The Cedarville Herald, Volume 68, Numbers 27-52
C o 'lub and SocialA ctivities Mr*. Herman Randall has been ill Vith typhoid fever a t her home, She is reported as- improving. Misses Janet Gordon and Martha Ann DttvelL and Gene Abels are a t tending the Methodist Youth Camp at Sabina this week.,. Mrs, Harry Wal lace, Mis, Gail Ross and Mrs. John Mills are instructors a t the camp. Mrs, Paul Harrod and son, Paul, of Washington, D. C., are here on a vis i t with the former’s parents, Rev, W. A. and Mrs, Condon. Mrs, R. E. Gaston of Cincinnati was a guest last week a t the home of Mr. and Mr. Harry' D. Wright. | Mr. W« i \ Me Gorney, Pittsburgh, ■Pa., and sister,. Mrs. David Buckley, 1Greensburgh, Pa„ have been spending : a few days visiting with Mr, and j Mrs. O. T, Marshall, in Ross Twp. Tech 5, Lewis L. Cartmell, husband of Mrs, Hazel Cartmell, R 2, Cedar- ville is a member of Co. A of the 134th Qrdiance Maintenance Batalion which was recently awarded the Star to the Meritorious Service "Unit Plaque by direction of the President. The ‘batalion commanded by Lt. Col. Paul H* Wood, Lancaster, O., was awarded the- Star and the first unit in the. 12 Division to receive such an award. * . Seaman First Class WAVE, Jeanne Wright, who is stationed at Wash* iijgton, D.' C., is home on a ten day furlough and will return to the same city. Pfc. Walter Boase, Jr,f now serving in Gerinany with the Medical Corp. % informs his parents of his ability with surgery. He has three Battle stars and recently was awarded the Presi dential citation*. He has been over seas two years. A brother, Pfc. Mar vin Boase now stationed on Okinawa has been given the work of a Regi mental Carpenter. He has served in two major battles, the Leyte and 0* kinawa. Another brother, Charles, graduated on June 28 from Naval Air school in Oklahoma and is now waiting to be assigned to operational' sehool. All three are sons of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Boase of this place. ■ Mrs. ‘Alva Sagraves, nee Mary Me Campbell, recent bride of Cpl. Sa graves, of London, O., was honored by the United Presbyterian Church choir of which she is a rriember, at the home of Misses Josephine and Wilda Auld, Saturday evening, after choir prac tice. The party was to have been a lawn party at the home of Mrs. Greet McCallister, but rain caused the pro gram to be changed. About thirty- five members and guests enjoyed a dessert course, and a gift was pre sented to the guest of honor-by the group. The Misses Auld were., as sisted by Miss Margaret Stormont and Mrs. McCallister. The McCamp- bell-Sagraves wedding took place af ter the usual church services last Sunday at Noon. FREE—Several truck loads of cin ders free for the houling. Located at the school house. Call Wm. Fisher or Alvin Chaplin, Cedarville. . HAVE YOUR D R E S S E S GOATS DRAPERIES COUCH — CHAIR . COVERS Tuffeted Spreads EANED - PRESSED S T O R E C L O S E D JULY 23-28 i • [o work w ill be taken in lint week- Vacation time Mr the Factory. JRS—Daily 8 A, M. to 7 P. M. iturday 8:00 A. M. to 10:80 P. M. THE C L E A N E R S Quality Work LOST—MY WIFE—^WILL the man who stole. her _and my Grape-Nuts please bring back the Grape-Nuts? I can run a farm without a wife—but not without the energy in those mal ty-rich. sweet-asa-iyit Grape-Nuts!. Whims of Fashion Dresses for the South are playing up color contrast for all it is worth. Butcher linens highlighting bright color themes are especially impor tant, For example, a black suiiback dress has halter straps of lime and orange. Charming are hand - crocheted calots designed to be worn with the new pastel suits and dresses this spring. They are decorated with col ored sequins and some of them even go out for extreme novelty in way of adding wee tinkling bells to the decorative scheme. . , Fashion holds in promise for the future such scientific achievements as sheer woven glass hosiery, un breakable 'glass-soled shoes and even very sheerest prints of spun glass are being made into.blouses. As exciting news as this is the prog ress being made in materials de rived from especially processed