o-day r An-re insaid pier’s : from ;ff he Ispot ■riv is !erred Foa-1ENGILMAN DRYCaGOODS ROOM ISKENNEDY SITEHuihot1-30mdDe-ingingjle.ifmeri, an-II b«theSamuel Engilman To Re-Deflatetire; Grocery ToRemodel StoreThreSt.,eattirehasPa..was)IRSrgeThenday |k at ]IringOhio’statedThe* nple-haverialstionswiderein net•t in-field.erry.atnil-f'ler-land,•ioto,Vin-«rash-iana.Har-Prin-con-Iheir and n, itSamuel Engilman, proprietorof the Engilman clothing and dry goods store, 23 W. Main believed to be Xenia’s old-retail merchant, will resoon from the business he operated at the present location for forty years.Mr. Engilman, who will close out his stock of merchandise within the next month, has leased his three-story building to W. J. Kennedy, who will reestablish his W.Main St. I. G. A. Market at the new location after completion of extensive interior and exterior remodeling work at the store room.The Kennedy Market will vacate by July l its present location, occupied for eight years, at 45 W. Main St., in a Schmidt Bldg. that will be razed to clear the site for a new $20,000 structure, leased to the Kroger Grocery and Raking Co.The Kennedy lease on the Engilman property will include the basement, first and second floors. The ground floor room will give the Kennedy Market almost four times greater floor space.Improvements contemplated toprepare the Engilman room for the new tenant will include erection of a modern store front to the second floor, featuring a black glass trim and a marquee extending about five feet over the sidewalk the entire width of the building.Mr. Kennedy announced plans for installation of a fluorescent lighting system and has under consideration an air-conditioning unit for the store.Discontinuing the store he has operated since 1900, Mr. Engilman recalled that he took a personal vacation of only one day over th*3 forty-year period he has owned thebusiness.While enroute to New York Cityin a buying trip about twenty-five yearH ago, he stopped briefly in Philadelphia to visit relatives and was persuaded to spend a day sight-seeing in Atlantic City.At the time the Engilman store was established, patron* mounted a short flight of steps to enter thefront door. Mr. Engilman remodeled the building in 1914, putting the floor at street level, and erected an addition in the rear.ByGazette VWAS HI FltRs vi primary [L. Ijewis’All spr manding hinting ifnew partjbor, old i of war gr wingers primary g such a pa The Pa ported by grouping about. Itoperating(CoatITF it ra bethan if pleasant Count; party nlt;primary may kelt; the poll Weath work a have bei hope thbusy atminutesthink t thing aid spring c lethargylijsrht vo Candiicitizensdemooraupon a si on at pveryomARMSPf