The Cedarville Herald, Volume 52, Numbers 27-52
HEMORRHOIDS (OR PILES) GAN BE CUBED WITHOUT OF KNIFE WITHOUT LOSS OF TIME A successful treatment for internal and protruding piles. Requires from four to seven treatments at intervals o f about once a week for a cure o f the average case. Also the Ideal Non-Confining Method of Treatment fo r Fistulae, Pruritis Ani {itching) and, Fissure, etc. DR. J. A. YODER Osteopathic Physician and Proctologist IS, 10, 20 Steele Bldg., Xenia Phone 834 Do you want- to get ahead financially, if so spend less than you earn, and deposit some - 1 thing each we(ek to your savings account in this bank. The Exchange Bank . ■' • . I 9-123 ■'More buyers choose JBO than all other electric refrigerators combined . ) ■ , ' AH mechanical >parts are inside the cabinet. . . and the “ Cold Control” freezes desserts better and makes ice quicker. ] Visit our display room. Inspect the new, quiet Frigidaires. See the many features that.tadd to Ffigidaire’s value. Ask us about the monthly terms; ■ ★ :■ ★ ★ ■ Let us help you win in big$25,0Q0 contest Write a letter on food able awards .offered by the preservation and win a -NationalFoodPreservation. model home, a Cadillac car Council. Get complete . or one of many other valu* information here today. 50° is the safety point fo r perishable foods GAS and ELECTRIC SHOP THE CAS **J EtECTri»c||Pg||APPUAUCE COMPANY 37 5. Detroit 5t.|gi] Telephone 595 ( T H E D A Y T O N P O W E I 7 AND LIGHT CO.) X E N I A DISTRICT .y' Public Sale! I will sell at public sale at my farm 3*4 miles east of Xenia on the Jamestown and Xenia Pike the fdllowmg tve stock and other property: . ___ ___ _ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER25 AT 12 O’CLOCK 2— HORSES —2 ! 1 grey mare, registered pure bred Percheron, 1600i lbs.! 1 black Percheron mare, 1650 lbs. 8-CATTLE—8 1 registered Jersey cow, carrying second ca lf; 2 pure bred Jersey cows, carrying second calves; 1 Pur® Jersey cow, carrying third calf. Above cows due to c S by day of sale. 1 Jersey and Guernsey cow, giving good flow of milk, carrying second calf, due to calve m March; 3 yearling Jersey heifer calves. 17— HOGS— 17 . . 2 sows bred to farrow October 15th; 15 spring pigs, all immuned. lia -SH EEP— 113 t u 67 Uelaine.ewes, 2 to 4 years old; 45 Delame lambs and 1 Delaine buck. FARM IMPLEMENTS , i 1 four roll corn busker; 1 wagon with box bed; 1 iinlkv plow; 1 double disc; 1 one row corn plow; 1 new ‘c o r n pi liter; 2 mowers; 1 hay tedder; 1 hay rake; 1 corn S l e r ; 2 aides of harness; 1 set of buggy harness; 1 good ? osml buggy No. 12 DeLaval separator; 1 Ford sedan, 1926 model. *,*<**»,. FEED About 8 tons of alfalfa, clover and timothy hay. A few pieces o f household goods. Tetnts made known on day of sale. Lunch stand on grounds. LILLIAN SPENCER Weickei t and Gordon, Aucts. i otT m Long, Clerk, Presbyterian Church To Be l Opened .Sabbath « (Continued from page 1) Fostludc—-“ Proclamation" ______ ..— -------- ------------- Roland Diggle Evening* 'Service—8:00 O’Clock Prelude—“ O Sanetissima” __ ----------- ---------- --------.Friedrich Lux Processional Invocation, Choral Amen* Rev. R. A . Jamieson Hymn No. 116— '’Blest Be the Tie That Binds” Quartette—“ Lead Kindly Light” ' — ___Parks Fay Kirschner, Mrs. Walter Corry, Miss Helen Iliffe, Earle Littleton Scripture Lesson Rev. H.‘ C. Gunnett Duet—“ Still, Still, With Thee” . . — -----------------:-------------------- Ashford Mrs. Walter Corry, Mr, Earl Littleton Solo—“ Eye Hath Not Seen” from “ The Holy C i t y " ......... ............. Gaul Miss Helen'Iliffe Prayer, Choral Amen ■ Dr. W. R, McChesney Quartette—“ O Holy Father” ___ ___________ ___ ________Marchetti Sermon—“ The Glory and Responsi bility o f the Church” Rev. William Wallace Hiffei, D. D, Hymn No.#124—“ The Son o f God Goes Forth to War” Prayer, Benediction,. Choral Response Dr. F. A. Jurkat Postlude—“ Triumphal Marche" — ______ _____________Dolby-Flaglar Dedication Week TUESDAY— Congregational Fellowship Night 6:30 O'clock—.Congregational Dinner ' Toast Program WEDNESDAY— Consecration Night 7:30 The Hour o f Prayer • Thanksgiving and Dedication FRIDAY— .Organ Inaugural Night 8:00 O’Clock—Recital by; Mr, Glenn Grant Grabill, A. A. G. O. Mi' Grabill is Dean o f the Central Ohio Chapter American. Guild of Organists and Director o f Music at Otterbein College. Sabbath, September 29th The Regular Church Program 10:00 A. M. Bible School 11:00 A. M. Worship Service . Sermon b y th e pastor - 'Music by the Choir Junior Church—In . charge of.M iss Jean ■ ‘ Morton. . 