Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 25 May 1923 — Page 2

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FRIDAY, MAY 23, 1928.

A Democratic weekly newspaper representing the Democrats of Mancie, Delaware county and the Eight Congressional District. The only Democratic newspaper in Delaware County.

THE MUNCIE POST DEMOCRAT

Entered as second class matter January 15, 1921, at the postoficc at Muncie, Indiana, under the Act of March 3, 1879.

Subscription Price, $2.00 a year in Advance Office 733 North Elm Street. Telephone 2540 GEO. R. DALE, Owner and Publisher.

FRIDAY, MAY 25, 1928.

French Racing Team is Made Up of Wealthy Young Sportsmen

> "R i e; I* rvi ^

THE FAITH SHOULD BE LIVED It is at least interesting to read the speech which was made Thursday, jby Will Hays, head of the Motion Picture industry of the United States before the general assembly of the Presbyterian church of the United States of America at Indianapolis. “Religion is thegfliil^ es§§ntial industry of the world.” They (the ministers) in'surd perpetuity of the church, without which the Republic would,-, die</,■'They make certain the security of property, for if men ease to believe in God they cease to respect the statements made duMng his fervent appeal for more salaries for the preachers, which j . has many earmarks of having been designed to make him “solids with the ministry of the church, and the thought quickly presentsdt^elf, that it is not improbable that he might have an axe | to grind; maybe he wants their approval of the picture industry j und6r his management, or again it might be political support he | wants iop some of his favorites. Thtev Bible and the church which he professes to regard so ' highly''teaches a doctrine of love and charity among fellow men, j but it has not been forgotten that a few years ago, this same Will I Hays, after he had resigned from the state Council of Defense j led one-qf the most bitter attacks that was made against any man, : in which hate and venom were responsible for the breaking of the health and almost cost the life of a fellow member of his church, the devoted, earnest and devout president, Woodrow Wilson. The Indianapolis News aptly states, “The great need today is not so much that the faith be defended, as that it be lived.”

Judge “Takes a

Crack” at Klan

Charges Grand Jury to Scrutinize “Honorable Methods” Employed by “Sublime” Knighties

Emperor Simmons says Imperial Wizard Evans is a grafter and Imperial Wizard Evans proclaims that Emperor Simmons is a grafter. This leaves it up to the rank and file of one hundred per cent Americans to decided which grafter they shall follow. Nobody gives a durn.

Edward Young Clarke, charged by a federal indictment with a violation of the Mann white slave act, is still a fugitive from justice. When Clarke spoke here at McCulloch park last August, and lost his bottle of booze in the park, he was proclaimed as the greatest living American by his kluxian admirers. We would be pleased to have an expression now concerning Clarke from Muncie Klan No. 4. On that occasion the park was especially lighted for Clarke and the park superintendent was there himself personally directing traffic and handling the crowd which enthusiastically applauded Clarke’s utterances on pure womanhood. No klansman dares now to. say a word in Clarke’s defense and the klan is too tricky and deceitful to manfully acknowledge Clarke’s unworthiness.

TT71TH the famous Bugatti racing VV team which will compete in the International 500-mile race at the Indianapolis Motor Spevdway Decoration Day, May 30, will came an amazing representation of wealthy and noble aristocracy as pilots of the four mounts. Prince de Cvstria, member of the team is a son 1 , of Prince Faucigny, husband of a> Princess Maurat. Young, tall, elegant, athletic, he speaks English as if it were his mother tongue. He is an excellent boxer, has earned fame as* a fencer and driven an automobile HItc a raging demon. Pierre De Vizcaya, cap-

tain of the team, alc^g with his sensational driving ability is a champion tennts player, holds the fencing championship of Alsace-Lorraine and is an excellent sprinter. Along with tho Frenchmen two youngsters from the Argentine will come as teammates. Raoul Riganti and M. MaCoco, aJthough from Buenos Ayers, spend several months of the year in Paris. Both immensely wealthy they are not in search of the American dollars which come with victory, but are hot after the world wide glory that follows winning the great Indianapolis classic.

No power on earth can keep a first class man down or a fourth class man up.

are

The world needs less population and more men. Maybe the soldier’s bonus will be paid when all the war babies 21 years old.

Some people act like they DID descend from the monkeys. One of the best things a father can present his son as a commencement present is a job.

One trouble with a good many members of the rising generation is that they don’t rise until about noon.

