The Cedarville Herald, Volume 52, Numbers 1-26

i. I tow* ^ .. Springfield Business Firms InTh* Aroad# Spring- Said, Ohio Wateh Repairing Jewelry Repairing Diamond Setters Everything pew in Hamilton, Elgin, Green, Howard, Illinois and other high grad# watches. Watch®** Diamond*, Sterling Silver and Silver Plated Ware, Spe­ cial factory agent* for St. Thomas Clocks. Community Silver, guar­ anteed f o r -50 years, Official Watch Inspector* for Big 4 It. It., D. T. & I. Railroads and all Traction lines, Hoffman Green Jewelery Company iiuiiiiummimiimm a MEN’S WOMEN’S CHILDREN’S OXFORDS Good Shoes SHOES Tans—Blacks Sport Fancy Styles—Arch Patents or' Blondes Oxfords , Supports. All Leather t <Straps or Ties $2.99 to $£95 $1.99 to $3.95 $1.99 to $2.99 The Arcade Shoe Store } . ' H. S> SAUM COMPANY | ” JAZZ 'Expert Watch and | | , Jewelry Repairing 1 = TAUGHT AT 1 J . H. Bfausl 1SCH™ SCH00L! MUSIC | All Instruments Taught | | One Block Out of High | | String Instruments Furnished § | Rent District | | | 117.West Main Street f | I Springfield, Ohio 1 I J ew e le r ROBBINS BUILDING High and Limestone Phone -M4176 Springfield, Ohio I ■ HoSiman Tan. Wye ' JHO. ' - . j | • 21 East Main Street | f SPRINGFIELD NEW CLOTHING STORE I Hart Schaffer and Marx Clothes $25 TO $75 WHOSE ADVERTISING APPEARS ON THIS PAGE CORDIALLY INVITE YOU TO VISIT THEMWHEN IN SPRINGFIELD. EVERYONE ARE LEADERS IN THEIR RESPECTIVELINES AND BY GIVING THEM YOUR PATRONAGE YOU ARE ASSURED THE BEST MERCHAN­ DISE AND SERVICE TO BE HAD, |E L E t . r i O L U X | g ■ ■ S' HAS IW MACHINERY to got out ! oi ordor J fT tH E new GasRefrigerator | X has no compressors, fans, | belts or any moving parts to | wear out or make the slight- § estnoise. A tiny gas flame and I • a trickle of water do all the f work of making cold. I Drop intoourdisplayrooms | , todfay and let us show you the * | many different models. f The Gray Electric Company 1 k I |-FREEZE WITHIESAT ~s . s» The ELECTROLUXRefrigerator | | ^ . l 1 FERNCLIFF j I ^ , / | | The. Cemetery of, Thoughtful Service | | No Taxes or Assessments I 5 ' : e | Perpetual Maintenance Provided for Every Lot 1 } Phone Main 172 Springfield, Ohio j I J . M. IHRIG S | Optometrist & Optician. | 1 j . Makes Good Glasses | a t P o p u la r P r ic e s ~ I nnnm im nM H ttUW V “ n iiif..........Ti^»am*«m*a*UiiiU4UM imiiimitM iiiimiiM umuaiiaiaa*i*i*»iii**w....»^..rrrrim rT)n)|t| f CAPPBL’S JUNE BRIDE SPECIAL 4 Room HomeOutfit S 469 INCLUDING THIS SUITE: sI . I i i. | . s High-Lighted Overlay Decorated ' f A suite that looks like $75 more. Fashioned with , blended walnut | veneers over hardwood, strongly-made throughout, every piece large f sized with roomy drawers and big mirror*. Compare i t tomorrow. s Vanity, Bed, Chiffonier <j»j jjJJ jj Q j Dresser Marked at $45 60 Days i Same! as Cash J Z H 3 % £ .M G M S r .: 33 Store Buying Power All Slz| the wayi O n th l«H | rea *0 « r •nd most) color, w s| The ru( Aloxandel byW .& l Fifth AveJ Gome ij the rug yJ M il * •1 1 M“ 1.21 Hast High Street, Springfield, Ohio Opposite Bancroft Hotel Standard | Ice Cream j GOODNESS! I HOW YOU WILL LIKE IT | Leave Special Orders for | 1 parties at | | RICHARD’S DRUG { | - STORE | | Local Representative in | 1 CedarviUe I f Big Wall Paper Sale | | Now Going On | - 1 4c per single roll and - | 1 Upwards f | Enough Paper for. 1 Room | | Size 10x12 8-ft. high | 1 for . 1 | $1.04 | ] JOSEPH H. GNAU j .5 i*- v-. z ■ | 115 East High Street | 1 WALL PAPER AND •. j" | DECORATIONS | | Greeting Cards for All Occasions | 1 I. Phone Main 528 I fi ' ’ I S '1 CowsOwe Owners At End Of Year Only <When She Produces 25Qr. Pounds Of Fat / ' D^ct She Pay Board More than ,10 'per cent, of -the 33* . cows in two of the Ohio Dairy Im­ provement .Association, caused their owners a dead loss during the last ,12- month period over which complete rec­ ord* of their performance were kept. These ware the cows which produced less tharv200 pounds of butter fa t dur- it& the year. The 37 losers were $1,- 092.31 izr debt to their owners a t the end of tfr&year, or nearly $30 each, Only .the cow* which produced 250 pound* of bu#erfat or more during the yea*, showed any net profit after the cost of their, maintenance was figured put—and they failed to carry their sh ire o f the, load. In the 250 to 300 pound class werev19.3 p«f cent of all