The Cedarville Herald, Volume 54, Numbers 1-26
t m m > 4 x m m i m m & > v$m & % m c m m m m , %m T H E C E D A R V I L L E H E R A L D EDITOR AND PUBLISHER R a ter td a t th e Poet Office, Cedarville, Ohio , October 8 1 ,1 8 8 7 , «• M cond c law matter. 9 F R ID A Y , DECEMBER 2 8 , 1 9 3 0 GREETING THE CHRISTMAS SEASON Aga in w e g ree t th e Christmas Season. W e a ll have wit nessed the passing o f another year. In m any ways it h a s been a yea r unlike what the present generation has experienced the past ten years. W e have had other years when more people could en joy the spirit o f the season than w ill b e possible this y ea r but there should be nothing to 'h in d e r spreading cheer f among those in need. W o rd s convey sentiment but only by your actions in a helping way caft you enter into the true teach ing o f the Christmas Season, L e t us hop e there can be happ i ness in every home. T h e H era ld extends to its fam ily p f read ers and patrons greetings f o r a Merry Christmas and a brighter, happi'er and prosperous N ew York . DEPOSITOR’S MONEY WORTH LITTLE A depositor -in one o f the W a sh ing ton C. H . banks is so dissatisfied with the manner O . C . G ray is operating the State Bank Department, a letter o f protest was written to the Ohio State Journal, In it the statement was made that costs to de positors in the settlement o f the two defunct banks now has reached $ 1 5 ,0 0 0 , and the end is not in sight. The editor o f the Journal comments on the letter with a' statement from M r. G ray , who justifies.the cost thus fa r . This w ill be unpleasant news to several thousand deposi to r s o f the tw o wrecked institutions tha t has upset the private and public financial structure in tha t county. The depositors: evidently nad no protection through M r. G ray 's department before th e closing o f the banks, and indications are not encour ag ing at this time- th a t'th e 'sa lvage ’w ilFbe"worth more than the cost o f administration. CRESWELL HURDLES ALL HANDICAPS The H e ra ld voices the sentiment o f the great ma jority of people M this county in extending congratulations to Paul H. Creswellj who soon becomes United States Marshal fo r the Southern District in Ohio, with headquarters in Cincinnati. Tht nomination sent to the Senate by President Hoover, was con firmed last Saturday and he will enter upon his duties the first o f the year. The appointment is one highly to be prized and one o f the best fede ra l plums in the district and those w h o are acquainted with ,M r. C reswe ll know he will serve th e government with hoqor and distinction. H e was the outstanding candidate from the beginning but his appointment was not accomplished until m any handicaps were hurdled. ? H e w a s strongly opposed by the Cincinnati gang politi cians, the Cooper state mach ine and the Daugherty-Pemberton element in the' Seventh Congressional district. His last opposi tlon naturally had to come from his own county from a woman's organization tha t poses as interested in prohibition. It so happened th a t this same element has figured in politics in the coun ty in past years but the influence in .W a sh ing ton as a pro te s t to M r. Creswell’s appointment, had about as little weighl as it does in this county in th ings political, especially when the voters learn ju s t where the guiding hand, comes from . The Senate spurned the action o f the feminine politicians and gave its approval to the-President’s nomination. EVERYBODY HEDGING ON TAX ISSUE W e read With some^amusement the discussion of the pro posed change in Ohio tax laws under the classification plan As - adopted b y the electors a year ago . ... Previous to th a t election fa rm and home owners w ere ap pea led to in behalf, o f classification th a t it would reduce the tax - burden on real estate. Various organizations sponsored the change no doubt in the best o f fa ith . The other sid£ o f the-tax discussion now is th a t probab ly fa rm land and home owners 1can expect little re lief. W h a t has become o f all the, schemes proposed to catch hidden property fo r ta x purposes? •Income tax has been proposed as we ll as a sales ta x . Both are meeting strong opposition, business men do not" care to become a collection agency fo r Ohio tax spenders. Those sup porting income t a x say farm ers will not be compelled to pay th e ta x as their income is not near the limitation f o r exemption. It m ay not be now but if prices ever improve on fa rm products the fa rm e r w ill be caught. I t is an old trick being put over on farm ers a t a time when income is something almost Unknown. City people , where hundreds o f thousands live .on a salary ftnri^ nirlri—WaVfr-i