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The Hutchinson News from Hutchinson, Kansas • Page 13

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Hutchinson, Kansas
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13
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SATURDAY, MAY 22. 1937. THE HUTCHINSON. KA A S. PAGE THIRTEEN.

ongress And ress Battle Ball Field Question of Whether Either Team Can Last Itenuired Time Washington, sevenly- Ififtli congress and newsmen of the capital sent 18 pantalooned players down the Potomac today to commit various outdoor errors in Jhe name of baseball. Three major questions troubled he backers of both teams before he late afternoon game: 1. Does cither aggregation boast (in athlete who can catch the ball President Roosevelt will throw will it elude the butter- lingered battlers and roll Into the Vivcr? Will Vice-president be lost again, as it was last 3. Can either team last the required hour and SB minutes? The scene of this second annual llruggle between the lawmakers the scribes was the marine at Quantico. Va.

Honorary get a free dinner for their are: Admiral William D. Leahy, chief bf naval operaions; Harry L. Hop- Kins, federal relief administrator; fcnhn L. Lewis, chariman of the xommittcc for Industrial sation, and House Majority Leader T5nm Rayburn. House Scrgeanl-at-arms Kenneth Romney announced the congressional line-up of representatives as: Joseph D.

Casey (D-Massi c.f.; Fames P. Richards (DSC) 1st iasc, M. Mead (D-NY) 2nd lasc: Thomas S. McMillan (D-SC) Edward A. Kelly (D-Ill) 3rd wise; James A.

Sbanley (D-Conn) Leo E. Allen (R-111) r.f.; Jack Nichols (D-Okla) Mathew L. (D-NY) p. Refusing to divulge the news- hen's lineup until game time, Vlannger William J. Donaldson, said: "Our team being what it is, K-c've got to fool them with some- 'hing." MURRAY READS OF C.

I. 0. VICTORY 'Madrid Again Under Intense Rain Of Shells Thirty Estimated Killed And KM) Wounded in Three-Hour Cannonade Philip A. Murray, Chairman of the S. W.

O. C. and John Lewis' chief lieutenant in the C. I.O., smiles broadly as he reads the result of balloting in the government-supervised election at which a C. I.

O. affiliate won the exclusive riant to represent the 27,000 workers of the Jonei Laughlin Steal Company. Drivers To Court Traffic Violators Today's Chief Victims Traffic violators were the chief ictims in police court today. Donald Mcndenhall, 19, 318 was fined $16 when he ileadctl guilty to charges of speed- IIR and reckless driving. Santa Fe fficcr Ben L.

said the youth rove SO miles an hour past his ar and another at the intercction Third and Maple sts. Charged with speeding 46 miles hour and running a stop sign, lilton Fostier, 24, RKD 4, was ined $8 by Judge Ed J. Whalen. The same fine was assessed D. Hnughcr, 27, 110 West Fifth Riven a ticket for speeding on street.

G. R. Hannon, 42, 505 East Bigler arrested tor driving with- lut a license and failure to report In a previous conviction, was or- to appear in police court very Saturday for a lecture. Two dollars were collected from fcrnrgc Sours lor overtime park- pg. Soakers Fall Wage And Hour Over Eastern Message To Be Part Of State Given Monday (Continued From Page One.) Preston, according to the Rock Island.

The Little Arkansas river, out of its banks yesterday, at Little River, receded today. Rainfall of 1.34 inches at Chanute was accompanied by high winds that damaged trees and impaired electric service. The Marais des Cygncs river was reported near bank full at Trading Post. 30 miles north of Fort Scott, today, following heavy rains in the area. Mound City had 5 50 inches of rain the past 24 hours.

Heavy rains sent the Pottawatomie river in lowlands in northwest Anderson county and across highway 59 between Rielimand and Garnelt today. The stream was expected to recede later today. Five inches of rain fell at Garnet! and Scinio. in Anderson county, and Richmond and Lane, in Franklin county, had 3.25 inches. High winds paused considerable damage in McCune and to farm buildings northwest of McCune and southwest of Erie.

