The Syracuse Journal, Volume 25, Number 39, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 19 January 1933 — Page 1

by Arthur Brisbane MUSSOLINI’S OPTIMISM LOUD VOICE OF CASH 10, m REAL FIGHTERS THE DOVE zkPPEARS

Mussolini blesses the thirty-hour week, and would combine it with “back-to-the-land" movement. He. says, which will cheer you, Mussolir. being intelligent and practical, tha recovery ; will come next July, and that we are at the bottom of the de pression now. “1 think the second half of 1933 will surprise you pleasantly,” says h Here or abroad cash is the strong argument. American students at the University of Vienna were victims vs offensive rowdyism. The .American minister complained, with little effect Now somebody discovers hat foreign •end $1,750,000 a year, more Than all the Austrian ■ spend, and that has caused a change ' in the attitude toward ‘ American students. American doctors, finishing then studies in Vienna, spend a half mil;, *' ;lion dollars there yearly.. . ■ ■' ■ ; F ’. ■ .' ' i If American students and decor S would let urn from foreign countries, they w.-iild find letter cniversitieand better njedicaj schb< ls;here, and - have the satisfaction of spending J , 'their nwney in the United States, j where they expect to m >ke their money hereafter. Tai th sand more Jape see • Ih. diers are marching into Chinn. T.er. I thousand Japanese, well drilled. Well I armed, .with armored tanks rolling; ahead of them, bomb-dropping airplane-, overhead, represent a rea' , lighting force. . I ■ China h; s learned about fighting in the last ten years of constant civil war and foreign war. She learned | something in the war with Japan, | and “beating China” is no longer . pastime, /■•■ ■■ I Today's conflict, is .a. struggle be I ; !'■' ■ ' * inj; on the part of the Japanese, pa j tient endurance and determination or the part of .China to outlast Japan’ , financial ,esources.,'.' • . You read in Genesis, chapter that the dove came back to the ark; ' ‘‘and. 10, .in her mouth was an ohvc I leaf,” So Noah knew that the. witter; I wen- abated from off the esrth. I Business and financial ncwsdpves are beg’ in < r ’■ > 0 '•' e Al; , leaves t<> the ark of the depression.! Net !.■ f 'hr !!.> has risen 15 per cent in November, I compared with October. I Building operatit in Ameiici I *” we up more /bar !'» per cent ii i November, over October. We are gradually climbing i.p out of thi s slough. ' The governTnent discovers that [ ' milk kept in grass green bottles pre > ■.Served it* qilwlity, does now grow rancid. If you haven’t green bottles, black will di as well. | Year ■ ; i E. Uihlein of Mil- L waukee discovered that dark brown; bottles priyerve/beer from damaging , effects <>f ' i-.iight, and advertising . the f <’• ably added several million.j b icT ’. annual Jpuf of I ver. Auguste Piccard, who has twice visited ihe strat higher above the earth than any; other I .man',! arrives here to explore the! stratosphere again, in the cMd region ! of Hudson bay Professor Pivcard I.as a twin brother in America, also n scientist, Jean Piccard; who devotehis learning to. the phenomenon. of; twin births. Jean Piccard believethat .-left-handedness and twin birthare i'n S'-me way nhre.ted. « If you are left-handed it is possible I that you are one of twins, the other one having failed to reach maturity. (The senate judiciary committee he: repotted favorably, by a vote of IDI to 4, a resolution to repeal the J Eighteenth amendment, under which i mis nation has been drinking bootleg | gin and whisky instead of milder! ■ drinks, properly made. The saloon sis forbidden in the report and states (that want to have prohibition on their jown account will be protected and; I encouraged in that desire. ! I They will also have, largely, a mo-; j nopoly of bootleggers and racketeers > j but some, at least, will know how to: attend to that. i German industry shows of 13 per cent, encouraging for all industrialists, and workers. American industry would also show* , substantial gains quite promptly and American employment would show gains if this country would buy only goods made in America by American I workmen and paid for with American! money. It is pleasant to hear that friends across the ocean are doing better. It would be more pleasant to hear that ten or twelve -millions of idle here were going back to work' Buy American goods made by ; American labor. In New York has occurred the; roost stocking crime of this crimeridden period. A> child four months ‘old, Frank Mitchel Cammarano, is found murdered in his crib, stabbed thr.ee times with a sharp blade. The knife had been left driven through his heart deep into the mattress of the crib. The police “suppose” it to be a crime of vengeance. Criminals of this kind cannot be discouraged by any gentle methods, unfortunately.

