M VOLUME 55 'KEiiRT, ILLINOIS, Tn.uitS.uAY SJar i fiMiSfiSt 12, 1929 Ho. 15 -c . . , V* WORK PROGRESSES %: ON WONDER .LAKE ' #0 BS SECOND LARGEST ; % ,.4it NO. ILLINOIS "•alley ofthe Nippersink Near Bamard's HOIS Provides Beautifal Location '?• ViV'.ft j . The second largest lake in northern • ' Illinois is now under construction and the defendant, for the able and mas- Judge Shurtleff's Decision, • " §? Sentencing "Red" Haupris Quoted Below In Full THE COURT: The Court feels under great obligation to the State's Attorney .and also to Mr. Lyons, one representing the People of the State of Illinois, and the other representing Waring completion in the basin of the Uippersink creek near Barnard's Mills. "Wonder Lake is actually being made, built, constructed or whatever you "Want to call it, and is probably one t. of the greatest engineering projects «f its kind ever undertaken in the middle west. Not so many years ago Dame Na- 1 'litre received all the credit for these beautiful lakes in this equally beautiifcl country of ours, but not so in the - present .day for although nature has done a great deal in supplying the Ideal site and conditions, for the lake H> has been left to man's ingenuity and keen eye in discerning this site for a lake so large that it is second only in size to Fox Lake in northern Illi- ' wis, but taking second place to none its natural beauty and facilities ftr an ideal lake and summer resort. Dam To Be Done Oct. 15 « Wonder Lake will become a reality 4|t or about October 15, when the dam jW$11 be completed and the waters of the Nippersink Creek will begin to back up into its basin, a process which Will probably take about fifty-eight days to completely fill the lake for the first time. The Jones & Winter company, retort property specialists of Chicago, fesve acquired about 1,642 acres in the Nippersink basin and surrounding it, starting near the old Barnard Mill and running south for nearly four Wiles, and about 750 acre® of this land will be under water. The lake, which is rapidly nearing Its completion, will be about three and three-fourths miles long and about one and one-half miles wide at its widest part, with more than twelve miles of beautiful wooded shore line. South End Near Route 20 The south end of this body of water trill be only about a quarter of a mile from Route 20, making its distance ftom McHenry over the concrete hightray about six miles and about as Ittany miles from Woodstock. The eempiHmi of this stupendous project Irill very obviously open up a large territory to a host of new activities •which will, no doubt, mean a great deal to McHenry and other local communities. The plans of the Jones & Winter Co., call for one of the finest lake resort developements which have ever been put on in Illinois and the long Experience of this company in that line of work is shown in the fact that they own eleven subdivisions at Lake Geneva, which they are putting over successfully. They are backed by a capital of half a million dollars and are planning on probably 1,000 water • front lots, with countless lots with water privileges, which will open up a new era in the sale of low priced ^dfsirable lots. " -- In addition to the Nippersink the future bed of the lake will be fed by nnmerous springs, there being seventy- two springs within a distance of two miles, one spring having an eight- Inch flow. The lake will also embrace a watershed area of ninety-five square Wiles and will vary in depth from twenty feet neaf the dam to about five feet at the south end with an average depth of from thirteen to eighteen feet. There will be three Jbsautiful wooded islands and a peninsular of some size with a beautiful shore line and lots of every description, level, or rolling, high or low, some of them commanding a view over the lake and up and down the valley for many miles. . i Beautiful Scenery It has the advantage of wonderfully ^Jllfautifu] scenery made by the expert hands of nature with natural hillsides covered with majestic oak trees sloping away to verdant valleys where terful way in which they have presented the arguments to the Court from the testimony taken in this case. I want to thank both of them for the help and assistance each has given on his own side in presenting the testimony and the arguments bearing upon the question of the penalty that should be exacted of the defendant iu this case. The Court wotold have very much preferred that a pies oT not gfeilty had been entered by the defendant and that he Should have been tried by a jury that then would have had the responsibility of passing upon the facts and arriving at a conclusion that quite likely would have been nearer correct than any conclusion at which the Court can arrive and that quite possibly would have better satisfied the sense of justice of the people of McHenry county. However, the plea of guilty lg