The Cedarville Herald, Volume 51, Numbers 27-52

PUBLIC SALE! Bavktg im M my twm **d going Into other jbtu&MNM, I will sell at jHibJSe outcry m my firm l mil* «Mt of Cedmrvillm on the Barber ro»d 3 witiwmt nmorra « r k r M f m THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1,1928 at 1 Q;M o’clock the following property: 7 — HEAD HORSES — 7 1 Team e f black Mares. S and 11 yoars old, wt. 3400 lbs.; 1 black Mare, i f years eld, w t 17M lb«.; 1 Barrel Mare, I f years old, wt, 1400 lb** a single lias mare. These mares are sound, good workers, and extra alee, 1 Roan Filly Colt, i f months old. 3 Yearling Colts. 21— HEAD DAIRY CATTLE— 21 (Recently T, B. Tested) Guernsey Cow with 5 th Calf *by side, Guernsey Cow with 3rd Calf by aide, Guernsey Cow with 1st Calf by side, Guernsey Jersey Cow with 1st Calf by side, Guernsey Cow with 1st Calf by side, Jersey Cow with 3rd Ca)f by side, Black Cow carrying 5th calf to freshen Deo. 15, G: Cow carry! 4tfc esJf. tc ........................................................................ . . . . . high testers, Guernsey Heifer to freshen in Jan„ eligible to register, Guernsey Heifer to freshen Jan. 7, Jersey Heifer to freshen Jan, £ 6 , Registered Guernsey Heifer just bred, Guernsey Heifer 18 months old, 2 Guernsey Heifers about 9 months old, Jersey Heifer 8 months old. 1 Guernsey Bull 18 months old, 1 Registered Guernsey Bull 6 months old,. . If you are looking for a real lot of Dairy Cows you wllf find them here. 41 — HEAD SHROPSHIRE SHEEP — 41 28 Ewes, 11 EWe Lambs, 2 Extra Good Bucks. Most of these are young. * 116 — HEAD OF HOGS — 116 (All Double Immuned) 5 Dttroc Brood' Bows, 6 Hampshire Brood Sows, 4 Mixed Brood Sows, 80 fall Pigs, 20 feeding Hogs, 1 registered Hampshire Male Hog, 18 months old, FEED— FEED — FEED , About 10' tons extra good Alfalfa Hay, 2nd* and 3rd cutting, 50 bale* good mixed Hay, 125 bales good Wheat Straw, about 300 bushels good. Corn in crib, 25 tons Ensilage. FARMING IMPLEMENTS 1 Brown Wagon, with box* bed, 2 fiat top Wagons, with Bide beards, 1 new Ideal Manure Spreader, Deering Wheat Binder, 7 foot, Milwaukee Mower, 5 foot, two row Corn Plow, Oliver 1 row Corn Plow, Black Hawk Corn Planter with fertilizer attachment, Hay Tedder, Cassidy Gang Plow, J2 inch, double disc, 3 horse Superior Wheat Drill, 1 horse Superior Wheat Drill new last year, Cultipacker with Rotary Hoe attachment, good as new, Hay Rake, Feed Sled with steel soles, Double Shovel Plow, Single Shovel Plow, Harrow, Drag, Walking Plow 1£ inch. HARNESS—1 Double Set Brass Mounted, Breeching Harness, nearly new, 1 Double Set Tug Harness, 2 sides Chain Harness, Collars, Lines, Bridles, Halters, and Fly Nets. DAIRY UTENSILS—No. 12 Delaval Cream Separator, nearly new, 4 new 10 gallon Milk Cans, 1 five gallon Milk Can, Strainers, etc. MISCEL­ LANEOUS—7 Square Hog Boxes, good as new, Hog Toughs, 2 100 gallon Hog Fountains, Slofe Cart, Milk Cart, Smidley Self Feeder, Hog Panels, Barrels, Gravel Bed, Calf Crate, Platform Scales will weigh 1200 lba., Com Dryer, Corn Sheller, Grapple Hay Fork, 160 foot Hay Rope, Pulleys, Shovels, Forks, 70 rods new Hog Fence, some Chicken Fence and other articles not mentioned. TERMS CASH GRAY W. McCAMPBELL , COL. GLEN WEIKEBT, Auct. HARRY LEWIS, F. C. LONG, Clerks i Lunch served by Young Married People’s Sabbath School Class of the United Presbyterian Church, Cedarville. keeps fo o d colder a n d pays for itself m T h e cost o f Frigidaire is insignificant in com- parisoawith the benefits it gives. It keeps foods fresh and wholesome and gives vital protection v to health. Its economies w ill mote than pay for its cost. Visit onr display rooms for a demon* etration. Easymonthlv payments can be arranged! Ohe D a y t o n P o w e r & L i g h t Co. jvenia District 9 ft 0 D U C T * O * G E N E