fn r^p -gempti nn would be caught fo r ninety-five per cent o f the ta x raised. Thus Income ta x does not suit the city dweller. . • Manufacturers and merchants o f cdurse do not want it and ~ iH s hinted thE tnn ines o f ^ om is ^ iis t^ b ^ 'in C fe a s e d or Wages pa id labor and clerks must be reduced . Meantime everyone seems to be trying his best to find some new way to raise more taxes bu t no bne suggests a reductioh 'ih tfie cost ot state govern ment. F U R N I T U R E REPAIRED sad UPHOLSTERED At Prices In Reach Of Everybody CharlesHHoemer RHONE Cedarville 148 Res. Address Cor. Monroe A L ike Sts., Xenia "Just Twtnty Fnm plantain . ftt (Hit GCSG 1 m . St Br*nftln. PtH. A . ri*n. Msr. Stop at the Hotel Havlin in Cincinnati and enjoy aU the comforts o f home. Spacious, well-ventilated rooms, courteous service and hospitality o f the highest degree, RATES ! Room,with running water, 32.00, ' Single with bath, 32.50 to 35.00 Double with bath, |4.00 to $7.00 A , Special Croup Rate" GARAGE SERVICE , HOTEL HAVUN* CINCINNATI, 0*10 jna<M ( / A r t h u r B r i s b a n e Important Questions j PreWKtiea I ! k g a i r < Sewed in a Roar Skim " Strange Motions [ Let those that torment themselves with foolish fears, and permit their fears to interfere with business and the return o f prosperity, ask them selves these questions: . Have we not had depressions b e -i fore? Did wo not then think that the, end. o f the world was coming? Did not men go about shaking their heads, ’ saying: j “ Yes, but "this is a different kind o f i depression; wp never had anything 1 like this.” Improve Hfhmt liMNdbnd tore Way to Stop (A, ISM. Wwtew m BS s * *•** i nwtuutte V •*■*-*• ft .~> #*■' -re- SrWS - - 111 • .gat us«d extensively on eoldfr*****jdoapand t foot wider tka* t| s j» ir ts l * lata in the season whan the weather* frame. I f the was*** Is piewd ** th* pile ia this layer* and tramped evenly, It w ill furnish a rasdsfst* ply o f heat for a long b i t 3 * loosely tramped pll* m .maimre p*e- duee* higher temperatures fo r shorter periods, , • Where a pit hotbed is built, mack i j mwr wt m ne m muan M U ifu S has moderated. A good heavy grad* »-, o f muslinshould be used and it needs Famous Prescription Bring* to he largeenoughtoprovide anover- Almost Instant Relief lap of from 6 to 12 inches on all LqCAL ; * ■ .... . sides. Night coughs, or coughs caused by „ .. , . . . I a cold or iiTitateii throat, can now bo u ^ or the ‘ “ “ f W * o { , t stopped within 16 minutes by a doc- * ds * gpod *™wrc* * 18 p u w w , tor’s prescription called Thoxinp ing « « * » 8* ™ * which works on an entirely different manure » piled near the hotbeds fo r are prepared by excavatiag the «9® to FOB BA ICaJ# Hogs. The Cedar Association Those that have been in business treasonable length o f time recall the head-shaking, meaning and groaning o f 1807. Haven’t there been good times since 1807? Didn’t business "pick up,” to put it mildly, after 1S07 ? Hayen’t we since then added hundreds o f billions to the country's wealth? And haven't we got everything now that we ever had? , Could anything be more stupid than talk and action o f a. kind harmful to business, to banks and other institu tions upon which the prosperity o f u s all and every man’s employment de pend absolutely? The country discufeses the decision of Federal Judge William T. Clark, who pays that prohibition isn't, legal because the people didn’t pass on it. Judge Clark is interesting to mil lions o f men and women, although they may not know it, fo r he is one of the famous O. N. T. Clark thread family. Judge Clark’s decision that prohibi tion isn’t legal will be reversed by the Supreme court, probably. Everything is comparative, even sorrow. The head o f a great bank in New York tells o f a client “ with the saddest face I have ever seen in my life.” . ' One year ago. this client was worth at least sixty millions o f dollars. And .oday his fortune is reduced to not nore than twenty million dollars. ’And you can’t imagine,” said the ranker, “ how that man puffers.” Ivan-the Terrible, ezar o f Russia, .o subdue those that oppose him, in dented queer punishments. \ • On one occasion he had a bishop .owed up in a hear akin, and the bish ip, in his bear skin, thrown to a pack i f half-starved dogs. The bishop suffered horribly, o f course, but only ta t a few minutes. His total suffering amounted to fa r less than the sufferings o f some that have seen thrir fortunes and the re sults o f their life work gradually tak- jn from them, hit by bit, during the past year. Harvard sends reassuring pews about this grand old earth, on which men have lived, according to Profes sor Osborne, for forty million years, and .on which geologists, physicists, astronomers, tell us we shall continue to live for at least a million million years more. _______ ■ Our strangcTrolfibg domicile is one with many motions. We all know that it turns around on its axis, rolls around the sun in 365 days . .and is traveling through space accompany ing the sun on its journey. But most -o£--u&-forgct~-about-the~niany--other- motions of the earth. We are glad to learn from Harvard that a “ recent mysterious shaking of the earth’s crust was a movement back and forth, rhythmical and regu lar, six seconds to each swing.”j move, it moves only two ten-thou sandths o f an inch in either direction, the motion continuing for many days. We should be very grateful that lit tle human microbes can be safe on this whirling globe, twenty-five thou- and miles around, as heavy as though it were made o f solid steel, with hot fire under our feet, and absolute zero, more than 400 degrees below freezing, all around us. Mr. Cutter, president o f the United Fruit company, says that we did a business last year with Latin-Amerioa of more than two thousand million dol lars, whereas we ought to be doing a business of ten thousand million dol lars. In the Caribbean countries, says Mr. Cutter, we reach fewer than 20 per cent o f the possible customers, American business men, with the Department o f Commerce leading, should Itiok into that ten billion dollar possibility. We need the business. France hps banking troubles am} deals with doubtful bankers in a dras tic fashion. Thirty-five French bank ers are in jail, and 185 under govern ment investigation. Germany has found a way to make danger signals plain even for the color blind. Drivers approaching a rnilroa} track need not( know the difference be tween white and red. The‘ warning comes In flashes. While the way is dear ft white light flashes fo rty times a minute, When a train approaches # tod light to turned ,on the flashes eighty times to the minute. The train automatically switches the red and white lights on and off. f o r D o c o w l i o r 2 8 - BEVJIWi THE PATTERN OF CHRISTIAN LIVIHO G oumw the X t —i* t thi« miaa b« In you, which was *1** la Christ J«- KUL. PRIMARY TOPIC—Hew Jsrus WsnU Us to Uvs. JUNIOR TOPIC—Sosos Xxamplss or Christina 14vine, • INTBRJUBDIATIS ATTOMOTIQKTOP- IC—-lesson s from the Lives o f Others, YOUNG PXSOPUB AND ADULT TOP IC—Fellowship w ith Christ. ^ For senior apd adult desses two good methods o f review msy be used : The first m*y b e designated cUjmcter study o f the principal persons men tioned In the lessons of the quarter; namely, . Zactiarias and Elisabeth, Maty, 'Simeon and Anna, Peter, Thomas, Eaccbteufc, Stephen, Saul, and Timothy. In using this method assignment Should be made the week before. The second method may he designated t h e . summary method In which to* salient facts should be notea foUowed wlth the leading teach ing. In this case also, assignment should b e mad* a week ahead- Lesson for October'5. The parents o f John the Baptist were noted for thetc godliness. Zachn- rias means “Jehovah, bath' .remem bered.” •' Elisabeth means “ covenant maker.’*'' Every Indication Is that this plons couple wrought together for God. John the Baptist was a great man. Much can be expected o f a child horn of such parents and brought up in such a home. Lesson for October 12. God chose Mary ‘ to receive the greatest honor ever conferred upon a human being. To fill this place of honor meant exposure to suspicion as well as much suffering and hardship. Lesson for October 19. The ability o f Simeon and Anna to discern the Messiah was due ‘ to a special revelation o f the Indwelling Holy Spirit, not merely because they were pure in hearfc The grace which they possessed Is available to every believer. / Lesson for October 29. The believer experiences a vital .con flict going on within. This conflict is due to the fact that he was once horn o f .the flesh and afterward horn of the Spirit Victory over the flesh is to be obtained through the power of the Indwelling Holy Spirit Lesson for November 2. Peter through over-weanlng confi dence fell, even denying his Lord. The occasion o f his denial .was the sifting to which Satan subjected him. Through the prayer o f Jeeus Christ he was restored. Lesson for November 9. Thomas fa everywhere presented In the Scripture* as o f a skeptical mind, but he was an honest doubter. The Lord Is pleased to be put to the test. Ko honest skeptic has ever remained In darkness, Lesson for November 19. The centurion's faith In Christ brought healing to a very dear ser vant. Genuine faith links man with Omnipotence, • ' Lesson for November 29., A noble young ruler failed to get eternal life