The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 January 1932 — Page 6

ijn; DAIL y banner, greencastle, Indiana, fbiday. January i, 1932 •

lessee®?**

Skre Are Some Rea! 1^2 Frites BATH TOWELS

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12 IMo. Red La hie Pongee

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Natural Color — YARD ......

Yard Wide l>leached Mu Up, i i : in o eight V ARD

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BEARCATS TO MEET TIGERS

ians play a smashing:, aggressive but DC T ^ nmt are forever on the VVV/DkJ vJVy A \_7

clean game and are forever on go. Coach Rice has the makings of the strongest team ever to represent the great Queen City muncipal uni-

\ Y Versity an< ^ ?reat thin K s are predicted

Rice may start Cheater Smith, Negro sophomore, at a forward in place of Captain Barsdale. Smith, one of the best liked colored athetes ever to wear the Red and Black at Cincinnati is an uncanny shot- He starred at Woodward high school in both football and basketball playing center on both teams. He played through out the football season at the pivot position for the Bearcats and made the Associated Press All Buckeye

MARTINSVILLE FOR TOURNEY

( I.M INN ATI SQUAD TO INVADE BOWMAN GYM FOR

NET BATTLE

When Coach “Doc” Rice brings his University of Cincinnati Bearcats to town Saturday night to open the Buckeye Conference basketball season officially with DePauw, Greencatle fan will have an opportunity of seeing the tallest center in Ohio in

action.

Julius I Bunny) Shuck, U. C. junior

BEDFORD, VINCENNES AND ARTESIANS ALSO PARTICIPATE IN NET MEET

Greencastle high school’s basketball team went to Martinsville at noon today where the Tiger Cubs were entered in a blind tournament with Bedford. Vincennes and the Arte.-ian squad. Drawings for the

team besides being chosen the “most | meet was to take place at 1 o clock valuable sophomore player” by them- , with the first game staiting at 2 p. In meeting DePauw Coach Rice m. followed by the second tilt at stands exactly six feet four inches in feels that he is going up against one ‘ o'clock.

evening, the losers of the

ytlrandec

S. C. PRF.V0 COMPANY

HOME STORE

I his stockings. His arms are proper-I of the best quintets in Indiana and a | tionally long. The Bearcats won both team which will be primed to take the I of their starts this year from George- number of the Cincinnati five.

town (Ky) College and the University of Daytor. (O) by impressive scoresIn neither contest did the opposing center out-tap Shuck. This enabled Cincinnati to keep possession of the hall the greater part of the time. With the exception of Shuck and Captain Ray Barsdale, a senior and a forward. Rice’s squad is made up entirely of sophomores- The Cincinnat-

“We have the greatest respect for DePauw” Coach Rice is quoted in a dispatch from the Queen City. “Indiana high schools and colleges are noted for their excellent brand of basketball and we will be lucky if we win fren tne ‘Tigers..’’

kvKKITSE IN THE nANNFR”

s 11 HS( KI ME FCIH THE BANNER

This

afternoon round are scheduled to clash in a consolation game at 7:30. The two winning quintets will tangle in the championship contest immediately after the preliminary. Coach C. B- Edmonson stated be-j fore he left that the starting lineup for the Cubs in the afternoon bout would be Hurst and Cox, forwards; McAnally, center; Dawson and Seeley, guards. BANNER WAN! ADS PAY

< Min Sin k !m Hione (lotnpany

The A < iateil Telephone Utllitle* company, owners of the (ireeneasllr feleplione cr mpany. has placed flOOft shan of no par \alin- common rtci k on ilie markei for purchase by individuals in th- communities If, Indiana, where the company ex rhunge: are located The A Bis latcd Telephone Utilltbi company owns and operates oxchanges in Wain h, Elkhart. f,osheii Angola. Import . Llb'ity. Conner*vlile. Lafayette. Or- encastle, liogans ponte. and nineteen other towns ad .latent to ihe ones above nieiitloiied

INSIDE INI OHM AIDIN'

LONDON, II I’) Society ha a j new fad At least one well-known J London hostess of American birth— 1 lias promised to send a friend a Don at one of England’s most famous universities—an X-ray photograph of, . her stomach as a Christmas gift. In j exchange for this inside information, the Don has agreed to supply to thej hostess, precisely the nine record of his own inner anatomy. '

tiff' ling f* th announced today district manager exchange

5.lino .-liar wai hy H B. Walls d I ho <. i • on. astl<

These hare: aie common Flock and pay a divddi ml of 8 percent li. Block, uhhl) may he lash'd It d^sli tri. an! may he pimliu *d j th lor fll effn ■, at the market price

