The Cedarville Herald, Volume 58, Numbers 1-26

Th« new things are advertised by merchants first. Adverts*ements keep yon jdjreaat o f the times. Bead them! iThe 'GedarvUk Xerald. Advertising is news, as much m the headlines on the front paga. Often it is o f more significance to yon. FIFY-EIGHTHYEAR NO. 26 amMHRMiip CEDARVILLE, OHIO, FREQUY MAY 31,1935 *«?=3paWBB wmmm NEWS LETTER FtM STATE PRICE, ?1.60 A YEAR COURT NEWS WIFE ASKS DIVORCE Charging non-support during Memorial Day DEPARTMENTS Jest four or five years, Maude Lytle I.ha* fuc-d suit in Common PleasCourt | seeking a divorce from Harry Lytle, < <mUHRUS.~The state tax com. ' miwion warned last week that it will f ! f l °v * 5 * ^ revoke the licenses o f vendor* umier . E ^ e has the sales tax regulation unless they ^ ^ ^ . - ?% * !° file the required initial sales tax t o - i * * * ? £ formation by June 1. The commission 2 ^ 1 i f ? " aW« f of the 235,000 licensed vendors have f dower mter- filed the necessary data to date. ac.r? of wal estate in extension of time will be given unless. |Chester ^ County‘ a vendor makes a written request to} PARTITION ASKED • the commission for delay and shows! Partition •Of property at 1113 E, good reason why an extension :Church( g ft the^ b/ect of R BUit' should be panted, it was said. Sales ^ b j ^ penj leton aga!nat tax collections m the first fouriRo8# Pen(llelon> ^ th 0Wli * one, • * » - * - " * * s- Marshall are the plaintiff's attorneys, reported. The sixth annual advanced train, tog course for officials of Ohio fire de­ partments will be staged at Ohio State university from September 10 to 13 under auspices of the'university and the Ohio Inspection Bureau, it FORECLOSURE ACTION The Peoples Building and Savings Co., through Attorney C. W. Whitmer, is plaintiff in a suit directed against ^ Lucy Bramlette and others, request- was announced by State Fire Marshal . „ r* rr„,,„/ .. „ jin? judgment for 3673.44 and fore- , ‘ 5^' , , . ®closure on mortgaged Jamestown real regular annual school three regional .-estab; meetings were scheduled •this year. The first was to be conducted May 29, 30 and 31 at Jjffiddletown, the DIVORCE GRANTED On grounds of gross neglect second will be held Jpne 11 and 12 at dut Viola Ruth £ane has been a, ^ onm? tbe tbird July 12 and ^'warded a divorce from John M. Lane, at Lyndhurst New and improved^ plaintiffwas ‘ tcd custody 0# methods of fire fighting, teebmeal mi hiW K -i mm COLLEGE NEWS MW Ftorwuw Jones h«s been elected to • a scheel.fe South Solon; Esther. Pleasant to Sooth 8ob»; Jape Lay- boume to South Vienna; Eugene Haufhey to Jefferson Township; Ruth Crow to- Sfyai; Walter Linton to Jefferson ToWMtig; Virginia Wat­ kins to Hawkins School; Mary Pro- basco to Sedfdia; Besaie Viator to a school near Greanvffle; and Eleanor Coulter a* substitute in Xenia Town­ ship. HEWDEALIS ! DEADLETER says mm Track Cedarville College was represented in The North West Ohio Conference Track,meet at Bluffton May 24th by Edward Brigham and Pierre Mc- CorkelL Brigham tied.for second in the high jump at 5 feet, 3.3-4'inches and won the 120 yard high hurdles in 16 seconds setting new conference record, McCorkell tpok second in the mile run losing by only a few feet. Entering three events artd winning two seconds and a first is quite an en­ viable record. It is hoped that this start will lead to greater interest next year.' Dr. F. A. Jurkat has returned from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he attended a meeting of the Synod; matters and resuscitation of victims Of smoke and gas will be discussed at the sessions. Prof. K. W. Stinson ORDER PARTITION Partition of real estate has i Here Is What NRA Was T q Industry been* Thousands of citizens never knew of the university's mechanical engine-. S o r b e d in%bTca~T5 B ern ce !! * "*+NR^ W*8 bei" f , ased by enng department vnJl Reside at t W . c a inst LueUa R p and business to oppress small business, re- fa n t * ? and R. B. Criswell of w g Rogers, J. J. Curlett gardle*s , ? wbat Gaa J°hn* the Ohio Inspection Bureau will give and M A Hagler were appointed “ "!