The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 June 1932 — Page 1

4.+ + + + ** + + the v^eather + 4. jhundei#torm»; Little Change + 4.4. + + + + + +

yOLUML FORTY

PLAN WELCOME

FOR CHICAGO DPU ALUMNI

THE DAILY BANNER "IT WAVES FOR ALL"

* * * ALL THE HC UNITED PREJ + * *

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1932.

NO. 196

ARNOLD LEAVES HOSPITAL

INDIANAPOLIS, June 1, (UP)Billy Arnold, Chicago , who was injured in a crash during the 500-mile auto race Memorial day, was discharged from the City hospital last

: ivening. Spider Matl-.rk, Los An SPECIAL TRAIN DUE IN GREEN- R''les, hi. mech.i ai ^ improved,|

TAX MEASURE IS PASSED BY U. S. SENATE

( \SILE ON SATURDAY MORNING

COMMITTEES ARE SELECTED

Arrangements Now Underway Make Visitors’ Stay In This

City Most Pleasant

but remained in the ho pjtal. B nny Panm f eld Indianapolis, an I Hamid Gray, ('Iceland, injured in qualifying acrii nt-, remained in

a serLiij conditi n. BOY SCOl I NO I ICE

VOTE OF 72 TO II FOLLOWS PERSONAL PLEA OF PRES. HOOVER EXCITING SESSION IS HELD

Troop 43 will have an out door meeting this evening at Handy’s,

A meeting of Groencastle men was south of town. In the . i. iit of adverse

he i this morning to make plans to t weath ' r * the meelin K " 'I* b e held at r]ras from prPSSi ’ pub i^ it ’ n d p rpsi

wrl ame the Longien Special, over ^ l,t> Ui ’ ua * place.

Bill Expected To Go To White House For Hoover’s Signature Within

Next Few Days

WASHINGTON, June 1, (UP)—

HALF MILIION SEE DERBY EPSOM DOWNS, England, June 1, (UP)—April tlv I ifth upset all ex pectations by winning the 153rd re newal of the derby today before a vast throng of half a million which had come to sc tlv i x|ie:ted triumph of Orwell, the favorite. Dastur was so nd and Miracle third. Royal Daiige: finished fourth and Firdaussi fifth. Orwell was never in the lead and could not get up.

OX NAM GR

4 i

\ I It »N SPEAKER

dent jammed a $1, 116,000,000 tax bill

the Monon here Saturday morning. through the senate today in culmina-1

■) train will carry the ( hicago THE WFATHER D on of a 13'j hour session of excite- ^

alumni to the Del’auw commencement Scattered thunder.stoi n tonight and lnt ‘ nt an 1 surprise,

rvre. ws, and will he known as the .Thursday; little change m t, mpera

Icngden Special. Nearly 100 alumni ; t U (. e>

from Chicago are expected to come '

to Greencaatle on the sirecial train,

|)r. G. Bromley Oxnam, president of DeP.iuw univer.aty, delivered the comnur.eement addiess to a class of 159 graduates in ‘he gymnasium of

MUCH ACTIYin ON DPUCAMPIS THIS WEEKEND

ANNUAL U N IV ERSI I V CuM-

MENCEMENT FE \ IT'REs MARK CLOSE OF SCHOOL V E\K

ALUMNI DAY S A T C R D \ ^ Baccalaureate Sermon Sunday Sen-

iors to Receive Diplomas At

Monday's Exercises

then ccmmis.-ions as second lieuten- ; ant ■ 'ii the officers reserve corps. The 1 • i vice will bo held about the flag-' P !o in thi campus and the oath will be administered by Roy O. West, president of the board of trustees. This i i heduled 'or 4:30 Saturday)

afternoon.

