have had long ex­ France under General de Gaulle is nufacturing companies will be in gaged in farming. As it develops, perience in democratic government. making an amazing recovery. The peacetime production. more and more people move over They possess varied industrial prediction of South Africa's Field Outlays of more than $600,000,- into manufacturing. And in a real­ skills, including an aptitude for Marshal Smuts that she never 000 to finance the transition from ly advanced economy, the propor­ management. Even though the old could regain her old-time stature war production to peacetime out­ tion of people engaged in the serv­ regime collapsed under the impact apparently is defied by de Gaulle. put are expected to be made by 881 ices gains at the expense of both of military defeat in 1940, the Already she is assured a place, if of the companies who reported in farming and manufacturing. French nation did not disintegrate. not snippy, as one of the five per­ the survey. This may shock people who are Now the French people are eager manent members'of the World Se­ Small companies, the survey under the impression that there is to stand on their own feet, fight curity Council. With U. S. help, showed, are marked for the sharp­ something "parasitic" about the their own battles, and manage she is building a new army and is est job gains. Those with less than service industries. Antiquated non­ their own affairs. preparing to rebuild her industry. 100 employees expect to go to 71 sense. Clark has found that among If the aims of General de Gaulle per cent above pre-war level, as an all the countries of the world the French agriculture is another are realized, she will become once average, while medium-size com­ ones with the largest proportion of source of national strength. The more the No. 1 power of the Euro­ panies (100 to 5,000 employes) ex­ people in the service industries are farmers of France are hard work­ pean continent outside Russia, and pect a gain of 32 per cent. Great Britain, the United States, ing and take good care of their soil. rank next below the Big Three in However, you will note that the New Zealand and Australia, in all Normally, France is nearly self- the world. NAM president doesn't say indus­ of which the standard of living is sufficient in food production. These are the ostensible things try, or manufacturing, will furnish comparatively high. He concludes French industry is an asset that General de Gaulle is driving all of this 56,00J,000 jobs. He that' a high concentration of people whose value is likely to be greater at, pretensively for the good of speaks of "other elements of the in the service industries is a sign in the future than, in the past. To France, though to people untutored nation's economy" making "similar of a high standard of living. If this begin with, most French factories in diplomatic maneuver, his meth­ increases." These "other elements'' country is to have a higher and came through the war intact. And ods of approach do not seem so in­ are reviewed intelligently by C. higher standard of living after the General de Gaulle sees that, if viting. Ordinarily, a country that Hartly Gratton in a recent number war, the movement into the service France, besides the iron of Lor­ has been rescued as America and of Harper's Magazine. "A colossal occupations is to be welcomed, raine, has access to the coal of the Britain have rescued the French error," he says, "is being made by planned for. Saar and the coal and iron of the from the Nazis, wouldn't turn the great majority of those who Translate this statement into Ruhr, she can become the leading around and slap them in the face, are discussing what America must terms of what you yourself would steel-producing nation on the con­ almost while they're doing it. One do to achieve post-war prosperity. like to look forward to* after the tinent, next to Russia. To bring might almost surmise that de When they speak of finding jobs war. To hear some economists and this about, France will have to mo­ Gaulle has some of that Polish for 11 million returning soldiers, government officials talk, one would dify her long-time policy of keep­ blood in him that sizzling from and sailors, and for the millions of think that post-war employment ing agriculture and industry in bal­ London is displaying so much ha­ war-production workers, they talk depended wholly upon your buying ance, and become predominantly tred of Russia—but for which na­ in terms of employment in facto­ manufactured goods — building a industrial. tion the massacres of Warsaw ries. It is high time to hammer house, getting a new car, a new French colonies are still another would still be vogue with the Nazi home to Americans these elemen­ washing machine and so on. That's asset on which General de Gaulle is gestapo at the guillotine and cre­ tary facts: all fine, but don't you look forward relying. They provide a wealth of matories. to some other things, too? Above "First, that it will be impossible (On Page Five) flSS^-T' - , "-J^-J Ii. ...;/i

MARCH 16, 1945 Page Five

Roscoe Pound of the Harvard Law dency, no public references were made School for the Notre Dame College of Law in Law Building. The first lecture to his difficulty in standing and walk­ Factory Hands Only to be given on Friday evening, March ing, although he almost had a bad 16th, at 7:30 o'clock p. m., followed by fall at Jefferson City, Mo., when a lectures on the evenings of March 17th, weakly constructed rail on his ramp 25% of Needful March 23rd, and March 24th. Dean Pound has chosen as his subject for this collapsed in his hands. Throughout series of lectures: "The Law of Indivi­ his first three terms, the president At Nation's Work dual Rights, Its Origin and Develop­ leaned in public on the arms of aides, ments." and he stood for public speeches. (From Page Four) As a courtesy to Dean Pound, the Bar Association has planned a reception with "But those appearances were pain­ all, as daily conversation would in­ refreshments to be held immediately ful. For them, the president wore 10 form the experts, most of us want following the first lecture on Friday pounds of steel braces which gripped night, March 16th. They will adjourn service. We want a laundry which to the Faculty Dining room in the Notre him about the waist, were joined at gets shirts clean and delivers them POTTS LANDS JUDGESHIP Dame Dining Hall building. The recep­ the knees, and extended to his feet. BY GRACE OF GOVERNOR: tion is without charge to members. Just wearing them was uncomfort­ on time. We want service stations CLIFFORD POTTS, lawyer (non- xxx able. To stand or walk with them where we can geka tire changed in member of the Bar association, SUPREME COURT PUTS was an ordeal. A physician says that, a hurry. We want to be able to do * but who will now become an hon­ END TO J. P. BATTLE: J in standing to make a speech, he ex­ orary member by virtue of his judge­ Joseph V. Wypiszynski's fight to win our marketing without having to ship), was appointed judge of the new legal approval of his appointment as pended as much energy — just in lug all our packages home. And probate-juvenile court Wednesday by Portage township justice of the peace by standing — as an athlete would in Gov. Ralph F. Gates. Thus after run­ the county commissioners on April 26, running a quarter mile. He has been there are countless servivces which ning for every judgeship in the county 1943, came to a definite end late Tues­ a glutton for physical torture. we have never had but which we (situs in South Bend) and being defeat­ day. The Indiana supreme court has ed, he lands on a bench. Potts was refused a rehearing of the case on which "Since the war began, the presi­ would welcome if some imaginative county attorney two years, back in the a unanimous decision was handed down 30s while Glenn Thompson was auditor, dent's public appearances have been and resourceful individual provided against Wypiszynski several weeks ago. fewer. He quit wearing the braces, and the board of commissioners consist­ In the court's decision, which reversed them. ed of the Frank J. Murray dominated moved from place to place with his R. E. Gardner, Aaron Crofoot and Special Superior Judge Aldo J. Simp­ If your town is planning to help son's decision in the case several months sturdy little wheel chair. When he returning boys find jobs, don't George V. Hepler, — wiped out by the ago, it was ordered that the lower court voters in 1938. Lately he has acted as appeared in public, he often sat. A think that the alternatives are in­ counsel for the Family Welfare league shall enter judgment favorable to Frank public that never had known how X. Kopinski, who had been reelected ducing some company to locate a and Girls Reserve. He will take on his justice in 1942 but was drafted into the hard it was for him to stand was duties April 2nd, when the probate- army during his term. swept by all kinds of rumors about new factory in town, or else build­ juvenile court law becomes effective. He ing a local park on a WPA basis. will hold past the next general election Only the formality, of entering a re­ his health. During the last campaign, to November, 1948. Provision of quar­ versed decision in the docket remained Think in terms of giving every en­ to close the book on the long struggle one reporter asked the president's ters in the court house is causing some physician about a dozen diseases Mr. couragement to local stores, res­ discussion since the judge does not re­ by Mr. Kopinski to regain his office fol­ gard the present quarters of the juve­ lowing his medical discharge from the Roosevelt was rumored to have. The taurants, hotels, schools, hospitals. nile court sufficiently convenient and army May 5, 1943. physician replied that, except for^his If you have a young friend who elaborate to cope with its dignity. The The supreme court ruled that Mr. Ko­ pinski did not vacate his office volun­ inability to walk, or jump rope, th€ learned all about radio in the Navy, judge has full power to name clerks, president's health was good. His deputies, a stenographer, probation offi­ tarily and that no vacancy existed at don't try to steer him into a fac­ cers, and such assistants as he needs, the time the county commissioners ap­ brain is perfect and hevisn't too old: tory that makes radio equipment; pointed Mr. Wypiszynski. and to fix the salaries, for which the 63. steer him into setting-up a local county council is mandated to appropri­ xxx "It was the constant repetition of ate the funds. CITY COUNCIL APPROVES electrical shop. these rumors that sent Mr. Roosevelt xxx CIVIC AUDITORIUM IDEA: Get out of your head the disas­ The South Bend city council went on out upon the most arduous set of BAR ASSOCIATION TO campaign trips any president had un­ trous notion that only by recon­ HEAR DEAN POUND: record Monday night favoring a memo­ rial to South Bend's servicemen and dertaken. He rode in open cars in rain verting to peacetime use the whole The St. Joseph County Bar associa­ women of world war No. 2. They ap­ and ice, made numerous speeches and disproportionate industrial plant tion which held its annual dinner in the proved a resolution calling for a "civic Bronzewood Room of Hotel LaSalle, auditorium or some other worthwhile back-platform talks. But he left off that we have built for war pur­ "^'ving memorial." It reauests the city's his braces, made most of his speeches poses will we be able to escape a Saturday night—and went to consider­ post-war planning committee to give able lengths in criticism of lawyers who consideration and study to the erection seated. And he was re-elected. post-war depression. Expect a good are holding aloof from membership,— of such memorial. The council agreed "Now, Mr. Roosevelt finds it sim­ deal of that industrial plant to be has been invited to attend the series of with George H. Heideman, who intro- pler to deal plainly with the fact that unable to function. Fasten your lectures to be given by Dean Emeritus (On Page Nine) he needs his energy for more impor­ eyes upon the service industries. tant things than standing or walk­ For if we fail to bring about the ing. He told the whole nation that it expansion of our service industries For People Whose Bowels was more comfortable to talk while we shall fail to solve our economic seated. By that one gesture, he sought problem. "Bellyache" Their Brains to wipe out the fiction that had cre­ ated so many rumors. Of course, if Washington keeps From Page One up its pace, at present being push­ fantile paralysis had affected his low­ "The president once told a friend after the crack-up, the San Francisco er limbs,—not his head. ed to the limit under cover of mili­ meeting, all of these subjects provide that his inability to walk enabled him "During more than 16 years of to do much more work than the av­ tary necessity, and regiments ev­ interruptions, but the president is re­ erything, industry and labor both, laxing when he can. public life — a period extending erage man. Outside distractions do through his service as governor of and "service" thrown in, things "Mr. Roosevelt spent four days of not budge him from his desk. When New York and three terms as presi> may become ratKer confused, or last week at Hyde Park," says the* he gets there, he stays until he has fin­ dent — all references to his inability ished. He does not go to the window diffused, and with all employment News. "He did some work on the to walk without long steel braces and governmentalized; well, it may be heap of material that had piled up to look at the scenery." the assistance of aides, or ramps, have all WPA, and you'll take it from while he was at Yalta. But, between Possibly this will silence some or been subdued. The equipment that he the USES (United States Employ­ times, he played a sharp game of the Roosevelt haters, so anxious for used for moving from place to place ment Service) or starve. That mumblety-peg with reporters and re­ him to die; he carried four elections, was kept' in the background,—but he "service" isn't the one, or the kind laxed in the quiet peace of his Hud­ and is in his fourth term — because arrived. that we have been giving a build­ son River estate. When he returned his head is stronger than his body and up. to Washington for a series of confer­ "In his first campaign for the presi­ we elected him to use his head. ences at the week end, he appeared in good spirits, relaxed and still wore the sun tan he had gotten on ship­ THE POCKETBOOK OF KNOWLEDGE By Topps board. "The president is adopting a new 10 PROVIDE MORE JOSS AFTER attitude toward the infantile paralysis HUE WAR, AMERICA BUSWESS PROPOSES.** that struck him 24 years ago and left him without the normal use of his legs. That attitude was made mani­ fest by his delivery of a speech, seated, to a joint session of congress, by his references to how much more com­ fortable it is for him to sit than to stand. It is made apparent by a wheel chair left standing outside his office when reporters go in for a press con­ ference. "Those things used to be kept in the background. They never were al­ luded to in public, or in print. But the president no longer cares to go through the strain ot pretending to stand and walk without assistance. He has worked as president for 12 years from a wheel chair. He sees no need of pretending, to do otherwise. During his trip to Yalta, he disclosed that he had sent a wheel chair to King Ibn Saud, of Arabia, who had admired the one used by Mr. Roose­ velt. AIL BU5W«5Maf, "Many of the rumors about the THE" RFSfPNfclBILnY president's ill-health that have circu­ TO PEVtfE yJFrYS TO lated during the last 12 years devel­ IMPROVE $6 PROPUCT- lb MAX? nmJ PKOPUCTZ', oped from a lack of public under­ AJP XU OIP otJe$MOR£ cuEmy -PPJODUCE FT FASTER standing of the extent to which in­ fM> M/ 68B07ER QURtfTtTtES AMD CHEAPER.

-^Ss^itjafirii! Page Six THE MIRROR THAVklli W. I. B. C. Presents "Nightingale Ii" WEEKLY CROSSWORD PUZZLE HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous JPuzzIo hearing. 1 Japanese 10 Genus of BOOKSH island. rodents. 8 Group of stu­ '11 Structural NEW BOOKS AT SOUTH BEND dents engaged unit. PUBLIC LIBRARY in research. 12 Get thee gone 14 Airman. 13 Rambles. Non-Fiction 15 To extol. 19 Bird's home. 16 Go on (music) 20 Hymn tune.' "Day of Deliverance," by W. R. 17 Cows stored 23 To intone. Benet; "War and Its Causes," by supper. 25 To cherish. L. L. Bernard; "Ukraine," by W. '18 Aperients. 26 Fetters. H. Chamberlin; "Art in the Armed 27 Not so much* Forces," by Aimee Crane, ed.; 20 Soup con* a 28 Bustles. "Foster Home Care to** M nte\ tainer. 21 Dye. 30 Laughing. Patients," by H. B. Grutcher; 31 Fired a guiu "Mentor Graham," by Kunigunde 22 Scatters. 23 A sound. 33 To hire. Duncan and D. F. Nickols; ".Fran­ 36 Chants 54 Huge serpents. 34 Forward. ces Willard," by Mary Earhart; 24 Lair of a beast. exultantly. 55 Lived. 35 Prison. "Color and Method in Painting*" 39 Names of 36 Of what min­ by E. W. Watson. 26 Exalted VERTICAL happiness. anything. eral has China) 28 Glittered. 40 Cloaks. 1 Front of an abundance? Business and Industrial building. "Gliding and Soaring," by J. P. 29 Voracious. 41 Comparative 37 Fortune. Andrews; "Estimating Building 31 Commences. suffix. 2 Small eggs, 38 Packed. Costs," by C. F. Dingman; "Plan­ 32 To wash 42 Pot herb. 3 To free. 40 Covers the In? ers," by Emanuele Stieri; 23rd An­ lightly. 43 Drop of eye 4 Mother. ner side of. nual of Advertising Art. 33 In -what coun­ fluid. 5 Indian. 43 Word In a ' The above titles may be reserved try is there al­ 44 Toward. 6 Anything comparison, by telephone: Main Library 3-9429. leged to be the 45 Beer. steeped. 46 Golf teacher. Mrs. Jeannette Knepprath of Milwaukee, Wis., President of the oldest iron 46 Love potient. 7 Pertaining to 47 Before. Business and Industrial Depart­ 48 Thing. ment, 3-1625. W.I.B.C., christening the "Miss Nightingale II" at the presentation. industry la­ 49 Hedge, aretium. the world? 50 Second note. 8 Winter car­ 49 Secreted. Fiction, Clover Field, Santa Monica, Cal., January 28, 1945. Pilot is Major Phillip Cartwright of Summitville, Ind. Looking on is T/Sgt. Russell 34 Valences of 51 Verbal. riages. 51 King of Basam "Tomorrow Will Sing," by El­ Kearns of Keyser, W. Va. eight. 52 Hermit. S Organs of 53 Third note. liott Arnold; "Orchids to'Murder," by Hulbert Footner; "Apartment in Athens," by Glenway Wescott. I Juvenile Department "Rooster Club," by Valenti An- gelo; j "Gregorio and the White Llama," by Laura Bannon; "Gran­ ite Harbor," by D. M. Bird; "To­ ward New Frontiers of Our Global World," by N. L. Engelhardt; IN THE WORLD COF SPORTS • - " Lincoln's World, 1809- 1865," by G. S. Foster; "Shoo-Fly Pie," ;by M. A. Jordan; "Juba's 1DA M WALSH, center and Maine where he was head coach New Moon," by Mrs. I. M. Mc- captain of Notre Dame's for eight years. Meekjn; "Timid Timothy," by A Four Horsemen eleven of The new coach soon will pick an Gweneira Williams. 1924, Wednesday signed a flv^e- assistant to succeed Joe Benda, year contract as head coach of the also a former Notre Dame athlete, After three years, a package of Cleveland Rams in the National who has returned to St. John's pliofilm-wrapped raisins was Football league. The signing took university in Collegeville, Minn., found to be in perfect condition place in the Oliver Hotel here where he is football coach. for eating. Chili Walsh, general manager of Signing of Walsh is in line with Cleveland and brother of the new the Rams' long term policy to coach, released news of the con­ build up the T-formation made ( Allied engineers (non-metal­ tract. famous by the Chicago Bears. lurgical) used a million dollars No financial arrangements were Walsh has been coaching the T- i worth of gold-bearing rock to revealed other than that this is the formation since 1939. General 'surface two miles of road in most lucrative contract Walsh ha. Manager Walsh said that the Rams *l | New Guinea. Proponents of wide signed in a 20-year coaching ca­ have signed a formidable number open immigration will have to reer. He will leave Notre Dame of former college T-formation go some, now that there really where he was line coach last year stars for post-war activity. is a place where the streets are under Ed McKeever. was on Adam Walsh has had a brilliant FEDERAL WAR AGENCIES OPA , DIRECTORY 'paved with gold. leave from Bowdoin college in coaching career from coast to coast Rent Control Office, fifth floor, Pythian building. Phone 4-0154—4-0155. and is the only man to serve at War Price and Ration Board No. 1, for all South Bend and Portage town­ both Yale and Harvard. From 1925 ship west of Lafayette boulevard and German and Warren townships, 106 West ^Monroe street. Phone 4-0173. Adventures of thru 1928 he was head coach and War Price and Ration Board No. 2, for all South Bend and Portage town­ athletic director at Santa Clara ship east of Lafayette boulevard and Olive; Greene, Centre, Liberty, Lincoln where for the first time a Santa and Union townships, 106 West Monroe street. Phone 3-8219. Clara team beat Stanford. In 1928 War Price and Ration Board No. 3, for all of Mishawaka and Penn township THE TOTTIES and Clay, Harris and Madison townships, 202 Lincoln Way East, Mishawaka. he took his Santa Clara team to Phone 5-2116. Hawaii where it won two games. The war price and ration boards ration sugar, tires, automobiles, gasoline, From 1929 thru 1933 he was line fuel, oil, bicycles and rubber boots and are price control agencies. coach at Yale under Mai Stevens, OTHER WAR AGENCIES Office of Defense Transportation, Tower building (commercial vehicles only). and in 1934 he was Eddie Casey's Phone 2-3393. line expert at Harvard. , United States Employment Office, 216V2 North Michigan street. Phone 3-6175. U. S. Veterans Administration, 804 Sherland Building. Phone 4-6177. War Manpower Commission Office, J. M. S. building. Phone 2-1463. Hugh Devore, Notre Dame's act­ War Production Board Office, 808 Sherland building. (All priorities.) Phone ing director of athletics, has an­ 2-1435. nounced that Gene Ronzani, for­ mer Marquette university and Chicago Bears' football star, has r been appointed backfield coach of the Irish. Ronzani will assume his new duties on March 20. Captain of the 1932 Marquette mt^v (y^' ADAire HAT | eleven, and one of the two nine- I lettermen in the school's history, j Ronzani joined the Chicago Bears' j organization following a brilliant collegiate career. After playing with the Bears' for eight years he became head coach-of the Newark Bears, farm team in the American association. Last year he returned to active play with the Chicago team.

(RKA!) i'Hk STORY, THKN COLOR THE PICTURK) Clem Crowe, head basketball <'/"^H. gee. look at that pony 'round and 'round until the par­ coach and line football coach at go. It's like a dog and pony rot shouted. "All right, hound, Notre Dame, is expected to become show," cried Dotty, as the frisky get set to jump! acting head football coach at fee University of Iowa, according to pony scampered here and there. "Leap in the air with all your rumor emenating from the Hawk- "I'll bet the hound is filled might and make real sure you do eye campus. with fright. He sure knows how it right." ; The dog then leaped up on the pony, landing with a Neither E. G. (Dad) Schroeder. to hang on tight. 'Twas mean of Iowa athletic director, nor Crowe BOBBY JONES us, 1 tnink. to give the poor dog thump would shed any official light on TURNED 1&IS TRICK such a scare." the matter. "AH that was fine," yelled AND TWO BETTER The funny parrot then cried, WITH HIS FAMOUS Duncy. "1 think 1 can do Delicate repair work on watches "Say! To both of them it's just "GRAND SLAM" OF like play. They've really been it, too I'll try!" But Dotty and fire-control instruments for 1930-WINNfNG BOTH with circuses. grabbed, him by the arm and anti-aircraft guns is an important shouted. "Mercy, no! part of the versatile maintenance OPEN fOURNSYS roof "Ill make them do an act or "Pernaps you think 'twould be carried on in the field by army two. 1 know it will please all of a thrill, out vou would take an ordnance troops in western Eu­ you." awful snilk* rope. Wo k AW SON * * * Just then the pony raced by '"PHE parrot shouted, "Hey, and ah 'he ; bunch heard Goldy U. S. troops in this war are sup­ LITTLE come here! There's not a cry. "He? hend-ns tot that tittle plied with more army ordnance WHOSE VICTORIES thing you two need fear. Please stream and nlpn^me something artillery ammunition than World IN THE 1934 BRIT­ do your little jumping act. rasn " War I troops had rifle ammuni­ ISH AND U.S. AMA­ "If it's done nice, the Totties tion. THESE ARE And. -ure enough, ner hi' .•.>'• THE ON L/ 3 TEUR TOURMIES, all will clap and give you each a was n«ht Pie oonv lumped »"»tn GOLFERS MADE HIM THE SAO friendly slap." all ms m-.^ht and both he and After the fall - of Brest, France, EVER fo WIN MAN EVER 10 WIN Down jumped the dog, right to the hound lit -n the stream witlj army ordnance soldiers reclaimed 3 OF THE FOUR the ground. The pony then ran quite a smaFh. enough captured German welding MAJOR GOLF BOTH IN ONE YEAR/ equipment from submarine pens to CROWNS " (The hound Rets caught in a rapids in ihe i.ext story.) fully equip a U. S. welding truck. i -^...^.; .j^.Jt.,,;,^-.,..-. f's,;..?11,rrrv-,.

