The Cedarville Herald, Volume 46, Numbers 1-26

WWWWUpw A rm our O ow » F ifty MfflBan Deal I * « * * « * • * LOCAL AND PERSONAL * * • * * • • * * J For Sal*:- Stov*. No, 8f coal |wood, cheap. Call Ceda'rville 189. nmtwmm s'SKS MNM " T i T - “T-i iirTiTfi^Tnrtiirr^iiifr Sale! Community Paint Day, Saturday, April 28, at Service Hardware Co, J . L, Hale Notice;- I am prepared to do all kinds o f trucking. Call 21 on 213, John S. Stewart Do not forget the dish shower for Community Hall Saturday afternoon.] Wanted;- To rant pastjjre .land. ‘ Fred Dobbins f For Sales- A pair of roller skates, ball bearing. James Stormont For Sale:- A few Big Type Poland China Boars, ready for service. H. 0, Creswell Prof. F . A. Jurkat was called to The high school base ball team will Pittsburg, Pa,, Tuesday by the serious play the West Liberty team Saturday illness of his father, afternoon on the College campus. Mjrs. W, A, Turnbull entertained Thursday afternoon for the members of the Kadantra Club. Mrs. Andrew Winter has been vis­ iting a few days this week with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dodds in Xenia. HOUSEHOLD GOODS Saturday, April 28,1923 Commencing a t 1 :30 P . . M. Having rented my residence I will sell the following household Goods: 2 Bedroom Suits, Couch, Rock­ ers, Dining Chairs, Buffet, 2 Din­ ing Tables, 3 Stands, Sewing Machine, Rugs, Pictures and numerousother househoidarticles. The Rev. Gilbert L. Wilson of St, Paul, Minn.,? is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dean, Mrs. Edith Randall and son-in-law and daughter, Mr, and Mrs. Raymond VanMeter left Tuesday for their home in Kansas. Mrs. R. C, Watt spent last week in Columbus, the guest of her sister, Mrs W. L. Marshall., The Wednesday Afternoon Club was entertained this week at the home of Mrs. Mary Bridgman, Miss Marie Meahl of the college, has been in Granville, *0., as a dele­ gate from the Y , W. C. A, off the College at a state cabinet meeting of the organization. Robert Stewart of Xenia, formerly a farmer in this vicinity, was in town Wednesday Mr. Stewart informs us that he expects tb locate in Spring- field about the first of July, to reside with his daughter. .Remember the public .sale of house hold goods Saturday afternoon at 1:30 at the home of T. V. Hiff, North Main street. A list' of articles can be round elsewhere on this page. T E RM S :— CASH T. V- ILIFF H A R R Y K EN N Q N , A u c t . Sunlight ice cream in any style for parties, churches, or any social func­ tion. 11will be able to make you a special price, ‘ See Ridgway, the Druggist. Warren ' Keiter of near Bellbrook 'eena Harbison last week. They will re was married. to . Miss • . Mar- side with the groom's mother bn the farm. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and;Mrs. William Harbison of near Wilberforee. K R O G E R ’S FOR EV ER Y DAY LOW PR IC ES BUTTER ,clubFresh.^ ,46c EGGS Strictly fresh,' large select ■ .......... ..26c LARD Fl t re^6fc 2 lbs. 25c P u a r k a c Del Monte in Heavy syrup, c a n . . . . ,25c ITv&C IlcS Avondale halves in syrup, c a n . . . . . . . 19c Clifton in their own syrup, c a n .-...................... .. 15c PRUNESS '1 ..... ........ lb. 5c RAISINS California seedless 11 ounce . 12c A n v i r a t e Finest Calif?*nia fruit in their 1 Q r x x p i R U l o own syrup, big c a n . ............................ £ £ Fresh roasted, French Brand l b . . . . . . . .35c v O l i v v Jewel A-Bourbon Santos lb........... .............27c Special Santos, pound. ..................................................... 22c CRACKERS Fb?tte : or.Soda" : .............. .. ,10c Ginger Snaps lb» , 1 , ,<<,••<•••>«*■•**•1Oc rU C D C I ? Wisconsin cream lb ...................... ...........29c V l l £ iE | d l ! t Brick Cheese pound.............................. 29c Pimento Loaf lb........... 39c Swiss Loaf lb ............ 45c Chocolate Drops^aFresi>.Rich......16c I T K Q 1 7 C Whirlpool, something extra fancy r T C IV luU uu 35c value. Kroger price l b . . . . . . . . A«JL HAWS g a cured' wholc.... .... ;.... 