Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 22 November 1946 — Page 4

POST-DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1946.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SERVICES mortals and Immortals” was the subject of the Lesson-Sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, November 17. The Golden Text was: “Thou art no more a servant, but a son; and if a son, then an heir of God through Christ” (Galatians 4:7). Among the citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon was the following from the Bible: “Unto every one of us is given grace accoi’ding to the measure of the gift of Christ. Wherefore he saith, When he ascended up on high, he led captivity captive, and gave gifts unto men” (Ephesians 4:7, 8). “Seeing then that we have a great high priest, that is passed into the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold fast our profession” (Hebrews 4:14). The Lesson-Sermon also included the following passages from the Christian Science textbook, “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddyj “The sinless joy,—the perfect harmony and immortality of Life, possessing unlimited divine beauty and goodness without a single bodily pleasure or pain,—constitutes the only veritable, indestructible man, whose being is spiritual” (p. 76). “The admission to one’s self that man is God’s own likeness sets man free to master the infinite idea” (p. 90).

Warns Against Big Government Philadalphia, Pa. — Dr. Harold W. Dodds, Princeton University president, said last night that “the time is past due” for the revitalization of the entire federal government)* and a “thorough overhauling” of Con-

gress.

Dodds asserted at the annual banquet of tlm National Municipal League that government must be kept wtihin the understanding and control of voters in order, to remain democratic. Warning against “big government,” he said that freedom will not be preserved “by transferring to government responsibilities and decisions which we ought to be making as private citizens.” Dr. George Gallup, director of the American Institute of Public Opinion, reported that the proportion of voters in America is lower than any other “real de-

mocracy.”

Gallup listed as the chief reasons for the “general lack of interest in elections in this country” the failure of colleges to teach enough government and politics and the “incredibly low plane on which most of our cam-

paigns are fought.”

“Millions of political ignoramuses are graduated from our high schools and colleges each year,” he said. “The truth is that any student can graduate from any college in the country today and not have even a basic knowledge of the structure of our govern-

ment.”

American Girls Are Too Skinny

Chicago, Illinois — Mr. America

Nov. 22-29

Trustee of Salem Township

Legal Notice NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF SALEM TOWNSHIP Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Salem Township, Delaware County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said Township, at their regular 'meeting place on the 2nd day of December, 1946, will consider the following emergency additional appropriations:

Tuition Fund

Fund No. 28, Pay of Teachers __$300.00

Special School

Fund No. 24, Wt., Lt. & Pr. 45.00 That said appropriation is a realloea-

uon of funds as follows:

Pay of Sub. Teachers $300.00 .... ,

Loans interest and ins. 45.00 j said today that American girls are

Raymond C. Shirey too skinny They would be prettier, he said, if they would practice weight lift-

ing.

Mr. America is Alan Stephan, 22, Cicero, 111., a 205-pound mass of muscle who won his title in a male beauty contest at Detroit,. In his spare time he is a weight lifter His job is to travel around to high schools telling students what is wrong with their physiques. “There’s plenty wrong, too,” he said. “What the girls lack mostly is curves.” He said most girls are too fat or too skinny. “Their complexions are bad and they have poor posture. They wear too much makeup, and they don’t get enought fresh air.” Stephan said the girl whose only exercise is bending her elbow at the corner drug store never will be attractive. “It’s muscles that make a girl shapely,” he explained. “The fatty layer women have under their skin hides the muscle bulges, but you can tell it’s there all right.” Stephan said girls should start out with simple tumbling exercises and work-up gradually to weight lifting. “Some of the best looking girls are weight lifters,” he added. “I talked them into it, and you should see the difference.” They not only look different, but they act and think different, he said. The girl who can lift a 100 pound weight stands straighter, thinks better and feels healthier than the girl who thnks it’s a strain to lift a ping-pong paddle, he said. Stephan said the girls also might try eating what their mothers cook for them, instead of what they find to munch on between meals. “I try to tell them to remember an old Greek adage—a sound mind in a sound body.” “But the main objective is more and better curves. I’m not advocating a Mae West shape, you understand, but when a fellow puts his arm around a girl, he doesn’t want to have an armful of bones.”

