The Cedarville Herald, Volume 56, Numbers 27-51
CEDARVILMS HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1933 mm mtufm TIME OF PLOWING INFLUENCES YIELD "In The Heart o f th e C ity ” Right in the center of theatre* and hop*. B«* and car service to all atttying point* and suburb*. Jt-rr+llmnt CuUlne—New Low Prices 250 Outside Rooms With Bath Circulating lea Water—Tiled Shower* A (dean, comfortable home for thriftytravelers. Modem and metropolitan, but not ostentatious* The ideal hotel for transient and resident guests, VINB BETWEEN 4th and 5th STREETS RATES $ 2.00 TO $2.50 Time of plowing wheat land has an important effect upon the yield of the crop, In an eight-year test at the Ohio Agricultural Experiment Sta tion, plowing by the middle of'-An gust resulted in average yield in creases o f more than three bushels an acre, reports Robert Salter, chief of the department of agronomy, Salter points out, however, that under certain conditions early plow ing was a hindrance to high yields. In a dry season, such as was experi enced in some parts of Ohio this year, early plowing may result in poorer yields. Mrs, W. B. Cherry of Xenia; Mrs, H. H, Cherry, Mr*. E. A. Allen and In the drouth year o f 1930, land Miss Kathryn Sanders, Gedarville, at- plowed August- 15 Produced tw » ; tended a luncheon, Wednesday, given bushels an acre less wheat than land1 ? * Hilltlnnilsini!!!!!!*!!!!!!1 *!! FOR SALE 500 Bushels Choice Y e llow Ear Corn FEED OF ALL KIND COAL ADVANCING IN PRICE Kentucky Bock and Dana Block in yard. Car Dana Block on track now. Car Yellow Jacket on track Monday. Car Pocahontas Lump in next week. Call or see me if interested C.L.McGuinn CASH STORE TELEPHONE--3 South Miller St. Gedarville, O. KmrmnTPOTffiTOlqngirBmmiiriiBeiBPHiaaynmwaffiiemil Hotel Chittenden «g£ *m*nd*l*jl. . . ov*r Mr. and Mrs, X. A. Allen and Miss Kathryn Bandars, Cadarville, and Mr, and Mr*. It, B. Sanders and children, Betty Jean and James Arthur of Columbus, w*re the Sun day guests o{ Miss Kathryn Strong in Cincinnati, > Walter Hopping and wife of /Buffalo, N, Y., are guests at the home! o f the former’s brother, Mr. W. S. Hopping and wife. Rev. Hopping is 1 pastor of the United Presbyterian Church in his t city. He spent some time at Chautauqua, N. Y,, on his vacation before coming to Ohio. at the home of Mrs. Edna M, Clarice, • is to be represented by works of art. Columbus. Mrs, Clarke is the author t ■ — o f “Ohio Arts and Artists” and is in) Big 6—Yellow School Tablet charge of the Art Department at the, 340 pages—10c Ohio State Fair where each county Wefek End Special at Brown’s Drugs * * • •4 MAKE OUR MARKET YOUR MARKET Consign Your Livestock for Sale to Springfield Live Stock Sales Co. Central Ohio’s Greatest Live Stock Market Sherman Avenue Center 796 Springfield, Ohio t o IM I Upward. Manager Connoisseurs of sleep J R » comMfctai tnwjBa’ i* enoipert M ta d JW te rt. 5 *w parlor car y o u t ii hear, the. i^mSlHUholat spoburf in t a m s s f ! *W Wt a t a ycu M tel often or turf , & < & ,*& Nkhoia comfort,' nm teted tasno)^ vAI oaxae y o u .......,.;.1 flr iiv v fc b ; from *2?° Sample rooms v M I famous food in five beautiful dining looms ■ jtfbe froMof dwracter ida dty of chancur ' ‘ JOWLHORGAN.... C incinnati IFYOUNEEDPRINTINGDROP IN prepared for seeding by disking. In In other years, land disked three times returned yields almost five bushels smaller than land that had jeen plowed. Two factors are responsible for this result, in Salter’s- opinion. Drouth discourages weed growth and there is less chance for exhaustion o f plant nutrients, he says. The second factor is loss o f moisture from turning the land with the plow, .which is an im portant factor in a dry year. Loosening of the soil hastens the formation o f nitrates by promoting better conditions for bacterial grow th, he says. ....................... ..... . . . LOANS AND . . . INSURANCE . We Will You a*«*ejr ° * Your AUTOMOBILE Farmers’ Special Rule On INSURANCE A Saving Can Be Msde on Insur ance by Calling Us 3ELDEN & CO., Inc, Steele Bldg. Xeni*. O. Phone 23 IMimHIIMMMttlimillllimiHHHPIHMOMHHMGMMMfWIMHte FARMERS INTERESTED IN WHEAT AND HOGS Farmer* just at this time are much interested in the government plan to curtail the production of wheat in order that the price can be stimulated and give the producer a greater prof i t Meetings are being held over the county, one being held here last even ing in charge of David Bradfute, com- mitteman in this township. The plan of Secretary of Agricul ture Wallace to aid the hog market by slaughtering 80 pound pigs and over, along with piggy sows will be started next week. , The pig meat is to be cured to. give aid to unemployed. Both r ’ ans are experiments that are being supported publically in the hope that conditions will be improved. FIRST EXHIBIT OF NEW CROP CORN FROM FERNDALE FARMS O. A. Dobbins brings us two ears of Early White Cory com that were husked Thursday from a field planted about May 20. He says not all the ears are as well matured as the sam ples but far enough to feed. The samples are unusually. firm and far ahead of most corn even in Septem ber. ; - Miss Kathryn Sanders received her degree of B. S. in Music' Supervision at the Commencement Exercises, August' 18, held at Wittenberg Col lege. Miss Sanders returns to Or ville as .Music Supervisor for the fourth year. Mrs, Mary Ilarbispn has returned to Cleveland where she will reside with her son-in-law and daughter, Mrs. and Mrs. Leslie Dean, Alfalfa, Clover Bring Late Crops May Be Used Where Chinch Bugs Have Riddled the Com and Barley. 