The Cedarville Herald, Volume 44, Numbers 1-26

m MMWBilriWiillfiliMI * # * * * * * * * * i LOCAL AND PERSONAL ; ♦ * „ * * * Now is tfc hens. * * * * * time to sell your old * Wm. Marshall, Mrs. Mary M, Barber has been suf­ fering for several days with neural- HP*- ' • See Mrs. your S„ on disp opening , Tarbox before buying »prm? nats. She now lias them ?lay. Watch for the date of the > S*ie:~~Seed oats, Early var­ iety. Phone 2 gm 104, Cedarville, Ohio. __________ Fred Barrett! The Hutchison and Gibney firm in Xenia celebrated their 58th a n n i­ versary Monday evening in the base­ ment o f the store where supper was served the 58 *mp%ees. Mr. W. C. Hutchison was able to be present. When you build that fence this Bpring why not use Osage Hedge end posts and do the w ise thing. Golden Estella, a pdre-bmi Jersey cowr owned by Perdu University, is the champion butter eow of the lioos- ier state, having produced in one year 14,101 pounds of milk, from which was taken 754.35 pounds of butter fat,1these figures givirif her a pronounced lead over all other cows in the state. ->■ *» W. 0 . Maddux of west of town jxas esHwfro Atlahta, Ga. as a wit- ne^srfn the U. S. Court in a suit of the Portland Cement company de fending a patent that Mr, Maddux had received on a roller that was af­ terwards sold to this company. Frank Hurley of Xenia was also called *as a witness. Mr. and Mrs, W. A. Spencer were called to Dayton Monday owing to the serious illness of their daughter, ..... day......... Shultz continues what uhysiciai i critical condition. to improve from consider" a very . John .Wright is personally ac- quamted with the coming Secretary: of the Navy, juat named by President elect Harding. Mr. Wright and Mr.' Denby were at Paris Island, marine i teaming station at the same time.' John sent a telegram o f congratula­ tion Tuesday. » . r*» . V I. Il ■ '■S »!■»■*■— Farm Wanted:- I want to hear from . party haying /farm for sale. , Give priew and description, B. B. Howard, Champaign, 111, , George R, Gibney, aged 80, died February 8 in Washington, D. C., and was buried in that city.. He was bom near this place and in later a telegraph operator for the Pejnnsy- yesrs located in Xenia where he was Ivania railroad. He was a veteran o f the Civil War and will be remem­ bered by 'older citizens, * *■ Salesman Wanted'to solicit orders fo r lubricating oils, greases and paints.* Salary or Commission. Ad LENNOX P£ dress T H E ............ CO., Cleveland, ^0. OIL & PAINT Ten counties will be represent­ ed at the District Farm Bureau convention which was held' yesterday at Xenia. Madison, Fayette, Clinton, Ross, Highland., Pickaway, Montgom­ ery. Champaign and Clark counties. Mrs. Flora Considine, 1 wife of Frank W. Considine, died at her home, in Xenia' Monday from “ sleepin&^ick ness' Mr. and Mrs. John o f west o f town mother. are step-father and Mil? bricks » 1' M X STANDARD BREEDS P!aco l ,)ur Ofd«p Moy/ for Spring DofWory D t r t t m H A T C H E R Y ' 1 © 2 0 Y A t-iR W U p t . ’ ( £A Y TO K , OKSO ■E* 1376 -Homs 3S03 Bo' J V ISIT OUR STORES IN C O LUM BU S ,© .- CINCINNATI - LOUISVILLE OR 50 North Third Street .Ninth &\V.:lnut Sts. 943 S. ThirdStred 909 Ract* Street ORDER NEWTIRES B K . M A IL a n d S A V E M O N E Y SEND NO MONEY r THESE TIRES am FIRSTCLASS, NOT RE-BUILTor SECONDS FIRST QUALITY NON-SKID TIRES—Guaranteed 6000 Miles TIRES SIZES . TUBES - TIRES SIZES TUBES $11.25 30 x,3 $1,50 $20.10 34x4 $3.00. ., 12.75 30 x 3 # - 1 ,75'- 26.75 ’ 34x4j£ 3.75 . 13.95 32x3j^ 2,09 27.85 4.00 16.40 31x4' • 2.25 28,75 36 x 4*4 4.25 »18.75 ’ 32x4 2.50 32.75 35 *5 4.50 *.19.60, ' 33x4 2.75 34.75 37 x 5; 4.75 Tire* delivered prepaid to ydurExprcu oi P*stOffice. K, site* CMsainsthro, tire* are sslijfactoiy.psy espies* or .post-oifics inthorities. Ifnot satisfied, retnret at our expease. - Ourlaig* outlet enables us to purchase MW, high grade tires at lcssUion cost to manufacture/ in .many instances. THE VfUUU »cmuy Ui*U» .