The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 November 1933 — Page 1

,1 + + * •4- ♦ ♦ 1HB WRA^HW* . * wARMRBi R ajn or snuw7 * \ + * * * * * • •*

THE DAILY BANNER “IT WAVES FOR ALL.’

JME FORTY-ONE

GREENCASTLt, INDIANA. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9. 1933..

+ + + * + + + * + ALI, IBE BOMifNBiVS ♦ + UNITED > SEKVICB + + + +t‘ > ’ + +4

NO. 334

EATH TAKES MRS. LEVAN AT PORTER HOME

lECEASED WAS AUNT OF LAfWK1TK I- PORTEK. PASSeD AWAY WEDNESDAY.

AT SO UTlt BEND

For Mail}

rs. Mary Porter LeVan

Y f ar> Was Prominent In ( har-

ily And Relief Work

j| r . Mary Porter LeVan, widow of ^Fayette LeVan of South Bend, Inlina ' died at the home of her f p h P», UFayette L. Porter and i r . Porter, in Northwood, Wedneshv evenintr at (>:dB oVIock, following | oW deeRne, due to her advanced

NEGOTIATION PROGRESS

WASHINGTON, Nov. 9, (UP) — Soviet-American negotiations en rdcofniition were understood today to be proceeding' rapidly toward successful conclusion • As a result of flfph.matit spadework done yesterday b\ President Roosevelt, Secretaiy of Slate Hull ajid Foreign Cciinmi.-^ar Maxim Litvinov, informed sources here would" not he surprised if United States Recognition of the Soviet Union is announced tonight ni tomorrow. Litvinov had an engagement with Hull at 11 a. m. today t,, continue discussion of the teehni al barriers to recognition.

COMEDY IS . PRESENTED . BY PHI DELTS

life in radio station depicted ID CAST OF LOCAL taleAt

INDIAN tPOLIs LIVESTOCK j HAUTE Hogs IjJOO; holdoveis ISa; mostly W cents lower; bulk lt>(l to 325 lbs., | «4.15>tu $4.20, top s i.25 ; 323 lbs. up, ^4.0.3 to 44.10; 14u to 1H0 lbs., $;i.85 j lo *4.00; 120 to 140 lbs., T! 30 to *3.6,3 light pigs'$3.35; packing sows, $3.23 I t _____ . * 10 * :i - 8r ’- , M EM HERS OF ESCAPED CONVICT Cattle L0O0: calv. s 600; Tittle in- . , lXN(; ELUDE VIGO CtIUNTY terest in beet* st-ei , loud light- OFFICERS weights hel<l $5.30; others mostly |

POLICE HUNT RANK BANDITS

ROW \N(E INTERUUPTED

OSGOOD. Lnd., Nov. <) (UP)—State ; jMjlice last ■night interrupted the ro maiM-c of Evelyn Hutherlin, U5 year old Indianapolis TtA-hnical high sch&id girl, and Monroe hox, Osgood . •!

The girl was arrested on a warrant i. ^ ’ # [•signed by her father. Fred Sutherlin, | KKL) ( KO>s K \|(o|.| mV.N I DRIVE

MEMBERSHIP " DRl\t OPENS ON SATURDAY

PROVES HIGHLY

A MUSING

Leater Blue and Lenta Mullins Haw Leading Roles in Show to be Repeated Tonight

common and menum guides; she I stisk liuh- changi I; ome heifers $4.23 to S6.60; common down to $2.5Cl cows ('2.25 to $3.2 • Jow cutters and .cotter- $].0t) to $2i | 0; vealers trong, | $7.no down.

CH \KI.ES M AKI.EY IDENTIFIED

\\on Wan Hired To l)ri>e Three Men To Plainfield \nd On 'To Terre Haute

The vital point of the conversations was to be readied later in the day at the Whit" House when Litvinov meets Mr. Roosevelt again. State department officials hoped that the discussions of technical detail, would lie sufficiently achance j by that time to "liable the I Wo principal • negotiators to decide definitely ' n terms of rec-

ognition.

