Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 September 1928 — Page 3
GKEENCASTLE HERALD PAGE THREE
£Hii3 Mr. aiul Mrs. Joe Crosby attended the State Fair, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hunt attended the Slate Fair at Indianapolis, Mon-
day.
Elijah Arnold Is confined
home in Jefferson
ness.
to
township by
Dr. G. Bromley Oxnant spoke over radio station WLW at Cincinnati, Sun
day.
Kenneth Todd accompanied Mr. Stark from Stark & Griffith. Pontiac dealers to Pontiac, Mich., Monday. Mr. and Mrs. K. E. Todd are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Bradley pt Peru. They will attend the Slate
Fair before returning to Greencaetle. REPUBLICAN
Henry Cook of Louisville, Ky., is (here visiting his mother, Mrs. John Cook, south Indiana street, and other
relatives.
HOOVER’S FARM PLEA HOOTED BY DAKOTA EDITOR
think my Wall street friend you 1 ST • i f\ do it again. As a Republican I can- ||y|l|/l|\|/l nll/\|| iu»l Inin vniir nln niiii'lmixi n»wl i tv i ho i mL AA M A »AmAJ
SIDE YIELDS A THIRD BODY
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Goddard, north Madison street, spent Sunday visiting relatives at Cambridge City.
Charles Wood, assistant, postmaster at Jasonville, visited relatives in
Greencastle Sunday.
Ferd Lucas and Dr. J. A. Throop have gone to Montezuma where they
will spend a week fishing.
John Call of Gary visited relatives in Greencastle Sunday and accompanied Miss Ann Cannon to Gary. Elder J. N. Dal by has returned from Poseyvllle where he had charge of the services at a Baptist meeting.
Mrs- William Price and daughter, Mon,lay -
Mrs. Ida McAtee have returned from; Mr am| Mrs j 8mes Mullis,
not join your pluniicibund and in the politest way 1 know of phrasing it I 1 hope Hoover and all your associated! parasites will be licked as clean as a 1 Isoup bowl In an orphan asylum. “With kindest personal regards |you are at liberty to publish this and — go to the devil.
‘ENTHUSIASTIC- "Faithfully yours,
ALLY DECLINES” TO JOIN IN “WILUH WELLS"
INDORSING CONTINUATION OF COOLIDGE POLICIE&-HOP-1 ES CANDIDATE GETS GOOD LICKING—CONDITIONS IN HIS
ASOCTETYi
Miss McGaughey Appointed Secretary To Methodist Church
Ola Ellis, west Walnut street rogd, who has been confined to his home and the County Hospital for Home time by illness, was able to be uptown Monday. Mr. Ellis is much improv-
ed.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Potter of Mobile, Ala., who have been here for seeVral weeks the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gray Potter and other relatives and friends, left Monday for their home. Mr. Potter has a position with the Mobile city govern-
ment.
Mrs. Wilbur Stewart, who has been seriously ill at her home on south Indiana street, was slightly improved
Mrs.
STATE WORST SINCE DAYS OF PIONEERS. HE WRITES HEAD OF ADMINISTRATION GROUP
WASHINGTON. Sept. 1.—That the Western farmer is belligerent in hi* political fight is indicated in correspondence made public between Herbert N. Struuse of the Republican Busiuesss Men, Inc., and Willis B. Wells, editor of the Webster (S. D.) Journal Strause wrote the South Dakotan a letter appealing to the business men throughout the country to support Hoover. He asked Wells to publish the letter. In his reply, Wells states the ease of the Insurgent
farmers and includes
AT LEAST 17 ARE KILLED
OVER WEEK END
ELEVEN FATALITIES DUE TO AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENTS—TWO RACE DRIVERS ARE KILLED
Miss Margare^ Emily McGaughey, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. W\ M. McGaughey, has accepted the secretary
u £S»mSSK SJkffioti^^ OWENSBORO. KY. FOUND NMD ££ ST,2 ^ llT.t
NEWCASTLE—FOUR HELD MARION, Did., Sept. 3.—(INS)
The third systeiy murder yielded by Indiana road side ditches within three weeks today occupied the alien
Hon of Giant county authorities. The latest victim was Orville Good-'
Pasteur, 22, formerly of Owensboro, Ky., whose bloody body was found in a ditch at the side of state road No. 18 flie miles east of here. Four young men were being held by the authorities here today in connection
with the case.
