The Cedarville Herald, Volume 46, Numbers 27-52
T*i Mrertliilie of tndajr, tot « ljr w*«lt* erf it* own, but it fr—bus Awl bring* to final eulminatlaa Bm advertising of the yesterdays. F O R T Y -S IX T H Y E A R NO . 49. PAYMBiTSSTART DECEMBERFIRST Main street property owneis that face on the mvr improvement end de sire to pay cash, thus Having interest at 5 1-2 per cent during the period the bonds run pnusfc do sp before Monday night when council must pass the assessment ordinance. Cash pay ments must be made to the Village Clerk, J. G McGorkell, By paying cash progeny owners not only wli; save interest but will not be called upon each December to pay the an nual assessment. Payments cannot be* made at anyolher time than at ‘ the December collection of taxes. The bonds for this improvement run for ten years but under the leg islation passed by council in conform- ■ity with the state law, payments were to be made in nine installments, Thu was done at the* time thinking that the’ contract could not be let and completed this year in time for the county officials to prepnxe for tin regular December tax collection. As the contract has been completed and the Enginoei having certified th; frontage cost to council the village Treasurer suggested that probably County Auditor Wead and County Treasurer Jackson would like to do a little extra work f o r . the village and arrange for this collection at the lime of the regular December tax col-' . lectian. While these county officers were not obliged to. do this., they read ily consented to do so, knowing that it would be economy for the' village. The matter was placed before the Village Solicitor, Harry D. Smith- a: to the. legal phase of the proposition. Mr. Smith consulted with Messrs Wead and Jackson and completed ar rangements whereby the firs', pay ment would he collected in Decv.mbor Under the arrangement completed it V’ilf be to the benefit of ercli property owner in- that the cost will he collect ed in' ten installments instead of nine -as had been planned originally- The legal status is fully covered in. that all payments must be made within the life of the bonds. By this arrangement each prop erty owner Will make smaller pay iiwpts, this December and each fol lowing December than , under the nine year plan first thought neces sary. m time vt’ would have .been plet necessary for the village to carrv part of ,this bond debt until the regu lar collection in December 1924 un less a goodly number cash It will he plainly seen that the plan approved >by Ath they Smith and consented to by Messrs Wead and Jackson, will enable property owners to pay smaller payment* eaci year and at the same time free the village of having to carry any . part of the debs for a year add pos sibly having to issue a bor-d for one year. When the assess item ordinance is published each property owner will know the exact cost. Mi Mcforkgll dies a large tabulation prepared by tlve Engineer showing what each prop erty owner must pay each year. Property owners that have been informed of the plan of payments in ten installments are well pleased ove*. over the change The cost will be n, greater in ton years than jit pine btt. tiui annual payments easier as they will be less a muteAn* eKvouEfi *o LOCAL AND GENERAL NSW* AND THE INTERESTS OF CRDAR. VJLLE AND VICINITY. F R ID A Y , N O V EM B E R 23, 1923 PR IC E , $1.50 A Y E A R CONDENSED OHIO NEWSl« W S wAWl,fcWRK1 fc>N News items Picked at Random sad Boiled Down for the Busy Reader Lewis Css? Laylin, former Ohio e; j scary of state, died at his home hi Columbus. He was 75 years pi age ami had been ill a year. Lawrence Crawley, 39, was found dead in his room' at a Cincinnati ' hoarding house with his face sub-*; merged in a small basin of water, j Mr. Eangvvill telling Americans that their “pep” is lost motion, that they are undignified, unjust, lack shame, etc., will be useful to the wise and annoying only to the fooh-sh. It doesn't- matter what Mr. Zangwil! is—is there any truth in what he says? If a humble mouse crawled- from- a sewer, looked at you with his long quivering, nose and said, “ Youi-.re a ihamless creature and don’t know anything,” you should not try to kill