KENTUCKY IS :{*TH ST \TE TO VOTE REPEAL

Mrs. LeVan had made her home ith Mr. and Mrs. Porter for many ;ar ., and during his youth, Mr. Porr niaule his home w ith his aunt from he ag" "f three years. The funeral services will be held at | uth Bend Friday afternoon, at 2:30 j ’clock from the Russell Chapel, with Charles T. Raillie, pastor of First Presbyterian church, in urge. Burial will be in the South -nil cemetery. The funeral party leave here Friday morning at

'jght o'clock.

‘ Mr LeVan was born in Pennsylnia at Tobyhanna, December 27, “4S. She was the second of nine ildren Irom to Samuel Porter and ai> Barne Porter. She was united L marriage to LaFayette LeVan on ■ay 20, 1X7,7, the service being held

|i the Presbyterian church in "Tite J approval given by

r-

Liquor Control Becomes Issue^S'

A cast of local talent presented a | community jiihilee entitled “The World's All Right,’’ before a large 1 audience in thu high school auditor- i ium Wednesday e vening. The highly | amusing production will Tie repeated again tonight under the auspices of | the Phi Delta Kappa fraternity.

; Dire te.d by Mi- Hertha Germaine, j "FIS M\fNTAIN FAKNLY >1 >- the home talent proeluetion kept the Si \INF.D MAJOBITi \> YOiES

, audien c in a gale of laughter much titE COl N TED ; of the time but had its serious mo- 1

merits when a vested choir sang WASHINGTON, • !), (UPI — Holy. Holy,” and a group do- President Roosevelt la gan considera- ' opelan I

the “Stars and Stripes,” a pa- | lion of the liquor ! "dem today in a

and returned to Indianapolis

Miss STitherlin disup|>eaied fr m her hojne Oct. 27. She caime to Osgood and suet Fox, a former neighbor. They tried to obtain a marriage license at Versailles but were refused because of their youth. From‘Versailles they went to I.awrencaburg, Ky., where thi'y’ were .-aid to have been married. | The couple returned to the home of the gro m’s parents where thes were arrested. The Sutherlins moved to

Indianapolis from here.

Wil l, wl VKI MtMISTK E

DAY

MRS. DONMiV IK CHAIRMAN O PulnaHi ( aunty Rereiied More lhau $8,000 Last Year For $200 Contribution •

The annual membership drive of the American Red Cuss.will begin in •) Putilam county, Saturday, Nov. 11,

TERRE HAUTE, Nov. 9.—Three men, all members of the, band that ha> preyed on Indiana banks and police stations since ten men escaped frotn the Indiana state prison at Michigan City on Sept. 20, were hunted here last night b> state (Rilice anil Teire Haute officers One of the men 1 was reported identified as Charles Makley and the other two were be-

lieve I to have been Edward Shouse i (ties in times ami Harry Copeland. Makley and FAIL T. I IO M\3 IMI Os E VNT ( known. But sotin pe >ple are not ■" .■si"u.. an escaped convicts and ' RKt.l I \lloN IH VI HT, : W pj| jnt, m>od as to the service the is a parole violator. DK( IDES I PON Cross has been icndering during The. three are reported to have the recent years of depression. I’ood

Excise Direelor Has Li(|uor Sali‘ Power

ami ’will continue until I h'iuk-gi' mg The Ameriean R«"l Cross needs no introducti n to 11 "‘ jieople of Putn im

county. It

of disaster are well

J triotic number conference tvith i vperts from five | brought here in a hir.-d car from , INDIAN APOLIS. Nov 9 -Cover-

^

FEDERAL OFFK IAI.S CONSIDER

M8ULTO OP PROHIBmpN ; , dlfficultie of " th# statl ■, jwn ,, tire situatio| the White House re-

