The Cedarville Herald, Volume 51, Numbers 1-26
mmm MMMMMW* BABY CHICKS Tburottjrit-brad b*by chick*. A h*tett e*ck w**k- Write or pboiwt for prk;««. Place your oirisr »ow for ehjeka to Tbedelivered, gay week you want them. CUSTOM BATCHING—** I'EIt EGG. Ralph H. Oster 0«J c -W< mh I Poultry F o n t Pboxy* 221 Box 37, Yellow Spring*, 0 , T H E C E D A R V I L L p H E R A L D HO0VB* fcfGANIZATION FW3RBD IN CHARLESTON , . XARLH BULL EDITOR AND FUBMBHE® OUR BIO [• -V ’ -■■ - Wall Paper and Paint Sale continues to 24th Papers from 2 1-2c h p Fred F. Graham 1 7 r l9 S . Whiteman St., XENIA, OHIO PURINAFEEDS PIG CHOW COW CHOW BULKY LASS HEN CHOW CHICK CHOWDER FEN j CE . LOCUST POSTS STEEL POSTS HANNA GREEN SEALPAINT, • ! JOHN DEERE IMPLEMENTS HAAG WASHERS feu*.-* * i« Company Everything For the Farm , Phorie21 Cedarville, Ohio Friendly and Cheery If you like to trade in a store that’* friendly and cheery, then The Fulmer Company store is in business for you. “E" PEACHES g* No. 2Vg can LARD lO ic MACARONI, Spaghetti, Bulk, Pound......................... 10c FLOUR, “Thank You" 5 lb. sack............................... .....23c RA1SENS, Seedless, Market Day, 2 pound pkg............ 20c GORTON READY TO SERVE CORFISH BALLS, can 14c PUFFED WHEAT JL JL C CRACKERS LAUREL s i Pound Pkg* JL O v STRAWBERRY JAM, Bulk, Pound ..............------------ ,.15c COFFEE, “Thank You” Pound Package...................... 36c FRANKLIN Chocolate Flavored Malted Milk, 26c can 20c SARDINES, in Tomato Sauce, “Shell," Pound can..... 15c &Ttns 60c OLD FASHIONED BUCKWHEAT 5 Lb. Bag $ S B C SPECIAL FACTORY DEAL Proctor and Gamble Soaps 6—P. G. SOAP I—LARGE CHIPSO 1— IVORY FLARE TOTAL 1—IVORY SOAP VALUE 1—LARGE OVA1* GRANITE $1,70 DISH PAN, GREEN OR BLUE, A BEAUTY 99c Entered at the Post Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October 81,1887, m second class matter, FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1928 AN INSULT TO INTELLIGENT PEOPLE If ever insult was flaunted in the faces of jMeUIgent men and women, it has come from Senator Frank WRUa and Con gressman Charles Brand, The charge o f pro-Briiti*h and un- American against Secretary o f Commerce Herbert Hoover sounds ifiore like the statement of a demagogue than from a member o f congress. Bom of poor parents, left an orph -r, reared under the guidance o f a Quaker family, Herbert Haqyer worked his way hrough school and later graduated from a university. His ability as an engineer was recognized not only at home but in England and China, His many years of honored service abroad made him one of the consultant engineers of the world. Such a service now brands him un-American in the eyes o f Willis and Brand, but thank goodness the American public has another view. We have two sons o f his township now in a worthy service in a foreign country under British0control. Under the Willis and Brand idea both can be charged as being pro-British. Who could believe such slush? ■ Hoover has never found it necessary to parade his accom plishments to win public favor. *His work speaks for itself, He haS made the best of ’his talents which the public admires. World Success has not swelled Hoover’s head, but its wonderful What a little honor will do for some others, merited or other wise. FnwJe 6te*tfc*!r* and N, W , ot 8prJ»g®*ld wer* in town Wedmu- day afternoon, in the interest* o f a township “ Hoover fo r president” club Several name* were obtained here, it is said, although they reported find ing considerable sentiment for Vice- President Dawes, and some fo r Low- den, Willis sentiment is weak, they declared, Thursday afternoon a “ Hoover for president” rally was held at the as sembly room in the courthouse.0 Among the 200 in attendance were a< number o f men from the vicinity, According to a local follower o f the Commerce Secretary, the meeting indicated a strength for Hoover be- yond all expectations. Little time was given to preparation fo r the rally, which brought together representa tives o f all the nine counties o f the district. ' The local man was especially bitter against Congressman Charles Brand, who carried the Willis-Hoover fight to the fioor .of