The Cedarville Herald, Volume 61, Numbers 1-26
FACULTY MEMBERS AND STUDENT BODY OF CEDARVILLE COLLEGE, 1937-38 The above group picture is that of t h e 1faculty students of Cedarville College, the picture being a special feature of the 120th anniversary of the’ Springfield-News-Sun. The following are the members pf the faculty: ’D r/ Wilbert^ R. McChesney, Dr. ’Frank A. Jurkat, Prof. A. J. Hostetler, Prof. C. W. Steele, Prof. John W, Auut, Prof. -Ernest Gibson, “Prof." Helen H. Santmyer, Mrs; John W.- Ault, Mrs. Eloise Kling, Miss Emma Force, Director 'Mildred W ."Bickett, Miss Glenna Basore and Mrs. Robert Jacobs. • ' Students arp: Bette Allison, London; .Edila Ander son, Piqua; Frank Wylie, Cedarville; Elisabeth Anderson, ■ Cedarville; James .Anderson,” Cedarville; Clara Belle Ankeny, Xenia; Marthabelle Bartley, Jamestown; Harold Bernard, Xenia; Dorothy Bennett, Odajrville; Grace Bickett, -Xenia; Mary Binga- mon, Xenia; Ruth Boohqr, Alpha; Martha Bryant, Yellow^Springs; Bar ham Carter, Yellq,w Springs; 'Helen; Ghitty, Xenia; -Geneva Clemans, Ce daryille; Marie Collins, Xenia; Louise Cosier, Xenia; Helen Crawford, Al pha; Junia . Greswell, ^Cedarville; Rachel -Greswell, C.edarville; Herbert Cummings, Jamestown; Mary Elisa- baugh, Tippecanoe City; Rachel Har- riman, Dayton; Neil Hartman, Cedar ville; Justin Hartman, Cedarville; beth Edgington, JamestoWn; Erma Jean Elliott, Cedarville; Florence Ferguson, Xenia; Pauline Ferguson, Xenia; Merium Foulk, London; Donald Foulks, Waynesville; Wilmott Fischer, Springfield; John Fox, Dayton; Jane Frame, Cedarville. Arthur Geake, Graniteville, Vt.; Eldon Gillespie, North Bend; John Gillespie, North Bend; Irene Goodin, Jamestown; - Beatrice Gray, Bain- bridge; Wanda Griffith, South Charles- 'ton; Rosalyn Gutlvrie, Mary Jane Hampton, Xenia; Catherine Har- Velma Henderson, Selma; Mary Hol- way, West Jefferson; Louise Jacobs, Yellow Springs; Ted James,. Spring- field; Genevieve Jesson, Springfield; James‘Jackson, Dayton; Mary John- jston, Yellow Springs; Royden John- json, Springfield; Charles Jones, Ce darville. - Eugene -Kavanaugli, Cedarville; Wavealinc Kelso, Sedalia, Dorothy Kennon, Cedarville; Everett Keener, Harrisville; Frances Kimble, Cedar ville; Anna King, Hqoven; Orval La- big, Versailles; Roy Linton, Bowers (ville; Cra.mton Lott, Xenia; Fred Lott, Avon Lake; William Lott,Avon Lake; William Loy, Springfield; Richard MacKnight, Madeira; Beatrice Mc Clellan,. Xenia; Mildred-. McKibben, Cedarville; Bennett McNgal, Platts- iburg; Kenneth .McNeal Plattsburg; Orcna .Marshall, Cedarville; Helen Moossbnrger, Greenfield; Angus Mur ray, Graniteville, Vt.; Justin Northup, Yellow Springs; Margaret Olinger,- j South Vienna; Catharin Oyerholser, ,Eaton. , John Peterson, Cedaryille; Florence Pidgeon, Xenia; Monroe Pyles, Cedar ville; ’ Doris - Ramsey, Cedarville; Robert Reed, Cedarville; Russell Roberts, Kenton; Betty Rowe, Clifton; Kenneth Sanderson, Belle Center; Opal Seanion^Marysville; Betty Shaw, Springfield; Elwood Shaw, Yellow Springs; Harold Shaw, Yellow Springs; Victor Shaw, Yellow Springs; Noah Sharpe, West Union; Phillip Shupp, Springfield; Bessie Shively, Springfield; Harry 'Sinks, SpVjngfield; Raymond Sisson, Cleves; Marthena Smith, Springfield; Wanda Nell Smith, Xenia; Ruth Stebbins, Dayton; Ruth Stoddard, Irwin;, Howard Swaim, Xenia. Rhea Tavenner, Springfield; Jessie* Taylor, Elkhqrn, Wise.; John Taylor, Cincinnati; Cecil