Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 62, Decatur, Adams County, 12 March 1932 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

•DF' (0) FT 1 0

NET PAIRINGS ARE ANNOUNCED ('hi.ngo. Mar 11 —(U.PJ Pair-, Ings fm th" ninth annual national. Catholic iMiskcthall ' tournament starting at Loyola I'tilvi-rsity Mar. ( IG wore announced today. Thirtytwo schools front all pints of the. country will complete The draw intra: Wednesday, March 16 7 pin. De LaSalle high si-limd.; Minneapolis, vs. Catholic highi S< hool. Washington. Ind. 8 pin.- De Padua high '< hod,| Ashland. Wis.. vs. winner of !.”<>-! St. Philip playoff. Chicago. 9 pin -Father Ryan high! school. Nn htille. Tenn vc win-' nor lowa Stat" Catholic tourmi-' ment. Thursday. March 17 9 a.nt. Catholic high school, I Little Kock. Ark. vs. St Thomas ' high school. Scranton. Pa. 10 n.nt. —Cretin high school. St. i Paul. Minn. vs. St. Mel high school \ Niagara Falls. N. Y. 1 pin.-St. Mary’s high school. | Bid Island. Minn. vs. Cathedral high school. Indianapolis. 2 p.m. Spalding Institute. Peoria 111. vs. Canishts high school. Buffalo. N. Y. 3 tint. — Augustinian Academy. Carthage. N. Y.. vs. Jasper Academy. Jasper. Ind. 1 p in—Loyola high school. Man- i kato. Minn. vs. St. Patrick high l school. Chicago. i* p.m.—Trinity high school.; Bloomington, 111. vs. Patrick high I school. Binghanipton. N. Y. 7 p.nt. — Bishop England high school. Charleston. S. C. vs. rua-ncr-up lowa state Catholic tourna-j ment. 8 p.nt. —St. Francis high seho d. Athol Springs. N. Y vs. De La Salle high school. Joliet. 111. 9 pm.—Cathedral high school, Sioux Falls. S. D vs. Campion. Academy. Prait ie Du Chien, Wis.! Friday. March 18 9 a m.—St. Joseph high school. Huntington, W. Ya. vs. Central Catholic high school. Fort Wayne. 10 a.m. —Northeast Catholic high school. Philadelphia, is. St. Bona-' venture high school. Sturtevant. Wis. i At the Training Camps By United Press > — St. Petersburg, Fla.. Mar 12. -Babe Ruth will be absent from the Now York Yankees’ lineup today when the Yanks take the field against the Boston Braves. The Yanks starting lineup: Hill, cf; Saltzgaver. 2b; Chapman. if; 1 Gehrig, lb; Selkirk, rs; Lary. 3b; Crosettl. ss; Paddon, c: Andrews. Brown and Murphy, pitchers. Los Angeles — The New York Giants will try to turn the tables; on the Chicago Cuis in the see-] ond of their six-game exhibition series here today. Yesterday, the Cubs defeated the New Yorkers 3 to- 1. taking advantage of three! paces in the fourth, when Parme-1 lee was wild. Tampa. Fla. — Whitey Hilt her.[ recruit from Peoria, was slated to , start on the mound for tl;e Cincinnati Reds against the Phillies tn. their exhibition game here today. Phil Collins and R- Grabowski are expected to be openers for the Philadelphia team. Larry Bentcn is expected to open against Brooklyn for the Reds on Sunday. Winterhaven. Fla.—The Phillies ; went to Tampa today for their ex-1. Reds. Yesterday the Yannigans hihition game with the Cincinnati defeated the regulars in a six-in-ning game. 1 to 0. New Orleans —If weather per- , niits, the Cleveland Indians will meet the New Orleans Pelicans ini an exhibition game here today.: Rumors were revived that the Indians were spending their last' season here, and would gotoPasa-; dona, Calif., in 1933. San Francisco — The Detroit! T'gej will seek revenge today for yesterday’s 5 to 4 defeat by the San Francisfo Missions, who got to Pitcher Herring for one run In the last half of the ninth to win. „ -o—; I Get the Habit — T"-ade at Home

1 An Important Question ‘For Truss Wearers • ♦ p When you put your truss on in the morning are you SURE you know how to adjust it properly? Do not answer that question hurriedly. It is very important. Many ruptured persons are wearing trusses incorrectly because the right way never was shown them. Many suffer unneces- 1 sarily in consequence. Let our Expert Truss Fitter show ' you what to do to get the best results. Private fitting room t t The B. J. Smith Drug Co. “The Rexall Store” f AUTHORIZED EXCLUSIVE AKRON TRUSS FITTERS , f ’ —— "I ■■■ll I

