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The Sandusky Register from Sandusky, Ohio • Page 4

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Sandusky, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
4
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REGISTER, SUNDAY, KOVBMBEJR 6, THE REGISTER by Ohio. Sandusky Pounded April Published evsry morning Mondajr Sandusky Newspapers. Sandusky, Snurod as second class matUf.at postofflce. Act of 1879. SANDUSKY NEWSPAPERS.

INC. R. SNYDER. President Mgr. Editor MACK JOHN D.

MACK Vice Adv. Mgr. PAUL HEIBEROBR. Managing Editor Foreign Advertising Representative, John W. Cullen Co, 601 Fifth New York! 8 a Michigan Ave Chicago; Gen.

Motors Detroit. Price Three cents per copy, dally; eight cents Sunday. By carrier a week. By mail In Erie, Huron. Ottawa, Lorain, Seneca and Sandusky coun- tlss.

months, 1 The Associated Presa Is the use of publication year. $4.00. Elsewhere In Ohio. par year. Outside of Ohio $7.50 per year.

Payable In advance. Mall orders will not be accepted from localities served by delivery agents. Members of The Associated Press, American Newspaper Publishers Select List Ohio Dally Newspapers, Audit Bureau of Circulations, exclusively entitled to of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. "The mission of the press, If it has any, is to make righteousness readable." A "Gentleman Parmer" The designation of the Democratic nominee as a "gentleman farmer" has proved perplexing in some parts of the country, according to the Hon: Ray Lyman Wilbur, Secretary of the Interior. "Somebody asked me about it during one of my speeches," the tall, lanky California ex-college prexy says, "and I told him a''gentleman farmer' was a man." who thinks a dry cow is in favor of the eighteenth amendment." The waste paper market will probably be glutted when they clear, out all the political cards and pictures of defeated candidates.

One of 17,000 The problem of the degree of relationship between "Cousin" Franklin D. Roosevelt and T. R. (THE Roosevelt) has been settled at last. The Oyster Bay Enterprise week printed the following item: Dr.

Calvin Kephard, past president of the National Genealogical Society, has figured out that there are approximately 17,200 persons alive today as close (or closer) in relationship to the late President Theodore Roosevelt as is Governor Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The two had a common great- great-great-grandfather. Not much glory left in being a Presiden' Hal Elector, when your name does not eiien now appear on the ballot. "A Just Judge" One of the finest tributes to the integrity of any man who is a candidate-in the present political campaign is that which paid to Carrington T. Marshall, candidate to succeed himself as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio.

It is being paid to him perhaps uhwit- fcngly by those members of the Bar who have been so active in the advocacy of the candidate endorsed by the Democratic Party that they have forgotten both good manners and discretion and are heaping upon the head of the dignified Chief Justice such calumy and contumely that any average man would be sorely tempted to pay back in kind. These gentlemen, lawyers that they are, must that the chances are overwhelming against them and that Judge Marshall will be reelected beyond any reasonable doubt; but the point is that they have firm convictions in their own mind that when they appear before him in future years they know that they will still get absolute justice and' impartial fair play even in spite of their present campaign of opprobrium. It is one of the finest tributes that has yet been paid to the integrity and high of Chief Justice Marshall. They know that no matter what they say or what they do that he will be unbiased on the bench and that they will get absolute justice. Next thing we know it will be claimed that Tammany Hall loves the farmer with undying affection.

We're Proud of It! Once again, check over that excellent county ticket that Erie-go Republicans present this year, and you'll be convinced of yqur absolute safety in marking your under the eagle at the top of the second column this year. Ferd Bing certainly needs no introduction to Erie-co voters, nor of the state either, for his record as a member of the Legislature speaks more eloquently in his behalf than anything else, Fred Powers and William Wagner are the two candidates for county to elect this year. The former is already on the board, a real businessman on the job; the latter knows the ropes for he was one of the most efficient treasurers Erie-co ever had. They are the type of men to whose hands your business will be safe. Alvin Weichel's first term as prosecuting attorney is ample proof of his fitness for the second term.

Keep him on the job. John Baxter, is the nominee for county clerk, His experience both as deputy and later as an accountant, is attest that the job is not strange to him. A student of the law is exceptionally well equipped for the clerkship deals so much with it. Victor "Umps" Moore, deputy sheriff, is the nominee for promotion this year. A straight shooter, and square dealer.