aluminum. An idea that is going over big in millinery midseason showings .is the “dog collar” trim on the very smart and new “sissy” sailors, postilion and homburg' types and on youthful calots. Each little hat is completed with a veil which has a sparkling jewel-embroidered velvet or gros- grain band attached. This fastens to form a dog collar fastened about the • throat, or it may be used to band the crown. Something new that looks as if it might develop into a real fad for evening wear or with the brief cap sleeves is a jeweled arm band which encircles .the arm midway between the shoulder and the elbow, It may , be of wide; black velvet'ribbon or of s e l f - f a b r i c , e i t h e r event, jit.. is elaborately be-jeweled or i t'may. flaunt an important large brooch'or spray clip, or a group' of whimsical little cluster pins. Knitted Fashion Is Growing in Favor A keen interest , in knitted fash ions is being shown by women who, from experience have proved that for practical wear there’s, nothing that surpasses the serviceability of knitted dresses and suits. Corona tion blue is a color that is going over big in-the knitted fashions.. A smart new version shown in a hand- knitted dress keeps the skirt and the very short sleeves in a mono tone, knitting the bodice part in multicolor horizontal stripes. BUDGET HEARING FOR CEDAR VILLE TOWNSHIP fiOAD OF EDUCATION, JULY 23 Notice is hereby given to the tax payers and citizens in general that a hearing for the. adoption of- a bud get for Cedarville Township Town ship Sehool Board will be held at the office of the board in the school house on Monday, July 23, 1945 at 8 P, M A. E. RICHARDS, Clerk Booth Mtln s t, Cedarville C O Z Y m t h e a t r e • r i . and S a t, July 20-21 WARNER BAXTER IN • 'Crime Doctor’s Courage* fteon — Snapshots —Comedy id Mon., July 22*23 a Monies -‘J®** H»1I J * and the Forty , T h ie v e s ” 0% NEWS • MUSICAL 1 Thura., July 28*26 ter — Helen Walker fit H a lf Strdnt* the Day —Cartoon MAKE ICE CREAM At hoirl*-Any flovof—D«l!etou»—Smooth —No lt« cryitolf—No cooking—No ,#• Whipping - No «cotch*d flovor-Cow - lno«p«n,lvo—20 roclpti In ooth IS* pkfl. floott xrtd thti od lot (too fulbllts tom. plo offor. or buy from your groeir, LODDOtlDERRy Irond Homomodo IcoCroom STABILIZER UMMKMT*tUMWM*.DM IMHOOMI.MUf. Cong. Clarence Brown Blasts WFA and OPA 9 \"'1 ■T“ Cong, Clarence J, Brown, of this Seventh congressional district, in an interview Tuesday priced all blame for the shortage of meat, sugar and other foods on the War Food Admin istration and the* Offier of Price Ad ministration, He said in part: “Nobody is wise enough to regulate direct and control on such an exten sive scale as the OPA was attempting to do, “He continued to denounce the A r U oral price control inadequacies, crit icizing the War Food Administration for its continuous “bungling”, “There’s: po fairness whatsoever a- bout this sugar rationing situation and there is nothing fair and equi table about the discrepancies of ra tion quotas”. {, *AHe drew a comparison between the War Food Administration of First and Second World Wars, explaining that there were only 240 men al together working on ration problems in the first war. This group proved itself efficient and successful. Con trary to this record is the current POA set-up which-involves about 190- 000 people, most of whom are paid ' workers. ✓ Cong, Brown leaves Saturday for Seattle, where he and a committee of Congress will meet northwest pulp manufacturs, along with Canadian, to get a different distribution of pulp for newspaper and magazine publish ers. He will return by way of Cali fornia, -where he ■meets a delegation of newspaper publishers, to confer on problems in, that trade. mar SEN. TAFt MUST FEEL BAD MeGAMPBELL-SAGRAVES While Sen. Taft debates almost alone on the part this country should have in the post w sr world, one is re minded of some of the debates on vi tal issues in the days of Lincoln, Douglass, or even Patrick Henry. Senator Taft is exposing the inside possible workings on financial mat ters that must be financed by income taxes*. He is still