REPEAL jin putting it on a paying’basis, hail j vea * e ^-

• -—-— for its leading characters, Jimmy 1 _ » WASHINGTON, Nov. 9.—Sighting | Waddell, announcer and ownier, play- j **-‘TE, K Nnv. ti (l I )

ed by Uster Blue; Jane Rogers, his Count of Kentuck ballots from secretary and sweetheart, played by i Tu<>s,,i *>' s «'lw' tiu n today showed an

l.eota Mullins: and Joe, the office boy and would-be radio entertainer, portrayed hv Elmo Sweet. Judge Wil- ! bur S. Do liner played the pait of a

laveu. Pa. Mr. LeVan was super fctendent for the Cox and Brothers Boa I Company ami the family r«lainrd in the Pih-oiio region of Penn■flvama until 1883, when Mr. LeVan xeptrd the -uperintendency of the liver Chilled Plow Company plant | South Bend and they came to InLi i t" .mke their future home, Mr.

the certainty of pr ihihition repeal, ; federal officials todav hurried the i formation of plans for dealing with ‘ national phases of t ie liquor control ! after Dec. 3, when the 18th amend-

I ment expires.

Moving promptly behind the quick ' big pickle man who paid a handsome

the necessary 36 i price fur a spot on the station pro-

states to the 21st amendment, which i gram.

repeals prohibition. President Hoo e- ti,,. most hilarious feature of the

■Van pa ted away 12 year- ago, rte, acting i superintendent of th"

nrer p/anf for 27 years.

Mr, LcVan’a greatest life work with homeless children and in ^1 charity and relief work. She ormzed the charity work in South nd and was its guiding spirit for r 3anv veari. She was elected one of first members of the Orphans’ tome ”f South 'Bend in 1888 and re gained on that board until failing iralth prevented her fiom taking fur■er active iiart. In mho she ma lisd' i member of the St, Jeiepll founty Board of Charities and Corge'tioii by Judge B'unk when that ■ wii organiznd. She was also wh t n fooadm of the Pnogrcu , lub "f South Bend, one of the oldest lorial organizations of the city. She I*'i eoiinty Red Cross chairman for iouth Bend during the war, being rafted to the place because of her 1

(ability in organization.

Mrs. laiVan was a lifelong member j”f t ie Presbyterian church and even |' | i h. i advanced age took a keen ini'"' H mari, aetiv ities, although , | ' unable I,, attend prr.-onally. Ub'i mind was always alert and she' j'"' I a full .-bare of the finer , •’’ting he came in contact with dur[itig her long years of association in j

veil called his aids to meet with him Friday to devise a program which would include recommendations to

congress.

The prohibition unit of the justice department was drawing its plans to keep dry -tale- dry in the immediate future and the fatm administration installe I a beverage section to work out marketing agreements with the liquor industry

program was the hill-billy numlier in which a number of well-known Green-CH.-tle people disguised themselves as various characters. Many of them were so well hidden under paint and costumes that even dose friends had difficulty in picking them out of the group Russell Lukin as Nellie Rly, the village vamp, literally brought tie house down, although other <har-

. i street and Kenwood avenue yesteiday morning. Since that time all trace of

them has been lost.

Local authorities, aided by state police and private and bank detectives, were still conducting a search for the men Thursday morning. Paul Walton of Avon, lnd., who drove the men to ’Torre Haute from Avon, is reportqd to have identified one of the men as Makley. He said he lielieved the othei two were Shouse

and Copeland.

and clothing have been distributed to the needy nil over the nation in ever)

he termeri “un unof. ; county where there has been tin active fici-al memorandum” from Philip Lutz, chapter of the Red l ro--.

Jr., attorney-general, on how whisky! Note what was done last year In

evenlv sustained n nty for repeal of the Eighteenth m a ndment, placing the state as the 37'h to approve re-

peal.

Returns fropt 75l pi" met* gave: For repeal .... .. 61,114 Against 44,486 Complex local i -in'- -lowed the count w hich was in I expecte 1 to be

complete until som time next week. ( 3 'T’* ' "edne-day morning. At um

may be sol i in Indiana after repeal of the 1 stm amendment becomes a

fact next month.

