The Cedarville Herald, Volume 56, Numbers 27-51
CEDARVILLE HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1912 Local and Personal r l Church Notes 1 mummmiifmuimimiimmwmi Mr, and Mrs, Paul Orr visited over the week-end in Rossford, 0., with Mr. and Mrs. Norman Sweet. COLLEGE NOTES UN ITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH , , Sabbath School, 10 a. m. J. E. elementary certificates by also ac Kyle, Supt. (Continued from cage 1) - Temperance Notes.. The Child Problem Sponsored by Csdsrville W, C. T. U, . By R, J. Westlake Mrs. Sarah Ellen Weimer, who has has been seriously ill at her home on South Main street, difcs wot show much improvement at this time. Union Service, 7:30 p. m., in this church, This is a union service to Mr, and Mrs, Frank Armstrong, who have been residing on East Chil- licothe street, have moved to the Kyle place on the Yellow Springs pike, whlch Clifton 311(1 Jamestown U. P. near town, a , ' Churches are also invited, as we have . (the great, privilege of having as our Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Pickering gUest speaker Miss Emma Dean An‘ spent Sunday visiting with M r and ' llers01' of lTldia- Miss Anderson has Mrs. Raymond Pickering and family, eiven f,fty-two years service.in India* . . . .• . A great deal of information will be i The problem of directing the bound- .............. 7 ° s®meStm’ h.°UlS T h in given fronx over the less energies of children heoomw in -1 Preaching, 11 a. m. Theme: “The ™ a!th education, mustc, and are radio in our broadcasting periods, creasingiy complex. In our larger- ml's Vision.1 <total 6 semester hours and a grand station WA IU . The time has been cities the children of the working and Y. P. C. U., 6:30 p, m. Subject, total f 14-semester hours in element- changed to Monday, Wednesday and workless classes are living ihetrlive* Iqw Christ has Changed Life inMis- 3ry education). Conversely, one who Friday at 7:45 p, m., and on Sunday in gloom-shrouded tenements, hedged sionary Countries." Leader, Mrs. has completed a four-year elementary afternoon, 1;30 to 2:00 o'clock. Please around with cheerless stone walls and Margaret J. Work. course and holds a four-year pro- “tune in" on these air programs and cesspools of iniquity. The ward visional elementary certificate, may tell others to do so. ipolitician is the God of such districts; obtamthe high school provisional i Beer As A Cure For Drunkenness the gangster is their priest, rabbi and cert.ficate by adding to his training J The Hearst metropolitan papers ' teacher. Charity fails to cope with two hours each ,im methods in his ( have never been accused of dry lean- the problem because it constantly adds major or minor subject organization lings. The Washington Times, a Hearst to the misery by prolonging the lives and management, and student teach- jpaper, in the issue of June 19, 1933, of the miserable. ing in the high school field (a total of had this to say concerning drinking: I Those children of the expropriated 6 semester hours). Students who are i. —u ~ . -------,. . i south of Xenia, Mh Howard Turnbull has rented the Crabil farm near Pitchin and will move there. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Scott, who have been residing in the Wolford property on Xenia avenue, moved on Tuesday to Columbus. Mr, and Mrs. Fred Shew and family spent the week-end Jn Noblesville, Ind., with Mr. Shew’s ’father. Mr. and Mrs. Ancil Wright have had as their guest Mrs. Harsha and two daughters of Washington C. H., the past week. Misses Lueile ?|nd Eleanor John son, who teach in West Carrollton, O., entertained their bridge club of that place, Tuesday evening at the home of their mother, Mrs. Della Johnson on Xenia avenue. ' Mr. John Davis, Newark, who has been manager of the Licking County Live Stock Co-operative Co., is giving up that position and will soon move to the farm occupied by Miss Etta Owens, where he will engage in farm ing. Miss Owens recently purchased the Turnbull property on Xenia ave nue and will move to town. Miss Mary E. Fowler, who for the past 31 years has been engaged in Mission work in Selma, Ala., under the. Reformed Presbyterian Church, has been granted a year’s leave of absence from the work, and will spend the winter with her brother and sis ters at their home near East Point. ______. ■ . . \ ONE HOUR SPECIAL Saturday—2 to 3 P. M. • 2—$1 l 0Q Boxes Shari Facet Powder— $1.01 Brown’s Rexall lc Sale CEDARV ILLE CLUB OBSERVES “GUEST DAY ” “Guest Day”1was observed by the Home Culture Club of Cedarville when it met at the home of Mrs. J. H. Nagley, Xenia, Tuesday afternoon. Fifty-five members and guests were present. i “American Composers,” was the subject of the meeting and Mrs.