Mayor Quick is surrounded by boards and administration heads who want to ignore the mavor’s wishes and run the burg to suit themselves and the special interests they represent. The

mayor would make himself immensely popular in Muncie by firing ^ our jj e

the entire bureaucratic gang and putting men in their places who 1 0 j^| cs are in sympathy with the common people, instead of the commercial club, the manufacturers’ association and the public utility

crowd. .

Eve didn’t appreciate the seriousness of her sin until she had

to do the first week’s v/ashing.

Paderewski has made another fortune in his present concert has cleaned up \n the ivory business what he lost in

A Muncie pastor last Sunday made a surprisingly vicious attack itpon-Willfa^ Bryan, because the latter opposes the theory that man descended from a monkey. Bryan resolutely adheres to the scripture, which declares that Adam was the first man, created by God in His own image, and opposes revolting theory that the ancestors of Bryan, Harding, General Grant and

You laugh at prohibition laws; the libertine laughs at the marriage laws; the anarchist laughs at the property laws—watch out that your son does not laugh at all laws! Let’s quit laughing

at any law.

KEEPER OF VILE (Continued from Page One)

\ McCreary by juvenile officers of Cov’ngton. West Virginia, of a young girl, Minnie Smith, fifteen years of age who had accompanied the Mor

Crowley, La.,—“Any organization which holds its meetings by the light of bonfires in secret places, whose members wear white suits and masks, and which attempts to prevent orderly citizens from enjoying their constitutional rights, freedom of speech and right of trial by jury, is a proper subject for investigation by a Grand Jury,” declared Judge William Campbell of the Eighteenth District Judicial court, in charging the Grand Jury l which convened yesterday. J The gist of Judge Campbell’s charge 1 was as follows: “We are guided and governed by the eternal laws of justice to which we are subject. No man in this country is so high that he is above the law, all the officers of this government, from the highest to the lowest are but creatures of the law and bound to obey it. Government is a trust, and the officers of the government are trustees, and both the trust and the trustees are created by the people for the benefit of all the people. “There is no greater evil today than the non-enforcement by public officials of laws which they have sworn to uphold. It is not for an executive officer, to say whether a law is good or bad, he should enforce it, or confess failure and resign. “My duty is clear. As long as I am resuonsible head of tho dopartment of justice, in this judicial district, the law will be enforced with ■ all the power possessed by the govI ernment which I am at liberty to call ! to my command. j “Tbe yourt charges you, gentlemen > of the Grand Jury, that any man, or I set of men, who take the law of the country in their own hands, to right or redress a right or imaginary right, violate the fundamental law, that is the Constitution of the United States and of tbe State of Louisiana, and immediately become amenable to be prosecuted under our statutes. “Any organization which holds its meetings by the light of bonfires in secret places, whose members wear white suits and masks, and which attempt to prevent orderly citizens from onjovin.g their constitutional nights, freedom of speech and right of trial hv jury, is a proper subject for investigation by a Grand Jury. “That is because, such behavior on the part of a secret society is a conspiracy .and the law can be brought to bear upon them. “It is not within the province of such secret societies to say who is or is not a desirable citizen and for them to attemot or try to administer justice in the dead of night or in the woods, is a contempt of the law and a violation of the law. “According to the press and newspapers, as published, there is a certain organization uow in existence, the ! members of which are undertaking to | censor the conduct of their fellow citil zens. and when you get to such a state 1 of affairs, one may well ask what differences there is between the United , States and Bolshevism in Russia.”

‘GRAY DAWN” FEELING BLAMED FOR SUICIDES

Washington

London, May 24—Is the “early morning feeling” responsible for suicides ? That is the question that is vexing leading English physicians, brain specialists and coroners. At an inquest Dr. Edwin Smith remarked that suicides were much more frequent in the morning than later in the day. “This fact is no doubt due to early morning depression, which causes people to feel their troubles much more acutely,” he explained.

