The Cedarville Herald, Volume 51, Numbers 1-26

p « A lM fK ^ fA L LOCAL' ft* */tt*~ 0 * §m» 9 ^ ** WmiWif4mb&&*M* |>y4»V ’rnmMtm j. ' s _, ^P t ^ v »5( p PII^ w *- . W1^*t)Q*l*W t_' ^ I J f M *&*** * t S P. Jt. *** N*OCl*y t «gQ fet porch***! fm * tb* * imiiinijiimiin'iimuipwiwmwimmmiyiriniiimWiMWa^'! ^ > cmmmmm<m g j " * * - ** •5 ° “ *** ft1* ^ * * * L f 16^W * ? * !* _ ?E * Dobbins, Supt. UNITED PRESBYTERLN Sabbath School at 10 A. W 0» A . ', Stax*. The Pfcrt will op** on Moodejr ^ : Mareh 2 6 ii at 2 I\ M> *t the o ffice . 6:80 P. M. 0 , Y . P. 0 , U, Special Service fo r Stewardship C**a* and la»**, at the Joke* on ’ o f the Buildin* and Loan Association, 1]L A ^ W*da**Uy alt* Maroh * « & C. £,< .-->— -------- * .f iW w l Topic: “ The Way To The { Twenty one wen will compose the Best.” ' rcfu lar minitrcl east. Reptan, Thonsp-; i . Stcv/ardship o f Life, J»sephlne . 1 . ew Tfck*t* f* r C. C. Hifcatrel *r* * o h « ' *on, Collin*, Crippes, Graham, and Auld. fast. Only one performance. So bay*Be*** have been chosen as end men} ot Stewardship o f A b ility your Minstrel ticket* early. {with Mr. Duffey* the director, as in- g aret Jamieson.. Mar- >» w >terlocutor. Many catchy times will be sane at the College Minstrel on Wednesday nite March 28th, The Ladies* A id o f the M* E. Church wilt hold a market Saturday, March 84th, at the Co-operative Cream Station, Mrs, Alice McLean was in Xenia Thursday, the guest o f Mra, Anna Boyd, Rev. S. M. Ingmire spake at Boss Township school last Monday morning and at the College Y , W, C, A, Wed­ nesday. A, M. ' Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Dukes, who. have been residing in Dayton fo r some time* have gone to Florida, their future home. Mv$- Dukes is the daughter o f Mr«- and Mrs. Arlhur Cummings o f this place. Mr. Duffey o f South Charleston is coaching the minstrel, Mr. Duffey in himself a singer and entertainer o f note, having served as first tenor and character impersenator on a Lyceum Course Quartette." The College Minstrel Show is given every ofher year under the auspices o f the College Y . M, C. A . and the money realized, from it will he used to send representatives from the local association to the Lake Geneva Con­ ference this summer, » Thp members o f the Bearers o f the M, E, Church were entertained Wednesday evening by Misses Lois McFarland and Kathryn Van Pelt at the formers home. Following the business meeting contest and games were enjoyed. Dainty refreshments were served; 3. Stewardship o f Time, James Stormont. .4. Stewardship o f Money Lloyd McCampbell. Address from the Congrgational Chairman o f Stewardship Partners, W, W, Galloway. A ll are cordially invited tothis ser­ vice. 7 :3Q P, M. Union service u Presby­ terian Church. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN Sabbath School —___- ___-w 3 A, M, Classes fo r Alt, and all ■ag'invited to attend. .Worship S e r v ic e s__ ______ ,i A . M. Standard'junior C. E. at ________ ____ ,-3 P, M. Senior C. E. at ,__ _____ „6 fi0 P. M» M. E. CHURCH * 10 A- M. Sabbath SchOf, P. M. Gililian Supt. 11 A. M. Sermon. 2:30 Junior League. ^ " • 6:30 Epworth.League. ' Herbert Hoover a Grandson of Ohio— Old Records Show Four Generations of Ancestors in Miami County V S - was bom it son whom they namfed j The stones to these graves an so Herbert Clark. • (worn that only a search o f the etn- That son, grown’to manhood and Jtlcry records will .’disclose W>Ich having won fame and fortune in his grave is which, but it is bolivcd profession ns engineer, eaught the .two worn som eone slabs, stnd- r’s grandmother used attention and fired the imagination j’JS close together at one edg ^- the women’s sessions \ o f America in the early days o f th e . Cm Hoover plot, mark the gave* (Coiiricsj’ DayWn .Journil-ffctati) West Milton, O., (Special).—Her bert Hoover M a grandson o f Ohio. Four generations o f Hoover’s pa- , temal ancestors lived, as man or • boy, bh the old Homier farm lo­ cated about one mile Southwest o f this Ohio village, in Union town* ship, Mian?' county. 