The Cedarville Herald, Volume 52, Numbers 1-26
1 Advertising sells three articles where you had only sold one before— He who advertises—realizes. f t e r d c L No Busina Is Tod Big to VmA&> vertisfngr and None Too Poor to Af ford using it MFTY^ECONB YEAR No, 31, CEDARVILLE, QW( )AY> DECEMBER 14,1928 PRICE, ?1,50 A YEAR NEWSLETTER FROM STATE DEPARTMENTS Columbus, Of—There Is an influx of Republican politicians and office seekers in the Capital City afc the present time, which at least Is grati fying to the hotel and restaurant man agers. Governor-elect Myers Y. Cooper is a ranch sought after in dividual and he endeavors to arrange appointments with all those desiring an audience. The raeh ‘whom he has appointed as members of his- cabinet give universal satisfaction to- the party leaders over the state. * * * The approaching inauguration on Monday, January 16th, it is predicted, will draw an immense crowd to this city, as the arrangements are to be on rather an 'elaborate scale-.Delegations will be present from every county in the state. There will he a parade with a dozen brass bands, which will pass in review before the newly-elect ed vstate officials. .The new governor will take the oath of office on th« west steps of the State House. ■He Will hold a public reception afterwards }n the rotunda of the, Capital and a private reception for invited ‘guests in the senate chamber in' the evening. . * * .-V * Now that the two brunches of the General Assembly have organized a general overhauling o f the two Cham bers is under way, preparatory to the convening of the legislature on Mon day, January 7th, when jthe states men Will hear the-reading, of the last official message of Governor Vic Donahey. They will also have ap. offi cial communication from the newly- elected governor following the an,- augural ceremonies. • * * • * Statistician and Editor of Ohio Laws George M j Neffner, of the office of ■SecretaryJof State ‘ Clarence J, Brown, has compiled *. interesting statistics as a result of the vote cast at1the late -election, There' are 92 cities in Ohio and only 52 of them have a population in excess o f 10,(300 Sene'are 760 amaUer cities together .Cedarvilie Wins Over Antioch In Opening Game The College “Yellow Jackets” took the first .basket hall game of the sea son from the Antioch Division A, te*m on the local court floor last Saturday evening. The score was 42 to 36, The first half Cedarvilie held the score at 25 to 12. Allen played top for the locals taking honors for sixteen points with Smith fourteen, Capt. Toomire for Antioch was credited with eight points for his team, Cedarvilie had a good representa tion of last year’s team with Allen, Turner, Smith, Jacobs and Gordon, The College Reserves won over Ritchln 14 to 12. , The following was the lineup and summary": ..] Cedarvilie Alien, If. v W n t * ***■»»»**fc* m Smith,’ e, ,---- ____ : Jacobs, Ig. .— Gordon, rg. — ___ arshall, rg. Peters, rfi Townsley.’lg. ] Totals Antioch Earley, If. Hoerx*, r f . ___ _ McGlain, c . _ Marsh, ,lg. *__ ,i_ Toomire, rg. 1__ Swanson, c . ____ ife, Ig. _______ pratsa G, F -. TP. ---- 7 2 .. 10 ---- 3 0 6 — 7- 0. 14, —„ 1 0 . 2 ■ 1 ' 0 2 *.* % 0 ’ 2 0 . 0 O 0 0 —* a ? 0 . 0 .,M20 2 42 ' G. F. TP. ---- 1 O 2 a •4" 10 ‘ 4 ___o J ’ O 0 1> Ifi.. __ 0 0 O' 0 0 * .0 9 - 7 25 I'leet,- Dayton. Wilirangton Takes Basketball Game - Cedarvilie “Yellow Jjackets” put up astiff game of basket ball Wednesday night against the fast Wilmington College team-on the latter^ floor.'The locals had trouble in the first half getting theballinto the baskets. The scope whs 37 to 24 in favor of Wilnit ingtan. The ‘‘Yellow Jackets'* play University of Cincinnati Saturday night in that city," •» FARMERSWANT SHOW DOWNON RELIEFMEASURE Two million American farmers de manded Monday that the, incoming Republican administration “make good" on its campaign promises to agriculture. •’ The showdown was called fpr at the annual meeting - of the ' American farm.Bureau federation in session in Chicago, which was attended by dele gations from thirty-tWo farm states. The farmers agree that the Hoover administration should* be' given a chance, arid indicated a. willingness to judge future farm-relief plans on their own merits. The delegates,were unanimous, however, in insisting that something be done at once. The keynote of that spirit .was. Bohpded in his annual address by Sam H. Thompson, president of the feder ation. The way, in which, farm relief is obtained is insignificant in comparison with the importance of having it done effectively,’ Thompson said. Later in his message .