Foreign News

London—The Russian reply to the British ultimatum is entirely unsatisfactory, Ronald McNeill. Under secretary for Foreign Affairs, told the House of Commons. The British Government, however, is willing to confer with M. Krassin. Soviet envoy, here, and extend the time limit. Premier Bonar Law, faced with a ministerial crisis, cut short his vacation to return here at once. London—T. P. O. O’Connor, “Father of the House.” was honored on his seventy-fifth birthday, when 300 members of Commons joined in a tribute led by ex-Premiers LlojM George and Asquith, and J. Ramsay MacDonald, labor leader. “Tay Pay” was presented with a gold snuffbox, filled. Paris—Former Premier Freycinet. a close friend of George Clemeneeau, died here at ninety-five. Mexico City—The promptness with which the American delegates to the “Recognition” conference laid their cards on the table at the opening session has completely changed the aspect of the situation. It is now believed the session will be of short duration. Where a long drawn out discussion had been anticipated, it appears Mexico will be invited to accept or reject the principles laid down. Paris—Another member of the artistic Duncan family has run afoul of the law. Raymond Duncan, the brother of Isadore Duncan, the classical dancer, was summoned to court charged with exhibiting an immoral painting. The police removed the painting from a salon.

COLORADO TO FEATURE WINTER SPORTS IN JULY

Washington, D. C., May 24—Wisconsin Lumber Manufacturers’ Association scored in exhaustive report by trade commission, which asserts it has been a price-fixing orga.iizai tion for twenty years, that competition frequently has been destroyed J and prices charged Government during war were unreasonable.

Very little unemployment in any/ section of the United States, according to report issued by the Department of Labor.

Five-year deadline on aliens who* refused to fight for United' States in. World War will expire next Armistice Day, when 50,000 can ’oe admitted to citizenship. Secretary Mellon is expected soon to make a decision as to the differentiation of the various kinds of paper used in newspaper publishing and thereby to determine what is standai’d newsprint within the meaning of the present tariff law.

Recommendations to be placed before Congress, relative to a renewal of the rehabilitation act, which expires June 30, 1924, were discussed here today by State civilian vocational rehabilitation directors and social welfare workers at a conference.

President Harding has decided definitely to make his contemplated trip I through the West and to Alaska, I leaving Washington about June 20 I and being absent from the capital j about sixty days. BLUEBIRD, EMBLEM OF HAPPINESS, FOUND TO BE POLYGAMOUS

Idaho Springs, Colo., May 24—Winter sports in midsummer will be witnessed by Colorado residents, if plans under way by the Idaho Springs Chamber of Commerce materialize. A (skiing tournament Is planned for July 4 on Alice Glacier, near Mary’s Lake, ten miles above Idaho Springs. Alice Glacier is one of the largest in the state and plenty of snow is assured for the alpine sports.

Boston, May 24—The bluebird, emblem of happiness, is a polygamist. I Tests just completed in Massachu- | setts definitely prove that the lady 1 bluebird chooses a new husband as ! often as does the society woman of ! the “fast” set. Observers placed , bands on the legs of a number of , bluebirds last year, each band bearing a serial number. Thus a glance at the leg bands of any couple of birds found nesting establishes “who’s married now.” (Memo: Suggest to Nevada Legislature a law requiring that serial numbers be tattooed • on members of Reno divorce colony.) Last May Rev. George E. Allen of Plainfield banded with the number 17.236 a “bluebird which was brooding five young in a nest box. In July she hatched three more_ young in another box. Her mate with the another box. Her mate with the last brood was No. 17,243. She returned last month, but when Allen discovered her perched in the box where she hatched her last brood her companion was riot No. 17,243, but another songster in brilliant blue and orange coat, No. 17,249, I An unconfirmed rumor says that , reform organizations will now agiI tate for legislation jforbiddjng the i use of bluebird decorations on lunch sets and birthday postcards.

the Rev. Harry Adams Hersey were originally chattering long ing attorney at the time, Van Ogle. san,girl to Elwood. Mrs. McCreary tailed apes, swinging by their caudal appendages from prehistoric the present prosecutor then being i res ?j! ;

cocoanut trees. All in favor of the babboons say aye.

his deputy j conducted by Anderson and she cam& The (act that Anderson is a Mans- h, th ? , scrv . ice 5 man, and a member of Muncie Klan',,' , f • 1 " lr ( < ? u * No. 4, carries with it the inference ; & w„ a ; d V ^ d hl?r

that the klan protects its own, for ! ho "’°. W f‘

the present klan-controlled prosecut- ■ , e bruth girl told Mrs. McCreary or and police force were in no wise I , a hout the place and informed her responsible for the arrest of Ander- • a bout the Morgan girl.. On her reson and the marshalling of the evi- ! y!j rn from West \ irgmia, Mrs. Mc-

