The Cedarville Herald, Volume 43, Numbers 27-52

\ Tfc*H hm H m m d % tkapro- m m *** $mmm* o f th if woe* OBtt ©df ffo* cou iily , thoae •who b w i| i«w « * y to buy. B e Merald. The iMhrartiiuoirat ihut teiU i* thead that doewa't try to tell tog much. FQftTY*THIBB YEAR HO. 35 CEDARVIIAE, OH scuoot iond election ^ says paper mill MAY m QUESTIONED. A» «* eofcemrjB* of tb» trouble in Proetnet G of Xenia'* famoae Fourth w*y«, fcb# legality « f the last school k *d kmt may bq, q«*etk*»d, It i» h & mw I that *t that time peofcably to eoldewi parient# *t the Washington hospital, under o»re of tt^p govern- nwnt, voted, although they hr* not residents of Xenia, At the resent primary Wm. Shield* was ameatod on three affidavit* m charge* with refusing to swear a to . ter and wafoeis# a vrtar. the man who fllsd the “charge* withdrew them before time of trial, Then Frank Stofeea and Henry Wabater, two . followers of R. L, Gowdy and L. T. Marshall, non-resi­ dent* of Xenia or the county,>fllpd charge* against Shields. Judge Shoup then caused charges to be filed against Stokes and Web­ ster in Magistrate Jones court. The 'bond of the former was fixed at $600 and the later at - $300, ' Both are -charged' with illegally attempting jfca vote when not qualified voters. The fight f^oitt both, sides is a -re­ sult of the recent central committee contest between the two party fac­ tions. ’ - '' ‘ ' 1 ' The Gowdy-M&rshaU erdwd has been posing as reformers but their •part in"the game proves- that such . charges as they have been picking against the other faction, headed by Judge Shoup are hut the same tricks employed by themselves. Shields was justified ip 'refusing a non-resident a vote at the primary and. one who votes illegally can be given a prison Sentence,upon conVie- ° iidn«‘ - , . - - ’ ,. - At the school bond election in April every precicnt, in-the' city ‘ except the two colored precincts known as the Fourth ward Voted Sgainst ’ a*bond - issue o f several hundred thousand dollars yet the,fourth ward gave a -heavy enough hmjority that the issue carried. * - -"' * ’ ‘ ! Imagine “two ward-healing poli* ' /‘Cians peeing as reformers and then person)3ly suing .as bondsmen for whb attempted to oast also, into mm- WATER DID IT, Chargee o f polluting a stream and killing fish wvr* filed against the agar Straw Board A Paper Co., last Friday before Magistrate Jones in Xe.fia by a state game warden, Karl Keller, ' * . , President George Little and Vice President, A» G. Hagar, o f New York Chy, appeared for- the company. A plea of guilty was entered and a fine }£ $300 assessed. - The company several years ago meat several thousand dollars erect- ttg large reservoirs west of town to a le care of the wash water from the, will, The reservoirs were erectod^un- ler the latest known plans for purifi- mtion pvmposes. According -to reports thousands o f fish were found dead several day* igo ifi the Little Miami river around; Wayheevillm One remarkable feature ofi tlje ait- nation,is that most every day last week odys were fishing with success1 *t the stone bridge on thp<cemetery road, less than half a.mile front where the reservoirs are located. Not a dead fish has been seen* in Massiea creek. Reports in tbMuty paper* from a statement of an inspector was that ihere was so much acid lit the water teed in mnkuig.paper that a hoy ,at WaynesVille that waded into'the river had all the skin taken ‘offjjhis legs. Siich a statement only shows how much dh,inspector, who gets-his job sy political -appaointment, knows a- 3c>aj( the manufacture of paper. There ■ano ac|d used*on making straw pa- obr whatever; - . ’ ■ ' \ ' ,The company will install a purifica­ tion plant as approved by the state iliat will cause the fibrous matter to settle and the clear water to pass off. GOOD TIME TO SELECT YOUR SEED CORN. . The continued rains for thfi past twd weeks has brought out the l^te com and’witha good fall seasonthere will be a