The Cedarville Herald, Volume 48, Numbers 27-52
r PH# sce-r!r~— The Exchange Bank Wants Your Banking Business THEY PAY A o f ON SAVINGS ACCOUNTS The Cedarville Herald K- ir i j i n u u . EDITOR Entered at the Post-Office, Cedar* ville, O,, October 31, 18B7, aa second v’-ass matter, FRIDAY, AUGUST 28,1925. Haag Electric and Power Washers Nesco Oil Stoves Kokomo Fence, Brace Wire, Barb Wire Locust Hosts, Steel Posts, Lehigh Cement John Deere andMassey Harris Corn Binders Papec and Blizzard Ensiliage Cutters, Hardware Tile, Coal, Roofing. . '■''.'■■-■" I1".. . *. ■ •: j .■;• '; V;:.':'•.' ■ ,1 Cedarville Farmers’ Grain Company Everything for the Farm Phone 21 Cedarville, Ohio K ■ PAINT SALE 1:-*-' ; » •1 ft J. Sherwin-Williams high grade Paints* S. W. P. OutsideGloss White Paint $3.40. , AHother Colors in proportion, a Including. Enamel and Enameloid. Commonwealth Bam Paint, Red $1,90. Ebonole Roof Paint per gal. $1.00. . Pure White Lead per 100 lbs. $15 25. Raw Linseed Oil Per gal. $1.20.. Turpentine per gal $1.25. These Prices are for Gash Only .f1 Service Hardware & Supply Co. C. H. Gordon & Son, Props. GIVEUS A CHANCE TO FIGURE ONYOUR JOBPRINTING AS TO STATE POLICE Every year or so a movement, breaks out in this state fo r rural high way police. -The argument is that ilie, property o f the farmer would be much more safer and that thefts are run down much quicker. Another argu ment is that rural police could patrol the highways fo r speed violators, J’ whigan is one o f the slates that has* rural police, We just recently completed a tour o f several hundred miles in that state and saw hut one o f the rural officers, and he was On guard duty at a bridge that was be ing repaired. Automobiles were going over the rends by the hundred at forty and fif ty miles and hour when the speed limit is 35 miles an hour. I f a man can guage a boot-legger from, his expres sion, his conduct and manner*, a rural policeman would not have time to sleep fo r the highway is full o f them bringing booze from Canada, particu larly into Ohio and Indiana, In one place we noticed several of* deers with motorcycles and we in quired who they were. The answer came that they were_the rural police but they were usually found in town. Our informant did not think much o f the system other than to say such a salaried list makes a good political organization. As long as the politicans can. make the farmers believe they cannot be safe without rural, police, Michigan will always have them. The experience o f Michigan should be enough for Ohio. ’ avwragM 82 ton* o f farm products I hftu'ed to issrket and 8 rvn* ...f ft- d, f u d , feri.tiswr, marbinary, supplies, tte,, from town, Wh*a good roads make trucks feasible this is not ve ry ‘ burdensome, but R represents a good many hours' labor where horses and 1 poor road* must be used. And so | while the tourist find* inter-city ! roads mighty comfortable, to the { farmer a good serviceable road from ! his farm to tie nearest market is a downright necessity. BRITISH EXECUTE 7 FOR KILLING STACK KLAN’S NEW FIELD The Ku Klux Klan has set out to demonstrate that the organization is purely fundamental and that none-of the modem ideas g'\ This conclusion was reached this week at a meeting o f the kleagles, titans, and other sal aried officers and partakers o f the commissions frqm the members. The Klan in its program to succeed the church comes out in defense of the fundamentalists and that no theory about monkey, ancestors will be permitted. The church can now rest assurd that modernism has been sec back and if there is to be any profit in carrying on the discussion, the Klan will take care o f that also. . What the Klan should do now is to enlist the aid o f "K ing Ben” Of the House o f David and interest him in holding down the modernists. These organizations have reason to; worry. To let modernism prevail and estab lish the theory that the monkey is one o f our ancestors would' be embar rassing. To see IClansmen marching down the street behind masks and robes with the House o f David following behind full grown beards, some rascal might be tempted to remark: "There goes the ancestors o f the monkey." The Columbus meeting o f the Klan seems to have ignored President Cal vin Coolidge, who 'positively refused to address the recent ■Klqn demon stration in Washington, D. C. The president right now' might be .put down as a modernist, from the Klan political standpoint. GOOD ROAD MILEAGE Ohio farmers and tourists now en joy 228 miles more