The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 September 1940 — Page 1

THE tt'EATHFR + Ml! \M> COOLER * + + + + + + + + + + «

THE DAILY BANNER

IT WAVES FOR ALL”

0*****++++**fQ + ALL THE HOME NEWS 4 4 UNITED TUESS SKKYIC’E 4 • 44 + + + + + + + + + + 0

ME

FORTY-EIGHT

GREPiNOASTLK, INDIANA, TUESDAY, SEITEMBER 10, 1040.

NO. 1»81

INCILVIEN 1IMS BIDS

)N SEMINARY

„ E I|STAM>L\'G of speciA TI<,NS ( VI SKI) SCAK-

t ITV OF BIDS

IKK MI NTING ON SEPT. ‘JO

CLOVERDALE MASONIC PICNIC TO BE SEPT. 12

On Thursday evening, September 12, at 6:30, Cloveidale Masons anu families and members of Cloverdait: Eastern Star will have a pitch-in picn c supper in the grove east u. the Clcverdale school building. Tire lodge will serve ice cream and iced tea. Entertainment will be provided. All members of Cloverdale lodge and Eustein Star are urged to Le present and a cordial invitation is

Ion Of Salvage Of Kails And j extended to all sojourning Masons

e Also Features Monday anc j gt ar members.

Night Session j Arrangements hav'e been made .o

hold the picnic inside, in the event

MISS MILBURN RETIRES FROM HOSPITAL POST

IN ACCORDANCE WITH WISHES OF BOAIfll) OF TRUSTEES OF HOSPITAL MRS. OVERSTREET Is HEAD Miss Effie Stigelman, Assistant Su|terintendent, Also Retired From Her Position

j single bid was received by j [, a j weather. . council for the paving of the |

Jerurban right-of-way on Sent- ^ ^

C t.vt during the special «*- LOllIltV I UX

the Greencastle official fam- J

^result.'^second special meet- i St j 11 I H Sl^Joil

hi be held on Friday evening, I

|,ber 20. The proposed paving I BUDGETS OF V ARIOUS PUTNAM

fc-iil 1 r. advertised and it is 1 TOWNSHIPS ARK UNDER [that at least one contractor! PERUSAL I on the job. j

as brought out in Monday’s The Putnam County Tax Adjust-.

that a misunderstanding of j ment Board began its second day .ses- j !)0sltl0n ' accordance § ifications had caused the | sion Tuesday morning, and moved ■ SP ' v, ‘ f1 " nnr

liids in the previous adver- | rapidly down the list of budgets t regarding the street, the which were before it for considera- I

cone* rning the use of a 5-bag tion.

and a machine finisher had j The budgets as advertised were appeal contractors stumped. No ; proved for Clinton, Russell, Madison locally who do this kind of j and Jackson townships and for Rus- : have that large a mixer and ^ sellville and Bainbridge towns, all figured on finishing by I i n the county budget, the

In accordance with the wishes of tne board of trustees of the Putnam County Hospital, Miss Eva Milburn, for seventeen years superintendent of the hospital, has retired from that position. These desires of the board were expressed to Miss Milburn in written form, and were accepted by

her without objection.

Miss Eftie Stigelman, who became assistant superintendent of the hospital at the time Miss Milburn became its head, also retired from her

with notice

served upon her orally by a reprej sentative of the board, Monday. Mrs, R. J. Overstreet, a member of the nursing staff of the hospital ten years, was designated as acting superintendent and is now in charge of the institution’s operations, under the oversight of the board of trus-

tees.

The record of the board of trustees of the hospital in regard to this mat-

ter is as follows, in part:

On the 3rd day of September, 1940,

SENATE-HOUSE GROUP DISCUSSES DRAFT BILL WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—(UP) —A Senate-House conference committee, nine of whose 11 members are opposed to any delay in conscription, meets today to iron out differences in the Senate and House versions of the Bu.ke-Wadsworth con-

scription bill.

Chairman Morris Sheppard of the six-man Senatd group said an agreement would be reached “as speedily as possible, consistent with thorough consideration of the Senate and

House bills.”

Chairman Andrew J. May of the five-man House committee said a settlement is possible before nightfall. Neither May nor Sheppard would predict the outcome.

