The Cedarville Herald, Volume 40, Numbers 27-52

s° f f k e W W W i /W V W ^ W V V W M W A The time to tU>f i^vertWiMt \* wkm you ere rmuif t* step doinglwwlpwe* y<m11 notice thet the -jm c rp a A n merchant jut aut advertiser. V . W . V W . W W / W p W I W * F O R T IE T H Y E A R N O , 51. C E D A R V IL LE ) O H IO , F R ID A Y , I ECEM BER 7, 1917 PRICE, $1.00 A YEAR h . h „ su l l e n b e r g e r e n t e r s GROCERY BUSINESS The local grocery business will have •’ new man m the field the first o f the week, when L. H. Sullenberger takes'' over the J, M. Willoughby- grocery. Mr. Sullenberger has been a resident o f this place fo r a number o f years, having recently disposed o f hi& flour - mill to the paper company. His many friends wish him success in his new undertaking. Mr. Willoughby states that hd has no plans fo r the future, though he may spend the winter in the south, MAY GO IN FEBRUARY. Press dispatches Monday state that the leading regiments o f the various camps, will be fitted out soon for ser vice "over there," The Camp Sher man regiments mentioned are the 329, 830 and 332. These regiments are said to have taken on military life much quicker than most o f the others and are equal in military tact and training, to regiments that have had years of service, ;The boys not only know the work on the field but have proved ex­ cellent, m the rifle range. The plan now is to pick out-the lead­ ing regiments and equip them fo r fo r­ eign service, leaving this country prob­ ably in February, ready fo r the Spring campaign on the Western front. The Cedarville and Greene county bbys are most-all in the regiments named, the most being in the 330, and it is quite-an honor to know that the home boys have won recognition, WOULD HAVE GUESSED WRONG , F ew . people wpuld have guessed that Madison County had more tlian 60 per cent, o f the' Shorfhom-.breed- ers in Ohio. A canvass reveals that 146 men in that county owned 1600 Shorthorn cattle. Buyers from all over, the country attended the Madison County Shorthorn Breeders' sale last week. The highest priced animal was a cow owned by R. M. Oglesbee, of Jamestown, and sold to W. H. Steva, o f St. Marys, fo r $310. . TIMES HAVE CHANGED. I-1* Three o f Cincinnati’s leading banks having the name. "German," have asked authority fo r a change in -the name. As Cincinnati has a large German population-and two o f these banks located in the German section o f the city, one would think that the business interests would be a little slow about suclt a move, ^Cincinnati has come forward with Y.:,M. C. A ., ■Liberti Lean and Red Cross subscrip- fihip is behind the government .at' this time. The. city authorities in Pitts­ burgh have refused to allow a. public performance where art alien enemy .citizen has a part.' The .Cincinnati Symphony orchestra was denied a per­ mit due to the fact that the leader was an Austrian. Sergeant Cameron Ross, o f Camp Slier? ;.an, is reported in the hospital due to a very severe cold. The past two weeks the fo g that hovered over the camp at night has not been for the general health o f the men, .It is said that about 800 men are in the hospital due to colds and pneumonia. Mrs. Margaret Bennett, o f Dayton, has been the guest o f relatives here fo r several days. MUST HAVE PERMIT j TO GET,EXPLOSIVES Council met in regular .session Mon- lay evening, all members being pres­ ent. The most important business was he passage o f an ordinance in con- ormity o f a law passed by congress whereby all persons wishing to buy explosives must have the permit from die mayor and pay a fee q f twenty- ive cents. "Bills fo r the month were ordered mid and the mayor reported $11 in nips and licenses. Council will meet .he last day' o f the month ,to complete business fo r the year and turn affairs iver to the new administration. OHIONEWS OUT TOTHEQUICK NELSON FULTON DEAD. Nelson- Fulton, .prominent Xenian, died Saturday night at hia home in •.hat city. The deceased had been a clothing* merchant-, postmaster -and superintendent o f the O. S. & S. O. home. He was horn in Highland :ounty and was' 78 years o f age. He was a close friend o f the late Ex-Sen­ ator J. B. Foralcer. He is survived jy hia wife, a brother and two sis­ ters. The funeral was held Thursday morning, burial at Martinsville. DIED AT HOSPITAL. Mrs. Hannah- Robinson, widow o f James Robinson, died Tuesday morn­ ing at the Dayton State hospital, where she had been fo r three years., She is past 70 years, of age and is sur­ vived by one daughter, Mrs. Carrie Weymouth; three sons, Lacey and Wesley, o f Dayton, and Albert, o f ;his place. The funeral was held Thursday, Undertaker H. A . Barr bringing tjie remains here. Mr. J. W.