The Cedarville Herald, Volume 53, Numbers 27-52
F U R N I T U R E REPAIRED and UPHOLSTERED A t Prices In Reach O f Everybody C h a r l e s R . H o e r a e r PHONE CedarriBa 149 K m « A iir tw Cor. Moarqe & Lake Sts., Xento 'V a lu e f f i r s t C lo th ie r s For Men, Young Mens 1 and Boys 28 S. Detroit St.^ Xenia* Ohio il h : Upholstering Refinishing Repairing OF in S o w e t o R o w * * * * O-iMwmJpiv '30wMF KkHMMKIii Straw, Corn S tow , Winter Pas ture, Silas*, Oats, Rye, ft-o* loin Mnnla—-AU May HA» Suggestion* to »H#«p men fa r pro* viding roughage tor their stock by buying only a minimum amount p i •hay, are given by L. A . Kauffman, sheep specialist for the Ohio State University. Kauffman ia also a mem* bar o f the drought committee spon sored by the Ohio Chamber o f Com* merce. Sheep require more roughage than grain, and roughage is necessary to prevent serious digestive disorders, he says. The short hay crop makes nec essary the use o f straw, com stover, winter pasture and silage more than is- normally recommended. A ll o f these fe&ls may be used, he advises, but due to their character and effects some laxative, high-proteta supple ment such- as 'lniseed cake must be supplied. Pasturing standing com or stalk fields, when such are available, also will reduce the amount o f hay. re* quited, Kauffman says. I f the com is to be cut, this is not advisable, he believes.- Better still, he says, is com silage, when the-farmer owns a-silo, Silage is a cheap and excellent rough age when supplemented with a small amount o f hay and a little cottonseed Or linseed cake. Three pounds o f sil age to one pound o f bay is his recom mendation.. Where grass has failed, rye may be sown in stubble to provide late fall and early spring grazing. Kye alsd may be sown in com. Oats too may be.used as an emergency hay crop* When cut in the dough .stage oats hdj| has a feeding value equivalent to mix ed hay, he says. With oats selling at 25 to 30 cents a bushel in northeastern Ohio Kauffman suggested to southeastern Ohio aheap men that they buy in carload lots now. Oats is an excellent growing feed for sheep, and due to .its bulky character, less roughage must be fed with it.. u H^I^IHSJIIIISI'I'M f T h e G l ^ t M o * r i > lamiglwge* and to etowfciato waite'lr .** --------- .w . to* net at fcedtog took*, Seeding W f D t saw . — — | A» 4am. as safe* pit tb# aolL ia With preparetisiMi getog forward in condition to sow rys it i* wiigeeM aAdapartmants towardthe cojuptotton that this atop ha uusd to supply fall of srrsngemeats far this yew's Mont*,“ 4 *jpwi«4rpasture, sad the thirdmo* gomsry County Fair, to be held Sep- ommeadatiowis to cull all daises of tember 1 to 4 inetoaiva at Dayton, livestock carefully, without sacrificing visitors to this annual institution may Roodbroodingstock. look forward to one o f the most corn-! --------- -. i . plsN and iotsrastbig displays over ar-1 Sprouting o f potatoes in the ground ranged on such oecsden*, Judge 1. L- is due to hot, dry wastber halting the Holderman, Smretary-UMUiager, states. Jgrowing period and causing the sots- Eural handicap, by reason o f weath-' ^ , * ^ ttoTrw rt p^ iod, S ic h or conditions have been leas in Mont- j . broken when the weather becomes gomery County than to many other jBlore f RVorable again. The potatoes counties o f the state, with the result ceM0 to grow, and sprout, that granges and individuate are plan ning exhibits that w ill match up favorably with those o f past years in •very respect and exceed them, in many.. ! There will be ail extensive art ex -■] bibit this year, the Dayton Art Insti tute, which during the past year went into its new #2,000,000 budding, show ing a traveling exhibition o f note; in addition to displays o f the school art departments and the best work o f local artists who have wop national fame. ■ j| The particularly note worthy fe e -;1 ture different this year from, Fairs pf preceding years is the fact that night racing will-be held. -Several thousand .dollars have been expended for