here, the defendant has submitted the cause to the Court, and it is the duty of the Court to pass upon his case, disregarding all public sentiment or the views of any Individual as to what penalty shdald be exacted. What Is Harder f The crime of murder is the premeditated killing of another person in the peace of the People by one with malice aforethought. The law has defined premeditation as having no particular length of time over and above the shortest interval for a person to effect the premeditation In his mind to take the life of another to bring it within the definition of murder. Where a murder is committed the statute has provided for a penalty that is of very wide range. The Court may exact the death penalty; the Court may exact life imprisonment; or the Court may exact imprisonment for any number of years not less than fourteen. There has been no doubt as to the Court's own personal views of the death penalty in the minds of the defendant, or his counsel, or the State. I might say that the academic question of whether capital punishment is proper in any case is not a proper question for any Court in Illinois to pass upon. The Legislature of Illinois has provided that capital punishment is a proper punishment in case of murder, and it is the duty of every Court to enforce the laws of the state. Jadge dhutMPs Ftorssaal Views As to my own views in regard to that question I stated to Mr. Lyons and I think to Brother Lumley that in a community of a large number of people, for example in a community like the City of Chicago or communities adjacent to it, where there are congested populations, there isn't any question in my mind but that the death penalty is practically the only deterrent that there can be for the crime of murder. In England, where the death penalty is exacted in practically every caso of a premeditated murder, even according to population they do not have one murder in twenty as compared with what we have in ths conntry. Whether it is abstractly right or wrong, whether it is in accordance with the teachings of the Bible or against the teachings of the Bible courts have nothing to do with that bushes, HIS THROAT CUT IIP AND DOWN AMD CROSS WATS, Which was possibly necessary to cause his death or It was still possible that the Prst blow of the stone may have taken his life. THERE IS NOT AN EXTENUATING CIRCUMSTANCES IN IT, so far as the act was concerned. If one were to mete out punishment from the viewpoint that the person committing the act should be punished for what he did, it would take us all back to the old English common law where they used to QUARTER AND DRAW THEM, hitching a horse to each arm and a horse to each leg and the horses going in opposite directions until the body was torn apart. If it were the duty of the Court and that were the law to punish a person for what he had done in the way of vengeance, I can not say but that the old English law would have been applied to many cases and that kind of a penalty would have befitted, the crime In this case. To Protect But the power in courts to fix a penalty is not for the purpose of punishing the individual. It is only for the protection of society and that the penalty meted out will be a deterrent to others and place them in fear so that men will not commit such crime*. That is the only purpose that courts have in view in fixing penalties for crime--protection of society and the deterrent to others from committing 'the same act. This was a most peculiar crimes Both counsel argued that. It was not planned with any skill or any foresight. One would almoBt say after listening to it that the man was mad who .undertook such a job; that he was foolish; that he did unnecessary things. He could have gotten the money without taking life. He could have gotten the money, as It has been argued here, and covered his tracks with a half of ordinary intelligence and escaped from the law. The state's attorney argued--and I quite agree with him--that when the defendant took Mengs in his car at the post office he did not have murder in hi# heart. He-wanted *a automobile and he wanted the money to make the ^rst payment on an automobile. He had seen the one hundred forty dollars in crisp bills. Like a child it looked good to him. He wanted the money. He had sense enough to work out a way to get it. He enticed the old man undoubtedly to go out to the fair grounds to get a drink for the purpose of getting the money. Then the stroke with the rock--the hauling through the building-- the cutting of the throat--the hiding in the hushes were undoubtedly afterthoughts--the work of brain acting clearly or acting cloudily. I have observed the defendant from the first day that he was brought into court. He does not look anybody in the face. I doubt if I have seen the look of his eye more than once and that was when he stood at the bar and entered his