The Cedarville Herald, Volume 51, Numbers 27-52
NOTICE! AfterNovember1stIwillbeprepared todoalHdndsofPipework REPAIRS ONPUMPWORK ESPECIALLY AgrentsWin Prizes On Soil Programs ■ v -'f - • %• Marion C. Hughes Cedarville Phone in the tlme of need Is a ■ . , . . ’ ■ f < , n 1 * , ' - > healthy Saving Account in this hank. Take the first opportunity to get your name, on an Ex- 1 change Bank passhodk. •CedarviHe, Ohio' Uf- •f •% Hfcvdiigydec^ed to quit farming. 1 will offer at Public Sale at my firm o f GtedarVille, 4 mites sooth east e£ YeJlo’W Springs £t 12 The following property: 3—HEAD OP HORSES—3, 1 gray Mare, 12 years old, good hue mare; 1 bay Hare, 6 years old, aoudi, good worker: i pure bred sorrel Belgian Mar^ with 3 months o}d Ally Colt (T years old). • , 6.—HEAD OP CATTLE— 6 S Jersey Cows, carrying 2nd calf to be fresh in D.ec,; 1 Shorthorn Jersey Cow, giving 2 gallons milk a day,- carrying14th calf, to be fresh March 1st; 1 Jersey Heifer, IB months old; 1 Jersey Heifer, 9 months old. *** 19— HEAD OP HOGS— 19 16 fall Shoats, weighing 60 lbs., 2 far Hogs; 2 .Sows, bred for Feb. pigs. FEED—6 tons good mixed Hay; 209 bushels Corn in crib; ,60 Shocks, of Com in field; 200 bushels Oats; 300 ShodkB of Fodder. , , 200 CHICKENS—Pure White Rock Chickens. MACHINERY Box Bed Wagon; set Hay Ladders;.Nisco Spreader; Farmers Favorite Wheat Drill, almost new; McCormick Mower; Sura Drop Com Planter; Single Disc: Cas* Sulky Plow; Imperial Walking Plow; Drag Harrow; Steel Roller; Single and Double Shovel Plow; good Sled; Gravel Bed. 3 sides of Chain Harness, Collars, Bridles, Lines, etc. MISCELLANEOUS- ; 2 Kettles with Stands; Liard Press; Sausbge Grinder; Scalding Barrel; Platform, Seales; Corn Sheller; set Fence Stretchers; Grindstone; D.e Laval Florence Coal Oil Stove; small Heating Stove and other articles. TERMS MADE KNOWN ON DAY OF SALE J. G. St. John COL. JOBGORDON and HARRY KENNON, Auctioneers. Lunch served by ladles o f M. E. Church, C^andTie.^T^ Clerk. •4b FR I G IDA IRE hepsfoodcolderand pays for itself BNMa*ad wholaaomt aod gives vital protection ' to health. It* eCoomniMwill more thanpayfor its coee. Visit oor display rooms for a demoo* DaytonBower&Light Go. J C t t t f# y D i s t r i c t - # ' M O f o I i Ohio Extension Men Rated High On Plans For Improvement In ability to plan soil building pro grams for their counties, Ohio county extension agents, rank very pear the head of the list. This year two Ohio agents were awarded prises on. plans submitted in the fifth annual contest for such programs, carried on by the National Fertiliser Association of Washington, D. C. W, S. Barohariy Muskingum County, and John R. Gilkey o f Richland-.CSpunty are ibi* year's winners. Each will jhave his expenses paid on a three-day visit to Washington to attend the annual meeting of the American ..Society of Agronomy, November 22 and 23, and will receive a gold medal and a certi ficate of award. Seven Ohio agents have won, this honor in the past five years. This States string o f winners includes Charles F. Class, Warren County, qiul W,F,. Gahm, Scioto. County, in 1923; P,"A. Young, Gallia County, in 1925; A, M. Hedge, Vinton County, in 1926; George W, Kreitler, Meigs County, in 192.7, and the two names- added this year. Thirty-five agents from 26 northern and eastern states have re ceived apet award at Various times, Ohio has. had more men on the list than any other state. Gahm, in 1923, won sweepstakes honors. Dr. G. I, Christie, president of the *Ontario1 Agricultural College •and former director of the Indiana Experi ment -Station, is chairman of the judging committee. The other mem bers are Director R. K.‘ Bliss; Iowa Extension Service; Dr. A. G. McCall, chief in soil investigations, United States Department of Agriculture; Dr. L.L B. Hartwell, formerly director of the Rhode Island Experiment Sta tion, and Prof, L. E. Wortlien, exten sion soil technologist, Cornell Univer sity, New York. 