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The Republic from Columbus, Indiana • Page 4

Publication:
The Republici
Location:
Columbus, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, COLUMBUS, INDIANA, MONDAY, MARCH 14, 1938. PAGE FOUR long Illness Fatal, THE EVENING REPUBLICAN I DsJifo News iLLXJ Is Good (lews A Republican Newspaper. Established 1877 by Isaac T. Brown Published Dally Except Sunday in The Republican Building. TELEPHONE 38 AND 39.

NEW TAX BILL CHANGES LOOM Move to Overhaul Revision Measure Gains Support in Senate. RITES HELD FOR MRS. WILLIAMS Funeral at Hartsville for Letts Resident Who' Died Saturday. MRS. CROOK, 71, ED1NBURG, DIES Native of Ohio Ridge Dead After Week's Illness Funeral Wednesday.

RAYMOND S. BROWN. Publisher. Entered as Second Class Matter in the Postoffice In Columbus, Ind. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: Delivered by Carrier, per week.

liic. By mail, one month. 50c: three month, one year, in trading area only, $4.00 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use of republication of all news dispatches credited to this paper, and also the local news published herein. RITES HELD FOR MRS. ROBINSON Funeral services for Mrs.

Sarah E. Robinson, who died Thursday at her home" in Elizabethtown, were held Saturday afternoon at the East Columbus Methodist church. The Rev. G. J.

Pickett of Cannelton, former pastor of the church, and the Rev. C. F. Ault, present pastor, conducted the services. Burial was made in Garland Brook cemetery.

There were many flowers and nelping with these were a group of girls including Jane Western, Betty and Fay McMillan, Shirley Du-trc, Claradcn and Mary Elizabeth Dutro, Joan, Rosalyn ar.d Rose Mary Robinson, Marjory and Betty Baiton, Mary Jane Burns, Letha Castner and Doris Ping. The casket was borne by Leo and Leon Robinson. Paul and Everett Western, Joe McMillan and J. C. Dutro.

A number of persons came for the funeral from Cincinnati, including her son, the Rev. Lloyd MIDDLE OF THE STREAM Doc Harrod took time out Saturday to trade horses with a Greens-burg doc who called him up at the hotel between sessions and suggested they swap Just to keep the old hoss-tr'ader com plex from getting control of him. uoc took nev. i. raun mung maybe it was to influence the Ghg doc We haven't heard who came out the A somewhat spifflicated fan caused- some excitement at the regional UNITED PRESS SERVICE INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE -A rhjAiljlihi ah Tlx ICE g.

MEL.VIN LOSTUTTER, Editor. BUREAU OF CIRCULATION'S "fair quantitative limitation." And a spokesman of the Tokyo Foreign Office said that Japan might re- spnnd to unnrticial and presumably less peremptory -requests for information. F.ut in Washington Clarence Darrow- by being from Franklin but forhrith Rllrnpv with hnria, in Columbus. In the middle of the Franklin rooting section, he kept yelling, can't Columbus will other'the daughter of Combs Anderson the only official response was a Franklinites wanted to mob him. land Jane Pettigrew Anderson.

Af-determination to hold Japan re- but didn't He predicted the Bull ter ner marriage to Mr. Williams Dogs would take the the the state tourney fm- ally the United States tourney The Greenshurg restaurants were jammed so bad Saturday evening that some of the Cols, fans drove to Shelbyville and some to Rush- ville for supper Looks like they'd of come home, but guess they were out on a lark and wanted to stay out. Bottorff stuck by his guns after prognosticating the outcome of the games said Dogs would beat Gbg. 5 poinj? and they did it by 12 He said they'd beat Franklin 15 points and they did it by 11... The point is not so much that Dean was such a good gues- ser.

bad It's that he ,.3. i ft DARROW, NOTED LAWYER, DIES "Friend for Underdog" Sue- pi CUlTluS III OniCdljO WdS Oft Yoorc flIH Chicago, March 14. iJP) Clarence Darrow, who rose from a $30 a month country school teacher to the nation's most famous "attor- ney for the defense was dead to- day. The noted lawyer-philosopher died at his home here yesterday after a long illness with a heart I He yesterday afternoon fol-ailment. He was 80 years old.

