The Cedarville Herald, Volume 70, Numbers 1-26

The Cedarville, O. Herald Friday, April 18, 1947 Page Three Society MISS KNOTT SPEAKS AT PAR MEETING “Know Ohio” was the subject of a talk by Miss Mabel Knott a t a meeting of Cedar Cliff Chapter, Daughters of the American Rev­ olution, Saturday afternoon at the home of Miss Mary Knott, near Clifton. Speaking of Ohioans as “typ­ ical Americans” since they have been drawn from all over the country, Miss Knott mentioned the state’s excellent school sys- 'tem, including forty-eight col­ leges, and pointed out tha t Ohio has furnished seven Presidents of the United States. Two vocal solos, “A Poor Man’s Garden” and “The Old Road” were sung by Mrs William Laf- forty. Mrs. M. J. Bahin, regent, presided and Mrs, Walter Condon, chaplin, led the ritual and pledge of allegiance which opened the meeting. Plane were made for Memorial Day services in which the chapter will cooperate witli the American Legion. Mrs. Fred Townsley, Mrs. Anna. Wilson, and Mrs. R. T. Wil­ liamson were chosen members of the Memorial Day committee. The flower committee consists of Mrs. I. C. Davis, Mrs. Robert MacGreg­ or, Mrs. M. J. Bahin and Mrs. Donald Kyle. A dessert course was served by the ho-ics> to twenty-five mem­ bers. As.-dsiiiig her were the Miss­ es Ella and Bertha Knott, Mrs. Leo Andt1son, Mrs. M. J. Harris and Mrs. J. II. Harris. HOLD INSPECTION Ced.,r .'ilk* cimMer No. 413 OES lulu in;iveti'.m ?»!omIay, at the Masoni Lad. Mr-.ay Grand Ma­ tron ru :hu- of Urhana was in-jpc'din." o; ii . r. Guests irom 18 chaptirs ei s. vcr.il other cities wcio p rv .n t. Aiier the inspection refreshnunt;: w.re si rved. TS V POSTPONED Tin* t a w .ith the Lome- eco­ no.a..-. of Cedarville 1 * 1 "^{I .< ft vl*. f'-ft*tilt.*' tlilf bte-.j * i .p.v.tel ir-.m !Vxivday unt.i Wd.t* -day aLtrncon '►Trvr*i^ Mr. and f h ~I. C. Charles togeliioi* v.Ttli Mr. and Sirs. H. 0. Hooten of Springfield attended the general conference of the ELDS church at Independence, Mo., last week. VISIT IN CEDARVILLE Mrs. Fied Furnas, and niece, Vivian Michael, of Jamestown spent Monday afternoon with Mir. A h a Chaplin. KIPPER GUESTS Miss Peggy Ellis of Xenia and John Garris of Dayton were Sun­ day siipp.-r guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Chaplin. i \ j Mr. and Miv. Wilbur Wiseeup I had as their giieits Saturday,. J ’!.-'. WisecayV ns Ur and brother- in-law Mr. and firs. Elmer Sehan- r. acimr of Chicago. TUCKER—BROWN Marriage vows were exchanged by Miss Anna Brown, and Joseph Tucker, in a ceremony solemnized by candlelight in the Friends church, Jamestown, last Friday evening. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Brown, near Xenia. Mr. Tucker is the son of Mrs. Lavona Tucker, Xenia. The double ring service was read by Rev. C. A. James, pastor of the church. Preceeding the ceremony, Mrs. Delmar McCoy presented a thirty minute program, of organ music. Miss Hazel Chaffin, Jamestown, was solist. Mrs. Morgan McDowell, sister of the bride, was matron of honor. Mary Alice Brown, another sis­ te r of the bride, was flower girl. Keith King, cousin of the bride­ groom, served as ring bearer. The bride, given in marriage by her father, appeared in a gown of candlelight satin designed with a fitted bodice of Chantilly lace with a sweetheart neckline and long, fitted sleeves tapering to points over her hands. The full skirt extended into a wide, cir­ cular train. Her fingertip veil was held in place with a tiai’a of orangeblossoms and was edged with lace. She carried a white Bible topped with a corsage of gardenias. White satin streamers, caught with freesia. and hya­ cinths, extended irom the corsage. Her jewelry was a cameo locket which belonged to her great- gxeat-grandmother and had been worn by several brides in the family. Mr. Douglas Huffman,, Spring- field, served as best man. The ushers were Charles F. Brown, brother of the bride, and John 'William Fudge, cousin of the bridegroom. Following the service, 100 guests attended a reception at 27 E. Second Si., Xenia, where th'* couple will he a t home after | a wedding trip. >ucl;er is a graduate of Sihcrerofk high school. Mr. Tuck­ er was graduated from Cedarville high school and is employed a t Dayton. i HOME CULTURE MEETS •’ART” was the program theme v.u.r. ?i:o Home Culture Club met cd with spring housecleaning. Try at the Lome of Mrs. Walter Cum-: i . u i - n North Main street, Tues- our service and y°u’U a£rce that day afternoon with Mrs. Charles Baldwin (Lois Brown), Columbus, i-.r.iM'Iy of Cedarville, as guest speaker. Mrs. Baldwin formerly taught a rt in the Piqua schools and at Ohio State university. She des­ cribed various types of a rt rang­ ing from oil paintings to sculp­ turing and illustrated her talk with several of her own paintings and a head of clay which she modeled. Eighteen members and seven guests responded to the roll call by naming their favorite paint­ ings. Mrs. Baldwin was presented a gift by the club. A dessert course was served following the program and daf­ fodils were given as favors. Mrs. Harold Reinhard was program chairman, assisted by Mrs. C. E. Masters and Mrs. J . W. Collier. The club will suspend its meet­ ing in May as it will join with other women’s clubs of Cedarville in staging a May Festival of Mu­ sic. * BROADCASTERS MEET The Broadcasters class of the First United Presbyterian church held the first meeting of their new year Tuesday evening in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond 'Williamson. Mrs. William Waide was in charge of the devotionals. The president, Mrs. Paul Edwards conducted a business during which the new club programs were distributed. The group enjoyed contests and games with prizes going to the winners. Delicious refreshments of apple pie and ice cream and coffee was served by the hostess, IN XENIA Several ladies from Cedarville attended the Womens Presby- terial Tuesday which was held in the F irst United Presbyterian church, Xenia. Mrs. James L. Chesnut and son,Donald, of this place, and Mrs. Robert Conley and daughter, Kathryn, of Crystal City. Mo., were in Pittsburgh last week, where they attended the gradua­ tion of James D. Chesnut, Jr., from University of Pittsburgh medical school. Dr. Chesnut will intern a t Medical Center, Pitts­ burgh, beginning June 1. Mrs. J . W. Johnson le ft Mon­ day for Olney, 111., where she will visit Rev. and Mrs. Herbert Main and son, Paul. She was ac­ companied by Mrs. Willard Bar- low and son, John, of Columbus. Mr. and Mrs. William Glemans, who have been ill a t the home of their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Cultice, near South Vienna, have returned home where their son and daught- er-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Clemans will care for them. * Mrs. Fred Engle entertained the local WCTU Wednesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Giffin and two children, Covington, 0., were guests of. her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Townsley, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Max Lynn, who Save been attending McGill Uni­ versity, Canada, are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bay Carzoo. Mrs. Robert Huffman has been on the sick list but is improved a t this time. Mrs, Inez Rigio is home after attending the funeral of her sis­ ter-in-law in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Taylor will soon move to Dayton having sold their property here. Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Rigio Jr. entertained 25 guests a t dinner Easter Sunday. Mrs. Ruth Reiter is still ill at her home hut is improved' at this time. Mrs. Wade Charles and Nancy are spending'several day in New York City. Keith Rigio is home for a few days, but expects to continue his baseball duties soon. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Wiseman were visitors Sunday in Water Loo, Ohio. Last week they cele­ brated their 31st wedding an­ niversary. Several women of the Method­ ist W.S.C.S, attended a meeting in Bowersville last jveek, Mrs. Joe Gordon is a patient in Sprinfield City hospital fol­ lowing an operation. She is much improved a t this time. BUY VICTORY BONDS MONEY to LOAN For Buying a Home or Farm Repairing or Refinancing CONVENIENT & FRIENDLY SERVICE All Savings Insured to $5,000 Cedarville Federal Savings A SPECIAL SHOWING TH IS WEEK OF THE Just Plug In and Milk! No pipelines, tanks, tracks to install or maintain. No winter freeze-ups. N o carts; light, compact, hand portable, self contained. Requires only an electrical outlet for operation anywhere. 17. 5. and Foreign Patents Pending The Globe Grand Cham­ pion is precision built, with 12 plus advantages for B E T T E R, easier milking, that make it the ideal milker for every farm. Stop in today. Get the facts. See why it is your logical milker. 44 W. Main St. Photographs of Children In Your Home Babies A Specialty SCHWAB 106 Corry Street YELLOW SPRINGS Phone for Appointment Just D ial 7-5482 (No Toll Charge) BEST BUY BIG We Deliver (no charge) in Cedarville Anderson’s Ffc r Phone 681 FLOWERS BY WIRE EVERYWHERE “Say It W ith Flowers” FERTILIZERS OF PROVED QUALITY FOR ALL SPRING CROPS Formore than 20years successful farm­ ers have depended on BIG M Ferti­ lizers for maximum yield of all crops. They know free-flowing BIG M brand is always manufactured, up to highest standards . . . never down to price. Better get the best...best buyBIG M. TheMiami Fertilizer Company OTHCE IN DAYTON, OHIO FACTORY IN TREBEIN.OHIO The condemned ate a hearty meal c o z THEATRE Y Fri. - Sat. April 18 - 19 Robert Cummings - Peter Lorre “The Chase” Cartoon - Variety - Sports Sun. - Mon. April 20 - 21 Marshall Thompson-George Tobias “Gallant Bess” in Natural Cinecolor Fox News - Pete Smith Wed. - Tfturs. April 23 - 24 Dorothy McGuire - Robert Young “Claudia and David” News - Cartoon - Sports FEET’S PERFECTION MINERAL The Complete Mineral that will take care of your Livestock troubles Call or see your Local Representative ARTHUR HAHNA D ial 6-2201 fT ^ H I S may be your nextdoor neighbor’s table—or JL yours. Sooner or later, cancer may come to your house or his. Every day, cancer sits at somebody’s table. For cancer strikes _ o n the average__one out of every two American homes . . . one out of eight Americans is condemned to die of cancer unless we do something about it.- How can you help fight this disease? One way is to see your doctor the minute any member of your family develops one of cancer’s danger signals*. Another way__a way in which you not only help guard those you love but bring new hope to thousands—is to join the fight to conquer cancer. The April drive of the American Cancer Society is now on. Help this vast army of workers drive cancer from our midst. Give so they can pay for more research. Give so they can buy more equipment to ease suffering, restore hope. Give so they can find a cure for cancer—a cure that some day may save a life in your own home. And give generously, won’t you? Let’s stop fearing cancer __ le t’s conquer cancerl LSFS-AND-DEATH FACTS ABOUT Gw ern . One-eighth of our entire population —17,000,000 Americans —are today doomed to die o f cancer. This is a shocking, but absolutely true fact. B u t there is hope . * . even today, one out of three may be cured of cancer, and in at least one type, 92% is curable — when caught in time. And tohelp science finallyco«< 7 «^r cancel-, the American Cancer Society has made more than 100 grants for research projects. Right now, the same scientific group responsible for the atomic bomb is directing the - research to conquer cancer. Every dollar you give speeds the search. * Cancer’s Danger Signals 1. Any sore that does nol heal. . . particularly about Shs longue, mouth, or lips. 2. A painless lump or thickening, especially in thebreast, lip, or longue. 3. Bloody discharge from Ihe nipple or irregular bleeding from any of Ihe other natural body openings, 4. Progressive change iti the color or size of a warfermole. 5. Persistent indigestion. 6. Persistent hoarseness, unexplained cough, or difficulty in swallowing. 7."Any radical change in normal bowel habits. l b c a n c e r The American Cancer Society

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