The Cedarville Herald, Volume 60, Numbers 27-52
*m cx> T * C7m cn* > > > i $ A M g ^ 'iS f . . :=■ -v * ' i ■ >wW ^ ■’ :'.■ •'- V ^ : ' • • -■' •* ?/>• Parkyakarkus and Jce Fenner “ light up” when they see the •hundreds o£ gorgeous girls that appear with them in the newest and most sensational musical eeaaedy released this, season, New Faces Of 193?/* „ „ Heading the gala ea 3 t of this spectacular production are Har riet Hilliard, Thelma Leeds, WEliazn Erady, Joa Fenner, Milton Berle and FarkyakarJras, besides a hundred now faces and person alities brought from the world's gay places to make this musical "different* and more exciting, “New Faces o f 193?** will he seen at the beautiful Stato The atre in Springfield for & week beginning, Saturday, August 28. A Boeeial “ Owl Show” pravuo is scheduled for Friday night, August 27, at 11 P. M. REPORT OF SALE j Monday, August 23, 1937 Springfield Live Stock Sales Co, IIOGS—SCO head. 200-225 I ds . ___________ 12,03 225-250 lbs______ _______11.80 250-275 lbs............ ..........-11.63 275-300 lbs. —_________11.45 300 lbs. u p ____________ 11.24 down 180-200 lbs. _____ 12.00 160-180 lbs. __________ 11.35 to 11.S0 140-160 l b s , ___________ 11.55 to 10.05 120-14G l b s . ___________ 10.40 to 10.50 Feeding p i g s __________12.30 down Sows _.___________ ______ 9.80 to 10.65 S t a g s ______ 8,80 to 9.50 SHEEP & LAMBS—350 head. Top lam b s ________ - ___10.75 Medium lam b s__________ 9.25 to 10.25 Feeding l a m b s ______ ___8.25 Fat e w e s _______________ 4.25 down CATTLE—125 head. Grass steers ________ 7.70 to 7.30 Grass h e ife r s ____________8.45 to 7,75 Common h e ife r s ________ 5.G0 to 6.20 Hairy heifers __________ 5.S0 down Best Fat c o w s __________ 5.70 to 6.69 Medium c o w s ____________4.10 to 5.50 Bologna c o w s _______ — 4.00 down Butcher b u lls__ ______ —5*95 to 6.65 Breeding bulls —-----------6*60 t° 6*60 iMilk cows — ——$30.00 to $80.00 VEAL CALVES—150 head. Gcsd and choice - ——.11.10 to 11.80 :-Top medium -------——9.65 to 10.85 (Low medium — — —6.90 to 8.05 ■Culls —_________________-6.85 down | The slump in hog prices on terminal imarkets at noon today was reflected in prices on this market today. A load o f weights averaging 205 lbs. sold at 12-05, and a deck o f 185 lbs. averages at 12.00. Weights over 225 sold from 11.00 down, and weights under 180 lbs. sold downward from 11.89 down. Feeding pigs sold up to 12.S0, and stags mostly around 9.50 Graded fa t cows cashed at 10.65 with odd head higher. In the cattle division there were no ’ choice or medium dry lot steers or heifers offered. Best grass steers offered were o f medium grass kind ar.d sold up to 7.90. Heifers o f the same sort sold at 7.75. Best fat cows offered topped at 6.60. Butcher bulls : o f medium grade sold up to 6.65. Milk cows and springers sold up to $80 with calf by side. PEACHESFORSALE EABI a EY CBAWF0BBS — CHAMPIONS Beady Next Week CallP. M. Gillian or L, J. George Phones: 3-86 and 26 CEDARVILLE, OHIO WANTED! ANTIQUE GLASSWARE & FURNITURE Best Prices Paid Articles o f no value to you are worth money to me. Especially want colored glassware, must be fifty years old or over. Gan use six-leg drop-leaf tables in maple, cherry or walnut. Chests, open arm chairs and many other items. Address, Collector, care box 17, Cedarville Herald. THE TOPIC FOR TODAY IS Hog Feeding This mixed feed is suggested'for the feeder who has had wheat too, good to use for straight hog feed and who has sent in will send it to the nulling market. WHEAT— 1400 pounds ground light weight wheat or re- cleaned screenings which according to Henry & Morrison is almost as good for hog feed as heavy wheat. OTHER GRAINS—3G0 pounds Wayne Grain Substitute which consists of ground corn, ground barley, fine ground oats, standard middlings, hominy feed, limestone and salt. This « » feed mixed at Allied Mills plant, is reg-> letered in Ohio with a guaranteed minimum protein of 19 g r cent and is NOT as an ambitious rumor has it, Rood corn. This feed adds variety. (Y g jm XM EN T -^O O pounds Wayne Hoy 40 which needs >explanation for its performance. above feed mixed and delivered at today’s prices r# a complete hog feed with 14.