The Cedarvile Herald, Volume 57, Numbers 1-26

# T3ie new things are advertised by merchants first. Advertisements keep you abreast of the times. Bead themI Advertising is news, asmuchas Hie headlines on the front page. Often it is of more significance to yon. FIFTY-SEVENTH YEAR NO. 25 CEDARVILLE, OHIO, FRIDAY MAY 25, 1934 NEWS LETER FROMSTATE DEPARTMENTS C O U R T N EW S Decoration Day 1 SCHOOL NEWS DISMISS CASE A t the plaintiff’s request, the case of the Peoples Building and Savings Co„ against Lindsey Vance and others, ------- - . has been ordered dismissed in Com- COLUMBUS.—Ohio’s inland lakes, mon Pleas Court, including Lake St. Mary’s, Indian — —- Lake, Lake Loramie, Portage Lakes ORDER FORECLOSURE and Buckeye Lake, are being restock" The Peoples Building and Savings ed this spring with crappies, some- Co .‘ has been awarded the following times called shad, the Ohio Division two foreclosure judgments in Common o f Conservation announces.. The an- Picas Court: against H. L. Sayre and nual spring program o f stocking others, $8,010; against Edith J. M, state waters with game—fish o f other Woodward and others, $6,523.42. kinds has also been proceeding with ------- great activity. These consist of large AWARD JUDGMENTS j and small mouth black bass, catfish, Fern O. Routzong, as administrator rock bass and bluegills. Efforts were ,of the estate of R., O. Routzong, has made by the division to obtain wall- been awarded a $269,03 note judgment eyed pike and some niuskies for in a suit against William F. and Olive waters suitable to them. In a special E. McMacklin, >in Common Pleas bulletin Conservation Commissioner Court. ; W. H. Reinhart gives directions how The Clinton County'National Bank the crappie, a popular fish is all parts :and Trust Co„ Wilmington, has ro­ o f Ohio, can be most easily caught covered a $3,817.35 note judgment a -1 by disciples of Isaak Walton, includ-1gainst Dennis Dennehy. ing women and children. This fish | -------- bites best, on small minnows and the! T ITLE QUIETED best equipment is a light cane pole' Title to-real estate has been order- with bobber and hook. The best place fed quieted in favor o f the plaintiffs ' to fish is near stumps, logs or brush ‘and certain defendants, and partition! under the water, with the cork about'of property was ordered in the case 18 inches above the hook, as a rule.j■>f Samuel H. Grindle and others a-; •‘When the cork bobs and goes out of gainst Finley Grindle and others in sight, you can pull,” the directions Common Pleas Court. Fred Kt-vsh-1 says—and then, oh boy—maybe. ner, Oliver Garlough and Frank Corry j ______ were named appraisers of the prop-1 — Public Debts Shrinking erty. The forthcoming annual report of Auditor of State Jos. T. Tracy for 1933 will sho\y that Ohio’s political PRICE, $1.50 A YEAR 1C. CFORTIETH ANIVERSARY MAY27-JUNE2 Mr,. Rosa Serves Forty Years (Few persons can equal the record j of Mr. John Ross, commonly known j as “ Cutter," who next month com-j ^ ____ pletes his fortieth year as janitor for; The program f or the Fortieth Anni- the public schools in Cedarville. Mr. |yersary Week of Cedarville College Ross served twenty-five years in the !js. old building, which still stands on Sabbath Xenia avenue, and in June will com- May 27—8 P. M., Baccalaureate plete fifteen years in the present'servjce jn p resbyterian Church, school building. (Rev. D. Earle McKinney, pastor of the The reports of the State Depart- j Oakland Presbyterian Church of ment of Education have repeatedly J Springfield, Ohio and a son o f the late commended the efficient work done by jDr< David McKinney, first president 'the jantior of Cedarville Schools.Iof Cedarville College is .to be the Officials of that department have es- guest preacher. The College Girls’ Ipeqially praised Kim for his ability to Glee Club will furnish the music under (give a maximum amount o f service a t;the SUpervision o f Mrs. Margaret J. - a minimum cost o f material. “ Cutter” has not only cared well for the building and grounds, but he has-] also been interested in the welfare of 125 Farm Women Gather A t Camp FORECLOSURE ACTION Judgment for $187.98-on a' note and sub-divisions reduced their total in- foreclosure of a chattel mortgage on debtedness $37,448,677 during that twenty-four acres of growing wheat Gne hundred twenty-five farm wo- year in spite of heavy relief and de- °n a farm in Spring Valley township alen’ representatives of the Home pression demands. The counties, are sought by W. C. Smith in a suit Extension Council of the Southeastern cities, villages, townships and schools against Gust A. Freier, filed in Com- district of Ohio, composed o f Darke, owed a grand total of $861,151,669 the mon Pleas Court. F. S. Sharritt, Treble, Shelby, Montgomery, Greene, beginning of this year while at the claiming an interest, is named co- Warren, Franklin, Auglaize, . and end o f 1932 they owed $898,600,346. defendant. The plaintiff also seeks M‘ani' Counties, were in attendance The largest reduction in debts during to have priority rights' determined by ^uesday afternoon at the council s the year was by the cities , where the the court. Attorney George H. Smith annua.I convention, held both morning decrease was $23,759,527. Based on represents the plaintiff. iand afternoon at the 4-H Club camp- the 1930 population, the per capita -------- s'J-e at Camp Clifton, Little Miami share o f the debt the first o f this SUIT TO. FORECLOSE ,Iiiver. year was $129.56, or $5.63 less than Suit to foreclose a mortgage held - J°hn Cunningham, Columbus, dean a year previous. on the Third Baptist Church property, the agricultural college o f Ohio - u - colored church, was filed in Common University, II. C. Ramsower, William Aaron Selz, Steele High Pleas Court by the Peoples Building state director of extension work, and School, Dayton, .and Elinor Imogene and Saving Co. ,Miss Adele Koch, state demonstra- Ayres, Belpre High School, Washing-! The suit, directed .against John‘ *-'on londer of the extension depart- ton'-county, rank first among the boy Jamison,.. Neal Kstridge, -Irwin *Me-^KOPL 'V.Sff-vPfesent and participated and girl high school students of Ohio, Cormiclt and Wade Allen, present,hi the program, it was announced when state scholar- trustees of. the church, requests judg- ■ Mrs. Burl White, Darke County, ship awards were made before a large ment for $5,833.57, claimed to be due was reelected chairman of the council audience at 'Central High School, Co- *n principal and interest on a $5,000 aTld delegate and representative to the lumbus, last Saturday. Second places loan obtained in 1923 by a former t)hio Home Extension • Committee, went to Robert C. Jones, De Vilbiss IP'oup o f trustees. H. E. .Beard, Mrs.,-John Kinder, Miami County, was High School, Toledo, and Betty Hamil- claiming an interest or lien, is named elected alternate, ton, Fairmont High School, Dayton, eo-defendant. j The importance of the part that wo- All awards were the results of tests The petition requests, foreclosure men have played in maintaining the in five state districts April 28 «nd sale of the property if the amount morale of the farm home during the Helen Virginia Falls, Lake Township due is not paid. C. W. Whitmor is depression was stressed by Ramsow-' school, Wood county, was first in the the plaintiff’s attorney. !‘r> who pointed out that it was the eghth grade test and Sarah Grace women on the farm who by their re- Dodds, Mt. Moriah school, Jefferson WELL WATER DISPUTED ^ourcefulness and economy mad- it county, second. The Trumbull county A dispute over a water well reach- l’ossdble for their farmer husband> to scholarship team placed first and ed Common Pleas Court when C. R. <an y on' Summit county- second. Academy of and Eugene Strain, heirs of Jessie “What Women Expect From Ex- Immaculate Conception team, Canton, Strain, filed an injunction suit against *ons'on Y ork was the subject o f a Won first place among private high Anna Grooms, 107 Bellbrook avenue, Kirs. H. M. Bowinan, Mahos- schools and Caldwell High team'first and Ida May Morgan and Ida Whitt, Goiinty, state president of the of exempted, villages. Of city high both of Dayton. ‘ Home Extension Council. “ The Pre­ school teams, Mt. Vernon placed first.; The well inquestion, according to sf nt Situation—The Rural Womans The highest ranking individual school the petition, is located on a lot owned Educational Opportunity, was dis- on county teams was McDonald, by the plaintiffs, four feet away