With lowln an illness of three weeks I Ua woman i cnange nis riggers even afternoon at his nome at Frank-when they looked way too lin was to he buried there today. speaking of basketball. The funeral services were to be which is about all vou can get anybody to speak of today, the MEMBER OF THE AUDIT BEST TEAM IN YEARS. Columbus high school will send to Indianapolis next Saturday the best basketball team it has had since the days of "Dutch" Fehring. That is the general concensus of opinion here among fans who have followed the teams year in and year out.

It is altogether likely that several hundreds of the fans will follow the Bull Dogs to the Arsenal Technical gymnasium for the state semi-finals to show their faith and collect their thrills. If the team gets oyer this r.ext irdle, the City of Columbus will move 40-odd miles north for one day only a week from Saturday, But that is a big IF. The Bull Dogs are headed for the field house the hard way. Both teams they will have to beat next Saturday have speed, stamina, skill and the will to win, selecting themselves for the assignment as the Bull Dogs did. From now on there will be no easy" teams.

There will not even be any mediocre teams, unless they are from the regionals in one or two sections of the state where the competition is not so heated as in the rest of it. From now on a team must not only play excellent ball, but get something more than its share of the "breaks. Any of a dozen comparatively minor things can put it oul of the running. It is not pessimism, nor is it an alibi in advance if Columbus does not happen to win over the 15 other teams still in the running. It is merely acknowledgment of the fact that a team shows its power in the regionals.

Any team which survived last Saturday is a powerful team, and deserves full credit for being the equal, or nearly so. of any other in the state, no matter what happens this week. NO BUND IN BROWN. It has been denied that a "bund" camp will be established next door in Brown county. Although the denial does not mean that it will not be, or will be.

An Indianapolis report Saturday telling of the cancellation of the German-American bund meeting scheduled to be held there tonight mentioned reports that Charles W. Soltau, who was to have been host to the bund, had purchased land in Brown county to establish such a camp. He denied "We owned it a long time before we had anything to do with the bund," he was quoted as saying. "We do not intend to establish a camp." Let us hope this is not just a "diplomatic denial." There are few, and probably none in the county who would care to live even that close to a nazi camp. WRONG REASON.

boys at the P.O. were kidding Mr. i-ricnara was tne son or Walter Cole the other day. Robert F. and Coroline Nay Prich- 'ard, and was born in Johnson Frank Bond said the Renaissance i Dec.

5, 1868. He also taught game here was the first basketball I jn he Greenwood schoois and car. game Walter ever saw. Said ried ma out of that plare for ten when everybody went out He was twice married and smoke at the half, Walter went lis survived by the wife and a son, too, and went on Clarence Prichard of Waukegan, Somebody asked him how he liked a grandson, Robert Prichard; the game, and he said O.K.. only one brother, John A.

of Alma, it was a little short Have vnuiMirh- four siste i Ba ton of Marion, Mrs. W. S. Hamb- noticed that the high school )h rD0iUr him at the end were his wife, Ruby, his son, Paul, and a sister. Mrs.

Jennie Darrow Moore. Funer- al arrangements were incomplete During his half century in courts from one side of the coun- try to the other, Darrow al- ways the defender, the pleader. He fought for the poor, the oppressed, the captive and the weak because, as he once said, "those found in prisons are practically i the dice are loaded and the victim is almost sure to lose." WALESBY HEADS STATE SOCIETY At a state meeting of the Indiana Radioclast Research Society held Sunday at the Lincoln hotel at Indianapolis, Dr. -T. G.

Wales- Mrs. Ella J. Williams, 82, widow of M. Williams, died at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Mel Courtner, in Marietta, Shelby county, at 4 o'clock Saturday afternoon.

She was a resident of Letts. Funeral services were to be held this afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Hartsville Methodist church in rharpp of the Rev Charles rial- the college cemetery there. Mrs. Williams was born two and one-half miles south of Hartsville, tnev uvea ai iiens. one nas a nan- 'brother, Herbert C.

Anderson, of Great Falls, Montana, and two half-sisters, Mrs. Jacob Thurston and Miss Mary Anderson of north of Wayresburg. The husband, one son and one daughter preceded her in death. "RociHac Trc fnnrtnpr she pavp another daughter, Mrs. W.

E. Wat- kins of Whiteland and two Frank Williams of Waynesburg (and Howard Williams of Greens- RITES HELD FOR I Tl ODII I A Edinburg, March 14. -L. E. I Prichard, 69, former teacher in the sc'hools who died Friday held in the Christian church with the Rev.

