The Cedarville Herald, Volume 48, Numbers 27-52
• * . 3 P > i 7-.', ■f ,’i V ) B*mtf 4mf% M a y ta iWte jpmi ihmm I M M i * paaaRy up** **» pm * **idvakat to th* aav* JNt w# u*e •£ tiw artiel* would yro- rtwe*." / n » i r » A W ( * D iYO 'rM t 96- LOCAL ju r y g k n m u l KWT* A W T « a ftlOW H rff CKMJI*- v i L L i A w w xmm r* FORTY -E IGHTH YEAR NO. 40. CEDARVILLE . toA Y . SEPTEMBER 18. 1925 PR ICE ,*$ I.50 A YEAR SKETCHOF TTALY.BERMftNY. ANDHOLLAND the Ar.r.lfi Drive "which rank* -with tap Ocar.J Cornish Drive at Nice as i f>no t.f ita> most beautiful in the >w^rM. Gains out we spent the UH'J in m % Our three days in Naples have been wonderful a» have been our other stops. We arrived here on Sunday noon eomfng to the Hotel Patria f o r lunch, then started out in taxis on a sightseeing trip over the city which took us to the Cathedral o f St. Januarius, where i* kept the blood o f a martyr. St. Jerome, which liquifies and performs miracles two or three times a year I ? ) . We rode out along the hay and came back to the Aquarium which is quite unusual, not nearly so large ’or com pete as the one in New York, but containing some very rare' and unusual specimens o f Mediterranean types particularly the coral and sea anemonal which are lovely.. W e go t a splendid ides o f all the beauty and .ugliness o f Naples op that afternoon. I don't suppose there is any other city in the world with a more completely beautiful and historic setting. The hay is vivid blue, the mountains tower all around and behind it, and Vesuvius ' lords it over all with the cloud o f smoke which hangs heavily over him . at -all times. But in spite o f pH o f this natural ■beauty,.Naples is continuously ugly under foot, hut always picturesque. It is a ll rags and smells* donkeys and d ir t . There are millions o f chil dren .and dogs and goats on every street. We stopped on .a corner to take a picture o f a half dozen chil dren and instantly there were men, Women, jbahies, dogs and many snore children clamoring to he token too. The dirt is terrible but every one Is happy. Every whei*e one goes he finds a smile and a-song. Hurdy-girdies and wandering.bands play in the street. ■ While we waited for, dinner Sunday evening, we watched' from our .bal cony at the hotel the melon vender ' in the side street and his wife Clean (throwing rubbish into the gutter) a chicken prepare and serve a fou r , course dinner to the daughter, her im qh and th«ta»oive®. AD this-was. on-the- street, they used merely' a charcoal burner, three plates, one glass, a fork apiece and a small table. •Every where one sees people prac tically living on the street and get ting more pleasure out o f life than an Anglo-Saxon ever dreamed o f having. Until fa r into the night one hears the sounds o f little .boys playing on the street. Never in my life have I seen So many children, aud all o f them beau- . tiful. Italy ig indeed the land o f perfect babies. * - I suppose sanitary conditions are such that only the very fit live past - a very tender age and they are in- destructable and lovely. ; On Monday we deft early in the morning by boat fo r -Capri, an is land a t the fo o t o f the peninsula which bounds the Ibay o f Naples. There we visited the Blue Quotto which is i cave with an opening so small tha t it can only be entered by lying down in a small row boat. The cave is a perfect dome over head, and the light coining more through the water than the opening gives the most vivid blue hue to the whole place and makes one feel as if he were rowing on a sea o f tur quoise. W c had lunch at Capri Hmd bought beads which are fo r gale by the bushel. The boat trip takes all day but is worth It fo r the view o f Vesuvius from the water is worth the time spent. / Today we took what is known as the ranis o f Pompeii, j Ever since 1 read “ The Last Days o f |Pompeii” when I was a child I have wanted to see it and I found it fa r * more wonderful than any thing I had anticipated. One can get a complete idea o f what the city was like and how life waa ordered there, from the ruins as they now stand, And to aee old Vesuvius puffing away as he towers above all this ruin that he did more than nineteen hundred years ago, gives pne a de eded ..thrill. We had lunch at a little mountain .hotel high and directly above the Mediterranean. STATECANS VEGETABLES FORWARDS % More than 5,000 gallons o f to matoes will be canned by prisoners at the London farm during the next two or three weeks. Approximately 1000 gallons o f tomato soup will bc- canned. .This is the* juice o f the small ripened fruit boiled down sc that from fou r to six parts o f water must be added when it is servido. The