’l■ . - . n - Syracuse Journal

VOLUME XXV

TOM CLAYTON DIES AFTER AUTO WRECK Another Guest at Party At Lake Now In Jail. f Sheriff Harley 1). Person, Coroner Pau! Landis and Prosecutor Seth Rowdabaugh completed their investigation of the Sunday night party horily before noon today, and this is the report being made to all newspapers: January 19th, 1933.. Ihe Clay ton-Rider house party on Kale island has been the source of an unusual number of weird and unfounded rumors. Facts ascertained by thorough investigation by Sheriff and Coroner are as follows: On Sunday. January 15, three (3) young louples including several high school girls and Rider drove to the Ro'ii r cottage on Kale Island for Bl week-end party. This party was just like hundreds held in lake cottages | all over Northern Indiana every week end .it its inception. Every-' thing went syell until after dinner I Rider and Clay tori began drinking from a supply of liquor which they had brought from Ft. Wayne. Both; became intoxicated, following which there was a general browl. Neigh-, hors were molested but none report- ■ < d ft. officers. Various reasons Jjave been given” for Clayton s trip away ; i.rotri the group, chief perhaps/ that he was in search of officers for help. ; It has been definitely determined ' that he left the party alone and ? while driving at a high rate of speed. , while intoxicated, suffered the crash whii h caused his death. A search of ; the Roser cottage yielded a small quantity of liquor, and much evi-. j dence of general consumption of . liquor. Rider's reason for leaving, the party has not -been explained. His con- i dm t hi ilie. Gome! home has been previously reported. Due to the fact; that ( lay ton arid Rider have both . f»een careii for. and due to evidence ' that theirs was’the chief reeponsibi-i Hty for affairs, officers have not yet ! determined whether further prose^u-i tions will be made. • The investigation has been on since Monday . The delay in the Cbnorer's ; answer to this affair has beery caus-1 ed by failure of the Elkhart County j Coroner to call the Kosciusko County Coroner at the time of Clayton's I death. HERE ARE THE FACTS. Thomas! Clayton, '2O, is dead and ■ William Eider is in jail in Warsaw t as a result of a party at the cottage j of; Clayton's mother, Mrs. Guy Roser ri Kale Island, Sunday. Clayton was on his way to Syracuse in Rider’s car when it failed to j make a turn in the road and turned <>ver. His chest was crushed and ' bones pierced his lungs. He was rushed to the Goshen hospital where hi> death occurred, afte| inidnight, Monday. ’ Rider, arrested on Kale Island SjUnday evening, Ls charged with | malicious trespass, assault and bat- : tery, resisting an officer and public intoxication, and is at present in the, county jail.. | Thomas Clayton was the son of Pell Clayton of the Wawasee Restaurant here, and Mrs. Guy Roser of Garrett and Tort Wayne. He was born oh May 2, 1912, on a farm near Goshen. He attended a number of« scho< Is but graduated from Syracuse ' High school in the class of 1932. i He is survived by his father, his mother two half-sisters, who, live * with their mother, and by his step-' father who lives in California. Funeral services are to be held this • afternoon at his mother’s ho&e in J Garrett, and there will be a burial service at the cemetery in Milford. Mrs. Allen Ritter, who lives in the first house west of the bridge across the channel to Kale Island, >said she was busy in the kitchen, I late Sunday afternoon and glanced [up to sec a car fail to make the . first of the two curves in the road before it meets the main highway. She called to her husband, that a car had turned over. They hurried to the place where Tom Clayton had (failed to make the turn in the I Chrysler machine, which belonged to Rider of. Ft. Wayne. It had gone straight ahead into the marshy grass and turned over several l times. Mrs. Ritter said her husband pulled Clayton away from the car and held up his head, while she ran to phone for the doctor. They feared someone might have been with him and was pinned under the machine, but found no one. When the doctor came it was found that Clayton's chest was crush(ContinueJ on Last Page)

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SPEAKER AT MEETING URGES FARMERS NOT TO PAY MORTGAGES

Non-payment of mortgages on farms and interest and non-payment l of taxes by the farmers until they are able, taxation of only the rich people of >he country arid the big 'corporations, and cash relief for farmers in need w-ere the proposals iof John Mashall of Leetonia, 0., in a meeting at the . High school last night, when he urged .farmers of this township , to form a National Committee of Action. t In urging the farmers to organize into this group, Marshall claimed that the Holiday Movement in Nebraska, the farmers Strike in lowa and the recent buying k in of farms at; auction at riduculously low prices have all been done by farmers Committees of Action in different parts of the country. Mr. Marshal! spoke in a derogatory 4 manner of other organizations of farmers such at the Grange, aridthe Farm Bureau, the Farmers Un-j ion, „ claiming that all these groupn accomplished was paying a few men I fat salaries to get laws passed that worked against the interest of farmers, Marshall painted a picture of

