The Cedarville Herald, Volume 53, Numbers 1-26

TB* CKDAVVILLK HERALD. JANUARY 10,1930 ’ *' / « | V /! : w 11 I i! jft ft THE CEDARVILLE HERALD LETTER KARLH BULL — — — EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Entered * t& e Post Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October 31,1887, m Mooad claw matter. , FBIPAY, JANUARY 10, 1930. SECRETARY BROWN SHOULD ANNOUNCE NOW The Herald has i .6 apology to make in urging the immedi­ ate announcement of Clarence Brown for another term as Secretary of State. His efficient service to the state has been recognized in all quarters and from various sections we notice newspapers are urging that he should continue in that office for a third term. It must be understood that Mr. Brown is not asking for a third term and at one time a report was given out from some source that he would not seek such, honors again. Such a report was no doubt due to an illness that befell him more than a year ago but he has fully recovered and the press in the interest of the state is again asking that he give his efficient, painstaking, courestious and obliging service for another term of two years. There might be some objection to a third term where a professional office seeker desires to force himself on the state but at this time such is not the case with the present secretary. No doubt he feels his private business Interests should have more of his time but he should also give consideration to the call that he continue the work which has been so successfully carried out during the first term and last year of his second term he is now serving. Mr, Brown is yet a young man, but he has had much experi­ ence in public life, having served some years ago as lieutenant governor. He has shown mqst excellent executive ability and even under the most trying circumstances has faced responsibil­ ity in administering the election laws with honor and dignity to his state and great, credit to himself. It is little wonder that this demand arises for a continuance o f such service. It is proof that Ohioans are ready to reward Mr, Brown and. as we see it he should give at least two more years of his time to his state in response to the call of his fellow citizens. POWER AND MORE POWER FOR AUTOMOBILES The continued increase in motor car accidents is largely attributed to the speed built in the modern automobile. The seasons n ew e s t creations in the auto world are now being shown in New York City for the first time at the annual auto show. The point being stressed in all accounts of the show is the, great increase in power for the new cars over those of the past. One new model of a popular make car now has sixteen cylinders in­ stead of eight as in the past. This-car is rated at 185 horse power which is more than eight times the rated power of the old style Fords. The motor public has been educated to power and speed and of course will not be satisfied with low power as we knew it even so short a space as ten years ago. To digress from the field of motors the day of power by concentration of all busi­ ness through combinations arid mergers is the order of the day. Banks consolidate to be stronger and more powerful. Retail business is combined and operated under the chain system to expand,the buying power. Railroads are to be consolidated to increase their power in the field of transportation to meet the new Competition in highway trucking. , Great industries expand by increasing the power plant to provide for greater production America evidently does not ■lrnnWvthft limits of her power in any line of human endeavor. As for motor power developed by one line of automobiles, the Ford, with 7,200,000, old and new cars in use. TKis numbei o f cars, represents the power of four hundred million horses without taking into consideration the power developed op the highways with thousands of motor cars o f various makes. We all have a certain allotment o f power within our grasp but the question arises as to how, and when and where to use it, to our own advantage without injury to fellow citizens. WE ARE TO HAVE PLENTY OF RUBBER Rubber now constitutes one of the most important articles o f c om ffie r e e in this country. The automobile has ci;eated a demand for what a few years was a produced with limited use, until today it runs into the millions annually. For years English capital held a firm hand on the rubber production industry and .America was forced to pay what the English asked for the product. Later the Dutch took up the growth of rubber plants and continued to develop and