The Cedarville Herald, Volume 53, Numbers 1-26
I § » c t t P 4 J t y a x g H m u ) , m a r c h fit ,'it * * . Ji*&Jl*)0£S3f,'j)n,Jt'tnWf; (HMMIBMIWMi ^rtiiuimu i nr"'-......... r.............. ......................-■.■■■...■■— ...■—■i ■■— ■■■.... Before marketing jfour Bvrstock call THE SOUTH CHARLESTON STOCK YARDS DAILY MARKET " ’ * •- r > . Plume ,$ 0 . , .«■ * iW $ M 0 O T S . I P, P. SMOOTS MONEY PAID WHEN WEIGHED r V ’ " f - AH - L ew fia g Varieties A n y Monday Order ’ Early QUALITY CHICKS Sent C. O. O. If you W f* Phone Main 836 Springfield, Ohio, C H I C K S Win Highett Honors at OMe. State University, Columbus, Ohio, March, J929. Why take a chance on other^ (jet Our Catalogue. It tells you of their wonderful quauty. Out prices are no higher than ordinary, chicles. THE STURDY BABY ' CHICK CO. • n Ik i . •.auve ..-v *•,.*“ - y *1 - -- (with thermostatic control) Jhas a steadying influence on ' ' :thev“dumping” thermometer - ■ Gas gives even heating.•. •*. ■ t ' i - f ' 41 f i. i <c •> 4 { ‘ -J. ' 1 \ I METROPOLIS TJDLEASING service that antic- ipates eveiry convenience and .com fort'of the guesit, complete appointments and distinguished cuisine make. it anideal hotel for your visit to Cincinnati. i f 40a Roomy, wkhbath from $0.30 upward Walnut between 6 th and 7 th (one yguare southofBus Terminals) t •Sfc* Stop! Look! Listen! Be prepared lor old age. Wepay 4 Per (tent on SavingsAccounts. The Exchange -Bank- * J l & O J t t K by A r th u r B rlabatnn ; Don't Sell Wheat Short ; Federal Control o f Power 1Memories Fade I Smallpox Also Marches 3 1 Uncle Sam buying wheat at a price j above world market and storing it helps wheat growers o f other court tries, although that ia pot hia inten tion. ^ What the wheat situation will he pext July, nobody can guess. Wise gambler*, will refrain from, selling short. Uncle Sam's pocketbook is back o f wheat prices In the United States, a new kind-o f ’‘corner,” ' Flour has reached Us low price since the World war, $6,60 a barrel, compared with ?7.30 a year ago, and $18 a barrel, the peak price in war time. Good news for housewives. Bad news for farmers. Senator Cpuzens introduces a bill to regulate production, transmission and distribution of all , classes o f power in interstate Ammerce. He would let government supervise rates, and securities issued by holding companies, 1 Soma say the people should have no control o f power- and its, distribution, although power in national life comes next to food, water and air. The people a t least might supervise sales o f securities. One company is sued more than- .60,000,000 shares \>f stock based on odds and ends o f power companies. Foolish investors bought the pieces o f paper, at a price exceed, ihg fifteen hundred million dollars for the whole collection, . evil it* good” ’ r V - ' , SaMNmMt mil it, British toms ba le v« i t The attack a* religion in Rus sia has eraated fastens* faaUng in Brit ain, If Pramfasr MacDonald's labor government refuses to break, off rela tions with Russia, it wilt probably be driven from powtr, Men and notions, with their radios, movies and other interesting things, may seem to lose interact in religion. But such an attack as Russia makes on established beliefs shows that re ligion retains its hold on the human races, (Copyright, less, by Kins Vestum SjndU-ste lac.) ■ » ■ • William Howard Taft, chief justice o f the Supreme court, President o f the United States, secretary o f Vvar, rode to his grave in Arlington ceme tery on a gun carriage, the first Unit ed States President to bg buried there, A military funeral was,"perhaps, hot what he would have suggested, but he was entitled to it as former secretary -of War and commander! in chief o f the army qnd, navy. Before burial the body, o f the- late chief justice lay in state fo r three hours in the’ Capitol, on a catafalque upon which had lain the coffins o f President Lincoln, Garfield, McKip ley and Harding. * I Now .Lincoln.stands out in that/'or any list. ‘How soon men become un important and ,are forgotten! * Lincoln never. Announces Candidacy For Treas. o f State GONE, TOMS TO FAMED KONJOLA New Medicine freed Cincinnati Lady o f Stomach Troufcu* and Built Up Her Health Main St. W E SAVE YOUR MONEY *SB|jgSJXl*MJseM SPECIAL Ladies* Comfort Oxfords Turn Sole Low Heel Kid Leather $ 2 . 