'AKLAND c Announces theAppointmento f With,this guard any door Is warranted. iM- to item $hu* Yes, It's a door-atep^d*. very unique one at that Soma folks place them on the mantel or timltifeg zoom table for ornament or on Jh(It#fiial -pedes tals. The Interestfiig tlilng about, tills elephant is, you buy the papier-mache animal forms at plaea* where mate rials for making piper .flowers and' favors are to be bad.1You patet them with sealing wax dissolved in alcohol. To make themheavy enough for door stops pour a quantity of leaden shot into the hollow forms. Excellentidea for Christmas g^fc making, JEANPATTON CEDAgVILLE, OHIO For Meditation OOOiOOO , By LEONARD A. BARRETT A MAKER OF VIOLINS Harfier Work Won’t Stop These Eeaks Farmers Ca r Increase Profits , Without; Extra Labor If They Alter Practice - That harderjwork and more of it is all $he farmer needs in the way of farm relief, is* a cherished belief -in some non-agricultural quarters. Be which as it may, C, E. Arnold of the- rural economics department of the Ohio State University, points out that the farmer is doing some things Which are cutting down his gross income and which *cannot he" remedied “by by working harder* Among-..tbesef money-losing prac tices is-that of milking scrafi caws' which average about 186 pounds o f hutterfat annually and hardly pay for their, feed,'instead qf^ mUkipg 309- pound producers whieiTwould rdjtum a profit, be just as easy to milk, :and require little extra feed: * Another is the practice of selling cream When everybody else is selling it, and the price is low, from cows Which have freshened in the spring instead of in the fall. ■ , In the same class' is the habit of feeding cattle or hogs until the feed supply* is exhausted and then selling thqm on the same low market which everyone else is loading with stock, instead of deciding in advance the most desirable weight and time to market, and contracting for feed to -make that weight. •. - Still another trick is taking seed com at random from the feed bih in the spring, instead of selecting it from the field in the fall, storing it in a dry place, testing it for gemination, and planting only the best of the com. Experiments at the Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station showed that the farmer could make $6.60 an hour as wages for simply testing his Seed' com for gemination and planting the high-germinating ears, Vine Has Beauty In Winter &nd Summer Evergreen Varieties Valuable In Concealing Ugliness Through All Seasons “Vines*' and “Summer” are two ideas so closely associated with each other that the connection is often needlessly emphasized; there are vines for the winter as well as for the summer, Victor H. Ries, extension floriculturist at the Ohio State Uni versity, points out. Vines are valu able in a beautification plan hot alone for the behttty they .reveal, but fdr the ugliness which they may conceal in the form of old buildings, garages, sheds, or architectural details which are not all they might be. •One vine wjiich remains green through the winter is the Winter Creeper or Eudrtymus radicans. This vihe, Ries says, is not a fast grower but eventually will reach a height of 10 or 20 feet when once it has estab lished itself, Another form of the same vine, known ns the Broad Leaf Winter Creeper, is more vigorous in growth and sometimes bears berries which resemble Bittersweet. Another vine, not entirely ever green, but retaining its leaves well into the winter, is the Hall's Japanese Honeysuckle. This vine, according tec the floriculturist, will grow in either sun or shade and is valuable on a f steep slope or terrace where grass will not grow. These vines should be planted early in the spring, DIPPERENT things seemnecessity' ^ to mqKe people happy. Some people think they would be supremely happy If they,possessed sit the money they wanted. Other people are real sure they wofitd attain real happiness If they could only square themselves with the