In the evening a ban I c ncert by tlv u: ivi : ity ban i will begin at 7 o’clock The campus will be lighted Ity bringing light- from tree to tree. The hand will plav until the president’s reception winch will be held in Rector hall this year. Dr. and Mrs. Oxnam will receive all friends of the university in an informal reception at 'a: time. It is uls) the hour for the

— sc " d performance of the senior Saturday will be a gala day on the class play. Following these two

ERNEST STONER COMPLETES :!0 YEARS SERVICE

BEGAN WORK IN LOCAL POSTon ICE JUNE i. 1M2 UNDER DUN BAR

SERVED UNDER Ti POSTMASTERS Became Assistant Postmaster Here In 1917. Has Wide Acquaintance Over State.

Ernest Stoner, assistant postmaster

DePauw university campu- as itumni ovi-its, < 1' scs will continue the.r re- of thp Grwsncastle p„,tofifce, quietly

celebrated the end of 30 years of ser-

v irh is due to arrive here at /nine o'clock. It will he the first time in the his-' tmy of DePauw university that a I special train has been run to Greeni a tie, carrying a group to any commioicoment. Phil Maxwell, formerly of this city, but now living in Chicago, is in charge of plans for the ti dn and has been instrumental in seeing that it will come. x The part the Greencastle people will

LESLIE CALLS LEGISIVT0RS FOR Jl LX 7TH

Secretary of Treasury Mills told the United Press that sum would bal-, ance the national budget to all prac-

tical purposes.

A.- the unprecedented peace-time burden was adopted, the senate appropriations committee reported to the senate a $238,000,000 economy program to aid the budget balancing. The senate was scheduled to begin consideration of this controversial and

the Pari., Ill, hit i scho I Tuesday « d former Btudent8 ,;ik " 1 ' ' ' " on The cam P U8 * the campus for their annual Alumni the various fratern.ty and sorority : yice at that government institution

day program. Graduates in Chicago l.ou.-es. I Tuesday have chartered a spi-cial train ovei Sund iy i baccalaureate with Presithe Monon railroad to brirg their dent Oxnam delivering the baccalaI delegation to the campus. The list ureate sermon. Rector scholar alumni | of notables on thi< train will include will held their annual dinner-meeting ! the Hon. Roy O. West, president of in Long ien hall Sunday at noon, the board of trustees at DePauw; ' ommencement exorcises on Monday Mrs. Edward Rector, widow of IV and the conferring of degrees will

i Pauw’s greatest benefactor; two ) clove the year.

TRlSTEES TO FAVOR CHANGE IN TENURE LAW

United States judges, the Hon. Jame.BEI.IEVE LAM DOES NOT FILL H. Wilkei.-on of the district in

PURPOSE FOR WHICH II M AS INTENDED

GOVERNOR OE( IDI S n\ SPKt lAI ess, ‘ nt ’ al m, ' asure at ^ P- nl -

Chicago, Del’auw’s commencenie t speaker, and the Hon. Will. M. Sparks 'judge of the U. S. circuit court f an peals; M'ilbur Helm, well known Chi-

Knirw Hunt lor Hansom Monoy

SESSION OF INDIANA

LEGISLATl RE

INDIANAPOLIS, lune 1, (UPl-

Retention of the township unit and. , , ,, ,,

1 cago broker; Phil Maxwell, president

teacher| „

play in the arrival here, is to welcome j (j ove rnor Harry G Leslie today called visitors, see that they get tran.'- a sp,., ,,,1 session o ' 1 " legi lature to

The tax bill passed the senate at

12:25 a. m., almost 12 hours to the repeal or amendment of the minute after President Hoover broke tenure law .'ere favored by the Sixth his own practice to appear in person District Township I rustees As Sofia before the senate with a plea for Hon, which met 'n the Greencastle

speed In a national emergency. Methodist church luesday to discuss , , , vote of 72 to ,1 the senate various problems and hear addresses has planned to decorate t .e c.ty and

of the Chicago dumni group, and Louis S. Binkley, chairman of the

alumni council.

