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SOUTH BEND PUBLIC LIBRARY. 304 S.MAIN ST., CITY.

"THAT MAN" in WHITE HOUSE spies DAPPLEMERE FARMER black-marketing "GOOSE-FODDER"

egui ELIEVE IT OD ALMIGHTY, if He is interested in politics, must have had a good laugh Saturday night, if He listened in on the speech by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, linguistically taking

'_**• G the lying hides off the backs of the Republican High Command, their mouth-pieces and dupes OR ELSE who are running around—synthesizing, themselves His annointed,—and heralding a "Second Com­ ing," come November. They'll chain the MEA T Q* THE COCON UT devil (by aping it) that has been prevalent the past -.•• BY ..•- eleven years, and institute a millenium in America i SILAS WITHERSPOON I after the formula of the twelve years preceding; _. No thing under Harding, Coolidge and Hoover. BATTLE IS ON, OH! like it any­ He must have laughed even harder Sunday morn­ where since ing to hear the Republicans broil in praying moods. CHRISTIAN SOLDIERS" the war be- Some vowed it silly; nothing to it but Fala; others g a n ; in took umbrage at the likening of G. 0. P. insistence AND SIDNEY HILLMAN Pearl Har­ on fraud, to the Mein Kampf formula that if you bor, Algiers, make a lie big enough, and repeat it often enough, IS PUBLIC ENEMY No. 1 Tunisia, you'll believe it yourself. Still others were down­ Italy, Rus­ right mad, including Mr. Thomas Edmund Dewey, ON G. 0. P. ROSTER sia, Poland, whose dander went up to the doffing of his gloves. Bataan, Roosevelt seems to have defied the "sacrilege" WITH ROOSEVELT AND Guadalca­ defined by these self-annointed of the Most High, nal, Paleliu DEWEY RUNNING JUST Normandy, to counter any of their say-soes, or go back, in his­ tory to recount their perfidies gone before. The Belgium, or 1 TO PASS TIME AWAY along River "Masterpiece" inside (page three) is how he did it; Rhine. I knew it long before they came; was taking up the cudgels — yes sir, and what do you told at the luncheon tables, or wherever a G. j think? *8§S O. P.un could get in the word. C. I. O. was It was at a convention of a labor union; the •coming and there would be street brawls; A. Brotherhood of Teamsters (not C. I. 0. but A. F. of F. of L., God's holies because not aligned "That Man" ROOSEVELT (On Page Three) with P. A. C., was likely to turn out and mob them from our midst. There would be nothing wrong about that as long as A. F. of Dewey Doffs His Gloves and Dons His Dander L. was the mob and C. I. O. and P. A. C. the mobees. It makes all the difference in the EWEY, the dapper dandy of Albany, elsetimes ofvDapplemere farm and Berkshire hogs — quite world who is doing the mobbing and who is idylic in his daintiness, — donned his dander and doffed his gloves at Oklahoma City Monday being mobbed. D night, billed by the Republican command to show us how he used to do it to the New York "policy racketeers"; not, of course, of the Wall Street variety. He walked right in, shot off his mouth, However, C. I. O. came and went; nestling and walked right out again. meanwhile at the Indiana Club rooms, where the elite alights, and the only mobbing that He made good only so far as comparison goes, to took place was linguistic; hurled at M. M. the case of the only Wall Street "policy racketeer" that and G. G. (Miller, Morris, Gates and Grant). - he ever tackled; Charley Mitchell of National City C. I. O. had the nerve to come back at assaults Bank, and other points financially prominent. National made on Sidney Hillman, head of P. A. C. City is the bank, you know, over which Winthrop ahd a C. I. O. leader. Hillman is propagan­ Aldrich, Dewey's pride for secretary of the treasury, dized by the G. O. P., and M. M. 8 G. G.. now presides. as some sort of tartar hell-bent on instituting Mitchell was up for fraud anent his federal income himself, with Roosevelt for camouflage, a taxes, which though Dewey's criminal "prosecution" Genghis Khan to America, — out-Hitlering absolved him, the civil courts forced him to pay. He Hitler, out-Hirohitoing Hirohito, and if you was saved from some of the ignominy that befell Al. please, relegating Lenin and Trotsky at their Capone and Mose Annenberg. "worst, to the limbo of nothingness. The present culprit after whose scalp he is gunning 1 As analyzed at the C. I. O. conference, the is Franklin Delano Roosevelt, sometime president of th ? G. O. P. has about settled it in its own mind ; crimes the New Deal, the war, the peace, (or minds), if any, that its attacks on Roose- and 4th term. Long on gall this time as he was short velt are like thin air disintegrated. So the tac­ on gumption in the Mitchell case, history repeated. The tic is to pick on Hillman, make a bogey of acquittal verdict will be unsealed on election day. (On Pag« Two} There wasn't a thing new in his Oklahoma City speech. He had said it all before at Philadelphia, Louis­ ville, Sheridan, Wyo., Couer d' Alene, Seattle, Portland, DAYS IS DAYS San Francisco, LQS Angeles—less reciting some alleged By JOHN O'HARA authorities to bolster him up. He seemed to realize that he needed bolstering. He FTER the first few days there the repeated the perfidies of which President Roosevelt ac­ habits of living in a new place began cused him; they were as the attar of roses when he A to form. Larkin would lean over spouted them, but returning to his nostrils, divested of and kiss his wife good-by, get out of the car, his egotism, and their falsity spiked, they were mud. go inside the station, buy his paper at the Like the coiled snake that the Carolinas once displayed news-stand, walk through the station, and on their flag, he hissed; "don't tread on me." (On Page Seven) Touch-Me-Not" DEWEY (On Page Five) Page Two THE MIRROR

ViCfOllY PARADE By COLLIER the $5,000 limitation), never aided and abetted partisan finances. Follqgy the association's weekly ELIEVE It. telease and you're durr-b if you can guess it, de­ spite the clever presentations, any less than a G. O. P. propaganda sheet, and definitely so intend­ Or ELSE! ed. R| (From Page One) And next we have with us Frank Gannett's hjm, and lead the populace, if possible, into for­ and Dr. Edward A. Rumely's, Sam B. Petten­ getting the man in the white house by concen­ giU's a_a4 P<____- G. 1f__Htl-olomew's Committee for trating on the one they would past in the dog­ Oaf_stitutional Government, Inc. (CCGI) ; oh house. M. M. & G. G., though tirey set the hM no, __ot a Republican appendix. "For Americans rolling locally, as Hitler institflfcad the blitz and Only," their latest ©-tit-pat; oh well, of couErse, if Hirohito the shaking blas&t; sure, there shouldn't yostshave ever read. Article V of the constitution, be any back talk. Aren't they the annointed of providing for change, or have the gumption to the Most High? assume that there has been any evolution to What right have these scavengers of the dust, American life since 1789, yoia're net an Amer­ and grime; without diplomas, bank balances, so­ ica©. Back to the Indians, back to the caves, back cial status, and pews up front—where everybody to the fig-leaves. can see them come in,—to challenge the word of The first historical record of claim to private such mighties or attempt to lay waste to their property was at Jacob's well"; bask to Jake, never charm? Isn't "Bob" Grant, for instance, the mind any of the various refinements, securities, First Methodist Church's "own congressman" as definitions, that have since then been given, and per special announcement of a coming appearance taken away, from private ownership, consistent at church, the Sunday morning that was Grant with the -needs of successive times. Stick to the Day at Pottawatomie park? well, "free exterprise" (freedom to exploit), "in­ * * * * vestment -ittc_-3t-ve"; faty claim, shoot meddlers, Near as I can find and no strikes—back to Jacob's well. Back from By "Making Mountain out what hap­ the New Deal to the "OLD STEAL." pened at the C. I. Of Molehill" Retorts O. conference was that Clyde E. Anyhow Dr. Edward Of GIO Inkle Akin to Stephenson, presi­ A. Rumely (formerly AGA Browder and dent of the St. of Laporte), executive Joseph County secretary of CCI (the CCGI Rumeley at Misprison of Treason Industrial Unioaa great constitution sav­ Council, welcoming the delegates, and James Mc- # THAN*-- TO iors) , and Earl Brow­ Ewen, of South Bend, president of the Indiana CrOLVesStt IS-i K.V. SUR der, head of ACA Par in Hoospw C. I. O. Council, who acted as permanent chair- (American Communist man, said some uncomplimentary things about Association) have some­ Experience Plus Miller, Morris and Grant. that I hoped the contribution to the Republican par­ thing in common. Both Stephenson called Frederick Alfred Miller, publish­ ty would do some good. The Mirror never heard of have refused to testify be­ er of the Tribune, biased and prejudiced; said he its membership again; never got a card nor received fore the house association Refusals to Let wouldn't print the proceedings, and that his paper any more literature. The column had the temerity to investigating committee re­ and Grant had misrepresented P. A. C, to give it a say that NSBMA was net a small business men's as­ questing their official and Senate Publicize bad name; make it anathema,—whereat I rush to the sociation at all but a big business men's association membership rosters, contri­ Tribune's rescue. What do they think "freedom of using the small business men for a pseudonym and a buting associates, and that Their Persenna****************e - the press" is for, if not "not to print'^as well as to smokescreen. They could say what big business want­ what they do with the contributions when they get print, or to lead people astray if the editor feels that ed said, urge what big business wanted urged, and be­ tlbem. They'd stand citation and imprisonment for way. I say this for the Tribune, that for a "one and cause the apparent plea of small business, it would contempt first. They're going to protect their con­ only" in any size town, it is fair as they make 'em. be accepted in smcexitf, and as of merit, freed from tributors and membership lists from pummeling by It is a Republican paper, however, and what else do all guile, and as the plaint of a great group of suf­ the meddlers. Public knowledge of who they are you expect than that it will favor the Republicans; ferers. might be embarrassing to some,—and a few more otherwise it wouldn't be "free." To favor the Dem­ From that day to this .DeWitt E___e_"y has traveled days in jail wo_tl_fai't add much to either Rumely's ocrats, from their standpoint, yo_t have to be muz­ up and _§own country, spieling the same spiel, avow­ or Browder's shame — if they have any. Both have zled, brow-beaten or bought. edly non-partisan, insistently poor man sympathetic, had prison experience. And they called Ernest-Melvin Morris a "money­ professedly with -only one purpose in __fe; that to save small business from e__t___-tion,—-feint always by Rumely went to tfoe hoosegow post-Workf War I bag" and said the Tribune is "controlled" by him. for aiding and abetting the enemy (misprison of No wonder Miller fla-red, and as to the "money-bag" process that wo_t_4l iaa nowise injure, and would as in­ we have heard worse than that about Morris, even variably free big business to accomplish exactly the t_ea#on) while the war was on, but was promptly from Republicans. One said he had filled the "bag" things against which he ostmsaJbly inveighs. Like pardoned by our pro-German President Harding with philanthropy; "putting men on their feet by Robert Gaylord, of MMA (t__e Nario__.fl Manufac­ (1921) whose p_enipote__t_aries to Berlin apologized taking their cars and making them walk,"—in fact, turers' Association), another ladies' aid of the G. O. to , in settling our separate peace (1922), in about the only financial crime I have not heard him P., his concern is purely civic, economic, humani­ effect,—because all America had not been like Ri_mely. charged with is stealing sheep. Morris, Indiana Re­ tarian, and nowise partisan, says he. Browder was jugged for falsifying and misusing passports, and after serving two years was pardoned publican National committeeman, naturally hooks in Before a senate committee investigating asspciation- by President Roosevelt to help corral the Communists with Republican st_«ttegy, — so the major point al composfltaons, revenues, and expenditures recently, behind the Allies instead of the Axis—Russia, per­ against Miller and Morris seems to be '-hat puMic at­ Mr. Gaylord vehemently denied that NMA had any tention is called to the fact that their courses are force of Nazi attacks on her, having set the pace for political connections; its purposes were purely altru­ politico-strategic and what they say should be taken such alignment under the' Atlantic charter. with that grain of salt. istic, intra-informarive, and as to the public, educa­ tional. Its members, even, do not subscribe to cam­ - Hurrah for Rumely! G-d d--n Browder! CCGI Now Grant, Robert Allen Grant, congressman. paign funds (seeing that commercial corporations are is "For Americans Only," as per Messrs. Pettengill Stephenson, McEwen, and later Walter Frisbie. of not allowed to under the corrupt practices act), but and Bartholomew, co-authors and queerly enough, Indianapolis, Indiana P. A. C. secretary, called him he hardly dared say that officers and directors, of the distr_fe_-_ed by it just at this time; no partisan pur­ a liar; also Ralph Gates, G. O. P. gubernatorial nom­ corporations (and out tharo-ugh their families to evade pose; no p©_**k_cal connections. Rumely was publisher inee. I'll deal with Gates later, But as to Grant, _ _ of a New York newspaper then (Republican in I won't call him a liar though he can lie fast as 1920), and executive secretary of the so-called a horse can trot,—as witness the whopper that The Return of the Prodigal Sort American Security league (Republican in 1916). he told vast a few days before the election in He wants to see that the constitution is pre­ 1942. That in mind, I wouldn't believe him pol­ served now. itically—unless under oath. Understand, I said "politically," and said "unless." Citing the Con­ Browder! That rake! First he belongs to the* gressional Record as proof he asserted—when too "great unwashed"; his ilk is at the forge, not in late to check up on him, — that he had voted for the counting room; he wears denims,—not dia­ defense appropriations aggregating $155,773,- monds. And besides, doanchurknaw, there is 821,482, on 43 occasions, giving the dates. Sidney Hillman and every crack at Browder is Curious, I did check through 1941, after elec­ supposed to smear H_-__nan; Hillman and CIO tion, 14 items and instances, and quit. Election and PAC—though of course not John Llewellyn was over and I had found out what I wanted to Lewis and his UMWA. know. In not a single instance was a vote taken "God so loved the world" that he gave the G. in the house on the bills listed, on the dates given, O. P. John Llewellyn Lewis as His "second and on five occasions, the house was not even in coming"; Lewis'who gave CIO its communistic session. But then, the ways of M. M. & G. G. are only lift—fast fizzling out as witness the recent Grand incidental to Republican ways. P. A. C. natural­ Rapids convention where it failed dismally to ly doesn't suit them; it is on the Democratic side weed out the "no strike during the war" order of the fence; different than when it was backing of the higib-Bi-S. Attacks on WLB and its "Little Mr. Dewey in New York. The G. O. P. claims Steel Formula"—similarly denounced about the the right of monopoly of the side-kicks cooperat­ same time by Candidate Dewey in Seattle, petty- ing in politics. ***** fogging his "Big Steal" laypofirfcies,—went simi­ larly by the boards. 60P-NSBMA Joins 1%'tz ^i Dewey, out west, said Roosevelt through WLr} or four years ago, caused all the strikes, mine strikes, in the war in­ NMA and COGI With after The Mirror dustries, everywhere. Apparently labor was just had made its con­ dying to go on with the work but Roosevelt and tribution and taken WLB ordered them out, at least aggravated them Pleadings to Turn out membership in out, according to the Dewey agenda, and the the local branch of Smith-Connelly law, outlawing strikes in war Backward from New the National Small. industries, though passed over Roosevelt's veto Business Men's As­ ou-g__t to be repealed; no bid, of course, for the sociation, and Mr. support of the ultra-Browderesque-Lewis brand ^^Dea^ l to Old^^ Stea^ l DeWitt Emery of anarchistic defiants. came here to bestow its charter, making a speech, (On Page Six) «%?*&• ,-;.',. ..'4iW'» " '•

SEPTEMBER 29, 1944 Page Three F.D.R. NAILS 8.0.P. LIARS-AIRS FALSEHOODS USED TO BEGUILE VOTERS (From Page One) L.); a "mobocracy," if you please, low-browed, unwashed, and infe­ bility—as you know it to be a fact without being told or having to be rior, of course, to the "snobocracy," high-browed, refined, well- sold, black-market or otherwise. groomed, that is turning up its nose; well say, at tha presence of the It was a bad night for Republicans; last Saturday night. It was other fellow's "class consciousness." full of nightmares—and every mare was in a heat. They awoke Sun­ And it is almost sacrilege to drag poor Coolidge into it. He in­ day morning with terrible headaches. They say the president dis­ herited an awful mess from Harding; .not as bad as Roosevelt inher­ claimed their American citizenship, branded them all criminals, but ited from Hoover, but bad enough. Cal. wa3 so "silent" and laissez read the speech and find if you can whereat they found it,—unless faire, however, that he let it slide, whereat ''free enterprise" and in their own imagination whetted into action by their own subcon­ "investment inventive" had such a hey day, that, well again, it blew scious confessions of guilt. itself up on poor Hoover's hands almost before he got started. The president dealt mainly with facts of history and history mod­ "Why: bring that up?" Some Republican is asking it, but why ern enough that school children, not poisoned or unstrung by "delin­ not? Mr. Thomas Edmund Dewey, Owosso, New York, Dapplemere quent" parents puking lies, and prejudice, and hate into their ears, farm and Albany, feeding" goose-fodder to the west, says the Demo­ know it beyond dispute.- Time forbid him to go into the depths of crats are to blame foi* it, so why not bring it up ? Read Mr. Franklin it as he might have. We leave it to you. Read it. lira Delano Roosevelt, herewith, and get the true scent of that responsi- But the present, and the future! Don't overlook those features of the address,—the war, the peace, and reconversion to peacetime activity. Get the facts, comparative to/Republican claims—and the A Rooseveltian Masterpiece logic that belies Republican pretense particularly as to the peace. As now stands, with the war all but won, President Roosevelt isi more RESIDENT ROOSEVELT addressed the national convention of the "indispensable" to the peace, than the war, since Mr. Dewey has Brotherhood of Teamsters (A. F. of L.), and the nation, in Wash­ raised the "indispensability" question; and particularly so with Mr. ington, D. C, Saturday evening, September 23, in these words here­ P Dewey running against him. tofore not printed in South Bend. He gave it as the opening of his cam­ Because the irresponsible Gen. "Blattant" Hershey shot off his paign ; yes, for a fourth term. He so announced it. Here is the speech: jj. mouth—a Republican perhaps by Republican prompting,—that men Tl 77 ELL, here we are again •— \ in the army could be kept there cheaper than they could be given y^\f after four years- -and what vious common or garden variety years they have been. of fraud. jobs, G. 0. Pj spokesmen have jumped onto it, declaring it to be .the I am actually four years older— admiristration's intentions. President Roosevelt answers1 that dema­ which seems to annoy some people. There are enlightened, liberal ele­ ments in the Republican party, and gogic lie, intended to scare American mothers, with boys in the In fact,- millions of us are more than armed forces, into voting Republican in order to ever get their boys 11 years older than when we started they have fought hard and honorably in to clear up the mess that was to bring the party up to date and to back home. dumped in our laps in 1933. get it in step with march Well, if the Republicans get in, we had'better have the war over of American progress. But these lib­ We all know certain people who eral elements were not able to drive before they do—else, especially on the European fronts,, they might make it a practice to depreciate the ac­ the Old Guard Republicans from surrender to their beloved Germany and bring the boys home without complishments of labor—who even their entrenched positions. attacked labor as unpatriotic. They finishing the fight. They did all they could, as the/,president point3 keep this up usually for three years Can the Old Guard pass itself off out, to keep us unprepared for it, and Mr. Dewey was still bellyaching as the New Deal? and six months, but then, for some in California that we had not sent all of our troops to General MacAr­ I think not. strange leason, they change their tune thur to fight Japan instead of concentrating first on the Nazis. —every four years—just before elec­ We have all seen many marvelous tion day. When votes are at stake, stunts in the circus, but no perform­ Oh yes, the G. 0. P. loves its Germany; the Germany that' it re- they suddenly discover that they real­ ing elephant could turn a handspring habiliated into what it is today by the perfidious peace that it made without falling flat on his back. ly love labor, and are eager to protect with her following . And it is all set, behind screen, it from its old friends. I need not recount to you the cen­ turies of history which have been to do it over again,—if it gets the chance it is lying to steal. Read I got quite a laugh, for example— crowded into these four years since I Roosevelt and then if you want to "raise your boy toj be a* soldier" in and I am sure that you did—when I saw you last. read this plank in the Republican World War III, swallow the "goose-fodder" that.Farmer Dewey of platform adopted at their national VOICES THAT BEG Dapplemere is black-marketing to you—say, for instance, as per his convention in last July; TO BE FORGOTTEN promised answer at Oklahoma City. "The Republican party accepts There were some—in the Congress Reply, yes, but answer no. He doffed his gloves and displayed his the purposes of the National La­ and out — who raised their voices dander, but his despair was too great to admit of logic, say nothing bor Relations Act, the Wage and against our preparations for defense of allegiance to fact. His speech was a confirmation; not disapproval. Hour Act, the Social Security Act —before and after 1939—as hysteri­ and all other federal statutes de­ cal war mongering, who cried out It was just another camouflage exposition — more or less like, signed to promote and protect the against our help to the Allies as pro­ though different from Cecil DeMille's accommodation with, Hollywood welfare of American men and vocative and dangerous. We remem­ fans at Los Angeles to fill his stadium,—"I am striving to enlighten women, and we promise a fair ber the voices. They would like to the country on the kind of government it needs in Washington," said just administration of these* have us forget them now. But in laws." 1940 and 1941 they were loud the Dapplemere Farmer, meanwhile governor of New York, "and voices. Happily they were a minor­ don't intend to be laughed at in the effort." Many of the Republican leaders and congressmen and candidates, who ity and — fortunately for ourselves, That's telling 'em, ain't it? Indorsing the New Deal objectives shouted enthusiastic approval-of that and for the world — they could not in most particulars, he is telling! 'em all right, but has he any back­ stop America. plank in that convention hall, would ground in the Republican party, or Republican history, to command not even recognize these progressive There are some politicians who confidence that he really means to render those objectives effective? laws if they met them in broad day­ kept their heads buried deep in What is biting him is that they have been effective, and beneficial, light. Indeed, they have personally the sand while the storms of Eu­ spent years of effort and energy—and rope and Asia were headed our to'the great mass;of people, and he is pleading them only to get the much money—in fighting every one way, who said that the Lend- votes, with the reliance up his sleeve to nullify them, if retained at of those laws in the Congress, in the Lease bill "would bring an end all, by ineffective administration. press, and in the courts, ever since to free government in the United Just as they nullified the Sherman anti-trust law by the grace of this administration began to advocate States," and who said, "only hys­ them and enact them into legislation. teria entertains the idea that Ger­ their attorney generals, and the "packed" supreme court against the That is a fair example of their insin­ many, Italy or Japan contem­ un-packing and repacking of which they scream so violently. They cerity and of their inconsistency. plate war upon us." These very rendered the Federal Trade commission nugatory, crippled the Inter­ IMITATION SINCEREST men are now asking the American state ' Commerce Commission—nullified quite everything that could in people to entrust to them the FORM OF FLATTERY any way interfere with their wanted "free enterprise," and "invest­ conduct of our foreign policy and The whole purpose of Republican our military policy. ment incentive," and "Divine Rights" Baer power to "hire and fire." oratory— these days seems to be to "Preserve the worthy features of the National Labor Relations What the Republican leaders are switch labels. The object is to per­ Act ?" Once in power there won't be any such, thing under enforce­ suade the American people that the now saying in effect is this; "Oh, just Democratic party was responsible for forget what we used to say, we have ment, regardless of the smokescreen that they are throwing up to veil the 1929 crash and depression, and changed our minds now — we have their false pretenses. that the. Republican party was re­ been reading the public opinion polls Social security ? They'll broaden it ? Since when did, they fall so about these things, and we now sponsible for all social progress under in love with it? Read Roosevelt. The only Republican we ever knew the New Deal. know what the American people want. Don't leave the task of mak­ to sanction any brand of social security was Congressman "Bob" Imitation may be the sincerest ing the peace to those old men who Grant, and he pretended to want the Townsend plan—knowing full form of flattery—but I am afraid first urged it, and who have already well, as he admitted, that he wouldn't get it. that in this case it is the most ob­ (On Page Four)

Publishers^ Mirror Press, Inc., 307 West Jefferson Boulevard, South Bend, Indiana, Phone 3-2635. Entered at the South Bend (Ind.) post office, Sep­ &7V//RROR tember 2, 1909, as second class mail under act of congress of March 3, 1879 *_ ___*y f M JOHN HENRY ZUVER, Sr.. Editor —and of the independence of the United States the 103rd. VOL. XL—35th YEAR SEPTEMBER 29, 1944 No. 39 SOUTH BEND, INDIANA WEEKLY $1.50 A YEAR; COPY, 5c ipppfppl \i*>v%__

Page Four YHftf MIRROR

technique was all set out in Hit­ made to warn our people and to arm ler's book—and it was copied by this nation. A Rooseveltian Masterpiece the aggressors of Italy and Japan. Some of them called our 50,000- According to that technique, you airplane program fantastic. Many of (From Page Three) sands of dollars—but their solicitude should never use a small false­ those very same leaders who fought laid the foundations for it, and who for that dollar which the men and hood; always a big one, for its every defense measure we proposed have had to fight all of us inch by women in the ranks of labor contri­ very fantastic nature will make it are still in control of the Republican inch during the last five years to do bute is always very touching. it—just turn it all over to us. We'll more credible—if only you keep party, were in control of its national do it so skillfully — that we won't They are, of course, perfectly repeating it over and over again. convention in Chicago, and would lose a single isolationist vote or a sin­ willing to let you vote — unless be in control of the machinery of the you happen to be a soldier or sai­ For example, although I rubbed congress and of the Republican party gle isolationist campaign contribu­ my eyes when I read it, weiiave been tion." t^lli lor overseas, or a merchant sea­ in the event of a Republican victory man carrying the munitions of told that it was not a Republican de­ this fall. WAR NOT AIDED BY war. In that case they have made pression, but a Democratic depression CARPING CRITICS it pretty hard for you to vote— from which this nation has been These Republican leaders have saved—that this administration is re­ not been content with attacks1 There is one thing I am too old for for there are some political candi­ dates who think they may have a sponsible for all the suffering and upon me, or my wife, or my sons —I cannot talk out of both sides of misery that the history books and the they now include my little dog my mouth at the same time. chance if only the total vote is small enough. American people always thought had Fala. Unlike the members of my This government welcomes all sin­ been brought about during the 12 ill- family, he resents this. Being a cere supporters of the cause of effec­ And while I am on the subject of fated years when the Republican par­ Scottie, as soon as he learned that tive world collaboration in the mak­ voting let me urge every American ty was in power. the Republican fiction writers had ing of a lasting peace. Millions of citizen — man and woman —• to use Now, there is an old and some­ concocted a story that I had left Republican-* all over the nation are your sacred privilege of voting, no what lugubrious adage which says: him behind on an Aleutian is­ with us—and have been with us—in matter which candidate you expect to "Never speak of rope in the house of land and had sent a destroyer our unshakeable determination to support. Our millions of soldiers and one who has been hanged." In the back to find him—at a cost to the build the solid structure of peace. sailors and merchant seamen have same way, if I were a Republican 9 taxpayers of two or three or And they too will resent this cam­ been handicapped or prevented from leader speaking to a mixed audience, twenty million dollars — hiss paign talk by those who first woke up voting by those politicians and can­ the last word in the whole dictionary Scotch soul was furious. He has 'to the facts of international life a few didates who think they stand to lose that I think I would use is that word not been the same dog since. short months ago—when they began by such votes. You here at home "depression." to study the polls of public opinion. have the freedom of the ballot. Ir-' I am accustomed to hearing mali­ respective of party you should regis­ TRY BRAZEN ATTEMPT cious falsehoods about myself—such Those who today have the TO SCARE MOTHERS as that old, worm-eaten chestnut that military responsibility for wag­ ter and vote this November. That is a matter of good citizenship. For another example, I learned— I have represented myself as indis­ ing this war in all parts of the pensable. But I think I have a right globe are not helped by the state­ much to my amazement — that the WOULD BLAME HOOVER policy of this administration was to to object to libelous statements about ments of men who, without re­ my dog. sponsibility and without knowl­ ON NEW DEALERS keep men in the army when the war edge of the facts, lecture the chiefs Words come easily, but they do was over, because there might "be no TASKS AHEAD ARE OF of staff of the United States as to not change the record. You are old jobs for them in civil life. FIRST IMPORTANCE the best means of dividing our enough to remember what things Why, the very day that this But we all recognize the old tech­ armed forces and our'military re­ were like for labor in 1932. fantastic charge was first made, a nique. The people of this country sources between the Atlantic and You remember the closed banks formal plan for the method of know the past too well to be_4j?ceived Pacific, between the Navy and the speedy discharge from the Army into forgetting. Too much is at stake Army, and among the command­ and .the breadlines and the starv­ ation wages; the foreclosures on had already been announced by to forget. There are tasks ahead of ing generals of the different the­ homes and farms, and the bank­ the War Department — a plan us which we must now complete with aters of war. ruptcies of business; the "Hoo- based upon the wishes of the sol­ the same will and skill and intelli­ When I addressed you four years vervilles," and the young men diers* themselves. gence and devotion which have al­ ago, I said: "I know that America and women of the nation facing a ready led us so far on the road to will never be disapointed in its ex­ This callous and brazen falsehood victory. hopleless, jobless future; the about demobilization, was an effort to pectation that labor will always con­ closed factories and mines and stimulate fear among American There is the task of finishing tinue to do its share of the job we mills; the ruined and abandoned mothers, wives and sweethearts. And, victoriously this most terrible of now face, and do it patriotically and farms; the stalled railroads and all wars as speedily as possible effectively and unselfishly." the empty docks; the blank de­ incidentally, it was hardly calculated to bolster the morale of our soldiers and with the least cost in lives. spair of a whole nation—and the There is the task of setting up LABOR NOT CAPITAL utter impotence of our federal- and sailors and airmen fighting our FURNISHED SUPPLIES battles all over the world. international machinery to assure government. that the peace, once established, Today we know that America has i Perhaps the most ridiculous of V You remember the long hard road, these campaign falsifications is the will not again be broken. not been disappointed. In his order And there is the task which we of the day when the Allied armies with its gains and its setbacks, which one that this administration failed to we have traveled together since those prepare for the war which was com­ face here at home—the task of re­ first landed in Normandy, Gen. Eis­ converting our economy from the enhower said: "Our home fronts days. ing. I doubt whether even Goebbels would have tried that one. purposes of war to the purposes have given us overwhelming superi­ Now there are some politicians, of of peace. ority in weapons and munitions of course, who do not remember that far ANOTHER DAMNED LIE war." back, and some who remember but IS NAILED TO WALL These peace-building tasks were I know that there are those labor find it convenient to forget. But the faced once before, nearly a generation baiters among the opposition who, record is not to be washed away mat For even he would never have dared hope that the voters of Amer­ ago. They were botched by a Re­ instead of calling attention to the easily. ica had already forgotten that many publican administration. That must achievements of labor in this war, not happen this time. We will not prefer to pick on the occasional strikes The opposition has already im­ of the Republican leaders in the con­ ported into this campaign the gress and outside the congress tried to let it happen this time. which have occurred—strikes which Fortunately, we do not begin from have been condemned by every re­ propaganda technique invented thwart and block nearly every at­ by the dictators abroad. The tempt which this administration scratch. Much has been done. Much sponsible national labor leader—ev­ ^more is under way. The fruits of ery national leader except one. And victory this time will not be apples that one labor leader, incidentally, is to be sold on street corners. certainly not among my supporters. DEMOBILIZATION IS Labor baiters forget that, at BEING WORKED OUT our peak, American labor and Many months ago, this adminis­ management have turned out air­ tration set up the necessary machinery planes at the rate of 109,000 per for an orderly peace-time demobiliza­ year; tanks—j 57,000 per year; tion. The congress has now passed combat vessels — 573 per year; legislation continuing the agencies landing vessels —j 31,000 per needed for demobilization—with ad­ year; cargo ships — 19 million ditional powers to carry out their tons per year; and small arms functions. ammunition—23 billion rounds I know that the American people per year. ^jfe > —business and labor and agriculture But a strike is news, and generally —have the same will to do for peace appears in shrieking headlines—and, what they have done for war. And I of course, they say labor.isjtlWays to know that they can sustain a national blame. The fact is that, since Pearl income which will assure full pro­ Harbor, only one-tenth ,~of one per duction and full employment under cent of man-hours has ^ee'-l* lost by our democratic system of private en­ strikes. . terprise, with government encourage­ ment and aid whenever and wherever G. O. P. THINKS LABOR it is necessary. SHOULDN'T HAVE VOICE The keynote of all that we pro­ But even those candidates who pose to do in reconversion can be burst out in election-year affection for found in the one word—"jobs." social legislation and for labor^ji gen­ We shall lease or dispose of our eral still think you ought to be good government - Owned plants and boys and stay out of politic^ And facilities and our surplus war above all, they hate to see any work­ property and land, on the basis ing man or woman contribute^ dol­ of how they can best be operated lar bill to any wicked political'party. by private enterprise to give jobs Of course, it is all right for large to the greatest number. We shall financiers and industrialists and mo­ follow a wage policy which will nopolists to contribute tens of thou­ (On Page Five) SEPTEMBER 29, 1944 Page* Five