-the president indicated that "the federation would be willing to .forget the vetoed McNary-Haugen farm relief abfll if the administration would bring out a new plan-which'the federation, believed.’ to be as good. Thompson necommeiided that the organization hold in abeyance any specific plan for farm relief and meet President-Elect Hoover on an open basis ahd. consider on their merits any proposals advanced, hy the adminis tration. . . Included in the farm, bureau pro jects, Thompson placed prominently the- intention 'to extend co-operative marketing through the tendering of certain services to existing organiza tions and development , q £ new ones; the pushing to compltion of freight rate hearings under -the Hoch-Smith resolution; extension• o f:the Farmers* Tax-Equalization campaign; develop ment of highways and ’inland water-|.patriarchal ways,arid assistance .in- finding new usees for agricultural products, . dro^e The -farm bureau, Thei suggested, ’ffiighh'^elbm^sifeir ttbe■•d&araiioh -At I JoumWrl {Hark B. t natiTimM the mouth Of to Clifton raid 1 his trip and reyiewed. We wentiup Miami to see got as far as could step iby its pieands seventy miles a journey along an old \ world, at a tiroe^ reflective temp are left—to the past. The' beginning o f ,* vaguely called* : flurries Blterna shine; there was lesser .brooks, roadsidp watering was the.brirrenne where .“fades at reluctant .leaf" knew the rich reached their tit Yet there ws With their wr bing.in the,.win| had the appeatar riged “•aboriginal,‘j over spoil that- along the iv bowed arid scrap civility,, and the ered overhead—* , of the air, A f®W’ kiris occupied*th$ of the stubble- fl| toWard such as since they may1 cattle with frb stood’ mute in farther afield, sheep,' came -the the pasture, cessions of .pigs.1 ing pursuits dna their little __ From, -sheds 'AGES HAD THEIRCAPITAL ioothe, Old Town, Little Miami Gorge of the Ctoein- own number a* mistress of his wig- S journey from warn, After living with thpir nation Miami river for some months in great apparent interestingly of >content—perhaps waiting for his hair * ~ connections 1 to grow out—he slipped away to no* , jtify the settlement of Bqonesborough, «y o f the Little Ithat his red brothers were going to could see, and attack it. There lie -was court- martialed on the charge that he was; a better Ohio Indian than he was a Kentucky Nordic, Nothing was proved against him, but one can guess that this son o f the wilderness $r«* more at home with a Shawnee brave than with either a North Caroliria ^uahari or a tidewater Vjrginian. ; ; i Not far from the aboriginal capital we ran across an ail&tigi not on earth whenita inhabitants were raiding the Blue Gtass stations. It Jis the chinchilla rfthhifc % rohus|; creature as large as the Belgian hare, and with mottled fur of soft*French gray,-very like that Of the little An- dean -rodent whose skip -the ancient Peruvians made into coverlets' and which is still jn favor for muffs and tippets. We' saw a score of these rab-, bits at a fish hatchery. One which 1 picked up ’ must have Weighed ten pounds! his full brother had sold for above'a hundred dollars. This animal is a 'spprt from the European rabbit; appearing about a dozen years ago in. in golden, heaps the .south of France,- it has bred'true s* - Scarecrows to thfe new type—another affirmation ire iri an. empty that creation is continuous, eluded- crow hov- Yellow Springs, some 'miles' to the north, is' one of a number of defunct resorts which are'scattered- over the Old West, and which testify,to the three- major interests of the Fabulous forties—self-medication, speculation, and . summer flirtation. * Physicians were of. no great sagacity then, and