The Cedarville Herald, Volume 38, Numbers 1-26

nftrrimtm SMM rnmatummimm N ew Millinery Store ^ safcUSF J f r fiew Goods-r-Latest Creations in Spring Millinery t ' Spring Opening Friday, March 12 Saturday, Mqrch 13 * v p- The latest shades in King George Red, Sand and Putty as well a s Belgian Blue, Shepherdess Sailors and Tipperary hats, Jackson & Dean South Main Street, <3> ' :■ Cedaryille, Ohio CLOSING OUT SALE. *39,0!) Mr. A. E . R ichards spent day in Oolumbuson busities. Mom Mrs. Ralph Baldwin and son, Robert, of Chicago, arrived W ed ­ nesday evening and .w ill spend some time with her pa ren ts, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Jackson. Jiev. 8. J . Kyle D ‘. D., now pastor, of the Biggsville, 111., congregation, formerly a Gedarvtlle boy, under­ went a surgical op e ra tion , f o r ' gall stones a t th e hosp ital in Burlington, Iowa.- L a te st word he was doing well. ’ . ‘ You can buy Lime and Sulphur solution both in the, dry and liquid form a t O. M. Ridgway’s. Mr, Lee Nash a ttended th e J . C. Townsloy sale Wednesday and purchased “ Prlsoila” a noted H o l­ stein cow. She is a registered cow and few, if any one. Knew she had a long pedigree. Rev. W. A, Condon and wife of Trenton, a n d ;Mrs, J.' P, Schaffer and daughter, Jean , of Dayton, a t­ tended the Wfttt-Siegler nuptials, S3. J . W h itt, of Xenia, Will be in Gedarville n ex t Tuesday the 2i’»rd to db clock repairing. Leave orders a t Nagley's S tu d io ,. - ‘•Get your Sassafras, Locust and Bed Cedar posts of K e rr & H a st­ ings Bros. (10 d) For Sale:—18 stacked hay. or 2o tons of well H . M. Murdock, Contributions to the B e lg ian .fund should be delivered to the fre igh t depot by Sa tu rday evening. —AN ESTRAY—A tiger cat, two wide black stripes around body. L a s t seen m the alley near Wolford's b lacksm ith shop. Answers to the n am e c ” .Jack . Is fa t and sleek, very friend ly disposition. In fo r­ mation regarding his whereabouts w ill be gratefu lly received and finder rewarded. K a t h r y n M c G iv e n —Man p a st 80 w ith horse and buggy to sell Stock Condition Powder In Greene County. Salary *70per month. Address 9 Indu stral Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind iana. In th is issue will be found the . financial statem en t of the Cellar^ v ille Building & Loan Association. The directors ju s t recently paid the dsufcl fl p e t cent semi-annual dividend. The Association is in a prosperous condition. The many friends hero w ill bo pleased to hoar of the now appoint­ m en t Of Mr. Carl Ostorstrom ae general contracting - freigh t agen t fo r the W abash railroad , itt Dos Moines. Mr, Ostorstron when a young lad was taken up by Mr* Fred McMillan and given employ­ m en t th a t ho m igh t Continue his education. He graduated from high school and from Tnrkio college and entered the railroad field and 1ms made good. X-.Ray incubator, g reatest Catch­ ing machine on the m arket. . Phone 2-122. J . W. Moore, Agt. Leave yotir watch repa ir work at Nagley's Studio for S. J . W h itt, —Angle iron fence posts, superior to any other make. (10 d) ■ Kerr & H astings Bros W a ll Paper Cleaner a t Bldgways’s, 8 cans for 25c. C. M -M ON EY TO LOAN ON FARMS a t 5i£ w ith privilege to pay on the principle a t any timo. W rite, Farmers Loan &T rust Co,, Room 8, Steele Bldg., Xenia, Ohio. Mr. Vance Burba, who is tele: graph operator on the Pennsylvania in Cincinnati is home on a two Weeks vacation. • Miss Agnes Stormont, who has been teaching a t Ind ian Harbor, In d .t is home on account of illness Mr. O. L. Smith was a business visitor in Cincinnati, Thursday. Concentrated ' Cough Medicine will save you money. A BOo bottle of White Pine E x tra c t and Tar Compound makes a full p in t of splendid cough syrup and saves the user abou t $2,00 a t C. M. IUdgway’s —Red Cedar fenco posts, corner posts and braces, equal to Ohio Locust and of equal value. Kerr & Hastings Bros Members of the M, E . church as well as citizens in general woro shocked a t the news of the sudden death of Hr. J . A. Story In Spring- Hold Tuesday eveilnig. In company w ith o thers ho was on his way to a ttend a banquet and