THREE ARE INDICTED [ BY GRAND JURY As one of the results of the gram, jury investigation, Asa Leckrone. lawyer, practising in Warsaw wa; arrested, Wednesday, charged witjh obstruction of justice by influencing the testimony of witnesses. In the two indictinntes returned against him by the grand jury, he was specifically charged with influencing the testimony of Charles McKinley and his sister, Emma, at the trial of their father, Fred McKinley, for incest. Tj ■' The grand jut y also re-indicted Fred McKinley on the charge of incest. He was arrested Tuesday afternoon and held in default' of sl,ool* bond. James Hart, cashier of the defuncti State Bank of, Pierceton, was induct-I ed by the grand jury and charged I with embezzlement on two counts, . one for the sum of $2,000; the dth-j er for the sum of $774.98. John W. Matchett, president of the defunct bank has been laboring under indictment for the past two years for re j ceiving deposits w’hen the bank was known to him to be insolvent. Hart was arrested Monday and posted bonds totaling $4,000 for his appearance for trial. FUNERAL SERVICES HELD ON SATURDAY Funeral services for George' Stephen Kroh, son of Mr. and Mrs'. ! Charles Kroh, were held Saturday morning at 10 o’clock at his home, with Rev. A. J. Armstrong officiating. Burial was in the Syracuse cemetery. ‘ Steve was five years old, having been born Oct. 27, 1927. He became ill a few days before Christmas, intestinal flu developed, and peritonitis set in. On New Year’s day his condition became so serious it was feared he would not live through the day, but ' he rallied. An infusion of glucose | into his veins helped for a time. He took a .little nourishment the week, following New Year’s day, but dr.! Monday last week a spot of pneu-i monia was found on one of his lungs. He steadily became weaker, -and his death occurred Thursday morning. i Steve is survived by his parents, his brother Jimmie, who was ill with pneumonia when Steve became sick; •his sisters Mary Jo and Susan; his grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Freeman; George F. Kroh of California, and a number of uncles and aunts. b SISTER BURIED MONDAY Mrs. Sarah Keck, 72, wife or Joseph Keck, of Nappanee, and sister of Mrs. Clara Stookey, Mrs. George Kreager, and Silas, William and John Gilbert of Syracuse, died at, her home four miles east of Nappanee, Friday afternoon. Cancer caused her death.. Mrs. Keck was a member of the Church of the Brethren and funeral services were held at the Union Center church, Monday afternoon with Rev. Roy Fisher in charge. In addition to her husband and brothers and sister of Syracuse, two other sister*, Mr*. Isabel Welbaum of Nappanee and Mrs. William Manchley of Grand Ledge, Mich., survive. —— -o— Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Dolby and son William Jr., and Miss Thelma Thein of Chicago were Sunday guests of ' Estelle Swart*.

SYRACUSE, INDIANA, THURSDAY J Act UAH X IM, 1«3.

ditions of this country. He said it was a land of plenty, w’here people were unable to the necessities of life. That farmers; had to burn corn for fuel as it could not be sold at any price, while coal miners suffer privation, that houses in cities are unoccupied, but people have homes. He said that one of the plans studied by Congress is the domestic allotment plan to fix a price on certain articles, and for farmers to cut down the production of these. “The allotment plan is a starvation scheme. It is ridiculous and absolutely criminal,” he said. “We should not decrease what we produce, we should increase our market.” In speaking of the allotment plan, Marshall said: “In the United States there is an increasing number of people who can’t buy what the farmer has to sell. There are 15 or 16 million Unemployed, which with their families means about 40 million who can buy nothing. “An increase in the price of foods would only make it more difficult for them to live. (Continued on Last Page)

