The Cedarville Herald, Volume 62, Numbers 27-52

1 CEDARVILLE HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE SO, 1989 Courtly Lover* Respleridant in their court costumes Bette Davis and Brian Aherne play the tragic lovers, Carlota and Maximilian, in Warner Bros, greatest motion picture achievement, "Juarez” which opens Sunday at the Xenia theater for a two diiy engagement, "Juarez” pronounced (War-ezz)) is so momentous a story that It required six Academy Award winners and a cast of 118G players to make. Besides the above mentioned stars, Paul Muni, John Gar­ field, Gale Sondergaard, Claude Rains, and Donald Crisp also have outstanding roles. ASK THE PAINTER* * Mm will Ml yes that HANNA'S tmSBN SEAL fives s better looting and morn ecoa.omfeaf point fob. lU K C B aH IM O W im iS : . Tills perfect location fives yoe easyaccess to all partsof _ cJnnati— and tbs ideal a* commodatlons at the Palace will malt* your visit delightful, You'll enjoy theQicIcetTaverifc a fine restaurant, coffee Aop and bar. ThePALACE HOTEL AND UP SIXTH AT VINE STREETS ANTHONY ELSASSER, MANAGER C U R E D JU ST R IG H T . . , That’s the Verdict When You Use a McCORMICK-DEERING SIDE RAKE and TEDDER The best features in a side delivery rake and a tedder are combined to make this two-in-one hay tool indispensable for curing hay quickly and thoroughly. It forms a windrow in which the leaves are turned inward to prevent shattering and loss from breaking off. The stems are turned outward to get the quickest and most thorough action from the sun and air. The shift of a lever converts the machine from a side rake to a tedder. Another lever sets the teeth at the right slant for either operation. We would like to show you this machine on our display fleer. CEDARVILLE LUMBER COMPANY Phone* 33 u O ther McCormick-Deering Hay T ools: No. 7 Enclosed- Gear Mowers Self-Dum p Rakes Sweep Rakes ■Windrow Hay Loaders Cylinder-Rake Hay Loaders H aysta ckers . Hay Presses SBS5 iij ~arr«ni INK* T em p e ra n c e Nw te s Sponsored by Cednrville W. C, T. U. Liquor consumption in New York City was 90,000,000 gallons less in the first seven months o f last year. Traffic ! deaths declined during the same time 22 percent. The Ending is suggestive. Prospective students o f Illinois State Normal University do not need to enter that school in ignorance o f its stand upon the liquor problem. Its recent catalogue contains this state­ ment: “ Since ability to consume in­ toxicating beverages, regardless of nature or quantity, is not a part of teacher-training- program, and since employers of teachers, regardless o f their personal attitude toward the liquor question, will not employ or continue in service teachers who use such intoxicants, Illinois State Nor­ mal University very emphatically states that the use of intoxicants ott or off the campus will not be permitted and the deviation from this regulation calls for severance o f connections with the school. Because the institution feels justified in the interests of its reputation" and that of its students and graduates in having such areg- ulation, it is hoped jthat persons who cannot live within both the letter and spirit of this procedure will not apply for admission to the university.” ( ^ / [ V /| V Master painters ted you ihat quality gives satisfaction. Qual­ ity paint contains beauty, durability,,wearability, and ■ com­ plete satisfaction. All these you buy when you ask for-— VlANN A;s GREEN SEAL PAINT CEDARVILLE FARM IMPLEMENT, INC., Cedarville, Ohio In his discussion of what he regards as an outstanding serious situation facing the American people today, Mr. Babson said: “ But only since the repeal o f pro­ hibition, however, have I, realized the tcriffic dangers of the commercialized liquor traffic. “ After most careful study, I am con­ vinced that only by crushing the liquor traffic can democracy be saved. “ The American people are now fast approaching the time when the liquor interests will be running the United- States. government. If our Constitu­ tion is thrown over for fascism, it will be due primarily to the liquor traffic, which has never known when to stop in its nefarious and underground campaigns. The great danger o f such a development cannot he over-em­ phasized. Even today the liquor in­ terests claim that they elected Presi­ dent Roosevelt and ,that it is up to him to protect them. “ As a statistician, I am especially disturbed by the arguments which the liquor interests use in connection with taxation. They claim that because liquor is contributing about $500,000,- 000 a year to Federal and State .treas­ uries, they are entitled to special con­ sideration. Let me tell you, howevor, that they are telling you only one half o f the story. The other half is that liquor, on which they pay this tax, has'so wrecked the character o f thou­ sands that our Federal and State governments are now required to pay out .more than $500,000,000 a year for relief! This relief expense the coun­ try never had before the repeal of pro­ hibition. NOTICE The following rulings were made by the Board o f Public- Affairs at their last regular meeting. 