The Cedarville Herald, Volume 56, Numbers 27-51

CEDARVILLE HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 82, 1033 „ " I n T h e H ea r t of the City'* in the centeroftheatres and ■hops. Bus and car service to all outlying points and suburbs, Excellent Cuiilne—New Low Prices 250 Outside Rooms With Bath C frrn l «U"g Ice Water—Tiled Showers A rlww, comfortable home forthriftytravelers. Modern and metropolitan, but not ostentatious. The ideal hotel for transient and resident guests. RATES $ 2.00 TO $2.50 i aft rs«;880»«*( l» ibo AJ mo l«evna■a Ji ..'•a®„ ooa*B-J B 0 0 • ® ® | BBS B * •are* fir ilBBBBB ,081*1 " «» a ' VINE BETWEEN 4th and 5th STREETS 'JffiirMEJSffl! •am Hofei Cfeittenden . s s m r dsn the ___.. Fufjde Q^aforai^^. rooms— filial f l.i l opwsrd. t M A W i y d ^ M o t w f e r OOLUMBVE, OHIO »,|wtM»w»^wS«S«»S ANNOUNCEMENT Having accepted the A gency o f Cedar- v ille and surrounding territory, with the HOME INSURANCE CO. OF NEW YORK W e are now in a position to write a ll form s o f Insurance— Except L ife We Invite and Will Solicit Your Patronage MOTTO:—SERVICE AND RELIABILITY M cCorke ll & Gordon Office: Bank Building, Xenia Avenue Entrance iniiii’inniiiiirasenimn!’ COAL After several weeks, Conferences and some 30 odd Codes had been presented. A Final Code has been approved and accepted by the President, to take effect October 2nd f which means an advance of 30 per cent to 40 per cent' on all Coal Prices on or before that date. I have a nice stock of Coals suitable for any purpose and can fill your order before Advance. If interested, call or see me. FERTILIZER Fertilizer is moving out of factories very fast and Dry Stock will soon be out, and Late Orders will be filled j with Green Goods. [•: Better get orders delivered now out of Dry, Seasoned j Stock. [ Binder Twine and Choice Home Grown Timothy. j C.L.McGuiim CASH STORE i TELEPHONE— 3 South Miller St. Cedarviile, O. LIGHT PIGS SELL; SOWS NOT OFFERED |.4HS.4NSHI..SMS.iS,.|.iSHS»S»S«SrSnS- Farmers^ arc holding back on marketing sows due to farrow soon, 1says Henry A. Wallace, secretary o f the United States Department o f : Agriculture. The. hog marketing program, entered into by the Secre- . tary and the executive committee o f |the National Corn-Hog Producers' j Committee of Twenty-five on August j 18, included the purchase by the Secretary before October 1 o f 4 mil­ lion pigs weighing from 25 to 100 pounds and o f 1 million bred sows weighing more than 275 pounds, since reduced to 240 pounds. A bonus above market prices was offered to induce a flow o f jiigs and sows to market, , During the first two weeks of the pork-reduction program, the farmers sold about 2 million, or one-half of the quota, of pigs but only 50 thous­ and, or one-twentieth of the quota, of piggy sows. Reports from the country indicate, says Secretary Wallace, that many farmers are holding back bred sows, not because they feel the bonus is insufficient, but because they have been carried away b y ' hopes that the sale .of pigs alone will achieve the results hoped for from this cam­ paign. These, he says, are false hopes; Four million fewer 1933 spring pigs on the market next winter means a- bout 600 million fewer pounds of pork and lard. But the sale now of one million bred sows would reduce the marketing o f hogs next year by about one billion pounds, because one million bred sows can raise from five to six million pigs this fall. If only the four million pigs are sold, says the Secretary of Agri­ culture, the benefits to be obtained from the program may be less than half as great ’as if the maximum of both pigs and sows were sold. Farm­ ers who hold back sows, therefore, are hurting themselves as well as their neighbors. l i v e s t o c k c o - o p s g a in A 25 per cent gain in volume was recorded fo r August over the same month a year ago by eounty live stock shipping associations affiliated with the Ohio Live Stock Cooperative Association, according to J, R. All- gyer, secretary-manager o f the state organization. The preliminary summary shows that 480 decks o f live stock were sent to market for the month as compared with 385 deck? from the same counties in August, 1932. County units chief­ ly responsible for the increase were those in Logan, Seneca, Wyandot, Fayette, Putnam, Ottawa, Marion, Fulton, Van Wert and Hardin counties. Each o f the first three named doubled its .shipments o f a year ago. The report covers a period just prior to the launching by the Federal Government o f its program o f reduc­ ing hog production through the pur­ chase o f pigs and sows, approximate­ ly 100,000 head o f which have already been marketed cooperatively from j-Ohio, I Packers usually iincrease their •storage of pork from November to IApril and reduce that storage from !April to November. This year the !amount o f pork in storage has con­ tinued to pile up since April. 300 SEEK 75 PLACES Three hundred Ohio boys applied for the 75 places in Ohio State Uni- *versity's new cooperative men’s dormitory opening Sept. 26 in Ohio ’ Stadium. The dormitory was estab­ lished to help students o f good-char­ acter and scholarship without suffi­ cient finances for college training. ■Applications came from all parts of the state. veterinary medicine. One was fa' dentistry, 10 were in engineering, 13 in law, 16 in medicine, and 20 in pharmacy. COEDS ARE NUMEROUS $1.00 Horlick’s Malted Milk-— 76c jWeek End Special at Brown’s Drugs Women registered last year in all of Ohio State University’s 10 col­ leges, making up one third o f the tota. enrollment. For the first time in years, three girls enrolled in ; SCHEDULE INCREASED I W l. -Ill PPL.JL l I Increased student demand has caused Ohio State University’s com­ merce extension department to add several new classes fo r the fall :quarter. Night classes will-open the Iweek o f October 1 in Columbus, New <Philadelphia, Newark, Lima, Findlay, Marion, Sandusky, Fostoria, Toledo, and Canton. 