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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (May 4, 1927)
V3 e -'Daily Nebraskan WEATHER FORECAST For Lincoln and viciniity: Gen erally fair Wednesday. PHARMACY NIGHT IS THURS DAY EVENING. 141. THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1927. PRICE 5 CENTS PHARMACY OPEN (I0USE WILL BE BELDJWSDAY -1 "Show Week" For Convocation Today EXHIBITSARE PUBLIC All the Workings of the Phar macy College Will Be Open To Inspection x- The important events of Pharmacy Week open this morning at 10 o'clock, with a convocation in Phar Icv Hall. Mr. Guy Butler, member of the Board vol Pharmacy Examin ers and Mr. W. J. Porter, president of the Retail urug "ou -- coin, will speak on -marmacy .m a. rim Store." Both speakers are retail druggists of Lincoln; Mr. Butler w connectea .!tk Iip Butler Drug Co. and Mr. Porter is president of the Sumner Drug Co. From years oi continual in this profession, the two speakers will have actual experience jg a bacKgrouna iur w" c.enth Annual Display Pharmacy Night, the next impor tant event of Pharmacy Week, starts at 7 o'clock Thursday evening and until 11 o'clock the College of Phar macy is host to the people of Lin coln and the state. The College takes this opportunity of welcoming the people to the Seventh Annual dis play of the students of the College of Pharmacy. The purpose of this annual dem onstration is three fold. First, it shows the public just what is expec ted of the pharmacists of today. Sec ondly, it gives the student a profes sional morale. Lastly, it brings a closer relation between the profes sion of phanr.acy and the layn-an. Each student will spend the entire evening with his exhibits and will answer questions and explain differ ent phases of the experiment. These exhibits cover considerable senpn in the field of pharmacy. Exhibit Are Varied The following exhibits will be shown : Pharmaceutical Law, chairman, Robert Thygeson: Th young man in (Continued on Page Four.) SYNDICATE ADOPTS COLLEGE ARTICLES Branch of the United Press Makes Offer to College Students Who Want to Write for the World Theta Sigma Phi, women's jour nalistic honorary, has received a com munication from the United Feature Syndicate of New York, an organiza tion owned and operated by the Uni ted Press associations, proposing an International Nflwunsppr Service by student writers, through which, by the direct cooperation of student writers in colleges here and abroad, an opportunity will be given the younger generation to express its at titude towards its world, a chance to present its so-called immature views. Contributors on the campus will teave their contributions with Isabel O'Halloran in the News Service de partment of the School of Journal ism. A board of faculty members, chosen by Theta Sigma Phi, will judge the articles banded in and de cide which ones merit publication. These will then be sent in to the syndicate. The proposition calls for a weekly series of articles, to be written en tirely by young writers, for distribu tion to newspapers in this and other countries. The facilities and organ isation of the United Press associa tions throughout the world will be utilized in bringing to the attention of newspaper publishers and editors this unusual newspaper service. Five or six of the most important and in teresting of the articles secured will compose a weekly service for Satur day or Sunday publication by publi cations willing to pay a fair price for them. Only material which is good news Paper copy and is written on a sub ject of general interest will be ac cepted. Cartoons that tell a story or make a point are just as useful as 'cles and are invited. Both arti cles and cartoons will be paid for. 0' the gross proceeds from the tviii the service proposed, one Wrd gQ tn ths .tUittn; Mii, share to be divided equally be een the four or five contributors, se arlicle8 haye been accepted f or Publication, one third will be applied "dfray editorial costs, and the indicate will receive the remaining 0ne third. Concerning rules governing arti J ' ! contributions must be typewrit- at all poeaible, and, ia aay vttw, l?t cover only one side of the pa per. arfc a, r .. ', - ' ie, address, college, and class Continued on Page Three.) C. C. OFFICERS ARE ELECTED iuaJ to Head Univer sity Commercial Club Next Year The following officers were elected to head the Commercial club for next year at a meeting yesterday after noon: Donald Robb president. Clark Weckback vice-president. Ralph Fell secretary. Enos Heller treasurer Leo Carpenter