The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 January 1929 — Page 1

♦++++++++++++ THE WEATHER + Fair Anti Warmer * ♦ + + + + * * + + -!- * v *

THE PATTY BANNER,

++++++++++++++++ ALL THE HOME NEWS + + UNITED PRESS SERVICE + •f. + v + + + +

VOLUMK THIRTY-SEVEN.

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, .JANUARY 2, 1929.

No. G7.

ARMY PLANE SEEKING NEW IGHT MARK

AIRPLANE SOARS OVER SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA AFTER ENDURANCE RECORD.

Greeley Told Him

CHEW

FIVE A HOARD

Anerkan Army Aviatorw Se k To Shatter Mark Estahlinhcfi By Dairint; Oernian Airmen.

LOS ANGELES, Jan. i* (L'l*)— Dobby Trout, 1« year old Lo Anp los Aviatrix, took off from the Metroiiolitan Airport today in a proposed attempt to break existing sustained flight records for women. She lifted her Golden Eagle Monoplane front the runway at A. M. and began a circle of Los Angeles' and other Southern California cities. Mias Trout’s ship carried fuel sufficient for 15 hours of flying.

—o—

LOS ANGELES, Jan. '1. (l'P| — The Army airplane, the Ouestit n Mark, soared over Southern California today in an attempt to et a new world’s endurance llight reeord. The plane had been in the air 21 hours at 7:26:46 a. m. P. C. T. A note dropped from the plane last night by Major Carl Spatz, in command, indicated that he was anxious to take on fuel, warm food and any needed supplies as early as possible. Another mid-air refueling was taged shortly after daylight today.

STRANGE TALE OF HIDDEN SILVER MINE

inteipreted to indicate certain things. So great is the faith of the Par- | j rish brothers that they have let oth- ( er work go, to explore, by means of shaft and tunnel, the interior of the hill to which they were led. So far, the rock taken out has not shown values, but they have not ceased he-

ELECTRIC CO. IS INVOLVED IN BIG DEAL

Law Parts Them

cause of that.

DEERSKIN CHARI INTERPRETED Thert> an , two oth ,. r indents which B\ GENl INE ( HEROKEE j ar( , considered to bear out the belief INDIAN BRAVE. ! that there is ore in the region.

Early in the last century, on the — GOLD BURIED NEAR THIS CITY old National road, two white men CENTRALIZED 'found an Indian attempting to get a

CO-ORDINATION OF OPERATIONS OF MIDLAND SUBSIDIARIES

ANNOUNCED.

MANAGEMENT

Bear's Paw Carved On Boulder Was < Sign For Searching Red Men From West. : —

pony and wagon out of a mud hole. 0p ,. ratin({ l ompanieH Wi „ No , They helped bun, and he told them MerKcd Hut w ill Continue As the wagon was laden with s.lvcr ore, Individual l nits,

stating that it came from near the 1 falls and that there was enough there

to shoe with silver every horse in j 1 o-ordination of the operations of

:the Interstate Public Service Coin-

It was to Charles Terry that Horace Greeley gave that famous bit of advice, “Go west, young man,” 70 years ago. Today, at 02, Terry is said to be the oldest active traveling salesman in the United States, and he has been honored in New York recently by fellow traveling men.

A strange story is developing, day

by day, down in that section of Ow- [ n< |j ana .

en county which lies between Mill' Also, years ago, an old Indian P an y> subsidiaries of the Midland creek and Putnam county’s south line j s | u , wed man namr) | Akers, now u tilities Company and subsidiaries of —a piece of terrain including many! ( j ea ,| ., c hunk of lead ore, from that i * 1< ' Central Indiana Power Company hills and hollows, bluffs and ravines,, reff i on ' hrmigh centralized supervisory manin which wild wolves ran in packs Buried Gold Near Putnamville. agement was announced today, shortly before the Civil war. i Qn the back of County Commis- rtu ' pri'ndpal companies involved

