The Cedarville Herald, Volume 73, Numbers 1-26
* y : w 9 r ~ ^ V ** '■ v % W » - if:* • Ijr, April 14, 1950 The Cedarville, O, Herald Personals •--fesa Dr. and Mrs. W. W. Morton of Louisville, Ky., were guests this past week of Ralph and Miss Ina Murdock. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Townsiey had as weekend •guests • their daughter and son-in-law,' Mr. and Mrs. John Sanders o f Sandusky. Sunday guests were Mr. and Mrs. Howard Swaim and son of New Lebanon. Mrs. Clara Morton ^nd Jesse Townsiey had as weekend guests Mr. and Mrs. Norman Sweet and daughter of Rossford and Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Townslay and sons of Wellsville. Dx*. and Mrs. Donald Kyle and Mrs. Millison had as guests this past week Mrs. Grace Millison of Claysville, Pa., Mrs, Karl Kobert, Miss Lee Ann Kobert and Kent Kobert o f Jackson, ‘Michigan. Herbert Myers, Miss Winifred Myers, Miss Meredith Miller of Springfield and Marion and Bil ly Myers spent a few days last week with Mr, and Mrs. Ernest Foster and family in Dunbar, West Virginia. ysA HH2 d r ; b . b , ro se DENTIST HAS OPENED OFFICES For the Practice of General Dentistry. Located at 5 y2 S. FOUNTAIN AVE. Springfield, Ohio (Above United Cigar Store — Fountain at Main) Dial 5-3571 OFFICE HOURS 9 A . M. to 8 P. M. Daily X-RAY GAS PLENTY OF ROOM FOR ALASKA AND HAWAII . . . There has been considerable speculation as to possible arrangements of the stars in Old Glory should Alaska or Hawaii or both be- admitted to state hood. These girls at the office of the world's largest manufacturer of flags Jn New. York City show two combinations of 50 stars flanking a flag with a field of 49. If—and when—Alaska and Hawaii are voted statehood, there will be a boom in the flag-making business, for existing U. S. flags will become obsolete.' Mr, and Mrs. H. II. Brown spent several days this past week with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bald win and son in. Columbus and with Dr. and Mrs. H. M. Brown in Clyde, Ohio. Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Huston were Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Huston and sons Pure Bred HAMPSHIRE OpenGiltSale * - 55 - GILTS : 55 Wednesday Night,April19,1950 Sale Starts 7 :30 FEMALE FARMS' Dobbins & Evans Cedarville of Knollwood and Mrs. Minnie Wetzel o f Xenia: Mr. and Mrs. George Hartman •spent Thursday in Columbus. Mr. Hartman attended a meeting of the Republic Mutual Insurance company. Miss Joan Jobe, teacher in the Milan schools, spent a few aaye this past week with her parents, Mr. and Sirs. Delmar Jobe. Jlr. and Mrs. Bert Jacks and daughter and air. and airs. W . C. Hughes o f Jamestown were Sun day guests o f Mr. and airs. Lewis Lillich. A[r. and Mrs. George Sheeley , had as Sunday guests air. and Mrs. H. E. Donley, Miss Leota Gibson and air. and airs, R. Wise o f Springfield. Miss Doris Ramsey, teacher in Bellefontaine schools, spent the past week with her parents, Mr. and airs. Paul Ramsey. « airs. Cora Trumho and Miss Mildred, Trumbo had 'as their weekend guest, Mrs. Edwin West- exf eld o f Cincinnati. airs. Luella Bailey, Margaret and Bill Bailey spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. James Bailey, Jr., -and son in Newport. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Check and daughter spent the weekend* in Cleveland with Mr. Cheeks’ mother, Sirs. Mary Cheek. Arthur Hanna spent last week attendjng a Peet Manufacturing company sales convention in Indianapolis. Mi*. and Mrs. Willard Barlow and son o f Columbus spent the week end with relatives heje. . 1 * ■■ ’ ■ " 1 .*i- -i i ' iK?*''- See these great new truck buys in our showrooms today! * ■ * ■y ^Performance JCeaders Mosf Powerful Chevrolet Trucks : Ever Built! JPayloadJHeaders Cost Less To Operate Per Ton Per Mile! -Popularity headers Preferred by Far Over All Other Trucks! .-Price Xead^rs Now 'dir New Lower, . Prices ? FA&AHEAD with all these PLus FEATURES • TWO GREAT VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINES*, the New 105-h.p. Load-Master emdlh* improved 92-h.p. Thrift-Master « THE NEW POWER-JET CARBURETOR • DIAPHRAGM SPRING CLUTCH • SYNCHRO-MESH TRANSMISSIONS e HYPOID REAR AXLES • DOUBLE-ARTICULATED BRAKES • WIDE-BASE WHEELS • ADVANCE-DESIGN STYLING • JBAU-TV p E STEERING • UNIT-DESIGN BODIES F CUMMINGS CHEVROLETSALES Cedarville, O h i o PROPER METHODS OF HANDLING ' AND PLANTING TRES P lant immediately when RECE/VED ~ 0 £ HEEL IN UNTIL POSSIBLE TO PLANT* S calp mo: Mi-, and Mi'S. Guy LeForgg had as Sunday guests Mrs. Jack Pit- stick and children of Hamilton. George Whitt and mother of Indianapolis spent the weekend with Mrs. Anne Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Richards and daughter of Columbus spent the weekend with the formers paients, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Rich ards. Mr. and Mrs. Harpld Spitler had as a weekend guest Mrs. Eu- phemia Stock o f Fairborn. Mr. and Mrs. Robert, Aitben of Canton spent the weekend -with Rev. and Mrs. Paul Ellfotfv., • • TWO FAMILIES MOVE “ Mrs. Inez Rigio and Mr. 