TAX DETERMINED. Judge Donald Vanderveer has determined the inheritance tax in the Richard Guy estate to be $69.50. The net value of the estate is $16,425. 09, divided among three heirs. • • o THE ROYAL STORE CLOSED ON 13TH On Friday the 13th, the Royal Store, established in Syracuse 19 years ago, closed its doors. On Tuesday at public auction the stock and fixtures were sold to the Boston Store of Elkhart for $1525. According to W. G. Connolly, owner, conditions had become such that he decided to turn the merchandise over to his creditors, to pay them before things got to the place where this not, be done. He said that the merchandise of the store, and accounts were turned over to the Illinois Credit Association to sell. The proceeds were to take care of his indebtedness. Thesewere sold to buyers at a public auction, Tuesday. Mr. Connolly said he has no definite plans for the future. He said that if all accounts owed to him had been paid he would have been in good shape. He also said that the depression was not the only cause of the closing of the store; that the Syracuse Cedar Chest factory’s failure several years ago° left him with a note of $2,500 which he had just finished paying. Mr. Connolly came to Syracuse 30 years ago, and for a time was a partner of J. U. Wingard. After he sold out to Mr. Wingard, Mr. Connolly traveled for the Brown Shoe Co., of St. Louis. There followed a few years in the real estate business, during which time he owned the Syracuse Journal and sold it to Geo. Snyder, continuing with the real estate buying and Selling. ’ Nineteen, years ago Eagles and Connolly started the Royal Store. After two years Connolly bought out Mr. Eagles and since then has managed the business. Mr. Connolly said: “We owe everything we have to the people who live here. We built up our business here and plan to continue to live here, and perhaps re-enter business at a later date.” 0 —• A. STRIEBY WILL BE BURIED FRIDAY A heart attack about 7:45 Tuesday evening, caused the death of Andersbn Strieby. His son Robert had just started from Syracuse, driving Carr’s hearse to take Thomas Clayton’s body to Garrett,, when his father died. Mr. Strieby was 68 years of age, having been born June 2, 1864. He was the son of Daniel and Elizabeth Strieby and was born in Kosciusko county and lived his entire life in this vicinity. He was married to Eva W’hitehead who died in May, 1919. In September 1921 Mr. Strieby and Mary Deardorff were married. She survives as do his four sons, Marion of Tojedo, 0., Edward and Norman of Chicago, and Robert of Syracuse; and his daughter Mabel, who lives in South Bend. There are also four grand-children. Funeral services for Mr. Strieby will be held Friday afternoon at the Evangelical church with Rev. Foust officiating. • Oren Cable went to Chicago, Sunday.

' CURRENT EVENTS | Jan. 12. The emergency domestic allotment farm relief bill passed by the House of Representatives. The bill went to the sepate for consideration. An amendment to the bill established a “fair price” fixed at $ .75 per bushel on wheat and rice, S. 09 a pound on cotton, $.05 a | pound on hogs, $. 03 a pound on peaand $.26 a pound on butterfat, j to become effective 30 days after en- > actment of the bill and ending w’ith I the 1933-34 marketing year. Allot- . ment certificates transferable and I redemable at-the treasury will be issued to farmers for the difference (between the price” and the acI tual market price, less the cost of administration. Money to redeem the ' certificates will come from levying a processing tax equal to the difference in the prices. No reduction in the amount of the benefited commodities will be necessary during the initial period, with the exception of hogs. Hog producers will have to market 20 per cent less than the pre- 0 ceeding year. Once the crop year of; 1933-34 starts individual producers of benefited commodities will have to show a reduction to receive a certificate. The minimum price will be the pre-war parity between agriculture and industry as the basjs for figuring the processing tax. The bill also carries a tariff provision. The duty on <botton is raised 5 cents, on animal, vegetable and marine oils! the duty is raised 5 cents, and on all other benefited, commodities the duty is raised an Amount equal to the so called adjustment charge. The farmer will only receive a benefit on that portion of his produce used in domestic consumption. The secretary of agriculture will estimate what percentage of the various crops are to be consumed in this country. The deficiency appropriation of $31,761,535 was passed by the Senate. The bill w.ill be reviewed by a conference cdtftmittee of the two houses. The bill carried an amendment which placed the control of the tax refund in the hands of a Congressional committee—instead of the treasurer. The House Appropriations committee reported the v. ar department bill • of $344,0Q0,000 f to the house. The' bill is SRMjOOO.OQO less than last' year’s bill. Jan. 13. The House of Represen-1 tatives passed the Philippine Independence bill over the veto of Pres, ( ident Hoover. The bill would give corrtplete independence to the Philp-1 pines in the 11th year after enact-, ment. The House beer bill was modified by the Senate judicary sub-commit-tee to include light wines, and change the alcoholic content of beer j to 3.05 per cent by weight instead of 3.2 by weight. • | ' - i The bill appropriating $129,000 for the expenses of the Indiana legislature was signed by Governor McNutt. . i — I A bill- proposing the repeal of the i present stale highway act;, and a, bill proposing a full time commission of three members instead of a part- ■ time four member commission were introduced into the Indiana Senate. , A counter-attack of the Chinese; irregulars checked the advance .of the Japanese into Jehol. A proposal by the House Inflation- < ists was made public. The proposal would authorize issuance of bonds amounting to $3,000,000,000 to Federal Reserve Banks which in turn • (Continued on Last Page) !

