The Cedarville Herald, Volume 60, Numbers 27-52
m W THINGS ARB ADVERTISED BY MERCHANTS FIRST. ADVER TISEMENTS KEEP YOU ABREAST ■ OF THE TIMES. READ THEM! ADVERTISING IS NEWS, AS MUCH AS THE HP4DI4NH9 ON f g f t FRONT PAGE. OFTEN IT IS OF MORE SIGNIFICANCE TO YOU- SIXTIETH YEAR NO. 35 CEDARVILLE, OHIO, FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1937 »wwB*W!»>wia!-'jMiijgm-M..1 .pwiiiBwwwwapii ii1 ""ii" m iiiwg"1w a u r " PRICE, ?1.50 A YSAR a - • m u . . ‘i .......i i ' .i 24 APPRAISERS r tr NEWS LETTER FROM STATE i DEPARTMENTS S DAMACiE SUIT | Suit demanding $100 damages has {been filed in common pleas court by JHarold L. Fiste, Florence Ave> COLUMBUS.—For the first time injagamst PauI Qstter and Judy Bittner, . , , , j * . }Yellow Springs, based on an auto col- history, Ohio has an adjutant g e n e r a l ; on in>J„ ____ lision November 29, 1936, three miles south of Yellow Springs. Fiste charged his auto was damaged when struck by an •auto owned and driven by Bittner, whom the plaintiff accused of negligence, with life tenure of office. He is Adjutant General Emil F. Marx of St. Marys, Mercer county, who was appointed to the life-time post by Gov ernor Martin L. Davey under the authority of a new legislative measure passed by the 92nd General Assembly, which provides “for the confirmation of the military laws of this to the Na tional Defence act.” Although in 1803 Cornelius R; Sedan served as adjutant general) * the first since Ohio was granted statehood, historians credit Arthur St. Clair Jr., who served from 1796 to 1803 as adjutant general of the Northwest Territory, from which Ohio was carved, as being the first adjutant general of Ohio and he is so listed in the Official Roster of Federal, . State and County Officers. General Marx, who may hold the position until; he reaches the United States army re-j tiremenfc age of 64, is the fifty-seventh] adjutant general of Ohio. He enlist-; ed in the Ohio National Guard in 1815ire#l estnte. and served with the 37th division inj A divorce, on grounds of. cruelty and the A. E> F. as a first lieutenant. Also!U‘auiiuleiit representations, is sought appointed, for life under the new lawj Alton .;Whitmire in a suit against j were Lieutenant Colonel Loucks D.. barmen. Whitmire. They were married j About 175 older members of Ohio Brown of Kenton, assistant adjutant; m-U)33 but have been separated three! 4-H clubs will meet a t Camp Ohio, general, and Colonel John A. Blounttycars, according to the petition. The! August 16 to 19, to receive a course Hillsboro, quartermaster general. idefendant’s last known .residence wasi of instruction on the conservation of *• ■ ... — j Port 0 Lemon, .Costa Rica. Inatural resources, according to-H. W. More deaths occurred in Ohio last I Walter Richardson, in a suit for di-i Harshfield, assistant state club leader, year than during any other twelve-1 voice from Thelma - Richardson, -i9j This will be the second such camp month period since records were ljept’Jackson st-, charges cruelty and re-j held in the state and, as a t last year’s with the exception of 1918 when the! quests that his wife be barred of fa-j camp, a girl and a boy from each influenza epidemic alone accounted for [teresf in his ’ property. •••They wore!county will be invited. Instructions 14,986 fatalities, according to statis-j married. March 21, 1934 at Richmond, lw^l he given by leaders in the various tics compiled by I. C. Plummer, vet-!Ind. • !fields of conservation, eran chief of the division of vital! • •Cruelty in the form of nagging is!' I)r‘ George T- Harding, Columbus, DIVORCE SUITS Gross neglect and cruelty are charged in a petition for divorce; filed by Alfred Gerard against Ida .Gerard, to whom he was married in 1902. The husband, engaged in the restaurant business in Xenia, charges his1wife sits in the kitchen of the restaurant all day, criticizing everything that is done and that it makes him nervous. Mattie Harris, in a suit for divorce from Carl Harris, 531 E.