The Cedarville Herald, Volume 72, Numbers 27-52

The Cedarville, O. Herald Friday, October 14, 1949 BRICKER TO EUROPE Ohio’s Senator John W. Brick- er, with five other U. S, senators, has cone to Europe fo r a four- weeks’ first - hand study o f the situation, with an accent on the housing;- Mrs. Bricker accompan­ ied the senator. BRADFUTE IS P. M. David Bradfute who has been acting postmaster in Xenia since February has been named post­ master and began his official duties last week. TAKES YMCA JOB Donald Harner o f Xenia has gone to Springfield, 111., to be­ come program chairman o f the YMCA, After completing his work in OSU Harner was trained in “ Y ” work in Cincinnati. PREACHER MOVES Rev. Lee Parkington, Friends minister, who has been pastor o f the church at Leesbnro. has ac­ cepted the pastorate o f the Church at Harveygburg. TELLS OF WEST Mrs. Harry Carruthers talked to the group at the Paintersville church Sunday morning at the 11 o’clock service on her exper­ iences while living in Colorado and Arizona. VISITING FRIENDS Rev. and Mrs. Edwin Linton and Mrs. Charlotte Scott o f Mon­ roe County, Tenu., are visiting Friends meetings in this area, showing pictures and telling of the progress o f their work. They were at New Burlington this week. < GRANGERS VISIT-'? Fourteen members .of Pleasant G r a n g e, Bowersville, visited * Caesarcreek Grange one evening recently. A supper followed an interesting program o f music and readings. ■GOLDEN WEDDING Open house was neid Wednes­ day in Xenia in eelebratipn o* the golden wedding anniversary oi Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Marsh­ all. Both the celebrants were born is Xenia ancf*'*have uvea ~ there always. * '**' HAS BEEN ILL E. C. LeMar of New Burling- . ton a well-known citizen has.beep , confined to his home from tne effects o f surgery* He has a son> Herman LaMar, o f Cedarville ana America’s SmartSet o f t im h a l i n TELEVISION More thanONEout of every TWO television combinations soldis anAdmiral. . . morethan 57% of theentire industryoutput! The first six months of 1949 have witnessed the rise o f Admiral Corporation to leadership in America’s fastest growing industry . . . television. Note these comparisons: For the first six months o f 1949 total sales o f the tele- ,5 l«i> industry were 206% greater than for the first six ;r»*nth-s of 1,948*. Trlevj.ion rales of Admiral Ccrporation, however, were 4"»0% greater . . . an increase more than double that of the te-Lwhion industry. And Admiral sales For the seeond • month?, are expected to be 167% greater than for-the '-•tton.s .*K months last year. * Prominent in Admiral’s growth is the dominant position it s. ti achieved in television combinatiorfs. This type of re* receives television, AM and FM radio, and includes, in Admiral’ ; case, a phonograph that automatically* plays all types of records. During the first six months o f this year. Admiral built and sold more television combinations than all other makes combined . . . more than 57% o f the entire industry t utput.'-' When, all types of television sets are considered, consoles and table models, as well as combinations. Admir.l cur­ rently is producing approximately 25% o f the entire in­ dustry output measured in dollar value. Frim the beginning Admiral recognized that television is more than a plaything for high income groups . . . rec- *RCA Licensee Figures ognized television’s potentialities for bringing a rich variety o f entertainment and education, day in and day cut, to those needing the entertainment *and education most „ . . the lower income groups. Immediately, therefore, Admiral began the application of mass production methods to the manfacture of television. The economies obtained were regularly* passed on toi buyers in the form o f better television sets at lower prices. Other manufacturers necessarily followed Ad­ miral’s leadership. The result has been a constantly ex­ panding market for television. Within the lact few weeks an amazing.‘ transformation has taken place in the nature o f the demand for television,' Until just recently many people still classed television as a novelty, v fascinating invention, but a purchase that could wait until other things had been bought. Today Ule.iVitsn has arrived. It is “ first” on the shopping Ibis of millions o f familes. The demand exceeds anything anticipated, or even dreamed of. Its future growth now can be f< re.