representative to Bizad executive council. STATE SCIENCE EXPERTS MEET Thirty-Seventh Annual Meet ing of Organization Will Be Held in Lincoln WHITNEY WILL SPEAK The thirty-seventh annual meeting of the Nebraska Academy of Sciences will be held at the College of Agri culture, May 5, 6, and 7, 1927. The Nebraska Academy of Scien ces was organized January 1, 1891, at Lincoln, Nebraska, with some of the noted scientists of Nebraska as charter members; some of them were: Charles E. Bessey, Roscoe Pound, Lawrence Bruner, Goodwin D, Swezey, J. S. Dales, and J. S. Kingsley. The purposes of the organ ization were to promote investiga tion and fellowship, secure friendly criticism and exchange of thought, and aid in the spread of knowledge and interest in the various fields of scientific study. Meetings are held each alternate year in Lincoln, the other years in some one of the other educational centers of the state. In 1918 it was held in Peru, the state normal school, and in 1920 in Doane College, Crete. Papers To Be Presented Important and very valuable pa pers are presented at each annual meeting upon the different scientific discoveries and researches which have been carried on during the yeaiv The present active membership of the academy is about 175, and in cludes many of the persons actively engaged in scientific research within the state. Original investigations in the Nebraska fields have been very largely conducted by members of this Academy. The work is organized and divided into five sections, each presided over by a vice-president, and holding a field sectional meeting at the time of the annual meeting of the Academy, viz: Biology and Medicine, Earth Sciences, Engineering Sciences, Eth nology and Folklore, and Physical and Mathematical Sciences. Officers at the present time are: Dr. G. I. Peltier, University of Ne braska, President; H. J. Wing, Doane College, Vice-president; M. P. Brun ig, University of Nebraska, Secre tary; P. K. Slaymaker, Treasurer, University of Nebraska; Councillors; Professors, J. A. Moss, Virginia Zim mer, and M. C. Gaba. Creighton Man Lectures Some of the high spots in the meeting is a well selected talk by Dr. D. D .Whitney, on "Heredity and Life" at the Annual Banquet Friday evening, May 6, at the Student Ac tivities Building at the Agricultural (Continued on Page Four.) Opportunities For Women to Be Explained Mrs. Florence Robnrt of the Chi cago Collegiate Bureau of Occupa tions, will be in Lincoln next Mon day and Tuesday, May 9 and 10. Letters explaining her work have been distributed to all women in school and each of the sorority houses has been visited by represen tatives of the A. W. S. board. The Altrusa club of this city and the A. W. S. board are sponsoring Mrs. Robnett's visit here. Both or ganizations are anxious that all wo men be reached by this personnel program. Mrs. Robnett's plan is not so much to show the vocations that are open to women as to give spe cific, detailed information concerning opportunities and qualifications in those lines of interest to each indi vidual. Personal conferences are a part of her program. A schedule of personal conference hours will b placed on the bulletin board in Ellen Smith Hall Thursday and Friday. Girls desiring personal conferences should sign up for their time then. Another, opportunity to sign up will be immediately after the 11 o'clock convocation, Monday. Tables in the lobby of the Temple will be in charge of the sophomore members of the A. W. S. board. Further information will be printed in the Daily Nebrankan. Questions concerning the work will be answered the committee and Kathryn Douglas, who is assisting her. 50 ARE NAMED TO SIGMA XI, SCIENCE GRODP University of Nebraska Honor ary Scientiic Organization Names New Members REQUIREMENTS ARE HIGH Candidates For Society Must Pass Rigid Examinations, The Rules State Fifty new members of Sigma XI, honorary scientific society, were an nounced at a convocation yesterday morning at 11 o'clock, after which Miss Audrey Utterback gave her ju nior recital. The new members of Sigma Xi are: Bade, Otis F., B. Sc. 1910, Ohio State; M. Sc. 1917. Bukey, Fred S., B. Sc. in Pharm., U. of N. Wible, Chas. L., B. Sc. U. of N. Graduate Active Promotions. Alumni , Kiltz, Burton F., B. Sc. 1925, U. of N.; M. Sc. 1927. Maxwell, Rob. Wm., B. Sc. 1925, U. of N.; M. Sc. 1926. Rosenquist, Carl E., M. Sc. 1926, U. o? N. Grandy, Lewis S., B. Sc. in E. E. U. of N., 1922. Nielsen, Ralph P., B. A. Nebr.; M. A. California. ScM'lz, Reuben Zeitcn. A. B. Cen tral Wesleynn, 1921; A. M., U. of N. Bogle, Margaret Helen, A. B. Nob. Wasleyan, 1924, Buttery, Helen May, A. B. Nebr. State. 