FEB. 28 ISSUE ANSWERS: The next few weeks will contain articles and documentation on Early Entertainment in Romeo. Have fun reading. Reading, itself, was one of the many activities cultured people did here. This Old Greek lady (building) has quite a history. She stood on the southeast corner of South Main and East Lafayette streets where the modern slab and glass bank stands today across from the Speedway gas station. She was quite a good looker in those days- wood frame, three stories high. Lewis Cass who was appointed governor of the Michigan Territory in 1813 secured the property, from the U.S. Government on Sept. 22, 1822. From that time on many early settlers had deeds to the property on which Romeo Hall was erected. In 1862, Azariah Prentiss purchased the property. After three years Judge Prentiss sold the wood frame structure now existing on said property to James E. Price in April, 1865. He converted the first floor to a “general store.” It was also factiously called “Price’s Museum” for it had EVERYTHING. The Romeo Observer newspaper records stories to bear out this fact. One is the story of “a bet of one dollar between persons that a “goose poke” could not be purchased there. The dollar was lost (and gained)