Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 8 Oct 1925, p. 2

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wiiwwnwi* 7^- *> <** • w - - • -f^fir1"" "' "- ™" ""* J.-.,,,.,™- .... !^.." - -p^i ^ ^PS^P|P?»IPWPP^PIP^ , .\J^ MeMiWJII PLAINPBAUBR, MeHBNBT, ^ +# ^ *. $400,000,000 BREAD MERGER ANNOUNCED CHARMING DEB Wm» Company, General m Continental in Giant - • Combine. •• ™"™ Chicago.--Following a 20 per ceht reduction In Its Chicago bread prices, the Ward Baking company announced * $400,000,000 baking corporation, a merger of the Ward company with two of its largest competitors. The announcement was made in New York. Discussion of such a merger wai Immediate upon the announcement of the Chicago price cut. The General Baking company ®n^ the Continental Baking corporation are the other firms Involved in the merger. Articles of incorporation for the new firm, to be known as the General Baking corporation, were filed In Baltimore, Md. A total of 157 baking plants will be controlled by the merger corporation. The Ward corporation has eighteen plants, the Continental 106, and the General Baking company thirty-three. , It in estimated that the three concerns do 10 per cent of the bread business of the United States. William B. Ward has resigned as chairman of the Ward Baking corporation, and It Is believed that he will be the chairman of the consolidated concern when the merger has been completed. Mr. Ward is regarded as the moving spirit in the combining of the three firms. SPANISH TROOPS IN KRIM'S CAPITAL Believed Victory Witt GoFar Toward Breaking •f RifRan War, Miss Kalherine Watson, the charming young daughter of Senator James E. Watson of Indiana and Mrs. Watson, will make her debut into Washington society this season. CA1LLAUX TAKES U. S. DEBT PLAN TO PARIS F. /. Thompson Resign* From Shipping Board Washington.--Frederick I. Thompton of Alabama, a Democratic mem ber of the shipping board, unexpectedly submitted his resignation to President Coolldge. The President accepted the resignation, effective Norember 1. Commissioner Thompson, who has been actlv.e in demanding that the (hipping board resume control of the lovernment's merchant marine and that the resignation of Leigh C. Palmer, president of the fleet corporation, be accepted by the board, declared he had resigned to be f^ee to oppose proposed legislation that would deprive the shipping board of its control over government ships. Women's National Golf Title Won by Miss Collett Clayton, Ma--Miss Glenna Collett of Providence, R. L, won the twentyninth annual women's national golf championship at the St. Louis Conn try club by the largest margin In the history of the tournament. She defeated Mrs. Alexa Stirling Fraser of the Royal Ottawa club, Ottawa, Ont, three times winner of the title, 9 and B, in a 36-hole match. The golf played by Miss Collett shattered all records lor women's play over the St. Louis dob course. In the morning round she made a concessional medal scon of 78 strokes. Mellon Ashe $40,000,000 Per Annum. Madrid.--Spanish troops art i* jlr, the capital of Abd-el-fcrim, leader of the O&yfflnn rebels. News of the victory which has carried their soldiers at last to the stronghold of the enemy was received In Madrid with great rejoicing. King Alfonso appeared at a window of the palace and was greeted, toy the acclamations of the populace. Flags were flown from most of the houses of Madrid. The king and the military directorate sent messages of congratulation to Gep. Primo de Rivera, who has been in charge of the Moroccan campaign. The advance on Adjlr has been made by both Spanish and French troops, the Spanish troops working from AIhucemas bay and the French on their left from Klfane. Military authorities believe the victory will go far toward breaking the back of the Rlffian war. Fez.--An official communique aays the offensive has ended with every objective taken, the French troops having carried their lines twelve kilometers (7% miles) north of Klfane, Wahsington.