30c Grove's Bromo Quinine—21c Week End Special at Brown’s Drugs POULTRY PROBLEM IS ATTACKED BY A. A. A. The problem o f how to increase the ■ prices o f poultry and eggs to pre- j war parity is one of the most puzzling that face the Agricultural Adjustment Administration. Through a' series of informal conferences with distribut­ ors and producers of poultry and eggs, the special crops section has “begun an effort to work out a prac­ tical solution. In value of product, the poultry in­ dustry ranks high. The number of eggs sold in the United States in 1929 was nearly two billion dozen, with an aggregate value of $588,- 000,000. The number o f chicken, ex­ clusive o f baby chicks, sold in 1929 was 284 million, with a value of $262,000,000. The combined total value o f poultry and eggs was $848,- 000.000. The industry is unique in that poul-i try or eggs are produced on more ' than 5,400,000 o f the approximately; 6,000,000 farms in the United States. : A,relatively small number o f th e ' chickens are on farms that specialize in poultry. Most o f them are in farm • flocks o f 200 or fewer. Leading! states in production are Iowa, Mis-1 souri, California and Texas, in the; order named, while California, Iow a ,! Missouri, Pennsylvania and Ohio lead i ‘HERALDWANT ANDSALEADSPAY' in the value o f eggs sold. j Several factors contribute to the ' difficulty of improving the poultry . and egg situation, according to the Adjustment Administration officials, j Most important they say, is the fact j that poultry is produced on such a ' large number o f farms and irt all ! parts o f the country. Second is the i fact that on all but a relatively small! number of, these farms, poultry is > considered a side issue and is often • left entirely to the farmer’s wife, j Third, it is possible for producers to ; get into and out of poultry and egg production in one season, thus making possible fluctuations o f supply and •therefore o f price. Fourth, there are many thousands o f buyers o f eggs and poultry, scattered widely o v e r . the United States. Fifth, the market­ ing o f poultry and eggs is handled by ( several groups o f middlemen before . these commodities reach the consum- 1 er. Sixth, cold storage supplies o f j eggs and poultry are from 40 to 50 | per cent greater than a year ago, j and no price-raising plan can be effec- j tive unless it takes into consideration the factor of cold storage supplies. Poultry and eggs wgro not included as basic commodities in the Agri- j cultural Adjustment Act, and there- • fore the production control median- : isms being used on wheat and cotton can not be applied to them. But u n -; less something is done to correct the situation, the poultry producers may , face higher prices for feed and for j labor, os well as a higher cost o f j living, without corresponding in- ; creases in the prices o f the things they sell. Consequently, the Special; Crops Section, of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration is now working on the formulation of a poul­ try program. ' The United Kingdom, which until 1931 was a free trading country, re­ cently announced a further reduction in the import quota o f pork allowed the United States. Germany recently rased her tariff against lard importations to $15 per hundredweight, in furtherance of her live-at*homo campaign. ' I The two greatest causes of tire accidents are skiddingaud blowouts. Most people know that —■so almost every tire maker—eager to make a sale—nowclaims his tire is built to prevent both of these troubles* But in all the hubbub—Goodyear Tires out* ■ell any others because o f these facts: More traction than ANY other tire Traction means grip. Brakes may stop your wheels—but it fakes tire traction to stop your car. And on streets flooded with water, cars equipped with Goodyear Tires grip and stop somuch better than any othertire 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 of the tread—and that’s where the tire contacts the road. Blowout Protection in every Ply Everyply of every Goodyear Tire is built with Supertwist Cord—developed and patented by Goodyear to prevent tires from breaking down and blowing out under the strain of 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 ply material prevents blowouts, how it stretches and co. mback 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 of Goodyear Tires —you’d naturally expect these ..res to outrun others. Well, here’s the proof. The most accurate mileage records are kept by the bus oper* altors, and Goodyear Tires on thousands of buses throughout the country are averaging mileages that represent an increase of 97 % in the past live years. Goodyears are better every year. Prices that say “ Buy Now 99 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 50 to 100% . Be warned in time. Bctiw I m I at every wheel *@.40 7.10 7.60 8.15 9.15 .5 5.50-19 10.45 6.00-19 11.85 6.50-19 14.60 PATHFINDER Supertwist Cord Tiro \S 4.40-21 *5.00 >5 4.50-21 5.60 IS 4.75*19 6.05 r5 5.00-19 6.55 [5 5.00-20 6.75 b 7.35 K 5.50*19 8.50 on your car—and replace worn, thin, risky, slippery tires with the safest tires on the market — quality tires —Goodyear Tires . at prices you may never see qpia. RALPH WOLFORD i

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