WEATHER
Leo.-- >! v fair tonight and Wed
Not much change in tern
»<Uy
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©If? ©tmrs -$etuut
Largest Daily Circulation of Any Newspaper in North Carolina in Proportion to Population
GOOD AFTERNOON
A correspondent complain* of
• apj mania in Japan. Oh, that'*
been going on for mania year.
\0L 57—No. 249
HENDERSONVILLE, N. G„ TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1938
SINGLE COPIES, FIVE CENTS
BRITISH LAY SIEGE TO OLD JERUSALEM
IKYOTOEND
11 RELATIONS
pH LEAGUE
Bain Raises Question of
I Jap Mandate Over
I Pacific Isles
IntMi. sTtrade
■agreement is near
By CLIFFORD L. DAY
lyright 1938, by United Pre«i
,OX DON. Oct. 18.—(UP) —
ted States interests were af
*d by these developments de
bed in dispatches from four
■ign capitals today:
. A reliable Geneva report said
in will leave the League of
N>ns labor organization, man
es commission and other league
sidiary departments—thus sev
ig all remaining connections
h the league.
This would complicate United
tes relations with Japan be
ise of the former German
inds in the Pacific now held by
>an under mandate and in which
i United States has an important
erest.
I. Prime Minister Chamberlain
L«.::don, intimates said, hopes
announce signing of the long
Lt . cd British - American trade
revment. as well as implement
t Anglo-Italian ::iendship
ft, shortly after parliament re
embles on November 8.
In volume, financial importance
I pofsible political results, this
de agreement easily would
k>i the of Secretary of State
rdell Hull's reciprocal trade
aties—the keystone of Amer
*> good neighbor foreign policy.
S. Italy made a "satisfactory"
>ly to the United States note of
tube: 7 warning that American
m in Italy must not be discrim
ited ;.ca •• -t by anti-Semitic
asures The reply was handed
the U. S. embassy in Rome,
ich described it as "satisfac
y" but forwarded it to Wash
It n without revealing its con
Its.
m >ntro!Ii»d German press
■ Churchill, British
■ . namberlain statesman, for
Hradiucast appeal to the ^United
■ s on Sundav in which he
Bt-tl America to join Britain ai}(»
■t the expansion of dictatorship
■ion- "before it is too late."
■The Berlin newspapers called
■urchill ignorant and charged
■ with trying to incite the dem
■atic nations to war against
■rmanv.
■Japan's reported decision was
Id ti> the action of the league
■entlv in \otinvr economic sanc
■r.s ij^ainst Japan for her cur
at' war asrainst China. Memoer
It *-; were t<>Id they could apply
Betkms if they chose, but were
■ obliged to do so.
■should Japan withdraw and dis
fctinue reporting to the man
It-- eoaualsaon on the Pacific
L she was expected to claim
w Otright under provisions of
fcret treaties made with France
U Britain just before these two
fcntries persuaded Japan to en
the World war on the allies'
Be. The United States protested
I- '• at Versailles and in
iad ol the islands going to Ja
m diivctly, they went to the
kue and then to Japan under
Indav The growth of air trans
Pt has nade some of them par
lularly valuable as bases.
ILondon authorities said the
| American trade agreement
fd beep. completed in all impor
pt respects and that ironing out
lie® minor points and actuai
tinued on page three)
laither Rhodes
Fully Restored
To Citizenship
Superior court yesterday re
tored 'ivzenship to W. Gaitner
Me*.
convicted of embezzle
!<"t &• t; January, 1931. term.
&e court found as a fact that the
' ejjatit ns n the petition present
d were u ue, and that the charac
fr of the petitioner for truth ana
Wtesty is good. _
The judgment read: "It is there
ordered that the petitioner• s
ft' citizenship are herewith
stored with all privileges and
fcltts."
In the cou**t yesterday
Ed Green pleaded guilty t*>
P®ratine a disorderly house. A
'* ttonths sentence was ?u»pen4
^ on condition a road house
as the Chicken Coop be
» ,or purposes for
®°nths and the defendant pay the
British Naval
Expansion Calls
For 3 Big Ships
Several Cruisers and Two
Destroyer Flotillas
Also Provided for
LONDON, Oct. 18. (UP)—It
was learned authoritatively yes
terday that in connection with the
vast speeding up of British rearm
ament, the 1939 British naval
building program will provide for
at least three new capital ships,
several cruisers, two flotillas of
destroyers and numerous fast tor
pedo-like motorboats.
