The Cedarville Herald, Volume 51, Numbers 27-52
mum (A FriB Btrihday Party WrihcUy it to. ba celebrated tW» • V . asters and autumn leave* make gorgeous decorations. . Tiny purple.' aatfra may be used instead * f birthday candles on a white birth day cake. O r. you may hake the cake in a tube pan and place a vase o f asters in . the center after the cake is frostedv Have tall candle sticks on mantels, and tables, tvith purple,candles in them, „ For the cfcnterpiece o f th e '‘table, make a lavender and purple crepe paper Jack Horner Fie, and in it place the birthday •gift?,-'all wrapped, in lav ender -tissue, and tied with purple jribbori, "When possible* gifts'should have a suggestion pf purple about , them. Scarfs, perfume, $ilk. or linen printed handkerchiefs, bath salts, boutonnieres, pictures, and books may all be selected so that there is at least a hint o f royal purple about them, * SUPER- William Fox * . * t ' « / . ; p r e s e | i ^ s ■ * , “THE NEOPQLITAN LOVELYRIC” ’ i f e i — J* - ^ : 1* Janet Haynor and Charles Farrel SATURMtNOVEMBEB 170(0 . ' ' h n M C ■ 1L l ■ '&* AfterNovember1stI willb.eprepared todoallkindsofPipework , f - x 1 „ ’ « * ,r * * REPAIRSONPUMPWQRK ESPECIALLY Marion C. Hughes Cedarville Phone « s T E E T H ! E-am- inatioe Ft— JULowfiosf I Extras.., to Yew Asleep or Awaa* TRUE BITMfl PLATES H d b m mm iMytitf w lW P ^ li C sG lc iP in A n ch o r Suction Open Daily Mid T oni * That*. M il' ■Itefwided DR: G. A. SMITH jp y ft g I h l * i * i i s % * . U k I N I T J o T N O W m w m t p C A T lO H t t H W M M b m . . M M m * ■ m M Myer* Jturfcec ‘ r OpR'#M|t iSMMfiay an* tialmdsy -^1. c, m m ww isaw# m Opinion Affects Transportation } Of School Pupils! Rev. J. W, MM State Director o f Education C lifton ’ The following —$ has Just issued a circular letter ad- o f Rev. j . M. J fa feg is bwwled us by tech, t’sCar o f the death Here is a royal menu fo r the jparfyt Royal, Sandwiches Queen O tim , Almonds , Chicken a la King Pineapple Royal Birthday Cake ' ■ v , 1 . Royal Sandwiches* M ix and force through a meat chopper one cup canned -.shrimp, one cup chapped chicken livers, oho canned pimiento. and one small Bermuda onion. Sea- spin with salt and moisten whh may onnaise, .Spread between thin, slices d f buttered whole wheat bread, rm. move crusts.and. c u t ,in diamond shapes. Pineapple Royal; Chill canned sliced Hawaiian pineapple. Arrange a slice on each plate, place, on top' n round slice o f strawberry or, van illa ice icream, cover with whipped cream and top with a maraschino cherrv,. vising boards o f education and super- , iateadents o f tbs recent decision of : Attorney General Turner affecting ■transportation o f children to high schools. } This decision may affect quite a ' number o f pupils in Greene County I Jiving in districts not centralized or consolidated. He says that i f a pupil lives more than four miles from high school the board o f education must take action on the question o f his transportation, , This may be, ( l ) . t o transport’ him by Tegular bus or wagon, (2 ) to provide his transporta tion by common carrier, (31 to pay fo r his transportation individually or in a group.with others,- (4 ) „to provide his ■hoard near s, high school in lieu o f transportation, (5 ) to make a finding that his transportation is not neces sary or, in the words o f the law, “ ad visable an dpracticable.” The parent must appeal to the local board-or county board or both in time to have action taken. The law applying to elementary schools is substantially the same, the limit being two miles. HUNTING SEASON NOW OPEN , The hunting season openq$ yester day and sportsmen can enjoy chasing rabbits until’ January 1, 1929. Each hunter is allowed five rabbits fo r one day. 'Hunters must also have a license and should have permission from the land owner to hunt as most farms are posted against hunting with dog or gun. To avoid misunderstanding make . arrangements with the land owner, ' 4-H Clubs Gather Walnuts For Seed Supp ly State D epartm en t O f . Forestry W ith Source O f 1929 Seed lm gs * ’ >\f ~ ... . ’ ■> Seventy-five bushels o f walnuts, 10 bushels o ff tulip poplar seeds, and a small quantity o f red oak seed have been collected this fa ll by Ohio 4-H clubs and sold to the state forestry department. Thereby the clubs have accumulated a little ' money, but more important,'have carried out one o f the required features o f their training in forestry?