The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 February 1932 — Page 1
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# * + + + 8 + + +* ^ the weather ♦ + Fair; Not Much Change + ^ + *l* + •tr ♦
VOLUME FORTY sin youint HEADS BEDFORD SCHOOL SYSTEM
THE DAILY BAiNAER
“IT WAVES FOR ALL”
» » <• -S' f ♦ + . ALL THE HOM^ NEWS ♦ * UNITED PRESS SERVIC1 *
♦ *
+ ♦
RESIGNS POST HERE
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, M(>NDAY, FEBRUARY 29,1932.
NO. 115
MX W. SUPERINTENDENT TO HE AD SPLENDID SCHOOL SYS- i TI M AT STONE CITY
MICH LARGER SCHOOL I
Supt. Yount Came To Local Schools Five Years Ago. Work Has Been Highly Successful
Warren J. Yount, superintendent of the Greencastle public schools since iy^7, tendered his resignation t<> the consolidated school board here Monday noon, in order to accept the superintendency of the school system at Bedford. Merle J. Abbott, head of the Bedford schools for a number of years resigned there two weeks ago in order to go to Fort Wayne as head of the
city school system.
Mr. Y'ount is leaving the Greencastle schools only because of the better place. He not only goes to a larger j system, but one that offers more opportunities in every way. The schools have an enrollment of about 4,000 as against 1,500 here and with a teaching staff of 105 as against 45 here. The salary is in proportion to the school system and is more than the local school unit could ever afford to
SPEAKERS OF NOTE COMING TO THIS CITY
“Pals Forever”
PRoi NFISW ANGER OF DEPAl W RESPONSIBLE for series OI \ DDR ESSES ITTLITIFv TO BE DISCUSSED
i ‘ r «t Speaker \\ j|| |{. |{. Shively Of Marion. Four Talks Have Reen Aranged.
wap.Rkn i
VOI - N'T.
MRS. HI \ LRS FOUND DEAD BY III SBUND
HIED SIDDKMT OI HEART DISEASE SI NOW |(| kiaL IN ILLINOIS
Prof. \\. A. Neiswanger of DePauw . | university ia bringing several speak-i ers to Greencastle who no doubt will be of general interest, outside the stu 1 dent body. I he idea is to educate the 'classes in public utility work, and the speakers will from different sides 1 of the important utility subject. The first .'jieaker will be B. B. 'Shively of Marion, co-author of the I • Shively-S])en or act, and ids subject i ! will be “Public Utility Law of Indiana and Its Interpretation.” Mr. Shively is one of the best posted In , diana legislators on utility law ami , his talk shoul I be of much interest. I lie addre-- will be in the chemistry j lecture room in Minshall laboratory 1
HIGH CHINESE OFFICIALS IN NIPPON HANDS
IN TO STAY
PKDKSTRAIN SFIZKD J\P\V ESE IDENTIFIED AS GENERAL KANG-KEN
GRADUATE OI WEST POINT
Natire Officer ( barged With Being A Spy. Attended Several l. S. Universities.
Alls. Susanna Rivers, age old years
wife of Charles River passed away at o’clock, Thursday evening, early Sunday morning at her home ^ ar cli 3 and the public is cordially northwest of town. Mr. Rivers found j inv * te< l- Mayor W. L. Denman will i
, „ i . . her dead in bed about (i o’clock. P 1 ' 68 ' 410 at tlli£i meetill Kpay. eo o s a u y o . peo JXaith was due to heart d.-easc. , '* le following Thursday evening at pie and has an unusuaUy splendid Besides the husband she is surviv- the same time and place, t . Y. Soren-! ,uiuol system, it H, reporteil. ‘ , by a si[iter Ml , Eugene Soper of son » representing the Insul interests Tr. ount came to Greencastle ((f Greencastle an j two brothers, V. in Indiana, will be the speaker. His from Mooresville ,n the suninier of LoV( , :iI1(] M , hi „ Lovo both vf subject will be ’’Public Utility Man1 192 v H, 1 > fa “ tceede ‘ 1 B - w - Kelley as | Grant p arki p, agement” A third lecture will' be beadof the local schools and his work Friemli who vviljll to vit . u tlle re . five,, by Howell Ellis, a member of ..ere has iieeu out.-Uinnng. I he mu i n ^ muy ( . u n a t the McCurry Fun- the Indiana Public Servic Uommis.s hools have made progress and have erul hollu , > t)k , wil , be taken to ^on, whose subject will be “Publi gamed widespread recognition under Grant 1>arki ,. arli fuesdav morn- Utility Regulation.” The fourUi and ins administration and it is with deep int , where furR . ru i unices will be last of the series will be by a mayor
regret from tl.ose connected with him hfcld u , n u ' clock ,
■'U Ins work, that Prof. Yount leaves
Greencastle. OI ^1^1 * 4 I Prof. Yount received his A. tl. de- | |||( k | |S
gree from Franklin college in 1912 J
ami received his Ma.-ter’s degree from GivCIl I'll I l^mil
Their combined ages forming a 4 90-year span of life, John D. Rockefeller, O'l-year-old oil king, and General Adelbert Ames, t*7-year-old war veteran, are shown as they recalled day of long ago when they met at Ormond Beach, Ha. General A me . wlio graduated from West Point in 1861 and (ought in three wars, planted a tree to commemorate the Washing, ton Bicentennial on the lawn where this photo wa made. "Old pals
forever.” said John L».
