The Cedarville Herald, Volume 70, Numbers 1-26
W " .... - f l f f W ^ - " - Page Four W ith t h e Churches METHODIST CHURCH WilHam B. Collier, minister. Sunday School at 10:00 a. m. Bette Nelson, supt. Morning Service at 11:00. Dr. C. E. Turley, a former district superintendent of this district, ■will preach. His sermon subject will be “ The Unfailing Resources o f a Christian.” Many who knew him will want to hear him again. All are invited to join in the .High School Baccalaureate Ser vice at 8:00 p. m. in the United Presbyterian Church. UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Ralph A. Jamieson, minister. Sabbath School 10 a. m. Supt. Arthur B. Evans. Preaching 11 a. m. Theme, “ The Rock o f Ages.” No Y . P. C. U. meeting this Sabbath evening, as the High School Baccalaureate service will be held in our church at 8 p. m. Sermon by Rev. William B. Col lier. Midweek Prayer Service Wed nesday, May 21, in the Methodist Church at 8 p. m. Choir Rehearsal Saturday 8 p. m. in the church. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN Paul II. Elliott, minister. 10:00 a. m. Sabbath School, John Powers, supt. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship, Sermon, “Acceptable Timing,” 8:00 p. m. High School Bac calaureate in the United Presby terian Church. Wednesday, May 21st there will bo no Union Prayer meeting on account o f High School Com mencement. Thursday, Combined Women’s Club Concert at the Methodist Church, 8:00 p. m. Choir Rehearsal Saturday even ing at 7:30. CLIFTON UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Dr. John W. Bickett, minister. Mrs. Elwood Shaw, organist., Sabbath School 10:00 a. m. John Skillings, supt. Miss Jean ette Spahr, pianist. Lesson Topic A struggle for Social Justice. Sermon 11:Q0 Topic, “ God So Loved The World” Dr, Bicket. The text will be that familiar and well-known Scripture pas sage in John 3;16. The. Young People will meet at 7:30 with Miss Jessie Dailey lead ing the group on Worship in the home. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Hostetter spent Sunday with their daughter and her husband Dr. and Mrs. Paul Miller and family o f Col umbus. GreneIs16th InBondSales For Quarter Greene county placed tenth n- mong the twenty-two counties m southern Ohio in the sale o f U. S. savings bonds for the first quar ter o f 1947, according to figures released Saturday. Based on an estimated popula tion o f 67,300 for this county, the average in bonds purchased per person for the quarter was $15.72. Purchases fo r the. three- month period amounted to $1,058,- 500.'T h e average purchase per person fo r the same period Yu the southern area was $17.92 and in the state, $17.64. Greene finished thirteenth . in the district in January, with total sales of $381,500, including $304,- 500 in E-bonds and $76,800 in F and G-bonds. In February, this county moved up to ninth place with sales o f $327,800, o f which $285,000 were E-bonds and $42,- 800, F and G-bonds. In March, Greene advanced to fifth place with sales o f $349,400, of which $293,600 were E-bonds and $55,- 800 were F and G-bonds. CLARENCE J. BROWN Writes With a Buckeye In Congress Member o f Congress Seventh Ohio District Y/ashington went on daylight saving time last Sunday morning, and from now until the last Sun day in September the time of the nation’s capital will be one hour faster than usual. By a vote o f 287 to 107 the house last Friday, after four days of turbulent debate, enacted the the president to spend some four hundred million dollars in giving relief and military aid to Greece and Turkey. A solid Democrat minority, supported by a good sized bloc of Republicans, beat o ff all attempts to refer the military problem in the Mediter- ranian to the United Nations, while in the meantime the United States would go ahead and send food, medicin€ and other relief to the people of Greece. As a re sult .of the passage o f this mea sure the United States is now embarked upon a new foreign policy which is estimated will cost somewhere between fifteen and thirty billion dollars over the next few years, and may pos- sihly lead to early war with Rus sia, No real American has any use for communism. While all speed is being made to stop com munism in Greece and Turkey, and others portions of the world, little or nothing has been done by INTO Vi Hi J UST bring your grain. We will grind and mix it with Purina Concentrates to make balanced rations for hogs, cows, chickens, turkeys or steers. Here’s what this does for you: 1. Helps you get the maximum amount of meat, milk and eggs from your grain. 