SOUTH BEND PUBLIC LIBFUBY. 304 S.MAIN ST., CITY. IKI Dewey Is Tarred with Same Feather As Smeared Harding

G.O.P. Up to 1920Trick

ooseve It ELIEVE IT OR EXAMPLE, "If I were President Roose­ reincarnation of Harding in political philosophy, 1 velt, and I were to say, 'if I don't believe manners, and methods, and the Republican party F in the first commandment, I don't believe of today, a perfect replica of the Republican par­ OR ELSE in God,' Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, of New York, ty of then, in platform and purpose." running for president, MEAT O' THE COCONUT Cox was on the air the would quote me, leaving SIAMESE TWINS other nighf; made the •*• -.•• sr ...- out the first part of my best Democratic speech of SILAS WITHERSPOON I statement, as flatly and the campaign — not ex- only saying 'I don't be­ l cepting Roosevelt's own.; Latest G. O. P. lieve in God,' — and Gov. G.O.P. SLANDERS propaganda, evi- better than Roosevelt's John W. Bricker of Ohio, because he was not de­ KNOW NO GRAVES 3QU9S running for vice president, fending himself; spoke as thetic favor would follow suit; propa­ a statesman and a sage, nru/cv wccno ^ gandizing a half - truth, — ULffLI HLLUO his One World rather than as a politi­ philosophy, on worse than a whole lie." cian, office-holder, or can­ WILLKIE'S BRAND account of his That is from James didate. And he minced no death, overcaps Middleton Cox, former words; might have come AS ANTIDOTE TOth e anathema cf governor of Ohio, who ran- closer to election had he- for president against spoke out then as he does "ROT-GUT" BEING Hggj I Warren Gamaliel Harding now. in 1920. He knowsfltfliSs Mr. Cox admits too FED HIM BY HIS frJ'S tricks, prevarications and that there was disaffec­ lies of that campaign, and tion in the Democratic "HIGH COMMAND" n^rto characterizes Thomas Ed­ party, then as now; Irish­ captivate the rancorous "drys," and hypocri­ mund Dewey a "perfect Warren Gamaliel Thomas Edmund men, for instance, peeved HARDING DEWEY tical "wets," that Wendell L. Willkie was a (On Page Three) "heavy drinker," ancljthat alcohol; not grief and torture from his turndown by the G. O. P., hastened his demise. It is a lie; the same See Page T.E.D. As Champion Cribbage Player THREE brand of Republican lie that was hurled at Theodore Roosevelt and Albert J. Beveridge in 1912, when they went Bull Moosing— against the same "invisible government" that See Page is seeking its comeback today; against the THREE same "invisible empire," situs in Wall street, F. D. R. Blasts G.O.P. Isolationism that is craving its old control now,—yes the. reinstitution of plutocratic dominance, this time plus reassertion of the international bri­ gandage that was perpetrated when it re­ How Coolidge '"Sainted" Dr| Edward Af Rumely turned to power in 1920. R. EDWARD ALOYSIUS RUMELY, son We have a "Warning of Libel," registered mail, I challenge the lie, notwithstanding such of Meinrad Rumely, Laporte, who expand­ from the above Committee on Constitutional Gov­ background as Chase National Bank, of New D ed Rumely & Co. into the ground after the ernment, Norman Vincent Peale, D.D., chairman, York City, over which Winthrop Williams old man died; was founder of the 205 E. 42nd St., New York 17, Aldrich, chairman of the board, presides, Interlocken School for Boys, out N. Y., telling us all about Rumely, while nursing the hope that he will become near Rolling Prairie that flunked and all about "it"; including a let­ secretary of the treasury, if Thomas Edmund quite coincident with the Rumely ter (typewriter reprint type) from Dewey becomes president. But even if true factory in Laporte; who was next Samuel Barrett Pettengill, on a re­ that Wendell Willkie drank some, it doesn't heard from as publisher of the New print letterhead of Farabaugh, Pet­ follow that his Rushville grave is a drunk­ York Mail, then as being indicted tengill, Chapleau & Roper, South ard's grave, any more than that the grave of and convicted for falsifying reports Bend attorneys. Daniel Webster is such, ditto, the graves of to the Alien Property Custodian It is addressed to Hon. Clinton Gen. U. S. Grant, and thousands of others— (World War I) ; then pardoned by P. Anderson, house of representa­ worthy servants of mankind and great teach­ ; Calvin Coolidge, as president; who tives, and Mr. Pettengill informs us ers of truth. now is in trouble in Washington thus that he is "not an officer of the Wendell Willkie's "One World" nor his for contempt of the house of repre­ committee, but a director or trustee, stand for international cooperation to pre­ sentatives for having refused to pro­ and have been its attorney,"—and serve the future peace, are rendered any the vide information to an investigating yessir, it has been his "uniform ad­ less worthy though the author may have sip­ committee, as regards contributors vice to the committee to lean OV_J? ped a few drinks between chapters. Daniel to the Committee for Constitution­ backwards to keep within the law, Webster was literally dragged from the senate al Government, of which he is ex­ as a non-partisan, non-political or­ barroom to the senate floor where he delivered ecutive secretary; said Dr. Edward ganization." So now! his reply to Robert Hayne—under an influ­ Aloysius Rumely, we say, seems in­ Sometime somebody wrote a ence that proves that John Barleycorn isn't disposed to be further held up to the book titled "Within the Law." It wholly nitwit. During the darkest days of public light by members of congress, made the stage; a very clever pre­ the civil war; all seemed lost when President publishers, editors, columnists, ra­ sentation of the tricks of lawyers, Lincoln placed Ulysses S. Grant at the head dio station owners or commenta- crooks, financiers, even editors, in of his armies. It has been said that Grant not . , _ . c , . SAMUEL B. PETTENGILL violating the spirit of the law, while ; l ; IJrief ac iffg_«_--_jtj> (OB Page Four) (Ctr. Fa£_* fatrdii *'] j g^-mWlthout. a hg%K^, 11,.

deny it-jj^rnianently; banish everybody who en­ 'He, Hum!' tertains a single anti-plutocratic thought. They ELIEVE ram infer that the proletariat has no rights that the plutoo«$ is bound to respect. Stewed in their OR ELSE! own and each other's egotlSm they would con­ (From Page One) tract America into a sylogism of me, us, and the Almighty Dollar,—what t&eir social sentiment only drank but passed, ;#_ around; even-p-it.gun - prescribes as the lower straMs of humanity, be jwder in it to make his men vicious. Temper­ damned. \* ~af£|£>> *^4^2[. a-Ik heard of that and they weren't going the war. won by John Barleycorn; some * * * • * sincere fanatics on the subject, and oth- Admittedly Sidney Hillman, Ting "copperheads," .grabbing at anything If This Is Earl Browder and Harry taken the north against the south. Bridges, have called strikes; \ey went to Lincoln, a member of the strikes of garment .workers, in Knights of Temperance himself. He listened, he Communism the steel- mills, among dock- puzzled; finally, "what brand of liquor does whollopers. Of course the Grant use?" he inquired. "The tide has turned, Signal Us workers had no grievance 'you know?" against their employers; could­ "But what difference does the brand make?" Status of n't have. "Look a gift horse in the spokesman inquired, miffed. "Well," said the mouth!" Didn't the em­ Lincoln, "I was just thinking I would like to ployer give him his job, always get some of that brand for the rest of my gen­ Capitalism pay him more than he could, erals, "^^and the delegation walked out. earn, angelic working conditions, short hours, and everything lovely? Certainly then the Anyhow it makes a good story, and I sug­ strikes must have been Communistically in­ gest that the G. O. P. nigh command find out, spired, to overthrow the government, annex us and get some of the Willkie brand, Seagram's" or to Russia, and "divide the wealth,"—-as though otherwise, and pour it down the throat of Mr. the latter were ever a vague tenet of Communis­ Thomas Edmund Dewey as an antidote for the tic faith. I! "rot gut" that he is drinking and vomiting from - the vials (or viles) of Winthrop Williams At- "Divide the wealth, Who with, and who to. drich, Wall street and international banker, There is no such thing as private property under John Foster Dulles, international banker-law­ Commu_iism. It confiscates wealth, socializes it, yer, James Scott Kemper, insurance truster, and puts it at work for use, not profit; for the ""Giibbaloney" Clare Boothe Luce, Clarence commonweal, as they interpret it, not private- Buddington Kelland, ghost-writer, Robert Brownell, ago, to scandalize Gov. Henry F. Schricker out of his steal. Everybody works, if able, and "he that will . Jr., director, and say, to take in the whole G. O. P. election upon claim of illegal voting here and in Gary. not work, neither shall he eat"; therefore no strikes. fr national committee, the likes of Ernest Melvin Mor­ When so many of the alien votes were found to be The worker is supposed to have no worry about food, Republican—including these local "patriots,"—the fuel, clothes, drinks, entertainment, vacations,, etc., ns. i): "-jc >(; **}; "scandal" soon flattened out. "from the cradle to the grave." How it works, or It makes all the difference * .* * # might work, isn't known; a lot has been written in the world who is doing about it, and lying done — but like Christianity it Other Sources of Sidney Hillman, Earl has really never been tried to the ultimate. That ulti­ the drinking, and when, Right to Have Fool Browder and Harry mate like the ultimate of Christianity seems to the Intoxication Than and what happens. I know Bridges, evolved from be­ little about Wendell Will­ Idea Fundamentally low up. "Lowliness," most of us decidedly chimerical. kie's personal habits, his says Shakespeare, "is . If it required Communism to inspire Sidney Hill­ Flowing-Bowl Are secret vices, or besetting young ambition's ladder, man to organize the Garment Workers of America to sins, if any, but I have American Or G.O.P. w hereunto he upward a point that enabled them to talk turkey to sweat­ "Snobocracy" and enough hunches from re­ turns his face, ascends to shop operators, and politicians, and force the aban­ liable sources, confirmed Might Be Ruled Out the top, and when he donment of child-slavery, then Communism has a by the fact that the Re­ once attains the topmost round, he then unto the lad­ very beneficient thing to its credit. Political Hitytity publican "whispering der turns his back and scofiis the base degrees by | If Communism, and Communism alone, drew Earl squad" is spreading the reverse, that I am safe to as­ which he did ascend," — but not so of Hillman, Browder to the steel mills, to organize the steel-work­ sert that "the voice behind the hand" that hisses that Browder and Bridges. They proceeded to try to pull ers, and secure for them shorter hours, .and increased Wendell Willkie was a near-drunkard, and wrote fellow-beings left behind up after them. The Dewey- wages, somewhat commensurate with their health and "One World" under the influence of alcoholics, is likes hate Roosevelt because, they say, "he has been family needs, emancipating.them from the^age-rslav- rather from Berlin and her American suburb — the traitor to his class," and they hate Hillman, Btowder eifjrthat Bethlehem, Carnegie, Youngstown, Republic G. O. P. strategy board, than from the Book of and Bridges because they haven't been. Roosevelt' ai_d U. S. Steel, had imposed upon them from their Facts. born rich should have always championed the cause inception, then glory be to Earl Browder and his What kind of liquor does Dewey consume? So of the rich; no "class consciousness" there, but Hill­ Communism. fair as I know, alcoholics none, but there is a "rot- man, Browder and Bridges show. "class con*_eio.fs- When Harry Bridges walked out on the dock at gut" that inebriates the mental pabulum in fashions ness," and are encouraging it, by not goi__g back on San Francisco, his Longshoremen officially organized, jat put alcoholics high on the shelf for comparative those among whom they were born. Hillman was all and shaking his fist at Dillon Dollar swore that not slgnomin-es. It is that brand of inebriance coursing right when he was championing DeWey for New another vessel would leave that wharf, or dock there, through the brain of Mr. Dewey and his coconspira­ York prosecutor, and Lewis a knave when he was until every seaman in his employ was better paid for tors, that, d.t.'d with visions of red hering, is puking supporting Roosevelt, but now they have traded fewer hours, with working conditions fit for men it upon th6 American intelligence* that Sidney Hill­ horses, and Hillman is knave and Lewis saint. (not dogs), I suppose it was all a matter of Com­ man, Earl Browder and Harry Bridges — and of Communists? Well, is there anything in the con­ munism, transplanted from Russia or Australia; chal­ course, Franklin D. Roosevelt, — are the reincarna­ lenged not a single fault of Dillon Dollar. tions of Satan, and as such, all who need be feajred stitution of the United States that prohibits a man The life of a seaman, from captain to dock-whal- for the future of mankind. having a fool idea? If there were it might be applied to the G. O. P. Patriots in the Republican party have loper, had been like that of a dog (they became known Hitler? No! Hirohito? No! MuSsolini? Reinstate championed such right of free thought and expres­ as sea-dogs), from the time that the first sail was set him! Stalin? Better be cautious about Stalin! He sion on exactly that ground. Charles Evans Hughes, preceding the days of Noah,—but not any more% hasn't embraced capitalism to the hilt, as yet. Church­ Elihu Root and George W. Wickersham .once volun­ Does it require a background of Communism in. ill? Careful! He is making a tool of Roosevelt; we teered their high-powered legal talent, without fee, to America to bring about such reforms? How about need a Dewey via Dulles to master Churchill. And to fight for Socialists elected to the New York assembly, the Homestead riots, the Haymarket riot, the Colo­ save us from Communism within, oh yes, we need when the Republicans and Democrats in Albany were rado Springs massacre, the American Railway strike, Winthrop Williams Aldrich, the big banker, James attempting to deny them their seats because Morgan's and so on, that came along before Karl Marx, Com- Scott Kemper, the insurance ghoul, John Howard minions told them Socialist doctrine contravened munsim, or Soviet Russia, were much dreamed of? Pew, petroleum gusher, and most surely, John Llew­ "American traditions"—and what they vowed was It was Herr Most, and anarchy then; everybody was ellyn Lewis, and his United Mine Workers (the re­ America's constitutional ways. incarnation of the late "Big Bill" Haywood, and his an anarchist who dared say a word for the under-dog.:' I. W. W.). "Nay, nay," said these eminent lawyers. One of My esteemed contempdrary columnist, Paul Mal-f them had been an associate justice of the U. S. su­ lon, in the "One and Only," told us the other night The background of Mr. Dewey's campaign, un­ preme court. The others had filled posts in Republi­ what a great man Sam Gompers, long head of the less you are of the American snobocracy that accord­ can president's cabinets. "There is nothing in the con­ A. F. of L. was; how he never took partisan sides in ing itself aristocratic, worships at the shrine of Greed stitution that sanctifies private property save as politics, played both parties. Grand, says Paul; none and surmises it God, has nothing to recommend it to against unwarranted search and seizure, and confisca­ of this Sidney Hillman P. A. C, stuff for Sam; he American humanitarianism. Ah, but don't mention tion without due process, as protected by statute for "humanitarianism"; that savors of humanity, and looked ahead to the day when organized labor might the time being," said Elihu Root, trying the case. become strong enough to effectively insist upon its "humanity" embraces too many; the low as well as "The constitution, Article 5, contemplates changes, the high, and the sick as well as the well, the lame demands before leading the movement into such and therefore the right to agitate changes regarding brawls. Well, what Mr. Gompers was looking ahead and the halt and the blind, as well as the spry, the property rights or public or private ownership, or swift and the crystal-gazer; the old as well as the to is is pretty well here, isn't it? In his day of strad­ anything else. The fathers themselves were semi- dling, no difference which party won, labor always young—and for God's sake don't mention it, the socialistic; gave us post offices, post roads, docks and lost—but now, different. So it is Communism, is it? poor as well as the rich. wharfs, and assumed control of navigable streams. * * * * In Republican psychology, the preamble to the Socialism is an ideology; we don't like it, but neither George Benson, president of Harding Lcoh8titjpfc_en- leads off, "We the dollars of the United does it like us. Half of its fight against us is our SHteC" not, "we the people"; the 10th amendment Wealth Is college, pinch-hitting for the G. O. P. fight against it. The constitution guarantees an open with an "independent" column dis­ reserves all powers not conferred on the federal gov­ field and a fair fight. There is no evi<*fchce that these ernment, in "the states and the dollars," not the tributed to whoso is silly enoush to So«alists have tried to take over the state of New Result of print, pulls one quite as good as Paul **§tates and ti?e people." Are persons people—before York by force or violence; they are here by vote of they have banked their first million, or subscribed to JVIallon's eulogy to Gompers. He tells the people, the same as the rest of you and have as how a trio of workers garnered an worship those who have banked it? Sidney Hillman, much right to their chairs." Labor and Earl Browder, Harry Bridges; what about them any idea but had no money and in order more than a trio of local gentlemen, high in financial Deny that doctrine and you are as fundamentally Capitalism to put it over found it necessary to Circles—and very G. O. P. and anti-Hillman, Brow­ un American, violate of the principles of liberty and interest capital; without capital they der and Bridges? They had been voting for years equality, as the late Herr .Most, arch-nihilist ever was. were stalled. The. men could do the without naturalization until they were caught up It would be intolerance intolerable. Yet the New In Unison work, but they couldn't get material, with incident to the G. O. P. attempt, a few years York assembly did deny it, temporarily. Taking Re­ and hardly afford to wait returns upon which to live. publican campaigners at their word thev mean to (On Page Eight) '•.'.'*%5 >aP

OCTOBER 27, 1944 Page Three F.D.R. Blasts G.O.P. Isolationism ESPITE Republican scare-dev­ Russia, for distorting the record in foreign relations committee and chair­ Then he specified for the first time iling^ that Roosevelt is sick, if this campaign and for remaining si­ man of the senate appropriations how an American security delegate D not almost dead — and God lent in 1939 and 1940 when Mr. committee; Congressman Fish (Rep., should be empowered to commit save us from Harry Truman—Frank­ Roosevelt was attempting to warn N.Y.), who would become chairman American forces to action without re­ lin D. Roosevelt rode in open car and prepare America and was being of the powerful house committee on ferring the matter back to congress through sixty miles of pouring rain called an "alarmist" and "warmon­ rules, and Representative Martin for debate and delay which might last Saturday, along New York ger" for his efforts. (Rep., Mass.), slated to be Dewey's permit aggression to get out of hand. speaker,—but who "voted against streets lined by three million people, He bracketed the young New York "It is clear," he said, "that if the who (except in pro-German Queens, governor with what he termed "in­ the repeal of the arms embargo, against the lend-lease bill, against th. world organization is to have any known as "enemy territory") ban­ veterate isolationists" who, he said, reality at all, our representative must nered and cheered him for "Another would take command in congress if extension of the selective service law, against the arming of merchant ships be endowed in advance by the people date in 1948." Then he wound up the G. O. P. should be put in power themselves, by constitutional means Saturday night at Waldorf-Astoria next month and sabotage world co­ and against the reciprocal trade agree­ ments act and their extensions." through their representatives in the Hotel, before the American Foreign operation in a manner identical to the congress, with authority to act." Policy Association, a non-partisan or­ isolationists' sabotage of world col­ Against the record of failure to By that statement Mr. Roosevelt ganization, with one of the greatest laboration after World War I. recognize American peril, Mr. Roose­ speeches of his career. velt contrasted his own steps toward gave the final answer to a series of In blunt sentences, the president three questions posed this month by He put the Republican party as called the roll of this group-—Senator- preparedness and for the projected de­ velopment of a world securitv organ­ Senator Ball (Rep., Minn.), leader of championed by Thomas E. Dewey Johnson (Rep., Calif.), who, he said, an articulate group of advocates of (not all Republicans), in a category would become chairman of the all- ization based on the Dumbarton Oaks charter in which America would be international collaboration who had where they belong, minced no words, important Senate foreign relations feared that neither party would com­ giving facts of their past in relation committee next year if the Republi­ committed to take its full share oi forceful action in repelling aggression mit itself to this extent. to the war, and "judging their future cans take command. Johnson, he re­ and keeping the peace. Gov. Dewey thus far had refused by the past," told his audience what called, was one of the "leading isola­ Such measures, he said, are neces­ to answer this question and, on the to expect if they are given the power. tionists who killed international co­ sary because of one inescapable and last occasions when he was asked Although he did not mention operation in 1920." brutal fact; concerning it, replied that he did not Dewey by name, he lashed out at He also listed Senator Nye (Rep., "We either work with the other deem it necessary to reply in view of him on three indictments; for con­ N.D.), who, he said, would be one of great nations, or we might some day the fact that Mr. Roosevek at that demning American recognition of the most influential members of the have to fight them." (On Page Five) Gi O. P. Up to 1920 Tricks — James M. Cox Takes Stump (From Page One) dustrialists and international bankers Calvin Coolidge, and a score of oth­ Johnson, and other of the foreign af­ because President Wilson had not can reap another harvest in reequip- ers, honest - to - goodness League of fairs committee, and on the floor of ireed Ireland from England at Ver­ ping Germany for the occasion? Nations supporters, went to Chicago, the senate, settled the peace—a separ­ sailles; Polish who thought they "If you do, vote for Mr. Dewey. demanded the plank that they got, ate peace, in effect, apologizing to should have had all Europe handed then signed a round-roban for Hard­ Germany that we had ever made her then by the Versailles pact; Demo­ It is the only real issue in this cam­ paign, veiled by the Republicans as it ing promising Republican backing any trouble. crats, nominally, theretofore, who for the covenant — and got behind were downright pro-German, and was in 1920; pretending favor to No difference what kind of inter­ world collaboration, fooling right- him believing the Republican party national peace association Thomas E. might as well have wanted what they would be true to its promise." got,—the opportunity for their boys minded Republicans into cooperation, Dewey may approve to save his face, to fight World War I over again. but all the while determining the re­ But it wasn't. The ring leaders if elected; it will never be ratified by verse. that maneuvered the 1920 Republi­ a Republican senate. "That is the He thus took a side-swipe that the "The attitude of the Republican can convention from the Blackstone Republican game, now as twenty- Woodring - Pettengill, Etc., socalled party in 1920, and since, pre-Pearl hotel never intended to be. Warren four years a&o, — and Mr. Dewey American Democratic National com­ Harbor and since, isolationist and G. Harding was prepared to say, im­ knows it," says Mr. Cox. That is mittee, not without its local adher­ mediately the returns were in: "the the reason that he, instead of Wendell ents, who disguising themselves as critical of every war move, blaming the president as a war-monger for League of Nations is dead." The Willkie was placed at the head of the Democrats still are serving the Re­ only promises kept was that addenda ticket; Willkie wouldn't equivocate; publicans under false pretense,—and wanting to prepare, apd for getting Hitler and Hirohito by the same us in, then for not being better pre­ to Calvin Coolidge admitted to the Dewey wouldn't do anything else. token. pared and not getting in sooner. It ticket for vice president, the "round- "If you want to raise your boy to entitles it to no confidence as a per­ robins" would be recognized in the be a soldier in a World War III," "You mothers," said Cox, "whom manent peace party—the straddlings appointments. They were. says Cox, "vote for Thomas E. Dew­ Mr. Dewey is trying to scare stiff of its candidate for president not­ William Howard Taft was made ey. Otherwise you will miss that with the lie that the administration withstanding." ambition." plans keeping your boys in the army chief justice of. the United States; forever; answer this question. Do Mr. Cox went on to tell how Wil­ Charles Evans Hughes became secre­ Cox gave good warning of that you want your children, or your liam Howard Taft, Charles Evans tary of state, and Herbert Clark Hoo­ contingency twenty-four years ago. grand-children, to have to fight a Hughes, Herbert Clark Hoover, ver, secretary of commerce, — but The nation refused his warning and World War III, because of a jumbled George Woodward Wickersham, what good did that do? Henry Ca­ is now paying for it in blood that peace, and in order that American in­ Nicholas Murray Butler, Elihu Root, bot Lodge, James Eli Watson, Hi staggers all the wars of time. T. E. D. As Champion Cribbage Player PROPO of James M. Cox's of America. It was that statement of you are supposed to have a navy that been fattening on Germany thanks to illustration of Thomas E. mine which Mr. Roosevelt called will go anywhere for national defense the G.O.P. peace, were regardless of A Dewey's lying qualities (sep 'just plain dumb.' Then, as now, we purposes, and no human being can political considerations, strong for comment on Cox's speech), immedi­ got ridicule instead of action." say where it. will have to go—no­ such dictators. Before Hoover went ate illustrations, indulged by Mr. It was a press conference on May body." out they were saying "we need a dic­ Dewey, his own words, are in order. 14, 1940, to which Mr. Dewey re­ "Pettifogger" Dewey _would con­ tator,"—to pull us out of the hole A "snake's belly in a wagon track" fers. The conference was devoted to vey the impression that Mr. Roose­ into which his administration had is the best comparative that we know the president's message of the same velt was content with a mediocre plunged us,—and had it up their of for the lowness of his tactics. "If day, calling for 50,000 planes a year navy. The only truth in his state­ sleeve in 1932 to go farther than I were President Roosevelt," said and immediate extra appropriations ment is that President Roosevelt used NRA ever went to that end. It was Governor Cox, "and I were to say 'if of $896 million for the army and the word "dumb,"—a perfect simile to be a dictatorship from Wall Street, I don't believe in the first command­ navy,—the planes that Mr. Dewey of Mr. Cox's comparative. We built smokescreened by the United Stat.s ment I don't believe in God,' Gov. said was foolish to talk about, sar­ the Panama Canal so that all our Chamber of Commerce with Hoover Thomas E. Dewey, of New York, castically suggesting a two-ocean navy could get where needed without for a stool-pigeon. Commenting on running for president, would quote navy instead. having to go around Cape Horn— this clamor January 14, 1932, before me, leaving out the first part of my and serve against Germany if neces­ Ridicule instead of action? Not he became president, the then gov­ statement, as flatly and only saying sary, instead of having half of it ernor, Roosevelt, of New York said: 'I don't believe in God'." only does "Pettifogger" Dewey con­ being bottled up in the Pacific to bat­ ceal the action, but he distorts the "Some say we need a dictator: Cox wasn't exaggerating. Take tle say, Dewey's only seeming enemy that democracy has fallen down. ridicule. What Mr. Roosevelt really in this war, Japan. for instance, Governor Dewey's at­ said was this: "The two-ocean navy Now to bring about government by Back in 1932, before Mussolini tempt at Oklahoma City, to show 'is an entirely outmoded conception oligarchy, masquerading as democ­ that it was the president, not the Re­ started for Ethiopia, he had been do-" racy, it is fundamentally essential of naval defense and it has been since ing things in Italy; really pulling publican congress, that scoff at, and ''bout 1847, when we first acquired that practically all authority and con­ decried war preparations. her out of the hole. Hitler was just trol be centralized in our national California. I just nevejr discuss two- budding and promising to do as well "It was in January of 1940," says ocean navy in one way or the other government. The individual sover­ Gov. Dewey, "that I publicly called by Germany. American international eignity of our states must first be de- because it is dumb to talk of naval bankers and industrialists, who had for a two-ocean navy for the defense defense in those terms . . . Of course, (On Page Six)

Publishers: Mirror Press, Inc., 307 West Jefferson Boulevard, South Bend, Indiana, Phone 3-2635. Entered at the South Bend (Ind.) post office, Sep­ tember 2, 1909, as second class mail under act of congress of March 3, 1879 JOHN HENRY ZUVER. Sr„ Editor —and of the independence of the United States the 103rd. VOL. XL—35th YEAR OCTOBER 27, 1944 No. 43 SOUTH BEND, INDIANA WEEKLY $1.50 A YEAR; COPY, 5c Page Four THE; MIRROR

