The Cedarville Herald, Volume 52, Numbers 27-52
mrnqm iO li’S PK( >v L;l " ; ,\TIt)N ., montumed. llio State o£ Oh:??, Greene County, * the incorporated Vi’fogo o f Cedarville: Jn compliance with t!io laws of tho State o f Oh::>, X, J). H. McFarland, mayor o f the incorporated village of Cedarville, Greene County, Ohio, here i). h . M c F a r l a n d , Mayor o f Cedarville, Ohio. TOWNSHIP ELECTION NOTICE State of Ohio, Greene County, the - ..... township o f Cedarville: ®j.VD n^ wc ar,<^ Proclaim to the/ j n compliance with the laws o f the qualified electors of said municipal : state o f Ohio, X hereby give notice to corporation that on the qualified voters o f said township TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1929 j that on Tuesday, November 5th, 1929, between the hours o f 5:30 A. M. and j between the hours of 5:30 A . M. and 5:30 P, M., an election will be held1®5®® F. M., an election will be held in ’ fo r the purpose o f choosing the fo l- - tho USUal precincts for the choosing o f ' lowing officers towit: ^the following officers for said town- One person for Mayor, sllip' CEDARVILLE HERALD, OCTOBER 18 , 1029 . e l e c t io n n o t i c e One, person fo r Clerk. One person fo r Treasurer. One person for Marshal. Six pel'sona fo r Members o f Council Each o f said officers to be elected for a term o f two years. Said election to he held at the usual voting places at the hour|| heretofore One person fo r Clferk for a term of two. years. Three persons fo r Township Trus tee for terms o f two years each. One person fo r Constable for a term o f two years. W. W. TROTJTE, Clerk/ Cedarville Township Rural School District, Greene County, Ohio. To the electors o f Cedarville Town ship Rural School District: You are hereby notified that at the General Election to be held on Tues day at 5th day o f November, 1929, there will be elected by the electors of Cedarville Township Rural School District, Greene County, Ohio, three (3) members at large o f the Board o f Education o f said school district for the term o f Four (4) years each, be ginning the first Monday in January 1930. Said election will be held at the us ual voting places o f the School Dis trict, between the hours o f 5:80 A. M. and 5:30 P .M . W. J. TARBOX, Clerk of the Board o f Education of Cedaryille Township Rural School District, Greene County, Ohio. GRAM'POP SKIS HE IkTBft SEB LOTS o f ItiO lMS HERE AB0UT5, AH' I FOUND AN ARROW HEAD RIGHT BY OUR CRICK, MYSELF. JU BET THERE ARE /KOIAH GHOSTS ALL /\R0UHO US AT Tfi(5 TIMS O ' YEAR. - POP v 5A/D $0,100, AN'POP KNOWS* ! T By ELMO SCOTT WATSON . ANG ! goes another of our •Illusions t It is in regard to that pleasant period in au tumn,.known as Indian sum mer. Antf ns Usual, it is sci ence which has disillusioned ;us; Ndiless an authority than the United States weather bureau,’basing its statement upon accurate meteorological observa tions, lias this to say about that delectable season, famed for Its genial kunshlne and alluring hare: Indian summer Is the name applied In this country td a period of mild fall weather following a spell of unseason able cold weather known as "squaw winter," such as occurred this f»U. It is not a fixed season In the calendar. In many years It is Intermittent; that is, there may bo several Indian lummers in one autumn, Tlioreau in notes on weather conditions at Con cord, Mass., from 1851 to 1800, records the occurrence of Indian summers on Bates ranging from September 27 to December 13. In Europe as well as In this coun try It Is popularly believed that a re ? iewal of mild weather occurs every su- umn, and the dates of its supposed (Occurrence arc more definitely tfixed than Is the case in America, The period Is associated with the names of Various saints. The mild period thus, is known In different parts of Europe as "St. Mar tin’s Summer," "St. Luke's Summer” or r*flt Michael’s Summer," and tradition fosters the Idea that it Is always mild tend warm, about the time o f these various saints* days. Climatological facts, however, do not always square JSrlth this belief. ■ Indian summer lias always been a favorite theme of