Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 277, Decatur, Adams County, 22 November 1935 — Page 1

ETAaIH- No. 277.

jHROR SURE ■Bopia will ■|P ITALIANS Sure Os rV : I (Ssen ing Fuel ■ t ■..: >(! Press) ■UMMRF ib'VPlopmentß: / '■ .. K’drf* Indians. Ethiopians in -Jji.JMt it.Hians issue veiled >p.- 1 aptnn-d ■th HtlJpiaii tones. ■ tour# tanks .Hid many a daikened to ■Biervt^i- 1 Mussolini donates Cl E KecU/■ war chest. and Erance disK ; rJKI- future terms of set■lwnt,B:' ' prospects of im e. ■ Os Victory ■(EdittO) note; In a frank inter•w witk d Beatlie. Unitlie- front—that he arc go’ing to K italic He revealed tßat he contact with Klian M -d patrol on his flight. s perhaps the most ■tporlanl he has made since the Er sttttK By Edward W. Beattie, ■ (UP.IS'-n: <'orrespondent > ■Addis Bbnb.i, Nov. 22.- —(U.R; ■iperatioi to date on the south-: Blttflll - demonstrated that ■yarmftt ar- capable noT only of ■titling I modernized troops but ■ren of tier- ' lie tin -in." Emperor Kt-ii,: Massie told the United Bress tan.. BHt-tMjb li..- statement in a self Britten kt ■ .--w in response to B>y after an airplane BrtfSbtl --'--I-n southern f'.iiil B“WeS« tie Italian airplanes in Be roan of our trip," said the ' 1; presence was Jipiga. ■ tioin KeeS&i: i Harar, south of til■BHß)- a Djibouti railway. B* W' -'em southern war ■“«- Jir- dawa is on the railB* 7 W' V7r,ssi country is south ■ tiW Jr y antl west Harar. said, the l.out Blit ' the ■rttle »f hi s armies. I i,as to < ’ ate ‘ n Ogaden r*Jy : 111 front I have demon <’i resisting modernized f' ) ®Bßt • ' ii of defeating them. ’ r T “R ft. an’ 111 - v soldiers com for their lack of equip■?nt. no never achieved the they claim. As a matst 1 . J# 1 are still near the - Gerlogubi line I UIV ( >x PAGI-; six, ■ IB- —o

WLES HYDE JOSES APPEAL | Of Former I County Highway | Bead Is Upheld x, )V . 22. lU.R) Tht ' SI W °f Charles E. Hyde, forcounty highway super by county commis- : r"“-’SMwas upheld by the Indi court last night. I WaS dismiss( - ! i on the S, ’!■ ,)l malfeasance in office, to the Wells circuit ’ |to n»t, The <as ' e later waß laker, circuit court on E^B 1 venue. The lower court action of the commisappealed to the supreme the grounds the county 1 BOritM SNlollers d ’ d not have atith- 1 prefer the charges against act as both the prosecutcourt. He contended ' which authorized such prounconstitutional. court held that the' within its rights to 1 c * larges ' hear evidence < and render a decision. |thSß° PiniOn Was dtvided ' vith ' K6S Coll curring and two ' I The difference of opinover the question of wheth- I |ad^K° Unty counc *l acted in an 1 I tativi' or judicial capacity ' I ’•“l’King Hyde. ’ I