Congress this week. Brand's talk would have been all right in Ohio, he said, but contended i t was out o f place to make it before Con gress,.. . I t was ,intimated that Brand might have opposition fo r the nomination for Congress this year. — South Charleston Sentinal. THE MAN FROM THE COUNTRY Why (lb so many men/from "the country" wind up in the chief executive positions in industry and in public office? Probably because they develop a stronger physical consti tution and a broader education on many and varied lines, of human endeavor and activity. The average man raised in the1 city does not have the same apportunity for mental and physical growth. ; The man who gained his early training away from the great centers of population generally has a broader vision of human affairs, and a better mental “ yardstick" with which to see arid measure the possibilities of the future. ,WHO WILL PAY FOR SHORTERWEEK? It has been announced that a determined demand will be made this year for a five-day working' week. This means the sacrifice of. older men, less keenly alert men, victims o f past industrial accidents, everybody who could not stand the swifter pace. It means a few hours more leisure for the swift, though they pay at a greater nerve sacrifice and an earlier breaking point ; but it means fewer jobs, with the slower worker a jobless derelict oh every labor market.^ ... To maintain present production on a shorter work week, is to make no new jobs ; it only throws out men who cannot get jobs under ,harder Competition. To cut production along with the cut in hours, in order to give new jobs, is to increase costs to everybody; a desperate hazard, almost certain to destroy any industry that tries it. v ’ FIRE WASTE OUR OWN FAULT Commenting on Our Country’s appailing annual, fire waste, the Washington Post says; t . y “ The average' American will not take fire seriously. He lets inflammable matter collect in out-of-the-way corners. He stores combustible materials in flimsy container^. He throws lighted matches out o f the window or into dry'leaves in the forest. He shakes ashes from his cigar or cigarette into the waste basket, ■Consequently the nation is called upon to pay a fire bill pf $560,000,000 in a single year, and during the past 49 yeafs has dug down into its pockets for some $10,000,000,000, almost the amount1owed to the United States in war debts by the allied nations, to pay for conflagrations, “ Not all fires are preventable, The majority, however, are. If Americans will take time to take care in this connection, it will mean millions o f dollars saved every year." $ 1 , 0 © TIE FEE T^NIC .............. ..... 1 84 c $L2* KONJOLA .......... ............................ ..... Ua $141$ HOODS SARSAPARILLA, Spring Tonic ........04c $ 0 e PHILLIPS MILKOF MAGNESIA Z M t E . W . F U L M E R C O . ARTERIES OF THE NATION . One hundred years age the first American railroad system, the Baltimore and Ohio was inaugurated. Staid citizens o f the time used to gasp at the “ comic-strip" engine followed by a few cars traveling slowly over its brief length of track. Today, monster locomotives hauling many heavy, comfortable cars, equal to the finest palace in their conveniences and sleeping ac- cofliodations, speed overi420,000 miles of track, in every section, of the United States, . , In this 100-year period practically all American progress has been made. There could have been no satisfactory settling o f our great stretches of isolated country without a means of communication better than the ox-cart, or ships that came around the Horn. The railroad provided the necessity and brought the supplies for the extension of civilization on a large scale. In short, they brought development and prosperity. America as we know it could no more grow and prosper without healthy railroad arteries of transportation to carry our products to the remotest districts, than could the human body thrieve without a perfect arterial system to carry the life-giving blood from the heart to the farthest finger tip. We are ready for the 1928 Season, Baby chicks all Varieties, Custom' hatching at 4c, per egg. A full line o f 'Buckeye