Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 22, Number 132, Decatur, Adams County, 2 June 1924 — Page 4

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Publlshad Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. J. 11. Heller—Pres. and Oen. Mgr E. W. Kampe—Vlce-Pres. & Adv. Mgr. A. R. Holthouse—Sec’y. and But. Mgr. Bntnred at the Poetoffice at Decatur Indiana as second class matter. Subscription Rates Single copies 3 cents One Week, by carrier 10 cents One Tear, by carrier 36.00 One Month, by mall ~..31 cents Three Months, by mai1........ 31.00 Six Months, by mail 31.75 One Year, by mall 33.00 One Year, at office 33.00 (Prices quoted are within first and second sones. Additional postage ad ded outside those sones.) Advertising Bates Made known en applleatloa. Foreign Representative Carpenter * Company, 122 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Fifth Avenue Bldg., New York, City, N. T. Life Bldg, Kansas City, Mo The only things apparently undecided for the Cleveland convention 1s who Mr. Coolidge will pick as his running mate and how “Fighting Bob" can be muzzled with least , harm to the G. O. P. The third party ( talk has revived since ap- i peared in the senate again the other 1 day. a little ihiner but evidently just ' :i s determined as ever. < This is an important week for the < democrats of Indiana. Delegatee from i every nook and corner are gathering 1 in Indianapolis for the big convention which will be held Wednesday and | Thursday. If they act wisely in se- < letting candidates and writing the 1 platform, if their actions promise re- ’ lief to a tax ridden people, they will win the November election. This • w.-ek's results will be watched by a , million and a half interested voters i If President Coolidge signs the new tax bill as now seems probable, even though it doesn't suit him. it will mean a saving of twgnty-five per cent on the federal taxes payable thia rear. The second quar’er is payable June 15th and according to rules adopted ' by the department, you may remit but one-half of the amount due at this time . and then deduct one-quarter from the amounts due in October and Detern her. There will be but one registration day this year for the voters of Adams county and that will be early in October. Under the law when it is thought ’ necessary an extra registration day day may be had by the filing of a petition signed by three hundred voters. This was not done here, consequently those- who must thus qualify muss" at-1 tend to it on the one day. Only new' voters in a precinct need to register. This includes first voters as well as' those who have moved from one pre-1 cinct to another. Be sure to remember this duty as It is necessary.

We presume the average b<sy doos not realise when he kill* a robldn or any other native bird, that he I* violating the laws of Indiana and la subject •<* * Bne. He la doing that and more for he la hardening himself Instead of protecting life. Boy*, please don't kill the bird*. Try snapping < picture* of them with your kodak and see If It isn't a lot more pleasure than J •hooting th<tn with a bullet. An Adams county woman who used her kodak and mad* • study of birds became famous and rich. Bead the life of Mrs. Gene Htratton Porter. Those who signed for ehautamiua tickets are urged to get their ten at once, tn sell them and call for more | The way to put ths week over big la to show Internal. It will help every number on the program If we get up •owe enthusiasm and thia la the first way to display it. President Thompson and John petwsou of the ticket committ«e are going all they can to assure th* community of th* highest ciaaa entertainment. They can only do it one hundred percent with your sincere co-operation and help Get your tlckela at once and go to work Lot a nay "tee put It ever rather that "they did It." . t

I “ Flashlights of Famous People

Face to Face With Karl Bickel President of the United Press (By Joe Mitchell Chapple) News is now exported as well as Imported into the United States —the most potential product on the list. Sitting with Karl Bickel, president of the United Press, in his office in New York, I was in the great clearing house of news. Every day a thousand newspapers go to press every five minutes, from nine in the morning until four in the afternoon, with information flashed from this nerve center of news. 1 began to realize the change in newspapers since the time that Horace Greeley edited his Tribune near this very spot. “The schools and Increase of facilities for general intelligence has transferred journalism into newspaper work.” Karl A Bickel was speaking before a desk cleared for action every minute of the day. Six to ten thousand words are dispatched in Spanish and Portuguese to every country in South America. Important papers in Ger-■