-D. R. Guthrie read a paper on “Mac- Dowell's Colony.” Mrs. Walter Cony, near Clifton, gave biographical sketches of three composers and pre sented a composition of each. Mrs. Della Johnson sang three solas and Mrs. Richard McClellan, a guest, sang the following numbers^ “Come Ye Blessed," “Sylvia” and “To a Wild R6se.” ' Mrs. Nagley served a salad course at the conclusion of the program. and is greatly beloved throughout the church in India as well as in America. Her address will be the Annual Thank Offering address of the Women’s Mis sionary Societies, but the offering will be taken the following Sabbath morn ing. A free will offering will be taken Sabbath evening for Miss An derson’s work in India, to which she returns this fall. Prayer Meeting, Wednesday, 7:30 JJ- m. Leader, Mrs. Frank Bird. I f any others wish to subscribe for the United Presbyterian at the new club rate of $1.50 per year, give your name to the pastor as soon as pos sible. Fifteen members of our Y. P. C. U. attended the Presbyterial Rally in the Glen Echo Church on Tuesday eve ning, and report a good meeting. . FOR RENT—House, six rooms in good condition, located on Ghillicothe street. Anna Alexander, Yellow Springs. Phone 8. Root crops such as horseradish, parsnips and salsify are not injured by freezing and thawing, and need not be dug before the ground freezes. “Come Up And See Me Sometime” S: FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Dwight R. Guthrie, Minister Sabbath School, 10 a. m. Prof. A. J. Hostetler,. Supt. Lesson: “Paul in Asia Minor.”— Acts 13:1-5, 13-15;. 14:19-23. Golden text: “And he said unto them, Go ye into' all the world, and preach the Gospel to the whole crea tion. Mark 16:15. ■ Morning Worship, 11 a. m. Sermon text: “Now Israel loved Joseph more than all his children, be cause he was the son of his old age.” Christian Endeavor, 6:30 p. m. Subject: “How Christ has chang u life in Missionary countries.” Read Acts 19:9-11. Leader, Miss Glenna Bascore. Union evening service in the. United Presbyterian Church at 7:30. Miss Emma Dean Anderson will bring the. message. Miss Anderson has served more than 40 years in India as a Mis sionary. She established what is known as a “Faith Mission” (not de pendent on any of the Mission Boards) ajnd it is now a flourishing institution. She has a remarkable story to tell and it will do all of us good to hear her. (see Dr. Jamieson’s church notes for additional informa tion concerning Miss Anderson). A definite announcement about the “Mid-week Service” will be made at the Sabbath morning service and on the Bulletin board next Monday. NOTICE preparing to teach home economics, manual training, art, music, or other special subjects should be informed that all beginning special teachers are required to have completed four years q f college work with prescribed pro fessional content. The schedule is the Station houses and police courts poor— these migratory, waifs who in the District of Columbia were have been robbed of their heritage in jammed today when a new all-time record for arrests was rolled up over the _week end, Beer Beer has taken 320 million dollars same as for the elementary field, ex-j from legitimate industries so far and cept that the methods courses and has already interefered with the milk student teaching special field. must be in the President McChesney spoke at the meeting of Greene County Teachers’ Ito the Washington Times. association in Bowersville last Satur day morning and Sabbath morning in the Rally Day Services of the churches in Selma and speaks this coming Saturday, tomorrow, to the Fayette, County Teachers’ association, the P. T. A. and the School Board* at Washington C. H. business. Evidently beer as a means for re ducing drunkenness is making a worse job of it than prohibition, according Beer is Cedarville College has lost a good friend in the death of the late John Grindle who, for a .number ■of years, was care-taker of the college build ings and grounds. He was faithful and absolutely dependable. He was beloved both by faculty and students. We shall long cherish his memory. not the cure for drunkenness. England’s drink bill in 1930 was three times the milk bill—more *han three times the bread bill. Prohibition drove the outlawed liq uor traffic from Main street to the back alley. This is Hie song of the barroom, Old-timers know me well; I’m coming back to’ stardom To drag a world to Hell! ■Due to the removal of my office from Cedarville m the near future, all persons knowing themselves to be indebted, please call and make ar rangements for settlement of their