there was’ much in their talk about, “effluvia" in the atmisphere - and “humors" in the blood. To cure the humors and’ to escape the effluvia— and- the doctors—American sojourned in the dog days at places where there* were mineral springs, to '"Whose* Waters a*variety o f 'virtue^ was im puted, The men gambled a good deal' and thewomen—not their wives, then,* hut their daughters—flirted .more, than jalittle. Prominent ayhe -reap: mm: 5 “ tplace where you river; measured is was perhaps mouth. It was historic region, of the Indian it was easy for its-tifi any such the memorial of •have been the season- which is |w Winter. Snow jtth. gleams of sun- *re ^f ice on the 'ties hung from ougho. All about of lath Novepiber; ilia’ the doomed, idscapes which ses o f June had ' remembrance, fe in the fields, fed plumes bob- the porn shocks 3 of a huddle of irriors wrestling ace o f the.power Ml, wastrel pump- ce .corners,-' Out |j&flock of doves; one is reverent, i from afar. Black roughened- "coats yards, while. ' the .throats of liritive dialectaof »*of the;-chill, pro- bwed their snout- lows oyer which -yirerh .'scattered, fed under strata |f»clamoring. Sgh'rible^c'but New York's Poor To Eat Meat Of Champion Steer ..Dick, IfiQfl-pouad champion steer, has arrived In New York to gladden •the hearts and stomachs of some 1200 poor children on Christmas, J, C. Penney, the chain store man, paid the record price of, 17 a pound for Dick at the International Live Stock Exposition in Chicago, where the-steer was crowried grand cham pion. Jimmy Dodge, form manager for Mr, Penney, concaved the idea of the charitable dinner upon his ar rival in- this city and obtained the ap proval of Mr, Penney. He estimated the dinner would bring the cost of the steer to $11.69 a pound. The steer,'wae raised-hy 12-year- old- Clarence Goecke on his father’s farm at State Center, la, ■ Musical Recital For Musical Department The Department' of Music of the College under the direction of 'Miss Lydia Berkley gave a* recital last Saturday. The following was the program: „ . . . Gondoliers ---------- -------- - L Jesse! Gertrude Hamman Bagatelle 1JL----------------Sqhareenka 1Mary Margaret McMillan, The Lark — ------------ Tschaikowsky Marjorie Stowbridge ’ Hickory Sticks------ _______ Rent o * ’ ' Elsie Post La. Zingara.---------- Thome Carma Hostefcter- A Barn Dance--------- Engieffiapn Charles Whittington ‘ >. Jimmie Anderson The Clowns —A ___ Ludwig Schytte i, Ruth Kimball Minuet (from Don Juan) Mozart { ' Beatrice Pyles , S6l0 ____________________ _ ’ Lois Fisher Melpdy;for a Young Musician_Fisk Jimmie Anderson-’ On the ^wing Valdemar , ' * Charles Whittington ■Haunt o f the Fairies__ _ Crosby The Ghost in the Fire Place_Crosby ■•■ Jane Frame False In A Minor --------- , Grieg Eegina Seward June (^arcarolle) Tschaikowsky 6RENECOUNTY JURYVENIRES AREDRAWN Grand and petit jury venires for the January term of court were drawn Tuesday afternoon by Clerk of Courts Harvey Elam from the jury wheel. The grand jury will meet January 7, A date for the convening of the petit jury has not been set. The following names were drawn; Grand Jury—C a th e r in e Scott, Xenia; Gates Dowrtey, Miami town ship; J. R. Kimber, Xenia, ward 2; Artie Little, Rpss township; Lester Stewart, Beavercreek township; D, , Eldon Hailey, CaeSarcreek township; Nellie Corwin, Xenia, ward 2; F. M. Torrence, Xenia, ward 2; Maud • Stark, Xenia," ward 3; P, T, Jasper, Jefferson township; Ralph Skeehan, Spring Valley township; E. H* Hris- *, ton, New Jasper township; "Homer Snivele^,» Xenia township; Charles,,, Hazard", Caesarcreek township; Wil bur Beard, Jefferson township. ‘ ’ Petit Jury—R.ev. L. L. Gray* ’SU-v vercreek township; .Winnie 'Sutton, Silvercreek . township; •W illiam — Lackey, Boss township;*George So- ivard, Xeriia/ vrard' 3; G. J, Smith, Xeni< ward 3; Jacob Sellar, Bath - township; Edna .Mi Winters, 'Xenfa, . ward 1; Mary Burrell, Xenia,, ward 2; Edith Blair, , Cedarvilie ’ township; ” Archie Gordon, Silvercreek; ClarCnce Storek, Bath township; Mamie-Miller,/* Beavercreek township; Horace Comp ton; Spring Valley township; R, E, - Bryson,’ Xenia 1 