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Page Six THE DAILY WORKER Published by the DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING CO. | 1113 W, Washington Bivd., Chicago, Ml. Phone Monroe 4711) pe acctesicenabnendaia SUBSCRIPTION RATES THE DAILY WORKER® Police Charge Workers Who Hail Marie - With Cries of “Down With All Royalty” By mal! (Im Chicago only): By mall (outside of Chicago)! $8.00 per year » $4.50 six months $6.00 per year $3.50 six months | —— mirals with four pound epaulats and {Blvd, and south on the broad thoro- $2.50 three months $2.00 three months | (Continued from page 1) the near generals weighted down with ] ‘are to the depot. Join in Cr “Cotz f ti!” . Addrean(eil:matl and make out checks to the abasement before royalty that the | Silly medals—they didn’t hive much Daily Worker Sells Heavily. , Or aREStt: THE DAILY WORKER, 1113 W. Washington Bivd., Chleago, tl, J, LOUIS ENGDAHL : WILLIAM F. DUNNB t Met MORITZ J, LOEB... Butered as second-class mail September 21, 1923, at the post-office at Chir yeetseeree ItOFS sseeseesenmmeererees Business Manager ‘the City | whole official show constituted. The second police charge came at Hall after the “greeting” of ver highness when the two parades re- formed and with recovered banners paraded back thru the loop to the of a show eithet, As soon as Marie alighted, the camera men, some of them on top of the train, tore loose. it was bedlam, Her Royal Highness was surrounded with secret servic men (one of them treated your re- On the march, there was no inter- ‘erence, DAILY WORKER containing che story of Cotzofanesti were sold by hundreds as the parades moved along. A great deal of interest was manifest- d in the crowded loop district. It was WORKER thought the word MAX’ bystanders, hearing the word “Cotzofanesti” and not yet having read of the expose in The DAILY was a Roumanian greeting and joined in the yelling as well as their American version of its pronounciation would permit. All of which, of cago, Il., under the act of March 3, 1879. municipal building. While the queen | Porter in tel aay ne and the } yot until the demonstration had reach- course, added to the queen’s dismay. had lef 2 City y » | queen marched along the platform, at | the depot and began to parade over 1 had left the City Hall by the time é @ dep ei oP rc) <= 200 Savercenk rates had cduldsaisioe the demonstration got there, the| tempting to smile. ear the entrance that the first Dert- ) qemeseeeeenprennneensenessnenenienesstee-nessessese-neieniusmsmessnensniaues ‘é march around the building had pro- Wet Reception, uion of police under Lieutenant Free- ° . They Did Themselves Proud grovect only’ half, way whan Cabt.|’ Outdldy Qu ERMRte ee cash. Whe: | iam moved th elthex the parade uutt | A GMO 4 OMY COMIC OF 1 nese 7 uo A Tan Dary WorKer congratulates the Chicago workers who participated in the splendid demonstration against the Roumanian terror symbolized by Queen Marie. | The workers who, on Sunday morning, nursed the bruised heads | they carried bravely and defiantly under the violent attacks of millions of workers in this country. We know that the workers of the United States do not share the obeiscances to royalty being made by the ruling class of this country. We know also that when work- Kelliher led his men into the crowd. It was here that, Maurer and the other two were arrested. Much Violence, A third police charge was made at Central station where the crowd fol- Fought Royalty in 1776, Why Do We Pay Homage to a Queen?” “Remem- ber Cotzofanesti,” “Down With the the processign reached the street the queen was pushed ,jnto the Lincoli car that Henry Ford, donated and 1 began creeping thru tie wagon roor made for it by the.,mounted policc The way led along @ sort of abutmen marching directly there thru the loop, The banners attracted great attention s the-manifestants walked the mile from the Illinois Central Depot to the ad come down the boulevard, The nners were seized and kept in custo- y in front of a building north of 11th treet, Other Section Pulls Up, George Maurer complained to the In the Queen’s car on the drizzling way to City Hall were Ira Nelson Morris, Roumanian Consul General and Charles Vopicka, wartime min- “Whereas, Queen Marie of Rou- mania now visits our country to so- licit. help for a government that cruelly oppresses the workers, peas- Resolutions on Roumanian Queen Two, resolutions that greeted Queen Marie of Roumania when she ar- rived in Chicago show whose queen she is and whose interests she repre sents. The Chicago Federation of LaboF points to her record of white ter Illinois and the American common- wealth may form the basis of a per- manent friendship between the Urfited States and Roumania. : ; y lowed the officers who had Maurer|'aised ten or so feet above the car: }| -cutenant