that mouse.' You should ask yourself, “ Is there truth \in What the mouse says? If so, how can 1 correct my fault?” . The bad feature of Mr. Zangwill’s iafic is the harm it may do to his co religionists among those already pre judiced. It cannot hurt. him, for he will,soon be baric, safe in England, where they will approve quite gener ally his views on America, - i l l — . But his inaccurate belittling of the Ku Klux Klan may cause trouble to hotter Jews than Zangwill, And his ridiculing of Christian Science does uot come with good, grace from one belonging to a race that has so long complained (and justly) of religious predjuice. However at his worst, Mr. Zang- will is to be thanked. The United Slates and its people have a^fchousand defects^ many that Mr. ZangwlH could not see or understand. To make us think About them is to render a ser vice. The coroner and polico say he either deliberately committed suicide or was the victim of a strange accident. -Charles Phillips, 20, a jockey of Ada, changed his plea of not guilty of first degree murder to guilty of manslaughter. He was sentenced to servo seven to 20 years in the Ohio penitentiary. Phillips was tried for .he slaying of Claude Q. Hunt, 41, his brother-in-law. roillsion with an Intc.nirbm car IT Ci aneaut wrecked an automobile- ulyen by Charles Donaldson and led to the discovery that the machine carried 136 quarts of lj4uar, valued at $2,280, Donaldson is under arrest charged with transporting liquor. Cosmo Ferranto, 44, was sentenced Mrs, Helen Bosore, 63, was bound over to the grand jury at Warren on a chavge of second degree murder. Mrs. Besore is charged with having furnished poisonous liquor and to have killed Ernest K. Justice, 45, deputy constable of Warren; Justice died under unusual circumstances. Harry six, 12, swung out on a wire oyer an old swimming hole, lost his grip, fell into the deep waters of the Hocking river at Athens and. was drowned. > Harriet Fowble, 17, sought by her parents since July 12, when she dis appeared, arrived home at Mt. Gilead, the bride of Floyd Davis, 18, home town boy, with whom she had eloped to Michigan. • . ’ Parents of high school pupils at Niles will take a referendum to de termine whether their children shall dance at school parties under instruc tors. The action was ordered by the school board. ■• Tlry Du.ff, farmer, was acquitted, at Bellefontaine of the*first degree mur der of Orra Van Horn, a neighbor, Whom Duff admitted shooting Aug, 9, when he found Van Horn leaying the at Cleveland to die in the electric chair Feb. 26 next. Ferranto entered a plea of guilty to a blanket charge of homicide in connection with the murder of Jan, 16, 1919, of 2-year-old Ernest Ferrltto. Two fires at Columbus destroyed the plant of the American Laundry company, Ohio Bell Telephone com pany’s garage and the building of the r, Ofrlswold-Sohl company, wholesale hardware dealers. A motion for a new trial for James Brady, Sandusky butcher, convicted of the first degree murder of his wife, Margaret, at their home in Sandusky, Aug. 2i)» was overruled by Judge Wil liams. Judge Williams must order the slayer put to death in the elec tric chair. Patrolman Ernest A. James shot and killed Harold F o s b , 19, one of two youths who: refused to halt and fled* in Rockefeller park, Cleveland, when he surprised them In an attempt to steal an auto, he said. Guy Bryant and wife are charged with murder in the case of Russell Sonday, whose mutilated body was found recently in the Little Miami river at Dayton,, John Francis Gardner, 4, was kill ed; his sister, Virginia Gardner, 6, and Mr. and Mrs. .John F. Stewart, were badly injured when the Stewart auto left the road: east of Cambridge and turned over. Stephen Timothy, fireman,, and Mike Penross, deckhand,, were drown ed and four other persons are in Lakeside hospital, following tbe over- Duff home with Mrs. Duff in the "Van', turning of a scow just outside the solini admires and would bring back.' TOM BKGY A conlented army means a safe dicta- COMING tor., The old plan was to give land to the okl soldiers and whahtevev they could take to the young ones! Good pay probably will do as well; . otvespondents -report that