The Cedarville Herald, Volume 58, Numbers 1-26

|^|MiWW»iWWWIWIWWP i WUIPWI , . .,■«■. ..» ■W <■»'«,*■«•» «M» » . » i»IS>Hj ■*,„, Local and Personal j J Church Notes j Temperance Notes } H istorical Mileposts !«■»■*«ii>inininii«iip 1 «HI mm w m iVmtruimniuinunniirMi—~ -or—mm.mmnf arjnnfinraH hv .fWlarvillft W. f T . Lf. ■ 4TVC 1_ He. and M m , R. M, Town*l*y h*ve| M l fur thtir guest, MU* Florence Robert*, of Xenia, the past week, I pDousored by Cedurville W» C. T. 0 , FIRST PRESBYTERIAN * y CHURCH » .»■» Dwight B. Guthrie, Mtoister Prof. Irving FUher of Yale Univer- Sabbath School, B: 45 a. nj. Paul sity, say*: “Repeal has retarded Mias Fannie McNeal, who has been £ a®wy‘ S.upt‘ I'es80n: “Tte Holy w th « than helped recovery because ill for two weeks, is reported much Swipturea,' Golden text; “Oh, how the reasoning behind it was false,” improved and ia now able to be about. I1®!* * fl'y Jaw! lt is my meditation -------- taU tho day,” Pa, 119:97). II. L. Walker of Pittsburgh sends O f Ohio By C. S. Van Tam l (Copyrighted) UEPABmilS HK3AI-D, FBTDAY, APJffE U , IW 1 m The eighteenth legislative session convened December 6, 1819, Gover- The monthly meeting of the Re-’1 Mo™ng Worship at 11 o'clock, The us a clipping front The Post of that w Ethan Allen Brown was greatly search dub will meet at the home sera}on subject is, “The Call of the city, in which the coroner of AI- opposed to the branches in Ohio of of Mrs. George Creawell Thursdav Prophet," of Esekiel 3:17. legheny County reports eight more United States Bank, and in his May 2, at S o’daek. * i Junior Christian Endeavor will meet deaths from alcoholism during the annual message, charged the deplor* |at 4 p, m„ in the primary room, This first year o f repeal than the pre- able financial conditions, which were <is the second Sabbath for the contest, ^ioua year, growing more alarming, largely to * Un«< aw wfff _ _i. ■; itiafiftlflAHa Vita #amM«ws Mrs. M. A. Summers of Huntington, _ , W.Y*., mother o f Mrs. W. W. Gallo- , Semor Christian Endeavor will meet way, haa been a guest at the Gallo- *w a ^vered dish supper at 6 p. m., way home for several days, !n the church basement- The meeting " • 1______ is in charge of Mary Catherine Pro*- Mrs. O. ft. Ullrey, of Bethel, 0., *"d Edwin Potee. - spent a few days here the past week U“ on J '™ 1"* Service at 7:30 m with her brother-in-law and sister, th® w . 1 1 preach. Mr. and Mrs. J, S. West ana family. _ Thaw1^ ^ * 0 nud-week service. ________ ■ We are looking forward to the follow- Mrs. Willard Barlow entertained ^Wednesday evening when we shall fifteen teachers o f West Carrollton *£*“ * Judy of five religions'sects: schools Tuesday evening at a bridge e” t^,D y Adyentifiin, Russehsm, dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jormomsm, Spiritualism, and Chris- Aden Barlow. tlon E01™0®* The purpose of these ‘ studies is to inform ourselves on these . Dr. C. M. Wilcox, New Paris, who interpretations of religious exPeri- has been spending the winter with. . , ■ , , a daughter in Cincinnati, spent t h e ' J K ^ week end here as guests o f Mr. and o f Dayton tobe adele- Mrs. A. E, Richards. gat® ** Awenfcly wh,ch Mrs. W. A. Spencer and daughter , V Misa Jane Wham will present Miss Wilmah Spencer, have issued I T ^ invitations to a bridge luncheon at * **** one o'clock, Saturday/April 27 honor- Gorry at the organ' ing Mrs. Willard Barlow. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Charles Everett Hill, Minister Church School, 10 a. m. P. M, Gil- Mr. and Mrs. Robert MacGregor, Orleans, Mass, is spending two weeks with her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. MacGregor at w ’ . . , their eountry.home, “Braehurn,” south ^ ^ of town. - “A Gift From the Risen Lord.” .>■■■•■ .