The Cedarville Herald, Volume 41, Numbers 27-52

I i l f ) r 5 J % i) % . V ir A 1 i t t lA 6ur „ ------- 1 ■ m & to im i FOR PUH-IC eating plages m m rTf* C*«*►«*»■ BEFOREYOUfAT EFFECTIVE REMTHERULES OCTOBER gl, T HI UNITED STATES FOOD ADMINISTRATION has leeued ths fsllswlna Ositsral Ordsrt, effective Pot. 21 In «U Pub- lls Eating Flee**, Patrons SHOULD, proprietor* MUST, know ths Rulee, and llvs up t# tSom. By ao doing w* will bs help. to food tho ample# »*wi * 0 £ alliae In Europe, who must have from ua MVsntsen and a Half million tons of food this year. 0H>N®RAL QRP*R J. Ms VvW* •aUag-Blae# (ball csrvs or permit to ®* asrrod any bread or other bakery . predpot which doss not contain at PM t N per cent »{ wheat flour sub- stitfcLee, nor shall it serve or penult to be served more than i ounces ot WMa bffhA, known as Victory Bread, e r if no Victory Bread la served, more thap 4 ounces of other breads (such as eons bread, muffin*, Boston brown bread, etc.). Sandwiches, n r bread served at boarding camps, and. rye bread containing 60 per dent or more of pare rye flour, are excepted. CNBNBRAI' ORDER 2. No public •etlnS-Place shall serve or permit to bp-served bread or toast as a garni' ture or under meat., ' GENERAL ORDER 3. No .public eating'plaoe shall allow any bread to be brought to the table until after the -first course is served. GENERAL, ORDER 4. No . public eating-place Bhall serve, or permit to be served to one patron at any. one maal more than one kind of meat, For the purpose of this rule meat shall be considered as Including heel, mutton, pork, poultry and any by­ products, thereof. GENERAL ORDER 6. No public eating-place shall serve or permit to be served any, bacon as a garniture, GENERAL ORDER 6. No public e»thjg-place shall serve or permit to be Served to any one person at .any •ne me'flil more than one-half ounce1 of .butter. GENERAL ORDER 7, No public eating-place. shall serve or permit to he served to any one person at any ar. one meal more than one-half ounce Of Cheddar, commonly called Ameri­ can cheese. GENERAL ORDER *. No public eating-place shall use or permit the use of the sugar bowl on the table or lunch counter. Nor shall any public eating-place serve sugar or permit It to be served unless the guest so re- Quests, and in no event shall the amount served to spy pno person a t any one meal exceed one teaspoonful or its equivalent. GENERAL ORDER », No public eating-place shall use or permit, the use of an amount of sugar In excess of two pounds for eveTy ninety meals seryed,Including all uses of sugar on' the table and in cooking, excepting such sugar as may be allotted by the Federal Food Administrators to hotels holding a bakery license. No sugar allotted for this special baking pur- poie shall be used for any other pur­ pose. GENERAL ORDER 10, No public eating-place shall bum any food or permit liny food to be burned and all wasfa shall be saved to feed animals or reduced to obtain fats, GENERAL ORDER 11. No public eating-place shall display- or permit to he displayed food^on its premises in any such manner as-may -cause Its deterioration so that It can not be used for human consumption. GENERAL ORDER 12. *No public eating-place shall serve or permit to be served what is- known-as double, xreaia or cream de.luxe; and In ahy event, no cream containing over 20 per cent of butter fa t shall be served. A NATION'S STRENGTH IS IN ITSFOOD SUPPLY PRODUCE MORE! EAT LESS! WASTE NOTHING! AMERICAMUSTFEED120,00,00ALLIES $810,000FORGREENECOUNTY ' “ • » “ •$* *, * • , - • k . This is the amount the government allows- Greeiie County to exchange for bonds free from taxation and onwhich the government will pay 4 M $ interest the best investment in the world. The govern- ! ment needs the money to win this war for us. .W ill Greene. County .do her part? T say she will 0 I 4 Greene County will do-what the President of the y . S. wants us to do over subscribe our share. Don't wait do it now. Yours for-success of the Fourth Liberty Loan and the honor of Greene County. X EN IA , OHIO GIVE YOURCAR A NEW FINISH'DO IT YOURSELF WITH ONE OR TWO COATS ____ OF . i » j r ^ w t o FINISHES THETARBOX LUMBERCO. W . h. C L E M A N S R e a l Es tate Can found at my'offlce each Saturday or reached by phone at my redded** each evening. OMc* 3* FflONSS Residence 2*122 OSCARVltLI, OHIO. • • • e e e e e e e * • • # £ • e e # iOHIfiGLEANINGS I e e e s e e e e t f • • • • « * • • • • • • # • • • • Beoeuae Oot f, cuatomgVHy ob­ served as Are end accident preven­ tion , day, this year fells within the liberty loan campaign, the obaerv- aaee has been postponed until Sat­ urday, Nor. 2. Governor Cox issued a proclamation Urging co-operation •C all state and civic bodies in its observance. A violent wind end hall storm did considerable damage In Marlon, Han­ cock and Crawford counties. Charles T . Lewis, Toledo attorney and railway director, died suddenly gt his home, L. M. Phillips of Niles died after .ejjing toadstools mistaken for mush­ rooms, * Following Ohioans died of pneu­ monia a t Camp Sherman:’ Miss Eunice Jennings, New Richmond; Pri­ vate Jesse J). Warren, Delaware; Private ,Mathias Repicsky, Cleve­ land; Private Joseph Hughes, Shaw­ nee; Private Robert Weddle, Xenia, and Private Louis Simon, Elyria. Concussion ot the brain and Inter­ nal hemorrhages, due to having been run down by a speeding auto, caused the death of Mrs. Antoinette Drach, aged 63, a t Columbus. Kenneth C. Eggert, 