The Cedarville Herald, Volume 55, Numbers 27-52
GEDARVJH n IIERAf-P, F fijl*AY. HEPTKMBKR 10, 1032, *»IW T x w a o t r Why Buy Oil From Us? BECAUSE . . . *■". We earry only the Best, We have engineers charts specifying the proper oil for your machine, We carry complete stocks at all times. We train our employees to sell only the proper oil. We sell at the price you can afford to pay, THAT’S WHY! Tiolene — Mona Motor — Purol — Allvis THRIFTY BUYERS Try Our Wholesale 48c Per gal. & up. FINEST OILS . Department 1 THE CarrolUBinder . CO. 3 Convenient Stations No. 1— 108 E. Main St. No. 2—-N. Detroit St. No. 3-—Bellbrook Road 6 C. F. SELF BARBER SHOP (Located in Room Formerly Occupied by Service Hard ware Co.) 4 CIGARS,CIGARETTES,TOBACCO, SOFTDRINKS AND CANDY s'- ' . ' Pool and Hillards We Invite a Share of Your Patronage Main Street1, Cedarville , Ohio Sow Wheat This Fall The present price of wheat is not much incentive to sow wheat this Fall, or at least a very large acerage. Some Market forecasters are predicting $L00 wheat for 1933. With Seed Wheat, Fertilizer and Labor without any doubt all the cheapest they will ever be again in our time, this may be the appropriate time to sow the usual or lar ger acerage, providing of course that a High Grade Fer tilizer be used. " I HAVE WELCH, WUICHET, MIAMI, AND HAMM*S LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED CALL OR SEE ME ABOUT YOUR FERTILIZER FEED OF ALL KINDS IN STOCK CAR OF HOMINY FEED— LOW PRICE Best Grades of Coal In Yard—* Coal Advancing in Price I am buying Timothy Seed, Bring iii Samples. C. L. McGuinit TELEPHONE— South Miller St. Cedarville, O. *2 y m t. R e v e r s e P hone C harges _ MAIN 8W1CK Columbui.Qhlo E.&ButhSllMnc, CALL iREENE COUNTY FERTILIZER Tel. 810, Xenia, O. L o n d o n fio xn o B u s T o p i PATENT LEATHER 1 LEADS FOR FALL 1 Steam Driven Motor Truck on t London Street. ‘ Proparcd py National Geographic Society, Wualilnston, D. O.)—WNU Service, L ONDON’S latest bridge-inspired song ’ bit might be “Waterloo Bridge Is Falling Down.” The “ falling," however, is not acci dental, It Is an engineering Job. Tho bridge will be replaced by a-new span. Many travelers now are seeing Lon don from a 'bus top, where they enjoy watching perky messenger b*ys with their tin-can hats cocked on three hairs, the huge policemen, the sand wich men, and the clattering crowds of men and women on the streets. In a private, car the least snobbish feels himself aloof and superior. On a personally conducted tour-one Is only the pea tossed In the dishpan of a careless conductor’s rhetorif. In a taxicab even the very reckless can not refrain from watching the meter. But from a bus top one looks down, part and parcel of all he sees, under standing and being thrilled by a thou sand activities. It is true that one sees the cen turies without order or sequence; but that is as it should be in London, where today, tomorrow, and 1,800 years elbow each other companion* ably. Perhaps one leans over they rail to see a lordiing sprawled .at the wheel of a great car, all color and silver, on that Watling street which was one of the four thoroughfares by the aid of which the Romans held Britain; or to watch those who are to fly to Paris, stepping into the car that Is to carry them to the flying field at Croydon. Next, the bus passes a porter’s lodge in which a duchess Uves at the gates of the great house she can no longer afford to occupy.- Or the brass ti-inniile near the Marble arch, which marks the site of Tyburn tree, a com mon gallows away back in HOC. Or that'street o f pallid houses built by' n French architect that Napoleon’s of ficers might have fitting quarters when he had conquered England. Or the horse guards, wl^re massive sen tinels In scarlet and buckskin and sil ver bestride horses of black silk. One marvelsvat the horses more .than at the men. However do they train (them to stand so still? Reminders of the Past. Yonder is Lansdowne passage, lead ing from Piccadilly into Curzon street. The street Is the citadel of the high est fashion, lined with gloomy houses. A steel bar Is still' set- across the passage, that no highwayman may gal lop his