The Cedarville Herald, Volume 40, Numbers 27-52
She # , The time to stop mh f in wh*» you are-ready to stop doing t»wi*ww» You'll notice that the prograawv* merriiant is an adv#rti#er, v w v w w v y v ^ ^ F O R T I E T H Y E A R N O . 3 3 . REVISED LIST OR RED CROSS CONTRIBUTORS Since trta first list o f Red Cross con tributors was published there have been some changes. There were also some omissions which have been ad ded, to the list. The local member ship is &Q2 and the amount contribut ed is $2820. $ 100 , 00 . Dr. M, I. Marsh, $50.00. Harry Townsley, Andrew Bros,, W. L* Clemans, Exchange Bank, S. K. Williamson, $40.00. W. J. Cherry, C, E, Cooley, G- H. Creswell. , $30.00. Robert Bird &. Sons Co. . $28.00. John M, Kyle. $25.00. George Little, J, S. E. McMichael, S, M. Murdock, Alary E, Creswell,. A. H. .Creswell, Mrs. Ida O. Stormont, John Stormont, O. T. Wolford. R .S , Townsley, J. C. Townsley, C. G, Turn- bull, R.. A . Murdock, R. C. Watt, G. E . Jobe, Tapbox Lumber Co., Cedar- Ville Lime Co., Kerr & Hastings Bros. '' $20.00. J .H . Creswell, aW. W . Creswell, James 1?. On*, N: L.' Ramsey, A. M. Peterson, S. T . Baker, O. E, Bradfute, J. E. Turnbull, J. G. McCorkell, R. M. , McKee, W. Ii. Smith, Fred Dobbins, Andrew Winter, W. H. Smith, Cedar- ville Centennial Commission, $15.00. F. W. Weimer, A . G. Collins, Edwin Dean, W. H. Creswell, Robert Bird, j 1 $10.00. L. M. Huston, Mrs. Mary Harbison, G. C. Hanna, W. S. Hopping, Andrew Jackson, J. Oliver Jobe, F. A* Jurkat, J. E . Kyle, A . E. Richards, C. M. Ridgway, L.- H - Sullenberger, G. P. Siegeler, W. B , Htevenson, Airs. M. M. Beally Mrs. W. M. Barber, Lulu Bar ber, Bertha Stormont, W. W. Troute, W. J. Tarbox, Olin Dobbins. Bert Turner, Prank Townsley, Ra chel K . Creswell, W. A . Collins, A r thur Cummings; W. K. Cooley, Elder R. Corry, Mrs. J. H. Andrews, B. W. Anderson, Thomas Andrew, Lee An derson, R. B. Barber, W. P. Anderson, W . C. Bull, Thompson Crawford, W» O. Maddux, M, C, Nagley, Frank Creswell; Oscar Evans, Cedarville Telephone, Co. O E D A R V I L L E , O H I O , F R I D A Y , J U L Y 1 3 , 1 9 1 7 rSJSS P R I C E , $ 1 .0 0 A Y E A R ■f$5.0(hv G. C, Arnold, Edgar Arnold, Vera For years it has been a common practice o f all city bakeries .to accept unsold bread. This has been an ex pensive plan to the bakeries but the public demanded fresh bread. Thou sands o f barrels o f flour will be saved annually. The refusal to take back unsold bread was brought about at the request o f the U. S. Council o f Defense. aarth, Mrs. Robert Bird, Mrs. Zetta Bull, W , H, Arthur, H. M . Baker, Mrs. A . H. Barr, Raymond S, Bull. Tinsley Corn, J. H .’ Fortney,. Mrs. J. E . Gill, Ri. F. Gilbert, Camper Heitz- man, David R. Johnson, G. H. Irvine, D . M. Kyle, J. J. Keleher, Carl Spracklin, F . B. Turnbull, Fred Townsley, Mrs. John Townsley, Robt. R. Townsley, Howard Turnbull, J, M. Tarbox, John. Turner, F, E. Tobias, D. S. Williamson, H . C. Wilson,, S. iC. Wright, E. E. Finney, W. C. Finney, James Frame, W . L. Nerr, Calvin Owens, Reid Owens,. E. C. Oglesbee, George Powers, J. W. Patton, J. E. Post, Joe Pitstick, Herman Straley, Mrs. Thomas Fields, M. W, Collins, James Duffield. Clayton McMillan, L. D. Parkelr, Lillias Ross, John Shepherd, Sidney Smith, Mable Stormont, Rosa Stor mont, Alva St. John, Thomas St. John, Mrs, Kate Setz, Edna Stormont, Charles Conner, James Duncan, H .