bar-'.] ness and running races, at night to the way o f track lighting and to addition to the races there will be novelties pf various sorts interspersing the 'several regular events, r || All departments o f the Fair will be J kept open to the evening also so that visitors who cannot come during the early aftemon before the races and • still want to see both races and ex hibits cap do so .before the evening | programs are started. In the matter o f live stock, to womah's handicraft and the thousand and one things that go to make up a successful fair, the Montgomery County Fair this year will stand forth as one o f the foremostJ to the State. IWfMwy 1* RUk c^us^mK*dl*E0 amnjdn. gmmmmmm milUMMlMMIIIMIIMI ****** Before marketing your live stock call THE SOUTH CHARLEffTON STOCK YARDS DAILY MAEKKT • S . K , SMOOTS P . P. SMOOTS MONEY PAID WHEN WEIGHED i A D A I R ’ Another Shipment of 6 TUBES' Built in Speaker $ ALL IN A SPACE 16x13*7 INCHES The Greatest A ll Electric Radio O f its Site THE IA IT WON© W RAOIC SO* I % =fJi- FURNI TURE Auto TopsRecovered Price Reasonable Quick Service Drought Proves Worth o f SBos Fred F. Graham Co. RELEASING service that antic* A ipates every convenience and comfort o f the guest, complete appointments and distinguished cuisine make it an ideal hotel for pour visit to Cincinnati. ukkbedt V r I V t l g c*cc Walnut betaken 6 th and 7 th (one square southofBui Terminals) Silage and Soybean* Recom mended for Dairy Cattle F e e d by Specialist v .. •• .•. - * I Greater silage capacity and growing o f more soybean hay are two means Of meeting the shortage o f roughage on Ohio dairy farms affected by the i drought, in the opinion o f C. L. Black- I man, specialist in dairy husbandry fa r ' the Ohio State University. There is not only a'lack o f roughage fo r this year; where new seeding* hare failed the shortage w ill contimje Into next year, h.etsays. . On farms which have more than eg* ough com to fill the silo, building an other may be worth while, suggests the dairy specialist. Tbe experience with'dry weather this year shows how desirable it is to have more than one source o f roughage, says -Blackman, And silage is one o f the best feeds fo r dairy cattle. This second silo could be made small in diameter and be used in normal years, for summer feeding. The shortage o f feed for next year can he met by the use o f soybean hay, Soybeans make an excellent emergen cy crop; says the specialist. It is palat able and yields well, and can be sown in spring when other hay crops have failed. When alfalfa end clover in the regular rotation supply enough rough- age, soybeans are not recommended because production costs are higher. I f it is sown in May or early June this hay can be harvested late to August satisfactorily. If sown later soybean bay Is often difficult to har vest, September ia not a good hay making month. Well mads soybean hay is about as valuable as alfalfa hay for-dairy-cattle, says B1 Feeder Cattle Arp Now Cheap Farmer* Who Hare Pasture Land Now Hare Oppor tunity Say* Specialist Feeder cattle on the Chicago mar ket are lower in price then for any year, except 1921, since the war, de clares L. P. McCann, beef cattle spe cialist for the Ohio State University. His mind on the low price o f finish, ed cattle on this same market, a farm er easily may overlook that feeder cattle prices are following closely the prices for the other, says McCann. Because o f the low" price o f finished cattle, and in spite o| the low price o f feeders, 38 per cent fewer cattle were shipped from the Chicago market in July to be fed fo r finishing than for the same month a year ago. This slow movement o f feeder cattle is due also, says McCanrt, to the rela tively poor pastures in many parts o f the com belt. Far this reason, those farmers who have ample pasture land for the feeding, o f beef cattle during the balance o f this summer, have an opportunity to buy low and sell high er, in his opinion. The price o f feeder cattle, on the Chicago market, during July was #4.60 to #6.60 a hundredweight, depending upon the quality demanded. Crop Reports Show E ffectqof Drouth Committee Offer* Three Sug gestion* on Mean* t o Con serve Supply of Roughage Federal crop, reports, which reflect, the condition o f crops both to Ohio and the United States as a whole, throw light upon the seriousness o f the effects o f the drouth, according to the special drouth committee ap pointed by ..