1, That anyone making a water tap must place a shut-off valve be tween their- meter and corporation stop, if there is more than one meter there must be a shut-off Valve for each one. Water will not be turned oh unless this ruling has been followed. 2. That any renter desiring service may make a deposit o f Five ($5.00) Dollars, with the clerk, instead o f hav­ ing a “ Guarantee Card” signed. M, C. HUGHES, President, Board of Public Affairs. P. J. McCORKfcLL, Clerk, Board o f Public Affairs. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS - STATS OF OHIO DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS Columbus, Ohio.> - June 27, 1939 UNIT PRICE CONTRACT j Sealed proposals will be received at the office o f the State Highway D i-' rector o f Ohio, .at Columbus, Ohio, until ten o’clock A . M, Eastern Stan­ dard Time. Tuesday, July 18, 1939, for improvement in: (Proposals Nos. 1 to 5 inclusive are offered as one project and will be a- warded as one contract. Proposal No. 1 Greene County,*Ohio, on Section C-l and C-2 o f the Springfield-Jamestown Road, State Highway No, 472, State Route No. 72, in Miami and Cedar­ ville Townships, by applying a bitum­ inous treatment, Item T-31. Pavement: Width, 8 feet. Length 18,480 feet Or 3.50 miles. Estimated cost—$830.03. Proposal No. 2 Montgomery County, Ohio on Sec­ tions E and F o f the Mason-Sprirtg- boro-Northeffi Road, -State Highway No. 948, State Route No. 741 iii Miami Township) and Warren County, Ohio on Section D o f the Mason-Springboro- Northern Road, State Highway No. .948,-State Route No. 741 in Clear Creek Township) by applying a bitum­ inous treatment, IteM T-31. Pavement: Width 18 feet. Length 45,936 feet or 8.70 mileR. Estimated cost—-33,802.95. Proposal No. 3 Montgomery .County, Ohio1on Sec­ tion 0-2 o f the Cincinnati-Dayton Rond,, State Highway No. 19, U. S. Route No. 25, in Miami Township, by applying a bituminous treatment, Item T-31. Pavement: Width 20 feet. Length 10,560 feet or 2.00 miles. Estimated cost—$2,970.08. . Proposal No. 4 Montgomery County, Ohio, on Sec-, tion D o f Miamisburg-Spring Valley Road, State Highway No. 894, State Route No. 725, in Washington Town­ ship, by applying a bituminous treat ment; Item T-3l. . Pavement: Width 18 feet. Length 13,411 feet or 2.54 miles. Estimated cost—$1,110.98. Proposal No, 5 Greene County, Ohio, on Section L and part o f Section S o f the Dayton- Chillicothe Road, State Highway No. 29, U. S. Route No. 35, in Xenia, Ce­ darville and New Jasper Townships, by applying a bituminous treatment, Item T-31. Pavement: Width 18 feet. Length 16,368 or 3.10 miles. Estimated cost—$3,733.90. Proposals Nos. 1 to 5 inclusive of this project to bo completed not later than September 1, 1939. The minimum wage to be -paid-to all labor employed on this contract shall be in accordance with the “ Schedule o f Prevailing Hoftrly Wage Rates As­ certained and Determined by The De­ partment o f Industrial Relations ap plicable to State Highway Department Improvements in accordance with Sec­ tion 17-3, 17-4, 17-4a, 17-5 and 17-6a o f the General Code o f .Ohio.” The bidder must submit with his bid a certified check in an amount equal to five' per cent o f the estimated cost, but in no event more than ten thou­ sand dollars, Plans and specifications are on file in the department o f highways and the office o f the resident distinct deputy director, . The director reserves the right to reject any and all bids. ROBT. S. BEIGHTLER, 1 State Highway Director. REPORT 6F SALE Monday, June 26,1939 Springfield Live Stock Sales Co. HOGS—759 head. 160-J|74 lbs........... *--------- ;7,16 to 7.20 140-159 l b s . _____________ 6.75 * 120-139 lbs, ______________6.60 100-119 lbs. _____ 6.30 Feeder p i g s ------------------- 7.40 down Fat sows ------------- *6.20 to 6.60 Stags------------------------------5,oo down CATTLE—119 head. Steera .................................. 8.10 to 9.05 Heifers ----------- 5.60 to 7.45 Fat c ow s— --------- .5.05 to 5.90 Medium cows _________ i.4.00 to 5.00 Thin cows ______ ,________ 2.00 to 3.95 B est.hu lls........... ............... 6.75 to 7.45 Other bulls _____________6.25 down . Bang re -a cto r s_____ _,__5.50 to 5.80 VEAL CALVES—139 head. Top ............................. 