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                  <text>lalt. t.he baU on 1'a.llure

PURPlE PANTHERS
WUHN BY BLUE
DEVIlS, ~~ n ~

makt'

I

the necessary yarc:taae and Oa.lll·
polll at.t.empte&lt;l Ule o1fensivf:
Beard hlt center t c. rw pJn
then Ham.rlcll: plowed throu&amp;:h for f
3 yd6 but taking no chflnce.ll Lhey I
punt.ed

Dye 11 paM

to

pl~:~.ys
the ~-yd

wa ~

lopped on

3allloclls

j'}Un~d

the

ss

~.&amp;J y

Broth era Pre•
aenta Beautiful
Running

line and
1

Luke 2 • Iii 111 38 n
&lt;-VIA)t'J'\'JJoXl-1 v.
l elr wl stoly

I

D}e \1 as n!Jured In th.s period of
pi ny shortl y after tl'!e GalllpoUs I
bv) s wuk possesion ui the ball and
J oachim .mbslltu LeJ1 The qua rter 1
I enCied m a zmo tic •1Ith the ball In
he nosesslon of t h e Blue Dev ils 0 ,1 I
their own 41- }d line
1
DJ.e ap lnced J vachlm a.tter the
S( ~ol'll pealod begun s.nd the line
held the advance ot the Blue Devlla
wno lost the ball on t h e Pom m oy
25 ) d 11m \' hen the} failed to I
1 make lho&gt; n cessa r3 }arctage
0 llnthcr punt~d out to Brother8 1
011 Lhe 40 v&lt;l line antl he returned
t h e buli to the 30 •umbled a n d
OJ uese1 recove1'ed Afte1 a line. pl~~oy
Lh&lt;&gt; Pnr:thel Jm n t.cd L.o tl.. Oall l p o lt ~ 4l -ycl Ill e d en KeJ on sllp ped 1
1hrt: l ':lh tt:e center of t he lin e t.d
~O vd ~t l I H' DJ othe, s 11.ent t hrou gh
101 'i- J ds th e n. Hnm11ok repeated
t h 4 1\ft " 1 Hamm;k had spiV a I
111ge h ole In the ,Pomeroy line
Nhlle a Cblc•co Gnmd Jury waa lndlctlnr him Had hi8 bTother on!
Kro ll oll fodo11,ert through fo r t h e I Jharrea of embeulement and pand larceny m connection with the cruhl
10 lChdov.n llllll t 11e f)lace kick was d their ll'iaantlc utlht1es emp1re. Martin ln!IUJI waa snapped hke thia as
•• tried.lo e.vadt • photoe"rapher in Torcmto, Canada. Ch1cai'o authorJ·
~cu j frl 11 7 tu 0 ... c ... re
1
lie• who vfelted ln!JUII at hil'i retreat in Otilla. Ont.. olf'ered him the!
Af e r
h
k1c iL on
Bhtck well l a1tematlve of retuntac volua.tarll)' to Cbic:aco or fac ing arre!t under
JJ JS ' l t J Gumthc1 for n firs~ do wn
1 pravilloaal fueatlve warrant. Hia brothel', Samuel, I! mysteriously
A l il. t~l l PUf&gt;.' was fumbled and I
mfasuur from bts hotel in Pari!
G ui nlh~l wns mJuretl shg 1t]J
fht!
Prm1e1oy L~ am wu~ penalized fc.r t.oo opened
Y~UNG
rHU II )o clme~ o •1L Jn •he pen od of
Pln&gt; f 1om Lhat poin t on V.'\S '
Ilia\ nnd un the n ext play t h e) gc::~cl alt h ough it c.. ragge d along 1
Ptmtcd
omewhu.t whr.n Cc.ach M)oel'l; 51'm

I

the l

I

j

D

'

VOL. VII-NO. 23

Ill

aa

p e rf ect h PH t

I

f Hl~IAHY

FLJnll)

~a! m

0

f! il. llllY
Llf• l

J e~u~

of

1~11R:'!HDh 1 R

11~0

4 onrP" S• rlly
mr
fJIH to 11 L [(I

l!llbJeCt

Hf:NIOR

Tflf'fc II InK 11 1 ll riUian at H 1mrt
H!l :&gt;-:1,
PI IJPI ~
AN'O
AD U I [
T!JI 11
\ I I In~!; l~HI flo mo r.hllqllun

ttJt'! I!!Xt8
f'il~u n Couunlllf'~'&gt;

I&gt;! lUll-

t&gt;rl In lhP I
11111 u•n tru l

Js

I

Jf'I'IU~

1 •e r ~11n I n

II I II' If, 1!•1 (John I 11)

t• r,...,, l+'rll l +'dhrtle l-l o ly
11rl ju)JJ11 I lu Tf '&gt;!lS ( hrlst hy I
f IIIIi Ill l l1• ,l(fu~ ln d Il l hiM t P.deU I]l1 I~ \H k
'I 1\1 VII \\!'I or hl lll 0 11-tj
"I•! It

- -

-

--

-

ll ~ ~ Al

"I

ona~hr! ~e\

.,;uf

p~ R[ I~Tn

I

11:

1

O

8

I

I

SUPPORTED BY
TotiiV
"BEHIND THE MASK"
"' "'" ""' '"I" I, ,.. "''" "'' ''""' IROLL CALL TO BEGIN NOV. c
l
,l
I
I
I HIII I

l

ll~

l

II

11 r

111 bl'l l!~
[ he
l is r IJ) i!l!('n l f\!111 nwn

I ,:'10\\ I IJ \\fl

II li lt

llu

•

1

Hllllt e n'l l h l~l'

