The Cedarville Herald, Volume 59, Numbers 1-26
* pedauvj I tjf . rzv.\u\ F riday , may is , THE C ED AR V I L L E HERALD ! KARLH BULL EDITOR AND PIT,USHER Mi.MITi! NV.t-:;.; r;iv :i-J A’ ljc.i 01:io Xinariiiiar A mdc ,; MUml Valley rre*a Assoc. Entered at the Poet Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October 31, 1887, as second class matter. , FRIDAY, MAY 15,’ 1936 DR, MrCHESNEY GETS COUNTY ENDORSEMENT Tho noTidnation of Dr, W. R. McChesney for a third term Peim*sentalive in the General Assembly by a substantial margin carmoi be trAvn other than a public endorsement of his vote, fur or against important bills that were of interest to citizen,? of this county. From' the voter’s standpointHhfi con test was not one of personalities but on the record of Dr, Me- Chesney in the lower branch of Ohio’s law making body. There was much comment .and at times heated debate over how the Doctor voted on such measures as old age pensions, relief, the milk bill, all sorts o f so-called social security legisla tion, as well as liquor legislation. ■' With nearly six thousand votes cast and a majority of 1200/ registered in favor o f Dr, McChesney, it is clear that the electors wrote their approval of the acts of their Representative in the General Assembly. . As we-canvass the vote we find, the unseen hand of an in fluence that might well take warning. Activity of certain in terests is leading us just a bit.closer to .county local option. While the vote was large considering the busy planting season, there were several hundred farmers that did not leave their fields to vote. Evidently this section of the-electorate would have only aetded to the size, of the endorsement of the Mc Chesney majority had it faced the ballot box. Greene counlv has every reason to feel proud of the record of Dr, McChesney in the legislature,' regardless of the fact that the Republicans in the House were in the minority. INFLATION IS NEARER DAY BY DAY Congress now has up for consideration what is known as the'Frazier-Lampke bill that provides for printing press money. All that is required is authority to order tons of paper, some ink and start government presses. . Many of the acts of the present national administration border on inflation but the answer we get is that it is controlled due to the government holding all the gold in the country and keeping it locked in government vaults. We are also informed that with this controf there can be no dangerous inflation. With the Frazier-Lampke bill no provision is made for any guaranty of payment, or that there is to be anything of value behind the hundreds of millions asked for. With the situation thus, the new money becomes nothing more than what we know as script. . . ' . , ., „ ,, The administration faces the most vital test ot any month it has been in control. If this bill becomes a law all government bonds will gradually decline in value. As money gets “ cheap e r ’ .the more of it will be required to purchase ary given article. All values will decline, whether it be bonds, real estate, or other investments. The cost of the necessities of live will increase as the value of money declines. This form of money sent Germany into an economic turmoil, while printing press bonds issued m France upset that nation. : . - With the great increase in the cost of living certain upon the issue of this serinL what is to become of the millions now on fixed income? Even the old age pension and the poor relief mite will melt in the hands of'the recipients before they will be able to purchase-the. same quantity possible today. Danger lurks ahead. P L U M B IN G Bath Room Outfits Electric Water Pumps 1 We are.prepared to install Kohler or Standard bath room outfits arid necessary bathroom plumbing. We are also agents fo r the Duro Electric Water Pumps. HOT WATER HEATING PLANTS If you are considering a hot water heating plant let u? give you estimates, on the American Ideal system installed. We can give you reference of our plants giving satisfaction in this community. F. E. HARPER Phone 130 ~ Cedarville, Ohio Glcarly . concisely T o Help Yotl . The United Stales News pre- In Your Thinking seats the news ot national at- . C7 fairs—organized for your con* . . . venience in special divisions as These an days when unprecedented follows: things are happening In n a t i o n a l The congress Week—what the affairs to affect you, your living, your Bonce and Senate debated , , . income and your buying power, Smurfr* passiCmniientin1nstc*r',ora The United Slates News, the weekly attitudes . . . implications. newsmagazine of national affairs, cuts _.*}>» ~ th* a Iane through the dark for you. Whst he said end d?d . .