The Cedarville Herald, Volume 52, Numbers 27-52

r 'M**"' 1 ’-L ......... —-n.-nW« 'r— "i1,- |^'|*",LM|'|)I|"-| 1w*' 'S-1-1'■" M g y J B R liA T J E S \ | {Pi(r ]JtPa To c il s ^ m n b every room NOW Vv,TH eat . h * $ ' ? f ^ r C ’ lf 300 Clean f '5 « S|« ........ | Modern Rooms ‘ \ p 1 \ v1 S . p*V . j ; A i * J' 1 ! ©A1 ~r*i- HOTEL h . ^ r v s w AlJDff©R[(J|||%P' AST SIXTH AT ST.CLAIR AVE W.H. BYRON, Manager IN ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF THE New Shoe Department Thursday, S ep t 26th I n OUR Basement Store : WE OFFER THE FOLLOWING Shoe Specials FOR THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY 500 PAIRS WOMEN’S FALL FOOTWEAR Pumps Suede i Strap Slippers 2 ^ # C P C P Calf Ties":.. ■ ' : JHT : Oxfords J U Patent ■Novelties ' Kid - Medium and High Heels CHILDREN’S SHOES Infant’s and dCfejCfc Infant’s Sizes 9 m * 8 8 2 to 5 SPECIAL OFFERING 1 Children’s Oxfords - Shoes Slippers 1 Children’s Sizes 6 to 12 In The Shoe Department On Our Main Floor You Will Find Our Better Grade Footwear KTABU 5 !€Dlf»M utchison&Qibneu ■ if iu iiM S ta a LO®WW «ABN.D*al8fc*» Xenia, Ohio LOCAL AND PERSONAL Mr, l 1’. E. llausu of Springfield, has taken a position as meat eutter in the E. Master’s grocery. Mr. Leo Albright lias resigned his position as clerk. -J - -V Mrs. A. G. livileth of Akron ac­ companied Robert Turnbull here last Ft iday and has been spending a week with friends in this place. Mr. Lee Stanforth of t ’edarville and Miss Edith Simpson' pf S. Charleston were married at the home of Rev. R. A. Jamieson, Saturday, September 21 at 10 A. M, WANTED —rA dependable white girl to stay in the home and assist with the house work. Reference. Call 1007 R, Xenia, Ohio. The First Presbyterian Fellowship dinner was postponed from Tuesday etening until Thursday evening owing to the. death of Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Smith. ‘ The congregation enjoyed a splendid repast with several interest­ ing talks. Rev. Ralph M. Fox, pastor of the Clifton Presbyterian congregation, was chosen Moderator of Dayton Presbytery at a meeting held in New Carlisle, Monday. APPLES—I will have a truck load of Baldwins, Roman Beauties, Stark Imperials and Winosaps here, Friday or Saturday this week, Phone your order No. 60. Prices $2.00 a bushel. ' FRANK ARMSTRONG. Milk Producers Meeting Tuesday, October 1 a t Community Hall, All Milk Producers or anyone interested 'should attend this meeting and hear !the Milk situation discussed. A daughter was born Sunday to Mr. and Mrs. Tarvey Lovett. The family now' is- composed of three sons and three daughters. ■ r A pleasant reunion was held here !Sabbath when Misses Mattie and jFlorin Iliff and Charles Iliff of Chi- icago were the guests of their brother, jMr. T. V. Iliff. The Misses Iliff and IMrs. W. R. Graham of Lafayette, Ind., accompanied the Rev. W. W. Iliff, D. D., of Chicago, here for the dedication and re-opening of t|ie First Presby­ terian church. • It is the first time in ;thirty-five years the family has gathered a t one time in their home town. -. Mr. anti'Mrs. W, H. Owens returned home Friday after an extended visit with ..their son-in-law and •daughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Lott in Pittsburgh. Removal of tonsils as a cure all fo r physical ills was scored by Dr, A. Greene Mitchell,.University of Cincin­ nati, addressing members of the Five County Medical Society, composed of physicians of'Greene, Highland* War­ ren, Clinton , and Fayette Counties. Mitchell said the practice of removing , tonsils in many cases was unwarrant- 1ed. Next meeting of the. group will ■be at Hillsboro in December. - } Cedarville folks in the McClellan hospital all continue to improve. S. !T. Baker is much better. W- B. Stevenson is now able to ait up some. ‘Mrs. Anna Miller will soon be able,to return home following a fractured hip due to a fall. Ned Brown and Sam Heathcook who jui'ulerwent operations ;for appendicitis are now on the mend. Now is" the time to order your timothy seed. Get it at McCampbell’s Exchange. When you are in need of paint for the house or barn let us fill your order. We have the agency for Tower Paint. McCampbeil’s Exchange. HOT TIPS ON Grocery Prices For Saturday BANANAS, 3 lbs. .... 