township; - MCllie F. , Landrum, Xenia, ward 4j Anna Herr,. Bath township; M / J. Bebb, Xenia, ward 3; Catherine Miller, Beaver creek township;' Harold Lewis, Silver creek township; Anna LoVelace,.Xenia first ward. . * (i^efirarisd the ^nqral districts. The estimated popu- ^Ktfeiri'of 'Ohio at present is 6,826,000 ■‘Sod thus it is presumable that aholit 52.3% of the rural residents h'.ld 68.4% o f the residents of the cities did riot vote, principally due to ineligi bility. The State Library, is -undergoing a thorough house cleaning arid about a , dozen men, “ trusties” from the -big penal institution in West Spring Street, have been engaged for several Weeks with mops, scrub brushes, soap and water in placing it in presentable shape, It was badly needed for the dust and grime of months had settled upon the shelves and books in the numerous rooms and passage-ways which house .the library. Thousands of feet of floor space are covered rind to the uninitiated one might become lost while on a tour of inspection, Every one of the 260,006volumes are being taken from their resting place and given a good dusting. ’ v 4 . * Warden Preston E, Thomas of the Ohio Penitentiary is a very busy official at the present time for in Addi tion to his routine duties he has supervised the building activities and is now preparing for the Christmas program. Thousands of holiday boxes will be handled and distributed to the inmates and the annual minstrel will take place on Christmas morning fol lowed hy a special dinner. The new chapel was dedicated last Sunday and its popularity was immediately estab- tUhvd' It will be used for theatrical gad movie programs as well as for religious purposes. Five hundred prisoners have been transferred from the big institution to the London Prison Farm reducing the population to 4,168. ’ * -’ •# The Motor Vehicle Division of the office of Secretary of State Clarence J, Brown has been swamped with busi ness for the’past several weeks keep* ing employees busy many hours after the regular closing time in an effort to ktep up with the demand for Speeds! numbers. Director o f Motor Vehicle* Chalmers R, Wilson and three stilt have filled and mailed out about 5,000 special license platers by December 21st, aftd R has been some task. The new*!1929 plates may be used on and after the 21st of this jBHIpttF CLAIMS ALLOWED Oewoty Comadasioneri have allow- twenty-three sheep and animat HSuteS Aggregsttag in addi- tri fee*. . . . . . matins are for the lest three laud Are’ now adjusted fptat*. n-wt&it a a«w law iosteftd ef atm t c> lr »* Chapel Exercftes were conducted by the Eighth Grade pupils last Fri day afternoon. Their program waa sufficient to prbve that they have a Very promising -class. The members of the class portrayed the various characters -of the “comic" page o f the, newspaper. The Seventh Grade will have charge pf.Chapel Exercises this Friday morning, and they have ex pressed their desire to be the.best yet. The Senior Class will have charge of the Christmas Program and are work ing off it at the -present time. On account of a Faculty meeting at 3:00 P. M. today, it -is necessary to have the chapel exercises in ■the morning, i * Vacation Of all the seasons in the year,. Christmas is the best and happiest one. Just think—two whole weeks of Christmas vacation! Of course we like to go to school,'' but we don’t mind having a little vacation. The school will- be closed December 21, to be opened again on January 7. Every One will be back in school and eager for work at that time. - Postoffice Mail boxes have been erected for each member of the faculty Of Cedar vilie School, in the iower hall of the school building. The teacher’s name is placed on the box, «o there will be no difficulty in finding the right one.