v u r 111 11 lnnr 111 hrlnll'
rPw nn tJ "IXe 1l ~
"
"'
ron, 1 t
11
~~~~ "H ~~u,' ror IJil'&gt; llml v t{. il fl
lr ll II I&gt;~ h1 ~ I ll r 1 r\f''" n nd rnus

or

H

11

*

*

Jack Holt, C

•

I I•

I

KNIf [
.

nUNO IN CREE
Form11r Wealthy Ma~ e

relief In time of pe11.ee and to a.p
the same I n mitlp1.Jnl the surrerln tr.&gt; caused by pe.stllence famine
n re floods and oUter great national
cala mltlesll..lld to devise and ca.rry
on meMures tor prflventin r the
same
Membershlps are desltlnated llS
follows Annual, U contributing
$5 , sustaining $10, and supportin g
3 ty

I

"FORGOTTEN
COMMANDMENTS"

-==::c

The rest 18 for local services

lnlnL Pit.chel

C

d. "B
B
,
ome lea
uay eaver
and "With Pleaauren

When Enrine Fails; Bro"·
en Pump Prevents
- Riae From Water

CHIUB'l'QPBER PROTOP~.Aa
&lt;OOpyrlsht, lt32, b1• I N el
Athens Greece, Oct. to-INs-

Manila, P I, oct 10- Jl-tS-Thc
steamship KataKola late today res· I
tued Dapt Wollaa.ns: Von G10n a.n
.o.nd his three eom11an lo n ~ from
their seaplane which waa toroed
down yesterday mornlnl in t he
dian ate n b~ engine trouble, ac- ~

"I am innocent ot wronl40lat&amp; I
han lOKt eveeyth.lng I bave ever
owned"

In an

In-!

M~tlnee Sunday 2 30 PM

I:·:~~ to a wtrcle!11 me&amp;Sare re-

1.1

trom

him

O ron,au H\dloed at

L'Oon' l

Po me roy

I

I

WORK

I.

.,v

j

- - --'--

I

I

I

Foot

•.-

Aft&lt;!r 7 P.M.

I
I~;ca:~~~~~~:~ v?~~iabli'S:h

CI!:Nt~ .:

·-

~'-=::..·=====&amp;

tiGHT Kff.L[O~J~ I

!0

c.~~~~=-~~~ ~~~: fRAFFIC MISH~P~ I
8:::·::~· ?,:::~A, :NBUC'KEYE SlUt
Cnu'

heavy rainstorm continued to rap
here and at El Centro today caus.tna
Ooed Hke oon d1tlons in tht! ImperIll':~·• Case Before Trib·
Ial Valley lrrlgatJon dlt ches were
brokeu In ~~ev e r a l places
unal, Deal• With
An ~arthquake temblor the ntrt.t 1
Liquor
in the lfl!it two day11, was felt In the
vii.Pf) a• 12 4! A M today caualna
eon&amp;idera ble u cttemmt. There was
ERROR ADMITTED
little damage
I
Many residents of Doth cltt~ fled
Jly Prosecution; Alabama 1
t.hro uah the rain to buUdinp of
sturdy coast.r~tlon following a
Negroea Appeal Sent·
he.vy earth t remor of 15 seconds
duration yesterday artemoon
ences Of Death
1
A quakf! at 6 30 )clock last mght.
shattered the vhnuow ~ ot a. hardW&amp;f:hlngton, - Oct
l O-- INs-A I
ware store Jn Brawlty a n d temporJl st rong pollee gua·d was th rown
P ri~.y put the city s Hghtt ns system
1I uround the caplwl 'a rl y tOll a y on 1 3u rTopt.e John P. O'Bnen, who b out of commuuilon
the Dttmocratie ehoice for Mayor of
Thr trembiar.s Bdde( to the con·
reports that comm uulsbi and n eg New York Ht~ waa unammou!IIJ
rces plo.nned a dem::mstration be- I nommated at the De mocratiC con f us.on caused by t h e ~teadlly moun·
1fo re the Buprer.:le Court which is t.o vent1on in Madtson Square Garden ttng 1alnwaters Ralniall h&amp;d total~
more than two inches a.nd the
r:,~:;;~;~~~ teven
hear anegroes
rgument s in Lhe a ppeal ot .tter it had been announced th11t ed
condemned to dea.t.h former Mayo.- J&amp;mes J Walker downpour was cont tnutng through~
at ScottiiOOl"O AIIL
hac:l Withdrawn from the ra&lt;'e out the Imperial Val~·
Five co.rs oi' the Wf'ltbound OolThe entlr eda.y and nllht Ahltt8 Walker radtoed ht8dtclAton from t.hc
den State llm.lte d \\ Te deralled
ot the Capito., pollee numberlna
S. S. t;uropa, at oea.
near Tortusa, Cal, between Nl..l&amp;pd,
men In aU were placed on duty
Cal , and Yuma Artz The roadbed
and the C&amp;pl~ol P la:l.ll was cleared
j bad t-~ undermined by ra inwater
Bll obstructions
No one wu lnjured A relief train
Beott.sboro cn.se In which
were con victed and
rl1htedwa•
thererouted
audt.o Los
the A
Stilte
to death on char&amp;es of
\Varkmf!!n d ean!d t ho.! track
two white girl&amp; ma.y not
washout. and &amp;el'VJ.o-.e 0\ler the
on the courts docket Surpl ~se Developmenta
It was the 14th
P•ctniaed at Nelrl Gra..d wu resumed

.tJ

U

II

~

Quarry Murders
Still A Mystery

~

Four Victima Are
t:d In Aeeidenta .At ~ '.
Cincinnati . _ f_,.
-

~

ONE DRIVER IIEUL

II-

F cr Reckle.. Driviqt~
T&lt;&gt;t Hit By Auto Hu .
Mirac:uloua Eleape
By I N B
Trame accident.&amp; CIJII!t elib.t. 11\l'l
tn Ohio over the weelt end. ft;mr:M
.,.,
th e victims dying Jn and nfar o~T
cluant l, a survey by Intrerna toruil
Ne W1'1 Service sbowed today
.. M
Fcur- year-ola. Wtllla.m Krllae:
H~

m:

Ha.rland Eakt.n, 43, &amp; 1aborer
Ross, 0 • JlanY H1ll, -&amp;6, a fatntlt
of near Y/Wiamslnu"', 0
and
John Burb, 60, were kUled or ~-t
tally ln,JurM at Ctnoinnati. . ..f1·
The K~ boJ' wa.llMred J.QM
the Path ot an ODCOII'll.n8 au~

.

~:~:;:.j ~~===;========'

Juey Seuion

to·-tliailiifo

- ----.-.-.. . ----

I

Quakes. Add

I

IN INDIAN OCEAN

Goinw T&lt;&gt; Country Where
Extradition Lawa Do
Not Hold

Sari Marlin, Gene Ra.ymond,

I
~~ t~!ty :~:t&amp;l~te~~~i~e:t)(!~o:c:
6

Stmday and Morular, Oet. 9· 16

FLED PARIS ~

HAD

C ummlnp

Comedy "Partners"

Four Airmen On Flight
Around World, Come
T&lt;&gt; Grief

1. Taken ln1 Cuat..cly
At He&gt;tel
;,

--

Ousting of Go-.':' mor General
Irish Move ·:. oward Republic
*

--

]f'~l[~l~·~~: ~~~~ :~~!l1~!:1~H ~~~~t ~ ~~h(:~ ITHE RED CROSS

51

'

-

i

I

wus l

___..

::;.:;:~:,;:~"~;,~~::·:,::,~; M••" IRELIEF AND REGULAR WORK OF New Electric fheatre

f

~u ~~~~E~

-~---1-- -

I

URS N[W CASE~
TERM ~PE~S:

I

~ESCU£0 n SE~

I I Jnl -;

r1 ' " " "

t' JtlC'r-'1H.KI!:E

~

~OMPANmNS. ~HE

BY POUG{,

ll1•l&gt;~llf'll•liJII~Ilii Of ( ru!
'\ CJ 1 1 1~ I

I •1

...1

4

FULL LEASED WIRE OF INTERNA'l'ION AL NEWS SERYIOE
POMEROY, OHIO, MONDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1932
•• 'i.: !,~,' ~.!' .:~. ~;,••"

[X,. UTiliTY H[A07----:--GH-ONA-Ul-NO-Star_an_d___.;~~~:-SU-PR-[M_[.C~URTI,

a

Sfl]P{ t

hoilt t o s:t~
It l~ uumlfiMt lv lmiHO[IIr to thl u k 1
un1 l :oil"' I Hr him n'l bro1 ug th r1&gt;~
Is

ohio Cloudy ntln ~
probably ~. North ODd porliQir , ~1
morninl Colder &amp;onJcbt u4 T'U ~ ) • "'f

More Lives Claimed :In A utoritobile AccidentS

1

TOPIC- The Home

JUt-OIOR

1H

'1'H &amp; DAIL T ftiBUHa

•

WEATHER FORECAST-

•

Hll f

1UPJ C-If!II U8

unr

at·
It lT B HIW&amp; lT'S

•

SAMUEL
INSULL
A~
R
RESTED
IN
A
THEN8
,...
....
.....
. ....
.....
....
....
••••

lllbPh11Vf!my. 1

parfecl wa:&gt;

1 T h e ann u l Rull Cu ll of the
AmoC'l iCil. ll Red Cror, s annmmceo
1 rm Novembt-'1 11 to 24 will
1 more than 3 000 ~ hapt.ers
mg m 1 m~r "hips for
t he
game
The
boll
w"'
In
Golllpol"
oss
the
reserv"'
Into
the
game
"
uite
The bee r to ld ovu t he llgh te1 es 1on 011 tn~ 40 .yd line then np a 1 &amp; num ber of Po.nther reserves a ! ~0
(,
t.. f' lts lll l 1 o nt 11n lv P. I1Jiii J 111tn lhPir l CffU l al and emcr~cnc~
~n d fi!~~dte r team .., hen afte1 t.he h om Brother!! Lo Ke lton nlr.t ..~ 1!la w ac tion ln t his :fi11al period a uc! ,
I
JH 111' 1 r ~1~:1'\~ 1 1t fr)l)llt hf'l 'lll l ~ t'l'lr th 10 ugh 1933
rst
l t he Blue ~viis were ta.k them u 2U yrl gain BJOl ht'!rs made
t.hc scoring was o ver
1
J
U rr nul
At toea.! Rcc C ros~
1na
d U
advan tage cf the conditiOn o yds tmd Hemrick 5
Th e line up
'f lllt1 l wJt h ..,l~llum ., HI ~ th..-. cha p tr.r cl 'ulr m'i. 1 Ml
the
P cmeroy
line which
had beedu
n the
ll on downs
n HI\ hf' r I1)1J h1/ cflfl \\IHI h lil t&lt;-'adJf'r In J summed liP Natlonel Red Cr OBs aclleaten
do wn untu
tl1ey could
11 ydbuline
on eJlost
oy Pomeroy
POfl
Gallipoli s 1
11 )!ol+' Pnr l.) 11nr~ ft '"~ re HHmtlolel tlvltlc., d w ln g lhc past year as fol
~!e In stop plug opposmg Hne pla,,
A few lme piny~ b~ t he Pa n ther McQulRG"
LE
Broy lc~
8 Keiser
l•l !I ~SUFnl• I h ut Iii~ tn lght tll m to lows
.,,""y dJd however makP some good pluc~d Lh E ball Otl h 2
LT
Slble.'l'
'
11
1un mH B hl1• Vf'I~C'~ 1o nwmo ry undj
To prevent su ffe1\n g In this
t.lidtlea on the line of llCfhn magc I un d t h e half 1 n ded
LO
Gothard
1 t~-y~ ~ :C Bae1
even afte r lhe 'Oall}_f~~~batterln s Pomewy s (IOSSe&amp;f'Jlon
e a n Arnold
C
VlckeH
•
t nld ltl m lllfl L!r~ ut 1111 rrnUve~ u! rn lod of u nemp l o~me n ~ and ~e~e&lt;alj
ram h a d ta ken Its ;~ \.
I Powel tc.ld ln lhc h i1
RG
Ball 1 Umque
pera h on Perfor· l r • t~ und p l lrfi iiP.ts (}f t he ()1 1! T~" l ecr- n r.m ic
the
1 easel
1 1~1 ~ nl
muqe wldclipl end
Ac~~~~rstea~uar~~~vedk t~~ ~h~ fo urth pe1tods of pta~ ~ ~~~ ~~~~s
~i
H1"', r~
med On 30 Month-Old 1 1 • 1 llf-!
wheaL fluu
1loth lng
&amp;r Un d
l
~ j Di ue Dcvlb ca me out rrnm th e res t Dyew
' on
Sho rr Ba b y •
!!r 111 1 of &lt; · o~l wuFJ 111 ~0n un d o he1 suppllts Mer£' tha n
ttfe tl ga n cr for t h e Devils ll.8 tim" pellod batllmc the!
QB
Bwlhers
hi n
( Hl fl 1m~ l:l\llr 11nrl t•n•ltll lchapt;JS have p.urt1clpated in com
r m e h e slithered thro ugh u goal for Lhe 19
HB
H amuck
1 r Wa} to iht' Guinthe r
1 11fl \\tl ~· 1111011 111111
l mtl nl ty unemplotmenl re llef p1o
:~;n;:ry 1defcl'l8C fe r huge gains
Brothen; ran ~ ~~
Blackwell
HB
Ke1ton
Joe Sue 2 -Ar ye11rMold daughter of
:? r .-.~~ ~~~ r.,u wl ln t hro J CII! Il le ( -cv Igr ams
~ - PP ng reversing h 1s field an d Yuse pin to
t.
on a. re~ I O rueser
QB
Beard Mr a nd Ml~ J ohn S h orr of MulCcnshucLhe mcasul'cs for com=~~:~~f Jlwgukt- be tackler~ He was ter t h e krck ~ffa I n °~~h shortly u.f- Yardage gained tn SCi lnllll af!l:f'- berry Aven u~ \\ho underwent ll 41 4i) At I he nge 11 f I IH• lve tlu
0 a Y &amp;cod at Jet urnln i of 1
rJ
c second h alf j I'omeroy 61 Oa iH poll&gt; 189
Lc.&gt;enz opemtlou for
congenital II\\J ~h l hll d II (•'· h iM p lu.-e 1u1 11 j bettlng ha~dshlp In &lt;t oug ht _.'''eo"l
ra!rtf:JI ' Jbu t appeared to be the on ly ba.l r nv an the Kt:Jt n toe sent ne
Yardage lost In sctlmtn llgt!- 1 ci l!;lor a.tllln or t h e hlp at t he La n
'1 1n 111Jil11'!1 111 thfl ~' lllJll f
n e 1\ a!llrcsulted In the d istribution
gar&amp;.sJt .W!Ul-11) the GaiJtpoUs tmclrfleltf
t h rough t h e cross bars !OJ thP I Pome10y 31 Onlll polis 6
caster City hcsp1t n l Thursday has ll f'U f' llll-l l I~ l l'•ln • f'hl!~l M t J1e lnw den seed to 605 000 farmn rs
1931
't the.._!lck-9ff, Crow was atop- ~x: l ~a point atld the :::core wns 14 1 F nsscs~Pona croy couwleted 5 out 1 !Je( n brou!{hl lmm1 and 1s r,... pmtecl n1lug cn 1rs1 lo u ~ or h J~o~ m iRslon a n j 315 000 ac!cllttona l pe.clc.et or
Pec:t In ""r·~e or his own tert itory 0
of 9 rm 43 yd~; gain Oo. llipoll.s com to bo in u favorable condition
fp,;ns ln r rh•tl hl'h intl In tl ie teln J P.atden seed V."re dill r ibuted In th e
P e -splin g of 1932
aQd Dye woa \ l)rown. for ll 5-yd
A fte r the l,lck·o ff C row PR'Ised p letect 7 out of 16 fo r 134 yds gam
DJ F'
M
IJu lett
flrthoprdi&lt;'
v. hron his mot hror :lU tl )o!t(lp ir IPf l J e
•
SJ:teclu l ts~ or Columbus \vho studted r11 ~1l f&gt;n1 nrte 1 t l u~ l'a::~~ovcl
lo.ss Gallipolis received a. pen a.U- tlo GuJnUa r ! t l\ !l'l In thnn HayP.Il F'h st Downs
wo1k for war veterans
M~~ qn ttt:ae play and then orue- tt terccpted
lnc lt w~ IJ ~ Pll88 o.n d Pomeroy
3 2 1 D-fi un dv r the tnmo u~ D'1
Lm enz ct t11ev mn(le search for J\t h Wh Pn l~ lh'The
clr tamallijs m ulliplle.d
Mr went through for 6 ydij and rn c~d rrom
e 2fi-yu line to the
OalUpolis ~
2 1 2 2-1 '\Ue.rtna Austria pet formed the op rn
1
Ill ' woll eeom:linlc strlnienby and
tho ftrs t c!own Dye pall.'drl buc Beard slith ered tht ough tl1 e 11M
Offi ciRII'I -Slut~ Rr!f
Rhodes "lilt lon F lty su r gr cms from Oll lo
llhd fn t im t mHJli l'! Ot)servf.'
n n d \ibera lbm t1Qn In vetel'a:~ s
for t h e nrcessar} 5-vds a n d t he Ump Lyne~ H L 1 nd r n ne1
u.nd ot het p u'U ?f the Unlt 1
n H1 \\ &gt;~ f1l uml slUing (v 46) lslat lofl
~
touchdown und Kel ton s klC k
States wh o \\C i c Jn Lancn.ster at
H e 1\ 1 ~ !HI !ln'I'II FJ g v l ~ltor or sight j ' Nursing nnd health ac l.ivlties
110 gr( d The score wa..-.. 20 to u
I
ttmdtng the conventkn of the ce n Sf to l hnt l t hnmr• fn hi s fnt hAr R wc r1• bton dened a n d Inten sified to
SPECIAL
FOR Su NDA y
\
Anothe r rep resen ta t ion of reverse
ll ~ I Ohio Sccieo) or P 11yslclan .. R.nd hnw1&lt;'
mee t 'ih e r, u&lt;lde n emergencies o r
t,\t:l;llcken Dinner w a t h 1 Plnys a nd off-ta c kle JOi t.s sc 1t t'u! 1
:;ul gt&gt;ons wi tnessed t h e operation
h l ie 1\11 ~ hearin g .:he tenchcrs ol" natural di saste rs and to cope wlth
It li
.._ I
Th llu.ll to Within 5 Yds uf lhe goal In Mrs Bet Lim Pilson o.nd daughte 1 rlns cu:-&gt;e was un ique becnuse of the G(ni s Wor I ( v -16) !l P. w ! &lt;:ron~~'" •nd pient dlwase th1ea1ened by mu.l
I an ..... aa1 e th at
e th e second period bu t th e qm1 1:e1 Elean or and Ml~ Eleanor Lo we of fai t that tVIO hips \\e 1e d 1 sloclLte~ to lcnrn flotl s 11 111
n u t ltlc n
C p.Gci Reataurant o n Coul t 1 nd!!d l hiiSI} a n d H11.mrlck too k Lhe Pt Pleasnnl M rs HC'leu Zelhel 1athet tlum om which 1s morf' com
~ H e oskell fJ UCStlon51 (v 46) His
Fast aid ami llle ~;nvln g conStreet
boll o ver th e white ~Lrloo fm th, a nd M1 s Am y Oenty ut lcnd ed the man Dr Allhtan of L an~:u.!iler tool
gJO\\ IU~ mind Inqui red n rtf'r truth tlnued as t he n ationa l evan gels of
•
ma1ke1 whi.!l l the tlnnl
[Jl' .on meeting a nll h nchcon o r t h e F"'d- movin;r ptctu 1es of 11 -. progre!JS of
d ll 1• n n ~mc1 ~ d r11ws t1 111 18 (v 47 ) snfet) o n land watet and high
-- -craletl Wmn l'n s Cl ubJ oJ Oh io can lhe opPn 1011 fhesc p l cttu c~ Y.lll
Hl s IH!sn ~ I'I'J. ll'&lt;l o n lr-~ h rod t bo~e \\llo wu)s the ll.CCCpted trader In Leach 1 Vl'ntlon m Al hcus Saturday
be used Ill &lt;llffercnt cllnlc!l rhrough
111 1~'rt1 him
l iniJ accid ent -preve ntlml
Leo Phillips a nd out. lhe Um tr!d Stn.tes
IsonM1 J ua nnlod Mrscame
1f.
F! tda v t o spend
Aftet the opc1atlon Joe Sue was
U 11 y K com pl nlnt ( \IV ~ "'. 0)
The J umor Red Cross with 6,re latives a nd placed m a pla.&lt;; ter cnst In which illlf' r eiOom'lt rntrod wll h 111 f
h is 71a 000 ltlcmbels in the x hoob y,:ns
t he wt:e k end w ith
m or
I stlmuluted to lnct"'1.3ed aChi.evcftlc nds here
she w111 1-emnm tor . h e nm.: t s1x heh 1
nv or
1'o ll1 l:&lt;1 he r eplied In n l lllent.'l In ~erv 1 cc to less fortunate
The
D nujthten1 of the
Union months Sh e w i ll not tegB! n t he u ~P.
d l~n lfl('() l 1°t hmi!('r mnnu er
R e c hll ctl en, Lo cu1mmmhy enterprloos
Veterans will hold nn Inspection at of hel bmbs before ~ ~~1u 8 w n e
mpde no npology l'l how!ng th:~t h,e Lo \ etera.n.s m h osp itals and the
' *•
the
Odd
Fellow
s
Hall
Monda.).
c
v
1
wlls mm t&gt; thnn t he Ron o r :\f nr)l {;l"!leral all cv!P. t ion or dlfltt ess ever':Y
cnlng October lOth
"Re~~a:U~n" of James Mc Nr.Jil , Pet :-~onul R epresenta·
whcu
R L Keller con nected with
th.! co lege nt O livette m Is h"l e fm Gmt \\ IJ.'R hit~~ fntl.f'r
1
Fll ty one years '1.8 the official
4 Tesu ~· obe1ll eucP. ( ~ "'~]) fhou gh
tivc Of Crown lD Fl ee ~ a 1 e, et !l l:!Ved ll'orced by
Ohio State Dep!lrtmenL of High- a sh01 t vl ~ l t Wi t h h is p!Uents, Mr
he\1
flf'l ful ly roMcl ous or hi s divin e J National re lief agency with expel wa
ys
went
to
M
cCorrne
lsv1lle
Sa
..
and
M'
rli
On
viet
C
u-.:t
.et
of
B1
"PZ)'
PJoesident de Vulerll Jl H f-i teJ) Towa rd Sev•
urd ay to spend the wee k e n d wi t h Helghls
being 111111 Jut !'lslon h e li~ E"'I a life or l ien~ In more t han 1200 disasters
erance from B11tl~ h EmJ1n e
t rlcnds
Mr ~ Stella Da bney o f New Yotk llll al nhed !t• ncc t r nc hlu g 11 8 thn t olu., in t h ~ Uu lted S tates lhe Anterl,ea&lt;;
Miss Wilm tt Roush sectetar y to I C1t' co me Plldoy fm a "hmt busl
dl c&gt;nce to ll ll r eut slR piCII&amp;Ing to God Red C1oss finds Itself in 1932 ca.rry~
lhc rou nty supe rinte ndent wcht to I nrss ~!lilt in Po111e1o\
d lng t h e largest penCf tun e lood In
11 nd n lhlty v.hiC" h w l\1 be 11 1
&lt; 11c 1nrgc t h ro h1 sto1) o f humo.nitsul a n Ol Letl\tt Saturday to spend th e week 1
- - - ~-fnlt hfnHy hy throse Wh('l hnPP t h('l gan1zatlons
end with he&lt; pa&lt;entr• Mr a nd M" li"R AOIN "
ON lJJilrlt ot Christ
Arthur E Q.o nsh
u
M
Volun tee r~ lra. lned a nd dir ected
11 J
""' 1n ar1ha•s Home (Luke by :). nucleus o f proicss..ton al men
Miss Mab" Lee w&lt;nt to ColumNEW ROAD BEGUN
1fl :lS 12)
I a n d \\ omen ca r ry torw a1 d the com
bus Snt.urday to sqend the week end
1 J10'""!1 M w~&gt;l&lt;'tlm ed Into llf n:rt ha B prehen81ve prog:r9. m of th e Red
with friends
E quipmen t has a rrivi'ct rmd ih~
1hong h Tesu~ lind Ct css T h is plCJi am puts Into efw
Mrs Cor&amp; B Roberts 1 M. s F'Jor- work will be begun on 1!'11\dl 'l"' r homt&gt; ( v :'UI )
no hmn c or h i~ O\\n In to Afnl1:hllSJ feet the mnnd~l.cs ot the Congressj en ce R Smith and daughter Mil· the n ew fleCtion of th e aw. b• hig h·
d red were visitors In Athens Fri· wa y No 7 n ear Hobson Monda\ homo lw enuhl come nt o. ny ftme lon nl C h aJ 1CJ! th e principal ones
Iday and we t-e present at the speech· enornlnl{ acco rdln ~ to an an- Thl ~ hnme \\ n~ h i~ s pecial rf'tteo t of which a.1e
es of John W B r ld:er Republica n nouncemen t f1 om the Meigs count\ In tlw ln~t dnu o r h i.c~ mini stry on
ro r ,1rnlsh voluntee r ~tid to the
ce.ndJdate for Attorney Oeneral and !Jn1mh r:f thf" Btat.P hl gh \ll'fty dl' - Pllrlh
1 stck a n d wounded of armies in
Thom a.!&gt;
A Jenii:Jns
Republi can paa tme nt, Batut day
•~ 'I
tnnc or wm
~· arv Mltt lng nt .Tcsus teet (v
cnndldate for colliressman
The grll.dtnc work will !.&gt;n r.lc1 l 'J!l ) Unry hnd ll pecnllnr .c~pirltual
To pcr!out\ all t he duties deveMl'li Lesllf' Keller o! Akron was
the Mlller Broth ers Comt1Ur"· ln~l ,~~:llt 1\hl r.h prompted h er to sit I lc ped up on a n a tlontll society by
a business vi sitOr in town Saturday
Harry Mille- o! ft l9hmond Va tlon company of GaiUpolls TY. en- nt Te&gt;~u s' feet nnfl ll!!.t('n to his ~~~~~ :::,~~f ~~ich has acceded to
~ ne vn
er1 1oute to Columb us tails a vlsitOJ tv mP.n will s''.l l l thf' n rf!t &lt;:hl fl word~
Monday
n.nd
w
ill
b
,
3
Mnrlh·
•a
COmJi
hl
lnt
(
'
1
"
~
T
o
a
ct
l.n
mllt ter!l of voluntary
In town Friday ca.lllnA' oh friends
1
40, relief and m accord
with the mill·
Mi!;S Bertha Con de who hns been t hrough the Meigs count,y relief ~h f' ll t&gt;A irf'd Uoll l&gt;~ l l'MII to p r r.pn re thf!
tn.ry o.nd n aval a uthorities a.s a me1
nnd
'&gt;'11•
''
(}rk
nnd
com
m
ission
Ill at h er home on W ..st Main S t
\ ery IJ,.&gt;;t prioSI!! h ~ m,.n l for Jmm M tllum of communlca Uon between
the past l wp Wef'k ~ l~ repor.ed to t h&lt;! rules provided b] th.! lf'dera l
ommJ~I c n
The m!.\Xlmum l&amp;.bOI He preferH tl1fl lov &lt;- v.hl ch eo neerns t he people cf the United States ot
be tm pt c vlng
Miss Edith Bowen who h as been pe r WP.f'k. to1 one man Is th11 tv Jt Sf' lr \\ll h hlm11elf an ti his mesns,:e Amen~ ab d their army and navy
"'To cont inue and carry on a sys..
conflnt d to her home on Sp&lt;lng- . ., rurs The crf'm fliP em plm eo 1\ to ony pP r.&lt;~onn l mlnl &gt;~trv R~n:uae
nt
tw
r
fnlln
re
to
seP.
t
his
she
wall
te
m
or nattom •l an d International
Avnn ue the past m o'lth Is repor ted twP-nlv·ft w. hou r Rhlfta ctm:n R:I mr
to be rec upe1 ntln g si CJwly
"Cllll!he r('il \11111 mn ch ser \l ng " !'!.he
at noon
Miss Llda Te .. nll "'f W~ttgall
not nnly fo mul f mit '1\ lth Uury but
!
1
Stl ect has acrepted s position ft:..
MJDD!.EI"ORTF.R AltRE811i.-J
found fnult "' lth .Tesu JII tor nllowinl: T- ~
c h cul atlon ma nager cf the Oa1 l~
?ll!t r v to fli t At his ft&gt;et whllP. tht r
1
Mrs Ch a l!C!II: Rl,..e or south fll nM r wnR unf1nl ~ 1Hld
I Tribune
HOTEL
1 Mn~ · Raymond 'Jierrlll dau~rhter ,." ,.rth 11.v~ nue Mlddlepo1 ~ was kr4 J@!m il' reply &lt;vv 41, 42)
~OLuMllUS
! Marg ie L'J 'enia. nnd Olen Br1ght of rettfld about mldnl11;ht.., Frlda.v b"
8
Re
rPlmkes
Mnrtha,
t
PIHng
her
Colambas. Olllo
1
L "'!i;an came'Ftlda :r vnd viSh.ed With