On Saturday, Sept. 1, the body of Mrs. Myrtle Miller, 26, of Muncie was found in a ditcli northwest of Newcastle. On August 16, tlie burned
PLAINFIELD. 1ml.. Sept. 3. (INS) —Mrs. Alma Wetzel, 35 of Pittsburgh was killed when the car in w hich she was riding crashed into a pole on the National Road west of
Stilesville. Ind. Henry Meiael of Ben| bo<ly ° r u you " K woman was founrt ln scathing at-1Davis was the driver of the car. He! at d ‘ teh near Cro " "
tack upon the “Coolidge policies" and! hi* wife and their daughter Lenetta M, ' s ' 1 lank ^'Kan of Marion dis-
their effect upon agriculture. He| antl Samuel Todd, the other occupants
of the car, escaped with cuts and
a two weeks visit in Kentucky thJ Al . Ue Parks aml son Jack of Terre! .. Dear M| . gtraUBet Associated and I bruises. H,latives - Haute, spent Sunday here the guests | Afflliated Wall ^..eet bankel . H and Miss Katherine Ixmg, daughter of | °* Mr - an<l altet ' members of the Now York Stock Ex- INDIANAPOLIS. Ind., Sept. 3. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Long, south Lo- ° ,,ve 8tm ‘ t - illss ' irginia \\ imams c h an g e; I (INS)—At elast 17 persons met vlolcust street, is visiting in Indianap-J accompanied them home. | .. Your i et ter under date of June out deaths in Indiana over the week olis. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Cass Broadstreet vis-!- 1 has been received. I note you] "bile scores were injured, a survey u ! of , )nr | in „ ' ited in Greencastle Sunday. (request that 1 join the Republican j<>f the slate showed today. Eleven of Miss Helen Stephenson, of g Business Men, Inc., of your city in! the fatalities were due to aulomoblle
ton, former teacher of aiti j] 1 . s> Aaron Swift and Mrs.
,n the Cloverdale schools, will teach j Cowlin({ of Morgantown viaited j ImrmUy^rou^T'that "be 1 wiH^aTry
|oul the Coolidge policies.’ Your plea
in Michigan City the coming year. friends in Greencastle Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marshall and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Marshall spent Sunday visiting Mr. and Mrs. James Baker, west of Terre Haute.
Miss Jennie Clements who has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. Alverson
has returned to her home in Indiunap j j Bon township, Tuesday.
oils.
Miss Bonnie Moffett of Indianapolis j leaves me as cold as the ice fields of a was the guest of Miss Evelyn Aylcripolar sea. over the week end. I Says He "Enthusiastically Declines”
j “As a Republican I enthusiastically
Bruno Mann, who has been in the dec , ine t0 do any pll( . h foo , County Hospital for the past several jj am for 1Ioovel . jU8t about aH tfu as
weeks, will return to his home in Mad
Harry Conklin, of Shelbyvilie. a former Greencastle boy, was her#
Monday visiting his Conklin and other friends.
MORE SHEEP KILLED
father George Sheep-killing dogs cleaned out the relatives and flock on the farm of Milo West last
accidents.
The rasuulty list lollows: INDIANAPOLIS Mrs. Nannie Thompson, 65, fatally hurt when hit by a cur; Johnnie Palikan, 4, killed
by a truck.
NEWCASTLE—Mrs. Myrtle Miller, 36, of Muncie, found murdered
ditch.
you can throw our party elephant hy| MARION—Orville Goodpasteiir, 22.
the pin feathers and with your ariuU oun, l sin* 11 in ditch,
broken In four places. Your lueasl GARY—Mary Edginton, 10, kill*il are al lln the red column, if you can 'O’ auto; Janies Houe, 57, killed by
covered Good pus leu r’g body. She told police here that three youths were dragging the body across the road and had fled at the approach of her
car.
Those arrested in connection with the case were Ule Ferguson, 24, aiff. Charles Mauled, 39, both of Marion. I Justin Anderson and Hugh Smith were held as material witness while Cecil Ferguson, brother of Ule was being sought, police said. Young Goodpasteur had come heft> from Kentucky several months ago ‘o visit with his uncle, James Good-
pasteur.
Police held the theory that Good11 1 1 pustcur was slugged ami robbed. About |27 which the youth's uncle said the victim had were missing.
grasp that thought. “Out in the West, where men arc mortgaged up to their eyebrows and
Miss Bernice Flint has returned
week while ! Greencastle
Thad Jones,
township farmer
another'the farm work begins at sunrise, we lost !® re *o decidedly opposed to a contin-
!twenty-one animals.
hit and run driver. BEDFORD—Jam.