The locale of the tale is not more ,j onP1 . Cooper's farm, lying north of nr, ' :

than a quarter of a mile north cf that short stretch of Mill creek which is known as The Narrows, which is

Cold Wave Hits

been conquered by local anglers. The immediate vicinity of the

1 11 iir stream is picturesque, yet is subdued

The Middle Wert TS ZSi

there is a savageness in the scene,

LOWEST TEMPERATURE REG 1ST- unrelieved, except where the axe ha.ERED 'N GREEM ASTLE ON ,M:en free >y Industrious farm-

the National road and east of Dee. Northern Indiana Public Service creek, is the site of a former Indian (, o»'l’any. Indiana Service Cor ration •amp, as has been mentioned in these und (lary Railways Company, subsl-

down-stream from the lower falls of articles, and, until the middle of the | l *' ar ‘ es the Midland Utilities CornCataract, from which foamy reach of | as t century, there was near it a large P an - V ' operating In the northern part

water many a fighting black bass "has ' Kranite boulder which bore the out- ‘ ' ,f th ’'

line of a bear’s paw, carved on its ' Subsidiaries of the Central Indiana

mrfacc tower l ompany including the North- * On one or more occasions, Indians “ r rn n ,n<, ‘ a " u Power Company, Wabash

the Indian Ter- X allc y k |ectn c Company, Indiana

Electric Corporation and Attica Electric Company, operating chiefly in the central part of the state.

PURDUE FIVE ROUTS TIGER SQUAD, 47-24

HARMESON AND MURPHY GET “HOT” YGAINST D'PAl V\ NETTERS. HYLF SCORE WAR 21 TO 5

Marion Crawley, Grcencastle Boy, Stars For Old Gold, Yssislrd By Oz Stone.

W EBNESDYY morning.

The year 1P2U came in like a Lion and we hope the old saying holds true

Four of the five men aboard divid- and that it will pa-s out like a lamb, ed the night watches. Major Spatz It looked as though the first day of and Lieut. Elwood Que.-eda, pilot, took this year attempted to equal the first the shift from 6 p. m. Tuesday until day of the old year, in coldness, hut midnight. it failed a little. A year ago Tuesday, Captain Ira Faker, chief pilot, and it was five degrees below zero, hut Lieut. H. A. Halverson, on the watch Tuesday morning it was far above from midnight to 6 a. m today relin- that mark. However, the blizzard and ,

quished the controls Immediately aft- cold wave came rapidly and within f ’“ t . of a '. ty ’ * , ' < when, in ac

er the refueling. twenty-four hours, there was a miniBefore the take off it wa planned mam temperature of (tie half degree to have Captain Faker fly the tjues- above zero. This wa- the low maik

tion Mark whenever contact i. mad» for the night, registered by the gov- what else i> needed to make

with service planes. eminent thermometer Wednesday at'**’ 1 -' s * or y •

■Sergeant Roy W. Hone, fifth man the home of Prof. Ernest Rice Smith WP n<,t *orget the love aboard, did not take either watch. He in Northwood. It was the coldest I' 1P Indian interpreter, the

er- have cleared away much of the debris of nature in some areas, hut not all. It is reached only by an

unimproved road.

When, to these natural elements, you add a deerskin chart, with pic-ture-writing that a genuine Indian interpreted as being directions to thr location of a mine of silver; and you add, also, the words of another Indie.n spoken away back in the century in gratitude to men who helped him

dition to all this, there has been partial working out of the message on the chart with all these before you,'

mys-

retumed there from

ritory, following their deportation and searched for gold which they -aid was buried near the boulder, the carved bear paw being an indication i f lirection and distance. They did not find the treasure. White men took jp the search, one group even taking with them an instrument intended to Tidicate the presence of metallic ore.

uid they, too, failed. ..... .

