The Cedarville Herald, Volume 48, Numbers 27-52

T h e *Hn„g | I t K ev c .r S o C h™ u j? : C UI- wm-"»,; .■( •%■: :i w::% cousid •iv.j z ;* W ".. la « hi; cliy. ; 1«* Is iU iiur,') !. i,, ,t *,**,<:!, | f ..» . • ? .V1:J •' . it u:i> r.'.v d :»t l l rMtn»s t r t. i: jjs ..-J \n j n.iv ( ,s, ^* 4 * i» i'.if* JitUM t»:j t=ai%h. >r’Sitl *»ns «'• ~'o J v elry V.i-1 «■-n -u’fl t.JiW. KmiiX’t.iVtS « 4 '*Jf-s.| |ii.S||. j| l-a r f W-, r, r>l Vr ■:} nbV!s ii.n; * a th*nii t>.*UVj!i“ it, a.i’ <;!;■ : *-tj i-*:*!:’ wl. .-*! 0 {;«.t l ;r.i ;i:t' f.Kinwiaa wt-.-t; *!:■ a . 1 1 « y wero *vitfiSni,v beri»i::'ii« an*l - uoultl be more so v.-bcn off the t-arifr } board, ] How crowded tbe store become * around Pbristmas thae. The people would K’ok and admire and buy. she would be so busy, it was splendid to be busy, and even to be tired with the <’i;iLstui;:s rash. There was something so ntimukUiujr about the Christmas rush. There were several floor walkers in the store—an extra rne was added for the Christmas- season. True, their presence was not so majmSfleent as the floor walkers m the great, expen­ sive stores, but they were grand to her. And she loved to say, with a beautiful manner: "Just a moment, madnnjc; I will call the floor walker,” And then, tills Christmas, grenter happiness than ever came to her. A most wonderful floor walker came as an "extra," but they said he would be taken on for good—-he was such a capable man. And she took him on for good, For hadn’t they fallen In love -with each other at once? Oh, to some the store might seem cheap, the people. In It might seem funny Imitations of the people who belonged to the very expensive stores. But there was glorious Christmas hap- plness in that store, lfor It radiated the Christmas spirit. And the Christ­ mas spirit'can never be cheap!—Mary Graham Bonner. 1 (c), 1325, Wcatern^evtspapejrUnlon.) Expensive Presents Do Wot Give Most Pleasure a if It. AND MBS. GORSE were iu- t v j vdted to spend Christmas with , Mr. Corse's wealthy sister on her farm. "But we can't; we can’t," insisted Mrs, Corse, "Oar rent has been raised this year, and living is so dear in town we cannojt afford presents that even her children will enjoy.” "It’s us they want, and not our gifts," rejoinedMr. Gorse. "You leave the presents bo-me.” On Christmas Day the Gorses drove up to the big white country house in their flivver. Such a welcome as they received. Not an idle nor an embarrass­ ing monrent—even for Mrs. dorse whe discarded so reluctantly the weight ol city poverty, Daughter, raukic, ton prevailed. And after dinner, when the grown-ups peeked Into the nursery to see what the children were' doing, Mr Gorge had his triumph. The children had discarded their expensive toys and sat In a circle on the floor playing, industriously with some ten-cent mag- . nets he hud brought. “You know our children's likes bet­ ter than-we. do," said the charming hostess, as she lead the Gorses back.to the living room, "And nothing I re­ ceived pleases. me so much as the books yo t brought me, unless it Is to have you nere on Christmas dny.B Even Mrs. Gorse knew that bet words rang true.—H. Lucius Cook. <©, 1925, W**t«na r}«w*p»perUnion.) HIS GENEROSITY m F A M O U S F O R T S I N U * S * H I S T O R Y By ELMO SCOTT V/ATSON “I hear that you are going to give- your mother-in-law an automobile for Christmas.” "Yes, but It is guaranteed not tc run more than half way from her house to mine, without breaking down," Coconut Balls Into a saucepan put three cupfuls of granulated sugar, add two cupful? cold, water and boll until sugar spins thread from tip of fork dipped Into. It. Into this sirup stir a good-sized eo- coconut, grated—rthe prepared dry co­ conut does not answer the purpose quite as well—-take saucepan at once from Are and turn contents Into bowl or set saucepan where cunily will coo! quickly. When cool -enough to han­ dle make Into balls with tho fingers, roil In powdered sugar and wrap In waxed paper. Comm on T y p e Jud Tunklns says his folks always put off their' Christmas -arrangements so that .along about the 23rd of De­ cember they have to shop both early and late.