The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 August 1937 — Page 2

THE DAILY BANNER, GBEENCASTLE, INDIANA, TUESDAY. AUGUST 3, 1937.

COLD-BLOODED SLAYING OF ".I RECALLED HERE

HAAG BHOS. CIRCUS IS COMING TO GREENCASTLE MON. AUG. 9

THE DAILY BANNER ; INTANT ' DiLI ”“ F a x „ and

SOAR

Herald Consolidated

"It Waves For All”

The Haag Bros. Circus organized by Roy and Henry Haag will exhibit in Greencastle one day only, Handy show grounds. Monday. Aug. 9. and throughout this section plans are lierfecting for the attendance of every man woman and child—so it lieems. at one of the performances.

Everybody wishes to see the Haag by mall outside Putnam County.

Bros Circus this year, one hundred

;ind fifty acknowledged kings and Hint of Heart Throbs Arising -lueens of daring grace, skill and in-

credible agility, scores of clowns will project ten times that number of mirth waves. Countless new foreign features and innovations new to America are introduced on the gi-

INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 3—Ander-

ftySPCiETY

son Ketchum. state tax board secre- uutcJieaon Reunion

Entered in the postoffice at Green- larv todav said collections of intang- Hel( j Sunday

. , ibles taxes for the first seven months than

OI.II BANNKi; ITLRS GIVU l»UTAll.Id) AUCOI NT OF EARLY

TRAGEDY

COURT REX’OKD Is AVAILABLE

No

From Murder In Southwest 1’nrt of County Seen in Record

castle, Indiana, as second class mall matter under Act of March 8, 1878. Subscription price, 10 cents per week; $3.00 per year by mail In Putnam County; $3.50 to $5 00 per year

PERSONAL AND LOCAL NEWS

ibles taxes for the

of this year showed an increase of $106,134 over the corresponding sev-

en months of 1936.

Ketchum said more trading requiring increased stamp purchases, an increase in bond issues and maturity ' of several large bond issues account-

ed for the gain.

HOSPITAL REPORT

This county has had its quota of "killings.” through Us more than a century of organized existence 'c of them within the first half o' th it period but one that happen^ 1 in ttv> southwest corner of the county, in lower Washington tov/nship eight’/three years ago had features about it that classed it as one r. r the nr-t serdid cold-blocded affairs Irvolv nithe taking of human Mfe that t . ■ countv ever knew The details of the trfigeiv can b? learned only by turning to the Putnam Banner of that day There seems ’ • be no oilier record cf it. excepting the dry record of the hearing it had before the "court of common pleas” in Greencastle Those court records seldom present even a hint of the heart throbs that arise in connection with such a happening nor a suggestion of the sufferings of Htt’e children left fatherless or of the wife left without a husband in a period wnen living was hard at Us best, and there were no organized channels for extending help to those who needed

it

This killing was not of the common type of that period, when tempers often flamed suddenly into arts of violence but it was. so it seems, a develcpement of a hate that had existed some time, with a deliberate effect. brutal in its nature to take a man’s life to satisfy that hate. It was in the spring of 1854 that it happened The Banner pictured the tragedy, in its issue of April 26 that 1

year:

"On last Wednesday! ” the Banner said, "a shooting affair came off in j the southwest part of this county in which one man was kil’ed and another mortally wounded The court of common pleas being in session. a court of inquiry was held before •ludge Cowglll on last Friday at which the following facts were brought !

out.

"It appears that there was a logrolling at Mr. Dobson’s at which several neighbors were present. Mr Hiram Furney who was a road supervisor left some time before night, i ' th the Intention of warning a Mr. | I'.ice and other not to work on the roads. Nothing further w’a.s heard from 1 im until the next morning when an Irishman came to the house of Mr. ' Dobson to inform him that he was tt Mr Rice’s, nearly beat to death ! t ie deed being done the night before, f. id that it was impossible for him I to communicate the news sooner, as , Rice was up all night with him watch- t ing whether Furney would die or not j and as he 'Rice fell asleep about

The Ladies Aid of Mt.

Eleanor Long of Manhattan under-

Meridian wen t a tonsil operation at the Put-

More than one hundred attended the annual Hutcheson reunion held Sunday at the Phil Hutcheson grove at Hamrick Station. A bountiful dinner was enjoyed at the noon hour. The new officers are; President, Earl Hutcheson; vice president, Roy Hutcheson and secretary and treasur-

er, Lucille Hutcheson. Monday Club Holds

Annual Picnic

The Monday club held its annua!

antic program.

