The Cedarville Herald, Volume 61, Numbers 1-26

S9i NEW THINGS ARE ADVERTISED BY MERCHANTS FIRST. ADVER­ TISEMENTS KEEP YOU ABREAST OF THE TIMES. READ THEMl SIXTY-FIRST YEAR NO, 10 REUS LETTER EMM STATE DEPARTMENTS ADVERTISING IS mm *. A* AS THE HEADLINES ON THE PAGE. OFTEN IT m OF SIGNIFICANCE TO YOU CEDARVILLE, OHIO, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4,1038 PRICE, f 1.50 A YEAR COMJMBUS.—An Activity which w»a termed “an innovation in. America and perhaps in the entire world"1and designated ''The Lithic Laboratory for -the Eastern United' States" has been ^launched by the Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society, J t,swaa announced by Director Henry C,:-SbefcrCne., The official action came a fte r two years of planning and pre­ paration. and ,was made pos?iblp by the financial generosity of two Co­ lumbus publishers and officers of the society. President Arthur C* Johnson and H. Preston Wolfe, a member of the hoard o f trustees, Director Shot-, rope said. “The. .purpose of the lab­ oratory," tHe director asserted,’ “ is to .^tiidy .the lithic materials, such as stone, flint and the like,, pertinent to thje.m^terial culture of the America^ aborigines, and .the methods and tepiiques employed in then- utiliza­ tion. I t has been generally recog­ nized by archaeologists that' atone and flint were basic in primitive economy, and that relics made from them and found in ancient mounds and village sites constitute a major source of in­ formation concerning the peoples who made and, used them;” He -pointed put that although most of the material substances used by the aboriginal man have been or are being studied, the lithic materials have been “sadly neg­ lected” until now/ DIVORCE SUITS Mary Vance, seeking a decree from William Vance, charges gross neglect and points out her husband has been confined in Ohio penitentiary since April, 1037. They were married in 1934, Gross neglect and cruelty are charged in a suit filed by Zelda Booth Harris, 805 E, Market St., against William H ,. J , Harris, Chicago, 111. They were married June 20,1931. The plaintiff requests custody of two minor children and asks that the de­ fendant bo barred of interest in her real estate, - . Oscar P. Day, plaintiff in a suit ■against Lilliom G. Day, charges wilful absence from home, asserting the de­ fendant" left their home in Yellow Springs on October 1," 1931 and never returned. They were married April 3, 1920. a t Covington, Ky. •The,hus­ band seeks restoration of a ll prop­ erty rights. PARTITION SUIT FILED • Partition or real estate located in Yellow Springs is the object of a peti­ tion filed by Charles Portman, Thomas, i'ortman and Maude Shobe against Blanche Cunningham and others. Miller and Finney are attorneys for the plaintiffs. : A ’warning to-Ohio, motorists using; state, trunk highways to be on the lookout fo r, snow removal equipment ’ of the State Department of Highways was issued by Highway Director John Jaster Jr! “ In some cases,” he re- Mated', “the snow plows and trucks will be found operating in the very center of’the roadway, sanding icy stretches or pushing snow toward .the'shoulder. Their position, their low working speed and unusual overall width creates an extra hazard despite the precautions,taken by the operators to; warn motorists by the use of danger flags, signs and .