The Cedarville Herald, Volume 52, Numbers 1-26

Business Firms j w iim M iiw M iw wiww M W iwi Hm iHMm HimnwiH w w w iH W W M fm H uuH nw iiw H W U rtM M im iM nH W W W m M M M m m i'i ' Watch la The A r n d t Spring- WW, Ohio * ■u. IRepairing Jewelry IRepairing iDiamond Setters Everything new in. Hamilton! Elgin, Green, Howard, Illinois and | other Mgh grade watch**. f Watches, Diamonds, Sterling Silver and Silver Plated Ware. Spe- | da l factory agents fo r St, Thomas Clocks. Community Silver, guar- s sntead fo r BOyears. Official Watch Inspectors fo r B ig 4 JR, R., D, T. & | I, Railroads and all Tractiop lines, ■ | Hoffman Green Jewelery Company I I = THE HOME OF BETTER FOOTWEAR VALUES J The Arcade Shoe Store j * WOMEN’S DRESS SHOES $ f,9 9 j MEN'S WELT SEWED OXFORDS ?2 ?? I Children’s and Boys Barefoot ,, Boys or Girls Summer Shoes Sandals - Tennis Shoes $1 .99 99 c 79c I Expert Watch and I f IA 7 7 | f I f JnLL PLAYING I I Jewelry Repairing I § t AUCHT AT 1 | j . H . M a u s | I SCHAFER SCHOOL | | Jf e t* MUSIC | | | All Instruments Taught 5 'f One. Block Oat o f High | Rent District | 117 West Main S tree t, | Springfield, Ohio WHOSE ADVERTISING APPEARS ON THIS PAGE CORDIALLY INVITE YOU TO VISIT THEM WHEN IN SPRINGFIELD. EVERYONE ARE LEADERS IN THEIR RESPECTIVE LINES AND BY GIVING THEM YOUR PATRONAGE YOU ARE ASSURED THE BEST MERCHAN­ DISE AND SERVICE TO BE HAD. | ELEC k AOLUX | 1 HAS NOMACHINERY j * . **■ .a r | t o t fe t o u t - I . . . sp- . * . . % ■ I V I ' I fr^HE n ew G a s R efrigera tor X has n o com pressors, fans, belts o r any m ov in g parts to : w ea r op t Dr make the slight-,.■ ■ | pst noise, A tiny gas fJame and | a trickle q £ w a te r d o all the / f :■w o rk o£ m ak ing c o ld , v v . j D r o p in to ou r display r o om s | today and le t us sh ow y ou the | many different m odels, | I HieGray Electric Company I I FREEZE WITH HEAT A - W v The ELECTROLUX Befrigerator I I " | ......• i im i im m ii ii ii ii t i fm i iM i iu H i i n m ,n il ,,,,,I ,^ |H«|IIIUMHHHMMIHHHMHMMHIUMWUHWMHHUtUlWmitUUIMlWIMnlUnlUKHmMUUlIMKUIUHIIUHIIIIIHHUUUnmmUIIH, I f H BUILT FOR REAL, RESTFUL COMFORT ERE is a distinctive living room mute built fo r comfort, a* Well as endurance. It is a real value, and will last fo r years and years, ' Oil tempered, cone-type springs, with 8 -knot ties, provide pillowy rest, The frame construction is o f clear, kiln-dried hardwood, doweled (not nailed) together. It is beautifully upholstered in a variety o f long-wearing, standard coverings, o f handsome patterns. * Both the interior construction and the upholstering o f this suite embody Cappel-Graftamanship, which means, "Beauty in the open: quality in the unseen." * 8 PIECES $135 m~J3Q E'HIGH ST, I - ’ i f . • | ■S' | s • . ■ -S- Big . Wall Paper Sale Now Going On I I String Instruments Furnished J | ROBBINS BUILDING | I ^ High and Limestone | | Phone M4176 I f Springfield, Ohio S ' '■ 7 , =" =■' .......... - : ............ ■ •= * INC. ^ * • 21 East Main Street SPRINGFIELD NEW CLOTHING STORE Hart Schaffer and Marx % Clothes ' $25 TO $75 J 1 1 The Cemetery o f Thoughtful Service | I ’ No Taxes or Assessments I I Perpetual Maintenance Provided fo r Every Lot I | Phone Main 172 Springfield, Ohio 1 .. -V. ■'••. ... v ^ v ■ -'-V .■>„■■■•, V - : ‘.iv j J. M .IHRIG J 1 Optometrist & Optician | ^ - ‘ Makes Good Glasses I AtPopularPrices - ' ' Standard ] | Ice Cream I § ♦* ' * g 1 GOODNESS! SHOW YOU WILL LIKE IT 1 . 5 ■ § ». 5- Leave Special Orders fo r | parties”at | RICHARD’S DRUG | STORE . I i '" " " " " '' ■ ■ 1^1 East High Street, — ' ■■.... f | ' Springfield, Ohio ■ . I | • Opposite Bancroft Hotel . j S ' • , ■ ' f k 1 \ . , | | Local Representative in ‘ | dedarville I I;S 2 5 1. 