> Notices and communications f6r the teachers will be placed in the boxes, % -t. Springfield Game The Basket Ball boys will go to Springfield this Friday evening to play the Springfield High boys. Al though our school Is small in compari son, we shall show them that it isn’t size that counts. We have the proper spirit and that wil make up for the difference in the sizes, of the school. Basket Bail Pictures ’ On Tuesday, December 11, picture* of the hoys’ and girls’ basket ball squads were taken by a Springfield Photographer, The girls appeared in their new outfit*. « Firth and Sixth Grades .Closed' The fifth end sixth grades have been closed because o f the scarlet fever epidemic , although no new cases have beft reported recently. They will probably be out until ajker the Christina* vacation, . Student Council Actiritie# The Student Council meets regular ly from * to 4 F. M. every Tuesday. A oofistitution has been drawn up, and the organization is functioning tera satisfactorily, Their first ftwwwki project has been the parchasd of books for the school library. Sub scriptions have been planed for “The Literary Digest” and “The Stientifio Monthly," to be paid for from the f i f ip .. Uatift -dir; agririiltvmid prod The farm bureau,' he said, also might consider the extension of the co-operative marketing, idea- to em brace co-operative, production. Thompson- traced the development of the movement to adjust' agricul tural conditions, 'from it* inception after the period of deflation after the war down to the moment when Presi dent-elect JHooyer at St,. Louis de clared that' the farm- problem.“is thei most, urgent economical, problem by our-nation today. It mutt be solved if we are to bring equality of oppor tunity and*, assurance of complete Stability Of prosperity to all of our people,” . < “To my, mind,” said Thompson, “that statement id, the most hearten ing thing that has. happened. At last the agricultural problem has become he nation’s problem.' We always have contended and We now Contend that the American policy of protec tion should be made just as effective for agriculture a* it has been for in dustry and labor and thu* assure the farmer an American price for the pro ducts of his toil, even though he may be forced to sell a.portion of that pro duct abroad,” scrfemffiig <willows note fb the inant tr&eOf tb more, -zas -» distinct c yet the dem onWas the sycA- wlube-armed, LANDOWNERS PETITION FOR NEW HOAD County Commissioners have under Consideration a petition to establish, what will be known as the J. M. Auld road* which will be 180 rods in length and forty feat in Width. •The proposed road would extend from a point on the Cedgrville-Yel- low Springs Pike, one-fourth of a mile west of Cedarvilie, at a private right-of-way; through the eMary Hensal McGinnis estate; running with the right-of-way to the line o f the J. M.' Anldiand Claudie E. Auld prop erty, then ,north to the intersection of the McMillan rpad. Elghteen/resfdents interested in the improvement and living in the vicinity signed the’petition. Commissioners fixed December 26 at 10 A. M. as the date for viewing the proposed road afid January 9 at 10 A. M. as, the date for a final hear ing on the matter, Ctitfstmafe free For Court House Dawn marmoreal,, etching a classic* pattern, on the bordering hillside—under an other name- the %ee of Plato and the groves of •AcadWn«,^F«r smaller, by no mean* stately, acjd yet made con spicuous by its greed globes, was the Osage otaUge, out. o f Which ^Indian tribes used to fashion their imple ments "of war and "the chase—it ,is also called bow wood—and from the fiber of which'they derived a yellow dye. Its function iff aboriginal ar senals is perpetuated in the name of the Ozark Mountain^—French, and meaning people with bow*. ■ ‘ At A settlement just beyond Xenia we overtook history. ,,Qnmaps-this is Old Town, and its full name is Chilli- cothe Old Town. It la one of several Ohio communities that bore the Same resounding hams; Da Tocqueville was impressed with what he deemed the pompous nomenclature of. the Ameri can savage. For a time this was the capital of the Shawnee nation?. “The most conceited and warlike of the aborigines,” DAniel Drake called them, Shaler describes them a* “a kind of Hun,” No tribe on this continent wandered so widely. They came up from Florida, settled between the Cumberland and the Tennessee, were evicted by the Cherokees, removed to the Delaware sad then the Susque hanna, drifted westwsrd to Ohio, and thence in separate band* want’ on to