23; Lancaster oil man, died following an operation for appendicitis. Thieves burglarized five stores at Alliance and escaped with less than 350. Private Henry Peters of Cleveland is detained In a German prison camp,( Columbus barbers are charging 5Q ‘ cents for a haircut'and 20 cents for.' a shave. Dr. Arthur G. Hyde, superintend­ ent- of state hospital at Cleveland, was appointed superintendent of state hospital ht Massillon to suc­ ceed Dr., H. C, Eyman, resigned. . Village schools at Caledonia were closed on account of Influenza. Sev­ eral of the/teachers have it and a score of .pupils are ill. Dr, Henry J. Lower, one of the best'known physicians and surgeons In Marion, county, was sued for di­ vorce and alimony by Mrs. Nannie Lower, who alleges he refuses to live with her. Threatened epidemic of influenza caused the closing of schools at La­ rue, Caledonia and Martel. Victor T, Noonan, safety director of the state Industrial commission, has declined, a t the request of the commission, a higher salaried posi­ tion offered him by the war depart­ ment as a safety director for muni­ tions plants. The commission told him prevention of industrial acci­ dents in Ohio is an important war activity. At Dayton an unknown colored man, hged 35, and who had a card in' his pocket containing the name “Herbert Smith,"' was run down and killed by an Ohio Electric car. Lake division of the Red Cross is­ sued an appeal to graduate nurses, undergraduate nurses and nurses" aids to register at oqpe ‘with local Bed Cross Committees for service in the present epidemic of Influenza. John Hays, ,a stranger, was bound- over to the grand Jury at Port Clin­ ton on a charge of being implicated In tho burning of, the barn on Fred DubUerfs £ann_,, “'Ora South, id, fell out of a tree at Marion and sustained a fractured skull, • Washington C., H. hoard of health closed all city schools, churches,, pic­ ture shows and other public places as a result of an epidemic of influ­ enza. Eighteen hundred cases la and near .the "city have been reported. Presence or influenza, at ..the Wil­ bur Wright armorers"' school at Day- ton. resulted -in a quarantine of the field. It is not announced how many cases are naeding attention. Two Ohio men, Charles Brand, Ur­ bans, large milk producer, and H. W. Ingersoll of Elyria, president of the Ohio Dairymen's association, ate on g committee jvith five men from, other states, appointed by Federal? Food Administrator Hoover, to in­ vestigate the dairy problem, particu­ larly the butter shortage and the In- pressed price of butter and other dairy products. The first task of the agricultural advisers of the six Ohio district draft boards, whose business it is to sea that.the draft doetf not make costly Inroads on food production, will he to m&lia a survey of the farm man power of the counties in their dis­ tricts, Surveys will be made through county farm bureaus and county ag­ ricultural agents. Every farmer and farm laborer will be listed, Miss Eugenia Maxwell, 13, of San­ dusky, a freshman in Miami univer­ sity, died in the university hospital of . bronchial pneumonia, which devel­ oped from Spanish influenza, Marlon federation of clubs con­ demned hs unpatriotic any attempt to discourage sending clgarets to Amer­ ican troops In France, Robert Sinclair, 30, formerly of Co­ lumbus, committed suicide at Toledo by shooting himself through the tem­ ple. Assistant Surges Hadley H. Teter, 27, graduate of Ohio State university, la among the missing oh the Tampa, United States patrol ship sunk In British waters. He lived In Clete- land. A reprieve granted by the circuit eout a t Cleveland reached Warden; Thomas at the Ohio penitentiary too late to’stay the execution of Pasqqale Biondo, It is believed the Cleveland court officials misunderstood the date of the execution. Biondo was 27 years old and the loader of a gang ot robbers who killed five pclioemea la Akron, rg*.vylw*«t* ji wA-jia# 1 jgiaeftgi CLASSIFICATION U you desire information regarding tho taxation amendment, to the Con- sthoHofi providing for classification, please write OHIOTAXPAYERSLEAGUE, *01 Gugk Building, Columbus, Ohio, For the Expression and Enjoyment of Life-—Music With its Magic Power to Soothe our Wounds of Spirit, to Ligthen our Sorrows, to Heighten our Joys, to Gladden our Hearts. , • ' . ’ ’ 1 - . ** . . ... ■ ’ : ■ ->:• , ' ■ • Unfortunate, indeed, are those persons who have never known the happiness that lies in ,MUSIC. We need it, every one of us. It is a fluent, free and beautiful form of expression for those deeper impulses of ours which are denied expression in words. »♦ Is There Music in If Not-There There should be a PIANO, for one of the greatest assets a young woman or man can posses is ability to play the piano; Or. a PLAYER-PIANO with it's wonderful power to educate the uncultivated ear and for*those who have never learned to play. Or a TALKING MACHINE with It's possibilities for pleasure, amusement and musical education without limit. Whether you decide on a moderate priced instrument,' or one of the’more costly—your satisfaction is assured if you select from our complete showing of none but high grade instruments. A Postal or Phone Call Will Bring Our Representative To Explain Our Easy Payment Plan For Your Convenience* “Just Try” ; s . 3SSSSSSSSSSSdses£6S68SSGgd$SSSS6€ '\ i V V 168 NORTH HIGH STREET c « L U M B u a , o : n « .

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