--Negotiations for the funding of the French war debt of $4,200,000,000, which have been going on for eight days, were suspended sine die when Joseph Caillaux, minister of finance, agreed to take back to his government a temporary proposal made by Andrew Mellon, secretary of the treasury. This suggestion provides that France pay $40,000,000 annually to the United States for the next five yeras. At the expiration of that period, or at any time during Its course, the French government would resume the discussion of the definite funding of Its obligations, taking up the pourparlers from the point where they are now left off. ^ Secretary Mellon's proposal was presented to the French, commission after the French terms of settlement had been pronounced unacceptable. The American offer which M. Oaillaux will carry back amounts to an acceptance of 1 per cent interest on the total French debt, with accrued Interest, as It now stands, at over $4,000,000,000, for five years. The annuities of $40,000,000 In reality represent only an addition of $20,000,000 as France has been paying $20,000,000 annually In Interest at 5 per cent on the A. E. F. war stocks she acquired for $407,000,000 in 1919. Mr. Mellon's offer is admittedly only a stopgap to prevent the total of the debt with accruing interest rolling up to a greater grand total. Wilbur Scores Critics as Plane Carrier Is Launched Qulncy, Mass.--Secretary of the Navy Wilbur in an address at the launching of the airplane carrier Lexington here, scored critics of the navy who have condemned it as "hidebound with conservation," and cited contraction of the Lexington as evidence of the navy's keeping pace with prog- British Labor Patty Will Bar Communists London.--A drastic measure to purge the party of Red influence was carried out by the British Labor party when at the first day's session of the organization^ conference at Liverpool a resolution barring communists was carried by a nine to one majority. The radicals, who have been seeking to control the party by a process of Infiltration, suffered a heavy defeat when--after the defeat of a Red motion disputing the executive's decision not to raise for three years last year's decision not to admit the Communist party to affiliation--a resolution outlawing individual communists also was carried by a majority of 2,- 870,000 to 321,000. KUMANIAN DELEGATE V. V. Pe'la, professor to the University of Bucharest and member of the Rumanian parliament, one of the Rumanian delegation to the conference of the Interparliamentary union in Washington. BLAMES LANSDOWNE FOR AIR DISASTER Expert Says He Should Have Avoided Storm. tiQOfSERS DEFENDS • I NAVAL AVIATION Trant-Pacific Failartt Shehandoah Wreck Not ;J" ^ Due to Neglect. Washington.--Commander John Rod-' gerg, flight commander In the effort of the PN-9 No. 1 to reach Hawaii, took issue with Col. William Mitchell, army aviator and critic of administration of the air forces, on two main points In the army man's contentions. Rodgers declared that he challenged "anyone to make a Just criticism i>f the Hawaiian flight," and defended the navy agalnsf other charges of Mltcheh in regard to the bhenandoah flight and other mishaps. He declared in his opinion that It would be Impossible for this nation to be attacked by airplanes of a foreign power capable of crossing the ocean with 2,000-pound bombs. He jupported critics of the air administration, however, in their contention that a reorganization of national defense is needed to give more latitude to airmen, and he argued for a department of national defense, under which the navy and all the departments of national defense might bo better co-ordinated. The need for a scientific reorganisation of the national defense. Commander Rodgers told the board, was plainly apparent. Defending the navy from blame for recent disasters, he added that there was "something vitally wrong with the fclavy department." Scranton Body Hopes to End Hard-Coal Strike Scranton, Pa.--Hopes that a foundation for resumption of anthracite mining operations had been laid were expressed by members of the. Scranton Chamber of Commerce committee after a conference with John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of America. After the conference, which lasted for four hours, the only statement forthcoming from the committee was that the outlook was hopeful and that definite results were expected from another conference to be held with Mr. Lewis within a few days. Lakehurst, N. J.--Blame for the loss of the Shenandoah was placed on Commander Zachary Lansdowne by Capt. Anton Heinen, former German Zeppelin pilot, in testimony before the naval court of Inquiry. Commander Lansdowne, who died In the wreck of his ship, permitted the craft to be driven Into the center of the storm for at least half an hour after the danger was evident and measures to escape should have been taken, the German expert insisted. A Captain Heinen was the Instructor of the crew which took the dirigible on her Ill-fated cruise Into the Ohio valley. He explained In detail how the ship should have been kept head to the wind and away from the vortex of the disturbance. "Are you prepared to say that if you had been In charge of the Shenandoah you would have escaped the storm?" the presiding officer, Rear Admiral Jones, asked. "I am proud to say that I could have done so," Captain Heinen answered. At the ceremony, Rear Admiral William A. Moffett, chief of the navy bureau of aeronautics, reiterated his opposition to separation of naval aviation from complete naval control. Rail Official Is Killed fs Car Plunges Off Road Carbondale, Ind.