prisoners ha -e husked and Every where we gO dried almost five tons o f sweet corn, there is music, at the hotels, on the This is hauled direct to the factory boat, in the streets, sometimes it is from the fields and while one group men, sometimes a whole family or* o f men husks the corn, another re- a company o f adults. A t lunch to- -moves the silks, and within an hour day it was a family with the'younger Jafter being picked from the stock '“ .it'1’"'1'" J il%- “,J— — ’J- the corn is shredded arid in the drypn ch ldren singing and the older onfea playing, instruments. It is no wonder Italy, has produced a “ Caruso” and a “ Galli Curci,” there are no doubt many more o f them on the streets o f Naples. - On the way back we stopped at Sorrento where beautiful inlay work in. wood is done and in the edge o f Naples a t a Coral factory where there are many lovely things inswork manship to b e seen. It is just impossible to describe this mountain, life o f southern Italy, There are lemon and .olive groves and- vineyax s everywhere. The sides and the soil reld in place just,as far o f the mountains have' been terraced as it is possible to climb, here the trees grow and sometimes some other crops. The villagers climb the moun tain- side, beginning at the water’s edge, Seemingly the sun never stops shin ing and >the sea is always as blue as the sky which seems continuously cloudless except fo r the vapor hang ing over, Vesuvius. •How I wish we had time to climb him and peep down into, his gizzard, but we leave in the morning for an all day’s ride -to Florence b y way o f Rome, ‘ ’ No one ever.can get an idea o f the dirt and noise, smell and jo y until he comes himself. - # : "'.Experiment.' , ■ . The canning factory was estab lished as an experiment by the pres ent administration, but so successful has been the work o f the prisoners there that an addition may be erected next year to care fo r the increased amount o f canned goods that will he put up fo r consumption at the Lon don farm . , ' Tha supply o f tomatoes fresh from the field not .only will b e enough to supply the needs -of the 500- men at London, and the 1800 or more at the penitentiary, but shipments o f the canned product will b e made to other state institutions. The making o f sauerkraut for use this winter Will begin within a few weeks, Director Harper said, Satur day, The' prisoners have made sev eral hundred gallons which will he fo r early use, but more than .1000 barrels will be made from late cab bage at London and other state in stitutions, Sauerkraut has been found to be pne o f the most wholesome dishes that can be served institution inmates, and a larger amount will be„inade this year than ever before. STATE HOUSE SITE FAVORED BY OLD COMMISSION YELLOW SJMUHf The improve low Springs road to the public Mo* improvement waa township trustee* epinmumneds fro. two mill road levy, was furnished b y £ road now has a go- surface being built The road will but from an inv* it should have a *- small stone. By d- keep will be greatl; present transport*!!' binder* is needed, In the course o f a road in CedaSrville be built o f stone., roads are longer an cut-up so during tb Our side roads are much more travel yearn due.to the mail trucks andf milk living on stone roa PUBLIC the Yel- ra open The i r by the; county under the equipment ity and the and fine •tone. ?oral years standpoint torvia and jthia the up- (idueed. With aelJUies a tar DR. HENDERSON ISCALLED TO GROVECITY.PA. - year* every ifihlp should Detroit will lose one o f its older pastors in the resignation o f the Rev, Dr. Homer B» Henderson, o f the First United Presbyterian Church, taking effect Oct, 1, Dr. Henderson goes to the First United Presbyterian Church o f Grove City, Pa., one o f the strong est small city congregations in West ern. Pennsylvania. The change is made because Grove City is the seat o f a Presbyterian college where Dr, and Mrs. Henderson hope to educate life o f stone their three sons, they -will not -in gthaws, sw receiving In former - ■Dr. Henderson came t o 'Detroit 14 years ago, succeeding Rev. J, C. Pinkerton, who had; -been here nine „ ... years, In 30 years the church has ivery, school j,a^ only three pastors. He served ' Pres5thmt o f the Pastors’ -Union , _ , * . / e * ~.eld several years ago and-now" is on the atkletic' soramittee the Detroit Council o f Churches. He is a mem- t u , 1 1 Tim «fe«#BB . JNW MhMl fW *T f*H a ifa * * f L o i Alt* iftKrtM the fi»ti* w*rid by tsm, 9*4 * £ mm J » * ft* tvmMA «h*nmd«tH e tm w 9 .......