Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 320, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 May 1928 — Page 2
PAGE 2
1,300 SITES IN * BIBLE HISTORY : NOWLOGATED New Evidence Unearthed by <■ Science Sheds Fresh Light on Times. Su Science Service WASHINGTON. My 5. No Jess than 1,312 of the places that made Bible history in ancient Palestine have been accurately located by archeologists, according to announcement today by Dr. George S. Duncan, professor of Egyptology and Assyriology at American University here. Picks and spades wielded by scientists are unearthing so much important evidence about the Bible that it is like anew book, Dr. Duncan pointed out. “Hebrew architecture was deeply dnfluenced by Egypt.” he stated. ’Solomon’s temple and its utensils were modeled after Egyptian patterns. Temples on the Nile contain altars, tables with bread, and arks with cherubim, all recalling the .Bible descriptions. Origins to Babylonia “Archeology shows that the first Chapters in Genesis are old traditions originating in Babylonia. The Hebrews monotheized them and spiritualized them and made them ’ the vehicles of most important religious truths. It is a great mistake to make the chapters standards for scientific knowledge. The Bible is c, religious book, not a scientific I treatise. ■ “Biblical chronology has been j fereatly enriched by science. Formerly earth and man were supposed to have been created about 4004 B. C. We know now that the earth is {not less than three billions years old and man appeared not less than £OO,OOO years ago. “Abraham lived about 2100 B. C. and Moses 1225 Bl C. The date of Christ's birth must now be placed eight years earlier, for the census bringing Joseph and Mary into Bethlehem took place 8 B. C., so | that 1928 really should be 1936 A. D. j “Archeology is throwing light on J historic references- m the Bible Which have been obscure, Dr. Duncan showed. We now know about the tower of Babel, its location, size, and purpose, he said. Will Improve Translations Archeology has given us a more accurate knowledge of Hebrew and Creek, which are the original Biblical languages, so that all translations in the future will be more fcorrect,” the professor continued. This is a point of special interest, since the Biblb has been translated! into 835 languages and there are many controversies over the proper j equivalent words to express obscure passages in the Hebrew and Greek. The Hebrew literary methods were similar to those of the Babylonians end Egyptians, Dr. Duncan pointed out, and as these ways of expression were vastly different from our western ways, it is necessary to understand the Semitic mind and method of writing in order to interpret the Bible. SURVIVES 12 FRACTURED BONES AND TORN FLESH {Union City Man Told by Doctors He I Would Die of Injuries. Bil Timex Special UNION CITY, Ind., May s.—Oral Suitss has discarded crutches and 4s able to walk about his home here after suffering fractures of twelve bones and lacerations of the flesh on various portions of his body. Following the injuries suffered ■■when crushed in a locomotive turntable at Beliefontaine, Ohio, physicians said there was no hope for recovery. But breath remained in Suits’ body and apparently he will be back to normal soon. He spent three months in a hospital. 750 IN MUSICAL TILTS High School Students Enter Contest Finals at Muncie Today. Bn Times Special MUNCIE, Ind., May s.—This city today is host to 750 boys and girls, members of high school bands and orchestras throughout Indiana, who are competing in finals of the'State contest for these organizations. Winners will be announced this evening. The contest opened Friday night, with the appearance of Class B bands. Ear Nearly Severed in Fall Bli United Press PLYMOUTH, Ind., May s.—John Richardson, recently was the victim of an unusual accident. Richardson was walking along a street and . suddenly became ill. He fell to the sidewalk, cutting one ear nearly off. It was necessary to take a number of stitches to fasten the ear in place.
Protestant Meeting
Tonight, May sth At 8 o’Clock Veterans of Foreign Wars Hall 210 E. Ohio St. ELKS OLD HALL 116 E. Maryland St. \ % All candidates are invited to be prefeent. And every one interested in voting for the right man should come. Political Advertising:
Back Yard Junk Pile Fire Menace
A residence district is no place to operate an “impromptu” junk yard, especially when the junk is likely .to burst into flames and set the whole neighborhood on fire. This, in effect, is what Municipal Judge Clifton R. Cameron told George Reed, 2730 Kenwood Ave., when fire prevention authorities brought him into court for failure to obey orders to clean up his
Bargain Sales? Ancient Skyscraper Store of Rome Is Unearthed.