KEEPING AMERICAN BOYS • • 80NPS OVER AMERICA • *.'-.'* HOOKED IN ARMY ULTUM Then there is the question of de­ America's ftpst success­ mobilization; the peace that Dewey in ful oil well was drilled Black Gold Flows says the Democrats are afraid of. at Titusville, Pa. They Roosevelt picked him up in his speech called it "Drake's PARVO Folly." The gasoline for asserting that it was the Demo­ was thrown away as a cratic plan to keep the men in the worthless by-product — army; "that it would cost less than to before the automobile make jobs for them in civil life." It was born. High Spots in News appears that General Hershey, in charge of the selective service, made the assertion in an over-seas army "PANNERS" TAKE NEW newspaper. Dewey says so; there­ CRACK AT BUS COMPANY: fore,, of course, Roosevelt said it, Hull The South Bend Civic "Panning" As­ said it, Stimson said it, Forrestal said sociation, Inc., in regular meeting re­ it. solved: "Whereas under present laws we under­ "It has been Hershey's business to stand that the common council- has exclusive mobilize an army, not demobilize power to fix the fees, the fares and rates to be charged by the bus companies operating it," says the president, and Secretary in the city of South Bend: Stimson, like Hershey, a Republican, "Now Therefore Be It Resolved we re­ spectfully request that the Common Council The great oil fields of reprimands the general that his au­ order the South Bend Motor Bus company the world have been the thority is military, not political or and the Northern Indiana Transit company, to targets of this war in file with the common council a balance sheet Fcr Your America civilian,—yet Mr. Dewey cites him as and profits and loss statement for the year order to win victory for 1S43 or the immediate past fiscal year." Buy War Bonds democracy. an administration spokesman, and Addenda to the above the "Panners" groans, and almost weeps to the resolved that the city levy a tax on the mothers, sweethearts and wifes of the gross income of the companies; nothing soldiers that, oh my, they may never against neutrality repeal, and all said, however, about proceeding simil-' rhission collected from the permittees see their loved ones again unless he is $30,718.16, from penalties and sale of manner of preparedness measures, arly against the Gas Company. COun- elected president. How much of Her­ cilmen are beginning to wonder when illegally possessed liquor. right up to Pearl Harbor? R. R. Smith, head of the Motor Bus and The enforcement department made shey's statement was Republican in­ Transit companies, will get hep to him­ 764 arrests for illegal sales of alcoholic Harry Truman is supposed to have spired for political purposes has not self, and help support the "Panners," beverages, illegal transportation and said sometime, quoted by Dewey, been ferreted out. Fact is demobiliza­ and perhaps incidentally, pull Dan War­ possessing stills. that the white house was responsible tion plans had already been made ef­ ren off the Aviation commission, The commission reports $1,425,723.67 for the unpreparedness. Maybe he xxx were distributed to city, town and coun­ fective when the war ends, and the ty treasurers from the permit fees; that did say it, but even Truman's word Hershey claptrap reflects no part of it. ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES the school units of the state received isn't the infallible word of God. It Dewey says he will defy anybody to YIELD $8,635,845.70: $716,882.66, and $5,688,422.57 went to was responsible to the extent that it tell what the plans mean, but then the state'general fund. The civil units took any heed of the Republican The Indiana Alcoholic Beverage Com­ of St. Joseph county received $112,483.50. , there are a lot of people smarter than mission collected from all sources $8,- x x -x heckling, and moved cautiously, lest he is, and besides "none are so blind 625,845.70, a decrease of $320,940.89, or its might hasten Hitler's ire—which 3.7 per cent, of the previous fiscal year DEMOCRATIC WOMEN as those who will not see." receipts in the year ending June 30, the Republicans were mollycoddling. HOLD CELEBRATION: And, oh yes, finally, Mr. Dewey 1944. Four hundred sixty-seven per­ Members of the St. Joseph County mittees were cited before the commis­ ROOSEVELT NOT JAPAN quotes from Roosevelt's speech of ac­ Women's Democratic club observed na­ STRUCK AT PEARL HARBOR sion for violation of the beverage law. tional Democratic women's day Wednes­ ceptance: "I will not campaign in the Twenty-one permits were revoked; fif­ day at the Democratic headquarters, 219 ordinary political way," —and says ty** two permits were suspended; two Maybe too Washington was some­ North Lafayette boulevard, according to F. D. R. has forgotten all about it. hundred sixty-two penalties were re­ information furnished the Republican what to blame for the lack of alert at covered; sixty-one permittees»were pe­ Tribune; their favorite newspaper. In Pearl Harbor when Japan struck; oh Has he? Is he? Roosevelt probably nalized and given suspensions. The com- (On Page Seven) no, Japan didn't strike, Roosevelt anticipated the campaign of fraud, struck. Hirohito, nor Hitler back of falsehood, and hate that Mr. Dewey him, never had a thing to do with it. was from his nature likely to con­ It was Roosevelt, and Hull, and duct. He had no such tangles with Dewey Doffs His Gloves Stimson, and Knox, and we suppose Hoover, Landon or Willkie. Harry Hopkins, Sidney Hillman, They went to bat on the issues, From Page One wardrobe), Adolf Hitler, Paul Goeb­ Harold Ickes, , who not personalities; on some facts, at 1 The whole trend of his, diatribe bels and Hermann Goering. Howju blew in that Sunday morning and least, not all lies* —ennuendo or pro­ was, in effect, "who is that man in likit? shot up the works. fane. Those were ordinary political the white house to dare to question campaigns. However, facing the bar- Of course, it wasn't aligning You may recall that there was a any utterance that a Dapplemere age of such as has been hurled at him, Roosevelt and the Democrats with peace conference on in Washington farmer, Berkshire hog-raiser, govern­ and expecting, it, why shouldn't he Hitler, Goebbels and Goering, when at the time, with Japanese conferees. or of the sovereign state of New assert that he would campaign dif­ Mr. Dewey all through the west was Possible, if not proper, that though York, running for president on the ferently than he did against Hoover, accusing them of attempting to fasten tipped to possible Nipponese treach­ Republican ticket (impliedly submit­ Landon and Willkie? Their cam­ upon America the nazism and fascism ery, Pearl Harbor was told from ted by God), chooses to unloose?" paigns were ordinary. If Mr. Dewey of that trio. Guess he didn,'t mention Washington to be cautious about any thought from the Roosevelt assertion, Oh no, he wouldn't resort to mud- Mein Kampf outright; was more moves that would disturb the confer­ that he meant to lay down, and take slinging; never has. They were flow­ sneaking about it,-—but none the less ence. And in the face of it, with the anything he handed him; that he was ers -strewn in the path of the presi­ Roosevelt was right when he ob­ commanding general and admiral to have it easy, could say what he dent, when he spread them. "I will served the G. O. P., following the jealously eyeing each other, both may pleased, and there would be no come­ never make a speech to incite people Mein Kampf formula; to lie, and lie, have gone entirely to sleep at the back; well, that would be just typi­ to hatred, divide them," Mr. Dewey big enough, and often enough, that switch, on receiving such caution. cal of Dewey. says, but what other kind of speech you can make yourself believe it. Generals and admirals are not infalli­ has he ever made,—and with "hate ble — any more than presidents and Which is.: all there was to the Roosevelt, hate Roosevelt," even JLO "INDISPENSABLE" MAN secretaries of state, war and navy. Oklahoma embroglio. his wife, children, and dog, always AND FITNESS FOR WAR a veiled but not sheathed, stiletto. Of the "indispensable" man; Dew­ POET DAVID HURRJED ey read quotations from several Dem­ A Rooseveltian Masterpiece "ALL MEN ARE LIARS" ocrats in which they so asserted of the What Roosevelt said about the G. president. Very well, let him hurl his - (From Page Four) to those who live in and are O. P. using the tactics of Mein Kampf shafts at them, not him. In their ex­ sustain the purchasing power of weighted down by the dead past. uberance they probably did say it, labor—for that means more pro­ and out-Goebbelsing Dr. Goebbels, We are even now organizing the piqued Mr. Dewey terribly; should. but that doesn't put it into his duction and more jobs. mouth. We say it too, as against logistics of the peace just as Marshall. The truth always hurts more than The present policies on wages and Dewey though we probably would King, Arnold, MacArthur, Eisen­ lies. It is eternal while the lie can be prices were conceived to serve the not, were the Republican nominee hower and Nimitz are organizing the exploded; Mr. Roosevelt exploded needs of the great masses of the peo­ . "Indispensable" is logistics of this war. several. ple. They stopped inflation. They a relative term; it depends on the al­ David said in his haste "all men kept prices on a relatively stable level. The victory of the American ternative somewhat. As against Dew­ are liars," and flashing back what he Through the demobilization period, people and their Allies in this war ey, Fala, Roosevelt's dog, would be termed Rooseveltian lies, evidently policies will be carried out with tha will be far more than a victory relatively "indispensable." Howju Mr. Dewey thought to paraphrase same objective in mind—to serve the against Fascism and reaction and likit? (likyfala.) Ben Franklin's warning to the colon­ needs of the great masses of the peo­ the dead hand of despotism and ists, making it say "we liars must And the preparations for war; our ple. of the past. The victory of the hang together or we'll hang separate- lack of them; the lives that President American people and their Allies Roosevelt, personally, has taken, and G. O. P. "FORGOTTEN in this war will be a victory for" But Roosevelt didn't lie; Dewey the blood he has shed, particularly on MAN" IS REMEMBERED democracy. It will constitute such did, and he reiterated it at Oklahoma the western front. Germany, of This is not the time in which men an affirmation of the strength and City. That he can quote even some course, never fired a shot. Not a can be forgotten as they were in the power and vitality of govern­ Democrats like Harry Truman and word from Mr. Dewey about the Re­ Republican catastrophe which we in­ ment by the people as history has "Dear Alben" Barkley, doesn't publican jangling, inside congress and herited. The returning soldiers, the never before witnessed. change a lie into the truth. Neither out, every tititt the president called workers by their machines, the farm­ does it make the truth of a lie to ana­ for a preparedness appropriation, or With that affirmation of the vital­ ers in the field, the miners, the men ity of democratic government behind thematize Frank Hague, Harry Hop­ uttered a warning; how they yelled and women in offices and shops, do "war monger," and that he was ag­ us, that demonstratior_#of its resili­ kins, Frances Perkins, Harold Ickes, not intend to be forgotten. gravating Germany to fight. What ence" and its capacity for decision and Sidney Hillman, Ed. Kelley, Earl No. They know they are not shape would we have been in, infin­ for action—with that knowledge of Browder,—without at least mention­ surplus. Because they know that! itely worse than we were, in Decem­ our own strength and power — we ing his own pals; Dr. Edward A. they are America. Rumely, William Dudley Pelley, ber 1941, had Mr. Roosevelt totally move forward with God's help to the Robert Rutherford McCormick, Ger­ heeded the Republican vote in con­ We must set targets and^objec- greatest epoch of free achievement by ald L. K. Smith (camouflaged), gress, and outside blattancy, against tives for the future which will free men the world has ever known James Scott Kemper (despite his lease - lend, against conscription. seem impossible like the airplane or imagined possible. ga, __^8iifaS-5^w_«^ SM__--_-_-_--_I

Page Six THE MIRROR

appeared before the House Campaign dained plutocratic child-slavery un­ have wanted to see the New York Expenditures Committee, where some der the Old Steal now seeking a come - crime world cleaned up—but different ELIEVE IT of the committeemen were all set to back. now, when he objects to Mr. Dewey's saw and quarter him, and throw him afe afe a^ _{e movement to reincarnate „a worse to the winds. Childs is no novice at 0 n u crime wave than he was fighting then; RELSE observing men or dissecting matters: Even Washington Hk e ii?^. a "policy racket" calculated to over­ is a journalist and author of no mean here is some­ throw the national set-up that has Not Shells DeLuie reputation. He says: thing more pretty well served to overthrow child eproduction of Hillman, slavery generally—say nothing of his O "Sidney Hillman looked as tanned'and 1 World War peace philandering. (From Page Two) as well-tailored as a big business execu­ Chicago Tribune wmTr; * So between Browder and Rumely, tive. He was flanked on one side by his attorney and on the other by the execu­ if ••••I a better, coming k take your choice, and you're also wel­ tive director of his Political Action Com­ come to your choice between Sidney mittee. Vows Hillman \ip°>»**m- CIO's Choice of*" £ Hillman at his worst and John I_r. "As a matter of fact, he is big busi­ Corrmck-Pat- ft . n. conference; it ness. Since 1915 he has been head ol b d n Lewis at his best. the Amalgamated Clothing Workers oi 5fC 3p _|_ 3fC America, which is a rich, cohesive union. Somewhat Decent #ss^ Speakers Shows c °h°: e r\ - He is chairman of the board of the of New York, a di­ Daily News; bitter anti-administra­ Lewis or Hillman *S_»I§9| rector of the Amalgamated Trust & Sav­ tion. Here is the version of Thomas How Little They K^ a ings Bank of Chicago. L. Stokes—once awarded the Pulitzer Seem All Set for^yU ; "But the business of the CIO Political reporting prize for best work of the Know About How "cheers Action Committee and the National Citi­ year. The News says: | were a hun- zens Political Action Committee turned "Sidney Hillman tried hard in a day's Labor Department {j|9§ out to be not quite so big as apparend;> session with a group of congressmen to some members of the House group haa break down some conceptions about the To Run a Union t^Z^; expected. The CIO Political Actioi: CIO's political activities which he directs to the Tribune import. A few hot­ WhetherDeweyor-^TR Committee contributed money to can­ as head of both CIO Political Action didates in primaries in only eight states. Committee and the recently created Na­ heads couldn't forget the days of 0 With one possible exception, ao _ontes> tional Citizens Political Action Com­ Chief of Police W. K. (Wichita, FIDIR, Manage tof^™" ^' with an arch CIO foe was involved in mittee. He seemed to have had some Kansas) Ingram, and how he had any of the primaries in which the :ia- success. A definite impression from his handled some strikes; besides, aligned tional organization spent -its money. * examination by the House Campaign "Sometimes, in fact, it appears, the;y Investigating Committee is that ii is dif­ with a faction of the Democratic par­ Land White House L^il spent their money foolishly. In Massa­ ficult tor the average congressman to ty, and Republicans, who can't forget was pleading before the state conven­ chusetts they gave Thomas H. Eliot $3,- understand how a worker in some fac­ their defeats in the primaries and tion of the A. F. of L., hoping to 068 for his primary campaign, although tory, in his own district or elsewhere, elections of 1942, and 1944—blam­ thus kindle the fight that is being it was fairly obvious he had only the can get really interested in politics, on ghost of a chance to beat the incumbent, what goes on in Washington, and want ing them on the city hall. They don't waged between that group of work- who was none other than that old Bos­ to do something about it. like Pavey's way of handling the ingmen and CIO. Sure, Roosevelt is ton baritone, James Michael Curley. In "The average congressman is waking moralities—any more than some Re­ hell bent on turning everything over Maine they put $1,000 on a CIO candi­ up suddenly, and a little resentfully it publicans do,—-and besides it wasn't to CIO, but how about Dewey? The date who, as the election results proved, appears, to the new political conscious­ was a very long shot. ness of workers and its outlet in organ­ the only time that Pavey has been day before the Republican presiden­ "A good bit of Hiliman's testimony ized political activity. He can't quite booed. tial nominee had spouted off at Seat­ confirmed a belief I've had for some understand it. But Frank Rosenblum, New York tle that union labor would have a time, and that is that the PAC has been "Some members of the investigating "International vice president of the" place in the cabinet (and where else built up fo bigger than life size. Partly committee, particularly Rep. Church (R., this has been the fault of its promoters, 111.), tried to. draw a picture of some vast Amalgamated Clothing Workers of than the labor department?) if he and they are paying now for their zeal sort of conspiiacy by Mr. Hillman and America, and personal representative were elected; I wonder who? Who in getting headlines. a few others which they are imposing on of Sidney Hillman, national chairman better than Hillman, assuming that "Much more nearly, however, the millions of workers who are following of the Political Action Committee" there is any possibility to the Gates' buildup comes from the opposition to along, like sheep. Mr. Hillman explained (PAC) ; presently anti-Republican! assurance? John Llewellyn Lewis? Roosevelt. It is astute politics. If the that the idea of organized political ac­ PAC can be made to appear as a sinister, tivity, local and national, was outlined What right has he got coming to Dewey said it certainly wouldn't be octopus-like organization trying to dic­ by him over a period of several months South Bend? This town is exclusive­ Madame Perkins; no women in his tate the flection, a great many indepen­ in visits to 40 states to workers and rep­ ly for visitors from Wall street, or soup,—and only a day or two previ­ dent, middle-class voters may be .sright- resentatives of workers, including 300 say, DeWitt Emeries, Robert Gay- ous, Lewis had hilariously darned ened off. called together in Mr. Church's own "Even some objective observers have, state. The unions then discussed it all lords, James Scott Kempers, Thomas Roosevelt, in perfect line with all it seems to me, painted the picture of 'hemselv-s and the plan was ratified at Edmund Deweys, and so on. Besides, there is to Republican campaigning. PAC in strokes too broad and too gen­ a national convention and expenditure you may have guessed already that "Lewis didn't indorse me," Dew­ erous. It has, for example, been likened of funds approved. Mr. Hillman thought Rosenblum is a Jew, and if you want ey cringed, when asked if he welcomed to the late Wayne B. Wheeler's Anti- it all followed the democratic process. saloon League lobby. "Records of activity and expenditure evidence of the truth of anything he the indorsement, but as to who else "Now PAC may work uo to the state of funds in primaries presented by Mr. may have said about the assaults on he could be for, by plain implication, of perfection Wheeler achieved, but it Hillman also should serve to take some Hillman being anti-Semitic, even when so against F. D. R., "I am not has a long way to go. What -he Anti- of the fight out of congressmen. The na­ more than anti-Democratic, all you a mind-reader," he vowed. However. saloon League had—and it was why tional PAC organization contributed in have to do is to edge up to most any prohibition stayed long after the senti­ only 18 congressional primary contests Lewis, employing the G. O. P. tech­ ment of the pople turned against it— and did not win out in all these. Locally, Republican and touch on the sub­ nique of just condemning without were fanatically devoted followers will­ of course, the CIO was active elsewhere. ject. Anti-Semitism is in the very air alternative, mounted too square en ing to give their time to political organ­ "PAC spent no money in some con­ as it emanates from 75 per cent of its bandwagon to admit of any other ization; this, plus the fact that they were tests cited for CIO activity and influ­ Republican mouths. I took a poll of distributed in areas where they could ence. None was spent in three Alabama interpretation. So it is to be Hillman, do the most good. contests in which CIO was given credit twenty and fifteen started on Hill­ or Lewis, eh? Which do you prefer; "What is important to remember, for working against sitting congressmen, man, damned Frankfurter, blasted Lewis, who ran CIO into the ground including that in which Rep. Starnes, a Chester Bowles, and some even went however, is that once majority senti­ member of the Dies Committee, was de­ with bis "red" contingent, and had ment had turned against prohibition, not feated. The national PAC spent none in so far as to quote a federal prison to be ousted,—and has UMWA qvite all Wayne B. Wheeler's skill nor his far- bird of sedicious fame, that Roosevelt flung organization could prevent repeal. the contest against Rep. Kleberg (D., similarly grounded,—or Hillman The sentiment must be there before* or­ Texas), who was defeated. had some Jewish ancestors back in who is doing something to re-Amer­ ganization does any good. "The Smith-Connally Act, imple­ Spain a couple centuries ago. Two icanize CIO and get it back to earth? mented by amendments to the Hatch "In areas with large communities of Act, forbidding contributions to political wondered if Hitler wasn't about workers, the PAC can do a job—a badly right. Dewey not a mind-reader. I guess needed job of registration. Their suc­ campaigns by labor unions, has cur­ not, but from the manner after which cesses to date have been where the pre­ tailed CIO activities, the house members Powers Hapgood also .spoke at the learned. The PAC had a fund of :?671,- conference; confound him. He favored he tries incessantly to substitute sur­ dilection of the voteis was already _.il 214 contributed by CIO unions. It had mise for -fact, asserting it as the lat­ their way. -pent $371,086 up td the end of the na­ organized labor and advised that it ter, it looks as though he were trying "That's the real story behind the tional political conventions, when it or­ stand by the president; "subversive to practice up on it. His mind-read­ build-up. The CIO has no new bag of dered that, except for the remaining influence!" The suckers! Don't they tricks. William Green, speaking can­ orimaries, no more of this fund should know? The men CIO should have ing that Churchill and Roosevelt were didly, has said that at least 80 per cent be spent, since union funds are barred going to set up a new overall Pacific of the members of the AFL would vote in regular election campaigns. brought here to address their conven­ command, while at Quebec, appears for the fourth term. "House members also learned that tion are Robert Gaylord, NAM, De- "And there's no profound mystery in Witt Emery, NSBMA, Dr. Edward something of that order. It was never that, either. The Republicans in the these contributions from union members, contemplated, any more in fact, than House have taken the lead in paring which Mr. Hillman insisted are purely Rumely, Sam Pettengill and Paul soluntary, are not pouring in in any Bartholomew, CCGI, Winthrop Ralph F. Gates' mind-reading Sidney down the George bill, to cut stili fur­ golden wave. Loans and contributions Hillman into the labor portfolio, ther the safeguards for unemployed _rom union members from July 23, when William Aldrich, Wall Street banker, which means just that—since Roose­ workers in the transition period after embryo for secretary of the treasury, the war. an: on contributions were fvozasn, to Aug. velt WILL be elected, and Hillman 15 totaled $56,922. Of this amount, $36,- John L. Lewis, UMWA, lined for "That's easy to understand. People in j83 has been spent, which, with the secretary of labor, Tom Mercer will not be secretary of labor. Frances general vote for their friends who prom­ $371,086.56 previously spent from funds Perkins, the best secretary of labor ise them benefits. That is the way labo contributed by un-ons, makes a total of Girdler of Republic Steel, Sewell we have ever had, will continue right would vote this fall if no one had ever $408,030 spent for political activity. Avery of Montgomery Ward, and of heard of the Political Action Com­ course, Robert Allen Grant, 3rd dis­ on the job. mittee." "This sum, Ms. Hillman said, was s|j j|e ^t $ equal to what two families had contri­ trict congressman. They would have buted to the Republican campaign in told them how to run a labor union, Ah, but saith the G. O. P., "he 1940. He decried stories of many mil­ was born in Russia'; but more mind- lions to be spent by PAC and NCPAC in just right, and who to vote for, ditto. G.0.P's "Grown of fffrfoS reading. He was born in Zagare, the campaign, which he. attributed to There would be no more labor , March 23, 1887, came to propaganda. NCPAC, which has thus troubles and no more pro-Democratic far got contributions from the general PACs, if workingmen would take th_ Horns" Planted On ™f£p the United States in 1907, and never public of $78,569, has set a goal of was in Russia in his life until sent $1,500,000 for the campaign. Mr. Hill­ advice of men like these—and ther* Hiliman's Brow Is^nT; there in 1921 on an official mission man thought PAC would be lucky to get* would be no more laborers;, just wage to negotiate an agreement regarding 'hat much, which would make a total of slaves. l •___ J tin • 11 about John $3,000,000. The Republican NMional You'll me seein' me— use of American dollars. He was-edu­ Committee spent $17,000,000 in 1940. Lifted When Truth |^*>» cated for a rabbi (now watch the Re­ "Mr. Hillman told the committee that —SILAS. but about publican nose go up) but his socio­ Vs union, the Amalgamated Clothing Invades Limelight all you have logical sense threw him into social Workers, had contributed $5,000 to the j ever heard campaign for district attorney by SUBSCRIBE FOR work and he took up the cause of Thomas E. Dewey in 1933. The Dewey about Hillman is Republican asper­ labor, to begin with, to rescue chil­ organization asked for more, and it also sion, cast about to make appear that dren from slavery in the New York got contributions from other unions, Mr Roosevelt is his stool-pigeon, and sweat-shops. That, of course, is Hillman raid." that he is really a dictator behind the enough to disqualify him for th? Of course, that contribution to throne in this great commonwealth. right even to live, in many Republi­ Dewey's campaign for district attor­ $1 50 by the Year Here is a word picture of Sid by Mar­ can estimates. He is a Jew and dis­ ney was o. k. Indeed, Hillman must quis Childs, reporting on him as he SEPTEMBER 29, 1944 Pace Fevm