■■ :,;'i■■ ■ Epworth League and Intermediate Attorney William Spencer and wife i . ' . of Osceola, Iowa; have been visiting -7 ^ 1 v t among friends and relatives here and 7'3°U » N<>t What 1 in Xenia. Mr. Spencer is a son o f , * ® 6*?"?: ™ o the late Harve Spencer, former resi-' M ^ S; dent of this community. (and Z - ^ &t ■ . - - - jthe Church Wednesday, beginning at Mr. Howard Arthur has contracted for the erection of a residence on the site of his old home that was burned several months ago. 11 a. m. UNITED PRESBYTERIAN • CHURCH Ralph. A. Jamieson, Minister Sabbath School, 10 a. m. . Meryl Stormont. Theme, “Grace Rev. Walter Morton and wife of Louisville, Ky., is visiting at the home p_ o . . „ _ o f Mr. Ralph and Miss Ina' Murdock. gervjjf>» ■nr " t T a , t. ' - -v • , ^, Y. P. C. U., 6:30 p. m. Subject, Mrs. Leola. Tarbox of Xenia, and .. •«■*» T . T . . . , « j.. rr j J- k r- 1*Tints of the Spirit. Leader, James daughter, Mrs, Scott Hudson o f New . York City, visited with friends here TT- „ Thursday, Mr?. Tarbox has been m. .....u a . „ spending the winter with her son-in- a - ’ ermor* V ev- SWr 1 , dHUghter Snd MS 5USt ^ ’ i Wednesday, 7:30 P: «•» ^.the Church. Leader, D& C. ^ Mr. Rankin' 3McMilfan, who has a ^ tc^*e* government positiou in Washington, D. C., and Miss Mary Margaret Me-. \^ Choir Rehearsal, Saturday 7:30 p. m. Millan, stodent at Muskingum Col- A$ NUAL INSPECTION F. & A. M. lege, spent the Easter vacation with _____ their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton j District Lecturer Weber French oi c 1 an’ ___________ New Holland attended annual inspec- r _ , , _ ■ . tion of the local Masonic Lodge Mon- , day evening. Work in the Master Ma- entertamed at six o’clock dinner Wed- son d wa3 t Mr< Warren nesday evening at their home on ^ fomerl pUceandlM>w Xenia avenue, ^ e following guests: ^ {n New Hollandf accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Hersel Long, Pauhne Mp Prench h6re -Follo^ thP in. and Anna Lee and Warren Long; Mr. tion a lunch was served lhe mem. ^ 1 5 r5* « T,, ^0Ur T . T *>®rs and a number of guests from Robert; Mrs. Flora Harper and Mr. i h. . , . and Mrs. Paullin Harper and daugh g ^ g lodgea- ter Madeline. CONGRATULATIONS IN ORDER Word ^ been recehred from- Mr. and Mra. E.C.teMar.NewBur- Cleveland o f the death, &ihbath morn- u are announcin^ the marriage “ f* ^ i kte of their daughter, Miss Lelia, to Mr. Edward Farris, who died o f P"®«- Howard Arthur, Cedarville. The mar- motiia about four weeks ago. They took Jace April in Keai. leave one daughter, Mrs. Spear, ana ^ Mr. and Mrs. Arthur are grad- two p-anddaughters. Mr. jnd Mrs, uatcs Gf Gedarvil|e CoUege and Mrs. Farrk Wew former residents of Ce- Arthur ^ b the Jefferson darvdle. His brother Inrm Farns ^ gchool for seyen yearSi Mn Ar. and daughter, Mn> Al. Jolly, d ay- tjiur js onc 0f olir prominent young ton, were in Cleveland attending the farmers funeral. i ’ .................... • . _ nl, . _ . Mr, H. E. Mills, farmer, residing Mr. J. C. Williamson, Xenia, wen 0f town, was thrown by a team known here haa -been quite ill in the Wedn6eday afternoon, sustaining deep McClellan Hospital, Xenia. cuts on his head and cheek. As no one Subscribe for THE HERALD wes present it ia not known just what frelghtened the team. r « * m T S W iuotba JOIN OUR ALL-STAR RADIO PARTY SUNDAY A P R IL 28™ 6 :0 0 to 7 :00 p« nflu COLUMBIA NETWORK COAST*TO*COAST bUtr* era tom* of th* stttiont — WHK Cleveland WBBM Chicago WABC NewYork CKLW Detroit KMOX 8 t iouit WADC Akron WKBN YoungstownW8PD Toledo W8MK Dayton WBN8 Columbus 50" ANNIVERSARY of Ota Incorperetton*f TheAmerican TeM tofie 6- T*>tfiteph Cempany THEOHIOBEL TELEPHONECO. these institutions. The farmers hat their problems too. But, the