$ per cent protein at SOper ton. A price less than hominy! And so much iter feed value! " It’s worth anyone’s time to tigat*. ( Continued from first page) • ■ - request, Waiter W . Mitchell, vice chairman o f the commission directly in charge o f the administration of the sales tax law, predicted & short age o f $500,000 in the operation of the commission during the current year, and added that the $156,000 "cushion” fund appropriated m the biennium bill to the tax commission would hardly suffice for the sales tax division, alone. He qualifies his re marks, however, with the admission that “we. could gat along some way i f we got the $150,000.” BadGW! Qon’tMindGrandpa! Temperance Notes Sponsored by Cedarville W. C. T. XL There Is No Fence In Moral Issues Some people say they are on the fence; but there is no fence in any moral issue. Jesus Christ tore down the fence, pulled up the posts, filled up the holes, leveled the dirt and burned the wood, when H said! “ He that is not for me is against me.” Those people who claim to be on the fence probably would not have the courage to climb up on the fenc eif there were a fence. They would be more likely to crawl into a hole under the fence. , Mary Hands Armor, in Georgia Bulletin. Liquor After Women and Youth The brewers are adopting the most deliberate program possible' to cap ture what its spokesman called “ 36,- 000,000 young non-beer users,” who grew from childhood in the national prohibition period. The amazing fact that the national prohibition perdio saw the develop ment o f a trillion dollar ($1,000,000,000 industry in soft drinks, fruits and vegetable juices, has hot been over looked by the brewers*- The daily press earned the follow ing July 23: “ Americans drank enough hard liquor and malt bever ages during the fiscal year ending June 30 to float a fleet o f fifteen ships the size of the Queen Mary or the Normandie, figures released by the Bureau o f Internal Revenue showed. “ The devil has both arms around the man who feels confident that moderate drinking won’t hurt lam.” While you may laugh at the antics of a drunken man remember there may be a mother, wife and children crying over him. Some one has well said: “ The old pre-prohibition day ealoon was a Sun day school picnic compared to our present saloon system.” j? Beautiful Barbara Read representing the modern generation who make their own dates, and Victor Moore, whose generation is strictly out-of-date, come Into conflict in “Make Way For Tomor row,” a Paramount picture dealing with the revolt of youth against old-fashioned parents, v. . ■ “Make Way For Tomorrow,” is a story of a typical American daughter whose ideas of a good time are not understood by her grandparents, who look after her while her mother plays birdge and her' father is .busy on the golf links. . . This wonderful drama which wiil have you crying one minute and laughing joyously the next, is scheduled for a week’s engage ment at .the new air-cooled Majestic Theatre in Springfield, begin ning Thursday, August 26. Increased demand fo r woolen fabrics in the United States in 1937 brought the consumption o f apparel wool 18 per cent above the 1936 figures. Prices for Wool are expected to ye- main near present levels