The Cedarville Herald, Volume 53, Numbers 1-26

t m C*OA»YILL» HERALD, MAY 2, J9M. j ln|l1..... 1-1.................. T ...... .............................................................. ...................... ........... — F U R N I T U R E . REPAIRED amd UPHOLSTERED A t Prices In E m i l Of iBirerytiody CharlesR.Hoeraer I PHONE | Odarville 148 R«f Addrex* Cor. Mearoe & Lake 8ts., Xeaia niimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMliirmwliMitmHnm<iiiHiiiiiiiiiini.i..m.^J1.M.f.), ■romM arshall F ield ai COMPANY.WHOLESALE'S I R E M O V A L . - ““i t -n i SALE Pick Hardy Kind Of Early Annual F r o t l - R o sU ttn t C a n B e P l a n te d A* S oon A# So il | s R e a d y Greenhouse* or hotframe* in which to start the seedling* of annual, flow* ers for the garden, are not part of the average equipment of the hame. Much disappointment may be avoided then, by choosing for early planting only tlie annuals which , are known to be hardy and whcih may be sown directly ill bed fir border as soon as the soil can be prepared, says L. C. Chadwick of the floriculture department of the Ohio State University! Chadwick has listed a number of annuals which can be sown this early. The list is as follows: Althaa rosa, or annual hollyhock; Alyssum maritinum or swet alyssum; Calendula officinalis, or pot marigold; Centuarea cyanus, or bachelor button; Clarkia elegans or clarkia; Coreopsis tirictoria or Calliop- sis; Cosmos bipmnatus, or Cosmos; Delphinium ajacis or larkspur; Dian- thua cbinensis or China Pink; lberi 3 amura, or candytuft. Thousands of buyers were there from the biggest and best stores all over the United States. I t was an exciting time, and we bought thousands of dollars worth of Mer­ chandise which we will put on Sale MAY 1 s t'T O 10th Very low prices—New Spring Merchandise in a store wide Sale* , The biggest event of the year. Come. J C C C T , Xenia, Ohio a wriaf!. rime ‘Hint, Come to our store in a “show-me” mood. sTell the demonstrator you‘want f to see him start the n ew . . . a ( bleman Cookers Then a t he lights the P reheater. . . time him. When he touches a match to it, it lights instantly. A hot, pressure-driven, blue flame plays against the generator. And before you know it, the toaster burner is going full tilt Check the timel Pull Cooking heat in leas than a minute from a cold start! The other burners a re ready, too. See, he lights them with a match just like city gas. The Coleman i* a gas stove. I t makes its own gas from regular, clear- white gasoline. Cooks with a clean, blue flume actually h o tte r than natural gas. And there’s no piping nor wiring to bother with. Just fill tlw gas tank and the Cole* man is ready to got Model Jlhtttrtted $ 8 5 .0 0 Easy Credit S§44fi Weather Will Be Factor In Prices Potato Acreage Increase Not So Important A s Acre-Yield In Fixing •Production Weather conditions during the next two or three months, not the acreage of potatoes planted, will determine the price which this year’s growers will get for their crop, surmises C. R. Arnold of the rural economics depart­ ment of the Ohio State University here. ■ While’potatoes are now selling at more than double the price they were bringing a year ago, two distinct factors- have operated to decrease the supply and raise the price, Arnold points out. The 1929 acreage was 12 per cent below that of the preceding year, but it was the low acre-yield joining.with the low. acreage which cut the total production 26 per cent and caused the higher prices. Preliminary reports1 indicate that farmers this year will plant a potato acreage 6 p,et cent greater than the 1929 acreage. “Six per cent increase in total production over that of last year would not be large enough^© cause any heavy surplus on the mar* ket,” says Arnold. “However, we must remember last year’s low yipkfe If we increase our acreage 6.per cent over last year’s and then obtain .an average yield per acre instead of the very low