The Cedarville Herald, Volume 42, Numbers 1-26
Salvation Army Seekisg Funds Th* slogan fo r the Salvation Army campaign to radio $33,000,000 to pay debts contracted by 1dmwar work is: **A man may be doom but he's never out** Former Governor 'Whiteman o f New York is chairman o f this cam paign and each state has been organ ised. Greene county has a quota, o f $ 5,000 wad this, township $500, There is not a returned over-seas soldier but what has the best o f word fo r this organisation, •Their work about the camps and on the battle front issaid to have exceeded every- •other except the Red Cross. The policy o f the organisation has always been that there was no dis tinction among fallen men and hun dreds o f thousands have been reached and led to better lives that were not within the scope o f endeavor o f any- other organization. P. H, Creswell is to have charge of the campaign in this township and it ia proposed to start the solicitors on Monday, Most o f the work in the county will be done by returned* sol diers. Lend'a b in d by rewarding ,the organization for what it has done f o r all the boys. u m t* i c o n * ® * Common Fleas Court .Grosne County, Ohio. Kate K, Thompson, Plaintiff VS. Kelly Thompson, defendant. Kelly Thomson, place o f residence unknown will taka motile that Kate K. Thompson has filed suit fo r divorce dgainst him in said court, bar petition charging wilful absence fo r more than throe years and that the same will be fo r hearing at the court house in Xenia, Ohio, on dune Id,1010 a t 10 A . M, or as sooh thereafter as the same can be reached by which time defend ant must answer or demurr to said petition or judgment may bo taken against him. ' Signed Kate K , Thompson; HOW'S TH IS? NOTICE, ROAD PETITION. On the 26th o f 'April, 1919, R. B. Barber et al, filed a petition with the Board o f County Commissioners; praying fop .the alteration and vaca tion o f a part o f Public Road No. 135 located in Cedatville Township, Green County, Ohio, on the following line, to-wit: ; ; ■ Beginning op the land o f Ada Baker in Survey No. 6?50 and continuing on • line o f said Road, so as to oxtend' the alignment o f the road East o f the be ginning o f the. proposed alteration to an intersection with (he present road, so as to eliminate a crook in said road: and f o r vacation o f so much of the present road as is contained be tween the East and. West ends o f pro posed .alteration, a distance o f about; . 700 feet. _ . Also fo r a part beginning on the •land o f Lucretla M iller' in»Survey No. 3376, and continuing^ on line o f said roadj so as to parallel with the North side o f said P. C. C. ft St. L. R. R . rjght-of- way to an intersection with the East Street o f Miller’s Addition to the village o f Cedaryille: and the va cation o f that portion o f said road from the East end.o f th e proposed al- teration to the. South end o f said street^ a distance o f ahdut 400 feet. / ^Notice is hereby .given, •that the Board of- Cohnty Commissioners has fixed. May 29th, 1919 at IQ o'clock a, m. when they will view the propos ed improvement. Also, the 7th day o f June, *1919 at 10 o’clock a. m., as the date for afinal hearing thereon at the office o f the Board o f County Commissioners. A. E. FAULKNER, ; 1Auditor o f Greene-County, Ohio. We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward fo r any case o f Catarrh that cannot bo cured by Ball's Catarrh Medicine. ' Hall's' Catarrh Medicine has been taken by catarrh sufferers f o r the past thirty-five years, and .has be come known as the most reliable rem edy fo r Catarrh, Hall’s Catarrh Medicine acts thru the Blood on the Mucous surfaces, expelling the Poison from the Blood and healing the dis eased portions, * A fter y o u ' have taken Hall's Ca tarrh Medicine fo r a short time you our Send for rid testimonials, o f catarrh, free. F. J. CHENEY ft Co., Toledo, Ohio Sold by all Druggists, 70c. WANTED: CARPENTERS, CABI NET MAKERS, BOAT BUILDERS, JOINERS, AND PAINTERS WHO UNDERSTAND HIGH CLASS FIN ISHING. Our plant is light and.well .ventilated. Port Clinton* is located on Lake Erie „in the famous fruit growing section, midway between To ledo and Cleveland on the main line o f the New York Central. RR. A good inexpensive little town in which to live . Plenty o f fishing, hunting and boating. Attractive summer resorts near by. Steady work. The Matthews Co., Port Clinton, Ohio. D R .U P. ELIAS DENTIST Exchange Bank Bldg, Cedarville, O. LEGAL NOTICE. . Common J*leas Court, Greene Cpunty, .Ohio. ■ ."v ' Nora Carroll, Plaintiff, -vs.