—Washington Evening Star, I t Is C h ris tm a s In due time we shall''wish a merry Jhrlstmas to everybody except 1 those who call It Xmas, v Jury Finds Scott Insane; Sent to Chester Prison Chicago.—Russell x. Scott was found insane by a Jury’s verdict and was thereby saved from the galiows to which he had- becn~Bentenced for the murder of Joseph G. Maurer, u nine- teen-yea^-old drug clerk. Judge Joseph B. David, before whom the verdict was returned, at once sen­ tenced Scott to the Chester peniten­ tiary. If he recovers bis sanity he will be hanged. “Cal” Views “Old Ironsides” Boston.—President Copiidge Inspect­ ed the frigate Constitution, “Old Iron­ sides," which is meored at the Charles­ ton navy yard. , U. S. Ships Leave Sydney Sydney, N. S, W.—Two divisions of the visiting American fleet left here for Auckland. / . / . DaviV Uncle Dies •Tredegar, South Wales.—The visit here of James J . Davis, the’American secretary of labor, who arrived In Tredegar, the town of his birth, was saddened by the death of an unde. The under was Walter Nleols, eighty- years old. j- James Hay Mapes Dead Ppris.—James May Mapes, son of Victor Mapes of Boston, author of “the Boomerang” and “The. Hotten­ tots,” died here of pneumonia. Where Narraganzett* Fought anti P ied It was bitter cold that winter morn­ ing In 1075 and the snow lay deep on the ground. But in the’Indian fort of Sunke Squaw the hearts of the red men were warm, for in its security they felt little fear of an. attack by the white uien who hud driven King Philip, the Wampanoag leader, out of Massachusetts to seek a refuge among Chief Canonchet’s fierce Narragan- setts, They did not know that the colonies of Massachusetts Bay, Plym­ outh and Connecticut were sending Gov. Josiah Winslow of Plymouth with * farce of neatly a thousand men against them. This fort, which stood near what is now South Kingston, It. I., covered several acres of ground and was built on hlgli ground surrounded by a treacherous swamp. It was protect­ ed oa all sides by heavy palisades driven deep into the ground and Its only entrance W'-a over a narrow log bridge. It was probably the finest stronghold ever built by Indians, and in it were 3,000 red men. Winslow’s army arrived late .in the afternoon of December 19, and, de­ spite, the fact that the colonists were weary from their long march through the snow, an attack was launched im­ mediately. Again and again they were driven back as they tried to gain dn entrance over the log bridge. Six of their captains and a large number of soldiers were killed. Then Capt. Ben­ jamin Church, the most famous New England Indian fighter, assailed the rear of the fort where it was least protected, and although he was shot three times he succeeded in leading his men over the walls. Inside the stronghold' the battle raged more fiercely than ever, for the Indians put Up a -stubborn defense from within their wigwam's, made bul­ let proof by the great stores of food piled in them. Finally Church gave the order to fire the wigwams, and as the lodges burst into flames the In­ dians were forced out into the open. But it was a costly victory for the whites, for their loss was -80 kUled and 150 wounded .1 — Nearly 1,000 of the Indians were killed ot* died of cold and hunger soon afterward. The power .of the Narra-, gnrtsetts was’ broken. King Philip escaped, hut the capture of S’tnke Squaw was the beginning of the end. Within a year he had been run to earth and New England’s great Indian war was over. (©, 1924, Western Newspaper Union.) First Air Mail Robbery; Bandits Take 8 Pouches $aa Francisco.—What was believed to be the first rot fiery of Us kind oc­ curred here, when eight pouches of air roali were taken from a United States malt truck, The i-.