The Cedarville Herald, Volume 59, Numbers 27-52
’OWAaW.Ui HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE If, 1M6 Furniture Repairing AND Re-Upholstering 2 am again located in X en ia a fter an absence o f a few years and am prepared to repair and reupholster you r fu rn i ture. W e also do repairing o f coal o il and gas stoves and ranges. C. R. HOERNER Cor. Second! and Whiteman Sts. Xenia, Ohio Phone: 169-—Cedarville Exchange MARION HUGHES & SON Well Drilling CEDARVILLE, OHIO MAST-FQOS PUMPS AERMOTOR WIND MILLS , PUMP AND WIND MILL REPAIRING PU-RI-NA WITH PUR-A-TENE The Only Feed Made Containing Putatene WHAT IS PURATENE? „ Pu ra tene is concentrated g reen feed made from a siibstance called Carotene which is the yellow coloring m a tte r ex tracted firom p lan ts and vegetables and when taken into the body converted into vitamin A. Scientists have found th a t vitam ine A is the exclusive something, in green feed th a t has so much to do with. H ea lth and Egg production. Startene, (Qrowena, Layena, Turkey S tartena , Grow ing Chow, Lay Chow, Broiler Chow, Chowder Supple ment a ll have Pur-A-Tene. ! AH these feeds In Stock. Also P ig and Hog Chow, Cow Chow, Calf Chow, Steer Fa tena, O-Mo-Lene. Evangelistic Service In Springfield C . L . M c G u i n n THE PU-RI-NO STORE TELEPHONE*—3 South Miller St. Cedarville, O. o If you're taking a trip this summer, write for a copy of "Looking Ahead", .our new I93& touring log, It’s immensely helpful in planning a trip and in making arrangements as you travel. Also it gives you an accurate account of expenses from day to day, and form;. a valuable part, of your travel collection in years to come. Send in the coupon which appears below. We’ll mail you a copy without charge or obligation. THE OH IO BELL TELEPHONE CO . THE OHIO BELL TELEPHONE CO.! please send me a free copy of "Looking Ahead!" NAME* Phut print ptninly •The servic Warren L party on t' Pythias groi Shaffer stree success. Seven platform. Sunday ist spoke on “B: He stated that bath, the prayer family altar were conducted by Dr. and evangelistic of the Knights of i-ner of High and meeting with great ijers were on the Idling the evangel- •Altars.” the Sab- tbe and kind*, whilemedium and heavier kinds sold downwards from 8.00, Best fat awe and wether iambs said from 10,50 down. N O T I C E Nptice jls hereby given th a t a Peti tion by owners of .lots iq, the. ■ im mediate vicipity of an alley extending, eastwardly from Miller.' Street; to Main Street, along the -properties of John Johnson and C. E. Barnhart in the Village of Cedarville, Ohio, has been presented to the council of said Village of Cedarville, Ohio, praying for a vacation-of said alley from said Miller Street to said Main Street; that said Petition is now pending before said council, and final actiofi thereon according to law will be taken on and after the 17th day of July, 1936, said date being not less than six (6) weeks after the first publication of this Notice, and. not more than three (3) months after the completion of said publication of this Notice. KENNET%L. LITTLE, Mayor Village of Cedarville, Ohio. Attest:— . J. C. McCorkell, Clerk, of Village of Cedarville, Ohio., (6-5-7-17d) Farmers Have Method Of Improving Pasture Use of Lime and Phosphate ■ Doubles Yields of Grass and ' Reduces Milk Costs One-Third he made a strong appeaJTVQpipfe re newal of our vows. Much interest is being manifest in these meetings, not only in Springfield, but also .in surrounding towns. Next Sunday afternoon Dr. Sleeves jvill speak on “Where aTe Our Loved Dead* and in the evening the sjibject will be, “Hell, and Who Goes There.” REPORT OF STALE Monday, June 15, 1936 Springfield l ive Stock Sales Co. HOGS—-Receipts 490 hd. 150-200’ lbs. ______ __.10.00 to 10.10 200-22^ lbs. -1.............. 10,00 225-250 lbs. •;_______—10.00 250-275 lbs. _r_.......... ..... 9.70 to 9.80 275-300 lbs. — _.i— 9.50 to 9.60 300 lbs. up ^____ ____ __9.40 down 140-150 lbs. ______ 9.50 to 10.50 120-140 l b s . ........ ...........9.50 to 11.25 Feeding pigs ________ 10.00 to 13.00 SOWS—Choice _____—.7.75 to 8.50 Medium ____ _7.00 to 7.75 Stags ________ „______ 7.00 down SHEEP & LAMBS—Receipts .31 hd. Choice fa t lambs :___9.50 to 10.50 Medium fat lambs ——_8.50 to 9.50 Buck lambs, best __ 9.00 to 9.75 Medium and l i g h t ___ _7.09 to 9.00 Yearling lambs ——__;__6.50 to 8.00 Fat ewes;_,____ 2.00 to 3.00 Old ew e s__ ; ________—1,00 to 2.00 Breeding ewes 3.00 to 6.00 CATTLE—Receipts 66 hd. Best dry lot steers —_—7.00 to 7,75 Medium and grass steers -4.50 to 7.00 Best heifers 7.00 to 7.75 Medium and grass' heifers 4——00 to Med. and grass heimers 4.00 to 6,50 Fat c o w s ___ _________ 4.00 to 6.00 Canners and cutters —2.00 to 4.00 Milkers and springers ----- $25 to $60 Bulls ____ 5.00 to 6.00 VEAL CALVES—Receipts 74 hd. Cho ice________ 8.00 to 9.00 Top medium____ .