The Cedarville Herald, Volume 38, Numbers 27-52
m ii I ' o r I x e t i w o t O u t Jb fc £ Work win comping with k&fclof any o tb ir firm.,,.. •! J This it*** wfecnmarked with m in dex, denote* that a yea? ’* subscrip tion Ii p u t due aud * promi-l ##t- dementis eaniestiy desired, . . * THIRTY-EIGHTH YEAR NO, 39, CEDARVILLE, OHIO, ■RIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10,1915 PRICE, $1.00 A YEAR IS,? --- >*tr.v Chautauqua Program Of High Standard Audience Appreciative of Program Which Means Another Next Year— Sale of Tickets Exceeds Expectations— Weather Conditions Favorable for Large Crowds. Clifton U. P. Church Chimes. !School 0] Grades twded. The second annual chau tanqua fo r Cedarville opened Monday a fte r- ’ noon with a program th a t haB pleased the tick e t holders and established & precedent that,-w ill ca ll for a more exteninve program in ano ther year. When- president MoMiohael announced th a t the ticke t sale bad exceeded the guaran tee by nearly a $100 he -was giyen a round of applause. I t must also he taken Into consideration t h a t th is sale "was made against the Strongest odds due'to the lateness of the seasonTopening of schools and uncertain weather. , , The equipment fu rn ished by the Coit-Alber Company' is *up to the usual standard and everything was done for the comfort of the people th a t was possible. The location of the,tent on the college campus was n ea re r the s tre e t th is yea r tyhich brought many favorable comments CEDARVILLECOLLEGE NOTES. The motker ought to vote. Kenneth Ritchie vu ited Roger Collins la s t Tuesday. W ealth w ill not tak e wings and fly away if you sprinkle a little economy on its tail. Do n o t wear the sign of the J uniper tree, Slogan for Cliftonltes—“ The best Christian l ean be by Jan , 1,1910. The church different from any o th e r organisation exists for those outside. The twenty-second yean of Cedarville College opens next Wednesday morning ip the College* Chape} at 0:30 o'clock. All are cordially Invited, The Uev, Henry J. Becker, D, D.. Dayton, Ohio, will, give the opening address. Dr, Becker has travelled widely-about the world. He is eloquent, intellectual^ practical, witty, and comes highly rec ommended. He is a rioted Chautauqua lecturer. The exercises will be inter spersed with music by a quartette and vocal solos. Mrs. Russell also will-play some piand solos, Registration of Students will begin Tuesday morning at 0 1o’clock and con tinue Wednesday morning at. 8 o'clock and after the openirig exercises, Stud- 1 .ehts should be present to register and I t also enabled automobile owners arrange their schedules of study, pur- to p a r k their machines along the chase their books; and pay. their tuition stree t making i t easier to handle and contingent fees, $18 for the semester the crowds, Mr. C. A, Brown was superin tenden t and kep t the audience in formed as to the program as well as lo o k ing 'a fte r Hie Coti-Aiber busi ness locally. Mr. Brown has been In the employ of the Goit people, tor some time and is thoroughly In formed along his l in e .' The opening ,number was Borva- DeLeon Company of Boston, a trio of musicians th a t pleased. Wood' Briggs a s a story teller in “ Helping th e World Co ‘Around” „k e p t his audience in laugh ter. H e is a real - en tertainer and h is Southern stories although humorous always h i t the m a rk . H is read ing of “ThaRaVbn” which is to be paid on Tuesday or Wed nesday, Recitations will begin Thursday mom-, ing at 8. o’clock. The recitations will begin a; 8 o’clock each morning and each recitation period will be one hour in length. The attendance in all de partments will be materially increased over that of last year. Paul Ferguson sta rted la s t Mon day for. Monmouth'eoHsgswhere he expects to en ter the Ju n io r class. Harvey Flririey in' improved ■wfflciently to drive out and bids fair to' recover entirely in a short time, ' a ‘ Cecil Rife is lead e r for Christian Union next Sabbath evening. *The W» M. Society will meet with Mrs, F luke n e x t Wednesday, The meotlug w ill be led by Mesdames George R ife arid Hi <3. Corey. ; - * -' . , „t ; ' * ■ Bocal option elections have taken the ‘■tU'’ ou t of Illinois, the “gin” .out of V irginia, and the “ tuck o*ut of Kentucky. * , Presbytety meets a t piifton Mon day, September 27, a t n p. m. An in teresting conference■is being arranged for’theeven ing session, Carl Collins sta rted to Cedaryille High School la s t Monday; th e more schooling and be tte r equip ment tlie greaierptoiSjlectfor success in life, - . Tlio public school] day morning under able circum stance^ expected whera d ii crowded, Dr, J . L. Cheanuti E. McMiohael took votiorials a fter whl marks were made inont, Colltris and Tim classes v e re l necessary books students after-■whl was taken until T« v Tlio