world,'pay all their debts and get a new start A smaller group try to find happiness in thq possession of friendships and the things-which,mon ey cannot, buy. Here Is what tbe great Germanpoet, Heine, required for bis happiness: "A tiny cottage with a vine over the door, plenty of fresh milk and butter, and a row of tall trees •leading down to, the garden gate. And, If God permitted him to be perfectly happy, six or seven o f his worst enemies hanging to those trees,” , f Happiness largely depends , upon what we are seeking in life. If we ex pect‘ to find It in the acquisition of things outside Of ogjselves we shall surely meet - with disappointment. Happiness does not come to us—It grows in ps. Whenwe have‘discovered- our true.selves we are op the path way re bappfnesj*. Tbe bird does not beat'its wings against tile cSge be cause. It Is not a beautiful flower it knows it is a biro, ft sings and sings even In spite of it* captivity The flower put* forth alt of Its grow, tng strength to become the most beau tlful flower ft can. . - Ilapplnesa ts the result of contem- ment No discontented person can be happy. Discontentment is proof of the fact that we have not yet found our true selves, A famous maker of violins lived in ihat portion Of aJrfg city where prop oily wns being sold at .large prices to make* way for the progress of bust- ness, ‘Denying himself the pecuniary advantage offered 'Wm for the sale of' his' property, he remained where he was and continued to make, violins. “Why leave tills place where I -have labored many year*? 1 am content* I am happy. T am a maker of vio lins.'1 (©, Wt. W*»t»r»M*»r*p»perUnion.> Sahara Once Forested Dense forests once grew on the Sa hara desert and,* race of people who subsisted by bunting and tilling the soil lived fhefe, says the Dearborn Independent, quoting a Chicago pro fessor. - ■ HOTEL FOBT H A Y E S In Columbus _ ' Stop at Hotel FortHayes , Made-fa— Fireproof Cokjmbtta' Most Popular Hotel 309 Rooms With Bath ■ <• - I&60 and $3.00. C&venient to sto$•* and theaters Free parking lot atid garage in connection R. K BUNSTINE, Manager ’ 1 COM?MBITS, OHIO Went Street, new High ■Ve are pleased t o announce the appointment o f a new local dealer whose standing and experience fully qualify him to meet the exacting standards required o f those who sell' and ser- vice Oakland and Rontiae Sixes. We hopp you w ill meet this* hew dealer. Visit him at your first opportunity. Permit him to show you the New All-American Six whose superb power, stir- . ring.performance and vivid style have established an entirely pew conception o f the modern motor car. Let him point nut the.nqw features o f today’s Pon tiac Six —- excelling even its famous predecessors in ; exclu- luty Hiqliesk u M \ In addition tomew cars oiFinatchless value, this deal er also is authorized to sell'Good W ill Used Gars— re liab le , inexpensive transportation backed by-a fixed policy o f honest valuefor'the customer’ s dollar. Our new dealer will welcome you whenever you find time- to stop-in. Call on him soon ! OAKLAND MOTOR CAR COMPANY, PONTIAC, MICHIGAN OAKLAND 1 All-American -Six •1145 »*1375 *745 »*875 < ■ t / ■ * - ■: AlltricasatFactor?: ■■ Today’s PONTIAC SIX FAODUCTS OF SIXES GENERAL MOTORS WALNU mond Br . Pound 'MINCE. Club 9 ( Such . wryarjM., -.-r\ ... „ SYRUP . Label SALM'O Tall Can QLOVE PerP ‘ ‘ r • t. v ‘ W e are carrying a full line of Feeds including: Bran, Middlings, Alfalfa Meal, Tankage# "Meat Scraps, Bone Meal, Charcoal, Oyster Shell, Pig- meal and Dairy Feed. ' v . - ■ * ' 4 . . ■ ■ ■ ■ • ■ j Let Us Quote You Prices on Your Next Mash Formula * *** - - ■ 1 - Let us save you money on your winter feeding as this feed was contracted for before the adyance in the market. Kt i., M .. Why not buy your winter supply of coal, before the price advances. We Handle the Best > /• V I - IF HORNBY’ Coal Yards WHENINNEEDOFSALEBILLSSEEUS >
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