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The Sandusky Register from Sandusky, Ohio • Page 12

Location:
Sandusky, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

fiOOli SASfARffAN MOSMfAL Friday discharged Fred Mees, Nell- It. fBOVWKNCE ttOSMTAL PRf. day discharged Mrs. Roy Rooks and baby. Warreivst.

MB. AMI MRS. KENNETH SSorn, 1617 Pearl-st, are the parents of ft son born at home on Thanksgiving Day. A MEKTINO OF THE Ross Juniors will be held Saturday afternoon at in the library at the Soldiers' Home. FREIGHTERS tOUNGSTOWN and F.

B. Squire were at the Petinsy docks Friday to load coal, the first for Toledo and the second for Du- lnth. THE RELtGtOUS ttfSTRUC- tlon class at Zion Lutheran Church will be ommltted this morning because of the funeral of James Dorn- blrer at Cleveland. CONDITION OF ALBERT STIE- We, 35, Venire-rd, was reported improving at Good Samaritan hospital where he was taken after being struck by an auto Tuesday night. JOHN WILLIAMS, DECATLR- st, was taken to Providence hospital Friday where he Is being attended by Dr.

P. N. Squire. His Condition is not believed serious. A MEETING OF THE ERIE-CO Ministerial Association will be held Monday morning at the Old First Presbyterian church and tho speaker will be the Rev.

Donald CONDITION OF WILLIAM HOP- kins, colored, Warren-st, was reported Improving Friday, after he Buffered a hemorrhage while attending the Sandusky-Fremont football game Thursday. FIREMEN REPAIRING TOYS At Fire Station 6 for unfortunate children for Christmas have sent out a call for old toya to be repaired, as they say they have run out. A rush of toys after Thanksgiving is expected, however. FRANKLIN HORNIG, STUD- ent at Sandusky High School who was Injured last Saturday morning while working on the auditorium stage, was reported Friday evening as much better. Hornlg received a broken ankle and has since been confined to his, home.

He is tant business manager of the Sandusky High Fram. SANDUSKY WAS WITHOUT electric light and power service for few minutes Friday evening be' tween 9 and o'clock. Attaches of the O. P. 8.

Co. reported that the lftck of service was a result of local trouble which was easuly corrected and' permitted resumption of service. The nature of the trouble was not disclosed. FISH CONCERNS LIFT NETS TO Much Twine Sffll in Water and Owners Fear Loss By Ice. Fear of a freeze which would damage fish nets in Lake Brie and Sandusky bay if the present cold weather continues was current among fishlhg firms in Sandusky Friday and many boats were sent out to take up nets to prevent a recurrence of last year's loss of thousands of dollars In twine.

Clifton Blckley of the Schacht Fish said that -there had not been much damage' as yet but that the cold, weather continued there was likely to be much damage unless proper precautions were taken. He said that his firm sent out their boats Stevo Junior and to take up nets anlong the mainland and island shores. He said that he understood that Post Fisheries and others were taking similar action. Officials of Lay Bros, said that firm had no fear of losing nets if the weather WHS not worse than at present, but said also that this company had the Dispatch out and had taken up quite a number of nets. Sandusky Bay had a thick coating of ice early Friday morning but none of the boats had any great trouble navigating tho bay.

MANY LOCAL NEEDY GIVEN PROVISIONS Poor families of Sandusky eeived many gifts In the way of food Thanksgiving Day. Mrs. Henry Deering of Kimball gave chickens and vegetables to three families consisting of 20 members, the ladies of the East Oxford Evangelical church donated tables, groceries and meats through the Associated Charities, the Central Erie and Supply Elevator Co. of Prouts Station gave a barrel of flour and Mrs, L. J.

Stautzen berger a' large basket of canned goods, Mrs. E. Leber, Prouts furnished a quantity of chicken and vegetables for six Sandusky people Others making gifts were Mrs, Edward A. Mrs. J.

E. Mor ton. girls of the Sandusky News' Office, Camp Fire Girls, Mooseheart Women's Legion, L. Winters and others. The Parker barber shop offered to cut free the hair of any chjld whose name a-p peared on the list of the Associated Charities.

SERVICES FOR MRS. WILLIAMS TUESDAY Mrs. Julia Williams, widow of Taylor Williams, a well known and highly respected colored wdman died at Good Samaritan Hospital Friday morning at 1.30 o'clock. She was 76 years of age. No known rel atlves survive.

