The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 April 1934 — Page 1
<* tt
+ + + + the WKATHER pair and WARMER + + + +
VOLUME FORTY-TWO
THE DAILY BANNER “IT WAVES FOR ALL”
+ + * •!• •!* * * + + ALL THB HOME NEWS -V l- UNI FED PRESS SERVICE + + * + ♦♦ + *#
.) SENIORS ARE ELIGIBLE TO GRADUATE ji (CHOOI. OOMMETJCEMENT TO^BE HELD THIS YEAR ON JUNE 1 CCALAUREATE ON MAY 27 poakers For Final Events of School year Have Not Been Announced By School Officials Sij j-Iiinr seniors .arc olifiibl" to raJuate from (ireencastlo hinli • " f 1934, accord njtoan announeement Saturday by Igh school officials. Commencement exercises for the ;niars will lie held June 1, and the -ccaiaureate May 27. Speakers for Hew two events have not yet been jnounced. Seniors ellsible to graduate this rear are as follows: Ellen Adamson Billy Allee John Bishop Marjorie Beneflel William Binkley Harold Birt Bernice Brattain Marjorie Brooks Jewel Blue Don Chiles Marguerite Cowan Jane Coffey Geneva Coffman Emily Caroline Conklin Helen Crawford Lorraine Davis Jo Ruth Donnohue Mary Lou Earley Robert Etter Stanley Fisher DeVota Floyd D. Forest Fuller Elmo Gasawuy Haul Mary Goldsberry Winifred Grimes Frances Harris Toni Harmld Leonard Dayman Harriett Heaney Veda Mae Dill Ed Hunter Chester Jarvis Eugene Jones Emerson Julian Every Maurice Jones Scott Kirkham Charles Knauer Eugene Knauer Melvin Knauer Dori> Iguiig Frances Mathes Wilbur JteCullough William McN'eff Wilhelmina Nelson Betty Nichols Orville O'llair Robert Orndoi ff Kenneth Peek Hobynne Pence Wayn« Pitts Garold Query Toni Raines Charles Rector John Richards Elmer Rogers Wilma Shields Edna Siddons Katherine Simnierman Geneva Sims Fay Spurlock Mildred Staten Jean Marie Stewart Hon Tate Helen Thompson Jimmy Walsh Willard Wells Imogenp Williams Alma Williams Oakley Wright amaj'e Suit Srttlrd Here
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA. SATURDAY, APRIL 21, 1934,
INSULL PLANNING DEFENSE ABOARD S S. EXILOXA, At Sea, April 21, (UP)—Samuel Insull, re gaininjr his vitality bepan planninR his defense atrainst federal fraud charges, as .the steam-hip Exilona neared the Atlantic today. Fiom his attitude, it was clear that he believed implieitely he would be freed. Casablanca, on the northwest Atlantic coast of Morocco, is the Kxilona’s last s.'he'fule'l -t, p steams for Boston, where Insull will be turnsl over to federal authorities.
NO. I6I
DUPAUW SENIOR CLASS TO HEAR DR. E. F. TITTLE
BIG AIRSHIP \LOIT EL PASO, Tex., April 21 (Up) Averaging about 80 miles an hour, the navy Dirigible Macon, en route to Miami, Ha., was ir>0 miles west of El Paso at 8 a. ni (CST) today, Southern Pacific railroad dispatches
reported.
NAMED SK( RKTARY Jotin Earnshaw of Greencastle was elected secretary of the Greencastle Production Credit Association, to succeed Paul Albin, who resigned, at a meeting of directors Friday night. The association maintains an office on the third floor of the court house
PASTOR OF EVANSTON METHODIST (HI K(H TO UK IttJI COMMENT KMF.N 1 SPE\KER
BE HELD 'ON JUNE
John R, Robe of Phis City to Receive Goodwin Memorial Cane as Oldest Living Alumnus
■ "B L. DRAKE \WAEDED *1 M op imm wd $m and costs
1.1 . Stii(l(‘n!s Vi ill Hold Yes|mtk Mm’
deputation team from wlsley FOUNDATION IN < II \RGi; OF SERVICES
Hauiage suits of James L. Drake 3,1 individual and as administrator lh >‘ estate of Fannie Drake, ■“omst Ren White and George Mul- . ettled in eourt I n • I id** Wilbur S Donner. n one suit Drake was awarded ' 1 of $7r,0 and costs of $J5.85 the second suit Drake a.' ad-m'n'.-trator was awarded *3,250 and of '-L55. Roth judgments were ' the defendant George Mullin, ■ ad M to the
Vhlte.