was stricken on the stree t. Ho was carried Into a drag sto le where lie died twenty m lnu tss la te r. Dr, Htory was horn n ea r Bowersville and was oi years of'age and leaves only Ids Wife, formerly Miss Mary Stevens of Mt; Washington. Fo r the p a st five years he has been superintendent ot the d istric t and was one of the lead ing men in tmfiuonee In tho con. forencev Tho funeral was held T hu rsd ay afternoon from the High afreet M .'E , church, Springfield, «t which ho was for ten years pastor. In ternational double disc harrow com p le te .......... In te rnationa l single disc harrow*complete..................... $23.00 In te rnationa l 8 fork bay tedd e r.... ...................................$29.50 In ternational side delivery r a k e ................. $40.00 In te rnationa l Blue Bell Cream (Separator No. 2 ............. $16.00 In ternational Blue Bell Cream Separator No l ..........................$41.00 No 17 U. S. cream sep a ra to r... $55,50 Gale Bure Drop corn planter... $31.00 Gale Balance frame Hammock seat Cu ltivator......................$22 00 Gale 14 in, walking p low ........$12,00 Gale 18 iu. walkiug plow ........ $11.00 Empire IQ-7 grain drill with ferti­ lizer a ttachm en t and grasB seed­ er complete with seat.... .’....... $70,00 No, 4 new Id ea Manure spread­ er ............................................,....$93.00 No, 10 Nlsco Manure Spread­ er.................................... ..$98.00 Associated Gasoline 21*' li/p....,$38-00 Fuller & Johnson engine and pump jack h. p .......49.50 G, M. CROUSE LEGAL. NOTICE Lela M. Bowyer, Plaintiff,, vs, ' , Chas. W. Bowyer, Defendant: Common. Pleas Court, Greene County, Ohio. . Charles W. Bowyer place of residence Riverside, Virginia, will take notice th a t on th e 28th day of January , 1915, said Lela M. Bowyer filed In said court , her petition against him for divorce upon the grounds of wilful absence for more than three years and gross neglect of duty, and th a t the same will be for hearing a t th e Court House in Xenia, on 'March 22ac|, 1915, a t 9o'clock a. m ., or as sooii thereafter as the same can be reached, by which time defendant must answer or demur to said petition or judg­ ment may be taken against him. (Signed) Lela M. Bowyer CHURCH SERVICE. R. P. CHURCH (MAIN STREET) Teachers’ meeting Saturday evening at 7 o’clock. , Sabbath School Sabbath morning at 9:30 o’clock. Preach ing service a t 10:30, C» Ev Society a t'5:30.' P rayer ’meeting "Wednesday at 7:00, UNITED, PRESBYTERIAN. Sabbath School a t 9;80. A t 10:80 a. m,, Rev, Ralph D* Kyle, secretary o t the Beard of Education w ill address the congre­ gation, Y .p . C. TJ. a t 5:30 p, m., Dorothy McClellan, leader. P reaching a t 6:80 p. m ., by the pastor. Subject, Joseph, the Slave. This is the second of a series of sermons on Joseph. ■Prayor meeting Wednesday a t 1:80. ' —F or S a i K:—A lo t of No. 1 oak fence post. Edw. Dean, Cott ge for ron ton B /Ch tllico tho street, Mrs. J . O. ptew art, igEreak up a cold in one day, 2uc a t C, M. Ridgway’s. .Mrs, RobortRood, who died Jan. 20,1915, and her casket placed in the ,vault in the Woodland cemetery, Xenia, was buried Thursday with brief funeral services. MisseB B ertha Jackson and Isa Dean have opened a m illinery store a t the old stand on Main St., and have a beautiful lino of goods a t reasonable prices. Mrs. J. II. Fortney was called to SprJirrGeld, FrLiay, by the death of ner grandmother. Mr. Foster McMillan of Blooming­ ton, Ind., is visiting friends here, Mist? Alberta Creswell has been sick the past week with tonsilitia. A vory protty wedding took place fit 4:80 Wednesday afternoon a t the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Sicglor w.hen their daughter,Rose Charlotte Siegier became tho bride of Mr. W1J Ham Robert W att. The ceremony was performed by Dr. H. C, Middle- ton of Yellow Springs and was w it­ nessed only by immediate relatives Proceeding the ceremony Mr. G. F. Siegier sang “ She is Mine" accom­ panied by Miss Bello Middleton on the piano. While tho couple entered Miss Middleton played ’Goodnight’ and the wedding march ffvin Men­ delsohn. Tho bride wore her travel­ ing cost'utn a Belgian bins tailored su it and a corsage bouqiletof bride’s roses. Following tiro ceromony a three course supper was served the table decorations being carnations and ferns. Tim bride and groom left th a t evening on a trip to A tlanta, Ga. and other Southern points. On their retu rn they will go to house­ keeping on Cedar Dale farm, it be- Ing the intention of Mr, It, O. W att to move to town about tho flriifc of the month. Tile- bride and groom have the hearty congratulations of their many friends. }!.