The boulder, it is said, was gather:d in by the contractor, who conitrueted the Monon’s bridge over Deer •reek, southeast of I’utnanivillr in the '50’s, and is now a part of the stone

work of that structure.

—G. E. BLACK.

will have a risky job if the motors morning cf the winter thus far. give trouble as he will have to veil- u _ turn out cn the ratwu' t "f on tlw ' « • _

Principles Of received from Major Spatz it was thought that the Question Mark would Meet refuel ships three times

Principles

Rotary Outlined

today. Attaches at the Metropolitan airport at Van Nuys, where the start was made yesterdav ex pm sed the h' - lief that the ship would stay aloft long enough to set new records if it got by the 24 hour mark this morn-

ing.

The motors will have had a hard

teat

Cherokee. Y'et this was a unique affair, ns such sometimes are, in that lit (►ercolated backward- It moved in reverse, so' to speak, inasmuch as Danny Koscoe, the interpreter, had a wife with him when he went down Into the hill.- to read the signs foi th' 1 white men, but when he left the

region he hail no wife. Things were V. G. BROWN COMPARED CLUB there that -he just simply could not PRINCIPLES TO COMMUNITY endure. The songs of the birds, for AND INDIVIDUAL AUTIV- instance, especially at night. (TIES AT LUNCHEON. As you know-, coccyzus Americanos and bubo virginianus do not jazz. On The Rotary (Tub meeting was fea-l^' far fr,,m ^

WAR VETERANS HELD MEETING MONDAY EVE.

FRANK DI RHAM MADE HONORARY MEMBER OF MILITARY ORGANIZATION.

Interstate Public Service Company qierating chiefly in the southern part >f the state, but serving a few town-

in the northern section.

Operation of these companies, begiruling today, will he co-ordinated un-i<-i centralized management through

Utilities Investment

Company. The operating companies will not be merged but will continue to operate as individual units. E. Van Arsdcl, president of the Intertate Public Service Company and L. IT. Andrus, president of the operating subsidiaries of the Central Ind* ma Power Company will continue it -•barge of the operations of the repective properties which they have

-nanaged for several years.

Co-ordination of the operation of the Interstate Public Service Company and the subsidiaries of the Cenral Indiana Power Company will be ■ffected under the direction of Saintel Insull, Jr., president of the Mid-

Little Betty Ann Zalis may never see her mother again, since Mrs. Catherine Zalis must spend the rest of her days in an asylum at Elgin, 111. She was adjudged insane at Chicago, after she smothered her four-month-old child, Cecelia, “because she cried too much.” Above, Betty Ann is with her mother.

Expenses For U. S. Increase

U IHORIZED GOVERNMENTAL YPPROPRI \ I DiNS EXCEED OLD SI M BY $.'>0,000,000 WASHINGTON, Jan. 2 (UP) Congressional appropriations authorized for government e\|>ni • . next year have thus far excis ded by nearly , )0(),0ll() the appropriations made foi I'.he same governiiu-stal department.his fiscal year, a tabulation compiled >y the United Pro.-- bowed today. The figure n-presi-nts 91,200,00(1 nore than authorize I bv the budget

DePauw's basket ball team was no match for the fast going Purdue aggregation Tuesday night at Lafayette as the Boilermakers trampled on the Tigers, 17 to 21. The second half was far better than the opening pnlod a- the up-Monon outfit held a 21 to 5 advantage at the interini--ion Harmeaon and “Stretch” Murphy proved th.- wrecking crew accounting for 2X of Purdue's points, which would have been enough to win th--game. Marion Crawley, Old Gold floor guard, and Stone, Tiger forward, played good hall and collected more than 16 point- between them. I The first half was all Purdue'.- hut the filial period was far more inter esting a.- DePauw garnered l!t point while Lambert's netter ■ were getting

2.T points.

Tonight, the Tigers meet Illinois Wesleyan at Bloomington, HI. Lineup and summary: Purdue (47t.

