Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 64, Number 29, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 19 February 1942 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Horse Sale! Wakarusa Sale Barn --- Tues., Feb. 24 at 12:30 These horses consist of mated teams, some nice sorrels, roans and bays. Will have some good 2 and 3 yr. Id Colts. Can use more horses. Please call before you bring them in as I do not want too many. Any one in need of horses be sure and attend this sale. JONAS A. MILLER, MGR.

UNION CENTER ' Mrs. Dan. I. Stahly entertained the following ladies at a quilting on Wednesday: Mrs. Lawrence Blosser, Mrs. Ira Mishler, Mrs. Ira Walters, Mrs. Mery in Michael, Mrs. Russell Stahly and Mrs. John Muntz. A pot luck dinner -was nerved at noon Mrs. Charles Slabaugh assisted Mrs. Stahly with her quilting on Thursday. Mr and Mrs. Curtis Sheets and family of this vicinity, Mr. and Mrs. Aiiizy Miller and son, Mervin, near Wakarusa, Miss Harriett Swartz, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Mishler and family of New Paris were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Sheets, and family at Elkhart on Sunday in honor of the birthdays of Mrs. Carl Sheets and son, Donald. A pot luck dinner was served. Mrs. Mary Fisher, of Elkhart, spent Saturday night with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Noah Weltv. ME and Mrs. Omer Rench, of Osceola spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Ephraim Johnson. Mrs. Aby Stump called on her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Myers, of New Paras, on Saturday. Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Johnson were Mrs. Edward Pippenger, Mrs, Mary Hartsough and Mrs. Loren Pippenger. Mr. and Mfs. Emmert Miller and family were dinner , guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Will Stouder on Sunday. Mrs. Jerome Sherman, of New Paris visited her mother, Mrs. Aby Stump on Thursday. Miss Alice Joan Slabaugh was a dinner guest Sunday of Miss Mary Lou Stuckman. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Phillips and family were dinner guests on Sunday of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Phillips at Bourbon. Mr. and Mrs, Charles Stahly were guests at dinner Sunday of their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. "and Mrs, John Stahly. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Postma visited their son, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Postma at kappanee on Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Homer ! Weldy were guests of their ison-in-law and daughter, Rev. and Mrs. Paul Lantis, in Chicago, over , Mr; and Mrs. Lewis Linebaok and son of Lakeville, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Stark of north of Goshen were guests of their parents, Rev. and Mrs. David Miller on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd „ Brady, of Elkhart were guests of liis mother. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stump, on Sunday evening. Miss Dorothy Malcolm, of Manchester college visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Malcolm over Sunday. Homer Weldy, of this vicinity and his son-in-law, Rev. Paul Lantis, of Chicago, called Sunday afternoon pn Mr. Weldys brother, Rev. Silas Weldy, of Wakarusa, who is a patient in the Wesley hospital in Chicago. The Rev. Mr. Weldy .is improving satisfactorily from an eye operation which he

underwent last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Hilbert Schlemmer and daughters, Cletus and Phyllis, of Oak Grove, were guests of their son-in-law and daughter Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Weaver and son on Sunday evening. John Welty called on his brother, Samuel Welty, at Goshen, on Friday. . Mrs. Han I. Stahly spent all day Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Carl Masuth and son at Elkhart. Miss Lillian Smeltzer visited Miss Shirley Keefer and Miss Etta Iffert on Saturday afternoon. Dale Sherman, Miss Lucile Lantz, Mrs. - Mjlt ,Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Roy J. Blosser and sons of New Paris and Mrs. Aby Stump called on Mr. and Mrs. Burt Stouder at the Michigan City hospital, Sunday, where Mr. Stouder underwent treatment. On Monday Mrs. Lola Bollinger and Mrs. Jerome Sherman went to Michigan City hospital and were accompanied home by Mr. and Mrs. Burt Stouder. Mrs. Daniel Hochstetler visited Mr. and Mrs. Dan I. Stahly and Mrs. Simon Stahly Sunday afternoon. ;* Miss Katie Hochstetler spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Dan . Hochstetler. Mrs Lawrence Blosser and Mrs. Charles Tobias spent all day Friday with their mother, Mrs. Frank Bainter. Mr. and Mrs. Noah Welty and family and Rev. and Mrs. Francis Freed and family attended the Christian-Life conference at the Goshen college over the week end Mrs. Martha Burkey, of Alan son, Mich., called on Mrs. Elmei Hartman on Wednesday. Mrs. Emmert Miller and dauah ter, Jeanette and Miss Mary Mil ler assisted Mrs. Will Stouder with her quilting on 'Monday. Miss Marie Walters, of Elkhart spent the week end with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Walters. Mr. and Mrs. William Bateman Marilyn and Patsy Keefer, of

