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The Sandusky Register from Sandusky, Ohio • Page 10

Location:
Sandusky, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

VCN: I COURT HOUSE 1 Wrongful Death Case Settled During Trial City foiefa PROVIDENCE HOSPITAL HAS Trial Marino Poggiali, 1815 Syc- pIa lh third LlUrUlg I Hal amore Lme; Mrs. Eugene Wobser were a d1b 18 JL SL df St: Jjr 8 Chairman James Hendrickson dur- Settled in course of trial before; Maiam, 808 Tiffin-av; Mus lng the mon(h nieeting of the Trophy Dance By S.S.C. Outlined During Meeting H. Savord and a juiy Judge E. was the case of Harry Andrews, administrator of the estate of Paul Boyer, bay View, (Bernhardt G.

Zcihor I Jeannette Dunham, 734Vi st; Mrs. Arthur Biddle, $25,000 wrongful death; ccntral-av and Lois Amolsch Camp-st. Curran 1706 Sandusky Sailing Club Monday i night. The dance, which provides 1 (28: ro phies for the annual summer series, will be held Dec. 20 at the Knights of Pythias hall TI1E 3- SANDUSKY REGISTER-STAR- DEC.

9, 1947 GOOD SAMARITAN HOSPITAL with Robert Montgomery's orches- imd Lewis L. MarquarH. against! has discharged Mrs. Charles Tur -j tra featured, the Lecrone Benedict Ways, rie and baby, E. The sa il 0 rs also approved pur Detroit.

(Fiynn, Py and Krusc, ct Mrs. Willard Sprankel, 926 i iase and installation of a bronze Jefferson-st; Henry Lucal. Action had been brought be- Townscnd, and Mrs. Eugene cause of Boyer's death, in May; Warner, 820 Maple-av. last year, in result of a taxicab; and truck accident on Route 2 and! DISCHARGED FROM MEMOR- 6, near Vermilion, when a cab op-; iai Hospital were Mrs.

Carl Ncese crated by Boyer collided with a truck combine owned by the defendant company. The charge of negligence was made by bo Ji parties. CROSS-PETITION IS FILED Answer and cross-petition of Ymelde T. Contrcras. Orange- Grove, Texas, who is defendant in a divorce action instituted in the local common pleas court by Jacinto N.

Contrcras. Castalia, (James was filed today. Mrs. Gontreras. who married the defendant at Alice.

Texas in February, 1946. and who left the couple's Castalia home in July, this year, denies her husband's allegations of cruelty and neglect and the charge of wilful absence. She says that she returned to her parental roof in Texas because she was subjected to physical abuse on part of her husband and stood in fear of certain of the latter's threats. Parties have one minor child, and' in her cross-petition by which the defendant seeks the decree of divorce from her husband, Mrs. Contreras seeks the child's custody and requests the court to order him to pay $45 per month for its support.

and baby, 117 Hancock-st: Shirley Brown, Huron, and Leo Morgan, Lorain. plaque on the mast adjacent to the club house, which will bear the names of members killed dur ing service in World War II. The ciub also granted permission to members of the Sandusky Miss i Sea Scout ship to use the club Mrs. THREE MOTORISTS FOR- feitcd bonds in municipal court house one night weekly, under supervision and certain rules to be drawn by the board of trustees. Carl Miller, delegate to the annual Inter-Lake Yachting Asso- today.

They included Frank meeting in Detroit Satur- Whcoler. 22, charged with failing to obey a stop sign $5, and two persons, tagged lor overtime and prohibited area parking violations, $1 each. PROBATE COURT First and final account in the estate of Reid Eddy. A 20 -YEAR-OLD COLORED youth is being held today after he was found at 4 a. m.

standing inside a storm door of a home on Center-st, according to police. He is to be questioned by detectives who arc investigating several burglaries. HERBERT BLAND, 1411 PER- kins-av, reported the theft of $39, contained in an envelope, from his home, police said today. Bland told police the money was taken while he was away, and believed the front door had not been locked. MR.

AND MRS. CLIFFORD Miller, 319 Shelby-st, are the parents of a son born at Providence Hospital instead of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miller, 634 W. Parish- st, as reported by the hospital Saturday.