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and said, "I think we ought to at last; something he had known it that way, if you love me have a man here. A chauffeur- all along, more than likely from enough, let her go ahead and do as gardener." the first day, when seeing her ap­ she pleases. I'll give her all the (From Page One) "What for?" pear from behind the corner of money she wants." And then he stand out there waiting for the "We need somebody like that, the station had had an effect on had to laugh out loud at what he train. He liked to get that much and they don't cost so much. He him like—a jolt. Now he began to was thinking, and at that moment air anyway, and that was how he could take me to the station in listen to the words of songs about she turned, and there was a smile began to notice her. the morning in the big car and you love, trying to discover a voice in her eyes. Two other men smiled _°_4/?KO She, he found would come out could use him to drive around, and on the radio that would be just too, at him, this man standing of the large apartment house, the cf course, this fellow we have now, like a voice he never had heard. alone and laughing out loud at last building before you got to the he's only a part-time gardener and In a way he began to envy the some private joke. But she had station. She walked across the not so damn good, for that mat­ people who got into messes in the smiled and it was beautiful. She graveled space and did not go in­ ter." papers, although that was the last was beautiful. And on the way High Spots in News side the station at all, not even on "I don't see what we need a full- thing he wanted for either of his in on the train he suddenly knew rainy days. He had been in the time man for. it's only additional two women—the one he was mar­ that now it was only a question town only a few weeks, and so he expense." ried to, and the one he loved. of days. Days! (From Page Five) did not-know whether she stayed "Now listen, it wouldn't cost "Mrs. Larkin and two detectives addition to hearing a local speak­ inside the station when it was that much more, and we'd get a surprised her manufacturer hus­ band at a morning tryst with an er, the women listened to national snowing, but from the. beginning lot more out of him if we had a full-time man. When Teddy comes attractive brunette at a midtown Glasses Correctly Fitted radio talks by party leaders, the he was -pretty sure she stayed out­ side, winter and summer. home and starts using the Ford all hotel. The woman, Mrs. Larkin Tribune says. the time you'll be glad of a man to said, was attired in a flimsy neg­ xxx She. carried her pape-* under lige, and was about 30 years old. 1900 her arm. It seemed part of the drive you in the big car. You Est. COMMISSIONERS BUY know that yourself. I'm going to She said her husband had regis­ general neatness of her gloved tered under the name of Law­ GROCERIES AND GAS: hands, her bag, her tailored call up an agency tomorrow." "It's your money, but I think rence. A property settlement . . . J. Burke Contracts for groceries. Stnd gas clothes, the scarf at her throat,, alimony . . . custody of their one for the last quarter of 1944 were and* even the way she held her you're silly," his wife had said. And so Larkin no longer was son." Hell, no! That wasn't the W. 6. Bogardut awarded by the County Board of head. The paper probably was the 1 way Anna would do it; not the Commissioners Monday. The one she had delivered at her apart­ driven to the station by his wife. E. C. Beery In a way, he told himself, he was way he would have it. Levy-Ward Grocery company, of ment, because he never saw her Optometrists & Mfg. Opticians South Bend, won the grocery sup­ buy a paper at the news stand. On doing it for her; he didn't want to Oh, no? Well, if he couldn't have ply contract for Healthwin hospi­ that theory, one day in New York stop kissing her good-by, but he it any other way, he would have it 228 S. Michigan Street didn't want to be seen kissing her that way. When he went to the tal and the county infirmary on __(_- lingered' after everyone got out EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT low bids of $1,783.43 and $656.57, of the team, and went back and by the woman, whoever she was, station the morning after he lay respectively. Gasoline contracts nicked up her paper, hoping it that he loved. thinking these things he wanted ____•*' the county highway depart­ would have her name penciled on Well, there it was, acknowledged to explain to her: "If we can't have Say You Saw It in The Mirror ment, all based on 14*V_ cents per ton* the way some newsdealers do; gallon, went to the Gafill Oil com­ but the only mark on the paper pany for October, Stevens Oil was 9-H, obviously the number of company for November, Sinclair her apartment. He felt ashamed Refining company for December that day, and terrified that the and the Continental Oil company conductor, who would have recog­ ..for all outside stations for all three nized Mm, would come in and see months. No bids were received on him at a seat so far forward of frozen food supplies for Healthwin. the one he always tried to get. He xxx always, after the first week or so, tried to sit behind her so that if TEMPLE BEHy-EL WANTS she turned her head he could see SCHOOL PROPERTY: her nroflle. She seldom turned her An offer to buy the old Madison head. ' school property, at Madison street 'Vhe other habits were merely and Lafayette boulevard, was pre­ habits, feat there was one of which sented to the South Bend board of he. was? conscious-: the habit of education Monday by a committee knowing, all. through breakfast and representing Temple Beth-El. Ar­ before it that he would see her. In thur Simon, head of the commit­ a way it was awful, to be so ex- tee, told the board the committee fljtw*. about so Ht-tle, but it made wants the site for erection of a the mornings good, even some bad new temple which will cost about Monday mornings after golf tour- .$150,000'. As yet the board of edu­ namentg. The excitement would be cation has not placed the property there until she appeared*, then a on sale. If it decides to do so, it sort of relief, and, in the trainr was explained, the board must, by actual comfort. Yes, comfort, he Jaw, have the property appraised told himself. The way he wanted and advertised for sale at public to be with her; sort of like being -auction. It must then be sold to in the same comfortable room, qui­ the highest bidder at not less than, et]-*- reading, knowing she was the appraised value, there. But then once they were in xxx New York, once people began get­ ting up in the car, it would be JFLANNING INTER-CITY differe-it, a different-; kind of ex­ TRUCKING ROUTES: citement that was not good, but First steps to regulate use of the: upset him. He knew her path to public streets throughout South the subway, and on the way she Bend by inter-city trucks were would pass tunnels that led to taken in a surprise move Monday hotels. What if he could meet her night when a truck route ordi­ and then some morning they could nance was introduced before the' take the train as they always did, city council and immediately set but this one morning she would ior public hearing Oct. 9. Hi__g- turn in at one of those tunnels and i-ig on a truck-route map schedule- wait for him, and they could go "to worked out by the city traffic en­ the hotel together? gineer, Ernest H. Miller. Sample street Is the only inter-city truck He would wonder how he could route established while access get to meet her. It was too large a routes to and from truck termin­ suburb, too many people got on als are set up portions of the fal­ the train, for casual good morn­ lowing streets: South Main, Cal­ ings wi-b people you hadn't met. vert, South Miami, South Twyck­ There were two country clubs, and enham diive, South High, SOuth he guessed she belonged to> the Olive, South Walnut, Washington smaller one, the one with a nine- It won't be worth two in the. hush if hole golf course. He sometimes It won't pay you $4 for every $3 yoji avenue, Fellows, Hill, which is you cash it in—that War Bond, we also a part of the South Bend ave­ thought of joining that clubi-but invested ... if you cash it in. nue state and federal highway set­ he knew his wife would put her mean. up, South Columbia, Carroll, East foot down. "Two country clubs?" So, please—besides buying all the extra Jefferson boulevard, and St. Louis she would say. "What do you It won't buy your boy, or your neigh­ Bonds you can scrape the pennies to­ boulevard. want to join that club for? Lot of other things we could use the bor's boy, enough extra ammunit_oa gether for—hold onto th« War Bonds xxx money for." And there were, of maybe to save his life... if you cash it in. you've already bought! WILSON BROS. GET course, and pretty soon, when his NEW FEDERAL CONTRACT: ' son got home from prep school, It won't help bring tha]. final victory Yes—hold on for dear life! Keep that Wilson Bros., whose war con­ the expenses would climb. And tracts were canceled April 11 by anyway, he had no way of know- nearer ... if you cash it in. bird in the hand! reason o fthe fact that South Bend, in*->- she even belonged to the is termed an acute labor- shortage* smaller club. The apartment house area by the war manpower co_n~ in which she lived had a lot of mission, has a new contract for tennis-courts, and she probably sleeveless co$to__* underskirts- for played tennis. He seldom went to War Bonds.-to have arid to hold the United, States armyj; Officials the movies, and he never saw her at the Wilson plaat at 1008 West there,.-but what if he .$_•__? -He-had Sample street; ex^ained that other a better chance of getting to know manufacturers were unable to her on the train than at any damn ROR supply all the army needs and! movie, with his wife there with that the facttfties of the local plant him. ' &_u_4_ ThlMiean omciaftr.StTreaaft&aWrartlaema&t—preijU of Treasury Department and Wat Adverti-ing Council (On Page Elfevfen} He came home one afternoon Page Eight THE MIEROR

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starting car; and use short ladders Bat-Wing Sleeves instead of stools, chair or boxes in Gable's Loss SUNDAY SCHOOL reaching for high places. LfSSON A Bit of Home in Foxhole or PX American fighting men in this Christian Ways Butter Supply Down war "are getting every food nutri­ tionists say is necessary to keep Americans will not have as them in top physical strength," Found in St* fing much butter as they want this declared Lee Marshall, director of year, primarily for two reasons: distribution, War Food adminis­ The Life of Christ The supply is down and the de­ tration. "In addition to this," he mand is great,-the War Food Ad­ said, "they get a share of the ice The International Sunday School ministration says. Average per cream, the turkey, the soft drinks, L«*-«son for Oct. 1 capita supply before the war was the candy bars—in fact the big­ 16.7 pounds and this year it is gest amount of home we can crowd Text: John 91-7; 13; 34-41 about 11.9 pounds. More people into a barracks, a foxhole or a » -*» _ are eager to buy butter today than PX." To make this possible, VWTTTT this lesson we begin a, ever before, and in the face of in­ American agricultural. production qmrtcr-year study of Height1 creased demand, production has has been increased roughly 40% from Christ for Life Today." declined while five per cent of 'the over :pre-war levels, he pointed Christirm principles and way- American supply is going to Rus­ out. ]|||g begin with Christ, and that is sia, mostly for use in hospitals. where our lessons start—with ^S^hile milk production is higher Saves Trainload of Prisoners •than before the war, a greater the mature Christ in the very proportion of milk is going into When the Nazis recently tried to hoi_ht of His ministry. fluid milk, cheese, evaporated milk ship back to Germany a trainload At iho outset we are met with and milk powder. No manufac­ of persons of various nationalities f str^ngo and uncompromising turer will be required to set aside who had been imprisoned in Bel­ challonrro—tho story of the man any butter for government pur­ gium for underground activities, born blind to whom Jesus gave chase in October or any succeed­ they were thwarted by the delay­ sight. But, greater . than the ing month until spring, when pro­ ing tactics of the Belgian railroad story is tho Master himself, and engineer, who acted upon instruc­ duction will rise seasonally. - the real heart of the lesson is tions from the Belgian under­ in the Golden Text, John 8:12, Oil Stockpile is Getting Lower ground. With prisoners packed in "I am the light of the world; he cattle cars so thickly it was impos­ The nation's stockpile of crude sible for anyone to sit down, the that followeth me shall not walk c# in storage tanks has been de­ train started. Using various ruses, in darkness, but shall have the pleted at the average rate of 2,- the engineer managed to go onl.*; fight of life" *8_),000 barrels a month this year, 15 miles in 24 hours, despite Could words be more chal­ and now is only slightly above the Bat-wing sleeves are one of the threats of Gestapo men with ma­ lenging;? A teacher who speaks minimum required to keep refine­ newer trends this season, shown chine guns who stood at his side. in that way is either all that he ries in uninterrupted operation, in this rhumba plaid. Notice Finally the train stopped and the claims to be; or he is an impos­ -the Petroleum Administration for the subtle switching of the pat­ German authorities decided it was tor, or at best a victim of delu­ war reports. Although gasoline tern above and below waistline. better to let everyone go free sions of grandeur. stocks are at pre-war levels, only rather than trouble %ith them any It was no delusion of gran­ si^out half is for civilian use, com- further. deur that inspired the Master,! pared to 90 per cent available for azine, China At War, and Japs but the consciousness of fulfill­ Ofvilian use in 1941. "shanghaied" a Chinese farmer New Shoe Stamp Coming ing the Father's will. When the ordered.him to guide them in the Master spoke of himself as the Chinese Farmer Outwits 22 Japs direction of Changsha, a city that A new shoe stamp to become had already fallen into Japanese good November 1 is announced by light of the world, and as the Before Hengyang, China, fell hands. The Chinese farmer, know­ the office of price administration. way, the truth, and the life, it into Japanese hands, 22 Japanese ing his countryside, deliberately The number of the shoe stamp will was not in terms of any earthly soldiers got lost, and as the story led the Japs on a winding course be announced later. greatness. He never claimed to is told in the official Chinese mag- that finally landed all 22 of them Meet actress Kay Williams, who be a superman. He claimed into the Hanechinese troops—as denies reports that she will wed only to be a minister of God. prisoners of war. RACE SUICIDE Clark Gable. Gable's tough luck. And after 20 centuries we Today*s Pattern In "Martin Chuzzlevit," Dickens can test His words in the light Be Careful—And Patriotic sarcastically credits a certain New of history. Where else in all Because home accidents that York daily of his time with a the world has there been ^guch killed 6,000 workers last year seri­ "claimed circulation of 12,000." A \&Tihetoy teystAa light-giver ? Where else can ously impeded the war effort, the recent Ayers Newspaper Directory we turn from a world of sin, and Federal Security Agency endorses lists that city's foremost newspa­ turmoil, and strife, and cruelty, these safety suggestions: Walk— per with 790,344. These contrasted and see the revelation of a dif-j don't run, especially on stairways; figures show population-growth; ferent world—of righteousness,! don't carry heavy loads on stair­ population pressure. One further and love, and peace? ways; don't let children play on glimpses them as based upon a unprotected stairways; don't let standard of living, the world's floors become slippery or cluttered; best, due to ten generations of pio­ never leave soap in bathtub and neering. Today, however, our pio­ UNRRA Uniform use non-skid mat to prevent slip­ neer stock race-suicides with 2, 1, ping; keep utensil handles turned even no children. away from edge of stove; never —M. B. Pitts, president of Eu­ touch an electric fixture and a genics Society of Northern grounded metal object at the California. same time; disconnect electrical appliances when not in use; don't "Some time and in some way smoke in bed; keep pillows out of the expanding power bureaucracy babies beds; keep pins, needles must be broken. Blocking its and sharp tools away from chil­ growth is an essential service to dren; keep garage doors open when IT.hj the people."—Kansas City Star. HERE

WAR PRICE AND RATION GUIDE The air these days is full of post­ DATES TO REMEMBER AND WHY war schemes whereby somebody else MEATS, FATS: Red 10-point stamps A8 through Z8. A5, through G5, good is going to take care of us forever, indefinitely. but in all these Santa Claus schemes, PROCESSED FOODS: Blue stamps A8 through Z8, and A5 through L5 good you are just as soaked as anybody, indefinitely. •<-. SUGAR: Stamps No. 30, 31, 32 and 33 (after Sept. 1) in Book Four are good -*(: >j< _{c 5|C for 5 pounds indefinitely. Stamp No. 40 in Book Four is good for five pounds Secondly, the company you work of canning sugar through Feb. 28, next year. SHOES: Stamps No. 1 and 2 on Airplane sheet in Book No. 3 good indefin­ for is probably paying terrific taxes itely. — and these taxes are, after all, FUEL OIL,: Period 4 and 5 coupons are good in all areas through Sept. 30. partly out of your production. If No. 1 coupons for 1944-45 good soon as received. taxes were less, your wages might &»attern 9249 comes in children's GASOLINE: No. A-13, new book, good through December 21. be more. Azes: 4, 6, 8, 10. Size 6. jumper and OPA DIRECTORY 3|C J-J*. 3f_ 5j_ (jacket, requires 2% yards 35-inch Rent Control Office, fifth floor, Pythian building. Phone 4-0154—4-0155. In the first place, a big part of *6_bric; V_ yard contrast. War Price and Ration Board No. 1, for all South. Bend and Portage town­ TThis pattern together with a ship west of Lafayette- boulevard and German and Warren townships, 10ff West every dollar you spend for bread, llfeedlework pattern for personal Monroe street. Phone 4-0173. shirts, automobiles and nearly War Price and Ration Beard No. 2, for all South Bend and Portage town­ everything else is for taxes. for household decoration. TWENTY ship east of Lafayette boulevard and Olive, Greene, Centre, Liberty, Lincoln CIENTS. and Union townships, 106 West Monroe street. Phone 3-8219. * SK * * jjSend TWENTY CENTS in coins War Price and Ration Board No. 3, for all of Mishawaka and Penn township YOU —working in conjunction ior these patterns to 170 News- and Clay, Harris and Madison townships, 202 Lincoln Way East, Mishawaka. with the stockholders and manage­ taper Pattern Dept.. 232 West 18th Phone 5-2116 ment of your company—are one of Here is what the officially uni­ 9L. New York 11. N Y Print The war price and ration boards ration sugar tires, automobiles, gasoline, the producers of the money out of formed UNRRA folks will wear: plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, fuel, oil, bicycles and rubber boots and are price control agencies. which corporation taxes are taken, blouse of regulation khaki, |TYLE NUMBER. -*«»-_. OTHER WAR AGENCIES * * * * trousers and skirt of darker tflFTKRN CENTS more brings Office, 210-12 Sherland building. rAll priorities.) khaki. It will be worn during fou the Marian Martin Fall and Phone 2-1435. So don't believe in anybody pos­ the period when UNRRA is F_nter Pattern Book full of smart, Office of Defense Transportation, Tower building (commercial vehicles ing as economic Santa Claus—he is serving as an agent of the mil-* jfiS-sy-to-make stylos A free bed- only). Phone 2-3393 just taking it out of one of your tary» The identification over War Manpower Commission Office, J. M. S. building. Phone 2-1463. Socket patt.:_i is printed right in TJnited States Employment Office, 216% North Michigan street. Phone 2-6175. pockets and giving it back to you the pocket says, naturally, _J_* book, -y in another. . S_2S&Si^s z£m "UNRRA* SEPTEMBER 29, 1944 Page Nina

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OTRE DAME will st^ft its regular, are back from last 56th year of intercollegiate year's national championship N football on Saturday, open­ club. MeKeever hopes that his H: ing a 10-game schedule with a freshmen players, four of whom M°^0-77 v. APAMS-TZ M.?>4\/ctA/-£HB ^tm^-^ErJS A4.\AJ&AJOEUL^.B. >• F/L-E.Y «

.--EKE jies the body of H.Mr . Hey Day The South Bend Window: Idella Logsden of the Western Who die*-, maintaining his :v,'!«pight of Way"; Cleaning Company Cartridge Co., East Alton, 111., He wis -tight, Dead Right, shows you hunters what the As he.{sped along— 129 North Main Street (WPB is allowing you for sport But is j_*st as dead as if Deac$! Wrong. Phone 4-325- this season; 100, shotgun shells, *':iz£__mJf —Unknown. 150 rim-ire, 140 center fire. ^ i_**£_a__*i_fc-""_ '.:_—• .- 'W-IJ**? •_PST-*-

Page Ten THE MIEKOR A Weekly Collection of "Dripping Sands" that "Marie Time" in Passing \> ruv

