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Washington C.H. Record-Herald from Washington Court House, Ohio • Page 9

Location:
Washington Court House, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
9
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SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1937 WASHINGTON C. H. RECORD-HERALD i PAGE NINE yttaitc tite -st A cent a word tor first insertion, minimum 25c, one cent for each word, each additional day. One month for the price of three weeks. PHONE 22121 FOR Virginia lump $5.50 tax paid delivered city.

Ohio lump coal $5.15 delivered city. Call Clyde Smith, 27451. 11-24-241 LINE CONTRACT RATES ON APPLICATION FOR boxes, any size. FOR delicious, Rome Beauty, Staman Winesap, Leave route 70, one mile south ot new Petersburg at Karnes orchard sign, drive one mile west to orchard. Karnes orchard R.

2, Greenfield. Phone 314 Rainsboro. For Sale FOR Virginia lump $5.35 delivered city. Also Ohio coal. Call Clyde Smith, 27451.

I1-30-tf FOR new five room house, new barn and outbuildings, with 15 acres of fine land, 3 miles from Sedalia. See Ben Jamison. 10-2-tf per ton. Crushed limestone, delivered in Washington C. H.

For drives, lanes, etc. Phone 201 Greenfield. Blue Rock, Inc. 8-12-tf APPLES THAT from 35 cts. to $1.00 per bu.

Fresh sweet cider as good as you ever tasted. Bring jugs or kegs. Vandervoort Orchard, 4 mi. S. W.

of Jamestown. I l-30-t6 FOR of 104 acres near this city, good farm, nice home. Price reduced. Act quickly. IOO acres, 30 minutes from this city.

Mr. Renter, see about this one, only $2,000 down, balance long time at a very low rate of interest. Possession soon. Feed on farm for sale. Other farms, large and small.

Some at very attractive prices and easy payments See Jay G. Williams. 11-20-tf FOR SALE Baled straw. Sollars Implement Co. Phone 4661.

7-16-tf delivery. Phone 21861. Mmnery Roofing Co. 11-29-tf For Rent FOR Plymouth two door touring, good as new. One FOR garages.

314 E. Court st. 12-2-t3 owner. No tax. Apply Arcade Motor Sales Co.

12-1-lf FOR 16x60 feet rear of Grocery- D. T. McLean. Phone 21652. 12-3-t2 FOR 7 room brick house opposite armory, city heat if desired.

Phone 3811. 12-3-t2 FOR radios. Special one console radio $12,95. Table model radio $7,00. Also business cards $1.50 per thousand.

enders $2.95 per hundred. Manker Radio Sales and Printing Service. 727 S. North st. 12-3-t2 FOR houses and two apartments, G.

B. Lohr. 12-4-tf FOR Quality fine. Winter varieties ready now. Leave Route 70 one mile south of New Petersburg at Karnes Orchard sign.

Drive one mile west to orchard. Karnes Orchard, Route 2, Greenfield. Phone 314, Rainsboro. FOR Dr. Davis.

336 East street 12-4-tf FOR room modern house $20 per month; also 2 five room modern houses for sale. Inquire at 712 Carolyn road 12-4-2t FOR room, with meals if desired. 401 E. Temple St. 11-5-t I FOR and geese on foot or dressed.

Pure bred bronze turkeys for breeding. Phone 20391. ll-18-24t FOR loose second Cutting. Call 29302. 12-l-tl0 Gasoline, store, restaurant, living rooms, small town.

Rent $28,00 Must have sufficient experience and capital. Box 306 London: O. FOR plant complete with batteries. Semi-automatic. Call Mrs.

Bruce Mark 20393. 12-3-tti Wanted FOR drop leaf table good condition. Phone 57W1 Jeffersonville. 12-3-t2 butchering. We call for and deliver, J.

W. Smith, two squares rear Graves Read the Classifieds Shell gas station on N. North st. Phone 26524. 12-l-t24 RADIO BROADCASTS wan Comm ba.