Mishawaka and Mrs. Bert Anglemyer called on Miss Shirley Keefer at the Mart Iffert home on Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Noble Swihart and son, Phillip, of Goshen, spent Friday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Walters. Mrs. J. M. Wise was a guest in the afternoon. Keith Stouder, of Manchester college was a week end guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Farr el Stouder. Mrs. Sam Smeltzer went to Nappanee Saturday to visit Mr. and IVty'R. Arthur Smeltzer and family. Mrs. Mary Rogers and son spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. John Welty. AYR VICINITY - jt - Amish church services will be held at the Levi Schrock home Sunday. Mrs. Sovilla Oswald of Ohio and Mrs. Emma Miller, of Elkhart, were Thursday dinner guests at the J. J. Borkliolder home and afternoon callers at the.Rueben Hershberger home. Mrs. Henry Schmucker, IVlrs. Edward Borkholder, Mrs. David Borkholder and Mrs. Amanda Borkholder were among those that assisted Mrs. Oscar Schmucker with her quilting, Wednesday. Mrs. Amos Whetstone and Mrs. David Borkholder assisted Mrs. Andrew Miller with her work on Tuesday. JVtrs. Ervin Borkholder and children and Mrs. Crist Helmuth and children assisted Mrs. Andrew Helmuth with her quilting Wednesday. Mrs. Noah Borkholder and two daughters spent Thursday at; the Reuben Hershberger home. Joe Schwartz, of Adams county spent Sathrday night at the Amos Borkholder home.

Mrs. Joe Hilty, Mrs. Barbara Eicker and Joe Schwartz, of Adams bounty and Andrew Borkholder, were Sunday supper guests at the Sam Chupp home. Anna Whetstone, of Middlebury and Alma Hoehstetler spent Saturday night with Lizzie Ann Borkholder. Willis Hoehstetler,- son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hoehstetler spent' Wednesday and Thursday ' at the Andrew Miller home. , Mr. and Mrs. Jos. A. Schwartz of Adams county, Mr. and Mrs. Elias Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Hershberger and children were Sunday supper, geusts at the Noah Borkliolder home. Other evening callers . were Mrs. Joe. Hilty and Mrs. Barbara, Eicheiy of Adams county, and Mr. and Mrs. Sam Chupp. Mrs. Joseph J. Yoder and Susie Borkholder assisted Mrs. Oscar Schmucker with quilting; Friday. Mrs. Eli J. borkholder, Mrs. Jonas Borkholder, Katie and Emma Miller assisted Mrs. Andrew Miller with her work, Wednesday. Joe Whetstone; spent Thursday night at' the David Borkholder home. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. A. Schwartz, Mrs. Joe Hilty,- Mrs. Barbara Eicher and Joe Schwartz of Adams county, Mr. and Mrs. Menno Kaufman and children, Mr. and Mrs. Noah Borkholder and daughters, Mrs. Mary Yoder and Mrs. Henry Helmuth, Sr., were Monday dinner guests at the Sam Borkholder home. Mrs. Reuben Hershberger and children spent Wednesday at the Noah Borkholder home. j and Crist mutt children of spentSWednesday and Thursday wm their grandparents, Mr. and MrsVAndj^Helmuth. Mrs. Andrejf Hoehstetler and two Mrs. Andrew Miller- with her work Thursday. Sylvia Borkholder, Minnie and Katie Helmuth spent Sunday with Mary Yoder. Reuben Hershberger assisted Raymond Hoehstetler with butchering on Wednesday. Polly Miller and Katie Beachy, of Topeka, spent Saturday night with Susie Borkholder. Eli Borkholder spent Thursday night at the Andrew Miller home. Clara Mae and Emma Miller assisted Laura Helmuth in quilting Thursday afternoon. Anna Chupp assisted Mrs. An- : drew Miller with her work, i Monday callers at the Jacob Borkholder home were Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Schwartz, Mrs. Joe - Hilty and Mrs. Barbara Eicher, of : Adams county, Mrs. Mary Yoder, Noah Borkholder, Mr. and Mrs. I Gavid Borkholder, Mr. and Mrs. Warn Chupp, Mrs. Andrew Miller 1 md daughter, Mary, j Mrs. Andy Helmuth was among ' those helping Mr. and Mrs. Levi Kuhns with butchering on Thursiay. , Mr. and Mrs. Jos. A. Schwartz, Mrs. Joe Hilty and Mrs. Barbara Kiclicr were Monday night guests it the J. J. Borkholder home. “ Katie and Emma Miller spent 1 Saturday afternoon at the Andrew liller home. Mrs.' Joe Goblentz, of Stark Cos. )hio, is visiting with her friends f around here at present.

