The Cedarville Herald, Volume 53, Numbers 1-26
f e ■ r r a x CR jUKV IlXX HEKAhD, MARCH 2d, 1930 TOO OLD TO WORK K Some day YOU will be too old to work. Wilt you then be dependent on otberx or yourself? You can make *ure of your fu- » turn through a SAVINGS AC COUNT with US, It will *upporfc you In your old age, because it is " NEVER TOO OLD TO WORK m. W e Pay iVt% On Saving* We Charge 6V2% On Loan * Springfield, Ohio ill Gas?Heaters (with thermostatic control) has a steadying influence on the "Jumping” thermometer Gas gives even heating fes... ' M METROPOLB IjDLEASING 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 Koom( with bath from $a.jo upward y . t BEE Walnut between 6 th and 7 th (one square ■ s o u t h o f Bui Terminals ) jgutuxjiiui 1 S333SBSSB Stop! Look! Listen! Be prepared for old age. We pay 4 Per tent on Savings Accounts. The Exchane Bank ■ h Arthur Brisbane Federal Reserve Advisee Russia Answers the Pope In A . D. 1001930 Gamesters, Cruel, Silent Los Angeles.—The federal reserve chief tells business to go ahead boldly, showing more initiative, less hesitancy. Excellent advice. Business will ad vise the federal reserve, when and if prosperity booms again, to be less en thusiastic about promoting usury, and run the federal reserve more like a banking institution, less {ike a pawn shop. disease, xvmJftd* -pea that being dicta^ ter la 1 wearing job- It take* such a mtm a* MuaeeUnl to stand R for a long time. The Italian ruler establishes a “mi nor" Mass of eitfaen, net obliged to enter thf Italian army. This la planned to keep Italians in foreign countries interested in Italy, Wise Mussolini. Reserve board financiers that forced 15 to 20 per cent interest rates, hand ing hundreds o f millions to money lenders and adding thousands of mil lions in value, temporarily, to inflated bank stocks, need advice as much as any business man needs it. Russia, inflamed by the pope’s pro test against atheistic propaganda, re taliates in vindictive fashion. In the Minsk district a fund is started to build an airplane, presumably fo r war? to be called “ Our Answer to Pope Pius." >And from the Veronesh dis trict workers send to the industrial fund at' Moscow ten carloads of church bells, sacred images, crucifixes, etc., to he melted down. That shipment is called “ an‘ answer to the pope.” President Hoover, like a good fam ily doctor fo r the nation; says nothing or says things .that ate encouraging There is a great deal o f value in that. Buy what you want, beginning with a good automobile; buy it now anu then enjoy it now. Life does no, last forever. Keep It busy, and full. {(.‘(SOrUtta, is*#, l/y i . joj f..o.u»cMo, i U. c . i *■ •••1 • _ _ _ _ _ Forest Seedlings Growing Scarcei Supplies A t State Nurseries Being Exhausted By Heavy Demands From Farmers . “MHJOLAPROVED eOOSEND,” SAID THIS TOLEDOMAN Suffered Two Years From K id ney A ilm en t; Grateful For R elief Brought By New M e d i c i n e One item o f news will be remem bered a million, and ten million, years hence. Nothing else in our age will be of the slightest consequence, even 100,000 years from now. ‘ , The news that will outlast recollec tion, o f this age o f industrial and finan cial bai-barism is the discovery o f an other planet in our solar family, sail ing around outside the orbit of Nep tune. Each dwellers in the year one mil lion nineteen hundred and thirty, as they, converse in the ozone area, thirty mites above the earth, will wonder how such primitive beings as ourselves could have -discovered that planet. Similarly, we wonder how primitive cave dwellers could have made those interesting pictures o f rhinoceroses and horses. Gangsters are not kind to each other. •John.( “ Billiken” ) Rito, described by police as “ a bootleg racketeer,” mem ber of the “ Bugs” Moran gang, lie's in the morgue. Wires with which his arms, hands and .ankles Were bound when he was taken out o f the Chicago river have been removed. The polite wonder who burned the tips o f his fingers In the process o f torturing him before he ’ was murdered, and why they did it. They will never know. Golf links, daily dozens,.radio set ting-up exercises and other devices are designed fo r the man who leads a sedentary life physically. Edison wants to know: “ What about the mart mentally sedentary and inactive? Who will plan something for h im ?" Many millions need to he called early on the radio with this question: “How long is it since you have exercised your mind ? How much reading worth 'while do you do, and how much do you think as you read?” It is mental, not physical, inactivity that hurts a nation. The Union Pacific railroad has bought $500,000 worth of fine new motor omnibusses. Railroad- men have passed the phase o f contempt for au tomobiles. The Union Pacific will use 22 new omnibusses between Chicago and Los Angeles, 11 between Portland, Spokane, Boise and Salt Lake City. Demand for young forest trees from the state nurseries, to be transplanted by farmers reforesting their woodlots, has been so heavy this year that sev eral o f the more desirable types have already been exhausted, and the sup-, plies o f others are limited, says F. W. Dean, extension forester. “ The is still time to order some .types o f trees, but delay may mean waiting for them another year,’*.Dean Warns. “ Trees still available for distribu tion fo r farm reforestation include Scotch pinesr