—learning the principles o f collecting forest seeds and appreciat ing trees o f high-lumber vhlue. WT it the course p f -.the 4-H forestry dub project, the members are required W eollVct fo r themselves enough seed to start a amftll nursery and refor estation plot o f , the, most valuable native- hardwood^, , Tlie seeds w ill be .used in the nur series; and reforestation* projects o f the state forestry department. The clubs which have been doing this work are the pioneer forestry clubs in Har rison, Athens, and Treble counties. Dr. RitebJ* u t**fa*i f r * i » a Boston paper, which gJvwr* oeweet and full account o f the aoddmtal death o f one so wall known hat*, The Rev, J u b m W. Foster, 78, rector o f tfce geoond Reformed Pres byterian Church ft* Chambers street, West end, and m m « f the best known clergymen in greater Britton, was kill ed Instantly last night by a motor car at Mt. Vernon * t r ««t and Embank ment road, near the Charles river esplanade. M errill Pendleton, member - o f the class o f 1980 at M. I. T „ and who lives at 830 Bay State road, was the driver o f the car. H e was arrested on a charge o f manslaughter and was re leased on bail. Did N o t See Rector Pendleton told the polios that traffic was unusually heavy at the time and that he did hot see the aged man un til he stepped suddenly front behind another car and directly into the path o f his machine. His statement was substantiated by three other Tech students, who were riding with him. The car struck 'the victim a severe blow and hurled him to the street. The. car was stopped and the students placed him in the' car and hastened to the Massachusetts General Hospital, where he was pronounced dead on ar rival, , The body was then removed to the Northern Mortuary, where it remain ed unidentified'for several hours, The identification was made, by Arthur M.. Young o f 59 Pinckney Street, Beacon Hill, where Mr. Foster made his home. The Rev. Mr. Foster came' to this city from the West many years ago. He was a forceful speaker and . at many conferences he was one o f the leaders in discussion#. W ife Died In Motor He was married a t BJoomington, Ind., September 24,1878, and his w ife died suddenly, in sa ‘ motor car in August, 1919, while passing through the town o f Whitman on her way to this city from Hanson. She was prominently identified With societies and had been superintendent .of ,the state anti-narcotics committee o f the W . C- T, U., treasurer o f the Boston Central Union o f that -organisation and secretary o f the West End T&rent-Teacher Association since its organization until the time o f her death. They had three sons, the Rev. Sam uel Foster, Boston University, \ ;03, Princeton, theological school, ’06? J. Paid Foster, Boston. University ’07, Harvard ’09 and Dr^ William H. Foster, Boston University ’08 and four daughters, .Mrs. James CaTderwood, Mrs. Howard Ellis, M rs .' Edward Benner and Miss Itacliel Foster, PotatoGroWerCan Win OnHigh Yield Low Cost Pod Bushel Leaves Genera! Margin To Add To Profits $500PAID.FOR- WOODEN PLOW Washington C. H.—James Dallas o f Bainbridge was in Fayetto County Tuesday, and secured possession o f an original old-time wooden mold ’hoard plow which he sold recently to Jlenry Ford .for $500, . , l Mr. Dallas 28 years ago paid $2.50 fo r the plow at a sale. I t is the kind o f plow Ohio farmers used a century ago. Mr. Ford w ill give it a place in his curio collection. Shorts and Middlings L a «t year 7 Ohio, potato growers who sprayed four times and spent $4.07 an acre fo r spraying material, harvested less than 250 bushels ta the i acre. Six other growers who sprayed 1:seven times and spent $7.55 an acre fo r material, harvested more than 400 bushels to the acre. Some o f the big sequoias in Cali* ’ fornia are suffering from the.effects * o f having -their rootlets trampled by i throngs o f sightseers. | Says Sam: As a-campaign argu ment the aged egg, while not parti cularly logical, is hard to answer from a* lo fty pique o f discussion, 4 , * '! '■ . I On the farm, as in any other busi ness, it is enrportant to know where every dollar came from and where it went, “ Often it has been necessary to State a theory dogmatically fo r the sake o f clarity, when the author would have preferred to give the arguments fo r and ng{iinst.’’