R A L * M O T O R S EL______________ ____________ L----------------------- ------------ WHEN jIN Y SPRINGFIELD R E G E N T SPRINGFIELD, OHIO * N O W P L A Y I N G SAMUEL GOLDWYN PRESENTS Ronald Colman and Vilma Banky IN TWO LOVERS A FRED NIBLO PRODUCTION FRIDAY AND SATURDAY "LADIES OF THE NIGHT GUIS” B DAYS STARTING SUNDAY, OCTOBER 14 Wm. BOYD, JACQUAIJNE LOGAN A L L E N H A L E IN “ P O W E R ” A SENSATIONAL COMEDY MELO-DItAMA ACALENDAROFOHIOBIROS-ASTUDY By Prof, Allen C, Conger, o f Dept o f Zoology* O, W. U. Who can doubt the approach o f •homes in our dry upland fields. From winter now? Woodlands are turning'moi'a northern nesting regions we to flame and gold. The tang of leaf welcome owr transient friends, the smoke is in the evening air. tong!clear-whistling White-throat and the rows of corn shockB stand guard over!regal White-crowned Sparrow, The heaps o f Halloween pumpkins. The j brownish Swamp Sparrow and the industrious ant and bee, yes, even Jbig handsome Fox Sparrow also stop the fiddling grasshoppers must he i f or a few weeks. Late in the month aware that the cycle of the year is changing. Surely the birds know it. From the great marshes of the north comes the vanguard of an army o f waterfowl to run the gauntlet of shot froiA'duekboat and blind. The cries of geese and of dugks may float down from the darkness of" the night sky our little friend Chipping . Sparrow and the Field Sparrow of our coun­ tryside both leave us. Towheea (Chewinks) become scarce and we look in vain for the bright blue of the Indigo Bunting, The reappearance o f Tree Sparrow and Juncos is further evidence of the near approach of and tell us of the coming of fou l'w inter,for they were among our first weather and our first snow. As the. bird population deserts northern forests the migratory birds of prey trailed southward and the migration of hawks is noted. The blue darters, Cooper and Sharp- shinned Hawks are on the move now, acquaintances on a mild dky last January. » The Vlreo, clan leisurely seekers of insects among the foliage of trees, now seeks mote productive hunting grounds; where frost will not paint seeking their victims among the de- leaves and then send them tumb- fencejess species of song'birds which ling down- The bright Brown Thrash are being pressed south by “ the ap proach of winter. The swallows and the Night hawk er, which whistled arid sang from treetops and dashed into the thicket of the fence row, has gone to join the has already gone and now our sky |Catbird in a visit to their southern seems bare, for Chimney Swifts are c9usto» the Mockingbird. The busy no longer circling and chattering little House Wrbn, .which scolded and above the treetops. Their winter sang from the nest-box under the home is still an,unsolved question, garage eaves, bids us au revoir until 'We would hardly give credence to the next, spring. Roving bands of Golden- idea that they fly to the moon or crowned and Ruby-crowned Kinglets plunge into the. mud at the bottom Pay « autumn visit to our orchard of our lakes, yet not so long .ago trees, there to search for over-winter- people realy proposed such fantastic u,8 stages o f insect Pests hidden m -messes. ' crevices of the bark. Much we owe h m, ^ ™ . to these restless creatures whose . T/ e Phof “ -never-ending quest for food, leads bridges and the Crested Flycatehers . hem cultivated plants. ‘ hasten to 30 m their other flycatchers 4, relatives in more congenial climes.? October 18 .the month in -which to The blackbirds which began to flock renew,, a c q u a i n t a n c e with those in mid-August have nearly all gone, thrushes which went north last spring The Cowbirds have departed and only to neat. -The Hermit Thrush, most a few Bronzed Grackles remain, per- famous vocalist of the group, tarries haps to winter