'By J. O. Hacklemnn, Crop Extension Spe cialist, Collsico of Sericulture, Univer sity of Illinois.—WNU 8ervlce. Extensive areas In central and north central Illinois where chinch bugs have ruined the corn or barley crops can best be planted to alfalfa or red clover. Planting these legumes not only would put a crop on land that otherwise would be Idle and costly, but also would be in tine with the national agricultural adjustment pro gram, which Is designed to reduce the acreage of grain crops. Illinois farm ers already have adjusted their crop ping systems to the point where they are growing a million acres more of legumes than they were in 1910-1914, but the acreage can be vastly extended by seeding alfalfa and red clover on hind where the corn or barley has been riddled by the chinch bugs, provided the soil Is ndnpted, It is Important that soil conditions In the field be known before either al falfa or red clover Is seeded. The land must he Sweet and must have a suf ficient amount of phosphorus. Sim ple tests are available for determining this. The seed bed already has been prepared and by occasional additional cultivations can be kept In excellent condition for seeding. Red clover and alfalfa can be seeded In mid-summer. Tills will help to solve the problem of crop acreages and will make It ma terially easier for farmers to put a crop adjustment program Into effect for 1934. Choosing something to replace corn that has been ruined by chinch bugs Is doubly difficult because the crop must be one that Is Immune to the bugs and that Can, at the same time, be planted at late date. Sudan grass and millets, which could be seeded at this season of the year, are out of the question because they are highly fa vored foods of chinch bugs. About the only cash grain crop avail able at this date is buckwheat. This will yield from ten to as many as twenty-five bushels to the acre, de pending upon soil fertility and season al conditions, The best varieties are Japanese and Silver Hull. The two greatest causes o f tire accidents arc skidding and blowouts. Most people know that —so almost every tire make?--eager to make « side—now claims his tire is built to prevent both o f these troubles. But in all the hnbbnb —Goodyear Tires out* sell any others because o f these facts: More traction than ANY other tire Traction means grip* Brakes may stop your wheels—but it takes tire traction to stop your car. And on streets flooded with water, cars equipped with Goodyear Tires grip and stop so much better than any other tire that in tests the next best skidded 10% farther—while others skidded up to 77% farther than Good* years. Goodyear Tires give you traction in the center o f the tread—and that’s where the tire contacts the road. Biowout Protection in every P ly Every ply o f every Goodyear Tire is hiiilt with Supertwist Cord—developed and patented by Goodyear to prevent tires from breaking down and blowing out under the strain o f heat and speed. And every ply runs from bead to bead. Right before your eyes, at any Good year dealer’s—you can see why this patented p ly m aterial prevents b low outs, how it stretches and co. m hack long after ordinary cords have failed. The best buy in mileage Because Goodyear treads are tougher and wear longer—because Supertwist adds longer life to the body o f Goodyear Tires — you’d naturally expect these tires to outrun others. Well, here’s the proof. H ie most accurate mileage records are kept by the bus oper ators, and Goodyear Tires on thousands o f buses throughout the country are averaging mileages that represent an increase o f 9 7 ^ in the past five years. Goodyears are better every year. Prices that say “ Buy Now” All you have to do is to look at today’s prices to know they’re low. And if you look what other commodities are doing—you knoW that prices can’ t stay where they are for long. Com* modify prices already have risen 5 0 to lOO^I. He warned in time lieu*# laaii at every wheel A L L - W E A T H E R Supertwist Cord Tire TODAY'S PRICES 4.40-21 $ 6.40 4.50-21 7 . 1 6 5 4.75-19 7 . 6 0 1J|85 5.00-19 8 . 1 5 5.25-18 9 . 1 5 ;5 5.50-19 1 0 . 4 5 6.00-19 1 1 . 8 5 6.50- 19 1 4 . 6 0 PATHFINDER Supertwist Cord tire • IM l iRfGfi 4.40-21 $ 5.00 >5 4.50-21 5.60 IS 4.75-19 r s 5.00-19 |5, 5.00-20 6.75 5 . 25-18 7.35 5.50-19 8.50 on your car—and replace worn; thin, riaky, slippery tires with the safest tires on the market — quality tires — Goodyear Tires Mat prices you may never sos iqpdn, RALPH WOLFORD Suhscrlb* for Th* Htrsld
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