* the The. United States News gives you, meaning ot these conferences, In from half an hour to an hour a State of the union—a five- week, a straightforward, connected minute explanation of the high- narrative and interpretation of every- spots in the national news keeps thing essential in national affairs, you informed on the essentials. So ,,0C3 The United States News The Political Week—up-to-thc- do its Job of gathering, relating, con- mim •reports on what tne po- Sensing and explaining the Important hni(«an<1 news that lt ls read regularly by more planning . . . tho kettle bolls. than 50>000 8ubScribers. Tiun’ks* a’ niikk^intcrestin^sur” Thousands of b u s i n e s s executives, vcy ol pSbMc oplnion lnciudlnp organization leaders, thinMng men and the percentage:! of the press for women, read It to keep posted, and against on leading Issues. .■ . . . . . _ mS? 0 W"wh"t V GoIng on back rC0Kf '6THEUbUNITED of the scenes in the different £ £ j« A npwr l. *w departments, bureaus and "ad- ««?Cinr‘ news bcWna vUed to recelve it^nch wMk tho nous: tM the oext EIGHTEEN Voice of the New Deal—signed M —WEEKS for only $1.00 m n a r t i c l e s , by Administration ......... spokesmen Voice of Business- THE UNITED STATES NEWS, hotv bu.UuoM Icadna view na* oon. at nr tionai problems and propose to *2U j W Street, IV. W. eoive them. * Washington, I). C. , Send The United States News each week (f:r the next EIGHTEEN WEEKS for *1 00 9* boiled —vnur special offer to now subscribers, down t« & p8s<y AND IN ADDITION . . i .............. critical,iiupraisa) ot tho vvaoi* Isipt-Uj crone by David bAnu-ntr StWrc:- ........................... wnttjn p-r-ocinlly for The 'United State.1 Noe.! find appcarhiR In citv ...................... . Btfttc ......... tin other, public,itlon. t r W r i n k i k 'k 't e i t 'k i H r 'HERSLD WSNT ANDSALEADSPHY Wp had the pleasure o f being the guest o f IV. J, Galvin, at the Wilming ton Rotary Club meeting, Monday, along with two other newspaper friends. At our table was the Honorable Matthew R, Denver, former congressman from the old Sixth Dis trict that included Greene county. The club luncheon was held at the Denver Hotel, one of the finest small town hotels in the country. The name o f Denver is a household word in Clin ton county and always associated with civic advancement, banking, manu facturing and farming. With the pri mary election but a day away the occasion afforded the opportunity o f reviewing sonic past political history of Greene county. Mr. Galvin, then publisher as now of the Greene County Journal joined in regardless of the fact that the Journal had its candidate while the Herald espoused the Denver cause, Mr, Denver’s rec ord in congress as well as in the busi ness world is one that can, always be pointed to with much pride. Wilmington has a live Rotary club .whose membership numbers her lead ing business and professional men who no doubt live up ' to the ethics of that organization. It is a city that looks and is prosperous, all o f which is reflected in the. higli standard of the News-Journal. Mr. Galvin is no longer looked upon as a . “ newspaper publisher” for his organization owns a number o f daily papers in smaller cities in the state. Just this week the announcement .is made that two more have been added to the Galvin man agement. Both Van Wert papers will be consolidated for management, housed in a new building with the necessary modern machinery.. So much for Wilmington and the genial hospitality of Mr.. Galvin to whom we greatly appreciate the in vitation’'to be his guest. It .was more :hnn breaking bread and greeting old friends for the guest speaker was W, v .Wiley, publisher of’ the Cincinnati Enquirer, who spoke on “ Some Pre sent Day Political Trends.” We have read much on Americanism and the Constitution, we hav e heard all sorts j f talks, but never yet have we hoard present day tendencies so thoroughly analyzed as did Mr. Wiley on this occasion. While his .talk naturally had a political tinge yet it was not partisan, speaking only as one on guard fo r the future o f the. nation We' have received"a TuTT c o p y o f tin's address but did not get it in time for this issue. Herald readers will be in terested in reading it next week. Dr. VV. R. McChesney not only re- u'vcd.a good majority Tuesday, but ne carried 41 of the 49 precincts in the co.unty, according to the unofficial vote, and came within 10 votes of carrying Xenia city, The surprises over ihe primary re sults Tuesday have set the political dopesters on new subjects. How, why ind where the results turned out as they did giyes tho boys something new to. fligduss. In the finais it looks like some sacrifices wore made of a few ^candidates to reach some others in the background, at least the pre sent day comment tends that way. What the county needs more than any thing else is stricter enforcement of the election laws. It may not be a popular position for election judges out the laws speaks for itself on the matter o f switching from one party 0 another at a primary election. According to the Tiines-Star