The Cedarvile Herald, Volume 57, Numbers 1-26

CEDARVILI.E KKRAI.D, FRIDAY. MAY 1014 s ta r iff 'atm I XENIA Business Directory W H ITM E R F U N E R A L HOM E , Inc. Established Over 20 Years MRS, J. H. WHITMER . GLEN REED STANLEY H. CHJTTY, Director SERVICE W ITH IN THE MEANS OF A LL There Is no charge made for the use of this beautiful funeral home. 29 W, MARKET ST. PHONE M-68 W . F. H U G H E S DAYTON AVE. PHONE M-153-W GLASS— TIRES—PARTS— USED CARS - VULCANIZING R E -N E W CLEANER S 6 W. SECOND ST. PHONE M-S7-R CLEANING— PRESSING—DYEING D O D G E A N D P L Y M O U T H DODGE TRUCKS SALES AND SERVICE , WESTINGHOUSE REFRIGERATORS Purdom Motor Sales 50 E. MAIN ST. PHONE 1156 43 E. D . D . JONES, D ruggist PRESCRIPTIONS— TRUSSES FITTING ROOM— QUALITY SERVICE MAIN ST. PHONE 179-R L A N G ’S Chevrolet Sales and Service •1 Body and Fender Work — Battery Service - Repairing—Wrecking Service PHONE M-901 DR . JO H N A . YO D E R OSTEOPATHIC, DIAGNOSIS' AND TREATMENT General Practice, Colon and Rectal Diseases 18-19-20 STEELE BLDG. M cCO Y BROS. G A R A G E Desoto and Plymouth SALES AND SERVICE Battery Repairing Service— Towing 2265 S. DETROIT ST. PHONE 51 LU C IL L E ’S B E A U T Y SHOP 12V2 N. DETROIT ST. PHONE M-234 BEAUTY CULTURE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES ' GET A PERMANENT FOR GRADUATION i J. S C H A R D T A N D SONS, Florists 251 BELLBROOK AVE. PHONE M-553-R FLOWERS FOR WEDDINGS— PARTIES— FUNERALS FAMOUS CH E A P STORE 45 E. MAIN ST. PHONE M-179-W WE SELL EVERYTHING Hardware, Fence, Paints, Keady-to-We.Tr Clothing Dishes, Granite Ware , A N D E R S O N FLOWER SHOP 101 WEST MAIN ST. PHONE M-681-R FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS SCHOOL NEWS (Continued from flr*t page) * run going to Government order buy­ ers. | Cattle and Veal Calves are always 1 *■ in strong demand in this market, • prices paid being a little better at all l - — -... times than closest markets in this 1 lyn Sparrow, Virginia Townsley, section. Top lambs brought $10.15 | Donald Ferguson, Monroe Pyles. --------------------- - l GRADE 11 BIG PICTURE HITS , Eleanor Cooley, Cletis Jacobs, IN SPRINGFIELD j Frances Kimble. , ------I i GRADE 12 The Regent Theater, Springfield, 1 I Martha Bryant,' Pierre McCorkell, will open next Sunday with the most Eloise Randall, Edna Sipe, SPECIAL i Carl Johnson—First Grade, SIGHT-SAVING ROOM Grace Deck, Honor Roll spectacular attraction ever put in movies, “ Viva Villa,” starring Wal­ lace Beery, More than 10 months were spent in the sister republic a- cross the Rio Grande in making this' picture. 10 Q cameras were in cc> PHONE 344-R ! Those students who have earned no stant action and more than 10.000 grade below B for the last six weeks' people appear in the cast. Th*s i- period are as follows: brutal, raw meat of the .kind that i • GRADE 1 seldom finds its way to the screen. Norma Boase, Ruth Creswell, Clara The picture is attracting nation-wide ! Galloway, Betty Myers, Avanelle attention from critics and is reputed O’Bryant, Norma Stormont, Dorothy to be tlie surpassing spectacle of all 1 ■Waddle, Helen Williamson, Darrell time, j Glass, Kenneth Huffman, Bill Irvine, Starting Saturday the State Theat- :Bill McCoy, Harold Stormont, Paul er at Springfield will present “ Stand jStruewing, Up and Cheer," one o f the season’s t GRAPE 2 outstanding hit pictures, will dominate i Gerald Bradford,' Richard Conley, an interesting program. This film William Ferguson, Neil Kennon, Ruth stars Warner Baxter, John Boles, \ ' Andrew, Jean Bradfute, Martha Jane Madge Evans, James Dunn, Stepin j ! Creswell, Charlene Elgin, Jane Ellen Fetchit-and the tiniest big star in. | iGilliian, Grace Luttrell, Eleanor Reed, Hollywood, Shirley Temple, besides |Phyllis