The Cedarville Herald, Volume 39, Numbers 27-52
Iks Qsdarvllb HaPi.13, # i . o ® p e r Y*M*r, K ^ W U H B y i .1 . , « E d ito r JEntorad a t fcha Fost-Offlea, Cedar- fttta, October 81, 1887, $« second olaaa mahter. FRIDAY, DECEMBER, 16 1816 0*0*O|0*Q tO * 0 *0 * 15*0*0*0*0*0 D A IR Y w i s d o m . O T i . mii _ uu atti Bwad your cows to a pure bred, registered dairy bull from, a fam> ily having large and profitable production o f butter faf. The handa and clothes 'o f tbs milkers should be clean and free from dust. The finger nails of the milkers should be short and clean. The dairyman who hns alfalfa, clover or cowpes hay to go with his silage does not need to bal ance up the cow’s rations. . The silo preserves the corn crop with the minimum amount o f loss, as the .entire plant la made fit for food. To obtain the best results from any cow she must be treated Wltfi uniform kindness and. fed and: milked at regular times by the same person. If possible, f o * p * o * o * o * o * o * o f o * o i P » Q o Q •*» O«•* o >4* 'O o ■*0t 0 •09 o>09 o •0* . o '*•* o .«•* o o 0•m o <4 o O •»*■ o ‘ *•* to CLEAN MILKING ROOM IMPROVES PRODUCT For a. year or more one dairyman, of the many who supplied milk to a thriv ing. young city Invariably stood at the . top In the reports of the official milk Inspector. Invariably milk from- his dairy never classed as other than clean! writes a correspondent of the Iowa ■Homestead. AlwJys bacterial count <-Was low. Various were local com ments regarding the reason for the ap parent superiority o f the products of this clean milk dairy. •Many of the comments were wide o f a true explana tion. Some evert hinted at commercial preservatives. One got. very near to -the truth when he said: “I can't see Why the man with high priced sanitary bums cannot make a better showing -than, that dairy which hasn’t one-fitfh as mrt^b money invested in buildings ns some! o f the others. There is that email‘place where the milking Is done The average Guernsey c q w will welsh about. 1,000 pounds, with, the ■ bulls weighing 200 to' '30Q pounds heavier. The head o f the Guern sey cow is long, with' a slender neck. The "body is large and deop,- showing ample capacity for dispos ing of roughage. The, flanks are thin. Lon? years of breeding for dairy Production have brought out splendid’ , animals, persistent milk ers and. of a uniform type. From those cattle have descended tho' great families of Guernseys dlstrlb- 1uted throughout the dairy sections Of the world. The cow pictured is a Guernsey. aUdthe open shed where the cows find shelter at night, hut 1 can’t see any thing superior,” The few words from his remarks, “ The small place where milking is done,” very nearly tell tho story of the production of clean milk on that farm. The cows are clean and .they are milked In a clean milking room. The milk Is handled In clean vessels and is kept cool. The separate milk ing room is the big factor wherein the clean milk dairy excels the others. Being used for less than two hours each milking period, it docs not be come dirty at any time. The milking room is constructed strictly with re gard to ttie production o f clean milk. Cement floors, cement gutters, cement mangers, cement walls with water forced through a tank provide for cleanliness and sanitation,. An almost solid row o f windows eneircling the llttkr building provides for sunlight disinfection, The unassuming owner hns wonder ful faith in his separate milking room. He says that a cfean milking place does much to Insure clean milk, The reports o f the inspector and the comments o f satisfied patrons speak volumes for the results of his effort. His method is no impractical fad. ,1s the man quoted above said, “The clean milk dairy does not have one-fifth as much Invested in buildings as some of the, others.” There Is an Idea in the plan worked out s® successfully that It h».worthy o f thought, Possibly there Is Something in it worthy o f emula tion, Possibly there is something in the separate milking room idea that wilt, enable some to raise the quality o f .their products, -■amdHiiift. ■lull >'nmUTin iir iVnr Yj The Cow at Calving Time, After calf Is born it is well to fry alt loafs to see i f they are open nmT Then lea fs cow /m d calf