The Cedarville Herald, Volume 53, Numbers 1-26
f j p CJtBARVIUE HERALD, APRIL 4,1036 T H E C E D A R V I L L E H E R A L D KAXLH BULL ---------„ EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Entered at the Poet Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October SI, 1837, as second class matter. F R ID A Y , A P R I L 4 , 1 9 3 0 LYCEUM COMMITTEE CONSIDERS NEW PLAN The newly elected Lyceum Committee has already under taken the problem of selecting' a course for the coming year. This is no small responsibility in picking out talent for a com munity such as this within the ordinary limit for financial obli gation. ' It has been proposed that instead of employing all the talent from one organization that at least three of the five num bers be o f local talent giving the college, schools and churches the opportunity of not only providing the entertainment but probably to share in the profit. The other two numbers could ue outstanding musical attractions. While no definite plan has been adopted we understand the committee is investigating this plan and we are inclined to be lieve it is worth a trial. Any lyceum committee must depend on representations by those out to sell the course and frequently the committee gets ‘'stung.” With at least three local numbers, home talent is given an opportunity, and the profit would re main at home for some worthy purpose. Vance W. Burba Is Given Promotion Vgnc« W, Burba, who has bean sup ply freight and tfcfcet sgont fo r the Pennsylvania lines fo r the past four years, has been promoted to.freigh t and ticket agent in Xenia, succeeding W. R, Torrence, who has been freight agent but was recently retired and placed on the pension list. Mr. Tor rence formerly resided in Cedarville. The. freight and ticket duties are to 1» combined, although the present ticket agent, I. F, Emery, is to continue in charge, Mr. Burba has been connected with the Pennsylvania railroad fo r seven teen years, ids first employment being here in Cedarville, He has served as agent in "West Jefferson and Brook- ville, Ohio, During the past year he has been acting freight agent in Xenia during a year's vacation granted Mr, Torrence. . Mr. and Mrs, Burba and children will be located in Xenia at the close of the present school year. A NEW PENSION LOOMS IN THE FUTURE Ohio is soon to be in the midst of proposed legislation for old age pensions, a proposition that was defeated a few years ago. It is certain to come before the next legislature that will have much to do with revamping the proposed tax laws along the line of. classification, Ohio has always found a way to ex pend public money and a way to increase the tax burden. Un employment is going to give aid to the old age pension plan and it will have more support this year than in the past. Taxes we will always have but there is goifig to be a limit. Heavy taxes on manufacturing institutions adds to the cost of the product produced and heavy taxes on homes adds to the re. tal problem as well as those who own their own homes. MRS. FLORENCE FORBES HANNA WILL GO TO FRANCE . The following account p f a trip to Franch by Mrs. France : Forbes Hanna, Ruthern, Iowa, formerly o f thjs place is reported in the Free Press in that city: “ Mrs. T. M. Hanna, one o f Palo Alto county’s war mothers, ,has received a communication from the government, stating that she is entitled to a trip to France yrith the Iowa delegation o f mothers, step-mothers and widows o f members o f the military and naval forces o f the U. S., who died in Europe during the world war, and whose re mains are interred in the cemeteries there. They will make, the pilgrimage to visit these cemeteries, Mrs. Hanna has accepted-this invitation, and she expects to sail from New York with fo e Iowa delegation'on May 21st, on the steamship George Washington, which will take them across the At- " lantic. They will remain :in France about two weeks. “ Mrs. Hanna’s step-son, Major Mark Hanna, was killed in action shortly after the armistice was signed on No vember 11, 1928, but before the news o f the ending o f the war had reached his division. ' He *is buried in the Meuse-Argonne cemetery ah Romague, France.