- Radabaugh and wife*re- :.umed last Thursday from a .two- weeks visit with relatives in Celina. Mrs. Stewart Townsley, who was exposed to smallpox,, having visited Miss Freda Trumbull before it became renown the nature o f the disease, ’ .as been quite sick due to the vaccination. Mr, and Mrs. Walter Jones, of. Springfield, were- Thanksgiving guests o f Mr* and Mrs. M. W. Collins. Mrs. Mary Duffiekl has been quite poorly fo r several days. Master McLeod Sterrett accompanied Mr. and-Mrs. D. W. Sterrett to Green- jdlle,jwhere he expects to .enter school and remain fb rlh e 'sch oo l term. ~~r . Frof. 'Leroy A llen ,'V ife and daugh­ ter, Ruth, have gone to Woqster to remain until the first o f the .year. • One o f the biggest photo plays ever brought to this county has been signed by Mr. Ralph Murdock, o f the local photo play house. This picture played for several weeks in Cincin­ nati this summer and is pronounced one o f the greatest stories ever dis­ played on the screen. The picture has never yet been.shown in this county and Mr, Murdock is bringing it here at a much larger expense than most bills. He is willing to try out the 1plan even though he can hope fo r lit­ tle profit due to the capacity o f the (house. “ Womanhood, the Glory o f the Nation,” will be seen here Decem­ ber 14 and 15, Friday night, Saturday matinee and Saturday night. “ Womanhood the Glory of the Nation” MURDOCK THEATER, DEC, 1 4 -1 5 FRIDAY EVE. andSATURDAY MATINEE and NIGHT a d m is s io n m ■ • • m 25c . XENIA OFFICIALS UNDER . COMMISSION GOVERNMENT The newly eTeefed city commission- Yor.,*o ^ ttin g down to bus- era in Xenia are iness, although official places commission ger, which has „ Roy Hayward is tor, the best manager; J. Dawson Smith, A . Finney, soli, new form o f goyi easy sailing, dim finances o f the and that much the campaign Corporal Jfihn 330 Reg., Camp an eight-day f be assigned to 1 the army. Mr. dianapolis and be sent to -the ■Willis H . Dye, T. Baker, of, tlf Baker, died at tl Dayton, Monday, due to tuberculos’ home fo r treatiri .The deceaesd w. was bom near served throughoq the past seven Dye lived in Da; Miss Olive Coe I ation at the Mc( day, the operat by Dr. Robert Rev. A . G; Ma Yellow Springs who leaves Satii: fo r "over there"' C, A . "work, was8! to Miss’ Deanna M Dri and Mrs, L. < Springs. Eight foot fall was fatal to Sidney Golln, 20, electrician, Toledo, Fremont milk dealers advanced the price of milk to 12% cents a quart. Cleveland was chosen as the place for the 1918 meeting of the Ohio fair circuit. At Alliance Conductor William M, Conners, 61,’ was killed by a Penn­ sylvania train. Walter O, Blgham of Attica, charg­ ed with vrife murder, will be placed on trial Die. 27. Dr. Jane Sherzer, for 12 years pres­ ident o f Oxford College for Women, resigned to seelc rest at her home in Franklin. * Fire destroyed the fanhouse, gener­ ator and other property of the Stand ard Hocking Coal Company mine near Crooksvllle, ■ * Dr. Washington Gladden, 81, emi­ nent Columbus divine, Is confined to hia bed suffering ‘ from a nervous breakdown. Mayor W ,. J. Lamb charged •that "nearly 60 carloads, o f perishable foodstuffs are standing In the Akron yards spoiling," United .States... thrift ..stamps. anti war savings certificates are now on, sale In. Ohio. Every postofflee In the state has a supply. Two robbers .fatally wounded Irvin Jackman, 24, manager o f a Toledo roofing company; Jackman saved the company’s funds. Because he was rejected for army service, friends assert, Joseph Valen- cyn, Belgian, drowned himself In Swan creek, near , Toledo. Grieved because of the 'death of a daughter, Mrs. A n n a ’ Crouse, 47, -Cleveland, committed suicide by jumping over a 90-foot