yield of last year; total production would be considerably above 400 million, bushels, and the price probably would be low.” Prohibition Comrictioiis AreOnIncrease Number of eonviofaUm* fo r viola­ tion* of the state prohibition law in common pleas oorcrt* of Ohio under! section* of the criminal code making j it a misdemeanor increased nearly 2Qi per cent in, 1929, compared with the j number in 1928, according to report*: to Secretary of State Clarence J .j Brown. j There were 2,124 conviction* in 1929' under the misdemeanor provisions, Mr. Brown said, an increase of 30° over 1928, when conviction* numbered 1,772, These do not include convic­ tion* under provisions of the criminal code which make such, violation a felony. * Mr, Brown pointed out that the totals do not include dry convictions obtained in municipal courts and that in the more populous cities of the state where there are municipal courts, practically all of .the prohibition law violations are tried in the municipal courts. There was. a slight decrease in the number of acquittals reported, • Mr. Brpwn said, there being 126 acquittals in 1929, compared with 132 acquittals in the previous year. Indictments were dismissed in 338 cases in 1929 as com­ pared with 289 caSCS during the year before, While the number o f cases pending a t the dote of 1929 was GG6 compared with 500 pf. the year before. During the year in common pleas, courts of the state there were 172 convictions of prohibition,law viola-* tions under the felony provisions, ap­ proximately 10 per pant of the num­ ber of convictions obtained under the misdemeanor sections of the dry law. The report showed, Mr. Brown said, that in 48 opt of 88 ounties in the state there were no convictions in the common pleas Courts under the felony provisions fit the , state prohibition law, while in 29 counties of the state, there were no convictions in. common pleas courts under the misdemeanor provisions of the state prohibition law. Holmes county with 20 convictons led the state in the number of con­ victions obtained under the felony provisions of the state dry law. Nbw y iiimiiniw-“t w rf“"““ ....i.iin.iimmwi....iHiHWHiiiaiiiinimwnmrr-f-... -s other counties is. which the** were more than five such convictions in the common plea* courts follows: Scdote, 18; Loj. m, 18; Jackson, 18j Noble, 11; Clark, 10; Miami, 9; Ross, 7; Colum­ bians, 7; and Washington, 6, Montgomery County with 282 pro- hjbition convictions under the. mis­ demeanor provision* o f the dry law led the state for the number of con­ victions under this section in common pleas courts. Next to it in the num­ ber of such convictions obtained War* Summit County with 160 and Perry County with 100. • Twelve counties in which the num­ ber n f dry act misdemeanor convic­ tions exceeded fifty are: Allen, 52; Fairfield,’70; Guernsey, 73; Harrison,; 87; Hocking, 62; Lake, 65; Lawrence, 53; Medina, 73; Muskingum, 56; Ross/ GO; Stark, 78; and Washington, 64. I Auglaize county was in a class by | itself with po dry law misdemeanor j convictions and 21 acquittals in th e r common pleas court. WANTED Representative for Greene County- Splendid opportunity. A3TNA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY H . S. BAGLEY , DU t. M g r., 3 0 6 T h i r d N a t ’l B ld g ., Dayton* Ohio Shorts and Middlings Many poultrymen cost themselves money by raising chicks carefully to the age of 10 weaks o r so, and then neglecting the pullets until-it, is time to put them into the laying house. There are other trees than fruit trees which bear flowers and are high­ ly decorative in the yard. And they don’t dsjtribute diseased, wormy, and decaying, fru it over the lawn. NORTHUP HATCHERY We are now hatching and can take your orders fo r HIGH GRADE BLOOD TESTED CHICKS Custom Hatching. Phone 13-16 Clifton'Exchange R. F. D. 1, Yellow Springs, Ohio I M IDN IGHT | . . . A«M«tt Sickness } . . . Doctor Ambulance Hospital Operation o * a T h tf