Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Vidette-Messenger of Porter County from Valparaiso, Indiana • 3

Location:
Valparaiso, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FmiXY, 'APRIL 20, IMS THE VTOETTC-MESSENGER, VALPARAISO. INDIANA Vir 'SLOP RAIDERS; FOILED AGAIN NUERNBERG TAKEN, HEAD FOR MUNICH 1 CHICAGO MARKKm MOSCOW HINTS LINK UP BY THIRD ARMY jjjjih rJ i i jjjjjjj WDM'ANS Hi PLANS and. CLUB' ftJs PROGRAMS t7 I Wf wMHlMiwwt who originated th "work, study, play" schools still in use, introduced Miss Allee Gerard, a prize winning five-cent limit Remoyal of restrictions oft oats and barley shipments out of Canada and weaker cash market prompted the break. On the close grains were weak wiht May wheat and corn counter Ing the trend with light fractional gains: Wheat finished the day up lie to off lVic a bushel; corn up lie to off oats off to I l-8c; rye off 1 l-8c to lc, and barley quoted off to off the full permissible five-cent Heavier terminal receipts and favorable crop reports depressed wheat futures. A negligible amount of mill-buying failed to offset the decline.

May showed early strength but later lost ground. A sharp decline In cash oats In the northwest, a heavy Canadian cargo arrived in Chicago and the break in barley brought on weakness in the oats pit. The decline in barley reduced prices 77i from the high point of Monday. The market met stop-loss selling in the break. CHICAGO CASH GRAIN Corn No.

2 yellow $L15tt to No. 3 yellow No. 2 white $1.25. Barley Malting $1.18 to $1594; feed 90c to $1.10. Truman Appoints School Chum As Press Secretary WASHINGTON, Apr.

President Truman announced today that Charles G. Ross, 59-year-old Washington correspondent for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, will become his press secretary on May 15. 5" When Mr. Truman first took office It was announced that J.

Leonard Relnsch, managing direo tor of three radio stations owned by James M. Cox, would act as secretary in charge of press and radio affairs. The president explained at a special news conference today that Cox had telejraphed him, making special appeal that Reinsch1 be allowed to return to his post with the Cox stations because of the urgent need of his technical knowledge. The president said that after receiving the appeal from Cox he called in Ross, a friend since they went to high school together, asked him to take the post. Ross agreed to this, saying he would be available on May 15 after he reports the United Nations conference in San Francisco.

Mr. Truman said he was making the announcement today because he and "Charlie" got a little sentimental last night and together called up their old school teacher, Miss Matilda Brown, at Independence, Mo and also called some of Ross' family. So the president thought there might be a leak in the Information and he had better announce it. Jonathan Daniels, press, Secretary to the late who had planned to leave his White House post tomorrow, agreed to stay on until Ross could take over. Continued from page one) city patrolman put a ticket on Eagerly Michigan-licensed car Hoc parking in an alley7 a viola tion of city traffic laws.

So far Edgerly has not appeared at the police station, as ordered to do Within 24 hours of receipt of th'! traffic ticket. Records at the office of the Porter County Ration Board do not list Edgerly as ever having applied for or receiving gasoline rations it was disclosed today. Since he resides in Porter county, however, any gasoline he obtains must be issued from the Valparaiso ration offices, according to OPA rules Edgerly drove from Portage town: ship to the golf club in his car for the raid last night. Koritz in May, 1943, Instigated a raid on the Valparaiso Moose lodge together with Floyd Tucker pseudo-justice of the peace of Washington township. They made! off with six machines to Tucker's farm yard but shortly afterward landed in jail on charges of resisting an officer, carrying a concealed weapon and grand larceny.

As result of the charges "Tucker resigned his township office, and Koritz spent several days in the county jail. He was later released on bond and many months after-' ward the charges were dropped. Edgerly, employed now by the Carnegie-Illinois Steel company, in Gary, recently returned to Portage township from Detroit, where he was employed for about 18 months. He was elected justice of the peace in 1942 for a four-year term. He conducts his raids after working hours.