m"etfl William Robson and DA.na
that
1-lhe
Is
ca
rc
rul
lt.lt&lt;l tronhleil
~r ~nd Mrs John Hllo and attend Trt\CV a l'l d brOU!lh t to th e c~ un ty
nhnut mnn:~~ th l ngfil Tholle who a re
toO Room~
t'lreprobl
:a~e e Mldcllepor' -Logan footbl\l.l 1aU het P. whne t he I0~"~'5 u d1 ) r
prh nnr ilv cmwern ed with the Mns
Rt.k:s Redllll!ed
Mr and M
I nf met'lo.ctn.- threat.oJ The al'Hdu.v\t
Raymond Ebe r sbach 1 for the woman s a.nest was m nde t ~r ore 1mx lnn ~ for noth ing (f'llll
1 cnll do.u gh tf'rrs Betsy
R.OO~S St 08
tt U
nud wn Don
• 0)
nle a nd their h ouse guest R u.sseli I b~· M ne Siders also of Middleport
8iTU tlllu
Th r one th !nJ: that IJII needrul ror
K node of Ph ilade lphia Pa went to I 1 10 8!l.id t,he R ice woman thre.J.tf"'JPt\hnd y ]rJ Ill ~I t Rt th P feet of
1 C olumbus Fridny to ':lpend the wee k ened. to stab ho&gt;r with ~ " ic .. "''"
o:_, ~G ROOM AND
e nd wit h Mrs Eberebach s m oth ~ 1 according to omcen
She wtll be Jeri li S
1'1 He cummende d Mary, Mying,
Mrs Albery
e. 1 ~~vcn e. preltmlnary hearlng bl.!rore
COFF.II: S80P
Mn Oeorge Hetl'.el Mrs John llr 1nnr Pei P- Mees 1UBtlce cf thP "'Mar y bnth cho!en tllnt ,rood Jll\rt
Da.vls and Mrs E rse l Davis spent 1" "!"""' ~~mt"tlme Batu.rd&amp;y a.ner· whi ch sluillll nnt hn tnlten nwn y rro111
Undl!r Same N'a-.emeat
hPr"
Ftida
v In OalllpoJIB R!l the JlUHb of n C"Cll arresting of!l.~ indicated
1
ALBA. COURT DOrf.J.
Mrs Wl!Ua.m DavtdBOn
I David Cuclt)e-1 wh o iA atte nding
BIRTHDAY PARTY
~ n fWf!l ~ lint:~~ every lllll)l&gt;ln ~~V~
Mr and Mr8 Arthur Olnn enter- CJod ! mul" us AOmP snl! rlfh e
1
OR• PAUL C • BAUMAN I' t•l
ned lhel&lt; d•u•hter JuliO Eileen
, • lt.:.omtt-30 .Bath~, Bleaill.
wll h A n:u ty WerlnPsd~y evening in
rome I!! of no 11 sr to m lliiP or pr~
o.-cialiat
1honnr " r ~ P.r ninth b r t hd,ay The tern
Htatbll
n rrhmd
eventne was sneflt ln ramn and
1\r.tl! For Booll:tel and . . . .
HERE TODAY
muAtc The tcllowlnsz werp pres
The fi rst sfl'fl tnw11 1"d bfN~ mlnl
Jame• H. Butler,
t1 gftl 1bl&lt;•r I ~ 111 llkl' jnst on P&lt;'himc•il
1\UN'Dt\Y BY APPOINTMENT
K athryn Mr:Ca.be Bettie ttnd Betty In 1 1 11 r1h r ll I('
Ph
123 L
Boyd nn d lh~ (('l!"'~t ' r honor JuU"
one
•
1Elleeu

i

U TH Ut

D

1 wll '"n wIll n ou comf! unto me" 1
will wrdk wlthln my hOHII&amp; with a

ending ln nothing le.i!! Lhan 8 t.ouch 1
}

IT7.W4T.ItR

1 TH E CH RI STIAN IN THE FAMIL V

out !1om behlnd l

d O\Joll

~

U

1'

l.e..on for October 9

ba ll

Th is ended Lhe Pcmero,; advance
wh1ch seemed to the funs tertain of I

)nJ·ured;

ltlCV

111"' ~~ ~~ ur ~ ac11IIY llfQoQdJ Bit Jo
ln111tl tu!oJ o f Cll1o&amp;IO I
e 1?3t w"~uun :&gt;~ow~pla4)drUn1ull

..

.. u~••
• •"
.TATI
I UI IUI

0 ~ 10

I)EADEII$' NOTICI!I - U you wpt
the Newa 081ce of Tile DallJ
Tribune, call 286-L; If the BIIIIDeu
081ce uk for 202-IL

tr.,.,.,,.,;.,.t SCHOOL
·;· L E 0 N ·:· I

1

their c wn gus.J

QUARTERBACK DYE

'

~ SUNDAY I

1
"'"'"""'
Uoifmrr

for a. small ga.ln and a late-roJ sent !
Guinther into the Gallipolis ~rr!- 1
t.ory for a 6-yd (l'aln Then the play
was repeated for 11. run to the 10·
yd line and a nea-ftickFr
playj
Arter n !ew lme

t. 1113a

CC
OL UIIIU&amp; 0

Ou1nther

thr ball to Crow !01 2-ydJ

OCTOIII:R

-----------li4~1 GIOt!IIL-4Si-lT~Ui O

was aood for the nrst down then 1

~ve

~IJ:IDAY,

Utilities Prince in Bxile

Oye pined 2 yds Another pu.811
rrom Iiye to Oulnther v.us good I

P&lt;&gt;werful French C1ty
• Team Proves Too Much
For !.ocala

-The Pomeroy Purple Panthers
lost their fi rst vent1 re into the
~tn · season of t h e Sout heRsl.tJrn
' Le¥ue when a powerful Gallipolis
~rue OevU team
defea ted them
~ld• y arternon by t h e 5Core o! 26
to 0
A burs~ of po wer a n a !;peed Inter lnlngled wi th recept.lc-n m the flnt
feW mln uWs or pia) ca.rrled the
Pc.meroy lads to t he Oalllpolls 5-yd
Hn~ a n d the going 11.ppea red 1:1omewhat. rosy fort the locals Th" open
Ill&amp;: cft'enslve atlo.cl from the Po.n
tll:u ev1dent1y 5Ul pll~&lt;ed the hcav
le r Blue DeY ils IL5 the local bacll.s
ll ppar~ n tly •u tre off before Ule uu
.t&gt;U!p ectlna OaJlla Academy IJoys
kn13W whu t hud happened
Pollown g this opening prr.•,entu.tJ~&gt;n that sent short- li ve d llopeft lo
th ~ many Pomeroy fans a mls
hap occu,rred whtch account-ed ror
much a! th~ Onll.lpOilt&gt; olftm!) \&lt;'
~olns Quarterback Dve was forc-~o
t o re lln~ from t he gamf! with a sc
vere ~~pra ln of the ankle and wit h
ou t h1s uble lfUida.nce t h e Panthers
los t m uch of t bell dece ptio n nnd
s peed, a lt hough his m'lt.F~ at tempt i!d
to carry on withom h,., prc~c nce in

t.o

.

Bv Edson R.
a
some of the border
~ ~ a OQUP1e

allcl
oeeehll
bt New Bni'Jand
and the
fllill_
""omilb"'
In
---·~-~
-·~In
.......oau..J
B......
New Yort city
!'lnal
f or n.a
wl'l:l
mitklle
trl ~· 1 be
P wu
~t
the eove-mor at
-nee
th
•
A - 1
f.
&amp;"l,r ey, nbo.
tt ... 1 Oh lrm ..ames
cna
a
t.n
Undttr tenta.the Plans the Dem·
ner&amp;tlc nominee w.lll leave New
Yort a --k
~- • ...... HVlll .......uorrow BtoD·
that nlaht lil Baltimore for
one bl the major speeches
altlloujh t
---...
184-... ........
uu.nter 8 wB •-m TUOS$y
;~~~*ti;~,~~==•!'
Ootober 18 he wUI stop at. Rl.leLil\
lil
N 0 , and then t!OriUiiue on to A~

"Did you ever stop to think that adver!ising ia the poli~e introduction between
buyer and seller?
'
the place of the newspapet,
which entera

~

the home as a replar eaoential feature &lt;&gt;f
ciallife of the neighbcwhood.
"Under present d&lt;ty conditions a chief

Oblceco. Oct to-INs-The depmtatlon ol the ruatUve Samuel
l:nsu1l frOm Athena. Oreece t.o Ital1 was souaht "' the State ot m..
tnol.s ot.od&amp;y
In D: teJeBram to the atate depaf$men"" In w··"'"•'-"'·•-•• actinI IOV·
emor Fred 8 Sterllna &amp;eked tbl\
Oreelr, l~tnt. be rtQueatecl ~
arrest ai'ld
~ tormer utW·

object ia te make t~e process &lt;&gt;f advertioinll
Moat mert"hanta and other men who

handle larp IUml of MODe)'!afe blc&gt; MUCh
concerned with the actual sales and collec·

tieS

tiona tc&gt; study the fine art and detail &lt;&gt;f ad·

M

been for'nnfed came word tram
&lt;Continued OD Paae Btxl

trade. On thio account . the . newspaper
gives apecialaid when the ad•erlioe~ would

"Mat tenriee, including illuatration•,
espec~ll~••rrcre~,~pe face• a_nd .a co-'"'~ ,

1

itt1iiilf ftee' ah:h~~~~~1!'1:' .
ing juit how hi• ad•eriilellleht wilt· lo~&gt;lt
wl;aen it appean in the paper. This enabl~
him to prettnl hit ca1e clearly and dfec·
tively bef~ the reader, abftainl thoae
faeh and pricea which are m.,.t impremve.

r

co-·.

Coal Pl'ckets Are

Herded Into Yat·ds

1n•-

awtni.

I

I

Ji.

r.

to:-

Bloodh , ds
'":r :::;: I
oun

£ll111UDJ YJD

l

. _,...

:e--.::

.
u-• .:!!
..

-fi

Radicals Threaten ~:,~::,g.~ I~INB'- 1 BOT8PARTIES REAUZE IMPOtt,.AN'CE OF·WINNING CENTRAL
l!'~":.o!".r.~lot~~
~--~I Jaca-1!'-t;ilJe,
~*ii:....ll.f.
:' '
horlclna
..,d
the
T
V
loday she would return •• Co"""""" N
American Embassy : : ~Ia~~~~ :::It:~
ES TO CAU E; PRESIDENT A"' 1 YET ALTER SPEAKING PLANS ~"~::!..~
~~.:;
e:='::·I ~
p~~B;=-.:~rPol HWlten• AaloclaUon eot
~hich she
been
armed. oflleen at 'tbiJi biitls,
Amid tbe

expreu himself to the public.

"Thua the newapaper invites and ao·
siota tile uotum of bualneu, and hom enry
quarter &lt;&gt;f thl! nation word c&lt;&gt;a.aes juat now,
when buainm Ia generally nrarded u
nicklq '-'P· that there ia a wholesome ill(
fluente on the c:o-ercial man'• caah
drawer and bank account."'

an~d=-bl~ ~de~:.;

..::~ U:~h = d~~';:l

to perfecti0111 i• ita otimulath~g effect upc1n

•r.O 11J'W

""'-IIi
cUoa

fl'om wbert he tied to Greece.

vertieinr, but one thing they d .. undentand

plete:~ f ' ~eu~ ~~of.'.WP'

tt

order for the move
was recelved b)) pollee, and It was
understood autbOi'Jtlt&amp; took tM
step u a •etentknl meaau~ to prevent ln8Wl ftoo) le&amp;\'il'll the eo\111·
try wbUe authorities were ln\'eatl•
tatlnl h1a cue

the family, and is alro a part of the commer·

eyy.

~

murde rs of
Thelm&amp; Woods waa tbrecl8t b)l' au...
thortt1es today as the Allen oounty
grand jury met to questlol\ 20 witnessefl about the alle'leiJ oonfeMian
of Loren ;Ellsworth True&amp;dale, 23
brother o1 orte of the murder vJc:tlms
Altho .... h nrst d--.. murder in""e
.. ..., .....
,_ .....
die me n t3 are fo be liked •&amp;IJWM
Loren Truesdale whd on ..,..pt 1
ed hill
purportedly confessed ht ldU ~brother and the g1rJ a u ew mysiiCry
was thrown over the cue when Pro
sec utor Ernest M. Botkin aubpoena.ed a Ust of ' surprise wlt.neM·

Mt~nll&amp; P I ~~:~~if~~ 1""'====::::::::;:;:=:::::::=====1~
Sulu Iel&amp;nd oluh
pln'! lM)llc:e and Jdoro
t ile. Bur•·
~"~ by • ~,•••
..,
~
'" r c ~
the Uve 11 of :n
sv1v~ ..o1 .. t-•- wM1.. wa• ~-~ -~ ... _
......,....
..._ ~
~,.
Col Clarence BoWt 1, ch..laf
"he t."'&amp;Cb, and JIIU wu tataUt
Oonstobulary
aJll'; Junced
h.,_. w•·n ... ~••• ·-·• ed Joo• .nr~
T
olD
__... n.,
-~
U&lt;L:
lUll . . _....... , . . . _ . ,
t-.,.... ~
cen were ,. .......ea u..J
on -. a .""._..~ -·
edwo
BatiD aocordJDI to ~ee wu
An unknaWll Dumber of
, ,., d~ by iklneJ!~:,
WBS report!d dea.d.
w""•·-......u - ...&amp;.._ wu - "
esSince making the supposed COil•
In pera 1al o nummd of 400 men
"'....,
a ..... fOJ'uua.&amp;~YU-.,
.rectlell drtrii:J:I.
fesslon, declarln&amp;: t.hat he kllled Col Luther St - vens commander c1
Bleepinl beBide *be beb ol tbr
Earl Tru-·•a•• and h •• atrl cbm""'n· he ConsUlin;..l2..,""Y ln
al .. Pour -~ .,__ ,u......... 11-m
.._. "'
...
p lanned to attack and. wipe out
~
.,...- DI\IIUilWI' • :-:-:-r
Jon on Memorial De.y, 1931, and Jut.law stronghQld
Woolums, 18 of JatltSon ll{t..;
threw thelr bodies lntc a.n abt.ndonAfter " eonferen~:e with
N8l t.Ultd 11fben he "fts atruek"'.:W
ed stone quarry, Loren 'I'rue6dale 3 eneral Theodore Rooseve lt Teo- l. pa.uenaer train.
.
•
Ian.ta.
tu denied a.ny tnowledl'e of the oisto Ouin!Jona.. dinctor 01 nonWhen he plunged ~ the &lt;a•
t'J.'M Bl)eelal tratn wlll aidetra.ck
erlme
Christian tribes will leave for the boose ot t1le tra.iU to ~hi '**#
:,.IIAtmJ~~ ancl70 themURoooeeolo'eltw~~
As jurol1! assembledbotoday at thel l ulu Isll.nd tonight.
tbe ~,... 1\ft\', 10 ~
Allen county court.
.. ,..
"'"""''
........
uae, counae
The clash beBan when Lleut tow, Jlcuut W . ~ . f1.
Sprinp tih~ the eovernor ill (IX~
for Loren Truesd&amp;le had not &lt;lecld- Vicente Alapr and h1l constabulary Peanaplvant&amp; J'l.ilr1»4 cciKiutt'ia
nected. 1:4 remain \lDtJl Pliday oc~
ed whether they would have the 'lar":y of :n were ambuabed near na Jdlled pE&amp;I' Nf"WM~o• ..,-1!
tober 21. l.nspecUI\Jl the foundation
lefendant appear before the ill"al'U!i I:U.dy Kulay em the south lbore ot Be rea1ded. at Cam~Jridat, 0
wtdeh be establlabed for the t.r&gt;Jat•
jury &amp;nd declate his innooenoe
the Bwrullllano by \foro outlawa..
CntMinr &amp;be ltlei!it to talk
ment or 1nfanWe pe.raiJ&amp;Is.
MtMICOWn~lnued""6nandP•~~ar11J.Truea- AJ.agar waa one of the vtctt.ms
,.a.n wn Oflfl: car had lUij; strtttk
IA8.vtba' Atlanta October 1 un.
~
.,......
Capt. Leon Anpla, Bulu COD· ln a mtnor aectd8nt, Jt.
der the Wnt.o.U.ve eehedule tbe
3tabulary commatxler undertook "' Swords, e. OOJWiibut a&amp;lwnar.
(OYernOr will head f01" Bt
Lold.1
TO RAID SPBAK·IIASIES
lJur.IU.ve expe!UttoD YHterdaY, drlv was kUkd. ~t Y~tpWll\ wt.atl
dVter by vte:t of Oflattanodp o.nd
Columbus, 0 , OCt 16-IRB-A lni the Moros from their camp a t hit by uothtr: ~
;
IDW~vllle 4i* throuah Birmingham
1rive to "map up" speakeules oper· Bud 8alo Panamo, with an unUri. Marie Bo'fidle, wife ot Qr f ,
G.l'id ,NabvWe.
,
s.tlng In the Ohto State 'ODlverslt¥ mown nur.1ber of Moro dead ond. Bowdle, ~ Atroo ~·
:ilatrtct Waa under way today with wounded
·~-L..........._ ...
\fal tilled at er.ati1De Whera .._
PATTEST WOMAN 18 U!:A.D
the promise that. many hlBh sehool
OOWitallularymen Rpull'wu the
{Continued. 01. pqe Ida) : \
RiChmond, Va, Oct 10 - The
students also will be co.ueht. in tbe outlaws were beaded bf Imam Ibra
"'
-.a.. of Alpine Blitch 28 repuled
pollee net..
together with lollowera of Dat.u
· .r ~
-.r
'
Reports trom omcta.Is ot North Abdu.Uah ho
tJy
4£;
'
:r
to lla~r:,:ee:": ~
high school t.hat many Hudents victed. in ~Wp= rourts
.,_""""'....,_
-have been leavSng ctaasee to vbllt der
'11..:...-!1!
/1..:.. 4~
a _._.wn. .. - . today. She
beer places resulted in weekend
•
-Qtabe4~'Wt pound&amp; and _,. fOiltld
raids on three North~end speakADIEJ:: UTU&amp;NB
_
' ..,
~ in " aJde rhow at the rate
eaates
Los Anplee, Oct lO - IN8-Af- Det--'---.. M·•
11
faJ.rarouridl.
Her death tml! .JUe :;-:.:::;::;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:,;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;:;;;;:;:;;;;;:::;;;;;:.::;;;::;;;;;;:;-;::;;;;:;;;;:;::;;;;.:;;,:;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;.1 ter delJ.abt.lnJ a tarae crowd wlth
.-aiiiiOU
·~~
-·
to ratty~· ot the heattl
::;:
•
• dramotle .... _
.... An·
,.,.. P..W Who&lt; II .. :tt

"'tn..
~

"In this field no other fact&lt;&gt;r can take

to be under 20 at
time of the c rime
asserted
Oo1umbu11,
they ha. i not been given 8 !air
their plumed c&amp;ps and thetr smart trial
untrcnna fi,OOO memLers of th r
Durtnw t.he trial at Scottaboro,
Otand C ommandery Kn ights Tern- t h f' nattonal pard W1UI called out
plar of Ohto stt.J"e&lt;l a.rr lv mg In to prevent any trouble
Thl..6 as
Columbus toda.y ror thelr 90t't 1we 11 as alle'"'ed
exclusion of ne·
•
otr annual ccncl8.ve which opens to· KfOel!l from jury
duty.
fallure of
morrow and continues three daJs the court to moo.nt chan1e of venue
Bor ~ •, TWflloo""' abrltaflt the varluus cGtr. - and lack of •·.proper repreaentat1on
to complete their
t.•...
tim
~anderles will parade 'down 0&lt;1- tor the accused men was c:Jted a11
some
e late this lumbus ! b"eeta behind banda, dt Qm ll't'f'lunds tor a new trial
•·h
a••d
The
aLaLe of Alabam!L throus:
" bugle .,.... and 11 automo.
blles loaded with dlat.tnculshed vLS- its Attorney General, p "epa red to
ltOrs In 3o colorful prooe&amp;alon to be .ll1Jue vlgoroUBiy before th e court
held, Wednesday a.t 2 30 ._m 1
that the negroes were given a fair
v
th t re WQ.II n o d011bt
[n 8 IJreaJt burst or band mu:ne trial and that
the pa.radera will pa6S In M'ie'.\ e.a to their guilt..
while the mUBtcal units Join In
The alleaed crime was SBid to
...
I.AA
1•ted at•· the ne
Jllinoia State Troopel"a P re 'Onward Ohrlst&amp;an Soldier!!" untU ua.ve .....,...n romm ~
...,.r
•
all the thow:&amp;nQS have come to I:WS oha&amp;ed white boys orr a ratlvent Trouble as Mine
atte ntion The banda wW thell road freight car on which the two
Reaumea Operation
play the St.a.r Spau81ed-Ba nn4r af· JllrlB In t.he case were riding
ter which the bualers will will
Washington Oct IG-Il-..3-With
Taylorville Ill, Oct
10- INB- 1 ""
t"lonWld recall • el.J.01fll the forma· crtmlnal ca.seS .. ea~. : ' 'II the docket
~.....~.. ,._..
h
Pront yardl'l of homes near Pea- 1 Eminent Sir Clyde X. Sm1th ol Supreme court wuaY -an ear1nlf
bcd7 Nine No 58 looked like war Fremont. R'f8lld captain genera l oi IU'IUttlenta for t he new term of
time prtson camps here today wh.en tht Gran d Commandery, will be eo~ the flr9t case before the court
naUoniil luardaDten herded nearly. co~.ptaln general of the p hradP 'kl. Involving the extent to which pro4
3.000 coal mine pickets into the he l01" of hts high omce, the ~- hlbltlon omeers can go ln searchlnl
fel::qd ~
mont conunande r y will send roo ......t te ho
r
hlbltlo
1a
~uf!lcteH ~tte~p~ 58
knights here.
~Of:t1ona. ~! g~ve~~ent ~ vlr~
0
ven
reopen Y: 0
er
rempla.rs !J"Cm 71 conuuan "'ri~ 9 tualJy ocnfeued error
the: ~ns of th.e S5 ware scale will pe.rtJclpate 1n the PQrade
The fourth and one of the most
as &amp;J.ap.ed. by the United Mine Bands are comlng from all over wJdely discussed cases betore the
Workers of America and were lJle state
cour•· 1s the ap......al l)f seven yoldll
routed
by into
state troopers
who hurled
'
"'
.,..
tear aM
t:.h!lr midst
'fhe
tb~ Templar parade will attna.ct ne;roes from conviction and death
liw'd~Dl'm. then proceeded to clear huge crowds
Columbus sb'eet!l .sentences at Scottsboro Ala. , an
the streeta and fol"«&lt;d the pro- were decorated tor lhe oonve,nllou charges of assaulting two white
~-Ia.
1
teatmr men tnto the available yards ... ver the wt:ek er. d At the had
o1 ....
DlOii ot wldch belong to the miners the proceulon wW r4..de the J.tt in:l~ ~: ~:i~n'r'~r~~00~~
'l'tWI picket. i.rrl'fed ~ut mid~ Vt.rnon ~ of Columbus, ... lb"'- Ia
I I ion
h
aJght Tbey oame from &amp; dOien or the old.e£t conunandelt west of the " ,_. w voat s, t e go~mmore m..lnlna .,enters tn this section Alleghent.es, In the poetuon af f!¥1- ment hal virtually confessed eiTOr
Ahout 200 men went to work
c:.ort of honor
&lt;Continued On Pure Six)

Guard of 30 M,.. Placell
Al'Ouad Blllldl!it After

D.......tration

.,.,. -pParll, ()cl.

by radk&amp;ll,

,..

w

of clop

t)acQ"
Ulldtt WQ' her, tb.LI mornSnr
~tely 200 bunte.a

QhHllal levetal women,

the

~

in·
rode after

BUCkEYE DAJRYMEN
tbe AmeritiJUi !"!~!'J M ~
under beo-.y J1011o!!
AY CALL STRIKE
10--DI&amp;'-'fhrealol!oi!

1uot11 today
•
Twenty ,.&amp;formed po"MDMID aDd.
10 l)la1Dolotbeamen stood abOut the
t.utt.uq, fOilowlnl Ulni.ti al &amp;
eommunlet ~ pror.t.maa11fnlt tbe OI:J!Memn•U:m of 'tbe
accUMd
the , . ,
BcoU~ attack 1CU1.
W1lhln • block of tile omllUO,
not tu frcm, P)e po11os ~ iU
~ll'Owq mob ot .oiDDitmiN
etood about I.a. Uly lft;)Upl..j
Sl• ~ Of at com•
mtlniiY HOb. elalmJ=to be a
deleaatton ot an ~~ t&amp;i:IUl hcl
rellet" ~ll&lt;Di.
ol IJiil

necroea m

emba.a&amp;J U\4 lefi wrtttea pa;;l Ot

St Cl&amp;irsrilll, 0., Oct JO,......IN8A ~· lt:rlke was threatened
~ tn ,.atem Ohio u
JeacUq:
~ra were caUed. here \o outUDe
PWI8 tor a noo-eeiiJDI campatp to

fD* mllt pdeel

1'ret bundnd

de&amp;lmJ In Bel·
adjo~ ba,.
~ the ammment Ill ~
~ aptnH tba pra~~t~.t price ot
lla&amp; pet 100 pOJ.mcll, Jeideti u.td
O'tll&gt;'!el of .. 1:1 Ia to be de·
~ tbay deolared,
.~ - tor the non....llbll cam~me- Saltttday "'a

ti!Oilt alid

ap1nSt the eoot.ebon:luati ~ .."· iUD"'
Tba dellp.ltmll loft tbe blllldlill U..

ta Onlel"ll' tilblon

liibr!iiail

:::.e

10V11raJ ~lfll not to'
1jlllt'1 JIWk tor Stmday
~.
•

JSere

nu

s

declttred

•1 !t

1el.ht~y tour be&amp;'lnnlnl next week
whiah will carry bim as tar weat
st~t Hoover'" plaDIS ar "' sttU
somewhat uncertain but 1t an
nounced Wdiy ~ he wUl apeak m
Cleveland next Sotul:day nl1ht and
llellt SaturdoJ u'-ht Oct 10, !.he porbapo to pu.dl on fo&lt; ~Ia In
1Vbi.He Rouae &amp;l\llOIDlcet.. todo...v
diana., Illlnots and ~17 ~ne
1be hour of tlre speech and other sota...
details han not been deftnltely
Mr Hoover rtill is loath to aban...
decided.
don hill orig2n.,.... lllan of mat1Dt
- ..
but 'two or tlll'ee" ~ durliilr
w~. oot
1G-IN8-The Ule entire campa.lCn.. But the ~
Ll*ldenilal OCJm&amp;l"lan IWUDI Into ot the DemocraUe campaJan. OOv
the 11n111 mcmth today with both Roosevelt • i&gt;Jctureoque Invasion of
pa.rt1ee eyetnc tt1e mlCldle "'est-- the whole west, and (.be lncreuJna
trom ObtQ to Jfebrub-U territor)' evtdence~ of a DemocraUc trend '"
that 1i nteb: W fUmtsb the answer the inlddle west and beyond tb.e
The 1m~ with wlllch both Ml8sllslppt river. have rather latoclt
RepbbUc&amp;n and Delhocratlc leaders ed that plan awey
~. tbf!W mlddle wNt-oem. et.a:~
Republican leaders In moat or the
ill at$ili1ed l!Y Ulti plaila they are stajeo tha~ De bolweon tho Alter·
makla.l for lntenllve drtves there henle. and the Roeldet are ~
d~ tbo neD foqr..weeb
fran~ appea.l&amp; to the f 'lite hoUse
Got, Prlo&gt;tlta D. - e l t will for "more Del ii"DIIlet _ . . •
mate hlllild tGrlhelr IIUPiJOrllD an The burden or the • "'"" 11 lbo:
By (JJ!:ORGB R HOLMES

INS Staff Correspondent
Wublnlton. Oct 18-INB--Presl..
dent HjlO'Ier will deliver hll ..eond
maJor t..dd~ of the campaliln tn
Ute auditorium "' Cleveland, o

I

\

~epubll~ chance&amp; look bBd, but

1f tft@ prealdent wllt come out
h ,;:se,::e :ah=~~
ro - f r o m tomorrow
l'he ObJo..ID.d.lana-llllnolB 4roup
11 • I'P'l'ial magnet to the eyes or
lhe Reflubllcttn leadors Nonn•Uy
Repu~ tenltory every poll
and st~;aw vote thus far taken there
baa sh.a.rn Oov Roosevelt out ln
front of President Hoo~o-er by a. wtde
marctn Between tbfm they have
rst e1ect.ota.J. votes I no inconsiderable
factor ln case of &amp; cla&amp;e electl.on
~ust bow Intensive Is to be Mr
~ver'a. effort to turn the tide In
these ata.tes will be determined
~ tn1a week He hal already
l]lt"rid to mate a major speeeh ot
l;lie aaJDPt.fp at Cleveland Oct 15
n wouJd net be mnch of a Jump
~rom there Into the olho&lt; tw
ata.tea.
Ex~presldent C&amp;lvln Ooolldse will
~ lbo heavy RepubiiCIIL !Ire
f« the early jJOrt or thll -k. wllh

with
had
reported
crttk:ally Ul
his widely-heralded speeeb tmnorM The occasion ~ heT re&amp;ppe&amp;rrow night In Madison Square oar~ a.nce in t~
le pulpit wu be!
~~et ~~r~~ ~:.ee.. t~ forty-clehth.,_
there II vaal Interest In
BAR
u to Jtmt wb&amp;t he m to have to sa..
lomorrow
PROTES
AIROLES
On WednOiday, Preoldtnt Hoover
- ~ ""'-.:
will ha~ an ~tJ' to mate
Cleveland. Oct to-IN~tum
another ma.Jpr Bpeech-4o the Am - or Prancls tMaek \ Bush, reputed
erlean Bar Auociatloa here
iUlliiUIIl and robber, to tbe Obkl
Thus tar 1n hte camPfoiln, Mr Pen1tA!ntlary aa a parole vioJat«
Hoover has DULCle no Dlf!DtlOn Dllri wu antk:lpated tod$y In oompu...
hJbtUon other than to say in hiS a.nce to .. deJUild or Ule OllmJand.
speech of acceptance nearly two AsBocla.tlon for e.rim1hal JuAice 11 a
montlu aeo tbal hO atood by the reault or • wUd iJm ilaOo!Pad• ..,
Re't&gt;Ubllcan plaUonn.,
Cleveland at.reeta
The AmerJcan Bar Alaoclatlon
Dc:ms.Dci for e\llti.'s return wu
laat. year went on reoord.!n fa'fO" of made or Clofemor (Jeorte."'llhtt:4t at
repoal of the 18th ut&gt;mdment. l&lt;e• a Ol&gt;fOial ~- of tlte - uublican leaden!!, partlcna&amp;erly ln tbe c&amp;J.iad to proteA ..Cbpnplna ot ettmwet stateiS ot the Atlantic: &amp;board lnala" on the elty, a practtce the
have been turlnr Ute preoldent to - - deei¥Jed wu
say something: m tbtl Juue He will ' or tbe cun battle an4, pollce c:bMe
have on excellent apportijllity Wed.- l:n "biob one b&amp;D4Jt Wu •laiD ~ tw:o
nel&lt;lay night ltefore a trlent!JJ au- poU......., hl!r~ IDd f0111' othmi
dlenee
,..,. IDJured.,

both-

ASS

T

Tlt~N

-Lurd!Q'.

,_.,1&gt;11

j

~~ ~

u.&amp;

I t«m
manhunt pro~'decl ~· ·, •
~
oonvlcti. ~tate wt~ at

''1\ftatbol." tart.ure m~
here. who eady ~ Jawed

:r

!::ty":n.
to , _ , _
Clacl Jn cbaln lUI ~...y_Jf.)
w-

Drew and Jameo
tlid , _
lbo lall. ,oomotlme ltefon dan
Sunday after puiJinl out: a ~
1nl' 11xtQnr 1n tbelr eaU ad ·.Wl1n1 rt.bl'oUih tbe bole to a wtQdOW
wbf1re they •wed bars and .Upped
to the Pound on rope lld&amp;NDtlstd
tram bed. elotblDI
No trace of tbe ttcaJ)lnll conwtM.
1to4 rollD4 tu tile :N Jwun fol·
1ow.1nr their breat·aft)'.
l.l\
'nl!l men Wlft mem._,. of. a
or J1 Cllllvictl: .umlnoned bJ:
ota1e and !let...., to teollll! lD
trial of Gecrp w ~ 1M
Solomon B~m tormer otrJ
om ot tbe Sunbeam cl\li!li,~
camp w.bo are ~ wi~ mUi'Gifi'
1D tbe a.11ePd t.ortw:'*' deaill ct At·
lhur M&amp;!IIONrt. III-J&lt;W-ol4 J!!.~
Jerot)' oonflct
•
-!.

:i
...

�•Aaa lBHU

·I ,. ..

Tf'lo Anct,or

'
Middlepor

Republican Candidt.tt.il

J&gt;hont! Your New•

M tddl eport high school officlnls be·
ll tvt they have obtftlnect the l d ~ uLI LY of th~ person who
dro v i"' n
•1' Homohll e 11cross the lawn 1f tl•!:!
l:ilhOoi dunog the
MiddiCJ&gt;l:l i.JOg :. m footba ll game Frid, } t.l &lt;&gt; !, .t

disc losed

w m:e

tt!e

..................
¥1~flTJ!:OUSj'ij:SII

BIUNGS ~OICING; Whe11 ~~~
.,._la~OIJII arp In authprit;y, the people rej~ief: but when
tile -.,icied beare~h rule, the people mourn.-Proverilo
. ·~,
.

' . . ..

GAS CONTROVERSY

'I'IBE RECENT ruling of the Utilities Commission ill ,;etting a rate of 55 cents per thousand cubil: feet for· the
''i".'. l•,l•~ o( Columbus has aroused a storm of protes( throughput the state. Naturally it is hard for the citizens in the
state to ~gore just why the Gas Company should be gi&gt;en
an 1qcreased rate when conditions are as the:r are through
out the jand. Their cost of gas production is less tbau it

5

'

YOU EVER STOP TO

-"

Jidhe heart

I

!b2- l.

1

I

;

,;.:~-' ~~-- 1 :~~ c2·~~~1 \nytalluJj

&lt; •I

.n&lt;

, :vi
alt- M")! J~.··~.J •' :.J', :1
~he ~ .. H..!a} , 1 Columbus

m e mb~t~

Clf
p!eS..!nled Rn mtt',-

:~1

H ill ·

!lllL. J\lnii

htldr-t·•

~:~;

-c

RO!'

\J'&gt;,Jt&gt;rl

~·lt n

&lt;1111

"
t

b! UJSC'f;

:-011 wa •, b!t&lt;'!b •h,lKcn uu

SYNOPSIS

ol Harrison Will
whether or
ill ~;&amp;J~e aud then chargen
P~ced agalnsl. him

11qd oil bel~ wI! lie the
costs &amp;Jid transporta·
'
of til• Company to set ras to ~html&gt;~· citizens
RITES
&amp;lid a\¥'!il" mucb higJ&gt;er tha~ it is hPfll in our towu. Puner~~olI'JIILLIPS
rorvicea tor Mrs. Nora. W
is &lt;llfe 1!'atur~. wfiich our coqncil\ll.ell c'n and no PhUUpa, w)lo died at her home
,lhur&amp;!iaY. were conduct4l'd at
w!ll thr!ll'h o\1~ with t~e repreaenta~IVef of the Go• here
UJe ~ldwelt at. E. chllNlh Sunday
~~ t~e nex~ Council meetlns wben !l 11ew gao ll.ft.errtppo Wlt.b Rev. R. 11. Denney
cha...-e. Burtal wu made tn the
. •ilf v~ry probably be dioe~sseq. To be con- 1n
Memorial e!Jnet.ery, in Vinton.
and in accordance wi~b the gener4l tNnil of fllci
th~ prq.,jir m~~ cit c~ne, would htve beell a vol!Jow;~~ward rtvJsion of th~ price whlcb, of couroc
oxp~riencl! with the gas company hat taucht us
'" i•ied not expjct.
•
. l, ,

.J)I !.: ;R : 'lll"'}ll

I• ia •aid that man come• into this
world without hia wishes and leaves it
al'ainat hia will.
Government polic:iea cannot be chansed like a coat. It take's time and atudy.
Oi:

...

*

There is no. doubt but that the oentl·
ment expreued by a number of front PBI'e•
will ~~~ enonnpua appeal to thoae few
pe&lt;)p]e who prefer dabbling in theory1'about
dioabled war veteran• in•tead of the cold
fact that thio country baa alwaya and will
alwayo honor and protect ita own war veteran• and that people will not take from
them benefita already 11ranted them.

••••

•

Political freedom from those thin111
that let loose' political wolves on the sheep
moat objectionable to the oheep-and moot
of Ul are the eheep.

••••

If a r.mall portion of the time that has
been epent by many of our leaders in tryin1
to economixe our country into prosperity
ha$l be,~'! used i11 developin1 . mark!l'ta for
our Producta and gettin1 mon~y into &amp;eneral circulation, better times would have returned lon1 &amp;Ill·

* ....

Nowadaya the busine11 men of the citi!ll •r~ ro,qr tC! tJte buaineos men of the
f--pol to teach them how to farm but
tp ~e cquncll with them concernin1 their
commpn problems.

••••

A policy of minding one' a own buaineu. ia not to be diare.arded in time, like
t~"fJ!~I!~ ~~. if, riv~ a trial, is·likeb 1
!"!' •.,.-11)111'1' ~ffect1ve th•n lh!lt 4~f IPCIJ~
Jl!ent ~ ennuty. An ounce of realiem , ~~
'1\'11~ •. 119!!114 of theqry, yet th11 foripor
~ _-mp!fl.l'ly ~oneplcuous J»y , itJ ·~
lllflj:ll 111 all tbe epeecfte. we have, hur.l
lately.
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ROUGE GALLERY
B('low it he placed numerous
photograp hs of g1 rl s: s naps hots;
neWspaper pictures; iormal cabinets elaborately mouuted- cach with
:an mscription s u ch as: "'To Jeems
from Rosalind w it h her love."
On th e opposite wall l1e placed

his collection of Moviana-soulful
eyts and smiles-showing·leeth an d
h ght-glmt ing-m-ha ir; each with its
m e~~a~;e: "TI"&gt; Jimmy from Clara
Bow" .. , send you my loll-Gar·
bo " All wtrt grouped undtr the
gen eral head :

MURDERER'S ROW
Over his textbooks, too neatly
arranged in regular rows, was the

message :

READ 'EM AND SLEEP
H ... had rugs; a radio; fl oor la01ps
whose fringes were festooned with
dance program! th at dated back
through the years: easy chairsand a mrscellaneou! co llection of
burlesque show posters, auto li ce n se
plates, traffic signs, etc. Over the
doo r lle hung a sign:

YOUNG MEN'S STUDY
ASSOCIATION
Mr. Edward Wynne, Esq, Pres.
Mr. James Pidgin, E~q, Sec.
,(We have no treasury- this mean ~
you)
Pidge proudl y surve~·e d hi s art•
"A reg!llar mardi gras. I claim
it's hot Now l've done my part
towards making thia the best all·
ft*nd room on the campus: 'all you
to do ie tG make foot ball
captain, all-American, &amp;enior ela!s
l"'esidenl aa.d nledictor;."
"How about chairmaa of the Stu·

me

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lel!&gt; un· Ume.

Phone

fo r demonstr·•t.i-.n.

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' lll'tnmt: rugitd!f!nt..s Blelld 1

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•About time you gave the !rome town girl a tumblt'," she said.
."No~ody c:ver g;wc me a picture, I cd, nsualiv at ticJ{'Httcil victory a~nl
P1dgr.
l:unc fully prep.ued to c:eh: bra1r
"Hdl-you ac:k £o1 t l lelll, or ste3l
"fhe IOI\11 1~ f uli of almnt1l"
them. ~i'lH': :~nly one'' ho e\Cr gave Bartu:y "old rh,. :!qund after the
me a p!ctu1"e was Pen o;eur."
ga nt ~
"II. l1tt\e re laxauon w o n't
"\Vh1ch .llle 18 c:bl!'"
lmrt yoa, ~ o .-lth~'J :nal 11,, ncr. :~nd
. "I haven •t a•n ller up; l; hr.'s tn y fvr g d foo th3!1 for lhc m~llt, you I~
:riJStcr-The Thinker
n,rrn~:nt dom· a gre~t JOb so far- ,1 ~..:~ 1 , 1 t

tha t."
Durint;: hia four years as f reshman at Oh1o State, Va11d erbJlt, II·
Jm o1s and New Domirnon, Pidge
f r om m l'!. \:Vant to !Jc~ llc1 ~"
h~d collected many pe1mants; these
He dur: m t o the lowest drawer
lw strun g aroun d the lOp walls in
of
his t•uuk and re scued T h e
the prevailing co lleg rat&lt; d cs1g n.
Thmker
from i\UtOTI!-1: his 'lkatc~,
Ou the n ght wt~ll he hung
a

Glveli you morr

.k:iii "VOill_

,eom Tom and dro~ her

~ign:

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'

the boys, at Tom's suggestion, ru!h

CHAPTER XI

:

''11•111-P'IIJ)I

!nto the girls' rooms and take tbem,
PBJ&amp;ma-clad, down to the water.
Ted does not join in the fun, but
W"hen '!'om comes along with Barb
in his ·~ apparently enjoying it
and calbn'l to Ted to save her, he

"The first thi ng we do is decora te." P11lgc sa1d when Ted had
mo11ed in. "And we got plenty of

$5.00 Allowance for

JOb: lout wo·~·e .c:ot three tou &gt;::h nn&lt; Q
ye t Be ca reful tO:l lf{ht, t1 1 e~.:- o lrl
g r.nh will Will i to fi\1 you w 11l1
bum hquor all(! luve you maJ, 111 g
bathmg su1t nnd 51\ t•atel s.
~ r ·ct h cs, lay ofT riH"m •·
"Pretty," Ted ~a1d "Lool&lt;~ hke
Ted h ad a~kcd f~o~a!1e (o the
J anet G:~.ynor,"
~a mc
At dmn&lt;'r she Wo\S fl!i ~ ltcd
"How :r; he'd I ~YV~ th 3t
Somr- ~nd h;:.ppy
bod y told her th~t .1 111 1 th.1ft&gt; why
"About t1111e you gave th e hn11Je
she wears her l1a1r lh ,tt way"
tow n g1rl a llllliblc" ~ ln• ~.HJ
"Let's pllt her u p "
"Long tm1c nq ~ce, \!J s tc t "
HAlf righ t-on!} 1t's your !Hl~"l'vr hf~r. !l~eing Amet iei:O...,.
gest ion
Here's Father-~e t t i l t!
"'I tke 1t?"
fro wn- that's the way old p .l'' 11!\ll·
" Grea t "
ally look! at mt" ~o he had the JHc~
"Lot~ oi rrett v girTs""
tur~ taken that w~y. Mother ca 11
"None as p1etty a~ you"
!mul e, though-see?"
"Not even the wond er g·irl?"
The sea~on :z:odnied alon~ in t v"Lay off She ltk es you"
plcnl New Dommton style Geor~1a
"'Oh, you've bf':Cl'1 discu~stng me?"
T ech, Pitt, Nrbra!':ka, Kentucky
"She sa1d sometlung rtrce al1011t
and iowa. wert defeated in order- you."
some by fair marg1ns, o th ers after
"And you believed her?"
severe strugg les; but Barney Mack
'Why not?"
always found a way to finish fir ~t
"T don't."
Ted's tea m acqnitt~d it self crecl"'Why don't you like h er?"
itably, starting every co ntest except
"It would take too lo ng to exthat with Nebraska. T he Corn· plain."
hu skers were powerful and unde·
"Let's talk about you. Have a
feated when they came to New Do- hil'l t1me at thfl' Lake'"
minion for th e Homecom111g Game
"Yep. He was a band leader."
and Barney took no chnnccs He
"So yo u go fo r those guys"
started his regu lars and kep1 tlu:rn
"Yep"
in, with a few exceptions, until the
"Probably pl:lys;. saxop h one?"
game was almost over. Then, to
"Play~; everyt hin g-but on a vto·
Protect a thr ee-poinl lead, he made lin!"
a. f ew substitutions to b ols ter !11s
Tc(l tlt'dS annoyed
d e £en~e.
"Cu rl]' ha1r and souUul eyes and
Ted w;u; oRe o f th ese
Paden a velvet jacket-"

had played a magn ificent game,
practically -clinching an all -i\ merican selection; bnt h e w.ts ttring
fa~t and Barney ~aid to Ted:
"In there now, play it safe. K 1clc
them back in to coffi,, corner ev er y
time you get t h e ball an d can't
move witlt it."
Ted bad developed ln!o an accur·
ate kicke r. He relieved Pad en for
the last eight minutes and, a fter
trying two plays on offense, rmnted
for the corners or out of bound s to
prevent th e willowy Husker safety
man from getting a chance to brm g
back a punt iota 'rodng territory
Homecoming at New Dommion
wu a hectic time. Hot els were

"An d 3 megaplwne and t he most
bcan;_ifttl hanrls I've ever seen on a
ma n
"And f suppose all the girls were
m ad about the sap."
Storm signa ls fle w in her eye~.
"1A'hy not? You tlnnk a man
can't be artistic an d ~tJll he a manP
He m us t play football and wo1k in
a stee l ~til an d be rnd e, 1 sup..
pose?"
"He probably agree~ with ever".

thing v.ou say."
•·
''He g1ves a woma n credit for be"
mg able to tlunk a nd. does n't feel
that he must treat ,h r~ hKc a 1l11ld
to sat1sfy hi.s damned cor:.:.'e-it....
"Quit swearing.'"

crowded and tickeu for the mode!t
"I'll sw ear. I 'll $moke. I'll drin~
ActivJt:r Committe I!?'"
t&lt;J11 take care of that. All right, St! ~ting capacity of the make!hift - and [ do; \Vhat ' do yo u th ink ol
JM)W wbere ,are your entrants for woqdeD stadium were alway1 at a that, &gt;·au damned prude?"
.
('fiJ n~ Cou1muM)
premium. \ Ql~-drra'd • :w~.._ Ct\tiin" ·
1M Rou1e _Gallery?"

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think tltnl :1 two-fic.ted ft•llm\
ltt. • :!w ,fPt! jar·l\ iu lht' pictu'rc wnnl1l
'&lt;l, •· lti - t~rl1w t o --.!ro11:.:. 'llolut ~n.
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P . \\ :-~n f ... In, cigan· H e~ mild nnd
, · \\ h; I" ]'wkc. CIH'--.Lcrrield ~&lt;..
'l )!,]•ll ··'· fl,w !o;n"t

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fLT '"' ino,il'id or uuything li..ke
mean o

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rcllo\'.. ::; as well as anyone else.! :r ,IJld wntueJJ-want a cigarette that's
~ J . . . (IIW 1hJt satisli es-and that's
L ,l•·rfirld . •
\\ I' j,,.Ji•·v•) tltat every oinoker is look..
· ,~ f01 u ( i!-':&lt;~r, •tte wjthl)ut any~· bite"
l lt lt ·· nui~~ .~mJ a ,•ig~1rctte that hnsa
.
w,; t .~:-:ole- and that'~ Chesterfield•
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r1; ~\ "' t'X~'&lt;'pt Sun.l ny, Cohunhia
t'o,t ~ L-lo-C(•Ubf

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Nt l wut k.

ean be no dolnbt a.bout your

Ltlisure wotk.

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be independent, and at a week-end
party ignores Iter. Late at night,

in tht! watei. Furlou,, she sl&amp;ps' liim.
Tom trie11 to start an argument, but
Ted calls him a snob and leaves,
with Barb Watching from a window
In the fall. New DomJnion plays 1t1
AI"St game against the Navy. Mac~
is _Pleased wlth Ted. Wealthy Jimmy Pidgin offers to ah;ue his room
wtth Tt!d, he to pay expen11es in re·
him for Ted's help in hia studies.

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amadnrly llrht

rus! beiq tborourhiJ cleaped.

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a G E. Deluxe (

11 1 i, l'J tu sua l pt . . tUt i! ~how~ bt• \tJ]II'd tonvtds
l fl~ .i)!l\ tl!\' 1 Ft01, t o h 'tr" \ a' tht• I!IR.I of
lJ r~ytn hutl J~!!l forme1 , ,f! .. •,d&lt; 11 t ~w1lu·am
1·
Ce.mp. who arc
clwt ge d Whh the murd1•1 ., ,_ A1t h L'r !I !&lt;.~JIIdt !t , II.Jew Jersey youth who
v.a ~ ' l t \'1117 .1 t t' 1m at th .-. r artt ]~
\\ tll mm Hnbe 1·ts, uue u! the ro nv1cts
w llll 'I a~ .11 ~nnb{-' &lt;~Jll \\ hc1t ,f ,tl llr f, 11 mt t hl"' d, nt~ ' ~H tllicd tha the
)'O l!:lt lo::s ~ trtrl p~; U nnl-. u J liTI•l I • ltr ,t 111 the " ~ wt-nt.-Uux" Y.ber~ be \\lUI
11Un&lt;.J ~ tran,d e d.

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the time to buy
that new
G. E. Cleaner
$2.50 Down
$2.50 per mo.

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Mt ttlHI M !&gt; J&lt;tmcs SW\'t·!l·
H y::.c!l or !.h e Ghu1d1 o t"hu.H :\'1
•Htt 1 t1 t'-a!.hlhlln J:::nllv ·.·•u1VIvi enne MlddiLt&lt;Jn ul Ll11 1~1e!&lt;;•
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1:otllll .St&lt;./t of l\11,uilt pOJ' tu l n·Why eve ryone :r;huu ld vok ~.n
A large number oJ you n (! 11f'on t
JU:Jtf'd l.n \ 1lsti Nellli' H a n~nt
c.
'ftere ptesc nt fut ~~.( 1H('• 1.!~, II I l t"t~ H· ll(!lt' m• 1(!\\
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11.

Young and ambitious Ted W ynne
l'ealiz:s he cannot ask the wealtHy
.Harb Roth to marry a mill hand, so
he leaves his position in the Bellport
•tee! mill and work a llis way through
Old Domiruon college. He shows
pronuse in football and Barney
Milck, the coach, takes an interest in
•h1m. '!'om Stone, star playu and
Ted's ri_val for B11rb's affectiona, h11
antagomstic towards b1m. Ted, however, IS admired by the other studenu. During vacation he toils in
the null tO earn hia twtion and prepare for the faD football sea1on,
Barb breaks an appointment with
'Ted and goes wtth 'l'om to a dance.
~ed takes Roulie Downs, whom
Barb d1slikes Ted t gno1es Barb
and plans to show Barb he, too, can

over

f~~t'tl111~ :w•

e

Bn.pU!t Ch lii"Ci.
&lt;=6 tlne p l a~ie~ d1•pkt nr, t111
tlttlOns ol a ~u ll/)J m ... t• w

1-\'Al!ACE.•~

takes her

in •I*"

I

GR~AT FOOT BALL ROMANCE

*;

Pomero~
•ever~! yel!l'i apd

[Y411 1 1, r IH'IJ
Doll
Ru..'il-ol'''
lopllll
W!' K Nu
nen
from
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Hr v W T Po.ck·'l ,,r sit:.
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l«l:OoPh
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By FRANCIS WALLACE

trenched on salaries and employees just as every other
~uelne~ bas done during the past few yean. /
While all municipalities affected in any. way in
by ' !)is rulillJ, are making an out~ry,,, it .. riiij)jt ,
for ~· to look at the situation from a loc11! vjewjloint.
us copsider iust what Pomeroy is PaYilllr 'l!la we pre:~~~alid&lt;Jieport is in the same boat. By the ~ecision reu·''
a few days ago, Columbus is supposed to los\! her
centra~~ and be placed on a 55 cent on,, ,bq$:Pomeroy
mast lnllta~ces for the pust two ye&amp;I'!J, bY virt~~
tile laat tr~nchi•e granted to the Gas Comp~ny
·
"' '•»~ been puylni even more than 65 cents al)d possibly
contlnqe so to do until a new franchise Ia nesotlale&lt;i.
While the ~at rate does not "figure'" more than that
~~~e aver~&gt;ge consumer whose bills are less thap $8.0p
JI•Yinlf j~st 11bout 55 cents while those ~bove that
of Mllrse, &amp;n~Ubl't ~he more liM ~~~Y. bJI"!l the I~
u
0
tltoQI'811~)
It c~ts 'tee~ use of the fact that tM ~f!d 500 ·au·~~y~· n;~~~E~M~v;a•:~",~!~!'~hc:~~~~l:~!!, E,.':.
cpst $~ .00 willie the balance is only qne·fo~rth as ~
charges of
'!Jl.• ,r·lt''" :~'!M~IP~r w~o "'''
epb{t ':ot··· "'
killedLa~
'. :li!''.,'!.J~t th~.,~ 9.f 68.6 pents
thoq:
wounded
•

