WEATHER Fa ir tonight, probably Wrdne* iv: slifbtly warmer tonight. SLlji' -Melius Largest Daily Circulation of Anv Newspaper in North Carolina in Proportion to Population GOOD AFTERNOON Fashion note: No spats this win* ter.—Berlin pap«rs please copy. VOL. 57—No. 261 HENDERSONVILLE, N. C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1938 SINGLE COPIES, FIVE CENTS * * * #** * * * *** * * * * * * ••• 5 000 European Jews Without Shelter [LIGHT GROWS m VICTIMS (IF EJECTIONS ome i e Some go Insane as Problem Still Not Adjusted US PASSGUARDS I IN SEARCH OF AID WARSAW. Nov. i._(UP> — : - ■ committee here persons had t: . v. had gone insane : - I'ol.sh Jews held iiu • .:>h-Ger:uan frontier. I. ".a' said that the . ., hold without shel t 7 ..ken to the fron li - ' ' ..an interior and t d \ • z ieportation to Po :: ' - dispute, regardless Polan . - ew citizenship hv& By ROBERT H. BEST Lopyrijbt. 1938, United Press) BRATISLAVA. Czechoslovakia, v- i. «i;p)—A wretched band 62 Czechoslovak Jews, mostly tier., ysterday described how ■man troops threw their men ; ;nto jail and drove them into no-man's-land" between Czech p G rn^an frontier posts where r have established a crude p. ^J,'t\vanteil bv either Czechs oij sans, the^e refugees are ex i from day to day under a shelter, not knowing where tarn or what their fate will be. I visited the camp yesterday i: Ludenburg:, a German-occu d town of the Sudetenland 44 cs north of Vienna, and found it all their hopes had been plac in the efforts of relatives to ■suade the Czech government *ome other country to give im refuge. The 62 Jews var..e from babes arms to an 84-year-old blind r.an and inci"de eictit children, narriod couples and several en past 50. or tnrte weeks trey have been jz in the no-man's-land and, the 153 of them, many e -uccevlevi in slipping past Czech ir.tier posts at nifjht e and entering Czechoslovakia search of aid. zech authorities, they said, fitted or.o of them to be ta to a hospital after she be in.-ane and another after gave birth to a child in a sec no man's-land camp near aoisburg, a few miles away. ^ : tint, about 500 feet rc and stretching along an un ^ concrete highway outside nburg, houses the 62 refu lt was provided by friends tented a motor truck and ob «d official permission to bring 0 them. "e stories of the Jews huddled •? t.-.e highway were all the Of 510 Jews living in Lu lr? when the Germans occu 1 •' °nly one was permitted to She was Rosa Winter, of an American citizen, pwrd Winter. i -y" • _ hours, they said, ev ! Jew-sh man in Ludenburj? ri/"-T a'"i"csted and imprison t'homes were searched . '"•* •' men were told that i. -eave for Czechoslovak ia 24 hours. |IRB Examiner Dismisses Case I^TLAXT \ Giu Not. 1. (UP) P'. exami ier of the National V " P. Hoard regional fo yesterday recommended dis N of unfair labor Xtir t th< Se-l'ng Hos |i of Nashville, Tenn. I Gordon Dodmon, W had been dis r-' -i acitvitv, were p. ericas Federation !■»»< • 1 trkers, a Committee •fi; • (), ^anization affili | '° - . : o days in which v ' !-, "ldations. >rah Endorses Two-Price Plan Nov. 1. (UP) j-.• ; . R., today en f?"' r i rMvt' of Secretary L\ Wallace's two-pric< sul sidized sale of farn I ; of prolactin^ morale of the na RADIO DRAMA'S 'WAR SCARE' REVIVES CONTROVERSY OVER FEDERAL CENSORSHIP PLAN _ British Radio In 1926 Gave Public Scare With Play 1 Germans Pleased Because of Sunday Night's Incident Bv THEON WRIGHT United Press Staff Correspondent NEW .YORK. Nov. 1. (UP)— Orson Welles, 23-year-old theatri cal prodi>jy who frightened hun dreds of radio listeners Sunday night with a dramatization of "Men From Mai's," called in re porters last night and promised never to do it again. "I'm really quite shocked," he said. -j He denied that he had any no-1 tion that people would accept his highly dramatized version of H. G. Welles' famous novel, "War of the Worlds," as fact instead of fiction. jy "I should think, he said, "that the motion pictures and comic strips would have made people realize that the 'Man From Mars' was only a fantasy. It is almost a synonym for fantasy." The youthful director of the Mercury theater personally super vised. produced i»mi tvok part -in (Continued on page six) Nation's Ministers in Past 10 Days Protested to "Terror" Programs By MACK JOHNSON United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Nov. 1. (UP) —The Federal