- Second st., charges non-support and cruelty. They were married April 5, 1923. The plain tiff requests an alimony award, custody of a minor child and asks, to j •be declared the owner of certain Xenia Farm Leaders Don’t See Farm Plan “Eye to Eye” An open break exists between na tional farm leaders over the Com munistic “ever-normal” granary and crop control with fixed quotas and penalty taxes. Edward O’Neal, Alabama Democrat, head of the American Farm Bureau, demands immediate action by con gress. L. J. Tabor, Ohio, head of the Na tional Grange Opposes the plan as out lined. Under the plan central state wheat farmers with average crops would be taxed to pay for crop fail ure in the dust bowls and western plains. Much of the western wheat is produced by companies that farm several hundred thousand acres. These companies or individuals could plant wheat and have no worry- over a suc cessful crop, knowing they would be paid from the tipces collected from wheat produced in other sections. The central states have not liad a com plete failure ih twenty years, while western crops fail more than half the time. Plan Second Annual Conservation Camp action filed bv . has the hardest topic, human cental con- statistics of the State Department of j charged in a divorce Health. The deaths in 1936 totaled^ Henry Harenherg against"” 'jWfa!a*rvation throuffh cental hygiene; 80,942, and represented an increase of Haveni.org, to whom he was married!Al'thm' HaTPer, II. E. Eswine, and E. ten per cent fa comparison with the ’-iSt April 15. :S. Thomas, all three. Columbus 1935 total, Mr. Plummer said. Heart _____ ‘ ’ j naturalists, have charge of that field; disease alone resulted in 18,818 deaths; RIGHT-OF-WAY DISPUTE • ;aIU* T- H. Langlois, assistant director A dispute over right-of-way is in- iof the Stone Laboratory, Put-in-Bay, compared to 17,121 attributed to. the malady in 1935, Decreases were noted in deaths from measles, scarlet fever, diptheria, spinal meningitis, tubercu losis, cancer, suicide and homicide. In Addition to disease's■bf ’the ’heart, in creased deaths resulted from typhoid:(fa, east, recently obstructed, ft nine. , „ . , lv f fever cerebml hemmorrhage, enteritis | use(l for nro, 0 t(mn 11fty yoal% ,cat,.!lin‘{ the experiment station at VVooster , , . . will teach water conservation and fish volvcd in an injunction suit brought.cuj{.Ure by Sara Delscamp against Olive Hmts.|C^ r ^ - soiI consel.vatio„ service will Ihe plaintiff, owner of a 154.38-acrej f i>h charles Walker and Charles Sugarcrcek TWp., charged the DAmbftch> faoth from Zanesvine, and Llcfendnnt, owning land adjoining to jE I|e Goodf Colurtlbua> as teachers; lane. and fatal accidents. | ing to the Lower Bellbrook Pike. Re-1 supplies Elizabeth Burrage, geology, an. • r r . . , , rquest that the defendant be required!?" > ’■ f°r0St''y- C\ ^ The opening m the federal buildingjto r(18toro tJjp ]ane to Us or, , 1 } ^ Cincinnati, county agricultural in Columbus of a news stand operated ablo con(lition is ma(Io , , t |,e 1 )|aih-!!,|rent’ wiH be thC firt*anus exPe r t by a person who is blind marked the -j.;ty - jj .jj ,, r f 1 ' ! The list from the University staff eighteenth such .business establishedi pis jntjff ' mnej oi ”e j inclucUis R- D. Barden, agricultural by the>Ohio commission for the blind, _____ jengineer; Dr. G. W. Blades, botany de- I’ARTmON SUIT FILED 1 Pnrt,ncnt» 'rht‘lnll‘ Beall> homo eco- r, . . ' . ■ . nomica; R. C. Clark, rural sociology; i I artition of Cedarville. Twp. real[ ptofessor E. L. Dakah, poultry hus- it was;announced by William E., Bart- ram, executive secretary of the com-! mission-In co-operation with the com-! . . . mission, the federal government de- ’l‘st?lc' aad i“1 accoM" l,”f £or vo,,tst bandry department; D. R. Dodd, ag- cided to permit such businesses inj.afld *>1ro|,ts “‘"f® ,T“1;V 2f ‘ are(ronomy; Dr. Lawrence Hicks, director, (sought by Walter bhank in u snit^ hiolo^ric^il research; Virgil Overholt, filed against James J. McClellan, agricultural engineer; T. H, Parks, loplin, Mo., and -others. Claiming Jontomologv, and A L. Pierstovff, plant Will be placed in the post office lobbies :0.wn0rf,hip of “ -one-third interest in -pathology- of the larger'cities, Mr. Bartram said.| [lu‘ ,I,ro,‘erty» the P,a,nt,ff hoi — — - — <------- The seventeen ..which have been haf< * sp,T ’wI ° f m ,ta l, n „ operating have proven successful!;,on<‘<lts- A,, lor ni,rt I,,nne-V nt- R e - e l e c t e d O n ventures, according to records. . -‘W s for the plaintiff Liquor Detectives Make Local Search Saturday Night Two detectives from the State Liquor Department, two deputies from Sheriff George Henkel’s office, and Wm. Marshall, village marshal, made a tour of the supposed spots where the hard and foaming beverage were be ing handled. The first visit was that of Mabel James, colored, where a pint of boot leg was found in the house and a gal lon and a small bottle