BY THOMAS B. MORGAN United Press Staff Correspondent ROME, May s.—Ancient Rome had a nine-story “skyscraper” housing its chief great department store. Excavations now proceeding on the site of demolished military ! barracks in the via Magnanapoli j have led to the disclosure and identification of a row of shops, built nine stories high, one above the other, connected by inside staircases and galleries. Whilst temples, basilicas, triumphal arches and forums of the old times abound in Rome, this j is the first time a large monument , devoted to the material and commercial life of the city has been unearthed. “Trajan's Markets,” as the new j archaeological find is to be rolled, | owe their discovery and indentifi- 1 cation to Professors Bicci, Gig- j lioli and Piribeni, who are in charge of the excavations proceeding to the east and northeast j of Trajan’s forum. tt a a MANY traces of ancient Rome long had been tevident on ! the site, but only now has it be- | come possible to establish definite- j ly the fact that the big depart- ! ment store of the city was located there. Trajan’s markets were situated on the western side on the Quirinal hill. Access was gained to them through a monumental arch, the base of which has been found as well as one of the ornamental columns belonging to it. To this great store, which has beautiful architectural lines, Rome’s shoppers flocked to buy luxury articles as well as household provisions. From the designs of the Mosaics of the pavements of the first two floors of the structure, it is supposed that these were shops for the sale of luxury articles. LOCAL FLIER IN CRASH Chief of Army Staff Fall in TakeOff at Capital; Uninjured. Col. A. J. Dougherty, 84th division chief of staff, today was being congratulated on his narrow escape from injury Thursday when the airplane, piloted by an organized reserve air corps flier, crashed in taking off at Washington, D. C. Dougherty had spoken in the interest of the Citizens Military Training Camps and was starting the return trip when engine trouble forced the pilot to choose between high tension wires and a fence in landing. The plane’s landing gear was broken when it hit the fence, and the officers returned by train. Colonel Daugherty flew to Alexandria and Brazil today with Capt. H. Wier Cook to boost the training camps. Lived in Cne Home 72 Years B.il Times Special MOORESVILLE, Ind., May 4. Mi's. Indiana P. Likely, 82, is dead here at the home in which she has lived for the last seventy-two years. A son, Fred A. Likely, lives at Indianapolis. Mrs. Likely was active in the Methodist Episcopal Church.
premises, photographed above with Edward A. Lynch, inspector, viewing it. . “Parts of almost any kind of an object ever used in Indianapolis can be found either in that back yard or piled high in practically every room of the house,” declared Fire Prevention Chief Horace W. Carey. Judge Cameron gave Reed until May 10 to remove the fire hazard.
ORDER RAZING OF HALF BLOCK AS FIRE PERIL E. Washington Buildings Are Fire Menace, City Rules. A half square block of buildings bounded by E. Court, N. Noble and E. Washington St., have been condemned and ordered wrecked imme- 1 diately, L. D. Lee, assistant commissioner of buildings, announced Friday! Most of the buildings are owned by the Walling estate of Chicago. Charles Holloway is agent for the estate. The Brown Realty and Union Trust Companies also are agents for buildings in the plot. The buildings, belonging to the Walling estate, found to be fire menaces and in a general conditions, are found on E. Washington St., from 630 to the corner, j 650; 16, 18 and 20 N. Noble., 625, 631, 633, 619, 621 E. Court St. 608 E. Court St., is owned by the Brown Realty Company. The Union i Trust Company is agent for the 628! E. Washington St. two-story frame j building. “Most of the places were unfit for I human habitation,” according to; Lee. "They all are fire hazards.” The entire second floor of • the • building, extending from 636 to 650 E. Washington St., was used “for tenement house purposes in viola-! tion of the State housing law'. There i were open fires, oil hallway lamps, | no running water or toilet facilities,”! Lee said. The yards in the rear of the buildings were ordered cleaned, inasmuch as a great accumulation of rubbish w'as a fire hazard, constituting a menace to other properties, according to Lee. Men are expected to start work tearing down the buildings within the next few days. Thirty days have been given the realtors to adhere to the building commission’s ruling. HELD IN MAIL FRAUD Nab Red Ball Transit Agent for Mulcting Company. Jerry C. Pugh, 34, New York City 1 representative of the Red Ball Transit Company, Indianapolis, was held to the Federal grand jury here by a New .York Federal commissioner on a charge of using the mail to defraud the company, it was announced today by W. C. Ela, postal inspector. Ela returneed from New York today where Pugh was placed under $2,500 bond to appear here. Pugh is charged with defrauding the company of funds amounting nearly to $3,000. Held for Motor Theft Cecil Waymire, 21, Muncie, was held to the Federal grand jury under $1,500 bond on a motor theft charge by Howard S. Young, United States commissioner, today. Waymire is charged with driving a stolen Chevrolet coach from Dayton, Ohio, to Muncie, April 28. War Veteran at Auburn Bn Times Special AUBURN, Ind., May 4.—Attendance of 1,000 is expected here Saturday and Sunday for the thirtieth annual reunion of the 157th Indiana Volunteer Infantry, Spanish- | American War unit.