Communications Commission began a preliminary inquiry yesterday into the broad cast, "The War of the Worlds," amid congressional demands for stricter governmental supervision cf radio. FCC Chairman Frank R. Mc Ninch telegraphed the Columbia Broadcasting System for the script and a transcription of the Sunday night program, which depicted an imaginary attack by monsters from Mars on New Jersey and brought a deluge of reports of par.ic and mass hysteria from many parts of the nation. He premised to place the matter be fore the commission at its next session. q "I withhold nnal judgment un til later," McNinch said, "but any broadcast that creates such gen eral panic and fear as this one is; reported to have done is, to say the least, regrettable. "The widespread public reac-l tion to this broadcast as indicated by the press is another demonstra tion of the power and force of radio, and points out again the serious public responsibility of th(>se who are licensed to operate stations." PwiktewA Neville- MiHer of the) (Continued on page three) YEAR'S RAIN IS 24 PtKLLN 1 DEFICIENT WHEN OCTOBER ENDS AFTER 27 CLEAR DAYS I A Month's Precipitation Is .28 Inch; Temperatures Range From 28 to 86 Somewhere there is a line about October's bright blue weather. However it reads, it is a perfect i description of the weather during the past 31 days. The temperature was only .06 degrees below the normal for Oc tober; rainfall was recorded on only two days, amounting to .28 inch, and 27 of the 31 days were recorded as clear. The rainfall during the month was 4.08 inches below the normal of 4.36, bringing the total defi ciency of the year to 11.98 inches. The normal rainfall for the first 10 months is 51.32 inches, the fall this year has been only 39.34, and the percentage deficiency for the first 10 months is 24 per cent. The normal mean temperature for the month was 56.34 degrees ! as compared to the normal mean of 56.4 degrees. Both summer time and early winter temperatures were record ed during the month. A maximum of 86 degrees was attained on the 6th, 18th and 19th, and a mini mum of 29 degrees, 3 degrees be low freezing, was recorded on the 22nd. Daily temperature ranges were great, averaging 34.42 degrees daily and the greatest daily range was 46 degrees on the 18th, when the mercury ranged from 40 to 86 degrees. The deficiency in rainfall by i months is shown in the following I table: Month Fall Normal January 2.97 4.69 , February 1.87 4.87 March 5.86 5.50 April 2.54 4.28 ;May 4.16 4.86 June 6.05 5.51 July 10.19 6.08 August 1.66 6.13 September 3.76 5.04 October .28 4.36 39.34 51.32 Figures yesterday were as fol-! lows: Maximum temperature—75 degrees; minimum—32 degrees; mean—53.5 degrees. Day's range —43 degrees. MONTHLY SUMMARY Maximum—86 deg., on 6, 18, and 19. Minimum—29 deg. on 22nd. Mean maximum—73.55 deg. Mean minimum—39.13 deg. Mean—56.34 deg. Normal mean—56.40 deg. Rainfall—.28 inch. Normal rainfall—4.36 inches. Greatest daily—.23 in. on 24th. Clear day3—27. Part cloudy—2. Cloudy—2. Mean daily range—34.42 deg. Greatest daily—46 on 18th. COLLINS DENNY, JR., IS UNFAVORABLE TO CHURCH MERGER BROWNSVILLE, Tenn.. Nov. 1. (UP)—Collins Denny, vJr., son of the retired Methodist bishop, spoke at a mass meeting of Meth odists here Monday to predict that a merger of the three branches of the church would re sult in destruction of effective Methodism. Denny, who lives at Richmond, Va., said the northern church al ways would be able to control the general conference and thus have complete control over religious, economic and social rights of the membership, bishops and minis ters. He advocated preservation of three units separated despite the almost unanimous vote last year to merge. Mexico Halts Seizure Of American Owned Lands Pending Settlement MEXICO CITY, Nov. 1. (UP) A "gentleman's agreement" not ! to expropriate further Ameri 1 can-owned farm lands pending | settlement of the current Unit ed States-Mexican dispute over i previous seizures, has been made by President Lazaro Car i denas, it was learned today. While the president, in an of : ficial note to Washington, re i jected Secretary of State Cor 1 dell Hull's request that expro priations be suspended, it was understood he will not initiate i1 any new seizures during the • course of present negotiations in the United States capital. Expropriation decrees issued since the start