Richard Lentz in 1 Cl 1 V. Clil 111 1 IU. tJVJKll 1 of Edinburg, Mrs. Fred Hawkins of California and Mrs. George er distant relatives live here.

Additional Society EppcrSUH Wed 1 fn pnii Kcistfl' i i miss siarv h.nnerson. aauemer 1 of Mrs. Fena Epperson of Hope, and Paul Kaster. son of Mr. and Mrs.

Floyd Kaster of Shelby county, were married in a quiet and impressive ceremony at 3 o'clock Saturday afternoon at the Hope Moravian church. The single ring service was read by the Rev. Ernest Drebart. The bride wore a navy blue sories. There were no attendants.

1 L. r. r. Mrs. Kaster is a graduate of the Hope high school with the class of 1932.

and Mr. Kaster graduated from the Shelbyville high school. Both are well known in the Hope community. They will reside at a newly furnished home eight miles north of Shelbyville where Mr. Kaster will engage in farming.

United ra! Ch'h Holds tinfi. A meeting of the United Pa: club was held recentlv at the home of Paul Vail. 814 Cottage avenue, and eight members re- sponded to roll call. TUr.c. xt Greene Robert Norman, Arnold Paul Vail.

Dallas Nor- man. Robert Hendry. Carroll Owens, and Charles Hendry. Following a short business ses- sion. the remainder of the eve- ning was spent in playing bingo.

pach member received a small i I 1 young-uns are all buggy even tne wearing metai spiders on their clothes. ot preon of Franklin, 'em are also wearing little frogs Mrs. Chirles Cutsinger. another some of their mammas sister, died here last January. Sev-have become infected You can eral nieces and nephews and oth- by of Columbus was elected presi- senting the pictures, will be in dent for the next year.

Other of- charge. The films are reputed to ficers elected were Dr. J. W. Ro-be very interesting with many per of Evansville, vice president heart touching scenes.

A collection and Dr. Carl Kaiser, of Conners- wj be lifted for the deaf mis-ville, secretary-treasurer. 'sions. The purpose of this society is 1 The program is to be presented for the development of the ra rlianin dioirnAcic A "vim. ..0,10.0 treating.

The society met all day yesterday with a banquet at noon. Additional Hoppers Clarence Gilliland and his mother have moved from the Laughlin nrnnprtv on Eleventh street, to an i apartment at 528 Eighth street, The Baptist Brotherhood will meet at 7:30 o'clock tonight at the church. A good program is being arranged, according to those charee. in Charles W. Sonnenberg, of this a freshmen at Indiana uni- i Washington, March 14 UP) Proposals for a thorough overhauling of the administration's tax revision bill gained powerful support today in the Senate finance committee.

As the committee called treasury experts to discuss the bill, members said it was almost certain to make changes which would encounter administration opposition on the Senate floor. The House already has overridden administration wishes by knocking out a surtax on closely-held corporations and by inserting a tariff-tax on pork. Informed senators predicted conservatives and administration forces would engage in a showdown fight over how far tax modification should be carried in an effort to stimulate business. Would Cut Personal Exemptions. Chairman Harrison (D-Miss) of the finance committee asserted that capital gains provisions of tha house bill should be revamped and that the undistributed profits levy should be eliminated instead of modified.

Senator LaFollette (Pro-Wis) an administration supporter ancr a i finance committee member, said he would urge amendments to increase 'the present scale of surtax es and to lower income tax exemp-I tions. These would bring about 400,000 new taxpayers under the income levy. LaFpllette would cut from $1,000 to $800 the personal exemption allowed single individuals. The exemption for married persons would be whittled from $2,500 to $2,000. Barkley Sees May Closing.

The tax bill is one of the big la-sues remaining before congress. Most members expect adjournment between June 1 and 15, but Democratic Leader Barkley of the senate held to his earlier forecast of May 15. Three major bills farm, housing and emergency relief have been passed. Several appropriation bills are moving toward enactment, and Barkley said he was hopeful of senate action this week on the administration's government reorganization bill. The house took up tha billion dollar naval expansion pro-giam.