Thomas, Washing ton, C. H.; Harold Thomas, Washing ton c : II.; Melvin Tliompeon, Spring Valley; Delbert Tobin, Jamestown; Marcella Tobin, Jamestown; , Mary Jean Townsley, Cedarville; Virginia |Townsley, Cedarville; Charlotte Turn er, Cedaryille; Fred Venpillion, ’Jamestown; Clyde Walker, Dayton;. Everett Wiseman,, Cedarville; La Verne Whipp, New Carlisle;1Elinor Young, Boston, Mass, and Donna Zel* lei1, Versailles: —Springfield Newa-Sun. Rev. C. E. Hill was in Columbus, -Tuesday for a meeting of the Confer ence Commission on Endowment. Frances. Williamson, ;student at Bowling- “Green university, spent the week-end a t home. CHURCH NOTES season for Cedarville High. Next week Cedarville plays Ross, February 11, at Ross. I .mate channels of trade and has added (Continued from first page) Springfield, March 19. UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Ralph A. Jamieson. Minister . . . . . . . , • Sabbath School, 10 a. m. Meryl l>Ir’ Heed, loca music chrector, plans.. Stormont,-Supt. - • j to enter the following compeUt.on: Preaching, 11 “ a. m. . Theme,! bftnd’ 01'chestTa.» cornet, solo by Helen | f eated 22-18. “Putting God to the Ttest ” ’j Andrew; trombono solo by Jack Huff-j The C. H. S. sextet, previously un- Y P. C. U., 0:30 p in Subject - ' lHan' an<* a brass quartet including-defeated in Greene County rivalry, Bellbrook Wins C. H. S. bowed in defeat a t Bell- brook, Friday evening. The local quintet were unable to hold out against a last quarter spurt on the part of their opponents and were de in thousands of eases to the relief rolls. ' _ Mr. and Mrs. Peter -Shane > have movjed into -1die Nagley property on -Xeaia<ave.' Get ’em while they’re hotlUtCms-iri *&am Clothing Co.. Mr. Harry Eaitel', Clifton pike, who. fell some time ago and suffered-’' a broken left arm near the shoulder,, is improving. - •; .F e n id a te fB m & ^ proprieWy*, .virt{l^ 26th an nual '$ ; ’$){% UttmpshirtS -sows on Friday^'FibAipi'y 18th. Sixty head will bpAffered in th# sate. ’ >-t . ii 1 in iii ' / Miises; Rebecca and. Dorothy Gallo way have returned to Dennison Uni versity following a short vacation at the home of their parents. Mr. and Mrs. George Gordon are an nouncing, the birth a daughter, Linda Jane, a i'the Springfield City hospital, Monday*. ’ . Cedar Gliff Chapter ;U.'A . R., will d a ; Wnafcnjjtan,, ^e'av ;-Saturclay Jit -tjie. home, Mra.; li^IiaviRiiyrith .Mrs. .Hbtts'fop SHOWS CURRENTLY ,i>. •' *AT THE ' C O Z Y “THE- LITTLE THEATRE WITH THE BIG SHOWS” 1 "J .1- 1 : r :• FRIDAY ‘ February 4 LORETTA YOUNG ; DON AMECHE y„v. ' *in— “ lq V e U n d er f ir e ” Vein Mae Fields, Harold, Wayne Carry, and Whada Hughes. ‘Unity in Christ.” Leader, Douglass Funsett and Emile Finney. Union- Service/-7:30 p. hi,, m the •*' , ' . . Methodist Church. Sermon by Rev. • Bible StudyBeg.n.s. Benjamin N. Adams. . Over one himdred h.gh school s*u-, . /Prayer; Mooting. .Wednesday, 7:30 ***** . ^ h , , t h e Bible, -study, this p./m ., at the hqme,of.|drs. Carrie v-» direction Townsley! Leader/ Mr. Roy Bonder- * N* Ada™f’-1>r' A’ Jamieson, and Dr. C. E. Hill. lacked the services.