Special Session Steps Will Be Taken Tomorrow

rOMMITTEK TO MEET IN INDI \\ iPOI I ro WORK Ol I PROGRAM

Thi stock i. listed on the Ne . York Curb and the Chicago Stock Exchange and the selling price Is gov - I'm I hy the rh ing quotation' ot | ;lni | the previous day If ad any time the owner of hr tin k w ishes to sell It, the loro| iiffjwill handle the transart ion. The c r..htm shares are nn isnle in Indiana only This stock is in the pot 'in l omp.iny vvhos > g‘neral offices ore in Ma' l h;i>n. Wise'-vsln.

Di ii'ldition to ‘lie eonimoti

the lot a| company al > offers I'm sale a limited am unit ol preferred slock which i In the Indiana Associated Teleph 'tie corporation This is priced at $05 p r shti' plus accrued dividends and yields a return of 6.31 percent Th > Indiana group has In

"The next step towards the secur mg of a spec ial session of the legislature to cpn ider a new tax system is the working out of a program by a committee, Saturday of this week in Indianapolis, selected and called by

(Lieut. Gov. Edgar D. Rush, Salem, I

Waiter Myers, Indianapolis, I speaker of the house,” says W. 11. Settle, president of the Indiana farm bur-! * au, which organization has sponsored

II he movement . I

“More than 40,000 signors of the farm bureau petition, requesting aj special session of the legislature for j

ork. tax relief, are nnxiou.-ly awaiting fur I

ther favorable developments, and that the committee agree on a program

that will give farm and other prop j

orty owners a respite from a ruinous

tax burden." |

A delegation of business and real

estate men, legislators and farm |

operation “UJiUO '•lephoties in 'hit- leaders, headed hy Mr. Settle, con-, ly ti'c comiuunltler in the s at, ofiferred with Governor Harry G. Leslie, J 'i din'll The company owns over , at the state house in Indianapolis, aj 3."00 mil s of t >11 lin and ha th i few days ago regarding a special ses-' entire long di t m facilities of the! s ion of the general assembly. The Be|| Telephone romp : ny available for I conference resulted in the governor unlimited i et v ice Th*- Indiana jgroup I promising to call the legislators toIf 'indet he man ig m at of F O ! gether if a definite tax program Cuppv of Lafa.' tte. Ind . who ha • I could Ire agreed upon by re presen 4 a- ^ had thirty y ors experience in ihi fives of various interests in the state,!

Prosecutors Take Oft ire

NEW OFFICIALS ASSUME DUTIES IN THIRTEEN INDIANA CIRCUITS

teleph me business and who is recog- land also hy a majority of members in nlzed as one of th" ni" t capable tel- troth houses. It is expected that sevephone nr n In the business today, eral days will he consumed in wotk1 Ir perron-: 'I of th- state organlza ing out a tax program then it will he tion consists ol men whore expei some time before a reaction from leiic. .xteiid- over a period of years members of the geneial assembly may and who »' entirely familiar wi'h be compiled,

th® op ration of telephone proper-

t ' I p| , , , • , , , , |,. , | -

th! 1 : Kto r k Is to be in d for th purpose ot paying lor the propertrs re ctr-tly acquired by the company It.

Ir dis n a

Acrordlng to the piotenieni of Marshall E Sampsell. president of the Arsoclaferi TfEphone corpotatlnn. the n t consolidated earnings available for dividends on preferred Hock and denre-cistlon were fc *he quar'er 'ndlng September 3" 1931. as compared with $821411 for *he Bint- period In 1930. or a gain cf $91 127 ‘‘The reeuDs of opr’atlons during a period when g^n era! burlntts activities was a» a low ebb are <xtr:me!y gratifying The ' row-'h of the companv has Inde d v e^n phenom<nal Since !92e the company has grown front 7 t<. 909 exchanges. Th original unp orerased 38.000 ttltphones and ha« now grown- *© 550 000 ft operates In. three ctzt's and now operatte In twenty-Sv !r. 1926 -her w.rt IS2 ttockboMer: and at the cloys o' A" "U .f 193! *h r-- w, 11 000 Thr A^o.-Jit /. Telephone

pas-

or.con

INDIANAPOLIS. Jan ! ti p)—

Prosecutors recently elected tn !3 Indiana circuits took office today as a result of a supreme court ruling

which held the prosecutors I :v sed by the 1929 -legisl.iturt

' '

