The Cedarville Herald, Volume 52, Numbers 27-52

Springfield Business Firms 5 In Tim — W^ h ' A«M<! = Spring- 1 field, | Ohio Repairing Jewelry Repairing Diamond Setters- = Everything Hew in Hamilton, Elgin, Green, Howard, Illinois and | other high grade watches. Watches, Diamonds, Sterling Silver and Silver Plated Ware Spe- = | cial factory agents for St. Thomas Clocks. Community Silver guar- I | anteed fo r 50 years. Official Watch Inspectors fo r Big 4 R. R. D T & ^ | I. Railroads and all Traction lines. . * § | H offm an Green J ew e le ry Company | ......................... ........................... . ■S' • v. .. WHOSE ADVERTISING APPEARS ON THIS PAGE CORDIALLY INVITE YOU TO VISIT THEM WHEN IN SPRINGFIELD. EVERYONE ARE LEADERS IN THEIR RESPECTIVE LINES AND BY GIVING THEM YOURrPATRONAGE YOU ARE ASSURED THE BEST MERCHAN­ DISE AND SERVICE TO BE HAD. | € APPEL’S JUNE BRIDE SPECIAL I 4 Room Home Outfit INCLUDING THIS SUIT] | 4 6 9 SAVE THAT f-J IT'S TOURS MEN’S OXFORDS Tans—Blacks Sport Oxfords $2.99 to $3.95. WOMEN’S Good Shoes Fancy Styles—Arch Supports. All Leather $1.99 to $3.95 CHILDREN’S SHOES Patents or Blondes Straps or Ties $1.99 to $2.99 The Arcade Shoe Store 1 s ••. _■ • • - , -a. j . ' H . S. S A U M C O M P A N Y ' | m ■ ■ ' f ' a Expert W atch and ^ Jewelry Repairing Jeweler One Block Qut o f High Rent District '' 117 West Main Street . Springfield, Ohio JAZZ PIANO PLAY ING f TAUGH T AT ! J . H . M a i l s 1 SCHAFER SCHOOL [ i j MUSIC i I | ’ All Instruments Taught f 1 I String. Instruments Furnished | § | ROBBINS BUILDING | .1 | H i g h and Limestone v•■■;/ -*1 | § ' Phone M4176 / ‘./ | I f Springfield, Ohio i ...................... ................ Hoffman Van Wye | INC. ' [ 1 21 East Main Street. I | - SPRINGFIELD N EW CLOTHING STORE ■ | Hart Schaffer and Marx f I ; / -?r ■ v•: •- Clothes $25 TO $75 75c DELIVERS IT BALANCE $1 ,90 per week The Washer with a 10 year Guarantee Service Bond AufoMafi Duo-DisC theinycriible AGITATOR. The Gray E lectric j Company Springfield, Ohio | Main 158 | " . .........................i i m i m i M m i i i u i i i i i i i , ............. i FERNCLIFF | J The Cemetery, o f Thoughtful Service | | > No Taxes or Assessments ' | j Perpetual Maintenance Provided for Every Lot | | Phone Main 172 \ Springfield, Ohio § .................................... inmmmimiim?" ...........................^ | J . M . I H R I G 1 S' ‘ ‘ N ^ , - 'i s | ! Optometrist;& Optician • - - ■ | I *• Makes Good G lasses' , i B * _ 1 v _ , _ __. j __„ * ' , I ~ * atFopular Prices „ | ■ !n at . High-Lighted Overlay Decorated | A suite that looks like $75 more. Fashioned w ith .blended walnut f veneers oyer hardwood, strongly made throughout, every piece large § sized with roomy drawers and hig mirrors. Compare it tomorrow. § Vanity, Bed, Chiffonier Dresser Marked at $45 $103,50 60 Days S am e . as Cash IZ4-130 E. HIGH ST. 33 | Store | Buying | Power I | Standard I Ice Cream ] GOODNESS! I H OW YO U W ILL LIKE IT | I ■ " • . j * | 1 . . V I | Leave Special Orders for f 1 parties at 1 | Big W a ll Paper Sale f | Now Going On 1 | 4c per single roll and | 1 Upwards | % '3 ■ . . ."S | Enough Paper for 1 Room | | Size 10x12 8-ft, high f | / • ' for* , ' | ■- $1.04 | i 21 East High Street, ’Springfield, Ohio Opposite Bancroft Hotel J RICHARD’S DRUG j f ! STORE II X • | Local Representative in f Cedarville . . JOSEPHH. GNAU 115 East High Streot ' WALL PAPER AND DECORATIONS | | Greeting Cards fo r AH Occasions ! § I Phone Main 628 ’ 1 5 a > i . 1 - a . CHURCH NOTES UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH > Sabbath School'at 10:00 A . M. : Morning Service at 11 A . M. Theme: j “ Church vs. the W orld / ’ Young Peopled meeting ht 7 P, M, FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 10:00 A. M. Sabbath School. An hour o f study in the Book o f Books. 