The Cedarville Herald, Volume 40, Numbers 27-52
„ — ui „' j nm»•--- •»^' .v.*-*-*"® | LOCAL AND PERSONAL j r Bettor Frieas at the 8pofc Cash Grooery, W.W.Trouts Grocery tfo MUs Carrie Brailay o f Springfield th* guest o f Mr. and Mr*. Buams«( ha* been brisk in mayor's eonrt thi* wtnok. Charles and taw- muse Kpnaker, colored, wore sent to the work* under a fine o f $25 and (sp*U «u3i for beating their wives. An old charge against Clark Baker was w iv e d upon his return from Columbus and. he must take hi* de parture again next week or have the fine t ' ' ■’ Jtev. J. 9 , E, McMiehael was vaiii d ta Piqua Monday to ottkiate at the funeral pf one of his form»r parlshoners while pastor of the l,'. P. congregation in that city. Miss I.ucila Gray and Wilmah Mpenoer expect to go on the Daht- Catnpbell grcoeiy excursion to the great lakes next week. The com pany has provided a two thousand mile cruise with, stops at Chicago and Mackinac. Mrs. J. A. Stormont and son, who have l)ee«_ visiting in St. Louis, have joined their husband and father, who “ as been a guest of his father, Mr. v• v» Stormont. j Mrs, Elizabeth Nash, of Dayton, | visitt d here the fin>t,uf tho wpek. OSMWIN KMHMM* j A Cincinnati firm of junkera re- f reiitly purchafcad a branch of tho C, H. & I j . thr.it operated from Stillwa ter Junction to. Delpho", a distance of about 100 miles. The road was sold at receiver’s sale. It is said that the rails are 352 six hundred pound to the mile. This would make 10,560 ton* o f steel. The firm paid $194,000 for the road and have sold the rails alone for $475:0Q0, The rails will be taken up and shipped to France to re build the lines destroped by the Ger mans. enforced. Mr, Paul Creawoll left Thursday morning for New York City where ho went tv take pis examination for the aviation work, under the war de partment, A camp is located on Long Island* James Justice received an injured limb while at work at the paper mill Wednesday evening. A large roll o f paper weighing JilOO pounds caught rolled from a truck, the core tearing the fieshy part of the lower limb*. lire. Marsh and Oglesbee rendered .medical aid it being nepertary to take?18stitches to close thevwound. ' Mr. D, 8. Ervin was run over Thursdaymorning by a team aii# escaped with an, injured shoulder. . The team wax hauling dirt from where the steam shovel was loading dirt at the stone quaVy, One o f the horses was* a colt and became frXgihtned and unmanageable. The empty wagon*5 passed over Mr. Ervin’s shoulder but be was only Blightly bruised.* > ^5* Cjhaa. F. Marshall left Monday for Labayette, Ind., driving through in his automobile. . He null visit rel atives in that vicinity for some time. Misses Helen Oglosboe, .Wilmah Spencer, Ruth Finney and Zejpha Dobbins are attending the Y. P. <J II, convention of Xenia Presbytery in Columbus this week . "When you have the backache the liver , or kidneys are sure to be out of gear. Try .Sanol,’ it does wonders for the liver, kid neys' and bladder, A trial- 35c bottle of Sanol will convince you. Get it at the drug store. Mr. Walter Murdack*was taken suddenly ill last Safcnrday.with in testinal* trouble an d lo r two days it was thought he could not recover, Drp. Marsh, McOIeilan and Grnbp decided, following A consultation that his condition'would notwarrant an operation. Wednesday morning there Was a alight change for the better and ltmay bo that hie has passed the crisis. ' WANTED ik -po lu l Stock. We. pay the highest cash price, Prompt attention paid to all calls. Cash paid o q removal. Bell Phone, Pitch- in, O* Home Phone, Farmer Line, Springfield, O. Phone No, 8-178 Oadarvillb, O, •f 4 Brubaker Bros., Selma, Ohio. I f you have an auto accident and do hot have the .new lens to dim you r,light you personally will be held responsible. Protect your self by the new lens and do not take chances on the dimmer. We have all kinds at all prices. R. A . Murdock. In.