The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 February 1929 — Page 1
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THE DAILY BANNER
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VOLUME thirty-seven :ARM SCHOOL WILL BE HELD HERE FRIDAY
,|, n |,F<;i ME SdlOOL SIM )V L, K FU HY LOCAL ( Hamber P ' OF COMMERCE. SPEAKERS SECURED | trough bred Bull T« Be Awarded , nship Having Largest Atteml- I ancc. Splendid Program Friday, February 22, a dairy j uin,> farm school, sponsored by the j tencastle Chamber of Commerce,, l, f , held in the assembly room at | court house. |V outstanding feature of the day’s ►ting will he the awarding of a (istered th' roughbred Jersey hull he township having the largest ut-
dance.
fwo good speakers, experts from rdoe University, have been securf,,r the occasion by Robert H. veiison, county agricultural agent, ke men arc: K. A. Gannon, dairy fialist, and K. E. Beeson, authorlegumes. * |r. Gannon, “Ed”, as he is known all hi- associates, is the official th piece of the dairy industry in |aua. He has been connected with dairy extension department of
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19,1929.
Angry -vf Wet*
No. 108.
MANY ATTEND HIGH SCHOOL
CONGRESS TODAY
Senate.
Expects to vote on Jones prohibi-
tion bill.
Public lands committee meets on P ^ JMEE I Ster * inK Sa ' t ( “ ree *‘ re P<>rt. 1 Considers bill to extend life of Fed-
AUTO SKIDS INTO TRUCK;
NO ROTARY MEETING
Because of the Rotary Conference of the Twentieth District at Terre Haute Thursday and Friday, there W 'H be no regular meeting of the.
A Rn Y\ UI TDT Greenca.-tle Club tomorrow, hut the ^ AJV/ A IJ ^lwl\l membership is expected to make up
their attendance at the Terre Haute
FREEMAN BILL IS REPORTED FOR PASSAGE
NEARLY EVERY SEAT IN AUDI- Pral Radio commission one year and, ( „ meeting, and indications point to a . ... . I,ill. M,.rehu.it Murin.. ' •VK.Vir.G HIGH bt HOOL S Tl U- |_ r _„ , u. .
TORIUM ()( ( UPIED MON-
DAY NIGHT.
PLYMOUTH WOMAN
Mrs. T._ G. Y'uin ker
Organization’s Founding. Ytntngsters Give Athletic Exhibition.
other bills of Merchant Marine Com-
mittee.
Interstate commerce committee con-
siders bridge bills.
SPEAKS Ways and means committee tariff; ENROUTE
|revision heatings.
Also Tells Of Military affairs committee consid- Two ,. erhHps Fala , ly | njurM) . Werrj to,lay ' B _ ulk f to .'iOO pounders sold I
ENTS IN SERIOUS ACCIDENT ,ar *' attcndance f f° m h< ‘ re - riESDAY. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTtH K
INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 111. (UP)
MEASl RE FAKES PRECEDENT; DVER TOBACCO, ami SE. MENT TAX BILLS.
INDIANAPOLIS Hog prices were largely 10cents high- LEGISLATORS
__ ; er at the Union Stock yards here j
ARE
BUSY
er- porter resolution to place arms.
an amunitions embargo on
i Nations.
warring
Planning To Attend Session Of
State Legislature.
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Tilton, dry republican leader in Massachusetts, threatens to start a new dry-women’s-church party because the Republican Massachusetts senate urged congress to abolish prohibition.
LEBRIX OFF
ON FLIGHT 10
INDG-CHINA
1 Expenditures committee hearing on
■< ti ' argest crowd to ever attend a [ eX | )( , n djt ures relating to world war
| Parent Teachers’ Association inciting veterans,
j held in Greencastle turned out for the ! anniversary meeting of the Association at the high school auditorium
Monday evening.
Mrs. Truman G. Yuncker, in telling j >f the meeting, spoke of the founding ^ of the organization in 1892, and of its j rapid giowth since that time. Sinct its founding the society has grown from a small group of parents until
it has spread into practically every piv■ l- iii-spF'K \TK (OWICTS \T community ami school throughout the LARGE I ROM OHIO STATE nation and today is a national organi- 1 PENITENT! \ KY
zation.
PRISON BREAK TAKES PLACE
INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 19. <UP)When their automobile skidded and crashed into a parked truck near here today, four Carmel, Ind., high school boys were injured, two of them per-
haps fatally, and one man was hurt at $16 to $17 and $7 to $12, respee-
, seriously. 1 tively.