Because the findings of Lutz are in the form 1 ' a memorandum and not an opinion, the governor declined to make public the actual text of the report. He .-aid, however, h" will ask

Walton was hired by the men to I of course, would be made public,

drive them to Plainfield, when their automobile bioke down at Vvon about

our own county. Putnam comity chapter was not large in numbers last year, but was very fortunate in having active, alert men and women who were alive to the needs of our people and -who a-ked and re ojved grnerau ai l fr< m the National Red Cross. We sent $249 50 to the na-

tho attorney-genera I for a formal j t|,, n nl Red Cro-s treasurer la-t year, opinion on the matter and said that. received flour, clothing, betiding

The tabulation will •• . Satuiday in observance of Arm i-tire day. Complete report- of widespread shootings in elect: n brawls showed 16 men were slain on voting day. One man was killed Jl*l ' The other- were slain in rural and mining section

feuds. ^

ROBBED OF WHILE ON TRIP TO r.KFFNi 4STLE

A trip to Orecncastle yesterday cost Ophelia Crcen, negro, of Indianapolis, $105. he said that she left j a nephew in ch ge of her home and | that when she returned the nephew 1 was gone and wa- $105 -he had

hidden in a writing (desk.

actors portrayed by Kimber Gard-

The simple language of the first Lester Wells, Orville Stewart,

section of the 21st amendment left to Arthur Grimes, Koliert Johnston, the states the immediate question of j R 0 aeoe Hardwick, Maynard Robinson,

w hat to do about saloons and whether Jacob Eitel, Emmett Green, Venard

to permit their reopening. 1 Walker, Maynard Johnson, Gay Skel- I

After declaring the 18th amend-'ton and James Zeis, provided much ment repealed it forbade the move- ; mirth for the audience, ment of liquor into a dry state. , ^ numbur of other men dressed as Justice department officials said jjjU.billies, and several choruses of

that whether an enforcing law would ■ „ ma || ^jljren and high school girls

be 'written around the latter section j added to the entertainment of the depended upon congress, but production. Singing leads were taken three old laws covering the question j , jy Vera Ma e Knauer, Mary O’Rear,

still were on the statute books. (Ardith Moore and O. W. Hollowell.

They are the Wilson package law. t)le Gamma Delta trio and regulating the interstate movement ; (E) , Cauper sistefs provided several

«vf parcels; the Meibb-Kenyon l aw, lg„ngs. A one-minute radio talk was forbidding transportation of liquor ' by R usse || Alexander, publicity

Mo dry Utoa, md tho Bead bw. I dlrwctot foi DoPauw university.

The latter supplements the Webb 1 HAVANA, Nov, 9, (UP)—GovernKenyon law, but primarily covers j ment forces began a brisk bombaidrn'iils and advertising, barring liquor | |{i s| EES RFU{1 ESTED TO ■ inent of 700 rebels in the Atari fort advertisements from publications cn-.j PROVIDE 25 L \BORERS j ress at 11 i. m from heav y field taring dry states. | _____ pieces which rumbled into place durWith assurance that “we have ! i nK ,, comparatively iiuiet morning,

plenty of stamps on hand for Decern- Trustees of Putnam county were ,

ber," internal revenue buiwau officials j "‘'lui'-H' 1 mi-i ,iy -y ' , ‘"' UI ' | HAVANA, Nov. 9, <UPi Govern were ready for repeal. Until con-!' 011 " 15 uni nip o> in ni i i '" r ment" troops were deployed today for gress act - the tax will be at the late 1 , ,i n miminent land and wuts-r attack

1 - yf rolls tor made work on the

The memorandum was reported to hold that full power- rest vvith the excise director to promulgate almo-t any regulation he -ees fit to govern

the sale of whisky.

This was said to mean that whisky a he -old without a doctor’s pre-

and yardage material valued a*

KU VOLUTION GRIPS Cl BA

MORE I H \ N I IFIA KILLED IN FIGHTING. MAJOR RM TI.l

IMMINENT

driving them to Plainfield, he waasked to continue on to Terre Haute. | He, a cording to reports, received $5 for the drive to Plainfield and $15 ad litiaiial for the trip to Terre Haute. Avon is about 15 miles west of In-

diana polri.

