The Cedarville Herald, Volume 52, Numbers 1-26
•mm T H B C B P A R V I L L B H B R A I * D KJJOM T ^ L — — EDITOR AND PUBLISHES at the Pest Omc», Cedarvillt, Ohio, October 51,1897, m imm d sl*a* matte-. — M 0A Y , JUNE 7, 1929 ^ „ P t c r r o R i A 3 b — m i ......... — B y H . jMetrtS***-w «,,w BUSINESS CHANGES ABE REAL CHANGES Wh*t v » crn-ee a trust or combine of business institutions is now looked upon as * necessary and legal formation to reduce overhead and aid in mass production. Twenty year* ago the public demand was for decentraliza tion of the Standard Oil Companies and the International Har vester Companies. It was contended these and other such com- names were trusts or combines to stiffle competition, legisla tion and court decisions followed and the companies were divid ed up only to grow bigger and more powerful Meantime for the harvester trust the competitive companies m the mam have passed out of the picture, , ’ • . . . 1 Some years ago the courts held the big packers had no right to be engaged in a distributive business other than their own meat and allied products. These companies had engaged m the. canning business, but this was dropped, . Today we find the chain grocery companies with ten and twelve thousand retail outlets each doing more business by many millions than the packers ever dreamed of. •go much as ten years ago, live stock interests were very angry towards the big five packers, Today the. relationship 13 more cordial. Today the chain stores have their own facilities for purchase of livestock, packing and delivering to the cus tomer. The live stock producer ,now wants the big packers, to gefcinto the retail game but court decisions make this impossible and these decisions were brought about by the action of live Stock interests some years ago. The packers must now sit back and watch the meat business pass to -companies now doing from 36 to 50 per cent of the grocery business'll the state. \ - WHAT YOU FIND WHILE TOURING Take a drive in most any direction and observe the- civic improvements about towns you visit or pass through. The live progressive towns of 800 population and, up, you find improved streets, electric lights and Waterworks, You also find the homes neat in appearance and the lawns well kept with an abundance Of flowers and shrubbery,. . Several days ago,we' attended a gathering of newspaper men in the northwestern part of the state.. The trip was made over one route and return over another. In this way we covered nearly three hundred miles and.had opportunity to observe not only the municipalities but thousands of,acres^of farm land- ' 5 We made special point to observe the improvements in towns the size of Cedarville and some under in population. We have in mind one town that had little or no paved streets,* evi dently a poorly lighted town and no. waterworks, . We have since learned the town has no.fire.protection. "The business houses showed theJack' of paint and the civie pride of the town , was best displayed in that weeds,seem, to abound everywhere. Not afar'away was a progressive little town of oiily 800 people and what a contrast we found in improvements as well as gen eral appearance. This little town had as much or more paved street as Cedarville with boulevard lights and waterworks. ' There was the evidence of. pride and thrift afnong the people on every hand.' > We imagine strangers that pass through Cedarville are im pressed and' form .opinions of our town, much after the same fashion as we did the northern towns. Cedarville has most everything that towns of this size are expected to have save Waterworks, If we had such a system we would have no apology to make, . . . ' It Was only last Saturday that a Coluihbits citizen was in town, looking for a house to rent. He had been in Yellow .