20c B o o k in g a p p l e s , 3 ib& ................. 20 c SWEET POTATOES, 6 Ibn................... 25c IRISH POTATOES, Pk. 39c ORANGES, Doz. 20c SHREDDED WHEAT, 3 to r .............. 25c COFFEE, Extra Good 36c HILLS*DALE PEACHES, Large can 35c kind ........................................ 25c HE1NTZ PICKLES, Doz........................25c HEINTiZ, 15c TOMATO SOUP 10c CAMPBELL’S TOMATO SOUP 10 kind, 10c or 3 for » 25c SEAL OHIO CORN 10c WORK SHOES ..................... i............$1.98 (UJBBEk BOOTS ...............................$2.98 WORK PANTS .................................. .$1.49 |». W. SWEATER COATS ........... 98c JVQRK SOCKS .................................. 10c ;NDERWEAR, Heavy ..... .................. 98c HUNTERS CAPS ............ $1.00 JACKETS FOR CORN CUTTERS 98c CANVASS GLOVES ................ 15c C edarville Bargain ■Store UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sabbath School IQ A. M. Supt. O, A. Dobbins. Preaching 11 A. M. Theme: “God's Children." Y. P. C. Ik 7 P. M. Union Service 8 P. M ,. in this church. Sermon by Dr. W. P. Harri- mr.n. Prayer Meeting Wednesday a t 7:80 P. M. Communion Sabbath October 6th, v.ith usual preparatory services Fri­ day evening and Saturday afternoon. Preachers will be announced next week. Choir Practice at 7:00 o’clock Fri­ day evening. Mr. W. W. Galloway and Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Curtis went to Richmond, Ky., last week where Messrs, Gallo way and Curtis attended the annual meeting of Paper Mill Superintend­ ents. The . Wednesday Afternoon Club was entertained yesterday afternoon a t the home of Mrs. America Wolford. | Use Armour's Big Crop Fertilizer. We have plenty of it on hand. Me- Campbell's Exchange. Mrs. W. W. Troute entertained the members of the Home Culture Club at her home Tuesday afternoon. For Radio Service and Supplies, Phone 13-101. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH . Church School 10 A. M. This is Review for the past quarter -and we are to gather up the Golden Thread of God's’ leadership and weave them into our comfort and hope. P. M. Gillilan is the superintendent. The College students and other strangers will find a welcome, Preaching Service 11 A. M. Sub­ ject: “Team Work-in the Kingdom." Epworth League 7 o’clock. Union Service a t 8 o’clock a t the United Presbyterian Church. Prayer Meeting Wednesday,at 7:30 P. M. Rally Day, October 13. I t is hoped every member of the church school and congregation will attend .« FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sabbath will be Rally Day in the Sabbath School and the Church. A special program is being prepared in which different groups of children and young people will take part.. Music appropriate to . the occasion will be rendered by the choir; and a Rally Day Message will be brought by “the Pastor. • This will be a Unified service, and you will ,need to be in at the begin­ ning to enjoy it fully. The Opening Hour is ten o’clock. At-7:0O P; M. The Young People’s group will meet in the Vestry. The leader for the evening will be Mr. Marion Hosteltler. All Young People in the congregation, and all students in College not otherwise connected are urged to attend this meeting. We are glad to say that this work is under the dhhetion of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Edward?. Union Service at 8:00 P, M. in the United Presbyterian Church. Every­ one should attend these union ser­ vices.