The Cedarville Herald, Volume 39, Numbers 27-52
IHMIlfiT Watch an,d Clock Repairing All Kinds ol Work Performed and Guaranteed. WALLACE IRVINE Next Townsley’s Grocery. N . Main Street 0 . C E D A R V I L L E , O H IO A Late Extraordinary Millinery DO LLAR D A Y Wednesday, Nov. 29 Trimmed' Hats for Women , Misses and Children. Dependable Quality, Correct Styles. Osterly 37 Qreen Street, Xenia * Ohio ! S. H. SULLENBERGER ELECTED 1 ON BOARD OF EDUCATION, ; * i> i { 1 ] ! Mr. S. H. Sulenberger was chosen ! ;by the Board o f Education Tuesday ! i evening to fill the vacancy caused I ■by the death of Mr. J, H. Stormont, i • A number of names were balloted j ‘ upon and after several votes were itaken Mr. Sullenberger received the j required number and was then given a unanimous vote. ANNOUNCEMENT We have purchased- the retail meat busi ness o f Mr, Walter Cultice and are now ready to serve you with newly installed fix tures. We will carry a complete line of the best Fresh and Salted Meats, Lard, etc., and an invitation is extended to all prospective cus tomers to give us a calk . ■ s We have engaged Mr. Cultice as our cutter and we promise prompt service and courtesy to all. , G. W. KENDALL DEAD. George W. Kendall, aged 68, one of the best known men in Greene coun ty and for forty years or more iden tified with public affairs about the ! court house, died early Sabbath morn- ! ing with neuralgia o f the heart. He 'had been in ordinary health until an hour or so before his death. The deceased was born in this county and when a young man be came deputy county auditor under A. Z. S. Frazier,, serving thirteen years. He was deputy under William Dodds in the same office and lias been con nected with the treasurer’s office and at one time was tax inquisitor, plac ing thousands of dollars of property on the tax duplicate that had not been, listed by the owners. For the past six years Mr. Kendall has been clerk of the board of county commis sioners and was a valuable man for the place. His knowledge of public affairs, especially the law of proced ure for public improvements, was un- equaled by any man in the county. . Besides a wife, one daughter re mains, Mrs. George' Schlesinger o f Columbus. The funeral was 'held Tuesday afternoon. . OLD GRAND ARMY BOYS. You may talk about the Masons, the Odd Fellows and such, You may call them so fraternal as to fairly beat, the Dutch; You can praise them if you choose to, with their mystic rites and noise, But they can neve; hold a candle to the Old Grand Army boys. For a man who has the memory can learn all about the craft, He can get degrees and pass-words that would make a funeral laugh; And be loaded down with symbols,—■ hut fo r true fraternal joys, They can never hold a candle to the i Old Grand Army hoys. . • You can talk about the badges, but the one that has the call, . Is the Star, the Flag, and Eagle, that is far above them all. It was worn when cannon thundered, ’mid the battle’s crash and noise,— So there’s nothing holds a candle to the Old Grand Army boys. They fought and bled together, and shared the prison pen, > ; They faced, the front in battle, with the touch of manly men; Then the compact >yas cemented, ’mid the battle’s smoke and noise; So' there’s nothing holds a candle to the Old Grand Army boys. Are. they fraternal? Well, I reckon; and their charity’s, all right; Their loyalty was proven in many a r bloody fight, Yes, the nation owes them hpmage : for the placetit now enjoys; ■ So there’s nothing holds a candle to the Old Grand Army boys. — (Selected.) LEGAL NOTICE. , Catherine .Schneider, Plaintiff, »■■■'■ vs. .Jacob Schneider, Defendant. j Notice. S Jacob Schneider, residing at Evans ville, Indiana, will take notice that on October 24, Catherine Sch neider filed in said court her petition against him' for divorce upon the grounds o f gross neglect of duty and that the same will be for hearing at the Court House in-Xenia on and aft