The Cedarville Herald, Volume 55, Numbers 27-52

CEDAKYKtE li«BAI-D,'FB:r*.VJ', f-EPTEMBER 23, 1932 cwwcinBs- w ar n er Regent SPR INGF IELD , O H IO # j f m c * o * /t * u H m r m n EXCLUSIVE SHOWING A T REGULAR ADM ISSION PRICES O N E W E E K Saturday S E P T , 24th Why Buy Oil From BECAUSE . . . . . We carry only the Best. We have engineers charts specifying the proper oil fo r your machine. • W e carry complete stocks at all times. We train our employees to sell only the proper oil. : W e sell atrthe price you can afford to pay. ----- THAT’S WHY! Tiolene — Mona Motor — Purol Allvis THRIFTY BUYERS Try Our W holesale 4 8 c Per galy. & up. > FINEST OILS D ep a r tm en t No. 1- THE C a r r o l l - B i n d e r CO. 3 Convenient Stations —108 E. Main St. No. 2— N. Detroit St. No. 3— Bellbrook Road 6 Do Fertilizer! From a survey conducted in Ohio, Indiana and Michigan 4541 -Farmers answered— YES. W ith wheat figured at 40c per bushel they all claim* ed it paid to use FERTILIZER as their yield was from 8 to 11 Bushels per acre more than where they did not Fer- tilize, Lowest CASH PRICE in the County on 16 per cent and 20 per cent Acid Phosphate and all mixed goods DELIVERED TO FARM . 20 Per Gent $19.00 • 16 Per Cent $16.00 Call and see me before buying. FEED OF ALL KINDS Best Grades of A ll Kinds of Coal Car Kentucky Block just in at $4 .25 per ton. Car Number 3 Pocahontas on Track next Monday, Sept 26th at $5 .75 per ton. ■ *» ■ If you want Coke or Anthracite I will have it. ALL COALS AD VAN C ING IN PRICE Call or See Me Before Buying C.L. McGuinn TELEPHONE— 3 S ou th M ilte r St. - C ed a rv ille , O . - HORSES S cows IIJ m I R e v e r se : P hone changes „ .. in ortiCR TtolttffilWi.QhlO CALI. IREENB COUNTY FERTILIZER Tel. 810, Xenia, 0 . GANG CHIEF FINDS OLD TIMES CHANGED Learns Chicago No Longer Gunman’s Paradise. Chicago,—Louis (Two Gun) Alterle, who teii years ago was one of the headliners io the Chicago gangland, which then was beginning to reach menacing proportions as one o f the evils following in the trail of prohibi­ tion, returned to the scenes of his gangland conquests to find that times have changed, tie found that the state’s attorneys and courts d° dot bow down to the gangsters and that now 'they more or less “ treat ’em rough.” “I want to get out of Chicago and stay out as soon as possible,'' said .Alterle following his acquittal on a charge o f kidnaping.v “Times have changed since 1 was last through a court appearance." Tried for Kidnaping. Alterle and Charles (Buster) -Brown, A minor hoodlum, were tried on a charge o f kidnaping Edward Dobkln, alias Shamus O’Brien, a bookmaker, fo r $9,000 ransom. The victim refused to Identify the hoodlums, which weak­ ened the prosecutions’ case to such an extent that, there was no corrob­ oration for the testimony o f Qua Sanger, one of the gang, who turned l state’s evidence, and they were ac­ quitted. After Dion O’Bannion, one of the first o f the gang leaders.of the prohi­ bition era, was slain in"his. floral shop across from the Holy Name cathedral, Alterle, his first lieutenant, publicly announced that he was going to “ shoot i t out” with the killers o f his chief. Gangland guns blazed fre­ quently in those days and soon Alterle disappeared. At first it was thought he had been taken for a ride, but later he turned up as the owner of a dude ranch near Denver, Colo. •Alterle, who had many times/Walked in and out o f the police stations and the courts when he was arrested ouf* lag tits popularity as'a headline gang­ ster, apparently had retired frbm his booze-activities while in good health. Several times he was reported as being a motion picture cowboy;. Finds Time* Have, Changed. “ We never had much trouble in the old days,"’ said Alterle. “When we got pinched we either. Went out on a forthwith writ or bond was scheduled at once by the handy bondsman. “Seems- though that times have changed In this town. When I was extradited here on th is. case I had to lay in Jail for quite some time before I was able to get ont on bond. Plenty o f negotiating had to be done before a bond was obtainable that was satisfactory to the courts and the state’s attorney. “Bond In my time was $5,000 or $10,000 on most anything but mur­ der. Just think o f it—1 had to get a $30,000 bond—and a good one, at that —before they let me out on this kid­ nap case." Attorney William Scott Stewart who had represented Alterle before he left Chicago, had considerable diffi­ culty in explaining to his returned client why the case, which was ad­ mittedly weak, had not been dismissed without the formality of a trial That would have been done without ques­ tion In the old days, Alterle told his lawyer. And Alterlemoaned some more after the Jury returned the acquittal ver­ dict He wanted to return to Denver at once. Judge John Prystalskl, who Is ta.be the next chief justice of the Criminal court, said otherwise. A charge o f conspiracy growing out of the same cAse must be tried, the Judge said, before Alterle can leave. -mi W rath a t Pranksters ' Restores Man’s Voice Port Jervis, N. Y.