Indiana is controlled politically by the Ku Rlux Klan, with that control already strong in .TqXas, Oklahoma, and Ar kansas, now. spreading into.Ohio and other states. - I I ! - Everything depends on how con trol is acquitod. If. through the bal-, lot box, no one may complain. Vox jopuli, suprenja tex esto” holds good WHAT BECAME OF THE HEN? A D, Hybarger of Plain City, claims some recognition for ot e o f hi", flock of hens In his chicken house he discovered an egg a few1days ago that measured 10 8-4 ty 7 3-4 inches Wnen broken, it was found that the monster contained a perfect egg with two additional eggs and a white. The inner egg also had the usual yolk and while. jMichigan Miss Wins “Mr Stmt* la Making Highways Safe” war the w w which won first itemcompeted. the "vox” of the whether you like moment or not. - H i - In a Wild Wept exhibition a dozett cows are turned into the arena “ wild cows” they are called. Cow boys with las os, and empty beer bot tles are turned loose with the cows. They lpssO them, throw them down tit on them and the cowboy that with milk, no matter how, as the cow pants and struggles, receives a special reward. To many civilized bcing3 that seems all right. governors hav ing the ir TROUBLE SJUST NOW thm {**•>••**#&'•* < -V * : t - ' ‘J- The Oklahoma Senate without. a *heal'd, has dissenting vole removed Gov- Walton as chief executive of that state on a number of--<jh.n-gcs! Senators that a few weeks ago stood by him were not held t-v the ties of friendship but vot ed to unseat Walton. For misuse of puhlie funds he will no-w face the courts .Walton became famous owing to a spectacular fight he put up against tiui K it Klux Klan in that state. But it is evident now that this fight was only a sham to cover .his own wrong doing as governor. The removal of Waken sets new precedents for having armed soldiers stationed at the grand jury roonr to keep it from meeting Using armed force to keep the state legislature from meeting. Stationing armed soldiers in .news paper offices that tile public might hot know through the press what was go ing on. Walton is out and disgraced for life. He has lost in every suit he has brought in state and federal courts. Go-<rnnr MeCray of Indiana also finds executive life at present a bit unpleasant. The Governor was a prom inent farmer and large holder of land in his state, He headed several banks and after becoming governor used his-influence in placing large sums of stale money in his bank's and then borrowing the money from the banka for his personal use. it is charged that he invested in high priced land which has since depreciated in value Other investments went had until to day tt is claimed his liabilities run over thiee million. Ije refuses to re sign as governor, Last Week proceed ings were brought t gainst him in the U, S. Courts. WHAT IT DID FOR MEN IT WILL DO FOR HENS; SO THEY-SAY What should we say about a col lection of oxen if they gave a simi lar exhibition, only turning nursing btiman mothers into the arena instead of cows. We might criticise them severely for lack of delicate feeling. _ -x. jjj _ Religion is still powerful in nation al affairs. In Germany it plays a creator part than Focialism, bolshe vism, or capitalism. The Wittelsbaeh, royal Catholic family of Bavaria, who furnished Kings to Germany long be fore the Protestant Hohenzollems were known, are again rtvuls of those Hohenzollems for the rule of Ger many, when she shall become too weak to rule herself. - Ill - ' Stresomann, managing the Ger man republic allows the Holienzol- 'em Grown Prince to Teturn from Hollur/d, that his royal Protestant In fluence might offset the rcvohmtion- ary royal Chntholic influence of the une royal religion fight another is his plan, - HI - Frank Falos, a ‘ crippled laborer, takes his four young children to the State Workmen's Compensation Bu reau and saye, "You feed them, can’ t. Ten thousand voices will cry, ‘What vou can’t feed, them? You must feed them. It’s your duly.” To that every body says, "Amert” , yet the crippled father would got no regard, except n conscience, for feeding these children the community in general would get the value of their work, Barents are working