The Cedarville Herald, Volume 66, Numbers 27-52
Tw# i turn toaab m har# been hired ' Joseph W , Fiebter, m**ter o f the in p liiSg Snj4 W o iM * Gritege* tested .0 state- M. « . I t e w m w d T tam d ir. 1***** Wed&tefcf *w* v**rm$ 8e& T i ^ «w M « ! * « □ » Taytor, High- lw " “ “ “ “ ■ " “ l“ * 1'1” -------’ land. fw rU i made *&d"Mriu LaoQli % Oo&bm* Yritew % r i» * * Gammer- rial Department, The position o f ooeob and arieae* teacher is agate open since -word has boon received from Harry Waltee* who bad ' ac cepted the poet fo r this year that he to returning tp Rosa Township School -where he ha* served the last two year*. Other teacher* include Ruth A. Chandler, hire, Nolle Barrow Wright, Mildred Trumbo, Bernice Bryant, Ruth E. Lewie, Mr*. Vesta Halstead, Ora- E. Hanna, J, F. Hilt, Mrs, Anna 0 , WUsop, Mrs. Luelln Bob* Hilt, Elinbetb Raul, R. F, Wilson, Miss Carrie Rife, principel*- A twin cooperative program is be* ing worked out -with.the Agricultural Department o f Bowersville School the coming year it was, also annpiyicsd. Also Cedarville community is beRuP asked to he.ready to help share with the school cafeteria during the ,can ning season o f fruits and vegetables the ’later part o f August and the first o f September, , SUNDAY SCHOOL PICINIC The •Sunday School picinic o f the Church o f the Nazarene "Will he held at.the home-of Mi. and Mrs. Stferman •Cotton, Saturday, July 31. The pic inic will begin, with a covered dish luncheon at 11 A. M„ Following the Harold Jckee, against hi* proposed reduction in gasoline that such would b e a serious handicap to farmers. It would be., such a handicap to the thousands -of rural and. town people that have no other transportation. Filter urged nil farm organizations and farmers to proteat iso Ickes a- gstest hi* proposed reduction. St would he Just as proper fo r all farm ers to write and inform the New- Dealer that if. gasoline is to be re duced so will all the farm crops, The gasoline situation is purely po litical and all one had to do to he con vinced was t© have heard the '‘Roose velt big wind", Wednesday night. Roosevelt pictured the gasoline sit uation frqm the army Standpoint hut did not explain that the gasoline used on the highways. or for trucks or tractors is not the kind pf gasoline U*dd fo r airplanes: There are thous ands o f gallons o f ordinary gasoline Uo one gallon o f .high octane gas fo r aircraft.- .Roosevelt did not explain there would be plenty if the oil re fineries had the equipment to make airplane gasoline^ ' Eastern motorists have put the "heat* on Washington, fo r more gas oline ' and the New-Deal had to fine an excuse to hold that vote. The Roosevelt gasoline explanation was only half truth. CARD OF THANKS We wish to take this means o f ex pressing our sincere appreciation for luncheon ’'will g a m e s " a n o t h e r activities fo r All. The public is cor dially invitied to attend. BUY WAR BONDS .TODAY expressions of sympathy from ' our many friends during our hour o f bereavement. 1 .Mrs. Alta. Dobbins Mr. and Mrs. A . B. Evans OPEN EVERT MONDAY 12,30 UNTIL 8-4S P. M. WHILE THEY LAST! £- 2 ,Price 1 - BERMUDAS, HANOKIS, COCQANTJTS, BAKUS, > DYED AND BLEACHED PANAMAS, MADAGAS- ’ CARS, BALIBUNTALS, PEANUT BRAIDS, LEG- HORNETTES, FANDAUS AND SAILORS- Not all types in all sizes but you’ll find sizes for e v e r y man . *: —.aee theta early. rC6UE ■u - • m tm m , i>h.»a.wwww*i» SPRINGFIELD, OHIO * -Buy An Extra War Stamp And Help Build Shangri-la * At Regent Springfield, "D ixie” ■X--1 g ? V / At iobg last Hollywood Is giving us a real minstrel show! And frost everything beard about ft, it's been wen worth waiting for. uhahks to Paramount, the jitterbug generation is going to have a chance m see—and hear—what America was dahalng to anil sing* *»* * hundred-yeafs ago, when Bing Crosby's went new musical, 2pf*i«," come* u Springfield for tho entertainment of the Regent Theatre patrons, Bing plays the .role of Dan Bmrnetf, the banjo' troubadour who wrote "Dixie," the song that* comes near to being oar national anthem, plus