Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 263, Decatur, Adams County, 6 November 1937 — Page 1
No. 263.
sljl SCENE OF Oest threat J Of WAR DANGER n Haitians Mass- |{\ Dominican I R< public Troops |f ■■ ,|..uis of <l..inin-, ’■■■ |„ lba M^^K n • ||. ary Norw. b, "'KnA' " ll1 "' V. at llavaiui. Cuba, and to bnK. K'V J„ . -a''- <■!•’ <|.-n<-.-vKtW -l.iuuhb fd Xi':.. - ll,p )l '"' dc ‘ r t NorW»b is scheduled to catch • , '' l ’' pli,, "‘ s "" day ' y,. ( .rc..s 1 l-Ji'les from SanF Kko. <F sl '•Or »|" " Wa-limL'i.>H IO /’■WRBrsd.iy with President KuMWli :md assistant secretary i Wells, the United Krs» learned The conferences , I pL/Innhtidly " ill deal with the j / ■ DMolp'tieuts during tile last 24 •<iur»«t'l'eaied to substantiate ret - u ®Ki dipk quarters without nin.it ion for several fcw nt there had been mas-' ■L„. t( .« L h. Haitian dominical! - was increasing V Becw 'i the remoteness of Ki» ‘E'i'' t where the massacre news of it was slow in ■tsaehiM Haitian government offi■riateMPoi'l Au Prince. ■ IM&ie only fragmentary and reports have been re-1 The United Press ■M«WI "as carried to Cuba bjt I gl, tki..- Brazilian ...nsular Haiti. Haiti was the reason .■girea s) the cause of the ntassaiKcre. >• .a tit.' overcrowded ■onditk el Haiti, thousands of reported to have i ■ crossed the dominiean border and at extremely low ■ vagei. Th. i.pntedly caused r. ... ■wntilAr illl,l,n K dominicans who IliißSOßg^Bigli.l wage levels and the ■ ensuing slaughter of the itnnti-1 ■ Tha i .land of Haiti is one of the ■ “steppir stones" of the Greater ■ Antffl® lying between Cuba and I Pii. ’tßßico. an republic occupies ■ the eastern two thirds of the island mites, but has a of only 1,200,000. ' The . . I republh of Haiti has a population i’tfflE 11 "" * n an area ( d’ 10.204 it I squunftini.-s. The larger country ■•M »op'-lation per square mile lof KB persons, while Haiti has I 249.9 arsons per square mile. here have reI «Xo®Nl'l-;i> ON PAGE FOUR) \ ROTARY PLANS GROUP MEETING I Notary Meeting LI W®Be Held At Masonic I Hall Nov. 18 pl meeting of all Ro- | tal in group two, scheduled 110 be held in Decatur Thursday, ■ November 18 will be held at the | jjjf" ll ' 1 ’ temple on North Third | street, Botarians in charge announc- | rauijV. Barrett, .personnel direcOhio Oil company, Find I _ y ’iW’ o ' wi " be tlle principal dur ’ ng llle program which banquet. is one of the most I I ’ r<sla W ,lt speakers in the middle I ' ing B P olten for numerous i '°u«Wj high school, service clubs I ~ ' ll Kutherings. I 'Q9. 8 » s been a R,,tarian since I t wS; , v ing as president of his I kH8?926, and was governor of ! I district, Rotary InternarWgn 1935 and 1936. I Jgg- ' ta tlves from Rotary I ('"iZ~le -hngola. Auburn, Bluffton, I tuna < " ity ’ Fort Wayne, Hart- | an d Kendallville are ex- ! ||9h attend, and invitations ' I 3®f eil been extended to other I —,^® cplps not in gromp two. ■ in charge of ar--1 ■ i /'HB B nts for the group meet-T®-1» lll|>Osed of Rev - c - M - Prog'u I Son 4 Pumpllr - y and Cal Peter-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT
Rotary Speaker ' ■ Paul V. Barrett, personnel di ; rector of the Ohio Oil company at I Findlay, Ohio, will be the principal speaker at the group meeting | of Rotary clubs, to be held in DeI catur Thursday evening, Nov. 18. ADAMS ONE OF LOAN COUNTIES This County One Os 35 In State To Receive Corn Loans Adams county will he one of the ' thirty-five in the state in which I corn loans may be made by the j government, it has been an nounced. The amount of the loan will depend on the quality, or moisture j content, with a top of 50 cents a bushel for corn of 14% per cent ( moisture and a low of 44 cents for 20% per cent Farm leaders had suggested a flat 60-cent loan. The loans will bear a 4 per cent ' interest. Chairman Jones, of the RFC, said they may be made by banks and other lending agencies ' "with the definite understanding | that the community credit corporation will take them up on demand, at any time prior to Sep-tember-39. 