Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 19, Decatur, Adams County, 22 January 1932 — Page 1
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MERGENCY PROGRAM READY FOR TRIAL
<N TO SHOW Nothing of ■m VICTIMS i iiHg Proceeds In Case Wjibl Former HoosFor Murders ESSES I \RE CALLED Ariz., .lan. 22 IIIII I C Biith Judd. Jii-veiir-nld blonde, EX’ forced Io view ex■aig tod.'iv that revolted Elaiii‘l'l. need erilililioiodiscovered the Efc <>f her former fiirl nresi lilini! its case JuililX Inal ell the charges muiii reil Agnes Anne slate planned to present from the luggage in of Mrs. I-eroi EHr r.iuii.n ;it<’. Mrs. Hedvig were sent front PhoeAngeles. exhibits included bloodclothing of the victims, , ridges that took L.... ’ . di.ai instruments ,uj n~”d hi dismembering ’■■k Samuelson and. i”d photographs of ~Ebe. l>.-f.ilmy were taken Em te suitcase and trunks, K bl halt a dnz.-n Los Angeles including the baggag"En » ■ 1 .. ■r. d i li” plan to disthe bodies. general belief was that Es. inld would show little inter- . gnu exhibits. She ■l Nnsi m a laired manner as ■nt ' :>S” T” tn .1 it se 111.-d. the |U” would couON PAGE SIX) «ffl SUMMONS ■IS. J. M. RICE Woman Is Found Beside Her Cot; I Bllad Been Sick Mary Jane Rce, 74. wife of Hiu.-, med at her nonte, i Seventh street, at 12:30 1 ion - afternoon of anB* : - lettralgia of the ■M) Mr< Rice was found dead i‘ cot, Thurs ME" -er aged husband. I ,’ue fell o f of the cot i! ”■ suffered with bar vessels, and beM ''”■ ‘ll at four o’clock morning. resident of - >y mid for many years < ity She was a mem-M.-'hodist Episcopal l! "' was born Adams ■tt’ January 1858, the datlgh a KI Rachel Kern. She marriage to James on April 18. 1875. ng i< the husband, a son. near tills city: a grand pH :t ' r ' Otto Miller of Port ■B 3 sisters, Mrs. Jeanette £■'" tt'.ii Decatur; Mrs. James BB itiul Mrs f.'rank Burger oi brother preceeded death many years ago. MB* 1 * 1 services will be held H afternoon at 1:30 o’clock Be kt s e and at 2 o’clock at Episcopal church B. h. Franklin, pastor. Burial will be in the lr Cemetery. Ph Prices (io Higher ■ tlfc l> i' < e ° f eggs went ”P today Decatur market. They were BBs i'i 1 ’ Cents a (lozen wholeaj" cents retail. The price Ehi lv la<l l)Pen 1(1 cents a doz- ■ ’Jiolesale. | ’ B. a. Dues Payable Bost \ 1 eterson, seccretary of ■j* '! Trav ellers Protective As1 sta,e( l today before deVi2' a State directors’ meetcennes that dues for 1932 !ii >al ’ le ' Mr ’ Peterson urg-1 ■V. members send in their once. '
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT
Vol. XXX. No. 19.
