The Cedarville Herald, Volume 52, Numbers 1-26
Jew*Patfcx*Take® Over MurdockGarage J#jm Batten* Itejil dtetributee for to# 'PtHifm wjtd OijfluA tut ntfll m lib* hUrmpa *»d Roosstolt, has Mat tel H»R. A. Ifwafedc g*r*gf m i took 9«MNMMi6ft, Monday, Mr. Patton baa bad * wtdk axp«rietvc« la auto saloa- maa«Up oovarteg a parted o£ year*. Ha •win haadfo Y**oli»s, ait* and tiro*, Mr. Murdock ia retiring to devote «U his tire* to hi* farms." For a nure- bar of years be held the Ford agency and a t oae time was looked upon a* tb* moat pro*ra*«ive dealer to tha t line .of ear* to tote aectioa of Ohio. Ha gave up the Ford agency more than a year ago and now gives up the garage to Mr. Patton, who worked for bin* fo r several years. ' XENIA SEMINARY MAY BE MERGED WITH PITTSBURGH The annual meeting of the Board of Managers of Xenia Seminary, lo cated in St. Louis, have placed the future pf the institution in the hands of the United General Assembly, I t is probable tha t this institution will be merged with Pittsburgh Seminary; Xenia Seminary was. the first institu tion of its kind to be founded west of the Alleghany mountains and was first located to the city after which it was named, A few years ago the institu tion located in St. Louis. T. D, Kyle Xenia was re-elected treasurer. Rev. William Mufchie, Wichita, Kansas, was chosen president. Rev. ft. A; .Jamieson of this place is a member of the Board* MARVELOUS-WW OFNEWKONJOLA MEDICINETOLD Brown Drug StoreHo Introduce . Advanced Remedy For First Time In Cedarville * ; If you were told that one single medicine put hundreds of men .and women back to work in Chicago, Phil adelphia and other large cities after they had been idle for months with health troubles, it would sound -im- . G. H. MOSBY Discoverer of Konjola possible, Wouldn't i t , And that count* less people were completely relieved of rheumatism and neuritis, and 'that they were able to walk again, without cane or crutches, and tha t this same medicine restored health to men and women who had suffered with stomach and kidney troubles for years, that complete relief had come^in cases of misery where health resorts, expen sive treatments and medicine upon medicine had failed—indeed it seems impossible. Yet i t jb all true, and the medicine th a t has done all these things is the new Konjola, which Is being in troduced starling today a t the Brown Drug Store, this city. Wherever introduced, this Konjola is vastly different and more effective in thousands of cases of ill-health than any previously known medicine, i t is a remarkable liquid compound fo r the following well-known troubles. . RHEUMATISM: Especially severe cases, where pains are intense, mus cles swollen, joints stiff and rigid. In the milder cases of this disease, Kon jola relieves almost a t once, and 6this medicine brings the same results to the neuritis victim that it does for the rheumatic sufferers, J STOMACH, LIVER, KIDNEYS and BOWEL TROUBLES: Nearly all forms of misery that arise from these unhealthy organs have been so quick ly relieved by Konjola th a t men and women sufferers everywhere were sur prised. I t is the action of this medi cine on the organs of the inner-system th a t removes toxic poisons from the system and brings quick relief so many cases. The secret of this Kon jola is the way it acts on the om; irt- Attt functionary organs of the body namely, the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. So many diseases and long standing disorders of these organs were so completely conquered and entirely banished by this new compound tha t thousands of people in larger cities were able to give up tAktog medidne fo r time to come. After the great accomplishments and wonderful work Of Konjola to Other sections, it is declared that thi* medicine is what hundreds of sufferers to Ctetetvilta and vicinity have long needed to actually reach their caees, and preparations are being made to introduce Konjola for the first time a t fh t Prowant and Brown Drug Store, where this medicine will be sold and explained to the jtoblto daily, - COURT NEWS SEEKS DIVORCE Asserting her husband has been an habitual drunkard for a year, Annie Pyles has brought suit for divorce' from