three-year seedlings and three-year .transplants; Austrian pines, two-year seedlings and three- year transplants; black walnuts, one- year seedlings; black, locust,’ one-year seedlings; red oak, white oak, and White elm.” Prices on the trees supplied-from the state forest nurseries range from ' $3 to $5 a thousand. They must be ordered oh . application blanks which can be obtained from the State De partment o f Forestry at Wooster, Ohio. Spring Painting Now is the time to arrange to have your house or other buildings painted. We are booking orders for the spring and summer. Homes, interior and exterior Business Houses Barns Store Booms We Specialize in Sign Painting Elmer Jurkat Cedarville, Ohio Phone 138 Early: Planting Is ^ Factor In' Yields Crowding -Date Ahead o f May 20 H as Meant Larger Crops During Past Decade Crowding the- corn-planting date ahead o f May 20 means, within rea son, increasing the com yield every day. So indicate the records o f 600 Ohio corn growers who, during the past 10 years,-have-been entered in the Ohitf lCOiBushel com project Spon sored h y the Agricultural Extension Service o f the Ohio State University, Checking the records kept by these growers, extension specialists in farm crops have divided them-into groups based upon the yield which- they ob tained. The-group whose crop aver aged 60 bushels to the acre, planted on- May 20 as On average date for the 10 years; the group with an average yield o f 80 bushels to the acre, plant ed on an average date three days earl ier. The group who obtained 100 bu shels to the acre planted on an aver age date o f May 15, and the group harvesting an average yield o f 120 bushels to the acre, planted their.com on. an average date o f May 14, or six days earlier than the 60 bushels group, who harvested just half as much com to the acre. • Allowance must be made for differ ent seasons and weather conditions, but the summary o f the long period and the large number o f growers in vqlved, indicates dearly the value o f early planting as one o f the factors producing high Com yield. MR. JEPHHA KING “ About two _years ago I became afflicted with kidney trouble,” ,said Mr, Jephha King, Route No. 1, Hol land, near Toledo. “ I had terribly severe pains across the small o f my back. This pain became so bad that I often found it necessary to remain in bed for days at a time and work was out o f the question. I did not know what it meant to enjoy a night o f re freshing steep. I lost weight and be came terribly ^uu down and discour aged. “ From the very start Konjola went to the source o f my troubles. Four bottles completely changed ray whole outlook on life. I never have an ache nor a pain and I sleey soundly throughout the night. I do not suffer from constipation, the back pains are gone, my kidneys function properly and I am working every day. My en tire system has been built up by this. great, medicine until I have gained in weight and strength. I am in excel lent health fo r the first time in years.” Konjola is sold in Cedarville at Prowant & Brown drug store,,and by all the best druggists f in all towns throughout this entire section. eyoi iVTe a] g an 4 ! SPRING OPENING I T t e s d a y Evening A l s o Friday and Saturday 4 m For Sale The last word in fashionable hats and dresses Moderately Priced * * 1 1 1 W hi Three good Registered Draft Stal lions, 1 Percheron and 2 Belgians. For description, etc., see Os Briggs, Washington, C. H., Ohio, Phone 2- 1181. (St) Get our prices op Alcohol ’ and f Glycerin for yoUr radiator, McCamp- |‘ bell’s Exchange. 37 Green. St., Xenia, Ohio ■■■’ | <iiiiiiniuiiiiiiMiiiiinniiiniiiiiiHuiiimiiiMimiHiiiiiiiHiinnimiuiiiiMUniiniMnnmiiOMHiiiiuinnnmiunniifiiiiiiimiii^ Mr. Edison is hopeful about a rub ber supply from goldenrod. Chemists who thing it ought to be done by some synthetic process and victims of hay fever are less optimistic. The great inventor, eighty-three years old, says he wants only five years more to finish this job, and doesn’t ask to live one hundred years. The death o f Prime de Rivera, for mer Spanish dictator, killed by heart NORTHUF HATCHERY W e are now hatching and can take your orders for HIGH GRADE BLOOD TESTED CHICKS Custom Hatching. Phone 13-16 Clifton Exchange U. F. D. 1, Yellow Springs, Ohio W [& wer K ates MenMuGo& C ee EVERY ROOM NOW WITH 6ATH >50 t 300 Clean ^ ModernRooms at fijjl % B f* I’M - » iip P ____ iftftgg S @ 1 n r . ' H U I t L AuDiroim LV CAST SIXTH ATST. CLAIR AVE, %v W.h. BYRON, Manager Transform Your Appearance FOR SPRING With One of Our Smartly Tailored Suits and Top Coats TWEEDS, GABERDINE CLOTH, NEAT CASSIM3ERES Worsteds and Serges, priced at $19.75, $22.50, $25 and more Accessories Dobb Hats $8.50 and $10 Interwoven Sox SILK 50c, 75c & $ 1,00 LISLE 3 pr. $ 1.00 Accessories Arabond Shirts Neat and Fancy at - $1,05 • $2.85 and mere Smart Neckwear $ 1.00 $1.50 M any French Silk* Resolio constr ctiori m Desirable wearables ready for yon at popular prices The C. A. W eaver Co Main St., opp, Court House Kettle, Ohio Phone ttmfttimmj ldres Itmmuiumi * fc*1525S555J5S3 * • 5 ■ES / ; > re « i c n 1: tl ta vi pi be1 is po thi sir. tin Na ing wh pie mu sub tha M. Sh I si the dowi Noo) indie May< boys conti locat polict withi recog enter o f th once fatho- Ing a causec the pi office era a- mamir County ries nd s •ancy re iar i Silk* ton 0
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