--William H. Scrlvpn, general superintendent of the Pennsylvania lines in the West, was killed when his automobile plunged off a road near here and overturned as. it rolled down an embankment Mr. tScriven lived at 104 Bellevue place, Chicago. With him In the car, a roadster, was Mrs. W illiam Kramer of Kramer, Ind., A long-time friend and a member of • leading Indiana family. She was •thrown from the car and was injured. Russia Completely Wet Again After Eleven Years Moscow.--After eleven years of partial prohibition, Russia is again completely wet. Whisky, brandy and liquors containing 00 per dent of alcohol and vodka of 40 per cent Strength, again appeared in the cafes, restaurants and stores. Heretofore the government has Maintained a monopoly of the manufacture and sale of spirituous liquors •but under the new order private individual will be permitted to make and sell liquora Sprague Must Pay Procter $62,697 in Campaign Suit Chicago.--Col. A. A. Sprague was ordered to pay $62,697 to William Cooper Procter by a Jury In Judge Thomas W. Slick's court after it had had this noted controversy over campaign funds under consideration for 22 hours. ^ This is the full amount for which Mr. Procter aued his old friend and co-worker In the campaign of Gen. Leonard Wood for President, a piece of political adventuring which Colonel Procter now admits was the "work of amateurs." In addition to paying half of the $100,000 note which Colonel Sprague signed in 1920, he must pay 5 per cent Interest from the date of signature. A motion for a new trial was entered immediately by Colonel Sprague's attorg^s. Earl S. Driver, Noted Ftdl Back, Dies at Madison Madison, Wis.--Earl S. (Keg) Driver, famous fullback of Wiseonson's gridiron teams of 1901 and 1902, and who has helped to make Wisconfootball history as assistant coach since that time, died here of heart disease. He was born at Darlington, Wis., and was forty-seven years old. One of the most noteworthy contributions to Wisconsin football history contributed by Mr. Driver, was the institution of freshman football teams. I Auto Race Driver Killed 8an Francisco, Cal.--Gene Bingham, racing driver of Los Angeles, was killed and Lou Moore of Hollywood Was Injured at Tanforan track when their cars crashed through the fence on the death curve. Doctor Wound, Two Bandits ..... h„n rf®' Three men were wounded I Jr. and his wife slipped quietly International Peace and Law Approved by Union Washington.--The Interparliamentary union, in a resolution adopted, indorsed the efforts of the League of Nations and the Pan-American union to codify International laws and called for a general and constructive plan for codification. The conferpnoe also adopted a resolution providing for "a declaration of rights and duties of nations" and another directing a study to prevent wars of aggression. Bandits Get *$100,000 Gems St. Paul, Minn.--J. M. Dreifus, diamond salesman, was robbed of $100, 000 in gems by three unmasked bandits here. The robbery occurred in a Jewelry store. Divers Find Crew of Submarine 5-5/ Dead New London, Conn.--The lives of the men who went down on the submarine S-51 were snuffed out almost Immediately after she was rammed and sunk by the steamer City of Rome off Block island a week ago. The death toll stands at S3. This was established when divers found that the last two compartments In which It had been hoped there might have beeneair--the motor and torpedo rooms--were filled with water. None of the crew who went down ha^ a chance for bis life. Calles Proposes Bill to Fix Foreigners? Property Rights Mexico City. A bill to fix the land rights of foreigners under the first section of Article 27 of the Mexican constitution was introduced • by President Calles In congress. It provides rules for holding both land and water rights. Under it foreigners who now own properties within the forbidden zone along the borders and the coasts must sell them within three years after the law takes effect or apply for Mexican citizenship. Mrs. Kresge Asks Probe of Spouse in $1,000,000 Suit New York.--Mrs. Doris Mercer Kresge, wife of S. S. Kresge, the cha't store head, asked for examination of her husband" In connection with her suit to make him fulfill an alleged ante-nuptial agreement Mrs. Kresge charged that prior to their marriage he promised her $7,000,- 000 in securities but afterward gave her only a ten-Cent toy dog from one of his store* Mrs. Kresge later reduced her demand to $1,000,000, plus a 50 per cent stock dividend declared since the alleged agreement, and ' •- terest on the principal to date. Two U. S. Deputies Ousted for Joyride With Druggan Chicago.