Jerry Burrell con- will meet with Mrs. Gilbert Ogles on nam county hospital. Monday mom-, picnic Monday. August 2. with Mrs.

yress of cowboys and cowgirls, buck-j Thursday afternoon.

Luther Easter, who is quite ill at bis home on South Jackson street

Melba Jean Siddons. Elm street, has returned home from a weeks visit with Mr. and Mrs. Carl Purcell.

.tie horses, steer riders, trick riding and trick and fancy roping will con-

stitute our congress of rough riders roa(1 j s reported slightly improved,

from the far west. Jerry Burrell himself in person direct from Hollyvood will appear at each perform-

ance.

Throughout circus dav the gigan*ic tented stables of the Haag Bros organization will be open to the public inspection. Here, lovers of fine horses may view’ at random many of the world's most beautiful thorough-

breds.

G. E.

Mrs. Alfred Hirt and Mrs. Black are visiting today in

ville with Mr. and Mrs. Will E. Gif-

ford.

jLee Reeves. Sixteen members and two

Barharq Ann Myers underwent a'guests were present to enjoy th” minor operation at the Putnam coun- ( bountiful feast prepared by the memty hospital, Monday morning, Ibers. An interesting program was en-

j jcyed during the social hour.

HAUPTMANN WIDOW BACK FROM EUROPE

NEW YORK. Aug. 3—Back fromj "a sad trip’’ to Germany in which she

+ + * 4 ,> 1- + *1* •John A nn Hook To Wed Miss Zurrilli

TRENTON. N. J., Aug. 3—The en-

Nobles- 1 ... gngement of Miss Elvera Zarrilli and visited her narents and the mother K _ _ . ... tc me 1 1 Charles E. Van Hook, son of Mr.

of her dead husband. Anna Hauptmann. returned today. She declared;

Prof and Mrs Paul F. Boston and ( "I still believe Bruno was innocent

Perfect specimens of almost ; v.,!y will leave tomorrow for Me- and I will not stop my search to find

every known strain will be found in Millan. Mich , to spend a vacation on the guilty men the big shows great horse fair which the lakes I ‘ ‘ <o c ZZ Z z: ■—»HTammany Hall Has

folks.

Doors to the circus will open at me and sseven p. m.. Performances start at two and eight p. m : a number of free attractions will take place on the show ground at 1 and

7 p. m.

1 Mr

family, 109 W. Walnut street, will 1 1 leave tomorrow for a vacation in I

1 northern Wisconsin.

and Mrs. John Van Hook of Greencastle. Ind., has been announced here by the bride-elect’s parents. Mr. and

Detained by Chicago police when he stopped there en route from San Francisco to Mahwah. N. J., John M Hayes, above, was held on complaint of his mother-in-law Mrs. C harles Prendergast of San Francisco, who claimed that he had fled with his two-year-old daughter in the midst of a court fight over her custody.

Mrs. George Zarrilli of South Clin- The is dead and both father ton avenue, this place. | and g rarU | m other seek the child.

The bride-elect was graduated

Restored Harmony

FAKE. PANAMA H AT KING SWEEPS

STATE

j INDIANAPOLIS. Aug. 3—Indiana is being Invaded by a group of fake Panama hat peddlers, the Better Business Bureau warned here yesterday. According to the bureau, the peddlers , offer what they represent to be $15 to $25 value hats from $3 to 5. The peddlers have operated in many other

communities, it was stated.

The hats sold by the peddlers are Toyos. made in Japan, of rice paper. They cannot be cleaned proper!/ by any process known to cleaners. They can be purchased for $3 a dozen, the

bureau chief said.

Dr. and Mrs R. W. Vermillion | have returned home from a two weeks vacation spent at the Lakes in northern Indiana. Miss Nellie Heathco of Indiana-1 polls and Mrs. Lloyd Graham and children of Montana are spending the week with relatives in and near Putnamville. Juanita Mae Siddons, Elm street.

CHRISTOPHER

bride-elect was

from the local State Teachers College in 1934 and is a member of the U. S. Grant School faculty. The wedding will take place in the near future.