‘ C. Creswell, W. E. Clemans, David Cooney, C. M. Crouse, J. W, Rada- baugh, H* H. Stormont, A. E. Swaby, J. Q. Stewart, A. Z. Smith, William Spracklin, J. C. Stormont, C. T. Ste venson, E. L. Stormont, Clarence Stuckey,.C. N. Stuckey, J. E. Stuckey, Jacob Siegler, Charles E. Smith G, H. Hartman, G. W. Hamman, Howard Holloway, A. J. Hinton, John Johnson, George Johnson, Harry Kennon, Hugh Murdock, Mrs. Martha Milbum, W. E. McChesney, H. E. Mills, Currie McElroy, William McCampbell, John McCampbell, J. Alex AIcCampbell, Alberta Creswell, David Bakestraw, J. M. Auld. The committee also received many donations fo r the cause, particularly fo r the Red Cross stand that was con ducted on Main street fo r two days, which cleared about $25, The Herald contributed all printing and advertis ing gratis; $4.00. • L. S, Heilderson, Alva Link, J* W. McCoy, Duff Andrew, Frank Cultice, John Kendcs, A, C. Kyle, A. iL'Shoc* ley, Mrs, J. V. Terr, Mr . S. K. Wil liamson, Mrs, Elizabeth Blair, Eliza beth Blair, j $3.00. Gertrude Bumgarner, Cecil Burns, Mrs. Jane Arthur, Mrs. Lee Anderson, J. E. Randall, Lawrence Barber, Wal te r Fields, n . | . „ ,..v Don't fail to read the C. A. Kclble July clearance sale adv. in this week's paper, •‘-Comply with the now auto law Which goes into effect today. Get youf new Ians for the auto head Hghle. We bave^tll kind# from the cheapest to the highest price, all of whttth are in the requirements of theUw. We have these in stock and can fit you out at once. „• It. A. Murdock Garage. W h en y o u have "the backache CLAIMS. FDR EXEMPTION; THE PROPOSED RULES. According to latest word from iWashington exemptions will be made f under strict rules. As the .numbers are drawn - in Washington,4 the same number will ‘ apply in every unit in tins state, lor instance number five will be Csled from each county and so on with each number, drawn. Then comes the physical examina tion in accordance with' regulatioas provided. Each one is again subject . to-examination by an army surgeon, 1If this is passed thencomes the qnes* ]tion of exemption, 1 ; l Claims fo r exemption because of dependents may be made by the man ’ himself, his wife or other dependents, •or b y a third party who has peygon- |ally investigated the case. A claim : by the husband must be accompanied / - by supporting affidavits signed by the . ; -j wife and by the head o f a*£amily re- ’ siding in Hie same territory, A claim »by the wife or a third party must be ■ „ . . . , , Jaccompanied by two supporting afil- Gov; Cox has,named the now board davits signed by heads o f families, o f agriculture as provided by the last .similar rules govern claims on tho legislature A t that time there was grounds of other dependents, the bo- some question about a change in the pendents or third parties being «u- Iaw but since the membership o f the thorizod to file claims with support- new board is made-known tho change ; inlx affidavits. In each case the board can bo endorsed. Tho new board com -'must be satisfied before it grants cx- pnscs progressive farmers and ex-*empties or discharge that the depend- perienced business men, only four o f , out or dependents are actually sup- the old board being named. ’ .ported and maintained by the fruits Greene county has the honor o f one 10f the man’s menial or physical labor, appointment, Mr. R. D. Williamso* ' Local boards , are'required, subject who served m the old hoard, will be to appeal, to pass on claims fo r ex- o h io n e w ; TO THE IE i o u t I LUCK Fire destroyed four : Wam;nte;i. Clyde Jewell, moifler drowned while fishing i« Bovere windstorm ' Christian church at EOS Warren. > «sidcncea at if Salem, was LPIne lake, crocked the ,Mecca, neat IK a member o f the new; Another prom inent business man and farmer ap pointed is Foster P. Houston, o f South Charleston, one of the largest landowners in the state, Homer C. Price, former dean o f the Ohio Agri cultural College, was .also named. RESIGNED HIS POSITION. Mr. B. E. McFarland, who has been in the office -of the Pennsylvania rail road . here ’ as assistant to Ticket Agent Radabiiugh, has resigned his position and goes with the Gedarville, Lima Company, in the capacity of assistant manager. • BREAD H o t r e t u r n a b l e . Brickmasona are at. work