about the confiscation of| rorism, and the 2,500 workers and ‘peasants in her dunQeons. The Illinols Mayor Dever’s bluecoats the night before, were probably not fully |, custody, All the attacks were|28 they went forward in low gear. li] he banners, The lieutenant, said he| Manufacturers’ Association hails this terror queen as “amiable and’ pro- aware of the far-reaching significance of the effort they made. They] marked by the usual violence accom-| W@S here that the royal lady shudder: | vas holding them “for a while on his! gregsive,” pels knew what their duty was to their persecuted fellow workers in|panying a- police movement against|°4- From the’ bank.above her came | »wn responsibility.” After the Queen’s Here are the two resolutions. Take your choice: Boumania. They knew that it was necessary to make a protest demonstrations of workers. great shouts of fotzofanestl. She | car passed by the workers grabbed the ere 8 eae 1 ql sti oat belly awling ‘of Chicago’s owning class 4 Police Charges. was seen to turn pale, Editions of the | banners again and started for the City Chi F di fi M f t ’ against the adulations‘an¢ y-crawling é ass | z DAILY WORKER,,containing the ex-| Hall. cago rederation anuracturers ~ and their official henchmen, the politicians. They knew that they naa esa charges of the blue-| nose were flashed from the abutment} In the meantime, however, the of Labor Association would be doing a service to the working class of Chicago and the ant ce dokist was saath on the] where the Queen epuld see. She read| parade that had gone directly ‘South 3 Ha i ieikiss swaskd sn aistaie dey the. queen’a nose, whilesshe ia the Tst parade coming down Roosevelt} ye! headline: “Marie—What of Cotzo-| to Roosevelt Road and then east pull- ‘Whereas, There are at present Whereas, Her Majesty during her vtire worlc ’ y TRRELEE un , i ’ x 7 Rd. and half of the banners smashed,|ranesti?” The car put on speed and| ed up while the police were busy tak-| More than 2,500 workers and trade visit and journey thru our country center of public attention, the question of the unrestrained brutality | but the workers reformed their lines proceeded down Michigan boulevard | ing the banners from their comrades unionists in the jails of Roumania | has demonstrated herself a woman of her Roumanian ofigarchy. and Jater joined their fellow mani-}+, the City Hall, where a very brief! of the other contingent, It was too| fr political’ offenses, accounts of | of great amiability and progressive- ; e: a 1 i- In congratulating these workers, Tut Dary Worxer wants to mapeeceget the march to the City Hall.! 1nq unimpressive “greeting” to the|{much for the cops and Her Majesty| Which have been given in the a veugghluih lead winning the hearts of iell them what their demonstration signified and feels that they ee al ge sround, City Hall wee city was given h@eby Mayor Dever. *|had the privilege of redding.a great| Sedo Cally, papers. sbomitted by | [hecAimeploan seRnlas thanetaey De ie “ = with broken banners. But they streamer which spoke ix no uncertain their foreign correspondents, and it will consider the results of their work on Saturday more than]haq done their work and done it well. Parade. Loop. eds AReAL Ae whliaterrcnin Raw “Whereas, These workers have Resolved, By the board of direct- enough reward for the violence of which they were the victims. Thousands ppon thousands of persons Tt was so brief that the demonstre-| oi, and the connection with it of} Suffered the most brutal persecu- | ors of the Illinois Manufacturers’ =— The wires of all the news services are buzzing with the events | stopped to read the slogans: “Down|‘0"S, having recovered their banners} 1 1. coated lady in the Lincoln car,| t!0n by the Roumanian authorities, | Association, that we express our \ f Saturday. The story of the brave demonstration will be read by | With Queen Marie,” “Only in America ‘rom the police, got to the City Hall inden Ales Madead, “| many of them having been tortured | high regard for Queen Marie of Rou- of Saturday. he story a y F Royalty Get Support,” “We | ‘90 late, altho they lost no time in and murdered, and mania, and hope her impressions of - ers learn of the white terror in Roumania and the shameful occur- rences at Cotzofanesti that they, too, will join in the indigantion of those workers familiar with these things. And now they know. But most important of all is the fact that over in Roumania the workers and peasants will hear of the championing of their cause by the workers of Chicago. This show of international solidarity will hearten them in their struggle against absolutism and steel them for the final and fast approaching fight for the abolition of their oligarchs and task masters, of whom Queen Marie is a living symbol, at present in this country. : The workers ‘who