The Cedarville Herald, Volume 53, Numbers 1-26
tm bm e a ip , march 1 , m M tm AH*Yelicense To Sell SeedNow Partner* Who Advertise or Ship Seed Cops* Under Hew State Lew Governing Trade Farmer* who *eU seed must now, under * new OM& law, take out licences a* seed dealers. The change in the law has made it necessary fo r members o f the Ohio Seed Improve ment Association to take out indi vidual licenses, whereas heretofore they have operated under-a branch license issued to the association itself. The law defines a seed dealer as one who advertises through the public press or who delivers his goods by a common carrier, the members o f the association have been advised in a letter from Dr. J. B. Bark o f the farm crops department o f the Ohio DEATH OF M IS . HUTCHISON jW,lllWH|jWn Mrs. Martha Hutchison, 8S, widow o f Dr. J, F. Hutchison, retired United Presbyterian minister, passed away at her home in Xenia last Sunday e v en -1 WMWW .IHt.HIIFUHIW i.tMMOWWI, THIS WEEK By AKTJIl'S RRIHHAN'E Th* HuciW iM? w««k itt&uiiur&tftt a mwr in# at 6:30 o’clock utter an i II m s * o f totur* 1 * 1 ouawitt by Arthur Bri*ume, xh* one week. Heart trouble following an M“ n wik l y pejju* attack o f intestinal grip caused her ^ f f i ' C f t t l death. : Uxmind. Mrs. Hutchison was born* at Wool- , T>1 _ . , . . ton, England, near Liverpool, Au gu st1 1“ Advertised 9, 1847, one o f eleven children and I ‘ I*.® M,^da came to this country with her parents I . 1,1,1 m? Dig and Small at the age o f two years. She taught An Anc,ent Dread at Madison, school Ind., fo r fifteen years and came to this city with her husband jn 1896. She was a member o f the First United Presbyterian Church, in Xenia. Dr, Hutchison, whom she married April 9, 1889, preceded her in death eighteen years. Sheris survived by a sister, Mrs. J. E. Charlton, Hot Springs, Ark., two State University, who is acting step-children, and Knox Hutchison o f secretary-treasurer o f the association. -Cedarville and Mrs. Lulu H, Robinson ‘•When seed is sold and delivered 0f Washington C. H., and two grand daughters, Misses Louise and Anna by any producer on his own premises a seed license is not required/' says Dr, Park’s letter. “ This means that a grower may sell seed to his neigh bors or may wholesale his crop to a seed dealer, without securing a- license.” In the past the members of. the association operating under the association license, used the number o f that license on his tags. Hereafter he must obtain his'own license from the Bureau o f Plant Industry, State House Annex, Columbus, and will use his own license number on the tags which are attached to the seed he sells. ■ Pugh, Seattle, Wash. Although she had no children o f her own, she reared Mrs. T. H. Bell, Xenia, from the age o f four years. Mrs. Bell has cared fo r her during her declining years. Funeral services were held at the First United Presbyterian Church Wednesday afternoon at 2 o’clock and burial took place in Woodland Ceme tery. , FOR SALE—White and Fultum Seed Oats. F. B. Pitstick, Yellow Springs, Ohio, phone 45-R-2. Used Car Sale 1929 Series Pontiac Coach * 0 $49$ J E A N P A T T O N Cedarville Ohio MM lM llilWM Ii I , • j Before'inarketing’ your live stock call |-THESOUTH CHARLESTON STOCK YARDS j | d a i l y m a r k e t I Phone 80 ! S. K. SMOOTS P. P. SCOOTS v MONEY PAID WHEN WEIGHED * ' t * METROPOLIS JDLEASING 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. 400Rooms, it 4 th bath from $3.50 upward §1111 | I !Hf( If S\Will I § e ‘ e G| I e 1 vi 15 . t tw E Er£ Walnut between 6th and 7th (one square south o fBus Terminals) ■iuun SH8S Stop! Look! L is te n ! Be prepared for old age. Wepay 4 Pet Cent on Savings Accounts, The Exchange Bank Isg iiw w m ^ Francis H. Sisson, vice president o f the Guaranty Trust company, repeats what has often been said here,, that the big problem is not production, but distribution. Business is on the up grade. Mr. Sisson does not agree with that distin guished political economist. Solly Wertheim, who says, “ Business is looking up, fiat on its back, looking up." “i Mr, Sisson reminds merchants that With adequate advertising goods can be sold at a lower price than without advertising. First, have what the people want, then let them know you have it. Consider Mont Blanc, nice mountain in Switzerland, One ' million and eighty thousand people visited Mont Blanc last year, spending more thau $10,000,000 in'lit tle communities hear the mountain. Only 100 climbed to the top. We have bigger, better mountains, but they don’t get the advertising that Mont Blanc gets, and they don’t take in the money. It is true that established reputa tion helps Mont Blanc. It is also, true that advertising helps .to establish reputations, and keep them estab lished, / — There is no better work than dis tributing good books. They are the light o f the mind, stimulate ambition, develop good taste, prepare men's minds fo r service in the present by making them acquainted with the achievements, discoveries and services of the