ENROLLMENT EXCEEDS ALL EXPECTATION

PRESIDENT WILD MAN ADDRESSED FIRST MASS MEETr,\: OF FRESHMEN SO STATES ARE REPRESENTED For First Time Thnre It Waiting List For Rooms in Both .Mens and Womens Halls

DISTRICT MEETING TO BE AT CRAWFORDSVILLE

MAINE VOTE RESULTS IN PREDICTIONS

1 Call. Charles McGaughey, a mem-

poor re-

Tlvpoints were cleared up j lief requests for each township weri

council and the city engineer, ! approved as asked.

^ Dunbar. j The action on the budget of Jef-1 Cox. corner of Seminary and ferson township was the same as that

preaent and asked j for Cloverdale and Monroe township I th ® Boani 0< iniM, "'" i ' Putnam f they had considered i as outlined Del County Hospital convened with the any other form of pavement | The Greencastle city budget was followin ^ members P resent: T A 8 cement. He stated that he J reduced one-half cent by the cut >n ' ^ ollt l l aml Natlmn

frontage of about 190 feet on ] the city park item for materials, the ary and that he understood ' reduction being $184. leaving the nia- | 4e paving would cost the prop- J terials item at $1716. This lowers the |

Owners around a dollar per foot • city rate one-half cent, leaving it at I A fiUO ' um

asphalt would be about half ! 85 cents on the hundred dollars. | Trustees being present .the following

In the school city budget thereresolutions were presented U, the was no change from the figure adver- i boari1 b y the Pulnam Count >' MetU -

tised. .cal Society:

In concluding its consideration of I “ At a called meeting held August

the Putnam county budget as adver-

tised and as revised by the county j P ass ed a resolution, a copy

council, the tax adjustment board I

afternoon approved the I “Because of the deep

KEPFBLU VN LEADERS ELECTION OF VVH.KKIE

ASSURED

Enrollment of new students at DePauw University has exceeded expectations. President Clyde E. Wildman. addressed the first mass meeting of the F; eshman class In Meharry Hall Monday afternoon and a tabulation showed 540 students assigned to counsellors. A roll call of states showed that DePauw attracted these from a wide area, thirty of the forty-eight states being represented along with one student from j Hawaii. Two foreign students are I expected later in the week, one from

CLAIM I Pe u, South America, and another

RAF PLANES STRIKE BACK AT GERMANY

V. L. Tatlock, director of extension, * oi the Indiana State Teachers College, has sent to Frank Jarrell, superintendent of the Putnam county schools, an announcement of extension activities which that institution will hold in Putnam county. This work is intended especially for the teachers. Classes will meet once each week for twelve weeks. Four quarter hours credit is given for each course. Enrollment requests are to be sent to the class secretary ,or direct to the extension di-

vision of the college.

For Greencastle. the work will be on Education. The first meeting will be held September 18. at 4:15, in.

the High School building. The in- j and Wesermuende, brought an angry, strutter will be Mr. Ramsey. “Con- protest from the government today

tact Lola Walls or Glen Skelton,’

communication directs.

BERLIN CLAIMS BRITISH \\ \R PLANES BOMB NON MILI-

TARY OBJECTIVES

NAZIS \\ \KN GREAT BRITAIN London Ma> Expect Same Kale As Warsaw And Rotterdam

Declare HltP’rites

BERLIN, Sept. 10 (UP) British airplanes, striking back at Germany with airplane raids on Berlin, Stettin

the that "a number of dwelling houses

JOE MARTIN

ST \TEMKNT

National Chairman Says Republican Victory In Maine Heralds End

Of New Deal

WASHINGTON,

Republican leaders claimed today that Maine’s general election returns assured the election of Wendell L. Willkie and of a Republican House in

November.

They cited substantial increases in

her of the board, and secretary, was | the percentage of Republican votes not present on account of illness. j cast in Maine yesterday compared

A quorum of the said Board of

V mmnt.

Cox said he was sure 47 other ',rty owners on the street were tor of asphalt. He told the counwas c. rtain that this type of nent would be satisfactory an I

cheap r than cement,

rshall Ahrams, city attorney, Monday

Mr. Cox that the advertise-

! called for four types of paving ' advertised,

up to the council to

approved

county welfare estimate and levy as

with 1988 as proof that the Republi-

can tide is running strong.

Republicans cast 6r> per cent or more of Maine’s agglegate ballots.