1918. F.hlcrs, Orrin Cecil, B. Sc. 1926. ' Hanson, Ethel Belle, A. B. 1926. Nebr. State. Hesseltine, Evelyn, A. B. 1908, Nebr. State. Horton, Clark W., B. A. 1926, Ohio Wesleyan, Liebhafsky, Herman Alfred, B. S. 1926 Texas A. & M. Mechtenberg, Wm. Rudolph, B. Sc. (Med.) 1926. Meyer, Ruth R., A. B. De Pauw Uni. Rymes, Arthur James, B. Sc. 1925 Nebr. State; Schroeder, Leonard Ralph, B. Sc. 1925. Swartz, Ruth Dorothy, A. B. Doane College, Crete, Nebr., June 1926. Wesley, Wm. D., B. Sc. Nebr. State, 1926. West, Wm. Harvey, A. B. Nebr. State, 1925, FFellow ir Botany. Whitefield, Chas., Jr., Graduate I. S. T. C; 1926. Asst in Botany. Whitton, Emily Severn, B. Sc. K. S. A. C. 1920. (Continued on Page Three.) BIZAD RALLY DINNER HELD MONDAY NIGHT Business Administration Students Meet at Grand Hotel to Discuss Bizad Celebration Fifty Bizad members attended a rally dinner held at the Grand hotel last evening for students of the Col lege of Business Administration. The purpose of the dinner was to create enthusiasm and interest in the sale of tickets for Bizad Day, which is to be held Friday.'May 13. The speak ers were Professors Hicks and Full brook, of the College of Business Ad ministration ; O r v i 1 1 e Carrington, chairman of the ticket sales commit tee; and Wayne Gratigny, general chairman of Bizad Day. Orville Carrington outlined the plan for the ticket sale campaign that starts this morning and continue through Thursday. It is planned to conduct a campaign in every ; class room in the college both days in order that every student will be reached. The first part of every class period will be given over to the selling of the tickets and the mem bers of the faculty have pledged themselves to cooperate in order to make the sale a success. Team cap tains who will conduct the sales cam paign are Judd Crdcker, Wayne Gratigny, Orville Carrirjtton, Leslie Br'nkworth, Robert Du Bois, and Victor Brink. Each of these tesm captains will have two assistants. Professor Fullbrook gave a short talk urging everyone to support the campaign and to work hard to make Bizad Day a complete success. Waynei Gratigny spoke in regard to the plans for the day which are now practically complete. He gave the main features of the program which are n barbecue luncheon, a baseball game between the faculty and the underclassmen, five acts of vaude ville and a dance at the Lindell Party house. The price of tickets has been set at $1; this includes the holder to bring a date to the evening dunce but not to the barbecue luncheon. Buttons will be given to each stu 3'i rvr "r'!'- s. tlrV.Jt ttui is will identify him from further solic itation. Grummann Discusses Galsworthy's "Justice" In KFAB Radio Address In a speech broadcast over KFAB from the University radio station Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock, Prof. Paul H. Grummann, director of the School of Fine Arts, discussed Gals worthy's "Justice" which has the ideal of justice underlying it that justice blindly applied works havoc with humanity. Professor Grummann first pre sented a resume of the type of drama which Galsworthy's play represents. Secondly he presented briefly the plot of Galsworthy's' "Justice." In the third place he discussed the char- ENGINEERS OPEN FESTIVAL TODAK Annual Engineers' Week Will Be Started With Convoca tion This Morning OPEN HOUSE IS THURSDAY The annual engineers' celebration starts today with the convocation and -pep rally in Temple Theater at 10 o'clock. This assembly will coi 'st of yells and songs led by Jim Ham ilton, speeches by Dean O. J. Fer guson and departmental heads, and some sense and a lot of nonsense by Fagan. All engineers are excused from classes for this event and are expected to attend. Ed Jolley, '28, general chairman for Engineers' Week, will give a talk over ration station WFAV at 9:45 this morning. He will announce En gineers' Week to people throughout the state, and will give a complete program for the week. Fiield Day is Wednesday busses will carry the engineers to Antelope Park where the Field Day events will be held. The men will be served at lunch by the ladies of the Grace M. E. church at 12 o'clock. Earl Luff and his assistants have arranged a program of athletic events for the afternoon. Various business houses in the city havo of fered prizes for the winners of the events. To the winner of the level race, Lawlor Sports is presenting a baseball glove and the Co-op Book Store is giving a bronze "Nebraska" seal. The winner of the golf tourney wjill