t when your SAVINGS ACCOUNT • t tho M. A M. will be your best friend. Wo Pay %Vi% On Savings We Charge Wz% On Loans |. Springfield, Ohio IFYOUNEEDPRINTINGDROPIN Ohio Bouquet Is Still A Result Getter It Worked In ■Courting Days and Now Works In the Orchard . Many a man can remember'that a bohquet of flowers in his courting days •got results. Whether he’s now over­ joyed with the results doesn’t matter; he wanted them until he got them, a t least. And iff he is now an orchardist, using bees in his orchards to^ensure the proper pollination of his fru it blossoms, he can afford to fake a leaf out of the book of his courting .days and again get results with a bouquet of flowers, , • The idea being tha t if the bees arc located in a large block of self sterile varieties of fruit, their work of going from blossom to blossom scattering pollen will do no good unless they have with them some of the pollen from •blossoms of the proper cross* pollinating varieties/ The way to sup­ ply this pollen is to hang-bouquets of bloom 'from the cross-pollinating varieties, says Virgil N. Argd, exten­ sion Specialist in beekeeping fob .the Ohio State University. I t won't do any good, says Argo, to put the bou­ quets down on the ground near the hives, because the bees should en­ counter them in the trees oh their reg­ ular honey-gatheri.ng flights. The bees located in the 'orchard for this duty should be placed a t equal intervals through the trees to be pol­ linated, not less than one hive to each ' acre of trees. They should be in place by the time the first or apical flowers of the bloom clusters fire open. Using bees for cross-pollinating fruit trees has been very successful ift seV.ersl Ohio orchards in tho past two years. I BLUB S U NOCO | ' Quick Starting i High Powered | High Knockless [ Bating More Miles per Dollar! 100%Pure—No Dope H ill Top Service Station Selection i* Very Complete Now. Come in and Look—No Obligations to Buy. ...... •• -. - .■ ' . • 1 • -- • a ' • :-*• We Wholesale and Retail White Lead, Oils, Brushes, DuPont Prepared i t% |- Faint, Johnson's Wa&es and Polisher’s Supplies,*0’Brien’s Interior and Ex­ it S i m terior Paints, Varnishes. Thresher'S Enamels—Varnishes and Spray Lac­ quers. - '• ’ - An exceptional equipment makes our glass ^service the Very best, WIN­ DOWANDDOOR GLASS, AUTOMOBILE WINDSHIELD AND CLOSED CAft GLASS. ' WALL PAPER—A V?rjr Complete Selection Priced from 3c roll up Bring Us Your Painting Problems We Will Help You Solve Them Fred F. Graham Co. 17-19 South Whiteman Street Phone 3—Xenia, Ohio TheBostonStore n t r FAMILY FOOTWEAR SPECIALS Boys* - Girls* and Children** NEW LOW SHOES 130 * pairs cf real $ 3 .fc 0 and 68 values, Bright new spring style*. For boy* and girls of all sizes. F I F NE ANY iT I. verge \% 'tans immtimimumiiii PIN ared LEx- Lac- PIN- SED Colu of spn of all week-c- try-sid sunny 4* a tr ent in more This .in over hi. within chariot posses, ample, and use to Set- Brown, Vehicle the bus April 1.' age of day. This must b the' old intentic the lav transfei mobile •> license j new wit. tamed 1 hides, j fine of sued th; manner is wilfu to all p- to see t ■ promptl Colon missiom sion of t ; Clarenc as staff tentiarj rich 6f of troo; vie rec justly f tered tr August signal i ' major year a August assigne Divisioi meats t ' Argonn . Baccars Croix d ■ de Gue- honoral partm^ei Wilson ed a li( Reserve was cal. Decemb and ass eral Ste: -ment, b> Feliruar time he Adjutan The o 'the ink April lit caught i Ohio berry bs but' it is take mo and the; inches it bass ove also be < each in i • should 1 and rod with ten ense cler State Corntick interest ment ar library s of prese precede A memt necessar' tailed it school h libraries, library, eludes n libraries, access t brary sts port, ine informal efficient tion of ment ant service t establish J. L. I cation, v annual jt county V the Mw*' Several era will n / j

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