The Cedarville Herald, Volume 48, Numbers 1-26

m m ! I h e CoebaviUc Herald 1KARLH BULL - ;i EDITOR j Entered at th* Post-Office, Cedar­ ville, 0., October 31, 1887, u second class matter. HIGH SCHOOL NOTES ( Continued from Page 1) A PRO SPEROU S YEAR r - FRIDAY’, JANUARY 1G, 1925 Greer McCalister Ansi Melton __________________________ • Rankin MoMUlan Com. Geography “GOITRE GONE” > Wants Testimonial Published That Others May Benefit From Tina Simple Remedy. Mrs. Esrl Sanders, La Grange, 0., says; “If you wish to publish thistes- timonial, you are welcome. It has been over a year and my goitre has not This is the- Washington committee in charge of President Coolidge’s inauguration, March 4- A great effort is being made for an elaborate ceremony. Left to right, the committee membe.s are. M. A. Reese, Isaac Cans, A. E. Seymour and J. T. Lloyd We wish to purchase a few stacks of , L O O S E S T R A W Located within 10 miles of our m il. Call Cedarville Phone 39-4 rings. E. S. HAMILTON, Buyer. to"'.■ • The Hagar Straw Board & Paper Co . CEDARVILLE, OHIO PUBLIC SALE I will sell at public sale 3 miles west of Cedarville and 5 miles east of Xenia just off the Columbus pike on the Kyle road Wednesday, Jan. 21, 1925 Commencing at 12 o’clock noon, sharp, 1 Bay Mare 8 Year Old. 4 Milch Cows and 2 Heifers 1 Overland Touring Car Model 83 FARM IMPLEMENTS 1 4 h. p. Gasoline engine and feed grinder; 4 sides work harness; • 1 John Deer two-row corn’plow; 1 I4*in Oliver riding breaking plow; 1 Evans Corn planter; 1 Spring tooth harrow; 1 one-horse wheat drill; 1 two horse-wheat drill; 1 roller; 1 hay rake; 1 Com sheller; 1 sleigh; 2 hog feeders; 2 iron kot .tics; 1 Buckeye 125-(egg incubator; 1 Buckeye 500 chick brooder; 1 Walnut Bedroom suit of three pieces 1 Walnut bed; Dining table and din­ ing chairs; 1 Davenport; 3 stands; 1 work table; 1 40 lu p. Derrick crab; and lot miscelleanous tools. TERMS MADE KNOWN DAY OF SALE W. O. MADDUX THE PUGILIST AND MARTYR A prize" fighter comes to America, ! } bringing with him a woman who is i not his lawful wife and the big city j papers play it up day after day on ■ the front page as well as the sport pages. The fighter is permitted to remain until after he has cleaned up a fortune, but the woman is deported. At Bordeaux, Professor Bergonie dies a martyr to science in his effort to benefit suffering humanity, and the event is dismissed with a paragraph, There is something, wrong with the attitude of the city newspaper writers ‘ Prof. Bergonie had been studying for years how to cure cancer, or at least palliate it, by radium. He gave relief to- hundreds of patients. But in the process, he himself developed cancer .in th,e fingers by constant use -of radium. One of his fingers was taken off. Then they had to amputate his hands, and finally his arms. At last the malign disease attacked the heart. This martyr to science foresaw..the end, but he wai ot daunted. His last days were spent organizing a project for making Bordeaux the great center of France for radium research in the study of cancer. -'t ■. Professor Bergonie is not the only man of courage who has given his life for humanity. In the thirty years since Rotengen discovered the X-Ray there have been 140 casualties among workers with the vacuum tube and ra­ dium phial. Nature gives up her secrets grudg­ ingly and men perish in their effort to dig into the unknown. What heroes they were! They know that their work meant painful, certain, speedy death, and they were, unafraid—-undaunted. They _died in their efforts to dive beneath! the seas, to fly in the air, to reach unknown parts of the earth, to wrest the secrets of electricity and radium. Their obituaries are para­ graphs, while the bruiser who sails the seas with a Wanton gets columns. Of course the news writers know the difference between news and his­ tory but the craving taste of a public seems to demand the former. Evident­ ly we are living in an age far too fast to consider matters of historical im­ portance. : ; ; Kennon Bros., Aucts. W. W. Troute, Clerk SHEERS Soap Palmolive with the purchase or*3 bars 27c will give one bar 9 free, a wonderful value 4 for .. Sugar, Pure Cane 25 lb. Sack. $ 1.89 Bread, PANCAKE Flour Club Pkg, . . . . . . BLUE KARO 1 1-2 lb. can......... • BLUE KARO 5 lb. can. . . . . . 