great crop in'this.section. Should frost come, early the crop will be damaged to such an ekjtentSthat e^b&tifig deed com fromthe new crop POLITICAL COMEDY WILL BE STAGED. Unless something unforseen occurs, j the.'e will be staged at this fall's elec- tiou one o f the most ludicrous politi­ cal comedies in Ohio’* history. No more fitting uame could be given it {hat one Shakespeare has already us­ ed for one of his comedies: “Much Ado About Nothing". If the program it not changed, Ohio ant’ and in fact the whole nation, fiiay ye treated to the following'scenes: Time—November 2, 1920. Place— Any election booth" in Ohio, Scene' 1. A, man in an election booth voting on vhather Ohio women may vote for president. In the adjoining booth, a: woman actually voting for president and,then, if she's willing to waste the lime, also voting in favor of anact of the legislautre granting her presi­ dential suffrage, which she already has. Scene 2,—A man voting on wheth­ er the legislature was -right in rati­ fying the suffrage amendment, al-, hough the national supreme court, -n the case* Of Ohio’s ratification of ;he prohibition amendment, held.ijhat he legislature has final say „andSaot he, people. In the adjoining booth a woman Actually voting on a-ques­ tion which was supposed tv deter­ mine whether she could vote. Scene 3,—Men and-women Voting their approval or disapproval of two bills enacted by the general as- of State prohibition and ' providing, against the manufacture and sale'of intoxicatingliquors, 1 Scene 4.—(An instant later) Same menhnd Women voting their approv­ al or disapproval of two jndre pro­ hibition measures which repeal the two just voted upon, but at the same time provide for practically the same things, . v -’« ' 1" 1 ' \ . Scene fi.—Men -and women Voting on whether there shall Be a prohibi­ tion ' commissioner to enforce state prohibition, which became effective' a year .and a half previous. The secretary o f state and supreme court reserve the right tfy change the p r o g r a m , ' t v. v ‘ *’ ’ . With the exception of three- pro­ hibition measures out of the seven questions upon which the referendum has been invoked, the result will b» Mb < ' „ s- , •‘ , JTehmin*riofT^^(a.voq^^ prom- IDAY, AUGUST 27, 1920 PRICE, *1.60 A YEAR SUGAR MAY 9WDP TO TEN C O O POUND. If all reports are­ as if sugar would -*«| it i a cents per pound, * If that doss happen of wholesale,, and cem* In .this considerfble that are placed on Wholesaler* aw that sugar *bas there is a mice up to pr< iane prospects in jreater than ever neat reports shew dOO tons of old in ctorage. This sugar. from Brazil this country » lion pounds. The. present conditions price unless‘the up, it is reported" sal* groepry alating in mmt purchased $100,9# this sold ‘ ^‘futltr>e,'-'. men at high prtem?J Groceries are the high priced ing down. The refusal of the Bank to permit I fifteen, days on sjtg*! Uktors to 'sell, have already been speculation. i b o w lo o k * to ten and Rev. A. B, hition ihrit minus a induce Urn-. are a lot con- will loose order* now that kbe bottom, -hold the but the said to W govam- bas 150, on hand hags of ijied t0; ihroe mil* with all a -lower hold If whole*- 'Spee*( reocntly toofsef ijfcfocery- up on i f i« -than spec- dollars sugar OHIO NEWS IN BRIEF fit Yewm-towR, Hrlen la under am; t, barged Kith the mur- UOVo? I-i-thcrjlinl.-, licr emiTi. er. Bcdy of a girl of £2 was fquud in Mjwi’.j |al;e at Canton- A man Identified as Jacob SSugcI, 27 , wan jiistantfy killed and- four per- ’ --onBwere Injured viien a wotorcy*,.