The Cedarville Herald, Volume 53, Numbers 27-52
A fl , ^1 f l i t 4 ln si am advertised by merchants first Advertisement* keep you abreast o f the Hum Head them! X e ra ld . Advertising Is new sies the headlines on the front Often it is o f more aignifleaixoato yon. V FIFTY-THIRD YKAH No. 30. CEDARVILLE, iYt JULY 41930 PRICE, tl.60 A YEAR NEWSLETTH FftOMSTATE DEPARTMENTS COURT NEWS ■ m m m m m x m p im m ... I At Uamw Hwry D. Smite ha* been appointed executor rt the estate rt Hannah McClelland, deceased and has filed bond o f $6,000 in Probata Cobrt, COLUMBUS, Ohio—Official ballot*T, C. Long, M. L. Wolf and FrankMe- forma have bean matted to all County ClelUn ware named epprafeere, Boarda o f Elections by Secretary oft W. F, Harper has been named *xe- State Clarence 3. Brown, State Super-!cuter o f the eatate o f Margaret F. viaor o f Flection*, Local board* wilt! Titus* late o f Jamestown, bond being now prepare their ballots accordingly idispensed with, and advertise for bids for the printing" o f samp for the approaching primaries to be held Tuesday, August 12thv Ap proximately 5,000,000 will be printed. State TreasurerHoas Aka baa com pleted the settlement with' all the cduntief in the state for the last half o f the- tax year 1829, receiving, the amount of $4,698,811.58, The levy for the State Office building fund was $1,- 287,914,351 for retirement o f bonds for ’ soldiers bonus, $1,716,090.68; general revenue, $1,694^00.55. Inheritance taxes paid the various county treasur ers' amounted' to $1,622,734:20. The amount of. $9,280.44 was collected by the county treasurers and paid to the state as the letter’s share o f interest earned by the State’s share of taxes twhile such money was in county, re positories awaiting settlement and distribution. The roOmSfprmeriy occupied-bythe Department o f Agriculture and Fish and Came Division, on the lower floor of the Annex, adjoining the State House, have been nicely furnished and redecorated and will be occupied by other state departments, the old tenants' having moved several months ago-into the old Hartman Hotel prop erty, now known as the Ohio building comer Fourth and Fast Main streets. * . * v' * . -Quite a.few innovations.have taken piece in the halls and rotunda of the State House during the present ad ministration. An information and registration desk has been installed in the rotunda together with several comfortable upholstered . setees for visitors. Fancy colored pottery re ceptacles filled with sand have taken the plaqe of the unsightly cuspidors, An attendant is in constant charge to direct those seeking information about the Capitol, NAMED GUARDIAN Homer Snively guardian of the person Mary Helen Snively, „ond o f $100 in Probate1 appra ise estates Three estates having an aggregate gross value of $16,820 ate appraised:in estimates on file in Probate Court, . Gross value o f the estate o f W. H. Hamer, deceased, is placed at $11,39$, Deducting debts and the cost of ad ministration amounting to $1,894, the net value, is $9,504. Estate of Thomas Finn, deceased has a gross value of. $2,790 and a net value of $2,189 after deducting debts and the cost of administration total ling $601. * :* Gross value o f the estate of Tillman Bowers', deceased, is $2,632. Delfts and the cost of administration amount to $1,051,85, leaving a net value of 31,580-15. SALE AUTHORIZED Ernest Earner, as executor of the eatate of liV, H. Harncr, deceased, has' teen authorized in Probate. Court to sell personal property belonging to the estate at private sale. - ORDER SALE Sale of real eatate apraised at $4,- 500 has been authorized in the case o f Mary Bond Bell', as executrix of' the estate o f Martha E. Hutchison* de ceased, against Knox, HUtehiton and others in Probate Court, ‘ rw il CHURCH NOTES iiii« ii|0iu n iiiiiin m in iiPMin i>MiiHiniiMHM»iMiwiinHi # iMETHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH r f J* W@ m 1COILEGETO STARECANVASS WEDNESDAY Church School at 10 A, M. We be- j gin Character Studiee in the Old .' Testament. Begin with the first lee- ; _____ «en and mips non* of these great; !' . leader! of Issael during this quarter. ? Wrtnaadfty, July 10, is the day Dr. A. H. Gannett, Los Angel**, *4*6*»• * **k« tl># eanv*** ht