11:00 A. M. Preaching Service. Ser­ mon theme, "The Divine Patience.” 7:00 P* M. Yourig People’s Meeting in the Vestry. 8:00 P. M. Union Service in the Methodist Church. Mid Week Service Wednesday night at 7:30. Pre-Communion Services o f Friday • night at 7:30 an,d Saturday afternoon sftt 2:00 P. M. Next Sabbath, June 30 will be Com­ munion Sabbath. Xenia Shoe Store Makes Assignment Lester J. Styles, Xenia shoe mer­ chant, has .filed a deed o f assignment to, Attorney Harry D. Smith for the benefit o f creditors. The assignee filed a bond o f $5,500, The appraisers are A . W. Tresise, Adolph Moser and C. B. Frazer. Mr. Styles also operated a store in New Carlisle. METHODISE EPISCOPAL CHURCH The Church School lesson subject, “ A Psalm o f Praise” is very approp- rite fo r this wonderful season o f the year. The 103 division o f the Psalms is the lesson. This is the opportun­ ity to give gratitude by worshipping in bis sanctuary. Evening Worship o'clock, This Will be the last evening service in this church until after vacation. Dr, W. P. Harrimah will bring the message and the members o f the congregation are urged to attend. - Epworth League *t P, M* - The offieails o f the church will meet next Wednesday at 8 P. M. at the par­ sonage. The newly elected officials are to begin their duties and make plans for the coming year. Daufn of Reaton An Atchison Man—*T have been very happy the last four months, aft er bating been miserable ail the rest o f my life, t became bappy on the gay it finally dawned on me that 1 trill niter get anything for nothing,'’ «^Atchison Giobe. A* So oifun Happtna LtkSttU* it is possible to marry an Inside paragraph and repent In * ftoat-tmge column. -Arkansas Gasitte tight All human souls, never so bedark- ***& love light: light, once kindled, , M tn ft r until ail 1 * lum lBoui.-O it’. 'wSTT Natural Doubter* Some people must have demonstrat­ ed to them things that are evident to others, They are not necessarily men­ tally obtuse, but like Thomas o f old. Doubting Thomases we still have With us.—Grit. Cbmmuni Unselfish Mother* 1 The greatest pleasure of an unself- ■ tab mother is waiting on her family and her greatest sorrow that they not only don't get any kick out of wait­ ing on her, but kick if she asks them to do anything for her.—Cincinnati Enqnirer. > Female* Don*t Count If a father at an Annamlte family Is asked How many children he has, he will answer with the number of boys. He may have six girls, but they don’t count. An AlabamaExplanation It politics makes strange bedfellows It Is due to their fondness for the same bunk.—Florence Herald. 3eat on House Porch Gives Air of Welcome ■ A porch set adds a welcoming air to the threshold of a home, For the ’lack of one, many porches look bare and forbidding. There Is nothing of the "stay out” spirit o f the castle about the home With well-designed .entry that boasts one or more seats. They give a friendly, welcoming a ir .. The porch of a house la the one .exterior) feature which' Is notice! first and most. .By the clever addition of inexpensive' but well-conceived and constructed porch seats’, the threshold Is given a much more amenable as­ pect and an Inviting Charffi, . Even when a serit Is new, with no j surrounding vines or shrubbery,, the effect is far better than the cold for­ bidding formality Which often re­ sults without It; the true home lover can visualise these things after they hats had time to grow. An entrance that entices should be the aim,, and A seat is an excellent device to usw twin* about such an entrance. Long List of Famous Men Small-Town Boys For three generations