32c QUICK OATS Country Club 3 pkgs. 25c ROLLED OATS bulk6 lb. fnr 25c PRUNES Country 2 l b s ........... . SUGAR Granulated bulje 10 lbs........... RICE Fancy A* Clean lb . . . . . . . ever 2. 1 1-2 lb. . 9 c ripe delicious 3 lbs................... 2 0 c ORANGES 250 Size Doz. . . . . . 2 8 c SWEET POTA- TOES 2 lbs. 15c POTATOES Early Ohios 15 lbs . . . . BUTTER Fresh . churned . . . . . 45c LARD IYesh rendered 2 Ihr? 37c SOAP P & G or 3 9 c Kirks 10 bars. _ __ _ Regina Smith Edith Ferguson Christine Wells Kathryn Hughes Robert Wilson Robert Jsckso,- Martha Waddle Greer McCalister Martha Peterson Lucile Ritenom* Mary E. Smith English I— RaymcndSprklm Sara Abel Secretary Hoover says we are to have a prosperous year in this country an i that we had a real advance in ail countries th* past year except in Russia and China. Agricultural pro­ ducts are coming back and the con­ suming power at home and abroad is increasing. The world is producing bothered mo since. The choking and more, standards of living are higher, throbbing, was awful. Had about given and there is more assurance of eco- up when I saw Sorbol-Quadruple ad- nomie stability To? the future, Secre- vertised. Lost 40 pounds and looked tary Melon says that 1925 promises to had. Have regained this and am Iook- be the best since the war. ing fine. Will tell my full experience -----.................... j even by letter.” | Isabel Webstr: Social C ivics—. Jean Morton Christine Smith Isabel Smith Helen Thompson Cicero— Janet Huff Annis Huff Josephine Auld Isabel Smith LilliaB Ford Helen Thompson Edith Wigal Jas. Stormont Harold Mills French— ____ Jean Morton Gladys Beatty Christine Smith ___ Lawrence Waddle Freda Estle Garman Bradford Jennie Smith American H s,vry Harold Mihs Edith Wigal Helen Thompion GIRLS ON TflE FARM One of the most serious problems t raised in the keep the girls facing the world is tha i; question, How can: on the farm? It is one of the hallmarks of civili­ zation that so many girls are forced into the big cities to seek their for­ tune. Probably no more daughters of the farm come to misfortune in the big cities than do the city girls or the girls from the small towns who wo?k for a living. It can be set down as a sound prop­ osition that working girls as a class ire more apt to make a success of life than another large class of girls hay ing more social advantages but seek' ing the bright lights. It is a great social duty to ma]ce the home life on the farms more attrac­ tive to the girls. There should be more rural recration centers Under super­ vision. With good roads, cheaper motor cars, the rural mail and telephone, the phonograph, electricity and the radio, life is growing more attractive on the farms. Individual initiative, energy and ambition, the driving force which has bnilt this nation, is the great agency that is today remaking farm life in America and making i t pleasant for both boys and girls to stay on the* farm. PREACHERS AND GOVERNORS A man said to us the other day that the past year had been a. bad one for preachers and governors—which by implication might be used as a reflec­ tion against all preachers and all of our state executives. It is true that a number of preach­ ers became tangled in sensational a f­ fairs and landed within the meshes of the law. The percentage of course was small when all preachers were taken into consideration, As for the governors several were caught in acts violating the oath they took to uphold the law. One or two landed in prison and now another is reported “in bad” out in Kansas for ace,opting bribe money. If he is guilty ho should get the punishment that is set