The cowboy was well remembered in the naming of Texas towns. There's a Blanket, a a Lariat, a Loop and a Spur. SYMBOL OF QUALITY I BOGS Receipts active, steady; good and choice barrows and gilts 140 lbs. and up at $14.75, celling; good and choice sows at $14; complete clearance. CATTLE Receipts 1,500, calves 'gen- erftllv stPftrtv mnrkpt nn all lasQA clean-up trade moderately active; toft steers bulk $14.50 to no choice heifers offered; medium grade offerings dull; most beef coys $10 to $13; canners and cutters $7 50 'to bulk bulls at $11.50 to $13.50, with best sausage offerings around $13, and few heay fat bulls above $14; choice butcher bulls, however, up to $15; mostly $17 down on veal calves; week's supply medium to choice light stock cattle firmly cleaned up at $12.50 to $14.75.

SHEEP Recelp' 4.000; slaughter lambs steady to 25c lower; top $17.25 on loads strictly "good and choice 106-lb. fed Colorado; sheep scarce, nominally steady. LIVE POULTRI Wholesale Receipts 2 trucks Market Firm and unchanged FRESH EGGS Receipts 24,309 cases Market Firm and unchanged Extras 35.2c to 36.1c Standards 34.3c Current receipts 32.5c Checks and dirties 31.5c Final Grain Review Apr. 20 (UP) Grain futures displayed easiness and an uneven trend on the board of trade today with barley breaking the FOR MORE 4mmuui ETA CHAPTER Eta Chapter of Sigma Alpha Chi met at the home of Mrs. Betty Bur-ris, Lafayette street, Wednesday evening, and were entertained by the committee, Mrs.

Marilyn Beard and Mrs. Doris Locke. Cards were played and prizes awarded to Mrs. Helen Williams and Mrs. Nathans Kotzan.

A delicious lunch was served at a table, beautifully decor-ated with spring flowers. were made to attend Founders' Day at Lafayette, Sunday, April 22nd. THAN FORTY YEARS BreakrMexaf Store Sale (BE PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS month after month have caused thrifty-wist shoppers fO' Rexall Drug Store. They know that Rexall high quality ot shopping right here well worth while. SATURDAY SPECIALS 1 WALUES like these keep their eyes on the prices such as these, make 50c Dr.

Lyon Tooth Sanitary 12 18c 10c Woodbury Facial Soap, 3 for 20c- -Squibb-Aspirin-5 (Continued from page bne) Harz mountain pocket, where thousands 6f by-passed nazis were trying to wage a semi-guerilla war from the wooded caves and ravines. The mop-up bagged a secret hideout of the Berlin foreign office and 30 carloads "of German army and foreign office Hodges' men also consolidated their capture (Sf Leipzig and Halle, counting more; than captives taken in Leipzig alone. The U. S. Jrhird army on the Seventh's northern flank probed deeper into northwestern Czechoslovakia and eastward into the Chemnitz area; Unconfirmed Moscow reports said Third army patrols "probably.7 had contacted Russian troops in the Dresden area, 30-odd miles beyond Chemnitz.

The Third army's southern wing also was moving on the Czechoslovak border on a broad front jutting out within 60 miles of Pilsenhome of the great Skoda arms works. On the Seventh army's southeastern flank, 'French First army troops uncorked a sudden burst of speed that carried through the southern end of the Black Forest into Rottweil, "only 15 miles from the headwaters" of the Danube. There are French were 22 miles west of the former Vichy government hideout at Sigmaringen and 50 miles southwest of Stuttgart. Stuttgart already was menaced by other French columns striking down from the north and a U. S.

Seventh army fprce that wheeled in from the east to close the main escape roads for the enemy garrison. Negro Officer Dispute Under Probe By Army WASHINGTON, Apr. The war department Is Investigating the circumstances at Freeman field, near Seymour, where more than 100 negro air force officers w'ere ordered arrested during a controversy over the question whether fiegro officers could use the officers' club. Reports from the field said Col. Robert R.

Selway, post commander and commander of the 477th Bombardment Group, had ordered the officers' club reserved for the use of instructors, who were white officers. After the order was Issued, some 400 negro officers of the 477th Bombardment Group, training In medium bombers, were asked to sign the order saying they understood it. Some signed but others declined on grounds the order was in violation of army regulations. Subsequently; it wasundrstoodr three of the negro officers in training Jostled the provost marshal when they sought to enter the club in defiance of the commander's order. Thereafter more than one-fourth of the negro officers in training were placed under arrest and were sent last week to their former field, Godman field, Fort Knox, Kentucky, nearby and confined to quarters.