THE TIME OF THE CRUCIAL TEST

All indications point to the advent of better business. Depression has given way to confidence. Business has come through one of the most critical periods in history. In other times busi-

ness has suffered from depression and from many other conditions dence* which led i to*"*his fe conviction. ,, I fTeary again came to Muncie and that threatened its very life, but never until the past few years! In makin £ the opening argument' ^'4 tke facts before Mrs. Minnie Snyhas there been such world-wide business hardship, with the whole g at 5 0 ^g cu ^ y °*£ si &i officer. The womenTecurd iToffi-

world m much the same condition. Even now when a firmer basis criticism on that score by counsel has been established, the time has not arrived when the business for the defense by announcing to the man.may rest easy. There are problems just as serious now as j ul T ^! at Anderson’s attorneys would there were immediately following the war. The buying public has Anderson ^as^runmng 6 such ^ taken another stand. It is pitting its knowledge against that of rotten resort, why wasn’t he prosethe business man. It is searching down deeo into the underlying j euted before?” principks of business and of the business man. It is trying him Sady^ep-' at the bar of justice and fair dealing. It is demanding now—de-| Nation, hut we couldn’t get the evimanding that the business man deliver a product according to the dence. if we had had a witness like value the public places upon it. This values is of the highest stand-1 th is /Y 1 to inform us sooner we ard., t The public demands full value for every cent it spends. jP^ecled

lame part of this argument

ADVANTAGES OF A GARDEN COMMUNITY was that the prosecutor and police

could have secured the evidence easily

RICH GIRLS, NOT POOR, SMOKE, SAYS EXPERT

The first days of summer bring to the minds of many people officer ^ron^^n^erso^ fm-^ plans for the rejuvenation of the garden plot. j ^"th^hanrand^oduced^he eviTroy is a city of gardens. A walk along the residential dence either distinguishes her as a streets in season will convince the stranger that more than the remarkably efficient long range inaverage number of the citizens take pride in their garden plots, i^cai^nofic 01 X6S 1 P status of tne

What a difference to the appearance of the city streets these plots of multi-colored flowers and ferns create. They personify

local police department at several de-

grees below zero.

Complaint was first made to Mrs. empire.

The women securd an offi-

cer, took the girl out of Anderson’s resort and Mrs. Snyder filed affidavits against the man, charging him in one with contributing to the delinquency of a piinor and in the other

with pandering.

Thus, the alibi of Prosecutor Ogle, that the officers here were doing their best, does not hold water. They did their best after two women made tho case for them, but prior to that their efforts, if any. to put this evil resort out of business, were not par-

ticularly noticeable.

Possibly if the sheriff and his deputies would resign and the board of safety would fire the entire police force and hire a couple of women to take the place of the entire posse several other joints that are now being protected for political reasons might be closed up as suddenly as was the one conducted by the virtuous Anderson, one hundred percent American and citizen of the invisible

Sociologist Denies Cigaret Is ‘Contributing Cause of Vice' Among

Young Women

“From my experience in probation work, I would not name cigarets, automobiles or movies as the greatest contributing causes of vice.”

Baltimore, May 24—Cigarets smoking is a “vice” of the wealthy and not of the delinquent, according to Miss Lorraine Reinhard, probation officer of the Juvenile Court. Commenting on a statement made recently by Miss Fannie French Morse, superintendent of the Nation-

al Training School for Girls, in which Home-made Fireiess Cookers Prove

Miss Morse said “automobiles, ciga- m " r HAl ’'

ri Can Cook and Go To Church At Same Time

CANOE AND HANDCAR IN RACE TO REACH DOCTOR Oldttown, Me.. May 24—The life of Wesley Eldridge, 16, was saved here by an emergency operation after the youth was taken over an eight-mile canoe trip on flood waters and further travel on a railroad handcar. While the boy was being brought here surgeons from Bangor rushed here in a relay of boat, automobile and horse transportation. The operation was successful. CITY ADVERTISEMENTS

GLORY BE! BIG KU KLUX DOIN’S PLANNED FOR SATURDAY, JUNE 2

Saturday night, June 2, is to be a of the bridge and the auto broke

Slothful individuals do not create pretty gardens and big night in Muncie from a klucker in two, near the middle of the ma-

standpoint.

A state meeting of klansmen is scheduled for Muncie that night and

bills advertising the silly assemblage carrying Dr. Long and another pass-

soi^e'of thid’ffnest sentiments in life, and their obvious care speaks of the many hours of work that have been expended on the plants. . xff^ctihure of flowers is good for the physical and metal wellbeing of, the horticulturist. It gives pleasure to those who bestow their ciire^nd time on the art, and it gives pleasure to those who wahde£-along the streets and admire. Yls there anything finer to be said of a city than, it is a city of £)bw^>? A city of flowers presumes an industrious, nature lov-

ing people,

well kept lawns.