*a ridden by the victim crashed Into a rnei’kefc wagon on the Xenia pika, - mar Dayton, Henry Summers, W. H. Powell and II. II. Baker, boilermakers,' were In, lured at Lima by an exploeton during a boiler test. * Charles Kanfjhan, painter, drowned in shallow water in the Ottawa river » whoa ho feH while painting a bridge, | Five man demolished the jail at Bainbridre, R ose county, to-'release Issalio, Monroe, arrested for disturb* ing the peace, . . -Sanditsky county commissioners sold $773 50 i) Worth of bonds for road.. Improvement. More than- $ 300,400 road improvement bonds Are unsold in Hancccfe county, „F#ihesviUe council- allowed, a gas rate increase- from $ 1.50 tq $2 per 1*000 ciiblc feet, Milt feeds in Summit county were advanced from $12 to $lB"a ton, Carnegie library in Middletown will bd Improved by a$ 2 , 5 Q<raddition. Mr*. Isaac Haver of Newconiers- town. Injured In an auto tihcideUt, foreswore -all auto rides. Later she” .Waslnjured ih d runawaywliiteriding in a buggy, Andrew Anhev, 30 . Ixirain, fold the' police Me was bound.by a man while a woman, beat him Unconscious with beer bottles, . Governor, Cox will speak at the- state fair Tuesday, Aug, si, it was announced by Senator Pat Harrison, Chairman, pf .the Bomocraric national speakers' bureau, Senator Harding had accepted an invitation• to speak' On the same date some time age., \ Toledo, streetcar question entered another- ..'base when it was announced that a service at cost franchise bad bean completedand would be submit­ ted to council, f.' Three-fourths of themovie theaters hr Cleveland were closed as the re~ ;*utt of a strike "of operators oyer a. wage s s a i e . ^ ^ \ 'W, W. Durbtn, Kenton, war ye- adted Chairman anS-jS, Bl Godden of tire Democratic abate ex­ it* committee at Its -^eerganixa* 1 * / <, l' * K 1 { 1' , *> ”l:~: 1 ’ t ■ ' , . : . .!■•j •- ' ' : * ' -"i ., ■V . '('• -*;1 ’» , . 'i1-" THE INFLUX *^ It - i'i • • - ' . . . « if pf wealth tp all sections of the Uaifced State* in the past few years in enabling many people to build up Savings Accounts—but it is also causing some to be careless, to Join the so-called “American, Orgy of Spending The wise people belong to the first class. Do YOU? We invite your Savings Account at 4 per cent compound interest, Make this Bank your Bank Resource* Oyer Half Million , ' " * Dollars - , . The Exchange Bank - Cedarville, Ohio ■ ' ■ SAFE DEPOSIT BOXESFOR RENT ' \ ‘ - •, ^ ? * * * j , I ‘ * , ,, * *[ c N % , r r' ‘ I * / ^ l * U* S. Liberty Bond* bought and sold, , .J In the room on Main Street formerly .occupied by the BHas<&Masters Millinery Store, : t # i » * i i „ t We Rre ready to receive epeam and will pay the a“ highestmarket price at station and wiUalso run a truck atid take your cream at your home at( the same price as at the station* ”, * - Wv* . - v, A V ./ .7 - i f e * . rl ’ < . 't% * k'" . i ' ' v ^.'*4 Pi* S, *t? tZ: H.J fj ’ " T , at Xenia city does Itrim- GoWdy-Marahall faction id- eout^ol of payty affairs, No city could endorse leaders who stand hack o4 illegal methods to foist extra taxes on the people by the help o f non-res- iderits. Whan the mantel robe of re­ form is folded back we find the Jcot- tenest kind of a situation, As past master* of hypocrisy and deceit we hand -the belt to, the triform' leaders. 0B,! aft mu^good. i f notr they wiR -have thair own seed oom. " The recent rains have done an im* mense damage to the outstanding wheat and oats, Much of it will be unfit for the market.. DAYTONFAIR • SEPTEMBER 6 th Never in its history has Montgom­ ery county bad the promise pf as big a fair as this year, . L, Holder-man, secretary, said, “The 1919 fair was the biggest ever held, but 1920 will excel last year. The larger purses and premiums have filled- to over* uooq 9A«q rtuamdguvu* pus ran* flowing all barns, shed* and exhibit made to get large tents from Cincin­ nati to take care of the overflow.” This year the fair board is offering $2500 in. premiums for the best exhib­ its o f vegetables, fruits and flowers, grown by pupils of the grade* and high schools of both villages and townships. All superintendents are trying to make the most of the op­ portunity to advertise the work of their pupils. Article* to be shown are to be delivered to the superintendents for proper arrangement. RESIGNS POSITION w ith L o ca