OTTO DOBBS JR IS IN.II RED IN UJTO \GCIDKNT
SUITERS SEN ERE < I I > A> HE \M> HERREU I Ml \ 11N RE It KN EROS* I I UK E II Ml E
SHANGHAI, Feb. ”9 (UP)—A Chi uese pedestrian seized by Juiianese ! consulate jKilice in the lobby of the Astor Mouse hotel was revealed to-1 j day as Gen. Wang Ken, commander of 1 the salt revenue* constabulary, who i had been linked with rumored ef- ; forts of Chinese to raise a $30,000,000 war loan from Americans. Tlie Japanese seized the general’s brief case, in which it was understood they found contracts for American aiiplanes and munitions. It also was reported WangKen commanded sev- | erul units of the crack 19th Chinese route army, foremost Shanghai dei fense group. General Wang-Ken had approached the Japanese consular offices in search of the American consulate, failing to realize that the American headquarters hud been moved to a new location. Japanese police gave chase and captured him in the hotel j
as a spy.
Wang-Ken was a former student of Michigan, Columbia and Princeton universities and was graduated ftorn West Point in 1918. Gen. Wang, it was understood c.ine here from Pieping with maps he wished to show (apt. William Mayer, assistant military attache at the
Mayer
DYNAMITING OF RAILWAYS THREATENED
j JAPANESE ISSUE ANOTHER ULTIMATUM TO ( HINA’S SH NNCHAl NRMY
BOMBING PLANES IN READINESS
A1 Capone, czar of Chicago’s under world, whose conviction and sentence for income tax law violations was affirmed by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals Saturday. Capone wa.- sentenced to serve eleven years
in prison.
ENGLISHMAN GAVE VESPER TALK SI NI)\Y
Demands ( liinese Cease Bringing Up Reinforcements Or Railroads Will Ite Blown Up
“FISTS ACROSS THE SEA” SUBJE( I OI JOHN LONGDON-
DAY IBS ADDRESS
Indiana University in 1931. He has baa experience in teaching from the primary grade through to college work and is well fitted for any oiip-
crintendency.
Since FtVf. Youiil dime to the Greencastle schools, the entire curric-
Indiana school circles, and much of this credit is due Prof. Y'ount who ha*worked untiringly to attain this rating. The new Second Ward building was elected under his administration. Tiie other buildings ate* in splendid condition ami the finances of the city
Two Greencastle young men were
, ... , . , injured, one serio i.-ly, when the car in
of an Indiana city which operates its ' whu . h they were .-uiing, cashed into American legation at Pieping. own utility plant. He has not >et another mu. him: n t ■ National road " ai sent here as an observer.
late Saturday evening a thej were Chinese claimed that his maps ami
liould be oi more than retui . ning . fl . orn tl ,e (ireenca-tle-YViley ! ,a l M * r « ' vould P rove invaluable to the
Japanese military as they related to the Chinese defense of Shanghai.
been chosen.
The talks
passing interest to the people of basketball ,•-me .,t Tm-. Haute.