*order to supply,,the help neces sary for harvest, tffe needs of the farmers should be known immediately, ns the Labor division of the Ohio Branch Council of National Defense is making a special effort to furnish harvest hands to all who need them, so anv one who expects to use extra help through harvest .should send their name and address, the number of men needed and the date when thev want them, direct. tcNjhe Qhio Branch Council of National Defense, Colum bus, Ohio. Ralph-W. Hunger, of Alpha', Ohio, the County Food and Crop Commis sioner, will gladly give any assistance he can.. * Mr. Wm. Conley discovered a draft hors* missing last Sabbath night, the,animal having been left id tho lot near the barn. There was no Indication that the horse had broken ouband for that reason a search was made but to no avail, Having had a ’•horse stolen some years ago Mr. Conley gave the alarm to neighbors and a search started. Later on the animal was found in Mr. Morgan Kennoji’s barn lot. I lls thought by some the horse was taken to tho Kcnnon place where a buggy was to be ap propriated. Probably by the stir in the neighborhood the fellow had to give up Ills plan8. Dr* W. R. McOhesney will ad dress a patriotic meeting at Bowera- vllie Sabbath evening in the M, E. church. —Comply with the new auto law which goes into effect today. Get. your now lens for ths auto head ligh ts. We have all.kinds from the cheapest to the highest price, all of which are in the requirements of the law. We have these in stock and can fit you out,at once. R. A* Murdock Garage. In this issue will be found the financial statemeutof the Exchange Bank,-which shows this institution to be in » prosperous condition. ’ ... Mr. Frank B. Bulk Indianapolis, spent Sabbath at borne. Messrs. Charlton Bull, of Green- town, and-, Howard L. Bull, of Kokomo, lnd .,. were called here last Friday to attend the funeral of their aunt, Mrs. Elizabeth Reid, who died at the home of her son, Mr. A .‘ Y. Reid in Norwood. —FOR SALE:—1 have 15 acres of mixed hay that I will sell in the field .' A . H. CRESWELL Fresh Fruits and Vegetableaevary day at the" ‘New Cash Grocery on tbs,corner. • ■*'Womaa.’B friend is n Large Trial’ Bottle of Sanol Prescrip tion. Pine for black heads, Ec zema and all rough skin and dear complexion, A real skin Tonic. „Geta 35c Trial bottle at the drug store. ' An automobile . driven . by a summer school student knocked down two small girls aged, about six and seven, early.Tuesday morn ing. The machine was coming north on.Main street at a fair rate of speed when the two children started to cross the street around another machine standing on the street* The driver swerved I iib ma chine just enough, to keep from running over the children but khoiking them down* Neither was hurt other tbatt from the scare. Mr. Ed Stuckeyvpicked the little ones up .and in a feW minutes they were oh them way as if nothing had happened.* No blame could be placed against the driver as the children were crossing tho street in manner Where safety could not be teuarauteed. Mr. G. A.Sbrbades met with au accident to his Ford car Wednes day night below Xenia, when it was Struck by a larger car going at a fast rate of speed. The front axle was bent and the tire torn from the left front wheel. It was impossible to identify the car or the driver. Dr. J. L. Ohesnut, wife, - son, James, and Mias" Mary, left Wed nesday for an auto, trip to Illinois and Iowa. The Dr. has been in poor health for several months and his congregation granted him an unlimited vacation that he might seek rest and recreation and thus help to* restore his1 health, •They expect to spend considerable time at OoURerville, III., where the Dr. was pastor of the R. B- congregation., fojr a number of year* and'thkn visit in Iowa. The Dr’s, many friends here hope that he may bo much benefited by bis trip and that He may he restored to his usual health and vigor. Smith Charleston’ s contributions to the Red Cross fund were boosted toah igh figure by Ihe contribution of $$000 by one of the most public spirited men oi Central Ohio, Foster B. Houston, wealthy 'business man, farmer and bAnker, A new order is being followed this year for placing the oil on the streets. But one half of the^street is oiled at a time. This gives the Oil time to set without, the public having to travel over iis The other half of-the street will then he oiled. The oil was here more than a week before the Standard Oil Company Could furnish a wagon according to contract." There Will be qUlto a demurage bill with the