hid in the weeds about ten feet from the house. Mable argued the question with the detectives and they ordered her taken, up by deputy sheriffs. She spent two nights with the sHeriff and was liberated on bond Monday signed by Harry Shull. The next stop was a t the home of Minnie Hamilton where the officers say they found a full house, about twenty men being in the house at the time. A large number of cases of state taxed beer and 4 quarts of state liquor were found, there be- no sale no raid was possible. Under the Ohio law state taxed beer or liquor cannot be confiscated unless a sale 1 b proven. ‘ The raiders made several visits county the same night. Liquor overflowed into the street Saturday night from some source which caused some activity in police court. George Barber-pleaded guilty to intoxication and disorderly con duct and had a fine arid costs of $8.60 paid for him. Clark Baker, charged with the same offense, drew a like amount and has until Saturday night to meet pay ment, otherwise it is a visit with the sheriff.' Joe Massie drew thti largest prize, $45 and six months, but fine and daysi were remitted on condition he leave town and remain away. He is not Henry Ford’s Greenfield Village m A VIEW OF Independence Hall, reproduction of the original In Phila delphia, which Henry Ford has built as a museum In Greenfield Village, Dearborn, Mich; It houses one of the most complete collection! of American relics ever assembled. Among the more than 50 famous build ings in the Village are the laboratories and workshops associated with he life of Thomas A. Edison- permitted to return sober or drunk without facing enforcement of the sentence, according to Mayor Little’s orders. order that some of the blind may be come, self-supporting. As rapidly as funds are available, additional stands) FORECLOSURE ACTION l J National Board A sixty-five per cent gain in job placements in private business and in-! The Home Owners’ Loan Corp., is! Raymond. B. Howard, general nian- dustry during the fySst six months of; plaintiff in a mortgage foreclosure] a8er the Madison Press company, the current year in comparison with)811*1 against Denver Walker, s J o f London, wa3 reelected a director of the corresponding period in 1936 was! Monroe St., and others, requesting!the National Editorial association on reported by Director W. T. Doe of the! iu<tem<mt for $1,768.99. E. Dawson' Wednesday nt the annual convention employment survey of the Ohio state 'Smith is the IIOLC attorney. Jin Detroit. free employment service. Jobs <wore ‘ -------- ! W .W. Lomis, LaGrange, Illinois, found for a total of 67,297 men and' JUDGMENT SOUGHT I -vus elected president; W. H. Conrad, women from January '1 through June! Asserting a bill for certain legal' Wisconsin, vice president; 30. In June the service had 13,697' services is unpaid, Attorney Stanford' W' Grim,''Salem, Indiana, treas- npplications for work and was able t o ,... OTIarra has brought suit against'm cr’ Roy Brown> San Kacfel, Cali- make 15,737 placements. , WPA workers in Ohio have com pleted or have under «construction roads that, if laid end to end, would reach more than one-third the way around the world, Dr. Carl Watson, state WPA administrator, disclosed. More than 8,COO miles of road im provements are included in the WPA program, he said. Noble county led with 480 miles of road projects. More than half of the WPA construction Was on secondary or farm-to*market roads- Gold Prospector Drops Dead Suddenly John Funderburgh, 74, former resi dent of this county that resided in Yellow Springs, died suddenly in his gold mine 125 miles from Pasadena, Calif,, last Wednesday. The de ceived and his family located in Cali fornia 20 years ago. The last 10 years he has panned from $8 to $10 worth of gold a day. When He struck a large vein last Wednesday and found a large nuget ha was so overjoyed he fell dead with the treasure in his hand. He is sur vived by his wife and three sons, arid one daughter, A son, Fay, resides in Yellow Springs, the rest of the family a t the gold mine. Funderburgh was well known in Miami township. Lester MeDorman, (Vdarville R. R. !, mul others to recover judgment for -211.75. DIVORCES GRANTED Two divorce decrees have been a- .van'id by the court as follows: Ells- ivoifli Mercer, Jr., from Myrtle M, AK’ii-er, on grounds of wjlful absence from home; Elmer F. Anderson from Juanita Anderson, on grounds of gross neglect. JUDGMENT GIVEN The