of negotiations, it was pointed out, concern lands seized months, and even years, ago. The president was reported to be genuinely desirous of reaching a solution of the land expropriation controversy with the United States, the amount of indemnification to be based on Mexico's capacity to pay. Both sides were said to be still i in disagreement on the amount, but tha talks were understood to be proceeding along friendly lines and announcement of a settlement is expected soon, possibly within two weeks. HENDERSON TO; HAVE 3 COUNTY WIDE BALLOTS f These To Be Voted in Ad-C'1 dition to Township Tickets Nov. 8 4 YEAR SHERIFFS' ./ TERMS, ONE ISSUE ? Henderson county voters, bal« lotinp in the election on nex£i Tuesday, November 8, will use three ballots in addition to town-! ship tickets. The ballots, samples of which were printed in The Times-News Monday, are the county ticket, the state ticket, and a constitutional amendment ticket. Township tick ets will be voted in some precincts in addition. The county ticket is as follows: For solicitor. 18th judicial dis trict, C. 0. Ridings (D) and Gar rett D. Bailey (R). For state senator, 27th district: • Ralph W. Gardner and L. Bi Prince (D) and Mack Saunders (R). * For representative: L. L. Bur-» pin (D) and Brownlow Jackson (R). For county commissioners: i. L. Durham, J. A. Rusher and D. G. Wilkie (D), and Burt J. Sit ton, L. L. Merchant and Earl T.! Brown (R). For sheriff: W. E. Davis (D> aiid JMfn W. Drake (R). V- -4*. For clerk superior court: Georgfc* W. Fletcher (D) and M. N. Orr (R). For tax collector: J. M. Stew-1 art (D) and R. Hilliard Staton (R). J For coroner: J. F. Brooks (D) and Benjamin F. Cliff (R). For surveyor: Charles B. Tur-| ner (D) and J. B. Patterson (R).| For county board of education:, J. W. Morgan (D), unopposed. The state ticket is as follows: i For associate justice, supreme court: M. V. Barnhi?l (D) and Herbert F. Seawell, Sr. (R). For associate justice: J. Wallace Win-, borne (D) and Irvin B. Tucker, (R). For associate justice: A. A. , F. Seawell (D), unopposed. The following on the state tick- j et for judicial offices are unop-, posed: Harry McMullan, attorney general; Forrest H. Shuford, com missioner of labor; Stanley Win borne, utilities commissioner; C. i Everett Thompson, judge superior court, first district; Walter J. Bone, judge, second district; J. Paul Frizzelle, judge, fifth dis trict; Henry L. Stevens, judge, sixth district; John J. Burney, judge eighth district; Q. K. Nim ocks, Jr., judge, ninth district; Leo Carr, judge, tenth district; H. Hoyle Sink, judge, 12th district; William H. Bobbitt, judge 14th district; Wilson Warlick, judge 16th district; Zeb V. Nettles, judtre, 19th district; Allen H. Gwyn, judge 21st district. All are Democrats. For United States senator: Rob- j ert R. Reynolds (D) and Charles A. Jonas (R). For congress, 11th district: Zebulon Weaver (D) and Vonnoj L. Gudger (R). 1 lie VVllOI/ItU vtvuvv .w .— . two questions: an amendment making the term of office of sheriff and coroner four years, and for or against the establish ment of a department of justice. : 2 CZECH SOLDIERS KILLED BY GERMANS PRAGUE, Nov. 1. (UP). —A commission of German and Cze choslovak army officers last night ! was reported investigating a j shooting affray between border patrols of the two countries in which two Czech soldiers were kill ed and three wounded. The incident reportedly occur red when a German patrol crossed i the Delineation line in the Sude I ten area of Moravia Moravska ; Chrastova. ! According to authoritative I sources the German patrol pene : trated into Czech territory to the | town of Chrosdova Lhota, where one Czech soldier was wounded. , The patrol then returned to Mor avska Chrastova where a skirmish occurred in which the two Czechs ! were killed. VISIT ZIRCONIA Rev. Arthur W. Lowe, Rev. Em mett Molineaux and Rev. Paul G. Biorklund visited at Zirconia on last Sunday. They visited the home of Riley Bane and also vis ited at the old Staton home. Dur ing the course of the day they ' met a number of people. DIES FLAYS HIGH OFFICIALS FAILING TO HELP INQUIRY OF UN-AMERICAN ACTIVITIES CONFESSION IS 1 PLACED IN SPY TRIAL RECORD Voss Acted for "Love of Fatherland;" Says Much Armament Data Gotten ! NEW YORK, Nov. 1. (UP) — Over protests of defense counsel, the federal government read into the record of the Nazi espionage trial