home-town .boys have made good in the world. jThey have pointed to the days In their youth when they played pround !the town they knew s o ' well, with ■’pride 1 of the fact that they beghn in i&small way. Inin, whimsical article In the People's Home Journal, Charles 'Harvey Ford imagines a spirit o f ■small towns as a reminiscing: - “It is courage, the power o f initia­ tive, the determination to ’see things (through’ that give me the right to take ■pride In my men and women, splendid [products of America’s small home towns. Abraham Lincoln served his •youthful apprenticeship behhyl the [counter o f a general merchandise store ;in an Illinois small town. Thomas jEdison, famous inventor, was born In ia small town in Ohio and his ‘long .thoughts'—always youth’s delight— •were quickened In an environment 'such as this. “All around Lincoln’s •small town, stretched fields and forests, Edison's selling was ft fertile farm country. EU Whitney, Inventor o f the cotton ,gln. was horn In a Small town in Mas­ sachusetts. Harriet Beecher Stowe .first saw the light in a Connecticut .small town. Horace Greeley, when a youth, set type on a small-town pa- !per In Vermont. Whittier, our beloved poet, attended district school in a small town' In Massachusetts, Ills birth- ‘place/’ Effect and Caut* It is said that more men than wom- »n commit Suicide. Tills is because the men have all the things to worry about that the women do and then have the women to worry about be­ sides.—Hudson Star, Earlistl Condensed Milk The first application of a practical process for condensing milk was made by Gall Borden of Norwich. N. t „ who began bis experiments In' 1851 and applied for a patent In 1853, which was first rejected, but finally granted August IP, 1865. Prolific Leather Supply Sufficient leather o f all klfids to sup­ ply the Whole needs o f the world could b* obtained from sharks. Inveiimetit In Youth Comparatively and In view of pos­ sible returns; it Is, a small Investment Kansas City is asked to make in thou­ sands of its future citizens, The re­ quest for $ 00,000 to help finance the work o f the) Boy Scouts, the Girl Scouts, and the Camp Fire girls for three years, is amply justified iti the high quality o f training these organi­ zations are offering. It Is a grent constructive undertaking to teach young people the elements o f good citizenship and to encourage t’hem In the clean, wholesome type of living that will make them a genuine com­ munity asset, Tremendous forces for good and evil are tied up in the adole­ scent. They can be properly directed f‘ or left simply to th e .haphazard In- fluences of chance and environment— [ Kansas City Times. Building Pointers, ; ' When designing a home a feature which should be carefully planned is the porch. Make provisions for Its proper Incorporation Into the compo­ sition at the start and It wilt never look like a hopeless appendage or an afterthought An Interesting chlriiney will often give distinction to. an otherwise hope­ less design. Ornamental balconies, railings, shutters, awnings and ItowCr boxes are used to similar purpose, ; Finally, build a house of about the size o f those already In the neighbor­ hood. Do not build a home too large f by comparison with Its neighbors it ' you wish your property value to hold jts own. Aiding Hotat Industries j We ate always lamenting the fact that We have' $0 few Industries In . our county and striving at all times to seenre more? yet when we da se- ’Cure these Industries we do not give [them our full support. We are in­ clined to believe this Is thoughtless- 1;nesjj on the part o f most people. Had you ever thought what effect It would have ,to call the attention o f mer- ) jehants to the fact that certain artltffcs are manufactured in Jackson county j and that you prefer to use these nr- ' tides instead o f others?