Cedarville University DigitalCommons@Cedarville The eC darville Herald The eC darville Herald 11-24-1933 The edC arville Herald, November 24, 1933 Cedarville University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/cedarville_herald Part of the Civic and Community Engagement Commons, Family, Life Course, and Society Commons, Journalism Studies Commons, and the Mass Communication Commons Recommended Citation Cedarville University, "The eC darville Herald, November 24, 1933" (1933). The Cedarville Herald. 2655. https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/cedarville_herald/2655 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@Cedarville, a service of the Centennial Library. It has been accepted for inclusion in The eC darville Herald by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@Cedarville. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Hie new things are advertised by Advertising is news, as much as th# merchants first. Advertisements keep headlines on the front page. Often you abreast of the times. Read them! it is of more significance to you* FIFTY-SIXTH YEAR NO. 51 CEDARVILLE, OHIO, FRIDAY NOVEMBER 24,1933 PRICE, $1.50 A YEAR g NEWS LETTER | SCHOOL NEWS I m p r o v in g RECORDS KEPT FROM STATE Mr. George B. Smith of Dayton,] Illustrated Lecture j ON FARM COST Ohio, who is the financial secretary An illustrated lecture on Alaska i given by Mr. George B. Smith, finan-j for Chas. F. Kettering Co., gave an DERAILMENTS illustrated lecture on Alaska in the OF ELECTRICITY I cial representative of G. F. Kettering j high school auditorium under the COLUM BUS.-The state capital.°,f General took the place o f| — I flin nmifll nf/vM/lrtfe. nUnMnl ! auspices of Cedarville College. The The importance of electricity on the will have the general assembly as ‘he Monday morning chapel, pictures were very beautiful. Mr. farm was shown on a county tour to guests once more this year. Cover-ihour thls week* The facts> clearly; Smith presented the facts about presented in the lecture by Mr. Smith I electrical demonstration farms Tues­ nor White has fixed December 6 as Alaska in an interesting and instruct­ and beautifully illustrated by the day. the date to call the law-making body ive manner. The college faculty and colored slides, will linger long in the During the past year, a number of in special session to adopt a liquor students and high school faculty and memories of those present. farms have cooperated with the Day- control code. He also has set the first j:*!*! students and a number of ^j||^rs The student body and faculty Of the ton Power and Light Co., and agri­ or second week in January for con­ were present. public schools are indeed grateful to cultural engineering department of vening the legislature in another The Cedrus Staff will give its an­ Ohio State university in keeping rec­ special session to enact new revenue the college authorities, who made the program possible. We wish to take nual play entitled “Big Business" in ords on the amount of electricity laws. However, there were strong the opera house Tuesday evening, used by various farm and home indications the past week that tax ' thi3 .opportunity to express our ap-! electrical appliances. Special meters predation to the Hagar Strawboard' November 28* at 8:15 P. M. Plat open problems will be included in the pro­ were attached to each piece of equip­ and Paper Company, which so kindly} Monday, November 27. Come and gram for the special session week hear one of the popular plays of this ment including the following: Electric after next. This city will also enter­ furnishes' paper to darken the audi-! torium for such programs. i ■frj season presented by a capable cast of range, deep well and cistern pumps, tain the delegates to the state repeal characters well prepared under the di­ feed grinder, milk cooler, milking convention on Dec. 5. machine, cream separator, incubator, Liquid Air Demonstration rection of Miss Basore. Mr. EUiott James pleased his audi- i Mr, Axel Bahnsen, photographer corn sheller, 15. horsepower motor, Bound volumes of the annual re­ electric brooder, electric hotbed, re­ port of State Auditor Joseph T. Tracy once, last Friday afternoon, at the H v H u t from Yellow Springs, Ohio took group High School Auditorium, as he dem-; pictures of the Y. M. C. A., Y. W. C. frigerator, poultry house lighting, for 1932 became available to the pub­ washing machine, iron, radio and hot lic last week. This report contains onstrated the unusual properties of j t;««**** A., Philosophic Literary Society, r * » ' r water heater. liquid air. This unusual program j Itxwll IIW1’ Freshmen, Sophomore, Junior and much valuable information pertaining The tour started from