The local Chamber of Commerce

BANKS \RK \GAIN URGED TO S( tN SERI \L Nl MBERS ON MONEY

The government is still urging a

portation from the Monon to the cam- , convene July 7 to consider the tax sit- J " f ^ ^"“th bv Edgar D. Bush, lieutenant gover- 1 wil1 '' pnd :l delegation of automobiles ,>,■ watch for th«' ransom money nnn nYiiUo thoir visif nppo u i» pik uiitf u*-' 1 8 111civriiv.». ...I t. l,,, . »i . i al i • .11 u

pus and make their visit here a pleas-

ant one.

nation.

representatives of the house.

meet the special train which i

Automobiles will

transport all from the station and it , tea df as tly refused to call a special 1/ hoped that close to 40 will go from sion w j t | U) ut a pred-termined tax relief In 15 days the senate disposed of | satisfactory and economical form of

that was paid in the Lindbergh case. It is believed that the discovery of any of th' - note might have a direct

A few nor, and J. W. Bosse, of the state | ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

“ SS'SBSS sx&r ,h " here to Crawfordsville early in the p rogrami ft wln. li members of both j the bill despite hitter, non-partisian ! irovemment rather than centering the ' t( ',M.d^rn ' hldl morning to meet the train and escort bra , K .|, es pledged themselves in an dispute. Tariff battles swept over it. duties of the township trustee m ■ ‘ rh js ;lw:tv

agreement But the coal, oil, lumber and copper i some county office. 1 tie present cn- ,

j echedules remained in the bill. Taxed ure law is very unsatisfactory, the J hel(l - The Putna.n >

The governor likewise insisted that industries organized against it, but trustees indicated, in favoring a Krotip will act as .to- "i 'e

the legislators should pledge themselves t() no . |Va j] There was clamorous con- change or repeal of this statute. Un- , » ls -

not to consider anything other than the G j ( ,j 0 f „pj n j on ani i countless words der the law teachers are entitled to | The board of trustees of the uni

pre-arranged program.

Mr. Stoner began as a clerk under Postmaster John G. Dunbar and threw the first mail t" cit> carriers when that branch >f the mail service

was inaugurated here in 1902.

He served consecutively under Postmasters Dunbar, A. (). Lockridge, \V. B. Ve.-tal, W. L. Denman and E. R. Bartley, becoming a istant post-

master in October, 1917.

Clarence Hollick, pre-ent clerk, was the only employe if the local postoffice who was associated with Mr. Stoner when he began his service. Mr. Stoner said his annual pay thirty years ago was $400, considered ex-

cellent wages at th d time.

Receipts of the Greencastle postoffice have jumped from $15,000 to $40,000 annually in the pa-t 30 years. It moved to it present location July

1. 1912.

them back to Greencastle.

Among the committees named Wednesday morning to aid in welcoming the visitors Saturday were the fol

lowing:

Decorating—Flank Cannon. R. P. Mullins, Sam Hanna and Jake Hitt. Mclcoming Alumni—Judge James P. Hag+rc .. • Automobiles—Sinipsqn Stoner, O. W. Hollowed, E. B. Lynch, H. A. F • rrill, D. O. Moffett. Crawfordsville Trip—Charles Mc-

Gaughey,

Marshall of Day—Capt. B. B. McMahon, assisted by O. O. Dobbs. Mayor Denman issued the follow-

ing proclamation:

I heteliy set apart Saturday, June

4. 1932,

l 1 v. in Greenca tie, Indiana. “I especially urge that all our citi

zens join in making it a pleasant and ,1,,

rn'iuorable day, :hat our business h uses he decorated and that our

tiiets and homes along the line of

march from the Monon .-tation to the

uttered in debate. Treasury estimates of reienue were scrapped by the sec

rotary himself

lifetime contract after teaching in ver ity have def-rred their annua! ip school five years. This causes meeting until the afterno ii so t it trustees to discharge good teachers !»’ ^ they ’.'in join the fi tivitic of

Local hank have received the fol 1 lowing letter from the Treasury De-

partment at Washington.