it now appears that at least half o f the oan- lidntes for congress from Ohio that were endorsed by Father Coughlin and his National Union for Social Justice nave boon nominated. For instance George O. Williams, Republican can didate for the Seventh District sent received 9,747 votes, with Cong. Marshall, 21 l i t . Arthur W. Alcshirc, Springfield, received the Democratic f nomination with the same Coughlin |endorsement. Greene county Repukli- j cans were surprised when Williams j raved 1,301 votes to 2jfo8 for Mar- i shell. We may not be far fn-.o the j time when both Republicans and con- j servalive Democrats will be glad to ; joi forces to combat radical tend- New Hybrid Wheat Sets Good Record Terimarq, Fair Example o f American Type Produced by Hybridization. Prapired by the United State* Depertinent ef ABrlcuIture.—WNU Service, Tenjnarq, the new liSgh*yteIdlng, ex cellent quality, hard red winter wheat which made a good showing this year in spite of the drouth, is a good ex- ample of an American variety pro duced by hybridization from wheats of other countries. Tenmarq, produced and tested by the Kansas agrlcutural experiment station and the United States Department of Agriculture, de rives Its name from the pedigree num ber of the male parent, Ten-sixty-six iind the female parent, Marquis. Ten-sixty-six Is a selection of hard winter wheat made in 1000 from a bulk lot of Crimean wheat introduced from Russia. Marquis is the result of a cross mude In Canada in 1892 between an early ripening spring wheat from Culculta, India, and lied Fife, a high quality, hard red spring wheat Intro duced into Canada in 1842 from Dan zig, Prussia. Tenmarq also Is an excellent exam- . pie of the procedure followed by the bureau of plant Industry in producing and testing new varieties. ' Tho first cross of Marquis and Ten-sixty-six was made in 1918. Several hundred selec tions of tills cross were tested iff the plant breeding nursery at Manhattan, Kan., until 1924, when the selection now known ns Tenmarq was advanced to field' plot tests on the agronomy farm. As It continued to show the good qualities sought, It was .tested at experiment stations In western Kansas, and a t' stations In Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado, and Nebraska, Tenmarq appeals to the grain trade, millers, and bakers, because it lias In herited many of the milling characters and “baking strength” of Marquis, Its spring whent parent. Marquis Is con- sider-l In the flour markets of the world as h high standard for new va rieties. Tenmarq Is supeiidr to Turkey, Kharkof, Ivnnred, and Blnckhull, old varieties ol1 hard red winter wheat in yield, stiffness of straw, earliness, and quality, the characters of primary interest to farmers. It was grown in quantities this year by 60 Kansas farmers and lived up to advance expectations, although the yield was affected by the drouth. Ten- mnrq Is not so winter hardy ns Kanred and Turkey and is not recommended. for northern Kansas or states to the north. • • ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR STANDS UNUSUAL TEST There'.Are Various Ways o f Destroying Stumps If time is un object stumps can be removed quickly by use of dynamite or a stump puller, but either method entails considerable work and expense/ says Pathfinder Magazine. If the proc ess can bo stretched out over several weeks they removed with little expense” or effort. Fire i s the ngene used but several weeks of treatment are necessary before the entire stump Is made Inflammable. Tlu treatment consists ot borihg several vertical holes into the top of the stump, filling them with saltpeter, and then adding hot water, tflie chemical will gradually be carried to all parts of the stump and as the holes empty they should be re filled. After about four weeks dur ing which time the holes have been refilled.about three times, the stump is ready to burn, Due to the saltpeter the lire will even fallow'the deep roots and consume them. World Wheat Supplies Production of wheat in the northern hemisphere, not including Russia' and Chinn, is expected to be nboiit 32T>,000, 000 bushels less than last year, and the crop of the southern hemisphere about 10ri,000f000 bushels less, according to the government survey, says Wallaces' Farmer. The world carryover appears to he about the same ns last year. The United .States carryover la estimated at “90,000,000 -bushels, which, together with the estimated production of 401,* 000,000 bushels, indicates a domestic supply of 781,000,000 bushels.. With a normal domestic utilization of about 020,000,000 bushels, this - would leave a carryover next July of about 150,000,* 000 bushels If there arc no net Imports or exports. cncics. I : A recital will be given at. 7:30 Mon day evening in the Presbyterian ; Church..with Eugene Corby a t the |organ, assisted by Miss Doris Hart- ! man, contralto. The