-bbery occurred ;n the Embarcadero. An automobile, con­ taining six men, crossed the path of the truck while It was on its way from Orlssiield landing field to tiie Ferry post oflice and crowded the. truck to the curb. With drawB pistols the six robbers jumped from their touring car to the truck and unloaded the eight powches of mall. The' bandits escaped. Bread and Cakes a t Home Bakery, Phone 65. About your H e a W i T h in g s Y o u S h o u ld K n ow Practical Instructions In H O M E S E W I N G By Ruth Wyeth Spears J_yJpb»Jo*«ph_G»SriE*,M. D, t\ WINTER TALK. »£.iicus forms ofPNEtT- II stages and complications, )t for me to discourse here, e means of prevention, and :ionn for maintaining health to he worth studying, nps fhe most common cause osure of the body to. cold* atmospheres without suf- protection by clothing. A £ s been identified and nam- a cause, but we know that micro-organisms may cause [{Jon of the lung as well, onla, like other serious dis- is more likely to set in, lie Vitality is lowered by rrk worry, or other common w tho harsh waiter months, 0 the bodily functions a t Vim efficiency* ■ the person from violent ^ a v o f sudden changes of rature, as going out from a room, while perspiring, into f i l d * * habitually h the nostrils, so tha t cold y he warmed before deep th­ en. K tfr*n from close c o £ with sufferers from the die- pernicious practice of dress- U# girls' In thin garments in weather, just for the sake J*rwwe, *nd to keep paoe iwnorseles* fashion is both and fraught with peril. Par­ ly the lower extremities be kept w a rn and dry te pneumonia tmuall# be» 1 pronounced chill, ^ “ic hv violent fever. As first m nU * this chiU into a profuse, *«8S. V *> “ "St , the doctor gets th « * > ■nit for f*tw t0 mnot be overestimated. dunm * e l m s s a m r Editsr** Not*i— THou*h tfeeolal « HuifeMnoat with Tho EmeoMonal Boo'; Co* N. Y„ this Bowsnope* now off*r* Its toad, tr* this intorwtinsr feature, *.QUlii'\ bting extracts from that book, etu’arr-cd by Eugeni C, Cibnor, Mract'.'r of Ej-tenslo.i Activities, New York Board ol Education. ThaOa puzzles will ho.foUnd Intellectual as wall as instructive. Puzzle No. 18 A Christmas Rhyme Sing a song of .........------------------ - A season full of ------ .... Four-and-twenty happy ... Soon they will be .......... When your stocking's — , Oh, what fun there’ll All the gifts and pretty ... You will love to —...... >«*»•** *•••••»% FITTING SLEEVE PATTERNS The points marked A, B, C and D ort the sketch should be noticed first In fitting. If, when the elbow is bent, the sleeve m»ms to pull from the shoulder, a section should be added a t the top as shown a t p . I f this does not entirely remedy the fault make a few tiny gathers a t the seam as a t F, This may make it necessary to add a small aectlon a t the bottom as a t G. If the sleeve seems to draw from the front of the armhole a section ad-, ded as at H will help it. I shows the alteration to he made when , the sleeve draws from the back of the armhole. _____ f#e kata dr*a«»akUi* S m **♦*«**:;' 1 y..**.**!* Aitewa M| i* dew el V Puzzle No. 19 What is the difference between an old penny and a new dime? Puzzle No. 20. RIDDLE-ME-ItEE. My first is in mother—a name We hold dear; My next is in coward—a word full of fear; ■ My third is in lovely—in beauti­ ful too; My fourth is in morning mist** —never in dew* My next is in desert, so dreary and wild; My sixth's In the laughter of each little child* My seventh was lost in yestee* , day’s flight; My last is in summer days, never 1 In night, 1 My whole's a great dtlight to all, ; The young, the old, the big and small* gahUiena *f Laat W*ak'« PttzktM^ t’tw- ala Mo, IS, liadKnti Tup; Ftp; Deed; N mw . Puzzle No. Id, "Bo all tha azttd jrou aati, In all tha wat* you eaa. To all tha people you can, In every plow you earn At all the time* you can, In the quieted way you can, A» loti* aa aver yaw can. Puzela No, 17, Men, Tan, Sen, Mm* Pen, Fen, Kan, Ben. All eaihr, aren't .they? fit I year anttrdr* W thto newawsw* Tha ilrzt iWa eotntkma received to each set 'f\ of putnlee will reaeive ten eradita: whan aueh Winner bae obtained lOfl awilta ha will ha entltlan to a "Otjlfi CMnr* G rudaw A ar Com pzra Pr*Hat W ith L oo t A (o J ENNY aud her great-grandmother were having a little chat while they waited fur tbe announcement from the maid that Chrt*t«i«s dinner was ready. Grandum Smith hart been horn and mired in the tv'.