^gaangs, but houses are at a premium there and. he came herb to locate his family, but had to leave because he could, not find a. house that had modern fabilities that could be rented, r Last fall two farm owners from Highland county came to this place looking for homes in order, that their children could enter Cedarville College. There weye three students available with four more for our public schools. Both men sought homes with, modern appointments but could not be accommodated. Both had looked at houses suitable other than the modem bathroom. These men were from farms that had not such ad vantages, but they desired to reside in town with conveniences greater than where they were leaving. The sorrow of this narrative is that both located in another college town south of Us where they could find what they wanted. There is no argument against waterworks that will stand the test. Such an investment on the part of the town means higher values in property, lower rates on insurance and a'health insurance worth many times the cost. The fire insurance rate bureau lists the town in the ninth classification, one better than nothing. As a result We pay the top rate on insurance, on busi ness houses, manufacturing plants end especially our homes. Our fire fighting equipment is not only out of date but worn out and for that reason alone'the'insurance companies give us a rate as if we had no fire protection. You cannot make money .Without investment nor can you protect what you have in prop erty without a high insurance rate or have waterworks and a lower rate. this i* r a e - wa y r « t ^ Trt« iftoV SHOULD T "fCKjeH Y rt£ , * V . / I I 1 \ IN MJVHSU. *M<«?AAA rHJERE. tS OANfififc, of Toprwver CIU* COM*.* UP OUlCKiy i ------ - PaTonrftt. « o fc F * , ■0—1 •w--* Church Baikt L*rf* Long Flat Swiiys Prevent* Danger of Topping '-pU E golfer who attempts a cow- * plete round awing with Ids Iron will find hiuiself topping or schlatllpg tan or flftqen per cent of his shots, Maybe more. One nnist be accurate indeed to hit- the ball at the exact bottom of the arc. There la one sure way of .hitting an Iron shot, Let the club describe a flat are which makes sure-of the Clnbhea'd piquing the ball up as It sweeps through. Longer and more accurate shots will ,result from this sweep of the club, than If the round full swing la used. P ott parson*, hewopnr <,itttero«t Ip orga*3**4 to Uv Asset Good .Finish Means a Good Shot -pH E ^nlsh of the swing means -* more than the average golfer wilt ndmlt. Few ohots go wrong whore the linlsh has beeit perfect, or even fairly good. Tommy Armour looked at a photograph of himself recently taken at the completion, of Ills awing and! remarked that .11 popsi have been a very, good shot.. „ > If the club goes the route from- the top of the swing to a position around behind the back,working It* way to a groove as it were, the ball wlU be filt properly 10 out of 20 times, Har ry Vardon has the'perfect swing.of golf and he misses a smaller percent age of his drives than any other player. ' , wmad; 'care li e in $ w®aw*ijfy without 'a church. Purely gauds, ftom aetual membership rnWiMts or the number and money worth of plants, thev churches are a community asset of' incalculable value. The print fre quently Is overlooked, Too often the Influence of the churches is under rated. I t may he frit that because only a certain percentage -of th* people are church members end because not all o f these attend or take any actual part In the wort; of the institution, Its Importance J* to be discounted, It is a mistaken/ sMhgighted view. For the church Is as Indispensable to Com munity life as Is the school (which only limited numbers attend), and Its .position hardly is comparable, be-, cause Of the dliferenca in purposes, With that of business enterprises. ,, There are and wlU remain differ ence* to faith, doctrine and practice; •the ideal church for one Individual or group is pot and could pot be, in the nature of things human, the Ideal for all. There has been a growth of church co-operation locally and else where. The prospect Of wider church union'Is a t time* bright, again dis appointing. But withal, the churches are herd*and will remain, each one or each division seeking Ip the best light It can command to minister to the spiritual needs of the people. ,If on no other basis then that of‘'good citi zenship, the individual Is und,er obli gation toi give the churches sympa thetic consideration and sppport,— Kansas City'Star. ‘ New York Town Get* Revenue From Forest Little Falls, N. Y,> a city of #,000 population, 1* demonstrating what can he done with' a /municipal forest, Other cities might profit by following the example of tfie Slew York munici pality. / . . As far back 'as-1896 Little Falls was purchasing lands with the view .of ultimately controlling the water shed of the neighboring Spruce and Beaver creeks, Today the wafer sup ply of the city is protected,by mu nicipal ownership of 4,003 acres of land at the headwater* of the two creeks, writes R. R, Fehska, o f the New York State College of Forestry. ■ Up to 1927,. 