Uuii au ami mack t -e fii-t time in

leveral yoai - that congress lias cx-

'nnd Utilities Investment Company th( . |ilnit ,, f M , t , n

and Robert M. Ruestel, president m ! u ur( , au

he Indiana Service Corporation of j ( ; ov ,. rnim . Mt talisti ,. ian , ar „ wor _ ’>»•

in view of

KG FT

TP

Lyle, f-g

1 2

i

Ha i mean, f

6 :i

1 •»

Murphy, c

7 2

18

Schpaier, g

1 2

t

Hoots, g

1 ()

2

Welch, f

o •>

g

Kibel, f

(1 II

0

Sleight, g

II 0

ii

Totals

18 II

47

DePauw (24).

KG FT

TP

Stone, f

4 0

8

Loveles-, f

I 2

1

Yfouutz, <•

1 1

3

(’raw ley, g

4 0

StUlikel, g

0 1

1

Struck, c g

0 0

0

Rag dale, f

n n

(i

Lyon., c

(i n

0

Totals

to t

21

Referee I in pi re

Dale Miller t Indian ipol-Stri-hmeiei (Indian-ii.

Ay the City l.ibtarj .Monday nWI | 2 ramfc “ Ilf I „ t u ...

MRS. YYKJGHI DIPS

he Veterans of Foreign Wars heln I >„ |„, operated as they have been in >nc of the best meetings of the year I pas t under the supervision of Mr.

After the business session, Comrade j | nsu || t j r .

•'rank Durham was made an honor j |, r. Andrus, president of the Wacry member for interest and servici- , Valley Electric Company, -aid:

dint of Congress that th.- treasury i n a precaiiiiis fiiauci.il position. Anithei can e for worry i- the .ontrmpated expen- foi the Naval Cruiser

Mr-. Nettie Wright, ago 7o yen

passed away at her borne, in Mauhatlan, today at 11 :()(! o’clock from flu

and pneumonia. Surviving

10 has given the V. F. W. this year. Comrade Durham is mi doubt, thr

lured i n Wednesday by a talk by A. G. Brown, Mr. Brown showed how-

ply do not sing syncopated songs. Kv- j /oungest V. F. W. of today, but mn erv night, in sea.-on, and all night dm j* to recognize the efforts of

the

by that time and if they con- lh(1 ,,, jm-jpi,, of ■. from statii n OAK they broadcast pro- l0U th as well as the offuits of

tinu- to function then will give

promise of holding out th-y .-aid. The fortyl^Vn'countries in which it Army plans to keep the plane up^as 0| , eratinK aml (ht , same pHndl)le a|( .

men and communities'througheut the!* ran,s of ^ ^ I ,ldcr folks ' . worn taught them by tni»ir revered j A review of th«* past year wa ^ parents. Those, and nothing else. Go | hen cheeked and our post a good

p'lie- t('i"coinmunities ' and" to 'nations llown ther,, s|,rin *’ « hp n coccy-! record for eight months. We

“There will be no change in the local situation. Operation of this 1 Company w-ill continue as in the past I he operating companies, the managements of which are now placed under a single centralized -upervis- | r\ organization, serve the public in mist sections of Indiana. The territories which they serve dovetail in

•Wilding proaiain and the Farm Re- daughter, Mrs. Elsie Wiight of Man

'ief bill which will conn

/ears expen-es.

out of next

PRISONERS INI RE \SE

INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 2. (UPtindiana's penal population grew at he rate of twenty-one committments i day during Ifi2x, according to the itinual report of the State Board i,f

long aa the motor- last, hoping

flight will continue TOO hours. [ hat applieV to’inen and individual zus an, ‘ bubo are tHurtin K- a,Ml 8,n ®-! Iact< ” 1 a -"•'uvenir booth at the Uoun-! nany in-tanre... Two companies serve f i, v jiih,, .7.'Brow.'.