--Terry Druggan, supposed to. be on his way to the De Kalb county Jail, went on a seven-hour Joyride and precipitated a new scandal-- this time in the Federal building. The two deputy United States marshals who were with him on the party were discharged by United Stafes Marshal Palmer D. Anderson. Discharge of the federal deputies, Walter Zlppman and Anton L. Polak, makes a total of eleven federal and county officers who have lost their Jobs through Druggan's efforts to soften jail life. Druggan, Zlppman and Polak set out from the Federal building for Sycamore at 4 o'clock in the afternoon and they did not reach Sycamore until 11 o'clock at night. Federal Judge James H. Wilkerson had ordered Druggan held there- until he makes his findings In the county Jail contempt proceedings In two weeks. Bricklayers? and Plastererf A Unions Sign Peace Pact ^Atlantic City, N. J.--President William Green of the American Federation of Labor announced that an agreement had been reached In the Jurisdictional dispute between the bricklayers' and plasterers' unions, which has tied up $250,000,000 In construction throughout the country. The agreement, which was signed by the officers of the unions and Mr. Green, provides that hostilities shall cease Immediately and that all work shall be resumed at once. Grace Lusk Gets Liberty $ Was Married September 22 Madison, Wis.--Grace A. Lusk, Waukesha school teacher, who 'n 1917 shot and killed the wife of the mah she loved, was given a commutation of her nineteen-year sentence at the state prison by Gov. John J. Blaine. Miss Lusk was released from prison on a conditional pardon January 17, 1923, because of poor health, and in announcing the commutation of sentence, Governor Blaine said that Miss Lusk had married "a professional man of good standing" on September 22, 1925. The governor refused to say where Miss Lusk Is living now or to whom she Is married. Jack Dempsey and Wills Sign to Fight in J 926 Niles, Mich.--Jack Dempsey, heavyweight boxing champion of the world, signed articles to defend his title against Harry Wills, negro challenger, somewhere In the United States some time In September, 1926. The articles call for a ten-round nodeclsion contest Forfeits aggregating $350,000 are on deposit with the First National bank of South Bend, IntL, as evidence of the food faith of all parties concerned. Landslides Bury Many Tokyo.--More than thirty persons are dead, scores Injured, and many more are believed to be burled alive by landslides In Tokyo, Yokohama, apd vicinity. Ftockefellers to Europe New York.--John D. Rockefeller, away To Hold Mass Meeting Fergus Falls, Minn.--A national mass meeting for Methodist men to be held/ln St. Paul November 23 was annwnced by Dr. Bert E. Smith of Chicago at the Methodist conference. Atterbury Succeds Rea as Head of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa.--Samuel Rea retired from the presidency of the Pennsylvania railroad on Tuesday and Gen. William Wallace Atterbury took charge as president General Atterbury, vice president of the company for the past fifteen years, was elected to the presidency at a meeting of the board of directors at which President Rea presided. Noted Irish Jurist Dies Dublin.--Stephen Ronan, who, until the formation of the Irish Free State *ev^5verbat«nry-it(hrOS8 engaged 111 * 1foT Europe on the liner Majestic, I was lord Justice of appeal and privy tried to •rqoUb h --t«.h ree bandits who 11 evadin•g pV hotoOg rawp hers by» sWmaXy-Jf liungg tUh1e"yy I1 cv"oUulnl'c-1i1l1lo vrI ,, ItOs dUevahUd.i HAAeV wWfalBs oUnUev of 6ne of th»•e> wounded. Gross was 1 had merely come down to "say fare-1 the most brilliant Irish lawyers of i well to a party of friends." his generation. Scopes Enters U. of C. for Course in Evolution Chicago.--Jol 's >mas Scopes, central figure in the evolution trial at Dayton, Tenn., hasn't enough of that subject. At the University of Chicago, where he will do postgraduate wr-k, he said he would attend lectures on evolution to be given by Prof. H. H. Newman. He also signed up for a course In geology, which plays a big part in the evolution theory. uBrokerGet Long Terms' Los Angeles.--Harry Hlbbs and Thomas Hennessey, who were convicted oi defrauding thousands of railway stock Investors by a tale of a $6,- 000,000,000 merger, were sentenced to from 80 to 300 years In the state prison. Yank Bodies Brought Home Chihuahua City, Mex.