- Till:; for Hi<mnatlMi' Postmaster W. A. Turnbull moved thi® week into his elegant new homo on -Cedar street which is about com­ pleted, Mr. C. IV. Crouse is again a resident of the village having moved into the Randall property last Thursday. Mr. Cash Gordon, who purchased tho Crouse, home near the corporation line on tiie Columbus pike, move® to his new home last Thursday. Justice Andrew Jackson decided a ease last Friday in favor of o. M. Ridgway against 13. 13. Clark of Yel­ low Springs, who operates a grocery in the Ridgway room. Several wit­ nesses wero called. Failure to pay the rent according to contract 4s the basis of the cult and Mr. Clark was given 1.0 days to vachte. CONCERNING WHEAT. Wheat is not a ruifnrtnjy profit­ able ernp, \ t ! e \ t it Jjot compare favorably svith the oil), er leading crop;: ■corn, hay, to­ bacco. rottou and alfalfa—if wo accept (Uo cost investigation!) of tho United P u ;r i department of agriculture at their face value. Winter wheat continues to hold <*\ <♦>■ g its own on the general farms of '% * the eastern, central and north- (•> <v western states because of its pe- * Ready to .Go to Work. "Let me see," said the editor to A hew acquisition, a graduate of tho college of Journalism. "I hardly know what to put you at.’’ "Until you decide,” replied tlio man, "I’ll sit down and write a few leading editorials.”— Topeka Journal, CASTOR IA For Infant* and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Boars tho Signature of eullar fitness in the rotation and * the fact that it can be grown <•> without competing with other & crops for the fanner’s labor, f There is little question that at J" least half (lm-total wheat crop of ib the country, is produced wfih n very narrow margin of profit, and winter wheat may ho re­ garded as a by product of the farm roiatbo v hich ip itself is not profllubi.', a t least on most central end eastern farms. No ™ yield of less than twenty lyishels % an acre can be regarded us a # profitable trap wben it is consul- 4 <*■- eml apart from the vultieof the i; "J growing wheat as a means of % ty securing a stand of grass or clover or of utiil.-iiig land during <•’ tiro winter.—Country Gentleman, J> SELECTING SEED CORN. Early Selection From tlie HHI Has Im­ po rtan t Advantages. Hill selection of seeTl Is urged by every institution interested in the im­ provement of corn. By selecting corn from the standing stalks la the field one can consider other things besides the ear itt'clf. The height of the ettr on the stalk and the strength of tin; stulle it; vy both be considered., and whether'hr not the cur grew on a stalk tlmt had the whole hill to itself or had to compete with two or three other stalks-can be determined, wlsi.e If one waits until-the.corn.bus-been cut these factors cannot he considered. While the large, heavy dans, are de­ sirable, one cannot profitably select them a t the expense of maturity, be­ cause corn that will not mature is bound to be an unprofitable crop. Early selection tow the hill .avoids^ the danger of the corn,being injured by frost while it is still damp in the husk. It also allows for ample time for the corn to become thoroughly dried out before freezing weather, which is very important in maintain­ ing a strong germination.