“Under date of April, ti. 1932. you were furnished a list of -erial num hers >>f <a rtain I nited States notes, I nited Stsites gold certificates and Federal l!< -erve notes, with the request that you promptly notify the Trea ury !>' partment if any of the

hould he presented to

Rotary Inspruts Pumping Plant

LUNCHEON CLUB \ PJOURNED TO WATER WORKS PI. \NT FOLLOWING LUNCHEON

,si | re'arv mmseii ^ i • i 'i nnuio tie | n -enlp<i c

Drl ;II1U . I’Uhtrr III In a -mpri.-" Hpjmarance hef-.,'" fe fhve the five *««cod i up rather .piornlmr^ ig 44 on open meeting "1 ^ ^ ......r, Ul . „ ,|

^ • 1 1 /• ct.. . . .v* U,.... .. timo iz-xli In 1 iio m t n i 11«o • will lin hflfl

senate finance committee just before than givethenfa life-time job. In

the executive committee will be held

('in nrtWkr'v Rapp yeaterday’s seasion began,’Secretary many inetanc. this works a hardship during the morning hour*. If m e lyUVlIIlUl & ltai/1 Mj ,| g 1 tha . MW ..our...a of on both the trulh and th< tea her. ear) a night < wi

revenue had to he found to balance A resolution adopted by the trus- be held to finish all business, the budget. Income taxes, gasoline,! tees was to the effect that they will The senior play tart ff the - om

and electricity for power and light study the problems of education and were selected. They were given a taxation and try to contribute a prop1267,000.00 additional burden. !solution through the 1 ext legisla-

Mills also advocated the manufac- ture.

ARTHl'R H. SAPP OF HUNTING TON ANNDUNI ES CANDI-

DA! Y TUESDAY.

The Rotary Club members were guests of Orville Stewart, superinyoitr tendent of the Gt" rca.-tle Water Co.,

notes pt (he |4c(»l UiN?h of tlxc *'ty WVd-

repre.ent the ran.-om paid in the nesday following the club luncheon-up

Lindbergh case. ! town.

“It is believed that the discovery of The plant was gone over and the an of these notes may have an im- • three nig pumps, throwing 40 gallons imrtant Irearing on the apprenaion of | to the stroke and working with a the kidnapers of the Lindbergh child.] maximum capacity of 22 strokes to It 1 therefore requested that renewed the minute each, were explained by

the Little theater. The first event on vigilance lie exercised in watching Mr. Stewart. It was the first time the Saturday program is the annual f,„ t h. presentation of any of the cur- many ha ,| pvpr | )epn jn , hp p | ant anf t

meneement festivities proper with it initial performance FTiday night in

Arthur H Sapp, Huntington attor tui . e| . s , 8a i eg t . ix al1 ^ his personal Lieutenant Governor Bush in his meeting of the alumni council which ,<m y appearing on the li.-t Your fur- t | 1P trip wa3 a genu j ne trpflt t „ thP ALmn7-Lo"igden'*Special ney and member of the state highway p i Pa l)P fore the senate President Hoo- talk recommended economy in gov set for 9 o’clock. The annual no . t- ther cooperation will be greaUy ap- ,.i ub mPlnt ^ rs . Mayor W. L Denman commission,, formally announced hi- vpr saj(1 hp wou | d act . ppt ?urh a tax emment, an income tax system based i n g of the alumni association will fol- , reciated. and if any of these notes was a g||p t and went t() thp p , ant

candidacy for the Rf publican ] rPr0Urse . , Bnl th( . sPnatp finance comation for Governor m a statement is- | mittee and thp spnatp voted that pro

ject down, the latter by 53 to 27.

Mr. Sapps -t dement is as follows. Senators remarked early today as “The press of thu state of Indiana t|)ev )pft thp chanthpr that Mr. Hooand many of my friends have been vf r |md aKpi jn l)lP pagt fpw wppks .