IT IAI ClBOlim.tl lr COX. ITT AM Cl. val.ad.,, ADK A WABC Bow WHA! X.oal. WBK lchm.ctodjr.., .1070 SM SSO 7S0 Chicago .....................770 Bow York 7 so VJB D.trolt.................. 7M WOS Chil ago 700 WIW Cladus.ti.......

700 WBAP aw York SM WHO Columba. 640 BOID SUNDAY IS TO WFAF-NBC -7. Jack Benny and Mary; 8, Charlie McCarthy Hoar; IO, Rising Musical Stars Clark Gable in to 6. Joe Penner 7, John Charles Thomas; 8:30, Earaches of 1938, 9, Sunday Evening Hour! Lawrence Tibbott. WJZ-NBC I 30.

Radio City Symphony; 7:30. Keg Murray's Program; 9, Tyrone Power's Playhouse. By C. E. BUTTERFIELD Time is Eastern Standard' New York.

Dec, Hoover, speaking at Chicago, has been scheduled for a mid-December broadcast. He is to speak on "Economic Security and the Individual'' via WABC- CBS the night of December 16. The time will bo IO o'clock. MONDAY The O'Neills. 15, New Horizons by Trubcr Davison and Dr Roy Chapman Andrews.

Farm and Home Hour. SAT LI KI) A Y.DEC EM KEH I (MG HT) Presents; Fred Allen and Jack Benny, one enemies in broadcasting only, are going to get together again on the air. Jack is to call on Fred in his Town Hall broadcast of Christmas Week on a return visit for the occasion that Fred called on Benny's broadcast last March. That event officially ended the mythical feud which had been going on between the two In their individual programs over just what were Jack qualifications as a violin player of The Bee." Virginia Verrill Virginia Verrill, one of veteran performers, is often called the songstress of Before her national net-; work connections she sang on a popular California program which also served Bing Crosby and the Boswell sisters as a stepping stone to greater success Prior to her actual appeal ance in a movie. Virginia Verrill tilled numerous engagements dubbing in the singing parts for movie stars She made hei vaudeville debut at age of five.

her radio debut at the age of 12 and now although she is only 20 years of age. she has, appeared in ll radio As an added broadcast for WABC-CBS at 6:35 Monday. Newbold Noyes, associate editor of The Washington Star, is to talk on "The Worker Over 40 What is to be His Fate 6:00 VY KRO Quartet1 .1 WSM Kl I lev lew 6 KRC Dick Bray Bob Newhall Vt KRC Sport Resume AI Orch Cl I AV Don Best oi Orch WKRC In: heat a. 7 hi l.w Renfro KIU: Orch SAI Palmer House 7 10 RC Saturday Swing Sealion; WSAI orchestra. 8 on KW Believe It or Not: WSAI Hi, There, Audience 8 lo WL VV Jack Haley; VV KRC WSAI Kb rn Da me; Johnny I I AV National Barn VY Professor VV Br VS SAI Swing Kn i'in Die 9:15 Ri' Musical Moments, tv SAI try hest i a VV KW Ot i hest i a VV'Iv Rd Your Hit Parade, 53 VV New ca VV SAT Of Mi, ll oo VV KW Paul Sullivan; VV KRC Ii WSM ch.

IPSO KW Orch' tra: VV ftC SUNDAY, DECEMBER (DAY) ON TOE SATURDAY NIGHT LIST Tex Boys; Bob Ripley Program' 8:30. Jack Haley's Show. WABC-CBS Niagara Falls Band; 8:30, Johnny and Russ Morgan; 9, Professor Quiz; IO, Hit Parade. VV PW Quartette; WK HP Way- Dorothy Rreelin mil Phqivh, WSM William Mender VV KW Radio City Music IU Ta bf i nae Ie. ICI 0 "ll VV KW Rev Rattail WJZ-NBC 8 30.

Linton Wells Comment; 8 45. Songs bv Nola Day; 9. Barn Dance (west repeat, ll). All-American Team Selected to work in Call at Bakery, 224 E. Court st.