artfats and poets, Especially the latter who, however, pave usually lieed better verse inalc- than meteorologists. “When was lie rod man's summer':” asks Lydia luntiey Sigourney, "the Felicia He* knans o f Ainerica".and one o f the early Nineteenth century poets. Then, with, tout trying to fix the date hi one of her poems, she says It came < When tho firoves fn Heating colors wrote their Own do- cay; When with heart Foreboding or dopresfied, the white man marked The signs of coming winter, then began The Indian’* joyous season. John G. C. Braiileid. a contenipo- jrary of Mrs, Sigourney, fs more spe cific Its placing the season at tho time When tlic front Turns into beauty all October's charms. Longfellow fixes the season about the first of November in tt pnsoage In fils "Evangeline" as follows: Then followed that beautiful season, Called bV the pious Acadian peasants the summer of All Saints, Filled was tho air wlih a dreamy and magical light: as;d the l.imlseape Lay If now-created in all tho fresh ness of childhood. Since election «l;iy ootww in Novem ber, the following quotation from Whittier’s, “The Eve of Election'’ ^I ko places Indian summer lu that month: From gold to gtay 0*e mlW sweet day o r mdlan summer fades too soon; , Jfut tsndsrlv Above the sea Hangs, white and calm, the hunter’s moon. In Its pale fire _ The village spire Shows like the zodiac's spectral lance; - Tho painted walls Whereon It fallb • Transfigured stand in marble trance! Stephen Henry Thayer, puts It a lit tle later in the month when he says that 'It is in the autumn’s dotage, mid No vember, When ' skies, seductive, seem to woo the earth. . Other poets, however, are more con cerned with wlmt It Is rather than when it is and have given us some, charming descriptions. Sam Walter Foss, In his Inimitable dialect, calls it “a piece of sweetmeat" in the fol lowing verse: "Natur," the good old school-marm who pities our distress, She gives her children every year a little glad recess; ' An’ ol’ gray-headed boys and girls, they feel their hearts thaw out, An' fife flows -on as mualc’ly as wa ter from a spout; An’ now the Ingin Summer time, '1th all Its rest is here, A piece of sweet meat stuck between the slices o f the year; A sorter reign er jubilee 'twlxt snow an' thunder showers; « A chunk of sweetness sandwiched In between tho frost and flowers. Nor were the early American poets the only ones who paid their tribute, as witness the following by Marian Isabel Angus: INDIAN SUMMER Indian summer broods today Over thd mellow autumn lands, Soft wispy veils o f amethyst And amber pale stream from her hands. Vines hang heavy with purple grapes; Apple trees bend with crimson gems, And In’ the woods the great oak trees Are crowned with golden diadems, Like topazes the pumpkins lie Hot in a ring of brown and green,' And mock the nun, while slender spears Of goldenrod make gay the Seen*. Nature in drowsy; her work Is done, Now she awaits her winter rest; Harvest is over; the tired brown earth Will sleep with red leaves on her breast. And Minna Irving paints tills gayly* colored word picture of IN6IAN BLANKETS Sumac fires ate burning brightly, IMtby-red the embers glow, Indian council fires rekindled From tho ftMl of long ago; And the wind's a runner passing With his feet In deerskin shod, And a chief’s tail feather tosses In tho dusty goldenrod. Wild grapes ripen in the thicket, Purple asters edge the stream, And tho braves to earth returning I5y the moon’s enchanted beam Itafw thoir rod and yellow blanket# On tins windy maple bough When the frosty night Is over, For it’s Indian summer now, Another fatuous dialect poet, Frank L. Stanton, writing o f Indian summer in Ids natlva state o f Georgia, daclwas that Injun summer suits?,ms, soft, nlght aiifi ; stilly day, And I . could' keep on dreamin’ till I dreamed my Ilfs away. And Cornelia R, Doherty calls it the season WHEN THE ACORN© DROP There’s a whisper on the hilltop and a murmur In the-wood, There’s a dream of golden glory ev erywhere; On the beech a russet cover, on the elm a mottled hood, While the walnut lifts her branohes - brown and bate-. Oh, the crows