“Usually,” says editorial research I tests in reports, “the Republicans have lost ] ternoon.

18, the Putnam County Medical Soc- ! the presidential election in the na-1 strutted liety passed a resolution, a copy of j lion when their (September) vote in j iib rar y.

which is enclosed. “Because of the

from Finland.

For the first time, University officials reporTtid, there is a waiting list for' rooms in both the mens halls and the womens halls. This despi'c the fact that Mason Ifail, which will house 110 women students, was constructed during the summer. The toI tal enrollment when registration is |

Sept. 10. (UP) j completed this week is expected to

top the 1500 mark.

New students met with their faculty counsello s yesterday and were assigned to sections after their entrance credentials had been checked. The important iask of giving each entering student a thorough phys- i ical examination was begun Monday I and will be continued throughout to-

day and Wednesday.

English placement tests were given Tuesday morning and placement

President Works On Radio Speeehj ROOSEVELT WILL BROADCAST FROM NATION’S CAPITAL

TOMORROW NIGHT

HYDE PARK. N. Y., Sept. (UP) President Roosevelt began work toilay on a major address which may establish a precedent affecting the question of free radio time for himself and Wendell L. Willkie during the campaign. Mr. Roosevelt speaks from 9:.'!0 to 10 p. m. (EST) Wednesday night in Washington before the convention of the international brotherhood of the teamsters, chauffeurs, stable-

ami helpers. (AFL).

Ignoring Republican protests that the President is receiving free radio time for addresses which are actuj ally campaign speeches, t7ie White I House would give no intimation whether Mr. Roosevelt's speech

; Maine has fallen below 65 per cent cf j w j)] be given Wednesday morning, interest' the total.” | Fraternity and sorority rush is also

foreign languages in the af- | wouU1 be P olitlcal or non-political. , All new students are in- ! As a consequence, the networks | in the use of the University which wil1 transmit tho add ress to |

Psychological examinations

fell sacrifice to wilfull attacks on non-military objectives’’ and from the newspaper B. Z.-Am.-Mittag with the editorial statement: “Onr

cup is full.”

Authorized Nazi sources had described devastating German raids on London, and asserted that the raids would continue until London had been “completely canceled as a military factor,” when anti-aircraft guns in the capital area burst into a fury of fire at 1:10 a. m. (7:10 p. m. Monday, EDT) and the drone of Brit-

ish planes was heard.

It was not until 1:45 a. in. that the air raid alarm was sounded and the “all clear" came at 2:28 a. m. Official reports said there had

been only slight damage.

B. IS.-Am-Mittag warned, in its editorial, that German “reprisals” might mete to London the fate of

Warsaw and Rotterdam.

“We realize,” it said, "that the war between England and Germany will not resume a purely military character as long as the criminal clique around Churchill continues its low game ... on the other side it j must have been realized that one day the cup would be full and that then retaliation would be manifold. “Now it has reached that point.”

which the members of the society ^ “The Maine election,” said Chair-1 underway on the campus. I have for the welfare of the Putnam man Joseph W. Mai tin, Jr., of the i Actual registration of all students'

hat it was up to the council ’.o; The "budget for Marion township 1 c °'*"Lv Hospital and for residents of R e P u b 1 i c a n Nnt.omd committee.'^,, takp p, a ce in Bowman Oymnas-

)t the i ■ st and lowest bid.

; was approved without change.

.Cox ncl he was confident that In the instances of the budgets of 70 to 80 per cent of the people Cloverdale ami Monroe townships, in

iminary preferred asphalt.

iinciiman Gwin Ensign moved pendituies and levies for 1941 were | the notui for bids on the street considered high by the adjustment] p-advt rtised according to law board, the latter made the ruling ! jtl'.at another spccigl session he ’ that the special school levies in both : withe ten days. Councilman of these townships be cut to 75 cents ^ irt Stoner seconded the motion but that the board recommend to 1 |tt> vote on this question was the state tax board that the latter I , , ■ . i The Daily Banner, this morning,

Jmous. , make some provision to provide these •>' ’

the 1-lYif r»h«uon Homo for Nlll’!

discussion of salvaging the two townships with funds above the i

H car rails and trolley wire then amount allowed by .he Putnam Miss Milburn, the retu-ing up nn J tendent of the Putnam County Hos

the nation, will not be obligated to I make any prior commitment to giv'- j Willkie the same amount of free ra-

dio time.