It always used to look like a touchdown Umps got the ball. Watch him run. For recorder, Norman Brown is nominated for a second term. The public knows he has done the job well; keep him. Henry Gassan, one of' Sandusky's best known businessmen, is the nominee for treasurer.

His leng contact with the public, his experience in the marts of trade, his high calibre of citizenship, make him an ideal candidate for the job that keeps the strong-box of the county. William Helm for surveyor has both experience and ability 1 The surveyor's office has become one of the most important in the court house; all roads lead from it, so let's see they are built right. Dr. Carle Koehler is from one of the city's best known families, and the place he has made for himself in his profession is ample attest of Ills fitness for the job of coroner. Ray Speers is the nominee of the party for probate judge.

He needs no introduction to the people of Erie-co. As a practicing lawyer he has built up loyal clientel. His record is good; high-grade. Make him the custodian of the affairs of the widows and orphans and you'll make no mistake. There's4hc ticket.

United behind ft, secure well as economy in the court house! Today By ARTHUR BRISBANE Mrs. Genevieve Fisher, 20 years old, expecting a baby soon, thought the little two-room apartment in which she lived with her husband not big or good enough for the baby. She wanted something better and told her husband. He was angry and he went for a walk. When he came home his wife was dead.

She had killed herself and the unborn child with gas. The unhappy mother, was wrong. No one knows what passed between her and her youth ful husband. But evgry man should remember that, with his wife about to face an ordeal which he could not face, he should show all possible kindness, consideration and indulgence for the one upon whom nature puts the strain and the pain of childbirth. The Rev.

Father Preston of St. Cecelia's, Kear ny, N. proposes a bronze statue of Christ 150 feet high, to cost half a million dollars, made up of "mite contributions from 80,000,000 of the 123,000,000 inhabitants of the United States." -Every one of the 120,000,000 should be represented in such a statue, if only by the contribution of one penny. Poor, women and children especially, owe gratitude to the founder of Christianity. Father Preston suggests as a site for the statue some high point in the Rocky mountains, a site near Washington, D.

or a point near the Statue of Liberty in New York bay. Some place on the shore where the statue would be seen by Immigrants on all incoming ships would be best, and a. sign, appropriate, might at this moment read: "We try to live up to His teachings in America, but we do not succeed very well." How many tens of millions of miles of travel are saved every year by the telephone? Nobody can estimate what it means to "send the voice" instead of going yourself. Statistics show that in one week New York city's suburbs send in 1,750,000 calls to the big city, and the zone of retail trade in New York city shows customers calling up stores more than 321,000 times In a single day. Merchants know that nothing is more important than "good telephone except good advertising salesmanship that reaches all the people before they telephone or visit the stores.

The man, about 30 years old, unidentified, who jumped from the 103rd floor of New York's Empire State building, paying for the privilege of going up in the elevator, also paid Uncle Sam 10 cents as "pleasure tax." To pay a 10-cent pleasure tax 'for jumping from the 103d floor may seem ironical. But perhaps when the man woke up in the next world he found his 10 cents well invested. We may all wonder, later, why we stayed on this earth so long. The fact that suicide is cowardice, and that men do not like to be cowards, keeps a good many here. Size Is not everything; wealth Is not everything.

New York, our biggest city, and by many billions our richest city, borrows $21,500,000 and must pay the lender per cent. Other New York cities, less than one-tenth the size of New York, can and do "borrow from the same lenders at 3 per cent. George Bernard Shaw thinks he might possibly visit the United States "for five'minutes" next year. The United States would be delighted to see Mr. Shaw "for five minutes," and much longer if he chose to stay.

This country appreciates men for what they have done in their youth and strength, not for foolish ideas that develop when they are old. And it is a forgiving country. It reads Charles Dickens, as it should, in spite of what he wrote about the United States. Copyright 1932 Illinois farmers are making a 5 per cent cut in the wheat acreage they intend to seed this fall as compared with the 1931 crop. A net profit of $12 a head on 39 calves and $7 a head on a pen of 32 others has been made at a feeding demonstration by P.

C. Bishop, farmer of Tarrant-co, Texas. Most farmers do not gather eggs frequently enough to enable them to market a quality a survey conducted by the I6wa State College revealed. MARK 8AR.RON New Yorker's Daybook By MARK BARRON NEW YORK, Hov. being much too busy with political articles to be concerned with the trivial in the day's news, it behooves this department to report these minor tales sifted from informants.