DECATUR DAIET DEMOCRAT

Sen. Gottschalk On Hunting Trip Berne, Ind., Nov. 22. —Sen. T. A. Gottschalk of Berne is enjoying a hunting trip in southwestern IndiI ana. The Senator is after rabbits. ) birds and other game. He left .here Monday morning and attend i ed the meeting of the state budget f committee at Indianapolis Monday and Tuesday, and left for southwestern Indiana Wednesday morning with Dr. G. C. Emick and Clar-1 ♦nee Bierstoffer, both of Berne. BUYING PLAN : fIECOMMF.NDED Recommend Direct Relief l Clients Be Permitted To Do Own Shopping Indianapolis, Nov. 22. — (U.R) — • Continuance of the system under which direct relief clients are permitted to do their own shopping |at stores which comply with established regulations was recommended today by the governor's ! commission on unemployment reI lief. | The recommendation was included in a bulletin sent by the commission to township trustees throughout the state. The purchasing plan was developed during the period of federal aid for direct relief. “The perfect system o. relief has not yet been discovered." the bulle-1 tin said. “But the plan evolved during the federal aid period has many advantages over the discredited basket system, the commissary system, and various other methods in operation in many j townships in the past." Regulations provide that maximum prices should be fixed at least every two weeks that grocers should be required to give their relief customers the benefit of special sale prices, and that political or personal considerations snould have no weight in the acceptance or any grocer. I Pointing out that township trustees in Indiana followed no uni[form method of purchasing and dispensing food to Indigent families prior to the advent of federal aid, the commission urged that the I local units retain the FERA plan to prevent a return to such a con-; , dition as previously existed. | The commission condemned the i basket system because of a repeti-, tion of food items week after week, resulting in improper diet, malnutrition and waste of unusable supplies. "There was no provision in many cases for some items of food needed to keep children or ill persons properly nourished and it was exceedingly difficult and -often imi possible to make changes to meet these needs," the bulletin said. "There was always a great deal jof complaint and dispute arising I between the relief families and the grocer or township. Charges that I spoiled food was delivered were made frequently and often it was impossible either to substantiate cue charges or to clear the grocer.: I 'Complaints of various kinds) were ' so numerous as to take up much j of the time oc relief workers that I should have been aevoted to the | ! primary job of determining eligi- , j bility for relief,” the bulletin said. The commissary system was dis- , l favored by the commission because of the inability to keep sufficiently I laige varieties of food items on , hand. Relief families also were forced , j to go to a public dispensing depot. , I advertising the fact that they . I were on relief with resultant inI jury to morals, the commission , 1 said. “One of the principal advant- , . ages of the federal system was ' that it maintained competition and , I helped to govern prices in a more satisfactory manner." the bulletin , said. "Families dissatisfied with prices , (CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO) o Woman’s Society In Charge Os Services The Woman’s Home and Foreign Missionary society of the local ' Presbyterian church will have charge of the services! next Sunday ’ morning tn recognition of the annual service of (’.raise and prayer. This service is set aside by the i church each year during the , Thanksgiving season to praise and thank God for his guidance in the; missionary enterprise. Mrs. C. D. Teeple will deliver the address of the morning speaking on t the subject, “The Most Wonderful i Country in the World. Where is it?" i Mrs. M. A. Frisinger. vice-president, s will have charge cf the service. ; Special music will be rendered 'by 1 Paul Suarer and Mrs. Walter Krick, t who will ing a duet entitled “Thejc Lord Is My Shepherd." I J

LARGE VOLCANO I ERUPTS STREAM! OF FIERY LAVA World’s Second Largest Active Volcano Erupts This Morning Hilo, Hawaii, Nov. 22. -<U.R>— A Stream of fiery laval broke from the north pit of Mokuaweoweo, the world’s second largest active volcano, today and cascaded down a live mile front on the northern side orbleak Mauna Loa, emitting i llu second vapor eruption in three years. It was the first time since 1926 ihat lava had spewed from the : huge cone, surpassed only in size and violence by Mt. Vesuvius. The flaming red mass could be seen 60 miles through the tropic darnkness as it coursed down the sides of the picturesque volcanic, peak along the path taken by the 1899 lava eruption which halted only three miles short of the city lot Hilo. The first report that lava was surging from the pit came from a rancher. Ronald Vonholt. Vonholt said a fissure had appeared five miles below the crater’s summit and lava was pouring down the north Mauna Loa slops at an unusually rapid speed. He said it was the most voluminous flow he ever had seen. His prediction that the flow might spit, with part of it continuing toward Hilo and the remainder flowing toward the Kona coast, was borne out shortly thereafter in a report from Ed Wingate, superintendent of Hawaii National park. At its source, Wingate said, the lava stream was five miles wide. Then it billowed off into two fiery streaks, one descending on Hilo and the other toward the Kona coast. While the lava flow threatened; only a large section of cattle laud, i it might reach the Wailuku river and cut off Hilo's main source of (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX) THANKSGIVING UNION SERVICE Union Service Will Be Held At Presbyterian Church Wednesday The Decatur Ministerial Association will conduct Union Thanksi giving services for Protestant churches in Decatur Wednesday evening, at the local Presbyterian church. The Rev. Glen E. Marshall, pastor of the Church of God will deliver the address. The program will be announced later. Short services will be conducted by the association in the four public schools in the city, Wednesday afternoon. The Rev. George Walton, pastor of the Presbyterian church, will speak at the high school Wednesday afternoon at 1:45 o’clock. The services in the grades will begin at 2 o’clock Wednesday af-' ternoon. Hhe Rev. C. M. Prugh, of the Zion Reformed church, will speak to the South Ward pupils at the Evangelical church. The Rev. H. W. Franklin, pastor of the United Brethren church, will speak to the North Ward pupils at the Zion Reformed church. The Rev. M. W. Sundermann, paotor cf that Evangelical church will speak to the Central school pupils In the Central auditorium. The programs for these services will be announced next week, —: o Berne Pastor Is Reported Improved Berne, Ind., Nov. 22—Rev. E. B. | Hartley, pastor of the local Nazarene church is in’jjrove-d today fol-: lowing a severe attack of acute indigestion. His condition was serious for some time but his com-plete recovery is expected. o Berne Conservation League Plans Shoot Berne, Nov. 22—(UP) -Members j of the local conservation league are ■ < planning a shoot to be held Tuesday evening of next week in the] shooting gallery above the Mettler and Euamgartner garage. Everybody who can handle a gun is invited to participate. Prizes of chickens ; ducks and turkels will be awarded, j just in time for Thanksgiving.

ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER IN ADAMS COUNTY

Decatur, Indiana, Friday, November 22, 1935.

Speaks Sunday ■ W V. i My /W I , R. Ea.rl Peters, state director of the federal housing administration will be one of the speakers during the 11th anniversary of the construction of the new United Brethren church in this city. Mr. Peters, a former member of the local church, will speak Sunday afternoon. MESELCASEON I AT HUNTINGTON William W. Mosel, Jr., Is Suing Geneva For $25,000 Huntington, Nov. 22. — A fury must decide whether shot-putting is baseball in the $25,000 damage suit of William W. Mesel, Jr., against the town of Geneva in Ad-, ams county for the loss of an eye. 1 Mesel, a former high school athlete, walked and fell against the stub of a telephone pole in an alley of the town on April 21, 1932. The resulting injury to his eye necessitated Its removal. He charged the town with neglli gence for failing to remove the obstruction front the alley which was generally used. Attorneys for the town, in their! , opening statements to Judge Sumner Kenner and the jury in circuit ■ court, Thursday, referring to an old lordinace prohibiting the “throwing ior catching" of balls in alleys of the town. Mesel, they contend, w'as practie-| ing the* shot-put when he fell against the post. A sharp projecj lion punctured his left eyeball. Tossing of the heavy iron ball constituted a violation of the town ordinance, they claim. I Attorneys for the plaintiff will attempt to prove, it is expected, that the old town ordinance was directed against baseball only. i Six women won seats on the jury. Judge Kenner called a recess for lunch after the opening statements and the hearing of evidence was begun in the afternoon. The case, originally i.Ted in Adams circuit court at Decatur, was venued to Allen county, and then to the Huntington circit court. o Announce Extension Sugar Beet Contract Wa-ihington, Nov. 22 —(UP) —The 1 -AAA today announced extension of! ! the 1935 sugar beet production ad-1 justment contrast to include the 11936 crop year. o CHURCH PLANS PROGRAM HERE Missionary To Speak At Evangelical Church Sunday Night Miss Edna Carter of Indianapolis, returned missionary from South America, will be the speaker at the annual Thanksgiving ser-j , vice at the Evangelical church i Sunday night. A special program will also bo presented at the service. It will be' entitled the “Gift Perfect” and is as follows: Rreader —Arline Becker. Angel—Verniece Hannie. Representative of the Women’s Missionary society. Representative from the East, West, North and South. Smith—Mrs. E. J. Anspaugh. Other characters: Marlyn Bonifas, Patsy McConnell, Jane Grab-1 er, Betty Brown, Peggy Lou Gaunt | and Ruth Hammond. Girls: Marcella Lnterwiler, Rosella Hearse. Virginie Breeuer, Rose Mary Brown. Wilma Miller, Ruby Miller, Betty Smith, Betty Hamrna, and Agnes Foreman. The public is invited to attend this program.

