Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 16 August 1946 — Page 2

THE POST-DEMOCRAT £ Democratic weekly newspaper representing the democrats of Muncie, Delaware County and the 10th Congressional District. The only Democratic Newspaper in Delaware County. Entered as second class matter January 15, 1921, at the Post Office at Muncie, Indiana, under Act of March 3, 1879. “ PRICE 5 CENTS—$1.50 A YEAR

MRS. GEO. R. DALE, Publisher 916 West Main Street

Muncie, Indiana, Friday, August 9, 1946.

What’s Best for America Is Also Best for Labor A new CIO policy is in the making: Emphasis on more production, bigger output per man, fewer strikes—instead of just demanding higher wages. . Signal for this policy is in the CIO Economic Outlook, which says: “It is not so sure, however, that widespread wage increases can be won at this time. If won, they are likely to be promptly reflected in further price rises.” Then the CIO publication goes on to urge a continued fight on high prices as the surest way to increase real buying power. Every thoughtful citizen will welcome this proposed new policy. Especially since the American Federation of Labor has been moving along similar lines. Its Monthly Survey has argued that ‘real wages” alone matter to labor: not the number of dollars in a given pay envelope, but what those dollars will buy in the necessaries of living. All this suggests that our top labor leadership in both AFL and CIO - realizes that labor has come of age, and must accept a broader responsibility in the national life than just getting pay boosts for this or that union. What’s good for the country is good for ftibor. And what’s bad for the country in the long run is bound to be bad for labor—even though it may not seem so at the moment. ❖ * * Some politicians and heavy thinkers have tried to sell labor the notion that it can have the cake and penny, too. That was behind lire theory sold President Truman last fall in dropping control of wages, but retaining control of prices. The theory was fine. Wages would go up. Prices would stay down. It didn’t work out that way. It couldn’t. Wages went up. But prices didn’t stay down. No law could compel people to sell goods at a loss, or a factory to operate in the red. That’s why prices have now about caught up with the last round of wage increases. That’s why Reconversion Director.. Steelman has disapproved further wage boosts, in excess of the Government’s wage-price pattern, for 45,000 West Coast lumber workers. ❖ * * It is true that real wages can be' increased over a period of time. They can be increased by so expanding production that the unit cost of an article is cut. Even at today’s increased prices the dollar buys more of some items, such as an electric light blubs, than it did 30 years ago when the whole price level was much lower. Real wages can be increased by increasing production. That’s why CIO and AFL leaders are wise in tjjieir proposed new policy. We say “proposed” because it is still uncertain whether the top CIO and AFL leaders can sell this policy to their unions. Some leaders oppose it. Walter Reuther, of the UAW, favors it. And Philip Murray has called a policy meeting of the CIO international executive board to settle the issue next week. Communist labor leaders, of course, will oppose the policy—because they know it will be good for our free enterprise economy, good for our country, and make for labor peace whereas they prefer chaos, turmoil and conflict. But real Americans will hope that the labor statesmen in the CIO will carry the day at the coming parley. Indeed, when labor generally has adopted that policy, it may be time for President Truman to call the oft-proposed conference between industry and labor—to chart a mutual policy which again will make American production the eighth wonder of the world.— Philadelphia Record.

The Peace Of The World In theory, the world is at peace. Yet in China and elsewhere, accurate A. P. and U. P. Observers note flareups that might be described more accurately, as war. What goes on behind the iron curtain of Soviet Russia, few westerns know. Palestine is far from quiet. The fledgling Philippine Government of Manuel Roxas fends off hungry hukbalaliaps. Occupied countries are restless. Fighting is reported along a 500-mile front from Kiangsu Province to Manchuria. Americans, not unnaturally, ask the cause of all this. Veterans of our Army and Navy say, “Oh, I thought the war was over.” Our soldiers and civilians celebrated V-E Day 15 months ago. Over a year has elapsed since A-bombs were released over a Japan oven then on the point of surrendering. Where is the elusive peace we thought we held in the hollow of our hands—the ,peace for which brave men fought and died? Perhaps the answer is that never in human history has the peace of actuality been synonymous with the peace of which mankind has dreamed, and toward which warweary combatants have striven. Peace is rarely, if ever, 100 per cent complete—100 per cent perfect—100 per cent free of the ingredients of a later and deadlier war.

