The Cedarville Herald, Volume 69, Numbers 1-26
vt D*tt- Viiiww* basfll- divocee lotwi of f , Ohio, ir hr»*r- h , i m , >urt of fo«M Lttom«y Calhoun is a t 203 lichigsn, ovember her cer- him in. e cruelty lid cate the Com* County, icon for ber 29th, HOUP, Plaintiff ereby no* m haa fil- the Com jityr Ohio 1156 The a divorce sglect of and said ng before ull weeks ublication IAN, j laintiff. address is oenix, Ar on the 1st sher Max* i Court of nty, Ohio, : Case’No. aid court grounds of for Other .11come on, from No- he date of AXWELL, Plaintiff Xenia, Ol JD M LOANS as for skle lake farm ■15 years. io apprais* re London O. dgr. itm m tiutatH M tsH fICE C K ER so Chargee ia, Ohio anmiiemmHHnMi r ed , i Chargee. f i lk i i Ejrei • , \ t 1 -SSE&mr-l m m mm CEDARVILLE HERALD, FRIDAY, 'tub and SocialActivities U . , ____________- Mr. and Mr*. Ralph Townuley will The December meeting of the Golden open their homo thia evening to the Rule Circle of the Methodist Church Kensington Club where the annual will be held a t the home of Mrs. J.O. Christmas dinner and party will b e 1Conner, Wednesday eve, Dec. 19th. held for members and their husbands. Mrs. ,H, A. Reinhard was hostess Saturday afternoon to the Cedar Cliff Chapter,, D.A.R. Mrs. Fred Towns- ley gave a talk of “Approved Schools’' Assistant hostesses were Miss Carrie Rife and Miss Josephine Randall. »The Home Culture Club>^11 hold a Christmas party a t Harriman Hall to* day a t 2 P.M. There will be an ex change of gifts, Members of the committee in charge of the arrangements are Mrs. H.H. Brown, Mrs. John Powers, Mrs. Mar garet Payne, Mrs. Bert Carroll and Mrs, R.R. TownBley. The president There will be a covered dish dinner for members and their husbands,Jfol lowed by the business meeting and a g ift exchange. Dinner will be ser ved at 7 P.M. Mr. and Mrs. Maywood Homey cel ebrated their fiftieth wedding an niversary a t their home on. Cincinnati Ave.,.Xenia, Saturday evening. The couple received many gifts, flowers and- cards. .Refreshments, with gold and White appointments, were served. Mr, and Mrs. Homey were married at the Methodist Church ■ parsonage, IJeffersonville, December 8, 1895 by of the dub ia Mrs. Ira Vayhinger, and Rev. Edwin Sherwpod. Mrs. Horney Mrs. Earl Richards is the secretary. MISS LOIS BROWN TO WED SPRINGFIELD MAN was Miss Della Flax, Jeffersonville, before her marriage. Mr. and >Mrs. Horney formerly resided near hero but moved to Xenia about a month ago. They have two daughters, Mrs. Wil liam Ringer and Mrs. Loren Sims, Xenia and two sons, Messrs. Vernon Horney, Bowersville and Robert Hor ney/ Springfield. They also have twelve grandchildren and two great- Mr. and Mrs, H. H. Brown are announcing the approashing marriage of their daughter, Miss Lois Elaine to Mr. Charles A. Baldwin, Springfield, World War II veteran. . \ . The wedding will take place at the Brown home, Thursday, December 27.' grandchildren. Miss Brown is a graduate of Ohio State University and is a member of ' Delta Phi Delta, honorary a rt soror ity. She is supervisor of a rt in the I COLLEGE NEWS I elementary schools a t Piqua. g | Baldwin is the son of Mrs. ■■MiiMiiMmiiiiiMiiiiiiiiifimiiiiimiiHaitiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiM Charles Reed, Springfield. He served in the Pacific theatre more than three years and was discharged from the army a t Camp Atterbury, Ind., in November. He will enroll in the col lege of engineering at Ohio State Un iversity for the winter quarter. Parmer Albert Payne Opposes British Loan JUNIOR BAILEY IS HOME REAL EST, TE James Bailey, Jr., arrived home Wednesday