Shinkle, Elizabeth Ann Thom- many other stage, screen and radio ‘ as, Doris'Vest. stars. The attraction takes the place j GRADE 3 on the Fox Company’s release j Joyce Clemans, Norma Dean, Mar- schedule, of the usual Fox Follies ijorie Everhart, Mary Jean Hill, Janet which each year marks the peak of Jones, Martha Kennon, Ruth Ramsey, production from this big company. Claire Stormont, Nellie Smalley, Starting Sunday the Fairbanks j Philip Tindall, Paul Watkins,'Donald Theater will introduce “ The Crime j Williamson, Charles Yeutfer. Doctor” starring Otto Kruger and j GRADE 4 Karen Morley. This is the screen j Lois Brown, Susanne Elgin, Frances adaption of Israel Zangwill’s .“ The •Jolley, Margaret Stormont, Doris Perfect Crime.” It is unusual and Townsley, Jeanne Wright, George unique in its story presentation and ■Martindale. is heralded by critics as being one of ! GRADE 5 the year’s really sensational mystery j Wallace Bradfute, Wayne •Corry, photoplays. Jack Huffman, Junior Judy, Carl Wat- _ ---- --------- :------ i kins, Keith Wright, Florence Den- i nehy, Wilma Jean Ferguson, Alice ' Hanna, Almeda Harper, Wanda Hughes, Louise Miller, Martha Kreit- The LEGAL NOTICE Cedarville - Building & Loan zcr. Association of Cedarville, Ohio, Plaintiff, vs. Florence B, Gray, et ah, Defendants, Martin Knecht, Sr., whose place of residence is unknown, will take notice C O V A U L T B E A U T Y SHOPPE 33 W. CHURCH ST. PHONE M-434 BEAUTY CULTURE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES . GET A PERMANENT FOR GRADUATION STILES CO. S. DETROIT ST. PHONE 298 COAL, KOPPERS COKE, CEMENT, LIME SEWER PIPE, TILE, BUILDING MATERIAL W IN T E R A N D D A V IS 8-10 S. ORANGE ST. PHONE 506-W; Res. 559-R PEERLESS FURNACES Furnace Cleaning, Repairing for All Makes Roofing and Spouting GRADE 6 Emma Kennon, Betty Truesdale, Wallace Collins, Mary Struewing, ‘ Paul Dobbins, Bernice Frame, Vera Mae Fields, Marjorie Vest, Pansy ‘ Rose, Robert Murphy, Eleanor Lutt- that on the 19th ^ of A Pn l- 1934- ■roll, Nathaniel Swaney, Frances De- Tho Cedarville Building & Loan As- t Haven, Frances Patton. sedation of Cedarville, Ohio, filed its GRADE 7 petition against him in the Common j Helen Andrews, Harold Cooley, Pleas Coui;t o f Greene Count(y> 0hio- Ruth Copeland, Doris Hill, Marcella Prayin® for a ju<i&,nent ,n th® sums 'Martindale, Leona Melvin, B(,atrk.e of $2,574.37 and $2,647.33, w:th mtev- O’Bryant, Kathleen Elgin. est thereon from the 10th day of GRADE 8 April, 1934, at 7 per cent per annum Catherine Ferguson, Donald Fields, an mort» age notes- and scekin^ to Nancy Finney, Dorothy Galloway, Neil Hartman, Betty Jane Judy, Martha Jane Martindale, Janette Neal, Mary Alice Whittington. . GRADE 9 Alice Pullin, Doris Ramsey, Betty foreclose mortgages oh real estate situate in Ross *'. Township, Greene County, Ohio, being two/tracts, both part o£? survey No. 816, one tract consisting o f Forty (40) acres, the other of Twenty Nine and Thirty Rowe,'Rita Struewing, Betty Swanj£, ,Thr,ee Hundrcdths (29'33> acres of land. H . E. E IC H M A N 52 W . MAIN ST. PHONE 652-R MAYTAG WASHERS, ELECTROLUX AND NORGE REFRIGERATION Radios, Fixtures, Appliances, House Wiring Charlotte Turner, Elizabeth Anderson, . rothy Collins, Opal Foster, Mary Frames Heintz, Juanita Harper,' Louise Jacobs, Dorothy Luttrell, Eugene Miller. GRADE 10 Geneva Clemans, Florence Fergu­ son, Pauline Ferguson, Rebecca Gal­ loway, Elmeda Harris, Harold Bene­ dict, Daniel Dennehy, Donald Fergu­ son, Charles Whittington. ' GRADE 11 Said Defendant is required to ans­ wer said petition oii or before the 23rd day of June, 1934, or the Plaintiff may take judgment ordering the mortgages foreclosed and the said real estate sold for the purpose of paying the