following lxjj under the teach* Miss E liz a b e th . MI bs Edna Shrc Miss Efllo Coni? Miss Kath leen i Miss M artha Oc Miss Hazel LoWi Mr. C. C, Morton^ Total enrollment] rened Mon- !most favor- it could he it grades are Rev, J . S. in the de- informal re- Cessrs. Stor~ jlgued and the Joed for the :adjournment enrollment >wm im , AutoClul Mr, ' W illiam Sm ith's fam ily by the re-d istricting '.o f the township have befen thrown in to the Gliiton d is tr ic t making four more pupils for orir schools. ' Arrangements ay members’of the bobile ©lub for a n : Weduesdayr Sept. S elude .Cliffon, Ce" town, Xenia and Some months -agoj run west pf Clark were 95 cars in line ciub a boost in tin The .1916sta te arit tags will have a ground with pure and letters, On thi Will be the word The figures on tb» S inches high.' The! 'Tor 300,000 tags for Work is offered in ali the Collegiate Courses, Normal courses, Agricultural courses, Theological courses, Prepara tory courses, Piano, Vocal Music, Har mony, Theory, Domestic Science, and Oratory, The wpric in the preparatory courses is free to ali. All theoOurses in the Theological Seminary are free, The. WA# 9 $peUeut. seminary will formally open in cai correspondent for the. out- ■r* iiams, look on t h e W ar fron t in Europe brought home to aU the ternbLe ex periences and devastations of war. The' lecture jwas illu strated w ith actual photographs th a t Impressed th e audience in a m anner never to be forgotten. Dr. Williams, was arrested as a spy five times and court-martialed and sentenced to death by the Germans a t Brussels and his life was only spared by in tervention of the American, au tho ri ties. Dr, W illiams ev iden tly ■made m any converts agaiilBt the ^P§PP° ganda being carried on iivThis country by the financial interests th a t furnished war supplies urging a larger navy and standing army, Tuesday Dr. G. Whitofleld Ray, in an illu stia ted lecture w ith scores of curios gathered itl South America, gave »* insigh t into th a t country Dr, Ray was th e official explorer of Bolivia for sixteen years. The speaker of the evening was John R Boardman, ed ito r of “ Countryside Magazine” delivering a lecto rs th a t appealed to community interests. H is experience in reach ing the low e r element In the Cities shows the methods employed loading men to a b e tte r life. Both sessions of the d ay were en tertained by the Brower Musical E n te rta in e rs, assisted ’by the noted oornetist, Chester K . Scott one of the lead ing musicians in his line m the country. This organize tion was one of the best of the week’s program. The big attraction Of the week was Franciao Barone’s Orchestral Band and Opera Singers of Boston This organization pleased two large audiences Wednesday, Big. Vittorio Bomtna as tenor and MI sb Constance Reese, soprano, captivated the audi euce. Few vocalists have appeared before local audiences that have -pleased as well in classic or popular numbers Prof. Barone’s band is composed of talented musicians th a t rendered programs as a ttrac tive as there was variety, A t th© afternoob session Prof, Henry G Bell, assisted by J . G. Hencefoth gave a most helpful talk on “ The Science of the Boil", This subject is one which all farmer* are interest ed In and deals with the important points of successful farming. Mrs. J . F . Hash, of Dayton, arid sister. Miss Fannie Tonkinsdn of tins place eiitertaitted the members Of their club a t the home of Mrs, Hash in Dayton last Wednesday. A three course dinner was served. Th* guests were; Mrs, Raymond Bull and Mrs. It. T. Marshall, Xenia; Mrs. Harry Waddle, Spring- Held; Mrs. Xdoyd Conforr and the Misses Ju lia Harbison, Martha Cooley and Carrie Finney of this place. Encourage your teacher to read the Scrip tures in the public schools, I t is a s much your business as any one* to see t h a t th is m a tte r is not overlooked. Begin a t the opening o f school, . Mias Oarrle Rife has entered on h*r work m th* Selma High Sbhoal Mia* Rife is principal and Prof. '«„* formerly of Clifton is the time announcements as to periods qf recitation will be made. Special-course* in Bible, Sabbath School Work, and missions will be open free to all of both sexes in the seminary. The sessions jjf the seminary will be held in the after noon at the library. Messrs. W. C. Rife and E . C. Corey were in Springfield 'Tuesday on business fo r the church. Mack .Anderson, who bad a re lapse la s t week is greatly improved; a t this w riting . Saturday courses for taacliers will open Saturday morning, Sept. 18 at 8 o'clock in College Hall. This will be a splen did opportunity for teachers. All text books are to-be obtained of Prof, Jurkat at the College Tuesday and Wednesday mornings. The schedule of recitations will be posted in the lower corridor of the College Halt Tuesday