&lt;do: ~;,II~! uf 'Nlilllk -

f1,7J
r ,,

ever wal because their leases are no higher now than
• me~l:r and it is a virtual certainty that they have re-

',

~~1tt.. 01 .. 1 tlll!

'!fh!UJ .

wns bemg played .:..t Y. c " ~ 1ld
::,mnt• person drove au
. 11t. Jn1 C.hl1t'
ltCltl!i.~ th-e lawn to Thbd
.·.v ~·:-~ m:
and then continued up t•h' sldt&gt;'HI.lk
Lo Lh e
lOtllrsectlon
Qt L J u ~.:&lt;• 'n
Mtf' 1 l wherp the cur en~e:"t.:d the
strel't
Offlcnt.lso1th-t! ::.choolhll\'e
prnhlblted cars from l!nt.e •ttl!{ the
ill\.\.n In front or th.e
.~lgh "'~; 100 1
h ml d!ng and one membet
ll lh t&gt;
l•JCal Board of Education I'D.&gt; "H' Jcatrd that others doing the s;un t&gt; , 11
lht: fULU!e ma\.' l""e &gt;• oc ,'i. l&gt; ,,· ,nR ev an d
Ml ~&gt; 1-' (" K lP.Lf:ll
' 1 h
'"'-' ' " ·' ~
Clara. Mae Hamll ~on Uu\'l D»J ,
ll·• ~ arges
M
,
Le:[ ~n';t P l ud!p~ nu•,
•
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1 ug ate H~tcnt.h-'0 Li ltUihL
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UNJON MEETING
tn(etJng oJ ' hE B Y P lt ~. •l •rr.,~
A Union Meeting of the Young a t tht• Oulhpo l.~ .H(•I bt C11 t•
P1.•uple ~;; Societies Qf Lhc fo111 if'l n '
h,eld In P "f'lla! nt1 on ,,) J !111. ~ •• ,
ChU!Cl1t-!S WQ~, h eld Suolday E:Velll:Jt(
Conventwn fur t hr l:la p :·~~ ~ l' ,,.~,
ut 5 30 o clock at the Fhst. Ba(J~Js t People's Umon to b1· !w id ,,. ·h •

1§•' 1111

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MAY BE PROSECUTED

haf&gt; been

.

1

1.' o-VJRGINIA QREGG-Ph 1111 f!

AUTOMOBILE DRIVER

•

t 'N·ews

:====~~~;:~;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~====~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~HB~~n.~tL~T~TR~lB~O:Nt:~~~::~~·~'~JB~I=~~·~========~==~
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Tf'lo Anct,or

'
Middlepor

Republican Candidt.tt.il

J&gt;hont! Your New•

M tddl eport high school officlnls be·
ll tvt they have obtftlnect the l d ~ uLI LY of th~ person who
dro v i"' n
•1' Homohll e 11cross the lawn 1f tl•!:!
l:ilhOoi dunog the
MiddiCJ&gt;l:l i.JOg :. m footba ll game Frid, } t.l &lt;&gt; !, .t

disc losed

w m:e

tt!e

..................
¥1~flTJ!:OUSj'ij:SII

BIUNGS ~OICING; Whe11 ~~~
.,._la~OIJII arp In authprit;y, the people rej~ief: but when
tile -.,icied beare~h rule, the people mourn.-Proverilo
. ·~,
.

' . . ..

GAS CONTROVERSY

'I'IBE RECENT ruling of the Utilities Commission ill ,;etting a rate of 55 cents per thousand cubil: feet for· the
''i".'. l•,l•~ o( Columbus has aroused a storm of protes( throughput the state. Naturally it is hard for the citizens in the
state to ~gore just why the Gas Company should be gi&gt;en
an 1qcreased rate when conditions are as the:r are through
out the jand. Their cost of gas production is less tbau it

5

'

YOU EVER STOP TO

-"

Jidhe heart

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~he ~ .. H..!a} , 1 Columbus

m e mb~t~

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p!eS..!nled Rn mtt',-

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SYNOPSIS

ol Harrison Will
whether or
ill ~;&amp;J~e aud then chargen
P~ced agalnsl. him

11qd oil bel~ wI! lie the
costs &amp;Jid transporta·
'
of til• Company to set ras to ~html&gt;~· citizens
RITES
&amp;lid a\¥'!il" mucb higJ&gt;er tha~ it is hPfll in our towu. Puner~~olI'JIILLIPS
rorvicea tor Mrs. Nora. W
is &lt;llfe 1!'atur~. wfiich our coqncil\ll.ell c'n and no PhUUpa, w)lo died at her home
,lhur&amp;!iaY. were conduct4l'd at
w!ll thr!ll'h o\1~ with t~e repreaenta~IVef of the Go• here
UJe ~ldwelt at. E. chllNlh Sunday
~~ t~e nex~ Council meetlns wben !l 11ew gao ll.ft.errtppo Wlt.b Rev. R. 11. Denney
cha...-e. Burtal wu made tn the
. •ilf v~ry probably be dioe~sseq. To be con- 1n
Memorial e!Jnet.ery, in Vinton.
and in accordance wi~b the gener4l tNnil of fllci
th~ prq.,jir m~~ cit c~ne, would htve beell a vol!Jow;~~ward rtvJsion of th~ price whlcb, of couroc
oxp~riencl! with the gas company hat taucht us
'" i•ied not expjct.
•
. l, ,

.J)I !.: ;R : 'lll"'}ll

I• ia •aid that man come• into this
world without hia wishes and leaves it
al'ainat hia will.
Government polic:iea cannot be chansed like a coat. It take's time and atudy.
Oi:

...

*

There is no. doubt but that the oentl·
ment expreued by a number of front PBI'e•
will ~~~ enonnpua appeal to thoae few
pe&lt;)p]e who prefer dabbling in theory1'about
dioabled war veteran• in•tead of the cold
fact that thio country baa alwaya and will
alwayo honor and protect ita own war veteran• and that people will not take from
them benefita already 11ranted them.

••••

•

Political freedom from those thin111
that let loose' political wolves on the sheep
moat objectionable to the oheep-and moot
of Ul are the eheep.

••••

If a r.mall portion of the time that has
been epent by many of our leaders in tryin1
to economixe our country into prosperity
ha$l be,~'! used i11 developin1 . mark!l'ta for
our Producta and gettin1 mon~y into &amp;eneral circulation, better times would have returned lon1 &amp;Ill·

* ....

Nowadaya the busine11 men of the citi!ll •r~ ro,qr tC! tJte buaineos men of the
f--pol to teach them how to farm but
tp ~e cquncll with them concernin1 their
commpn problems.

••••

A policy of minding one' a own buaineu. ia not to be diare.arded in time, like
t~"fJ!~I!~ ~~. if, riv~ a trial, is·likeb 1
!"!' •.,.-11)111'1' ~ffect1ve th•n lh!lt 4~f IPCIJ~
Jl!ent ~ ennuty. An ounce of realiem , ~~
'1\'11~ •. 119!!114 of theqry, yet th11 foripor
~ _-mp!fl.l'ly ~oneplcuous J»y , itJ ·~
lllflj:ll 111 all tbe epeecfte. we have, hur.l
lately.
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ROUGE GALLERY
B('low it he placed numerous
photograp hs of g1 rl s: s naps hots;
neWspaper pictures; iormal cabinets elaborately mouuted- cach with
:an mscription s u ch as: "'To Jeems
from Rosalind w it h her love."
On th e opposite wall l1e placed

his collection of Moviana-soulful
eyts and smiles-showing·leeth an d
h ght-glmt ing-m-ha ir; each with its
m e~~a~;e: "TI"&gt; Jimmy from Clara
Bow" .. , send you my loll-Gar·
bo " All wtrt grouped undtr the
gen eral head :

MURDERER'S ROW
Over his textbooks, too neatly
arranged in regular rows, was the

message :

READ 'EM AND SLEEP
H ... had rugs; a radio; fl oor la01ps
whose fringes were festooned with
dance program! th at dated back
through the years: easy chairsand a mrscellaneou! co llection of
burlesque show posters, auto li ce n se
plates, traffic signs, etc. Over the
doo r lle hung a sign:

YOUNG MEN'S STUDY
ASSOCIATION
Mr. Edward Wynne, Esq, Pres.
Mr. James Pidgin, E~q, Sec.
,(We have no treasury- this mean ~
you)
Pidge proudl y surve~·e d hi s art•
"A reg!llar mardi gras. I claim
it's hot Now l've done my part
towards making thia the best all·
ft*nd room on the campus: 'all you
to do ie tG make foot ball
captain, all-American, &amp;enior ela!s
l"'esidenl aa.d nledictor;."
"How about chairmaa of the Stu·

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lel!&gt; un· Ume.

Phone

fo r demonstr·•t.i-.n.

fmelv

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,{n 11 1 be 'l t'lg watP ~
tc1 lilm·~ar &lt;:~nd ~&lt;alt
\Vl•ln ~ l· l.': h t ' v tl'lckcno:!,.1 1
' lll'tnmt: rugitd!f!nt..s Blelld 1

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•About time you gave the !rome town girl a tumblt'," she said.
."No~ody c:ver g;wc me a picture, I cd, nsualiv at ticJ{'Httcil victory a~nl
P1dgr.
l:unc fully prep.ued to c:eh: bra1r
"Hdl-you ac:k £o1 t l lelll, or ste3l
"fhe IOI\11 1~ f uli of almnt1l"
them. ~i'lH': :~nly one'' ho e\Cr gave Bartu:y "old rh,. :!qund after the
me a p!ctu1"e was Pen o;eur."
ga nt ~
"II. l1tt\e re laxauon w o n't
"\Vh1ch .llle 18 c:bl!'"
lmrt yoa, ~ o .-lth~'J :nal 11,, ncr. :~nd
. "I haven •t a•n ller up; l; hr.'s tn y fvr g d foo th3!1 for lhc m~llt, you I~
:riJStcr-The Thinker
n,rrn~:nt dom· a gre~t JOb so far- ,1 ~..:~ 1 , 1 t

tha t."
Durint;: hia four years as f reshman at Oh1o State, Va11d erbJlt, II·
Jm o1s and New Domirnon, Pidge
f r om m l'!. \:Vant to !Jc~ llc1 ~"
h~d collected many pe1mants; these
He dur: m t o the lowest drawer
lw strun g aroun d the lOp walls in
of
his t•uuk and re scued T h e
the prevailing co lleg rat&lt; d cs1g n.
Thmker
from i\UtOTI!-1: his 'lkatc~,
Ou the n ght wt~ll he hung
a

Glveli you morr

.k:iii "VOill_

,eom Tom and dro~ her

~ign:

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•

'

the boys, at Tom's suggestion, ru!h

CHAPTER XI

:

''11•111-P'IIJ)I

!nto the girls' rooms and take tbem,
PBJ&amp;ma-clad, down to the water.
Ted does not join in the fun, but
W"hen '!'om comes along with Barb
in his ·~ apparently enjoying it
and calbn'l to Ted to save her, he

"The first thi ng we do is decora te." P11lgc sa1d when Ted had
mo11ed in. "And we got plenty of

$5.00 Allowance for

JOb: lout wo·~·e .c:ot three tou &gt;::h nn&lt; Q
ye t Be ca reful tO:l lf{ht, t1 1 e~.:- o lrl
g r.nh will Will i to fi\1 you w 11l1
bum hquor all(! luve you maJ, 111 g
bathmg su1t nnd 51\ t•atel s.
~ r ·ct h cs, lay ofT riH"m •·
"Pretty," Ted ~a1d "Lool&lt;~ hke
Ted h ad a~kcd f~o~a!1e (o the
J anet G:~.ynor,"
~a mc
At dmn&lt;'r she Wo\S fl!i ~ ltcd
"How :r; he'd I ~YV~ th 3t
Somr- ~nd h;:.ppy
bod y told her th~t .1 111 1 th.1ft&gt; why
"About t1111e you gave th e hn11Je
she wears her l1a1r lh ,tt way"
tow n g1rl a llllliblc" ~ ln• ~.HJ
"Let's pllt her u p "
"Long tm1c nq ~ce, \!J s tc t "
HAlf righ t-on!} 1t's your !Hl~"l'vr hf~r. !l~eing Amet iei:O...,.
gest ion
Here's Father-~e t t i l t!
"'I tke 1t?"
fro wn- that's the way old p .l'' 11!\ll·
" Grea t "
ally look! at mt" ~o he had the JHc~
"Lot~ oi rrett v girTs""
tur~ taken that w~y. Mother ca 11
"None as p1etty a~ you"
!mul e, though-see?"
"Not even the wond er g·irl?"
The sea~on :z:odnied alon~ in t v"Lay off She ltk es you"
plcnl New Dommton style Geor~1a
"'Oh, you've bf':Cl'1 discu~stng me?"
T ech, Pitt, Nrbra!':ka, Kentucky
"She sa1d sometlung rtrce al1011t
and iowa. wert defeated in order- you."
some by fair marg1ns, o th ers after
"And you believed her?"
severe strugg les; but Barney Mack
'Why not?"
always found a way to finish fir ~t
"T don't."
Ted's tea m acqnitt~d it self crecl"'Why don't you like h er?"
itably, starting every co ntest except
"It would take too lo ng to exthat with Nebraska. T he Corn· plain."
hu skers were powerful and unde·
"Let's talk about you. Have a
feated when they came to New Do- hil'l t1me at thfl' Lake'"
minion for th e Homecom111g Game
"Yep. He was a band leader."
and Barney took no chnnccs He
"So yo u go fo r those guys"
started his regu lars and kep1 tlu:rn
"Yep"
in, with a few exceptions, until the
"Probably pl:lys;. saxop h one?"
game was almost over. Then, to
"Play~; everyt hin g-but on a vto·
Protect a thr ee-poinl lead, he made lin!"
a. f ew substitutions to b ols ter !11s
Tc(l tlt'dS annoyed
d e £en~e.
"Cu rl]' ha1r and souUul eyes and
Ted w;u; oRe o f th ese
Paden a velvet jacket-"

had played a magn ificent game,
practically -clinching an all -i\ merican selection; bnt h e w.ts ttring
fa~t and Barney ~aid to Ted:
"In there now, play it safe. K 1clc
them back in to coffi,, corner ev er y
time you get t h e ball an d can't
move witlt it."
Ted bad developed ln!o an accur·
ate kicke r. He relieved Pad en for
the last eight minutes and, a fter
trying two plays on offense, rmnted
for the corners or out of bound s to
prevent th e willowy Husker safety
man from getting a chance to brm g
back a punt iota 'rodng territory
Homecoming at New Dommion
wu a hectic time. Hot els were

"An d 3 megaplwne and t he most
bcan;_ifttl hanrls I've ever seen on a
ma n
"And f suppose all the girls were
m ad about the sap."
Storm signa ls fle w in her eye~.
"1A'hy not? You tlnnk a man
can't be artistic an d ~tJll he a manP
He m us t play football and wo1k in
a stee l ~til an d be rnd e, 1 sup..
pose?"
"He probably agree~ with ever".

thing v.ou say."
•·
''He g1ves a woma n credit for be"
mg able to tlunk a nd. does n't feel
that he must treat ,h r~ hKc a 1l11ld
to sat1sfy hi.s damned cor:.:.'e-it....
"Quit swearing.'"

crowded and tickeu for the mode!t
"I'll sw ear. I 'll $moke. I'll drin~
ActivJt:r Committe I!?'"
t&lt;J11 take care of that. All right, St! ~ting capacity of the make!hift - and [ do; \Vhat ' do yo u th ink ol
JM)W wbere ,are your entrants for woqdeD stadium were alway1 at a that, &gt;·au damned prude?"
.
('fiJ n~ Cou1muM)
premium. \ Ql~-drra'd • :w~.._ Ct\tiin" ·
1M Rou1e _Gallery?"

ht

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think tltnl :1 two-fic.ted ft•llm\
ltt. • :!w ,fPt! jar·l\ iu lht' pictu'rc wnnl1l
'&lt;l, •· lti - t~rl1w t o --.!ro11:.:. 'llolut ~n.
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P . \\ :-~n f ... In, cigan· H e~ mild nnd
, · \\ h; I" ]'wkc. CIH'--.Lcrrield ~&lt;..
'l )!,]•ll ··'· fl,w !o;n"t

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smoke th:1t' s
fLT '"' ino,il'id or uuything li..ke
mean o

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reverse.

