The Cedarville Herald, Volume 52, Numbers 27-52

"..-.,«awin»ifrfr mm *fc*t*»*:**«rT-- .jests-.* «aJifc»sUi— Springfield Business Firms 1 . Watch In The Arcade Spring- field, Ohio Repairing Jewelry Repairing Diamond Setters | Everything new in Hamilton, Elgin, Green, Howard, Illinois and | 1 other high grade watches, | . 1 Watches, Diamonds, Sterling Silver and Silver Plated Ware. Spe- | | eial factory agents for St. Thomas Clocks. Community Silver, guar- | | anteed for COyears. -Official Watch Inspectors for Big 4 It, It., D. T. & | I I, Railroads and all Traction lines. | [ Hoffman Green Jewelery Company ] I <= l WHOSE ADVERTISING APPEARS ON THIS PAGE CORDIALLY INVITE YOU TO VISIT THEM WHEN IN SPRINGFIELD. EVERYONE ARE LEADERS IN THEIR RESPECTIVE LINES AND BY GFVING-THEM YOUR PATRONAGE YOU ARE ASSURED THE BEST MERCHAN­ DISE AND SERVICE TO BE HAD. f CAPPEL’S JUNE BRIDE SPECIAL f 4 Room Home Outfit $ 4 6 9 INCLUDING THIS SUITE; 75c MEN’S ' ' ■WOMEN’S CHILDREN’S OXFORDS Good Shoes SHOES Tans—Blacks Sport Fancy Styles—Arch Patents or Blondes Oxfords • Supports: All Leather Straps or Ties $2.99 to $3.95 $1.99 to $3.95 $1.99 to $2.99 SAVE THAT 1 * 5 IT’ S YOURS DELIVERS IT BALANCE $1.90 per week The Washer with a 10 year Guarantee « Service Bond The Arcade Shoe Store } H. S. SAUM COMPANY ' f | Expert Watch and i | . Jewelry ’Repairing ! J. H. Mans] - J e w e l e r - | * One Block Out of High \ | Rent District I | 117 West Main Street | 1 -^Springfield, Ohio | IA77 PIANO JnLL PLAYING ! TAUGHT AT ! | SCHAFER SCHOOL f [ MUSIC l I All Instruments Taught f I String Instruments Furnished f 1 ROBBINS BUILDING . f § High and Limestone I !„ Phone M4176 I § Springfield, Ohio § W .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim H iiiim iiM iM im im im im iiiiiim m n m i -9 I, ! High-Lighted Overlay Decorated I A suite that looks like $75 more. Fashioned with blended walnut | veneers over'hardwood, strongly made throughout, every piece large | sized with roomy drawers and big mirrors. Compare it tomorrow. jj Vanity, Bed, Chiffonier (M fl 9 £ f| I Dresser Marked at $4.5 M I. UOmJ U | Hoffman Van Wye i • . ' . inc . . \ | • - ■ .21 East Main Street I | SPRINGFIELD NEW CLOTHING STORE" | f Hart Schaffer and Marx f f Clothes | | $25 TO $75 f ArfJtafic D u cP D isG THE INVERTIBLE AGITATOR The Gray Electric Company Springfield, Ohio Main 158 .........» * m iilin iiiiiilin iiin lu iltm itiiiH 1,1,.11,m u m ,n u n i'? ..... ..................."'»•><....... .............I.... ....... ........ I FERNCLIFF j | The Cemetery of Thoughtful Service f I No Taxes or.Assessments ' | S' * • . . ■ 1 . s | Perpetual Maintenance" Provided for Every Lot f | Phone Main 172 Springfield, Ohio ! ',| iliiin iit ..i,iiiiiim ,iM iiiim m iiiiiiii„ 1 iim m „ l „ m ii ii im i,im i,iiiim im iiiiiii.............i i i i l i , i i i , „ i „ „ „ „ ......................................... ... .............................................................................. .............. I(> j J. M. IHRIG | | • Optometrist & Optician ! 1 '* Makes Good. Glasses | | at Popular Prices * | | 121 East High Street, - | | Springfield, Ohio | | - Opposite Bancroft Hotel I ... m m im iim iM iim im i.i s • 60 Days Same as Cash /Z4-/30 E.HIGHST.^ 33 Store Buying Power ................................................... Standard Ice Cream GOODNESS! 1HOW YOU WILL LIKE IT | Leave Special Orders for | | . parties at | I RICHARD’S DRUG f I STORE 1 | Local Representative in | 7 Jf ■ | Cedarville I ■ b Big Wall Paper Sale i Now Going On 4c per single roll and L Upwards ; Enough Paper for 1 Room Size 10x12 8-ft. high for ' , $1.04 JOSEPH H .GNAU 115 East High Street WALL PAPER AND DECORATIONS Greeting Cards for All Occasions Phone Main 528 i ' J * W j V isit Niagara Falls, Canada and the East via C & B Line Palatial Steamers W7HETHER traveling by train.' or auto, enjoy an all night’s tide on beautiful W LakeEric. C&BLineStcjmetsarenuEnificcntfloaunghotels-withLigccom- fortable staterooms, excellent dining roOmservice anAcourtepu. attendanw. Music and Dancingon thegreat ship SEEANDOLE AutoUts, saveaday C&B Lineway. Avoidrhiles andmiles of congested1 roadway. Cleveland andBuffaloDrrison ClevelandandPLStanley,Can.,Dir. Each way, every ttfeht, leaving at 9:00 DailyMrrlce,leavingCI««Und.W:00mItl- p.m., arriving 7:M b . m , IF,. S. T.) nlgnt, arrivingPort Stanley, g-MaJO., ■ Maylot to November 15th. Jdno»lb to September7th. Connections atBuffalo andPott Stanleyfor Canadian andEasternpoints. , * /$4,50 one way —CLEVELAND to BUFFALO—$8.30 rd. tnp New Low ) Autos Carried $6,50 and up - . . Fates l$3.00 oneway—CLEVELAND io PT. STANLEY—$5.00rd.trip ‘ l Autos Carried $1.50 and up Writefor details on all expense tours