WHITNEY GIVES PLEA OF GUILTY Indictment Charges Head of Brokerage Firm With Grand Larceny. New York, March 14 UP) Richard Whitney, head of the Rich- ard Whitney brokerage firm and former president of the New York Stock Exchange, pleaded guilty today to a grand jury indictment charging grand larceny. The indictment was procured by district attorney Thomas E. Dewey, and accused the socially-prominent Wall Street financier of the theft of $103,000 from the estate of his father-in-father, George R. Sheldon.

Estimates of the shortages in the Whitney firm, which represented J. P. Morgan in many transactions, have run as high as one million dollars. Whitney was president of the Stock Exchange for five years and long known as th "White Knight of Wall Street." He pleaded guilty in a low voice when arraigned in general sessions court. Whitney also has been accused of the theft of S109.000 worth of securities from the New York Yacht club, of which he was treasurer, in an Indictment brought by Attorney General John J.

Bennett, Jr. NAZIS AT A GLANCE By The Associated Press. Vienna Jewish hvsteria becomes grim undertone in ecstasy of Nazi 'welcome for Adolf Hitler; promin-jent monarchist. Baron Karl Von iWerkmann, reported dying from mysterious bullet wounds, Berlin Nazi economists work 1 out economic future of annexed Austria, counting on new mineral resources to aid Nazi self-suf-I ficiency. London Triple alliance of Brit-! am, France and Czechoslovakia appears in making to curb Hitler in central fciurope; caDinei considers crisis.

Paris New people's front government 6eeks British -id in mutual assistance network for central Europe. Rome Premier Mussolini returns Hitler's reassurance of friendship. Budapest Hungarian Nazis may ask Hitler to return Burgenland, ceded Austria after World war. in' return for military-economic alliance. Vatican City Vatican newspaper doubts Austrian Catholics will escape "persecutions." Praha Sudeten Germans hall Hitler coup; leader says "victory is ours." Fre City of Danzig Nazi organ pleads for formal union with Germany.

Moscow Communist newspaper sees war threat because Czechoslovakia is Hitler's "next likely victim:" secrecy still veils hour of death for 18 condemned traitors. BOBCAT ON CITY STREET. Eastland, March 14 IP A bobcat on a downtown street here had citizens wondering if Eastland was out of the "wild west." Alton Reeves, night officer, i noticed the young bobcat one night walking toward the downtown section. Reeves killed It with a i shotgun. Edinburg, Mar.

14. Mrs. Jettie May Crook, 71, died at 12:30 o'clock noon today at her home near the Blue River dam after a week's ill- ness. Funeral services will be held at I 2 o'clock Wednesday afternoon at 1 the home, with burial in Rest Haven cemetery. Mrs.

Crook was born in the Ohio 1 Ridge community of Bartholomew county Jan. 22, 1867, the daughter i of John and Lydia Headrick Nich- 1 olds. She was married to George H. Crook in 1890. i The hufband and following chil- dren survive: Daniel, John and Miss Ruby Crook at home.

Mrs. Ida Weaver, Edinburg, Mrs. Walter' Olmstead, Greenwood, and Mrs. Ben Griffith, Indianapolis. There are also a sister, Mrs.

Harry Cordray, of Edinburg, and four Perry Nichols of Franklin. R. R. 1, Charles of Edinburg rural route, Lemuel of Indianapolis, and Benton of Missouri, besides six grandchildren and two great-grand-chi'dren. Mrs.

Crook was a member of the Ohio Ridge church. C. BEYNON, 48, DIES IN SHELBY 1 Word has been received here of the death in Shelbyville of Claude luuuumm maker of tnat cit' Funeral services will be held 7 "IJ rhl.rrh the First Christian church in Shelbyville Mr. Beynon was a son-in-law of C. E.

Jones, who was engaged in the monument business in Columbus for a number of years. His wife is a niece of Mrs. E. S. Newsom of East Columbus.

He is survived by his wife, his parents and two sisters. DEAF MISSIONS TO BE SHOWN A 4 reel moving picture of Missouri synod Lutheran deaf mis-msions will be shown at 7:30 o'clock tonight in Concordia hall. The Rev. J. Kempf of Detroit, Michigan, who is on a tour pre- under auspices of the Walther League.