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rcllo\'.. ::; as well as anyone else.! :r ,IJld wntueJJ-want a cigarette that's
~ J . . . (IIW 1hJt satisli es-and that's
L ,l•·rfirld . •
\\ I' j,,.Ji•·v•) tltat every oinoker is look..
· ,~ f01 u ( i!-':&lt;~r, •tte wjthl)ut any~· bite"
l lt lt ·· nui~~ .~mJ a ,•ig~1rctte that hnsa
.
w,; t .~:-:ole- and that'~ Chesterfield•
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/1, \'l'rfu•ltl· Hmlw Program,.
r1; ~\ "' t'X~'&lt;'pt Sun.l ny, Cohunhia
t'o,t ~ L-lo-C(•Ubf

,Vd! DER

Nt l wut k.

ean be no dolnbt a.bout your

Ltlisure wotk.

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be independent, and at a week-end
party ignores Iter. Late at night,

in tht! watei. Furlou,, she sl&amp;ps' liim.
Tom trie11 to start an argument, but
Ted calls him a snob and leaves,
with Barb Watching from a window
In the fall. New DomJnion plays 1t1
AI"St game against the Navy. Mac~
is _Pleased wlth Ted. Wealthy Jimmy Pidgin offers to ah;ue his room
wtth Tt!d, he to pay expen11es in re·
him for Ted's help in hia studies.

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rus! beiq tborourhiJ cleaped.

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• ~ ~ po ou .all

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u,r.

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$42·50

the~

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t Jl

Only

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t:" !tt

one that

With a G [ C~aner on the job

old cleaner

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and easy to r ulde over the floor.

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tf'h the dirt .

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a G E. Deluxe (

11 1 i, l'J tu sua l pt . . tUt i! ~how~ bt• \tJ]II'd tonvtds
l fl~ .i)!l\ tl!\' 1 Ft01, t o h 'tr" \ a' tht• I!IR.I of
lJ r~ytn hutl J~!!l forme1 , ,f! .. •,d&lt; 11 t ~w1lu·am
1·
Ce.mp. who arc
clwt ge d Whh the murd1•1 ., ,_ A1t h L'r !I !&lt;.~JIIdt !t , II.Jew Jersey youth who
v.a ~ ' l t \'1117 .1 t t' 1m at th .-. r artt ]~
\\ tll mm Hnbe 1·ts, uue u! the ro nv1cts
w llll 'I a~ .11 ~nnb{-' &lt;~Jll \\ hc1t ,f ,tl llr f, 11 mt t hl"' d, nt~ ' ~H tllicd tha the
)'O l!:lt lo::s ~ trtrl p~; U nnl-. u J liTI•l I • ltr ,t 111 the " ~ wt-nt.-Uux" Y.ber~ be \\lUI
11Un&lt;.J ~ tran,d e d.

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Uere'~&gt;~ yuur oppo-;t;"nit:lto own

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qt•~.:ct ;,.
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$ 1[lfl0 loL 11'ud1 \ 1,,&lt;.. 1IHll'"''l nt·
wo.'l 111 :&gt; ... unt f•, 1 a, 111e \V('(i, v 1
~ Jmn State Pan
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t- ·&lt;~•o~ ,1
Dllr Mr IIJh'l
'111 \~~ ,., 11 rtl Hu•tttnflton
l .., J

Jl. 11 5~:&lt; lion11(\ u ,,_

the time to buy
that new
G. E. Cleaner
$2.50 Down
$2.50 per mo.

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l.tmk 'u•n-..r ~patents nPli: L&amp;n&amp;s.Hl•
llnd ~he fmal ttecwmn "lut· ut:J..
Mt ttlHI M !&gt; J&lt;tmcs SW\'t·!l·
H y::.c!l or !.h e Ghu1d1 o t"hu.H :\'1
•Htt 1 t1 t'-a!.hlhlln J:::nllv ·.·•u1VIvi enne MlddiLt&lt;Jn ul Ll11 1~1e!&lt;;•
'll,
S u t'Chv
Jwld at th!:' \V p
h! rJa l t
Chwtll
\ 1,
1,J 1r 1• 1 ;; , 1c 11;, homt' n•~t· K •,gl
P l' llJJnS ul th&lt;: H.lt)!I-&gt;L CIH,t1.:1l DC
_ _ .,~~--Fa:uk Bh1 ~ kstot 1f' ,1 r !J,• .dr.~ 1 \ 1
!!-\. \ 1 ~o\R ii O\\ i:::::i( \ 1, .,_
E lhurth e:l~h )t\\1 t!Ollt'.clol. ,,,
1:otllll .St&lt;./t of l\11,uilt pOJ' tu l n·Why eve ryone :r;huu ld vok ~.n
A large number oJ you n (! 11f'on t
JU:Jtf'd l.n \ 1lsti Nellli' H a n~nt
c.
'ftere ptesc nt fut ~~.( 1H('• 1.!~, II I l t"t~ H· ll(!lt' m• 1(!\\
'ol&lt; ' •
1 CC.&lt;HhJ 't'o 1 m~ Pt&gt;opl•· ~ '•In • 1.:, , ,
Ulllul' ll qhl
S!l lmrla,
,., • • ·
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1 be held Tuesda,y u, ~'"' ~ 11 .~,
• t'\ :J 10 111 en lth. u;, 'l
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,s
cr:ll!lP •1::1., sld(• · J \\1l~!:'rl•~ •
wlllbeserl'cda t tiiP M,lll.v•l
rr~t ' 'llk{:;.th c C tl1:h'."''···:
by th~ progra m at 1 p M
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.\ft .. Frt.nk H'll • lt 1 id 1 iJ '

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11.

Young and ambitious Ted W ynne
l'ealiz:s he cannot ask the wealtHy
.Harb Roth to marry a mill hand, so
he leaves his position in the Bellport
•tee! mill and work a llis way through
Old Domiruon college. He shows
pronuse in football and Barney
Milck, the coach, takes an interest in
•h1m. '!'om Stone, star playu and
Ted's ri_val for B11rb's affectiona, h11
antagomstic towards b1m. Ted, however, IS admired by the other studenu. During vacation he toils in
the null tO earn hia twtion and prepare for the faD football sea1on,
Barb breaks an appointment with
'Ted and goes wtth 'l'om to a dance.
~ed takes Roulie Downs, whom
Barb d1slikes Ted t gno1es Barb
and plans to show Barb he, too, can

over

f~~t'tl111~ :w•

e

Bn.pU!t Ch lii"Ci.
&lt;=6 tlne p l a~ie~ d1•pkt nr, t111
tlttlOns ol a ~u ll/)J m ... t• w

1-\'Al!ACE.•~

takes her

in •I*"

I

GR~AT FOOT BALL ROMANCE

*;

Pomero~
•ever~! yel!l'i apd

[Y411 1 1, r IH'IJ
Doll
Ru..'il-ol'''
lopllll
W!' K Nu
nen
from
lQ jVUIIl; pt:oph: a WJ.t If Lht.•Jr &gt;tlld.l•· I
'
tl. vh.o un1nrlh~e tm n(jU&lt;'t
Hr v W T Po.ck·'l ,,r sit:.
&lt;!oCII'l«l•
••·
•'"
l«l:OoPh
,.,.,,,,1 '·" .bu o 1 7tnw'