McCune streets were littered with trees and other debris and roofs were blown from several buildings. Lightning struck a barn near Urbana, causing a fire that destroyed 30 tons of hfty. Order More Tokens Stork Is Awaited Cunningham And Wife Are At Newton New-ton. Cunning. Kansas mile star, and Mrs.

unningham have established a temporary residence here while waitinR the birth of a child to Irs. Cunningham. The runner explained the cou- le came here for the stork's ar- ival as Newton is nearby Pca- ocly, Mrs. Cunningham's former ome. While here Cunningham said he Loulrt train with the high school track squad.

His next big meet, le said, was at Princeton on June lit. Chamber of Commerce Finds Biff Demand With the supply of 200,000 lax tokens received from Topeka virtually exhausted, the Chamber of Commerce today ordered 400,000 more, costing $800, R. H. Snyder, secretary, announced. Acting as a community store in sale of the zinc disks, required by the new sales tax law to go into effect June 1, the chamber must have orders by Monday to be able to furnish additional tokens in time after the new supply is sold, Snyder said.

"No more will be ordered until we arc sure of the demand," he said The tokens are packed in boxes of 500. Each box contains 10 rolls of 50 tokens. Each has face value of two mills. From Page One) until next year as an economy measure, but Secretary Wallace urged prompt consideration. Edward A.

O'Neal, president of the American Farm Bureau Federation, said Mr. Roosevelt gave the proposed bill a "pat on the back," favoring its principles. It would drop processing taxes of the outlawed AAA, but would revive some other features of the original act. The measure seeks to give farmers prices for their produce that would enable them to buy as much in other goods and services as they could between 1009 and 1814. Mr.

Roosevelt had intended to send his regional planning message to congress this week but deferred it in an attempt to harmonize conflicting views within his official family. It is expected to propose a series of organizations similar to the Tennessee valley authority. Court Matter Becoming impatient, house flood control advocates sought to assure immediate appropriations. The president agreed to spend $40,000,000 in the lower Ohio valley in the year beginning July 1. There was a lull, meanwhile, in the intense interest in the court reorganization bill, which will come before the senate early in June unless a compromise should be made.

The White House is represented, however, as standing firm for the uriginal measure to increase the supreme court unless justices over retire. Four Get Divorces h'ounttiiii On Tonight The colored spray of the Emer- 1 Carey memorial fountain at ic entrance of Carey park will plash tonight for the first time season, Ray K. Hockaday ounced today. Hockaday was instrumental in aising funds for erection of the. harble arch and installation of 1 'ghting arrangements, i The city park department has Charge of its operation.

Want Rent Cut Pontiac, (if) group of Eutomobile workers, who recently Iireatened a sit-down strike in Bieir homes, notified landlords of .000 houses here today that a (program for rent reductions" lould be put into effect unless Voluntary adjustments are made June 1. Two Win Watches Caroline Puckett and Kussell Shirk Lucky Caroline Puckett, 334 East Eighth and Russell Shirk, 711 West Seventh were winners of 1 new wrist watches in the novelty clack st'jppine contest for graduating high school students at the Zinn-Cantwell Jewelry Co. When the window timepiece stopped today, hands pointed to Miss Puckett's and Shirk's names, G. W. Cantwell said.

A large cardboard dial surrounding the clock stem bore nHmes of all graduating seniors The watch-giving stunt is an annual affair. To Wichita Meeting. A group of members ol the Ex- I liange club and their wives at- a state meeting at Wichita esterdav, closing with a banquet ist night. Dr. Kuno H.

Struck, Davenport, national prcsi- cnt. was the banquet speaker, lurward Sanders, a member of le Hutchinson club, sang. Realty Man Dead Nicld, pio- eer real estate dealer here, died esterday in California where he as visiting. He was a business lan here for 30 years. He for- lerly was postmaster at Dumas, ex.

New Paalor 1 Pretty Rev. S. M. pastor of the Mennon- le church, who recently resigned, 1 succeeded in the pastorate here the Rev. P.

p. Tschetter, from outh Dakota. One Phase of Ex-Fireman's Aetion Dropped Four divorces were granted to plaintiffs in as many actions In court today. Pauline Leimweber was granted a decree from Harry Leimweber and given custody of a minor child. Thclma Catherine Baxter was granted a divorce from J.