* u- ^ instruction on fire department drills. commissioners for this purpose. claims in his douhle roll of pleading ---------- f ; _____ for continuance of a system.,that, soon There will be an increase o f four? mnrMWNfT APPinMPn (was to wipe out all small business, state senators and three members of F . * J To use a local illustration we will the House of Representatives in Ohio's refer to the manufacture of paper be- be i p S 'b y C o i^ n P le^C ou^ in^ e f '2 ? importaaf of ^ in' Dr. M’CKesn^y Speaks At Union, Program Dr. W. R. McChesney attended the meeting of the General Assembly two days this week. Miss,Lydia A, Berkley,.a former, music teacher in Cedarville College, 'Why We $hpuld. Remember Our!?8 ^siting with Mrs. F, A. Jurkat and ~ - 'other friends in Cedarville. Mr. Uoyd Ross» a former student The increase will, bring the total more mills closed down, such ptiints memteship o f «,o .enolo to 36, md S 4 ” " " ™* « « - « » • ‘ o lw p ob 4 fa ™ » P® i _ rt,, . . overruled. . momentious occurrence that of the house to 138. The mem­ bership increases are . due to the' operation; Other companies that topuiji . u,u»opo w c •a™ w urc _ || __ owned hut, one plant leased closed 1 * population fractions certain counties L/IC l F i d d l e r s G O R t fiS t down plants, many of them obsolete, T f* , yCara a t> Et LE TTE R T O ED ITO R May 21, 1935 To The Editor:—;' While endeavoring to-redall some of my experiences in Cedarville which^ , ^ 7 DeVd^w irth7thew7ofV« might make an intetosttog sto^r, ifc inapirin? a^e^^eUvered by Dr. W. occmred to me that toy father should R>McC^ aney> president of Cedarville be able to r -v*.e some stories about College at pre_Memorial Day union , a graduate of Cedarville College, things wh.ch happened ht toid around ^ rvices of Xenia chanheB, at the visited the college Wednesday. , Cedarville when he was a boy; which Ut p Church Sunday evening.! Misses Eloise and Florence Me would be much more interesting thattj Dr McChesney reviewed a. history ,1-aughlm came from Salem, Illinois, any, I could iccall. So I approached ^ th wa s ^ w^ich United States ITuesday, for the commencement week him on the subject nd [^ fter» little p ^ ^ t o a , X w tog f t T inj^ivities. Both are graduate, of the thought he concluded that the tunc mg „ atiortwaa on the side college. Abmham Lincoln P « s « l through m o f ju3tice. He d(^ d m ^ r e s s with b SjPfingfiel^ pn Bppea|f0I<universal peace, to Washington H -iC ,, to be Dr H B> McElree ^presided and inaugurated Fresidfit of The Dr j R Pjeid8> of the Firat M. E. ,y toe most churcH( the Scripture lesson. ea" y Rev. W. L. Bright, of the First ~1 . Lutheran Churchi and Dr. W. H. Til- have In excess o f the legislative ap-| portionment ratios and are' authorized ^ by the constitution. Four state senatorial districts, each now repre-* a » pi » » « » « Memorial Hall be credited to the'one 'in operation, *—1— ithus giving the latter plant more Mrs. H. 33. Talbott o f Dayton who is days o f operation. others at the railroad time and hundred ford, of the Presbyterian Church, led to Brayer*. The ffeootol II.P Xtovek . . _ . _ „ _ .* * choir sang two patriotic.anthems. A. look at the homely rail-splitter _ * ■ . , who, with his wholesome psychology Impte«Bive memorial semdees were and humor, had talked himself into «®n4tt^ * ,i,tbe O. S, and S. O. Home tented by a single senator, will elect sponsoring a band concert at Memorial Under the code all mills were list- TV'" 77** . T ' Chanel Stindav morning. Dr. Me- two to toe 92nd assembly, and Bel- Hall, Dayton, June 25th, which will ed as to tonnage and limited,as to thopresidency' Among those present Z . The production, no matier how mont, Mahoning and Franklin counties feature an old fiddlers contest, will each get one more house member concert will start at. 8 o’clock. orders than they have at the present time. The first 25, fiddlers who make their tain The senatorial districts which will reservations will be entitled to com- small company could do was to. close elect an additional senator