The Cedarville Herald, Volume 59, Numbers 1-26
a * NEW THINGS ABB ADVERTISED BY MERCHANTS FIRST. ADVER TISEMENTS KEEP Y 0TT ABREAST OF THE TIMES. READ THEM | ADVERTISING IS MEW39, AS MUCH AS THE HEADLINES ON THE FRONT PAGE. OFTEN IT IS OF MORE SIGNIFICANCE TO YOG* FIFTY -N INTH YEAR NO. 16 CEDARVILLE, OHIO, FR IDAY MARCH 20 ,1936 PRICE, $1.60 A YEAR NEWSLETTER FROMSTATE DEPARTMENTS COLUMBUS.— The eighth annual short study course fd r Grange lecturers will be conducted at Ohio State University from March 23 to 27 under auspices o f the Ohio State Grange and the university’ s College o f Agriculture, it was announced by Joseph W . FiChter, former assistant state director o f education and now an official Grange lecturer. A ll phages o f rural life will be discussed and the Grange lecturers w ill prepare to re lay the messages to the various Granges throughout the state. “ Mak ing the Most o f Living'’ ha sheen selected as the general short study course theme, Mr. Fjcther said. Speak ers include L. J. Taber, master o f the Mationnl G range:. Walter F. Kirk, master o f the Ohio State Grange; Dean J. F. Cunningham o f the College o f Agriculture; and H. C. Ramsower, director o f the Ohio State Agricultural Extension service. y Fire Department Back In Historic Days ... 4 * ' P - . ■ 'i This week our picture presentation entertainments,. It occupied the eery, suspended, partlyCover the old dall*, W illie Beamer*, Mattie Wylie*, takes our older citizens back into second floor over the department mill race that provided [power, for the Mary Bratton4; Amelia M iller’ , iAnna history o f the village in the days when headquarters. The building is part sa'^ m illidongM i^sies (Creek. Homan”, , Calvin Morton* Cam e .. , , . . . . - . , y „ You will n o tice ’ Old Neptune/’ one Cline*, Curtis Miller*, Lidia Torrence the local firt, department was the o f the building is now occupied by the o f the f|rst ^ odem’’ hand pumping Brewer, Etta Creswell* Ada Creswcll Announcement o f a new and sim plified system fo r recording cases filed and heard by the state sundry hoard was made by Director M. Ray Allison o f the Department,of Fnance, who is president o f the. board. .In short, the new claims’ record has (pride organization o f the town. I f sidewalk. In the room adjoining was your power o f recollection and name White Abbott*, Ida Creswell Stor- sim ilarity to a court docket and will our memory serves us correctly Ce- the James Milburn grocery. The next the/list o f citizens in thp picture. The mont, Thomas N. Tarbox*, Effle Bar- add both efficiency and economy to the jdarville was the first village in the room south was the Crouse and Bull engraving was made from a picture her, Lida Stormont*, H. Jero Kyle*, method o f handling claims against the .county to have as much equipment as hardware store now occupied by presented .by David MJMcElroy. Nellie M illerVM ary Orr Hutchison*, center o f activity and through the Cedarville Bakorv. Notice to H*,n I.P i • ■ ,. ..... ji ,-v■ - - . volunteer service o f citizens was the the wnn,i™ • .. ? re cn®‘ne? ,n tbe counfy> which now Baker, Lizzic Murdock Reid, Ellie Mc- oi ntcer service o f citizens « as the the wooden shed awning over the is stored as an antique.! You can use Millan Townsley, Lena Gilbert, Lillie state, Director A llison'asserted. The new system supplants a volumnous and antiquated proceduer o f minute records, it was said. can be seen in the picture. Neal’s Restaurant. How many re- ' . Riley Little, Della McMillan*, J; H. First you will be interested in know-'member the little frame building to The school picture in bur last issue McMillan*, Ralph Raney*, ing just where the department was the right, then occupied by the Coop- took you back