in southern Ohio. jfor awhile and the Olive-backed and Just as September iB Warbler' perhaps the Graycheeked Thrush may month, we 'must' dedicate October t o ’ be found lingering in our quiet groves the Sparrow tribe. We now miss tbe.jand woodlands. There is really much evening hymn of the sweet-voiced; of interest for the bird-student now, V e s p e r Sparrow. The yellowish’ for due to migration, daily new sur* Savannah Sparrow and the tirty ' prises are in store in the painted land- Grasshopper ‘ Sparrow leave their!scapes o f October, Lawns, Like Owners, Looking Seedy Now By the end of the vacation season, the lawn, like its owner, is beginning to look a little shabby. Victor H. Kies, extension floriculturist at 'the Ohio State University, says both the owner and the- lawn had better get back to work. Lawns should be re­ seeded before the fall rains begin. Kies endorses apparent extrava­ gance as real economy when buying j grass seed. I f it costs less than 40 or 50 cents a pound, it probably con- tans weed seeds, chaff, and timothy, he says. The seed should be sowed- at the rate of one pound to each 300 square feet of surface, Agriculture Is Big . Chemical Industry Every Farm Is A Chemical Plant. When Seen By Eye Of Chemist Chemical factories representing an investment .of* 50 .billion dollars in a chain o f plants covering the United States and constituting one-fifth of the tangible national wealth o f. the country—that is the picture Seemby an agrcipltUfal chemist when he looks at the farms o f the United States. To Dr, C. A. Browne, chief of Chem­ ical and Technological research in the United States Department of Agri­ culture, each .farm is a chemical MADE DEFENDANTS For many places, Ries recommends factory. Sunlight, water, and carbon a mixture of three pounds o f Pacey Jdioxide are the principal raw materi- English rye grass, five pounds of 'als. The factory .output includes Kentucky blue grass, and three finished and semi-finished products pounds of red top grass. One half 5and raw mqtetrial fo„r pther factories, pound of white clover may be added' The products o f these farm factories to this mixture if desired. . . Iare essential in the life of the nation For shade which is .not too dense, —grains, fruits, vegetables, cotton, the formula calls for Canada blue Jsugar, poultry, milk, wool, hides, meat, grass, creeping bent jftnd wood mea-land other necessities, come from them, dow grass in equal amounts, used! , Ope-fifth of the American chemists with the English rye grass as a cover. fisted ip “AlbprtrijT? Men. of Science” cr0p • . [are engaged m Work pf an ngricul- Don’t use lime, but use a complete tural-chemical nature- “Tho proper- chemical commercial fertilizer on tho tie® should be larger, Dr. Browne be- lawn, &ys Ries. It should have a Moves. '" ‘There is need for wider ap- formula of 6 - 8 -ff, 5-13-4, or 4 - 12 - 4 , .plication of chemistry to agriculture, __ j and the problem!! waiting solution are PUBLIC. SALE OF - , ’ complex. In comparison with the in- CHATTEL PROPERTY finitely varied and complex processes _______ of plant and animal chemistry, the The undersigned will sell at public operations of an md (Strial-chemical auction to the highest bidders, on factory, such as the manufacture of Thursday, October 18, 1928, commenc- sulfuric acid or sodium carbonate, are mg at 12:00 o’clock noon, on the Mar- relatively simple,” quart farm occupied by Clell Wilson, located about 2 miles east of Osborn and about six miles west of Yellow Springs, on the Osborn-Yellow Spring pike, the following named chattels: FARM IMPLEMENTS NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate o f J< O. Stewart, Deceased, j Emma Vi E. Stewart has been op- _____________________ 1 pointed afld qualified as Executor of Buckeye two row corn