4c p er single roll and- j | Upwards | | Enough Paper fo r 1 Room r | Size 10x12 8-ft. high | 1 ^or 1 I $ 1 .0 4 I § t. §' j JOSEPH H . GNAU | | 115 East High Street - | | L w ; a l l p a p e r a n d - | . I DECORATIONS \ | Greeting Cards fo r AH .Occasions f | . Phone Main 628- ’ I %imililinil.....iiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiimuiiiiinmv^ ^iiniiinmimiii,nil,.................................millll^? Scrambled Word* . Sylvia, aged sir, who has a great liking for long words but who .does not always get them right, was.heard to exclaim to- her baby slsler, "Ob, Gear, how aggravoking' you are 1”— Beaten Transcript, Man’* Real Worries It’s easy to be content with what wci havaj it’s what we haven’t that wor­ ries us.—ChicagofDaliy News. NOTICE OF ’ APPOINTMENT . . Estate o f Jesse Morris, Deceased. Margaret Daniel Morris has been appointed and qualified as Execntor of the estate o f Jesse Morris, late ‘of Greene County, Ohio, deceased. Dated this 7th day o f May, A , D. 1029, S. C. WRIGHT, , Probate Judge o f said County Before selling your wool see or call rrank CresweR at No, 10. • Shorts And Middlings ! CHO<>0<VCM>0000<><H><KKKK><><>00<>00 Unless they have two full-size hive bodies, bees in any colony headed by a young and ’ vigorous queen from good stock, are likely to swarm. April’s estimated gross cash income to Ohio farmers was 3 per cent great­ er than that o f March,. Of the entire hay acreage o f Ohio only about 6 per cent is in alfalfa. How It S tarted By J ean N ew ton o o o p o o o o o o o o o d o o o o d o - o o o o o o ' PIN MONEY Volume o f business is more import­ ant than the size o f the farm, in determining labor income. , Says Sam: His indifference to con­ sequences is the final measure o f an individual’s freedom, Ants in lawns or gardens may be killed by fumigating their burrows With either carbon bisulphide or calcium cypnide. Cool season vegetables should be planted early in order to mature be­ fore hot weather, i f they are to be o f the best quality. "He judged with knowledge only of himself, and valued youth not at all.” -William McFee in “ Pilgrims o f Ad­ versity,” RECOVERS JUDGMENT The Greene County Lumber Co, hqs recovered a cognovit note judgment by default against John Thomas Sutton for $302,73 in Common Pleas Court. VALUE ESTATE Estate o f Elizabeth Frederick, de­ ceased, has a gross value o f $5,188.07, according to an estimate filed in Pro­ bate Court. .Debts and the cost o f ad­ ministration total $2,107:15, leaving a neet value o f $3,030.02. W OULDN’T it be awful,, girls, If we had to spend all, our pin money on pins? But there was a time when court ladles were considered for­ tunate to be able to buy them. The expression nhd the custom o f supplying women with an allowance for fancies comes down to us from the time whenw-plns were so expensive that only the wealthiest women could afford them. ^ For A long time after the Invention o f pins,. In the Fourteenth century, It was not extraordinary for women to be endowed at their marriage with a sum o f money for the purchase of pins. At one time a law was passed in England permitting the maker of pins to sell them only on January 1 and 2, Then the Wealthy city, ladles flocked to the shops, provided with “pin money.” The early pins were of two parts— the stom and the head of wound wire soldered to it. Though our marvelous manufactur­ ing methods have revolutionized the pin Industry so that the product Is now turned out by the million and sevdral hundred can be bought for a few cents, pin money still survives. May the scorn implied by the oft- used expression, “ It isn’t worth a pin,” which its cheapness has brought upon It, be Counterbalanced In the heart of that most important adjunct of mod­ ern femininity, by this little apprecia­ tion o f its former glory 1 <copyti(fin.