account. Harold E. Ray, M. D. “SIGN OF THE CROSS” FIRST SCHOOL PICTURE - A MILLION DOLLAR M A M A . . . AND WOR TH EVERY PENNY OF IT*.. . . n CARY GRANT I H I A T I I r e g e n t Theatre Springfield One Week Starting Sat*, Oct. 21st t The local schools will present the “Sign of the Cross” on Thursday, October 26 at the Opera House. The equipment will he furnished by Messrs. Lowry and Creswell, thereby assuring a continuous show. The first show will begin at 7:30 and the second show at 9:3ft. There are thirteen reels. A comedy is also included as a preliminary fea ture. Admission will be ten cents for anyone in grades or high school and fifteen cents for others. No tax is charged since the show is sponsored by the school. Reminiscent of the power and sweep of the “Ten Commandments” and “King of Kings,” Cecil B. De Mille again demonstrates his mastery of the spectacle and of historic drama in the “Sign of the Cross.” Frederic March and ElissU Landi play the romantic leads, and both are magnificent, March as a powerful '■ young pagan, prefect of Rome in the !sensual luxuriousness of Nero’s days and Landi as a convert to the new re ligion that has come from the Bhores of the sea of Galilee. The difference between paganism and Christianity is strikingly con trasted. It was during this time under Nero that Christians were ruth lessly put to death. As a result of the supreme sacrifice" made by these Christians, the history of the world was destined to be changed, "The Sign of the Cross” is enter tainment, lavish, dramatic, inspiring, historical, educational. It is a re ligious picture depicting conditions of thh early Christian era as they were. Without doubt it is an outstanding picture, If you have already seen the picture, no doubt, you will want to sec it again. Remember ‘ the date—Thursday, October 26. . Admission 10 and 15 cents. Tickets will be sold by the school pupils. Cedarville College is the grateful recipient of a contribution fpr the current expenses from Lillias Ford. As Has been announced several .lies before,- the college will need about five thousand dollars in order to end this year 'clear of debt, pre sent and past. Nothing would give us greater joy than to continue to receive contributions, large and small, from the friends of the college, to the amount that will wipe out all of our_ debts. One of our alumni who sent in q voluntary contribution to the college wrote as follows: “For a long time I have been wanting to send money to the college, but circumstances in this critical time have prevented. I am enclosing this gift, djnd from each check I receive you shall have a .like amount regardless of my other obli gations during the year. I have ap preciated so much what the college and you personally have done for me. I haven’t been able to express it in words to you but maybe.I can express it otherwise since piy contribution, though a small one, moans' sacrifice— I am perfectly willing to make it for my Alma Mater. My.thoughts and Interests have been and are with Cedarville College.” I f Not, Why Not? Awake, Church of Qod! Awake, Christian Soldiers! Awake, Christian Citizens! Awake, Civic and Service Clubs! Awake, Parents and Teachers! and. Fight the Liquor Traffic, Greatest Enemy of the Home. Twenty-six million reasons for to tal abstinence— twenty-six million motor vehicles. The Y. M. C. A. had a very inter esting program on Wednesday. State Secretary, Ralph Garner, was the visitor and guest speaker of the day. He stressed the value of the small college stating, that if afforded an opportunity, to get thoroughly ac quainted with different types of people "and to understand human, re lationships. He said that students should play the game well in college in order to play it well in life and that so many who were in college did not .realize that they were playing the game which they would play in life. Four years is a short time in which to get ready for life. All the last of life, you will think about your college life. The Y. M, is organized and functions to make life rich, mean ingful arid serviceable for the stu dents who are in college. You should make your life count now just as well as after you graduate. Try to discover the dominant neers of men and fit yourself to minister to them. Don’t be satisfied with mastering the minimum requirements. Train your self to deal with individuals. Inform yourself upon Government conditions and needs. Remember that most, if not all of you, will assume home re sponsibilities sooner or later. Enter the.fe relationships wisely arid ful fill them to the best of your ability. The devotions of the Y . M. were led by Walter Kilpatrick, Eugene Corry president at the piano, Donald Trout directed the singing and Homer Mur ray led in Prayer. Reserve the date, November 12, for the men’s Bible Reading Contest in the Presbyterian Church. A silver offering will be received. Church Relief Refused To Needy Drinkers The Associated Press reports that fifteen hundred church .members gathered at Heathsville, Virginia, for a Baptist camp meeting the middle of August, passed resolutions against giving church relief-to families which were in .want because of liquor, if and when the. Eighteenth Amendment should be repealed.