The Cedarville Herald, Volume 56, Numbers 27-51
Local and Personal Mr. and Mrs. G. E, Masters bad for their guest the past week their sister- in-law, Mrs. Helen Masters,.of Gin einnati, Q. Mr. W. W. Galloway left Wednes day night for Chicago on a business trip. Mrs, Margaret Milroy and daugh ter, Mrs. May Aiken, spent a few days days at the Century o f Progress Ex- position the past week. Masters Pieere McCorkell and Robert Richards accompanied Mr, Emery lliff hack to Chicago and had the pleasure o f spending a few days at the Exposition. Mr. Ernest Post, and Miss Elsie and Clark Post, were visitors at the Chicago Century of Progress Exposi tion for several days. Reed Martin Weimer is the guest of his Aunt Anna Boyd, Harry and Ethyl Shaffer, of Xenia, this week. CEDARY1LLE HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 4 ,1 t t t 1 ( Church Notes iH lI IM m iM lIllin u lu .i... ..,!.................. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH C, A, Hutchison, Pastor Sunday School, 10 a. m. P. M. Gil- lilan, Supt, Church Service, 11 a. m. Epworth League, 7 p. m. Several o f the Epworth Leaguers will be at tending Epworth League Institute next week. Tom Kureth o f Toledo, Ohio, who is a special friend of Mr. Sweet. The bridesmaid is Miss Mary Ruth Wham, class o f '30 and of Carter, Illinois. The wedding march was played by Mr. Clyde Hutchison, Jr., class of ’33. Mrs. Robert Jacobs, class of '28 and a pro fessor o f Education in Cedarville Col lege sang two numbers. killed due to wreddees driving on part o f the dafeedeet. It is also si leged Mrs. Paries had been drinking and that liquor « m being transport ed, Coroner R. L. Haines gave a re port o f accidental death. Fragments of ,a bottle found in the car by deputy sheriffs who investigsted were saic to have been used for alcohol. UNITED PRESBYTERIAN Ralph A. Jamieson, Minister Sabbath School, 10 a. m. Supt. J, E. Kyle, Preaching, 11 a. m. Theme: “Whom Should We FollowT” Y, P, C, U., 7:30 p. m. Subject, “How far does nature reveal God?" Leader, Wilda Auld. No evening preaching service thru August. No Mid-Week service during Au gust. A daughter was horn to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Gordon at the McClellan Hospital in Xenia, Tuesday.'The little one has been named Jean. Both mother and babe are doing fine. j ~ r ~ Miss Clara McMillan of Dea Moines, Iowa, and Miss. Mary Margaret Mc Millan of this place are attending the Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago. Miss Helen Cushwa, who has been spending the summer with her uncle, Mr. C. N. Stuckey, has returned to her home in Martinsburg, W. Va. Miss* CUshwa is a member of the school faculty in that city. Mrs. Reed Pringle of Cedar Gardens, Dayton, visited Mrs. mer, Monday. Lawn Wei- The Misses Carrie Rife, Ora Hanna and Lois Estle of Clifton, have re turned home after spending several days visiting the Century of Progress Exposition. , Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Flatter en tertained . members of the Corry family Tuesday. Mr. Wilson Hanna and family of Hagarstown, Ind., have been visiting here among relatives. MrJand Mrs. J. E. Turnbull moved fne past’ week to-the Murdock apart ment, ion West Xenia avenue. The property in which they have resided has been sold, to Miss Etta Owens, Mrs. Margaret Work went to Chi cago Monday to spend the week visit ing the World's Fair, with friends. The Y. P. C. U. o f the United Pres byterian Church held a Covered Dish supper at Lakewood Beach Thursday evening. . A group o f girls enjoyed a ing trip for several days it camp- Syca- more Park Camp along the Little Miami River. Those present were Clarence Ferguson, Pauline Ferguson, Marie Collins, Jean and Billy Kyle, Jean Ferguson, Evelyn Thordson, Katheryn Ferguson, Mr. and Mrs. David Kyle chaperoned the party. UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH ■ Clifton, Ohio Robert H. French, Pastor Sabbath School, 10 a. m. Omer L. Sparrow, Supt. Lesson: The Book of Ruth, (A little preparation at home means a lot more good from the lesson on Sabbath. Try reading the Book o f Ruth Saturday.) Morning Worship, 11 a. °m. The subject o f the Pastor's sermon will be 'Driftwood," base,d on the warning against drifting, found in Hebrews 2 : 1 . The Young People’s Society will meet in the church at 7 p. m. Henry Kyle will lead the discussion on the topic, “How Far Does Nature Reveal God.” The Community Vesper Service will be held on the lawn of the Presby terian Manse, at 7:45 p. m. This week and next, due to the ab sence of their Pastor, the members of the Clifton Presbyterian Church are to be our guests. We heartily wel come them to all our services, and we invite all others in whose churches there are no services, as well as those in who have no church home. “ Come, let us worship together." The Congregational _Program Com mittee will