Xenid Farmers Exchange Co., has lecovered a $101,73 judgment in a suit against Alonzo and Pearl Caile. Archie Gordon, as executor of the J. II. Sanders estate, won a $1,036.41 note judgment in a suit agninst B« P, Thomas and others. APPLICATION SUSTAINED Application of Herman Halior and others, plaintiffs in a suit agninst Eleanor M. Corbean and others for removal of a brick building from ecr- ain real estate involved in the case, ius been approved by the court. Hie lcfoiidant was ordered to remove the building and persona] property by August 7 or lie permanently barred. APPRAISE ESTATES Three estates have been appraised (Continued on page three) lornia; Howard Palmer, Greenwich, Conn,, R, C. Stitser, Winnemuca, Nevada; Ed Abels, Lawrence, Kansas, members of the board of directors, ,vith Mr, Howard. Clayton Rand, Gulfport, Miss., re tiring president, and Bruce McCoy, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, were named ex officio directors. . Cameron M. Ross Gets Iowa School Position Mr, and Mrs. John W. Ross have received a telegram from their son, Cameron M. Ross, Iowa City,; that he <ias been appointed District Super ;isor of Schools for South Eastern Iowa. He enters upon his new duties August 2nd. Mr. Ross is a graduate of the Ccdarville High 'School and Ccdnrviile College and has been super intendent of several schools in Iowa where he located some years ago. Miami Valley Chautaqua Assembly -Visitors a t the Mianj-J Valley Chau tauqua grounds this, summer are im pressed with the beauty of the park and the splendid condition of all the property. Great crowds are using this public institution, to attend conven tions, hold reunions or for a simple little picnic. More -than ever the people have come to appreciate this fine, institution, located on the Great Miami River between Franklin and Miamisburg on Route 25. The 1937 Annual Assembly opens Thursday, July 29th, and continues until Sunday evening, August 16th. The program this year is one of the best in all the long history of Chau tauqua which started in the horse and buggy days and has. continued to bring culture and recreation to the people for forty years. Three big Sundays are featured on the 1937 Assembly program. Sunday, August 1, Knight Mac Gregor, famous baritone, appears afternoon and evening, and King Chapman, noted traveller, will deliver his beautifully illustrated lecture, True Tales ,of the Sulu Seas,” fol lowing MacGregor’s evening song recital. Sunday, August 8, General Smedley D. Butler, former head of the U. S. Marines and one of America’s out standing characters, will speak a t 3 p. m. Herbert C. White will give his il lustrated lecture, “A Pilgrimage to China’s Wonderland,” at 8:16 p. m. Sunday, August 15, Robeift A.. Taft, one of Ohio’s favorite sons and prom inently mentioned as a candidate for the United States Senate, will occupy he platform at 3 p. m. Mr. Taft will be followed by U. S. Senator Gerald P. Nye of North Dakota, Senator Nye is an outstanding American, a fearless critic, a brilliant statesman and an eloquent speaker. The Assembly this year features morning, -afternoon and evening ses sions each day. Complete programs may be secured by -addressing Man ager Wade E< Miller, .Chautauqua, Ohio. Greenfield Villager where the mem bers of the NEA”were guests of the Ford Motor Company, is a sight that no visitor to Detroit can afford to overlook.'. This village is the result of Henry Ford’s consuming interest in the architecture, iife, and customs of the early American days. Here are grouped hundreds of interesting relics of the early American period and. graphic illustrations of the English colonization. Many historic buildings arc gathered fa this spot, ,laid out in the form of a Colonial Village, with its village green, town hall, black- that is still making flour for sale to visitors. An old blacksmith shop, the old time shoe shop, a small one store room more than 100 years old. In it boys are taught how to make shoes by hand under the direction of an old shoe-master that has been fa the business fifty yeato. At the time a pair of patent leather shoes of the very best leather was being finished for Henry Ford. Children’s shoes are also made and turned o,ver to chil dren in need. Weaving of fancy pieces as well as carpets and rugs by the old hand process still goes on each day in. a XENIA BOND ISSUE FOR MUNICIPAL HOSPITAL The Xenia City Commission will submit a bond issue of $90,000 to the