cliff. . Mrs. Shannon ,T. Elliott, one of the organisers of the Marion, county W. c! T. U. and mother of County Treas­ urer Harry S. Elliott, is dead. Marlon county was. the first county In Ohio to proceed with a complete war emergency organization, reach­ ing out and taking in every township in the county. •Representative Ellsworth R. Bath- rick is reported to bo very ill at his home in Akron and an operation may be necessary. He has been failing Several months. Theft of a registered mall package, said to contain $29,000 worth of dia­ monds, from a counter in the lobby ) Dr. miiwc o f the Hotel Statler, Cleveland, was reported to the police. Guards, were stationed about the Sandukky to T>rotecfc large quantli of sugar, flduivand canhed goods piled up along the track. .Miss Pearl G, Lewis o f Cleveland' filed suit against John Cromwell, a ' steel manufacturer of Lorain. She asks for $300,000, alleging breach of promise of marriage. Blaine Snouffer, Franklin "county farm hand, must die Dec. '12 for the murder of Augusta Sickles, hl& 15- year-old sweetheart, last April, The supreme court: refused Snouffer per­ mission to file,a petition in error. Three thousand additional men are needed to fill to war strength the units of the Thirty-seventh division (Ohio national guard) at Camp Sher­ idan, in, Alabama. That number of = national army men may be sent there from Camp Sherman, ChiUicothe. A movement was started by the Canton Automobile club to have a road open between Canton and Cleve­ land throughout the entire winter. Th’s road will be used by motor trucks, which manufacturers plan to use to relieve the railroad congestion. In an appeal to the-people of Ohio, Food Administrator Fred C. CroXton urges observance of the following program; Make Tuesday a* meatless day; Use less pork products at-ali times; maha every evening meal wheatless; use less white flour at all times. - Grand Jury at Cleveland returned a murder indictment against Mrs; Elsie lass. 24, arrested following the death oyJohn P, Perterko, 9, after drinking .ilk in which Mrs, B obs admitted ahn >ad put rat poison to discourage some one. who had been taking milk from the porch. At Cleveland night watchmen Were found bound and gagged In the vault at the Hlgbee Company store, where they had been locked by four safe blowers who had broken into the strong box and escaped with between $5,000 and $10,000 in cash, Merchan­ dise also was taken. Eighteen-year-old Joseph Urbatls Is given Credit for planning the holdup o f the Htiebner-Toledo Breweries company bookkeeper at Toledo, in which six men later captured by the police beat the bookkeeper uncon­ scious with beer bottles and robbed him of $37,000. The money was ra* covered. Milk prices in Ohio will keep go­ ing up along with feed and labor prices, according to Professor Erf o f Ohio State university, who says the latest reports to him show the tcc tual cost of production of milk la 35 cents a gallon. He adds that owing to the high cost of feed, cows are be­ ing slaughtered. That he had burned the plant of the A.. B. Smith piano company at Akron July id, with an attendant loss of $125,000, to hide his embezzlement of $12,000 af the company’s funds, through destruction of the books which he had kept, was the confes­ sion which State Fire Marshal Flem­ ing’s office announced It had obtained from Frank M. Koplln, 26, now In Jail at Akron, „ NO HUNTING—Hunters are here­ by notified that hunting with' dog or gun, is forbidden on my farm/* W. H, do not take their January 1, The . the city mana- yet been selected, fied fo r city audi­ ting job under the .Button, treasurer; “,!.ce judge, and J. It is said the •lent will not have the fact that the are at a low ebb , was promised in it be fulfilled, HOME ON^fURLOUGH. - ’. Collins, o f Co. F, ierman, is home on iughi, expecting !to aviation branch o f 'Uins goes to In- .. there .will likely [ght aviation field. JOBE'S Prices Now Lowered on Women’ s and Misses’ fin e COATS and SUITS These are days o f opportunity-—tjie best days the year in which to buy apparel~~be^ cause prices have been lowered on all fine coats and suits, Take advantage of these offerings. DEATH H- DYE. ^ ■ r i ' other-in-law o f S. lace, and W. R. oldiers’ home, in r ling, death- being ^having ',&&gred the t. o f thin disease. [7’years o f age and imbus Grove. He civil war. For’ •rs Mr. and Mrs, ia; Florida, Chiffon Velvet Suits, trimmed with Flying Squirrel, values up to $100.00 now ................... $69.50 pine Wool Velour Suits, Seal trimmed $68.50 Values now. , . .