Ge« Califoi5a, w illT r ic «t S T S S U S l worship hour. Preceding this.will fee jm Fourth Celebration Will BeHeld By Colored Citizens m lte*nw i l l * # , '* Dr. AHWdltabtaj»w,ttH!T5 year youngster, whose official title, is Seri geant-at-Arms o f the House of Rep resentatives, will soon be- in bis cle- ment for the decorators, electricians and others who have been employed in overhauling the main floor, gallery and rooms •adjacent' thereto,' have about completed the work and the transformation is truly noticablc, for it is the first time that*the House has been given such an overhauling in several decades. When tho new car pets and ruga are installed old mem bers will hardly recognise the place. Dr. Robinson and Clerk of the Pfouse John P. Maynard’are certainly to be commended for their progressiveness. . *. * ■* „ Palms, ferns and flowers itt great profusion form the background, of the, rotunda where Governor Myers Y. Cooper and staff held a public recep tion and greeted the visitors here in attendance at the opening of the Na tional Educational Conference in the,child's custody restored to her, and Capital City Saturday, June 28tb and \ carried the matter up from common which will continue to July Fourth. It|plea* Court, is predicted that during that time over • APPRAISERS NAMED J». T. Rountree, O. H. Harris and William Shields have been appointed in Frobate Court to appraise real es tate belonging to the eqtata r t Cassia -**-..*.1--- J; Eta . jM P P H IH M lf r t t fw g M * RETURNED TO MOTHER *Custody of 7-year-old Jacqueline Little was restored to her mother, Mrs. Doris tittle Lucas, by the court of appeals, ruling oh long drawn out litigation between the girl's divorced parents over her control. Tho court reversed the decision o f Common PleasJudge R. L. Gowdy and transferred the custody from the father, Davis Little, Dayton, .hack to the mother, Pointing out that' the child's health is delicate, the appellate court held that the most desirable place for- her is with her mother who lives with her parents on a farm near Jamestown., Tho child’s custody was given to the mother when the divorce was granted five years ago. This order was modified by Judge Gowdy and custody given tp the father last October because of failure o f . the mother to permit the child to visit tho father. The mother sought to have the The colored citizens in town stage a Fourth of July1celebration on /riday evening. Such an event waa jeld. last year and everything went off .inooth and them was merriment for til, the affair not being excluded tOf .he colored race. Those in charge, have asked fhaf Elm street be roped off to exclude auto traffic and none will he,permitted evert ter parking spate, The Dayton Power h Light Company ia giving Special lighting facilities .for decoration. It is. expected to hava a gra .mi*. vdBous kinds of feet rams fee girl*. ... the evening. W,U Ride. So tost Charts#'. Town. •’ -’ r Over Hw'eael of toeirad to Building fundLoan Companies to Pay Interest Soon But the waxed aid another,' tore#fo r ' town-Into-1 Bteeet to J tm tA * jd he dM , fceSteeet era* peed-: . jiigk,' Hrporitors and' stockholders In j ? " >building, loen and savings companies ■ |1n Greene County will have dividend ~(and interest'earnings to the extent o f ;$ti^*<KK)>for the first half of 1930, ac- ** .f t 0?* {cording to reports of the State De- n«vthsto^ Ipayment.' | Loan Officers xwint out that building eind loan earning* tor the first half of the year have placed « substantial port in .keeping this Community pros perous, The t eUdtog and loan •‘mrion'4will be ahered by depeeitors and a^iHde the Main ».njppmwPiwuPSL Ret end of s i dirt, There will be plenty o f lunch and .efreshments and the beet o f order is guaranteed which wa* Observed last ./ear. There will be nothing that wii, offend anyone and all are invited, Tho event will close with special d>*r play of fireworks that is now* bring arranged* Former County Auditor Huy Return; Report JUDGE GRAM IN TOWN 15,000 visitors will be in attendance, mafcipg xt the largest convention ever held in the city. Operation Did Not Bring Belief Mrs. Maty Alice Ruwlaugh, &f years old, wife of Thomas E, Rum- baugb, Upper Bellbrook pike, and tl;o mother of II living children, died