Throughout the night the Question j^ r u r()Wn ,^, n iiiuinities near t, ' roll *T hoUt I hp ,lot n'Ki'ts, and' y Fair, put on a poppy sale, a Stars . the same communities in a few in ecretary

Mark droned over Southern Cali for- Gr „,. nca , t | ( , wh( . le ,,.| tish ilHl j vi( , uaU you will understand why the fair:,,,,! Stripes, HUH Armistice Day Sou- stances, each with a different kind of; Th( .' |a , (la| am| ( tu.nai

nia, keeping to the 12« 1-2 mile W((rk a g a i ns t c ivi c improvements and Fi,,r " havln ® * on '‘ th, ' r, ‘ fr om I/enir reprint sale. Aided tile l egion k,. rv ice. stretch between the Metropolitan air- di-feat priji-cts that would benefit the! tl ”' ^ tzz l ,alaCP!< ,,f Tefrp Huute, in' , t ,d G. A. R. Mean rial Day. Jointly i “By co-ordination of the operationport and Rockwell, the Army field, In nurTJ ber He urged ' that wb ' cb I (,w i> even funeral dirges are , jcith the Legion we held one of tin l( f these companies, a development San Diego. Greencastle he made a town in which ra W d - | inest Armistice Day programs evei | program can be planned and put into

everyone in it is glad to live here and Aml rvpn Uann >' himself - whp " ho ! "‘ ld »» Gieencustle. We also assist- j .-fleet in the

The big tri-motored craft -eemed to favor the southern end of its route ^usually circling about there for some time before heading back to Eos Angeles. All refueling is to he done

over San Diego.

to make the town one in whieh evc very one in it is glad to live and t0 tb '

come to live because of its privilege, U*” , " dia " ,ovp to blase wlutr and benefits. people. But he could read picture

- . , As samples of how big business writin ®- and l " his interpretation of l-he Question Mark s log dropped ^ affajrs u th<> the deerskin chart his personality

"1 .1 greatest number, th- speaker cited the lent a glamour that added to its real-

American Telegraph and Telephone i'' m -

Company, the

men are finding it comfortable

board the plane.

Unknown to the crew of the Ques- - .. , . ,

tion Mark two rabbit's feet were fas’- ir 1 " r * t,on » ,lant ']T “f" 1 ° th ^

We also assist- | ,-ffect in the best interests of the ga-

jieft sweet Owen behind him, went in-1-d at thiee funerals, one a Work j m<J electric custemers of idl the com- | )r ,. v j ou v vaudeville halls of Chicago, to | vV a r Veteran, one a Civil War Viler- lanies. By considering the state as

in and one a Mexican War Veteran ( whole, a more comprehensive pro-; There were also a dozen or more vet- nam can he developed for the c.\•ran- in distress financially, who ensivn of gas pipe lines, electric .vere given aid in cash, work or sup- ; ^raiismission lines and other facilitdies. After this an hour was spent | u-s to meet the constantly growing |

lemand.s for service in the state.” '

titutions had an avi-iage daily population of .'>,702 dining th- ti-cal year which dosed Sept. IK), l!(2X, the re-

port revealed.

This is an increase of |x|i over the

hattun. Funeral arrangemen- will ha nmounced later.

GEORGIA TECH 1928 CHAMPS

TIM I HERN I E \Y1 Nitsl - Dl l UALfPURNI Y 'N THRILLING (.RID BATTLE.

t ened to the -li p * rear of the eruft

-a rear foot to the and a fore foot in

the front part of the cabin- Metropolitan airpnit attaches said they placed them there before the crewappeared in the hangar to prepare for

the takeoff.

The Question Mark aim- at the (i.> hours and 26 minutes record made by Histic and Zimmerman, Gomans, for a heavier than air craft and the lix hour flight mark of the Flench dirigible Dixmude for any Fghter or heavier than air craft.

