MAY 25, 1945
Page Five
President's Aide
Spots in News
DEAN OF SOUTH BEND
BANKERS PASSES AWAY:
Charles L. Zigler, dean of the
South Bend banking fraternity
(57 years in the business), passed
away suddenly in his residence,
.816 West Colfax avenue, at 6:20
p. m. Wednesday. He returned
home from the bank about 5, had
a light dinner and walked about
his yard. Returning to the house
he was seized with a very severe
pain in his face and neck, sat in a
rocking chads? and a moment later
fell to the floor.
Mr. Zigler was born in Laporte
county Feb. 5, 1866, a so_a.o_S_he
late Mr. and Mrs. John W. Zigler,
birthplace was known as Bootjack
from the forking of the roads west
of 2. He was educated in the Wjlls
township school in Laporte county
and in Holmes Business college in
Laporte.
As a young man he was a stenographer in Laporte, later with
the Studebaker Bros. Manufacturing company, now the Studebaker corporation, and then with
the South Bend Chilled Plow company. On Oct. 4, 1888, Mr. Zigler became a messenger with the
First National bank. He continued
with the bank through the" remainder oi, its existence and iol-
lowed with its successor, the Fi_fs.
Bank & Tr<_n_t company, of which
he was vice president.
-___■. __igter was married June 1,
188#„ to. Miss Grace M. Norris,. of
this city. Besides Mrs. Zigler he
is survived! by a daug___er, Mrs.
Charles R. Hull 405 Lamonte Terrace; a son, J. Norris Zigler, 8.00
East Jefferson boulevard, and one
sister, J^rs. Mary R.. Leonard, of
Los Angeles, Calif. He was a
Presbyterian, a Republican, member the South Bend Country club,
the South Be«d Rotary club, Sou-h-
Be»d lodge No. 394, F. & A. M.,
the Scottish Rite, Royal Arcanum;
and Association of Commerce.
-.fit ,1921 Mr. Zigler was elected
president of the Indiana Bankers'
association. For 10 years he served
on. the executive council of the
American Bankers' association,
xxx
WASTE-PAPER CO_L_L__-_-TION
TO BE TAKEN SUNDAY:
"Get out the scrap a__d slug »-
Charles G, Ross, 59, is President
fruman's press secretary. He
and the President have been
friends since high school days,
Boss is on leave from the St,
Louis Post-Dispatch whil© hold-
big- the $I0,Q00-a-year White
House post.
G8t Passports
(From Page Five)
to the department of agriculture
—where it always should have
been, ua-der- a proper secretaryship.
And all that is that, — and
more fuss about it than in England over the resignation of a
pjime minister, and with him
the ousting of an entire cabinet.
But in England they do such
things to get something done,
conformity to the public will
—while here everything is politics, just politics.
school boys and Boy Scouts will
j work on the trucks with thedriv-
I ers. Some trucks are being sup-
j plied by the city street and county
highway departments. Newspa«-
■ pers, magazines and corrugated
paper should be tied into separate-
easy-to-handle bundles,
xxx
CHARLEY EGENROAD ON
jSTATE AIRCRAFT BOARD:
Members of Indiana's newly-
I created aeronautics commission
have been named by Gov. Ralph
F. Gates. They are Dr. George A
Starr, director of the bureau ol
business research, Indiana university; Guy T. Henry, president oi.
the Central Indiana Gas company
Muncie; Morrison A. Rockhill,
Warsaw attorney; Gene Dawson
aviation editor of the Indianapolis
News, and Charles L. Egenroad, of
The South Bend Tribune. Herschei
A. Hollopeter, traffic director or
the Indiana State Chamber of
Commerce, will serve as director
until a permanent director is appointed by the governor. The
commission held its first meeting"
Thursday.
xxx
SOUTH BEND MAY GET
SUPER-EXPRESS HIGHWAY:
The possibility of a super-express highway cut across Sou-h
Bend from east to west after th-'
war, was revealed here Wednesday afternoon by C. E. Vogelsang
chief engineer of the state highway commission of Indiana, when
he disclosed that U. S. highway
No. 20 probably will be recommended by the commission for in-
clusion in a national system of interstate highways.
These interstate highways ar*
to -become the super traffic lanes
of the nation, probably will be
(On Page -sixteen)
Jap," Giles L. Cain, city salvage
director, urges in connecttb.. with
pre]?---__tu_ns for the city-wide collection of waste paper in South
Bend Sunday. Mr. Cain suggests
that bundles be put at the curbstone in front of homes Sunday
morning early.