9.00 Good and choice_________ 8.30 to 9.00 Medium ................. 7,000 to 8.65 Culls --------- ----------------.— 6.25 down SHEEP & LAMBS—130 head. LEGAL NOTICE Mary E. Endsley, whose place of residence is unknown, will take notice that on the 5th day o f May, 1939, Ross E, Endsley filed his certain ac­ tion against her for divorce on the grounds o f wilful absence for three years in Case No. 21952, before the Common Pleas Court o f Greene County, Ohio. Jhat said cause will come on for hearing on or after the 17th day o f June, 1939, and she must answer before that date or judgment may be rendered against her. MARCUS SHOUP, Attorney for Plaintiff, iiiimiiiMmtHimiimMmimiMmtiiiiiiiimmiiHimtiiiiiiiuii Old SOU L- Camp When you are in harvest or threshing — give your hands a good meal. Come to the Old Mill Cqmp and you will be pleased. Plenty at ntll meals served, LEGAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the Board o f Trustees o f Sugarcreek Township, Greene County, Ohio, on the 20th day o f June, 1939, filed its certain petition before the court' of Common Picas of Greene County, Ohio, in Case No. 21983, Seeking au­ thority for the transfer o f the| sum o f Five Hundred ($500,00) Dollars from the road and bridge fund tit said sub­ division to the general fund o f Said subdivision in accordance with the pro­ vision o f Section 5625-13 G. C, o f Ohio, Said cause will come on fo r hearing on Thursday, June 29, 1939, at 10:00 a. m., or as soon thereafter as the same may be heard by the court, Ex­ ceptions thoreto must ■he filed‘"‘prior to said hearing; Boiifd o f Trustees o f Sugarcreek Township, Greene County, Ohio.' ■ By Roger P. Tumor, Clerk, Marcus Slump, Prosecuting Attorney, LEGAL NOTICE Beatrice Whitelow, whose place o f residence is unknown, will "take notice that on the 20th day\of May, 1939, Albert Whitelow filed his petition for divorce against her tin the gro\ nds o f wilful absence for three yeatfS, being Case Ne. 21,961, before the Court o f Common Pleas, Greene county, Ohio, and that said cause will come on fo r hearing on or after July 1, 1939, FORES* DUNKLE, Attorney fo r Plaintiff, (6-26*6t-7-l) Best fa t lambs _____— 9.75 Seconds __________ 9,28 F e e d e rs _________ 6.15 to 6,60 Fat buck lambs . . . . . ____1.00 discount Fat e w e s ________ *_____ 2.00 to 3.15 Thin ewes . . . __________ ..1.76 down Y e a r lin g 'w e th e rs ___^ Bidding was snappy fo r all offerings •o f butcher weight hogs at this sale Itoday, with 7.15 and 7,20 being paid fo r all weights sold, This unusual spread only five cents was probably due to producers being busy with other work on the farm. Weights under 159 lbs,, and going back fo r finishing fold downward from 6.75. Feeder pigs sold up to 7.40, this figure fo r treated pens. Fat sows shared in the advances o f the day, selling from 5.20 to 6.60. The cattle sale was a brisk affair for all offerings, the feature being . the sale o f a bull weighing 2320 lbs. the largest animal offered here to date. Steers ranged from 8.10 to 9.05, . and heifers, dairy breds, from 5.60 to 7.45. Best fa t coWs sold from 5.05 to 5.90, and medium kinds from 1010 to 6.00, and- thin kinds from 2.00 to 3.95. Best butcher bulls ranged from 6„75 to 7.46, and others at 6,25 down. Bang Re-actors ranged from 6.50; to 5,80. V eil calves topped at 9,00, with Other good and choice grades from 8.30 to 9.00, and medium grades from 7.00 to ,8.65. Culls sold under 6.25. Ewe and wether lambs topped at 9.75, with seconds a t 9.25, and medium kinds at 8,.:5. Fat buek lambs .sold. 1.00 under these figures. Yearling wethers sold at 6.60, aand, butcher ewes from 3,15 down. Wanted—To Rent farm o f 200 anas, more or less. Cash rent. To get possession this fall fo r -seeding; for March occupancy. Address by mail^ “ Farm,” Cedarville Herald. • (dt) SEARS HOTEL-^-Attractive rates for full time boarders and roomer*. Modern conveniences and good home cooked meals. Sunday dinners, fried chicken. (4t-6-16d) c n n r r A T YOUR CHANCE To SAVE NOW. Standard Ice Cream Full Pints Full Pints Regular Price Is 15c Vanilla Strawberry Chocolate Pecan Krundi The above is an introductory greeting by the new proprietor, Robert Gorman, Come in and get acquainted. . ■ Open Evenings—-Open Sundays AUNT MARY’S KITCHEN STOVE PASSES INTO HISTORY r\ . 3 ; . I . jj 5* ^ P : 'I .