many. Austria. Spain and England are served direct through this source. As a result of his trip to China. Karl Bickel arranged to supply news |o the leading papers in China and Japan direct from New York. Girdling the globe, the dots and dashes of cable and telegraph are carrying the news of America to all parts of the earth every hour of the day. A map of the world is continually visioned before Karl Bickel. With an unerring nose for news he keeps the wires tingling' with human interest stories. His big blue eyes see news values and b»j quickly transforms events into a daily record of each succeeding twen ty-four hoursWhen the United Press was organized in 1907, the policy was established of adopting a unity in the form of news service percolated with personality interest. The names on the wires of the world daily news budget vary, but today Coolidge. Mary Pickford. Ramsay Maedonald. Ghadi Charles Chaplin. Mussolini. Edison. Henry Ford, are often mentioned. When political conventions convene, the names shift rapidly. "People are always Interested in other people, and every item should throw some light on personalities who reflect the policies of nations. There is nothing so exhilarating as news, it is always today and tomorrow. The primal instinct for news in small neighborhoods in days of isolation is now expanded, so that the world passes before the window of newspaper readers.” In the adjoining room the telegraph

1 Editor's Note: Send ten names of yovr favorite famous folk now living to Joe' Mitchell Chapple, The Attic, Waldorf Astoria Hotel. New York C'ty. The readers of tn<s paper are to ncinmate for this Hall of Fame.

Among those mentioned a* dele-' rates to the national democratic' convention from Indiana is Lew G. Eiling ham. owner and publisher of the Fort : Wayne JournalGaxette and no selec- , tlon could possibly please so large a . number of the democrats of northeastern Indiana. Mr. Elllngham has been a leader tn this section of the state for a quarter century and a worker for hie party. In season and out. since he was in his teens. When but eighteen years old he conducted s , democratic paper at Genera in thia I county and since then has continuous ly published a paper with Jefferson ,lon policies at Winchester. Decatur and Fort Wayne No democrat In the state is more deserving of reconli . i tlon and honors.

Now the expert* In business are blaming the depression of recent weeks to the cold, wet spring That's about as close a guess as to blam* It to the fact that this Is a campaign year. Th* real <aus<- ot any depresJ *lon that may I* on Is the old one of supply and demand. The let up Is moat noticeable In those centers where th* automobile Industry playa the biggest part and there la ho doubt ■ some thing In th* argument that the point of saturation I* at hand, that Is to say that th? demand for car* has *to large extent been filled Also It most be remembered we have not made much effort to supply a foreign 1 market or take care of th* farmer I who has always been and will contini( us to be the backbone of tb* buying i power ot America. . | w

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, MONDAY. JUNE 2, 1924.

ww WS*. ■ KF -1 # ’ tow Wet** - £ w ■ ■ , JKr F KARL BICKEL says: f “People are always interested in , other people, and every item should', throw tome light on personalities who , reflect the policies of nations." f instruments were madly clicking like a battery of gatling guns. Faury p was dispatching foreign news in the q various languages. Through different t news agencies current events were‘ s exported on every tick of the clock J f i There was also a return cargo, for s i America was finding out what was n

-'going on over seas. When Edison 3 < made vne wire carry two messages t I, at the same time, he made the news |. ■service of today possible, reconi ing p i in words as definite as legal docu- a i r.ients the swirl of events coming and p • going with the rapidity of a lightning;],, i flash. I |e ‘ Whether Karl Bickel is sitting at a' o ' banquet table with Presidents crjgrabbing a bite in a “one-arm” lunch is room, he is busy. No one has ever' him in the act of passing ' an idle moment. Karl Bickel began. ’ ■ life with a news instinct He found | iout where the cookies were stored a ' rnd the name of the man who gave 'cut circus tickets. The high school paper which he edited was his letter •• •Ic-f introduction. he secured a' ’ I job as reporter in Davenport, lowaJ s I where he was kept busy from 7 a. r.i.| ''to 11 p. m. When he attended Leland d l Stanford University, he worked his! • way through on schedule time by pi Fathering news and selling news be- . I cause he knew what was news. “Gathering news, after all. is a matter of observation and .inform!ton c<H»rdfnand -ntwrtbw -town- of. i where the universal law of selection! i I rpplies'* i This was the terse, telegraphic an- . elysia of a news-distrlbnting po'icy I i that engirdles the world every hour ■ <f the day with first-hand information] i ba to what Is going on. wbo >■ doing - it at the time when newa is new. The] • countersign of the news gatherer.* f “What's new?" is today a world query, rddressed to a young man of forty ] i, two. born in Geneseo, Illinois.

