The Cedarville Herald, Volume 62, Numbers 27-52
HHUMmUIUHIHHUUlHimUUIIIIIUUUlUlJFAMILY REUNION AT !Local and Personal!' pomeofjudge aultman ------------- ------ -------------— " - J , M„. c. A. HrtAton, Jr., «„d » , Mvs. W. E, Garber of Chicago, is a *Clyde Alien III, of New York City, guest a t the home of Mrs, B, C. Watt who have been spending a month at and Mrs. E. C» Bader, , the home of her parents Mi', and Mrs. — . - ...... . 4 . J *'S. WeBt, returned home Saturday. 55S CEDARVILLE HERALD, FRIDAY, X t m f f TS, OM J 0 "Stanley anil Livingstone' Mr, Alfred Marshall, wife and " " - ->— -v » um uvj « uu « h daughter, Jean, New York City, were* Toledo, arrived home to spend guests of the former's aunt, Mrs*. Lula *t*le remaining time with the family Watt, Saturday. wh° was reunited for the week, A ----------------- -- series of parties were planned for the pleasure of Mrs, Hutchison during the last week of her visit. On Wednesday, Mrs. G, H, Hartman and Miss Doris lineman entertained a t dinner in her honor,"Thursday Rev, and Mrs, C. A, «■_„ , Hutchison and daughter, Betty Lee of Mrs. Donald Kyle underwent an Columbus came, and the families en- operation a t the McClellan Hospital joyed a picnic at Bryan farm. Friday rn rov in tayS ^ " reP°rted “ evenin* « family reunion was held at j tlhe home of Judge and Mrs. Dan Ault- jrnan, near* Xenia where about twenty Mrs. John A. Davis and children are were entertained. Saturday morning, , visiting in Cincinnati with her brother- Mrs. Hutchison and baby son, accom- in-law and wife, .Mr. and Mrs. Ralph panied by her brother, J. S. West, Jr. Ferguson, ■ j ,and sister, Ruth West, Mansfield, her . "■ , cousin, Philip Aultman of Xenia and Miss Mary Campbell of Colvimbus, is Hazel and Pauline Nelson, left by visiting a t the home of her uncle and moto1' for New York City. Mrs. aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Ed Harper, Hutchison will join her husband there __j j . i— and the rest of the party will then take a trip into New England. Dr. and Mrs. Hutchison will leave New York, the first, of September for Buffalo .where he has accepted a pro fessorship a t the Universiy of Buffalo in the chemistry department. He has been associated a t Columbia Univers ity with Dr. Harold Ulery and will continue his research work at Buffalo. Gn Tuesday her sister, Miss Susanna Mr. and Mr*. Greer McCallister are announcing the birth af a daughter a t the McClellan Hospital, -Xenia, Friday evening. *< and family. Mr. and Mrs. 0. A. Dobbins went to Winona Lake, Indiana, Wednesday to attend the Bible Conference which is held there annually. . Mrs. Ethel Buck went to College Corner, Wednesday, to attend the Mc- Quiston-McDill faily reunion and to visit her son Charles and family. Mrs. Margaret J. Work, returned: Tuesday from New Wilmington, Pa., where she attended the Missionary Conference'for the past ten days. Mrs. Wesley Humphrey of Wilming ton is a guest of her brother and sis'- teiJ-in-la\v, Mr. and Mrs, G. H. Hart man. Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Dobbins have gone to Winona. Lake, Ind., where they will spend a week or ten days a t that resort and attend the Bible Confer ences. The Jamiesons attended a Jamieson family reunion at Rushville, Ind., Wed- ' nesday. Three brothers and repre sentatives of their families, to the number of eighteen were' present. Mrs. John McNeil is spending a.few days with her sisters-in-Jaw, the Misses Margaret and Fannie McNeil, while enroute froip the New York World’s Fait} to her "home in Denver, Colo. . - , went •on a motor trip to Kentucky, .Tuesday, They were accompanied home by their cousin, Dr. Esther Mit- cnell of Mt. Sterling, who will attend the McMillan reunion, Friday evening. SMITH-TOBIAS NUPTIALS THURSDAY MORNING Miss Marthena Smith, Selma Rd.,. Springfield, became the bride of Mr. John Tobias of this place when -their marriage took place at the., home of the bride at 8:30 Thursday morning. The couple was unattended and the service was read by Rev Paul Pfeiffer of Springfield. ■Preceeding the cere mony there was a program of harp music by Miss Jane C. Braun of Springfield. Following the ceremony the bride arid groom left on a- wedding trip, to Kentucky and on their return will make their home in Hemlock, O., where Mr. Tobias teaches in'the pub- lice schools. ° . Both Mr. Tobias, who is a son of Mrs: Mary Bradfute Tobias of this place, and his wife, are graduates of Cedarville College. • Betty Copeland baa given up her work at the Neal reaturant and baa joined a nurse class at the Miami * Spender Tracy, Nancy Kelly., and Richard Qreeno shore 'stel- iar honors in Darryl F, Zunuck’s production “Stanley and Liv ingstone,” the 20th Century-Fox film which thrillingly recon structs the great adventures of the daring young reporter who penetrated the heart of Africa and scored the “scoop" of the century. • The picture opens at the Regent Theater,'. Springfield, Frl- day, August 18, with Spencer Tracy twice winner of tin \rnrl -mv Award, starred as the heroic Stanley; Nancy Kelly und Richard Greene featured in the romantic roles. ’. . . CONGRESSIONAL (Continued from first page) be much more economy minded than Valley Hospital a t Dayton, the last and that the days of wild Federal spending and heavy appro priations are fast drawing to an end. This column will mark the last of | the series of articles from Washington, by your humble scrivener for this bob * sion o f‘Congress. If the publishers and the readers of this newspaper de sire it, “With a Buckeye in the Con gress” will be resumed with the next session of Congress, January 3rd, or during any special session that may be called before that time. Your humble' servant will be on the high1 seas for a much needed rest and vaca tion by the time this column appears print. Being the second vacation we have had in eighteen years of more or less extended public service, we know we will enjoy it. Incidentally, | so that our friends of the opposition may have no fear to the contrary, we* might mention that the vacation trip 1 is not a government ‘junket,’ but that the expenses are coming out of the pocketbook of your correspondent which, we might add, has been some what flattened during the last few months as a. result of the altitude of Washington prices. E, £». Neal has been called to near Gallopolis, the homo of his father and * mother, wjio are seriously ill. Valuable Work Done sense, and which set a larger number of fruits • from the first blossom At Experiment Farms dusters. Many of the experiments a t the Paulding farm are duplicated on other experimental farms, in the state, but each of the farms has test, work under way that .is of particular interest to Ohio farmers must have a super stitious fear of the number 13 or they would pay more frequent visits to one of the 13 experimental farms which arc operated in Ohio to test out agri The Cedarville Wonders, soft ball- team, had one defeat and one victory against the Columbus South Side. A. Mrs. Effie Lackey, Ada Stormont; s - team>Sunday. The score the first Mr. H. K. -Stormont and son,' Billie, 'Same was 2*° with one h it? and 4' x Jack Neiman, formerly of the Ford Sales and Service, will take-a position with Paul Edwards, its service man, on September 4th. Howard Finney, who lias been with the garage the past few years, will enter Ohio State this fall iQ take up the study of Animal Hus bandry, I with 3 hits for the second game. ,A •return game will be played in Xenia, Sunday, Aug. 27, at the Recreation Park. The local team doned new uni forms for. the Columbus games. Wed nesday evening the locals handed the Jamestown team an easy game with a score of 8-4. Mrs. Howard Stackhouse was hos,tess Wednesday at her home to members of her