« ^ -rij! GERMANY AND HOLLAND We tK& -Germany and w e -have been doing Holland a t so terrific a rate o f speed timt there has not been a minute to spare fo r writing. We traveled all d-ay on the hottest o,I German trains, through the most un interesting o f German country which looks just like our flat middle west, A fter the beauty and the coolness o f the Swiss mountains it was just awful. W e found famous hath place o f Weisbadey very lovely and fair ly interesting. I t and Mayanee arc the section still under the command o f French soldiers and we found ii interesting to notice the effect o f it all. The next day we had a lovely ride down the Rhine to Cologne. • , <■ The Rhine is interesting but not nearly so beautiful -as our Hudson. The days ride could not compare with 1ihe Hudson River Day Boat’s trip. The only very interesting things to be seen are the lovely old ruined castles which are perched all along { the high rocky banks, i We passed the famous Lorlei rock, [the Binigen Mouse tower, Boun the ■home o f Beethoven CoWentz where •the American troops wore fo r so {long, . A t Cologne everything was closed up tight by the English. tfhere were manifestations o f greater prosperity in Germany than any place where we -have been. O f course I realize that the Ruhr valley through which wc passed is the rich* ;est part o f the country. The fact [that much o f our time was spent in occupied territory may have had [much to-do with the attitude o f the people toward us, but they -had not the cordial friendly -attitude which we have found in most o f the other countries. We may have -been look ing for affronts just because wc are naturally curious how an ex-enemy will treat US on the first meeting after the hostilities are over hut I do be * iieve I was quite open minded in the matter, German food however is excellent, but Dptch is super-excellent, It seems so very very good because it is almost identical -with our own iti method -of preparation as well a* in variety. The city o f Amsterdam is a more modern and in most ways a much more “ American-like" city than any We have visited. This combined with the hits o f atmosphere which one finds here and there about the streets -and which ’ abounds on the very outskirts makes lit most unusual, Imagine stepping 'ou t o f the suburbs of'Golumhus, Ohio, | into very green fields dotted With : windmills, storks, rows and canals. •The fields are bounded only b y tha Jditches and canals but the cows seem ’ never to wander beyond their bound ary, Within much less 'than an hour o f the -city ona m m at! o f thi* and I The old state house building com mission, consisting o f Governor Don- ahey, State Treasurer Tracey and Attorney General Crfffib^ a £ « r *ong BkkeHnir briVfe voted to build the »«W ifnnonSms state house building oh the- present state house grounds. A t 1 the last ses sion o f the legislature another com mission was named in art advisory capacity.from the legislature. This, body wants the new building on the river front," Until public sentiment became so strong against the advis ory commission favored a Third street site opposite the" present building. There was every ear-mark o f jobbery connected with this site and public sentiment became so hot that it no longer is considered, ' " The large majority o f people favor the state house site irrespective o f what the advisory legislative com mittee wants. it comes to market!)* hogs in the spring. By having wait a few days fo r the roads to attle a farmer can miss a gopd* price tor his hogs. Another refuson wh tStone should be used- fo r rpada in fids township and the eastern part I the country is that We have op o f the host companies supplying an.-, excellent grade o f-s ton e . T b » company is largely owned b y loci .ppopl'e. The company pays taxes a the county and it should have flint recognition. The profits are distributed to local people and the ep tife community profits b y the labor that is supplied. Eastern Greene ribunty should stand f o r ' the local product? manu factured and baejk up oUr' local in dustries whenever possible. The two' mill levy is a direct man date from ?the people fo r funds fo r improved roads. The general pub lic expects hard surface .roads arid will be satisfied with nothing else. Gasoline tax money'as well as reve nue from m otor licenses adds .to funds fo r Streets and highways and the -motoring public also demand a lardroad . . ,The hard road.