The Yellow Springs American, Volume 1, Numbers 1-22
T H E I A I V O L . 1 NO . 21 Yellow Springe, Ohio, Thursday, December 10 , 1953 REPORT ON TEACHERS MEETING COST OF CHICKEN AND TURKEY DOWN IF YOU CAN SHOOT STRAIGHT Red Everman, Jackson Rd., didn't have to go very fax nor work very ■hard to obtain a goodly supply of The executive heads of the local» chicken and turkey for his immed- schools in Greene County met Wed- i late needs nesday evening at the court House’ The Springfield Rifle Club held for their regular meeting, held a t , Its annual turkey shoot at the the beginning of each grading per- • outdoor range op Route 4, just lod. { north of Springfield, Sunday, Dec Ijl)(CU!r ton followed five main '(l. For 50 cents, one could take problems t three shots for chickens with a t l) Teacher supply and salary' limit of two. Red got chickens on schedules for next year It was each of his first two shots. For emphasized that early evaluation $i 00, one could take three shots of needs and a competitive salary spent another dollar and won an schedule makes possible a better other turkey standard of teaching In each school. n t. didn't do so well h ere-got only (2) AthelUcs Announcement of for tUrkeys with a limit of two, the candidacy of Mr, E,W Kavanagh one turkey with three shots. Ho for member of the District Athletic , Shooting rules for turkeys were Board was made and local princi- too yards at a 1-lnch chalk disk pals assumed the responsibility to off hand Rules for chickens were contact those schools voting this 50 yards at a Vi-lnch chalk disk, month. Clifton’s Junior High Lea- off hand gue Basketball dntes were added to Hod's score—2 turkeys and two the regular schedullc Announce- ; chickens at a cost of $2.50. ment was made that tournament ........... „ ____ competition must be complete by , MIAMI TOWNSHIP February 27 , 1054. The athletic com -: SCHOOL HONOR ROLL mlttcc took that under advisement* as Ute new "two and out" double* ‘ fh grade Mark Blxler, Susan elimination had a possible Marcli 1 Clark, Jem Filler, Julie Xxsud, Eve game j Odlorne. i3) Transportation Mr EG Shaw ; 8th grade-Donnld Gasho. Dieter and Mr, Vaughn Lewi:,, who alien- ■Knecht, David Ltthgow, Doris Bean ded the state meeting on transpor- Kathryn Beatty Dorothy Bittner, tatlon Tuesday, brought back some Janet Blackwood, Jane Dystra, Bla- of the recommendations of the State i *)11 Folkninnis, Nancy Mcranda, Department of Education and the ' Mary Ellen Mlnshall, Janice Schaub, SUite Highway Patrol, (a) Sub-tl- - Margaret Wise, tute drivers will be checked more j .Oth gradl—David Blackwood, Ju- c.losely <bi Out-of-county trips;He Couillard. Darrell Dawson. Atls must be certified <c* All accidentsi Folkmanis, Ann Huffman, David Involving buses must have an on-1 Kirkpatrick, Dianne Waechter thc-spot report. <d> Drivers w ill)' >0th grade-Anita Bean, Judy operator licenses must take a cliauf- Duncan, Peggy Finn, Yvonne Gibbs, four's examination to get a cliauf- Manfred Kncmcyer, Joyce Phillips, feurs license fci All field trips mu.ft Ellen Pillard, Mary Ann Shaw, have drivers with chauffeurs license Patsy Tharp, Charles Weller. Elenri- fflO f 233 accidents involving school fir Wise buses In Ohio In 1052-53, 83 were the lHh grnde-Evelyn Adams, Bar- bus drivers fault, There were 2 fat- bara Deal, David Champney, Jack allties; Ohio has one of the best Cochran. Elizabeth Finley, Shirley records in the country for school Miller, Douglas Williams. bus safety, <41 Committee Reports, The rurrlc- J2ili grade—Nancy Acton, Patty Alexander, Sue, DeWine, Sonia ulurn study, athletic revision and 1louden, Lulsc Rothemund, Xnrifa elementary report card committees fealluinc, Dlantha Whitmore, Marian all announced plans for January} Wingfield, Bill Mcffcrd. meetings to work on their problem i j /‘vf>¥p'rp-\TU G A I T M T V t5i Teacher's meeting i. A umtp.it - , \ jrlv ib I!K > i Hr L A a U I x l I Ison of methods Used by pniiclp.tls. BUDGET In directing teacher activities war, . 