The Cedarville Herald, Volume 38, Numbers 27-52
i MMNINasVMMipi 5 THIS STORE! Is « store steadily doing the right things, hour by hour* in looking after its customers’ interests, never tiring in its purpose to please and serve, It has its staff o f courteous salespeople trained for years back in our lecture-roama, I t has faithfully persevered in its one price and retum- ableness o f purchases, uninjured, i f desired, with cer tain necessary reasons. It is in direct and daily communication w ith every manufacturing and fashion center on both sides o f the sea, by means o f it s offices abroad. All in a ll—it is a store truly deserving the confidence and praise given by its friends and admirers from far and near! * The Elder & John ston Co. (DAYTON’S SHO PP ING CENTER .) mm M EAR ICR ’S 2nd and Main , Extra Special forT h is W eek "o',. •. y \ ■* Fur Trimmed Suits Slxesfor Women, Small Women And Misses , $20.00, $25.00 and $35.00 A comprehensive sboymig o£ Now Models ah these exceedingly popular prices and they are splendid values, darefully made, trom excellent materials, in all the new fashionable shades of the season, Velvet-Trimmed , Braid-Trimmed Fur-Trimmed - AS YOTJR FANCY MAY DESIRE Wonen’s and M isses *1 'Winter Coats $15, $20, $25 and $35 ‘ 1 , ‘ T -rt « T h e B e s t Valves Known Coats th a t cannot be . duplicated elsewhere a t this moderate price—rich garments th a t pay tribute to the superb, taste' of their new llnas. Mostly fur-trnmPed and fashioned from. Seal Velour Flush, Cable Gord Velours, RippleeeaLVelours,. Plaid Novelties, . Velvets and Corduroys; every newest color; Uned’thronghont, T h e M earick C o lk e Co. DAYTON, OHIO . % . _ Aft . . j i iuu;n*..| j .ju.i ..in in ,.n ilmtii ■nainj a S p ec ia lty o f Women’s and Children’s Shoes That Fit and Wear Frazer’s Shoe Store ■ * For 16 Years th e Leader XENIA* -. - OHIO D irect to th e F a rm ers We null furnish direct to the farmers of Greene county the best serhm and virus on the market a t 3 cents per G. O. for serum and virus: 30 G. C. serum and l t t . C. virus will immune f a t loo lb , pigs their natural life. Pigs threo to ten days eld can be immuned their natural life with 10a. <3. scrum and l O. O. virus. We will send you aft expert to teach you how to vacci nate your own hogs. REFERENCES Phone O. A. Dobbins, Cedarville, O., References South-west National Bank ot Commerce of Kansas City, Mo, Order your serum from W. K. Embry, our agent, Stockyards, Cincinnati, O., or Inter-State Vaccine Go., Kansas.Oity, Mo., rsssa ✓ TRY OUR JOB PRINTING GOOD PLACES TO *T0AK fEED. 1. Dry, w*ll-v»nttlsted cellar. 2, Dry attic cr storeroom, 3, Dry, ventilated ahed. 4. Any dry, ventilated build, Ing," I. H. C. LECTURE CHARTS. Your Chamber of Commerce Should * Put op a Series of Lectures With I. H. C. Chart* and Slide*—Get Your Farm Demonstrator or Superinten dent of School* to Give You a Prae- : ileal Talk on Agriculture^ You will be surprised to see how intensely Interested your bankers and merchants will be. If you want to put your organisation on the map, plan an agricultural campaign of education, Ar- range a program. Give one lecture a week on any of these subjects: Soils, Corn, Alfalfa, Poultry, Weeds, Live Stock, Plies, etc.( Follow each lecture with a discussion of the subject. Make your chamber of commerce an edu cational .center, not Just a “club," ,Your town 1 b built on the surplus earn ing* of the farm. Business men in town should take a keen interest in the industrial welfare of the. town’s ’’trade territory," There is nothing constructive in grabbing.business from other comma-, nitles—create new business In your own community. Have a chamber of agriculture and. commerce: If you want to make your organiza tion a place of Interest, plan a three months’ lecture course- .Use JL H, C- lecture charts and slides. You can, no, doubt, And among the members of your chamber of commerce men wbo can give interesting and instructive, talks on any, of the subjects treated In these charts. WHY CROPS RUN OUT. . The question is often raised as,to t Whether crops "run out” br not. To say that crops.do not "run out” would- be .to deny that any variations are pro duced by changed conditions or envi ronment. When plants are* brought', into new conditions of soil, climate,, or methods of farming less favorable,,1 they will tend to deteriorate or "run* out.” ‘ . " ; Desirable Qualities Suffer First Un der Unfavorable Conditions. If coni' is, planted too thick (seven or eight stalks per hill) a large yield of foli age will be obtained, but the yield of grain will be small. Under unfavor able conditions the plant tends to re vert to its original condition, and the particular' thing for which the plant ia grown and which gives it value suf fers first and-most. Rest Methods Necessary. It is only by the best methods- of seed selection and of cultivation that the farmer can hope tomaintain, the valuable qualities of his crops, otherwise they will, dete-' riorate or "run out” and it will be nec essary for him to secure seed from someone who bas paid more attention to the improvement o f his crop*. *BEED CORN WEEK.