1 Drake brought suit following fatal | Jl| y ef his wife in a collision he-
drffwi by Whit., and
C. * U 1 bi, e driven by Mullin in L " l,autp - Mis. Drake was a ... , " ,r '' r nn the bus. The suits were i 1 here from Clay county. I M HOI, XRSHIP.S AWARDED our schoUrshkp* at Central NorJ 260.00 | '• hose from this county aw~ard
'' scholarship are:
ibri^'ahM amith. $100.00 dfein|Co'al.!!vif|,'. i ' n ® tte $;y0 00 of >(JJ^ y ,>ou *50.00 of Green-
Andrew
tg«tle.
A deputation team from the Wes-1 ley foundation of Indiana university will have charge of the vespers services of the Gobin Memorial church Sunday evening. The team is composed of Malcolm Ballinger Maurice Hunt, Virginia Martin and Lawrence Robertson. Mr. Ballinger and Mr. Hunt are Bloomington ministers in the First Church of that city. Doth are seniors in Indiana university and planning to enter Boston university on graduation for theological training. Mr. Hunt is president of the student council of the foundation and Mr. Baliingqg is chairman of the dep-
utation team comnittee.
Miss Martin was a student at DoPauw last semester and is a member of Alpha Gartpna Delta sorority. She was recently elected vice-president of the Wesley foundation student C’>uncil for next year at Bloomington. Mr. Robertson, tenor soloist on the team, had one of tiio singing loads in the musical revue staged by Indiana universitv last year and will be heard on
the vespers program herq.
The general theme for the deputation team in it. progrcgn hen' will he “Christ Today.” Iliis same team has conductdd similar services this year at Tipton, < .dumhus, New Albany and Baiford The Rev. R. I!. Baldridge, assistant pastor to Dr. ('. Howard Taylor of the Bloomington church, will accompany the team here. He is a graduate of DePauvv with (the class of 1931. The program for Sunday evening follows:
Organ prelude.
Hymn No. 1 Oh For a Thousand
Tongues to Sing. Call to wors ip.
Hymn \o. 481. O, Love That Will
Not Let Me Go.
Prayer.
Siript me. Hymn No. :>pt Tukd My Life and Let It Be. Offertory. Tenor solo The Penitent, by Lawrence Robortson. Talks “Christ Today,” Malcolm Ballinger, Maurice Hunt and Virginia
Martin.
Benedicth n.
Dr. Ernest Fr mom Tittle, paslor of the First Methodist church at Evanston, 111. has been chosen as the commencement speaker for I)' Pauw univei ity's ninety-fifth com mencement which will be h-ld June 11. Dr. Tittle is acknowledged to be one of the most outstanding preachers in M-thodlsm today. Dr. Tittle holds the A. B. degree from Ohio Wesleyan, the It. I). degre • from Drew Theological Seminary, a I). D. degree from both Ohio Wesleyan ami Garrett Biblical In stitute and an I,L. 1). degree from Wlttenb eg college, lie has been pastor < f the Evanston church for sixteen ycais taking this charge in IfilS at the close of the World war He wn- with the Army Y. M. C A. during the World war s aving in France for six months and partlci paling in tin St. Millie! offensive. | lie is a tins r. of Northwestern mil versity and is noted for his ability to preach t • a college audience. Fraternally he Is a member of Phi Kappa Psi and Phi Bet a Kappa. He also holds membership in the Federal Council of Churches of Christ of America. Ilis books have received wide attention. He is an,hot of four: What must the Church Do to be Saved ’ (1321); The Religion of the Spirit ( 1 028): The Foolishness of Preaching (1030), and Vt*'
Need Religion (1031).
IDs daughter, Elizabeth Ann. is a sophomore at DePattw and a member or Kappa Alpha Theta son city. Commencement plans are tiling tn:ule now. Alumni day will be Saturday. June 0. Baccalaurea'e wall be heM Sunday, June 1 n wiih President G. Bromley Oxnam as baccalaureate speakei Fra' k Kothman, student from Dayton. O . i president of th“ senior cla which will number approximately 275 in both the sehoi 1 of music and Die college
of liberal arts.