FIREMEN ( OMULIMKNTKD

These their

(laying cards and telling army stor-

International Cement Then, too. Ivan Parrish, who had es. Refreshments of cigars wet.

the chart from a coal miner, who | .hen served and all enjoyed u rial

companies, although paying couldn’t make head nor tail of it evening of \. F. YA. fun.

individual stockholders divl- found Danny in an amusement place .

( IV SCHOOLS OPEN

Fights For Life

dendx, at the same time, add to their in Terre Haute which, while wild, ' S | WT C A t mljiF property holdings by spending mil- n t the Wild West—wherever that ii' IUe a\IllDflSSdQUI

lions of dollars which benefit the gen- It was Just chance that Parrish hap eral public. pened onto an Indian there, espec- j

ially one who could read the chart,

9 and another chance that Parrish’s j

father, when he heard the interpre- MY RON T. HKRRM K REPORTED

tation, recalled that not far from SERIOUSLY ILL AT ( LEA K-

- • their home there was just the sort of' LAND HOSPITAL.

|Zpl- rJlffTI Tprmc locality depicted, including the “bub-;

UCl rural 1 CII1I5 blinK spring” '< Wn; d f> bp ‘ bp CLKVELAND, Jan. 2. (UPt-Phy

. very scene described by the chart. , . , .

sicians today were fighting to sawThe project is liK-atiai on Anderson Jones’ farm, half a mile west of Timothy O’Conner’s home, in which some residents of Greencastle and

r v.-ii >• vicinity visit as relations. It was

, of Mill Grove,

Boys Are Fined;

ENTER PLEAS OF Gl ILTY UPON

ARRAIGNMENT IN U1TY

COURT TUESDAY.

Five years ago these institution.--maintained an average population id .‘i,HT2. Since then the number of inmates has increased at tin- rate ol

162 annually.

Cost of maintaining tie- six insti tutions was $l,H!Ht,50S, which means I but 52 cents a day per prisoner ac-

|cording to the report.

Il was found that of the I,DIO men

TV Greencastle city school- resum-, . omm ; tt ,.,| , ;7 |)( . r w ,.,,, ul|lU . r ;;0

d class work on Wednesday morning. ;1;i , (ent 'ollowing the annual Christmas vm-a (|

ion which began on Friday December ^ __ awyyx r*fNr 1 21. The county chool-. with the ex GtUKuh

eption of ( loverdale, opened .Mon ay;

norning. It was announced that Mine • | JC

A numbr’r of compliments have Kenneth Black, 20.

been heard regarding the quick work an ,i Basil Baldwin, 1*. of Quincy, rf the city firemen in extinguishing when arraigned in city court late the I oof (We at the home of ott Her- Tuesday afternoon entered pleas of od on east Hanna street Monday eve-, (j U j|ty possession of liquor and noig. Within five minutes after the driving an auto while intoxicated, alarm had been turned in, the fire- They were each fined $100 and costa

prevented the i pening of the Clover-

dale schools.

DePauw Univeisity will r»-. unu work on Thursday noon.

KIYVAMS MFETING

111 LLF.TINS I ROM SD KRODY1 IN-

DD AT K NO < H 4NGK IN RULER'S CONDITION.

the life of Myron T. Herrick, 71, U.

The newly elected officers will take i LONDON, Jan. 2. (UP)

S. Ambassador to France, who is suf- charge at the regular meeting of the '-f King George’.- illne i fering from bronchitis. Kiwanis Club at the Christian church William Joyn on Hick-, the home -e<-. Call for oxygen tanks was rushed Thursday at 12:15. At this meeting retary. announced today before de to Emergency Clinic hospital early to the new president, B. H. Bruner, will parting on a trip to Mentone, France,

more than a year ago that Ivan Par-j ( | a y from the Herrick Hunting Val announce the committees for the year; n rish and his brother, Grover, began i| p y here by Dr. John Philips, and will outline some of the work of LONDON, Jan. 2 il'I'i An offic working out the directions of the wbo ^ U!( ( bl , a nibassadcr’s bedside, the club for the year. The trustee,’iul bulletin i sued at Ituckinghum Pal-

PASADENA, Calif., Jan. 2 <' P) ieorgia Tech, pride of the South and Gridiron , today i the uacro-.-.-n d king of 1928 eleven - hecuu ■ of i' «• usationul X to victory over Cali foinia in the annual tournament • f coses ii.ter-scctional game here ye -

terday.