12-2-t3 Bai fey HERS man for farm work. Phone 88R12 Bloomingburg. 12-l-t3 RrLEASCD BY CF NTH AL mess ASSOCIATION WANTED TO or 3 unfurnished rooms for light housekeeping. Call 20154, mornings. 12-3-13 RVI AD THIS KIRST: Jerry Chandler, son of a country in modest circumstances, after a course at Yale, finally meets Muni Le Brim.

now a St. Louis society girl, whom he has admired for years. She is a cousin of Lionel Clark. Jerry's only lose friend at college. All three.

with several other young people, are at a Maine camp presided over by Olga, an attractive young woman who married Minn's wi althy grandfather shortly before he died Jerry has just met Andy Fuller who is In love with Muni. And now Jerry is with Mind herself. More impressed than ever with Minn's charm Jerry feels he is going to enjoy the house party. At a nearby dame the first evening. Jerry begins to resent Andy's attentiveness to Mimi.

Nr w. back from the dance at 2 a. Lionel decides that Jerry must read to the group a play they have written Jerry reads the play that he and Lionel have written to the house party guests Irater he goes outdoors where Mimi finds tell him that aho his play, and its ideated hero. Andy, fingered. finds them.

Suddenly Mimi tells Jerry she has promised to marry Andy. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY: CHAPTER 17 I HAD THE brooch I had taken from Mimi's dress in my hand. are going to give it back to Fuller," I stated. do you think I shall let you sell yourself for a thing like It to me," she said in a strange little voice. I put both of my hands on her shoulders.

va iii you promise. I shall keep you can go back; and if he asks for it you can tell him that he can come and get I was absolutely reckless. It seemed to me at the moment that if Andy would come and ask for the brooch we could settle the thing there, as men had settled such affairs since they first fought for a woman. My father would never have done it as I did. But my Uncle Jerry would have done it.

My defiance is a debt I owe to Uncle Jerry. For I am sure that it saved recklessness of it, and the feeling that I meant what I said. if I give it she temporized, there be a next time and a next? I told you Andy was the apple on the tree, Jerry. And he's always hanging there, waiting to be The words seem light, as I write rn, hut she was in dead earnest, and I heard myself saying, as if someone else were speaking: will not be a next time. Oh, Mimi, Mimi, if you would only let me show you what love can Her lips were parted.

"What can it be, I told her in a rush of eloquence. How we would go together to that far country; of the shining palace in which she should rule; of the dawns that would come up over purple hills; of the nights under the stars. Well, I have said I was a poet. And I was carried on by my imagination, beyond myself, beyond realties, into that'land of fancy in which I had lived since a child. Ami when I finished I had her in my arms, under the moon, and he was saying: would it be like that, Jerry?" And I was saying: "It would be more than that.

I have no words to tell you all that It would She made me no promise, opt that she would givt the brooch back to Andy. know hat I shall say to ITI do She could not, she told me, when the first flush of exaltation had lased, think of marrying me. We live on dreams, "I ll make them come I assured her, stoutly. The next morning Andy Fuller did not appear at Mimi. I learned that she had a headache, and sent her a scribbled note.

She wrote back: "I gave the brooch to him, and he ia simply wild. I am keeping cut of his way till ha gets over As I could not sea her, I bunted my horse and rode brough the wood When I reached the place where I had found her hat, I dismounted and went toward the clump of white birches where I had first seen her. I sat on the log where we had sat together. Not far away was the quiet pool with its amethystine shadows Now and then a bird came down to drink, but there were few birds in the dark forest, and for the most part not a sound broke the stillness. Then all at once I heard the brittle crackle of the needles under foot.

I looked and saw a tall figure on the other side of the pool. It was Andy Fuller! He did not see me, for I was hidden by the thick growth of birches His face was dark, and he seemed as he stood there to cast a sinister shadow among those deeper shadows. He had something in his hand which sparkled, and he was looking down at it. Suddenly fie lifted his arm and flung the shining I thing into the pool. I guessed I then what I learned afterward was the it was the peacock brooch which disappeared with a gleam and a ripple into the watery depths.