I I he youths, whose ages range from The sheep market remained steady.
. _ fTftffnVYP ^ t0 * 8, Were enroute to “Rend a _o
AT COLUMBUS 'zfTZ in
for $10.85. The extreme top was $11. i Krc, " ,it, ‘ Bill Provides For Assess-
Reeeipts numbered approximate!;, nicnt Of Intangibles A! 25 Per 7,000. ! Ucnt of Their Value. In the cattle and calves division ! slaughter classes were strong to high ; INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. lit. (Up)
er. Vealers were steady. Receipts j Taking precedence over tobacco atid
were estimated at 800 and 600, re-1 amusement tax measures, the Fieespeetively. Steers were quotable at ] man bill providing for assessment of $10 to $12.50. Vealers and calves sold intangibles at 25 per cent of their
value was to be reported for passage today by the ways and means committee of the Indiana House of |{„p-
SAY\ BARS OF NEW
part of their school history course. aJ^^ARD SPF, A K S .m^.**"**'^** nutrition I Those who may die, are Paul Ely, • Ivw 1 I »
18, who received a fractured skull and | j internal injuries; and Merritt Murphy, | | 16, whose chest was crushed. Both CELLS live on farms near Carmel.
The others injured were William WOMEN FROM EIGHT TOWN-
MEETING HERE
Every seat wa* taken in the auditorium and the balcony was well fill-!
ed, when the program opened. It was 1 - — divided into three parts, with each | “Trigger Man" In Murder of Don Henricks, 15, Howard Middleton, H. being taken by the various ward Mellett, Canton Editor. Among a,,d Ulmer Hall, 31, New Albany, op schools. The First Ward had the part Prisoners At Large. orator of the truck. of Patriotism; the Second Ward the i , Clifford Hinshaw. 17, driver of the , part of Character Education and the! r0 i itmuit* n vu to nun , automobile was hurled clear of the third Ward Health Education. i... UMt S ’ 0 ” F !. .. 1 .. wreckage and was uninjured.
SHIPS M l END PROJECT SES-
SION TUESDAY.
MISS BEADLE
( H A KG I
;
Frozen windshields and slippery Mr "’ s """‘ r ( ' hair
man And Mrs. Ivan Ruark, la
News ( hairman
SUIT ON NOTE
University for years and | _ ~
•ugh hi- close contact with the 1 B YNS-A I LANTK ' FRENCH FLIER
i. aide to give a go,,, I clear! LEAVES TUNIS BEHIND ' \ U ‘ e I COLUMBUS, O., Feb. 19 of just what is being ac orn-! TUESDAY. th.rd Ward Health Educat.on. I Five convicts, among them Pat Mc-
licl over the state and what oth- 1 A number children took part in i Bepmott, “Trigger Man" in the mur- n)U j wag |,i am ,.j f or )), e cru8 ),
can do by the proper application | two COMPANIONS \BOUtl) , “ aCl ’ ° f the pa '' t " a " d thl ‘ y ha< ‘ W " rk ' del of ,, " n R - Mellett, editor of the (orreet duiry practices cn their! j ed ' li * r d on the program and it went j Canton Daily News who was a-sassin-
t herds. .. , , j " f 1 1,1 l >erft ' ct harm °ny- Even little ! a te,1 two years ago, escaped from the ReoresentAtiven from eight town Beeson is well known in Put- A,r """ Left , r *‘ n ‘- h At 1 A.IWar.en Tucker, a chubby specimen of , state Penitentiary her- early today. ‘shin, were present at the first meet county as he has assisted for. M ’ Beave Tunia At ! 1 : ; I0 A. M. jlfood health, -at throughout the pro- The ptisoners escaped from th,^ The Hetk Sales Company has filed!'ing of the year of the Nutrition pro E,1 years in the annual corn show ; " H, ’P "r'ent. gram on his throne at different parts t hi r ,i tier in a new cell block. After 8U i t to collect a note of *112 alleged to ject, which was held all dav Tucs [here, acting in the capacity „f i of the d ' spl “ y ‘ n ’ ? the P “ rt be ' sawin « uwa Y the bars ,,f tlu ' ,r ce,ls - be due and unpaid from Arthur Han day at the Court House, with Mis He is connected with the soils TUNIS, Feb. 19. (UP) - Joseph ' n *? lvpn “ y VT , ! . n , , , : th . Py ,T,a,lp ,hpir wny lh, ‘ roof an,i neman. Aneta Beadle of Purdue Universit; [crops extension department of Lebrix, trans-Atlantic aviator, and' *’ IKa School and Departmental s |i I to the ground on a ro|ie impro- Q l n c |, ar g t .