1938, at par and ac- ■ crued interest at the rale of 2% ! per* cent.” Corn belt counties which will receive loans are: Adams. Bartholomew, Benton, I Blackford, Boone, Carroll. Cass, j Clinton, Decatur. Delaware, Fayette, Fountain, Franklin. Fulton. ’ Gibson. Grant. Hamilton, Hancock. I Hendricks. Henry. Howard. Hunti ington, Jasper, Jay, Johnson, Knox. Kosciusko, Lake, Laporte. Madison. Marion. Marshall, Miami, , Montgomery, Morgan, Newton. | Noble. Parke, Porter, Pulaski, Putnam, Randolph. <lush. Shelby, Starke, Sullivan, Tippecanoe, Tipton, Union, Vigo. Vermillion. Wabash, Warren, Wayne, Wells. White and Whitley. Attend Meeting Why the United States needs a permanent soil conservation program and what is likely to come in the 1938 program, and how the ' 1938 corn loan program will be ' operated in Indiana were the prin- ' cipal subjects before an important farm meeting held yesterday at Huntington. The gathering, under I auspices of the state agricultural i conservation committee, which is in charge of the agricultural conservation program, drew representatives from a number of counties in this part of the state. Those from Adams county atI tending were: Homer Arnold. Win. IH. Patterson, Winfred Gerke, Bovd Stepler. L. E. Archbold. “Maintenance of farm prices and income at a fair level so that farmers will not be forced to mine the fertility of their soil by overcropping and unwise use of their land is one of the principal aims of the 1938 program,” said A. N. Nichter. field representative of state committee, who spoke at the Huntington meeting. “If farm prices are ruinously low, farmers tend to overcrop their land in an effort to get enough money to meet their obligations, and if prices are abnormally high, I they tend to mine the fertility of their soil in order to get as much cash as possible. Generally, they have been forced to overcrop year ! after year to meet fixed charges I (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) I o DEATH IN CHAIR Cincinnati. 0.. Nov. 6— (U.R)—Anna Marie Hahn. 31 blond German immigrant, today was convicted of the murder of 78-year-old acoh Magner. The jury of 11 women and one man made no recommendation of mercy, which means that Mrs. Hahn, accused by the state of being a “Borgia” who killed for personal gain, must be sentenced to die in the electric chair.
WINDSOR CALLS OFF VISIT TO UNITED STATES Attitude Os U. S. Labor Heads Held Responsible For Act Paris, Nov. 6 (U.P.) The Duke | of Windsor postponed his visit to the United States after a telephonic consultation with his i brother-successor. King George VI, it was reported in usually re- i liable quarters today, over the i possibility that British-American relations might be harmed if he went through with his plans. it was said that after talking the situation over, the royal brothers agreed that a bad reception to the Duke by American labor might provoke a wave of anti-American , sentiment in Great Britain. This. 1 it was agreed, also according to informants, would be most unfortunate in view of a tense situation in which Britain and the United I States might cooperate. | Deeply chagrined by American i i criticism, the Duke has decided to j regard himself In the future as a purely private citizen, it was said 1 authoritatively. No new date for the journey was set and there was no indication I what the duke intended to do next. The decision to abandon the trip ' for the present came after a threehour conference among the duke, Lee Olwell. press agent; Lieut, j I Dudley Forwood, the duke's equer-1 ' ry; and others. The statement added that “the Juke emphatically repeats that there is no shadow of justification for any suggestion he is allied ; with any industrial system or that I he is for or against any particular political or racial doctrine . . (The Baltimore Federation of; Labor last Wednesday "warned” ! organized labor not to be “taken (CONTINUED ON PAGE FIVE) O BISHOP NOLL TO i* LEAD PILGRIMS Fort Mayne Bishop To Lead Pilgrimage To Hungary In 1938 The Most Rev. John Francis ' Noll, bishop of the Fort Wayne i Catholic diocese, will lead one of ’ the largest tours of pilgrims to ' the international Eucharistic Congress in Budapest, Hungary, in , ' May, 1938. The prelate’s pil- _ grimage is being organized at ' Huntington by the Our Sunday | ’ Visitor, weekly publication, of ‘ which Bishop Noll is editor. The; Huntington cavalcade will join in ! ' what is probably the largest move-I ment of Catholics in the United ! ’ States to an international congress in a foreign country. Approximately 40.000 American Cath- ’ olics and their friends will move j , on the