MARCH 16, 1945 Page Seven

"Why don't you go to work, you cooked on canned heat. He's gone ower Print bum?" a man yelled. coo-koo. The stuff makes 'em all STREET SCENE "It's too hard," the old man an­ that way. Well, he'll get 30 days (From Page One) you let me alone to die in peace?" swered. in the Bridewell, but it won't do Yankees. The old man wore "Come on, now, none of this "Shut up, you!" the sergeant no good. Them bums is jus' bums. shapeless clothes; his shirt was wise stuff. Move on! Get up and said. They're just bums." "You're right, officer." gray with dirt, and the toes stuck move on! Do you hear me?" A fat policeman joined the other out of his army boots. He shuffled "Can't I die in peace? I tell you, The cop strolled back along along and stopped in front of the cops and helped to push the crowd Michigan Boulevard. There was a all I want is to die in peace." back. The sergeant stood over the cheer from the crowd by the play- gold and bronze entrance to the "You heard me! Move on! I old man. Nation Oil Building. ograph, and it broke up. The Yan­ don't want any monkey-shines "Yu gonna get up?" he asked. kees had won the world series "Hell, I give up," he told him­ here. This is a public place." "Officer, please leave me die in from the Cardinals in four straight self. He grabbed the old man's arm peace." He yawned. He stretched his and tugged at it. The old man "The wagon is on the way," the arms like a sleepy man. He took didn't resist when the policeman sergeant said. eff his coat, rolled it into a bundle, pulled him. Suddenly the old man stood up, "In America, the balance of and laid it on the sidewalk. Heed­ A portly police sergeant ap­ picked up his clothes, and put power still eats in the kitchen."— less of those who stopped to gape peared on the scene. them on. He started walking away. William M. Jeffers, pres., Union at him, he slowly went through "What's wrong Mike?" the ser­ "Oh, no, you don't," the ser­ Pacific. the gestures of undressing, put­ geant asked. geant said, grabbing his arm. ting on pajamas and getting ready "There's nothkl' wrong, sir. I'm The policeman escorted the old Science warns all parents to be for bed. He mumbled instruction only trying to die in peace." man southward. The crowd fol­ extra careful how children are to an imaginary valet, remarking The policeman let the man drop cared for during infant and juve­ lowed. Near Roosevelt Road they nile illnesses, because their entire that he wouldn't need a bath in the back on the sidewalk. allowed him to sit and wait on life may be affected by nature's morning because he had decided to "Shut up, you!" The policeman the steps of an old building. He secret^weapons. It's in The Amer­ lie down and die. turned to the sergeant. paid no attention to his audience. ican Weekly, the- magazine dis­ He lay down on the sidewalk "He's disturbin' the peace." "I'll be dead soon," he solilo­ tributed with this Sunday's (MarcJhi and carefully drjew imaginary cov­ "What's the matter with you? quized. "Then let the world go 18) Chicago Herald-American. ers over himself. He made loud, You can't die there," the sergeant to hell. It can die after me. It snoring noises. said angrily. can die five minutes after me. I A small crowd immediately "Jesus Christ, can't a man die in don't care. I don't even belong to gathered about him. peaee, even in a free country?" the human race anyway. I don't "Nighty, night," he said. "Come on, quit blasphemin' and care. I'm gonna die in five min­ Strangers gaped at him. He move on," the sergeant ordered. utes. I won't work. All I want is stared vacant-eyed at the sky. "Move on!" the policeman com­ to die in a little peace. I'm goin' More pedestrians stopped to clus­ manded, prodding the old man West. "Go West, young man. Ha! ter curiously about him. with a club. Ha! Everybody's goin' West, even "Are you hurt, fellow?" The old man\didn't move. cops. Ain't that right, officer?" "Hell, he's just full of canned The sergeant grabbed his sleeve A flower print dinner dress with He looked up at the fat police­ He South Bend Window heat." and tried to hit him. Then both a large rose in the hair makes man. "What's the matter with you?" the sergeant and the policeman up this attractive ensemble, "Shut up!" Cleaning Company "He was knocked down in a shoved him. shown at a New York fashion "Even cops die. Everybody's go­ 129 North Main Street fight." "I told you to be on your way," exhibit. Marionettes to match ing to die." Phone 4-3251 "Who is he?" the sergeant shouted. each model enlivened the show. He looked down at the sidewalk "You can see, he's coked up with The old man rose. The crowd for a moment and then, with a wood alcohol." laughed hilariously. He limped on twinkle in his eyes, he looked up "Somebody call a doctor." for about ten feet. He turned make me work. I'll die instead." at the policemen. "Where's the police? They're around and told the crowd: "Get an ambulance," someone "That's a good joke, isn't it? never around when they're need­ "I only want to die quietly." called. Everybody dies, even cops." Glasses Correctly Fitted ed." "Go on or I'll run you in," the "Let him alone, officer," some­ The patrol wagon arrived. "The man was knocked down by cop bellowed as a number of spec­ one else demanded. Two policemen lifted him an automobile. Somebody call for tators continued laughing. The sergeant talked to the po­ roughly, while the others kept the Est. 1900 an ambulance." The old man moved down a few liceman, and then the cops went crowd back. "Here's an officer." more paces. He again stretched off. . | "Well, I must belong to the hu­ "The law." himself out on the sidewalk. "Come on, button up, you! There man race. They didn't send the J. Burke A burly, red-faced policeman More people stopped to see what is ladies passing." dog catcher's bus after me," the pushed his way through the grow­ was happening. Another policeman showed up. old man said. W. 6. Bogardut ing crowd. He looked at the old "I'll run yuh all in," the ser­ "Get them people back," the They shoved him into the patrol E. C. Beery man, who met his gaze with inno­ geant said, turning to glare at the sergeant ordered. The policeman wagon. It went off. Optometrists & Mfg. Opticians cent eyes. amused and voluble crowd. began edging the crowd back. The crowd slowly broke up. A "What's wrong?" the policeman The sergeant and the policemaan When he succeeded on one side, stranger asked one of the officers 228 S. Michigan Street asked. stood over the old man, not know­ they pressed forward on another. what had happened. EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT "Hello, officer." ing what to do, "Just let me alone." "Nothin' much. Another bum The policeman looked at him "I only want to die in peace. dubiously. He pushed his cap back That's all I want. You can't make on his head and scratched his me work. I'm too tired. This is a head. free country." ^£ANk\ "What's the matter with you, "Shut up, you!" the policeman huh? Come on, what's the mat­ snapped. ter?" "I only want to say, work is too A woman tried to tell the police­ hard for me." man what had happened. "Get up!" the policeman said, "I'm all right, officer. I've just putting his foot against the old laid down here because I feel kind man's ribs. "Get up, I say! This is of tired. I thought maybe I'd just a public street and not a sanitar­ like to lay down and die, that's all. ium. Get up and be quick about I only want to be left alone so that it! Do you hear me?" the police­ I can lay down and die." man bellowed. Some of the on-lookers laughed. "I want to die in peace. Can't "What?" the cop asked, angry you leave me alone?" and bewildered. "Are you going to get up?" the "Can you let me alone? Can't sergeant asked. "No, Im dying. Let me die in peace." i "Officer, that man's sick. Call Beginner's Pattern an ambulance," an indignant lady cried out. 9051 "Lady, move on and tend to your SIZES own business." 16-20 The sergeant turned to the po­ 34-48 liceman. "Come on,, let's get this bum out of here." They bent down and tried to lift the old man. He stiffened his body. They dragged him along the side­ walk on his buttocks. Some ot the on-lookers laughed. A few pro­ tested, but the police paid no at­ Is this trip tention to them. Still more pedes­ trians stopped to watch. The po­ liceman and the sergeant con­ tinued to drag the old man along the sidewalk. His short was un­ buttoned. Freeing jhimself from necessary? the police, he lost his shirt. He lay on the sidewalk, naked and dirty from the waist up. His ribs showed. \ "Get a tow wagon," a with from the crowd yelled. ow BADLY do you need the money by even so much, as 30 thunderous sec­ "No, get Big Bill Thompson the you'd get by cashing in that War onds ? Mayor over here," a second wit H said. Bond? Bad enough to tamper dangerously with The policeman and the sergeant puffed, tired from their exertion. Bad enough to risk withdrawing your the life you've planned for your family The old man watched them with support . . . even momentarily . . . from and yourself when peace comes? innocently twinkling blue eyes. He turned and winked at the the tight your soldier is in all the way up If you need the money that badly, crowd. The policeman again tried, to his ringing ears? Mister, okay. to lift him. He relaxed, refusing to cooperate. They let him drop Bad enough to risk prolonging the war But we hope you don't. Pattern 9051, sizes 16, 18, 20; 34, back onto the sidewalk. He shiv­ 86, 38, 40, 42, 44. 46, 48. Size 36. ered. His feet dangled over the 3% yds. 39-in. edge of the curb. Automobiles had Send TWEMT# -GENTS in ceaaa stopped, tying up traffic. Auto­ Keep forth with our fighters for this pattern to 170 News­ mobile horns made an incessant paper Pattern Dept., 282 West 18th racket. The crowd now filled the St., New York 11, N. Y. Print sidewalk. Buy War Bonds ior keeps plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. "Dunging for that bum," some­ JUST OUT! Send Fifteen Cents one in the crowd said loudly. more for our Marian Martin Spring "I don't care what happens. Let Pattern Book! Easy-to-make clothes a truck run over me. I don't care. for all. FREE Blouse Pattern print­ I don't care. I give up. I wanna ed right in the book. Send NOW. die," the old man said. His teeth chattered. "No, sir, you can't This is an officially S. Treasury advertisement—prepared under auspices of the Treasury Department and Wat Advertising Council Page Eight ^THE MIKKOK MARCH 1(

Jananese had been killed in 23 days of fightine. G7°A 1EEK OF Gj°. •) THURSDAY ULTUM Ever Hear o American troops virtually cut Rhine superhighway. Third army crossed Moselle. m in \J{y at a glance * * * Twenty-five Soviet armies were n^pF PAR vO OVER WEEK-END trap around both Baltic Sea ports. preparing for full-scale assault-on . Heavy fighting was under way Discretion In front of Berlin, 150-mile stretch Berlin, Nazi radio said in American bridgehead on the of Oder-Neisse line was feeling east bank of the Rhine. American opening blows of Soviet drive for * * * (From Page Five) German capital. U. S. troops seized two more is­ dueed the resolution, that the me­ 1st Army forces captured seven lands south of Luzon. morial should be practical rather Geiman towns and extended cheir than a statute or monument. grip at Remagen. Berlin said In fourth "obliteration" assault The memorial, the resolution American-held area was 11 miles on German cities, British heavy said, should! be one that "can be in width. U. S. 3rd Army captured bombers again struck at Ruhr in used by the returning members of 29 towns in Moselle river area and wake of assault on industrial town the United States armed -forces threatened Coblenz along its of Barmen. Berlin was bombed and future generations which will northern outskirts. To north, Ger­ for 22nd consecutive night. be a lasting tribute to these men man Rhine bridgehead west of and women who gave their serv­ Wesel was virtually eliminated. Continuing new record cam­ ices and, their lives that this na­ * # * paign to destroy Japanese war tion snould forever remain free." production centers, 300 Superfor­ ARMY xxx More than 1,000 British bombers tresses dropped 2,300 tons of fire Louis E. McEndarier, 130 E. Broad­ ers attacked Ruhr arsenal city of bombs on heart of Osaka, Japan's way; Harold C. Johnson, 127 E. Ewing OPA TO PUT CEILING Essen and 1,200 U. S. bombers second city. Returning fliers said Ave.; Wesley T. Hensel, 1216 S. Fel­ raided three submarine construc­ lows St.; Everett D. Inks, 614 S. 27th ON REPAIR JOBS: four-square-mile area was left a at.; Robert J. Shilt, 910 Sherman Ave.; OPA moved to curb what it de­ tion centers and three oil refineries sea of flame visible 125 miles. Rudolph J. Koloszar, 818 W. Indiana in Baltic area. Ave.; Vincent Brusca, 1631 Lincoln Way scribes as exorbitant prices in West; Thomas L. Walling, 618 N. Scott some cases for repairing household SPRINGFIELD. Mo. — -] On Luzon, American troops cap­ St.; Alvin Hagey, Jr., 730 Cottage Charles H. Law, D. D., i Russians drove new wedge be­ Grove Ave.; Albert C. Taylor, 1252 N. appliances, automobiles and farm tween Gdynia and Danzig and it tured provincial capital and large Fremont St.; Stanley J. Woltman, 1112 equipment. The agency granted Broadway Methodist Chu: appeared that both Baltic ports harbor of Batangas, 56 miles south Blaine Ave.; Albert Clark, Jr., 718 N. to its nine regional offices author­ (inset) is the father of a tl of Manila. On Mindanao, Japan­ Scott St.; Leo Schmanski, 920 N. ity to require detailed invoices for would fall. Meanwhile Berlin Brookfield St.; John H. Chelminiak, tenant. If you don't believe broadcasts said Soviet force of 75,- ese resistance stiffened, but U. S. 1022 N. College St.; Bill E. Moore, 1109 customers of repair jobs which forces captured four villages. charge on an hourly rate basis. them. Proudly he introc 000 men had opened a new offen­ W. Harvey St.; Russell W. Fleeman, three of his children as * 930y2 Lincoln Way East; Arthur L. These shops may also oe required sive at Moravian Gap in Czecho­ * * * Birkholz, 1118 E. South St.; Donald D. ant." slovakia. Marines without opposition oc­ Castetter, 1321 S. Michigan St.; Jack O. to keep detailed time records. cupied two tiny islands off western Loutzenhiser, 1123 E. Broadway; James Wherever an unreasonable dis­ The "third" lieutenant, H. Walsh, 920 N. Frances St.; Jules De- crepancy is found between pr^es Mrs. Law's youngest, is 2t American marines broke thru coast of Iwo, while other Amer­ Winne, R. R. 1, South Bend; Ralph F. Japanese lines on Iwo and gained icans continued mopping up bit­ charged and these time records, Robert V. Law (right), A Barton, 1609 Panama St., Mish.; Harold £W?s> a^eo-pilot of a B-n virtual control of island's east terly resisting Japanese at north S. Long, 1218y2 N. Sarah St., Mish.; "appropriate enforcement action Paul R. Richey, 1127 E. Fourth St., will be taken," OPA says. Ceiling frequent bombing missions < coast. Trapped enemy pocket still An American soldier exercises end of Iwo. Mish.; Francis M. Walker, R. R. 2, battled fiercely on the north coast. prices for such repairs generally discretion near Geilenkirchen, WEDNESDAY Mish.; Richard W. Boettcher, of Niles, EDITOR'S NOTE: Dr. Law, Oermany (OW1 photo ) Mich.; Lee B. Cousins, of Kokomo, are frozen at March, 1942, levels, Methodist Church, South Be: More than 300 Marianas-based U. S. 1st Army troops captured Ind.; George A. Aldrich, of Franklin, xxx Honnef, Germans' northern an­ Ind., and Ernest D. Kennedy, of Gary. Superfortresses struck at Nagoya, Ind. SCHOOL TEACHERS ASK given Monday afternoon third city of Japan and site of bombers hit Baltic port of Swine- chor on east bank of Rhine and muende in direct support of Rus­ drove four columns for Cologne- NAVY $400 PAY INCREASE: old H. Steiner, Plymout great Mitsubishi airplane factories, Kent S. Kaser, 2110 E. Pleasant St,; auctioneer who was convic only 48 hours after a record B-29 sian armies. Frankfurt superhighway leading Irvin E. Babcock, 140 S. 29th St.; Frank Increase of $400 a year in the to Ruhr. Germans threw best J. Draskovits, 515 E. Chippewa Ave.; maximum salary scale of all South 28 in federal court on 15 c fleet had devastated 15-square- India-based Superfortresses at­ planes, jet-propelled fighter- Harold T. Lake, 1153 E. Fox St.; Don­ Bend schoolteachers is sought for selling used farm machin mile heart of Tokyo. tacked Singapore at tip of Malay bombers, into battle in desperate ald J. Aranowski, 1209 N. St.; the 1945-46 school year by two equipment over OPA c * * * William Freeland, 1301 Lombardi Dr.; prices. The sentence was peninsula. B-29 attack on Nagoya attempt to check expansion of Joseph F. Kovach, 316»/2 E. Sample St., ieachers' organizations, They American troops have landed on destroyed 285 square blocks, while Americans' bridgehead. Allied and Albert L. Love, R. R. 2, Mish. charge that the purchasing power down by Judge Luther M. Mindanao island, Gen. MacArthur 16.7 square miles wer wiped out in planes also struck at Nazi concen­ MARINE CORPS of teachers' salaries now is "below after he had denied a m announced. Troops scrabled ashore last Superfort attack on Tokyo. trations and communications. Erwin K. Wright, Sr., 507 E. South the lowest depression figures." Steiner's counsel for a n( on Zamboanga peninsula on south­ St. The sentence included ( * * * * * * Representatives of the local No. each on eight counts, the west tip of island. In Philippines, 41st Division Russian forces crossed Oder CASUALTIES 679, American Federation of run concurrently, and six * * * troops captured Zamboanga, prin­ Rivef at captured Kuestrin and KILLED Teachers, and the South Bend BIRDER, Capt. James P., 22, son of Teachers' federation presented the each on the remainini In Burma, Indian troops began cipal town of southwestern Min­ were fighting through strong for­ Prof, andi Mrs. C. E. Birder, 1618 E. counts, those also to run a frontal assault on Fort Dufferin danao, and pushed on to seize San tifications toward Berlin, 38 miles Madison, killed in action in Germany. salary request to the board of edu­ rently, but consecutively in northern part of Mandalay, Roque airdrome. to west. Berlin said nine Soviet CLEARY, S/Sgt. Richard, 21, son of cation Monday. V. C. Cripe is year terms. The fine Vv where Japanese were fighting des­ Mr. and Mrs. Don E. Cleary, 1036 N. president and L. W. Barber is divisions crossed river in 16-mile Johnson St., killed in action in Ger­ &aclr on- the. 15 counts, perately. On Iwo, American Marines be­ stretch between Kuestrin and many Feb. 23. chairman of the legislative com­ xxx * * * gan thorough mopping up of re­ Frankfurt-on-Oder. KALE, Sgt. Chas., 18, son of Mr. and mittee of local No. 679 and Flor­ MONDAY maining enemy strong points on * * * Mrs. Fredk. Kale, 116 W. Edgar St , ence Chezen is president and Har­ RED CROSS HOPES TO Roseland, killed in action in France old Blanchard is chairman of the REACH GOAL TONIGHT American 1st Army, ' fighting northern end of island. World's biggest bombs, 11 tons, Feb. 23. finance committee of the teachers' eastward from Rhine river, was in * * * were dropped by Royal Air Force M'INTYRE, Pfc. Robt., 19, son of Mrs. ^Mie St. Joseph county Loraine Slater, 330" N. Notre Dame federation. The request would be American Red Cross mov control of 23 towns. Troops had Indian troops in Burma were Lancasters on Bielefeld in Ruhr. Ave., killed in action in the English acted on before May 1, when con­ advanced five miles east of river thrown back from Mandalay. They About 4,000 Allied heavy bombers Channel on Dec. 25. nesday into the final stret tracts for 1945-46 are awarded, war fund drive for $270,C Berlin said that some 50,000 Amer­ by-passed area and were routing struck targets in Germany and PAUL, Crpl.. Alex E., 27, son of John xxx ican troops, including two arm­ out Japanese snipers in heart of Hungary as nonstop aerial offen­ Paul, 731 W. Ewing Ave., killed in nearly 25 per cent of th; ored and two infantry divisions, action in France last August. vet to be raised. Final rei city. sive went into its 31st day. PORTER, Sgt. Fred Jr., 32, husband of PLYMOUTH AUCTIONEER due at a dinner meeting ( already had poured across Rema­ Marjorie Porter, 618 Willow Street, TOO GOOD FOR OWN GOOD: TUESDAY * * * killed in action in Luxembourg Dec. Friday in the Oliver hotei gen bridgehead, officially deline­ In Philippines, American troops Sentence of 18 months in prison ated as 10 miles wide and more American troops made new 18. Reports of the various crossing of Rhine at Koenigswin- landed and seized control of two RICHARDS, Pvt. James. 19. husband and a fine of $3,0uO and costs were totaled $202,959.91. than four miles deep. islands, Romblon and Simara, in of Louise Richards, killed in action in * # $ ter, with bridgehead on east bank Germany Dec. 21. of river now extended to width of Sibuyan Sea between Mindoro and SOJKA, Pvt. Donald, 26-, cousin of Mr. Russians captured Oder .river southeastern Luzon. and Mrs. Sylvester Kuczmanski, 755 Look . 11 Compare! fortress of Kuestrin, 38 miles east 15 miles. Other units of 1st Army N. Olive St., killed in action in Ger­ fought to within two miles of great Cutting Japanese supply route many Feb. 28. of Berlin. Frankfort-on-Oder, 15 superhighway running between in Mandalay, 19th Indian Division VERASH, Pvt. Leslie, 18, son of Mrs. miles to south, was threatened captured former Burma summer Agnes Verash, 2423 W. Lawton St., with encirclement. To north, other Cologne and Frankfurt. Dispatch­ killed in action in the European Area. Russian forces fought toward Dan­ es told' of massing of great num­ capital of Maymo, 40 miles south­ WALTERS, Pfc. Paul, 21, son of Mr. bers of troops in central and west. Ezra Walters, 1227 E. Cedar St., killed zig and Gdynia, and captured northern sectors of western front in action on Leyte Dec. 8. three outlying fortress towns. MISSING * Sf • for probable new Allied drives. American Marines formally DEITCHLEY, Sgt. Kenneth, 27, son of R. A. F. sets a record »when * * * raised Stars and Stripes on Iwo Mr. and Mrs. John Deitchley, 311 S. bombers dropped 5,600 tons of Russian forces were fighting in and first Army bombers were us­ Wells, Mish., missing in action since bombs on Dortmund in Ruhr in 29 ing airfield on island. Marines Feb. 22. suburbs of Danzig and Gdynia as GREGG, Pvt. Douglas, 21, son of Mr. minutes. It was heaviest oblit­ an estimated 100,000 Germans pressed ahead against bitter re­ and Mrs. Floyd Gregg, previously of eration attack of war. American sistance. Estimated that 20,000 Mish., missing in action since Feb. 12. were driven into 500-square-mile KINCAID, T/Sgt. Harry, 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Kincaid, R. R. 1, Refugees Behind the Front in Belgium Mish., missing since Feb. 14 over MAC DONALD, Lieut. Chas. Jr., 22, grandson of Mr. and Mrs. James Ju- die, 1515 E. Jefferson Blvd., missing in action over Austria since Feb. 21. PRISONERS B'ERNING, Pfc. Richard, 22, son of Mrr;. Georgia Berning, 707 Ann St., Mish., is a prisoner of the Germans since Dec. 16. KUBIAK, Pfc. Eugene, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Kubiak, 749 S. Phillipa - St., is a prisoner of the Germans This picture, removed from Manila newspaper files before th( since Dec. 16. could destroy them, bore the following caption: Nippon Para MURTAUGH, Sgt. Wm., son of Patric —Members of the Takatiho airborne unit. Intrepid fi Murtaugh, 139 E. Ewing Ave., is a prisoner of the Germans since Dec. seated in the plane ready to hop off on their mission. 17. NYERS, Pvt. Chas., 33, husband of Mrs. Theresa Nyers, 414 W. 11th St., Mish., is a prisoner of the Germans since Dec. 16. WILLIAMSON, Lieut. George, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Galbreath, 220 E. Jefferson Blvd., is a prisoner of the Germans since Dec. 22. WOUNDED ANDERSON, Marine Pvt. Lester Jr., 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Anderson. 203 S. Ironwood Dr., wounded in ae~< tion in the Pacific. DICKENS, Pfc. Robert, 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Dickens, 101 W. Greenacre Ave., wounded in action in Luxembourg on Feb. 21. GROSE, Pvt. Eldon, 23, husband of An- geline Grose, Chicago, 111., wounded in action in Germany Feb. 11. O'DONNELL, Crpl. Lawrence, 24, hus­ band of Stella O'Donnell, R. R. 4, wounded in action in the Philippines. PAREE, rCpl. Claude, 24, son of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Paree, 1227 LWW, wounded in action in Belgium Dec. 26. STAJKOKSKI, Pfc. Joseph, 29, son of Mrs.;L. Stajkowski, 1534 W. Dunham .St^.wounded,in Germany Feb. 13. TROWBRIDGE, Pvt. Richard, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Orville R. Trow- 1 bridge, 2378 Dixie Highway North, The sweep of war leaves scores of thousands homeless and destitute, and our side, at least, takes wounded in action in France. ce of them. Here is the Displaced Persons Bureau at Verviers, Belgium, where the homeless: 2URATH, Crpl. Stanley, 33, husband of Zurath, 614 S. Meade And for comparison, here is a gliderful of American Dai from front line sectors can register for return either to their homeland or sate areas. St., wounded in action Feb. 23. u troops. (USAAF photo.) ; IIKKOK MARCH 16, 1945 Page Nine