In addition, aircraft construc
tion will be on a much greater
scale in accordance with rapid
development of the naval air di
vision.
The source of this information
said that of the above ships, at
least one of the capital ships and
some of the cruisers were in addi
tion to warships previously au
thorized. The balance of the ex
pansion of the 1939 building pro
gram would be effected by ad
vancing construction dates of ton
nage already authorized, but not
hitherto included in the 1939 pro
gram.
ALIENATION j
SWT FOLLOWS
GUN BATTLE
Blues Singer in 1 hree- Cor
nered Affair Declared
Not Legally Wed
HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 18. (UP)
A $150,000 alienation of affec
tions suit was added last night to
the misfortunes piling upon blonde
Ruth Etting since her first hus
band shot her second in a gun bat
tle at her home Saturday night.
With investigators casting doubt
on the legality of her marriage to
30:year-old Myrl Alderman, the
pretty blues singer was named de
fendant in a suit filed by Alder
man's second wife, Mrs. Alma Al-!
I derman. N
Mrs. Alderman, who divorced
the wounded musician last Decem
ber. accused Miss Etting of "show
ering him with expensive jewelry
and gifts" and inducing him to
leave his wife when she was ex
pecting a baby.
The complaint alleged that the
singer began lavishing her affec
tions on Alderman two months be
fore the divorce. Her attentions
took the form of "giving him gifts
and clothing, jewelry and other
things, telephoning him locally and
from Chicago and New York, and
by sending him letters and tele
grams," she complained.
Shortly before the baby was
born, Mrs. Alderman said her hus
band left her. and in July of this
year, he and Miss Etting, "acting
under some pretended marriage
ceremony" began living together
as man and wife."
The disclosure came while Al
derman. 30-year-old musician with
whom Miss Etting secretly eloped
to Tijuana, Mex., three months
ago, lay in St. Vincent's hospital
with a bullet in his abdomen.
The shot was fired by Marvin
("Colonel Moe") Snyder, New
York night club figure, who was
divorced by Miss Etting nearly a
year ago. Miss Etting said Snyder
shot her second husband because
of his "insane jealousy."
As the district attorney's office
made a formal complaint against \
Snyder, charging him with at
tempted murder, kidnaping and
violation of the state firearms law,
it was disclosed that Alderman
was not legally divorced when he
eloned with Miss Etting.
; Snyder was returned to jail af
ter the formal complaint against
him was read in court. Bail of
$25,000 was recommended.
When arraigned before Munici
pal Judgre Arthur Guerin. Snyder
obtained a reduction of the bail
to $10,000.
MONDAY
Maximum temperature—80 de
crees. Minimum — 37 degrees.
Mean—58.5 degrees. Day's range I
43 degrees.
Normal mean 'temperature for
October—56.4 degrees. No rain
fall to date. Normal rainfall—i
i 4.36 inches. '
GERMANY IS DEMOBILIZING
FORB1DABLE MANEUVER ARMY
ON DUTY DURING 'PARLEYS'
NAZIS TRIED TO
LEARN COAST
DEFENSE PLAN
Rumrich Was Asked to
Get Placement of Uni
ted States Troops
NEW YORK, Oct. 18. (UP) —
Guenthor Gustave Rumrich, con
fessed Nazi spy, today testified in
Federal court that the espionage
contact man in Germany had giv
en him a specific assignment to
determine the number of United
States soldiers along the eastern
seaboard and particularly, how
many troops are stationed in the
New York City area.
It was Rumrich's confession
that touched off the spy inquiry
and resulted in the indictment of
18 persons, including himself and
three defendants present here for
trial.
They are charged with being
pawns in a plot directed by the
German war office to steal Ameri
can defense plans.
The plot, as described by Unit
ed States Attorney Lamar Hardy,
contained such fantastic schemes
as forging; President Roosevelt's
signature to a letter asking mili
tary authorities for specifications
of the new aircraft carrier Enter
prise, and trying to lure Colonel
Henry W. T. Elgin, commander of
Fort Totten, to a hotel room with
secret mobilization plans, so that
a spy could subdue him with gas
from a bomb camouflaged as a
fountain pen, and steal the plans.