Hodges, 59, fat-;
luance of the Coolidge policies that if
to Indianapolis after spending the has bwn a hcavy losar of ' I wrote you what I think ItVouldu’t^ins, 21
i . i «u norontu Mr onrti «ir. VV t‘Sl naS DCeH U Heavy lO.^r Ui |
Mrs. Thomas Flint, on Nort'h Jackson a « "' a reHl,U of ^ ntinued J^eraTe* 1 in S"'Nm-tnV’acl'L
l)y dogH this year, least week dogs! “•ooei ate in my exprtHSioiis accoi j
[got into his remaining flock of eightjU'Kly-
ally hurt in auto accident,
KOKOMO—John Swain, negro, kill
ed by hit and run motorist.
COLUMBIA CITY Howard Has
of Aurora, 111., killed in
Dr. 0. F. Overstreet and John Thomas returned home Saturday from Bay View, Mich. Mrs. L. R-
Ekgrdt returned to Greencastle with dogs got into the flock last week,
them.
sheep and killed the bunch. I " 0l "' newspapers are filled with Mr. Jones has also been a previous » ort «*e d forclosures ol farm lauds loser and lost twenty-one more when ''huttel mortgages sales of household
effects and livestock on the farms.
Mr. and Mrs. Eber Hamilton, | ^ FlhlEI) Greencastle, R. 1. have returned from ILLEGAL l Sh OF Sh . -
a visit with Mr. and Mrs. J. \V. Neldii at Akron, O., Mrs. Hamilton and
Mr.- Ntider are sisters.
ITIES
Staten Owens and Clair Albiu,
Chenoweth, both
reported to have been fined a total of over $40 each in the court of Justice
■ hool truck drivers, took two new^ of the Peace J. J. Kauble, on charges si liool truck chassis to Mitchell Mou- of illegal use ot a seine, Sunday. 1 he day to have new school truck bodies men were apprehended by game warfitted on Hum at the factory. | dens from Brazil and ( rawfordsville,
! it was said. Justice Kauble could not
Miss Ella Mahatma will return to* reach<)d Monday . Steuben Cheno-
Grcencastle Tuesday from Bay View, weth is a brother of A. R. Chenoweth,
Michigan, where she has been man- R b , i( . an County chairman. ager of Pearl O’Huir’s Studio. Miss
O'Hair w ill not return to Greencastle
until October.
Sheriffs' sales of rural credit joint land bank loans until the Coolidge prosperity you speak of so joyously makes me wonder if you really
Ruel Hainev and Stephen "Steve" j think w llut y "" >'<>” ur H
of Greencastle, arei 11 ls ""’y a Gckllng sensation behind
the ears.
"We are a long-suffering people, Inarticulate to a certain extent and somewhat timid in expressing our views, but 1 want you to know right down in your marrow bones that a
continuance of the Coolidge policies I ford, 25, of C’arbondale, 111 under your friend and associate, Mr. jin White Lick creek.
Hoover is utterly abhorrent to us. I MICHIGAN CITY Bryant Dillin-
“Most Distress Since Pioneers” U"'- :n - ha 1 '*" 1 a « • late hos“Under the Coolidge policies, I pital for criminally insane,
which Mr. Hoover Is pledged to con- 1 EVANSVILLE—Albert McCartei,
tinue and which you so eloquently j 27, killed by a falling log.
collision between his motorcycle and
an automobile.
PORTLAND — Mr. Esther Mut-]\yOMAN thews, 87, drowned herself in tank on
the George Itnucli farm.
CONNERBVILLE — Herman C. Alexander, 11. of KnigliMow n. Kiil-
and jed by auto.
FORT WAYNE John Reynolds, 36, of Bluffton, killed in auto accident near Ft. Wayne. TERRE HAUTE—Waller Axe. unto racer, killed in race track accident at Jungle Park. 30 miles north
of Terre Haute.
WINCHESTER — Hurry Giitou, racer, fatally hurt on Winchester race track when ear crashed through fence PLAINFIELD Miss Lucille C'lif-
di iiw nod
WATSON WOULD STIR RELIGIOUS
HATF IN MAINF Miss Snider Assigned llil I 111 IflnlllL To Garfield Park Sch<
months she has been secretary to Dr. Guy Black and became very much interested in the work. She has resigned her position at Hagerstown where she was to teach this year and where she was located last year.
