The Cedarville Herald, Volume 43, Numbers 1-26
I I Ft&ttt Fruit Display In Town Oranges, Fancy Box Apples Lemons, Grapes, Walnuts f* r a 4* Hot House Lettuce, Qelery,, - Head Lettuce- ' • Cucumbers Cabbage W . W . TROUTE a m m ... Jf •*srt* i -y j.-< .'if ■‘.• j .- Yw ' tf ' . 1 j * » "K‘ ' ' "v -.A1, A ,.i* i y Buckeye and Standard 1 j * 1 * * ^ ^ ir f ^ Brooders ■ A padf^psl^teoiog. Perfect for raising incu-^ bated cMeks. Let ns showyou one, of these and ex- plain it to you, Robt. Bird Be Sons Co. The funferal 6 f Mr*. Caroline Wil son was h#ld Tuesday from the Home o f her daughter, Mrs, W» A« Spenesr. The service* were in charge o f her pastor, Rev. Wra. T. McKinney, pas- tor-of the Clifton Presbyterian church assisted by Rev. J, P. Whit* o f the H. P. church and Dr. MeCbesttsy, Burial took place at Clifton. Two vocal selec tions ware sung during the service by Mrs. J. W.. Johnson. The pallbearers were her tons, WV L.f Harry and Dr, J. J. Wilson, two son-in-laws, A. B, Brewer of Clifton and W, A. Spencer and a nephew, Sol Wilson. * - Mrs. Caroline "Wilson was bom in Miami township, Greene county, 0 ., April 5, 1835. j 8 he died, after a two weeks illness, at the hpmp o f her daughter, Mrs, W, A, Spencer, Ced- arville, Ohio,, at day-break on Sab- ; bath morning-, March 21 , 1920 , aged 84 years, 11 mouths and 15 days. She was the daughter o f Stephen and Martha Mills Cdnwell, being one o f a, family o f ton children. On November 11, 1857, she " Was .married to Mr, Jacob Wilson at Xenia T<t this union, Severf' children were horn, one son dying ‘in infancy and another' son, Rev. Robert B., dying June 26,1918 in the midst of a useful Gospel ministry. The husband and father died, January 13, -1886. Mrs.' Wilson's entire' life was spent in Greene county 'more than forty years being on the .farm in t^lark’s Run neighborhood, After^the "hus- bafad's death, she continued to live oif .the farm, there- rearing thefthildren who had:not yet reached maturity. In 1904, she. left the farm and re-, hiovedto the village op Cedarvijle, .Which place has since been’helr'home. Pbr .ten years, shp. maintained her own home but for the past six years she has lived with, her daughter, Mr»._ £>peflcer. In--young Womanhood" she' made the Christian profession and joined the fellowship o f the Method ist church Wt for almost half a cen tury she has been a member o f the Clifton Presbyterian church. , Although she always lived in a sim ple and- unassuming manner yet she was a Woman o f .great interest jn life nd possessed a courageous spirit, facing(the problems*o f life and fami ly with unwavering fortitude. In. the community 'and- in -1 the home, .hers was a life o f quiet usefulness. Where ever sorrow and suffering were, there were also her heart o f sympathy and her band o f helpfulness.. She was a devoted and sacrificing mother, find ing her greatest joy in the-happiness and success of*her children. She was willing to “ lose her life’ *that jit might he found again - in the life^of those she had borne. The children *who moUrn ^er de cease are: two d«ugbtw ^ .iii»r“ “ .v-#: EARLYW i f i OF COM» ESSENTIAL .■.-*<4....■— Larger Yartoft* Can Be More rffiwM P f w »w ri. Weeuhe W ri«a1*isrrtt KSenduoted U Pemenetrew /fm t fsebWty end " ■ Value «kf %*g«*d—Better YW # Obtained, * tPrepereS by Oslt#* mates Oepert- HlliiT i ^ U wtfM.wi V Barller pleat!** o f large, productive varieties of core is frequently much more profitebi# £b** |ha normal plant- tng of early epjariag varieties, proof of this has been obtained In many In stance*. announces the chief of the bu reau of plant industry, in reporting on the results of experiments con ducted to demonstrate the practicabil ity and value the earlier planting, of corn. By much earlier than normal planting it has been found that larger varieties can be profitably grown for ensilage in northern localities with much better yield# than can be bad from thfi mutter native varieties plant ed at the usual date. BABY CHICKS AU . STANDARD BREEDS '■••'•S' ^ . •' . jQt 'i ' *- *...