thirty-fourth Eucharistic I Congress. Headed by the Hier-) ■ archy and accompanied by the clergy, the pilgrims will join ap- ' proximately 500.000 pilgrims from every part of the world from May j 25 to 30. Bishop Noll's pilgrimage will sail from New York on the Rex, larg-; est liner of the Italian system, on ! May 14. The itinerary will include j ' Genoa. Venice, Vienna, Budapest, , the Holy Land and Egypt- Reservations are being made at Hunt-; ’ ington. Pilgrims will witness two great holy communions — an army of j 35,000 uniformed men, laying aside their weapons of war to re- ; ceive Christ the King in the most ; holy Eucharist and another 35.000/ police, gendarmes and civil guards joining the soldiers in homage to j God. A lake in Budapest has been draine’d to make room for the thou- ’ sands who will receive holy communion. On May 26, Ascension . Day, another great army, 100,000 children from convents and schools, will receive the sacrament. Another '"impressive event will be the midnight vigil of men. kneeling in silent reverence under the stars after an all-night adiration of the Blessed Sacrament. The event is sponsored by the tamed Aecio Catholica, founded by | the Hungarian Order of Dominicans. o Celebrates Victory, Taken Into Custody Ralph Jones, of Fort Wayne, celebrating the North Side football victory last night, was apprehended by Officers Roy Chilcote and Adrian Coffee on a charge of reckless driving. He is scheduled to appear ! in city court this afternoon on the I charge.
ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER IN ADAMS COUNTY
Decatur Indiana, Saturday, November 6, 1937.
Victors Plan Racket Crusade ... * < rwlk ‘1 f- SO District Attorney Dewey and Mayor La Guardia Getting down to business after their sweeping victory at the polls. Mayor Fiorello l.a Guardia of New York and new District Attorney Thomas Dewey discussed plans for a new war on rackets. It was due to ills efforts as a special prosecutor of vice overlords in New York that Dewey attained prominence.
OBSERVE WEEK OF EDUCATION Central PTA To Observe American Education M eek Here Decatur’s part in the commemoration of American Education Week w«s designated today when ; officers of the Central PTA asso- ; elation planned to observe the event and outlined a program for the year, conforming with the ef- ' forts of national advocates of the week. The general theme of the PTA meetings will be “Education and j Our National Life,” with the modern seven cardinal virtues: hon- ■ esty. courage, dependability, selfcontrol. reverence, loyalty and for- ' giveness—as sub-topics. In addi--GioH to-these the local committee; 11 has added an eighth virtue —appreI ciation. Each of these thoughts is to be i discussed in a separate meeting. | "In this modern world of ours with its changing and shifting moral ; values, can we expect the same vir- ' tues in the children today as we i did years ago?”—the committee; queried.” or do We expect too much of them? The seven cardinal vjri tues that have come down through j the ages are still found to he the ■ fundamental characteristics in the forming of a natural, symmetrical I constitution. If parents and teach|ers still use these virtues as ideals, we are not expecting too much of ! our modern youth,” the committee | asserted. Included in the porgram for the l year will be a series of safety I talks by Sylvester Everhart and round table discussions, to be conducted by Lowell Smith. Tentai tive date for the meetings, follow ing that of November 9, are: December 7, February 1, March 15 and April 19. The program committee is composed of Mrs. Baughj man, Mrs. Langston. Mrs. Schultz and Miss Grace Coffee. “We are looking forward to fine, inspirational meetings for the year ! and we urge the patrons to attend. 1 so as to increase the ever-widen- ; ing circle of parent-teacher influences,” the committee stated. P. Bryce Thomas, principal of ■ Central school, has sent individual invitations to all parents to attend (CONTINUED ON'PAGE FOUR) o r Monroe Lad Improving After Injury In Fall Robert Gage, son of Mr. and Mrs. j John Gage, of near Monroe, was reported recovering in the Lutheran ' hospital in Fort Wayne today, after ' a broken collar bone sustained in a fall a week ago had been set >by the attending physician. The lad 1 fell when he tripped over a car.