’u — fl I EIGHTH GRADE TOURNEY Morning Games Kirkland. 19; Monmouth. lU. St. Joseph, Decatur. 31: Jefferson. 12. I Geneva, 15; Monroe, 5. Afternoon Games Berne 79; Kirkland, 15 (fltmll jl STJOEBEATS JEFF GRADERS [ St. Joe Catholic eighth grade basketball team went into the 1 ! semi-finals of the tourney at! ‘ Berne this morning by trimming i .leTersoD gradeis with much ease.i ;:l-12. Braden was the chief scor-1 ler for the local team with 13i . points to his credit. Hess. Murpl.y and App< Iman al -I so aided in the scoring spree' which sent the Wemhofftnen into, the lead. The score at half time was 22-2 for Decatur. Lineup and summary; Jefferson (J 2 FC. FT TP Miller, f 2 15 Yaney 0 0 0| Bryan 0 0 tl Whitacre 0 0 0 Forman 2 2 fi. Tester 0 0 0 Yaney 0 0 01 Roe ‘ .... 0 1 1| Totals 4 4 12 St. Joe (2.1) Appleman 2 0 4j Keller 0 0 0 1 Hess 2 2 «’ Daniel . 0 0 0[ Braden .11 1 13 People 0 0 0; Murphy 3 0 G Baker .1 0 2 Totals 14 3 31P Officials: Lehman. Berne; Long Geneva. o LESLIE BLOCKS ROAD* CONTRACT ■CONTINUED FORM !>\GE ONE) this week, it was reported that all commissioners were in favor of, 1 rock asphalt. i Lesli.- is expected to attend the meeting this week. j The Ray L. Harris company. Fort | Wayne, was to have been award- i i e,l the rock asphalt contract on its bid of 13G0.780.42. The concrete bid j entered by the Hardaway construction Com;:any. Columbus. Ind., was $244,648.77. The bituminous retread bid. submitted by the Blair and I Franse Company. Lexington. Ky., wa- $237,725.93. — o DEMOCRATS TO (LATHER HERE NEXT MONDAY — iCU.v3 INUB.It FROM PAGE ONE) numerous sub-committees to take [ i are of each visiting notable. i George Baker, president of the | Jay County Jefferson club, stated, j today in a telephone conversation! that he was bringing several Dem-! [ocrats from Jay county to the meet-1 [ ing. A delegation from Hartford i City headed by Alex Pursley, old! eleventh district chairman and: James Cronin, president of the Citizens State Bank, will come to ; the meeting. Fort Wayne will send a large [delegation down Monday afternoon and backers of each congressional: Candida e are planning on being!; here full force. L Anyone wanting a ticket until the last 43 are disposed of may get [ them from J. L. Ehler. i; -o ( River Made Lake Reel l-’iHit lake in Tennessee is caused by a change in tin- course of ‘he Mississippi river, i part of I, the former bed separated from the j present channel of tin- river in the i foss'i of a lake, l< Is loca'ed in the i evrome northwest corner of Ten 1 nessee nd part of its area also is It: I lie stale of Kentucky -~o . i Wife'* Sense of Humor If the wife laughs at your Jokes, you can he sure either that, you know some good ones or you have a good wife.- Los Angeles Times I