growth of population, President Roosevelt in a letter to the governor of all the states said: “I am gravely concerned with the which was 581,395 in 1839, required increasing number of deaths and in- * reapportionment o f members o f the juries occurring in automobile ac- General Assembly, increasing the cidents. Preliminary figures indicate number of State Senators by three to that the total of these losse* during thirty-three and the number of rep the year 1934,greatly exceeds that resentatives. by seven, or to sixty- of any previous year. We should, as hme. a people, he able to solve this problem Fourteen new counties were estab- which so vitally affects the lives and lisbed February 20, 1820, in North hoppiness of our citizen* ” western Ohio from lands acquired by The President knows why there pre the treaty with the Indians on the more automobile accidents, although Maumee, in September, 1817. They he does not say so, were; Allen, Crawford; Henry, Han cock, Hardin, Mercer, Marion, Pauld- It is said that man is 90 per cent ing, Putnam, Sandusky, Seneca, Wood, water. That was before repeal., Van Wert, and Williams. Only ...... - Wood and Sandusky counties were We have Received a letter frbm then organized, April 1, that year. ’ Katherine La Berny of Butler, Pa., Governor Brown, by reason of his aged ten years, saying she reads these activities for the projects, became “Notes,” and that she is writing a known as the “Father of the Ohio composition for school on “The Re- Canals,” although Governor Worth- suits of Repeal.” ington during his administration had - — . called the attention of the Legislature Stills are being seized today by to the important question. Even be- federal and state officers, very much fore the Ordinance of 1787, Washing- larger than in prohibition days. ton and Jefferson had discussed the -------- feasibility of a canal ' connecting ■ “Large enough to flood New York Lake Erie with the Ohio River, as a and New Jersey with illicit alcohol” link in a national canal system, con- was said of the illicit distillery raided necting the Mississippi with the St. in Elizabeth, New Jersey, It could Lawrence and the Atlantic, produce it was Reported, from 35,000 However, it was in the yetr 1827, to 50,000 gallons of alcohol daily. that canals became a reality and the Another still called “one of the nearly nine hundred mile system was largest in the United States,” this not completed until.the year 1847. time in Zanesville, Ohio, was found At the. first session of the Ohio recently by fifty Federal, state and Legislature, a law was passed author- city officers. It was located in an izfng a lottery to raise money to abandoned pottery which had been improve the navigation of the paritally razed by fire two years ago. Muskingum and Cuyahoga Rivers, but Nothing of this kind was to be it did not materialized found after repeal, said the wets. I While most of the near sixteen mil­ lions cost of the canals was defray­ ed primarily by State loans, the donations of lands by the Govern­ ment gave rise to receipts o f over two and a quarter million dollars. SCHOOL NEWS (Continued from Page One) I Lawrence Fulkerson; Virginia Swaney, Betty Rowe, Charlotte Turner. j JUNIORS LOWER RURAL ELECTRIC RATES The state utilities commission has (granted the Dayton Power &. Light Harold Benedict, Ddrothy Bennett, Go- authority to reduce rates in rural Geneva Clemans, Jean Dunevant, districts served out of Xenia, Dayton, Florence Ferguson, Pauline Ferguson, Wilmingtflp, Piqua and Washington. Rebecca Galloway, Ehneda Harris, G, H. More than 500 rural patronsWill Freda McCall, Phyllis Powers, Ferne &et a one cent cut on, first 30 k. w. b. Rose,- Marjean Smith, Evelyn Spar- per month, or eight cents. The next row, Mabel Turner. ;fifty k. w.