railroad company but this com#* off the oil company* It is expected that the cost of oil to tbs property owners will run slightly over what it whb last due to the increased cost from the Standard Oil Compaby. Even if it does cost more this Is as nothing compared to the damage to stocks of, merchants and the trouble .it costs in Care of homes when we have that continual wave of dust. Best Prices For BUTTER and EGOS Fresh Fruits and Vegetables ‘ Every Day Call Th o se 217 for You r Grocery Supply. • Ordars Will b« Dellverad Promptly. Batter Prices can be Obtained at the Spot Cath Store. Tlw % W. Troute Grocery Co. SPECIAL* FOR SATURDAY, JUNE 30thi ONLY-FOR ' CASH. 26 *k. Golden Fitee* Flour • • * v ................ S t .76 25 lb*. Granulated Sugar $2 .09 Brown Beans / Pink „ bulk •’ 15c lb. Bulk Coffee • ...... 20c Ifa. Drisd Pears — 12c lb. Edgemont Craoksrs lOepkg. Jackson Brand Pink Beans „ .................... ........... 2csns2Sc Our Country’*Brand can corn ..... .................*....... 2 cans 25o Matcha s ............ 3 boxes for 17c or Ohoxssfor 50o 203 Box Runkal’s Cocoa for-19e Bins Rase'Rice.................. OeJb, Can P e e s “ Parson Brand” .................................2 dans 15c Grandma’s Macaroni -. 9 o box These prices for cash only ROBT.. BIRD A SONS CO, Wo will pay 3Qe in trade and 28c In cash for «(ean,fresh eggs, Saturday only Junej30th. Robt. Bird & Sons Co, Will give- you highest market priceffor good fresh butter. Robt. Bird A Sons Co. s M Cross Benefit Ohio’s Public'institutions Are Expensive. Skating R ink MUCH IS DUE TO DRINK , J u n e 3 0 Do you got up at iiigltt.? Hanoi is surely the best, for all kidney or bladder troubles, Sanol gives relief in 24 lionrk; from all back ache and bladder trouble, Sanol, is a guaranteed remedy. 35c and1 $1,00 a bottle at “the drag store. Messrs. Frank Braswell, Paul Turnbull and RoSooe McCorkell went to Xpnia Monday and’ were examined by Dr. Galloway for ad- admittance to the Second Officers Training camp that will soon be opened. All three applicants passed the first examination and have received word from Columbus their papers have been Approved, TH b camp will Ho opened sometime .in August. ’ , Mrs'. Anna Morton and daughter. Grape, who*have been spending tho winter at New Kingsington, .Pa„ where the latter teaches domestic science tn the publio schools, are here for tub summer vacation. Plants (ft me; MiJGraw and National Tire and Rubber companies at East Palestine, near .Salem, were situ down as a result of demands for high er wages Sixteen hundred men aw idle. Mrs. Ethel Co’ga, twenty-eight, wa* shot to death at fiviv home in Here, land. Police are holding her hrolhcr- in-Iaw, (Alexcudm* E’Hjtu, who is said to have shot tho woman, following ois argument. • Samuel ‘Monroe," single. Wapaico: neta, after telling-a neighbor the dis position to make of what few small articles of personal property he .own ed after ijis,death, committed suicide by shootirg. ■ Results of the army recruiting cam* paign in Ohio arc still far from satis factory. Tim state so far has fur- nished less than one-fourth, or tun quota oi 9,534- assigned to it when the recruiting campaign began April i. • A passenger train struck an auto mobile at Mansfield, killing three per sons. The dead: Mrs. Odcllu Wright. Mrs. Lama Sutton,, twenty, her dan;-in ter, and Marjorie jane Sutton, thrt i-' months-old daiightdr of Mrs." Sutton. Six boys, none over sixteen, arc be ing held by 'East Cleveland ‘ police charged with stealing fourteen auto-. mobiles, in the, past, mbiitfi. ' Police records show that •200. automobiles have been stolen -in' Cleveland since' ilfllO- Avarage population Lest Year In Fir toon Asylums, Prisons and Reform atories In Excess of 20,000 and It Is a Conservative Estimate That More Than Half of the Trouble is Due-io AlcahoJ*- Cclumbus, O.