$49.50 Broadcloth, Wool Velour, Tricptine Suits $55.00 values n ow .........$39.75 - *Broadcloth -Suits - —$45.00—values now . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$29.75 Broadcloth and Tricotine Suits $37 50 values now . . $24, 75 Gabardine; Velour and .Serge Suits, $25,50 values nog . . . . . . . . . . . 1 8 . 7 5 Burrella Cloth Suits values up to $22,50, now, ____________ ^—412.75- The deceased wak twice married and has four children-living by his first w ife; Miss Iola IT ’ of Dallas, Texas; o f "Columbus 1 daughter in. Wi was m arried .''to. and Lowell Dye, rs. George Jones, 0 , and another gton. Mr. Dye iss'Arvilla Baker sixteen years agoj and she survives The funeral servi&s were held at Co­ lumbus Grove, Thursday afternoon. ifierivent an oper- f , hospital, Tues- eing performed p f Dayton. bv.pastor o f the Ibyterian church, ajn New York ^ |lst in the Y . M. □pried Wednesday dau^iteiv o f allow Coats Chiffon Velvet and •Rsdium Cloth Coats, Fur Trimmed, values up to $100.00 now. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,$68.50 Wool Velour Coats, Seal Trimmed values up to $ 8,50 now. . . . . .$49.50 Velour de Noirdt Pom Pom, Broad­ cloth Coats, plain and fur trimmed, values up to $55 n o w $39. 75 Wool Velour Coats, fur and Seal plush trimmed, values up to $37,50 now. . . . . . . . . . . . *.............. $27.50 Suede and Wool Veiour Coats, $35,00 values nowe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$22.50 Venetian and Wool Velour Coats, $27.50 values now...... ...............$19.75 Persian Lamb Coats, full lined $22.50, "now . . . . . . . . . . .".T.T.T.T. .$ 16.50 Wool Velours, $20.00 values, .$14.75 Kersey Corts, Plush trimmed $15.00 values...................................... .$9.95 V I I D C Poiret Fox Sets ......................... $59.50 to $85.00 • U I W Kolinsky Muffs and Scarfs, each......... ...........$27.50 Genuine Mole.Muffs. , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . » . .$35.00. Moleine Scarfs and Muffs, each.^..........................................$15.00 Coney,.Muffs.......................................■................. .. .*$3.95 to $10.00 Seal Muffs and Scarfs, e a c h . . . .$15, $18.50, $22,50 Misses’ Fur Sets................. .................... . . . . . . , : $6. 00 to $7.50 Childs’ White Fur Sets................. ...................$2.95. $3.95, ^4.50 ’ ” ! CHILDREN’ S COATS ~ Corduroy Velvets and Chinchilja' Coat?, sizes 3 to 6 years, value's up to $7.50 now............... v..........................................$4.95 Plain Velvet, Corduroy, Chinchilla Coats, sizes 3 to 6 years, values up.to 6.00, now .............................. .......................... $5.95 — Jobe Brothers Company ' X E N IA , • ^ ^ - : Suits OH IO illlMlIIIIIJIIlllllIllllllil^^ i A t , J Enroll Yourself Enroll Your Boy Enroll Your Girl Enroll the Baby IN OUR. Christmas Savings . rP ' And Have Money For a Merry Christmas and a Happy and Prosperous New Year lc===2c===5c or l®c Starts a Bank Account Or if You Prefer You Can Shirt With 25c, 50c, $1.00 or a Larger Amount Lei: the Penaies Usually Spent For Trifles Grow Into . BIG ROUND DO LLAR S . * *, * , You get back every cent you pay in— i ne first t/.eposit makes you a member— * You get interest if you keep up the Join as numy classes as you l i k e - payments regularly— , There are n o extra charges— Everyone who joins gets a hank book Free—> 14When You Open aB mh Account Yrn Open the Gates of Success i in Yout*-Undertakings” Call at this bank—Phone or write fo r booklet giving you complete ''{ f t o r l t l c u l a r s s We shall be pleased to have j nwi becom e a member o f th is d u b and <t ■ssz patron o f our banks 1 A CORDIAL WELCOME - EXTENDED TO EVERYBODY | T h e Exr change R anh fiiEiH4iHinuiawe^iiiiuiiiifiiuiuiiRiimiiiruiiiiuiniim pfuiiuimiinttinmnii r

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