(SALES TAX IS DOOMED. STRAW VOTE REVEALS I (CONTINUED FORM PAGE ONE) Unmet leal standing on tin- sales I tax, hit the results of his survey were definite enough to make all :I he house loaders downcast - Spealo I Garnet 4 . Rnim-y, Acting Chairman Crisp of the ways and I menus committee and Republican Fluor Chief Snell. ‘‘Those fellows who are making j spread-eagle speeches against the sales tax on the floor will ho permitted to go on as lung as they like sai<l Rainey "If they defeat , It. we will call the ways and : means committee together In a minute and report out the Mills i plan. which js oven more ohnox ! ions.” Criim said there are apparently more Republicans for the sales ! tax now than Democrats. "The opposition l.tis exceed. I mt expectations." ho added "B it I believe it will come around in i the end ” | Snell declined to make any pre- ! dictions. | Other leaders thought Rainey might lie unduly pessimistic. They ' described the house as milling anil hauling” and they do not intend to let matters get to a vote until members have had an opportunity to think the matter ont fully. That means a vote on the ; issnb probably will not bo reached I until the latter part of next week. There was disagreement among[ the leaders as to means of appensing the opposition. Rainey thought t | nothing could lie done for the < aimers, whose protests have been I most effective. Crisp thought ■ some corrective amendments should be considered. EXTRA SESSION LOOMS AGAIN irnifTINTIFD vfiOM v» n ’’ '’Wl posals set forth today would reduce the property tax in the state $50,i 000.000. . Tlie proposed gasoline tax change would cut the highway commission | fund approximately $3,500,000 an--1 totally. The tax on intangibles, it [w s estimated, would reap $5,000.000. John T. Beasley, of Terre Haute, is chairman of the committee. o CHINESE ARE IN REBELLION CONT'N’TD FROM PAGE ONf-D j headquarters of the new government with rifles and machine guns. The administration is part of : the new Manchurian regime inaug-1 urated this week at < hangchup with Henry Pu-Yi. former Chinese emperor, as chief executive. Attempts to hoist the new Manchurian flag Thursday were , said to have caused the rebellion. Fighting began Thursday night ; ami was reported still in progress. Stray bullets fell on the Russian i side of the river. The rebels reportedly looted four Chinese hanks and attacked the English customs office and a branch of the Soviet - trading organization. The Chin- , I ese were entrenched in strategic ( j points at Sakhalien. Foreigners who crossed the , Amur into Russian territory in ! eluded the Japanese consul, the ! manager of the English customs. ; named Crossman, the manager of : tlie Chinese bank several Russian , i citizens, and their families. , BRIAN!) RITES ARE CONDUCTED! : PDF XTIED FROM PAGE ONE J’ places of peasants who lived and i died in the quiet countryside he loved. The only religious touch was the! I absolution given by Cardinal Verdier, archbishop of Paris, on speci:l instructions from the pope. Members of Briand’s family. Premier Andre Tardieu. and members of I the government witnessed the j simple benediction as the cardinal [aspersed holy water on the oak 1 coffin. Tardieu’s eulogy of Briand con- ! secra ed the veteran diplomat as the greatest postwar internationalist. Il emphasized the blow to world peace in his passing. Despite the cold. 20,000 persons in specially erected stands outside the foreign office heard the broadcast eulogy. In an effort to offset royalist criticism of Briand’s receiving the papal blessing after he had played an important part in the separation ol church and state in France, Cardinal Verdier issued the following statement before the ceremony; “In the presence of death there I should be universal respect for all I Chris ians, men, and good will. , The cardinal assumed full responsibility for the ceremony. For many years the cardinal was a professor of morals and is therefore well aware of the conditions under which religious funeral ceremonies can be given.” After the absolution ceremony the body was carried from the clock room of the foreign office to the gateway inside the high metal [ fence surrounding the ministry, j Tardieu then delivered the eulogy. |

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCR AT naTI. RD AY, MARCH 12 1932

Zero Hour Approach<‘s lor “Bluebeard i k. r T ■ 1 y jL , ■' j _j kJk pSSHp ' sW wk 5 JPWCT Dofqthy X' 7 HpjAst - -.it. Lemke P-icher

Denied a review of ms case by the State Supreme Court of Ve-t Virginia, Harry F. Powers, called the "Wi -t Virginia Bluebird." will hang on March 18th, failing intervention by the Governor, which is very unlikely. Power-; was sentenced for the murder of Mrs. Dorothy Pressler Lemke, of Northboro, Mass., whom he enticed from her home with a promise of

Greater Love Hath No Mau Ji F; A tragic aftermath ot the ternfle gale that lashed the Atlantic sea board, causing havoc among shipping, was the death of Charles Graham (left) and William Garton (rightl, members of the Coast Guard who w--nt to the rescue of the fishing sloop Anna which was in danger of foundering off Absecon Inlet. N J. Capt- J S. Turner tinset) reached the shore safely Three other men of the Atlantic City Coast Guard were lost before the Anna was towed into port.