HOSPITAL ADDS IMPROVEMENTS Changes Made Or Contemplated Make Hospital Highly Modern j A number of improvements have been made or are contemplated at the Adams county memorial hospi tai which will make it one of the most modern institutions of its size in the state. ; The elevator has been remodell ' ed and the shaft extended to the basement. | A new ambulance entrance will be ' completed next spring. This will bo 1 io constructed that ambulances may . i drive .to the basement entrance. | Through the use of the elevator | which now extends to the basement j it will be possible to take patients i into the hospital without exposing them to inclement weather. All the rooms have been repainted and the floors refinisbed. The nurses’ room on the third floor has been repainted. A new nursing room has been provided on the second floor and a new recreation room has been provided for the nurses. New x-ray equip rent, sufficient tor all diagnostic work has been ' purchased. This has been , -aceu in a room • reviously used as a nurses'; , recreation room. The equipment is ' mobile and can he used in the, rooms in which there are patients who can not be moved. A new light had been installed in the operating room which is a great improvement, it also has an emergency battery light to be used in case etorrns break down the regular ' system during an operation. | Several new beds and mattresses have been purchased to replace those which have been worn out. Dr. C. C. Rayl has recently purchased and installed a modern high (lowered “radio knife.” This is an .electrical cutting device for use in | cancer or other malignant diseases 1 and in goiter, fine stomach and intestinal work and many other types of surgery. | RULES AGAINST MUNICIPAL TAX South Bend Judge Holds State Tax On Municipal Utilities Invalid South Bend. Ind., Nov. 23. — A sweeping decision holding the 1933 Indiana tax on municipal utilities to be unconstitutional was handed down here today by Superior Judge J. Elmer Peak. The court upheld each of even objections to the law. declaring “they point inexorably io the conclusion that the Legislature erred" by imposing the tax in the form of an amendment to a 1913 law i which, he said, makes no reference ; to the subject of taxation. Thus > the title of the act, he held, is defective. • In addition, he decided that a i .1919 statute exempting municipal I property from taxtion could not be abridged by amending a law enacted six years earlier. I County Aattorney Samuel Feiwell and Attorney General Philip Lutz Jr., w’ho defended the law. said it would be appealed Th the Supreme Court for a state-wide test. The decision came in a suit ill ed by City Attorney Edwin tV. Hunter seeking an injunction to restrain county authorities from collecting $12,000 in taxes levied against South Bend water department. Decatur has withheld payment of its assessment on the municipal plant, amounting to approximately SI,BOO, pending final decision on constitutionality of the act. A large number of municipal utilities in the state have taken sim- ( ! liar action. County, Township Officials To Meet Indianapolis, Nov. 22. — (U.R) — Comparative economies of local and consolidated government unit, administration of relief and school systems will be discussed by morO than 2,000 delegates to the first annual convention of Indiana County and Township Officials association here Dee. 11-13. Included among the delegates ! will be township trustees, county [ auditors, assessors, sheriffs, clerks, recorders, treasurers, highway supervisors. surveyors, engineers and attorneys. The convention will mark the i first joint meeting of members of .11 associations of county and | 1 township officers.