'and Mrs. Keith Rigio moved this week to. the property on Main.street, recently vacated by Mr.''a’hdMrs. William Lister. Mr.? aa*?””-^Mrs. Lister have moved into ‘^-trailer fox* the present. C P' . L* RURAL POLICY HEAD Leonard Yochum, Clinton.coun ty fax-mer, well-known to' -Greene county rural folk, has. hejjiv elect ed president of the wqr&f policy group in* his home Countyi, J* DOLLING UP THE PO * C The government i s . ^pending §3,530 redecoratifag the post of fice in Wilmington. * • STORE IS ROBBED The Jonquil shopJVa woman’s apparel store in Sabiria. was en tered and robbed o f coats, dress es and .materials. rtrttf v On* GHDfJLD RS MADS* SStx t x f s h o u U* os m a d s * KEEP ROOTS MOIST■ A fter , removal from package OR HEELING M TRENCH ~ KEEP ROOTS /N WATER UNTIL PLANTED • \ D ig HOLE WITH ONE VERTICAL SIDE AND LARGE SNOU6HTO ACCOMODATE ROOT SYSTEM • p l a n t i n g " i S^ a W s *‘ ■£>£• sifljy' Ssrar -■lxP S= P lant tree v \ t s a m e depth r r WAS BRCSN/NS* FIRM TH£ EARTH AROUND ROOTS- w F il l ho le w m ^ J ^ in / n g EARTH AND F I R M T R E E * LEAVE SURFACE MULCHED* April is Conservation month in Ohio, the week of April 10-14,' Con servation Week in Ohio Schools and Friday, April 14, Arbor and Bird Day. The following instruc tions for Arbor Day planting are suggested by the Forestry Division of The Ohio Department of Natural Resources. ' Dig a hole a little larger in size and depth than is necessary to take the root system when spread out as it would grow naturally. Place tree in the hole, spreading out roots so that none are folded, bsnt or bunched. If running water Is available, run a small stream Into the hole and push soil in slowly io that it settles solidly around the roots. Hold the tree upright with the “ root collar” level with the ground while filling the hole, and fill to the ground level. If water is not a^iilable, hold tree in position and push soil in slowly, tamping and packing firmly. It is advisable to stake and tie trees which are in exposed posi tions until they are .firmly estab lished. • If trees are received a' few days before planting, follow, handling in structions in drawing above. All trees should be planted at the same depth as they formerly grew. This depth can usually be deter mined by an “ ear mark” .or “ root collar” on the stem. Air spaces or pockets around a root indicate that it is not in con tact with soil, which will kill that root, and possibly the tree. Planted trees should be watered- during dry periods during the first year or two. INC IDENT IN RAYBURN (A Short Story) By RICHARD HILL WILKINSON C URIOUS how the three of us turned ou t, to be reporters. A1 Leighton, Burt Turner and my self. Burt and I graduated the same year from the Rayburn Higli School. That »was the year A1 Leighton.was released from the state reformatory. I saw I_m- a couple of times during the sum mer, then in the fall I took a job with the Journal. Burt Turner had gone to New York. I heard later that he was in the* game—making good on the Record. Leighton at the time was doing feature stuff for the Ledger and I remembered being glad, because I knew it was what he wanted to do and he wasn’t letting his record in the reform.' sold him back. ■It was in il og of 1936 that I saw him. I wa. stationed at Tay- *iL ' 'i. We went up into the Shas country. I’ve never seen so many wretched people any where; such misery and pov erty. It made your blood run cold . . . eh, an outpost near the Chinese front lines. W e' hadn’t seen a white man for over a week, then one day A1 Leighton came riding jn on- & burro as- casual as you please. . “Hi, Eddie,” he grinned. “Heard you were up here.” We worked together on a couple of stories. The war was taking a rest, but there were plenty of things to write about. We went up into the .Shas country. I've never seen so many wretched people any where; s\tch misery and poverty. It made your blood run cold, got you to wondering why such men ■and women made the effort to stay alive. The gaunt, hungry, preda- ' tory lories (of those 'hillmea stayed with me for nights"afterward. They f sobered A1 Leighton. Usually he was grinning. After that trip to ; shas he didn’t grin for a -week. “Remember Burt Turner?” AT said Unexpectedly one day.' “He’s coming in. I Just heard/’ He Was looking at me steadily?