fifty y am ago. From ’—-Deceased. located. In those days “ fireman’s er insurance agency ? This building left to right the pupils vrere: Wilbur The picture belongs to Miss Jennie hall’’ was open fo r all sorts o f local was on the site o f the Wright Gro- D. Nesbit” , Jimmy Wylie?, Otto Ran- Bratton and was taken in 1884. Beulah Park at Columbus has been granted the. first ..permit o f the yeaer to stage a running horse race meeting by the Ohio State Racing commission,' according to Commission Chairman , Richard A . Forster. The meet w ill be held from May 9 to' June 6, M r.j Forster stated. Other . Ohio tracks COURT NEWS DIVORCE SUITS Consolidation O f j Units Proposed | ~ — I Consolidation o f Xenia and Greene County health activities into a county- Two Small Firfs Discovered 3tn Time Fire from defective electric wiring is credited with a few hundred dollars udnch have applied fo r dates include ®teI?a Iona James, plaintiff in a n ' . • .. pistledown at Cleveland, from July act5on against LeRoy James, to whom 'X ® ^ w under consideration here damage to «a reaidcnce bwned bv the 4 to August Dece,ribbr Church on MiH0r 8trCet, oc- '■"***■ *?y w CYL j Mabla, assistanteupied for Mr. rvw»i p,.idav tine from JulvT 6 to Julv 25- at ^ “ estown, sets forth her husband Northamnton at Akron from June 13 'drink* to excess. She- seeks an in- jjnent at a meeting here Wednesday. Most of the „„ to JUly 4; and North Randall, toj Ih-; :Mabta, ebrifeiring withtepre- water and 'batting' Cleveland, from. June 29 to July .11. her form er name and an alitnorty a- ward out o f her husband’s real estate. Mangan, in a suit against b y . . Coo! director o f the state health depart- about one o’clock. ...... ■' from .....................................................................................................................................; sentatives o f the Greene County boarding to extinguish, the flames. Board o f Health and Xenia physicians, Some o f tho household goods were suggested creation o f a county health removed but no damage. There was department with a setup involving one at home at the time the fire was employment o f a full-time health discovered. A second alarm was Monday evd- During-January the estimated num -' ‘ her. o f real estate foreclosures in Daniel Mangan, asserts her husband’s Ohio was 1,292, involving ninety-five abusive treatment forced her td leave farms and 1,197 other properties home and that she is now living with commissioner, at least*one and per-, classified as residential, business or a son Thurl, in Xenia. The coaple hops three full-time nurses, a fu ll- ning about nine o’clock when Edwin vacant platted land, according to data WM married April 30/1903. Custody time clerk and a sanitary commission. Richards and Arthur McFarland dis- collected by Secretary o f State George three minor children has been ,d c-(By the proposed merger o f health In- covered fire in the Ridgway store S. Myers and complied by the Gov- cided b y .agreement o f tho parents, .terests the county would be eligible room, vacated some months ago by em or’s Farm and Home Protective according to the petition. committee in cooperation with Ohio Esta Evans, mother o f six children, State university. The total was de- E. Evans that the defendant neglected rived from eighty-tjhree county re- her and was abusive. They were mar- ports submitted to Secretary Myers ried October 28, 1915. by sheriffs and an estimate o f ninety- . , ,, . ■ „ fou r sales based on population in the » “ torati0n to her madden name o f five unreported counties; Farm fore- ? olten 13 30« eht .by, De^ B" te® a closure sales prices averaged 66.42 ^ orce *uit against ^ Floyd ^flates, per cent o f the judgment and 87.06 ? hom “h° charges ing per cent o f the appmised valuation; her* ^ wero married ln m i ' . urban properties 80.18.per cent o f th e' judgment and: 74,33 per cent o f the valuation. The 1/192 sales in Jan- fo r more state funds and for federal II. H. Brown. The fire had a good financial aid fo r a more well-found- Start in n partition between the oil health program, he indicated. = front room and the rear and was eat- A t present the county health de- ing its way to the roof. It only re- partment is served by a part-time 'quired a small amount o f water to commissioner, one full-time and a'extinguish the, flames. The damage part-time nurse, with the city health is placed at less than $109, and is department operating independently, 'supposed to have started from de- Dv. Mahla is said to have discussed ,fective electric w ring, the consolidation with City Manager M. C. Smith and reported city officials ure interested in the plan. It is expected the merger wilt re ceive additional consideration at the FORECLOSURE ACTIONS The Peoples Building and Savings nary represent a. decrease when com- 18 ln* tbe fo-llowj,n3 county health board’s next regular papred with the sales in the previous ^ rt 3 age foreclosure actions: against mcetjngr which will be hel<l the first month and an increase when compared “ * « * Grooms andjiUiers requesthig Saturd jn April.. with the January 1935 sales. judgment fo r 33,194.92 and involving m u , f Cedarvillo T *p . prop . R Q g g T e a m T q erty; against William. H. Kennedy and Enter State Finals romantic novel with all it* o th ;;87 Seekingi ^ g n t e n t fo r ?887.37 color entertainment is staging a re- and lnVolvin Xenia real estate. ! ______ vival, results o f a survey made by, .. | — — State Librarian Paul A . T. Noon indi- i o n R o n v rn iTP i p a u p n 1 Ross ^ baiketba11 teara « ets tho cate. Hb said that hundreds o f extra ’ * 977 £ honor o f the fittt Class B team requests fo r publications of- this kind L p S in tv B k i^ DTJ- Tepre8ent this county ln tho 8tat® during the last year were made at the J£ F* ^ ^ w 'w T ^ whlch 6pcn Thursday eVenin^ State library. And the revival o f to” ’ i f 8 , oUf b t A* in Columbus. Row took honors over »u ite imrary. st a i v i and E janej,e Schneider, 201 Main St,, literary romanticism is bringing with « Tippecanoe City by a score o f 20 to it a big demand fo r the rousing pirate .0sborn’ to recovcr 0,88 amount* 16 last Saturday night in the district tales o f blood and plunder on the high n iv n n c p q CttANTPn meet in 3pringfield. seas. The library ha* added many T„nrl|. awards! « Regardless o f the fact that a star volumes centering around pirates in J®*®1 Player» ®Mgene Kavanaugh, forward, order that all patrons may be sup- J l - S - J WM uftable to p,ay due t0 il,nt8S’ thc plied as rapidly as '.possible, Mr. b ;? w1 f? « S Ho8B quintet won over the Noon announced. ba" ed °1 m7 re8t f hl8 wife/ 7 f al Miami county team. ______ estate. The husband was awarded the Earl Stitsworth, all-star county •mj,. v Mtotnobjle and household goods. forward, was credited with ten points The battle against pollution m Ohio On grounds o f cruelty and neglect, i„ ot, j streams by sulphuric acid draining Lucile Maver won a divorce from • aa« third quarter?. He from abandoned coal mines is slowly Horace Mayer and was restoredto her ^ B 1,8 °®rd6n> wer° ®iven mekinir nroorcss accorfinff to a state <7 y . w n r P^068 0P tho oil-tournament team Wllh|te v age o f 60 abandoned mines are being DENY NEW TRIAL Kavanaugh, center, was «r«l}ted wlHi sm I m S each month and toe sulnhnric * UUAL ptar performance In aiding Stitsworth, leaiep .qaen montn, ana wq snipnqric A defense motion fo r a new -trial wiii At^ . C-Hna as Wld draining into the