0 ~ , n made The asc of the weekly bulle* l i N C * l v l i / A o l i » U tin, teacher's committees, depart- j The Green County Board o f Edu- REMEMBER “POP” BAILEY? "Pop” Bailey Among County Deer Hunters "P op " Bailey, formerly of Romney and now residing in Winchester, ac companied by a group of friends from Baltimore, Edward Robinson, Herbert Meshaw and Gerald Nuz- zole, is one of the spryest and most energetic Hampshire County deer hunters despite his eighty-six years, A hunter with many decades of ex perience and much game to his cre dit, Mr, Bailey does not permit the accumulation of a few years to in terfere with Ills sports and other oc- tlvltles. With his party, he was a guest at the home of Mr, and Mrs. W.A. Hammond for the three-day season. * The above article, taken from , Mra. w ing was the real founder the Hampshire County (West Vlr- 0f that Yellow Springs institution MRS. M. H. WING ... Mrs, Maria Holland Wing, 326 Phillips St-, Yellow Springs, widow of John Wing, died Friday at 3 a. m„ In Mercy Hospital, Springfield. Her death occurred on her 85th birth day, -* In failing health several months, 6hc had been critically ill two weeks. The daughter of Andrew and Belle Griffin Holland, Mrs Wing was bom at Wllberforce, Dec. 4, 1868. She pas a member of the Central /Chapel AME Church in Yellow springs. Mrs. Wing is survived by two sisters,, ^rs. Pearl Thompson, of Wllberforee and M'rs. Catherine Mingo, olj Yellow Springs; two bro thers, Andrew Holland, Yellow Springs, And John Holland. Dayton, and a number or nieces and neph ews. JUDSON JEROME |WE WARNED YOU! SPEAKS AT A.A.U.W MEETING ginia) Review started us reminisc ing about a number of tilings . “ Pop" Bailey who is really William W- Bailey. Is a former resident of Yellow Springs, He has two sisters living here - Miss Ella Bailey, Xenia Ave, and M’rs. Albert Pultz, E- North College St., as well as a number of nieces and nephews. Mr. Bailey lived In the red brick house on the comer of Herman St and Xenia Ave., now occupied by Mr. Ed. Carr. He ran a successful truck and fruit farm on property extend known as the Goods Exchange. About .1935, Mrs. John Birch, head of the P. T. A., asked Mrs, Wing to take Into her home and distribute donated clothing. Mrs, Wing accepted the responsibility and washed, mended and fitted (being an excellent seamstress) un til Nov., 1941. A t that time it had become a real* burden to her. Mrs. Hilda Livinston and Mrs. Sarah Adams, with" Mrs. Wing and the late Mrs- Georgia Pettiford, co operating, rented a room. Mrs. ing both north and south of the big j vying continued to accept partial brick house. We wonder how many ] responsibility as long as she was people in Yellow Springs remember j abie Not long before her death, the closed vegetable wagon and th c .s-ne inquired if there were still team of mules he drove to Spring-jp,enty of donations to care for the field with his produce. How many ■npedy remember the green houses that! Untii her last illnesSf Mrs, w ing were connected to the house on the ,represented the AME Church on south side? j the Community Council. She was He grew his own plants and they, devoted to Wllberforce University were worthy of the name. He was and never missed a commencement. A study of a new law concern ing platting o f real estate which has been a controversial subject One must not suppose .that, how-1**ncc R was set up under a rc- ever useful, fact is truth,” declared 1v *-s*on of the Ohio General Code Judscn Jerome, Antioch assistant'"'*** undertaken by the Greene professor o f English. Thursday night] County Bar Association, when he addressed the Antioch* A committee to study this new chapter of the American Association I low was named by J Carl Mgr- of University Women at the Antioch 5 shall, bar association president, at tea room. ' |n luncheon at the Lawrence Hotel Mr. Jerome discussed "Facts,;Monday noon at which State Rep, Their