the Dayton to the finances of all state depart­ from the field of science proved to be j Senior classes, the faculty, Cedrus one of .the most popular and worth­ Staff, Eating Club, Tennis Club, and Power and Light Co. office iri Xenia, ments, institutions, commissions and at 9 o'clock and visited the follow­ other state activities; statistics relat­ while entertainments of the year. practice teachers. *- President McChesney addressed the ing farms in the forenoon: Frank ing to county, municipal and. school j Collins and Edward Ginaven on the operations, and other phases of gov-] . Teachers Join Red Cross Rotary Club of Lebanon at the Leb­ The teachers of the local public anon House last Thursday noon. Fairfield pike and Horace Anderson ermental finances, and also includes of Alpha. historical and descriptive sketches of schools have again responded one Dean C. W. Steele is hooked to ad­ A free luncheon was served by the ‘ state departments. The Bureau of In­ hundred per cent to the annual Bed} dress the Kiwanis Club of Xenia, company at noon in the K. of P. hall spection and Supervision of Public Gross Roll Call. Since the school 1 ————— —— December 12. at Alpha. At this place I. P. Blauser Offices, D. O. Heeter statistician, has pupils, whose parents are unable to 1 The Board of Athletic Control con­ of Ohio State university and Charles also issued a report for 1932 under provide sufficient food and clothing,! sisting of. O. W» Kuehrmann, C. W. Poland, field man of the power com­ are especially benefited by this or—-1 '■ 'jd ,lu c Co. Commissioners Farmer Friends Lend direction of the State Auditor. One Steele, J. W. Ault, Karih Bull, Walter pany spoke on the “Possibilities of table shows the total expenditures of ganization’s work, the staff is glad to! j Iliffe, Paul Edwards, Paul Orr, Homer Economic Use of Electricity , on * the the 110 cities of the State last year as take advantage of an opportunity. to i Ever Shipped Have Not Refused Aid In Corn Harvest j Murray and Regena Smith, met at the Farm and in the Home.” Miss Inez $111,859,175.04. The largest item of:•h®lp. If the people of the coramun- home of President McChesney Monday Plotner of the home educational de­ the ten divisions of expenditure was jcould only realize the amount of The finest shipment of extra heavy To CooperateForty-four friends and neighbors of cattle ever to leave Greene county Mr. Burton Turner gathered at his night. They organized by electing partment of the Dayton Power and $23,453,703.80 for debts and interest, I S°od the Red Cross does for the! President McChesney, Chairman; C, constituting 21 per cent pf the total! -children, there would surely be a.good I ab‘PP«d' from her? last. Friday. ■ What appeared to ’fcef a wide differ­ home last Friday and harvested his Light Co; discussed electrical appli­ ence of opinion between the. Xenia W. Steele, Secretary; J. W>. Ault, ances of the home. The greatest value of the report is response to Roll Call in Cedarville..! IS 3 a emen roTn ex‘ . omP~ corn crop, putting it in the crib and city authorities and county commis- barn. Mr, Turner is ill in a san­ Treasurer of Athletic Fund; O. W. In. the afternoon the tour stopped in shovving the comparative' tax rates Already this year, much material has ' son’ veteran cattle buyer, who sent i sioners over plans for!federal relief itarium at Dayton. ‘ Kuehrmann, Treasurer: of Cedrus and at the William Shoemaker dairy farm and»per capita debt in the cities, been furnished by the Red Cross andith? «*** t0 eastern markets. , . * , ed. While the shredder was in operation other plays. The Board of Athletic at Alpha, Thomas Faulkner farm in figures which vary greatly. is being made into' garments by the I Forty-four head were shipped ,by,. *® f” Control has' advisory and super-ad­ girls of the Home Economics Depart-1 Frank Townsley and son, Ralph, and ’ Acc®ramff to the coupty autl authorities eighteen men went to the field to husk Caesarcreek Twp, and home of H. C. shock corn and by four o’clock the visory direction, under authority of the Pinker of Jamestown. A large number of questions in­ ment. 23 head by William Frame. The tbey have not. refuse^: to cooperate Townsley cattle weighed 1160, having;bu^ were J10** King to /Ipsh into some' work was completed. Board of Trustees over college ath­ At each farm the various appli­ volving the recent election were re­ letics for the year. Christmas Program—December 21 ! gained 660 pounds. They 'were graz thing until they knewf their ground. The,ladies of the Kensington Club ances were inspected and the host, ferred to Secretary of State George The new bulletin which is a special Mr. Poland and Prof.
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