receive an engineer's leather note book from Latsch Brothers. The winner of the horseshoe pitching con test singles will be awarded a pair of gold horseshoes by Lincoln Sports, and the doubles winners will be given $5.00 credit at Long's College Book Store. The chain race will be run on a parallel course this year and the .r. n will all run at once instead of run ning against time as has been the custom. The winner will be given a (Continued on Page Three.) May 10 it Date Set For Applications Applications for the following positions will be received by the Student Publication Board until Tuesday noon, May 10: The Daily Nebraskan (fjlrst se mester, 1927-28) editor-in-chief, contributing editors, managing ed itor, two assistant managing ed itors, three news editors, three assistant news editors, business manager, assistant business man ager, two circulation managers. 1928 Cornhusker editor, man aging editor, business manager, two assistant business managers. Awgwan (first semester, 1927 28) editor, associate editor, business manager, two assistant business managers. Applications may be got at the School of Journalism office Uni versity Hall, or at the office of J. K. Selleck, in the coliseum. T. J. Thompson, Chairman, Student Publication Board. University Vomen's Rifle Team Wins Thirteen Matches in Season Shooting by telegraphic report against twenty other universities, the Woman's Scarlet and Cream Rifle team closed its match s by winning t hi', teen of the contest. The University team won from Maine, Wesi Virginia, Wichita, Del aware, Purdue, Georgia? California, South Dakota. Michigan, Oregon Apt", Kefcne Normal school, Coe college, Oklahoma A. and M. college. They lost to Nevada, Cornell, Kan sas, Missouri, Cincinnati, Syracuse, and Washington. Rifling was begun at the University- in 1923 ond has been (sponsored by the Women's Athletic association, an organization within the depart ment of physical education. Practice begins in the late winter and con tinues until about the first port of April, when the inter collegiate matches are held. Eighty-six women The four classes organized teams and held interclass matches,' the acters of the play and criticised the manner in which they were treated by the author. "Humanity, in the course of its development, has formulated rules of conduct which it has crystallized into law. The individual, willing or un willing, is forced by means of this law to conform to the dictates of the past. Since all things are in con stant transition, since all things grow constantly, but more Blowly than the ever alert ideas of man and women. So it comes about that we look upon (Continued on Page Four.) History Association Passes Resolutions The following resolution was in troduced by Prof. J. G. W. Lewis of the Wayne Teachers' college at the Saturday morning session of the State History Teachers' asso ciation, and was unanimously adopted: Resolved, that we, the members of the Nebraska State History Teachers, association and members of various groups in social science, express to our officers and the authorities of the University of Nebraska, our appreciation and thanks for the excellent program provided for us this year and espe cially for the presence of Dr. F. L. Paxson. Resolved, that a copy of this resolution be presented to the ad ministrative authorities of the University of Nebraska. J. G. W.. Lewis, Wyane, Nebraska. PAN-HEL AWARD TO BE TONIGHT Second Pan-Hellenic Banquet Will Take Place in Coliseum; 1000 Guests Expected HAVE NATIONAL SPEAKER The Pan-Hellenic banquet will be held at 6 o'clock this evening in the University Coliseum for the purpose of announcing what four sororities of the University have the highest scholarship rating for the last semes ter of last year and the first semes ter of this year. The four sororities found to have the highest averages will be awarded silver baskets. The winning sororities may hold the baskets for one year, but a sorority must have won the basket three times in succession to have the right to keep it permanent ly. Mrs. Westover is Chairman Mrs. Richard N. Westover is serv ing as general chairman of the ban quet committee. Mrs. Lynn Lloyd, who was president of the Lincoln Pan-Hellenic Council at the time plans were begun for the banquet, will preside. Mrs. Hal Lebrecht of Kansas City, national president of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, and Mrs. Lloyd Jones of Tulsa, Okla.,' national president of Kappa Kappa Gamma will be the speakers. Mrs. Lebrecht arrived in the city on Tuesday. Mrs. Jones ex pects to be in the city