-not only, means much moire pleasant motoring but a safer surface. I t mti£m« a saving It- m lefense economical steni can b e made fo r other type o f road than that o f to r bound atone macadam, cement and brick high ways. .... . LOOKS LIKE CMBTON PIKE WILL COME NEXT OSBORN REMOVAL COMPANY WILL SELL HOUSES The Osborn Removal Co. is this week advertising 26 houses in New Osborn for sale. The company is de sirous o f closing up its business and the last twenty-six properties will go on the market. The company was formed to relocate the town- and move the residences from the old site due to the Miami conservancy work. The opportunity is at hand fo r those seek ing an investment. With two o f the largest cement works in the country and the Wright aviation field that will liave several hundred gOvemmtnt, em ployees, the new Osborn will be one o f the best towns in Ohio and cue o f the prettiest. Few cities have any better traveling accomodations, two- railroads, a traction line, a buss line, are mote than many towns can bo'a$t of. SQUIRREL SEASON OPENS The Squirrel hunting seitson opened Tuesday and will close October 20th, Each hunter is entitled to five squirrels aand under the ,law none can be sold, Each hunter must have a license and there can be no hunt ing without permission o f the land- owner. -Hunter* should take precaution this year. A t present in some sec tions there is considerable hog cholera. This cah -be spread by hunters in carrying the germs on feet from one fa rm J to jan oD ^ the peasants wearing wooden shoes, baggy trousers, )sc< naps, full skirts and aft the other quaint things we term Dutch costumes. In the afternoon* we went in sail boat from- the little village known as Volendam, over the Zuider Zee to the fishing island o f Nearlsen. It furnished still another variety o f local -color and costume. We wont Into some o f their little spotless but funny 'looking houses, It all takes too long to describe it in detail now but it was charming, ANNA COLLINS We are informed that the state u’ghway department has notified the Clark.county commissioners not to spend anymore money this year on that road as it was to be improved' next year. It is also reported that the village o f - Clifton has been asked to release- any claim on the street pass ing through Hie village that connects the Springfield and Washington, road from Clark to Greene county; The road is worn out and many have com plained o f both the Clark county and the Greene county sections. The sec* lion in Cedatville township is.not in as had, condition. M. E. RECEPTION The M. E. congregation gave a farewell reception to Rev. and Mrs. E. Stevens Tuesday evening and a t the same time welcomed themew pas tor Rev. Joseph Bennett and wife Rev.- Stevens., moved his household goods Wednesday to pleasant Ridge, Cincinnati, where he wa* assigned at the recent M. E. conference. The con gregation at Pleasant Ridge is pre paring to build a new parsonage. The salary in the new charge is $8,000 in stead o f $2,700 as reported last week. H om o Sewing •d mmm m k m A hm « u Wy*th Bp*a; regular illuatmtod dressmaking, season’* n*w Mpfa* and tth# handy w***** < dfasMd a* Itttfc* wtM «s n w y Wtoft in ■pap*r« hem* ' tb* haw ber o f the Optimist -Club. Dr,- Henderson ds a graduate o f Ce'd-arville College and one in which Cedarville people have always had in interest. He is an eloquent speak er and prominent churchman in his denomination: Wfe understand that, the salary o f his new charge will be- $4,200, an increase o f $400 over-the salary he has been receiving, in .De troit. ' WlHAT c o n g r e s s m a n b r a n d MIGHT HAVE PONE While Congressman Charles Brand o f this district must be commended fo r his votes on legislative acts, and declining the increase -of salary^ there are many that have disagreed with him on the way-he is distributing this money to the counties o f his district. The Congressman i3 a known advo cate o f gravel roads, or at least he' advocates this type o f road .. He has :seen giving some o f the counties $500 each to purchase a wheel barrow crusher t o be placed In gravel pit? to crush gravel. Every load- o f gravel so ,c'Urshed costa as much as load o f atone b y the time it is on the road, A suggestion was handed. Us a few p. ^ the UopgreMman ve-n the five hundred dollars to each county artd aided five students, in se curing a college education, he would lave been doing something worth while. The general public knows nothing o f the number o f students that are out o f college this year due to fin ancial stringencies in their own families. Many farmers have had their income* so reduced that they cannot send their children to even the small colleges,. There are now scores o f young folks in college that can only-remain b y receiving outside aid or part time employment during the year. The suggestion might b e worth Congressman Brand’s consideration. The regular tax funds, the license and gas tax money will care fo r the highways,without causing the coun ties to load up on small machinery that will require as much man power as if the plant was ten times the size. CINCINNATI PIKE PAVING * MAY START THIS YEAR The County Commissioners have been granted $116,000 as state aid fo r the improvement o f the Cincinnati pike out of Xenia to the Warren county line, a distance o f nine miles. The type o f road has not been de termined but it will probably,be tar bound macadam. The estimated cost is $250,000, Thirty farm Owners have petitioned f o r the improvement, The Warren county section* o f the Colum bus pike is now being improved west o f Waynesville. This is the last main highway in the county to be improv ed. O H I O N E W S IN B R I E F SALKM.