—Lust year it cost the state more than *$4,000,000 to wa>n»r:in the institutions in \vk:ch its unfortunates ere' housed. This Is merely-for maintenance and does not; include the cost of grounds, build-; mgs, machinery, etc. There *are twenty of'these State institutions. It is conservative to say that 60 per cent of the trouble represented in fifteen of tho. twenty of these Insti tutions is due to drink. * Leave out of consideration the School for Blind, tho Deaf and Dumb Institution, Soldiers’ and Sailofs’ Homo, Tuberculosis Sanitorittm, and the Madison Home for Ohio Soldiers and Sailors and their wives. But look at the others, Ohio has eight insane asylums and drink has, done its shore in filling them. These eight asylums have cost Ohio, many millions of dollars. In 1916 the aver age pdpujation of these eight insane hospitals was 12,047..' Then .there are the Institution for the Feeble Minded at Columbus, and the Hospital for Epileptics at Galli- polis. The former had an average at- fc.-'i-dance last year of 1,960 and the kH.-jr j*569. The penitehtiary at Co- IvMibus had art' average attendance of l.f.t'M, and the Mansfield Reformatory, 1 the Boys’ Industrial School at- Lancaster 1,156 and the Givis’ indus trial School, at Delaware >109. The-re formatory for women, near Marys- , ville, is new and had 08 inmates. . These 15 Ohio asylums, prisons and reformatories had an average popu lation last year, of more -than 20^000, Think of .the wrecked homes, ruined lives, misery and utter helplessness represented by these institutions, and then remember that a large per cent of these unfortunates owe their con dition to drink. Furthermore, do not forget that the people of Ohio fire in partnership with the traffic which is causing all th's. misery and expense. Also keep in mind the jails; police stations, poor houses, and charitable institutions, aside from those already mentioned, which are built and main tained largely for the' care of the sa loon product, , Why not remove the cause rather than provide for-the effect? The management" of the Skat ing rink will give one-half of the proceeds to the Red Gross fund/ Ten t Located on the Barr Lot Gents 25c Ladies 15c W A N T E D DEAD STOCK WE W ILL PAY* TH E H IGHEST ; PR ICES EVER PA ID , B efore, by "us or anybody else for Horses and Cows OR ANY O TH E E D E A D S TO C K W«? have con tracted to furnish the AMERICAN H ID E AND LEATH ER CO. car loads o f hides fo r the 17. S . GOVERNMENT AN D MUST MAKE GOOD. CALL CALL US FOR PR ICES , Cash on R em oval. Belt Phone 837-W Cltizous Phones: Factory 454, Qffioe 187 Xenia Fertilizer Co. Xenia’s Only Fertilizer Plant. t Auto Service V Inquire about our tankage for hogs y Sheriff Sells CedarvilleProperty Sheriff F. A. Jackson on Saturday under orders of tiio Oemmon Pleas Court following a partition suit of the heire of the lain Robt. Hood sold five tracts of land that totaled $4117, Tract No. One known As the Ferris property appraised at $760 was purchased by W. J, Turbox for $600. No. 3 occupied by Gharles Spar row was appraised at $750 i>nd brought $640. No, Sknown as tile Hood homo stead appraised at $8000 was pur chased by Robt. Bird for $2000. Mr. Bird will improve the property for rent. No. 4 occupied by John Hamilton and purohaBed by Andrew Jackson for $846* No. 5 was a vacant lot back of the homestead and was purchased by Andrew Jackson for $165. Another sale was the A* R. Bull farin of 103.40 acres under par tition suit to W. Clifford Bull for $88 an acre. “ The farm was ap praised at $72 an aore. irSiteaag Mr. A. Y. Reid and family, of Norwood, Mr, Frank Reid", of LoUisadiia, Mrs. Joe Potts, of Battle Greek, Mich*, and Mrs. Anna Belle Reece, Minneapolis, Minn.; were palled ^here to attend the fUneral of their mother,, Mrs. Elizabeth Reid* % Mrs. B. H> Little and son, Ken neth,. expect to go on the Dahl- Campbell excursion to the lakes, Monday* Messrs. Hamilton Sr. and Jr., with their wives and Mrs. Minnie Rltenour ami daughter,- Johan Brock Hamilton,'and Mr. and Mrs, Rltenour, of Selma, spent Friday with Mr. nhd Mrs. A. 7 „ Smith. The Hatalltons will motor back to ‘Wilmington?™. The skating rink people have offered hail the pfooesds of Satur- day, evening’ s trade to the Bed Gross work, we bespeak for them a liberal patronage* Let us sari i you fras a paper pattern showing the exact size of spacs required to accommodate one of our n»w small size Baby Grand Pianos, advertised at tho special price of $465, MvMMMtM tw. m m * pm 168 NORTH HIGH STREET COLUMBUS, OHIO H 4 m » . ,, > *,M fwT*" * I**- uLn , v . I
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