Mr. Roosevelt's press secretary,

Stephen T. Early, Informed the net i buildings Uxluy. works that the president would i Known loll of dead.

Roosevelt administration with all its | sche(lule „/ classes will be followed i s P eak nt the a PP ointed h, ’ ur ’ bUt LitT'a chihl.^VLlpRal and a'ma-

madc no request or suggestion that | / _ t/ 4 t i _

it be b: oadcast, saying by

LONDON. Sept. 10. (UP) A third night of merciless German terror raids left London littered with the debris of homes and business

There was an un-

l Putnam county, and patients, there | “definitely heralds the end of the | jum pnday Saturday the entire

' has been concern for some time ovi r

I the hospital’s operation. With only inefficiency, bungling, extravagance j through with shortened periods tor : ■--- ■- - ' i ternity hospital, suffered direct hits. the view of betterment and pro the purpose of assigning texts ready »'<»<lca»t, ijaying >y inferem ; Ano ther nurses’ home was damaged, of this very vital local institution the Chairman J. William Ditter of the | fo , cla8g . room work to bt , gin M on- I that tho y could broadcast it or not | ha | ^ atarted near st society asks that every consideration Republican congressional campaign ; day morning > as they chose. But, as a matter of I p au ,, s cathedral whose great dome ! be given its recommendation.” The ! committee, was more specific. Baa-1 Thc first Univ( . rsity cha p el wi „ hp I policy, the networks broadcast all i

communication from the medical ing his estimate on figures less com-, held

society was signed by its president | plete than thos • on which the ton man as speaker. The chapel pro- i and secretary. i P 0 ' n K percentages weie computed, . g. ram j- or rema mder of that ween j In talking to a representative of Ditter said Maine’s combined vote in ( inc|udea Dr H ,. nry b. Longdon on

at: three districts for members of the ] Tuesday, Prof. Francis C. Tilden on

of the president, whereas |

Monday with President Wild- j speeohea political candidates must pay for

overlooks the center of London, and

Nurses, | House had increased from 58.8 per

Matt Murphy suggested that board, if such extra allowances are 'tontractors bidding on the street required during the year, rovnnent also bid on the steel The Floyd township budget was wire The city attorney said 1 approved as advertised, if the city deals with the sal-1 in the Franklin township budget | end uf it, the money derived matter, the trustee reported that on !

It Ro into the general fund and | September 3 the advisory board of j

toward helping defray the cost that township had made some reducavirc Sen,inary street. He said tions in the advertised budget wherecouncil wants the money from ; by the special school fund was resale of thi former interurban.: f | u( . cc | by the advisory board $1,200. i>eity to :;o back to the street and , lowering the special school lund levy the State Board of Accounts J g cents, or to 52 cents. The advisory previously informed him this, b oard reduc d the tuition fund I'i not 11 done and that this body j $1,294.50, thus cutting 8 cents off not sanction such a step. | the advertised levy, leaving it at 52 Murphy then suggested that' cents. However, the county tax ad-

I justment board cut another one cent

(( <iti11iitied mi I’aui- Twol

pi tal. expresed her appreciation of the friendships which she has formed in the county. She said: "I wish to thank my friends in << ‘hi I'fttfe

cent in 1936 to 66 per cent this year. Thurs , |u

“This gain of 7 2 per cent in the | ' Republican congresisonal vote." said | Ditter. “checks generally with Re-1 publican gains n-gisterel in seven j special elections earlier this year. In these special elections in Tennessee,

Count) Resident® Present At Rally

i Nebraska, Iowa, Ohio, Michigan andj' He U1 " b '' K ‘ n U,,I ' IS -

| New York, the Republican candidates * increased the combined G. O. D. vote i

oy seven per cent over 1938. '(/I’aild (lll’X Prol)(

l the historic Guildhall. Bombs struck

, ... a dor house for aged men and wom-

their time. Thus early required the I broadcasters to make the distinction between president and candi-

date themselves.

It appeared probable that the networks would assume that Mr. Rous- j , .