Down in Greenwich Village, where everybody gets pfofound with beautiful letters come up for vivisection, a new novel from one of our more serious authors, noted for his weighty wordage, was taking- the boots. One of the Village im- passionates was defending the book from the cynical attack of a heretic from farther uptown. The Villager ranked it with the slicker things of Mollere, Gothe and one or two other Continental headliners. The mean old cynic picked up the volume. "You call this a book?" he said scornfully.

"Just lift it. It reads exactly like it looks, and It looks like a blunt instrument." THE BUILD-UP Marc Lachman, the bard, is a notorious practical joker and everyone about town is suspicious of his Tibblng. One of his frequent victims is Dave, who runs a restaurant. When giving a party one night recently, Lachman called up Dave and informed him that his chauffeur was on the way over for 200 sandwiches and several gallons of coffee. "Poo, poo," thought Dave, and went about his business.

Not long afterward the chauffeur arrived for the food and found it hadn't been fixed up- Moaning low, Dave hurriedly assembled his staff and prepared the order. He profited, ot course, but there is small consolation in for he is now a ripe victim for Lachman's next rib. AUTHOR! AUTHORA new comedy, being exposed for the first time to Broadway's first night cannibals, was perishing miserably. Time after time the actors waited for expected laughs which were not forthcoming. As the second act got under way, every line was hailed with raucous laughter by a man in the second row, The bored spectators gazed curiously at him, and finally one man leaned over and touched him on the arm.

"Do you really think this show is funny?" he asked. "I should say I do," answered the other. "I wrote it." As everybody knows by this time, a newspaper man, when unemployed, describes his current activities, i. Job-hunting, as "free lancing." Such a one so confided to W. Keefe recently.

"I used to free lance, too," admitted the Irishman from Morton, Minn. "One winter I became so absorbed in free lancing that I went without an overcoat, and frequently this deep absorption in my art would lead me to miss meals and evade payment of rent." Washington Letter By XIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, Nov. the uproar of conflicting predictions from campaign leaders as to the presidential come, one is likely to lose sight, of reiterated claims of Democratic house warriors, like John Garner and Joe Byrnes of Tennessee, that the party would widen its present slim con trol of that body to a ma jority of 50 or more in the next congress. It is hardly to be doubted that Garner's decision to accept a vice presiden tlal nomination, in addition to his all but tradl- tlonal re-nomination to the KIRKE SIMPSON house from his Texas district, was made all the harder by his belief that such a result was coming in November, so far as the house was concerned. Backed by a 50 vote party margin, any speaker could expect a relatively easy life.

His prestige and importance would be as great but his problems of leadership, of getting bills through, would be much simpler. WHY SO OPTIMISTIC? Now the question arises, however, as to what it is that makes these two house veterans put out such claims. There have been no straw ballots taken in the congressional districts on a scale to give them ground for such optimism. Granted they have spoken their minds frankly, what are they counting on? Probably they were considering such things as these: Three members of the next house already have been elected. They are from Maine, two democrats and one republican.

That leaves 432 seats to be filled In November. But in the pending congressional election for those 432 seats, 40 men are running unopposed Four are republicans, all from 36 democrats. So, except for the formalities of election in those cases, five republicans and 39 democrats are already "in" for the house of the 73rd congress. Oddly enough, one of the unopposed demo crats also is from California, the other 35 alt being from southern states. Speaker Garner himself, however, has opposition.

REAPPORTIONMENT That represents, clearly, quite democratic headstart. It leaves only 392 house seats to be contested in November. And in that contest another factor shows up, the aftermath of the congressional reapportionment and the failure of 18 of the 48 states to complete redisricting legislation in accordance with that belated reapportionment. A total of 60 house seats from those 18 states are being contested for "at which means they will be filled by statewide instead of trlct votes. Looking Backward (From The Register's Files) FORTY YEARS AGO Forty-nine orders of registration were granted by the city board of elections yesterday.