The negro officers held the commander's order was in violation of army regulation 210-10 which required that, any club on a post must be open to full membership to all officers on duty at the post. The 477th Bombardment Group consists of four' squadrons of B-25 medium bombers. At Freeman field there were more than 2,500 negro soldiers and 400 negro officers in training. The housekeeping and training staff of the post included about 250 white officers and 600 white soldiers. Attack State Control Over Local Affairs SALEM, April 20 (UP) Washington county councllmen took a swing at the 1945 Indiana General Assembly today, proclaimed their love of "home rule," and asserted that salary boosts voted by the legislature to deputy county officials were "unwarranted, unfair and unnecessary." Hoosier legislators set a $100 minimum on monthly salaries of deputy county Previously, Washington county deputies, with the exception of the deputy auditor, received $90 a month.

Councilmen took their stand in a strongly-worded resolution condemning "the practice ol our state and nationin assuming control of local affa.s." Enlarges Staff To Enforce OPA INDIANAPOLIS, Apr. 19. (UP) Director James D. Strickland of the Indiana district office of price administration, has launched what he termed an -unparalleled crack down" against meat blackmarket-ing. Strickland announced that the OPA had added three meat specialists and an enforcement attorney to the Indiana staff and that the new employes would check all slaughtering sources.

The OPA director said that the purpose of the campaign was to return a greater flow of meat to normal channels, by curbing "present Illegitimate channeling." Studded with deep bays, coves and inlets, the total length of the coast of Maine nearly is equal to the rest of the Atlantic coast states' shoreline combined. (Continued from page one) the soviet high jfimmand's con- firmation of the great offensive said Berlin was being Invested from three directions and that Russian guns were hammering the city's toner defenses. The first report of a possible junction of the American and Russian forces came from Moscow. United Press Correspondent Henry Shapiro reported from the soviet capital that Russian forces, after breaking through the Spree river defense line, were thrusting on toward a junction with the United States Third army forces advancing on Dresden. "In the Dresden sector, motorized soviet patrols probably already have contacted the scouts of Lt.

Gen. George S. Patton," Shapiro reported. In any event, the Moscow dis patch said, giant Stalin and Sherman tanks surging westward from the crumbled Spree line can easily exchange radio greetings with the Americans. Soviet field reports referred to Marshal Ivan S.

Konev's first Ukrainian army units "closing in on Dresden." But by nazi account the closest soviet approach to the Sax ony capital was at Bautzen, 25 miles Bury Ernie Pyle Beside Doughboys On Ie Shima Isle OKINAWA, Apr. 20 (UP) Ernie Pyle was buried on Ie Shima today beside of the doughboys he glorified In his newspaper dispatches. As a chaplain read a brief burial service and spoke the final words, a squad of 'rifleman fired a volley of shots and the flag-draped coffin was lowered into the ground. The lovable war correspondent, killed by Jap machine gun bullets Wednesday, was accorded a military funeral because he was a seaman first class In World War I. That, and not the fighting he did with his typewriter In this war, was decided upon as the official reason he was entitled to be burled with military honors.

CHICAGO, April 20. (UP)-Sig-ma Delta Chi, national professional journalistic fraternity, today announced award of the Raymond Clapper memorial award to Ernie Pyle. It was the second consecutive year the prize was given the famed war correspondent. He was chosen on April 2, sixteen days before he was killed. Liberty Center School To Present Spring Play On Friday evening, April 27, at 8:15, the students of Liberty Center high school will present their spring play.

"Little Miss Fortune" is a three-act comedy that will keep everyone, well-entertained throughout its humorous unraveling of the simple but interesting plot. The Liberty Center students participating In the play are: Cora Anderson, Crystel Martin, Richard Cushman, Loren Dillingham, Joan Sheridan, Freida Bell, Fred Bach-man, Norma Newcome, Norma Griffin, Alice O'Connor and John Schoon. The play is under the direction of Mrs. Helene Fierke. CUB SCOUTS Cub Scouts of Pack 20 and their parents met at the Presbyterian church Tuesday evening.

The meeting was opened by Mr. Sanford. Following the Pledge to the Flag and group singing, Ronnie Lines and Charles Trinkle were initiated into Den 3. Awards were made, a silver arrow to Robert Kerr and Ronnie Grable, and service stars to Melvin Walsh, Earl Jeff Inman, George Phillips, Howard Mcllvried, Bill Collins, and Leroy Russie. Interesting displays on "Transportation," and "Stunts" cleverly presented by Dens 1 and 2, were enjoyed by all.