alone for at least six' hours, says Hoard’s Dairyman, if conditions are normal milk all four qifltrters nearly dry. Do not milk the Cow entirely dry until at least the fourth milking, and i f udder is hot or swollen do not milk dry until this con- dltfon has subsided. Milking dry soon eft dr the cow has egivetf Purposes the danger o f an attack o f milk fever. For ths fiilo, Short, immature com should he ai- wed to stand until nearly dry before itHrtg Into the silo,. That is, the urm should be nearly dry and the alk should lie nearly filled with sap, the coni I* pat in while too green m y make sour silage, ‘ . WE HAVE A Few Odd Piece* In C U T G L A S S A N D n i l o a k ; p o t t e r y TO Close Out at U mh * T h a n C o s t t Churchman’s EVERY YE.AR We have carried for the Holidays what we believed to be the largest and best assortment of Useful Gifts to be found in any drug store, This year is no exception. We invite your careful inspection of our stock and prices. CHURCHMAN’S FOR HER W E SUGGEST Hand-Bag Shoe Bag Traveling Set’ j Stationery Set Perfumizers > Perfumery’ Fountain Pen Embroidery Scissors Toilet Sets Dresser Clocks French Ivory Hair Brushes ' Hand Mirror Comb and Brush Set Boxed Stationery Toilet Wafers " Chafing Dish Stemo Outfit L O O K .V , $8.00 Comb, Brush and Mirror Set*, quadruple (IJC silver plate ........ ^ S-J H E R E , $14.00 Toilet S e t * ..............., i < * * « $5,00 Gillette Razors . . . . $5.00 Auto^Strop R azo rs ............... L.00 Gem, Jr. R a z o r s ,........ $3.89 •78c $1,50 Comb and Brush S e t s ... $9,89 ...89c $4,50 Tiger Wood C O Q Q Toilet Sets (3 pieces) e x t r a s p e c ia l t / Pocket Books, Wallets, Card W a I Ifrl". Cases, e tc ....................... V f t . — u French Ivory PieceB ’and Sets of every de scription, ranging in pride from 25c to $23,50 Set* Made Up to Order Churchman’s S P E C I A L N O O N and E V E N I N G L U N C H Fo r S H O P P E R S A N I D E A Special Prices of our prices can. On best, be had by a Thermos careful inspection Bottles - of our stock. The. * ■•Safety assortment is best Razors right now, select and it now, get it next Fountain - week. . Pens FOR HIM W E SUGGEST Thermos Bottle Thermos Lunch Kit Shaving Set Safety Razor Old Style Razor Fountain Pen Collar and Cuff Bag Traveling Sets Ingersoll Watch Humidor Razpr Strop Pocketbook Card Case Wallet Hair Brush Clothes Brush Flashlight Smoking Sets ' NO S T O R E in-Springfield can show you as complete an. assortment of Toilet BRUSHES as we can, and the prices are absolutely right. Hair Brushes, v . . . . . Clothes Brushes, ; ; . Nail, Brushes............. -pooth Brushes.. . . . . Rath Brushes., , , . . . ....................... •........... 50c to $1.75 g having Arushes.. . . . . . . . . . . . . ; . . . . . . .15c -to $3.00 * ■ t ■ -w ' C A N D I E S BELLE MEADE In Bulk SWEETS.LQWNEY’ S and in Boxes ALL GOOD AND FRESH 1-2 to 5 -LB . Boxes S j P E C I A L ’ P ' 5 LB, BOX LOWNEY ’ S, Assorted $2.20 36 South Fountain Avenue, Springfield, Ohio Cincinnati is confronted with • shortage o f labor, Eire at Warren damaged, the city hall to the extent of $40,000. Akron. merchants have petitioned council for wider-sidewallcs. .Quarries on Johnson's island, San dusky bay, have resumed work. Joseph Toohey was struck and kill ed by a switch engine at Xenia. , During the month o f March there were nearly 12,000 cases o f measles in j Ohio. i Ernest OehlenschTager, seventeen, Dayton, was instantly killed when struck by lightning. Jury at Sidney recommended mercy in finding Thomas Williams guilty of murder in first .degree. Robert Cline of Akron pleaded guil ty in federal court at Cleveland to a charge of counterfeiting. ' > Thieves stole diamonds valued at 5?,600 from the automobile of J. R. K iam y , living near Akron.. Congregation of St. John’s German E\angelical church, Tiifin, proposes to erect a $40,000 church edifice. Despondency prompted Charles Cra mer, thirty-three, Bucyrus, to kill himself. He swallowed poison. James P.uehlon, sixly-three, a rpral wail carrier, dropped dead while plow ing at his home in West Mansfield. Five men were, injured, three Ser iously, when a scaffold on which they V'ere working at Cleveland Collapsed. New postofilce in Fremont will be come