The Cedarville Herald, Volume 42, Numbers 1-26

r r nm nW ^ i A i m m w w m m m ® M W t o » C r y f o r F l s t c h o r ’s A j n * * * £ S U ? U F atft ^iTay* ***&*> m d w hith hw been . m w e for « « [ orcr 30 year?, h « borne th* signature of • J*3r J 'sf j : 'j r * *** r M t>6en *Mde trnder hi* par- I S * «kw» its inf ^ * * Comiarfria, » * ■- „ ‘w^EFCg«?g,agmggt JS5cpcfimen.t, „ Whatis CASTOR! A ^ to r i* i f ft hazmlNS substituteI ot Castor OIL Pareeoric. S t i L ^ f 00^ 8 S rrupe* & ** tfewant. It con ldS uMther^^pimn, Morphine nor othef narcotic substance. Its JJS® Is ijg guarantee. Foy more th a n th irty y e a rs i t has TClH ^^-Pfttioft* Flatulency, JJfed Colic and, Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids G E N U I N E CASTORIA A L W A Y S In Use For/Over 30 Years Th& Kfnd You.Have Always Bought CQMftANY. NEWVOWKOtfV^ r . ^ jm mm © 1 fl:£ ' l l . * M .( _ GIVE YOUR CAR A NEW FINISH'DO IT YOURSELF WITH ONE OR TWO COATS ._____OF , X k J F ^ ) V T O ' F I N I S H E S THETARBOX LUMBERCO. fcNDDRSfif* THg IfntitfAfe Please allow we a few lines space to give my approval to what the Rev. George Macaulay had to say concern* ing the use of cigarette among the the soldiers and the part the Y. H. C. A. took in supplying the boys with them. The writer has lived a good many years and has not acquired the tobacco habit ip any fprm. Being the father of a'boy in the service of his country I certainly have as much right to give my approval of granting any reasonable request of the ones that shouldered the hlunt of this war for yen and me. I t appears that some of the men and soma of the women in this section that have not sons in the l army or have none a t all are more 1concerned than a te parents that have boys exposed to 'this awful curse, the cigarette, which in their estimation i s more deadly than the- German:ma* ■chine gun tha t our boys put out of *commission, and no doubt more than one of them smoked cigarette, in fact I know o f one that h a s used them since he has been over-there and from the letters he has written his dad would, have done the same thing or else sent up'the white flag to the Ger­ mans asking fo r a truce until the American army could decide whether there should be cigarett s in camp o r not,. What impresses me most is the fact of so few complaints among the fathers, it seems to concern everyone? else but them. The Herald summed the situation when it said that Gen. i Pershing would have abolished the j cigarette had i t been harmful to his ] men in gaining victory. There can be fno more criticism of the Y. M. C- 'A. than the Red Cross, each of which j gave out cigarette, and the Red Cross has been termed the greatest mother in the world. I thank you. A Soldier’s Father.' UNCLE SAMTO GRADE GRAIN AT COHN SHOW Is Semilof Demonstrators to GoUms Farmers’ Week. |j<jf OFFICERS ARE ELECTED. "The Clifton Community Club held a meeting Monday night and. elected the following officers: president, Al­ fred Swaby; vice presidents, Fred Es- tel and W. C. Rife; secretary, Reva Moore; treasurer, Elder Corry; direc­ tor, H. R. Corry. Following the busi­ ness session . Rev. George W. Macau­ ley of Xenia gave an interesting ad­ dress of his experience as a Y. M„C. A. worker in France. • insects Still Used as Food. Tales of the use of Insects ns food are Very, frequently discredited. The locust and wild honey fare on which John the Baptist is' described ns hav­ ing lived In the wilderness has been claimed by some to have been a plant, such us is to be f&iml In Bermuda under the uaiue of torneln, or more popularly “locust and wild honey.” On the other .-hand, there have been earnest supporters of the theory that the manna on which the people of Israel fed was an Insect excrcUon, While the development of agriculture and commercial facilities have ren­ dered The use of insects as food.in most cases unnecessary, In other times and under other conditions-men, have not despised the Insect as a means of subsistence;1ami even today various Insects are eaten und relished by men, although their relative Importance as food ts now of course ulmost neg­ ligible. Demonstrations in the grading of 'corn will be given by representatives of the United States Department of Agriculture at the Ohio State Corn and Grain Show, to be held at the College of Agriculture, Columbus, from Jan. 27 to 31. Visitors wilt see bow wheat and shelled corn are .grad­ ed under federal stahdarda at the -large mar’ ets, where the work is su­ pervised by representatives of the -Bureau of Markets. The exhibit ol- the United States Department of Agriculture includes all the /equip­ ment used in determining grain grades, samples of different claiae: of com aud wheat, and various com- merciajrsampies of grain of different grades. Meu with the government exhibit will demonstrate ' how sample of wheat or corn Is taken from a. car by means pf a “probe" or “trier,” so as to represent an average sample of the whole car, and they win show how a sample is mixed, divided mechan­ ically, arid the moisture, dockage, aud test weight per bushel, are de­ termined by special equipment. More classes are open for entry at the corn show this year, and more money is being offered for premiums, than ever before. New classes.have- been provided for spring wheat; for sheaf exhibits of oats, wheat, barley; rye, alfalfa, timothy and clover; for members of the Men’s .Ten-Acre Corn Contest, for members of boys’ and girls’ corn -Clubs, and for the best bushel of certified'seed potatoes. Programs .of the corn show, and Farmers* Week,-during which, it will be held, .may^be had of the Agricul­ tural College Extension Service, Co­ lumbus, O. Nature’s Coloring. For nil fruits and flowers only three coloring substances litre furnished by nature. One of these Is the familiar "chlorophyll," which paints the beans and tiie peas. the watermelon, and the leaves of the. ivyps so vivid a green. Another is "xantnophyll," which exhib­ its Its intense yellow in the carrot, for example. The tftlrJ Is “erytlirophyll,” which shows Its rich red in the beet. The last-two are only modified “chloro­ phyll,” however. But It is marvelous to realize that ull tho varied hues of flowers and 'cults are due to these three substances mixed in different proportions. Macaroni Beans. The “macaroni beans’*of north Man­ churia, a peculiar product described In a recent commerce ,report, are con­ sumed entirely by -the Chinese farm* era. The beans are of two kinds-** red and'yellow variety that is very floury,,and p amiiU; gi-opn hgftp that is unusually glutinous—and for use the two are mixed together, ground into Hour and made into a paste, which IS forcedthrough sronl! holes into long strips or noodles, These dry quickly and keep well In any climate. They are cooked In water, like macaronl.or vermicelli;- and this method of using gives the beans their trade name. NEWSPAPER CORRESPONDENTS—GET. INTO THE GAME THE WAY IT’LL PAY PEP .teaches you to be a Newspaper Reporter, W riter and Editor. 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