•S'l*+ + + + ♦•!*

SULLIVAN Arnold Reunion

NAMED TO VACANCY LEFT BY DEATH OF DOOLING.

NEW YORK Aug. 3 iUP'—Harm-j ony appeared to have been restored today in Tammany Hall ranks with

Held Sunday

The Putnam county Arnold reunion was held Sunday. August 1. 1937. at Fairview farm, the home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bunten near Fillmore. The attendance fell off a little this

the selection of Representative Chris-, , , . „ „ ^ ^ . year, but those who were there had

topher D. Sullivan. Democrat. New - York, of the Thirteenth New York district, as leader for the post vacai

an unusual amount of pep. judging by the way they responded to the call to dinner and the stunts and

S AFETY DRIVES SPUR SALE OF LICENSES

INDIANAPOLIS. Aug 3— The state automobile drivers’ license division report that the safety campaigns being conducted by th" state and local police have resulted in a boom in the sale of drivers’ licenses. Motorists arrested for traffic violations are subject to another charg" if they do not have an operator’s license.

returned home Monday from the I ^ by the death of James j Dooling. i Methodist hospital in Indianapolis remained a subject of political where she recently underwent an eye, 1 speculation whether the East Side ular music ’

operation. j representative would be able to bring The President. Glenn Dicks, had The ritv lihnrv will be onen Sun- I together factions split over questions ^rge of the business meeting and The city library ui.l be open . un . .. Miss Grace Arnold the entertainment

dav afternoons from 2 to 4 o’clock be- ! c,f ne * deal support and selection of ginning Sunday. August 8th. as an-j a mayoralty candidate in the Demo- ( ^ f Of Sullivan by th. «.'*"»«• !«»««•* *»■"■ B A ™‘ feutive committee of the organization old ’ vice-president; Helen Dicks.

Mr and Mrs Walter Rogers. Rock-! which long has dominated Democratic treasur _U am ) ^ au< ^ ^ secre '

ford 111. Eston Rogers and sister.' politics in Manhattan came as a re-

community singing of old-time pop-

in the afternoon. The fol-

lowing officers were elected; Grace

tary. The date for holding the next

Bertha Rogers of Roachdale and Don 9u it of a coup by County CTerk Albert ,cunion is the last Sunday in August.

I RGE PASSAGE OF C ON SERA ATION

Resolutions urging passage of the

epp/rtunity to give the information funds of consen’ation activities in th--"Rice would not permit the Irish- j various states, have been adopted by man to leave and threatened if he the State Conservation Committee, said anything to kill him. , Virgil M. Simmons, commissioner of “Several of the neighbors soon j the Department of Conservation was

gathered In and found Mr. Furney j informed today,

helpleas condition, horribly bruised

a-10.

day.

Bainbridge

Church. There will be piano, violin and vocal numbers. The public is cordially invited to attend.

Those present from a distance were Rev. and Mrs. James Shockley.

R ,'ers of Chicago were guests of Marlnelli, co-leader of the Second AsM- and Mrs. John T. Sutherlin Mon- sembly district, who obtained the votes necessary to force the meeting Glenn Dicks ’ wife and dau S hter - and

Elmer Seller «„ preeen, her M ZZtZ’MmTZ" Z

- - «“»• *■£"» - »■>»»"- :; “■ , * a, ™

ated. The new leader said that there of rerre Haute. was no plan to find a compromise + + mayoralty candidate. Answering an- Mr “’ To Bo ; other question he said that Copeland Thursday

Mrs. Etta Collins. Mr. and Mrs positively would not withdraw from ^' !le Thursday Reading club will George Collins of Champaign. HI., the race. (meet Thursday afternoon at 2:30 have returned home after visiting ' The new leader is 67 and was born °’ c1ock at h orTlp of ^ ra - Robert

Black, west Columbia street. The leader. Mrs. Ray Fisher, will have as her subject "George Ade.”

4>>k4*4* a $4 a 4 a 4* Mr. and Mrs. Zaring ! Entertain Guests

monf n l. . . 1 Hr. and Mrs. R. D. Zaring, N.

street, left this morning for Chicago, ‘he Presbyterian church and 1 Ma , Uson street entertained the fol .

Mr. and Mrs. Luther Easter, south in New York.