Francis Baxter in an emergency decree, on a charge of extreme cruelty, and Dai id Baxter was given custody of a minor child. Artie Horton was granted $2,500 alimony, in addition to delinquent temporary alimony and a home, in receiving a decree from Nelson Horton. Jessie Snowden received a divorce from Otis Snowden on grounds of extreme cruelty. A compensation suit brought by Leo Ford, ex-city fireman, against the city of Hutchinson, was dismissed. Executives of the firemen's relief fund were given 20 days to plead in suit agRinst the fund.

Ford alleged he was injured while on duty. Crushed Under Hone Corning. Iowa, Ellis, 10, and his brother, Rolla, 5, were killed near the farm of their father when a blind, aged horse they were riding to pasture slipped on the soft shoulder of a ditch and crushed them. Coroner B. Holland said today.

The horse was killed in the fall. Sella Station J. Potter has sold his filling station and building here to C. L. Shoemaker, of Wichita, who will move here.

C. F. Gramberg had lately been operating the station. Concert Tonight the 15th year the Nickcrson band tonight will open a series of weekly Saturday night band concerts for the summer, under direction of E. P.

Bozeman. Dlsruis Parly Work The Democratic women of the First precinct met yesterday at the home ot Mrs. Helen Card spoke on party organization work and Mrs. E. P.

Wixsted gave a resume of the Democratic Digest. Twitter Barn twister destroyed the barn and other farm buildings at the John Fulkerson farm Madrid, OP) hours of intense insurgent cannonade killed at least. 30 persons, wounded more than and ripped private dwellings apart In Madrid todav. The shelling began at 7 a. and continued until ten o'clock.

It was one of the heaviest bombardments in many weeks. Thousands of workers crept to their jobs under the deluge of steel, seeking whatever shelter they could find, keeping away from the open streets. The least 200 of them a wide pattern of destruction through the cil.y, indicating the intention of the insurgents was to demoralize the life of the whole capital. The force of explosions shook the officially-closed American embassy, in which some persons are living. From the emplacements thry have held for months in Madrid's the insurgent gunners also poured heavy fire into workers' suburbs, particularly Tetuan.

Women and children fled into crude holes thry had dug in the ground to escape flying timbers and stones. Three of the shells hit the hotel where most of the foreign correspondents have been staying. An elevator was wrecked. Government batteries returned the fire, and it died off after ten o'clock. Ghost Voices In Home "Talking Displayed in King's C-ardens Not ghosts, but loudspeakers, were responsible for voices that apparently emanated from walls, ceiling, floors and foundations of a home on East 30th in King's Gardens, today.

And visitors were not frightened trespassers, but guests and prospective customers of C. E. King, development man, viewing a modern new home. Harold "Buddy" Siegcl, Wichita, known to the sports world as a champion high diver, explained. "Features of the home are described over the loudspeakers in such a way that the walls and floors appear to be talking," Siegel said.

"Three men do the announcing, explaining various features of construction as lookers go through the house." Visitors will be welcomed from 1 to 9:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon and evening, and from 3 to 0:30 o'clock Monday and Tuesday, Siegcl said. It is the first time the "talking house" stunt has been tried in Hutchinson, it was said. Beauty Not Essential Woman Speaker Brings Cheer to Brainy CirU Atlanta, A pretty face definitely is off the "must" list as an employment requisites, a Geor. gia business woman said today. What employers want is brains, said Mrs.

Clara C. Conroy of Albany, president of the Georgia Federation of Business Women's and Professional clubs. The beauty requirements as job getters are symbols of the flapper era, she said, emphasizing that "the woman seeking employment today must be qualified. She must have a broadened knowledge of the world." Farmer Shoots Self A. E.

Duranl Is Found Dead Near Holuomh Garden E. Durant, 53- ycar-old tenant sugar beet farmer living nine miles west of r.ere near Holcomh, was found dead of a shotgun blast through the roof of his mouth in a field a half mile from his home today. He shot himself, said Dr. H. C.

Sartorious. coroner. Despondency over the death of his wife, who died ot cancer last fall, was blamed for the act. Durant had driven to Hnlcomb and purchased shotgun shells just prior to the act. His sons heard a report at his car and found the body nearby.

Two married daughters living in Finney county, and five single sons of the home survive. The youngest is a grade school boy. Deaths Mrs. I.ont N'usser Mrs. Lora Nusser, 36, wife of John Nusscr of Plevna, died last night at a local hospital shortly after giving birth to a child.

The baby did not survive. Mrs. Nusser leaves her husband, and four children. Willm Promoted. A.