and Newtown Incubators and Brooders. The Northup Hatchery, .Bell Phone, Clifton 13F16. it. R , 1, Yellow Springs, 0 . SCHOOLDAYS We are now well along in the second half of the school year and everywhere the teacher and pupil are looking toward those strenuous Spring weeks which will tell the story of pro motion or failure. Most boys and girls in this happy day have realized in their experience that school days no longer repre sent a blur o f gray monotony, a more or less torturous, experi ence, an affliction to be borne with whatever fortitude and en durance one may possess. Away back in the flays when the little red schoolhouse was serving its immortal purposes, things were very different than,at present. In those, days getting to school was many times a problem of serious proportions, and getting anr educa tion was reckoned among the most arduous achievements in life. There were no Special features of diversion to make learn ing loved in those days ; there were many hardships and handi caps. Even in the cities the school year was more or less a drab affair. Time has changed all o f that. Splendid school build ings, both in country and town, now offer haven to all who care to learn, •Proper heating, sanitation, comfortable furniture, ex cellent textbooks, efficient teachers have replaced crude and uncomfortaglo structures, the menacing conditions and the in adequate textbooks of other days. Today schoolwork is made interesting. Today the schoolteacher is an important person age, and indespensable factor in the life of the community. Today the; pupil, if he takes advantage o f his opportunities, when he leaves the public school is prepared to enter, well : equipped, the struggle of existence, And then there are the Inormal schools, seminaries, academies, colleges and univer- ’ slties—all far in the forefront of educational progress, each ; adding its contribution to the development o f the nation's edu- j cation. * 1 School days, even under the most trying circumstances, live forever in the memory, hallowed by the truest, tenderest and finest experience of life. They indeed are those “ dear old Golden Rule days." With these memories are entwined hu manity's purest emotions; school dfiyg know the clean ambitions o f the youth that come to us fcut once* merging all too soon into the fabric of life, whose warp and woof is oompoeed of the threads pf joy and pain, sorrow and sacrifice, thetaeomnense and burdens iseparable from mature realiz'gtion*. DON'T AGREE WIT|I BRAND While Representative Brand o f C|hio was assailing Herbert Hoover with bitter invective on Tuesday the Re publican citizens o f New Hampshire were voting at the primaries. • You see, they did .not know B ra n d - does anyone outside his own Ohio? But they didknow Hoover. And so they elected a strong set of-delegates who will proceed to Kansas City and vote for him. The braying o f a Brand are o f no ‘consequence by the side o f the splen did services that Hoover fo r years has rendered the United States, es pecially as the services are real .and the braying, are based upon malicious misrepresentation. , ‘ The Willis campaign in Ohio, 'for which Brand is a spokesman, is be coming thoroughly ^nauseating. Philadelphia Inquirer. A . S, L, TREASURER . GOES TO HOOVER . While Senator Prank WiHis is rak ing Hoover ont the prohibition ques tion, Robert L,. .Dickey, banker, trea surer o f the Ohio Anti Saloon League announces that he will suport Hoover, and has asked to be enrolled in a Hoover organization in Colutphus. Frank never mentions the Rqmus bribery, jta. get liquor permits for the withdrawal o f liquor from a depart ment headed by a Willis appointee. MUSKINGUM .STRAW VOTE The,, presidential .straw vote taken at Muskingum College among 645 stu dents gave Hoover 489 votes, Willis 73, Lowden, 73 Dawes 34, Hughes l, and CoolidgC 4. AUCTIONEER— C. L. TAYLOR— Jamestown. O. Phone 46. (10-28) NOTICE NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR CERTIFICATE OF PUBLIC CON VENIENCE AND NECESSITY TO OPERATE A MOTOR TRANSPORA- TION COMPANY Public notice hereby given that Frank Armstrong has filed with the public Utilities Commission o f Ohio an application fo r a certificate o f public convenience and necessity to operate a motor transportation company f o r ;the. transportation o f properly over the following route, to-wit: irregular. Number o f trips to jie made , daily will be irregular. Number of motor vehicles to bq used, one (1). All parties interested may obtain information as to time and place Of hearing upon said application by ad dressing the Public Utilities Com mission o f Ohio at Columbus, Ohio, Frank Armstrong, Cedarville, Ohio, ft * h|E*-1'•m w*~imtawuj.!w Get 1 *nr'y with Vnir.l.v UlllCk.