The spies, Hardy said, were
naive enough to submit to their
superior such things as the army
drill manual, which every army
recruit is given, and the name ol
armv units stationed in Panama,
which every tourist knows.
But their boldness ofFset their
bungling, Hardy said, and they
succeeded in getting photographs
of vital parts of an experimental
naval bombing plane, a copy of
the "Z signal" code used in com
munications between army planes
and their bases; information about
a new submarine periscope and a
copy of a confidential contract be
tween the Bethlehem Steel Co.,]
and the Amtorg Corp., relating to .
armaments for Soviet Russia.
Five of the 18 named in the
espionage indictment wfere stew
ards on ships of the North German
Lloyd iine. One of these, Karl
Schlueter, rifled the mail aboard
one of the ships and get photo
static copies of the armament con-,
tracts, Hardy said.
Those on trial were Johanna
Hofmann, hardresser on the Ger
man liner Europa, alleged trans
Atlantic courier for spies; Erich
Glaser, former private in the army
air crops at Mitchel field, and Otto
Voss, airplane mechanic.
Striking Tugmen
Fail To Aid Big
Liner Go To Dock
NEW YORK, Oct. 18. (UP).—
The huge liner, Queen Mary, to
day docked without the assistance
of tugs. The difficult and dan
gerous task was necessitated by |
the strike of 2000 tugboat work
ers, whose representatives refused
special permission for them to aid
the big liner ending her western
trans - Atlantic voyage from
Southhampton.
FRAUD CHARGE BANS
PENSION ISSUE FOR
ARKANSAS ELECTION
LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Oct. 18.1
— (UP)—Arkansas will not vote
next month in the general elec-1
tion on the proposed Rotenberiy'
old age and blind initiated pen
sion act, for the state supreme
court yesterday granted an in
junction restraining Secretary of
State C. G. Hall from placing it
on the ballot.
The injunction was granted on
the petition of E. P. Hargis, tax
payer, who had attacked the plan
on the ground that fraudulent
names were included in a petition
circulated throughout the state to
force the question on the ballot. I
500,000 Reservists to Re
turn Home Next Three
or Four Weeks
By EDWARD W. BEATTIE, JR.
BERLIN, Oct. 18. (UP).—Ger
many started today to demobilize
the formidable "maneuver" army
whose formation nine weeks ago
marked the start of Europe's
gravest crisis since 1914.
It was estimated that consider
ably more than 500;000 reservists
would be sent home during the
next three or four weeks.
Farewell parties were held in
garrisons throughout Germany
last night for the first men to be
j released.
At about the time the last con
tingents of reserves are released,
ti is planned to send home also the
first class to receive two years of
military training under the com
pulsory service law enacted in de
fiance of the Versailles treaty.
These will be replaced by a new
class—a large one, this fall, be
cause recruits from Austria's 7,
500,000 people and the 3,500,000
of German Sudetenland, will be
included.
For several days, the special
reservists called up during the
first two weeks of August had
been doing only light duty, and
many had received leave during
! the week-end which virtually
marked their demobilization.
But today was the big day for
■ it marked the official start of a
I dispersal period which, also, mark
! ed the end, in Adolf Hitler's eyes,
of the Czechoslovak crisis during
which he confronted the great
democratic powers of Europe with
his "or else" demands—and won
without the firing of a shot.
Reservists as they gathered to
leave for their homes and their
jobs, decorated their uniforms and
caps with flowers or green leaves.
They were assured of a warm wel
come in their home towns, not
only by their families but by their
employers and fellow workers who
in industries that are operating at
top speed, have needed them
sorely.
Retained on emergency duty
were scores of thousands of men
drafted for the labor corps.
They were working on the un
completed sections of the Siegfri
ed line of fortifications bordering
on France.
NEW BREVARD ROAD
PROPERTY OWNERS TO
DEVELOP GROUNDS
Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Tibbits of
Orlando, Fla., have purchased the
Brevard road property of Mr. and
Mrs. R. C. Kuhn, their recent
home place, with six acres of j
ground.
Mr. and Mrs. Tibbitts are plan
ning to develop this property sim
ilar to their cottage court develop
ment at Plymouth Dells, 14 miles
north of Orlando.