Defends Hawaiian.* - - ; Psi Asserting that "the old-type Ha- 1 waiians are a grand people’’ and "that it is the lower class, pro-1 duced by intermarriage, tint: causes trouble," Miss Helen Judd, daughter of Governor Judd of Hawaii, now a student at Mills I College, Oakland. Cal., stoutly de-; fends the natives of the "Island' Paradise.” Commenting on the Massie case. Miss Judd said she had lived in the islands all her life i Itnd has never had cause for fear, i Her great-great-grandfather was! one of the first Hawaiian mission ! aries anil the family has lived! there ever since. SECONDSOVIET PLANFORECAST Imorovement In Living Conditions Is Seen As Plan Is Discussed Moscow, Jan. 22 — (U.R) Improvement of the living standard; of Soviet Russia by 300 per cent | is envisaged in the "second five I year plan." it was disclosed today i ii> OU -Urst detailed 7>ntllne or lite, plan, issued by the political bur-1 eau of the communist party for the guidance of the forthcoming ; party conference. The plan sets a threefold in-i crease in the consumption of food, clothes and other goods by ever.', Soviet inhabitant as one of the : l principal objectives. The improvement in living standards; would be achieve,] ] )v further ex-1 pansion and inerchanization of <n-l dustry, agriculture and transport I from 1933 to 1937. giving the Soviet Union first place in Europe in "the domain of technique" and first place in tlie world in a series of economic fields. Politically the plan aims nt - "complete liquidation of eamtali. t ! elements and classes gi nerallv bv, destroying the conditions which breed class differences and ex-i ploitation. The outline adds that simultane-1 ously, the soviet union must be forfeited as a base for international socialism. The political bureau advanced , startling estimates of industrial expansion by 1937, compared with the end of the first piatileka. or five year plan. The machine building industries would grow three and one-half times. Elec(GGNTINTTEn ON PAGE SIX! LOCAL GROUP PLANS MEETING Chamber of Commerce To Elect Directors At Meeting February 8 The annual election of directors for the Decatur Chamber of Commerce will lie held February 8, it was decided at a meeting of directors held last night in tihe Chamber of Commerce rooms. The directors will meet again next Thursday night to nominate six members, three of whom will be elected to the board and make other arrangements for the meeting. The ipeeting will follow the annual banquet, and the place and time will be announced following the next Thursday meeting. The three retiring directors will be C. C. Pumphrey. Dick Heller and A. R. Ashbaucher. present president of the club. Membership in the local Chamber of Commerce is now over 150 and it is the desire of the board I that all members attend the annual | organization meeting and help in the selection of new directors.
sinle. Natlonni And lulerunllouul Ar»s
WASNER URGES MORE CONTACT ■ Monroe Principal Says Pupils Should Meet With All Classes Speaking on the subject of edu- I cation. Vagil Wagner, principal of! j the Monroe high school stated be- , , fore members of the Decatur Ro- | I tary dub last evening, “that the I j high school boys and girls be given | (the opportunity to iearn citizenship i I first hand through contact with I business men, i üblic o ficials and ; public institutions in the state." Mr. Wagner has met with more | I than ordinary success in the teach- | er’s profession and stated that I nearly every boy.or girl moulded l his or her career after someone in i I the community. "A boy can learn more civics ! 1 by shaking hands with the superin- i tendent of a boy’s reformed school, j I by seeing the inmates at work, by ' i having the past, present and future I j of the inmates explained, than by i reading many text books from cover to cover". Mr. Wagner stated. Mr. Wagner paid tribute to the i business and commercial interests I !of a community and emphasized (that the schools and churches were ! dependent upon them. “A school ■ teacher’s patience, a preacher's diplomacy, a professional man's se> - I vices are constantly dependent upon the stability which the business I man has placed in the economic | foundations upon which we stand’. I Mr. Wagoner cited George Wash- | : ington as a successful business man 1 . who led us through a military crisis. I a financial crisis and a political | crisis, any one of which was as dis- ‘ I flcult to handle as the present one. I Jibe school principal had a word • i for youth and stated that the young I 1 folk of today were as good and • i clear as anytime in history and I j.stated that in mdnt cases tbew-w«MM | always right. Pau! Edwards had charge of the l program. , CROWLEY PAYS WITH HIS LIFE — Two Gun Killer Goes To Electric Chair In Calm Manner I Ossining, N. Y . Jan. 22. (U.R) — | Francis Crowley, boastful, hateful, 21*-year-old killer, who fought only ’when armed, died calmly in the electric chair last night, his hands clasping a rosary, his, last words for the woman who sent him that I rosary—the woman who bore him. deserted him at birth, and remainled a stranger until death. | "My last wish,” he said clearly .and without a trace of his habitual I bravado, “is to send my love to liny mother." Who that mother is, Crowley did not know. Where she lived, he did not know. Why she bore him, he | diih not know except that he had heard of her love story. It had embittered him. made him a "cop hater” from grade school days. Crowley’s father was a policeI man. His mother a housemaid. He was unwanted. Today his mother, the story goes, lis remarried. Her husband does not know of her child who paid the ' tCONTINUED ON PAGE TWO) o Broken Lantern Causes Barn To Burn Down The barn on the Roy Lewis farm southeasrof Herne, was completely burned early Wednesday morning, and Mr. Lewis narrowly escaped flames, when the kerosene lantern which he was carrying ignited the hay. Mr. Lewis had gone to the barn alxmt 4:30 o’clock Wednesday morning to do the chores. He had thrown hay from ■ the mow to the lower floor, and was descending the ladder, when a rung became loose and he was thrown to the floor of the barn. In Ohe fall he was hit in the back by a sharp object which completely paralyzed him. The lantern which Mr. Lewis was carrying at the time of the tall, broke and kerosene was spilled over the hay and ignited. Mr. Lewis was unable to move for several minutes I The barn was completely destroyed, and implements and grain were burned, althougih the livestock was saved. The damages were covered by insurance. ‘
ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER IN ADAMS COUNTY
Decatur, Indiana, Friday, January 22, 1932.