Sat urday morning in a Xenia hospital, having failed to rally after an emer gency operation performed Friday. Mr*, Rumbaugh was borfl in N.rvv Jasper township September 28, 1872, and was married November 16,1893. She always tteW in Greene county. Besides her husband these MUt-m survives Melvin and Ormond It, at home, Mrs. Elisabeth Fowet* and Mr*, Clara Evans, Cedsrvlttej Amos o f Dayton; lister, Miamisburg; Mrs, Ada Keller, Springfield; Mrs, Mar» garet McCoy, Gee# Station, and Sarah, turtle and Roth,at home, Her mother, Mr#," ‘Mabel Brickel, and brother, ^ „ . ..te-M.. *’•"[pifnic Dropped ., . Fwwrat m nkm were held at the ' F o r € o lfe | t& A S ^ I l^ T a e r t a y , Burial in Woodland f g O o r t l i l i e i l l l a l lk eemttery, Xenia, } .. Judge Harry G. Gram, Springfield, was in town Tuesday morning calling among business men and citizens in behalf of his campaign tor Congress In Lhe' Seventh District. The Judge is not only presiding over Frobate Court 'n Clark county 6afcr the Juvenile Court also, Ho is president of the Springfield Y. M, C. A., Chairman of tho Red Cross. Connectedwith the Boy Scout movement and a number of, other organizations. Judge Gram % the owner and operator of s small farm and knows what present day farm problems are. For several weeks reports have been n circulation in and about Xenia that ft; 0, Wead, former county auditor and ior tbe past year, deputy state and! ior, would,return to Xenia. Report# from Columbus the past week through lews channels are that Mr. Wead ha# •esigned and will return to Xenia to <?connected with one of the banka in tout city; It is said no official action has been nkert but rumor has it that J. A. Nis- mt, cashier o f the Xenia National Sank, who has been in ill health tor .Gihe time,'desire# to resign.and re* dro-and-thafc Mr. W eal'w ill tw_hi3 iucccssor, No statement has been ia jued by bank officials either of Mr. Ncsbit’a resignation or Mr. Wead*# retortion as cashier, Reports havs it the change will take place in Gcptem :e r.' ROSG TOWNSHIP LOST Official figures m poptilafion InRbs# township abotss & decrease o f 164 In the past ten years. This year 866 persons arc listed against 1630 ht 1920, There Is no tillage In the town ship. Cedarvilie township has fiat been reported. ■ ATTORNEY GENERALWILL ^ STEAK JULY 4th " Attorney General Gilbert B. Ilett- nan has accepted an invitation to d&- Ivor the address at tho community, uly dtft celebration in Shawnee park, Centor the committee in .charge has iJinoufteed Mr, Bettman'S speech*# vill bo delivered in tho park pavilion i% 0 ©*etoe|» The patriotic ce!ebra» lion Is being promoted by; the Rotafy md Kiwanis clubs Tho criebration win open with a concert by tho Osborn* }#r.;J at 2 o’clock. Gpoxts tor children sud two softball ‘game# "Will feature tho afternoon. Beginning at 6:30 Aleck women representing various srganfastfons will serve a picnic sap .ior. Dancing In tho pavilion will be an .evening feature. FIRST VISIT BALK IN TWENTY-EIGHT YEARS '“ ~T _ j ' Tho Home Culture Club met afcth§|, James Mateaer, wife and son, who A DAY EARLY 1 Ihome of Mrs, B, Cl Wright, Tuesday> reside at Spokana, Washington, yisife ■fi* yteraki la oat this week a dfty|erening,July 1st, tor the annual bnib|ed hero this weekamong old acquaint early fine to the fact that we hate no‘ ness meeting. 'Die members of tlmiances, It is Mr. Mamuer’s first visit tnrrt daltwmy on Friday, July 4th. As. { club voted to forego the pleasures of] back to his old home town In twenty* a -r.»r»!t news matter had to be cur-{their atmaal picnic, and pMet their?eight years* A.brother, Tea#Mamuer leUrt a# m'itchas poeefble, yplcnfomoney into# fond. This amountIand wife .of Coraefsvlllo, Indiana, ^ — - |to be glren to Cedarvllle College, The{stopped herb Sabb&th on a short visis Mt»., Jam*# Watkfna, » f Jeffer*^. ItoUowlwg officers'were elected tor the] entente to Springfield, tllte Mr* Myril* Brock, Graml M#> (ensuing years President, Mr#, tt 'E.1 , ........ tha rtf the Btote rt Ohio,O. K B.f andj Hamilton; Vice President, Mrs, J, W. j You will want your home painted or Wm FhyHs i'rock o f Jeffersonville Johnson; Secretary# Mrs. C, % Mas-* decorated on the Inside this spring, were atr gumf? ' "ters; Treasurer, Mrs. CoraTrumbo, ICill on Elmir Jurkat to* estlmaleti (ga in Ml rfe'tirtseMugy. "Dlrtrilm- ' e#e»i-<u*na*l- ’eellng a gtert 'final r t w gmwm#• rtwi». BUtwhenwe had agrta ereteefi aver tlgh unto th# Mala stosrt, and found mrsehres Modemf tib* i a*<md time, ben did tha yrifia at M m m he wertome with ■■earthing ale*. And iteface o f BekmandUl grow red and h* teeth,rt Soknnon did Wte M* Mp tot spake he not a ward but turned ito yet another aide afreet. And 1 draw ***** iato rthe shadow if the far side of tha Chariot that I night not anger mine husband the nor*. ■ Again wt drove to the Mtin street md again we atepfad ahert rt neeea- ;ity at sight rt tha meonfi rt J»rth Chen did Eokmett turn unto me and is opened Ms month and spake ebemently. And he shewed tmta me iow it would have been better tor the man who Invented Waterwork*, had ie had a mUlstrtM hanged about hie neck end had he boon dropped in the midst o f the tea. Eat I gathered that nine Mtehan* thought that it would java been bettor for Cedarrille and totomon also. I spake no word hat sate quite etill .» my corner until w» had found the side street that led ante Main street. But, lo, the WatmrweriMHf# had btott here also and time* we* yet a big bump tor oar Chariot to rattle over, for it i# o f the Ttn-TTp*. When we had jarred aerate. Solo mo# delivered unto me yet another Masterpiece on tho Bril# rt Something x other and m m went home and to And this morning I *•** h*» Months y Magaslne rt the rmatort* r t * cool mth o» a hat deg in * white tab, with Lhe added convenience rt the soap that .loafs, And I fiaaht It art And % loabt not timt perndventare a*«» #*> -,at in oar bathroom, mine husbant rill be one rt the ehtet tetter#- and mjoyer* rt tim tab, And tVmmatedit Usfts m Waterwerke will not be among tha aeags rt Solomon that Is sue from baMad our hathroom da©*. t o t ho wfil than have torgooRen ear rides o f brt- night and will fe ll only the p!ea>*nt artsmtten* that the Monthly Magaslne dweriled. For Bolomon, Ilka all other man, lives to day, forget* yaterday, m e think# of tomorrow, gotemeus Wife. SaM m Bw kb P ew IteC kw e The E*rt ffaMaa Eaak to « « M « H closed by oifiar at lha fiteortomT «* day and mined mm m th* fitate Banking tteporiawa* earteg ta in t* Cess Of "ftrosen loanrt. :!». * 3WHIoesy WaspreaMMairt thateam. Mr«Whte- #rywaafar a K*«heaga Rank a brief •tatement o f what tha preach era and layman did the past week at Boonville, Kentucky. Thie day close* the pastor’s twenty- fifth anniversary in tho m»ni*try. The member# and friends are most cordial- '|yjnyltsdlv , The Imperial Male Quartet r t Get- tyabargt Ohio, will furnish the pro gram for the evening Union Service, which will be held fn this church at 8 o’clock, Mr. Cecil Ewbenk is %-member of the quartet and well known in this community. ' The musical program will consist rt saCred songs In solos, duets, and quar tet nUnterbs. /Also several negro spirituals wittbe given, A Silver offering will be taken for tbe entertainers’ expenses, RainMuchNeeded In This Section I f weather reports aTe correct We are experiencing One of the unusual summers for absence o f rainfall.~Lo- ca)ly it hat.(been ptere than fifteen days since we have had rain and most of'the days have found the tempera ture around 80 with a high windthat h is dried-out everything. Lawn* about tbe homhs as well as farm pasture are badly burned and small, crops have been, cut abort, The Jhay harvest will not amount to muck and many predict that gardens cannot last much longer without rain. < Withmany wells are towwith water and soft water is again a scarce arti cle. It has been several years since town people have found the need of water any greater than at present. People areanxious to b. re the munic ipal Water connected but this cannot be done at this time, While the sup ply tank Is fitted the oontroctors have use rt water mreet o n .ilst*tadt*i .ttisil.1 jUvt^eiSieir dtaek -.ate.audited twite -yeerijr, -and interest «a j^ fica te* -of 'daporit- ia mattedput ataiy six moatfaa at irreg ular drta*.' Thai#It ‘may be seen4 that white tbe bulk of building and loan earning# i»'credited January 1. and ply 1, a considerable, portion of tbe earnings on money left with these in stitution# is distributed throughout the year.