AMERICAN-AUSTRIAN REVISIONS LOOM (Continued From Page One) union with Germany. The American legation in Vienna probably will be converted into a consulate, headed by a consul-general instead of a minister. Here, the Austrian minister, Edgar L. G. Prochnik, was awaiting official instruction, but legation at taches said unofficially his duties probably would oe tanen over Dy the German assembly, The United States has not had a Diplomatic matters concerning Austria would be placed in charge of Hucti Wilson, ambassador to Germany, who formerly was assis- lqhi.

kjitm --v JAPANESE STALLED ON CHINESE FRONTS Shanghai. Mar. 14. iJP) The Japanese invaders were stalled on all of China's far-flung war fronts today. Shock troops which the Yellow river 20 miles west of Chengchow last week and disrupted service over the Lunghai railway apparently have been wiped out or driven back.

Traffic has been resumed over the vital Central China line and Chinese troops, stubbornly fighting all "along the Yellow river front, hav succeeded in preventing further Japanese advances. Japanese warships on the I Yangtze river above Wuhu tried to break the deadlock in that area by I shelling Kiuhsien and Tikiang but Chinese guerrilla tactics blocked Japanese eround operations. Three thousand Japanese soldiers i were brought in reinforcements for the Tientsin-Pukow railway sec HORSE HITS POST. Huntinpton, Ind. (A.

A horse, and nit an automobile, knocked a elohe from a licht post here. The horse was ri nerl by a train and shied into Champions French Feminists Cause I Mf WEISS, in- a tionally ffTA known writer and publicist, leads the French feminists who recently won an important victory when the Chamber of Deputies a p-proved a bill, giving women additional civil Mis Weiss rights. 1 I I I sponsible for a naval program an- nounced before Tokyo was qucs- tioned. i Now Japan may be responsible to the extent that in 1936 she re-, fused to accent the inferior naval ratio offered by Great Britain and the United States. Certainly too her drive in China and her alli- ance with Germay and Italy must be taken into account in any consideration of why a new naval race is under way.

But if the pres- ont American program is made to hinge on lack of informa'ion about bigger ships Japan is supposed to he building then it stronger support. And refusal to reopen the question of limitation on the grounds that to do so would be a confession ot tear is surely no su pport The real question is whether Bri'ain and America will concede Japan's dominance in the Eastern Pacific. That is what all the talk is really ahout and that is what should be frankly decided. WISDOM AND WISECRACKS Now that spring is almost here, you can't depend on the weather except as a topic of conversation. "Women are adaptable.

Their place is no longer in the home." Mrs. M. G. Roehling. head of the Trenton, N.

Trust Co. Massachusetts proposes to substitute machines for scrubwomen in the state house, but some senator will soon wake up to the fact that machines don't vote. GOD SEES. Neither is there any creature that is not manifest in his sight: hut all things are naked and opened unto the eyes of him with whom we have to do. Hebrews 4:13.

15 YEARS AGO TODAY. The Bull Dogs won their way into the state finals Saturday by 2 defeating Central of Evansville to 20. They will meet Richmond in their first game. It is the first time within memory that Columbus has gone to the finals. Fashion experts predict that the Egyptian style craze will be a flash in the pan.

They say women will soon get fed up with King Tut trinkets and fashions. The Columbus garbage ordinance is bringing mote publicity to Columbus than any other features of the city's affairs, according to the 25 YEARS AGO TODAY. Solomon Zurhrugg, who lives near, Wiggs station, says he will plant tomatoes tomorrow if it does not rain. It is almost certain that roll call votes at the late legislature were juggled in many cases. Thp New Theater, opposite the interurlian station, continues performance from noon to 10:30 p.m.

each day, with good vaudeville. Advt. COPB. BY Nt StRVICr. tVC.

i DISPUTE OVER BEER IS ENDED Importers Ordered Today to Waive Handling Charges on Michigan Brew. Indianapolis, Mar. 14. JP State Excise Commissioner Hugh A. Barnhart said today Indiana's 14 importers had been instructed to accept Michigan beer "free of handling charges" until March 30, 1939.

Thus the beer dispute between the two states was ended formally. Both agreed Saturday to lift embargoes on beer produced in the separate states. The bans were scheduled to go into effect at mid-, night tonight. Barnhart said he assumed "something will be done about the situation by the legislature." Asked (whether he meant he believed Indiana's importer system was doomed, Barnhart conceded that question would be "left open." Newsmen asked whether the "handling charges" on beer of other states would be discontinued eventually. "We will meet with each state as the situation rises," Barnhart said.

