The Cedarville Herald, Volume 41, Numbers 27-52

mmmm T WJgLL^jCi C. ANDERSON. ladles’BrownandGray Lace Boots Yrtth bi*b P a m o r new m ilitary Keels $6,50 to $10.00 #*• Black Kid, .Boots, both high a n d low Keek $3.50 to $9.00 Boys*, Girls and Children’s Shoes in superior grades. ilv t f . We specialize on fitting Children's Shoes m Frazer’s Shoe Store /, "* ' Xenia? Ohio" " r SCHM IDT ’S r - s 4 ! m To buy Potatoes, Look 'at the quality and )eck v *.-•> * »■ • * .• » •« t-.» • $1 .58 $ll%jrice will move them fast. Per p . . . -. Per bushel*.. • m Plenty of Apples The demand for apples is great, but a new .ship­ ment juet arrived will keep everybody supplied. Solid, fine apples. PRICED RIGHT. Kt a Choice hand pidked 12K c N avy B ean s, lb . {■ T * S c hm id ts B lend , I t ’s fine. ‘ S te e l Cut Per, po j ind , . , . 17c /* « ,* v • Plenty of Cabbage for Saner Kraut Cool Days Suggest Oysters. Have you Tried Them. P lum p ,ju icy Fresh Oys ters from Am erica's b e st b e d s , th a t g rea test o f a ll, m o st nu tr itiou s sea food . H. E . Schmidt & Co. X EN I A , OHIO U. 3. ITo-ld A.‘ltnluisfcCftUoa'JLi\c«u8e, O. 45,d7il. On Friday, NovJJth, * goodly hums * j her of th# fritwids and relatives gal*,- , ered in iha 2nd U. I*, church of Xenia ( to pay a last tribute of reepect to the ; memory of Wallace C, Anderson, who,. while in the service of hi* country,} ou t hi# death in the water# of Pen- uncoil Bay, Oct. 80th. The service# were in charge of hi# pastor, Rev. J- S. E. McMichael, who was assisted by Dr. J . 0. Carson, who for some 30 years had been the family pastor, and Dr, W. R, McCUesney, -who as Pres­ ident of CedarviUe College had been in dose touch with Die young man dur­ ing his student days. After prayer by Rev. McMichael. a quartette of the iSnd Church and the reading of the {scripture lesson by Dr, Carson, Rev, McMichael spoke, basing bis remarks! on Mark U'A “Why. was this waste of the ointment mad^?'* After set­ ting forth the circumstances under which‘the question was first asked, he found a dose analogy between the critical Judas and the pelfcentered man who, in the face of the tragic Happenings of the today, asks “Why should 1 make any sacrifice? Why should I waste myself? Never ris­ ing above the interests of self, the needs of the worn -and wounded mid dying upon the battlefields make no appeal to such an one. Others who ask the same question as to waste, are the unimaginative economists, the rank materialists .who can see noth­ ing beyond that which has a commer­ cial value. None can deny in these days there is a fearful waste of men and money ,apd -material that will leave the worid the poorer for genera­ tions tp come, but the trouble with'the coldly calculating man is that he is blind to anything -beyond this. But ini chis Very less of material thing there is a gain of sacrifice that is beyond arithmetical computation, Back of this expenditure is a principle, an ideal and it is for that that men lute Wallace Anderson are pouring 'their dVes. ’ That principle was in ‘the heart and that ideal before the eyes of Wallace Anderson, A year ago he had heard the pall of bleeding human­ ity and since then the one thot of his hfe lmd been to enlist in some branch of the service'that he might help to make the,world safe for democracy. But to him it was more than the .call of humanity, more than the cause of democracy, it was the cause of the kingdom of -righteousness and . the Kingdom- of Bod. His life, then, he he lias poured out as ointment to a- noint the Lord not for burial as did Mary, but to. anoint Him for His cor­ onation. as King of Kings over the nations of earth. -His life thus pour­ ed out was not as wasted ointment, but the arf.has been accepted by his Master with the commendation “He has wrought a good work for Me!'