USGENWEB NOTICE: In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, data may be freely used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material. These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by other organizations. Earl Colvin, Yakima, Wash. -- Enclosed and P. O. order for the Enterprise, the best paper and from the best town we know of except Yakima. It is always welcome. -------------------- Clyde Ohio, Feb. 1, 1923 -------------------- Miss Lauretia Barnaby Passed Away. Mrs. Alice Stewart received a letter last week from Miss Ida V. Niles at Oakland, Cal., which relates the passing of Miss Lauretia Barnaby, the first principal in Clyde High School and a teacher of many of the older residents. In writing Miss Niles says: "Miss Barnaby passed away Wednesday, January 17th at a hospital in Pasadena, where she has been two weeks, following an illness of two months, during which she was confined to her bed. Bronchial pneumonia, complicated with a bad heart and complete loss of desire for food was the cause of her death. The funeral was held on Saturday, Jan. 20th. "Last September she seemed to feel so refreshed and so rested from her two months stay in Honolulu, but when she returned home she found her sister, Mrs. Cooper, ill and nursed her back to health. Later, Miss Barnaby was seized with a severe case of grippe. "I shall always feel so glad of the visit of a week last September on her way from Honolulu, even though my time and energies were so consumed with my sister's illness at the time. "What a splendid life was hers. Seemingly never in robust health yet always doing the full work of a person in perfect health, wherever she worked or lived she made a strong impression and left an influence of the nobler and higher ideals of living. How fortunate so many of us were to have been under her teaching for three years." Miss Barnaby was one of the founders of Clyde High School Alumni Association and was greatly loved by all her pupils. She had been on the west coast for many years and had given up active work in the schools and devoted much of her time to private tutoring. ------------------------ It is reported that the check forger who operated here last week has been captured at a town south of here. D. E. Fuller was elected a director of the Sandusky County Automobile Club at the big meeting at Fremont Tuesday night. ------------------------- A February Snake. To see a snake 2 feet long crawling around in February, when the thermometer is near zero is an unusual thing. Jas. Weisheit of the N .Y. C. section force killed such a reptile at the Woodland Ave. crossing last Monday. ------------------------- HUGHES-- In San Jose, Cal., April 15, 1924, Stanley Hughes, son of Mrs. Mary and the late David L. Hughes, brother of Mrs. W. N. Atwood, Anna Bell and Luther L. Hughes of San Jose, Mrs. C. E. Polikowsky of Pasadena, David L. Hughes of Fresno, T. Arthur Hughes of Santa Rosa, Calif., a native of Ohio, aged 24 years, 7 months and 13 days. Friends are invited to attend the funeral Saturday, April 19, 1924, at 10:30 a.m. from the Funeral Home at Curry, Gripenstraw & Darling, 48-50 North Third street. Interment at Oak Hill Cemetery. ----