%of two players und were beaten by Bellbrook 17-11. son. ' Meeting of "the Committee on Pub licity for the.'Comhinnity-Eynngclistig Meetings, Match 6-2(1 iir-the Prayer ;'r:‘ : Music Department News- . Merubors of tbo, music department w- , . . . . . . , • _ , . contributed to .the’program for the Meeting room of this, bhuiich on Sab- leachel.s- nleet|n^ heId in tht, loCal bath a t 2 p.m. The Committee is a sk -|ailditoHuiUj Jnnl,ary r h(, boys- mg-for ten-woikers from each church : flu'ttrtcUo> (){ Wayne An. io meet with us. drew, Robert Dunevant, Harold Cooley, Harold Carry, and Jay Peter* . F. Fi A:- Nows Kenneth Benedict’and Wallace Col- liris, members of the local F. F. A. Chapter, were delegates to a State F. F. A. Leadership IMnference field ip Columbus in connection with Ohio Farmer's, Thursday and . Friday; January 27-28. ■ INITIATE PETITION AGAINST LEGALIZED GAMBLING v SATURDAY •fW-i Ffbmtvy S HOLT O rient SUNDAY.nd MONDAY Feik-tiaty 8-7 ROBBftTfDUNG . “N«rt Blue and Gold” AV ONLY AIN NIGHT — HARD DIX 'V- , “IT HAPPENED IN HOLLYWOOD” f t t ADMITS TWO OH 'DAMAlM NIOMT FIRST PUESIJYTEUIAN CHURCH * Her. Benjamin N, Adams, Minister Sabbath School, 10 ,a. W.^Lesson; ‘Challenging the Spcial Order,” Mark J: 13-22. Golden Text: “I came not to call the righteous, b u t,sinners." Mark 2:17. . Worship Service, I t a. ni. “The Power of Hope.” , ., Junior Sermon: “Crushing flm Lights.” ♦Christian Endeavor, 6:30 p. m. Raymond Sisapn will Icitd. .,. , ,t'Unlon EeVning Service^ 7:30„p. m. a t the M. E. Church. ’Ouf*pastor will 'sjieak. -' ' ;r ■' *’ ;. / • leadership; Training Course, Vo<l- twteday, 7:30 p. m» Subject:« “De nominational Loyalty, Church Union, and ' 'Interdenominational Co-opcrn tion,” Junior Choir, Wednesday, 4 p, m. Senior choir, Wednesday, 8 p. m. Christian Endeavor Social, Thurs day, February 10, a t 7:30 p. m. This is to he'd Valentine’s Day Social. Avance Announcement. Several of the adult -classes dre planning ft cen- gregationql dinner for the evening of March 1, Judge Wright, Mr. Win. Conley, and' Mrs., jttjjjihDnson are the program coirimlc«5«"9T,lrrt. McChesney, Mrs. Jay Stortmmtf Mni. Wilson, Mrs. George Creswell are the Dinner Committee. ,jy= • • iin’irnil>n ij.fti METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH , r Charles E. Hili. Minister Church School, 10 a, m. L. J, George, Supt, '! Worship -Service, U a. fii, $ft1)ject: “ReconbUed through Hi? j^eath',,.; , Saved -by His life,'’ R«m/i5:10.' ‘ Roth sections of tits ' Epwortli -League will meet nfc the Church a t <5:30 p, m, i Union Meeting, p /m ., in our Church.! *Kte Rev/B. J f / Adams will Iffipg the message. ’- • The County Brotherhood wiU meet a t the Jamestown M. E. Church, next Wednesday evening. Judge C. B.j Zimmernian, of our State , Supreme; Court, will lie iho principal speaker. The Yotmg Women's Missionary Society Will meet on Wednesday eve ning in the home of Mrn. Howard A rthu r/; Choir Rehearsal, at the Church, Sat urday evening, 8:16 p, m, Robert Reed, Director, ‘ - ton, accompanied, by Mary .Whitting- delighted the audience with their sink ing of “Grandfather’s Clock” and “Anchors Aweigh,” A girls’ sextette, including, Ruth Copeland, Alma Brew er, Mary Alice Whittington, Janette Nealj Helen Andrew, and Nancy Wil liamson, ^ang “Send Out Thy Light" accompanied hy Frances Patton. Mr. James A. Watson and Mrs. Robert Reed sang ::Serenade’’ nnd ■“Sing Me. to Sleep.” Petitions are noVr in circulation secicing signatures tp amend the con stitution -to’prohibit/tile operation of, licensing of, or in ally manner legalize gambling by the pim-mutuel, cert, (irate co-operative (ir any other sys tem in the .state, j T h e state committee is headed by John F. Seidell, chairman. Members of the state committee