plea. The testimony, in this case and the written statement of his life is a peculiar history. It is not the history of the ordinary normal man. He starts out by joining the army or the navy, not with any particular idea in view but to do something. He became dissatisfied with that and lssves without a permit. Haiprfs Life Story From that on he has recited a story which is undoubtedly true--that he BOARD APPROVES KINDERGARTEN PLAN Plans Are Uader Way For Opesing New Department in Schools V Those in McHenry who have been interested m establishing a kindergarten for their children will be glad to learn that the petition asking for, this addition to the present school system was approved at a recent meeting of the board of 'education and that already plans and arrangements are under way to provide for a kindergarten which will be opened for the little folks as soon as/.a teacher can be« secured and the equipment airriveq. Supt. C. H. Duker is busily engaged trying to find a favorable teacher for the position and already has,Tour or five on his list, although he tropes to procure one who can teach the art work in the grade school as well as teach the kindergarten in the forenoon. The room at the grade school has been decorated and furniture and equipment has been ordered, so it will probably not be long until the little folks of this community will be going to school as well as their big sisters and brothers. The school program is now well under way and teachers and pupils are settling down to the routine of the years work. The gym work is getting started this week and a very enthusiastic squad of about thirtytwo men have turned out for football practice, which takes place on the high school grid every night after school. Coach McCracken is hoping great things fofr- his team this year and is very much encouraged at the spirit shown by the players thus far. Several of the freshmen have turned out for practice and the new players are showing up in great shape and everything looks good for a successful season of football. The second team is considerably heavier than last year and the form of all the players is good. The first team has not been picked yet, so anyone of the squad sliii has an opportunity to make the first team and, no doubt, the interest will continue to increase. On next Tuesday night there will be a practice game on the local grid with Barrington and it will not bo long until some real games are staged. The football schedule for tho season is a full one with several games played at home as well as away from home. The season will open on Saturday, Sept. 28, when Mc Henry will meet St. Mary's at Woodstock. The schedule of games for the season is as follows: Sept. 28--McHenry at St. Mary's. Oct. 5--McHenry at Marengo. Oct. 12--Woodstock at McHenry. Oct. 19--Elgin Second heavy weight team at McHenry. Nov. 2--Wisconsin school for the deaf, Delavan. at McHenry. Nov. 11--McHenry at Harvard. A letter has been received at the high school announcing the United States Marine Band which will play at the Masonic temple at Elgin on Oct. 3. There will be a student's program at 3:30 in the afternoon and an adult program at 8:15 in the evening. Although many have heard the president's band over the radio it will be a real treat to see this interesting organization as well as hear them. question. I have felt in this case, I think I j has wandered over the United States have stated and the defendant was' from one place to another, taking up fully advised, that, in view of the one kind of work for a short time circumstances of the murder and the j and then abandoning it and going facts surrounding It. the full penalty; from that to another, traveling, huntof the law would be exacted unless ! ing, to find what jiobody knows, posthere were some circumstances and sibly in the hunt to find himself, some conditions surrounding it upon j He is not a person of strong normal the sun shines warm and bright. To j which the Court could act in its dis- j Intelligence. He is not a person in „ this beautiful natural scenery will bejcretion under the statute to make the my judgment, from! all this testimony added lake shore drives and perma-; punishment less. land from seeing him,,of ordinary in- • nent roadways leading to accessible j p0r the last two weeks I have given. telllgence. points for lot owners with a drive j the best study and the best consid- j All the proof In this case fits into r , completely around the lake. I eration that I could give to the facts (the testimony of George Donnelly, who ! „ The engineering features were su- anrt to an the circumstances in this testified that he has the body of a man , pcrvised by the Randolph-Pejrkiris; ca8e bring my mind to what I and the apparent mentality of a boy company, prominent Chicago engin- j thought was the proper penalty to fifteen years of age. I am very •ers, who