Legal Notice

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF MT. PLEASANT TWP. Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Mt. Pleasant Twp., Delaware County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said Township, at their regular meeting place on the 2nd day of December, 1946, Will consider the following emergency additional appropriations:

Township

Fund No. 4, Books, Stationery, Printing Advertising $ 40.00

Special School

Fund No. 12, Repair Bldg. Care of Grounds 90.00 Fund No. 14, School Furniture & Equip. 40. CO Fund No. 16, Janitor Supplies 70.00 Fund No. 23, Transportation 450.00 That said appropriation is a reallocation of funds as follows: Care of Cemeteries $ 40.00 Fuel 650.00

Ray L. Miller

Trustee of Mt. Pleasant Twp.

Nov. 22-29

Legal Notice

NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS

No. X0649-S State of Indiana, Delaware County, ss: Viles L. Hutchens

vs.

Forrest L. Hutchens In The Superior Court September Term 1946 Complaint: for divorce. Notice is hereby given the said defendant, Forrest L. Hutchens, 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 Tuesday the 21st day of January 1947, the 8th day the next term of said Court, to be holden on the Second Monday in January, A. D., 1947, 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 Munthis 22nd day of November A. D., 1946. (SEAL) Jesse E. Greene, Clerk John J. Dodd, Plaintiff’s Attorney. Nov. 22-29-Dec. 6.

Gates Seeks New State Fire Law Indianapolis, Indiana — Governor Gates today studied the possibility of a state law which would, clarify fire protection responsibilities of Indiana cities. The Governor said he would consider legislation to avoid duplication of a situation such as that existing at Terre Haute, where the city refuses fire protection to certain property owners involved in an annexation dispute. Gates criticized officials of Terre Haute and Harrison township for “failing to act wisely” in the annexation controversy, which gained statewide attention last week-end with the fire death of 21-months-old Mary Ann Wil-

ber.

The little girl was burned to death w’hen fire destroyed thefamily home outside the city limits, while city firemen, acting on municipal orders, refused to answer the fire alarm. “Matters of this character should have been so handled that protection was afforded for life and property in that community” the Governor said. ' State Fire Marshal Carter I. Bowser previously handed Gates a report of his investigation of the girl’s death. Bowser believed the child’s life “could have been saved had the fire department responded, although this cannot be definitely answered and could only be answered if the effort had been made.” “Since it was impossible for those present at the scene to have saved the life, it is hard to understand hfaw anyone could have come the distance of a mile (from the fire station) and accomplished the saving of this life,” Bowser said. Go To Church

Lottie Lockman’s Trial Date, Jan. 27 Madison, Indiana — Mrs. pont housekeeper, was told today that she would be tried Jan. 27 on a charge of attempted murder. Judge Harry E. Nichols of Jefferson Circuit Court announced last night the date for the trial, after discharging a grand jury impaneled to investigate the illness of Mrs. Mayme McConnell, wife of Mrs. Lockman’s wealthy employer. Nichols dismissed the jurors before they completed an investigation of the deaths of three persons Mrs. Lockman attended. He heard a report from Hie jurors which said they felt a thorough investigation must wait for completion of medical tests and scientific research. The jury recommended that testimony received during the investigation be “preserved and made available later to a succeeding grand jury.” Mrs. Lockman was arrested last August in the “sleep” deaths of three elderly Dupont residents. Authorities said mercury was found in the exhumed organs of the three.

Fleet Deployment Started By Navy Washington, D. C. — The navy will begin a simplified system of fleet deployment Jan. 1, with one major “task fleet” in the Atlantic and one in the Pacific. Designation of fleets by number will be abolished under the new setup, which the navy said

would result in “reducing command overhead and simplifying fleet organization in the light of war experience.” The number of ships in active operation will remain the same. The first task fleet, in the’Pacific, will be commanded by Vice Adm. A. E. Montgomery, formerly of the fifth fleet. The second task fleet will be stationed in the Atlantic and is to be headed by Vice Adm. W. H. P. Blandy, who commanded the Bikini atomic bomb tests. Montgomery and Blandy will have administrative command over all the naval units in their areas. The ships at their disposal will be distributed among subsidiary commands in each

ocean.