Missouri, Texas, Kansas and Okla homa. Savannah is a variant o f their tribal name and was one of their homes, Cornstalk and Tecumseh were their gxeatesot warriors. Among other tribes, curiously enough, they were known chiefly, as salt makers, yet they were redoubtable fighters and what Shaler calls “somewhat fore thoughtful men." he devastation o f Kentucky was mainly their work. A Race Aad A Bath Old Town and Its savage inhabi tants figure in the careers of the Wo most romantic character* of the Bor der, Hete Simon Kenton probably raff faster than any white man in this country ever raff before. He had to, for he was a prisoner, and two lines of Shawnee*, armed With Mub* and knives, formed * gauntlet through which he sped to the temporary ref uge of their countilhouse; We located its site near aft aid brink mill. Here, 1County Commissionor A. E, Beam has presented to the county'a fine .specimen of a cedar tree to be used :ts a permanent Chriatmaa tree. The tree hae been set on the lawn and will be decorated With colored lights. • CARL TAYLOR* Auctioneer. Phone 4*. Jfttwtotiwn, Ohio. also, Daniel 1773; hut the Shi and proud put him t o 1 an ordewl t o ' to the scrubbed.* The his hair dog for h$*M was a prisoner in of middle age, and irtoe fond of him was their captive, it was by their squaws stripped, end widto blood, Uls Mtoked out all baked (to* of titote qwfevek. fThfvbgue bfAsaeri can watering placebo bits passed, al- ihough the automobile may yet revive it.-Some o f the hotels burned* down; others became” hoarding schools, hos? pitals,'summer chautauquas, In my travels I have come across many of these old-time resorts and where the hotel is still standing there isnojtet- ter place to spend a night and a day. Rushing Waters j In a glen back of the town’we found the Yellow Springs. A stream of iron-impregnated water ad thick as one’s thigh rushes from the top of a hill,, plunges into a pool, and then babbles in . a quaint, half-concealed, runway o f its owri down among the hillside cedars for a long .leap into the lake below. Green mOss and sulphur-tinted rocks give the cascade a colorful background, and we found icicles framing it. The water has enough volume and velocity to turn an overshot mill wheel. It carries a good deal of ochre; while history Is silent on the point, it is a fair guess that after the Shawnee women ducked Boone they daubed some of it upon him—a vigorous anticipation of the era of civilized flirtation later. * The springs belong to Antioch Col lege where we dined agreeably in a sort of college, inn. Off a campus that has memories of Horace-Mann we met a gronp of students—there are some six hundred of them—and thqy made us Welcome. The main building is surrounded by tall trees and has towers on which the benediction of years has fallen. Walking through academic halls when the holiday si lence is upon them has its pensive unconsciously wistful in the faces of their students, One thinks of Mer ger's i scription of Bohemia as “ the gayest and most melancholy country Of the world:” but being lads, they see only the fore part of the phrase, Those Camp Meetings We Went on to Bryan Park* which became State property over the veto of Gov, Donahey—a veto inspired by the fact that John Bryan, belligeren ; infidel, stipulated iff his will that iff religious e^erdsds should ever be halt off the romantic Btretch of hilt am valley which he was giving Ohio. Perhaps he was thinking of camp meetings* the sort reported by Drake as presenting “scenes o f fanatics raring among the worshipers, and of levity and vice among the young men who hung about." With more than six hundred acres, this is Ohio*# larg est park, and it is also a notable al falfa farm. The Miami flow* through it iff a splendid gorge, With rook- houses like -one toe* at Cumberland Falls. A high, narrow heavily wooded plateau, such as New Mexico would call a mesa, atorde long views of the river valley/fa the gorge are the tod oedar or juniper, and, fringing th* Romance &affS paroles — Saint Saens Arcelia Phillips Rustic Dance* — Carma Hostetter Mary Margaret McMillan Marjorie Sftowbridge Edwin Wing Hied lit City Hospital ,'*■ l***' . ..... . "* * -Gr* V Edwin‘ Wing, 69, a resident* of * •Clifton, died Mffnday night ifi fhjs Springfield ‘City -hospital-suffering, \ from injuries snatajfftd in A m olH '' crash, ’ ^ •--* «,-VA CHILDDIEDFROM THROATINFECTION LASTFRIDAY Millicent Pflammer, 10 daughter Of Mr* an<|Mrs. Carl Pflammer, who re side on the Burton Turner farm* died Friday night about 8. -o’clock. The daughter bad first suffered scarlet fever and infectious throat trouble developed. A brother died just the week previous with scarlet fever. Mrs, Pflammer has been quite ill for some time following the serum treatment,. Another son, aged 2, ha* the scarlet fever and has been in .a very critical condition. : The funeral was held Sunday after noon with burial in Cherry Fork, Adams county. The family has only resided on tho Turner farm a few weeks. Wing is- survived by ,ifis vjfld^W, three daughters, Mrs. Alice Nel^m,.. Mre^ Nelson Stretcher. And' Mks. ' Florence Swigart of Clifton. A broth er, Charles Wing of Mechanicsburg* . also survives. The funeral was hfcTfl from the?Clifton M. E, ChurchWed nesday afternoon with interment iff .Clifton Cemetery. Farm Bureau May- * Take Shough Mill Reports from South Charleston -state that the'-Shough mill, one of the landmarks of this section of the coun try, may he tak’ert Over by the farm bureau organization of that section within a short time. The .Shough mill Was established in ■1890 by the three Shough brothers, A. M., C. N, and Joseph Shough, A. M. and C, N. Shough are both dead and Joseph Shough withdrew from the comphny several years ago. Little Sour has been milled in the plant for the past seVeral years, the company handling an extensive busi ness in coal, grain and feeds. Herman Coe Has Heart Attack Tuesday Mr. Herman Coe, Yellow Springs, suffered a sudden attack, of heart trouble Tuesday at the home of Edgar Tobias where he had been aiding with a group o f farmer* iff harvesting the Tobias eotn crop owing to his illness Mr. Coe for a time jyA* iff a Very critical condition but we are informed that he has since improved. Mr. Coe now resides iff Yellow Springs. Arson Suspects Are * In Dayton Jail Robert Johnson, 25, and Harry Duncafl, 19, prisoners in the Greene county jail, have been bound over to the grand jury on charges of arson, evidence having been gained it is said that places the blame for the recent fire.Inthe Greene County jail on them. In as much-as the jail haa,ffot been repaired Sheriff Tate has placed the two .prisoners in the Montgomery County,jail to await the action of the grand jury. Both have previously indicted fop burglary and larceny and are awaiting trial oh these charges. APPEAL TAKEN ON DEATH CASE (Continued on Pag* f ) Preliminary to filing an appear in Common pleas Court against the pro posed construction of a single county ditch petitioned for by B. B. Stack- house and others, John Baker, E. L, Baker, W, F, Lewis and Femmie Lewis have filed appeal bond of $1,000 with County Commissioner*. The appeal is baaed on these claims: that the improvement is not conducive to public welfare; that the cost will be greater than the benefits derived} that the route, temlnl or mod* of con struction h not of the project; and that the assessment* levied are not according to the benefit* of the im* provemsat* CARD OF fflANKB Wo wish to thank the many friend* and neighbors who have Shewn M much kindness and stteh h y r t4ftdt sympathy in our recent sorrow. 1A. G. Colitaa and Fassiy, il FewMotorists Yet Have 1929 Tags ruur.or^nY w . According to Harry Lewis, local registrar for automobile and dog tags, few persons have taken advantage of the time to get tag* early. However as auto tag* cannot be used until December 21 no rush is expected be fore then. All oars must have the new togs b^ January 1 at stay off the highways. Thor* are plenty -of tags for all. Coltese Get* CHtt Aimowt te g fo fBSfflie President W. & at dsiMKle Gatieco fMemteei that ho baa received a ttm to* e* the Arfeudkle sotote to f « » f s i im M m rn m m m om t ly her wttl- to to* 'Ool egel ■ •■ ■ ” pjdy?fifiw.*■ ' ht •*- *V'- hf I f ^
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