for the next few months. Higher wages fo r farm labor during the next 12 months are in prospect unless unforseen factors chang pre sent conditions. The trend has been continuously upward for the past four yeai’s and the rate o f increase shows no'sign of slacking. that plantilf has filed suit for divorce in the Common Pleas Court Greene County, Ohio, praying for a divorce on the ground of gross neglect and extreme cruelty. Said case will be for hearing on and after six weeks from the first publication of this notice and that unless she answers 'by that time ) judgment may be taken for plaintiff, FRANK L. JOHNSON, Attorney for Plaintiff. (6-25—7-29-01;) LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Greene Common Pleas Wm, P. Hamer vs. , „ „ iRega P. Hamer. In pursuance of the order of the. Probate ° . . , . , Court of Greene County* Ohio, I will offer for ih e QGiGnu&Tit whose last known ad- sale at public auction on the dress was Sarasota, F la., w ill take 18th Day o f September, 1037, .^.notice that suit fop divoreo has been at the We;uALo^F0t o 0CourtAHouse In Xenia. filed aSainst her ^ plaintiff charging Ohio, the fallowing described real estate, extreme cruelty and that -unless she , . , ■ ■ , , . answers or demurrer within six weeks Greene, Slate of Ohio, anil’ Township of Ross, judgment may be taxon against her. and further described .as follows: Being part The time starting to run from the of Bony Vautclroyr, Survey No. 784. for 1000 first publication o f this not;ce. F. L. JOHNSON, Attorney for plaintiff. Viscount Astor said: “ It is im possible to reconcile the interests of the drink trade with the interests of the nation,” The liquor traffic in economic waste is appalling. The $3,500,000 spent last year would buy 750,000,000 loaves of bread; 750,000,000 bottles o f milk; 150.000.000 dozen eggs; 150,000,000 pounds o f meat; 50,000,000 chickens; 5.000. 000 tons of coal; 275,000 old age pensions at $600 a year; 375 home mortgages at $2,000; 100,000,000 gar ments; 525 school houses costing §300,000; could give to the Y. M, C. A. and the W. C. T. U. $126,000,000; child welfare and clinics §250,000.000; education $750,000,000; and fo.r alco hol education would be left $690,000;- 000; or it would pay for 2,000,000 homes at a cost pf $1,500 each, “ We can prove with mathematical certainty that as much flour as can lie on the point o f a table knife is more, nutritious than eight quarts of the best Bavarian beer.”—Baron Liebig, the great German chemist. “ There is not a single disease that &c.hol will cure, Since alcohol will cure no disease, it is not a medicine and has no place in medical practice. We have no place inside the body for alcohol; be it wine, 'beer, booze. It only befuddles the brain, and makes the heart and lungs overwork to ' get rid df it.”—-Dr. Howard A . KeJIy, Joi;n Hopkins University. “ Make it right to sell whisky, and it can not be proven that anything else is wrong,” Total world stocks of old wheat on July 3>were estimated by ,the Bureau, o f Agricultural Economics at 1515 million bushels, as compared with an average o f 675 million bushels on hand July 1 in the years 1921-28. acres, the part hereby conveyed being follows: . . . . . . 1 Beginningat a steno in the tyest corner pf' the land belonging to W, I*. Walker in-- line of Win. Weymouth, Sr,; tbeace with the* ~y' „ • I lineof GregoryWeymouthK, 34° E. ififl petes LEGAL NOTICE to a atonfr in theline of GregoryWeymouth: ' p rf>w e Court. Greene Countv. Okfti thclH-e N. 33* 43' K. ttt'iu#* tfr .* ^ ° in the tine of w. u. - WtMen . abwsjM . ". Case No. 3282, - ; «*' w, i«« votes *>'* ■*»nr I* jrf* , r ,-W. K. W.