The organizational s h a k e u p will put two admirals out of a job temporarily. They are Vice Adm. Daniel E. Barbey, commander of the fourth fleet, and Vice Adm. Howard F. Kingman, commander of the third fleet. 0 New Disease Is Revealed Cleveland, O. — A dramatic story o: how game wardens in Virginia worked with medical scientists in a search for information on a rare, but usually fatal, disease was told today at the 74th annual convention of the American Public Health As-

sociation.

Less than 100 confirmed cases of this disease have been reported in the world in the last 60 years. It i scalled histoplasmos-

is.

Interest in it has heightened in recent months because some medical experts have expressed opinion that many Americans, | particularly those living in the areas along the Ohio River Valley, may have had this ailment in their childhood in a mild form. They based this opinion on their finds that thousands of persons were revealed by x-ray photographs to have calcified lesions in their lungs, yet they reponded negatively to tuberculin skin patch tests. If such a theory is proved correct — and it may be years before it is — then there is the possibility that thousands of men in Ohio, Kentucky, Virginia, Indiana and Illinois, may have been classified as tubercular and denied admission to the army. The survey in Virginia was conducted in 1945 after two fatal cases of histoplasmosis were reported in Loudon county. The disease, in some respects has the symptoms of tuberculosis. Dr. Joseph A. Bell, senior surgeon of the U. S. Public Health Service, and two associates, Doctors C. W. Emmens and Byron J. Olsen, made the investigation. Making a report of this survey to the APHA, Dr. Bell said that an effort was made to determine whether there was a connection between the disease in animals and in humans. In th search for animal infection, ^ he reported, game wardens were' informed of the problem and asked to report animals with symptoms of histoplasmosis. The game wardens trapped the animals in the areas where the disease was known to have struck. In most cases, the animals caught were rats. Almost 500 humans also were examined, and 83 per cent had a positive histoplasmin skin reaction and 40 per cent had pulmonary calcified lesions, Dr. Bell’s report said. No relation, however, could be established between persons with a positive histoplasmin skin reaction and persons with pulmonary calcifications, the report said. o Biggest Farm Harvest In Bins Washington, D. C. — America’s biggest farm harvest in history virtually was in the bins today. The Agriculture Department said ideal harvest weather in October improved both the quantity of most crops and boosted the production index three points above the former 1942 high. Cotton and cottonseed were the only notable exceptions. The department said that a prospective crop of 3,380,672,000 bushels of com — the ‘largest on the books — means an alltime yield of more than 165,000,000 tons of food and feed grains. Coupled with history’s largest deciduous fruit crop and record or near - record crops of many other farm products, this assures Americans their most plentiful food supplies on record. It also may spur the end of the government’s remaining restrictions on grain. These curtail distillers’ grain and limit the production of flour for domestic use to 85 per cent of last year. The prospective corn yield tops the former record of 3,203,000,000 bushels in 1942 by about 177,000,000 bushels. In addition to corn, prospects* also improved in October for soybeans, potatoes, tobacco, apples, pears, grapes and sugar beets. Cotton was the only major crop to slump. The other big factors in this year’s historic output were record crops of wheat, potatoes, tobacco, peaches, pears, plums and truck ^crops and near-record yields of oats, rice, soybeans, peanuts, grapes, cherries and sugar cane. Better than average crops included hay, flaxseed, sorghum grain, buckwheat, dry peas, sweet potatoes, prunes, apricots, hops and sugar beets. Only the cotton, rye, broomcorn, dry beans and pecans yields were below average.

PICTURE NEWS OF THE WEEK

FRANK A. SEIBERLING, “little giant” of the rubber industry, recently passed his 87th birthday. He is founder and chairman of the company bearing his name. One in 10,000 is baby WILLIAM EUGENE FISHER, JR., Berkeley, Cal., who was born with a lower tooth. Doctors say he will probably have a full set of teeth at six months. JACK HOFFMAN, right center, 4-H Club member of Ida Grove, Iowa, is richer by $42,000 following sale of T. O. Pride, hia I, 200-pound grand champion steer, to a Kansas City meat packer. Steep decline in cotton prices was attacked by these men before the Senate Agriculture committee. TOM LINDER, left, of Atlanta, Geu, charged that one cause was “short selling by foreign interests.** J. E. McDONALD, right, of Austin, Tex., told group that decline caused great resentment in his state. ,

Farmers May Lose All Their Gains

Indianapolis, Ind. — Secretary J. E. Standford of the Ken-

tucky

and atabine, and clinical tests are being made to determine whether it can be made even

more effective.