Williams, a member of the Second Baptist church, came to San dusky 4.0 years ago from iSid lived here since Mr. Williams' died several years ago. The body was prepared for burial at the Frey. Funeral Home where friends may call after Sunday noon nnd where the funeral will be held Tuesday at VSO p. m.

and at 2 p. from the Second Baptist church, Decatur-st. with the Rev. H. O.

Mason, pastor, officiating, interment in Oakland Cemetery. I ADDITIONAL SPORT WOLFE SCORES MAT WIN HERE AGAINST BROWN Frank Wolfe, clever grappler from New York City, took two out of three falls from Andy Brown of Minneapolis in the main attraction of the wrestling show staged at Yontz Hall Friday night. Wolfe appeaved here two weeks ago, at which time he won over Jack Mitchell, who is said be one of the best wrestlers in the Mississippi Valley. Brown took the first fall in minutes with his famous figure four scissors -hold. In the first match of the ning, Joe Montana of Columbus, won a one fall match from "Wild" Bill Hasson of Louisville, after 42 minutes and ten seconds of grappling.

Montana, who is quite popular around Sandusky and vicln ity, downed the Louisville wrestler with the famous flying tackle of Gus Sonnenberg, together with a cross body lock. Evens Matters Up Wolfe came back after the 10 minute intermission, and although Brown's body scissors weakened the New York wrestler considerably, he managed to' even mattors up by securing a bear-hug and take the second fall in 12 minutes' and 10 seconds. The final fall was won by Wolfe in 19 'minutes, with an "airplane slam." The "Hoosler" wrestler became quite groggy near the end of the match after Wolfe had been continually using his favorite head locks. Next Friday evening will find Joe Montana meeting "Wild" Bill Hasson in the main-go. Matchmaker Irvin Zlnn announced last evening that ladies accompanied by gentlemen will be admitted free of charge to next week's show.

OHIO COLD WAVE RELAXES TODAY: JOBLESS HAPPY 1,300 Men at Cleveland Get Work Shoveling Sftdw, 8 Inches Deep. nt AMtlatei Still shivering with the record-breaking cold weather which is blamed for sejreti deaths and -much suffering In this state, Ohlofltis today had the cheerful promise of the U. S. Weather bureau that relief is due hot later than tomorrow. The relief may not come all the way up.

to expectations, the weather bureau said, but the indications were that Sunday's temperatures would be around 80 degrees. Slippery highways In many parts of the state continued to endanger automobile travel and around Cleveland, where the snowfall was inches, several country roads were' closed. Although the southern part of the state had tie coldest weather of the past three days, the storm itself was worst in the Cleveland section. Within 24 hours, more than 2,000 automobiles were hauled to garages there by auto club service cars, after engines failed and radiators froze. While the auto owners were finding fault with their misfortunese, 1,300 Cleveland unemployed were made happy however, by city jobs, shoveling snow.

Thousands of others received similar employment elsewhere in the Yesterday's coldest localities in the state were at Alliance where the unofficial mark was three below zero, and at Oxford where It was one below. Chas. Weschke Stricken Here Funeral Services Will Be Held On Tuesday. Charles Weschke, a well-known Sandusky resident, died Friday evening at 9 o'clock at Good Samaritan Hospital following an illness of five weeks. He was aged 63 years, four months and two days.

Surviving Mr. Weschke are three Bisters, Mrs. Peter Young of San- duaky; Mrs. Frank Seitz of Tiffin, and Mrs. Homer McCarthy of Detroit; one brother, William Weschke, of this The body was removed to the Frey funeral home for burial preparations and Sunday afternoon will be taken to the residence of his brother-inlaw and sister, Mr.

and Mrs. Peter Young, 206 Townsend- st, where friends may call and where funeral services will be held Tuesday afternoon at 1 o'clock. Rev. Theo. Stellhorn will officiate and interment will be made in Oakland Cemetery.

WEDDED 50 YEARS, CQUPLE CELEBRATES TIFFIN, Nov. and Mrs. John Traunero of this city celebrated their golden wedding anniversary with a solemn high mass In St. Joseph's Church and a dinner Thanksgiving Day. The couple are natives of Bavaria and have lived in Tiffin Bince the second year of'their marriage.

Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Yeager, their son-in-law and daughter, together with their family from Fre- inont, were among the guests.

County Commissioner Milton It. Hooper and Mrs. Hooper celebrated their 34th wedding anniversary yesterday, Mr. and Mrs. Merl Musser.

othdr well known residents, observing their twenty-fifth. ST BITES ON SATURDAY FUKMONT, Nov. Funeral services for Miss Miunon JMtter, 22, of Fremont who died of heart attack at the home of nor parents, Mr. and Mrs. C.

W. Ritter Wednesday night will be held ftt the family home Saturday afternoon. She had been in ill health for noma time. A brother and sister also survive. Miss Ritter was from Fremont High school with the class of 19U7, TOLEDO CAGER TO PLAY REDS Game Billed For Here Next Tuesday Night.

Carl Mackey announced Friday that the Sandusky B1 Reds basketball team will, open their 1930 cage season next Tuesday evening at the Junior High gym when they are scheduled to meet the Toledo Redmen. According to Mackey, the Reds will not attempt to draw up a schedule for the season, but will bring to Sandusky some of the country's best teams. The Toledo Uedmen, Cleveland Rosenbloom's and Olson's Terrible Swedes are included in the list of quintets that Mackey expects to book for the coming season. The Toledo Redmen are members of the American League and are rated as having a fast team again this year. Capt.

Pip Koehler and "Cookie" Cunningham, members of the tobacco squad, are well known to Sundusky basketball followers. The Sandusky-Toledo game will start at 8:15 m. and Mackey expects to offer a prelim between twp local teams. ftJRS. GARDNER DJKS TJ1PFJN.

Nov. 2S Gardner. 36. wife of Burke died Wednesday morning Colorado Springs, Colo. Her 40atb was caused by a heurt ut- Jftgkv was "teter Mrs.

Wa.de of this city, Ht-r body taken to Ada. her former services will be held In lbs 1st Episcopal church Sal- be made in that WBAVm INdUBY HOHWAUv'. NOV. bpgfc to truck -Vir- morning, the mimm trucj turned BlWPM WM WWd to Si mmmix. a ASKS OHIO TO BUY CHRISTMAS SEALS URBANA, Nov.

28 appeal to Ohloans for greater purchases of Christmas seals this year than ever before, was voiced here tonight by John W. Bricker, member of the State Utilities Commission, and the chairman of' the Ohio Christmas Health Seal Committee. Hundreds of the hungry among unemploy'id discovered that the free soup, coffee and doughnuts they were enjoying at a mysteriously endowed "kitchen" were being furnished by At Capone, the hoodlum king D. A. R.

TOLD OF JOBLESS RELIEF Says Support of Public Is Needed Here. Al R. Williams, secretary of the State-City Employment Service, addressing the members of Martha Pitkin Chapter, D. A. at its meeting Friday, afternoon urgjed full cooperation of.

the public in plans or unemployment relief In Sandusky this winter. Mr. Williams told the members that If the city's complete emergency projects were undertaken as proposed, it was evident that enough deserving men now without jobs would apply for work so as to stretch out the labor so' that each man would not receive more than three days work in a month's time. This, Mr. Williams said, made it plainly evjdent that unemployment conditions In Sandusky could not be fully remedied by the municipal emergency projects.

He declared that It was largely up to the Sandusky citizen with steady employment or. other Income to cooperate by opening, wherever possible, practical casual work in the homes and elsewhere for the workers who are without regular jobs. TELLS ENGLISH TEACHERS PUT KICK IN LITERATURE CLEVELAND, Nov. 28 There should be joy in the high school literature classes tonight. For' the teachers have just about decided literature ought to have more in It "If the youngsters are looking for a thrill, it is our place to give it to Ruth Mary Weeks, of Kansas City, told 1,000 members of the National Council of Teachers of English here today.

Miss Weeks is president of the council. She explained however, that It would not be necessary to use cheap fiction to get the. "kick" or the TheVe is plenty of good literature that also fills the bill. Much of the dullness that the student finds In English reading assignments, Miss Weeks said, is the fault TARDIEU WINS BUT LEAD LESS PARIS. Nov.

