The Cedarville Herald, Volume 51, Numbers 1-26
E C E D A R V I L L E ' H E R A L D UM BULL EDITOR AND PUBLISHER r*d at the Poet Office# Gvd&yvHle, Ohio, October 8 1 ,1887> kmu Sel**» mutter. FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1938 new spaper g iv en m er ited a w a r d [’ht* Indianapolis Times has been given the Pulitzer prize he meet distinguished and meritonzed public service ;red by an American newspaper in 1927.. for its exposition Jltical corruption in Indiana. The-Times was known for years, as the “ tail-end" paper in that city, nut following onviction on evidence gathered by that paper, o f high up .dans and rulers in the Klan, the Times became the out- ling medium in the state. Corruption cannot long exist it te or smaller political subdivision has one or more newi* rs that will give the facts in the interests of the public and or the protection of crooked politicians. Chicago had but two newspapers that came out m the re- primary and took a stand for decency and the routing or Thompson-Small machine. They were the News and the ine» both o f which fired a. consistent broadside against the: sters that had the city for the throat, In a neighboring city we have an example of haw a news- r had the opportunity to win postage and praise from the abiding element. Instead that newspaper, rather than at- office holders of its political faith, kept silent at what was M lace in the courthouse, and it was not long until citizens y refused to follow and we are now told the paper goes r new ownership. ,; Clanton was another example of where rotten politics was id with the underworld. What was called the leading r winked at what was* going on. The opposition paper up the fight and as a result a number of crooks were sent ■ison-and the public gave its support at once to the paper stood in defense of clean government, ■ ' A Pulitizer prize was won by Grover Cleveland Hall of The Ggomery, Ala.,, Advertiser," because of his campaign against mderhanded methods of the Klaii in that state. Hall is ited with writing the best editorial of the year and has awarded apprize. . *, 1V. Newspapers have a duty to perform in behalf of the public. * are semi-public institutions that’ can exist only by public ort. The newspaper, that remains silent or refuses to rec- ize wrong doing and aid in uncovering corruption, is break- with the public and stands in'the same light as the accused ig-doer, * VALLEYFORCEPLANSTWO TOHODS HEROIC * , Library and Non-Denominational Church W$J R&*r m 4‘ Broad Acres Near Philadelphia— Arranged for June to Mark 150thY©*& ■ j~ : THE TREND OF RETAIL BUSINESS Business of all kinds is undergoing a great change. , All is of business is meeting new conditions as to the methods ilesmanship and the new inovations introduced, to combat petition. The manufacturer and the jobber have their prob- i and competition is today closer than- anytime in the try of the country. It is in the retail field^that One can find the greatest corn- ton. : The retailer ,first must contend with a discriminating ic. Demands for service-or great demand for a wide range Sods and price and quality for selection. New styles intro- >d to the public after’the merchant has stocked up for the on business in most cases means a direct loss to the retailer vis stock on hand. Demand for the very latest in style means xtra profit te the merchant to cover a part of the loss he fc take on stock that only a few ,months previous was in 16 , The retailer has -a hard game to play but the public entiy cares nothing about his troubles. ■ ‘ , B mother angle the retailer in the largest city, as well Uer Villages, has fbtfnd the chain-store as competi- [ we find the keenest .kind of competi,ori between chain- js . . Buying In large .quantises for the chain-stores has .made it ible to meet a very heavy overhead such a company must Modern methods of merchandising and display of goods attracted the public, Selling for cash has enabled the n companies to eliminate credit losses. Taking their store s to the public by advertising has placed the chain-stores i6 front. , Many of the rules of the chain-stores have never been rfced by the proprietor of the old-time store that has been ,ent to operate on .the least line ,of resistance. The pro- tor that has even attempted to adopt modern methods has .e more or less of a success in the face of .the new kind of petition. With chain-stores and large mail order houses in a war in ral states, one Of which is Ohiojowe are to witness an un- il situation soon. Within the