morning, School Brick Are Selected. Attack School Law The Board of Education met Wednes day forenoon and made a selection of brick to be used in the new school build ings The new school law h a l been a t tacked by former supreme court jud; ©A, N, Summers in the Court of Appeals s itting a t Springfield in behalf of Joslah Wognmann of Perry township Montgomery county I t Is held th a t the new school cod* conflicts with the constitution Which provides th a t a ll county Officers shall be elective. Should th e court affirm the contentions th* eouttfcy school board and county superin tenden t would be relieved Of their places and the whole system of tho state upset. Different brick companies sometime ago placed Sample panels in the alley north of the opera house. The board selected the first panels, a Hocking. Val ley product, furnished by the Gem City Brick Salej Co., of Dayton. The order calls ior 90 thousand ex terior brick at $14 s thousand and 135 thousand interior face brick at $17 a thousand. The former amounts to $13,506 and the latter $21,!60 a total of $M,8G0. CALHOUN AT TH.E OCULIST'S La Follette’s Story of the Darky Walt, er Applied to Thoe* Who Fear Reciprocity. ANCIENT QUARREL IS OVER Two Old Sardinian Families Publicly End Feud That Had Lasted for Centuries. A ceremony the like of which had not been seen for centurlei has just taken place in Sardinia, the cradle of the Italian vendetf . It was a solemn public reconciliation of two ancient families, the Oreechionl and the Cardl, who had been in feud sine* th* mid* die ages. A dispute over a question of fam ily honor between these widely mini- fled houses ha* led to countless acts of vengeance and those who shirked fighting had to take refuge abroad, ’ in 1844 a reconciliation committee was formed by the bishops of Tetaplo and Ozieri, the prefect and the. com mander Of the ohrabinieri and many other notables of the island, but it effected nothing, If may b& that even the Italian ven detta is Influenced by - modern no tion#; at ail events a solemn recon ciliation of the families has been ef fected before the bishops In the ca thedral of Santa Teresa, The present heads of the two families, Advocate Orecchloni and Cavalier# Card!, pub licly embraced amid cheers from thou sands of Bardinian throats. From si! parts of th# Island came congratulatory messages. To break this peace would be in the eyes of the people an act of sacrilege, United States Senator La Follett*. discussing reciprocity, said with a smile: ’"These fears are groundless. They are groundless to the point of being ludicrous. They remind me, In fact, of Calhoun Clay. “Calhoun Clay was a waiter at a sea side restaurant The wliite glare of the sun-drenched beach injured his eyes, and he bad to consult an Oculist The oculist fitted him out with spec taclcB, and, as he left the shop with the spectacles on his nose, he gave a great start and hatted before a huge and extraordinary machine. “Calhoun stared In awe at this ma chine for some time Then he said: " ‘Wha’s dat, boss'?’ •“ That/ said the oculist solemnly, ‘is an ophthalmometer.’ ‘“ ShOiV muttered Calhoun, and ha backed farther away,-hi# eyes still fixed upon the formidable instrument —*#ho‘, dat*# what Ah WUz afeared it wuz. Watched. “No, Herbert,” whispered the maii “you mustn't put your atm around me We are watched.’’ Herbert looked around the dimly lighted parlor. “O, yes,” he smiled. “I #ee there- a rubber plant at the other end of the room." “’Sht There’# another one that you don’t see. Johnny'# hiding there!" rill trville. Nichols Founds Institute. s in g rin td e b y ingflelfl Auto-^ ernoon tu n on* th a t will in* rille, James* stllpw Springs. club had a jihfy and th e re rich gave the jobile Defense black back irbite numbers iflb and comet* Ihio” beneath. will be four rkraqt wilt call ct year, David L< Man. David Dowryj. R. G. Dowry of J r. and Mrs. te b u t who Dr. Roland A. Nichols, whom everyone will remember' as a lecturer a t the Chautauqua last summer and the la s t lecture course, has founded a Community Develop, m eat In stitu te and be will have six assistan ts. Dr. Nichols will lecture twice daily during the two weeks stay a t each place. The pur pose of tho, irintitute- is tp bring about better relations between tho townspeople and their friends pi the community, fostsr sivio pride and bring permanent results in everything essential to the well be- ing of all, * Mrs. Dida Keck Wiggins, woman|g editor of the ‘Springfield "Sun, and former residen t of th is place, will speak on “ A Bunch of Sweet P ’e for Girls” and “ The Larger House keeping.” The other Speakers will he ,'Sam L ew is,' tenor eolist, who directs a choir of $00 voices which will be trained and in readiness in. each place upon the arrival of the p a rty ; Lee R . McCullough, taber nacle superintendent and