Briand's family, representatives of foreign governments and the league of Nations, stood in special I tribunes. Cold winds blew off the Seine as the coffin was placed on a shroud--1 hearse. Hundreds of representdives of foreign governmental formed in line behind the coffin. Spectators stood bareheaded as troops began the march past from he Esplanade Invalides toward the j chamber of deputies. They lower'd their flags in salute as they passer! the coffin of the man who devoted years of his life to attempts to make was impossible. ■ NEW CHARGE IS PRESENTED — CONTINUED FORM PAGE ONE! tempte I to send a letter to our! law firm at Gary setting out some' legal upon which re-’ healing could be based. The letter was taken by Daly, who refits-1 cd to permit it io be mailed. “I went to the prison Friday, and Iyad a long talk with Steph-j . nson with a guard present as is customary. But wTiat is not customary is the fact I was informed that any notes taken by me or any other attorney for the prisoner would be submitted to Daly for censorship before allowed to bo taken out. ‘ Such rulings add new evidence to the charge that our client is a political prisoner and has never been given a square deal." Jenkines said he intends to institute other proceedings tn procure by court order the letter which was withheld. One of the principal points in the petition for rehearing is the contention that Miss Alice O'erhnltzer. whom the one-time klan ‘ragoj ia charged with murdering, committed suicide and that if others can be held in suicide cases, the freedom of any person may bo thus put in jeopardy. o One in Time Saves Nine "A Texas man of ninety-eight says honey has kent him alive," says a news iter... And yet, too many of them will shorten any man's life. —Kansas City Star

♦ marriage. Powers was also under indictment for the murder of Mr< Aste Bu.ck. of Park Ridge, 111., and her three children. Under the alias of Cornelius 0. Pierson, Powers had lured them from their home. Their bodies were later found buried under th* floor of Powers’ garage at Clarksburg. The condemned man seems resigned to hii fate.

LOCALS Floyd John-on of Monroe was a business visitor here today. Tillman Gerber motored to Fort Wayne today where be attended the regional tournamen' Bill Landis of Portland visited friends in this city today. The Misses Lorain? and Mildred Teeple motored to Berne w.iere they attended the county eighth grade tournament. ■ Mr. and Mrs. t ail Bartlett of Muncie are spending the week-end in this city. | Ine Mississ Dolores. Mary Margaret, and Alta Ruth Klepper were j among the Decatur tans at the I County eighth grade touuiament i at Berne today. ■I There wil be no meeting of the ‘Presbyterian Christian Endeavor ■ Socit.y. Sunday evening, because of lhe al sem e of the leader, it was J announced thia afternoon. t , „ Marked Fiih ‘i In studying the habits and move | merits <>f iish. specimens are I caught and tagged, and after under i going this operation they are placed ■ • In a tank in order to give them an -, opportunity to recover. Having ,: rested they are released. The tags contain some directions to be fol lowed by anyone catching or find Ing the fish, and it is rather rP 1 nmrkalJe that, ns noted by the Eng lish authorities, 25 per cent of these tagged wanderers nrs after - wards heard from. 1 — o — • Divorce in Old China i The seven Justifying causes for ■ divorce under the old Chinese code -’ were barrenness, lasciviousness, disi: regard of the husband’s parents. I talkativeness, thievlshness. envious and suspicious temper and Inveter ■ i ate infirmity. _o—“Land of Midnight bun" Norway reaches :»00 inilea into | the Arctic zone, and nearly one- , third of the country is in the do main of tlw midnight sun and winter darkness, but even in the extreme south the summer day is 1 long and the winter day Is short.