This puts an entirely new face on • • the whole proceeding. The money How Coolidge with which to buy the New York Mail was furnished Dr. Rumely in l_fcB5; was bo_rowed' from "private Sainted A carillon of 71 bells chimes from the Bok Singing Tower individuals," he says. He was "in-* Singifig Tewer and Bird formed that it was the capital of Her­ Sanctuary near Lake man Siekhen, an American citizen re­ Dr. Rumely Wales in central Flori­ da. Because of its siding at Baden-Baden (in Germa­ From Page One architectural perfection ny) , but transmitted two years be­ keeping within the letter; a trick that it is often called the fore the United States entered the 'Taj Mahal of America.' war, via the only means then avail­ is quite the business of lawyers, some­ able, German diplomatic channels." times, as Elbert Hubbard put it; "a How many "private individuals" is profession, ostensibly, to preserve and Herman Siekhen? enforce the law, that in practice runs Charles Nagel, St. Louis attorney, to instructing clients in how to evade who was President Taft's secretary of it." commerce, cooperated to make the And Mr. Pettengill evidently Rumely loan possible. So far as dis­ thinks he has done a pretty good job, Many beautiful bells of closed Dr. Rumely never met Kaiser Europe's steeples have for Dr. Rumely, and the CCG; so been silenced, many hid­ Wiihelm Hohenzollern; wouldn't good that they can even defy the na­ den away, waiting to have known him from Baron von tional congress, lest the "cat in the ring out freely when lib­ Bernstorff if he had. However, re­ bag" escape and fall into the clutches Preserve Beauty — eration comes. member that in 1915 Germany was of "Walter Winchell, PM, the Daily Bonds up to the neck at war with Europe, Worker or the reprisals of some two- and there were already threats of by-four bureaucrat who thinks the American intervention; the Lusitania had been sunk. The Mail was strong American system is all washed up and perfectly, and all things work togeth­ pletives." The fill-ins might reverse for neutrality; keeping us out of war. wants to run every business in Amer­ er like clockwork. the sense. ica in either the Hitler or Stalin mo­ Thanks to Mr. Pettengill for one But what of it? By the time Cal. del." • However, exit Pettengill; enter thing; his letter removes our last re­ Rumely! He was ij_dicted, tried, con­ Coolidge became president, America But that is not all. Mr. Pettengill gret that John W. Davis was defeated victed and sentenced, not for being a under the guidance of Warren Gama­ himself testified before a senate cam­ in 1924. Nincompoop that Cal. "German, agent," as currently repott­ liel Hacding, Henry Cabot Lodge, paign committee, and a federal grand Coolidge was, he wasn't that slip­ ed, but on a charge of false informa­ James Eli Watson, and the Republi­ jury, back in 1940, and told them pery; on the face of it not so dumb tion given the Alien Property Custo­ can party, had forgiven Germany and then and there that in opposing a as to even surmise that conspiracies dian, the evidence apparently con­ why not pardon Dr. Edward Aloy- third term for any president, the announce themselves from the house­ vincing the jury, thoug__ desried by sw_s Rumely, even if twice as guilty CCG was "supporting. a political tops—or that "dogs in the manger" his defenders, that the sinews Of his as charged? Why bring him up at philosophy, rather than in opposition are necessarily any less canny than purchase of the New York Evening all? After the repudiation of the Ver­ to any one candidate," — and of "dogs on the trail of the fox." Mail came from the German govern­ sailles treaty, thumbs down on the course that settles it. Nfei The brief on libel too, presumably ment. League of Nations, and the separate Not only that but Mr. Pettengill furnished by Mr. Pettengill, evident­ Specifically he was charged with peace of Berlin, in virtual apology to the Huns, there really was no reason obtained an opinion from John W. ly from his letter, CCG's attorney! violating the Trading With the Ene­ Davis, House of Morgan attorney, According to it all a criminal has to for holding Dr. Rumely to further my Act. He and two attorneys were account. Democratic presidential candidate in do is to obtain a pardon, as Dr. indicted, tried and convicted, one of 1924 (which is supposed to knock Rumely was pardoned by President them Hon. Arthur Garfield Hays— Maybe President Coolidge was ex­ your eye out) who opinionated that Calvin Coolidge, and his crime was long on presidential-Christian names. ercising h_s sense of humor well as his because CCG was not "engaged in a never committed. You mustn't men­ —which ought to absolve all three of sense ol justice? Let everybody go; campaign for the nomination and tion it; the indictment, the offense them. forget all. Already American finan­ charged, the conviction, sentence, even election of any candidates * * * or ciers — "private enterprise," — was the pardon itself. The scandal may After the trial 11 of the jurors said political party," but only "discussing pouring money infra Geraaany, like the question of the third term in the be grounds for a suit for libel, slan­ they were sorry; no evidence of what der, and we don't know, possibly pressure, if any, brought them to drunken saifers, to rebuild hef, and presidency," the "circumstance of the as it has worked out, resuscitate her present campaign" (1940), though treason, or murder. their sorrow. The trial judge and prosecuting attorney too, either lost for World War II. On that basis, aimed directly at a 3rd term candi­ Hush! Gov. Warren McCray too we too approve of the pardon, no date, and opposing him, "does not was pardoned by President Coolidge; their nerve, or repented of their "fol­ ly." The prosecutor is accused of difference what lay in the back­ bring its discussion within the cate­ don't mention it. Under such ruling ground. gory of the activities described in the McCray never went to Atlanta, and holding back some evidence (the na­ Hatch Act." Clyde Walb, Indiana Republican ture not disclosed), which if present­ CCG quotes generously from As­ ed would have brought a different sociate Justke Brandies, Cardoza and In other words, in the estimation state chairman, pardoned by Presi­ dent Hoover, therefore never went to verdict. Stone, on freedom of speech, press', of this eminent lawyer (and he must etc., in readmitting Mr. Arthur Gar­ be eminent or the House of Morgan Leavenworth — though: c&fferent of On petition of these converts Presi­ wouldn't tolerate him), to get into course of Earl Browder, pardoned by dent Coolidge pardoned the wlfrole field Hays, and partner, to practice politics you must support some par­ President Hoover. trio; wiped out all their sins, if any, law. Why not?. Certainly these are ticular candidate, or party; and neith­ The brief gives the citations; and: in effect said to the world, "go as sacred as the right of the president er does opposing them get you in. quotes—maybe something like Gov. thou and do likewise/* (On Page Five). though your "political philosophy'* Tom Dewey's quotations ol Presi­ and the opposition platform dovetail dent Roosevelt; deleting all the "ex- For Governor An Independent Voice: AMUEL

It is a reflection; not a snap judgment; a review and pre-view of To Continue the Splendid current events, with whys and wherefores otherwise frequently f neglected. Record Made By $1.50 b$ the -gear Governor Sc at newsstands HESRY F. SCHRICKER Phone 3-2635 307 W. Jefferson

Order by phone or mail — Choose the DEMOCRATIC If your name is in the telephone directory you can phone Nominee for His Successor us—3-2635— and we will send bill. and Send SCHRICKER to the United States Senate—a post ... 19. now held by JACKSON. MIRROR PRESS, Inc., Publishers SEND- ^SJ MAKE UQ MISTAKE OME YEAR HIS MACHINE NUMBER IS Name Street :. $1.50 City N^

OCTOBER 27, 1944 Page Five

as to distort the facts. I happen to F.D.R. Blasts believe that, even in a political cam­ paign we should all obey that an­ cient injunction — 'Thou shalt not G.O.P. Isolationism bear false witness against thy neigh­ (From Page Three) and heA€> 7 cum bor.' " . time had not specified his own credo In passing, Mr. Roosevelt again on the issue. Folks Back Home: gave the lie to Republican charges or Waiting thus, Dewey sinned away innuendoes that he has indulged in his day of grace. Monday, Senator It has been a long time since I have written one of these secret diplomacy and made secret Ball, younger than Dewey by four missives (the last in March from Ginger Blue Lodge in the agreements. years (therefore not so old and de­ Missouri Ozarks), but when one is battling against Time for "After my return from Teheran, I crepit) , defied the censure of his party the life of a precious pet, writing isn't important. The end came stated officially that no secret com­ and turned his back on its candidate; September 14th, and Michael, our wire-hair, is buried in the mitments had been made," he said. he will not support Dewey. beautiful Cartwright garden at Osceola, Arkansas. "The issue then is between my verac­ Recalling that isolationists effec­ ity and the continuous assertions of tively killed American particpation in The home of Mrs. James R. Cartwright is greatly beauti­ those who have no responsibility in the League of Nations in 1920 des­ fied by its stone terrace with its bubbling fountain and statuary, the foreign field—or, perhaps I pite President Harding's pretensive white-iron furniture and gay-awninged umbrellas. A stone should say, a field foreign to them. advocacy of an effective association of walk from this picturesque terrace leads directly to Mkhael's "The American people know that nations, as a campaign expedient, resting-place pavilioned in the splendor of exotic hibiscus. This Cordell Hull and I are thoroughly Senator Ball foresees grave peril that conversant with the constitution of a similar fate would overtake current was his home for five months, and we were appreciative that he the United States and know that we efforts to keep the peace should the could enjoy these spacious grounds, the lovely L-shaped screened cannot commit this nation to any se­ Republicans candidate take command. porch. And when the inevitable happened, it was a consolation cret treaties or any secret guarantees "Can anyone really suppose that and a comfort to leave him amid this profusion of beauty. We which are in violation of that con­ these isolationists have changed their were so privileged because a friend understood' stitution." minds about world affairs?" President The president closed his address Roosevelt had asked, and then added, More when the mood strikes. outlining the future for a defeated with obvious reference to Dewey's Germany—a future in which the variable record in world affairs, that -LEILA B. ROSTISER. Nafci nation would be completely dis­ "politicians who embraced the policy Osceola, Arkansas. armed and all guilty leaders shall be of isolationism—or who never raised brought to stern retribution and jus­ their voices against it in our days of tice. peril—are not reliable custodians of "We shall not leave them a single the future of America." element of military power—or of po­ As for himself, Mr. Roosevelt re­ The president laid out on the rec­ repeal of the arms embargo in 1939; tential military power," he said. jected the ideology and support of all ord the full story of Republican isola­ they (including "Bob" Grant) voted "There is going to be stern punish­ isolationists and specifically the isola­ tionist and votes against prepared­ against the lend-lease law in 1941, ment for all those in Germany di­ tionist press. ness in the years between the first and and they (including "Bob" Grant) rectly responsible for this agony of "I am proud," he said, "of the fact second world wars, starting with the voted in August, 1941, against ex­ mankind." that this administration does not G.O.P. opposition to the League of tension of selective service — which But on the other hand Mr. Roose­ have the support of the isolationist Nations and the World Court. meant voting against keeping our velt left for Germans a ray of hope— press — and I mean specifically the "Much of the strength of our navy army together four months before "The German people are not going McCormick-Patterson-Hearst - Gan­ was scuttled—and some of the navy's Pearl Harbor." The parentheses are to be enslaved—because the United nett press. (Gannett is big chief of resources were handed over to friends ours; Roosevelt never heard of him. Nations do not traffic in human slav­ CCG to which Sam B. Pettengill is in private industry—in the unfor­ And then, with a direct smash at ery. But it will be necessary for them counsel). gettable case, of Teapot Dome," Mr. Dewey's use of isolated sentences from to earn their way back into the fel­ Citing his own record in warning Roosevelt recalled. statements, he declared: lowship of peace-loving and law- the nation of peril, beginning with "The majority of the Republican "I am quoting history to you. I abiding nations. And, in their climb his Chicago "quarantine address" in members of the congress (including am going by the record. And I am up that steep road, we shall certainly 1937, the president hit hard at Re­ "Bob" Grant) voted against the se­ giving you the whole story and not see to it that they are not encumbered publican charges that he had failed to lective service law in 1940; they (in­ merely a phrase here and half a phrase by having to carry guns. They will prepare this country for the war. cluding "Bob" Grant) voted against picked out of context in such a way be relieved of that burden—we hope, With obvious reference to Dewey's forever." lack of position in the crucial prewar Did you hear the nation-wide iso­ years and months, he commented that lationist roar, like wild beast, imme­ "These same voices were not so very How Coolidge "Sainted" Rumely diately Roosevelt had finished? They audible five years ago—or even four (From Page Four) petition be avoided. CCG has con­ are becoming quite as frenzied and years ago — giving warning of the and congress to double-cross Amer­ fanatical for the Nazis as the remain­ grave peril which we then faced." stitution on the brain; constitution, ica, to plunder, to placate, and pilfer conservatism, constipation, — a con­ ing German soldiers fighting at the He recalled specifically the action of a peace, on the supposition that the stipation of thought and diarrhea of fronts. They're desperate. Their Senator Borah (Rep., Ida.), in block­ war itself was a travesty? words. lies are finding them out. ing revision of the Neutrality act in 1939, indicating that the inability of The question now is, not what this government to strengthen its Dr. Edward Aloysius Rumely did policy because of this Republican ac­ back there in World War I, but what WILFORD V. tion emboldened Hitler to start the are we going to do to avoid a repeti­ war, tion of what an American president Borah tolcMhe senate that he was and the senate did to the World War better informed on foreign affairs I peace? than Secretary of State Hull; that we CCG, the Committee on Constitu­ were in no danger from Germany— tional Government, of which the doctor is executive secretary, and WAL but were we not? Borah lived to see the rape of Poland and Czechoslova­ Samuel B.~ Pettengill attorney, of kia and turn-about-face on Russia. course, isn't supporting the repeti­ Peace be to his ashes. He didn't live tion, or advocating it; it is only to vote for or against a war of which afraid that by some quirk the consti­ he "knew" we were in no danger. tution may be violated,—and the re-

WALTER G. ECKLER No. No.

DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE 18-B 18-B

FOR

County

Commissioner Democrat for SECOND (Middle) DISTRICT Prosecuting Attorney

THE MAN For The OFFICE "His Record as Deputy Prosecutor Sags Elect Him Prosecutor.9' No. 28-B -Adv. -Adv. Page Six Yn___ MIRKOR

DEWEY'S "POINT" OF T_E.D. AS CHAMPION CRIBBAGE PLAYER TOM) PENDERGAST (From Page Three) press gallery as the civilian who knew Of course, not mentioning his Al­ tend that the Kilgore bill should have bany tactics of holding the Assembly stroyed except in more minor mat­ more about the war effort than any­ been passed? His supporters in con­ ters of legislation. God grant that one except the president." to "cooperation and harmony" by gress were among its bitterest enemies; suppressing, or holding back indict­ America may never come to that Dewey followed this up asserting they killed it. If he does not favor pass." that Truman had said he was better ments against the members, Dewey the Kilgore bill, then why does he has a hemorrhage about Tom Pender­ Recently Mr. Dewey, extremely qualified for president than Roose­ cite an advocate of it as a witness imaginative, and pettifoggic, in a de­ velt, but did not want the job,—but gast, the olie-time Kansas City boss, against President Roosevelt? Roose­ exposed as a boodler. This was in fense of state rights, and condemna­ back to the Truman report. It said velt wasn't for it either. tory of what he terms of President there had been waste in war-produc­ connection with his "point" that Roosevelt's "plans to convert our tion, "a lot of waste, but seemingly DRAWS ON TACTICS OF "corrupt city politics" are "holding democracy, into a centralized oligar­ unavoidable, at least unintentional." HIGH-SCHOOL DEBATER President Roosevelt a prisoner"; are chy," quoted from the above state­ "Who is to blame, the white house?" his chief supporters aside from the Dewey, who majored in music and "Communists." ment—but only the two central sen­ Senator Vandenburg asked, kidding- debating, in Owosso and Ann Arbor tences in light-face type: not the bold. ly. "Oh, yes, of course, the white is detected by the St. Louis Globe- Dewey forgets all about how Pres­ Looks very savage all by itself doesn't house. It is to blame for everything Democrat, as remembering his debat­ ident Roosevelt, then governor of it? It is enough to make your blood bad, nothing good," was Truman's ing tactics. "He talks like a high- New York, instead of holding a boil, but read is now clear through, sarcastic retort. Dewey used that re­ school debater scoring 'points' with smothered indictment over his head, and it says just the opposite to what partee to make appear that Truman phoney or obscure half-quotations, removed Jimmie Walker, Democrat, Mr. Dewey was attempting to prove had critically blamed the white house leaving it to the judges to figure him from the mayoralty of New York, by it—a perfect parallel to the exam­ for all waste. out." for "corrupt city politics,"—and of ple that Mr. Cox gives us. course, fails to note that it was the "CRIBS" TO PROVE The Globe-Democrat was com­ New Deal's treasury department MAKES PREPAREDNESS F. D. R. SUB-NORMAL menting on Dewey's efforts to hang which uncovered the evidence of Pen­ SAY UNPREPAREDNESS on the president an "intent" to keep dergast's income-tax violations,—and Adherent of Mien Kampf, if not men in the armed forces. To "prove" "Pettifogger" Dewey, former pros­ student, as President Roosevelt charg­ the New Deal's department of jus­ this utterly untenable "point" he re­ tice which prosecuted him. A New ecutor of New York, pursuing his ed in his Washington speech expos­ iterates a phrase from the verbose argument that the nation was unpre­ ing Dewey's "distort the record" Deal district attorney, Maurice Milli- Gen. Hershey, a soldier and Indiana gan, with full approval of his Wash­ pared for war, calls to the witness campaign, the Republican nominee Republican who has nothing to do stand H. H. Arnold, commanding makes plain that though decrying the ington superiors, totally wrecked the with New Deal policy,—was just vote-stealing machine built by Pen­ general of the Army Air Forces, and challenge, he relies on that Hitlerian blowing off on his own hook, says allows him to say: "Dec. 7, 1941, formula; reliance on reiteration to dergast and sent the big boss himself so himself, and absolves all official to prison. Missouri is the last place found the Army Air Forces equipped cover up his lies and tire the voters authority from responsibility for his with plans but not planes." .*_a>£ into believing them. A subtle con­ in America for Mr. Dewey to tell the blab. people that Mr. Roosevelt is the ' The senate is cribbed from Geri. tempt for the public intelligence—the In St. Louis Mr. Dewey added a "prisoner" of the "corrupt city ma­ Arnold's report to the secretary of kind that a hot-shot lawyer feels for few phrases pulled from a National chines." And should he come to In­ war, Jan. 4 this year. The general a hick jury,—mingles in his methods. Resources Planning Board report— diana, he shouldn't mention it either, did, indeed, say what Mr. Dewey Defending himself, and his isola­ and once again distortion was fla­ lest he start people asking questions says he said. But he went on to add: tionist cohorts, against the charge of grant. The report—a purely advis­ about Republican Gov. Warren Mc­ "When the Japanese attacked, we dumbheadedness, or treason, in refus­ ory document — summarized the Cray, sent to Atlanta, Clyde Walb, may not have had a powerful air ing to, recognize the dangers growing "compelling reasons" for rapid de­ G.O.P. state chairman, sent to Leav­ force but we knew that we soon from the day Hitler ascended to the mobilization and other arguments enworth,—both pardoned by Re­ would have one. We had the plans, German chancellorship, he moves to advanced for a slower pace. The lat­ publican presidents—and D. C. Ste­ and our organization was growing make believe that President Roosevelt ter section Mr. Dewey quoted—but phenson, super-boss of Indiana Re­ every hour. We knew that we had was similarly unconscious of impend-; he did not quote the recommendation publicans, now sweltering in Mich­ " done everything in our power, every­ ing dangers. He "cribs" from a presi­ which the report added: "A general igan City. thing permitted us by a peace-loving dent's message of 1935, this much, policy of speedy, but orderly and nation, to prepare to defend that na­ and no more: "There is no ground controlled, demobilization should be WHY "WASTE LATHER tion against cruel and^unning foes. for apprehension that our relation's adopted." Even had the report meant TO SHAVE AN ASS?" . . . Due in large part to the initiative with any nation will be otherwise what Gov. Dewey pretended it meant, Why say more? "It is a waste of of our commander-in-chief, we did than peaceful." it would in no sense have bound Mr. not start this war from scratch." lather to shave an ass," so why waste In that same message, two para­ Roosevelt. (On Page 8) Here is a perfect sample of Mr. graphs ahead of this statement, the Dewey's prosecution technique. He President said: "I cannot with can­ twists a statement explaining the na­ dor tell you that general international ture of our preapredness into a state­ relationships outside the borders of ment alleging unpreparedness. A the United States are improved. On general's report paying tribute to the the surface of things many old jeal­ The Kind of a Man initiative of the commander-in-chief ousies are resurrected, old passions becomes, in his hands, a criticism aroused; new strivings for armament charging lack of initiative. What we and power, in more than one land, "didn't start from scratch" means, if rear their ugly heads." it means anything, is that we were That President Roosevelt was somewhere on our way, and every aware of world trends toward war, honest intelligence with the memory and of their meaning to our own na­ in Public Office of a louse knows what was holding tional security, is well known to us back, towit: the Republican party every American with a memory. Mr. in congress. Dewey, who was himself totally blind NLY occasionally is a man elected to high office to the implications of fascism, now TRUMAN PEGS LIE BY tries by a lawyer's trick to prove that O in Indiana who possesses such natural integrity REPUBLICAN NOMINEE Mr. Roosevelt shared his own dere­ . . . and has such talented capac­ Senator Harry S. Truman of Mis­ liction. souri, Democratic nominee for the ity for public service . . . that he AFTER WAR AROUSES vice-presidency, accuses Gov. Dewey commands the respect of all the of "political chicanery" for quoting DEWEY'S CRIBBAGE sections from Senate (Truman) com­ Everything is wrong, must be people irrespective of their polit­ mittee reports to criticize the prosecu­ wrong about this war, pre-war, post­ ical leanings. ISp. tion of the war. war, and present, so far as President "This is the most efficiently con­ Roosevelt is concerned. Therefore ducted war in the history of the "Pettifogger" Thomas Edmund Such a man is Governor world as far as the United States is Dewey levels a finger at the president, is concerned," the report said, but and quotes with voice-rasping scorn, Henry F. Schricker! Dewey didn't quote that. president of the CIO Auto Workers He has administered the affairs of state through Truman told San Francisco's Com­ Union, to this effect: "The trouble monwealth Club that he had not is that no adequate over-all planning the tempestuous war years without one breath of scandal; wanted to bring the committee into is being done to insure orderly recon­ without wastefulness; without bickering and confusion; the political campaign, because it was version which will lead into a post­ "not political but a public service or­ war period of full employment." without taking unfair political advantage; without per­ ganization." However, Mr. Dewey Now what was Mr. Frankensteen secuting his political opponents. had done what he wanted to avoid. talking about? "Pettifogger" Dewey He said Dewey had "chosen to take has yanked this sentence from a con­ sentences from committee reports and text of a letter which the union offi­ He has always kept his feet on the ground. had construed honest criticism of mis­ cial wrote to the New York Times takes as a statement that the president last July. The purpose of the letter Henry F. Schricker has been a good Governor. was inefficiently conducting war." was to endorse a plea of Senator Cha­ Many say the best in Indiana history. The Republicans did not quote a sec­ vez that congress reconvene in August tion saying "the greatest job of the to write comprehensive reconversion war had been done on the home legislation. [This is certain— front," he declared. Mr. Frankensteen wrote that no At a press conference shortly after over-all planning was then being done his arrival from Los Angeles, Tru­ because congress had failed to set up Indiana Needs man was asked if he wanted to be an overall planning agency. "There President and if he believed he had is need for a government agency to Henry R Schricker the "experience" necessary for the organize the reconversion process," job. He said he did not want to be he wrote. "To meet this situation we president and gave this reply to the urge the adoption of the Kilgore in ihe U* S. Senate! second question: bill ..." —Adv. "I was nominated by the senate Does "Pettifogger" Dewey con­ OCTOBER 27, 1944 Page Seven

met, Mr. Gates, in person, saw to You are not going to expand or ;s Blocked Post-War Aid it that his own promises were contract social security, or any .dishonored. other national program. You prob­ led Railroad-Relief at "Did Mr. Gates have a reason ably are not even going to be gov­ gs for dishonoring his promises? He ernor of Indiana, but, as you jseek. AYOR Jesse I. Pavey(right) no one, except selfish interests, made the explanation that the leg­ the office, you cannot avoid mak­ on WSBT Monday night, said 'No' Representatives of the islative program requested by ing your own statement of your M took up the cudgels of vot­ Republican mayors of Indiana fol­ Gov. Schricker, which would pre­ own policy for your own state, ers in the armed forces, the tax­ lowed Mr. Gates from place to pare the cities of the state to pro­ Mr. Gates, the time is short. You payers against tke railroads, and place throughout the state seeking vide jobs for -returning service will be in South Bend this week. the Indiana Municipal league, an audience. Gates carefully men and war workers during re­ Speak up or forever hold your which he served last year as presi­ avoided them. Cornered at last, conversion, would lead to requests peace." dent, and the problem of post-war Gates pledged the Republican for legislation by labor, the farm­ needs, in a series of indictments mayors, favorable legislative ac­ ers and other groups, and he would "Zodiac Girls" — Don't miss against Ralph F. Gates, Republican tion at the special session to help not permit that during a year just Scorpio, another in the series of nominee for governor, excoriating solve their problems, but, as the before an election." unique interpretations of the signs the G. O. P., boss for trickeries in legislature opened, the same Re­ In conclusion, said the mayor: of the Zodiac. Watch for the paint­ handling legislation before the publican mayors were locked out "Mr. Gates, you are running for ing by the well-known artist, Wil­ 1933 assembly, and the 1944 spe­ of their own party caucus. Mr. governor of Indiana. You should ly Pogany, reproduced in full col­ cial session. Gates presided at and" controlled not be seeking office on coattails or on the front page of The Amer­ Leading off with comments on that caucus?- though he was not a that are already too heavy for ican Weekly, the magazine distri­ the necessity of voting, regretting member of the general assembly. themselves. You are not going to buted with next week's Sunday; that only 27% of the vote in the And when the general assembly conduct a war, or write a peace. Chicago Herald-American. county was cast at the primary, and urging everyone to get out and cast their ballots, regardless of party. "But," said he, "the right and duty to vote carries with them the corresponding duty to know the records of candidates for whom "The comics say (IT many in our armed forces will not be able to vote. I have never claimed to be an expert on na­ tional or international affairs. My work in the last six years has been state and local, and that has taken all of my time and energy. Part of "jny activities as mayor of South S W9 Bend has involved participating in the affairs of the Indiana Mu­ nicipal League, a non-partisan or­ ganization 45 years old, devoted to the best interests of the urban population of Indiana, wTiich in­ volves a majority of the state's people. . "I have just retired as President of this league, •*••**• a Democratic President, if you please — which has a membership more than 70% Republican. From my experience in the league, and as mayor, I do feel competent to discuss the can­ MA*OR JESSE didates for state office—particu­ larly the Republican candidate for only by a desperate last ditch governor. I shall leave the dis­ stand of those interested in the cussion of the rest of our splendid welfare of the taxpayers. That Democratic ticket to those more bill, like Gates' political career, qualified than myself. But now to could not stand the white light of Mr. Gates: publicity. It was common conver­ "Ralph Gates has dominated the. sation among the Republicans at Indiana legislature and the Re­ that session, that Gates' efforts in publican party since 1943. In the favor of the railroads, was to be 1943 session of the Indiana general rewarded by their influence for assembly — a session condemned Gates in his campaign for the gov­ by both Democrats and Republi­ ernorship: cans alike, as among the worst in 'tit is barely possible that Mr, the state's history—the legislative Gates will tell the oublic why he halls of the state house stood un­ labored so hard for this bill when der the constant cloud of a dicta­ he comes to South Bend this week. tor not responsible to or elected by Mr. Gates, in this campaign, has the people. That dictator was had much to say about a little Ralph Gates, the present Repub­ man from Albany, but nothing to lican candidate for the office of sa-r about himself. governor. SHACKLED SOLDIER VOTE "No bill*, proposed in the inter­ AND POST-WAR PROBLEMS est of the people could obtain a -hearing unless it had the blessing "The Republican party has of the same Mr. Gates. At a time claimed much deserved credit ior when the people of the state need­ the passage of a bill making, it dif- ed desperately the benefits of new ficut for the members of our legislation, the shadow of Mr. armed forces to vote. This bit of Gates stood in the halls of the history deserves some examina­ capitol to bar the legislative bene­ tion too. Early this year Gov. fits from the public. Schricker called a special session of the legislature. That call noted WANTED TO TAX PEOPLE the need of legislation for soldier FOR RAILROAD CROSSINGS vo-cers, but, contrary to what the "An example will suffice. Under Republican party would make you the guidance and inspiration of believe, the call was far more ex­ the wealthy and powerful railroad tensive. -Lrov. Schricker laid be­ lobby, a bill was introduced to fore the general assembly not only transfer from the railroads to the the matter of the soldiers vote, but shoulders of the taxpayers, the proposed to lengtnen the hours of cost of installing and maintaining voting for the thousands of work­ .protection at railway crossings. ers in our war industries, tax law Our biggest security-holders are; amendments, municipal post-war w.HE N a comic strip artist wants "Under the lash of the political whip of Ralph Gates, this bill was needs, state post-war problems, to suggest the birth of a new idea, banks arid * insurance companies forced through the house with and the correction of faulty Re­ every device of political trickery publican legislation. he draws an electric bulb glowing which have invested your savings in the book. It was defeated i& "But Mr. Gates—who was elect­ above his hero's head* Since that here because they can count on the senate by a narrow margin ed by no one and who represented symbol comes from our business, sound business management — and Future Farmer President Takes Over maybe we can borrow it to do a because cheap, dependable electric­ little enlightening of our own. ity is so basic to the American way For example, there's the old idea of living. that companies like outs are all So whether -you own us directly owned by a few wealthy people in through stock, or indirectly through Wall Street. Actually, of course, a savings bank, you have a stake this company is largely owned by in this company. We welcome your the same people it serves and run ownership and your patronage. We by your friends and neighbors. try to be worthy of both.

