The Cedarville Herald, Volume 62, Numbers 1-26
$ CEDARYt/jUB HERALD, FRIDAY, DKCEMBSft fiV t B IT c e d a r v i l l e h e r a l d KARLH BULL----------- ------- EDITOR AND PUBLISHER MEMBER—National Editorial Aaaoc.l Ohio Ntwoi-uiiiT Assoc.; Miami Valley Tress Assoc. iEiaaws^'j.tAaa'BW .« Entered a t the Post Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October 3 L 1887, as second class matter _ ....................... . ___ ..............FR IDAY , DECEMBER 23^ 1938 ___ CHRISTMAS COMES AND GOES ChVistmas for 1938 will be much like the celebration of simitar events during the .past century, that is with the same thought in mind as to the event all nations desire to keep fresh in the lives of young and old. ' Christmas in other years has been observed when we were in the midst of war, civil disturbances and economic upheavals, and we approach December 25th this year with the nations of the world more or less distrustful of each other. We find dictatorship in fact in important European nations.. We have it in a milder form at home. The thought tha t Christmas and the birth it represents has been banished in foreign countries under dictatorship should serve against the form of dictator ship- now being forced upon the people of this country. Hidden behind important boards and commissions are those whose loyalty to a,Republican form of government under a democracy •must be questioned. Communism is entrenched throughout our government and Communism repudiates the day we celebrate as Christmas 1938/ No one can predict what our own nation will face by the Christmas of 1939. We are eternally boring into foreign affairs and complicating our future under the so:called guise of trade treaties, some of which calls for our young manhood when.the call to arms is sounded. Christmas of 1938 calls for the Christian citizenship to stand guard against our entanglement in foreign affairs that we may be at peace at home and abroad when Christmas 1939 arrives. i- Dublin wmmwM Contractor Frank -McCurran is mak ing good headway with the new city building in Xenia, the weather this winter being unusually favorable. Some of these days there may be a corner stone laying, a thing .entirely in the hands of the City Commission. Former Sheriff -(Ohmer Tate is. the chief building inspector which insures a one hundred per cent structure ac cording to plans and specifications. - AMERICAN MEDICAL SOCIETY UNDER INDICTMENT (?) The New Deal has finally forced an indictment against the American Medical Society on some trumped up charge to meet .the demands of Hopkins. Ickes, Perkins and other Commun ists that want socialized medicine. The Communists say the society has violated the anti-trust laws. If so' what about churches, fraternal orders, Grange, Farm Bureau, all of which certainly have a right to say who shall be members and should not be. »Citizer^s should'welcome the indictment, not that the medics are guilty, but to give them a chance to show what dictatorship is a t home. . .In speaking of' the corner stone we learn that the City Commission de sired some data on that valuable block of stone that would not meet the New rfcai requirements. The building is of the WPA variety and part of the finance comes by the grace of FDR, "he first dictator on this side of the Atlantic. Under, dictator rules •‘WPA"'or “ FDR" must be on the cornerstone. Instead of either a more ippropriate inscription would be •‘Erected and - paid for by ‘all the federal taxpayers in ' the United States." . ■:___ - ‘ ■ ■ J cleaning he first named a Democratic former bucket-shop operator from Boston worth a few million. Then a SALE OF BONDS LEGAL NOTICE « • , , ... , , , Kc-nU-d )ir<>]H*tula will bo rwi-lved At the new fangled committee was named to] of llie viuaro ru-rk of th» vuuuc of supervise and enforce'the rules. One j cvii-m-iiu-, rtHiawiiie, Ohio, until twelve noon member