past few weeks two of the est mail order houses iu the country have leased rooms in •ighborfng city to open retail stores and combat the drift of l-order business to chain stores. -More than twenty of the l-order.retail stores will be opened in Ohio in cities of 50,000 up..: According to statistics put out by Babson the next five years determine the chain store supremency. He is of the opin- that the competition among ,the big companies will be sloped until they will become unprofitable and the drift will i turn to the old channel where individualism will be wel- ed by the trade. . . The average merchant has his destiny in his own hands, can in a great measure adopt the same methods of mei;- idising as his big brother and in this way he can meet the forms pf competition, , T "T ALLEY FOBGE, scene of the \ f Continental Army's martyrdom ■f and heroism in the depressing days of 1777-and 1773, will furbish the background for a great national ob servance of the 150th anniversary.' Imposing memorials' are planned for the big cantonment outside of Phlla- - deiphia. chiefly a Washington Memo rial Library and'a Washington Memo rial Church, non-'denominatlonal. While the details lor the celebration have not yet been -announced, it is believed that they will be most com* prehsnslve and picturesque, including participation first of all by the. thir teen original states and then by all forty-eight states. ■ The Washington memorials will rite on the site of the iZulleh mansion, de stroyed last "spring by Are,, The Rev, W, Herbert Bark, founder and rector of the Washington Memorial Chape], .Has received assurances of gifts that will make the memorials possible. , J Hie coagregapojt has .bought a site oovariag 15 gora* for fhe buftdingaand an unidentified donor has promised funds for the Library, the cornerstone Washington'* Headquarter and Memorial Arch at Valley Porae. The Walk Approaching the Arch Has Been Chemically Treated, -. for wlrich will be laid June 15, 15211. as the closing feature pf tbV Sesqul- Centennial observance. History only will have a place on the library shelves. Bach state will be represented by work* dealing with the history Of that state and the M-. brary will have, therefore, 48 alcoves. Valley Forgp continues to be the center of interest of thousands and thousands of visitors from every »ec- tiou of the country, as veil as. from' abroad. Railroads and automobile bug com' panies regularly run excursions to the i'amouB old shrine of patriotism aud on Sundays, and holidays even 'the broad acres of Valley Forge are taxed for space hy the huge throngs, lu addition nlatiy visitors travel by pri vate motor c&rs over the excellent roads, kept in splendid condition by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. All' roads to Valley Forge 'run through a landscape of remarkable beauty,-artists agree, and these roads are treated, as necessity arises, with chemicals, especially calcium chloride, to lay the dust ■r 'SMply 32.miles from Philadelphia, the ‘ brine has long been one-of the favor ite 'Objectives for daily excursions for Philadelphians, as wall as tor visitors to that city who have combined the Valley Forge trip with a-tour-of other places of historic interest, such as independence'' Halt, the Betsy Ross Mouse and Other relics of the Revolu tion. ' ' :4 - * That interest la expected to be stim ulated by the forthcoming celebration, SAVE THE GORILLAS I f;<?l enjoyment to your trip East or W«t, ! bivif-ff jt-u a delightful breakinyourjourney. C & B LINE STEAMERS s EaeR W « 3 f' Every Nig ii Between Cleveland and Buffalo ’/.it mu ucftrU^d fWfljtlee. hxkkltng T»r*e, cdmfbrt. >-uif*a;s?OiftmhstiimiraxlottstUshtVmftMMnsrittp, hK i.cjj r.ibiM, wide <Wk», excellent dining room a.trKe. CourteousstfseKknci. A tripyouWill long . re x-njoet. Ojtiftictlons st Buffalo for NiagaraFalls, tsatern andCanadianPoint*. pally Service May let to November 14th Uavir.j*ac 9)00i>,M.; Arriving at 7:30A. M. Aik yout'tkketagentor mtriftagency for tkkttHfia.C&B JJn& NewLow Fare $4.50 ggf •A W tm CARRIED $6.S0 AND IIP ...... a Those whose youthful "reading in cluded the works Of It* M. BUIluntyne will Have somewhat fearful memories of the gorilla. Tn “The Gorilla Hunt-. ers” that author described the pursuit of an anthropoid who could give and take In the forest battle. But the heavy armament of the modem pur suer prevailed, and the constant ra pacity of the big game hunter has so far devastated western and cen- tral Africa that recently the extinc tion of the gorilla was being