The ruling was the last 1931 decision of the high court The law was passed with the ;nten-1 tion of making election of prosecutors; uniform throughout the state It pro-1 vided that the 13 countie. where 1 prosecutor.', were L lx dc ted November, 1930. should eliminate tho fc.cct.o'.ti .nd the ;r.cur.-.bt.;ti retah. office for another y^_. • - ' . ' * year *ad a month a:ur B ..a.on.

0 OOOOCOO C . C '. 00 ?O c . c>o pJ by Sidney lPJAru;ick>_^

tfl !9.1! King Fr.ift! v v«. c v ndirt'e fqr

READ THIS FIRST | done!" the older nun cried emotion- | Prenk Severn has been kidnaped | ally. "Well, here's wishing you all

from his country home, Beggar’s ! the best I'

Court, apparently hy persaas trying to ateal the fabulous and sinister Czarina R«bies. Severn's friend, Jim Wynter, enlists the help of Bill Grayson, a lawyer, and they search the grounds, discovering a secret stairway and a locked door in the rums of an ancient chapel While they plan to force the door a wall eolhipses, burying it under tons of masonry. They' suspect Martin, a servant ot Severn’s, of dynamiting the wall. They begin to doubt also the sincerity of Sant, Severn's attorney. In a village nearby they meet an ex-convict, Ilsham, who goes on crutches. Also they encounter a mysterious Dr Martell, whose presence Martin, the servant, tries for some reason to conceal. Grayson’s wife and Katharine Far Ing, to whom the rubies rightfully be long by inhentance from her Russian grandfather, return to London while the two men plan to search Beggar's Court again at night. Wynter dis covers Ilsham, his crutches laid aside, examining a motor boat in a boathouse. Martin and a thug named Frome try to shoot Wynter, who outwits and captures them. In the library Wynter finds an unsigned letter addresstd to himself, which some one has opened and hidden away. It warns him that Sant is untrustworthy. He returns it to its hiding place. NOW GO ON CHAPTER XL The door opened and the big smiling man bustled tn with a day of glasses and a decanter. "Sorry to have been such a deuce of a time. But I had to go up to find out from Martin where I could lay my hands on anything to drink. The wretched man was changing out of a ruined suit of clothes—and his wife was there, loo. in Hoods ol tears, to make things damper still because he’s got the order of the boot!” remarked bant Not, ol course, that Martin had really been dismissed As Ins healers were quite well aware, al! Sant s bluster in the grounds had merely been the decorative window-dressing that an awkward contretemps had demanded. REASON TO FEAR Sant spoke with his breezy laugh, but behind it a scarcely concealed nervousness was apparent to Ins two guests. He put the whisky dccantet and siphon on the table and invited them to help themselves Had the remembrance of that carelessly left tell-tale envelope recurred to him whilst out ol the room, to touch him with a sudden uneasy fear- As Jim added a splash of soda water to his whisky, his eyes followed the movements of his host that a tilted mirror on ihe wall reflected—aw Sant, as if casually, edge toward the waste paper basket What he had found in the letter must already have given helix Sam a very bad lolt To know that someone else, some unknown person, suspected the truth and had written of these su-picions to Severn s vlosest friend I He could suppress tins let•er—but that anonymous correspondent might write again, a letter he would possibly be unable to suppreis. J in did not envy Sant s state of mind, with the unnerving thought of the unknown figure m the dark man or woman, w-ho suspected the

truth

Sant's eves had espied the envelope In the mirror Jim saw him hastily retrieve tt doubtles; with immen » relief, and thrust it into his pocket Some c! Sant s usual launtin.css was back as he returned to the table Hc'; .::g yourselves. ! hope? Y'es. old Ft!.* <on t rci .se 10t too— ° «4i cr.« r.-.-i tarruw etcope ol ours ton.glu Wynter, t * 4 ." - e two t>.ur.de.*.og foo.s ■ - • V«’* i *• *** c ' f 1 .Y

Jim had to be responsive, had to raise his glass, against which Sant clinked his own with an effusive air

of genial good fellowship.

But knowing the man as he did now. knowing all he knew now. to poison for him the verv atmosphere of this house, Jim Wynter would have liked to put his glass down un-

tasted.