er December 11, 1916, by which time defendant must answer or demur to said petition or judgment may be taken against him. (Signed) Catherine Schneider. [ DEAD STOCKWANTED. • . —Xenia Fertilizer Co. will pay cash for all dead stock. $2,00 to $5.00 for horses; $3 to $6 fo r cows. Prices to be governed according to mileage and condition of stock. Cash at time of removal. Call Bell 337-W. Citi zens 187. Citizens 454. Xenia Fer tilizer Co. S. F. Holstein, Mgr. Do not forget and have the curtains on* your automobile repaired with cel luloid before winter is here. A t Wol ford's. ADAIR ’S The Leading Home Furnisher forOver ThirtyYears The ChristmasGift ProblemSolved ' At A d a ir ’s ADAIR’S GIFT FUND IDEA! CONS IDER T H I * V is it our beautifully stocked department now, while they are at their iullest CHOOSE YO U R C H R IS TM A S G IFTS , D E PO S IT A SM A L L AM OU N T W ITH . US E A C H W E E K , till by Christmas you discover through our G IF T FUND ID E A that you hardly apparent “ L ittle Stow Away" has r^ade the Gift Problem something of the past. Adair’s Furniture Store f , D E TRO IT STREET, - XENIA, OHIO Western R essm university has « registration of 2,210, ^ peer at 6 cer.tr; a glace threatens Cincinnati ectn.v.jijers. Fire at Medina destroyed the Odd Fellows’ l-Jilding. Loss, $50,000. Fire destroyed, the vifiagr school in Amity, Knox county, with a loss of $6,009. Newark may pooh vote on proposal to establish commission form of gov ernment.. Philip Cotner, sixty, was Instantly killed at Lima when, he fell down an elevator shaft. At Warren Frank Osborne played suicide afcd accidentally shot himself in the abdomen. Lack of coke has forced the Car negie Steel company to close Us plants at Warren, Mystery surrounds the disappear ance of Rufus Franhey, Cleveland law yer and clubman. Death claimed Mrs. Ann Foster, eighty-nine, widow of the late Gover nor Foster, at Fostoria, Fourth producing oil well on the O’Bannon farm east of Newark was drilled in, flowing ICO barrels. Mrs. Harriet Taylor Upton of War ren was reelected president of the Ohio Woman Suffrage association, Ironton's city employes bad their pay held' up pending authorization by the city auditor to borrow, money. Lowell Haines and Ralph Curl, West Mansfield boys, were badly In jured when a dynamite cap exploded. Albert Ahern, fifty, plumber, was instantly killed at Akron when he fell In front of a heavy automobile truck. A. L. Rambo, thlrty-fiye, married, died of the effect of a sixty foot fall from the stack of an Alliance factoi-y. For the second time in six months the factory of the Kressler. Automo bile company, Fostoria, was destroyed by fire: - r William Krueger, fifty, retired farm er. at Sandusky, arose from his bed and fired a bullet into his heart. He had been ill, \ Avelina Paletto, three, died at Ak ron from bur is received whilo she was playing around a bonfire in front of her home. Records In probate court and the county clerk's office show there is ono divorce for every four marriages in Union county. Returning from a grocery store, Mrs. Anna Wilson was struck and In stantly killed by a train at a Cincin nati -crossing. Purchase of coal lands by the city of Cleveland as a guard against fur ther coal famines will be considered by the city council. Patrolman John B. Anderson, Cin cinnati, was beaten and robbed of his revolver, his manual and ?10 by three negro highwaymen. Shortage of gas at Steubenville caused three glass plants, one pottery, one day works and six smaller fac tories to dose down, Jacob Wagner, ninety-five, father of nine children, grandfather of .thirty- nine and great-grandfather of twenty- four, died at Fostoria. - Mrs, E. A. Morris died as the result of injuries sustained when an automo bile plunged over an embankment near her home at Eeverly. Phineous Mortis, charged with the murder of Willard Wilson at Wash ington. C, H.. whs found guilty of as- sault and battery. Pleaded self-de