28 The government of Premier Andre Tardieu today won two votes of confidence, although his majority is gradually being whittled on the issue of the failure of the Oustric Bank and other financial institutions recently. The Chamber of Deputies was DUt in a critical mood yesterday, when Tardieu won another vote of fldence. In this balloting, taken at a time when Americans were eating turkey In the traditional Thanks giving repast, nothing was said directly about the bank issue, but a question was poised on a purely international matter that neverthe less Involved the expenditure ot about $680,000,000 for public Improve ments. The government emerged with a majority of 78. of poor teaching, rather than the, books.

The picayunlsh, detailed forms of literary instruction alsfi were derided by Howard Mumford Jones ot the University of Michigan. Another subject the teachers found interesting was a discussion by Miss Edith Jones of Daytbn, of the art of conversation. She teaches a conversation class at the Day ton Junior Teachers' College by starting a round-table discussion. The class then discovers that to talk Interestingly It must read and be informed, she said. UNEMPLOYED STARTS ON PAGE ONE OFFICERS CHOSEN TIFFIN, Nov.

CoOJc was elevated to the office of worshipful master of Hildredth Lodge, No. 165, F. and M. of Republic, when the regular election was held; Others chosen were: S. Howard Porter; Jr.

Len Glagett, treasurer, H. Kanan: secretary, Allen Miller; S. Jay Weller; Dr. Harold Comers; tyler, F. Breighner; trustee, W.

Kuntz. SALES CAMPAIGN IS PLAN OF STUDENTS FOR BYRD LECTURE The Senior Class at Sandusky High School, which brings Admiral Byrd to Sandusky for its annual lecture course number, December 12, is preparing to make one of most extens'ive sales campaign drives ever to be staged by Sandusky High students. Last year Just the immediate ci.nlty was canvassed for the lecture course. The senior class this year, however, is extending its drive to points east, west, north and south. This will take in Norwalk, Milan,) Ri tes or ElrOY Ward Will Be Huron, Berlin Heights, Florence, 1 Birmingham, Green Springs, Fremont, Clyde, Bellevue, and the Island district, including Port Clinton, Lakeside and Danbury, The most capable members of the senior class will be selected and sent to sections mentioned to publicize Admiral Byrd.

MISS HUGHES TO WED WASHINGTON, Nov. 28 Elizabeth. Evans Hughes, daughter of Charles Evans Hughes, Chief Justice of the United States, and William Thomas Gossett of New York vfill be married here Friday, Dec. 19. BANK CLOSES MIDDLESBORO, Nov.

28 Citizens Bank and Trust Company, having capital and surplus of J60.000, suspended operations the close of business Wednesday, it developed today. GRISWOLD STARTS ON PAGE ONE Huron Cagers On Losing End HURON. North Fulrfield City Service basketball team took a close 15 to contest from the Huron Merchants at Huron Friday evening, Hoyt and Tilson led the attack for the North Fairfield cagers, each accounting for two fteld goals. line-ups and summary: Huron North Fairfield 15 tirisell RF Ashley W. Frya LF Woodwarth Rhodes Sanders Zimmerman R(i Brltton A.Frye IM TUaon Field Goals: W.

Frye, Zimmerman 2, A. Frye, Hoyt 2, Woodwarth, son 2. throws: Woodwarth. SubnUtutions: Hoyt (or January was presiding bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States. Recurrent illness kept Bishop Grlswold from active supervision of diocesan activities much of the time Thirteen years suffragan bishop of Chicago, the prelate on Feb.

4, 1930, was elected to succeed the Most Rev. Anderson. He is survived by his widow. There are no children. The incoming bishop of Chicago, Dr.

Stewart, is regarded as one of the most distinguished leaders in the church. He entered the ministry as a Methodist pastor in 1908, but applied for orders in the Episcopal Church and was ordained con and priest that same year. S'nce 1904 he has been at St. Luke's Church in Evansion, seeing it grow from a struggling mission in a email building'to the largest numerically, in the diocese. He a native of Saginaw, and his education at Northwestern URlverr slty, of which he Is now a trustee CHURCH NOTICE First -Baptist a tf a Bible school.

Classes for all agea; 10:30 m. morning worship and sermon Subject "The Proof of True DJstci- pleShip." 8:00 p. m- Bible school at 2318 Mllan-rd; 6:00 p. m. Juuior and Senior B.