In a million homes, in thousands of < hurches, on the streets, in the shops q and wherever people have met the past few days, discussion has turned to the unusual murder of the Franks boy In Chicago and the confession of two of his chums that they did it "for the adventure” more than any thing!, 1 else Roth the two mnrdorer* and the victim were sons of Chicago millionaires. educated, brilliant and with«»ut any of the usual desires or needs ■ 1 which usually figure in murder cases ' Don't you realise what is wrong In this county Just now? We are educating ( hands and brains of the boys and girls’ ( and forget tins to train their hearts; !l r too many young folks are getting away t ' from church. roll* tan. from the teach--1 Ings of the Bible and searching only for an easy life and some new thrill ( And they are getting It largely front ,

i their adult parents who are devoting, all thrlr time to money-making and i new form* of entertainment There : 1* much to think about ta thia cane i which haa broken throe Chicago pel- • ace homes. ( ♦ TWENTY YtARS AGO TODAY ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ From the Dady Droov'it Ulna ♦ 1 ♦2O yearo »9« th‘« •'»' ♦ ■ —• jun* 2 “-Frank Mill* appointed * agent tar ftatnrday Evening Itaat. ' Hqulrrol hunter* wartmd that new I game law* for! id bunting untn i August let. r Premium Wat* out for Noribern | Indians fair to be held August avtli to September .nd f D. K Erwin goes to Wexford . county. Michigan to take option* vuj

■ " i——a————— First Automobile In Adams County Was Purchased By “Johnny” Smith In 1900; Started The Wheels Rolling “Johnny” flitted with fate in exercising an American prerogative; Initial trip down main street was finite serious and everybody climbed a tree; Community took pride in its progressiveness and soon others fell victims to smell of gas and oil.

— 1 - By F. Q. If we have the facts right it was along about the year 1900 in the spring cf the year after the apple blossoms had bloomed and most evert body was ready for almost anything that Johnny Smith did it. What ever made him do it, he has never snid and no one else seemed to have had any responsibility In the matter so whitever their opinions were or may have were, is now and was quite incompetent evidence and wo will let it go at that. The point at issue is. that Johnny did it. It cost him at first eight hundred and fifty bucks to do it and when he drove out onto the street as captain at the wheel of that embryonic automobile ,the populace of our thriving little city was perfectly thrilled, or do 1 mean stunned? No. we can't say that this initiatory performance was funny, rather it was ' quite serious. Did you ever hear of j the little railroad that was under construction down in Arkansas and had got its ties laid up as far as the main ' street of the sleepiest town that ' never had a chamber of commerce I and the first train of an engine and tdro flat cars had pulled up to the last rail? And bow the entire community, black and white, stood around the monster properly attired and in course of time the engineer stuck his head out of his cab and yelled. “look out. I'm going to turn around" and every body ducked?

land. . * Twentyseven from 'here join .1 Earles at Fort Wayne.’ ;t J. M. Dull of Willshire returns from a trip to the Holy Lands and con- i f tinental Europe. Birthday surprise for Mrs. Corgle- [* ton was a happy event. p Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Bieeke leave for * St. Ijouis to take in Worlds fair. * Mrs. George Far.ders. son and ' daughter, leave for Cincinnati. a Dr. J. S. Boyers leaves for Chicago r to take post graduate course. □ ’ t <j • jL h COMMENCEMENT DAY Ended.—one lap of*tne journey; j Conquer I'd. —one low mountain s peak; , laid. Is the first strong foundation; , Glorious Mill.- dawn s rosy cheek. , Forward, far stretches the pathway: . tn the distance are wonderful heights: The temple eternal uprises. In dreams, where day pblneth bright. • < Than rubles and prarb. more price-. less | Is wisdom.—delight her ways: Crowning with hone*, her lovers. — j | This is their day of all days. i, A. D. Burkett, j I - o 11 Soybeans Should Be Inoculated Says Busche "That sound* foolish.’* Is the ex- j 1 |pr> saion often made by farmers the : ■ Drat time he hears what is meant by 1 Inoculating soybeans Nevertheless it | 1 remains that Inoculation gets results, j' wMch »n itself la auffi< lent reason for never neglecting tn Inoculate. All I* gome . stub h* alfalfa- awed clov« r. soybeans and red clover make use of bacteria gathered on the roots 'to gather nltrugr® from the air and ! ' Store it tn nodules. These bacteria are present In small number* In practically all festlle ground Hence a legume will inoculate Itself If grown .for several years in the same ground. I But placing a sufbclent number of the bacteria In the ground the first year [the new crop Is used enaM-s the , fturner to gel the most from th- crop J from the very I* sinning >| Very flftM the benefit of Imwnta* > tionfcannot be anon. leading 'he , farmer to believe hl* work was tn vain instances have bs*n seen where inorubitod need, sown be»lde uninmulatod seed showed pn advantage However, the lemeflt in thia case la unseen aid is found in th* eart' hint nf th. >oll for future crops. In other cases Inoculated end nniaroula’wt w-ed sown in adjacent pirns havs |shown 'he work tn tuocuh'ing to ’bits be*a well paid Mr in producing | thriftier. better colored bean*, mure