THE AUXILIARY OF THE Final and distributive account! Disabled American Veterans will in the estate of Andrew Polta. jhave a regular meeting tonight at Second partial account in the. 8 o'clock at the G. A. R.

hall on estate of Gertrude Westerhold. Columbus-av, Mrs. Robert J. Inventory in the matter of the Brown, commander, said today. trusteeship of funds created un-i der the will in the estate of Bess! MRS.

ARTHUR NEIDLER, W. Danks I Wahl-rd, reported to the sheriff's Application to transfer real estate in the estate of Catherine Baumeister. department that she has found an auto wheel and tire near her premises which may be claimed Will admitted to probate in the'by the rightful owner upon proper estate of Olive M. Gerow. 'identification.

DISMISS INJUNCTION ACTION Dismissed by Judge E. H. Savord upon application by the plaintiff was the injunction action of the Bay View Property Owners Association, Bay Vie (Schwer and Moore), against F. Homer Halladay and Florence Halladay. rural Bay View, (Catri and Catri).

It was claimed by the owners WALTER WINKLE, SON OF Mrs. John Hess, 506 E. Adams-st, who was injured in an auto-train accident is at Community Hospital at Bedford, and would like to hear from his friends. FRED HALL, ASSOCIATED with the Dictaphone Corporation will present a movie in or called "Hello Business," at the association, which has jurisdiction! meeting of. the Lions club Wed over building restrictions of Ba.yl nesda ron Christmas View allotments and 31 for ns ailcl tnci i' lad that the defendants violated a cer-; scheduled lor Dec.

tain building restriction. The plaintiff averred that in constructing and enlarging a certain chvell- day. reported on the election of officers, finances and said that the ILYA regatta is to be held at Put-in Bay starting August 8. The 22nd annual Sandusky Bay Re gatta was then set for July 31 and August 1 with William Sudbrink, vice-commodore, as general regatta chairman. Albert Simon then read 1he proposed changes to the club constitution and by-laws, which are to be acted upon by the members at the January meeting.

John Emery was taken in as a new member of the organization. Following the business meeting members were taken on a mental cruise of the West Indies and the Caribbean Sea by Paul R. Tappan, Mansfield stove manufacturer. The Mansfielder told of his 90-day, trip from New York City to within 100 miles of South America and return aboard his 52-foot ketch. The talk was illustrated by brilliantly colored slides which Tappan took on the trip.

He said that after leaving the Bahama Islands the rest of the trip south was almost always within sight of land, the various islands being so close to each other. Tappan said the trip by sailboat is inexpensive due to the rate of exchange on the foreign islands and told of buying a bushel of grapefruit for, 10 cents. DEATHS AND FUNERALS WEATHER REPORT I By U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU 9 Sandusky nnd Vicinity: Partly cloudy and somewhat colder tonight and 'Wednesday.

Low temperature tonight about 1(5 degrees in the city and near 12 degrees out of town. Fresh northwest winds this afternoon, diminishing tonight and becoming northeast to east Wednesday. Lake Erie: Northwest winds 25-30 mph, becoming north to northeast tonight and cast to northeast Wednesday. Snow flurries. Islands: Mostly cloudy with liklihood of occasional light snow flurries.

Winds 3 p. m. 25-milc northwest; 6 p. m. 22 mile northwest, 9 p.

m. 20 mile north-northwest, midnight 20 mile north, 6 a. m. 20 mile northeast, 9 a. m.

20 mile northeast to east. Shippers' Forecast: Protect shipments for next 36 hours from temperatures as follows: Northwest 12 degrees, west, southwest and south 17 degrees, east 14 degrees. Services for Fred J. Thompson were held this morning at the Charles J. Andres Sons' Funeral Home and at St.

Mary's the Rev. C. J. Dobmeyer, officiat- JJadison-sts light goes into opera Mail-Order Romeo Nabbed, Wanted For Fleecing Widows PITTSBURGH, Dec. 9 James A.

Lynch, 47, self-styled "mail-order Romeo" who made a living fleecing widows he met through matrimonial agencies, was held here today for Chicago police. Lynch was arrested yesterday on a warrant for taking $6,000 from Mrs. Anne Jordan, a Chicago widow with two children whom he married last October. When arrested, police found in his possession some 40 photographs of middle-aged women with whom he had corresponded, dozens of love letters, a blank marriage certificate, blank checks from several banks, newspaper clippings and $4,000. The tall, slender, balding Lynch told police that he clipped stories of fatal automobile accidents so that he could correspond with the victims' widows.