o f Federal-aid highways than they did a year ago. This mileage, completed in the year ending June 30, cost a total o f j$8,449,501, o f which the federal Igovernment furnished §3,365,075. Highway construction under this plan now underway in the state totals 285 miles, while the total mileage ‘ completed previous to last year was 0G2 miles. This additional mileage, while a convenience to the tourist in the state, is a godsend to the farmer. It is estimated that each ■and c v r y farmer in this section o f the country Store Your Harvest in This .Granary While your grain is stored in your barn it not only fails to draw interest but may be destroyed over night by a fire, tornado or other disaster. If it ;s turned into dollar* and stored herein the form of SAVINGS CERTIFICATES will not only be protected from disaster but will draw S% INTEREST First mortgageon Clark County real estate protects every dollar here. Make yourmoney work for yo * as Hundred* of others are doihg by placing it in Tbe Springfield Building & Loan Association S t K * i t M a in StMMt, Springfield, Ohio Prominent Egyptian Lawyer Battles With Guard* on Scaffold at Cairo. Cairo, Egypt.—Execution o f seven men convicted o f th* murder of sit Lee Stack, governor general of the Sudan, took place here. They were hanged at Intervals of forty-five min utes, The death sentence Imposed, upon Abdul Fattah Enayafc was commuted to life imprisonment, Shoflk Mansour, prominent lawyer and member o f the Egyptian chamber of deputies, whose role, as revealed at the trial, consisted In remaining in the background and Instigating and '’remunerating the actual murderers, did not bear up with the fatalistic fortitude . of Ilia comrades, however. After the guards had plnjoned Jila arms to lead him. from his cell, Shaflk renewed bis wild struggles and actual ly buret his bonds la an effort to free 'himself. Hopes that Mahmoud Ismael, be lieved to have been the organizer of sevethl big political crimes, might break the silence which he maintained throughout the trial proved Illusory. Ismfiel protested his Innocence to the end and met Ids death with a mdle, hurling Jests at the warders as they led the men to the scaffold. Russell T* Scott, Sane, Must Face Noose Again Chicago.—Russell T. Scott, convict ed murderer of Joseph Maurer, has been found sane and will be returned to face the Cook county gallows once .more within, the next thirty days. News that an Informal decision that Scott Is not a lunatic has been made by Dr. Frank A. Stubblefield, was re ceived by the. office of State’s Attor ney -Crowe. Doctor Stubblefield, superintendent of the state hospital for the lnknne nt Chester, 111., awaits only the corrob oration o f his decision by two con sultant experts, to return Scott to Sheriff Peter Hoffman for hanging. Under the commitment papers, Doc tor Butterfield was .ordered to confine Scott until he dies or until pe Is found sane. Smoke Bomb in War Game Bums 1§ at*Cecmp Grant Rockford, III.—Fifteen peteons were burned, one probably fatally, during a demonstration o f the chemical warfare service at Camp Grant. All were spec tators. The explosion of a smoke bomb during a, gas attack, put out by the Thirty-third division' troops caused the accident. Leo Flanders, thirty, Rockford, was critically burned, The other fourteen received first-aid treatment at the camp hospital and returned to their homes. The spectators were warned not to approach the danger area, but about a hundred crowded too near and a phosphorus grenade fired by the troops landed In a group of watchers. Wife of Rich Detroit Auto Man Killed by Propeller Windsor, Out.—Mrs. Thelma Hol man, wife of George A. Hillman of Detroit, vice president of the Fisher Body corporation, was almost cut In two when she was caught In the pro peller of her husband's , gasoline launch while swimming in Lake St, Clair, one mile off Belle river. Mrs, Ilalmnn made a dive and was Immedi ately drawn toward the boat. Her husband and two of his friends on the launch failed to see her plight and bet cries for help were drowned by the noise of the motor. The body was recovered, s ic Charge Rich Realty Man Poisoned Woman in Jail . • i Miami, Fin.—John Gabel, wealthy, Florida real estate operator, Is held 1 under charges of administering poh ! son to Mrs. lb D, Hunt, who died { here. A coroner’s Jury verdict ac- ( ettsed Gobel of tbe crime after Deputy Sheriff P, C. tntlinm had testified that the real estnte man confessed administering the poison. Gobel visited Mrs. Hunt at the Jail, whero. she was being detained on charges of theft of n $1,300 ring preferred by him. Two U. S. Army Aviators Killed in Plane Crash Chicago.