'Two generations o f them—hie father and grandfather—Were b o th ' bom here. Two generations— great grandfather and great great grandfather—died herd and rest in the burial ground o f the old West Branch Quaker Church, the church where .Hoover to preach to o f the Friends’ meetings, The Hoover's, came to Ohio in 1802, when John Hoover, great great grandfather o f the present Secretary c f Commerce, left North Carolina, because o f objections to slavery, and sought a home in the new Quaker colony that was being established in Miami county. He obtained from President Jefferson a patent to a section o f land and settled dcv;n to establish his home and rear his family. *■ With John Hoover cam* his son Jti :; 0 , then a mere boy. Jesse grew up, married, and among hi* children was a son Elf, who, when he mar- i r?ed, established hia home' on an bight-acre plot of the original sec­ tion that had been entered by *hls grandfather. Here, on Sept. 2, 3847, Jesse Clark Hoover, father of Herbert Clark Hoover, Was bom. / Grandmother Dies in Ohio. To EH Hoover afid hi* wife, who had been Mary Davis, were born here, four children—Allen, Eunice, Henry and Rebecca, In the early 60’s, Mr*. Hoover fell into a de­ cline. Tim country doctor said she had a "pulmonary disease,” but doc­ tors today probably would diag­ nose her ailment as consumption. A change- o f climate was decided upon and on Oct. 1,1853, the little farm was sold. Before a change could be made, however, Mrs. Hoover’* condition became worse. She could not travel. For Her, the decision to move had come too late •fid she died early hi 3854, Within a few weeks her daughter, Eunice, also died Of ” * congestion Of the lungs.” leaving wife and daughter in the old West Branch burial ground, where hia father and grandfather already rested, EH Hoover with his fom* remainbig children w i*t—i* Iowa, H oover family P lot *m west bramch CEMETERY,.MIAMI CO. OHIO C A YTO W .JCJU*fVAL-H t«ALO -PHOTO* World War by the initiative and rc-{ of Eunice Hoover and her mtiher sourccfulness' with, which he ,-mry. s, ■ plunged ihto the problem of assist-! Transfer to Iowa, ing Americans stranded abroad ! The transfer of Eli Hooverand and, this done, turned to the labor;his four children from the Vest of feeding and housing the dost:-1Branch church to the Red Cdar tute noncombatants in Belgium and {Monthly Meeting of Friends, Iwa. Northern France, left in the wake!is fully recounted in the careUllj of the German war machine. jkept church records under lat* Today, that son, with a record of °^,^arci1 *354 is this entry accomplishment in public sendee “Eli Hoover request# * certify* equalled by few men in so shopt a ° f removal for himself and four span of years, a tried and proven minor children to Red Cedar Mrtth- - *•* ■ ' • ly Meeting of Friends, Iowa.* Juke executive in the cabinets o f two presidents, haSubeOn placed by his friends ana admirer# in the race for the presidency. Should he win out, Ohio will be able to place yet another feather in her cap. For she would have, this time, a grandson in the White ■House. * Old Records Tell Story. This story o f Hoover as a grand­ son of Ohio is disclosed by a search o f the land records of Miami county, Ohio, filed in the recorder’s office at Troy, and by the records o f the West Branch Friends church, now in possession o f Mrs. Frances Thomas, pear here. The homo in which Jesse Hoover —Herbert Hoover’s father—was bom, is still standing. It is located on old Butter Road, a short mile from West Milton and about 38 miles north o f Dayton, On Pig Eye Road, another mile to the south, is th'e bid West Branch Meeting House, where Herbert Hoover’s grandmother, at monthly meetings,, preached to the women’s sessions. The Old church, dilapi­ dated and in disrepair and now used for drying tobacco, still shows, however, the remnants o f the old partition that divided the men from the women in their religious . Mi*'* GrandsonWhs#Fam*. Th*r* J « sm H oew r gr*w up and MIAMI unit a* <h*m—at W**t X*w& , k m a r^ O ^ U , 1K4, moved ‘ service*.. Across the toad from the church is th* cemetery wher* HooveT’s great great grandfather and great grandfather are buried. There, lute**. «ii£ Yvlji yyiUldlttisidiAF ftftd t$M) airnt, Eunice, who died in childhood, to hire tjie Washington AttdiioljtM, •.......