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CONDENSED DISPATCHES. Charles H. Spear, who had served as private secretary to every mayor of Lynn, during the past 20 years, died there, Thursday. Brain trouble, aggravated by the loss of his position, which was abolished, Dec. 31, last, under a new city charter, is said to have caused death. Mr. Spear was 57 years of age and had held various city offices. He was a bachelor. 'James L. Gillingham of Boston was appointed receiver, Thursday, for the Kissel Kar Co., an automobile concern of that city. The petition for a receivership was filed in the superior court by the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. George W. Coleman, formerly bookkeeper of the National City Bank, and now serving sentence for assisting in wrecking that institution, was formerly president of the Kissell Kar Co. The company has maintained a sales room in Boston, for three years. With the statement that W. H. Taber, president of the American State Bank at Terre Haute, Ind., is short in his accounts $25,000 and that the bank has made loans on worthless securities amounting to $200,000 more, the State, banking department, Thursday, closed the institution. A receiver will be appointed. The bank was organized in 1907 and Tabor has been its president since its opening. No information as to possible legal action against him was obtainable, Thursday. Ralph Jasdine, the Worcester cigar maker, who went joy riding in a locomotive, Wednesday night, pleaded guilty to a charge of endangering lives of people on railroad property, when given a hearing in the district court at Webster, Thursday. He was held in $2000 bail for the grand jury. He made no statement as to his reason for taking the locomotive. He got into the cab of an unguarded engine and after a wild ride collided with a locomotive attached to a passenger train. The two engines were badly damaged and nearly a dozen passengers were hurt. Refused two days' holiday for Christmas by S. E. Eldelman, the white president of Clark University, who went to Atlanta, Ga., from Ohio, 600 Negro students have been in rebellion against the college authorities, for a week. The boys stole the bell clapper and thus put a stop to lessons. The president threatened them with the loss of meals until the bell was working, but after starving them for two hours relented. The students retaliated by corralling the calves in the barns and driving them into the study halls, Wednesday. Two animals were herded into the president's study. Since that time the tension has increased. Negroes believe that if the president had taken counsel with the faculty and let the clapper theft pass unnoticed all would have gone well. "The students are angry," said one student. Wednesday night, "because Mr. Eidelman has been unfriendly to the industrial department, which by paying the boys for work in the dairy department and on the farm has helped them to pay their way through college."