are the Pete for the four grand prizes. The down the plant. was "Jake” Alexander who was the ObMMy ddfomd the principal ad* many __dress and music.was furnished by the The following students have had to Withdraw from school because of ill­ ness; Miss Helen Haines, Xenia, Ohio; Miss Mildred Labig, Vandalla, Ohio; and Miss Virginia Wilson, Plattsburg* Ohio. W# wish for them a.speedy recovery to health, CedaririHo Oo&tge won over Bluff*1 ton 3-1 on CedarvUle's baseball dia­ mondMonday evening. College was dismissed Thursday to President Roosevelt, a honor of the. sacrifices and spirit hi* inauguration When the United States Supreme Court by a unanimous decision killed three o f the important New Deal laws by declaring them unconstitu­ tional, Monday, the Roosevslt admin­ istration faced a challenge to return to constitutional government. The National Recovery Act which regimented industry and commerce by a system o f codes, approved by the President is nothing more than a scrap of paper, More than 709 codes became illegal at the reading of toe decision Monday' and from that time: on have no standing in any court. The code case was that o f a pbultry firm in New York city that had been : jindicted on 1$ charges by toe govern­ ment, Charges of unfair competition along with illegal selling of poultry ■ not in conformity with the code was the basis on which the case was de­ cided, , The code provided that the dealer must sell chickens by the coop and the' customer had no choice of selecting coops, the code demanding they be sold as they come. If a coop was in the first ten a customer want­ ed that had two sick undernourished chickens, the customer was forced to take the sick birds or none at all. I f the deader permitted sorting,, he was violating the code. The high court held that the code requirements, if followed by a dealer would make him liable Under pure food laws both of New York state and the city. Con­ sequently the NRA collapsed, by the decision. The second important slap at the Roosevelt administration was holding , the Frazier-Lanike five year mora­ torium farm, act unconstitutional; The , court held it was taking ' property without due -process o f law. The en- - actment o f this law did more to burden Building and Loan Associa­ tions than •toe depression itself, Thousands who held mortgaged farms refused to pay on their debt or even interest or taxes! Federal. Farm Banks and other financial institutions suffered as well as insurance com­ panies or individuals that had loans outstanding on mortgaged property. The third import*#*-; dedston -wan— relative to the removal of a member of the Federal Trade'Commission by few. weeks * = r z >=: r r * » « * * « * * ST S T E T T T K K fe * * .fa torn,.,, fafa b» ” . *>>«“ Jfcmbltam P.rty fa 2 *■*“ » •» *>.“ '* *■ f j y .*■“ * “ "** * L?° ” *, *»■*** n . very much fa .vide™, at ftalr LegOT, delivered th. mvfa 1116, lAfmf COOl*> . w ... nnhAn nrt#l filun. tsoai I ‘‘ID ............, — The court our soldier dead. It is well to pause held the President was powerless to to trice, thought of the remove such an appointee without the spirif filing chargee and presentation of Edwin Potee-has been ,elected to W f i n g evidence. The ousted mem- teach to d grade school to Unionlber died s,ome. montbs ago and tos Holmes, Wayne, Coshocton, Tuscara-gift- 'get the -unfinished orders of small' _ , . , , _ , was, Guernsey, and parts of Monroe! The bonus prize will be awarded to plants that had. been forced to close * a.. . one loya* Ke* and Noble counties; the 20th and 22d. the oldest entrant. down under the NRA tonnage code. *“ Cj !T , . . . , ‘ comprising Belmont, Harrison, Jef-j Reservations should be sent to Mrs.I Early in the code formation a plan tram dld no“ bU8 moved ferson and Columbiana counties; the Talbott, Callahan Building, Dayton had been worked out that did not publican to Cedarville. ' P r O g T a m f o r G o l l e g e The train did not atop but moved • through town very slowly; about four C o m m e i i c e x i i e x t i t W e e k 80th and 33d, comprising Wood, Put- or to Don Bassett, Riveryiew avenue, reach conclusion tha t provided or five miles per hour. Mr, Lincoln num, Henry, Hancock, Fulton, San- director of the band which will pre- method of forcing the independent c?l? e °Vfc.on^ .the.1>ac^ platform and Baccalaureate Service, Sabbath, dusky, Ottawa, Huron and Erie sent the concert; ’ mills to close down or be subject to he did not speak, he smiling- Jifrio 2, 8 P. M., U.