out for the ordinary citizen caught in ouch Work, Because a few preachers and some governors have brought disgrace on themselves is no reflection on the thousands of other preachers and the two score or more governors who have stood straight in their public and private lives, To Toll Wtight of Coat A solid cublo foot of anthracite weighs about 03 pounds. When broken It weighs about 54 pounds. Bitum­ inous coal when broken up averages about 50 pounds per cubic foot, Therefore, simply find the contents of box or bln in cubic feet and mul­ tiply by one of those numbers, ac­ cording to kind of coal, Wilda Auld Bernice Bryant -Esther M Hartman Dorothy Shaw Martha Waddle General Science— Garman Bradford Cornelius Grinnell Ildrothy •Shaw Edith Ferguson Martha Waddle Wilda Auld Robert Wilson Edith Evans Leo Reed Biology— Sarah Rumbaugh - -Featrice Doju lw Grace Wigal Anita Printz. Ruth White English II— Freda Estle Anita Printz Mary E. Smith Isabel Webster Ruth White Grace Wigal . Geography ft h— Helen Kenn -n Robert Rich-i:It Regina Smith Esther Stevms' English 8th—- Robert Richards . Esther Richards Esther Stevens Frieda Beekman Helen Kennon Seventh English— Carter Abel Harold Dobbins Helen Stevens Viericdnicat Black Doris Hartman Ruth Oxley Literature 8th— Robert Richards Esther Stevens Frieda Beekman . Jennie Smith Ruth White Stormont English III - Joseph«rc Auld Public Speaking- ___ Frances Anderson jas, Helen Thompson Helen Kimble Arithmetic 7th. Edith Wigal Loren Beaty Katheryn'Hughes Har'y Henronimus Lucile Ritenour Wilford St. Johns Raym’d Spracklin Harold Dobbins Albert Wigal Joseph Finney Vernon Harris William Beaty Robert Baker, Carter Abel Kenneth Waddle Glenna; Waddle Pauline Nelson Geography 7th— Jeanette ’Ritciour Loren Beaty Doris Hartman Harty HeironinrusMarguerite Oxley Harold Dobbins " Helen Stevens Joseph Finney . . Veronica Black Cartel Abel Lucile Brigner History 7th— Panline Nelson Harold Dobbins Jeanette> Ritehour Veroniee Black Marguerite Oxley Carter Abel Doris Hartman Doris Hartman Helen Stevens • Helen Stevens Veronica Black Marguerite Oxley Arithmetic 8th— Ruth Harrow • Freida Beekman Helen Kennon Regina Smith Esther Stevens Robert Richards Rankin McMillan William Willis PI. Geometry— Josephine/Auld Freda Estle Lillias Ford Literature 7th— ‘Veronica Black Helen Stevens Doris Hartman Marguerite Oxley Jeanette Ritenoiir Pauline Nelson Glenna Waddle Carter Abel William Beaty Joseph Finney Harold Dobbins Wilford St. Johns Loren Beaty FINAL NOTICE! Extractions made now entitles you to these special prices when ready for prices, Absolutely Painless Extraction SET OFTEETH UsingMy Regular Gold Pin True Biting Teeth NO f f i n Cft NO ORE LESS Guaranteed the Best or Money Refunded 10 YEARS IN ONE LOCATION DR. SMITH HIMSELF DENTIST—Springfield, O. S« Limestone St., Over Wool- worth 5 & 10, Phene-Main 999 Open daily and Tuesday , Thursday and Saturday evenings COUGHS Quick Way to Stop Thant Persistent, racking coughing, which by rapidly weaktz ing your entire sys­ tem lays you open to more dangerotto :r'.f£c:if>c3, can be chccard often wftb the w jt case of that old-time tru/t and proved wpiady -D r . Beit's fine-far lloney. And *«•.■ * reason. Dot tors s»y there is no*bins Wee P* m - tar to oukkiy loosen and remove the Wileym and congestion which are the direct sew *** the couthing, while the hooey botii K.ivcs * pleasant taste and help* soothe irn'«fc.n. B is often astonishing how quickiythwcomwa*- tion relieves the stabborneit cough, hut ue sure you gr-t the original Dr. gwr* Pine-Tar Roney, and no substitute. (w< B*M* Of the Same Family Tlio “timber" wolf is one found In the m rdicasteru part of the United States, while the "loafer" wolf Inhab­ its regions in the vicinity of Arizona. These may be regarded as the same type, tin; only difference being In the terms applied them in various parts of the country. I Sold at all drugstores or writs Sor- bol Co., Mechanicsburg, O. Locally at Ridgway’s