streams ha, has ^ oven.uled *,,1 a %m Jury J * * * w« ‘ apea J " 1 " been reduced by 165,900 pounds dally, ftWard to the plaintiff Upheld in the at ^ it was said. Although the pollution cage o f Anjfellna San/ erg affalt)Bfc day night at nine o clock, problem originated In O hb a century Archie Gordon, executor. t t o W Huffman with Mrs ago it was only two and a half years ■ “ ’r8‘ »®bert Huffman, with Mrs. ago that an intensive effort to combat BALE APPROVED Mary^ Huffman as assistant; hostess, It wm fttnrtod Tt Is estimated that n , - , , , entertained the members o f the Gold- i totel acid ^ SnlC ^ P r ^ r t y to the plamtiff has en M e CJrcle 0f the Methodist * * ta t. a , .t™ .™ « . k a , , . i ^ l T S S T r s * S S ’ L « r a T l H n™ ,n Vc.„ „ T ™ 'T tf* ° i ^ r L in g . v r i promoted C or, t o - , <i arle8 S t4* * ^ i nwf cle!,t t0 pay tlM> Trumbo, Mrs. ftp ^ rt HuiTmap, Mrs, ^ * Vincent R igio, end Mrs, M a ^ Huff, si a aw fttm is s a a n «• «* Tho decorations and wfrerii^ W# hj* poMtipn, a w ‘ » DISMISSED ments were appropriate to St. Pat* W P t» J»i» t o “ t o Yellow . By mutual agreement, the ca s, o f ^ A d«iiAhtfu l afternoon f 1„ e, / ^ xarkna, 5°** fl* nln8t c * was enjoyed by the thirty members 'H . MeKay and others has been ordered p fofont, * Births Higher Than Deaths in Greene Co. Vital statistics for the Greene county health district, exclusive o f the Xenia district, for 1935 show 287 births as compared with 228 deaths in tho same period. The report is prepared by the county health commissioner’s office. Thc infant mortality rate was 38.8 plus as compared to 38 plus for. 1934. Heart disease in various forms was the most prevalent disease while T4 deaths occurred from accidents. Thirty-seven cases o f diptheria were reported during the year and three died from this disease. The health program included^ immunization o f 1191 children against diphtheria dur ing the year. The department spent $3725 to carry on its work and $4845 has been appropriated for 1936,- Unclaimed Dividend / Checks Are Waiting A number o f dividend checks as a result o f the liquidation o f the Ex change Bank are due various organ izations as reported by N. B. Eding- ton, local liquidator. Those interest ed In •these organizations are urged to call and get the checks on any Wed nesday^ rT h arsday wrnle Ihe'hatik is open, The Department is anxious to get rid o f the checks. Claim No. 7, Alumni Association, Cedarville College—$15,60. Claim No. 40, Berean Sunday School Class, U, P, Church—.46, three checks, Claim No. 101, Cedarville Grange— .78; four checks. Claim No. 102, Cedarville High School Alumni Association.—1.12, Claim No. 104, Cedarville Juvenile Grange—.24, four checks. , Claim No. 106, Cedarville Orchestra .31. Claim No. 107, Cedarville Protective Association—7.00, four checks. Claim No'. 112, C. E, Society, Pres byterian Church—.25, four checks. Claim No. 317, The Kensington Club—.15, three checks. Claim No. 347, Ladies Aid Society o f U. P. Church—.25, three checks. Claim No. 417, Methodist Epworth League—-.19, three checks. LETTER TO THE EDITOR To The Editor Cedarville Herald, Cedarville, Ohio. * ' Friend Karlh: Those photo reproductions in recent issues o f the Herald, do indeed prove a source o f recalling happy memories, thnt were real actualities in life, as .we contacted it long ago, (if you choose to put it that w ay), but to us, not seemingly much more .than a re cent yesterday. That- snowy view o f Xenia Avenue can n ot'h elp but revisualize Cedar- villa’s winter race course; fo r o ft on the side lines we’ve stood, thrilling as the noble steed* ried neck and neck a* competitors to the goal line. Trot ters and paces from , stables in tbe home neighborhood, with occasionally