Lloyd Mustard, p ian ist; and Mrs. Nichols who will lsctupe to mothers. ConferenceAssigns M.E. Ministers. Millinery Opening Our Exhibit of Correct Fall and W inter Millinery Friday and Saturday, September 10th and 11th Yon are Cordially Invited to Call Jackson & Dean Cedarville, Ohio. The "West Ohio Conference of the W. E . church concluded Its sessions In Springfield Monday with th e an nouncement of the assignments by Bishop Andersdn. Rev, O. W-Sullivan of the"First M> E. chucb, Xenia, goes to-Bowling Green and llev. A, J . ' Kestlp of Lebanon goes to the F irst church. Rev. J . H , Jew e tt rem a in s . a t T rin ity . Rev- J ; W . Patton, was returned t* Cedarville much to the pleasure pf th* congregation and community. R ev .H .G . Gierke, Yellow Springs; Rev, Jl, J . Coleman, New Jaspe r; Rev. G. VV. Horn; JauiOBtown; Rev. W> E , P u tt, P leasant R idge i A. B. Maddox, Carthage; E . T. Waring, $oufch Charleston. use plane th a t wJP bring into several idea# of bis own. - H is model is somewhat, different from other# in th a t the weight Is slung under the oraft, ’ One plane in front of the machine a middle stationary plane auk tail in the rear. By the use of universal joints the problem of Stabilization will be cared for, LEGAL NOTICE Common Plea# Court, Greene County, Ohio. Lily M. Cline } vs. >Legal Notice -Curtis Cline > Curtis Cline, hssldence unknown, will tak e notion th a t said L iiy M. O llnehas filed in said court her petition against him for divorce upon the ground of gross neglect of duty, and th a t the same w ill be for hearing a t the CourbHonsejm Xenia, on October 25,1915, by winch time de iendan t must answer or demur to said petition or judgement may be taken against him, Custody of children, with order for snpport and maintainance also asked. L ily M. O u s g , DIPLOMACY IN. THE HOTEL Some People Mrght Call It Lying, but the Gusst Was Quit* Satisfied, .“Sometimes it Is an awkward mat ter to set ,a temporary tenant out of a suit* that ha# been promised for a certain day," a hotel manager said, “amt you have to use diplomacy in such a case, Occasionally lying is necessary. “A man from San Francisco came to us in the busy season and the only thing we gould do for him was to de tach a room with bath from * suit® that was promised for the next day, H© was to stay-over only one night, anyhow, Wo understood. But he did not leave and the family we expected came In. I was in a quandary, hut as the San Franciscan was downtown I had his clothes and baggage moved out to a room upstair# that fortunately fell vacant, Wh®n he came in I thought for a moment and then I said; *1 am sorry, Mr, X, hut 1 have had to move your things out of that room.’ '“ Why was that!’ he demanded, flaring up, “ •We discovered that the ceiling was leaking.* '• ,, *' ’Good gracious* My .clothes didn’t get wet, did they?” he demanded. “He was much relieved when I as sured him that they didn’t; so much so that ho made no kick at all."—New Fork Sun. Warm Weather. Farmers are anxious a t this time for a t least two weeks of warm dry went her'to ripen tho corn, Roporis are th a t the Crop is well eared but the cool damp weather keeps the grain fronwleveioping at» it should. Should the weather continue a8 it has been the cob will decay and tho crop will bo lost. Dry weather will add several thousarids of -dollars to tlio corn crop. As it Is farmers that have silos would not loose so much but few have sufficient silo capioiiy to oare for the entire crop, ’ Kissed a Dead Cow. . Told that her pet cow that had been struck by k train was so badly injured that the animal would have to be killed, Mrs. Max Johnson, of the foot of Jasper street, Camden, kissed the cow several, times and then walked away. The cow was burled near where It was killed, and a hoard was placed at the head of the grave by the heart broken women, who" between sob#, ex plained to number of persona that th* auimui had been the pet of th* family for yearn.—Philadelphia Rec ord,' Dr. Miles* Anti-Pain Pills for rheumatism. tfmamaci-itr1rr-rrussi:wara'irr~rrrWrwS M a r A t o i Our reputation for beautiful, perfect fitting footwear has-given this store a splendid custom. ; MEM'S.SHOES.............;V.,.$ 2 .G 0 t o $7.00 LADIES' SHOES. ........... $ 1 -.S 0 to $5,GO We have the only complete line of Children’s Shoes in Greene County. Frazer’s Shoe Store “For 16 Years the Leader” Xenia, Ohio TRY OUR JOB PRINTING -“•Above All*1smoke the Bold. —A geimral line of gtaple and fancy groceries always on hand# at Willoughby’s. JOBE B R O T H E R S COM PANY Announce Their Fall Showing of M ILL INERY Dresses, -Suits, Coats, Footwear, Silk and Dress Goods Thursday, Friday, and Saturday September, Ninth, Tenth and Eleventh. mm M.WWHIW j 1 i 1 * •1 i j -j Ii. •Lr $ | 1 4 }
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