--Bodies of five American soldiers killed during the Pershing expedition In 1916 have been exhumed and more are to be taken up to be transported to the United States. Bread Prices Are Reduced 20 Per Cent at Chicago Chicago.--A slash of approximately 20 per cent In the wholesale price of bread to Chicago dealers will go Into effect at once, a large baking company of Chicago announced. As a result of the cut the retailer can sell the large 1%-pound loaves that now sell for 16 cents at 12% cents. The small one-pound loaves now retailing at 10 cents can be sold for 8% cnts. v Bread prices have been higher In Chicago than in other cities for the past five years. Failures for Week, Also for September, Show Decreases New York.--A small reduction appears In the number of commercial failures In the United States the week ending October 8, a* total of 851 being reported to R. G. Dun and company. This compares with 360 last week. For the fifth consecutive month the number of commercial failures shows a decrease, the September total being 1,465. Last month's liabilities of $30,687,319 are the smallest reported in two years. Votes fo Join Los A nffU) • Venice, Cal. Los Angeles, the ever' expanding city, added 27,000 acres to Its area and 25,000 people to its population when the citizens of this seaolde city voted to annex it to the metropolis. To Deport Alien Prisoners • Indianapolis.--Thirty or more unnaturalized prisoners in the- Indiana reformatory at Ffcadieton will be ,de- '• ported, if plans ot Governor Jackaun ,«re carried out. Chile President Qu«|p^ I Seek WiUon Memorial Fund Santiago, Chile.--President Arturo 1 Washington.--The National Wood Alessandrl resigned after appointing 1 row Wilson Memorial association Luis Barros Borgono minister of the I launched a. drive to raise $5,500 000 Interior and vice president and turn- I for memorials at Washington and lng over the presidential ' powers to I Princeton university. The Washington him. The president's resignation fol- memorial would be an educational In • Heiress Weds Fifth Time New York.--The fifth marriage of Mrs. Almee Crocker Gouraud, heiress of the Crocker family of California, became known when she arrived on the Berengarla with her husband, Prince Mistislaw Galatxlne, twentyfive, a Russian. lowed a dispute with Ibanez, minister of war. OoL Carlos Flu Causes 60 Deaths Charleston, W. Va.--An epidemic of flu in the Holly river section of Webster county has caused 60 death* * stltution. Veterans Instidl New Cktef St Petersburg, Fla.--Col. Carml Thompson of Cleveland was Installed as the new commander of the United States War Veteransi Mexican Financier to U. S. New York.--A. J. Panl, the Mexican finance minister, Is reported to be on his way to New York to confer with the committee headed by Thomas W. Lamont on arrangements for resuming the payment of Mexico's external debt of $000,000,000. Hawaii Secretary Renamed Washington.--The Vhlte House announced the reappointment of Raymond (p. Brown as secretary of the •territory of Hawaii. * Calls U. S. Crime Intolerable St. Louis.--A. V. Lashley, director of the Missouri Association of Criminal Justice, said in an address before the Missouri Bar association that crime conditions had never bepa so Intolerable In the United Stateo, McNamara Gets Prison Term Indianapolis.--John J. McNamara, labor leader who served k prison term In California for the Los Angeles Times dynamiting, was sentenced to from one to five years on an extortion charge. Bids to Radio Parley Out Washington. -- Forty-two governments are Included In Invitations sent out by the State department for the radio telegraph conference next spring. Those countries will be allowed to vote at the meeting which have ratified the agreements reached in London In 1912. Valued at pi 7,OOO,000,000 New York.--New York city's real estate is valued at $17,000,000,QQflt Of this $12,000,000,000 is taxable. • ILLINOIS STATE HEWS Illinois Motarians will assemble at Joliet October ST for a district meeting. The population of Rockford city If. now 92,909, according to returns innde by a company issuing a new directory. In September 12,644 civil suits were disposed of and 10,375 were filed, Chief Justice Olson of the Chicago Municipal court, reported. August Maue, county superintendent of schools, ordered teachers of Will county rural schools to bar county nurses during class hours. Growth of Jacksonville and Morgan county from the time of the mound builders was portrayed during the Centennial Pageant of Progress at Jacksonville. Miss Emma Bacon, thirty, years old, nurse at the Chicago Tuberculosis institute, 360 North Michigan avenue, was found brutally murdered in a back yard