In one of the most colorful and • - citing games of th'- -eason, the (iold en Ti rnado. rated a- the underdog b"'i re the game, swept down th" field if R-i-e Bowl, packed with a i low of 70,00) peisons, and extingm he-l (alifornia’s hop*-- of another inter-a-itional victory for the we t. The supreme sen.-ath n of the gridrun battle came when captai - elect Roy Riegels of ( alifornia lan-d - yard- and pluceil the hall on hi one-foot line. On the next pin the '(ears gave the Golden Tornad" a nf-ty-and, it dev*-io|H-d, the game, Tt eh played the major part of its -'am*- * n the giound. while California hafflcl uni played to a stand till iloring the first thu-e |ierio<ls, took to

The worst 'he air hi the last quarter with a pa--ovi* Sir r,t, K attaek that carried it to within

one |Miint of a tie with the victorious

Southerners.

ELEC I (iRS ( AST KYI I 'll

chart, under the guidance, at first of Thl . ( . a || reV ealed that Herrick hnthe Cherokee. been ill for two weeks. His condiAlthough the whole proposition up- tion was not regarded us critical un

men hud reached th- scene of the und sentenced to the state farm for pears fanciful to one outside the group til midnight Tuesday, when ho suf blaze, had placed their ladders, and thirty days. most interested, even the doubters | fored a severe attack of -uffocatjon. were on the roof lighting the flames. The two young men were arrested must admit that directions und dis- Dr. Philips found the use of oxy The firemen in turn compliment the Monday night by night policeman tanoes, as read from the chart, were, gen would not be necessary. He ad motorists they passed on the way to Henry O'Hair and merchant police- 0, > e by one, found to check up close-j ministered treatment to euse Her-

th- fire. It is said every auto driv- man Tom Morgan in -outh Greeneus- ly with trees and stones which were i rick’s breathing und left him in charge the retiring president. H. Taylor, er when h«- heard the siren pulled to tie. It was the first case for Mar- marked just as the chart said they of a nurse. made at the last meeting, th<- club I HE YAKAIHKR

hopes to make 1929 one of the best,' Kail tonight. Thursday in.rea if net the Test in the life of the club. (iToudiuess, li ing ti mpeiatuie.

R. P. Mullins, will have some im-jace today said,

portant announcements to make. It “In spite of a restle.-- night, the i- hoped that a large representation {condition of Hi- Majesty remains unof the membership may be present for ! changed fi n lest evening.” this first meeting of the new year. The bulletin wa signed by Sir The year 1928 was one of the be-t Stanley ID-wrU, Sir Hugh Rigby and

in the history of the l.a-al club. In'Lord Daw -on of Penn, line with the fine suggestion- whiih at 11:15 a. m.

the curb to allow the fire truck plenty -hall Abrams, new county prosecutor would he, with rude figures und oth- He/rick later in the morning of room! on the streets. w ho took office on New Year’s day. |er unnatural marking!,* which were j reported to be resting well.

INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 2. (UP) - Fifteen presidential elrctui a emblcd in the House of Representative- today to cast the official Indiana vote

for President-elect Hoover.

The official ballot of the elector.-I

It was timed college wa- -eat to YVu. iiington b,

registered mail.

'This is the first Uine that the mail have been used. Formerly a noy i-nger was sent to the nut on: I capiItol to record the vote