The Cedarville Herald, Volume 41, Numbers 27-52
P U B L I C S A L E ! SEW# OF SELMA. Mir. A. E, Wildman ' home. 1 . ,, . , ! Mr* Howard Wildman, and children Hsvia* beagbt » now!! (arm I toll {Roger, Loyd and Edwin called upon mot a*ed*U a y stock and farm equip* i Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wildman last m*at and will tell name, on ;>at is j Thursday, known M th* W . H, Luca f a r m m i l e ist ill at hia Clarence Bag^ant is recovering a severe attack ’o f influeasa. of ^ rU uM riihrm an,i I Mr, and Mrs. Andrew Kinnison and ni^rttr of Clifton oa the Clift n an1 (jaUg'|1.er Spent the week-end Spnagaew pike, on 1 . . . . . Iwith relatives in Xenia. M o O ffft y * N o v e m b e r 3 5 , - IB ; Miss I .013 Sehickedant* was the At 11 o’clock the following property: } r uest o f Miss Ruth Levering Friday. 2 H E A D O F W ORK H O R S E S A good work team. - 1 * HEAD O F CATTLE 14 Consisting of two Urge hrown cow# J Stanley Shitty ha# sold his house giving good flow ol milk; 1 Urge pure *hold goods and will move to Souther;- 1j Howard Strain entertained a num- >her o f guests last Sunday. hredjersey giving good flow of milk; 1 roan, cow, heavy milker, fresh by sale; Georgia, Harry Leach and friends o f Xenfc 1 red cowjust fresh;-* Jersey cows, one i p#Hed ^ Errett Kinnison last Sun- fresh last spring, the other recently; 2 1 j Jlv. good Shorthorn heifers fresh in Decern- j . , . , f„J Mro Robert Fmney and son George, bnert 1 large Jersey heifer fresh December; 1 0 raos, Shorthorn calves,! ™ R® 8*8 & frim * s in Ccdarville on e s heifer and other a bull. ia ,t ,,unday. Mr, Noah Wright and wife enter tained a number o f Dayton friends over the week-end, The Red Cross Society met at the high school building Tuesday for the ' ftrgfc time in many weeks. ------5 0 H E A D O F H O G S SO ----- Consisting of I t thrifty shoats, 7i> lbs, each; 00 head o f Duroc pigs eight weeks Old; 6 pure bred Duroc gilts, 1 6 H E A D O F DE LAN E E W E S 275-Shocks o f Good Corn; 12 Tons, of Glover and Mixed Hay in Barn. IMPLEMENTS:—17-ft, tongue truck, , binder used three years; 1, Oliver riding \ _from their son, br.altiDg plow used th ru years; 1 m i S “ .1 S ° L ^ disc harrow; 2 horse wagon wjfh flatbed; * d 5 ■ X harness and other articles, Terms Made Known Day o f Said Mr. and Mrs. David Morris have re- ' ' " ‘ Corp. has A surprise party was given at the home o f Howard Smith Monday even ing in honor o f the Nagus girls who |will move tD Columbus soon. Many Er* N O R T H U P 1 0| t^j0 grade and,.high school 1 .:. >^ t _.\.. a , w.A, J ,AMIlAt Col. Glen Wpikert, Aucf. Chat. Hatfieldi Clerk. {pupils Were present and enjoyed )evening.’ . the Word has been received from Philip Wildman, Who is attending school $%■. vVestqwn Academy in Pav informing as:that he in company with several or, miiiiiiiuMiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiuiHniHfiiHiiiimsmmiHunmiHiunuimntiiiiHinniiiiiiJ ar\e0nrgSe 5^ t b company “ —. — the East as there is no school on ac count o f the influenza. . Lester Tru«$da!e lias completed a new garage on the Jot above the po;.t office which . he purchased j.ist recently from R. G. Calvert.- On the way home from Richmond s last Sunday night Arthur Wildman gnd family were the victims o f an auto accident which occured on this j side o f Dayton, Mrs. Wildman being j sevcrly injured, The machine left theroad and Mrs. Wildman received an ugly cut on the forehead .when tinv.vn against the top, Fifteen •stitches were taken to close the cut. Mrs. Wildman has been irt a critical condition the past few days. None o f the other occupants were injured. From early Monday morning untii iate in the aftemon a great deal o f excitement.was caused in this, vicin ity by the appearance o f ah appar ently insane colored man -who called at the- home o f Andrew Kinnison and inquired the way to the home o f Cbas. Patterson, The man was .sen wander- mg in the fields and could give no ac count o f himself other than his name was James Barry and that he was hunting liis wife. Claude Edmiston phoned Sheriff Welsh and deputies Woodward and Didwell took the man oack to Springfield as his relatives had been searching for him.. The man looked rather old and was weak