*’ Miss Florence White o f Clifton has 'entered' the McClellan hospital for treatment, having been ill for several weeks. POLITICIANS HAVE NEW DEAL COOKED FOR TODAY Politicians in. the Seventh Congress ional district will meet in Springfield today to endorse Congressman Brand fo r another term giving him an op portunity for elaborating on wild ideas o f government and jpromsies of postoifice buildings at the expense o f the people. .Almost every cross-roads town has had the. promise o f a govern ment building.. Some months ago the same crowd met to down Brand in the interest of “ Boss” Marshall. The tide seems to have turned and the gang split with Brand and his wealth at stake. From reports Bpjjnd must have smoothed out the wrinkles and friction. Another report is that Charles Wag goner, Lebanon, will be endorsed for U, S, Marshal again - County Auditor P. H. Creswell, who ..rill has the.in side track. For weeks the former enemies o f President Hoover and the administration have sought a candi date to defeat the' plan for the ap pointment o f Creswell. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Notice is hereby given tb all eredi tors o f the Cedarville Bargain Store or O. L. Myers, proprietor, that ac counts are now due under orders of the U. S. Referee and payable to V. Rigio, trustee, or The Exchange Bank John Dineeh, Referee in Bankruptcy and V. Rigio, Trustee. (2t) I • Before marketing your live stock call THE SOUTH CHARLESTON STOCK YARDS l DAILY MARKET / | Phone 80 » I S. K . SMOOTS P. P. SMOOTS 1 MONEY PAID WHEN WEIGHED j j WANTED , ‘ j Representative for Greene County. | Splendid opportunity, j iETNA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY f , H. S. BAGLEY, Dist. Mgr., | 306 Third Nat’l Bldg., Dayton, Ohio $f ifnifiiimjHiiitiimY C: li'wUfi - iui iin,'iii y ~ J ()W E R j R ATJES ^ "— MenYouGolrj ' l S W M N D EVERY ROOM N O V / WITH BATH 2 S9§0 x y ** m 300 Clean * * Modern Rooms l "%•« ■ ! .‘iN, iv t.TOV SIXTH AT ST.CLAIR AVE ’ H. 6YRON , M anager 'in-ifif' /■ lIDIlfOfilUM PRIZE'S AWARDED IN D. A. R. CONTEST The Patrotic Education Committee : jf the D, A. R. sponsored an esB&y ontest in the High School last month, and prizes .were awarded last Friday ih Chapel to the winners. The Seniors and Juniors' wrote on the subject: ‘‘Why America .should have Army Prepardness,” and the Freshmen and Sophomores wrote on the subject: ■Why America Should have Navy Pre- pardness.” Many very well written papers were submitted. The papers >vere graded on the following points: 1st, treatment o f subject; 2nd, style and composition; 3rd, spelling find neatness. Two first prizes o f three dollars each were* awarded to Willis Ramoley of the Senior class' and Mary Mar garet McMillan o f the Freshman class. Two second prizes of two dol lars each were awarded to Doris Hart man o f the Senior class and May Dobbins o f the Freshman class. The papers were all handed to the judges numbered and without names jo it was- impossible for any paper to be identified by the judges. A number o f students received hon- jrable mention for their papers. They ire: Betty McCorkell, Dorothy .Nelson,: John Stover, Howard DeWell, Mae foung, Leigh Ferguson, Pauline Nel son, Geraldine Peters, Loelia Griffin, Curtis Hughes, and Joe Waddle. The committee was more than grati- ied with the success o f this their first contest and promise more interest to x shown in the future. We wish to thank Professor Furst, Mrs. Edwards and the rest- o f the faculty fo r their great interest and splendid cooperation, also wish . to thank Miss Wilmah Spencer, fo r her help in grading papers. x MRS. GALLOWAY, Chairman MRS. I. C. DAVIS MRS. FRANK CRESWELL- . MRS. FRED TOWNSLEY OFFICERS FIND AUTO STOLEN IN XENIA , Local officials with Road Patrolman Davis located a stolen “ Star” car at the “ pld Mill Inn,” Wednesday night just before James Burden; 19, Xenia, was ready to leave where he had stopped, fo r gas service. It is said Burden and Thelma Burba had planned to leave that night for Newport, Ky., to get married. He was to pick her up on the Taylor hill west o f town and the girl was in waiting but Burden was taken to police head quarters in Xenia on a charge o f hav ing stolen an automobile. Burden is married and Sheriff Tate holds a warrant for his arrest on charges preferred by his wife who is expected soon to become a mother. P S P * M S W S S S S P * Germany's Victory. Surprising the Greek. The Billion Debar Age, Saa Diego, Calif.