YOUTH’S DEATH IS PUZZLE TO AUTHORITIES — Unwanted Husband Os Young Heiress Questioned In Mystery New City, N. Y„ Nov. 22—(UP)— The unwanted husband of a beautiful 17-year-old heiress was question-, ed by authorities today concerning the mysterious death of a 23-year-i old youth, who, before he was slain , | told his friends that he did not i intend being made the victim of a ’ shot gun" wedding. The husband was Luther Philpot. . 23. a PWA worker, who eloped with Miss Mary Swope. 17, mem-! ber of an old and weathy family, i last February. Authorities were told ' that the girl’s mother. Mrs. Nichol 1 las Soloxon, had taken the bride I fro.n her husband and iiad instituti ed annulment proceedings. He was questioned concerning the death of Leroy Smith, a small I town “man-about-town” whose body was found by the roadside one mile from New City courthouse yeeter-j day. Miss Swope, questioned by auth- ' orities. left the courthouse early ' today and was believed to have I gone to tho 16-room family mansion ! that was built in revolutionary ‘ times. She had admitted that she dined with Smith Saturday. Author-1 ities believed, from the condition ■ of his body, that he had been slain Saturday night. District attorney Vincent Dorsey ' also qu stioned the mother her hus--1 band. Miss Swope’s step-father who is/an artist, and Carl Stottlenyer, | I believed a family friend. He inti- ' mated that Miss Swope would be questioned again later today. Dorsey and other officials would say little, but the prosecutor said: lie was giving close attention to two theories: 1. That Smith was killed by a man jealous because of the marked : attention he had paid- Miss Swope I during the past few months. I 2. That his repeated boastings to | friends of being involved in a “shot- ; gun w-dding" scheme had had ■ something to do with his death. D.isey would not say what Miss ! Swope, a vivacious cultured brunj ette had told him beyond her sayI ing that she had dined with Smith Saturday and knew him well. Miss Swope, he said, was attending a girl’s school in Cincinnati when she met Philcot. They eloped Feb. 19 to Covington, Ky., where | : they w?re married. Three days later he said. Mrs. Solomon went to (Tn-. cinnati and returned her daughter alone, to the family town house in < ! New York City. Dorsey said he ( understood annulment proceedings , had been instituted in Cincinnati. o * Yost Brothers Given Contract Yost Brother.) of this city have , been awarded a contract for the Al- \ < ger bridge in Chester township, Wabash county, on a bid of $4,494.90 ; nearly SSOO under the next lowest . bidder. Three other bids were in t excess of the estimated $5,000 esti-' mated cost. j 0 I BITTER FIGHT f IS PRESAGED ; i — New Deal, Big Business ' In Bitter Struggle Over Policies i i Washington, Nov. 22. —(U.R) —The ; new deal and “big business” were ( locked in a bitter struggle today over constitutionality of major . planks in President Roosevelt’s re- j covery program. Government legal experts were , rushed to the front to defend a ( new onslaught upon tho president's farm policies. The supreme court already is studying cases vitally affecting thousands of dollars in processing tax collections—the life blood of the agricultural adjustment administration. Federal courts throughout the ' nation are laboring under a stag- 1 gerlng burden of new deal litiga- 1 tion, involving not only the AAA 1 but the Bankhead cotton control * law, the Utility Holding company ! regulation act, the Guffey statute ' creating a “little NRA" for the bi-; 1 tuminos coal industry, and the Wagner labor relations act which seeks to guarantee collective bar-. gaining rights of the working man. Here’s the latest line-up. corn-! piled after a busy day in the court- j (.CONTINUED ON PAGE EIGHT)

Rotarians Enjoy Musical Program Members of the Decatur Rotary dub were entertained with a muoi(al program Thureday evening in the regular meeting ut the Rice hotel. Adam W. Knnowich played four ; violin selections and Mra Harry j Thoi.Tjpeon sang two solos. Miss Lulu Gerber accompanied at the piano. A. D. Suttles was chairman of the program. The club will not meet next week, as the regular meeting date falls on Thanksgiving Day. SMALL DECLINE IN EMPLOYMENT Curtailment Os Canning Season Brings Slight Drop In October — Bloomington, Ind., Nov. 22. —(U.R) —Seasonal curtailment of activity | in the canning industry caused a three per cent decline in industrial employment in Indiana in October, the Indiana University bureau of business research-reported today. Other types of industry reported a net gain in employment. Nonmanufacturing employment changI ed very little. Building activity during October remained well above the like periods in the past three years but far under normal, tho bureau reported. "The general level of business activity was higher than during any October since 1930,” according to the report. “Warm weather was an unfavor- ! able factor during the last twothirds of the montn, but clothing and department sales made about the usual seasonal improvement. "There were a few cities in' which furniture sales were better during October, but little change was reported in most sections of the state. “Drug store sales were a little | higher than during September, and! hardware sales continued as a month ago. Most lines of retail trade in Indiana during October i ranged between 15 and 20 per cent ’ (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX) | FT. WAYNE FIRM IS HIGH BIDDER Central Security Corp., Submits High Bid For Geneva Bonds The Central Security corporation of Fort Wayne was (he high bidder on the Geneva school house bonds. The bids were opened this morning at the office of Wabash Townshiip Trustee Jesse Mann. The Fort Wayne company hid par j for the school township bonds, to-j taling $35,000 plus a .premiui.it of $1,986.35. The company bid par for the civil township bonds totaling $7,500 plus a $373.89 premium. The Bank of Geneva ibid a prem-1 ium of $1,525 on the school town-1 ship bonds and $325 on the civil township bends. Marcus R. Warrender of Indianapolis bid a premium of $385 on the school township bonds and $82.50 on the civil township bonds. Tile bids were opened by Mr. Mann in the presence of the township advisory board, representatives of the bidders, Theodore Graliker of Decatur and Herman Myers, local attorney. The township advisory board will take action soon to accept or reject the bids. The board received authority from the state tax commission to issue bonds against the civil townhip to the extent of SIO,OOO. However, only $7,500 was offered for sale, ilf necessary the remaining $2,50V will be raised by a second bond . issue. The money raised will be used in the construction of a new Wa'bash township school at Geneva. o Fine Uniondale Man For Illegal Parking Gregg Brickley of Uniondale plead guity to illegal parking a truck on U. S. road 27, south of Decatur, in Mayor A. R. Holthouse’s court this morning. He wa« fined one dollar and costs, amounting to I sll. which he paid. Mr. Brickley was arrested by state police officer Burl Johnson. _o WEATHER Generally fair tonight and Saturday; continued cold tonight, slowly rising temperature Saturday.