and ragged, HIGH SCHOOL NOTES. Don’t Pat It BU Y NOW Off B U Y Y O U R W IN TER NEEDjS N OW School opened Monday with a large attendance, very few o f the pupils be ing absent. The number of cases of “ flu”1was very small in this section and the Selma school is among the few few that started Monday. Clothingand Shoes are going up much higher in price every week. We bought thousands of dollars 'worth of Clothing and Shoes before the very high prices took effect. We offer you a chance to supply yourself and family at low prices on The .basket ball teams have been organized and are now playing. The girl's teams play every Thursday and axe showing good . am Work. Clothing, Suits, Overcoats, Trousers, Hats, Caps-Shirts, - . , Coatsweaters, Underwear, The high school will publish a small school paper each month this year ac- _ cording to one o f the staff. The first 5 ; edition, will appear in December find Hosiery, all Kinds of Work Clothing, Ladies’, Misses*, Men’s Jjnd Boys Fine Shoes. and is well under way. The pupils are beiug examined each day by Dr. Marshall fo r signs o f iu- E <liuenza. ... S o lid Every D ay S h o e s , Rubbers, "Arties, Felt Boots, Rubber and Leather Boots. DON ’ T M IS S US E f Alice Powell, sophmore, will move - E ! to Springfield soon. S t BOARD OF HEALTH NOTICE a 5 Notice is hereby given that parents S must keep their children o ff the BIG STORE streets during the quarantine and exercise greater care ns to heiilta conditions. „ „ , Cedarville Board o f Health § 17-19 West Mala Sfreet, Xenia, O. §j tfHiHtiiiirtifiimiiiiiiimiiiiJHiiiiHiOLHimiiiijiiiiiiiiiiHiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiHiHiiiiiiir For Rent:- Large house of. eight rooms, well, cistern and bam , G. H. Smith. , PUBLIC SALE! tetpvtunkm 1 will sell at public sale on my farm, known as Greenlawn Stock Farm, 2 m iles southwest of South Solon, on the Gurrey pike, leading from South Solon to Grape Grove, on- ' .. ' *■ Saturday, November 9, 1918 Commencing at 10 a. m., the following property towit: 14 HEAD OF HORSES 14 No. 1. Sultan De den, 44368, imported Belgian stallion, weight 2000 pounds, This horse has proven himielf to ba one of the best breeders in Madison County. No. 2. Mokoyer, 2:17 1-4. No, 3 .. Aihland, W» C .fc2:17- Ntt* 4. Birdie McGuire (4), 2:24 1-4. No. 5. GlermaMoke, 5 years old* Trial, 2:20 trotter. • No. 6 Baby Moke, 6 years old. Trial, 2:24 1-. No* 7. Furl, 2 year old. Record, 2:15 1-2. No. 8. Three-year old chestnut geldmg, by Nutwood Wilkes. Dam by Online, 2:041-4. No. 9, Roan mare, 6 years old, weight 1600 pounds. One of the best draft mares in Madison County. In foal. No. 10. Roan Belgian filly. An, extra good one. No. II. Roan Belgian filly, yearling. These two mares are full sisters and perfect matches. No* 12. Eight-year old family mare. Good driver and saddler. No. 13. Weanling filly colt, by Ashland, W . C. No. 14. One mule, 6 Head of Registered Shorthorn Cattle . No. 1. Lady Cregg, 8 years old; due to calve in No. 4. Anna Lee, ill) months old; due to calve in January. Bred to registered bull.. January. NO, i and 8. British Mary, 2nd; 8 years old, with No. 5 Roan King, 12 month old bull, bull Call byside. ‘ * No, 8. Kcdstrafh Allen, 18 months old bull. Vhe registered certificate will be fiuruislieil with these cattle. This is an exceptionally nice bunch of cattle* « 43 Head of Sheep 43 88 Breeding ewes, Oxford and Shropshire breed. Yearlings to 4-year old, One*cgi$tered Shropshire buck. 14 Shropshire buck lambs, - 171 Head of Hogs 171 Eight pure-bred DurbC brood^ows, I Poland China brood sows, 22 Duroc gilts, 0 pure-bred Duroc boars, large enough tor service; 1 yearling Dm-oc boar, 11 hogs, weighing from 200 to 2«5 pounds; 57 feeding lwgs, weighing from 140 to BK>pounds; hi) fall shoats. These liogs have all been mnnuned. TWELVE GOOD HOG BOXES TWENT¥-FOUR HURDLES TERMS MADE KNOWN ON DAY OF SALE jwi i»i<n ritiiTufCiwfr. t i> titm win 'I'T^— ti tth --------- 1— ------------------- —irTi^ i ^iiT)ftsiiiiai^iiiftiiiBan>liwiwujjjjiuL^4uk-_Xi^LL G u Y G u rrey & How ard T itu s , A u c t f . f T O | J> p V HowardCotreHi Clark. r • v U I X I V l j I Lunch Served or> Ground 7 % NON-TAXABLE IN OHIO The Walkill Stock Farms Co. Full Participating