Prevention and Curt,'''~tad _Herman K . Ankcncy, Dayton P k , his talk dealt with the distinction f discussed the measure, between facts, inferences and Judg-j Pointing out that he had "no ments- jpart” In the passage of tills new In defining a fact, he termed It,measure, Rep Ankcncy explained a statement which points to the |that under the revised law the world outside our nervous systems, 1county auditor is permitted to re- expressed in terms about which we fuse to transfer any tract of less all roughly agree. Such statements: than five acres for building pur- do not apply to more than can be •poses and which previously had observed by the senses, and they,been platted. He said the measure do not evaluate. They are based; was designed to control building on arbitrary terms which have the and eliminated haptnzard planning PERSONALS Robert Fink, Ohio State Univer sity, and his fiancee, Miss Norma Carne W, formerly of Fort Lewis, Washington, spent the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W il bur E. Fink, Allen St. Mr. and .Mrs. Cliff Wallace, of Pleasant Kill, were guests of Mr, meaning they are given by agree- ■and to define the tract more ac- ' f rl< KMph Oster, Winter St-, ment among men. 1 curately last Tuesday. "An inference/ he continued, "is; Five Xenia lawyers were named! Thursday guests at Uic homo of a generalization. I have observed , to a committee to study the law M r and Mrs. Ralph Oster Winter many fingers and many arms, and,and to recommend to the nssocia- s t , were Mr and Mrs- Tester Al all the arms tI have sccn wcrejtion whether it should go on rec- ien, of Jeffersonville and" Mr and longer than the fingers I have scen.;ord in favor or the measure or ask Mrs Dick Smith, of South Solon Each observation is a fact. From [for its repeal, Committee members | x x x x these facts, I Infer that all arms,arc Philip Aultman, John V. Gib-* Mr, Frank McGowan, son of Mr. everywhere are longer than all jhey, Charles R- Finney, Marshall ■and Mrs. Frank B. McGowan, Day- fingers everywhere. This amounts ( J. Massic and Prosecutor George1ton Pk., attended a meeting of the to a prediction that every arm I.R . Smith. The group will report j Oil!o Cheviot Sheep Breeders Assn, see will be longer than every finger.}at the association's next meeting ‘‘A judgment is an expression o f .on Dec. 28. approval or disapproval, and when- * The association’s Fee Schedule ever such a personal reaction is j Committee chalrmanned by Rob- stated in absolute terms, there is j ert K. Shoecraft was authorized to danger of confusing It with fact *study the mlnimium fee Schedule You can’t verify a Judgment. I f for title examinations, preparation judgments conflict, you cannot e x -' of Income tax returns and collec- pect them to be reconciled by refer- ( uons and make recommendations In ence to facts- A decision may be ,jn charges in fees If necessary. Other reached, by vote or by persuasion, i members of Attorney Shoccraft’s Saturday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John R, Bickett. Union Rd. A t that meeting Mr Bickett was renamed president of the associa tion. X X X X Miss Joyce Bernadine Clark, daughter of Mrs, Telitha Clark, W. Davis S t, was one of eight county seniors who made their debut at a cotillion sponsored by Wllberforce ers-by. No one was a more avid follower In 1946, The Home and School of the almanlac and the phases of i Association presented her with a the moon. For him these practices jsCroji recognition of her devotion worked, because other exhibitors at ^ school*, the Greene County Fair didn't have punend service* were held Mon- a chance wlpn hls flne « * * * « . . ^ 2 pr r ^ w central Methodist " ” " ' AME Church In Yellow Springs with and fruit* were there. ______ Mr. Bailey left Yellow Spring*,t>uri«l in Glenn Forest Cemetery, more than thirty years ago to faaac R LoUden officiated. age a large orchard near Romney, _______ ___________ W,Va. Even after he retired from ' T O that position he liked to go out to J * ^ * * ™ ™ the orchard to "get his hand in *’ !SPEAK AT A Story Is told albout an Incident j i r j f l W I Y f i T f l M that happened when he wo* past] ,, , 80 years old. The orchard was short! Charles F, Kettering, director of of pickers so "Pop” decided to go General Motors Corp, and dean of * “A 1 M tIAM * ■««! 