Ebenesev Pyles on grounds of citreme cruelty in Common Pleas Court, PET IT ION ASKED Partition o r sale of real estate is sought in Asuit filed in Common Plaaa Court by Emma L. Tibbies against A, L, Tibbies, Oscar Webs- and Cl aries Waddle to Common Pleas Court, C, W. Whitmer is attorney for the plain tiff. §3B- DIVORCES GRANTED On ground* of extreme cruelty, Charles Fleming, has been awarded a divorce from Matyl Fleming in Com mon Pleas Court. They were married June it, 1923 and have no chlldien living. A. G. M, Grimes was awarded a .di vorce from Sural* GrimeB on grounds of gross neglect of«duty. JUDGMENT TAKEN T,he Chew Publishing Co. recovered a cognovit note judgment for $118,85 against John Thomas Sutton, WINS JUDGMENTS John T; Harbtoe, Jr., has been awarded four cognovit note judgments aggregating $1,991.31 in Common Pleas Court. The judgments were as- follows; against Thomas Deeter McBride and Phoebe Elizabeth McBride, $430.10, Edwin A, Jeffries, Della Jeffries and Fred. G. Fisher, $143.71; James- L. Hurley and Elizabeth Hurley, $2 '9.50; Harry Conts Poore, Ethel Poore, John Monroe Thome and Myrtle L.' Thorne, $1,159. NAMED EXECUTOR G. C. Constable has be^n appointed executor of the estate o f Joseph P. Hebble, late of Fairfield, without bond in Probate Court, R. O, Routzong, Edward Richmond and Jacob Kooglor were named appraisers. VALUE ESTATE , Estate of A. L. Bigler, deceased, has a gross value of $4,072, according to a*i estimate filed to Probate Court. Debts and th e cost of administration total :"$2,403, leaving a not value of $1,669? HEARING SET Application seeking to probate the last will of Georgians E. Greene, late of/.Bellbrook, has,been fixed fo r a heating a t 10' A- M. May 7 in Pro hate Court. GUARDIAN APPOINTED Donna B, Finney has .boon appoint ed-guardian of James Howard-Finney l i , child o f E. E. Finney, deceased, and baa filed bond o f $2,000 to Pro bate Court. 1■ • , _ G, F» Spahr, Osborn, finds insteac of having heen married only twice previously with both former husbands dead, his wife, Dora has four living . husbands and be does not know Wheth er she is divorced from them or not Spahr complains in a suit seeking an nulment of his marriage filed in Com mon Pleas Court. The couple was married last Janu ary 14. The plaintiff seeks annulment on grounds of fraud. Spahr says that he has not been living with his wife since his discovery of-her misrepre sentations to him. CHARGES THREATS MADE Charging that her husband has threatened th a t if she fails to leave her present position and return home by Saturday night, May 4 he will kil both ^her and her employer, Bessie •Freelan has brought su it for divorce from Ollie Freelan in Common Pleas Court. k They Were married November 28, 1907. The couple have; five children, Louie, 20, Chester, 19, Goldy, 16, Stanley, 10, and Lucy, 6. . Charging gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty the plaintiff asks to be decreed custody of the youngest child. She also requested and obtain ed a temporary restraining order en joining the defendant from interfering with her in any way, ESTATE VALUED *Pross value of $1,080 is placed on the estate of Harry Holders, deceased, in an estimate filed in Probate Court. Debts and the cost of administration total $500, leaving a net value of $580, VERDICT*SUSTAINED A verdict . for $1,500, damages awarded by a jury In Common Plena Court to favor of Margaret Davis, widow and administratrix of the es tate of-Charles E, Davis, Ross Twp., in her $15,000 damage suit against Frederick Gohl, was sustained by the Greene County Court of Appeals. The damage action was based on an accident April 9, 1927 in which Davis lost his life, PLEADGUILT* Entering a guilty plea to a charge of possessing liquor, Walter Connell, 40, near Cedarville; was fined $300 and easts by Probate Judge 3, C. Wright Thursday. His arrest followed a raid on his home Wednesday night in which two gallons of corn whiskey and a quantity of home brew was Confiscated. The raiding officers destroyed eighty bot tles of home brew and dumped out ten mors gallon to' the making, they re ported, The whiskey bad- been buried to the ground and the officers dug it up, Sheriff Otoner