Mrs. David Kerr and Mrs. Grieger, den mothers, received their registered certificates. The meeting closed with four living circles. Porter Memorial Hospital Notes A girl was born tody'to Mr.

and Mrs. Joseph Pier, of Wanatah. Mr. Pier is in the armed forces. Admissions Thursday were Owen Price, Pioneer Apartments, medical; Charles Able, 466 Park avenue, medical.

Dismissals today were Albert Helmberg, Valparaiso RFD. Mrs. Edward Zyanowski and baby, 257 Washington street. On pay day buy bonds I NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION -No. 3947 i Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed bv the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Porter County, State of Indiana, Executrix of the estate of Fred W.

Marquart, late of Porter County, deceased. Said, estate is supposed to be solvent. Gretchen Marquart Poncher, Executrix. April 18. 1945.

George W. Douglas, Attorney. (Apr. 20, 27, May 4) 25c Gillette Shave Cream 12c $1.00 Mar-o-Oil Shampoo 67c Waxed Paper, 80 sheets 9c The Ltrature department will; observe I annual poetry day at the club houi Tuesday afternoon at 2:30. Mi Harry Johnson is in charge othe high school poetry contest at will present the winners at this neting.

Mrs. Hold Boehme has prepared a paper i the subject "Reminiscences Each member is requested bring a favorite poem or stanza Mrs. V. E. Berry will sing.

AllWomi-n's club members are cordlay invited to attend and participate in this program. The first annual ten-day exhibit of Hoosi' Salon paintings at Memorial Auditorium in Gary closed Tuday with members of the Woman's club, Mes-dames Jot Hauff, Ray Dean, P. A. Cushman, A. O.

Dobbins, Fred Bartz, ancMlss Flora Reffelt, and members if the Valparaiso Tri Kappa, lisdames N. A. Sheldon, Joseph F. trennan, and the Misses Edna Agaand Clara Crosby acting as hossses. The Valparaiso organizatlcs are both members of the Hoosie Salon.

The exhit, the pick of over 700 works of followed the 21st Annual Showig of the Hoosier Salon in Indianeolis and was sponsored by the AlUsa National Club and public schds of Gary for the benefit of themblic and 37 northern Indiana ants, some of whom find it difficult get their pictures to Indlanapoli Partly because people are unableto obtain many other things thejneed with their good wages, sale, of the Hoosier artists have been pst encouraging the last few years, nd $5,000 has already been realize from this exhibit, and a number othe pictures still there have been dd. Pictures ff which prizes had been awarded we "Gray Hills of Winter" by Cun Bohm, first prize for the outstanng work in oil of the entire exhition, and "Enchanted Hills" by Sari Brandner, first prize for otstanding landscape in oil. Othei prizewinners were: From Leila by Margaret Adams; Dale Bes-sire; "Fruit md Fred Eilers; Ulliam Eyden; "Dr. Floyd Boys" Marie Goth; "White Sands of Floyd Hopper; "in Georges La Chance; Guest Ma-hrea Lehmaj "Marian's Catherine Mttison; "Clam Henri Mayer; "Afternoon J. Templeton; "Phlox and Frances Tran-barger; Bessie Weasel; "Rip Van Wikle Clifton Wheeler; Eva Yoder.

MrsrMnareVarrWtrtrxf the Altrusa Club.Jirector of auditoriums In the Gry schools, and wife of the late hea of the Gary schools ALLIED GUNS ARE -IITLER'S ONLY SALUTE (Continued Tom page one) capture. Accoring to the report, all nazi organlitions and government offices hat been evacuated to the Bavarian reoubt, where Hitler plans his last stnd. The dispatch said anything tat might identify nazi party mejbers uniforms, emblems, and evn books and pictures of Hitler hd been destroyed. Martin Borman nazi party leader for southern (ermany Including the Bavarian Als and Berchtes-gaden warned ptential deserters of sinking Gemany "whoever breaks his oath scoundrel. We will observe with 'atchful eyes." Hitler himself cpelled from the party a deputy tauleiter named Tesche from the Ou area including captured Halle an Merseburg, according to a DNI report.

