The Cedarville Herald, Volume 59, Numbers 27-52
CFBARVILLE HERALD, FRIDAY, JOEY 1 7 ,IWJ •AiiM **l > L oca l and Personal n- 1 " 1 -j • ............. Mias Jessie Small baa been visiting in Columbus fo r two weeks. Mrs. •J. M. McMillan and son, “ Johnnie,” are the guest o f relatives in Cleveland. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Orr have been spending a week visiting with the former’s father in Fair Haven, 0 . Mrs. George Confarr and daughter, Joyce Ann, are on an extended visit with relatives in Michigan. UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Ralph A . Jamieson, Minister Sabbath School, 10 a. m. Meryl Stormont, Supt. I Preaching, 11 a. m., by the pastor. Y. P. C, U., 7 p. m. Subject! “ The Divine Voice o f Nature.” Eleanor Cooley, Leader, The Y. P, G. IJ. have planned an ice cream and cake sale on the church lawn, Saturday, p. m, o f this week. Telephone order's to the homes of .Tames Anderson or to the parsonage, CedarviJle \Federal Savings & Loan Association, is n ow .accepting invest ment funds. Mrs. Harrison Deck and son, James, and daughter, Grace, are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Banard, in Youngstown. A report has reached this place that the cement workers in both the Miami and Wabash plants near Os born, have walked out on a strike. Bennie' Sparrow, who has been clerking in the local Kroger grocery, has been transferred to one o f the Xenia stores belonging to the same company. Dr. Ralph A. Jamieson and family motored to Frenehburg, Ky., Monday, to spend a few days with the daugh ter and family, the Wileys. , An eight pound daughter wak born to Mr. and Mrs. John Stanforth, Mon day. Mother and babe are in the Haines hospital in Jamestown. Mrs. R. J. Hill and two daughters, have returned to their home in ■Homestead Park, Pa., after a (two week’s visit with' relatives here. Mrs. Arthur Townsley left Wednes day fo r Washington, D. C., to visit, with her sons, Ira and Everett Towns ley. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Galloway and four daughters returned home Sat urday, after spending two weeks camping in Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Robert MacGregor and daughter, who have been spend ing two weeks in Orange, Mass., visiting with Mr. MacGregor’s mother, having returned home. Dr. and Mrs. If* E, Gaston o f Cin cinnati, spent Sunday with the la,-"- ter’s sister, Mrs. Line McCullough and daughter, Mrs. Harry Wright and family. Mrs. McCullough returned with the Gastons for a visit in Cin cinnati. Judge and Mrs. S. C. Wright arid Mr. Harry Wright of this place, and Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Peterson, Frank fort, O., were called to Idaville, Ind., Fridqy, by the death o f Miss Luella Wright, a sister o f the Judge, Mr. •Harry Wright and Mr. and Mrs. Peterson, returned Monday, while Judge,. Wright and wife remained in Idaville for a few days. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Dwight R. Guthrie, Minister Sabbath School, 10 a. ,m. Paul Ramsey, Sqpt. Lesson: “ Social Serv ice in the Early Church,” Acts 4;32- 35; Cot. 8:1-9. Golden text: “ He himself said, it is more blessed to give than to receive.” Acts 20:35, Worship Service, 11 a. m. Following the devotional part o f the service, “ Conference Echoes” will be presented by Misses Doris Ramsey, Martha Jane Martindale, and Miss Rachel Creswell. Our pastor will speak .briefly on the conference faculty. The Sunshine Club will meet at 7 p. m. in on Sabbath. The Fellowship Club will meet at 7:30 p. m., on Sabbath. Plans will be made fo r the summer picnic to be held the following week. There will be no.,Un ion Evening Services until the’ Sabbath evening of Sept. >6th. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Charles Everett Hill, Minister Church School, 10, aj m. P. M. Gil- lilan, Supt. Worship Service,'ll a. m. Subject: "Amos, Prophet o f Social Justice.” Epworth League, 77 p. m. No evening worship service. -S Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Huey, who have been on an extended motor trip to Illinois and Colorado, where they visitpd with relatives for more than two weeks, have returned home. H. A, McLean; village marshal, who has been critically ill was moved to the McClellan hospital/last Saturday for .an x-ray investigation to deter mine certain intestinal trouble. Mr. McLean is somewhat improved at this time but far from being on the road to ultimate recovery. Fire destroyed a large bam and crib bn, the Smith farm, Ballard road, near Jamestown, Wednesday,-, Neigh bors formed a bucket-brigade and. saved the residence and a 65-acre field o f wheat near the bam. Mr. and Mrs. John Johnson, who ave been residing temporarly in Jamestown fo r more than a year, ex cept to return here to their own resi dence, Saturday. Rev. J. Merle R ife,, professor of Greek in Earlham College, Richmond, Ind., has resigned ids position to ac cept a similar .chair in Muskingum College, New Concord, 0 . Dr, Rife has already moved to his new loca tion and with his family are now visiting here with his father, Mr. J . B. Rife and Mrs. Rife’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. N.. L. Ramsey. The Dayton Power & Light -Co,, lias started erection o f a new power and light line on the Plymouth road from Jamestown to Bowersville in Silvercreek twp. County TreasUrer~Harry- M. Smith; dr his deputy will be at the Exchange Bank building, Wednesday, July 22,' for the collection of real estate taxes as well /& special assessment taxes. Wanted—We buy and sell new and used cars. Belden & Co., Steele Bldg., Xenia, O, . j For Sale—Male Poland and China hog, G. W. Watson. <3t) Subscribe to THE HERALD SANITARY PROTECTION w ithout NAPKINS OR BELTS Performing the i r function safely, tttt* dcntly, with new comfort. . • yet to tiny that * day's supply tan Ka **r-' tk i Jab kandfca*! Manufactured by B*Ettes Co., Inc, DuBois, Penn#. BOXES OF 12—3§c HANDBAG PACKETS OF 3—12c COZYTHEATRE South Main Street FRIDAY and SATURDAY July 17-18 M A E W E ST —-In— “Klondike Annie” —with— V ictor M cLaglen SUNDAY and MONDAY July 19*20 C laudette Colbert Fred M cMurray —in— “The Bride Comes Home” TUBS., WED. and THUR8. July 21-22-23 SH IRLEY TEMPLE , “Captain January” Shbwa at 7:30 and 9:15 Adm ission 10 and 11 eants Temperance Notes feMMMd by CedarviUa V . G. T. U, “ Illicit liquor is the cause o f 50 per cent loss in revenue.”—Tap A Tavern, March 12, 1936. The repealista told us that repeal o f the - Eighteenth Amendment would drive the bootleggers from the land. The Brewery Worker o f March 1938, said; » “ Over 8,000,000 more persons lived on federal relief in 1935 than in 1934. The increase o f unemployment in Jan uary, 1936, was the highest since 1031. Put the two gethor and we have misery.” a The dry progressive forces o f Ohio will meet at Columbus April 16, to consider the forming o f a new party. It i3 expected a platform will be adopted and a state ticket placed in the field.. Fred J. -Freestone, master o f the New York Grange, said recently in an address: v N f | “ The repeal o f National Prohibition has plunged us into a state o f chaos, lawlessness amt disaster that was fully expected by all who remembered the liquor regime which preceded the enactment o f National Prohibition, The same defiant outlaw which the liquor traffic has always been, again has -the nation by the throat, in form infinitely more degrading than even in the old saloon days. Restrictions that formerly held the traffic in some sem blance o f control have been thrown to the winds.” “ Gentlement,” said General. Philip Sheridan on one occasion, after the ladies had retired from dinner, “ shall we drink like- gentlement, or like beasts?” “ Like gentlement,” was the somewhat indignant answer. “ Then,” said Sheridan, “ wje shall all get drunk •for beasts know when they have bad enough.” “ The man who has'been through a hundred high schools and a hundred universities, and does not know his Bible, is not an educated man, and never can be.”