hold their , meeting ip the old oak’# top, And ho, for Indian summer when the acorns^drop! There’s a bloom fipon the meadow like the ghost of Summer1 flowers. But the forest and- the valleys are aflame, And on hillside and In hollow through out all’ the misty hour*. ■ Descend the rustling drops of au tumn rain, Oh, the squirrel’s at his feasting in the old’ oak’s top. And ho, -for Indian summer when' the acorns d'fop! When the chestnut and the fiaselnut put on a richer brown, And the blackbird* all are-gathered in a flock, t When rriftllow-ln-the-mareKe# buttons up her yellbw gowns, Then It’s time to heap, the fodder 4a, a shock. Ob,, autumn’s oti her wsning; better gather In tha cropI And ho, for Indian Summer when thv acorns drop! But not all tbe beautiful tributes to Indian summer bate been In verse. Oliver Wendell Holmes, writer of de lightful prose as’ weil as poetry, la W* essay on the- seasons, says; in October, or early In November, after the "equinoctial storms," comes the Indian summer. It is tlty time to be In tho wood's or on the apaahore— a sweet season that should be given to lonely walks, to stumbling about !h old churchyards, plucking oh the way tbs aromatic silvery herb everlasting, and smelling at Its dry flower until It etherises the Soul into almlfs* reverie* Outside of space and time/ Ther* le- no need of trying to palfit the still, warm, misty, dreamy India# summer In words, there are many States that’have no articulate vooabulary, and are only to b« reproduced by muale, and the mood this season produfiet Is of that nature. In "The Guardian Angel” be contin ues on that theme thug; To those who knoff thS Indian aunt* mar of our northern states it is need less to describe the Influence It acserta on the senses and the soul, Tha atlll- ncsi of the landscape in that beautiful time le as if the planet were sleeping, like a top, before It begins to rook with the atortna of autumn. All na ture# seem to find themselves more truly in its light; love grown more tender, religion more spiritual, mem ory sees farther back Into tho past, grief revisits it# mossy marbles, tbs poet harvests the ripe thoughts which he will tie In sheave# Of verses by hla winter fireside, And iii "Elfllo Vennor- bo again to this season by fostering that "The real forest is hardly still axcopt in Indian sutnmor; than there Ig Eoath in the house, and they, a r» waiting fo r tho Ahnrp* shrank** jgontfco to- ooao. with white rntgteftt fo r the Muaamft' battik* ' Dayton Presbyterial Society of Missions One hundred wtd soventy-tiwoo delegates and visitors registered at the Fortieth Annual Meeting o f the Springfield Plgtrlet o f the Dayton Presbytartel Society o f Mksioas which was held in the First Presbyterian Church, Wednesday, October 16th. This was one o f four siich meetings being held in the Dayton area this week, Mrs. Robert S* Rogeirs o f Spring- field,- President # f this district pre* sided. At the business session, Mrs. Rogers was re-eleeted. The devottoftgi services were con- ducated by Mrs* W.^R, McChesney and Mrs, Clayton respectively. The address o f Welcome Whs given by Mrs. George Martindale, tbe President of the local church organisation. Speakers from out o f town were Mrs. Corson5o f Oxford who spoke on Stewardship; Mrs. Paul Espsy of Xenia and Mrs; James Hunter o f Pique who gave five minute talk# on Mission Study; Mrs. George Winweod of Springfield- who reported on the Wooster Miaeion’ conference. The Principal a$*kk<«? o f the afternoon Wad Mteb Blanche o f DillonviHe; who told in a modt Interesting And inspir ing address o f the work that is being done among the families o f foreign Speaking people in the mining districts o f South Eastern Ohio, Mrs. Forest Babb o f Springfield told about the Over-seas Work of the organization: Specialmusic f o f the day was furn ished by Mi*, and Mrs, Wfilter Corry, Mrs. PhUl E'. Davies; Of Springfield, and /MTs. Helen OglOBbee, o f Xenia. Mrs. John Ross was the chairman, Of a committee o f the ladies o f the local church who prepared and served- a iplendid dinner which was enjoyed, by all. About one hundred and fifdy sat down to