Sunday school class i of the -High Street I Methodist Church, of Jeffersonville.. Those at tending were: Mrs. Daisy Mock, Mrs. Belle Thompson, Miss Louise Fultz, Miss Helen Fultz, Miss Freda Hig- bee, Mi's. Sarah Higbee, Mrs. Anna cultural enterprises and methods for i that locality. Experimental farms are special adaptation, in the sections! located at Cortland, St. Clairsville, where the farms are located. j London, Canfield, Germantown, Mt. D. C. Foster, Paulding county agri-1 Healthy, Strongsville, Troy, Batavia, cultural agent, declares that any farm- 1Fleming* Carpenter, and Wooster. cr in northwestern Ohio can get! -------------------:— worthwhile information from the farm ; Ohio fanners who contemplate in- located one mile south and a quarter-!creasing the number of sheep on their mile east of Paulding^ The farm' is farms are advised by Floyd DeLash- managed by Rando Beatty under the mutt, farm management specialist, supervision rtf M. A. Bachtell, .Ohio State University, to remember Wooster. . • , ! that the wool market is on a world- One of the the sights'on t!hc Pauld- wide basis. The numbers c*. sheep on ing Farm recently was a difference of United States farms have increased two fret in height of corn in two ad- more slowlyAhan the numbers of hogs, joining plots on the same day. The but there is no prospective immediate difference was due to the effects of a,.shortage of wool or mutton. crop of sweet clover plowed under in ; ------------------ —— the plot where the corn was the tall-! There will be no changes in the ost. . JWages and Hours law voted by this Mr. Beatty finds that the. heavy soils!.session of Congress except a special on this farm are kept in much better ! bill giving exemption to operators? m tilth if legumes are plowed down to* rural telephone exchanges having less keep the soil from compacting. Drain- j than, five hundred subscribers. The ad age is better if the soil is not packed! ministration was successful in heading Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Reinhard have had for their guests the' past week, the former’s sister, Mrs. Jessie Kamp, . and daughter, Betty, of Mt. Carmel, .Mr s . Flora Douler Mrs. M.n Hi;, and Robert Wright, Jr., a nephew! mc Glaze’ M™' ^ , R° i er,ts’ ^ Ts‘ of Mrs. Reinhard, fromZeigler, 111. , Eva Porter, Mrs. Helen Tudor, Mrs. The guests returned to their homes1 Ora BOoc.0’ Mrs. Al.ce Nisley, Mrs. Thursday morning. ' | Blanch R.tenour, Mrs. Jessie Re.se, • iMrs. Bertha Hoppis, Mrs. Mary Do ur ' w .i 'it a , , . %. .witt, Mrs. Bertha French, Miss Joe Mrs. Wilson,H. Crosby and daugh- Nisl Miss Carroll Tippett, ter, Joyce Confer, left Sunday for Elizabeth French. Dayton where nicy spent the day with relatives. They left that eve ning by plane for New York City. Modern home for rent—$25 month ly. Call phone 70, Cedarville. “Mighty proud of Tripl-ife” $2 A WEEK W ill Buy A W illiam son Trijpl-ISe "Tfae Williamson i&tater Company I am just a busy railroad man and at home very feddom. Had a Tripl-ifc furuacs Installed last Sep tember and am well pleased with it. fact tre don't know how we ever got alofojf without it. Our home has never been so warm in the winter mouths aa this winter of 1939. I am mighty proud of my furnace/* Signed—B, A Riffle Dcunisori, Ohio FREE: Furnace Inspection. Did you"bum toomuch coal, did you have toomuch iilhess —were your coal bills too high this oast winter? We make free insscc''” ' ocate troubles, do repair work M- Hies. C. C. BREWER Phone: Cedarville 125 WI LL IAMSON ■■TRI PL- l FE” F u r tm c e i C le a n e d n u n c Friday-Saturday, August 18-19 Akim Tantiroff—Frances Farmer “Ride A Crooked Mile” Musical—Sports—Paragraphic T H A Sunday«htonday, August 20-21 ' I s " u Lew Ayres—Lionel Barrymore “Calling Dr. Kildare” A " 7 News—“Jitterbug Follies” 0 T J L Wednesday-Thursday, Aug. 23-24 ■ m The Bit* Brothers—Pat«y Kelly