9 8 SPECIAL Boys’ Ten Oxfords Sewed Soles New Shade of tan Size 1 to 6 $ 2 . 9 5 SPECIAL 100 pair K . D- Ladio* Low Show Slightly damaged $7 to $10 vxlne* Size 6 to S $ 3 . 9 5 ROSS ARE Treasurer o f State Hon., Russ Ake, present treasurer o f the state, has made a format announce ment o f his Candidacy fo r nomination for the office'at the Republican pri mary in/August* -Ht.’iMbe is holding this office by thtbUgh Governor Cooper following the resig nation o f the former treasurer,-Bert Buckley;'. / Mr. Akp has many friends over- the state andjis considered a highly effici ent official, 1 ' MRS. GEORGE SOHNGEN “ I suffered from stomach trouble] for m6re than tv^o years,” said Mrs,/ George Sohngen, Jr., 236 Setphel ave-’j nue, Cincinnati. Nearly everything Ij ate formed gas and bloated ,my stqm-t ach terribly. The pressure against my* fieart often made me dizzy pnd short,', of breath, My liver was sluggish andj subjected me to bfiioU# attacks and! headaches. Constipation bothered me severely and forced me to use cathar tics almost daily. “ That was my condition when Ij began to take Konjola, What a differ-, enqe today! Food no longer ferments and causes gpe, and the heart palpita tion has gone. Bilious attacks, head-j aches and .dizzy spells are a thing o f the past. Gonstipation disappeared within a week after I began with this medicine. I have gained“ ten pounds in weight and am in better-health than I have been in years.” Konjola is sold in Cedarville at Prowant & Brown drug store, and by all the best druggists in all towns throughout this entire section. ^ GOLD RUSH DAYS IN ALL-COLOR SINGING “ SONG OF THE WEST” Ominous and threatening for India ,1s the beginning o f Mahpfma,Gandhi campaign of. “ no violence,, but refusal to obey,” against the British. Gandhji and his followers march in protest <to make salt tax-free, and smallpox marches with them. Three are dead, 22 prostrated by disease. The British have made a desperate 'fight "against the various plagues in Theda, gmallpox included, with the natives^fighting against them. It has never been possible t o prevent natives bathing in the filthy" Ganges, occasionally swallowing.- water Upon which corpses are set adrift. ' Under British rule the population o f India has increased by 100,000,000. It,,would' soon diminish under native rule, With the aid of smallpox and other plagues. The /epic rsweisp o f the old West is the background against -which “ Song o f,the' West” , Wdrner Bros, latest 100 per cent'patural color, singing, talk'1 mg, dancing picture .in technicolor, coming to the Regent Theatre Spring- field Saturday March 22 for one week is laid. ‘ Drama and cOjrtedy are intermingled in'this late* of pioneer days.'The story starts at Old Fort Independence, and moves along with the westward march o f the pioneers to-the California min ing towns, San Francisfco and the Golden Gate.' 'A dramatic love story, which concerns a young deserter; and Several'of the Crinelined ladies o f the covered wagon caravan, is the core of the .drama. , ' 1 * >f <■ ,« * John Bal.es and Vivionnu Segal play the leads; and Marie Welts, Joe E. Brown, Sam Hardy, Rudolph Cameron, Mqrion Byron, Eddie Gribbon and Ed. Martindel are in the east and there is a chorus o f 100 voices. 1 ' There is planty o f money in this country, the difficulty'is to get 'it. Secretary'Mellon meeds $450,000;000 for Uncle Sam. — The public offers to buy twelve hun dred and ninety-one million dollars* worth u f treasury certificates’, There is plenty Of‘Water in the oceans, lakes and rivers. The trouble is to get it on dry/soil that needs i t , ' 1 All doctors -ohd parents,will be in terested in n&ws/of, a “ memingitis car rier,” a nineteen-year-eld youth, Wil liam Fehiker, in the reformatory for boys at, Booriville, Mo. Five superintendents ’’and inmates With whom he came in contact died o f menihgitis/ Showing how easily the deadly disease may be contracted. From DeVil's Lake, N. D., Comes the sad story .of Sioux Indians that drank anti-freeze mixture for the sake o f its alcohol. It was the wrong kind. " This Small item o f news interests 4>anagcrs and stockholders of railroad 'ind steamship lines. An airplane driven by a Diesel en gine flew from Detroit to Miami in ten