‘ I, < - V W ■; ¥ • i I m :'i. f T ^ ^ , m i - ' r . m # - m 7 % - ¥ f ! , a * a ■x h i infill ■ # ’ y : M ’ m ■ ^ W JtH , gr . f j " .. ^ ^ f f e # M r ? r ~ ^ \y is»» , f % '* i / ■i'K# From BtukittUU Famout Drawing "Brtakfart on the Farm" (Copyrighted) 1 went down to see Aunt Mary not so very long ago; to spend a day with her and to talk. She was lone- •ome. Unde Dan—he was her hus­ band—had died some time previously and say what you will, yon cannot find yoursalf suddenly aeparated from one you have loved and lived with for 50 year* without a aenae of lone UnejB. Aunt Mary lived just at the rim of the dty. She had gone to housekeeping in that very home; but of course over a half century many additions had been nude and some modern convenience* had been added, Taken by and large It was a comfortable home, snug and filled with a lot of things that Aunt Mary, principally, and to some extent Uncle Dan, had been collecting over their married life. There was that tct.thls home life that made it all very (avlt Ing to m*. Ever since I was a kid I had gone theta and Aunt Mary had told me ttorlee o f • pioneering time In her life when aa a young girt from the East she had come to the “ west country”, aa she called It. She knew nothing abouLcooking or housekeeping or hartf wofk when she "emigrated” to Ohio; and, believe me, Ohio 50yearsago to toe sectionwhere she lived really had everything that spoke of pioneering with the possible exception of Indiana. One old man who Uvcd up the pike « few miles, ell by himself, wae reputed to be "parMndian” and when you saw him Jogging along the dusty toad on his way to town you sort of shivared, expecting him to come over end set Auht Mary’s and Unde Dsn’s house ondtae }uat for the theei'hm o f keep­ ing UP an Indian tradition. But he never bothered the Cotks and be kept' :M riiira "eM am l'ind nobody really knew much about him. When I arrived at Aunt Mary’s she was busy in the kitchen, as usual. The hard life of the frontier town in which she was brought up as a youug brida had hardened her to many kinds o f work. She never thought she could learn to do what she had done. The first thing I noticed when I tought her out in the kitchen was her new gas stove , " ‘Uncle Dan’ ordered it just before he died,” she Bald. "Isn't it simply grand?” she said. “The gas Company mains came out here about six months ago,” she said, “and 1 got rid of the oldi kitchen stove, Land, your Uncle Dab end 1 had that stove so many yeahs It was kind of hard to part with it Why, I remember how he used to drag In wood from the field back of the barn, and later on coal; how he used to come in of nighis so cold his hands ‘were simply numb and hold them ever the stove and thaw out, sort of like you know. And the new hot Water heater that I bought and the gas company put in the cellar, gives me more hot water every minute than t used to git out of the old kitchen Move in hours of steady firing.” I noticed the pride she had in posi session of her new gas stove end new water heater. “Land sakes,” she went bn, “how I remember Unde Dan taking his Saturday night baths hi the old wooden tub in the kitchen, Why, boy, I had to heat water on my old kitchen stove for hours to get enough water for him; to say nothing about myself. It wai all very old-fashitmed, t guess, but-we, didn’t mihd if at the time because we didn't have anything to take it’s p4a«e. Seamed like I was always running CutofwoodandOncold,winterdam when your Unde Dan was laid up with rheumatism, I had to carry'toe1 wood and coal myself. Wasn’t that hard Work, though? "But thia new gas stove and water heater--they really am something, boy,” She always called me “ boy” because, I guess, she always thought ^ of me as a youngster, more or less. “Well,? she went on, "with this new gas stoVe all 1 have, to do is to use jthe automatic safety lights and there is my meai a-cooklng right away. It wasn’t like that in the old days, son, not by a long shot. This gas ,range has a ‘C.P,’ on U{ you know that i» means 'Certified Performance’, aom. It means, too, that It is guaranteed to do everything that Is claimed for It —auto^ntio safety lighters on the oven : broiler as well as top bum* ers—see? The ovin tacks do not tip when withdrawn and. have. oattMtt - so they cannot fall oht. 1 can broil a steak easily because the design of the1 holler burnermakes this possible: In fact, eon, everything about thie new gas. range Is intended to ta*k» : it easier to cook meals, have < 0001 * conveniences and prevent Waite o f . gas for cooking, And I cannot begin to tell you how that new water heater h&if helped me clean house end do’-jk lot of things around here when 1 need hot water. Boy, isn’ t It swell?” I admitted It was, of course, “ YOU’ should have been a salesman,” I sug» > geated. abb looked at me qukzloaliy. "Tell you what;; son, I’ll cook you, a tnca] on this new gas stove right now and . after dintier we can have a good lone* talki Wliaft do you say?” Who could resist such a grand tn« eRedOHt

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