The new drug, which was not used on a big scale until late in the war, prevents and cures one type of malaria, called plas-

Farm Bureau believes medium falciparum; but is not

American farmers will lose everything they have gained in recent years unless they remain organized. “Farmers must make maximum use of cooperatives and maintain existing favorable legislation,” he said, “or else they will lose their gains and return to a low income status.” He spoke before the 28th annual convention of the Indiana Farm Buruea last night. Purdue University President Frederick Hovde was the principal speaker today. “The cost is small for an organization, but a heavy price must be paid for the lack of a powerful and influential organization,” said Stanford. He estimated that agriculturists in recent years lost $17,500,000,000 because of lack of organization. Farmers, Stanford said, are “victims of unfavorable legislation which influences the course of agriculture. Delegates to the convention met in the World War Memorial building here yesterday to hear their president, Hassil E. Schenck, advocate adoption of the direct primary system of nomination political candidates. Governor Gates welcomed the farmers at the opening session of the three-day meeting. New officers will be elected at the official business session tomorrow morn-

ing.

o Drug Available For Domestic Use New York, N. Y. — A new drug, developed during the war to protect American soldiers against malaria, is now available for domestic use, it was disclosed today. It originally was known as 7618 and latef as chloroquine. It is 16 times as strong as quinine, and much less poisonous. It is a better drug than atabrine, which was used widely during most of the war. Chloroquine, a synthetic compound made from coal tar, is related chemically to both quinine

so effective against another type, called plasmodium vivax. The latter is the recurring type. It has several advantages over atabrine in that it does not cause the patient’s skin to stain; does not cause gastrointestinal symptoms, and may be given in a single dose. Atabrine must be given daily for a week. o Cutback In Excise Taxes Due July 1 Washington, D. C. — Republican tax experts believed today the new GOP-controlled Congress would set July 1 for sharp reductions in the stiff wartime excise taxes on such things as jewelry, telephone service, luggage, liquor and travel fare. Present plans don’t call for outright elimination of excise levies but for a cutback to prewar levels. In some cases, that would mean a 75 per cent reduction from present rates. Rep. Harold Knutson, R., Minn., who will be chairman of the taxwriting House Ways and Means Committee in the new Congress, said excise reductions would be made in the second of two tax bills planned for next year. The first, he said, will be a “quickie” measure after Congress meets Jan. 3 for an immediate 20 per cent reduction in personal income taxes. The cut would be retroactive to Jan. 1 and would reduce Treasury income by some $3,500,000,000 a year. The second bill will deal with excise taxes and . administrative sections of the present tax laws. No reduction in corporation taxes is contemplated next year. Knutson did not say when he expected excise reductions to become effective but his aides said it probably would be with the start of the new fiscal year next

July 1.

o

Legal Notice

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON | AMENDMEN1 OK ZONING ORDINANCE

Notice is hereby given to the citizens of Muncie, Indiana, that public hearing on an amendment to the Zoning Ordinance, which is now pending before the Comnson Council of the City of Muncie, Indiana, will be held in the city council chamber in the City Hall at 7:30 p. m., on the 2nd day of December 194C, at which time and place any objections to such amendment or change will be heard. The proposed amendment or change to be made is as follows: To amend, supplement and change the present Zoning Ordinance of -laid City of Muncie, Indiana, so as to transfer to the business district, to the six hundred 16OO1 square foot area district and to the eighty 18O1 foot height district the following described territory in said City of Muncie, Indiana, to-wit: The North half fl^2i of a lot numbered Four (4i in Anthony Park, an addition to the City of Muncie. Indiana, commonly known and designated as 1113 South Madison Street. Said proposed ordinance for such amendment 01 change of said present Zoning Ordinance has been referred to the City Plan Commission of said City of Muncie, and has been considered, and said City Plan Commission has made its report approving the same: Information concerning such proposed amendment or change is now on file in the office of said City Plan Commission, for public examination. Said hearing will be continued from time to time as may be found necessary. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of the City of Muncie, Indiana, 1SEAL1 J. Clyde Dunnington, City Clerk, and Clerk of the Common Council of the City of Muncie, this 22nd day of November, 1946. Nov. 22-29