expand until the English were forced to take second place. American capital through Ford and Firestone is developing thous.' nds o f acres in the warmer climates and in a few years rubber will be as plentiful as. other crops.. The production has now reached the stage where rubber is.lower in price than evei known. In addition the great Edison continues his experiment as to the manufacture of rubber from some of our most common weeds. Reports of his experiments thus far indicate some suc­ cess. Thus we find England that once attempted to rob the- American people by charging unfair prices for crude rubber HOWis fighting to even find a market for her product. .................................................................................................................................................................................................... CAN BE'CURED HEMORRHOIDS (OR PILES) WITHOUT USE OF KNIFE I WITHOUT LOSS OF TIME J A successful treatment for internal and prettuding piles. Requires | from four to seven^reatments at intervals o f about once a week for a | cure o f the average Oase. Also the Ideal Non-Confining Method of | Treatment fo r Fistulae, Pruritis Ani (itching) and Fissure, etc. § DR. J. A . YODER Osteopathic Physician and Proctologist | 18,. 19, 20 Steele Bldg., Xenia | Phone 334 § TEA-POT SAViNGS Have you a little cash laid away In youfi home or in your pocket? Ever notice how easy it is to Spend it? Many folks cannot Save money they can get at easily. It burns * hole ih their pocket. Put your savings in an account with us. You can withdraw it if you want it, but you Won't unless absolutely necessary. It will be *efe and it will work for you at 5#% com­ pounded semi-annually. We Pay $ 2 % On Sayings Springfield, Ohio FROM STATE DEPARTMENTS Columbus. Ohio. — Chief J. W. Thompson o f the Fish and Game Divi­ sion o f the state in summoning up the work o f the past year finds that hia department has released 14,000 ring- neck pheasants and has shipped 6,500 pheasant eggs to the farmers o f the state for hatching under hens; the young pheasants are to he released when old enough to look after them­ selves. Chief Thompson has also dis­ tributed 350 pairs o f imported Hun­ garian partridges and 125 wild Color­ ado trapped turkey hens and 45 cocks have been placed in the Roosevelt game preserve. After two hatching of eggs, each hen producing approxi­ mately twelve at a hatching, the tur­ keys will be distributed oyer the state. Preparations are heing made to re­ ceive a shipment of 250 white-tail deer which will he liberated in the 600 acre game preserve in Scioto county and added to the herd already there, possibly numbering over 100. Rac­ coon are also being propigated with the purpose o f building up the -breed in thbse counties of the state which have become depopulated. * * * The Ohio State Department of Edu­ cation has in the past year aided and promulgated many different types o f educational activities, Ohio is .the third ranking state in education in the! United tates. Some o f the activities of the department show a range from pre-schools to the vocation of educa­ tion of the adult who iB physically handicapped, mubic, both instrumental and vocal, broadcasting o f educational program, supervising o f teacher train­ ing, inspection of the 1400 Ohio high school0, public and private,d o s e checking on rural school conditions, distribution of $4,000,00 to financially handicapped school districts, promot­ ing o f a program o f health and physi­ cal education, ■encouraging o f visual instruction, supervision o f child ac­ counting, advising on elementary school problems, directing o f exten­ sive vocational education in home economics,, agriculture, trades and in­ dustries, issuing of stae certificates, censoring of motion picture films and1 collecting and diseminating o f educa­ tional research. ■*: ■ #■■ . The- Ohio.State Archaeological and Historical Society has launched and is maintaining a broad up-to-date pro­ gram o f activities. It can furnish a Istate-wide service both to juvenile and adult. It will tell the story o f Ohic in all its essential phases, so simply i and so clearly that all can understand. Under the new program the; Society will endeavor to cooperate in every possible manner with local and county historical societies. A conference o f representatives of various .colleges and universities in the state will be arranged fo r the very near future, when cooperative plans will be dis­ cussed. , :•] ■■* * ■ * ’ State Treasurer H, Ross, Ake cer­ tainly handled a