from ^ussed ^y ^Irs. Ernest Bradford, Trumbull county. Over 1,500 winners a property line dividing their lot from ^ rcenc County, by subjects regardless o f school class- that of the defendants, adjoining the ification were also announced. east side. — ---- ‘ The Strains set forth the defend- |Work, Director of the Department of [Music. . - Monday , May 28—10 A. M., Christian Educa- Jthe children, fie has been a loyal 'tion Day, Presbyterian Church, Greene (supporter o f all school activities, es- County Association of Ministers, ad- .pecially athletics. dress by Supt. H. C. Aultman, Super- Atthough Mr. Ross.is seventy-four intendent of Greene County schools.. years old, He is very active, and i t ;Music will be furnished by the Orange has been only in recent years that he jand Blue Serenaders1and the Cedar has employed assistants to aid him. Needles Quartette of Cedarville Col- The students and faculty wish to | lege- 1 express their appreciation o f the fine' _ 1 2 noon, Dinner will be served by work which - Mr, Ross has done, the ladies o f the local Methodist ■through the years. We feel that we'Episcopal Church, Cedarville. jjiave been indeed fortunate to .have]- —1:30 P. M.,. Address by Honorable [such a good janitor,' IB. O. Skinner, State Director (of Edu- ■ ■ -- (cation o f Ohio. Neil Hartman Ranks Seventh ! —-2 P. M., Address by Rev. George Neil Hartman, a boy o f the local j a . Frantz, D.D., pastor o f the First (eighth grade, ranked seventh in the presbyterian Church, Indianapolis. I f t n Y p a r « T V p o r l v C o m t > Y e t e d state’ according to , results of ^ jMusic for the afternoon will be fur- V jO O d x e a r s IN e a r i y j ^ o m p i c , E i g h t h Grade Test( conducted recent- 'nished by the Mixed Chorus and the .. w ' l y ’by the. Ohio State Department of ,Glee Club of Cedarville College. The: lw « m tm and « t » « e lines The of eheekmB ||dJ Mi0„, Neli t^ lved hia p. Alnual for gas being placed by le ay en con lae s s g ' fieate of award at the recognition Department of Music under the super­ power * I/tht Co are net only of larmors has been 1^ ^ . . ” ^ - ! . ^ . ' In Columbus, Saturday. i v l.L of Margaret J. Work, Dtamtor the best-material but something dif- ed and the allotment committee is now , Gas Service Lines :Checking Corn -Hog ferent ■thaW what has been used in the past. 'The mains are larger which will insure better gas service and the method of installation and use of a non-rusting coating will, give protec­ tion for years to come. Steel pipe laid where limestpne exists is con- waiting on the county quota from the j state corn-hog board of review, ac-!^ cording to J. B. Mason, secretary of the local association. It was pointed out that for years, the Division of Livestock and Crop of Music. Tuesday May 29—9 A. M., Cedar Day on the H. S. Students W in State Honors Cedarville High School students were among the winners o f state |Campus, class stunts, college'history, honors in Scholarship tests again this jetc., Walter Kilpatrick, Delaware, year, when certificates of awards were Ohio, orator. Regena Smith is to be Estimates of the United States De-1Pr®aente^ at the recognition service's, |Crowned the May Queen by Doris sidered sh6rt lived and it is for this-partment of Agriculture has b e e n C o l u m b u s , last Saturday. Swaby, Queen of last year. Music will reason, the used which 100 years. new Ijrind of coating is collecting data on the production of will ^ive protection foT agricultural products. It is upon these figures that the secretary of C. H. S.„ winners in the state were |^ furnished by the Neapolitan follows: Charles Whittington— (Knights. Honorable Mention, Plane Geometry;! French II; jJane Frame—Honorable Mention, English III. Public Schools Close The Cedarville Public Schools clos­ ed for the summer vacation period, Xenia avenUe is' torn up from end agriculture has based the amount o f tJan'ce Dunevant Honorable Mention, to end due to new gas mains and the the processing tax on corn and hogs, installation of sewer and water serv- from which the benefit payments to icafoi^jeach. p r d p «^ * ,‘whather.it^aXi;c « m - b ^ c ^ desired by the property owner now or Upon these figures was also based the not. The gas mains arc laid along