Greencastlo, who are v,tally interest- • C)tto j, on of the Gl . een . ed in public utility management in ln- ica8tk> clli) , f of p „ ljlV Mr8 . UobbS( d.ana ; Many efforts at legislation of | m Hamia suffeleti s0V , l( . one kmd or another have been attempt- cuts about the f:)( . e an injurwl .ed in recent years and no doubt will kneo wbile H#rbert Muu j V) s , m of be carried on in coining sessions of M| . a(|d Ml> ^ A Mundj .; 2l)2 xvcst .the legislature and the more People WasllinKtoi] of the ,.., r ,
,, , . . . ,,,, Henry Jackson, of Palestine, Texas, toe"'about utility rates, management esc . ed xvil|l bruiv _ 0u . u
tuum has been reorganized and today! ^ ^ to|u a pail . of >h( , Ca fl . 01 „ the and affairs generally, the better off it is rated second to none by educa maibs at thc A1 onon railroad station th e various communities will be in the
tiunal experts in Indiana who have hure soveral woek . s ag0 anU was ar- future. M,.ted the Greencastle schools. Ac-j re>ted i(eUveell that station and the' cording to present day educational [Jikr ,, oU1 . i a half m ii,. 110rt h, was senstandards, Greencastle stands out in , te|iced U) M , 1Ve a0 days in the Marion
.ounty jail, by Federal Judge Robert /,. Baltzell at Indianapolis Saturday. Jackson said he took the shoes from a parcel post package consigned to a Putnumville merchant, while '‘bumming” his way home fiom the national legion convention in Detroit.
HF..NKY J \( kM)\ 'EM E.Nt ED IN
FEDERAL COURT VI
INI*; vAROLl'
Cooper Trial U Resel For Maivh
J El F Elf SON TOMNSHII’ MAN M.-
LEGED TO II W E * lfl'll\ VLLY YSSAI LI ED GIRL
C are above par. There ii no «f* j when arrest Morgan he had a quantity ol liquor
in his possession.
Si\l\ Fresoui \i Coiiierence I li re
cess balance, but the finaiices are in such shape that funus are available "ithout expensive borrowing as is be ing done by many systems in Indiunu. '1 lie Greencastle schools are to be congratulated in having Mr. Yount at the
l.eim for the past five years. Mr. and Mrs. Yu ant and their two
children have taken an active part in tne social and civic life of Greencastle ; md during their five years residence ! re, have made scores of friends who will rvgiet to see them leave the city, but will rejoice with them that the jtiew position is a distinct promotion jfor Superintendent Yount in his edu
[cational work.
pants of the other car, driven by F. I. Hoffman, 114 south 13th street,
Torre Haute, c-raped injury. Dobbs, who is bleeding.profusely,
was rushed to the Biuzil hospital following the nr lent, where fourteen stitches wen ikon to lose cuts on Ids face. He I or was brouuht to ids
home in Gno stle.
It was said the aevident occurred when the Mu. y car trashed broadside into the i! ffma auto as it pulled out on llii Nation-il highway from
which is near the line. Hoffman was another young man
omen.
John Langdon-Davies, British lecturer, urged that the United States and England join to give the liest of both their countrie- to the wot id, in an addiess at the DePauw university vespers servici s Sunday evening. He spoke on "Fists Across the Sea.” With citizens of both countries dissatisfied beenu o of depressed condi tions, he advised that they should realize that this is the time for work and thought to avoid complete econo-
mic dis .'ter.
Mr. I«mgdoii Davies ciiaracterized thc attitude of thc Briton as that of amateur, and the American atti
Miami Gai h ( lay-Vigo i oi, accompanied an 1 two youny
!» H Y S I ( \ I, EDI t: VI IDS \ND HEALTH i i VCHERS VI I END
I’ROt.lt \.M SATURDAY
Sixty teachers of health and physi*al education were tegistereii for the
Trial of Herschel Cooper, Jefferson township farmer, on a charge of criminal a.-.-ault, will be held in the Putnam Circuit Court next Monday, March 7, according to a new trial date set by special judge Edgar Rice
of Crawfordsville-
Trial of the case, originally set for last week, was continued when n 1 Prosecutor Marshall D. Abrams filed
an amended affidavit and John If. /’I i l\ 4 I 1/ Janie., attorney for Cooper, asked * * I * t IIjIj
for time to re-arrange his defense. The case of the State of Indiana against William Key of near
TUI RNEY TICKETS
Season tickets for the Greencastle sectional high school basketball tuurnumcnt are now on sale at the office of William Bishop, local principal. Tickets for the Friday and
Saturday games will be $1.51). Single 1 as that of a pro f es .. io nal i n re-.-rs.sion admission will be 40 cents, ^ to politics UIld t| . ad „. Despite I'" 1 Bishop annouocM. these contrasting chan teristics, he
urged tliat tliey join hands, and offer
t i .i. both i, until' to the
progress.