yesterday a confession > by Otto Hermann Voss that he be came a German spy "for love of the Fatherland." According to the statement, Voss did most of his espionage i during two years employment as a mechanic at the Seversky avia- 1 tion plant in Farmingdale, N. Y. During this time, the statement said, Voss was able to turn over to Nazi agents specifications of 35 army training planes and 77 pur suit planes and other armament < data. Charles W. Philipbar, Jr., coun sel for Voss. charged the state ment nvas obtained under duress by Reed Vetterli, who resigned recently as head of the New York the Bureau of Investiga-I tion. Eleanor Boehme, pretty Hunter college graduate, testified that once when she visited Kate Moog, a government witness who had , dealings with some of those in dicted, Miss Moog pressed into her , hand a match box which she later discovered contained a secret code. Miss Moog had testified that Karl Schluter, escaped spy, had given her a package of paper , matches with instructions to turn one over to Miss Boehme, who would understand the reason. But Miss Boehme testified yes- , terday that she had no under standing of the code and had known Schluter only casually. , Martin Schade, former engineer M for the Hamburg-American line, jj testified that Johanna Hofmann,i( girl defendant, had accompanied Schluter on several visits to Schade's apartment. i j CATS TO PLAY f FRIDAY NIGHT Practice Under Lights to; Meet Strong Canton Team There Hendei-sonville's Bearcats will, journey to Canton on Friday night for a game with the powerful Black Bears of Coach Charlie Poindexter. Both teams are undefeated in | the Blue Ridge conference race, the Cats at present holding the top position by virture of five con ference wins and no defeats. The J lone defeat suffered by the locals' this year was at the hands of I Marion, a non-conference team. The Bears, rated one of the j strongest teams in this section, j hav» won four conference games. The Cats will be decidedly the underdog in the game, but a bat-, tie is expected. Last season; Poindexter brought a powerful, team to Hendersonville, but man aged to take the game by a close i 7 to G score. The Cats have been working un-1 der the lights at the Chipman Athletic field this week to get ac customed to the night game. All Canton games are played at night. WOODMAN CIRCLE'S TEAM DRILL IS SET All members of the drill team of the Woodman Circle and those wishing to be in the drill team are asked to meet at Woodman Hall Tuesday evening promptly at 7:30 o'clock. This drill team is under the leadership of T. V. Lyda. BURNS PROVE FATAL MEMPHIS, Tenn., Nov. 1.— (UP)—Miss Eulalie Sloan, 22 year-old school teacher, died yes terday of burns received when she was trapped in an apartment fire. Denounces Campaign of Ridicule, Will Extend Probe South, West WASHINGTON, Nov. 1. (UP) Chairman Dies of the house com mittee investigating un-American ictivities today indicated he would :ontinue his inquiry into subver sive activities after denouncing lijrh administration officials for their "campaign of ridicule" and 'torrent of abuse unloosed on us." Dies said he expected to con tinue the inquiry through sub groups on the west coast in New York, Washington, and in the South about December 1. Dies charged cabinet members ieclined to comply with the terms ">f the house resolution creating a committee, by failing to assign lawyers and investigators to aid the inquiry. SAYS NEW DEALERS 5EEK TO BALK QUIZ By CERRY ROBICHAUD United Presi Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Nov. 1. (UP) Chairman Martin Dies, D., Tex., af the house committee investi gating un - American activities charged last night that top-flight Me'v Deal officials had sought to lamper the work of his group by •efusing to cooperate and by heap ng "abuse" and "ridicule" on its learings. In a nationally broadcast speech (Mutual network) Dies psserted ;hat various government depart nents had "refused to comply" .vith the resolution creating the :ommittee by failing to assign in vestigators and attorneys to help :onduct the hearings. In a nationally broadcast speech (Mutual network) Dies asserted :hat various government depart nents had "refused to comply" nth the resolution creating the ;ommittee by failing to assign in vestigators and attorneys to help conduct the hearings. The Texan's address preceded mother by Paul