-P.JChurch, counties. j Mrs. Talbott is asking J. Herman lease or sale, under a "yellow dog / 1f ai8ed ? " hat *B,8rra.ce' Final Faculty Meeting, Monday, ■wfafaw jThuman, of Cincinnati; yCol. Wm. contract." ' •fulIy as he ®ould-71,18 cndwing Jurte 3, 9 A. M., College Office, A new proposed method o f com- Robbins, new commanding officer of The code enforcement was entirely ? e8*wre.mu,t ' ave made a profound Music Recital, Monday, June 3, 8 batting bootlegging in Ohio Is being Wright Field; Eugene Weigels head in the hands of the cvners o f the 1I?,pr***loa those present, for p m ,, Presbyterian Church, considered by the state liquor board, of instrumental music at Ohio State largermills,.independent mills having a*tcr,the tra^ bad ,moved ®a a n d f! Faculty Reception, Tuesday, June it was announced by Chairman Well- University; Wilbur Crist, director of little to say, and without much chance SJ0™ ?** dispersing.Old Billy g P. M., Alford Memorial, Gym- ington T. Leonard. The plan will per- instrumental groups and the glee club f0r defending themselves. This is■ a°,7r** one . *w,r nasium, Township, Madison county. certain }at Capital University; John C. Has- but one of the few things small in- ®r< *> close, well and P.. N. King of Dayton to be dustnr has faced under the Roosevelt ,.® ry * '™ r J t A. M., Collegi campus mit key liquor stores to cities to open at 6 a. m. and to at 12 midnight. Until now the stores jthe judges* 'anarchistic system of Russisn re^‘ were open from 10 a. m, to 10 p. m.i Remember tbe old Fiddlers contest,’mentation o f business. The cities in which the new plan may!Memorial ^ a11' Rayton, June 25th at be put in operation are Cleveland, 8 p. m. Hdedo, Cincinnati, Columbus, Dayton, Akron and Youngstown, where the greatest amount of bootlegging is said to take place. The board last week Issued an order that all liquor agencies must close at midnight. crate o f the community, Was heard Cedar Day, Wednesday, June 5, 9 4-H Beef Calf Club To Tour "Well I didn't vote for that man and I didn't want to see Wm elected, but Athletic Day, Wednesday, June 5, I must say tlwt he made his manners ® **• Wilmington vs. Cedarvilla in as nice as anybody could,” baseball. a* * Mr. Kyle, a man o f seventy at that Board of Trustees Meeting, Thurs- time, lived in the residence which Was day, June 6,9 A. M„ College Office. Tenant House Burns CSn F l u t t e r F o v m afterwards occupied for many years Alumni Dinner and Business Meet- y j n r i a w e r y a r m ly XiWow. Had he been a ing, Thursday, June 6, 6 P. M„ Alford The small tenant house on the y°Hn?er hH»n, doubt, he too would Memorial Gymnasium. Leonard Flatter farm near Clifton hav® th* nU *?. volunteer* Commencement, Friday, June 1, 10 Candidates for Graduation To receive the A.B. Degree and Four-Year State Provisional High. School Certificate* Maxine Bennett, 1410 Oak St., Union City, Ind. Eleanor Bull, Cedarville, 0. Gilbert Christian, Millersburg; O. AF&n Copeland, Cedarville, O, Annabel Dean,''Xenia, O. Arthur Donaldson, 430 South East A vet, Montpelier, 0, * Carl Ferguson, Cedarville, 0. Rbbert Hardman, 80 Oxford Ave., Dayton, 0. estate sued for . salary- due., The court ordered the government to pay back salary up to the time of his death. Scores of other New Deal law* are in the balance and probably ineffect­ ive now due to the death of NRA. The AAA regulation and expenditures are now: held without law and the collec­ tion of processing taxes 'Will prob­ ably be cheeked by court action. One ground named is that Congress dele­ gated to Roosevelt and others powers not possible under the constitution. Another is that the processing