Legal Notice

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON AMENDMENT OF ZONING ORDINANCE

Notice is hereby given to the citizens of Muncie, Indiana, that public hearing on an amendment to the Zoning Ordinance, which is now pending before the Common Council of the City of Muncie, Indiana, will be held in the city council chamber in the City Hall a* 7:30 p. m., on the 2nd day of December 1946, at which time and place any objections to such amendment or change will be heard. The proposed amendment or change to be made is as follows: To amend, supplement and change the present Zoning Ordinance of said City of Muncie, Indiana, so as to transfer to the business district, to the six hundred I6OO1 square foot area district and to the eighty (80t foot height district .the following described territory in said City of Muncie, Indiana, to-wit: Lot numbered Fifteen (15) in Block number two hundred and eighty one (2811 in the Muncie Land Company’s Subdivision of a part of the Watson Tract and a part of the Prutzman Tract, an addition to the city of Muncie, said county and state. 2912 South Elm St. Said proposed ordinance for such amendment or change of said present Zoning Ordinance has been referred to the City Plan Commission of said City of Muncie, and has been considered, and said City Plan Commission has made its report approving the same; Information concerning such proposed amendment or change is now on file in the office of said City Plan Commission, for public examination. Said hearing will be continued from time to time as may be found neces sary. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of the City of Muncie, Indiana, (SEAL 1 J. Clyde Dunnington City Clerk, and Clerk of the Common Council of the City of Muncie, this 22nd day of November, 1946. Nov. 22-29 Legal Notice NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON AMENDMENT OF ZONING ORDINANCE

Notice is hereby given to the citizens of Muncie, Indiana, that public hearing on an amendment to the Zoning Ordinance, which is now pending before the Common Council of the City of Muncie, Indiana, will be held in the city council chamber in the City Hall at 7:30 p. m., on the 2nd day of December 1946, at which time and place any objections to such amendment or change will be heard. The proposed amendment or change to be made is as follows: To amend, supplement and change the present Zoning Ordinance of said City of Muncie, Indiana, so as to transfer to the business district, to the six hundred (600) square foot area district and to the eighty (80) foot height district the following described territory in said City of Muncie, Indiana, to-wit: Lot No. 87 (Sixty-seven) and Sixtyeight (68) and Sixty-Nine (69) in the Anthony Homestead Addition to the City of Muncie, Indiana. 327 East Willard Street. Said proposed ordinance for such amendment or change of said present Zoning Ordinance has been referred to the City Plan Commission of said City of Muncie, and has been considered, and said City Plan Commission has made its report disapproving the same; Information concerning such proposed amendment or change is now on file in the office of said City Plan~Commission, fdr public examination. Said hearing will be continued from time to time as may be found necessary. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of the City of Muncie, Indiana, (SEAL) J. Clyde Dunnington City Clerk and Clerk of the Common Council of the City of Muncie, this 22nd day of November, 1946. Nov. 22-29

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 place on the 2nd day of December, 1S46, will consider the following emergency additional appropriations: Special School Fund No. 12, Repair of Bldg. $200.00 Fund No. 13, Repair of Equip. 200.00 Fund No. 14, School Furniture and Equipment 600.00 Fund No. 16. Janitor Supplies 500.00 John B. Lotz Trustee of Hamilton Township Nov. 22-29

JATO ASSURES.TURTLE RECORD

Wmmm

. j

^ Official L‘ S .\av> Photo Official Navy photographers made a pictorial record as the Truculent Turtle, a Lockheed Neptune P.2V land based patrol bomber powered by two Wright Duplex Cyclone engines, took off from Perth, Australia, in October to establish a nonstop record of 11,236 miles to Columbus, O., in 55 hours and 18 minutes. Com. T D. Davies, of Cleveland, O., ordered the plane equipped with four Jato units (jet assisted take-off) which enabled him t*> take off with a 85,500 pound load, the greatest load ever airborne by a two-motor airplane. The above pictures show the Turtle taking off at Perth It had Jato units, manufactured by the Aerojet Division of The General Tire & Rubber Co., attached to both sides of its rear fuselage, and with each unit developing thrusts equivalent to 330 hp., the big bomber was helped to rise easily into the air for its record-breaking trip. Ascent of the plane is quickly ascertained by noting the trees in the right of the pictures. “The biggest thrill of the trip was the takeoff,” Com. Davies readily admits. “After we were airborne the record distance was assured since we had gasoline enough to fly at least to Bermuda.”