carried high the banners disclosing the ex- cesses of the Roumanian autocracy against the workers. of Rou- mania and exposing the hand of the owning class which kow-tows to monarchy out of a feeling of emulation, had the backing of the labor movement. The workers of Chicago were united on this ques- tion, as shown by the fact that the Chicago Federation of Labor pass- ed unanimously a resolution condemninw the homage paid to the ter- vor queen and calling for release of the 2,500 political prisoners held in the prisons of her country. Many of the slogans carried on the banners of the demonstrators were taken bodily out of the resolu- tion of the federation. This unity on an issue with regard to which the ‘sentiments of the entire working class are being expressed privately or publicly is a real contribution to the movement. The workers who gave the queen her unexpected “greeting” in Chicago made this issue a living reality. The queen has not yet left the country. Altho it is becoming more uncomfortable for her every day she stays, her itinerary will probably be continued until she sails out of New York harbor some time next month. These demonstrations of solidarity must continue. evs of Chicago have shown the way. “Their Sacrifice Will Not Be in Vain”, Says Lucy Parsons, Widow of Haymarket Martyr, as Chicago Labor Honors Memory By CARL HAESSLER, Federated Press. HE sat in the second row of the big meeting and looked around with sad pride. The place of honor on the platform was occupied by a bust of her dead husband. Strands of red and black were draped around it. Over 40 years ago she had attended an open air mass meeting where her’ husband was + the leading speaker. She had taken her two little children. Wxactly 39 years ago on Nov. 11, 1887, her husband had been executed by hanging in the Cook county jail. Sinee then both children had died. And here she Sat, sole survivor of her little family, in the second row of the memorial meeting for the Haymarket martyrs, the pioneer workers in America and in the world of the agitation for the 8-bour working day. Eyes Stil! Flame. —_—_—_—_——— Lucy Parsons’ dark eager eyes still] arnold, president of Painters’ Local flame as they must have when Al-/No 275, and William Z. Foster, or- bert R. Parsons, her innocent hus-| ganizer of the steel strike of 2919 and Wand, had his neck broken by the} now the leading radical trade union noose on the Chicago gallows and 20,-| igure in the country, were the prin- 000 workers followed him to his} cjpal speakers. An effective chorus graye. He had been the most suc-| of 50°women’s voices and a smail or- éessful trade union agitator in the} chestra furnished music, The work- Bloody White Terror of the Rou- manian Monarchy,” “We Stand With the Persecuted Workers and Peasants of Roumania,” “Release the 2,500 Po- | litical Prisoners in Queen Marie’s Country,” and many more, Flat Weicome. Amid the booming of camera flashes and the glare of magnosium flares used by the movie men, Queen Marie made her unpleasant way thru lines of soldiers standing at attention in the corridors of the Illinois Central Sta- tion where her train pulled in at 5:30 P. M. Saturday, Two hundred soldiers from Fort Sheridan and five hundred disgruntled policeman were the “guard of honor.” In the depot approach, a squadron of U. S. cavalry sat their mounts with drawn sabers at attention. As the Queen’s party marched thru the wait- ing room curious bystanders looked merely curious and that was all. There was a noticeable absence of cheering and enthusiasm, The only noises were made by the booming of the camera men, the hissing of their flares and he Roumanian national anthem being played by a sailor band from Great Lakes naval station, Arrangements Flivver. Everything was done to give the royal entry a touch of real European pomp and circumstance. The arrange- ments flivvered from the very start. The plug hatted dignitaries, rear ad- mirals and major generals who were jon the station platform to hand her royal highness down from the steps ®f her luxurious car had to run the length of the platform in obvious dis- order to get to the unappointed place it which the special train really stop- red. Lieutenants Balled Up Young army lieutenants, many of hem not without a pre-Volstead aro- na in their panting breaths, flew hither and yon about the station try- ing to get some sort of order in the proceedings. It was plain that half of them had forgotten their instruc- tions and that the other half didn’t care much. Th only thing the young military men succesded in doing was to drive away the delegation of costumed Roumanians who were to meet their royal lady as she stepped from the train and to walk all over the feet of the rear admirals and major-generals, 4 Roumanians Sore. The Roumanians were sore. They had their Greek orthodox