was President Hutchins of; n “ ,,f 1|“’ 181,1 dliy 193;’« •. .. - it ,1hr flu> { iuijmjsp or { hsuaiu - u of Immta of ilio Chicago University but he resigned haiii vnimso in the nnnreitaiM sum of Thirty- last week, sick of being a goat to Hmuimi OoHurs (Sa.noo.op), tho ist cover up Democratic Street operators (10) r alld rr„m onu ui to and crooked bankers. He demanded Ton tun, belli im-iusivu. Knelt of aaiu bumia will lit! In tin) ilonoinluatlon of Three Hundred _ . anil 1'ifly Hollars ($350,011), and will draw evidence that fncrbn-. interest a» tint rate of four and pne-half lib) that the Whitney case be re-opened on new found inkted others. ■Washington said n o t' **»IU!» wr aimum, jinjjiblc awil-nimually, i x, rr rt ., , .. , , Imi the Ihl iluys of April and October of each and the U, President sai„d; Here S: y,an „|,wl jii-eseiilatlun and -surrender of the. your job-." *liitm'.sl rmiimns lo be attui-lied to autd bonds. . ______ • Any olio tlealtliiK lo do so may present u' tliiij or bids for said bimds, bused on and This had no sooner reached the TUI-j benriitK'n different rate or Interest tlnui that (ion’s leaders when an Italian w ith l“I,u' “ »i«vin«i. provided Unit where a frae- The new city hall is to be two story, with basement a half story above ground and will have an •elevator to eliminate the wear -and tear on the ity employees and those that must pass in and'out on .official business. The courthouse is a two story .build ing, and has an elevator but it was never , used. Probably the county •'onimissioners could dispose of this useless property at a bargain price to (ho City Commission for Use in the new city building; SALES AS USUAL MONDAYS, DEC. 2fi and JAN. 2 MAKE OUR MARKET YOUR MARKET SPRINGFIELD LIVE STOCK SALES CO. Sherman Avc. SPRINGFIELD, OHIO Phone: 5942. LATEST DESIGS GRGEN w a t c h e s , lifEVEdozensofnewGRUEN * iJwatch'stylestoshowyou, ' • including that' most sensn- tional:of all wrist watches,.,' 'a GROENCORVEXthat’s worn - at the SIDE of the wrist! Come in and sec them... . ‘Prices star; at $24.75. • GIFTS FROM YOUR JEWELER ARE GIFTS AT THEIR BEST % Mamma Roosevelt goes tovbat this week in defense of the Roosevelt family. Since Mamma takes .Jimmy’s place on his insurance company di rectorate to defend, his interest, with out .pay, in his own company, that specializes on writing building con tract insurance, the sting .was more than Mamma could stand. She Says the family of a President must live its own life, just like any other family. She failed to state that the ‘family, of a PWAworker must live its •w n life di^what daddy makes on a fourteen day a month' schedule but none of these families draw insurance joinmissions from federal govern ment contractors amounting to- $3L- fJOOon a single policy. Well, Mamma '.nay do Jimmy some good as a directot in his company, but she will have to let down on her gadding about at least a day or so a-month, or she will be as much of a stranger, in that office as she is in the new $75,000 electric etiuipped White House kitchen she had installed while men clamor for jobs and children cry . for bread. Jimmy is now “working”'fo r a motion .picture concern at $50,000 a year, sort of a vacation. from . the strain of writing insurance policies. Mamma forgot to explain that Jimmy took a job with' a motion picture company that, accord ing to government reports, owes more than a million in income taxes. That job was not taken by accident. . T iff a n y ys S. Detroit St. X en ia , O. J I p » ^ s ft Greene county tobacco grower livided eight each for and against the Roosevelt-Wallace crop control at recent election. T.he issue over the country lost as it did with rice grow ■era. Cotton growers are said to have approved the crop control plan.. Why not? Tho government has already loaned growers almost the market price of their cotton and the New Deal now has some .ten million bales under its control. Hast week Washington loaned broken down China, almost under- control of Japan by invasion the neat sum of $25,000,000, In addi tion to many million back debts. Its part of the Wallace plan to sell Chinn some of our wheat, and China will pay for it with our money. And yet the press reports tell us that the New Deal will keep A1 Capone in jail another two years as he is “nutty." iii- One Year By Mail *■ r Cedarville Herald $ 1.50 Remember your friends and send them One '. Year's subscription of THE HERALD, It exp jres in January, 1940 , This rate applies both to Now and Renewaksubscriptions, ' r Alf Lnttdon, Kansas. Republican, who was invited by ItoosOvclt to aecom pnny the C. S. delegation to Lima South America, let loose ,a Monroe Doctrine speech some days ago thn set dictators all over the globe squirm ing, It was one of those “mind your own business and we will mind ours", speeches. Sec. Hull, who 'has been peddling free trade treaties all over the world -which permit foreign made goods, meats .and grains to land on these shores, duty free, in competition with American business, farmers and labors, probably did; not npplaude the London speech.- There will be no free trade agreements by Hull in that sec- r i criminal record, a li st .water, used an Anglo-Saxon) mu) w muliijiles iiterwf. .s«m bonds will la,' dim ami imyaldu an follows, lu-wll:- Out- bond an October' 1st in eucb of the years . . . . . , , (i"iinl Interest irate Js lilil such fraction ahnll sw in d le r Ol tn e . |,()1 (nm-ijn,-trier I,f one per cent (>4 of J per name. He soon had branches in all parts of the country with a “supposed flew 111 to Poll, Incliiaive. xVll homts warehouse" in Canada that-had raw 1 1 <ail.ii»le on and after o *loiter r, mil), , , , mi * i I Saltl -hniiila are Issued for Urn jnirpose of lrugs valued at $18,000,000. This hasj pm-cimsiiie n ru been going on for months and months | -Kouipim-tit md thousands of druggist and phy-j ^ w)th . rtrtalll ur(11. iicians in the country. bought stock f nance of the said viiiaeu entitiod “OiuiT- n the concern. The srriooth Italian had two brothers -working the public Flirhllin; Apparatus and :uid urirfer 1 authority of i«u« of of TI jo rnlform llornl Act, an<! i tion with Alf Landon thereabouts. If ^ 1so y.ou , hu u will hear about it, It just x i faint* to light last week that little - Patagonia, one of the smallest of the fj; foreign nations, had accepted the fj\ i Roosevelt-IIull free trade world Wide prosperity plan and was shipping ' the first- dressed beef to tin's country. And maybe that is not a nice Christ* . mas gift, in the American farmer's stocking, ft When1Roosevelt took over Wall tdieet, you mny have forgotten it, that famous alley was to be cleaned from one end to the other. You were, (old the money changers will he driven out of the temple. They wore so far as politics was concerned,' To do the for the company under •assumed names. The head belonged to ‘‘ex clusive?’’ social clubs in New York mil Newport. Ail this time the New Deal cleaning committee did not know what was going on, or did they? Records in government departments inder control c f Democrats, certainly cot? Republicans, maybe N.ew Dealers, hat concerned a former conviction of '.his -swindler, have disappeared, form he files, Even' New Deal income tax, noopors did not know what-was go- mg-on, maybe? Reports now show 'hat the latest Number One 'Swindler uad political' protection for his drug company did 1'4 million dollars worth f imported liquor business last year. The company also handled two ■mil-. Ubn dollars worth of army rifles, for who ? And the New Deal knew nothing about all these transactions that have been going on the past few years. The answer to it all is—Big contributions to the Democratic Na tional campaign fund and also the New York State Committee, have covered