> O Only One Per Gent Of Wheat Abandoned Acreage Given Up This Spring Is Smallest Oh Record For This State be nearly four timers as great as that of last year. Forecasts o f yield, the department officials point out,. are based wholly upon present conditions, nnd may be greatly changed by w'eather conditions before harvest.. Abandonment o f winter wheat acre­ age in Ohio this Spring as a result o f winter-killing is the smallest' on rec­ ord, according to reports to the rural econbmics department o f the Ohio, j State University. This year, 99 per cent o f"all the land seeded to wheat last fall is to be harvested. Last year at the same time,'more than 66 per j cent had been given up. In 1921 only j 2 per gent o f the acreage was aban- Idoncd—the nearest mark to this [year’s figure. In the United States as a whole the abandonment o f only 6 per cent o f the wheat acreage is the lowest since 1921. An average yield o f 14.7 bushels pec acre is indicated for this year's wheat crop on the basis o f conditions on May 1 , as -against a yield o f 16 bushels an acre last year, and a ten- year average o f 14.9 bushels. Indicated production o f wheat in -Ohio this year according to the con- Idition o f the crop on May J, is slightly over 35 million bushels, compared with an average o f about 34 million ovgr the five years from 1928 to 1927. Prob­ ably production in Ohio this year will " From Sheept Not Cat QatguJ, contrary, to Its name, floes not come from ca ts ,but Is prepared from the Intestines o f sheep, according to an answered question In Liberty, . Perhapt AU Are Right Some people think the radio is a toy, some find It a blessing, -to others It Is merely one more nnlsahce and yet others 1 make It a cause and • crusade.—Woman’s Home Companion. Carnot See Own Failing * There are many clever people who have one Very drill side. They never seem to be able to find out their own faults. Even when the faults are pointed out, they cannot recognize them, apparently, and lack the sense to get rid of them, P A IN T IN G GetOurPrices on DU PONT PAINTS! WeSaveYouMoney ■ r on Any PaintingMaterials Fred Graham Co. Whiteman St., Xenia,' Ohio Ha* Bibieal Sanction Capital punishment as a lawfirf pro­ cedure has existed since the history o f mankind. It will be found laid down In the Mosaic law In the booka o f Leviticus and Deuteronomy, HEARING FIXED Application seeking to admit to pro bate the last will o f Jennie Hamer, j late o f the city o f Xenia, has been as- j signed fo r a hearing at 10 A. M. M ay; 25 in Probate Court. Jmd.Tanhim J«d TUnista says a man who loves days at least has the enjoyment of friendship* that don’t hand him a»? ‘ seedy sareamn*.—Washington star, 1 <©by McCiut* Nwmm eradicate.) ■e— ■ - Visit Niagata FaIIs, Canada and the East via C &B Line Palatial Steamers WfiKl* mtrcll«HttiitiingfOOtt.Ktrice *?riJftBUttlMtiI _ COffl- Itt. -» fd^Kto roReWay# Gerehnl Ft9Uii%,Cfet,Dhr. Connecdoft*« BuffHo*nd Stanley Mn. Vmi * * H> COKMNY .utuma.mmsi w uvd wm - dcrekiidiifil BriSskl vwiww™**- itn ITelne PottStanleyn>fCu>Adi«a*0 Permanent relief from work and worry C on stan t . Protection to Health SeethenewFrigxdairesatoar displayrooms,espe» dallythenewTu-Toflemodelsofexquisitebeauty; Seethe coolingunitwhich convertsanygood ice. box into aTrigidaire at surprisingly low cost. All Frigidaire prices are low, and payments can b« arrangedto suit your budget*' . > **- - GAS,»»/ELECTRIC SHOP THE CM mi ElrCTRIC[K # |AmiAU^g tCrtVANY ■ 37 S. Dottoit St.lJI Telephone S95 (tH t DfcVfOH F d 'WMD AH0 LIGHT €OJ 1 X t N IA OltTHICT sty- D H O D M G T ^ i * M O T O R .

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