By FRANCIS WALLACE

trenched on salaries and employees just as every other
~uelne~ bas done during the past few yean. /
While all municipalities affected in any. way in
by ' !)is rulillJ, are making an out~ry,,, it .. riiij)jt ,
for ~· to look at the situation from a loc11! vjewjloint.
us copsider iust what Pomeroy is PaYilllr 'l!la we pre:~~~alid&lt;Jieport is in the same boat. By the ~ecision reu·''
a few days ago, Columbus is supposed to los\! her
centra~~ and be placed on a 55 cent on,, ,bq$:Pomeroy
mast lnllta~ces for the pust two ye&amp;I'!J, bY virt~~
tile laat tr~nchi•e granted to the Gas Comp~ny
·
"' '•»~ been puylni even more than 65 cents al)d possibly
contlnqe so to do until a new franchise Ia nesotlale&lt;i.
While the ~at rate does not "figure'" more than that
~~~e aver~&gt;ge consumer whose bills are less thap $8.0p
JI•Yinlf j~st 11bout 55 cents while those ~bove that
of Mllrse, &amp;n~Ubl't ~he more liM ~~~Y. bJI"!l the I~
u
0
tltoQI'811~)
It c~ts 'tee~ use of the fact that tM ~f!d 500 ·au·~~y~· n;~~~E~M~v;a•:~",~!~!'~hc:~~~~l:~!!, E,.':.
cpst $~ .00 willie the balance is only qne·fo~rth as ~
charges of
'!Jl.• ,r·lt''" :~'!M~IP~r w~o "'''
epb{t ':ot··· "'
killedLa~
'. :li!''.,'!.J~t th~.,~ 9.f 68.6 pents
thoq:
wounded
•

&lt;do: ~;,II~! uf 'Nlilllk -

f1,7J
r ,,

ever wal because their leases are no higher now than
• me~l:r and it is a virtual certainty that they have re-

',

~~1tt.. 01 .. 1 tlll!

'!fh!UJ .

wns bemg played .:..t Y. c " ~ 1ld
::,mnt• person drove au
. 11t. Jn1 C.hl1t'
ltCltl!i.~ th-e lawn to Thbd
.·.v ~·:-~ m:
and then continued up t•h' sldt&gt;'HI.lk
Lo Lh e
lOtllrsectlon
Qt L J u ~.:&lt;• 'n
Mtf' 1 l wherp the cur en~e:"t.:d the
strel't
Offlcnt.lso1th-t! ::.choolhll\'e
prnhlblted cars from l!nt.e •ttl!{ the
ill\.\.n In front or th.e
.~lgh "'~; 100 1
h ml d!ng and one membet
ll lh t&gt;
l•JCal Board of Education I'D.&gt; "H' Jcatrd that others doing the s;un t&gt; , 11
lht: fULU!e ma\.' l""e &gt;• oc ,'i. l&gt; ,,· ,nR ev an d
Ml ~&gt; 1-' (" K lP.Lf:ll
' 1 h
'"'-' ' " ·' ~
Clara. Mae Hamll ~on Uu\'l D»J ,
ll·• ~ arges
M
,
Le:[ ~n';t P l ud!p~ nu•,
•
•
1 ug ate H~tcnt.h-'0 Li ltUihL
Dl &gt;.I ,
UNJON MEETING
tn(etJng oJ ' hE B Y P lt ~. •l •rr.,~
A Union Meeting of the Young a t tht• Oulhpo l.~ .H(•I bt C11 t•
P1.•uple ~;; Societies Qf Lhc fo111 if'l n '
h,eld In P "f'lla! nt1 on ,,) J !111. ~ •• ,
ChU!Cl1t-!S WQ~, h eld Suolday E:Velll:Jt(
Conventwn fur t hr l:la p :·~~ ~ l' ,,.~,
ut 5 30 o clock at the Fhst. Ba(J~Js t People's Umon to b1· !w id ,,. ·h •

1§•' 1111

&gt;I'

Ttlf'

church

MAY BE PROSECUTED

haf&gt; been

.

1

1.' o-VJRGINIA QREGG-Ph 1111 f!

AUTOMOBILE DRIVER

•

t 'N·ews

:====~~~;:~;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~====~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~HB~~n.~tL~T~TR~lB~O:Nt:~~~::~~·~'~JB~I=~~·~========~==~
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~s
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wea t Box " case
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JH[1HIO ·CO~l SllUATI~N ~jt~~[!N BY ~~i§;S@ Ig;;£:~=~ ~·-·

(n.,A.Utf 1~P

fRANK J• B[N Uhr'ft,
[.fl . ~~

AQVJltTJ$1Nf:O

S' TJOtf

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~~.~~m~
;.:1'\ f.IJ ~~~~"'lftto ":!;i!;,l~iF
'
tOnnaae. w ~boUt •lv'nr ~~ &amp;nd thtap ~n;t~ ac
•

••

Uou to oqr o4vonlq&lt;l q1 O!lr ZIAo
Ml&gt;~r 'futO ~llrlbu
I( lila
1tun.l martetl, Ob.lo lhOU1d. 1oM J&amp;a JI'Efer' cent ~ tcit 'Iht oa
' · 6h01'e of Ill• lou or nr.tiQ!l'' pro· , II&gt;• )l&gt;Cliii{O In llle dlolonl ,.. ct

11J I

• _ _ ____.:·___

·
Any statement upon indll4t:.ria.l , S,81!o1,848 t.ons. In 1931 produc;Ucm dOOtlQti wh.leh 111 13 per oenJ.. Bu.\ eeaJ. In tbe pr'oth.actr~ ol 'lKtrio
ciovelopment Is bound \P oonto!n lin til... eountleo hall a......... "' &lt;IIIIo bH .,,. 61 pet - · " - · P&lt;--lt . m~ .. Iii 111103 ' tn
¥bWa~lve d 8 t a and "l.al.Lst.l(;t. 11.8B9,410 toW!.: Jtockl~ ll41.a&amp; ton~ pared wlth their 1930 )onnut. Tbl: PQupOJ Qf' Coat to produce one kUo- 1
Me!as 0&lt;1~21 tono, ~ etll,llf&gt; lloc- v.u.. hu eDtllirecf f oUll hi ~our. Ill ltlO 11 roq_l!lred
B~h are lnva.rtably dlmeult to Iol· j tont. In other ' words total praduc- treat-or loU Ulan U\t perc:enl ot ~ pounda and 1n 1n9 1t 01\JY NQ\I.If'f4
low, but 1 hope that I can gl\!e j tion In tlleeie tour cqWlt.lt&amp; 1n 19~. entire st.a't i. O~t= t 1t. 11 liJ RRUDJ2a, I ~tcrQII pf 4T per
10¥ a "'r!~l P,lcLW.'e ot the CCRI WBl! 13,&amp;fi1,11U, in 193(1 It had drop~ [ loliCal we 1b0uld.
Sn fGQ• oen~ lp ~l rJQUJnl~~t$ in .~
JiicluatrJal
dJtiorl In ~neral otM ped to 4~fH8,1lD ln the tour coun- 1n~e in eqt31 rat~D · ~.
. _ . , ·~·T'Ywl AI tlfC~h1 iD tbD Jut.
ttu. ~ ··10 ' Mhig thla point more 1 decreaae 01.11' tQilnl\i41 'Ja,t ·~ 10 )'elf Rtri04.
Ulat cf hlo In PlfUCtilar.
·' In t,he. early devol6pment •of tb.B I clearly t:: the rca&lt;tu· the ftiUret would have bDtn 3I~,O(I(f ~ 1' J O~t ln~JI~I lp the ••den~ ~
Obto coal ftelda the
PJ.'l:Judlcf: &amp;bow th&amp;t t.he totaJ production or ot the e:aUqlo.ted. ~ at 1~,61)0,- lRe ot a ! bi.ve ~ atiYie IQ,. rau,.
i\PbU5t coal wu ao ~1·~~ that the the tour ..oaun.t1ea 1n 1980 WIHI 1.- I 000 ~~. We ~ore have Jolt. rJ;~ .tttw,aportaUon. RaUrO&amp;d lo14$1t:lature, In 1810, otre1~4 a tc- 861.194. ton'~S. lel.s i:tum t.l1e produc ~ 115.000,000 tona o~r and ~ the , l;lC.ID()tlve' eomume abbut 1, 20 1 PP' 1
blte at tbe rent to any of tne salt. U0h ot AthenS' oounty In 1920.
propol'tlonate loBI or the li•b.
i oe~Jt pt the ~ona· 00&amp;1 output.

Ull l

I

fbe ld laklf will 1Jo&lt;IIJ

workl18 ot the stato who would JnV'Qcluee the use ot .coal. In 1&amp;18
\tlla preJucHce was so fiLr overcomt'
that out o( the ~wenty six salt
mintl on the Mli.t~lw;um river the
Dl&amp;jorlty were ustns COlli.
The Ohio canal wa6 ocuwleteU
to liasaUon in 18M, and &amp;hJpm&lt;..'llts

...... JOU

&amp;I tteairr:d. 10 tba.' c.he 'opJ •1or
rour IK1 ta t:repp.rtl2 lD such &amp;
manner e~ to urtna \he rreatMI.
result. to · ou

~pUbJil.hen wUI bf

rt..til'OM•b..,

nok'!u
adV&lt;!!M.I.aemtn' wW~takerJ r~ 1 -----...,.-~~--~ .
than a m!ntmum charvf! o, •
·
·
•.o:&gt;~' ·
• "
t D cents for eadl :naer 1 WANTED-Load to lloul to Cleve- !
tlon .

for
S •le, Mi~
~:_;______

.

land. Tenn. oz: , polnta between. i

'

Zert!'le Tra"'ter, Phone 4!H- X. ,

Inqu!" Mn.

port.

wm

100-10·3(

I-==

FOR BALE-Mans Ovl"rccat and
ladles sllpon swea.tel'. Bargain.
Ste!ft, Middle·

10·6-3t

.

I

.

I'

I
Gron
10-1·at I

throat. ~ r~u&gt;...

1

and .;ara,se. nea.r Booch

·

........ dJe "OOUDter-lrritml"

YOU POOl&gt; , Cl-ll L' O~t=ll·
HOw Yt&gt;U "'U'ST 1-lA\/E
SUFFEI21il) · LOST

_

!
I

I

I
I

•

I

•

I

For OOLDS, OOUGBS -·-.;--;- ;.·...; ,.~~~-;;;;;~

FOR RENT- HOUI!f 6 roonl3, 0;.1th

cell\~tery. Ca.ll~~1:R. _

I

r·

mallea~cli:JU...,.PPlyM ....

for Rent-

t:on• 41 112:0: thus II\ tha.t seven
yefJ' P.trlod there wu a ZD per cent.

p

i

·

s-

in 1M WOUld do t91 wort ot 101) 1

1

1 ,------------

Vl!

the

In Cltveland-Younptown and or must get a common de~;~~ominatol'. tmpro,ement. In the etllctent. use of 1·
the other lnduatrW northern Ohio I A&amp; previously stated, co&amp;1 wu kina ra.ilti?,IJl t~l.
wtre SOon att.erwa.rds ma.de to cities. These custofners were soutb· In eneJ'8'y production tor a ll'f&amp;t Lllewi.ae tbete have been eft't· 1
Cleveland from the Tuscare:we.&amp; l ~~ n Ohu:-.·s by virtue of many years ma!lY y-!IU'II. It a4U '!' tll_e chief 1 clencfea 1.n ,&amp;he manufac•urtng In• •
valley In ltl4ft the Ohio camol of bus~esa ~relat.iolll!hip, the ex· 10urce ot ' ene~. but ,Sevtlopments, dustrlee, 22 per cent, the ateei In·
wu finlahed to Youngstown. The , ceDent quaUty of tn.e coal llnd \most especially 1n the 1aat d~e. : duetry, u per rent and the domeaccnstruc'Ucn ol the Oh.lo canal lrt 1 the ,eograpb1cal location. These bave shorn him of some of hll pres~ i tlc market. The a.tnount of savtnr
thf year ct 1832, fron1 C?IP- ;l-.. ~ ' marke~ by all rules or good buJ:;i. I ttge. Water power has been or such . tn tbe domestJe conawript.ton ot c.oe.l
outlet to ncs:s belona to thoae coal mhlllll I Bli&amp;hL efl'ect u to be considered · per unit of energy produced Is 1
1 N l8io ·ue
i~ e 1n~ f.t. lllV~ ~1
Ucy c:cnununiUes now. Prom 1&amp;80 to I ntgllble here; but is now responsible , u:•ther ind~iermlnable, yet with tn- 1
~0 ~ ~iE. ~e c~l ~s ~~in~d Ulao the•JXlPUiation ot the Unlt..cd 1 tGr 6 pel· cent of t~e total energy . creased knowledge upon the Clorrect I
l r
Sts-tes has doubled. Tho torepmt produced. on and gas are factors ot ~lrlqa o1 00111, improvement In
tor domestic purposes and for the cf this perlod was a t.lmc Krt!tl.t U'l Immense importance. ln 1889 cool heatJny , eq"'pment and the mare
usc of nelghborlng blacksmiths.
railroad bulldllliJ. This w yeur Jl't!r- produced 9:1 per cent ot th~ energy 1recont adv~nt ot mechanlcol stot· ;
•
.
•
.
•
Tile flrllt yearly coaJ producti~ loci hM
r beet1 ual · 111 1 1ccnswned that year and oil a.nd KM 1 ers, there 15 bcund to l::e a telling
H~ aM . . . . of tla. pltl alan wlo will perfona wbea tile
State at Cambrada11 •nd Com ell meeb Pr1nceton 1n Oie1r anau•l batfte et
n ::col"d that we havt&gt; tor Ohto "Is
neve
~ ea
!)• pl'Qduced 8 ptl' cent. In 1929 coal ' bnprcvement In the use of
foolftaU...,... ..b full,. aadn
th• Satarda,. W"itb nTeral haportant Princeton. Piu "P ''~'' the Cadell ia)l year 26-0 ant.l fi1ure1 tn do like·
1
1838 wh~ lil}oWs that Ohio in duM&amp;! dcveliJpment. Power re: -~ prcduced 66.3 per cent of the enem 1' Not oniJ' have we Ill Oh1coa~ken
cl...o•ltotw-. .ajor team1, Arfur tak~ aa Pittahurrh at Weaf: Point, ":'i•e in Saturday'• •en ion. Dartmouth and U. oi P. ll'leet foW" tbe fint
0 t
that year tnfued 1Ut,96a tons of qu~mentl have lncrea.&amp;ed beyond consumed that year and oll and ~raa i. defeat alon
ith th
t 1 'l~•Mt. aatl Peaa meet
at Pbil~lpb.ia, HanaN cl..&amp;.. wltb P•a• tune •• do Harvard and Peoa Stete. I _ : . ': t~ l _ t I
_ ~ ._
pro 'frhe tnost radieaJ ))tophecies.
t
~·~~..
g w _
e
rea o
. ___ · - __ ________ _
.. • 1·h" 1 u· Win"' year .
341
oo 1 c c o e
Vie .
•
1
• ~r ,cen ·
•
,
..w: nawon In our iilab1ltty to Mm- largely trom the mlnlng Industry.
mountable.
couraaeous, de!lnJte
sh
duoed 12ft.OOO tom or ooe.l. Our proThe rapid increase ot COQI as
Since lU$ .there have been stu~ pete with other eneraY prod.U~r~
Thltl ill typical ot many mining 1and Intelligent ana.Iyais and action t(~l!gent and couragrous leader ip ; cesa, Instead or uatca t.he deatlnles
duct.ton, &lt;rf coal continued to h1- shown by Ute bUJ'e6.u of mines. pendous tncrea11 es ~ plpe. linea ~n coal, accepted our share or communltiea In the entire state . 'will wm for the industry here with li leaderShip whl ~h st.andll out In of ~hooe depending on' the ind\18·
crease yearly, and by the yel.r ot frcm 1871 to 1918 a period of 41 from gu nelda over thoU58lldll otl ttmnage IJ$18-because of the hlaher The value of all that this rep 1·e- Its great resource11 that which rtght· tht front pointing the wa:y to sue~ !I try. in a pollt1cal racket'
1880 the production had incl'ea.s&amp;ed years, lnqlca.ted. producUon of en· miles tp lndQStrial centere. 5000 ettlclent ~ of coal, and shoulder- cents In South Ea.lltern Ohio rests ly belongs to lt.
to 8,(108.596 tons. Production con- ergy as convert.ed to B. T. U.'s in- mU eot saa Unea were •laid tn nSI.I ed our Pt'OJJOrtlonate !!hare Of Joss upon whether or not the Industry
1 do not presume to dictate the
- --tlnued to lncrearee year after yea r creased rrmh 3000 t.r1llloJls to 1.7.- Th1&amp; too has greatly artected our due to t.luil deJ)r8881on a.nd 1t8 con- can be kept lnt&amp;ct, can be made solution.
I
do most earnestly
unUl it l'f:lacheh it&amp; peak In .i.9::l0- 000 trlllioM, or a nine tvld ln- Ohio markeLB. Th~ poeetble re-, stquent decrease In the ue of f~lf supportu:tg and, perhaps, again urge dlsznrdlng antagonistic pre·
45,878,191 tons. Since then produc· crease. This. doubled 1ncrpa.5,.)
plat"ement of coni by Juet one or 1coal, but. we have ai/JO lost In our be made to prosper. It the exist· ·Judices ro ~ concerted action solely
Uon ha.s, in generaol, declined un- due lal'll'eiY to the proxlml~_y or the the large gus lines lnto a a-reat ln •. own natural markets In oompetl· lng fad.s a!'e faced separately and \based on tact.
The only question
tn la&amp;t year the estltnated produc- Ohio coa.l ftelds to their natural dUlltrlal city is m&amp;ny ·million tons tion Wlt.h producers of coal who e.re honestly, the alarming trend which 1 now weighed tn
the balance Is
t.lcn wu only :.;160""'.tJO tons. Th e markets and tn no little measure to 1 annually,
·
•
j much farther trom. the markets I I have Indicated can be turned wh{ther or not this Will be done in
Joweet tonnage since 1901 not in- the development and growth of ttle
we wonder aL this sudden and ' t.han we are. In other warda. ~e !·into a happier condition. The time.
eluding the &amp;trike yurs ot 1914- rich fields ot tl1ls vaJley. The enormow tncreue 111 natural sas en · haY'! not even held our own rela.. problem Is not one at C1vil strife
1 am truswng that before May 11.
192'Hl8. At the rate ot decllnc !roril nation's and the sl;a.te's coal pro- croachmenL as an eneriY producer. 1t.lvt: pqsltlon, but have sunk farther between the employer and employe 1933 there will be 8 mutual rela.1930 to 1931. Ohio cell8e8 as a coal ductlon dev!l?Jlmenti have been As coal men we 1ue concerned that 1 ~m the seneral _ dep~ion of the It is not a question of barter be- uonship between Uul owners and
producing state In 1942.
the natural resultl or the' grea.t,. ,lu- patural lllll is lncreaalnJ•&amp;t rates., coal Industry haa aunk.
tween these two forces as to Lhe mine workers ot Ohio that this
In 1920 Athena ccuut.,y produced (ju~trml develOpment and the pop- rucen~ly 25 per cent , 1.r eater than I Our chhlf competitors Kentucky :11hare eiOOh shall receive It is a more problem may be solved without the
6,501,013 tons;,, ·HOcking, . 2,198,9itll 1ulatlon lnel'ea.se w~e coal was . each precedin&amp; ~·r, 'fh:e , . ~ua~ :and West Vlrstnla have trained in ·momellto\18 problem than that. It 1 esortlnlf Lo another coal 11 trlke,
tons, Mel.g&amp; 1,509;&amp;37 tons. 6Perry 1king.
~re these. First, pipes of ~ ·tst , 1coal produ~t.lon each ~ear abOve ihe con(e~ns whether or not there shall which have p"'ved very disastrous
- · · ____...,.
·, _
_
•
~ - - · · ----·
1917 Production and ohiq has lost. be anythtnr to share.
our mining tndustcy in Ohio. our
( The peroentaaea o! production
The stron1hoid6 or the Ohio coal • Btate has newr been able to reot the stat.es of Penll£,Ylvanla, West industry have been Invaded by out !gain all of her tonnage that n lost 1
VIrginia, Kentucky and Ohio, com· side competltiOll. The two fo rces when engaged in a.n tnduatrial con·
pared with hte nat.lcm•s Pl'oduction must. it success Is to be had. joln , fllcL. We mlll!t mutuaUy find a
cf 100 per cent each year. Pennsyl- Into one to rorge &amp;head toward Lhc 1method to solve ow- .vexing prob~
vanla 11lnce 19U has dropped soal of holding our coa l mdusi.ry llems wllhout reBOrting to this
" - - - - - - - - -. By HARDIN BURNLEY
from 31.2 per oenL to 25.'1 per tntact and on 1.o the successful costly procedure. U thci""e o:-e Cf.'r - ,
cent West Virginia has INCR'EASEO maintenance or the Industry which tain element!! that bar the way t.o '
ED rrom IG.7 to 28.4 per cent, our natwal conditions and loeat.lon a mutua.! Wlderstanding between
Wll.. t.'HE
KENTUCKY HAS INCREA8ED warrant. , Rarely, If eve :·, docs a miner and mine owner. for the wei·
FROM B.l tQ 10.5 and OHIO basi round principle f::.!J when t.he fare of the industry anrl those deWIN 13ACK
dropped trom 7.3 to 4.3 per cent.
and understood pendrnt, upcn It for a livelihood , :
1 facts 11re studied
There
ha
sbeen
illVClited
:.n
souLh.
!
JLnd
when
all
the
forces
unlt.c to they should be elimma~ed from the ·
HIS
castf!m Ohto ntUllons of dollars make the.t principle succelisful. l'hiB fl'cene.
in mining PfOper:tr and 1mmen.se problem Is a perplexing one l\nd
The Ohio Industry today. as nev'Tti!.E..
investmenta In homes and public appareuLly a.n unsurmountable one. cr berwe demands from both the
lmp ~avem8n_ta that .tu.,ve resuit.ed • But only apparently It Is lnsur· mine owner~ a.nd the mmers. In~
- -·---..-...........
- - - - - --

onlY rnr oo-. lnoor:-ed 'nsertloD 1
of anv liidverti&amp;eWetH.. Erroul ln 1
a.dverl1M'!'IJfDk 1hould be ~--porLed
immecUateiJ.
.Vt;,ted-

twrn ~-

'nl~ JlUctene'- In coal UNd bert, j
accordbll to the bureau of m.lnetl, i
have been ttucb that. 15 tom ot 0Q11'1

·
First 1 l!h&amp;ll endeayor tp lho'f
~s 1 have previously shown that
c&amp;~se• ot the n.atlon'a lou of its
this ten·Ltory was one or the !lnt 93 per cent. I have ahown. fr.om t.Jte
~o:a shipperu to the IR'eA.t indut.- bureau or- m.lne ~...,._, 'tl)e ~I'IY
rhl cities ~ Ohlo, l'nd tbe indus- 1 In trUlioiUI o'f B. T. '0'.'1. Wl.,\eA usw
try arew Wlth the steel tndustrv t in&amp; d111erent sources pt e.qMo, we

~

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AT ·
""Y HAI&lt;ID":.·

1.14 THE

,&lt;!&gt;L L

End of Old

I

LOOt!:

THEY~/2.6

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ROUGH

VoiOOO"i&gt;

POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT
Will 11.ppreclate ,our vote and b~­
tluencc for omce of Probate Judge
In the corning November election.
Dr. S, A. McCullough.

I

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iIN OUR OF:n~E

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.OF '~cl(.,r..~
-i-01..1&gt;: '100

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----

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:fionolJS

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CHMELING·

.flavor

~

\WITH . ~C.:~I'.1P.I'?N . .IAC~
. .,... .

FoR f'r,'fll'5 SM&lt;'E QUIT OFFE'RIN6

.'

ME 1"001&gt; Wtll!l'l

To

~DIJCE

tl'\ 'IN)\1{4
.
.

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Be THRIFTY...

,.
...
.

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THE Ulll'ICH GUIKPE

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-

All
ru4•1s •rt cr••te.l
rlttrlml i11 PeriJ 1111J tllt ,ttU1r111 arl
matlt ;, Nft» Yarl.

is only good food that has
been improperly handled?
In this day of electtic re·
frigera.tion, there)s little ~x­
cuse for food waste. W1th
40 per cent of you• income
spent on food, the savings
.
effected by its proper preservarwn
represent the difference between economy and extravagance.
.
Buying perishable food at q~anpry
prices, coupled w1th the ehmmatton
of food sppilage by the faithful "below
'0 degrees" temperature of an electric
refrigerator, will pay the cost of the
refrigerator within two years.
Why not get statted on yoNr rwo
yc111i of LU1Cury t~at is real thrift pe·
c~usO\jl pays for itself as 1t soesl The

to-f) 4'
.-

-, .......'

This little model would make auy •
schoolgirl happy.
I

It's carried out In a novelty plaided • ~...!,_,.;::.
10 modish this season,
;

woolen

Tl" aoporato ••;mpe m•y be of
'1i11g ma.terlal c.;r of plain WQOien.

:

I

AND UNCLE

JQHt'J'

!!,~:~~:_~~::.~:_::~~::._!,!~,:!.:,

1hl·r delightful material&amp; lll'C wool
ur, novelty rayons, woolen tweed
mixtures, linen and cotton tweeds.
1

'1

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Styli Ntf. 1155 .,., ,,' •• , ...

,;., 6 ,. ll. It ;, r••'7l•"
Ji11AI 4ditJtrJ.

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Cf'l,

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· i IC'Owc.tu.ssM&amp;w

i,.,..~
. j

H.ow to ,Cht 7'/lq( l!qttenu ;

01~11 (;p ti.~PI

to li'Ashl'q" Jur411~ ·

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. /3UIZ~':f'f 10·10

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or co;o) '
carefUII~

Write
•nd
PI• nJ• '~"' "~"'' •nd Ju!l ad·
~rc•t, tfit a\f.111b(r of ita' ,.~tern an~

,.

0 19~!: K;n,q f(IIV.ft 'S•·i!dicare, 101:.,·
Greu BfilAi• r.:&amp;Jll\ ltsetft4

..'

••

AX SCRMEIJNG has
cldod

·A•. u~•~ ~