horse through It to safety in the fields, as one formed the repre hensible habit- of doing a hundred years ago. / Nearby Is the Shepherd’s market, which Is In Its essentials what a shop ping district was in London in Dick Turpin’s'time, and a little public house Whose customers are almost wholly the Jeames Yellowplushes of today. A wealth of gossip about their masters might be gathered there by one ad-, uiltted to their Intimacy. Off Whitehall one may see the win dow through which n king walked on his way to the block. Over the rail of Hyde park one may glimpse the lit tle gravestones of the dogs’ cemetery j then hurriedly glance at the new Devon shire house, wherein apartments may be leased for 999 years at an incredible number of pounds the year. Trafalgar square is the natural center of London for the adventurer. It Is true that Charing Cross, a long stone's throw down the Strand, Is aq- cepfed as the geographical center, If there can be a geographical center of a map, which Is messed about as is that of London by the oxbow-bend of the River Thames. At any rate, the 69B square miles of the greater city include all parishes any part of which may be within 12 miles of ■ the cross, or of which the whole may be within 10 miles. /Going From Nelson's Column, But Nelson’s column, in Trafalgar square is the North pole to the visi tor’s compass. If he were able to mount to Nelson’s eminence, as stee plejacks sometimes do, and there re volve upon his heel, he would discover that each quarter turn would reveal a new aspect. Down Whitehall is the ancient City of Westminster, with the houses of parliament and the abbey, The Strand opens to Fleet street and the offices of the great newspapers. Over Covent garden, a bit more to lhe left, one might sight the Bank of England and the heart of the old Ro man city. Another turn left and the markets, the Charterhouse, the British museum. Left once more And the theater dis trict: Soho, where are the foreign res- tnurants beloved o f novelists, and the fashionable shopping districts. Just it hit more and clubland and Mayfair and n glance at Buckingham palace. Then Hyde park and the Admiralty, and the circle la complete, All reached best by busses. Trafalgar square Is a place of. peril ous delights. Eight streets debouch upon it, each filled with roaring traffic coming from unexpected angles, and made more perilous to an American by the English Insistence upon the left-hand tura. One leaps from safety island to safe ty Island across these streets, as If they were stepping stones In a torrent —omnibuses, steam lorries, donkey carts, limousines, tbe small, barn- swallowllke cars which taxation has throat upon English motordom, brew ers’ vans firawn by elephantine horses, screaming motorcycles with the latest editions. Once Trafalgar square was tbe king’s mews, where various monarchs stabled their horses. Honest artisans shaped weapons for English gamecocks In Cockspur street Fronting • on the square Is the national gallery, crammed with treasures of art Of ail the 1,500-odd churches In London, the visitor is apt to cajrry away the (post vivid memory of, St. Martln’s-ln- fhe-Fields. The gray and white and black pillars of Its- majestic portico gain added value, of course, when seen across the open square. In a little house which once Stood here, Bei^ Johnson wrote “Drink to Me Only with Thine Eyes," which some people-hold to Jbe one o f the finest ballads in the English language, though deprecating- the sentiment Heine and Ben Franklin and Charles Dickens have roomed close by. The Mall and Buckingham Palace. From Trafalga/, too, the visitor can peer through the' fine Admiralty arch down -the-Mall, at -the-farther'end-of- which stands Buckingham palace. Eventually he will discover .this to be a large and almost violently ugly stone-fronted building behind a tall wrought-lron fence, and that time Is wasted on It except during those stir ring, momenta when the soldier guard Is changed. Ho may recall that It was down the Mall that Charfes I walked to the headman’s block; and that it was named after the French game of pallte mallle. that Charles II played upon It . Across the square is the statue of Charles I, perhaps the finest equestri an figure in London, One bridges cen turies of English history by a glance at It Queen Eleanor's cross, first stood upQn this site, the twelfth—or was It the thirteenth?