ana, the OPA and WFA an­ nounced. Indiana OPA officials Ever Hear of a Third Lieutenant? are informed by Perry S. Richey, ULTUM district representative of the com­ New Indiana Employment Security Act modity credit corporation office of in supply, WFA, that a directive or­ dering the purchase by the armed forces of 70,000,000 pounds of More Liberal and Harsher to Workers PARVO boned canned poultry will make FFECTING some 1,400,000 leaves work voluntarily without heavy inroads into civilian sup­ workers and 11,500 employ­ good cause, who makes trouble plies. A ers in Indiana, the 1945 In­ and is discharged for misconduct, om Page ?ive) diana General assembly devoted or, even more important, who re­ esolution, that the me­ "A good many things enter into the poultry shortage,'-' says Mr. some of its closing hours to pass­ fuses a suitable job, when man­ ld be practical rather ing House Bill No. 475 which power needs are so great, should ite or monument, Richey. "A year or so ago there was a glut of eggs on the market, amended and liberalized the Em­ not expect to escape penalties or lorial, the resolution. ployment Security act. Effective to receive as much in benefits as '. be one that "can be and everybody was being urged to July 1, 1945, the maximum weekly the workers who has performed returning members of eat eggs so that farmers would be' benefit check, heretofore $18, has his full duty. States armed forces able to dispose of their supply and been increased by the legislature generations which will thus would not be discouraged to to $20 per week. This raise .was A change affecting employers is 1 tribute to these men the point where they would de­ made to adjust the maximum the new definition of "employer," who gave their serv- crease their poultry production. weekly benefit amount more close­ the term now being broadened, in eir lives that this na- Then the new order calling for the ly to the weekly wage level which the Indiana statute, to include em­ forever remain free." boned canned chicken will further is now about $45 per week. ployers liable to any federal tax xxx shorten the supply. Seventy mil­ against which credit may be taken lion pounds will dig a pretty big Duration of benefits was also in­ for contributions required to be JT CEILING hole in our available supply of creased from a maximum of 18 paid into a state unemployment R JOBS: poultry. The ceiling prices set up weeks to a maximum of 20 weeks. compensation fund, whether or not ed to curb what it de- on poultry constitute only one of For claims filed after July 1, 1945 that employer has eight employees exorbitant prices in several factors affecting the pres­ a maximum amount of $400 can be in Indiana. tor repairing household SPRINGFIELD. Mo. —The Rev. many. First Lieut. Mary Louise Law ent supply." Poultry people may­ drawn instead of the $324 pro­ automobiles and farm Charles H. Law, D. D., pastor of Burke. WAC, is a medical technolo­ be will not sell and Mobilizer vided by ihe old law. EMPLOYMENT BENEFITS The agency granted Broadway Methodist Church here gist at Fort Omaha, Nebr., and Lieut. Byrnes and Manpower Commis­ "No one," says Everett L. Gard­ ON OUT-STATE WORK •egional offices author- (inset) is the father of a third lieu­ Paul C. Law. USNR (now a two- sioner McNutt may have to "work ner, director of the Employment The board is authorized to enter :e detailed invoices for striper), has been a FT boat skipper or fight" the chickens, Security division, "knows how into reciprocal arrangements with tenant. If you don't believe itr count in the South Pacific. af repair jobs which them. Proudly he introduces all xxx long reconversion will last or how appropriate agencies of other- an hourly rate basis. Uniforms have proved no armor long individual workers will be states or the United States adjust­ : may also oe required three of his children as "Lieuten­ against Cupid's missiles for these WHAT INDUSTRY DID unemployed between jobs. In­ ing collection and payment of con­ ailed time records. ant." "P. K.s" (preacher's kids, to you). JULY 1, '40 TO DEC. 31, '44: creasing of the duration of bene­ tributions by employers with re­ The "third" lieutenant, Dr. and an unreasonable dis- Both WAC and Navy, Lieutenants Revealing for the first time the fits to a maximum of 20 weeks was spect to employment not localized found between pr^jes Mrs. Law's youngest, is 2nd Lieut. have married in recent months, Dad deemed necessary by the legisla­ in this state and to permit the pay­ Robert v. Law (right). Army Air full extent of American industry's d these time records, officiating, and Army Lieutenant remarkable war production, Wil­ ture in preparation for the post­ ment of benefits to workers who 2 enforcement action Corps, a co-pilot of a B-17 now on Law, not to be outdone, has an­ war period. earn a small amount of wages in frequent bombing missions over Ger­ liam L. Batt, vice chairman of the ;n," OPA says. Ceiling nounced his engagement. War Production Board, has just "To qualify for the maximum more than one state. such repairs generally EDITOR'S NOTE: Dr. Law, the father, was pastor of the Stull Memorial announced that our total aircraft weekly benefit check the eligible Gardner reveals that according at March, 1942, levels. Methodist Church, South Bend, about 25 years ago. ' output between July 1, 1940, and applicant must have earned not to the law any employer who ac­ xxx December 31, 1944, was 246,845 less than $500 in the highest quar- quires the business of another will EACHERS ASK given Monday afternoon to Har­ Residential section majors re­ planes, 28,471 of them heavy ter of his base period," Gardner be required to notify the board in says, "and to be entitled to that writing not later than five days INCREASE: old H. Steiner, Plymouth, Ind., ported gifts of $17,500 in, against bombers. amount for the full 20 weeks of $400 a year in the auctioneer who was convicted Feb. a quota of $18,000; the rural area Shipyards turned out 45,384,000 must have earned at least $l,ouU prior to the acquisition or lose alary scale of all South 28 in federal court on 15 counts of reported $9,355, over its quota of deadweight tons of* oceangoing in his base period." A "calendar advantages which may result from iteachers is sought for selling used farm machinery and $8,500; Central business, $32,136, shipping, with 56,697 naval ves­ quarter" is composed of the three a redetermination of his contribu­ ! school year by two equipment over OPA ceiling against its quota of $57,000; large sels. Other production included consecutive months ending March tion rate. >rganizations, They prices. The sentence was handed industry, with a goal of $145,000, more than 75,000 tanks, 130,017 31, June 30, September 30, or Dec. Gardner explained that the the­ the purchasing power down by Judge Luther M. Swygert reported $111,085 in; medium in­ tank and self-propelled guns, 55,- 31. The "base period" means the oretical division of the fund into salaries now is "below after he had denied a motion of dustry, with a goal of $12,000, re­ 252 field artillery pieces, 769,468 first four of the last five completed a "reserve" account and a "pool" depression figures." Steiner's counsel for a new trial. ported $8,883, and small industry, trucks, and millions of tons of calendar quarters immediately account is eliminated and only ;atives of the local No. The sentence included one year with a goal of $3,000, reported $2,- preceding the first day of an indi­ one fund account will be main­ each on eight counts, the time to 736 in. The special gifts division, shells, bombs, and grenades, :ican Federation of xxx vidual's waiting period. tained after Jan. 1, 1946. and the South Bend run concurrently, and six months with a goal of $10,1)00, reported The benefit rights of individuals "This change," Gardner said, ^deration presented the each on the remaining seven $6,605. AIRLINE CAN HIRE in military or naval service are "will permit 100 per cent of an sst to the board of edu- counts, those also to run concur­ xxx 1,000 MAIMED VETS: preserved till March 31, 1947, by employer's contribution to be rently, but consecutively with the the new changes in the law. credited to his account instead of Lday. V. C. Cripe is year. terms. The fine was $200 COUNTY COMMISSION A thousand jobs for veterans ind L. W. Barber is with amputations are available SOMETIMES EMPLOYER the 95 per cent of his contribution f the legislative coni- each on the. 15 counts, BALKS SLAUGHTERHOUSE: credited heretofore and will place xxx The St. 'Joseph County Plan now with Eastern Air Lines, Inc., MAY BE PENALIZED >cal No. 679 and Flor- Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker, presi­ the accounts of Indiana employers r is president and Har- commission named Walter G. Eck- Persons who leave work volun­ on a more comparable basis with RED CROSS HOPES TO ler, member of the county board of dent, told patients of Lawson Gen­ ird is chairman of the REACH GOAL TONIGHT: eral Hospital, Atlanta, Ga. Loss tarily without good cause, who are employer accounts in other states. imittee of the teachers' commissioners, to a third term as discharged for misconduct, or who "In addition," he went on, "the 3?flie St. Joseph county chapter chairman and gave second terms of a hand, arm or leg, even two fail to apply for or accept suitable The request would be America*h Red Cross moved Wed­ legs or arms, will be no bar to a amount of contribution heretofore fore May 1, when con- to Alva W. Marburger, vice chair­ work will be required to wait six credited to the so-called 'pool ac­ nesday into the final stretch of its man, and Brother Nilus, C. S.. C, job for wounded men interested in weeks (formerly four weeks) be­ 945^-46 are awarded, war fund drive for $270,000, with aviation, Capt. Rickenbacker ex­ count' will be restored to each em­ xxx secretary, at its meeting Tuesday. fore becoming eligible for benefits ployer's account. This will place in nearly 25 per cent of that quota After hearing a plea for ap- plained as he forecast a tremen- and their maximum benefit amount vet to be raised. Final reports are s do s ex n will be reduced by an amount each employer's acpount all the H AUCTIONEER due at a dinner meeting (tonight) proval of location of a slaughter- ^ ^ ^n of the air industry contributions he has paid since ) FOR OWN GOOD: house on West Chippewa road be There are countless jobs in the equal to six times their weekly 1936." The director explains that Friday in the Oliver hotel. company—even my job is open— benefit amount. "The penalties," of 18 months in prison Reports of the various divisions tween Keria trail and Linden road, contribution rates for 1946 will be' for you men. Jobs as reservation Gardner explained, "will affect a computed by considering the rela­ if $3,000 and costs were totaled $202,959.91. the commission voted against a clerks, ticket sellers, weather ex­ claimant who applies for benefits change to permit the erection of within six months after the date of tionship of the balance in the em­ perts, mechanics, instrument men, ployer's account as of June 30, the processing plant. The com­ accountants and bookkeepers, even the disqualifying act. The old low Look ... Compare! mission had withheld a decision imposed penalties if a claim was 1945 to his payrolls for*, the three since Feb. 23 to study its jurisdic­ flight engineers," he said, filed within 18 months after a dis­ fiscal years ending on that date. tion since a South Bend city ordi­ xxx qualifying act." Contribution rates for 1947 and nance gives the city some control DRAFTS AND SHIFTS IN Gardner emphasized that the each year thereafter- will also be over slaughterhouses within two JOBS CUTS EMPLOYMENT: penalties do not affect any work­ "omputeo as of the preceding June; miles of the city limits. ers except those who commit acts 30. The commission also recom­ Unwillingness of employees to against the public interest in a PROTECTION GIVEN mended that the county commis­ shift readily to tight labor areas war-time economy. A person who SECURITY FUND sioners adopt an approved amend­ which change with the continual ment to the county building de­ shifting of the war picture as well This will allow contribution partment electric code which pro­ as the steady drafting of selective rates to be determined before the service resulted in a downswing of beginning of the year for wb<"h vides for the licensing of electrical they are effective and will result contractors and electric appliance Indiana employment for the period from mid-January to mid-Feb­ OF THE WEEK in many advantages to employers dealers in the countj and the division. xxx ruary. Employment for all groups These new provisions do not in PRIVATE AIRPORTS BALKED studied was estimated at 573,593 "Our raids alone certainly any way avoid the concept of BY NEW AERONAUTICS LAW: wage earners in February, a 0.3 aren't going to win the war."— maintaining individual accounts for per cent drop from last month and B-29 pilots in Pacifio to Ernie employers and reporting methods Private airports in St. Joseph Pyle, emphasizing hard task will be unchanged. Voluntary pay­ county will have to await action 6.3 per cent lower than February, ahead. ment provisions remain unchanged by the newly-created state depart­ 1944. Corresponding weekly pay and such payments can be made ment of aeronautics, the county rolls were estimated to be $24,870,- under the same circumstances as plan commission ruled late Tues­ 096, showing a loss of 6.3 per cent "The midnight curfew looks under the previous law. day in considering two petitions from January and 6.2 per cent like fool conservation rather than The new law establishes a safe­ for approval of proposed ports. from February, 1944. fuel conservation." — Raymond guard to the solvency of the em­ ire, removed from Manila newspaper files before the Japs The plan commission, after stu­ February factory employment Moley, columnist. ployment security fund by provid­ troy them, bore the following caption: Nippon Paratroops dying the new state law, an­ was estimated at 408,368 wage ing that no employer may have a rs of the Takatiho airborne unit. Intrepid fighters nounced that the new state depart­ earners, a dip of 0.1 per cent from contribution rate lower than 2.7 :ted in the plane ready to hop off on their mission. ment will have considerable au­ January. Total weekly pay rolls "Putting a strait jacket on the per cent for any year if the bal­ thority over the establishment and for all manufacturing industries free people of America by a mot­ ance in the fund is less than $25,- were estimated at $19,814,215, a ley crew who couldn't be elected 000,000 as of the preceding June operation of private ports in In­ dog-catcher must be stopped!"— 30. diana and that the county com­ 0.3 per cent decrease from Janu­ ary. Compared to a year ago em­ Congressman John Jennings, It is provided in the law that mission could take no steps in port Tenn., in Washington, no employer's account shall be rezoning until they had been stu­ ployment fell 9.3 per cent while charged with benefits paid to any died and approved by the state weekly pay rolls declined SA%. person whose benefit rights have department. Both durable and nondurable "There shall never he another been or shall be preserved in ac­ The latest request to the com­ goods manufacturing industries war, ever. We must 'get on the cordance with provisions relating mission for port rights was made registered employment and pay ball' back home."—Letter from to the'"freezing" of benefit rights by Warren Oliver and Frank Aker, roll declines. In the eight groups Lieut. A. Grimaldi, Brooklyn, of individuals in military or naval Jr., at the Tuesday meeting. They of non-manufacturing industries later kitted in action. service. seek a site about one mile west of studied, wage earner employment Gardner announced that the new South Bend city limits on Sample diminished 0.6 per cent from Jan­ law repealed the penalty contri­ street or the Grant road. The port uary while weekly pay rolls of "If we don't get well along in bution rate of 3.7 per cent and would be located less than three $5,055,881 dwindled 0.3 per cent. A world trade within 20 years, a now expressly states that after miles from St. Joseph county air­ seasonal decrease of 1.3 per cent line-up for World War in by that' January 1, 1945 no employer's rate port and would contain 79 acres was reflected in the employment time will have become evident." of contribution shall exceed 2.7 of land. of the retail trades group. Em­ —Pres. Ira Mosher, Natl. Assn. per cent. ployment in wholesale trades ad­ of Manufacturers, advocating The director emphasized the fact Previously filed with the com­ that the employment security mission was a petition by H. C. vanced 1.2 per cent accompanied tariff adjustments, to. expand by a parallel increase in weekly world, trade* board is required by law to take Biddle to establish a port north­ f- all appropriate steps to reduce and east of South Bend and Misha­ pay rolls. The coal mining indus­ prevent unemployment. He said waka. tries show an employment reduc­ p< that the new measures included in tion of 0.9 per cent while quarry­ Lois of times women think more of their dogs than of their the act by the 1945 legislature are POULTRY SHORTAGE ing and nonmetallic mining em­ designed to broaden the Indiana NEXT IN LIKELIHOOD: husbands." — State Sen. Peyton ployment gained 8.7 per cent. Em­ Hawet, Ala., 'favoring: law to bar unemployment compensation pro­ A poultry shortage due for the ployment in laundries and dyeing P«t* from hotels* gram and to provide post-war comparison, here is a gliderful of American parachute most part to heavy buying by the and cleaning establishments re­ economic security for Indiana troops. (USAAF photo.) , armed forces is moving into Indi- mained stationary. workers. Page Ten THE MIKKOffc

SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON

«.an-pc INO fcxyy-v,-.-IVI • fftr• IM Liberty Without HIT PROGRAM? i The Lows of God WSBT Dial 960 Text: Matthew 22:34-46: Chap­ • gf THE Ml* ters >K 25 South Bend Tribune Station ^v^jKWJWjCTiiy,'^i^^.i • • » nnHERE is, and can be, no life 6:00 Joe Boland on Sports 10:00 John Daly, News and Bob 2:45 Waltz Time 9:15 Maude Wilson's Recipes ^""- without law. It is by the WSBT — 960 6:15 Music Tnat Satisfies Trout, News Analysis 3:00 G. E. Houseparty 9:20 Morning Melodies laws of nature that we come in­ S:JO American lVieioay Hour 10:15 Local News 3:25 News 9:30 Christian Youth Hour SUNDAY, MARCH 18 7:00 Big Town 10:20 Hoosier Beer Sport Revue 3:30 Manpower Program 10:00 Warren Sweeney, News to the world, and by the laws of A.M. 7:30 Theater of Romance 10:30 Viva America 3:45 Gospel Melodies 10:05 Let's Pretend 8:00 Sunday School of Air 11:00 News 4:00 Off the Record 10:30 Billie Burke Show nature that all life is nourished 9:00 Voice of Prophecy 7 :OD Bill Ayres, News and sustained. In babyhood the 8:00 Inner Sanctum, 11:05 Listen to Lawrence 4:25 Fireside Tales 11:00 Theater of Today 9:30 Sunnyside Youth Church 8:30 Highlights of" che News 11:30 Dance Orch. 4:30 Pick A-Tune 11:30 Stars Over Hollywood process is without our knowledge 10:00 Warren Sweeney, News 8:45 Royal Hawaiin Echoes 12;00 News "M:45 Engagement Book Noon Grand Central Station or consciousness».but as we grow 10:05 Blue Jacket Choir 9:00 Service to th.i Front 5:00 Mort Linder Reporting 12:25 News 10:30 Your Worship Hour 9:30 Jim Costln Says FRIDAY, MARCH 23 5:15 To Your Good Health 12:30 Report to the Nation we understand. 11:00 Sunday Edition, News 9:45 Outdoors with T. Dee A.M. 5:30 10-2-4 Time 1:00 Of Men and Books 11:15 First Presbyterian Ch. 6:00 Morning Roundup 5:45 The World Today 1:15 Adventures in Science So every sensible man knows 11:45 Hungarian Hour 10:00 John Daly, News and Q. that we live in a world of law. Howe, News Analysis' 6:15 Sunrise Meditations 5:55 Joseph C. Harsch 1:30 Victory Valley 12:36 Polish Hour 10:15 Local News 6:30 Reveille Review 6:00 Joe Boland on Sports 2:00 The Land is Bright And this is as true of the higher 1:25 News 10:20 Hoosier Beer Sports 7:00 News of the World 6:15 Hogan Quartet 2:30 Syncopation Piece ranges of life as of its physical 1:30 Matinee Theater i0:30 Behind the Scenes, 7:15 Hits and Bits 6:30 War Commentary 2:45 Job for Tomorrow 2:00 N. Y. Philharmonic 10:45 Dance Time 7:45 One Day Closer 6:35 Rainbow Rendezvous 3:00 Report from Washington foundation. We are discovering 3:30 Electric Hour 11:00 News 8:15 Tip Top Quiz 6:45 Tele-quiz 3:15 Report from Overseas this increasingly in our political 4:00 Wyman's Sun. Concert 8:30 Sunny Melodies 7:00 Aldrich Family 3:30 Assignment Home 4:30 Diamond Dramas 11:05 Buffalo Presents 8:40 Morning Edition 7:30 Adventures of Thin Man 4:00 Philadelphia Symphony and social life. There are laws 4:45 Wm. L. Shirer 11:30 Dance Orch. 8:45 Star Dust Melodies 7:55 Bill Ayres, News 5:00 Mort Linder Reporting of human welfare the neglect of 5:00 Adventures of Gzzie and 12:00 News 9:00 Morning Devotions 8:00 It Pays to be Ignorant 5:15 School Kids' Quiz which, or the disobedience of Harriett WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21 9:15 Maude Wilson's Recipes 8:30 Those Websters 5:45 The World Today which, brings tragedy and de­ 5:30 Toasties Time 6:00 Morning Roundup 9:20 Once Upon a Time 9:00 Moore and Durante 5:55 War Commentary 6:00 Kate Smith Hour 6^15 Sunrise Meditations 9:25 Thei Bright Spot 9;80 Salute to the G. l.'s 6:00 Joe Boland on Sports struction. We know that there 7:00 Blondie 6:30 Reveille Review 9:30 Strange Romance of 9:45 Frank Colby 6:15 Treasury Program.. 7:30 Crime Doctor Evelyn Winters 10:00 John Daly, News and Q. 6:30 America in the Air cannot be liberty without law; 7:55 Bob Trout, News 7:00 News of the World 7:00 Danny Kaya and that wh^re some have free­ 7:15 Hits and Bits 9:45 Hogan-Richardes Howe. News Analysis 8:00 Radio Readers Digest 7:45 One Day Closer 9:55 News 10:15 Local News 7:30 FBI in Peace and War dom, without regard to law, and 8:30 Texaco Star Theater 8:15 Tip Top Quiz 10:00 Easy Rhythm 10:20 Hoosier Beer Sports 7:55 Bob Trout, News 9:00 Take It or Leave It 10:15 Story of the Day 10:30 Texas Rangers 8:00 Hit Parade the liberties and rights of others, 9":30 We, the People 8:30 Sunny Melodies 10:20 Job Reporter 8:45 Stars and Stripes unhappy social conditions result. 8:40 Morning Edition 10:45 Dance Time 10:00 News of World and Ever­ 8:45 Star Dust Melodies 10:25 News 11:00 News 9:15 Footprints on the Sands But when we write of law and ett Holies. News Analysis 9:00 Morning Devotions 10:30 Bright Horizon 11:05 Toronto Calling of Time 10:15 Old Fashioned Revival 9:15 Maude Wilson's Recipes 10:45 Romantic Rendezvous 11:30 Dance Orch. 9:?0 Dince Time liberty, we must recognize MONDAY, MARCH 19 9:20 Once Upon a Time 11:00 Kate Smith Speaks 12:00 News, 9:30 U. S. Marines that all law does not make for 9:25 The Bright Spot 11:15 Big Sister 9 *45 Tillies 6:00 Morning Roundup 9:30 Strange Romance of 11:30 Helen Trent SATURDAY, MARCH 34 10:00 News and Maj. G. F. liberty. People often speak, or 6:15 Sunrise Meditations 11:45 Our Gal Sunday A.M. Eliot, News Analysis. write, of obedience as if it were 6:30 Reveille Review Eveiyn Winters, Noon Luncheon Club 6:30 Reveille Review 10:15 Local News 7:00 News of the World 9:45 Harlan Hogan, piano 1:00 Joyce Jordan, M. D. 7:00 News of the World 10:20 Basketball Roundup in itself a virtuous and desirable 7:16 Hits and Bits 9:55 News 1:15 Two on a Clue 7:15 Hits and Bits 10:30 Dance Orch. thing. It depends entirely upon 7:45 One Day Closer 10:00 Easy Rhythm 1 ;30 OPA Program 7:45 One Day Closer 11:00 News S&eSp what one obeys. Obedience to 8:15 Tip Top Quiz 10:15 Story of the Day 1:45 Public Service Program 8:15 Tip Top Quiz 11:05 Dance Orch. 8:30 Sunny Melodies 10:20 Job Reporter 2:00 Mary Marlin 8:30 County Journal 11:30 Dance Oich. men like Hitler, and to the sort 8:40 Morning Edition 10:25 News 2:15 Mrs. Riley Shop News 9:00 Calling All Girls 12:00 News of laws that they have enacted 8:45 Star Dust Melodies 10:30 Bright Horizon 9:00 Morning Devotions 10:45 Romantic Rendezvous has brought horror and suffering 9:15 Maude Wilson's Recipes 11:00 Kate Smith Speaks upon the world. 9:20 Once Upon a Time 11:15 Big Sister Law tends toward liberty 9:25 The Bright Spot 11:30 Helen Trent 9:30 Strange Romance of 11:45 Our Gal Sunday only when it is not contrary to Evelyn Winter's Noon Luncheon Club the laws of God, and of God's 9:45 Hogan-Richardes 1:00 Joyce Jordan, M. D. 9:65 News 1:15 Two on a Clue world. 10:00 Easy Rhythm 1:30 Concert Hall , The two great commandments 10:15 Story of the Day 2:00 Mary Marlin - of Love—to love God with 10:20 Job Reporter 2:15 Mrs. Riley's Shop Guide 10:25 News 2:45 Ladies Welcome all the heaft, and soul, and mind, 10:20 Bright Horizon . 3:00 G. E. Houseparty and strength; and to love one's 10:45 Romantic Rendezvous 3:25 News neighbor as one's self—are not 11:00 Kate Smith Speaks 3:30 Feature Story 11:15 Big Sister 3:45 Gospel Melodies in vent: ens of Christianity, or pe- 11:30 Helen Trent 4:00 Off the Record 'Ctiliarly Christian. They are a 11:45 Our Gal Sunday 4:25 Fireside Tales Noon Luncheon Club 4':30 Pick-A-Tune part of that great heritage from 1:00 Joyce Jordan, M. D. 4:45 Engagement Book Judaism that Jesus said He had 1:15 Two on a Clue 5.00 Mort Linder Reporting not come to destroy, but to ful­ 1:30 Strange As It Seems 5:15 To Your Good Health 1:45 Public Service Program 5:30 10-2-4 Time fill. They were the great com­ 2:00 Mary Marlin 5*45 World Today mandments that Jesus heard as 2:15 Mrs. Riley Shop Guide 5:55 Joseph C. Harsch _2:46 The Singing Lady 6:00 Joe Boland ori Sports a boy as He attended worship 3:00 G. E. Houseparty 6:15 Music That Satisfies in the synagogue, occupying a 3:25 News 6:30 War Commentary _ place in the Sabbath ritual. 3:§0 Public Service Program 6:35 Rainbow Rendezvous ~ Well might we make those com­ 3:45 Gospel Melodies 6:45 Jimmie Fidler 4:00 Off the Record 7:00 Jack Carson Show mandments, also, a part of our 4:25 Fireside Tales 7:30 Dr. Christian regular Christian worship. 4:30 Pick-A-Tune 7:55 Bill Ayres, News 4:45 Engagement Book 8:00 Frank Sinatra Show 5:00 Mort Linder Reporting 8:30 Which is Which Blaming current real estate 5:15 To Your Good Health 9:00 Great Moments in Music 5:30 Sally Moore & Columbia 9:30 Let Yourself Go, prices on speculators who want Concert Orchestra 10:00 John Daly, News- and to resell to beneficiaries of the 5:45 The World Today Maj. G. F. Eliot G. I. Bill of Rights, Federal Re­ 5:55 Joseph C. Harsch 10:15 Local News 6:00 Joe Boland on Sports 1050 Hoofier Beer Sports serve Chairman Marriner Eccles 6:15 Hedda Hopper 10:30 Texas Rangers wants them taxed "out of exist­ 6:30 War Commentary 10:45 Dance Time ence." In a word, he'd make 6:35 Hogan Quartet 11:00 News 6:45 Military Marches 11:05 Petrillo, Janette & each lot an acher. 7:00 Vox Pop Mac Cormack 7:30 Burns & Allen 11:30 Dance Orch. 7:55 Bill Ayres, News 12:00' News 8:00 Radio Theater 9:00 Screen Guild Players THURSDAY, MARCH 22 9:30 Thanks to the Yanks 6:00 Morning Roundup 10:00 John Daly, New, and Wm 6:15 Sunrise Meditations Shirer, News Analysis 6:30 Reveille Review 10:15 Local News 7:00 News of the World 10:30 Hoosier Beer Sports 7:15 Hits and Bits 10130 Texas Rangers 7s$6 One Day Closer 10:45 Pance Time 8:15 Tip Top Quii 11:00 News 8:30 Sunny Melodies 11:05 Music From the West 8:40 Morning Edition 11:30 Dance Orch. 8:45 Band of the Week rfesOO News 9:00 Morning Devotions loMng 3^X5 Maude Wilsdn's Recipe^ TUESDAY, MARCH 20 9:20 Morning Melodies 6:00 Morning Roundup 9:25 The* Bright Spct 6:15 Sunrise Meditations 9:30 Strange Romance of 6:80 Reveille Review Evelyn Winters, 7:00 News of the World 9:45 Hogan-Richardes 7:15 Hits and Bits 9:55 News 7:45 One Day Closer 10:00 Easy Rhythm 8:15 Tip Top Quiz 10:13 Story of the Day 8:30 Sunny Melodies 10:20 Job Reporter 8 ;40 Morning Edition 10:26 News 8:45 Melodic Moods 10:30 Bright Horizon 9:00 Morning Devotions 10:45 Quizzing the News 8:15 Maude Wilson Recipes 11,-00 Kate Smith Speaks 9:20 Morning Melodies 11:15 Big Sister ,, WOT THAT EASY 9:25 Th9 Bright Spot llato Helen Treht 9:30 Strange Romance of il:48 Our Gal Sunday Prosperity is a picnic ... on Evelyn Winters Noon Luncheon Club 9:45 Harlan Hogan, Piano 1:00 Joyce Jordan, M. D. paper. 9:55 News 1:15 Two on a Clue 10:00 Easy Rhythm 1:30 This Rhythmic Age Some people say: "The govern­ 10:16 Story of the Day 1:45 Safety for Victory ment owns 920 war plants. If, 10:20 Job Reporter l:-50 Navy Program iC:25 News 2:00 Mary Marlin after the war, each of them em­ 10:30 Bright Horizon 2:15 Mrs, Riley's Shop Guide ployed 50,000 people, that would 10:45 D. J. Sings 2:45 Ladies welcome be 46,000,000 jobs!" Just like 11:00 Kate Smith Speaks 3:00 G. E. Houseparty 11:15 Big Sister 3:25 News •*hatt 11:30 Helen irent 3:80 Red Cress Program 11:45 Our Gal Sunday 3:45 Sign of the Cross But an empty building, or even Noon Lunchedn Club 4:00 Oft the Record a building full of machinery, is 1:00 Joyce Jordan. M. D. 4:80 PWi -A-Tune 1:15 Two on a Clue 4:45 Engagement Book not a business. 1:30 McCall Sewing School 5:00 Mort Linder Reporting 2:00 Mary Marlin 5:15 Calling Pan America Most big American businesses 2:1§ Mrs. Riley's Shop Guide 5:45 World Today were started by some little guy 2:45 Ladies Welcome 5:58 Joseph G. Harsch with little money, a big idea, a 3:00 G. E. Houseparty 6:0Q Joe Boland on Sports 3:25 News 6:15 Music That Satisfies capacity for 10,000 headaches, 3:30 Readers' Review 6:30 Eye Witness News and the guts to fight for 5,10 or 3:45 Sign of the Cross 6:45 War Commentary 20 years to lick obstacles, build an 4:00 Off the Record .6:90 Hogan Quartet 4:30 Pick-A-Tun* 7:00 Polish Hour organization, perfect his product, 4:45 Engagement Book 7:55 BUI Ayres, News persuade millions of people to 5:00 Mort Linder Reporting 8:00 Major Bowes, Shower like it and buy it. 5:15 Edwin C. Hill Stars 5:30 Time Was • 8:30 Corliss Archer 5:45 The Wtorld Today 9:00 The First Line 5:55 Joseph C. Harsch 9:30 Here's to Romance MARCH 16, 1945 P&ere Eleven A Weekly Collection of "Dripping Sands" that "Mark Time1' in Passing Vvu/

Time Doesn't Fly; It Stand The World Moves.

A. M. Herring, 712 So. Bend, rebuild R. 1, Mish. and Cloyce Bowers, Elk­ porches, $100. hart. Ind. E. Waters, 322 S. Kentucky, enclose William at Colfax—Violet Schimmel, Test Your I. Q. porch, $140. R. R. 6 and Chas. Bowse, Goshen, Ind. Studebaker Corp., 500 blk W. Sam­ Western at Walnut — John Howes, BIRTHS DEATHS ple, add., $14,000. Niles, Mich, and Victor Ramemth 238 TOTAL BIRTHS IN FIRST TWO TOTAL DEATHS IN FIRST TWO H. Johnson, 214 E. Donald, enlarge E. Bdwy. and Wiley Killebrew, 562> MOi\j.iiS ENDING FEBRUARY, 1945, MONTHS ENDING FEBRUARY, 1945. 1. What is pomology? basement, $175. Chapin. 443. 176. S. Lewinski, 637 Sancome, add., $120. Sample at LWE—Geo. Miner, Hoff­ 2. What state leads in broom- man-Hotel and Geo. Lockey, 517 Iron- To the: Mrs. Mary Woltman, 1223 W. Dun­ ?orn production? wood Dr. Kugar C. Powers, Jr.'s, 619 W. Mar­ ham, age 72, March 5. 10C3 Riverside Dr.—Chauncey Nathes, ion, acUghter, Kim Anne, March 6. Mrs. Emma E. Parsons, 114 N. Main, AH/ FAIR AND WA&HER// Jr. and Edw. Toohey, 1007 Riverside Ray Meuiernan's, 1635 W. Dunham, age 81, March 4. THE RED DEVIL Dr. son, Dennis Charles, March 7. Mrs. Paula S. Lipton, 1868 N. Adams, March 8 Theodore Kulwicki's, Granger, Ind., age 66, March 4. FIRES 2S0 N. Mich.—James Cook, 333 Tonti son, David Francis, March 7. Frank B. Huber, 1412 N. Wilbur, ag.s ESTIMATED FIRE DAMAGE FOR and Elmer Walters, 605 Va S. Rush Floyd M. Dickey's, 913 Oakland, son, 83, March 12. FIRST TWO MONTHS ENDING FEB­ 2200 blk. S. Leer—Robt. Clark, 801 Stephen Floyd, March 5. John Alabaugh, 502 E. Monroe, age RUARY, 1945, $15,576. Sancome and Devon Rowe. Donald W. Wozny's, 1801 Werwinski, 83, March 10. 2700 blk. B'ertrand—Casimir Robaska, daughter, Donna Marie, March 5. Mrs. Erma Keiser, 311 E. Indiana,-'age March 8; electric iron left on ironing R. R. 3 and No. Ind. Transit bus. Wmslow W. Peterka's, 466 Gilmer, R. 41, March 9. board at home of John Parkansky, 2515 500 blk. W. Colfax—Roger Donica, R. 6, daughter, Mary Louise, Mar. 5. Mrs. Marie B. Jacobs, 520 W. Bat­ 3. What is synoptic clima­ 812 S. Fellows and unk. driver. Raymond E. Jaronik's, 1214 Ford, son, tell, Mish., age 47, March 5. W. Orange street; iron burned through Arthur Raymond, March 5. Cary R. Tucker, 1001 E. Washington. tology? board and ignited floor and wall. Dam­ Twyckenham at Chester — Howard, 4. What is casein? age, to house $100, to contents $50. Denbo, 804 Tower Bldg. and unknown Vernon R. Beauchamp's, North Lib- age 67, March 5. March 8; ABC Coach Line bus, of driver. -fefeft^pd., son, John Ray, March 5. . James F. Payton, 116 E. Monroe, age 5. What is lebkuchen? Fort Wayne, Irid., at Washington ave­ 3400 blk. Langley Dr.—Frank Eward, Steven M. Yambrich's, 2053 Eckman, 49, March 6. (Answers On Page i5) nue and Lafayette boulevard, caused 526 E. Southmore and unk. driver. daughter, Judith Lyn, March 5. Stephen Vargo, 1017 W. Fisher, age by anti-freeze boiling over, damage $25. 800 blk. Twyckenham—A. V. Prudue, Sherman J. Van Lue's, Osceola, Ind., 54, -March 9. March 9; plant of the Wells Manu­ Rochester, Ind. and John Hayes, 1108 daughter, Marilyn Kay, March 6. Henry Seitz, 1002 E. Calvert, age 92, facturing company, 1701 South Main Cleveland. Emery M. Vanslager's,904 S. Catalpa, March 9. James M. Hastings, Sterling, Qolo., street; sawdust in ventilating system March 9 son, Barry Alexander, March 4. Infant James E. Dudkowski, 869 Mar- and Delia Cometto, Atwood, Colo. ignited by spark from electric fan mo­ Goodland at Longley—Arthur Vick-4 Walter M. Johnson's, 202 N. Wenger Geo. D. Biddington and Hazel Ash- tor; damage $500. rey, 2869 N. Dixie Way N. and Arthur Mish., son, Wm., March 4. Charles R: Clough, 1127 Oak Park Ct , ton, both of Philadelphia, Pa. March 12; grass fire in the 700 block O'Brien, 1654 Olive. Stanley E. Grzeskowiak's, 222 N. age 68, March 8. Wm. C. Brooks, 114 N. Main, and of East Woodside street, no damage. LaSalle at Mich. — Homer Ridgway,. O'Brien, son, Jackie Donald, Mar. 4. Jean Donlin, 1005 W. Wash. March 12; grass fire in the 1100 block 518 23rd and truck. Lucius H. Gibson's, R. R. 2, daugh­ Chas. Somgyi, 1245 W. Collax and Eva of East Fairview avenue, no damage. 27th at Wall—H. T. Smith, 633 27th ter, Nancy Karen, March 4. W. Singleon, R. R. 5, East Notre Dame, March 13; residence of Co­ and Mrs-. Wm. Hillman, Jr. Harold E. Graham's, 2806 Hickery Ind. hen, 216 East South street; match in Chapin at Western — Geo. Pickney, Lane, son, James, March 4. HONEYMOON EXPRESS Lester C. Bernhard, Michiana Hotel, waste basket; damage $25. 728 W. Ford and ped. Bernhard Kreisle, Jos. J. Hoffer, Sr.'s, 512 Donmoyer, and Rose Dubbs, 608 W. Colfax. March 13'; second hand store operated 726 W. Napier. son, Jos. John, Jr., March 5. MARRIAGE LICENSES Wm. H. Gottshall, Washington, D. C, by C. Van Scoyk at 105 West Sample Ironwood at LWE—Geo. Smith, 622 Romeo Martin's, 2228 Orange, son, TOTAL MARRIAGE' LICENSES IN and Shirley Bloomfield, R. R. 1, box 121. street; roof, sparks from chimney, W. Jeff., Mish. and Wm. Strahla, 828 Fredk. Lee, March 6. FIRST TWO MONTHS ENDING FEB­ Robt. L. Wendt, Bureau, 111., and damage $5. Marietta. Donald W. Lynn's, 1404 LWE, son, RUARY, 1945, 267. Patricia Hendry, 1321 Miami. March 10 Donald Wayne, Jr., March 3. Richard Flanagan, Sigourney, Iowa, LWE at Sample—Velma Simpson, 631 Orville D. Harrison's, Granger, Ind., and Betty Spink, 752 LWE. E. Sample and J. C. Szigeti, 1051 W. son, Thomas Lee, March 2. Howard Wenger and Madeline Eld- James J. Granning, 139 E. Broadway, Dunham. Floyd E. Williams', 2137 W. Merry, ridge, both of Caledonia, Mich. and Mathilde P. Klingerman. TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS 300 blk. N. Mich.—James Cook, 333 son, Paul Michael, March 5. Laque B. Ifiatt, 1911 Parallel, and John P. Hetman, R. R. 2, and Ber­ Tonti and Elmer Walters, 5O6V2 S. Rush. Ernest F. Stuck's, R. R. 1, daughter, Lillie Mae Harris, 1911 Parallel. nice McGlothlen, 2816 Hickory Lane. NUMBER TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS IN 400 blk. S. Mich.—Sylvester Bartko- Lois Elaine, March 5. Richard Moore, R. R. 1, box 41, and Richard L. Weaver, 914 W. Marion, SOUTH BEND IN FIRST 2 MONTHS wiak, 1505 W. Sample and N. I. T. Ci Clyde W. Eckenberger's, 401 S. Main, Eileen Fry, R. R. 1. Mish., and Marian Lawson, 726 N. ENDING FEB., 1945, 487; NUMBER IN­ bus son, Max Gene, March 1. James F. Gormeley, Jersey City, N. JURED, 43; KILLED, 1. Harris E. Taylor's, R. R. 2, New Car­ J., and Margaret Kopsea, 1116 Christy- Frances. 1040 Western—Leon Harris, Muske­ lisle, Ind., son, Robt. Eugene, Mar. 1. ann, Mish. Harry J. Shideler, 414 E. Lawrence, gon, Mich, and concrete steps. Calvin H. Marker's, New Carlisle,, Leonard E. Woodruff, 1026 S. Mich., Mish., and Sarah McCauley, 119 N.*Mill March 6 Mich, at Wakewa—Claude West. 229 daughter, Cheryl Dee, March 1. Mish.,—and Margaret Hall, 1026 S. Mish. 1100 blk Western—Chester Dunn, Jr., Wakewa and June Patitucci, 2396 Myr­ Stephen Bardick's, 717 S. 31st, daugh­ Mich., Mish Thos. B. Hamilton; Birmingham. Chesterton, Ind., and hit and run driv. tle and Otto Switzer, 113 E. Pendle. ter, Elaine Carol, March 2. Ralph E. Dewees and Ramona S. Ala., and Vera M. Jester, 209 E. Altgeld. 100 blk N. Mich. — Elieda B. Erb, 1428 1037 W. Sample — Wm. Cairns, 414 Stephen J. Kratovil's, R. R. 1, son, Mitch, both of Buchanan, Mich. Robt. L. Whitcomb and Beverly Sunnymede and Alta Christophel 804 Parry and parked car. Scott LeRoy, March 2. John Hadkins, 217 E. Battell. Mish., Downs, both of Kalamazoo, Mich. Wilson, Mish. March 11 Jos. O'Brine's, 623 N. Birdsell, daugh­ and Myrta R. Holcombe, 808 N. Sarah, Don M. Jester, 223 N. Mich., aand Cedar at Niles—Chas. Willard, 710 N. 100 blk. N. Mich.—Chester Carney, ter, Margaret Elizabeth, March 2. Mish. Georgianna Hickey, 707 Harrison. Hill and James Lupresto, 713 N. Niles. 2620 Erskine and unk. driver. Moorman R. Balis', 1201 Riverside dr, Oscar Simon, 1202 Kinyon, and Grace Ralph E. Corrin and Marjorie Mc- 1800 blk. Circle—Fred Bishop. Plym­ Laf. at Navarre — Du?ne Chellwig, daughter, Martha Louise, March 3. Clark, 1202 Kinyon. Keon, both of Flint, Mich. outh, Ind., and Lloyd DeWitt, Kee­ Buchanan, Mich, and unk. driver. Bert J. Klysz's, 1325 N. Elmer, son, Chas. Hull, 129 S. Walnut, and Bette Richard B. S.lesinski, 510 S. Walnut. shin Trucking Co. March 12 Bert Joseph, March 3. J. Rakestraw, 915 E. Miner. and Henrietta E. Kolesiak, 513 N. Bill Mishler, Nappanee, Ind., and 3305 S. Mich'.—Ernest Tudor. Chicago Walter A. Gaedtke's, R. R. 5, son, Harry N. Heidrich, Jr., 729 George, Johnson. Alfred Schwartz, Niles, Mich. and Robt. Love, 624 W. LaSalle and Paul John, March 4. and Pearl Ewers, 404 W. Navarre. Robt. M. Jones, 631 Diamond, and Mich, at Donmoyer — Theodore Par- Harrv Seilor. 118 W. Marion. John*K. Nice's, 1118 Goodland, son, Eldon G. Wheeler, Rocky River, O., Dorothy E. Haddock, 216 E. Don­ rott, R. R. 1 and Matthew Zoncick, Jeff, at LWE—Mrs. Willis Sriver, 2427 Don Stephen, March 4. and Frances C. DeVries, 1049 N. John­ ald. 127 E. Donmoyer. W. Prast and Clarence Gizella. RR 1. Robt. L. Kelley's, 1237 E. Miner, son. Harry R. McCausland, Jr., Bremen. .Mich, at Center — Chas. Kile, 1309 600 blk. N. Mich.—W. O. Branden­ daughter, Kathy Lee, March 4. Herman M. Vogg, Healthwin Hosp., Ind., and June G. Scott, 229 S Notre Woodward and Clarence Bare, 1922 E burg. 215 Seebirt and H. W. Blackwelh St^^ley Klaybor's, 1241 Sorin, daugh­ and Gladys Harris, Healthwin Hosp. Dame. Donald. 606 N. Mich. ter, Martha Marie, March 4. Richard W. Shuman, 925 26th, and Chas. R. Brebach and Thelma C 600 blk S. Laf. — Francis LeBlanc, LWW at Cushing—Grace Hill, DWN Peter S. Richard's, Plymouth, Ind., Marian S. Schahtz, 2322 Miami. Baer, both of New Carlisle, Ind. 2753 LWE, Mish., and viaduct. and Wm. Jenkins, 501 W. Wash. Floyd A. Kauffman and Gladys Mae Jeff, at 32nd — Cecil Andrews, R. R. Franklin at Bdwy.—Nick Garbacz, 917 daughter, Mary Evelyn, March 6. Edw. W. Hibbard and Elizabeth Mae Woldheser, both of Elkhart, Ind. E. Fox and John Schrock. Ernest T. Watts', 514 E. Bowman, son, Miltenberger, both of Niles, Mich. 2 and Margaret Krueger, 911 N. Main. Donald Wilson and Ruby Dungey, Raymond M. Leliaert, 914 E. Dubail, Glenn Hardesty, 813 E. Third reports Prairie at Dubail — Eugene Orban, Michael Wm., March 6. and Lois Zubler, 816 Almond Ct. car turned over. 1515 Catalpa and Jack Vukovits, 1728 both of Cassopolis, Mich. Russell K. Harris and Vena Gribble, Geo. J. Jach's, 1213y2 W. Ford, son, Harrison T. MacDonald and Corinne March 7 Kemble. Darryl Chester, March 6. M. Reifers, both of Lafayette, Ind. both of New Carlisle, Ind. 200 blk W. South—Jack Andrews, 124 M^x Steele's, North Liberty, Ind., Thos. J. Litter and Helen W. Fox, E. South and Ruth Nowak, 1318 Mish. daughter, Susan Elaine, March 6. both of Appleton, Wis. LWW at William — W. B. Saxton, Geo. B. Bailey's, Michigan City, Ind., James Zickmund, Renselaer, Ind, and Granger, Ind., and Wm Delmel. Bridge- TRANSFER OF REALTY daughter, Barbara Jean, March 6. Connie Peregrine, 123 Home, Mish. THE MOVING VAN man, Mich. Elmer at Vassar — Richard Sergeant, DEEDS MOVING PERMITS 1243 Elliott and Harry Heidrich, Jr , TOTAL DEED TRANSFERS IN TOTAL MOVING PERMITS ISSUED 525 Niles. Sample at Chapin—Omer Becker, 851 SOUTH BEND IN FIRST 2 MONTHS 7 IN FIRST TWO MONTHS ENDING Prairie and Nick Wesdowski, 2426 Po­ ENDING FEBRUARY, 1945, 1,092. AT REMINDS ME/ X VE 60TAN APPOINTMENT FEBRUARY, 1945, 168. land. Riverside at Mich.—Wm. T. Carpen­ March 6 WITrtTff-EPBNTISTTfil^ AFTERNOON// L. Pawlak, 1618 Florence to 1014 ter, 410 S. Mich, and Ed Smet, 1049 Chris Seifert et ux to Donald Car­ Fuerbringer. Sherwood. penter et ux, lot 66, Liberty Gardens. G. G. Rose, 1722 E. Ewing to 1706 E. (On Page Twelve) Ewing Sample at Main—C. E. Simmons, R. M Ameling, 419 S. Vincent to R. R. 4, Warsaw, Ind. G. L. Mason, 534 S Main, Apt. 3 to / 1 110 y2 LWE. J. F. Baxter, 1222»/2 S. Fellows to R. ,1 R 5 box 591. ! M. Bock, 1315 Vassar to 1433 Chester .V P. M. Kenady, 1352 E. Dubail to 1312 E. Wayne South. * L. Dutrieux, 714 N Elmer to 121 N * Huey. R. Rice, 11421/2 Mish. to 217 S. Cedar, Mish P. Russell, 510 Penn. to R R. 1, box 221 A. Herring, 826 S. Bendix to 712 South Bend. L. Kasner, 525 Leland to 1501 Kess- ler Blvd. Wm. Haft, 933 33rd to R R. 2, Mish. R. W. Anderson^ 520 S Fellows to 2717 S. Main. R. Kallies, 1914 S Meade to 133 Ohio. W Henning, 2624 Cypress Way to R. R. 2, Niles, Mich. C. F. Gassensmith, 2618 Bertrand to 714 N. Elmer. E. Gustin. 508 E. Howard to 1114 Goodland. T. Osowski, 530 Bendix to .817 S Dundee. G. Paszli, 449 Gladstone to R. R. 2, Box 488, South Bend. A. Palkowski, 1339 Fremont to 329 O'Brien. PERMITS TO BUILD TOTAL BUILDING PERMITS IS­ SUED in FIRST TWO MONTHS END­ ING FEBRUARY, 1945, 82; VALUE, $272,767. . v %? \i ii J "I /,//' 1 ,J, H. Polis, 410-12 N. William, gen re­ pairs, • $3,600. S. Sabaj, 520 S. Olive, enlarge base­ ment, $192. J. H. Wilson, 522 27th, enclose porch $100. "Welt I always wanted a little place in the country/! % Page Twelve THE MIRROR