- ........... Building and loan .associations in this county report a successful six months. Assets Increased approx^ mstely 5 per'cent, and now stand at 5JM5,910.45. Because building and eon associations ate so wholly inde pendent of genital business conditions these institutions felt little. If any, the effects of the past six months’ de pression. - Cedarville building and loan pay# dividends in February and August. BROKEN WRIST Mr#. Dana Mills fell at her home south o f town Monday when she frac tured her left arm At the wrist and spraining her right'wrist. A New Kind o f Cars For Electric Line The Cincinnati and Lake ErieRail road that operates .more than 270 miles of electric"road in Ohio"part of Which touches Springfield and Osborn ’s introducing a new train service with the most modern electric cars, The car# have a speed o f 75 miles an hour with front and rear enclosed with non-shatterable glass,. Low level type bodies built of steel and aluminum. Hot and cold water, Up» bolstered lounges and easy chairs. The day o f the old style traction car is passing and from now on will be- reCogiiised a# the electric railroad, There is no doubt but that this service will again appeal to SUFFERED STROKE MONDAY Mr. R .. C. Watt suffered a light stroke of paralysis on the farm oc cupied bp hi# son near noon, Monday. He was found1sitting on tho running board rt his automobile. For a/time his speech and right side were affect ed but he has since improved though not able to-Ieav* hit' room at his resi dence an South Main Street. ' ANSWERS TO PICTUPE PUZZEL TWO CHARACTERS IN COSTUME aaajaaif^a* ' GRECIAN . 1-^-Min on left should not wear mod em cap. 2 -SaitcSic is modem. 3~*Wrlstwatch is modern. 4—Round arch not known in ancient Greece. ____ 5—Phone modern invention." fi—iModemoffice desk, 7—Modern picture and frame, 8 Spectacles unknown in ancient Greece, s: 9—Pipe# unknown to ancients. IXM&esign on border of mantle does not match, lI^Modem chair. 12=Newepaper 0 ® desk hot known in ancient Greece. ^-Haircut onman on left is modern. Mis# Kathryn Sanders, Supervisor again appeal to the traveling 6f £ uik in iha Marysville public puhlis and that many towns that on^ I j , spending her vacation with had the ‘ traction hne’’ will regret to w h m U n . E, A. Allen, tnrte thin m et that their- line had ■ 'been sold tor junk, Steam roads are no longer encour aging short trips and only seek traffic for through train#, The new electric service will go far to fill the need rt passenger business steam roads now fieslfe to discard. The electric train With the new accommodations will ap-> peal to the traveling public. WHEAT PRICE AWAY BELOW PRODUCTION COST The -So-We-Bew and- BlossomClubs held their meetings together Thurs days June 26th at tha homo o f Cletis and Louise Jacob#, For Roll Call the Presidents had the So-We-Sew Club members each name one o f the part# r t the sewing ma» chine and the BlossomClubgirls name a Rower In ttrtm at their home* The minutes of both dubs were read and approved and business 'dis* ward# securing $15,600 for CedarviU* College tor the collegiate year, ItHL 1931. The budget o f expense# tor C*d*r- viUe College for the coming yaer I# a $35,000. $22,000 o f this goes to pay the salaries rt tho professor* jmd janitors. $7,000 will be seeded to. meet the contingent expense* o f the college, such a# light, fuel, repairs, painting, -and supplies, $3,000 will be needed for putting m the cam paign to secure the Building and En dowment Fund of$750l000( This $6,- 000 will necessarily be expended in .. advertising, travelling expense*, eov* - responfience, and' keeping * fore# to the field after the fund tor the next two or three yearu.- To meet this budget o f $35,000, Ge- darville roijege will have .aw income of $800 from its endowment and rt $12,000 (estimated) from*tuitien, or a. total income o f $20,000.' TTwt witt leave a deficit of $15,000 for next year - unless we secure in tbe canv*#*.