C. Willm, agent-telegrapher for the Santa Fc railway at Johnson, has been promoted to the Sterling office, succeeding C. A. Crebbs, oldest agent in the western division, who has retired. Crebbs resigned because of poor health, after 49 years of service.

SUrt Road Link Perry Construction Co. of Abilene, is moving equipment here to start work building the connecting link highway at the west end of the new overpass here. Visiting Here Mrs. Wilbur Trego, Clayton, N.M., is visiting- her parents. Mr.

and Mrs. W. T. Baker, Hi Avenue west. She plans to be here about two weeks.

Student Is Honored bronze medal has arTri'rtiH rfa i i been Raymond James, nome Thp 8 nior school, by the granary, bolted to a heavy con- American Legion as the oiitstand cret, foundation wa. torn loose. ing student in Early Seltler Dead. St. S.

Emrie 78 an early settler of the Rose Valley community, is dead, the funeral being held yesterday afternoon bunal at Fairview. He lived on a farm south of St. John for 51 years. Miners Continue Sit Are Cozy 36ft Feel Below Surface Gillespie, 111.. hard, cold rain beat down above, but 450 union miners were snug as so many bugs in a rug as they continued their sit-down strike today, 360 feet below the surface, in the Superior Coal company's No.

4 mine at nearby Wilsonvillc. Forty at a time, the miners were brought to the top early tliis morning to bathe and clean up in the company's washroom. Some of them changed to fresh clothing. A razor was given severe service. Leaders of the demonstration declared there were no detections from the strikers' ranks when the men reached the surface.

They said the morale was high. Wives and children of the men below clustered about the mine property. Messages on tablet paper were exchanged. An 11-year-old girl, who had been ill and had cried for her "daddy" most of the night, was brought to the mine to sec him. Read News-Herald.

Classified. 1 Radio Is Silent After Message About Landing (Continued From Page Onel the years work leading up to the six-hour and ten-minute flight over the polar wastes. Final plans were begun last summer when the ice breaker Rusannff sailed lor Rudnlf island with the final consignment ol equipment and supplies. The project almost ended in premature disaster when the. Rusannff was caught in the ice pack, saving Itself only alter days of struggle.

Preparation Thorough As a result of the completeness of the preparations, it was disclosed today. Dr. Schmidt expressed full confidence in the success of the mission in an interview secretly given more than a month ago. "For many years," he said, "we have envisaged a station at the North Pole to study weather as an aid to nur work in the far north. The wintering party is equipped to study the speed and motion of ice drifts and air currents, measure the depth of the sea and study any plant or animal life.

"Radio is vital to the success of our plan because of the airplanes which will fly the region in the be able to orient themselves by it and receive weather reports." Four To Stay Four of the eleven men who formed the daring party will remain at the permanent base at the North Pole for a year studying conditions in the polar "birthplace of weather." They arc Ivan Papanin, in command of the base: Ernest Krcnkel. radio P.volr Shirsov. a hydro-biologist; and Eugene Fcd- crov, magnctologist. In preparation lor their lonely vigil, the quartet spent the week of Feb. 19 to Feb.

25 in a tiny tent 13 miles outside ot living, working and studying in a dress rehearsal of their life on ton of the world. The radio station to be set up will have 70 watts power and will be equipped to operate on both short and long waves. Amateur operators all over the world are expected to be able to communicate with the new sttlement al the north pole. Tlie station will be centered about a little black, fur-lined hut. 10 feet long and 6 feet inches wide, equipped with many of the comforts of home.

Food Concentrated The four men will have 48 different kinds of food including concentrated meat from 5,000 chickens, concentrated eggs, milk and sausage. Over heavy woolen underwear, they will wear shirts of reindeer fur, wolf for stockings and fur trousers. No effort will be made by the quartet to keep the some 1,000 miles of ice floe that will be their "yard" anchored to the pole. They plan to let it drift as it will, making their observations over as large a region as possible. The observations were expected to determine the feasibility of the air route from Moscow to San Francisco by way of the North Pole, a project that has been seriously discussed by Soviet aviators and scientists for some time.