1 poll til

evelt was speaking as president, it ' was not expected that his prepared

e working out' text would be read y much before S

I twice daily. Freshmen football pr ic- j m ' an hour and a half bcfore h “ j 286 persons had

in... ...in v...,.!,. i.~i.,„ speaks. | about 1.400 seriously wounded in the

| After it is made, the networks , rajd of Sunday night and Monday [will have i" decide if h< spoke aa a mornln g Adding the toll of the

Saturday night laid, a total of 592

| Wednesday, Dean Louis H. Dirks on

and a music chapel on

Friday.

Vaisity football candidates reported to Coach Raymond U. Nohi

Monday morning ad are

The ministry of home security, it was learned, was considering the adj visahility of closing all theaters and I movie houses throughout the metrotan area for the duration of the i German raids. Some had closed vol-

I untarily.

It was announced officially that

been killed and

contractor deal direct with the ’(•sent:,this of the defunct intersn line. There was some talk of j jointm- a citizen’s committee of I petty owners on the street and :>»){ them sell the salvage to a | jk si, i and giving the money to | contractor. Mr. Abrams announc-1 [that hi would go to Indianapolis I

s| ay inci confer with the state I ASSERT PLANES BOMBED I’OKI .ri in an effort to find some plan! OF JAFFA; OTHER BRITISH

Italians Report Aerial Success

cover this situation. Others who ■k part in the discussion were jnw Leucus and Roy Sutherlin, 1 residents of Seminary street.

N ORGANIZATION OF STATE CIVILIAN GUARD NjIANAPOLIS, Ind., Sept. 10 Pi -Organization of an Indiana ’•han guard to replace a national 8* r 'l called to active duty moved P* ,ar d today as guard officers Wciroj W it b army officers at the corps area headquarters at Hayes, O. .Participating in the conference f I-cut. Col. Robinson Hitchcock, 1 • °f selective service plans for ^ ln liana National Guard, and Norman L. Thompson, as-/-a-U state adjutant general. ' •'■ P oposed civilian guard would -,7 ,0 preserve law and order i assist in catastrophes In place lar J nati(>nal Kuard should It be Kit a 1,1 actlve service with thc ■ e<1 States army.

BASES

ROME, Sept. 10.—(UP)—Italian airplanes yesterday bombed the port of Jaffa In Palestine, damaging port works and causing large fires, the communique of general headquarters of the armed forces said today. The communique said Italian airplanes again bombed the railway between Alexandria and Marsa Matrum, Egypt, and that railroad buildings and one train were blown up. In East Africa the air force attacked the British air base at Port Sudan, Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, hitting several planes on the ground and

causing fires.

The Italians admitted that the Royal Air Force had attacked Mas-

Eritrea and

KEPI BLR AN ORGANIZATION WORKERS MET AT TI KKEY RUN TUESDAY At at rally of Republican organization workers, held at Turkey Run. Tuesday evening, sponsored by the Indiana Republican Editorial Association, there was reported to have been a fine attendance, so large, <n fact, that there was an overflow meeting held outside and the overflow numbered 500, it was said. State Republican candidates were in attendance and made brief talks. Among those attending from Putnam county were Mr. and Airs. Gilbert E. Ogles, Mr. and Mrs. Thad Jones, Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Bartley, N C. O’Hair, A. J. Duff, Fred Starr, Kenneth Bennett, George Arendt, from Greencastle; with George and Charles Rockwell, Fay Ray, and Mr. Truesdel, of Cloverdale, with others from the

county.

This gathering for the Sixth district will be duplicated in character by others to be held in each district of the state, in preparation for the opening of the active campaign work. Chairman Ogles, of the Putnam county Republican organization, announces a big district meeting at Crawfordsville, the night of Thurs-

"Maine thus confirms the nation- ■ wide swing toward Republican leadership which has been marked in every special election since 19,17. This tide appears to be gaming in sweep and power from month to

month.

“Clearly it indicates a Republican House in the November general election by a comfortable margin. A general gain of seven per cent in the congressional vote over 19.18 would give a gain of 71 Republican seats in the new House.” That would give the G. O. P. control with a comfortable working majority and elevate Martin to the speakership held since 1930 by Democrats. The Senate will remain Democratic in any event because only one third of its meinberahip is up for reelection and Republicans have no chance to elect enough new senators to emerge from the minority.

20 Years Ago IN GREENCASTLE

lassie during

war. These raids

dead and three wounded. The British were said to

raided Italian positions in Cyrenaica.

causing one dead and four wounded, evening.

resulted in two

have

The Rotary club organized by electing officers and adopting bylaws. The vice" president was Charles McGaughey, secretary was C. C. Gillen, one of the directors was Charles H. Barnaby. Among the

day, October 1, principally to hear a charter members were ^Sayers. J ’ — ’ p] Allan, E. L* Harris, J- H.