11 f #1 oi gioup inm ings were each Jr.v/on approved a 1954 budget re- out to help. When he came home In . American inventors, will be the discussed The eheif ri-meni of frlc -' quest for $ ,17.350 at their regular ^ eVenlng he said, " I don’t kn ow .P fin^P^ speaker a t Wilmington Uoii seems to be related to holding December meeting, Thursday even* what they aregoing to do about College’s Business-IndustryNight meetings after those teachers that ieg. in the Court House,Tills repre* pickers out there - those old men, Friday at 8 p- m,, during the week- dnve school buses return from their 'rents nn Increase o f $850 over the thc/are hiring(60 \o 65 yrs.) aren't long gedlcatlon of the newAudl- routes, j request for 1953 a year ago, worth a plugged nickel!'* I t seems; torium-Finc Arts Center, A regularly scheduled mcetiiKt ] Most of tlic increase was made time was recommebded in order that ■to provide for a Citizen's Committee teachers could plan their tune W e ll-,on School District reorganization, planned meetings were al .o urged should the board deem such action as a key id successful co-operation j nere'/snry, or If a petition Is pre- Thc meeting was followed b> ft tented demanding such action, Ac dinner together at Oeyer’s. j cr.rding to ft law passed by the re cent session of the legislature, such A committee may be organized after June L 1954. It# purpose would be i* survey existing school district boundaries „ , ^ . and approve the present arrange* The Mizpah Bible Class o f the j mcnt 0r propose a plan to change Methodla Church met in the church J(hp cx,sUng Up Membership "Boss' Kettering, as he Is af- ---- -------- missea a commencement. ii,„ rfpMdnn icn’t rieht in Chapter of the Links, Inc, at the always experlmenUng with new v a r-.She WiiS s membcr oJ ^ commStteJ ^ c tknt a m ^ of this*:“ Co,nmon Jlld« c Xenia Armory Saturday night lettes. Wc remember the specimen ^ declded the ^ when the c iS te rteh? plants of curly chard that he plant- Church and s u te schools separ- «The difference between one' W ' B- McCalllstcr, Municipal Judge ed in the flower urns in EH. Bat-?ftted in e Qlnerencc D etv,Ll 0 ley’s front yard. The new "flower” ! A!'though Mrs- Wing never hitd caused much comment from pas3- *W1y children of her own, she was constantly surrounded by children. D M. Aultman and Prosecutor Smith mans Judgment and anothers is, Twpnty.slx menlber;. attendpd par ly in the access he c a c .h a te ; ,un(;heon w)llch to fact and partly in the amount ; a for ^ ^ ■ t t s ^ s s r . . s l s £ — >■’ when tlic reports arc In, one must still evaluate; one must choose; one must decide.” MIAMIGRANGE ’ CHRISTMAS PARTY KETTERING ENTERTAINS . , , . ___Heavy canvas still curtains one of The annual Cll^ nlas P ^ ty , the main entrances of the new labo- Miaml Grange will be held m the (ratory of Kettering Foundation new Grade School Auditorium at 6:30 p, m., Wednesday, Dec. 16. Tills Is for Orange members and their families. Turkey for supper will be furnished by the Orange, as well as dressing, rols, butter and coffee Each family is to bring a covered dish and Its own table scrv- X X X X Mr. Richard Fulton, Jackson Rd„ entered Miami Valley Hospital Wednesday for surgery. ** Mrs. Charles Lucas of Xenia, en tertained w ith a dinner parly, hon oring Mrs- G A. Foye, o f Denver, Colo , at Trebcin Manor, Wednes day night, Other guests were Mrs* Leonard Grimes and Mrs. Lawrence Haller. X x X X Mrs, Alton Prince, PhlUips St.