the cow* in the herds of the two associations, hut their share of the net profits was only .1 per cent of the total net. profits from the entire group of cows. Up a t the other end of the line were four cow*—1*2 per cent of the group —which {produced 600 pounds of but- terfat and returned 4.4 per cent of the total net profit, or more than all the 00 cows in the 254 to 300 pound class, together. The 65 in the low group con­ sumed l?.fl per cent of the whole cost of maintaining the herds. The four cow* in the 600 pound class consumed , only 1.6 per cent of the total cost of maintaining ,the herd. In dollars, the cost of maintaining the 600 pounders Was $846,64 and the net profit on them, $*?»,»*, The 260 to 800 pound- ert edit, their, owner* $0,317.10 during the year, and the net profit on them was $636.85, Program Announced [Housekeepers Asked For Achievement Dayj The Annual County Achievement * Day program of the Nutrition project will be held, a t Alpha K. of P, Hall i hursdajr, June 20 beginning a t 10;00. .1o'clock, . I To Watch For Pest Mediterranean Fruit F ly Threatens A ll Fruits Grown In U. S. Protect Against" Grazing- Pays Profit Sirup From Unpastured Sugar Bush Better Than That ffrom Grazed Plot The best samplo Of maple sirup judged a t the annual maple sirup and sugar festival in Geauga County this Housekeepers throughout a largo Reports from the various townships j section of the United States are being [will be,given in the forenoon, followed !enlisted .by the United* States govern- by a county summary by County ment as inspectors and scouts in the 'year, came from a sugar’bush that lias Agent E. A. Drake. Following this, effort to repel a thoroughly dangerous been fenced and protected from live- representatives from each township foreign enemy — the Mediterranean stock for the past 30 years. The will give an original stunt. At noon' fruit fly—which has already invaded' sample, consisting of one gallon of FRAZER SHOE BTGR& TO QUIT BUSINESS C. S, Fr*z*r, p&bfeastfr, Xenht, who ha* bM* hi tbs sho* bwthm* in that *Hy for |6 year* past, will discontinue ltasin«M mthhf sixty days as fit* fenOdittg h i oooapii* haf h im sold to H* E. Mr, Fm * r wilt dis> pose of kte stock and retire from the retail tsarinwiii. Mr. Schwidt has for awwtral ' f t m »m * i fully -fifty per ♦ext Of Wm property fit the hm tt of the county and hk new pwwfiiawe jfivea Mm another three *t**y M tto«k properly that reports a dinner will he served emphasizing•the country.. various diBhes taken up in the propect. | Fruit from Florida, where the in- In the afternoon Miss Lolia Ogle, 'fe ta tio n of the fruit fly was first dis- Nutrition Specialist and Miss Adele covered, has been placed under an Koch Assistant Home Demonstration;embargo, but only‘ after much fruit Agent, both of Ohio State University, which may have been harboring the and Mrs. Faith Terrell of New Vienna'post, had been shipped to distant Will be on tho program* j states. Federal authorities urge the Mrs, John Collins is chairman of t h e ; utmost care in inspecting any fruit' Achievement Day Committee and has imported from Florida, appointed the ^following committees: j Except for the watermelon and the Menu, Mrs. Chita, Bickett} Hostess,‘pineapple, all fruits grown in the, Mrs, Elmer Hotaetf Program, Mrs..United States are vulnerable to the Myron Fudge; Music Leader, Miss attacks of the Mediterranean fru it fly, Martha Anderson. [The fly is to be found in the form of The project this year was ‘‘Meat (small maggots or worms* inside the and Meat Like Dishes" and was car-[pulp of the fruit.,When these maggots ried to ten townships. With approvi- [have reached full size or when’ they mately seven hundred ladies attending jhave been working for some time, the the demonstration, The subject of j infestation is easily discovered, since these meetings was.