-Gber; ilieueo’" S. ~SS»' SUP ■S. O. Wrfghf-, Administrator of the !' W 180 poles to the place of h««W»ln# eoh- ;-KiMtp of Jacob Clark, DectSaacd, plaintiff, tabling XOd acre* more <*r less. j vs. - *. Being the same premises conveyed by pTU-t Tb? tfaknown Heirs and Next, of Kin . . Andrew* to ChW- tfcf, {lands fffijjj Mary IptWii : of Jacob Clark, Deceased by deed-dated Ntywh % ISOS, recorded Ip VpJ.j unfl ' 113. page 37, Greene (jaunty Deed Record*. «The Devisees, Degrees, Executor* and TRACT No. '3, Sltjtato In the Village of,Administrators of. any Deceased Helrt at Cedarville, In the Cumjf.y pf Greene and State of Ohio, being forty blx (40) feet off tho> Daw of the Said Jacob Clark, Deceased, The Unknown Helre and Next of Kin of. oast side of Dot No. j38 In John Orr ‘et al Jacob Clark, Deceased, The Devisees, Legatees, addition to the VUlagd of Cedarville, as the j Executors and Administrators of any deceased same is designated, nnbibcred and known on. holr at law of Jacob Clark, deceased, will take tho recorded plat of said’ addition, Tract No. 1, Is located in Ross Township* South of the Towniiloy Road, and Tract No. 2, Is- located near Use West egd of Nortlf .Street, Cedarville, Ohio, Said premises are appraised as follows: Tract No, X, eighty dollars (880.00), per acre. notice that S. C. Wriglit, Administrator of the estate of Jacob Clark, deceased, on the 12th day of July 1837, filed his petition In the Pro bate Court of Greene County, State of Ohio, alleging that tRo persona} egtafg of said tie- cedent Is Insufficient to pay hlg debts and the charges of administering his. estate; that the Tract No. 2, one thousand dollars, ($1,000.00), said Jacob Clark died seized la fee-simple of and must lie sold for not less than two-thirds the following described real estate, situate In (2*3), of said appraised value. Ternm of sale: Ten per cent, (10%), de posit on day of sale, balance in cash upon delivery of deed and confirmation by the court within thirty (30) days from dato of sale. Possession to bo given March 1st, 1938. Said sale Is made pursuant to an order of the court in the case of B. E. MCl'arhmd, Executor of tho Estgte of Mary P. Harris, de ceased, ys, Ethc} Harris, et al, No, 3258, Pro bate Court Greene County, Ohio. ». E, MePARUANb, as execliter of the estate of Mary P- Harris, deceased. Miller ■& Finney, Attorneys. Aug, 20-27—Sept. 8-10-17. LEGAL NOTICE Catherine E. Troute, Foyo M, Troute, ft minor, seventeen (17) years of age, Dorothy li. Troute, a minor, thirteen (13) years of age, and Robert W. Tronic, a minor, six (8) years of age, who reside at 1200 South High Street, Denver, Colorado, wllj take nolice (hat bee If. Retilcr, us administratrix of Uio Estate of Lctltia A. Troute, decease/}, on IJia 1?U1 j day et July, 1837, Bled her petition in fh° I’roljato court, Greene County, state of Ohio, alleging that tho personal cstato of said decedent is insufficient to pay her debts In administering tier estate, (licit she died seized Jn fee simple >f tho following described real estate, (.triwltj; TRACT NO. 1. Situate In {lie County of Greene, State of Ohio, and In the Village ff Cedarville and bounded and described as follows: Being forty' (10) feet off of tho North side of Dot No 2, on the original plat of said the County of Greene, State of Ohio and the Village of Cedarville, to-wltr "Being part of-Military Survey entered In tho name of WlUlam White, No 4315. Beginning at a stake eight foot from Jonathan Haywood’s, now A W, Osborn, easterly corner on the South Charleston-West Jefferson and Xenia Turnpike road, running thence easterly with said turn pike road four poles to a stake; thence north erly -to the bank of Masslo Crook; thence with the hank of sn{d creek, westerly four poles to a stiilm; being eight