Such an air route presumably would lie slightly northeast from Moscow to Rudolf Island and from there in a straight course over the pole to San Francisco. The distance from Moscow to the North Pole is about 2.000 miles; from the pole to San Francisco is about 3,000 miles. The present base at Rudolf Island is approximately 1.500 miles airwise from the Soviet capital. Leader Welt Known Dr. Schmidt became known as an explorer in 1928 when he was a member of the Soviet-German expedition which mapped a large glacier in northwest Pamir.

West central Asia. In 1929 he was aboard the ice breaker Sedoff with the research party that built a permanent scientific station in Franz-Josef Land in the Arctic and in 1930 he made a voyage to Novaya Zemlya in the same legion of the Arctic Circle, discovering a number of islands, one of which was named in his honor. Dr. Schmidt was head of the almost disastrous Bering Strait expedition aboard the ice breaker Cheliuskin in 1934 when his vessel was caught in the ice for five months before being crushed off Kamchatka. He supervised the abandonment of the ship and maintained discipline despite hardships until Soviet aviators picked more than 100 survivors off the ice in one of the sagas of modern aviation.

All four members of the wintering expedition are Arctic veterans. Surly Tiger Finally Kills Animal. In Mixup Here, Claws Man Fatally Prizes Are Awarded The same Beniial tiger which mauled George Patnaud at Convention hall here April 29, dealt death today to H. G. Getchell, 81, at St.

Joseph. Getchell died early this morning as the result of wounds received when the tiger clawed him during a performance of the Pollack Brothers indoor circus. Captain Roman Proske, trainer of the jungle beasts, said the animal would not be killed. His cats turned Upon him last winter while he was exhibiting them in Los Angeles and caused him to spend six weeks in the hospital. The circus management released Proske's contract, however, deeming the tigers too dangerous.

Getchell was the senior member ot the Imperial Council of the Shrine of North America, and with the St. Joseph shrine was sponsoring the show. The Pollack circus was brought to Hutchinson by the Grolto. Patnaud was thrown and clawed as he attempted to clean a cage. He quickly recovered (rom his wounds.

Tax To Apply On Newspapers And Magazines (Continued From Page permitted to assume responsibility for making returns of the tax for the newsboys or others who sell their publications. In such cases, (he publisher or his agents must remit the tax on the basis of the retail price of the newspapers or magazines so sold. Some Are Exempt. "Receipts from subscriptions for newspapers, magazines, periodicals and trade journals which are delivered to points outside Kan- 1 sas are not taxable, as these transactions are in interstate commerce." in adopting the regulation on printed advertising, Fink said, the commission held that it is not a sale ot tangible personal property. The sale of commercial printed ma iter, however, was held to come within the category of tangible personal property and will be lax- able.

Radio advertising was held to into another classification: and a regulation covering it will' be adopted later. An oculist or optometrist, who i sells spectacles which arc in whole or part of his own assembly or manufacture, must collect and remit the tax on such sale, the commission ruled, but he is exempt from the lax on professional services incident to the sale of the' spectacles. I he had He was of the short Cash Awards in Letter Contest Announced Miss Betty May Bloom, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer E.

Bloom, won the first prize of $12.50 in the letter writing contest sponsored by the Hutchinson Life Underwriters association during life insurance week which closed today. Miss Bloom's letter will be sent to the national con I est for which prizes totaling SI.525 have heen offered. The local awards were made at the luncheon meeting of the association today al the Leon hotel. Other prizes in the local contest were awarded to Miss Barbara Batchelnr, daughter of Mrs. Etliel Batrhelor, second price of $7.50, and Miss Betty Ann Conard, daughter of Mr.

rnd Mrs. J. D. Conard. third prize of $5.

Glenn Ethridge, son of Mr, and Mrs. Glenn A. Ethridge. who was ineligible to compete as his father is a life insurance agent, was guest and read the letter written as a class theme, given a special prize. Following the reading letters by the winners, business session was held during which R.

E. Fisher gave a short report of the recent sales congress at Topeka and Don D. Darnell told of the activities of the Hutchinson association during life insurance week. Will AskHuge Sum Held For Drought Relief (Continued Jf'rom Page One.) ator Frazier (Hand) a leader of the delegation, said after the conference. Frazier said a dozen counties in North Dakota already faced total crop loss this year and added that the same thing was true in parts of other midwestern states.