Dane G. Rogers and Margaret Belle ger, Ind., and Roscoe Burger, 217 Penn. Daniel Borovitz to Jakob Cavich et Peojaignot, both ei Fort Wayne, Ind. Van Buren at Cottage Grove^—Mary ux, lot' 154. Whiteman's 1st. Caarl.o® Jeffries, 125 N. Adams, and Jane Olas, 1017V2 Portage and E. Len- Citz. Nat'l Bank __ Tr. Co. to Francis Matie Gray, Johnstown, Pa. valen, 1008 Sherman. H. Alien et ux, lets 28 and 59, Revised Roy Lee, 219 Middleboro, Mish*., and Test Your I. Q. Niles at Colfax—Carl Schecker, 556 Strong's 3rd. BIRTHS Effie L. Martsolf, 425 E. Fourth, M_sh. Twyckenham Dr. and Herbert Oest, 224 W. Donald B_B et ux to Ivan Ford, TOTAL, BIRTHS IN FIRST EIGHT Oilie Patton, 712 W. Monroe, and S. Laurel. lot 69, Meadow Brook Farm sub. -MONTH'S ENDINti AUGUST 1944, 1,795. Pearlse Alexander, 1807 N. St. Louis. Mich, at Wash.—Ross Bryan, 1013 S. Eleanor' B. Markham et al to George Ethon M. Bartels and Martha Cheese- 1. How much has war inflated Esther and W. J. Haft, 2335 DWN. F. W. Weber et ux, pt. lot IO, __r_mso__*% To*'thue: man, ho*h o_ LaPorte, Ind. isorm values? •G-otfiax at Hill — Eleanor Brzezinski, Survey. Max Krumanaker's, 408 W. 19.!-, Wm. J. Friday, 533 S. Walnut, and 725 W. LaSalle and Dr. Harry Boyd- Can Bassler et ux to Wra. H. Hoersfc? *WJ-J_> , daughter, Kay Lee, Sept. 15. Rose E. Pa-ren-t, 328 W. 7th,. Mash*. . 2. How -na-ny Mexicans have fSttee, J. M. S. Bldg. man,, tr., parcel 01 land on Sarah St. Cleifo MarttaczaJt's, 1925 W. Sample, Ishmael W. Monroe, Niles, Mich., ahd been imported for crop and rail­ Ma_n at Sample—E. Wayne Wise, 306 tx. W. xiolderman et ux to Wm. H. daughter, Marcia Jean, Sept. 15. Harriet Lewis, 143 Paris. way labor? MiMon and Sharley Markel, Elkhart. Hoerstma-i, tr., parcel ©tf !___<_, be_ng Smion Boorda's, 1617 S. Walnut, son, Lovell E. Watson. 527 Leland, and 6C0 blk N. College — Russell Dumont, pt. of I. Martin's ___<_- •Jerry Eugene, Sept. 15. DoM_e J_L Matz, 9ffi Ashland. 3. What well-known Ameri­ 315 Dubail. i-acho-som et ux, lot ;4o, Glenwood add. Cyr?*- S_erens', 317 E. llth, Mish., Jesse Kost, 9iS W. W___., and Maude can establishment remained September 21 Myron Purmton et ux. to. Wm. H. 1 son, Dennis, Sept. 15. P. WeJffli-,' 916 W. Wastu Wash at Taylor—Raymond Newman, Marie Van Holsbeke to Edw. Mat­ Th-etna Stachurski's, 1514 Parallel, Walter R. Cooo«r, 296 S, Main, and open in Paris during the occupa- Elkhart, Ind., and Howard Beach, thews, lot H4, J__lbsurn P_. son, Ronald Thomas, Sept. 16. Eleanor K. Burgess, 1ft* Taylor, Mish. __»»? dsciyrsar N. L.T. C. Edw. Hono-d, Jr. et ux to Forest M. Robt. Paulsen's, 520 W. Third, Mish., Stanley Kadulski, 1913y2 I____ien, and •_. What is "condemnation Z0- t_k W. Wash.-*-Riehard J. BeU, Le_n_er et u_t, pt. 38 St. $es. JTron WS&. son, Marshall John, Sept. IS. Loasetta Wegner, 1618 V_. Samp]*. 430 LaMonte Terrace and V. O. Weaver, Serena D. Currey to Mike Govorke Robt. Swinehart's, _0__ E. Bowman, Ma-yaaard Kurzhall. No. Liberty, Ind., AAF Bendix Prod. Div. et ah lot 3, Battell sub. son, Dennis Lee, Sept. 16. and Maatte Burge,, ESkhart, Ind. 5. ft* AAF lingo, what is a C-hapin at Wa___.-**-Dale Stephenson, Be-cty Rose R. fSarma et al to Serena Raymond Behling's, 1329 N. Wilbur, Dale H. Metzger, 430 S. Laf., and junior frrom? 18i4 Oliver and Jamea Clark, 137 N. D. Currey,. lot 3, Battell sub. son, _nomas Charles, Sept. 15. Gladys R. A. Thomas, 1245 W.Wa&h- Studebaker. Fredk. Goodman et ux to Paul __. John MeComb's, box 192, son, Jennie, Jay Sehuring and Shirley Upjohn, f*»a_5W«rs On Page lb? 619 S. Michigan—Robert Mitchell, 24-0 Pearson, lot 508, W. & K. 3rd Sunny Sept. 15. both of Kalamazoo, ______*. - blk Prairie and lamp pogt- mede. James CartwrigM's, R. R. 4, son, Rob­ Robt. Duncan, 1127 S. Laf., and Alice 1813 S. Mich,igan—Bernard Buckley Melvin C. Dunning et ux to- Earl W-. ert Lee, Sept. 13. Wenker, tl*§4 Fox Kingsford Hts., Ind.,. and Rev. Earl Hazard et ux, pt.. lot 27, Milburn Prop. John W. Lyon's, 714 Cushing, daugh­ Chas. L. Kirby and Diy.te JQuncan, M. Elling, 1326 Mish. to 825 28£fcu Mat-son^ 225 Haney. Plat. ter, Lynde Kay, Sept. 9. both of Benton Harbor, Mich. W. Geminder, R. R. 4 box 8 to 3911 3818 Montgolfier — Irnine Bleasdale, Lowell T, Boyd et ux to James W. Jacob H. Gilberts, 291 W. No. Shore Ross E. Sanis, Plymouth, Ind., * and Thomas -St., Berkley, Mich. 3944 Montgolfier and ped. Carol J. Klingerman et ux, lot .9, Leer _nd. . JSr., sen, Bruce, Sept. 11. Florence E. Pendleton, 316 W.4th. Mish. N. Kosinski, 1702 S. Ohme to 907 Moore, 3818 Montgolfier who was in­ Oral Kreighbaum et ux to Edmund Claud J. Gerlach's, 1412 Marietta, Raymond S. Gons__rowski, 819 S. Pu- _*ra_e_e. jured. B. Golbaet al, pt. sec. 8, twp. 37 R 4 ... daughter, Martha Ansa, Sept. 12. *»sSi. and Chalmers J. Hagedorn, 424 C. J. Grunert, 441 S. Lake to 430 S. Fianklfn at Sample—Stephen Ra- Geo. R. Jones et ux to.icenneth F. Geo. C. Lively's, 713 E. Dubail, Cushing. Falcon. decki, 1632 Sibley and Wm. Yost, Ireland et ux, lot 177, Stu_i_.]jM. add. daughter, Catherine A__n, Sept. 12. Willie Peterson, 502 Chapin, and Ro- E. Sfcabo, 930 S. Pine to 906 W. Mon­ Osceola. Idalie Vercrysee" to Marie Van Hols Leslie Yeager's, R. R. 3,- box 211, sie Lee Harrison, 502 Chapin. roe. September 22 befte, lot 174, Mi-burn Pi. Mrs. R. W, De_gar_-___, 133- Wood­ daughter, Carolyn Sue, Sept. 1-2. Hernaan Mitchell, 826 Third, M__fcu LWE at Mish.—Madalyn Edder, 2023 Sari S. Marham, adm. to Herbert L. Ralph S. Archibald, Jr.'s, 2750 Miami, »«••* LMW_Be IS. Wagner, 116 S. Byrkit, lawn to 814 E. ll_h, Bloo-nington, Ind. Geiger et uat^ lot 82, O'Nerl & Schwab. F. Turney, 112 E. Marion to 1806 E. Miami and Mies Cowin, 702 W. Law­ ; daughter, Gail, Sept. 13. Mish.' rence, Mish., Ind. September iS John Claycomb's, 1347 E. Fox, daugh- Fred ©•. Shaw, Wakarusa, Ind., and Ewing. H. Van Houten, 1726 N. Huey to Sampie «t Laf.—Donald West, 520 Vz Sarah Birmingham et al to Donald iier, Susan Kay, Sept. 13. LueilJte O. Bendit. Wyatt, Ind. Cushing and R. E. Reed, 117 E. Pal­ N. TUrley et ux, lot 31, Whitcomb & Herbert Ferner's, 3S31 Montgolfier Pi, Berkley, Calif. Riehard __. ©ann, 1036 Van Buren, H. Manley, 141. E. Calvert to 1825 isade. Keller's Ind. Ave. add. son, Barry Nickersom, Slept. _**_.. and Bdajth M. Baryan, 225Vz S. Walmat. Main at Tutt —Emma Sutlin, 1230 Her cert C. Stegman et al to Lawra H. Guy Anglemyer's, ISO. Liberty, Ind., E. Bowman. Roger EteLoof, 421 S. Wellington, A. Makulski, 2287 No. Side Blvd . to Portage and Ruben Silberman, 1121 Gau, pt. sec. 24, twp. 38 R :. E. daughter, __eth Ann, Sept. 14. and E_eanore Bo__ne,. 303 E. 10th, Mish". Irvington. Jos. F. Hauger to Roy W. Nelson et Jos* A. GrontkowsJcPi, 1140 W. Na**- -5_-3% SL William. Abrahaoaa J&Stfs, 814 N. Notre Dame, W. Wagner, 816 Fellows to 406 N. Laf. Mich, at Milton—Rev. Earl R. Matt- ux, lot 97, Muessel's 2_-d. pier, daughter, Rita Kathryn, Sent. IT. and Mildred Warner* Gary, Ind, son, 2_5 E. Haney and Bernard Buck­ Gertrude Deacon to Howard E. Zerbe Harold E. Bowers', R. R. 5, son, R B. Alloway, 1913 E. Fox to 1737 E. Wex. ley, Valparaiso, Ind. et ux, lot 51, Leer's 1st. Larry Eugene, Sept. 16. 1 190» blk Miami—Edwin R. Martin, Bert Megan et ux to Chas. H. Deck ' Kenneth E. Kern's, 1886 S. Taylor, H. R. Woodward, 509 ,- S. Tayior t© -126 S. Kentucky. 1914 S. Main and Dr. Frash, 19_*9 Miami. et ux, lot 3_8, Berner Grove. 2son, Wm. Kenneth, Sept. 16. Mich, at Chippewa—James Zimmer­ Lowell H. Harris et ux to Hazel m Walter E. Harroif's, 1401 E. Ewing, G. B. _5a__j, 52. S. Wellington to 706 S. Ironwood Dr. man, Lakeville, Ind., and Are*hi*"__em-j Schmitts, lot 33, Seeberger's Mich. St. daughter, Vicki Sue, Sept. 17. na, 202 E. Haney. Clifton R. Lonzo et al to Milo D. Cecil D. Butler's, 739* Logan, son, DEATHS S. Ranhap, 126 S. Kentucky to 632 Irvington. , JE? 425 E. Madison—Roman Lovisa, 127 Bowers et ux, pt. sec. 16, twp. 36 RIE. Thomas Franklin, Sept. 9. TOTAL DEATHS IN FIRST EIGHT E. Woodside and parked car and I. & Ignatius Piaakowski ei ux to Jos. J. 1 EvOrett A. Lonergan's, 1410 E. Cam­ MONTHS ENDING AUGUST 1944, 680. M. utility pole. Zellner, et ux, et. sec. 12, twp. 37 R 2 E. peau, son, Lani Daniel, Sept. 9. LSfcW at William—John Bell, 620 Ki­ Ercil C. Smith et ux to Ralph R. -,.|__5. S. Tajkowski's, 714 S. Webster, Geo. B. Bless, 134 W. Grove, Mish., zer Ct., struck by Geo. Dewald, 210 W. Wlfllams et ux, lot 86, Martin L. Wen­ son, Frank Thomas, Sept. 11. age 61, Sept. 19. PERMITS TO BUILD 7th, Mish. ger 's 4th. Geo. E. Whitesel's, R. R. 3, son, Jas. Andrew A. Haverstoek, 116 E. Ohio*, Mich, at Jeff. — Royal Stones, 934 John A. Meyer and Florence A. Leroy, Sept. 12. age 78, Sept. IS5. Lawrence, reports bus struck two Schreyer, ex. to Florence A. ScBreyer, Afons J. Gooretnan's, North Liberty, TOTAL BB-ILDING PERMITS IS­ Mrs. Cora R. Mason, 2121 Kenwood, SUED IN FIRST EIGHT MONTHS pecs., John Flanagan, 417 S. Taylor lot 63, Chas. Weidler's 1st. Ind., son, Chas. Paul, Sept. 12. age 59, Sept. 20. and Betty Church, Osceola, Ind. Mara i_. Summey to Oliver P. Tye et Anthony Guerra's, 219 W. llth, Mish., ENDING AUGUST _944, *_;305; VALUE, Mrs. Anna E. Shadel, R. R. 1, age $1,672,270. Wayne at Notre Dam&—jf'ra-_k Pa- ux, pt. lots 350 and 351, Colonial Gar. daughter, Joan Louise, Sept. 12. 74, Sept. 21. ezesny and ear owned by Roland Edgar, Schafer et ux to Harold R. Irvin P. Nowacki's, 2417 Linden, son, Mr_v Stella Saczypiorski, 1639 LWW, v Thorpe, 309 S. Notre Dame. Wright et ux, pt. sec. 25, twp*. 33 R 2 E. irvin Peter, Jr., Se_rt. 12. age 69 Sept. 20. Mrs. Jacob M_tsche__M, 120 E. T®*. Paul H. Drake et al to Edw. J. Btelle- Donald A. Brown's, 5-6^ 25th, son, Standter A. Paquin, 1012 N. St. Louis, garage, $209. September 23 _in et ux, pt. sec. 29, twp. 37 R 2 E. Fredk, James, Sept. 13. age 39, Sept. 17. Mrs. Helen Halasi, 610 W. Calvert, 113 S. MW_----Ai__e Petrowski, 2§21 Harold C. Reprogle to Fred C. Henke Raymond N. McKemsae's, 828 Mari­ Mrs. Cleo M. Herr, R. R. 1, Lakeville, add., S200. W. Sample and James Thanos, 330 et al, pt. see;* 7, twp. 36 R .. E. etta, daughter, Barbara Jean, Sept. 13. Joe Caecr, 1902 S. Brookfield, Garage, Tonti. Ind., age 42; Sept. 17. $200. Mary K. Fuson to Chase D. Smslser, Robt. J. Vrabel's, Granger, Ind., Mrs. Mayme A. ____aa_n, 1142 N'. Fre­ Fellows at Bdwy. — James M. Law- pt. sec. 11, twp. 37 R 3 E. twins, Eleanor Susan and Noel Cath­ V. P. Kovaloezki, 1775 Prairie, change rence, 404 E. Dubail and Lottie Borow- mont, age 62, Sept. 18. windows and repair, $130. Wm. H. Inwood to Paul Inwood,. lot 34 erine, Sept. 14. Blanche Robison, R. R. 1, age 59, ski, 604 S. Middleboro, Mish. Taylor's Field, lot 5, Rockstroh's & James K. _-*___e's, &6V2 S. Frances, Sept. 21. C. A. Sfcafford, 1162 _3mer, garage, Thos. at Jeff.—Jack Wagner, Goshen, Nickel's, lot 45, Martin's, lot 219, Riv­ daughter, Viola Jean, Sept. 14. O. Adoiph Uldin, I5S3 Virginia, a@e **W=** Ind. and Augusta Hesiben, 1002 S. Laf. erdale, lot 22, O. P. New Carlisle. Chas. H. Wolfe's, 510 E. Irvington, 87, Sept. 23. Carl F. Solzan, 1809 Kemble, convert September 24 Hildegarde H. Singler to Napoleon daughter, Susan Elizabeth, Sept. 15. Mrs. Theresa Nelson, 1118 23rd, age house to 2 apts., $750. Winston et ux, pt. lot 95, O. P. Lowell. Elmer V. Zsedely's, 917 S. Chapin. 1800 blk. Calif.—Lloyd Morehouse, 919 72, Sept. 23. Harold Haenes, 620 Dubail, rebuild N. Brookfield and Bernard Konkol, Bernard W. Hughes et al to Oral C. daughter, Sandra, Sept. 15. porch, $150. Emmons, pt. sec. 13, twp. 37 R 3 E. Leo V. True's, R. R. 2, daughter, Stephen* M. €lark, 919 25th, age 75, 1126 N. Adams. Sept. 2& A. L. McGee, 101 S. Chicago*, house Wash, at Walnut — Chas. Blankert, Katie M. House to Jessie M. Inwood Patricia Dawn, Sept. 15. $216.. et al, lot 5, Rockstroh & Nickel 1st. Milam Ri__iaK__>', 1329 N. Huey, Eddie Mac Adkins, 1511 Fassnacht, age 1534 Nash and Leon Jennings, 106 S. Wm. Chalew-ezynski, 2422 W. Prast, Behdi-t. Clifford V. DuComb, gdn. to Jessie daughter, Fssa_e_a Jane, Sept. 15_ 3, Sept. 16. repair and- enclose poreh, $200. M. Inwood et al, lot 5, Rockstroh & Anthony A. Rye's, 749 S. Phillipa, Infer-1 Glenna Lee Stanley, 920 28th, Wash, at Birdsell—Floyd H*_t*__, 1230 Cyriel P. Meuleman, 2901 Prast, house E. Howard and Frank Tomkins, 12-4_ Nickel's istsg daughter, Ann Marie, Sept. 15. Sept 19 $5,250. Frank Gomber et ux to Estle Ald­ Wm. J. Ganser's, 20* W. 6th, Mish., S. Walnut. S Jacob' Wujeik, 1341 W. Poland,, age D. A Nye Co., 1441 E. Madison, house September 25 ridge, pt. sec. 23, twp. 38 R 2 E. son, Daniel Paul, Sept. 15. $5,2*85. So. Bend Highland Cem. to Herman Stephen Banashek's, 1127% N. St. 59 Sept. 2X1. Jeff, at Ironwood Dr.—JohW Jackson, Mrs. Elizabeth M. Leopold, 1310 N. Mrs. Geo. Frushotcr, 1009 3€st, repair 140 Timber Lane and Frank Cramer, A. Schmitt et ux, pt. 917 Graceland .Peter, daughter, Victoria Marie*, Sept. pOT-lic and re-roof, $100. Sec. 15 O'Brien, ag*e 28, Sept. 21. 531 E. llth, Mish. Corner D. Jones, 7^4 S. Bendix,. en- Notre Dame at Wayne — Rolland So. Bend Highland Cem.. to Ethel John E. Klyop's, 1721 Hildreth, C-Oses porch, $109. Hester., pt. 917 Grace'Iamd Sec- - - daughter, Cheryle Jayne*. Sept. 15. Thorpe, 309~ Sr NOt. 6" XJSYne and city Wns. Santocki, !SS E. LaSai*--,, -_!P- bus. Blanche H. Overmyer et al to Arthur C-au-fi* E. Sttsithf's, New Carlisle, large basement, underpin foundation J. Houser et ux, grave 3, center of lot Ind., jda-jaghte-, Ma_y__l*_n, Sept, 15. Ind. at Laf-.—H. R. Newcomer, 1622 walls, _im. . Northern and R. W. Overman, Lake- 485, Sec. B. Reuben Hoffman's, 1120 E. Madison, MOVING PERMITS L. L. Lemons, 1321 N. Brookfield, new Caroline Kettring to Arthur J.'~ Hous- ••- son, Craig B-warv Sept. 1*6. ville, Ind. TOTAL MOVING PERMITS IN dormer, $150. 340O blk. E. Jeff.—-€. H. Jerne, 620 E. er et ux, grave 3, center of lot _05 Jos. Wilkinson's, New Carli__e. .*«_-., FIHS3T EIGHT MONTHS EiMDING Mi_s7 EUa M. Campfo^a, 911 W. Oak, Sec. B. daughter, Dorothy Jean, Sept. 16. Klinger, reports car overturned. AjU-rU'ST 1944, 767. convert house to 2 ap$fc, $145. Lindsey at Sherman — Lynn Landis, September 20 B. R. 1 and Mary Baker, R. R. 5. Howard A. Folk et al to Fred O. Cul- J. Lodyga, 1738 E. Calvert to 1908 113 E. Penn.—Rhaon Sheehan, 530 S. lar et al, pt*. sec. 29, 32, twp. 36 R 2 jS. Mich, and parked car. Alva Alexander, gdn. to Fred O. Col­ lar et al, pt. sec. 2_y 32, twp. 36 R 2 E. HONEYMOON EXPRESS M_3&. G. Rusbateh, 119ya E. Marion to THE RED DEVIL 830 W. Colfax. Alfons DeMunck ei ux to Bert Ackles et ux, lot .538, Mi_bi_r_r _"_. MARRIAGE LICENSES Ben Bartok, 1073 Portage to 531 35tn. FIRES C. W. Butler, 1617 Sunnymede to Chi­ Percy AlfOrd et ux to Martin Zyto tt TOTAL MARRIAGE LICENSES IN ESTIMATED FIRE DAMAGE IN BANKING ACTIVITIES ux, pt. Lot 91, O. P. town O- Loweil S.B. FIRST EIGHT MONTHS EiN xllh __ cago, 111. „,..,_ FIRST, EIGHT MOWTHS ENDING C. E. Rose et ux to Jacob- Stryker ct AUGUST 1944, L2S&. E. Krakowski, 2428 Linden to 2417 AUGUST 1944, $41,700. South Bend Clearing House ux, let 9?, O. P. No. Liber-y.. Longley. Ffcat-ie Raspovtte et ux to Jacob W. B. Gray, R. R. 2 to 627 W. Wash*. Sept. 19, roof fire caused by chirmrvey Total clearings from September 16 to Carl B. Leslie, 1023 E. Cedar, and 23, inclusive, $16,791,324. Stryeker et ux, pt. sec. 5*. twp*. 35R 1 K. * Emily, M. Pekla, 919 N. Notre Dame. Rev. W. E. Hausey, 125 S. Liberty to soarks at res-dence of R. E. Chub- Wh_tco_nb & Keller Inc. to Geo. D. 12_ S. bendix Dr. bMck, 2917 Mich. St.; damage $£ Total transactions from September Orvee W. Black, Cass county, ind., 16 to 23^ inclusive, $4,339,0-3. Freel et ux, lot 33, Citz. Homes replat. and Bessie Richardson, Rochester, Ind. J. j. Golubic, 1714 S. Taylor to 313 Sept. 19, auto fire _0 the Bendix. .park­ Whitcomb __ Keller Mc. to SQ. Bend Thos. J. Rice, 1106 Oakland, and Leota S. Kaley. „„„„ ing lot No. 9, car owned 1__f. Warren Bnulders Inc., pt. lots 506, 597, Sunny­ Pruett, 1106 Oawland. M-lS. Langan, 423 S. Logan to 4248 Nelson, of Walkerton, this county, mede. J-fen J. Ewing, I860 N. Kaley, *_a_d Monticello Ave., Chicago, 111. caused by discarded cigarette in seat, Leo P. VanRie to Leo and Laseinda Joan D. Chestnutt, 617 E. Wayne. J. Casey, H3i W. Monroe to 1007 damage $20. Koze, pt. see 10, two. 37 R. 3 3_ Mast T: • Coy and Edna Mary Cripe, Talbot. Sept. 21, rubbish fire at Edwards Iron Chas.. A. Davey e.t al to Wm*. G. Ma-- both of Qromwell, Inds Mrs. R. P. Boyle, 1806 E. Ewing to •jSbrk-C Inc., caused by hot ashes, no grane et ux, lot 15 ana 88, St. Jos. PL, 1«1_ E. Fox. _ damage. DEEDS and lots 23A, 24A, Boat House. Novak Pasalich, 2113 &-Franklin, and TOTAL DEED TRANSFERS IN SO. _L___ian Szodzo, Chicago, BjL * E. Weaver, 402 S. Franklin to 408 S. Sept. 23, city water works garage, Elsie M. Steele et al to Marven L. Franklin. 223 Lincoln Way East, faulty connec­ BEND W FIRST EIGHT' MONTHS Clark et ux,. rat. sec. 16. twp. 35 R 1 E. Gust A_-Saras, 2318 S. Mieh., and ENDING AUGUST 1*944, 5,054. Mary J. Alberts, 111 S. Laurel. L. Hill, 7_8 E. Haney to 3506 S. Wise tion on car batteries being charged; Whitcomb & Keller,. Inc. to Jos. Vida Philip K. Smith, Goshen, Ind., and Orcle. ,,_, damage, $5Cf.* et ux, pt. sac. 22, twp. 37 R 2 E- Opal A. Rummfi, Goshen, Ind. G. Carson, 1012 E. Western to* lla4 Sept. 23, resideace of Mrs, Grace September 18 Willard P. Wise to Wm. A. Kaiser, Robt. Reuter, 514 S. Ironwood Dr., LWE. Smith, Willis and Dunn roads; Clay Donal J. Foster et ux to Calvin R. lots 9; 6, 7", Steveley's add., Osceola. and Myna Goddard, 13_9* Dubail. A. J. Boberg, 1614 Hildreth to 720 township; faulty chimney; total loss, ___*_ure et ux, lot 64, St. Jos. Pk. Charlotte M..Partridge to Elva Cogs­ BenediGt Pajak, 1215 W. Wash., and McCoustia, Kalainazoo, Mich. damage, $2,500. Lymes, 'J. Horveox __t UK to Raleigh well, lot 7, Horatio'* Chapin's sub-. . Mary Tarwacki, 118 ChestrBut. O. Loo-ens, 1306 Catalpa to 723 S. Sept. 24, davenport on porch at O. Humphrey et ux, lot 5, T. E. A. By- Emma Ranstead to Zora Kingsbury, - Leonard M. Nutz ahd Hazel Cafterty, Scott. 'Moose home, 825 East Jefferson; dis rley sub. pt. lots 33 and 34, St. Jos. Co. Ag. Soc. both of Kalamazoo, Mich. A. Szabo, 709 W. Ford to 723 S. Scott. carded cigarette; damage $25. Emily B. Loring to Clossie Bunton et Florence M. Fidler et al to Paul Rat- Riehard Goral, Buchanan, Mic&., arijd. W. F- Cams, 1507 E. Co__asc to 1127 u_r. lofc-StgO. P. New Carlisle. kowski et ux, lot 88, Portage Fie Agnes L. Cooley, San Diego, Calif. E. Wayne North . Rufus W. Smith et ua_ to> Lloyd Sau- People's Fed. Sav. & Loar. to Shelly Willis E. Cosby, R. Rv S, and Helen J. Raymond Smith, 919 Sherman to R. saman et ux, lot 118, town of Maple G. Ingram et USE, lot 36; Mfltourn pi. Helpingstine, 404 LWW:'* R. 4, box 298. f-ane. Lucius LaFortune e* wx to Ralph W. G. K. Baer, 913 E. Calvert to 2010 TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS Maple Lane Const. & Sup. to Rufus Qu£m*by et ux, pt. lot 14, Ed Sorin's 1st. Chas. C. Fuller, 1037 Diamond, and 1 Thelma Anders, 1037 Diamond. - Miami .^- W. Smith et ux, lot 118, town of Maple Portage Rlty. Corp-, to Meto E. Hor­ F. Freese, 537 N. Sunnyside to 515 NUMBER TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS IN ner et ux,, lots 250 and 260*. portage Gar. Chas. S. Willcox, Jr., Norfolk, Va,, SOiUTH BEND IN FIRST EIGHT Lane. and Jo Ann M. Anderson, Grosse Poinlt, W. Wayne. Carl J. Graeff et ux to Ted R. Piersee: •Mildred Stump et al to Richard L. R. W. B-tzsimmons, 811 E. Fox to 433 MONTHS ENDING AUGUST 1944, 1,258. S_«a«p*et u*x, pt. see. If, twp-.-35, R 2 _S. Mich. NUMBER INJURES*, 223; KILLED, 11. et ux, pL sec. 23, twp. 38 R 2.E. - Maurice Mattens, 717 S. Camden, and Morrison, Columtras, O. Geo. W. Byrkit et ux to Ralph L. Leslie C WJ__tcomb^ et al' to Fped- Virginja* -^Uacfeocki, 607 S. Brookiieid. J. Standfield, 623* S. St. Joseph to 219 Jackson el ux, lot 21 , Byrkit's 6th. ericka. Buck, lot 24, Ind. Ave. add. • Winifred Reeves, P. O. 1083, So. Bend E. Broadway. . September 20 Carrie L. Jones to Harry Jones et ux, Donald Turley et ux to Owvffle. M. and Lo'rrin- Morris, R. R. 2, Mish. ] J. Kreatctry, 2122 W. Wash, to 1501 Vz Eddy at Jefff— Regina*. __*>___-, 5I_g Ss pt. sec. 12^.t_vp. 36 R 1 W. Gable, lot -4, plat o_ Brookside safe*. - / Shirley R. Erich and Betty J. __Sr»- Linden. Meade and John Johnson, bus driver. Jack S. Victor et ux to Ebei J. Chayie Clarence J. -Sollirvs «-,«*,*.o», Sbuth . tol, both es Huchanan, Miefe. R. S. Dufendach, 1925 Berkley PI. to 300 blk W. Jeff.—Lola Maudlin, Gran- •et nx, lot 766, _tonnTnT-_KT"*' (On Page Eleven) 510 W. LaSalle. SEPTEMBER 29, 1944 Page "£

Chas. Nickerson et ux to Morris Plan 1 Cecil Roby, drunk, $1 &c. seph County, State of Indiana, Execu­ Co., pt. lot 30, Lindley's add. $600. September 25 tor of the Estate of Rachel J. Cover, Leslie Hammond et ux to Farmers John Hiechny, drunk, $5 &c. late of St. Joseph County, deceased. MULTUM IN PARVO State Bk., pt. sec. 30, twp. 38 R 2 E. James Bryant, running stop sign, $2. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. $3,500. James M. -Lawrence, running stop Glen A. Cover, Executor. (From Page Seven) ward the production of materiel to Orville Gable et ux to First Bk. & sign, $20 _-c. September 21st, 1944. were placed at the disposal of the defeat Germany and Japan, Tr. Co., lot 64, plat of Brookside sub. Horace Bonnell, speeding, $10 &c. Wilford V. Walz, $4,500. Chas. Somagyi, drunk, $1 &c; dis. Attorney for Estate. 0:29; 10:6-13 government to meet the situation. xxx September 21 conduct, $10 &c. xxx Alva A. Farquer to Alice Matehett, Wiliie Daniel, drunk, $5 &c. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION JULY AIR EXPRESS MAKES pt. lot 4 and 6, sub ot Denniston & Martin Henderson, drawing deadly Estate No. 8417 WAR SHOW COMING GAIN 10.8 PER CENT: Fellows' add. $2,500. weapon, $25, 30 days co. jail. NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ TO TOWN OCT. 5 & 6: James J. Kalafat et ux to Indus. Sav Floyd Hines, leaving scene, $15 &c; 10 dersigned has been appointed by the Weight of air express handled & Loan, lot 21, Studebaker replat. days, oper, lie. susp. 1 yr.; no driv lie., Judge of the Circuit Cottrt of St. Jo­ Persons hereabout will have the for the nation's commercial air­ September 22 $5. seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ Hallie M. Herring to Peoples Fed. Glen Steel, drunk in railroad sta­ istrator of the Estate of Jerome J. opportunity next week to view a lines in July gained 10.8 per cent Sav. & Loan, int. lot 21, Bdwy. Hts. tion, $10 &c. Greene, late of St. Joseph County, war show by the army's Fifth over the same month a year ago, $1,250. _^ deceased. Power Light 2nd add Co. to Nil. Bk. Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. service command of Fort Hayes, F. H. Couillard, agent of Railway 1 & Tr. Co., pt. lot.258, S. L. Cottrell's Robert L. Greene, Administrator. Columbus, O., and the War Man­ Express Agency, says. An esti­ 1st. $2,750. September 25th, 1944. power commission. Arrangements mated 3,050,000 pounds were flown James J. Vasa et ux to St. Jos. Bk. & CAFETERIA COURT Farabaugh, Pettengill, Chapleau and to bring the show to South Bend over the 45,000-mile network ol Tr., lot 537, Belleville 3rd. $3,800. Roper, Attys. for Estate. 9:29; 10:6-13 Oct. 5 and 6 are announced by Emil W. Kucela et ux to Mish. Bldg. the domestic airlines during the & Loan, pt. sec 8, twp. t37 R 4 7. $1005. JAYWALKING: NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Walter Stansbury, general chair­ month, compared with 2,750,494 Lawrence Cornell et ux to Indus. Sav (One Dollar Fines) Estate No. 8373 man of a committee representing pounds in July, 1943. "Shipments & Loan, lot 249, town of Indian Vil­ Oliver Kushto, Ralph Little, Earl H NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ St. Joseph county American legion lage. $1,600. Susan, Har.old Carpenter, John Paidle, dersigned has been appointed by the carried in air express service in >. September 23 Jennings Martin, Geo. Daraius. Judge of the Superior Court No. 2 of posts and "40 & 8" voitures, which July increased 6.9 per cent," Mr. Willard E. Wertz et ux to Levi M. RUNNING RED LIGHT: St. Joseph County, state of Indiana. will sponsor the event. The pur­ Couillard says. "We handled an Truex et ux, lot 1, Talbot's Plat. $4,000. (Five Dollar Fines) Administratrix of the Estate of Fred pose is to induce war workers to estimated 137,145 shipments Aubrev E. Smith et ux to Indus. Sav Otto Keres, Lawrence Shaffer, Lem Voynovich, late of St. Joseph county, stay on their jobs and to recruit & Loan, lot 471, Milburn PL $Lj-00. Kizer, Earner McCall, Willard F. Whet- deceased. throughout the country, compared Robt. A. Zusman etux to StrJos. Bk. ham, Lawrence Alford, Fred Kaier, Said estate is supposed to be solvent. persons not now engaged in war with 128,245 shipments in July. & Tr. Co., pt. lot 160, Cushing & Lind­ Roscoe Headier, Wm. Hugins,, Charles Helen Rinkus, Administratrix. work to turn their activities to­ 1943." sey. $3,200. Mercer, Michael Radecki, Vallie Rigby, September 25th, 1944. ^Psi Harry Atkinson, Thos. Owens. Seymour Weisberger, MORTGAGE RELEASES OVERTIME PARKING: Attorney for Estate. 9:29; 10:6-13 September 19 (Two'Dollar Fines) Nat'l Bk. & Tr. Co. to Minnie Gil­ Roy D. Clark, Chas. W. Moore, Bill NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION bert. Cassady, Leo L. Bryson. Estate No. 8418 American Tr. Co. to Paul Summy. IMPROPER PARKING: NOTICE is hereby given that the Alexis Coquillard et al to Gust Peklo undersigned has been appointed by the (One Dollar Fines) Judge of the Superior Court No. 2 of et ux. Russell Yockey, Frank Reasor, Harold Dept. of Fin. Inst, to Martha Hffier. St. Joseph County, State of Indiana, Baker, John Taylor, Ernest Snyder, Executor of the Estate of Alfpns Rodts, Metropolitan Life Ins. to Colpaert Robt. E. Wigfall, Leon Kieloch, Mrs. Rlty. Corp. late of St. Joseph county, dfeceased. Ditto—to Myrrel D. Keely et ux. * Alice Joyal, Carl Hegner. Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. Deievan D. Bowsher to Bertha S. RUNNING "STOP SIGN: Marcell Cooreman, Executor. Bleuler. (Five Dollar Fines) September 25th, 1944. of land between Sorin and St. Louis, First Bk. & Tr. Co. to Marcellus Lud­ Letha Hughes, Joan Stole, William Leo L. Cook, lot 7, Cedar Hts. wick. Christian, Mary Jane Kelly, Lorin Lav- Attorney for Estate. 9:29—10:6-13. TRANSFER OF REALTY Burah H. Ditsch et al to Lawrence Farmers State Bk., LaPaz to James engood, Ida Sandock, Mrs. Margaret C. Cornell et ux, lot 249, town of Indian D. Kirkpatrick et ux. Wills, E. R. Rupert. OS 4786 SHERIFF'S SALE DEEDS Village. Wm. J. Walsh, Recorder to Amanda By virtue of an Order of Sale to me . Florence R. Miller et ux to John directed from the Clerk's Office of the (From Page Ten) Klotz. Mamula et ux, lot 328 Oliver 2nd. State of Indiana to Elmer Whitesel. St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2, of St. Bend Acceptance Corp. pt. sec 34, Ida Barnes, adm. to Horace Wells et Wm. J. Walsh, Recorder to Bridget Joseph County, Indiana, I will expose twp. 38 R 2 E. ux, lot 29, and 29A, Pd_4age Pk. M. Cauty. U. S. DISTRICT COURT to Public Sale on Saturday the 21st day Thomas Walter et ux to First Bk. & Catherine Ort et al to Horace Wells Ditto—to Sarah Taylor. of October A. D., 1944, between the Tr., lots 459 to 464, incl. et ux, lot 29 and 29A, Portage Pk. Ditto—to Wm. Taylor. Civil No. 490 Chester McConnell v hours of ten o'clock a. m., and four September 21 September 23 September 20 Alfred F. Dowd, warden. Writ of ha­ o'clock p. m., of said day, at the door First Bk. & _r. Co., tr. to David A. St. Jos. Bk. & Tr. Co. to Robt. A. Harriet H. Cullen to Chas. A. Davey beas corpus. of the Court House, in the city of South Nye, lots 15, 23, 24, 26, 36, 43, 44, to 50, Zusman et ux, pt. lot 160, Cushing & et ux. Bankruptcy No. 2039 Geo. W. Bahr, Bend, St. Joseph County, Inaiana, the consec, 52, 55, 56, 66, 67, 70, 84, No. Lindsey. College to 2nd Ch. of Elkhart, Ind., automobile mechanic; rents and profits for a term not exceed­ Sunnyside. Levi M. Truex et ux to Willard E. Brethren. assets, $383, liabilities, $1,622.38. ing seven years, of the following de­ Dora G. Dillon to Homer W. Martin, Wertz et ux, lot 1, Talbot's Plat. St. Jos. Bk. & Tr. to Edmund Robert scribed Real Estate situate in St. Joseph lot 1, Nursery PI. Chas. E. Emmons et ux to Aubrey E. et ux. County, State of Indiana, to-wit: Elsie B. Waits et al to Tower Fed." Smith et ux, lot 471, Milburn PI. Ditto—to Harvey Linden. LEGAL NOTICES Sav. & Loan, lot 81, Elder PL Herman F. Dehne et ux to Lester J. Ditto—to Norman Wagner. Lot numbered One Thousand Thir­ Walter S. Buszkiewicz et ux to Henry Emerson et ux, lot 119, Bowman's 5th. Ditto—to Paul Klowetter et ux. NON-RESIDENT NOTICE ty-one (1031), (W. 49 feet) in La­ F. Waitz et ux, lot 47, Morgan Pk. So. Bend Builders Inc. to Theodore Ditto—to Reliance Pharmacy. Cause No. 69870 Salle Park Second Addition to the . Nellie N. Eash et al to Oscar Sellon M. Frohler et ux, lot 19, Beverly Hts. So. Bend Fed. Sav. & Loan to Wayne STATE OF INDIANA City of South Bend. et) ux, pt. sec. 18, twp. 37 R 4 E. Harvey A. WJne et ux to Geo. Japa C. Castle et ux. COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: Francis E. Claycomb et ux to et ux, lot 292, Studebaker PL 3rd. HOLC to Geo. W. Cenkush et ux. In the St. Joseph Circuit Court And on failure to realize the full Tofica Sara, lot 7, ±_eiger Farm 1st. Reinhold Tetzlaff et al to Harry Tetz­ Fred DeLee to Geo. VandeVelde. September Term, 1944. amount of judgment, interest and costs Coquillard Rlty Co. to The Light Co., laff, parcel of land, pt. sec. 6, twp. 36 Teachers Credit Union to Ercie M. thereon, I will expose to Public Sale, Inc., pt. sec. 8, twp. 37 R 3 E. R 2 E. Jtfewby. ANTOINETTE KOBIEC at the same time and place, to the Jos. Szymkbwiak et al to Jos. M. Far­ Mildred I. Heckman to Hariy J. Re- St. Jos. Bk. & Tr. to Virgil Wibbel.- vs. £*,!? highest bidder, the fee simple of said kas et ux, tract of land off lots 7 ;.nd ser et ux, lot 128, Homeland add. man et ux. JOHN KOBIEC real estate. 8, RafFs J_nd. Wm. K. McHenry et ux to Harry J. Ditto—to Hazel Orrison. Taken as the property of Oscar M. Ruth Newcomer to Amanda Barrett, Reser, et ux, lot 129, Homeland. Ditto—to C. Ingram Little et ux. Be It Known, That the above named Sieron, at the suit of Josabel L. Read, lot _6, O. P. No. Liberty. Harry Polis et ux to Wm. L. Doyle et Ditto—to Wm. E. Phebus et ux. Plaintiff has filed in the office of the et al. Mike Stuper .et ux to- Genevieve Jan- ux, pt. lot 57, Northwest add. D.tto—to Percy Warrick et ux. Clerk of said CoUrt her complaint STEPHEN J. MOLNAR, JR., czak, lot 4, Wm. A. Noland's add. a Wm. P. Dayhuff et ux to Cornelius O. September 21 against said Defendant in the above Sheriff pf St. Joseph County, Ind. Harry A. Edris et ux to David B. Brqfwn et ux, lot 194, Geyer's 4th. State Bk. of Whiting to Coquillard cause together with a proper affidavit Helen N. Sibley, Deputy. 9:29—10:6-13 Pulley et-ux, lot 98, Edris 1st add to Chas. F. Ludwig to Leroy Clemans et that said Defendant is a non-resident Rlty. Corp. of the State of Indiana. Mish. ux, pt. sec. 9, twp; 37 R 4 E. Marie Dye to John F. Solmos et ux. EX 6139 SHERIFF'S SALE Wm. F. Klockow to Harvey R. Kloc­ Jos. L. Winstead et ux to Edw Smet . Wm. J. Walsh, Recorder to James F. Said defendant is hereby notified By virtue of Execution to me direct­ kow et ux, lot 18, pt. 19, Jacob Miller. et ox, lot 48, Roanoke Hts. Gri-hves. that said cause will stand for trial on ed from the Clerk's Office of the St. Wm. E. Geminder et ux to Alvin E- Eli C. Gak et ux to DeVon Waw ct September 22 the 27th day of November, 1944, of said Joseph Circuit Court, of St. Joseph Brocks, et ux, pt. sec. 22, twp. 38 R 2 E. ux, lot adj. 195, O.P. Walkerton. Lincoln Nat'l Life to F. Earl Hotter Court commencing at the City of South County, Indiana, I will expose to Pub­ Ralph E. Correll et ux to Elroy R. Tf-eresa Skarich to Michael Orosz, pt. et ux. Bend, on which day said defendant is lic Sale on Saturday the 21st day ot Foglesong et ux, lot 59, Colburn Acres. lot 9, Raff's 1st. Allen Hayes to Wm. C. Hofer et ux. required to appear to said action. October A. D., 1944, between the hours Mary Jane Gaff et al to Tom B. Tay­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. of ten o'clock A. M., and four o'clock MORTGAGES HOLC to Ignatius Kruszewski. P. M., of said day, at the door of the lor et ux, lot 30, Roseland Woods. HOLC to Margaret D. Germain. By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. September 19 Joseph V. Pawlowski, Court House, in the City of South Gilbert E. Vanderhoof efc ux to Alva HOLC to Catherine C. Casey. Bend, St. Joseph County, Indiana, the A. Farquer, pt. lot 4 and 5, a sub of Donald N. Turley et al to So. Bend HOLC to Bernice Paidle et al. Attorney for Plaintiff. 9:29—10:6-13 Fed. Sav., lot 31, Whitcomb & Keller'- rents and profits for a term not ex­ Denniston & Fellows. HOLC to Emery Pillan. ceeding seven years, of the following Ira M. Spurlock. et ux to Melvin aid. Ave. add. $5,000. HOLC to" Michael Nemeth et ux. NON-RESIDENT NOTICE Belleville Inv. Co. to Amer. Tr. Co., Cause No. 69858 deacribed Real Estate situate in St. Jo­ Roush et ux, pt. sec. 7, twp. 38 R _ __• HOLC to Burry Queer.' seph County, State of Indiana, to-wit: Stanley R. Perkins -*kjt ux to Francis lot K, Belleville 4th Unit. $4,900. Morris Plan Co. to Harry Zeigler. STATE OF INDIANA W. Loganet ux, lot 4, pt lot 2 on 2nd St. Howard E. Zerbe et ux to Gertrude Industrial Sav. & Loan to Basil COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: Sarah C. Ward to Stella Amsbaugh, Deacon, lot 51, Leer's 1st. $1,500. Downer. In the St. Joseph Circuit Court The Southwest Quarter of the • pt. sec. 18, twp. 37 R 4 E. Chas. H. Deck et ux to First Fed. Sav Ditto—to Albert Ross et ux. September Term, 1944. Northwest Quarter of Section 22, Edw. A. Everett et ux to James G. & Loan, lot 328, Berner Grove. $3,200. Township 36 North, Range 1 East, Ditto—to Milo D. Misher. excepting therefrom the right of Kalafat et UX,- lot 21, Studebaker's re­ Ralph R. Williams et ux to First Fed. Natl Bk. & Tr. Co. to Wm. H. Boger. MADLYN D. STEWART plat. Sav. & Loan, lot 86, Martin L. Wenger's vs. way of the Chicago, Indiana and Amer. Tr. Co. to Edw. Everett. Southern Railroad; Wayne H. Swygart et ux to Lewis E. 4th. $1,800. HOLC to Walter Geabler et ux. BRADLEY STEWART Phillips et ux, pt. sec. 35, twp. 38 R 1 ]_' Milo D. Bowers et ux to Community Lillian Ludwig to Elmer Goff et ux. Stephen J. Molnar, Jr. Sheriff to State Bk., pt. sec. 17, twp. 36 R 1 E. Conservative Ins. Co. to Elmer Lev­ Be It Known, That the above named Also the Northeast Quarter of the Agnes Szuch, lot 102, Lincoln Manor. $2,700. # Plaintiff has filed in the office of the Southwest Quarter of Section 22, ering. Township 36 North, Range 1 East; Univer. of Notre Dame DuLac to Edw. J. Belledin et ux to Indus. Sav. Morris Plan Co to Anthony Stacn- C>;rk of said Court her complaint Emil Martin, lot" 129 blk F. & Loan, pt. sec. 29, twp. 37 R 2 E. $2000. owiak. against said Defendant in the above So. Bend Highland Cem. to Victor Frank E. Brinson et ux to Garden Ditto—to Thomas Sassaman. cause together with a proper affidavit Also the Northwest Quarter of the Van Lake et ux, 2 crypts. Homes Inc., lot 23, and D, Jacob Leer's Ditto—to Douglas Thornton. that said Defendant is a non-resident Southeast Quarter of the South­ No. Liberty i-mrying uround to Mel- Survey. $550. of the State of Indiana. west Quarter of Section 22, Town­ Ditto—to John Moore. , ship 36 North, Range 1 East, the von Roush et ux, see record. Ralph E. Banes et ux to Mish. Bldg. & Ditto—to Friedolph Nelson. Said defendant is hereby notified Loan, pt. sec. 18, twp. 37 R 4 E. : 2,125. that said cause will stand for trial on southern boundary thereof^ being State of Ind. io E_w. Divine et ux, Ditto—to Mike Horvath. the Stofer Ditch. pt. sec. 16, twp. 35 R 1 E. Lloyd F. Gage to Mish. Bldg. & Loan, Ditto—to Gary Stites. the 27th day of November, 1944, of said Maxine Connell et al to Coral H. pt. lot 6 and 8, Hill St., O. P. St. Jos. Ditto—to Vernon Bice. Court commencing at the City of South Segag et al, pt. lot 261, S. L. Cottrell 1st. Iron Wks. $3,875. Ditto—to Eli D'Haeze. Bend, on which day said defendant is And on failure to realize the full September 22 Marshall Potts et ux to Mish. Bldg. required to appear to said action. amount of judgment, interest and costs Ditto—to Irene Boswell. thereon, I will expose to Public Sale, Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. to Ford & Loan, nt. lot 6, Race St., add., plat Wm. J. Walsh, Recorder to Albert FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. S. Hausman et ux, lot 537, BelleVt--«*_d. St. Jos. Iron Wks. $1,824.20. By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. at the same time and place, to the Vivian J. Jones et ux to Mish. Bldg. Jaquith. George Farage, highest bidder, the fee simple of said Christine Parr, gdn*. of John Klaer to State of Ind. to Jennie Wiemer. Halhe M. Hering, int. lot 21, Broad­ & Loan, pt. sec. 33, twp. 38 R 4 E. Attorney for Plaintiff. 9:29—10:6-13 real estate. .1,725.71. September 1.3 Taken as the property of George way Hts. Martin M- Popejoy to Ernest A. H. Ru_sell Stapp et ux to Geo. C. Mues­ Portage Rlty Corp. to Lincoln Nat'? NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT Bickel, deceased, at the suit of Bernice _____ Ins., lot 72, town of Wilmette Pk. Schlutt et ux. Estate No. 1754 E. Bickel. sel, lot 578 Gillmer Pk. Fed. Farm Mtg. Corp to Louis Scholz. Wm. A. Bertsch, tr. to William G. $5,000. Estate of Susan Schrock. STEPHEN J. MOLNAR, JR., Portage Rlty Corp. to Lincoln Nat'l Ditto—to Arthur F. Abigt. By direction of American Trust Com­ Sheriff of St. Joseph County, Ind. Schneider et ux, lot 28, Colonial Gar. Fed. Land Bk. of Louisville to Elton Helen N. Sibley, Deputy. 9:29—10:6-13 El___.bcth Fredrickson to Wm. A. Life Ins., lot 91, town of Wilmette Pk. pany, Executor of the Estate of Susan $5 000. P. Schafer. Schrock, late of St. Joseph county, in Bertsch, tr., lot 28, Colonial Gardens. OS 4784 SHERIFF'S SALE John G. Pence et ux to Clifford L. Portage Rlty Corp. to Lincoln Nat'l the State of Indiana, deceased. Life Ins., lot 92, town of Wilmette Pk. NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs By virtue of an Order of Sale tc me Fidler et ux, lot 2, Portage Pk. directed from the Clerk's Office of the Jos. Klaer et al to Hallie M. Herring, $5,-00.- legatees and devisees of the said dece­ Portage Rlty. Corp. to Lincoln Nat'l dent, and all other persons intereste. St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2, of St. int. lot 21, Broadway Hts. GOOD MORNING, JUDGE! Joseph County, Indiana, I will expose Serena D. Currey to Serena D. Cur­ Life Ins., lot 76, town of Wilmette Pk. in the said estate, that said Executoi $5,000. has filed in this court its account to Public Sale on Saturday the 21st day rey, lot 408, Berner Grove 3rd and 10 of October A. D., 1944, between the and EVa 9 Lawrence & Battell. Portage Rlty. Com. to Lincoln Nat'l CITY COURT and vouchers for the final set­ Life Ins., lot 93, town of Wilmette Pk. TOTAL CASES DISPOSED OF IN tlement of said estate, and they are hours of ten o'clock a. m., and four Pearl S. Canaan et al to Serena D. CITY COURT IN FIRST EIGHT hereby required to be and appear in o'clock p. m., of said day, at the door Currey, lot 10, pt. EV_ 9, blk 65, Law­ $5,000. of the Court House, in the city, of South rence & Battell's. Portage Rlty. Corp. to Lincoln Nat'! MONTHS ENDING AUGUST 1944, 947 said court on the 23rd day of Octo-< Life Ins., lot 25, Forest Pk. 1st. $4,800. ber, 1944, when thte same will be heart Bend, St. Joseph County, Indiana, the Chas. W. Canaan et ux to Serena D. and make proof of theii>heirship, o: rents and profits for a term not exceed­ Currey, lot 4.8 Berner Grove 3rd. •Portage Rlty. Corp. to Lincoln Nat'l September 20 ing seven years, of the following de­ Life Ins., lot 50, Forest Pk. 2nd. '.24,800. Leroy C. King, A&B, $50 &c. claini to any part of said estate, and Whitcomb & Keller et ux to Jos. show cause if there be, why said ac­ scribed Real Estate situate in St. Joseph Skowronski, lots 79, 80, 81, 82, West- Portage Rltv. Corp. to Lincoln Nat'l Alfred Rankin, drunk. $5 &c. County, State of Indiana, to-wit: Life Ins.. lot 26, Forest Pk. 1st. r*4.300. count and vouchers should not be field. "» Verne Jones, running red light $5 &c. approved. ^JTirst Baptist Church of Sumnerville Portage Rlty. Corp. to Lincoln Nat'l Harold Fish, speeding, $5 &c. Lot Numbered One Hundred Forty-1 to John A. Dziubinski et ux, lot 261, Life Ins., lot 24, Forest Pk. 1st. $4,800. Wilbur Reed, drunk, $1 &c. WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal ';f the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1 four in Walnut Third Addition to Homeland. Portage Rlty. Corp. to Lincoln Nat'l Robt. McKeen, drunk, $5. the City of South Bend, Indiana. Life Ins., lot 23, Forest Pk. 1st. $4,800. Dave Putz, drunk, $1 &c. at South Bend, Indiana, 25th day of N_Hl Bk. & Tr. Go. to Power Light September, 1944. 2nd ae'd. Co., pt. lot 258, Sam'l L. Cot­ Portage Rlty. Corp. to Lincoln Natl September 21 Lots numbered One Hundred Sev­ Life Ins., lot 9, Forest Pk. 1st. r;4-00. Monroe Carpenter, driving with im­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER. Clerk trell's 1st. JOHN E. HANLEY. Deputy. enty-five (175) and One Hundred Mary J. Hepler to Elva R. Robinson Portage Rltv. Corp. to Lincoln Nat'l proper plates, $5. Seventy-six (176) East parts begin­ et ux, lots 322, 323, 324, Morningside. Life Ins., lot 22, town of Wilmette Pk. Edna Ehninger, failure to stop for Jones, Obenchain, and Butler, Attorneys for Estate. 9:29; 10:6 ning on South line of Calvert Ford S. Hausman et ux to James J. $5 400. jS „ stop sign, $1 &c. Street 283.65 Feet West of West Portage Rltv. Corp. to Lincoln Nat" September 22 Vasa et ux, lot 537, Belleville 3rd. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION line of Nash Street, then West 54.35 Betty S. Spiro to First Bk. & Tr. Co. Life Ins.,dot 8, Forest Pk. 1st. $4,800. Rollie^H. Brackett, drunk, $1 &c. feet, then South 106.07 feet then tr.. pt. lot 29, O.P. Bellevi'le Inv. Co. to American Tr. Mike Krznaric, molesting women in • Estate No. 3416 East 54.35 feet then North 106.07 - Minnie P. Smith et al to Violet J. Co., lot J. Belleville 4th Unit. J4.900. theater, $5 & c; 10 days co. jail. NOTICE is hereby g:ven that the un­ feet to beginning, in Walnut Third ' Olmstead, lot 196, Gillmer Pk. • Belleville Inv. Co. to American Tr. Albert Wojciechowski, drunk, $5 &c. dersigned has been appointed by the Addition to the City of South Bend. Co., lot L, Belleville 4th Unit $4,300. Kenneth Kennaga, reckless dr., $25 Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ Violet J. Olmstead to Henry F. Smith seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ et ux, lot 196, Gillmer ?k. September 20 &c; no driv. lie, $2 &c. James Warren, A&B, $1 &c, 10 days istrator of the Estate of Antoniette And on failure to realize the full Margaret A. Stremme et al to Verne M_rtin M. Zyto to Sobieski Fed flav. Goralski, late of St. Joseph county, amount of judgment, interest and costs C. Bice et al, lot 211, Portage Gardens. & Loan lot 91, O. P. Lowell. ^2 ".00. September 23 thereon, I will expose to Public Sale, Paul P. Ratkowskl et ux to Western Jessie Aldrich, drunk, $1 &c; public deceased. Catherine Ort to Horace Wells et ux, Said Estate is suboosed to be solvent. at the same time and place, to. the lot 29, and 2.A, Portage Pk. St-te Bk., lot 88, Portage Pk. -13,300. Indecency, $5. highest bidder, the fee simple of said Bert Ackles et ux to First Fed. Sav. Don D_wspn, no driv. lie, $1; run­ Frank C. Goralski, Administrator. Donald J. Ccok et ux to Arthur R. September 25th, 1944. real * state. Jones et ux, lot 43, blk 8, BereJif. Est,. 8c Loan, l^t 530, Milburn PL $1,080. ning r°d light, $5. Taken as the property of Wa.nut Lee S. M"ck et ux to Studebaker co. jail. Leon E. Kowalski, St. Jcs. Bk. & Tr. Co. to Wm. D. Attorney for Estate. 9:29; 10:6-13 Realty Corporation, at the suit of First Lanning et ux, pt. sec. 30, twp. 38R2E. Emp. F. C. (J., pt. sec. 34, twp. 36 R 2 E. Moses Stallings, drunk, $5. Roy Flohr, drunk, $2 &c. Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee Lawrence Siders et ux to Edw. Cab­ and pt. sec. 35. $1,0-0. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION under Trust of Sarah L. Kirby, de­ anaw et ux, lot 3, H. V. and A. H. Meto E. Horner ^t ux to ^Studebaker Mary Eli, drunk, $5. Hugh Barcus, drunk, $1 &c. Estate No. 8412 ceased, et al. __ Compton's 1st. 1'i^r Kmp. F. C. U.. lots 250 and 280, Portage NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ .STEPHEN J. MOLNAR. JR., Colpaert Rlty. Corp. to Willie Woods Gar. ens. $1,563.64. Ben Sherwood, drunk, $1 &c. Russell Flatt, crunk driving, $75 &c; dersigned has been appointed by the Sheriff of St. Joseph County, Ind. et ux, lot 192, LaSalle Pk. Conner L. Harris et ux to Morris Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo- Helen N. Sibley, Deputy. 3*29—10:6-13 Mae Wolf to Mary E. Herzog, parcel Plan Co., lot 16, Strong's 3d. $660. oper. lie. rev. 90 days. *P_