*<U i/wav*?! UMVf ptcittvt Bitrkc* price. . Wo* have deposited' a bond assuring you that alt adjustments will be made without question or quibble. . ■ _ V OrderNowIStatewhetherStraightSida or Clincher are desired. Immediate sKIptncnt’. Cord lire prices on request, AVON TIM & RUBBER CO. ‘ Dept. 26,Ninth & Walnut Sts. " CINCINNATI, O. Mrs. Rebecca Jeffryes o f Dayton] aged 83, widow of Daniel Jeffryes, known to many here, died at her home in that city. Burial at Massies Creek yesterday, T--------■! 'j "1 -jp 4 Mr. Alex. McDill and daughter, Mrs. Arthur Buck, of College Corner, O., were here tq attend the funeral of the late Robert Bird, Mr. McDill .vas a former citizen and at one time operated the flour mill west of town, ^Muggins” Stormont is dead. She has gone to .her happy hunting ground after a dose of poison. As a result there is grief in the H. M. Stormont family. It is hard to believe that anvone would take such a meth­ od of J ing a dog but it Beems such is the case now and then. Poultry is now bringing a good price. We will need all we caii get, Wta. .Marshall, Those who heard the E. C, Mobley lecture at the opera house Tuesday night \\ere well repaid for going. The subject was “ America at the Crossroads” , The lecture was not only instructive but very timely and we hear many favorable comments among lecture course patrons. Depositors o f the Houston bank will get their money about April 1. The money for the land Bale has been put up' according to reports apd the land rented by 456' new owner. Curtains repaired at Wolford’s. This section had a good coating of snow last Saturday night* The peculiar feature o f tne storm was that Dayton had less than , wp did and Springfield hardly any. Td the South ,the snow was heavier and in Cincinnati one of the heaviest of the winter. Southern states were treated to some real, winter. In' the East the snowfall was heavy partic­ ularly in New York City, • Some weeks ago R. A. Murdock was heavily loaded with Ford cars of all types. With s^ack times it was predicted that he .ha<L enough cars, for a year but evidently Ralph knew about what he was doing. Today he is out o f closed cars and five behind in his orders. Several weeks ago the Xenia , agency turned down two car loads of Fords and Mr. Murdock took them over. The Cedarville and James town agencies under the * Murdock management are two of the best in the Columbus'division of the Ford company. Last week four closed cars were sold to Springfield parties and one in Xenia. Several churches of this county will be represented through their pas­ tors at tne interdenominational pas­ tors’ conevntion in Columbus, Tues­ day; Wednesday and Thursday, Mch. 1, 2, 3.Kev. V. E. Busier expects to attend; The convention has been cal­ led by theOhio Federation of Churche as a step in preparation for the state­ wide interdenominational (campaign o f ‘evangelism which is to be conduct ed this spring. Among the noted speakers will be 1Bishop Anderson, Gypsey Smith, noted / evangelist, and President Knox Montgomery’ o f Muskingum College and others of note, - : : .v. Party who lost dog collar with twj& license numbers on it can have same by calling at this office and proving property and paying a. charge of 25 cents, for this, notice. -Call ns when yon have poultry to sell. We will call for any amount. ■ . ■ Wm. Marshall. One of the season’s most import­ ant social functions was held Tues­ day afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. W. Johnson,* when Mrs. Edith Blair, Mrs. B. H. Little, Mrs. A. E, Richards apd Mrs, Johnson enter­ tained about two hundred and fifty ! guests at two different intervals ( during the afternoon. The decora­ tions were tin keeping with ..the Washington Birthday season. Light refreshments were served, the.-favors being small flags and cherries. There were quite a few guests from out-of- town. BELDEN ’S PUBLIC SALE I ' S ;........ .... . -------—--- As we have leased our Storage building we will sell at Public Auction, on Saturday, February 26,1921 Beginning at 1 o’clock, at ” 19 SO . W H ITEM AN ST ., XEN IA 3 d o o r s South of Regil Hotel. In case of bad weather the sale will, be held in the building which will accommodate 50 people. FEEDS—FEEDS--FEEDS -FEEDS ” Belden s White Middlings (Pure). * Beldens Winte Wheat Bran (Pure). PuMna Cow Chow Dairy Fe*d, 24 Per Cent Protein, Dewey’s 3 D ‘Distillers Dried Grains, 31 Per Cent Protein, „ Belden’s Mayflower Dairy Feed, 20 Per Rauh’s Digester Tankage. Gent Protein. Beldens Mayflower Pig and Hog Feed, 20 Whiter Oats. Per Cent Protein, SEEDS SEEDS SEEDS SEEDS Medium Red Clover Seed*. Saplin Clover Seed. . Ataike Clover Seed. Toledo Prime Timothy Seed TERMS—2 Per Cent off for Cash. 6 Month* time with Bankable Note. belden M illing company Auctioneer**-J* L< Webb. Clerki—J» Ed, Sutton and T, C. Long ...................- •'•■' .............. . 1 1»1'1111' ' .rr "lf 11 VlhlM . ............................................... ............. . The Building at 19 South Whiteman Street, will be open all day, February 26, *o you can come early and look over the Sample* to see what you are buying. *rif J^jJ^-'ftffj^ririiijlil II W M Miiriiffin 0 TOR flfiTWHIir HIGH SCHOOL NOTES) Three-P*rt AUmorahdum Pad. a*isT.«et'JlMMA^iir*fciia~niar*>^fcjs»dlMJ8Maa<a^^ 7„ w vv w w iw __a************* Inday, Fabruwy 18, T ie aevonth and eighth grade boya won over the second team, Xenia Junior High by a score of 9 to7. The local Freahman boys defeated Xenia Junior High first team by a score of 19 to 13, An­ ginal! sheets, bearing old or worth- notes, can be removed from * new type of memorandum pad. designed for business man’s desk, without dam­ aging those still possessing’ value, ac­ cording to an article In Popular Me­ chanics Magazine, The * ’ ock of pa- ! PUBLIC SALE DATES. 1 +*n>i. ujtujiu aa. - ,« rnv<^^ i„tn three narta by tioch Acadamy suffered a aad defeat; by the Cedarville girls. The game Perf<irate<1 near epded gith the score of 25 to 5, j left-hand side. Monday, February 21 two lively] r';! ....................— ■ games were played at the college* gym. * i The Cedarville H. S. Girls defeat­ ing Yellow Springs by a score of 18 to 0. The Cedarville boys were de­ feated by Y, S. H. Ross H. S. girls have been counted the classiest sextet in the county but Mrs. Idella Cross $t Sons, Feb. 25. J. J. Keieher, Thursday, March 3. Frank Sboup, March 4. NOTICE! °a"e tllou«ht beautiful. The Hottentot worn S e d them by t^ n t y ^ iuts J redDL !.hehiei,? reTb,>? y pn,tC^ The third section of the High m l a^d blae,t< I« Greenland the School will give their literary pro- 4 omen color the face blue and yellow. gram Monday evening, Feb. 28 in. ................ ..... the School auditorium at 7:30. ’ j Everyone apparently enjoyed their . Afte# invoicing we find we have .loads o f bargains to offer, 285 men’* , time overcoats, 142 young men’s ov-! vercoats at half price, 218 men’s fine) Queer Idea of Beauty. j suits, boys clothing and all furnish- j Beauty makes use of strange ways 1lags at 1-2 to 1-3 off. Great bargains < for adornment In some lands. Many : in the shoe department for men, boys i ~ ' women and children, Dress and work ’ shoes, felt and; rubber boots all go at prices below the market. Don’t wait but come at once to C. A. Kel- ble’s, 17-19 W», Main St, Xenia, Japanese women adopt the slpgutar habit of gilding their teeth. In some sections of India part of the teeth must be dyed black before a woman Is Washington Birthday vacation and, returned to school ” T with smiling faces. BASKET BALL FRIDAY. Greatest Cotton Producer and (Jeer, The United States consumes«more on Wednesday' raw cotton and splitB more cotton yarn then any other country, producing more than 99 per cent of the yarns re- j I),ln<>cones have their chance, and from qulred for domestic Industry. Tonight, Friday, the College Var­ sity will engage the strong Baldwin- Wallace quintet in the Alford .Gym. This will undoubtedly be the fastest passing game of the present season. This game.has been changed from February 26. The waynesville Normal sextet will-give battle to our college girls the same evening. Single admision will be 50 cents. March 4, Inauguration day, Bowl­ ing Green Normal will be the Var­ sity’s opponents here. The girls will likely play the Ross township high school girls that evening. March 18, Defiance College in­ vades Cedarville to play the boys. The girls have the Wittenberg girls signed up to come also. Color and Disease, . / Color really does fight disease. Tnke for example the ultra-violet my. Her# we have a most convincing proof of the healing force that resides In color. This famous rny exerts a very po­ tent curative effect upon certain dis­ eases of the side. . A rny of ultra­ violet light is concentrated upon the diseased part, and Immediately a new process |s set up by which the disease Is eventually destroyed. ■ The Cone of Qur Pine, So hard. is the cone of a pine In our western forests that the impris­ oned seeds cannot be propagated fn the ordinary way. The best way Is to burn the cone’ over a hot fire until It bursts, when the seeds escape. When forest fires sweep the country these I*■"*' hVM>M I them new trees grow. Flavor! No cigarette has th e same deUoious flavo r a s Lucky Strike* JBeoause— . I t s t o a s t e d LUCKY STRIKE CIGARETTE ■Difference In Time. Inrcply to our observation! that he and his son 'and namesake resembled each other greatly/ old Bill Silvers said r “The main difference 'twlxt me ‘ an’ young Bill Is, when I put In a dny ! at work I don’t-feel much ljke funntn’ J ’round at nights; and when young Bill puts In a night rtinriln’ ’round he don’t feel much like workin1 next day.”-— Topeka Capital. He Sucks the Blbod. ' ] When mice ahff'Other small cmimah Al» M.AA, l lire abundant, j i weasel makea grea* havoc dni^^them, says the America! J Forestry, Magazine, killing one after] another, merely to suck a part of thr fresh blood, and then abandoning thi] bodies for some other animal. F o r d s o i v TRADE, MARK More and more every day the demand for the Fordson Tractor increases because the Fordson has demonstrated so much useful- \ness, so much economy, so much labor saving, so much money sav­ ing, 'along, s c . many lines of activity; The farmer has discovered that not only-for plowing, harrowing, : discing, seeding, ;mowing, reaping and threshing but a multitude of other uses; cutting wood; feed; grinding feed; churning; washing furnishing water in. the house; making electric light possible in the house and around'thp barns; so that, as a matterof fact, there is hrdlya an hour in the dqy when. theTractorcannot pe made a profitable servant. There is ditching to. do; there are roads to fix; and so on all down along the line of the numerous calls that constantly face the farmer . the Fordson steps in and does the work, shoulders the complete burden of the toil and the hard work, one might almost say “drudgery," ' This is the A, e of Machinery, the.day when mpn plans the day’s work, or the year’s work, and then turns it over to theTractor to • execute. Get the book, “ The Fordson at Work,” because it is free. If you cannot call for it, write and we will mail it . to you. The Tractor i s : not only a necessity toevery farmer blit is established utility along a great many commercial lines. / an R. A. MURDOCK Authorized Ford and Fordson Sales and Service, CEDARVILLE AND JAMESTOWN. 1 ' RS3B AND SO ARE OURS CALL AND SEE Tankage 60% Bran Middlings Oil Meal Cotton Seed Dairy Feed Y- Arlington Flour Red Dog Flour Prime Medium Clove Seed / * „ 1 . . • Timothy Seed Alsike Seed Alfalfa Seed COAL # S3 Jackson Lump at $7 .0 0 P er T on L orado W est V irg in ia 4 in. Lump at $ 8 .0 0 P er T on Y e llow Ja ck e t B lock at $ 9 .0 0 P er T on . Let us have your requirements on fence if you want to save money. How about your Implements? Come in and talk it over with us. y Let us grind your feed. We have a nice lot of oats for Feed St , ’ . *» Y ou rs to P lease \ The Cedarville Farmers’ Grain Co. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlf iituirniiuiiiiiiMiitiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniuiiimiuHiiHiimmiiiiiiimiiiHiiiiiiiiii mm

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