The delegation included Senator Nye (R-Ind), and Representative Lcmkc (R-ND); Senator Bulow (D-SD) and Hitchcock (D- SD), and Representative Case (R- SD); Senator Capper (R-Kas); Senator Murray (D-Mont); Representative Martin (D-COID) Representative Ferguson Okla). Senators Nye and Frazier the entire delegation "will fight" for additional drought relief funds in the senate. The delegation said Wallace and Works Progress and Resettlement Administration leaders were "very sympathetic" in the conference. Nye contended the $1,500,000,000 relief bill, as approved tentatively by the house, su restricted expenditure of funds that emergency aid for drought victims this year would be impossible. He said present plans called for tapering off all draught area relief by October 1, a time when another severe drought was threatened.

Typical Story Climaxed Here Police Hope to Find Home For Oklahoma She will he a mother within two months j.ncl she is in jail. It is a lyjiical story this Oklahoma girl iclis, one that ha3 been used over i.nd over in the "vrue confession" Only to her it is real and tragically new. Her father is a preacher, her mother strict. She was not allowed to go with bc.y?, excrpt one. the "nicest boy in tovn." He gave her a ring.

The inevitable happened Airaid to tell her parents, she ran away from home. In Hutchinson, she tried to find work, any kind of work. But jobs arc still difficult to get for an untrained country lass. Why she drifted the streets is difficult to understand. Perhaps that was inevitable too.

Her arrest followed as of course. Mrs. Jack Campbell, police woman, hopes to place her in a Wichita home. 1 want" the girl sobbed, "is to keep my "Pig" Continued and ID- said Padlock Hearing Partly Completed Today Padlock action against Robert Flowers, erstwhilp operator of the Musical Pig. East Fourth it.

beer stand, was continued until May 25 today in Reno county district court lo allow more evidence to oe heard. George T. Allison, sheriff. George A. Salmon, undorsheriff, Guy L.

Ankcrholtz, deputy, Martin Duprey, bacteriologist, and J. Brashcnrs, 736 East Fifth testified this forenoon, giving evidence pertaining to a raid early this month alter the new beer law went intu effect. Bottled and canned beer ale taken in the raid was alleged to contain higher than 3.2 per cent alcohol. Brasliears testified he saw a bottle being carried out of the place. Salmon said he found a bottle containing liquor a few moments later on a trash heap behind the building.

A motion to set aside an injunction now binding was overruled. Declines To Plead Blame On Boy Friend Brevities Girl Accuses Co-Defendant I first st. Ill Murder Trial Abernathy, 326 'i East is a new barber at the K. B. Bates shop.

The shop Jersey City. N. repainted, ing her co-defendant ami and bu lls sweetheart of the hatchet slaying lr S'l Slaughter, 205 West Sev- of her mother, Gladys MacKnight, 1 1 1 sl Painter, is confined at 17, testified at her murder trial hls lor ICU clays with an rib. A former hurt was aggravated by a strain while ML 1IV.J LI HI! today that the youth threatened to kill her too if she told about it. She said she suggested telling working.

J. Reed Williams of Divide, Lulling: "utmiiiN Ui 1J1VIOC neighbor. Mrs. Elizabeth Feury, visiting his parents, Mr what had happened in the MacKnight home the night of July 31, last, and Donald Wightman told her: "If you do, I'll kill you too." Gladys, talking in a culm, low and Mrs. J.

R. Williams. 943' East Sherman st. Glen D. Banta, 104 West Fourth is a new barber at the Clean Towel shop.

He was formerly at the Moon Cigar where a shop Grads Are GuetU of the county rural and parochial schools, 39 in all, will be guests at a banquet tonight given by 'he Kinsley Chamber of Commerce. State Superintendent W. T. Markham will speak. wuere a sliop voice, said she tried repeatedly was recently closed because of to get Donald to return as they the state law prohibiting refresh- drove along New Jersey roads in ments to be sold in the same room the MacKnight car after the slay- where tonsorial work is done, ing.

Miss Mildred Clark is a new "He said he could put me on a employe at the Roberts Printing spot," she testified. Stationary Co. "He said he could tell them Mrs Hc Hickman ol ulin killed my mother and that when operator a the 1 finally got out he be he only Jcw cU beaut one 1 could turn to, and Id have: Edward Colson, Missouri university athlete, is spending Ihe week-end visiting his mother, Mrs. E. E.