Preferred Stock I'Paisedhj the Capital Issues Committee at notincatnpatihte the. national tnterfMf ■» but without approval of legality, validity, worth, or vefUffijy, Opinion f/Vo. A 4tS4. Subject to prior sale we present the final offering o f the 7 % , non-taxable in Ohio, full PARTICIPATING PREFERRED Stock of The Walkill Stock Farms Company. The first cor.sideratipn in any investment should be {Safety, and land utilized for the production o f cattle, hogs and sheep was not only safe for your grandfather and yourself, but will be .safe for your grandchildren,. The Walkill Stock Farm contains fourteen thousand acre.S, in a solid body, of good land, ail under hog-tight wire fence, there being eighty-three miles o f outside and field fencing^ ovor fifteen hundred acres ,are under cultiva tion,~and the balance in pasture. < The farm is crossed by one o f the best railway systems in the United-States with two shipping stations on the farm, and these stations are only thirty miles distant from a ,hig Armour Packing Plant* -•■ _ ’ <3 Chicago prices, with practically no shrinkage caused by long shipping, are secured for the liyestock products o f this farm, ‘ . The land on Walkill Farm produces corn, velvet beans, hay and other forage crops for the cattle, hogs and sheep* Why This Is Safe The Preferred Stock issued on this big farm is only $400,000, a Httlfc less than $30,00 an acre, and this covers farm and improvemiots; and no bonds or mortgages can” be placed ahead of the preferred stock without the con sent of the preferred stockholders. All incorporation pro ceedings have been under the direction of the well known legal firm of Burkhart, Hcald & Piclcrell, Dayton, C)hio; and all title approvals by Richard Sassane.t, Abstractor, Jacksonville, Fla.; George F, Osier,' Cincinnati, Ohio, and O, O. McCollum, Attorney, Jacksonville, Fla. It is not enough that assets* behind a preferred stock issue be safe at the time of issue without regard to the future. The assets behind preferred stock should con stantly increase in value and add to the safety o f the pre-^ ferred issue. * o ’ ’ Any one familiar with increases in farm laud in the United States knows that not only is the Preferred Stock o f Walkill Farms safe- today, but that it .will be safe and have, a larger value behind if one year from today, five- years from today and ten years from today. The .plain fact o f the matter is that the greatest source o f wealth in most part» of Ohio—a comparison that would hold good with any manufacturing district—has been the’ increase’ in value o f farm lands; large and safe profit's have been realized from the increase in land values. Walkill 7 ‘tb Participating Preferred Stock is safe. It is backed by good'farxn lands, advantageously located, and has increased in value since it was acquired by the corpo ration, and wilt go on increasing in value just as other farm land. Preferred Stock That Is Participating > , ! There are few men who read who are not cognizant o f the fact that the eyes o f the nation are upon the South as a coming liyeStork producing section o f the United. /States. ■’/. ' 1 ■. will give the holder -a c&nstant dividend and a further' share’in%the profit. The Breeders’ Gazette in niany issues in the last year, the United States Government in numerous bulletins and' The Country Gentleman, published by the? same' reliable company that publishes The Saturday Evening Post.arid Ladies' Home Journal, of October 26th and November 2nd have called attention in detail to the revolutionary .change that has come in cattle and hog production in the ■South." ■■ ■ ■ .