* JeaUs never uses the wOrd ‘waste’ in connection with an act done for Him­ self, i t hat no placerin his vocabulary, but that which the world regards 1 ac wasted he accepts in the same fine spirit in which it'was’given and places to ’the eternal profit of the giver, So today we tbinlc of the .life that has been poured forth and amongst those of US who knew Mm in CedarviUe, amongst Ms friends in Colorado and at Cooper and there, irt the camp a t Pensacola, the memory of it stealB with a sweet fragrance over U3 and, we say with the singer of old 'His name, his influence, is as ointment poured," forth!” Dr. J. (1. Carson. using Romans 14:7-8 as a basis for his remarks said Christian’s life was the fact that he belonged to Christ, .that to him it mat­ tered not whether it be life or death, Whatever was pleasing to his Master would be Well with him. Wallace C* Anderson had dedicated his life to jesus Christ and lie to him the war appeared aS a field in Which he, might serve his Lord. With the thot of be­ longing to Cod, he had donned the^un­ iform of liia country and had given His life not merely to the causeof de­ mocracy but to the caus e Of righte­ ousness and of Cod. Tears there may be as wo knew that ,he will no long­ er he with ua here, but the spsiow is mingled With gladness as we praise God who hath given him the victory shru our.Lord Jesus Christ, Dr. HcChesncy after touching upon the intimate association he had had with Wallace Anderson and paying a high and deserved^ tribute to the young man’s character, recalled the words of God to the aged Moses a t Mt, Nebo “Go up -—and die!” Moses With his heart set upon leadlnglsreal into h te promised Canaan was only permitted to view the land from a i’or-ofE mountain top and then he died; So Wallace Anderson with his high hopes and sd**Us was hot to see them realised, dying just as humanity was„ about to enter the Promised Land,of peace. Yet today, having died in Christ and for Christ’s cause his rejoicing in Heaven was that by his death he had helped to bring peace upon the earth and to Usher jtt the reign of M* Lord, the Prince of Fl!ftC6r At the cemetery after a. brief pray­ er and the .benediction by Dr. Joseph Kyle, a guard of honor from the cadets of the 0. S. & S. 0. Home fired a salute over the grave and a most- impressive services Was brot to a close as the bugler sounded ‘Taps*. NOTICE. , i ‘S . *■'« 4- ^ f|jg|jjP .JMMMMMMMP*' o™ !jk■ GIVE YOUR CAR A NEW FL'ii&ri'bO IT YOURid Lf WITHONEORTWOCOATS . OP ' . V s r - e u r o ,. , ■ ■ f i n i s h e s Notice is hereby given, that sealed bids for furnishing electric current for lighting the streets, etc., of the Vil­ lage of CedarviUe, iitate of Ohio, for a period of five <t>) yeai 3, and irt ac­ cordance with specifications now on file with Council of said Village* will be received and opened"by the Clerk of said Village a t the Council rooms in said Village, Monday, November 18thD918 a t ±2 o'clock, noon. AH bids lo be accompanied by a certified check for Invc Ilhndred Dollars ($000.00). . 1 The check b£ the successful bidder bidders to be returned whdh the ' successful bidder or bidders can be i ascertained, Said contract will be let >; to the lowest and best bidder, said }Council reserving the right to reject | any and all bids. ^ ^ JOHNSON 1Clerk of said Village, CedarviUe, 0, ; October 2bth 1918. THETARBOX LUMBERCO, , |A « « — h J.. WH'J. Most Widely Bead iFarm Pablfcafiaafe In the United States give the Facts on Startling live Stock Development "Passed by the Capital Issues Committee as not ircompatibls vitth the national interests, but, without approval of legality, vulidU'j , worth or Security. Opinio it No. A •434.*' “The Country Gentlemen” is one of the most widely read farming publication# in the United States. It is pubj|»bed by The Curtis Publishing Co., .who also publish ^The Saturday Evening Post” .and “The Ladies’Home Journal,” and no one doubts the reliability of this, the greatest publkhmg house in America. *• • • , / n “The Country Gentleman'* o f October 19th, October 26th and November 2 d there appeared articles under thehead , ‘‘THE^SQUTH A S THE CQMING STOCK LAND OE AMERICA .” The thoughtful r e a d e r will realize th a t a revolution ha s come in live stock production.' Here are a feu* extracts from “The Country Gentleman**: The South “The South is-fairly galloping into the meat Galloping Into business. It is Tunning.bheadT qf, to pork Meat Business production quota "and passing, all cattle ex­ pectations. As a re?u!t, whim Europe sub­ side# to peace and undertakes to satisfy" that meat appetite with which mesa call hau branded .millions o f reboots, the South will not bid against them for every.mouthful o f animal flesh. Ihdaed, the South expects to cell them,, meat, thus fulfilling it# natural destiny lo .become the greatest cheap- meat region in the United States. The Farm and' liv e Stool: Record, Jacksonville, Fla., .Recognises