‘Daihr Comment
Queen Marie’s Subjects Protest 250,000 Roumanian peasants are gathering in the six principal cities of that country to make formal protest, Sunday, against the Bratinau government. If Roumania were as prosperous as America these same people would be happy in working and saving toward financial independence. Every one of us can and should save a little each week at the City Trust Company.
CTTY TRUST L COMPANY DICK. MILLER, president BJ 106 E.WASHINGTON ST.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Drunken Drys ’ Paper Wars On Inebriated Congressmen Making Speeches.
Bn I nited I’ri as WASHINGTON, May s.—The Washington Daily News announced editorially Friday it proposes henceforth “to publish as news the appearance on duty of any so-called dry member of the House or Senate in an obviously intoxicated condition." “The spectacle of a’ Senator or Representative, under the influence of * liquor, undertaking publicly to discuss affairs of state, is always disgusting,” the editorial says. “When such a Senator or Representative is one who consistently votes for prohibition, the hypocrisy and rank abuse of special privilege make the spectacle intolerable.” The newspaper admits that Congressmen have as much right to the “synthetic pleasure” of drinking as any one else. It says the "great majority” of members of both houses are “gentlemen, capable of controlling their appetites.” And it adds that “on the whole, probably, there are as many or more teetotalers among the dry-voting members as among the wet-voting members,” though “this is a question that has never been decided.” B B n THE NEW'S says it does not intend to “snoop,” and explains; “But when a fire-eating prohibitionist wanders aimlessly about the Senate chamber during the discussion of important business and finally interrupts to ask the presiding officer, ‘whass bizness before House,’ or when a similar exponent of the Volstead act has to hang hard to the edge of his # sk. where his legs weave unsteadily under him. as he attempts to make a speech, or when a champion of the Eighteenth Amendment relapses from maudlin inattention into snoring sleep in the midst of a Senate session, the News will undertake to make his condition clear to its readers.”
CITY PIONEER IS DEAD Funeral of George VV. Stradling to Be Held Saturday. Funeral services for George W. Stradling, 82. pioneer Indianapolis contractor, will be held at the residence, 1932 Central Ave., at 2 p. m., Saturday. Burial will be at Crown Hill cemetery. Mr. Stradling died at his home Thursday after an illness of two years. He had lived in Indianapolis since 1870. Surviving are: The widow, Mrs. Martha Stradling; a daughter, Miss Emma C. Stradling, at home; three sons, David W. Stradling, Detroit, Mich.,; Edward G. Stradling, Lafayette, Ind., and Howard M. Stradling, Indianapolis, and two brothers, Thomas and Clinton Stradling, Muncie, Ind. FRATERNITY IN MEETING Kappa Sigma Chapters Here From All Over the Mid-West. A luncheon at the Lincoln Hotel today opened the mid-western conclave of Kappa Sigma, national college fraternity. Members from active chapters in Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin, and alumni from a number of chapters attended. A smoker meeting tonight, business meeting Saturday and a banquet Saturday evening are included in the program.