7:00 P. M»; Young People's Service .8:00 P. M. Union Service, United • Presbyterian.. Church. SpecialAnnouncements - .Dayton Presbytery - The-.Regular. Fall-.Meeting of. the -Dayton Presbytery ..will be held Mon day, September, 23rd at 10:00 A.. M., in the Jersey^Church, at--New Carlisle. Rally- Day , Next Sabbath, September .29th will be Rally Day in the Sabbath School. This is to be a -United Service lasting an hour' and a,.half. -The various groups will participate in>the service and a message, appropriate to the occasion will be brought by the pastor. Women's Preabyterial The Autumn Meeting o f the Spring- field District o f the Dayton Preaby- terinl will be held in this church, Wed nesday, October 16th. All the - ladies of the church should make a note of this and plan to attend. Synod-Wide Service o f Evangelism The Period from .October 6th to November 13th,/is to be set aside for a special Evangelistic enterprize. During that time*nearly four hundred Presbyterian - Ministers and churches will cooperate in-Evangelistic preach ing services. 4 • J1# These services are to be introduced by a period o f Home Prayer Services', and will terminate with i Synod-wide observance o f the Sacrament o f The Lord's Supper on November 10th» This will take the place o f our regular Autumn Communion Service, The Visiting Minister for this church ty Rev. Edwin S. Marshall, D» O,,. o f Lorain, Ohio, who will be here from Monday evening, October 14 tq Sabbath Evening, October 20. Organ, and Repair Committee Walter C.- I liffe --------- — ^Chairman R. T. W illiam son_____.____Secretary E. L. Stormont ------------------Treasurer R. A, Murdock Clayton McMillan Melviri McMillan -'William Conley S. C. Wright At E, Huey; Women's Advisory Committee Mrsf. W« R. McChesney, Miss Ina Mur* dock, Mrs. Walter Iliffe U. P. Church Is After Pension Fund* - -r —■— About 40 laymen, comprising the ministerial pension fund cornmittce o f Xenia -Presbytery, United Presbyi; terinn Church, meet in the first church of that denomination {n Xenia Thurs day evening when they will be ad dressed b y ,the Rev. R. W. Burnside; o f Philadelphia, secretary o f the hoard of ministerial relief.{ The church i f inaugurating plans to raise a peimiori fund o f $1,500/100 and this blatter was discussed at Thursday evening's meet- niff.- Dinner was served at the church Jn connection. W. W. Galloway, Cedar* ville, is -chairman o f the committee^! which includes representatives o f churches in Columbus, Springfield, Xenia, Jamestown, Cedarville and Clifton. . ..... , ‘ ; Forty owners o f farm woods irt Ashtabula County have now had their plots classified as farm forest tracts for tax exemption tinder the- state forestry law. Cattl* BujtbsgLess Certain This Year Govaniiaf Factors Less Stable Than Tkay Were In -Summer of ’ 28 Judging by advance .statements o f their intentions, the cattle feeders o f the Cora: Belt will buy just about as many cattle .during the remaining months o f this year in the same months, as they did last year. But the. influences which determine wheth er the .feeders will .carry out these intentions, are not so clear this year as they were last year at thiB time, according to J. C. ;Neff o f the rural economics department o f the Ohio State University. Plans o f the feeders were reported on August I, this year, and the con dition and prospects o f the corn crop at that date were far less, certain than they were a year ago. Develomeni; of the corn crop and the price conditions on both fat and feeding cattle up to the middle o f October, will actually determine the, degree to which the feeders load up this fall, in Neff’s opinion. , f Neff anticipates that the feeders will buy rather more cows and heifers this fall than ,last, and fewer heavy feeding Steers, he purchasing will be centered, he believes, on calves .and yearlings'this yearf as it was last. Distance Vanishes ForClubMembers Radio 4-H Program September 7 W ill Go Ori The Air From *'37 Stations in’ -26 States .Distance Will -cease to have any •meaning at all for 4*H dub members with* radio sets when on Saturday, September 7, a national 4-H club radio program .will be broadcast with the participants in the* program located in three different states, and the program itself taking the air at the same time from 37 radio stations in 26 different states. . j? The program includes a talk by a 4-H Club-member,-Edmund Aycoek of North Carolina; speaking from a sta tion at Washington, D, C.j another 4- H Club-member;- Anna C. Probasco of New Jersey,.