rebuild- ng the G. E. Boyd building that was damaged by fire some, weeks ago. The building; will be full two stories high and fireproof. Slow shipments o f material has held up this work fo r several weeks. THREE BIDS RECEIVED. The McFarland stock o f groceries was offered at private sale by Mr. Andrew Jackson as trustee in, bank ruptcy on Tuesday. Three bids were received on the stock, none of which have been made public. The bids must be referred to the Referee in Bankruptcy, William Howard, of Xenia. THE FAIRFIELD CAMP. Although work on the Fairfield avi ation camp lias not been completed, twelve airplanes have been received and about one hundred men, pilot, and mechanics ,o£ the Twelfth areo squadron. It is expected that the buildings will be completed this week but it may be October before the grading and outside work is com pleted. Enough is done now to enable the assembling o f the ma chines fo r the use o f the students that will arrive about August first. A waterworks system is being completed and the electric light plant installed while the sewerage plant will soon be ready for Use. THE REVENUE QUESTION. The liquor men are still harping on the lose o f revenue to the government if prohibition should prevail. Careful statisticians are proving that instead of being a gain in tlic matter o f rev enue, it is a positive loss. An oiftside estimate o f the amount received from the traffic places it at $500,000,000; while the loss in footlsfuU's; loss thru crime, insanity, and poverty; loss of the 120,000, the number o f deaths due to drink in a year; loss in production of wealth, etc., amount to $3,745,097,- 000. In other Words, the nation will oac $7,48 fo r every $1.00 it receives. These facts and many more have icon brot to the attention of Congress, so that they are without excuse when they bring up the revenue argument. i f President Wilsoh does not know the condition o f affairs, he also is without excuse. President Lincoln made the mistake o f his life when he, with tho greatest reluctance, agreed to tax liquor as a war measure. Pres ident Wilson has tho opportunity to undo that mistake. The sober, loyal men o f this nation would gladly pay the revenue rather than have the liquor men pay a price for the privi lege o f degrading and debauching their sons. e.tfption or discharge' within.three days after the filing o f affidavits. District boards must decide appeal eases within five days after the clos ing o f the proofs and their decisions are final. If the ruling, of a lofcnj board is affirmed, the person in ques tion stands finally accepted for mili tary service. " I f in the opinion of the district board,” this section of the regulations concludes, " t h e direct, substantial, material loss to any .such industrial or agricultural enterprise outweighs the loss that would result from failure to obtain the military service o f any such person, a certificate of discharge may be issued to him * * * ” Certificates o f exemption will mot; necessarily be permanent. They may j be revoked with changing, conditions ’ or may be granted only fo r prescribed periods. Ernest Amore, ’sixt^ia, Plainfield, was drowned In. W ills* creok while hunting mussels. Pittsburgh packet R * h struck an obstruction in the Ghiojriver at New Matamorgs and xank. Dr. Milton' H. Lyon, im ffge llst ot Winona Lake, will a revival at Elyria In the fall. Body ot Frank KtBlkr, fifty-four .clgarmaker, was found * t Cincinnati, Keller had. been rnuri •At Lorain Mrs. B. p&Aldricb sued her father-in-law for $p),(K)0, charg ing he called her a “ fat One thousand deleggfes attended the convention of OhjpJjhrlstlan Ei* deavor Union at Hamli J. A. Kirby, BaytonSfwas elected president of the AmaMphated Apse elation of Firemen of ptiio. J Rev. John' Green, fornleriy of Belle fontalne, has taken tlhfipastorate ol