Pointing out tliat distribution of goods was far behind the efficiency of production, he stated tliat a rew social problem w ill appear soon in the reduction of working hours. He stated that within a few years labor will have been, reduced to a two-hour day. and tliat at piesent three hours'
In Middle OI Day
I.. (,
LOSES Fil l KEY HENS IO BOLD THIEVES
S \ IURDAY
Till
Generally f; cn using i loud
WEA I HER
tonight; Tuesday iness; not mu. Ii change
ritomas Doijr Will
conference on these subjects held at 1 Roachdale, charged with violating the Grcenca tie high school all day Satur- I tote gasoline rebate law in a grand lav under tie supervision of the state jury indictment, tentatively set for
March 1, will not be tried at that 0 f time, it was announced Monday.
YI\N DIFS: II I. ONLY IFW l)\Y'v
[department of public instruction. I The conference hire was one
about eleven held in the state
tiiis Prosecutor Abrams said the case had
Speak
• TiX J< ai by the ’at departnu t to lietk III I ill II It, I C* | t,. r uequaii 1 t> .ulier with tin new
requirement for Idgh pdiool graduation. Although one unit of physical education has been required for grad uation at the local higii school for
MXKEIAKY NATIONAL ( kedit
UNION TO MEET W ITU FARM ERS IHUKSDAY EVENING
ITie Putnam County Farm Uu-up-rative Association will hold u meetng in the assembly room of the court ho ise on Thursday evening, March 3 t 7:30 o’clock. All fanners and their families are cordially invited to at-
pend this meeting.
I homag Doig, secretary of the K’redit Union National Extension
not been -et for trial. KEYOIA EK KILLS EDI R V EAR OLD INDIAN VPOLIS BOY INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 29, (UP)— A revolver, kept under a pillow us
el bine i
several years, a number of schools protection against thieves, have only recently complied with the the life of Frank West Jr., 1, when state requirement in this respect. the child accidentally touched the trig
H. E. Moore, state high school in-; ger. The revolver was ow "® d ^ | clock with , mrial
spec tor, was in harge of the meeting Frank West, the boy.* grandfather, and discussed plans and purposes of with whom he was sleeping, the conference. Other talks were
ur iay afternoon
stoic fifteen hens during the absence of the Goss family. It was Putnam county's fir.-L daylight poultry rob-
hei y.
A mail carrier was reputed to have se< n the thieves at work but due to tlie fact that it was daylight did not suspicion they were stealing tlie poul
try.
It was said one of tine thieves remained in tin* ear while the other two went to the poultry yard where they sacked twelve black and tlnee
red hens.
Goss discovered tlie robbery following his return home from Greencastle Satur lay and immediately notifie i
'Sheriff Alva Bryan who investigated.
,, . , , . „ , | The mail carrier reported seeing the r uneral sen ices for Aniasa J. fab- , . , , ... „ . .
..... ... , men at work but .-aid he did not ub er, age <1 years, lifelong residua of ,, . , _ ... . , ’ , . ...... serve the men closely or secure tin: ( loverdale township, who died rather;,. , ,, . ...... . , license number of their car.
suddenly at In home two miles south-1
w “‘ °1 Cloverdale Sunday morning BUOHEVELT IMAUGI RATED
at 10:30 o clo-k, follouin^r an illness]
of a few clay- will b»‘ held from the] at4afII . ^ .it.,, ( .» . , n ♦ , . MAM I A, P. I., Feb. 29 (UP) (ol home ruesda> afternoon at 1:30 o-| . , . ,
tl ... , , Theodore Hooaevelt was inaugurated in the Clovedale; , . ,. .....
| governcr-gentral of the Philippines
Tlnee chicken thieves vi-ited the
faun of L. G. Goss, near Quincy, Sat . ., . .