SAVE WASTE PAPER

GO BY BUS - ■ , w ^ Frequent, Coovgnjgnt Seryjcg BejVeen These C i tie sand Intermediate Poin ts

W61 A NAPOLIS F T. WAYNE

KOKOMO

MUNCIE

ANDERSON

TERRE HAUTE

CONDENSED SCHEDULE FT. WAYNE —INDIANAPOLIS —TERRE HAUTE (West Bound)

AM

AM

AM

AM

AM

AM

AM

AM

Noon

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

Lv. FORT WAYNE ...

5.00

7.30

10.00

12.00

2.00

3.30

5.45

8.00

10.00

Lv. Bluffton

5.38

8 12

10.42

12.42

2.42

4.12

6.27

8.40

10.40

Lv. Hartford City

5.00

5.50

6 30

7.30

9.02

10,45

11.32

1.32

2.45

3.32

4.10

5.02

7.17

9.26

11.26

Lv. Muncie

5.37

6 30

7.20

8 10

9 50

11,25

12.20

2.20

3.23

4.20

4.50

5.50

8.05

10.15

12 «5

Lv. Anderson

5.45

6 18

7 06

8,00

8,48

10,27

12.03

1.00

3.00

4.00

5.00

5.30

6.27

8.43

10.53

12.55

Ar. INDIANAPOLIS..

7.05

7.30

8 20

9.20

10.05

11.45

1.20

2.20

4.20

5.15

6.20

6.50

7.45

9.55

12.05

1 50

Lv. INDIANAPOLIS..

7 30

9.30

11 30

1.15

3.30

4.30

5.15

7.45

10.30

1 00

Ar. Greencastle

8 42

10 42

12.42

2.27

4.42

6.00

6.27

8.53

11.38

2 10

Ar. Brazil

9.15

11

15

1.15

3.00

5.15

7.00

9.23

12 08

Ar. TERRE HAUTE ..

9 45

11 45

1.45

3.30

5.45

7.30

9.50

12.35

AM

AM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

AM

AM

AM

TERRE HAUTE —INDIANAPOLIS —FT, WAYNE (East Bound)

AM

AM

AM

AM

AM

PM

AM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

Lv. TERRE HAUTE

5.20

7.00

10,45

1.15

2.30

4.10

6.45

Ar. Brazil

5.47

7.28

11.13

1.43

2.58

4.38

7.13

5.00

6.16

8 02

11 47

12.15

2.17

3.32

4.00

5.12

7.44

Af, INDIANAPOLIS

6.40

7.30

9.15

1.00

1.55

3.30

4.45

5.15

6.25

8.55

Lv. INDIANAPOLIS

5.45

7.00

8.15

9 45

11.15

12.15

1.15

2.15

3.15

4.15

5.15

5.45

7.15

9.00

10.00

lv. Anderson

7.02

8.15

9.34

11.04

12.34

1.34

2.34

3.34

4.34

5.34

6.34

7.04

8.34

10.15

11.16

lv. Muncie

7.50

8.55

10.20

11.55

1.15

2.20

3.15

4.25

5.15

6.25

7.15

7.55

9.15

11.00

11.5S

Ar. P»irt!oid City

8.27

9.35

11.00

12.32

1.55

3.00

3.55

5.02

5.55

7.05

8.35

9.55

11.37

12.35

Ar. Bluffton

9 15

11 49

1.19

3.47

5.49

7.52

9.22

12.20

Ar. FORT WAYNE

9 55

12.30

2.00

4.30

6.30

8.35

9.05

10.05

1 00

AM

AM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

PM

AM

AM

TYPICAL, LOW FARES (ONE WAY) Muncie To: Indianapolis $1.15 Fort Wayne 1.35 Anderson .40 Bluffton 85 Terre Haute 2.45 Hartford City .40

(Plus tax)

^ For Furthel* Information, call UNION BUS TERMINAL Charles and Mulberry Streets

Warren Young, Mgr.

Phone 4495

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