—William Jones, fifty years old, still la talking about how he recovered hla voice, which he lost in an Illness a year ago. Know­ ing that Jones was speechless, some boys who touched off a large fire- cracked just'behind him on Monday were shocked when he jumped and. bade them be quiet. Jn such a way which showed he has fergotten none o f his vocabulary. Physicians said that the fright and the jar of the explosion bad restored bis speech. Strangled by Swing Youngstown, Ohio.—When a clothes­ line on which she was swinging be­ came entangled about her neck, four- year-old Laverne Blucher strangled to death. Offers “Black Light” to U. S. for Defense Dayton, Ohio.—Gtsbert L. Boa- sard, Inventor, believes he has In “ black light" a useful means o f defense should United States be­ come Involved in another war, “ Experiments have been carried on to the point where a person hiding In a field on a dark night can be located by these invisible light rays, or ’black light,” ’ said Bossard, “ This Is . accomplished by the use of apparatus lit the hands o f an observer, In this manner the navy can detect the presence o f enemy ships at night. This form o f national defense lies In utilizing the light rays Which lie outside the visible spectrum.* More than 100 patents have been issued to Bossard In Gils country and abroad. KEEN KUTTER RAZOR S tR O P DRESSING By M ail—-25 c box SOOT REMOVER Cleans flues. Prevents fires, Saves fuel. By mail, 8 oz. box 60C. K O RN K U R E— M igh ty Fne By Mail 206 bottle J . B . STRONG , 288 N. West St., Xenia, O. TO BE COMMITTED W. C. T. U. NOTES Sponsored by Cedarville W. C, T. U. „ i ] *It is high time that responsibility- for the organised rice and crime which threatens our sodal fabric be placed squarely where it belongs. Is prohi­ bition to blame, as certain wet metro­ politan dailies end certain wet leaders, are declaring 1 I f prohibition is to blame for the gangster menace, then the Ten Commandments are to blame for murder, theft, and adultery. Let us make no mistake. Not the law, but the bitter, determined oppir. ition to the law, is responsible for the conditions which have grown up. The influence of the wet press and the we’ leaders, in the interest o f disrespect and contempt for the Eighteenth A- mendment and the prohibition laws, has probably been more responsible than any other factor in creating con­ ditions In which racketeers and gang­ sters thrive. In addition to the cam­ paign of organized opposition carried, on against the law, has been the fail­ ure o f so-called decent, respectable citizens io observe and obey the law. Every business man who has bought contraband’ liquor from a bootlegger during the last twelve years, every so­ ciety woman who has served illicit in her home, every banker who has fi­ nanced bootlegging operations, every citizen who has failed to exert his full influence for the qhservance and enforcement of the law, has a ‘direct share of responsibility for the under­ world. . It is an old trick ,of those who are ..interested in perpetuating the liquor traffic to encourage'and promote law violations in dry territory, to hamper enforcement by every method, foul pr fair, at their comthand, and all the ^ime to' keep up the cry that the law can’t be enforced. This is done in the hope and expectation that those opposed to the legalized liquor traffic will become disgusted with violations, take up the refrain of the wets, “ The law can’t Le enforced.” and join them in a repeal movement. It used to work n local option days, and now we are witnessing it staged on a national scale. The antics'of both political party conventions, beyond doubt, did encour­ age, law-violators more (ban anything that lias happened in. many months. Bootleggers and their friends