l co . - Mr. George Little has resigned as president and general manager of the Hagar Straw Board & Paper Co. and has been succeeded by the vice president, Mr. A. G%Hagar of New York Cijfcy, Supt, A. Z. Smith .become# local manager. Mr, Little‘ has been head o f tbie company for nearly eigh- teerf years, since the death-'of the late E. W, Hagar, For the past two or three years Mr, Little has gradually relinquished his business .cares and disposed pf a number of interests that took much of his time. He still remains a member o f the Board of Directors of the local company. ' COLLEGE NOTES. Miss Amia Harper and Hiss Lome Glass wifi enter the College as Fresh­ man this fall and will room at the home of Mr*' had Mrs. Thompson Crawford. Both are graduate# of the Eos# Township Nigh School. Mr. Raymond Homey, of last year’s freshman claw will eater O. « . D« this fall to study risefcrima engineer* Ing, Rufus Sanders will also study electrical engineering in Cincinnati or Ohio Northern University, he is undecided. He may take anotheir year In Cedarville. Willard Kyle, for the past two years * student at Muskingum Col­ lage, Will he a welcome addition to the junior class here. His cousin Robert Glasgow, of Seaman, Ohio, will also enter the college. George Gelman of Philadelphia, Fa. brother o f Rev. Robert N. Coleman, Jr., wiU be one of. this year’s freeh* man. Mila Iva Pullman of near Spring- Arid, who has been studying thi* sum­ mer in Chicago, wiR enter the eeBege here. Miss Ethel Humber*, of Clinton, O, is to be a new scholar, from the high **b*ri in which Misses Hanoi Um f «•* MacvNrtt.IMer taught last year. » «*» ggjj? amMMdMHMiML aMURNRR m tion referendum*) contend that the’ legislature-was wrong when it pass- set! two enforcement measures upon which the referendum had been brot. Secretary Smith must decide whether the two repealed referenced meas- ures shall go on the ballots'. If he roles them off, the Wets will go to the supreme court and ask for a mandamus suit directing him to put them on the ballots. If he rules^them on the ballot#”, the drys will ask the court to grant an in­ junction stopping: him. Then another question arise#: ,‘What’s -the use of going to the ex­ pense and trouble of voting -on the suffrage' question7” Verily, the secretary of state has some strange questions to answers . And the whole mess o f political hash is just. “much ado about noth­ ing.’ -Columbus Dispatch. PROF. WESLEY GOES TO YANKTON, SOUTH DAKOTA. MAY HAVE TO HAVE' . ANOTHER STATE. From all reports the* Tenneessee legislature did not legally adopt the 19th amendment to the constitution to grant national suffrage ,to women. There is a question of legality raised and the matter is going to the courts for settlement. This means a delay of 18 months, and probably longer i f it goes, to the U. S, Supreme Court. Meantime leaders'for the suffrage qause ore going to try and land an­ other state to get the necessary thirty-six. Since'the avo# Was put in type the Governor of*Tennessee has certified the action of thd legislautre and Sec­ retary of Sate Colby has issued his proclamation which concludes the con­ test* • ■ ■ %■ * SAVE! OH, SAVE!! Notice how the sugar speculators are crying for help. The Federal Re­ serve Board has called In loans on sugar and thousands of speculators have had to cash in and put their sugar ofi the market, afid at a loss. This is the reason sugar is dropping in price. Now the speculator# and brokers want government protection to save them from great loss, The public wanted protection last fall but did not get get it, so we say let the gamblers have some, of the bitter with the sweet. One report is that speculators lost $4fiO,(KK),O0Q in the recent crash. Prof. Oscar Wesley, for two years, head of the Deportment of Education in Cedarville College, has been elected Professor of Education and Sociology in Yankton College, Yankton, South Dakota, at a salary of twenty-four hundred