Jackson street road. Mrs. Etta Arn-’ old of Ogallah, Kans.. is a guest or THAT OLD STREET LAMP Mr. and Mrs. Easter this week. | Another informant of the Banner, Charles Downey, son of Mr. and in re & ar( l *° the use of the old street Mrs. P. H. Downey,, 646 East Walnut lamp wh ich was found in the base-

v. here he will take a boat trip on w h' c h has been rehabilitated

a

Lake Michigan. He won the trip sort of museum piece, states that through a contest conducted by a * nose lamps used gasoline as the ilTerre Haute newspaper and will re- * u minant, instead of kerosene. Chas. turn to his home here Friday. j R el,em and Gip Brawner had the

first contract to light the lamps over

Mrs George Pearcy of Hollywood. the city, using a sort of bifurcated

Two bills now In congress—Senate | Calif is visiting her sister, Mrs. W. cart W ith a box on each side and

and totally insensible. | Bill 2670 and House Bill 7681—pro-jo. Lewis and family of Putnamville space between for the driver of the “About that time Rice had caught | pose that revenue now being collected ( an-i Other relative* and friends. She one horse to stand The fi „ ed tanks Meet Wednesday his horse and was in the act of leav- by the federal government through a^s on her way home after spending for the i arr) p 8 were carried in one GrP <“ nc astle Chapter No. 255 O. E. Ing with his rifle on his shoulder j i-pecial tax of ten percent on all ( the summer in the East visiting her aide of the (art an( , {he emptje<i rej) j s win meet in regular session Wedwhen Mr Joshua Furney. a brother sporting arms and ammunition, be son who is finishing work for his r ervoirs werc , aw , ' nesday evening at 8 o’clock.

Ph. D. in Clark university. Mrs. other a u D htor ...oo * ' r +-t--r-i-»-*-TT

- omer. a lighter was used to gener- „ t

Miss Dora ate the g(Lsoline to the proppr tpm _ Reading Cub

! perature flame of the lamp. This 1T " . Th,,r * dd ' V

— I informant says that the last of these' Country Reading club will meet

of the injured man. in company with 1 distributed to the states to aid their

his father, was seen coming up the j conservation programs. The distriburoad the young man also having a j ri°n would be made on the basis of gun on his shoulder. area and number of fishing and hunt"As soon as they were seen an- I ing licenses sold by each state, preaching by Rice, he dropped th" ! Members of the State Conservation

lowing guests at dinner Sunday; Mr. and Mrs. John Leonard, Mrs. Jennie Goodale. Mrs. A. F. Ringo, Mrs. Nell Leamon and James and Billy Leaman all of Indianapolis and Mr. and Mrs Will Glidewell of Greencastle.

►J* 4* 4* *1* ■f* Eastern Star To

July 31st, in the McKee Chapel of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church in Indianapolis. Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel officiating. The bride is a graduate of DePauw university where she was affiliated with Delta Delta Delta sorority, and also a member of Delta Theta Tau chapter at Brazil. She is a member of the Brazil high school faculty. Mr. Miller graduated from Indiana university and is a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. They will make their home in Indianapolis. where the bridegroom is employed.

Students On NYA Make High Marks DEP.AI'AV AID STUDENTS SCORED GRADES HIGHER THAT AVERAGE OF OTHAitS

Pearcy was formerly Hodge of Putnamville.

The comfort wash suits afford and str eet lamps to remain standing, ^ ^ 0 ^° cl< r ’* 1urSl,a y afternoon

, ,our fine laundering make a conibina- complete, so far as he remembers ‘ rS ' ' Bart ' e y. Mrs. James reins of the briddle and advanced to- Committee, represent Indiana’s 648j tion hari , to bpat Spnd your 9ujt3 was one in front of Clarence Vestal’s W,n h3Ve charBe of thc P ro ?Tam

ward them with his gun in a shooting i organized conservation clubs with 1 position. When within a few yeards more than a hundred and sixty thousof each other both guns were dis- and members, and serve in an advis-

ory capacity to Conservation.

charged, and it is not known which fired first. Rice being killed on the spot, the ball entering his breast, while the ball of his gun missed Fur-

ney but hit another man by the name 1 SALE OR SERVING OF

of Danbury immediately in the rear of Furney, the ball taking effect In his side Danbury, it is thought, will

the Department of

+ -1-4- + + J- + + DePauw Graduate's

and wash trousers to Home laundry present residence.