The men took their Chryslei car to

Ian automobile repair shep liefore hiting Walton ami his car. t\ hen Walton did not return to Avon in due time, authoritie at Plainfield were notified, as it was feared that the driver had been kidnaped or held up

and robbed of his automobile The sheriff’s office at Plainfield

notified 'Terre Haute authorities and i a squad of officers was stationed at | Stelyville. However, officers appar- JOHNSON \PPEAI.S FOR ently mi.-, ed the ear, as Walton “de-’ SUPPORT FDR NK\ PLAN i live,led his customers” at the local '

scription an 1 that the. excise director also may permit it to be sold in establishment- other than diug stores. The governor also said today that he has eon dieted selection of the membership of hi- advisory commission which will aid in perfecting the | whisky sale, setup, but added he i- not yet ready to announce the names of

the members.

The commission will act with Paul i

Fry, state excise director.

$8,263.25. It sounds like the miracle j of The Loaves and th' Fishes. Tlies" 1 supplies were distributed to the needy ones i,f our county by volunteer workers, and so not one cent wa- ! taken foi expenses Isn’t that, get I ting your i ney’s worth'.’ We can

-treet inter-cctinn about 10:3(1 o’clock \ in the morning. A resident of the neighborhood saw the men get cut of Walton's car, but , paid no attention to the three. The men were c.irrying a small bag and ■ a bundle covered vvith a blanket when they got out of the machine. Walton .aid he believivi the bundle contained

' guns.

A thorough search of the locality in which th" trio got cut of• the car was being conducted this morning, but no tra c of them had been un- ; itivercd. Several places were search-

DM A HA, Neb.. Nov. 9, (UP)-Re-covery Administrator Hugh Johnson

not afford to neglect our Red Crass This winter the need will be greater than ever. You cannot give a dollar through any < then agency that can as-'in- you uch rich return Join early 'Take the first oppor-

tunity to eiir II.

kivwmians Hear SpltMidid Talk

DEAV OF INDIANA SCHOOL OF LAM SPEAKFR \l I l’M HEON

wa- enroute to Kansas City today to continue his npiieal to midWestern farmers for support of the adminis-

tration program.

In a wildly cheered speech here last n’ght tc an audience of 5,000, Johnson rebuked agrarians because of complaints that relief had not been

faster.

“God knows no one can blame the

Dean Bernard davit* of (he Indiana University Law S "I gave an interesting presentation of fact and theory involved in the professional training and standard- f the legal profession at today's meeting of the

local Kiwanis club.

Mi. Gavitt pointed i ut that whereas in European countries, with the

impatience of people trying to save | P"«*iblr exception "f Kpiiin. full their homes, hut such impatience | P^er to «"•'« vested in sIkiuIiI not take tlie form of going out i ‘‘“vh separate department of the gov-

of $1.10 a gallon for whiskys, gins and

3.2 beer and

n'"* f , ” <l for those near and dear , hrandles: $5 a barrel

i* 0 h " J - $6 for

Sin

I state road 13 widening project next

against San \mbrosio barracks, prin-

stronger beer. A varying, ■M" | i'lay • •’* •' 1 p,-. ident Rannni Grau San

$6

was not widely know n *" I *. he( l u l 0 w ill apply to -

Orecncastle, Wause sbr- was unable | ,j ()Uort . beverage compounds sucht rp P ,!rtln b' for w,,, 'k to go many times because of her fail- j ^ ( . ofd i a i < .

III,, .liter connng MTS tfcn

year-ago, but those friends who were ; re „ (>mlll ,, Ml] latl . r | evy of from $2 A|w||*|vt4 |< -||'|'(kV\ 1(1 fortunate enough to know her in the j ^ ^ a ^ a |] on , m ,tn a p.,ssihility that ^ ' Y’ 1 1,1

Porter home will always remember j j mport taxes .on foreign beverages j

might be boosted also.

should I ( ‘H ,a l stronghold of rebels seeking to wines'and j^i'Lv to Mr. Gautier for slips before (