• - ■ * „ Rlaee Yew-OnlarNew for Serin* Dsllvety DAYTON HATCHERY 1620 TACOMA ST. DAYTON, OHIO Bell fc 1*7* HemeSdSS •• P A R L O R M I L U N E R Y Wo have a nice line of Ready Trifnmed Hats to ihoW you. CALL AT THE HOME OF MRS. ANNA BOYD Old Reliable Meat Market Where you can get the choicest cuts of Veal, Fresh Pork or Smoked Meats* Beef, S. E. WEIMER C oc la rv iU o , - \ "* Ohio a e IMRWf PwBWWLVTrf rPpuIRr# The sstperetlttoo which dings to the sneuitE o f beads is of answht origin. The eeetem o f wearing an amber awSdNee was tnumm it m rnm , and ie aet yet extinct among old wotefeft hriHSNMsd, The asaber, when hfeited semis fsrtfc as agreeable p*rtnm, in fiffie* OHMS' ft wt« th# present made IF a mm O mt re Use daaghter os M* tB^MAiifeaeadSye. ■ -■ tpisnwivRHi' iiiMivi I'fipiwMirv f t M l *mm are Miftf re change as * remit o f renvretf*# to OhrtstJ- atrify- IVw fwrtanre. Mr. Nreepridted b>aretes Mr. terttAt # J* mw ; Mr mmmm. mm *t mroN**,. m I N o M l MMit Ufa Matfiwm . Soyptian Darter. . The ordinary village barber of isgyp* bear* a cerialn resemblance, in so fur *» his profession goes, to (life bur ber.snrgeon of ancient times is EJng, land. He la authorised by law, eftnr having pessfed no examination, to per- form vaccination, application of leeches, cupping, simple dressings, but M forbidden to order or prescribe med- ldnee, - - M * A * A w m m U planning A model home, but tU ik . uvery of the Cost af hutlaiiig material and th* dUpoMtloa of the coutrsetbr to exam. Me ymtr plane and Uut follow M« mm m m mm <Mti* j*$ twnf. leave* ahm M .ipm. Gowdy bine granS rifMv ren and fbvBr great'-grand children: Misplaced Ambitions. '■ The dully routine of the federal board for vocational education I* full o f amusing Incidents, Oflfe big nerim who Imd-been a laborer before the war Said Hfi Its representative': “I come to see ’bout dlsf vacation edu cation, I needs a vacation mighty bad after mah long service la France.’ When, however, -bo learned that tlie “yacatlon'* must he spent in rjchdbl, he -changed li|s mind. Another-, who wanted to do "somefin out of the ordi nary*’ hod decided to be a -.tenogra- pher. “I rends- some;*' he said, “an* 1 understand it don’ take much wrltln’ or spellin’ nohow-for to. become a ste nographer,” Hewas persuader to study motor mechanics inajend,—Youth's Companion. Vtr* Crux. ■■■■■■ Vera Crux bas the unique record of caving been twice captured by Ameri can forces, once In 1846. when we were St war with Mexico, and again In 1917, when we were not at war with Mexico. However, all we aeem to do with it after we get ft is to give'it back again, so It* citizens probably feel little worried at the vicissitudes o f war, Indeed, they have recently raised a statue in honor of the bobte defenders of Vera Crux agntnst the gringoe*, which shows that ,they fee) they are adequately protected. Error Regarding Indigestion, Now, It Is a popular error, to sup pose that indigestion is merely as affection of the (stomach. There Is not a .single organ, a single tisane, or k nerve which Is not affected to Some considerable degree. non - re s id en ts no t ice OP HEARING CLAIMS, In the matter of Springfield— Jamestown I. C. H, No. 472 Road. Improvement-No. 146 Petitioned for by Andrew Jackson and others. Auditor’s Office Greene county, Ohio March 22nd, A, D. 1920. To the Non-Resident Owners thru or upon whosfe lands , Said ipmrove- menfc is to be established or located!