Price Two Cents

TRAIL OF DEATH FOLLOWS AFTER POISONED SODA Police Launch NationWide Hunt To Solve Poison Mystery San Francisco, Nov. 22.—<U.R>— A trail of death in two-pound packages of bicarbonate of soda today expanded into a nation-wide hunt by police and health authorities ! seeking to determine whether a ! San Francisco man and two wo. I men died by accident or design. Stalemated in San Francisco, of. fleers turned their attention to ! leads in New York and Chicago, i In either of the two vicinities, they ! believed they might stumble upon 1 a clue which would explain how I deadly arsenic became mixed in I lethal quantities into bulk baking soda sold to an estimated 800 San Francisco families at a “cut price” department store. Three persons died after using the baking soda. Twenty-one others were stricken with arsenic or fluoride poisoning in varying dei grees. While medical authorities checked the causes of 20 earlier deaths, George Purnaras. 45, entered a San Francisco restaurant, ordered a meal and died in convulsions. A package of baking soda was found on his table, investigators said. While a pathological examination was ordered, the coroner's office expressed doubt that Purnaras was a victim of the mysteriously poisoned soda. Instead, they believed, he succumbed to heart j disease or another chronic ailment i aggravated by injudicious use of the bicarbonate of soda. i The outstanding discovery to dale developed last night when , chemists reported a short, 100pound barrel previously believed to have contained baking soda had contained pure sodium fluoride. Through efforts of the depart, ment store proprietor, it was learn. ! ed that contents of this barrel had been nsed to refill other barrels of | soda being retailed on the sales floor of the department store as : their level receded. In this discovery was the ans- ! wer to how deadly fluoride became | mixed in the baking soda. Disclosure of this accident, however, did not explain the presence of tho (.CONTINUED ON PAGE EIGHT) O Attacker Given 30-Year Sentence Chicago, Nov. 22 —(UP) —Found guilty of attacking an 18-year-o!d girl after kidnaping her from her escort. Michael Lipinski, 23, was sentenced to 30 yeans in prison by criminal court Judge Joseph B. I David. Lipinski, paroled last June from I the Pendeton, Ind., reformatory, at the age of 14 escaped from the Illinois fef.'Me(minded institution at Lincoln after two years confineI ment.. Karl Krudop Gives Fort Wayne Program Karl Krudop of this city appeared in a group of Shakespearian scenes on a program sponsored by the tine art) department of the Fort Wayne Woman’s club Thursday afternoon. Mr. Krudop presented Jaques' famous speech "The Seven Ages of Man" from the play “As You Like it.” He then changed to the part of Orlando from the same play with Miss Helen Potters playing Rosalind. A group of songe written for Shakespeare's ‘‘As You Like It” was sung by Mrs. Florene Siprunger Starr of Bluffton. PROGRAM GIVEN BY GIRLS BAND Decatur Girls Band Presents Chapel Program This Morning The Trirl’s Band of the Decatur high school presented the chapel program this morning in the school auditorium. Miss Eileen Jackson served as directress of the band. The program was: March —“Project.” Serenade—“ldle Fancy.” Spanish Serenade—“ Havana." German Band Selections by Brass Quartette. Selections —Accordian and saxaphone duet. March —“Advance.” Overture—“ Zenith.” [ March—“ Activity."