Between 5(1 and 75 Ixiflies of civilians who were eaujrht in cpm fire between reiwls 4in<l ifo vein ment

oil ind many n-'idents of the vicinity I and setting these honuss afire,” he j ernmf * fl E * n rounty an> a tion questioned. Laid. ! "'“V eyfntuall.v I"’ objected to judi- ! “Striking farmers are playing I «'•' review. It is somewhat para-

Farm Inmate Dies

lor , . being a delightful comiwnion ( i" ronver-aticn on any current lopic. j Her interest during the later years of | oi’t lif,. wa- in those around her and , iJip ev ideutly Imiked into the future unafraid as she wrote a brief but | complete skqtch of her life for membr- ,f the family only a few month* *g" In it she asked that numerous

GOLD I’RM'K R VISED

WASHINGTON. Nov. 9, (Uf’i The government today raised its priie on newly mined American gold to $33.15 an ounce from yesterday's

fores, wen’ /in hw-piUil,. and tjie morgue, unofficial reports said.

Ih* Kni'iiwl Hprp! Th ' re w " , ‘ ,M ' rilap4 ■*' 1*111 1" "1 IH l 4 |,n*ny of them women. ______ ' A state of war existed throughout

umn.KNT SUCCUMBS ^e island. Bu-ine-s in Havana va- (liiui )ulis FORMER REMUENI M M t Mil. h) . un( , ( „ w Jestrians were

AT HOME OF DAI f.H I ER

squarely "into the hands of Wall ; street.” he continued. “Striking | miners and silk workers do not want i

t’ 4 i* It I to go back to unregulated exploita-, N)()ll \l l(M’ l\( 4 U‘ciS( [uon, but that' where they are headed

if they wan. Sniping newspapers ( don't want to see four million re-em-j ployed workers thrown back on the

streets.

“Why all this fantastic whirling i gainst out best interests. It’, the

R. SI af ford si FFER' he \R1

\ II \< K Ml n WINNING LIBERIA WEDNESDAY

I

IN IN Dl \ N A POMS

S R. Stafford, 41 years old. of In-j inability « f a few people to make a Wedne-day was released | sacrifice in desperate times for the jlpart'ing, an I

I paraiyzeu, uno ic-w. a habeas corpus w rit from the In- j eonTir.on gir.sl of all.'' spirit a -eientifi, attitude,

on the stre<*ts, diana state faun at Putnamville amH _ _

was confident it WaHne. Uv niirht died of

The government

would suppress today the last ve-

carly Med lie-lay night I heart attack at his home.

Word was received here Thursday

level. The price wn on over ov.ming of HTe death at Indianapolis

"Z - STis. .U Ari.lt—* .,

'By. and Mrs. George Nogle, Brook-{cents above the *vorhl price set m

'va; and four brothers, George A. London today.

Porter, \,it ion.11 City, Callfti Emaat ] The London prkn today w.,, 190 '' 1’orttr, Honolulu; M'. F. Porter, shillings II d’H Mvii."

M '^ni, Kla , and Harry ,A. Porter* ( from yesterday. On the

N *w York Uity.

briih.f: dkktroykd

counc:

basis of the

I early high exchange ‘rat" for the I pound dOo.l lL.), thi-^wa- equivalent

{ to $32.83 an < unce.

the home of a daughter, Mrs. Hulah

George.

Funeral service* will t»e held FTi lay afternoon at 2 oVlmk at the Rector funeral home in this city with interment in Forest Hill cemetery beside th« remuiip. of his wile. Resides the daughter he is sur-

tiges of opposition from the civilian : y| r> F^hel Stafford, sild |

Remve Elin*k

and police rebels who -ought to over , s | u . called her husnun l f. the throw Gray in an uprising that was • HV ,. ri iug meal, hut he aid that he wa, to hav" broken out simultaneously, in , no t hung, "and -at down on a Ixtl. He di"d a few minutes later. ■ " — Scaffold w entcnced to the pen:)! 1 PI I NAM 4'Ot NTV’S SH \RK

dsxi.al that in a country uich a; ours, it is possible for the judiciary to thwart.the will of the maj' rity. For this reason and others, the ultimate success oi failure of our experience in democracy depends upen the lawyer to a "Teat extent, anil the active sympathy and support of the general public must Is- given to the problems

of legal education.