On Alumni day the C. iodwiu Memorial cane which is held by Ih • old est living alumnus will tie pre-ented to John It. Robe of this rify, a member of the class of 18GR. Semi-cen-tennial medals will be pn-'i led to nil graduates retiirniin I i Alumni day who wer» graduated fifty or
more years ago.
Car-Truck (’rash Ties 111 Trafic SEVEN PERSONS ESCAPE !NJl RY IN ACCIDEN I E \ It IA SATURD\Y
Widow Of Civil % ur Wtcran Dies
have
county stu-
MKS. MOM IE HOLLINGSWORTH WAS MOTHER OF LOCAL SCHOOL TEACHER
Mrs. Midlie Hollingsworth, mother of Miss Mayme Hollingsworth, teachrr in the Thirl ward school, died Saturday morning at the Old Soldiers home in Lafayette, after an illness of four years. Mrs, Hollingsworth, n
lifelong resident of Putnam county, j clearing
had spent most of h^r life in Belle
Union.
She was the widow of John Hol-lin.-gsworth, a Civil war veteran, who preceded her in death several jeatfl
ago.
She is survived by four daughters, Mayme Hollingsworth of Greencastle, Mildred and Pauline of Chicago and Flossie of North Dakota, and one son
Hobart. *
Funeral arrangements will be nn-
Seven persons escaped with minor cut- when a Tffrrc Haute automobih occupied by five prison; collided with | a Michigan truck and trailei on the Nath nal road, ea-t of it intersection w ith state load 43, about I :.3<) o’clock Saturday morning. Traffic wa- tied up for more than two hour.- by the debris of the collision. Sneriff Alva Dry.in and Deputy j Walter Bryan said the two vehicles sideswiped each other, demolishing the automobile and forcing the truck tractor off the highway. The truck trailer was swung across the pavement, completely blocking traffic for
some time.
The auto wa.- -aid to have Imon ; driven by V. J. Hinkle, Tern 1 Hnute, j and other occupants were Nellie Hinkle, Ernest Wade, Jack Rollen and Katherine Upso. The truck wa- in | charge of Wurrem ITiroop and . Howard Throop, of Grand Blanc- j
Mich.
Only minor cut- were suffered by , the occupants of th ■ automobile ap 1 though their aut nnobile was a mass
of debris after the collision.
Two wreckers wore called aid in
the highway and other
trucking outfits blocked by the collision also assisted in getting the j heavily laden truck-tractor outiit
back on the highway.
MOOR KSVILLF. FOLK SHOW OPPOSITION TO DII,LINGER PLEA
PIERPONT IS
SENT MESS AGES
II BIBLE CODE
BELIEVED TRYING
TO COMMUNICATE WITH
DOOMED HEM 11 MEN
WARDEN WITHHOLDS LETTERS
INDIANAPOLIS, April 21.—State police held thorn .elves in readiness to take another long trip yesterday afternoon after John Dillinger only to find that it was another false report. |
A report was received at headquar- .... . . w
ter- of word being can-bid on a stock hioker’ , wire th u the desperado had been capture! in New Mexico. A1 (T. Feeney, state director of public safet>. i imiediatqly prepared telegrams asking that he be held for Indiana officers but the report later was de-
clared to be false.
In the meantime word came from M ore-ville, Dillinger’- Itomq town, that considerabh indignation is being j
expressed by .many citizens over the * * -UMRUS, Ohio, \pril 21 T\ rrciiv ul ition of a petition asking a p a r-| ,iq " I>rPSton E t Thom:l ' "f the Ohio don for the gang leader. I p0Mitentiar y '•'st night he Pastors, nterehnr - and others were. ,M ' l,PVwl hc ha '. , thw:lr "‘ (i '•« attempt reported to he taking stand.- against i’ >f . J ®. , *' l,, T r 10 <-omm unicate any such action. [ hla crst ’«hile henchman. Hariy Circulation of the petition was ^ 11 'P 0 "‘.through letters containing started Thursday. It also was said. " 1 lr ‘' p.'- igos, that none of the per on- who signed I ' ,, ' r,,0nt aml ^ hari '' s the request for a parole for Dillinger " nant ~ ' ,f t " c 01,1 Htlhm'er gang, are last June have* signed the present 1 -" '' ’ <M 'y Kuar l awaiting death
Both Harry Pierpont and Charles Makley Under Heavy Guard
In Ohio Prison
petitions.