Drugstore, Etpecially Cold Morning a “Any fool can go’ to bed," asserts the Hlgglnsvllle Jeffersonlun, “but U takes a man to get up." GUICk _ ---- —..., , ......... ^ harmful drumso canbegivenevento swung children—fine for spasmodic croup. If you want thebest, a medicine that often relieves the severest coughovernight, make sure,you get Dr, Bell’s. Oniv^Bcatanygooddruggists. D r . B E L L ’ S PINE -TAR -HONEY FOR COUGHS Y o u r S to r e m Cincinnati ,,eUhe Store for A ll ‘People” Not long ago a dear old lady said: “ I have traded at Pogue’s for many, years and ! have never known them to misrepresent anything. I can de­ pend upon Pogue’s goods. ’ They keep their word.” This statement from an old customer* tells the story o f Pogue s Policy. Our friends know it from long years of experience. / You, who may not know iis quite so well, are invited to become acquainted with us and our way of doing business. * ■■ ■ A ll purchases sent free o f charge The H.&S. POGUECo. Comer of Fourth Street and Race Street Oar Big Clearance Sale is Still in Progress Pogue’s does not want unnecessarily to take any trade away from your home merchants. Try to be as loyal to home merchants as they are to you. Sometimes you qannot .find just wh a t you want in any of your home stores. That is where Pogue’s conies to your aid. This is a large store, carrying a- large stock of goods. Naturally we can. sup­ ply a greater variety than smaller s t o r e s . Buy at home when you can. Buy at Pdgue’s when you can’t buy at home. Jane Alden, our personal shopper, will shop with you or for you.' DON’T BUTCHER YOUR DOLLARS Just place them in our care and we will feed them so they will grow, is nothing tha t will fatten them like There 6 % INTEREST Bring them to us and then forget them. It is surprising how rapidly they will grow and everyone will be amply protected by first mortgage on real estate. TheSpringfield Building&Loan Association 28 East Main Strept, Springfield, Ohio C Y WHERE TO DEAL D A Y T O N When In Dayton Visit THE DAYTONARCADEMARKET Under TM Dorn* LUNCHES Served all Day. POULTRY BUTTER EGGS FRUITS VEGETABLES GROCERIES MEATS DELICATESSEN ; “ Evarv Day la Market Day” IKatraeeM 4U» 9*. LMifekSi. *t* I t, l F. KEITH’S The Show Place of Dayton « fil«y*e4«iflle *»4Feeterefhewekrt. Kedr* ef t t « r I wh U tm I T t t o a lino t» li>w r. M. AnmNirmMtOeMiOi, fSSE fi VMM*''VV*VW HAWAMAaCHANT d S yma WK'0"' THE MUTUAL HOME and SAVINGS ASSOCIATION ' Tfca Largest In Peyton ({•sources $18 ,600 ,000 .00 ' Surplus $870,087,321 Ov*t 31 ,000 A«*e«t«ts C»m«i-Mala and Seeead Street* Dayton, Obi* AVhecl* of Ail. Kinds Rebuilt, tightened and trued op n also on rim* and part* t* a! t h e M e e k e r m e g , co . «» 35S3S2 .WH MainStreM m Wooil, Wire, or Btrrl Dive Wh*»U ■* • • * LOCAl * * * Wo fcavc nei shirts Dir. J. K % bruises but , Jobs. Ginn, : as the Miliar the railroad Messrs H e Graham epen on a Outline1 M.'as Berni a few days aunt,- Mrs. 0 Rev. R. B. Y. and f’harl spent Saturda Charles Gill is reported in sufferinjr wit J. W. Johnson week. J. C. Townsl day and broke wrist. Dr. M. I and had an X- For a full see Richard ( Cedarville, 0. Rochester, N. Coming! Mi Minstrels. A h house. Date te­ rnary, CLEARANCE Clothing. The W. 0. Msddu Wednesday, Ja this issue. Adam Huff, the Con v far lies rented the ty and will m expects to take the Wright A\ .Otis Shaw, Mr. and Mrs. J on tjie Harvey town, has scarl boys in the fa- ' The icy.wea dangerous ocup for pedestrian, and automobile with an accide auto left the r wheel. Word has b Mias Ellen Tat let fever at th land, Miss Tai .nurses trainin contagious wai velopcd. Miss Vernie Edward Bull died Monday n received,here was the eldes bout 55 years blind since sh Miss Nellie Bu her of the far being dead. Th terday in Wor Misse $ 2.00 NOW, Tan le soles. (S comforta ing shoe Just th days, warm ar MEN’S 4,Red 6 Buckl 4 Buckl 1 Buckl Special Ju st th Will kc Keep h l

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