^ “V. If, Mottram. WE PAY MORE for dead and undesirable stock. Call us first at our Expense - 454 * XENIA FERTILIZED St TANKAGE CO. With this year's, potatoes harvested and either sold o it Stored, growers are beginning to .figure on whether they are ahead o f the game or behind. Figures bn the’ cost o f potato produc tion last year, uncovered b y the Ex tension^Service o f the Ohio State Uni versity, indicate that one essential o f making money on potatoes in any year, is to produce large acre yields. Records on six farms which last year reported yield# o f 400 bushels and more to the acte, show the cost per bushel o f those potatoes to have been only 31.6 cents. On four farms ■where the yield was between 360 and 400 bushels to the acre, the cost o f each bushel was 42.8 cents. On 16 farms with yields o f between 300 and 350 bushels to-the acre the Cost was 44.4 cents a bushel. On three farms which raided between 260 and 300 bushels to the acre the coat was 52.5 cents a bushel, On seven farms with yields below 250 bushels, each bushel cost the grower 55.9 cents. Total costs per acre ran from $123.- 60 on the farms with a yield o f less than 250 bushels, to $146.98 on the farms with more than 400 bushels to the acre. I t was even higher, $166.41, on the farms with the yield pf 350 to. 400 bushels. But an a crop o f 5,000 bushels of* potatoes, the margin be tween 55.9 cents a bushel and 31.6 cents a bushel, amounts to a total o f $l,215ewhich can be added to the pro fit column fo r the man whose yields were high, Buy your feed save money. from Homey and W e carry a fu ll line o f feeds. Homey’s Coal Yard. LOST—A small gun metal handbag. Finder please leave at Herald office and receive reward# When In Springfield " Visit The New Ladies andKiddies Hair Cutting Parlor H,A,WALTERS i l l Arnett* B ld g . Horten*©** Krlgjll ' T h o u g h t By JANE OSBORN (CopyUnite,t I T WAS not quite as a last resojirea that Ilortttqse Fay had gone to work at York’* department store. Ska bad had one year In college and she bad taught herself how to use the typewriter. Site might have got some sort o f office Job, or tmmaged to find employment as a governess. But some where she bad beard that there were golden opportunities waiting fo r clev er girls In department stores. But after a week at the ribbon counter at York’* her aspirations to ward a buyer’s career were becoming a trifle dimmed. Clever though the ribbon buyer undoubtedly wa'~ she was mote than clever—and Horteuse fait that other traits had Imd more to do with her success than cleverness. • Still, Hortense was not entirely dis couraged, She did her beBtto make a good Sales record and racked her brain .for bright Ideas which might lead to promotion;’ . “ I've bad a bright thought," said she one morning to another girl be hind the counter. " I think I'll tell Miss Gray# * The other girl looked at her with mingled contempt, and amazement “Don’t spill any o f your bright thought? to that hyena,” she advised, “ I f it’s any good she’ll swipe It, and the chances are it's no good ‘ariyhow. New girls always have bright, thoughts fo r a few weeks. But I always;tell ’em that If there were any1pew Ideas, about- selling goods or showing ’em or running the .store the fellows ftp on the seventh fipor would have thought o f them long ago,” “ Well, this really Ik an awfully good id eaH o rten se defended'herself, ’’But I won’t tell -Miss Gray If,you think she'd swipe it. I ’ll go right to ; the Seventh floor with It.” , ‘ ; t . Such a hptlon was manifestly too absurd to Mother to protest, so Miss' O’Brien went on arranging the soils of ribbon on display on the counter. . No mere salesgirl had ever gone di rectly tp apy o f the executives on the seventh floor.' BUt a t half-past eleven when Hortente had time off for lunch eon she serenely went to-the executive offices ph the seventh‘ floor. And be ing extremely green she made her way directly to the door parked “Mr. Oilver York, Private” ; M»V Oliver York, son o f the founder o f the Store, was u person,whose name was usually hot even mentioned above a whisp'er. Hortense Stood in the, broad pas sageway outside the door, <and, five minutes later when it opened .and* a genial-looking, tall young man emerged- she went u jf to, him without embar rassment, and sold “la this Mr. Oliver York! Well, I'm va salesgirl In the ribbon^ department* And I’ve lmd a bright thought I want to (ell you about.” For a fraction o f ia minute Aftv Oli ver York looked dCfmf«un|Ied—possi bly annoyed. But a glance Into (be clear blue eyes o f the unamb&rragged young woman before him altered his feelings. H e glanced quickly up and down the passageway,.saw no-one, and with a courtly bow^opened his office door ahd asked the girl to enter.’ “ So you are working In. the’ ribbon department,” he said—and then think ing o f a problem that had been dis cussed lu conference that morning ’he forgot all about the bright Idea, the girl had had and asked her why it was that the personnel o f the sales force changed so often. AnO so It began. Hortense did not say that the personality o f .department heads and buyers possibly had some thing to do with the matter# ha fact, she offered no solution to the problem. But it. wouldn’t have mattered If ‘ lie had—because Oliver York was gaz.ng, into the sky-blue depths o f Hortense’s eyes nfid somewhere out o f his past reading flashed the line: “None ever loved, l)dt at first sight they loved.” “I came up to see you to tell .you* about a bright Idea I had—fo r selling ribbons,” sold Hortense. . But Oliver, remembering that he had. a twelve o’clock , engagement downtown, had no time to waste, It was Important not to lose an oppor tunity to see those dear blue eyes again. "You keep your eye* open," he eald, “ and meet me tomorrow, say'.at four. We can talk things over—might meet at Stanley’s for tern Til have you excused. Now I must hurry O ff-" “Well, did you tell ’em your bright thought?” asked Miss O'Brien,, when Hortense returned to her .post after her very brief luncheon, ** “No,” said Hortense, with a twinkle In her eyes. “Mr, York had an Im portant business engagement,. But he asked me to. have tea with him at Stanley’s tomorrow afternoon,” . Miss O'Brien laughed Approvingly. This hew girl had a aehre o f hutpof after all. But Inter in the afternoon when the buyer, beating an office com munication Id her hand, snapped out to Hortense that she would' he ex cused at lialf-pnst three the next aft ernoon, Mies O’Brien- did feel puzzled. Two day# later Miss O’Brien greet ed Hortense with a grip, “ Well, did yon tell Mlstah York your bright Idea?” eh# asked. " I didn’t have a chance,” said Hor tense. “We -discovered that mymoth* er and hie Ware second cousins and— then he asked mo to marry him." . “ That was real sweet tF Mm, Pm sure,” grinned Miss O’B rie ft."D fjg ’t forget to invite me,,to the wadding," " I certainly will,”' said HoHaasi*— and as a matter o f f .eg she did. SmalUat Knvwn M ■ The smallest bird ih'-tMirMgd 1« th* fairy humming-bird o f Gabs, Which; Is only Kft Inches long, M p i h f ta Liberty. ■ .. JttybWttllttr ' The dvintat has his ttohMea, h *f H dost not have among H mm * * m that a Jay-walker may ■$»&&&<. ap pear around th# nattier o f m wm * m«ad.-~-Hasbim « ! & ' - w Public Sale! HORSES— HOGS CATTLE— SHEEP 600BushelsCorn I Crib * Complete Equipment to operate Large FarmincludingInternational Tractor. Tb*f Sale will be held at a date to be announced be* tween December 1 and 10 on the Henry Bateman Farm, FRANKROWERS Your Best Friend • in the time of need is a „ - healthy Saying Account in this hank. Take the first opportunity to get your, name on an Ex> change Bank passbook. Bank C ed a rv ille , O h io fiO T E L ■■^^xsrryt ,<3B5iaj DETROIT .M ODERN DOWNTOWN u p - to - date h o t e l o r 5 0 0 ROOMS EACHrgMBATH tertes$i * ? a i p 1 E X C E L L E N T H DINING ROOM COFFEE kSHOP mm ELIZABETH 1 STREET EAST Worn®) ^ / AVENUtT PUBLIC SALE! A s I am going to farm less ground I w ill offer a t public auction without reserve or by-bid on what is known as the David HiJt farm, 2 1-2 miles North East o f Yellpw Springs and 2 1-2 miles North West o f Clifton ph the H jlt Road op TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20*1928 , S A LE T o S TAR T A T 12 N pO N 1Horse-Black Gelding, 18months old— a goodone. 4 r 10— HEAD OF C A T T L E 10 Consisting o f 2 Jisraey heifers, bred. 2 yearling Jersey heifers, opeji. 4 Jersey heifers under i year. • 1 half Jersey and half Shorthorn heifer under one year, l Jersey bull 11 months. 46—HEAD OFHOGS— 46 Consisting o f 80 feeding shoots. 9 sows. 1 sow with 3 pigs by aide. 3 sows w ill farrow before day o f sale. 5 sows bred first part o f November, l good Durpt boar, 2 years old. MISCELLANEOUS 6 hog boxes; 3 sides o f leather harness; collars; check lines; bridles. — —A base burner and a kitchen, range, P E E P — -------- - P E E D 866 bu. o f com in crib, all hand husked and sorted, 300 shocks o f com Jn field. , TERMS. -— AH -sums.* over „$25 a credit o f three or *1* Montiih# A ll note* mast bo accepted by your banker or We can not turn them. - . & & GERHARDT Gten Weikert, Auctioneer." * Frank Curry* Cleric Luneh netted, by Ladles’ Good Will Circle of Bethel Church
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