^Oi^fi-. are many books dealing with the culture of flowers. Th^rjam^te.ur who desires to excel in the art can obtain much edueftthm In the hobby from what has been written by those who

havejput on record the experience of years. s!

$/ WHAT THE WORLD IS LOOKING FOR The world today is looking for men who are not for sale; men

who are honest, sound from the center to circumference, true to

the heart’s core; men with consciences as steady as the needle to| probabilities are that most’of"them the pole men who will stand for the right if the heavens totter will he in the parade. i and th® earth reels; men who can tell the truth and look the world t ho firrt^timf'aU , IjledTp h 1n e the 1 right in the eye; men who neither brag nor run, men who neither j regulation mask and shimmy. i flag nor flinch; men who can have courage v/ithout shouting to it;! The report is out that the demonmen in whom the courage of everlasting life runs still, deep and i stratum is being staged m an atstrong; men who know their message and tell it; men who know j hanging hff^mind about firing The their place and fill it; men who know their'business and attend to | present Aboard of safety

it; men who will not lie, shirk or dodge; men who are not too lazy to work; nor too proud to be poor; men who are willing to eat what they h^ve earned and wear what they have paid for; men who are not a^Iiamed to say “No” with emphasis and who are not ashamed

to say, “I can’t afford it.”

DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS OFFICE OF THE BOARD 212 Wysor Block Muncie, Ind, NOTICE OF IMPROVEMENT RESO-

LUTION

NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNERS In the matter of Certain Proposed Publtc Improvements in .the City of

Muncie, State of Indians,.

Notice is hereby given by the Board of Public Works of the City of Muncie, Indiana, that it is desired and deemed necessary to make the following' described public improvements for the City of Muncie, Indiana, as authorized by the following' numbered improvement resolutions, adopted by said Board, on the

?2nd day of May 1923, to-wit:

I. R. No. 1028-1923, for Sewer system known as Congerville Sewer, in the following territory, towit:—Commencing at Mulberry Street and Twenty-first street, running thence east on Twenty-first street to Madison street; thence •south in Madison street to Twenty-fourth Street;

Shown how at demonstrations in thence east in Twenty-fourth Street to

to smoking. Here is her comment: 27 counties 784 Ohio housewives last ! Plum Street with tributaries as follows: “Gie-aret smnkimr is found amomr t counties, IBS unio nousewives , _ In j efferson street from Twenty-first cigaret smoking is lound among year went home and made tireless i street to twenty-fourth street; In Elm the daugihters 1 of the jwealthy. I cookers. Then through their local ' street from Twenty-first street to Twehknow girls of 14 who smoke. These f arm bureau organization, they pass- 1 ^ntv-lxtf; girls have tne example set them by e d the lesson on to countless other in AMne street from Twentieth Street to tneir motners. | farm, women, and in certain Ohio I Twenty-sixth street; in Plum street “College Girls Smoke” counties fireless cookers are now con- Y om . 1 \ w< ', n i y '?I' st JJ stree l. tb

“I know of no girl under my care sidered an indispensable piece of kit-

who smokes, so I Ccumot believe it chen eejuipment.

is a contributing cause to delinquen- Since the cookers can be used to cy. You find college women who keep cold things cold, as well as to smoke, yet you. surely could not keep hot dishes cooking, their spread

rets and movies” are the greatest contributing factors in vice. Miss Reinhard said none of the delinquent girls under her care was addicted

B^ Help to Farmwives; Saves

Fuel and n.nergy

street and in Madison street from Twen-ty-fourth street to Twenty-sixth Street. j. R. No. 1029-1923 Local sewer in Plum Street now known as Pershing Drive from Second Street to first alley north

of Willard Street.

I. R. No. 1030-1923. Cement sidewalk on

chine.

The rear end of the car remained on the bridge, while the front part,

nut Street to Franklin Street.

I. R. No 1031-1923, Cement sidewalk on both sides of North ITeffersifn street from McCulloch Boulevard to- Highlands

Avenue.

I. R. No. 1032-1923, Cement sidewalk on both sides of Highlands Aveftfv from Walnut Street to Lake Erie & Western

Railway Tracks.

All work done in the making of said

are being distributed in many Indi-

ana cities.