** The Last Weak In September or the First Week In October Should Be *6et‘Aside a* Read Cord Week In th* Corn Beit. We have "Arbor Hay," Would it not also bo well to have a "Heed Coin Day?” A day when everyone should begin the harvesting and storing of his seed for the following spring. We laugh at our grandfathers for planting their potatoes and sowing their grain "in the moon,” that is, in certain phases of tho moon. The value of this practice lay, not in the fact as supposed by many that the moon ex ercised any influence on tho crop, but in the having of a definite time and plan for the doing of Tarious things on the farm, If the harvesting of seed com, like tho feeding of stock, came every day, it would-be attended to on time, but it is nothing more nor ’less than hu man that the work which comes only 'Occasionally or once a year, as in the case of the harvesting of seed com should he put Off or neglected alto gether, unless there is a definite time and plan for the work. 1815 A BAD YEAR. Indications point to trouble In the corn belt this year, 1915 I* an abnormal year. ExcesalVS moisture and cool weather has retarded the growth of corn* es pecially In the northern state*. Com will be late In maturing and there wilt be a tendency to gather seed com late. Watch this. Don’t wait too long. Don’t wait till frost beats you to It, Frost bitten corn will not grow., Gather your' seed corn before frost comss. Store It where It will dry out and not freeze or mold. Don’t forget that next year’s corn crop will depend on the seed you gather this fall. Pick Your Seed Com Early. A sack with the mouth held open by a keg hoop and strung over the shoul ders by a rope or strap is very con venient in gathering seed in the fall, The com may be piled on the ground a t the end of the rows or in the mid dle of the field and gathered up In a wagon or sled made for that purpose. Com should not be left on the ground overnight or piled up in bins or cribs. In tbii condition it may mold or tfeeiA ........................ "mMwas—SHawi , ........ I «wHr«*n.for MMHTSCftMOH Add jrfrtxttt o* , I tax (rf iMtefit Klfofdmttoti, ft WBU»o)|>r»irW j f f i sAp r AP,S8.n»»a » * *« • •»*»*•« j *VT m pMlVIt* WriteW(w/* i D. SWIFT & CO. KEEPING HOBS* « FRANCE BewMHMy ftu&M, **Mi R**d For On* Day Only I* fttusbfc a* * Tie*#. In tbs Franck market* 7*0 any portion of food you “ ey wish. Nothing i* too waall. No tradesman stares If yon say, “M’siau, I want one tvg,” or "I will tak* a miqugrt (which is uu eighth o t * poeudt of butter." And if you ask tor a half pound of meat he eat it to weigh three- quarter* of a pound. 3fou don’t let him, and he know* it. The French housewife ha* been, for generations ed ucating tiie French shopkeeper to sell in the way that *he wt uld have him. It Is popularly supposed by some people that there i* economy in buy ing in hulk. But the Frenchwoman says otherwise. She say* that of a large quantity some of it is almost sure to spoil, and in the end yon lose more than yon nave gained even by your wholesale price: So she buys her but ter, as everything else, just enough for tho day. And she has a marvelous in tuition for guessing what that amount will be down to the very sou. The test of her skill in housewifery, she con siders, 1* an empty cupboard at sun down. Then she requires no Ice to keep things over until the next day. The cost of Ice, which id many an American household amounts to $1 * week, would he an ifhfhinkable ex travagance in France. There Is no ice box among the fittings of the Paris -kitchen. Instead, there |s in every apartment the cold storage cupboard, set in the kitchen wall with shutters on the outside, through which, there is always a. ’circulation of air,. A wire netting on the inside of the shutter pro tects the. food from'dust The cupboard is an entire success in keeping food tor the length Of time that the Parisian housewife requires, ' else, you may bo sure, she would not n«e I t for she never throws anything -away. Not to waste the smallest scrap or crumb is a fundamental dogma pf lier housekeeping creed. Even every stale crust of bread must be 'saved. It is grated to reduce itjto crumbs. These are kept ill the tin can that sets on the eheminee shelf over tiuhstove, There arc five or six purposes for which you use breaderumhs-tor French toast, for .bread soup or for pudding, tor fill ing poultry or lu frying croquettes or •‘breading’* chops, or, very important Indeed, Is it to know that by mixing an equal part of them with chopped meat -worth only 10 centimes' and an egg and rolling ajl in a cabbage leaf to bake In the oven they serve the .plever purpose of making the meat go a t least twice m far again, Tea; it is some fussing to fix it. But it doesn't matter a t *11 that this takes time. The , Frenchwoman applies always but one test, "Is it cheaper,I’VPictorial Re view, ; , An Indignant Post. Beratagetv the famous French poet, Whose greatest gift lay in writing lit tle poems which he called songs, was particularly dependentupon the chance visits of the muse. Ho was once visited by the author and academician Vlennct, who said to him: "Yon must have written several songs sines X s*w yon last” “I have only ,begun one.” answered Bet-anger. "0 tits, one? I am astonishedr*‘ ex- churnedYUmnot, Bmagor Itecama indignant. ••Humph!" he xboutsd, "J>o you think one can turn off a song a* one turn* off a tragedy?’