«at 6c and all over at 3 l-2c SENIORS —*---------------- Gr.ce Barohu-t, Elemor Cooley. MORE TO WORRY ABOUT Mary Coplter, Jane Frame. Justin' ^ Hartman, .Elinor Hughes, Clcotis H we read the signs right we may Jacobs, Eileen Johnston, Frances expect to hear in the near future of Kimble, Mildred King, Stanley Swan- a yet unannounced marriage of one go, Gretchen Tindall, Catherine Wolf, of our prominent young men. A new Betty Tobias. topic to worry about for the time be- SIGHT-SAVING ROOM ing. Grace Deck, Rosalie Riley, Reginald ... . .... r .......... Vaughn. Subscribe for THE HERALD U B I K O LIFE GUARDFEEDS We Have A Complete Line o f Feeds AUKinds Grain Bought and Sold Complete Line o f GRASSAND LAWNSEDS PREMIUM COAL Top Price* Paid for . . l i r a A u c i U f n hasm I IM K IU K a P S Z Z I 8 « lint Me# DM Mm K m AMI Meal II 10JM Hart Ml prime Pest 1 » 14# LH 1JN • R U L E S * t. Write a letter, set from** belief 5w*e AU Mail: Starter, to B P J T B j K Bids.. Cledonatl, Ohio* I, Mention la yotft uti 4. Contest closes aldnljtht, totttr. day, Jtme h ism . WOOL or consign it to Ohio Wool Grower* Coop Association and get your advance HERE. MORE NEW TAXES j BROODER HOUSE DESTROYED f CORN PLANTING NOW ON ov. Davey in a message to the leg- . r j With favorable weather conditions islature Thursday asked for fcoOQjOQO A brooder house on the Norman, 'com planting will be shout ten days’ more in new taxes for old age pen- Cheney farm near South Charleston 'ahead of last year. Ope o f the first sions. The Gov. suggested an increase ^ a s recently destroyed by fire and to start planting that has been rsport- of one cent a gallon on liquid fuel that nearly 300 five-week old chicks burned I*d to this office ia Roy St. John of the would bring in about $7,000,000. The ^ fire u ^ ifton pike A warn shower would , , , , , ibe welcomed by farmer* to keep the from an overheated brooder. [grass for pastures growing. Gov. promised^ more new taxes and more economy. Another promise. SPRINGFIELD, OHIO J. I. CASE FARM MACHINERY T or P r ic . for Livortock—No Comnuoion MARKET DAILY Cummings & Creawell ph°”“ !c » : ^ o = r - m N ow In Full Progress! Great Value Giving Reorganization SALE! No matter where you live . . .how near or how far . . . the SAVINGS o f this great sale and the fine NEW merchandise offered . . . w ill more than pay you to come. The Sale That Is Different"*Offering NEW MERCHANDISE at Tremendous Savings! Every Piece of Merchandise in The Store Reduced! FLOUR SUGAR GOLD MEDAL OR P1LLSBURY PUREGRANULATED. STOCK UP NOWl 24 .25 LB. BAG LB. BAG $1.09 $1.19 JEWEL COFFEE .W. 3 * 49c $2.49 $2.19 MASH STARTING AND GROWING. WESCO. FOR MAXIMUM RESULTS n m • • 1OO-LB*| SACK SCRATCH FEEB LARD r:m BETTER AV., , .ULTS 100-LB.f SACK FINE FOR FRYING 2 31c Bread * . . . * • »■ « • • •i/im- ■* CmaiiFjCluk N r* J w »I m » «tyl*i Chocolate • • • • • < • ' bar FroMhMieF tm I B*kin( ptm. with mc * Va-lh* bar, Campbell's Soup.................2 cans 17 j : Old Dutch . . . . . . ,2 cans 1C c ClMMMr. KidnayBrnn................ 2 ^ 1 19c UrjmM* “ ■ 19c ! ’ i.‘n f ? S o t l a .................... * pko * 5 c At.ii andHammer. C^ ipso . . . . . Soap Flahed. C l’IK O . . . . . ShoHenfng, Wall Paper Cleaner,. * .2 cans 13 c Avalon. M otor O il . . . P*«rt-R«jd. Flu* tax. ♦ * * 'PKO. LB, CAN . « « . 1B> 21c X-GAL . * » a CAN "*C BOLOGNA -15c break fast bacon lb. 29c FRANKFURTERS . lb. IS c SMOKED CALLIES . lb, 20c COTTAGE BUTTS . lb. 38c FILLET ol HADDOCK, lb. | g c Strawberries EXTRA qt. | 1 1 ^ NICE . . . . J L 9 l r California Carrot* . bunch S c TOMATOES . . 2 lb*. 2 B C WINESAP APPLES, 4 1U. 2 & C 8 * * i 9 c 4^ l i e GRAPEFRUIT . NEW CABBAGE I A 'I

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