The morning session was given ov er to a most interesting and instruc-
__ . . __ tive talk by W. B. Ward, of the Di pi Pjljri W A P p visjim of Horticulture of Purdue l ni
u- and will he able to give a two companions, paused here’ four pupils * aVP an e * hibition of tumbling , v i SP d f r „m an old mattress. r*ffrk/\nr' n A bwhile di.cu. sion of a subject <>f hours today an,I continued at 11:30 a a,,d j uni P' n K under the direction of i Four of the prisoners came from p I Jlcl IMp p A I p X list t- every farmer. The grow- m. on a flight from Istres France to M' sa Kestner, physical cuiture direc-|two cells and the fifth from another.' V alfalfa, wcet clover and oth- Saigon, French Indo-China. ltor ’ The childrpn - pvon to thc 8mallpr Warden P. E. Thomas believes saws
gum,., is of vital interest and i- Lebrix left Istres at 1:30 a. m. ami WOrP MUrte efficient in their ismuggled in to them. [ng the farmers a great deal of will fly to Cairo. His companion* arc "
* - * - — SNOW »K,N«S rjirr," ^
An attendance banner was effered: ficeman. '* Pimm.i Ai in M VNV siwu K. )
versity. Mr. Ward's talk dealt wit! I “Home Gardens”. The various kitub
f, r the Dairy Cow.
>n.
|r)-2:2.', p. m.—Feetling Dairy Catpr I’rofif. )-3:15 p. in.—Alfalfa Hay and Clover Pasture Problems.
lather Change Hit? Community
IBOVE /.FID > I I ESDAY I0RNING WITH FURTHER |)ROP OF FIVE DEGREES
iny ,|uestions reganling legumes ,
very farmer should Wear him. ISTRES^ France, Feb. 19. (UP) — program for Friday’s school is .fos«-|)h L-Brix took off from Istres Hows: ! airdrome at 1:30 a. m. today for Nor-*1-10:10 a. in., The Importance of them Africa on the first stage of his in the Dairy Ration. (flight to Saigon, French Indo-China. 150-12:00 a. in.—Growing Soy- It will be hi- first long (light since
he and Dieudonne Costos won international fame by crossing the South Atlantic to Port Natal, Brazil, in 1927 and extended that (light into a round-the-world ship and plane trip. From his first stop, Tunis, about 500 miles acro-s the Mediterranean, Lebrix will continue to Cairo. His route will take him to Karachi, Allahabad and Calcutta, India, and Bang-
kok, Siam.
Le Biix is using a Bernard Monoplane equipped with a radio. (Ystes, Le Brix's companion on the
trans-Atlantic flight, also is planning a flight to French Indo-China soon,
with Hanoi as his destination,
j The Uruguayan aviator Major r- was a decided change in the | ja ne Borges, who i preparing for a 'tain,,, in this community M"n- trans -Atlanti< flight to South Ameria till more Tuesday morning, ,. a vvitb the Frenchman, ( apt. Leon th, down town thermometers, challc, wa.. at the airport when Le me,I from 10 to 12 degrees u- Brix took off.
Borges told the United Pre-s he
(till further drop i.. foreca t for | lil( | not fj x ,„| a ( | at ,. f„ r his start and and tonight with a minimum of evaded the question of his destination
five degrees. The cold wave an ,j object,
icoinpanied by a rather heavy | t |, al | been thought he would take now and a cold wind that advantage of the lighted field last v "n,>ne along at a lively clip, nj^ht to leave almost simultaneously I'pl most iieoplc indoors. with Le Brix, hut he .aid bad weather —o bad prevented him from making trial
HiKKCLOSURK SUITS flights.