* returned to her home after spend ing some time Irt Maine with her fat.hr, who is critically ill. Mr and Mrs Paul Dawson, Allen Inside the First floor Is cold and j St., are planning to leave for Fort damp and unfinished. But on the warm second floor, lights were bur ning, windows have been polished until they shine, painters were hur rying along transforming gray block walls into pale pink. There was a Saturday night dead- *ce- . ...Mine to meet up here and It hadn’t There will be a fifty cen- B f"; anything to do with the sober re- j . _ .. exchange and a Christmas program ^ ^ energy t0 whlcl] *evening, The wedding will i t U ^ c e ^ u c r i ^ ' o S M e c u T ^ evenir^ Xor rcSem MIZPAH BIBLE CLASS dining hall Monday night. After devotions, led by Mrs. Dick Den- nljon, and the regular business meeting, a Christmas program was enjoyed by the members Mrs M K . Wilson gave a Christ mas reading; Miss Nancy Action ac companied by MVs Paul Tharp, played a clarinet solo and Mrs Mar vin Trollinger, accompanied by Mr«. on the committee would be deter mined by a county convention and would be limited to those holding no elective offices, not associated ulth the schools In any capacity, and to no more than one person from any existing jhtrict, of which (.here are ten In Greene County. A group of citizens from the northern part of Clifton Local Charles Hoskett, sang solos appro- Scj100j District appeared with their attorney, Mr. Pavlotas, of Spring- field, to informally discuss the pbf- slblHty Of iraiisferring a sh ill tract of land including lour families 10 the Greene Special District In Clark County, In the absence of neces sary legal papers, no action was eon- prlate to Use season Under the supervision of Mrs Florence Schrcpplc, gifts were wrapped and tagged for the board ing students of Erie School at. Olive Hill, Ky t Refreshments fitting to the sen- L - e ! 0t*ry- JCKfll * son were J'CIT d by liu;#hos^ f ’ sidered at this time. Mr*. M. E, laventier, Ntrs. O A,. county hoard also approved Nonker, Mrs. Earl Williams, Mr*, * urrpnt bfljg Q{ and discussed Dick Dennison, and Mrs. Bess Burn* ^ nped for addtlional clerical help eth tin the office, and an elementary supervisor In the county school*. They included a request for funds for those purpose* in tht 1954 hud- get- '®he balance at the1 end' Of the COUNCIL MEETING A lot of discussion which always precede* ‘'action to be token at the ypar wll, approx|mate I7J1O0. meeMmr’’ wax she rule at the ..../ , . . . . . . , . , , , men” Of 60. i will speak on “ The Genius of the I f you are traveling on Route 50 CreaUve Act,” with business and between Romney, W V*. and W in- Industry leaders from southwestern Chester, Va , and would like to see ohlo as guests of the College, Con- MT. Bailey, don’t, when you ask fo r . trjbutions of money and materials direcUons to his house, ask for Will toward construction of the arts Bailey. Nobody can tell you a th ing.,building came from Ohio industry We know - we tried It! Just ask fo r , and business In great part "Pop ” Bailey and everyone know*! Following the address, a perform- Saturday. December 12 at 1 pm. at -anbe of the medieval morality play. Just a little more on the hunting / ‘Everyman,” will be given- Lauderdale, F la , In a few days. They expect to be there for several weeks, x x x x M r and Mrs. A e Peterson, Route 1, are expecting to attend the wed ding Of Mrs Peterson's nephew, Richard Mitehner and Miss Phyllss Borst, o f Bowersville, Saturday take following the supper. ’ T n T f c * m o r Z 7 lh b m r ic m b m 7 d > lac<’ J" thc ChurCh of God 111 Please call either 7-4346 or 7-57i0 win ^ dedicated D ie workman i Bowrrs' ic' v were hurrying along because Charles Among tho.w? from Yellow Springs Charles F Kettering and his foun-1 Wh0 will attend the Pioneer Hybrid dation staff were entertaining Sat* JCom Co.’s Chrikknas party arc; urday night and thc guests weren't Mr. and Airs, Flody Bailey, M r and Ding to be the bigwigs of the scion- f Mrs Alfred Hu tolar and Mrs A E. tlfic world who’ll be visiting the j