the resting place of the bones of Urieh Drake, Fremont's rsfc mail car rier. A body, said by the Cleveland po lice to be that of John McDermllt of Marietta, was found In the. Cuyahoga river. Elmer Moses, unkempt and ragged, who was committed to the Ashtabula county Infirmary, had $3,000 in Cash in his 'clothes, Rev. Billy Sunday, the evangelist, will visit Tiffin June 1 and 2 to talk before the annual Seneca county Sun day school convention. Town M Otway, Beat of Scioto coun ty tobacco industry, was almost whol ly destroyed by fire. The total loss v.as estimated at $150,000. A. Cf, Harris, forty-eight, farmer, was instantly killed by a bolt of light ning while plowing In a field in Clfti* boriie township, Union county. At Massillon, Miss Alma Snyder, twenty, attempted suicide when ac cused of stealing a 50 cent pair of gloves, Her condition is critical. Fireman John Tlmmors was killed and Fireman John C. Young totally injured at Toledo when a fire engine skidded while on the way to a blaze Joseph F. Tunison, sixty-seven, re tired journalist, died fit East Liver pool from injuries Toccived when ho fell down a 150 foot cliff while pick ing flowers. President John 0. Pew o f the Youngstown iron and Steel company announced a 10 per cent increase o f wages.for all but salaried employes of Ms company. George Horn of llollefoMaine and Milton Ring of West Liberty were in jured at Bellofohtainc when the mo torcycle Miey were riding crashed into ft barbed wire fence. Pitching the trigger of a shotgun with a stick. Ray Hoskins, thirty-five, < farmer, living iii-at Brownsville, L ick .' ing county, blew off Ills head. lie had been in ill health. Mrs, Julia WiMyard, fifty-five, of Akron,, carrying out a threat she made repeatedly wtiertv despondent over 111 health. Committed,,’Srticide by drowning in Silver Lake, J. W. Johnson of Waverjy. ex-state public printer, has purchased the late ex-Senator A. R. .Van Cleat's paper, The Democrat, and Watchman, » weekly published at CIrelevIlle. Supreme court appointed H. D, Grindle o f Lima, to ‘ succeed tho late. E. B. Leonard Of Warren as a mem' her of the state bar examination com mittee. . Tiie term expires Dec. 31‘. 1917. Rev. Baline Redding, thirty, who claims he is a Methodist minister, is in jail at Ghardon, charged with as sault and battery on Miss Ethel Springer, seventeen, o f Fullerton, Geauga county. The Rev. Dr, A. B. Leonard, former pastor o f the Central Methodist Epis copal church at Springfield, and one o f the foremost men in Methodism in the United States, died at his home in Brooklyn, N. Y. . Body of Albert Waugh, a prominent farmer of Chestnut Ridge, near Steu benville, was found in 'a field-near his home. He .committed suicide by blow ing out his brains with a shotgun. Waugh hnd been 111. Former pupils of St. Aloyslus’ acad emy, New Lexington, are planning a Silden jubilee celebration for Sister Mary Suphcmia, ono of the founders of the school, who will have been a nun fifty years May 17. At Marysville Mrs. Elmer J. Bailey, in her suit for divorce, Charged that I-er husband refused to give her a quarter for trimmings for her; Easter bonnet and wouldn't allow ber a nickel to give In church. Despondency over tho death of her husband, A. G. Lockhart, a wealthy farmer of Green township, Adams county, is supposed to have been the cause of MrS, Lockhart’s committing suicide by jumping into the Ohio river. State Superintendent of Public In- &{ruction Pearson announced that 501 Seniors of high schools, more than in any previous year, took the e *mina- Hons, for four year scholarships in the college of agriculture o f Ohio State university Under the will of Sarah Kreitler, eighty, who died at Springfield, the Ohio State University receives a part of the estate, valued at $15,000, with the stipulation that the money be’ used for the encouragement of the bettor cate of livestock. PILES FISTULA Ami At.tr DISEASESOFTHERECTUM Wj «<t Urt VrofMtttn »n4 Ut* rrtMla « 1«1 h« nika* • «r-w!kH, ef them rtfiMM* m jliM hM H i w i M ttntt K* |»ln **4«# MmMMtmnr XtrtMr, P!5'* »nt W n flltaww wvl of Want*.. tr k lfK M ft t d M M SW VAti SIW AM M (M in t ) »r.i If.JorwaietiUct prtlwiietufed, EM>UlUi«4 UM, d r . j. j , M c C l e l l a n CflLUMBUS,'Q. D ll F C 1" sweMt