many other tunes, There are six old tune* in the picture that Bing sings, including *BJxie,’’ "Old Dan Tucker," "Turkey in the Straw," "Buffalo* dais," "Last Rose of Bummeri' a id "Swing Low, Sweet* Chariot," The movie tells tee story of the formation of the Virginia Minstrels ,by Ring, as D in Emmett, With Billy do Wolfe, Lynn* Overman and jffiddfe Victory Garden If Book1* Friend Opportunity to Save 2,772 Ration Point* Foy* Jr., rounding out the original quartette.that subsequently grew to a minstrel troupe of forty—count 'em, forty—men. New Orleans, rite scene of their first triumph, is where Bipg meets Dorothy DeiUour who is co-starred with him in the Him. Dottle plays the part o f Millie Cook, unsympathetic landlady of a boarding house for-deadbeat actors. Of court*, it's difficult to he unsympathetic to Bing for very long and in spite of the fact that when she meets him, he’s another out-of-work boarder, Dottle tolls tor him and vkMKversa. From all accounts, "Dixie," which is Ring's first Pto* tort la Technicolor, i* a musicaluiu that ought to provide *a very » toe*a*t respite to those -smart.eeougii'to take advas nteg# of it. A S3, by 50-foot garden plot p lu s; 25 tomato plants, a .couple o f pound* of seed and someone to plant, har- • vest, and can them, equa£^2,772 ra tion points saved in the course o f a . .year, ... ■ * So let ration points, as w e ll’ as nutritive values and the'famiiy budg et, provide tlm yardstick by which you measure returns from your 1943 garden. That's the advice given b y , Prof. F , G, Jgtelyar o f Rutgers uni versity, chairman o f the state V ic*. tory garden' and fcod conservation committee. And remember, If you have not yet started your Victory gar den, it's not too., la te / Rut you must get busy now* The plan on which .he has figured the,2,772-ration point/return, based on present point values, includes two rows of tomato plants, each row 50 feet long; two xows o f snap beans, Crop Corps Insignia ' 'Th is is the identifying insignia for the 1J. S. Crop Corps. The sheaf of ‘wheat symbolizes food .production and -the toothed edge of toe C sym bolizes food processing. ' fplanted from a pound of seed; two row* o f - carrots, planted with an ’ounce of seed; and. a similar plant ing of beets and of lima beans, for ;which an ounce and a pound, re spectively, o f seed will be needed. Professor Helyar estimates that' bn -the average the tomatoes will yield 'three bushels of fruit, or 54 quart jars and 1,481 ration points. The ‘other crops, measured on the -efSme 'basis, will produce as follows:, (snap beans—one bushel; Id quarts, 358 points; carrots—one* bushel,.*18 'quarts, 403 points; beets—one bUsh* ol, 16.quarts, 256 points; and lima beans—one bushel (in the pod), nine (quarts,‘ 274 points. * Measured from this standpoint, it' is obvious the the garden will not only help keep an average-size fam ily fed in .accordance with good standards o f nutrition for the year, but it will save them from spending their ration points for foods that will probably'be drastically needed by families in metropolitan and city- areas who are unable to garden, Professor Helyar adds. .Commercial Uses for . Our Citrus Fruits ' Back’in 1920, grapefruit was an in expensive delicacy. Have you heard of .the woman who boiled one for hours and could not make it tender? Today, five times as much grapefruit is grown and it is well known by rich and poor, . Our' grapefruit is grown most ly in Florida, Texas, Arisons t and California. California' and Florida produce 97 per cent of our oranges and virtually all - lemons are grown In California. These citrus fruits are used al most entirely f o r food, hut there Is still a great waste from can ning. and marmalade making and a need to find-non-food uses- for culls. Orange and lemon oil is produced commercially in California, Grape fruit oil is a very new product val ued in the textile industry to fix turkey' red dye. The peel and pulp o f citrus frui^ rfiay also be come an important source of pectin which i* sold Commercially to add to other fruit