He wrote to them to get an estimate of their wealth and of 1he amount of insurance carried by the victim. He told police he met Mrs. Jordan after corresponding from Ashtabula, through a matrimonial agency. On Thanksgiving Day she gave him $6,000 to into the used car business." Instead he came to Pittsburgh. Mild-Mannered Man Confesses Shooting 2 Wives, Killing One WASHINGTON, Dec.

9 mild-mannered restaurant worker was held here today as a modern-day bluebeard who allegedly shot two of his wives, killing one. Lacey Jennings. 36, was taken into custody by Pvt. Joseph C. Snyder of the Pennsylvania state police and FBI agent Ralph Lepore on multiple charges dating back to 1941.

His fellow workers at the bus station lunchroom where he worked as a counterman were amazed a "harmless, jolly sort of a man But police said Jennings admitted, after first denying, that he shot and killed his first wife, Mildred, 26, with a shotgun in the home of a friend at Unionville, on Oct. 27, 1941. Questioning disclosed that he also feared he had killed his second wife, whom he married after fleeing to Kankakee, 111. He said, according to authorities, that he married Lorraine Gloise and lived with her five years. They had three children, two of whom are living.

Last March he became estranged from his second wife. On May 15, he went to his wife's home with a revolver and in a struggle with his wife the gun discharged. Seeing his wife and small daughter drop, Jennings fled, believing one of them dead. The bullet actually wounded his wife in the hand and struck his sister- in-law in the hip. LOCAL TELEGRAPH MARKETS LIVESTOCK than Ch coin CLEVELAND LIVESTOCK CLEVELAND, Dec.

9 More active yesterday, prices steady. Steeri $28-34; good $25-28; med $20-20 SI7-20; low grade Hellers: ch $25-28; good $22-25; ined $19-22; com low grade $14-17. Cows: choice good $14-15; med $12-14; cutter cows $11-12; canners Bulls; ch $20-23, good $10-20; low grade $12.50 16. Active, steady. Ch good $20-20; med $15-20; com S10-15.

SHEEP AND Active, steady, ch good $20-22; med $18-20; yrlg lambs; ch $15-18. Sheep: wethers $8-9; ch ewes $7-8; com Bc Active, 25c lower. They described him US Heavyweights 300 lbs 1 'medium nnd butchers 180-3UO lbs yorkers 160-180 lbs light lights 140-160 lbs $24-25; pips 100-140 lbs $22-24; roughs, good quality stags, good quality 7.50-20. Officials Checking Claim Of Man That Hitchhiker Shot Him CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, Dec. 9 early butcher market steady Later trade dull and about 25c lower.

'Sows generally 50c Top $26.25. Bulk gd and ch 180-300 lbs butchers Lighter wght scarce; few gd and ch 1G0-1P0 lb barrows and gilts bulk gd and ch 350-500 lb sows few to $24 .50. calves steers and yrlgs uneven. Good and ch yilfis nnd ch weighty steers strong to 25c higher. High med to good weighty steers weak to 25c lower.

Heifers firm; cows steady to weak. Bulls active and scarce; strong to 25c higher. Vcalers firm to 50c higher Stock cattle steady. Most good and ch steers nnd yrlgs top $39 paid for ch 1150 lb steeis; a new all-time high. Bulk gd and ch heifers $20-31; top heifers $31.50, cutters $14 down Med and good cows hvy sausage bulls to $20.50 Vcalers $27.50 down.

4.000; moderately active and mostly steady; early lop S24 for several lots and loads of good and ch native and fed woclcd western lambs. Med and good woolskins S21 50- S23.50; com down to $17 good and ch yrlgs $20.30. Three loads mixed com to ch mostly gd slaughter ewes Operating Traffic (Continued from Page One.) ing. Burial was in St. Mary's Cemetery.

Pallbearers were Gene McLaughlin, and John, William, Howard, George and Dewitt Thompson. SANDUSKY CHESS CLUB will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. ing the front of the building in the offices of Alden Seitz, 101 brought to within six or eight feet of the prescribed building line, the limit was 15 feet. The association had requested that defendants remove the part of the building which extended over the building line and that they be enjoined from further construction.