Louis Robb, drunk dr., $50 &c; deft's oper. lie. susp. 3 mos. Clarence Troutner, A&B, $1 &c. Mildred Garrage, drunk, $10 &c, 5 days. James Zimmer, running red light, $5 &c. Thomas Weil, reckless dr., $40 &c; oper. lie. susp. 3 mos. Foster Lane, drunk, 01 &c. March 7 Alvin Cole, embezzlement, $25 &c; szynski, lot 281, Portage Gardens, and prob. 6 mos. lot 21, Wilson Manor. Robt. Wheeler, drunk, $1; dis. cond , Erhardt Johnson et ux to Felix De- $1; mal. trespass, $5 &c; prob. 6 mos. TRANSFER OF REALTY Groote et ux, pt sec. 35, twp.' 38 R. 3 E. Raymond Songer, speeding, $35 &c. Don Wilson et ux to Wm. C. Taylor Louis Horvath, speeding, $5 &c. DEEDS et ux, pt. sec. 14, twp. 38 R 3 E. Robt. Bernhardt, running stop sign, Jos. Wypjszynski et al to Gertrude $10 &c. (From Page Eleven) Wallace, lot 281, Portage Gardens, and Betty Jefferson, petit larceny, $25 Walter C. Miller et ux to Basil lot 21, Wilson Manor. &c. Greenblatt et ux, lot 51, Christrnan PI. Tower Fed. Sav. & Loan to Myrtle Franklin Thomas, running red light, Josephine Bauwens to J. Clifford M. Ritter, lot 113, Hastings, Woodward- $25 &c. Potts, tr., lots 18, 19, 20, Mary E. An­ and Gray. Frank LeBlanc, reckless dr., $50 &c. derson's 1st sub. Lucius LaFortune et ux to Bert Pus- Wilfred Ludlow, parking on side­ Ruth Kindig et al to Ralph Dixon tay et ux, lot 69, Commrs. sub. walk, $5. et ux, pt. lot 14 and 15, O. P. River Pk. Arden Kincaide et ux to Richard March 8 Guy R. Seybold et ux to Peter Benc- Huckins et ux, lot 79, Ewing Pk. Robt. Groves, speeding, $10 &c. sis et ux, pt. 9 and 10, A. H. Cushing. Michael Pullman et ux to Violet R. DeMeyer, running stop sigh, $10 Orville L. Davis et ux to Sam Wil­ Olmstead, tr., lot 37, Brook Farm sUb. &c. liams et ux, pt. sec. 6, twp. 37 R 3 E. Glenn A. Kellogg et ux to GustaV Chas. Juhas, no driv. lie, $1. CoUrtland P. DuComb et ux to Clay Lass et ux, lot 24, Hollywood Hts. John Howes,' reckless dr., $20 &c. Twp. pt. sec. 32, twp. 38 R 3 E. Marjorie Galloway et al to Marion Ermal R. Name, speeding, $1 &c. Sallie Houghton to Clyde Brown et E. Forbes et ux, lot 5, pt. 4, in Kno- Chauncey J. Mathes, Jr., reckless dr., ux, pt. sec. 2, twp. 36 R 2 E block sub. $40 &c; oper lie. susp. 30 days. HOLC to Fred Hathaway et ux, lot Walter E. Kollar et ux to Ernest Geo. Swartz, drunk, $5 &c; 8 mos. 471, W. & K. 3rd Sunnymede. Greenwood et al, lot 339, town of Ma­ Ind. State Farm. Wm. C. Row to Alex Dubicki et ux, ple Lane. March 9 pt. sec. 14, twp. 38 R 1 E. Zua P. Howell to Edw. Livers et ux, Leo Bell, viol, of state liquor law and Anna Fox to Edith Woodward, lot lot 102, Bowman 5th. misrepresentation of age, $25 &c; prob. «9, Rush 4th. Robt. O. Knoblock et ux to Benjamin 1 year. Chas. Campbell et. ux to Robt. Bowsher et ux, pt. sec. 18, 19, 20, twp. Jos. Turnock, failure to provide for Wayne, lot 77, Mayr Mich. Ave. 38 R 4 E. children, $1 &c; 60 days Ind. St. Farm. Anthony Vumbaca et ux to John J. Merle G. Stephens et ux to James L. Ferrando Sisti, speeding, $15 &c. Burke et ux, lot 23, Muessel 1st. Hart et ux, lot 153, pt. 154, Vernon Hts. Samuel Rowan, drunk, $1 &c. . Bernard Finnan et ux" to James Din- Tower Fed. Sav. & Loan to Merle Jesse McGee, improper plates, $5; no colo et ux, pt. lot 72, Lederer & Long- G. Stephens, lot 153, pt. 154, Vernon driv. lie, $1;; no muffler, 03. ley sub. Hts. Logan Watson, failure to stop for John H. Rusk et ux et al to Louis Belleville Inv. Co. to Edw. M. Pau red light, $1 &c. Share, lot 395, Vernon Hts. weis, lot D, Belleville 4th Unit. Bob L. Myers, Jr., dis. red light, $5; Raymond Smith et ux to Harry Mat­ Minnie Sibley to Wm. I. Sibey, lot faulty brakes, $25 &c. thews et ux, pt. 56, unrec. plat of Oak 20, Stude. PI. add. Oliver Harker, drunk, $5 &c; dis. Forest. Kenneth Topper adm. to Harold "It certainly taught the city not to grant any more 99-year cond., $10 &c; 10 days. Kenneth Coverdale et ux to John Seese, pt. sec. 2, twp. 36 R 2 E. March 10 Wieczorek et ux, lot 197, Fulkerson Pk. Violet J. Olmstead to) Evans D. Day franchises.'* Clarence Flake, drunk, $1; dis. cond., Edith M. Boles et al to Roy E. Went- et ux, pt. sec. 12, twp. 38 R 2 E. $5 &c. worth et ux, lot 6, Gaylor 1st Plat. Julia Day et al to Violet Olmstead, Belleville Inv. Co. to St. Jos. Bk. & Studebaker Corp. to Fred Dreschiel. Carry Gibson, drunk, $1 &c. Stanley Hibiske et ux to Irene Hancz pt. sec. 12, twp. 38 R 2 E Tr. Co., lot 104, Belleville 1st Unit. March 7 Emery Seiner, drunk dr., $75 &c; opr. tr., lot 6, Ed N. Shank's 1st. Violet Olmstead to Michael Pullman, $4,900. Mary Csillag to Walter Jerzak. lie. susp. 3 mos. J. Clifford Potts, tr. to Josephine lot 37, Brook Farm sub. March 7 Nat'l Bk. & Tr. Co. to Selvya K. Arthur Wilson, drunk, $1 &c; 5 days. Bauwens et al, lots 18, 19, 20, Mary E. March 10 Chas. Furnish et ux to Tower Fed. McNamara. Dorothy Fisher, drunk dr., $50 &c; 10 Anderson 1st sub. Rose Hegedus to Frank Balogh et ux, Sav. & Loan, lot 176, Bemer Grove 1st. First Bk. & Tr. Co. to Alex Alexan­ days; oper. lie. susp. 1 year. So. Bend Acceptance Corp. to Don pt. 13, Jaquith So Rutherford sub. $250. der et ux. Ethel Jones, trespass, $1 &c. Ransberger et ux, lot 23, Christrnan PI. Regina Haltz et al to Russell E. Bry­ Thos. Hilkert to First Fed. Sav. & Ditto—to Elmer Nimtz. F. A. Charlesworth, speeding, $5. Irene Hancz to Robt. Hibiske et ux, ant, lot 265, Gaylor 3rd. Loan, lot 88, Fordham. $3,000. Ditto—to Walter Price. Donald Leichtman, speeding, $5 &c. lot 6, Ed N. Shank's 1st. Leon Kowalski et ux to Mennonite Harold F. Smith et ux to American Prudential Ins. Co. to Chas. K. Rob­ Alton Bottom, speeding, $5 &c. March 7 Bd. of Mission and Char., pt. 158, Cush­ Tr. Co., lot 410, Berner Grove 3rd. inson et ux. March 12 Chas. Zimmerman to Lucy Kasner, ing & Lindsey. $3,500. Ira W. Ciralsky et al to Virgil Nash Byron Roylia, drunk, $1 &c; dis. con­ pt. 79 and 80, Northwest add. Michalina Lukasiewicz to Norbert Frank Preus et ux to Walter R. Ar­ et ux. duct, $5 &c. Tower Fed. Sav. & Loan to Forest E. Chlebowski et ux, lot 41, Gorsuch's 4th. nold, tr., lot 3, Erastus Perkins sub. Indpls. Life Ins. Co. to John E. Lar- Marcel DeKispeleare, drunk, $1 &c. Scott et ux, lot 69, Floral Pk. Ira Ciralsky et al to Vincent Ferraro $4,500. kin' et ux. Wm. Ellis, making false affi. to obtain Thos. Hilkert to Wm. Haft et ux, pt. et ux, lot 5, C. L. Hodson sub. tureen Arrow Parking, Inc. to Samuel First Nat'l Bk. of Mish. to Alfred driv. lie, $25 &c; oper lie. susp 1 yr. sec. 3, twp. 36 R 3 E. Arthur Wellington to Ora Winrotte, R. Feuer, lots 39, 40, pt. 245 and 246, Marchant et ux. Robt. D. Dearing. same, $35 &c; oper; Wm. Haft et ux to Thos. Hilkert, lot lot 6, Bl. 7A, Towle 1st. and pt. 57-58, all in O. P. South Bend. IMaroli R lie susp. 1 yr. 88, Fordham. Virgil Nash et ux to Walter Smith et $97,000. First Nat'l Bk. of New Carlisle to Melvin Osier, failure to stop for red Julius Dhoore et ux to Alice Lewis, ux, lot 325, Wenger & Krieghbaum's. Oliver Milliken et ux to Morris Plan Robt. Mansfield. light, $5 &e lot 748, W. & K. 3rd Sunnymede. Ralph Zehrung et ux to Malinda Ditt- Co., pt. sec. 29, twp. 37 R 2 E. $1,200. FUrst Nat'l Bk. of Mish. to John E. Stephen Snyder et ux to Harold mer, lot 12, Jeff. Manor. Bertha C. Kingsafer to Geo. W. Sei­ Creaghton et ux , Smith et ux, lot 410, Berner Grove 3rd. Geo. Byrkit et al to American Foun­ fer et ux, lot 22, town of Dreamwold HOLC to Eubank et ux. Julius Lovas et ux to Andrew Zu- dry Equip. Co., pt. sec. 14, twp 37 R 3 E. Hts. $1,450. HOLC to Rosario Signorino et ux. rowski et ux, lot 1457, 5th PI. Summit Elizabeth Kuhn et al to Carl W. Carl D. Lindzy et ux to Clarence HOLC to Edna Speth. I S. DISTRICT COURT Place. Schmul, pt. sec. 35, twp. 38 R 1 W. Swihart et ux, lot 155, Berner Grove HOLC to Wm. P. Grapp et ux. Stickel et ux to Clarence Ki­ Chas.^F. Seifert to Paul Harmon, pt. 1st. $3,027.64. Merl Mikel, tr. to E. German. Civil No. 546 Chester Bowles, admr. zer, lot 12, 16, 20, Markstead. sec. 5, twp. .37 R 3 E. Wilfred L. Schuster et ux to So. Bend Peoples Fed. Sav. & Loan to Mary O. P. A. v Russell Conrad. Compt. for Arthur J. Harrigan et ux to John Viola B. Parsons to Sander DeVries Fed. Sav. & Ln. Ass'n, lot 95, Nortn- Nimtz. treble damages. Tomsits et ux, pt. sec. 25, twp. 37 R 2 E. et ux, pt lot 313 and 312, Woodlawn. west add. $2,650. Peoples Fed. Sav. & Loan to Chas. Civil No. 547 Chester Bowles, admr. Paul Cooreman to Carl A. Haab, pt. Camiel DeKeizer et ux to Alfonsus Robt. H. Hoover et ux to Miriam E. Hall. O P. A. v W. R. Wedrick Farms Inc. sec. 35, 26, twp. 37 R 1 E. Geersam et ux, lot 19, Tallieu's 1st add. Shupp, lot 348, Berner Grove 3rd. $1,700. Sobieski Fed. Sav. &' Loan to John Complt. for treble damages. Alfons Rodts to Nobel J. Rough et Alphia Schrader, gdn. to Carl W. March 8 Guzicki. ux, pt. sec. 6, twp. 36 R 3 E. Schmul, pt. sec. 35, twp. 38 R 1 W. Wm. L. McAllister et ux to Citizens Sobieski Fed. Sav. & Loan to An- James R. Doty to Sophie S. Doty, lot Minnie Gaff to John Smith et ux, Homes Co., lot 86, Ind. Ave. $4,300. drzej Pytlewicz. 120, plat of Town of Maple Lane. pt. sec. 14, twp. 37 R 3 E Stephen Dobos et ux to Morris Plan Peoples Fed. Sav. & Loan to Frank Geo. W. Seifer et ux to Bertha C. Southlawn Cem. Ass'n to Oscar Boy- Co., lot 5, Birdsell Mfg. Co $780. Smare. BANKING ACTIVITIES Kingsafer, lot 22, town of Dreamwold er, lot 62, Sec. B. Wilfred Bryan et ux to Elizabeth Peoples Fed. Sav. & Loan to John South Bend Clearing House Hts. March 12 Samford, lot 7, Kelly's sub. $6,0d0. Cochran. Total clearing^ from March 3 to 10, Clarence R. Swihart et ux to Carl D. Florence Crum to Paul N. Crum et Donald Charles et ux to Peoples Fed. Sobieski Fed. Sav. & Loan to Dallas inclusive, $3,842,692. Ltndzy et ux, lot 155, Berner Grove 1st. ux, pt. sec. 34, twp. 37 R 1 E. Sav. & Loan, pt. sec. 18, twp. 37 R 4 E. Robertson. Total transactions from March 3 to Fabian D. Swift et ux to Walter E.) Walter J. Bell et ux to John Eitel et $3,800. Sobieski Fed. Sav. & Loan to Ferdi­ 10, inclusive, $15,118,246. Kollar et ux, lot 339, Town of Maple ux, lot 252, Chas. Weidler's 2nd. Albert Berger et ux to So. Bend Fed. nand Stedman. Lane. Mish. Auto Serv., Inc. to Ora Win­ Sav. & Loan, lot 79, Rush 4th. $2,250. So. Bend Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass'n to Clayton Krupp to Floyd Kepler et rotte, pt. sec. 10, 9, twp. 37 R 3 E. Ralph Anderson to Tower Fed. Sav. Wm. J. Blue et ux. ux, pt. sec. 16, twp. 38 R 4 E. Marshal Smith et ux to H. L. Stewart & Loan, lot 45, 2nd add. to Oakside Sobieski Fed. Sav. & Loan to John L£