Mr. and Mrs. Kuhn are now liv
ing in one of their bungalows on;
Rhododendron drive, Laurel Park.
Rome-Berlin Axis Is Unimpaired,
Mussolini's Journal Declares
Accord Still Obtains on European Reconstruction;
Calls for Plebiscite for Ruthenians
ROME, Oct. 18.—(UP)—The
government yesterday took heed
—with an emphatic denial—of re
ports abroad that the Czech-Hun
garian territorial dispute had
placed a strain on the collabora
tion between Premier Benito Mus
solini and Chancellor Adolf Hitler
under the Rome-Berlin axis.
The government agency, Lnfor
mazione Diplomatica, said it was
"useless to attempt to detect even
the slightest differences" in the
attitudes of Germany and Italy
toward the dispute.
Virginio Gayda, editor of the
Giomale d'ltalia, which often
serves as II Duce's mouthpiece,
added that there could be no dif
ferences between Rome and Ber
lin "because there is complete ac
cord on a plan for reconstruction
of the new Europe, which also ap
plies to the Czechoslovak ques
tion."
Hungarian extremists, support
ed bv Poland and Italy, have de
manded that Czechoslovakia sur
render her eastern province of
Ruthenia and its population of
about 600,000 to Hungary, there
by permitting a common Polish
Hungarian frontier which would
form a barrier against Soviet Rus
sia on the east.
Dispatches from Prague, Buda
pest and Berlin have indicated,
however, that Hitler is cool to any
such amputation of Ruthenia be
cause it might seriously affect his
penetration eastward.
The Informazione Diplomatica
demanded that Hungary's territo
rial demands be settled on the ba
sis of -the Munich four-power ac
cord which surrendered Czecho
, Slovakia's Sudetenland to Ger
many.
Such a basis, it was said, must
give to Hungary "outright annex
ation of those zones predominant
lv inhabited by Magyars, eventual
plebiscites in other controversial
zones and, finally, the right of
other minorities in Czechoslovakia
to determine their own future."
This last point, in the opinion
of diplomats, is of cardinal impor
tance because its fulfillment would
give the 3,000,000 Slovaks and
600,000 Ruthenians the right to
vote on whether they wish to re
main in Czechoslovakia or join
Hungary or Poland.
The announcement said that the
military measures adopted by Hun
gary, including the calling up of
300,000 reservists, were "perfect
ly justified" because the Czechs
have not yet demobilized large re
serve forces called to the colors
during the German-Czech crisis.
Arab Guerillas Harass British in Palestine
British troops striving to maintain order in Palest ine are constantly harassed by bands of Arab guer
rillas. In the photo above, a turreted armored car is shown driving around a rock barricade erected
by the terrorists to delay reinforcements sent to Tiberias. This Jewish town on the shore of the Sea
of Galilee suffered a raid by Arabs in which 21 Jews were killed.
(DEFER TRIAL
OFATTEMFTED
ARSON CHARGE
Mooney Is Convicted of
Manslaughter in Gaines
Homicide
J The case of Zeb Brock, indictee
Mn the preset term of supertoi
court on a charge of setting fire
to a building was continued in
court this morning for the State.
Solicitor C. 0. Ridings stated
that Deputy Insurance Commis
sioner Jordan, of Asheville, a wit
ness, was not available at this
time, and that he himself was not
in the best of health. Solicitor
Ridings has been suffering with a
severe cold during all of this term.
Brock is charged with setting
fire or attempting to set fire to a
Main street building, occupied by
his brother, Monroe Brock.
In court this morning a jury
convicted Brisco Mooney, colored,
of manslaughter in the death of
Tom Goines, colored, on Sept. 3,
1937.
At the close of State's evidence
Monday the court dismissed simi
lar charges against Frank Mooney.
Judge Pless did not immediate*
ly pass sentence on Briscoe Moo
ney.
LABOR BOARD FINDS
TEXTILE CHARGES BY
C. I. 0. UNFOUNDED
WASHINGTON, Oct. 18. (UP)
The National Labor Relations
board last night dismissed charg
es filed against the Talladega
(Ala.) Cotton foctory by the Tex
tile Workers Organizing commit
tee, a Committee for Industrial
Organization affiliate. The board
said the charges that the com
pany had discharged or refused
to re-employ 10 persons named
in the complaint were unfounded.