‘lights.; When ap­ proaching such ^equipment the speed should be reduced tO five and hot more ,;$hairten: mile's an hour and %he horn should be, sounded. Collision with a heavy plow, weighing several* tons, is likely to result in a t least serious dam­ age to an automobile.with only super­ ficial damage to the - plow. In a single teu,-year period,, from 1927 through 1936, claims filed with the IndustrialCommission of Ohio, totaled 1,885,260 and represented'an average of more than one claim for every man, woman and youth employ­ ed in the state, according to data in ’ the current annual report of the com-! mission.., “The trend of industrial ac­ cident, frequency in Ohio is definitely upward/* the report said, “apd due to heayy ihaptyies in employment dur­ ing thg flrst Show a substantial climb. The latent report officially covered the tWelye-pioiith period ending De- •cembei-'fil, 1980; FORECLOSURE ACTION Suit requesting judgment for $1,- 113.36 and foreclosure of a mortgage' on Eairficld property has been stituted. by the Peoples Building and j5 Savings Co., against Charles and Vir- tinia B. Beaver. J. Carl Marshall is attorney for the company. MIAMI VALEY WIL CHOSE DIRECTORS Election of directors for Miami Valley Co-operative Milk Producers association in Montgomery, Green and Miami counties got underway Tuesday; with the-first meeting in Englewood. . Other meetings include: Vandalia and Trotwood/ February 2; Brook- ville, February 3; Miamisburg and Springboro, February 4; Osborn, Feb­ ruary 7; Yellow Springs and Xenia, February 8; Beaver Greek, February 9; Farmersville and Eaton, February 10; Waynesville, February 11; James­ town and Cedarville, February 12. Christiansburg, February 14; Perry township, February 15; Springfield, February 16. LewiSburg, February 17; Piqua, February 18; Camden, Febru­ ary 19; Tippecanoe City and West Milton, February 21; Germantown and Centerville, February 22; Sulphur Grove and Troy, February 23; Jeffer­ son township, February 24; Green­ ville, February 25; West Alexandria, February 26, and Spring Valley, Feb­ ruary 28. The annual' members’ meeting will be held in Dayton, March 8. Xenia Co, Wants More Labor Blit ReHef List Grows The New Deal is turning out relief applicants, fasten than the federal and state government can keep check on them. Meantime one Xenia industry complains it cannot keep up produc­ tion due to the. lack of labor. The situation is laughable with federal and state government taxiijg everything for poor relief and in­ dustry seeking more help. According to federal census'tome eight or nine hundred persons are getting aid in this'county, with nearly seven hun­ dred in Xenia .wbifr* ‘'relief* is more attractive than aJob. DIVORCES GRANTED Three divorce decrees ■have been awarded by the court as follows’. Louise A. Lubers from Harry Lue- fcers, on grounds of neglect and crue- iy, with the'plaintiff restored to her former name of Algee; M. G. Cobb from Anna Cobb, qn grounds of wil­ ful absence from home;. Gi’ace Clark from Estel Clark, on grounds of neg­ lect and cruelty. Your State House And Mine PAUL YODER, Lieut*. Governor To Issue Greene Co. " Poor Relief Notes County commissioners have adopted a resolution to issue anticipatory notes whici) will wjeld |14,605.32 to finance the: c o u n ts share of* relief under the new state .relief law* State Auditor Joseph T. Ferguson has estimated th a | Greene co*s. sur­ plus from sales jjnd utility excise taxes, which will fjmd thc relief pro­ gram, will be' $19jj862.fl6, Under the matching .provision ,of "the law the county will- put Up$14,605.32 from the anticipatory fiOtesand will receive from the state $20;21Q.64, which will make $43,815.96 |ayallable to the County for, relief purposes, y. The anticipatory notes will be offered first to the Interest and sink­ ing fund board. (- ERNESTLONG , ENDORSEDFOR BO.ELECTIONS J. Ernest Long, Federal Pike, prom­ inent Ross Twp. farmer and for twelve years a member of the Ross Twp. Board of Education, received the endorsement of the Republican Executive Committee a t a meeting last Thursday night in Xenia, Mr. Long is an ardent Republican and will be the first Republican mem ber of the Board of Elections for ft number of years as coming from his township. The endorsement will go to the Sec­ retary of State and the appointment 'Will be made about the first of March. Earl Ritenoyr, Ross Twp., will be the Democratic appointee. The retiring members are Erskin Winter, Xenia, Republican, and Fred Dawson, D„ Yellow Springs. The committee, approved'! and will sponsor a Lincoln Birthday banquet in Xenia, Tuesday, Ffeb. 15th a t 6:30 p. m., Masonic Temple, Tickets 50c. The speaker of the evening will be Hon. James G. Stewart, Mayor of Cin­ cinnati. Mr, Stewart is a native .of Clark county and is known to many in this section. He is an „excellent speaker and prominent Republican, -TRANSFER APPROVED ■ Authority to transfer $1,141 from* the county general fund fo the dis­ tric t queued i n application filed by county commissioners, has beon granted by the court. JUDGMENT RECOVERED Myrtio Kilgore, as an individual and mi executrix of the Laban Kilgore estate, ,has been awarded a judgment for $156.25 in a suit against Vernon Kelley and Clara Kelly, ESTATES APPRAISED Two estates have been appraised under direction of probate court as follows: Estate of Helen M. Veasey: gross Value, $1,185; obligations, $766.00; Oct value, $418.10. 1 Estate of Clyde L. Nojrthup: .gross value, $2,224’; obligations, $2,230; net value, nothing, /■ ■ APPOINTMENTS MADE Ada B, Moon has been nanied ad­ ministratrix of the estate of Charles H. Moon, late of Xenia'/ under $8,000 Few imjportftUt Changes affecting fishing in Ohio Vera made a t the an- ao*1 ^ “ ^ ^ " r t e n d / ' j ; J . Curlett, C .R . Bales and council'IftsJ week, It was announced' . . . by Conservation Commissioner Law­ rence ’jVooddell. However, the bag limit o ^ g o and small-mouth as wMl J ^ administrator of the estate, of Ruth \V, E. Probabsco were appointed- ap­ praisers. Harper L. Devoe has been appoint- as spotted bass was reduced from eight to five per day, and the size limit was reduced from eleven to ten inches. For one year, starting March 1, one- third 4* ell Ohio streams will be clos­ ed to fhe commercial taking of min­ nows apd crayfish-;j h order to rebuild the supply of.natfi^al.fish food which has b^*vi£tuafljr depleted in certain creeks’-and rivers," All I know is what I read in my mail. My attention is called to a recent editorial in the Saturday Evening Post to the effect that; 1 In 1027 the, Curtis Publishing Company filed fourteen tax returns with Federal, state and local govern­ ments. It cost $S50 to prepare them. “In 1937 this company filed about 44,500 tax returns, the cost of pre­ paring which was $21,000. “In 1927 this company filed one tax return in Canada. In .1937, it iile.i one return there,” I halm found that people -operating small business concerns, realizing, the necessity -for government and education, do not. object - to paying /taxes, but they are irritated—and properly so—by the state's methods of tax collections and. duplications, of inspection. . Speaking of state taxes and, as a matter of comparison, I am advised that, in the Gasoline .Tax Division of tito Tax Commission of Ohio, ft net increase in collection in 1937 over .1036 was three-quarters of a million do) lars, with a total administrative cost of one and a half per cent. The pro­ visions of this law providing for the collection of the gasoline tax were enacted before the trend of today Was in order, More specifically, a t our own door­ step we have the Ohio sales tax )aW, With commissions for handling Sales tax coupons, the cost of coupons and many and other devious discounts,'to bates, and refunds, the result is the annual loss o f millions of dollars in revenue to the schools' in particular, and, to a lesser degree, the political subdivisions. This makes the cost of collection enormous and maintains all the possible irritations fo r those who ■have (o collect the tax. These ills are made possible only when your candidates for public office ReappraisaiJFiled With Commission A complete absinict of the real estate reappraisaljn, Greene County was to be filed Wednesday with* the state tax commissicgi, for approval or revision, County Auditor J. J. Curlett announced.' , . The county-wide Iprojeci first un­ dertaken since 193ljbill establish