--Jolm. Vernon, former ed itor and publisher of Salem Journal, and wife, celebrated their aigbUstli wedding anniversary. NELSON\LLLE.~"Mauy miner* and their families were homeless In the town o f Buchtel, as the result o f fire which wiped out more than a score of bouses. « * * * CIIARDON,—Arriving in a large cloud, bees raided the county jail here, but were overcome when they imbibed In a quantity o f liquor mash there. ■' *■■ ■*■ ■ *■ YOUNGSTOWN.—Board' o f educa tion passed a resolution which, pro vides •that local students be graded on, savings and wise spending of mon ey. ■' ■■■■■■ * « • ' #■ 'I* •■■ ALLIANCE.—Thomas Bell, captain of the Mansfield police force, was named president of the Eighth. Ohio 8panlsh:Ainerlcsn War -Veterans at a two days’ reunion here, * , * ■ * " ♦ * • - ASHTABULA.—Axel Benson, 14, of near Jefferson, died at General hospi tal o f a bullet, wound 'Inflicted by a companion, Lewis Augustine, 15, while shooting at a mark with a rifle. * « * * * CINOINNATL—Leaning against a screen which gave way under his weight, Joseph M, Lowe, 8, plunged to thp pavement two stories below. He died a few minutes later of a frac tured skull, ELYRIA.—After he had been ar rested by B. & O. Detective L. V. Jones on a charge o f carrying con cealed weapons, Louis Watson o f New York sawed his way out of the city jail. " * * v *. AKRON.—Fourteen new busses will Soon be placed in service between Ak ron and Cleveland, it was announced by officials of the Northern Transit Co. They will be named after former presidents o f the United States.' » * *.* TOLEDO.—The Ohio State Automo bile association, in an attempt to re duce the number o f accidents at niglit caused by glaring headlights or im properly lighted cars, will request that law enforcement officere be instruct ed to see that Ohio headlight regula tions ate obeyed. / ' ! \ • * ., * ,*• 1 Tiffin.—Description o f a mlsslng girl by radio broadcasting has led to the discovery o f the marriage o f Dorothy Emberling, 17, missing Kenton, O^ high School girl, The discovery was tnsd# when Mrs, William Brttcklacher, marriage license clerk here, heard the description o f' the missing' girl over her radio. COLUMBUS.—Convincing work in his amateur sword swallowing act at a Columbus theater- accomplished full result in the way of thrills fo r his audience, bat threatened, to end dl*. astroualy - fo r Jack Hill, 24, Spring- field, Ohio. Hill swallowed the sword all rights a nine-inch case knife, but the knife remained in his stomach un til Burgeons removed it at a hospital several hours later. ■. *. • COLUMBUS. — D e c is io n w a s reached by the executive Committee o f the Ohio State Bar Association to hold the mid-winter meeting of the asso ciation in Cincinnati Jan. 28, 29 and 80. Sessions are to be held at th*i Hotel Staton. * * * , * •FINDLAY.—Plumbers recovered di amonds worth $2,1)00 in a tower that led from a local; hotel. The jewel* wore the property of an actress play- tag at a local theater and had been accidentally thrown ta the waste pip* by a chamber maid. DROUTH BROKEN SATURDAY BY HEAVY RAIN FALL The three weeks drouth and hoi spell was/ broken last Saturday when about clever, o’clock that morning one o f the heaviest rains o f the year fell. About 10:30 that night a still heavier storm visited this section o f the state hut did no damage other than find the weak spots in the roofs. Day- ton reports that more than four in ches o f water fell that day. The creek as well as the river and smaller dreams have been replenished. The ground has been soaked good which i* welcomed by farmers, There was some fear o f seeding for wheat un less there was more moisture. This fear has been allayed. —For Dure Seed Wheat, The Trum bull variety. R. 0 . Watt Jk Son For Rent*. House o f 7 rooms. Both kind* o f water, cellar and garden. J, 1), Mott For Refit: farm o f US acre* o ft o f the Yellow Spring* toad. John FiUHek FUNK LEE DIESINPEN DEATHDUMBED Frank Lee, colored, 28, sentenced to die in the electric chair December 