2. Lowers your cost of pro ducing meat, milk and eggs. We now are a Purina Ap proved Custom Mixing Sta tion. We use Purina Concen trates to balance your grain according to 'Puxina’s farm- testedformulas. This is youras surance of top quality rations. R. G. WELLS Cedarville, Ohio Phone 6-1031 wuwuvuwuwuvuv Preside\t Truman and his admin istration to get rid o f the Com munists in our own government, except a request fo r authority to double the size o f the civil service commission by adding some forty- eight hundred new employees. Then, too, it is hard to understand why four hundred Communists were permitted to demonstrate in front o f the capitol at the very time congress was voting to fight communism in foreign countries. On Saturday morning, the day following enactment o f the Gre- cian-Turkish loan bill, it was announced by official sources that the passage o f the measure sim ply marked the beginning of the administration’s program to give aid to many other countries throughout the world. A two hundred and fifty million, dollar world bank loan was made to France on that day, and it was officially announced that con gress would be requested to make a prompt appropriation of some seventy-five or one hundred mil lion dollars for Korea, The admin istration promises more suoh re quests for appropriations to aid foreign countries will bg coming along at regular Intervals. Another result springing from the adoption o f the- new Truman foreign policy is the announce ment by the state department that the president will soon be requested to restore eantrals over exports and imports, and farm and industrial production, here in the United States in order to implement the new foreign policy. It was also stated the Adminis tration may find it necessary to ask authority to reijigtitute price controls, priorities, tec., here in America in order to obtain the food and the goods necessary to extend relief and military aid to the nations which will be included under the president’s new foreign policy program. The senate is expected to have competed its work on the new labor bill by the time this column appears in print and to take up the income tax reduction bill, which had previously passed the house. The measure to cut taxes has been reported favorable by the senate committee, with but few changes in the house version. •Oh f i l t e r -May The senate committee added oone more tax reduction bracket, mak ing the schedule of reductions run thirty per cent on net incomes under one thousand dollars; twenty per cent op incomes be tween one thousand, and seventy- eight thousand dollars; fifteen per cent between seventy-eight and three hundred and two thou sands; and ten per cent on all incomes aboove the laatter a- mount. The senate also voted to make the tax cut effective July 1 o f this year, rather than last January 1—the beginning'of the tax year. The war investigating com mittee o f the senate, previously headed by President Truman when he was senator, is running into some unexpected difficulties in investigating charges that ad ministration favorites were able to sell Arabian oil to the navy during the war at prices far above normal^ resulting in huge profits to certain oil companies and in dividuals, It is claimed this Arab ian oil deal \vaa put through upon orders o f the then commander in chief, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. An effort has been made by the committee to obtain the files and correspondence o f the late presi dent—which certainly should be" public property, inasmuch as he was acting as president apd com manded in chief=:ter learn1: the truth or falsity o f such charges, but they are being, held at -Hyde Park, by the foi’mer president’s execptgrs, yrtiq refuse tq gjve the pgnatg eempiittee ageess to thein, ' BanditHoldsUp Coupleat HuffmanPark A bandit, described by two victims as wearing a polkadot bandanna handkerchief to mask his features and brandishing a President Truman has1been ap pealed to and he, too, refuses to order the papers turned over to the senatorial committee. The committee is now considering issuing subpoenas for the papers and forcing court test on the matter. -All of last week Washington suffered from a cold wave, with temperatures down near freezing each night. Heavy frosts have killed most o f the fruit and many of the vegetables in this area, and agriculture department re ports show that the unusually wet spring and the recent cold wave, general over the country, may result in short food supplies for the coming year. Last Saturday night your cor respondent had the pleasure of attending the spring Gridiron dinner put on by the capital’s top newspaper men. Clever skits lam pooning national events and fig ures, good music and short o ff the record talks by President Truman, former President Hoover and Gov. Warren of California made the event an outstanding one, The Cedarville, 0 . Herald Systems, Audits Tax Service Anthony Spencer Public Accountant Phone Clifton, Ohio, 5748 MONEY to LOAN For Buying a Home or Farm Repairing or Refinancing CONVENIENT & FRIENDLY SERVICE All Savings Insured to $5,000 Cedarville Federal Savings & Lean Association Phone 0-2141 J, Cedarville, Ohio GOOD PRINTING and Full Value for Your Dollar! O U R PRINT SHO P IS % AT Y O U R S E RV I C E . . . There’s