Tate led the raid, assisted by his two deputise. You Can Now Get “lodiae* In Your CannedVegetables Incorporation, papers have been filed at the Secretary of State’s office to Columbus by Fred Fishbeugh and others, of London, fo r the Fishbaugh Packing Corporation with a capitaliza tion of $100,009 to preferred stock and 1250 shares of common. Mr. Fishbaugh, who has been a t the head of the London Canning Co., with a large canning factory in London, fo r; years, states that the incorporation oT the new company will not change the operation of the local plant in any way. I t is the plan of the Fishbaugh Packing Corporation to operate plants in South Carolina for the canning of vegetables in what is known' as the "iodine section” where vegetables are said ,to contain the proper amount of iodine for health purposes, Mr. Fishbaugh has spent several weeks in the South, and particularly in South Carolina, and is so sold on the idea that the vegetables grown to that state are extremely healthful, that he has decided to extend hiB can ning business into th a t section, Those who have studied the situa tion claim that a very smalt preepnt- aga of the people living in the “iodine section” of South Carolina, where these vegetables are grown, have go*t tqr and that it is a result of using thesis vegetables for food.—Madison Press, London- Borer Cuts Profit y On Ohio Corn Crop Either Causes Higher Labor . Cost or Reduces Yield Of Profitable Grain Posters WmM m | F o r A r i b t t e f N a f t t a Fa*tow** InafcHstfrf Contes* Ne*s Total of $990 In PrlM* Divided Among 10? Om feaadted wspU* of Ohio grade sad high iohosjs are $300 richer this spring bsenuse #$ their ability in majdrtg pasters whlsh weto used to advertise the farmers' institutes held last winter. The $300 to prizes was awarded to the 98 pupils whose posters were outstanding among 642 which were submitted to the annual contest held by the department pf farmers’ institutes, agricultural extension ser vice, the Ohio State University, ’ Each of the (S42 posters submitted had won a local conteost to the school where i t was produced. The total number of farmers’ institute posters made in connection with the contest runs well tote Hie thousands. iytoners o f t h e first prizes of $26 each were Ruth Apple, Union City, toil., in the grade school class, and Donald Feck, Kept, to the high school class. Ruth Apple’s home is in Darke County, Ohio, although her post office address is Union City, Ind. Second prizes of $15 each went to Adelaide Holton> Olmsted Falls, in the grade school class, and. Mahlon Hippie, Miamisburg, to the high- school class. Third prizes, $io each, were awarded to Vernon Chamberlin, Miamisburg, in the, grade school class, and Melvin Hawkins, Derby, in toe high school class. Ninety-eight ' other prizes ranged from $5, to $1, The contest wilt h« repeated under toe same rules this year. W|IN| Nt«M In one or both of two ways, toe European com borer threatens to re duce farm earnings in Ohio and ad joining states. Either more labor .will be required to produce the same yields of corn when the borer is present, or the yield will be reduced. Since, in Ohio, corn is one of the highest profit crops, in the agricultural, schedule, and most cri.p rotations are built around it, Ohio farmers are seek ing a practical solution of the com borer problem which will enable' them to continue corn production without a decrease in farm earnings. Eighty farm owners in northwest ern -Ohio, territory infested by,,-the corn borer, have kept accurate records on their practices and' costs. These records, supplemented by information gained to visits to toe forms have been summarized in a bulletin, "Man aging ,A Farm in toe Com Borer Area” written by Paul E. Johnston of toe United States Department of Agriculture and Carl R. Arnold of toe rural economics department off the Ohio State University. The bulletin is available for distribution through toe agricultural extension service of the University.