from Greene county arc: H. E* Eavey, Dr. W. R, McChesney, Miss lijbry Meredith,- Dr. Austin Patterson, W . W. Galloway, ; Mrs. T. B. Flynn, G. L. Jobe, O. A. | Spahr, Frank L, Smith, Dr. Reed . The$c numbers were repeated in Madden, M„ L. Wolfe, J'. H. Nagley. the high school assembly program, Miss;-. Mary Wilgus, Dr. Ben R. Mc- MondfiVr Januaiy 24. , J r * Clelfen, Mrs. ^fisryjX., Dfi:e, Dr. B. L. f*. * . — '2— *IJicfeey, tDf.J:Sf* THrid8>..Dr. Van der «¥ YelMv Spriiyfs llete Tojight ' ‘V^ri^'jtyljpr*'." , C, 1L S. wilT he host to Bryan High Tfip>Wavq»of all fprms of gambling in the local gym when the two schools thaY-fias swept the' nation lias taken meet for the last home game of the millions of dollnrs out of the Jegiti- “SOMETHING DIFFERENT” FOR YOUR NEW LINOLEUM FLOOR! YES YOU do wartf something 'difTercnt/r-a glowing wealth of color,—-an expressiye’ design as ■ ■ ■' * "* » distinctively “you” ah-the clothes you wear, » . * INLAID LINQLEUJflS in marble * > ,r*h },' , I / o r ifoToffdl tile patterns with 1Striking1 border- and ■ possibly an appropriate- inset, rcombined harinpnioOSly/ V?ill give " that Something Diifet^T” door j?ott’hhvb dreamed abbiiir Let us show you how to plan your next Linoleum Floor. A D A IR ’S 20*24 N. DETR6IT ST* XENIA, OHIO More Red Tape To_Get Relief If you never saw a lot of “red headed” township trustees you could have found plenty in- Xenia, Tues day, when trustees from over the county waited for hours’ for a high salaried state appointee to arrive to tell them that they could not pay bills fo r relief until he audited each and every bill. Bills will be audited twice each, month. The state has been turn ed over to forty high priced, auditors to-help eftt up the relief money before the deserving get their beans, prunes and grapefruit. . - The whole thing summed up in a few words is' that the Democratic administration is anxious that all de serving Democrats . get -relief where Republican trustees have been elected, It might he best to make all purchases of New Deal merchants-to get quick payment of the hills. It would bo more interesting to know who is to audit the relief bills in Guyahogn, Summit, Lucas, Montgo mery and Mahoning counties, .all Democratic, where the state ,feeds thousands of citizens of foreignf birth,- Hundreds of whom may be on strike and refuse to work? Decent citizens in Greene county that happen to be trustees cannot be trusted by the Democratic state adt ministration that is so rotten the in vestigators prefer to work in rural counties. cessing and supply businesses, and so on until you reach fanner, miner and forester, producers of the raw ma terial And beyond is the great back ground of oil, rubber, garage in dustries, and the merchants, news papers,. schools, and churches main tained by this direct or indirect cm ploy’ment. Every day a Ford man works he makes work for six other men: Suppose, then, you. do (‘get” Ford, will that help these others ? ‘‘The farmer is a small business man; destroy the big agricultural im plement business that brakes his plow, or the big railroad business that carries his crop to market—will that save him? The druggist is a .small business man; do you help him by hampering the pharmaceutical labora tories? The vegetable and frt}it grow er is a small business man; can you prosper him by breaking down the big canning industry? Shall the only big thing in the United States be the public official? Shall we have giant politicians nnd pygmy producers, tow ering bureaucrats and dwarf invent ors? They got that in some-coun tries, and wherever they got it, the production of bread,—even bread!