-een patterned after the radio industry, with not one, but two or more television sets in the typical Ameri­ can home. For this next *4ago c f television’s growth Admiral now is planning, just as it did for the first . . . to give even greafei valuc-s and thus make available to th,e maximum market all the entertainment and education television has to offer. Admiral Corporation CHICAGO 47, ILLINOIS Galloway & Cherry * SEE! HEAR! ON TELEVISION! SPONSORED BY ADMIRAL! “STOP THE MUSIC,” ABC-TV NETWORK THURSDAYS, 8 P. M., EST. 34-38 V /. Main St. “Xenia’s Exclusive ADMIRAL Dealer” Xenia, Ohio N o other low -priced car offers you all these EXTRA VAL UES CERTI-SAFE HYDRAULIC BRAKES WORLD’S CHAMPION YALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE CENTER-POINT STEERING 'VX'tV-i'- ’ • v'*** '/■ FISHER BODY STYLING AND LUXURY Chevrolet and Chevrolet alone offers you all these EXTRA Values ■ at lowest coat! EXTRA ECONOMICAL CURVED WINDSHIELD ; 5 $ & & f l S H B r TO O W N — OPERATE— * with ' " MAINTAIN 5-INCH WIDE-BASS WHEELS LONGEST, HEAVIEST CAR! r TJN1STEEL B O D Y .. . plus LOW-PRESSURE IN ITS>FI e £ d , PANORAMIC VlSIBIUTY^jfrli! CONSTRUCTION^ TIRES V w ith WIDEST TREAD ajlaughtef, Mrs. Howard Arthur, oi Columbus, both of whom have visited him during his illness. PHYSICIAN ILL Hr, G. K, Schloss of Osborn is a patient Tin Miami Valley hos­ pital, Dayton. ...STUDY.. PAINTING. AT MEETING *. ; * Instructions in textile painting Will be given to groups of farm Women throughout the county in; the next few months as a project of the Greene * County Home;' Demonstration Council. * At a meeting this week at the . home of Mrs. Gilbert Ream, near Bpwersville, council members re­ ceived instructions in this art from Mrs. Fred Wilburn, Cedar­ ville township. Each member cut stencils and painted designs on articles which they brought to this meeting. Council members, in turn, will conduct similar classes in their respective committee,, Mrs. James Beam, Caesarcreek township, council president, pre­ sided at a business session pnd luncheon was served to nineteen members. The next meeting will be held Nov. 14 at the home of Mrs. Ron­ ald Atkinson, Wilmington Pike. There will be a demonstration on, gift-wrapping, crafts and hobbies INDIANA GUESTS HERE THIS WEEK * Rev, and Mrs. Fred Huish ancf son and Mr. apd Mrs. Glen Elling- Wood and daughter of Rushville, Ind., are visiting at the home of Rev. R. A. Jamieson this week. Rev. Jamieson, Rev. Huish, Mr. Ellingwood and Mr. Delmar Jobe attended The Synod of the U. P. Church at College Hill Church in Dayton, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. McKIBBEN BIBLE CLASS ENJOYS HAY RIDE Members of the McKibben Bible Class and their families enjoyed a hay ride Tuesday evening. Fol­ lowing the hay ride the group gathered at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cotter for •a weiner roast. IN SERIOUS CONDITION Mrs. Nancy Oglesbee is irt ser­ ious condition at Creech Rest home in Osborn, where she suf­ fered a stroke this past week. Cedarville, Ohio W#re fectfiirmg Chevrolet Super-Service Specials all this month—so "ALL ABOARD FOR VALUES UNLIMITED!” Along the Greene County Farm Front By E. A. DRAKE Corn Hybrid Field Day • Farmers of Greene County are invited to attend a corn hybrid ■ field day at the G.. T. Wall and Sons farm, three miles southeast o f Xenia on the Hoop road Oct. 19 at 1:00 P. M. The event is sponsored! by the Veterans Farm Management Class at Xenia Cen­ tral with H. N. Grice, instructor. Hybrid seed fpr>the. test^dem- . 'onstration were* 'furnished'' the*, class last spring by Funks Hy­ brid Seed Corn Company and wai­ ter Williams, Ohio Hybrid Seed Producer, Mr. Wall and his son, Ralph, who is a member of the Veterans class, *provided the la­ bor, land, equipment and fertili­ zer. - Fifteen of the newer hybrids were included in the test to check their performance. The class will get yields of the different plots and next Wednesday visitors may see the difference in yields, ma­ turity, types of corn, corn borer infestation and other qualities. Ray Roush field representative of Funk Hybrid Seed Corn Com­ pany and Walter Williams of the Ohio Hybrid Corn Growers will be present to explain the differ­ ent hybrids. Study Food Marketing County Extension Agents of south-west Ohio will be seeking