protopope with them in red lined robes of black. They had banners flaunting the na- City Hall, Groups of policemen stationed in the loop and the traffic cops took a delight in reading. the banners and stépped out of the way as the parade came along thru the crowded loop dis- ister to Roumania from the United States, They seemed every bit as alarmed as the queen over the shouts of “Cotzo- fanesti” that penetrated the windows of the limousine and Morris was seen trict. Traffic was held'up at the cross- ings and State street was filled with cries of “Down, with Marie” and “Stop the bloody terror in Roumania,” Police Strike. It wasn’t until the parade had pro. ceeded half way around City Hall, that the police phalanx struck. It was only a.half block fromsCentral Police sta- tion, The captain fof the first district led his men into the crowd with shouts of “break ’em up,¥ and “get the guys with the banners.” A number of heads were cracked ang, the banners either destroyed or confiscated. George Maurer, Margaritg Miller and A, Zuris, all carrying banners, were then taken in tow. Follow Cops, But the-crowd reformed and follow- ed the officers torthe Central Station. They stood outside and demanded the release of the three. More reserves were called out ‘and rushed out the; crowd for the second time with drawn elubs, s Propagandize Cops. The three workers were held in the station for a half hour, where they ex- plained to the interested policemen in the waiting room yghat the demonstra- tion was all about, After the photo- graphers took pictures of the group they were let go. Cops Wet and Annoyed. ‘ Several hours before the train ar- rived, the station was barren of any one but passengers and the policemen who were reporting to their lieuten ants and forming their lines. It was drizzling. They were uncomfortable. They were day men drawn in from the districts after a day’s work, As your reporter made his way thru the ranks he heard many ungentlemanly re- marks about a queen for whom “Men have to come out oma day like this.” The demonstration against the queen began at asap in the afternoon at 80 N. Wells St. where International Labor Defense had called a mass meeting of its members. “Speeches were made by Willjam F. Dunne, Max Schactman and George Maurer. The | object of the meeting was to prepare the crowd for the parade and manifes- tation thru the loop,and at the Illinois Central station, 5» . Thousands of leaflets were given to to shout heated but unheeded ingtruc- tions to a mounted escort. “AldermeneMisstng, The “welcome to the city”, at the county building was a fiat | failure. Here too the arrangements were hope- lessly tangled. There was a noticeable lack of alderman to great her majesty. There were only seven! Forty-three stayed away. The reasons were various. Many of the alderman had issued defiant statements saying they would have no share in the “kow- towing.” Others feared that if they took part in the royal business, it would hurt them at the polls next November. The business was gotten over with quickly, Mayor Dever mumbled a few more or less meaningless compliment- ary terms in which he showed a mark- ed lack of knowledge about Roumania, and the Queen thanked him in the same stereotyped way tat she has thanked dozens of other mayors. Wine Served at Dinner, At a private dinner sponsored by Arthur Meeker, Chicago millionaire, at the Drake Hotel, at nine o’clock wine was served to the guests to wash down innumerable viands with fancy French ‘names. The excuse for the wine was that diplomatic immuni- ty has followed the official journey of the queen ang cheated the rum snatch- ers who can do nothing but gnash their teeth. It was a very select crowd that sat it the table. Only the most exclusive amilies of the Gold Coast were ad- aitted. Mrs. Rockefeller McCormick called upon the former Minister Vopi- cka for a speech. He spoke of the Queen’s “heroism” during the war. He was careful not to mention “Cotzo- fanesti” about which he certainly knows, When he had finished the queen leaned over to him and said gravely, “Those were the most solemn days of our lives.” “Where were you” Meeker. “We were nearest the Bolsheviks, Alas!" answered her majesty, lighting a cigarette. Chinese Treaty Crisis with Powers Imminent WASHINGTON, Nov. 11-~(FP)-- asked = Mr. ants and trade unionists within its borders, destroys their legitimate trade unions and peasants’ organiz- ations ‘and denies them the right of free speech, free press and freedom of assemblage, therefore be it “Resolved, That the Chicago Fed- eration of Labor protests against the subservience of American offi- ci: to Queen Marie, the ‘royal’ symbol of oppression, and terror ism of workers and peasants and racial minorities within the borders of that country, and be it further “Resolved, That we declare that organized labor will do no homage to any potentate, particularly as when in this case the potentate rep- resents a government which perse- cutes and imprisons workers for be- longing to a trade union and for their struggles for better conditions of living. The sympathy of our la- bor movement is with those who now suffer under the iron heel of Roumanian capitalism.” — Introduc- ed by Lodge No. 337, International Association of Machinists. Radio Man Clipped Tags from Clothing to Protect Woman (Special to The Daily Worker) LOS ANGELES, Nov. 14.