- ' . Otis A* Spicer, Defendant. .Otis A . Spicer, place o f residence unknown, vjrill take notice that rApril 26,1919, said plaintiff filed . in said Court her1 petition against him to quiet title as to all right and interest that may be asserted by Defendant in the following real eatUte, situate in County o f Greene, State o f Ohio and city o f Xenia, Part o f Lot 137, original plat o f said.city, 90 by 127 feet, and that said cause will be fo r hearing at the Court House in Xenia on June 23, .1919, by which time Defendant must answer or demur to said petition or judgment may be taken against him. Nora Carroll, Plaintiff. AUCT I ONE ER TERMS VERY REASONABLE Satisfaction Guaranteed .or no Pay Parties wanting two auctioneers' I am in- position to supply the extra man with' unlimited ex-- pericnce. ‘ PHONE 2-120 | Cedarville, - - |Ohio EYES Examined Correctly Glasses Fitted. —^ AT MODERATE PRICES TIFFANY’S Optical Department Open Evenings by Appointment Select Your Car Now Reo Dodge Overland Hudson Essex Nash M. C. NAGLEY Local Dealer N. J. HUNTEb.lDUtributor *Va*t dam*** to fruit in Ohio no means amounts to total failure of the crop or anywhere near it. Sec- rotary of Agriculture .Shaw Bald after receiving reports from OTer the state. The previous estimate of a loss of $1,600,900 Is a conservative one, be says, but it must be remem bered that a full bruit crop would amount to .perhaps $15,000,000. Oblo employers paid out the enoi* mous total of $1,007,069,179 .In wages and salaries to 1,285,167 workers all Industries in 1917. The number o f workers exceeded by 100,000 the total reported employed In 1916, the industrial commission’s report shoVg, Professor Raymond C. Osburn the department"o f entomology at Ohio Sta,]te university and government sci entists predict that the periodical visit of the locust swarm will be made in Ohio some time in May. Prosecuting Attorney Dixon filed petition in Belmont county common pleas court askingf an injunction to prevent the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone company from putting into Affect a schedule that would In crease charges In St. ClairsviUe and nearby towns. Henry Patten,. 70, farmer, in re sponae to a query as he stood at the .grave of a friend In Athens cerae tery, said he was feeling fine. Two minutes later he fell dead from heart failure, ^ Five masked burglars tied the night watchman in the basement and blew three-safes in the clothing store of the Burkhardt Brothers company, Cin clnnati, end escaped with several thousand dollars. *. . Leo H. Rinehart was fatally In jured and two others were hurt when the automobile In which they were riding suddenly turned turtle at Co lumbus. * .The 166th infantry of the fomoue Rainbow division arrived at Nev York on the big transport* Leviathan The regiment composed of troops from central Ohio, and was greete by Governor'Cox and other state o f flcials, Daniel K. Gadd,.fanner, New Com erstown, suing for divorce, charge his wife attacked him with a fence rail. ■ John H. Williams, 63, Barnesvllk miller, killed himself in his office He. had been brooding over bushiest troubles. . Public school -teachers' salarle Were increased at Canton, minimum being raised from $550 a year to $7m and Maximum from $1,200 to $1,301 a year for teachers h fthe elemental-, schools, with proportionate increase in advanced grades.. Teachers in Lorain public schoo' get an increase In salary of $150 a year for,all grades, Steve Sabo of Barton was kille- when he fell from a window, at the Belmont county infirmary. John Lersch; Elyria banker and dr goods merchant, is dead. Sandusky’s clucks have been tume> -back one hour. It Is said the peopl are opposed to the daylight savin plan. Lieutenant Harry -J. Runner r ceived two broken ribs when the al plane with which he was trying i make a landing at Defiance, after h gasoline supply became exhauster struck a barn. Near Bucyrus W. S. Cook, 37, far* er, fell on a revolving saw, which m through biB skull and penetrated • brain. He has. a chance to recover. . Cash drawer of the Lorain Milllr company, Lorain, was robbed of $H by aq unidentified stranger while tl clerk's attention was attracted to n other part of the office, William McClain; for 30 years s pertntendent of'the Washington C.M schools, has been re-employed at $*.', 750 per year. Salvation army at Alliance a nounce_dLplan.s_jor_A..campaign_Ma_ 19*26 to raise $25,000 for a new heat quarters building, Charles Moren. 