ways of helping farmers solve their marketing problems when they visit Dayton October 17. The groups will visit warehouses and retail outlets, of large food chains and study .their merchandising operations/ . . . . _ ■ Karl Kahler, agricultural coun­ cil fo r the Ohio Retail Merchants Association, "is cooperating with the extension service in making arrangements for the tour. Free Sewers of Tree Roots Applications of copper sulfate or blue vitriol will free sewers of tree roots that are causing stop­ pages. Crushed or moderately fine crystals are easy to use, dissolve rapidly, yet lodge in the root masses long enough to be effective. The roots are killed and there is no injury to trees. .Sewage organisms, including bac­ teria and fungi, aid in disinter­ grating the dead root masses that slough o ff and are washed away. When a sewer becomes slug­ gish, 2 or 3 pounds of copper sul­ fate crystals may be put in through the toilet. This should be done when the flow of water is not excessive. Sometimes, after the first application of copper sulfate, the sewer becomes com­ pletely clogged after a few weeks. This Occurs because the disinter­ grating roots cannot he carried away fast enough. They become lodged and the flow of. water is stopped. When the roots have been cleared away it is a simple matter to keep a sewer in work-; ing order by adding 1 1-2 to 2T pounds of copper sulfate every 3" or 4 weeks. . College Lists Short Courses : Busy days are ahead for the* : .College of fAg^iculture staff -a t/ Ohio State University, as -well4: ’ as for farm folks and agriculture al 'workers interested in learn­ ing the latest information on a- variety o f farm subjects. The schedule of short courses, confer­ ences, institutes and other spec­ ial educational meetings *are as follows: October 19-21—Turkey flock selection and pullorum testing school; November 10-11 —Anirnal Nutritution Confer­ ence; November 14-25—Pre-ser- . vice training course for veterans’ . instructors. Similar courses, will also he . given in February and May 1950, December 5-8—Annual Fruit Growers School at Wooster; January 9-11—-Short course for commercial florists; January 23-25— Short course for arbor­ ists, landscape gardeners and nurserymen! "February ‘ 3;4—Ohio Young Farmer Conference; 'Feb­ ruary 7-Id—-Conference’ ?dn prob­ lems of1 Glairy manufacturing;' Maj^h ,1^-17—Vegetable and fruit .processors’ short course; March 16-17—Conference on restaurant management; March 20-23—An­ nual Grange short course; March 21-24—Farm and Home Week. 4-H Advisors To Be Honored Sixty-two Greene County 4-H Advisors will be given special recognition for their voluntary leadership of more than 700 4-H boys and girls at the 4-H Advis­ ors Recognition Banquet to be held Thursday, October 20, 7:00 p. m., at the Trinity Methodist Church, Xenia. The project work and various activities of -the 39 local 4-H Clubs located in all sec­ tions of the county were super­ vised by these advisors. The evening’s program' will in­ clude recognition of Advisors by years of service, recognition to. Advisors of clubs meeting*- the Honor Club requirements, presen­ tation of trophies to the county Health and Junior Leadership winners, and reports on Ohio 4-H Advisors Coneress held in July and the Ohio 4-H Club Congress held in September. Mr. John T. Mount, Ass’t, State 4-H Club Leader, will be the guest speak­ er. Entertainment numbers will include group singing, and two instrumental numbers. The business session will be in charge of Guy Smith, chairman of the 4-H Council. Two Coun­ cil members from Bath, Miami, Cedarville and Ross -townships will be elected to serve a term . of three years on the county 4-H Club Council. The nominating committee for the selection of members consists of Horace Fer­ guson, Mrs. Myron Fudge, and Mrs. Ro.y Pui'dom. The Greene County 4-H Junior Leadership Club -is in charge of making arrangements for the Banquet. Roger Conklin, presi- ‘ dent of the Junior Leadership Glub, will serve as toastmaster for the program following the dinner. The following committ- tees were named to plan the de­ tails: Program Committee; Patricia Koogler, Osborn; Irene Lile, Xe­ nia; Nolan Butts, Cedarville: Faye Huston, Cedarville; Wen- dell Anderson. Xenia; Roger Conklin, Xenia. Hostess Commit­ tees: Jane Thuma, Jamestown; Dorothy Creswell, Cedarville; Marilyn" Tuttle, Osborn; John