I 1 False Rumors Circulated Os Holdup Killing At Monroe
Dozens of telephone calls were received by the Decatur Daily | Democrat today, inquiring if AlI vin Coppess, proprietor of the, Coppess filling station at the inter- j I section of state road 124 and U. S.; | highway 27, one mile weft of, ' Monroe, had been killed in a hold-1 'up Friday night or Saturday [ I morning. The rumor was false. The reports were that bandits i riddled Coppess and his station j ' with bullets. Officials were contacted and i stated that no such holdup had oc-1
Report Neuenschwander Definitely Improved The condition of Glen Neuenschwander, who has been fighting for his life in the Adams county memorial hospital since last Saturday night when he was critically Injured in an auto accident south of the city, was today reported as definitely improved by the attending ; physician. Two fractured legs, one a compound break, were set by the physicia'n yesterday. Reducing of the fractures had been postponed because of his condition. The physician stated that the victim also sustained a fractured right hip, X-rays disclosed in addition to the leg wounds, several broken ribs, a punctured lung and oth- i er injuries. rev. McConnell TO SPEAK HERE Noted M. E. Bishop To Speak At Local Church November 14 The Rt. Rev. Francis John Me- i I Connell, D. D„ of New York, one of | the foremost bishops of the Methodist Episcopal churches, will speak at the local M. E. church on Sunday morning. November 14. the Rev. R. W. Graham, church pastor announced today. Bishop McConnell, a former president of DePauw university, lias established, an international reputation as a lecturer and writer of religious works. He was president of the federal council of churches of Christ in America in 1928 and for some time lectured in India. Members of the local congregation feel extremely fortunate in being able to secure Bishop McConnell for the address, the Rev. Graham stated, since he is one of the leaders of the Christian faith in the world. Annual Bishops Meeting The Rev. Grahamis also planning to attend the annual meeting of the j board of bishops, which will be held ' in Fort Wayne at the First M. E. ' church, November 10 to 14, inclu- , sive. Sessions of the convention will be held each day, beginning Wednes(CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX) ° G. E. Employe Retires After 48 Years Work Arthur L. Hadley, oldest employe of the Fort Wayne Works of the ’ General Electric company, will re- , tire from service on Nov. 12, the 48th anniversary of his engagement with the company. Mr. Hadley is . well known in Decatur among Gen- | I eral Electric employes. i
curred in the county. Mr. Coppess, reached by telephone this morning, stated he had received telephone calls from all ! over the county in addition to a • number of long distance calls in- ; quiring about the "hold-up." j ' This morning several carloads f”of sightseers drove to the filling station to see the reported bullet | holes in the walls. i It was reported that a blockade of the roads in the vicinity of the ; filling station was set up by state ] police officers. No reason for the I blockade was announced.