for the nation, and supreme ly wise Providence makes them ea ger to do it glad to sacrifice them selves for the coming generation. iwmi }|j «*au Mussolini increases the pay of his Wanted: A plife on farm by a man soldiers so that they are as well paid 5that has a family that can give the ns civilian workers, That’S an echo of best of reference. See me at J. W eld Rome. They took good care of sol- Tomlinson’s, Jamestown. Call phone tH*** hi those ancient day* that Mus-^d ustralian soldier world affairs, dice .Dec, 7th as e lecture career o f for his lec ture work, and today there is no mure popular speaker on the lecture platform For the past ten years Tom Pkcyhili has- been almost constantly on the go, from one country to. anoth er. In 1914 he was a lad of 18 in his native Australia when he enlisted as an “ Aozne”. While fighting the Turks at the DardoneHes in 1915 he was :trickwi stone-blind from a shell ex plosion. Ho was invalided home and became so famous as the “Blind-sol dier orator" that other nations asked him to talk to their men. After two years he miraculously regained his sight while in Washington, D, C., and his popularity -as a war-sspeaker in creased many times. Horn auto. .... ... Motel Harding, Marion’s new 15- story hotel, will be completed by Jan. 1. , •• Elgin Hawkins, 30, colored, was in stantly killed when he fell from the tenth floor of .the Fort Hayes hotel, in course of construction at Co lumbus. Thieves who raided the hen house of T. S. Sweeney in-MHier creek town ship, Union county, dropped a pocket- hook containing $100 on the floor of the, coop. It was found by' Mr. Sweeney, .' ’ , * - Waddell Ladles' Home association’s new home for aged woman was form ally opened at Marlon, Ohio supreme court held constitu tional the law penalizing employers breakwater at Cleveland. New Philadelphia council Approved salary Increases for the city auditor, solicitor, treasurer, president and members of council. Mrs. Carrie Fingerhoot was fatally burned when her clothing caught fire as a result of starting o coal fire with oil at-her home near Youngstown. Mrs. LRe Tischer, 22, died on the way to a hospital at Lorain' after thfr - automobile driven 4by her’ husband crashed into an unlighted truck, left standing by the roafiSide-heaf 1 '-Mrs. Bessie Ferguson, 27, was sen tenced to the' women's reformatory , at Marysville for life after she had pleaded guilty before Judge Cull at Cleveland to a Charge of second de- The hiygest farce in law enforce ment in Ohio todsv is among the fish and game wardens. These officials as ,1 rule have m more regard for the honesty of law enforcement than ,ias a fish itself, 'Jho whole fiepj.rt- nent i» rotten from top to bottom. Ihe Idea of any set of officials being mid from a fund made up of fines is jnreasonable and only lends these oi- ;rials to trump up charges in many stances against some one against whom they mny have a ' grudge. It 5 . within the fright of these officials 0 report any serf of violation from i.inor offenses to bootlegging. The latter is so common among the fishi ng camps along the river that n war- ien never ern be found tp interest umself in such a charge. Last week 1 Cincimi'iti judge laid down the Jaw .0 a v arder. that appeared in a case .;g(;:nst a man charged with having .1 soil) in his possession. The owner >f tho garage where the sem was :’mind admitted.it had been hanging here for six years and was always egarded useless owing to its age. During this same period of time this -nme warden used ihe garage for the -torage of his automobile. . Nothing was. ever said until the men differed m. some personal matters and then .he warden to get even filed a charge against his foriher friend for having this old sein in his -possession. The jcurt found the .garage owner, guilty f possessing the sein. Placed the iue at $50 and costs and Vemitted the fme. The court next delivered a $50 ecture to the warden. FORMER RESIDENT DIED IN COLUMBUS SABBATH Y-illiam Kyler, ‘formerly a resident of this place some years ago, died at his home in Columbus, Sabbath'fol lowing a long illness. Some'•months ago he underwent an operation for a removel of his jaw dub to an infection of, a tooth. The deceased was a grand son of the late Samuel Barber and while a young boy made his home for many years with Mrs. Hanna Johnson of near Clifton- Ho was educated in ihe O. S, U. and became interested in. the drug business .at one time'operat ing two -stores. He is survived by. his tinge. Tuesday. 