Fifty-Two-Year Old ! Directory Interesting ! ♦ ; ♦ Attorney Earl B. Adum.i brought us in a copy of a directory of Fort I Wayne and sui rounding towns, (published in 18,80, fifty-two years .ago, and containing a lot of inter- ! esting information. It gives DeIcatur a population of 2.000. Bluffton | and Kendallville 2,500, Van Wert (4.000 and Huntington 5,000. The directory boosts Decatur in! • a nice write-up and says the town ! | presents an appearance of stir and! .bustle not usually noticeable ini (towns its size. The directory shows I R. B. Allison, president of the Old I I dams County Bank; L. D. Adams. I stave factory; A. R. Bell, livery: INorval Blackburn, county clerk; J. I R. Bobo, judge; Dick Townsend.', .Burt House; Godfrey Christen, county Auditor; Ray Williams, editor of Decatur Democrat; \V. SJ I -CONTINUED ON RAGE TWO, BRITISH HAVE | CABINETSPLIT. Differences Arise On Import Duties; Vote Mav Be Called London, Jan. 22. —(U.R) —A split in Prime Minister J. Ramsay MacDonald’s national government over I the tariff issue was announced in an official communique today. The announcement said the cab-J jinet, unable to obtain unanimity on ja tariff policy, had decided those i i ministers unable to support the 1 cabinet’s majority conclusions “on I the subject of import duties and! j cognate matters, are at liberty to j ’express their views by speech and vote.” The communique was issued| after a cabinet session lasting twj» anil one-half hoars. "The cabinet." the communique said, "is deeuly impressed with the paramount importance of maintaining national unity in the presence i of the grave problems which now confront this country and the whole | world, “Accordingly, it has been determ-1 ined that some modification of tliej I (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX . 0 Murder Case Argued Lebanon, Ind.. Jan. 22—(UP)--Final arguments were started today ' in the murder trial of Charles Ver- I non Witt. The case was expected to go to • the jury late today. —o Woman Seeks Office Terre Haute, Jan. 22 — (UP) — Miss Emma May, president of the Indiana Woman’s Democratic Club today announced her candidacy for the democratic nomination for reporter of the supreme and appellate court. Miss May is the first woman to announce for nomination in the convention. It nominated she probalbly I will contest for the position with Miss Genevieve Brown, republican, Winamac, incumbent, who Is expected to seek renomination. LEGISLATORS ARE CONSULTED Myers Sends Questionnaires To House Members On Taxation Indianapolis, Jan. 22. — (U.R) — Questionnaires will be sent all state representatives seeking their approval of a house committee to cooperate with a state senate committee in devising a tax relief schedule, Walter Myers, speaker of the House announced. The relief program, if completed, will be presented to Governor Harry G. Leslie with a request that he call a •special session of the legislature to enact it. A tentative house committee, drawn by Myers, includes Delph McKesson, Plymouth. Democratic floor leader: James Knapp. Hagerstown. Republican floor leader; Earl Crawford. Milton, and Miles Furnas, Winchester, Democratic and Republican caucus chairmen, respectively; Harbin Linke, Columbus. and William Babcock Jr., i Rensselaer, Democratic and Republican members of the ways and 'means committees, respectively.