fense, After a quarrel with his wife, Adapt Schwartz, Cleveland, committed sui cide with the same revolver that his brother used to take his life some months ago. Showing the largest gain in mem bership of any state grange, the Ohio State grange' last year Secured 6,000- new members, making its total mem bership 65,695, Three persons were seriously burn- red in the Henry Tillman home at Ken ton when one attempted to start a fire with gasoline, which was thought to be coal oil. • . Shimon Spasovlch pleaded guilty of Akron to murder In the first degree for killing Mrs. Katie Solomon last May, He was given a life sentence In the penitentiary. Linemen in the employ of the Ohio State Telephone company at Toledo voted to join the strike of switch board operators, who are asking for increased wages. Cecil Burrell was shot and instantly killed by Carl Dlckev, another youth, in the presenco of the victim’s moth er, at Newark. Police allege rtlekey had been drinking. Railroad attorneys In Ohio supreme court attacked the constitutionality of the Ohio public utlitles law giving the state utilities commission the right to regulate railroad rates. Near Nelsonville Clay Laughman was instantly killed when the boiler at an oil well exploded. Charles Nel son. a miner, was 1;filed at about the same time by a fall of slate, Ohio State university officially be came a United States army training school under the national defense act when announcement of its-selection was made in Chicago by Genera! Barry. Mrs. Mary Corcoran arrived at Lan caster from Ireland, accompanied by two little daughters, to prosecute a charge of bigamy which sho filed against Daniol Corcoran, a tire maker, who she alleges married wife No. 2 In Columbus. Body found floating in Upper Shaker lake, near Cleveland, was identified as that of Bertha Kozak, nineteen. It is believed she commit ted suicide to join her chum,-Mamie Vydra, whose body was found In Lake Erie recently. Ernest Zaros, infant son of Mrs. Weiidel Zaros, was burned to death at Cleveland Kind the mother Serious ly burned in fin attempt at rescue after a little brothfer of the infant threw a blazing newspaper into the **by’s cradle. ‘ ____ INCREDIBLE RESULTS STARTLE CEDARVILLE. There has never been anything here with the INCREDIBLE results of simple lavoptik eye wrisli. One man’s eves were So badly strained he could not read five, minutes without pain. Two applications with lavoptik re lieved him. A lady had tried three different glasses for weak, inflamed eyes. ONE lavoptik wash surprised her. We. guarantee a small bottle to benefit EVERY CASE weak, strained or inflamed, eyes- ONE WASH pro duces incrediblo results. A . L . Rmh- ards, druggist, (No.?) [ Winter Coat Sale A Seasonable Event of Unusual Economy for Women and Misses ) Ladies’ Coats, worth Juniors’ Coats, worth $ 1 8 . 7 5 $ 2 0 , for $9.95 $8.75 t o $ 1 0 , f o r $4.95 Something New # * s ■ ■ j . .■■s instead o i waiting until after Christmas to mark down Suits and Coats, our customers can buy them now and get the benefit of winter use. ♦ Hutchison & Gibney Largest Store in Greene County Xenia, Ohio Overcoats The Best Line to Select From in the County ^ An d at prices within the easy reach of all B Pay ub a vis it {besides Overcoats our stock includes Sjji every article necessary to a gentlemah’s, wardrobe A N D U P ^ The saving you can ef- ect bn even a single gar- ^ ment will more than re- H pay you for a trip to ^ this store. Come and See For Yourself $ G.A. Weaver Opp. Courthouse Xenia, Ohio The best lines, the b«Bt values, and services o f the better kind is all yours. Remember this and come. g jf X X GET OUR PRICES ON PRINTING XJC mmitmk K o d o l 32KSSF m&tood Mgntl *tt.Mfeottl*«t * • ««,JMp 1 MoM yem ■*»>!, ti e-itoM fatfc.f«U 6 »!n*,)imM tltto K it f*n» toootirfy**«.*•**«• Ut*»o*tl*l« It,MMtor*will r * »o i j Mtr »** st» W '« o M * * a n r i » c m w
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