new and higher realty ^valuations in' a| majority of taxing7districts. I SCHOOL NEWS M fSOFT n c u i t m o im p IlLlnnlfM wnm P SALMIS Youth Guidance Program. During the second semester, the home room period is being largely devoted to Youth Guidance programs. Each* home room teacher is using any A ^ topic which may seem advisable and - worthwhile. Booklets suggesting 0f Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Kildow, *un*r- variou. topics for consideration a r . matron. S t o ^ ^ r being supplemented as the teachers infirmary, suit has been filed in Cem- ® mon Pleas Court through Attorney The need of such a program has Pr#pk h Johnson, seeking xesti**- been felt for some time and will no t;on 0f tbe yearly incomet o r the doubt be both interesting and profit- two 0f8cials. The suit was in the able to,the.pupils. form of mandamus action. Judge F. .The program is being carried out M. Clevenger, has s e tih e hftaHng^>r ift grades 1-J2. In the first grade, February 10th Miss Chandler is teaching “Good The original'salaries of the officials Citizenship" by means, of stories, WM $g5 ,#or Kfldpw a n d * f o r his booklets, 'and pictures. Miss second grade, Miss Trumbo, grade, and Miss Lewis, sixth grade, Allen, wjfe a month. They were reduced third to $60 arid $40 respectiviely. The charge is made-that-Cousniis- BUSINBSS— LITTLE and BIG By W. j . CAMERON have been discussing “Courtesy" with sionerB H L. .FaWorf Md their groups. “Cleanliness u the Hawkins are of the opposite *djitfcs Home andjefiool’’ is the topic taught from plantiffg ftnd tU t since ^ by Miss Chenoweth to the fourth have been }n -pfiSce they hav®:W to grade pupils, m * Reeder, home yacate their po,ui4„8. teacher for the fifth grade utilizes Some months ago the board topics of Youth Guidance fo r con- membars versation m English 4, 5 and 6. In pIaint8 restored m h ;t0 f a b ,# ,* . the special room, Mrs. Halstead has tiona> The tioin a8Berts ^ used the subjects of courtesy, clean- ^ tQ deal thr h ^ lmess and courage. In the high school -member, C. A; Jacobs, to 'gat^tkft Kil- most of the teachers are conducting do^ ,to resjg„ but theja refused, panel discussion about topics-suggest- charge is made the salary cute-were ' ed m the booklet entitled, ‘Personal made to force ^ r ign. - -J Efficiency and Gtizenship.” In the According to a stktenient issued*? seventh grade, M ss Hanna has used Commissioners Batdorf and .Hftwkips the topic, ^Honesty about School and deny any deaj as charged. They Teachers a t Home." Miss Hudson, fltate ^ Mr Jacobs ^ e t i d ’ the eighth gto4.e h p i^ j?oom teacher,, IRr^ salaries not be reduced during bii.term Orr and Mr. Be^,freshmen advisers, which end8 l938 bdt t his was not.ac- Mrs. Wilson and Mr,*. Georgei sopho- CGn^ ,j ^ It now develops that the salary ..re- The following address “Business— Big and Little" wa3 delivered by W. J. Cameron on the Ford program over one of the leading-broadcasting systems. We believe this address comes near answering some of our present day problems -than anything we have heard or read; It certainlji is the answer to the attacks on busi­ ness by “big and little" demagogues. ‘ “Before they launched the great plan of national economic salvation iii 1933, whose origin we recently said was financial and no t political, one' of Ratificatiott <ff/1037 votes of tox*... .. . ... .. . „ . _ ation, tentatively j»y the C » ^ Badget C omm lsid^ iK iw e^ pending completion of the new real Wmn t te plan had been-unfolded, Mr. estate valuations and approval by the' l » a\ Vn" | more advisers. Miss Robe and Mrs, Edwards, junior advisers, and Miss attempted b y l h e ^ r ^ m m i s Rife and Mn Deem, senior-advisers sioners did not mean any saving'to $he have based their discussions on the C0linty that in arranging the first and second chapters of the home co||nt annua, gud t salarieB pf deputies in the office of the sheriff, and probate judge were increased filia l to _ , . , , _ . . _ ,• _ . an amount near the $000. Both offices John Remhard, Lou.se Graham, Lom ^ unde]; Democratic control toei^e Anderson ^ d Ruth (Topefand took wefe no increase8 for Republican charge of the discussion in their home d ^ in other offices< rooms. \ . ;■■-■■.