$1(M59.23 \\ AS SPENT ON CWA IN PLTNA.M (01 NT\
INCLUDES MONEY PAID OUT IN WAGES AND FOR MATERIALS
AND TOOLS
for the murder of Jess Sarber of Lima, who was slain when Dillinger was liberated from jail at Lima last Oct. 12. Russell Clark, a thirl Diliinger gangster, is serving a life sen-
tence for 4hat crime.
The bibical refrerenc.es were in gospel passages. Thq first intercepted communication contained a pamphlet of St John’s gospel with certain -onten es marketl and lines underscored. It was received a week ago. The second, (mailed in Chicago last Monday, contained this quotation, w licit the warden regarded as signifi-
cant:
, “Have no fear; Jesu s has come
—■ | once, he will come again.”
Civil Works J^ministration Replac- 1 ^’Hptvral badly
REPORT
INTEREST
ed April 7 With New EERA
Pi ojets
A total of $ 108.3511.23 was expended in Putnam comity ilirough the eiv it works administration, a federal relief pi >.ii i t according to Eugene Ruaik, who wa employ'll in the office of < r Gauiici, county ailminlstralor of thi CWA. Kitaik is now county chairman of the new state relief plai which w nt itco effeel April 7 ToHowlng suspension
of the CWA.
Of Die total CWA figure, tie um of $82,54 1.44 was paid out in " ;vgi . another sum of $12,010.3.5 wa xpended for teams and trucks. $13,145.30 was spent on material provided locally itnl $1,261.54 was provided locally for cither nils'ella-
iieous costs.
In KUtniiiarizing his report Huaik it'anized the following expenditures: Miscellaneous $ 495.95 .Stone 817.86 Cement 755.35 Bituminous Materials 40.40 Petroleum 8.17 Iron and Steel 1.4 43.60 Clay products 4,030.12 Lumber 2,490.09 Pliuubnig supplies 777.76 Hardware 1 88.21 Explosives 57.02 Paint 1.644.77 Tools 455.70 Cash for w; es and materials for upervTsoi m the CWA work reach ed a total of $16,634.43. while local contributions in the way of materials and tools supplementing CWA and local fun is totalled $3,957.94. Total money pimiided by the government was $8 ■ 06.86. lluui'k a report
shows.
I \RM III REA I MLLIS
[irepa re
The regular monthly meeting
the Jefferson lewnshtp Farm Bureau , Dillinger was hebl Wedn -slay evening at Belle pals.
Union After a talk by K. W. Baker, | county Agent, refreshments wire creed' liy tlie ladies. 'Mrs. Paul Huis | was elected > ml anil edueutioiial director for Ute coming year. There
was a large attendance.
thumbed, had a pagq turned down tind tt chapter markol with a paren-
thesis in blue ink. It read:
“Let not your heart he troubled; ye believe in (e l, believe also in Me. “In My FathqrN house are many mansions; if it were not so, I would
have told you. I go to
place for you.”
included in the marked passage, but net underlined, wen. there: “And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will cqmo again and receive you unto Myself: that where I am thue shall ye be also “ Vml whither I go ye know and the
way ye know.”
The warden, admitting hi 1 was suspicion- of the missives, orderoj them withhold from Pierpont. Governor George White only yesteiday revealed he had received threatening letters which had warned him to rrlua.-e the trio or he would not live out the end of his term. Federal inspector- now are tracing the letters, which also came from Chi-
cago,
Dillinger was freed from the jail at Lima b the men, who killM the sheriff in t e course of the delivery, lie bud been held there on a bank robbery charge. His delivery was assisted t ■ he he reward for his aid in the M'chigan City, lnd„ prison break. The gang escaped from Lima and spren I terror over three midwestem state- until they fled and were captured in T m, Ariz. Dillinger subsequently escaped from the jail at Crown I’ in'. Ind., with his famous womien gun, and has not been recaptured. 11 i -ociatcs were taken to Lima for trial and were convicted
there.
Warden Thomas said Hundreds of letti rs have poured into the penitentiary addro ivl to the three gangsters, many of them of a religous nature. He i\v in the ones confiscatofjid, however, a definite attempt by
to communicate with his
DID NOT RECEIVE CALL
INDIAN A PQLUSt Ind'., Apr. 21 (UP).—Denial that he received a telephone “tiip” that John Dillinger, notoriou- outlaw, was at his home near Mooresville March 23, was made by deputy sheriff Vorl Clark of Morgan county to A! Feeney, state police commissioner, yesterday. Clark tol l Feeney he did not receive the call which a Mooresville resident said wais made to the sheriffs office. The inforlmant, who talke.k with i'. ' ney in Mooresville Wednesday, -aid he called the sheriffs office at Martinsville upon learning Dillinger had been seen near his father’s farm hotin*\ hut tliat no investigation was made.