Y. Anderson, St. Louis newspaperman and former Pulitzer prize winner, who dc icribed the committee's procedure. Charles Michelson, publicity di rector of the Democratic national committee, arranged for Ander (Continued on n^sre three) Robert Woolsey, Comedian, Dies HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 1. (UP)— Robert Woolsey, former partner )f Bert Wheeler in one of Holly wood's most famous film comedy ;eams, died at his home in Malibu Beach late yesterday after an ill ness of more than a year. He was 49. Dr. Ralph Tandowsky reported the veteran actor was in a coma for two days after the illness be came critical. Woolsey's wife, the former Mignone Reed, and her mother, Mrs. Mary Reed, wpre at the bedside. The cigar-smoking comedian, who earned $100,000 a picture in his heyday, had been in retire ment for nearly a year because of his illness. He was reported to have suf fered a kidney ailment while still under contract at RKO, where he made his last picture last year. The illness necessitated a rest. In Hollywood it had been thought he was recovering and his death came as a shock. Slight of stature, Woolsey was the solemn member of the comedy team, which enjoyed its greatest success in the films between 1930 and 1936. Runciman Made Council President As British Cabinet Changes Ended LONDON, Nov. 1. — (UP) — Prime Minister Neville Chamber lain completed the reshuffling of his cabinet yesterday when Lord Hailsham resigned as lord presi dent of the council and was re placed by Viscount Runciman, Britain's "unofficial" mediator in the early stages of the Czecho slovak crisis. Malcolm MacDonald, colonial secretary, also was made domin ions secretary, succeeding the late Lord Stanley, thereby merg ing at least temporarily the two cabinet portfolios dealing with the overseas units of the British em pire. Sir John Anderson, former gov ernor of Bengal and at various times attached to the home of fice, ministry of health and colon ial office, was made lord privy seal, a sinecure post left vacant Thursday when 38-year-old Earl de La Warr was made minister of education. The resignation of Lord Hail sham, who is 66 yearB old and has been in the cabinet since 1935, was attributed to ill health. In public life for many years, including two years of service as attorney general to the Duke of Windsor when he was Prince of Wales, Lord Hailsham was a dele gate to the Ottawa conference in (Continued on page three) Brazil Virtually Banishing Six Ranking Leaders RIO DE JANEIRO. Nov. 1.— (UP)—Virtual banishment from Brazil of six ranking- political leaders was revealed last night with reports from Bahia of the departure for Europe of former Foreign Minister Octavio Manga beira. Mangabeira was the first to leave the country after the six were "invited" to depart before Nov. 8. The others include former Pres ident Arthur Bernards, Armando Salles, one-time governor of Sao Paulo state and candidate for president before elections, sched uled for last January, were can celled by President Getulio Var gas; Lindolpho Collor, former la bor minister in the Vargas gov ernment; Mario Brant, former di rector of the Bank of Brazil; and Julio Mesquita, director of the newspaper, 0 Estado Do Sao Pau lo. which supported Salles in last pear's campaign. While the reason for the depar tures originally was said to be va cations, it was understood the six were charged with opposition to the present regime. DEATHTAKES MRS. EC KING Rites and Interment Will Be at St* John in Wil derness Wednesday Mrs. MacMillan C. King, 49, of Greenville, S. C., and Flat Rock, died at her Flat Rock home last night at 10:15 o'clock. The funeral services will be conducted at St. John-in-the-Wil-| derness Episcopal church on Wed-| nesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, and burial will follow in the cem etery there. Services will be in charge of the Rev. James P. Burke, pastor of St. James Episcopal church, Hendersonville. Pallbearers will be Alester G. Furman, Jr., Rich ard Riley, Allen Bedell, William Perry, John Pellet and Steve Nettles, all of Greenville. Mrs. King was a native of Wa terville, Maine. She is survived by her husband, a Greenville bus inessman, and one sister, who re sides at Long Beach, Calif. She had made her home at Flat Rock in the summer for a number of years. RULES PRESS UNDER WAGE AND HOUR LAW WASHINGTON, Nov. 1. (UP) —Wage-hour