Ban Lifted Over Weekend. He pointed out the Indiana alcoholic beverages commission could "do nothing" in retaliation to the added assessments placed by Ohio on wholesalers of that state who handled Indiana beer. "The commission," he said, "will not act unless the Indiana industry requests action." He emphasized the Indiana importers would continue to collect $1.03 tax a barrel on all Michigan beer. The dispute between Michigan and Indiana started when Michigan placid a ban on Indiana's beer, contending the "handling charges" made by Indiana importers constituted "discrimination" against brewers of that state. Indiana retaliated with an embargo on Michigan beer.

The bans were lifted In Michigan over the weekend after a confer- Michigan, liquor commissions of the states and legal advisers. MRS. CUTSINGER PASSES Edinburg. March 14. Mrs.

Addie Coons Cutsinger, former resident of this community, died Saturday at her home at Indianapolis. Funeral services be held at 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon at the Ragsdale Price funeral home. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery at Indianapolis. Mrs. Cutsinger was born and reared two miles east of here in Shelby county, the daughter of Harry and Coons.

She was married to Ivory Cutsinger and three children were born of the union. Two sons, Harry C. and Cor-win R. Cutsinger. a grandson, Donald R.

Cutsinger and a brother, William I. Coons, all of Indianapolis, -survive. She was a sister of the late Thomas Coons, a druggist here for many years, and has many relatives here. LEGION WILL MARK BIRTHDAY The American Legion and Auxiliary will hold a "birthday party" Tuesday night in the courthouse in observance of the 20th anniversary of the Legions' founding. All members and their families, and other World war veterans and families are invited to attend.

Supper will be served at 7 o'clock. The meat course will be furnished, but those attending are a.ked to take baskets of other fcod and table service. MR. PATRICK'S FUNERAL HELD Funeral services for Joseph B. Patrick, who died Wednesday in the county hospital, were held Saturday afternoon at the Hege Flanigan funeral home.

The Rev. Charles J. Meyers had charge and burial was made in Garland Brook cemetery. The flowers were in charge of Mrs. William Harrington.

Miss Lena Goesker. Mrs. John Tuttle and Mrs. Louise Martin. The pallbearers were furnished by the American Legion and military services were held at the grave.

LABOR BOARD'S HEARING OPENS HERE THURSDAY (Continued from page one). here, although reports published at the time said there were indications he was not. The situation quieted down, with few developments until announcement that the labor board had got around to a hearing of the charges. versity, has been initiated into minister in Vienna tor six monms, Theta Chi fraternity. I because of the death of Minister I Grenville T.

Emmet. American af- The monthly chest clinic will be fairs in Austria are handled at conducted by the Bartholomew present by charge d' affaires John County Tuberculosis association C. Wiley, who is expected to be-from 10 a. m. to 3 p.

m. Wednes- come the consul-general. Christian Science Monitor. Chamber of Commerce. There may be a good reason for Columbus was hit by a wind-the Cnited States to reject the pro- storm last night.

So many poles posal, put forward in Congress and were blown down that the inter-in London, for further discussion urbans were unahle to run today, of navies. But certainly the rea- son reportedly given by Senator Pittman is not it. Declaring that to talk ahout limits on naval building would be a sign of weakness is no evidence of strength in the case for a bigger navy. It does not improve the impression created by the response in Washington to the Japanese note. Japan answered that she could not divulge her naval plans, but that they were "non-aggressive" and that she would be glad to discuss OUT OUR WAY Mrs.

William Tieman ot to-as a favor. Mrs. lumbus, were called to Ohio Sat- get the bugs at the dime store, or the jewelry store. from a dime to a hundred dollars none here that disconcerting thought has struck us that maybe that Chicago boy who sees everything upside down is the only one of us with tho T-irvVit olonl after oil to CELLAR DOOR Be sure slide down the door of the coal bin while coal is being delivered. Otherwise you will have a cloud ot coal aust over tne ceuar noor.