taxes on grains and meats do not all go to producers as originally intended. Edgar Hinton, Dayton, O., RTAOI,111®government has been paying only Edgar Hinton, R.P.D. 12, Dayton, O . : * ^ 65 J*r c0nfc the Pressing Carina Hostetler, Cedarville, 0. jtaxofl to f « « i « * while 35 per cent Walter Linton, Jamestown, 0. went for government operation other Mary Lpn>McLaughlin, 1284 W > thw than what the AAA provided. Mato St; Salem, HI. Paul Rif*, Cedarville, O. Lpella Robe, South Charleston, 0. Robert Taylor, Smith’s Ferry, Pa. Ralph Tifidall, Cedarville, 0. Franklin Trobee, Cedarvilla, 0. William Waddle, 137? N, Fifth St*, Coiamhus, 0 , To receive the A*B* Degree* Ronald Boyer, 70 High St., Dayton, 0* Fernan Kearney, 349 Alexander St., Brockway, Pa. President W. R. McChesney o f C t-'and Four-Year State Provisional High v tc ui » umc »u iiuujmikiu * , Greene County 4-H Beef Calf ucumuu fiaiLc uriu w unw , . , , , . , , ■ r u ... * Previously they were permitted to|cluh Tour will be held Thursday, tme burned about six o’clock, Monday to ” ni?n' wblch f inc?ln A* M*’ CwJ i e 0pe* sell liquor u late as the individual,1according to James Hawkins, chair-evening. Fire started in the kitchen 80unded within a few week* after his proprietor cared to keep his place o f,maI> of the county Beef Club com- while the family was preparing for Ina» ^ at»to for the country was § a V S S o l i c i t o r s business open. »Htee. ; a u p p e r . The alarm brought neigh- «w h t In the throes of civil war. 7 . , , _ -------- I 7he tour will leave the County bors to the scene and most all cos- o ft tbo*e tha* day N o t A l l t l t O f l Z e d Approximately 800,000 employables;Agents Office at 9:45 and visit the tent* were removed other than a few v^bed . this backwoodsman .....—- on Ohio relief rolls w»i be put to feltowing members in Xenia, New[pi**,, in the kitchen. A family by tt"ke hi* mannerB^on the rear plat- ......... .................................. __ __ . o rw it-iw o » work under the federal government’*|Jasper and Cedarville Townships: 'the name of Luther Breakall, who f°^Jn ** the tram, did answer his call darville* College branded Monday aa'ggbool Certificate. $4,000,000,000 work*’ program, it was-Raymond and Robert Hartman,'moved there but a short time ago* A Served him as their commander- impostor* members o f agroup o f CarrieMount,Carlisle, 0. estimated by C. C. Stillmann, federal Clarence Williamson, Sam Arthur and occupied the home. The house was ^^hief for four long years of strife, young men who, representingthem- »p0j^ iv e theFour-Year State relief administrator for Ohio. There‘^alie Dean, Stanley Hctzler, Paul insured and wjll he rebuilt at once. an8WCrcd and solve* to he student* of: the college, provisional High School Certitieate. rare 3^25 relief work projects, tovolv-;Evans, Carl Watkins, Kenneth Cle-j — ------------ gave an arm to the cause. have been soliciting magatirt* sub- Miller, 712 N. Detroit St., tog an expenditure o f - 180 , 000 ,000 a-'mans, Paul and Robert Dobbins, Mil*! v _ nm , sit * I Two years later my father, al* ecripttons from residents of Greene Xenia, O. waiting final approval at Washington, ten and Gregg Turner, John William-{DAYI«N HBJWI.D awd though he had not yet reached the and adjacent counties. Mr. Stillman aaki. Of the 1 ,2 0 0 ,0 0 0 Stanley Swango, Wallace Brad-} JUUJWAL, drop wka mtoimnm age requirements for a full- President McChesney said he was Ohioans on relief, 341,000 are e m p l o y - a n d Donald and Billy Ferguson.; ______ ^ ^ figged sailor, he misrepresented his informed the youths, numtoriac By this it can be seen that even pro­ ducers of cotton, wheat, com, pork, etc., have not been getting all that was due them, while consumers were called upon to pay the tax supposedly to Telieve agriculture. It Is plain in,reading the decision onthe NRA case that license of in­ dustry, commerce and even agri­ culture products is not possible Under the constitution. The decisions were read by Chief Justice Hughes, Re­ publican conservative and Justice To receive the B.S. to