selder et al. Oliver Corp. files disc, Thursday, March 8 showing that defts. Anna Verselder and Est. 8461 Gewetzki. Sub. tr. fdg. Peter J. Verselder are in their employ 70835 Eaton. Deft, apprs. by Rieder at average weekly salary at $44.48. Crim 8737 Modlin. Hrg. March 26. NEW CASES FILED PROBATE MATTERS 36009 Kellogg McKay Co. v Nicode- Crim 8786 DePriest. Hrg. March 26. CIRCUIT COURT mus. Ct. sustains deft.'s plea in abate­ 54249 Read. Cause dismissed as to CIRCUIT COURT ESTATES ADMITTED TO PROBATE Tuesday, March 6 ment. defts M. J. Kubiak and Clement Stude­ - NEW CIVIL CASES FILED IN CIR­ IN FIRST TWO MONTHS ENDING Claim 3061 Golden v EsL Sherman baker Est. in respect to lot 1396, Sum­ CUIT COURT IN FIRST 2 MONTHS FEBRUARY, 1945, 72. 6003. Jury finds for claimant and SUPERIOR COURT NO. 1 mit PI. 5th add.; complt. amended. ENDING FEBRUARY, 1945, 216. award her sum of $780. Tuesday, March 6 56527 Whitmer et al. Cause dis­ Est No. 8604 Jessie M. Clark, Geo. 70575 Ward et al. Clerk directed to missed as to deft. Martin and B. Kubiak 70850 Lucille Gardner v Raymond F. Clark, excr. Bond, $500. Atty. Earl. order seizure of real est. 67856 Aulm v Roth. Plf. and X-deft. in respect to lot 1396, Summit PI. 5th Gardner, divorce, Scheer & Scheer, Est. No. 8605 Stephen Nemeth" Atty. 65483 Stefanski. Deft, found guilty files ans. to deft's x-complt. add. and as to Clement Studebaker March 6. Torok. of contempt of ct. Est. 8613 Myers. Clarence Myers Est.; complt. amended. 70851 Meda H. Trobaugh v Wm. A. Est. No. 8606 Wm. L. Bowlby, Ebba 70850 Gardner v Gardner. Hrg. qualifies as admr. 56529 Whitmer et al. Cause dis­ Trobaugh, divorce, H. T. Miller, Mar. 6. V Bowlby, admrx. Bond, $2,000. Atty, March 12. Est. 8614 Barnard. Ray M. Voorhees missed as to) Union Tr. Co. in respect 70854 Jennie T. Peak v Wm. Peak, Potts. 70014 Rouse. Hrg. April 6. qualifies as admr. to lot 314 Lincoln Manor; defts. file ans. divorce, Sands, Mar. 6. Est. No. 8607 Roy E. Rowe, Ellen M. 70796 Long v Long. Deft, to pay for Est. 612 Reyniers. Final report ap­ Rowe, admrx. Bond, $2,000. Bingham, proved; credits claimed by admr. dis­ 59382 City of SB. Defts. Hipsak and 70855 Gertrude Woloszyn v Jacob S. support of minor child sum of $10 per Hipsak appr. by Anderson and file ans. Woloszyn, divorce, Sands, Mar. 6. Atty. wk. beg. March 10: charged. !• Est. No. 8608 Atha H. Rice, Russell Est. 7806 Porter. Est. finally settled 56541 Whitmer. Cause dismissed as 70856 Bert W. Nelson v Henrietta M. 70815 Boudreau v Boudreau. Deft, to to defts. Michael and Lawrence Swiat- Nelson, divorce, Farage, Mar. 6. C. Rice, admr. Bond, $1,500. Atty Van pay for support of minor children sum and admrx allowed. Tilbury. Est. 8187 Kelly. Report approved kowski in respect to lots 8 and 9, Vogt's 70857 Garnett B. Bair v Murry E. of $27 per wk. beg. Mar. 10 and further 1st add. Bair, divorce, Van Tilbury, Mar. 6. Est. No. 8609 Anton Winkler, Ethel sum of $75 for plf.'s atty. fees to be and order entered det. value of est. and M. Winkler, admrx. Bond, $2,000. Atty. fixing amt. of tax. 54249 Read et al. Cause dismissed as 70860 Myra Bethel v Mack Bethel, paid $40 in 30, $35 in 60 days. to Bales and Hass as pertains to lots 9, divorce, Buntman, March 7. Schock. 70160 Moller v Moller. Hrg. Mar. 12 Est. 8582 Proudfit. Report approved Est. No. 8610 Jos A. Tremel, Joan and order entered det. value of est. and 14, 15, 16, 18, 21, and 23, O. C. Huey's 70861 Elizabeth L. Eagen v Marshall 70851 Trobough v Trobough. Hrg 1st add. and as to defts. Wm. Schrader J. Eagen, divorce, Buntman, Mar. 7. Hodson, admrx. Bond, $1,000. Bing­ March 13. fdg. that there is no liability for pay­ ham, Atty. ment of inh. tax thereon. and Ruth Schrader as to lot 9, O. C. 70868 Edna Ferguson v Robert L. 70846 Peare v Peare. Farage apprs. Huey's 1st add. and as to defts. Iva Ferguson, divorce, Schock, Mar. 7. Est. No. 8611 Mary N. Quigley. for deft. Wednesday, March 7 Bate. Chas. Lewinski, St. Jos. Loan & 70869 Pearl I. Hawkins v Floyd L. Est. No. 8612 Louisa M. Gibbs 70734 State ex-rel Swanger gdn. v Est No. 8613 Anna Myers, Clarence 70858 Scheid. Dr. Carter and Hel­ Tr. Co. Fed. Dep. Ins. Corp. and Ada Hawkins, divorce, Sands, March 7. Great Am. Ind. Deft, apprs. by Sands. Stark in respect to lot 14, John Prast's 70870 Angeline Grzeszczyk v Ben O. Myers, admr. Bond, $5,000. Atty. _ 69245 Nesbitt. Sands apprs for deft men to examine. Montgomery, Atty. Breen. 70859 Same as above on Dave Pau- sub div Grzeszezyk, divorce, Sands, March 7. 70238 Alleged feeble mind of Lucille' 56039 Heiermann. Cause dismissed 70871 Pet. of Samuel F. Gembar­ Est. No. 8614 Wm. T. Barnard,, Ray M. Sobieralski. Com. to Fort Wayne weis. M. Voorhees, admr. Bond, $7,500. At­ Decleen, Sr. v Smet et al. Mo. as to St. Jos. Ln. & Tr. Co. Iva Bate zewski et al to change name, Nyikos, State School. and Ada Stark in respect to lot 14, March 8. tys. CMC&B. of Camiel Smet to require plf. to make Est. No. 8615 August Ditsch, Rose N. Wednesday, March 7 his amended complt. more specific sus­ John Prast's sub. div. of lot 13, in 70873. Dorothy M. Smith v Robt. 70832 Kruggel v Kruggel. Cause dis­ Kunstman & Meyer's add. F. Smith, divorce, Van Tilbury, Mar. 8. Ditsch, admrx. Bond, $1,000. Atty. tained. Hahn. missed. Thursday, March 8 56513 Whitmer et al. Party deft, 70874 Marvin M. Gill v Viola M. 70797 Sheaks v Sheaks. Deft, to pay 70720 Bona v Szita. Sub. tr. fdg. substituted. Gill, divorce, Van Tilbury, Mar. 8. for jupport of plf during pendency sum and judgment. 56514 Whitmer et al. Same. 70875 Mary J. Pownell v Harley H. of- $20 .per wk. 'beg. Mar. 10 and fur- 69427 Cossell v Cossell. Hrg. Mar. 60553 City of SB. Same. Pownell, divorce, Sands, March 8. thearsum of $75 for plf.'s atty. fees, to 56513 Whitmer et al. Cause dis­ 70877 Velma Price v LeRoy Price, LEGAL NOTICES be paid $40 in 30, $35 in 60 days 70876 Snyder v Snyder. Hrg. Mar. missed as to Vern Riggenberger in re­ divorce, Loomis, March 8. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT 62006 Goins v Goins Hrg.. Mar. 14. 14. spect to lots 9, 16, 21, 23, O. C. Huey's 70878 Raymond Gibson v Frances Estate No. 8039 70843 Milewski v Milewski. Deft, Est. 8172 Davies, Jr. Pet. granted. add. Gibson, divorce, Sands, March 8. Estate of William F. Kerr. apprs. by Potts. Est. 8616 King. Lawrence King qual­ 56514 Whitmer et al. Same. 70879 Martha Hurley v Thomas E. By direction of The First National 70847 Gard v Gard. CMC&B appr. ifies as admr. Cause retained on docket. Hurley, divorce, Buntman, March 8. Bank of Mishawaka, North Side Branch, for deft. Est. 8203 Barber. Schedule referred 51501 Kazmirski. 70880 Mildren Roesch v Karl L. Executor of the estate of William F. 36009 Kellogg McKay Co. v Nicode- to J. P. Lechner. 59388 Stajkowski. Roesch, divorce, CMC&B, March 8. Kerr, late of St. Joseph County, in the mus Hrg.. March 12. Est. 7637 Kline. Est. settled and 61377 Wiener. 70881 Adlena Fuller v Roosevelt state of Indiana, deceased. 69245 Nesbitt. Hrg. Mar. 14. excrx. discharged. 64243 Fishburn. Fuller, divorce, Carter, March 8. Notice is hereby given to the heirs, Crim 8572 State v Hill. Hrg. Mar 19. Est 7051 Kuhn. Est. settled and 64487 Rose. 70884 Louise Rice v Roy E. Rice, legatees and1 devisees of the said dece­ Crim 8725 State v Harris. Prob. admrx. discharged. 64895 Hullinger. divorce, Van Tilbury, March 9. dent, and all other persons interested Dept. to investigate. Est. 6989 Rogers. Est. finally set­ 66015 Verbeke. 70885 Kathleen M. Wickey v Robert in the said estate, that said execu­ Crim 8629 State v Downes. Cause tled and excrx. discharged. 66471 Dutoi. Wickey, sep. maint, Van Tilbury, Mar. tor has filed in this court its ac­ Cont'd. 66595 Prentkowski. 9 count and vouchers for the final settle­ 70580 Phillips v Phillips. Cause dis­ Friday, March 9 54249 Read et al. Cause consoli­ 70886 Eleanore Pearson v Louis E. ment of said estate, and they are here­ missed. 70464 Morris v Morris. Hrg. Mar. 16. dated under 70203. Pearson, divorce, Elliott, March 9. by required to be and appear in said 70846 Peahe v Peare. Hrg. Mar. 14. 70882 Reed v Reed. Hrg. May 14. 56527 Whitmer. Same. 70887 Minnie Smith v Henry F. court on the 2nd day of April, 1945, . 67594 Miller v Miller. Hrg. Mar. 13. 70195 Kubiak v G. E. Meyer & Son, 70203 Read et al. Sub. tr. fdg. Smith, divorce, Gonas, March 9. when the same will be heard and make 70531 Oliver Emp. F. C. U. v. Ver­ a corp. et al. Mo. of deft, to sep. 54249 Read et al v Alward et al. Pet. 70894 Everett Stanch v Mary Stanch, proof of their heirship, or claim to any selder et ux. Hrg. "Mar. 16. causes into sep. paragraphs of complt. granted. divorce, Paden, March 12. part of said estate, and show cause if 69711 Bethel. Cause dismissed overruled. 56513 Whitmer et al. Same. there be, why said account and vouch­ 70860 Bethel. Hrg. Mar. 13. 44995 Davis Van Camp Hdw. & Iron 56514 Whitmer et al. Same. TO ESTABLISH BIRTH ers should not be approved. 70784 Katona v Katona. Deft, apprs Co. v River Park Hdwe. Co. • Pet. 60553 City of SB. Same. PETITIONS TO ESTABLISH TIME Witness, the clerk and the seal of the by Buntman granted. 70204 Whitmer. Sub. tr. fdg. AND PLACE OF BIRTH FILED IN St. Joseph Circuit Court at South Bend, 70814 Bowsher v Mejer et al. Ko­ 64821 Nelson v Nelson. Divorce 56529 Whitmer et al. Cause consoli­ FIRST TWO MONTHS ENDING FEB­ Indiana, 8th day of March, 1945. walski apprs. for defts. granted. dated under 70205. RUARY, 1945, 40. FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. 70607 Alleged epilepsy of Willard 70864 Couch v Couch. Hrg. Mar. 16. 58790 Nat'l Dis. Corp. Same. JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. Odle. Committed to Village of Epi­ Est. 8356 Snyder. Pet. granted. 59382 City of SB. Same. No. 3984 Liller Jones. Charles W. Bingham, leptics. Gdn. 135 Hagerty. Mary Hagerty 70872 Whitmer et al. Sub. tr. fdg. Attorney for Estate. 3:16-23 69316 Gollatz v Gollatz. Cause qualifies as gdn. 56541 Whitmer. Pet. granted. SUPERIOR COURT NO. 1 cont'd. Est. 8557 Roth. Pet. granted. 70707 Woldhaven Homes Co Same. NEW CIVIL CASES FILED IN SU­ NON-RESIDENT NOTICE Thursday, March 8 Est. 8481 • Pollock. Pet. granted. 70872 Whitmer et al. Sub. tr. fdg. PERIOR COURT NO. 1 IN FIRST TWO Crim Juv 6142 State v Frances. 70613 Hawkins. Cause dismissed. MONTHS ENDING FEB., 1945, 70. Cause No. 70876 Cause remanded back to Juvenile Ct. Est. 8177 Dugdale. Report approved Divorce of St. Jos. Co. and order entered det. value of est. Friday, March 9 STATE OF INDIANA, -* and fixing amt. of tax. COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH, ss: .Crim 8691 State v Fleming. Pre-sen­ Est. 8145 Warren. Report approved 70619 Daugherty. Fdg.; judgment. 70858 Alleged insanity of Alida tence inv. by Prob. Dept. 69619 Mars. Hrg. March 16. Scheid, Mar. 6. In the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1, and order entered det. value of est. and February Term, 1945 Crim 8698 State v Dale. Cause fdg. that there is no liability for pay­ 70649 Shelly. Defts. file mo. to sep. 70859 Alleged insanity of Dave Pau- struck out for term. ment of inh. tax thereon. complt into numbered pps. wels, March 6. DOROTHY F. SNYDER 70426 Vrient et al v Claris:. Cause Est. 8421 Szczypiorski. Pet. granted 69768 Linster. Plf. files reply to 70864 Lena Couch v Henry J. Couch, vs. dismissed. Est. 8085 Jankowiak. Pet. granted. deft's 3rd pp of ans. sep. maint., March 7. 69740 Alleged epilepsy of Stephen 70821 Erickson. Committed to Lo­ 70865 Emma I. Burzynskj v Chester CHARLES E. SNYDER Vida. Hrg. March 19. Monday, March 12 gansport St. Hosp. J. Burzynski, divorce, H&S, March 7. 70843 -Milewski v Milewski. Deft, to 69986 Linn v Hager. Cause dismissed. 70848 Sanders. Hrg. March 16. 70866 Jos. Fritz v Neal W. Jackson, Be it known, that the above named pay for support of minor. <»hildren and complt., Huguenard, March 7. plaintiff has filed in the office of the 70545 Hunsberger v Wickman. Deft 70883 Guin. Hrg. March 16. clerk of said court complaint against plf sum of $30 per wk. beg. March 10 apprs. by CMC&B and files ans. to com­ 70824 Mell. Deft, apprs. by Lam­ 70876 Dorothy F. Snyder v Chas. E. and further sum of $75 for plf.'s atty. Snyder, divorce, Meyers, March 8. said defendant in the above cause to­ plt. berson. gether with a proper affidavit that said fees, to be paid $40 in 30, $35 in 60 days. 70247 Long v Long. Scheer & Scheer 70885. Wickey. Hrg. March 16. 70882 Hazel E. Reed v Fredk. A. 67438 Smith v Smith. Hrg. Mar. 16. Reed, divorce, Schulman. March 8. defendant is a non-resident of the state appr. as co-counsel for deft. 70762 Orey. Cause dismissed. of Indiana. 70868 Ferguson v Ferguson. Hrg. 69427 Cossell v Cossell. Divorce de­ 70384 McGann. Sale confirmed. 70888 Pearl Drumm v Albert Drumm, \ March 16. nied. 60269 Swartz. Hrg. March 23. divorce, Gonas, March 10. Said defendant is hereby notified that 70856 Nelson. Deft, apprs. by Sands. 69996 Dannacher v Marker. Plf. files 70256 Dibbel. Cause dismissed. said cause will stand fort trial on the Gdnship 2382 Wordesa. Hrg March amended complt. SUPERIOR COURT NO. 2 14th day of May, 1945, the same being 69877 Henry. Divorce granted. at the city of South Bend on which 19. 70685 Parshall v Kolczynski. Deft 70849 Paprocki. Hrg. March 23. NEW CIVIL CASES FILED IN SU­ 70687 Mielke. Tulchinsky enters ap­ day said defendant is required to ap­ files ans. in 2 pp and x complt. 70840 Wilson. Deft, to pay for sup­ PERIOR COURT NO. 2 in FIRST TWO pear to said action. prnce for deft. 66578 Greer v Greer. Deft, to pay port of plf. and minor children and for MONTHS ENDING FEB., 1945, 115. 7C854 Peak v Peak. Hrg. Mar. 15. support of Susan Greer. FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. plf.'s atty. By Marie Stansbury, Deputy. 70875 Pownell v Pownell. Same rec­ Est. 8166 Magiera. Pet. granted. 70837 Howard. Deft, to pay for ord. 70853 Dora B. Chew v Wiley R, Paul L. Myers, Est. 8257 Klmeczewski. Est. finally plf.'s atty. . .,_ Chew, divorce, Scheer & Scheer, Mar 69316 Gollatz v Gollatz. Div. grntd.' settled and admrx. discharged. 70862 George. Deft, apprs. by Far- Attorney for Plaintiff. 3:16-23-30 Friday, March 9 6. 70862 Effie George v Robert George, 70881 Fuller v Fuller. Hrg. Mar. 1-6. SUPERIOR COURT NO. Z 70185 O'Connor. Hrg. March 13. NON-RESIDENT NOTICE 70884 Rice v Rice. Hrg Mar. 16. divorce, Scheer & Scheer, March 7. Cause No. 70882 Tuesday, March 6 70441 Winrotte. Divorce granted. 70880 Roesch v Roesch. Same rec­ "•66126 Friend. Deft, found guilty cf 70863 Stella Strombeck v Howard L, Divorce ord. Cause retained on docket. Strombeck, divorce, Plodowski, Mar. 7. STATE OF INDIANA, 41108 Citz.- Nat'l Bk. contempt of court. 70867 Hugh S. Webb, Blanche Webb, COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH, ss: 62582 Kollar v Brown et al. Commr. 64761 Schwartz. Same. ordered discharged and bond released. 55388 Kovacs. d. b. a. Webb Coal Co. v Irma Tealman, 111 the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1, 59175 SB Acceptance Corp. 70823 Carpenter. Deft, to pay for on acct., Dempsey & BonDurant, Mar, -66269 Davis et al v Maggas. Rule to support of plf. and for plf.'s atty fees. February Term, 1945 ans. cont'd. 59230 Superior Systems & Sales Bk. 7. Co., Inc. 70836 Whitson. Deft, to pay for 70872 Harold Whitmer et al v Mich­ 70808 Rospopo v Rospopo. Hrg." plf.'s atty. fees; parties have resumed HAZEL E. REED March 16. 60042 Philadelphia Fire & Marine ael Swiontowski et al specially con­ vs. ins. Co. their marital relationship. solidated with Woldhaven Homes Co. FREDERICK A. REED • 63126 Ostrum, admrx. v Hojnacki. 70835 Eaton. Deft, to pay for sup­ Hrg. March 19. 614S3 LaSalle University. et al v Michael Swiontowski et al, 617191 SB Acceptance Corp. port of plf. and minor children; deft. Arnold's office. Mar. 7. Be it known, that the above named 70846 Peare. Hrg. March 14. fquiwj net guilty of contempt of ct. "70795 Patty v Patty. Deft, to pay for 61722 SB Acceptance Corp. 70883 Elizabeth Guin v Carl C. Guin, plaintiff has filed in. the office of the 61730 SB Acceptance Corp. 70702 Huys. Plf. to pay for deft, s sep., Doyle, Mar. 9. clerk of said court complaint against support of minor child sum of $15 per atly. fees. wk. beg. Mar. 13 and further sum of 61731 SB Acceptance Corp. 70889 Frank E. McBride v Fred said defendant in the above cause to­ 61732 SB Acceptance Corn 68815 Studebaker EFCU. Cause re­ Trippel, Jr., complt. on acct., ADG&Z, gether with a proper affidavit that said $75 for plf.'s atty. fees, to be paid $25 tained on docket.- in 30, $25 in 60, $25 in 90 days. 61921 Kemps. Mar. 10. defendant is a non-resident of the state 63539 Schultz. 64034 Fiwek. Same. 70890 H. Paul Ambs v Virginia H. of Indiana. 70359 Hubbard by n. f. v Miner et 66899 Studebaker EFCU. Same. al. Deft. W. C. Miner d b a J. & M- 64598 The Massey-Harris Co. •Ambs, Talbot, Jr. Said defendant is hereby notified that 65156 Scrivnor. 66416 Studebaker EFCU. Same. 70891 Betty B. Dhoore v Julius F. said cause will stand for trial on the Mfg Co files ans. 68590 Bendix EFCU. Same. ; 70817 Freet v Freet. Plf. to pay 68329 Chamberlain. Plf. files 2nd Dhoore, divorce, Rieder, Mar. 10. 14th day of May, 1945, the same being amended complt. in 2 pps. 70824 Mell. Deft, to pay for sup­ 70892 Albert Hoover et al v Harold at the city of South Bend on which for support of deft, sum of $10 per wk. port of plf. and minor children and for beg. March 10 and further sum of $75 70146 Smarszcz. Cause dismissed Toner et al, suit for poss., Scheer. day said defendant is required to ap­ 78821 Ericfcsen. Hrg. Mar. 9 nlf.'s atty. fees 70893 Ruth E. McKnight v Howard pear to said action. 1 for deft's atty. fees, to be paid $40 in ^•18 Clough. Divorce granted. FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. 30, $35 in 00 days. 70702 Huys. Hrg. Mar. 9. M. McKnight, divorce, Chester L. Du­ 7C349 Shelly. Deft.'s request for 5 70422 DuBois. Divorce granted. Comb, Mar. 12. By Marie Stansbury, Deputy. 70243 Sobieski v Sobieski. Hearing add. days time in which to file ans. to ypS^O Griggs. Divorce granted. 70895 Almaf Waterbury v Robt. Wa- Samuel Schulman, March 16. • -*a „, ptt.'s oomph, granted. 46871 Klipoel, Recr. Sub. tr. fdg terbury, divorce, Taylor, Mar. 12. Attorney for Plaintiff. 3:16-23-30 70739 Anderson v Anderson. Deft. 70588 Bunch. . Cause transferred to 69584 Freshour. Divorce granted. to pay for plf.'s atty. fees $75, to be St. Jos. Sup. Ct. No. 1. 70845 Shambry. Deft, to pay for paid $40 in 30, $35 in €0 days. 69785 Van Scoyk. Hrg. Mar. 9. sUDoort of plf. and minor child and for 68328 Alcorne. Hrg. March 30. 69238 Corbridge. Same. plf.'s atty. 69669 Lucas v Lucas. Div. grntd- 70281 Fox. Same. 70831 Paholski. Deft, to pay for 70544 Stillson. Jr. v Stillson. Hrg. 70853 Chew. Hrg. Mar. 16. support of minor child. March 21. . Est. 7772 Seese. J. P. Lechner named 64762 Martens. Deft, found not Court Calendars 70417 Hojara v Hojara. Div. grntd. inh. tax apprs. guilty of contempt. 67015 Miller v Miller. Div. grntd- 70435 Richard. Hrg. March 23. 70854 Peak v Peak. Deft, apprs. by Wednesday, March 7 65720 Giles. Hrg. March 23. Fer Next Week Clifford DuComb. Tr. 2190 Twyckenham Land & Inv. 70626 Chmiel. Hrg. March 23' Monday, March 12 Co. Pets, granted. 70567 Henson. Hrg. March 23. Crim 8732 State v Fowler. Cause Crim. 8736 DePrfest. Warrant or­ Claim 2034 Scott. Sub. tr. fdg. judg­ struck out for term. dered; bond fixed at $5,000. ment SUPERIOR COURT No. 2 Crim 8682 State v Scanlon. Pro©. Crim. 8737. Modlin. Warrant ordered; Est. 7772 Seese. Admr.'s deed ap­ bond fixed at $1,000. proved. Dept. to investigate. 69768 Linster. Huguenard appointed "A" LIST Crim. 8684 State v Sones. Same special judge in fhis cause. Monday, March 12 MONDAY, MARCH 19th: record. i L 61183 Taylor & Johnson, Inc. Cause 64944 Green. Deft, apprs. by Paw­ 70172 Alger Co v Central Transfer Co (Doran & M—VariTilbury) Crim 8709 State v Seese, Jr. Mo. dismissed as to lot 296, Parkovash add. lowski. 70072 Crawford v Romine et al (Huguenard—Arnold—Kurtz) overruled. in Navarre PI. 70890 Ambs. Hrg May 11 TUESDAY, MARCH 20th: 70887 Smith v Smith. Hrg. Mar. 16. 55583 Deacon. Report approved. 70891 Dhoore. Hrg. Mar. 16. 69505 Banaszak v Leodanski (Olczak—Sands) 70575 Ward et al. Deft.'s name 54249 Read et al. Same 69906 Bendix EFC Union. Sub. tr. 67263 Ozdych v Ozdych (Sands—Van Tilbury) • changed) to Mable Ward Keplinger. 56041 Heiermann. Same fp'g. 67951 Keplinger v Ward et al. Allen 70212 Gait. Same. 69262 Studebaker EFC Union. Cause WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21st: & Allen enter apprnce. for Mabel Ward 70321 Gait. Same. dismissed. 66866 Burke v Grieb et al (Arnold—Burke—Raymer—JO&B) Keplinger. , 3 „, 70384 McGann. Pet. granted. 68562 Matthews. Hrg. Mar. 16. 69768 Linster v Ponader (Garnitz & K—Loomis—Orr) 70116 Reed v Reed. Deft, requests 70212 Gait. Tr. files pet. 70885 Wiekey. Deft, apprs. by Scheer THURSDAY, MARCH 22nd: that cause be set for trial. 70321 Gait. Tr. files pet. & Scheer. 70131 Laffin v Laffin (Sands—C L DuComb) 70710 DeSmet v DeSmet. Hrg. Mar. 68059 Wanchura. Hrg. Mar. 16. 69660 Hartsough. Hrg. Mar. 16. 70862 George. Hrg. Mar. 16. 70893 McKnight. Hrg. Mar. 16. 69495 Wedel v Wedfl (O Parker—Sands) 19 70576 Alsop. Hrg. Mar. 16. 69110 Demaegt. Deft, files ans. • to NOTE: This is the last regular setting of COURT cases for the February 70850 Gardner v Gardner. -Deft, to 70845 Shambry. Deft, apprs. by plf.'s amended complt. Term. pay for plf.'s atty. fe#s sum of $75 to Sands. Est. 8295 Halliday. Est. closed; On account of Good Friday falling on Friday, March : 0th. the be paid $40 in 30. $35 in 60 days. i 70803 Horvath Deft, to pay for sup­ sureties oh bond released. hearing of Domestic Relations customarily heard on .TRIDAY 70860 Bethel. Deft- apprs. by Schock. port of plf- and for Dlf.'s atty. fees. Est. 8396 Schneider. Pub. of not. of will be heard on THURSDAY, MARCH 29th. 2069 Gdnship of Drina Welsh. Ct. 69446 Ritter. Tr. files pet. hrg. on final report ordered. denies pet. _ „ _, 70531 Oliver Emp. F. C. U. v Ver­ Page Fourteen THE MIRROR