It is probably there the wonderment of all the little fishes! I went back and found Mimi by the fire, and everybody else down for the late lunch. The mail had come, and a telegram The telegram was from my father. My mother was, he said, very iii They wanted me at once. I came into my fathers house as a stranger. I can not express the feeling which it gave me of utter separation from all that had made up the years I had spent there.

The house seemed diminutive, the trees dwarfed: nothing was it used to be, except the lake and the high arches of the sky. My mother lay in bed, a waxen figure with silver hair. Yet the rooms were peopled for me by energetic ghosts of her, restless, busy, worrying over my little lies, tying my father up in gingham aprons. But now she was not restless or busy. No matter how much she might wish to follow the old paths, her feet could no longer tread them.

She was often in great pain, and hour after hour my father would sit beside her boti, holding her hand, and sometimes when I passed the door I would see him on his knees beside her. I knew then how life had knit them together. In earlier years their dreams may have differed, but in their long sharing of a common lot they had grown close in spirit, and I realized that to my father my mother had become once again the girl who had led him into high paths of duty for his soul sake. Outside my mothers room the whole house bore the stamp of Rose Drury's occupation. Her personality pervaded everything.

The bare beauty of shining cleanliness was no longer apparent, although It was clean enough: it was only that it was not so shining nor so orderly. Yet there was a certain color and glow which the place had lacked in my time pink sweater on a chair, the bright pink of the gingham dresses which she wore, w'ools out of which she was knitting another sweater heaped high in a basket, a bunch of pink roses crushed into a bowl on the center of the table. The meals which she put on the table were most generous and, I may as well admit, more tempting than my mother had ever served. Our menus had been in a sense ascetic: we had always had enough to eat, but no time or money had been wasted on our appetites. Rose gave us great dishes of meat in their own rich gravies.

She baked cakes for with chocolate, or white with coconut. And she ate them fierselt, sitting at the end of the laole in her pink dress and with her pink cheeks matching the roses of the bowl. Because death stalked under that roof. I swung back once more to the things I had forgotten. Forced to face a future without my mother, I asked myself again questions about eternity.

When the breath left that frail body, would the spirit live on and on, as my father believed? Yet I did not want to think of death. I wanted to drink of to share with Mimi youth and joy, all vividness of experience, i felt that every moment away from her was a lost moment; that even now she might be drifting toward some destiny which would shut me out. I wrote her tong letters of eloquence and entreaty If she would ait. Her notes in reply were brief. She had nothing to promise And gradually I lost the assurance which had come to me in that one moment of her surrender.

I grew depressed, wishing to escape from among the shadows into some space illumined by hope and happiness Every day my mother was growing weaker. When the pain was not too great, she liked to have me sit beside her and talk to lier of my tut tire. "What are you going to do with your life, "I should like to write, She pondered that. "What kind of What I really wanted was to write plays. But I should never have dreamed of telling her.

Nor that an almost finished manuscript of one was at that moment in my desk upstairs To my mother the theater was a place of evil influences She would nave been shocked and startled to know of my ambitions So I did not tell her Her bright, pain-tilled eyes were upon me. I ish you might have preached like your father I shall never be as good as my father." say that. He waa a boy like you when I met him, not yet having found the worlds need of him. I felt that he could do bigger things he has done them I hope that you may meet a woman some day, Jerry, who will bring the wish for bigger things into your I had met the woman. But I kept that to myself, The things to which I aspired would have seemed small in my eves.

To write a play? To marrv lo be lord of my own wide acres? She would' have blown all these ambitions awny with a puff of her breath. To know the Lord and serve hun. All else counted as nothing In the sum of her hopes for me So it was, as always, to mv father rather than to my mother that I poured out my heart I told him first of the manuscript in mv desk. "I like to read it to you. didnt do it alone; Lion el Clark and I are collaborating it I was glad to do It, and I read it to him as we sat under a big maple tree in the front of the house.