standing on the premise this nation should have some security ffor the billions that are loaned to bankrupt European nations. Senator Tpfk is trying to force ap plication of common sense banking rules, security or collateral. What a crime it is to insist on security for loans, private or public? Yet the New Dealers and a lot of weak-sis ter Republicans like Sen. Burton, of Ohio, to give Uuncle Sam’s Shirt away. . Franklin. D. Roosevelt operated on the theory that every man had a price and that money was not morals, re gardless of how it was used. Sen. Taft is evidently following the lines of economic safety such as your father or grandfather. The. New Dealers are strong for giving away_ that which does not belong to t iem. 1 NUPTIALS TOOK PLACE IN U. P, CHURCH, SUNDAY NOON SPRINGFIELD “MEX” LANDS IN COUNTY JAIL Last Saturday night waLnot with out its thriller among the “Mex” and the usual number of drunks, male and female. A Springfield Mexican, and his wife, colored, engaged in. a combat when the wife was brutially beaten. Stories the wife'came down here and her husband followed. The woman is now in SpringfieldXity hospital, said to be in a critical condition. Mayor Abels filled the “Mex” |20 and sent him to the county jail with thirty days additional. The number of drunk citations and cutting affairs should arouse some ac tion on the part of the populace. The root of the trouble is known to all. The state grants relief but it is up to the citizens to do their part. Everyone realizes the labor situa tion is bad and much has been over looked on that account. But o get that is no reason why we should not have law and order. One remedy is to take the situation before-the Fed eral Immigration authorities. Far too many lawns are decorated with liquor bottles after a Saturday and Sunday series of disorders. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate of Frances K. Dauton, De ceased. Notice is hereby given that Kon- neth Little has been duly appointed ns Administrator of the estate of Fran ces K. Daunton, deceased, late of Ce- darville,' Greene County, Ohio, Dated this 7th day of July, 1945, . . WILLIAM B. McCALLlSTER, Judge of the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio. ST. PAUL A. M. E. CHURCH Gordon Franklin, Pastor. Sunday School, 10:30 A. M. Morning service, 1,1:30 A.M, LEGAL NOTICE. Dorothy G.( Sirois, a minor, and Herman Neubigher father,- whose last known address was 113-10 Farmers Blvd., St. Albans, New York, will hereby take notice that on the 18th day of July, 1945, Stanley B. Sirois filed his petition against her in the Court of Common Pleas, Greene County, Ohio, being case No. 23,993 on the docket of said Court, praying for a decree of divorce from her on the grounds of gross neglect of duty; Plaintiff, vs. Dorothy G. Sirois; De fendant. Said defendant will further take notice that she is required to answer said petition on or before six weeks from the date of the first publication of this notice, being July 20th, 1945. STANLEY B. SIROIS, : Plaintiff T. L. Barger,, Attorney. (7-20-6t-8-24); BUY AND HOLD “E" BONDS w • A U N T E L L I E S A Y S . . « 'i'M wmm tiypo srm p m m f WANTED! ! POULTRY and RABBITS All Kinds-Any Amount Top Market Piud . " ' s -•**-?*%4*i? THE CIHCKEM HOKE M l Cincinnati A**., X**ta* O. PlIONR-MAin 411 ' I I B | ■he best way I know to save money for the new gas appliances I want after the war, i$ to buy all the War Bonds I can. It helps Uncle Sam now. and is a good investment for my future.'