Administrator An drews today ruled that daily news papers are subject to the tefms of the wage-hour law. In a letter to Elisha Hanson, attorney for ANPA, Andrews said, "It is the opinion of the general! counsel's office that newspapers1 are not service establishments within the meaning of the new law." SUMNER RESUMING LECTURES TONIGHT Dr. F. W. Sumner of Mills River, who gave 10 lectures in the spring in connection with the vocational school, at the request of various members of the class, resumes this work tonight at the city hall at 7:30, when the public is invited to hear the first lesson of the course in "religious psychology." MARK'S FINAL BLOW AGAINST WORLD LEAGUE Hitler Offers "Gentleman's Agreement" for Long Peace to France BROAD SETTLEMENT SEEN THIS MONTH By UNITED PRESS The Nazi-Fascist combination today moved further to the front in Europe's search for a solid basis of international relation*. At Vienna, delegations headed by Nazi Foreign Minister Joacliiiri Von Ribbentrop and Fascist For eign Minister Ciane weru gather ing to arbitrate tomorrow the mi nority dispute between Hungary and Czechoslovakia. There appeared little doubt that satisfactory compromise would bo reached and some 11,000 square miles of additional territory and one million inhabitants would be cut off from Czechoslovakia. Hun gary, however, was believed un likely to get a common frontier with Poland. HITLER VOLUNTEERS PEACE WITH FRANCE By CLIFFORD L. DAY (Copyright, 1938, United Pr«»«) LONDON, Nov. 1.—(UP)—A four-power pact to replace the moribund League of Nations r* keeper of Europe's peace came nearer today. This long has been the desire of Premier Benito Mussolini of Italy and Chancellor Adolf Hitler of Germany and it was iHtler who actuated today's development. Der Fuehrer yesterday offered France a "gentlemen's agree ment" to ftfrain from war, the pact to be of 10 or 25 years' dura tion, and French Foreign Minis ter Georges oBnnet eagerly ac cepted the opportunity to e*terV<J the Munich agreement of the "big four"—Germany, Italy, Britain and France—towards general Eu ropean appeasement. Bonnet shuttled back and forth between diplomatic representa tives of the four nations, laying the groundwork for solving a half-dozen pressing European problems, as a result of the en couraging overture from Hitler. Diplomats anticipated that this month would bring a formal Franco-German friendship or non aggression pact, renunciaiton by Germany of any territorial claims in Europe against France, re-es tablishment of normal friendly diplomatic relations between France and Italy, effectivation of the Anglo-Italian friendship pact of last April 16, final settlement of the Czechoslovak-Hungarian territorial dispute by Italo-Ger man arbitration and the granting of belligerent rights to both sides in Spain by the London non-inter vention committee. This four-power program, turn ing Britain and France complete ly away fro mthe League of Na tions system of collective security, would bring the Democratic allies into close collaboration with the two great European dictatorships. Diplomats said it definitely would kill the small remaining effective ness of the league in the field of (Continued on page three) ART WEEK IS KEPT BY CITY Many Local People Are Exhibiting Art and Crafts Productions American Art Week is belrg observed in Hendersonville, spon sored by the Woman's club. The exhibit o* local artists is viewed by the sponsors as helping the community by bring local ar | tists directly before the public, disseminating ideas to enrich the | community, and emphasizing by exhibitions the worth of local crafts and fine arts. It is also maintained that such exhibits offer local and national publicity to. the artist and the J community, stressing local histori cal and beauty spots and enhan«> j ing art education. i Mrs. Augustus Williams, chair man of the art department of the club has arranged an exhibit in several of the windows of loc;tl merchants. She was fortunate lo procure the works of the follow ing leading artists of Henderson ville: Dr. William R. Kirk, Mr. Cady Hayes, Mr. Lewis Kemper, Major Thad Jowett, Mr. A. F. Barber, Mesdames Harry Ewbank, Margaret Beale, A. Ficker, J. Ben ton, C- Few, Karl Snow, Misses Lucy Jowett, Maude Robinson. Anne Bowen, Nancy Allen, and Fassifern School

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