The sun was setting as I finished, and as I looked up. I saw that my father's gaze was on tnc luminous sky where two golden clouds floated in an almost breathless clearness. talent there And your theme is big. Fix your eyes on the stars, Jerry, You can't go far wrong lf you do Yet I knew that he nad fixed his eyes on the stars, and to what had it brought him? this bare parsonage- a lonely old age when my mother left him. Never would I act my feet in such a path never, never, never! (To Be Continued) ADDRESS ENVELOPES HOME FOR US.

GOOD PAY Experience Wonderful Everything supplied. Nationwide Distributors, 401 Broadway, 1. Y. 12-4-It huskers. Cal! Orville Bush, 20321.

11-30-13 butchering logs and cattle. Will call for and deliver. Phone 27341. 11-30-tf service by factory trained mechanic. General auto repairing.

Work guaranteed. Herman Easter, Dayton Ave. 11-29-6t WANTED TO hides. Cloverfarm Store, 143 N. Main St.

Phone 2527. ll-24-30t FUKS pay best prices for all furs caught in season. C. H. Paper, Mi.

Sterling. O. I1-13-tf WANTED Piano tuning and repairing. ll. C.

Fortier, Phone 27951. Call evenings. 4-20-tf repairing Greenfield Casting Co. Scott 'laster, 633 Daint Washington C. O.

8-2-tf WANTED TO hogs nd pig-. Call Edith Worthington. 5071. 11-8-tf Miscellaneous KILL THAT (OLD Rock and Rye. full quart.

98c. Made from 18 months old rye. Herbs Grill. 12-2-t24 Associated Plumbers Heaters Electric contractors. Fhone 8171.

12 2-16 We offer the people of Washington C. H. THE DEST SANITATION SERVICE IN OHIO at a price all can afford to pay. TWO PICK UPS WEEKLY OF GARBAGE, ASHES. cans and all ether rubbish.

Our trained men will remove ashes, elf. FROM YOUR BASEMENT AT NO EXTRA COST provided same is in one man containers. THIS SERVICE IS YOURS FOR 60c MONTH able quarterly in advance Commercial rates slightly higher. 7072 TWO PHONES 8971 WASHINGTON SAN IT AXION SERVICE Owned and operated by W. H.

Sullivan, Van Deman I l-29-6t Lost And Found teeth lower set. Reward. Phone 8233. 12-2-t3 LOST Small red male g. Phone 5531.

12-1-13 A imil.tr law in California also is being tested in two cases, attorney said. The lower courts, he said. had differed in their rulings on the two cases. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of Gertrude Flagler McCoy, deceased. Notice is hereby given that V.

R. McCoy and Roy Hagler have been duly appointed and qualified as executors of the estate of Gertrude Hagler McCoy, late of Fayette County, Ohio, deceased. MAX G. DICE, Judge of the Probate Court, No 4055 Fayette County, Ohio Dated Nov. 20, 1937.

N. P. Clyburn, Atty. (Continued from Sports Page) Claude Evans, and Vard Stockton. CENTER The conspicuous defensive roles to which centers are assigned in modern college football not only has increased the number of standouts but has also made the all-star problem that much tougher to solve.

Coaches generally pick their smartest, steadiest and best tackling linemen for the pivot posts. Most centers dictate the defense formations and figure in 50 per cent of the tackles along the line of scrimmage. This choice. Carl Columbus of Vanderbilt, measures up to the highest standards on all counts, including durability, but his margin is by no means daminating. Hinkle closed a 3-year varsity career in which he played 60 minutes in 13 games, snapped the ball unerringly, and rarely was out-foxed on the de- lense.

Nevertheless he as hard pressed in tile pursuit of all-star recognition principally by Kl Aldrich of Texas Christian and Ford- ham'a Alex Wojciechowicz, who covered as much ground on the gridiron as hts name does in the alphabet. One of the year's best duels was waged on the same field by Aldrich and The Texas boy. on the basis of unbiased accounts, did not come off second best. Two other heated sectional debates revolved, in the Big Six. around the relative merits of Charley Brock of Nebraska and Mickey Parks of Oklahoma, and, on the west coast, between partisans of Bch Herwig and Phil Dougherty of Santa Clara, Brock and Herwig got the sectional all-star nods.