*-........... S. Mote and Riley Davis are ap­ pointed to make the nefcessarj in­ quiry and i f they find nothin! to hinder to prepare and product one to the next meeting.” On the following page the tans- fer is shown duly approved and signed. , f While his father and grahdfaher quit Ohio at that time, then re­ mained behind in the Buckeye tate a host o f relatives who, with heir descendants,' ihay now claimattd establish kinship with Hebert Hoover. Host o f Relative# in State There h&d come into Ohio [Vith f.reat great grandfather iohrt Hoover, four brothers—Antfew, Jacob, Daniel and David. Of heae and their off-spring it is estinbted some 8000 Quaker inhabitant o f Miami, Darke, Treble and Jont- gome^y counties can trace Iheir ancestry to a common parentWith the Secretary o f Commerce, Relationship by direct desceit, or through marriage, can be etab* lished by many o f the key fa illes o f these thrifty, thriving Qisker counties. Among the farfHes known to be so related arc the Coates, Coppocks, Halls, lay- worths, Brandons, Jones, Hoeli and Holes. - , Bo if Herbert Hoover, pehaps as President Hoover, ever uder- takes to stage a family reunio for bis Ohio relative# a t the thita House, even the spacious W i t Room will not suffice. He’ll a m *** MolassesBai O n C o m H » i* * Han* Lay jp £ Chick* H*0W When Far Ga*» i* F**d Cane molaasse la the poultry ration possesses certain ^jwtiaet advantages over com , whan aobetitutad fo r that grain In quantities op to JO per cent o f the ration. This has been, estab­ lished by two years o f experimental work by the poultry husbandry de­ partment o f bh* Ohio State .Univer­ sity. The molaasa* has replaced com on a pound-for-pquiid basis. 'T t has given equally good results in rations for^ starting and growing chicken#, laying hens and fattening birds.” says Prof, A. R, Winter o f the poultry de­ partment, in discussing the gegults o f the tests, * In a test with laying hens, those fed on a ration containing B per cent o f molasses laid 16,93 per dent more eggs than a group fed with corn qnd no molasses. At. the same time the mortality among then! was only 5 per cent as compared to 32,5 per ’cent among the hens which got no mo­ lasses. The .test was carried on dur­ ing the fall and winter months. Growing chicks, at eight weeks of age, weighed 17.7 per cent more when fed a 6 per dent molasses ration, and suffered a mortality o f only 7.32 per cent as against 12.89 per cent for'the chicks which received corn instead o f W h # « f* d XO per cent w M « im th* <*Mks writhed eriy I f A per w on , but Hup mortality had bean reduced to 4.88 per cent. ” Tb* cane molasses carries some Vitamin B . and furnishes carbohy­ drates in easily available fo rm /’ says Professor Winter. “ Th* potassium salts ia the product serve as a mild laxative. It js believed that the cat' bohydrates create a condition in the intestine unfavorable to the develop­ ment o f coccidlosis and other harmful bacteria. This theory is under investi­ gation at the present time.” I f its a farm you want to sell o r trade, or i f you want to buy or trade for a home in or near Payton, better write to C, A , Kennedy, Lecerisekt Real Estate Broker, 3000 East 5th, St., Dayton, Ohio, . He trades and sells farm# any where in south west-; ern Ohio, Also has nice list o f D a y -' ton property fo r sale or trade, <3t) j The Cedarville College Minstrel will * be given at the Opera House on Wed- * inesday evening March. 