—Henry van Dyke. Clarence Darrow o f Chicago, in a recent address made before the Ohio Hotels’ Association, meeting in To ledo, O., on the topic, “ Repeal as I Have Seen It,” said, “ It will be only a few years until we get another does o f prohibition." Mr. Darrow was a foe to prohibition, but he seems to have realized that repeal Is a failure. At a b ig temperance mast meeting held a t Wooster, 0 „ February 23, Rev. E. H. Mohn o f the Methodist church, saidf “ The church can no more cease fighting the liquor traffic than it can cense repeating the Lord’s prayer,” He ventured the prediction that dry fraces could never hope to get very far under the leadership o f politicians, nor through depending upon any poli tical party. The goal, he suggested should be such a preponderant public opinion against the liquor traffic that total abstinence would be approved just as public ■opinion approves modern sanitation, public education or tiafflcreguration. ~ “ Beer having 3.2 per cent alcoholic content is an intoxicating beverage, according to a rilling handed down re cently by the State Supreme Court o f North Dakota. This ruling affects only beer shipped into North Dakota as this state has no brewery at the present ime. - - You laugh at prohibition laws. The libertine laughs at the marriage laws, The anarchist laughs at the property laws. Watch out that your son doesn’t laugh at all the laws! Let’s quit laughing at any law.—Dan Morgan Smith. A prominent columnist (H. J. Phil lips) writes in a metropolitan paper; The old saloon has its faults, but at its worst there was never any chance that you would have to fight your way through school girls to get to the bar.” Some one has said: “Alcoholic drink injures one Internally, externally and eternally." The U. S. Circuit Court o f Appeals the past month ruled that three and two-tenths per cent beer is intoxl eating. The opinion was handed down in an appeal from Montana, where AJ R. Mitton was convicted o f selling beer to -an Indian on the Fort Crow reservation, For six months, feminine drinker! o f the city o f St. Louis have been ex cluded from tavern bars, and for six months they have,steadfastly claim#: their right to drink at the bar a# wel as anywhere else that the men drink, They have at last won their case. Laboratory to Study Soy Bean S eek N ew V a r ie tie s fo r . Many Industrial I Uses. l A co-operative Industrial research■ ’laboratory has been set up at the enl iven!ty of Illinois to study the soy- ibean crop. Dr. E. O. May has been •named the director. Breeding work Is -under the direction of W, J. Morse o f ; ’ the bureau o f plant industry. Three Immediate objectives of the new laboratory are: Improvement of present industrial uses for soy beans; more facts on the effects of different processes on the quality and quantity o f soy bean products; and facilities for testing different varieties as to adapta bility for industrial use. On experi mental plots nearby, plant breeders hope to grow new varieties even better suited to Industrial demands. Soy bean acreage rose from 2,000,000 acres In 1024 to nearly 5,000,000 last year. Production of the beans them selves increased from 5,000,000 bushels to 40,000,000 bushels. Reasons for this Increase—-In addition to the demand for beans for food, feed and industrial uses—are Immunity of soys to chinch bugs and other pests, good prices com pared with other grain crops, drouth resistance and high seed yield. Soy beans are used In making indus trial and food products such as pnlnt, enamel, varnish, glue, printing ink, rubber substitutes', linoleum, Insecti cides, plastics, glycerin, flour, Boy sauce, breakfast food, candles, roasted beans with a'nut-Uke. flavor, live stock feeds, and so on, .jLecUhln is a valu able product of soy bean oil used In the manufacture of candles, chocolate, margarine, medicines, In textile dyeing and as an emulsifier. *A question the hew laboratory will study Is why the same soy varieties growing uuder varying soli and cli matic conditions show a range of 12 to 26 per cent In oil and 28 to 54 per cent I d protein. For paints, varieties having an oil high In “Iodine number” are desirable, For food -purposes an oll low In “Iodine number” Is better. This laboratory Is being established under the provisions of the Bankhead- Jones act of June' 29, 1035, which pro vides for establishing by the Depart ment of Agriculture of a limited num ber of specialized laboratories in the major agricultural regions. Miss Aimabelle Murdock has re turned home after a visit wjth rela tives in Arkansas. Mis* Murdock ha* not been in good health for some weeks but is much Improved and Is visiting at present at the home o:' Mr. and Mrs. Clayton McMillan. Use Safety Pens for Handling Young Bulls “Never slaughter a high grade young bull Just because- lie lias an ugly dis position. The Indiscriminate slaugh tering of young bulls Is a great hin drance to herd improvement In this state,” says John A. Arey, extension dairyman at North Carolina State col lege. When a bull has been found to have the ability to transmit good type and high milk producing capacity , to his daughters, Arey added, be la a proven asset to the herd.