Big Ten coaches favored Ralph Wolf of Ohio State over George Miller of Indiana. The Southern conference standout was Charley Woods of Clemson. BACKFIELD Old positional distinctions have been largely discarded in modern offensive football, with its wingbacks. tailbacks and blocking backs. All four men selected for this year's All-America backfield ate halfback types, though Yales Clint Frank carries fullback drive and power in his chunky frame.

Like California Sam Chapman. Frank also qualifies as a defensive backcr-up of the first magnitude In fact, with Frank and Chapman to furnish the locomotion, it is difficult to see how any opposition would have much success stopping their mates. Whizzer White and Higgle Goldberg, from running wild all afternoon. This combination, without any serious debate, is the country best, notwithstandmg a fine backfield class in the southwest and tile exploits of numerous others, on or off the big-league circuits. Not even the fact thev were on losing teams could dim the lustre of all-around great performances by Sid Luckman of Columbia, Joe Gray of Oregon State and George Karamatic Gonzaga.

Over the stretch and in the clutches, however, none ser- ously challenged the All-America leadership of Flank and White, the players of the year. Frank carried Yale along unbeaten until the final game with Harvard, tallied the last eight touchdowns registered by the Blue in 1937. and even in defeat was a heroic figure His defensive ability, though somewhat obscured by his passing and running exploits, was one of his greatest ascots. White, a quintuple-threat man. fi the Rocky Mountain sector with performances unrivalled since the palmy days of Dutch Clark.

Phi Kappa scholar rolled up amazing yardage well over 1,000 yards from scrimmage, besides running wild on kick returns, punting, passing and booting extra points or field goals. He Had To Be Good Goldberg had to be great to stand out on a Pitt team possessing extraordinary backfield talent as a whole. He starred on the defense and engineered what few passes the Panthers tried but was at his best on Pitts slashing reverses or off-tackle power thrusts. Like Goldberg. Chapman had to prove his greatness in exceptional company.

One of the mates, John Meek, shared all-coast nomination and another. Vie Botari, got most of the headlines because of his flashy ability in the open. Nevertheless, coast critics rated Chapman the best-all-around man in the best backfield they had under scrutiny. In the southwest, little Davey O'Brien of Texas Christian performed amazing iron-man stunts against as rugged opposition any team in the country faced. Dick Todd of Texas A.

M. and Hugh Wolfe of Texas rated high as runnmg backs. Ti 1 11 Patterson of Baylor was main rival for passing honors, Big Ernie Lain, sensat onal Rice sophomore, tore the conference apart with his late-season exploits and labelled himself the big threat man of 1938. Tulsa's Morris White gamed gobs of ground. Puplis, Pingel Stand Out Minnesota kist a potential All- America star in Andv Cram.

due to a broken wrist. Big Ten backfield honors went mainly to such veterans as Don Heap of Northwestern. Jim McDonald of Ohio State. Cecil Isbell of Purdue and Corby Davis. Indiana.

John Pingel of Michigan State rated high on his all-around qualifications and Andy Puplis contributed to some of Notre Dames big moments. The east contributed aside from those already given the accolade such other standouts as Bob MacLeod of Dartmouth, Bill Osmanski of Holy Cross, line-buster extraordinary; George Peck and Baker of Cornell; Hal Stebbins and Frank Patrick of Pittsburgh, and Vernon Struck, Harvard's spinbuck specialist Whit Jaeger, out most of the season with injuries. returned in time to help Colgate upset Syracuse. Joe Kilgrow stood out consistently in backfield. with his running and passing, while Fletcher Sims engineered Georgia flash attack Walter (Tiger) Mayberry of Florida was conspicuously hard to stop regard'r'-s of the opposition, Paul Shu of V.

a sophomore, caught many an exoert eve. as did another varsity newcomer George go of Tennessee 8 -VVLNN Church Koruna VV KHO Youth Education Program; WSAI GW Smu- Dreams; WRRC Uoodl. i Cold; VV VI Ted Weems' Father WK TIC VV I Or, ii Magic Key of WSAI B- nUP Farad IO: aft VV KW It ii it Me'od es, VV KHO AV lh Pnnallan; VSS VI Church of Hie Air. Page and Sears 1" VV KW News Review; WSAI LM Church bv the Side ot the Lund. ll VV KW Choir: WtCRC Btcvcie Patly.