mortgages of the Plain­ tiff. THE CEDARVILLE BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION o f Cedar­ ville, Ohio. Eleanor Cooley, Jane "Frame, Justin „ art.num. F.linnr lU r r * Smith, Attorney for Plaintiff. • 7t H rtman, Eli or Hughes, Cletis Jacobs, Frances Kimble, Betty Tobias, GRADE 12 Hazel Allen, James Anderson, w \ Martha Bryant, Rachel Creswell, , ,an 6 Randle Hickman, Elsie Howell, Doris ~se . caI s‘ Kome, Loyd Mitchell, Lowell North- ' eHia’ up, Herbert Powers, Elojse Randall, " Edna Sipe, Reva Smith, Mildred i Swaney. ' .SIGHT-SAVING ROOM Rosalie Riley, Grace Deck, Betty Cash. . ' -We buy and sell new and Belden & Co., Steele Bldg. | REPORT OF SALE { Monday, May 21, 1934 ■ Springfield Live Stock Sales .Co, j HOGS--Receipts 887 ,200-250 lbs, ............. f AT SPRINGFIELD THEATRES | REGENT i Starting Sunday, May 27 | “Viva Villa” | A brutal, spectacular picture ; starring [ Wallace Beery j 180-200 ibs. ......... . *lOO-loO lbs. ____; ____ .140-100 lbs................. 120-140 lbs............ 100-120 lbs. ........ iFeeder P i g s _____ Sows, lig h t ........... Sows, h e a v y ............ Sows, thin . . . Stags _____ CATTLE—Receipts 27 Best Steers . . . __ ...... Medium Steers . . . ___ Med. Grass Steers . . . . f STATE THEATRE f - 3 .f>f> (n 3.55 I Starting Saturday, May 26 | -3.40 @ '8.50 f “Stand Up And Chere” I -.3.25 @ 3.40 j I,no of the reason's outstanding! --3.10 @ 8.35 I starring Warner Baxter, John | __2.75_8,10 I Holes, Madge Evans and others. | ..2.25 @ 2.75 | — ------ -------------- | - z'25 C«< 3,25 I FAIRBANKS THEATRE f -.2.76 (gj 3.00 Starting Sunday. May 27 | .2.25 @ 2.601| “The Crime Doctor” f —1.50 @ 2.25 j From tlie story “ the Perfect! ..1.00 (tp 2.00 ij. Crime" and starring Otto Kruger | • and Karon Morley, f tHMMMmMimmmiimmMmtmiumiittttltmOimiiiMiiiiii .6.50 -5.00 (ffi 6.25 .4.00 5.00 B R Y A N T M O TO R SALES Authorized Ford Dealers FORD SALES AND SERVICE 24-Hour Wrecking Service—Body and Top Work Fat Heifers ____ ------..5.00 (u> 6.00 * Grass Heifers ... . . . — 3.00 (<i> 4.00 g. Best Cows ... -------- 3.75 (m 4.00 ■ Medium Cows ... ---- .2.75 (a. 3.25 I Fanners . ( a) 2.25 5 Bulls ..... -.- - - .2 .5 0 (w 3,50 i 1 Milk Cows . . . . „„ --- .20.00 (£> 40 00- I ■VEAL (.'ALVES - Receipts 91 1 Tops . . . . . . - -. .6.25 I Medium 5.00 _. (i.(K) 1 Heavy ... ..... - .-*1.00 («I 5.00 Culls ................. ......... 2.00 («> 4.00 LAMBS- Receipts 3(5 Tops _ . .......... ......10 ,15 SK IDDO L U N C H ROOM A GOOD PLACE TO EAT 29 W . MAIN ST. PHONE 108-R Established 1909 Medium wi. { Gull and light t'lipp Lambs .Aged Wethers i Breeding Ewes ,Fat Ewes . I Demand for 7.00 (w 8,50 5.00 (.« 7,00 5.50 (oi 8,00 8.00 @ 6.00 3.00 (m 5,00 2.00 .... 8.00 fat hogs was afrom .wn this market today, moat of a heavy B A B Y C H C K S FROM BLOOD-TESTED FLOCKS, Tested for B, W. D.; Stained Anti­ gen used by our own poultrymen; tested seven years, including 1934. Reactors removed day tested. Hatched and sold in accordance witli CODE. ORDER DIRECT FROM TIIIS ADV. and in advance. We can deliver any Tues. or Frl. White, Brown, Buff Leghorns, $7.50 per 100. $36.00 for 500, $70.00 for 1000. Barred, White. Buff Rocks, Beds, $8,00 per 100. $38.50 for 500, $76.00 for 1000. Buff Orp., White Wyan., $8.50 per 100, $41.00 for o 00 , $80.00 for 1000. Heavy As- soited. $7.50 per 100, $36.00 for 500, $70.00 for 1000. Deposit with order, $ 2.00 for each hundred' ordered} balance C>. O. D.; or all cash with order. XENIA HATCHERY Xenia, Ohio ( Engineering facts pmw ___ It. Expariane* In liulM- Ing marly tan mllllan cart canflrms It. And tha racard of ovar Chnmkt Six owner* remove* any shadew of doubt about lit Tfcoonly way to got leaf aconomy la a laws pricod ear la to Uniat omMIXoytin* dors and OVERHEAD valvaa. SIX cylinders—no morof—beeau** oxtra cylinders mean extra cast far gas, oil, upkeep and parts.