«<The life of these bulls, which take- the guesswork out of breeding, should be prolonged as long as they are active A dairy bull can be handled safely, and his period o f usefulness extended, by keeping film In a safety bull pen. Such a pen can be built by any dairy man at low cost from materials usual ly found around a farm, he added. “A wider use of safety bull itens would not only mnke possible more rapid progress In herd improvement," Arey declared, “but at the same time would protect the care-takers from ugly bulls. No mntter how tame a bull may appear to he, there Is no way of telling when he may suddenly turn on his handlers.” Oats as Peed Oats are not so high In fattening properties as corn. However, oats are very desirable ns part o f the grain ration, especially for breeding' animals and growing young stock, says the Rural New Yorker. On n strictly .nu tritive basis oats contain nn average of about 16 per cent less stnrcli and sugar, or as the chemist calls them, carbohydrates; about 1 per cent less fat, but a llttle over 2 per cent more crude protein than corn. On the aver age oats contain about 15 per cent less total digestible nutrients than corn. Corn contains an average of about 1,714 pounds of total digestible nu trients per ton and oats nn average of 1,408 pounds. Cow Always at Work “Contented cows” are tqzy-looklng critters. All they have to do, seeming ly, Is eat, sleep, and chew their cud, yet enviable as their lives may appear to be* they are one of the hardest working animals on the fArm. Night and day their bodies are working to produce milk, the secretion of which requires a steady drain of food from the blood stream, If well fed, nutrients are taken from the digestive tract by the blood, but If undernourished the cow produce* milk at the expense of her body as a result, |Must Watch Closely To Save Vegetables Strict attention to a few essential points should be given by home can* ners who are putting up the winter’s jsupply o f non-acid vegetables, i f the food is to he as good as the canner hopes, according to Lillian Brinkman, nutrition specialist, Ohio State Uni versity. Miss Brinkman says that the three moBt important things to watch in this type o f canning are the condition o f the vegetables, the method of can ning used, and the proper manipula tion o f the equipment. Homemakers who have attended canning schools in the state this summer list those three things as causing the most trouble. Vegetables should be mature, they should be picked in the morning, and they must be canned within qne or two hours from the time they are picked. Peas which are picked and allowed to stand for a couple o f days are very likely to spoil in the cans. Corn should be cut fronv the cob but should not be scraped, and the dish into which the qorn is cut should be washed every hour. If -the dish iB used for several hours without being washed, the canned com probably will sour* Jars which have nicks on the seal ing edge Should not be used for can ning anything except fruit preserves. The jar rings must be new anil of good quality for canning non-acid vege tables, and two rings should never be used on one jar. When a pressure cooker is used, jars should bo sealed immediately after the cooker is open ed and then the.- lids should not he touched until- the food is to be used. Some steam cookers are now being used in canning, and the method of operating these is different than that for using pressure cookers. Home canners should follow the directions o f the manufacturer o f the type o f equipment which they are using. Many Ohio counties now have home demon- sration agents who will arrange can ning schools to show groups approved ways o f using all types o f equipment. All canned foods should be ex amined fo r appearance and odor when they are opened for use. Any canned goods having unusual odors should be iramed. All canned foods should he cooked for at least 10 minutes before they are tasted