^ The resolution called on the state legislature to make available any money, “necessary to re lieve distress brought on by the use of intoxicants or alcoholic drinks pur chased from licensed dealers who pay the state, a tax for license,” and added: “If no distress comesfrom le galized selling of alcoholic drinks, there will be no relief needed. I f in nocent women and children suffer as they did in the days of legalized liq uor, it is only fair that the state that gets the revenue should care for inno cent suffering families.” “All the umpires together have not put as many ball players out of the. game as old mpn booze.”—Connie Mack. "Alcohol kills more men than war and kills them more dishonorably-”— Cardinal Merrier. “Alcohol puts the man to sleep and awakens the beast.”—Dr. Saint Jaq- ues, Uruguay, “To talk of alcohol as a food is really absurd.”—Dr.’ Woods Hutchin son. - “There isn’t a thought in a hogs head of beer.”— Theodore Roosevelt. Democracy is something deeper than liberty—it is responsibility* The Eighteenth Amendment closed 177,790 licensed saloons. FOR RENT— Six room house, on E. Xenia avenue. Rented very rea sonable. Call Ruth Mitchell, Phone 2Q0. Cedarville. APPLES FOR SALE Phone 3-86 P. M. GiUlhm REPORT OF SALE Monday, October 16,1983 The Springfield Lve Stock Sales-Co. HOGS—Receipts 364 200-220 lbs, -------—--------4,70 @ 4.75 220-250 lb s .__________— 8.60 @ 4.75 Lights — —— ..— .—4.00 @4 .50 Fat Sows —— —— 2,60 @ 4,00 Stags @ 2.00 Boars — — —— —3.00 @ 8.00 Sows and Pigs — —*.-,.10.00 @ 5.00 Stock Shotes---------- — 1.60 @ 3.00 CATTLE— Receipts 104 Steers — — — —— 2.50 @ 4,00 H e i f e r s __— — - —2.00 @ 3.00 Baby B e e f ---- --------------- 4.00 @ 6.00 Fat Cows — — — 2.00 @ 2,76 Cannera —— -------- -— .75 @ 1.50 Bulls _______________ - ____2.00 @ 2.50 Milk Cows — — 16.00 @ 46.00 CALVES—Receipts 66 Tops ____—- __— — ..6.50 Seconds — - — —>— ■4,00 @ 6.00 Medium ------;---------— 3.00 @ 4.00 Common — — — 2.00 @ 8.50 Culls -------------------— .-1.00 @ 2.50 We. wish to express our thanks and j g uEEP & LAMBS—Receipts 801 appreciation to our friends and neigh- j;we8 __— ..2.60 @ 5,00 bora for their kindness, and expres- ,p at- Sheep_____ — — — 1.00 @ 2.00 sions of sympathy, and to Dr, Me- QU]jg .76 @ 1,50 Chcsney and Rev. C. E. Hill for their g ucjjS _____________ _____ 3,00 @ 8.00 consoling words, during the bereave- Wethers — «— — 2.00 @ 3.50 ment of our dear father, John C. Top Lambs — _________ —6.25 Grindlco • The Family. - Seconds _____ ___________ 5.00 @ 5.50 ----------------— Light Weights -------------- 3.00 @ 4.50 OCT. 22 EPWORTII ’ Common --------- — ---------- 2.00 @ 3.00 LEAGUE MEETING Cattle receipts today were the larg _______ est yet at this sale, and prices were “How Shall I Find Happiness?" Well in line with terminal markets Like everyone else you are seeking H0g and Lamb prices and receipts the answer to this question. Come were again strong,. and the supply and join us Sunday night for this in- taken by packere from Columbus, torest discussion with Jane West as Calf receipts atropger than leader. usual, and prices high, We W ill Have Buyers For '*11 kinds oir livestock at our sale, next Monday, and are in a position to serve you better than other convenient markets. Springfield Live Stock Sales Co. Sherman Ave. Phone Center 796 Springfield, Ohio the natural, resources of the nation— are our future law-abiding Belf-re' specting citizens, or our future gang sters and convicts, whichever we choice to piake.of them. The unwanted children of the street who grow up in Btone hells sur rounded with viciousness, ignorance and poverty, and eventually become recruits in the army of criminals that turns our cities into battlegrounds where the innocent are slaughtered along with the guilty— these are not criminals; the state( the body politic) brought to justice. Crime is a is. the real criminal and must be disease, a maladjustment of the so cial organism, not of the individual. The first duty of government is not to protect the nation from outside enemies—from the mythical perils beyond the sea—but to protect- its