Y. P. U. Btoil will lead the Seniors and Mr. Bradley the Juniors; 8:40 p.

m. prayer meet ing: 7:00 p. m. evening worship and mapttanaai service. The pastor will preach on the subject, "How True Christiana are brought into exls tence." Community Bible Study Class Monday Ttffr.

p. ui. Church. Wednesday at p. m.

prayer and mlm service Wednesday at 7:80 mi aj Heart Attack Causes Death Port Clinton and Vicinity PORT CLINTON, Nov. 28 Port Clinton council friends may call. Held Tuesday, Dr. A. R.

Grlerson, coroner, attributed the death of Elroy Ward, son of Daniel Ward, who was found dead In bed at the home of a cousin, Mrs. Fred Tomlch, Venlce-rd, Friday morning about 7 o'clock, to a heart attack. He was aged 31 years, 11 months and' eight days. Mr, Ward leaves but one near relative, his father, although he had a number of cousins. The body was taken to the Frey Funeral Home to be prepared for burial and late Sunday forenoon will be taken to the Tomich home where The funeral will be held from the Tomich residence Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, with the Rev.

Ralph Stoll, pastor of the First Baptist Church, officiating. Burial will be made in Oakland Cemetery. PRETTY NURSE ON PAGE ONE has voted favoring a new highway bridge over the Portage River, here, at the site of the present so called wagon bridge which has served tjie public many years. This bridge is over part of Route No. 2, the connecting link between Sandusky and Toledo, An effort has been in progress for some time, to secure a new bridge here to replace the old one, and there was Borne difference STARTS of-opinion as to whether the old New York Central Railway bridge and sag6 that came back to Ijer, "the right of way be used, or the site of North American is hers from today." the present bridge.

A delegation of Editorial space was given In the people present at the council meet- paper, and demands for the stamps ing, petitioned the council to take came s0 fast the little lady from some action In the matter. It has pelaware was bewildered. Soon she been suggested tha.t the okl railway bu a new hospital. Tuberculosis bridge and right of way be secured associations were formed throughout as a detour if ft new brldgo.ahojuld be the country, and eaph year a Christ' erected here. Estimates some time mas seal sale was conducted to sup ago placed the cost of a new concrete port tuberculosis work, bridge at about 8150.000.

-About the same time that Miss Lee MilJer and 1 Cletus Marsh of Blssell's idea grew, Governor Boose Put-in Bay their winter's program of carrying the mall from Put-in Bay to the main.land at Catawba Monday. The Put-In Bay mall passes through the Port Clinton velt recalled, the late Dr. Herman Biggs, formes hearth commissioner of New York, made a remark soon to become famous, "health is pur chasable," front it sprang and Is carried to and from day's slogan that prevention is better Catawba by special carriers, and is than cure. then transported across the 16? or "Back in those days," Governor open water during wintar months Roosevelt reminded, "noi cure was by Moller'and Marsh. The Kelley known for tuberculosis.

A person Island mail goes by way of Lafcesjde with the disease was looked upon as during the winter schedule. These an outcast. His relatives and friends two routes are considered among the shut him up in an airless rooAi and most.dangerous of Uncle Sam's mall there he remained.ic^await the end. 1 routes, and it ia that within The success of the penny Christa short time, the mail will be mas seal has beeo eaidj ported to the Islands airplane that tonjay there are- sanatoria route. which annually aend back to their thieves have been reported homes 100,000 as having heen busy at JQanhury He en4ed his address with a plea Catawba Island.

Mrs. H. A. Twin- to buy ing of Catawba, reported the loss of 35 chickeus, which wert taken at night. a.

R. Setoffer of West Ohio, has announced that he 1 tabllsh chiropractic offices In the Korndorfer building, Joard Mismanagement Charge Of Crecelius In Milk Association Grdup unworthy cases but that those in charge of unemployment work were doing their best to eliminate those who would not work. But he said the situation was a very serious one and that the members of the manufacturing committee had met at noon and after discussion had felt that the East Battery project was the best way of relieving the situation. Commissioner Horner then said that he thought there ought to be substitute found) for the East Battery work, on account of opposition against it In many quarters but said he did not know anything better and in view of that would be in favor of authorizing the issuance of bonds for $10,000 to start the work and then if it proved successful tooth as a constructive development and in relieving unemploy ment, then appropriate the remainder of the money grandually later. Schade then said he was willing to try $10,000 as an experiment, which was agreed to by the Commission at private conference later.