-speaking from a station in ,NeW'York L .cy;. talks by Miss GertrudeWarren of the. extension ser vice of -the United-States Department o f .Agriculture, and I. W. Hill, field agent in club work, for the southern states, both speaking from the Wash ington; station; music by an orchestra and soloists.irj a radio studio in Chi cago. The prograib will last 45 min utes, beginning at 1:30 o'clock, East ern Standard'Time. The Qhio’ Station which will broad cast the 4-H ' Club material is WLW at dmcinnati. Select Rams Shown On A Special Train Sixty Will. Be Offered For Sale in Southeastern Ohio During Trip , i* i i~nr i Sixty head o f choice, Ohio-bred, I mutton and Merino rams \ will tour southeastern Ohio, September 16 to l 21 on the third “ Ohio Pure-bred Ram j Special” train. The train will be operated through the cooperation of several sheep breeding associations, I thfc Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, the Ohio Sheep and Wool Growers’ Asso ciation, the county extension agents o f the state, the Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station and the Ohio State University. The rams which will be taken on the 10-car special train will be fo r sale. They have been selected by a committee representing the agencies cooperating in the operation o f the train. Most o f them are Delaine Merinos, with a few Southdowns. Shropshires, Dorsets and Hampshirea. Each ram's breeding powers are guaranteed. The selection was made with an eye to the type of ewes in the fine wool section o f Ohio. The rams come from the flocks of well1 known breeders. The train will make its first stop at Mt. Vernon at 8:30 A. M., Monday, September 16, At 1:30 the same afternoon it will be at Toboso; on Tuesday it will stop at Freeport and Flushing, on Wednesday at Belmont and ' Quaker City, on Thursday at Zanesville and Malta, on Friday at Waterford and Marietta, and on Sat urday at Athens. Specialists in sheep husbandry from the agricultural ex periment station and from the Ohio State University will be with the train, and will talk on various phases o f the industry. PURINACHOWFEEDS Hog Chow—-Pig Chow-—Cow Chow Steer Fatina—Sheep, Calves— Laying Mato COAL Island Creek—Yellow Jacket—Battleshi) Pocahontas Hardware—Del Laval Separators Hog Fountains—Hog Feeders Cedarville Farmers’ Gran Company Everything For The Farm Phone 21 Cedarville, Ohi> rrrx - r rr-r THE NEW FORD SEDAN P Cottonseed meal supplemented with a mineral mixture containing 60 per cent calcium carbonate and 40 per cent sodium chloride, and with animal pro tein, is a satisfactory source of protoim for livestock feeding, it is shown by tests at the Ohio Agricultural Experi ment Station. . • Only purebred sires are now being used by 17,345 Livestock owners in the United States. New Ford Pordor Sedan College TeamPlays First Game Saturday Uoach Borst has been .putting the college football team through the paces the past two weeks getting l he hoys hardened and trained for the first football game o f the year with Transylvania, at Lexington, Ky. The team is showing good prospect this season and has been given thorough practice. .Government standards o f .grading for. 44 fruit and ’-vegetable commodi ties, have been established since 1916. Chrysanthemums -have been forced to bloom three -months earlier thaii normal, by artificially shortening their “ days” or the periods in which they are exposed to daylight. RADIO SETS SERVICE j Let us overhaul your set | and put it in condition | for winter ,use. We | repari any makes of set | *reasonably land guar- | * antee our work. | JAMES C. I STORMONT Phone 3-161 I Q u ick as a Flask f on the get-away) • * ,|!| No need fo r us to tell you how quickly the new Ford accelrates. jj You can see it any day in traffic. Few cars at any price are s fast a ;on the get-away, jj Come in and arrange for a demonstration. You’ll get real Jg thrill in driving the new Ford because it is so alert and respnsive g and so easy to handle under all conditions. H SPECIALS IN USED CARS 1 Chevrolet Coupe, Model 28 ................... ....... 1 Durant Coach, Model. 2 9 ............ .................. 1 Ford A Roadster, Model. Sj8 ........................... ...',.$315.00 | ;.... 415.00 | ..... 35.00 I EASY PAYMENTS ON NEW OR USED CARi - i •. I * C e d a r v i l l e M o t o r S a le s S. MAIN, CEDARVILLE, OHIO HiinuiniHtiBiu!i!iinii!iiitiin)!i!iHiHt.Hi[i!i!ini!iitnts!niniitnin!iii!n!i!fiui!iu!:ii[iituni!i!iHinmiRi “HERALD WANT AND SALE ADS JAY” aiiiimmnmniHimHiimuHiiii Prices Smashed! SALE o f Du Point PAINT Fred F«Graham Go# 17 and 191S ou th W h item an St. Xenia, Ohii
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