KING’S ENGLISH GOES DEMOCRATIC IN BIG REVOLUTION OF WORDS

The King’s English is going democratic nowadays in a revolution led by no other people than some of the teachers of English themselves, writes L. H. Robbins in a recent issue of the New York Times. Its ancient and honorable traditions are openly questioned and even scoffed at. We are told that a preposition is a perfectly proper word to end a sentence with. We are advised that we may split the infinitive all we like if our object in doing so is to more clearly express our . meaning. And we may open our sentences with conjunctions Such are the radical pronouncements heard at the recent national convention of English teachers at Memphis. Many of those who are supposed to guard the language from vulgarisms and to deferid its timehonored rules to the last ditch have joined with us common people in declaring. “After all, the language was made for man, not for language.” The opening shot of this amazing insurrection was the publication of a pamphlet entitled “Current English Usages,” and that shot will be heard around the world. . Language ia Evolution.

DO YOU | REMEMBER—--20 Y’cars Ago. When Ste'.ler and Burlingame, -and the Bowser were cutting ice, it being between nine and 10 inches thick and bi good quality? => o « When the temperature was 28 below and the printing office of the Journal had “froze up” so that the Journal “skipped an issue”? 10 Years Ago When P. W. underwent an operation in the Elkhart hospital? sc# Five Years Ago. When on Friday’ the 13th “Mac” McClellan shot a water snake, three feet long, crawling on ihe ice of Syracuse Lake? o « (ON LAKE WAWASEE I. ; : 1 A sunshiny day brought a numbe: of summer residents to the lake, Sunday Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Harwood and family from Marion spent the week end at their cottage, as did Mr. ant. Mrs. Charles Miller from Anderson. Others who visited their lake homes i and called on friends on Wawasee, Sunday were: Mr. and Mrs. J. L. i Farrell Sr., of Goshen; Mr. ana; Mrs. Gingrich of South Bend; Judge . Kenner and family from Huntington: Mr. and Mrs. Tom Ewing from For’ Wayne. Mr. an<l Mrs. W. B. Leas of Goshen spent last Thursday at their cottage E. R. Ingall of Fort Wayne visited his lake home, Saturday. , Mrs. Roland Crowe’s sister and mother 'from Fort Wayne spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Crowe Mr. and Mrs. Roy Turney of So. I Bend spent Sunday with Mr. and i Mrsz Dwight Mock. Mr. and Mrs. George Mellingei spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. arid Mrs. Ira Rothenberger in. North Webster. M.. and Mrs. A. W. Emerson and daughters returned home, Sunday, after a week spent in Marion. ,Mrs. Wallace was buried Wednesday afternoon, and Mr. Wallace I’returned 1 ’returned to the lake with Mr. and Mrs. Emerson. Enno Franke of port Wayne visited Roy Brown, Friday. He is starting a golf school in Fort Wayne, he told Mr. Brown. Mrs. Maude "VeltmZn spent las! week in-Chicago. Work on building the new cottage for Ursa S. Williams of Elkhart between the new Miller' and Olds cottages was started this week. Home: Smith of Cromwell is putting in the cement foundation for the house and a contractor from Fort Wayne is to build it, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Wilbur of Michigan City, spent Sunday at their home on Kale Island. Frank Wood suffered an attack of gall stones last week-, but is improving. , " A number of golf enthusiasts played on the Turkey Creek course, Sunday and Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Cunniff and Dr. Urbana Spink came from Indianapolis, Monday, to the Spink-Wa-wasee, remaining there until Tuesday. They discovered that ice carried to that shore by the wind has damaged the sea Wall in front of the Spink-Wawasee and “Sargent hotels. Speaking of the coming season, Mr. Cunniff said that 40 per cent more reservations had been made so far this year than last year; that manj who planned to visit the World’s (Continued on Last Page)