tnoming. being discharged from the armed service a t Indiantown Albert Edward Payne, industrialist, Gap,, Pa., on Tuesday. A .brother ,Earl farmer, cattle breeder, Springfield and j is still in service in Czecholsovakia. Clifton pike, is' opposing the loan to (His father died October 29th. Neither Britian and Russia. He calls Gov.; of the sons were able to get home for Lausche’s attention to the fact that the funeral. Ohio's share of the national debt to day is 15 1-2 billion dollars, and asks if Ohir could get a loan from either of the European countries for bur share of the debt? ■ Both England and Russia have ask ed this country for loans of four billion four hundred million and eight billion dollars each. President Truman will ask that congress make the loans, which will never be paid, as neither country has paid the First World War debt, or what they owe today for the second.- Mr. Payne thinks it is time to stop squandering our- money abroad for any purpose and do something to aid those who must be taxed at home to pay their own government that has loaded its people with bonds. ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ 1 1 1 ■ ■ H a i l l R a H I I E I I H I TWINS ARE BORN 10 Room double dwelling, water, gaB, and electric, North Main Street. One side rented a t $30.00. Basement under one side, no bath but commodes in each side. Large lot. 44.64 8 Acres with 9 room modem dwelling, 2 baths, steam heat. 4 acres in orchard. This property at the cor poration line of Cedarville and would make you a good home. 2.57 Acres 4 room dwelling, electric ity and gas available, chicken house and small barn. All tillable and priced at only $2,750.Q0. <■ Would'nt You Rather SEE The Real Thing? Cy.Wnlii.iintoip lM.m 44.64 Acres 11-2 miles N. W. of Ce darville, 6 room strictly modern house, good barn and other outbuildings, i good fences. This is. a good buy. Twin daughters bom Monday night to Mr. and Mrs. Darius S. Smart, who live on the Xenia-Jamestown pike, a I 154 Acres North of Cedarville. Good mile south of Jamestown, are. the 7 room.house, good barn and other out third set of twins bom to the couple buildings. Fair fences, 125 acres till- in the last five years. ]able. This can be bought at the right price. See or call— Choose Early —The Best \ Excellent Qift Suggestions \ RESEARCH CLUB MEMBERS HAVE CHRISTMAS BANQUET The Reseach Club held a Christmas banquet last Friday evening at the United Presbyterian church, A . Yuletide .atmosphere was pro vided by a Christmas tree and the holly and bayberries which decorated the tables. Nut -cups formed in a Christmas tree design added further, to the Christmas season theme. Fol lowing the dinner, the forty-two mem bers and guests present exchanged gifts and enjoyed a quiz program. Carol singing completed the evening. Mrs. Donald' Kyle was program chairman. Members; of the banquet .committee were Mrs. A.E. Huey, Mrs. Harold Reinhart, Mrs.- J.''Auld and Mrs. Ward Creswell. C O Z Y s TH EA TR E # F ri. a n d S a t., D m . 14-1S Richard Dix—Janis Carter D e ligh tfu lly Dangerous” Cartoon • Comedy - Snapshots Sun . a n d M on ., D ec . 16-17 Joseph Cotton—Ginger Rogers TOWER OF THE WHISTLER* Fox News — Color Cartoon W e d . a n d T h u rs ., D ec . 19*20 Jane Powell—Ralph Bellamy “ I ’LL BE SEE ING YOU ” News Cartoon - Comedy 4 .ilnfr ‘H.