have made a national repu- | exact ! much impressed with that testimony tation for work of this kind, while the wjjj no^ satisfy public poinion, or in this case. It impressed me when OOntract for the building of the dam ,ar?e of public opinion, and I heard it. It apparently fitted into was awarded to the Whitwater Bridge court is going beyond its reach the sight and the actions of the de- Co., of Whitewater, Wis., with En- j when undertakes from the bench fendant in court. It fits into every m *** .to make decisions for the purpose of line and letter of the history of his work at ^he lake. appealing to public feeling or public life that he has written out and which One gravel roadway, which win be s K ! i8 now a part of the record here, apvered by the waters of Wonder ^ travel and j There is something wrong with him. tak^ J&'ZS' <«"« SUoJlWUtT for. and the I do not me.,, by th.t that U »ot E'eiteiided to connect with Route S0r°°lT UllI": 1 "l"11 to do m "r own. nnth this case is to satisfy my own con- for his own acts. He does know rlgnt ^ it fs 8the plan of the owners to di- science and Judgment in using the from wrong, hut he does notunder- ^ide the property into estates and lots discretion that the statute plaesa on stand the reason for it He does Of various sires in order to have sites •* ths present time. , | know it is wrong 1to J* B " 'to please everyone. - . Most Brstal Crime , 1« wrong tolrob; he is amenable to toe Dam 1,000 Feet Long \ The homicide in this case, and the ! law. but I question whether he has The dam which is now being built facts surrounding it, WAS THE MOST. the slightest conception of why an is of an unusual type, but one that is J BRUTAL, and in some respects un- aet is right or why an act Is wrong, best fitted for this exact location. The explainable, of any murder or homiconcrete work which will comprise the cide of which I have ever known. Ths spillway of the dam is 150 feet long,: deceased, an inoffensive, peaceable, while the entire dam extends over quiet old gentleman, waa lured from 1,000 feet. The remainder of the dam the, streets of Woodstock to the fair consists of an immense fill of clay grounds, the testimony showed, I beabout 110 feet wide, twenty feet high (lieve, on the promise of a drink or and about 900 feet long, which is ob- something tempting and enticing, tained from a borrow pit which will j BRUTALLY STRUCK DOWN WITH A later be in the bottom of the lake.: ROCK, afterward waa dragged for a ' ' |',.ypentiaasd on fcisfc ' oonsiderahls- LBGriON CONVENTION There will be a convention of the American Legion at Rock Island, Sept. 16 and 17. Quite a number of the local post will be in attendance. Saturday, Sept. 14, a display that presents all the newest and most modish in millinery for the new season at Elizabeth Thelen Pich Hat Shop, Riverside Drive. 15-fp 'RED" HAUPRIS 5 CEIS 75 YEARS "NO PAROLE" RECOM ^ MENDED Attorney Lumley Asks ;For Chair For Munderer of Henry Mengs The wheels of justice move fast in MbHenry county. Fifty-seven days from the date Ralph (Red) Haupris killed Henry Mengs, the murdtrer entered the gates of the state penitentiary at Joliet where he will relinquish all rights of being an American citlcen and where he wili be compelled to give up the name his father and mother gave him some twenty-six years ago. From now until death takes him from this world be will be known as only convict number so and so. Haupris has been taken to Joliet. by Sheriff Cyrus Sanford after a sentence had been passed Saturday afternoon by the Honorable Judge E. D. Shurtleff. The sentence of the court was that Haupris be confined In the state penitentiary at Joliet for the period of seveuty-flve years with the recommendation from the court that Haupris never be paroled. In passing sentence Judge Shurtleff gave one of the most eloquent opinions ever heard in a murder trial in the state of Illinois, 'it was a fitting climax to a case which has had the people of McHenry county and Northern Illinois in a state of excitement The opinion appears in another part of this paper today and should be read by every person in McHenry county. It is a masterpiece of legal intelligence and could only be given by a jurist with a keen mind and de- Eire to do what is right. Lyons Pleads Merry Judge Shurtleff's opinion cstne at the conclusion of a day of much oratory. For more than three Jiours, J. S. Lyons, attorney for Haupris, pleaded with the coUrl to spare his client's life. He pleaded, prayed and did everything but offer to take the place of his client Following are a few of the high spots of his plea: "You may sentence this boy to ctath," Attorney Lyons declared in addressing the court, "or you may sentence him to life imprisonment "After all either will mean for him only darkness--eternal night. "I have communed with God and consulted the best legal minds 10 Chicago. Then