Page Twelve THE MIRROR

port of sale and report approved and 68416 Rodgers v Rodgers. Hrg. 69550 Johnson v Johnson. Cause 69822 Blanche R. Crill v Bessie W. deed approved and ordered delivered. Sept. 29. dismissed. Wolff et al, complt., Hubbard, Ser>t.__L 69705 Stickley v Stickley. Deft, ap­ 67848 Fetters v Fetters. Plf. files 67688 Spevak v Davis. Cause dis­ 69823 Helen E. Jensen v Martin %,. prs by Bertsch. ans. to deft's x-complt. missed. Jensen, sep. from bed and board, Sept. 688841 Whitaker. Hrg. Sept. 29. 62075- O'Hara v Kovatch. Cause con- 69437 Knight v Knight. Deft, to pay 21. CIRCUIT COURT 69832 McHenry. Deft, to pay for t d to May 1945 term of court. (On Page Thirteen) 69826 Mary Louise Alexander v Da­ support of plf. and minor child sum of 68817 Zimmer. Deft, files ver. mo. vid Alexander, Jr., divorce, Weis­ Monday, September 18 $25 per wk beg. Sept. 27 and further to strike plf.'s complt. from docket. berger, Sept. 21. This record in the following cases. sum of $50 for plf.'s atty. fees, to be 696__> Doyle v Lacey. Deft, files mo. 69827 Frances H. Flynn v Jos. F. Cause retained on docket: paid $25 in 30, $25 in 60 days. to make complt. mor specific. Flynn, sep. maint., Weisberger, Sept.21. - 65391 Wolf et ux v Westerhouse. 69427 Cossell v Cossell. Hrg. Sept. 68776 Hall. Deft, to pay for sup­ 69828 Wilbur C. Benson v Nona N. •'67334 Studebaker Emp. F. C. U. V 29. port of minor children sum of $15 per' Benson, divorce, Sands, Sept. 21. Fort©!* ct si 69651 Chapin, admr. v St. Jos. Hosp. wk. beg. Sept. 30 untiT further order. CIRCUIT COURT 69829 Emerspn R. Pearigen v Birdie -67335 Studebaker Emp. F. C. U. v Hrg. Oct. 2. 18923 DeBaets. Pet'ners. now file NEW CIVIL CASES FILED IN CIR­ R. Pearigen, divorce, Sands, Sept. 21. Ipe. Crim 8678 State v Manuel. Carter reference to surveyor and viewers*. CUIT COURT IN FIRST EIGHT 69-30 Paul Fannin v Margaret Fan­ 67827 Studebaker Emp. F. C. U. apprs. with Hagerty for deft. 68275 Ben Feferman Motor Sales MONTHS ENDING AUGUST 1944, 649. nin, divorce, E. O. Scheer, Sept. 21. Rowan P*_- 68727 Fleck v Fleck. Deft, to 3pay Corp. v Martin. Sub. tr. fdg. for plf. 68832 M^lah M. McHenry v Garland 67774 Ball-Band Fed. Cr. Union for plf.'s atty.. tees $50, to he paid $25 68842 Kubiak v Rozplochowski et al. D. McHenry, divorce, Davis, Sept. 22. in 30, $25 in 60 days. 69807 Rose Huitberg v Ellis Hutt- 69834 In the matter of epilepsy of Pfiffer et al. Defts. appr. by Piser. berg, divorce, H. T. Miller, Sept. 19. 67777 Ball-Band Fed. Cr. Union v 69745 Reeser v Reeser. Deft, to pay 68295 Holcomb et ux v Taylor et al. Clebom Engle, Sept. 22. for plf.'s atty. fees sum of $50, $25 in 69808 Geneva E. Gugle v~Stacey __. 69836 Frances McAvoy v Stanley Reba et al. Sub. tr, and fdg. for plfs. as perform. Gugle, divorce, H. T. Miller, Sept. 19. 67778 Ball-Band Fed. Cr. Union V 30, $25 in 60 days. 69781 Herman v Herman. Deft, to McAvoy, divorce, Schock, Sept. 22. 69701 Whetstone v Whetstone. Plf. to 6_808 Isabel Hayes v Floyd Hayes, 6S837 Frank E. Yoder v Maurice Rupchock. ,pay for support of minor daildren sum divorce, Taylor, Sept. 19. 67779 Ball Band Fed. Cr. Union v pay for deft's atty. fees sum of $50, $25 of $22 pei* wk. beg. Soot. 30 and fur­ Kercftart, replevin and for damages, Murray. in 30, $25 in 60 days; hrg. Sept. 29. ther sum of $75 for plf.'s aty. fees* to 68811 Marion M. Speheger v John L. Lewis, Sept. 22. 62954 Motor Vehicle Casualty Co. v 69257 Burris v Burris. Div. grntd. be paid $40 in 30, $35 in 60 days. Speheger, divorce, Sands, Sept. 19. 69838 Lena E. Morreil v Forrest E. •Claflin etc. 6S8-6 McAvoy v McAvoy. Hrg. Oct. 69753 Paskell v Paskell. Cause dis­ 68812 Jos. West v Sherline West, di­ Morrell, divorce, H. T. Miller, SeDt. 22. 67423 State Farm Fire Ins. Co. v 2. missed. vorce, Paden, Sept. 19. 688-8 Chas. Bond v Willie Bond, di­ Kazmirski. 69288 Danculovich v Danculovich. 69777 Hushower. Deft, to pay for 69816 Helen Machalski v Edw. Ma- vorce, Paden, Sept. 22. 67432 Commonwealth Loan Co. Inc. Deft, ordered attached. support of plf. and minor children sum chalski, divorce, Kowalski, Sept. 19. 69845 Prairie State Bk. of Oak Park, v Burkhart. 683_4 Clayton v Clayton. Deft, to of $15 per wk. beg. Sept. 30 and further 69817 Catherine Elcess v John H. 111. etc. v Wm. G. Ponader et al, com­ ^7254 Industrial Training Inst, v Gall. pay^for support of plf. during pend­ sum of $50 for plf.'s atty. tees, to be Elcess, divorce, Montgomery & Mont­ plt., G&K, Sept. 23. 61431 Findy v Goldstein. ency sum oi $10 per wk beg. Sept. _•_ paid $25 in 30, $25 in 60 days. gomery, Sept. 20. 69847 Alice E. Gibson v Lucius H. Wednesday, September 29 until further order and further sum 67704 Shipman v Grove. Cause re­ 69818 Goldie May Quick v Benja­ Gibson, divorce, Pfaff. of $50 for plf.'s atty. fees, to be paid min H. Quick, divorce, Buntman, Sept. 68272 Alleged epilepsy of Edith M. tained on docket. 20. 69849 Jane O'Kelly v Chas. W. Seifert. Hrg. Oct. 1. $25 in 30, $25 in 60 days. 69722 Busick. Deft, apprs. by Tay­ O'Kelly, divorce, Buntman, Sept. 25. 69821 Dawson v Dawson. Hrg. 69829 Pearigen v Pearigen. Hrg. lor. 69819 Ray D. Brown v Dorothy M. 69850 Rene Lameire v -Edna La- Sept. 28. Nov. 22. 69800 Crawford v Crawford. Amend­ Brown, divorce, Farage, Sept. 20. metre, dUvorce, Pawlowski, Sept. _5» Thursday, September 21 69139 Price v Price. Hrg. Sept. 25. ed complt. filed. 69820 Alice F. Stoner v Jacob E. 69851 Calvin Shirley v Resells Sfttt- 69753 Paskell. Prob. Officer Astone Stoner, divorce, Allen & Allen, Sept. 69823 Jensen v Jensen. Hrg. Sept. 28. 68721 Banacka v Banacka. Deft, 20, ley, divorce, Paden, Sept. 25. 66835 Kinch et al v Bishop. Hrg. files report in regard to employment files ans and x-complt. 69855 La Verna I. Grimm v Fredk. J. and wages of deft. 69821 Pauline E. Dawson v Clarence Sept. 21 69847 Gibson v Gibson. Hrg. Oct. 2. A. Dawson, sep. maint., E. O. Scheer, Gftmm, divorce, Lewis,. Sept. 25. 69826 Alexander. Hrg. Oct. 2. 69306 Jefferson v Jefferson. Div. gtd. Sept. 20. 69757 Underwood v Underwood. 68523 Hawkey et al. Hrg. Oct. 2. 68776 Craft. Hrg. Nov. 21. TO ESTABLISH BIRTH _Deft. apprs. by Lechner. 66665 Huff v Huff. Hrg. Sept. 26. PETITIONS TO ESTABLISH TIME 69786 Helm v Helm. Hrg. Sept. 18. 69294 Hammond v Hammond. Divorce AND PLACE OF BIRTHS FILED IN 698.0 Crawford V Crawford. Hrg. granted. FIRST EIGHT MONTHS ENDING •Oct. 2. 69422 Disbrow v Disbrow. Divorce AUGUST 1944, 383. 69683 Graham v Graham. Deft, to granted. "pay for support of plf. sum of $10 per 68984 Johnson v Johnson. .Div. grtd. wk.- beg. Sept. 23 and sum of $50- for 69406 Nellans v Nellans. Div. grtd. No. 3877 James E. Phillips. plf. s attorney fees to be paid $25 67372 Bradfield v Bradfield. Deft. No. 3878 Add Lee Turner. in 30, $25 in 60 days. Virgil L. Bradfield awarded custody of No. 3879 Juliana D. Novotny. 65218 Max Buntman—Earl Case v Mid- No. 3880 Samuel Johnson. 69738 Culver v Culver. Deft, to pay minor child Norman; support order SUPERIOR COURT NO. 2 1 for support of minor children sum of modified and deft, to pay for support Cases to be ftruck from the docket. City Equipment Cpn. No. 3881 Robert Lee Thorpe. $12 per wk. beg. Sept. 23 and sum of of minor child Beverly sum of $7.50 on October 14, 1944 in accordance with 65283 Leon Kowalski — Irene Was v No. 3882 Chas. B. Miils. $50 for plf.'s atty. fees to be paid $25 per wk, beg. Sept. 23 until further or­ Rule XII: Casimer Was. in 30, $25 in 60 days. der. SUPERIOR COURT NO. 1 6S3S7 Arnold *ejc— Martha M Wolter et NEW CIVIL CASES FILED IN SU­ 69493 Harwood v Harwood. Hrg. 68241 Kambol v Kambol. Div. grntd. 26760 SO&O — Christine Rosenberger al v Merchants Nat'l Bank et al. Sept. 28. 68029 Elliott V Rammer. Plf. asks et ai v Ulyn Vida et al. 65376 T M Talcott Jr—Walter E Heller PERIOR COURT JNFO. 1 IN FIRST 8 69184 Ausenbaugh v Ausenbaugh. leave to file amended complt.; leave 43362 Farabaugh & P — Louts C. Chap­ & Co v Harry P Bolles. MONTHS ENDING AUGUST 1944, 319. Hrg. Sept. 28. granted. leau, Tr v Arthur M Rivard. 65449 Geo Sands—John L Witter v Min-*- 67595 Allen v Allen. Hrg. Sept. 29. 69311 Mead v Mead. Div. grntd. 46054 Farabaugh & P — Andrew S nie F Witter. ***> 69806 Edw. Scheyving et al v Freeda 69773 Kline v Kline. Deft, to pay 67463 Warwick v Warwick. Prob. DommicK et al v Floyd Walter. 65537 C L DuComb—Chester L DuComb Shapiro, damages, VJ&G, Sept. 19. for support of minor children sum of Officer Astone files report showing that 46142 Farabaugh & P—So Bend- Lum­ Excr v Royal V Rhymer et al. 69810 Gladys Jannasch v Roy Jan*- $12 per wk. beg. Sept. 23 and sum of deft, has not made any payment on ct. ber CO v Earl P McKee. 65562 Geo Saancs—Lelia LaRocco v An­ nasch, Jr., divorce, Wypiszynski, Sept. S50 tor plf.'s atty. fees to be paid $25 order since Aug. 4, 1944, on which date 46358 A Olczak — John _*•_ Buazban Jnc thony LaRocco. 19. in 30, $25* in 60 days. he voluntarily quit his job. v Thomas Webb et al. 65716 Max Buntman — Cesta Eubank v 69814 Raymond J. Claudon v Cora N. 69792 McClanahan v Jodon. Deft, Monday, September 25 46792 F&P — State of Indiana, ex rel v Austin Eubank. Claudon, divorce, Buntman, Sept. 19. apprs. by Lamberson. Crim. 88__- State v Downes. Cause City of South Bend et al. 65767 H & Johnson—Emanuel T Steig- 69815 In the matter of the alleged 69691 Segal v Segal. Same record. struck out for term. 46953 T M Talcott — H S Eckels & Co meyer v Prusel S. Clark. insanity of Willis M. Sweet, Sept. 19.' Crim 8619 State v Mit-he-l. Deft, Crim 8675 State v Swttalski. Deft, v Earl C Hollis. 65785 Grant Lewis — Morris Plan Co v 69824 Agnes M. Phillips v Steve ordered released on condition he pay apprs, by Hogan, waives arraignment, 47263 A C & D — So Bend Accept Cpn Harold R Hildebrand et al. l^gss Phillips, complt. for divorce, JO&B", fine and costs herein assessed on or and pleads not guilty. v Duncan J. Campbell et al. 66021 Harry Taylor—Lillian Mikolajew- Sept. 2a. before Sept. 22. Crim 8676 State v Paquuin. Hrg. on 47988 T M Talcott Jr — Sentinel Prtg ski v Ollie Mjkolajewski. 69831 Insanity of Melva Sweet. Crim 8677 State v Eutsey. Deft, re­ arraignment cont'd. Co v Earl C Hollis. 66275 J V Wypiszynski — Lawrence R 69833 Raymond J. Oppelt, father ef turned to f-ustodv of sheriff. Crim 8677 State v Eutsey. Deft, 48789 J W Niemiec — Clarence T Sand- Allen v Margaret E Allen. Carol A. Oppelt, deceased v Earl E. Crim 8652 Slate v Sidefs. Deft, pleads not guilty. berg v Frank Koutney. 6644_TEdw Metcalf—Edith M McGraw Cane and American Transit Lines, Inc., pleads not guilty. Crim 8673 State v Burt, Jones, Ward. 49698 FP&C — Crane Co v Walter J V Homer N McGraw. a Corp., judgment, Bingham, Sept. 22. Crim 8678 State v Manuel-. Cause Defts. plead not guilty. Braunsdorf et al. 66603 Taylor & Talbot—John D Burke 68843 Andrew J. Kluszczynski V Mary ordered set for trial. Grim 8660 State, v Redding. Plf. 50322 Taylor & Scheer — Elizabeth v Ben Hur Life Assn et al. KlUSZCzynski, divorce, Schock, Sept. 22. Crim 8645 State v Olds. Prob. Dept. waives right of trial by jury. Sorkin V Henry Pijman et al. 66610 Seymour Jansen——Seymour Jan­ 69852 Edra C. Connon v Donald Con­ to make pre-sentence investigation and Crim 8681 State v Budd. Deft. «f_- 50535 T H Talcott Jr—Gunby Co v Al­ sen et al v Alanson M Hurd et al. non, divorce, CMC&B, Sept. 25. report. prs. by Harmon. lan H Willis. 66612 Leo L Cook—Virginia Suddarth 68853 Hertha DeBruyne v Raymond 69627 Flynn v I-lyrm. Hrg. Oct. 2. Crim 8674 State v Hancock. Deft. 52290 JO&B — Mary L Robinson v v Ernest E. Suddarth. DeB-uyne, divorce, Doyle, Sept. 25. 69781 Herman V H___n*n*, Hrg. Sept. pleads not guilty. Josephine J R Stewart et- al. 66660 Alfred E Martin—Charles Noel 25. 69421 Williams. Cause transferred to 54999 A J? Scheer — Charles LaRocca v Stedman v Mrs John Louis. • SUPERIOR COURT NO. 2 69820 Stoner v Stoner. Hrg. Sept. 29, Sup. Ct. No. 2. Flora La Rocca. 66712 J O & B—Frank Jozwiak et al v NEW CIVIL CASES FILED IN SU­ Crim 8880 State v Criss. Cause or­ .68669 Lucas. Hrg. Oct. 3. 55240 SO&D — Rose From V Julius Chester C Cielieski. PERIOR COURT NO. % IN FIRST 8 dered set for trial. 69838 Morrell. Hrg. Sept. 28. From. 66724 Olczak & O—Studebaker Emp. F MONTHS ENDING AUGUST 1944, 580. 69781 Segal v Segal. Same record. 69335 Krell. Deft. sep. and sev. files 55291 M Tulchinsky — W G Houser v Cred Union v John Takacs. mo. to strike. Friday, September 22 Eugene Millea. 66745 H & Johnson—Theo Jena, Recr 69813 Gary D. Richert by himself 69587 Hoerstman et al. Sub. on re­ 69778 Zielinski. Hrg. Oct. 6. 55282 J D Pfaff—Winifred F Kollar V v So Bend Highland Cem. Assn. and for and on behalf of all others . Edward J. Wickey. 66783 Chas H Wills—Beatrice Johnson similarly situated v Wm. Wells, Sr. et 55390 AC&D — Unt__t Trust Co, Tr v Arthur Johnson. di, temp. inj. and mandatory inj., v St Jos -Loan & Tr Co et al. 66862 S Weisberger—Helen Irene Clay Sands, Sept. 19. 55679 A F Scheer—Norbelle Shank etc etc v Gearold H Clay. 69825 Exp. in- the matter of the __*» v Ernest Shank. 66923 Olczak & O—Bendix Emp. F Cr sanity of Clebom Engle, Sept. 16. 55929 A F Scheer—Mary Ann Hall v Union v L cmfwyp shrdlu cmfwy 68835 Wm. N. Curnutt v Esther Cur- Marcel Speybrook. 66981 Solomon Segal—Alberta. Howe v nutt, divorce, E. O. Scheer, Sept. __L- 55971 Geo Sands—Henrietta Dfranek v Rollie J Howe. 6S840 Eula L. Coy v Tillman J. Coy, Aloysius Deranek. 67133 Geo San*—Barbara Morrow v divorce, Doyle, Sept. 22. 56402 Chas Davis—Otis L Bullock et al Morris Morrow. 69841 Oliver J. Larimer v Ruth Lari­ v Ernest Bieber et al. 67184 Orie Parker — Mary H Patterson mer, divorce, Van Tilbury, Sept. 22. 56403 Chas Davis—Otis L Bullock et al v Harvey Patterson. 69842 Martin J. Kubiak et al v John v Ernest Bieber et al. 67258 Jos T Pawlowski — Stephen G W. Rozplochowski et al, construe and SUPERIOR COURT No. 1 57184 Edw Olczak—Stanley Nycz v Bert Yakim v The City of So Bend. det. liability under contract, O&O, P. Wroblewski et al. 67297 Geo Sands — Hilda Streuver v Sept. 23. SETTING OF SEPTEMBER 28th 59809 John Lechner—Clayton Beistle v William Streuver. 69844 Stella Cygert v Adam P; Cy­ William A Cramer et al. 67403 Max Buntman — Henrietta Mat­ gert, sep. from bed and board, Chester JURY CASES 58873 John Lechner — Clayton W Beis­ thews, v Peter Matthews. 67433 J O & B—Dora C Dungey v Elt- DuComb, Sept. 25. MONDAY, OCTOBER 2nd: tle V Harold H Felgar. 69846 Victor Maggioli v John Nico­ 68624 Solin v Balaban & Katz et al (Schulman, Barber V H&S) 59874 John D Pfaff—Stanley E Dunn v fon J Dungey. lini, complt., A. Olczak, Sept. 25. 5886 State v Peter Nowatka (Scheer v Schock) Frank A Duncan et al. 67500 John W. Schindler—Ex Parte Last, Will of William O Niles. 69848 Erma Gi Nef_ v Chas. A. Neff, 8646 State v Robert J Loftus (Scheer v Taylor) 60044 John Lechner—Clayton W Beistle divorce, Martin, Sept. 25. 8666 State v Clarence Elliott (Scheer v Schock) V Ray Helmlinger. 67534 Chas H Wills—Hattie Belle Var- nado v Henry Terry Varnado. 69854 Benjamin W. Troxel v Nadine 8667 State v Ralph R Timmons (Scheer v C R Montgomery) 60408 T M Talcott J*-—Chhas H Albers, B. Troxel, divorce, Parker, Sept. 25. 8668 State v William D Ballou (Scheer v Schock) Recr V Steve W v^av-ul *et al. 67536 A L Doyle—Mildred Johnson v 57203 Paquin v Hardt (Sands v H&S) 60765 Max Buntman—Minnie Dunn V Forrest Johnson. 30831 Libby v Lee Bros Trucking Co (AC&D v Humrichouser) Herbert Dunn. 67545 John W Thomas—Edmund Gor­ 68853 Kuhl v Northwestern Transit (Pawloski, G&G v Williams, Krueger) 60874 Yeagley & Y—Marshall Furnace ney V Tillie Gorney. MONDAY, OCTOBER __h: Co v Edith Fisher et al. 67556 Leo Van Tilbury—Pauline A PROBATE MATTERS 66121 Olander vS_ Lathe Works (Special) (FPC&R v D&M, Beamer) 61008 John Lechner — Theresa Kapica Mathews v James A Mathews. v Joseph Matuszak. 67568 Max Buntman—Florence G Pul- ESTATES ADMITTED TO PROBATE - • •• L ' — - - - 61009 John Lfeehner <— Martin ___#-_a len v William F Pullen. IN EIRST EUitLT MONTHS ENDING V Joseph Matuszak. 67589 Oliver A Switzer—Margaret An­ AUGUST 1944, 315. SUPERIOR COURT N©. 2 61097 John Lechn__"-Clayton W Beistle derson v Jack Anderson. V CStfl Nl?e_kins et al. 67585 J V Wypiszynski — Josephine SETTING OF SEPTEMBER 28th 61177 Edw Olczak—-PeJagia Kaniewski, Hawk v John Hawk. Est. No. 8383 Helen Chapin, Ray­ Admx V Stanley Mnichowsk et al. 67588 C W Bingham—Dorothy Picking mond Ch&pin. Bond, $50. Atty. Loomis. COURT CASES 61269 H T Miller—Dorothy Douglas v v Lewis Picking. Est. No. 8384 James A. Lineback. "A" LIST William Mifflin. 67612 Geo Sands—John Lee Davis V Inh. tax only. MONDAY, OCTOBER 2nd: S1305 Gleason & Fedder—FP&C—Lucy Alliene M Davis. __st. No. 8401 Caroline E. Fassnacht, Cr 8570 State v Clubb (Grand Larceny) (Schock) M Queal et alvBC Towle et al. 67625 Edw B Smith—Dorothy Johnson Walter O. Fassnacht, Homer E. Fass­ Cr 8634 State v Howard (Grand Larceny) (Paden) 61451 Max Buntman — Helen Sones V v Haskell E Johnson. nacht, Paul W. Fassnacht. eXCrs. Bond, Cr 8641 State v Nalazek (Sodomy) (Gonas) Verl Sones. 67626 A L Doyte—Alleine Davis v Johh $30,000. Attys. CMC&B. 39763 Falakas v Calef et al (PCC&M—SO&D—Hammerschmidt) 62445 A C & D—Jessie L Boyd etc V L Davis. Est. No. 8402 Mike (Bajic) Baicb, 39764 Falakas v Glaser et al (PCC&M—Buntman—S&A—-SO&D—Bur ch) Robert L Boyd. 67627 A L Doyle—Tressa V Dubois v Edgar A. Duker, admr. Bond, $2,009. 42708 Ind Lbr & Sup Co v Kaniewski et al (PCCM—Sands—Jackson—Romig&c) 62753 F O JeilispB—Margaret E Jordan Clyd* E Dubois. Atty. Jellison. 46871 Klippel, Recr v Colpaert Rlty Cpn et al (PCC&M—AC&D—JOB &c) v Elmer Jordan. 87652 E Spancer Walton—William C Est. No. 8403 Mary E. Rupert, B*s 61921 Kemps v Bronson Realty Co et al (AC&D—SO&D) 63012 Shively & Z — Notre Dame Club Magrane v Richard Fulper et al. sie Nelson, admrx, w. w. a. Bond, $14, 65156 Scrivnor v Scrivnor (Arnold &_—SO&D) etc v Theo A Klosinski et al. 67t>62 J V Wypiszynski — Frances R 500. Atty. Kowalski. 63080 A C & D—Bert Pustay; v Alice Harper v Leroy W Harper. Est. So. 8404 Wm. J. O'Leary, Hen­ TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3rd: , Smith. 67676 Geo Sands—Jean M Gaszewski v rietta O'Leary. Bond, $1,000. Atty.. 66080 Zahoran v Simon (Nyikos—Sands) 63116 A C & D—Walter R Arnold et al Ferdinand J Gaszewski. JO&B. 66497 Skelly Oil Co V Jacobs—Taicsott-^-Weisberger) v Charles Emmons et al. 67679 Harry Taylor — Tillie Gorney v Est. No. 8405 Peter F. Zemalkowski, 66712 Jozwiak v Ciesielski (JO&B—Kopinski—Pawlowski) 6-222 Max Buntman — Ethel Tener v Edmund L Gorney. Chester S. Zemalkowski, admr. Bond, 66866 Burke et al v Grieb et al (Burke—ADG&Z—RaymeSr—JO&B) John Tener. 67709 S Weisberger—Margery Peare V $2,400. Atty. Kopinski. 67986 Jacobs v Dfinski (Weisberger—Sands) 63317 H & Johnson — Clyde Steenburg Daniel Peare. Est. No. 8406 Martha Jane Swygart. 68059 Waftchura v Wanchura (Alien—Sands) v A C Steenburg et al. 6W7 Walter A Rice — Marie Elnora Est. NO. 8407 Jacob Horein, Martin. J. 68206 Rozniarek v Wozniak (Sands—Hammond) 63541 Geo Sands — Golden C Mann v Deck v Charles Huey Deck. Horein, excr. Bond, $7,000. Attys. 68228 Long v Long (Niemlee—C V DuComb) Bendix Aviation Cpn. 67728 J. Clifford Potts—Marie B Ris­ Davis & Schaefer. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4th: &^ 63837 Leo VanTilbury—Trella E Karnes ner v Green W Risner. Est. No. 840!. John Spagnolo, Jr. 68279 Hamilton v Stemm (Gonas—Olczak) v RoLey A Karnes. 67742 J V Wypiszynski—Marie Barnes Est. No. 8409 Nathaniel G. Eartyi 68478 Lonie v Lonie (Feiwell—E Scheer) 64256 Olczak & O—Frank E Brown, As­ v Edward J Barnes. Lola S. Metzger, admrx. Bond, $3,000. 68589 Bendix &c Union v Kronewitter et al (Olczal.—Schulman) signee v Union Tp School Bd et al 67766 F O Jelliso'n—fo Anne Noland v Atty. Sands. *3|SR 68650 Stenotype Co v Ansett et al (Olczak—Kowalski) . 61674 Geo Feldman — Robert Chester Edgar Robert Noland, Est. No. 8410 Wm. Bodine. 68676 Russell v Olczak (Segal—Olczak) Foster v* Hazel A Foster. 67773 Seymour Jansen—Lulu O'Gorman Est. No. 8411 Caroline LaVigne, Rich­ 68879 Bendix &c Union v Verri (Olczak—Allen) 64700 Miller & Crowe—Leila Suit V v Lee Shellenberger. ard Follis, admr. Bond, $1,500. Atty. 68773 Culp v Mounzie et al (Olczak—Walz) Ralph Suit. 67781 Harry Taylor—Howard P Kibs v Dohnalek. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5th: 64883 Jos V Wypiszynski — Ex Parte Calvin Virgil et al. Est. No. 8412 Rachel J. Cover, Glen 68783 Fretz v Fretz (Weisberger—A E Martin) Reuben Schafer etc v Indiana 67783 H T Miller — Dorothy Smith V A. Cover, excr. Bond, $100. Atty. 6.911 Knoblock v Miller (Gonas—Frank) K%__B DeLuxe Cab Co. Ralph Smith. Walz. §8915 Crofoot et al v Martin et al (ADG&Z— ) 64923 T M T&lcott Jr—The Modern Fi­ 67794 Jos E Talbot Jr—Herbert Arnold Est. No. 8413 Lucy Jane Bosworth, 69010 Studebaker &c Union v Hale et al (Olczak—Sands) nance Co v Ralph E Camere__. v Irene Arnold. John G. Kimtz, admr. Bond, $7,000. 69080 Bendix &c Union v Derrich et al (Olczak—Schulman) . 64965 Seymour Jansen—Thelma F Dyk- 87880 F O Jellison—Noah Delbert Ac­ Atty. SO&D. 69808 Redman v Redman (JO&B—Schulman) aOff v Wm Dykhoff. kles v LaRue Ackles. Est. No. 8414 F. Moritz Odusch, Jul­ .8570 Dit*%-ian v Mtller (Cook— ) 65158 H & Johnson—Advance Neon 67907 C L DuComb—Peggy J Vaughan ius Oduseh, excr. Bond, $1,600. Atty. Signs Inc v Drewry's Ltd USA. v Raphael T Vaughan. Nyikos.