- $1$,-- 000, next Wednesday, July 10. $15,000 Is a smatt sum to raise in order to keep the wOric of Cedarville College going next year;:and, at the same time, foo,- enable it to -put o n , and project a campaign far and near to secure by 1934 toe 'total sum of $750,000 for a building and endow* mentfund. » Cedarville and Cedarville Township . ought to raise this sum in view rt what the college means to them. 2,000 student# have been in attend ance during the 36 years o f the opera-" tipn of Cedarville College. Grant it that each one rt themspent $400While here, a very conservative, estimate, Ond . that makes a total contribution to Cedarville o f $800,000, 452 o f tbe 2000 have -graduated from Cedarrille College.. Each one o f them spent from 2 to 4 year# in Ce- . darville. -Most of them spent 4 years . here. At a cost to them o f $400 each . a year, they have left in. Cedarville $701,200. ha* hM* aw avenge rt$01 vilte College. Suppose they each spent in Cedarville $1000 * year, and soma of them spent more. they have given J in the 36- years to Cedarville a sum " of $360,000. 170 students were in attendance at Cedarvflle College last.year.. 56 of, them roomed and boarded in Cedar ville, They Jeffc in Cedarville in,tui tion, room, boarding, and other ox-" penses at least $450 each. That makes a total for 56 students last year Of $25,200, 'The remaining 114 spent in , Cedarville at least $10000 in tuition and personal expenses. '.Then if you. had had no college in Cedarville and would have sent away to other col? feges the 114, who came' from Cedar-' villa and nearby places* you would have had to pay out at the rate of $600 for each.one of them; and of the 114, 56 came from Cedarville and Ce- darville Township/ By attending at home, they saved Cedarville and Ce- darville Township the sum of $31,600, estimating that they each Would have spent $600 during "the year, i f they had gone elsewhere to college. In surveying tho expenses of a stu- dehfc jn 53 Ohio colleges, it is interest ing to note that they run all tho way Jra::i $520 a year Up ttj $1357. %The average expense to a student for a year in theso colleges is $600, Stu dents in Cedarville College, who litd in Cedarrille and township can ,go to Cedarville College tn -at least $175 a . year for all expenses. Students at a ' disiahce can go to CrtaryiUe College on $475 a year for all expenses. Of the 452 graduates of Cedatville* College, practically all rt them are em ployed in paying positionsor are run ning their own business, Those who are employed ate receiving salaries all tho way ftom $1000 tip to $7000 a year. : » . to t Us estimate tho average salary of 300 of them at $1500 a fear, which j is very conservative, and they at that salary are receiving $4500,06 m feitC Musi rt these would not hato gotten ft collegiate training, if Cedarvlllg Col lege had hot been open to them, Of, the. 452 Alumni.of Cedarrille College, 241 came from Gtoeno Coun ty. ; '00 o f the 241 came ftom Cedar- rilhr and #1 earns Dom Csdarvflls township. 200 o f the alumni ate men, $52 ate Women, 58ate minister# of the #•#$*! f-' t f 4 it cussed, . Reports wet* given fram tr#«WMt*fSi(more thau onefourth of the men/'tfit With the wheat market the lowest in jrear# farmers will not likely findJwas read, fey secretary of Blossom*riptes, and teachers, 26 are mmhants a. pries for this season'd rtop that witt.]t)luh, n mnd in other business, 21 are fame?#, «n*Me them to .get hardly half «oat| Mias Brth Radietfi, t'ounty ttomej U are phislrian*. 6 are attorney#, prke, Ftote. statisttes nfeosit the best Demonstration Agent, attended ourtfi are dteter# of toualne## contefna, that wheat, can he- produced' with a jmeeting, fibs, and t® leader of Sew»|5 ar« missionaries, 2 are judges, % prrtit l« $1,50 a busheti. The ptefatt-llng Glufe, Mrs, Jaeotw Inspected the’ are newspapermen. % ia a lecturer, lag wheat price Is around 70 cents, tea towel# and other sewing we had! Gibers are in. various other Hues rt Many farmera’ will find- ft mote pro*!been doing thrsughowt the week, frteugatiem The largest cewtrihitloii fitahle market in using the crop fori Thehostesses ihowedantheir fiower ■ has teen -to the church, tbe wheels, -heg frtd. A numberftps ofely cuttinglgardehii; ttokysavarat Kodak pictnresjand the homes of our country and rt thafpirii rt the crop and will turn hog# in and aertafi fiallihtfW;fa<riw*h*tt«#it« rt; ether parts o f the world, yaare age.lan thi balatHw, jeake# «wi leawmafi#, j ‘“ :
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