over the week end, to attend the province conven tion of Kappa Kappa Gamma. The following are the members of the banquet committee: Mrs. E. W. Lantz who has charge of the tickets; Miss Thelma Sealock, who is looking after the prize awards; Mrs. Frank Beers who is arranging the seating of the guests; Mrs. Phil Watkins and Mrs. George E. Salladin, jr., for the decorations and menu; and Miss Helen Fitz-Gerald, Mrs. Walter White and Mrs. Walter C. Ernst, who have arranged for the program. freshmen winning by a narrow mar gin. Miss Helen Schrader of Pueblo, Colorado, is captain of the team and one of the high-point women. She is a senior in the department of phys ical education. Edith Graw of Ben ington is another high-point shooter of the team. The Scarlet and Cream team is chosen after tho practiced period is closed, an'l the interchip - htesta ended. The fourteen igbjK were picked for the representative team. All shooting wps done in the gallery of the department military science. Following are the members-of the team: Marjorie Eastbrooks, Delia Hoy, Lcuise Sifarik, Edith Graw, Helen Lomeier. Irma Sanders, Freida Cur tis, Helen Morehead, Virginia Lee, Marion Davis, Helen Schrader, Mild its! SelLtut-, EUwijra CetesS, Hazel Snavely, Edith Graw, Helen Schrader. SPONSORS ARE HONORED R. O. T. C. Regimental Review Held On Tuesday Afternoon The Cadet Regiment held a parade in honor of R. O. T. C. sponsors yes terday afternoon. The interfrater nity rifle meet banners were present ed to Delta Sigma Phi, which won first and Theta Chi, which won sec ond in the recent meet. Following are the sponsors, in whose honor the parade was held: Regimental Sponsor, Miss Eleanor Berge. First Battalion, Miss Gwendolyn Schroyer. Second Battalion, Miss Katherine McWhinnie. Third Battalion, Miss Ruth Ann Coddington. . Headquarters Co., Miss Helen Hildebrand. Company A, Miss Janice E. Wills. Company B, Miss Ruby Teater. Company C, Miss Jeannette Olson. Company D, Miss Virginia Lee Green. Company E, Miss Mary Elizabeth Craft. Company F, Miss Helen Meister. Company G, Miss Florence Christy. Company H, Miss Helen Wilson. Company I, Miss Mildred E. Let son. Company K, Miss Janet Jefferis. Company L, Miss Evelyn Mans field. Company M, Miss Bernice Trimble. Pershing Rifles, Miss Ruth Palmer. Band, Miss Helen Donnen. FILIPINO WOMEN ROLE THE NATION Miss Dale Ellis, Cotner Dean, Says Pilipino Wives Are The Rulers Of Their Homes " 'The Filipino woman is tho man of the nation,' as Governor General Wood has said," declared Miss Dale Ellis, Dean of Women at Cotner Col lege, at Vesper services Tuesday eve ning. "They are the rulers of their homes and the man must even be di rected in the profession that he has chosen. Not only that but she is the business head of the household," she further declared. "The Filipino girl lives a rather secluded life at first, and she looks forward to the time when she will marry and become the mistress of her home," Miss Ellis said in part. The life of the poorer girls is very drab, for they are taught from the first to carry water and they carry it until they die or marry; but the life of the richer ones is little better as far as freedom is concerned; before they are married. "The girls of the islands do not get' to go to school very much even though Amefica has provided them with so many schools," asserted Miss Ellis, "for the boys have first choice. However, these condition are chang ing very rapidly of late for they are getting into school more and more all of the time. "One of the main troubles with the girls is that they are so very shy; when they try to go to school and be assertive they are not bold enough and consequently drop out, very often, as freshmen," she said. Still in the last few years they are becom ing more assertive and are entering the special fields and making quite good." Miss DoVothy Luxford played a violin solo. Engineers in Near Riot When Dirigible Reading Changed for Pharmacists Students of the College of Engin eering were not only amazed but angered early yesterday morning when it was noticed that their dirig ible, anchored near the Aministration building, and upon which was painted "Engineers' Week" had been changed to read "Pharmacy Week." A near riot was caused by enraged members later in the morning' in the Engineering buildings when the pos sible culprits were being sought. Students of the College of Pharmacy were believed blameless, for "Pharm acy Week" would not have been printed upon the dirigible to betray the culprits. The dirigible has been restored to its original! significance, that