■:*■■:. ■. -i • fv It is planned each week to feature the work being done 4n this program in one grade room and: one high school class­ room activities book. Facts about our schools and relation of school -.and home have been interesting topics. Artiinstructor - Monday, January 24, after deva­ state tax commiaeion. COMtNBSOMQUET m i EVE E. Devoe, late of Caesarcreek Twp. under $1,000 bond. ( , has been named ad-j ,rtdul*e *,n mud-slingmg,rather than _ a / Mnnttlhimii toatlaa Httd W. S. Rogers ministrator of the estate of Cora J, Kelsey, under $600 bond. Swimming Pool Plans Are Near Completion Will Draw Saturday For Tournament! fk 'j .... . ReptotonUtiveg of eight rural high school^gdii gather Saturday morning, Feb. office^ of '’^CoUhty] School Super^lteitdent H. C: Auitman to make drawings for the first round in Grtjjene'Gomty’B annual Class.B, basketmdl tournament. The |fcpurney wjll be staged Thurs­ day, Friday and Saturday nights, Feb. 24, 25 .‘tihd 26 a t Central gymnasium here. |W. :|5C.. Puntoh .qf Mechanics* burg, who handled the 1937. county cage elastic, liaS bSen reeniployed as head cnieial dor tits 1083 event, ftnd will pr|vido iiji assistant official of his, own ae^ctie^'to work with him. J, MIGHT $UST AS WELL OR^RR SOME MORE COAL February find has* come and gone but foliHtihgi^he.grouhd hog was one of the whit shadows that could be ex­ pected ^hder a bright sun, This means Wfftks mote o f (winter) weathemmmiwfcai in tbe bin, of ft trip jto the IftSlfwf sunAltine.• A committee composed of William Anderson, Charles W; Adair and E. A. Drake, county farm agent, named to represent Green?-co. in negotiations for a federal-state aid swimming pool in Bryan park, near Yellow Springs, will meet with representatives of the other seven interested counties in Springfield to complete plans for the pool. The pool, jointly promoted by the Boy Scouts and the 4-H clubs will be for" exclusive use ofi the boys part Of the time and will be thrown' open to the public a t other hours. The federal government will finance the Construc­ tion and the state will operate and supervise the pool when completed; Bryan park in in . the geographic center Of the 4-H Club Camp, Inc-,.find Tecuffiseh Area, Boy Scouts. The gov­ ernment has approved the, plans for a 45 by 120 foot pool fthdtha* allocated $40,000 for the project. The eight counties will be asked to raise $10/300 PURCHASER FARM a discussion of problems, issues and the cures for present ills. The present Governor brought into Ohio politics, the mud-slingihg era to the jpoint th a t even his friends, in the legislature are beginning to follow suit in an attempt to win re-election! Tax-paying voters should again start asking questions about the “ cost of beans in Welfare institutions," and disregard the political clap-trap of “Who killed Cock-Robin V* Clifton Young people To Stage Production Young people of the Clifton Pres­ byterian Church will take over the Clifton Opera House a t 8:20 p. m< Saturday; Feb. 5, to stage a three act comedy mystery*1“The .,Night Owl." Extra stage equipment to lend, weird and gruesome atmosphere to thft production, including equipment to siihulate a thunder storm, has been procured. The cftSt was selected from those, experienced in amateur plays, and promises plenty of action; Gomfdy is supplied iiLcbtef by Russo) and, Junior Luse, who* play detective roles, with Russel impersonating woman, a t one p^int in the piay, Frank O. Harbison and sister Elsie, Other members of the cast include Ion Wednesday purchased the farm on Hetty Young,.,Irene Eckmon, Mae Ith t Barber. read , belonging to -Mrs, MF«ri,..Areb7Myers, Naney