50 per cent of. an award made by tho firee murder for. the killing of her state industrial'commission if the em- husband, William,'on Oct. 27* ployer does not pay the award within: Helen Jean Turner, 8, Hillsboro, is VALUE OF THE LOCAL PAPER We heard a man say the other day that if you feed yeast to hens they w'U lay more regular. From what we can learn you mix the yeast with tile grain or feed set out for chickens It must 3et so long for fermirtatiun to take place, then you give it to the innocent hen and she will lay. Before prohibition that was v/hal was done with rye, barley, hops, •yeast, etc. The mature was mode up and allcwed to ferment. Water was added to suit and nature did the resfc^ Men drank it and if they took on an over supply they were - “laid out.” But since the advent of prohibition man can no longer have access to the liquid properties that would mnlo .him “lay” . “Biddy” is going l<> have this yeast combination forced upon her while n lot of men niust stand bark and feel more or loss jealous. A good newspaper is a fine thing for a locality. It Is c real asset. Is gives the news that is of real interest to the folks at home and forms the huh about which the wheel o f neigh borhood activities centers'. • Many of the papers, published in smaller cities, carry more news of general interest than is found in some of the big city dailies which too of. 'ten sacrifice real news of value for mote sensational stuff which would he better left unmehtioned. If the news of the locality is presented with a proper degree o f editorial considera tion. it not only keeps the local people well ihfornv.d as ot what is going on about them hut also adds a dignity to affairs in general that might other wise hq lacking. Wo have nr quarrel with those who take end read regularly a good clean city daily, hut everybody owes it to his home community to support the local newspapers wliich are such a latge factor in making tho home town and the country surrounding it a good ptace to live. There is also much to he done in supporting tho local paper ir. Advertising patronage. It is .lurpri.rng how little apjrecia- tion is shown Of tho local newspaper in an advei Using way. Fu'^ets t'Apefckfity can often util- ?/•: the advertising columns of the local paper to sell or locate for pur chaise what they may wish to buy but do not know Where tu> find. Don’t overlook the local papers. Yon need them and they need your support. Onio Farmer. m a i m W ill hold annual corn carn iva l T’itchifi is to hold another corn car nival. width will he the 15th annual event oil December 7 The horse show | will not he a feature *of this year’s carnival Good prizes are offered fur form and home exhibits. The event has alw»y* t*en on* that Attracted many fatm*r*» 10Raya. . Title and Guarantee Trust company Of Cincinnati was awarded Bucyrus deficiency bonds totaling $24,500, hearing 6 per cent interest, at $685.45 premium, | Quarrel over chickens resulted In 1 fight in whteh Michael Kindemi, 38, was killed, and Guy Odeto* 31, aud Dominie Spanish, 37, were seriously wounded at Laferty, Belmont county. At Martins Forry Mrs; Caroline Al- lBway, I8, was sentenced to serve 10 years in prison after she had pleaded guilty to a charge of highway rob bery. , Charge of violating the postal laws has been filed against W. L. Bundy, Springfield. ; A large coliseum, to be erected on the county fair grounds at Lancaster, is being planned*by the Fairfield County Agricultural society. Rev, Dr. Horace Hout of Granville has been Installed as president ot Rio Grande college, near Galllpolis. John Mullarkey, .31, Cincinnati, is dead and Tommy NIemer is held by police investigating the shooting Ot Mullarkey. Fear of an epidemic of scarlet fever in Madison county has been-increased With the reporta ot two new caseB, There are about a dozen cases in the vicinity .of London. The Ohio Collieries company