"But you aren't going to run off yet." cried Sant, when a lew minutes later bill Grayson looked at his

watch.

"Well, I think we ought to be making a move in Ihe next hve minutes. It'll be late enough by the time we get bavk to town," Bill said. ‘‘You're staying the night here, I suppose. Saul.'' "I fancy • shan’t turn out again tonight. That's one advantage of being a bachelor I haw only my own wishes lo consult!” laughed Sant. ' Really. I ran over "etc this atternoon partly with an idta ol snatching an early round ol golf first thing tomorrow, lo lake my mind off this infernal business before I go back to the office that s why Beggar’s Court secs more of me than it otherwise would." Sant added, referring lo an admirable golf course in the neighborhood "Well, we don't -.1X111 much nearer a solution ol (hr Severn mystery." ?aid Bill suddenly, "or why these unknown criminal- -liould murder ( reyke—and then spirit the dead man away Irom Monksllvcr alter their erime was known Have you any theories, ‘■-ant *" Sant wa- pouring himself out second drink A> Dill (tiayson made the abrupt relercncc to Creyke. Ins hand seemed oddly shaky, lie spilt some ol the whisky on the table.

^ . t - VV»g*« xO ••«**••• |

STRAINED

■'Hopelessly in the dark, my dear I chap." Ills voice was a little icrky 'and strained "Unc can only hope | that some unexpected clue may turn

i "P-"

"Ot course Only you dou t think it very hopeful, do your" Sant shook his head Jim Wyntet sal smoking almost in silence, as the other two went on

talking

Until yesterday Sant was almost the last man he would liavv sus peeled, this genial populai figure always ihe best ol company and appai enlly the kindliest ol souls, and much in demand al lunctions held in aid of this oi that benevolent cause. Following an aftei-dmnci -peech. moving his hearers now to laughter, now to a sudden lump in the throat, haid-faced nun would be surprised al then own libera! response to hi- appc_l And Sam guilty ot that shameless betrayal ol his friend—the moving spirit behind this plot auanut Frank Severn, the associated murdei ot

Ciey kcl

FAcn yet it seemed almost un j

believable

1 hat hrst suspicion hud' flashed | at loss Jim IV enter on his return to Monk-ilver from Di Martell s house At first he had told himself that he would not even take Dill Grayson into his csnhdi nee. that Dill without! further proof would only laugh at a suspicion seemingly -o monstrous But Bill, with his trained legal mind. Ins long experience of the criminal,

hac! not laiu'ied

Tho-e cobwebs on the door t;

Monks dver

Sant had seen the hrst at the door, had L-.i^en care no doubt, to be the hrst he nad taken care to be seen »uppo-ed!y flicking way a network o! cobwebs there A very subtle ruse -. uOoi te-toone'd with ancient uiibroi.cn webs—now could u have beer, opened as 'atoly as the

nigl.t before -

Of Co™, sc- -;t was as .... W yntc. .‘.ow .. ,t had Lee:

ir t.*.e t.a-...- -Aft! -id r.opcd t<* d.;-

. .. ••• ' ■ -• C-.'-O *e Mttft/wicrtw .1 AwwAa-

silver, or ol having been inside that house: had tried subtly to make the whole story appeal to the police as nothing more than the delusion ol a man whose drugged senses had played him a trick.

OBVIOUS

Only the unexpected proof of that jade and pearl necklace, with its conclusive evidence that he must have been at Monksllvcr. haal been factor lor which Sant had not

bargained

And because ot his certain knowledge that he had pas-cd through that door barely tiftexi) hours uelore. Jun Wynter had known too. beyond doubt, that Sant could not have found that door a- he protessed. cob webbed-up Just a tm k ter dr ceive them, his pretence ot flicking loose those cobweb- that Fad already been tom and broken when the door had been opened on the

previous night

It was m sudden reali/ation that tor some reason Sant bad lied that had hrst started the tram ot suspicion in Jim Wynter’s mind, wild as that suspicion seemed ot a nun he had liked and had never had the faintest cause before to mistrust. But certainly Sant must have lied And then in the light ol that dawning suspicion, other odd (acts Sant professed skepticism that he. Wynter. bad found t reyke murdered. as if he were anxiou? 10 implant seeds ol doubt beforehand in the minds of the police, to germ male when they -huuld find no dead man at Monksilver Otlici laettoo . Well, tonight had pioecd beyond all question that hu suspicion had been right Just a? tonight had shown that hostilities had been opened on him. Had Frome s attempt on his life been inspired by this man whom he had known for year- and liked, and who had |u;t clinked friendly glasses with him' Or had it been instigated without Sant - knowledge by Martell.' Maitell who might have recognized Ins voice on the telephone and seen the first Hash of the red dangcHighti* Sant. Martell. Martin. I iomc! 1 he time was not yet ripe lot them to be swept into the net. but perhaps soon, very soon now I