& Cleaners. 3-lt.! °f‘e other industry of that same

j period was the retailing of kerosene] ,arr a * P AnnolIn ecd

wagon, that oil being

MRS. DUUHIN DIES

from a tank wagon, that oil being' Ann ouneement has been made of used for the illuminant in all stores 1 thp niaria ^ c of Margaret C. Klinger as well as residences. Will Irvin ■ *° ' F ’ rT1PSt Hiller, which took place

NEW YORK. .Aug. 3 'UP' Mrs was t)le fir8t ] {erospne tank wa?0 n i ° n Saturda y afternoon at 3 o’clock.

Marjorie Oelrichs Duchin. 29. who man and was succeeded by win | -

Grades of National Youth administration students in DePauw university were higher than the average of all other students in the school, it was revealed in a report issued today by Robert S. Richey, state NYA director. The same was true in 19 other Indiana colleges, the report revealed, which was based on the grades of 4.680 students working on college aid projects in Indiana ’ast year, earning a total of $365,344.24. In eight schools their average was equal to that maintained by the entire student body, while in only five colleges were below the general aver-

age.

Schools in which NYA men and women made higher than average grades. DePauw included, were: Anderson College. Ball State Teachers College, Concordia College. Evansville College. Hanover College. Indiana Central College. Indiana State Teachers College, Indiana Universitv. Indianapolis College of Pharmacy. Manrhester College, Marion College. University of Notre Dame, Rose Polytechnic Institute. St. Joseph’s College, Taylor University. Valparaiso University, and Wabash College. GAME WARDEN TRANSFERRED Herman Riley, who has been the game warden for this area for some years, has been transferred to Lagrange county, succeeding the warden who had been located there and who recently died. Mr. Riley is succeeded here by Victor Walters, of Ft. Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. Omer Beck have returned home from Port Huron. Mich., where they spent a vacation visiting their daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth Lindsay.

GAME FISH UNLAWFUL 1 was dropped from the social register Callahan.

1 because she married Eddie Duchin, |

recover. The ball has been extracted | sale or purchase of any game fish, ' Rice was a man of desperate j whether caught in this state or not,

also prohibits the serving of these

The Indiana law prohibiting the orchestra leader, died today less than sov OF fraNKLIN COLLEKE

a week after giving birth to a son at

the Harbor Sanitarium.

character and source of annoyance to the whole neighborhood. He had lately sold his farm, and when advised by a friend to move off to some new country, he swore he would not be run off by any set of men, and that tf Hiram Furney ever put his foot on the farm, he would beat him

to death.

"Furney’s taon ■will jprobably recover. His skull is broke in several

species of fish in restaurants, hotels and other eating places, Virgil M. Simmons, commissioner of the Department of Conservation, pointed out today. The statute makes it unlawful to

GRASS FIRE EXTINGUISHED

HEAD IN SERIOUS CONDITION INDIANAPOLIS. Ind., Aug. 3 — (UP)—Lewis Spencer, 12 year old son of William Gear Spencer, president of Franklin college and former

| The Banner’s Question Of The WeekJ

HOW no YOU KEEP COOL? Ever mindful of Mark Twain’s

tinguish a grass fire out of control. Mpthodls t hospital where he '

to purchase, any large mouth bass, Kentucky bass, smallmouth bass, silver or yellow bass, white or striped

places. Rice was a man of near 50 j bass. The law defines the term "sale”! vears of age. and leaves a large fam- j as including the serving of any of the

lly of small children. THE WOOD DIVORCE

In the divorce suit in Circuit court. Wood vs Wood, Thaddeus Wood Is

the plaintiff, seeking from Madeline Wood.

, ttll Wlrelc n who fid-

in vacant lots between H.ghfal! and!^ en j* ^ ^ hia'rig^t;August, we"bravtuhe bolhngTquare

some people around

sell or offer to sell, purchase or offer, .. V7 “ arm and left leg both severed hv .l* 1 to nurehnse anv large month h.ss ArUngton avenues. Firemen used ' f ' b0t ?_.“ Cvere ? ^ \ and questioned

water from the booster tank to douse

the flames.