Ed. Degree,Louis Brandies, liberal Democrat ap­ pointed by Woodrow Wilson* All de­ cisions were unanimous by the nine judges, afefc* and of the total about 50,000j arc working for the FERA at the j presant time. J Tha state's death rate showed a alight increase to January and Febru­ ary o f this year to comparison with the corresponding two months in 1934, accordingaecordiftg to figures com­ piled by Dr. Walter H. Hartung, di-j ranter o f th* state department of| health. There were 14,132 deaths inj Ohie daring the first two months of 1 m , with a rate of 10.14 per l,000j popuktton, as compared to 18,049 for; the sam* parted to 1984, with a death rate o f *.** per 1 ,«0 population, Dr. Batting said. . SACR ILEG E Decoration Day, II Dace Roose­ velt, placed a wreath on the tomb of the Unknown Roller to Ar­ lington National Cemetery, sup­ posedly ih remembrance o f those World War veterans that fell to the bloody trenches to France. •After what 11 Dttce had to say just last week in his veto mes­ sage ami hie slighting reference to those veteran* that survived the terrible ordeal, his visit to the tomb o f the Unknown fWdier lacks sincerity. What Sacrilege! SPRINGFIELD WEDDING tu> 8 «d . Clifton, 0. ...Mr. M -r c t « « « i * » < m t tw -Y -f D ip t * .; » ! Tim nf ° --- jiuunu u in®jrwwvm, mnnoss wwrvn; and Four*Year State Frorislc|nal, , , , 0 * *nd J>hrtd the Ual011 Navy' He or eight have been attempting to a*tt;Elementary Certificate. "J* ChaiT^ ?%}******' BaU,r" f a S L r i t ' ^ T r i R A t o s t to *be Mississippi subscription* to iha Ftetorial Review, Mildted Beard, Jamestown; H U a t e l J S , t S '■STT** dropping of the NBA insigna that jSqusdron and for the two remaining with college aanrwVaL Their activities b# 4 h Brock Xante- Charles C h a m b e r - H , W, Barr, ™ ««n«t -1» d.ito « * « .. .... _* ^ - - A ,, wth cm*** m m * qwete act vittes beto RyoCf. Aetoa, Chsrtee Ubamb y 11Jr!>ana) assisted by Rev. R. W. U- Muip rimnKiuip Viiiniwiint * 10 * ** ^ Charieiton; Marjory Coltetee, Ja»e*-J* ^ ' ^ D* JJf* J S w S j town; Ruth Craes, C i«artllte,j^■*"*,,*• **' ” “ .?**** C Im w . G » ,. Jfafaifawn; ^ ' T S g Guthrie, So. Vienna; Ruth Hoke, forwarly Lorena Carilsle; Jane 'Laybourtos BpriagfieW; i*01*11 *"'* F,ac#* m m°*fc a11 <1#ily neW*' ytMS o£ *** Pateofled tbe Ohio, *re wholly unauthorized by the col papers. ' the Mississippi, the Tennessee, the ] „ » , Dr. McChesney said, | Senator Huey Long ha* a news- Cumberland and the Red Rivers. Even =p*per to New Orlestia *n& th* Senator boy* twelve years of ags were sc I has carried nob one NRA sign but two, repted to tbe navy hut wera not full*1 •and always both upside down, fledged sailor* o f course, They were The HOLC has brought 842 fore- 312 FORBCLOftURR gUITfi I WILBERFORCE WON GAME called “powder muckers” and their suits to Ohio against propertyNorma May, N. Cariiel#; Edwto Fotee, duties were to carry powder from the wlVh government loan*. Had a banVLondon; Mary C « M m Pmbssee, magazines to the gone when the boats brought that many suits th* govern- Mt. Victory; Georgia Bktenell, Frank- Wflbwrfem defeated Cedarville in art'{ott‘ At ether times they mpnt would have advised the owners'fort; Bessie Victor, GreenvUte. College baseball team on the local *e,?d * * , *****#**» *«r carrying to taka bankruptey, or do anything to .diamond last Batorday by a acme of * * * * *** other .menial K aothtog aleethe batik }7 to 8. The battery for the local teem m tkm . ^ ......>4 4 would have been held up topabUr was Gerioogh and Roes, were held fer six bite. The locals At the time Ltoeato. paid hie short fidkulc in the name o f the Torgotten ICsMtkstaid'est *) i man.’ MARRIED IN KENTUCKY Mr, Roscoe McCoricell, son of Mr, T* raceive the Four-Year Pro- and Mrs, J. G. McCerkell of this plaoe vtetettal Elementary Certifioato. | wim marrted Imt Thursday to Xeu- Lete Oultiee, Springfield: Ceeri# u j| « . Wmick Wtotoey. Mr. Manat, Carhele; Honwr Murray, |MeOeAeH is connected wHh the Graaiteville, Vh Americaa RoIRng MmCo.

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