J .r.*. x..g

EXCUSES Jim Wynter dragged himself out of these preoccupied thoughts, as something Sant was say mg caugitt his ears Of course. I wa- lunou? about what happened tonight.' Sain wa; speaking ol Martin again "Unlv the man s all nerses—and small wonder, really, alter all that s hap pentd at this lonely place One must make allowances for that, eh •" It Sant hoped tor encouragement from Dill Grayson, he found the other disappointingly aloof Bill smoked m stol d silent? J suppose I'm an impulsive soft hearted fool in some things," went on Sant, "but I couldn't help feeling.sorry for the man )ust now— and still more lor In- wife In (act. I may as well admit I held out a vague hope to her Mind you I in not excusing Martin, lai iruin it But—well. I told Ins wile tli at I might reconsider the me tier of Martin's dismissal (nn smiled inwardly Just what lie had known Sant would say. with the way to be paved -or Martini continued presence at beggar* Court' 'Well, why not 5 he rejoined carelessly "After ail. I didnt lo-e ar much a- a feather during >hcir exciting target practice And tr any Case I've decided not to prosecute 44 Lite* ail. d then p'au- turned out as he hoped Martin and Fromeai'.d others—would hna themselves ."! the gr.p of t.ie law betore very on a more serious charge stdi • > was not unw-.’F.-.g t0 rf;V( ,<, e _ n ' ' ° - ‘ P A.-.i to Lr.r.g V.e.c

w4

li

ry y Showing

Sz

Saiu relay

Only

MATINEE

AND

NIGHT

GRANADA

- nmr

STAIE YEAR END REVIEW

in' ", iiui pnlciv ' d to one to 10 years impri "inmert.

January 7 George L. Satlnder:. state representative of Blufftor dies suddenly of heart disease on the eve of his selection as majority leader of the 77th Indiana General Assembly.

M i ;;(i Loo chneider, Indiana poli . veil, annual Indianapolis speed wa;, MU) mile into Mce after Billy Arnold, 1930 winner, crashes and is nijiii <1 ciiou ly, viln!” in lead at 400 mile mark. June 15—President Herbert Hoover speaks at the Indiana Republican Edi torial association in Indianapolis at anual dinner. June 21—Alice Jean, 10 and Vir ginia, 14, daughters of Mr. and MrJohn W. Simmons, of near Greenfield, die of ;.tryclinine poison placed in pressed chicken sandwiches eaten at Sinunons-Pollard family reunion in Lebanon. Three othei ill of poison-

ing.

July 3—Mrs. Carrie Simmons ir dieted by Boone county grand itu ■ charged with fir.t degree murder of her daughters, Ali.-e Jean, 10, and Viiginia, 14, \v)io died of strychnin” in sandwiches eaten tit r family ieunion picnic, Juno 21. * July I I i > | y | bq Fl' , £-'. Ifi, found at bottom of air shaft in Central high school, Muncie, where he apparently fell to mysterious death in

1922.

July 22—Two federal prohibition agents, John AVil on. 46, Indianapoli and Walter Gilbert, 33, Cincinnati, shot to death by George Adams, 35, bootlegger, near Fort Wayne. Adams

captured.

July 24.—Elizabeth Dunn, Indiana polls, wins state women’s golf title, one up, over Alice Belle English, La

fayette.

August I" Neil McIntyre, Indian 1 -

life imprison- polis, wins state open golf till” m

third play-off with Ralph Stonehouse,

Indianapolis,

August 15- Bill Heinlein. Indianapolis, wins state amateur golf title. August 27—Pr int on Charles Elkins farm, 2.7 miles from Linton, Ind., is designated by II. S. census bureau as nation's new population center. September 2d—Trial of Mrs. Carrie Simmons, Hancock county farm mother, on first degree murder charge, for the strychnine poisoning of her daughter, Alice Jean, 10, at a Lebanon family reunion picnic, opens in Boone

circuit court.