OUST CURRY AS TAMMANY ll\UL CHIEF
KXEtl IIVE COMMITTEE VOTES TO DEPOSE LEAlDER OF P \ST FIVE YEARS
ANNOUNCE PROGRAMr r CONFERENCE
GREEN VSTLE T> ’’Lire SESSION TO BE HELD i > (ilu.T NCASTLF **')N'D.\ V
REV. n AUDE YOUNG TO SI GAU
Theme for Cnnfere-'ce Ts “An A quate Church for a Changin'Period in Human Progress”
IjUsI llrM For Mrs. Hardacn 1
11 xchers gi\ e degree
Ml MORI\l SER\ ICES III I D - \ I 1 ROW FOR DELTA TAU
High School teachers heiuksl by P F. Boston, as worshipful master, conferreil the Ma ter Mason degree U|«m twi camli ate at the Mu onic Tempi 1
HOSTESS
Memorial services for Mrs. Hanna Hardacre, house mother at the Delta
Friday evening The candidates were rj- au fniternity house whJ died Marion Craw lev and Charles Brown, j Thursday afternoon, were hehl frolm
the fraternity hou e Saturday morning at 9: ( 10 o’Aock. The Rev. V. L. Raphael was in charge T3ie entire chapter accompanied the t*' Y to laiw- | remeville, HI , w here burial was in
, the family lot.
Matt Murphy returned home from| Mrs. Hardacre was widely known business trip to Albany, N. Y. | to the student body faculty an I to the
20 Years Ago
IN greencastle
NEW YORK, April 21.—Tammany Hall foi the first time in .history last night deposed its leader, the suave and imperturbable John F. Curry. ( urry, w hose opponents had’dubbed him “the man of blunders,” was voted out of the post ho had held for five years, l.{ i-:j to 10 l-fi, at a closed meeting of the wigwam’s executive committee. A triumvirate is expected t lie named by the committee to operate Tammany Hall, a policy which sometimes ha- been followol in period of st ress. The gray haired, ruddy complexione<| leader made an impassioned plea for support, defending his recor I and asserting he had given the 135 year old institution the best service he could command A district leader quoted him as saying: “i have tried to lie congenial and friendly with all district leaders. 1 have tried to instill in Tammany Hall a new spirit—an intelligent spirit. “If mistakes weie made they were mistakes any leader could have made. There has been ne leader in the past w ho has not made some mistake.-. “I have been for five years your leader and there are no charges against me. No one can say 1 have not been an hom$ t man. Therefore, wliy this procedure? “In the whole \istorv of Tammany Hall no leader ha- ever been voted out. If vou do this in my case, you are establishing a precedent—an uncalled for presMlent. I challenge the right of the executive committee to do this. “1 was elected for a term of office and can only he removed under charges.” First, he refu - d an appocil by Charles W. ( ulki', i district leader, that he resign. T ien the vote was taken, an hour and i half after the committee went into e i< n. Curry, who opposed President Roosevelt’s nnminati a and who stood by fnrmeir Mayor James .1. Walker to the end of the huttei’- political career, emerged from the committee room smiling With him was former Mayor John P. O'Hrion. “Well,” Ourry ai to the .-splat, bald, former mayor, a trace of a smile crossing his face, “it's ju-T another thing in our liv As Cuny ateppoi from the elevator he was cheered. A ked for comment, he said only: “I have nothing t say. I am g'ing | home, have dinner w ith the family j and go to the movie ” Awaiting him outside the stately Tammany Hall, overlooking Union Square, the Imtitleground of the Marxists, was Mr Curry, attractiveI ly dressed, in the family limousine. I | She had been waiting for nearly three I hours. One of the 73 district leaders who attended the meeting said afterward that wh<|n James J. Him a powerful Tuinmanyite, h id cast his vote ( for Curry, the latter -aid: “I want you to change your vote j and vote against me, because you • causer I this whole thing and you directed it from down where you were.”. Hines had returned hastily from a vacation In Hot Springs, Ark., to at-j tend the meeting, called earlier in the j week after the insurgents decided i 1 they had enough votes to overthrow the leader. It was to Hines that the Curry