toMontreal, Quebecand the Saguenay, also tbe new C&B Triangle 7 our THE CLEVELAND AND BUFFALO TRAN S IT COMPANY East Pill Street Pier Cleveland, Ohio TTITTITTmillljlllTTO^ Enter Twelfth Year Wheat Rust War Of Barberry Eradications Due To Cover State By Mid-August - kit Hog Chow—Pig Chow—Cow Chow Steer Patina—Sheep, Calves—Laying Mash C O A L ** Island Creek—Yellow Jacket—Battleship Pocahontus Hardware—Del Laval Separators Hog Fountains—Hog Feeders Cedarville Farmers’ Grain . i) • ' . ■ . • Company Everything For The Farm Phone 21 Cedarville^ Ohio portion of the suit should bo of light j weight wool, which will proloet the body against any sudden change of f temperatare, | “Experiments have shown that the ultra-violet rays of the sun will pass through wool or celanese rayon to simple extent,” Miss Foster points out, In mid-August a 12-year offensive! "especially if the material is of open against black stem rust, menace t o ; \ytave or mesh,” Ohio’s whjjat crop, will come to an- Sleeveless and sun-back drosses for end, but another long offensive will women, and the stockingless fad, are start at once, jall outgrowths of the idea that oxpo- The common barberry bush—not ! suro 0f the skin to ultra-violet rays-is the Japanese barberry-—is host to the !beneficial. organism which causes black stem ) ---------------------- rust of wheat. Workers of the United States Department of Agriculture have for the past 12- years scoured \ Ohio, going from farm to farm to root out common barberry bushes. By mid- ( August, when seven townships in - Ashtabula County have been covered,' the entire state. Will have been cover- ed. ! The second systematic survey of the stale is in fact now under way in western Ohio, The 27 burberry num Experiment Station To Hold Open House i Three August Days Named For Dairy, Garden, Fruit, And Potato Interests Open house for Ohio dairymen, rchardists,' gardeners, and potato growers is announced by the Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station, ers now in Ashtabula County will Wooster, for three days in August, move to Montgomery and Preble; The annual dairy day at Wooster Counties as soon as they finish their ! conies this year August 9. Garden work in Ashtabula County. land potato day is scheduled for AH menVcmployed in barberry era- August 15, and orchard day follows on dieation are especially trained for the August .1G. Intensive programs have job. All of them are college men, and tbeen completed. Most of the discus- all but three of the present crew in ’ sions will be based on experiments Ohio have had previous experience a s ; conducted at Wooster during the past barberry c adicators. jyear. Largely as a result of this systema- i Dairymen will have an opportunity tic odadication of barberry bushes, the to discuss the necessity of mineial average annual losp to wheat growers supplements for dairy cattle; grinding S A N D S T O R LOLA* IN THE LAKE I T WAS not terribly cold In the win­ ter time where Lola lived, but still It was cold. They did not have the severe winter storms, nor the heavy snowfalls, nor the Ice, but It was sharp, cold weather just the same. The wind blew hard at this time of the year, harder and colder than at other times just to show that it was winter time here, too. Lola hnd gone canoeing. It was a cold, raw day, but she loved to go on the lake at all times. A wind was blowing hard. It made the inlce full of little squalls. It was hard to manage a boat when the lake was like that. But Lola was lifted to the lake and Its winds, Now and ngnin one got the better of her, hut not often. She wns very from black stem rust during 1924*28 was less thtan two-thirds the average annual loss of the preceding five years, Scientists Applaud Sun Suits for Kids Ultra-violet Rays Help Body Manufacture Its Own Vitamin D Sun suits for children are no mere fad. Experiments have now proved that when the ultra-violet rays of the sun strike the skin directly, the body and predigesting feeds; vitamin “re- quirements of dairy cattle; protein feeding experiment^; use of skimmilk powder for calves; control of conta­ gious abortion; and economics of milk marketing. Fruit growers who come to Wooster on August 1G will see, in the Experi­ ment Station orchards, results' of com­ parative tests of various sprays and dusts'; thining experiments; effect of different fertilizer treatments on the keeping quality of apples; study of varieties in plantings begun in 189.'