That is a fundamental truth, which nationals of our own and other lands must come to appreciate, if a wave of disillusionment is to be kept from usurping the great, all-encompassing hope and faith that characterized the human family not so many months ago. It is vital to the prevention of another wholesale slaughter that we do not repeat the near-fatal mistakes which followed 1919, when (because the peace of that time did not start out as a perfect peace) large numbers of men and women (Americans included) gave up all thought of international cooperation, retreated behind a false facade of isolation, and laid the groundwork for World War II. There is plenty going on currently at Paris that is not to the taste of finicky folk. But it would ill behoove American public opinion to repeat its major error of 19201940, run away from the knotty problems of the peacemakers, and thereby make World War III inevitable. We have sons and daughters, granddaughters, grandsons. Let us safeguard them now by taking an intelligent and lively interest in world affairs—affairs which, if misguided by those who have failed to learn the lessons of two horrible conflicts, could lead to the destruction of those we love. The pathways of peace are' hard and thorny. There is no quick or easy route. Gradually, almost imperceptibly, Americans as a whole are coming to understand how slow is the pace, and how vital the active, intelligent interest of the people themselves. —Journal Gazette.

Will the United Nations Take Over UNRRA’S Job? UNRRA—the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration—soon will be no more. Its money is running out. That’s why Director General LaGuardia proposes that its activities cease in Europe on December 31, in East Asia next March 31. Since it was established in November, 1943, UNRRA has spent about $4 billion. The U. S. has contributed about 75 per cent. Yet everybody admits that UNRRA’s job is not finished. Four nations—Greece, Yugoslavia, Poland and China—now protest letting UNRRA die. Austria, too, is fearful. It is not usual for Americans to let a humanitarian task of this kind lapse unfinished. But Congress has not voted any new funds for UNRRA. And no other nation has offered any. There are two reasons: One is Communist European politics. The other is the fact that with the United Nations established, most people consider world relief a IT. N. job. When UNRRA was founded, the need of millions was too desperate for Americans to ask questions. Our motto then was: Feed people first, ask questions afterward. But two of the nations who now want UNRRA aid to go on DID ask questions while their people were starving: political questions. Yugoslavia would not let UNRRA help come in until UNRRA agreed to let Tito’s Communists distribute the supplies. Poland played similar politics, and UNRRA went in only after an American was ousted as head of the Polish UNRRA mission, and k Russian put in his place. Ever since then, both Yugoslavia and Poland have used UNRRA supplies for Comftmmst propaganda whenever possible. Poland even tried to have UNRRA food denied Polish refugees opposed to the Red regime. In Yugoslavia the picture has been even worse. While Tito has been denouncing lapitalist America on every possible occalion, he has been selling UNRRA supplies to his own people on a basis which has helped mtrench him in power. In the left wing magazine, Nation, Hal Lehrman tells how only Yugoslavs with ration cards gets food. There are two kinds of lation cards. One kind buys three times as much food as the other. Only Tito heilers ^etthe better kind. Result as Lehrman says: ‘ The middle class is being systematically impoverished.” He reports, too, “down a road in Croatia I passed a solid mile of parked three-ton trucks and G. M. weapon carriers. The carriers were loaded with troops, the trucks attached to artillery. UNRRA has supplies thousands of vehicles like these to relieve the acute crisis in the transport of civilian rood and reconstruction supplies.” Tito ad ™its UNRRA aid has kept 3,000,£?°u^ goslavs from saving. And of the $4 billion spent by UNRRA, Yugoslavia has had or will have nearly a fifth of it — and three-fourth of that paid by U. S. taxpayers. Yet such is Tito’s regard for the U. S. A Amencans sti11 hid e from his UGPU in our Belgrade embassy. And the American member of the UNRRA mission m Yugoslavia has just beep ordered home because he objected to Soviet censorship of Yugoslav use of UNRRA aid. Even LaGuardia has openly denounced Russia for taking oil out of Austria which that nation sorely needed. Yes, it is the “iron curtain” which symbolizes the end of UNRRA. All Americans will hope the U. N. now rinds means to take over UNRRA’s job, and see it through to a finish. They will hope the U. N. finds means to tmance that work, and methods t 0 see that uommumsts do not go on starving all those who dare disagree with them. They will be willing to finance food for Greece, and they certainly should finance food for China. But they are exceedingly tired of extending a help hand only to have Communist Record klCk them in the shins — phiiadel P hia

POST-DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 1946.