Jennings, Xenia; Nancy Sanders, Jamestown; Decoration Commit­ tee: Jo Anne Sheely, Cedarbille; Roger Horney, Cedarville; Joan Cultice, X*|nia; Wayne Marshall, Ross; Donald Wiechers, Xenia; Clara Sexton, Cedarville; Max Rogers, Ross; Janet Crumrine, Cedarville. . i WE HAVE THE NEW PAINT SENSATION I Makes kitchens, bath­ rooms and all wood­ work look and stay like new. KEM-GLO autfteefi ur* as easy"to «le«Ti as your refriger­ ator. Simple m A-B-C %9Apply, and only one salk'tt does ike Average RSteken, wells and WCodtVoi'k. Cedarville, Omo A t the Courthouse Asks Partition Partition of real estate is ask­ ed in the^case of Leroy J. Wonefe vs. James T, Wones, et al.. Cases Dismissed Dismissal ^records have been entered in the case of Jesse W. Jordan et al. and Mai*y B. Jordan vs. Jane E. Harris. Would Marshal Liens Charles Hoppes and J. D. Mc- Griff have brought suit against Paul and Helen Eikenberpy, seek­ ing to marshal liens. Asks Divorce Nellie J. Bentley seeks a di­ vorce from Denver Bentley, charging cruelty. Action Disimssed The suit of Floyd E. Satter­ field vs. The Kelley Car company . has been dismissed. The case of DeVilbiss company vs. Lillie G. Maier has been dismissed. May Sgll Real Estate James S. Miller, administrator of the estate of Morris S. Miller, has been authorised to transfer real estate. Judgment Granted ! Welfare Finance C!o. vs. George and Naomi Cain, judgment of $577.71 granted on note. May Sell Real Estate Jessie Hamby,.administrator of the estate of Balford Hamby, was .given authority to sell real -■estate, and relieved from further administrator. Ask Damages The General Exchange Insur­ ance Corp. and Howard E. Stan­ ley of Spring Valley are asking damages of $135 from Wilbur A. Page. The action stems from an automobile accident in Spring Valley in 1984. Judgment A.warded Merchants Finance Co. was a- warded a judgment of $239.09 from Vernon Cremeans, et al. In the same ease a judgment was given U. S. A. for $856.75, to sat­ isfy a mortgage it holds on the property. Divorces'Granted v ■.MarthaS. J. Collins has- been •granted divorce from Lerdy, neglect- and cruelty and Iva Mil/ . dred .^Stroup from.-Roy. Stroups, neglpcfe, 'l'j. - t ' ' Asfes for 'Sale. /V ’ ? ; f. Charles W. * Stoker asks the court of common pleas in settle­ ment o f a judgment given him -in July against Paul L. Bowermas- ter;. He petitions for marshaling of liens, and the sale of real es­ tate. - -’ - :*. Seeks Replevin ir • The Universal .Credit Corp, nas filed suit against Thomas Smart, seeking to replevin an automo-- bile. There is disagreement over the ownership of the car.’ - IT’S HERE! the mri#, Bowens BATTERY you don’t fill U ONCB A MONTH, not even 3 TIMES A YEATt fill It only ONCE A YEA-R. Most batttiy failures are A ie tb lack-of-warer. With the atiming NIC-L-LYTE Batteryyou know youx water level is UP where it should be for a solid year — do more annoyance and loss-of-tune "checking." Mote These Quality Features1 ■MGenuine Hard Rubber Oise. * 51-Plates. ■KTwice the electrolyte volume o f w ordinary batteries. *)C Exclusive Black Oxide. Cedarville Guaranteed in Writing for.25 Full Months STOPSMOTORCO. Formerly Paul Edwards Phone 6-4021 e ood electric lighting indoors means new eye- *| saving com fort fo r reading, sewing, school|| homework and. farm account keeping. It means i safer stairways, fewer trips and falls, greater en -'J joyment o f the hours after sundown. Eyes are ^ precious, but good lighting is cheap. * Ou tdoor’ lighting makes after-dark chores | easier and safer. Well-placed reflector units con­ veniently placed are a great help when you want to finish urgent work such as silo filling after dusk or get the hay in before an impending storm. Good , lighting protects your home and your) poultry and stock against prowlers and thieves.' In barns and other buildings, electric lighting re-’ fduces fire hazards^ and makes safer working con*/ [ditions the whole year through. J J ,. . j . i r , Nowris a^§Dod:rime to check up on your light--} ^ and install modern electric: *, f . lighting; equipment. Ask* your County Agricul­ tural Agent for advice on the latest wiring and lighting helps,%r consult the larm Representa­ tive o f The Dayton Power and JLight Company^ .j )serving your neighborhood ■rej-rr THE PATTON.POWIRrAHP.UOHT.COMPANY.,

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