few million dollars according-to the financial statement of his department covering trans­ actions for the year ending December 31, 1929. There were total* receipts o f $88,333,100.47 with transfers from various funds ainounting to $26,182,- 984.43 and a balance on hand to start business in the new year January first of $223,684,236.30. Of the' above re­ ceipts $33,524,047.94 was collected on the gasoline tax excise and $19,931,- 241.41 of that amount was transferred to the Division of Highways for the building and maintenance of state roads and $13,985,122.96 was sent to the various counties and municipal­ ities of the state. ■* * * Heads of the several departments in the office o f Secretary o f State Clarence J. Brown are anticipating a very busy year, if the advance busi­ ness is any criterion. Stenographers and typists in the corporation division have volunteered their services to work extra hours in order to take care of the business that is flowing into the office. Secretary Brown anticipates greatly increased revenues in the Motor Vehicles Division and In other branches over wh: :h he has supervi­ sion. He has arranged to see that all business pertaining to his office is taken care of promptly and efficiently. Shorts and Middlings “Grasshopper mice/’ unlike most .»ther small rodents, are friends to farmers i.i the wo.,I, where they few' . u o large number of injurious in sects. Says Sam: A high-powered scion 1st says in the paper that man didn’> descend from the npe. But the same paper carries the story of another dance marathon, NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Hrt-if-s o f ,'ulia C, Stcrratt de­ ceased. W, Dwight fU'omtt ha* been appointed and qualified as executor of the estate o f Julm G. terrett laU of Greene County, Ohio, deceased. Dated this 24th day of December A. D. 1929. S. C. WRIGHT, Probate Judge o f said County, Will!#* to U «, L t f i t f lit If it would make us any younger we would be glad to He about our age.— Hillsboro News-HerakJ. Rough Walk, But Not So Very Rough Too Informal Texture Tends T ° Dwarf Furniture And Fitting* of Rooms Rough plastered walis, painted, while recently more popular than they have been fo r many years, are not necessarily new, points out Miss Anne Biebricher, extension specialist in home furnishings for the Ohio State University. The Pompeiians painted their rough-plastered walls in fiat tones. Then they painted medallions upon the walls, as we hang pictures upon our walls today. ‘‘But if the modern housewife chooses a painted, plastered, wall, she must decide not only on the color but just how rough the plaster is to he,” warns Miss Biebricher. “ Exceedingly rough plaster showing the irregular sweep o f the trowell or the hand of the workman is entirely out of scale in the living room o f average size. Such extreme roughness o f the wall would dwarf the furniturq, curtains, and pictures in the roof and cause them to lose their distinction. Even in the English style house with large rooms and rough-hewn beams, the walls must be only moderately rough and irregularly finished, if they are to be effective. Lightly stippled and brushed surfaces o f tan, buff, soft blue-grey" o f .soft green, fit best in the average living room in this section of the country, if painted and plastered walla are to he chosen.” .• 1 Change In Ownership Of Ford Motor Agency The Cedarville Motor Sales Com­ pany, having the agency o f the Ford, has recently undergone a change. Fred Severs of Young and Sevirs has re­ tired and his interest taken by Mr. A . F. Halberstadt, Springfield, who has been engaged in the motor sales busi­ ness for twenty-four years. flooeoooeoooooioeooooooooooo How it Started By J ean N ewton 00<*>000000000<H>0000000©OOC “ PELL-MELL" r p O DO something pell-mell Is to do A it in Indiscriminate haste and con­ fusion. The expression is commonly used in every day speech, but the per­ son is rare who understands the al­ lusion with the knowledge of how it started. • The expression comes to us from the old English game o f pall mall or pall mall, which tsws lntroduced during the reign o f Chons* I, and subsequent­ ly became rier* popular in England. A .game in whjcli a hall was drived with a mallet,.