'ALBERT ARNOLD I DIES THURSDAY Kirkland Township Resi-[ dent Succumbs To Illness of Heart Trouble Albert Arnold. 64, prominent I I Kirkland township farmer, and life 1 I long resident of Adams county, died j ’at his home in Kirkland t,ownship I (at 10 o’clock Thursday night, Jan-! I uary 21, following a four years’ ill-1 | ness with heart trouble. Mr. Arnold was born in Kirkland (township, May 2, 1868. the son of j Frank and Polly Lihy Arnold, both lof whom are deceased. He was ‘ {united in marriage to Caroline! IKruetzman, April 24, 1893 in a cere-! mony performed at Magley. Mrs. I Arnold survives. The deceased was a member of I 'the local Zion Reformed church. | The following children survive: | Mrs. Augusta Hoopengardner of Angola, and Earl Arnold of Deca > |tur. Four grandchildren, and two I brothers and two sisters survive: | Edward Arnold, Charles Arnold of) j Decatur; Mrs. Sarah Martin. De-! catur, and Mrs. Rosa Milroy of Hud ' I son, Ohio. Two brothers, Stephen j | and William, are deceased. I Funeral services will be held Sun-1 ; day afternoon at 1 o'clock at the ‘ home, and at 1:30 o'clock at the I Pleasant Dale church, with the Rev.; 'A. R. Fledderjoharrn. pastor of the; ; Zion Reformed church officiating.! I Burial will be made at Pleasant ■ I Dale cemetery. oJosephine Archbold Is New Sorority President I Miss Josephine Archbold a student I iat Indiana University, and the' daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Roy Archbold of this city, has been chosen president of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority house at Bloomington. Miss I Ar. hbold is a junior at the Univer- ' | si’ty. o — DEATH GALLS j YOUNG WOMAN' iVerena Habegger Dies At M o n roe Township Home Thursday Berne, Ind., Jan. 22 —Miss Verena I Habegger. 35, died Thursday afternoon at 5 o’clock at the home of j her mother. Mrs. Joe H. Habegger- ; in Monroe townshjp, four miles : northwest of Berne. Miss Habegger had been bedfast with a complication of diseases for the last 12 years. Death was due l to uremic poisoning which she j contracted about a week ago. The deceased was born in Wabash Township. February 21, 1897, Uhe daughter of Joe H. and Eliza-1 beth Mazelin Habegger. She moved ; with her parents to Monroe town- ; ship in 1911. Her father preceded I her in death last July. Surviving are the mother and the following brothers ami sisters: Noah H. Habegger and Mrs. Menas Graber of Berne; Mrs. J. D. R. Schwartz of Monroe township, David, i Barbara, Reuben. Esther, and Ag- ; nes all at home. Funeral services will be held at ■ I the home Saturday morning at lb i olclock. Burial will be made in the I Hilty cemetery, north of Berne. O Attends Lima Meeting C. E. Peterson, Thirty-third degree Mason of this city was a guest last night at the annual Lima Association Scottish Rite. Lima. Ohio. Mr. Peterson attended the affair as the guest of William Stolgenbach. Two hundred persons attended the banquet, which was followed by a program attended the banquet, which was followed by a program by Edna Means, Chicago on impersonations. Charles Dalyeat of Van Wert motored to Lima with Mr. Peterson. , — — > I TWENTY SEATS ’I ' Central high school officials today turned back 20 tickets for tonight's Central- Decatur | basketball game. The tickets j | will be sold to the first 20 | | people who call at the gym- , i nasium doors before game time ; tonight. All other tickets have | been sold. ♦ ♦
FurniNhed By I uited PreM*
. Series Os Meetings Are Planned Here * Beginning next Sunday night a series of sermon-lectures on I “Church History" will be given at I the Zion Reformed Church by the | pastor of the church, the Rev. A. IR. Fledderjclirann. Each ‘Sunday I night during the coming weeks will ! I be devoted to that subject. The | I first message will deal largely on i | the theme, "The Meaning of,l I Church; the Prevailing Beliefs and Philosophic among the heathen and ; i Jews at the time of Christ; tilie | Early Church." These messages I will be full of information and will present largely the histori.al and' spiritual background of the church I ias it hail its beginning since the i coming of Christ into the world, and j continued on through the ages up 'to the present time. The speaker I will use the blackboard in presentI .CONTINUED ON PAGE TWu> SENATORS WAR ON WILKERSON I ;Claim Senator Glenn Has Important Case Pending In His Court [ Washington. Jan. 22—(U.R)—The ' law firm of Senator Glenn. Repn., j 111., leading advocate of Federal Judge Wilkerson's promotion to i the circuit court, is counsel in a I case now pending in Wilkerson s | court, it was disclosed today. Senator Blaine, Repn., Wis., I lYrouglit out the fact in question- ■ ing Glenn, who was urging the ; senate judiciary subcommittee to i report favorably the nomination of | the Chicago judge. In defense Glenn said ho per-1 sopally had never appeared before