—cross erected by the sorrowing King Edward I to mark the places where her casket was set down tor the night on the long route from Lincoln to her tomb in Westminster. That was in the Thir teenth century, Much Is to be seen >hereabouts in the compass of a short walk before definitely embarking on. n cruise through London’s streets. A turn to the left leads to Malden lane, where Voltaire and Turner once lived, One may pause at Rule’s -oyster bouse for a snack, not because of hunger, but because this has been the resort of English actors since 1750. Fielding and Pope and Goldsmith used to fre quent It when it was “The Bedford Head’’ and the home of the Reunion club. A vast white-painted door, set with brass like the quarter-deck of a yacht, a populous bar behind which, two lively maids are busy, a great fire* under a marble mantelpiece. Lively Covsnt Garden. Just around the corner is Covent garden, once the convent garden of the abbey of Westminster, it has been the great market for fruits and vegetables ever since 1G34. A lively, sad, industrious place, In which the coster’s donkeys furnish the comic re lief, Under the great piazza, which was u century ago London’s most fash ionable walk, old women sit all sum mer long shelling peas. Something of a comedown from the patches and ruf fles, and the small swords and the snuff. It is to be feared the. Covent garden opera has somewlmt declined. At all events, when one visits the fine old house two jazz bands may be heard offering interminable tom-tonmitng for a horde of dancers. Here is Bow street and Its police station, where the scarlet waistcoats of the “Bow street runners” gave the world its idea of a uniformed police force—or so Bow street says. On the RuBsell street corner is Will's coffee house, where Dryden sat lu judgment on plays, and which is Just as it used to be, above the street level. Charles Lamb lodged at No. 20 Russell street and the National Sporting club, most aristocratic of boxing clubs, is at 43 King street At No. 4 York street De Qnlncey wrote his “Confessions." Half the charm of London is in lts history. KEEN KUTTER RAZOR STROP DRESSING By Mail—-2Bc box - SOOT REMOVER' Gleans flues. Prevents fires* Saves fuel. By mail, 8 oz. box 50e. KORN KURE~~Mighty Fne By Mail 26c bottle J. B. STRONG, 238 N. West St., Xenia, O. NOTICE OP APPOINTMENT In the battle for supremacy In fall footwear, patent leather 1ms again won out. -according to the findings of the shoe and leather style conference held recently in New York. As a matter o f fact, patent leather has risen to unprecedented heights since last fall when It was announced as » spring winner. The Paris stamp of approval, coupled with the vogue for black shoes, has hud much to do with the present status of patent letlier. It affords that dressier black shoe to take the place of colored or colored trim shoes when accessories matched the costume, With the vogue Tor black shoes, accessories harmonize rather than match. While sandals are the outstanding models for .summer, fall shoes will turn to oxfords, step-ins and pumps. with stltehlngs, perforations, and some openwork. Considerable patent and suede In combination Is predict ed. Lizard and alligator ln"~coinbIna- tlon with patent again shows signs of creeping In. • With the vogue for pntent leather trims and accessories,' hnt hands, hand hags, belts, shoes and even gloves, In troduced this spring, and fashion pre dictions running true to form, milady will fairly sclntllate from top to toe. Velvet Now Being Used for Hats and Turbans Now that the hent of summer Is in full blast women are thinking about furs and wools and velvets. They are not only thinking about velvet hats but are wearing them. French designers are using velvet for little turbans, small-brimmed bats and crowns of hats that liuve straw or other materials for briins. Blouiet Dark blue percale with small-white dots goes to make one of the newer blouses to be worn with o navy blue suit or separate skirt. \ o r « t Unknown Dietitians, say there are vitamlnes In hash, but It’s what they don’t men tion that worries us.