—Officials o f the Santa Fe road, gathered in convention, were told by their president, Mr. Storey, that something is happening to railroad passenger business in the United States. In 192? the Sant* Fa carried 15,000,- 000 passenger*. In 1928 the number had dropped to 4,200,000, That means a good deal to railroads, to owners o f railroad stocks, and tv' the automobile industry, « Automobiles, privately owned, an public automobile bus linos, have made the change. And *Mr, Storey’s figures will change again soon, when fully developed air travel takes 90 per cent of long distance travel from railroad and motor bus lines. " Do not hurry to sell your Santa'Fe pr other sound railway stock, however. Railroading now is really railroading, not stock jobbing. And better methods, bigger locomotive, danger trains, bet ter. yards and a thousand improve ments, including, especially, loyftl co operation by railroad union workers, have more than made up fo r the drop in passenger travel. Freight is the thing now, .and that depends on pros perity, ■ Germany lost the .war, but wing in other directions. Recently the German Bremen, lowering the record across the Atlantic, took the “ blue ribbon” from the British. Now the North German Lloyd liner Europa -has beaten the Bremen’s rec ord,. The Eurppfi, magnificent 50,000 ton ship, according to, builders here and in Britain, would be too expensive fo r American bv British lines. The in vestment o f $50;000,000 could not be profitable. ■ Germany, beaten, is able to do what the winners o f the war cannot do. , A Greek philosopher was exiled be cause he said the sun was’ probably bigger than ail o f the; Greek islands. We know now that the sun is a mil lion times bifeger than the earth, and in distant spfice other- suns are a mil lion times bigger than .ours, making them one million million times bigger than the cosmic grain o f sand we live on. ^ An Italian, Professor -Bendani, an nounces discovery,of the fact that our ottr solar system‘is fifty times bigger than astronomers ” thought. What would the old Greek have said, to that? w, I '- * '- ’ %* , . • This is the billion dollar age. The old plain million',, onfce" reversed, is as unimportant as >the extinct hansom crib. Gen. W. W. Atterbury, president of the Pennsylvania railroad, foresees ex penditures by his company in the next ten years amounting to ten billions o f dollars. Ten thousand millions is a good many dollars. . . The Pennsylvania has already spent six thousand millions. / 1 The running: time from New York to Chicago will be cut to fourteen hours within a few years, . . Trains will carry passengers’ auto mobiles with them as ocean steam ships now carry them. Radiophones will enable travelers to talk to their offices and to their homes. FORMER STUDENTS MARRIED Miss June Thompson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, A. L. Thompson, Alpha, and Mr. Ira Townsley, son o f Mrs. Arthur Townsley, Dayton, were mar ried Saturday afternoon by Rev. Arthur- Learning, pastor of the Bea vercreek Reformed church. The bride is an English teacher in the Beaver creek High School while Mr. Townsley s employed in the Frigidaire plant m Dayton. Both are former students o f Cedarville College. They will re side in Alpha following the close of school. The house o f representatives voted |to increase the national contribution [ to good roads from $75,000,000 to I $125,000,000 a year fo r three years, beginning next .July. ’ This wiil mean, in three years, $375,- 000,000 fo r better roads alone, good news for all citizens, for the' automo bile industry, its employees find for , the unemployed. * Shorts and Middlings Each kind o f metal ware needs spe cial polishing treatment, but soap and vater are the first and last cleaning agents for all kinds o f metal. ' On April 6 the Mormon church will , be one hundred years old, Plural mar riage ha* gone, but the church remains powerful, with numbers increasing, Rafter a century of struggle and opposi tion, Nearly one million Mormons will celebrate the day; the main celebra tion at Salt Lake City, others all over this a, d nearly all Europeah coun tries and in Mexico, Australia, Hawaii and the South Sea Islands, Freshly hydrated lime is essential In spraying, because old lima may have changed to the carbonated form Which will not prevent spray-burn. In 1929 there weie registered in the United States, 20,501,443 motor vehi cles, The states and the District o l Columbia collected in fees from the owners, $307,843,543. YOU PAY LESS AT 39 Weal Main Xenia tP The late Lord