I reached the decision to plead this boy guilty. "And I determined upon that course knowing that if you decreed that he should die. the responsibility foi his death would be placed upon my shoulders. "For in a jury of 12 men, - one, possibily two, would have had the humanity to say that this boy shall he permitted to live to atone for his awful crime." Pleading for a prison sentence, Atty. Lyons assured the court that "Red" Haupris would never have the sentence shortened. "It takes money and influence to £?et out of prison, your honor," he stated. "This boy has neither. Poverty is the curse of this case. If he had financial hacking, he would have had a good lawyer here, alien- WEEKLY EXCHANGE! ITEMS PRAM TAKEN FROM COLUMNS OF OUR EXCHANGES Assortment of Newsy Itests fi| fc Condensed Form For Busy People Ernest Hanson, aged 40, who had been employed as a baker at ths RETURN FROM TRIP TO YELLOWSTONE PARK j Misses Dorothy and Genevieve I Knox and Miss Kathrlne McCabe of McHenry, in company with Misses Margaret and Elizabeth McCabe oi Waukepan and Miss Halberson of Chicago returned the first of last week from a 3,500 mile motor trip to Yellowstone Pa^rk, the Black Hills and other points of interest. This venturesome party of young ladies are enthusiastic about .their trip and have many exciting and interesting experiences to relate. They went by way of Iowa, South Dakota r. D - and Wyoming and stopped at Sioux j, Pner Bakery at Antioch, was Falls to visit Mrs. Ed. Sutton and I Marie last week. Mrs. James Cleary, former McHenry , ^"eved that Hanson had been . residents. They motored through the) n" ,n* Pnor to his entering ths Black Hills and enjoyed the wonder- j W%fr" ^ ful scenery, then on to Yellowstone'. M e stockyards of the C. i*- Park, where several days were spent! " , ' ra'|road company were dein sightseeing. They motored to the I f tfr.e Sunday afternoon of •'{ top of the two-mile peak, Mt. Wash- j week. Origin of the fire was not burn, which is the highest peak in . e er*T1J*1'yards once busy, v the park, where they made snowballs 8 en ,nto disuse during recent at the top. They made the return! y trip through Nebraska, where they| J~ss Dorothy Good all, 12, daughter - did not find the good roads they had j "5 Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Goodall of been accustomed to, although they j wl1" pertor7ne<1 8 jamming made the entire journey without trouble of any kind with the exception of a few flat tires which the girls became very adept at changing BIRTHDAY ANNIVERSARY At the invitation of Mrs. Arthur Krause a group of friends surprised Mrs. Albert Krause on Thursday afternoon of last week, the party being planned in honor of her birthday anniversary. Two tables of bridge were in play during the afternoon and prizes were won by Mrs. George Bohr and Mrs. A. L. Purvey. Mrs. Krause . i -fi. uiuwiicu m iw ieei oi from the ladies present. TDWeliiiicoiiomuias reThursday afternoon of last week when freshments were served. The guests were: Mrs. P. H. Moulton and Mrs. Edward Dowling of Chicago, Mrs. A. L. Purvey, Mrs. F. E. Cobb, Mrs. George Bohr, Mrs. J. W. Rothermel and Mrs. F. O. Gans. HELEN POWERS DIES AT HOME HERE SUNDAY Miss Helen Powers, 23 years old, daughter of Mrs. James Powers, passed §way at her home on Waukegan street, Sunday, Sept. 8, after an illness of several months. Funeral services were held at St. Patrick's church. Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock with burial in St. Patrick's cemetery. Obituary will appear in next week's Plaindealer. feat at Deljivan Lake on Sunday of last week by crossing the lake, a distance of one and one-half miles, in fifty minutes. Reverend Cornelius F. Donovan, managing editor of the New World, official newspaper of the archdiocese of Chicago, passed away on August 30, at the Alexian Brothers' hospital, following a brief illness. He was one of the leading Catholic editors of the country and the author of two novels. Thomas Patrick McCarron, 21, of , : Chicago, who was at Lake Geneva •%> convalesing following an operation, ffllf was drowned in 100 feet of water « compamon were riding tipped over while trying to make a connection with a motor boat. The body waa recovered ^ in a few hours. Mrs. Minnie Harris, colored, mother of five children and the wife of a man sought for the past eight yea's '• in a murder case, was shot to death , on Wednesday of last week, apparently by Oscar Tooles, a jealous suitor, as she sat on the front porch of "her home at Libertyville. Four other colored women who were also on the Harris front porch, witnessed the •< slaying. Tooles escaped. - A bogus check artist who gave htef^vi^ name as Ernest Byers of Stacy. Minn., plied his trade at Hampshire the canoe in which he and '•'as recently. He applied for work at the| ^ « Albert Engeln farm and was employ- ^ DINNER -PAIIT^- '- ----- ed