MATTER UNDER ADVISEMENT Inquiry was made in common pleas court today by Judjge- Savprd of the recent Willfam Ryan, Sandusky, who is under a suspended reformatory sentence Columbus-av. A halfhour instruc tion will be given by Dr. Ernest Speycr prior to the ladder tournament play. Services for Charles B. Seeholzer were held this morning at the residence on Kelleys Island and from St.

Michael's Church, the Rev. Charles Haley, officiating. Burial was in Kelleys Island Cemetery. Pallbearers were Alvin and Jack Betzenheimer, Peter Kekelik, James, Thomas and Donald Seeholzer. Earl Gilbert, 914 W.

Washing- ton-st, appeared before the commission and suggested that new markers or double street stripes be placed at Washington-st and fin-av, cautioning motorists of the narrow, dangerous curve at the entrance to the street. The matter was referred to the city manager for his recommendations. Willoughby Train Wreck Hips Up Four Tracks WILLOUGHBY, Dec. 9 New York Central trains were switched from main-line tracks here during the night to those the Nickle Plate railroad to bypass wreckage of a derailed arising out of his having pleaded i 11 ei lt guilty earlv this vcar on a charge! 1racks of 1,10 ma easl of breaking and entering Ai west line were nppec up late last charge of violation of probation 1 hl lu loaded ireight and was made by a community l1 tank cars oi an eastbound New; cnt Central freight were de- Ryan, who appeared in railed No onc as offered certain testimony and- Judge Savord bus taken the mat-; 14 HURT WHEN NAVY ter under advisement. Ryan was; COT TTG TM niip ordered back to the county atlir orL.il» nALt inl CUKl0dy ShC1 ifI BOSTON.

Dec. 9 (UP) Four-' William S. boutcr. toen workmen wcre hurtf otle PETITION' FOR DIVORCE 'critically, and about lliO others Petition for divorce, on Rk kci1 whcn of extreme cruelty and gross ne- hc 18.000-ton loimer S. navy gleet of dutv was tiled in com- Umk cr Pongansct split in hah mon pleas court bv Mae Marie whlle undergoing conversion at Dawes, Castalia, against Lester an Lasl BoMon slip.

Dawes, Venice Parties were mar- 1 nl the 1 none of the ried here in September. 1945. and nu ils directly at the Funeral services for Mrs. Irma Northeim, 62, a former San- duskian who died Sunday in the Springfield Masonic Home, will be at 2:30 p. m.

Wednesday in the Laible Funeral Home, Norwalk. Readers of the First Church of Christ, Scientist, Sandusky, will be in charge of the services and burial is to be in Woodlawn Cemetery. Local Fire Alarms, Rescue Squad Calls (To report a fire, phone 131) (Today) 12:24 p. 1228 Os- borne-st, Sandusky Baking overheated oven stack ignited roof timbers; no damage (General alarm.) Liquor Board Issues Castalia Beer Permit An ordinance accepting the plat and dedicating that part of Milne- st to be extended to Harrison-st, was adopted. NORWALK, Dec.

9 Sheriff Jesse Mellott and state highway patrolmen today expressed doubt about the story told to them by Clarence H. Perry, 57, Oberlin, claiming that he was shot accidentally by an unknown hitchhiker. Perry is in a critical condition in Memorial Hospital. Perry told investigators that he picked up a hitchhiker late Monday on Route 20 and was shot as the man fumbled for cigarets in the glove compartment of Perry's car. He claimed that the tran- sient got out of the car a short Mime later, taking the grin with him.

The bullet pierced his left chest near the heart and came out near his left hip. Since there were no burns on his suit, coat, but only his vest and shirt, investigators believe the wound might have been self inflicted. When Perry left, home Monday afternoon his wife, Zora, later told police, that she cautioned him against driving the car due to poor health and despondency. When he did not return in a few hours, Mrs. Perry searched the house for a revolver and found it was missing.

Perry, a World War I veteran who was gassed in service, had several ribs and one lung removed in previous trips to hospitals. He was one of the first bus drivers between Cleveland i labor, and Toledo upon abandonment i of the electric cars. Printer Dispute (Continued from Page One.) STOCKS BONDS 9 (AP) NEW YORK. Dec. stocks: Allegheny Am Can Am Radiator Am Rollinfi Mills Am Smelting Am Am Tobacco Anaconda Copr A Atl Refining Baldwin locomotive RR Bendix Aviat Bethlehem Steel Noon 34 55 152 1 (ili 81 33 PRODUCE CHICAGO PRODUCE CHICAGO, Dec.