men- tloned as possible, or even probable. This senseless slaughter of an ani mal whose, wickedness goes no farther than self.defense against the aggres sor is^now to receive some limit, says the Manchester Guardian, ^On the rep resentations of an American natural ist the Belgian government has cre ated a “national park" In the Congo, In the center of what Is called the gorilla country. Within this reserve, which Includes abmjt 250 square miles, the, ruthless collector of heads and skins will be forbidden to enter, and all fauna and flora will have rights pf sanctuary guaranteed by a staflpof wardens. Thus Belgium falls into line with many other states who have real* tzed that It is not the business of civ ilization to abolish the forest and its creatures, but to regulate It with a due respect to nature. kind. If your mother married1* car penter, you were brought up to re* duced circumstances, but If yon marry a carpenter you ha^e a husband whose income'Is as great aa that of a college professor, and *o long as be remain* a carpenter yon need never toay for .his morals. It, Is when hi graduates Into a contractor, with the possibility that gives of juggling with 'contract* figures and more or less compromising aldermen, that yott will be compelled If interested In his spffttoal welfare to spend more time on year knees. Although for many y«*r* Hew York city has enjoyed faculties tor taking care of its orphaned children,' the problem of saving homes end keeping families through periods of street has but recently received com ! deration. This work, howsveft,ls now bring Sons by a new department of the Children's Aid society, which to the irat nine months of Its existence eared, tor tt children. Unfertonatriy ^scanty re sources have thus far made It neces sary to reject some Of the neediest cases, but the requests tor help have exceeded ail estimates. Where the children are boarded, every effort- is made to insure that they are taken to purely for the levt of children to the home.„ It would he diOcalt to ever* estimate the wotiderfsl poeetbUltle# of helpfulness that should epefc Up he* fore the workers la this welfare *e pnrtment AntMtafr Armament. ----- ----- - ■ 'ftpegynr sm I Dust Can, With; Asue#*ltie*, ‘Should Be On BeadThronghentSeason Bfndpreeafr for combating insect pests should he as much a part of the home gardener's working outfit, *s Ms hoe. A hand sprayer and a hand dust gtm should he available and there should be ammunition for both of them in the form of spraying and dusting chemicals. Bordeaux mixture is recommended by the specialists of the vegetable gardening department of the .Ohio vtate University, who would add poisons for the chewing insects and jicotine for the sucking types. If no sprayed Is available a home nixed copper-lime dust' is valuable for general,use in the vegetable gar den. It is made fey mixing one part at monohydrated copper sulfate with four parts of hydatod lime. The dust la applied to plants with*best results when there is a dew on the foliage and there fa no wind blowing, It is important to begin dusting as soon as the plants come through the soil and to keep the new growth covered with the. dust. '’ Control of early and late blight, leaf hoppers and flea beetles con be obtained by the use of this dust, A special bulletin on the1 control of garden Insects and diseases is avail able through the agricultural "exten sion service of the Ohio {state Uni versity, It is Bulletin No. 76. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Services for Sabhath May |3th. Mothers’ Day, The last Sabbath of the Inter-class Contest-Broadcasters are still in the lead. - The goal for. Sabbath Is 200. If not; attending any other church, we shall be glad to have you comO and join us |n this Bible> period at 10:00 A- M. Interesting Class Discussion. Worship service at 11:30 A,M. Ser mon Subject, “Mutual Obligations and Honors,’’ -A Mothers’ Day Sermon. Special music by the choir. Regular Services for-Young People and Juniprs, and the Mid Week Ser vice on Wednesday Evening. S A V E 3 1 3 S § AChlcaaoKalm M *detoM©*5ure Suit Worth A C M m - Gmmm&r RMtoevtWarth YourChoiceel *nyChl- «am K*ha all wool, aud* to fftuum Jult Tailored to year erect rttemurs—300 PAT- TJCKNS09 FA5RICS to Mlect from—your choio* ot *0 of tht « m * mb '« jirwert «ad cboie* « t ,»tyiej, A ruleyou’ll be proad ot—we tpA that1we are modert to name $35,00 as the value of suchcloths*. Juit the thin* ter yew car.AseeaiaeOoeMU"* x»ir-pet. SUpit iftto a side pocket *ad you*U fi»d It one ot the hee dscut UdftC* y«“ wer put into your maculae. Light enough to carry ia your poet pocket-- strong enough to *<*>»« thshesvlsstshower.Put one layourgolf beg or slip it Into your fUhl«t kit, Best stylish, fitting O r d e r Both N o w Oaeoif d» sr««t»«t I jr* ■ifriD riothtas bore ever 1 /? >' ^ V .offeredso«ny.townt 1 L m. If you went to e*ve I rnonty end- etthe 1 eunetSueeetdotliee ■ _ . . . of GUARANTEED 1 gf* .