Plan To Mark
Revolutionary
Grave, Nov. (
1
i Appropriate Services t(
Feature Program at
J. P. Corn's Grave
The grave of John Peter Corn
Revolutionary War soldier, who ii
buried in the cemetery at Ebenez
er church, will be marked with
appropriate uofviees under the
auspices of the Daughters of thf
American Revolution on Sunday
November 6.
A native of Virginia, Mr. Corr
served with American forces ir
the Revolution and was discharg
ed at Valley Forge. After the wai
he married and moved to this
.«tate, living first at Green River
until about 1830, and later near
Ebenezer.
He was born in 1751 and died
in this county in 1843. His de
scendants live in Henderson, Tran
sylvania, Buncombe and other
! Western North Carolina counties
and in upper South Carolina. At
least nine generations of the fam
i ily are buried at Ebenezer. It has
been stated .that the Corn family
furnished more pioneer ministers
in this section than any other
family.
The program on November 6
will be under the direction of the
Joseph McDowell chapter, D. A.
R., and the invocation will be by
the Rev. J. P. Corn, a descendant.
The principal address will be de
livered by J. E. Shipman, Hender
| sonville attorney.
RUMANIAN AIR
ACE WRECKED
Plane Crashes in Miami
Take Off But no One
Injured
MIAMI, Oct. 18. UP).—A plane
carrying Rumanian Air Ace Cap
tain Alex Papana and his com
panion, Ma* Constant, on a plan
ned flight from New York to Ru
mania, crashed on the runways of
the municipal airport here this
morning.
Neither flier was hurt but the
plane was badly damaged during
the attempted take off and the
flight was postponed.
Flight plans called for a hop
from Curacao to Paramaribo,
Netherlands Guiana, then to Na
tal, Brazil; Dakar, Senegal; Tunis,
Algiers, and Buchaerst, where
they expect to arrive Sunday.
They were flying a twin-motor
ed Barkley-Gorw land plane.
T. E. CARTER EXHIBITS
BIG CHRYSANTHEMUMS
T. E. Carter who resides on the
Sugar Loaf road, today exhibited
a number of large chrysanthe
mums, but stated that the size of
the flowers this year was not as
large as formerly on account of
the weather.
Mr. Carter has grown such
floweri measuring seven and a
half inches wide.
NUNS TO HEAR POPE
• NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 18. (UP)
Nuns of three cloistered orders
will hear a male voice today for
the first time since they took the
vows of the Roman Catholic
church when Pope Pius bestows
his blessing by radio upon the
Eighth National Eucharistic Con
gress. .. _
COMMUNIST IN
; FARM-LABOR
, KEY POSITI0R
Quiz Discloses They Had
Key Man in Minnesota
Political Group
WASHINGTON, Oct. 18.—
(UP) — Jacob"Spolanslty, De
troit sheriff's investigator, told
the house committee investigat
ing un-American activities to
day that Joseph Kowalski, de
scribed as a Communist Inter
national representative, was the
man "who conceived the intrica
cies and strategy of the sitdown
strike" in Michigan. t
He testified that Kowalski
was u former Soviet secret
ice man and is now head of all
industrial operations of the
Communist party in America.
"REDS" RUN" FARMER
LABOR PARTY, CHARGE
By MACK JOHNSON
I United Press Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON, Oct. 18. (UP)
Witnesses charged yesterday be
fore the house committee investi
gating un-American activities
! that Communists had acquired a
key position in the Farmer-Labor
party in Minnesota and were di
recting its policies despite opposi
1 tion from the "rank and file mem
bership." . „„ ...
I Albert Kittock, 38, Minneapo
lis. self-termed former Commun
ist, and Steve Gadler, St. Paul
consulting engineer, were the ma
jor witnesses. Gadler, who aided
the unsuccessful gubernatorial
nomination campaign of Governor
Hjalmar Peterson against Gover
nor Elmer Benson, accused the
Minnesota chief executive of
' openly leaning toward Commun
' 'Kittock testified that Minneso
to was "singled out by the Com
munist International congress as
the state . . . which should receive
specia? attention." The . witness
said he quit the Communist party
! last year during the Soviet purge
trials" because he was convinced
! that something was wrong there.
He related that Communists, by
means of a "Trojan horse" policy,
had bored into the Farmer-Ubor
party through membership in la
bor organizations, and that they
were able to dictate many Farm
er-Labor nominations.