-uih. Khe tvas spending the holidays with her daugh­ ter in the North, Grandmother *\vas in her early nineties, fiat n vemarb-.'.lik* nrurivU i«>r her age. T:‘ii, ere -t, spry. cUe wonitl never grow old mentally for she was too progress’ve in her tli.n’c ing. “Jenny, as I looked around the U oiiep just now, I couldn't help l>at realize what a differeuce a g. neration or two has made in our mode of l i v i n I eouidn’t keep from eomparing this day and home with u t ’Hrmfmas Day and home I knew long ago. You know, Jenny, Andrew and I were married on one Christmas, years ago, Aadraw built a little cabin ou a plot of ground lie owned. It was perched up on a hill. I thought It was the loveliest, moat beautiful cabin ever built in tbe whole world. And it was. It was the last word in .cozy, home! architecture of the times. Inside It httd a dirt flooi and a few pieces of hickory furniture which Andrew had made. I wove all the linens and other cloth which we used. We were so' happy, We had s big home wedding. One of my wed* ding presents was a tin cup, That cup was a prized possession, much talked about and envied by my neighbors, Sometimes I wonder, we lived so. sim­ ply—and happily—and now how com­ plex are—" The dinner gong boomed forth a wel­ come sound. The family gathered and with joyful. ChajEterlngs hurried in to the festively arranged Christmas dim ner table.—Eleanor E. King. <©, 1926, W>*t*«i NewspaperUnion.) i LETTER G O T TH ERE | \[ • * ----- — I jff OHE didn’t have Santa Claus’ Sj O address, but she knew that v Aunt Mary must have it, so she SJ wrote the following' letter to him and sent It in care of “Aunt ; Mary, New York," having first I read it to her mother; "Dear Santa Claus; ., -“I hope you are well. Are you? Won’t you liavp to come this year in your' airplaln, or your atomoblle? Here is my list; '*Too teddy bears In dresses. A doll’s writing desk. A doll, not a girl doll. A doll’s house (it la in the corner bookshop that Is kept by MJfls Sinclair). One bear brown and the other A white, J think that is all. Your W. loving friend.” The letter must have, arrived, for the presents did.—C. G. Haz­ ard............................. - (©.1*25.W»«t*fnNewipppertJoloo.) Christmas C&rd That Ended H is Loneliness several years circumstances had made James Wlngall move from to'wn to town so that he seemed to lose almost the entire connection with his past. He was So. occupied with trade he did not note the parsing years, nor realize that almost all ills schoolmates now were ,married and he a bachelor of thirty-five, . One Christmas Eve, however, when he returned to an empty hotel room. It was with feelings that in spite of his business success, something vital was lucking In his life. Perhaps that was why he disliked Christmas so. When business cCased, nothing else remained. In the solitude of his room, he opened the few Christmas cards which still sought him out Every one he scanned he tossed aside, except one from the first girl he had ever kissed, He held it tenderly and read it many times, “You faithful dear,” he murmured, and going to the tele­ phone, inquired when he could catch a train. He had decided to go home and see Ids friends again, and' find Q partner, If he could, to make life really a success.