We Strive for Profits and Earnings but to little purpose or benefit unless we put some of it aside in a savings fund; it is not what one profits in a trade or earns at his daily avocation that counts, but what he saves is the magnet that spells success when most it is wished for. Let us help you save. 4% on Savings Th. INDIANA TRUST SSSESSb $2,000,000.00 Savings Deposits made on or befo'e May 10th earn interest . from May Ist
GRAND PRIZE OF EGG EXHIBIT TO GORYBON YOUTH Annual Contest at Purdue Attracts 511 Entrants. Ba Times Special LAFAYETTE, Ind., May 5. Merrill Stevens, 16, Corydon High School student, today holds the grand sweepstakes prize of the annual egg show sponsored by agricultural freshmen of Purdue University. The contest 'ttracted 511 entrants who showed 800 dozen eggs. First prize winners include the following: EXPERIMENT STATION CLASS White Errs —Georgia national egg laying contest, first; Kansas experiment station. second; Michigan egg laying contest, third. Brown Eggs—Georgia national egg laying contest, first; Georgia State College of Agriculture, second; District of Columbia experiment station, third. COLLEGE STUDENTS' CLASS Whites—H. R. Bradley, Manhattan. Kan. Browns—G. F. Schwarts, East Lansing, Micir. PURDUE STUDENTS NON-AGRICULTURE Whites—G. Durtyz. West Lafayette. Browns—F. D. Valentine. Lafayette. INDIANA STATE POULTRY ASSOCIATION Browns—Terrav hatcheries, Evansville. Whites—Darrett Sellers. Mooresville. COMMERCIAL CLASS Whites—Superb Red Poultry farm. Lafayette. Browns —G. E. Gurtz. Corydon. Brown Extras—Glara Belle McCaslin, j Franklin. White Extras—Sarah C. Brown. FANCIER CLASS leghorn.' Albert C. Appel. Evansville. Black Minoreas- —Mrs. M. N. Bott, Remington. , _ | Anconas Albert C. Appel. Evansville. Blue Andalusians —Vcrn Hessler. Rem- l "cia h'lna Althea Buck. Remington. Brahmas—Geneva Patrick. Remington. Langshan—H. J. Eastman. Hillsboro. i Plymouth Rocks—F. S Taylor. Peudle- ■ °Wvandottes—Gilbert Wood. Remington Rhode Island Reds—Clara Belle McCaslin. Franklin. Orpington—Mrs. George Wood, ReminKton. Sussex- Richard Roe. Hillsboro Barnryelders—Herman BenmnK, west Simar T'ree N. Y. Mixed Flock—H. H. Bowman. Remington. GRADE SCHOOL CLASS —Section 1— Whites- Romert Bowman. Remington. Browns —Martha Lough. Remington. —Section 2- _ ... Whil es Charles Williams. Battle Ground. . . Browns—Paul Larroraes. Muncie. —Section 3 Whites—Charles Williams. Jr.. Newport -Section 4 Whites Charle. West. Lyons. Browns Frank Ikeid. Bedford. —Section 5Whites Ruth Emily. N< ’ w _.,p al I : ls ,*t llry ' Browns—Gordon Cooper. Elizabeth. COUNTY AGENTS' AND VOCATIONAL TEACHERS' CLASS Whites-- Edward Criss. Corvdon. Browns—O Hogue. Argus. 4-H CLUB CLASS - Section 1 Whites- Henrv Jaegers, Remington. Browns Howard Tvler. Remington. Section 2 „ ... Whites—Charles L. Brown. Battle C 'Browns Marvin Nusbaum. Remington. - Section 3Browns Harold Frost. Greenfield. Whiles Harold Rothermel. tountain Cit ' -Section 5 Browns Erwin Criss. Corvdon Whites—Merrill Stevens. Corydon. HIGH SCHOOL CLASS -Section 1— Whites-Orville White. Medarwtlle. Browns—Grant Waknitz. Medarvvi'.le. - Section 2 • Whites Francis Ravman, Remington. Browns —Virgil Shrover. Muncie. Section 3 Whites -Van Jacobs. Greenfield. Browns -Dale Gates. Splceland. Section 4 Whites William Lang. Heltonvllle. Browns Francis Brothers. Clay Cit\. Section 5 - Whites Leslie Cluncie. De Pauw. Browns Foster Lowry. Scottsbur*. PURDUE AGRICULTURE STUDENTS —Freshmen — \V Pardonner. first, in browns and sweepstakes m freshmen entries Whites- G. Harris and Kel h Elsburv tied tor first. Sophomores— Whites J. H Bruehner. Browns William tl iman. Juniors — White K. Honk. Brown C. Spul *r. Seniors White K E. DrLinKham. Browns J. R. Titus. BEE CAUSES ACCIDENT Child May Die of Injuries in Auto Crash Near Warsaw. Bn Times Special WARSAW. Ind., May s.