—To pro- tect the woman who was with him at Carmel-by-the-Sea, Kenneth Ormiston, | will o’ the wisp radio man, clipped store tags and other identifying marks from the feminine clothing found in his little blue trunk, Deputy District Attorneys Forrest Murray and E. J. Dennison declared today. The district attorney's investigators also checked a report that the ‘radio man’s trunk had been shipped over the ‘Santa Fe from the Dearborn sta- tion in Chicago on the train that Aimee McPherson rode on when she veturned to Los Angeles from the holy land early this year. Ben Cohn, chief of dectectives, be- lieves that Ormiston himself may have ridden on the train from Chica- g0 to’Pasadena. Lectures on Prison Life in Second of A. C. W. Series Here Ralph Chaplin will deliver the sec- ond lecture in the Amalgamated) Clothing Workers educational series | here Tuesday, Nov. 16, at Douglas} Park auditorium, Kedzie and Ogden! | tice Day speech at Chicago, that Ame: FIVE WORKERS ARRESTED AT QUEEN SERVICES Were Distributing Anti- Terror Leaflets Five workers were arrested by Chi- cago police Sunday afternoon for dis- tributing leaflets denouncing the Rou- manian terror near a Jewish synagogue where special services were being held in Queen Marie’s honor, here was no disturbance in connection with the distribution, but the police took the--~ - workers to jail because the leaflets were being read with avidity by the assembled crowd. L. Greenspoon, Mrs, L, Greenspoon, S. Potofsky and two others were taken to the station house. A large crowd of workers gathered in front of the synagogue to see the spectacle of a monarch, who is the worst oppressor of the Jewish people in the world, worship in a Jewish tem- ple, ss The services were arranged by reac- tionaries, who organized a fake body for the occasion, “The Society of Rou- manian Jews of Illinois,” headed by Marx Weissler, Judge Harry Fisher, Judge Alschuler, County Trustee Ros- enberg and others. The ceremonies were held at Shaarin Komain Syna- gogue, Douglas and Millard streets, which means “door to heaven” in Bng- lish, Many copies of Saturday’s issue of The DAILY WORKER containing the story of Cotzofanesti were sold to the crowd, r A demonstration by the workers greeted the queen when she came out of the church after 4 o’clock. f French Resent Jingo Pershing Statement on Who Won the War PARIS, Nov, 12.-The statement of General Pershing, made in an Armis- ica’s entry Into the war saved the al- lied cause, attracted almost as much attention here as did the speech of President Coolidge. “T have always had the most friendly country. Her dark hair still shows/ foster praised the excellent organ- the assembled workers to be passed relations with General Pershing and I some of its one-time youthful color. | ization work and the militant spirit of |ionalist ambitions of “Greater Rou-| out along the line of march, One leat- Under pressure of nationwide demana | avenue: can’t believe that he made the ald Sho spoke gladly of Parsons and of| the martyrs. * mania,” as they call it, and the women |19t was a reproduction of a cartoon the “government” at Peking, which| Chaplij n’ subject is “Prison Life in statement attributed to him iat the three trade unionists who had] « folks were dressed to kill, fourteen | owing the queen receiving the adu-|COS!8ts of Wellington Koo, former,| America. A, In 1879 these men drew 60,000 is q r 4 minister at Washi had termi: The 1 hel 1 39,| America won the war,” said Marshal been hanged wjth him, Spies, Engel | petticoats, beads and all, lations of the plutograts on one side) ™ at Washington, erminat- ie lectures are held by Local 39. t r tet his eer ere to & Gemonstration in Chica-| "" 7 heck whereyou belony,” and platey ed the Belgian treaty which gives| All members of the A. C. W. of A.| Foch. « and Fischer, of Lingg who died in his | 2, in nénor of the Paris Commune of | et back ‘where. 7! 