November 5—Charles A Greathouse, 62, Democratic National committeeman from Indiana, died in In-

dianapolis hospital.

November 5—Boone circuit court jury fails to agree in firijt degree murder trial of Mrs. Carrie Simmons,

January 8 Seventy-seventh Indiana General Assembly convenes. January 14—H. O. 4 'Pat” Page re signs as head football coach at Indi ana university at request of athletic

board.

January 24 -Earl C. Hays is chosen he id football coach at Indiana uni ver ity to succeed H. O. “Pat” Page. Hayes was assistant coach. January 20—Twenty-nine miners killed in explosion in “Little Betty" coal mire near Linton. February 28—Gran 4 county circuit i nit jury acquits Charles Lennon, second defendant tried on a charge of omplicity in lynching of two negroes on the courthouse lawn, August 7,

1930.

March 6—Governor Leslie vetoes Oi l Age Pension bill, appearing perFonally before the senate to explain

action.

March 10—State budget of $75,900,000 adopted by both houses of legis lature. Only $92,000 below original figure. Governor lyeslie signs bill creating state boxing commission. Reapportionment bill reducing districts from 13 to 12 adopted. Legislature adjourns 1 :15 p. m. after turning back official clocks for 13 hours. Virsril Kirkland, Gary, convicted in Valparaiso on a charge of murdering Arlene Draves, his sweetheart, at a Gary gin

par y. Sentenced to

ment.

March 12 Harold Herbert Schroeder, Mobile, Ala., convicted on man slaughter charge at Indianapolis, for “torch slaying” of unidentified man ( whose charred body was found in j Schroeder’s auto May 31, 1930. Sen-

j tpriced two to 21 years.

March 13—Affidavits against six Marion men charged with implication jin lynching of two negroes on Grant county courth mse lawn in August, 193), dismissed because of acquittal of two defendants in separate trials. M’rch 21—Muncie Bearcats win j 1931 basketball championship, defeat-

ing Greencastle, 31 to 23.

Apiil 1 Body of Knute Rockne, j famous Notre Dame football coach | who was killed in air crash near Ba|Zaai. Kars., received at South Bend, j April 4 Knute Rockne buried.

April 6 A irgil Kirkland, who was and is discharged by Judge John A'

I'onvicte i on a first degree murder Homaday.

'haige for the gm party slaying of November 6—Mrs Carrie Simmons I nis sweetheart, Arlene Draves. and Released on $10,0C0 bond I sentenced to life imprisonment, is j November 14—Grant countv grend cranted a imw trial by Judge Grant jury m Marion virtually dis redd At

n Port< i - ir utt «ourt ti

.* ,v "that th^eitY i < thii

April 7—Cities of Muncie and Indianapolis file suit in Marion circuit

j court charging fraud and corruption passage of House Bill 6, motor Hansporta i n regulatory measure. Beck injunction L> prevent its publi-

j cation.

April 15—Harry E. Rowbottom, Ev:tnBvi!!e, Republican congressman from Indiana’s old first district, is ,found guilty by federal court jury in I Evansvi l!e c n a charge of selling postoffice appointments, and sentenced to a year and a day in Leavenworth, Kans., federal prison. May 26—Joe Caccia, 31, and his

corruption" by adjourning without retun ing indictments against any coun

ty officers.

November 13—George Adams is sentenced m Allrn circuit court to two to 21 years in state prison on man■daughter conviction for slaying of John Wilson, federal prohibition agent, near Fort Wayne, July 22 November 21—Southern California breaks Notre Dame’s three-year warning s f reak in fortbal! with “game of the century" 16-14 victory at South Bend after trailing 14-0 at start of fourth penod. November 24—Thomas Taggart,

< '

• t ! ’"' K!n £ au '° E° e s through tional committeeman from Indiana to -diar.apohs speedway during succeed Charle Greathouse i^-- or Me ”-07ia! day race. Virgil November 23—Purdue beat:, Ncrthv- rfr*’ •“. CCCSc<i B * > yi-"g Ar- wes‘err. in sensational upet to W thftart, | • ■ ' ■ -'■‘Tty, convicted on a,-(Mkhinan'for Big Ter. football cha-T ti r *. • utM ■ ■ . wzu.. cs.’-u-t court, Viijjxur* -2-Cr ;n e^uxlly uncage ted rave-***