citizens from disease and exploitation, from physical, moral and economic ruin. In this respect, to say the least, our own government has been a mis erable failure; It has spent billions of dollars on an obsolete prison sys tem, which has never reformed one criminal; but it never spiends a dime for the purpose of eradicating the factories which make criminals— the vermin - infested, disease - breeding, soul-wrecking slums of the cities. Our reactionary government is spending, at the present time, $238,- 000 (with another hundred million to follow) on new battleships which can serve only to focus the suspicious, fears -and hatreds of the world upon the United States. Our rich nation has over $7,000,000 a day to spend on war— past and future— but it has no money for the building of homes and wholesome i recreational centers for the children of the poor. The nation is perishing for want of social vision! Governor Pinchot says thatover 160,000 children of Pennsylvania are mentally and physically subnormal, due to improper housing and mal nutrition—a polite word for slow starvation. The harm done to grow ing youngsters by malnutrition is for ever beyond melioration, and “if we had paid no more attention to our plants than we have to our children,- we would now be living in a ’.jungle, of weeds.” It may be accepted as a truism that bad housing and overcrowding, to gether wi.th the lack of playground facilities and adequate supervision of activities, result in a general dehu manization. The effects of such en vironment are seen in the prevalence of tuberculosis and syphilis, in the disintegration of the family, in a tendency to focus life on the streets, in increasing habits of criminality and other- phases of low-grade citizen ship. In New York City the State Recon* struction ’ committee studied four small blocks of wretched houses, own ed by Trinity Church corporation, and found that 58 boys and girls or near ly four times the average for the area, were reported as conduct prob lems, The folly of the people of the United States is to be found chiefly n their reliance on providence and politicians for the solution of their problems. But new occasions and conditions call for new duties and so cial formula; and at present we are greatly in need of social engineers to 5 save our children from the jungles o f . gangsterdom; to save them from prison bars and the hangman’s noose, from the hell of exploitation and neg lect and from devils’ madness—war! WILBERFORCE TO PLAY W. VIRG INIA IN C INC INNAT I! The annual Thanksgiving Day foot- j ball game between Wilberforce and , West Virginia State Institute, will be | played at Redland field, Cincinnati. INFORMATION Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lumbago, Nervousness, Colds, Poor Circulation and kindred ailments. Bath Treatments i Highly Recommended • Our Bath treatments consist of Cabinet Bath, Hot Packs, Blanket Packs, Salt Glows, Swedish Shampoo, Hot and Cold Sprays, Showers, Scientific Ojl and Alcohol Rubs. One Treatment, $1.50 4 Treatments, $5.00 Bath treatments for Men and Women J. D. FELLABAUM ’S Bath Parlors, King Bldg. 81 S. Fountain Ave. Springfield* O Phone: Main 507*J’ Gentlemen and Lady Attendants Come in and see vis APPLES FOR SALE Phone 3*86 P* M. GHlUatt POTATOES Beat Crop of Petoaky'a W e Have Ever Grown. SUPERIOR Q UA L ITY W n . B. Ferguson Phone: 34 F I I , Clifton Exchange Route 5 Xenia, Q. WE W ILL CH ANGE YOUR OIL FREE * HIGH GRADE SHELL OIL USED NONE BETTER MADE SHELL GASOLINE AND OILS 1 Let Us Service Your Car Bratton and Homan ANNOUNCEMENT Having accepted the Agency of Cedar ville and surrounding territory, with the HOME INSURANCE CO. OF N EW YORK > We are now in a position to write all forms of Insurance—Except Life W e Invite and W ill Solicit Your Patronage MOTTO :— SERVICE A N D RELIABILITY McCorkell & Gordon Office: Bank Building, Xenia Avenue Entrance Removal Sale N ow Is Your Opportunity To Save On SUITS and TOP COATS Hart, Schaffner & Marx Finest 6eady-to-Wear Clothes in America $21.75 SH IRTS W ILSON BROS. Full Cut—Pre-Shrunk $ 1.19 Suede Leather Wool Jackets $2.25 $7.65 Shanhouse Make i All-Wool SUITS & TOP COATS $ 11.75 HATS A L L NEW Fall Shades and Colors $2.15 1 to Values to $5 BOB SMART SHOES Broken Lots— Sport Shoes Only— , !■ , $5.00 I Shoes— $ 6.00 Shoes— $ 2.45 $ 4.25 $ 5 . 3.5 W e are moving to 8 South Detroit Street, next door to Kresge’s. W e must reduce our present stock to a minimum, in the face of advancing markets these low p ried are very unusual* The Men’s Store, Inc. 21 Green Street T. O. McDORMAN East of Court House Xenis, Ohio
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