Continuing, Mr. Gavitt -aid that the lawyer must have knowledge.

ultimately a tolerant

octal

viewpoint. A .profeasknal man meas- | are- his conduct, not only by bis ln- ! dividual nee Is and ambitions, but by i the social consequence, i f his actions.

key town* all over the, island

20 Years Ago

IN GRFIBNCASTLB

this reflected a dollar worth 62.55 , v j tfM | t(V Dwight and Hale,

I both of Nebraska, and u sister, Mrs. j Catherine MTmmcr, south Indiana

' -t reel, Greencastle.

'cents as compared with 62.54 cent ■ BLUFFS, la.. Nov. 9— y^t^-day. . I I • • A bridge on the Chicago, Mil-

'mkee, jjt. Paul ami Pacific railroad

8 destroyed by Are near Ports*' WOMAN Si FFRAGK GRANTED

m, ’'ith. la., today *

11 was the th'ird railroad bridg*- MANILA, 1’. I- Nov. 9 (d'I’i Both burned in the farm strike area this 1 houses of the Philippine legislature

{^k. Sheriff George Jensen said he ! tc lay passed an amende I bill givnj- Indiunaimlls hl *d evidence of arson. | women of the island* suffrage in Ittf). jwith his daughter in “’ po '

Mis- Na 'ini Snider is the guest of Mr. and Mi Lawrence 1'erry at Put

namvllle.

C. C. Gautier is in Dundee, Mich., looking after business interests. Erwin Baney an! Lacey Stoner

S. Donner ruled that his sentence to the penal farm from I>*banon was il- | legal. He paid a fme of 4110, part (of the penalty assessed at Lebanon.

Mr. Farrow was a prominent farm- %pent the day in Indianapoher of Putnam county bef re tenioving Mr. and Mrs.* C. H. Barnaby are to Nebraska where he followed the visiting their daughter w ho is •atone oecupatp n until his retirement feuding school in Kenosha, Mis. evcral years ago. He has since lived C. ( . Gillen went to Uhi agiSon

| business trip.

■ ^ ■' • rxi Since we cannot have a government I* OI* |j\(*IS( k * tlX "f l >\v al'I not of neii, il 1 iiuperi-

I tive that a broad education in n tolI eiaiit -isrit Ik expel ien ed )>y each *** | memlier of the prefe-sion.

' wank tgo for j HE DISTRllff 1ED tviom. , Jn |u ,, lUi „ ,a ,«||| p*saMion llpwor. IfFWNMIP TRUNTM^ y uoh* a toMruf Stafford .•cured his release IFoiu * U^rit should iniikc the attitude of the penal lann in ciicuit court Med- ^ ( ,*_k for $5.591.82. representing the general public toward the NBA, ue-day after" on when Judge Wilbur ^ t . ounty , g , f lh „ $874,717.1)6 i althorg , it 1- often hatd f <r.a man tc

collected by th"*-tat'' in excise tax, , consider -uch a pi 'g’-nm •biectivel; wa- i-eceived Thursday morning hy when the*dollars and cents basis of County Auditor \\. V. < oojkt. hi ev*n hu-ine - i. -o intimately <011 The money will tie apportion))'! ceiued. The speaker al-} shewed the jiuotig th*' to a n-hip trustee- om th) ' diffieulty of dee ring t!"' afe mi-l • i • , L . * l

Dr. and Mrs. H. B. L ngden and Ku- II V lex a 1 id* • will leave F'lidav moining for Chicago where they will ! attend the annual dinner meeting of , the Chicago Rector Alumni associu-

j tion Friday evening.

of overagi 1 • atti#gi>f w couns between Ma on th me school children in their U wnships hand and tryanny on the other in this the distribute n will be ba-cd on "rucial indtuelit of the worlri's his >1 f.» r eacii ' md the monev . buy. Vision, imagmation and .-oui will go into the tuition funds of the | ageou - experimentation are needed at

-trustee-

(Continued on Page Two)