A “Missouri Compromise” To Strengthen the U. N.? • The Missouri Compromise, while far from perfect, headed off civil war in tbis country for 40 years. Adopted by Congress in 1820, it provided for admission of Maine as a free State and Alabama a slave State and forbade slavery in the territories north of Missouri’s southern border. The compromise was killed by two blows —passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill by Congress in 1854 and the Supreme Court’s decision in the Dred Scott case in 1857. Now the United Nations is faced by a somewhat similar situation—the admission of new members. , Some are “slave” States in the sense that they have totalitarian Governments and are puppets of Russia. Others are “free,” in the sense that they are democracies. Others are doubtful. Since all of the Big Five nations have a veto power over admission of new members, it’s possible that a similar compromise will develop—admission of one Russian puppet for one country outside tlfe “iron curtain.” Eight countries are now asking admission. They claim they fulfill the U. N. Charter definition of “peace-loving States which accept the obligations contained in the present Charter.” Two of them are undoubtedly Russian puppets: Albania and Outer Mongolia. The latter voted in a plebiscite held under Russian auspices last fall. The vote was 100 per cent in favor of becoming “independent” and against rejoining China. Britain is known to favor admission of three applicants. They are Trans-Jordan, which Britain released from a mandate last March and declared independent; Ireland; Portugal, long an ally of Britain. The U. S. is understood to favor Iceland

and Siam.

Status of Afghanistan in the play of

power politics is doubtful. Long a British outpost protecting India, the hill country re-

cently has been wooed by Russia. Application for a ninth country, Sweden,

is expected, soon. All of the Big'Five are be-

lieved to favor Sweden, who is

puppet.

Ideally, of course, the case of each country should be weighed on its merits. But if that can’t be done, “a Missouri

compromise” might work:

It would strengthen the U. N. by admis-

sion of more members.

It might give us time to develop the U. N. into something nearer the world government we need to prevent a world civil war.

—Philadelphia Record.

But if Robert is 4lso elected, 40 years j after his rotund sire defeated William Jennings Bryan, it will by no means be the first father-and-son White House parlay. For John Adams, whose term ran from 1797 to, 1801, Ijved to see his son John Quincy Adams elevated as James Monroe’s successor. Up to this time the Adams family is the only one to chalk up victories by son and father, but the Harrisons—Benjamin and William Henry—were grandson and grandfather. And there have been other family associations and connections in the mansion at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Franklin D. Roosevelt, for example, was a fifth cousin of Theodore Roosevelt—and was also T. R.’s nephew by marriage. Presidents William Henry Harrison and John Tyler were distantly connected. Presidents Madison and Taylor were second cousins. Also, it is to be remembered that Charles Francis Adams and Andrew Jackson Donelson were vice-presidential nominees. Sons of Van Buren, Tylqr, Grant, and Theodore Roosevelt were politically prominent. At one time a national ticket was proposed, composed of Robert T. Lincoln and Frederick D. Grant. It is an odd twist of American nature that Americans who long ago cut ourselves loose from monarchic institutions, and doffed the trappings of royalty, seem to take kindly dynastic implications in our highest elective post.—-Journal Gazette.

Legal Notice

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF CENTER TOWNSHIP

Things Are Looking Better Things are looking better on the domestic front. We got a bad start on national postwar problems after V-J Day. Errors of judgment and undisciplined behavior slowed up production and loosened the reigns on inflation. For a time, everything was tangled, feverish and chaotic. We couldn’t seem to get on the road to public service, prosperity

and plenty.

But the farmers and Nature have worked together to give us a bumper crop. Food is something that the whole world needs. Food for everybody will aid the cause of peace, a

thing which we sorely desire.

The end of the strikes in the larger industries has made production possible and it is now proceeding at a rapid pace. We can work out our industrial salvation if those whose business it is to make things which the consumers need will stay on the job. The lesson that uninterrupted production is the best and only natural way to curb inflation is being learned. It is to be hoped that labor and management will continue to be guided by common sense and reality to the end that

both will prosper.