- To Cecil R. Burns, lEixa Badabaugh and. C. W. G, Hanna You arq hereby notified that the 12th day of April, 1920, at 10 o'clock A, M. has beet! fixed at the date, and the office of the County Commission- ers as the pike, for the said County Commissioners to hear Claims for COMPENSATION AND DAMAGES in the matter of said improvement, S, 0 , Hate, Clerk of the Bokfd o f County Com missioners, Dr. Leo Anderson was In Columbus Thursday on business, $h* Leonard Wood presidential 4«- i* p u t %In the South, by •planting small short-season Varietiesearlier than nor mal. much earlier maturity pan .be se cured, affording a supply o f corn for very early feeding. Many rather soft varieties that ret badly when planted* late produce sound coin when planted parly m southern localities. The plant ing o f short, and long, season varieties in alternate rows bas increased 1 yields where moisture is a limiting factor! - Varieties differ, It has been found, in their ability to adapt themselves and their grain production to varying stands. Prolific Varieties., when given increased space* have shown ability te- Increase tihiegr'gram production much more satisfactorily than have the sin gle $ar ranges, because o f their abil ity to make up ^deficiency, k stand.^ The studies made by- the department specialists have resulted in Isolating Uniform types within a Variety;' It has, been ^opnd that so-Caited varietlesUof corn arclargeJy conglomerates of many distinct types, and to arrive at'basic facts in breeding work’It is necessary k.'.Xegregatk-thCee-.uniform.-t y p e s ,.• BARRa. FOUNTAIN IS HANDY Outfit WfU Save Lots of, Work and - Also Inaure Constant guppiy of .. Watsr . or Fowls. v , - The diagram shown is of a home made poultry fomjtain. The cistern; Is a cwpmtm tHUrfel that la watertight,' connected ,fp«a drinking tank by a Meee «r pW Athene elbnw «a shown, ssys a wt&ri-'in The Farmer, a .big washer or^fanwtbing eh*n of thatshape is factensd ba rim and o f tfarf pipe at emmumad. ’o f the*tank make a sort of rim on pet "A” is a glees fipet andconnected .van* of a wins.-: valvaae.thUfr': tt» tank stouts offthawater .a* rim water is |wril to,have the part wUpre the valve i« boxed off by itself SS-lti * fid over to keep Homemade poultry Fountain. the poultry from, meddling with the valve. Tbit outfit wifi save a-lot of Work and also insure a constant sup ply o f fresh water If the cistern is kept replenished with a couple of pall* of water once U awhile, according to the number of ohickons. V CHICKENS NEEDGREEN FEED Greatest Vklus Is fioecultno*; arid Salts K Contains are Great As- , sistanoe to Digestion, In nutritive elements, green foods contain re little strength that if their only claim to poultry favor was on that account they would have been discarded long ago. Their greatest value is their succulence, and the salts they Contain, which promote digestion. Green feed in tyie winter poultry ra tion, help* 1 * keep a laying stock in good tone. It assists digestion, and many poultry keepers use It for that reason and because it increases egg production. SUPPLY MATERIAL FOR EGGS Ne One Kind of Grain Wilt Furnish All of Different Food Clements . Required by ,Hsn. There Is no one'kind of grain that alone will furnish alt Of the different food elements required to maintain the body Of thl hen In gbod condition and also furnish the material o f which eggs are made. Certain kinds of food combination* yre required to . makfe the yolk of the egg, certain otherkinds are required to make the whites, while still other kind* are needed for build ing the membranes which surround the yolk and the white and the shell which contains alL GkMM Snodfib. *1 want t* gst something for-my husband, SM*s a golf player." “Why oof g«f Mm * new club?” suggested the cleric, "Dear, me, no. HAbelongs to three rtvtbe already/*- Detroit Free Free*, * v «* Worth Remembering, lh IMA m the tweaty-fourffe hf January, n****) » . S. More* gate Me firet dfkMMtretiott of theredoof dote lag rei** used i» triegrephy nod mto tp lS t « i Gw More* red*, JOBE'S Easter Dress Sale - ■ : r >* NewDresjt A High^Clast New Spring Style Values up to $42.50 .VNer , ■ Special ■•■.