Oliver H. Kinzie, left, of Cushing, Okla., new president of the Future Farmers of America, receives the gavel of office from re­ tiring president Robert Bowman of Buttonwillow, Calif., at the .organization's 17th national convention, held recently in Kansas City, Mo. DON'T' WASTE ELECTRICITY JUST BECAUSE IT'S CHEAP AND ISN'T RATIONED! Page Eight THE MIRROR

Each Week for the Whole Week Following Another Mirror Feature Exclusively in These programs, nowhere else available, supple-*, H|T PROGRAMS ment THE MIRROR, weekly, with daily radio JliROIi news and entertainment. South Bend's DeLnxe Weekly

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SUNDAY, OCT. 29 630 P. M.—News Editor 10:45 A. M.—Jack Berch & Co. 8:00 P. M.—EKhininger — Master Men- 1:00 P. M.—Kiernan's News Corner 7:30 A. M.—Voice of Calvary 6:15 P. M.—My Sister and I 11:00 A. M.—Glamour Manor talist '^___W 1:15 P. M.—Mystery Chef 8:00 A. M.—Need of the Hour 7:00 P. M.—Leon Decker—News 11:30 A. MK—Governor Thomas Dewey 8:30 P. M.—Tropical Moods 1:30 P. M.—Ladies Be Seated 8:55 P. M.—Freedom's Hero 2:00 P. M.—Songs ot Romance 8:30 A. M.—Tabernacle Echoes 7:15 P. M.—Democratic Pgm. 12:00 Noon—Baukage Talking—News 1 9:00 A. M.—Message of Israel 7:30 P. M*—Allan Young Show 12:15 P. M.—WHOT's Cookin* 9:00 P. M.—Senator Truman 2:15 P. M.—Hollywood Star Time * 9:30 A. M.—Southernaires 8:00 P. M.—Famous Jury Trials 12:45 P. M.—Noonday Headlines . 9:30 P. M.—Scramby Amby i:30 P. M.—Afternoon Headlines 10:00 A. M.—AAF Symphonic Flight 8:30 P. M.—Tropical Moods 12:50 P. M.—WHOT's Cookin' (cont'd) 10:_0 P. M.—Billy Mills Orchestra 2:3-- P. M.—Memorial Chimes . 10:30 A. M.—Blue Notes 8:55 P. M.—Freedom's Hero 1:00 P. M.—Kiernan's News Corner 10:15 P. M.—-Henry J. Taylor—News 2:45 -M.—Serenade for Strings 10:45 A. M.—First united Brethren Ch. 9:00 P. M.—Raymond Gram Swing 1:15 P. M.—Mystery Chef 10"30 P. M.—Chuckles Time 3:00 M.—Ethel & Albert 9:15 P. M.—Organ Melodies 1:30 P. M.—Ladies Be Seated 10:55 P. M.—War News 3:15 M.—Don Norman Show 12:00 Noon—John B. Kennedy—News 11:00 P. M.—Dance Orchestra 12:1/5 P. M.—Waltz Rhythms 9:30 P. M—Let Yourself Go 2:00 P. M.—-Songs of Romance 3:30 M.—Time Views the News 2:15 P. M.—Hollywood Star Time 11:30 P. M.—Dance Orchestra 3:45 M.—Rose Room . 12:30 P. M.—In His Steps :0:00 P. M— Teddy Powell 11_55 P. M.—War News 1:00 P. M.—God & Mothers 10:15 P. M.—Henry J. Taylor—News 2:30 P. M.—Afternoon Headlines 4:00 M.—Gold Room 2:35 P. M.—Memoi-ial Chimes 4:15 M.—Green Room • 1:15 P. M.—Silver Strings 10:30 P. M—Chuckles Time THURSDAY, NOV. 2 1:30 P. M.—Beauty That Endures 10:55 P. M.—War News 2:45 P. M.—Serenade for Strings 4:30 M.—Blue Room 3:00 P. M.—Ethel & Albert 6:30 A. M.—Sunrise Ranch 4:45 M.—Hop Harrigan 2:00 P. M.—Charlotte Greenwood 11:00 P. M.—Dance Orchestra 7:00 A. M.—Martin AgrtHisky—News Theatre 11:30 P. M.—Dance Orchestra 3:15 P. M.—Don Norman Show 5:00 M.—Terry & the Pirates 3:30 P. M.—Time Views the News 7:15 A. M.—Early Birds 3 5:15 M.—Dick Tracy * 2:30 P. M.—Ethel Barrymore 11:55 P. M.—War News 7:30 A. M.—News 5:30 M.—Jack Armstrong . 3:00 P. M.—Darts for Dough 3:45 P. M.—Rose Room 7:35 A. M.—-Early Birds (cont'd) 3:30 P. M.—World of Song 4:00 P. M.—Gold Room 5:45 M.—Captain - Midnight .. eWe_\ WEDNESDAY, NOV. 1 7:45 A. M,—Consolaires 6:00 M.—Fred Waring & His Penn- 4:00 P. M.—Mary Small Revue 4:15 P. M.—Green Room 8:00 A. M.—Breakfast Club 4:30 P. M.—Hot Copy 6:30 A. M.—Sunrise Ranch 4:30 P. M—Blue Room .. Bylvanians 9:00 A. M.—My True Sjtory 6:30 M.—News Editor 5:00 P. M.—Radio Hall of Fame 7:00 A. M.—Martin Agronsky—News 4:45 P. M.—Hop Harrigan 9:25 A. M.—Aunt Jemima 6:00 P. M.—Drew Pearson—News 5:00 6:45 _£.—My Sister and I 7:15 A. M.—Early Birds P. M.—Terry & the Pirates 9:30 A. M.—Cliff Edwards 7:00 M.—Leon Decker—News 6:15 P. M.—Don Gardiner — Morning 7:30 A. M.-—News 5:15 P. M.—Dick Tracy 9:45 A. M.—Listening Post 5:30 7:15 M.—Champagne Music News 7:40 A. M.—Early Birds (cont'd) P. M.—Jack Armstrong 10:00 A. M.—Breakfast at Sardis *, 7:30 M.—America's T)bwn Meeting 6:30 P. M.—Quiz Kids 7:45 A. M.—Consolaires 5:45 P. M.—Captain Midnight 10:30 A. M.—Gilbert Martyn—.News of the Air 7.•__*-P. M.—Music for Sunday 8:00 A. M.—Breakfast Club 6:00 P. M.—Studio Party 10:45 A. M.—Jack Bereft &^Co. 7:15 P. M.—Dorothy Thompson 6:15 8:30 Jt.-^Political (Democratic) 9:00 A. M.-My True Story P. M.—Fiesta Time 11:00 A. M.—Glamour Manor 8:40 M.—Tropical Moods 7:30 P. M.—Joe E. Brown—Stop or Go 9:25 A. M.—Aunt Jemima "6:30 P. M.—News. Editor 11:30 A: M.—Farm & Homemakers 8:00 P. M.—Walter Winchell 8:55 _*f.—Freedom's Hero 9:30 A. M.—Beauty That Endures 6:45 P. M.—My Sister and I 12:00 Noon—Baukage Talking—News 9:00 M.—Raymond Gram Swing 8:15 P. M.—Hollywood Mystery Time 9:45 A. M.—listening Pqst 7:00 P. M.—Leon Decker—News 12:15 P. M.—WHOT's Cookin' 8:45 P. M.—Jimmy Fidler 9:15 M.—Petite Musicale 10:00 A. M.—Breakfast at Sardis 7:15 P. M.—Champagne Music 19-4R p. M.—rNocaiday Headlines 9:30 M.—March of Time 9:00 P. M.—The Life of Riley 10:30 A. M.—Gilbert Martyn—News 7:30 12:50 P. M.—WHOT's Cookin' (cont'd) 9:30 P. M.—Footnotes* by Foster P. M.—Musical Comedy Favorites 10:00 M.—Rhythm Makers 10:15 M.—Henry J. Taylor—News 10:00 P. M.—Golden Gate Quartette 10:30 M.—Chuckles Time 10:15 P. M.—Sunday News Review // 10:55. M.—War News 10:30 P. M.—First Church of the Naza- 11:00 M.—Dance Orchestra rene Blind Date Is Great 11:30 M.—Dance Orchestra 11:00 P. M.—Dance Orchestra M.—War News 11:30 P. M.—Dance Orchestra 11:55 11:55 P. M.—War News WHOT Laughter-Getter FRIDAY, NOV. 3 MONDAY, OCT. 30 6:30 A. M.—Sunrise Ranch 6:30 A. M.—Sunrise Ranch Listening in on the neighbor's 7:00 A. M.—Martin Agronsky—News A ally get the boys a date. Such as 7:15 7:00 * M.—Martin Agronsky—News telephone conversation, long a ru­ A. M.—Early Birds 7:15 A. M.—Early Birds the one from the sailor who plead­ 7:30 A. M.—News 7:30 A. M.—News ral tradition, has become a nation­ ed: "It's either you, the Stork Club 7:35 A. M.—Early Birds (cont'd) 7:35 A. M.—Early Birds (cont'd) al pastime through the WHOT and caviar ... or it's back to the 7:45 A. M.—Consolaires 7:45 A. M.—Consolaires laugh-getter, BLIND DATE. 8:00 A. M.—Breakfast Club 8:00 A. M.—Breakfast Club bunk and a can of Navy beans." 9:00 A. M.—My True Story - 9:00 A. M — My True Story . Every Monday night at 7:30 Whether the'y win the coveted 9:25 A. M.—Aunt Jemima 9:25 A. M.—Aunt Jemima o'clock thousands of persons eaves­ date or not, the men who are quick 9:30 A. M.—Beauty That Endures 9:30 A. M.—Beauty That Endures drop on the fast-talking efforts of 9:45 A. M.—Listening Post 9:45 A. M.—One Woman's Opinion 10:00 A. M.—Breakfast at Sardis" 10:00 A. M.—Breakfast at Sardis six eager servicemen, bidding for a 10:30 A. M.-^-Gilbert Martyn—News 10:30 A. M.—Gilbert Martyn—News BLIND DATE with three beautiful DEMOCRATIC 10:45 A. M.—Jack Berch & Co. 10:45 A. M.—Jack Berch & Co. girls. The enthralled listeners, in­ POLITICAL BROADCASTS 11:00 A. M.—Glamour Manor 11:00 A. M.—Glamour Manor trigued with the verbal attacks 11:30 A. M.—Farm & Homemakers • 11:30 A. M.—John Bankhead (Dem.) NEXT WEEK 1_:00 Noon—Baukage Talking—News 11.-45 A. M.—Farm & Homemakers and counter-attacks, in turn laugh, 12:15 P. M.—WHOT's Cookin' 12:00 Noon—Baukage Talking—News sigh, weep and applaud, depend­ 12:45 P. M.—Noonday Headlines 12:15 P. M.—WHOT's Cookm? 12:50 P. M.—WHOT's Cookin' (cont'd) ing on the success of the uniform­ Sunday, Oct. 29: 1:00 P. M.—Kiernan's News Corner 12:45 P- M.—Noonday Headlines ed lotharios. 12:50 P. M.—WHOT's Cookin' (cont'd) 12:50-1:00 P. M WSBT 1:15 P. M.—Mystery Chef 1:00 P. M.—Kiernan's News Corner BLIND DATE is the perfect cur­ Monday, Oct. 30: 1:30 P. M— Ladies Be Seated 1:15 2:00 P. M.—Songs of Romance P. M.—Mystery Chef tain-raiser for the BLUE'S week- 7:55 A. M WHOT 2:15 P. M.—Hollywood Star Time 1:30 P. M— Ladies Be Seated long cavalcade of laugh shows. 2:00 P. M.—Songs of Romance 7:45-7:55 P. M WSBT 2:30 P. M.—Afternoon -Headlines 2:15 Its complicated lormat, seen only 2:35 P. M.—Memorial Chimes P. M.—Hollywood Star Time Tuesday, Oct. 31: 2:45 P. M.—Sacred Heart Program . 2.-30 P. M.—Republican Pgm. by a huge studio audience, pro­ 7:15-7:25 P. M WHOT 2:45 P. M.—Queen of Peace duces over the air a simple, old- "The Listening Post" offers lis­ 3:00 P. M.—Ethel & Albert 3:00 P. M.—Ethel & Albert 11:05 P. M __WSBT 3:15 P. M.—Don Norman Show fashioned pattern, that of a young teners 15-minute dramatizations 3:30 P. M.-—3__ra*e' Views the News 3:15 P. M.—Don Norman Show* Wednesday, Nov. 1: 3:30 P. M.—Time Views the News man trying -to talk himself into of fiction and non-fiction culled 3:45 P. M.—Rose Room 3:45 P. M.—Rose Room the good graces of a girl. 3:45 P. M WHOT from the pages of the Saturday 4:00 P. M.—Gold Room 4:00 P.M.—Gold Room 4:15 P. M.—Green Room Of course, neither the girls nor 6:00-6:15 P. M._ WSBT Evening Post. Ethel Owen, long 4:30 P. M.—Blue Room 4:15 P. M.—Green Room 10:20-10:30 P. M WSBT regarded as one of radio's top per- 4:30 P. M.—Blue Room the men have ever met. The girls, 4:45 P. M.—HQ_> Harrigan 4:45 P. M.—Hop Harrigan Thursday, Nov. 2: formers^ is a "Listening Post" reg­ 5:00 P. M.—Terry & the Pirates who are lovelies from the stage, 5:15 P. M.—Dick Tracy 5:00 P. M.—Terry & the Pirates radio, theatre or screen world, sit 6:55 A. M._ WSBT ular. 5:15 P. M.—Dick Tracy This Blue Network program is 5:30 P. __L—Jack Armstrong 5:30 P. M.—Jack Armstrong in one side of a partition, the boys 11:55 A. M WSBT 5:45 P. M.—Captain Midnight 5:45 P. M.—Captain Midnight on the other. Over the telephone 6:45-6:55 P. M WSBT heard every Tuesday through Fri­ 6:00 P. M.—Studio Party 6:00 P. M.—Studio Patty he boys compete for a BLIND 7:45-7:55 P. M WSBT day at 9:45 a. m. over station 6:15 P. M.—Fiesta Time 6:15 P. M.—Fiesta Time WHOT. 6:30 P. M.—News Editor 6:30 P. M.—News Editor DATE at the famed Stork Club, all 8:30 P. M WHOT 6:45 P. M.—Dinner Music 6:45 P. M.—Dinner Music expenses to be paid by the show's Friday, Nov. 3: 7:00 P. M.—Leon Decker—News 7:00 7:15 P. M.—Democratic Speech P. M.—Leon Decker—News sponsor. The audience listens in 6:15-6:30 P. M WSBT P. M.—Saltonstall—Rep. Speech 7:15 P. M.—Champagne Music on both sides of the conversation, 7:30 7:30 P. M.—Your Blind Date 7:15-7:25 P. M WHOT T.E.D. As Champion 8:00 P. M.—Gangbusters 8:00 P. M.—Counter Soy which runs from puns to entrea­ Saturday, Nov. 4: 8:30 P. M.—Gov. Bricker 8:30 P. M— Tropical Moods ties, from wise-cracks to bouquets. Cribbage Player 9:00 P. M.—Earl Godwin 8:55 P. M.—Freedom's Hero Football game WSBT 9:15 P. M.—Le£s Learn Spanish ._»•' 9:00 P. M.—Raymond Gram Swing Again, of course, there's no ac­ 9:30 P. M.—Ect-Wynn—Happy Island Monday, Nov. 6: (From Page Six) P. M.—Claude Sweeten Orchestra 9:15 P. M.—Let's Learn Spanish counting for what clicks with the 7:15 A. M WSBT 10:00 9:30 P. M.—Melody in the Night gals. Punned an aspiring sailor time, paper and ink on warning of 40:15 P. M.—Henry J. Taylor—News 10:00 P. M.—Sammy Kaye one night, after being asked if he 6.35-6:45 P. M.______WHOT its wiles? If the examples here 10:30 P. M.—Chuckles Time • 10:15 P. M.—Henry J. Taylor—News 10:55 P. M.—War News 10:30 liked demure girls: "De-mure the given aren't enough more wouldn't 11:00 P. M.—Dan-ce Orchestra P. M.—Chuckles Time P. M.—Dance Orchestra 10:55 P. M.—War News merrier." He didn't win the date. oe either. 11:30 11:00 P. M.—DanceO^cUestra Countered a soldier on another with the wise-crack are favorites As the campaign speeds to its 11:55 P. M.—War News 11:30 P. M.—Dsnce Orchestra with the eavesdroppers. On the close, it may not be easy to keep 11:55 P. M.—War News show to a question as to. whether. trigger one night was a Marine SATURDAY, NOV. 4 .e was a good dancer: "No, but I uo with Mr. Dewey's cribbage and 6:30 A. M.—Sunrise Ranch corporal, to whom a girl described distortions. He talks about 10,- TUESDAY, OCT. 31 can crack my knuckles." He DID her dream-man as, "true, square, 7:00 A. M.—Martin Agronsky—News 6:30 000,000 unemployed in 1940—the 7:I_ A. M.—Early Birds A. M.—Sunrise Ranch win the date. and^up-right." 7:30 A. M.—News „ . 7:00 A. M.—Martin Agronsky—News Heart-rending appeals, if sprin­ higrest estimate of a biased source 7:15 A. M.—Early Birds "Lady, you don't -want a man, —and our allegedly "slow" recov­ 7:35 A. M.—United Nations News Re­ 7:30 kled with enough small-talk, usu­ vue A. M.—News you want a piano," quipped the ery in the 1930s. He ignores the 8:00 A. M.—Breakfast Club 735 A. M—Early Birds (cont'd) Marine. fact that the only spectacular Eu­ ftaOO A. M.—Fanny Hurst Presents 7:45 A. M— Coila*_-_._. ta 9:30 A. M.T-What's Cookin' 8:00 A. M.—Breakfast Club Playing Cupid on the BLIND ropean "recoverv" occucrred in 9:55 A. M.—War News 9:00 A. M.—My "True Story |.'"*f DATE shows is lovely femcee, Ar­ nations which "cured" unemploy­ 10:00 A. M.—Chatham Shopper 9:25 A. M.—Aunt Jcm^ra : lene Francis, who has a gift foa ment by building vast armies and 10:15 A. M.—Trans-Atlantic Quiz 9:30 A M.—Cliff Edwards 10:30 A. M.—Land of the Lost 9:45 A. M.—Listening Post. - drawing out a thumb-nail sketch war industries. 11:00 A. M.—Swing Shift Frolics 10:09 A. M.—Bre^kiast ; t Sai'-dis from a uniformed man before he More significant than any of 11:30 A. M.—Farm & Homemakers 10:30 A. M.—Gilbert Martyn—News does his^ stuff on the telephone. these individual misrepresenta­ 12:00 Noon—Sez You 10:45 A. M.—J_.ek Be:ch & Co. tions, however, may be one general 12J30 P. M.—Eddie Condon's Jazz Con­ 11:00 A. M.—Glamour Manor Miss Francis, and prominent men cert 11:30 A. M;—Farm & '. -o^netfiakT- and women who serve as chape- fact observable about Mr. Dewey's 12:45 P. M.—Noonday Headlines 12:00 Noon—Baukage Talking—News rones for the party, accompany the campaign. He now excites great­ 12:50 P. M.—WHOT's Cookin' 12:15 P. M.—WHOT's C ck*V winning servicemen and their est applause in the extreme isola­ 1:00 P. M—Horace Heidt's Treasure 12:45 P. M.—Noonday Headlines blind dates to the Stork Club. tionist wing ofthe Republican par­ Chest 12:56 P. M.—WHOT's Cookin' (cont'd) 1-45 P. M.—S_.tu¥day Dancing Party 1:C0 P. M.—Kiernan's News Corner As for the losers, they get $15, ty. He once was considered doubt­ 4:45 P. M—Hello Sweetheart 1:15 P. M.—Mystery Chef fully by the most bitter tories and 5:00 P. M.—Edward Tomlinson—News 1:30 tickets to popular Broadway shows P. M.—Ladies 3e Seated and sympathy and cheers from the vengeful isolationists, but today 5:15 P. M.—Harry Wismer—Sports 2:00 P. M.—Songs of Romance they too are singing his praises. 5:30 P. M.—Soldiers with Wings 2:15 P. M.—Hollywood Star Time listeners. . 6:00 P. M.—Wa,r Correspondents 2:30 P. M.—Afternoon Headlines Abroad 2:35 P. M.—Memorial Chimes 6:15 P. M-—Vocadences 2:45 P. M.—Sprenade for Strings A Russian reporter writes that A BRITISH War Ofl_e_>g staff 6:30 P. M.—Meet Your Navy 3:00 P. M.—Ethel & Albert •^ directive' says "Nothing is 7:00 P. M.—Footlight Reviews 3:15 P. M.—Don Norman Show Love and romance take over in Jap home front propaganda now 7:30 P. M.—Boston Symphony Orch. 3:30 P. M.—Time Views the News "My True Story." Above scene, takes the line that a miracle will more conducive to long-winded 8:80 P. M.—Sen. Harry S. Truman 3:45 P. M.—Rose Roem happen to save Nippon from in­ and stflted writing than the use 9:00 P. M.—Guy Lombardo Orchestra 4:00 P. M.—Gold Room from True Story, is typical of the 9:30 P. M.—The-Man Called "X" — 4:15 P. M.—Green Room stirring, real-life tales of heart­ vasion—such as the typhoon of a formal, pedantic, or poly­ Herbert Marshall 4_» P. M.—Blue Room ache and happiness as dramatized which wiped out an enemy force syllabic substitute for the nat­ 10:00 P. M.—Saturday Dance Parade 4:45 P. M.—Hop Harrigan in the i8th century—but that the ural word or expression." That's 10:30 P. M^-Chuckles Time.. . 5:00 P. M.—Terry & the Pirates in "My True story," an innovation 10:55 P. M.—War News 5:15 P. M.—-Dick Tracy in daytime programming. This Jap in the street does not be­ puttin' the communique writers 11:00 P. M.—Dance Orchestra 5:30 P. M.—Jack Armstrong Blue Network feature is heard lieve such talk. Apparently the on their-orthographic,-orthoepic, 113©. P. M.-rD___c_*~ Orchestra , 5:45 P. M.—Captain Midnight every Monday through Friday at Japs have seen too many coun­ solecistic, and etymological met­ 11:55. P. M.-*-War News 6:00 P. M.—World and America 9:00 a. m. over station WHOT. *_ *- .D..0- —i I 6:15 P. M.—Fiesta Time ter-miracles. tle, all "light WSBT—Daily Program in Tribune—96(1 IM/

OCTOBER 27, 1944 Page Nine,

D. Jackson, Sidney Hillman and sented under the auspices of the cloaked in secrecy due to the na­ tered Dhomkos, 30 miles north of communism. Bendix Products division, reveals ture of their work. Lamia. the complete story of a large xxx ULTUM BENDIX FILMS STORY American company's war produc­ COURT APPROVES OF THURSDAY OF PLANT WAR WORK: tion job. BARRETT LAW SALES: American Third and Seventh.—-j People of South Bend and sur­ Wednesday and Thursday the . Approval of .toe sale of anorox- fleets sank or damaged at least 30 m in rounding communities were taken film was shown to employes, their imately half o_ 1,500 parcels of Japanese warships in a decisive^J m behind the scenes in American families and guests at a__ernoon land in which the city of South battle. Invasion forces landed orijsl %iWPAR VOwa r production Monctey morning and evening showings. Bend either owns or holds a sub­ Samar, third largest island in FhiW^' stantial interest has been entered ippines. at the Granada 'theater, -where The picture moves swiftly over by St. Joseph superior court No. they witnessed the preview of the the years from 1938 to 1943, a pe­ 2, and about 400 sales have actual­ motion picture "Ceiling and Vis­ riod in which American produc­ ly been consummated, according Canadians closed in on German ibility Unlimited." The film, pre­ tion activities largely have been guns guarding Antwerp. Germans High Spots in News lOn Page Twelve; said Allies had begun landing op­ erations on an island on approach**** •;-;*-. es to city. SCHRICKER PLEADS FOR STRONG POLAND: EEKOF Soviet Arctic forces are invad­ Gov. Henry F. Schricker ap­ ing Norway for first time and oth­ pealed Sunday night for a strong er Soviet troops are battling for and independent Poland after the at a glance new advances in East Prussia andu~. war as a matter of justice to a na­ above Warsaw. tion which, he said, "has suffered OVER WEEK END Philippines was under attack by in Philippines area in largest na­ the most in the holocaust and was MERICAN forces gained$m$. carrier planes from Adm. _Ia_sey's val action of war. British troops drove beyond HW\te the most steadfast to the cause of control of coastal road &x_ 3rd Fleet. Fleet was sighted sail­ erated Larissa. the United Nations." He addressed A Leyte in Philippines and ing through Sibuyan Sea and S-tlu In land fighting in Philipipnes, the golden jubilee banquet of the were driving Japanese t o w-ard Sea and long-awaited naval en­ British have cleared Germans' '2.\ American forces invaded island of from Savio river line in' eastern -Ji M. Romanowski Falcon lodge. Six wild hills of interior. Gen. M-ac- gagement with Japanese was ____«•; Samar at point 90 miles southeast V hundred members and guests at­ Ai-hur reported positions were minent. of Luzon. Across a narrow strait Po valley. -J*j<] tended. expanded oaa all "fronts and that -cm I_eyte, Gen. lylacArthur's forces "The Poles make excellent sol- enesfty's supply problem -already U. S. troops on Leyte have cap­ captured important road junction diers, because they know how to was becoming difficult. Work was tured 12 towns and killed 3,000 of Burauen. NOTICE OF F7MAL ACCOUNT pray and how to fight, and the begun on captured airfields of Japanese in advancing 25-33___e Estate No. 8126 combination of the two makes Taclobaai and Dulag. In procla­ tCwsfit inland. U. S. amphibious - Ameriean Superfortresses at­ Estate of Etta P. Grable. • them more valiant," said Gov. mation, MacArthur declared .Phil­ tanks landed on Samar Island, By direction of Marjorie Mv- Kreimer, tacked southern Japanese island Administratrix of the Estate oi .Etta PS; Schricker. "A good Pole," he ippines laws to be fully valid and separated by narrow strait __H3R_ •«•$ Kyushu again, hitting Omura -Grable, late of St. Joseph County, hfc added, "also makes an excellent annulled all enemy-passed laws.; Leyte. aircraft plant. One bomber Was the State of Indiaha, deceased. American because of his innate missing. NOTICE *? hereby given to -the heirs;' love of freedom and liberty." legatees and devisees of the said dece* Lt. Gen. George S. Patten's $*§ British troops caved in 12-mile cent, and all other persons interested, The banquet closed with a num­ Arisy advanced twoi -sniles along gedfcor of German front in Holland German _«8_stance in southern in the said estate, that said Administra­ ber dedicated to the men in the sixMDsdle front east of Nancy. Ca­ fighting way into 's Rertogenbosch trix has filed in this eourt hcer account Holland collapsed under Allied and vouchers for the final settlement of armed forces. All elec-tpic lights nadian troops captured Breskens and driving past that old feudal blows that brought gains of eight said estate, and they are -hereby rete were extinguished and the guests at ©te mouth of the Sohelde River city to south. Gen. Dempsey's men miles on 100-mile front. Nazi de­ quired to be and appeag; in" said Coui't sang "God Bless America" by can­ in !S_e__a-_d. On Aachen front U. overran eight towns, moving with­ on the 21st day of November*. 1944, fenders were reported fleeing when the same will be heard -and make dle light. S. troops repulsed a German in eight miles of Tilburg. Fsti- northward in an attempt ^© -escape proof of their heirship, qr. claim to* xxx •JjjjsS "feeler" attack. mated 60,000 to 70,000 -Germans closing of an Anglo - Canadian any part of said estate, and .shew CAPEHART TO PROVIDE were being herded into a trap. pincers. cause If there _», ^hy said account" JOBS FOR VETERANS: In Italy BKtish 8th Army broad­ * * * and Vouchers should not be approves? WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of Veterans of world war No. 2 ened bridgehead over the SavtiQ Russian troops captured Augus- American troops in Italy fought -he -St. Joseph Cftrcifit Court at South win come home to jobs with high Riv-er ^West of Oesena on Rimini- lew-, Polish df-fy *__ght miles from against heavy German isasastance Bend, Indiana, 23rd day of October, Bologna idghwajr^ U. S. HS-i A.*-srr_y southeastern border Of East Prus­ 1944. wages m 'private industry under a to take Mount Grande, near Bol­ FRANK J. BRU*GGNT__., Clerk. Republican administration or to forces *#ecupied three hills above sia. In East Prussia itself Soviet ogna. To east, British 8th Army JOHN *E. HANl^Y,-^epE_B58r. / made-work jobs under a New Deal Castel San -S&etro, 13 miles south­ forces continued thesfe. .advance to forces crossed Savio River and Joseph W. Nyikos, east of Bologna. take several strongholds, includ- captured Savio village, eight miles Attorney for Estate. £s| 10:27—11:3 ^ver-iment, Homer E. Capehart, ing Ifcrakehnen. "ii*Ste*4jox" manufacturer, and Re­ south ol Ravenna. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION publican nominee for United Russian troops made a new 12- mifea^^etration of"IBsst iPr»s___k, Sai Italy American forces reached ___tate No. 8452 States senator told some .550 per­ Russian forces outflanked War­ NOTICE is hereby given $hat the xm-V sons at a dinner^ meeting Tuesday reaching north ,-teank of Nieman points five miles from Via Emilia, saw from northwest in renewed _tersjgned has been appointed by the night in the Indiana club under River opposite Tilsit. In northern principal highway leading north­ _»dfeiv-ty on that front. Other Rus­ Judge of the <3-rc_tt-t Court <©f •&$. -Jo­ Fi^Sand other Red Army forces westward through Po Valley. South seph County, -State of Indiana, Execu­ the auspices of the St. Joseph sian troops completed liberation tor of the Estate of Edith Phillips, -Ufte •County Republican Women's asso­ reached Norwegian booster on 54- •at CSK_-©_ San Pietro they threat­ of Transylvania, while to north <0*f St. -Joseph County, .teceased. ciation. mile front. Russian^ took .£_$».••- ened German communiGa*tjons in Red Army forces crossed Norwe­ Said Estate _s supposed to be soTverrt^ port center of Nytpegyhaza in northern ItaSy. g gian frontier to take Kirkenes, William J. Hooton, Execute** It was the second of two major Hungary. October 2*ffh, 1944. campaign JLatks here by Mr. Cape­ Nazi Arctic port. Crumpacker, Jffay, Carlisle, WEDNESDAY and Beamer, hart Tuesday night in which he Attornevs for Estate. 10t_7-41;3**4L_>: made vicious attacks on Gov. Hen­ TUESDAY Japafc*9 navy has been "defeat­ British forces moved up Athens- ry F. Sch__<_ker, Senator Samuel Japanese battle fleet in central ed, seriously damaged and routed" Salonika road in Greece and en­ *UY THE MIRROR AT NEWSSTANDS