• • *
Mis* O'Hair Gives Studio Tea For Patrons BAY VIEW, Mich., Sept. L—A delightful affair that has become an annual event in the social and cultural life at Bay View was the art exhibit and studio tea given Tuesday afternoon by Miss Pearl O’Hair of Greencastle at her little art and craft shop, at which more than three hundred persons from the various results in this region attended. Guests were shown all of the exhibits in her studio where may be seen articles in every branch of decorative art, including works in Italian wax, clay, fabric painting and placque work; al- 1 so furniture decorating and enamel work on glass and china. The exhibit included not only the art work of Miss O’Hair herself, but also specimens of the craftmanship of her large class of Bay View sum-j mer school pupils, ranging in ages from small children to those of ma- 1 ture years. Miss U’Hair’s classes will continue for another month, after which time she will return to her home in Greencastle, where she maintains a similar establishment.
• • •
Miss Cannon Returns To School Miss Anna Cannon, who has been here this summer the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cannon, John Can-! non and James Cannon, left Sunday for Gary, where she will resume her work as musical director in the Gary | schools. James Cannon drove to Gary with Miss Camion.
S. C. C. To Have Picnic Supper The S. C. C. club will hold a picnic supper Tuesday evening at tho home of Mrs. Ross Runyan, east Wash ington street,
* * •
Rttark Reunion Held Sunday i Members of the Ruark family and friends gathered at the Blttles Grove, east of Fillmore Sunday, and held their annual reunion. There were about fifty present.
Art Needlework
Club Meets Thursday The regular meeting of the Art Needlework Club which was to have been held Tuesday afternoon haj been postponed until Thursday afternoon and will be at the home of Mrs. Oscar Thomas, south Indiana street.
SATURDAY’S RESULTS American Association Indianapolis, 4; Louisville, 3. Columbus, 8; Toledo, 1. Minneapolis, 7; St. Paul, 6. Milwaukee, 5; Kansas City, 0. American League New York, 8; Washington, 3. Philadelphia, 14; Boston, 3. Detroit, 6; St. Louis, 4. Cleveland, 6; Chicago, 2. National League St. Louis, 4; Pittsburgh, 1. Chicago, 1; Cincinnati, 0. New Y'ork, 1; Brooklyn, 0. Boston, 5-1; Philadelphia, 3-7.
1KSTERDAl S RESULTS American Association Louisville, 5; Indianapolis, 2. Toledo, 10-9; Columbus, 4-6. Minneapolis, 8; St. Paul, 5j Milwaukee, 13; Kansas City, 12.
American l.eaguc
Washington, 2; New York, 0 St. Louis, 5; Detroit, 2. Chicago, 3; Cleveland, 1. (Only games scheduled.)
National League
St. Louis, 5; Cincinnati, 3. Chicago, 3; Pittsburgh, 2. New York, 5; Boston, 2. Brooklyn, 6; Philadelphia, 6
n innings.)
(elcv-
DEEMS INDIANA
To Garfield Park School
Miss Esther Snider has returned to tIndianapolis after spending the sum-;
SEN- mei with liei parent. . Mr. and Mis. L.
AT0R UNNECESSARY IN NEW i>, Snider. Mi- Snider will attend ENGLAND CAMPAIGN—WOULD tin. institute thi week. She ha- been STIR UP STRIFE IN C0MMUN- assigned to tile Garfield Park SciinoL
for the coming year.
NOBILE GROUP 18 BELIEVED ALIVE ON AIR Til ISLAND
Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Runyan of Cloverdale visited Mr. and Mrs. Paul Al1 in and family, east of Greencastle, j Sunday. A. R. Woods of Indianapolis was an over-night guest of Mr. and j Mrs. Albin Sunday night. Moffett & Dobbs have delivered a I four door sedan to Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Light. Mrs. Light has gone to Bay View and will be accompanied home by her son, Amos Light, who has been attending music school during the summer.
BERLIN, Sept. 3.—(INS)—The six members of the Nobile Polar expedition known as the Alessandri group, who were carried uway with the envelope of the Italia, nre believed to be alive upon an island in the Arctic, according to word received from Tromsoc today. Advices from that place state that the Danish tankship Jopetter sighted smoke and fire on the edge of an island near Stone Foreland a fortnight ago.