railroad train

TRUSTEE’S PICNIC

fish listed as a part of a meal by any restaurant, hotel, boarding house, or

at Franklin yesterday. town on the Do

Young Spencer was riding his hi- You Kepn , .'. w Do cycle toward the Franklin busines* remark Allowing sage

i remarks were gleaned from a public

district late yesterday afternoon I inflnltly ^

when he fell under the wheels of a Pennsylvania railroad switch engine. “Looey” had shown considerable

The annual picnic of the trustees

eating house keeper. An exception is and assessors’of the townships of promise as a violinist and pianist and made to permit the serving of any of Putnam county will be held this year was looking forward to passing his the listed fish to a guest, patron or at the Cloverdale park, on August 8. Red Cross life saving test on Wedboarder and his family when the'fish Trustee Furr, of Cloverdale township. 1 nesday. He was to enroll In high

separation was legally taken in Indiana by such is the chairman of the committee on school this fall, two grades ahead of

guest, patron or boarder. arrangements. j the usual schedule.

heat dodging.

They are:

the wisdom of

Blame it on the heat.

Go without a hat and soak up plenty of sunshine.—Paul Wright.

Go jump in the lake, risen.

-Roger Mor-

Pour water on department et al.

your wrists—fire

Keep calm and collected. Little excitement will keep the temperature under the collar at its most delightful minimum.—Fred Snively.

I sit gent.

the shade—Russell New-

Dun t look at the thermometers. John T. Sutherlin.

The hotter it gets the better I like ‘ Come around when its zero and /Tv, te11 y ° U something.—Leon (Pinky) Welch.

(Submit your questions Banner.)

The

your furnituh, LOAN here Here the cash you be obtained quick'v c fuss or ml tap,.. Yo u J* in small m onthl suited to y„ur i nco ?f reasonable charge J 6 . only for the number of keep each dollar, e‘ fair terms, courtesy, pn* Indiana Loanr I Washington ^

TWO GIRLS AFTER PL0 IN DEEP S|

SUCCUMBS TO IXJpRn AFTER REMOVAL IN r PD NEW YORK FELL FIVE STORIES TO Hospital Interne Enters Pit to Care for (hlld Police Protest NEW YORK. Aug 3 lyn Murphy, 9, joined her Jorraine Chinclmr io j n day another victim of N crowded tenement districts Like thousands of other Marilyn and Lorraine had r ing on the roofs of the fire* ements in their east river hood, away from the hot n and heavy traffic. With Marilyn leading, started to climb across i shaft to an adjoining roof, stepped upon a strip of i concealed by tar paper, rti a covering over the shaft, wire gave way. The children five floors down tiv shaft 22 inches wide at the top W near the bottom There they Four thousand persons wil rescue efforts of an heroic at, surgeon, police and 'ironies cheered when patrolman Cossman was towered into at the end of a ropheldby and removed Lorraine. She df hours later. Gossman reported that he: reach Marilyn. Her fall ha! 1 in a cranny from which she extricated only by break inf: an eight-inch wall beside ki and firemen went to wort, tween the blows of chisels' bars the rescuers heard moaning that her back htirV wanted her mother. Dr. Phillip Zoller. an inis, manded that police lower hill shaft. Police protested that was too great. "I think that girl’s hack is said Zoller. 180 pound f‘ l % York university football pW she isn’t handled properly I’m going down.’ Zoller found Marilyn Im 1 injured to be hoisted to thehad he been able to erctricak gave her a sedative, told he "a brave little girl’’ and by directed the attack on the Forty-five minutes aftef* sledgehammer h.3 I been s*fi lyn was lifted out through foot hole. A rude plank strt^ splinis had been prepaid] climbed out after the chill* ed on her a fpw minut»s ing her in an ambulance ^ Marilyn waved an arm ' stammered broken thanks 1*

cuers.

“I’m not going to cry pered. "I want my mother Six hours later she died. EMU.IE DIONNE ’ MlU’U ILL BECAUSE Of CALLENDER. Ont Au? • —Emilie Dionne, one of plets, is “mildly’’ iH heat. Dr. Allan Roy DeF<*

today.

Dr. DaFoe said Emihe r would not appear with h'r their daily showing the week. ,, Emilie was In bed pan day and will be kept in ward of the Quints’ hospA*

ELMORE

pIVORf*

Alfred Elmore is vorce from Louise F' complaint being fi' Pl ' "^ ty rlerk. Homer C. ' day, by James & Alle p 1 ^ the plaintiff. The coupKj riprl Anril 18. 1935. _