28th at 8:15 P, M. by the men' o f the- College, FOR SALE—Bull Cooley. » pups, Wilber , FOR .SALE—Western Electric Light !plant ip good condition with hatterieB. . Fred Bryant, R, 4, Springfield, Ohio. <• FOR SALE—Small size Buckeye Incubater, E. <1. Payne, Here We Are At Last Cedarville College WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28th Opera House 8 :15 P. M. Plat-Opens Jackson’s Office Monday, March 26, 2 P. M. $5 SLAV? M A IN 8 £ R S S ? j& m o f fa r iB & p , O h i o JUST ARRIVED Kinney1* New Spring Shoo Style* KINNEY „ W W ® > eu n e e Women, Misses, Children* 0|l|tBG SHOES Mm , Boy., Infanta SnUiW KINNEY'S have a complete stock of shew for the FAMILY at REASONABLE PRICES KINNEY'S WOMEN'S SHOES New Spring Pattern* Patant , Qatln , Honsy Blpnde , $ 2 . 9 8 P * rchm # nt . 8 i#w 2 t i (to 9 JoidlfB* 1 .Strap d*-! A n Leather 8 IIpper*..,.,.*J)la »70 Ladies’ All Wool pelt Slippers— Rose, Blue or a n (jCiTiytL«.*»*•***^e « 4 • v w KINNEY'S MISSES’ AND ‘ CHILDREN’S SHOES Pa t e n t Straps, Patent ■ Oxfords, Tan Ox f o r . d **' Ti es . AM new Style*. ' Siza* 2J£ to 1t and WA> to 2 Kinney’s Infants’ Shoes Patent with colored top or'pUuo colors. ilCljf. Size# 0 to 4 ,, Sizee 5 to 8 . . . . , . . 98 c KINNEY’S MEN’S SHOES New Spring Oxford* black. f jO QQ :r w e lts ,,.,-. f s t a W Tan or Gpodyea There I* plenty of style to these oxfords. Easy to wear. Hard to we-r out. Sizes A to 12. Kinney’s good Ipng weeding Work Shoes.. 0 1 A Q Size* 6 to 1 2 . «P* evt J KINNEY’S BOYS’ SHOES New Spring Oxfords Size# 9 to 13</a Sizes 1 to. 514 ,98 $ 2.29 Like dad’s. Boy* like the style. Parents like the Service and price. . ' . . 5 Kinney's’ Rubber Footwear Ladies'".Rubbers^- - Q O . First1q u a l i t y , D O L . *Children's .Rubber*— ' • First quality............... I D i . Msu’s Rubber Boots— A n n o First quality IJ. S.. q lAetfO Open Until 9 O’clock Saturday Night YOU ALWAYS DO BETTER AT KINNEY’S SPRINGFIELD’S FAMILY SHOE STORE m m m am m m m m iw tm sBB sm m m m With Spring Here and Easter Just Aroundthe Cornerr- aca- S SE S . & SB ‘ House Cleaning Time, andthe Problems of New House-Furnishings Loom Large on the Domestic Horizon. * *\ , ! NEW CURTAINS FOR SPRING Plan ruffled curtains this Spring. Even . though you may have them up now, plan , to refurnish your windows with this ever ■ ■■" ■popular treatment* Fashions in ruffled . . -’curtains-;<®ange.-ey&h:# ^ ■ I $1.00 to $2.25. *. . Lace Swiss for Ghrtains^yard W& ; Marquisette, yard 25cto60c. LaceCurtains, readytohang, pair $1,75 ; to $ 8 . 00 . ' Damask Drapery Material 44 to 50 incheswide,^$1*50and$1.75, yard, ^ Damask Drapery Material 36 inches wide, 75c, yard. 5 Bright Cretonnes Put Your House in Tune 35c to 75 yard, There’s a hint of spring in the air. Soon bright open-window days will be here, Give your home a new gaiety. New color, new interest for the- new season. Look around. Find the many places where color­ ful cretonnes will help you brighten your home for Spring. Cretonnes are ideal for curtains, draperies, bedspreads, slip-covers, laundry bags. In fact* the extent of their use is limited only by ones ingenuity. A General Line of Kitchenware and Household Necessities Electric Washing Machines Refrigerators Hoosier Breakfast Set Bissells Grapet Sweepers Mattresses Hobsier Kitchen Cabinets Window Shades in all widths Aluminum Cooking Ware" Enamel Ware Byrex Cooking Ware China and Glassware Garland Gas Ranges , New Process Gas Ranges New Perfection Oil Cook Stove Coal Ranges A x m m s t e r R u g s ' B x m S i z e IS S .O Q '.a iid u p ■W i l t o n V e l v e t E n g s •v ■; v S x m S i ® . • $6(}»0d aw4 u p : r A t t r a c t i v e R u g s f o r E v e r y . . L - t t e o g i ' . ■ / Ak ip ip stera* W i l t o h V e lv e ts * T a p e s tr y " B ru saells a n d o t h e r h ig h g r a d e rugs* i p n e w p a t t e im a p d c o l o r s s u it a b le m t e v e r y r o o f c R e g a r d le s s o f y o u r t a * t f o r p r e f e r e n c e , w « h a v e ruga" h e r e t o p le a s e .y o u . ■ ^ : . T a p e s t r y B r u s s e l k R u g s , ... ■■■■' ■/ ■ . . S g I 2 :S I « e X e n i a , O h i o $ 2 2 .5 0 a n d u p

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