electors for the securing of a site and section of a municipal hospital a t the coming election. Xenia city voted for the. county bond issue a year ago but the rural townships defeated it. smith shop, and other appropriate^ plant 'moved to Greenfield from the buildings. Henry Ford's great ad- East. There is the saw mill for hard miration for Thomas A. Edison had lumber and a score of other small led to the setting up of Edison’s orig-..factories even •to -manufacture- •of tool laboratory and work- shops on glassware. _ AIL these institutions are the grounds, as a tribute to the great operated by youths under the direc- inventor. tion of those versed in their respect-] Not far from the Village is the Ford ive lines. j Rotunda, which is a limestone replica An old drug store and p.ostofflce of I of the famous Ford exhibit at the Cen- the days when mail was carried horse- tury of Progress Fair a t Chicago. One back over the country occupies a prom wing contains a complete theatre with inent place on the grounds. Here you ]revolving stage, where films of pro- can purchase picture cords and stamps duction methods are shown; the other, and mail them to your friends, Ac- n display of .the hidden pnrta of the comodating young postmasters are on modern Ford car. duty during the day. Some months ago Henry Ford pur- The art exhibit and the antique chased the historic building in Day- settings in the various rooms in In ton where the Wright Brothers built dependence Hall, outrivals anything their first airplane. The building was i*e found in the country, dismantled and shipped to Greenfield Even the “horse and buggy”,has its Village where it has been .re-erected P'ace ’a Greenfield village which adds just as it stood in Dayton. It will muck to the quaint setting of the vil- house relics used in building this that attracts thousands of visit- plane and it is intimated that the ors ®ach Mr- Ford maintains the plane now in Smithsonian Institute ^rce transportation by horse-drawn fa Washington, D. C„ will be brought iatrgar. two seated; the once famous to Dearborn and placed in the build- horse-drawn covered cab and other ing Where it was first assembled. The vehicles of the days of long ago. All building is of brick, wood and an iron this expense, even the salaries of more frame front for doors and windows. than two hundred young high school Some other famous buildings can a"d college boys that act as guides be found on the grounds where there anf have a part in entertainment of a re . good streets of the tarbound visitors, macadam arid cement sidewalks. For It is an educational treat to visit instance a grist mill 150 years old Greenfield Village. C Om iU N TM Twenty-four appraisers appointed to conduct the re-valuation of real estate in Greene County villa^ps and townships, exclusive of Xenia city, were announced Saturday by Cpunty Auditor J. J. Curlett. One appraiser was named for. pfc|> ten villages and ten of the jtwelyjs townships, while Xenia and Beaver creek Twps, were divided intq , sections. Auditor Curlett announce^ m when appraisal work elsewhere in £b? county is well under way, apjpojp|- ments will be made for Xenty The. auditor has been bjisy fp rty fb weeks, visiting all parts of the county and giving instructions to fas .$§1^ workers. The appraisal, for taxation pur poses, is the first since 1031 and; held mandatory for this yeae under the state law. Appraisers appointed in the towji* ahipa and villages ape a s folltws; ' ' ■• Townships Bath—William.N; Wilkerson, _ Beavercreek north—J oW Mwwpr, Beavercreek south—Herman eney. ■ Caesarcregk—Frank Buckwftltor, Cedapville—John Collins, Jefferson—Harry Martin- Miami—Elder R. Carry. /New Jasper—James Fudge. Ros«—Ray Eeid. Silvercreek—Myron Fudge. Spring Valley—Elmer Compton. Sugarcreek—Henry Barnett. Xenia north—Weir Cooper. Xenia south—w! A. Bickett. /' Villages Fairfield—Jay Darner. • -, Osborn—George fieyl. 