. , , ■ , i .,i work iku day per capita wool 1 be suf-
about 1 o clock, and [ J ' 1 ticient to produce needed goods. With
KITES FOR t.MAS.V J. FABER TD
HELD i i HOME IT ESDAY
U lERNODN
TEMPERANUE LEADER DIES
LAFAYETTE, lad., Feb. 29, (UP)
i cemetery i
' Mr. Taber had the unusual history ! ^ wit, ' . a rousi,,K rul ' el)tion fr ° m
of having beer bom on the some farm
where lie died
i a large crowd. Roosevelt -ai I
lie would be impur i
Besides the widow In* is survived
tial on the subject of Philippine in-
made by I.loyd Messeismith, physical
, • 1 | , ( ' ’ ■ ' ' ‘ ' DePSU VI ; .1 . 1 >1 '1 , II VIYCNA
Fortner, ptincipal ol Honey Greek —Funeral services were held today two cb ji,| ren) Ml -s. Bessie Newton ^Pemdencc. His administration will township school, and Arthur L. Strum, for James Kirby Risk, 60, state tern- of T( ., ( und |. ab( . r> of cor.cen, itself w ith health work, sound i i • t i ,i:......Ye*'* r»f Tn/14ana .,<.*• <viv/<a u/rzi-IrA*. nml 1 \a - i<’f» GHTiilidate ... . . ! Inu < tin«i im!u.‘iitioii. lu* said.
Kili
bureau will be tlie main speaker of physical education director of Indiana perence worker and twice candidate cloverda i e he evening. Mr. Doig comes from State 'F iclici-' college. Lively dis- for governor on tb* Democrati ticket. Tin: eapolis und is one of the best in- cussions followed each talk. Risk was associated with the U P r med men on farm affairs in the fayette Daily Demoiiat from 1902 to Jiiddle west. He has travelled all . , ...... . . lc '^T* He waii c " unt > chuirrna " a,ul
FORD AN no I Nt E! I KM K. a member ol tlie state Democratic ON NEW V-8 AUTOMOBILE eonimiUet . fron , la o6 to 1910. In 1920
und 1924 he was a cvindiduto for guh-
DETROrr, I'eb. 29, tl F U- 16 i ernatorial nomination. I Ford V-8 automobile will sell at ap-1
tlie I
' er the world and Greencastle und ‘ utnam county farmers are most fortunate in being able to have him come
this meeting.
20 Years Ago
In GREENCASTLE
laws and education, lie said. “J have great respect for tin
; pino people, for their achievements an dfor their chajacter and valor,” , Roosevelt said in his inaugural ad dress. “No part of tlie civilize! globe has seen a- muen progress during tlie
last 30 years as these islands.”
Walter L. McGaughey was appoiuto administrator of tlie $4,500 estate f die late James M. Gardner of Rus- ‘ drill ■, in circuit court Monthly. The iduw, Mollie B. Gardner, relinquish'd her right to serve as udministra-
proximately the same price
Model \ or only stiglitly higher, pre 1D\Y A BANK ROBBED
liminary reports on costs indicate, ac-^ DAVENPORT, lu., Fell. 29 ( Ul 1 )
cording to the company headquarters, i Four men entered the Home Savings j day j„ Indianapolis. Tlie new four will s<'ll for approxi- Bank shortly Before it opened for bus- F< bru:*i y 1912, had mutely $ll)0*le.-s than the V-8. The iness today, bom d and gagged four was also leui» year,
present Moriel A ranges from $448 I officials and a customer, and escaped
to ^GCS, delivered in Detroit. .with $31,000. •
Marriage license. Vernon Houck,
Greencastle, and Lessie Margaret Bl.At KBURN INDICTED Garner, Putnainville. INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 29, (IP) Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Evans spent the William H. Blackbury, former Purdue
student, 20, Oak Park, UL, was indict-
29 4ays 41, it ed by the Marion county grand jury
today
a charge of robbing and
( . C. Gilley went to Motion on b«si- shooting J. Rus-ell Gardner, 50, who ness. was attacked bya hitch-hiker Jan. 28.
SHANGHAI, Feb. 29 (UP)—The Japanese threatened today to blow up all railway lines leading to Shanghai and destroy troon trains unless tlie Chinese cease bringing up reinforcements. Tlie Chinese considered the threat to be an ultimatum. i he C him.*; , w ere given until 2 P. M. T uesday to meet the demands otherwise the Japanese will dispatch fheir aerial bombing planes to wreck the Shanghai Nanking and ShanghaiHangchow lines over which the Chinese may move troops from Nanking and Soockw and from Kiangsi and other southern concentration points. Meanwhile, hope for an early truce dwindled. The Japanese claimed important gains in Chapei and the Chinese raked ruined Kiangwan, turning their own deadly artillery fire on a village they hud defended to the death for a week. The heavy gunfire was resumed as Japanese landed more men near Shanghai to la at buck the city’s defenders—and as reports were received that a truce was being negotiated in which diplomatic negotiations would pusii tlie Chinese back farther than pushed so far b;. Japanese fighting men. Army and navy headquarters of tlie attacking forces issued two communiques claiming important victories. Lieut Gen Kenkiclii Uyeda, Japanese military commander, announced at 3 1’. M. that all Chinese had been driven from the section east of Honekey Creek after Japanese forces had (a;in. i-d*t towchiati and other villng* I" tween Lochiaehai and the Chinese headquarters at Chenchia-
tur.g.