I Well. Johnny and his new liability had some such experience. Only, that when Johnny started down the street everybody climbed a tree. We can vouch for that because we : were there and we were also up a tree. It was a trying time for all-es-necially the ladies. Johnny had the first automobile in Adams county. Could.it have been possible that there could have been a first automobile, with accent on the first? Why, it is just as plain as can be that the very day Itcfore Johnny got that machine that there was no more of an automobile in Adams County than there was an internationalist, if you get what I mean. A good many hadn't Ven susplcioned an automobile. Some thought maybe, it wasn't quite pious to even talk about the darn things. One cun readily see that Johnny was courageous, willing to take a chance both financially and physcially. We'll say he had courage. We can’t say that we can at this distance of time properly describe ithat machine. Perhaps we may give you an idea of its construction and appearance by saying, go out and take a look at a 1924 model and what ever it is Johnny's machine wasn't Johnny's machine had a bright red body, the hind end of which worked up and down to admit and discharge passengers and looked and worked like a set of faPe teeth. The engine was all right, had two lungs and an exhaust like the d'scharge of sixteen

seed to the plant and of better rise. The writer's observation has be en that inoculation shown results quicker on high ground or in fields where fertility has been allowed to decrease. Dirt to be used in inoculating should be taken from a field in which w< 11-Inoculated beans were grown the previous year. It should be obtained from one to six inches lielow the surface, if possible from around old soybeans roota. All that remains is to distribute this soil through the henna so it will be placed in th" soil with them. Althought r.o method has proven superior one which has been used to a great degree is as follows: Plaee thrpe pecks of beans in a bushel basket and pour about a half plat of water on them, stirring the beans enough with the hands to dampen them. Then mix a pint of the dirt, which has been pulverised as fine as possible, through the beans. This should cover practically all of them with dirt. Although commcrical inocutator may be purchased from numerous agencies, the cost of this method la almost prohibitive. There Is no reason why anyone sowing soy beans should overlook inoculating the seed since this muses them not only to produce a good crop but to enrich the ground as well. oBOY MURDERERS (Continued From Page One) day. Clarence Darrow, lending counsel for the defense. Ind'caied the conrsh* will follow by objecting to having Leopold and lx»ob examined by slate's alienists. The state. Darrow i believes. will attempt to prove the boys sane and thus forestall a defense of insanity. Darrow. It ts understood, will direct a full staff of attorneys retained by parents of the two boys. Many millions of dollars are available tor the defense. Leopold's father Is head of the Morris Paper Bo* ■■ompanv; l-oeb is the son of Albert H. Ix»eb. multi-millionaire vice prosl dent of Hoars Boebwek company State's Attorney Crowe announced the ph-a of insanity would bo con tested bitterly. Millions Versus Death Penalty •it will be a case of millions versus the death penalty,” Crowe said, "but there boys killed an innocent child ‘just for the spirit of adventure' and they must suffer the consequent •♦* Everv effort will b«* made by my of Bee to have them hanged." Both a bit remorseful for the crime they committed. U-opold and l«oeb behl stoutly to «heir original route*' skin. They Insisted that the murder was pr< meditated, planned many month* before It wm carried into execution, leupotd'. rctaorve. however, as indicated tn an Interview was chiefly for the fact that he had allowed Loeb tn participate Altbougti crediting his tonipantan with fdottlni 'he mtirder and aecnsing Unb ol doing the actual killing. Leopold aakl h* <au«d have carried It out atau* sod never been found out Calls Lvsb A Wsskhoff "Dick Loeb la a weaklteg." Leopold > said, "if j ha<l known he was I'dni *