until now a . multitude of criminal acts. Death of the dago by his own. hand from a revolver cheated i (12-2- 7t-27d ). the New, Deal of the remotest chance >f Shifting the burden of responsibility by a conviction of the swindler. It (cents to' the writer that history i records a “Teapot Dome” scandal. . I . v i v n : .vo 203, a n o k iu x a n t k i ’ k o v iii - IM l KOIl TUB ISKl'ANCK OF BONUS OF TJiK VU.I.AUK OF rK IIA llV lU .K , OHIO, FOU-.THE m t l ’OSK OF I't’ lin iA SiN O F.IItB FIGHTING I'A IM 'AKATrS ANJi [jq rie.U E N T ," imsscil on jin* rljiy of Noyomlior, TJUN, .Said Lontlrt will l><*hold to tho highest hlddi-r for not IfH-.t than tlit* fnce volm* ilifruof aiul .oyriuod Inicrcst All UtU iimiil Mt»U' the number of bomls bid and Hu*{frost* amoiimof bid and juthuh I inter- ost to datp of dcUvory. All bids to by ac- (MHIHUiii’d >vitli ;v bond or rertlflud check, pay- aide mu jho VUliufi* of CcdarwllU*, *Ohio, for Three Hmidrcd and Fifty Oollura OfltriO.OO), iiptn cmuUtlou that if the bid js accepted-the bbidvr will receive and pay for mieh bonds us tna.v be Issued as above set forth, within thirty .(♦bO'days from, the-time of award, said houd lo, (a* f,ufelled*or said check lo he retained lo the Village, If <tuid condition Is not fulfilled. Hinls shti ild be sealed and endorsed."Mils For Flr« Ftehtlns' Apparatus Bonds/' FIKKVIK J. M- ' ’OUKKI/L, YUlaue (T.-rk, of Village of (Vdarville, Ohio, it t-KidhO LEGAL NOTICE Edythe Garringer, whose residence is- unknown,.-is- hereby notified that Hiiroid' Garringer has filed his petition against her .for divorce, in Case No. 2LS‘M,"of the Common Pleas Court, of Greene County, Ohio, and that said cause will be for hearing on or after the Hth day of January, 1939. • NEAL W. HUNTER, Attorney for the Plaintiff. LEGAL .NOTICE Wo heard. with interest Monday rii’-ht a radio program sponsored by he American medical society in ,be- ialf of the campaign to combat in fantile paralysis.. -The program was • fashioned as a playlet using the ex- j periencc of. families that have had the dread disease. 'J’he idea of the broad-1 :ast no doubt- was to combat the fake 1 :Margaiet iStevens, whose place of residence is unknown, will take notice that John Stevens has filed his peti tion for divorce in Case .No. 21,846 of the Court of Common Pleas of Greene County, Ohio, on the ground of wilful absence and .that the ease will come up for hearing on or after January 14th, 1939. . FORREST DUNKLE, (12-9-6t-l-13-39) Attorney. of “cures" that mislead the { When the lutes of- the doctor claims 'ufclic. in the rater at Warm Springs had no modi-. Inal properties" but was just heated, -,ve wondered if'there was not some rnnsgression on the claims of that re- LF.GAI. JS'OTICE IL Ervin Harner, whose-residence play were spoken, "That .the| js unknown, is hereby notified that Oo^a Harner ' has filed her petition against hipi for divorce, to obtain pos session <;>f certain personal property, restraining orders, and equitable ie- ort supported by public funds but lief, in case No. 21851, of the Common where patients have been asked to de- tosit $.1,000 before they could be ad- nitted. The . play brought out the 'act that ther.e .are a number, of in stitutions.in the country equipped to handle- such cases' where they have tented water in swimming pools. The uiLlic will endorse any movement to •omhat any form of disease but the nihiic has a perfect right to expect protection from imposters and fake mres. Thousands of cancer patients ■■tave been robbed by fake cures. Mr. Paul Edwards and wife., Mrs, Eslie Williams and Miss Ora Hanna eft, Thursday on a nto’tor trip to yioridit to bo gone ten days. ' Dr. Walter Hopping and wife of Buffalo, N. Y., are guests of the former’s brother, Mr. W. S. Hopping and wife. HOME MADE CANDY If you have not taken notice of the ine homemade- candies of the Cgdar- ■' ille