The Chinese pushed back a few yards at a time in Kiangwan, had time to replenish their artillery over Sunday. Then they launched their determined retaliatory attack this morning- There had been no attempts at adv ui' <\s but Japanese reply to the fire soon made the engagement
a first class artillery duel.
\ bomb exploded in tin*, yard of a residence in the French concession occuped by several Chinese leaders, creating considerable excitement but doing no damage. The residence is occupied by Sun F’o, former cover head and sun of the Late Dr Sun Vat-Sen; Eugene Chen, former fori eign minister, and other officials. All | wen* members tf the Cantonese regime which failed to form a stable I government after the fall of the government of Gen. Chiung Kai-Shek. Fighting over Sm day was confined chiefly to in mbardments from both sides with tlie J.ip.ine - attempting to prevent b terferenee with the arrival of reinforcement . Tin Japanese front line was straightened out in the Tazang -is tor with tlie capture of Kiang-
vv an.
Japanese Coun iil-Genoral Murai I protested to United States consul1 general Edwin S. Cunningham aganst ! alleged illegal search by United States marines of th<* offices of the
I - . tU : 1 •• marines
I )|t ’^j| | JC \|\^' recently raided the mill and drove
out Japanese accu-ed of signalling to 'force on th<* Chapei front. American | officials said the raid was justified. Admiral S Nomuka, ranking naval authority, said in a statement that (his marines had recaptured the Jap-
George Kelly. 1 unviile, an In- ( anese cemetery established near diana state f.11 • '’ape, who stole Shanghai and that navy planes had two horses in < '< ir ins getaway | renewed their I iniiing attacks on from the Indifina t '• farm a week ^ (_'ha P ei and Wun-ung. Navy planes ago, found it wa. h.-t r exfiensive ^eoonnotering over the Hangchow to steal horses atoinoliiles, when district answered Chinese rifle fire Judge Hutchisun tin* (Taj circuit - with a hail of aerial bombs and ma-
eoutt sentenced iiitn to 20 years in ehine gun bullets,
prison Saturday. | The Admiral said Japanese naval Kelly first ole a "r e from a casualties up to today were 12 killed
farmer on a CTovcidale rural route an d 625 wounded,
i hirers and latei »l>. dotieil it in Bra Japanese headquarters announced zil where lie stole a horse from Jacob, Gl ut only one regiment of the 11th Fell, a farmer living ei't of Harmony. I division had arrived. The entire It was while Dying to -ell till' second i strength of tlie. division, approximatehqfse iri Tei n* tl te I* li i.y that he ( y in,000 men, w. expect- d soon to was apprehended. reinforce the 9th division cuinmand-
Judge Hutchison revived an old w ( by Gen. Kenkich UVcda.
statute wliicli pr \ i led 2(1 years in Japanese marines at Chapei, just prison for hor- ■ stealing, in sentenc- , u tsde the International settlement, ing Kelly. The penalty for escaping advanced after aerial and artillery from the penal farm i- only one to bombardment. They occupied the five years but K lly made a mistake Sumin institute and e tablished headwhen he stole horses in making his quarters under a hail of Chinese bul-
getaway. * | lets-
the reduction of working hours .sociologies must find cultural enterprises which < itizens may pursue in their
idle hours, he said.
The speaker was introduced by Wilbur Osteriing who substituted tor John Millett, president of the talent union, who is ill. The invocation was given by Churl"- Geile. Miss Margaiet Dennis of the mu ic school faculty sang, accompanied by Prof. Van ! Denman Thompson at the organ.
HOUSE Til I EE (,ETS \ TERM
OLD MAI i n; KI N IN KD lu PUN 1SH PENAL » NUM KS( APE
FOK I HEFT
o