plow, Oliver estate of J, O, Stewart late of single row com plow, Oliver Breaking, Greene County, Ohio, deceased, plow, BlUckhawk corn planter, Deer- i Gus Dili day of October, A. ing Harvester, ( 8 *foot cut), Emmer- son-Grimes Manure Spreader, (Thom­ as Mower, two farm wagons, beds and hay ladders, Sulky hay rake, Double Disc Harrow, Dump bed, Bob sled; CORN HUSKER—. Four Roll Rosen­ thal corn huaker. FORDSON TRAC­ TOR, John Deere two bottom tractor plow* Power Milking Machine— DeLaval two unit milking machine Rulso pump Two Ford quarter ton trucks, Live Stock—Gray horse, gray mare; 10 head milk cows, being Holstein, Shorthorn and Jersey breed, Each cow is giving milk and each cow is suppos ed to be with calf, due to calve ,some­ time in February and March, 1929. TERMS OF SALE: Property sold where is and as is. Nothing warrant­ ed or guaranteed, excepting that the purchaser is getting a good title to whatever he purchases. Cash In hand no property to be removed from the premises before settlement, Mrs. Addis L. Drake, Executrix, Estate of George H. Drake, Deceased. Mrs, Frances Marquart, Morris D. Rice,!Osborn, ()., J. Wilbur (lorry, Cleveland, Ohio, Attorneys, Cols. Mouk and Weikert, Auctioneers Frank L. Curry, Clerk. FOR SALE -Bull dog pups, old enough to wean, HARRY SHULL D. 1928, S. C, WRIGHT, Probate Judge of Baid County. NOTICE TO BIDDERS Notice is hereby given that the Cedarville Township Trustees, Cedar- ville, Ohio, will receive Sealed bids qp to 6 o’clock P. M. on Monday, October 22 at the office o f the Township Clerk, for the furnishing of one truck of a ton or a toh and one-half capacity to meet the requirements on file with said clerk. One Ford ton truck with dump body to be accepted as part cash payment by successful bidder* Bids to be sealed and endorsed “Bjil for Truck.” The Board of Trustees reserves the right to accept or reject any* or all bids, By order of the Board o f Township Trustees, Cedarville Township, W, W. TROUTE, Clerk. FOR SALE We offer for Sale one Ford truck, ton capacity with dump body. Cash sule. This truck is authorised to be sold for cash or’ traded as cash on a new truck by the Cedarville Township Trustees. , ' W. W, TROUTE, Clerk. In the case of E, T, Ballard and Roea B, Lewis against Anna L, Bal­ lard and others in Common Pleas Court, on motion o f the plaintiffs, E. T. Ballard and J* E. Lewis as administrators o f the estate of Eliza­ beth B. Evans, deceased, have been made parties defendant to the action? ALLEGE RENT UNPAID CEDARVILLE LECTURE COURSE ftoit for |383 has been filed in Com­ mon Pleas Court by Charles Kable against J, B. Newsom* The plaintiff sets forth the defen­ dant rented a'105-acre farm located i in Xenia Twp, owned by him, for the [ year beginning March 1, 1928, and’ agreed to pay 3735 as rental, half of the sum at once and the. balance Sep­ tember 1,1928.' The defendant failed to meet the September payment of 3367.50 and also owes the plaintiff 315*50 for a 200 -pound hog purchased from him > last February, according°to the peti- j tion, Miller and Finney are attorneys ! fo r the plaintiff. NAMED ADMINISTRATRIX . Bertha Ballard lias been, appointed administratrix of the estate of Eliza- J beth Thomasson, deceased, and has filed bond of '31,000 'in Probate Court C. R, Bales, O. A. Spahr and R. R Grieve were named appraisers. CARL T a YLOR, Auctioneer. Phone 46. Jamestpwn, Ohio, H I SETS AND SERVICE i Get your radio in shape for the: political campaign and, winter entertainment. We service, any make o f radio or can supply any standard ap- ratus on notice. J. G. STORMONT Phone 3-161 Cedarville, Ohio What Flavor! Your chfldtenwill callfocVitaWheatevery morning, once they m tc it, Give th«a au Ready in tlx short minute*. ^ „ . Ordera package—25c GsSiaaSgfr Your Health Fao4 Center > CEDARVILLE