juices in making jelly. It may also be possible to recover some o f the valuable vitamins and turn them to commercial use*, Citric acids are being produced for food flavors and uses in medicine. Novel food products are appearing, such as citrus powder and citrus butter. Canning o f grapefruit hearts and juice has been on the increase, about 62 per cent coming from n n a r i a a f csrt/f Oil Florida cannaries'and 36 per cent from Texas. • Until the present European war, the United States was on the way to developing a fine export trade in fresh oranges.and canned grape fruit, • ‘ Rural Briefs Cabbage, endive and other plants that are partly bleached when eaten contain less vitamin C than .the real ly green vegetables, 0 ' '• * -« To assure full milk pails next win ter* many farmers are planning a thorough feed production and stor age campaign to get next* Winder's stock o f foodstuffs into their barns* by (October 15, »• WANTED Truck Driver ior Cream Route Man or Wotaan, The Miami Valley Cooperative Milk Producer*. Association, Dayton, Ohio. M tm m ( n i ir n a u q n a l IOk£ 9 SfOn S ^ sw :w Patou!) o. LeuonforAugust 1 w & r- GOD DKLXVEX* Ml* PEOPLE ZJDSSQN T E X T—X s o d u i # : » , » : 6 : 1 - 7 ; Mat. « ■ GOLDSWTKXT—C*H upon m« In tba diy ol trouble: I wttl qellver thw, and thou Shaltglorifymt.—-Pwlrn.»:U. Why doesn't God do something? People are .quick to ask such a ques tion. in a time of crisis. Today they want to know why God permits the war to go on, In the- day of our lesson Moses wanted to know why G$d did not deliver His people from Egypt* He and Aaron had been ap pointed o f God to lead them out, but their first efforte only met with fail ure and increased persecution. The complaint of'Moses, and the response o f God piake an instruc tive Stoxy for our consideration and guidance. !V will answer our ques- tjonsi I. Mosbi Said; “ Thou Hast Not DeUvCred Thy' Peop le^ (Exod . 5 :22, 23)/ - When, the efforts of Moses brought heavier >burdens on- the people they blamed him and Aaron for making their situation worse. This sorrow and shame made them doubt God’s calling and commission. How quick ly men are discouraged in their pur pose'to serve God. The pepple* were wrong in their attitude:' They should'‘have been patient.- They ought not to have as- .sunied that the-loss of the first skirmish riieant the loss o f the whole campaign/ ■ Are we not just like them? The new minister or the recently elected Sunday school superintendentmakes .a mistake-and instead of helping him to pick jup the pieces and start over, w e decide that he just will not do, that we must have a change. Even though the people were wrong, however, the man- of God should not have lost his faith and accused God of' failure to keep His promise. He wa® supposed to have learned the lesson o f patience in the long yeats on the backside of the desert. Had he forgotten the .expe rience of. the burping bush? II. God Said, “ I Am Jehovah, Thou Shalt/Bee What 1 will D o" (Exod. 6; 1-7)/ ' In other words, Moses was to re member that he was dealing with # 6 .Eternal One, unchangeable, and always true t6 His word and able to make His will come to pass, - So often men'in dealing with God think o f Him in terms o f their own Weakness and failure. What we need to, to hove a Godlike conception of God, not a manlike idea of Him. God,is the infinite and Eternal One with Whom we have no right to ' quarrel, knd-whbse dealings with us are fob high for us to judge <Ps. 139:1-6), God’s Covenant with His people was established (v. .4), He had heard their cry (v. 5) and His deliverance was sure (v. 9). The only thing MoseS had to do was to wait and see God work.. 1 , That word “ whit'' is a little one.' JR seems to ca ll for no effort, to be easy o f fulfillment; yet it seems to be toe hardest'thing for a human being to do.. Men who carry the burden o f active warfare' with ease and. with honor become discouraged, and sick whet) they'must sit in a prisoner** concentration camp and wait for deliverance.. Christians who can speak and work for God