dollars a year. Yankton Col­ lege is a flourishing Congrcgation- alist institution, and the Professor is to be congratulated upon securing such a good position. During the ear­ ly part of the summer, Prof. Wesley took a six week’s course in the Uni­ versity of Chicago. Since then he has had a fine position at Berea, Ohio, as assistant employment! manager for the Dunham Company, manufacturers of all sorts of rollers, He writes that he is learning a great deal of prac­ tical sociology, as liis company em­ ployes negro#, Italians, Mexicans, Bohemians,' Germans, Poles and Americans. committee organizes . The Republican Executive Com­ mittee organized last Saturday with L. T. Marshall as chairman, Frank L. Smith, Secretary and Erskin Winters, treasurer. A committee on headquar­ ter# composed of W. H. Donges, J. A. Finney and W. 8. Rogers Was chosen. The finance committee is composed of the following: S. C. Wright, J. E. But­ ton, Roy Starbuck, Dfr. R, Kent Fin­ ley, H, P. Howard, Fred Kerahnef, John Baughn, Herbert Fisher and Z, T. Hobble. 5« o f the ter bri5iwt;'Ssmri^ vincad him that h4 plans and virit Hi A Mr, Williamson in haring all three fair is to entertain them entertain us”. Gov, Cox has the country that he cuss the issues of ator Harding a tthe not accept the discourteous to ,the When R, D. the Senator that • fair a Cox bubble Ham&on is a big board and his diminished by the ertiit be gets for inducing Senator Haasttaf to come to the fair on Tuesday. * _ ams-: ^p^a-hlS; -^.purpose ^l|e« at the UOhto have uveri like to dis* With Sen* fm|if he did £b would be eonrinced visit thf Mr. Wil- ihe state baa nobbeen Wanted: Man to drihmr paper* in the mornings. James McMillan, Miss Elsie Hhroade* visited In Lore- land -the first part rtf this week. While there she attended the wedding of her friend, Miss Larisa Prkje, • Mrs. Cora Trumbo and daughter, Mildred have "returned from Osborn where they spent several days with relatives. Mis* Carrie Etta Marshall, dau­ ghter of Mr. and Mt*. George Mar­ shall was taken to th# District Tu­ berculosis hospital at Springfield last Sunday afternoon in the hope of restoring her health. Cedar Vale farm will have an ex­ hibit o f Duroc Jersey bogs at the State Fair, The herd will be in charge of George Gordon. F. B. Turnbull’s Cedafi Dell herd of Angus cattle will also be shown at the fair. We have had numerous calls in the past few week* for Harding picture*. The Republican Stats committee has supplied us with quite a number of Harding and also a group picture of Harding, Willis and Davis. They are free for the asking. Farmer* have been stocking up on feeding cattle and sheep. This week Will Frame, received two cars of lambs and a ear o f cattle. James Frame two car# of lamb*. Andrew Bros, three cars of cattle, J. B. Rife seven car# of cattle that were divided around among a uhmber of farmers. USING MAILS TO DEFRAUD tha Nancy Winter Estate wm be sold Saturday, B*ptmbn* l l at 16 M, m. at the West door of the court house, Xenix, Ohio, Either of these homes ar» derirabla for a home or for in*, ■ Mr*HarlanMcMillan, wife and four children of Siaaoxt City) Mo., are iso lug. entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clayton McMillan. Mis* Charles Brown, alia* S, B. Mander- j Clara McMillan of Philadelphia, who son, whowas arrested some day# ago. is one pf the librarian* in the city It by Sheriff Funderburg for obtaining! brary u a!»o at the home of In# hro- money tinder false pretenses, 1 #want*Ither-j Mrs. Fannie McKensle and son, ed by the government for>using theI Donald of Flushing, N. Y., are ex- mail# to defraud. Brown Wotild order' peeled .today for a visit. Rev. McKen- punch board# and then rob them of t»ie is on a trip around the world in the priJse#, He worked the scheme in the interest of the Inter-Church Yellow Spring#, Boweraville and this World movement. He is expected place, ‘ home in October. *. is: b m flirt* or Xenia and James