SINCERITY OE PLANS DOUBTED (CONTINUED FORM P.4GE QNEi 1 Chinese foreign office, said China would insist on Japanese withi draw.il from all Chinese territory | now occupied as prelude to negotiations. The stnKmeut wag in i teply to a Japanese request for the Chinese defini'ioti of the terin withdrawal ot Japanese armed I forces." At Nanking, a foreign office 1 statement •••lied the new Manchurian state a “puppet govern- ' m»:>t" engineered by Japan and | reiterated that th" nationalist government would never recognize ! the new state. The government also released all notes exchanged between th" Chinese and Japanese foreign offices on the subject. | 1 Foreign observers inti rnreted this as a definite Chine. i bid for wori<l sympathy in its renorted impending military campaign to regain! , the territory occupied by the , Japanese. The foreign office teinied the! administration of the state a rebel regime, and charged that the sovereignty of China was impaired and that administrative rights of, the nationalist goveuuuent were: usurped. A Chinese note charged that Chines" who formed the state did so either at the instigation of Javan or under Japanese coercion. I The foreign offic e also claimed ■ that the “boy emperor.” Henryi Pu-Yi. wont to Changchun under! duress to become chief executive of the state and that the trip was. Hot as voluntary journey or ai i triumphal return to rule over th->l j land of his fathers. , i Tokio. Mar. 12- (U.R) The 9th[ Japanese division commanded by! Grit. Kenkichl I’veda and one . battal'on of Gen Shimomoto’s mixel l.rigad" will, be withdrawn from the Shanghai area, the I’nited Press was informed today from reliable quarto s. It was under-1 stood that withdrawal would be' ompleted by mid-Anril. With j drawal would leave the 11th and 14th divisions, various'* estimated! ' lo contain Cmhii 10.000 to 20 000’ men each, and Japanese landing narties from some 40 warships in ■| he Shanghai area. ■ o POLICE FORCES OF NATION ARE READY TO AID CONTINUED t-Ro.v PAOF ONE' 1 . j acting independently in an effort to cooperate. Col, H. Norman Scliwartzkopf. stationed at the Lindbergh estate. I made it clear that his pledge of I conSdeuce would be kept, but added the obvious fact tbfit the police themselves are not empowered to grant immunity to the criminals themselves. Efforts of the Jersey police have extended to three states, he revealed, and some investga'ors still afe cut. A feeling grew that the case rapidly is approaching the point where ‘the kidnapers may feel that the “heat”—in gangland parlance—has been sufficiently turned off to enable them to negotiate in comparative safety. That is to say, they may feel that, there is a sufficient relaxation of tension to make the ■ coast fairly clear for them. ' i With the press army dwindling ;at Hopewell, and many papers demoting less space and headlines to , the story, the kidnapers may feel 'that now is the time to come forIward, deliver the baby to a go-be-tween collect their ransom and vanish into the secret haunts from which they came. Gangland Is stirring, and there is a chance that a "break" will

come over the week-end. Sttlvi Spiftile. go-between for Col. Lindbergh. has planned to go to Detroit when u Uipior trial in whit h he is h defendant ends Owuey Madden, the r«-al "king pin" of New York's r.u ki t-i. Is reported active. He h, pictured as the man who turned authorities’ attention, seereily. to a Tombs prisoner who Is vaguely and mysteriously reported to possess information possibly helpful. The general feeling Is that the [ease probably needs uo more gangsters than are already involv [ nt. The Dally News hi New York Io- 1 [day ridiculed the idea of giving Al] i tpone his freedom in Chicago to aid in the hunt, mid printed a ser lies of "dispatches” saying variousi i noted prisoners would like to come : from jail to uid in clearing the niw. I nti (Killer) Burke. Winnie Ruth [Judd, and former Secretary of Interior Fall wire among those list[id as anxious to help. ——o Bandits Are Sentenced Robinson. 111.. March 12 <1 Pl — The three m r n. one ot them a former Indianapolis officer, who held tip the Flat Rock stale bank last week, were on their way to the State penitentiary at Menard. 111., today to serve sentences. Guy Sinclair of South Bend. Ind., only one of the trio to plead not guilty in the $5,000 robbery was convicted by a Crawford county jury yesterday and sentenced to one year to life in prison, on a charge of roMa-ry while arm'd. The other two are Grover Gris I ilh. former [silice chief of Hart- ; lord City, Ind., anil Clifford ila zen of California. Griffith fines u sentence on one to 20 years, t'.ul Hazen one year to life. — —0 Rum Runner Killed Indian .-.lolis, March 12- (UP) — Elijah Carpenter, 51. Negro rum runner, was shot to death here to day in what, police said was an attack by hijackers. His com; anion, Arthur Owona, Negro, was suffering critical gunshot wounds. Mohawk Bank Robbed Mohawk. Ind.. Mar. 12.— (U.R) — [Three bandits held up the Sjate [Bank of Mohawk shortly before I noon today and e.sciped with SL--900 in cash. Armed citizens set out in pursuit as (he bandits fled in an auto. i Preceded by an auto believed to ;he a decoy, the bandits drove up Ito the bank. Two leaped out and and entered the institution while ithe third remained in the car. o —— New York’* Infancy An article published ti> me C. .» tlaii Ai.viH-ule sa s; “Al the <>•- glutting of tlie Nineteenth > ti t 'lie •eonimenhU metropolis -■♦ the United States occuplt 1 -i >A th* lower end of .Mmiliat tn isl.-ii.i". • Oat la now up town’ being still ; made up of spacious forms and rountry e-sates. Im-t-e'ing tlie little village t'f Harlem. The actual measurements of the city pro|n-r are given as three miles In length (from the Battery to Fourteenth street), one and a half miles In width and eight milt's in circtimfer [ ern e " Grasshopper as rwd Attractin' as tlie grassh.qipet may he i<. fish his (Hisslhilltief as mi edible have never appealed to Americans. Yet John the Baptist fed on locusts and wild honey, with scriptural sanction. \Ve have the I testimony of the second chapter of . Liviticus that this insect was an acceptable item of diet among the | ancient Hebrews. "Even these ye may ent; the locttst after tils kind and the grasslmpper after Ids kitol" — o Shatk's Companion The largest nun eating sharks sometimes attain a lengt" of :M) n j4O feet It is nut true licit .lie fe male shark Is Idlnd. The plhu-tisn ; a member of the mackerel famih I and •mly nhotti 12 inches long, nc ! fsttupanles ships and also sharks , guiding the sharks to llielr food it swi;..s ••lose in front ,»t the shark but probably does lids |>. feed ot fragments scattered by the shark and also to secure ormer .o-n frot. | Ils "tenues Division* "f Time A. .M sinnds lut the Isitin words "ante meridiem” and P. M for “post meridiem." Hours are marked A M. from midnight until noon. P. .M. from noon imtil midnight. M. marks the hcur at noon