i>W rRon. The party will be in the building later. The guerts wcrl going 1 form 0( a tm n dinner and will bs to be gay young girls in frothy even - ' held at the Bee and Thistle, Fair ing dresses and their escorts j bom, Saturday. Mr. Kettering was giving a dance' fo r AnOOch College, the students - STUDENTS AT lions. CHRISTMAS TREE FESTIVAL PLANNED The annual Bryan High School Tree Festival has been planned for the tt-hool forest. Activities are being supervised o y jand u,e faculty story He with friend*, has been go- '■ Kettering, who now serves as the Bryan Student Council, with thej Before the party began, Mr. Kc t- in* t ‘n Colorado everv year until this chairman of the board of trustees j faculty sponsor, Mr, Fredrick Judd,, tering was a dinncr guest of Pre..!* w x r to hunt elk Last year he was at Ohio State University and on the |assisting D iere will be two kinds o f : dcnt and Mrs Douglas McGregor, fh . onto member of his Dirty to boards of Antioch College andthe trees available - white pine and;with Mr. and Mrs Prpd jfooven. cf \autumn quarterare: Betty J. Black toln* home the bacon , or elk. National Geographic Society, Is scotch pine, many of w-hich w illjje .Dayton. Like Hooven, Mr. Ketteringman.ShellyBlaskman, Thomas E. iUm tfiwMfwnr tnr lilt x STATE Student:; from Yellow Springs who are enrolled at Ohio State this that I*! .known the worldover for his wide | list of inventions, which at the time ’ teemed revolutionary' and which to- P U \ ^ r f f R l S A < ? ^ sWm commonPl‘ ce ind nec€S' P L A N S C H R I S 1 M A S 'sary lb the conduct of our day-to- P A P T Y 1 activities- r J V I V l x jjls contributions number In the Morgan House Is presenting ft hundreds, but the invention of the Christmas party Saturday night t o Mjf.starter, ignition and lighting which all faculty members and stu-,sygtems for automobiles; high oc- dento of Antioch are invited. ‘ tone gas; rural power generation; The party will start at 7:30. Plans eiecerjc casSl registers; chemical re- have been made to decorato r out-;frJ(er|iUon. Sifpty Ri&vl| &nd the door Chnstm*s tree. A taffy Pul* 1 tWo-cycleDlescl engine rank at the will be going on indoors Of cour»e,1 ~6 this may well turn Into an outdoor.1 P‘ ________ m _______ _ " S L t w h»ve ^ j N U M E S H O R T A G E asked to give talk* on “What C O N T I N U E S Christmas Means to Me.” These members are Ken Hunt. Mary Hunt The shortage . of professional ...... — - —- ...................— - j nurses for the nation as a whole Irwin Abrams and Walter Ander-jjmy exceed 80.000 by I960, It was son. 1reported here today by officials of a portion of which 1$ earmarked for thc expenses and salaries for the next ting” s t l council meeting Monday night Yellow Springs, that Is combining wants 1 and 2, and wards 3 and 4, Allowances for police uniforms were discussed and tabled for further action at the next meeting,. The first reading of the reW l of the ordinance for admission tax was recorded, Mrs, Hilda Hahn was authorized to purchase the Hour to be distri buted to worthy widows at Christ mas; With The Sick Mrs. W, E. Jacobs continues seriously til at her home on the Fairfield Pk. x :X X X Miss Florence Williams, W, M, College Bt~, returned to her home Sunday after several weeks In Mercy Hospital, Springfield- She is able to be up and about a part of the time. A serious note will be given to j,hc at- Elizabeth School of Nursing, the party when the group will break Dayton, up into units and go through tlie j estimated ,1s based on U. 8. village singing carols. ! government research, considering It Ifi hoped that those who are ^ present student nurse en honored witn csrol*, will respond •rojiment figures and the anticipated by giving canned goods to the group.»pMmbriion Increases. These canned goods will be added to the Christmas boxes that are de livered on Christmas Eve by the Community Council. To assure enough graduate nurse* for the future, student enrollments