—Capt. Fraser Hole of Wlnnetka, 111., U. S, army aviator, was killed when his airplane fell nt White Sulphur Springs, \v„ Va. Hale’s me chanic, Iidrl C. Novies o f Whitesvilie, Ky„ also was kilted. Captain Hale formerly was one o f the best known amateur golfers in the Chicago dis trict. He represented the United States In the British open champion ship In 1914, Accuse Turn of Counterfeiting Kenosha, Win.. .. Perry Kopas, twenty-three, Thompklnsvlile, Ky., nnd Ray L, Lucas, twenty-three, Marlon, Ohio, are being held here by federal officials, charged with being tbe pair that flooded Wisconsin with counterfeit $20 bills. Six Kilted in Georgia Storms Atlanta, Us.* - a **rie* e f wind storms which swept southern Georgia caused six death* and $250,000 la property dawags. , vpr;si 'N e w # THIS SDW. WREN 00. SPRINGFIELD, OHIO. •USSSm Special Values Being O ffered Far Saturday the Last Day o f the ^ A u g u s t S a l e O f F U R N I T U R E —-At no other time is there such an important sale of furniture hen1 as in August, and this year’s sale Jn-s been well attended -by those who fuh : ; -i furniture, yet must give a thought to price. * —Saturday is the last day of thiBgreat sale and it will he well worth your time for you to select your new furniture now. EASY TERMS CAN BE AR RANGED. ASK ABOUT THEM. .as 3 Piece Living Room Suites! —Beautiful 3-piece living room suites of fine quality ve lour. Choice of colors., Every piece, perfect, and guaran teed. Davenport and two chairs ................. 3 Piece Living Room Suites! —Another 3-piece living .room suite upholstered in excel lent quality Jacquard velour in a choice of colors. Daven port, side chair and wing, chair ...................... ■................ 3 Piece Living Room Suites! —These handsome suites are covered in the best grade mohair in the newest designs with carved base. Best spring construction and each piece perfect. Complete.. * 1 4 7 - 5 0 $195.00 8 Piece Dining Room Suites! 4— Attractive dining room suites of American walnut veneer. Oblong table, buffet, 5 side and. one arm chaiiv August Furniture Sale price .............. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Piece Dimng Room Suites! —Beautiful tudor design dining room suites inwa.nut fin ish, 66 inch buffet, 45x60 inch table, 5 side, chairs and arm chair. Complete ....... .......................................................... 9 Piece Dining Room Suites! —Massive dining room suites of American walnut, artis tic in design and of a character for the best homes. Ta ble, buffet, china and 6 chairs, for .. .......................... $14750 $ 1 9 5 - 0 0 $ 2 4 7 * 5 ° 3 Piece Bed Room Suites! construction. Guaranteed. August Sale price . . . . . 4 Piece Bed Room Suites! t—These suites are of genuine American walnut and in very attractive design. Dresser, vanity, chifforette and bow end or four poster bed. Complete in this sale a t . .. . 4 Piece Bed Room Suites! —Bed room suites that are suitable for the best of homes, and the same quality you would pay half again this much for elsewhere. Genuine walnut, the 4 pieces complete.. WREN'S—FOURTH AND 19075 107 5 0 •J 1 7 / > 29500 J FI*?TH FL0OR8—OLD BLDG. -• VOV & fa ll yarn Tbe K held last and Sir-- Mins Li Ban!; has j ■vacation. | * Mr. an i home In:-i 1 visit in 3 1 JM'KOlta. 1 P §J . •Wit arouiii think need!) pairs school We tractiv to si) serges like tl boy—t O f c Knicl faraou Button HOM G. Spe 37 Gr * Money to loan 5% interest semi-annually, for 5 or 10 years* or, 5 1-2% semi-annually if a 20 year loan is de s i r e d . , Loansmay be paid be fore due if borrower desires. W. L . Clemans CEDARVILLE, O. H i A restful night on Lake Erie Makes Upteasantbreak in your journey. A good bed in a clean, cool stateroom, a long sound steep and an appetizing breakfast in tme morning. ■ SU».»er» ,,3E£ANDftEE’,—” CtTV OPTRlE'WfiltY OFBUFFALO” Otaly May 1st to Nousmbse l&lh loovt OlerttatttMLpaI*. M./ . Fastttn 1 1 *»w OiVin i, A t Tints } AttltwCj*ytU&4 *?.-O0A, m ! | g ;s ''slnANnPLti’v Itato—SW®. PtA jforft.'n x.'fL'if-il e j the I5rc.it tl>:y "CtEAKUBEfc” am! Sl-ysip-bji-kict. . TOtt?ticket AutOmofcilw Tl:e Clevcbud BuffaloTtatiart Co. ClevelembOhlo jpa*c,$&50 I-ngtli, SCO fttt, Brcaihn,,99 fret « liichea. res rVour tbi!ticket ij ticrxl on thu ILi.if'i '» tr-4
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