amount of reduction required to bring the sidewalks. As a result of these production in line with effective de­ changes there will be no occasion for mnnd. It becomes necessary ’ there- openings soon on the new street. The fore, for each state' to keep in line same arrangement has been made for with the figures for that state, which Chillicotlie street. Iliff Bros, started will be approved by the secretary., placingJthe heavy stone base course Before county quotas could be es- on Chillicothe street this week. Dry tablished, it was necessary to get the ;reP°rta* registers, and grade cards, weather, has been much in favor of Wednesday May 30—-1:30 P. M., Patriotic Day on- the Campus. Speaker will be Senator Earl R. Lewis, St. Clairs- viffe^sQbi6^i.wha vepresants ^the- 20-22- Senatorial District, Ohio. Music by the Orange and Blue Quartette. M., Faculty Reception and a —8 P. Wednesday. Teachers spent Monday -pageant entitled, “ America the Beau- grading papers and compiling numer- tiful.” Music by College Orchestra ous reports on the year’s work. Tues- 'and.Mixed Chorus. (day, the superintendent conferred with each teacher and checked the various speeding up the improvement. DeatK Claims Mrs* E. W i Hughes, Tues. contract data of all the counties in' Students returned Wednesday mom the office of the state statistician. A l inff to receive the grade cards, number of counties were quite slowt getting this material sent in but the Teachers Enjoy Steak Roast . data has now all been tabulated and! T (le teachers enjoyed a steak roast quotas should be available within a at B,T an State Farm, Tuesday eve- few days. Then as soon as your county ninS- Guests fo r the evening included M M 7 ~ “ . . „ . „ allotment committee has made final (wives and husbands o f several of the j Mrs. Margaret V.rgm.a Hughes, 67, adju8t and contracts are typed .faculty members. ' they will be ready for the final sig-j nature. '! Perfect Attendance Record wife of Edward W. Hughes, state parliamentarian since 1915, died Tues­ day morning following an attack of pneumonia. Death took place from the home in Jamestown. The deceased was a direct decend- ent of Patrick Henry, and was born in Buchanan, Va. She was married Court Approves ‘ nor tardy during the entire a , -rj year: Attorneys’ Fees BIRTHS IN APR IL 1934 Wm. Howard Caycnder, Xenia. Eleanor Louise Robinson, James- The market for municipal and other ants claim the right to obtain water public bonds has improved appreciably from the well, have been doing so, and the general level of prices has and are now digging, preparatory to town risen, according to, E. C. Gallehcr, laying a pipe to the well, to be con- Infant Young, Xenia, formet director o f finance o f Akron, nected with a pump on their lot. E. who has been financial adviser of the I). Smith is attorney for the plaintiff. state •industrial commission several -------- months. It is Mr. Galleher’s duty to DIVORCE SUITS advise on the purchase and sale of Asserting his wife made false ac* Robert Eugene Parks, Xenin, Elwood Dale Baker, Xenia. Mary Arlene Sherod, RR 3, James­ town. Joyce Ann Bingamnn, RR 2, Jnmes- bonds by the commission* and to keep cusations' concerning him, Domv to''''0, . A , a constant check on collections o f in-, Sanders has brought suit in Common au >arrin£f’ r’ H orn‘ teresfc and principal. The commis- Pleas Court seeking a divorce from Bion is responsible fo r many millions Anna Sanders, R. F. D, 2, Loveland, Of bonds Invested in the state insur- on grounds of cruelty. They were ance fund o f the Vorkmen’s compensa- married Anril 23, nf P ho V i I a tion division. p 1916, at ueblo, iColo. The husband asks an injunc- Donald Ray Burden, Spring Valley. Patricia Joan Kress, Fairfield. Mary Lee Jenks, Jamestown. Doris Ann Johnson* Osborn, Martha Lou Rohrback, RR to Mr. Hughes in 1888, and with her' A bill for $915.01 attorney fees,] husband shared the honor o f author- presented by Attorneys Marcus Shoup ity on parlimamentary law. Mr. and C. L. Darlington, Xenia, for legal has been an invalid due to infantile services performed in connection with paralysis since childhood and almost the liquidation of the defunc t Ex- helpless since 1917. He was entire- change Bank at Cedarville, Was ap- ly