Hitler ordered, "I degrao you and expel you from the partyfor the cowardly attitude expressed in your phone call. You can regsa honor only by trying yourself to te utmost in immediate front servie." In a different toe, Hitler thanked the gauletier oiFranken province, where a few thousand nazis made a desperate ist-ditch stand in the capital of Nurnberg. "We are now stating a fight as fanatical as that 'e had in our ascent to power yers ago," Hitler said in his mesage. "However great the enemy's speriority may appear at the preset moment, we will yet break it awe did in the days of old." The only birthdif greeting to Hitler made publicly was by the Luxembourg radio, a broadcast directed to the fueker personally. Said Luxembourg rdlo: 'If the date is rerembered at all it will be with horr-r and disgust.

You liave had the w.r you planned, the one you said ya would rather have at 5(1 than at 60. And now the war will end ling before your sixtieth birthday, wiich you will not live to see." Britain To Lift Blackout Monday LONDON, Apr. 20. (UV) The British blackout will be lifted Monday except for a fve-mile coastal belt, Home Secretary Herbert Morrison announced tody. It has been five -years and eigh months since the lights have buried at night in Britain.

Morrison said all restrictions -on home, factory and Jfflce blackouts would be removed xit that street lighting will not be tffected. Street lighting will contlnte curtailed as a power economy neasure. artist last year from Warsaw, and J. C. Templeton, whose work is similar to Frank Dudley's in the dunes.

Miss Gerard and Mr. Templeton spoke 'briefly about their own pictures there, indicated other outstanding entries, and were most gracious in making comments and answering individual questons. A number of favorites were not represented, as Frank Dudley, who has sickness in his family. The concensus of opinion seemed to be that the works were unusually well-hung, the placing having been supervised by Warner Williams, sculpted and head of the art department Culver Military Academy. Mr.

Williams was guest-speaker at the local club this winter. There were many visitors at Gary Tuesday including two or three classes of school children with their teachers. Besides the hostesses Tuesday'svisitors from Valparaiso were: Rev. and Mrs. Buel Horn; Fred Bartz and daughters, Norma and Maxine; the Misses Althea De-Witt and Ella Vincent, and Mrs.

W. I. Wilson. Local ladies there were also glad to again see Mr. and Mrs.

T. Guy Pierson, formerly of Valparaiso and now of Crown Point, and Mrs. William Mettler, of Gary, state chairman of approved schools, Daughters of the American Revolution, who spoke for the local DAR Monday evening. Mrs. Pier-son was a member of the local Woman's club and is a past 10th district chairman of music, Indiana Federation of Clubs.

Miss Leota Loop, who painted a flower picture, nowin the local club house, while members at a meeting here watched her, was also an outstanding exhibitor. Through the efforts and generosity of Miss Flora Reffelt, chairman of the Fine Arts Department, and other members of the local Woman's Club, it is also fortunate in possessing from the above named artists, "Forest by Frank Dudley, and "Cottage in by Clifton Wheeler. Also of interest is the fact that Miss Edna Agar, of Valparaiso, and Mrs. Lea-the Ponader Worthlngton, recently of Valparaiso, are members of the Hoosier Salon and in competition had pictures selected for the exhibit last year, and the fact that this 10th district of the Indiana Federation of Clubs and individuals from the district at the 1944 state con-venton, IFC, gave a painting by Dale Besslre, one of the above artists, to. Mrs.

Oscar Ahlgren, of Whiting, this district, junior past state" president, IFC, and record-ing-secretaryT General-Federation of Woman's Club, in honor of her election to a national office. O. Cushman. School Events At Washington Twp. Are Announced School activities at Washington Township school for the next month were announced today by Clarence Olinger, principal.

On April 27, senior students will present two one-act plays, "Sauce for the Goose" and "Double Affair." The band will furnish musical numbers under the direction of Reed Sterling, band leader. May 1, a pre-school health examination will be conducted by Miss Barbara Palmer, county nurse, with Dr. F. J. Klelnman as examining physician.

On May 1 a band concert will be held with the combined bands of Washington and Morgan taking part. On May 4 the Washington band will go to Morgan for a similar concert. On May 5, the seniors and juniors of the school will make their annual trip to Chicago. On May 11, school exhibit and award night will be observed at the school. The annual baccalaureate services for the 1945 graduating class will be conducted by Rev.