when things' are ac tive and moving become querulous and despondent when they-have to wait for something to happen, ocv when, they are laid aside for a time. His promise Is sure. That is not. just a religious sentiment. It is‘ a fact, and it is proved by history. Note that iff toe case of M o s e s - III. History Bald, ' “ It Came to Pass toe Selfsame Day" (Exod, 12; 51). Moses had to take God’s word, for “ the selfsame day," which we read here came later. It came in Gbd’s own time, after He had, through Moses, humiliated and bro ken the hard. Will of Pharaoh, Then He gave His people toe great me morial feast of the Passover, teach ing them the needed lesson that re demption is by the shedding o f blood. In that night Jehoyab did bring the children o f Israel out of the land of Egypt. That deliverance was a* certain the day He made the first promise to Abraham (v, 3, and Gen. 12:1-3) hundreds of years be fore, as it was now that it had been accomplished. • - History is really God’s story, re vealing His outworking of His plan for mankind. The torn and blotted pages are man’s handiwork. Sin and unbelief have caused him to hinder the (Work of God, but God is not defeated,, and in the- midst of man’s ,self-created chaos, He pro ceeds quietly to Work out: His own. purpose. ' The many prophecies o f Scripture . which have been fulfilled mot only prove its divine inspiration, but demonstrate Its dependability, Ev ery promise o f God ia "yea and amen" in Christ (II Coif. 1:20, 21). We can count oh that! —[■— ri.nH..IH..II,i.i. ii i. i .1 il..i— jM«.Mn<.i(iiiiinimimffMni»»iniiiiwmnwriNi«wwwH)mw. WANTED DEADSTOCK! -We pay for Horse* 14.00 and Cows $4.00' Animals o f site and Conditio\ Teltfphetie XENIA 1272R •r DAYTGN ' WOtCHET PRODUCTS, INC. Dayton, Ohio V We also reatove Hogs a tut fijhMtfc WFVnlTMRwwf IMVI k 1 tm m F o rm e r Died Sunday Pau lXV olkert, 40, former dentist, recently located in Tipp City. Okie died -Sunday in Stoader Memorial hospital at Troy, o f injuries received Saturday in a fall from a tree he was trimming, He was a graduate from Ohio State Dental Collage jn 1934, and practiced here fo r three years, locating .after wards in Tipp City, He is survived by his widow, a daughter, Rose Ann, and a son, Paul. The funeral was held Wednesday afternoon with burial in Memorial Park Cemetery/ Dayton. ' , BandCCoupons ' Use Extended Central Ohioans'1will he allowed to use their B and C ' gasoline rationf* coupons after tho expiration date o f their ration book, according to a rul ing anounced by Columbus district OPA headquarters, The old ration coupons may be used untiijthe motorists gets a renewal o f the ration book, it. was explained. The ruling .also applies to-non-high way gasoline users'with E- and R coupons. Previously ration coupons could not be used after their expira tion date and motorists were required to surrender them to local boards within five days after expiration date. HAIL STORM DAMAGES CORN CROPS MONDAY Another heavy hail and windstorm hit eastern Clinton, Fayette, Clark and Madison counties Monday _that did considerable damage to corn crops.’ The storm was heaviest near Reese- vilie where gardens were ruined; There was some hail in this locality but no damage. Corn was blown down by heavy wind in seVeral lo calities. PROBATE COURT , SETTLEMENT OF ACCCOUT . The Third-, Final and Distributive account o f Marshall L. Wolf,- Admin istrator o f ‘the- Estate o f Minnie^ Hnninger, deceased, with vouchers, has been filed in the Probate Court o f Greene County; Ohio, fo r inspection, settlement and record, and unless e x - ' ceptions are filed thereto, it will be c for hearing and-confirmation on Aug ust,-19, 1943. July 29, 1943. ' s ^ WILLIAM B. McCALLISTER Probate Judge - I. , „ , ...........................I *. I ****** .tK . II I M ' 104th ANNUAL p R P iE County Fair XENIA OHIO MUST 3 ,«, 5 ,*. 