9 lbs; steady: 93 score 80c; 02 score 87c; 00 score 83c; 30 score 74c. Carlols: 90 score 2 fi9 score 75c. cases; firm; extios 1, 63-G5c; extras 2, 60-63c; 3 and 4, 57-58c; standards 1 and 2, 55-57c; 3 nnd 4, 52-56c: current receipts 52-50c; dirties 39i 2 checks 38 lie. 3 1 H7'J. 31 41 til 35 12 5 471 51 7 Borden 40 Briggs Mfg RR Chrysler Cities Service Cohim El Contl Motors Curtiss.

Wright Douglas Aircraft Dupont El Autolitc Erie RR Gen Elec Gen Foods Gen Motors Goodrich Goodyear UarbWalkcr Interlnkc Ir Jut Harvester Johns Manville Kroger Lib-O-F Glass Montgomery Ward Natl Biscuit Natl Dairy Central Norfolk Western North American Ohio Oil Packard Penney AURAL. CITY MARKETS WHAT r-AKMRKS ARK PAID Grade large white eggs 61c Grade largo brown eggs 56e eggs 41c 100 lbs Elevator! Central Erie Supply Elevator Ass'n WHAT FARMERS ARE PAID 34 I New wheat, bu $2.92 35 Shelled corn, bu $2.50 nil 2 New ear corn, moist, cwt. $3.07 New 30 lb oats, bu $1.30 Soybeans, bu $3.77 Buckwheat, cwt $4 00 si: 1 lb 87' 52 30 27' 12' 57 4 43 Pcnn RR 5: Phillips Pet Procter Gamble Pullman Pure Oil Radio Corp Repub Steel Sears Roebuck Servel Shell Union Soconv Vacuum Standard Oil Ind Standard Oil Transamerica Un Carbide United Aircraft Ruhr Steel ,4 Wt'stinshuuse El 2 Wheeling Steel Younpstown 52 24' 25 37i 11 2 10'. Graded Eggs in extras. I 58-02c dozen; U.

S. standards 1 and 2, 49-52c; current receipts 47-48c; dirties 36c; checks 34c. Cleveland Eggs, Poultry CLEVELAND, Dec. 9 Department ot Agriculture composite market for Cleveland area bing prices). Government graded eggt in cases lconsumer grades) large AA whltu 77c; brown 72c; large A white 70-73c; brown 08-70c: medium A white brown 61-G3c; small A white 49-54c; brown 49-52e; large white 64-C5c; brown G4-65c.

Wholesale egg grades (prices paid f.o.b. Cleveland market, cases Included): Extra 1 ar.o 2 large (minimum CO percent A quality) while 65-68c; brown Gl-flSc; medium white 52-56c; brown 48-54c. Poultry prices (paid f.o.b Cleveland market); Fowl, colored p.cd htwy 27- 29c; lephorn and light 20-22e: roasters 37-39c; fryers 38-39c; broilers Irvv-rs. Leghorn and 45 30c: old roosters 10-17c: young 45 5 young hens 40-47c; young ducks 33-35C 33-34c. GRAIN RANGE American Newspaper Publishers) CHICAGI Association.

i The Inland group charged thc jD oc union with refusing to negotiate i May Toledo Grain contracts with 50 members. Julv Sept The ITU policy already has pro-: CORN strikes by typesetters I ec. Mar. Mnv July duced Mav against 12 newspapers fi vc iy cities. More than 1,700 union mcm-jsep bers are on strike against De newspapers which have a total cir culation of more than copies.

i Sept. In brief, the labor board's com-i plaint against the union was that the ITU encouraged "slowdowns," feather-bedding practices, payments for services not performed and attempts to coerce the publishers. In its answer, the union claimed the NLRB has no juridiction in the case and that the Taft-Hartley law is unconstitutional. The ITU claimed th'e revised National Labor Relations act deprives the ITU members of liberty without due process of the Iawi contrary to the Fifth Amendment and imposes upon them "involuntary servitude contrary to the Thirteenth Amendment." The union said the law denies the printers the right to cease work or to refuse to sell their Dec 9 (UP) 1 Open High Losv Noon 307 303 295 297 295' 197' -j 20! 203 2G0 14 2 (53 254' i 255 254-'a 250 256 284 250 258' 250 252 '1. 249 3 i 252' 239 241 238 3 241 225 1 227 i 225'i 222 1 12G 120 11 5 1 1 1 5 3 Dili 11 i no' 4 i oo 100 100' 02 92' Ul-'i 92 2P.0 380 385 i 378 383 378 383 381 381 Toledo grain on track 33c.