2 fo r Hie murder pf Fatrpintais Chas. Simms o f Xenia, died Tuesday in tbs Pentitentiary Hospital, Death waa due to acute heart trouble, from which, he ha* suffered rince entering tiie* death, chamber, Lee csipe to CedaryiJJe from Spring field and was a stranger to the col ored population. From here, he went to Xenia and the day that he arrived in Xenia he was charged with shoot ing officer Simms at the home o f Earji Keyes, where Simms had gone to get a rooming bouse key that belonged to Mrs. Jennie Hamilton o f this place. Simms waa shot from witiun the Keyes home and fou r bullets entered his body. Lee fled from the house and was not captured fo r several hour* afterwards'. A posse was formed and he1gave himself up hear Trebihe*. Lee was indicted and found guilty August 13. He protested- his innb- cense at the time o f the trial and after being taken to Columbus, A t no time did he ever weaken. While he Was sentence?! to die De cember 2nd, Attorney Dawson Smith was preparing to appeal his case be fore the Court o f Appeals next month. For several weeks subscription papers have been.in. evidence in thp county " seeking, funds among colored citizens to employ Attorney Frank L, John son to aid Attorney‘ Smith in appeal^ tag the case. ■ Lee was horn in the south and he has a wife and tfiree children "infMon- * roe Michigan, The, body was shipped to Alabama fo r burial, % According to Columbus prisort au* forities this is the second time in the history o f the state, that, death has defeated execution o f sentence for such a crime, The other case was a- bout nine years! ago when a Hamilton" county prisoner died before the time ' fo r his execution. WREN’S ANNUAL HARVEST FESTIVAL NEXT MONTH This announcement will receive a glad welcome in every home in this vicinity fo r it presents many unusual opportunities. Great preparations have been made Every market has been combed and the entire store is ready and will of fer seasonable merchandise o f re* iable “ Wren” quality and latest style You will find the lowest possible pri ces consistent with good quality, and the values Will be the best, The Harvest Festival Exhibits are to be held again this year. Worth while cash prizes and ribbons will be awarded to the winners o f First, Second and Third prizes ta each, class. Every person is invited to enter in these exhibits and can make its many entries as- they wish. No entrance fee s charged and the only requirement is that the exhibit must have been produced during the year 1925. A few changes have been made m the classes this year and the revised list will ho published in this paper next week. You will also see further details on Springfield’s Greatest Val ue-Giving Event, W . D. NISRET GETS HIGH MASONIC DEGREE W, D. Nisbet* stopped here Thurs day on his way from Pittsburgh back to C)bi<ago. While in the Smoky City Mr. Nisbet was signally honored by having the Thirty-third Masonic.de gree conferred upon him. There were 85 in' the class. The membership, fo r this degree is limited and candidate* are elected only without application. Mr. Nisbet has fo r ’ the past few years been devoting much, time, to lecturing before Scottish Rite a* well as other Masonic bodies.* His local friends extend congratulations on his receiving the highest Masonic honor. WILL ERECT NEW BUILDING , . FOR GARAGE PURPOSES Ralph Wolford has had plans drawn and approved by the state department fo r a new fire proof garage. Part of the present blacksmith building will bo wrecked to make room fo r the new structure, . The garage will be modem and have ample capacity fo r winter stor age o f cars. The building will have modern heating facilities. Provision has been made fo r a separate depart ment fo r garage work. An office and display raom"‘\yill be located on the Xenia avenue frontage. ANTIOCH GLENN TAKEN OVER BY THE STATE Antioch Glenn, known as Bryan park adjoining the Village o f Yellow Springs, owned by Antioch College* has been taken over by the state as a game preserve, the lease to run for five years. The Glenn adjoin* tha Bryan Farm, which is now state prop erty. - t Oldest G. A. R, OFFICERS RAID SMITH HOME SUNDAY AFTERNOON 8 |lf Sheriff Morris Sharp and Deputies Baughn and Spencer raided the harm* j of James Smith (Venerable) last! Sunday afternoon. There was no o n e , at borne at the time. I t is said that. Smith had made some grape w in * . and * quart o f this was found. I t i# probable that an analysis . will b e . necessary to determine whether It contained mote than on* per c*nt alcohol. I 'M* Hjtmiiif * « # » * * » as** w X 7 '“ * is# jut# m m 0## Si###!|r $# ^#1#)# . \
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