1 Cedarville—Ralph Wolford- Bowersvilie—Claude Chi^ty. Yellow Springs— -C. C. Stephenson. Clifton—George Braley. • 'Jamestown—Heal Hunter, Spring Valley—Carl Smith. Bellbrook—James Crowl. Wilberforcq—VL A. Anderson. M r & Died AtRoundhead* 0*' Mrs. Lois E.’Northup McCarley, 3£, died Wednesday in a Kenton, Oq hospital, following an eight-week ill ness. The deceased was the daughter P* Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E. Northup, Springfield, former residents of: tide place. She was a graduate of Witten berg College in 1924 and taught in th e , Clark county schools for eleven years, .She is survived <by her husband, Rev. Walter McCarley, pastor of the Roundhead Methodist Chqreh, her parents in Springfield, and a jiafer* Mrs. Olive Everhart, Springfield. The funeral will be field Friday from the residence of her patents* 1954 Kenton st., Springfield, a t 2:30 p. m., in charge of Rev. Roy B. Patton, pastor of the Clifton Avenue M. E. Church, and the Rev. Walter -P. C u - toe, superintendent of the Methodist district in which Roundhead is located. Burial in Femcliff Cemetery. Second Annual Picnic Of McMillan Family The Second annual picnic of the Me Millan family will be held Friday, August 20, in Alford Memorial Gym. The picnic supper will be served at 7 o’clock. An interesting program is being planned and those having old pictures, clippings and letters are isked to notify the picnic committee composed of Miss Florence WUHom- ion, Mrs. David McElroy, Mrs. Anns Wilson. These having names and addresses of those they wish notified .vill give them to the picnic committee. Farm Buildings Saved When Straw Stack Is Burned A straw stack on the farm of James Patterson burned last Friday evening about 5 ;30, origin of fire un known. The fire was first noticed by threshers in a nearby field. Neighbors were summoned and a bucket brigade formed that saved the barn nearby. One side of the barn was scorched but with the Use of water and house fire extinguishers the only loss was that of the straw. Blackberry Crop May Be Short One Reports coming from some acres in the hill counties indicate that the blackberry crop, contrary to previous indications, will be below normal, due to - the continued rains which have prevented proper ripening. One landowner near Fruitdale states that his crop will be about one-fourth normal. Early buyers, it is indicated, will be the lucky ones this year, unless some communities have larger berry crops than indicated by present reports. APPOINTMENTS'MADE Dr, Paul J. Volkert Opens Dental Office Dr- Paul J. Volkert, Dayton, has; Ann Lang, late of Fairfield, under rented the rooms in the bank build- j $10,000 bond; J. J. Curlett, John Groth ing formerly used as dental quarters, Iand Oscar Kauffman were named ap- and will open his office for the prac-jpraisers Katie L. Herr has been appointed | administratrix of the estate of Mary tice of dentistry, Monday, August 2, Dr. Volkert comes well recommended and will be welcomed into the com munity. He is married and is now reeking a residence. Suh tenbe to T B S HK RALD COUNTY ROAD FUND The county Inst week received $11,- 153 from tne state for the road fund from motor Vehicle license fees. The same fund was increased by $15,00$ from the gasoline tax. TO FILL SIX FA IR ' BOARD VACANCIES Six vacancies to occur on the board of directors of the Greene Cpunty Agricultural society will he .filled by vote of family ticket holders during the annual county fair in August. Board members whose terms ex pire are N. N. Hunter, Jameetown, president; B. U. Bell, Xenia, treas urer; Mrs. L. H. Jones, Miami twp.; A. B. Lewis, Jefferson twp.; Bfarl Ritenour, Ross twp., and William Wilkerson, Bath twp,- All will b* candidates to succeed themselves. NOTICE TO BIDDERS FOR AUTOMOBILE CHASSIS Notice is hereby given that bids will’ be received On two (2) chassis for school busses up until noon, Monday, August 2, i937. For spepificatipwi see B. E. McFarland, ebairmas e f tfi# buss committee, or A« E. Richards, Clerk of the Cedarville Township Board of Education. WOMAN IS ACQUITTED Marjorie J. Dunkel has been des ignated executrix of the estate of R. E. Dunkel, late of .Xenia, without bond, J. II. Hawkins, H. A. Higgins and E. D. Beatty were appointed appraisers. W. L. Miller has been named ex*1 ccutor of the estate of Nettie Marsh, late of Xenia, under $3,000 bond. J. J. Curlett, C. R. Bales and J. E. Watt were appointed appraisers. "Mabel James, colored, token .up by state detectives Saturday ntyht#*iaMI a raid and charged with ptestofion s i illegal liquor was dismissed by J.u&<§ Johnson, Xenia, for Jack of evidence. For Sale—Hay Press. 16-18 Bailer, (fit) C. E. Barnhart, FIGURES IN AUTO ACCIDENT According to the aherifPaoffioe Mr*; Blanch Fixx, 64, Xenia reoeiitai *att and bruises, *he& an auto :Arivsst.Ity her son, Maurice, was ^rUOk^fit^-ttjto rear'by .a coupe,driven •by 'Haric Sharpin, 27, CedarriUe. * ■‘WMSssliWNIMi
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