PRIMMfItST OFCANDIDATES NOWCOMPLETE With twenty-three candidates filed fo r ten county nqmiaations fp r public office, the primary list i f complete, Tho. Republicans haye a. fu ll list with 18 candidates and the Democrats, 5. In the list two Cedayrillian* seek - nomination, Dr. W. R. McChesney fo r stqte repres«m&tiv©j and L fiL A rid fo r county commissi«mer, both on the Republican ticket. Contests .for Republican nomina tions are in prospect fo r abate repre- an outsider, entered! into the sport as tentative, sheriff, prosecutor and $W<»; truly as did their respective drivers, J vacancies,on the board o f county corn- seated in among the lu r robes above missioners. Six other incumbent Re- '■ M. F,. Church—5.27, two checks. Claim No. 482, Presbyterian Sunday School, Clifton, Ohio—.91. Claim No. 494, Queen Esther Circle, M. E , Church—.02, three checks. Claim No. 722, Women’s Missionary Society, Presbyterian Church—1.09, four checks. Claims N o / 735, Y , P. C„ U. Treasurer—2.34, Claim No. 732, Zion Baptist Ladies Club—1.85, McCANN WILL ADDRESS BEEF CALF CLUB a - L« F* McCann o f tho Anim.-il Hus bandry Department o f the Ohio State University will bo the principal speak er at the annua! Greene County Beef Calf Club party to be held at the Rotary Room in Xenia, Monday eve nlng, March 23rd, at 7:30 V. M. A motion picture, “ Hearts and Stars” by the Hooven & Allison will also be shown, Details o f trips to award members o f tho club to the Interna tional Livestock Exposition ' Will be announced and reports will be given by the boys v/ho attended tho show last year, Refreshments will be served- This'’meeting is being arranged by th e ‘ Greene County Beef Calf Club Committee comported o f Janma Haw kins, Elmer Drake, Kenneth Hutchi son, A . B, Evans and R, K. Haines. Approximately 75 beys are members o f the clttb this year and they and their dads are invited to attend, lt<m and Mm. R< A . Jamieson have di8m,S8ed’ t o s ^ n d l^ ^ a days a t Fronch- F 0R gAL1M <)od iron ^ w jn the toe Clark County J Honey Lou and Dick Stormont en- gins in Silvercreek township, half a I S i Prof. FVank springs, Mrs. J. O. Conner, State Ministerial Association, Springheid, tertained a few- o f M J M i at ^ Rev. C, E. Hill was the guest speak- the gliding' cutter -bodies that flitted by to the muaic o f ringing chime* en- Circlihg the petted bodies o f favorites from -box stall, and paddock. Harvey Owens, Andy Jackson, Dave Tarbox, - George Boyd, Cal Barber, John Marbison, Martin . Badger, AV Barber, Jesse Marshall, Mitch and Gordon Collins and many others not coming to mind at present, made many a. wintry afternoon a scene o f interesting activity, despite perhaps an almost zero temperature. Wonder how many o f those old time cutters with their accompani ment o f bells, buffalo and w olf robes could be resurrected; today? I’m old fashioned enough to confess I would (fo r my own pleasure) rather possess real genuine speciment -o f saddle and driring horse than the finest auto, that runs the road. O f course, if you want to go somewhere, right now, and come bade home away in the night by yourself, you can do' it, but you’ve got to stay awake, and hang on to that steering wheel. Think you can ever learn to love that ignoramus o f a machine as truly as 1 did “ Deck,” or little “ Fleet,” that would take me' home safely, even i f it was so dark I couldn't see the road, had I stayed awake trying? . . But all this reminds me I did have a-mishap with “ Deck” .and my cutter one winter night. • Sleighing was good all over Greene county^ so stid- when he came to the fron t o f a little brick cottage on Xenia avenue, across the street from the old school build ing thought that was a good place to publican office-holders