or are served for food. Bulletin No. 104, Home Canning for Better Family Meals, published by the agricultural extension service, Ohio State University, can be obtained from agricultural or home demonstra tion agents in Ohio counties. PLUMBING Bath Room Outfits Electric Witter Pumps We are prepared to install Kohler or Standard bath room outfit! and necessary bathroom plumbing. We are also agents for the Duro Electric Water Pumps, H O T W A T E R H E A T IN G PLANTS I f you are considering a hot water heating plant let us give you estimate! on the American Ideal system installed. We can give you reference o f our plants giving satisfaction in-this community. F. E. HARPER. Phono 1 30 Cedorvillo, Oh io Mr. Richard Barker o f Sidney, O., has been sent here by the Krogery Co., to fill the vacancy when Bennie Sparrow was placed in a Xenia store. " I ’ve painted hundreds o f homes. And I know thatwhen you use LOWE BROTHERS HIGH STANDARD House Paint, your house is painted t o stay pa i n t e d . H IGH STANDARD is economical .paint.. "I find that HIGH STAND ARD outlasts ordinary paint two and three years. . . and so the average per-year cost for protection is much lower. “ Another thing I like is the LoweBrothersPictorialGolor Chart. It shows therightcolor schemes for many types o f homes and every kind o f room . . . in pictures painted with actual paint. I f makes choos ing color schemes easy for the homeowner.” Before YOO paint, come tn and consult the Lowe Brothers P ic to r ia l < C olor Chart, There is m obligation.. - CUMMINGS&CRESWELL CEDARVILLE, OHIO FARM IM PLEM ENTS , H A R D W A R E , PA IN T S , O IL IFYOUNEEDPRINTINGDROPIN KROGER STORES COFFEE JEWEL HOT^DATED 15c Special low prtca ou this fresh, smoothand fragrant coffee. lb . bag 3-lb. baf 45c Combl.atloa Sale! 1 pk«. fee. Comity Cktfc CORN FLAKES a r i ■■■" . 1 pkg. Coaatry Cleb BRAN FLAKES both for 19c Use o f Buckwheat Very little experimental work has ap parently been done on the use of buck wheat for hay. This plant Is very high in fiber and unless cut quite green makes very coarse fodder. It has also been claimed that, fed alone, It some times causes digestive disturbances and has been known to bring out nn Itchy rash on the light-colored akin of ani mals, Buokwhent does its best work at a weed-killing crop or to plow un der to add hrnntiS. Only small amounts are harvested n# grain, WALDORF *• * mdrtsarbMt roH 4 e CATSUP 3 14-ox. bafttei 25 c I I P M f h Sweet aad tender O r t H a Pot la a sepply £ Na. 2 coni 25 c HEUZ SOW s ® 2 Largo coat 25 c APPLE BUTTER£ras%’i? 15 c FIDOS sse. 24 lb. tack 69 c T W I H K L E Gelatin Dessert — six delicious flavors for tasty summertime des serts. 25c Lifebuoy Soap 3 bars 17c Scottissuo 2 rolls 15c Rlnso Soap Powdor Lga. Meg. 19Vac PooRut Softer Embassy. 2>lb. for. 25c CeratryCtek Fruit Cocktail 2 No. 1 cans 29c Ginger Soaps. Fresh lb. 10c Icod Too— Wesco ’/ 2 -lb. pkg. 25c Bovoragos— “Kroger 24-oz. bot. 8c (Pies i t Set. dig.) Coaatry Chib Tomato Juice Tall can 10c Cookies*—Hiking Day-Tad Pkg. 15c Dr«gkt condition* hovo eaated qlmsst a complete tailor# of many crops of local fruits and vegetables. Wo orga oor easterners to keep tkl. in mtnd and toko advantage at oor present lowprices aa cannedgoods. Everything points to the fact that oar own replace* ment ooit will bo higher. This ts a adit opporton'a time to etoefc apt WESCO FEEDS 14% Dotty Feed— 100-lb. bog,. . . » 20% Dotty I l-lb, boi .$1.39 100 . g ............$1.49 24% Dairy Feed— 190-lb. bag ........... SMS Scratch Feed— 100-lh.bag — ,$1.«S $2.09 BUDGETS MAY MEAN LITTLE Village, township and school officials under the law must file budget# for the coming year, all o f which means little other than a lo t o f detail red- tap# for the officials. Budgets filed last year Were upset by relief legis lation end i f the sales tax is changed mqst. o f lb* budget trouble this year will ba usdess. FRANKS BO LOGNA CALLIES CHEESE BACON LARD lb- 20 c **>. 2 0 c M»- 23 c lb. 23 c ib* eoc 2 lbs. 2 9 c TOMATOES BEETS HEAD LETTUCE POTATOES . CELERY . WATER MELONSj * 2 lb *. 2 5 e 3 bunch* 1 0 c . 2 f « * i 3 e 10 lb s. 4 9 c Bunch 5 c <m lee 48c Horn* o f . .Hot Dotud Cofftt. . leaking Dotud Cookfof. . «L 9 Subscribe fo r THE HERALD
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