BAKERY Adv< where y He who FIFTY- NEWS FBI DF COLUMB State Clair! dred and iif engaged i> pamphletn, proposed an ’ tion o f Ohio COUNT FELIX VON LUOKNER pQUNT FELIX VON LUCKNER is tho dashing, romantic liumanU tarlan of the late war; who won Ills way up from the ranks In the German navy to his position as commander of the uSea Adler,” the famous German raider which sailed tlie South Seas sinking Allied munition ships during the late war. Because of his very flue humani­ tarian motives he emerges from the conflict as one of its best known and most beloved heroes. He sank eighteen ships and yet completed his war record without-a single notch on bis gun, ' He never killed' anyone nor did-he perniit the slightest injury to any of the hundreds of prisoners which he captured, . Count voq Luokner will appear here In the. near future to tell of his absorbingly interesting experiences during the war. When lie arrived in New York city some’ time ago he was greeted, by three American commanders, whose vessels lie had sunk, who came, to : thank him for his- humane treatment while they were big prisoners. THURSDAY'OCTOBER 25'1928 ^ "TT , Your Boy Your Girl— cannot b e considered w e l l “ educated” until, they learn the value o f a regular, systematic Say­ ings Account. Hundreds o f young-peo­ ple have already select­ ed this hank as their “Home for Savings.” The Exchange Bank Cedarville, Ohio or “No,” st ■ lot with 114 n also on thf S m a l l F i r s t P a y m e n t —E a s y T e r m s o n O . K , ’ d U s e # C a r s Jbr Economiial Trantj>trt 0 (l»» See these used cars today! You can get the car-o f your choice a t an exceptionally low price—and you can buy it for a small first payment and on easy terms. These cars, carrying the red “ O. K. That Counts” tag, provide you with a definite assurance o f hon­ est value, dependability and satisfaction because they have been thoroughly checked by expert mechanics and reconditioned for thousands o f miles o f satisfactory service. Come in and make your selection todaywhile stocks are complete. c o u n ts A few o f our exceptional Used Car values “with an.OK that counts” Removal o f War Tax Lowers Delivered Prices! THE LANG CHEVROLET CO. phone 90 Xenia, Ohio 121E. Main St, Beal Chevrolet Co., Jamestown, Ohio B ill Top Garage, Cedarville, Ohio . s J Dependability, Satisfaction and Honest Value An iiiter children ag being carrio direction of of the Stati Health and sioners of • that over 1 ( by particip The annual Commission ment of Hi city for the fall election Superintoi the Division of the Indus reports the trial fatalit January, 1! August this 121 , exceed! cord of Jun> more than f< than for Au total numbe filed in Augi corded in a 1926. Tin;-, in August, 3 Welfare I ordered the and six hun Penitentiary Farm. They very near tv tion at the may be relic being conipl and a new under consti farm conini prisoners, four penal daily, aeeor. Teacliei Postpo The regu County Toi for October postponed v to the ex speakers n George M< supervisor, REPUDUiw The fan. of Colunih' Congrea&io- ion, Oetoh' tor Chari' the big * Cooper, N" dales will avail of ( claim will meeting. ro xne eiecu approval or to be held f. pamphlets a in favor of and also an it. These p distributed 1 j cordance wi nU General Cod Control has In(4 it lion of $15,(. i r, ed - ill. ximately 1,( will be sent m 000,000 distt efi ed The final ds down on Oh ail with the bit Lancaster la he attendance. ee to state and h and patrons county capit it has the r< the big fair incentive pe is. the fact t Bawp sion is char- annual Circ being held t 19, and this large -crowd: capital. Ohio vote 253 Candida they enter t J lots, on Nov Cl four ballots i l candidates, Constitution a creases of i yoter simpl !V r ,lr

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