*mtm»&Wit*mmi%

DEMOCRA TIC Candidate for

i*:|

THIRD DISTRICT

; -a tea te/'tete'-T V „, pli UU Wlotia: "Win the War and Make Peace Secyre"

Post-War Employment for All Veterans — — Economic and Social Security for Everybody Machine No. 17-B Adv. Page Ten THE MIRROR OCTOBER 27, DELIEVEIT 0QR ELSE Not Shells DeLnxe

(From Page Two) Just so, but supposin' the case; a trio of capitalists with an idea, and plenty of cash, wanted to go into business, LECT but they were not asttsans, and need­ ed labor to produce what they would make. It. wasn't during the Hoover depression, and they couHti't find anybody willing to work for them; were they stalled? Will money grow the products of industry without the manure of workmanship. Being a preacher as well as college president, Rev.JG)r . Benso^shj^yjd-know so*T5-M thing of the^^ifjaraL ;rJronouncia- mento on the ^ppe^Kveipnctions of the merrfbers ©If tH^Dody; the eye, E the ear, the nose, the mouth, the lungs, the heart, the bowels, the bladder, the hand, the foot — and what happens when any of them go M haywire. Economics are similarly constructed. Capital is just as de­ pendent upon labor, if it is to multi­ ply and replenish itself, as labor is O upon capital for the sinews of its ex­ istence. Where did all these wealths of which America boasts come from; C just the counting-room, the director's room, the stock exchange? What do the niches. of our economic system have to fumble with, but raw ma­ terial harvested and fashioned by R workers, to make them useful to that great figment of the capitalistic brain, the consumer—-ja^s^miy, in num­ bers, and quantity, the very workers A who did the harvesting and fashion­ ing? Capital never produced any­ thing, but panics, without the menial element. Oh yes, there are such things as interest, and rents, a profits from T sales, but what for? The human element is still indispensable, and at bottom, it is the man that works, that makes the mare go—though cap­ ital may be, and is essential fodder. Communism, class consciousness is it, for workingmen to attain the goal that Sam Gompers hoped for them. When Sam died and Bill Green took over A. F. of L., there "was such a lull, due to too much capital-labor "cooperation," that well, come John L. Lewis, who kicked over the traces, organized CIO, and instituted a com­ petition and growth in the number of No. organized workingmen, giving them something for their money, such-as old Sam Gompers never dreamed of. It. has arrived at his goal, yet no right to an interest in politics, a choice of candidates, allegiance to party prin­ ciples, unless pro-Republican? Com­ munistic-is it; a crime to contribute to a campaign fund, unless Repub­ lican? Mark Hanna said in 1896, when the hold of the money-lords on the circulating media of the country was at stake, "We've got to defeat this man Bryan if it takes thirty million dollars and sends as many souls to hell." Labor well as silver was quite Acquainted with the technique of the office and problems of the tax-payer and an issue then, and the "full dinner pail" was trotted forth as a bribe, skilled at rendering courteous and efficient service. with success, but the pails didn't fill to overflowing. Unorganized, sub­ jected to a free-market, oh yes, there was work, but in large measure at FIFTEEN YEARS ACCOUNTING EXPERIENCE near-starvation wages—due to. capi­ talistic greeds and the importation of foreigners to hold down the wage scales. The Republican party is the Five Years Field Auditor for Treasury Department of State of Indiana. party of capitalism, super-capitalized Present Chief Deputy County Treasurer On Leave for Duration of Campaign. —a case of Dives and Lazarous. The workingman becomes a Com- m-inist, according to the G. O. P. if he demurs,—and whoso demurs for YOUR SUPPORT WILL BE APPRECIATED him is worst than the commune. -Pi-YHtVal Adv. You'll be seem* me— ^$b£&Sf. HE MIRROR OCTOBER 27, 1944 Page Ele\3eaa aEVE IT BvQRELSE MATT C. Not Shells DeLuxe

(From Page Two) Just so, but supposin' the case; a trio of capitalists with an idea, and plenty of cash, wanted to go into business, but they were not artisans, and need­ ed labor to produce what they Would make. It wasn't during the Hoover depression, and they couHn't find anybody willing to work for them; were they stalled? Will money grow the products of industry without the manure of workmanship. Being a preacher as well as college president, Rev. Dr. Benson slir&ld know sorjt^ t^rmg of the^j^gl: ||ronouncia- mento on,the compe^Eve fffnctions of the menfbers of ^txjwbody; the eye, NCED the ear, the nose, the mouth, the lungs, the heart, the bowels, the bladder, the hand, the foot — and what happens when any of them go DEPUTY SHERIFF haywire. Economics are similarly constructed. Capital is just as de­ Under pendent upon labor, if it is to multi­ WILLIAM J. (Big Bill) HOSINSKI ply and replenish itself, as labor is upon capital for the sinews of its ex­ TWO YEARS istence. Where did all these wealths of which America boasts come from; just the counting-room, the director's room, the stock exchange? What do the niches of our economic system CHIEF DEPUTY have to fumble with, but raw ma­ Under "Big Bill" Two Years terial harvested and fashioned by workers, to make them useful to that great figment of the capitalistic brain, the consumer — majepaty, ! in num­ bers, and quantity, the very workers who did the harvesting and fashion­ CHIEF DEPUTY SHERIFF ing? Capital never produced any­ thing, but panics, without the menial Under element. Oh yes, there are such things as interest, and rents, a profits from STEPHEN J. MOLNAR, JR. sales, but what for? The human element is still indispensable, and at Present Incumbent—Four Years bottom, it is the man that works, that makes the mare go—though cap­ ital may be, and is essential fodder. Communism, class consciousness is Understands the Operations of it, for workingmen to attain the goal that Sam Gompers hoped for them. Sheriff's Office in Every Detail When Sam died and Bill Green took AND over A.- F. of L., there "was such a lull, due to too much capital-labor PROMISES "cooperation," that well, come John L. Lewis, who kicked over the traces, EFFICIENT EXECUTION organized CIO, and instituted a com­ petition and growth in the number of organized workingmen, giving them something for their money, such as old Sam Gompers never dreamed of. It. has arrived at his goal, yet no right MACHINE NO to an interest in politics, a choice of candidates, allegiance to party prin­ ciples, unless pro-Republican? Com­ munistic-is it; a crime to contribute to a campaign fund, unless Repub­ lican? Mark Hanna said in 1896, when the hold of the money-lords on the circulating media of the country was at stake, "We've got to defeat this man Bryan if it takes thirty million dollars and sends as many souls to hell." Labor well as silver was quite an issue then, and the "full dinner pail" was trotted forth as a bribe, Demo t with success, but the pails didn't fill to overflowing. Unorganized, sub­ jected to a free-market, oh yes, there was work, but in large measure at For near-starvation wages—due to. capi­ talistic greeds and the importation of foreigners to hold down the wage scales. The Republican party is the party of capitalism, super-capitalized —a case of Dives and Lazarous. The workingmas becomes a Com­ munist, according to the G. O. P. if *)____•__• he demurs,—and whoso demurs for Sxy&uehccd -;- CampeUht dcpcrtdable* him is worst than the commune. Advt You'll be seem* me- -SLIAS. Page Twelve THE MIKKOK

'CROSS INCOME TAX traffic accident victims, considered the landlord that the violation DUE NEXT TUESDAY: as in the productive age bracket, cease, or is committing or permit­ October 31 is*the final day for were engaged in some type of ting a nuisance or is using or per filing third quarter Indiana Gross work related to the war'effort, -the ___f-ting use of the housing accom Income Tax returns. Gilbert K. safety-official asserted. He added modations for an immoral *:r ille Hewit, director of the Gross In­ that 6,498 persons were i&jured in gal purpose. Mr. Gutermuth era come Tax division, reminds Indi­ vehicular crashes, 18% of them piiasized that a nuisance must b<. ana taxpayers that returns filed severely. of a genuine character and not ; PARVO xxx fancied grievance or an inconse y that date will be subject to,pen­ quential objection to a tenant's be­ NEW BOOKS AT SOUTH BEND alty and interest charges. All tax­ O.P.A. RENT DIRECTOR havior. The landlord must follow PUBLIC LIBRARY (From Page Nine) payers whose Indiana gross income WARNS HOUSEHOLDERS: the procedure laid down in the to an ui-O-ficisi iestimate given by tax ieicceeds $10 for the quarter "Tenants wha are protected "from; OPA regulations. Non-Fiction an official of the First iBank & which includes itex: on income de­ indiscr.m-1-ate -eviction by OPA Trust voompany acting under ccaart ceived during _S__t_/, August and regulations, still have eertain obli­ "Sea-borne," by J. B. Connolly; appointment as fee trustee for ^he September, are required by law to gations to their landlords,1' C. R. "Through the Perilous Night," by city and other bondholders. file reti___.s and pay tax by the Gutermuth, district rent executitse J. J. Custer; "Pacific Victory, The city became a landowner quarter. i945," *by Jeseph Driscoll; "Jew in declares. Many tenants are under Our Day," w".. 3_>. Frank; "Road to through the foreclosure of liens xxx the impression that so long as the-y acquired through the redemption pay the_r rent -they cannot be Serfdom," l^y F. A. Hayek; "Invi­ of Bar_-ett law (improvement) WAR WORKERS HIGH tation to Health," by H. J. John- EN ACCIDENT RATE: evicted no matter how they care s«ft_; ''SearcMng Wind," by Lillian bonds. The city's recovery, through for or utilize 'their dwelli__g space. Heilman; "Nor Death Dismay," by the sales of the parcels of 3and, War production workers figured This is decidedly not the case. S. D. McCoy; "Siiracle of Amer­ i-_ay exceed 25 per oent of *_t_e $1,- substantially in a more than 35% Many tenants have -been evicte® • KILLED ica," by Andre Maurois; "Purser's -EiSB.-OOO general purpose bond issue! increase in Hoos_er traffic fatali­ for violating an obligation-sf fcheir JORDAN, Pfc. _-Obt., son of Sir. & Mrs. fenc-ers/' by A. M. Carr-Saunders banko-fcial. Thos. Biggs, S. "Union St., -Bfssing in 'Il***- XXX action -in !Prance since Sept. 22. and others; "Child Development," DOYLE, S/Sgt. lac-wwll, husband oil by E. B. Hurlock; "Who Shall Be ANOTHER WASTE PAPER Mae Doyle, -806 E. Wenger St., _n_*H Educated?? by W. L. Warner and COLLECTION SUNDAY: sing in action in France since Sept. others. Three hundred youths including 26. BR-*_BECKI, Pfc. Anthony, m. son of The above titles may be re­ Boy Scouts are being marshaled to Mrs. L. Drabecki, -984 S. Phillipa St., served by telephone: Main Libra­ man the trucks which will gather missing in Holland since Sept. -SB. ry 8-_»429; Business and Industrial waste paper in a curbstone collec­ FRENCH- Storekeeper *-/c Lloyd, 86, OTRE DAME will face its hsuband of Ntrtfaete French, -058 Por­ department 3-162SL tion in South Bend Sunday. sternest t^ri. of the season tage Ave., missing in '-action some­ Through the public junior and N on Saturday, meeting the where In •____ South (Pacific Area. Fiction senior high schools boys are being University of Illinois at Champaign PRISONER " *f£ast by Southwest," by Chris­ enlisted for the drive by Forest M. MCNEIL, Corp. Waltet^fe., 22, husband topher LaFarge: ""Little Coquette," in the eighth game of the all time lip t Of Patricia McNeil, 3101 S. St. Joseph Wood, school city health and phy-' series between' the two schools. [v St., is a German prisoner of "war. by R. deF. McCormick; Cluny sical education director, while the The Illini have yet to win a game : WOUN'BfED Brown," by Margery Sharp; "So scouts are being organized by fe:'i-!':'ii .-•• .•.?&•—'-to*** ''41*11 DEBECK, Marine Pfc. Aloysius, 22, son Thick the Fog," by Mrs. C. P. from the Irish, although the 1937 of Mr. & Mrs. Remi D-bec.., __01 S. Chief Frank C. Rogers. game ended in a scoreless tie. Tile; fill H% Spring St., wounaed in action in the Stewart; *_*?ight XJnto Night," by The youths will work on 60 series is one of the oldest played m South Pacific. Philip "Wylie. trucks which are being mustered by the Irish, the first game taking HATFIELD, S/Sgt. Lowell, 25, husband of Mat-Orfe Hatfield, 9*05 Queen-hero Juvenile Department by^W^lter E. Biggs, president of place in 1898. £*•:?•-: ' '_____W\i'- k y^_i Ave., wounded in an accident in Eu­ "Bible Stories as Told to Very the South Bend Teamst^ps' unio___1 .; JP.^ rope. Little •Children." fcy Mrs. B. E. An- Meanwhile Giles L. Cain, salvage In meeting Young, Patterson, HLADKY, Pvt. Leon, *_, brother of Greenwood and company, the Edward Hladky, 1226 N. 3_teey St., druss* *^Peter *__e fsreat," by N. B. director qf the civiiaaa defense V coaching staff has impressed on •£ ' •!>& -..., ' '-"\*S|^SM wounded in *c_ion in Holland Sept. Baker; "Secret of Wild Cat Cave," corps, agai-K, appealed to citizens the young Irish team that they 20. by Maristan Chapm|m, pseud.; to make the coliedtion Sunday the- jV ilL -^ -HJSZAR, Pfc. -Steve, 29, husband of **T-_ree Gay Tales"; tr. and illus. are tackling the speediest ball Alexandria Huszar, 101 S. Dundee, bv Wanda Gag, by J. L. Grimm best ever conducted in this city. club in the game today, and . - - ,, |§8| 8gj|jj|j|p? wounded in Prance Oct. 8. "This will be thevjast collection *"••£•• - ____•§£§____ and W. ft. tS-thnm* "Pledge of Coach Ed MeKeever has set up KENNA, Sgt. Pa_d, '-fllgte husband of Piang," by F. P. Stuart; "Come j_f this kind in 1944^' Cain says, special defenses in an attempt Catherine Kenna, 449 Gladstone Ave., "and it is up to us. to make it as wounded in action Oct. It" Soon, Tomorrow," by Gladys to stop the -fast flying Illini m KUGLER, Carpenterfe iMEate 2/c Clem, Swarthout; "All Aboafl-l, We Are fruitful as possible. Everyone backs. This should be a high husband of .HftorenBe -Kugler, 2615 Off," by Mrs. N. W. Ulreich: "Han­ should know by now -that waste Kenwood Ave., wounded in action in scoring contest, with the speed France. del at the Court of Kings," by paper is urgently neaded to stretch of Coach Ray Eliot's team pitted McEF-ARLAND, Pfc. Lloyd, _& gem. ••_£ Opal Wheels - the diminishing supply of pu_p. against the running of Bob K__ff KlcFarland, 806 -.ttrd^tte "Street, xxx Kelly and the passing of Frank 1Wi_h.. '•wounded -it action i_a France. SCHOOL BOARD IN QEiQ&SE TGG.L£P'*+lAt.F&AaC NEWMAN, Sgt. RichsaJd, -_tt, sen ot Mr. Dancewicz and Joe Gasparella. '•Ste Mrs. Wtn. Ifcwman, 1021 E. Bow­ BUSY SESSION: man, wounded in action in Germany. Test Your I. Q Approv.l of resignations, ap­ No changes are anticipated in in a creditable performance. It PALMER. Pfcc Donald, 34, husband of 1. What 'percentage of the •the S_a-*tihg lineup of *he Notre is expected that Nunzio Marino, Helen Palmer, 1151 E. Indiana Ave., pointments and appropriations wounded in action in France Oct. *•*!.. Army 3s inf attfery? marked a meeting of the South Dame team. This will be ^he last halfpint speedboy, w_H spell Mag­ game for left halfback Chick Mag- gioli on Saturday. SAUSMAN, Sfeaman 1 /c Ch__j., 20, ne­ 2. Where and when was paper Bend board of education Monday. phew *of Mrs. "-Br. Sausman, <8__ W. . , Bob, Kelly; C. Zielinski, -*_©6 S. Brookfield, seri­ American troops? xxx fb, . ously wounded in Germany Sept. 26. .{aij_._W-rs on Page lb! AVIATION COMMISSION The Notre Dame team has aver- HOLDS PUBLIC HEARING: j aged 5.9 yards each time they have Public hearings conducted by i carried the ball from scrimmage in the governor's commission on avi­ the four games played to date. In ation, first of its kind in South I addition, they have averaged 9.8 Bend, is being held today by Her­ yards each time they have tossed a schel A. Hollopeter, of IntUanap- pass. In the four games the Irish olis, chairman of the commission. have been involved in 285 o_fe_i-: Many Organizations and todtvi- sive plays, and have averaged 6.8 SET JtgWORLD'S duals from various sections of yards per play, both rushing and J-iECORDS IN A northern Indiana have indicated passing. ^000 METER RACE they will appear fe-sSfore tlate -com­ Herb Jones, Notre Dame's mission in the circuit court room business manager off athletics, AM NEWVORK ON in the court __o___e throughout ifee announced today, in response to j MARCH 1% 1925 day and possibly early Friday many inquiries, that the Great 3&t®!Dli'T WIN night to voice their opinittrts ®n Lakes-Notre Dame game at Indiana's needs in aviation legis­ Notre Dame on Dec. 2, would be lation. open to the general public. Last ©©^LAPSED xxx year, when the game was played BEFORE THE, COUNTY KITCHENS BECOME at Great Lakes, it was closed to FINISH/ TIN MINES FOR WAR ITEMS: civilians. The ticket sale for the Women of St. Joseph county can game this year has been brisk, "mine" tin sufficient for 4 subma­ but there are still plenty of du­ ©§____ rines this year. These figures were cats available. . compiled by J. A. StewaPt, vice- When it comes to controlling the litOM BROKE president of $he American Csm ball on running and passing plays THE WORLD'S MILE RECORD Company, on the basis ol canned from scrimmage, iPruIhie Utas dom- AT PRINCETON IN 1933, foods consumed by civ_3___n_. _n the inated the situation in all of its county during 1943. On the basis; BUT ONLV CAME five starts so far this season. The $£COA/D/ of last year's consumption, civil­ "score" Oh scrimmage plays fol­ ians will open 13,1*67,660 cans of lows: • food this year, he said. According Prudue,.68; Great Lakes, 47. to a table recently issued -3y Purdue, 71; Marquette, 46. Washington, 3,100,000 cans provide Purdue, 74; _llmo_B, %2. tin stttficient for one submarine. Pur-doe, afit? Iowa iPEwe-Flight, 55. SET Meanwhile, the armed iorees Purdue, 52; Iowa, 51. A NEW consumed approximately three U.S.A. 3-MILE billion cans of food during 1943 Purdue has chalked up ten and needs for the current year are straight victories over collegiate MARK IN expected to rise to three and a foes since the start of the 1943 THE 1938 quarter billion cans, Mr. Stewart campaign when the Boilermak- AA.U 5,000' SHOTPOTreR.«LMfiR HACKNEy said. He pointed out that with a ers were undefeated and untied. METER RUN— ONCE WADE A -HEAVE* THAT greatly increased number of the The only losses have been at the hands off Great Lakes and Iowa BUT DOAl WE DfW»T1?nNK WOR-m COUHT". armed forces in overseas duty, tASM WON INS —J*r__4S_;R£_>H-MOFFlC/ALLy more canned foods will be needed Pint-sized Johnny Yungwirth, Pre-Fiight. In addition to their North western's 18-year-old TUB RACE/ ITBSAT THS. WltiMtiG 7QSS- because the can has proved the collegiate victories, the Boiler­ BLmROHLi KACEP 4t7lf most pract'cal container for the freshman halfback, is a main- makers defeated Great Lakes shipment of foods abroad. stay of the Wildcat aerial attack. and Camp Grant last season. OCTOBER 27, 1944 Page Thirteen

A Fashion for 1945, They Say WAR PRICE AND RATION GUIDE DATES TO REMEMBER AND WHY MEATS, FATS: Red 10-point stamps. A8 through Z8. A5 through *_-> good indefinitely. L5 through P5, good Oct. 29 and indefinitely. No new stamps until Dec. 3rd. PROCESSED FOODS: Blue stamps A8 through Z8, and A5 through W5 good Can Aid Ceiling Drive Nov. 1 and indefinitely. No new stamps until Dec. 1. Housewives everywhere are SUGAR: Stamps No. 30, 31, 32 and 33 in Book Four are good :"or 5 oouiids Indefinitely. Stamp No. 40 in Book Four is good for five pouncs cf canning urged to cooperate with their sugar through Feb. 28, next year. grocer in a campaign to more SHOES: Stamps No. 1 and 2 on Airplane sheet in Book No. 3 good indefin­ prominently display ceiling prices itely. Airplane stamp No. 3 gocd Nov. l, r.nd indefinitely. in stores and to Stimulate the use FUEL OIL: Per.iod 4 and 5 coupons are gocd indefinitely nnd No. 1 coupons for 184--45 good through heating year. of price lists by consumers. GASOLINE: No. A-13, new.book, good through December 21. OPA DIRECTORY Lake Herring Prices Suspended Rent Control Office, fifth floor, Pythian building. Phone 4-0154—4-0155. War Price and Ration Board No. I, _df all South Bend and Portage town­ Retail ceiling prices on fresh ship west.oc. Lafayette boulevard and German and Warren townships, 106 West lake herring have been suspended, Monroe street. Phone 4-0173 effective Oct. 26, OPA announces. War Price and Ration Board No. 2, for all South Bend and Portage town- The..action follows indications that 5-btpa.aBt of Lafayette boulevard and Olive, Greene, Centre, Liberty, Lincoln and Union townships, 106 West Monroe street. Phone 3-8219. the price of this fish will be gen­ War Price and Ration Board No. 3, for all of Mishawaka and Penn township erally below the 1942 price levels, -nd CVv. Harris and Madison townships. 202 Lincoln Way East, Mishawaka. which was the minimum level re­ Phone 5-2116 The war price and ration boards ration sugar tires, automobiles, gasoline, quired by the stabilization exten­ fuel, oil, bicycles and rubber boots and are price control agencies. sion act for fishermen's ceiling prices. However, OPA said that OTHER WAR AGENCIES Office of Defense Transportation. Tower building (commercial vehicles if fresh lake herring prices should only). Phone 2-3393 rise above 1942, levels ceilings will United States Employment Office, 21_*i_ North Michigan street. Phone 3-6175. be promptly reset. U. S. Veterans Administration, 804 Sherland Building. Phone 4-6177. War Manpower Commission Office, J. M. S. building. Phone 2-1463. War Production Board Office, 210-12 Sherland building. cAll priorities.) m Shoe Rationing Still Needed Phone 2-1435 Present inventories and the pres- .aent rate of production of shoes To save paper and manpower, The American Public Health "Show the necessity for continued the Nazi government decrees Association says the war ia shoe rationing. Over-all produc­ Ladies, coiffeur Claries of the Ritz j_hows you his new flower tion of civilian shoes of rationed that the herrenvolk will pay the changing our eating habits from coiffures, presented recently at a flower show in New York. At same income tax for 1944 as for boiled to steamed vegetables. types in the first half of this year left, Eileen Wldsh wears brown orchids; Jane Reade, middle, ;was 134,065,000 pairs contrasted 1943. Apparently Hitler has de­ Fare enough, maybe, but the looks glamorous with a "Bird of Paradise" flower; Roberta Gaybe, meat of the full stomach prob­ With 154,125,000 pairs in the like right, wears "Glamellias." cided that making out forms on 1943 period, which was also short the run would be too much to lem lies in full production of needs. ask even of supermen. previously obtained gasoline. This and intersections has sent broken obligation to cut off supplies of a bodies to hospitals and mangled OPA Guards Gasoline Quality dealer who has not made good any corpses to the morgue. Glasses Correctly Fitted Gasoline sold at service stations invalid coupons is binding on .he Let caution ahd couptesy be the and other retail 'establishments at supplier, regardless of any con­ bases of your driving habits. By WINDOW .ceiling prices set for premium tract with the dealer, the court observing them, you may arrive at Est 1900 grades must meet a minimum oc­ ruled. your* destination a few minutes tane specification of 75, OPA an­ later, but a lot healthier. CLEANING nounces. This action has been tak­ J. Burke en to protect buyers from any at­ December Gift Mail Deadline Dec. 1 is the deadline requested ERE lies the body of W. 6. Bogar-dut tempt to sell lower grade gasolines H Mr. Hey Day The Sooth Bend Window at the higher ceiling prices estab­ by the post office department _or Who died maintaining* his E. C. Beery lished for premium grades. OPA mailing Christmas gifts inside the "Right of Way"; United States. Every citizen who is He was Right, Dead Right, Cleaning Company Optometrists & Mfg. Opticians •said most sellers are offering pre­ As he sped along— mium grade gasoline having an playing Santa Claus for loved ones But is just as dead as if 129 North Main Street 228 S. Michigan Street octane rating not lower than 75. and friends'in other towns is urged Dead Wrong. Phone 4-3251 The Petroleum Administration for to get that present in the mails by —Unknown. EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT war does not permit manufacture that date to assure proper deliv­ of gasoline for civilian commercial ery. The reason, say postal offi­ channels as premium grade to ex­ cials, is that Americans are ex­ ceed 76 octane—a step necessary pected to mail domestically 25% to maintain military supplies of more gifts than a year ago—and higher octane fuels. at a time when the post office has fewer employees and less veil- trained holiday help than ever be­ Court Hits Black Market "Gas" fore. In addition, the fact that Efforts of the OPA to wipe out more people have move 1 to dif­ the black market in counterfeit ferent addresses to do wa: wori. Once there was a man gasoline coupons were greatly i. expected to mean that the aver­ strengthened by decisions in three age distance traveled by each gift injunction cases recently handed will be greater than before Ihe down by the United States district courts in Greenville and Green­ named Bill wood, S. C. The decision makes clear the obligation of gasoline dis­ Christmas Street Lighting Ban tributors to refuse to supply gaso­ The Office of War Utilities of line to dealers who have failed to WPB is asking city officials, civic surrender valid coupons to re­ clubs, chambers of commerce, place counterfeits ior which they merchants and citizens to dispense with outdoor lighting this Christ­ mas, as was done in 1942 and 1943. Object of the request is to reduce electricity consumption and coal requirements. The fuel situation in most areas going full blast -and homes properly heated, officials point out. Bill Was With the first Marines who went to the Pacific. For three years he Reconversion Job Given Industry fought Japs. "The job of reconversion, when Then at Saipan, Bill had a quick de­ it comes, will be put squarely up cision to make. to industry with an absolute mini­ mum of interference, from Wash­ He saw a job he thought should be ington," declared Edward R. Gay, done. He couldn't be sure it would help. assistant vice chairman for civil­ ian requirements in WPB, at a He couldn't be sure he'd come back if he Boston meeting of the nation-re­ tried it. But it seemed worth trying. tail furniture association. Pointing He went ahead with the job. And it did out that government had to step in two years ago when war con­ help. And he didn't come back. version was the prime essential, Perhaps there's a lesson in this story for Mr. Gay said that "some day government is going to be able to some of us at home. say to many manufacturers, you've Bill had already done quite a bit for his done your war job. Get back to Country. But When the time came, he didn't making your peacetime products. We'll help you where we can, but stop to think about that. He didn't look this job is yours. And I am confi­ around for someone else to take the risk dent that industry will accept this for a change. He knew his work wasn't challenge gladly and will do the finished. Wmg job better than any of us in Wash­ ington could plan it." The same thing is true about buying War Bonds. Don't waste time wondering whether or not you've done your share. Pattern 9143 comes fn children's As long as there are men like Bill still sizes: 1. 2, 3, 4, 6, 8 and 10. Size 6, fighting—your job isn't finished yet—your Jumper, requires ONE yard 35-inch; job is to back them up. So keep on buying jacket, % yard. War Bonds. This pattern together with a needlework pattern for personal or household decoration, TWENTY Did you know that when two CENTS. cars (yours and someone else's) Send TWENTY CENTS in coins approach an intersection at about WAR BONDS for these patterns to 170 News* the same time, the car on your paper Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th right has the right-of-way, and St.. New York 11. N Y. Print that you should let him cross first? -to have and to hold! plainly SIZE. NAME, ADDRESS, Even though you have the right- STYLE NUMBER. of-way and another motorist FIFTEEN CENTS more brings drives heedlessly ahead of you— you the Marian Martin Falf and let him go through—what differ­ _M_W Winter Pattern Book full of smart, ence does it make? easy-to-make styles. A free bed* Stubbornly "arguing" over the Jacket pattern is printed right la right-of way or thoughtlessly dis­ the book ^«fi regarding it at railroad crossings Thiaia an official U.S. Ttaamtj adrattiaamaut-ptaparad uadar auapicaa ol Ttaaauty Department and Wet Advartiaing Coinci) Page Fourteen THE MIRROR