Epoch- Making Operations. the state of Florida;' “On November 5 , 1916 ,W a lk ill w»» practically 14,000 acres o | wild lahd. Beginning on that day were the first of the epoch-making, operation*which , are •making- Pollings and. .WallplI a popular topic for conversation 'in. “In another article I should, like to say something more specific about the South’s cattle opportunities, for Dixie is the best hope of home-grown meat for the United States,'' Cattle fit into all its important problems,' and are the.’solu­ tion o f most of them, gud fhe-South is well aware of it. It is grasping its opportunities rapidly, eagerly. “Had r hot been told better, I should have thought there must have been at least'three or four years o f actjyity re­ sponsible for the improvements which were visible. “Here, a little more than a year -after the commencement o f things, there were more than a thousand Head o f cattle grazing on the Walkill pastures. Nineteen Killing Plants Now- hi South “Those who want the calmest -and most exacting sort of proof or this can find it in the fact that (he South lo being dotted with killing plants by the packers. “Hundreds of sleek hogs were visible ip. the fields* “Substantial buildings and silos, such as one ordinarily’asso­ ciates with several years of, successful farming, reared their, outlines against the sky everywhere.” , ; ' “There are nineteen killing plants in the South under Gov­ ernment inspection. On some o f these the hammer* are still beating. None are old. That is what the packers think of - the South. ‘Yes: Pollings hires brains. But not' ............................. ne.. He fully “ For a m om en t le t's look a t sandy, sunny ;Florida, with its abundance of Water aud its cheap lends. Despite t h e fact tha t the oldest city i» the United Slates is located there, it is still p a r t o f the frontier, as regards .oppoilunify. Indeed, George M. Rommel, chief o f the .Ajqimal Husbandry ■Division,of th e United Slates Bureau o f An im al,Industry, DECLARES EQ OTHER STATS HAS-’SUCH -CATTLE CHANCES- - ' . " * ' ' * * Taken from . ■ The Florida Grower, for and with money alone................... Tampa, Fla. appreciates the importance o f the per- ■ * sonal equation and' so well under­ stands that then's best work'is done only when-.their-heart interest is enlisted.* So he ties men*to him and to His enter­ prises*with bonds that endure .because they are founded.on mutual : aspect, harmony of interest and fairness of. partici­ pation alike in opportunity to serve and assurance,of profit. ‘Can do.* Unconsciously Using the spirit tof the faVorite It has. always been a great cattle sta te and always'will be. IT 3BASMORE NATURAL APYANTAGES^HAN ANY OTHER 5TATETN TH E UNITED STATES, v F lorida h a s ' no sdrew worms, no e a r ricRs and no coyotes. Undertake the solution of the problem of increasing, meat production ^at .lower costs than-then prevailed. '*‘‘ Natural “The South, which surprised the North and.W e s t, Swine - last summer with its record-price steers, •also has Country hogs. A bunch of Northern swine breeders made • - this discovery only this year. “Those who wore in his confidence know th.at this deter­ mination in no sense was based on.snap judgment, On the cqtttrary, it Was the result o f most careful-study and o f thorough investigation. Colonel Pollings-had secured the, opinions of many experts, had checked and counter-checked these, and retained a? the foundation o f his effort those in . which" he.had found absolute agreement “They learned, for instance, that the South is a natural, swine Country which can produce pork very cheaply because it. has the pasture, the feed and the right type o f animals. The Southern Ruralist, W. L. Glessner,* Field Representa- of Atlanta, Ga., ■ five, say*: “While visiting the Flor- Says Big Thing# ida State Fair at Jacksonville I was Are Being Done struck by the .sign over Clay Coiin- t ty’8 exhibit: -Where big things are being done by big men in a Kig y/ay y/ith big results.’, for I had a few days before I seen some c f the big things being done in that county. , Success “Then he began to do things. Not with a In a Great "blare o f trumpets nor an putbreak,ao f pub- Undertaking licily,. but silently and swiftly. As. a. matter . • of fact, his indifferehce< to newspaper noto­ riety^ has been the despair of more than one reporter who saw in Colonel Pollings* activities ‘copy* o f a most excellent character. .