this* bounteous repast, Mrs. Chas. Steele had charge of registration, while Mite. George Mur- tirtdalW, Mrs. W. P. Harriman, Mrs. Clayton McMillan, and Mrs. Raymond Williamson teerved as Reception com mittee. This is the first such meeting to be held here: but wp trust that there m ay, be many like it to follow thru the years. - Ye», IftTrue About Raised Wafttiifie* Back to normal waistlines .la’ fash ion’s Ultimatum, Which Accounts for the popularity of- the; tuck-in blouse with the1autumn tWefed BUtt It is JuSt Bubh- stxmnlng tWeed suits as the one in the picture which Rfe "the talk o f the town.” This one Is made o f a rongh -flecked-Wlth-white wooleri, these "blrds-eye” fWeeds being about the niftiest suiting brought orit thl# sea son'. The luxurious natural lar and the eggsiMll Wottse effect « perfect blmui. Plaids Featured for Softool Girl EusMhftle* »,fi.C0UiNS PASSEDAWAY 0NTH1SDAY QsdsswiUc township lest an estaem- ed cHUert and prominw*t fanner in the death e f A, G. Coiling, about soon Thursday, He had been in failing health'fot several months but recent ly it wag believed that he had im proved .considerably. He was accom panied by his nurse and was being aided te the dining room when death overtook him almost immediately. THe deceased^-waa the -son o f J, Wal lace arid Mary Gordon Coffins and -was the only Child,. He ws# hem in this toWhship and baa resided on the home farm during, his lifetime. He Was 64 years o f age August lZth. - Thetdeoeased ie survived by his wife formerly Miss Mary Rife, and the fol lowing .children:*Dorqthy o f Brooklyn, N. Y .; .John, who resides on a farm nearby; William,'of Columbus; Rogpr, at home; ’Ear!, o f Columbus; Mrs, K, D. Choate, Toledo; Ruth at home; Robert, a student in Cedarville Col lege. Mr- Collins was president o f the Greene County .- Livestock Shipping Association-at-the iime ef- his death. Ho wad a member e f the Clifton United PktesbyteHAn congregation and fot twenty-seven year# has served* a# an elder.. He has also derved on the township board o f education artd dur ing his lifetime-has been interested in ,the w elfa^ # f the community. The fuAeral Will be( held from the home btft the time and place of burial have not'been determined but will be announced later. ' , Just so it’s plaid It-realty does hot matter whether the material fer little daughter's fall ensemble be gingham^ velvet or print crepe, Of course the first fabric te suggest Itself Ef. men tion of school Is gingham,, and ging ham made up like the model- la-the picture is botu attractive and prac tical. But for dressy dress there’s noth ing handsomer than' fhe richly color ful velvet plaids which are so high* lighted this seaaoct id the fshrtc realm.’ STOVE AUCTION SALE I will auction a new Favorite l>rlar Heater, never moved from display floor at Cedarville Fawners’ Grain Co. on Saturday, October 95 at 8:99 P, M. This stove and a need Clermont Oak heater will be sold to the highest bid der. Charles F. MkrdhaHi Bfcrtec H a * «** T&w d ity* Octobar 2$. K, C .V fM& S ok , * * * m Diet Needs Same; For Folks, Flock Poultry Requires Foods With Vltaatiin A Content Whan Shut Up What’s sauce fbr 'the goose is also sauce fo r the gander, and some o f the things which are healthful in the diet of the family, -are equally so in the diet bif the, poultry fiockf Carrots, cod liver i oil, and green yegetables belong on tha table o f the flock as much- as on that o f the family, ac cording to P. B, Zumbro, extension specialist for the Ohio State Univer sity poultry husbandry department. “ These foods carry vitamin A, a pre ventative o f nutritional roup, a disease' which often strikes flocks whtft they are-housed during the win te r atid unable tti obtain green fedd on the 'ran**/' s»y » Zumbro. Symptoms, o f .nutritions! roup in clfide discharges and sWdllihg o f the face;-which « f # jch*racberistlc o f nrdi-> nary rewp, but the nutritional roup also; causes lesions in the eyes and mouth/ Postmortem examination usually shows the kidneys to be very, pale, and marked with a network of white lines, and a deposit o f white material on the surfaces o f the liver and