The Cedarville Herald, Volume 53, Numbers 1-26
TSUt ClOAtVILI.E HERALD, FEBRUARY t, It*-Q Used Car Sale 1930 SERIES PONTIAC COACH 1929 EARLY SERIES PONTIAC COACH 1926 CHEVROLET COACH ..................... $675 $195 $135 J E A N P A T T O N Cedarville Ohio Joseph Stewart Dies In Topeka, Kansas Joseph Stewart, a former resident . o f Xenia and Cedarville, died Tuesday at his home in Topeka, Kansas, Hr. Stewart left the county about twenty- five years ago and fo r a number o f years lived in Canada. While here he / was bookkeeper for the Hag&r Straw ; Board & Paper Company, ; He is survived by a son, Samuel, o f . Portland, Maine; and a brother, Rev. * SPaul Stewart of New York City and KSSIWSiO j a niece, Mrs. Charles Galloway, Chica- ■ f go. His wife was Anna Charlton i Stewart, who has been dead many years, The remains will be brought to Xenia fo r burial. METROPOLIS IpLEASING service that antic- ipates every convenience and comfort o f the guest, complete appointments' and distinguished cuisine make it an ideal hotel for your visit to Cincinnati. ■ 400 Booms, pith bath from $ 3.50 upward ' Walnut between 6th and ?th (one square southo fBus Terminals) PURINACHOWFEEDS Hog" Chow—Pig Chow—Cow Chow Steer Patina—Sheep, Calves—Laying Mash C O A L Island Creek—Yellow Jacket—Battleship ' Pocahontas Hardware—Del Laval Separators Hog Fountains—Hog Feeders CedarviUe Farmers’ Gram Company Phone 21 Everything For The Farm < Cedarville, Ohio SHERIFFS SALE! REA £ OF ESTATE IN BATH TOWNSHIP* GREENE COUNTY, OHIO , The undersigned Sheriff will offer for sale at public auction, in pursuance o f an order o f the'Court o f Common Pleas o f Greene County, Ohio, in the case o f Stella Bryan vs. Nettie M, Harner, et al., .case No, 18711, on the premises in Bath ToWmdtip, Greene County, • Ohio, beginning at 2:00 P. M., on Friday, February 21,1930 three (3) farms: First Tract—159*4 acres, good clay and black loam, rolling, self-draining, will grow corn, Wheat, potatoes and other crops one year with another regardless o f the weather; well watered, im proved with large barn and a dwelling house and outbuildings. Second Tract— lOoy* acres o f red clay and black loam, will grow crops of any kind, improved with barn and house. Third Tract—27 84-100’ acres, al! in pasture, improved with dwelling house and two small bams. First Tract appraised for $7,975.00; Second Tract appraised for $4,020.00; Third Tract, appraised for $2,000.00,. and neither tract can sell for less than two-thirds o f the appraisement. . At the same time the said three tracts wilt be offered as a whole and must sell for al least two-thirds o f the total appraised value,,and at the same time tracts land 2 will be offered together and must sell for a t least two- thirds o f the total appraised value. Said property will then be told in « manner Whereby it will bring the best price. TERMS OF SALE : Cash on delivery o f deed, but a reasonable deposit will be required On the day of sale to guarantee good faith. A loan has been arranged for and for the terms and conditions thereof, see either the attorney or the auctioneers. ' The sale will be Started a t the buildings On Tract No. 1, Which buildings arc located about otte-four.th mile north o f the Yellow Springs-Osborn Bike. Said real estate is located about two miles east o f Osborn, Ohio, and three and one-jialf miles west of YelloWi Springs, Ohio, on the Osborn and Yellow Springs l*ike. OHMER TATE, SHERIFF OF GREENE COUNTY, OHIO. MORRIS IL RICE, Attorney, Osborn, Ohio. COL. GLEN WEtKBRT, IMS East High Street, Springfield, Ohio. COL, JOE GORDON, Cedafvllie, Ohio, AUCTIONEERS. Time Big Factor In Spray Tallies Catching Insect or Pest A t Right Moment Is Hightly Important Time is an important element in application o f spray to fruit trees. Orchards sprayed at the times and in the manner suggested by extension specialists of the Ohio State Univer sity here* yielded an average o f S4.21 per cent fruit clean o f insect and dis ease injury. In orchards which were checked, and where spraying recom mendations were not followed, the highest percentage o f dean fruit was 18.1 per cent, • Tests and checks on spraying were carried out in 13 counties o f the state. In Athens County, orchards where the spraying recommendations were carried out yielded 91.7 per cent clean fruit. Others, 18.1 per cent. In Cler mont County* following the sugges tions resulted in 89.4 per cent dean fruit where a check plot had only 2.1 per cent. In Cuyahoga County, 93.7 per cent o f the fruit was dean where the suggestions were closely followed and 16 per cent where they were not followed. Orchards in Lake nnd Meigs Counties where recommendations were not followed suffered 100 per cent injury to the fruit, while orchards in the same counties, under the spray schedule, produced fruit 93.8 per cent and 92.6 per cent dean, respectively. The average for all orchards where the recommendations were carried out, was 84.2 dean fruit. Times for applving the spray with