21c f i R f O n Su8ar cure<l 3 to 5 pound pieces, %4;C SMOKED CALL IES Whole pound ........................... 15c LARG E BOLOGNA SAUSAGE Per lb.............. 12 l-2c apples ?f&!ab!:ti:plrr..... ......... 25 c a m #* 15 lb. peck . .26c I O vA uvC S 60 lb.. Bushel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$1 .03 SOAP ...... 10 bars 45c GALVAN IRED TUBS No, 2 size e a c h. • » , 67c C \LVANIZED ^y . » < « » » * A T l ^ 6untry kig 24 02. g i g DJ&X a IXU loaf . »»*»» ^ Black Mr. W. W. Galloway left last night for Chattan oga, Tenn., where he goes on a business trip. He will be joined at Cincinnati by Mrs. Galloway, who is now a t Ironton, and. the two will make the trip South. On their return they will go to Ironton to bring the two daughters who are with-their grandparents, home about Tuesday. Community Faint Day, Saturday April 28, a t Service Hardware Co. Community Faint Day, Saturday April 28, a t Service Hardware Cd. Wilson Walker, former resident of this place, but now a resident of Dayton, spent a few days here the last o f the week. I t has been thirty years since Mr. Walker moved from here. Community paint Day a t the Ser­ vice Hardware Store, Saturday. There will be a special demonstration by a factory representative. Clip the cou­ pon on page two in the Service Hard ware advertisement and get a special price on Floor-lac and brush. Dish shower for ' Community Hall today. A community dish shower will be held at the Community Hall in the Bank building on'Saturday, April 28. Everybody is invited to come and bring articles of dishes for the use of everyone when the community hall is used. Light refreshments will be ser­ ved and a community social held. The dishes are on sale a t Bird’s store and will be displayed in the window. Everybody come. Rev, Robert Galbreath o f Union, N. Y., who has been poorly as the result of an attack of pneumonia, is report­ ed much better. His brother, Charles Galbreath of Dayton, went to his bed­ side several days ago. There have been complaints the past few days that post office lock boxes have not been locked by the owners and that some young folks in quest of sport have been taking the mail out o f one box and putting it in another. This is a serious offense in itself and those who have been doing it are taking great chances. Attention is also called to the fact that half or more of the post office lock boxes are never locked by the owners. Such pranks could not be played i f all will lock their boxes. “It was the best urogram that has been presented in the South Charles­ ton High School in a long time. ” “I haven’t laughed so much fo fr months as 1 did during that program. “That was a splendid program. Be sure to come next year.” , What program, is it? That present­ ed by the Rangers Club of Cedarville College. You, too, ought to hear it! I t is a sure cure for the blues. You will have a chance to hear the Ran­ gers a t the Cedarville opera house, Monday evening,.May 7. Look for pro­ gram in next week’s Herald. * Remember that Tuesday is the final.day for making your tax return, All returns mttBt be-in by that time, Mr. and Mrs. H. M<, Stormont mov­ ed to the T. V, IJiff property on Main street. The property just vacated by Mr. Stormont will be occupied by N, L. Ramsey. / General Mapager W. W» Galloway and Siipt* Funcett Were in Wellington Ohio last week inspecting a filtera- tion plant such as is proposed here by J . T. TraVers, head of the depart­ ment having charge of stream polu- tion in the state. It has been proposed by Mr. Travers that the company in­ stall tanks for treatment of the water so that the purified water could be emptied directly into the creek and thus do away with the reservoirs. It has not been definitely settled when such a change will be made but in the meantime the company will triake further investigation. The American Legion, Wallace C. Anderson Post, entertained last Thursday' evening in Community hall when lady friends and wives of the members were present. About forty were present. The speaker of the evening was Dr. McChesney who