?. Many a fruit grower lias Wondered what causes fruit to set or fall at blossom lime, or shortly after. Experi­ ments unday way at Wooster alied is enabled to make its own supply of Vitamin II. This is especially import-(light en the problem. ant for children, Hincc Vitamin I) The tour through the Experiment helps prevent rickets, and aids in the iStation orchard will lake place in development of bones and teeth “ Let the children have, ’a place in tlio nun’,” advises Mnrtllm E. Foster, clothing specialist at the Ohio State University. "In buying a nun suit choose one that allows the greatest exposure of akin surface. To prevent chilling of the vital organ the lower the morning; ft short program and open open discission is scheduled for the afternoon. Ohio’s gross car.li income from farm products stood 2VS per cent higher in 1928-29 than in the preceding crop year. -7L / - C L Her Arms Began to Aclis. strong nnd she wns a very good swim­ mer, too. It lmd looked today a llttio as though it might rain. For Hint rea­ son Lola find worn her. raincoat. “I might well be prepared,” she had said wisely enough. IIow Lola did enjoy the rough wa­ ter and the wind and the wild ldok of the day. Only it became harder to paddle the canoe than site had over known It to be, anil she had gone much further «p the lake than she had in­ tended. It lmd been so easy going tip the lake. The wind had been with her nnd she had gone further than site had intended before she realized it'. It was coming back that was so hard. Her arms began to. neli'e. Sbe felt she just coiildn't keep on pad­ dling, nnd yet she was so strong. lint this time the wind wns getting the better of her. It only she could stop and rest for. just one second. But she had to watch out for the squalls—coming In nil directions, making It so hard to manage ns well ns to work so hard. Then ctinie two breezes from oppo­ site directions and the wind began to blow harder than ever, IIow tier arms ached. Just for a second’s restl Ob, Just for a second’s rest, she kept thinking over nnd over again. She missed one stroke with her pnd- dle. She couldn’t help it, nnd n Hurry of wind toppled the canoe right over. Lola was In the lake. She wns quite a long distance from shore nnd the water was very cold with little cold Streams from the surrounding hills making It very, very cold in some parts. But Lola was a good swimmer and she was not afraid. She almost liked the rest from paddling, too. Of course she kept the canoe with her. She wouldn’t have gone off Swim­ ming without that, for she knew that would be dangerous, and slie didn’t take foolish chances. ’ Site swam and she swam and she swam, one arm over the canoe, the other using' the side-stroke. She swam with all her clothes on and the raincoat ns well. She renchod home safely. Oh, how relieved her family’ were when they knew she was safe, for they had wor­ ried about her on the lake in such n storm, They had not known until afterward that site had been in the lake, But tlie raincoat shrunk, It wns too small now for her in the sleeves, it looked quite absurd. It was too short for her and it was too tight across the shoulders and did not fit at all. But she had to wear It, IIow bad­ ly she did feel about it. If only she had taken It off nrtd lot St go In the lake no one would have minded so long as slie was safe and they would have realized how hard It would have been to swim with It on, But she had kept It on nnd it hufi shrunk and she was safe anyway. She still hnd to wear the raincoat, What' h great, groat pity it did seeml (CtitiyHfjlit.) “KONJOLAONLY MEDICINETHAT GAVERELIEF!” Rejoices to Be Free From the Clutches of Rheumatism and ‘ Neuritis : / ' MB. JAMES HALI,AI)AY . “ For a long time my food waft only partially digested, and eating was fol­ lowed by gas and bloating attacks,” said Mr. James Halladay, G2, of 1708 East Seventeenth street, Cleveland, Ohio. Lack of proper nutrition affect­ ed my general health, and I was low in vitality and energy. Finally rheumatism and neuritis developed and my whole body was filled with aches and pains. “The results from just two bottles of Konjohf wore so gratifying that I went right ahead, knowing that I had found the'medicine I should have had Jin the first place. In a month not a ;pain remained, and my digestion to- !day is as good as ever, Konjola was- jibe only medicine that gave me any relief!” Konjola is sold in Cedarville, Ohio at I’ rowant & Brown drug store, and by all Hie best druggists in all towns throughout this entire Section. Dairy Day at the Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station, Wooster, this year comes August 9; Garden and Potato Day, August IS; Orchard Da August Hi. Bay i» Sam: Another reason why China and Russia shouldn't go to war is that we’d never he able to pro- ! nounce the names o f tlio battles, ar* i «um J i \ *; A'l • [ill IP pg m k; Si1 H j'j. s 7 i i 4 x

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=