- . I O * •I'-.M PatI w.n« nrj.’op civ tiiu'u Qti'.bly <liiKts Kvoiij Qualify .Siuck ooa t;n turn e st,are ot at i.KC-, a: ;he Poultry Show. MUUI v K a UE BIGHT ■TUB Vi’OKDY BABY GIUUK CO. So. Umwtone cute Auburn av «. • uh ingf ikl ©. Main $3f I WE SOLICIT . . Y o u r B a n k A c c o u n t „ and offer the following service: COMMERCIAL ACCOUNTS SAVINGS ACCOUNTS CHRISTMAS SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES COLLECTIONS TRAVELERS CHECKS T h e E x c h a n g e B a n k Cedarville, O. • eWHEN m SPEK^IELD, OHIO VISIT Baa tha. Best—Picture*—Presentations and Vaudeville Entertain ment in-America - MAWPLiYMfi ME SAMUILS- " V h ■ ■ ■ n I CltifP „Thtj Q|ue strcak of vaudeville" . , THE HIGHEST S A L A R Y ARTiST IN VAUDEVILLE Coming Four Days—Starting March 25th ' ' “HERE ’TIS”“L!TTLE JASK LITHE” H IV a f lM ' Radio’s Most Popular Entertainer ----- - ONE SOLID WEEK—STARTING APRIL 1st - r — THE SENSATION OF VAUDEVILLE San Antonio’s “ SIAMESE TWINS” ' DAISY AND VIOLET HILTON The inseparable union ot these charming little girls of seventeen ia one of the human -wonders of the modern world. Their play- 1 ( 10 ,. dgte.iog and singing in vaudeville is the event oi; a decade. ! ! JUST ANOTHER EVENT COMING ' “ FOUR DAYS-STARTING APRIL 8th -AiONtmeron. and,Pete Bdnteema, Better Known to Radio Farts a* ; \N d .'.PETE * *■. Yeu won’t leave the theatre feeling gloomy after seeing their, performance we assure you. : STARTING APRIL 16th ~~ Raystor Leir Musical Extravagance Co. •s Of 40 People in a' Repertoire of •New Play* (TWO SOUP YEARS IN COLUMBUS,. Q.) ■ GrSfcteet list of start evsr offered in any theatre at fhesA prices. . '**•“— r-r^—yV— — f— t — -f . .■... - -J l. ■ ^ --* ’**[ eonysnienoe of opr ouljafstown patron* we have mad£. arrangements ' for “parking your' cap at Qrqya’a Gdrtge ,'IQ K * Spring St., for 10c—good for 3 hours,- durirjg everting performaho*. Ho AdfABM in Prices—-Matinee 25-30c, Night 30-50c. Children 10c rm te Tips regent when in S pringfield fflBGERI n p r a n Country Club Twin or Single lVz lb. loaf QH ii PIIbrAU Pound loaf, White 6c, Whole Wheat loaf Oil Vienna lib. loaf 7c, Raisin loaf 9c, Rye and Sandwich* 1%- lb. loaf 10c. A r i r r r r French Brand Lb. 46c, Jewel Lb. QAjt U U r r C t Country Club Steel Cut Lb. 47c. v Z y n n n i l Country Club Finest, doz. cans $1.58 3 1AA U U n n cans 40c, Avondale Brand 3 cans 34c, T*U U Doz. $1.33, Clifton Brand 3 cans 32c; Doz. $1.26, Stand ard Pack 3 cans 29c, Doz. $1,13. PUCEQE Extra Fancy Full Cream Lb. 33c, AA U l l t L v C American Loaf Lb. 39c, Pimento Loaf t) U U 41c, Swiss Lb. 46c. TOMATOES No. 2 Standard dozen dans 97c, 3 BANANAS Fancy, Golden fruit 4 lbs, ^ BEANS Country Club with pork and sauce 3 cane 23c, Campbells with pork and sauce 3 cans - f 25c. - LETTUCE Iceberg head 3 for 20c, F an cy* Leaf lb. 12c. APPLESFancy Bald-*»«» ivins 3 lbs. 22c, F a n c y * * * * Rbmes, WinesapS 3 lbs. 29c. SALMON Pink 1 lb. f Q r can 18c, Avondale Red can 25c. ORANGES Navals, C 7 Q 176 size doz. 57c, N a ^ * ® Vais, 216 size doz. 49c. 1 HOMINY Fancy, No. ( ) £ S P A G H E T T I in 4 0 ^ jauce, Beechnut Lg, * ^ cail 12c, Franco American 3 cans 29c, Heinz can 18c< ONION SETS Fancy 4 Yellow lb* 19c, White lb. 15c. FISH* Fancy Cod- Brick 28c/Ready to Fry can 14c, Holland Her ring 2 for Be. BACON Fancy Sugar 4 Q m Cured in 3 lb. piece '**** ® 19c, Jowel 2 lbs* 25c. SPINACH Extra fancy, free from grit* , " * v 8 Lbs. 20c. .. { HAMS Cured, whole gY-* lb. 19c, Fancy C o t - " * ^ ^ tage Hams lb. 27c, Callies lb. 18c.
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