Second Baptist- church m Kenton. Dayton Masons haw; purchased Cooper seminary propa&y as a site for a now $500,000 MW*®ie 'temple. Allen W. GUI, foymaSYpungstown city treasurer, won amsfttid on an in dictment charging oppoA lon to draft, Invalid's home Is to fn e built at Carey, near. Our Lady the Consola tion shrine, by Sisters a|. S t Francis- George Roland,' fouBBCn, Spring- field, fell forty jfeet fres^a bridge at Yellow Springs and wa^nerlously in jured. Rev. John W. MoCtSfefclt, eighty* five, former repreaectfijHse from the Tenth Ohio district m Jgngress, die-l at Gallipolis, At Mt. Vernon Fatrqgffijtn McElroy shot and seriously wquMfsd Charles Suttlen When Suttles, y had been arrested, tried -to escaj Simon B. Lulley, et$l|S8ye, said to be Ohio’s oldest m a jo j* * preparing to become a oandhteteuM h is sixtieth year as .mayor of d r . M c C l e l l a n r e s ig n s . . Dr. B., R, McClellan has resigned as a member o f the Greene County Ex emption Board, due to the fact that he is first lieutenant in the Medical Officers’ Reserve- Corps. It was im- A. W, Stanley, - N l ^ HgPlate rail road detetthm, was aldajB p killed at Cleveland py a gang $j|H kn^w hom he tried to drive IrOidfl Sol 'Btix, fifty-two, ® B e r of, tho firm of Louis Stix A ffljBBbf, wholo- salers o f dry good* - 9 HKotlon i-at Cinciunari, died suddaffl | n k h ) office. fill Hie vacancy. WEDDING BELLS WILL RING. A report has been going the rounds that one o f our prominent young school teachers is to soon wed a South Charleston lady, an announce-, ment party to that effect having been given at South Charleston last week, The soon-to-be benedict when asked concerning the •coming event prom ises to inform us in due time. Whether the wedding bells will ring before school,opens in Illinois we can not say. NEW PICTURE MACHINE. Mr, Ralph Murdock has installed a new picture machine and the movie fans were much pleased with the per fectness o f the pictures last Satur day night. The machine is one of the« best on the market, has all the safe ty attachments a'nd equals the ma chines in the largest cities. The ma chine had been ordered fo r several weeks but it could not be delivered) and installed until last Saturday. Thcj two serial pictures, the "Neglected Wife” and “ Patria” each Wednesday and Saturday night are drawing ca pacity houses. . MARIO L0Z1T0. MARIO LOZITO, * Mftrlo Lofifo bns been ended by com* potent critics "tho most magnetic batuT leader In America," Ills New York City Marine Hand Is in constant de mand In the metropolis for Wg conven- tloiis ami other gatherings. Twenty select mnsielnns from tills organization trill appear at our (Tmutanqiia under tottl. Of (too l will conVMe -you. SA“ “ ' h am cl,im ™ Mai" a,» Got i t a t the d ru g store, j TStm*. &• church, died atB«$&OBtAln6. jks nerved In the navy during1the -civil war. Steve George, guardsman, Canton, was sentenced to ten days In the workhouse charged with kicking In a window wliih had an American. Hag pasted on it, . ’ 1 Mismanagement and irregularity are alleged In a report filed by State Examiners Blise, Dawson, and Bren nan, who Investigated concession con tracts o f »lx state fairs. . . Ernest C. Johnson, a traveling man of eioveland, was shot as he enterod a Turkish bath at Toledo. The bul let lodged in hie abdomen. Otis 1>. Wickerd of Fostorla Is held. Mrs. Mary .KugdulaS), sixty-five, was killed and her granddaughter, Mar garet Krojec, fifteen, fatally wounded when an,engine backed into a gang of women section hands at Elyria. At Toledo two Sixth Ohio privates, found sleeping on duty, were sen tenced to one year in Fort Leaven worth penitentiary and ordered dis honorably discharged from service. „ Crashing through a burning trestle near Waverly, a Detroit, Toledo and Ironton freight train Carried G. H, Llttler, engineer, and Otto