—Philadelphia In ouirer. • True in Many Cases Many a modern man feels he wouldn't >e worth a cent to bis family If It vere not for life Insurance.—Atchison ■lobe. Wanted to Buy UsedElectric Wrier Si 3303 E. Third St., Dayton, Ohio m use N A TU R A L 6 A S for HEATING Magnetic Attraction — The-buream-of-standards—says that- Iron, nickel and cobalt are metals that fho ordinary magnets attract. i J ! . . LOANS AND . . .1 s * 5 . vINSURANCE . . . j | We Will Loan You money on Your § I AUTOMOBILE j | Farmers* Special Rate On | INSURANCE | A Saving Can Be Made on Insjar^T^ | ance by Calling Us CLEAN ECONOMICAL CONVENIENT Natural Gas is available- in this community as fuel for heating the home; for conking and for hot water heating. when cool, Autumn days come Natural *Gas' in the grate is a comforting thing to have. \ . . . we shall be glad to have, an opportunity to talk over the uses of Natural Gas with you. Call us over the telephone or come in and see us. The Dayton Power & Light Company . Xenia District E. H . H E A T H M A N , M a n a g e r iiHinimiiPi mi j ELDEN & CO., Inc •J E | Steele Bldg. Xenia, O. f | Phone 23 | Brazil’* Official Language Portuguese Is the official iuugimm o f Brazil, ft .Is the only l.niln Aliter lean country (n which that ts tin pro vailing language.—Pathfinder Maga zlne. ...... To Clean Coral Bead* Coral bends may be cleaned by dis solving a teaspoonful o f borax In a pint of warm water. Dtp .the coral and when dean put through tepid water. Printing for Particular people Good Printing . . . Inspires Confidence Estate of John B. Taylor, Deceased. A. H. Creswell has been appointed and qualified as Administrator of the estate of John B. Taylor, late of Greene County, Ohio, deceased. Dated this 3rd day of August, 1932. S, C. WRIGHT, Probate Judge of said County. When you send out a poorly printed circular, or any printed matter, you make a very bad im pression upon its recipient, When you send out a well printed circular, you in* spire confidence and resect. The quality o f your printed matter reflects the dignity and distinction o f your business enter prise. We do exert printing at reasonable prices! you have nothing to worry about when you place a ! printing order with u s---- the work will be turned ---- — v * * v* r? V A I k VV A i l i. i j t*f i p i j out promptly, correctly, and will be o f the kind that inspires, confidence, creates interest and im presses with its good taste and neatness. Give us your order the next time you need to haw some printing done, and we’ll prove that we live up to all the claims m this advertisement. TheHeraldJob. Shop The inerd you al FIFT1 ROSS BOA! Voters i to approve pay o ff an , ,teen town? constructs gymnasiun, school p m years and be .75 of a tion o f lift, "To fipars school pati C. N, Stud same. The, note by ti games but first year, the debt ha due Stucke pal and int< The folio . E. Lewis, Lackey, J. Loren Roge: gington, I. 1 J. Leroy S F. Sheley, , Roush. Fall Me Day At the fal bytery, held Church of i 13, Mr, Mai Prof, and received uni tery as a ci1 ministry, I ville Collcg' studies in t Seminary ot The Rev. sented- the i ing where t of GovingL and the Re\ o f Clifton, t The Pres! therian U. counties sui which is ero both the pat J u d g e Judge S. I posed at t>| judge of th | Coui'ts in t) filing on , ticket whs 1 to be no oj Judge’ Wrig primary wit! The only | Was Attormi Democratic i R, L. Gowdy COLUft GETS The Golur represented taking a stra governor. I'a places and street. Each after markin the voter dt-i1 box, The vo in the o ffic first installo published T i. ered mamif city. Roose two to one ^ lead over Go have been w Congressiona a week. Othc ing in other ] Antiocl Fron Miss Edna City, N. J., i lege, suiferc afternoon wl feet from a ( The girl eliir of the river is thought tl She wa-i tak pitnl where a broken pel LONDON B GET The state ing a ten p« to depositoJ Commercial don. A fifto paid ceveinl was closed n
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=