- OVER* HEADvalves— nothing atsaf—forth* same good reasonthat airplanes use them. And speedboats. And racing cars. They get the MOST power out of tho LEAST gas. That’* why over­ head valves are the choice of leaders —and champions. CHEVROLET MOTOR CO., DetreK, MkH. CtmpM»Ch»wiM ,i lw>m iww l prim eod MiyQ.M.A.C.term*.AC e m lMetersValue and the OVERHEAD is the most e conomi c a l car in the wo r l d FULLY-ENCLOSED KNEE- ACTION WHEELS - f z z ; : * s ■ ■ « , . . . / CABLE* - CONTROLLED BRAKES 80 HORSEPOWER- 80 MILES PER HOUR |SHOCK-PROOF | STEERING BODIES BY FISHER PEAl-EfVADVERT1SCMENT C UM M IN G S C H E V R O L E T Cedarville, Ohio e DON’ T TAKE TIRE WORRIES ALONG OH T0DR TRIP Drop themoffhere beforeyoustartout this weelc*end or next Wednesday It’s a lot safer, more pleasant and cheaper in the end to start out on . new tires—particularly since prices r v are still so l ow . . *And because Good- y l 1 year makes the most tires—by mil­ lions—and so offers the biggest mon­ ey’s worth at every price—it’s a lot j wiser to choose new Goodyears . , Come and see why more people b u y 1 Goodyears than any other tire—just name your price and look at the Goodyear it buys! ' / / A *%ii NEW U -3 ’ V i GOODYEAR 1 AU-WEATHER 1 T h e g r e a t e s t l Goodyear tire of ?! all time — 43% in more non - skid mileage—tougher rubber and more of it — the tire that outgrips and outlasts them all. See it! And the best news of all: This Tire Repairing Oils - Gasoline Road Service marvelous new Goodyear ‘G-3’ with its manyad­ vantages over any other tire on the market costs you nothing extra, Price* subject to change without noticeandtoany State tale* u i Good Service By Responsible Mechanics DepthdoM* GOODYEAR SPEEDWAY A good low-priced tire — value only Goodyea r can offer, 10 4.40-11 30x3«/j 4.50-29 $ 4.00 $ 4.70 4.59-21 4.75-19 $ 4.85 $ 5.30 Other sizes in proportion. Latest GOODYEAR PATHFINDER Superior to high­ est-priced tires of m a n y o t h e r makes. 7 0 14.40-11 4.50*21^ 4.75-19 $ 5.50 $ 4.90 5.09-19 5.25-18 $ 7.40 $ 0.35 Other sizes In proportion. RALPH WOLFORD Vhe mere you a FIFT COLU moves m springtime state capit years from and middle been visitii lumbus mo and vwarm ways, of co State Depa rounding gi Loving pai dren and. and childre near,, some of strange point, enjo skillfully 1 feeding and esting Stat specting th the murals other evide in war and by flags a: and portrai Not a few names in th the State H Entries o farm boys f be held at, t Vocational Ohio State Saturday of riving in lar record attend with each ot and other a schedule of visits to i»a having some Friday night Jones ReCo tural limite state and n ers will be Farmer key- A t least bill promise next genera meet the 1935. The Secretary o for approval vides for li stores in op in effect a practically t that was d special sessi lief fund w’ from the Ui pay old age According sus, Ohio rai States in v~ with a -total 000,000, Earl 'Agriculture, a publicatio vision of M Egg Gradin formation a is the first out by the another step efforts to ra produced an to provide a lack o f whi a pocir reput Engineers of Public W statistics on Portage Lak igincies that • adjacent ter the average the shortage square miles inches as t* years previa was 9.88 inc 1931, 3.1 2i inches in 19 been a furt fall. Becau effort has ment to pr engineers st rainfall in shed shoul reservoirs, water table means the be dug to o has been lo the past 40 cline being OLD AGE The boar age pension organized George Gall Clark, seer under two- $ 1.00 Week End Phone 2 on 88 ROAD SERVICE CcM ferrill** &

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