past. . * ,Maj. George1H, Putnam, veteran of the Civil war, and a most distinguished veteran o f the book publishing profes sion, now dead at eighty-five years of. age, represents public service in high degree. ‘ / New York's police force includes “ radcial squad” selected to deal with rebellious radicals. Planning that squad in days o f ex trdordinary prosperity, somebody ,was looking far ahead. As a rule, prosperity is more-effec tive tha.n poison gas in dealing with radicalism. In the clash between unemployed radicals and police in New York, the photographs show women struggling and fighting more violently than men. Nothing ‘ surprising in this. When women believe anything they believe it more violently than men. And when they believe, nothing is important com pared with their belief, and they care little what happens to them.: President Hoover warns eengtsss LOVELY MUSICAL NUMBERS that it is incline! to spend money t o o . SUNG IN “ DEVIL MAY CARE” freely. An increase o f 40 per cent in ^ — — taxes might follew s®y tee liberal *p - Ramon Novarre’a first talking pfc- propriations. • ture fo r M. G, M.,- “ Devil May Car#” (Copyright, uw, sy Kl**. *#•«««» Syndicate, _yrhich comes to the Regent Theater, W,J 1 Springfield, Saturday March 8 - fo r a j / v n a m jweek's run, will give ample opportune! L fC ItSU S M f i l l JLO D C i ity for a display o f the star’s excellent * Highly Inquisitive1 tenor voice. j ______ j Six special numbers were written* Will Ask Question# C o v e r in g *°r tbia picture, a story o f France in 1 Every Aspect of Farm the days between the exile o f Na- polean to Elba, and his return. The lovq affair of Armahd, * young And Family Life When the census enumerator has Bonapartist, and Leonia, a Royalist, left the farm home after his visit i n . is aided by the well-known emotional April, the farm operator and the farm power as song. The various numbers homemaker themselves will know a are*' “ If He Cared” , “ Charming” , 1 lot more about their plant and. its “ Pompadeur” , “March o f the Old operations than they did before. The Guard” , “ The Shepherd Serenade” , enumerators will ask 232 questions und “ Bon Jour, Louie." i covering every conceivable aspect o f “ Charming” is the principle love J the farm family and the farm itself, song o f the production. It is sung by Not only will they want to know how, Npvarre while he is masquerading as many there are in the family and what a servant in the house o f the countess, are their ages and sex, but how much AM Leading Varieties Any Monday Order Early QUALITY CHICK# Rent C» O, D, If Y « i Wish C H I C K S Win Highest Honors at Ohio State University, Co lumbus, Ohio, March, 1929. Why take a chance W others. Get Our Catalogue. It tells you o f their won derful quality. Our prices are no higher titan ordinary chicks. THE STURDY BABY CHICK CO, Springfield, Ohio ‘ ___________Main 836 of a mortgage there is on the place, whether there are a bathroom and electric lights, and whether the farm is rented from the wife’s grandparents or not. The census bureau, in preparation 1 BABY CONTEST. Babies in all the suburban territory around Springfield, between .six months and three years o f age; will be eligible to enter the Better Health and for the 1930 decennial survey o f th e jp °Pular Babies Contest being spon- nation’s population, is sending out j sore(i by Bokara Temple, No. 113, D. sample blanks such as will be used,O* K. K., it has been announced by for making the census returns. It is 19tis °* Sn)ith* chairman o f the execu- the intention to have -these blanks in *ive committee o f the temple. { the hands o f as many farm families, as possible, so that the detailed in Each baby will have its picture taken by McKeon’s Studio, given an formation called for may be collected 1 exPcri health examination by leading and ready when the enumerator Springfield physicians, a score card reaches the farm. The sample blanks showing the result and health certifi-, have been sent to members o f the! cate>* wniBhed the mother, free. ! Agricultural Extension Service of the! SiIver lovinS CUPS w i» be awarded Ohio State University here, among the winners in all three divisions. A grand ball- will close the contest. other persons. For Sale Three good Registered Draft Stal lions, 1 Percheron and 2 Belgians. For description, etc., see Os Spriggs, •Service which has handled these con- Washington, C, H., Ohio, Phone 2- tests in many large cities is in charge Babies can be registered by their par ents going in person to the offices at 111 W. High st., Pythian Castle. A standard score card that has been approved by the United State govern ment, is used. The Clay M. Greene 1181. (3t) o f the details. Says Sam: Every silver cloud has a Before planning the year’s opera- dark lining. If e /eryone became tions on his farm, the operator should honest over night, think of the lock j scan the economic horizon for market- and key maker* who would starve. ing indications. GAS — is the modern home heating fuel— light