ADDED IMPETUS GIVEN INDIANA SAFETY DRIVE State Police Begin Intensive Campaign To Reduce Deaths Indianapolis, Nov. 6. — (U.R) —lndiana's extensive traffic safetly; program moved forward with increased impetus today along a path , that is ’ expected to make it a “model" throughout the nation. Indiana state policemen, acting on orders of Don Stiver, state safety director, began an intensive campaign against drunken drivers, charged by traffic experts with major responsibility for the increasing loss of life and property on the 50,000 miles of Hoosier highways. Meantime, the newly appointed ■ governor's highway safety co-ord-ination committee invited five nat-| ionally-known traffic experts to In-| dianapolis to suggest means of re-j ducing the state’s skyrocketing automobile death tollThe five men, each an expert in some particular phase of traffic safety, are expected to draw up plans eliminating much of the dual control, duplication, and lack efficiency in the present state safety set-up. Maxwell Halsey, of the Harvard bureau of street traffic research, will study Indiana's highway system and suggest engineering improvements. State police activities will be co-ordinated by Lieutenant; Frank Kremel, of Northwestern university. Joseph L. Lingo, of Purdue university. will assist in the enforce-, ment of new drivers’ license laws. Two experts from the national safety council, J. Standard Baker and Kirk A. Keegan, will scrutinize the statewide accident reporting system which will go into es-; feet January 1. Organization of the state high- ' way safety co-ordination committee has suggested to Gov. M. Clifford Townsend by Lew Wallace. lowa commissioner of motor ve- j ~’--ictes and national safety council traffic expert. After making an intensive study | of Indiana's traffic set-up. Wallace 1 told Townsend that "with 'the exI ception 6f the small number of : uniformed police officers,” the state : departmental organization essenI tially is sound if properly co-ordin-j ated. Wallace pointed out that Indiana has only 150 uniformed police officers and that criminal police work cuts heavily into their duties. The governor said today that at an earlier conference with Stiver he had suggested more < attention be directed by state policemen to traffic and less to criminal activities. “We want to place the major, emphasis on traffic safety,” Townsend said "The rest is secon(CONTINUED ON PAGE FIVE) o CHIMES MARK ARMISTICE DAY Legionnaires Invited To Special Services Sunday Churches of the city will commemorate the signing of the Armistice in special services Sunday. 1 especially inviting Legionnaires and war veterans to attend. The Rev. Charles M. Prugh, in [ behalf of the Decatur ministerial association, has urged all members of Adams Post No. 43, American I Legion to attend their respective; churches, setting aside the day as i “Go To Church Sunday.” At the Zion Reformed church j the pastor, Rev. Prugh, will hold; a special service at 10:15 o’clock. I The Rev. George O. Walton, of ' the First Presbyterian church, will ! deliver the sermon, “Facing the Facts,” in accordance with the event. The service will start at 10:30. At the First Methodist Episcopal church, the Rev. R. W. Graham will talk on “Peace, Real and Perverted,” in the special service. The service will be held at 9:30 o’clock. ° TEMPERATURE READINGS — DEMOCRAT THERMOMETER 8:00 a. m. 32 10:00 a. m. 40 Noon 50 WEATHER Fair tonight and Sunday, becoming unsettled southwest portion Sunday, rising temperature.
Elks Plan Dance Thanksgiving Eve A Thanksgiving Eve dance will be held at the Elks club on North Second street Wednesday evening, I November 24. A splendid orchestra lias been obtained to furnish music 'for the dance, which will start at 9:30 p. m. The dunce will be for members I only. Admission price will be $1 I-per couple. PARTY STRUGGLE ENDED BY TRUCE “Committee Os 100” To Set Up List Os Party Principles - ■■ Chicago. Nov. 6— (U.R) —Terms of a truce which ended a budding intra-party struggle for control , charged the Republican party’s executive committee today with j the task of setting up machinery for drafting and presenting to the nation a declaration , of principles.” I The full national committee acquiesced to advise of such leaders as Alf M. Landon, 1936 presidential candidate, put off definite decision of former president Herbert Hoover's proposal for an "interim" national convention and ordered an extraordinary “committee of 100” set up to draft ' party principles. i The committee will submit its draft to national chairman John I). I M. Hamilton, who then will call i the national committee together again to find away for presenting the report to the nation. “Maybe it wil he put up to some I national conference." Hamilton said in a nationally broadcast radio address last night, “maybe to regional conferences, maybe to state committees, maybe to just i clubs and groups throughout the country.” The committee thus put off 1 making a decision on Hoover’s i proposal which in the last few days before this meeting brought down a deluge of statements from party leaders and evidenced every sign of a furious contest for party control. The “program" committee, party officials estimated, can com- ' plete its work in four months. Thus the national committee may lie called on again next spring to decide the matter of an “off-year” national convention. Hamilton said 700 prominent , Republicans already had been ' suggested to him as program comi mittee members. It was uncertain whether the executive com-1 i mittee would select full program | committee membership today, but the chairman almost certainly will ;be considered if not actually i named. , Mentioned most frequently for the chairmanship were: Sen. Frederick Steiwer, Ore.. 1936 Republican convention keynoter. John R. McCarl. former coptrol-1 * ler general and onetime secretary Nebraska progressive Republican, to Sen. George W. Norris, veteran Former Gov. Frank O. Lowden of Illinois, ofted described as one I of* the best “peacemakers” within j the party. Some committee members also were understood to be urging ' selection of a chairman not ae-1 lively connected with politics,, such as Janies Rowland Angell, j former Yale president; Harold W.. Dodds, president of Princton; and Robert G. Sproul,’ president of the University of California. Hamilton asked his radio audij ence last night to suggest possible members of the “policy" committee. Appointment of the committee was not expected to make impossible the complete adoption of | Hoover's proposal. Hoover had suggested the conference for 1938. Landon, whose opposition state- | ment was considered the deciding factor in the committee’s action, i had announced 1938 was not an ’ "opportune” time for such a meeti ing. Rep. Joseph W. Martin, Mass., a member of the executive committee. chairman of the house congressional campaign committee. and leader of the national committee opposition to the 1938 proposal, said, however, he was confident there will be no national conference before 1939—if then. But Col. R. B. Creager, Brownsville, Tex., only national committeeman to urge immediate action on the convention plan at yesterday's meeting, served notice that he would continue to campaign in behalf of a national convention. The committee took one step yesterday which will make it easier to summon future “off year" conventions if they are believed necessary. It recommended to the 1940 national convention that power be vested in the national committee to > recall convention delegates for an interim meeting.