Malloy of Cleveland a# eloctpr»j*t-iar*e.1 Henry Fehrenhpit*, 26, was shot and kilted by a railroad detective in tha Cincinnati yafdA Albert Fenner; fif), a bachelor, shot and killed hi# sister-in-law,. Mrs. An­ nie Fennqr, Si, in whose ' hopie in FifJU* he had lived for Id years, Jealousy was said to have been- the ■'ftuse. George Francis Btirka, 65, chief ed­ itorial writer of-the Columbus Dis- 'atcb and fanner secretary to Gov. ^riior James lit. Cox, died 'suddenly from heart trouble at his home la CoJumbUs. He Was one of the .best known newspaper men in Ohio. ‘ Ohio fair price commission will not: tolerate any'present increase in the ’ "rice-of food; commodities, .milk or otherwise, at this time. This was an­ nounced by-the secretary of the, com­ mission, . Mahoning county, Ohio, including the city of Youngstown, has a popula­ tion of 186,310, an increase of 70)fe9 over 1910, according to census re. ports.. Rheinhart Duwve* 28, Toledo, world war Veteran, died instantly whop a lack slipped and let a box car fall upon, him. Rev. A, A.. Ahn resigned as pastor of the Lutheran church at Glrhrd to accept an assignment at Delaware. Newark firemen .filed suit to force Mayor Atherton and Safety Director Pemberton to recruit the department to full strength. On account of inability to get new» print paper the Meehaniesburg Daily Telegram was forced to suspend pub-. Ueatibn temporarily, J. O. Collicott, now,vocational di­ rector pf Indiana schools, wlil suc­ ceed John H, Francis Oct. 1 as gen* tiral manager of Columbus schools. He Was elected to a four-year term. Number of members of the Ohio Orange in the: state the first of Au* gust was 102,060, according to a Statement by Organizer 0. A. Dyer. This is a, gain-of 14,000 since the first of the year, At Toledo .the Henry Miller cafe was held up by three men, who over* powered tho proprietor and took $6,- 000 in indorsed pay fcheck# and $3,400 shd escaped. Gorpoml Raymond Htipp of Com­ pany D, Fortieth Infantry, was killed and Carrington Campbell, Company B, Fortieth infantry, lost a foot when hit by a freight trainnear Chilifcotne. jThc soldiers had gone to sleep on the | track's. • Anna Crus, 9, and Victoria Chixa, 7, playmates, were drowned, when they waded beyond their depth in. an old roiifl nt Warren. : Rondo and securities valued at about $ 0,000 were stolen from the safe dope it'vault of the Old Fort Rank* ing company. at old Fort, io miles north of Tiffin, Austin P. Gillen, Youngstown, ha* been appointed a member of theState hoard of- embalming examiners by . Governor Cox. 1 WE WILL PAY Men who can give information concerning the people ami business of the communities in which they are acquainted. Reply P. O. Bog 402 , Columbus, O. Tie Lontai Creamery .... . ........ . v ..... ,^ .V i .. W , . GEORGE HANKLE, Local Mgr Cedarville, . . . . Ohio 40 Head Big Type Poland China Hog Sale Monday, September 6,1920 One O’clock P. M. Spring pigs are from saws that farrowed from 8 to 14-each. J A catalogue on r eq u e st F E MeCALI Aril* JLrie i T l L w / a L i L j Farip 4 mites East of Xenia bo Jamestown and , Xenia Pike, ■tvucre Sate? W. Lr. R e a l E s t a t e 4 htnb*faun, atmy oSfleeeachSaturday or reached Jbypheha at my residenceeachevening, "" -*—*—**. Office U PHONES Residence 2*122 GHDAUVR.LE, OHIO mm a s MUSKINGUM COLLEGE J. KNOX MONTGOMERY, President NEW CONCORD, Oft*#, ' •*,*«.**...-*.-*The College For The AmbHioni Youth* Member ot the North Central Association of College end fiertndaiy Skhri 1m and of Hie Association of Ohio Colkf'c*. Approved by the General Kdaea* tlott Board. $ 200,000 Administration liuililiRg tendy this fall. $ 110 , 000 ' Girls’ Dormitory under constiuctbn, {itadt-ut Body 105 L- Faculty $L 14 *f thane In Univerritici ibla esiit •h ' '.u’r :o rb^ta’i'n. Ufwof eiffftttla feu* bidden. Fall Semester opens fccpio.ubvr IS, ItcA Write for ealakfgue, I ■ v i PHIt

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