- Mid-week service Wednesday even­ ing at 7:30. This Service will center about our Missionary work in India, and among the Youth of Our Own Land, Everyone should come. D. A. R. MEETING 1 IN SPRINGFIELD Lagonda Chapter, •Daughters of American Revolution will be hostess to the autumn meeting of the South west District of Ohio D. A. R. society on October 1st at the Covenant PTes-' byterian church. , Mrs. Charles H. Myers, chairman, from Cincinnati will preside over the sessions"of the meeting which will begin a t 10 A. M. Talks and reports from state chairmen of various de- partpients will constitute the major part of the programs. Lagonda Chapter with Mrs. J. S. Elliott, acting as general chairman is planning luncheon arrangements. To this luncheon all attendants at the conference who make reservations, arc- eligible. All members of the Cedar Cliff Chapter who wish to go and attend the luncheon, please inform Mrs. J. S. Wpst.not later than Saturday Sept. 28, wiiQ’will then make your reserva­ tion. Duroc Hog Sa le-—Tuesday, October 29, R. C. Watt & Son. (tf) FOR RENT—Three or four rooms, on first floor, suitable for light house­ keeping and three garages, Mrs. Julia Sterrett. ’ BEAUTIFUL GIRL IS MURDER SUSPECT Could a beautiful girl have com- riiitted the Greene murders? Florence Eldridge, stage and screen actress of note, is one of the suspects in “The Greene Murder Case," the S. S, Van Dine story wheih Paramount has made into a thrilling, alltalking maving picture. She is one of nine major suspects. S. S. Van Dine, author of the story, recently asserted ir an article in the Cosmopolitan magazine, that “The most resouraeful and daring of all criminals are womeh” and that for calculating, cold blooded murder, wo­ men more than hold their own with men. *» Of the nine suspects in “The Greene Murder mystery” five are Women and they include, besides Miss Eldridge, lovely Jean Arthur; Gertrude Nor­ man, as the aged cripple, Mrs. Tobias Greene; Augusta Butmester as the strange acting cook In the Greene household, and Marcia Hariss, the fanatical housemaid. “The Greene Murder Case” is the second of the. baffling S, S. Van Dine murder stories to appear on the all- talking screen. “The Canary Murder Case" recently presented by Para­ mount, was an overwhelming success “The Greene Murder Case” will 'show at the Regent Theeatre, Springfield for one week starting Saturday Sep­ tember 28, Mr. and Mrs, Elbert Coffman and daughter, Julia, of Cincinnati, spent Sunday here the guest of friends. Miss Rosa ^Chamber has been in a very critical condition since Wednes­ day. She is in her 93rd year and for some time has been infirm yet able to live by herself. Wednesday she fell but it has not yet been determined whether a hip was fractured, due to her rheumatic condition. The Home Culture Club was enter­ tained Tuesday afternoon ut the home Of Mrs. W. W. Troute. Mr, and Mrs, 0, E. Musters and Mrs, O; P. Elias spent several days last week in■Cincinnati.. NEWS LETTER FROM STATE DEPARTMENTS COLUMBUS, O. —- The Gateway Jubilee Celebration was, inaugurated Sunday of this week with observance of Emancipation Day at the state fair grounds, colored.people from all ovOr Ohio participating. The program runs through, the entire week closing with the crowning of the Gateway queen Saturday night, handsome young wo­ men from eighteen Ohio cities con­ testing for the honor. Wednesday was to be “National Road Day”, with Gov. William G. Conley of West Virginia and 1,000 citizens from that state in attendance. The Capital'City is filled with visitors from all sections of the Buckeye' state.' • ■ » . * * • Now that summer has departed and autumn, arrived the state house park is being deserted by the “regulars”, who find, it a desirable loafing place during the hot weather, and they are seeking a more comfortable spot where the chilly winds will not molest them. ■Care-taker's, are getting, the park in order for the long winter period and a dozen trusties from the penitentiary are kept busy raking up the leaves and gathering; the fallen twigs. The park is one of the show places of the city and attracts tourists from all over the country. V" * ■ * ■The next two weeks will witness the county and independent fair- sea­ son draw to a close. Eight fairs, will be held next week at Attica, Hamil­ ton, Georgetown, Carrollton, Coshoc­ ton, Loudonville, Ottawa