meet Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock, in the Pastor’s study. .. Temperance Notes.. Sponsored by Cedarville W. C. T. U. United Christian Forces of Ohio, Program every morning over Station WAIU, Columbus, Ohio, 9 to 9:15 a, m. Every one having a radio should hear these programs. I f you do not have a radio go and share a neighbors, MRS. HAZEL BARBER GIVES UP SCHOOL POSITION Mrs, Haze! Barber, who has taught the sixth grade in the public schools for several years, has hied her resig nation with the local board. Mrs Barber with her husband and family moved recently to Alliance, Ohio. COLLEGE NEWS Mr, Forest Nagley, wife .and son, of Middletown, are spending the week here as guests of the former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. C* Nagley. Mr. Nagley is connected with the Re- scriteh Department of the American Rolling Mill Company. “ The Golden Rule Circle” Sunday School Class of the M. E. Church, en tertained the members o f the Men’s Bible Class with a covered dish sup per on the church lawn Thursday evening July 27. After a bountiful.re past a short business meeting was held, conducted by the president, Mrs. Masters. Mrs. McCallister, had charge of the devotions. We adjotamed for a social hour o f games, singing and contests present. which was enjoyed by all EXTRA SPECIAL All face powders, creams, preparations, perfumes, etc., at or less this week end only. Week End Special at Brown’s Drugs hair cost Wanted—We buy and sell new and used cars. Belden A Co,, Steele Bldg. Xenia, O. New Honey, Extra fine quality. IS cents per section. Maywood Horney. Household Sprays for Flies and Mosquitoes—-one-third off. Week End Special at Brown’s Drugs For Rent, Pasture—Good blue grass pasture for young cattle, no horses, hogs or sheep. Plenty of. spring water. Apply at this office. MassieS Creek Cemetery Assoc. Weikert & Gordon a u c t io n e e r s For! Hates Call J o e G o r d o n , C e d a r v ille , 1. Prof, Kuehrmann is canvassing Greene County and adjoining counties for prospective students, He reports the outlook very promising. Cedar* ville College is expecting a large freshmen class. Now is the time ib r new students-to confer at the col lege office with regard to curricula of study. The president of the college will be in his office from 9 o’clock to 4 each day of the week and will be glad to meet prospective students. , ■ * '* * Supt. Albert E. Wright of the class o f '23 has just recently been elected superintendent o f the Gibsonburg High School of Ohio. We are glad to hear of this election and wish Albert success. * * * The next semester of Cedarville College opens Wednesday, September 6, Registration days are on Monday, September 4 and Wednesday, Septem ber 5. * * * The property committee of Cedar ville College is having new bowls put into old furnaces and making other repairs in order to have the furnaces ready for the winter months. Kram er Bros, of Dayton have the contract to make the bowls and repairs. * * * Judge S. C. Wright of the class '02 was elected by the Board of Trustees at its annual meeting to succeed Dr. F, A. Jurkat as treasurer of Cedar ville College. Judge Wright, both from experience and natural ability, is Well fitted for this office and will make a capable successor to Dr. Jurkat. Dr. Jurkat has served as treasurer o f the college for over 30 years. He has been faithful in all the duties of the office. For the past two years he has desired te be relieved of the treasurship because it adds quite a burden to the duties of teaching. Cedarville College owes much to him for his faithful and efficient services. The August bulletin of Cedarville College goes to the press this week and Will soon be ready for distribution to the public. Any who are interested in this bulletin may have a copy by writing for it or calling up the presi dent o f the college. * . ■ * * Supt. S. O. Liming, class o f ‘18, made a friendly call at the college office Monday morning of this week. Sherman is one of the capable and beloved superintendents of Ohio. We are always glad te have our alumni come to thp college office, * * * . Miss Jean Morton, class of ’30 and for the past 3 years a teacher in Ross ford High School, Rossford, Ohio, was United in marriage Wednesday eve- ining, August St, at her mother’s home on North Main street, Cedarville to Mr. Norman Sweet of Rossford, Ohio. They were united in marriage by MFs. Sweet’s uncle, President McChesney, assisted by her uncle, Rev. Thomas Reed Turner, D. D., class of '09, Pastor o f the Presbyterian Church, Quincy, Mass. The best man was Strong drink has taken the coat off o f many a man’s back and burned out the coat off his stomach. One has* said: “When alcohol reaches the brain it overturns the throne of reason and transforms the man into a fool or a maniac,” “ Alcohol has always been and al ways will be an organized anarchy in the midst o f law-abiding industry.” Evangeline