at Dolton. • The September grand Jury of Chicago returned a total of 898 indictments out of 608 cases considered. The Jury was dismissed by Chief Justice Lynch of the Criminal court. An estate valued at $400,000 was left by Ferdinand W. Peck, pioneer Chlcagoan, according to an inventory filed at Chicago by his sons, Ferdimand W. J., and Clarence K. Peck. Pursuing a speeding automobile at 70 miles an hour, Motorcycle Patrolman Anton Potucfk, thirty-four years old, Cicero, was thrown from his machine and killed when the motorcycle skidded. Illinois members of congress may nominate twenty youths for midshipmen at the Annapolis naval academy, according to a list of vacancies made public at Washington by the Navy department. Norman, two, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Parke of Humboldt, was found drowned in a watering tank in. the barnyard. He Is believed to have climbed a fence, lost his balance and fallen in. William Webber, fifty, Springfield, convict, serving a life term In Missouri prison at Jefferson City, was paroled by Gov. Sam A. Baker. Webber, convicted of mqrdering Mrs. Elsie Hagenbaugh Joplln, Mo., November, 1914, had served over ten years. The anvll-welghted body of Victor Larson was found In the cistern at the home of his brother, J. H. Larson at Galesburg. The cistern was the same one In which his sister-in-law drowned herself a year ago. Prof. Julius Goebel, head of the department of Germanic languages at the University of Illinois at Urbana, will represent North America as a corresponding member of the council of the German Foreign institute. He has Just been notified of his election. It hurts me more than you," Is silly twaddle In the opinion of Matthew P. Adams, superintendent of the Mooseheart home for children. In speaking on corporal punishment, Superintendent Adams asserted that children often were punished unjustly. One man was shot and killed, a second was seriously wounded and another arrested by Detective Thomas Mack of the Indiana Harbor railroad, when he surprised the trio in the. act of rifling a box car loaded with grapes In the Argo yards of the railroad. The dead man was John Shamlja Three pints of whisky in the car of Newton Perry, wealthy Chicago broker living in Lake Forest, cost him $200 as the result of Indiana's iron bound prohibition enforcement law. Mr. Perry was arrested on the Dunes highway on July 24 by Joseph Allie, federal prohibition agent. Four members of one family were killed and two others Injured, when the automobile in which they were riding was struck by a Chicago & Alton train at a crossing near Glrard. The dead: Mr. and Mrs. Albert Troy, their son Morris, nine years old, and daughter Rublee, six. Characterizing their alleged crime as the "vilest murder" he had ever heard of, Circuit Court Judge D. T. Hartwell at Marion passed , formal sentence on Robert Tate and his wife. Ruby Tate, found guilty by a jury of the poison slaying of Joseph Herrington, her first husband. Tato will serve 80 years at Chester and Mrs. Tate 20 years at Joliet, the terms fixed by the jury. The wedding of Harriet Lowden, second daughter of former Gov. and Mrs. Frank O. Lowden, to Albert F. Madlener Jr., was a friendly occasion, with hospitality and simplicity as Its chief characteristics. Some 400 guests, among them persons of such Importance as Vice President Charles G. Dawes, were present at the ceremony, which took place on the lawn at Slnnlssippi farm, near Oregon, the country place of the Lowdens. A large number of guests arrived by train from Chicago and were taken to the estate In motor cars escorted by motor-cycle policemen. Parents and teachers of Illinois "must realize that their work is cooperative, each helping and supplementing the work of the other," Mra Estelle L. Kilbride, president of the Illinois Parent-Teacher association, has urged in calling upon member organizations throughout the state to take an active part in promoting the school children health and attendance competition. Meetings of the miners' examining board will btf held in twelve Illinois cities in the month of October, saya a •Springfield announcement Gerry A. Wadsworth, for the last ptgfat years superintendent of the Evanston municipal waterworks, was killed when he came In contact with a high tension wire in the basement of the filtration plant, just north of the Northwestern university campus. - By a vote of four to two, the village board of Riverside ousted three officials, Paul Leitzell, attorney; Vaughan Houghton, engineer, and George Anderson, superintendent. The basis of the dismissals was said to have beA incompetency. 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