There will be a meeting of the Greem astlo district of ithe Northwest Indiana Methodist Episcopal church c inference in the Gobin Memorial church Monday. The theme of the conference will bo “An Adequate Church for a Changing Period in Human Progress." At the same time in forenoon, a session of the Woman’s Home Mi -ionary society wiP be held in the Presbyterian church. At tlie ministerial conference, committee reports will bo made from nine o'clock, the opening hour, until dock, at which time the Rev. Claude Young will speak on “Fundamental Motives and Assumptions for World Brotherhood.” After this address will come the following program: “Maintaining an Adequate Ministry for hi Adequate Church,” Dr. II. L* Davis. | Lunch -orved by the women of the church. Committees will prepare their re* ports. Dr. H. L. Davis presiding. Addre- Speaker furnished by the W. H. M. S Dr. W. S. Sharp. District business and committee reports. Department of missionary educa* tion, Dr. C. P. Hargrave. W. H. M. S. W. F. M S. District se-qui- milennial committee. Rev. R. I!. Kern. Composite pastor' report- Dr. A. E. Monger. District c. nfcrcnce relations committee, Dr F. L. Hovis. “Thei.aynen and Their Church.” A discussion led by Bishop Edgar Blake. Closing meditation, “The Uniqueness of the Christian Me -age,” Dr. C. I). W. Hildebrand. The missionary six io*y program .-< as follows: 9:00 Executive nu t ' - Devotions Mrs, (i nioi. Welcome—Mr . Hi aveiirii' ;c. Reading of minu. . Roll call Report of depar - ental o< retaries. Address by Pro .. F. i urp of E. Mitihell home cl d. Mrs. Jones. Report of nmo-uutir'.- o uiiiillec. Election of offi or Installation of offin rs, by M r Owtrom. Memorial r Mr Rice. Prayei—Mr . Ford Lunch. Gary—Mrs. I’m:g Queen Esther- Mr Bartlett.
Vvv Slnvls
\r<
()j*rnnl
Kl.< I N I IA P \\ I D DOM NTOW N ItLlK h> s| \s(»NED si IT ICIEN TIA I ol( I RAM 1C
Recently pa . i .-(net in the nwnitown district were thrown open t» traffic Saturday l-v the \V . E Pickens construction nai 1 y. after straw and sacks which have -overed them since the concrete w as laid, were rmnove I. Blocks opened Saturday were those on the north and ca-t i »■- .if tho public square and <m west Franklin street. Two block on i ast Franklin fArvet, tho first to In 1 laid, have been open for several lay The two (dis k's south of the square on Jackson and Indiana streets, w're to In' ore Mod to traffic Saturday evening, it wa- said. It will only lie a day or o before tho two blocks on west Washington street are opone
G Hair, I$o0.00 of Green- nouivced loiter, pending word from the
daughter in North Dakota.
sufficient funds in the bank when Hie
check wae written,
Mrs. R. A. Ogg is in Indianapolis tnwruipeople, having lieen house moth- forces had looked for the backing that a attending a meeting of the State Fed- er at tho Delta Tau fraternity hou.se j would stem the revolt. eration of Club*. for the past nine years. During all hi.- regime, Curry was
— i said never to have had the whole-
in he Hi xqlstiom A: Houxhlaml Mr Julia Albaugh wh.» ha.- -pent , hearted hacking of Mired E Smith,
the winter in Gary with her daugh- J who was reported to have favored the
Glen ShopUugh went to Brazil to J ter. Mrs. Donald Oonnerly, returned ; selection five years Ago of Edward J. take an examination for entrance into home Saturday. She was accnmiMUiied j Ahearn. The latter led the revolt the Naval Academy at Annapolis. home by Mr. an I Mrs. Coonerly. against Curry.
An affidavit charging Joe H'kels of Fillmore with is uing fraudulent cheek for 16.95 on the
Fillmore State Rink Nov. 25, 1932, | Just.n Godwin has accepted a post-
was filed in circuit c.wrt Friday hy|tlo» Fi. N. Denny of the firm of Urkin shoe store
& Denny- It is allege*) Eckels hiwl in-
O O O O O O O O O Q O ®
® Today's Weather
^ and
^ Local Temperature
O ® 41 fv> O {•> £■ ® O O O ®
Cloudy HivI not unite '<» cool Sat* urd&y; Sunday fair and warmer.
0 © 0
Minimum 6 a.
35 37
8 a-
43
*
.». 4fi
10 a.
48