New York rate nominal. Wheat. No. 1 soit red No. 2 Corn No.

2 yellow Onls No. 2 white a I SI 25-1 20; No. 2 soybeans. yellow 85-3 8G. SISTER OF CHARITY DIES CINCINNATI, Dec.

9 Sister Rose Anthony Obcrding. who joined the Sister of Charily order 39 years ago. died yesterday at the age of 58. Judge Holds Decision On Rent Control Ruling CLEVELAND. Dec.

9 Judge Paul Jones has agreed to a stay of execution of his decision holding rent controls unconstitutional pending a government appeal to the U. S. Supreme Court. Jones agreed with acting house Expediter Tighe Woods the danger existed that many landlords would take advantage of the decision before the Supreme Court had ruled. Resolution was adopted to construct, relay or repair a sidewalk on part of lot 17, Jackson-st as requested by waiver by Elizabeth Croft.

ADA Approves (Continued from Page One.) Three other ordinances were adopted Monday night. The city manager was authorized to enter into a contract with the Electron Recorder Co. of Marion for pur- chase of one soundscriber for usejt 0 in municipal court and police de partment at a price of $550. An- nor and UNRRA other ordinance called for work to' proceed with the improvement of Lockwood-av from the end of the existing sewer north to Cove channel by constructing a storm sewer, and the city manager was authorized to enter into a contract U1 iu: with the Sandusky Crane Service) failed to attain its objectives de for construction of this storm i spite the outlay of billions of dollars, the ADA described the of rising prices on the now virtually exhausted British Loan of 1946. Signers of the ADA statement include Sumner Welles, former undersecretary of state: Mrs.

Franklin D. Roosevelt, delegate the United Nations; Herbert Lehman, former New York gover- director; Paul Porter, former OPA administrator and chief of the U. S. economic mission to Greece; and Publisher Mark Ethridge of the Louisville Courier-Journal and Times. Declaring that America's foreign economic policy thus far has construction water sewer.

separated in September, UilG. Truck Driver Near Death After Crash ispot where the bleak occurrei I Prevented fatalities, officials said COLUMBUS, Dec. 9 Ohio department of liquor control! today announced new beer and permits were issued to William L. Stark, Spring and Swan- sis. Castalia, carryout permit.

Five Day Forecast NORWALK. Dec. 9 Jerome M. Foltz. 41, Detroit truck driver, is battling for in Memorial Hospital here a result of an accident in jront of W.

Main- si. Driving a loaclf with four new ear Fo able to straighten wheels after making' went over ihe curb, tree. The tractor cab caut: and Foltz was icscuei man H. Hoerneman. liinniru'ton.

a passing suffered a compound fraciure ot the right leg. a broken tured nose and inieina! injuries. and will was un ii-s truck colder a curve, l.uiim a on hie He ll! For Lakes rie, Ontario South Shore: Temperatures average near seasonal normal. Jiial maximum degrees in cast In degrees in the west. Normal minimum degrees in the eaM lo 24 decrees in the west.

Colder Wednesday becomin--', wanner Thursday and Friday and Sunday. Precipitation will awragc near "-i inch. Rain or snow late Thursday and again Saturday. Snow flurries Friday and Sunday. FAIR BOARD ELECTS FREMONT, Dec.

9 Six men been re-elected directors of he Sanduskv-co fair board. are H. A. Waggoner, Fremont; IF 1.. Balsizur, Sandusky-tp; Lester Nor- Uampshcr, Ballville-tp; Clyde Mitchell, Jackson-tp and John Kowalk, The iinancial report showed the board bad a balance of $18,442.

Lone bid of the Sandusky Motor Sales for furnishing the police department with a sedan was accepted. The company entered a bid of $1,630.45 for a 1947 Ford eight cylinder super deluxe Forder car equipped with hot water heater and left hand spotlight, and with trade-in allowance $1,100 for the police car use, making a net trade price $530.45. Price includes of electrical generator and trical controls to the new car from 'j (he auto now in use. four-year European recovery pro gram as opening "incredible opportunities of creating a better world." IRONTON MONSIGNOR DIES IRONTON, Dec. 9 Monsignor James H.