- Seottsboro (Ore,) Progressive Age, J Nearby amd Yonder S Vt ’ By T, T. MAXEY M WNU Service ' ‘ The Alamo T HE Alamo, a Franciscan mission-- the most noted in all Texas, was originally’ established In the Rio Grande valley and moved to a point now wltliln the limits of the city of San .Antonio about 1720 because of annoying disturbances. The church and Its yard, covering j some two and one-half acres, sur- j rounded by a protecting wall eight ' feet high and almost three feet thick, , was repeatedly the subject of disturb­ ing outrages by the Mexicans who finally captured it In 1830, during the war for the in­ dependence of Texas, a small garrison of some 180 determined Texans and Americans held an overwhelming num­ ber of Mexicans at bay during a bom­ bardment which lasted almost contin­ uously for twelve bloody days. Al­ though driven back repeatedly and with appalling losses, the Mexicans finally succeeded In making a. breech In the wall, clambered over the par­ apet and by desperate hand-to-hand fighting gained possession only after all but five of the Texans were killed. These were taken prisoners and later executed. Later on, the name Alamo was adopted. “Remember the Alamo” be­ came a war cry. The determined TeX- nns captured the Mexican general and Won independence. Today, this*aged, battle-scarred mis­ sion which'stands much as It appeared at the close of the final struggle, IS used a# a museum to house carly-day relics and records of Texas and has been referred to as the Thermopolae of America and stands out as one of the monuments of American history. (©, l» lt. W«»t*rn Ntwap&par Unl»n.) / Its value is \ making every owner an Oakland enthusiast Little Thing* Count Siuall kindness, small courtesies, small considerations, habitually prae- , tlCed In our social intercourse, give a greater charm to the character than the. display o f great talents and ac- J cOrnpllshments. Colonial Most Satisfactory For all-around satisfaction and itv-. ability no style o f domestic areliitee- I ture surpasses ttm colonial. With Us simple rectangular outline and entire absence of needless features which in other styles are added solely for architectural effect, the colonial achieves maximum economy and thero la little shout such a house to become-* dilapidated or out o f s o le through the pwtgt 1 • | Humanity?* ‘Odd Ttaii The world Is full of faint hearts, and yet everyone has courage enough to hear the misfortunes and wisdom enough to manage the affairs of his neighbors,-—Poor Richard. Nma* to IMm1 , «.,w . When the dog blteis the tt gemps like nfew* to the latter.—0 3 » iB&tVJonriffil. Am ong owners of the New Oakland A ll- American Six . . . especially among those who have heen driving this great­ est o f all Oakland&for a period of several months . . . enthusiasm is growing with every passing week. Talk with a, number o f these owners about A ll- American value. Then come in and let us demonstrate this remarkable ear* rvtoM, t i n s to $1376, s . » , t . Ponttof, Michigan, phi*- driijwry chargme. Spring oovor* ortrf tgtvrjoy Hydraulic Shack Abwrbt ra I m m M In list prices. tlumpCr* and rear fender guards extra. CanatM Motor * TJiri* Payment Plan aiciUabUi at ntitnimnm rate. (UtaMarlbadeUletmi pried as w !l ** the ll.t prlcc -whi-ti eam i»r- tra. .memoir11- rr1—"* . . 0*kl«»i<i-ronlt»e delivered price* im jm lo S i p ti»o.m»nli‘ ~ -V--|— forhsm llinj* uni* tot finariefn* -when the JEANFATTON - CEDARVILLE, OHIO fJhe.7'feio OAKLAND ALL-AMERICAN SIX ruooHCT or o s r i K i u t m o t o r s IFYOUNEEDPRINTINGDROPIN /

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