Tne Texas Rangers; WSAI I KW 'n in a nee Melodies; tim Hum ,5 VV KW' Musical Players; WKItC 11 VV KW tin ta I Roundup; VV KI IC Silver Theatre, Lurch Service. VV tv Tune of Your Life: I. nu VV KRC Major Bowes; WSAI VVKllu ll of Wok SUNDA DECEMBER (NIGHT) ft'I Around tile WSAI ra, VV KIU' Joe Fenner 111 VV I AV Tyrone NVS VI lo VV Court of Human Rela- Manhattan VV IIC KW Wat tor Witirheli; WHA I 7: Od LYV at Memo WK RC Open Vmerh an Album of Familiar Home McDonald; WSAI Mom ALW To He Amioum-d; tMvln V' KRC Foundation. WSAI Rising VV KW Interesting Neighbors; Stars IM I Baker. WSAI Fire- VV KW Unsolved Mysteries a.

Its cital--. 1 1 no VV KW Paul Sullivan. 7 I. -WSAI I lanes Orchestra. 11-15 WI.

VV Orc tnt. KW Edgar Bergen ll a VV KW Orchcatia MONDA DECEMBER ti Y) ii 3ft VV I.VV Drifting Pioneers; VV Jerry 7 KRC Sing Before Breakfast. UKW Sing Neighbor Sing WK IP' Du wo Patrol 7 In- -VV KW Mr 1 rj makers KW Rube Appleberry 8:1,5 VV KW Peter Grant: News. I lo -VV KW Before Hreakfa WK TP Mary McBride; sa I My I-: IS VV KW Texans: WKRC Kdwm Hill WSAI Noonday ReversIi: ohm I Farm and Home WKRC Romance ut Beh Trent KRC Bruy and Bob; VV SAJ Ne a Hour. WSAI I You Re- -VV I Voice of Experience: member? KIT Grimms Daughter; VV SAI Jpftn I.W Hymns of VI! Chun VV Ord and Music WKRC Metropolitan Parade; WSAI 1:45 Kitty Keene VV RC Rainbow Ridge Holt? wood in Person; WSM Ha- UKW Hope Alien's Romance, wain VV KRC Newscast VV KW Home Town WKRCVYn.

WKVV Lady Bs Good; WKRC men News. VVSVI Or 2 WKRC Sc In of Air; VV SA I Cincinnati, Your City. Three Cheers ft" VV KW P' pin You- Family VV KRO Newscast; WSAI Little Show 3 15 VV KW Ma Perkin', WKRC Matinee Mu tea Ie 3 Vie and Barie; Jennie Peabodr Nnlis; 1 Music Calendar VV KW Young Widder VV KRC Bachelor Children; WSAI VV hat Next. IO mn First Love; WKRC Musical Calendar; WSAI Mrs. VV ggs.

16 15 VV KW All the WKRC Mu; a Marge; WSAI John Cit her WTT, IO Betty and Boh; KRC 3 I.VV Tony WSAI lust Ida Bill. Notes md New 10 15 WL VV ll ii Im Haunch. 4 11 ft VV I. VV Dr Friendly WKRC Ruth Harbert: WSAI To- 1.5—VV KW Marc Sothern A YJBhlren. 4 3(1 VV I AV Mam Mat lim 11 6ft VV KW News WKRC Public Bund, wit S.

1 Library Pros; WH AI David Harum 15 -W KW Mad Hat u-rfields 11:15 -VV KW Road to Life. Dr Dafoe. I Maga of the Air; WSAI Back- 5 an I.VV Junior Nurse stage Wife VV KR Follow Moon ll UKW' Carson Robison: WKRC Bom stewart R'g Si r. WSAI How to 5:15 VV KW Jn Vi r. ne Charming Freshest Thing In Town 11 I.