Wealth is something that has to be created from day to day, from week to week, and from month to month. Food which has not been produced cannot be consumed and goods which have not been manufactured cannot be used. That is clearer to all Americans now than it was a year ago. Also, when wages go up, costs go up, and prices lollow There is no gam in having these factors chase each other in a vicious spiral, but, as we now know, it an be* very dangerous So the people of the United States have become production-minded and that is a dis-

tinct gam.

There is lots of employment today and much talk of the coming labor shortage. If pi ices ai e high today there is pretty general agreement as to how they can be brought down—by steady operation and a full day’s

work.

Of course, the present trend can be reversed if enough people start throwing monkey wrenches into the machinery, but that would be a form of sabotage which would huit everybody and help no one. Congress with its delays, its threats to change the rules, and its name-calling, has gone home until next year and its very absence from Washington is soothing to the nerves. America is beginning to seem more like itself again, after the hectic years of the war.—Journal Gazette

“Snipeshooting Fun, But—” Snipeshooting is an honorable Hoosier sport in which old and young alike havp long participated. However, the kind of snipbshooting in which the CIO has been engaged over in Connersville does neither labor generally nor the CIO any good. Only harm of the worst sort can come out of it. Where the CIO has a contract it is very poor sportsmanship for the American Federation of Labor to attempt to take over and organize the plant. And the same goes in reverse where there is an AFL- contract

in force.

The editor of The Union has been tpld by

nobody’s j representatives of the Indiana State Fed-

I eration that the AFL is pperatipg in the | Rex Manufacturing Company at Connersvillp under a bona fide contract which has been in force for longer than the CIO has been

active in the town.

Why, then, is the CIO trying to organize where there already is organization. Such tactics comes npt under the title of

organization, but may be called just plain snipeshooting — and now the boys of the CIO are holding the bag. Moreover, they have alienated many businessmen of Connersville who long have been friends of organized labor. Snipeshooting is fun for Ml

except for those who hold the bag. We hope that when the bag-holders in

this instance reach the goal with an empty sack they will have learned that sacking a union which is operating under a contract in any town or plant is fun fpr nobody and does the labor movement generally irrepairable harm! Come out in the light of copimon decency, boys, and let’s play fair.—The

Union.

Heredity And The White House

of , the curious family tradition which nas played a not inconsequential part in the

election of our chief executives.

The senior Ohio Senator’s father was the twenty-spventh President. William Howard Taft occupied (and he really did occupy it— he weighed over 300 pounds) the White

House from 1909 to 1913.

What Are Harold Stassen’s Chances? Political amateurs, excited by the prospects of Harold B. Stassen for the Presidency, talk hopefully of his chances for winning the 1948 Republipan nomination— and then the election. In order to understand what Stassen’s chances for victory really are, these ladies and gentlemen would do well to acquaint themselves with the conditions obtaining when more or less progressive candidates of the past emerged successful from the presidential lists. What they would do well to bear in mind is that Stassen’s chances for nomination go up whenever the GDP’s outlook for a landslide goes down. And, by the same token, the prospects of Stassen’s rivals (especially those bn whom the conservative Republican Party leaders smile) improve whenever it seems likely that the party of Harding and of Hoover will win, regardless of its nominee. —Journal Gazette.

Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Center Township, Delaware County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said Township, at their regular meeting place on the 27th day of August, 1946, will consider the following emergency additional appropriations: Special School Fund Fund No. 19, Transfer Tuition _$15,000.00 Tuition Fund Fund No. 28, Pay of Teachers _ 2,375.00 Fund No. 29, Transfer Tuition 13,195.00 * CHESTER C. CLARK, Trustee of Center Township

Aug. 9-16

Legal Notice

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF LIBERTY TOWNSHIP Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Liberty Township, Delaware County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said Township, at their regular meeting place on the 27th day of August, 1946, will consider the following emergency additional appropriations:

Tuition Fund

Fund No. 28, Pay of Teachers __$1,115.00

VIRGIL R. RUBLE

Trustee of Liberty Township

Aug. 9-16

Bilbo’s Klan Admission It is interesting to have confirmatipn from Senator Bilbo that he is a member of the Ku Klux Klan. But the news will surprise no one who has the least familiarity with the Mississippi demagogue’s record. The Klan is not only a formal organization but also a state of mind. It is a state of mind hostile to the basic premises on which the nation was founded, which elevates ignorance and intolerance and fear to the level of principles. It is a state of mind which glorifies and revels in hatred, bigotry and violence. No one on the national scene, certainly, has been a more blatant champiop of that tra^ne of mind than has Senator Bilbo. On the radio broadcast which occasioned Bilbo’s declaration of Klan membership he was asked how he reconciled membership in the Klan, which “secretly undermines the law” with his senatorial oath to uphold the laws of his state and of the nation. Bilbo’s answer to that qualifies as the prize understatement of the year. Said he, “I am not informed that the Klan, as I know it, is seeking to undermine the government.” But how about American legal and constitutiqnal principles? If Congress ever should get around to using belief in them as a criterion for qualification, Bilbo would be one of the first candidates for expulsion.—Chicago Sun

Army Redeems Ex-Convicts Albany, N. Y. — A large number of ex-paroiees in New Yorjc State are now Hying as respected members of their communities as a result of war service \yith the

rrmed forces.

Commissioner Frederick A. Moran, chairman of the State Parole Board, reports that of all the parolees who served with the armed forces, an “amazingly low number” had bad records in ser-

vice.

“The parolees almost to a man,” Moran reported, “found a new life in the Army and took advantage of it to restore themselves to a respected position in their com-

munities.”

One parolee, a medical aid man, was wounded three times and was awarded the Purple Heart with two oak leaf clusters, a Presidential Unit citation and a Frenph decoration for bravery iu evacuating wounded comrades during a fierce engagement in

Germany.

Several received

Legal Notice BOND SALE NOTICE CITY OF MUNCIF

Sealed proposals will be received bv the undersigned City Controller of the City of Muncie, Ipd., at his office in the City Building in said City, up to the hour of 10:00 a. m. on the 26th day of August, 1946, for the purchase of bonds of said city designated, “City of Muncie, Municipal Bonds of 1945,” in the amount of $40,000.00, bearing interest at a rate not to exceed per annum (the exact rate to be determined by bidding)., which interest is payable on January 15, 1947 and July 15, 1947, ^nd semi-annually thereafter. Said bonds are to be dated as of November 15, 1945, will be issued in denominations of $1,000.00, and will mature as follows: $2,000.00 on January 15, 1947; and $2,000.00 on January 15th each year thereafter to and including

January 15, 1966.

Bidders for these bonds will be required to name the rate of interest which the bonds are to bear, not exceeding 4 per cent per annum. Such iiiterest rate must be in multiples of 1-4 of 1 per cent and not more than one interest rate shall be named by each bidder. Said bonds will be awarded to the highest qualified bidder who has submitted his bid in accordance herewith. The highest bidder will be the one who offers the lowest net interest cost to the city, to be determined by computing the total interest on all of the bonds to their maturities and deducting therefrom the premium biq, if an?. No conditional biq of bids for less than the par value of said bonds, including accrued interest from the date of said bonds to the date of delivery, at the interest rate nahied in the bid, will be considered. The right is reserved to reject any and all bids. In the event no satisfactory bids are received at the time and on the date herein fixed, the sale will be continued from day to day thereafter until a satisfactory bid has been re-

ceived for said bonds.

All bids must be filed in sealed envelopes marked “Bid for City of Muncie Municipal Bonds of 1945,” and each bid shall be accompanied by a certified check in the amount of $1,500.00 payable to the City of Muncie, to guarantee the good faith of the bidder and insure that the bidder will, if awarded the bonds, promptly accept delivery of the same in accordance with the terms of sale. In the event of the failure or refusal of such purchaser to perform in accordance with the provisions of his bid and the notice of sale, then said check ahd the proceeds thereof shall be the property of the City and shall be considered as its liquidated damages on account of such failure or refusal. The checks of all unsuccessful bidders will be returned immediately upon the award of said bonds. The successful bidder shall accept delivery and make payment fof said bonds within 5 days after being notified J;hat the bonds are ready for delivery at the office of the Treasurer, or at such bank in the City of Mqncie as the purchaser shall designate in

writing.

Said bonds are being issued to provide funds for the following purposes, to- wit: Acquisition and purchase of real estate and equipment for sanitary dumping grounds, and will be the direct obligations of the city payable out of unlimited, ad valorem taxes to be levied

<?nnt hattlp- and collected on all of the taxable profipld _] „ ' perty in said city. The opinion of comIield commissions and one was a- petent bond counsel will be on file on

warded the Brnoze Star Medal for “utter disregard for personal safety” in assisting wounded to

reaph our lineg.