* Aunt Ellie has die right idea, folks. . . why don’t you buy more War Bonds now, then some day you can have * . * completely modern gas equipment for cook* * a Ing, heating and automatic hot watir? f T H E r O W i l A M S L I G H T € 0 * ! ' J . j Miss Mary McCampbell, daughter j of Mr; and Mrs. J. A. MeCitmpbell, | south of town, became -the bride of j Clp, Alva Sagraves, son of Mr. and j Mrs. John Sagraves, London, O. The ’’ceremony took place In the United Presbyterian Church before an altar decorated with palms and baskets of ( white gladioli and daisies. The cere- ] money followed the regular church services. Dr. L .L . Gray, Xenia, uncle of the bride, officiated a t the double ring ceremony, He wbb assisted by Dr, R. A. Jamieson,* pastor of the bride. Mr. Henry Hey, Xenia, sang the Twenty-third Psalm before the cere- money. He was accompanied by Miss Lena Hastings a t the organ. The bride’s only attendant was her matron of honor, Mrs. Do.nald Hag- ler,jot this place. Mrs. Haglar wore a gown of aqua blue crepe with white accessories an’d a corsage of pink roses. * ■ ^ Mr. George McCampbqll, Eaton, a cousin of the bride, was Cpl Sagraves’ best man. . Ushers were Mr., Meryl’ McCampbell, Eaton and Mr. Wilbur Cooley, Cedarville. MI bs McCampbell’a gown was fash ioned of white, brocaded silk jersey trimmed in white lace. She wore white accessories and a corsage of America® Beauty roses. * The bride’s mother wore gray and white flowered crepe, and a corsage of pink roses. Mrs. Sagraves was at tired in black, and white crepe and wore a white aster corsage. Immediate friends and relatives of the couple attended a reception held after the, .ceremony at the home of the bride's parents. Out of town guests were present from Bellbrook, London, Columbus and Xenia The couple left Sunday on a short wedding trip to the lakes. For her going away custume, the. bride wore a flowered jersey dress with white . Mrs, Sagraves is a graduate of Ce darville College where she was affil iated with Chi Sigma Phi Sorority. She has taught in Bellbrook schools for two years.. Cpl. Sagraves is a graduate of London .High School and is home on a thirty-day furlough af ter serving, thirly-one months over seas with the 8th Army Air Force in England.- - ''' *■ CEDARVILLE HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE U , m l .............................................................. h m * ........ i w i "! h ,' jj ) ........................................................... WANTED—Acetyline Weld ing and Cutting ,and bronzing. Carl Bagford, Phone ....-2206. Yellow Srings Pike. 7-27 m 'IITC H H I GROV • f v v W i t * G0mm II ■ ■ m m m m SPRAY AGAINST BEETLES . Hand Sprayer for Beetle qt .55 Dust-Sprayer ........................ .49 -V* Pump Sprayer, 3 gal............ $4-50 h S j Bucket Sprayer .......... .......1.80 ' i PORCLEAN RANGES TABLE TOP COAL AND WOOD t : Ranges Are In Now Handmade Brooms House and Stable BUG-A^BOQ ^MOth Crystals 79c to $1 .79 Get After the Bugs! On Your Beans ROTONONE 2 lb. 39c We Cannot List All Hardware Items 59c to $1.50 Ask For What You Want ” Tun Up Your Yard Shrubbery Snips Hedge - Tree Sheat* Grass Shears -— Cycle Special Grass Cycle 35c ■ ■ t D U V A L I ! *J{anxitjoa/ijes Phone 6-1941 Cedarville. -■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ a HERALDWANT AND SALE ADS PAY T0UNG MAN, STRING A LINE UP THERE FOR ME" W e can understand the impatient lady who wanted us to string a line to the telephone exchange for her. That does seem the practical thing to do when a person needs te le phone service. Unfortunately th e problem isn ’t that simple. For every customer or group o f customers on a party lin e ,' there must be a pair o f wires to an exchange. Each exchange, in turn, must he inter-connected by cables containing as many as 2,121 pairs o f wires.' - Back in ,the e a rly 1880’s, b e fo re telephone Cables w ere developed, there w e re so m any su b sc rib e rs' lines in large Cities th a t they fAirly b lotted ou t the suer; Progress in research and engineering overcame these early difficulties, enabling us to talk across town or across th e continent w ith equal ease, But the very nature o f our fast, universal service o f today demands a vast and complex telephone system. I That’s why w e plan to extend and im prove Our network o f cab les, wires and exchange equipment in Ohio as soon as materials and man power become available, Only by enlarging our whole system can w e serve the 90,000 persons now wait ing for service in otof territory and the thousands o f others- who w ill want it In d ie future. T H E O H I O i S L L T I L I M M O N i C O « 1 ' m i ■ -rWsmiUiA '
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