Oliver C. Starn, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, Valparaiso, on May 13. The annual commencement exercises of the graduating class will be held May 18, with R. C. Van Nice, Editor of School Activities, Topeka, Kansas, delivering the address.

are Clifford Kissinger, Harvey Miller. John E. Swanson, Dorothy Elliott, June Hill, Clarabelle Eawrence and Mildred Monroe. Cattle Feeders Subsidy Talked To Help Output WASHINGTON, April 20-(UPV-The office of price administration is revising the meat subsidy program in an effort to alleviate the nationwide shortage, it was learned today. At the sam time, It was reported, the war fodd administration is working out plans to give a direct subsidy to cattle feeders.

Informed sources said the OPA plan would be announced before the end of this week or early next week. They said the action was the direct result of meat industry complaints on Capitol Hill that OPA Is price-fixing meat packers out of business or into the black market and at the same time making it financially unfeasible for cattle feeders to "manufacture beef on the hoof." Flakes 19c large, 2 for 19c Moth Crystals 39c METAL DUST PANS 39c TUSSY JALFtlA and Removes Many Stains from Fine Fabrics Size $1.35 Powder 32c O0ytll totting Rexette for Ray's Soap Ivory Soap, 49c Elkay Washes Fresh $2.00 uilK Of U0tl" 4. ih.i pu'- Raise Textile Worker Pay To Up Production WASHINGTON, April 20-(UP) The return of low-priced clothing by late summer was predicted today as the government attacked the clothing shortage from a new angle in its efforts to get production up and prices down. Stabilization Director William H. Davis "last night approved a five-cent-an-hour wage increase for 50,000 CIO textile workers and tied his decision to the necessity for producing more textiles to hold down the cost of living.

At the same time Price Administrator Chester Bowles announced one of the last major steps In the government's program to roll back the retail cost of clothing by at least six per cent for lower and middle income families. The OPA chief Issued an order requiring clothing manufacturers to sell their goods at no more than the average price received in 1943. This, he said, should restore the pattern of price lines prevailing in that year. "When the government's program is established," Bowles said, "I can safely say that the dangerous rise In clothing prices will be halted and the pinch of high clothing prices on consumers' pocketbooks will realx noticeably." The lower-priced garments should begin to appear on retail shelves and hand's by late summer, he said. Scout Executives Talk Finances The executive board of Potta-wattomie Council, Boy Scouts of America, mei Thursday at 6:30 p.

in the main dining room of the Spaulding Hotel for its regular April meeting. A. K. Smith, council president, was in charge. Mr.

Smith led a discussion and study into the financial program of the council, with the aim of setting up a long term financial plan which will carry into the postwar period. A project for securing a visual education library and a. sound movie projector was presented. This project will involve the purchase of several of the most popular motion picture films which are available through the Visual Education Service of the National Council Boy Scouts of America. Among those present were: Martin Zimmerman, L.

E. Mcllvain and Paul A Cushman, all of Valparaiso, and William P. Glvens, Porter. The next meeting was announced for May 16th to be held in Valparaiso. News of4-H CLUBS The new president, Clyde Oast, called the meeting of Center Town ship 4-H Club to order on Tuesday.

It was decided- that Clyde would preside as president, and Donald Baker as secretary-treasurer. Don Llpke was elected as the new vice- president. Suggestions for a club name was' brought up. It was decided that everyone would submit a name at the next meeting. The winner will receive a bottle of pop.

furnished by Mr. Nye. All members are urged to get in more than one name, Donald Baker, Bill St. Ctalr, Don Lipke and Clyde Gast told of their experiences at the dairy Judging contest. One of the newest members, Gene Hinderer, left April 18th for the Navy.

Members wish him luck. Nina Bartley, club reporter. 10WKT ni: CO" 3jc and J0" i Conti ro'a Sfioiv "MSHAtooo VlBfinm Ac -39c TooH P(e 'tus taxes 7Sr i 39c Listeria H'I0n u' 59c -uca 49c JtT i. -uftfc1 IZL-- 0c Cold 89C 49 Sal 100 Plostj 25c xW ic 7ScC.r 25c Spray 50C M. Berber i R.l 'ou sir 60c Alt.

novs lu.t, fwi Rf9'or 59c Ol. in ampoo'Po, Kit sac 2a3 ooucr.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Vidette-Messenger of Porter County
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Vidette-Messenger of Porter County Archive

Pages Available:
334,757
Years Available:
1927-1995