- 1 On' the seven farms n the list which had been most successful in combating the com borer, toe following control practices were followed.: low cutting of com, plowing down of stalking and stubbie, raking and burning of long stalks, and the ^combination of all these practices. * NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of Jesse Morris, ■Deceased, Margaret Daniel, Morris has been appointed and qualified as Executor of, the estate '-of Jesse Morris, late of Greene County, Ohio* deceased. Dated this 7to day -of May, A. D, 1929. • ' S. C> WRIGHT,. Probate Judge of said County FOR BALE—Pure Bred Barred Rqck Hatching Eggs. $8.00 per 100. Call Mrs. Meryl Jones, Cedarville, 4-151, YOU PAY LESS : AT 3 9 West Main Xenia O* I • If your lawn mower *no t prbperly adjusted or needs to he sharpened take it to J. A. Stormont who. has installed modem machinery fo r sharpening mowers. v NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of John K. Milroy, deceased. Margaret Milroy has been appoint ed and qualified as Administrator Of the estate of John K , Milroy, late of Greene County, Ohio, deceased. Dated thies 10th day of April, A. D, 1929. S. C. WRIGHT, Probate Judge of slid County. S 3 -i ... 5 I Our chicks have lived—grown 1 $ fast-tend made wonderful layers I | for years to toe hands' of' our cus-1 ftomera. Why take a chance o n f * others. I 1 Sweepstakes winner Ohio State I | University, March, 1929. I [COULD YOU ASK MORE? f ( t h e s t u r d y b a b y } CHICK CO. ! Limestone and Auburn Ave. < | § Springfield, Ohio | | Box 4283 Mato 886 | SPECIAL F o r G radu a tion Special showing1for Graduation and Re ceptions of Patent leather and White Kid in pumps and straps in both high and low heels. Frazer’s Sboe Store 11 E. Main Xenia, Ohio % 0NM i A SURE CROP * When you plant your seed and cultivate the soil i t is with the HOPE of getting a good crop. When you plant your idle money here you can forget about i t and still be SURE or getting a good crop. I t will grow for you steadily a t the ra te of 51 - 2 * — ------ --------- INTEREST - .....— and your money is available any time you want it. Every dollar is protected by first mortgage on Clark County real estate. The Springfield Building ■ And Loan Association - Springfield, Ohio 28East Main Street ■IWIlWlllWMIllllfflllWIIMlllllliiillilwiiiilllllllllll A MAY SALE FEATURE In Our Annual Drive For lfiOO New Customers ^ 3 DAY * DEMONSTRATION SALE 42-Pc. Set Dishes Free . with every Red Star . *\ 3 i k j n Only ,4 * Attend This Unusual Event! THURSDAY - FRIDAYSATURDAY See How “Lively Heat” Permits Gas Speed at Less Cost with a o O IL m TOVM “Lively Heat” The modern cooking sensation “Lively Heat” is the dancing, vigorous, active heat above a bed of red-hot coals — above a modern gas burner — above the glowing electric burner. In each case it is the same heat. Only the fuel is dif ferent. “Lively Heat” is produced by burning vapors or gases. Con trasted to it is the languid, lifeless heat of a candle (flame. Red Star engineers found a way to produce “Lively Heat” in an oil stove. The Red Star ‘Lively Heat” Burner converts common kerosene or gasoline into a gaseous vapor, which is then burned and produces the same “Lively Heat” as coal, ‘ gas, Or electricity., Naturally, there are no wicks ‘or wick sub stitutes, N Free Ld&utiflll 42-Piece Set of Dishes given without extra charge with eveiy Red Star during thi* demonstration sale Only $2 Down Puts a Red Star in your home during this event Balance in easy payments .00 Allowance for your old coal, wood or gas stove, no matter what its condition, during this Demonstration Bale T HE famous Red Star Oil Stove produces “Lively Heat” from common kerosene or gasoline—pro duces a heat that gives gas stove speed, gas stove efficiency, gas stove cooking results. Starts cooking the instant burner is lighted. See this stove in actual operation. See the glisten ing white porcelain(and satin-smooth, black enamel finish that is f easily cleaned. See the many other features that make this‘stove the outstanding value of the day, * Remarkably Low Prices With all its wonderful service and efficiency, the Red Star costs no more than ordinary oil stoves 1There is a size for every need—from 2 to 6 burners—a price for every purse, 1 51-57W.MAIMST. t m HOUSE OF DEPENDABLE FURNITURE SPRINGFIELD, OHIO GETOURPRICESORPRINITOG
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