-the agricultural extension service o f the Ohio' State University. Compared with an average crop, conditions in Ohio oh August 1 pointed to 29 per cent less com, 10 per cent more wheat, 27 per cent less oats, 32 per cent les* hsy, and 84 per cent less pasture. For the United' States on the same date, conditions pointed to 18 per cent less corn, 2 per cent les* Wheat, 4 per cent less oats, 11 per cent less hay, and 30 per cent less pasture. . « A shortage o f forage crops and roughage is the striking fact which ; the crop reports disclose, says the committee. To meet this situation the committee ofTers three sugestions, The first suggestion is to make the' best use o f available feed by using a grain ration adapted to the available IfI & ss W i l i Veil » a. IDEAL FOR Apartment U se Small L lvin f Rooms Your Office Desk for Market Quotations h i Your Bedroom. A t Your ta k e Cottage I f you have electric current COMPLETE Forget Price — Forget Promises Performance Is A ll That Counts We want you to hear this complete all electric radio that you can carry under your arm. The greatest advance in compact radio building since the advent o f radio. Acclaimed by thousands a* a “ Wonder Radio” . . . Gets distant sta tions, marvelously clear.,full and true toned/ -' In *handsome walnut veneered cabi net as pictured.. Note the Size — the smallest great Radio in the world— 16 inches high, IS inches wide, 7 inches deep. Weighs l9Ys pounds. Easily carried. Com pact, reliable and guaranteed. PAY MONTHLY ADAIR’S a ■• * X E N IA , OHIO |.l I f Fully 70 per cent o f the forest tree seedlings planted tost spring succumb ed to the drouth. Estimates in differ ent sections o f Ohio, plane the lode at 20 to 96 per cent o f these seedlings, Blue Smackover * Near the Ouachita River in Southern Arkansas there is a little town called Smackover—a name now world famous because o f the Crude Oil this field produces. These Crudes contain a high natural content o f the so called Aromatics naphthenes and nhsaturates petroleum compounds which produces the desired anti-knock qual- ity. This unusual gasoline COMBINES IN ONE MOTOR FUEL every desirable quality required by high compression motors and in addition contains the same quick starting and smooth operating characteristics that ave. popularizd High Test Gasoline. The great power found in Smackover accounts not only fo r its remarkable anti-knock performance but likewise is responsible fo r considerably higher mileage yieldsper gallon. NEVER BEFORE HAS A GASOLINE RECEIVED SUCH Instant Approval Once Tried-Always Used--Come in and Fill Your Tank at the REGULAR PRICE 21c per gallon The CarrolTBinder Co. PHONE 15 N«. 1—108E. Main S i No. 2—N. Detroit S t • N o .»—Bollbrook Road EXIDE BATTERIES, HIGHESTGRADE GAS AND OILS Xenia, Ohio » , ft. \ i COLU Corpora Secretar fo r the year, to; which ir. will pos quarter Thomas largest : ratary B ago for amount 7 Large daily,at Hdrse S week an attracts anda of twoind* innings Butler, Huron, Union, Croton i Nimr< tog up equipmc gray an ion stai until Or token ii little r Claims, anthori’ reporti /Ohio ' ity is t • #Wepr< forcon Ulrecto August nOuncei 'Decease meats i cation .being t ment t the sta many othRj materii' * mainte “ fo r th e. _ $1,514, * Direr Health that w at low and ci water , health ‘ be car<' I f one i days, 1 totote S market e It’ 4 1 Mot. e Mrs oothe, death Samut and J and tl hit he J. 1 ble bi and i. Pettii fajuri out. the 1 arm. the cl Thi Coun that 48 ee Jbdg» Cinct were tow. Tb ttnior fami Xen ' hum the Clel’ 'I Hoc U* Mies
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