Bakery, you have missed a treat, i liese candies arc made from a recipe md under the instruction of a famous Cleveland candy maker. You will find no more attractive 'display of 'fine candies for Christmas ns well as oastries of nil kilids than are oil dis play daily in the hig show window NOTICE TO SHAREHOLDERS The Cedarville. Federal Savings -ami Loan Association Please return, all Pass Bookks to .1 i ‘ ice. before January 1, 1939, for udil and balance. „ I, C. DAVIS, Sec'y. (20 - NOTICE TO BIDDERS Bids will be received at the office of he Village Clerk for Repository of •ilinge funds as required by law. Council reserves the right to reject any or all bids. P. J. McCORKELL, Clerk Cedarville Village, Ohio. Picas Court,-of Greene County, Ohio, end that said cause will be for hear ing on or after the 28th day of Jan- -wry,; 1938. .NEAL W. HUNTER, " Attorney for Plaintiff. / !2-l7-7t-l -28) . LEGAL NOTICE Ruth Shirk, 'whose residence is un known, is hereby notified, that A. M. Shirk' lias filed .his petition against her for divorce and equitable relief, in case No. 21848, of the Common Pleas Court, of Greene County, Ohio, and that said cause will be for hearing on or after the Hth day of January, 1939. NEAL W. HUNTER, 'Attorney for the Plaintiff. (12-9-1 -13d) HEADQUARTERS « for ' EVEREADY PRESTONE ANTI-FREEZE FORD ANTI-FREEZE^ Woodrow Ford Agency ; Friday — Saturday “Bank Night” ' -.SCR EEN - "Little Adventuress" Edith Fellows Cliff Edwards * Continuous Shows Daily Adults Only 10c 'Til 2 P, M STARTS SUNDAY THREE DAYS Comedy — Musical Metro News Short Christmas Show In Springfield . Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. and Janet Gayuor pictured above play ' brother and sister who are respectively ih love with Paulette God dard and Richard Carlson in the prize romance of the year, i be • Young In Heart" which will open Friday, December 23 at the Re- gent,theater in Springfield, for a week’s -engagement. . ■ “The Young In Heart” is the screen version of the baiutday Evening Post serial, "The Gay Banditti.’’ The delightful story concerns the Carletons, a family of fascinating phonies, who live by, their charnt and on anyone’s money and have been kicked out of only the best place. Billie Burke and Roland Young head tho supporting cast. . , • • ' p f i l V E I N T O < p n i N G F I E L D ^ a n d e h j o y a • I t • S t a r t i n g J a L D ^ - 24 E R R O L F L Y N N Starred In .- “ The Dawn Patrol V ,v * * » - « " r b°“ u a iu uiriii” C artoon ‘'CaP Shlrt and Metro News Melody Master Short ^ J a y E v e r y t h i n g ” M.. W,th An Star Cast T<>7y Martin, ArWn . Blnnle Barnes, Jack O V JaCk H<” ey jjjjj-.-----' ' JaCk0 a “ «. Actolphe Menjou i GENE AU TRY ^ “ ^ M e s t f e r n J a m b o r e e FEATURE NO. 2, e h a t i a w s O v e r S h a n g h a i ^ Outstand; / * * * £ 1 3 . ' Mun »bY ROONEY boys TOWN*’ TRACY ADUIflOMBY TIL1PHWEEKDAYS ‘HERALDWANTANDSALEADSPAY* Local and i The Girl Scouts iuj ] n Christmas patty if gymnasium, Monday A son was. limn Charles Kavanu jgiiJ a t their home on tl| west of town. Dr. Florence teaches in Bowling | lege, is hume 1m I vacation. Mr. dnd Mrs. Gu| Morning Sun, Idwt during the Christtnl son, Frank E. Wilej Mrs. Cora TrumbJ pect to go to Cinf.il spend the week wi| Edwin WesterfeJi) Howard Jamiesonl Janette, are the gue Ralph A. Jamieson ;| young peopl • are mouth College, junicl Members of tin quested to*rememhe| buttons for Xmas and leave with M| hard. Mr. and Mrs, J, leaving for Chicago,| days with their Stormont, who is iol Mr. Ralph Murdoil Ina, are spending Cl -ville, Ky.,' with th | and sister, Rev. Wa and family. Walter Boase, underwent an o.pe| Valley Hospital fori ney, has returned | proved. • ' . Mr. and Mrs. Frl their home Friday! members of .the Ktl their husbands for t | mas"banquet and of the evening wn| gifts. Ml -1
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