spoke on the “Historical Events that have Happened in March. During the evening refreshments, were served. ’THE STYLES OF GLASSES The ’New “Dayton” metal lined shell frame. A sturdy yet light weight frame especially adapted for the pers on whose glasses must stand hard u sap . Maker of Better Glasses” WADE Optical Co. 41S, Fountain Ave „ Springfield, Ohio* During council meeting Tuesday ■when the bonds were sold -for the Main street paving, Solicitor Harry D. Smith of Xenia was present. As is was necessary for his to have an ab­ stract of all council proceedings from the start for the street work to have ready for the attorneys of the suc­ cessful bidders for the bonds. Mr. Smith paid Clerk J . G. McCorkell a Ijigh compliment on the condition of M b records and that it was not nec­ essary to make a change or even a suggestion, and in all his experience as solicitor for various municipalities in the county, including Xenia, he had never inspected a better .kept set of records. John Robert Reid, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Reid Of Port Gibson, Miss who is attending Muskingum College, visited a few days last week with his grandmother, Mrs. Mary Murdock. - Mrs. Elizabeth Blair, passed her ninetieth birthday Tuesday, Mrs, B lair makes her home with her daugh­ ter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. G. II. Creswell. She was the receipient of numerous cards and presents. NOTICE We are ready for the year’s busi­ ness, having ddubled our capacity. We can take care of your order of any size for chicks or custom hatch­ ing. We carry a full line of Buckeye Incubators and brooders and can make prompt delivery of anything in our line. Would advise early orders as our space is going fast, The Northup Poultry Farm and Hatchery. Yellow Springs, 0 . Bell IMPORTANT CHANGES IN 1 TIM ETABLES Sund ay , April 29 , 1923 between Cincinnati, Colum­ bus end Dayton New Fast NIGHT TRA IN to Pitts­ burgh and New York Present 9 :00 p. m. train changed to leave Cincinnati 9 :55 p. m. connecting a t Pittsburgh with the Gotham Limited, Con­ sult Ticket Agents. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD SYSTEM .. . . . . . . J • ! ' - . . . J . v # ri.T l'JU l oltwi makes cowards of the best o£ men. It tend* to bind their thoughts to the tri- ireplM of the past rather than to the possible achieve- i-.ciits or (he future. It makes them slaves to estab- codes. It throws a cloud of suspicion orer Juno- vuiton. It makes them afraid of a new idea. They wc-'-e the scholars of Athens who fed Socrates p»;;'tin. They wore the scholars of Italy who lit the fivotn at the feet of .Savonarola. The wise men of Spain jeered .at Columbus. Cultured England laughed at Darwin. ’Schooled scientists scoffed at Harvey’s theory of blood circulation, at Watt's tea kettle engine, at Whitney's machine that conh) sew, at Daguerre’s run picture, *t Well’s anaesthetics, at Morse’s tele­ graph. at Deli's telephone and at Edison’s talking machine. A quarter of a century ago a professor of physios at the ,ruiveralty of Call oruia "proved abso­ lutely” that It c u s ji phyaicai iniimBSibtllty for man tu' He. Hut the Wright boys showed that tills professor was a slave to u.s Culture. Every great triumph in the world’s history baa fought ita way over the boundaries of temporay fall- ure and gained ita goal in spite of the scoffs of the “cultured,” Society's pet Is seldom a prophet. True talent is- discovered tardily. To possess all Ita accumulated knowledge of the past does not make a man great. We are measured pot by our accumulations but by our contributions. The' brains that are remembered are those which had not knowledge but the patience and 25252-^"’ BE A PATHFINDER the confidence to pursue unabated a great plan or pur, pose and create knowledge. , , Hecause a fellow is doing something different from what has been done, don’t be too quick to call him crazy. Time may make you the (jigger fool of the two for having rejected bis idea before understand­ ing It, It’s the fellow who sails a new sea who discover* a