Booth. The appeal to which the Roosevelt Administration now gives official sanction .is an appeal to the lowest motives of human action. It makes a cash offer for wet votes. The return of the saloon bar is already assured in several states and is inevitable, if repeal wins. The government is’ wiU- ing to use the brewers and distillers to collect Federal taxes, and will pay them 900 per cent commission. For if the excise on liquor is to yield the amount which the Treasury opera-, tions require, it must b'e levied on a drink-bill at least equal te that of pre-prohibition years. The tendency o f the alcoholic bev erage to trick those who dally with it is manifested also, in the returns to the Federal Government for the first month of legalized beer sales. Not withstanding enthusiastic sales re ports, they turn out to be one-third less than the Treasury estimate.— Christian Science Monitor. Judge Webb in his charge to the grand jury at the opening of the United States District Court at Ashe ville, N. C., said: “ Alcohol is a deadly poison.' Alco hol is crazy. It doesn’t know the dif ference between a hovel and a palace. Liquor has never obeyed the law and it never will. Alcohol is a natural outlaw. Legalizing the sale of liquor does riot'stop bootlegging. It did not do it. before.'prohibition; it does not now iri Canada. “ Men and women have been fight ing alcohol through the ages, because alcohol is the deadliest poison known to chemistry. It is used to kill the living and preserve the dead, The al cohol taken from 20 bottles of beer, if administered to a child or a man not accustomed to taking liquor, would produce death. Any beverage containing more than 3.2 per cent al cohol violates the law and as long as it is the law I intend to enforce it.” Evangeline Booth says the Salva tion Army will not alter its position on the liquor question. Since the Army was founded by her father, Commander Booth said it had ‘made a steady, unbroken attack on what it feels to be the greatest curse ever to come into the world.” Hear these programs at 9 a. m. for they are worthwhile. Miss Lucile Johnson has returned home after a visit with friends Greenfield, O, m County Surveyor W.J. Davis, Xenia, who has been ill for some time, is now able to sit up each day. Mrs. Roy Waddle entertained mem bers o f the Kensington Club last Fri day afternoon. Mra. W. R, McChesney entertained Monday afternoon at a “miscellaneous shower” honoring her niece, Miss Jean Morton, whose marriage to Mr. Nor man Sweet took place Wednesday evening: he says. Some o f the light colored soils in western Ohig still contain- sufficient Jime for satisfactory crop production, hut in eastern Ohio and in the south ern part o f the state the soils, except j for the flood plains, are almost uni versally acid. Experimental work on acid soils indicate liming materials return 300 to 400 per cent on the money invest ed, in tests at the Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station. RAINS CARRY LIME DEEP INTO SUBSOIL In their battle to keep their soils sweet enough to grow field and vege table crops profitably, Ohio farmers have used in one. year as much as 237,000 tons of liming materials, ac cording to Earl Jones, extension specialist in agronomy for the Ohio State University. Our- climate, is responsible for Ohio’s soil acidity problem, winch re quires lime for its creation, Jones de clares, We have about 35 inches of rainfall each year, and as this water drains away through the soil it dis- l solves the lime and carries it deep' into the subsoil where plant roots of most cropB cannot reach it. ■ I This process o f nature accounts for the “hard” water o f wells and springs and for the deposit o f lime that ac cumulates in the tea kettle on the kitchen stove. Dark colored soils usually are less acid than light colored soils, Jones has found from many thousands of soil analyses made by the university agronomy dieparitnufot. Except tflor some muck or peat soils, dark color ed soils are seldom deficient in lime, FARMERS BECOME PLANT BREEDERS Experimental work now being done by 35 farmers in 28 counties may leac! to uniform types of corn less suscept ible to diseases, heat and drouth. Thirty-five men are cooperating with the Ohio Agricultural Expert ment Station at Wooster, by planting side by side “ male" and “female" single cross hybrid corns. From the artificial crossing of the two single cross types, a double cross type is be ing developed which, according to ex periment station tests, is superior in quality and yielding ability to the standard types of com now grown. From the seed produced by the 35 farmers, their neighbors next year will plant fields to compare, side by side, with fields o f their present types of corn. Each o f the men has a plot about one-tenth of an acre in size located in a position on his farm away from other corn fields. Every third