The regulation night shirt parade will be a feature and a lame duck preacher will deliver an address. It is not known at this time what action the police will take in the matter of permitting the lawless gathering of masked law breakers, but the

enger. kept on until it piled up at the foot of a hill beyond the bridge.

Chalk Marks to Gold Him Home From Wanderings

AUTO BREAKS IN TWO; FRONT HALF RUNS WILD

Oakland. Cal., May 24—John Wingett, 60, head of a local chemical company, is not going to find his way home some time if mischievous boys rub out the chalk marks he uses to mark the course of his trav-

els.

Wingett testified in a minor lawsuit that he did not know exactly where he lived on Twenty-seventh st. He explained that every time he left the house he blazed a trail

say they are delinquent as a class. i s expected to continue throughout the north side of Fifth street from Wai-

“I feel that Miss Morse meant that the summer. A tinner in Auglaize ’ “ at +

these things, the cigaret, the auto, County tells the agricultural agent the movie, were external causes. The there, that he lined 35 outer-contain-real causes of delinquency are lack ers G f home-made cookers for country of proper standards in the home and women there last month, remissness in safeguarding girls a farm family in Putnam County from temptations. In other words, has kept account of the amount of

I would say the broken home, where kerosene saved on their oil stove described public "improvements 0 shall be the parents h av e parted, or poverty, since the introduction of a cooker, in accordance with the terms and condiwhere the mother is forced to work When thev did all cookinp- on this ' tions of the improvement resolution, as and the children have no supervision. 0 il st ove, they used 5 gallons of coal- ! ho " works a 2n Pt the b above Earned f da'te; ai e causes. Ui course, tnere is an- oil a week. Now, using the cooker 1 and the drawings, plans, profiles and other big cause—subnormality. f or cereals and for Sunday dinner ' specifications which are on file and may “When the girl is left without re- 5 gallons of oil last two weeks. This ' to seen in the ofrice of said Board of

sfframt because the parents are housewife has built a cooker which working or when she is subnormal holds two pans. She starts Sunday there are boRnd to he irresistible! dinner early and leaves the meat and temptations. Many of the delinquent vegetables in the bottom container girls come from crowded homes and a pudding or dried fruit in the

where there is no place to entertain ton container so that all is ready ' provements, and on said date at

t0 the famHy comes back from, wX will meefat inlaid

^ 611 P^ ea . sur ^. elsewhere. | church. City for the purpose of hearing and eonMovies Harmless to Girls | Another housewife in this countv ' sidering any remonstrances which may “Movies are bad for the bovs, the a sec0 nd comnartment in her cooker 1 i ,ave been or which may have l‘thriller’ kind I refer to for thev in- f v C0 ™P a . rtmen ,t ^ ner . c00 ^r | been presented; said Board fixes said I tnn.iei Kina 1 reier to, ror xney in- for the bread mixer. This retains the ; date as a date for the modification, conspire them to do risxy things. There bread at the right temperature, and firmation, rescinding, or postponement is not much danger for the girl in ra j se s it without the bother of shut- of ac Y or b <?n said remonstrances: and the present day movie, although tinp. windows to keen the room warm ? r ' date v W1 hear a l P erso 2, s ) n : there ire some that rmVTit hav-> a tln & ^inaows to Keep tne room warm ( t orest f,u or whose property is affected tnere are some tnat mignt nawj a en0U gb or of wrapping the mixer m • by said proposed improvements, and will

Public Works of the City of Muncie,

Indian.

The Board of Public Works has fixed the 12th day of June, 1923, as a date upon which remonstrances may bo. filed or heard by persons interested in, or affected by said described public im-

7:30

Logan, O., May 24—Driving at

night near here. Dr. E. L. Long drove with white arrows, which he followed

onto a bridge. A hub cap hit a side on the way home.

bad influence.

“Flappers, here I refer to the more fortunate type of girl, do the unusual things and they suffer no evil consequences. They adopt a style if | it is fashionable and soon drop it for something else. That is the way they smoke. ,

a blanket.

How Island Got Name. Antipodes island, not far from New Zealand, was thus named because it is j directly opposite to London. ’

decide whether the benefits that will accrue to the property abutting and adjacent to the proposed improvement and to the said City will be equal to or exceed the estimated cost of the proposed improvements, as estimated by the City

Civil Engineer.

BOARD OF PUBLTC WORKS, MARY E. ANDERSON, Clerk. May 25-June 1, 1923.

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