-Cottage Cheese; they wjli destroy most of the pulp, ‘Before that time, any fruit which is suspiciously soft, or in which any sort of worms or maggots are found, *k open to suspicion, Destruction a t such, fruit is urged by the government. To make sure of killing the maggots, tlie fruit should be boiled or baked for a long period, Throwing it into the garbage is the surest method of giving the maggots* an opportunity to grow and spread, Meat Dishes and Meat Like Dishes, Charles E. Estle Claimed By Death Charles Edward Estle, 76, died a t the home of his brother on the Estle and Wilson farm on the CedarvillO and Clifton Pike a t 1:15 o'clock Friday morning. He had been ill for the pant three- Weeks and death was due to complications of diseases. My. Estle was born April 14, 1851 LESLIE DEAN TO GET DEGREE Leslie Scott Dean, will receive the in Greene Twp., .Clark County and lmd degree of doctor of medicine from lived in the. Clifton vicinity for the western Reserve University on Thurs* last twenty-five years. He had never, day, June 13, Mr. Dean is a graduate married. jof CadarvJlle College with the degree Ha Is survived by three brother:.: of bachelor of arts in 1021, Mr, Dean Harry R, Estle a t whose home he died, married Miss Reba Harbiaon of this 0 , D. Estle, Springfield and William place, D, Estle, of New Albany* Ohio, i - — Mr. Estle was a member of fba; Bays Sam: There should be a statue Presbyterian Church of Clifton, a.and a medal for the man who heroic..1- member of the K. of P. Lodge in Ciif-;!y refrains from trying ti improve ton and the Odd Fellows and Masonic ‘others by making them like himself, Irfpdg#* a t Yollow.Springs, . • ' | Ftmural service* were held a t the It is expected that 85,000 Ohio boy* how* of hi* brother, II. R, Estle Bun- ami girls will I ks enrolled this year in duty a t 2 o'eloek with burial in Clifton, ’l l! clubs, sirup, competed with several hundred other samples for the trophy awarded by the “Cleveland Plain Dealer." R. J. Patch of Novelty was the pro­ ducer of the winning sirup sample, which came from a sugar bush 60 acres in extent. On the same farm he has another sugar bush-of 30 acres, which has been pastured up until the past two years. Patch .has checked the yield and quality of the sirup from the two bushes, *,.d has reported that the lot protected fiom livestock is the more profitable, not Only in the pro­ duction of lumber, but in the quality and quantity of maple sirup from i t . ' •“The thick leaf mold and mulch in the protected woods and the healthy condition, of the roots gives the trees a better chance to produce quality sirup than they have in the unprotect­ ed Woods where natural leaf mulch has been removed and the forest soil is hard and packed from .constant trampling," says F, W. Dean,,exten­ sion forester for the Ohio State Uni versity, OREADNEURITIS YIELDS QUICKLY TONEWKONJOLA Pains Forced Him To Lay Off Work For Two Week* At A Time; S t o m a c h Trouble Also Ended J m . B* B m O ui I b , PIN*. 4k G ml Mgr. Stop at the .Hotel Havlin in Cincinnati and enjoy all the comforts of home. Spacious, well-ventilated rooms, courteous service and hospitality of the highest degree. RATES; Roomwith running water, $2.00, Single with bath, $2.50 to $5.00 Double with bath, $4.00 to $7.00 Special Group Rates GARAGE SERVICE HOTEL HAVLIN CINCINNATI, OHIO Evil Infill**®* This 1* Dm of every evil deed, lhat, propagating sllil, U brings forth evil.-*-Coleridge, MR. J. R. WOOD “After the remarkable manner in which Konjola benefited me, I feel that it is my duty to indorse it to all who suffer," said Mr. 3‘. R. Wood,. R .! R. No. 2( Blommingsburg, Ohio.. “My | entire body was affected by neuritis | and often I had to stop working for, weeks at a time. The stomiua trouble1 added greatly to my suffering and I was at a loss to know what to do a s ; all medicines failed to benefit me. “But all that is changed now, simply because I have given Konjola a chance. What a wonderful medicine this is. j Working at the root of my ailments i t , cleansed and invigorated my system ,' Soon the neuritis pains vanished eh*! tirely nnd then my stomach resumed its normal functioning. But best of all, it took two bottles of this medi-! cine to restore my.health. Does this not prove that Konjola is supreme?" j Konjola is sold in Ced&rVflle at l’rownnt & Brown drug store, and b y ' all the best druggists in all towns ! throughout this entire section. I Have your lawn mowers repaired and sharpened by the modern process, ‘ J , A. Stormont. Visit Niagara Falls* Canada and the East via C&B Line Palatial Steamers s s s s s w e a i S M W f f i * , • Mu icand V/knatig <m thesittt ihitt Aetos«.*»ve*tUyC.*BLine%»y. Avoidmil*endmil*<ifcon«e»t«J*»*«*. ^Mud andBofiakDhM* OmMiedPtSlSjSIS 5 X

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