Balfour was power ful in establishing and guaranteeing Jewish rule in Palestine. To honoi his memory, every Jewish child horn in Rumania next week will be named for him, the hoys Balfour, the girlH Bfilfouria. Andrew Mellon, now seventy-file years old, is the head, through owner ship, o f half a dozen o f the greatest corporations in the world, Under three Presidents he .has' shown himself to be one o f our greatest secretaries o f foe treasury, reducing the public debt by thousands o f millions each year. If Mr. Mellon were a railroad con ductor they would tell him he was too old and he would have to give up his job. I f he were a workman, Seeking em ployment, he would have to get his hair dyed black and He about his age. The best years of a man’s life, for useful work and for intellectual enjoy ment, should com, Mter seventy, At ninety, a man should rest. <f’r>i>jrtiirht, 1»3«, by Kins 8yntlle»U, KQNJOLA ENDED TEN YEAR CASE OF RHEUMATISM Man Suffered Terribly-—Could Not Work— New Medicine Won Quick Victory * FOR RENT—A good House with garden and garage, G. H. Hartman, 8*4 Bentbc multiply just as fast m pure- >uiw*■uwij.wuawsjwww.'.f*!* ImaAfr. feltf ffl§ fjfi 8 Starting and Growing Mash, For-Honal Live Stock Producer, sale at McCampbell’s Exchange. } MR. JOSEPH C. MEEKS “ Konjola benefited me so much that I feel better than in ten years,” said Mr. Joseph G. Meeks, 331, Twelfth street, Toledo. “ For twelve years I suffered from rheumatism that did not yield to anything I tried. The ache and pains seemed to affect my whole body. Finally I reached the point where I could not work. Then my kid neys became affected and prevented me from sleeping soundly. - “ Konjola was recommended and I decided to find out what it would do for me. In just a few weeks Konjola corrected my kidneys, . Then the aches and pains became less severe. One by one they disappeared and today I am free o f that dreadful affliction. My appetite is fine, and,.I sleep soundly, do my work daily and enjoy life and health once again. No wonder I am so enthusiastic about Konjola.” Konjola is not a ‘cure-all’—there is no such thing, but when taken for from six to eight weeks will produce amazing results. The countless thous ands o f indorsements o f Konjola have proven that it makes' good in even the most stubborn cases. . Konjola is sold in Cedarville, Ohio at Prpwant & Brown drug store, and by all the best druggists in all towns throughout this entire section. ■T NORTHUP HATCHERY W e are now hatching and can take your order* for HIGH GRADE BLOOD ^TESTED CHICKS Custom Hatching.1 Phone 13-16 Clifton Exchange R. F. D. 1, Yellow Springs, Ohio J .C .P E N N E Y C ® . 37 East Main St. Xenia* Ohio N ew Spring Goats Interpret the New Silhouette $ 9*90 $ 19.75 The Kjparste spring cost h the dominant keynote of the new spring wardrobe! With gay little silk frocks, or with [dresses that harmonize, you ^ may form your own ensem-f ^ ;ble andmake it just as grace- — ful and feminine as the new mode demands! Fas h 1on makes smart use of scarfs, capes, bows, andsmall details. Colors arenew andbecoming. For women, misses and ju niors. Your Type of Smorf Hat is Here! Both the woman who looks smart est in the brimmed hat that myste riously adds depth to her eyes . , . and the woman who looks more youthful and charming in the off- rihe-loiehead hat that sweepingry •frames her face , . ' . will find the type o f hat, she wants . . , here! Straws and fabrics in black, nalural, and bright spring shades. ^ o ecau s e o f im p ro vem en ts in its 60 h o rse p o w e re n g in e i M K i i m s m w sjmms Muchof Pontiac’s increased smoothness is due to tiav . . , If type rubber mountings which now (Insulate its engine from the frame* and toamore rigid crankcase which Msureamorepermanent bearingandcrank- i j f f t ?»gpment. Then too, smoothness Is intensified bythe Harmonic Balancerwhich S K ? ® ? ® !?rs!onLal crank8haft vibration. f S al£* Po,ntIa.C8 basic engine design en- develop 60 horsepower at moder- N®^'natterhowfastorhard SELJEr* Th®»f,n8ine runs smoothly and *\5* thiacary°n getreliabilityand equaUed, e*cePt in cars of much higher price. Furthermore, you get remarkablet.economy. Your own good judg- t,m t y o u f. *• b- rontlM . Shock ab*orber» *t0n4er& cault* [ ixtra toiK G*n* t PlanuvaltakHat minimum tot*. m . ^ m a i m s big six A m m JEAN PATTON
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