of said court commencing at the city son; Rachel Henderson; Rachel Ann of South Bend on which day said de­ Henderson; Rachael Ann Henderson; LEGAL NOTICE§ fendant is required to appear to said| Rachael Henderson; Robert Moore; NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT action. Maria Moore; Robert Harris; Dr. Hob- FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. ert Harris; Emma B. Harris; and the Estate No. 8119 By Golda S. Butler, Deputy. unknown wife of each of the above Estate of Gustav Jena. Joseph E. Talbot, named male defendants who may be By cirection of Mary Jena, adminis­ Attorney for Plaintiff. 3:16-23-30 living, and the unknown widow, heirs tratrix of the estate of Gustav Jena, and devisees and legatees of each of late of St. Joseph county, in the state NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT the above named male defendants who ot Indiana, deceased. Estate No. 8431 may be dead; and the unknown hus­ Notice is hereby given to the heirs, Estate of Stella Szczypiorski. band of each of the above named fe­ legatees and devisees ot the said dece­ By direction of Frank Lewandowski, male defendants who may be living, dent, and all other persons interested Administrator of the Estate of Stella and the unknown widower, heirs and. in the said estate, that said administra­ Szczypiorski, late of St. Joseph Coun­ devisees and legatees of each of the trix has filed in this court her account ty, in the State of Indiana, deceased. above named female defendants who and vouchers for the final settlement NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, may be dead; all of the above women of said estate, and they are hereby re­ legatees and devisees of the said dece­ once known by any of the above names quired to be and appear in said court dent, and all other persons interested and designations as above stated, on the 2nd day of April, 1945, when the in the said estate, that said Adminis­ whose names have been changed and same will be heard and make proof of trator has filed in this court his ac­ who are now known by other names, their heirship, or claim to any part of count and vouchers for the final set­ the names of all of whom are unknown said estate, and show cause if there be, tlement of said estate, and they are to the above plaintiffs; the unknown why said account and vouchers should hereby required to be and appear in children, descendants and heirs, sur­ not be approved. said Court on the 2nd day of April, viving spouses, creditors and adminis­ Witness, the clerk and the seal of the 1945, when the same will be heard and trators of the estate, devisees, legatees, St. Joseph Circuit Court at South Bend, make proof of their heirship, or claim trustees and executors of the last will Indiana, 9th day of March. 1945. to any part of said estate, and show and testament, guardians, successors in FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. cause if there be, why said account interest and assigns, respectively, of JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. and vouchers should not be approved. each of the foregoing named defend­ George. L. Rulison, WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of ants; and all persons claiming from, Attorney for Estate. 3:16-23 the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1 it through or under them, or either of South Bend, Indiana, 9th dav of March, them, and each and all of the above NOTICE TO BIDDERS 1945. named defendants; and all persons Notice is hereby given by the under­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. claiming from, through or under them signed that sealed proposals or bids JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. or either of them, and that said cause will be received by the Board of Com­ Leon E. Kowalski. of action is to quiet title to the follow­ missioners of St. Joseph county, In­ Attorney for Estate. 3:16-23 ing described real estate situated in diana in the Commissioners' room on the county of St. Joseph, state of In­ Monday, March 26, 1945, up to the hour NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT diana, to-wit: of ten o'clock a. m., for the furnishing Estate No. 4105. A lot or parcel of land bounded by of the following supplies as set forth Estate of Henry N. Hill. a line running as follows, viz: Be­ in the requisition and specifications By direction of Chester Byrd, admin­ ginning at a stake on the west line now on file in the office of County istrator of the estate of Henry N. Hill, of the Michigan Road, twelve (12) Auditor. late of St. Joseph county, in the state rods south of the northeast corner of For the period of Three Months of Indiana, deceased. the south half of the southwest frac­ Commencing April 1, 1945 Notice is hereby given to the heirs, tion, lying west of the Michigan Road, COUNTY INFIRMARY: legatees and devisees of the said dece­ of Section Thirty-four (34), Town­ Groceries dent, and all other persons interested ship Thirty-six (36) North, Range Meats WHILE MANAGEMENT in the said estate, that said administra­ Two (2) East, thence running south­ HEALTHWIN HOSPITAL: COORDINATES ALL THREE^* tor has filed in this court his account erly on the west line of said road a Groceries and vouchers for the final settlement distance of one hundred one (101) Frozen r'oods of said estate, and they are hereby re­ feet; thence west ten (10) rods; Meats _ „, fS /WJAfAGZMFAtr r-f; quired to be and appear in said court thence northerly one hundred one on the 2nd day of April, 1945, when the (101) feet; thence east ten (10) rods COUNTY HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT: / /////-0 £XP<4M£S PRODUCrfOty r%Bs^ same will be heard and make proof of to the place of beginning, being Lots Gasoline their heirship, or claim to any part of Lettered "D" and "E" in the original Said sealed proposals must be ac­ AEWARP FOUND AT companied by either a certified check wwfiw fs Z—rg£r-* $mm said estate, and show cause if there be, town of Lakevilie, excepting a strip or a bidder's bond in a sum equal to Wm>//'S/JCrV CORNER: /NR/S/N6 MCES FOR LABOR?..LOWER why said account and vouchers should thirty-one (31) feet in width, north not less than ten per cent of the Wffifi not be approved. and south, taken off of the south amount of the bid, together with a non- pRfCFS FOR COMS0WFR... /rVCRFASEO MV- Witness, the clerk and the seal of the side of said Lot Lettered "E." collusion affidavit. St. Joseph Circuit Court at South Bend, Now, therefore, said defendants and Proposals must be filed on forms fur­ /6FH05 O/Y SAVINGS FOR WFST0R2.. Indiana, 9th day of March. 1945. each of them are hereby notified of the bished by the County Auditor. FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. filing of such complaint and that this JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. cause will stand for trial in the St. The right is reserved to reject any Bendix Aviation Post, No. 284, in the said estate, that, said Adminis­ Joseph Circuit Court in the city of and all bids. - , „„„_ American Legion,- 9777, (Club), tratrix has filed in this court her ac­ Allen & Allen, Attorneys for Estate. 3:16-23 South Bend, St. Joseph County, Indi­ Dated this 14th day of March, 1945. IIOV2 W. Colfax Ave., South Bend count and vouchers for the final set­ ana, on the 18th day of May, 1945, on NICHOLAS A. MUSZER, —Beer, Liquor, Wine Retailer. tlement of said estate, and they are NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION which said day defendants, and each Auditor, St. Joseph county, Indiana. Clyde Crooks, 9776, (Restaurant), hereby required to be and appear in of them, are required to appear and 1613 Miami St., South Bend—Beer, said Court on the 2nd day of April, Estate No. 8605 3:16-23 Notice is hereby given that the un­ answej or demur to plaintiff's com­ Liquor, Wine Retailer. 1945, when the same will be heard and plaint. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT Earl Little, 9767, Transfer Beer, make proof of their heirship, or claim dersigned has been appointed by the Estate No. 8356 x Liqu«r, Wine Retailer's permit to any part of said estate, and show Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ Witness the clerk and seal of the Estate of Ohis H. Snyder. from John Baumgartner, 2642-44 cause if there be, why said account seph County, state of Indiana, executor St. Joseph Circuit Court this 14th day By direction of Glenn A. Snyder, Western Ave., South Bend. and vouchers should ndt be approved. of the estate of Stephen Nemeth, Sr., of March, 1945. Administrator of the Estate of Ohis H. Max Silber, 9571, (Package Store), WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of late of St- Joseph county, deceased. FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Snyder, late of St. Joseph County, in 601 South Bend Ave., South Bend the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South Said estate is supposed to be solvent. Clerk of St. Joseph Circuit Court. the State of Indiana, deceased. —Liquor, Wine Dealer. Bend, Indiana, 12th day of March, 1945. Stephen Nemeth, Jr., Executor. By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. 1 NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, Max Silber, 9751, (Package Store), FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. March 8th, 1945. Stephen Torok, Chester L. DuComb, legatees and devisees of the said dece­ 1738 Lincolnway East, South Bend JOHN E- HANLEY, Deputy. Attorney for Plaintiff. 3:16-23-30 dent, and all other persons interested —Liquor, Wine Dealer. Jones, Obenchain and Butler, Attorney for Estate. 3:16-23-30' in the said estate, that said Adminis­ The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Attorneys for Estate. 3:16-23 trator has filed in this court his ac­ Company, 9760, (Grocery). 1919 NOTICE NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION count and vouchers for the final set­ Lincolnway West, South Bend— BIRTH CERTIFICATE NOTICE Cause No. 70901 Estate No. 8621 tlement of said estate, and they are Beer, Wine Dealer. Cause No. 3985 STATE OF INDIANA, NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ hereby required to be and appear in The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea NOTICE is hereby given that Mary ST. JOSEPH COUNTY, ss: dersigned has been appointed by the said Court on the 2nd day of April, Company, 9759, (Grocery), 1119 Hollos Hollace has filed her petition in In the St. Joseph Circuit Court, Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ 1945, when the same will be heard and Western Ave., South Bend—Beer, the St. Joseph Circuit Court to have February Term, 1945 seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ make proof of their heirship, or claim the time and place of her ..birth deter­ istrator of the Estate of Emiel Caron, Wine Dealer. ELMER E. TAYLOR to any part of said estate, and show The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea mined. Said petition is set for hearing late of St. Joseph County, deceased. cause if there be, why said account March 23, 1945. vs. Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. Company,. 9758, (Grocery), 719 E. JOHN GILMORE, JR., ET AL. and vouchers should not be approved Jefferson St., South Bend—Beer, FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Adolph H. Caron, Administrator. Clerk of the St. Joseph Circuit Court. March 14th, 1945. WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of Wine Dealer. Plaintiff in the above" entitled cause, the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1 at Bartenders International League of Joseph W. Nyikos, Attorney. 3:16 Joseph W. Nyikos, having filed in the office of the Clerk Attorney for Estate. 3:16-23-30 South Bend, Indiana, 9th day of March, America, Local No. 103, 9725, of said Court his complaint together 1945. (Club), 124y2 N. Main St., South NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT Estate of Dora Schneider. In St. Jo­ with the proper affidavit that the fol­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. Bend — Beer, Liquor, Wine Re­ lowing named defendants are non-resi­ NON-RESIDENT NOTICE JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. • tailer. seph Superior Court No. 2. By direction of Harry Eisner, Admin­ dents of the state of Indiana: John Gil- Cause No. 70879—Divorce Lewis W. Hammond, more, Jr.; John Gilmore; Oliver Crane; STATE OF INDIANA Attorney for Estate. 3:16-23 SAID INVESTIGATION WILL BE istrator of the Estate of Dora Schnei­ der late of St. Joseph County, in the Thomas S. Stanfield; Oliver Crane and COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, AND PUBLIC Thomas S. Stanfield, executors of the In the St. Jdseph Circuit Court LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC PARTICIPATION IS- REQUESTED. State of Indiana, deceased. NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, last will and testament of John Gil- February Term, 2945 HEARING more, deceased; George M. Earl; Geo. ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COM­ legatees and devisees of the said dece­ NOTICE is hereby given that the Lo­ dent, and all other persons interested M. Earl; Edwin Pickett; Harriet Gil- MARTHA HURLEY cal Alcoholic Beverage Board of St. MISSION OF INDIANA in the said estate, that said Adminis­ more, widow of John Gilmore, Jr.; vs. Joseph County, Indiana, will, at 9:00 trator has filed in this court his ac­ Sarah M. Earl; Sarah Ann Earl; Charl- - THOMAS E. HURLEY A. M. Central War Time on the 4th By JOHN F. NOONAN, count and vouchers for the final set­ lotte E. Pickett; Charlotte E. Pickett; day of April, 1945, at the Commis­ Secretary. tlement of said estate, and they are Samuel S. Cottrell; Samuel L. Cottrell; Be It Known, That the above named sioner's Room, Court House, in the City BERNARD E. DOYLE, hereby required to be and appear in Catharine Cottrell; Seth Perry; Ann Plaintiff has filed in the office of the of South Bend, in said County, begin 3:16 Excise Administrator. said Court on the 9th day of April, Perry; Rufus Perry Seignor; Charles Clerk of said Court her complaint investigation of the applications of the 1945, when the same will be heard and Jonas; C. Jonas; Matety Jonas; Matety against said Defendant in the above followed named persons, requesting Ihe NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT make proof of their heirship, or claim Onas; M. Jonas; Matilda Jones; Matilda cause together with a proper affidavit issue to the applicants, at the locations Estate No. 8319 to any part of said estate, and show Jonas; Alexis Coquillard; Joseph R. that said defendant is a non-resident hereinafter set out, of the Alcoholic Estate of Gale V. Poole. cause if there be, why said account Emery; Frank Wallace, Julia Emery; of the State of Indiana. Beverage Permits of the classes herein­ By direction of Beatrice Poole, Ad­ and vouchers should not be approved. Lawrence A. Grafford; L. Wallace; Lar- Said defendant is hereby notified that after designated and will, at said time ministratrix of the Estate of Gale V. ance A. Grafford; Lavina Grafford; WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal ot said cause will stand for trial on the and place, receive information con­ Poole, late of St. Joseph County, in Lavina Grifford; Amatious Leed; Eliza­ 14th day of May, 1945, of said Court cerning the fitness of said applicants, the State of Indiana, deceased. the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2 at beth Leed; Elisebeth Leed; Lizzie M. South Bend, Indiana, 14th day of commencing at the City of South Bend and' the propriety of issuing the i.er- NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, Leed; William I. Rush; William J. Rush; on which day said defendant is re­ mit^ applied for to such applicants at legatees and devisees of the said dece­ March, 1945. Jessie E. Rush; Charles M. Ragan; Liz­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. quired to appear to said action. the premises named: . dent, and all other persons interested zie Leed; Louise F. Ragan; Kezia Sew­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER Clerk* GOLDA S. BUTLER, Deputy. ard; William F. Bunch; Lillian A. Arnold,'Degnan, Goheen, By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. Bunch; Robert James; R. James; Jane Max Buntman, and Zimmerman, James; James Miller; Edwin Hender­ Attorneys for Estate. 3:16-23 Attorney for Plaintiff. 3:16-23-30 YOU SNUFP NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT \JS 'EM — Estate No. 7772 WE'LL STUFF i Estate of Bessie Seese (Bessie Top­ per). 'EAA By direction of Kenneth Topper, Ad­ ministrator of the Estate .of Bessie Seese (Bessie Topper), late of St. Jo­ seph County, in the State of Indiana, deceased. NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, legatees and devisees of the said dece­ dent, and all other persons interested in the said estate, that said Adminis­ trator has filed in this court his ac­ count and vouchers for the final set­ tlement of said estate, and they are hereby required to be and appear in said Court on the 2nd day of April, 1945, when the same will be heard and make proof of their heirship, or claim to any part of said estate, and show cause if there be, why said account and vouchers should not be approved. WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2 at South Bend, Indiana, 9th day of March, 1945. FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. Leo L. Cook, Attorney for Estate. 3:16-23 NON-RESIDENT NOTICE Cause No. 70890 STATE OF INDIANA COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH, ss: In the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2, - February Term, 1945 H. PAUL AMBS vs. VIRGINIA HAGER AMBS Be it known, that the above named plaintiff has filed in the office of the clerk of said court divorce complaint against said defendant in the above cause together with a proper affidavit that said defendant is non-resident of the state of Indiana. "Matthew is a great artist and a fine craftsman—but he's Said defendant is hereby notified that "They're afraid to let me run one of them things- -I used said cause will stand for trial on the too ambitious for his own good." 11th day of May, 1945, the same being to be a cab driver in Brooklyn.? MARCH 16, 1945 Page Fifteen