—Three persons were injured, one perhaps fatally when Mrs. Alvin Althoff lost control of her automobile on a road south of here while striking at a bee which had flown into the car. Doreen. 9, Mrs. Althoff’s daughter. Is expected to die of a fractured skull. The motorist's sen Paul. 7, was severely cut by glass, and an aunt, Mrs. Emma Burns, Elkhart, cut and bruised. Mrs. Althoff was unhurt. WAR VETERAN. 101, DIES Uriah Gasavvay, Rcclavillc, Served in Conflict With Mexico. Bn United Press REELSVILLE, Ind., May 5. Uriah Gasaway, 101, Mexican War veteran and Putnam County’s oldest resident, is dead here at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Morton Smith. The end came Friday night after the veteran had been in failing health since last December. Besides Mrs. Smith there are two other daughters, Mrs. Emma Schenck, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Lon Hancock, Greencastle. Death of Mr. Gasaway leaves but I four survivors of the Mexican conflict. Hobbies in Family Varied Bn Times Special WABASH, Ind., May s.—Members of the firm of F. J. Rettig & Sons here have a variety of hobbies. Frank Rettig, Sr., likes bees; Frank, | Jr., is a lover of flowers, and George , Rettig, youngest in the firm, is an | aviation enthusiast.
He’s Just Business Man
'£s&s& ■' y 3&feffivj :^w' :
Alfred Loewenstein. Belgian financier, isn’t the third richest -man in the world at all, he told New York newspaper men. He's just a millionaire business man. And several of his large entourage are friends on a sight-seeing trip. Loewenstein, as he posed for the above portrait, said much of his time in America would be given to surveying public utilities and electric power resources.
FORTY-STORY BUILDINGS! WILL BE COMMONPLACE Prediction of Indiana Limestone Company of Bedford. Bp Times Special BEDFORD, Ind., May s.—The daof the super-giant skyscraper has dawned, according to the Indiana Limestone Company, which in a statement issued here, says: “Skyscrapers towering forty stories and over will become a common sight if plans already made in some sections of the country are carried out. Construction of several office buildings rising sheer 700 and 800 feet in the air have been announced recently. ."America's skyline has been rising steadily. A few years ago a twentystory building was a staggering thought. Today our latest and most modern commercial buildings make our first skyscrapers look like architectural dwarfs. In the early days of the nation's commrecial progress 75,000 cubic feet of stone would fill; the requirements of a buildings of substantial proportions. Last year one building alone, the New York Life Bldg., required 450,000 cubic feet of stone.” $5,000 SPURNED BY WIDOW TO BE PAID Government Acts on Pension Claim cf Woman Near Roann. ROANN. Ind.. May s.—Five thousand dollars in pension money is; to be paid by the Government to the guardian of a Civil War veteran’s widow who refused it be- j cause she feared perrons who knew j her would say she was taking too much from the Government. Mynot Cleveland, Anderson, guardian for his aunt, Mrs. Letitia j Teale. who lives on a farm north of here, has just been advised that ; the pension money she refused! twenty-five years ago has been allowed. Unaware of Wife's Death Bn Times Special ROYAL CENTER, ind.. May 5. Isaac Allen lies critically ill of pneumonia at his home six miles northeast of here unaware that in the same room his wife, 64, died of the disease three days ago. Both were stricken eight days ago, and shortly afterward became delirious.