One parolee, Morap reported, volunteered to lead a Filipino party bringing food and water to a lost American company. The group was ambushed and two men were killed and three others wounded. It required two days for the detail to deliver the supplies and wheh they returned they brought their wounded with them. ^ Whenever possible the Parole Board has released men from parole after they were honorably discharged from the armed services and has assisted them in their search for a new start in civilian life. Moran said. He enjoys recalling the act of a parolee who learned in prison that orders are orders. While on

the date of sale and will be furnished to the successful bidders at the expense

of the City.

Dated this 7th day of August. 1946.

JOHN D. LEWIS, City Controller.

Aug. 9-16 *

O Legal Notice

NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS

sentry duty, the parolee under orders not to allow anyone to enter a certain plane, refused entrance to an oficer — who turned out to be the senior pilot. The spntry was commended for his attention to duty. State U. Trails Dreaded Disease Columbus, O. — Thanks to researchers in radioactivity at Ohio State University, science may rpore speedily uncover the mystery of the bread disease, leukemia. ' ’ ' Maj. Gen. Norman T. Kirk, surgeon general of the army, revealed in Washington that certain radioactive isotopes, which give off rays similar to X-rays, have been used in the treatment of leukemia. These isotopes have been the subject of five years of experimentation at Ohio State, and, according to oficials in atomic research at Oak Ridge, Tenn., results of OSU experiments contributed greatly to the present use of the isotopes in leukemia treatment. It is still too early to tell, Gen. Kirk indicated, whether or not these radioactive isotopes hold the key to the cure of leukemia, a disease in which the life-pro-tecting red cells of the blood are destroyed in a cancer-like condition. However, he termed their discovery an advance in the treatment of the ailment—a discovery the initial credit for which Dak Ridge scientists have given to OSU.

Go To Church Sunday

No. 10.330-S

State of Indiana, Delaware County, ss:

Ivalieu Biddle Orville Biddle

In The Delaware Superior Court

April Term, 1946

Complaint: for Divorce Notice is hereby given the said defendant, Orville Biddle, that the plaintiff has filed her complaint herein, together with an affidavit that the said defendant is not a resident of the State of Indiana, and that unless he be and appear on Thursday the 10th day of October 1946, the 28th day the next term of said Court, to be h<*lden on the Second Monday in September, A. D., 1946, at the Court House in the City of Muncie, in said County and State, the said cause will be heard and determined in

his absence.

WITNESS, the Clerk and the Seal of said Court, affixed at the City of Muncie this 7 day of August A. D., 1948. (SEAL) Jesse E. Greene, Clerk Gene Wiiliams, Plaintiff’s Attorney.

Aug. 9-16-23

o Legal Notice

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF HAMILTON TOWNSHIP Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Hamilton Township, Delaware County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said Township, at their regular meeting p]ace_ on the 27th day of August, 1946, will consider the following emergency additional appropriations: Special School Fund Fund No. 22, Janitor Service $ 575.00 Tuition Fund Fund No. 28, Pay of Teachers „$3,000.00 JOHN B. LOTZ Trustee of Hamilton Township Aug. 9-16 O Legal Notice

NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS No. 10274-S State of Indiana, Delaware County, ss: Charline V. Black vs. Vertis E. Black In The Delaware Superior Court April Term, 1946 Complaint: for divorce Notice is hereby given the said defendant, Vertis E. Black, that the plaintiff has filed her cor'n'aint herein, together with ah affida - ! t that the said defendant is not a reside ' 1 of the State of Indiana, and that unless he be and appear 1 on Monday the 30th clay of Septethber 1946, the 19th day the next term of said Court, to be holden on the Second Monday in Septembfer, A. D., 1946, at the Court House in the City of Muncie in said County and State, the said cause will be heard and determined in his absence. WITNESS, Ihe Clerk and the Seal of said Court, affixed at the City of Muncie this 26th day of JuW A. D., 1946> (SEAL) Jesse E. Greene, Clerk John T. Walterhouse, Plaintiff’s Atty. Aug. 2, 9 & 16

JEFFERSON FOOD MARKET

AT JACKSON AND KILGORE

730 W. Jackson St.

Phone 7714