Kirsch, fireman, both of Springfield, to' their death. When Lyman Hudson o f Bollair© awolco ho found his wife dead beside him. She had been killed by a stray bullet which catered the room through a window during a street brawl, Extension oF the-, state advisory committee o f the Republican party Into each, county in Ohio was reoom* mended at the joint meeting of the state central and state advisory com mittees at Columbus. Governor Cox pardoned Mrs. Emma Daugherty, - Youngstown, widowed molnor o f five children, who was serving a life sentence in the Marys ville reformatory for poisoning an Italian who boarded at her home. Court ruled out codicil to tho. will of John Hugo, Zanewvilla millionaire, in which' $1,7007600 was left to- the' Actors’ Fund of America and Metro* polltnn Art Museum, holding it was written when Hogo was unsound of mind. A person hurt while working for a self-insuring employer under the workmen's compensation act nmy ap peal to tho courts for compensation when the state Industrial commission turns down a claim, the state supremo court ruled. State administration board dis missed Dr. T. If. Haines as clinical director o f the state bureau ot juven ile research. Work of the bureau will be conducted for the present by Dr. E. J, Emcrlok, head of the instltutiob for feoblcwmiffdcd, • Governor Cox commissioned Col onel Charles X . Zimmerman, Cleve land, brigadier general in command of tho new Third brigade, Lieutenant Colonel A. W. Davie, Norwalk, was commies,kmcd to succeed Silnuuorman os colonel of tho Fifth regiment, Cleveland. m* Star- hmm * ass »*# w ** ip»** , /Thirty pc-r cent in-rreaso Jn water , f ntOG is ofTcs-tivo at Lmain, Alliance police fhn aten to quit un- , less) 15 par cent wage increase is ; granted, 1 Tweuty-sovcn hundred school gar* j dons arc under cultivation. In High land county. j Campaign at Zanesville for $200,0G0 for the y , M. O. A. ended with $221,- 000 subscribed. Henry c . Muthen, head o f a Cincin nati oil company, was drowned In Lake Superior. Near Marlon John Witzel, sixty, farmer, was instantly killed by light- ning while feeding stock. Oyer 3,000 veterans in Union coun ty have signed petitions for a state wide prohibition election. Edward Watts, twelve, was drown. ‘ ed at, Columbus when ho attempted to swim across the Scioto river. Grieving over the death of his wife, Melvin R. Short, Cincinnati lumber dealer, shot and- killed himself, Superintendent Darrell Joyce, Ham ilton, was elected president of the Ohio- State Teachers’ association. Windstorm swept Liberty and Lees burg townships, Union county, level ing twenty barns and other farm pro* erty, Cincinnati board o f health refused Jacob Miller’s application for perjnis si'on to slaughter and sell horses for food, ' Injuries received, when he foV, eighty feet down a coal chute caused the death of Samuel Coffnea at Yor- salllea. Farmers in Seneca-and Hancock counties have appealed for a federal inspector, following epidemic o f.h og ebrdera. • When Harold Siipon, thirteen, hook ed a big fish he was jerked into the Maumee river at Toledo aad was drowned. Ohio Mining company purchased fiOO.acres in Trimble township,^Afheno- county, and will open three large soal mines, . Cincinnati police ray- Albert' Geld* reich, thirty-four, confessed to killing John Keller when Keller attacked him with a ...knife, . - • ‘ An unknown person stole into the' bedroom of Hannah JL Glenn, seven teen, Lancaster, cut the hair from her head and escaped, At Flmllay Evelyn Farmer, seven, and her sister, two, fell from a third- stoTy window to the ground bglow, but were uninjured. , Edward Elliott, Wooster lineman, was Instantly killed when a telephone pole he was working on broke and 'threw him to the pavement. Body o f Miss Nell Fleming, who dis appeared from Cincinnati, was found, in a room