during the threshing season, for ^ On Monday of last week Mr. and j which Engeln gave him a check. Bv-£? A Mrs. D. A. Powers of North Crystal ers then proceeded to imitate the > , Lake entertained at a dinner party signature and wrote himself tw<> more checks, each in the sum of $10, /v a which he cashed at two of the Hamp- - ^ ^ shire stores. . T ^ in honor of Mr. and Mrs. James McLaughlin and children of Wilkesbarre, Pa., who were visiting relatives in this vicinity. The guests were. Mr. and Mrs. James McLaughlin and children; Mr. Laughlinj of Despondent because she believed the love of her sweetheart had Cooled, & and Mrs. Jack Mc- Blanche Dixon, 19, of Freeport, ended IRingwood; William f her life Saturday, Aug. 31 by drink Dohe, (y. Miss Kate McLaughlin and Thomas McLaughlin. i +1? . FORMAL OPENING ' Mrs. Elizabeth Thelen Pich has issued invitations to attend the formal opening of her new store, showing advanced styles of fall and winter millinery, on Saturday, Sept. 14. ing poison. She went to the rooming V Slace of her fiance, Henry Videmeyer, , i the afternoon and asked to see him. He was asleep. She looked op- . on him for atmoment and then step- I ped out on the porch and swallowed • the poison. She died two hoars lster . j in a hospital. Leslie Jackson, 38, was arrested on ? Monday of last week and taken before Justice Edna Turner for grabbing women on the streets of Delavan. r. SPECIAL M'HENRY DAY The "Gladola" of the Hunter Boat Line is sceduled to leave the pier at I Within the last ten to twelve nights McHenry at 1:30 o'clock, standard j preceding his arrest four women who ists would have been brought here tjme for a special trip on Sunday,' were walking on the streets unescortby the defense, to testify that he gept! 15. The McHenry Band will led, were startled to have someone is fnsane. I furnish music during the trip. This'step up from behind them and place "They call it a brutal crime. I is to be known as Special McHenry his hand over their mouths and grab say, If ever murder was humane. Day and it is expected that a capacity "XS* ' this one was. Old Henry Mengs never knew what happened to him. The boy knocked him unconscious and [then killed him. He didn't suffer. "After all crowd will be on hand for the trip The Elizabeth Thelen Pich Hat Shop .on Riverside Drive will have its open- Red Hauprli • was fag Saturday, Sept^jl^ Don't miss it He Wanted Arf Automobile He sees an automobile and he wants it, not as a grown man would want an automobile and proceed in an orderly way to get it for an orderly and decent reason. His wanting an automobile is more a whim and desire to havs an automoboile. He knows it takes money to (Continued on page 4fc GOVERNMENT SUPPLIES FISH WW* -' ^ • • v.Z** *" ? ' f - * v'•>?!?& ~-vy- . tmm,: Courtesy Chicago Daily News ."^1 V«j gjcene Showing Game Fish Being Dumped Into Pistak^e Lake Near Bald Knob Hotel One Day Last Week 9 •'"j?- them. Some were abused and are still suffering from a nervous shock. Guy Glenn, C. & N. W. railroad conductor, of South Pekin, was killed outright, Harvey Butler, locomotive engineer, also of South Pekin, painlS- tp fully injured, and Assistant Supervisor A. B. Hammond of Belvidere, slightly hurt on Friday of last week when Hammond's Studebaker touring car in which they were riding plunged off the road ancj fell 15 feet on its top into the Kiswaukee river at the north approach to the; southern one of the twin bridges. Stanley Cholewa, 44 years car inspector for the St. Paul railroad at Roundout, was seriously injured on Thursday of last week whJfc inspecting cars in the yards south of Roundout. Cholewa was engaeed in his duties of inspecting cars, and stepped up to ascertain the number of a car on a side track, when a switching crew backed a string of cars into the one near the inspector. Cholewa ,• Was knocked to th* ground, and rt ' is thought his back was broken by the fall. _ . Paul Peterson, 26 year old Waukegan murderer, who killed his sister y and her husband at their home on a , . farm near Greenwood, Wis., on Ang. 26, was caotured near the viltasrs at Fairchild. biding in a cornfield on his brother's farm, about '20 miles ffoni the scene of the murder Thursday of last week. Peterson had lain t in hiding in the field since he j»Nandoned his auto near Willard on Wed- * nesday and he had evidently been without food since his flieht He was found by his brother who called the authorities. The killer had taken some mild poison during his hideout, but beyond an attack of nausen, he ip not thought to have suffered anv evil effects from it. Denuty sheri®^^ took the murderer to Neilsville. the county seat, where he was arraigned 4 a charge of first degree murder. Stylish hats, moderately priced, will* be on display at the EHiabeth Thelen Pich Hat Shop on Riverside Drive a! the opening Saturday. Sept 14. 15-fp j i<... mm V' 'V,'