A Weekly Collection of "Dripping Sands" that "Mark Time" in Passing \>*M/

Time Doesn't Fly/ It Stands Still;

Maurice M. Tulchinsky, 402 Haney Mrs. M. Smith, 2319 Mish. to 1116 S. 620 Western—Dale Hamilton, R. R. 3, Lane Realty Corp., lot 73, Hollywood and Ruth F. Bachrach, 730 W. Ind. 30th. and Robt. Weymon, INK. W. Monroe. Hts.- Wilbur E. Clemans, R. R. 5 and Vir­ J. Fabingac, 430 Pond to 805 Parry. October 22 Colpaert Rlty. Corp. to Pearl Wirick, ginia A. Boswell, R. R. 5. 1800 blk S. te.eilows—Betty Ebersold, pt. lot 110, Shetterly PI. Richard D. Devenport, R. R. 2 and 18ao S.-CarrcOl and I. __ M. light pole. John F. Solomos et ux to Wm. Ail- BIRTHS Betty Lou Wierman, R. R. \i. Brookfield at Ford — John Parent, so-" et ux, pt. sec. 16, twp. 36 R 1 E. TOTAL BIRTHS IN FIRST NINE Chas. N. Branstrom. 501 W. Wash. 730 S. Warren and Evelyn .Pacola, 210-J Peoples Fed. Sav. & Loan to Carl _MOiN_'-iS ENDING SEPTEMBER 1.44, and Bertha Genstler, 213 S. Peter. BANKING ACTIVITIES Bertrand. Heiser et ux, lot 29, Mish. Realty Co. -2,012. Loren Von Riesen, Marysville, Kans. South Bend Clearing House October 23 1st. To the: and Fawn Flory, 425 S. Franklin. 700 blk. Eddy—Margaret Horvath, 133 Josephine B. Klein et al to Charles Chas. H. Porter, 414 E. Monroe and E. Altgeld and Hildegard Gdller, CIO Guin, lot A, Berner Grove 1st. Jos. P. Ieraci's, 627 N. St. Joseph, Tot&l clearings from October 14 to 21, Iva P. Neville, 603 N. Scott. inclusive, $3,933,788. Harrison. Peoples Fed. Sav. & Loan to Tennis, daugnter, Rosemary Christine, Oct. lo. John L. Simms, Osceola, Ind. and 24*- -bik. Mich.—Mrs. -E. J. Meehan, C. Jester et ux, lot 14, Jos. de Lo- Howard L. Beckman's, 1744 Twyck­ Total transactions from October 14 to Betty Lou Duckworth, 1324 E. 4th, 21, inclusive, $16,485,867. 1S0_, Hillcrest and city bus. renzi's 3rd. enham ui*., son, Roy Edw., Oct. !_*. Mish. - Mich, at Colfax—Walter Davidson, Peoples Fed. Sav. & Loan to Harry David W. Sturgis', New Carhsie, Ind., Harold Hart and Corin J. Hart, both 2418 Prescott and Arnold Vandenberg. Hopkins et ux, lot 61, Barbeels add., daughter, Dorotny Sellew, Oct. 17. of Elkhart, Ind. 117 Paxton Dr. Mish. Andrew W. Pin's, 601 W. LaSalle, son, Roy Luther, Detroit, Mich, and Thel­ Sep. at -35th—-^Waiter-Bishop,- 1024 S. Cnas. Futterknecht et ux to Eugene Richard Wallace, Oct. 17. ma Puckett, 917 W. Colfax. THE RED DEVIL -5_tf and Forrest Riddle, 321 N. 35th. C. Futter et ux, pt. lot 1, Geo. Mil- .Wayne L. Shedd's, _881 So. Bend, Wm. DeGraff, Jr., 1122 LWW, Mish. loOO blk . Colfax—-Mildred Kwiecin- burn's add. son, Charles Wnson, Oct. 17. and Irma Datert, 110 E. Grove, Mish. ski, 1.1.4-2 W. Colfax and Wm. Taylor, Geo. Connon to Geo. DeRaeve et ux, Barron I. Goodsoeed's, 1212 E. Dayton, FIRES Paul H. Brady, Millcreek, W. Va. and ESTIMATED FIRE DAMAGE IN i.210 __. Bissell. pt. sec. 21, twp. 37 R 3 E. -daughter, Phyllis Jean, Oct. 15. Virginia Thompson, 714 Oak St. . Mich, at Chippewa—Frank Long, Jr., Henry C. Eckler Est. Inc. to Wesley ' Orville E. Woolverton's, 204 N. Niles, FIRST NINE MONTHS ENDING Wm. M. Clemens, Jr., Dubuque, Iowa SEPTEMBER 1944, $44,500. 347 E. Klinger and Frank Hart, R. R. 1. Wilson et ux, pt. sec. 6, twp. 37 R 2 E. .son*, Donald Edw., Oct. 16. and Mary Ellen DeGear, Bellevue, Ia. 1200 blk Mich.—S. W. Gerber, 1821 2. Wm. H. Palmer et ux to Mary Ko­ Edwin A. Jaroszewski's, 2013 W. Or- Chas. J. Lester, Kalamazoo, Mich, and Tax and Ivan Lodgon, 317 S. Carroll. vacs, lot 32, John F. Kirby's add. .ange, daughter, Carol Ann,.Oct. 14. Edward Ford residence, 412 W, Mon­ Patricia May Murdock, Walkerton, Ind. roe street, at 3:40 a. m.; mattress ig­ 900 blk Mich.—Victoria Szekendi, 1029 University of Notre Dame'DuLac a Earl F. "Sovey's, Box 272, daughter, Warren E. Carpenter, Dayton, O. and •V. Dunham and N. I. T. C. bus. corp. to Jos. F. Ru-etz et ux, lots 65, 66, .Patricia Ruth, Oct. 14. Martha Ellen Seitz, Sullivan, Ind. nited by cigarette sparks; damage, $25. o7 Sorin's 2nd add. B. W. Korthaus residence, 214 East Mich, at Dohmoyer—Ruth Holdread, Wm. C. Reid's, 3017 Rogers, daugh­ John L. Hudson and Virginia Chris­ 21. R. 1 and J. M. Roelke, Teegarden, Woldhaven Homes Co. to Mitchell ter, Roberta Rita, Oct. 17. Pennsylvania avenue; roof fire; dam­ tie, both of Grand Rapids, Mich.. age, $20. Ind. Elhng et ux, lot 173, Berner Grove 1st. Eugene C. Kepler's, 621 Sherman^ Glenn E. Hinton, Poulsbo, Wash, and Monroe at Rush—Robt. Smith, 215 W. Virginia E. Froehlke et al to Creo L. .son, James Carroll, Oct. 16. Oct. 19; Veterans of Foreign Wars Dorothy' L. Pollup, Rockford, 111. post No. 1167, 1047 Lincolnway East, J'ust, Mish., and Paul Spacy, 1809 W Penrod, lot 270, Bowman's 6th. Stanley A. Hostetler's, No. Liberty, Roscoe Bailey and Dorothy Copley, Sixth, Mish. Elizabeth Troeger to Calvin Ladd et Ind., son, Dale Monroe, Oct. 9. roof fire, .caused by chimney sparks, both of Buchanan, Mich. damage, $15. Ux, lot. 98, Rush's 4th. Walter Debus, Sr.'s, 1405 W. Linden, Gerald L. Harvey and Katherine A. Wilbur L. __eitner to John Dangel, son, Ronald Lee, Oct. 10. Y. Byford, both of So. Haven. Mich. Oct. 23; residence of George Deza- Sr., lots 168, 169, 170, Myers & Funk 3d. Lynn T. Scoville's, 122 Diamond Ct., Dewey Emrick, R. R. 2 and Mabel mitz, 2130 Warren street, cigarette left Jos. Hunn et ux to Thomas F. Hil­ son, Wm. Allen, Oct. 12. Sparks, R. R. 2. on dresser, damage $15. kert, pt. sec. 23, twp. 37 RIE. Maurice N. Srank's, 830 24th, son, Kenneth E. Burt, Niles, Mich, and Oct. 23; Northern Indiana Transit, Elva F. Wommer et al to Donald R. Wm. Richard, Oct. 12. Inc., "Bond Bus," short circuit in wir­ Ruth I. Day, Niles, Mich. ing, no damage. DEEDS Robinson et ux, lot 56, Edwy. Hts. Michael Rojics', 313 W. Stull, daugh­ Vern W. Orr and Gladys R. Hayes, TOTAL DEED TRANSFERS IN SO Lydia H. Blum et al to virg-rua E. ter, Mary Ann, Oct. 13. both oi Walkerton, Ind. BEND IN FIRST NINE MONTHS Froehlke, lot 270, Bowman's 6th. Chester R. Carlin's, 1030 N. Huey, Leo W. Zytowski, 1025 W. Jeff, and ENDING SEPTEMBER 1944, 5,644. Anthony Rozewicz et al to Lueille son, Bruce Wayne, Oct. 14. Nellie L". Monroe, 3006 S. Main. Walkowiak, pt. parcel of land, B. O. Chas. O. Teske's, 131 E. Paris, daugh­ Wm. H. Bodden, Horicon, Wis. pad October 17 L. 89. ter, Martha Jane, Oct. 14. Dorothy A. O'Neill, 1122 N. Notre PERMITS TO BUILD First Nat'l Bk. of Mish., Com. to New Carlisle City Cem. to Carr Rog­ Patrick J. Lynch s, 319 LaMonte Ter­ Dame. Mark J. Laing et al., pt. sec. 24, twp. ers, cem. lot pt. lot 11, blk 3, 2nd add. race, daughter, Marcy Holman, Oct. 15. Edw. C. Heitger, Jr., 1315 Longfellow TOTAL BUILDING PERMITS IS­ 37 R 3 E. October 20 Geo. H. Plambeck's, Jackson, Mich., and Lois Feldman, 630 33rd. SUED IN FIRST NINE MONTHS First Bk. & Tr. Co. to So. Bend Sand Prudential Ins. Co. to Edw. C. Mc- daughter, Margaret Emily, Oct. 15. Cyril Miles, 1024 S. Main and Alice ENDING SEPTEMBER 1944, 1,475. & Gravel, lot 228, Lincoln Terrace. Keener et ux, pt. lot 47 and 48, Jeff. Pk. Willie Williams', 1507 W. Orange, Doss, 1109V2 S. Mich. VALUE, $1,742,923. Lucinda A. Gillmer to Geo. H. Seeler Harry To. HanStaerger, adm to Michael daughter, Cecelia, Oct. 15. Frank Bennett, Lakeville, Ind. and et ux, lot 197, Gillmer Pk. £dd. Vercseg et ux, pt. sec. 21, twp. 36 R3E. Richard T. Eby's, 3714 S. Fellows, Biddie Lind, R. R. 2. Chas. J. Hilde, 225 E. Farneman, Myrtle Wiblock et al to Cecil and Irma tVeldy, ex. to Carl J. Fore et son, David Wesley, Oct. 15. Virgil Inman, 2340 Prescott and Mar- make alterations, $850. Louise Jack, lot 228, Beiger Farm 3rd. ux, lot 247, Beig^er Farm 3rd. W. Harlan Dobbs', 622 W. Jeff., Mish., celine Rupley, 2340 Prescott. Karl Gadbury, 5_5 S. Mich., repair Ruth Olinger to Harlan J. Noel et ux, Belle Merwin to Thomas ~P. Hilkert, son, Randall Steven, Oct. 16. Herschel A. Miller, 1141 Portage and fire damage to garage bldg., $500. lot 31, Lincoln Manor 2nd. lot 15, Leer's 3rd. Richard F. Kasprzak's, 511 S. Bendix Vera Jean Balka, 2229 W. Wash. Taylor & Johnson, 430 Angela, house, Bontrager Const. Co. to Michael Mary M. Nunemaker to Lila E. Co- Dr., son, Leonard, Oct. 16. Glenn Apt, 1148* Portage and Flor­ $5,000; 521 W. Angela, house, $5,000; Trzaskowski et ux, pt. sec. 9, two. 37 zart, lot 20, Birdsell Mfg. Co. sub. J. Dale Palmiter's, 511^ Harrison, ence B. Click, 802 N. Laf. _37\W. Angela, house, $5'.e_e; 531 W. R 1 E. Stanley S. Gilbert et ux to Wilson son, Michael Dale, Oct. 16. Olney E. Mclntyre, Jr., 518 E. Calvert Angela, house, $5,000. Thornton et ux, lot 1, Vander Bosche's Frank Evanshitz et ux to Frances sub. , Robt. C. Plant's, R. R. 6, daughter, and Elizabeth R. Beyer, 623 Cottage H. West, 71? W. Colfax, rem., $250. Grzesiak, lot 201, D. M. Shively. Marsha Louise, Oct. 17. Grove. C. M. Russell, 2528 S. Main, install Augustus B. Corwell et ux to Leroy Fredk. Mitchell et al to John L. Stanley et ux, pt. sec. 4, twp. 37 R 4 E. Robt. E. Anderson'.s, 1108 S. 23rd, son, Frank M. Tooze and Jeanne M. Gal- steel £.irc_€r __465 Fabiszak et al, lot 13, Rockhill's. JRobt. Edwin, Jr., Oct. 17. laher, both of Falcouer, N. Y. Lowell E.Catt, 2221 Smith, add., $100. Rene Graveel et ux to Walter Over­ Kenneth Uirich et ux to James P. man et ux, pt. sec. 17, twp. 38 R 2 E. Leroy Ward's, 716 Jacquith Court, Julian C. LaViolette and Stella Ca- -Bison Williams, 1234 So. Bend, garage, McGhee, pt. sec. 22, twp. 36 R 1 E. daughter, Germaine, 0_t. 7. hiR. both of Flint, Mich. $240. Garden Homes Inc. to Richard C. Daniel Berkey to Holland J. Berkey Oder et ux, lot 18, blk C, Belleville Floyd W. Sciba's, 904 W. Fisher, Myron D. Spady, Portland, Ore. and Steven J. Molnar, 326 S. Chicago, add, et ux, pt. sec. 28, twp. 37 R 4 E. daughter, Judith Ann, Oct. 10. Lil-te E. JCister, Scappoose, Ore. $150. Gardens. Earl S. Showalter et ux to Walter N. •Harry L. Ransberger et ux to Mary Edmund T. Machowski's, 642 N. Col­ Albert Semak, 3002 Bonds and Gene­ Platz Gill, 2416 Mish., increase tc Nierle et ux, pt. sec. 28, twp. 37 R 3 E. lege, daughter, Delphine Sophie, Oct. vieve Kotol, No. Liberty, Ind. parapet wall and repair roof, $220. Beach, lot 43, Pleasant Point. Jacob H. Snyder et ux to Virgil Hal­ Jacob H. Wommer et ux to Loa L. 10. Herman A. DeVliegher, 302 E. 104h. ter et ux, pt. sec. 4, twp 37 R 3 E. O. Eugene Lowe's, 1306 Prairie, son, Mish. and Stefanie Germann, 717 N. Olszewski, lot 178, Beiger Farm 3rd. Barbara Koerth to Howard C. Feaser Harriet L. Lindt et al to Bessie M. Donald Eugene, Oct. 11. Huey. et ux, lots 180 and 179 O. P. Russell E. Green's, 2102y S. Main, Rhinehart, tr., pt. lot 16, Hammond &c 2 Etta Van Dusen et al to Camiel Mon- Whitcomb. daughter, Sally Annette, ©ct. 11. TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS serez et ux, pt. sec. 1, twp. 37 R 2 E. Victor J. Lelnen's, 213 Stover Court, Chas. A. Stavedahl et ux to Stanley NUMBER TRAFFIC ACCTPI5NTS IN HOLC to Stanley Rymarz et ux, lot R. Holowihski et ux, lot 101, Ken- son, Geo. Thomas, Oct. 11. 17, Raff's 3rd. sington. Everett R. Isaacs', 311 S. Scott, THE MOVING VAN SOUTH BEND IN FIRST NINE Mary P. Mossman Manwarren et al MONTHS ENDING SEPTEMBER 1944, Thomas N. Ridenour et ux to Don E. daughter, Suzanne Geraldine, Oct. 11. to Jos. A. Hogan, tr., lot 33, Morning­ Rhone et ux, lot 35. Hastings, Wood­ Wayne I. Miller's, 750 S. Lake, daugh­ MOVING PERMITS -____>; NUMBER INJUKJ-i., -_i, Kli-i.- side. ED, 12. ward & Gray's. ter, Kathleen Ann, Oct. 12. TOTAL MOVING PERMITS 3N Tower Fed. Sav. & Loan to Chas. R. Wm. Leman et ux to Carl Haab et Louis J. Papay's, 209 S. Bendix Dr., FIRST NINE MONTHS ENDING Myers, lot 87, Middleboro. al, pt. sec. 12, twp. 35 R 3 E. twins, Jacquelyn and Carolyn, Oct. 12. SEPTEMBER 1944, 812. October 17 Carl J. Fore et ux to Mitchell C. i Gertrude Kirsch to Franklin I. My­ Ross P. Simmons', 906 N. Allen, 1100 blk Western—Herman Boulang- Long et ux, lot 353, Gaylor's 3rd Plat. ers, pt. lot 33, Wenger's 3rd. daughter, Rhoda Ruth, Oct. 12. er, Arnold St. and Harold Rulien, R. Jos. A. Hogan, tr. to Floyd J. Man­ Camiel Van Mele to Lloyd R. Keple Geo. E. Woolley's, R. R. 5, son, Cur­ F. Jones, 534 E. Klinger to 630 N. R. 2. warren et ux, lot 33, Morningside. Allen. et ux, lot 20, So. East. tis Lee, Oct. 12. Main at Sample—Paul Clark, 210 S. October 18 Alice Matehett to Roxie M. Clarke, Cecil E. Foster's, 230 S. Francis, son, J. King. 324 Columbia to 320j_ X.WE. Taylor and Leon Kowalski, 232 Mar­ First Bk. & Tr. Co. to Walter W. A. H. Cochneman, 2521 Western to lot 2, Ward and Otis 1st. Cecil Everson, Jr., Oct. 13. quette. Smith, lot 68, Elwopd. Manor. Tower Fed. Sav. & Loan to Nelson M. Wm. Pecze's, 2629 W. Wash., son, R. R. 2, Bremen, Ind. Mich, at Oakside—Fred J. Sumption, W. Liszewski, 1214 McCartney to 1247 First Bk. & Tr. Co., tr. to Jos. Rosen­ Jones et ux, pt. sec. 15, twp. 37 R 3 E. Wm., Jr., Oct. 13. 613 E. Oakside and Frank Fisher, 305 baum, lot 6 and 7, Edw. Sorin's sub. Hattie A. Beatty to Chas. A. Wilson LeRoy E. Hite's, Granger, Ind., son, Queen. E; Fairview. C Schuh, 114 S. 29th to R. R. 2, Prudential Ins. Co. to Alvin F. Dil­ et ux, lot 580, Milburn PI. Thos. Willard, Oct. 14. Wash, at Stude—John S. Porogi, 141 lon et ux, lot 35, Berner Grove 1st. Virgil W. Rau et ux to Frank S. Nies­ John J. Chiazar's, 1622 Magnolia, Misha N. Huey and Elmer Reynolds, 119 N. J. Paprocki, 1050 N. O'Brien to 2502 Glen H. Hoover et ux to Geo. Tuttle podziany, lot 61 and 62, Fulkerson 2nd. daughter, Sharon Anne, Oct. 15. Walnut. et ux, lot 14, Grand View. A. Noel DuComb et ux to- Henry J. John P. Vida's, R. R. 2, son, Richard, W. Poland. Rupe at Brookfield—Floyd Davis, 1239 D, Weiss, 3814 S. Mich, to Los An­ Northern Imp. Co. to James A. Judie, Waelbroeck, lot 29, Wm.Efnsberger's Oct. 15. Eclipse PI. and Robt. Johnson, R. R. 6. Jr., pt. lots 2 and 3, O.P. PI. of Arbor Pk. Marion S. Makowski's, 206 N. Sadie, geles, Calif. A. Nagy, R. R. 6, Box 720 to 1714 S. October 18 Northern Imp. Co. to James A. Judie, HOLC to Remo Artusi et ux, lot 295, daughter, Darlene Ann, Oct. 15. Main at Mich.—C. E. Ludwig, Spring*-* Sr., et ux, 2/5 int. in Beyers Tract und Gaylor's 3rd. Oliver*. Vz lots 2 and 3, O.P. M. Claywell, 1305 S. Main to 120 E. field, 111., and Paul DeRose, Hillsdale, People's Fed. Sav. & Loan to Elma Mich. Marguerite Des Jar dins to Earl H. R. Sharkey, lot 3 and 4, blk 25, Law­ Dayton. ••*£'tew_i 1200 hlk Western-^Walter Lajetty, 737 Miller et al, lot 8, Woodlawn. rence .& Battell's. P. Me-riweather, 709 Western to 135 S. Be-wBa. SJr. and Ralph DeGraff, 1316 Anna A. Archer et al to Gladys M. Wm. P. Rough et ux to Jos. L. Mes­ THE FINAL SUMMONS Weste___.- W. Wayne. Monroe, tr., pt. lots 48 and *__*, Ham­ ter et ux, lot 7_, Roseland Pk. T. Mallar, 1217 N. Elmer to Denver, mond & Whitcomb. Colo. 2327 S. Mich.—A. D. Shaffer, 1021 Sobieski Fed. Sav. & Loan to Maggie DEATHS Johnson and bldg. • Edw. Cornwall to David Germain et Garmon et ux, lot 312, LaSalle Pk. 2nd. TOTAL DEATHS IN FIRST NINE Mrs. C. Firestone, 924 E. Cedar to ux, lot .208, Kaley's 2nd sub. 2914 Hartzer. Birdsell at Wash.—Wilma Nagy, R. R. Mary Giefing et al to Louis S. Zaw- MONTHS ENDING SEPTEMBER 1944, 2 and E. Wo___s, 713 Ford. Whitcomb & Keller to Julius P, ierucha et ux, pt. lot 15 and pt. 16, So. 757. I. O. Sinclair, 1924 N. Johnson to Dhoore et ux, lot 748, Whitcomb & 821V Cleveland. 400 blk N. Main —Edith Harding, r Bend & Gary Land. 2 State College, Pa., and Thelma Knud- K__ter. Harvey M. Stallter et ux to John A. Infant Stoney, 2617 Fernway, Oct. 18. H. A. Wine, 517 Oakside to 1621 Sun­ John Lynch et ux to Stephen New­ Infant Patricia R. Sovey, Prairie nymede. son. Mar-Main Arms. SP*"^ Braniff. lot 44, Forest Pk. 2nd sub. C. DeClerq, 2101 W. Ford to R. R. 3, ^Forte at Colfax—John Robins, 1527 rock et ux, pt. sec. 22, twp. 38 R 2 E. HOLC to Paul L. Castle et ux, pt. lots Ave., Oct. 16. - Lester A. Rohrer et ux to Cloyd W. 2 and 3, Muessel's 1st. John Ludwig, 829 31.t, age 76, Oct. 18; Box 153. Linden and W. Olawski, -510 N. Walnut G. Pietrzak, 507 S. Jaekson to 418 Western at Carlisle—Clarence Went- Morgan, lot 330, Berner Grove 2nd. Robt. F. McKee et ux to Preachers Mrs. Florence Bell Brewer, 1419 S. Chas. H. Barnes et ux to Orvel M. Aid Society Nor. Ind. Conference M. E. Mich., age 63, Oct. _2. Pulaski. land, 518 S. Maade and Burt-Smith, 319 G. Dice, 1038 Yukon to 1613 S. Pel- W; Wayne and Clement Cwidak, Hun- Scott et ux, lot 16, Barnes. Ch., pt. sec. 2, twp. 37 R 3 E. Mrs. Alta R. Brouse, Ray, Ind., age Steve L. Hugyik, Jr., to Frank J. 65, Oct. 13. lows. tar Field, Ga. • Oliver D. Kise to Ruth E. Kise, lot C. Brown, 1116 30th to R. R. 6, Box October 19 Phillips, lot 121, Eiwood Manor 2nd. 1, Portage Pk. ___?'__ Mrs. Michael Kinscherff, 2125 Kem­ Lewis Berman to Jos. Schramke, pt. ble, age 70, Oct. 14. 442, Fern Rd. Sample at Olive—Geo. Freel, 2138 S. Bessie M. Rhinehart to Harriet L. C. Rayhorn, 738 E. Penn. to 133 Ken­ Taylor and Herbert Hoffman, 1418 N sec. 8, twp. 36 R 2 E. Lindt et al, lot 16, Hammond '& Whit­ Mrs. Dortha W. Lucas, Osceola, Ind., Chas. J. Granning et ux to Phebe E. age 36, Oct. 15. dall. Elmer. comb. J. Nelson Mosher, 119 E. Calvert to Main at W. Ewing—Eileen Peers, 3939 Bruce, lot 23, Euclid Pk. H. Elvah Hunt to Geo. F. W. Weber Julius Torok, 2202l_ W. Wash., age Alice M. (jhristensen to Chas. J. 71, Oct. 15. 1562 North Beach St., Daytona Beach, Montgolfier PL, and Russell Gfitt. et al, pt. lot 96, Colonial Gardens. Ka. / 3500 blk Westmoor—Waldemar Wil Granning et*ux, lot 23, Euclid Pk. Park Plan Cem. Ass'n. to Mabel-C. Henry Caban, 621 S. Bendix Dr., . J. H. Walker, 1921 S. Brookfield to sdn, Elkhart, Ind., and R. Lee*. 1802 Whitcomb & Keller Inc. to Belleville about 55. Oct. 19. Invest. Co., lots 38 and 68, West End Berg, sec. 303, gr. 2-3, sec. 305, gr. 6, Mrs. Martha Wcisel, 818 S. Meade, 1810 S. Warren. Sibley. bk 1 D. .'• F. J. Phillips, 625 S. Columbia to LaSalle at Laf.—Harold Harris, 108 E. sub. Niahcast A. Muszer, Auditor to Al­ age 65, Oet. 17. 1721 W. Eiwood. LaSalle and ped. Donald McDonald, John B. Nowicki to Clara Nowicki, Vollie G. Heier, Osceola, Ind., age 59, lot 7, Kaley's 1st sub. exis and Jos. A. Coquillard tr., lot 75, Oct. 17. G. Thilman, 918 W. Jeff, to R. R. 6, Chicago. Gorsuch's 5th, 7 lots in Rlty. Const. Detroit. October 20 Leo A. Paszkiet et ux to Jos. Hutter Co. 2nd. J. Jenkin, 320 E. Fox to 409 E. Paris. Goodland at Westmoor —F. Eugene at ux, lot 69, Walnut 2nd. October 21 L. Ferrel, 668 LaPorte to 625 N. Thomas, R. R. 5, and Marie Van Tal- Chas. Katz et ux to Lewis Katz et ux, Garden Homes, Inc. to Robt. E. Rem- Scott. mage, 2117 N. Johnson. lot 41, St. Jos. Pk., Mish. ley, lot 191, blk. E, Belleville Gardens. F. Carter, 219 Chestnut to 1619 Fass­ 500 blk Blaine—Martin Klein, 213 E. Gladys M. Monroe, tr. to Anna A. Hugh S. Neel et ux to So. Bend Gos­ nacht. Keasey, and Ted Klein, 1113 Harvey. Archer et al., pt. lots 48 and 49, Ham­ pel Tabernacle, Inc., parcel of land, MARRIAGE LICENSES W. Bladecki, 718 S. Grant to 512 Car­ 1732 LWE—Chas. Broughton, Ecorse, mond & Whitcomb. -S^lP-i eor. Mich, and Ewing. TOTAL MARRIAGE LICENSES IN lisle. Mich., and David S. Holdren, 3926 October 19 " Herman F. Glaser et al to Albert E. FIRST NI_fE MONTHS ENDING J. Kovacsics, 1311 Catalpa to 2119 Vistula *Rd., Mish. Lewis W. Hammond to John W. Lam­ Troeger 'et ux, lot 161, Sam'l L. Cot­ SEPTEMBER 1944, 1,396. Kendall.' w - October 21 irand, lot 56, Olive Hts. trell's 1st. E. Wartha, 1806 Werwinski to 1305 Mich, at Angela — Isabella Kittles, Wm. J. Calvert et ux to Lamont M. * John Keresztury et ux to Geo. S. Eiwood. Niles, Mich., and Deo Eurit, 506 I 8th. Waggoner et al, pt. sec. 27, twp. 38 R2E. Toth, lot 153, Walnut 3rd. 'WiH_e A. Fieson, Arkansas, Ky. and M. Marcus, 902 Sancome to 726 Arch. Mich, at Ind.—Ervin Holtz, 605 _N. 'Paulina Laskowski to Edwin Las­ Hattie D. Hummer et al to Peter Van Wilm_- Story, Niles, Mich, O. Lint, 206 DWN to 1024 Union St., Scott and Ernest Holasz, 1315 Victoria. kowski et ux, lot 16, Stanfield's sub. Esi, pt. sec. 17, twp. 38, R 3 E. Glenn Stoneburner, 2212 S. Mich, and Fostoria, O. 402 E. Angela — Mrs. M. Genevieve Paulina Laskowski to Stanley S. W. F. Solt to John E. Hecker ct ux, Fannie Mae Chupp, 521 Sherman. J. M. Minor, 610 Geyer, Mish. to 937 Whitmer, R. R. 6, and Louis Gispan- Laskowski, lot 43, L. F. Baker's sub. lot 24, Ind. Ave. add. ?•'*•::•% Glen O. Olson, 1838 N. College and Parkway, So. Bend. ski, Gary, Ind. H. Russell Stapp et ux to Otis D. Whitcomb & Keller Inc. to Raymond Betty June Johnson, 3C8 Haney. Mrs. S. Houthton, R. R. 6, Box 442 N. Scott and W. Marion—Newton H. Halterman et ux, lot 549, Gillmer Pk. 3". Smithy pt. lot 56, sec. 24, twp. 38 R2E. Casimir Janiszewski, 420 S. Arnold to 1116 S. 30th. Brown, Winamac, Ind., and Mildred 2nd. Melvin B. Sprague et ux to Ansel Er and Veronica K. Hintz, 2201 S. Kendall. A. Hersh, 132 LaPorte to 214 Altgeld. Miller, 817 Harrison. John J. Woolverton et al to Maple (On Page Fifteen) OCTOBER 27, 1944 Page Fifteeit