—A. D. Wil­ son. Director of, Agricultural Exten­ sion, University Farm, St. Paul. Portable S tock Chute. Every farmer has occasion to load some animals into a wagon, and many do this by building a stock chute. Usually those chutes ate built as per­ manent fixtures in connection with feed racks, but are often made bo they can be taken from one part of the farm to another.. When a chute of this kind is built heavy and strong enough to support the weight Of a mature hog or a large calf i t becomes a clumsy thing to move. An Indiana-farmer has solved”tills problem of inconvenience by placing his chute on n truck. The CHUfBOKATHUCK. wheels and u'xles used In making his chute w&re parts of old machinery found on the farm. The wheets were taken from an old mower. The short end of the chute -is provided with two strong iron hooks which are sharpened so as to engage the bottom of the wagon hod and to prevent the. chute slipping back when tho nntmals start upward. With such an arrangement there is no difficulty in building a dmto of ample strength because the question of weight Is of small impor­ tance. The chute can be hooked on be­ hind the wagon and hauled to any part of the farm. L SOME BEE WISDOM. Beekeeping Is fast becoming the bust ness of the specialist, and tilts num her of men who devote their entire at­ tention to the business la rapidly in­ creasing. However, there Is no reason why the average farmer cannot keep a few colohies of bees to supply honey for home consumption, with perhaps some surplus for'sale in good years. in moving swarms of bees long dis­ tances ns much care as possible should be taken to prevent sharp jars and bumping. This can perhaps be best prevented by crating with as much ex­ celsior or other padding between the hives mid outer casing as possible. The United States department o.f ag­ riculture attributes most of the report­ ed decrease to the brood diseases of bees which nro now found widely dis­ tributed in the United States. Tlio de­ partment lias knowledge of these dis­ eases In about 20 per cent of all coun­ ties in tho United States. Where dis­ ease exists beekeepers often lose colo­ nies and attribute their loss to Some other cause. Because of these facts tho department advises persons Inter­ ested in lines to inform themselves con­ cerning these diseases. It is quite pos­ sible to keep bees with profit with dis­ ease prevalent in the neighborhood pro­ vided the beekeeper know* how to treat u e disease. K l I X T H i C O U G H ano C U R E tm U IN G S W i DR.KING‘5 NEWDISCOVER! EQWI.QO .........P i . W A M N r s m J Springfield, Ohio Invite the Public to ILnjoy Spring Exposition Of Authentic Styles . . The nations of 'th e entire world have contributed their best, their. * rarest, their most interesting. * Coats, Suits, Dresses, Gowns, .Blouses, Lingerie, Silks, Dress Goods, Laces, Trimmings, White Materials, Linens, Wash Goods, Hosiery, Gloves, Ribbons, Novelties aud Men's Furnishings, For The Home Rugs, Linoleums, Curtains, Draperies, of which we show' the most varied stocks in this section. . 4 •< b- *■ r . . ■ • . . # . ■■- The March Sales are Now In Full Operation Probably there are few events so broad in the econmics they encompass for these sales include practically everything in wearing apparel a s ' well as things for the home—and at everjr angle they fulfill the mission intended for them— to make MARCH the best time of all the year to inspect and to buy. ehanCPI We pay your iure both ways on purchases of $15,00 or over. Meals served American plan 25c - *BUSHNELL BUILDING Luncheon a la carte. SCHMIDT’S We intend to lead during the year 1915 by always selling for less - . V ' * < * ’ Seal Shipt Oysters Special —FOR— Friday and Saturday Svveitzer Cfiieese per lb ....... 24c Llmberger Ohcese .per lb....l9o Brick Cheese p'or lb......... ...;21c Regular 10c package of . Home Made Sauer Kraut Per lb. . . . . . . .2c C,orn Flakes..,.;.................... 6c Tomatoes, per can ...... 8a Corn, per epu... :..................... Cc Lenox soap, 3 bars for........ lOp Salted Herrings for........ . 2c \ T?OOT> lYMolce or Water touches ism&uurr gvstur ? ,\NoChemicalVve'cryafivE \ um 4. iVRaturai TV stot ,B'eibwss ■UjiaUty GmWtttWKp ‘Sealshipt’ Oysters Cheaper Than Meat A F resh Delicious Table Oyster. Tacked in Sealed Gases, ; Solid Meat No Water 25c A QUART Potatoes K Jef?rbuhis 50c Fancy Apples Per Bushel 75c H. E. Schmidt 6 Co, Wholesale and Retail Grocers 30 South Detroit Streec, Xenia, Ohio. 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