also known as Lester O. Webber, late and assigns, lessees, cestiue qui trus?- being at the city of South Bend, In­ LEGAL NOTICES of St. Joseph county, deceased. tent, respectively of each of the fore­ diana, on which day said Gib­ Said Estate is supposed to be solvent ANSWERS TO going named persons, the names of all son is required to appear at said hear­ NOTICE OF PUBLICATION Raloh B. Webber, Administrator. of whom are unknown to plaintiffs; all ing. Cause No. 70778 February 28th, 1945. of the women once known by any of FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerfe. STATE OF INDIANA Wilford V. Walz, Test Your I. Q. the names and designations above E. R. Strombeck, Deputy. ST. JOSEPH COUNTY S3: Attorney for Estate. 3:2-9-16 stated, whose names have been chang­ Frank X. Kopinski, In the St. Joseph Circuit Court ed, and who are now known by other Attorney for Plaintiff. 3:9-16-23 February Term, 1945 NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION names, the spouse of all of the per­ Estate No. 8614 1. Science of fruit growing. sons above named, described and des­ NON-RESIDENT NOTICE J. ELMER PEAK NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ 2. Oklahoma in 1944, with ignated as defendants to this action, Cause No. 70829 vs. dersigned has been appointed by ihe the names of all of whom are unknown STATE OF INDIANA, LATHROP M. TAYLOR, et al Judge of the Superior Court No. 1 of 20,000 tons, nearly a third of the to plaintiffs; all persons, firms, part' St. Joseph County, State of Indiana, U. S. crop. nerships and corporations who assert COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH, ss: BE IT KNOWN that the above named, Administrator of the Estate of William or might assert any title, claim or in­ In the St. Joseph Circuit Court, plaintiff has filed, in the St. Joseph T. Barnard, late of St. Joseph County, 3. Compilation of weather re­ terest in or upon the real estate de­ February Term, 1945 Circuit Court, his complaint against deceased. ports on a world-wide basis for scribed in the complaint in this action, the above named defendants in the Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. forecasting far into the future. by, under or through any of the de­ HARRIETTA STRASSER above entitled cause, with a proper af­ Ray M. Voorhees, Administrator. fendants to this action above named, vs. fidavit that said defendants: Lathrop March 7th, 1945. 4. Milk's principal protein. the names of all of whom are unknown ARTHUR STRASSER M. Taylor; Alexis Coquillard; Frances Crumpacker, May, Carlisle, 5. German gingerbread. to plaintiffs. C. Coquillard, wife of Alexis Coquil­ and Beamer, You and each of you are hereby sev­ Be it known, that the above named lard; Samuel Hanna; Samuel Leeper; Attorneys for Estate. 3:9-16-23 (Questions On Page 5) erally notified, that the above named plaintiff has filed in the office of the Elizabeth Leeper, wife of Samuel Lee­ plaintiffs have filed in St. Joseph Su­ clerk of said court her complaint, per; John Osborn; John Osburn; Eme- NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION perior Court No. 2 of St. Joseph "County, against said defendant in the above hne Osburn, wife of John Osburn; Estate No. 8613 barzewski and Robert James Gembar­ Indiana, a complaint making you and cause together with a proper affidavit Louisa J. Lane; Warren A. Luce; Anna NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ zewski have applied to the St. Joseph each of you defendants thereto, and that said defendant's residence is un­ M. Luce, wife of Warren A. Luce; E dersigned has been appointed by the Circuit Court of said County and State praying therein a judgment and de­ known to plaintiff. R. St. John, whose true Christian name Judge of the Superior Court No. 1 of to have their names changed to Samuel cree of said court quieting the title to Said defendant is hereby notified that is to the plaintiff unknown; Edwin R St. Jaseph County, State of Indiana, F. Gember, Elizabeth Ann Gember, the following described real estate in said cause will stand for trial on the St. John; Elizabeth M. St. John, wife Administrator of the Estate of Anna Beatrice Marie Gember, Irene Anne St. Joseph County, and state of In­ 8th day of May, 1945, the same being of Edwin R. St. John; William F. Myers, late of St. Joseph County, de­ Gember, Rose Marie Gember, Arthur S. diana, to-wit: the 2nd day of the May term of said Schmid; Mary Schmid, wife of William ceased. Gember and Robert James Gember re­ A lot or parcel of land One Hun­ court commencing at the city of South F. Schmid; William F. Smith; Marv Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. spectively, and that said petition and dred and One (101) feet in length Bend, on which day said defendant is Smith, wife of William F. Smith; Frank Clarence O. Myers, Administrator. application will be presented to and north and south taken off of and required to appear to said action.. Mayr; John W. Harbon; Hester Bar- March 6th, 1945. heard by said Court on the 23rd day of from the entire width of the north FRANK J. BRUGGNER. Clerk. more; Mary Smith, Jr.; Wilhelmina John W. Montgomery and April, 1945. end of Lot Numbered Thirteen (13) By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. Smith; Clara Detling; William A. Det­ Frank J. Breen, FRANK J. BRUGGNER, on Second Street, now Lincoln Paul V. Paden, ling, husband of Clara Detling; Clara Attorneys for Estate. 3:9-16-23 Clerk of St. Joseph Circuit Court. Highway East as shown on the ad- Attorney for Plaintiff. 3:9-16 23 Detling; William A. Detling, husband Dated March 8, 1945. " ditional plat of the Town of St. of Clara Detling; Mary Smith, Junior; NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Joseph W. Nyikos, Joseph Iron Works, now the City NON-RESIDENT NOTICE Mary Smith, Senior; Mary Smith, Sr.; Estate No. 8609 , Attorney for Petitioners. 3:9-16-23 of Mishawaka. Cause No. 70798- William F. Smith, husband of Mary STATE OF INDIANA Smith, Sr.; Anna Detling; Anna H. NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ Said proceedings are being prose­ Detling; the unknown husbands and dersigned has been appointed by the NON-RESIDENT NOTICE cuted to quiet the title to the real es­ COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: wives, widows and widowers, children, Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ Cause No. 70793 tate in plaintiffs said complaint men­ In the St. Joseph Circuit Court descendants and heirs, surviving seph county, state of Indiana, admin­ Divorce tioned and described and above de­ February Term, 1945 spouses, creditors and administrators istratrix of the estate of Anton Wink­ STATE OF INDIANA scribed as againstf all defendants, of the estate, devisees, legatees, trus­ ler, late of St. Joseph county, deceased. COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH, SS: claims, and claimants whatsoever. The BETTY JEAN BILLMAN tees and executors of the last will and Said estate is supposed to be solvent. In the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1 plaintiffs in said action have averred vs. .testament, successors in interest and Ethel M. Winkler, Administratrix. February Term, 1945 by an affidavit filed in this proceedings JAMES BILLMAN assigns, trustees in bankruptcy, and re­ March 5th, 1945. that you and each of you are non­ ceivers, respectively, of each of the George A. Schock, HENRY F. HOOVEN residents of the State of Indiana or that Be It Known, That the above-named above named, described and desig­ Attorney for Estate. 3:9-16-23 vs. your residence is unknown and that Plaintiff has filed in the office of the nated persons, the names of all of ALICE MAY HOOVEN you are necessary parties to said pro­ Clerk of said Court her complaint whom are unknown to plaintiff; all of NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION ceeding; and that said petition or com­ against said Defendant in the above the women and persons once known by Estate No. 8610 Be it known, that the above named plaint so filed, which is now pending, cause together with a proper affidavit any of the names and designation's NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ Plaintiff has filed in the office of the is set for hearing in St. Joseph Su­ that said Defendant is a non-resident above stated whose names may have dersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of said Court divorce complaint perior Court No. 2 at the Court House of the State of Indiana. been changed, the names of all of Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ against- said defendant in the above in the City of South Bend, St. Joseph Said defendant is hereby notified that whom are unknown to plaintiff; the seph county, state of Indiana, adminis­ cause togetherwith a proper affidavit County, Indiana, on the 25th day oi said cause will stand for trial on the spouses of all of the above named, de­ tratrix of the estate of Joseph A. Tre- that said defendant is a non-resident of April, 1945, and you and each of you 7th day of May, 1945, the same being scribed and designated persons who are mel, late of St. Joseph county, deceased. state of Indiana. ar° hereby notified that unless you ap­ the 1st day of May term of said court married, the names of all of whom are Said Estate is supposed to be solverft. Said defendant is hereby notified that pear in said court on said last men­ commencing in the city of South Bend, unknown to plaintiff; all persons, firms, Joan Hodson, Administratrix. said cause will stand for trial on the tioned date to answer or demur to on which day said defendant is re­ partnerships, corporations, trustees in March 5th, 1945. 8th day of May, 1945, the same being at said complaint, that the same will be quired to appear to said action. bankruptcy, trustees, transferees, as­ Charles W- Bingham, the city of South Bend, on which day heard and determined in your absence. FRANK J7 BRUGGNER, Clerk. signees, successors in.interest, and re­ Attorney for Estate. 3:9-16-23 said defendant is required to appear to IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. ceivers who assert or might assert any said action. hereunto set my hand and seal of Leo Van Tilbury, title, claim or interest in or lien upon NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. said Court at South Bend, Indiana on Attorney for Plaintiff. 3:2-916 thS real estate hereinafter described Estate No. 8607 By Marie Stansbury, Deputy. the 27th day of February, 1945. Hemphling, Smith & Nemeth, the ^™F^Ng j BRU6GNER. Clerk under or through any of the above NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ NON-RESIDENT NOTICE named, described and designated per­ dersigned has been appointed by the Attys. for Plaintiff. 3:9-16-23 of the St. Joseph Superior Court No. & sons, the names of all of whom are un­ Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ By* Golda S. Butler, Deputy. Cause No. 70614 known to plaintiff, are non-residents seph County, State of Indiana. Admin­ NON-RESIDENT NOTICE E. Spencer Walton and John W. STATE OF INDIANA of the State of Indiana, and that said istratrix of the estate of Roy E. Rowe, Cause No. 70834 Schindler, Attorneys for Plaintiffs. ST. JOSEPH COUNTY SS: cause of action is to. quiet the title to late of St. Joseph county, deceased. STATE OF INDIANA In the St. Joseph Circuit Court, the following described real estate in Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH, ss: February Term, 1045 the City of South Bend, St. Joseph Ellen M. Rowe, Administratrix. In the St. Joseph Circuit Court, NON-RESIDENT NOTICE County, State of Indiana, to-wit: March 2nd, 1945. February Term, 1945 Cause No. 70825 NATHAN J. KREIZELMAN Lot Numbered Three Hundred Charles W. Bingham, STATE OF INDIANA •w- VS. and Thirty-five (335) as shown on Attorney for Estate. 3:9-16-23 HELEN VIRGINIA HAUBERT COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH, SS: ESTHER KREIZELMAN the Original Plat of the Town, now vs. In the St. Joseph Circuit Court, City of South Bend, Indiana, NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT BENJAMIN HAUBERT February Term, 1945 Be it known, that the amove named and that said action is instituted and Estate No. 8152 plaintiff has filed in the office of the prosecuted by said plaintiff for the Estate of Gust Andrew Kalen. Be it known, that the above named EVA M. WELTON, b/n/f Clerk of said court his complaint purpose of quieting the title to the By direction of Louise Zimmer, Ad­ plaintiff has filed in the office of the Lillie Musary against said defendant in the above above described real estate as against ministratrix of the estate of Gust An­ clerk of said court her complaint vs. cause together with a proper affidavit all defendants, claims and claimants drew Kalen, late of St. Joseph county, against said defendant in the above RUSSELL A. WELTON that said defendant is a non-resident whatsoever and whomsoever, and as iri the state of Indiana, deceased. cause together with a proper affidavit of the state of Indiana. agairct the world. Notice is hereby given to the heirs, that said defendant is a non-resident Be it known. That the above named Said defendant is hereby notified that legatees and devisees of the said dece­ of the state of Indiana. plaintiff has filed in the office of the said cause will stand for trial on the NCW, THEREFORE, all of the above dent, and all other persons interested in Said defendant is hereby notified that the clerk of said court her complaint 7th day of May, 1945, the same being nam d, described and designated de­ the said estate, that said administratrix said cause will stand for trial on the against said defendant in the above the 1st day of the May term of said fendants, and each of them, are here­ has filed in this court her account and 8th day of May, 1945, the same being cause together with a proper affidavit court commencing at the city of South by notified of the filing and pendency vouchers for the final settlement of the 2nd day of the May term of said that said defendant is a non-resident Bend, on which day said defendant is of jaid complaint against them, and said estate, and they are hereby re­ court commencing at the city of South of the state of Indians. .••.,••* required to appear to said action. t': t said cause will stand for trial on quired to be and appear in said court Bend, on which day said defendant i Said defendant is hereby notified that FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. js&3 7th day of May, 1945, in the Court- on the 27th day of March, 1945, WJrah required to appear to said action. said cause will stand for trial on the By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. • n of the St. Joseph Circuit Court the same will be heard and make proof FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. 2nd day of May, 1945, of said court Z. Dekelboum, i - the City of South Bend, Indiana, of their heirship, or claim to any part By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. commencing at the city of South Bend, Attorney for Plaintiff. 3:2-916 1 that unless they appear and an- of said estate, and show cause if there George Sands. on which day said defendant is re­ ;JSB Or demur thereto on said date, be, Why said account and vouchers Attorney for Plaintiff. 3-:9-16-23 quired to appear to said action. BIRTH CERTIFICATE NOTICE 1 complaint and all the matters and should not be approved. FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. i! igs therein contained and alleged Witness, the clerk and the seal of the NOTICE OF ACTION TO QUIET By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. Cause No. 3984 1 be heard and determined by the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South Bend. TITLE TO REAL ESTATE Charles Davis, • n Notice is hereby given that Liller f urt in their absence. Indiana, J8nd day of M4r&h, 1945. No. 69721 Attorney for Plaintiff. 3;2-9-lo Jones has filed her petition in the St. •/ITNESS the hand of the Clerk of FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk- STATE OF INDIANA Joseph Circuit Court to have the time d' Court this 21st day of February, JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. ST. JOSEPH COUNTY, SS: NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION and place of her birth determined. Said Herman Newsome, In the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2 Estate No. 8597 petition is set for hearing March 20, FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Attorney for Estate. 3:9-16 February Term, 1945 NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ 1945. CI?' k of St. Joseph /Circuit Court. MARCUS J. LAING, ET AL, Plaintiffs dersigned has been appointed by the FRANK J- BRUGGNER, •"' hn J Lechner and Arthur L. May, NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION vs. Judge of the Superior Court No. 1 of Clerk of the St. Joseph Circuit Court. Attorneys for Plaintiffs. 3:9-16-23 Estate No. 8604 FIRST METHODIST CHURCH, MISH­ St. Joseph county, State of Indiana, Charles Wills, Atty. 3:16 NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ AWAKA, INDIANA, SUCCESSOR TO administrator of the estate of Chester * LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION dersigned has been appointed by the METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH R. Montgomery, late of St. Joseph HEARING Estate No. 8598 Judge of the Superior Court No. 2 of OF THE TOWN OF MISHAWAKA, county, deceased. NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ St. Joseph County, State of Indiana, IND., ET AL, Defendants. Said Estate is supposed te be solvent. NOTICE is hereby given that the Lo­ dersigned has beehv appointed by the Executor of the Estate of Jessie M. TO: Richmond Tuttle, Richmond John W. Montgomery, Administrator. cal Alcoholic Beverage Board of St. Judge pi the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ Clark, late of St. Joseph County, de- Tutle, George C. Merrifield, Mary A February 23rd, 1845. Joseph County, Indiana, will, at 2:00 seph county, state of Indiana, admin- Ceased. Merrifield, George Ballinger, George John W. Montgomery, --„-,« P. M. Central War Time on the 23th istrat" x of the estate of Charles Chap­ Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. Bellinger, Minor T. Graham, Albert day of March, 1945 at the City Hall, lin, 1 te of St. Joseph county, deceased. George F. Clark, Executor. Hudson, Louiza C. Hudson, Richmond Attorney for Estate. 3.2-9-ib in the City of Mishawaka, in said Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. March 1st, 1945. Tuttle, Allen Sisson, George C. Merri­ NON-RESIDENT NOTICB Countyi» begin investigation of the ap­ Mary V. Chaplin, Administratrix. Homer Q. Earl, field, George Ballinger, and Minor T Cause No. 361 plication of the following named per­ February 23rd, 1945. . Attorney for Estate. 3:9-16-23 Graham, Trustees; AH members, min­ STATE OF INDIANA, son, requesting the issue to the ap­ Jo.:mh W. Nyikos, isters and preachers of the Methodist COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH, ss: plicant, at the location hereinafter set / ttorney for Estate. 3:2-9-16 NOTICE ON PETITION TO CHANGE Episcopal Church in the United States In the St. Joseph Circuit Court, out, of the Alcoholic Beverage Permit NAME of America; Methodist Episcopal (Juvenile Division) of the class hereinafter designated and NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION No. 70871 Church of the Town of Mishawaka February Term, 1945 will, at said time and place, receive Estate No. 8600 STATE OF INDIANA Richard Marter, George Milburn, Wil­ information concerning the fitness of NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ ST. JOSEPH COUNTY SS: liam Skerrit, A. Eberhart, whose true EXPARTE IN THE MATTER OF THE said applicant, and the propriety of is­ dersigned has been appointed by the In the St. Joseph Circuit Court Christian name is unknown, Adolphus PETITION OF EDWIN GOSIOROW- suing the permit applied for to such Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ February Term, 1945 Eberhart, William Dauley, Martin V SKI AND IRENE GOSIOROWSKI applicant at the premises named: seph County, State of Indiana, exeeu­ Beiger, M, V. Beiger whose true Chris­ FOR THE ADOPTION OF A MINOR tor of the estate of Helen B. Roper, PETITION OF SAMUEL T. GEMBAR­ tian name is unknown, E. F. Cole CHILD. • Mishawaka.Liquor Store, Inc., 9600, late of St. Joseph county, deceased. ZEWSKI, ELIZABETH ANN GEMBAR­ whose true Christian name is un­ (Package Store), 120 Lincolnway Said estate is supposed to be solvent ZEWSKI, BEATRICE "MARIE GEM­ known, G. C. Merrifield, whose true Be it known, that the above named West, Mishawaka — Liquor, Wine The First National Bank of Misha­ BARZEWSKI, and IRENE ANNE GEM­ Christian name is unknown. George C petitioners filed in the St. Joseph Cir­ Dealer. waka, Executor. BARZEWSKI, ROSE MARIE GEM­ Merrifield, A. Hudson, whose true cuit Court (Juvenile Division) their pe­ February #6th, 1945. BARZEWSKI, ARTHUR S. GEMBAR­ Christian name is unknown, and Albert tition for the adoption of Elizabeth Ann SAID INVESTIGATION WILL BE Charles W. Bingham, ZEWSKI and ROBERT JAMES GEM­ Hudson, trustees ot the Methodist Epis­ Gibson, a minor, together with a proper OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, AND PUBLIC Attorney for.Estate. 3:2-9-16 BARZEWSKI, minors, by SAMUEL F. copal Church of the Town of Misha­ affidavit that the mother of said child PARTICIPATION IS REQUESTED. GEMBARZEWSKI, their next friend, waka; Lewis T. Booth, Sarah Booth, Gibson, whose true christian NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION to change name. Sarah M. Booth; The unknown hus name is unknown to these petitioners ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COM­ Estate No. 8603 bands and wives* widows and widow is a non-resident of the state of In­ MISSION OF INDIANA NOTICE is hereby given that the un- NOTICE is hereby given that Samuel ers, children, descendants, .heirs, sur diana, and that she resides in the state Jiersigned have been appointed by the F. Gembarzewski, Elizabeth Ann Gem­ viving spouses, creditors, administra­ of Oklahoma. .„ - By JOHN F. NOONAN, vUdAe of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ barzewski, Beatrice Marie Gembarzew­ tors of estates, devisees, legatees Said Gibson is hereby notified Secretary. seph county, state of Indiana, adminis­ ski, -Irene Anne Gembarzewski, Rose trustees, executors of the last will that said cause will stand for hearing BERNARD E. DOYLE, trator of the estate of Lester Webber, Marie Gembarzewski, Arthur S. Gem- and testament, successors in interest on the 21st day of May, 1945, the same 3:16 Excise Administrator. ffivr THE MIRROR

amount upon the filing of a form in a recent decision interpreting- —Scientists say that the post­ 10 application. the fair labor standards act, held war auto may be equipped with that the administrator Jjf the W3^. radar to make driving in a fog NEW WAR MANPOWER and hour division hasphe vkglafeMk safe. All well and good, but for COMMISSION ORDERS prohibit home work m an indus­ real safety they should invent a Under new amendments to the try where it is found—that**sueh robot chauffeur that can give AUXILIARY "MPs" DENIED NWLB FIXES 55c PER HOUR war manpower commission's em­ prohibition is necessary in rnahj- drunkometer tests. BARGAINING RIGHTS AS SUB-STANDARD RATE ployment stabilization plan, female taining a minimum wage iaf^s0f£ HE Circuit Court of Appeals in The National War Labor Board, as well as male employees are now der for the industry. brought under controlled referral. The effect of this delSsfpi' is to In general the President's re­ Chicago recently held, in a by resolution, has authorized re­ port on the Yalta Conference Tfar-reaching decision, that gional boards to approve wage In other words, all employees, both give the administrator tJ§§.;jjower male and female, must be hired by to compel workers to work in the stimulates hope for peace in the military plant guards are not em rates up to 55c per hour in volun­ employer's factory or not to work postwar world. And if we GET ploye^s of the plant within the referral from the United States K tary cases. In dispute cases, the for him at all, *?? '* - those 60,000,000 jobs we'll be too meai. ing of the National Labor Re­ regional boards in their discretion employment service. The only em­ r latione act and the employer is not ployees excluded from this ruling The stabilized rates and *Traj^ tired to fight are permitted to take into consid­ ranges for the metal worMm^ig.-- compelled to bargain with their eration appropriate prevailing are veterans of World War II, ag­ - ricultural workers, domestic serv­ dustry in the Fort Wayne aniF^il* representatives. Both the National rates in making their determina­ Goebbels urges the herrenvoHs Labor Relations board and the ice employees, state or local gov­ Porte-Michigan City labor market tion as to whether or not a rate ernmental employees, and casual areas have recently been revised \td continue to bear arms, even National War Labor board, in a will be increased to 55c per hour in ^hopeless situations. "Keep great number of decisions, have as substandard. employees, that is, employment of by the regional War Labor bljlffdr held that employers must bargain less than seven days' duration. —Ind. C. C. C. swingin'," he seems to say, "they This action should not be con­ ain't touched us." with representatives of military fused with general order No. 30, Also employers are no longer plant guards,. If sustained by the which now permits employers to permitted to issue statements of French women, annoyed- at supreme court, the decision will increase wages to 50c per hour availability. All such statements the combination of being given Admiral Halsey says that when have the effect of overruling both without approval. In other words, must be issued by the U. S. E. S. the right to vote and denied cig- and if the Jap industrialists get the NLRB and the NWLB. an employer may not increase HOME WORK HIT BY arets, are changing their S£JCS§K in the saddle, we will receive In this case, the E. C. Atkins wages to 55c per hour. It simply NEW FLSA DECISION ration credentials. Which proves some very attractive peace feel­ Company of Indianapolis, had re­ means that the regional boards that where there's no smoke, ers. But numb's the word, as h« fused to bargain with the Interna­ will approve a rate up to that The United States supreme court there's ire. sees it. tional Association of Machinists, Dist. 90 and its affiliate, local 1683. The NLRB ordered the company to bargain with the union and up­ on the company's refusal, filed a petition for enforcement. The court in deciding this case states: "The board in its order entirely ignores the unusual status occu­ pied by members of the plant guard by reason of their enroll­ ment for service with the military. They are largely if not entirely under the control and direction of the war department. They wear the uniform of a soldier, owe the same allegiance, receive their au­ thority and commands from the same source, are enlisted for the duration, for service with the army and are engaged in the perform­ ance of a service essential to the successful prosecution of the war. Nothing should be permitted which will interfere in any degree or to any extent with the obligation £?Which these guards have with the military. Membership in a union with the right to bargain might, in fact is likely to, do that very thing. To so state is not to cast any reflection upon the patriotism of the guard members. It is merely a recognition of that which is a matter of common knowledge." WLB INTERPRETS GENERAL ORDER NO. 30 The National War Labor board, on Feb. 28, 1945, issued instruc­ tions to regional boards and indus­ try commissions for interpreting general order No. 30, where in­ creases to the 50c per hour mini­ mum provided therein involve rato ranges, merit and length of service increases and hiring rates under general order No. 31. The instruc­ tions also fix a retroactive date beyond which the 50c minimum can not be put into effect without board approval. Because of the importance of Suppose there weren't enough money Suppose your mother were ill and Suppose you were dying for want of this, we are quoting the full text of the instructions, which are as fo bring your child into the world? Without funds? Seaman T; M; received blood plasma? The shrapnel and frag- follows: In a tearful, dejected letter, Pvt. R.'s wife word his mother was desperately ill and ments from a shell burst riddled Sgt.i told him she was going to have a baby. without money. He remembered advice he'd R. J. M.'s left arm. He was losing blood "I. Rate Ranges. A. Any ad­ justment of a rate range which There wasn't enough money to pay for heard and went to his Red Cross Field Di­ fast. A medical corpsman administered first brings any part thereof above 50 medical care and hospitalization. Helpless, rector who requested the boy's local chap­ aid and Red Cross blood plasma. Then cents per hour requires board ap­ Pvt. R; appealed to the Red Cross. In a few ter to arrange for care. They did. Now, they carried him to the field station and proval. days he received word that they had assisted anxiety lifted, Seaman T. M. is a better gave him 8 more pints of plasma. Witno^E. his wife in applying for emergency materi fighting man. Another example of your Red it, he would have died, "B. If the minimum of a rate v range is below 50 cents and the nity and infant care. Cross in action. maximum of the .range is above Suppose you couldn't bring yourself 50 cents per hour, the minimum Suppose you were wounded, disabled/ Suppose your son were taken prisoner to tell your family you'd lost your leg? may be raised to any point up to jobless and discouraged? A Marine of war? Imagine the anxiety of the parents He hadn't told them he'd lost his leg ;-» ; and including 50 cents per hour Private, he was wounded in the South Pa­ of Pvt. E. D., who had had no word from Dad and Mom would take it too hard. But 'i^ithout board approval. Any ad­ cific and discharged for disability. He went him in months. The Red Cross sent a wel­ they were coming to see him in the hospital. justment in the maximum rate re­ home discouraged at the prospect of mak­ fare inquiry. And then the International He appealed to a Red Cross workei^to quires board approval. ing his living again. Unable to take up his Red Cross reported that he was healthy and break the news for him. It was a tough jobi "C. If both the minimum and former trade, in desperation he appealed well, and was receiving regularly the Amer­ but she did;;; and soon Mom was holding the maximum of a rate range are to the Red Cross. They put him in touch ican Red Cross packages that helped keep his hand while Dad was telling some funny*, below 50 cents per hour, both the with the proper agency—-he's doing swelhj up his spirits. Your money gets the packr things that had happened back home—and ' minimum and the maximum may now; ages to mm. Sgt. J. T. was smiling happily. be raised to any point up to and including 50 cents per hour. "II. Relation to General Order No. 31. A. An employer who-has The Red Cross can't do this work without your help! the minima of one or more of his The actual cases outlined above illustrate just a few of the thousands of ways in job classification rate ranges be­ which the Red Cross helps our fighting men—at home and overseas. But with­ low 50 cents per hour may adjust the rate of individual employees out your help there would be no Red Cross to do this humanitarian work. For KEEPYGUR to any points within such rate die Red Cross is wholly dependent on the money that you and other sympathetic ranges up to and including 50 cents Americans contribute. And after three years of war, the work of your Red Cross Without board approval and with­ is greater than even ; HID CROSS out offsetting such adjustments against the 5 and 10 cent allow­ Think of the pain and suffering yon can alleviate by your contribution—and ances provided in section I-A and how proud you can be of your part in this heart-warming work; Won't you give Il-C of general order No. 31. all you can?''' "B. An employer who has the minima of one or more of his job classification rate ranges below 50 cents per hour may hire new em­ l*«r ployees at rates up to and includ- GIVE mMf-mtMOM - ing 50 cents without regard to the 25 per cent hiring limitation of sction II-F of general order No. 31. "III. Retroactivity. Increases made under general order No. 30 may not be made retroactive to a date earlier than Nov. 11, 1944 (the effective date of general order 30) Without the prior approval of the War Labor Board." prepared by tbe War Advertising Council in cooperation with th* Office of War Information and the American Red Cross