I I inch gun. The wheel with its steert ing apparatus was a very complicated affair, one could tell that by the tracks the machine made, said trtfeks being in speriqal. almucantar, and 1 diurnal circles and also in obtuse, rec- ' . tilineal. oblique and Acute angles. Complicated was right because ‘ Johnny's eyes were perfectly normal, 1 , and his hands steady. * It was a great day when Johnny £ asked us to take a ride. We were , younger then and reckless as the dick- t ebs and we hopped to It. It was very t thrilling. We were very proud and f I still compliment ourself. Looking , back now with calm judgment we are t inclined to think that is was our con- t fidence in Johnny that helped us to i i be brave. | Johnny never had many accidents. [ That red body may have had perhaps i a dozen or so punctures. Johnny was c a pretty good driver. Our community took proper pride in j its progressiveness and not long after f Doctor Miller and Doctor Clark join- r ed the lodge and that started the ball f tor rolling or the wheels rather, and i soon the highways of our little city! a and countryside took on the gas andi oil smell now so very familiar. | r We feel confident that Johnny c Smith has some claim to fame. He h exercised an American prerogative, I 1 "started something.” He said, “come'j on. boys.” and flirted with fate. Talkas ing about courage and intitative. you seen any of the lads around here < J driving an aeroplane? s

tn be weak. I'd have pulled the job alone. I would have been free now. "But what could I do? I couldn't' keep up the denials after the weakling confessed everything." Loeb was more truly sorry for the crime in which he had taken part. Loeb Hopes For Freedom Nervously smoking cigarette after cigarette, shuffling his hands from j pocket to pocket, he told of his hope for ultimate freedom and a “career." "This thing will be the making of me." he said. “I'U spend a few years in jail and then be released. I'll come out to a now life. I*ll go to work, work hard, and come to success — have a career "What's hurting he most right now, ts the fait that my mother won't believe me. She won't believe that I've committed murder. A mother's faith —that's a precious, 'sacred thing—and I've lost it." The boy who at 17 received a de-' groe of bachelor of arts from the Vniversity of .Michigan—the young | eat graduate of that institution—told, of bis memory of the smiling Robert. Franks, whose life he had snuffed out "In the spirit of adventure.*’ Related To Frank* Boy lx»eb I* distantly related to the Franks boy. He had frequently play rd tennis with kirn Their homes were nearly across the street. •The only thing that comes to my mind now Is the picture of that happy little boy. swinging down the sidewalk. swaying from side to side in his happiness—his innocense. "I'll never forget the expression on , his face as we dragged him In th*-, car Oh. fhar face, the sunlight. tb< happiness In his eyes." Albert Loch, the father, was In a, ( state of collapse today. The boy's , mother was in only a slightly better ( condit'on. Neither would talk of the* , case, rumen Darrow, chief attor-, ney for the parent*, took personal charge of legal matters. Nathan Ix-opobi Sr . was calm bnt* silent. He only shook his head to ail . questions put to him. Leopoldlt i mother is not living. Mrs. Jacob Flank*, mother of the slate youth, was report cd in a aeriott*' I condition She Is under the caro of a ( staff of physician*. Her condition ( grew worse Raaday. It wn* said at the Franks home. The county grand Jury, to be sworn , today, will convene tomorrow. State's* I Attorney Crowe wid ask the jury for J I Immediate Indictments against Leo. ( pold and Ixteb on charges of first de | j gr«■* murder, he said. The trial, by, Illinois taw. cannot start within days after returning of the Indictb mrnt. — • - - r Amcricim Flyent End r Another la’k Os Journey, O — , r* TokW. lune I—The American r. 'round-the world flyer* completed an-, d other step In their journey today, n They flew from Knahlmoto. where g they arrived yesterday from Kasaml >( naura. to Kagoshima on the Island of dl Kyushu, la test stop they will make « la Japan The three flyers- Lieut* Utwell Smith. Leigh M'ade and Erik Nelson ,d' —left Kushimoto at 1 pm and arrivs cd nt Kagoabimi al 7 pm.