Carl L. Heiser et ux to Peoples Fed. Ditto—to Harry Sones. Sav. & Loan, lot 29, Mish. Rlty. Co. HOLC to Walter T. Barker et ux. 1st. $1,400. October 18 Oren I. Miller et ux to Peoples Fed. Indus. Sav. & Loan to Alice ChriS- Sav. & Loan, lot 45, Adam S. Baker's tensem 1st. $1,000. Prudential Ins'. Co. to Whitcomb •__ •^iOl fljfSlI Kenneth W. DeForest et ux to Peo­ Keller. ples Fed. Sav. __ Loan, lot 39, See­ Furniture Finance Corp. to Mary berger's Bdwy. add. $2,300. Konzen et al. Mary Kovacs to Ed Neddo, lot 32, Alice-Matehett to Eli Bromberg et ux. •VlaVe -9 drink John F. Kirby's add. $4,200. HOLC to Leonidas N. Mann et ux. ETfeOIT-BORN SON OF Creo L. Penrod et ux to So. Bend HOLC to Levi E. Hitchcock et ux. Fed. Sav. & Loan, lot 270, Bowman's October 19 on Bill | A SYRIAN IMMIGRANT, \ 6th. $3,250. Peoples Fed. Sav. & Loan to Don­ JI Xt" October 20 ald Wells. I TOM SAFFAUY BECAME. * *•-. ' VZ/ffP. *_•__•* i John Spurgeon et ux to Tower Fed. Ditto—to Eli Yoder. Sav. & Loan, pt. sec. 22, twp. 37 R 1 Ditto—to Chester Miller. &M_!£H.N1ST AFTER E. $500. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am. to Whit­ <0

69925 Vetter v Vetter. Hrg. Oct. 26. three and overruled as to items 2 and 70007 Nemeth. Deft, apprs. by ADG 70031 Georgia M. Lucas v Wm. G. 69948 Savidg v Savidg. Emma J. 4 thereof. &Z. Lucas, divorce, Schock, Oct. 19. Savidg app't gdn. upon furnishing 68.81 Associates Inv. Co. v Cloud et 68911 Knoblock. Sub. tr. fdg. for COURT MINUTES bond in sum of $2,500. al. Hrg. Nov. 10. deft.; costs assessed against plf.; SUPERIOR COURT NO. 2 68718 Matela v Matela. Deft, files 69522 Jenkins v Jenkins. Rule to judgment. NEW CIVIL CASES FILED IN SU­ CIRCUIT COURT ans. show cause dismissed. 67017 Berry. Sub. tr. fdg. for said PERIOR COURT No. 2 IN FIRST 9 Tuesday, October 17 69971 Van Slette v Van Slette. Deft, 68249 Pittman v Pittman. Pet. de­ intervening petnrs; judgment. MONTHS ^ENDING SEPTEMBER 1944, 60613 Mercantini v Mercantini. Cause apprs. by Edw. B. Smith. nied. S?_as* 69947 Poppe. Hrg. Oct. 27. 630. "transferred to Sup. Ct. o. 2 of St. Jo­ 69886 Seiders v Seiders. Hrg. Nov. 3. 67866 Klowetter v Klowetter. Rule 68329* Chamberlain. Cause placed seph Co. 69990 Ward v Ward. Deft. .Oles plea to show cause discharged. on jury list for trial. 70007 Imogen Nemeth v Joseph Ne­ 69845 Prairie State Bk. of Oak Pk., in abatement. 69538 Curtis v Curtis. Div. granted. 68708 Belleville Lbr. & Sup. Co. meth, divorce, Gonas, Oct. 17. 111. v Ponader et al. Plf. files mo. to 69699 Jennings v Atkins et al. Clif­ 69539 Baker v Baker. Div. granted. Deft, files demurrer to plea in abate­ 70013 Jos. Nemeth v Emma Nemeth, • strike request for interrogations. ton O. Atkips called and defaulted. 70005 Fell v Fell. Deft, to pay add. ment of plf. to x-complt. of Elmer J. divorce, Nyikos, Oct. 18. 69949 Fair v Fair. Dett. to pay for 69990 Ward v Ward. Deft, to pay sum for rent for home occupied by Chamberlain. 70023 John Wegh et al v Nicholas A. plf.'s atty., sum of $75, $40 in 30, $35-in for plf.'s atty. sum of $75, $40 in 30, pif. and minor children. 69998 Powell. Hrg. Oct. 27. Muszer, aa aud. of St. Jos. Co. et al/ 60 cays, and further sum of $25 per wk. $35 in 60 days and further sum of $20 69509 Pavelich v Pavelich. Div. grtd. 68753 Poklinkowski. Rule dismissed. pet., Nyikos, Oct. 19. for use of plf. and minor children beg. per wk. for support of. plf. and minor 70029 Glendening by n. f. etc. v 68451 Meyers. Hrg. Oct. 27. 70024 Ellsworth Berger v Lillie Ber­ Oct. 21. children beg. Oct. 28. Seeley. Sub. tr. fdg. and judgment. 69758 Brandley. Plf. to pay for ger, divorce, Frank, Oct. 19. 36009 Kellogg-Mackay Co. v Nica- 69928 Fidelity and Casualty Co. of 70615 Nemeth v Nemeth. Deft, to support of deft. $20 ea. wk. and for 70038 Nancy S. Martin v Ernest F. demus d. b. a. etc. Hrg. Octc. 31. N. Y. v Garney. T_ti__t:'apprs. by Arnold pay for support of plf. and miner child delt.'s atty. fees. Martin, divorce, VJ&G, Oct. -33. 1 69029 Elliott v Rammer. Hrg. Oct. 26. und Arnold of Elkhart. and plL's atty. ieea, 57483 Barrett. Hrg. Oct. 27. 70040 Edmund R. Van Winkle V 69660 Doyle v Lacay. Hrg. Oct. 26. 68883 Garrison et al v Warren et al. 68906 West v West. Deft, files ans. 66078 Alward. Pet. of plf. for mod. Esther R. Van Winkle, divorce, Feld­ - 67025 Smith v Smith. Hrg. Oct. 25. Defts. sep. and sev. file amended pp to plf.'s compl. and also files cr-complt. of order with ref. to custody of chil­ man, Oct. 23. 69427 Cossell v Cossell. Hrg. Oct. 20. to ans. 68302 Johnson v Johnson. Hrg. Oct. dren denied. 70042 Myttle L. Schwedler v Chas. Crim. 8361 State v Budd. Pre-sen­ 69468 Cullen v Cullen. Div. grntd. 27. Crim. 8670 State v Easton. Deft, F. Schwedler, divorce, Bertsch, Oct. 24. 67015 Miller v Miller. Hrg. Nov. 20. 69772 Wickizer v Wickizer. Hrg. waives right to trial by jury and 70043 Dorothy G. Godme v Roy tence inv. by Prob. Dept. ordered. . Oct. 27. waives right to COV. from judge and 68606 Smith v Smith. Plf.* files aff. 68942 Hollars v Hollars. Hrg. Oct. 30. Godme, divorce, Weisberger, Oct. 23. 68605 Lewis v Lewis. Hrg. Oct. 36. In the matter of gdnship of Mary county. 70045 Wilson Redding Jr. v Rosetta for COV from judge. Jane Koehler. Gdn. files final report. 70007 Nemeth. Deft, to nay for sun- 69863 Schuell v Howell. Sub. tr. and 70025 Gaylor v Gaylor. Hrg. Oct. 30. Redding, divorce, C. H. Wills, Oct. 24. 69437 Knight v Knight. Div. grntd. Est. 8249 Zeiger, Junior. Mabel Zei­ port of plf. and minor child—atty. fees. 70046 Stanley Hulecki v Stefania -fdg. for plf. against deft, for imme. ger qualifies as excrx. poss. of premises described in plf.'s 68529 Platz v Platz. Div. grntd. 69978 Zeigert. _je_t. to pay ior sup­ Hulecki, divorce, Doyle, Oct. 24. -complt. and costs. 69536 Ginn v Ginn. Deft, to pay for ivionaay, October 23 port of plf. and plaf.'s atty. fees. 62413 Morris Plan Co. v Hills et al. plf.'s atty. fees sum of $75, $40 in 30, 56861 In the matter of the liq. of-the 68224. Himes. Hrg. Oct. 27. -Deft. J. F. Miller asks trial by jury. $35 in 60 days. St. Jos. Loan & Tr. Co. of SB. pet. Est. 8034 Wroblewski. Inv. and app. 68941 Armstrong, v Armstrong. Plf. No. 62 granted. of pers. property approved 69855 Grimm v Grimm. Hrg. Nov. 1. J Monday, October 23 68406 Gard v Gard. X-complt. dis­ files mo. to strike out deft/s ans. __9_4 Woods v Nor. Ind. Transit Co. PROBATE MATTERS Monday, October 23 Deft., apprs. by SO&D. Tr. 2355 Coquillard Woods. Tr. files missed. 69750 Weber v Podemski. Plf. re­ ESTATES ADMITTED TO PROBATE 67264 Devenport v Devenport. Mar­ 70036 Exp. in the matter of the al­ pet. No. 8. leged insanity of Claude Reed. Drs. quests jury trial herein. Est, 8309 Hasty. Pet. granted. IN FIRST NINE MONTHS ENDINQkJ riage annulled. SEPTEMBER 1844, 354. * 67015 Miller v Miller. Amended com­ Abel and Helmen to report. 69643 Ingraham v Myers. Deft. Gdn. 1406 Pasket. Gdn. discharged; plt. filed. 70037 Hershberger v Hershberger. files _,nd pp of ans. sureties on bond released; F/R ap­ Crim. 8671 State v Lawrence. Final Hrg. Oct. 30. 35284 Amer. Tr. Co., tr. etc. v Ives. proved. . Est. No. 8446 Carl D. Nickersen, disposition of cause cont'd. 67923 Studebaker Emp. Fed. Credit Trust cont'd. 58619 Aitken. Cause dismissed as to Merle Nickerson, admr. Bond, $1,000. Union v Craft. Sub. tr. and fdg. for 69999 Western St. Bk. of SB v Byt­ lots 45 and 47, Monticello add. Atty. Wm. C. Pusch. Crim. 8685 State v Myers et al. Deft. ner. Deft, apprs. by Scheer & Scheer. Myers pleads not guilty; Gonas to rep. plf. against deft, in sum of $238.50 and 69957 Miller. Hrg. Oct. 27. : Est. No. 8447 Chas. Mead. Inh. tax deft. Welsh, alias Collins; arraigfiment costs and the right of foreclosure on 70000 Western St. Bk. of SB v Byt­ 69768 Linster. Hrg. Oct. 27. dniy. of deft. Schott postponed that deft. chattels described in plf.'s comolt. ner et al. Deit. apprs. by Scheer & Crfm. 8670 State v Easton. Cause . Est. No. 8448 Ralph A. Moody, Chas. may confer with his atty. 68503 Avery v Rittenhouse. Plf. files Sdheer. , cont'd over term. R. Moody, admr. Bond, $1,500. Atty." ans. to deft's mo. to stay proceedings. otiV47 Ernsberger et al v Herold et 70023 Wegh. Sub. tr. fdg. for plf.; Buntman. Crim. 8645 State v Olds. Deft, guil­ al. Deft, and x-compit. Chas. A. ty; sentenced to ISP from 2 to 21 yrs. 69984 Associates Iny. Co. v Chaney. costs assessed against plf.; judgment. Est. No. 8449 John Zeiger, Junior, Thompson cismissed his complt. at 70038 Martin. Hrg. Dec. 27. Mabel Zeiger, excrx. Bond, $600. Atty. Crim. 8688 State v Elliott. Prob. Deft, apprs. by Davisi the costs of defts. Harold & Harold. Dept. to investigate. 69849 Brennan v Brennan. Deft, lo 61741 Fetters. Sub. tr. fdg. for plf. Schindler. nay for plf.'s atty., sum of' $75, $40 in 68894 Dobbelaere v Dobbelaere. Res. that plf. is owner and entitled to have Wednesday, October 18 order now dissolved and vacated. his title quieted to the r. e. described 68118 Gunther v Gunther. Hrg. ,30, $35 in 60 days; deft, to pay for sup- oort of plf. and minor children sum of 65090 Smith v Smith. Order as to in plf.'s complt. as to defts. and all Oct. 25. custody and support of minor child of others claiming by or through them LEGAL NOTICES 69941 Exp. in the matter of the $20 per wk. beg. Oct. 28. and as against the world; judgment. app't of gdn. for Mary E. Weber. John 67778 Ball Band Fed. Cr. Union v the parties is modified. NON-RESIDENT NOTICE W. Weber gdn. Brock et al. Sub. tr. fdg. for plf. 67330 Martz v Martz. Deft, files x- 69610 Pletcher. Plf. makes proof of Cause No. 69269 - 68056 Schuyler Rose, Inc. v Von against defts. in sUm of $47.20 and complt. for limited- divorce. serv. by pub. on deft, in the Mirror. STATE OF INDIANA Hoene. Sub. tr. and fdg. for plf. costs; judgment. Est. 8288 Oliver II. Pet. No. 4 61269 Doughlass. Cause restored to COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: against deft, in sum of $500 and costs. 67923 Studebaker Emp. F. C. U. v granted. docket. In the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1 Est. 7739 Baker. Pet. No. 19 granted. 68811 Luxton. COV granted. September Term, 1944. ' 69702 Smith v Smith. Hrg. Oct. 19. Craft et al. Judgment as per form. Est. 8390 Nicolini. Report approved 69961 Susan v Susan. Deft, to pay .70934 Roadway Transit Co. v Lang- 69644 Kauffman. Deft, files ans and FERNE TERRELL with. Hrg. Nov. 20. and order entered det. value of est. and c-eomplt. vs. for plf.'s atty. fees sum of $35 within finding that there is no liability for 70024 Berger. Hrg. Oct. 27. HARLAND V. TERRELL 80 days. SUPERIOR COURT NO. 1 payment of inh. tax thereon. 68889 Zalas. Plf. files ans. to deft's Be It Known, That the above named 70014 Rouse v Rouse. Hrg. Oct. 25. mo. to set aside decree. Plaintiff has filed in the office of the Thursday, October 19 Wednesday, October 18 SUPERIOR COURT NO. 2 Clerk of said Court her complaint., 70019 WiHiams v Williams. Hrg. 70005 Fell v Fell. Deft, apprs. by against said Defendant in the above Oct. 26. Paden. Thursday, October 12 69912 Cross v Cross. Deft, to pay 69977 Oroklos. Hrg. Oct. 20. cause together with a proper affidavit 67866 Klowetter v Klowetter. Deft. 69976 Abbiehl. Hrg. Oct. 20. that said Defendant is a non-resident for support of plf. sum of $12 per wk. ^pprs. to information in contempt by of the State of Indiana. beg. Oct. 21 until further order. Miller. Monday, October 16 • 69657 Jagla v Jagla. Hrg. Oct. 26. 67908 Jansen v Shellenberger. Sub. 65218 Case. Deft, files ans. CIRCUIT COURT Said- defendant is hereby notified: 69934 Freshley v Freshley. Deft to tr. fdg. for plf. that he is entitled to dim. 8570 Clubb. Cause cont'd un­ that said cause will stand for trial on pay for support of plf. ahd minor chil­ til such time as deft, is released from NEW. CIVIL CASES FILED IN CIR- the llth day of December, 1944, the trame. poss. of the real est. described Cuii' COURT IN FIRST NlNE - dren sum of $5 per wk. beg. Oct. 21. in his complt.; judgment. military service. > same being act the city of South Bend, 69990 Ward v Ward. Hrg. Oct. 25. Crim. 8634 State v Howard. Same. MONTHS ENDING SEPTEMBER, 1944, on which day said defendant is re­ 700015 Nemeth v Nemeth. Hrg. Oct. 769. 69923 Kaman v Kaman. Hrg. Oct. 25. 20. 68801 Palmer. Divorce granted. quired to appear to said action. 69933 Brundige v Brundige. Deft, to 70011 Nemeth v Binney. Deft, apprs. 69577 Kapy.i?De_t. files ans. FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. pay for plf.'s atty. fees sum of $75, $40 by Schulman. 69977 Oroklos. Cause transferred to 70006 Lucille Galloway v Jake Gal­ By Marie Stansbury, Deputy. in 30, $35 in 60 days; deft, to pay for . 70016 Bowen by n.f. v Earhart. Sub. St. Jos. Sup. Ct. No. 1. loway, divorce, Paden, Oct. 17. Maurice N. Frank, support of minor child sum of $15 per tr. fdg. and judgment. 69905 Studebaker Fed. Emp. Credit 70008 Vicctor Layman v Ted R. Ne- Atty. for Plaintiff. 10:20-27; 11:3 wk. beg. Oct. 21. Thursday, Oct. 19 Union. Defts. Velma Price and Leroy her, complt. on prom, note, SO&D, 69970 Piech v Piech. Deft, to pay 68795 Koch v Koch. Plf. makes proof Price appr. by Loomis. Oct. 17. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION for support of plf. and minor children of ser. of not. of taking depositions of 68513 Ball-Band. Sub. tr. fdg. for 70012 Constance Szybowicz v Stan­ Estate No. 8454 sum of $12 per wk. beg. Oct. 21. plf. in surn of $119.71 and costs; judg­ ley Szafranski, release and discharge oi , NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ jurisdictional witnesses. lien and to quiet title, Niemiec, Oct. 18 dersigned has been appointed by the • Crim. 8683 State v Myers et al. Deft, 70005 Fell v Fell. Deft, to pay for ment. ordered released to take exam. 69998 Powell. Hrg. Oct. 20. 70014 Marguerite Rouse v Lemuei H. Judge of the Superior Court No. 1 of support of plf. and minor children St. Jdseph County, State of Indiana, 69702 Smith v Smith. Hrg. Oct. 26. pending trial sum of $25 per wk. beg. 69978 Zeiger t. Deit. apprs. by Rouse, sep., Allen & Allen, Oct'. 18. 63872 Sibley, admrx. v Jones et al. Weidler. 70017 Jo Ann Hartwick by her n. f. Administrator of the Estate of Martha Oct. 21 and for plf.'s atty. fees. Sylvester Hartwick v Northern Ind. L. Bennett Curtis, late of St. Joseph Plf. files brief on deft. Magaw's de­ 70022 Swartz v Swartz. Hrg. Oct. Est. 6017 DeWells. Tr.'s 4th inter­ murrer to 2nd pp of plf.'s complt. mediate acctg. and report examined Transit Inc., damages, Feiwell, Oct. 18. County, deceased. 27. 70018 Stephen A. Heckaman v Irma Said estate is supposed to be solvent. 69956 Rosa v Rosa. Deft, to pay for 69357 Scopelitis v Rose. Sub. trial and approved. plf.'s atty. fees sum of $50 to be paid Gdn. 1942 Schwartz. Gdnship cont'd. L. Anderson et al, complt. on note, and Louis H. Orvis, Administrator. fdg. for plf. against deft, in sum of fcl. mtg., Egger, Oct. 18. October 25th, 1944. $25 in 30, $25 in 60 days. $200; judgment. Tuesday, October 17 William A. Bertsch, 70020 Smead et al v Murray et al. 68614 Beckner v Beckner. Cause dis­ 69208 Redman. Divorce granted. 70019 Irene Williams v Edw. Wil­ Hrg. Dec. 21. liams, /divorce, Carter, Oct. 13. Attorney for Administrator. missed. 682_8 Long. X-complt. dismissed. 70020 Darwin H. Smeaa et al v John / 10:27—11:3-10 69864 Wilson v Wilson. Plf. to pay 70004 Exp. pet. in the etc. of Sophie 69942 Trzaskowski. Defts. file de­ for support of deft, sum of $9 per wk. W. Murray et al., app. for app. of a Gomv. Hrg. Oct. 20. murrer, accompanied by memo, and com. to release mtg., Hahn, Oct. 39. NOTICE OF INSOLVENCY beg. Oct. 21. 67808 Poston v Poston. Deft, apprs. brief, to plf.'s complt. 69996 Bolinger v Bolinger. Deft, tc 70025 Mary Gaylor v Robt. B. Gay­ No. 2713 by Elliott. 70002 Smith. Hrg. Dec. 20. In the St. Joseph Circuit Court pay for plf.'s atty. fees $75, to be paid lor, divorce, Sands, Oct. 19. ; 69509 Pavelich v Pavelich. Deft, 64137 Read. Tr. files pet. No 4 70026 Thos. H. Sherk v Lillian M. In the matter of the Estate of $40 to 30, $35 in 60 days. anprs. by H&J. 61899 Peoples Life Ins Co. Recr. dis­ 69649 Brennan v Brennan. Hrg. Sherk, divorce, Schwertiey, Oct. 20. JULIA NEMETH, Deceased. ffi| Claim 3127 Boldt v Est. of John P- charged; sureties on bond released. 70027 June Carnes v Wm. Carnes, NOTICE is hereby given that upon Oct. 23. Landgraf. Doyle apprs. for claimant. 69942 Trzaskowski. Both defts. appr Friday, October 20. divorce, Buntman, Oct. 20. petition filed in said Court by the Ex­ Claim 3128 Boldt v Est. of John P. by SO&D. 70028 Ruby P. Sanders v John A. ecutrix of said Estate, setting up the ' 69916 Menzie v Menzie. Hrg. Oct. 26. Landgraf No. 7822. Doyle apprs. for 66497 Skelly Oil Co. Cause cont'd 69850 Lameire v Lameire. Appn. Sanders, divorce, Sheneman, Oct. 20. insufficiency of the Estate of said dece­ claimant. over verm. dent to pay the debts and liabilities dismissed. 68588 Mendlikowski. Hrg. Oct. 20. 70030 Rosemary Jane Blue v Sam E. 51276 Kittredge v Kittredge. Pet. Friday, October 20 Blue, divorce, Jellison, Oct. 20. thereof, the Judge of said Court did on Est. 8430 Whiteman. Pet. granted. the 25th day of October, 1944, find said granted. 70004 Exp. pet. in the matter of So­ Tr. 2376 SB Accceptance Corp. Bar­ 70033 Roadway Transit Co. v Roy J. 68841 Whitaker v Whitaker. Deft, phie Gorny. Commitment to Logans­ Langwith, complt., Montgomery & estate to be probably insolvent, and rett Law Tr. Tr. Deed approved. Montgomery, Oct. 21. order the same to be settled according-, released and discharged from custody port St. Hosp. ordered. Tr. 2331 Richland Rlty. Cpn. Barrett on the rule. 69750 Weber v Podemski et al. Mo. 70034 Roadway Transit Co. v Roy .T. ly. The creditors of said estate are Law Tr. Tr.'s Deed approved. Langwith, complt., Montgomery & therefore hereby notified of such in­ 68742 Ray v Ray. Div. granted. of deft. Lord to strike out pts. of com­ Tr. 2339 D. M. Shively Est. Barrett 69427 Cossell v Cossell. Hrg. Oct. 30. j plt. sustained as to items one and Montgomery, Oct. 21. solvency and required to file their Law Tr. Tr.'s Deed approved. 70035 Clara Reynolds Cox v John C. claims against said estate for allowance Tr. 2377 Citz. Tr. & Sav. Bk. Bar­ Cox, divorce, Potts, Oct. 21. on or before the 27th day of Novem­ rett Law Tr. Tr.'s Deed approved. 70036 Alleged insanity of Claude ber, 1044. Tr. 2189 Colpaert Rlty. Corp. Tr. Reed, Oct. 21. files ver. pet. No. 18. WITNESS the Clerk and Seal of said Wednesday, October 18 70037 Anna Belle Hershberger v Wm Court at South Bend, Indiana, thislSth Tr. 2052 Dunnuck. Pet granted. R. Hershberger, divorce, Davis, Oct. 23. day of October, 1944. Est. 8346 Horowitz. Order det. value 70039 Pet. of Emery P. Baranyai et FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. of est. and fixing amt. of tax at $248.43 al to change name. Hrg. Oct. 23. 10:27—11:3-10 entered. 70041 Dorothy R. Stilp v Frank G. Tr. 2355 Coquillard Woods Barrett Stilp, sep. maint., Farage, Oct. 23. NON-RESIDENT NOTICE Law Tr. Tr.'s Deed approved. 70044 Jay C. Bowsher v Daniel Mc­ -No. 8394 70007 Nemeth. Hrg. Oct. 20. Kinley et al., quiet title, Martin, Oct. 24. STATE OF INDIANA 68622 Metcalf. Hrg. Nov. 3. TO ESTABLISH BIRTH ST. JOSEPH COUNTY SS: 68783 Fretz. Cause transferred to St. In the St. Joseph Circuit Court - SUPERIOR COURT No. 1 PETITIONS TO ESTABLISH TIME September Term, 1944 Jos. Circuit Ct. AND PLACE OF BIRTHS FILED IN SETTING OF OCTOBER 26th Crim. 8685 State v Hartman. COV AMOS WARDLOW, ADMINISTRATOR granted. FIRST NINE MONTHS ENDING OF THE ESTATE OF SARAH JANE COURT CASES •69854 Troxel. Hrg. Oct. 28. SEPTEMBER 1944, 400. HOSLER 68279 Hamilton. Deft, files supple. vs. MONDAY, OCTOK_!k 30th: ans. No. 3896 Gertrude Nabicht. 69248 Mester v Mester (Sands v VJ&G) 69088 Hadary. Hrg. Nov. 2. No. 3897 Eustren Woodford. AMOS WARDLOW, ET AL 65614 Simon v Simon, Jr (Sands v Nyikos, Scheer & S) No. 3898 Annies Wilder. 51351 Jurek Adm v Polish Women's Alliance (Sands v Fisher, Wypiszynski, Thursday, October 19 No". 3899 Wava M. M. Touhey. 61710 Woodka v Suit (AC&D v Allen & A) Rzeszotar.ki) Est. 789S Funk. Admr. files supple, TO: HERMAN CHREIST inventory; examined and approved. VERA MIKESELL 61739 Battles v Monhaut (Sands v SO&D) SUPERIOR COURT NO. 1 MARY SAIL 66633 Malecki v Ailis Chalmers (Kominiarek, ADG&Z v Rees & Link) Est. 5637 Schroeder. Admr. files NEW CIVIL CASES FILED IN SU-. final report publ. and posting of notice ordered. PERIOR COURT No. 1 IN FIRST NINE You, and each ©f you, are hereby no­ Crim. 7505 Williams. Deft, --file pet. MONTHS ENDING SEPTEMBER 1944 tified that Amos^SSfardlow, Administra­ SUPERIOR COURT No. 2 for error coram nobis. 360. tor of the estate ol Sarah Jane Hosier, 68927 Nemeth. Cause dismissed. has filed his verified petition for the SETTING OF OCTOBER 26th Crim. 8672 State v Pustay. Appeal 70005 Zelma Fell v Cedric Fell, di­ sale of the following real estate located dismissed. vorce, E. O. Scheer, Oct. 17. in St, Joseph County, Indiana, to-wit: JURY CASES 68821 Central Mftrs. Hrg. Nov. 3. 70009 Jos. Canter v John L. Worden Lot Numbered One (1) in Vaness's. - "A" LIST '£_$&' 57483 Barrett. Plf. files ver. ans to et al, fcl. mech. lien, Scheer & Scheer, Plat in Clay Township except 132 MONDAY, OCTOBER 30th: deft's appli. to vacate support order. Oct. 17. feet east and west taken off of the Crim 8685 State v Hartman (Rape) (Freed) 69454 Stone. Cause dismissed. 70010 Eloise V. Schaler v Chas. E. entire east end of said lot. 61377 Wiener v New Oliver Hotel (Sands—ADG&Z) Friday, October 10 Schafer, divorce, CMC&B, Oct. 17. to make assets for the payment of the. 68038 Badur v So Bend Motor Bus Co (ADG&Z—SO&D) 68889 Zalas. Hrg. Nov. 2. 70011 Jos. Nemeth v Gene Binney, debts of said estate. 68582 Pen well v Studebaker Aviation Corp (Spevak—SO&D) 69600 Eaton. Deft, files ans. to plf.'s corhplt., ADG&Z, Oct. 17. > That said petition will come up for 68583 Luggar v Studebaker Aviation Corp (Spevak—SO&D) complt.. 100115 Eva C. Nemeth v Joseph Ne­ hearing in the St. Joseph Circuit Court, 68584 Geraghzy v Studebaker Aviation Corp (Spevak—SO&D) 69976 Abbiehl. Deft, to pay for meth, divorce, E. O. Scheer, Oct. 18. in the court house in the city of South WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1st: plf.'s atty. for-services rendered $40 70016 Delores Mae Bowen by n. f. Bend, Indiana on the 18th day of De­ within 30 days. and Mother Edna Platz v Robert E. cember, 1944 at 9:30 o'clock A. M. 69142 Petzke v Mills (Huguenard—Niemiec—Spevak) 68676 Russell. Sub. tr. fdg. for i

;THIS HERE'P&UAS««_* m MPsTTER. •SSE, MAM THIS W*3 A SVtfELL SUPPER! YES SIR, MAWf ANDTU- BET THERE *iQW LONS *&Wti SEEN MNRRED VOU VOU'RE SORE A VJONDEfcFOL COOK- 1SWT ANYBODY 1N.THE. VMOUE*, SHCOJD CONTINUE TOFTJfnFERVOUR COONTRV CAN BAXS^ WES UKE M\WE IWD "frJS HONEYMOON WILL ^^^^SkWsrcooK ,. YOORSf YOU MAsY NOT HANE A c £kfc7 t-f\ST FbfcEVEE. E5V >JHV,THAvNKllNTHEVJHOUE M PEETTV FACE UKE.SOMfe d SOLLV, I'M* 6QNN* you,??*.* vV^7 VORLDf VJOMEN. AND YOU \\fi*i& A. 0*DBUR.f. TH F16GEE. UKE A HIPPOPOTAMUS. . FELLMHKT BUT, BY SOLLY WROTH TH/!?r YOU SORE AfcTKLE- CAN KEOQNn' // v NMlCHftSOUT HE DOES.