—-H. Lucius Cook. (©, ills, Wwc*rnMtwapzperUnion.) White Christmas Trees To prepare white Christmas trees take branches of evergreen of desired size and dip in thick starch to which a small box of borax has bemyidded and while trees are still damp sprinkle each with artificial snow, The trees when dry may be placed ic pot3 or baskets and the top of earth covered With moss, A larger tree may be made to glitter with artificial snow by sprinkling it on while tbe branches are moistened with glue. Tufts of cotton and glass icicles may be used for trimming. QualityFootiuear A f f l f t ? Slippers For Golfing Friend For one's golfing friend, a nice gift would be a small score pad In a leather wrist strap, t t provides a space for keeping one's own score, that of lhs opponent, and the number of holes played. ... . “He has proposed, but does he real­ ly love meT . “Walt and sea what he sends you; for Christmas, girlie. Then give him ypur answer.” Christmas Evo Broad According t« an old superstition, bread baked on Christmas Eve will never beacon* moldy. Odd Use A Fonrttosth-ceafary authority , states that turquoise protected horses from tha m affects resulting from , drinking arid water when they were overheated. R is Said that the Turks i often attodhed tbesa precious stones 1to tbe iatfius and frontlet* of diets i horses a* taM tcts.' ’ e» »la, <00 wedHs win **Ut)« tit* wim** , t* ****** aa attwwttr* fries . Ml atoe ■A**♦* hi* m m mtom* ** mm -M sim mS* e***i m mum Reap. tig*e*«at mm * depth recorded is *twr * 0 * Hind 1 * near Mindanao, m* of &• fMtptdn* isting*. Good strong serviceable leather or felt slippers for men and cozy felt or satin ones to please the feminine sex. They’ll warm the feet and heart of a friend. Give slippers for Christmas. Frazer’s Shoe Store XENIA OHIO Your Store in Cincinnati . “The Storefor A ll People ” I F you’re one pf those “ I never know what to get” people, then jane Alden is going, to be a life saver for you this Christmas time. She’ll give you all kinds of the bpst ideas for gifts-—and buy them for you, if you’d like her to. Or, if you want some 'friendly advice and some help in gift-buying you’ll find her a well of useful information, * V 2 - * If you can’t come in, just write of telephone and tell her what you’d like her to buy; Jane Alden.will send it to you post haste. For she shops with you or for you. And of course she has a store of gifts a t her finger tips—the whole Pogue store. Pogue’s Toyland is a wonderland for boys and girls, where Santa Claus rules supreme. A ll purchases sent free of charge TheH.&S. POGUECo. Comer of Fourth Street and Race Street Ifyou like, we'll wrap yo,ur, "Qmstmas packages foTyo'ti ’'1 —and tie .them and seal them, too, all ready for Christmas giving. Park in the Auto Hotel Garage while you shop at Pogue’s, Knowing how troublesome it is to'find a place to park, .we’ve ar­ ranged for three hours free parking space for custom­ ers who drive their own carsl A place where you may check your bundles is con­ veniently located on the , first floor. - -i ‘ f . ■S 1 . •* i i The rest room and writing room oh the sixth floor makes a convenient place for appointments. I n t h e B e a u t y S a l o n Hairdressers from New York are here to give you the benefit of Fifth Avenue modes. Modern equipment, fur­ nishings and s t o c k s to please the most fastidious. BUY YOUR OWN RADIO Hay-Fan; Four-Tube; Price, $75.00 Day-Fan; Five-Tube; Price, $115.00 Dnycraft; Five-Tube, with Built-in Speaker; Price. $115.00 i-san There is much talk about different sets and much of the talk is confusing to the uninitiated. Do not let someone «lse select your Radio Set. Apply your own pofld judg­ ment. Demand faithful Reproduction Of the broadcast, a degree of selectivity and a tone quality that is unexcelled, so that you will enjoy these programs. Day-Fan has these qualities. Demand a set sufficiently simple so that all of the family can operate it and can easily get the stations which they desire. And seo the Day-Fan Single Dial Control. Last'-y, and of great ‘Aiportane.e, buy a Radio Set built by a manufacturer capable of producing high quality products with a reputation that is in itself a guarantee of his merchandise, Day-Fan is made in a factory with ii7 years electrical experience back of its products. Ask the Day-Fan dealer to demon­ strate in your home and use your own judgment. You will he under no obligation. B t a l a r * W h o M a y B e I n t a r m t a d A d d t m u THEM. D. LARKINCO. D&yton, Ohio Exclusive Distributor

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