,,—„—^ _-^:: -•^-•^S^SSSJ- .. 1 • —:-_ ..-,.'- .----j-'g-gV ; ' |g;g'^--'S_*Sa"'~il^S^-i • * ••• **?*»?; SEPTEMBER 29, 1944 Page Thirteei

68307 Mich. Mutual Liab. v Yellow 69281 Benner. Hrg. Sept. 29. (198), One Hundred Ninety-nine cause if there be, why said account and Cab Co. et al. Cause contd over-Sept. 68666 Laffin.. Cause dismissed. (189), Two Hundred (200), Two vouchers should not be approved. term, 1944. Crim 8524 Dispenza. Deft, released Hundred One (201), Two Hundred WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of COURT MINUTES from further prob. Two {202),* Two Hundred Three the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1 at •i .. 68782 Meredith by n. f. v Studebaker Corp. Deft, files mo. to strike out pts. 68732 Provance. Deft, to pay for (203), .Two Hundred Four (204), South Bendv Indiana, 26th day of Sep­ CIRCUIT COURT of complt. plf.'s atty. $75, $40 within 30 days, $35 Two Hundred Five (205), Two Hun­ tember, 194-*. FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. (From Page Twelve) 66961 Zurieh Ins. Co. of N. Y. et al v within 60 days: dred Six (206), Two Hundred Sev­ Neal. Cause retained on docket. 69407 Ansualda. Deft. apprs. by en (207), Two Hundred Eight (208), JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. for pit.'s atty. fees sum of $25 within 69063 Schulman v Gross etc. Cause Johnson & Far_ell of Carrizo Springs, Two Hundred Nine (209), Two Seebirt, Oare and Deahl, 30 days. cont'd over Sept. Term 1944. Texas and files ans. Hundred Ten (210), Two Hundred Atto-i-sys for Estate. 9:29—10:6 Crim Juv 5826 State v Denman. Hrg 68014 Easton v Easton. Pros, atty, to 67996 Jacobs. Deft. Marjorie Drin- Eleven (211), Two Hundred Twelve appr. and defend. ski files ans. (212), Two Hundred Thirteen (213), NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT J 69138 Price v Price. Sep. granted 67161 Southern Pacific Co. v Stude­ 68386 City of SB. It is ordered by Two, Hundred Fourteen (214), Two Estate No. 7608 for 5 years. baker Export Corp. Cause dismissed. the Court that all further proceedings Hundred Fifteen (215), Two Hun­ Estate of Clara I. Milton. Crim Juv 5588 State v Cooper 67284 Bazyk et al v Shalley et al. in connection with the liquidation Of dred Sixteen (216), Two Hundred By direction of The National Bank A Cause dismissed; deft, discharged. Cause retained on docket. the real* est. involved in this action and Seventeen (217), Two Hundred and Trust Company of South Bend, SUPERIOR COURT NO. 1 62499 Stoner v Stoner. Same. the acts of the trustee-in connection Eighteen (218), Two Hundred Nine­ Executor of the Estate of Clara I. Mil­ Est. 8160 Sack. Schedules referred therewith be by the Clerk transferred teen (219), Two Hundred Twenty ton, late of St. Joseph County, in the Monday, September 18 to J. P. Lechner for re-det. of value and sep. docketed as "South Bend Ac­ (220), Two Hundred Twenty-one State of Indiana, deceased. Gdn. 224 Nelson. Gdn. discharged. of est. ceptance Corp. Barrett Law Trust and (221), Two Hundred Twenty-two NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, Est. 8181 Wellington."Pet. granted. Est. 7066 Futter. Admr. files final re­ assign to said trust the number 2376. (222), Two Hundred Twenty-three legatees and devisees of the said dece­ Gdn. 1333 McCauley, Hrg. Oct 13 port. 69387 Whitmer et al. Same. (223), Two Hundred Twenty-four dent, and all other; persons Interested Gdn, 2193 Hull. Gdnship cont'd. '- , Est. 8421 Clark. Harry W. Clark 69388 City of SB. Same. (224), Two Hundred Twenty-five in the said estate, that said Execu­ Est. 489 Cartvr-ght. Dept. of Fin •Qualifies as excr. 69389 Whitmer et al. Same. (225), Two Hundred Twenty-six tor has filed in this court its account. Inst, as state lift, -a*. St. Jos. Ln & Tr Est. 7545 Fetter. J. P. Lechner ap­ 69390 Reat et al. Same. (226), Two Hundred Twenty-seven and vouchers for the final settlement Co., admr. de bonis non files final re- ptd. inh. tax apprs and schedule re­ 69391 Read et al. Same. (227), Two Hundred Twenty-eight of said estate, and they are hereby re­ ' a port. ferred to him. quired to be and appear in said Court I Est. 7969 Rupel. Pet. granted. 68392 Fead et al. Same. (828), Two Hundred Twenty-rune on the 24th day of October, 1944, when Est. -878 Feitz. Sub. on pet. for sale 69393 Read et al. Same. (229), Two Hundred Thirty (230), Est. 8081 Redmond. Pet. granted- of real est.; evidence; pet. granted and the same will be heard and make proof. admr, fines final report. 69394 Read et al. Same. Two Hundred Thirty-one (231), of their heirship, or claim to any part sale of r. e. ordered. 69442 Read et al. Same. Two Hundred Thirty-two (232), in Tuesday, September 19 *^ Gdn. 202 V-inderheyden. Gdn. files of said estate, and show -cause if there Est. 7712 Lehman. Est. finally set­ 69444 Read et al. Same. the Walnut "Ehird Addition to the be, why said account and vouchers final report. 69445 Read et al. Same. City of South Bend. should not be approved. tled and excr. discharged. Est. 7860 Shirley. Report approved 54249 Read et al. Same. Est. 7924 Schafer. Report approved and order entered det. value of est. WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal •$_ and sale confirmed. 68473 Read et al. Same. And on failure to realize the full and fdg. that there is no liability for 69474 Read et al. Same. amount of judgment, interest and costs the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1 at Gdn. 2341 Hofer. Gdn. files proof of jjayt. of inh. tax uoon said est. 68475 Read et al. Same. South Bend, Indiana, 26th day of Sep­ posting notice of private sale of real thereon, I will expose to Public Sale, tember, 1944. est. Est. 7912 Hering. Est. Snally settled 68447 Read et al. Same except sep­ at the same time and place, to the and excrs. discharged. arately docketed as "Citizens Tr. & highest bidder, the fee simple of said FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. •Est.. 7860 Shirley. J. P. Leehner ap­ Est. 7608 Milton. Excr. files final re­ Sav. Bk. Barrett Law Trust" and as­ JOHN-E. HANLEY, Deputy. ptd. inh. tax appraiser and schedule : real estate. Jones, Obenchain and Butler, referred to hi_n. port; interlocutory order. sign to said trust the number 2377. Taken as the property of Walnut Est. 5226 Grimes. Admrx. files final 69448 Read et al. Same. Realty Corporation, at the suit of The Attorneys for Estate. 9:29—10:6 Wednesday, September 20 report. 69160 Chvojcsek etc. et al v Szita et 69449 Read et al. Same. City of South Bend, Indiana. ' NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Est. 8356 Snyder. Report approved 69450 Read et al. Same. STEPHEN J. MOLNAR, JR., al. Defts. ealled and defaulted. and sale confirmed. Estate No. 8423 69034 McNabb v McNabb. Rule to 69451 Read et al. Same. Sheriff et St. Joseph County, Ind. NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ show cause herein discharged. SUPERIOR COURT NO. 2 Helen N. Sibley, Deputy. 9:29—10:6-13 dersigned has been appointed by the 67330 Martz v Martz. Cause retained Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo-y on docket. Monday, September 25 LEGAL NOTICES OS 4788 SHERIFF'S SALE seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ 69830 Exp. pet. etc. Willis M. Sweet, (1st Pay September 1*944 Term) By virtue of an Order of Sale to me istratrix of the Estate of Grace M. 69469 Rigley. Hrg. Sept. 29.. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING directed from the Clerk's Office of the Drs. Carter and Helmen app't to ex- NOTICE is hereby given that the Cole, late of St. Joseph County, de­ • amine and report. 68987 Ley. Cause dismissed. St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1, of St. ceased. 69706 Horvath. Cause dismissed. Common Council of the City of South Joseph County, Indiana, I will expose 69810 Jannasch v Jannasch. Deft, Bend, Indiana, on Monday, October 9th, Said Estate is supposed to be solvent- apprs. by E. O.Scheer. 69554 First Nat'l Bk. of Mish. Cause to Public Sale on Saturday the 21st day Josephine F. Frazier, dismissed. 1944 at 7:30 p. m. in the Council Cham­ of October A. D., 1944, between the 69602 Burk by n. f. v Hill. Sidney bers at the City Hall in South Bend hours of ten o'clock a. m., and four Administratrix. H. Miller of Indpis., Ind., apprs. as co- 69554 First Nat'l Bk. of Mish- Cause will consider at public hearing the fol­ September 27th, 1944. counsel for deft. dismissed. O'clock p. m., of said day, at the door George L. Rulison, 69846 Maggioli. So. Bend Brewing lowing proposed ordinances: of the Court House, in the city of South 69160 Chvojcsek etc. et al v Szita et An orainanee reducing certain items Attorney for Estate. 9:29—10:6-13 al. Nyikos apprs. for defts. Co. ordered to make disclosure on or Bend, St. Joseph County, Indiana, the before Oct. 9. for the year 1944 in the budgets of the rents and profits for a term not exceed­ Thursday, September 21 street department, the Board of Public ing seven years, of the following de­ NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT 69160 Chvojcsek etc. et al v Szita et 69844 Cygert. Hrg. Sept. 29. Estate No. 8068 69784 Toth. Cause dismissed. Works and Safety, and the Police de­ scribed Real Estate situate in St. Joseph al. Deft. Helen Bona files ans. partment of the city of South Bend as County, State of Indiana, to-wit: Estate of Maybelle Rose. 69824 Phillips v Phillips. Hrg. Sept. 66237 Lincoln Loan. Order of execu­ By direction of Lydia R. Andrus, Ad­ tion on credits issued. follows: Budgetary account No. S-ll— 28. Salaries, in the budget of the street de­ ministratrix of the Estate of Maybelle 66573 West Town Elec. & App. Co. The East half (Vz) of the South­ Rose, late of St. Joseph County, in the 64746 Million v Million. Deft, files partment, $300,00; budgetary account east Quarter (VA) of Section No. reply affi. in support of rule to show Sub. tr. fdg. for plf. against deft, in No. K-ll—Salaries in the budget of the State of Indiana, deceased. cause. sum of $748.65 and costs; judgment. Twenty-eight (28), Township No. NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, ^69547 Greer. Deft, apprs. by -S. B- Board, of Public Works and Safety, Thirty-eight (38) North, Range No. .66354 Culp v Hartzer. Atty. Baer $1,000.00; budgetary account No. P-ll— One (1) East, except that part ly­ legatees and devisees of the said dece­ withdraws his apprnce. as atty for deft. JJBller of Indpis. and John D. Pfaff. Salaries in the budget^ of the Police dent, and all other persons, interested 568198 Darnell. James Dulcet files ing South and West of the Indiana . 67560 Million v Million. Complaint department, $500.00; appropriating the and Lake Michigan Railway; in the said estate, that said Administra­ amended. written consent to act as next friend amount of $300,000 from the street and trix has filed in this court her account .69815 Exp. pet. etc Willis M. Sweet. in this case. alley fund of the city of South Bend and vouchers for the final settlement of Hrg. Sept. 22. 68708 Belleville Lbr. & Sup. Co. the budgetary account No. S-251—Re­ The Southeast Quarter (VA) of the said estate, and they are hereby re­ Gdn. 1906 Patton. Gdnship cont'd. Deft. Elmer J. Chamberlain files x- pairs to building and structures in the Northeast Quarter (VA) of Section quired to be and appear in said Court Est. 8356 Snyder. Sub. fdg. for pet'- complt. - oudget of the street department; ap­ No. Twenty-eight (28), Township on the 23rd day of October, 1944, ner and order of sale. 69768 Unster. Deft, apprs. by Loo­ propriating $1,000.00 from the general No. Thirty-eight (38) North, Range when the same will be heard and make Est. 8009 Zeiger. Report approved mis. fund of the city of South Bend, to No. One (1) East; proof of their heirship, or claim to and order entered det. value of est. 69434 Wickham. Deft, apprs. by budgetary account No. H-251-A—Repair any part of said estate, and show and fixing amt. of tax. Rollo Bndurant. Of buildings in the budget of Public Also all that part of the Northeast cause if there be, why said account Friday, September 22 69785 Van Scoyck. Hrg. Sept. 28. Works and Safety; appropriating $500.00 Quarter (VA) of the Northeast and vouchers should not be approved. 69750 Weber v Podemski et al. Deft. r Crim* 8670 State v Easton. Pet de­ from the general fund of the city of Quarter (VA) of Section No. Thirty- WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of Donald. Lord, Sr. apprs. by Huguenard. nied. South Bend to budgetary account No. three (33), that lies North -and East the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South S69697 Dehn v Dehn. Deft, apprs. by . 69677 Kapy. Hrg. Sept. 28. P-333—Tires and tubes in the budget of the right of way of said Rail­ Bend, Indiana, 27th day of September, Farage. 66078 Alward. Hrg. Sept. 39. of the police department; declaring an way in said Township No. Thirty- 1944. ' 38350 Gordon et al v Kekko et al. 68639 Price. Deft, apprs. by Hem­ emergency. eight (38) North, Range No. One FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk, Otto Beyler, Com'r files final report, phling & Nemeth. (1) East, JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. 69487 Cornell v Reed et al. Hrg. •'89455 Robben. Deft, apprs. by H&S. An ordinance reducing the appro­ Lewis W. Hammond, Oct. 9. 69628 Tuesley. Deft, apprs. by Jo­ priation for budgetary account No. Subject, however,, to the easement Attorney for Estate. 9:29—10:6 36846 In the matter of the trust hannes. S-43—Street and alley materials in the of the Indiana & Michigan Electric made and created by Mary E. Kaley on ; 69672 Przybysz. Deft, apprs. by budget of the _-___*«rt department of the Company recorded in Deed Record NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT Buntman and files ans. and x-complt. city of South B_hd; appropriating 286, page 514 of the records in the Oct. 3, 1928, etc. Report approved and $7,500.00 from the street and traffic Estate No. 5226 confirmed and trust cont'd. 69825 Engle. Pet. dismissed. office of the Recorder of St. Joseph Estate of David Prank Grimes. 69780 Hull. Deft, apprs. by Schul­ fund of the city of South Bend to County, Indiana. 68101 Stoll v Kerr et al. Cause dis­ budgetary account No. S-723 — Other By direction of Mary Elizabeth missed. man. Grimes Olson, Administratrix of the '69806 Scheyvong. Deft, apprs. by equipment in the budget of the street And on failure to realize the full Estate of David Frank Grimes, late of 69833 Oppelt v Cave et al. Sub. tr. department of South Bend, Indiana, amount of judgment, interest and costs fdg. and judgment. Schulman. St. Joseph County, in the State of In­ 67205 HOLC. Cause dismissed. - for the uses and purposes of said ac­ thereon, I will expose to Public Sale, diana, deceased. 68937 Smallwood v G. T. W. R. R. 69268 HOLC. Deft. Dorothy L. Eld­ count; declaring an emergency. at the same time and place, to the . Co. PH. files mo. to strike out pts. of NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, redge apprs. by Chapleau. An ordinance transferring $109.21 highest bidder, the fee simple of said legatees, and devisees of the said dece­ j deft.'s ans. 67756 Hickey. Cause dismissed. from the general fund of the city of real estate. dent, and all other persons interested 69815 Exp. pet. etc. of Willis M. 69742 Turney. Both defts. appr. spe­ South Bend to budgetary account No. Taken as the property of Anna Ro- in the said estate, that said Adminis­ Sweet. Commitment to Logansport St. cially by Keating. V-252-r-Repair of equipment in the baszewski, also known as Anna Roba­ tratrix has filed in this court her ac­ Hosp. ordered. 57847 Cairncross. Pet. granted. electrical department of said city; ap­ ska/ Alphonse Cortier and Helen Cor­ count and vouchers for the final setr 68169 Welsh v Welsh- Buntman ap­ 67497 Whitmer. Pet. granted. propriating said sum to the uses of said tier, at the suit of The State of Indi­ tlement of said estate, and they are prs. for deft. «_•*>'- « 6_4T1 City of S. B. Tr. files for au­ budgetary account; declaring an emer­ ana on the Relation of Nicholas A. hereby required to be and appear lt- gency. 69692 Kaman v Kaman. Hrg. Sept. thority to sell sheriff's certificate for Muszer as County Auditor of St. Joseph said Court on the 23rd day of October, •fct 215 Lincoln Manor add. to Heber An ordinance reducing certain bud­ County, Indiana. 1944, when the same will be heard •**•'' 29. and Heber for $600. getary items lor the year 1944 in the - STEPHEN J. MOLNAR, JR., and make proof of their heirship, oaf 69838 Thompson v Thompson. Sub. 69472 Read et al v Alward et al. Tr. budget of the street and traffic depart­ Sheriff of St. Joseph County, Ind. claim to any part of said estate, and tr. fdg. judgment and decree. files pet. to sell sheriff's certificate for ments as follows: Budgetary account Helen N. Sibley, Deputy. 9:28—10:6-13 show cause if there be, why said ac­ 69691 Machowiak v Machowiak. lot m$, LaSalle Pk. add. to Zoie A. No. S-12—Wages in the street depart­ count and vouchers should not be ap­ Deft, to pay for pit's atty. fees. Smith fort $275. ment in the amount of $1,500.00; budge­ OS 4787 SHERIFF'S SALE proved. 69488 Daugherty v Daugherty. Deft, tary account No. T-ll—Salaries in the By virtue of an Order of Sale to me WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of to pay for support of plf. pending trial 69615 Porter. Deft. apprs. by >r Bertsch. budget of the traffic department, $244.; directed from the Clerk's Office of the the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1 at of this cause. 's*rg * 68562 Matthews: Hrg. Sept. 29. budgetary account No. T-12—Wages in St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2, of St. South Bend, Indiana, 26th day of Sep**** 69810 Jannasch. v Jannasch. Deft, to 69678 Crowell. Deft, to pay for sup­ the budget of the traffic department, Joseph County, Indiana, I win expose tember, 1944. pay for plf.'s atty. fees. port of plf. $80 on Sept. 30 and here­ $1,750.00- and budgetary account No. to Public Sale on Saturday the 21st day FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. T-725—Traffic signals in the budget of of October A. D., 1944, between the JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. 69301 McCollum v McCollum. Di­ after weekly payts. of $20 per wk. each the traffic department $9,373.13; appro­ vorce granted. succ. aturday. hours of ten o'clock a. m., and four Clifford V. DuComb, priating the amount of $12,867.13 from o'clock p. m., of said day, at the door Attorney for Estate. 8:29—10:6 69798 Everett v Everett. Hrg. Sept. 69495 Wedel. Deft, apprs. by Sands! the street and traffic fund of the city of the Court House, in the city of South 69758 Brandley. Deft, apprs. by of South Bend, to budgetary account 29. Sands. Bend, St. Joseph. County, Indiana, the NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT 68381 Moore v Moore. Div. grntd. No. T-26—Other contractual services in rents and profits for a term not exceed­ 69191 Trumley. Divorce granted. the budget of the traffic department of Estate No. 7938 67746 Riddle v Riddle. Hrg. Sept. 28. 69719 Davidson. Plf. to pay for deft's ing seven years, of the following de­ Estate of William Blake. 60338 King v King. Rule to show the city of South Bend; declaring an scribed Real Estate situate in St. Joseph By direction of Laurence L. Hall, attv. fees. emergency. County, State of Indiana, to-wit: cause discharged. • 89505 Banaszak. Deft, files mo. to Executor of the Estate of William. Gdn. 151T Gramza et al. Final re­ Set aside and vacate notice to plead. An ordinance reducing the current Blake, late of St. Joseph County, in the port approved; gdn. discharged. 68801 Palmer. Deft., to ans. plf.'s Obligations of services personal, serv Lots numbered One Hundred Six­ State of Indiana, deceased. Est. 7739 Baker. Pet. granted. amended complt. within 10 days. ices contractual, materials, current ty (160), One Hundred Sixty-one NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, Est. 8293 Johnson. J. P. Lechner 67585 Hawk. Cause retained. Charges, budgetary items provided for (161), One Hundred Sixty-two legatees and devisees of the said dece­ apptd. inh. tax appraiser and schedule 65290 Thompson. Rule dismissed. in the 1844 budget of the department of (162), One Hundred Sixty-three dent, and all other persons interested referred to him. 66843 Wells. Deft, ruled to ans. 1st public parks for the civil city of South (163), One Hundred Sixty-four in the said estate, that said Executor Bend, Indiana. (164), One Hundred Sixty-five (165), has filed in this court his account Est. 7912 Hering. Pet. granted. pp of 2nd amended complt. within 10 days. An ordinance appropriating the fol­ One Hundred Sixty-six (166), One and vouchers for the final set­ Est. 7907 Oliphant. Est. settled and 69239 Lochmandy. Divorce granted. lowing amounts from the park main- Hundred Sixty-seven (167), One tlement of said estate, and they are excr. discharged. • . 69840 Coy. Hrg. Sept. 29. tainance fund of the department of Hundred Sixty-eight (168), One hereby required to be and appear in Est. 7155 Weinkauf. Report ap- Est. 8347 Horowitz. Pet. granted. Public Parks of the city of South Bend Hundred Sixty-nine (169), One said Court on the 16th day of October, !£ proved and order entered det. value of Est. 7605 Andrzejewski. Est. closed; the following budgetary items for Hundred Seventy (170), One Hun­ 1944, when the same will be heard and est. and fdg. that there is no liability admr. discharged; sureties on bond re­ emergency purposes: To budgetary dred Seventy-one (171), One Hun­ make proof of their heirship, or claim for pay't of inh. tax thereon. leased. account— dred Seventy-two (172), One Hun­ to any part of said estate, and show Monday, September 25 Est. 8123 Krupa. Admr. files inv. No, ia—temporary employees _$2,300.00 dred Seventy-three (173), and One cause if there be, why said account Crim 8304 State v Malott. Cause con­ and app. of pers. property; approved. No. 26—Medical and ho_pital__ 500.00 Hundred Seventy-four (174), in the and vouchers should not be approved. t'd over Sept. term, 1944. Gdn. 1318 Grueger. Gdnship as to No, 331—Gasoline 100.00 Walnut Third Addition to the City 'WITNESS, the Clerk and the Se_d Crim 8561 State v Lewis. Wyp. ap­ Dorothy Grueger closed; as to Geo. No. 383—Zoo feed 500.00 of South Bend. of the St. Joseph Circuit Court at prs. for deft. a I ) \, , *'!:=' I ' I * South Bend, Indiana, 13th day of Sep­ Grueger, Jr. cont'd. No. 43—Drives and walks 186.00 tember, 1944. Crim 8646 State v Loftus. Deft pleads Est. 8240 Kiril. J. P. Lechner named No. 45—Repair parts and equip­ And on failure to realize the full ,: not guilty to each count of indictment. inh. tax appraiser. ment 200.00 amount of judgment, interest and costs FRANK J. BRUGGNER, derlfe. Crim 8653 State v Fallendorf. Deft, Est. 8109 Kreuger. Pub. of not. of Properties account 450.00 thereon, I will expose to Public Sale, . JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. waives right to trial by jury. hre. on R. R. ordered. at the same time and plaee, to the Hemphling and Smith, Crim 8654 State v Tracy. Deft waives Est. 8110 Kreuger. Same. $4,236.00 highest bidder, the fee simple of said Attorneys for Estate. 9:29—10:6 right to trial by jury. Tr. 2372 Northwest Trunk Sewer MARIE H. NELSON, real estate. Crim 8586 State v Nowatka. Deft, Barrett Law Tr. Pet. granted. Clerk of the Common Council of the Taken as the property of Walnut NON-RESIDENT NOTICE files mo. to require Statetoelect one of To. 2373 Kronewitter's 2nd add. Fdg. City of South Bend, Indiana. 9:29 Realty Corporation, at the suit of First Cause No. 69857 the 2 cts. of indictment for purpose of for Det'ners: judgment. Bank and Trust Company, Trustee of (Divorce) Est. 8014 Kauffman. Order det. value OS 4785 SHERIFF'S SALE Sarah L. Kirby Est. etc. STATE OF INDIANA •iV. - trial/ . , _ ,. Bv virtue of an Order of Sale to me COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: 69750 Weber v Podemski et al. Deft. of est. and filing amt. of tax at 05.89 STEPHEN J. MOLNAR, JR., entered. directed from the Clerk's Office of the Sheriff of St. Joseph County, Ind. In the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1, John Podemski apprs. by Niemiec. Tuesday, September 26 St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2, of St. Helen N. Sibley, Deputy. 9:29—10^-13 ^•ff-f;-September Term, 1944. 64317 Szabo v Price et al. Cause re­ 50322 Sorkin. Cause retained on Joseph "County, Indiana, I will expose tained on •docket. docket. to Public Sale on Saturday the 21st day NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT REBECCA ANN PAYNE 69686 Farwell v Farwell. Deft, to 54888 LaRocca. Same. of October A, D„ 1944, between the Estate No. 7066 vs. pay forpkFs atty. fees sum of $37.50 in 5W79 Shank. Same. hours of ten o'clock a. m., and four Estate of George Futter. .WILLIAM L. PAYNE 30, $37.50 in 60 days. 68228 Riffle. Deft, files mo. to re­ ...'clock p.m., of said day, at the door ±_y direction of First Bank and Trust quire plf. to make complt. more spe­ of the Court House, in the city of South Company of South J_end, Administra­ Be It Known, That the above-named 68814 Claudon v Claudon. Deft, ap­ Eena, St. Joseph County, Indiana, the Plaintiff has filed in the office of'. ©ve prs. by Raab. cific. tor u_ the Estate of George Futter, late 6W>78 Everly. Same. rents and profits for a term not exceed­ of St. Joseph County, in the State ox Clerk of said Court her complaint 64750 Stillerman et al v Goldberg et ing seven years, of the following de­ against said Defendant' in the above 64842 Poppe. Hrg. Sent. 29. scribed Real Estate situate in St. Joseph Indiaiia, deceased. al. Cause retained on docket. 68989 Karnes. ADG&Z apprs. with No_'ICE is hereby given to the heirs, cause together with a proper affidavit 69402 Kolesiak v Kolesiak. Hrg. County, State of Indiana, to-wit: that said defendant is a non-resident Freed for deft. legatees and devisees of the said dece­ of the State of Indiana. Sept. 29. 69397 Emory. Plf. makes proof of dent, and all other persons interested service of sumns on deft.; deft. C&D. Lots numbered One Hundred Eigh- • Said defendant is hereby notified Est. 8108 Swart. Est. finally settled in the said estate, that said Adminis­ that said cause will stand for trial oh and admr. discharged. 69176 Hadley. Hrg. Sept. 29. ty-nine (189), One Hundred Ninety trator has filed in this court its ac­ 68783 Fretz. Deft, files ans. to plf. s (190), One Hundred Ninety-one the 8th day of December, 1944, the ESt. 1754 Schock. Exr. files final re­ ' (191), One Hundred. Ninety-two count and vouchers for the final set­ same being at the City of South Bend amended complt. tlement of said estate,, arid they are on which day said defendant is re­ port. 68848 Neff. Hrg. Sept. ?9. (192), One Hundred Ninety-three hereby required to be and. appear in Est. 7707 Allen. Est. finally settled 66498 Equitable. Hr?. Oct. 27. (193), One Hundred Ninety-four quired to appear to said action. (194), One Hundred Ninety-five said Court on the 80th day of October, FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. j*. and admrx. discharged. 69G75 Hazinski. Defts. C&D. 1944, when the same will be heard _tnd *.!_:•» Marie Stansbury, Deputy. Est. 7994 Harper. Pet. granted. 69208 Redman. Deft, apprs. by (195), One Hundred Ninety-six (196), One Hundred Ninety-seven* make proof of their heirship, or claim Hemphling and ISmith, Est. 8009 Zeiger. Admr. files inv. Schulman and files ans. to any part of said estate, and show and app. of pers. est. which is appvd. 69841 Larimer. Hrg. Sept. 29. (197), One Hundred Ninety-eight Attorneys for Plaintiff. 9:29—1- «43 Est. 8066 Downes. Pet. for re-det. of inh. tax granted and amended or­ der is'entered re-det. amt. of said tax as per form. Tuesday, September 26 69643 Ingraham etc. v Myers. Deft, files ans. to complt. P&ge Fourteen THE MIRK OR