SEVERAL BUY I Park Additi on The 81 lots in the n n! . addition east o f the city s’®°°* urday afternn at public S " (ls ‘ l - Mr. Walter Schroll ally Company. Indianapolis . " ferent purchasers. some *'• many as four lots. The lots sold Include th.. . ground south of the main P n t ” Bellmont Park on the concrete and then east on the Pi qua r( J ten acres all together. The lots given a tweaty-five-foot with only one or two exceptions h purchasers purchased two or X,* the lots. Several of the purfh have signified their intention oil ng homes in the park addition and , is probably that within a few ,-J. Decatur will see several houses ed in this beautiful spot. A large crowd attended the taU Mr. Schroll purchased the ten acr« from Col. Fred Reppert. owner of the park, and auctioneers Earl Gartin. „< GreencastA-: Roy Johnson and Harry Daniels, of this city, conducted th. sale. The price for the double lota ram ed from 350 to 3430. Those who pnr . chased the lots were W A. Klep Wr . Earl Foreman. Henry Graber, Jess U Brun. Ijiwrence Walters, Mrs. C t. Miller, William Fingland, Merfil Sheets, Ben S. Colter, James Ross, Millard Baumgartner. James Ward. C. M. Baxter. Jesse Hurst, Tin Sprague, Noah Fry. Ernest Krugh, *.

E. Owens. Charles Ward. lawr"a« McDonald. Ralph Oakley. Walter Hammond, M. A Kenworthy, Arnold Stulu, ' Charles Magley. Ed. Deitc-h, Jobs Brothers. John McClure. L E. SunI mers. F. A. Neville, Doris Staher. • Walter Springer and W. A McDonald. Mr. Schroll was well pleased with the sale and stated that he was latistled with the price for the lots. He left today for Charleston. Ulinoi«. ) where he will conduct a sale on Saturday. o- — Announce Results Os Hog Feeding Experiment The resulta of seven trials of tw systems of feeding spring pig* st th 'Purdu* Station jre sir*en In Bulletin J 79. now available a Ith county agent's office. In esdl [trial two lots of pigs were used, one being fed corn and tankage supplied In self feeders, free choin- and tie other lot was hand fed. receiving * ' limited feed of corn ami tank«« st I two pound* of this feed ilally Ist each one hundred pounds wi-trtt ' Both lots were fed 85 days on P*»- • ture. The self fed hogs finished in K days, gained US pounds per head and were sold on the September nurttt I The limited fed hogs required al I extra 35 days of full feeding in tte dry lot to muke the eume averatt weight and consequently were early in November when the pd' was more than one dollar le**1 feed required for emb one hundrri pounds gain and th- amount ot I"** ture requ’red In each of the lot* b also given in the bulletin l The gbSv* figure* furnish the bae I I* of the exhibit Placed In the cou»t’ 1 agent's office a few day* * n<! * ' which many farmers have been mud Intel rated. Those who cannot »« ’th* exhibit may obtain a <<'Pr " 1 Bullet n J 79 by Alling or writing « 'th- same. Detail* of oth.r I triala with spring pig* *<U ** , ' ,u in the bulletin. o - ——~ Hawkins Trial Taken From Judge Andernt I Indianapolis. JuneT-Vnitd !«•<** Imatrlet Judge A B And.r.on 1 not h**r the case of Merton > 1 * 'kina. Portland flannel*r b** l , |the Haakln* Mortgage compan* *#*■ eubabllary ronrern*. and IT «" charged with using the mail* furl 'rrance of a ackcmc to defraud. Jthr trial which had been set tar ■>“” 1«. will be poetpon.*! un'il ,waa nkaonfred today by " ■* ' . .Kappce. clerk nf the court »• »** because Hawkins' counsel object J Jtidgr Anderson aIIHM I” 'b r ,r rangomunta are now belns «u* * another fe<!erul Judg« » b-* r I The objection to Ju*’"*’ * v * b • •indtan.imn. by H.-nr> M of Bt, Lottlx. a form** 1 n,,rd . Iris , . dlairbt attorney tar tb»' . [whn imi In hi* appcira""’ f torucy tar Hawkin* ' “ a i j'lhat at the time lb.' I J' Ar Itornav wa» objecting t<> “• I'der«»n. t'mwiu* C FhH’"" I'dtanapnll* of remove! tar the i .'datekfls.nt* in the ca»» •ed the oMd trlwd belur* '