and clean. The Gas heated home needs less frequent cleanings. Gas heating eliminates stair climbing to “ fix the furnace” when it is thermostatically regulated. Gas fuel requires no dark and dusty corner o f the basement fo r storage o f fuel and releases basement space for playroom, den or work room. Investigate. OAe Dayton Power6*Light Co. Xenia D istrict ■ 1 Henry Ford will say in Capper’s Magazine for April that “ It is just as easy to think big as it is to think small/’ It is, after you get a start For in stance, in 1859, seventy-one years ago, John D. Rockefeller, wfto began work ing as office boy fo r $15 a month, started for himself as a commission man. He began "thinking big." He had accumulated $17,000 in 1862 and took a partner, Maurice B. Clark. They invested their money in a crude oil “ refinery" in Cleveland. That was the beginning o f “ think ing big.” In 1865 Mr. Rockefeller, who is now approaching his ninety-first birthday, and was then twenty-six, bought out his partner for $72,500. Standard Oil corporation papers were signed on January 10, 1870. Standard OH is now sixty years old. John D. Rockefeller has been “ think ing b ig " ever since. H is.best “ big thinking” has been devoted to the fight against disease. Instead o f using a few dollars to re lieve individual cases, he uses -tens o f millions to elinfinato disease perma nently, Signals to protect pedestrians from automobiles fire to be installed in big cities and “ amber colored” lights were suggested. The police say: “ Drivers will pay no attention to anything but red. That makes them stop." Why is it that red impresses men, find even the lower animals? Is it, perhaps, because men, for forty mil lion years, and animals through hun dreds o f millions o f years before man came, have known and inherited one great dread, the red blaze o f a forest Or prairie fire ? The national, industrial conference board tells you that the wealth of the United States amounts to three hun dred and sixty billion one hundred million. It sounds a lot, but it is only $3,000 for each American, with about $500 extra fo r New Yorkers. That isn’t enough. Human machines alone, leaving out mines, real estate,, factories, are worth more than three hundred and sixty billions. This laud and its people are worth whatever science and industry choose to produce—certainly not mere bil lions, but trillions. Taxes way be bigger. “Washington Crossing the Delaware" depicted above is one o f a series o f ten Famous Historical Episodes to be seen in the windows o f The Rike-Kumler Co. * * In celebration o f their 77th Anniversary The Rike - Kumler Company has obtained ten Historical Tableaux which are reproductions of famous paintings. These settings, showing actual one-third life size figures en acting Famous Episodes in American History, may be seen in the windows. The Ten Titles Are: N “The Landing of Columbus” “De Soto Discovering the Mississippi” “The Landing o f the Pilgrims” “William Penn’s Treaty W ith the Indians” “The Boston Tea Party” “The Battle of Bunker Hill” “The Declaration of Independence” “Washington Crossing the Delaware” “Molly Pitcher at Monmouth” “Perry’s Victory on Lake Erie” r ? Do You Know Anyone 77 Years Old or Older? I f you do would you.be kind enough to send in their name to Cornelia at The Rike-Kumler Company. We are anxious to honor all Miami Valley residents 77 years o f age or older at our annual Old Fashioned Tea Party. Watch th,eDayton Newspapers and Dayton Shopping News for Announcements o f Rike-Kumler’ s 77th Anniversary Sale! Radio Talks lia ily Over WSMK at 7i 15 P. M. of Interest to Children As Well As Grown-ups. in t & 5 3 * O i i s Dayton, Ohio t k r t f t y i n S 0 « y G o o d <7k in g s Dayton, Ohio The n* merch; you ab n 8 Co- ce on won- FIFTY n NEWS FRI Dr X>, The date j n 8'36 tipn this yes many peoj election is candidates Secretary t fo r supplit dacy form, blanks, for r tive areas' sensing ai: Ohio’s elect Brown is il codification ] exercise of i o f this reel corporation era! opinio with court ings them state since i or and uent Wool gr tors in sh- c a lly ^ other stat lu sty • acclaim l , a n d spacious t -room is in sheep disp ed this sur grounds i> fair. In i wool on d encourage placed ex)! bids to b show room tons o f wc htt Within ment o f A divisions ’ th e variei the basem Annex by turned o' which ha’ The hew floor of t mati-Ohio Main and o f which Highway divisions keting i' same tin * the same ' Throuj law pert to appro ment of bee-keep •given g i, ties in t themselv bee-keep obtain t ing o f t) cording* whose hi A warnii. to trans- another obtaining warning * week. The Clarence ed at the in Colur. ant Seer ier Thor ment, b credenti: Fish ane ing of e*f men. B is explaj abstain-/ ing and in the “ haasei All s cept su cally Atchae have b of the servati the pa eye, I Lorarc large * in the the R arc a consit near ! Wil Vi Dr his o 1980, the \ * Ohio Vote The grad rang pots opm trad The ina*; Intb i • ! r
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