1,200 acres of mature timber wub In a' very dearly virgin forest of spruce, balsam," fir, hemlock, yellow- birch, maple atod beech. J tf 1926, under the-direction of a lorn ester, 5,000,000' board feet of timber, including both softwoods and- hard woods, was marked for cutting. This timber was go' selected that its re moval will not to any way Impair ' the value of the area as a protection forest. The timber has been sold to a concern spCsl&Uriag in high-grade tim b e r for pftmo sounding ‘bpards. ,The revenue from (he sale will reim burse the city for the purchase of the land and Umber, f I n BitUAiPPS' the - c a sm a t t 1$ PART oh TiffE S tioT , IT SHOULD BE. . THE SAME ift ptAYlriOA (WASHIE in V Chicagoatthe coMFommiE GREATNORTHERN - H O T E L Ground Is Used in Making, Marine Shot IN BILLIARDS we use the table l quite a lot to making our shots. This Is especially true of the maahle sfiot. The ball Is under perfect con trol to almost every shot, and obtain ing accuracy la 'easy. We should learn to do this mare to the rnnsble shot where accuracy 1* necessary In pitching to .the green. For back spfu we hit Info the ground, that Is, a Sort of a squeeze, using the ground Jo rebound from. The divot Is always taken with this shot, but not until after the ball has been dispatched upon Its way. The divot, will be taken in front of the ball, not behind it, (Cktpyright.) 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 7th day o f May, A. D, 1929, 8, C. WEIGHT, Probate Judge of said County f ii* iMMHitiM J fc YOU FAY LESS AT m w**t Main Xarti* mmmmm Thirty-TOrd Commencement Of Cedarville College (Continued from Page 1) Old Cedarville, Our College Dear „__ % _____ ..President McCheeney Love Leads the Way --------Howard Barcarolle (from ‘‘Tale* of Hoff man”) ____ Offenbach Glee Club Hungarian Dance (No, d) Brahms Awelia Phillip* Waltz—from “Faust"—(Arranged by Sartorio) ------ -— _ „Gpunod Plano l Gama Hostetler Mary Margaret MacMillan Piano II Ruth Kimble Dorothy Anderson Scottish Tone Picture „_rf.MacDowell Marion Hostetler I Would That My Love ^.Mendelssohn * Mrs. Walter Corry Mary Ruth Wham Scarf Dance _____ -_____ Chaminade Dance of the Elves — ------- .Grieg Marion Hostetler Sunshine Song . . . » -------— E. Grieg Wedding Day at Trolhagen (ar ranged by Emjl Kvonke) . .E , Gbieg Pianp I Arcelia Phillips Piano II Mary Ruth Wham Yalse Brilliante--------— Chopin Military Polonaise ..Chopin Arcelia Phillips ‘ Summer F rap c ie s --------------- .Metra Cupid Mfade Love to theMoon . . . . ' . . . . ___ ____ .t..D ud ley L, Smith Glee Club Highway lmpr<jv*m«»t To bring the native flowers, shrub* and frees from the fields and forest* of Missouri and plant them in attrac tive Order along main highways of the sfnte is the aim of a highway beautifi cation movement launched at Higgins- ylile, Mo. The first work will be done along Transcontinental highway No. . 40, which crosses Missouri from S t Louis to Kansas City. The entire pla.n grows from the initiative Of the Missouri state, highway commission to offering aid in roadside improvement. Assist ance to beautifying farm homes and surroundings along the road* also has been offered by the Missouri agricul tural extension department—New York World. ‘ L oam Associations Grow Total assefs of building and loan as sociations to this country now approx imate gT,179,000,009, an increase of 5884,458,000 over 1927, according to the Baited State* Leagtif of Local Building, and Leah associations. Pennsylvania is the leading state to total association ussot* with a figure of $1,246,000,000. OMo is