University grounds be decorated for teHing the people that I «.« a potem ] ^ wa8 wondprjng comment that th, ncc8 : i0 n tlal <' an, l | ^ a,r for Governor. • l ' t ‘ 1 f lar e-back of congressional critl-

r ° ., , „ .... . it is fair to the delegates to the state ' The Alumni Special is in charge convendon . |m friends an d other.- in- ' Philip Maxwell, a Greencastle terpste(j t „ )tate mv position. I wish * 8 ^' >y and is being brought here in hon- to s . dy tha , mv name wjU be presented

of our beloved fellow townsman t( , the convention, which makes me a ' 0 " v ' ^ “ -nd educatsr. Dr. Henry B. Longden. ... t .. voice of Mr. Hoover ceased speaking

cism had met the President's mes-

The fact is that it was not mentioned in the senate after the tired

the ability "f the people to pay, a b.w this at 9:30 with the alumni hould be detected by your bank you wjth tbe ( .| u h

new constitution, end various other chapel at 10 o’clock. Under the five will plea e tike note of the source new legislation dealing with taxation. \ear plan of class reunions, all cla -e from whim received and immediately Mr. Bosse also gave a splendid talk ending in “2” or “7” will have their rot ty tin office,

at the morning session discussing reunions with the classes and 1931 various matter* of interest to the un d 1929 holding with one and th’ee trustees. year reunion The class of 1882 1 Approximately 150 attended the making special plu' - for then te district meeting here Tuesday. The un j 0 n as it wil mark their fiftieth next meeting in October will be held anivt rsary of graduation. The uni

at Rockville.

Knilmkv Idil hmuilr liViiched

candidate. ,

"Phil has worked long and hard to | Mr Sapp ' political career started an,, ■ ke t e ‘Alumni Longden Special a j n i;)j4 wT<' he was elected prosecuuc esj; Dr. Longden, and the Uni- t0 , of HuntM)gt ,, M count y. He was re-

’ rsity will appreciate our efforts in elected in 19U md 1918. He was born have sympathy t 'dav or a man

1" Iping to make it a success, besides on a f arni lt Kaverna, O.. Jan. 13.

' will be the ‘Kick-Off for the I)e- jgg3 an ,| w.i graduated from Ohio j marks of c ue.

P iuw commercement exercises for Wesleyan uiineisity in 1907 and '932. : taught sch"d for four years- As a “Done at Greencastle. Indiana, this teacher he Is 1 ame a resident of Hunttirst day of June, 1932. ington in 1909 and that year married

“William L. Denman, Mayor.”^ i Miss Tingling of Huntington. In 1912 prat j nn Monday.

| he was graduated from the Indiana

he hurried from the chamber. Senators who hav > freely criticized Mr. Hoover's politics appeared to have sympathy today for a r whose job is lining his face with

HOSPH \L NOTES

David Houck underwent a tonsil op-

Pitchiord Store Opens Wednesday LOt vi STORE OPENS MEDNESDAY IN NF.M LOCATION ON E. M ASH INGTON ST.

versify at this tinm plans to present silver medals to each menrfbei of tin ( la s that returns to the campus fori comnit ncement. It plan-el t maki this a permanent award for every class on its fiftieth anniversary. Thiir the first year fo these medal- and

POSTPONE SENTFNtING INDIANAPOLIS, June 1, (UP) —

Sente-cing of Mayor Go rge R Dale. 1 of Muncie and nin’ co-defendants in a federal liquor con-piracy ra was po-tponed until F'n lay to allow counsel ’note time to prepare motions for

] a new trial.

Sente-res were to have berli meted

Vlt IIM < H VRt.ED WITH DYNA- today by Judge Robert C. Baltzell. M111M> STORE NEAR PRINCE- Two of the defendants, William ION, KY., UFT'ENILY Parkhurst, night. | olii e captain, and FitJ Kuhack, allezed bootlegger, PRIM F-T0N, K“., June 1, (UP)— WPr '’ f ’xp p it p 'l to make no attempt to Six auto mobiles, loaded with masked ( obtain trials. Parkhurst resign-

ed from the polic ■ force soon after

one. im- win inciuo. | fof)a y inij w . 1 j tpr Merr j,. ki 40f a pr i 8 . j he was found guiltv. and said he B. Town, DePauw s OI1 'y | rpniovpH from hi. cell, car ' woul ' 1 “ takp hl mP<licinp ’

all alumni graduating prior to 1882 roared up to tbp jail hprp early w ill receive < ne. I hit w ill im udi ... , .. . ...