recital will be ’ under the direction of Mrs. Margaret IJ. Work o f the Department of Music, Cedarville College. Subscribe for THE HERALD Dr. H. N. Williams 1 DENTIST X-RAY EQUIPMENT Yellovy Springs, Ohio Plan Crop Locations Considerable thought Is going to be needed to plan 1933 crop rotations so as to avoid damage from chinch bugs. It Is not so easy to plan for the elim ination or reduction of acreages of the grass crops such, as wheat, oats and rye. Care can be taken, however, lu planning field arrangements so that these crops nrp more or less'isolated from the cornfields, if the wheat fields are separated from corn by fields of clover, soy beans, potatoes, or other crops such as sugar beets the hugs are not likely to migrate through them to tiie corn,—Prulrie Farmer. Clover in Ontario In the clover plots at the Ontario Agricultural college there are-- 230 strains of early red clover, perennial red Clover, sweet clover, white clbver and aisike, says the Montreal Herald. Nearly 23,000 plants In nil are being studied, these Including, strains and Indigenous hardy types from Jltussia, other 'northern European countries, Amcricn, and from old pastures In On tario, the objective being thorough sp-, lection and cross-hybrldlzatlon to com bine th* best characters. NOTICE BREEDERS Belgian Stallion will make the season at m f barn on the Kyle Road, N. E. of Cedarville. This horse is a Golden Sorrell, with light mane and tail, 3 yrs. old, with plenty of size and bone, Fee $10,00 for 1 Colt or $8.00 each for 2 or more. Phone 2-157 ARTHUR HANNA A stock model Frigidaire household refrigerator has survived one of the most gruelling tests to which a home appliance evdr has been subjected, David Robison, dealer here *fo r the products o f the Frigidaire Division of General Motors,' learned toddy. •i Recently, in Miami, Fla., a Frigid-, arie was pieced in a sling, attached, to the bottom o f the Goodyear "blimp* iPuritan and flown over Bisda^ne Bay * (between Miami and Miami Beach, Mr, IRobison was informed. The bulletin jtelling him o f the test follows: j “ The new hermetically sealed imeter-miser’ with which the 1936 Frigidaires are equipped, and the new doubly-sealed steel cabinets have just furnished spectacular evidence of ability to withstand abuse to which no normal refrigerator will ever be subjected. . ■ Arrangements were made with Capt. Jack Boettner, manager o f air ship operations fo r Goodyear, to take aloft and drop the Frigidaire, encased only in canvas lifting straps such as piano movers use. It struck with a terrific impact. .Those on shore were certain it had broken open and sunk. But it popped up, floated and seemed to be all right. A speedboat retrieved it and towed it back and forth through the salt water to insure complete sub mersion o f the sealed mechanism and refrigeration unit. Then it was drag ged on to shore and opened up in the presence o f witnesses having no con nection with Frigidaire. “ The inside o f the. food, compart ment was-found to. bq, absolutely 'dry.; But would .it;.run ? A.ipowe'r line ‘hadj been strung some 1,200 feet to "the beach and when the Frigidaire was hooked on to it, there was a slight purr and the unit began- operating Within a few minutes the super freezer plate' was cold and when the ice-trays were filled right, there on the beach, ice soon began to form. “To make certain that there. hod : been no structural damage that would make the refrigerator unfit for use, a man with an oxy-acetlylene torch was put to work. He cut away the side o f the cabinet and found the insula tion between the steel exterior shell and the inside food compartment shell dry, The drop,, the submersion for hours in salt water and the subsequent : tests proved beyond any question, the soundness o f the hermetically sealed construction of the mechanical unit and the strength of the wrap-around sealed steel cabinet. When. R is re membered that it is quite-improbable that a refrigerator ever will be put to such severe, strain in. the uses for which it is designed, the survival o f this Frigidaire stands out as .proof o f its superiority,” Mr. Robison.- attempted to have the refrigerator - use din the test sent here, for public .display. I t has been placed in the Frigidaire patent museum at Dayton, Ohio, however. Subscribe to TEE HERALD ANNOUNCEMENT When the Cedarville Grain Company took over the “Allen Elevator” *o many equipment changes and addi tions were being made that a formal announcement of the new company,was put off till th® change* were complete. Then during the heavy corn marketing season just past, word seemed to go around by “ the grapevine tele* graph” and with the good volume of grain going through the elevator it seemed that most everyone in the com munity knew that the mill was again in operation. Recently, however, we find that a late announcement would be in order. Equipment in the mill, has been altered and modern ized so that, with’the addition of the. new equipment, for its size and capacity, it is at par with any in the state* 1. The new power truck dump will handle grain trucks without delay. This is'particularly important with >wheat harvest coming on. 2. The new drag feed on the corn sheller allows shelling com about as fast as it can be dumped, 3. The new instantaneous moisture tester eliminates delay in grading wheat for moisture. 