second with $1,085,000,000. New Jersey third with $880,000,000, and Massachusetts fourth With $478,000,000. The assets of building and loan as sociations to IiRhoIv total $338,000,000, and New York $350,000,000. In Indi ana they are $274,000,000; in Califor nia, $242,000,000; in Wisconsin, $218,- 000,000, and in Maryland^$210,000,000. At Least, Daaarva CourUty When a committee of your fellow business men call on you, regardless of their errand, for heaven’s sake treat them courteously; they’re not trying to make any commission on the money they seek to obtain from you—la fact, they're Working for your interests as Well a* their own—Mobile Register. ' ••’. . Building L** m Alohsmy The saving instinct and the hom ing urge meet to the office* of the building and loan association, and to the alchemy of a new credit, turn out at one door a holder of real estate bond and at another the pleased pos sessor of a home. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of John K, Mftroy, deceased. Margaret Milroy has been appoint-* •d and qualified .** Administrator of the estate of Jofia 3L Mflroy, late of Green* County, Ohio, deceased. Dated thlss loih day of April, A, D, 1829. * %a weight , ■ Private S&& of said1County. T L e F e m in in e M in d • < • A Young or Mature, Le*tut0 file Attractive Qualities in SHOES Lndicott Johnson shoes foewomenand $irls ore as neat and 1 stylish as any found I along tLehotdevards ~ offasluon.Tltey L a v e all tkc grace of line* attractivenessofpat« tern and Leanty of finish) found in tLeluAlter priced shoes of latest style.And henenththeir good loolcs are leather andworlcmanship sel» dona, seen in shoes ce llin g fo r so lit t le . Drop into our store today and make your selection From the Wide variety of Ibcavfiful models we carry in stock. M a d e h y E K D I C O T T J O H N S O N SOLD BY CEDARVILLEBARGAINSTORE I i y*)U re sar & F I T H E t h : I'.'i 237* MSepiAIAlllM VaMaisniBMia A Backward Season never effects the size of your money crop if it is planted here. Pro tect yourself against uncertainties by investing your idle funds with this association where you are sure of A A R 1 o- ds ■S INTEREST every six months.. Every dollar is protected by the best of security, —first mortgage on Clark County real estate. Come in and talk it oveiv . , .TV- The Springfield Building 28 East Main Street Springfield, Ohio l Q k . T H E S T R A K T V April JL Marmoi ( y a t the Roc •, they bough* lb mon facto . wanted me June, evei happening . petition to in sight. 1 I f you w type”of tr want to d ) n o The COACH ‘595 -and learn what marvelous performance you can get in a low-priced car if R O A D S T E R ....* , *525 *525 ..,*595 ...*675 c a b r io l e t . . . . . * 695 The . PHAETON The ^ COUPE. . . . . . sedan , . . . . . If you are onewho has always believed that truly fine performance can only he had In a high- priced car—drive the Chevrolet Slxl Here, in the price range of the Jour and with economy of better titan 20mites to the gallon of gato1inef is offered a type of overall performance that will literally amaze you— —marvelous six-cylinder smoothness that ellml- ' nates vibration and body rumble—power that takes you over the steepest hills—acceleration and speed that make every mil# a delight—* handling ease and restful Comfort that leave you refreshed at the end of the longeatdrivel Emphasizing this outstanding slx-cyllnder ptc* formance are the beauty and strength idf smart ' new bodies by Fisher. Created hymnsfor de- algners—they represent an ordtof of coachcraft ' never before approached In a low*prlced car. Come in today and drive th* Chevrolet Six! THE LANG CHEVROLET CO. Phone 90 Xenia, Ohio l i t E. Main St. Beal Chevrolet Co., Jamestown, Ohio Hill TopGarage, CedarviUe, Ohio A H1X IN TH E P R I C E ’R A N G E OP T i m P OUR TheConHtrt* IW'IC tb h LANDAU i £ 0 Ssstr. .... .*595 S&lnci — ...’400 ... .*545 R^Sa<*i ..*650 AUpriitif.Q.b.JatH** ■ Flint. M tch lpn , COMPARE too dtHttnS s rlc * >* well ha th e ll*t »*Hra to rbnaiaertoA «nw» raoMla ( ‘.heTfolat’a SallvH-ct) prlrtH lncfu<’ tMOKriuibt* ehnrgca I 'Umy m * only<*-
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