inter­ preted them to mean that it makes no difference henceforth whether the aw is obeyed o t not. It's the old jtory: “Give the booze interests and heir friends an inch and they’ll take a mile.” ' * * ' ** Our recent gr& t party conventions jave spoken once again on the ques lion of Prohibition; ’Both o f them mye bpwed the knee to their real masters. They are subservient to £ing Alcohol, the great destroyer of ife, liberty and happiness. We look no longer on either of the great parties as true protectors of the American home. Their acts, pro­ claim their intention to turn again to wallowing in the mire; You cannot change the leopafd’s spots or the low standards o f political parties under our present party system. The promised land of human liber­ ty, social, economic and-moral/is the other side o f Jordan. We are still in the wilderness, There is soon to be heard a call to the colors for the greatest advance in democratic gov­ ernment the world has'ever known. It will be a moral advance. Demons will be cast out of our democracy and with them.political parties ,whose days are nearly numbered. • * * —The Congregationalist. Dr. John Watchorn, chairman of the Philadelphia Methodist Conference Board of Temperance, Prohibition and Public Morals, said, “ If prohibition cannot succeed, the dream. o f self- government is shattered. The govern­ ment itself will have failed, The real issue is laW or anarchy.” Mrs, Mary Bickford, 55^ who slash­ ed herself in numerous places with a knife at her home in Eleazer a week ago in a suicide attempt, was adjudg­ ed mentally unbalanced and commit­ ted to the Dayton State hospital by Probate Judge S, C, Wright. She is to be taken to the hospital as soon as her .condition permits. RAIL SPLITTERS AND OLD TIME FIDDLERS HERE TONIGHT 4 The Greene County Rail Splitters, Old Time Fiddters and Radio Stars will appear at the Opera House here this Friday evening. There will be specialty and novelty acts wtih the old time music. The proceeds go for the benefit o f the needy children in the public schools. Adplts, 15c; chil­ dren, 10c, FOR RENT— Modern six Room House. J. M . M cM ILLAN For Sale:- Farm Produce, Cream, Eggs, Milk, 20c gallon. Bring contain­ ers. Dunkls Farm, Kyle Road. - E. B. MILLS •MiiiimiiiniiMiiittiftftMHitimimiiiiikmtMitmiliiiiMMiiM L I V E S T O C K # R A I S E R S • Consign YoUr Livestock—for bale “EVERY WEDNESDAY The Springfield Live Stock Sales Co* Sherman Ava Msln885-J Springfield, Ohio FOR SALE— Windfall apples. P. M. Gjllilan Wanted—To purchase timothy seed, red clover seed, mammoth clover seed. Call us fo r prices. Dewine and Ham- man, Yellow Springs, O. Phone 153. EARN SUBSTANTIAL INCOME Selling Peany-a-Dsy Accident end Sickness policies. Also dollar a year Burglar policy. Write 815-KA, Guar­ antee Title Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio. FOR SALE— Young Hampshire Boars ready for service, Howard Ar­ thur. Phone 12-178. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate o f John B. Taylor, Deceased A, II, Creswell has been appointed and qualified as Administrator o f the estate o f John B. Taylor, late of Greene County, Ohio, deceased- > Dated this 3rd day o f August, 1932. S, C. WRIGHT; Probate Judge of said County. TIME TO RE-RO DO YOU KNOW: TH A T a roof can be purchased cheaper from us? TH A T your carpenter is your neighbor and needs your work? TH AT you will pay for labor and material only to amount used? TH AT no “padded” area js figured in order to quote a lower price per square? TH AT we will inspect your roof without ch&rge-? TH A T if you arc worthy o f credit we w ill carry your account 'more cheaply than an outside roofing contractor? TH AT we are one community and your interest is our interest? THEN ! , < ‘ * ■ ,. • -L e t’s forget---Europe” and take care of-things at home. .W e as­ sure you we can give you a better roof for less money. Come in,; « ■ * . . * . ■ • ’ > * o or give us & ring, and we w ill call and measure your roof and '' N , give you an estimate. Let us prove it to you. C. T. &F. E. EWRY. Phone 214 Cedarville, Ohio Good Printing Inspires Confidence 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 us----- the work will be turned 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 have some printing done, and we’ll prove that we live up to all the claims in this advertisement. TheHerald Job Shop i

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