a commonly used ex pression: “You get just what you pay for.” This applies to PRINTING just the same as most anything else you buy. Good PRINTING can’t be produced at a poor price; Poor Printing even at a low • • • - price is expensive, because it gives the prospective custo mer the impression that your services or products are not up to standard. W e give full value for every dollar you spend with us for PRINTING —and our: prices are always FAIR. We Solicit Your Next Pt^bfing Order ’M PHONE 6— 1711 PRINTING and ijPiijNCE 187.7 gun in one hand and a-knife in the other, held up George Hell- wig, 22, Dayton, and an unidenti fied woman companion early Sun day morning on State Route 69 at Huffman Dam state park, De puty Sheriff James Ramsey re ported. * According to Ramsey, Hellwig was returning with his companion from a wedding at Bellefontaine and had stopped his car at the park when another auto pulled up directly behind. The driver o f the latter vehicle got out, came to the window of Hellwig’s auto, flourished his weapons and demanded the Couple’s money. He got $5 cash from Hellwig, plus a payroll check on the account of Kramer Bro thers Foundry, Dayton, for $44.80 credentials including an operators license, title, and license regis tration, and from the woman her purse containing $33. Then like a Cinderlla-in-re- verse story he demanded one of the woman’s slippers and the car keys, both oof which were turned over to him. Next, moving sev eral yards in front of the Hellwig car, he placed the shoe on the road with the keys inside. Telling his victims that if they moved to pick up the keys before he made his getaway, he would shoot, lie got into his car and J* ^ ■ ' *»■,' * ** * vs* if drove away. Hellwig reported the holdup to the Montgomery county sheriff, giving the license number o f the •bandit car, and the information was turned over to Greene county authorities. Later in the morning the ban dit’s car, which he had stolen in Dayton Saturday night, was found abandoned on a Dayton street by police there, Deputy Ramsey learned. The deputy requested the aid of the public in finding a brown leather jacket, said by the victims to have been dropped at the scene of the holdup by the robber. The couple reported the robbery at the nearest sheriff’s office with out having picked the garment up, and when an investigation was made, it had disappeared. Authorities believe recovery of the jacket would give them a promising clue In the case. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Tinsler (Maude Turner) are announcing the birth of a son Vernon Tinsler IH at Springfield Gity hospital, Monday. The Tinsler’s live in Morley Mich.,and Mr. Tinsler is at the Turner home now. BUY VICTORY BONDS FARMS FOR SALE •AND FARM LOANS We have many good farms for sale on easy terms. Also make farm loans at 4% interest for 15 years. No application fee and no appraisal fee. Write or Inquire McSavaney & Co. London, O. Leon H. Kling, Mgr. We Pay $5.00 for HORSES $3.00 for COWS According to size and condition Small animals removed promptly i FARM BUREAU CO-OP ASSN. call collect Xenia 756 Dayton KEumore 5742 Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted Reasonable Charges IB. C.L WILKIN Optometric Eye Specialist Xenia, Ohio You'll Find It FIRST of ALL at (SM(BSK- I. W . •HIGH ST. SPRINGFIELD, O. OPEN EVERV MONDAY TILL 9 P . JL . InsideofSignals -Sketches16MajorBal Parks m 1 Do You JCnow-- What Managers Won Pennants in Their Debuts os Major League Pilots? . . . Who Led All O. B. Batters in 1946? . . . . WHot Pitcher Won 22 Games Without a Loss Lost Year? . . . How Many Form Clubs and Scouts Are Listed by Each Major League Club? . . . What Player Stole HO Bases in 1946? . . . What Players Were Named to the Hall of Fume Last Year? . . . When Were Yankee Stadium, Polo Grounds, Briggs Stadium, etc.. Opened? 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Chevrolet gives you the Big- Car styling and luxury of Body by Fisher—at lowest prices— and it’s theohly car that does I Chevrolet gives you the combined Big-Car comfort and safety of the Knee-Action Ride and Positive-Action Hydraulic Brakes— together with exceptional gas and oil economy—and it's the only car that does I N a t u r a l ly , you and your family want the highest motoring enjoy ment at the lowest pos sible price; and you’ll find these advantages in the new 1947 Chevrolet — the only car giving Big-Car quality at lowest cost—as the following facts prove. Chevrolet gives you the Big-Car performance and reliability of a Valve-in-Head Thrift-Master Engine —together with Chev rolet's low upkeep costs—and it’s jhe only car that does! Yes, only Chevrolet gives you BIG-CAR QUALITY AT LOWEST COST; and only this need satisfy you. Visit our Showroom, and place and keep your order with'us f o r a new 1947 Chevrolet. NEW1947CHEVROLET f-.& . ■ig F P l f f l Cedarville* 0* fir s
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