——- Iztrre Borges and Capt. Challe came Eederal Uni Dank of Louis- here Sunday for final preparation*, kv., has filed suits in the Put; ° ■'fruit curt again t Haiti Over- T HE WEATHEK •t al and Jess 1 Knauer et al, o t r-Tlo. uie of mortgage; on Probably snow tonight and WcdnesI'“'Id by the defendants. Corwin day except fair Wednesday northwest fdl. n filed the complaint.. portion. Continued cold Wednesday.
the war I having (Re largest per cent-! James A. Walton, 28, Cuyahoga age of oarents present, and after the Fall-, serving 10 to 25 years for rob-
count was taken, it was awarded to | bery.
the Fir-t Ward school. It will be pre- Mi kl . j a cko, 19, Cleveland, serving sented again next year and the num- Rf,. f or first degree murder. , rals “30” placed <in the pennant and j,„. |{ us .o, s.i, Cleveland, serving 10 if will go to the school for the remain- | to 05 y Pa ,s f„ r robbery, der of the year. Until next’s years The rope down which the men slid
was suspended from the toof di recti \ above the record clerk’s office. The clerk, Don Bonzi, discovered the escape when he arrived for work this
morning.
After leaving the cell block the convicts were forced to go to the roof, walk across and slide down over the Warden's re-idence in which the rcc-
meetlng, It will he in possession of
the First Ward School.
The principal address of the evening was given by Mrs. Florence Kiddock Boys of Plymouth, State probation Officer. Mrs. Boys was presented hy Mr-. Yuncker, chairman of the meeting and president of the Par-
ent Teachers Council.
Mis. Boys cited many cases which |„ r ,| c | 0 ik’s office is located,
have come under her supervision over Seven other convicts were in the the state in Uthich boys and girls have j f rorn which the prisoners escap-
gone astray through lack of heme, ..j |,ut they chose to remain,
church and school influences, hut Russo, Young ami Walton were in mostly through lack of proper train-! cr || s , „ the third tier. McDermott and ing at home. She cited eases where were in a cell on the sixth tier, even small boy- and girls found them- | Three bars were sawed from the
selves in Juvenile courts over the | ;i oors j n each cell, state for crimes which would make j McDermott, known a hardened older ciiminal sit up and Man” in the Mellett
PROBLEM TO MANY STRICK-
EN DISTRICTS.
LONDON, Feb. 19 (UI’l-Moder-ating temperatures through Europe brought fears of floods from thawing snows today and turned alarm over suffering to concern over crops, particularly wheat. Heavy and unusual snowfalls for the pa-t week, in some places as much as 1 to 20 feet deep, made it almost certain that the rivers, already high, could not carry away the water as the snows melted. Inhabitants of villages in Dartmoor, Englan I, were preparing to evacuate their homes. The thaw al-
ready had started there.
The ice-jammed Wurn, in German; 1 thls yPar w j|| srp a || „f the township:
liter into the project
hal left its banks between Karlsfeld and Obcrmcnzing, driving people from their homes and threatening public
works.
A water allowance of one pint a pt rson a day continued in Dartmoor ! and the district, isolated since Thur:-
4 the "Ke> !(j a y by heavy snows, was suffering ussa-sinatinn. f r o m lack of food. There has not been
take police. In many cases she said suirendered through a brother more I ,, n , )U( jb water for baths for ten days, these children come from homes where ] than two years ago anti was taken in j Farmets burned huge bonfires on mere eking out an existence is a custody at his home in Nanty Gin, Pn.l thickly frozen ponds, attempting to hard thing to do, and they lack |){,. was alleged to have been on of the | provide dringing water for their liveproper food and clothing and she fit- 1 gunmen hired by Ben Rudner. son of a j stock. R >a s through the district were
ed one instance where a hoy was tak-1 Millionaire junk dealei and under-! impassable.
To Award Thoroughbred Hull
■I
ing a neighbors milk early in thc morning and after an investigation, it was found that by furnishing him with milk at schoc I, he failed to bother thc neighbors milk. She said it costs much less to take care of thc boys and girls befote they get into thc state prisons or state schools, and because of thi- fact, they should be looked after at In me more closely, if there is no motive other than the
costs of their care.
Following the meeting, punch was served in thc lobby of thc auditorium building. It was perhaps thc most |successful meeting held by the Associations here and much benefit will no
doubt come from it.
world leader, to slay Mellett. One group of people -aw a gleam McDermott said not a word during hope from the long cold -pell which trial nor when he was convicted and has caused several deaths and untold sentenced in December 1926 to life im- [suffering in the past eleven days, prisonment. I Coal production prospects brightened
Police chief S. A. Lcngel; of Canton, also was convicted of participating in thc murder conspiracy, but was ac-
quitted at a second tiial.