rdkrih* r IL E J Sr.SbMt'sKnilcOtatM>|. Mis,*. Kate Kafeio, twenty, hotel tei- «jgrA»h operator at Cincinnati, Is in a Serious condition as a result o f an at tack jin her by a negro. , 'After foriv-twa -yean# o f married life, Mrs. Elisa Herford filed suit for divorce at BeUefontalno from Edward L. Herford. a contractor. Charged with feeding chickens a mixture of marbler dust to increase their weight. James Gpff was. fined $100 and costs at Cleveland., At Findlay Mrs. Charles Swisher, who died o f acute palpitation o f the heart, was delivered o f a healthy boy baby some time after her death. Otis T. Locke, sSventy-four, debn of northern* Ohio newspaper men. died at Tiflln, He was a nenhew of David R, .Locke, “ Petroleum V. Nasby.*’ William . J. Knight, seventy-eight, member of the famous Andrews raid- srs of civil war days, died at his home ;n Strycker, Hancock county. Inmates of the Perry county chil drens' home will be placed in institu tions of other counties until a new home Is built. Present home con* lemhed. The 1917 reunion of the Thirty-sixth Ohio Infantry, known as the Piatt Zouaves, wifi be held In Urbanar. A 0. McClure/ Huntsville, was elected president. Rev. J. W. Brown, colored, was fa tally stabbed by William Green at Co lumbus.. A quarrel Over Brown's al leged attentions to Green’s wife led to the affray. Writing to his supposed sweetheart caused the arrest of Theodore Con- Way at Ironton. Conway is wanted at Marion on a charge of attacking Mrs. Ida Furget. An explosion In Still No. 9 at the alant of the Solar Oil Refining com pany shook every building In Lima. The oil caught fire and the entire still was destroyed. Mrs, Dora Smith, forty, was arrest ed on the charge of shooting with ln* ed on a charge of Glonna Day, as the result of a neighborhood feud at Van Buren, near Findlay. Engineer Berry and Fireman Millet i f a Pennsylvania passenger train Were Wiled and several passengers In jured when the train left the tracks at Kings Mills station, near Cincinnati, Columbus board ot .education wAs called on by Superintendent ot Schools Francis to authorize a vote on a $3,560,000 bond Issue for the erection of twelve new school build ings. Unable to agree, the jury, which, spent five days, hearing the Mrs, Em- mft Ebel first degree murder case at DAyton was dismissed. The Woman wAs accused of killing her husband, Adam. Agnes and Alice Smetters, a g ed ! forty-eight and fifty, and Mary Strut- ton, thirty, were found dead In tho 1 Sinetters home at Lancaster, T h e : three were sitting erect In chairs. Au thorities are investigating. John Mapler, Henry Logan and Lil lian Denny were killed and Warren Hale, Mary Denny, Henry Denny and Zola Graves seriously Injured liefer Hamilton when a train struck art au tomobile in which they were riding. Matt Glaser, Cincinnati politician, surrendered following "the return, of six sealed indictments by tta* grand jury which probed into the petitions td nominate K> A. Mack for governor aii the candidate of the LAW Enforce- went party* .When you com e to Dayton to do your Xm as shop p ing be sure anJ visit this store. L e t us help you to make- your shopping an easy task. Y ou w ill find anything and everything that would please father, son o r sweetheart. Select a Most Useful Gift A Snappy or Winter Suit F or this special occasion we have gathered hundreds o f the most at tractive models and styles. Q F P INCH BACK S U I T S ............... O F PINCH BACK O VERCO A T S O F CO N SE R V A T IV E SU IT S ............... O F CO N SE R V A T IV E O VERCO A T S . AndManyOtherInterestingAssortments at $10, $20 and $25 Other Useful Xmas Presents . Consisting of i f f un4rcds o f Exclusive N e ckw e a r ............... ; , 25c to $2.00 j Hundreds o f Fine Dress G l o v e s ............$1,00 to $3.00 Hundreds o f Good W o o l Sweaters . . . . . . „.$1.95 to $7.50 ; Hundreds o f Splendid House ’C o a ts ,. . .$5, $7.50 and $10 Hundreds o f N obby Bathrobes , ............. ,$4.95 and $7,50 Silk Shirts, Madras Shirts, Percale Shirts, Silk Hosiery, Suspenders, Fur Caps, etc. UfctatafeSfc'kOfc IMS T. D. Prat. DAYTON* OHIO a....,.., ...... .. ..... 'ft**~a*> A m i$» c * D w i r t 'r r m c H i M a a f e '
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