■'. ■ Space will not permit further presentation o f a situa tion that has come from a ten to twelve-month pasture season, or the ability to grow, crops^the year around; or the increase in’ farrowings because of no, ice or snow, or the plentiful supply o f good labor at a reasonable cost. We will be’ pleased to present these facts to any one in terested. * i ‘ The Walkill Preferred Stock stipulates,that 7% first be paid to the Preferred Stockholders and then 7% to the, Common Stockholders and after that any other divi dends paid must be divided equally between the Preferred and Common Stockholders. T o earn the Preferred Stock Dividend requires -an earning o f only ?2.00 an', acre; and on both the Preferred and Common, requires only an earning o f $3.00 air acre, and anyone versed 'in farm opera tion today knows thaf this is a very light requirement and that the farm that cannot cam from twelve to fifteen dollars an acre is-a very poor farm or very badly managed. - — There is only one- way to get the largest -profit that >vilL bo realized from this revolutionary livestock development, and that is through a Participating Preferred Stock that Only a cattle man or a hog man would realize what it would mean and what it does mean on' Walkill Farm, tp have five artesian wells that throw, the water 22 feet’ in the air and make it- possible to supply cattle feeding jots, farrowing houses and finishing p.ens with abundant, pure water without pumps or any other than natural pressure. . Walkill Farms has a number o f running streams and in . addition has the advantage o f water from these wells. In .brief, Walkill Farm answers the requirements o f the model stock farm of. today. It is big enough to make ft possible to afford good management: A $I,500-a-year hog man looking after a 3,000-a-year hog production is far cheaper than a cheap man looking after 100 hogs a yean It it fertile," productive landj Well..drained, yet well supplied {With water. It has ideal shipping, and- rail road conditions. It has the two elements necessary for an exceptional investment—SAFETY and PROFIT, men. Your Opportunity In the Final Offering o f this High Class Security., .Three-fourths of this Preferred Stock has been absorbed by Ohio men—Ohio farmers and business The remainder of the issue o f Preferred Stock will be quickly absorbed in response to this final .announcement offering. ' *Vi ima .mm _ . ™ s is a .Patriotic investment, and has been passed by the Capital Issues Committee o f the ' United buttes Government at Washington as "not incompatible with the National interest ’' Beef, Pork and Bullets are very closely associated. ‘ To the man who wants to get rich over night this will not be o f interest, but the think ing man who wants a Safe Investment, a steady income and a further share in Profits of rltin irtfrri'rKn. mlnml vntiiA xd MI !m ^ w * operation And Inc ease in and value will be interested. Full particulars wilLbfe-sent upon request. THE WALKILL STOCK FARMS COMPANY R. L. POLLINGS, President. Hamilton, O. By permission we refer you to The Florida National. Bank, Jacksonville, Fla. ' The United States Trust & Savings Bank, Jacksonville, Fla. 'R . X . '!: 7 HOLDINGS* President. ' 723 Rentschler Building, Hamilton, Ohio* - Dear Sir-.-Please send me full information about t h e ’ 77& Full Participating Preferred Stock o f the Walkill Stock Farms Co. < C. E. ARBOGUST 445 N. King Street, - Xenia, Ohio • Bello Phone 561-R . ....... ' . ■ ' ........................................ * i . SCHRADER PLUNGERS. Regular price 35c, our price 25c Frank J. Pierson 105 East High St., Springfield, O. NOTICE I have a complete cream station built on truck ahd will be at the B. | H. Little grocery on Tuesday t>f; each week, where l 'Will take care of • your cream, test it and pay for it in money (not checks). Highest market FRAM.lt L, JOHNSON, Attorney and Counselor-at-Law XENIA, OHIO. Office over Galloway & Cherry. price paid for same. Honesty and courtesy our Motto. j J. A. LONG CO. p ‘ ELIAS Per H. P. Bothast 5 DENTIST *** * 1 Union City, In d - Exchange Bank Bldg, Cedarville, 0 . * 1 l ■ Our Line of Fall and ip Winter Woolens is as fine as we have ever shown before. If there are any clothes you need be sure and * * give us a call. KANY, TheLeadingMerchant Taylor XENIA, OHIO TRY OUR JOB PRINTING By| vost ’ orderl than ! i n g t l /inatiq draft! ified YEL1 * Yel deleg all dt passe noon count o f ce endir ,Wt Stars pUbli paigi in Fr will 1 - are 1 gated adopt for it Lie Va., i suit 0 practi the k he in f 1 A the cd or see nstat Finns Iwl press# the fo r th ,erousl durinJ came] was the hi would and I| t. EvJ for tlf end Kniflf on hil uncus the si next] can ; on tii forml Dew{ La i Istic F war revd for A te: rupt th e : ne kno\ o f th| •xtriT W<j tax the As m i m
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