the maximum effect are determined by plant pathologists and entomolo gists, who study carefully the stage development o f the insects and the diseases, and obtain special Weather forecasts, then relay spray .warnings by' mail, telegraph, telephone and radio, to the growers. Wish For Beauty So Study Health Rural Wchnwu ia Lucas County Organise Extearnon Project In Health and Charm Frankly desiting to he as personally attractive as possible, a group o f rural women in Lucas County have turned to their county home demonstration agent, Miss Bernice Bailey, and th.: Agricultural Extension Service o f the Ohio State University, for some beau- ty lore, which has been forthcoming and which haa occupied the attention o f the group as a definitely organize^ extension project, this, winter. The project has been based on the principle ihat beauty and charm depend upon health. Therefore Miss Wands Brzy- luska, extension specialist in health has been cooperating. The work started through request* from rural women to the home agent for answers to problems of health ana' appearance. The organized course of study was the response. “ Believing that all charm comes from within and that a pleasing per sonality can be developed only by the physically fit, emphasis has bee, placed on instruction leading to cor rections of physical defects and handj. caps,” says Miss Bailey. Pr.pperly shod feet and exercises for the care and. development o f the feet have had a prominent part in the project., “ Few persons appreciate how much poorly clad,. aching feet can affect one’s posture and disposition. As posture and healthy feet depend upon each other, the first lesson in cluded corrective posture exercises and foot arch exercises, with discus sion o f the care and clothing o f ‘ the feet. The second lesson included bathing for health, care of the skin, and care o f the nails. The last lesson will cover care o f the hair and teeth and probably delve into the forbidden topic o f odors o f perspiration,” says '"the home agent. If the law were to edict that man and wife should never he together for mpre than six months in the year, It would be broken every day. and men and women would' eland hunger and stripes to ' came togrothey for twelve months In twelve. If love o f home were a -crime, a family life would' arise inoro touching than any thing Queen Victoria ever droemed.-— W. I* George. SEASONABLE FOODS C OOL fruits, frozen Ices and tin kling dripks arc the things which have the most appeal during warm days. . v Have dinner, luncheon or supper served out of doors—-in the woods If possible or by the side of a stream or lake. I f that is not convenient set a table on the lawn or porch and stay out In the open air as much as con venient. A Coo), back porch makes a ’fine breakfast room, and many of the veg etables may bo prepared for the din ner out there, where one has fresh air and may listen to the birds and bees, Such tasks seem only play with the mind occupied with enjoying the out-of-doors. Prepare sandwiches and salads and serve such foods often instead of hot meats, pastries and other heavy des serts, When one has a few fresh fish (not enough to serve for a meal for the family) try a fish chowder. Fresh Fish Chowder. Fry five or six tablespoopfuls of finely cubed salt pork in a kettle. When well browned add four to six sliced onions and six to eight pota toes out into slices. Cover with boil ing water and cook until the vege tables are half done, then add the boned fish cut into small pieces and cook until all are tender. Season well with salt nnd pepper nnd add six to ten milk crackers to a quart o f rich milk heated hot. Serve after the mix has been added to the chowder, and If not rich enough, add butter to sea son. Serve two ernckers in each soup dish. Very tender young cabbage, shred ded very flue nnd mixed with a boiled dressing makes fine filling for sandwiches, For anotiier vegetable sandw ich- slice firm crisp radishes very thin and lay them on the buttered bread with a bit of shredded onion. . Water cress sprinkled with salt Is another fine filling for buttered bread. Simple Bollsd Dr*i«fnfl. Mix together one-half cupful of su gar, one teaspoonful o f salt, one tahltspoonful of flour and one teas- pooiiful of mustard. Add one-half cupful of milk and one egg well beat en, Itea ( one-half enpful of vinegar (mild) in a saucepan Aid When hot add the other Ingredients very slowly, stirring constantly. Add whipped cream when using. This will keep In definitely. * * Shorts and Middlings More corn was hogged down, grazed, United States, during 1929 than dur- or used for forage, in Ohio and in the ing 1928, by more than 1 per cent o f acreage. Sweet clover will sometimes send its’ roots to a depth o f four feet with in a year o f being planted. Testing seed corn fo r germination now is insurance 'aganist begging seed com from door io door next spring. “ Life exists in the possible as well as in the actual;.the must and the maybe are equally valid.” --L ew is Mumford, To obtain full benefit ^from a com plete mash ration fed to the laying flock, arrange that the ration be fed in suitable feeders and plenty o f them, so that every hen has a chance at the food. In most cases the outward appear ance o f a cow does not reveal degree of infection Of bovine tuberculosis which may be present. Testing is the only sure method o f determining whether tuberculosis is present in the herd. „ A D A I R ’S Other things being equal, it is bet ter to buy baby chicks as near home as possible, « “ He that by me spreads a wider breast than my own, proves the width’ o f my own.”