* 1 ’* *A proposition o f such vast importance and great magnitude as this latest undertaking o f Colonel Pollings isn’t handled in an hour. But never was there a moment's time lost. T h e “ _______________t _________i - ' W . r . . * • « * “I was Impressed with the ,WalkiU Farm as being the most practical demonstration, of the possibilities o f the Eve stock m tmuu i, o i m , l n preliminary progress may have seemed slow to casual ob­ server#, but those 'in the know’ saw that it was surprisingly swift industry in the South that I have seen. There is nothing fancy or fussy about this farm — everything is plain and practical], business-like. It show's r.ot only what cqji be 'done with wealth, but it contains many Fraons of what can be 'done with small means, for everything is utilized,” “And as the finished demonstration became a visible entity men-wondered that so much could have been performed in such a short period. For the essential thing has been accom­ plished. The way had been made clear for all and sundry to follow. ‘Can do’ had become ‘It is done/ “ Final Offering of the WalMll Stock Farm 7% Full Participating P referred Stock The fu ll Participating feature o f The W alkill Stock Farm Preferred Stock g ives the holder the opportunity to share in the profits o f this remarkable development. Provision is made that after 7 r/o is paid on the Preferred Stock and Tr/o on the Common Stock , then excess dividends shall be divided equally betw een the Preferred and Common stockholders. A n earning o f on ly $3 .00 per acre w ill pay both the Preferred and Common stock d iv i­ dends. W ith the advantages o f a long pasture season, heavy forage crops, p len ty o f labor, and ideal market conditions, w e feel sure that the profits w ill far exceed $3 .00 per acre. The management o f the W alkill Farm w ill appeal to Ohio investors. H . B . M inium , one o f the E xecu tives, w as for nineteen years w ith Armour & Co., and for eleven years the Manager o f all th e Armour interests in Florida. J. L. Young, o f C ircleville, Ohio, one o f the m ost successfu l farmers in th a t prosperous county, has charge o f the crop production. So l Miller, o f Columbus,. Ohio, and know n to Duroc H og Breeders throughout the country, has charge o f the H og Department. Fred Brown, o f C ircleyille, Ohio, has charge o f th e Sheep Department. The W alkill Farm consists o f 14 ,000 acres, crossed i^y the A tlan tic Coast L ine Railroad, w ith tw o Sh ipp ing Sta­ tions on the Farm, and these Shipping Stations are on ly thirty m iles from the big Armour Packing P lant a t Jack­ sonville, Fla. There are over eighty m iles o f Hag-Tight W ire Fence on the Farm, THIS IS THE FINAL OFFERING— Three-fourths o f the Preferred Stock issu ed has b e e n / absorbed by Ohio farmers and business m en , It is a safe investm ent because it is backed / ** f by Land, Cattle, H ogs and Sheep. It Is a profitable investm ent because it carries a / 723 R«mnchi«rBuiidin* stipulated dividend easily earned and provides for a further share o f the profits, / B&miiton, tJkio This final announcem ent w ill result in the rapid sale o f the. remainder o f the Pre- / D»*r Sir~.iPta*c wad mo fun ferred Stock, If you are interested , do not delay in communicating w ith us. A part^^ing0Prefor^a tStock THE WALKILL STOCK FARMS COMPANY / R . L. POLLINGS, P resid en t H am ilton , O h io , / Noma ....... .............................. .............. .. By permission we fetetym lo / The f'lrtrida Nations!Hank, Jaek*onvilIe, Fla. , / Address,, The United State# Trifetfe Savings Bank, Jaekmnville, Fla, / C* E* ARBOGtJSt " 7 ... ...Ul........ L 445 N. Kitig Street, - - Xenia, Ohio Bell Phone 156 -R . m * r cei 1 \f i p ; ■' : ) r " "■ ■a: 1 daj the hog at < 60 tha •wei Dei ho{ am she ;•! ■ ths the prt tio hig bet • cov itio foe the thi •m£ CI« fai. bei as are of Ja< eou ’ 1 acr Sm thii , 1 nea vey ' 1 Chi Cla $22 1 son me) pec Ma: our Ma- gel then ■rassl I th< ut in 5 ful ’is Pe mde ■ chea tents' hd tartic profi Won ■rsofi led me detfi Dn t l »nd •jsd't heck 1 0 3 0 with <f pu matt r not fir wl L!celk gnitu <andl ■t. T ual, a rising t ent rmed acco sunc tunit Pref« erred tock al mi lives, i Floi rge oi ; cou; tmen

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