THE ADAMS-THEATRE SUNDAY-MONDAY-TUESDAY— IOc - “THIS RECKLESS AGE” with Buddy Rogers, Peggy Shannon. < harb Ruggles, Frances Dee, Richard Bennett. A great cast in a sizzling story of today’s Headstrong .' Two generations meet Head-on; the result is I' ire " Added--Comedy and Cartoon. j TONIGHT-Richard Talmadge in “DANCING Action! Speed! Romance! Thrills! ADDED" An GANG” Comedy and Cartoon. 10c--35c

< ; a> > eabs way® 1 E, UOh 01 iniNTINI'f H ' ht*® wi',l ll''" 1 " 1 "1-uIJB-r "" “O-uliM Half G.n I’., , 'l'i-’o<"r " ,!!,[ | h „ ( 1 I , l'.W ■ ' 'n-tuW JI made ' • m f. Th-' f n:ii:i l • .... i, k ■ W! • , " u/ ’ 1 1 I'liflenbarg, i f,.],! . | The offo iai , * ; | score 17 17 CUert.me ' I passed 111 H(1!1 . he ~ ’• SOI.- W.. I- . .... ||art g -■ ■h" . I tltlh busl.H ,„ I ■ it 19 19 a t. .... Second Overtime Bob to ■ ;. 21: Hartford This time '' Y- . * n’avod a : for.t City |,|, ; ’ I 'OrCl-UtOl’s i tracks. Haitf .- ' . a-.. ■ iod. Deeatill ■: r,( hall as the 1 and - rowd let . . . v irowned t ! game a! s .. m ■ ♦ s ) Rights in Invention EHh > A mlh'P rJL'M i« i ilHeiilioii wl " cfvalKl on ’ i .• i tile sitop. uln n ' "fi is I Vflajped in such s bv 3Q i ph»>ee who "ie tm* equipment nf • - ?h r ine rhe Invent *'’ «re mm .i>"’-i. ' u!'? !V to invenii«’n> !•»•■■ ■ p|oy<»r’.- < >. Gathc-.-kag Sirvp M Tapping or!' ■" »■ M •>* "b » prolongs the li»- p frPe - l firit grnwth tn» * hij.' hp tapp ' two and so' :'•••' throe ; without Injurs l»n i to tap ’n two pl;>' (> n':it ' i In nrdei tn colli’'-' k ip ' D bucket ■ Children’s Speech Uef»d. ■ The more forms * ipee h def ecu* in > ..’iren ' | retarded spee« !■ . > fpi i 1 i associated with ( ’ ImiJOrfert h < i'• ! r ' ' ■ma I forma I ions of H'? organ? f ! speech, and the ner - B ’ ' orders, such ms > i ! ' mcring. terinc and nervnn j| J THE CORI SUNDAY. MOM'AY, Tl® Matinee Sundas 2p- ri .‘W Evening. 6 30 - - ICc4oc ] ! Ch»rles Farrell and Ja" et Ca) "w in a gay romar"’ ;,ml ■ sparkling musieal |>W [| “ Delicious"| Different from I they’ve done | Also —Comedy and News. ■ r TONIGHT — TOW KEENE I 1 “FIGHTERS OF OESTINV. | Cartoon and Comedy c