dependent on his faithful wife who proved Friday by Common Fleas accompanied him to Columbus and Judge R, L. Gowdy. Payment was cared for him during the sessions of ordered made out of the bank’s as- tlie legislature. His last and eighth sets. The bill had previously been edition of the Parliamentary Guide, held reasonable and approved by the a 450 page volume, was dedicated to attorney general's office in accordance his wife. with an existing fee schedule for such The funeral service will be held l°Kal services. Saturday afternoon at 1:30 from the --------— . residence in Jamestown. Burial K e n n e t h K e r r I s takes place in Blanchester, GRADE 1 Mary Kearns, Estella Hall, Duane INolley. GRADE 2 Richard Conley, Charles Nier, Grace Luttrell, Doris Vest. GRADE 3 Norma Jane Meridith, Joyce Cle- 3. !tion to prevent his wife from molest- Waynesvillc. BOYS F IN D B O D Y Named U. S. Marshal Thursday May 31—9 A, M., Class Reunions on Campus and in Alford Memorial Gym­ nasium. —9:30 A. M., Annual meeting o f the' Board o f Trustees o f Cedarville Col­ lege in College Office. —-8:15 P. M., Senior Class Play, “ The Thirteenth Chair’’ in the Opera HoUs<?.' Music. Friday June 1— 2P. M., Baseball game, Wilberforce University against Cedar­ ville College. P. M,, Tennis match, Antioch _ ___ ____ Class Re­ school 'unions all day. —6:30 P. M., Alumni banquet and Consecration Services* Alford Mem­ orial Gymnasium. Speakers to he announced later. Saturday June 2—10 A. M„ Commencement Jin Opera House. Speaker, M. Earle Collins, ’23, Ph. D„ President of Tarkio College, Tarkio, Mo. Listed below are the names of the pupils who have been neither absent ;aga;nst~Cedarville College Donald Carter, RR 1, Waynesville, Mildred Bernice Long, RR 1, Xenia. Donna Lou Morgan, Fairfield. Jas. Montgomery Howard, Osborn. Georgia Ethyl MeComas, RR 1, Os­ born. Mary Zink, RR 8, Dayton. Grace Tui'vey, Osborn, James Jr, Stewart, Cedarville, I). I*. & L. BANQUET EMPLOYEES, WEDNESDAY Comparative figures compiled by ing their two adopted children, now Secretary o f State George S. Myers residing with him at Bowersville. He from the votes cast at the November requests custody of the children and 1933, election show some interesting seeks to have his wife barred o f dow- facts. One of these is that an aver- cr interest in his property, age o f 25 per .cent of the entire: Charging her husband with neglect- number voting failed to vote on the ing and failing to support his family, four state-wide issues submitted. The Irva E. Bayless has filed suit for di­ number Voting was 2,282,401, which vorce from Clarence Bayless, to whom was 362,100 less than the vote at the she was married July 18, 1918, at I)e- presidential election o f 1932. A con- troit, Mich. The wife requests cus- clusion reached from a study of the tody of two minor children, temporary figures is that the state-wide subjects'alimony, attorney fees and court costs, best understood by the people reeeiv- award o f household goods and real ” ov[<*r “ Light Co,, en- ed the highest vote. Eighty-three per estate free of his dower interest, and tcrtaiticd 60 employees at the Iron cent of those voting balloted on old seeks to compel her husband to pay Lantern in Xenia last Wednesday. 0. age pensions, 80 per cent on repeal off a chattel mortgage on personal K- Howland, Dayton, treasurer, was of Ohio prohibition, 71 per cent on properly. Gie pnnc.pa) speaker. E. n ieath- ten-mill tax limitation, and 69 per cent T. Bentley Miles, filing suit for dirn!an' inanaK01 o >e oma s ric , on county home rule. Fulton county vorce from Ethel A. Miles, Oxford, a K° *P“ ke’ and ,ntrod“ « d ° har e.a. showed the highest percentage of 0 „ charges neglect of wifely duties a c i, .amesown agen , avu o n* those voting on state issues, 86 per and wilful absencefrom home since e a*’ on ’ an< owar cent, and Lawrence county the low- October 6, 1927. He claims in the ur on’ c ro° c a^en * • est, with 53.75 per cent'. Ipetition that his wife, paid no ntten* — . ...................