— —7.00 to 8.00 Low medium - _____l-__5.00 to 7.00 Culls ___ —5.00 down Receipts of today’s sale totaled 711 head. Prices of hogs steady with last week’s sale, on fat lambs mostly 50 cents lowcv, on cattle mostly steady, and on veal calves, steady. Top price in the hog division, 10.10 for a double of weights ranging from 150 to 200 lbs. and averaging. 180 lbs. Weights from 200 to 250 cashed a t 10.00, while weights upwards to 300 pounds sold from 9.60 to 9,80. A new top record price for feeding shotes, for 13.00 per hundred. Best dry lot steers sold-up to 7.75, and dry lot heifers from 7.75 down Fat cows sold within a spread of 4.00 to 6.00, while cutter cows cashed a t 4.00 down. Bulls sold from 6.00 down. Veal calves topped at 9.00 for a limited supply of good and choice N O T I C E t h e In pursuance of the order of the Probate Court of Greene County, Ohio, I will offer for sale at public auction oh ,th e . 11TH DAY OF JULY, 1936 a t 2:00 o’clock P. M., on the premises, the following de scribed real estate: Situate' in the County of Greene, ih the State of Ohio, and in the Village of Cedar ville, and being all of Lot No. 5 in Kyle’s Addition.to the Village of Ce darville, as the same is numbered and ykiown on the recorded plat of said Village. Said premises.are located on South' Main Street in said Village. Said premises are appraised at Thirty-five Hundred Dollars, ($3500- .00), and must be sold for not less than two-thirds of said appraised value. TERMS OF SALE: Cash upon de livery of deed. A deposit of ten (lOC-o) per cent of the purchase price will be required upon the day of sale from the purchaser to insure good faith until the S3ie can be confirmed by the Court. Said sale is made by order of the Gourt' in Case No. 3039,. J, E, Has- ings, Executor of the Estate of Dora J. Kerr, deceased,1 vs.' George J. Rogers, et al., in the Probate Court Greene. County, Ohio. J. E. HASTINGS, Executor. Miller & Finney, Attorneys. ' 6-11—7-2d) Two Muskingum cqunty farmers ,have proved that pasture lands which have been treated with lime and phos phate fertilizer will produce twice as much grass as the same kind of iand which has received no treatment. Ben St. Clair and Geo. L’. Porter are the two men who have, been making the tests. These men also found that it.was possible to increase the production of grass on the land by 300 per cent by using lime, phosphate, and nitrogen. Land which had received the last treatment also furnished good pasture two or three weeks earlier in the year than unimproved lands. W. S. Barnhart, county agricultural agent, arranged meetings at the farms of the two experimenters and 75 farmers examined the work "Which had been done. D. R, Dodd, specialist in agronomy, Ohio State University, who has assisted the two farmers in choosing the pastime improvement methods explained the reasons for the differences in the growth of pasture on the different parts of the fields. . The pasture land first had been tested to find if it needed liming and then had received as much lime as veils necessary. The amounts varied on the two farms. The application of 20 per cent superphosphate was made at the rate of 600 pounds per acre in 1931 and an equal amount in 1935 This method of applying the phos phate is more economical than apply ing 150 pounds each year and has given larger increases in yields’ of glass.. On parts of the fields where nitro gen was used, 200 pounds of sulfate of ammonia was applied each year during the last of March or the first of April. The addition of. nitrogen increased the amount of grass, and more cattle could be carried on the land but the use of nitrogen did not lower the co3t of producing milk ’ir meat on pasture*. Lime and phosphate decreased the cost'of producing milk or meat on pasture by one-third. The soil on the St. Clair and the Porter farms is Muskingum silt loam. The pasture lands are rolling and had not been plowed for several years be fore the start of the experiments in, 1931. The pasture is a mixture.of bluegrass and white clover. Visitors at the farms: saw that the livestock grazed on the parts of the fields which had been limed and fertilized and stopped grazing a t the edge of the un improved land. N O T I C E Notice is hereby given that a Peti tion by owners of lota in the im mediate vicinity of an alley extending eastwardly from Miller Street .to Main Street, along the properties of John Johnson and G. E. Barnhart in the Village of Cedarville, Ohio, has been presented to