Price Two Cents.
INVITE JAPAN TO MEDIATE ON CHINA CONFLICT 19 Nations Ask Japan If Mediation Will Be Considered Brussels, Nov. 6— (U.R) —Japan was asked by 19 nations today , whether’she would listen to proposals to mediate the Chinese* I Japanese war. i The invitation was extended to Japan after a bitter wrangle between the chief democratic powers plus Russia on one hand and Italy on the other had threatened to develop. Japan was asked directly whether she would establish contact with the conference, with a view of starting peace conversations. The message was to be delivered Immediately to Saliuro Kurusu, Japanese ambassador to Belgium. At the same time Albert Baron De Bassompierre, Belgium ambassador to Japan, was to deliver it to the Japanese government in Tokyo. The conference, after approving the text of the invitation, adjourned until Tuesday. Luigi Aldrovandi - Marescotti, Italian delegate to the conference, left the private session of the powers before it adjourned and made its announcement. The message to Tokyo differed greatly from the form in which it had been drawn up yesterday. Its text will be published some time tonight. The complete note included important amendments submitted by the United States and other delegations. Norman H. Davis, the United States delegate. Malcolm Macdonald, British dominions secretary ; and acting British delegate, and i Francois De Tessan of France had taken the amendments and incorporated them in the final, apI proved draft. Fear New Pact London. Nov. 6 - (U.R) —Fears . that the German-Japanese-Italo j anti-communist agreement, to . which Italy is a signatory, might contain secret military clauses were expressed in some diplomatic | quarters today. , It Germany and Italy agreed to ! any military understanding, aimed at supporting Japanese expansion in the far east, Britain and France —and presumably the Unit- ; ed States — would view it with greatest gravity. it is emphasized at Rome and at Berlin that the agreement is simply to combat international communism. Japs Advance Shanghai, Nov. 6 —(U.R) —A new Jap army, driving northward on Shanghai, has fought its way 20 miles to the south bank of the Whangpoo river and is consolidating for the final inarch on the i city, Japanese spokesmen said today. This new army landed at Chapoo, down the coast of Hangchow Bay The men landed at three points on the north shore of the hay yesterday, under cover of a barrage of navy guns, two spokesmen said. Overcoming apparently slight. I Chinese resistance on the bay ! shore, the Japs drove northward with astonishing speed and ' spokesmen said this morning they 1 were 20 miles from their starting (CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR) BOOK WEEK TO if BE OBSERVED I Decatur Library To Take Part In National Observance , | The Decatur public library will ' take part in the commemoration > of "book week”, a national event - sponsored by libraries all over the II United States, from November 10 to I 15, Miss Ruth Winnes, local librar- ?' ian, stated today. 1 Plans for the event, sponsored especially for younger readers of .; the libraries, are rapidly progress* . I ing and several unusual arrange* i ments are being made for those who . participate. t The theme of the event will ba i “The Magic Highway To Adventure.” I A book exhibit will be arranged -for the children and a “book pond”, ' .patterned along the lines of a "fish 1 pond." will be set up for<he amuse- > ment of the young readers Miss Winnes has extended a cpr- - dial invitation to the general pub- . He and especially to the youner children to attend.