R v “ The Gorilla” r Y Donald Duck—Musical K m a ir - cond it ioned ■«P" 11,1 ~ and crops can secure food easier and in larger quantities. Variety tests to determine the' yield ing ability of different crop varieties are customary on the experimental farms. Ten wheat varieties are being tested at Paulding. Thorne wheat has the best average' yieli; record 37.3 bushels per acre. This is a variety developed in the state and is being rapidly increased by fanners but nearly all this seed available, for 1939 already has- been sold. Yield tests are made by comparing new varieties with old standard kinds whose productive ability has been proved. Gopher oats have yielded an average of 70.1 bushels an acre at Paulding. Five new oats ale being compared with old varieties and one of the new ones is showing a great deal of promise. Cultural methods for tomatoes and sugar beets are tested at Paulding as these two crops are important in that section. The-influence of legumes on crop yields again shows up in the sugar beet tests a t Paulding. Four, five, and six-year rotations arc under trial. The Paulding farm is testing out the practicability of direct seeding of to matoes in the field and results so far are encouraging. Direct seeding seems to produce plants with better root sys tems, which are more resistant to di- off a number of bills, including the famdus Barden bill for the exemption of agricultural workers and processors of agricultural products, but it seems certain that early in the next session, beginning January 3rd, the Wages.and Hours law is due for a rather complete over-hauling.. •nans B E A ’ S BEAUTY SALON I CROQ, PERMANENT *1.00 For A Limited Time Only P h o n e : 14 CEDARVILLE. OHIO ^ j j *"* /A- f r *'»•*'■ V ’-"’'if 5:2,' ;•/ .• D i r e c t o r o f A g r i c u l t u r e S e e s F a i r A s E x a m p l e ! O f O h i o ’s C o - O p e r a t i o n BRIDE-ELECT COMPLIMENTED WITH SHOWER ON MONDAY Miss Marthena Sifjith, of Spring- field, whose marriage to Mr. John Tobias, of near Cedarville, will take place Thursday, was complimented at a delightful party and miscellaneous “shwer” at the home of Miss Vir ginia Townsley, Monday evening. Miss Geneva Clemens, of Cedarville, was assistant hostess. ' Games of bridge were enjoyed and prizes were awarded Miss Rebecca Galloway and Miss Merle Mellinger, Miss Smith was presented a guest prize and an array of attractive gifts by the guests. A salad course, employing yellow and. white appointments, was served and miniature bridal boutjuest, caught with yellow ribbons; were given as favors. Guests were Misses Marthena and Mabel Smith and Miss Merle Melling er, of Springfield; Miss Wanda Tin dall, of Selma; Miss Betty'Lou Camp, Evansville, 111.; Miss Emily Michael, of Xeesburg; Miss Esther Shump, of Dayton; Misses Lucille Lott, Charlotte Bootes, Helen Chitty and Doris Wat kins, of Xenia; Miss Dorothy Nelson, Rebecca Galloway, Gretchen Tindall, Frances and Ruth Kimble, Cletus Jacobs, Christina Jones, Mrs. Merjin Eidemiller, M ts . Chester Swaby, Mrs. Cornelia-Bradfute and Mrs.‘Mary To bias, Cedarville, ' The annual Kyle-Jackson picnic will be held at Shawnee Park, Xenia, Fri day, August 25, at 6:30 p. m. Mr. Neal Hartman is attending Camp 'Indianola, near Lancaster, where an interdenominational school is held for ten days. . For Rent—Modern five-room cottage for rent, $25 monthly. Phone 70. Ce darville. COLUMBUS (Special)—Calling the Ohio State Fair “a fine example of cooperation among agriculture, industry and the state” Director of Agriculture John T. Brown, to day pointed out that this coopera tion has produced a fund of $134,- 000 to be offered to exhibitors at this year’s exposition, Aug. 26 t o ' Sept. 1. “During the long months of prep aration nothing has been taken for granted. Every possible effor has been made to make this 89th an nual Fair live up to its traditional rank