of a Milford hotel with a hpttl*1 of poison at her side. Governor Cox announced the AP- commissionar at a year. Frand Miffter. Iwenty-two, who com mitted suicide at Fortamonth, was led to take hie life through fear he would be selected for the ,,army. Mrs. Minnie Edmonston was struck by lightning and seriously injured during a storm which'''1 caused much property damage at Portsmouth. Colonel Oliver Hazard . * Payne, prominent in New York and Cleve land financial circles, died at New York in his .seventy-eighth year, Findlay will entertain the twenty- eighth annual convention of the Worn* ar's Home Missionary society of the Evangelical association next year. Private Anson Garber of"East Clove- Murdock Theatre Saturday, July 14. ~ Patria S j f , . kutli koland. Paths Star. V e r n o n C a s t l e . I n * ? 'atnl Ch6ilnln$ “ T h e N eglected W ife ” P A T R I A 6 ^ I f t - t e r D - c a t i o H - a l j S c o d a ; W ednesday, Ju ly 11 land, member of Company E, Ohio en gineers, was drowned in the Scioto river at Chiliicothe while swimming. J. P. Hershberger, Lancaster, Dem ocrat, has been appointed chief dep uty stnte fire marshal at $2,000, to succeed W. S.' Carlisle, Columbus, Republican. Declaring her husband cliokod her until sho promfsed to commit suicide, Mrs. Luella Watson of Lorain filed suit for divorce from hor husband, Norman Watson. Horace A. Chapman, eighty, coal operator and candidate for governor of Ohio on the Democratic ticket in 1897, died at Columbus, following a three weeks’ Ulness, C. If. Howick, member of the Dem ocratic state central co r ttiittea and cashier o f the First National bank of Cellna, is In a critical condition, from a stroke of paralysis. James Cruzen o.eventy-seven, shot and killed John Hosier, forty, assist ant dog catcher at Xenia, when Ho sier went to his place to get three dogs Cruzen owned. A call for experts for tho Ohio na tional guard. division was issued by Governor Cox and Adjutant General Wood, Chauffeurs, mechanics and avi ators aro urged to eblist. Dr, J. F,. Monger, state registrar of vital statistics, .sold 37,701 births were reported to him tiie -finst four months this year, against 35,674 births the corresponding months last year. Joseph Judge, Toledo,' stationery clerk in Secretary of State Fulton’s ofilee, will bo named purchasing, agent for state departments under the now law, Fulton announced. Sal ary is $3,000, Engineer kjaderson was instantly killed and Fireman C. W. Fry was fatally Injured when two freight trains on the Baltimore and Ohio rail road collided head-on at Freeport, west of Bcllhire, Ohio grain dealers in convention'at Tiffin deeded these officers: Presi dent E. t\ Bear, Hlckavlllo; vice president C. M. Eikcnberry, Hamil ton; secretary-treasurer, J, W. Mc Cord, Columbus, State public utilities commission finspeeded for thirty days the now tariffs of Ohio railroads providing for a 15 emit a ton increase on coal and a horizontal increase of 15 per cent on shipment of other commodities, Notice C. A. Kelble’abig July dear- ancfenaie Ifi thin i$»u&, ■ \ W ednesday , July 18 The Neglected Wife Moods of Medora Hoeys Heroes Thursday, Jujly 19 Million Bid Saturday, July 21 . Patria %a O v % ' ‘ h > - , - ' , f ,■ Night'Shows at 7:15 anid 8:45. A J Wednesday, Thursday, NSghts 10c Admission: Saturday, Adults I5 g , Children |0c. HAY TOOLS Mowers, Tedders, Steel Rakes, Wood Hay Rakes, Side Delivery' Rakes, Gearless Loaders, Carriers, Forks, Slings, Rope, Pulleys, Half Circle Singletrees for Hay Rope etc., etc. Kerr&HastingsBros. s ........................ . . . . . . .. w . L . C L E M A N S R e a l Es t a t e Can ba fopml at my offlc« «ach Saturday or reached by phona at * my rcsidatKO each evenitug;. Office 36 PHONES Reahlenca 2-122 €ED AK ,V E .tpE , OHWO*
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