™> **>. mat VALVE, Uke id- I bjfe (g; ‘ V O U venters of tfatetele 1 7-8 J T > AT ONCE, The 1 T *: * * *** thne.ie limited. 1 $ ’"J v •' * ammmmml The relny eeeeon ie HERB. Right now • ie the time to set a well msde raincoat, Hereleareelmoney eavins opportunity to jret that coat and improve your appearance. with ■ etyllah, made to mee.iuresuit. | . -/' |eMmems^ni?^vj^fli^Tg«KMeesep 1 HOME CldOTHING COMPANY Cedarville, Ohio, 3 son is, it now ;git I lacott. money rtunlty at and ;r sp- irfth a ids to 1 e*mew#*ew$K*em»w#e*S"»l ■f*«fM5W*tw»“fl«»S)»>sgi»efes»e»e». | Notice To The PubKc Under new . management Spencers, Barber Shop latest styles in Ladies and Gentle- - » » mens hair cuts. Children are} Welcome here. %' ' ReEeYIALL S, Main St. Cedarville, O SPECIAL PRICES 1 ■ ' ' 'ON B A B Y C H IC K S White Leghorns $10 per hundred Heavy Breeds $12 per hundred i - Custom Hatching 4 cents per egg , A hatch each week OAK-WOOD POULTRY FARM RALPH H. OSTER Phone 224 Yellow Springs , • • . ^ Ohio ' . Mw5"5w*H>Hiw Hotel Columbus Long and Fifth. Sts. COLUMBUS, OHIO 200 Rooms—Modern A FirsLCIass Hotel at a Moderate Price Rooms, $1.00, $1.50—Bath, $2.00 Noon Lunch; 35c—Dinner, 50c James H. Butler, Managing Direct JAMES H. BUTLER, Managing Director w e h a v e I n sta lled ALADIES’ SHOESHIM PARLOR ANDSHOEREPAIR DEPARTMENT STOP IN ; Styles Shoe Store Main Street Xenia, Ohio l i Sr ffiW RANGE FOBTHE KITCHEN— Why not have one of our modem ranges for the Kftdien tbls Spring? Wfehave one of the best on ffie marb^U Guaranteed to give sat* isfaetkm. gERYICE HARDWARE €0$ Not original sip nor Innate deprav ity but defective education is responsi ble for the pitiable spectacle of ths bored or urfappreclative American in the European museums, is asserted by Dr. John J. Tigert, United States tfom* mlssloner 6f edneation, in an article In School Life, a publication qt the de partment of education. Doctor TJgert discusses the need of museums in an educational program and states that experience has demonstrated over and over again that the American, when properly prepared, will respond to the esthetic, the rnttural and tht educational in the museum as rendily nS the European. Doctor Tigert l»e< ileves that the museum, with Its abundance of defliijfe and concrete things, its element of wonder, Us esthetic appeal and lure of interest ing things, has a great advantage as an educational agency because of the spontaneous attention that naturally attaches to It, It you oiuicry a carpenter you are marrying a man wtueie instincts are as clean as the shavings that curl off his tools, 1here is something about working in wood that develops hen* esty, straightforwardness and up* rightness, If has been «n honorable ealling since the Son of a Carpenter [ Went out from Hi* father's shop, while j trill a youth, toaglve Hi* Ufa tor man* t j Incorporation of dukedom* Should have it* dlsadvantagM a* won a* It* advantages. The duke of Rutland Is to pay lower taxes on hit kuom* now that his estate is operated by a com* pany, but on the other ha*d b* new has obligations to Members of toe public who subscribe tor stook. He will not Uko It if a minority stock holder petitions tor a receivership an the ground that hit interest* are be ing jeopardised by the duke’a totem*** tgement and misbehavior. Nothing I* Curtmim The wheel of fortune taa-a* ronad to- eessantly, and who c«a s*y *e himself, “Xshall today be uppermoet"—Confa* due, NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of James Pm*re$u Finney, deceased. Joseph A. Fte&iy and Mat- gatet Hogsatt have been wppototod and qualified *s E«wu%$nii cef the estate of James Pmttorepa Jg^ttoey, late of Greene (hmsody, G&fe* dyeeased. Dated this tm day M , A. O. iwa. Probate Jadgi. Tobaccos . •.. • Blend, T a s t e ALWAYS THE SAIVIE! E STATE it as our lionast belief that thetobaccosusediu Chesterfield cigarettes - areoffineTqualityaud henceof betteriasto than iu any other cigarette at the price. . Li«wm'&MyaaoToBACo*'Co, Thw$to(mm C h e s t FIELD C I C a r e W t e s . a n d y e t th e y X & A T t S S 'Y m * * ., . r p~> D y
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