Kittock named the American
Federation of Labor, Labor party,
Committee for Industrial Organi
zation, various veterans organiza
tions, and other groups in Minne
sota as those in which Communis
tic influences allegedly were at
(Continued on page three)
3 DECKING
IN FIRST SNOW
Montana's First Major
Storm of Year Sweeps
Into Fourth Day
HELENA, Mont.. Oct. 18.—
(UP)—Three were deed and
three others missing today as
the first major snowstorm of the
season swept Into the fourth
day. The storm, striking sud
denly, caught hunting parties
unawares, disrupted power and
communication lines, damage*
late crops and made highway
dangerous*
ARAB REBELS
i BARRICADED IN
j ANCIENT CITY
British Troops Lock Gates
as Conditions There
Out of Hand
terroristTfire
POUCE STATION
JERUSALEM, Oct 18. (UP) —
Two thousand British soldiers,
equipped for battle, today laid
siege to Jerusalem where Arab
rebels are running rampant be
hind the protection of the city's
sixteenth century walls. •
The troops took positions in
high buildings ig the modern part
or the city, flrinfj over walls and
commanding roof tops of the con
gested area inside.
Rebels barricaded sates from
the inside, burned the police sta
tion and apparently were in con
trol.
Troops could reach them only
by storming the walls.
Modern Jerusalem, built out
side the walls after 168, was hard
pressed.
. Ret els are encamped in the des
ert and hills on all sides.
Sporadic gunfire was heard
throughout the city.
Rifle volleys inside were answer
ed by the troops with machine
gun bursts. The situation inside
the walls and tht number of cas
ualties were unknown.
Rebels were prowling through
the new city. They were reported
to have delivered a large supply
of bandoliers end rifles to Arabs
inside the walls last night by low
ering them with rones. They were
concentrated in.. |he vicinity of
the sprawling mosque of Omar.
British troops ha«l- entered the
mosque several da?B ego without
removing their boots end ae a re
sult Arabs declared A general
strike protesting this violation of
their temple.
In addition to the perils within
the city, military authorities fear
ed that at any moment there
might be a mass fpsault on tho
modern city by the' Arabs in the
hills.
I Charles H. Brown of PittH
I burgh, Pa., who was staying at a
hotel 20 yards from the wall, ex
pressed a typical foreigner's senti
ment today: "I thought during
the Sudetenland' crisis that I
might get close to war before I
got home, but I didn't expect the
war to come to me."
Curfew from 11 p. m. to 6 a. m.
was established today in the new
city of Jerusalem as a result of
tension in the old city section,
and British authorities warned vi
olators of the regulation that
they would be shot without warn
ing.
The gates into the old city, pre
viously closed by British authori
ties, could not be opened becau.se
Arab rebels have constructed bar-,
ricades on the inside. Informed
persons said conditions were tan
tamount to civil authorities ad
mitting the situation was out of
hand. Guerilla fighting and snip
ing spread throughout the city.
Two Jews were killed and six
others were wounded while boat
ing on the Jordan river near the
Jewish settlement of Yessod Ha
mala, north of Jerusalem. They
were said to have been fired upon
from both banks of the river by
Bedouin horsemen.
I A prominent Jew was killed at
Beitsa Fafa, south of Jerusalem,
while assisting in the construction
of a new government hospital.
Terrorists set Are to a police
station in the old city of Jerusa
lem.
Public Debt Is At
New Record Level
WASHINGTON, Oct. 18. (UP)
The public debt reached an all
time nigh of 938,429,198,207 be
tween June 30 and October 14,
the treasury department an
nounced yesterday.
Federal spending exceeded in
come by more than $900,000,000.
The department said spending ag
gregated $2,562,735,321 and re
ceipts totaled $1,655,755,207. The
gross deficit on October 14 was
$908,980,284.
Presbyterian Men
To Hear Boynton
The regular monthly meeting of
the Men's club of the Presbyte
rian church will be held tonight
at 7 o'clock at the church house.
President John Sevier announc
ed that the principal speaker will
be the Rev. Charles R. Boynton,
chaplain at Christ School, Arden.
A short musical program wilt
be given by Mrs. Harry Latt and
dinner will be served by the la
dies' auxiliary.