35, was fatally ii jured at Steubenville When he wl caught under a 2.000-pound weight c a blast furnace- ore bridge. Cosbocton Y. W, C. A. secure 1,4C<0 hew members in a 10-day cam palgn. , Yeggs used acetylene flames tr, force open the vault at the Harpstot hank at Harpster Wyandot county They escaped with $100,000 Worth of liberty bonds. , May Hoperllne, Martin Byrnes and Alfred Blattner, accused of the mur der of Mattie Hayes, an Alliance re sort keeper, pleaded not guilty when arraigned in court. At Dayton Charles Minor, colored was sentenced to life imprisonment for wife murder. Fish hatcheries at Put-In-Bay arc liberating 106,600,000 wbltefish in Lake Erie this spring. Bell telephone interests at Norwailk were absorbed by the local compedy Richard Bell, 25, and John Claw ford, constables, were shot when they raided an alleged Socialist assembly at Steubenville. Anthon Defies is -tin der arrest Charged with the shooting Party-five men from Wayne county died in military service during the wan A meeting'of Ohio representatives of $0 Protestant denominations will bg held at Cleveland May 7, when the national conference of the Federal Council of Churches In "Christ In America 1 b held In that city. At this meeting an effort will be made to unite Protestant denominations of the state into a council of the federal organisations, To check Toledo’s crime wave, dur ing which eight persons met violent deaths within two weeks,. Mayor Schrelber called a conference tit which lie warned 263 policemen tb* order must be restored in the city. * 4* * * Coney as a Venice. Coming up toward Sandy Hook on* a perfectly placid sen we were blessed with just that amount of haze which turned Coney island Into Venice, Ar thur E. Shipley writes In Scribner’s Magazine. The sea Was an Adriatic lagoon j we might have left Trieste, overnight 1 The same -merciful mist changed the clcar-ent outlines o f the Skyscrapers Into Turner’s pictures and the Boy and the Poet became ecstatU with the ecstasy at youth. - ■ 'Sr**,.#* * w , «*• J‘ *• Price* i What They WiviiM . . Be If We Bought Today. W e Contracted . For Them La*t July and August When Price* Were Much Lower In addition to the sayings made by our early buying, we are o ffe r in g , still”greater re ductions on the prices based on, this-low cost to u s . ' ’ : *: Now — Compare These REM EM BER—You can buy anything iri our Carpet Department on the Morris; Plan Bank's Time Payment Service, if the extension of time is a cooven jetice'to you, IT COSTS NO NO IN TE R E ST—NO AD D ED CHARGES -rJ U ST T H E SAME A S CASH , f o r I T 4 S - 0 A 3 H TC |, US. A.branch of The Morris Plan Bank on our 4th Floor. ' ?/ m T V TH E L A R G E ST A SSO R TM EN T IN CEN TRA L 0 ^ 1 0 A T T H E L OW E S T PR ICES *" 9x12 Mottled Axminster Ruga Our Special - i B r i c e j - ; .." V : $29.00 Regular $* * Low P r ic e ' $ 35 .00 9x12 Oriental and Floral Axminsters Regular ( Our Special • Low Price $47.5o, $42;50 9 x 1 2 Floral and Oriental Axminsters . Regular ' , Our Special . Low Price * * J H 6* J $ 5 7 .5 0 ... ■ - ^ $ 4 9 i ? S 11-3x12 Floral and Oriental Axminsters Regular - Our Special Low Price - _ ~ $5o.oo $48.00 9x12 Oriental Tapestry Rugs Regular Our Special f ow Price • Price * * $ 20 .00 11-3x12 Oriental Tapestry Rugs „ Regular , Our Special , l.ow Price 1 . S35.00 $31.50 V _ . 9x12 Wool and Fibre Rugs Regular . O u t ’Special Low Price * ■ ^ $ 20.00 - N - - $18.00 9x12 Crex Rug* Regular Our Special Low Price ’ Price $ 1 8 . 0 0 . $16.00 * * . * 9x12 Japanese Matting Rugs Regular J Our "Special Low Price ♦ Price $ 7.50 * $6.00 Many Other Special Value* AXMINSTER WILTON AND TAPESTRY CARPETS ' .4- Th is season we are show ing.an extra special'assert- ment-of 27-inch carpets in Axminster, W ilton and Tap- estry Brussels weaves. Both Floral and Oriental pat terns,. Quality for quality,.■’ the prices cannot be dupli cated In Central Ohio. - Priced from S1.25 to $3.50 a Yard We Make Them Eree J r INGRAIN CARPETS ,.-A fine assortment o f both conventional and floral patterns to choc.se frdm.’ A ll grades from U tiions t o ‘the best all w o o ls ; 3 6 ,inches w ide and most m oderately Priced at 39cto $1.35 a Yard '• We Make Them Free . j : r j UNOLEUMS Quality in Linoleum is the part you caiirtot see. It . ' * is’ what you pay for and it is what you "get, in every *yar4 we sell; whether it is the printed or in’ait^ linoleums, 6 feet or 12 feet wide. F or the lasting and satisfactory quality ’ » Our PricesCannot BeDuplicated V. __ ^ ^ -- ------- ---- 1> The Edward Wren, Company Springfield, Ohio. GIVE YOUR CAR A NEW FINISH-DO IT YOURSELF WITH ONE OR TWO COATS - A U T O P ' T P t f l C t J t * C r i rs i ,[ j i i cv... THETARB0X .LUMBERCO. Spring and Summer W e have a fine line of r olens for SUITS# OVERCOATS and TROUSERS. W e are ready to »erve you. Our prices are reason able andnur work alWaya guaranteed it?fee first clast. KANY, * * The LeadingMerchant Tailor XENIA, OHIO. ■.... t^
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