start ed Mine No. 267, near Nelsonviile, after a shutdown of six weeks. Four hundred men are given employment. Students of Obbrtin college in four days subscribed $236,700 or $86,000 more than their quota In the $4,500,- 000 endowment drive, Joe Olah, 65, despondent over his wife's recent death, hanged himself to the little fence about her grave at Gloustor. Frank Hadler, 60, Columbus, died of a broken neck received in a fall from the roof of a building on which he was employed. Body of Matteo Ingleee, missing since June, was found in a woods near Niles. It was the same woods in which the body of Patsy Oilopc, Gir ard merchant and friend of Inglese, was found in July. Both men dis appeared from their homes in June and are believed to have been slain by an organized band. Three bandits hound and gagged the teller of the Elm street branch of the Dollar Savings and Trust com pany at Youngstown and escaped tflth $3,600. Membership ot the Mt. Vernon Y. M. C. A, has reached 580, the largest in the instidtioU’B history. THOMPSON WILL BE IN GOVERNORSHIP RACE recovering from an operation made necessary by the sprouting of a grain of wheat in her ear. The root of the wheat grain had penetrated along a bone lu the inner ear. John Copteha, 30, was burned to death white asleep in his home at Akron. Coptcha’s body was found by firemen. Fred Roberts, 45, a negro, walked into police headquarters at Cincin nati and told police he killed Arthur Ruple, 46, Ruple died ot a fractured skull. • Ten silk. Oriental 'rugs valued at $50,000 were stolen from the home of Frank B. Carpenter, Cleveland, while the family was absent, Fire destroyed five business houses, the town hall and two homes in Moga* dore, Portage county, causing dam age estimated at between $125,000 and $150,000. Governor Donahey requested Attor ney General Cratibe to institute a spe cial grand jury investigation ,ln Jef ferson county as a result of com plaints filed with the executive de partment charging _Jefferson county and Steubenville authorities with fail ure to: enforce the dry law. Twelve girls were led to Bafety from a basement room in a fire at the Ohio Dairy company’s plant at To ledo, Property loss $20,000. Richard F. Nagle, 45, retired busi ness man of Columbus, was shot and killed between Los Angeles and Cul ver City, Cal., by two bandits, Earl Staley, 35, of Canton, was overcome by smoke when fire destroy ed the Wheeling and Lake Erie Y; { M. C. A, at Cleveland. Byron Yoder, 41, Canton, suffered injuries when ha jumped from the second story of the burning building to the street below, | Ex-Judge John Goldsberry, acting on behalf-of 148 electors ot Frankfort, Ross county, filed protest of alleged irregularities in the recent election In a formal bill of complaint to the Ross county board of elections. Cyrus Wolfe. 55, was instantly kill ed near Fremont when his automo bile plunged from a bridge over Mus- kalonge creek and , landed upside down in the river 25 feet below. Two other occupants ot the machine were seriously injured* A loss that probably will total thou sands of dollars was sustained when a 60-foot mail car attached to a Bal- j time and Ohio train burned at Roach- ton# six miles south of Toledo, Two youthful bandits held up the offices ot the American Insurance Union at Clevelahd and escaped with $150. One of the youths covered J. F, f Kuebler, manager ot the office, with « According to reports fron^Republi- can headquarters at Columbus, Col. Cnrmi Thompson, will again he a can didate for governor, Col. Thompson ■was defeated last year as a result of fake issues against him at the close of > lie campaign. ■sammur Pumpkin Pieand* Y thankful for if you must awardedm$6,000 damages'i^hl’s w it; * the bound hlM j against the Norfolk -and Western rail road for injuries received when he Was hit by a piece of coal falling from a cat near Oirclevfile, Several month* ago. hand and toot. I Niles’ Ward, 5, Canton, died from burns received by the explosion of n discarded automobile gasoline tank with which he wan playing. m lain?? Well, listert kliowi Net co much, hut I’m here in* sa y , - ’ •- ■ U's pumpkin pie—and 'ran • MW J
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