‘ and taking Its name from the Italian “ palla magUo,"pnUa meaning ball., and "magllo” hammer. In quick pronunciation pall mail be­ came “ pell mdU” and It was from the fact that udder certain circumstance? In the game, the players would rush headlong at the hail that such heed­ less, hasty’ activity came to be de­ scribed as “ pell-mell.” And though the game which brought It into exist­ ence has, served its time and passed ont o f the picture, the expression “pell-mell” has^. survived in modern speech, i > (Copyright.) --------- O--------- I s M i u j y i Eu GABBY GERTIE “ i'h* pin monsy that girl* stick dad for ft usually tha pries e f a dlanisnd brooch.” Wh»t» They Cam* Fr##t ' Spinach came from Arabia; celery from Germany, the onion from Africa, sdoumbef# from the East ladles, the sunflower from Peru, parsley from Sardinia StgalSsaHM ®f Croi* ffh* cross now used as signature by illiterate* we* once used even by ihoe* trfco could write, a* an attests- ilon of the good faith o f the person fignin*. ILL FOS TEARS KONJ0LABRINGS QUICK RELIEF Ohio Farmer Says, “ No Preite j Too Great For New l Medicine" 3 9 Weal Main Xw nU V m PAY LESS AT MR. DELL, ALLEN “ Konjola has done wonders for me,” said Mr. Dell Allen, a farmer o f Pier- pont, Ohio. I suffered with liver trou­ ble for years and tried many medi­ cines without getting relief. Frequent bilious attacks brought on headaches' and dizzy spells. I was never free from constipation and was obliged to resort to cathartics daily. Sound sleep was impossible and- my -nerves were in bad condition. . “ A short time after taking Kjonjola I began to feel an improvement in my condition. I continued the treatment and it was only a short- time until my liver became normal and the head­ aches and dizzy spells disappeared. My kidneys became strong again and I slept soundly at night. No one can give too much credit to this great medicine which brought health to me after all other medicines had failed.” Konjola is sold in Cedarville at Frowant & Brown drug store, and by all the leading drugists in all towns throughout this entire section. THE PIERCES ARE COMING TO DAYTON The Pierces, versatile^ entertainers, the coming number on the lecture course on February 4th, will appear Friday, January 10 before the Scottish Rite in Dayton; The entertainment is fo r members and their wives only. FIRST FISH PERMIT Harry Estele has the credit o f be­ ing the first citizen m the comity to bo granted a 1930 fishing permit through the office o f Clerk o f Court Harvey Elani. New license must be secured fo r this year. TRUSTEES ORGANIZE The board o f township trustees or­ ganized Monday with M. W. Collins as chairman. The other members of the board are W. Conley and Hugh Turnbull, Jr., the* latter being the newly elected member to succeed Col­ lins Williamson. W. W. Troute is clerk o f the board. ■ "Were we spoon-fed by-Nature, we should doubtless be Nature’s morons.” —H. A. Overstreet. BANK STATEMENT Report o f the Condition of The Ex­ change Bank, Cedarville, in the State of Ohio, at the close o f business on September 12, 1929. RESOURCES Loans on Real E sta te____$ 40,915.00 Loans on Collateral_____ 36,550.90 Other Loans, D iscounts_277,146.94 Overdrafts - _______ ;______ 1,331.11 U. S. Bond and Securities ( 100.00 Banking House and Lot 35,100.00 Furniture and Fixtures __ 14,250.00 Due from Reserve Bangs and cash in vault . 20,529.21 TOTAL ____L-——$425,923.16 LIABILITIES Capital Stock paid i n ____$ 50,000.00 Surplus Fund - ______________2,000.00 Undivided Profits less expen* * ses, interest and taxes paid 3,482.82 Reserved for Taxes-Intcrest 1,752.20 Reserved for Depreciation _ 6,788.61 Individual Deposits subject to check ________________ 182.684.89 Demand Certificates Deposit 5,250.89 Time Certificate Deposit 30,365.88 Saving D eposit-----------—. 48,012.81 Notes, Bills Rediscounted 45,595.00 Bills Payable .......... 50,000.00 t ri TOTAL — - ...............$425,923.10 State o f Ohio, County o f Greene, ss: I, L. E. Tindall, Cashier of the above named The Exchange Bank oi Cedarville, Ohio, do solemnly1swear that the above statement is true to the best o f my knowledge and' belief, L. F. TINDALL, Cashier Correct Attest: W. J. Tarbox, Miron I, Marsh, Howard S. Smith, Directors, Subscribed and sworn to before me this 7th day o f January, 1930, A. E. RICHARDS, Notary Public, NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate o f Cora Crawford deceased, Lulu McChesney has been appoint* ed and qualified as executrix o f the estate o f Cora Crawford late of Greene County* Ohio, deceased, Dated this 6th day o f January A, D. 1980. 3. C. WRIGHT Probate Judge o f said County. I GORDON BROTHERS il AUTO PARTS AND GARAGE Replacement Parts for all Makes of Cars ' ft 4 Day and Night Service 30-32 E. 2nd S t , Xenia, Ohio Tele, 761 “If It Is a Part We Have It” JOIN NOW! 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