because his heart rested on earthly riches. Christ demand* man’s whole heart Lesson for November 30. — igftcchaeus-dlit-not-«ltow-dtfllcume«- ^ W e they are .torted ha* a quick double action, it relieves Fermentation usually start* at once the irritation and goes direct to the ? " d in, \ few, da*8 ^ W l internal cause. toady to place m the hotbeds. y Thoxine contains no harmful d r u g s , ^ *^e. ” !an,ur* is, ^ ^ is pleasant tasting and safe for the, ®uv*?ce hotbeds, hp declares, it should to keep him from seeing the Lord. The sight of the Lord moved him to repentance. This is always true. He jiroved the genuineness of hla repent- ance by making restltutldh. Lesson for Dsosmbsr 7. Stephen, while called to minister in the'temporalities “o f the church, wit nessed o f Christ In the energy o f the Holy Spirit. He sealed his testimony with bis blood. To those who are faithful unto death a crown o f l(fe shall he given, Lseton for Dsesmbsr 14. The sight of Jesus Christ trans- .formed.,ganU-fh* savage.periecutoi into a most ardent witness for Christ, Lesson for December 21, Through the faith o f a godly*mother and grandmother, Timothy was nur tured tor Godl Careful home train ing Is rewarded with pious Children. fa Communion With God As long ,as we dare to think that the secular life must be a separate existence from' the spiritual, that earthly engagement* cannot be ful filled in uninterrupted communion with GOd, Just so long are we living outside the purposes o f God; contradicting the majesty o f our true nature* and deny ing the efficacy o f the gospel o f the Lord Jesus,- -Prebendary H. W* Webb- Pfploe. The Faith In Gad’s Eloct t Neither fear, neither, danger, neither yet doubting, nor backsliding can ut terly destroy and quench the faith of God's elect, bat that always there re- malneth with them some root and spark of faith, hnwbeit in thelr aiigulsh they neither feel nor can discern the same.—John Knox, Victory Victory over sleep in the atornlng* watch may mean victory sit day.— Lee, The gross cash Income of Ohio farmers for the first 11 months in 1830 was 20 per cant leas than in 1020. Bxsisiitiitg Pftysicisn • Every Wsdnesday Phene, Center Hf-W v r a vt k (AF amity Remedy fer Domcsito Adanaisiratkm) , Mm P&fnOmt 3S& Ko, Fountain Avt., whole family. Guaranteed to g iv e ’ be placed in pile* from 10 to 14 inches a depth o f 18 to 24 iadbee. The f i t hi slightly larger than the frame o f the hotbed and it is well drained. Manor* is packed in the p it in thin layer* until the manure is 12 to 18 (aches dew . Special precaution is taken te see that the corners are well tamped, better and quicker relief fo r cough* or j sore throats than anything you have! ^ ever tried or you can have your rnoney ' back. 35c, 60c, and $1.00 bottle*, Sold by Richard ’3 Drug Store and all other good drug stores. THE S. K, Undrained areas, though small, sap the fertility o f the soil in the drained areas. Sometimes a single line o f tile, cosintg no more, than the profits } from the first season’s crops, will drain such an area. A run-down, emaciated condition in sheep, a lack o f color hi the skin and mucous membranes, and often tlie development o f scours and diarrhea, are all symptoms indicating the pre sence o f intestinal parasites. Machines have been developed with which it'is possible to move trees 35 to 50 feet high. Trees 100 feet high have been successfully moved. Grows Early Truck Crops With Hotbeds Plant Growing Structures Help Produce Vegetables To Meet Early Market " Demands 11 Early maturity of several vege table crops grown for the early mar ket may be obtained with the use of coldframes or hotbeds, says E. B. Tussing, extension specialist in vege table gardening at the Ohio State University. Hotbed and coldframe structures, he points out, are best located conven iently fo r the workmen, near a good supply o f water, and sheltered by a windbreak. Such structures need to be located where they will receive the 'maximum amount o f sunshine in the early season. A well drained site is necessary. Glass or muslin covers are frequent ly used on hotbeds and coldframes, he states. But during, extremely cold weather it is beat to provide addition al protection by using rye straw mats, burlap, or loose straw. Glass covers are the most durable and if properly cared fo r will last from 20 to 25 years. YEAR’S msmmm - ./IT ® ' - l The Cedarville Herald ' t a x n mat xrom w to zt>years, * * * * * * to* y * to* to* to* y Muslin covers, according to Tussing, AREMARKABLEVALUE! \ $7.50 Allowance Made on Yonr 018 Battery Jean Patton Ford Sales and Service * * * * - ■ . ■ • ■ * Cedarville, Ohio Open S
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