8» and on the other, Lecad ei cell just before the executions, and of their three comrades, Neebe, Schwab and Fielden who were given long terms of imprisonment but were pardoned some years later by Gov. Altgeld. Memory Will Live, “The memory of their sacrifices for labor will not die,” she told the in- terviewer. “I can See it growing as the years go by. This year the Chi- cago Federation of Labor voted to commemorate Nov, 11 not as armis- tice day, but as the anniversary of (he martyrdom of Parsohs and his comrades, The 8-hour day has been Jargely achieved and labor is advanc- ing to further reductions of the work- 1871,” Foster said. “Can you con- ceive of such an outpouring of labor in any American city for-any similar purpose today? In 1877 they had been leaders of the widespread railroad strike. In 1886 they organized the first great nation-wide general strike in the world history of labor.. No wonder the masters of industry and finance wanted to bring such men to the scaffold. The capitalist aim is al- ways to destroy the effective leaders oft the working class. Then they hang- ed them. Now they jail them, and hang or electrocute if they can, The Best way to honor the Haymarket he- roes, is to struggle as valiantly and spiritedly as they did.” ing, day.” Or, as Lucy Parsons exclaims, “As | Hall Filled. The meeting tn the well-filled hall Was called this year as in the past by the Ploneer Ald Association, ,com- | t you lodk upon the awful murder of our comrades, swear within your heart never to cease your work until hig accursed “Go on upstairs, the queen is going to make a speech to you on the steps as she comes up,” the top Heutenant, the least sober of them all, said to the Jisappointed nationalist®, And with choice Roumanian .cuss words and much gritting of sharp teeth, the Mol- davian contingent of petty-bourgeois royalists “got back,” But the queen didn't speak to them, They were push- od aside and very much bewildered by the camera bombardment—and the queen didn’t speak to ner children, One of them pronounced a Balkan Word that would no doubt pass in En- glish for “frame-up,” Some of the wo- men folks and children crashed thru the lines in the corridor and tried to kiss the queen’s hand—but they all {felt very much snubbed, Top Hatters Ignored, And the innumerable top hatters, members of the mayor's committee, posed of survivors of the splendid la- system of capitalism is local plutes, consuls of various lands terror scene in Roumania, Still ano! hee leaflet, signed by International Lal Defense asked why Countess Karolyi and Saklatvala were kept out of the country while Queen Marie, the heroine of Cotzo- fanesti, was accorded official welcome,’ At the hall also, the banngrs were given out and the crowd formed into two groups to march in different direc- tlong to the depot, One group went South on Wells St, to Roosevelt Road and then over to the station, The other went directly Hast to Michigan SUITE IS Queen Marie tothe floor.’ of the old fashioned variety hang Belgians in China the right to be tried before their own courts. This is the first of the extra-territorial privileges of foreign powers in China to be can celled. But the Cantonese program calls for cancellation of the British American, Japanese and French trea! jes ag well, in order that China shall be master of her own house. A cris: over the American tréaty is appar- ently near, despite the fact that Sec- retary Kellogg insists that it cannot be terminated until 1934 without the consent of, Washington. LUXURIOUSLY APPOINTED 24 ROOM USED HERE BY ROYALTY Bleeping in an early American four poster mahogany bed It Is covered with a th are urged to attend. at 8 o'clock. Hall-Mills Jury Will Inspect Murder Scene SOMERVILLE, N, J., Nov, 12, —Re- ports were current early today that the Hall-Mills murder jury was plan- ning to slip out of Somerville as se- cretly as possible this morning to pay a visit to De Russey’s lane where the Rey, Edward Wheeler Hall and Mrs, Eleanor Mills, his choir singer, were slain on the night of Sept. 14, 1922, Summon Leopold. JOLINT, Ill, Nov. 14.—Nathan Leo- pold, serving a life term with ‘Rich- ard Loeb for the murder of little Rob- will be summoned as a six convicts now on trial’ School Children Ase Attacked by Maniac JEFFERSONVIIAE, Ind., Nov, 14.— A man hunt was in progress today m the countryside between here and Owen township for a man believed to be Charles Craig, who according to the complaint of Miss Leota Boyer, pretty school teacher of Owen township school invaded the school house and screaming and cursing began attack- ing the pupils, Typhoid at School, DANVILLE, UL, Nov. 10.— Typhoid fever today had virtually destroyed the chances of Westville High School for the championship of the Léttle Hight Football Association, Frank Razavich, star halfback, was) in St, Elizabeth's Hospital with the ailment: today, joining Leo Lucas and _ i {’ A picture of Qu retiring and the SEND IN A/SUB TODAY, larie’s grandmother Is the last thin, Greet her upon arising = % aha ene ate i! bor movement of Parsons’ day and | (the ittle Ji Consul was notice ey younger sympathizers, Emil ' ne ably impressed) the gold braided ‘b ae clini f coe hiv es DOR AORTA CR REI EN ANE AM