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NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs,, Twenty-three (23), Township Thir­ erson, late of St. Joseph County, de­ quired to be and appear in said Court LEGAL NOTICES gatees and devisees- of the said dece­ ty-six (36) North, Range One (1) ceased. on the 13th day of November, 1944, NOTICE OF PROCEEDINGS TO dent, and all other persons interested East, containing Twenty (20) acres. Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. when the same will be heard and make £§» VACATE PLAT, STREETS, in the said estate, that said Administra­ Merle Nickerson, Administrator. proof of their heirship, or claim to any AND ALLEYS tor has filed in this court his account Terms and conditions of said sale are October 19th, 1944. Dart of said estate, and show cause if Cause No. 70064 and vouchers for the final set­ as follows: One-third of the purchase William C. Pusch, there be, why said account and vouch­ STATE OF INDIANA tlement of said estate, and they are price to be paid in cash; One-third in Attorney for Estate. 10:27—11:3-10 ers should not be approved. ST. JOSEPH COUNTY SS: hereby required to be and appear in nine months and One-third in eighteen WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of In the St-. Joseph Circuit Court said Court on the 21st day ofNovember,- months from the date of sale, deferred NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION the St. Joseph Superior Court No, 2 at September Term, 1944. 1944, when the same will be heard -and payments to be evidenced by notes South Bend, Indiana. 13th day of Octo­ oiake proof- of their heirship, or claim from the purchaser bearing six (6%) Estate No. 8448 ber, 1944. to any part of said estate, and show per cent per annum, waiving relief, NOTICE ia hereby given that the un­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Qlerk. HOMER W. FFPTERLING dersigned has been appointed by the vs. cause if there be, why said account providing for attorney's'fees and se­ JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. and vouchers should not be approved. cured by mortgage on the real estate. Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ Attorney for-Estate. 10:20-27 "CITY OF SOUTH BEND, IND. seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ and the Citizens thereof WITNESS, the Clerk and tile Seal Real estate- shall be sold, free from Leo L. Cook, of the St. Joseph Circuit Court at encumbrances, at private sale for not istrator of the Estate of Ralph A. Moo­ Pursuant to statute in such case be­ South Bend, Indiana, 25th day of Octo­ less than the full appraised value. dy, late of St. Joseph County, de­ NOTICE CM. ADMINISTRATION ing provided, public notice is hereby ber, 1944. JOHN W. GARD, Guardian ceased. FRANK J. BRUGfiNER, Clerk Estate No. 8438 •given that Homer W. Fitterling, as Qrie Parker, Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. NOTICE is hereby given Hta± the un­ •• owner, oi a plat within ,the corporate JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. Attorney for Guardian. 10:27 Charles R. Moody, Administrator. Scheer & Scheer, dersigned has been appointed by the limits of the City of South Bend, In­ October 2«_-* 1944. Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ diana, known as Sunset Park, an addi­ Attorneys for Estate. 10:27—11:3 NOTICE OF SALE .09 REAL ESTATE Max Buntman, seph County, State of Indiana, Execu­ tion to said city and of all of the lands Attorney for Estate. 10:27—11:3-10 tor of the estate of Peter Vasileff, late lying within said plat, has filed in the NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Pursuant to an order of Superior of St. Joseph County, deceased. above entitled Cause, his petition, Estate NO. 8451 Court No. 2, made and entered in the NON-RESHW&NT NOTICE Said estate is supposed to be solvent. praying a judgment of said Court, va­ NOTICE is hereby gi-ssent that the un­ estate o$. Elizabeth Niesen, Estate No. Cause* No. 70038 Make Blezrfakoff, Executor. cating the said plat and all of the 8321, in said Court, notice is hereby Oetober 6th, 1944. 'streets and alleys designated therein, dersigned has been appointed by the JTATE OF INDIANA Judge of the Circuit Court of St. JOr. given that the executors of said estate COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: Harry Taylor, to-wit: the following streets over their' will offer for sale at private sale on Attorney, for Estate. 10:13-20-27 extent, between Calvert Street and seph County, State of Indiana, Execu­ In the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2 tor of the Estate of John A. Harris, Saturday, November 11, 1944, at the September _?exg»,-..I944. Railway Court of said city, to-wit: U_te.of St. Joseph County, deceased. office of* the attorney for the execu­ NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT tors, 412 I. O. O. F. Building, South Illinois Street Said Estate is supposed to be solvent NANCY S. MARTIN Estate No. 7881 Falcon Street Thorn Parks, Executor. Bend,. Indiana, at not less than* the full Estate of Oscar Berkowitch. appraised value, the following de­ vs. Weliingtoiji Street October 25th, 1944. ERNEST F. MARTIN By direction of Clara Berkowitch, Lake Street Zilford Carter, scribed real estate , located in St. Jo­ Administratrix of the Estate of Oscar seph County, St-te of Indiana, to-wit: Kentucky Street Attorney for Estate. 10:27—11:3-10 Be It Known, That the above named Berkowitch, late of St. Joseph County, Kenmore Street plaintiff has filed in the office of the in the State of Indiana, deceased. Iowa Street ' NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Lots number One Hundred Twen­ Clerk of said Superior Court No. 2 NOTICE is hereby given tq, the heirs, and the street in said plat known as Estate No. 8455 ty-five (125), One Hundred Twenty- complaint against said defendant in legatees and devisees of the said dece­ Dubail Avenue, between Industrie! six (128) and One Hundred Twen­ dent, and all other persons interested Avenue and Dundee Street. • NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ the above cause together with a prop­ dersigned has been appointed by the ty-seven (127) in Eiwood Manor, er affidavit that said defendant, is non­ in the said estate, that said Adminis*- Further notice is given that this pe­ Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ Second Addition to the city of tratrix has filed in this court her ac­ tition will come on tor hearing before resident of state of Indiana. seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ South Bend. Said defendant is hereby notified count and vouchers for the final' set­ said Court on the 22nd day of Novem­ istratrix of the Estate of Josephine F. tlement, of. said estate, and they are ber, 1944, and that any tij-ite before that said cause will stand for trial or, hereby required to be and appear in Frazier, late of St. Joseph County, de­ The terms and conditions of said sale the 27th day of December, 1944, the said hearing, .remonstrances may be ceased. are as follows: One-third cash at the said Court on the 13th day of'Novem­ filed by such persons interested, op­ time of the purchase, one-third in nine same being of said court commencing ber, 1944, when the same will be heard posed to the grant of said petition. Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. at the city of .South Bend, on which and make proof of their heirship, or Emma F. Rulison, Administratrix. months and one-third in eighteen day said defendant is required to ap­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, October 25th, 1944. months from, the date of the sale, claim to' any part of said estate, and Clerk of the St. Joseph Circuit Court deferred payments to be evidenced by pear to said action. x show cause if there be, why said ac­ Dated October 26, 1944. 10:27—11:3 George L. Rulison, FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. Attorney ior Bstate. 10:27—ll:3--_0 notes from the purchaser bearing in­ count and vouchers should not be terest at the rate of six (6%) »er cent By Golda S. Butler, Deputy. approved. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT per annum from the date, waiving^ re­ Voor, Jackson & Grant, WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of Estate No. 8188 NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE lief, providing for attorney's fees, and Attorneys for Plaintiff. 10:27—11:3-10 the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South Estate of David J. Vandewalle. to be secured by a mortgage on the Bend, Indiana, 18th day of October, • By direction of Lawrence A. Vande­ Pursuant to an order of Superior real estate sold. NOTICE ON PETITION TO 1944. walle, Administrator of the Estate of Cou.t No. 2 made in the guardianship Real estate will be sold free from CHANGE NAME FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. David J. Vandewalle, late of St. Joseph of Mary Ellen Gard, Guardianship No. encumbrances, „ -_____". Cause No. 70039 JOH3SF E. HANLEY, Deputy. County, in the State of Indiana, de- 2088, the* undersigned guard ian will of­ ALOYSHJSt NIESEN, STATE OF INDIANA Arthur F. Scheer, ceased. fer fo_*-sale on Saturday, November £t, JOSEPH NIESEN, ST. JOSEPH COUNTY SS: Attorney for Estate. 10:20-27 NOTICE is hereby given to the. heirs, 1944, at the officfr oft the attorney for Executors of the Estate of In the St> Joseph Circuit Court legatees and devisees of the said dece­ the guardian, 412 I. O. O. _f. Bunding, Elizabeth Niesen. September Term, 1944 LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC dent, and all other persons interested South Bend, Indiana, the following de­ Orie Parker, HEARING in the said estate, that said Adminis­ scribed real estate located in St. Jo­ Attorney for Executors. 10:27 PETITION OF EMERY PETER BARA­ NOTICE is hereby given that the Lo*- trator, has filed in this court his ac­ seph County, State ef Indiana, to-wit: NYAI, ROSE ANNE BARANYAI, ANNA cal Alcoholic Beverage Board of* St. count and vouchers for the final set­ GRACE, BARAN3.AI and WALTER Joseph Gounty, Indiana*, vdU, at 9sQH T3.© Northwest Quarter tNSK.4)- of. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT tlement of said, estate, and they are 1 EMORY BARANTEAI by EMERY FET- A. M. Central War Time on the 15th day hereby required to be and appear in the Northeast (NE /*) of the North-, Estate No. 5554 of- November, 1944, a% the Commisstonr 1 Estate of Clara Marie Sharp. ER BARANYAI, his next friend, to said Court on Ihe 20th day of Novem­ east. Quarter (NE ,.) of Section change name. e-*-*s room, Court House, in the Citaa ott ber, 1944, when the same wflfc be' heard' ' Twenty-throe* (238* Township Tftir- By direction of Earl E. Whitmer, Ad­ Sosrth Bend, in said County, begin in­ and make proof of their heirship, or ty*six (36) North* Range One (1) ministrator of the Estate of Clara Ma*- NOTICE Is hereby given that, Emery vestigation of the applications of the claim to any part of said estate, and East, excepting thsrefrom a two (2) rie* Sharp, late of St. Joseph County, following named persons, re_tuest_ng in the State of Indiana, deceased. Peter Baranyai*, Rose Anne Baranyai, show cause if there be, why sa_S ac­ acre tract in the Northwest corner Anna Grace Baranyai and Walter Em- tlte* issue to the applicants, at the loca­ count and vouehers should not be ap­ thereof, One Hundred Ninety-eight NOTICE is hereby given to th* heirs, lory Baranyai, have applied to the St. tions* hereinafter set out; of the Alco­ proved. (198) feet, east and west, by Four legatees and: devisees of the said dece­ Joseph Circuit Court of said County holic Beverage Permits, ofc the classes WITNESS, the Clerk and '%ho Seal *t.f* Hundred Thirty (430**) feet, north dent and ail other persons- interested and State to have their names changed hereinafter designated and Witt, at 3M« .the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South and south; excepting also a one (1) in the said, estate that said Administra­ to Emery Peter Barany, Rose 4nne time and place, receiswu information Bend, Indiana, 24th day of October, acce tract in the Northeast corner tor has QVed in this court his account concerning the fitness ofi said appli­ thereof, One Hundred Ninety-eight ~and vouchers ftw- the final settlement of Barany, Anne Grace Barany and James 1944. Walter E. Barany respectively, and cants, and the propriety of issuing the FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. (198) feet, east and west, by Two said estate, and they are hereby re­ permits, applied for to such applicants Hundred Twenty (220) feet, north quired* to be and appear in said court that said petition and application will at the premises named: .JOHN E. HANLEY, !©«spt*$y. be presented to and heard by said Joseph W. Nyikos, and south, leaving Seven (7) acres. on the 28th day of November,. 1944, when the same will be heard and make Court on the 14th day of December, Attorney for Estate. 10:27—11:3 4944. Julia Nagy, 7072, (Restaurant), 1406 The Southwest Quarter (•SW1/.) of proof of their heirship, or claim to any. Kemble Ave., South Bend—Beer, 1 part of said estate, and shorn cause a Dated October 29; 1944. ; , •^•*_i§!*-ra NOTICE OF APPLICATION the Northeast Quarter (NE ^) of Wine Retailer. there be* Why said account and vouch­ FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. Russell F. Robertson, 7074,-(Restau­ an Cause No. 70053 the Northeast Quarter (N35V.) of ers should not be approved. x- STATE OF INDIANA Section Twenty-three (23), Town­ Joseph W. Nyikos, rant), 1025 Western Ave., South ship. Thirty-six (36) North*, Range WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of Bend—Beer Retailer. he ST. JOSEPH COUNflH-r SS? the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South Attorney for Petitioners. In the Sti Joseph Cireuit Court One (1) East, containing ten (10) 10:27—11:3-10 Max Teichman and Leon M. Wol-- September Term, 1944. acres. Bend, Indiana, 23rd day of October, vos, 7113, (Grocery), 402-404 E. 1944. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT South St., South Bend — Beer IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION Four (4) acres taken off of ahd FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. - Estate No. 6191 Dealer. , te OF VTBGINIA SZILY, CLARA SZILY, from the entire south side of ,£he JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. Estate of Sophia Dehne. Daniel and Millicent Fallendorf, southeast quarter (SE1.,) of the J. Clifford Potts, By direction of L. M. Hammer­ 7092, i (Package Store), 1021 E. AN:> FLORENCE SZILY TO CHANGE 1 Attorney for Estate. 10:27—11:3 NAME. Northeast Quarter (NE /.) of the schmidt, executor of the estate of So­ Madison St., South Bend—Liquor, Northeast Quarter (NE1/*) of Sec­ phia Dehne, late of St. Joseph county Wine Dealer. .--7Q5FZCE' is hereby given that We tion Twenty-three (23), Township NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION in the state of Indiana, deceased. South Bend Aerie No. 435, Frater­ h /e applied to the St. Joseph Circuit Thirty-six (36) North, Range One Estate No. 8446 NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs nal Order of Eagles, 7073, (Club), * art of the said County and State to (1) East. NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ legatees and devisees of the said dece­ 321 N. Michigan St., South Bend have our names changed from VIRGI- dersigned* has been appointed by the dent, arid all other persons interested —Beer, Liquor, Wine Retailer. I.-A SZILY AND CLARA SZILY AND The East half (E%) of the South­ Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ in the said estate, that said Execu­ Forty and Eight Voiture 249, Inc., i ..ORENCE SZILY TO VIRGINIA east Quarter (SEV4) of the North­ senh Countv, State of Indiana, Admin­ tor has filed in this court his ac­ 7084, (Club), 124V2 W. Washington . .ELEY AND CLARA SEELEY AND east Quarter (NE1/.) of Section istrator of the Estate of Carl D. Nick- count and vouchers for the final set­ St., South Bend — Beer, Liquor, i* .ORENCE SEELEY and that said pe- tlement of said estate, and they are Wine Retailer. t cibn and application will be presented hereby required to be and appear in George W. Werntz and John B. i_ and heard by said Court at the 18th said Court on the 10th day of Novem­ Taylor, 7045, (Restaurant), 744 W. t...y of December, 1944. Parking Place Straight Ahead ber, 1944, when the same will be heard Sample St., South Bend — Beer, VIRGINIA SZILY. and make proof of their heirship, or Liquor, Wine Retailer. CLARA SZILY. claim to any part of said estate, and Nick Genchoff and Zanfir Tsekoff, FLORENCE SZILY. show cause if there be, why said ac­ .7007, (Restaurant), 2120 Western Dated this 21st day of October, 1944. count and vouchers should not be Ave., South Bend — Beer, Wine 10:27—11:3-10 approved. Retailer. • ____ WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal oi Jacob Rymer, 7010, (Grocery), 744 NOTICE TO BIDDERS the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South N. Notre Dame Ave., South Bend NOTICE is hereby given by the un-. Bend, Indiana, 13th day of October, —Beer Dealer. dersigned that the Board of Commis­ 1944. ___ Steye Csillag, 7011, (Restaurant), sioners of St. Joseph County, Indiana, FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. 727 W. Ford St., South Bend- will receive sealed proposals or bids on JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. Beer, Wine Retailer. November 6, 1944, up to the hour of Hammerschmidt & Johnson, Walter J. Manuszak, 6956, (Restau­ ten o'_lock a. m., for the furnishing of Attorneys for Estate. 10:20-27 rant), 1816 S. Michigan St., South the i..lowing -equipment as set forth Bend—Beer Retailer. in the requisition and specifications^ NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Peter VanDeVelde, 6889, (Package now on file in the office of County Estate No. 8442 Store), 436'E. LaSalle Ave., South Aucator. NOTICE is hereby given that the Bend—Liquor, Wine Dealer. undersigned has been appointed by the Sylvester Manuszak, 6910, (Restau­ COUNTY SURVEYOR Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ rant), 1411 Western Ave.; South 1—Used automobile seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ Bend—Beer, Wine Retailer. istrator of the Estate of William G. Edward J. Hosinski, 7115. (Restau­ Said sealed proposals must be accom- F«lden, late of St. Joseph County de- rant), 450 S. Carlisle St., South p? nied by either a certified check or a CGSSGCi Bend—Beer, Liquor, Wine Retail­ -bidder's bond in a sum equal to not Said Estate is supposed to be solvent er. X ss- than ten "per cent of the amount Charles Felden, Administrator. Virginia Gapinski, 7116, (Package cf the bid, together with a non-collu­ October 12th, 1944. Store), 1041 W. Sample St., South sion affidavit. ______* Leo Van Tilbury, Bend—Liquor, Wine Dealer. Proposals must be filed on forms fur** Attorney for Estate. 10:20-27; 11:3 Frank Ermeti, 7967, Transfer Beer nished by the County Auditor. Retailer's permit from. Theophiel The right is reserved to reject any NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT VanDeViere, R. R. No. 6, South and all bids. Estate No. 8014 Bend (Woodland), Dated this 2Sth day of October, 1944. Estate of Franklin. M_ Kauffman. NICHOLAS A. MUSZER, By direction of Bernice I. Bainter, SAID INVESTIGATION WILIte Bft Auditor, St. Joseph County, Indiana. Executrix of the Estate of Franklin -M. OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, AND PUBLIC 10:27—11:3 Kauffman, late of St. Joseph County, PARTICIPATION IS REQUESTED. in the State of Indiana, deceased. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COM­ Estate No. 7921 legatees aijd devisees of the said dece­ MISSION OF INDIANA Estate of Ferd Simpson. dent, and all other persons Interested By direction of Wilbur H. Simpson, Big bombers based on Eniwetok of the Marshall Islands, now a. in the said estate, that said Execu­ By JOHN F. NOONAN, Administrator of the Estate of Ferd U. S. base, follow the lead of this jeep when looking for parking, trix has filed in this* court her account Secretary. Simpson, late of St. Joseph County, in and vouchers for the final settlement I BERNARD E. DOYLE. « the State of Indiana, deceased. places after landing on the supply-jammed atoll. (Navy photo.) of said estate, and they are hereby re- I 10:27 Excise Administrator. OPage Eighteen THE MIRROR