* Outlawry. Outlawry existed in England, and Scotland from very early days. Earl Godwin and Ilereward the Wake were famous political outlaws. At one time the sentence was used to punish any one who would not pay the "were,” ot blood money, to the relatives of a man he had klljed. In civil proceedings it was abolished ia 1879, In the old days an outlaw could be killed whenever or wherever he waa encountered, but this part of the penalty was abolished, A Modern Solomon. A Philadelphia police magistrate was called on to decide the ownership of a dollar bill which was found lu the street by a negro and claimed to have been loet by a white man, After hear ing the atory of each claimant the court said: "I believe the dollar belonged to the white man, but since the negro found it b« is .entitled to a reward, I there fore decree that each take BOcents and call it-a day’s work.” Ru*ty Stool. Onions are good for cleaning steel ar ticles that have mated. Rub the .rust spots with a piece of onion and leave for twenty-tour hours. Wash and pol ish with hath brick dust, moistened "with turpentine. Wash again in suds and scald with clear water.-' Knives that have rust spots of long standing should be plunged into an onion and allowed to stand for some time. Fin ish the cleaning process as above. Wise Judge. A Montana woman sued for divorce because her husband kissed the serv ant girl. “You want this man punished'?” said the jtidge. "I do,” said she. , “Then I shall not divorce you froift him,” said the judge. Not Quito. “How is the baby getting along in trying to talk?” “Well, I must say his efforts have not as yet rnqr with pronounced suc cess."—Baltimore American. » Opportunity seldom comes with a letter of iptroductiop. Thackeray'* Secret, Trackeray defied all rules. His, wonderful eye saw everything and everybody. He lived' and enjoyed life with an absolutely unimpaired and childlike zest, and his brave, simple, tender spirit- endured to the end. Where other men are connoisseurs of fine flavors and delicate nuances Thafckeray was a connoisseur of the broadest and biggest things of life—its pathos, it* absurdity, its courage, its loyalty,, Gossip, Just the Game. , 1 “De only difference wealth make* to some families,” said Uncle. Eben, "is a chance to gossips on « front porch instead- of over de back fence." O U R THANKSGIVING S A L E We Call Particular Attention to our Thanks- giving Sale Which Starts Thursday Morning, November 18th, and Lasts ten Days. We expect to demonstrate our POWER TO ^UNDERSELL by the moet emphatic price con- jc«B8ionB that have ever been offered you. No de partment in this big store but what will strain every muscle to give you such genuine borgains that you'll have much to be thankful for If you bpt come in- We've had sales before, many of them but we can't recall the time when in spite of the advancing prices that,we have been in a position to offer such high grade merchandise^at B]tich° low prices. It will pay you and pay you weM t o . visit thi» «tore daring this sa le/ < v " Everything is included in this big slaughter sale. Women's, Misses, and Children's, Ready-to-wear Garments, Men's, and Boys' clothing, sweaters, shoes, hosiery, underwear,-rugs, comforts, and* blankets, furnishings for Men and Women. Take advantage of this opportunity to supply your.winter outfit. We pay round trip traction and railroad, fare to out of town customers whose purchases amount to $10.00 or ever. 28 & 30 E. Fifth St„ DAYTON, - - OHIO This month’s' Butterick Patterns are 10c and ISc—none higtier * ¥ i n : from th e fin e ta ilo r in g o r from a dom in a ting sen se Of th e artistic, th e Suits and Overcoats tf - w e are se llin in g are c e r ta in ly a ll th a t an y m an cou ld h op e fo r or e x p e c t . Don’tWait! Stop! Holiday Novelties Coming in A. W EAVER Main Street, Opposite Court-House Xenia, Ohio, * •# 'iv 0 -frank** r8'0, brning, TER TO i n Ice con- 0 ■No de ni every .t« ' it you'll n ome in. re can't . b' i • g prices Is « Mh high 0 rill pay ring this V B •Hi tter sale. 01 rto-wear in ajv a, shoes, lankets, la ev supply V t1 ‘M ; tb , EV. - - ' Si ra ai E M . . ) Taction .*whoso \ , - I idi 3 e i sh( -B, her e N sol Bt 1 da ev. Sp am 1 Da of spl ■ J . 1 $15 flu Wi all .*»n PI; pOl >! f ers • wii t fill Fo Cl da th of to ’ oil th He tn h r Ce to of ta> ov al hi P» Tl in Ah In re id.
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