new shore. I t is the fellow with originality whom the world most needs. If a man’s faith in his new schema can stand the acid test of the' unthinking enter, h e may live to benefit iho world. The fellow who is afraid to depart from convention, nud who is afraid to do something different for fear he may be laughed at, i« * craven no matter how much he may know, The men and women who acquire knowledge that they may be respectable, who look io the past that they may be comfortable in the present, without any thought pf duty to tho future, who study merely fo r' the mental gymnastics of training their minds and who are afraid to use the mind when trained, are about as effective as au army which has learned to march by,marking time. Learn not only to fill your .head but to use your head. Don’t be ufraid to beat out a new path. The beaten paths are overcrowded. , The pioneer’s path is always hard but It Is the pioneer who find; new fields and new benefits and whom in the end the world most honors. $ & a i O P H Y . firm s ypt K are getting close to the Paint W Up and Clean Up season, and loon everyone will be thinking how the house looks. Wonderful how- bright and cheerful a coat of paint makes a place, how it increase^ sell­ ing values, how it preserves the wood. What’s the matter with the- house we really live in and for which we pay no rent! Why not a little paint up and dean up for that? Of course the flappers will attend to tne paint up, but a more general sarvey won’t harm any of us. Cleaning out thoughts of evil anil feelings of animosity, and paint­ ing the mind with good cheer and human kindness, patching up the faults w have and starting out in a new mental dress for spring will Bpell happiness and happiness al­ ways means greater prosperity. 4^ uncle : john Among the disapp’mtments that accrue to mortal men, there’s some that’s greater’n others,—je s ’ the way it’s allera been . . . the depths of disapp’intments is dependent on de­ sires,—when a feller fails to gather- in the things he most desires. . . . They’re purely unavoidable, as DISSAPOINT- , fur as T can. see, when I Agger disapxi’int- MENT ments that has spent their force on me. . . . And I ’ve tried to bear up under ’em, with­ out an outward sign,—We can’t expect the sweetest grapes, unles.s they trim the vine. . . . The trouble is, with most of us, we don’t control our greed; we’re allers thirstin’ after things our system doesn’t need. . \ ,, So, i t ’s nothin’ more than human, nor none the less divine, that I ’ve suffered disapp’intments in this mun­ dane life of mine! And I try to think they*re blessin’s—though i t ’s some­ times hard to do, when X set my heart on somethin’ an ’ I fail to put it through. , , . So, if fewer disapp’intments is what my soul requires, I do my best to expurgate impossible de­ sires. . . Visit Our Big Busy Shoe Store During “Pageant of Progress”Week Bargains in Every Department MEN! P o not fail to see our wonderful, new line .of oxfords for Spring- The newest colors and Styles. All with welt soles end rubber heels. $2.98. $3,98 and $4.98 None Higher ' * . ......... S P E C I A L 100 Pairs of Brown - Men’s Work Shoes, English Oxfords Heavy Soles , s $1.98 $1.98 Strap Slippers and Oxfords in blacky brown or patent leather, all with rubber heels a t the extraordinary price of . . , . . „ , , . . . . . No. 4302 is as pictured and sells $2.49 See Our Beautiful Line of Grey Pumps and Oxfords Nothing Over $4.98. $2.98 OVER 125 STORES 5 BIG Factories 122-124 E . Main Street, Springfield, Ohio & • 6® 6® Greater Safety Greater Returns Every dollar invested in this batik is secured by F IR ST MORTGAGE on real e s t a t e - recognized as one of the most valuable forms of security. B y availing yourself of our ’ special certificate plan your money will draw INTEREST Can you imagine a better combination of safety and generous returns} Pu t your money to work where it will mean the most to you, The Springfield Building & Loan Association 28 E as t Main Street 6®

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