“WEEK-END IN HAVANA” A MUSICAL COMEDY AT THE FAIRY THIS WEEK Alice Faye, Carmen Miranda, John Payne, Cesar Romero and an all star supporting cast will play at the Fairy this week end, Sunday and Monday, in “Week End in Havana”.' The support-! ing cast includes Cobina Wright,! Jr., George Barbier, Sheldon 'Leonard, Leonid Kinskey, Chrispin Maftin, and Billy Gilbert. The picture as the title indicates has a setting in the city ol Havana, and with the beautiful i background is filled with music and laughter. You will enjoy this picture. Friday and Saturday the double feature bill offers “Parachute Batallion” with Robert Preston, Nancy Kelly, Edmund O’Brien, Haray Carey, and others and George Montgomery in Zane Grey’s “Riders of the Purple Sage” with May Howard, Robert Barrat, Lynne Roberts, Kane Richmond and others. Both are excellent features you will enjoy seeing at your local theatre ,on the same bill. Tuesday the bargain night picture is “Unexpected Uncle” with Anne Shirley, James Craig, Charles Coburn and others. The picture i$ a rollicking comedy filled with fast comedy of love in a trailer camp. Wednesday and Thursday Errol Flynn and Olivia DeHavilland will play here in “They Died With Their Boots On” with Arthur Kennedy, Charley Grapewin, Gene Lockhart, and a number of others. It is a great picture of the famous 7th Cavalry and the early American conquest of the plains. Don’t miss it at your local theatre. LEAKY HEATER BLAMED FOR DEATH OF TWO MEN FOUND IN CAR

Alfonso and Otto M. Diehl,] both of Harlan, Ind., were found | dead in an automobile in a ditch | near Ft. Wayne. The report of ■ the Allen county coroner said the men had both died from| monoxide' gas from a leaky heat-] er in their auto. From all ap-! pearances the gas overcame the] men, the car went into the ditch without upsetting or breaking any of the glass, and the motor still running, caused the death of the two men an hour after going into the ditch, both men being overcome and unable to help themselves or call for help. The lights of the car were still burning and the motor running at j 7 o’clock Monday when dis- j covered, the coroner placing the] time of the accident at 12:30 andi death taking place at about 3:001 o’clock.

NEW DEAL CLUB ' MEMBERS TO MEET WITH MRS. DEVON HOSSLER Mrs. Devon Hossler will be hostess on Thursday,Feb. 19th to members of the New Deal bridge club. j NON-RESIDENT NOTICE State of Indiana, Elkhart coun-j ty. ss: In the Superior Court of Elk-! hart County, iState of Indiana.; February. 1942 Term. Richard Earl Garver vs. Sarah! Celeste' Garver. Cause No. 15063.; Divorce. i Be it known, that on this 6thdav of February in the year 1942,! the above named plaintiff by his attorneys, filed in the office of the Clerk of the Elkhart Superior] Court a complaint against saidj defendant in the above entitled cause, together with -*an affidavit j of a competent person, that the plaintiff has a meritorious cause] of action against said defendant! for divorce, arid that the de-] fendant. Sarah Celeste Garver is j not a resident of the State of! Indiana. j Said defendant is therefore; hereby notified of the filing and j pendency of said complaint j against her. and unless she appeari and answer or demur thereto at] the calling of said cause on the ] 13th day of April, 1942. the same! being the 55th Judicial day of the; Februarv 1942 term, of said] Court, begun and held at the] ’Court Room in Elkhart, on the 2nd Monday in February. 1942: j said complaint ' and the matters and things therein contained and alleged, will be beard and determined in her absence. THOMAS M. LONG. Clerk Elkhart Sunerior Court Pmctor Ht Proctor, Attorney for Plaintiff. (’l2-19-26’)

j SHERIFF’S SALE Cause No. 22844. By virtue of an order of sale j to me issued from the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Elkhart | County, Indiana, I have . levied upon and will expose to public: sale at the Court House dkior, ip j Goshen, on Monday, the Bth day of March, 1942, between the hours of 10 o’clock A. M.. and 4 o’clock P. M., of said day,' the fee simple,' together with the rents, issues, income and profits of the following described Real Estate situate in Elkhart County. State of Indiana, to-wit: The west half of the northwest duarter of section 19, township 35 north, range 5 east, containing. 80 acres, more or less, subject to all legal highways. Taken as the property of ■Tosenh J. Kaufman. Feme Marie Kaufman, et al to satisfy a Judgment of said Court in favor of The Federal Land Bank of Louisville. Ralph F. Logan. Sheriff of Elkhart County. Bv LaMar B. Himes, Deputy. Goshen, Indiana, January 29th. 1942. Ravmer & Raymer, Plaintiff’s Att’v. (5-12-19)

NAPPANEI ADVANCE-NEWS, NAPPANEE, IND.

WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS BY EDWARD WAYNE (Contniued from Page 1) on LaGuardias civilian defense activities, but the resignation of the “Little Flower” had long been expected. LaGuardia was supposed to have plenty to do organizing the defense of New York city, let alone saddling himself with the problems of an entire nation. He announced that he would devote his full time to these problems in the future. | Criticism, as Landis took charge ; of OCD, continued chiefly leveled at i the health, entertainment and social ; uplift activities of the organization. It had crystallized into the adoption by the house of an amendment specifically forbidding the spending of government funds for “fan-dancing, street shows, theatrical prformances ] or other public entertainment in the program of civilian defense.”

MISCELLANY:

Washington: All silk processors were ordered within 48 hours to sell their entire stocks of silk to the government, on penalty of having them commandeered. Washington: Congress was frankly told that the reason for the short American supply of scrap -metal could be traced to extremely heavy shipments to Japan before the declaration of war. The amendment had been tacked onto a bill passed which provided $100,000,000 for the purchase of gasmasks, auxiliary fire-fighting equipment and other protective goods to be used in the protection of the population against air raids. The senate had been expected to go along with the house in its effort

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JAMES M. LANDIS Succeeding Liltle Flower-. . . to weed the “frills afid furbelows” ] out of the program. Senator Byrd, Virginia, keynoted this move by demanding that the j OCD send his committee a list of all OCD employees getting over i $3,000 a year, and outlining their specific duties. LUZON: 163 Planes Continued efforts by the Japanese to land on Bataan had been turned back by General MacArthur’s highly mobile artillery forces in the general’s “last ditch” fight to keep the American flag flying over the Philippines. The anti-aircraft fire of MacArthur’s men had continued good, the bag of seven planes in one day comparing favorably with other i fronts where the United Nations had ! many more serviceable aircraft | than did the defenders of Luzon. Captured prisoners and other j methods of gaining information re- ; vealed that five Japanese divisions j had been identified as taking part i in the battle, which- would bring the J estimated strength of the Japs acj tually on the front battle-line at close ] to 100,000 men. j Other divisions were on the island, | keeping communications open, and : it had been reported that reinforce--1 ments for the Japs were constantly ! arriving, thus steadily increasing i the pressure on the American-Fili- ] pino army. NORMANDIE: ] $80,000,000 Job Whether carelessness, sabotage or ! Fate was responsible, the 83,000-ton ] Normandie, former luxury liner and now the naval auxiliary Lafayette, ] lay on her enormous beam-ends in j 40 feet of water and 12 feet of mud at her dock in New York, an SBO,000,000 salvage job for the U. S. navy. Twenty-two hundred men were at 1 work inside of her, changing her over from peacetime to wartime uses when a welder’s torch started a fire. Within minutes it was out of j control.

] SINGAPORE: Water-Pincers Anew tactic in warfare, the “water-pincers” movement, utilized by the Japanese in Malaya, had brought Singapore to her knee?, spreading gloom in Britain, and making the defense of toe East Indies a nearly superhuman job. General Yamashita, commander of the Jap forces In Malaga, had

won the Order of the Golden' Kite and the Order of the Rising Sun for his success in driving the defenders out of Malaya, for smashing into the island of Singapore, first time in history that the historic port had been tested in battle. The long, narrow peninsula of Malaya, difficult terrain, had apparently presented enormous invasion problems. The Japs had solved these by using small boats, many of them commandeered or captured, and sending small, well-armed and highly mobile detachments, first down the east coast, then down the west, making landings by night, and infiltrating behind the defenders. Each time the British were able to make a swift withdrawal, and to salvage) their main forces, but each time they lost ground, until they were finally driven back across, the Johore causewajr onto the Singapore island. Literally scores of “bites” had been taken out of each coastline by this Japaneshtechnique during their advance southward. At the same time the Japs had sent another large force to drive westward from the top of the peninsula in an effort to cut off the Burma road, but, more important, to protect their own rear. §PY RAIDS: On West Coast