Dr, Salem

living representative of Hie rlas- of 1-66 \ ho holds the Goodwin memorial cane as the oldest graduate. These medals will )>e presented b;, Dr.

Valiev Flooded

I law school and has practiced law in from th(i ho8 p jt3l Mrnday morning.

Huntington since.

n * i ik 1 1 ‘’ ••P “ • ' 1 Rv Levee Rreak .. "m h« i» •

member of th< general men’s council

of the Methodi t church and is presiM ATER FROM COLORADO RIVER den! of tin l aymen’s A ociation of

TAKES TOLL IN PALO | the church'

ference. H also is a trustee of Evans-

ville college.

Xin,. ., u s ago he served as district

T’e Quality Shop, operated by J.

H. Pit hford for thirteen years, open- Henry B. Longden, who was gradual

Mrs. Marie iBcswell was released pd Wednesday morning in its new lo P d with the cla : of 188! and ha been ( ( ^

cation, at 18 east Washington street. 1 or the faculty for fifty-one ' eais.

rif I ow n 1 < uni v road and hanged

I to a tree.

Merri k was held here on a charge nf dv amiting a general store owned by J. M. Pool, it Hopson, nine miles

VERDE VALLEY

Mrs. Grace Pruitt entered for treat- , The store’s new home has been com- Haney B. Ha'tsoi h of Indiana ment Monday. pletely revamped during the past polis, will preside it the alumni hap Mr . Roy Dugan, Cloverdale, R. R. nlon th ard with the new interior deco P | as president of the alumni n cia1, was released Tuesday. rations, makes one of the best of its tion. Report of the erietary, Ru

kind lit Hi' ' 'H cl! A

MR . THEN \ BYRD DIES The rPt'-tnn'’ 1 the store was kept t h e tre.isurer, H. E. Sutherlin, IndiA ,. , \ SUNDAY busy during the day welcoming cus ■, nal ,..lis. will he made at th u" '

tomers, each of whom was given a j ng u f t| 1P alumni eouncil. Cla retoken of the appreciation ur j on; , j|| not begin until the ift'r

would “take hi-

Othei defendants are Frank Massy, polio* chief; Fred Ellimember of the hoard rf ssfet\; Kenneth H'rstman and Harry Nels n, detectives; Raymond Powell and Dan Davis, pa-

The dynamiting occurred trolmen. and Erne-’ Flatters, alleged

February 2. ] bootlegger.

The lynching -c urred shortly after, midnight. Cult 1 Jones, jailer, was bound. The lin k'd band, working

I swiftly, tork Jones' keys, unlocked, Hogs 6,003: holdovrrs 73; market

M. rrick' "II 1 ragged him into ") t higher;

13.40-13.4

The (ommotion ; ii the jail corridors ; 250 Ihi. S3.30 .>■>; 1 3tm lbs $.1.20wa biief and th' sleeping t-wn was 13-25; 300 lb up •3-$3.15; 130-160

INDIAN tPOLIS 1 IVUSLUCK

] Nine • « ago he served as oisimc Mrs T hena Martin B’rd, wife of " sp -- > —

BLYTHE, Calif.. June 1, <UP)- rM ^ Rotary clubs of Ind- Jamp , BvrH( dje ,, at ,0:15 o’clock by Mr. P.tchford and Mis. Pitchford , n0 on. A toe®’ll tang over the Palo Verde . , , i.io? waa nreaident of i„v,. i,„, i, ,„e. „ half mile and those as ociated with him in con- tents

1 ulley today in th” shrill automobile

iana at.d in 1927 was president

- - 1 Rotary Int* 1" dional. souin oi L,auugn, mu . — Lumpet of W. A. Post who rode to 1 Mr Sap| , , jg a member of the of tpn dayg i n fi rm ities of age caused

Sunday right at her home, a half mile

south of Ladoga, following an illness dap t'"K the bus,ness.

death.