Wilkerson in connection witli I the ease. He said Wilkerson once , overruled a motion made by his | firm to dismiss the case. Blaine said he had information ! that Wilkerson is holding up a decision in the case to see wheth-. I er his nomination is confirmed. I The case involves Jacob Factor,; !a British subject. Extradition; ' proceeds were instituted to return ! Factor to England in connection | I with a swindling charge involving j $2,000.00(1 or $3,000,000 of mining i ; stock, Blaine said. Glenn’s firm I is counsel for Factor. He person-: ally appeared in the extradition' (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX) o—w — Speaks At High School i Dr. E. J. Bulgin, evangelist who lis conducting revival services at I the Methodist Episcopal church in ! this city, delivered an address on j "Guns" before pupils of Decatur high school at the regular chapel I period this morning. Dr. Bulgin compared a child's life to the metal part of a gun, stating that the metal part is more important than the wooden part. His addi ress was interesting and was greatly appreciated by the high school pupils. Mr. Charles Clark, who has charge of the singing at the Methodist church, sang a vocal solo. JURY AWARDS $1,350 DAMAGES Mrs. Flavia Gerber Is Given All But $650 In Damage Demand A jury in Adams circuit court, late Thursday awarded Mrs. Flavia Gerber $1,350 damages in her suit asking $2,000 damages as the result of an automobile accident in which the Gerber car and a truck, driven by J. 11. Deepen and owned by Spotless Cleaners of Fort Wayne collided. The accident occurred in Fort Wayne in 1929 and the cause was first filed in Allen superior court. Later the cause was venued here and hearing started last Saturday. The ease then went into vacation. Attorneys L. 11. Dunten for the defendants and E. V. Emerick for the plaintiff had several verbal tanglements during the five days of the trial. Just before final arguments tlie: plaintiff moved to dismiss the cause as against Deepen, the river of the J truck. The motion was granted I and the jury decided as to the ■ liability of the cleaning corporation.!
Price Two Cents
New Envoy to Japan r I < Appointed U. S. Ambassador to j Japan to succeed W. Cameron j Forßes. Ambassador Joseph C. I Grew, now envoy to Turkey, is one I of the few professional diplomats I to attain ambassadorial heights.! A native of Boston. Ambassador Grew entered the diplomatic service in 1904 and was assigned to the Egyptian Consulate as a clerk. He later served in Mexico. Russia, Germany and Austria. In 1917 he was assigned to the State Department and was later sent to Europe to take part in the negotiations that ended the war. BERNE MAN IS DEATH'S VICTIM! Peter Nussbaum Expires Thursday Afternoon; 111 For 11 Years Peter Nussibaum, 64, for many I years a resident of Adams County,! | died at his home on Sprunger street | in Berne. Thursday afternoon at I 2:55 o'clock. Death resulted from | pneumonia which he had contract- I ed recently and by Bright’s disease from which he has ailed for tlhe I last 11 years. Tlie deceased was born in Putnam County, 0., February 16. 1867, the son of Jacob and Barbara Amstutz Nussbaum. When he was eight years of age lie moved to the vicinity of Beine. He was married to! Ida Aldine Baumgartner in 1895, | and until 1923 the couple resided in ' Monroe township on a farm. Tn that year he moved with his family to Berne. Mrs. Nussbaum died May 22, 1931. Surviving are the children: Mrs. Della Liechty, Rufus and Henry NuSsbaum of Monroe township: Martha at home and Caroline of Fort Yayne. The following brothers and sisters also survive: Abraham of Kidron; Isaac of Orrville; Mrs. Mary Miller of Cardin. Okla., Mrs. Emil Badertscher of Berne; Mrs. Jacob Moser of Orrville and Mrs. E<l. Liddy of Fort Wayne. Mr. Nussibaum was a member of the Berne Mennonite church. Funeral services will lie lueld Saturday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock at the home and at 2 o'clock in the Mennonite Church in Berne, with burial in the M. R. E. cemetery. — ; O Adams County Woman’s Father Dies Wednesday Funeral services for Louis J. Diver. 73, of near Monroeville, father of Mrs. Edward Bischo f of Adams county, who died at his home four miles southwest of Monroeville, Wednesday night, will be held Saturday moriiing at 8:30 o’clock at. the home and at 9 o’clock at the St. Rose Catholic church in Monroeville. The Rev. Theodore V. Petting will officiate and burial will be in the church cemetery. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Catherine Diver; three daughters. Mrs. Edward Bischoff of Adams County, Mrs. J C. Minnich of Fort Wayne; and Mrs. George Laker of Dixon. 0., two sons, John Diver of . Madison township and Cornelius Diver at home. A brother and two I sisters, John Diver of Sunman, j Mrs. William Miller and Mrs. ’George Bahr of Batesville also stirI vive.