hours fifteen minutes without stop ping, with Chief Engineer Woolson o f the Packard company and Walter Lees, pilot. And the trip cost for fuel $8.50, “ Every sweqt has its spur; every -‘WALD WANT ANDSALEADSPAY” if f)f«'l NORTHUP HATCHERY W e are now hatching aad can take your order* for HIGH GRADE BLOOD rmm cm&cs Custom Hatching, Phone 1346 Clifton Exehanga B. F* D. 1, Yellow Sprihg*, Ohio Wake Up At Last To Soybean Value Grown! In U. S, For More Then - Century, Japanese PI«*t Coc^a To Front Although ..it has been more than a Century sin^l Soybeans -were brought to the United States- from Japan, it is only in rOeent ye»rs;that.,tiie value of the crop ha* been recognized and the acreage id the middle we -t and south has tncrMSed filore rapidly than the .acreage p f any other crop.* For several decades* the beans were grown only as a feed for livestock. Recently, however, attention has been given to the extraction from the seed o f a valuable Oil, used hot only »n livsstock feed and in In man food, but commercially in the manufacture o f paints and varnishes. Soybeans as a source o f human food have always been important in the -Orient and there is a growing use of the products o f the crop fo r food in this country. fhy soybean fits Well inio crop rota tions as a ttesh crop, the Soybean hay can profitably be fed to *01 farm ani mals, fend the beans may be used in silage, out and fed gfeen, ;or pastured. .The soybean is * legume and improves the soil in Which it grows, by deposit- tig nitrogen from the air, It is more acid-tolMant than some o f the clovers riid w iT grow where they will not grow, “ Soybean Utilization,” a new bulle tin o f the United States Department o f Agriculture at Washington, D, C., covan several phases o f the subject, fir in g the result* o f feeding experi ments, and is distributed free by the Office o f Information of the Depart ment o f Agriculture, FOR RENT — Two story frame louse with garage and garden. J. E. Ryle, WANTED—Middle age white W0r man to cook and general housework, family o f two adults. Small house, write or Phone Xenia 541-R. I* fiteiufels, Xenia, Ohio, “ I put .myself in the way- o f things, happening, and they happened.'- —Theodore Roosevelt. Planting soybeans too deep delays their coming up and ;may permit q crust to form on the soil. ' One inch in * a good seed bed is deep enough. , t « ’..... ^ ."‘ Direct aiinlight and green feed ate, the, final factors determining the hatchabjlity pf ’ eggs from '-'healthy^ Vigorous, properly mated fowls. Forty leaves are required as fac tories to produce the food fop a full grown apple. ' Thinning (fruit until there are fewer than 40 leaves to the apple; means starvation. T h e s u p r e m a c y o f D o b b s h a t s a s t h e m o s t e x c l u s i v e h e a d w e a r i s - f o u n d e d '/ ' */ • ” •' , * ( o h ' t h e s u p e x l o r ' q ^ a n t y - j m d ! ^ s m a r t n e s s o f t h e D o b b s . f i r o d u c t i o n s . ^ t y a r e u n i v e r s a U y 'r c c o g n i 2 e d a s t h e h ig h e s t ^ a c c o m p I i s b m c n t ^ o f ^ A b i e r i c a f l h a t - m a k i o g , A n d y e t , o n I y 8 . 5 0 u p w a r d l Ten Styles'at $5,00 v jr *" • Spring’ Suitings $19.75 $22.50 Up . C. A . Main St. Opp. Court House Xenia HERALDWANTANDSALEADSPAY 1 ,4 ThtCiufmM^n * JMVriFfMMr . L e m m a * improvements in its 60 horse powerengine XJOB Much of Pontiac’s increased smoothness is due to new , , , ty p e rubber m ou n tin g s which now linsulate its engine from the frame, and to t^tnore rigid crankcase which RNuresmore permanent bearing and crank* 10°* smoothness is Intensified by the Harmonic Balancer which counteracts torsional crankshaft vibration. Pontiac’s basic engine design en ables it to develop 60 horsepower a t moder ate engine speed. Nomatter how fast or hard you drive* the engine runs smoothly and silently.. , . In this.caryou get reliability and long life seldom equalled except In cars of much higher price. Furthermore,, you get remarkable economy. Your own good judg ment should Suggest that you investigate this finer Pontiac. Jf"”** Shock dfoefhrfi ttmMfertfeauib* Mbhzrsiszgsii jar^was-assas. 1 ::;. m .Jx a n r tfT m OJoaatAL m o to m s h ia six Amm Mefyfym** JEAN PATTON i
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