pre-cut and trimmed for you. For t jg ft memhcr of the board of trustees Brown. Wendell M. Byrd, J r , Rob- yoU who like to do your own cutting. s0c Antioch College ,ert W. rink, William L, Hamilton, trees will be marked, from which? p oundaljon j ^ l f members helped Homer T Kemp, Mary A Mcfferd, you can lake your choice. Greens w pJan ^ party wer6 Miss Mary Dwight M Pembertin, Juanita II. for decorating purposes will also be W llken, Dr. Russell Kay. Dr. Harry Pyrlte, Marilyn J Snyder, Richard available. •V. Knorr and Lee Hennessey. Mew The trees will sell In the price Nancy Zelgler, of Slieboygan, Wis- rangc of $1.25 to $2.00. conslrt, was chairman of the student I f you have children who might committee which worked with the handicap your tree-cutting actlvi- j oundauon group- ties, there will be baby-sitters on the j sometime this spring, the bulld- grounds. Uhg will be dedicated and turned I f you come in your car - and wc-ovcf statf of scientists who presume most of you will - there * wjjj COntlhue ther search for the will be plenty of parking space and ’ answer w what makes grass green, boys to direct traffic. [ an answer which Mr. Kettering has If you get hungry, the p.T.A. w ill.said wm rdcagg for man’s use nn have members there to serve y °u j energy that will drawf atomic en- refreshments. Jcrgy. I f vou don’t know hoW to get lo j — — — — the Lhool forest, there will « AMERICAN LEGION markers to show you the way. Help to make this; a > CHRISTMAS PARTY occasion for the Bryan High young The annual Joint Christmas parly of the American Legion, Thomas Edwin Bailey Post, and It Auxiliary, people who have worked SOhard in preparing for ite event. FRIENDSHIP REBECCA^ be held Wednesday nevenlng, Friendship Rebecca^Lodge wiu ^ ^ at the Legion Home on m y * meet in the lodge hall, Monday, Dec, ^^ ^ Xhcrc wm be ft covered ll> ftt ^ „ f'dlsll supper to be served M MM All Past Noble Grands a .... *6:30 as possible. Everyone Is asked should be increased up to 25 per quested to be present- There jg brifi# tliWi MWiee ftB WMl U . cent, Jt was laid. . be election of officers durii^ _tne rols Will bft p » - t t f n m t t M - “At the St- Elisabeth School of business meeting, after which there vidad. BIRTHS Nursing we expect to do our full will be a Christmas program ana, Santa claus Is expected to be M3r. and Mni- Stewart Williams,^' share by admitting as many stu- refreshments will be served. |present and there will be a twenty- 221 N lligh St., are dSe ’parent* of dents next year m oru facilities will. Instead of the usual gift exchange. jjcp cent gjR exchange. There will a son born Monday, Nov IO, at the permit,” It wm state by Sister a collection will be taken to be used ^ entertainment which will be of Springfield City Hospital, Mlnalia, director of the school, 1toward the furnishing of a room at jntere*t to young and old, *•—-— —-— —•— -— ' “ the I, 0* O. r Home. ' ----- — > B. Spitlcr, Marilyn K . Welch and Ronald N Williams CHRISTMAS#SALE OF ART AND CRAFTS There will be a sale of arts and crafts made by students and faculty of Antioch College in thc Creative Arts Building on Dec- 12, from 7 to 8:30 p. m, and Dec, 13 and 14 from 1 to 5 p. m. The sale Is ponsored by the Crea tive Arts Work Shop Committee X X X X Antioch's Faculty Ladies’ Tea was held on Friday, Dec. 4, at the home of Mr* William Finlay on Old Enor. Rd. Co-hostesses were M’rs- Fed- crighi and Mrs, Humbergcr, This will be the last tea until January 8, COUNCIL PRESIDENT Brooks Skinner, Fairborn, Route 1, is new president o f the Clark County 4-H Club Council. Thc council, which Includes 273 leaders nhd assistants, helps direct the state’s largest county 4-H organi zation. There were 1,870 boys and girls enrolled in Clark County 4-H groups this year. The new president succeeds Rob ert O, Grleser, Springfield, Route 2 who served two terms and was not a candidate for re-election.
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