Luse. Garl John B. Harm?. TbeY^n t comprietoJWasnerj Raehti CWtici and ROteb iftStt acres, . j.Xtiattb, You are making it hard for the little fellow. You must not make it hard for the young fellow to start." Big Busines# 'Went into St jauntily, expecting in­ dependent competition to be abolished and small business controlled. The plan pinched small business most, a “little fellow" dealing' in chickens complained, and brought it to an end. On the surface it would seem a change has occurred Since 1988, for now the professed object of concern is small business. But there is no change; no matter a t which point a program of control begins, it never stops until it tons from end. to end. The appeal, to take the side of the weak against the strong is what we naturally incline to dd even though common sense tells us, that by the strong the Weak live. In- an age of iclever words I t <becomes necessary | to consider what lies behind such an , appeal and what its success may mean- “We notice a t once that here is one more .way to divide the people into antagonistic classes, That strategy ! is familiar to us—the attempted rifts between, youth and maturity, between farmers and city people, between cm* ployers and employes, between those who have mere and those who have less—all of which failed save one,1 whose partial success is waning. And now this new suggestion of artificial . cleavage between business large and The Annual Home Coming Banquet gmal, B and Bssketbsll game will be held m ^ not,ce atg0 the faminRr fai< Alford Gymnatium, IMtonlay evening, Jacy ^ one byaTlch of production February 5. Dinner will be served may ^ penaIized witbout injuring a t 6 p. m. . . the other. Tangled in a thicket of The speaker of the ovening will be red ^ 8Uch as it hild navej, hnovmi Rees Edgar Talio*, Pn.D., D.D., LL.D., ptodUcing crtdieBB paper reports and president of Wittenberg College, jj^reft for the new public armies of Springfield- j clerks, hampered by ' imposts and I f ymr have not ^ Sou red , your regulatiojl9 unbbar(l Of in free na* tickets, Me each, call the. College office tJon<j> imJllBtpy noW hM heavier for reservations. burdens than it can boar, but the irony of it is, the demands made of “big F a r m e r s U r i r e d T o business" fall most heavily and1 hinderingly on the “little fellow." Ask - F j # h t ;<T s m s ” him, and listen to his story. The very . .■ ..... . ’ act of assuming control beyond Its L. J, Taber, National Grange proper functions, automatically ftos, master, spooking b^eto :500-farm- tratest he benefit that govtetoment era a t' Columbus last weak a t OSU, Intends. Never yet has special legls urgefc the farmer* o f.the nation to latiortbeen able 18 limit its effects to fight the “isms" that", are sweeping special groups, the -country. * . • “Then, there is the inveterate mis* Taber stated: “ The world is suffer* apprehension of fact*. Dividing in* ing Horn over-ptodu4tion of theories dustry into “big" and “little** Is and- wild ideas and under-sonsumption Artificial, Industry Is both — that b l 'boirtmoh sense. ; toftnkliid iWftkBnt fudostiy. Ninety-eight per, needs is fewer-to-c^ftd*i$per-)eader- cent of American industries employ ers anti more men and women imbued less than 600 men each. Today’s big with th e spirit of Jtofd, community industries were small within our life* mid sta te . * » We t W i many today’s small industries want a more prmpetotia.Ogrieulture; will become big before opr lifetime but ftbefe all W* iwdit * mare satisfy* «hds* U rg e industries make small ing w * l ^ $*9* m $ , H. J. Fawcet|Now County Treaftixrer Harold J. FaWcett, chjef depkty ifii''; » j t . . . _ the Greene County teeasuriH^s ftfitce, tions. led by Miss Hmma.Mfes Force, Measurer Tuesday mstructor of a rt in the public schools, BUCCbeding HJ ry M. Smith> who £ spoke to, the high school pupils. After „ ’ . , . The Angclua, the * a rt by pupils uul explain- g™ ?0? mB“ tto S * 1” "* NaUeart ah the purpose ef teaching art. .