Cincinnati Times-Star And a Second Thoughts contributor adds, "Before you slide be sure to look for nails." ODD BUT TRUE! Over in Lawrence County, the Welfare director, now making $200 a month, asked the commissioners for a S25 salary raise. Can you beat that? Imagine a guy making $50 a week wanting more money. Why. if it wasn't for us guys on relief he wouldn't have a job. Shoals 'Democrat) News BIG BLOW-UP Here's something that you don't want to have happen to you Doug Smiley.

the Bedford Mail says he had a nice little experience the other day "Traveling a little over 50 miles per hour on one of our state highways when the hood of our V-S flew" up in our face A service station man. who had checked the oil and water, had failed to fasten it He got out ail rignt. nut tnat mignt. he something for you to check the oil and water man on after he checks vou. By Williams DEC PAT.

Off. Easter rabbit Carlos Vail served refreshments at the close of the evening. Additional Personals. Mr. and Mrs.

Clessie Cummins and daughters, Marybeth and Bea- trice were in Greensburg Saturday where they attended the regional games. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Marshall and Mr. and Mrs.

James S. Brown attended the regional games in Greensburg Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry, Mr.

and Mrs. Arnold Hanger, Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Franke, Mr. and Mrs.

Delmas Holmes, Mr. and Mrs. HERE, WHAT'S TH' THAT'S FEE. 1 GUESS SMELL NUMBER-OF A BENEFIT- THEY HAVE THESE TH' MACHINE FIRST AID TO DO IT, I SMELLIN' THIS HAPPENED COMES AFTER 7HOUGH-A SALTS' ON? YOUR FULL LAST AID OUY THAT'S jlr NAME-VOUR I LAST AID IS DEAP CAN'T ADDRESS" VOUR I WHEN YOU'RE ANSWER ALL I 11 AGE -MARRIED I DEAR AIDIN' THAT STUFF- 9 ftnX I OE- sinole your heirs it kills (j RIOHT FOOT X. HIM DOIM' day in the clinic rooms in county court house.

The Clifford high school the was closed touay on account 01 waieri the basement. 1 he water oacKea into the building during the heavy: rain yesterday. i Fred Wehmeier of the Weh- 1 meier restaurant, and his sister, urday by the serious illness of an- 1 other sister. Mrs. Laura Topie, who under went an operation last Thursday at the county hospital, was returned to the home of her brother, Alfred Topie, 1712 Elm street, yes- terday afternoon.

She is getting along satisfactorily, 1 T. L. Schaefer, state president of the Fraternal Order of Eagles. will visit the local aerie tonight for a meeting at 7:30 a'clock at the hall. There will be initiation serviceso and a buffet supper.

All members are requested to De pre- sent. The Clarence Custer home, 1001 boards were removed and no oth- er damage was done. Mayor John L. Hosea, Police Chief Alonzo E. Fitch, Sanitary Officer John Coovert with Lieu- tenant Sutherland of the state police and a radio engineer from Indianapolis went to Connersville and Newcastle today to inspect police radio equipment.

Verle London and Clint Bass of laKen ln cnarge. Joseph P. Hilger of the J. V. Hilger department store, who recently returned to his home on north Washington street from the county hospital where he was taking treatments, is getting along satisfactorily but will return to the hospital for further treatments before resuming hie work.

James Daugherty. Mr. and Mrs. Franklin street, was slightly dam- tor at Tsowhsient and Lianghsia-Martin Voelz, Mr. and Mrs.

aged by Are this afternoon. Work- tient and 5,000 more were added to Donald Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Paul men burning off paint on the out- the Shangtung forces attacking Hathaway, Mr. and Mrs.

Ed side accidentally set fire to some Llni. Voelz. Mr. and Mrs. Emmert Hoelt- of the weatherboarding.

The ke, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Ropp and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Goshorn were among those who attended the regional games in Greens- burg Saturday.

N. Y. Stock Marjcet. New York. March 14 (JP) Arm- ament stocks with steels, coppers I i 1 I 1 and aircrafts in the van sidled in- this county, were arrested yes-to a rally in today's market.

Al- terday morning on charges of though dealings were at a pace Public intoxication by State Po-that barely kept the ticker tape liceman Nat Bush and Patrolman warm, gains ranging from a few Cuba McKay. They were at Fifth fractions to two points were fair-' street and Lafayette avenue when lv A little profit sell ing here and there handicapped the comeback, and extreme advances were substantially reduced near the close. Transfers approximated 400.000 shares, one of the smallest 5 hour volumes in three years. Classified Ads pay big returns..

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