feet from Said Jonathan Haywood’s northeasterly corner; on ilio bank of Masslo Creek; thence southerly to the place of beginning; containing eighty two' (82) poles, more or less/' v The prayer of said petition is for a sale of said premises to pay the debts of said decedent and charges aforesaid, and for other relief. The persons above mentioned will further take notice that they JjaTe been ipftde parties defendant to said petition opcl that they are renulrcd to answer the same on , qo . before August 21, 1037 " ' 1 C. WRIGHT, Administrator as aforesaid. July 36, 2,3, 30; Aug, 8, 13, 20. ‘ L E G A L N O T I C E GpBeite-Cojpjffftf};' fjeas Alton Wkifcttjjpq j: , ■ ■ .. r n : ';7 '' Carmen Whitffilro, defenflafitf Miqisp last known , —........ address was Port O Lemon, Casta Rica s /s s a w a r ir® «• «»*•«* *v ! VHXE fijMIN GO. Straws! T sU p fo o tm M Cowiiurvill*, CUsi# CONSIGN YOUR LIVESTOCK t o th e • SPRINGFIELD LJVESTGCfC SALES COMPANY Sherman Are. SpmsjgeM, a Warn'. Main 315-J " <vim ni .ujt HfU |ClIU UvU Vf j ■ . . v • Id village, and being a strip i>ff of the West; and said case w ill fca fo r hearing in (28) feet wide. 'the above named Court on and after .icing Ohlllieptho Struct and rxlcpdtne the* - , , - - I - ri.,1 mi icogtu of said jot. i.six weeks from the first publication The prayer of sold petition Is for the gate Of this notice, Lf1f13rg™tforcrifor Wl!icnt of thc:lcMV ^ ALTON WHITMIRE The pirsims first above mentioned will Frank L, Johnson, Attorney, ‘mfher take notice that they jiayo been wade' Jaly 23-30; August 6-j.3-20-27. •urtica of said petition and that they are to. 1ulw answer on or feeroro tbp 18th day Of! ——~ r r— ------ ^ | German fanners who disregard the ’ m t aoHtiatI63T’ government's requisitiem o f wheat and administratrix of the Estate of Dctitla A. v,ve may be. fined 100,000 marks or HtTUiwVdT apTv'vx.v 'sent to prison. •GhnEr. & BI.MtEy, Attorneys. July 23, 2ft.; Aug. 0. is, 20, 27. NOTICE - Greene Common Pleas Herman Sach : ... - -t? • . ' VS. v , Father Sachs. The defendant, living a t 1243 S, 49th Court, C k e ro , III,, w ill ^ &&& Dr. H. N. Willlams DENTIST , '- X-RAY EQUIPMENT . 1 ' SEED 1 mmm mmm m km FOR SALE CUMMINGS & CRESWELL Cedarville, Ohio SHELL STATION GROCERIES—Fresh CANDIES TOBACCO COLD.DRINKS O. W . Dawggm (Formerly Operated by O. F. Everhart) DEEP WELL SHALLOW WELL ELECTEIC HIMES W® t&e in poaislcssa to a^pfly ymsr deep or shallow w«li *piunp* with. aliaticn oomplebe. We „ ,S h '-.u»e aba gtinrantow satiafaction and-five refes®Acs. ; .=_ ^ » n tteeg Well Electric Pumps $ 80.06 up Wh^a ygft.gel ready for your private water supply system or batfe room installation, call us for estimates. Al! work guaranteed. Let us install a hot water circulating pump on your hot ..water heating system. With this you get aH the heat possible just where you want it* F» E*Harper Phone 30 Cedarvillej O. $ eflSf* -EfifiO % i&EfiSS e I ee ! i unTEi FOUNT&ENSQU&fiE t m MODERN OUTSIDE t> «gQ BOOMS WITH BATH FROM Vatj «rdf tkrg->wSHteyou {be Fotmta’mSquare HdtfiepRciflg<!j of tW ihopp?n$ cfeja friel endplfc? (julfdfotg:***, Tnz food m i sirvtce ere «he best to fff I**^ «if*coo?€<l Moorish Griff you'll fiteet th®Icedtay (sen of CbscferHtti,while theOlympic Cafe end B«r (elseelhcooledt h Cinds«*ti‘« idntirfmg center of night life, The room* ere exceptionallypiecwnt.„«!f have ful! tiled bethr, M. L DEiNINCER, Manager / g s n c i n n a t i f t t f i U T O M i O f m f i V E M T i i i isms. - 5 0 0 0 A o i f i s l i $ S B l I i . OWMea«&. .... <MB*T 3 „ » isstss^kssss^-^ssdssas KK**ooman R" OWO »a *■*++.* #♦** * fi*ft»***»l ^ . ■ r - . . ■ , --1 >’ tfe f. M ttm e - . -4'..7 „ - J
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