Mrs. Byrd was horn Nov. 30, 1858, near New Maysville, the daughter of John and Jane Martin. She was mar-

warn hi* fellow ranchers the Colo- p hj p e | ta jheta Fraternity, rado river levee had crumbled. , ___

UPAIRPENmCOMI^

here and threatened 1 000 families m tatp road 43 80Uth was' ried to James Byrd Nov. 11. 1901 and the southern end nt the valley. T . d Wednesday while since her marriage she had lived in or RotiMd by tte Tmacter’a Atom. • ■ pcn.yl near I^doga- She waa a mwaber of "eary atm> of 500 persons straggled i workmen w P- ,he Ladoga Methodist church.

Besides the husband the survivors

20 Years Ago IN GREENCASTLE

pjtihed m the campus. In case of in clement weather, la-s rooms in old F 1st " liege w ill be used for these re

unions.

More than 500 reservation* are made each ' eal fov t hp alumni luncheon wh:' h is serve I in Bowman gym

.... — e .. | rnH; : n „ on Blooming the Ladoga Method; t

into this town from isolated farms ] vanta railr >d iros-ing k ,

Arthur Real has purchased a Path

finder roadster.

.. . . -„iJ the tricks Besides the husband me survivors Mrs. Kenneth Peck* was hostess to year. 'I' w " ! ’' ''

and rattthes. Three lives were lost , ton street, " ! ' s ^ one 8 i 8teri Mrs. Susan Collins, of the Modern Priscilla Cub. groups so th y can vi-it and rerwm in flood watery across the Arizona were beiny l' 1 '" rough Seymour; four nephews and four DePauw lo t to Wabash by a 4 to 2 thp usual undergraduate exyeii' line but little fear was felt here for . in order to -moo' 1 mi 11 i a score. ‘ Babe” Conklin was the um- which they recall. Hunan life. crossing It was expected the repams hcl(J at 2:30 O . clo:|t pirp . A special military formation has Though 100 men struggled to place would be ma, e w’ un a fTuesday afternoon at the Byrd home, Miss Florence Crawford of Terre been planned f. r ' m ah,n ;'’' ^ ' wndbag* about the break in the levee (the detour lf _ hv the Rev Stanley Hall officiat- Haute is visiting relatives hfffe R. <• ' ( c mman 'er. ' a ■

nnoag* aoout me nrean in wie Waahinwton street bv with the Rev. Stanley nan omcmi- name i» *1-0.neie. o •

; z b “ k 1 B ” n " wv L : d ; s ‘ r \ !tOTe , 2%

not irnnwd 1 h wa found l,,< - ^3 3.» $3 16; '• lb* dr,.25;

lor their group which will be mj|eg daybreak Cattle 1.200; calves 700 Dapend-

’ able acti-n on all dnsses; beef steers

and cows ste “ly; heifers strong to

ON, l ONE HO LOON LEF L higher; bulk steers $3.50 $6.85; severIN N NIP'S NL AIR RAL E a | heifers around 15.50 and less; some

held up to $5.75; ; .vs f3-$4; strong

CALGARY. All" ti, June 1, (UP) cutters |2.50-$3.75; low cutters $1.50VT' tory air. nL 1 sured, the United $2.50; xealcr;; 59' lower. $5.50 down,

iiasium. tli" b'ng tables being Liid on States army lullon No. 2 was he- Sheep 1,400, lambs strong to highil.e basketball floor. No program Bevel to be pili g up additional mile- Pr ; bu | k good a :l choice $6.50-$7.00; ha- b i n planned fo’ the luncheen this age today, the only entry in the na- some *wes anl wethers $7.50; bucks

tional balloon 1 ice till in the air. ou t at II discount; throw-outs $4.00; Army No. J' nearest rival, the choke dippers held around $5.50. Goodyear VII, was known to be down on the Willard Onith farm, one mile The case of the tale of Indiana on southwest of Tyva i. Sask. the relation of M’ A. Cooper, county The last report of Army No. 2 came auditor, against Eliias FSmore and from farmers rear Woodrow and Cull others, to foreclose a school fund Lake, Sask., who reported having mortgage, has been dismissed in th®

ate work.

to 43 over

In this formation seniors

iji'uncej .'curs* wjll receive | been in conrmuiucstion with her

Putnam circuit court.