as the greatest state fair in the nation, as well as to make it a success financially. Every activity within th/s state has been encom passed by these preparations. -When the gates Bwing open at 5:00 a. m. August 26 the 150-acre grounds will be a living, pulsating demon stration of what Ohio citizens, agri culture, industry, science, schools and government can accomplish when they pull together,” Director Brown said. It is a venerable Institution. It brings together Ohio’s citizens from farm, hamlet and city. It teaches better farming, and breed ing methods. It -promotes profit able production, patriotism and progress. It provides clean, bigh- class amusement. It inspires bet ter citizenship through rewards to individual and group achievement. It establishes a goal for more Shan 30,000 boys and girls whpjook upon • some phase'of agriculture as their future. It is a mirror through , which we look at ourselves, because we are Ohio. It is Ohio’s show .window through which the remain-! der of the nation looks upon and forms its opinion about the kind JOHN T. BROWN Director of Agriculture of people who live and who work here—its opinion about the kind of a state we have bufided. " “We who have planned this 1989 exposition are confident of Its worth, its truthful portrayal, and its power to inspire hope for the future. We a r e ' confident it will entertain as well as teach. To miss attendance will be to miss the best Ohio has to offer.” i WHERE TO*STAY IN CINCINHATI IHTHECUIERBEDOWimWI ^TKlsperfect location fhasiraw easyaccess to all partsofG» ! tianati—• and the ideal e e commodations at the Rafaw will make yens visit dekshthdi, You'll enjoy theCricket larona a fine restaurant*coffee fitep and bar. RATES fT flUANDUF O TheMUCE HOTEL SIXTH AT VINE STREETS ANTHONYELSASSER, MANAGER Sb O! The production of honey from Ohio clover w»s below normal in all ex cept a few sections of the state. Heavy,,rains and scarcity of clover were the chief reasons for the reduc tion. -Cash income on the principal farm enterprises plus benefit payments to Ohio farmers in the first six months of 1939 were $4,000,000 less than the income and payments for the same months in 1938.. “Jim and Nip,” weight 3200 lbs., the horse “Jim,” being the former male of “Queen,” one of the Worlds records than any other team living today. Also “John and Jiggs,’ weight 4400, owned by John A. Day, Springport, Ind., are*to he driven by his grand daughter, Mary Jane Radnbaugh, aged 17 years in the World**. Junior Horse Pulling Contests to be held a t the opening day and night “of the Ohio Stale Fair, Saturday, Aug. 26th, Co lumbus. This past few weeks she has assumed the guidance of her grand fathers teams during his illness, his teams being the largest mtmey winners in pulling contests in the U. S. today. A great devotee of horses And a faith ful follower of her grandfather, who has made every pulling contest ,out standing in the Inst font Years, she should reign supreme in this event, Dr. H. N. Williams DENTIST Yellew Springs, Okie X-RAY EQUIPMENT HARD IS S P O I L I N G Y O U R S H A V E I Hard-water curd makes the beard hard to out Soft-water give* a quick, smooth shave. Hard water uses twice as much soap, i t also scales up water- heaters and pipes...shortens the life of clothes. Hard water costs yon enough to pay for Permutlt Water Softening Equipment many times over. Woiddyou like to try the lux ury of a soft-water shave? We will lend you a portable model to use for two days, free of Charge. Just phone our officer P e rm u tit So ft w a te r from every faucet WATER SOFTENING EQUIPMENT/ F. E. HARPER I**-* Plumbing of All Kinds 9 Bath-room Equipment Modern Kitchen Sinks Hot Water Heating Let us Quote you Prices WW.rttHUWlWlW«IMI«m H lllHIIIIHIHIiail>W i lllia ilMWMIlWIUmMIMlimMlIlHlnaWWtUMWWOWMUiailMMIIMWinW
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