heart. Complete discussion o f the treat-* ment of* nutritional roup , and other diseases-,, as well as o f problems of in cubation, brooding, feeding, and man agement, ate included in a correspond- t ce course given by the poultry hus bandry department <of the University. Tbf course includes 12 lessons to bo Completed by students and graded at the University'. Along with the les sons are! sent the several bulletins on poultry husbandry which* are publish ed by the poultry husbandry depart ment. WIFE SEEKS DIVORCE On- grounds o f extreme cruelty Bertha B. BaHWrd1 has brought suit from Johm-BaUhrd, charging that he became *ifitovicated practically every Week-end1and abused her, Anally com pelling her to leave their home Octo ber 12 because o f the ill treatment she received. They were married September 13, 1918, No* Children were' born o f tha Union. The* plaihtiif asks’ restoration to her former name1o f Credit, seeks to be decreed temporary and1perman ent alimony„ attorney fees, and' asks that the defendant be enjoined from disposing, o f personal property they jbintly ovm. GEORGE WATSON HERE Mr. George Watson, o f Cleveland1, former CedarvilUan, dropped in on us yesterday, Mr. Watson and wife and His mother, -being on a trip .to this county visiting1relatives. Mr. Watson has bemremiheefed with the American Express’ Company for tWehty-seven years and is now superintendent of terminals. Information at hafid indi cates that in the very near future, Mr, Watson, may be. given another ad vancement,. which his Cedarville friends will bo glad1to know of. PUTTING VP RAILING The County Commissioners are hav ing an jron railing placed on the Main street bridge to keep motor cars from going over tho walk or even reaching the present railing. A t1different times ioers have reached the present railing which is rather frail and afford little or no protection. tmeo T H E PAYS SADTRIBUTEFORCURS •III**. «l1J . I .IJIXlU.I.-.L ■! C When the Philadelphia Athletic baseball team took what was con- ceeded to be a lost game until the ninth inning, the World Series came to an end Monday. The Chicago Cubs were forced to bow to defeat fo r the series and once again the honor goes to the American League, The Chicago Tribune in a heavy black border .expressed tribute over <the loss in the following: HOPE—Beloved daughter o f Mr. and Mrs. Fan of this city de parted this life yesterday afternoon at the West Side Ball Park after a lingering illness o f nine innings. She was attended by thirty thou sand physicians who did all in their power to save her, hut with comparatively little success, She rallied a little in the second inning but a terrific relapse in the third defied the most heroic measures and reduced her pulse, respiration and temperature until thsy were per ceptible to only the most prejudiced observers. The heartless conduct o f nine conspirators from a place called Philadelphia hastened her un timely end. The remains will lie in state today at the.park, weather permitting, and the funeral will probably be later. She leaves two sisters, Faith and Charity, neither of whom was present yesterday, Philadelphia papers please copy, ' ' PURINACHOWFEEDS WI • » Hog Chow— Pig Chow— Cow Chow Steer Fatina— Sheep, Calves—Laying Mash C O A L Island Creek—Yellow Jacket— Battleship Pocahontus * > H ardw are-D el Laval Separators Hog Fountains-r-Hog Feeders Cedarville Farmers’ Grain Company Everything For The Farm Phone 21 ^ ’ Cedarville,. Ohio I W ill sell at public sale at my home in Clifton on Sat. October 19 Commencing at 1:30 P. M. The following household goods: Antique Furniture Glassware Household Goods • » Terms of Sale Cash R ..D . HALEY HARRY WILSON , Auctioneer HBRE* ON A VISIT Mr. J, 1 / Marsh and wife o f Owens- Ville, Ohio, are here ort d Visit fo r a tew days with Dr, H> I. Marsh and Wife, the fttttot being a brother o f Mr. J, ] » lfMeit. Notice! We have been ordered out o f the Nagley; Room and will be located in the Fulmer Room near the Bridge with a full line o f Home Kill ed Meats and Groceries on MONDAY, OCTOBER21 GIVE US A CALL C. H. CROUSE
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