PORTLAND, Me., Sept. L—Mrs. Charles L. Donohue, Democratic national committee woman from Maine in an open letter charged that the proposed speaking tour in Maine of Senator James E. Watson of Indiana, is for the purpose of stirring up re-
GIFTS AWARDED ' IN FOURTH BOOSTER EVENT
Mrs. John Cannon
Returns From New York Mrs. John Cannon and
James
Hughes, who haw been spending the MLL( HANTS TO CONTINUE CON-
suinmer in New York with Miss Mary Katherine Cannon, left New York Saturday, on their return trip]
iigiou.- hatred, particularly in smaller home. They are driving through in
Big Horse Short At ludiaua State l air
* ho Indiana State Fair, September 1st to Stb. wiU again hava a barn over owing with tha ttneat group of hone* that have ever been on the Indiana E^tfound*. The biggest stable* in the United States will be repseated. It i* your opportunity to see a real horse show In both Ugat and heavy horses.
urge ‘business men' lo support, we have had more farm bankruptcy and more luial (listless than bits existed since our pioneers came west in co\ered wagons and conquered the prairies. “And let me tell you Mr. Btrause, and your Wall Street associates that four more years of it will make us look like 30 cents. “You really have no realization and no conception of what these Coal idge policies have done to a great and flourishing agricultural section ot the country since the Silent One came into power. Under the Coolidge pa IK ctes: “Two million farmers have been beggared and have had to abandon farming. “Farm lands have depreciated 130,000,000,000 In value. “Fifty thousand business men have gone broke. “Four thousand rural banks have failed. How New Yorker Looks to Him “Why Mr. Strause, when I read (your letter over again to see why you want me as a Republican to support Hoover and a continuance of the Cool idge policies you look like a guy out on a limb, holding herring in one hand and a cun of oil in the other, insisting you ate an electric light plant and now is the time to buy stock in tho Illumination. “While Coolidge was President, Congrats, representing the people passed farm relief bills twice, and twice the men higher up, who believe in addition .division and silence' vetoed these bills. That is the paramount Coolidge policy. II overshadows and dims all others and Hoover says and you say and your plethoric associates say that Hoover will carry out the Coolidge pedicles.” "We have been fooled twjee. Don’t
communities.
’J he letter was addressed to Senator Frederick Hale and Col. William Tudor Gardiner, the state's major Republican candidate, in it Mrs. Donohue charged Senator Watson with being a leader of organized religious hatred and that his participation in Maine campaign was for the purpose of “fanning into flames the dying embers of religious hatred for p< litical advantage and plunging our peaceful villages and towns in neigh-
borhood strife and enmity.”
“The fact that Senator Watson," the letter continues, “has been assign ed to rural communities for most of his sja'cches in the state indicate?
om-
the candi-
dates or committeemen from Maine. That Senator Curtis, your eandi-
to visit
Maine for the campaign is proof that the worthiest and ablest of your party is available to you. Your ac- ] ceptanee of Senator Watson as an ally to your eandidui y compels tin beiiel that successful Republicanism in Maine is believed to require an ulliat.ee with the champions and lead-
ers ot religious hatred."
the Canron ear. • * • Baptist Missionary Society Meets Tuesday The Missionary Society of the Baptist Church will meet with Mrs. I'.,
TEST DURING NEXT THREE MONTHS WITH AUTOMOBILE AS GRAND PRIZE—ELMER BLUE WINS MAJOR GIFT IN AUGUST
CONTEST
The merchant members of tho Greencastle Chamber of Commerce will condui t a trade boosters contest
Continuation B the news was flashed upon the | screens. Patrons immediately bolted, the shows to join the milling throngs i
in the streets.
Bonfires were lighted all over town .. , .
,. . • i],, that the strategy directing his
and extra police were hutriedly , . , . . , . . i i | ' ployment is the plan ot * K “ "
sworn in to keep order and prevent | ^ ^ ^
proporty damage.
At the palatial home <>f Mr*. Eliz-,
. . I. il r .i date lor vice President, it
abeth Hassell, mother of the Greater | ... Roekford’s pilot, lights that had been dimmed for the night, suddenly flashed from every w indow as a telephone piessagc brought the joyous news. Mrs. Bert Hassell, who had just tucked her two small sons and infant daughter in bed, was summoned to fhe downtown district where she appeared before the thousands gathered : there and received a tremendous
ovation.
Factory whistles shrieked the message throughout the city and boats | on the river added their quota to the din that rocked the quiet Sunday
night.
Police were unable to cope with the traffic a> the night wore on late comers swelled the midnight celebra-j
(ion.