Called Waste of Money. I was called on the telephone by four men today, at least two of them merchants, who protested to me the East Battery improvement work as a waste of money and effort," Horner told the Commissioners. "I told them if anyone had a complaint to come before the Commission we would hear them, and if they had anything better to offer, we would be glad to accept it." Horner also expressed the belief that something ought to be done tc eliminate the "I'm not closing my eyes to the spending of $80,000 for something which may prove useless to the city," declared Schade. "I think we are getting altogether too excited about this thing, and if we could quiet down, much of the clamor, about unemployment would quiet down also," declared Schade. Commissioner Altstaetter then said that he was not closing his eyes to thp spending of.

$80,000 by the city, either, but thought since it would be spent oh improvements later, any-' how. it might as well be spent now, when the work meant so much and declared that it had better bo spent giving people work than "in putting down an uprising." It was then pointed out by Lewis Eger that If $5 a week were given to 100 families for a period of 10 weeks it would amount to $5,000, which would be beyond the limit of most charitable institutions and would af ford temporary relief at best. Work of listing the unemployed who are to work on the Battery project which is expected to start Monday was going on at the state and city free employment bureau late Friday. Men who are out of employment and desire to work are asked to list their names as quickly as possible Unemployed desiring work are ing-Hated'in, groups of 50 each. The first group will work three days then the second and around to th last group, after which the first will work again if 'there is more to be Old dissension in the ranks of the Ohio Farmers' Cooperative Milk Association flared again Friday when 3, J.

Crecelius, Vlcc-presidtht of the Association and member of the board of Went to Cleveland to consult attorneys and Issued, a statement charging mid-management by the board. Crecelius declared that the assoc. iation needed an "dfficlal hcnnreclean- lng from cellar to garret" and announced that he would take steps to force an accounting by officials and former officials jwhofh, he said, had been responsible tot extravagance and financial losses of the co-operative. "Plans to sell the retail distributing plant in Cleveland" said Crecelius, "have been muddled' and the business Is surely headed to financial wreck and ruin unless something is done soon," Creclllus is a former commissioner of Erie county and Is serving his second year as director of the milk association. Will Fight In Open.

"As a minority member of the board," he said, "I have tried quietly but without success to get the affairs of the cooperative put on a sound business basis. I have repeatedly demanded an audit so that full information might be supplied the membership. Now I've decided to fight It out in the open and fight to a finish and shall henceforth give full publicity to real conditions within the organization until an accounting is had." "The plans to sell the plant here," Crecelius stated, "was adopted after extravagance had plunged the business Into debt, because it looked like the best solution of the association's involved financial problems." Tho association, Crecelius revealed, hired Frank W. Bishop, Cleveland business consultant, to work with a special committee of the membership on tho sale of the plant to the National Dairy Cooperation or some other private concern. "Mr.

Bishop," he said, "was hired and paid $200 a day to handle, the sale. He has off and on for more than a month now, and the sale Is no nearer completed than Was when he started. Meanwhile the political clique which dominates the board is sending him around to spread propaganda among the members, and to write letters to members advising them who to vote for for directors next Monday. Fear Receiver Sale. "By delaying action, and at the same time, continuing financially unsuccessful operation Cleveland, the business is In the way of being knocked down at a receiver's sale for a song, at an immense and unnecessary loss to the stockholding farmers, when it might be sold sooner as a going concern.

'The majority members of tho board have not only hot Inaugurated reforms and economies, but are combined to sit tight on the lid, staving off a day of accounting. The association Is two months behind in its payments to the milk producing members. "tHS farmers Stand to more and more daily by this state of affairs while the. private company which delays wih be able purchase it at a forced sale, Stands t4 profit." Retails ttesignatlon. Crecelius' statement is repercussion of the turmoil In the association Which occured a year ago when Ralph Strong, secretary, treasurer and general manager of the cooperative, resigned.

In March, 1929, under Strong's leadership, the association entered the retail business Last fall the Federal Farm Loan Board allotted the association $400,000 to support its weakened treasury. Besides this debt now reported to be more triari $800,000 "milk certificates" outstanding among the membership as liabilities. Controversy was renewed recently in a campaign to elect a new board, with Crecelius leading a group opposing the present directors. Bandit Makes Toledo Youth Be Chauffeur Nov. 28 two hours Barnes Mauk, 17, son of C.