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TWO BUDDHIST PRIESTS TAKEN Weren't always praying . . . More and more Japanese continued to be caught in the nets spread along the West coajt by the FBI. The spy raids were being carried out almost daily by the G-men, who in one raid got 20 alleged spies and saboteurs and a truckload of ammunition and weapons. Chief concentration qf the raids was in Pacific coast counties where there were large military establishments. At Salinas, Calif.', following the questioning of several Japs taken into custody at a large lettuce farm, one of them turned out to be a former chief of police in Tokyo. Another was formerly a high official in the same police force. A raid on a Buddhist temple in Monterey county yielded three priests. All of them had been in i this country only a few months. In a sporting goods store, about ] to purchase firearms, a former JapI anese bootlegger with a police record was taken, into custody. It was here that a whole truckload ■ of ammunition, rifles, shotguns, etc., was seized, together with the proprietor, a Japanese. ; In 45 places searched, the yield j was, among other things, 60,845 j rounds of ammunition. TEA: • Panic Buying \ Anew U. S. agency had been (formed to handle the tea situation ] which developed after grocers were apalled to find customers ordering ] tea in five-pound lots.

The panic in buying followed similar lines to that in sugar, and which had resulted in the setting up of a sugar rationing plan. As more or less a natural outcome of the news from the tea-grow-ing areas, WPB began to get reports of “five-pound tea buying” from all sections of the country, and it was regarded as essential that rationing be adopted if the buying panic had not been stopped voluntarily. In the sugar situation, cases of prosecution began to pop up, one chain store manager, trying to make a sales record for himself, having disposed of 31,000 pounds of sugar, allegedly to illicit still operators. He was fined SSOO. DUTCH: Under Pressure Complaints from the Netherlands East Indies command that too much of the naval force of the United Nations was engaged in “non-combat-ant work” came as the Dutch faced a pincers movement against Sourabaya and the fear of a frontal attack on Java generally. It was evident, said the Dutch | leaders, that a giant pincers move I was being directed at Java when the Japs landed in force on Celebes island, which formed the tip of the right flank of the Javanese defense ! line. At the same time Axis sources had \ reported that the Japanese were de- ! manding the surrender by the Dutch ! of all the East Indies, together with ! their oil supplies, in return for which the islands would be technically left ' as Dutch possessions. Dutch sources said, however, that no Japanese proposal would be entertained, and they continued their < "scorched earth” policy of destroy- ; ing all oil installations before abanj doning any property to the Japs, i Despite the costly losses inflicted 'on the enemy in Macassar strait. 4 *

last month, the japs evidently nan been able to make successful landings there. Chief hope at present of the Dutch in captured territory was the report of successful guerrilla action which had really been the answer to the loss by J.apan of any real victory in the war with China. One Dutch authority had said: “Nowhere do the Japs feel safe. Our men behind their lines are piek-„ ing them off, two today, ten tomor-''-row, and the toll is mounting and steady. This guerrilla war is being fought in an incessant downpour of rain.” CLOSER: Draw Lines of War Though there was little evidence of a slackening of the general Japanese advance through the island empire of the Southwest Pacific, it seemed that as the days wore on, the main battle lines were drawing closer together. Arrival in New Zealand of the first units of Admiral Leary’s naval forces heralded, according to newsmen who accompanied the fleet, the establishment of a supply line for the United States. MRS. IDA STRYCKER ANSWERS CALL OF DEATH ON FRIDAY Mrs. Ida Strycker, aged 71, died at 11:15 p. m., ’ Friday in. | her home at Wakarusa after a six weeks’ illness of high blood pressure and a heart ailment. She was bom in Union township, May 22, 1870, daughter of the late George and Susan Walters. Her marriage to Ephriam Strycker took place Sept. 15, 1892.; He died in April, Surviving are five sons, Ora, Gary,! Ind.; Howard, South Bend; Walt-! er, Paw Paw, Mich., and Mervin and Carl, Wakarusa; four daughters, Mrs. Floyd Hemminger, Bremen; Mrs. Clifford Nusbaum, Ligonier; Mrs. Cornelius ' Haney and Mrs. Carl Rheinheimer, Goshen; 34 grandchildren; one sister, Miss Alice Walters, Dunlap, and seven brothers, Frank, Oscar, Vern and Ira, Nappanee; Jess, Dunlap; Bert, New Paris, and Milo, Elkhart. Funeral services were held at 1:45 p. m., Tuesday in the residence and at 2:30 p. m.. Tuesday in the Union Center church, Rev. John Frederick and Rev. David Miller officiating. Burial was in the Union Center cemetery. Mrs. Strycker had been a member of the Church of the Brethren 46 years. ADDITIONAL RED CROSS CONTRIBUTIONS Warren Howenstein $2.50 Henry Mishler 5.00 Helen King ->• 1.00 Mary King 1.00 L. W. King 1.00 J. Bammel 2.00 Ohio Oil Cos * 10.00

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