- not grinning, his eyes lacking .warmth. Curiously, for the first time, I remembered the incident back in Rayburn. X could see Burt' ON EASTERN TOUR Twenty-six students of Wil mington College are on a tour of New York and Washington. HAYES IS HONORED Eldon L. Hayes, Wilmington at torney, -was honored at a recent meeting o f the Eagles lodg^ for his career as an Eagle. He has been president of the lodge twice and held national office many times. Turner’ s young face, bitter and re sentful because Leighton had been chosen captain of the football team. Later, triumph crowded out all the bitterness, all the hatred. Some money had been stolen from the school - commissary and Burt had seen A1 Leighton coming away from the place, hurrying, he claimed when telling the principal, with a furtiveness about his atti tude. I remembered reading years later that Leighton had cleared himself on that money charge, and I thought at the time that Burt Turner knew he wasn’t guilty. Leighton suddenly grinned. “ If you’re thinking about that time when we were kids,'forget it. A man’s different when he grows up.” Turner arrived two days later, a big, confident looking chap, pros perous, but easily recognizable. He greeted us both heartily, and A1 Leighton shook hands with him' and grinned his famous grin. It was a relief to see them friends once more, and the three of us had a gay time recapturing the merri ment of our childhood. No mention was made of the money-stealing in cident. There was one thing different about Turner. He had a lot of gold in his teeth. Some of it you could see when he laughed. I remem bered he’d had trouble with Ms teeth when he was a youngster. The next day Burt said he wanted to have a look at the Shas country. We advised him not to, recoxuxting our own experiences. But he was determined; “ It’ s cold .up there,” A! Leighton said. “ If you go you’d'better take my fur coat And a gun. The hill- men don’t love prosperous looking whites." Turner couldn’t very well refuse the loan of the coat, but he laughed at the idea of. a gun. He started out early the next momipg, wearing Al’s fur coat carrying a camera, looking ludi crous astride one of those tiny, in- j credibly strong burros. We didn’ t ' see him again for a week. We scarcely .recognized him. His face was mashed in a pulp. Why? After the hillmen killed him they had a hard Job getting the gold out o f : his teeth. Cut him up considerably. Of course the fur coat was miss ing, “ O V I don’t mind the loss ofrtha coat,” 'Leighton said. "H e Mew smoke at the ceiling. 'That fiu? coat and the gold in his teeth. Those hungry, 111-dad Shas men. couldn’t resist the combination. Especially' when they discovered he wasn’t armed- Turner always, was a stubborn fooL” I locked at him sharply. His face was expressionless. But I couldn’t help thinking of that incident hade in Rayburn. v ______ - - s——r‘ PLAN SPELLING BEES By a method of contest elimi nation the pupils,*. in Fayette county schools lare planning to participate in the state spelling bee later. The county has been divided into sections. NURSE JOINS STAFF Miss Rachel Hupp, a graduate nurse, .has joined the staff of Fayette county’s new memorial hospital. Cozy Ihestfei - • CEDARVILLE, OHIO Telephone 6-3011 CHILDREN 14c Inc. Tax Adults 40c Inc. Tax Don’t Fail To Visit Your New “Cozy Grill” Where you will be served with a smile Lunch Specials Chicken in the Basket, French Fries Lettuce and Tomatoes - Rolls and C o ffe e ..................... 75c Ham - 2 Eggs, Toast and Coffee ......................... 50c Bacon - 2 Eggs, Toast and Coffee ......................... 50c HAMBURGER DELUXE (Hamburger on Bun - French Fries^- Salad) .... 35c Soup........ 15c ' Chili........20c Sandwiches Jumbo Hamburger 15c Ham .................. 15c Cheese ..................... 15c Hot D og s ................ 15c Cheese Burger ...... 25c Ham & Cheese — 25c Bacon & Eggs ...... 25c Grilled Cheese ...... 20c AT OUR* FOUNTAIN Cozy’s Weekly Special Banana Sp lits...... 19c Sodas ........ 20c Malted Milk 20c Fountain Drinks Sundaes — ‘ 15c 5c Make it a Date! 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