Colson. who returned today from spending the winter in California. Colson said hc cu wny ne am he: would graduate from the Colum- snid. "Oh. can't you shut up about bla school next week, i Elmer Duggan of Tampa is When he finally stopped the car spending the week-end visiting in a side road, said Gladys.

"Don-! his sisters. Mrs. Carl Coombs, Mr. aid said there was only one rea- i Coombs and family, and Mrs. son hc didn't want to back.

Claude L. McKinncy, Mr. said it was because of Kinney and family, 311 East Kith what caused the attack. "Hc said people would think he William Mackey, junior al the didn't regard me in the proper stale university at Lawrence, is light and show the proper re-: spending the week-end visiting I his mother, Mrs. Charles M.

"So we agreed to say that just: Mackey, 2011 North Main of kissing was the cause of it." i th probate court office. Gladys was still on the stand' Mrs Anderson 222 Wos under direct examination when 1Hh sl spending the week-end Judge Thomas F. Me.iney ad-! Stenographer Is Charged In infant's Death Wichita, in her hospital room on a second degree murder charge in the death of her newborn son, Miss Fern Cain, 24-year-old divorcee, was under $1,000 bond today to appear at a preliminary hearing set 1 lor June 1(1. The young stenographer offered no plea when Judge C. E.

Murray nf city court read the warrant last night. A woman guard was puslrd at the hospital. Miss Cain is charged with drowning baby shortly afler its hirth yesterday in an apartment she shared wilh threr other girls. She loltl police she did not know she was to become a mother. Detective rjucky O'Connor said Ihe girl's parents.

Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Cain nf Albert, vijit- cd her Inst night.

To Sylvia Faculty. Hunter, for Ihe past year music director at Mansion high school, has been engaged as music supervisor of Sylvia high school. Coach Erickson, of Zook community high schoul, will be coach here next year. Principal Nachligal has been reelected. Practice Air Raid.

Valelta. Malta, i.a'i --The British admiralty today ordered a "full dress" air raid rehearsal on June 2 for Malta, strategic base that lies closest In Italy in Great Britain's Mediterranean "life line." 0 marry him because my father wuuldn't have anything to do with me," she continued. Another time, she quoted him as saying "why are you worried? It isn't your neck," and "when I asked him why he did it, he Mores To Denver Pretty Shireman has sold his in the Jones Shircman company to George Jones', and is moving to Denver. Contract Awarded contract for laying 3Vi milrs of paving on highway Bl here, at the viaduct approaches, has been awarded to M. M.

Penny, of Lawrence. Hall Lasts A Week week after the hailstones had fallen, the ice was found lodged in thistles along a fence on the A. J. Enns farm near here yesterday. Nt journed court until Monday.

visiting her daughter, Miss F.mo- r.niu- gene Anderson, sophomore at the state teachers college in Pittsburg. They will attend a formal Snfi-ituy I'icnic lien An expected 200 Hutchinson ty this evening. district Safeway Employes nssoci- Ffleetlve ation members and their families, will held a spring 100 cent protest to Wash- president, announced today, pos toffic department Sixty chu-keis will be changed the plan of abolish- p.cces de res stance. The gio-, tp transferring the ccrs, meat cutters and office em-I Uc ont cm lcl Kinsley. ploves will play baseball and, other games following the early Quads Show Siren.th.

afternoon dinner. They will come! from several points in central and i. Muskogee. of southwest Kansas. Thieves Gel Nothing Thieves smashed a rear window at the Hutchinson Coca Cola Bottling Co.

plant at 805 South Main last night but apparently took nothing, police were told. the three surviving William Mul- 'hns quadruplets. Jeanitt Lin and Jo Charles, displayed strength today by sucking their fists but the condition of Phillip Marville, the weakest, remained unchanged. "Harveit" Over wheat harvest is about over for this year m- Lane county. Due to the prolonged Accidentally Hhol nla ",7 Wm ari I8 Uf me prolonge 5 'M" Mi drought the crop has "blown up and shoulder while cleaning a .22 Some fields may make but calibie rifle, yesterday.

I that i. about all Fresh crisply pressed summer suits will give you a new thrill in hot weather comfort. Called for and delivered giving you perfect service. 50c Phone Mt HAYES Clemaert IW Ha. Mala.

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About The Hutchinson News Archive

Pages Available:
193,108
Years Available:
1872-1973