of ad vertising Engineers' Week, and stu dents of the College of Engineering are still seeking the offender. BIG SISTERS TO INITIATE Annual Picnic and Initiation Will Be Held at A( College Thursday Five hundred Big Sisters are ex pected to be present at the annual picnic and intiation to be held on the Agricultural college campus Thurs day afternoon at 5 o'clock, according to plans lately announced. The ini tiation, in charge of the advisory council of the organization, will take place immediately after the picnic. Lantx's desk at Ellen SmiUt Hall end must be gtit before Wednesday noor 17-YEAR LIFE OF UNIVERSITY NIGHT IS ENDED Y. M. C. A. Money-Making Tradition Removed Forever By Faculty Group SHOW SAID DEGENERATED Y. M. C. A. Given Permission To Place Other Financing Plans Before Committee University Night, seventeen-year-old money raising Bcheme for the University Y. M. C. A., was formally sentenced to death Tuesday evening by the faculty committee on student organizations. The following resolution tells the story: "Resolved that University Night as such be abolished, and that the Y. M. C. A. may present a de-, tailed plan for some money-raising entertainment to take its place. But that the preparations for the perfor mance shall not proceed until the plan has received the approval of the student organizations commit tee." Committee Has Last Say The action of the committee comes as the final chapter to the University Night debacle this year. Postponed for weeks the affair was finally staged on March 28. Criticism of cer tain features of the program was so sharp that the above action of the committee was foreshadowed by the pronouncements of the Dean of Men and other members of the committee. An anticlimax to the Night this year was the suit of Sigma Delta Chi for recovery of prize money for the winning skit, Durham Time, an ex pose of cmpus politics which was later printed in The Daily Nebras kan. During the suit it was brought out that the Y. M. C. A. profited to the extent of slightly over $600 from this year's scandal night. Feeling against continuance of University Night has been growing for several years as the various acts seemed to be degenerating more and more from year to year without auy effective preventive measures by the ' Y. M. C. A. under whose auspices and for whose benefit the show was staged. The Y. M. C. A., it is understood has under consideration other plans for a money-making entertainment to take the place of the $600 or moro yearly contributed by University Night proceeds. Control of Varsity Parties, which is being contested at present by the . Student Council and the Varsity dance committee, was considered by the organizations committee, with action deferred until some future time. Locke Declares He Is Ready to Quit Cinders Until After Law Exams Roland Locke played a new dope, upsetting role Tuesday when he an nounced that he was through with track until after commencement. Coming after plans were well under way to bring Jackson Scholz and pos sibly others of the leading sprinters of the nation here to meet him in exhibitions at the Missouri Valley outdoor meet, his action left the plans for exhibitions in a tangled mess. Locke is admittedly not in the shape he was in last year although he has been slowly getting back to form.' He gave as his reasons for giving up the cinder game for the present the fact that he was not in shape and would not have time to get into proper shape while getting ready for his law finals. Law fin als are set for May 19 to June 2 while the valley meet is scheduled for May. 20, 21. That these dbtes conflicted; was Locke's principal reason for with drawing. He called attention to the extensive "cram" sessions engaged in by the law students preparatory to their finals. The "Gipper" stated that he felt he could neither do jus tice to his track work or to his law wrk under such conditions. He also indicated that after four years of training grind, he was willing to have a few weeks when he didn't have to watch himself so closely. In case Locke adheres to his drop ping of the cinder sport, athletic of ficial of vite Uu!eiolly uCp to be able to bring some other sprint aces here to compete with Scholx. Thief Takes Pocketbook The Kappa Deita sorority hoi2j 405 University Terrace, was en tered sometime Monday night and pocketbooks belonging to Marjorie Hall, 404 South Twenty-seventh, and Marion Fillers, 2S51 A street, who wr atterdjnc . jpp.tt'Vj, ,r?r.ra . taken. TfiO pockctboottt 'cositak.6-4 rash in the sum of $1 Bnd :i teen left in the front of tlie house.