4. The new grain drier will permit us to handle “combine” wheat and green corn which some elevators shy at. 5. The new steel corn cutter and grader produces the highest-quality'cut and polished corn.^^ Binder Twine - Feed - Seed - Fertilizer - Coal CEDARVILLE GRAIN CO. -South Main Street Telephone 21 Cedarville, Ohio BARGAINS ■ — IN— ■ NEW AND USED FURNITURE Special Sale Saturday on Ironing Boards .*• and. Clothes Racks. - .t Trade where your dollars buy most. BARNHART’S S W A P S H O P S, Main Street Cedarville, Ohio FORSALE ANDWANTADSPAYBIG THE GHOST Of THE CRUKIBLE • John Baptist van Helmonl had spent his life seeking for a means to.transmute a base metal into gold. He had grown old, his eyes had faded, and the intense heat of his alchemist’s fires had .seamed and scared his face and hands . . . yet he had not found what he sought. One morning in.the year- 1609, how* ever, he was bending over his crucible when, all at once, something strange and startling happened. In an entry made In his ledger that day, van Helmonl de scribed It tintsi . * Then the heated crucible did belch forth a wild spirit or breath. This ityjrit, up teithe,present time . , :• ofthelng<eon->1 -fipqd,jo,.vessels, pur,|caip*6k>^Nfeihglrfev;.,.: / duced to.• visible body-iV.- I'fcaTTIt^d ier’ new name of Geest.” The maW bad dis covered gas and had named it, because ! of its intangible and, to him, elusive qual ity « Ghost or spirit. . « Simple and crude at the discovery was — anyone can perform van Heimont’s basic experiment by heating a piece of wood or coal in a test tube — it paved the Way for a long series of developments and inventions that have since been em bodied into automatic gas heat . . . Tim lest tuba has given place to the gas. pipe, end the alchemist’s haphazard experiment to the Intense and rigorous research and painstaking experiment of Urn healing engineer. Even the Geest has changed. Gas la no longer elusive or wild. Today, It is subject to the most exact Con trol known to heating science, and has become tlm ekanest, safest, most depend able and eoitvenient of heating and cooking fuels. Using equipment without moving parte to wear and grow noisy with age, Gas, in the modern form of automatic gas heat, baa indeed undergone many changes since that day In 1699 when It was accidentally, discovered by A man in search for gold. The Dayton Power & Light Co. A daughtt* Mr, and Mr, i# manager o For Sale- quality for pules north Prof. John Ky„ spent th mother, Mrs, y took ove . mgei and ~f- uncement e were com] ting season grapevine n going thr me in the in open announce Thousands from an unki an investigai Greene Coun Mt Prof. O Catherine Ind., were vi with Miss In Mrs.,Callie siding with several days suffered a br patient in th Mrs. Margo here on a visi ed to her Virginia, Wet illness o f he ed and moi equipment in the stal handle | important I"*'sheller ai dumped, ester eltmii 5 us to hi some elev ler produce tilizer - ( Mr. Russell o f the local vania track li rented the G Main street. IN GO Cedarville, Mrs. Sarah J. Oglesbee, appointed niei Greene Count Judge S. C. "V Work has tion o f the n mings & Gres be 30x80 of s being erected 1 While peart were killed from the app be at least a fruits and be extreme weat Mrs. George Wednesday a members of th ;. membership social manne served. s; Mrs. E. C. < end with her * ter,, Mr, and Louisville, Ky accompanied •Morton 6f Loi ITURE Boards most. T’S edarville, ( Mr. Meriyn Innto, 111., we death o f the l: The latter is Stewart Satte lett and wife also in attend funeral. A delegation! from Californil ton, D. C., pass afternoon, es| Patrolmpn. cars loaded wi| tions bearing states implorir Townsend pel monthly to all] The Epwortl general clean-i urday morning dish dinner Everyone .is Sunday ever “ God In Natur if the weatheJ tetler will givd to come to thi inspirational ii PAY 81 The Board preciative of t| mittec compos! liam Marshall [ were named tij voters o f the cultural and ing which was I issue Tuesday.| 69 per cent. Mrs. Ida Std Pittsburgh, P:j tion of her sot. at the commej burgh-Xetiia Rev. Stormont the Mt. Hope congregation lowing his gr remain with tion.^ Commeij day.* The monthll men’s Club w| home of Mri program wssl Kuehrmnnn g| American w play was gb o f Mrs, Louis J. Work re while vocal ij by Miss Atvr Robert J a « Were served Dents cm* \ 4 *r
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