and Wooster, followed by two the following.week, Mt. Gilead and Lancasted. The last attraction featuring exhibits in the open will be tliei annual ■Pumpkin Show at Cireleville, to be held Octo­ ber 16 to 19. ' Large crowds have featured Ohio fairs this season and the state fair was one of the largest from an attendance standpoint held in a decade. <i * a ! The official roster of federal,, state and county officers for 1929-1930, and the laws of Ohioadopted by the eighty-eighth General Assembly, in book form, compiled and edited in the statistical division of the office of Secretary of State Clarence J. Brown, are how being distributed- by that official. Both publications are of in­ estimable value and will prove a splendid addition to any library. * * * State Purchasing Agent D. C. Ry- bolt is in the coal business on an ex­ tensive scale a»- he will contract for 285,000 tons of coal to run the state institutions during the fall and winter season. That would mean 4,750 cars of coal of 60 tons each or 47% full trains of 100 cars. The coal consists of all types and it is needless to add that it will come from Ohio mines. AU insects present in a room die when Tanglefoot Spray is Used* This powerful house* hold insecticide does Its work thoroughly —leaves top strsg* glersbehind*You need nothing else for combating flies,moths* mosquitoes* bedbugs* roaches and ants. Prices greatly re* duced. Paylcssandget thebest* Far fitts only, TanxUtoot Fty Paper and Fly RlohwU «r* th « matt lanlgary and economical dcMroyert. TANGLEFOOT S P R A Y FOR SALE—At a real bargain the new beautiful Heattrola Stove, won by me at the Cedarville Farmers’ Grab Co. Can be seen there, will be sold cheap as I have no use for it. Chas, F. Marshall. Preliminary reports indicate a total crop of about 774 million bushels of wheat in this country this year. Mr. and Mrs, Albert Jolly and two children of Dayton spent the ewek- end with the latter’s parents, Mr, and Mrs. J.^B. Faris, Mrs, Enos Hill has returned home after visiting with her sister-in-law, Mrs. Mattie E. Steddorn jn New Burlington, Ohio, Mrs. Lillian Kunkle Crider of New Jersey visited several days last week witii Dr. and Mrs, M. I. Marsh. Mrs. Crider had been home on a visit with relatives in Urbana, “We make our own world; when we have made it awry we can remake if, approximately truer, though it can­ not be absolutely true, to the facts.” —Havelock Ellis. fillin'’ F U R N I T U R E REPAIRED and UPHOLSTERED At Prices In Reach Of Everybody CharlesR.Hoemer i PHONE Res. Address Cedarville 148 Cor. Monroe & Lake Sts., Xenia 9-121 F rig ida ire has the added power that keeps foodfresher f t longer •., and thefamous “ C o ld C o n t r o l ” lit ■ . r . . - '.* .••• ’ th a t makes desserts better an d ice cubes quicker The incredibly quiet Frigidaire mechanismhas a surplus .of power... power that keeps food fresh and wholesome* And its position in the bottom of the cabinet where ,the air is coolest makes it still more efficient. Let us tell you. more about Frigidaire. Ask for our easy monthly terms. Visit our showroom for a demonstration: • V . . V V Let us helpyouwinin big$25,000contest Write a letter on food preset- prize offered by the National and win aModel Home, rood Preservation Council.Get Cadillac car or another big full information here today,' 50° i? the safety point fo r perishable foods GAS mid ELECTRIC SHOP ’ THE CAS md ELECTRIC js™| APPLIANCE! CQMPANY 37 S . D e t r o i t S t . IM m IT e l e p h o n e 5 9 & (THE D A Y T O N P O W E P AND LIGHT CO j . X I N I A D I STR I CT *#• * efhs^knntdCert THE FAHIEN-TEHAN CO. > SPRINGFIELD, OHIO. Beginning . Tuesday October 1st 21st Sale! FittaHgly celebrating our Anniver­ sary v ;th the giving o'f the greatest values in dependable merchandise that one could eNgect. * . * An entire month is devoted to ttfe event. Each day of each week, vrii bring forward ,new items, offered for sale at less^than regular prioe*. W-«AA tliet9pH»elMd

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