— | tion to Ids efforts directed toward a 50c Regs Chocolate Laxative 50c Hind’s Honey and jrcconsHiation. The couple was mar-i As Delicious as the Best Milk Cream—37c Iried November 27, 1913 and has two Chocolate—43c Week End Special at Brown’s D ru gs children. (Week Etui Special at Brown’* Drugs ■ I , GRADE 5 Robert Johnson, Junior Judy, Lloyd Meredith, Paul White, Keith Wright, j Senator Robert J. Bulkley, Ohio, Hiehnrd Coren, Betty Evans, Frances I N M IAM I R IVER has sent the name o f Kenneth Kerr, | •Johnson, Phyllis Swango, Lulu Mae --------- Wilmington newspaper man, to P rcs i-'^aB’ Juan*la Hall. Two boys while fishing in the Roosevelt for appointment Little Miami River near Clifton dis- mans, Philip Tindall, Eugene Judy. GRADE 4 Mjfs. Eleanor Holliday Llewellyn, ,, t > t. r< »» who taught German in Cedarville Walter Barnhart, George Martin- _ „ , , . dale, Keith Rigio, Cassius Hubbard, ?°.1,ege s.ev.eral yearS af .and « nT Flora Creswell, Lillian Glass, Mary]?01^ m,SS10narf / f f ’V a n V „ „ ; XT . | India, gave a splendid talk to the col- Anne McCampbell, Margaret Neir , I ,, , . Virginia Pemberton, Hazel Rozinson(': ^ e faculty and students m the chapel Margaret Stormont, Doris Townsley, ]Monday morn,n{?' Jeanne Wright, Grace Hall. as i covered the body of tin infant which indicated it had been thrown from the bridge. The investigation has been conducted by Mayor Thane Young of Clifton and Coroner R. L. Haines. D. K. Hempstead Called In Death ~ ~ ~ We wish to express our sincere I). K. Hempstead, 59, who has been thanks and appreciation to our neigh- j ill for several months, died Tuesday bors and friends for their kindness at his home in Wilmington. He wns and floral offerings to Nagley brothers Cedarville College will appreciate a hundred per cent attendance o f the people in Cedarville and community at all the exercises of the Fortieth Anniversary week of the college May 27-June 2 inclusive. We shall also appreciate a display of flags and colors throughout Cedarville during the entire week. Wc greatly appre- GRADE 6 United States Marshal for Southern l / e r a .M a e Fields, Eleanor Luttrell, _ _ _ KreBHy Bppw Ohio. On confirmation by the Senate J?a,J0Ue ®s.t’ ' ra?cia And^ ’ ^ entlciate all that the people of Cedarville Kerr will succeed Marshal P. II. Cres- C,“ ’ CoUins RMphDm- anU community have meant to us and well, who recently resigned, his r e g > hy’ Arnold 1ihord80n’ James Whlt* (have done for us during these years ular term would have expired Dec. | ' 20, this year. The appointment of I „ , . , AD „ , , Kerr willjceep the marshalship in the' He,en Andrews, Ruth Copeland, Seventh Congressional District. We are getting some nice Isums from graduates and other friends for CARD OF THANKS » - , * ^ i , n , **W*H iouMWWfl Mliu UUIVt AJ1UUUS x Agnes Lannon, Leona Melvin, Beatoce tha Fortieth Anniversary Fund, We O’Bryant, Ann Smith, Gertrude hauM u pleased to receive con. ^ vaaey’ H ^ Cooley BUlie Glass, thif, Week or at your earIiest Wendell Peters, David Ramsey. lConvenienee. GRADE 8 Dorothy Galloway, Donald Fields. Letters from the following indicate T GRADE 9 [that they are. coming for the Fortieth ...... ............... „ _______ .....................,T Laurance duaia CrX ; Anniversary week: James M. McQuil- an attorney and first came into prom- for their thoughtfulness and efficiency ;"an,a Gresw®'*» ” aro,d Hanna» Albart,kin, Robert Hutchison, David J. inonce ns secretary of former con- and to Rev, Guthrie for his kind and j:Iar,phant’ . , 0 Jane8 Dorothy jBrigham, Dwight and Mrs. McKune, gressman, M. R. Denver. Later he cohsoling words and his many v i s i t s '’ A ce Pa n\ 7 0i? S „ ” sey,!W. A. Condon, Florence and Eloise McLaughlin, Blair Brnsel, Mary Ruth Whawi, Jean Morton Sweet and many {others, became enrolling clerk in Congress during the sickness and death of our and served nine years under both husband and father. Democratic and Republican adminis- Mrs. Curtis Dellaven and children, tvationfi. He held the reputation o f — being the best enrolling clerk in the FOR SALE—Ice Chest, in good history o f congress, He is survived, condition, priced reasonable, by his wife and one qon. | G, H, Hartman, Dorothy Stover, Donald Sipc, Harold Wigglnton, Edwin Wigginton. GRADE 10 PAuline Ferguson, Helen Pember­ ton, Ecrnc Rose, Dorothy Sipe, Eve* (Continued on Page Four) 20c Mothproof Garment Bags—10c Week End Special at Brown’s Drugs

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