—Walt Whitman. 'Early seeded oats yielded higher than late seeded oats, in experiments which have been carried on at the Ohio State Agricultural Experiment Sta tion. hOT I CE l In pursuance of an order of tlie Probate Court of Greene County, Ohio, 1 wtli offer for sale at public- auction on the 8th day of March, 1834, at ten o'clock A. JI,. at the West . Door of the Court House In the City of Xenia, | Ohio, the following described real estate, to- wlt: ; Situated In the County of Greene, State of Ohio, and being two lots of land, anti bounded and described as follows: The first lot beginning at a stake at the Western Corner Of a lot of ground owned by Charles H. Sitaln, and In the Yellow Sprlnga Road and running with said road N, 7*14 degrees W. 3.65 poles to a stake; thence Jf. 38 degrees E, 43.5 poles to a White Oak 16 Inches in diameter In the lino of Janies Raney; thence with said line 8. 45 degrees K. 4.7 poles to n stone corner to said Raney: thence 8. 18ft de grees W. 31.7 poles to a stone corner to Charles H. Strain; thence N. 76 degrees W. 7,35 poles to a-stake; thence S, i8ft de gree* W. 16 pqlee to the place of begin ning, containing One aero and 145 poles, rabre or lees, second lot commencing et a stone near the center of Cedarville and Yellow Springs Road ami Westerly corner of James Raney and running thence N. 72ft degrees W. 7.35 potes to S stake, In said road; ihenie .V. Is ft degree* E. 16 poles to a slake; thence 8, 72ft degrees X. 7.33 poles to a stake Jamee Raney’* line; thence with said line 8. 18ft degree* W, 18 poles lo the beginning, containing 73.5 Square Poles, more or less, making In two lots 3 seres 37,5 poles, more or lew. Being the same premises described In the deed front George A. White and Elizabeth M, White to Ross Chambers, dated Febru ary 8, 1886, and recorded In Vol, 47, 1**60 4*, Greene County Deed Records. Said property Is located on the Cedmllfe and Yellow Springs Hosd, about onchslf mile West of Cedstrllle. Appraised at $m «6 , TERMS OF flAl.B: fash. To he sold by order of the Probate Court In the ’esse of W, J. Tarbox, Executor of the Estate of Hose Chambers, deceased, vs. William PufiWd. et al., defendant*. - W. J. TABBOX, Executor Of the Will of Hose Chambers, deceased Cedarville, Ohio. MIME* A FlNSlBY Attorneys Xthla, Ohio. Fell. 7. 14, 41, and 28. I .........— The Herald and Ohio State Journal tor one year at $4.95. i t , u rj.u iii .m.tm .u iii;. *i iihswh . i »«■ v i . i r 1 ’ a *. u» Before Buying Always See ADAIR’S $ 97.20 D on ’ t be misled by large sounding discounts. It is w h a t you a ctua lly pay fo r the article tha t counts., An O u tfit Similar T o That P ictured A bove , 7 pieces The outfit consists o f a 3-piece Living Room Suite upholstered in Jacquard Velour with reverse cushions, a Bridge Lamp, ah Oc casional Table, ah End Table, and a Magazine Basket. Note Suites You Can Get For Less Than $100.00 3-P iece Suite Covered in Jacquard V e lou r Reverse Cushions, Davenport, Club Chair And f t A Occasional Chair f v v i w w 3-P iece Suite C overed in Jacquard V elour Reverse Cushions, Consists o f Davenport, Club { O S f t f t Chair and Button Back Chair f y O i v w 3-Piece Suite C overed in Jacquard V elou r , Reverse Cushions, Serpentine Front. Compare it ATClCl f t f t With What You See Priced at $125. - Othet Living Room Suites up to $350.00. $ 95.00 This 8-Piece D in ing Room Suite as Shown The Suite consists of 60-inch Buffet, Extension Table, 5 Chairs and 1 Arm Chair. We cannot possibl y offer you better furniture at this low price. The construction is sturdy and solid. Genuine walnut veneers are used in this suite. Dining Room Suites At Prices You Can Afford To Pay i 8-Piece D in ing Room Suite Consisting o f 54-inch Buffet, Extension Table, 5 Chairs and l.Arm Chair. Upholstered in Mohair. Suite made o f gumwood. $ 6 5 .0 0 $ 9 9 .0 0 8-Piece D in ing Room Suite Of beautiful design. Genuine walnut veneered fronts, ends and tops. Consists o f 60-inch Buffet, Table, 5 Chairs and 1 Arm Chair. 8-Piece D in ing Room Suite Consisting o f 66-inch Buffet, Table, 5Chairs and 1 flP <fl f t f t Atm Chair. Made o f walnut and gum with maple Hr * overlays. Other Dining Room Suites At $129, $139, $155, $172, $199 and $240. WATCH ADAIR’S WINDOWS ADAIR’S 20-24 N. DetroitSt. Xenia, Ohio
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