Six inch water pipes are being delivered along Osborne-st between Camp and Carr and will be laid as soon as TWENTY YEARS AGO The Eagles initiated a class of about sixty into the lodge at Odd Fellows' Hall last evening. At the completion of the initiation ceremonies an oyster supper was served. FIVE YEARS AGO Fire of undetermined origin caused the totai destruction early last evening of the sash assembly plant of the Whltmer-Jackson window sash and door manufacturing concern of this city and Cleveland. The building, with stock of sash and glass was reduced to little morethan a gigantic pile of smouldering embers in two hours time, and loss will aggregate $20,000 plant officials said. Insurance was carried.

ONE YEAR AGO A rush of coal shipments due partially to the unusual seasonal activities just before cold weather begins and partly to a pickup of business in various steel and other mills throughout the country was on at the Pennsy docks. Stories From Old Ohio By J.H.GALBRA1TH For the Associated Press THE NEW DEAL JEFFFERSON WAS PROGRESSIVE The great Virginian, Thomas Jefferson, is on record as having expressed himself well pleased With the Ohio constitution, after he had read It carefully, but here is what he said about amendments, the need of them and their frequency: "No society can make a perpetual constitution, or even a perpetual law. The earth belongs, always to the, living generation. They may manage it, then, and what proceeds from it as they please during their usufruct. They are masters, too, of their own persons, and consequently may govern them as they please, but persons and property the sum of the objects of 1 "The constitution and the laws of their predecessors are extinguished, then, In their natural course, with those who gave them being.

This could preserve that being 'till it ceased to be itself, and no longer. Every constitution, then, and every law, expires at the end of 34 years." On another occasion, Jefferson expressed himself as in favor of even more frequent changes in the basic law and suggested that a period of 19 or 20 years was aboutrthe limit of proper duration of such provisions. Here, evidently, is the origin of the provision in Ohio's constitution calling for a vote on constitutional convention every twenty years. How's Your Health? fEdited by Dr. Jngo Gladston for the New York Academy of Medicine) ALCOHOL AND HEREDITY Recently, the British Medical Research Coun cil issued a report on a study made in an attempt to determine effects of alcohol on in heritance.

This report contributes certain illuminating facts. Some 20 years ago Karl Pearson made, the first biological investigation on the effects of alcohol on the race. According to his study, it was' found that there is a greater death rate among the children of alcoholic parents. A sec ond finding, however, appeared to show that the surviving children were constitutionally superior. This study was followed by others on animals.

At Cornell University It was shown that When fish and guinea pigs were exposed to alcohol, a large number of their young were abnormal and unhealthy. Raymond Pearl and E. C. MacDowell, carried on comparable experiments, one using chickens and the other rats. Both indicated that when the animal parents were subjected to alcohol, their progeny were fewer in number but the surviving young were constitutionally superior.

In the British report on the effects of alcohol on inheritance, the findings apparently contradicted those cited in the foregoing. The elusions of the English experimenters is that there is no evidence that exposure to alcohol causes the production of abnormal young." Fertility also appeared to be unaffected by alcohol. The results of experiments conducted cannot be directly to humans. For while the environment of the experimental animal can be rigorously controlled and its various factors regulated, it is next to impossible to accomplish as much among humans. The puerly biologic effects of the intake of alcohol cannot be separated from the effects of other factors.

The economic position of the individual, his occupation, social position, racial stock and other factors influence his ultimate biologic status, and that of his children. DAILY RADIO PROGRAMS SUNDAY WTAJI-CUBVEL AND I A. M. up. Hour.

Alden Edkns. String Quartet. Sketches. of Italy. Tarty.

v. M. Choir. Concert. and Honeysuckle.

King. of Worshipi Fronian. Matineo. Broadcast. Dramas.

Hour. FlaBh. Jackson. Trio. Gems.

Cantor. be announced. Album. Melodies. Exqulse.

Review. Serenade. Barn Orchestra. i Pictures. school of Air.

Neal. Hour. Instrumentalists. services. Unity M.

Marimba Band. Recital. Drama. Tercentenary. Doerr.

Tenor. Wezemael. Agnew. program. Album.

Lame. Hour. of Michigan. of Romance. be announced.

bo announced. Republican com. MInrievItch. Moments in History. Anniversary.

and Mark. Night Life. Revue. Day Dreamers. Lantern.

and Old Lace, REPUBLICAN TICKET For President Herbert Hoover For Vice-President Charles Curtis STATE TICKET For Governor David S. Ingalls For Lee B. Palmer For Secretary of State George O. Braden For Auditor of State Joseph T. Tracy For State Harry L.