said cause will stand for trial on the NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT said Court on the I9th day of Octo­ legatees and devisees of the said dece­ .LEGAL, NOTICES 22nd day of November, 1944, of said Estate No 7967 ber, 1944, when the same will be heard dent, and all other persons interested Court commencing at the City of South Estate of Margaret D. Cook. and make proof of their heirship, or in- the said estate, that said Adminis­ LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC Bend on which day said defendant is By direction of Mary S. Geissler, claim to any part of said estate, and tratrix has filed in this court her ac­ HEARING required to appear to said action. Executrix of the estate of Margaret D. show cause if there be, why said ac­ count and vouchers for the final set­ NOTICE is hereby given that the Lo­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. Cook, late of St. Joseph County, in the count and vouchers should not be ap­ tlement of said estate, and they are cal Alcoholic Beverage Board of St. By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. State of Indiana, deceased. proved. hereby required to be and appear in Joseph County, Indiana, will, at 9:00 J. Chester and Elizabeth F. Allen, NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal f.f said Court on the 13th day of October, A.M Centra^ War Time, on the 18th day Attys. for Plaintiff. 9:29; 10:6-13 legatees and devisees of the said dece­ the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South 1944, when the same will be heard of October, 1944, at the Commissioner's dent, and all other persons interested Bend, Indiana, 21st day of September, and make proof of their heirship, or Room, Court House, in the City of BIRTH CERTIFICATE NOTICE in the said estate, that said Executrix 1944. claim to any part of said estate, and South Bend, in said County, begin in­ Cause No. 3879 has filed in this court her account and FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. show cause if there be, why said ac­ vestigation of the applications of the NOTICE is hereby given that Juliana vouchers for the final settlement of JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. count and vouchers should not be ap­ following named persons, requesting Diane Novotny -has filed her petition said estate, and they are hereby re­ Frank X. Kopinski, proved. tfcje issue to the applicants, at the loca­ in the St. Joseph Circuit Court to have quired to be and appear in said Court Attorney for Estate. 9:29; 10:6 WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of tions hereinafter set out, of the Alco­ the time and place of her birth deter­ on the 19th day of October, 1944, when the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South holic Beverage Permits of the*classes mined. Said petition is set for hear­ the same will be heard and make proof NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Bend, Indiana, 14th day of September. hereinafter designated and will, at said ing October 2, 1944. of their heirship, or claim to any part E_tate No. 8405 1944. thine and place, receive information FRANK J. BRUGGNER, of said estate, and show cause if there NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. concerning the fitness of said appll- Clerk of the St. Joseph Circuit Court be, why said account and vouchers dersigned has been appointed by the JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. cants, and the propriety of issuing the Clifford V. DuComb, Atty. 9:29 should not be approved. Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ Hammerschmidt & Johnson, "permits applied for to such applicants WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ Attorneys for Estate. 9:22-29 atTthe premises named: BIRTH CERTIFICATE NOTICE the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South istrator of the Estate of Peter F. Zem­ Cause No. 3880 Bend, Indiana, 21st day of September, alkowski, late of St. Joseph County, NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Anthony P. Curtis, 5874, Transfer NOTICE is hereby given that Samuel 1944. deceased. Estate No. 8402 Beer, Liquor, Wine Retailer's per­ Johnson has filed his petition in the FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ mit and Dancing permit from St. Joseph Circuit Court to have the JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. Chester F. Zemalkowski, Administrator. dersigned has been appointed by the ; Amy Kekko, 821 S. Michigan St., time and place of his birth deter­ Hammerschmic't & Johnson, September 15th, 1944. Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ South Bend. mined. Said petition is set for hearing Attorneys for Estate. 9:29; 10:6 Frank X. Kopinski, _ seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ M. Ramonowski Polish Falcons No. October 2, 1944. Attorney for Estate. 9:22-29; 16:_ istrator of the Estate of Mike (Bajic) 4, 5900, (Club), 416-420 S. Chapin FRANK J. BRUGGNER, NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Baich, late of St. Joseph County, de­ St., South Bend — Beer, Liquor, Clerk of the St. Joseph Circuit Court ceased. Zilford Carter, Atty. 9_J9 Estate No. 8411 NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Wine Retailer. NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ Estate No. 8407 Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. Steve Lioinski, 5738, (Grocery), 301 dersigned has been appointed by the Edgar A. Duker, 5. Walnut St., South Bend—Beer, NON-RESIDENT NOTICE STATE OF INDIANA Administrator. Cause No. 69835 Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ ST. JOSEPH COUNTY, SS: Dealer. seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ September 12th, 1944. Millie Zoubek, 5899, (Restaurant), STATE OF INDIANA NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ Floyd O. Jellison, COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH, SS: istrator of the Estate of Caroline La- dersigned has been appointed by the 541 S. Taylor St., South Bend— Vigne, late of St. Joseph county, de­ Attorney for Estate. 9:22-29*---10:6^ Beer, Wine Retailer. In the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2, Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ May (in Vacation) Term, 1944. ceased. seph County, Executor of the estate qf Henry F. Uhverferth, 5767, (Restau­ Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT rant), 1302 W. Washington Ave., Jacob Horein, deceased, late of Elkhart Estate No. 5615 WILLIAM N. CURNUTT Richard Follis, Administrator. county, Indiana. South Bend—Beer, Wine Retailer. September 21st, 1944. Estate of Anna Kathrina Soens. James G. Phillipoff, 5847, (Package vs. Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. By direction of John G. O'Brien, Ex­ ESTHER CURNUTT Charles W. Dohnalek, Walter J. Horein, Executor. Store), 3008 Mishawaka Ave., Attorney for Estate. 9:29; 10:6-13 ecutor of the estate of Anna Kathrina South Bend—Liquor, Wine Dealer. Davis & Schaefer, Attorneys. Soens, late of St. Joseph County, in the. Be It Known, That.the above-named Goshen, Indiana. 9:22-29; 10:6 B. P. O. Elks No. 235, 5768, (Club), NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT State of Indiana, deceased. 215 W. Colfax Ave., South Bend- plaintiff has filed in the office of the NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, Beer, Liquor, Wine Retailer. clerk of said court Superior No. 2 com­ Estate No. 8136 NON-RESIDENT NOTICE legatees and devisees of the said dece- "Mary Marszalkowski, 5769, (Res­ plaint against said defendant in the Estate of Walter (Wladyslaw) Weso- Cause No. 69795 cent, and all other persons interested taurant), 2012 Western Ave., South above cause together with a proper lowski. STATE OF INDIANA in the said estate, that said Executor Bend—Beer, Wine Retailer. affidavit that said defendant is non­ By direction of Stanley Libertowski, COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: has filed in this court his account resident of the State of Indiana. Administrator of the Estate of Walter In the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1 and vouchers for the filial set­ SAID INVESTIGATION WILL BE Said defendant is hereby notified that (Wladyslaw) Wesolowski, late of St. September Term, 1944 tlement of said estate, and they are OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, AND PUBLIC said cause will stand for trial on the Joseph County, in the State of Indiana, hereby required to be and appear in PARTICIPATION IS REQUESTED. 30th day of November, 1944, the same deceased. ORA GERARD and GRACE L. KELLER said Court on the 12th day of October, being of said Court commencing at the NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, vs. 1944, when the same will be heard ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COM­ City of South Bend on which day said legatees and devisees of the said dece­ ROBERT M. STEWART and BETTY and make proof of their heirship, or MISSION OF INDIANA defendant is required to appear to said dent, and all other persons interested STEWART ET AL_ claim to any part of said estate, and action. in the said estate, that said Adminis­ show cause if there be, why said ac­ By JOHN F. NOONAN, FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. trator, has filed in this court his ac­ Be It Known, That the above-named count and vouchers should not be ap­ Is&p Secretary By Golda S. Butler, Deputy. count and vouchers for the final set­ Plaintif-B have filed in the office of the proved. BERNARD E. DOYLE, Edw. O. Scheer. tlement of said estate, and they are Clerk of said Court complaint against WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of 9:29 Excise Administrator. Attorney for Plaintiff. 9:29; 10:6-13 .hereby required to be and appear in said defendant in the above cause to­ the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South gether with a proper affidavit that Bend, Indiana, 15th day of September, LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC said defendants are non-residents of 1944. HEARING. the state of Indiana. FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. NOTICE is hereby given that the Lo­ Said defendants are hereby notified JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. cal Alcoholic Beverage Board of St. that said cause will stand for trial on Arnold, Degnan and Goheen, Joseph County, Indiana, will, at 2:00 the 18th day of November, 1944, the and Zimmerman, P. M. Central War Time, on the llth same being1 at the city of South Bend Attorneys for Estate. 9:22-29 day of October, 1944, at the City Hall on which day said defendants are re­ in the City of Mishawaka, in said coun­ quired to appear to said action. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT ty begin investigation of the applica­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk . Estate No. 8081 tion of the following named person By Marie Stansbury, Deputy. Estate of Mary C. Redmond. ' requesting the issue to the applicant, Doran & Manion, By direction of The National Bank at the location hereinafter set out, of Attys. for Plaintiffs. 9:22-29; 10:6 and Trust Company of South Bend, the Alcoholic Beverage Permit of the Administrator of the estate of Mary C. class hereinafter designated and will, NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Redmond, late of St. Joseph County, in at said time and place, receive infor­ Estate No. 8409 the State of Indiana, deceased. mation concerning the fitness of said NOTICE Is hereby given that the un­ NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, applicant, and the propriety of issuing dersigned has been appointed by the legatees and devisees of the said dece­ the permit applied for to such appli­ Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ dent, and all other persons interested cant at the premises named: seph County, State of Indiana, Ad­ in the said estate, that said Administra­ ministratrix of the estate of Nathaniel tor has filed in this court its account Yordan Daskaloff, 5667, (Restau-. G. Early, late of St. Joseph county, de­ and vouchers for the final settlement of rant), 301 N. Main St., Mishawa­ ceased. . said estate, and they are hereby re­ ka—Beer Retailer. quired to be and appear in said Court "(VIE BRONX, N-/,WOW Said estate is supposed to be solvent on the 12th day of October, 1944, BOASTS "TMBRMCST Lola S. Metzger, Administratrix. SAID INVESTIGATION WILL BE September 20th, 1944. when the same will be heard and make OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, AND PUBLIC P0,HO_-_ IN TWE)M3RLP' George Sands, proof of their heirship, or claim to PARTICIPATION IS REQUESTED. _*J_.-S3_W_S \%m. «T WW.' any part of said estate, and show cause WOU_*€ !_•_> POSS Attorney for Estate. 9:22-29 10:6 if there be, why said account and vouchers should not be approved. ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COMMIS­ &FCOttfVERSK»l UtiZ* HAS BEEN SET NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION SION OF INDIANA UP IM CALIFORNIA TO R_PROCe_^5" Estate No. 8404 WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of COMMERCIAL /9IRUNERS TURI-JEP NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1 at By JOHN F. NOONAN, BACK IO AVIATiCM COM RflKllE-5 dersigned has been appointed by the South Bend, Indiana, 18th day of Sep­ Secretary. tember, 1944. BY TVJE ARM/ ./-^fKs, Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ BERNARD E. DOYLE, seph County, State of Indiana, Ancil­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. 9:29 Excise Administrator. lary Administratrix of the Estate of JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. William J. O'Leary, late of Jefferson Jones, Obenchain, and Butler, NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT County, Kentucky, deceased. Attorneys for Estate. 9:22-29 Estate No. 7756 Said Estate is supposed to be solvent; Estate of Alice Hughes. HENRIETTA O'LEARY, NOTICE OF PETITION TO By direction of First Bank and Trust Ancillary Administratrix. CHANGE NAME Company of South Bend, Administra­ Tne. MHP AtlpBrtieR, n B-Z& Mna/eu MMMPBZ September 14th, 1944. tor of the estate of Alice Hughes, late BOMBER,FLEV/ IOO CCMBAT MISSION ttf BUSoPE Jones, Obenchain, and Butler, STATE OF INDIANA of St. Joseph County, in the State of ST. JOSEPH COUNTY SS: Indiana, deceased. iraiiji AMD BfioU&fT EV&& MEMBER OE ITS CKEIfJ MCH Attys. for Administratrix. 9:22-29, 10;6 _Mtf/AUl/J?eC In the St. Joseph Circuit Court NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, May (in Vacation) Term, 1944 legatees and devisees of the said dece­ NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT dent, and all other persons interested Estate No. 7713 EXPARTE IN THE MATTER OF THE in the said estate, that said administra­ Estate of Flora Ellen Shearer. PETITION OF LEON JOSEPH MA­ tor has filed in this court its account By direction of Naamah Schrader, KIELSKI TO CHANGE HIS NAME. and"*Wbuchers for the final settlement of Administratrix of the Estate of Flora said estate, and they are hereby re­ Ellen Shearer, late of St. Joseph Coun­ NOTICE is hereby given that I have quired to be and appear in said court ty, in the State of Indiana, deceased. applied to the St. Joseph Circuit Court on the 20th day of October, 1944, NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, of said County and State to have my when the same will be heard and make legatees and devisees of the said dece­ name changed from Leon Joseph Ma­ proof of their heirship, or claim to any dent, and all other persons firterested kielski to that of Leon Joseph Ma­ part of said estate, and show cause if v/ A BR4ILLE TELEPHONE in the said estate, that said Adminis­ kielski McKiel, and that said petition and application will be presented to there be, why said account and vouch­ . SET HA* BEEN PB/ISEP JW0-G4R tratrix has filed in this court her ac­ ers should not be approved. count and vouchers for the final set­ and heard by said Court on the first TO HELP BUMP PATIENTS Rq*$._)J6_R SUBURB--)!, WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of RAI l-WAy" TRftlM*., 0PERATEP tlement of said estate, and they are day of November Term, .1944. the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South At LETTERAMN HOSPITAL FRCM EITHER ENP, ARE PLOrthlEP hereby required to be and appear in LEON JOSEPH MAKIELSKI. Bend, Indiana, 22nd day of Septem­ INl *$/W FRANCISCO , FOR POSTWAR. P*V*S said Court on the 16th day of Octo­ Dated this 7th day of September, 1944. ber, 1944. ber, 1944, when the same will he heard Frank X. Kopinski, FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. and make proof of their heirship, or Attorney for Petitioner. 9:15-22-29 JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. claim to any part of said estate, and William A. Bertsch," show cause, if there be, why said ac­ NOTICE OF PETITION TO Attorney for Estate. 9:29—10:6 count and vouchers should not be ap­ CHANGE NAME proved. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of STATE OF INDIANA Estate No. 8413 the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South ST. JOSEPH COUNTY SS: NOTICE is hereby given that the^un- Bend, Indiana, 19th day of September, In the St. Joseph Circuit Court dersigned has been appointed by'the 1944. May (in Vacation) Term, 1944 Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. EXPARTE IN THE MATTER OF THE istrator of the Estate of Lucy Jane Carl Weidler, PETITION OF STEPHANIE MAK-EL-* Bosworth, late of St. Joseph county, Attorney for Estate. 9:22-29 SKI TO CHANGE HER NAJVIE. deceased. Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT NOTICE is hereby given that I have John C. Kintz, Administrator. Estate No. 8140 applied to the St. Joseph Circuit Court September 22nd, 1944. Estate of Antonina Bilinski. of said County and State to have my Seebirt, Oare, and Deahl, By direction of Frank S. Bilinski, name changed from Stephanie Makiel­ Attys. for Estate. 9:29; 10:6-13 Executor of the Estate of Antonina Bil­ ski to that of Stephanie Makielski Mc­ inski, late of St. Joseph County, in the Kiel, and that said petition and appli­ NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION State of Indiana, deceased. cation will be presented to and heard Estate No. 8414 NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, by said Court on the first day of No­ NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ legatees and devisees of the said dece­ vember Term, 1944. dersigned has been appointed by the dent, and all other persons interested STEPHANIE MAKIELSKI. Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ in the said estate, that said Execu­ Dated this; 7th day of September, 1944. seph County, State of Indiana, Execu­ tor has filed in this court his ac­ Frank X. Kopinski, tor of the estate of F. Moritz Odusch, count and vouchers for the final set­ Attorney for Petitioner. 9:15-22-29 late of St. Joseph county, deceased. tlement of said estate, and they are Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. hereby required to be and appear in NOTICE OF PETITION TO Julius Odusch, Executor. said court on the 20th day of Octo­ CHANGE NAME September 22nd, 1944. . ber, 1944, when the same will be hearc Joseph W. Nyikos, and make proof of their heirship, or STATE OF INDIANA Atty. for Estate. 9:29; 10:6-13 claim to any part of said estate, and ST. JOSEPH COUNTY SS: show cause if there be, why- said ac­ In the St. Joseph Circuit Court NON-RESIDENT NOTICE count and vouchers should not be May (in Vacation) Term, 1944 Cause No. 69829 approved. STATE OF INDIANA WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal oi EXPARTE IN THE MATTER OF THE COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH, SS: the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South PETITION OF LEONA JOAN MA­ In the St. Joseph Circuit Court Bend, Indiana, 20th day of September, KIELSKI TO CHANGE HER NAME. September Term, 1944 1944. FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. NOTICE is hereby given that I have EMERSON RAY PEARIGEN JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. applied to the St. Joseph Circuit Court vs. George Sands, of said County and State to have my BIRDIE REBECCA PEARIGEN a Attorney for Estate. 9:22-29 name changed from Leona Joan Ma­ kielski to that of Leona Joan McKiel, Be It Known, That the above-named A LARGE* RUBBER NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT and that said petition and application plaintiff has filed in the office of the COMPANV 16 AV)MM_S Estate No. 8139 will be presented to and heard by said Clerk of said Court his complaint COLLAPSIBLE RUBBER, Estate of Adam C. Hipe. Court on the first day of November against said defendant in the above CONTOUR, MAPS OP By direction of Ida V. Hipe, adminis­ Term, 1944. cause together with a proper affidavit ENEMy" CQA6>TUriBS/ tratrix of the estate of Adam C. Hipe, LEONA JOAN MAKIELSKI. that 'said defendant is a non-resident JFOB THBNAvy late of St. Joseph county, in the state Dated this 7th day of September, 1944. of Indiana, deceased. Frank X. Kopinski, of the state of Indiana. . _S>*8__fe>e5- **w Said defendant is hereby notified that NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, Attorney for Petitioner. 9':15-22,-29 SEPTEMBER 29, 1944 _?age Fifteen