•lO

the •••• J01.1 'w~tJt.
.
A~4r~~· Your letter In the · fo!lowo
lot• f~Y~"''"
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· ·-· ~ ~· · · • · · ··· ·· ······ · ·· · ·········· · ·· ·

manufacturer of a product capable
of an•wering a need in auch a manner af Jo
produce greater comfort, convenience, free·
dom from labor or diseaae, or one that "d•
to the joys cf livina, haa a diatinct o~U!(a·
tion to make •that product kn~wn to, till'
public. So lona aa hi' doea' not advertik,
he ia cheating the public a!Jd the~y ·
cheatina himaelf.
•

.

·~~IC

·. I

'·
,

.

.~

•'

Oklahoma

Th~

fCfriger~tOt tpat will fit fOUt ~QmO ,IS
i~ o~f shuwroarns. C!Jme and get tt!

dq"WII

.,

.. .. THAT under this cbanied order of
things, a manufactur.cr hu more than the
task of creating his producb phyaically•. He
must make them live in the public mind.
Thio mental property of public acceptance
ia crucial to succeaa today. ·Without it no
industry, company or prbduct can endure
th&lt;o eliminating proce,..ea going on.

ID

._.:.J:.:.,

•
DRIIS~

Waite, . ~·liawnee,

- F. G. Cramer, President of the CramerKra .. elt Company, of Milwaukee, Sayr.:

stop to reD atiz.eyouthateverspoiled
food

,... • i;".l,..,
•

By Edson R.

is wasted without proper refrigeration

l"h'

•

'

20% of the perishable food you purchase

~

\-··

'

Stop wasting food!

..

. . ' ' ·SHArc:KEY
I
' ---- - .. -

-~·

.

DID YOU EVER STOP TO

.··HIS. I&lt;AYo·. vrq'rbr.2Y
OVE,fc ' WAt.t&lt;ER EARNED
HIM A r&lt;ETUr&lt;tJ MAICH

ay Arnot

•

AIN'T IT THE TRUTH!

By EVA A. TINGEY

. ..

. ......

I

fY./Ultl

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I•CM'-fv"T~t&gt;

,K ltlll

Max and Jack Again in June

·;

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,...
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JH[1HIO ·CO~l SllUATI~N ~jt~~[!N BY ~~i§;S@ Ig;;£:~=~ ~·-·

(n.,A.Utf 1~P

fRANK J• B[N Uhr'ft,
[.fl . ~~

AQVJltTJ$1Nf:O

S' TJOtf

·

•

~~.~~m~
;.:1'\ f.IJ ~~~~"'lftto ":!;i!;,l~iF
'
tOnnaae. w ~boUt •lv'nr ~~ &amp;nd thtap ~n;t~ ac
•

••

Uou to oqr o4vonlq&lt;l q1 O!lr ZIAo
Ml&gt;~r 'futO ~llrlbu
I( lila
1tun.l martetl, Ob.lo lhOU1d. 1oM J&amp;a JI'Efer' cent ~ tcit 'Iht oa
' · 6h01'e of Ill• lou or nr.tiQ!l'' pro· , II&gt;• )l&gt;Cliii{O In llle dlolonl ,.. ct

11J I

• _ _ ____.:·___

·
Any statement upon indll4t:.ria.l , S,81!o1,848 t.ons. In 1931 produc;Ucm dOOtlQti wh.leh 111 13 per oenJ.. Bu.\ eeaJ. In tbe pr'oth.actr~ ol 'lKtrio
ciovelopment Is bound \P oonto!n lin til... eountleo hall a......... "' &lt;IIIIo bH .,,. 61 pet - · " - · P&lt;--lt . m~ .. Iii 111103 ' tn
¥bWa~lve d 8 t a and "l.al.Lst.l(;t. 11.8B9,410 toW!.: Jtockl~ ll41.a&amp; ton~ pared wlth their 1930 )onnut. Tbl: PQupOJ Qf' Coat to produce one kUo- 1
Me!as 0&lt;1~21 tono, ~ etll,llf&gt; lloc- v.u.. hu eDtllirecf f oUll hi ~our. Ill ltlO 11 roq_l!lred
B~h are lnva.rtably dlmeult to Iol· j tont. In other ' words total praduc- treat-or loU Ulan U\t perc:enl ot ~ pounda and 1n 1n9 1t 01\JY NQ\I.If'f4
low, but 1 hope that I can gl\!e j tion In tlleeie tour cqWlt.lt&amp; 1n 19~. entire st.a't i. O~t= t 1t. 11 liJ RRUDJ2a, I ~tcrQII pf 4T per
10¥ a "'r!~l P,lcLW.'e ot the CCRI WBl! 13,&amp;fi1,11U, in 193(1 It had drop~ [ loliCal we 1b0uld.
Sn fGQ• oen~ lp ~l rJQUJnl~~t$ in .~
JiicluatrJal
dJtiorl In ~neral otM ped to 4~fH8,1lD ln the tour coun- 1n~e in eqt31 rat~D · ~.
. _ . , ·~·T'Ywl AI tlfC~h1 iD tbD Jut.
ttu. ~ ··10 ' Mhig thla point more 1 decreaae 01.11' tQilnl\i41 'Ja,t ·~ 10 )'elf Rtri04.
Ulat cf hlo In PlfUCtilar.
·' In t,he. early devol6pment •of tb.B I clearly t:: the rca&lt;tu· the ftiUret would have bDtn 3I~,O(I(f ~ 1' J O~t ln~JI~I lp the ••den~ ~
Obto coal ftelda the
PJ.'l:Judlcf: &amp;bow th&amp;t t.he totaJ production or ot the e:aUqlo.ted. ~ at 1~,61)0,- lRe ot a ! bi.ve ~ atiYie IQ,. rau,.
i\PbU5t coal wu ao ~1·~~ that the the tour ..oaun.t1ea 1n 1980 WIHI 1.- I 000 ~~. We ~ore have Jolt. rJ;~ .tttw,aportaUon. RaUrO&amp;d lo14$1t:lature, In 1810, otre1~4 a tc- 861.194. ton'~S. lel.s i:tum t.l1e produc ~ 115.000,000 tona o~r and ~ the , l;lC.ID()tlve' eomume abbut 1, 20 1 PP' 1
blte at tbe rent to any of tne salt. U0h ot AthenS' oounty In 1920.
propol'tlonate loBI or the li•b.
i oe~Jt pt the ~ona· 00&amp;1 output.

Ull l

I

fbe ld laklf will 1Jo&lt;IIJ

workl18 ot the stato who would JnV'Qcluee the use ot .coal. In 1&amp;18
\tlla preJucHce was so fiLr overcomt'
that out o( the ~wenty six salt
mintl on the Mli.t~lw;um river the
Dl&amp;jorlty were ustns COlli.
The Ohio canal wa6 ocuwleteU
to liasaUon in 18M, and &amp;hJpm&lt;..'llts

...... JOU

&amp;I tteairr:d. 10 tba.' c.he 'opJ •1or
rour IK1 ta t:repp.rtl2 lD such &amp;
manner e~ to urtna \he rreatMI.
result. to · ou

~pUbJil.hen wUI bf

rt..til'OM•b..,

nok'!u
adV&lt;!!M.I.aemtn' wW~takerJ r~ 1 -----...,.-~~--~ .
than a m!ntmum charvf! o, •
·
·
•.o:&gt;~' ·
• "
t D cents for eadl :naer 1 WANTED-Load to lloul to Cleve- !
tlon .

for
S •le, Mi~
~:_;______

.

land. Tenn. oz: , polnta between. i

'

Zert!'le Tra"'ter, Phone 4!H- X. ,

Inqu!" Mn.

port.

wm

100-10·3(

I-==

FOR BALE-Mans Ovl"rccat and
ladles sllpon swea.tel'. Bargain.
Ste!ft, Middle·

10·6-3t

.

I

.

I'

I
Gron
10-1·at I

throat. ~ r~u&gt;...

1

and .;ara,se. nea.r Booch

·

........ dJe "OOUDter-lrritml"

YOU POOl&gt; , Cl-ll L' O~t=ll·
HOw Yt&gt;U "'U'ST 1-lA\/E
SUFFEI21il) · LOST

_

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For OOLDS, OOUGBS -·-.;--;- ;.·...; ,.~~~-;;;;;~

FOR RENT- HOUI!f 6 roonl3, 0;.1th

cell\~tery. Ca.ll~~1:R. _

I

r·

mallea~cli:JU...,.PPlyM ....

for Rent-

t:on• 41 112:0: thus II\ tha.t seven
yefJ' P.trlod there wu a ZD per cent.

p

i

·

s-

in 1M WOUld do t91 wort ot 101) 1

1

1 ,------------

Vl!

the

In Cltveland-Younptown and or must get a common de~;~~ominatol'. tmpro,ement. In the etllctent. use of 1·
the other lnduatrW northern Ohio I A&amp; previously stated, co&amp;1 wu kina ra.ilti?,IJl t~l.
wtre SOon att.erwa.rds ma.de to cities. These custofners were soutb· In eneJ'8'y production tor a ll'f&amp;t Lllewi.ae tbete have been eft't· 1
Cleveland from the Tuscare:we.&amp; l ~~ n Ohu:-.·s by virtue of many years ma!lY y-!IU'II. It a4U '!' tll_e chief 1 clencfea 1.n ,&amp;he manufac•urtng In• •
valley In ltl4ft the Ohio camol of bus~esa ~relat.iolll!hip, the ex· 10urce ot ' ene~. but ,Sevtlopments, dustrlee, 22 per cent, the ateei In·
wu finlahed to Youngstown. The , ceDent quaUty of tn.e coal llnd \most especially 1n the 1aat d~e. : duetry, u per rent and the domeaccnstruc'Ucn ol the Oh.lo canal lrt 1 the ,eograpb1cal location. These bave shorn him of some of hll pres~ i tlc market. The a.tnount of savtnr
thf year ct 1832, fron1 C?IP- ;l-.. ~ ' marke~ by all rules or good buJ:;i. I ttge. Water power has been or such . tn tbe domestJe conawript.ton ot c.oe.l
outlet to ncs:s belona to thoae coal mhlllll I Bli&amp;hL efl'ect u to be considered · per unit of energy produced Is 1
1 N l8io ·ue
i~ e 1n~ f.t. lllV~ ~1
Ucy c:cnununiUes now. Prom 1&amp;80 to I ntgllble here; but is now responsible , u:•ther ind~iermlnable, yet with tn- 1
~0 ~ ~iE. ~e c~l ~s ~~in~d Ulao the•JXlPUiation ot the Unlt..cd 1 tGr 6 pel· cent of t~e total energy . creased knowledge upon the Clorrect I
l r
Sts-tes has doubled. Tho torepmt produced. on and gas are factors ot ~lrlqa o1 00111, improvement In
tor domestic purposes and for the cf this perlod was a t.lmc Krt!tl.t U'l Immense importance. ln 1889 cool heatJny , eq"'pment and the mare
usc of nelghborlng blacksmiths.
railroad bulldllliJ. This w yeur Jl't!r- produced 9:1 per cent ot th~ energy 1recont adv~nt ot mechanlcol stot· ;
•
.
•
.
•
Tile flrllt yearly coaJ producti~ loci hM
r beet1 ual · 111 1 1ccnswned that year and oil a.nd KM 1 ers, there 15 bcund to l::e a telling
H~ aM . . . . of tla. pltl alan wlo will perfona wbea tile
State at Cambrada11 •nd Com ell meeb Pr1nceton 1n Oie1r anau•l batfte et
n ::col"d that we havt&gt; tor Ohto "Is
neve
~ ea
!)• pl'Qduced 8 ptl' cent. In 1929 coal ' bnprcvement In the use of
foolftaU...,... ..b full,. aadn
th• Satarda,. W"itb nTeral haportant Princeton. Piu "P ''~'' the Cadell ia)l year 26-0 ant.l fi1ure1 tn do like·
1
1838 wh~ lil}oWs that Ohio in duM&amp;! dcveliJpment. Power re: -~ prcduced 66.3 per cent of the enem 1' Not oniJ' have we Ill Oh1coa~ken
cl...o•ltotw-. .ajor team1, Arfur tak~ aa Pittahurrh at Weaf: Point, ":'i•e in Saturday'• •en ion. Dartmouth and U. oi P. ll'leet foW" tbe fint
0 t
that year tnfued 1Ut,96a tons of qu~mentl have lncrea.&amp;ed beyond consumed that year and oll and ~raa i. defeat alon
ith th
t 1 'l~•Mt. aatl Peaa meet
at Pbil~lpb.ia, HanaN cl..&amp;.. wltb P•a• tune •• do Harvard and Peoa Stete. I _ : . ': t~ l _ t I
_ ~ ._
pro 'frhe tnost radieaJ ))tophecies.
t
~·~~..
g w _
e
rea o
. ___ · - __ ________ _
.. • 1·h" 1 u· Win"' year .
341
oo 1 c c o e
Vie .
•
1
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•
,
..w: nawon In our iilab1ltty to Mm- largely trom the mlnlng Industry.
mountable.
couraaeous, de!lnJte
sh
duoed 12ft.OOO tom or ooe.l. Our proThe rapid increase ot COQI as
Since lU$ .there have been stu~ pete with other eneraY prod.U~r~
Thltl ill typical ot many mining 1and Intelligent ana.Iyais and action t(~l!gent and couragrous leader ip ; cesa, Instead or uatca t.he deatlnles
duct.ton, &lt;rf coal continued to h1- shown by Ute bUJ'e6.u of mines. pendous tncrea11 es ~ plpe. linea ~n coal, accepted our share or communltiea In the entire state . 'will wm for the industry here with li leaderShip whl ~h st.andll out In of ~hooe depending on' the ind\18·
crease yearly, and by the yel.r ot frcm 1871 to 1918 a period of 41 from gu nelda over thoU58lldll otl ttmnage IJ$18-because of the hlaher The value of all that this rep 1·e- Its great resource11 that which rtght· tht front pointing the wa:y to sue~ !I try. in a pollt1cal racket'
1880 the production had incl'ea.s&amp;ed years, lnqlca.ted. producUon of en· miles tp lndQStrial centere. 5000 ettlclent ~ of coal, and shoulder- cents In South Ea.lltern Ohio rests ly belongs to lt.
to 8,(108.596 tons. Production con- ergy as convert.ed to B. T. U.'s in- mU eot saa Unea were •laid tn nSI.I ed our Pt'OJJOrtlonate !!hare Of Joss upon whether or not the Industry
1 do not presume to dictate the
- --tlnued to lncrearee year after yea r creased rrmh 3000 t.r1llloJls to 1.7.- Th1&amp; too has greatly artected our due to t.luil deJ)r8881on a.nd 1t8 con- can be kept lnt&amp;ct, can be made solution.
I
do most earnestly
unUl it l'f:lacheh it&amp; peak In .i.9::l0- 000 trlllioM, or a nine tvld ln- Ohio markeLB. Th~ poeetble re-, stquent decrease In the ue of f~lf supportu:tg and, perhaps, again urge dlsznrdlng antagonistic pre·
45,878,191 tons. Since then produc· crease. This. doubled 1ncrpa.5,.)
plat"ement of coni by Juet one or 1coal, but. we have ai/JO lost In our be made to prosper. It the exist· ·Judices ro ~ concerted action solely
Uon ha.s, in generaol, declined un- due lal'll'eiY to the proxlml~_y or the the large gus lines lnto a a-reat ln •. own natural markets In oompetl· lng fad.s a!'e faced separately and \based on tact.
The only question
tn la&amp;t year the estltnated produc- Ohio coa.l ftelds to their natural dUlltrlal city is m&amp;ny ·million tons tion Wlt.h producers of coal who e.re honestly, the alarming trend which 1 now weighed tn
the balance Is
t.lcn wu only :.;160""'.tJO tons. Th e markets and tn no little measure to 1 annually,
·
•
j much farther trom. the markets I I have Indicated can be turned wh{ther or not this Will be done in
Joweet tonnage since 1901 not in- the development and growth of ttle
we wonder aL this sudden and ' t.han we are. In other warda. ~e !·into a happier condition. The time.
eluding the &amp;trike yurs ot 1914- rich fields ot tl1ls vaJley. The enormow tncreue 111 natural sas en · haY'! not even held our own rela.. problem Is not one at C1vil strife
1 am truswng that before May 11.
192'Hl8. At the rate ot decllnc !roril nation's and the sl;a.te's coal pro- croachmenL as an eneriY producer. 1t.lvt: pqsltlon, but have sunk farther between the employer and employe 1933 there will be 8 mutual rela.1930 to 1931. Ohio cell8e8 as a coal ductlon dev!l?Jlmenti have been As coal men we 1ue concerned that 1 ~m the seneral _ dep~ion of the It is not a question of barter be- uonship between Uul owners and
producing state In 1942.
the natural resultl or the' grea.t,. ,lu- patural lllll is lncreaalnJ•&amp;t rates., coal Industry haa aunk.
tween these two forces as to Lhe mine workers ot Ohio that this
In 1920 Athena ccuut.,y produced (ju~trml develOpment and the pop- rucen~ly 25 per cent , 1.r eater than I Our chhlf competitors Kentucky :11hare eiOOh shall receive It is a more problem may be solved without the
6,501,013 tons;,, ·HOcking, . 2,198,9itll 1ulatlon lnel'ea.se w~e coal was . each precedin&amp; ~·r, 'fh:e , . ~ua~ :and West Vlrstnla have trained in ·momellto\18 problem than that. It 1 esortlnlf Lo another coal 11 trlke,
tons, Mel.g&amp; 1,509;&amp;37 tons. 6Perry 1king.
~re these. First, pipes of ~ ·tst , 1coal produ~t.lon each ~ear abOve ihe con(e~ns whether or not there shall which have p"'ved very disastrous
- · · ____...,.
·, _
_
•
~ - - · · ----·
1917 Production and ohiq has lost. be anythtnr to share.
our mining tndustcy in Ohio. our
( The peroentaaea o! production
The stron1hoid6 or the Ohio coal • Btate has newr been able to reot the stat.es of Penll£,Ylvanla, West industry have been Invaded by out !gain all of her tonnage that n lost 1
VIrginia, Kentucky and Ohio, com· side competltiOll. The two fo rces when engaged in a.n tnduatrial con·
pared with hte nat.lcm•s Pl'oduction must. it success Is to be had. joln , fllcL. We mlll!t mutuaUy find a
cf 100 per cent each year. Pennsyl- Into one to rorge &amp;head toward Lhc 1method to solve ow- .vexing prob~
vanla 11lnce 19U has dropped soal of holding our coa l mdusi.ry llems wllhout reBOrting to this
" - - - - - - - - -. By HARDIN BURNLEY
from 31.2 per oenL to 25.'1 per tntact and on 1.o the successful costly procedure. U thci""e o:-e Cf.'r - ,
cent West Virginia has INCR'EASEO maintenance or the Industry which tain element!! that bar the way t.o '
ED rrom IG.7 to 28.4 per cent, our natwal conditions and loeat.lon a mutua.! Wlderstanding between
Wll.. t.'HE
KENTUCKY HAS INCREA8ED warrant. , Rarely, If eve :·, docs a miner and mine owner. for the wei·
FROM B.l tQ 10.5 and OHIO basi round principle f::.!J when t.he fare of the industry anrl those deWIN 13ACK
dropped trom 7.3 to 4.3 per cent.
and understood pendrnt, upcn It for a livelihood , :
1 facts 11re studied
There
ha
sbeen
illVClited
:.n
souLh.
!
JLnd
when
all
the
forces
unlt.c to they should be elimma~ed from the ·
HIS
castf!m Ohto ntUllons of dollars make the.t principle succelisful. l'hiB fl'cene.
in mining PfOper:tr and 1mmen.se problem Is a perplexing one l\nd
The Ohio Industry today. as nev'Tti!.E..
investmenta In homes and public appareuLly a.n unsurmountable one. cr berwe demands from both the
lmp ~avem8n_ta that .tu.,ve resuit.ed • But only apparently It Is lnsur· mine owner~ a.nd the mmers. In~
- -·---..-...........
- - - - - --

onlY rnr oo-. lnoor:-ed 'nsertloD 1
of anv liidverti&amp;eWetH.. Erroul ln 1
a.dverl1M'!'IJfDk 1hould be ~--porLed
immecUateiJ.
.Vt;,ted-

twrn ~-

'nl~ JlUctene'- In coal UNd bert, j
accordbll to the bureau of m.lnetl, i
have been ttucb that. 15 tom ot 0Q11'1

·
First 1 l!h&amp;ll endeayor tp lho'f
~s 1 have previously shown that
c&amp;~se• ot the n.atlon'a lou of its
this ten·Ltory was one or the !lnt 93 per cent. I have ahown. fr.om t.Jte
~o:a shipperu to the IR'eA.t indut.- bureau or- m.lne ~...,._, 'tl)e ~I'IY
rhl cities ~ Ohlo, l'nd tbe indus- 1 In trUlioiUI o'f B. T. '0'.'1. Wl.,\eA usw
try arew Wlth the steel tndustrv t in&amp; d111erent sources pt e.qMo, we

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ROUGH

VoiOOO"i&gt;

POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT
Will 11.ppreclate ,our vote and b~­
tluencc for omce of Probate Judge
In the corning November election.
Dr. S, A. McCullough.

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iIN OUR OF:n~E

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FoR f'r,'fll'5 SM&lt;'E QUIT OFFE'RIN6

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Be THRIFTY...

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THE Ulll'ICH GUIKPE

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All
ru4•1s •rt cr••te.l
rlttrlml i11 PeriJ 1111J tllt ,ttU1r111 arl
matlt ;, Nft» Yarl.

is only good food that has
been improperly handled?
In this day of electtic re·
frigera.tion, there)s little ~x­
cuse for food waste. W1th
40 per cent of you• income
spent on food, the savings
.
effected by its proper preservarwn
represent the difference between economy and extravagance.
.
Buying perishable food at q~anpry
prices, coupled w1th the ehmmatton
of food sppilage by the faithful "below
'0 degrees" temperature of an electric
refrigerator, will pay the cost of the
refrigerator within two years.
Why not get statted on yoNr rwo
yc111i of LU1Cury t~at is real thrift pe·
c~usO\jl pays for itself as 1t soesl The

to-f) 4'
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This little model would make auy •
schoolgirl happy.
I

It's carried out In a novelty plaided • ~...!,_,.;::.
10 modish this season,
;

woolen

Tl" aoporato ••;mpe m•y be of
'1i11g ma.terlal c.;r of plain WQOien.

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AND UNCLE

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1hl·r delightful material&amp; lll'C wool
ur, novelty rayons, woolen tweed
mixtures, linen and cotton tweeds.
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H.ow to ,Cht 7'/lq( l!qttenu ;

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to li'Ashl'q" Jur411~ ·

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carefUII~

Write
•nd
PI• nJ• '~"' "~"'' •nd Ju!l ad·
~rc•t, tfit a\f.111b(r of ita' ,.~tern an~

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Greu BfilAi• r.:&amp;Jll\ ltsetft4

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AX SCRMEIJNG has
cldod

·A•. u~•~ ~
•lO

the •••• J01.1 'w~tJt.
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A~4r~~· Your letter In the · fo!lowo
lot• f~Y~"''"
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manufacturer of a product capable
of an•wering a need in auch a manner af Jo
produce greater comfort, convenience, free·
dom from labor or diseaae, or one that "d•
to the joys cf livina, haa a diatinct o~U!(a·
tion to make •that product kn~wn to, till'
public. So lona aa hi' doea' not advertik,
he ia cheating the public a!Jd the~y ·
cheatina himaelf.
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Oklahoma

Th~

fCfriger~tOt tpat will fit fOUt ~QmO ,IS
i~ o~f shuwroarns. C!Jme and get tt!

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.,

.. .. THAT under this cbanied order of
things, a manufactur.cr hu more than the
task of creating his producb phyaically•. He
must make them live in the public mind.
Thio mental property of public acceptance
ia crucial to succeaa today. ·Without it no
industry, company or prbduct can endure
th&lt;o eliminating proce,..ea going on.

ID

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DRIIS~

Waite, . ~·liawnee,

- F. G. Cramer, President of the CramerKra .. elt Company, of Milwaukee, Sayr.:

stop to reD atiz.eyouthateverspoiled
food

,... • i;".l,..,
•

By Edson R.

is wasted without proper refrigeration

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20% of the perishable food you purchase

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Stop wasting food!

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DID YOU EVER STOP TO

.··HIS. I&lt;AYo·. vrq'rbr.2Y
OVE,fc ' WAt.t&lt;ER EARNED
HIM A r&lt;ETUr&lt;tJ MAICH

ay Arnot

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AIN'T IT THE TRUTH!

By EVA A. TINGEY

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