■ ’ -’f ; ■■rV1* •' •. Embroidered and Beaded Georgettes, Satins, Taffets, Silk Tricolette, Crepe de Chine Foulard ..................... - r 1 J '!■■"- ' "! ! »"» ........ and Georgette Combinations, vCrepe Metor. .Misses size* 16 and 18' Women’s sizes 36 to 44 • / ' * ‘ , > • - Anticipate yoiir future wants—Make your* , ‘l -i .selection early, ’ •. The Herald 1 gregfiive far lion o f the haye t!ie rm F O IiT Y - 1 *w•’ . X en ia , O h io i, t/\ / Many persons, fires where neai ments in the vvs destroyed at one first to be reeor Was the fire on farm, east of u - about 6:30, whei dence implement smoke bouse a n d destroyed by fir, •the barn and was Wind until every material was de> The fire was Townsley, a son o on the farm, whil, immediately gave bors by ringing set to work liber this he was only as six head of fit burned along w calves. The milk and jsaved. One c its’back singed number o f ,ealv burned but they er. ■ The rapidity v, spread cannot ha the neighbors wl assistance possib) made .to save the in the path of the Much o f the hou first floor was sa places of safety I a small part cou! greatest danger in al effects was af - fronx the house , bers ignited ever; this reason the g< far'from the hou The situation . at the same time the hundreds t could be of no a> est fire departme done ,more than .that, had to stanc o f almpst the .lif< . ations go up in s Rrobably no ct • section ever dre\ Thel heavens we- teid people were ma, South Chari tnym, and ^Sprini . fore saw so mar -fed’Alongside te -1 ^ deif' su ^ ’ circun 4 500 people we scene. Burning embe a half mile to tl ened another bai (the path . that Townsley: It req forts o f Frank P protect his propr Just how th You chn't jrnlgb a sltue by first appearance alone—but by the way it looks- after you have worn-it and by the KIND of wear it gives. Nisley’s "Better Shoes” look good LONGER thah ordinary shpes, yet they cost less per year.-- CHAIRMEN Brown kid- lace oxford, W e l t ss^< sole, b a b b y Louts heel, $ 12.00 The newest spring mod els in blacks and browns are on display. The great est .'assortment you have ' seen—and -so reasonably priced—: Four-fifty to Fifteen Dollar*. Easter Shoes. for - the little folks % Aiwdmost unlimited display of shoes for little feet await* you at the ‘ ^Children's Shoe Store”—the greatest variety you have eve^seen—at the widest radge of priced, Ore Whei* Stem Room DivoUd ExelusivsSy To Children's - fibres tT tm SM E S s Feefewee* MmM ' ,f »7 ChlidreR, •sire ami IN THE ARCANE SPRINGFIELD, OHIO. ssyiai X X G IT OUR PRICES ON PRINTING X X mmmm % Pittsburg, Pa. spaign directors v Of the New Wi paign for $16,00i . to May 2 have bt six presbyteries r o f the West o f tl ian church. The campaign w j synod by Rey. D. as chairman; Rei 1 Xenia, as secret; McBride of,Dayfc . Chairmen and • the Various prqs ced here'at the n o f the' New W * Indiana presbyte o f Bloomington, ' Rev, , JS. E. M burg/ Jtid., dircc em—Rev, Willis Ind,, chairman at ton, Ind., directoi L. McBride, Dayl S. R. Jamieson > ^Sidney presbytei i Clellan of Belle < i J. A. McCall o ; Tennessee presb' appointed yet; • Rev. J, A. Hendi man and Rev. C 1 Xenia, director. ( Miss Lula Her, led home from , the illness of het Henderson. NEW^SECRl STATE T / Bainbridge k tot state, to f is ^ S ' in
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=