1 «» DAY AND NIGHT Food Is Fighting, Too PBODUCE ANDCONSERVE r ■* ■ Agricultural Products Household Arts 1 Livestock Shows -Antiques Poultry Exhibits 4-H Club# OHIO s t a t e i i a m p s h ir e SHOW t Flower-Show ' Granges Victory Garden Show ‘ Vocational Agriculture HORSE SHOW, EVERY NIGHT * 4-H CLUB EXHIBIT RACING PROGRAM TUESDAY, AUGUST B,* 1943 Free For All Pace (S ta k e )---------------- L ----------- --------------------$1,000.00 2:18 T r o t ---------------------------------- -— ----------------— - ,400-00 2:24 Pace ____________________________________________________'350.00 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1943 2:22 T ro t f S ta k e )................................ =------------------------------ --$.1,000,00 3iYear-01d Pace (Stake) (And Added Money) —— — ,— >- ,250.00 2-Year-Old Trot (Stake) (And Added Money) — , 250,00 THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1943’ : 2:22 Paqe (Stake) „— --------------------------------------------------------- $1,000.00 3-Yeal-Old Trot (Stake) (And Added Money) — JU----------- 250.00 2-Year-Old Pace (Stake) (And Added Money) ----- - 250.00 FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, 1943 % l 2:15 Patie (Stake) _________ J_________________________'_„_$l,op0,0ft' Handicap Trot ___________________ ___________ _—- — — - ■400.00 - Handicap P a c e ------- ‘--------------------- ------------------ --------------------1. ^400.00 S p e e d e n tr ie s c lo s e , J u ly . 3 0 , 1 9 4 3 , a t 1 1 :0 0 P . 'M . A l l o t h e r en tr ie s c lo s e J u ly 2 9 , 1 9 4 3 a t 6 : 0 0 P . M GUS SUN AMUSEMENT COMPANY . VAUDEVLLE AND CIRCUS , - « *4 G E N E R A L A D M IS S IO N . D A Y O R N IG H T , 3 S c , T a x P a id N . N . H u n te r , Pres- . . B . U . B e ll, T r e k s . R . K . H a in e s, V ic e -P r e s . . M rs. J . R o b e r t B ry son * S e c . HERALDWANT AND SALE ADSPAY i- ■ ■ ■ ^ . 4» ' f'l . . . and Fall Value for Youn Dollar! , <► „ There’s a commonly used ex pression: <You get just what you pay for S' This applies to PRINTING* just the same as ■u * most anything else you buy. Good PRINTING can’t be produced aha poor.price. OUR PRINT SHOP IS AT YOUR SERV ICE ... Poor Printing even at a low price is expensive, because it gives the prospective custo mer the impression that your services or; products ate nbt up to standard. We give full value for every dollar you spend with us for PRINTING —and our ’prices are always FAIR. W e Solicit Your Next Printing O rder The Cedarville Herald 4 ( * > ;; PHONE 6-1711 PRINTING and PUBLISHING SINCE 1877 «. ► (From tl For yet pride in t joyed the in all the pression c automobile electrical higher wi country. A a conatan living fror It is tl: o f us to r< ’ living car maintained proportion! are engag* It is ea leaders am the standa: tallied, for depends t< ability to ■ living. con< Neverthi the standa> . more o f c concentrat* destructive .material ai tion o f civ restricted £ come to n ou t and ca And yet in g frantic dard of liv .group. C.I.< recently to ■ t e e ' fthat scrapping < unless food AFL Presi notice. tha brought do organized recourse 1 creates. It is und ernment hi .keepig dow bas in, sto tairiing low and,' other Whose ft ..must share wages and time and > lured hund1 and'boys 1, miist pay hh i f they are planting, c their crops also have, a thifig the f. farm machi over, farm from six t vance. Farr increase th confronted labor situa to Operate A geners. not solve would aggr evitablf wi prices. Nor tail food i o and now be atimulate a food produ prices. The iy. another 1,00 4 3 $100 25 2 _$1,0( .. 21 . . 2£ - 51 , 0 ( 4 ( 4 ( p; r P .M T t (R T a x i 1, Tr son, >s HMHH u I ! d *1' 3 X - iat to as uy. be crease in t sumers to stance by ' long run bj ;OW in the fori hack of wn 3it fective in p atid decrea ito- o f prices, 1 feasible be • >ur fo r any pc advocate it not Because demand, tl full gOvernmen the admini fOU ; after the e making ar NG Wages and that food line with ays ttakpfurtl * •nds. This wil o f the star Will fall m bat upon i has not hn Steel form 15 percent ary, 1941. Thinkinj hOi‘ will re i Ing o f the preferable which woi rinding 1ft’ Even if n A.iA.vA?.-.#. A-, T T T T T (Con
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