The -tale claimed Melletts murder was Gangland's an.-wci to a sweeping I
materially in Wales and 10,0(10 additional miners already have been employed there, a daily exptess dispatch said. Similar increases were reported from other English mining district:'. The Prince of Wales recently visit-
cleanup campaign conducted by Daily News, which he edited.
thc| e ,| the Northumberland an I Durham ! mining areas and planned a visit shortly to the Wales districts to study
TO LECTURE TONIGHT , possible relief measures for the unRev. John W. Hoyt will give a employed and suffering miners, travelog of adventure and missionary It appeared today, however, that j endeavor in the region of Northern the almost unprecedented cold wave
Because of the length of the pre- California, illustrated by 80 beautiful- had partly solved the problem, at gram the year!; reports of the Green' |y colored views at thc Presbyterian l pa -t in Wales. Snowbound trains on castle Parent Teachers’ Associations 1 Church Tuesday evening at 7:30. Ev- the continent and England and consewere presented to the meeting hut ! eryone is invited to attend, quent coal shortages in the lag cities not read. These reports show that! Preceding this lecture the Men’s brought orders from English operatthe Associations are in a healthy con- Club will have Its monthly Supper ( ,rs which it was expected would redition and that they are all doing fine meeting at 6:30, to which all of the quire eight months to fill. 'work. In each one of the reports men of the Church are invited. Wheat crops in England and 1-ranee
which follow the names of the past ^ presidents are given. The national organization suggests that these past [
were believed to have been damaged
resentative-
Promise of the favorable report verified reports that the committee may strengthen the sales tax measures and back the hill introduced by Representative George W. Freeman, Kokomo, to bring intangibles out of biding and make them produce revetues of $1,500,000 to $2,000,000 annually, as Freeman asserts can be
lone.
The Freeman bill requires listing of ■redits or intangibles, accompanied |, v in affidavit that the submitted list is 1 true statement of such possessions. One-fourth of the amount reported tml sworn to would subject the own>r to 100 per cent valuation of secreted intangibles. Thc ways and means committee has ibout concluded to abandon the ten ier cent tax on amusements because >f thc burden it would place on small theaters. The tobacco tax, d 1 ' ignt ,| o raise $2,250,000 annually, is still inder consideration, however. Among ten Senate bills passed on Monday by the upper house was the Moorhead bill bringing public utility tolding companies under jurisdiction if the public service commission. The ■Senate adopted a report of its Judi :iary A enmmittce favoring passage if thc Workmen’s Compensation hdl, re-written almost in its entirety in :ommittec. Among four j M he lower house was the McKessonHolloway bill increasing mortgage e\■mpthins from $1,000 to $1,300. |(^ ipponcnts declared it would remove (60,000,000 worth of taxable.! from he tax duplicate. While the house adopted umeiidnents to the Noll City Managet bill tgreed upon by friends and opp, n•nts of city manager government, the semitc waited in vain for a commiteo report on the Sims repeal bill. Although Senator George W. Sims, Perre Haute, its author, announced Monday he would insist on the remit being handed down, he admitted it adjournment he had later asked it )P held up. “I want to hold it up until some hings happen,” he said, refusing furhor explanation. —o Hocsier^s Body Found In River
—o—•
harry williams, former MI NI IK man, h \d been MISSING SINCE J AN. 19.
—O—--
LAREDO, Tex., Feb. 19 Tbe body of Harry Williams, 21 years old, mi - dug newspaper man, wa- found yes-
M1 ». Ivan Ruark, Madis n towi shi| ; pM | a y in the Rio Grande, will acta- County News Chairman. William,., formerly pf Muneie, Ind., o | bad been missing from his home here
NOT PAT CRO"K , .ince Jan. 19.
NEW YORK, Feb. 19 (UP) I hat j p 0 |jre who had -earehed both i . story about Pat Crowe committing j ,,f the boundry line for trace of the suicide in a Buffalo alley It's all ii| n i^ s jng man, said today they believed
success with the gruwirNk of garden suggested. The attendance at th< session this morning w;is not so largr in number a.- in previous meetings but more townships were representei
than in 1928.