Day For Attorney General John W. BrlcUer For U. S. Senator Gilbert Bettman For CongTessmen-at -Large L. T.

Palmer George II. Bender DISTRICT TICKET For Congressman 13th Dis 't Walter E. Kniger For State Senator Walter E. Schcld COUNTY TICKET For Representative Ferd'J. Blhg For Commissioner Fred C.

Powers William Wagner For Prosecuting Attorney Alvin F. Welchel For Clerk of Courts John W. Bnxter For Sheriff Victor J. Moore For Recorder Norman R. Brown For Treasurer Henry K.

Gassan For Surveyor William II. Heim For Coroner Dr. Carle W. Koehler JUDICIAL TICKET For Chief Justice Supreme Court Qtrrinston T. Marshall For Supreme Court Judges Edward S.

Matthias Thomas A. Jones (Short Term) Frank W. Geigcr For Court of Appeals Harry Lloya For Probate Judge Ray F. Speers Biaginl. W1W-Cincinnati i A.

hour. forum. Three. Continental. muslcale.

orch. P. M. recital. Drama.

POLITICAL BROADCASTS (Llstiirgrs Tentative) SUNDAY WJZ CHAIN 7 p- Cutting, auspices. MONDAY (Listings Incomplete) WEAF CHAIN 3 or 3:30 Hoover. 8 p. m. to, li.

11 p. rally. WJZ CHAIN 11 p. rally. 6:45 p.

Bettman. 7 p. Ingalls. 10 p. 9:15 p.

Thomas, Socialist. I- Doerr. Murdock. of Musi. Chimes.

be announced. Charles Coughlin. Ed Choir. program. Ford.

Amigos. Preview. Note Book. Brlcktops. Adams.

Sisters. Kessler. Singing Master. Home. Government talk.

Brlcktops. Humana. Stoess. Arnhelm orch. Cleveland! A.M.

Bugle. program. Morning forum. Mahoney. C.

Carlisle, Synod. M. Choir organ. and Dunn. Rich.

Percy. matinee. Editor. Symphony. and Drums.

Brickner. program. Holllger. Linings. Maurel.

orchestras. Patrl. Hutcheson. Musical club. Allen.

of MelodleB. Benny. Ted Weem. Relief program. orchestras.

Dalquist orch. Bajik. A. M. Bugle.

of the Air. Recital. Mahoney, C. Carllle. Makers.

r. M. choir. Tower. Instructions For Marking Ballots 12 1 1 2 5 r.

6 6 7 7. 7 7 8 8 9 9 10 10 11 11: 12: 12; Deutsch. Labor. of the Air. Ed McConnell.

of the Air. Hoosier Editor. and Drums. McConnell. Kcviow.

Gold. Beasley. Muslcale. Maurel. memories.

Patrl. Hutcheson. Cambria. Allen. of Melodies.

Benny. Program. Moods. Duchln. Nelson.

Kemp. This year, the national candidates, the state candidates, and the county candidates are ail on the same ballot. 1. Mark the ballot with black lead pencil. 2.

If you are a Republican and want to vote- for all Republicans, put your cross (x) in the circle under the Eagle. 3. If you are a Democrat and want to. vote for. all Democrats put j'bur (x) in circle under the Rooster; 4.

If you are a Republican and want to vote for some. Democrats, put your cross (x) circle der the Eagle, and then put a cross (x) in front of any Democrat that you want to vote for. 6. If you are a Democrat and want to vote for some Republicans, put your cross (x) in the circle under the Rooster, and then put a cross (x) in front of any Republican that you want to vote for. Or you muy Put a cross (x) in front of every name that you want to vote for.

i. MONDAY A- 31. up. Culture. Plant Pete.

Serenade. Minstrel. and Glenn. Rhapsody. markets.

Culture. Events. Fingers. Gray';" and Jill. and DeRose.

Band. of Education. Institute. Recital. r.

M. Marvin. Wlngs'of Song. Nichols orch. Gill orch.

of Education. Hartrlck. Stage. Speaker. Review.

Concert. Whiternan. Next Door. Tunes. Wing.

Family. River. Plant Pete. Nichols orch. Glenn.

Trio White. Jones, Ernie Hare. Goldbergs. Roads Program. be Announced.