I. VV The Goldbergs WKRC 5 UKW MIiickk Univ Aunt Stories; WSAI Grace Hoi iv wood Highlight sr-d Eddie KW Sing ne 12 Oft VVI.W Girl Alone; VV KRC VV Iv RC WKRC WKRC VY RO 01 WSAI VV RC VV KRC VV IX RO WSAI Nixon Denton. MONDA 6 (NIGHT 6 Oft VV KW Angelo; WKRC Smiling Horace Heldt On KW For Men Only. WKRC 6 1. VV I.

VV Supper Serenade; WKRC I Mu- at Visions. 9 im WI.VV Fibber McGee and VV KW Boti Newhall; WKRC Radio Theatre; WS. ai News. WH Al Dance Orchestra Mary Paxton. 1:45 VV KW Low ell Thomas VV SA I 0 -VV KW Hour of Charm; VV SAJ iu urge Prier VV KW Amos 'n' Andy.

WKRC Famous Trials Poetic Melodies. WSM Pm rn. I W'KRC Wayne King Orch VV KAI 7 15 VV KW Four Stars Tonight, I ed Fragrant WHA! Uncle I VV KRC? Newscast: WSAI Hid- 7 3ft- VV EVV I.mn and Atmei VV KRC rn on Droh- 1 in. Ms merle-. 7 KW Mona) and Music.

WKRC ll "ii UKW paul Sui! van; WK RO carter, I Orchestra, 8 "ft VV KW Burns ami Allen; ll 15 to DAILY CROSS PUZZLE basten maturity of cotton crons by sDreadmg coal dust ov er the soil. The black dun absorbs more heat from the sun than the earth, normally would. IN THE PROBATE COURT OF FAYETTE COUNTY. OHIO King. The State of Ohio, Fayette County vs: To whom it mav concern: Notice is hereby given that accounts and vouchers are now on file in the office of said Court being suspended for confirmation Bv Administrators of C.

Henkie. Eugene A. Clifton, By Executors of C. W. By Trustee of 1520 John Bateman By Guardians of William Whcelc Frances Thompson Any poison interested in sam accounts may tile written exceptions thereto, or to any item thereof, at least five days before the lith day of December, 1937 when the same will be heard at that date or at such other time a- the Court may designate, MAX G.

DICE, Probate Judge. R. B. THARP. Deputy Clerk i November 20, 1937.

i I a At 5 IP Ii IO a ll 12. 13 14- Us IS I16 ll a iS 20 2.1 22 fit 23 I -I 25 26 VII Ut 2d 30 a 31 6Z IS 33 3 A 36 37 40 I 4-1 rn, 42. I 44- 4-5 Ut 4e mr IO ACROSS 26- 2830- 12 14 A monkey Fight (slang) A person chosen by vote to elect 31 the president of the S. Organ of hearing 33 Sixth note of 15 17- 18 221 2325- the scale Dare -Abbreviation for Tuesday The threshold -Diminutive of Samuel A snare A speck -Centimeter (abbr I 34 36 38 39 42 4346 47- -A kind of duck -Inscribe Red Cross (abbr.) condensed on surfaces of cool bodies -Pres are for publication -Sick -Small, ed nail -Conjunction Man name measure Cuckoo-like bird --Overalls -Question lO- H- 13 16 18 os. Making letters High priest of lr aet -Having symmetry one of the chambers of the heart A junto -Hurried -Dejected -Advertisement 24 29- 35 37 40 4244- 45 -Migrate -Expose ber to ture I would (contracted) The sides vt a room -Existence Letter Meadow -Donkey -Letter Hun god Answer to previous puzzle DOU By -Form of before Burn with hot liquid en Cent abbr.

A measure of length -Greek god of war.

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About Washington C.H. Record-Herald Archive

Pages Available:
107,570
Years Available:
1937-1977