Townships represented were: Eas: and West Floyd, Washington, Modi son, Warren, Franklin, Greencasth and Marion. At one o’clock, electioi of officers to serve for tho following year was made, and during the afternoon, business plans discussed. I’ll! morning and afternoon sessions wen reversed due to the fact that U“ speaker, Mr. Ward, had an appointment in the afternoon. Organization of clubs in the other five townships was discussed, and it is hoped that
The annual Achievement Day exercises were discussed. The third yeai Achievement Day is celebrated with a pageant which will bo staged at one of the local theaters, of possible The scenes will be taken by the different clubs from over the count; The exhibits, which heretofore havi boon shown by booths, will be brought out in the scenes. Two leaders will bt appointed to the annual Agrlcultura Conference at Purdue UniversityMrs. Lycurgus btoner, South Did ialia St., wa. elected to -eive as ( oun ty Chairman the Mowing year, ami
h,. body hail bien placed in the river
ifter death.
pr. W. E. Lowicy Sr., after an autopsy, said examination of the lungs •onvinced physician, that Willi.im. ,v a . dead when placed in the river. There was mi water in the lungs, he
MRS. YORK SUFFERS STROKE everely bv the cold, but Russia «*ml ; ar ,eated j n 1925. Mrs. Ella York, northeast of Green- Germany reported more encouraging
mistake, Put himself aid when h' strolled into police headquarters l*st night and bared the left arm with a sear that would identify Pat Crowe in almo-t any police station in the land. “When I die," said Pat, “I'll • like a man. No suicide for me.” Thus another adventure was tacked |
on to the history of the man who ••Then' is no evidence to indicate kidnapped Edward Cudahy, Jr., 29! low Williams met death," Dr. Lowrey years ago and held him prisoner U,, RI | added. "No knife or bullets bad penhls father, wealthy Omaha Packer,: .^ ra p. ( l the vital organs, nor hud a bad paid *25,900 ransom. ! n avy blow fallen on the head.”
Yesterday a man was found shot -o through the head in an alley in But-, MEK( HANTS WARNED
falo, N. Y. all identification mark (; r cenca.stle inerci aet. wim are >1had been torn from his clothing, b u 'lling cigarettes, have he<>i, notified by police who viewed the body said it was j city police official- to retrain froei Pat Crowe —the same man whom the; -ailing them to minor . The law u
luite specific 0:1 the lade ef l ig <'el((.=; Co youngsters and because of nurnor-
DRIVEKS LICKNSES ( u. complaints a- to the promi eu.-i
INDIANAPOLIS. Fi b. 19 (UP) j selling «f them to any and every (UP)—Man; y^pator- passed a bill t da; re' % iiring fiy many dealers, the edict be- j one
Jugo-Salviu,; a |] imitm vehicle erivers to procure .,ut.
Greece X"d 25-ceut chauffeurs’ licenses from the -moking of eigne, tt.- by t),,.
M';; ,,f the Chamber of Commerce, a thoroughbred regtli,. 1, IJ "''ll be aw uded the township having the large-t attendutry Legume School to be held in the court house on Friday. I
presidents be mentioned and honored j castle, was brought to the Putnam prospect., on Founders’ Day because their work!County Hospital Monday in the Rector
'in the past has brought the Assecia-1 ambulance, suffering from a stroke of VIENNA, Feb. 19 lion to its present place of influence | paralysis. Mrs. York was found lying deaths in Southern
I in the school and home life of thejonthe floor in her home by a neigh- Macedonia, Northern . t „-, r,,,. .c... .....
nation. The reports in brief, by | bur, Mis. Artie Raines. Her physician, Thrace from disastroue floods were 0 ff u .,, „f the secretary of -tale. young*' 1 boy- and gills ha- cme t„ Wards follow: ! Dr. W. R. Hutcheson, stated that she' reported toila.v in dispute he received Another measure aimed at the mo- quite common and in nine pla, >-. F’irst Ward (Mary F)mmu Jones had been lying in that state for sev- here from Bi Igrnde and Ath"Hs. lorist in trouble was passed a few () j- pusim even in (ireim istle. the School) Feb. 1928-F’eh. 1929. Money, eiul hours. There wa- no heat in th*' The sections are among those uf- m i nu t,, 8 later. It required posting 0 U girls as w i || a s the boys in their eat I , raised: (>))erctta, $85.; two picture room, aiol if she had not been discev- fected by th* 1 recent cold wave which a pond in order that a person Is 1 nl- (teen-, raise a regular smok*' sin en at
o |ered, would have died from the ex- caused numeious death* and untold | 0 vved to drive until any accident time- when several of them are to(Coutinued on Page 2.) jposure. 'suffering. (judgement is settled. .gethcr.
I