Review. Rose. Gill orch. orchestra. Novis.

Orchestra. orch. A. M. Doolittle.

o' the Morning. and Shine. Rill and Jane. Bill. Devotions.

Pot. Rhythms. Abbey. Bugs. and Sade.

Page- "Skeeter" Palmer. Lu and Em. Daily Food. Ensemble. Melodies.

Trotter. Strings. I'. M. Song Review.

quotations. and Home hour. Harap orch. of the Air. Safety Campaign.

Eccles. and Bob. Sisters. Guild Drama. Neal.

Lady. Orphan Annie. Serenaders. Thomas. 'n' Andy.

Nolan. the Magician. Lads. by M. Hart.

Barnes. Moments. Doctor. Repaid. Rubes.

Light Opera. Hamp orch. WLW-CINCINNATI I A. irt. o' the Morning.

Exercises. and Herman. Mansfield. Devotions. 8:15 -i -YodelIng Twins.

Jack. and Marlon. Care and Training. Becker, Larry Greuter. Cabooch.

MobdS. WILL A RD HEARS MRS.ALEXANDER Maumee Woman Guest er At Club Meeting. WILLAitD, Nov. 5 (Special) Mrs. Paul Alexander of Maumee spoke at the annual guest day, meeting of the Twentieth Century club eld In the Presbyterian church FrU ay afternoon.

Music furnished by Mrs. H. L. Tracy, Mrs. J.

M. Elder and Mrs L. Summermacher. A dinner was served In the parish house following the program. Campaign songs sung during the dinner hour.

An original song entitled "Ingall Bells" was sung to the time of "Jingle Bells," first by the Republicans then by the Democrats. The former group was led by Mrs. L. Simmermacher and the latter group by Mrs. J.

Elder. reports. Bag. Snap Shots. Bill.

Sisters. Quartet About Town." Strings. r. M. and Home Hour.

Arnhelm orch. of the Air. John Johnen. of Melody. Serenade, Guild.

Time Trio. Lady. Jim. Bill. Man Sunslne.

Newhall. Thomas. 'n' Andy. and Glenn. the Magician.

Black and Queen. Committer. Barnes. Moments. Kessler orch.

of Terror. Thles orch. River, Slumber Musle. A. M.

Parade. and Ted. That. Devotions. Wyant.

Jimmy School of the Air. Wons. and Harry. Moods. of Medicine.

V. M. Revue. Ackerman talk. Soils, Livestock.

Hayes. City Marvin. 3 BarthelU orchestra. rragcr. Eton Boys.

talk. Westphal orch. to 'Go. Jack. Wolf Tribe.

Fellers. Bettman talk. Landers orch. S. Ingalls.

Uogers Frey talk. Bolton talk. Jack Smith. Sam. Smifh.

Brothers. in Paris. Broadf 1st. Wallace. Frolic.

Garden. SOIti A. M. Greetings. Corn Huskers.

Flashes. Joe. Gordon and Bill. Aacough. Music Makers.

Wons. 9:4 Dickson. MacKenzle. Berrcns orch. Art Trio.

of Medicine. Alley. r. M. Harrod orch.

Revue. Battle orch. Burton. Federation. Captivators.

of the Air. Barthell. orchestra. Solomon. Westphal orch.

Recital. and Sam. Jack. Wolf Tribe. Party.

Flash. and Stem orch. Roger. and Blue. ca 1 Alb rn.

Jack Smith. Sam. Smith. Manchu. Mills Brothers.

in Paris. Speech. Solomon. Lombardo orch. Duchln orch.

Barrls orch. Re-Elect Alvin F. Weichel Prosecutor. Francis Dorko Heads Seniors LAKESIDE, Nov. 5 (Special) Upperclaasmen of the Danbury-tp high school, here, have elected the following officers for the current school year: Juirlors: Heuderllck, president; Henry Dress, vice president; and Clarence Kosar, Senios: Francis Dorko, president: Lawrence Sa'uvey, vice president; ami Vincent Biro, secretary-treasur.

er. Suuduy M. Tuexdny, Krldny 0ll5 I'. M. B.

S. T. GIVE YOUR; CANARY-A SINGING LESSOtf Justrite PET FOODS ON SALE EVERYWHERE-.

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About The Sandusky Register Archive

Pages Available:
227,541
Years Available:
1849-1968