row is planted to the “xnale”hyhrid, which cross 'pollinates the two rows of the “ female” hybrid. The female rows aTe detasseled. The hybrid were developed by G. H. Stringfield of the Ohio Experiment Station at Wooster. According to Stringfield, the com hybrids must be tested in this way throughout the state before the sta tion is willing to broadcast its find ings for application to individual farms. PARTITION CASE Partition o f twenty-eight acres cf property, situated in Beavercreek Twp., is the object of a suit filed in Common Pleas Court by Bertha Coff man, Yellow Springs; Glenn K. Ragar, Florence A. Rohrer, Cora B. Sherry, Mabel Hisey, Marie Windsor, Ruth Stickney, James R. Short and Arthur C. Dulin against Almeda F, Miller, Medway, O. Attorney Russell J. Haynes represents the plaintiffs. WINS, JUDGMENT The Cedarville Farmers Grain Co., has been awarded a $166.31 note judg ment against H. C. and Mary Ellen Creswell' in Common Pleas Court. NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC That we can meet the requirement* o f the National Industrial Recovery code, we join with the lumber deal- er* in Greene and adjoining counties in closing our place o f business at noon on Saturdays until further notice, Cedarville Lumber Co, Wanted! Poultry, Eggs and Cream S h e rm a n W h i t e & C o . 127 S. D e tro it St. X E N IA , O . P h o n e : M a in 3 8 0 Make Our Market. Your Market We solicit your consignments of Live Stock of every description for our Sale each Monday. ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR about the good prices obtained at our former sales. Low Commissions. Springfield Live Stock Sales Co. Central Ohio’s Greatest Live Stock Market Sherm an A v e n u e C en ter 7 9 6 Sp rin g fie ld , O h io FOR SALE Good Timothy Hay and Straw Bailed COAL AND FEED FLEE T -W IN G GASOL INE— KEROSENE OILS— GREASES C . E . B a r n h a r t P h on e 2 on 4 5 C ed a rv ille , O h io siKisiiiiiiHEiBiniiinmninnnniuHrnH: 2i;itiIu!IiiiiniliiIIiiil!:F!!’!!n,: BRIDE-ELECT IS HONORED IN COLUMBUS Miss Jean Morton, Cedarville, whose marriage to Mr. Normart Sweet, Rossford, O., took place Wed nesday evening, was honored at a luncheon bridge given by Mrs. Paul Orr, Mrs. Ernest Gibson and Mrs. Alfred Townsley, of Cedarville, at 116 Fifteenth avenue, Columbus, where they are spending the summer, Thurs day afternoon. Guests for seven tables were enter tained and following luncheon at 12:30 o’clock bridge was enjoyed. Prizes were won by Mrs. Harry Hamman and Miss Ruth Bums and Miss Morten was presented a guest prize. Those present at the party were Misses Lucille Johnson, Winifred Stuckey, Christine and Regina Smith, Ruth Bums, Dorothy Wilson, Ruth Marshal], Martha Dean, Mrs. Ralph Townsley, Mrs. Harry Hamman, Mrs. Fred Clemehs, Mrs, A. E, Richards, Mrs, Arthur Evans, Mrs. Ancil Wright, Mrs, Robert Jacobs, Mrs, O. W. Kuehrmann and Mirs. Frank Cres well, Cedarville; Mrs. Clark Ekerle and Mrs. Janies Miller, Xenia; Miss Hilma Raisncn, Ashtabula, Miss Har riett Shields, London; Mrs. William Nagley, Dayton; Mrs. Lawrence Bar ber, Alliance, Miss Morton, the guest of honor, and her mother, Mrs, Clara Morton, and the hostesses. Oil Citronellli, 3*oz.—23c 50c Skeeter Cream—33c Week End Special at Brown’s Drugs SUIT FOR 120,000 DAMAGES Mrs, Norma Parks, Chicago, has been itemed defendant In a suit for 120,000 as a result of an auto acci dent last Friday that occured on the Dayton-Xenia pike. Mrs, Wesley J. Taylor, Dayton, is plaintiff in the action. She alleges that her husband, and theif daughter, Virginia 15, wsrs This Is The Golden Age Our time is the greatest the world has ever seen. We have more to be happy with. We have better things, greater variety, keener comforts for choos ing, more conveniences to help us in our work, more things that elevate and entertain. This is the day of better homes* better clothing, better babies, better health, better everything. Compare any phase of our life with that of years ago and you will find that it is better. And what is the instrument that has made, and is making these things possible ? Advertising ! Advertising is the news of all the looms, all the furnaces, all the laboratories*’ all the shops, all the stores that are working, planning and building for you. Because of advertising, luxuries and necessities that once would have been worth a king’s ransom, are yours at little cost. Advertising pits merchant against merchant, artisan against artisan* manu facturer against manufacturer, for your benefit. This competition brings out the best there is in everything for your personal benefit. You wouldn’ t know about many booms of modern life except through advertising. That is why you are not taking advantage of the better things to day if you consistently overlook the advertise ments. THE CEDARVILLE HERALD Telephone Cedarville 2 on 71
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