For years the late Prof. Sterling Andrus Leonard of the University of Wisconsin was engaged in studying the changes in English usage. He viewed the language not as a finished and crystallized product but as a thing constantly growing. He had traced its mutations up to the year 1800 and published his 'findings, and he was busy with its later developments when his untimely death ended his labors. The American teachers of English, through their national council, have completed his last survey and issued a report of it as a memorial to him. The report nullifies a great deal of the solemn teaching of the classrooms of not long ago. The public, as a matter of fact, has already done the nullifying- and many teachers are swent along with the majority. They admit that grammatical prohibition does not prohibit. They do not go all the way, or course. They still object to “a light-complected girl,” “If. John had of come,’” "the engine w|s hitting good this morning,” arid “these kind of bananas.” They art in doubt about “It seems to (Continued on page 2)

SYRACUSE IS VICTORIOUS AT MENTONE But Second Team is Loser First Time This Season. The Syracuse High school basket,, ■ ball team came back from Mentbnc, 'Friday night, with one victo-y and." j one defeat. The first team wop 20 to ! 14 in what spcctatois claim Was the best game of basketball Syracj.se has played this yeai. The second team, for the first time this year, was defeated. The^.Mentone second team won, 39 to 17. The game between the first terms -was hard, fast and closely contested throughout. Syracuse obtained a slight edge in the first quarter and managed td maintain the advantage, during most of game. ' In thKsecond quarter, Mentone held 1 the local boys to two points, and lied the i score 11 all. I Syracuse had .a-slight , scoring , spree in the third quarter, making j 7 points. The best Mentone could do was to score a free t|hrow. ’ Five of the 7 points made by Syracuse during this period were scored on free throws. The basket was made ' by Miller. In the fourth quarter Lung made one basket for Syracuse and Vandermark of Mentone riu de one. Osborn, scored fi basket and a free throw; Miller i basket; Lung three baskets; Beck two baskets and .four free throws; Green a free throw. Beck made S points during the game and Blue cf Mentone made 6 points. ■ j Second Team Game. The Syracuse second team was overwhelmed by thfe fast iravfelinfc, .Mentone aggregation The first quarter ended with Mentone leading 11 to 4. LL ■' . ’ ■ The half ended ‘vith the score; Mentone 18; Syracuse 6. During .the second half, Mentone kept adding to , ’he lead and the game ended, Mentone 39, Syracuse 17. Underhill, center for Mentone made 13 points; Shirley, left for--11 points; P; Paulas, right forward, 7 points; and K. Paulus, right guard, 8 points, Fisher, Syracuse left forward made 9 points and HibschiJan, right I forward, 6. Kindig substituting center made 2. .*J !, I Third Team Plays Saturday evening Syracuse’s third team played the B squad at North . Manchester college, and Tost 35 to 16. In this game Joe Kindig, K. Pfingst and R. Thornburg played forwards, Kindig and Pfirjgst scorning two baskets each, and Pfingst a free throw; Jensen and Crow played at center and Jensen scored a free throw; Crow and Searfoss played at right guard and Ci scored a basket; Sloan, Gawthrop and Jones played left guard, and Jones; Scored a basket and free throw. { ’ Haney, former MilfordJ High[ star played left guard on the Manchester team and scored six baskets. ———;—o . . DIES AT MOTHER’S KALE ISLAND HOME 2 < David Wallace Barnes* aged 32, died early Saturday morning at the home of his mother on Kkle Island. He was taken „to Gar|rett where funeral services for him! were held Monday afternoon. Rev. jJarboe officiaited. He is survived by his Wife and two children, Gretchen and Sammy; by his mother, one sister and two brothers. Mr. Barnes had been ill for sometime. Learning from the doctor that her husband’s condition was serious, Mrs. Barnes, who had been working in Milwaukee, returned there about two weeks ago to work but a notice, and she came back to * the lake on Thursday. Her husband’s death followed early Saturday morning. Among those from Kalje Island who went to Garrett to attend the funeral Monday, were Mr. and Mrs. Warren T. Colwell and Mr. |ind Mrs. D Gibson. Mr. and Mrs. Ed U/irue accompanied Rev. and Mrs. Jiarboe to Garrett, Monday, to attend the funeral of Mr. Barnes. Others , who were there were Mr, and Mrs;. Jess Shock, Mr. and Mrs. Carl O’Haver and Mrs. Owens. , HAVE SURPRISE; PARTY Tuesday evening 25 friends of Mrs. Clinton Bushong called to remind her she was a year oid|er. It was a surprise and she has hot recovered from it. A pot luck dinne was served and at late hour the guests departed wishing Mrs. Bushong many happy returns.

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