YOUR HOME PAPERLIKE ONE OF THE FAMILY
MAJOR BLOW AT DEPRESSION IS READY TO WORK Present Program Is Effort to Start Business, Farming And Banking OPTIMISM IS EXPRESSED j Washington, Jan. 22.— (U.R) —The federal government is set for its major blow at the depression. With the new $2,000,000,. 000 (billion) Reconstruction Finance Corporation, the government is about to make its supreme effort to push indusdustry off its dead center. By sheer mass barrage of millions of dollars, on a scale never before (attempted anywhere and possible | only in a country of America's I gigantic wealth, this government is 'seeking to revive the confidence of (the country. I This nation, which lias astoimdled the world by an industrial development which put automobiles jand other luxuries within the reach jof almost everyone, with a normal (annual income of possibly $90,0(h).000,0(h) (billion) with $5.000,000.0>m (billion) actual money in circulation and unlimited resources temporarily locked up by fear, now is attempting to drive away its own bogies. I President Hoover is waiting to sign the reconstruction finance measure. He already has asked congress for a $50,000,000 approI priation to provide initial capital, j Charles G. Dawes, a typical Am[erican business man of courage and disregard for precedents, is standling by. already designated as presi|dent of the corporation, prepared to throw the full force of bis cotnmanding personality and business experience into this gigantic job. He is pulling a little harder on his | pipe. He is scowling a little more. I He is even bl ushing up on his in- | dividual style of profanity after a tedious hibernation in sedate diplo- ! matie life. Beside him is tiie less dramatic, quiet, shrewd, expert. Eugene Mey(OONTINUED ox PAGE FtVE) o — Infant Child Expires Wilbert Norbert Bnltemever. 4-day-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bultemeyer of Prebl. township di. <1 at 3:30 o’clock Thursday afternoon, of intestinal trouble. The infant I had not been sick hut a few minutes before it died. The baby was born Monday. Januaiy 18, 1932, the son of Paul and Frieda Koenemanri-Bultemeyer. who survives. One sister, Emma, also survives. Funeral services will lie held Saturday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock at: the home with Rev. ('. B. Preuss, pastor of the Friedheim Lutheran church officiating. Burial will bo in the Friedheim Lutheran cemetery. LOWLANDS OF STATE MENACED Flood waters Rise In Several Parts of Indiana, Report Says Indianapolis, Jan 22 (U.R) Serious flood conditions in the lower areas of the White and Wabash rivers were foreseen today by J. H. Armington, chief of the U. S. weather bureau. Downpours of more than two inches within the past 24 hours added to the peril resulting from the already swollen rivers. Flood warnings were issued for Elliston and Mt. Carmel, where the Wabash river is more 'han seven feet over its banks. The heaviest rainfall was reported from Elliston, where the precipitation was 2.57 inches. At Bloomington it was 2.18 inches. At Terre Haute it neared an inch and Increasingly heavier southward. The Wabash river was 25.2 feet, and rising at Elliston. The flo I stage there is IS feet. Armington predicted it would rise to 28 feet. At Mt. Carmel it was at a level of 22.2 feet, with tlie likelihood that it (CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO)