Cotter, 90, pastor of St. Lawrence Catholic of Church for 58 years, died today now in I after a two-week illness. Reports for November of the city mechanic, parks-greenhouses- nursery and golf, forestry, cemetery, engineer, water distribution, street, license and permit and po- lice departments were and placed on file. E. W.

KAISER ACOUNTANT AUDITOR Audits, Systems, Costs, Taxes Public Accounting 1202 Fifth St. Ph. 2424-R. Sandusky. Ohio Cash farm income from milk in the United States increased from $986 million in 1932 to $3,716 million in 1946.

NEED A CASH LOAN OF $100 to $500 Get ihe money you need here to pay bills, buy needed lhings for yourself and family, meet ANY emergency lhal calls for EXTRA CASH. 169 E. Washington Row Large Assortment Barometers AND THERMOMETERS Field GLASSES 4.95 up With Case. Fed. lax inc.

Holzaepfel Bros. Erie County Investment Co. COOK FURNACE CO. 1625 Thomas St. Sundusky, O.

turn XHm 1m I hi Gift Suggestions Shop our store many, many practical gifts that are so ideal to give for gifts that are appreciated for many months to come. Work Benches Just the right gift for the man of the house. Well constructed. Girl Driver 'Continued from Page One.) TODAYS LOCALS WOULD I'LIKKS ON LAST LEG DAYTON, Dec. 9 (UP' George Truman and Clifford Evans, round-the-world "flivver' plane fliers, look off from the Dayton airport at Vandalia at A driver was injured slightly 11:34 a.m.

today for tnis morning when his on Ihe next-to-last leg sirilc 'k a fire plug, and ra. i iaunl. lcisurelv lobe-circling SECOND PRISONER NABBED, Doc. 9 1 The second of five dangerosus'' federal prisoners who escaped from the L'. S.

Center at Springfield was' captured early today after 14. block automobile chase. Deteciive Car! Sph.us identified the prisoner as Edward Ma- Harrison, 31. J. A.

OOOD FURNITURE CO 'OREc FEAST 0 en every tiiMht until Clirist- 1 1 auto another blinded by the according to inii; PI ione 1745 Full cr Ft FIT: if-s Chris tin us anklin St. intikL- Gilts Ph. nice I OK NEEDY Dec. 9- I UP' Employes of the KalMon Purina Cereal Co. today voted unanimously to forego their annual rd a nias given by the company mining order to provide food European children.

for hungry, Milton said. reported he was infrequent police. Gordon T. Canning, 45. Cleveland Heights, wa.s injured when his car to avoid hitting the rear of another on Clevcland- Pipe-sl, and struck a fire Driver of the other a car was Bellamy, 308 Beli-av, police Our Christmas Carol Call at our office; Koch ins.

102'' W. Monroe St! Robert M. Gruber, 1107 Tyler- I'ATKOE ASKS SATE DKIVING 1st, told police the sun blinded him COLUMBUS. Dec. 9 i.V' his car collided with another "Play it be hero for Christ-ldriven by' Arthur .1.

Oswald, 1529 mas" is the slogan of the state at Central-av and ay department's HI47 cam'-! paign fur sale driving during holidays. WANT ADS BRING RESULTS PENNSYLVANIA RESTAURANT Huron Street STEAKS CHOPS ROAST BEEF ROAST PORK SUNDAY DINNER SPECIAL Chicken and Home Made Noodles OPEN 24 HOURS EVERY DAY. PHONE 979 OPENING DEC. 12th MOORE'S CHRISTMAS TREE LOW East Madison and Elm Sts. The finest selection of trees in years and at the right prices.

TOYS See our selection today of nothing but quality toys. Metal, plastic and wood. CHRISTMAS TREE LIGHTS 1.95 to 3.95 Auth-O-Tone DOOR CHIMES No batteries or electricity required for those fine door chimes. Several different nnd attractive styles to ehoose from. HOUSEHOLD HARDWARE iy, fi 1 ill fi if f.

Sv GLIDDEN FAMOUS PAINT £STABUSHED '90 7 PHONE 3472.

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