A police car was dispatched to l.a-| grange, J1L, for Mrs. Fannie Cream-: er, mother of the Greater Rockford’s navigator, who went there for a visit over week end. She w ill be brought: buck to Rockford to join with Has- ! sell’s mother and wife in the recog-j nition the city seeks to bestow Ppon these women who remained steadfast j in their belief that the fliers would! be found alive.
M. Ewing, Tuesday afternoon at 2:30; which will begin September 12 and o’clock. 1 continue for three months ending • * • Saturday December 15, with an autoCresecnt Club mobile us the grand prize. A commUMeeting postponed ( tei has been appointed to purchase The regular meeting of the Cres-i the car which will be on display dur-
cent l lub has been postponed. An-, nounccmcnt w ill be made later as to when it will be held. • * • Missionary Society To Meet Tuesday The Missionary Society of the First Christian Church will meet Tuesday morning at 9 o’clock with Mrs. NY. F. Handy at her home on the | cemetery road. Please bring one dish, of food, sandwiches for one and table service.
MR* Cooper Leaves lor Benton Harbor
Miss C rystal Cooper, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. NY. A. Cooper, Bloom-! ford, ington street, left Monday morning for Benton Harbor, Mich., where she
ing the County Fair.
The fourth booster’s contest which was held during August ended Saturday and the awards were made Satur day afternoon. Elmer Blue held the number which drew the fifty dollar gift and Mrs. Ralph Allen was award ed the twenty-five dollar prize. Ten dollar awards were made follows: Mrs. Kate Bastin, Fillmore; Mrs. Wilbur Grimes and Harry Sutton, Keeisville; Ernestine Mastcn and Charles Met own, Limedale. Five dollar gifts were given to Miss Lillie Sourwine of Brazil; Mrs. A. E. Ayler, Miss Velma Cole, William Kocher, and Mrs. Harry Craw-
BAD BEER
PERU. Ind . Kept. 1. (INS) —A present of a bottle of beet to a small son of Mr. and Mis. George Jliff by a boy chum, led to a liquor raid on the home of Clyde Britton In which Cl bottles of home-
brew were found.
Britton was arrested and was fined $130 and sentenced to 30 days in jail on a charge of unlawfully possessing Intoxicating
liquor.
The gift bottle of beer made the Britton boy siek and it was necessary to call a physician tn treat him. The boy's story led to the polite probe and raid.
will teach music in the public schools. GEORGE LANCE RETAINS
This is Miss Cooper's second year at AMATEUR GOLF TITLE
11 Benton Harbor. Her parents and lis-, — -
! ter, Miss Imogene Cooper, accompan- FRENCH LICK, Ind., Sept. 1—Tho i if'l her as far as Indiunaimlis. frail, slender, willowy George Lunco
Mr. and Mrs. Killough Yisit In Greencastle
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Killough of Gary are here for over the week end the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J.
of Terre Haute once again is Indiana’s premier golfer. The Rea par 1 ; municipal links representative rodo rough shod through Hooxierdom'* best “shiny” ex|>crts in dufunse of tho title he won last year, the grand fin-
Arnold and Prof, and Mrs. !*. C. 'Iil-1 ale of which was a smashing triumph
den. Mrs. Killough, formerly Miss Edna Arnold, is a sister of Mrs. Til-
den and Mr. Arnold.
WANT ADS. NOTICE—The College Inn will open Tuesday, noon, September 4.
Mr. and Mrs. Kolliu Dobbs have retur. i to .eir home at latporte after a visit of two weeks here with relatives.
today in which he eliminated Will Diddel of the Indianapolis Country Club by the overwhelming score of 'J
up and 8 to play.
| The twenty-eighth annual tourney j of the Indiana State Golf Association of developed into a Lance tidal wavu of j from the opening round of qualifying
DePauw Beauty NYeds t.arrett Man
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Torrence Marion announce the marriage
their daughter, Miss Pauline Tor-| last Monday till the sinking of tho " nee, to < haile.- I roderick Abell of| lust putt on the twenty-eighth green Garrett, Ind., which took place on | this afternoon. Lance simply over Aug. 3. Miss Torrence was one of the’ shadowed everything at the meeting three girls selected as the most I and conquered the beatiful rolling beautiful on the DePauw campus last j Orango county hill* at Thomas Tagyear. Mr. Abell was graduated from[ gart’s famous couae with th 8 skill t ulver millitary academy last June, and strategy of a wartime general.