— fell below human needs. “In the past all of us have been moved to indigation by some distort* ed picture of the strong -oppressing the weak, we have gone -out in righteous* anger to battle,-, using laws for clubs to knock heads right and: left and we .have been appallingly dis illusioned by. the discovery, th a t all o f us together were “the strong,”' and wfe had only succeeded in weakening ourselves. “Those desirous of power work by an ancient technique—“Divided and ‘ conquer.” Americans grow wary of decisive counsel. They know we be* ing together. No one succeeds alone, one fails alone. We all need one another.” Dr, Paul J. Volkeirt Dentist OFFICE HOURS Monday and Friday ’ 5:30 A. M. to 5 P. M. Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday 9:30 A. M. to ft:30 P. M. Office Closed; Wednesday Phone: 73 . ' , Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pitstick of the Erion road, near Yellow Springs, celebrated their golden wedding an niversary in St. Paul’s Catholic church, Yellow Springs, at a high mass conducted by the Rev. Father John Kelly. Following the mass a wedding breakfast was served in the social rooms of the church to about CO relatives. They have 11 children and 58 grandchildren. Mrs, Pitstick was Miss Anna Paulus of near West Jef ferson before her marriage. COMPARE THESE PRICES with those of other markets in your vicinity and you will see why it pays to bring your live stock to our market. AT OUR MONDAY, JAN. 31ST SALE HOGS TOPPED AT §9,20 VEAL CALVES TOPPED AT fll.80 LAMBS TOPPED AT $8.10 Short Fed Cattle Were 50c Higher *Read complete market report elsewhere in tibia paper. MAKE OUR MARKET YOUR MARKET SPRINGFIELD LIVE STOCK SALES CO. Sherman Ave. SPRINGFIELD, OHIO Many useful items left in our 9c Sale, wllomc Clothing Co. For Sale—Farm, 98 acres, adjourn ing Cedarville corporation, Good six room brick house, large bank bnm, Part cash, balance ort time, I, C. Davis, Cedarville, Ohio. (4t), YOUR STATE HOUSE (Continued fm n first page) industries necessary, and small ■in make large ones possible. Wipe out large Industrie's and you wipe out three-fourths of the small ones; wipe out the small ones and the large ones cannot go oq. ‘ They work together. Each has a part in. the nation’s job. “Has the growth#)! the Ford Motor Company snuffed out sipnljt busi nesses 7 It has doubled tli'eni and trebled them, opening fields h i Which no business i me until it came; wherever it' operated today small in dustries sprbjrfr.up, and hundreds of those become<Jai*g6 by their own iperit. No. one knows hbtv many in dustries Ford business has made pos sible. Nearly 7,000 small concerns co-operate with Ford, and more than half of them are capitalized for $75,* 000 or less. Each of these ate pro* Safe and Sure For 53 Years This Association Has Paid Regular Dividends The Last Dividend Was Paid At The Rate Of ’ U still have an opportunity to take advantage of our 9c Sate. Home Cloth* itigCo. 4 % PER: ANNUM Accounts Opened by February 10th Draw Dividends from February 1st and are Federally Insured. SPRINGFIELD FEDERAL SAVING an d LOAN ASSN i • ■ AS E. Mam St. \ . JptDlsAe*i*'&< The pioneer Association of Sjpriniiali
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