Pitchford, Horace Askew, W. R. Hutcheson, Paul F. Cook, Charles McGaughey, R. *->• McCutchan, C. C.

Gillen.

Fred Masten sold a property in Greencastle to John W. Herod for a reported price of $5,000.

Delict E "a. Dessie 'was field ^ .y Harry headquarters of Emperor Haile Se-1 candidate for governor of I " dlana R

the Italo-Ethiopian | Also, said Mr. Ogles, all of the R -

publican county chairmen of the Sixth district will be dinner guests of District Chairman Byron Jones at his home at Lebanon, next Monday

Follow* Suicides

LOS ANGELES INVESTIGATES CONDITIONS AT JUVENILE INSTITUTION LOS ANGELES, Sept. 10 (UP) A grand jury today heard of the alleged suicide of two boys who an investigator said suffered brutal treatment and inhuman tortures at the Whittier State School. District Attorney Buron Fitts asked thc jury to investigate the hanging of Benny Moreno, 13, and Edward Leiva, 16, and the report by Judge Ben. B. Lindsey, juvenile authority. that corporal punishment and the mental to: ture of fear had been used at the institution. Lindsey and a committee appointed by Gov. Culbert Olson completed a two-month investigation of tin school, begun when Leiva was found hanging by a bed sheet in a punishment cell of "Ipst privilege cottage.” It was in the same "cottage,’’ a building with solitary confinement cells in which disobedient inmates are housed for temporary periods, that Moreno supposedly hanged h ! mself with his belt a year ago. Botn boys had attempted to escape. The state department of institutions earlier had sent a committee to investigate the deaths, but later five of its six members repudiated a portion of the report which sail “beyond any reasonable doubt Benny Moreno committed suicide.”

candidate, in which ease they would have to give Willkie an equal per-

iod of free time. MASONTO NOTICE

Greencastle Chapter No. 22 R. A. M. will hold its stated convocation Wednesday evening, September 11. \\ illkiu To Visit In ( hirairo Friday FIRST MAJOR CAMPAIGN M> DRESS BV GOP NOMINEE TO

BE IN KANSAS

persons were killed and about 2.74(1 seriously wounded in the first two raids with the toll of that of last night and this morning nine hours and two minutes, from 8:38 p. m. to 5:40 a. m. still to come. Operations within the 24 hours ending at dawn today had cost the Germans at least 52 planes.

i MRS. HI Nit) KNOLL’S At NT DIED IN ACCIDENT

The Elks lodge will meet in regular session this evening.

RUSHVILLE, Ind., Sept. 10 (UP) Wendell L. Willkie's campaign assistants said to lay that the Maine election returns ind'eated a trend which would put Willkie in the White House. Willkie followed early returns with interest but retired without formal comment before enough votes were counted to make the result definite. He devotes fcxlay to the speeches he will deliver on a tour of the west which begins Thursday

night.

After conferring with Henry Ford, Detroit automobile manufacturer, yesterday, Willkie announced that the first major address of his western tour woultf be at Coffeyville, Kans. He will discuss “the difference between my philosophy of free enterprise and that of the new deal.” He expects to make omy two formal addresses on the tour. His first stop will be Chicago where Friday he will deliver extemporaneous speeches at the union stock yards, an electrical equipment manufacturing plant, a steel mill and a negro baseball park.

Mrs. Henry Knoll received u telegram at noon Monday informing her that her aunt. Miss Elizabeth Bain had been killed in an automobile accident while en route from her home at Pasadena, Cal., to Houston, Tex. Miss Bain has taught music in the city school for a number of years. Mrs. Knoll’s sister, Miss Blanchard Kenny of Pasadena arrived Monday for a visit and received word of her aunt’s death after her arrival here, she immediately returned to Pasai dena accompanied by Mrs. Knoll.

& Today’s Weather * and • $ Local Temperature » Generally fair tonight and Wednesday; cooler tonight.

Minimum 6 a. m. a. m.

a. m. . a. m. a. m. . a. m. . noon . p. m. p. m.

53 53 55 57 59 61 61 61 62 62