6 846 S. Chapin St. 3 Stuckey School KJB^AL NOTICES .T• • li ING PLACES 7 St,' Casimir's School — Fisher && sgr-v Ullery School •ravi • i_--nwE.9 Webster St. LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC It is hereby ordered by the Board of 6 John Adams School—Mishawaka 8 Washington High School—1534 W. tS&man Wagner School HEARING Commissioners of St. Joseph County, Ave. Sample St. Greene Greene Township School Notice is hereby given that the Local Indiana, that the voting places by pre­ 7 2205 Mishawaka Ave. 9 St. Adalbert's Hall — 2400 W. Harris Granger School Alcoholic Beverage Board of St. -Joseph cincts for the Election to be held on 8 813 27th Si. Grace St. **•**•*> Liberty Countv, Indiana, will at 2.-00 P. M, Tuesday, November 7, 1944, be as fol­ 9 2921 Mishawaka Ave. 10 _1_ S. Bendix Drive ' 1 Town Hall Central War Time on the 8th day of lows: 10 831 36th St. 11 St. Anthony Hall—414 W. Indiana 2 Orvile Mapes Residence—Cen­ November, 1944, at the City Hall in the 11 2520 Mishawaka Ave—No. 9 Fire Ave. tefess*^ ter St. -City of Mishawaka, in said County, be­ SOUTH BEND Station. 12 734 W. Indiana Ave. Lincoln gin investigation of the applications of 12 931 34th St. 13 Verhovay Aid Assn.—1024 W. In­ 1 301 Michigan St. — Walkerton, the following named persons, request­ FIRST DISTRICT diana Ave. Ind. FOURTH DISTRICT 14 . ing- the issue to the applicants, at the Prct. Place 1601 S. Walnut St. 2 Town Hall locations hereinafter set out, of the 1 City Hall 1 Central Fire Station Alcoholic Beverage Permits of the — Madison 2 612 N. Lafayette St. 2 602 S. Michigan St. MISHAWAKA classes hereinafter designated and will, 3 792 S. Rush St. 1 Mutti Service Station 3 Turner Hall—Michigan & Marion FIRST DISTRICT at said time and place, receive infor­ Sts. 4 524V2 E. Monroe St. 2 Madison High School mation concerning the fitness of said 4 No. 6 Fire Station — 701 Portage 5 Zion Evangelical School—715 E. Prct -Place Olive applicants, and the propriety of issu­ Ave. Wayne St. 1 2324 W. 6th St. 1 No. 9 School — Tulip & Fill­ ing the permits applied for to such 5 1404 Portage Ave. 6 No. 3 Eire Station—219 N. Hill St. 2 LaSalle School — 1611 Milburn more Roads applicants at the premises named: 6 1021 Blaine Ave. 7 831 E. Colfax Ave. Blvd. 2 Fire Station — New Carlisle, 7 620 W. Cushing St. 8 907 E. Cedar St. 3 220 Harrison St. Ind. ^Beatrice Perigo, 6866, (Restaurant), Penn 8 Holy Trfety Lutheran Church- 9 No. 7 Fire Station—Notre Dame 4 Broederenkring Hall—West & 9th 1 Kennedy School. 607 N. Main St., Mishawaka — Corner Lindsey & Sherman Ave. & South Bend Ave. Sts. Beer, Liquor, Wine Retailer. 2 Osceola School 9 729 Blaine Ave. 10 433 Tonti St. 3 Boner School Beatrice Perigo, 6870, (Restaurant), 10 1840 Portage Ave. (Rear) 11 803 E. St. Vincent St. SECOND DISTRICT Portage 607 N. Main St., Mishawaka — 11 1101 N. Brookfield St. 12 Perlev School—Campeau St. 1 South Side School—206 W. 8th St. Dancing permit. A Notre Dame Cafeteria 12 1355 N. Olive St. 13 1252 E. LaSalle Ave. 2 304 W. 9th St. B Ardmore School Broederenkring Club, 6855, (Res­ 13 Marquette School — College & 14 Walnut Grove Community Bldg. 3 1116 S. Spring St. C St. Mary's Store Annex taurant), 721 S. West St., Misha­ Hamilton Sts. 4 202 E. 4th St. D waka—Beer, Retailer. FIFTH DISTRICT THIRD DISTRICT Fulton Service Station — 2337 SECOND DISTRICT Prairie Ave. Caesar Elbode, 6828, Transfer Beer. 1 East Indiana Avenue Christian 1 833 E. 4th St. E St. Joseph County Infirmary Liquor, Wine Retailer's permit 1 305 S. Lafayette St. Church 2 1312 E. 3rd St. from Camiel Van Bruaene, 901 W. Union 2 611 W. Wayne St. 2 414 Haney Ave. 3 Bieger School—1607 Lincolnway E. 1 4th St., Mishawaka. 3 1101 W. Jefferson St. 3 1006 E. Dubail Ave. 4 3941 Lincolnway East •> Miller's Garage Lakeville, Arthur Saia, 6745, (Restaurant), 4 1242 W. Thomas St.—Fire Station 4 1219- E. Haney Ave. Ind. 2807 - 09 - 11 Lincolnway West, No. 4 5 1611 Robinson St. FOURTH DISTRICT Town Hall—Lakeville, Ind. Mishawaka — Beer, Liquor, Wine 5 226 N. Studebaker St. 6 No. 10 Fire Station—.1820 S. Mich­ 1 City Hall—1st & Church Sts. Warren Retailer. 6 Temple Beth-El School Room —- igan St. 2 High School—1202 Lincolnway E. 1 Gleaner Hall—Edison Road I_iberty Club, (Mishawaka, Indi­ 606 W. LaSalle Ave. 7 918 E. Bowman St. 3 709 Ann St. 2 Crumstown School ana), 6850, (Club). 401 W. Ninth 7 Colfax School 8 2002 Leer St. 4 219 E. Grove St. St., Mishawaka -•— Beer, Liquor, 8 528 Euclid Ave. 9 1712 'E. Bowman St. 5 908 E. Grove St. By order of the Board of Commis­ Wine Retailer. 10 1005 E Fairview St. sioners of St. Joseph County, Indiana, 9 1520 Linden Ave. FIFTH DISTRICT this 23rd day of Owberflg44. 10 1920 W. Linden Ave. 11 260? Erskine Blvd. SAID INVESTIGATION WILL BE 11 738 N. Johnson St. 12 2429 S. Michigan St. 1 724 E. Battell St. OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, AND PUBLIC 12 501 N. Olive St. 13 2814 S. Michigan St. 2 North Side Fire Station—1102 N. THE BOARD O-^FOMMIS- PARTICIPATION IS REQUESTED. 13 2617 Westmoore St. 14 Southmoor Community Bldg. — Main St. SIONERS OF ST. JOSEPH, 3634 S. Fellows St. 3 803 Liberty Drive COUNTY, INDIANA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE THIRD DISTRICT 4 402 E. Jefferson St. COMMISSION OF INDIANA SIXTH DISTRICT Leo Casaday, 1 310 Ohio St. — Joseph F. Walsh, 2 Elder School—... Michigan St. 1 604 Western Ave. TOWNSHIPS By JOHN F. NOONAN, Walter G. Eckler, President. 3 501 Pennsylvania St. 2 413 S. Harris St. Centre Gleaner Hall ATTEST: Secretary. 4 702 E. Wenger St. 3 501 S. Jackson St. Clay JSjpgw NICHOLAS A. MUSZER, BERNARD E. DOYI2B, 5 Thomas Jefferson School—528 S. 4 F. L. Hall—2107 W. Ford St. 1 Webster School Auditor, St. Joseph County, Indiana. -1027 Excise Administrator. Eddy St. 5 2 109 Dixie Wav North 10:27—It :S ORDINANCE No. 3510—An Ordinance Regulating the Use of the Public Streets of the City of South Bend, Indiana-, by Inter-City Trucks as Defined herein: Defining Certain Terms, Providing Penalties. BE IT ORDAINED, by the Common Council of the City of South Bend, Indiana, that: SECTION 1. "Inter-city Trucks" as used in this ordinance shall include every self-propelled vehicle, except CITY OF those operating upon tracks or carry­ ing passengers for hire, operating by or under a permit or license of the Public SOUTH BEND INDIANA. Service Commission of Indiana or of the Interstate Commerce Commission INNER-CITY- TRUCK ROUTES ©f the United States and transport of -goods. a. From a point outside the City of South Bend through the said city to a point outside the City of South Bend, or b. From a point outside the City of South Bend to a point within the city limits of South Bend, or c. From a point within the city limits of South Dend to a point out side the city limits of South Bend. SECTION 2. a. Inter-city trucks as defined in Section la hereof shall enter the city, pass through the city, and leave the city upon established State or Federal highways only and shall not drive upon any other public street, of the City of South Bend,. Indiana at any time, provided however, that they shall be permitted to drive upon such other public streets of said city, upon the direction of a city or state police officer or to follow a marked and es­ tablished city detour or to obtain nec­ essary emergency mechanical repairs. b. Inter-city trucks as defined in Sec­ tion lb hereof shall enter the" city and proceed to the point within the city which is their destination in accordance •with the shortest combination of state or federal highways, city truck routes and access routes as shown upon the attached map marked "Schedule 1," at­ tached hereto and mace a part of this ordinance and shall not drive upon any other public streets of the city of South Bend, Indiana at any time, provided however, that they shall be permitted- to drive upon such other public streets of said city, upon the direction of a city or state police officer or to follow a marked and established, city detour or to obtain necessary emergency - mechanical repairs. e. Inter-city trucks as defined in Sec­ tion lc hereof shall proceed from the. point within the city, which is their starting point, to the city limits by the shortest combination of state and fed­ eral highways, city truck routes, and access routes and shall not drive upon any other public streets of the City of South Bend, Indiana, at anytime, pro­ vided however, that they shall be per­ mitted to drive upon such other public streets of said city, upon the direction of a city or state police officer or to -LEGEND- follow a marked and established city detour or to obtain necessary emer­ - TRUCK ROUTE. gency mechanical repair. SECTION 3. a. All inter-city trucks, - ACCESS ROUTE as defined in Section lb and c, chall rjo_^_GDrj-___qi'" :.;7QriC •*» •*' use the public streets of the City of - STATE & FEDERAL South Bend, Indiana, other than state -JClc_:_K^_Lt!_Z_H_ HIGHWAYS' or federal highways in accordance Jiaat___f-_D_-_-_rI Jl II 5CZZH___JBt l_^/=T^===ij S TRUCK TERMINAL with the provisions of Section 3, here­ 3aQCZ.!-^___]l-_]b|l^/ _JU. . of until such time as the provisions of ti. /J__3. Section 4 of this ordinance are made KBfc operative, and thereafter, in accord­ BE Jj ance with the provisions of said Sec­ tion 4. —i..r b. All inter-city trucks as defined in Section lb entering the city and pro-' \=te ceeding to a point within the city which is their destination, but which is not shown upon Schedule 1 shall follow -state or national highways, city truck routes and access routes as shown on said schedule 1 to a point nearest the point to which they are proceeding before leaving such routes and travel­ ing upon any other public streets of the City of South Bend, Indiana, pro­ vided however, that they shall be per­ MAP OF SOUTH BEND SHOWING APPLICATION OF ORDINANCE NO. 3510. mitted to drive upon such other public streets of said city upon the direction drive upon such other public streets of truck traffic in and upon said public after such finding is made and such SECTION 7. This ordinance shall be of city or state police officers or to said city upon the direction of city or streets. The said Board be, and .the corrected schedule filed as aforesaid it in full force and effect from and after follow a marked and established city state police officers or to follow a same is hereby, authorized from time shall become effective, and the use of its passage by the Common Council,, its detour or to obtain necessary emer­ marked and established city detour or to time, upon its determination of the truck routes and access routes as cor­ approval by the Mayor, and its legal gency mechanical repairs. to obtain necessary emergency me­ necessity therefor, to eliminate, change, rected shall thereafter be required publication. c. All inter-city trucks as defined in chanical repairs. or establish such truck routes and within the City of South Bend. APPRO VED: Section lc proceeding to a point out­ SECTION 4. a. The Board of Public access routes within the city limits of SECTION 5. All persons, firms, or CLEM NIEZGODSKI, side the city limits of South Bend from Works and Safety of the City of South South Behd. corporations violating any of the pro­ President of the Common Council. a point within the City of South Bend, Bend, Indiana be, and the same is b. If said Board shall determine that visions of this ordinance shall, upon hereby, authorized and directed to ATTEST: MARIE H. NELSON, tout "whiOh is not shown uoon Schedule any truck route or access route shall finding that they have so violated said City Clerk. 1 shall follow state or national routes, determine such additional city truck be eliminated, changed, or established, ordinance, be punished by a fine ©n a and access routes as shown on said routes and access routes as may be it shall make such rinding in its min­ first offense of not more than $25.00 and Passed by the Common Council of Schedule 1 from the point upon such reasonably necessary for the proper utes and shall file a copy of such find­ upon a second or additional violation the City of South Bend October 13th. JWtt-tes which is nearest to thei*- point conduct of business involving the use ing, together "with a corrected Schedule or violations by a fine of not less than 1944. Presented by the Clerk to the •e_--be<-,'nnin£ and shall not f^vei 'mon of such inter-city trucks and for the 1, with the City Clerk of South Bend. $25.00 nor more than $50.00. Mayor of South Bend, Indiana Octo­ pnv otb^r public streets of ft-"-*** C'tv of proper protection of the public streets Said findi-ig and said corrected copy SECTION 6. This ordinance may be ber 16th, 1944. Approved and signed South B«»nd. Indians, nrnvjrlo^ bow- of the city of South Bend, Indiana, and of Schedule 1 shall be available for the known and cited as The Truck Route by Acting Mayor M. T. Cummlngs, •ever, that they sh.ll be permitted to the proper control of such inter-city inspection of the public. Two weeks Ordinance. October 16th, 1944. 10:27; 11:3

n J IOCTOBE&J&.1944 Page Ni^teen

OS 4790 SHERIFF'S SALE 3—Electrical installation for New 2nd Addition to the City of South day thereafter, the following described __EGAL NOTICES By virtue of an Order of Sale to me Pumping Unit, •' Bend, Ind. 'tetep buildings and equipment located on directed from the Clerk's Office of the 4—Construction of a New Pump NON-BESIDENT NOTICE Taken as the property of City of South the corner of Cleveland and Riverside St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2, of St. House. Bend, Indiana, et al, H. A. Wood Realty Drive roads at Pinhook location. Cause No. 69957 Joseph County, Indiana, I will expose All shall be in strict conformity with J*>fATE OF INDIANA Company and National Bank and Trust Said sale shall be conducted in the to Public Sale on Saturday the 18th day the plans and specifications now on file Company, formerly Merchants National following manner: fcfl&UNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: of November A. D. 1944. between* the in the office of County Auditor, Room Bank of South Bend, Defendant owner, fif the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2 hours of ten o'clock a. m.*. and four 2, - Court House. September Term, 1944. at the suit of First Bank and Trust (1) Bids for all of the buildings and o'clock p. m., of said day, at the door Each proposal shall be accompanied Company .of South Bend, Trustee, et al. all of the equipment will be ac­ of the Court House, in the city of South by acceptable certified check or accept­ STEPHEN J. MOLNAR, JR., I DENNIS E. MILLER cepted. Bend, St. Joseph County, Indiana, the able bidders bond made payable to St. Sheriff of St. Joseph County, Ind. (2) All of the bids for buildings will vs. ~2t&___ rents and profits for a term not exceed­ Joseph County Commissioners for an Helen Sibley, Deputy. 10:13-20-27 be offered for sale as a group SADIE F. MJLLER ing seven years, of the following de­ amount not less than five (5%) percent and without equipment. scribed Real Estate situate in St. Joseph of the total bid price. pe It Known, Tha* the above-named County, State of Indiana, to-wit: NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT (3) All of the equipment shall be of­ fcntiff has filed 'in*--the office of the All bids must be submitted upon Estate No. 6012 fered as a lot. In the event sum Lots numbered One Hundred Form 96 Indiana State Board of Ac­ offered under plan 2 and 3 shall >k of said Court his complaint Seventy-seven (177), One Hundred Estate of Melissa Cooper Pheils. prist said Defendant in the above counts, the bid to be sighed with full By direction of Jacob LeMarr, Exec­ exceed plan 1, plan 1 shall then Seventy-eight (178) and OneTJuh- name and Address of the bidder. be refused. pe together with a proper affidavit dred Severity-nine (179) in Walnut utor of the Estate of Melissa Cooper said Defendant is a non-resident The right is reserved to reject any Pheils, late of St. Joseph County, in (4) Offer shall then be accepted for Third Addition to the city of South and all bids. Pie State! of Indiana, Bend. the State of Indiana, dejceased. each building separately without itid defendant is hereby notified Dated this 18th dav of October, 1944. NOTICE, is hereby given to the heirs, the equipment. And on failure to realize the full NICHOLAS A. MUSZER,, (5) Offers will theii be accepted for said cause will stand for trial on amount of judgment, interest and costs legatees and devisees of the. said dece­ 15ih day of December, 1944, the Auditor, St. Joseph County, Indiaha. dent, and all other persons interested the equipment in each of the thereon, I will expose to Public Sale, 10:20-27- buildings separately. In the event kme being of said Court commencing at the same time and place, to the in the said Estate, that said Execu­ E the city of South Bend on which tor has filed in this court his account the total amount offered in plan highest bidder, the fee simple of said NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION 4 and 5 shall exceed the amount lay said defendant is required to ap- real estate. and vouchers for the final, set­ fear to said action. Estate No. 8443 tlement of said estate, and they are offered under plan 1 or combina­ Taken as the property of Walnut tion of plan 2 and 3 then the in­ FRAI-TK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. Realty Corporation at the suit of Mary NOTICSE is herepy given that the un­ hereby required to be and appear in dersigned has been appointed by the said Court on the 6th day of November, dividual bids under plan 4 and 5 By Golda S. Butler, Deputy. A. Cairncross, etc., et al.* shall be accepted, otherwise be Eorge Sands, - STEPHEN J. MOLNAR, JR., Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ 1944, when the same will be heard seph County, State of Indiana, Admin­ and make proof of their" heirship, or refused, and, thereupon the bids FAttofaey for Plaintiff. 10:13-20-27 Sheriff of St. Joseph County, Ind. offered under plan 1 or plan 2 Helen N. Sibley, Deputy." 10:20-27; 11:3 istrator of the Estate of Robert J. claim to any part of said estate, and Sinlonds, late of St. Joseph County, show cause if there be, why said ac­ and 3 whichever sha_*i be the fOTICE OF PETITION TO SELL greater will be accepted. REAL ESTATE deceased. count and vouchers should not be ap­ NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT proved. Estate No. 8396 Estate No. 6456 Said Estate is"Suoposed to be solvent. I.TE OF INDIANA FIRST BANK AND TRUST COM­ . WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of The sale to be made in cash at price. Estate of William Robert Zesinger. not less than 75% of appraised value, HNEY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: By direction Of Grace Barron,-Ad­ PANY of SOUTH BEND, the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South Administrator. Bend, Indiana, 13th day .of October, which appraisement is now on record fhe St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2 ministratrix of the estate of William in the "office of County Auditor. Each September Term, 1944. Robert Zesinger, late of St. Joseph October 12th, 1944. 1944. Crumpacker, May, Carlisle & Beamer, FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. person submitting the bid on buildings County, in the state of Indiana, de­ and equipment should be required to f-tlfrRY EISNER, Administrator of ceased. Attys. for Estate. 10:20-27; 11:3 JOHN E- HANLEY, Deputy. lh.e Estate of Dora Schneider, Robert P. Lang, submit not less than 10% of the bid, NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, Attorney for Estate. 10:20-27 guaranteeing and specifying the terms J .'Deceased legatees and devisees of the said dece­ NON-RESIDENT NOTICE of the bid and removing the properties vs. Cause No. 69951 dent, and all other persons interested NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT within 90 days. pINNIE SCHNEIDER JACOBWITZ, in the said estate, that said Adminis­ STATE OF INDIANA Dated this 10th day of October, 1944. ET AL tratrix has filed in this- court her ac- COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH, SS: Estate No. 441 •& . •Estate of Nikodem G. Borisowicz. NICHOLAS A. MUSZER,; cownt and vouchers for the final set­ In the St. ~"Joseph Circuit Court, Auditor, St. Joseph County, Indiana. \> ilinnie Schneider Jacobwit?.:- tlement of said estate, and they . Sirfc September Term, 1944. • By direction of Western -State Bank, hereby required to be and appear in Administrator de bonis non cum testa- 10:13-20-27—11:3- mento annexp, of the Estate of Niko­ |i are hereby notified that the said Court on the 10th day of Novem­ BEVERLY FOURNIER as administrator of the estate ber, 1944, when the same will be heard dem G. Borisowicz, late of St. Joseph NON-RESIDE_*£r NOTICE vs. County, in the State of Indiana, de­ _ra Schneider, deceased, has filed and make proof of their-r heirship, or ALLEN J. FOURNIER Cause No. 69P2tf" REe Superior Court No. 2, of St. Jo- claim to any part of said estate, and ceased. STATE OF INDIANA jh County, a petition, making you show cause, if there be, why said ac­ Be It Known, That the above-named NOTICE is hereby given to the heirs, COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: endsnt hereto, praying therein for count and vouchers should not be ap­ legatees .and devisees of the said dece­ Plaintiff has filed in the 6f_iee of the dent, and all other persons*inter€Sted In the St. Joseph Circuit Court _n. order and decree of said Court. proved. Clerk of said Court her complaint September Term, 1944 Ipiorizing the sale of certain real es- WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of against said Defendant in the above in the said estate, that said Adminis­ toelonging to the estate of said de- the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1 at cause together with a proper affidavit trator, -has filed in this court its ac­ MAMMIE DAYS ;e.d, and in said petition described, South Bend, Indiana, 12th day of Octo­ that said defendant is a non-resident count and vouchers for the final set­ vs. foiake assets for*-the payment of the ber, 1944. of the State of Indiana. tlement of said estate, and they are ISAAC DAYS bs and liabilities of said estate; and hereby required to be and appear in FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. Said defendant is hereby notified said Court on the 13th day of Novem­ p**also averred by an affidavit filed JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. that Said cause will stand for trial on Be It Known, That the above-named [at you are a non-resident of the ber, 1944, when the same will be heard Walter A. Rice, the 20th day of December, 1944, of said and make proof of their heirship, or Plaintiff has filed in the office of the ate of Indiana, and that you are a Atty. for Estate 10:20-27 court, commencing at the City of South Clerk of said Court her complaint Icessary party to said proceeding and claim to any part of Said estate, and Bend on which day said defendant is show cause if there be, why said ac­ against said ..Def endant in the above |at said petition, so filed, and which NON-RESIDENT NOTICE required to appear to said action. count and vouchers should not be ap­ cause together with a proper affidavit now pending is set for** hearing in Cause No. 69979 FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. proved. > _h|(t said defihdant's residence is un­ fid Superior Coi$rt*"N0. 2 at the Court STATE OF INDIANA By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. known. fin the City of South Bend, In- COUNTY 6F ST. JOSEPH SS: : WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of Said defendant is hereby notified Max M. Buntman, the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South lon the 27th day of November, In the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2, Attorney for Plaintiff. 10:13-20-27 that said cause will stand for trial on September. Term, 1944 Bend, Indiana, 13th day of October, the llth day of December, 1944, of said 1944. [FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk, NON-RESIDENT NOTICE Court commencing at the City of South p, Degnan, Goheen LAURA JANE MENDENHALL FRANK. J. BRUGGNER, Olefk: Bend, on which day said defendant is timmerman, vs. Cause No. 69782 JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. STATE OF INDIANA required to appear toisaid action. Irneys for the Administrator. PAUL IRA MENDENHALL J. Wilfred Niemiec, FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. 10:13-20-27 COUNTY OF OT JOSEPH SS: Attorney'for Estate. 10:20-2. Be It Known, That the above-named In the St. Joseph Circuit Court, By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. Plaintiff has filed in the office of the Zilford Carter, WPICE OF ADMINISTRATION September Term, 1944. NOTICE OF PETITION TO CHANGE Attorney for Plaintiff. 10:13-20-27 Estate No. 8436 Clerk of said Superior Court -J*fe>..-*2 NAME )TICE is hereby given that the uh*- complaint against said defendant in the EUGENE WARD PYKE No. 69993 above cause together with a proper af­ vs. STATE OF INDIANA NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS ligned has been appointed by the NOTICE is hereby given by the un­ \te **§t the Circuit Court of St. Jo- fidavit that said defendant is non-resi­ BEATRICE PYKE ST. JOSEPH COUNTY, >§$: dent of the State of Indiana. In the St. Joseph Circuit Court, dersigned that the Board of County County, State of Indiana, Execu- Commissioners of St. Joseph Cotmty, |f the estate o| Mary M. Vitou, late H.Said defendant-is hereby notified that Be It Known, That the above named September Term, 1944 said cause will stand for trial. on the plaintiff has filed in the office of the PETITION OF BARBARA KOCZIBA Indiana, will .receive sealed proposals Joseph County, deceased. 14th day. of December, 1944, the same or bids on the. 20th day of November, Id Estate is supposed to be solvent. Clerk of said Court has complaint TO CHANGE NAME being of said coi^pt commencing at the against said Defendant in the above Notice is hereby given that I, Bar­ 1944, iUP to the hour of ten o'clock a. Edmund F. Vitohj Executor. City of South! Bgnd on which day said m.,-ior the furnishing and installation Eober 5, 1944. cause together with a proper affidavit bara Kocziba, have applied to the St. defendant is required to appear to said that said defendant is a non-resident Joseph Circuit Court of said -County of all material and labor to complete kpacker, May, Carlisle and Beamer, action. _^, •-. new service,' feeders and distributing irneys for Estate. .-10:13-20-27 4 of the State of Indiana. and State to have my name changed to FRANK J. BRUGGlSfER, Clerk. Said defendant is hereby notified Clara Theresa Benzur, and that said cabinets and panels, reconnecting all By Golda S. Butler, Deputy. petition will be presented to and heard present branch 'circuity on respective NON-RESIDENT NOTICE that said cause will stand for trial on floor panels in the Court-House, South Cause No. 70002 Seymour Jansen, the 20th day of December, 1944, of said by said court on the 5th day of De­ Attorney for Plaintiff. 10:13-20-^7 said Court commencing at the City of. cember, 1944. Bend, Indiana.' IE OF INDIANA The Contract Documents, including JTY OF ST. JOSEPH. SS: South Bend, on which day said de­ CLARA THERESA BENZUR. NON-RESIDENT NOTICE fendant is required to appear to said I drawings and specifications are now on ^q St. Joseph Superior No. 2 Court, Joseph W. Nyikos, Attorney file at the. office of County Auditor, -•September Term, 1944 Cause No. 69963 action. for Petitioner. 10:20-27; 11:3 STATE OF INDIANA •-:":-&* FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk!. . Court House, Room 2, South Beru$, In­ diana; Bevington, Taggart & Fowler, ED SMITH COUNTY- OF ST. JOSEPH SS: By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT In the St. Joseph Circuit Court, Leo Van Tilbury, Estate No. 7917 Inc., Consulting Engineer, 730 K. of P. Vs. September Term, 1944. Building, Indianapolis, Indiana and the GRACE SMITH Attorney for Plaintiff. 10:13-20-27 Estate of Mary L. Calbeck. State Board of Accounts, Indianapolis, FAYE RICHARDSON '. -B^ -direction of Lewis R. Overmyer, NON-RESIDENT NOTICE Executor of the estate of Mary L. Cal­ Indiana. Known^JThat the above-named VS. ^jV- Copies of contract documents Upon -has filed in the office of the ROBERT L. RICHARDSON Cause No. 69945 beck, late of St. Joseph County, in the tier (j said Court Superior No. 2 STATE OF INDIANA State, of Indiana, deceased. request ntay be obtained by depositing lom: it against said= defendant in Be It Known, That the above named COUNTY OF ST. JOSEPH SS: UOTlCE is hereby given to the heirs, $25.00 at the office of the Consulting Plaintiff has filed in the dffice of the In the St. Joseph Circuit Court, Engineer^, whieh amount will be re­ cnthe aatl * i v\ e cause together -with a proper legatees arfd devisees of the said dece­ funded provided these documents are that said defendant is non- Clerk of said Court her complaint September Term, 1944. dent, and all other persons interested amdcb \ against said Defendant in the above returned to the Engineer in good con­ reside* ~1 of the State of Indiana.: in the said estate, that said Executor dition. Said _i*fendant is hereby notified that cause together with a proper affidavit LEWIS WARD JOHNSON has filed in this court his account and that. said defendant is a non-resident vs. vouchers for the final settlement of The Board of Commissioners of St. se will stand for trial on the Joseph County reserveswthe right to re­ •of December, 1944, the same Of the State of Indiana. GLENNA CARMEN JOHNSON said estate, and they are hereby re­ quired to be and appear in said Court ject any or all bids and to waive any E said ;*$ourt commencing at Said defendant is hereby notified that informalities in bidding. , of South Bend which day -said said cause will stand for trial on the Be It Known, That the above named on the l#th day of November, 1944, when is required to appear to 18th day of December, 1944, of said plaintiff has filed in the office of the the samewill be heard and make proof Proposals shall be properly and com­ Court commencing at the City d&South Clerk of said Court i his complaint of their heirship, OE. claim to.anynart pletely executed on proposal forms RANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. Bend, on which day said defendant is against said Defendant in -the above of said estate, and show cause if there furnished bj». the Consulting Engineers required to appear tojsaid action." Cause together witfi a proper affidavit be, why said account and vouchers (included in Contract Documents) in I Golda S. Butler, Deputy. accordance with the Indiana Form No. Wills, H FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. that said defendant is a non-resident should apt be approved. of the State of Indiana. 96 and shall be accompanied by Ques­ W for Plaintiff. 10:20-27; 11:8 By Agnes M. Szamecki, IDeputy. WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of tionnaire Form No. 96A for any pro­ Charles Davis, Said defendant is hereby notified that the St.Jjoseph Circuit Court at South posal of $5,000.00 or more. Non-Illu­ WOK-RESIDENT NOTICE Attorney fo* Plaintiff. 10:13-20-27 said cause will stand for trial on the Bend, Indiana, 13th day of October, sion affidavit required by Statute shall Cause No. 69982 22nd day of December, 1944, of said 1944. be fully executed on proposal. TATE OF INDIANA NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Court commencing at the City of South FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. •^JJNJTV OF ST. JOSEPH, SS: Estate No. 8369 Bend, on which day said defendant is JOHN E. HANLEY, Deputy. A satisfactory performance bond, G5 the St* Joseph Superior Court No. 2, NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ required to appear to said action. . Chester L. DuComb, payable.toihe Board of Commissioners September Term-, 1944 dersigned has been appointed '-by the FRANK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. Attorney for Estate. 1020-27 of St. Joseph County, Indiana, executed Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Jo­ By Agnes M. Szamecki, Deputy. by the Bidder and a surety company NOLA MAE ROGERS KERN seph County, State of Indiana, Execu­ Edward O. Scheer, NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION and payable as set out above in an US vs. tor of the Estate of Ada N. Wiest.-New- Attorney for Plaintiff. 10:13-20-27 Estate No. 8437 amount equal 4e-100% of the bid shall DEWEY WILLIAM KERN man, late of £>t. Joseph County, de­ NOTICE is hereby given that the un­ be submitted with each bid. ceased. OS 4789 SHERIFF'S SALE dersigned has been appointed by the Bids .shall be enclosed in a sealed Be It Known, That the above-narriM Said estate is supposed to be solvent. By virtue of an Order of Sale to me Judge o&the Superior Court No. 1 of envelope, bearing the title of the proj­ plaintiff has filed in the office of the James William Shelly, Executor. directed from the Clerk's Office of the S.J. Joseph County, State of Indiana, ect and designating the construction "clerk of said court Superior No. 2 com- October 12th, 1944. St. Joseph Superior Court No. 2, of St. Administrator of the Estate of Eli D. branch to which the bid pertains and Iplaint against said defendant in the jSeymour Jansen,- -.*,* Joseph County, Indiana, 1 will expose Shirk, late of St. Joseph County, de­ the name and address of the bid«*r. above cause together with a proper Attorney for Estate. J|©:20«fc7. 11:3 to Public Sale on Saturday the 4th day ceased. The award of the contract for which affidavit that said defendant is non­ •of November "A. D.. 1944. between the said Estate is supposed to be solvent. bids are iswbmitted is contingent upon resident of the State of Indiana. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS hours of ten o'clock a. m., and four : tra D. Shirk Administrator. priority*ratihg-for said work being re­ Said defendant is hereby notified that NOTICE is hereby given by the un­ o'clock p.m., of said day, at the door October 6th, 1944. ceived by the Board of Commis«i«iers said cause will stand for trial on the dersigned that the Board of Commis­ of the Court House, in the City of South Seebirt, Oare and Deahl, of St. Joseph County, Indiana. .2nd day of December, 1944. tfte same sioners of St. Joseph County,-Indiana, Bend, St. Joseph County, Indiana, the Attortlfeys for Estate. 10:13-20-27 Wage rates on this work shall not _eing of said Court commencing at the will receive sealed proposals on the fee simple of the following described be less than the prescribed scale of ^ity of South Bend on which day said 20th day of November, 1944, for the Real Estate situate in St. Joseph Coun­ NOTICE OF SALE wages as determined pursuant to the lefendant is required to appear to said furnishing of all necessary labor and ty, State of Indiana, to-wit; NOTICE is hereby given by the un­ provisions of Chapter 319 ^of the Acts ption/tej* j material for the following work to be Lots numbered 399, ,407. 427, 434, . dersigned that an Auction Sale will be of the General Assembly of 1935. FKAtfK J. BRUGGNER, Clerk. ' done at Healthwin Hospital: 435, 440, 441, 442, 445, 449, 456, 457, held by tfHr Board df County Cdjhjtiis- Dated this 18th && Of Otnoaer, 1944, By (Jolda S. Butler, Deputy. l-s-Extension of Water System. 467, 468, 469, 478, 487, 488, 410, 490, sioners of St. Joseph County, Indiana, inCHOlSCS A. MUSZER, Parker: 491, 493, 496, 507, 512, 513, 516, 517, on the 28th day of November, 1944, at Auditor, gt. Joseph County, Indian* 2—Installation of Water Supply Sys­ 521, 522, 523, 526* 527, in Woodlawn ttorneyflpr Plaintiff. 10:20-27; 11:3 tem. -..'•.-• -tete".* 10:00 o'clock a. m., and from day to 10:20-21 THE MIRROR

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