1A WEEK! No oxrfru charge for credit:
v \ 1 I Headquarter* so r / „ Buy Your 1 Now j lii variety of white 6inn,r ‘39.75 II Jml KlrKltlll while itoltl tlesiun*. j pTiiin vjPiHj Windsor (^i SHI JEWELIWWOAVPANT * n,,,rK * lt! 135 N. Illinois St. Lyric Theatre Bldg. WttK
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported stolen to police belong to: Pauline Pitcher, 1111 Holliday St„ Ford, from 548 Fletcher Ave. J. Britts, Thirty-Eighth St and Washington Blvd., Nash, 13-514, from Forty-Second St. and College Ave. Charles Hurd. Columbia Club, 48-850, from Pearl and Meridian Sts. Mrs. Marjorie Cehee. 3720 N. Pennsylvania St., Nasn, 33-178. from in front of that address. Harry Thompson, 257 N. Pershing Ave., Ford, 618-446, from Alabama and New York Sts. Martha Scheffel, 5931 Julian Ave., Ford. 42-263. from Layman Ave. and Washington St. Dewey Aulman, 2146 Beilis Ave., Chevrolet. 658-761. from Blackford and Washington Sts. Ralph Boyer, 1421 N. Gladstone Ave.. Chevrolet, 35-833, from 205 W. South St. H. J. Reed, 409 E. Thirty-First St.. Buick, 37-992, from Michigan and Pennsylvania Sts. C. Cosier, 1944 N. Pennsylvania St.. Hupmobile, 627-505, from that address. Charles Lawler, 325 N. Riley Ave., Ford, 35-870, from New Jersey St. and Massachusetts Ave.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Automobiles reported found by police belong to; G. M. Williams, Kentucky Ave. and Morris St., Marmon, found at Twenty-Second St. and Columbia Ave. Herman S. Lane, Spencer. Ind., Essex, found at 230 Missouri St, Buick coach. 49-463. found at Morris St. and Big Eagle Creek bridge. OPEN SEASON ON DEER Pennsylvania Protests Bucks Sets 15 Days for Females. /.V/ I tiited Press HARRISBURG. Pa.. May 5. Female deer and deer without visible antlers, will be legitimate prey for Pennsyplvania hunters between December 1 and 15 this year, for the first time in recent times. The State game commission decided to close the season on bucks this year for the first time within the history of State game control.
WINDSOR’S
MAY 5, 1928
TEETH SHINE LIKE GEMS IN INVISIBLE RAYS Ultra-Violet Light Reveals Future Cavities as Dark Spots. ftp Science, Service CHICAGO, May s.—Teeth, shining like jewels in the dark under the invisible rays of ultra-violet light, reveal by dark spots the places where cavities are beginning to develop, before they become visible to ordinary inspection. If the technique of this kind of examination can be sufficiently perfected, dentists’ offices may be equipped with the latest types of ultra-violet lamps, to enable up-to-date practioners to catch cavities before they happen, and so perhaps prevent them. This possibility is an outgrowth of experiments by Dr. H. C. Benedict of Northwestern University Dental School on the fluorescence of teeth under ultra-violet radiation. Spot Marks Trouble Area Like many other substances, human teeth react to these invisible rays by shining brightly with a visible light. This phenomenon is known as fluorescence. The white spot that marks the beginning of cavity forming troubles, Dr. Benedict found, docs not fluoresce even though no coloring matter has begun to form on it. This seems to be associated with the removal of a thin protective film, for it w'as found that a similar effect could be obtained by treating a paraffin coated tooth with acjg. Wherever the paraffin had been scratched through, the tooth failed to fluoresce. Dentine Shines Brightly Dentine, which forms the foundation substance of teeth, fluoresces more brightly and with a bluer light than does the hard outer coating of enamel. Calculus, the so-called “tartar” that has to be scraped off teeth, fluoresces. There are two kinds of calculus. The kind formed through the influence of the serum, or blood fluid, fluoresces very little, but that formed by saliva shines with a bright orange color on living teeth. On some old museum specimens, the salivary calculus fluoresced with a white light. PLAN UTILITIES SESSION Indiana Associations to Meet Three Days, Starling May 22. Indiana Public Utilities Association will meet for three days, beginning May 22, at the Columbia Club here. The Indiana Electric Light Association will meet May 22; the Indiana Public Utilities Association, May 23, and the Indiana Gas Association May 24. Robert M. Feustel, Ft. Wayne, president of the Electric Light Association. will preside at that organization’s meetings, and Arthur Brady, Anderson, president of the Public Utilities Association, will preside ovei his unit National utility experts are expected to attend. Attend Chemical Meeting Bn Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind., May 5. Three faculty members, two undergraduates and three postgraduate students represented Indiana university at the spring meeting of the American Chemical Society which recently convened at St. Louis, Mo. Those attending were Prof. F. C. Mathero, Prof. H. T Brisco, Dr. Gastao Etzel, faculty members; Robert Shelley, Bluff ton; Herscheli Hunt, Hazleton, and Frances Whitacre, Calamonia, post-graduate students, and Eugene Kanning and Robert Hartman, both of Ft. Wayne under-graduates.
$1 WEEK! ■ You ihvp money M m every purchase here.