More than 50 trucks^ :rg_ost ©_
them marshaled by Walter E.
Biggs, president of South Bend
local No. 364, Teamsters, C-__h__*-
feurs & Helpers, unifi-.,. will be engaged in the- co-feet-©-*. • H_g-_
How Indiana's $2,500,000 War
-Vfemoria! Look to Architects
V Originator
&cid Indigestion
Relieved in 5 minutes or
double your money back
When excess stomach acid causes painful, suffocating gas, sour stomach and heartburn, doctors usually
prescribe the fastest-acting medicines known for
symptomatic relief—medicines like those in Bell-ana
Tablets. No laxative. Bell-ans brings comfort in a
Jiffy or double your money back on return of bottla
to us. 25c at air druggists.
Victor de Labeleye, one of Belgium's delegates to the United"
Nations Conference at San Francisco, demonstrates the V-sign
he originated while working in
London in co-operation with the
Belgian underground. He is a
former Minister of Education,
The Dionne Quints ace 11 years
old. And their precedent-shattering entrance may have started a
trend in multiple births. At least,
there have been numerous reports,
some later authenticated, of the
stork bringing along seme extras,
and all since the Dionnes were
horn. Read about them in The
America-. Weekly, the magazine
distributed with this Sunday's
(May 27) Chicago Herald-American.
Say You Saw It in The Mirror
FOR BETTER FARMS
Contact Pioneer Farm Brokers
THE FARM EXCHANGE
L. S. ORI, Owner
1328 W. Indiana Ave.
PHONE 3-6856
Tortured man gets help?
Lemon Juice
Mixed at Home
Relieved
RHEUMATIC PAIN
says Sufferer}
"1 have used ALLENRU for several:
months. I could hardly walk on account
of my knees. But now those pains are
relieved. I can go like a race horse
now," Mort Shepard of Ohio.
Don't be a victim of the pains and
aches caused by rheumatism, lumbago
or neuritis without trying this simple,
inexpensive recipe you can mix at
home. Two tablespoons of ALLENRO,
plus the juice ef '/_ lemon in a glass of
water. Try a bottle TODAY! Be entirely satisfied with it— or money back.
854*. Drug- stores.
The architect's conception of how the Indiana World War Memorial
in the State's Capital wiH look when the. new structures' are built.
THE Indiana War Memorial
Plaza a. Indianapolis will be
the only one of its ]_-jr_c_ in the
world when the three new national American Legion headquarters
holdings are erected. Pfewns. te
cs__vert the $2,560,000, appropriated by the Indiana General Assembly reeently, into a "I_vi»g
memorial to* the veterans of Indiana" are now underway. The appropriation will be used for three
new buildings along with present
Legion headquarters building to
form a symmetrical square with
the cenotaph in the center.
The new buildings will provide
national and state offices for the
American Legion and state offices
for various other veteran organizations. The money appropriated
by the assembly represents only
$6.25 per veteran serving from the
State of Indiana, had it been distributed in a cash bonus. The Le-
gaoa recently led the fight which
gave veterai-S $300''each oj* <_*s*
charge and opportunity to return
to college at government expense,
and works -__round the dtewk" fat
welfare of veterans.
Construction of the _*ew. structures, is expected to be started as
soon as war priorities are lifted.
It is hoped to complete the new
buildings by 1946.
The National American Legion,
whose headquarters center in the
World War Memo-Tal plaza, has
enrollec. more than 1,500,000 vet-
erans oi? World Wars I and II at
this writing. It is anticipated that
the membership of the K_r__o__al
Legion will reach one and three
quarters million, before the books
close this year, and eventually will
approach the five miHton mark.
The Indiana Legion has 55,000
members enrolled and of this
number, 9,300- are World War II
veterans.
ThG¥fre
beck them up with YOUR dollars!
AS THE battle lines approach
- -the heart of the enemy's
homeland, the _%_-_ang grows
fiercer.. ..and more costly in men,
materiel and money. That's one
reason why every sed-blooded
American must back -his mighty
7th War Loan with every dollar
he can lay hands on. Another rea-
son is that this is really two drives
in one. In the same period last
year, you were asked to invest in
two war loans, as against one this
time.
No need to tell you that War
Bonds are the safest and best investment in the world. So pour
out your might, Americans, in
the mighty 7th War Loan. Let's
show our valiant Fighting Men
that we're backing them to the
limit of our means. <. 100%.
WAR LOAN
BUY NOW! BUY MORE! MORS! MORS!
i~ynk<g
This is an official V S. Treasure advertisement—prepared under auspices of the Treasury Department and War Advertising Council