A. Mauk, prominent lumber dealer was the prisoner of a bandit who forced him to drive an automobilo while he held up several filling stations last night, he told police today. 4 Mauk was in the automobile of friend when the bandit approached and placed a gun against his ribs. He then drove to an alley where he was robbed of $1.50. The bandit gave the youth his choice of driving or giving up the machine.

The bandit, Mauk Mid, forced him to drive as high an 60 miles an hour after holding up gasoline filling stations. The robber got money at each gasoline station and talked constantly. The bandit related that he earns here from Chicago and had spent a day studying the city before Starting a series of holdups- Mussolini Ousts Anti Fascisti MILAN. Italy, Nov. 28 Anti-Fascist cleanous promised month ago ny Premier MussoUnl today swept Ernesto Bellonl, former mayor of Milan, and Bartello Belottl, a veteran of the Nltti cabinet Into exile on one of the penal islands for five years.

Bellonl, one of the chief antifascist leaders, went because an invest! gating committee reported he had used his office In Milan to increase his private fortune. Belottl was thrown out of the Fascist Party some time ago. The trouble began for the former mayor of Milan with charges that he had accepted a gift from an American banking concern which handled a $30,000,000 municipal loan in 1927, but 'he was acquitted of that charge and since has been politically inactive. SUSPEND STUDENT TIFFIN, Nov. Mary Smith, of Shamokin, was indefinitely suspended from Heidelberg College prior to the Thanksgiv.

Ing vacation. Reports of her suspension was confirmed today by coir lege officials who said alleged indiscretions led to this action. DIES AT DESK WASHINGTON Nov. 28 Edward H. Cunningham of Iowa, a Member of the Federal Reserve Board died at his desk this afternoon, In the Treasury Department, a victim of a heart attack.

WEINBERGER'S "Where Spending Is Saturday Saturday Specials Daily Ten Specials SPECIALS 10c Camay Soap 60c Pertussin 30c Hill's Quinine 100 5-gr Aspirin 65c Pond's Cream 50c Shaving Creams 50c Tooth Pastes $7. Conklin Pens $5. Conklin Pens 5c 43c 39c 39c 33c $5.95 $4.25 $7.50 Heating Pads $4J9 We Reserve the Bight to Limit Quantities CARS WASHED $1.25 Until further notice we will wash all cars for $1.25 CARS GREASED 1.00 AH cars greased for $1,00 except Ford, Chevrolet, Whippet 75c Let us prepase your car NOW for winter driving. Change Grease in Transmission and Differential Change to Winter Oil Have your Radiator filled with Prestone or AJcoUol and have a Heater installed. "TRY OUR SNAPPY SERVICE" The Erney Tire Co.

919 W. WasJOngton St. wort? again done. The names of the first group of 60 selected to go to work on the East Battery project appears in this Issue of The HOOMT IWBCiWT WANT ADS For the Big Saturday and Sunday Papers. MAIN 28 FREMONT, Nov; aftcret marriage of Miss Grace, Hivt, a former Fremont High girls' star, and KtUea, both of whleft occurred in Toledo 'laat Ivm known PfWay, 8iUea the dauuhJUMr and It.

S- Hirt, a farm couple and tnwhinji to UM Will Deliver a Many Socials Sale Today Dollar Day OCCASIONAL TABIDS AT OCCASIONAL CHAIK8 AT a lMUHIKS AT mm AT CEP Aft CHKSTS-j AT 100 F1ECK MNNKK S1STS AT LtiVNCE CliAIUtt ft U0.05 WM fiil.OS S10.U3 S15.U5 II EII Km 15 of Tickets WARNER'S OHIO THEATRE See Grace Moore in "A Lady's Morals" RULES OF CONTEST Today through the different la the Want Ada are distributed lines relative to the "Life of jenny arevHid whom the picture dwells. The first 16 perspnj submitting the correct paragraph will receive fiftch. BJwry Your a.oswer ts Want Ad Contest Editor, Sandusky Newspapers Inc. Winners aounced in Monday gtar-JftWOAl. Owid.

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