Hosier, late of St. Joseph County, de­ city of South Bend, Indiana, on the cause together with a proper affidavit ceased. lOtii day of November, 1944. that said defendant is a non-resident XJRGAL NOTICES Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. ANSWERS TO FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. of the State of Indiana. NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING OF Amos Wardlow, Administrator. George L. Rulison, Said defendant is hereby notified ST. JOSEPH COUNTY COUNCIL September 5th, 1944. Atty. for Admrx. 9:15--22-29. bhat .said cause will stand for trial on William A. Bertsch, Test Your I. Q. ttoe 28th day et November, 1944, of NOTICE is hereby given by the un­ Attorney for Estate. 9:15-22-29 NOTICE TO BIDDERS said Court commencing at the City of dersigned that a special meeting of St. NOTICE is hereby given by the un­ South Bend, on which day said de- eJoseph County Council will be held at NOTICE OF FILING RECEIVER'S dersigned that sealed proposals or bids •3e»da*nt is required to appear to said the usual meeting place of said Coun­ CURRENT REPORTS IN CAUSE 1. A survey revealed the per will be received by Ihe Board of Oo_m- action. cil at the hour of eight-fifteen o'clock NO. 5-821, St. JOSEPH SUPERIOR ,acre value in March 1944 was ty CO-m-mass-oners of St. Joseph Coun­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Cierk. p. m., on the 2nd and 3rd days of Oc­ COURT NO. 2, ENTITLED MINNIE ty, Indiana, on October 2, 1944, up to By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. tober, 1944, for the purpose of consi­ CHRISTMAN VS. H. G. CHRIST- 35.7 per cent higher than March the hour of ten o'clock a. m., for the Peter M. LaCava;, dering and passing an ordinance for MAN COMPAN*. 1939. purpose of itie following supplies as A-to-Jifiy for Plaintiff. 9:15-2^-29 additional appropriations out of the 2. More than 110,000. set forth in the req_ris-tion no-w on file county general fund to meet the extra­ NOTICE is -her-fcy given that _t_e Re­ in the Courrty Auditor's office. NON-RESIDENT NOTICE j ordinary emergency existing at this ceiver in the a-bove entitled cause d-d, 3. The American Chamber of Cause No. 59530 time as follows: •om _toe $th day at __ep-e_ateer, _9-4, file Commerce. FOR A PERIOD OF THREE STATE OF INDIANA •has C_B*33_-*- Reports for 1941, SMS, and 4. The law empowering the . MONTHS, October, November, COUNTY OW ST. JOSEPH SS: COUNTY COMMISSIONERS __*•__, and -that en. -he 13th day of Oeto- and December, 1944. In the St. Jeseph Circuit Court Bovine TB test & control_$ 1,500.00 ___r, .._®_t, _toe same will be heard a__d government to buy real estate September Term, 1944. County Advertising — Reg­ -te-ermafeed toy the Court; a*w_ d__r_n*g under the right of eminent do- HEALTHWIN HOSPITAL ular 2.0.00 _____ time, any credit©*, _*__a_efeo__*er or 1—Meats JOSEPH PRfNCIPE, JR. Advertising—Election 500,00 other interested party may file objec­ __©__.. vs. Insurance on county prop­ tions or exceptions, in writing, to such p. A dangerous m-ssion. COUNTY INFIRMARY AFTON PRINCIPE erty 500.00 report. 1—Meats D_ted at South Bend, Indiana, th_s (Questions on Page 10) Be It Known, That the above named COURT HOUSE 8th day of September, _944. Said sealed proposals must be accom­ plaintiff teas fifed in the office of the Repairs to court house^ . 15,_®O.'0O FRANK J. BRUGGNER, C3e-__. panied by either a certified check or a Clerk of said Court his complaint JEW Golda S. Butler, Deputy. bidder's bond in a sum equal to not against said Defendant in the above Totals .$17,790.00 9:_5-_3-2_ less than ten per cent of the amount cause together with a proper affidavit complaint so filed, which is now pend­ of the bid, together with a non-collu­ that said defendant is a non-resident ing, is set for hearing in St. Joseph sion affidavit. Taxpayers may appear at the session NOTfCE OF ACTION TO QUIET Superior Court No. 2 at the Court of the State of Indiana. of the County Council to be held on TITLE TO __E__L ESTATE House io the City of South Bend, St. Proposals must fee filed on forms fur­ Said defendant is hereby notified October 2, 1944, and shall have the No. -9721 Joseph County, Indiana on the 30th nished by the County Auditor. that said cause will stand for trial on right to be heard in respect to saM STATE OF INDIANA day of October, 1944 and you and each The right is reserved to reject any the 20th day of November, 1944, of ordinance. Any additional appropria­ 1ST. JOSEPH COUNTY SS: ot you are here-by notified that unless and all bids. said Court commencing at the City of tions as finally made will be automa­ in the St. .Joseph Superior Court No. you appear in -said court on said last Dated this 20th day of September, South Bend, on which day said de­ tically referred to the State Board of September Term, 1944. mentioned date to answer or demur to 1944 fendant is required to appear to said Tax Commissioners, which Board will said complain-, that the same will be NICHOLAS A. MUSZER, action. <*• hold a further hearing within fifteen MARCUS J. LAING, ET AL heard and determined in your absence. Auditor, St. Josepn County, Indiana. FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. days at the County Auditor's office. At PLAINTIFFS . tti WITNESS WHEREOF, I have By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. such hearing taxpayers objecting to vs. hereunto set my hand and' seal of said Frederick K. Baer, such ordinance or additional appropri­ court at South Bend, Indiana on the NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT Attorney for Plaintiff. 9:15-22-29 ations may be heard, and interested 8th day of Septem-toer, 1944. Estate No. 8137 FIRST METHODIST CHURCH, Estate of Homer Hall. taxpayers may inquire of the County MISHAWAKA, INDIANA, SUC­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk N O T I C E Auditor when such hearing will be By dsreotion of Rose Mae Hall, Ad­ Estate No. 6*93 CESSOR TO METHODIST of .fee St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2. ministratrix of the Estate of Homer held. EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE. By Golda S. Butler, Deputy. STATE OF INDIANA Dated this 20th day of September, Hall, late of St. Joseph County, in the ST. JOSEPH COUNTY, SS: TOWN OF MISHAWAKA, IN­ E. Spencer Walton and State of Indiana, deceased. 1944. DIANA, ET AL John W. Schindler, In the St. Joseph Circuit Court, NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, September Term, 1944 NICHOLAS A. MUSZER, DEFENDANTS Attorneys for Plaintiffs. 9:15-22-29 legatees and devisees of the said dece­ Auditor, St. Joseph County, Indiana. dent, and all other persons interested ROLLO E. BONDURANT, Administra­ TO: Richmond Tuttle, Richmond Tutte, NON-RESIDENT NOTICE in the said estate, that said Admmis- 9:22-29 George C. Merrifield, Mary A. tor with the Will Annexed of the NON-RESIDENT NOTICE Cause No. 69531 tratrix has filed in this court her ac­ Estate of Michael Muszynski, De­ Merrifield, George Ballinger, STATE OF INDIANA count and vouchers for the final set­ Cause No. 69641 George Bellinger, Minor T. Ora- ceased. S;__i.a STATE OF INDIANA COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: tlement of said estate, and they are vs. haxB.v A_b_Tt Hudson, Louiza C. In the St. Joseph Circuit Court hereby required to be and appear m COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH, SS: Hisdson, Richmond Tuttle, Allen TERESA SKORUBSKA, In the St. Joseph Circuit Court, September Term, 1944. said Court on the 12th day of Octo­ MARTIN S__QRUBSKI Sisson, George C. Merrifield, ber, 1-44, when the same will be heard September Term, 1944. George Ballinger, and Minor T. LEAH WARMAN DANIELS and make proof of^their heirship, or Graham, Trustees; All n*emtoers, claim to any part of said estate, and TO: Teresa Skorubska, JAMES BARLOW _• ministers and preachers of the vs. Martin Skorubski. LESTER JOHN DANIELS show cause if there be, why said ac­ vs. Methodist Episcopal Church in the count and vouchers should not be You are severally hereby notified CATHERINE BARLOW United States of America; Meth- approved. . „ _ , . tha't -he above named petitioner as odist Episcopal Church of the Be It Known, That the above named Administrator with the will annexed Be It Known, That the above-named Town of Mishawaka; Richard plaintiff has filed in the office of the WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of of the Estate of Michael Muszynski, Plaintiff has filed in the office of the Marter, George MilfcaiTn, William Clerk of said Court her complaint the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South deceased, has filed in the Circuit Court Clerk of said Court his complaint Ske_T-t, A. Eberhart, whose true against said Defendant in the above Bend, Indiana, 12th day of September, of St. Joseph County, Indiana, a peti­ against said Defendant in the above Christian name is unknown Adol­ cause together with a proper affidavit 1944 tion, making you defendants thereto, cause together with a proper affidavit phus Eberhart, William Dauley, that said defendant is a non-resident FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. and praying therein for an order and that said defendant's residence fe un- Martin V. Beiger, M. V. Beiger, Of the State of Indiana. JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. decree of said Court authorizing the known. whose true Christian name is un- Said defendant is hereby notified Jones, Qbenehain and Butler, sale of certain real estate belonging to Said defendant is hereby notified knowm, E. F. Cole, whose true that said cause will stand for trial' on Attorneys for Estate. 9:22-29 the estate of said decedent, and in said that isaid cause will stand for trial on Christian name is unknown, G. C. the' 20th day of November, 1944, of NON-KESIDlENT NOTICE petition described, to make assets for the 28th day of November, 1944, of said Merrifield, whose true Christian said Court commencing at the City of the payment of the debts and liabilities court, commencing at the City of South name Is unknown. George C. South Bend, on which day said de­ '. Csfuse No. 69783 of said estate; - and has also averred by Bend on which day said defendant is SfcrrH-eld, A. Hudson, whose true fendant is required to appear to said STATE OF INDIANA action. an affidavit filed that you and each of required to appear to said action. Christian name is unknown, and COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: you are non-residents of the state of FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. Albert Hudson, Trustees of the FRANK J. BRUGGNER,. Clerk. In the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2, Indiana, and that you are necessary By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. Methodist Episcopal Church of By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. May Term. 1944 parties to said proceedings, and that Max M. Buntman, the Town of Mishawaka; Lewis T. Frederick. K. Baer, said petition, so filed and which is now Attorney for Plaantiff. 932-29—10:6 Booth, Sarah Booth, Sarah M. Attorney for Plaintiff. 9:15-22*-29 CLAYTON WALLER MACKENZIE Booth; The unknown husbands vs. pending, is set for hearing in said Cir­ MARIE KATHLEEN MACKENZIE cuit Court at the Court House in the NOTICE OF SALE OF COUNTY and "Wives, widows and widowers, NON-RESIDENT NOTICE City of South Bend, Indiana, am the PROPERTY children, descendents, heirs, siir- Cause No. 69733 , V$*ing spouses, creditors, adrn_n_s- STATE OF INDIANA Be It Known, That the above-named 17th day of November, 19.4. :'_«§•. NOTICE is hereby given by the .un­ trators of -estates, devisees, lega- COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: Plaintiff has filed in the office of the WITNESS, the Clerk and the seal of dersigned that on the 23rd day of Oc­ In the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2 Clerk of said Superior Court No. 2 said Court'this 14th day of September, tober*. 1944, the Board of County Com­ _ tees, trustees, executors of the last May Term, 1944. complaint against said defendant in the 1944 missioners of St. Joseph County, will wTK and testament, successors in above cause together with a proper af­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, sell at public auction at the Court _n*e_«st and assigns, lessees, ces- JOHN OLAF CARLSON fidavit that said defendant is non-resi­ Clerk, St. Joseph Circuit Court. Hdu.e at ten o'clock a. m., ftie follow­ tiue qui trustent, respectively of vs. dent of the State Of Indiana. Rollo E. BonDurant, Atty. 9:22-29; 10:6 ing St, Joseph County property: each of the foregoing named per­ MOCELL CARLSON Said defendant is hereby notified that sons, the names of all of whom said cause will stand for trial on the NOTICE One—72" diameter heavy duty Ven­ are unknown to plaintiffs; all of 22nd day of November, 1944, the same Cause No. 69477 the women once known by any of Be It Known, That the above named STATE OF INDIANA tilation Fan complete with Plaintiff has filed in the office of the being Of said court commencing at the ST. JOSEPH COUNTY SS: frame, bearings, shafts and the names and designations above Clerk of said Court, Superior No. 2, t City of South Bend on whieh day said pulleys. stated, whose names have been In St. Joseph Ciwaftt Court changed, and who are now known complaint against said Defendant in defendant is required to appear to said Vacation Term, 1944. by other names, the spouse of all the above cause together with a pro­ fiction '•*__ v7*" --* One—7" leather belt 30 ft. long. per affidavit that said Defendant is FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION of the persons above named, die- non-resident of State of Indiana. One—Electric motor 7% horse power, scribed and designated as defend­ By Golda S. Butler, Deputy. OF ROMAN LESZCZ, MARIE L. ants to this action, the names of Said .defendant is hereby notified that Seymour Weisberger, LESZCZ, and GERALDINE LESZCZ, 3 phase—220 volts with General said cause wm stand for trial on the 10.6 Electric starting switch. all of wfiom are unknown to Attorney for Plaintiff. 9.2 2-21 by Roman Leszcz, her next friend plaintiffs; all persons, -asms, part­ §tfe day of November, 1944, the same TO CHANGE NAME. nerships and corporations who" being of said Court commencing at the NON-RESIDENT NOTICE Terms of said auction sale will be in assert or might assert any title, City of South Bend on which day said Cause No. 69754 defendant is required to appear to said STATE OF INDIANA . NOTICE is hereby given that we Dated this 20th day of September, claim or interest in or upon the have applied to the St. Joseph Circuit real estate.-described in the com­ action. COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: Court of said county and state to »T _4 plaint in this action, by, under or FRANK J. BRUOK.NER, Clerk. In the St. Joseph Circuit Court change our names from Roman Leszcz NICHOLAS A. MUSZER, through any of the defendants to By Golda S. Butler, Deputy. September Term, 1944 to Roman Lash, and Marie L. Leszcz Auditor; St. Joseph County, Indiana. this action above named, the Fred B. Dressel, to Marie L. Lash, and Geraldine Leszcz 9:22-29—10:6-13 names of all of whom are "un­ Attorney for Plaintiff. 9:15-22-29 MARY FRANCES PHILLIPS vs. • to Geraldine Lash. Said application known to plaintiffs. will be heard' on the 6th day of No­ NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION NOTICE OF PETITION TO SELL CAREY PHILLIPS Estate No. 8392 REAL ESTATE vember in said Court. NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ You and each of you are hereby sev­ Estate No. 8386 Be It Known, That the above-named Dated this llth day of July, 1944. dersigned has been appointed by the erally notified that the above named STATE OF INDIANA Plaintiff has filed in the office of the FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. Judge of the St. Joseph' Circuit Court plaintiffs have filed in St. Joseph Su­ COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH, SS: Clerk of said Court her complaint Leon E. Kowalski, Attorney. 9:15-22-29 of St. Joseph County, State of Indiana, perior Court No. 2 of St. Joseph Coun­ In the St. Joseph Circcdt Court, against said Defendant in the above NON-RESIDENT NOTICE Administrator of the Estate of Theresa ty, Indiana, a complaint making you" September Term, A. D. 1944 cause together with a proper affidavit "Rupe t, late of St. Joseph County, De- and each of you defendants thereto, Cause No. 69658 and praying therein a judgment and JOSEPHINE F. FRAZIER, Administra­ that said defendant is a non-resident STATE OF INDIANA aeeased. decree of said court quieting the title trix of the Estate of James E. Ranck, Of the State of Indiana. COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: •^MScud estate is supposed to be -solvent. to the following described real estate Deceased, Plaintiff Said defendant is hereby notified In the St. Joseph Circuit Court Joseph Sheetz, Administrator. in St. Joseph County, and State of vs. that said cause will stand for trial on September Term, 1944. September 1st, 1944. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF JAMES E. the 23rd day of November, 1944, of said Indiana, to-wit: Court commencing at the City of South George Sands, RANCK, Deceased, Defendants. JESSE M. CHRISTNER Atty. for Estate. 9:15-22 29 A lot or parcel of land One Hun­ To the Unknown* Heirs of Jtomes E. Bend, on which day said defendant is dred and Ohe (101) feet in length required to appear to said action. vs. Ranck, Deceased: DOROTHY V. CHRISTNER NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION north and south taken off of and You are severally hereby notified FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. Estate No. 8399 from the entire width of the north that the above named petitioner, as By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. end Of Lot Numbered Thirteen (13) J. Chester Allen, Elizabetti F. Allen, Be It Known, That the above named NOTICE is hereby given- that the un­ Admtnistrat-f-x of the estate aforesaid, plaintiff has filed in the office of the dersigned has been appointed by the on Second Street, now lincoln has filed in the Circuit Court of St. Attorneys for Plaintiff. 9:22-29—10:6 Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ Highway East as shown on the ad­ Cierk of said Court Ms complaint Joseph County, Indiana, a petition, against said Defendant in the above seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ ditional plat of the -fasm of St. making you defendants thereto, and NON-RESIDENT NOTICE istratrix of the estate of James Henry, Joseph Iron Works, now the City Cause No. 69572 cause together with a proper affidavit praying therein for an order and de­ that said defendant is a non-resident late of St- Joseph County, deceased. of Mishawaka. cree of said court authorizing the sale STATE OF INDIANA Said estate is supposed to be solvent. Said proceedings are being prose­ of certain real estate belonging to the COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: of the State of Indiana. Edna M. Bfelles. AdrnkiiStratrtx. cuted' to quiet the title to the real es­ estate of said decedent, and in said In the St. Joseph Circuit Court Said defendant is hereby notified September 7th, 1944. tate in plaintiffs said complaint men- petition described, to make assets for September Term, 1944. that satd cause witt stand for trial on Flovd Jellison, .iO-ietF and described and above de­ the payment of the debts and liabilities the 20th day of November, 1944, of Attorney for Estate. 9:15-22-29 scribed as against all defendants, of said estate, and has also averred in CHARLEY T. HAYES said Court commencing at the City of claims, and claimants whatsoever. The said petition that you and each of you vs. South Bend, on which day said de­ NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION plaintiffs in said action have averred are of residence unknown and of names IZOLA M. HAYES fendant is-required to appear to said Estate No. 8394 by an affidavit filed in this proceedings -cnkncwn and that you are necessary action. NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ that you and each of you are- non- parties to said proceedings, and that Be It Known, That the above named FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. res-dente of the State of Indians* or said petition, so filed and which is now plaintiff'has fHed in the office of the dersigned has been appointed by the tl_at your residence is unknown and By Agnes M. Sjeameckl, Deputy, Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ pending, is set for hearing in said Cir­ Clerk of said Court bis complaint George Sands, 2__aL___*__i that you are necessary parties to said cuit oourt at the court house in the seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ against said Defendant in the above Attorney for Plaintiff. 9:15-22-29 istrator of the estate of Sarah Jane proceeding; and that said pettt-on di THE MIRROR

LIS M. SASS, 3761 Curtiss dr.; SYLVIA Mr. artd Mrs. J. Przybylski, 2430 W. H. WILKINS, 416 ManftoU pi.; DORO­ Fisher killed in action Sept. 2. THY RAMSEY, 2401. Miami; I_ETTY J. RICHARDS, S/Sgt,. Eldon, 23, son of SCOTT, Bremen, Ind.; DELPHINE Mr. and Mrs. McKinley Richards, 426 Gf lEEK OF Cf. -)AR LENKE and KATHLEEN SABERNIAK, W. Jefferson Blvd., Mish., killed in n of Niles, Mich.; JEAN BENSZ ^nd action in France Sept. ... MARGARET M. CHRAPKOT-ySKjfe^&C RODIBAUGH, Pvt. George, son of Mr. Michigan City, Ind.; FLORigJCE and Mrs. R. Rodibaugh, 726 E. Broad-*** GREEN, of South Haven, Mi*|j_ ^ *.jgsy» died of wounds suffered in ac« I \J_y at a _\ance\J(J -k ^trotrsSept 8. KILLED _S___i&v. WRIGHT72nd Lieut. William, husband City, Ind.: EUGBNE F. FRINK. Burket. AMIERO, 1st Lieut. Albert, son of Mr. of Margaret Wright, 708 S. Eddy St., OVER WEEK-END ish planes raided Calais area and Ind.; KENNETH A. SMITH. R. R. .4. and Mrs. A. Amiero, formerly of •"•kitted -in action in France, March 11, supported Allied ground forces in Dowagiac, Mich.; ROBERT J. KRAUS- South Bend, killed in action oyer. 1944. British 2nd Army forces crossed Holland. MAN. 1457 Belle Plaine, Chicago. Germany. WOUNDED north branch of the Rhine river in MARINE CORPS BUHEKER, Marine Pfc. John, -20, ALLEMANG, Pfc. Robt., son of Mr. some strength to bring relief to Russian armies captured Latvi­ brother of-Mrs. A. Zilky, 1004 S,- -and Mrs. George Allemang, 623 N« an port of Ainazi and more than ROBERT W. WILLIA-VISON, 3620 Main, killed in action; no details Scott, wounded in action in France. pocketed airborne troops whose 500 towns and settlements as they Mishawaka ave. given.' BUTI, Sgt. Adam. 24, son of Mr. ana "island" near Arnhem had been NAVY CALL, T/Sgt. Donald. 22, son of MTr '' Mrs. Buti, 1505 S. Webster St., • whittled down. American para­ pushed rapidly toward Riga. Ger­ NORMAN R. KIRK, R. R. 5; ROY G. and Mrs. Marion Call, R. R. -No. 1, - wounded in action in Italy. mans were reported evacuating FILLMORE, R. R. 5; LUTHER CLARK Granger, killed in action over Eng­ HATALA, Sgt. Andrew, 29, husband of troops, turning east from Nijme-*-. Riga, near which a powerful Rus­ and BENJAMIN M. NOWAK, both of land, Sept. 1. Cecilia Hatala, 1525 S. Arnold St., gen, crossed German border to­ New^Carlisle; EUGENE LIGGET, R. LINDORF, Pfc. John, 29, son of MrVantf 'wounded, in action in France. ward Kleve to depth of two miles sian battle group was being R No. 1, North Liberty; FRED E. Mrs. V. Lindorf, 617 S. Meade, died THORNTON, Corp. C. W., husband of in possible start of drive behind massed. WIRT, R. R. 2, Elkhart; RICHARD P. in London, Eng., Sept. 8. Mrs. Thornton, Mishawaka, was Determined German defenders NARAGON.236 Garden, Laporte, Ind. McLOUTH, Set. Richard, 22, husband wounded in action in France. Siegfried Line into Ruhr. Allies WAVES of Pauline McLouth, Lakeville, killed YAW, Pvt. Wayne, 25, son of Mr. *a___t widened their corridor across Hol­ of Gothic Line in Italy counter­ MARY E. CLIFFORD, 223 E. Ewing; in action Aug. 9. Mrs. YaW, of R. R. 2, Mishawaka, land after beating off Nazi attacks. attacked fiercely at Alliezverces, DAWN GABLE, 901 E. Altgeld; PHYL­ PRZYBYLSKI, Pfc. Frank, 33, son of wounded in action in France Aug. 30. Elsewhere on western frbiit strat­ slowing advances of 5th Army egy of both sides appeared to be at units. British 8th Army forces standstill pending outcome of bat­ crossed Rubicon and moved over tle of Holland, Adriatic coa'stal highways toward Since D-Day Allied armies in Ravenna. France, Belgium and Holland have American Superfortresses raid­ taken more than 500,000 prisoner)-. ed Manchurian industrial center The American 1st Army took the in blow against supply sources for biggest bag, 182,493. American Japanese in China. Tokyo iden­ combat casualties in this war, as tified targets as Anshan, Penshihu officially announced passed 400,000 and Dairen. to reach a total of 400,760 as com­ One of bitterest struggles in Pa­ pared with 389,125 a week ago. cific war approached close as Secretary of War Henry l_. Stim­ American forces reached north­ son announced that army casual- western tip of Peleliu Island, cor­ Mes through Sept. 16 totaled 337,- nering Japanese remnants in pock­ m$, including 64,468 killed, 177,- et on eastern shore. Allied ves­ 235 wounded, 48,725 prisoners of sels sank five Japanese vessels in war, and 47,315 rnissing. The army raid on Ceram. total was 10,127 greater than that Germans are reported to have announced by Stimson a week ago. developed "new secret weapon" as Allied forces in Italy ousted the result of gasoline shortage. Amer­ Germans from Gothic Line east­ ican Broadcasting Station in Eu­ ward to Adriatic from captured rope quoted Paris newspaper Lib­ Futa Pass and drove within 15 air eration describing secret "V-4" as: miles of Bologna, British troops "Special tank with five-man crew. cut Rimini-Bologna railway four One man steers and other four miles west of Rimini. pedal." Russian troops have driven over WEDNESDAY east Beskid Mountains into Czech­ Battered remnants of British 1st oslovakia and unspecified distance air-borne division withdrew across into Hungary from Arad area of lower Rhine after heroic nine-day western Romania. . * stand. Overwhelmed by German In two-day attack on Manila reinforcements and handicapped area, carrier-based planes destroy­ by bad weather that prevented ed or damaged 103 ships and 405 supplies from being flown in, Brit­ planes, completing smashing of ish gave in only after holding off enemy's air force in Philippines, long enough to allow British 2nd Adm. Nimitz announced. Marines Army to hurdle two of three main on Peleliu slowly fought north­ river barriers in Holland. Mean­ ward as American warships while front dispatches reported thwarted Japanese attempt to re­ Germans were preparing winter inforce island. Southwest Pacific defenses along entire West Wall. Liberator bombers struck Celebes In 8th major invasion of Euro­ Island installations. pean war, Allied forces penetrated Albania and the Adriatic islands MONDAY off Yugoslavia. Berlin said fight­ Picked German troops cut main ing was in progress on 400-mile road through Allied corridor across front on Albanian, and Yugoslav Holland, but Britisteatanks quickly coasts. Allies destroyed the Ger­ cleared lifeline" Arnhem para­ man garison at Himara, southwest­ troops. Pocket near Arnhem was ern Albania, 200 miles southwest further contracted by German of the Red Army in Bulgaria. pressure and plight of sky-borne Germans in Italy put up do-or- army again was grave. To south­ die offensive against American 5th east, British 2na Army crossed Army below Bologna and recap­ German border within 40 miles of tured mountain spur. On Adria­ Ruhr. American big guns and tic coast, 8th army Canadian units planes launched terrific bombard­ advanced to seven miles north of ment of Rhineland opposite U. S. Rimini. 1st army positions. Red army continued to close in Nearly 1,300 U. S. heavy bomb­ on Riga, capital of Latvia. Hun­ ers raided Germany communica­ garian high command admitted tions at Frankfort, Coblenz and Russians are in Hungary proper. Ludwigshafen, through which U. S. forces completed conquest Germans clear reinforcements and of Peleliu except for elimination supplies for battle front. of minor pockets. Bombers con­ In Italy, 5th Army troops, tak­ tinued attack on Celebes, while ing downhill course, advanced to­ Australia-based planes *iade a 3,- ward Po valley against weakened 000-mile roundtrip flight to strike German resistance. They were 21 Japanese positions on Java. miles from Bologna. On east end of line 8th Army pushed across THURSDAY valley over marshes. British troops lunged toward Fall of Riga was imminent as Arnhem- gate in bid to redeem Red Army closed in on Latvian Rhine river crossing won and lost capital with 1,000 tanks in one bv paratroopers in an epic nine- 1. The desk at which Mr. Hastings 6* The electric range, filling the kitchen sector alone. Other Soviet forces day stand. virtually completed liberation of Soviet tanks and infantry drove opened his monthly bills and wrote an 'with appetizing odors. Estonia and captured Baltic port through a chain of lake and river barriers of northern approaches to indignant letter to the electric company, of Haapsalu. 7% The refrigerator, from which Mrs. U. S. Marines on Peleliu drove Riga. Other Russian units crossed protesting their advertising that the av­ 3,000 yards up west coast and into Yugoslavia. H. was taking trays of tinkling ice cubes. a spokesman said the advance Eighth army extended bridge­ erage family gets twice as much electric­ marked "beginning of end" of 12- head over Rubicon and captured day campaign. A southwest Pa­ the Adriatic town of Bellaria. ity for its money as it did 15 years ago. 8. The iron, with which Nancy was American planes based in new­ cific bomber sank three Japanese ly-won Peleliu joined mounting pressing a dress for her date. ships on single bombing run in sic-' offensive in Philippine theater 2. The electric clock at which Mr. Davao Gulf of Philippines. In Chi­ as British announced sinking ad­ na, Japanese columns moved south ditional 32 Jap ships bv subma­ Hastings looked to see if he had time 9. The back porch, on which Mr. H. in Hunan Province toward junc­ rines. tion with other units advancing to mail liis letter before dinner. paused to.think things over — realizing from West River region. that his family did use a lot more elec­ TUESDAY 3. The family radio, with Junior Widening corridor across Hol­ tricity nowadays, and maybe the com­ land, British 2nd Army drove parked close beside it, listening to "Jerry eastward 20 miles to reach Meuse pany was right after all! (Maas) River on 40-mile front. and the Jeeps." This | thrust carried within 30 10. The trash can into which he tossed miles of German Ruhr. Gen. Eis­ 4. The porch light which Mr. H. enhower applied tight censorship (The following men have either en­ his crumpled letter. on news of the fighting around listed or been called to active duty switched on to guide the dinner guests. Arnhem, but indications Were with the United States armed forces.) that British paratroops were cling­ ing to their battered "island." ARMY 5* The percolator, ready and waiting DON'T WASTE ELECTRICITY JUST BECAUSE LLOYD D. PRIEBE, 719 N. St. Pe­ . here was no confirmation of Ger­ ter; LLOYD VICKREY, .2834 N. Mich.; to do dinner duty. IT'S CHEAP AND ISN'T RATIONED! man claims that one pocket of air­ ROBERT H. TOLIN, 1535 W. Sample; borne forces had been "liquid­ ROBERT H/LESHER, R. R. No. 6; JAMES CAUFFMAN, JR., R. R. No. 3; ated." RICHARD D. BOURDON, R. R. 3; WIL­ More than 1,100 U. S. heavy LIAM R. HAWBLITZEL, R. R. No. 1; bombers, escorted by 500 fighters, JAMES H. JOHNSON, R. R. 5; TED R. SULT, R. R. 1; ROBERT L. CLINE. attacked Osnabruck, Hamm and 1530 E. Fourth, Mish.; JOSEPH BELL, Bremen, important centers in de­ 509 E. Fourth, Mish.: HAROLD F. fense of western Germany. Brit­ •STEELE, 202 Hilltop ave., Michigan