w ill ‘ be unop posed. on,the ballot- . ' ' , Republika candidates arei -County commissioner—W - W. Barnett,-incum bent, C. S,. McDaniel, C. H , Shepherd, Ralph 0 . Spahr, Jay M, Auld and J . ' Earl McClellan; sheriff—John Bgughn, incumbent, and .W illiam Fudge;, state representative—W R. McChes- ney, incumbent, and Frank M. Cham- blisB; prosecutor—Marcus McCallister; incumbent,, and Marcus Shoup; treas urer—Harry M. Sm ith ;, S u rveyor- Engineer W. J. Davis; clerk o f courts —Earl Short; probate judge—S. Q. Wright; ’ recorder—E , D. ‘ Beatty; coroner—Dr. H. C. Schick. Oh the Democratic side, .on ly one primary contest will be provided. George P. Henkel, Xenia, ahd 'B . M. Leach, Jamestown, w ill vie fo r fhe party’s nomination fo r sheriff; Janies H. Hawkins, near Xenia, and Howard' Batdorf, Osborn, will be the Demo cratic nqminees fo r county commis- ’ sion. G. H. Thorne, attorney, w ill be unopposed’ fo r the homination'. for state representative. No Democratic' candidates filed petitions fo r the other seven county- offices. * Twenty-nine candidates, filed peti tions fo r .24 vacancies:to be filed on the Democratic county-central com mittee. ' There w ill he eight .contests fo r committee places, indicating, a re vival o f a factional dispute o f long standing over control o f the com ipit- *. -’Sfit(‘iM I •“I'Vlr~i {-Vift^T i1lrtTJ3i4'lnj^?irt.i.tfiri■ elected on the Republican centred com mittee, 26 candidates filed. There will bo three contests, but these are purely ,o f a local character in the districts in- stop. 'W e had no difference'of opinion ;vojved. Following is the complete regarding the matter, so after attach- ifigt p f Republican* and •Democratic ing him to a well known ’ hitching post I meandered to the front door o f the cottage, There was a butich o f! central commilteo candidates: Republicans: Xenia first. Ward— . _ ^ t . . rGilbert R. Hisey, George Kileen; girls, lived there and I thought in nvy|Xenia second' wnrd_ j 0hn A . Yoder, bashful way it would be nice to 3 >ve(Tjioinnt| vir. ghoitev- Y,*ni<» «,s»-,i some o f ’em a sleigh ride. Well, there was Kate and' Mary Bratton and Lida Stormont at home. In response to my query as to whether any o f ’em wanted to take a sleigh ride o f course the whole bunch, did. Where Jen was, ’twas hard to tell, but you can bet if she had been at home I’d have had four girls instead o f three fo r that trip. We who were there, got loaded up, Thomas W. Shelley; Xenia third ward —Joseph H. Adams; Xenia fourth ward—no candidates filed; (villages— Bowersrillc—Claude Ghitty; Osborn— I. R. Kneisly; Jamestown—Neal W . Hunter; Bellbrook—Elmer Wetzel; Cedarville—John G. McGotkell; Spring Valley—W. E. Crites; Fairfield C .'F . Snediker; Yellow Springs—F. Fi ; Bales; (townships)—Spring Valley— John C. E lliott; James LaUreiis; Bath —H. R. Armstrong; Sugarcreek— with one o f the girls on a stool fo r JWeller K. Haines; Cedarville—John a seat.' Up the avenue w© jingled W. Collins; Beavercreek—John Mun-_ along to Main street, there turning ger; Jefferson—A . B. Lewis; New” CM . No.' 410, World So'rvlo. street was alive with merry makers. In -order to make as much noise as possible I speeded my dappled steed when all o f a sudden along about the Barr Undertaking (headquarters we came in collision with another rig go ing north. Neither had seen the other coming, C. B. Hazard; Silvercreek—Andrew M. Bryan; Xenia—Fred Wheeler; Miami—Elder Corry; Ros?i—C. Ray Reid. Democratic—Xenia first ward— Harry Donovan; Xenia second Word— no candidates filed; Xenia third ward — George H. Smith, R, E. Luce; partly due to the shadowy gloom o f ,Xen’ a fourth ward—Henry A . Jack- side walk trees. But the impact o f son; (villages)—Bowersville—it, B. those