■H| PHONE Per Dependable RADIO SERVICE B T C o U i s t e r Chapel Thursday of last week was one of those occasions that will lin ger longer in the memory of those present. First there was a short de votional service led by Mrs. iDoris Townsley Saunders. The hymn was j “Guard Thou My Thoughts”, the t Scripture was John 1 : 1-5, and pray er was made by Prof. A.J. Hostetler. All was in keeping with the main, feature of the meeting, an explana tion of the atomic bomb by Dr. W.A. Hammond, scholar, teacher, scientist, industrialist, philanthropist, president of the W-A. Hammond Drierite Corn- pay of Xenia, ^ Dr. Hammond was introduced by President Vayhinger. Dr. Hammond did not take the platform and orate in a flow of scientific j and technical terms about this new (to the layman) power that has suddenly been thrust upon us, but from the floor and close to his audience, explaining in every day language what i t is all about. After forty-five minutes of explana tion,- much of which was illustrated by charts, the noon hour was upon us. For the next half-hour a dozen or more students and faculty queried the speaker.and his hearers plus ex planations, And strange as it may seem the most pertinent questions of all were asked by “Bobby-soxers” in at last two instances. The atomic bomb was 40 years a- borning. Looking ahead it may be possible to Jook into the proton 25 years hence. Matter is made Up of molecules, molecules of atoms, atoms are little worlds of their own, in which protons and electrons play their parts. An electron.is 1-850 of a proton, According to Avbgadro’s hypothesis one cubic centimeter of a gas. eon tains under standard conditions, the same number of molecules, which number is estimated at 25 to 36 mil lion millions, and the some- hundreds of molecules are visible in an or- s dinary high-powered microscope. It is left to the reader to figure how iarge a proton is. Please remem ber that we are just at the beginning of the atomic age. Progress is be-' ing made a t a rapid rate. To quote the speaker verbatim, “The bomb pos sible now is to the bomb that wiped Hiroshima off the map, as the latter is to a wet firecracker.” Verily, man must learn the Golden Rule if civili zation is to survive. Miss Claire Stormont was a week end guest of Miss Lois Babb a t her home in Manchester, Ohio, Both spent Saturday doing Christmas shop ping in Cincinnati. ' ■ * «i. Harold Thomas, CC alumnus, was mustered out of the Ninth Air Force a t Indiantown Gap, Penn,, Nov, 13th, He is a t his home in Washington C,H, He planes to take advantage of the GI Bill of Rights and hopes to enter OSU the second quarter to work on a Master’s degree, All of us wish Harold continued success in education al work after war’s interruption. Do you know-that the 1940 census showed that of persons 25 years old and above, 3,000,000 jiever attended school 7 That in normal times two- thirds of the people of the world are underfed ? Manager Bill Boyce finished corn picking last Saturday of the College Farm crop. The yield equals that of ’43 and'is better than last yea?. Lt. Richard Vayhinger, home of) furlough, gave a most interesting ac count of some of his experiences in war. Hjs subject Was, “Missions Over the Empire” having flown 22 miss ions, covering oyer 90,000 miles, it is readily seen that it is fa r down, to the bottom of his barrel. One of the barrels was a laundry fashioned from an oil drum. Like every GI ‘Dick* anxious to got back to college to fin ish his education. The babies, each weighing eight and one-half pounds, were delivered a t the Smart home by Dr. A, D. Rit- enour, Jamestown. Mrs. Smart gave.her age as 37. Her hueband a discharged World War ANveteran, released recently by the (navyv The Smarts are the parents of 12 children. KENNETH LITTLE, Salesman Phone Ced. 6-1611 . } for ROCKHOLD TAYLOR CO., XENIA, OHIO FROSTEDFOODS W e are now ready and hand le th e Frosted Foods. Come in and g e t yours heije a s th is is th e first appearance o f Frosted Food s in th e c ity . W e w ill expand th is lin e later. \ •. • • • . , ; • • ’■ For This Week The Following H ydrau lic Jacks 3 ton ......,..,-........ $11 .92 Rubber T ire W hee l Barrows ...................... Large and Small .............$11 .75 up H ed g e Shears 18 in.*—20 in. $ 1 . 60 — $2 .75 up l/z Ton Chain H o ist............. $21 .00 Tai»ie and Chair S e ts ..................$8 .50 up W riting D e s k ................................... $9 .95 P lay Guns ............ $2 .75 Toy Snow Shovels ...... ........- 35 c up Christmas Trees ................................ 75c up Croquette S e t s ................ ..................... $5 .50 Monopoly ................................................ $1*95 F inance .............................. ..................... $1 .25 Take It or Leave I t ........................ $ 1 .1 5 Prolectric Footba ll—B a seba ll......... $1 .7 5 . Beginning Wednesday, December 19, this store will be open daily from 8:00 A . M. to X8:00P. M. until Christmas. Saturday Eve. 11:00 P. M. ■ TOY ■ ■ Headquarters ■ ■ HERE Phone 6-1941 Cedarville. LIMA BEANS ASPARAGUS PEAS FRUITS APRICOTS APPLE-SAUCE GREEN BEANS BRUSSELL SPROUTS 1 SPINACH FRUITS PEACHES , PINEAPPLES N ex t W eek STRAWBERRIES, Order Early ■Cedorville Locket Storage ■ ■ R E A D T H E DAYTON NEWS E V E R Y D A Y -S T A R T TODAY! NO O TH ER N EW SPAPER -’- . . BRINGS YOU ALL THESE FEATURES! r Tho Bariy Bird Worm - A Oiggir Sslsction If You Com* InNowt g ’RDEN . S m s GRUEN THE PRECISION WATCH Yes <. . Today, selection* in Gruen watches are BIGGER BY FAR than they've been in years, But. . * sd Is the demand <.»$o remember the d d adage about the early bird. DO come in now for your Gruen 'Christmas gift shopping. A Small Oaposit /?•«##■y#< Your GRUEN * Tiffany’s 5 HAST MAIN STREET* XENIA OHIO USEOUR CONVENIENTLAY-AWAYPLAN .....mu...... i ijj 1 i . i u ilin;!i.>y | ■ D R * OAYTON AND MIAMI * VAUfV NEWS .., Everything new* by Oaylon* '• '■' ,'Oto.t.rt Editorial •m c o m p l e t e s p o r t s W fcO V «A G f . , CompUU eova-og* by MS " • fctrfcfc, »«n Garfikav, Mit- «)t*M'*lndl tom Carroll, * s o c jm NEWS ^ a n i T F a s h io n s the hMetf In- racial .vents, plus n<sweW*tyl*.erection* and harpe- ■’' *n«kn Mntji, * FARM HEWS -NiSf* by Form Editor Jesse Garri* . ' so. . . . end complete market . quotOHoris. * SPfCIAL FEATURES . - A rMittitwde et features designed, ^la ke ot interest to everyone. * MONDAY SHOPPING / VAUIKS * Nfyr* of storey and merchandise . , ■ >With ipeclot Monday values I a the Sunday issue of the Dayton No other single newspaper can duplicate all the fea tures that are now yours every day in the Dayton News. You'll enjoy many hours of interesting leading of this, one of America's greatest newspapers. The | bigger, better Sunday NEWS brings you . » « li * ASSOCIATED PRESS . World-Wide New* Coverage + W I R E P H O T O Pictorial Review of World Event* •ACAMERICA Feature Magaxine Section YOU GET .MOREL • MORE PAGES • GREATER COMICS • TOP EDITORIALS • SPECIAL FEATURES • NEWS COVERAGE • MORE PICTURES • BETTER FARM COVIRAOI • MORE WOMEN'S FEATURES • MORE COMPLETE MARKET NEWS • MORE SHOPPING VALUES ENJOYMENT FOR ALL THE FAMILY! Whatever your taste in newspaper reading . . • the DAYTON NEWS makes it a point to provide some thing of. interest. News features are. selected carefully to provide the best entertainment and. the most com plete coverage of events of interest to every member of your family. VP YOU U V S IN Oft. 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