“ J » " “ « * « * ? * The boy’s quartette andrgirl’s sOx- . ... , tet, ns well ob Mr. Watson and Mr. In his new position Smith takes the Reed, sang the special numbers which P*8Ce Y. Dales Kyle, whose totire- they Had given at the teachers* meet* went from thft Citizens bftftk staff lug, Friday. terminates an association of nearly Illustrated Lecture 5.° yearB w*th this financial insttfo- Dr. C. E. Hill, of the local Methodist Ron- Church, continued the illustrated Fawcett, who was appointed county lecture on Mexico, a t the' Monday treasurer by county commissioners, morning assembly. The very Inter- became chief deputy ift the office when esting pictures depicted custoihs of Smith began his first two-year term. Mexican people. ‘ His staff includes one new appoMtee, ' Robert Kneisley of Osbdrn as bdbk- , Secretary 111 , keeper, succeeding Howard-C.'Moor- Miss Dorothy Nelson, secretary, was man, who was prompted : to chief absent last week due to illness. Dur- deputy. ing her absence, Eva Gray and Dftro- A number of floral pieties from thea Bobbitt assisted in the superin- friends graced the treasurer’s office tendent’s office, on the opening day. Services Appreciated 4 Local schools were closed, January W i l b U F B e a f d H e a d S 26 and 27, since the roads were blook- ^ _ ... ed with snow and buses were unable . L lV e S tO C K C o i l l l l l H i e e to make their routes. The local telephone operators, Mrs. Wilbur Bqard, of Jefferipn township Betty Gordon, Miss Marjorie Gray, has been elected chairman of tjhie Mrs. Maude Frame and Mrs, Alice Greene County Livestock committee, Huffman, assisted in notifying parents succeeding Roger ■Collins, -Gedgrville. that the school would be closed. Their other new officers are;Cecil Conklin, willing co-operation is greatly ap- vice chairman, and Earl McClellan, predated. secretary. . t The bus drivers deservemuch praise ^ho committee announced fhat dur- for the safe return of all pupils to jng tb(# year Greene county con- their homes, under the extremely bad Bigned 17|8 4 p head of livestock to the driving conditions ofTuesday Producera aaaodation at Dayton, January 25. The bus drivers witoout which represented 82.5 p«r cent of the exception total and led all othor cmmties. This William Fisher, Bennett McNeal, incjuded cattle, 862 Howard Swalm.- Safety Patrol boys accompanied and MIZPAH CLASS .BtEKTlNH assisted the bus drivers on the routes, Tuesday evening. These boys, who The Mizpah Bible tdoss of the First volunteered their services;, are to be Presbyterian church, met at the home commended. Each bus was equipped ef Mrs. W, R, Mc^hesney, Tbmdoy with a snow shovel to aid in emsr- afternoon, Feb, }. Miss Ann^islle gencics. Those Who gave their serv- Murdock, conducted the devetkinaU, ices are Keith Wright, pftptain; James Mrs. McChosney, president of the Deck, lieutenant; Wallace Bradfute; class; presided at the businsss gieet* Howard Frame, Keith Rigio, Jack ing. Roll callrwai oteiwsred byfsaoh Htiffman, PaUl Fteftey. Junior Judy, one giving a thfri poem. Mrs. i . B, Bud Ford, Philip Tindall, Junior Huey gave in original poem.. Bailey, and Walter Barnhart. Mrs. Effle tftekey, triiiUrer, teport* Efforts on the pari of the Town* ed that the Miss he* $150 in th i ha- ship Trustees, M. W. Collins, Hugh provement fund, Mrs. LMter Huston, Turnbull, and Meryl Stormont, to keep read and Commented on in tgtiela written by CWvtmning Pofiook, *<Tbo World’s Slew Btein/* Music Contest •* ... After the clom ef ttie prsgrftm a Cedarville High School will anker F»# tejersd Mte'MfteMi* the Central District Music Contest to bients were nerved to twterty Writes, be held at Wittenberg ^Oottcge, Mr«.McC1iete^r was ftteiated - — W, f t Harriman mi. Mm. -Jftmda (ContomA rn Itei» Ntedi) l Bratton, the roads clear ftre ivapreaSated. m

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