horses was terrific, both going up in We air on their hind legs as colts playing in a field do some times. The rebound brought Deck back to a sit down on my sleigh dash, smash ing it, and breaking off the shafts in meter short, creating consternation among my girls who luckily were Robert A , Turnbull; (townships) worse scared than hurt, Grabbing Week-End. Spree Draws $50 Fine Ernest Hauk, took in too much, territory when he tried to exercise their stool, they beat it fo r the little his man-power Saturday night on brick cottage, there to await my com- Dave Taylor; special police. Hauk j lug to recount how come all this was said to be well “polutted” and commotion, abusive to the officer. While taking | A t the time, ’twas 'beyond mo to tell Hauk through1the door o f the mayor’s :who to blame it on fo r the parties office a glass was broken in tho {going north, immediately after tile Bow&rmc&Bter; BellbUook — O. W , Hook, Osborn — Emmett Lewis; Spring Valley—Russell N. Stingley, H. W. Badgley; Yellow Springs— Edward L. DoWine, Harold ,L, Rahmj Fairfield—Vidgil Browning, Charles Herr; Cedarville—G, H. Hartman, scuffle. Mayor. Little placed a value o f $50 and costs with thirty days ad ditional in the county jail on the cele brant. In recent weeks drunks have been taking it for granted they can do-as they please. Its time to revive the chain gang and get free street labor. Hearing March 24 On Road Addition A public hearing on a proposed ad dition o f 29,03 miles o f the James town - Jeffersonvill - Madison Mills crash turned their outfit around, and headed back toward the railroad. But it wasn’t long until here came Dave Tarbox who admitted he and Tom Owens were, speeding up town on the wrong side o f the street, in Toms rig, until We collided. Wanting to know If my horse was o, k., he toid me ho had just pulled, as hard as he could with thumbs and fingers, to extract a piece o f wood about 12 inches long from the breast o f Toms hotae, with..only about an'inch pro truding upon which to get a. hold. And sure enough from my left sleigh shaft a piece that tong was broken off, almost as squarely as if It had been so much'chalk. Having Silvercreek—W . P. Spriggs, William W. Kcpuinger; Bath—George A . Feir- stine, Howard L, Batdorf; Miami—A . F. Pultz, Fred Dawson; New Jasper W, H. Wilkinson; Cedarville—M. F. Jones; CaesOrcreek—Emery Oglesboe; Spring Valley—Earl Simison; Sugar- creek—Herbert Meredith; Ross—Earl Ritenour; Xenia—Paul Ham er; Beavercreek—Elwood Hamer, To Replenish Supply O f Pike In Green Co. The Greene County Fish and Game association w ill establish rearing pools on the farm o f George Belt, Spring Valley, fo r the propagation o f Wall- eyed pike, now extinct in Gretna county water*. Hatched spawn furnished by the state w ill be reared and deposited in deeper county streams, later, it is said. Officers o f the association taw ind daughter, with Prof. STylte fctidWfe. ■ ■ , iftuute 42. . . , < , * n a o n on iR, suni ft el ti were rs- New Holiai)d road in Greene j dirtarriBPd betengifigrtjelected at the meeting m foltewti Fayette countie*ito the *tf® Idghw ay m m / fm m George H . tffiith , p g ^ r f » t JiVfltdHI will 1)0 heia At JVIO'* iniO wy CUtt®r# « lift morial hall, Washington C. H. The shoved it along devious alley ways Greene county portion o f the road be- tj,fc tetM, 0f Henry W olford's »hop* a s , Marshall, CedarviUe, secretary. Honey Lou and Dick Stormont en*'gin* In MvsrtteeJf township, half a , ....:.... ................................................. OfHC0 assistant treasurer was : ]abolishffd, j , '. a i^tisslr home, WSdrtteday evening |3J2 miles to the Faystto county ihw. (Con iim Pd rin pag* fa ir )
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