the council of said Village of Cedarville, Ohio, praying \ for a vacation of said alley from said Miller Street to said Main Street; that said Petition is now pending be- for said council, and. final action thereon according to law will be taken on and after the 17th day of July, 1936, said date being not less than six (6) weeks after the first publica tion of this Notice, and not more than three (3) months after the comple tion of said publication of this Notice. K. L. LITTLE, Mayor, Village of Cedarville, Ohio, Attest:— J. G. McCorkell, Clerk of Village of Cedarville, Ohio. (C-5-7-17d) NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT REGENT THEATRE SPRINGFIELD (Ice-water Cooled) FOUR DAYS Starting Friday! It's Gay! It’s Glorious! Robert Taylor . 1 Loretta Young 1 —in— “PRIVATE NUMBER” State Theatre SPRINGFIELD, O. “Coolest Anywhere” TOUR DAYS Starting Saturday Jimmie Allen The Radio Flyer —in-— “SKY PARADE” STREET *ncf No.- CITY— Fairbanks Theatre SPRINGFIELD Now Playing 1 Ends Saturday Night! “THE GREAT ZIEGFELD” Estate of Oscar B. Satterfield, Deceased. 'Notice is hereby given that Kathleen B. Creswell has been duly appointed as Executor of the estate of Oscar B. Satterfield, deceased, late of Cedar ville, Greene County, Ohio. Dated this 1st day of June, 1936. S, C. WRIGHT Judge of the Probate Court, Greene County, Ohio, LEGAL NOTICE Frank Reed, whose place of resi dence is unknown, will take notice that on the 19th day of May, 1936, Opal Reed filed her certain action against him for divorce on- the Igrounds of gross neglect of duty, said cause being Case No. 21107, Common , Pleas Court, Greene County, Ohio, Said cause wil! come oh for hearing on or before the Ctli day of July, 1936. MARCUS SHOUP, (6-26d) Attorney for Plaintiff. Dr. H. N. Williams DENTIST tf-RAY EQUIPMENT * *t Yellow Springe, Ohio For Sale—Iver Johnson bicycle, in good condition. John McMillan. HUNB0IG Bath Boom Outfits Electric Water Pumps Wo are prepared to install Kohler or Standard buth room outfits and necessary bathroom plumbing. Wo wo also agents -for the Duro Electric Water Pumpf. * HOT WATER HEATING PLANTS If you are considering a hot water heating plant let ns give you estimates on the American Ideal system Installed. Wc can give you reference of our plants giving satisfaction in this community. F . E. HARPER Phone 130 Cedarville, Ohio Wanted—Wo buy and sell new and used cars. Belden & Co,, Steele Bldg., Xenia, O. Subscribe to TH E HERALD C P E N N E Y C O M t A N V , , f t i ' c V * P ° r « t e 4 E. Main St. Xenia, O. THE BIRTH OF RR ORACLE • One day, many centuries ago, a Greek goatherd was sitting in a shady and comfortable spot watch ing his animals While they cropped at bits of dwarfed stubble. All at once, henoticed themacting strange ly, walking ujnsurely, and even seeming to reel in their gait. Fright ened and astonished, he jumped to his' feet and ran until lie came up with them. When he reached them, lie was seized by a peculiar light headedness. The goatherd hurried home to tell Ids friends about what had hap pened. The next day they accom-. panied him to the scene o f his experience, where they, too, grew giddy, and very soon began acting like men intoxicated. Almost overnight tlie spot be- came holy, and the orade of Ddpliii —destined to determine Greek state policy and stratagem of war for centuries—was born. That was over twenty-five hundred years ago. Today, we know that there was notiiing supernatural about the oracle o f Delphi!—that nothing more than an emanation of surface gas was responsible for the giddi ness, strange actions, and mysteri ous sayings o f the people who visited there and the priestesses who presided over it. Although It is no longer looked on in the light o f the supernatural* Gas, in the modern sense of Gas Heating Comfort, ranks well among the wonders o f present day science. Painstaking research .and hundreds of discoveries have made Gas into tlie finest form o f househeating known. Piped from vast reservoirs, it now provides uniform, measured warmth throughout the winter months without the least need for care or attention* Clean, silent, automatic* It has freed the modem home from all the old-fashioned drudgery of furnace tending* cook ing and water heating* The Dayton Power & Light €o. F I F f COLL tetanus firekork. Fourth i by Dr, \ the Stat wounds powder Dr. Hai trivial a injured injection toxin wi simplest missible a phys pointed the fire& ness of t and caiJli General from a s . mortar ploding- son died from a .< pistol. Annou: aminatio: in the st. ed June in four 1 Celevlanc by Chair Civil Ser The posif be held way pat fruit anc janitor a and vete tion may state civ lumbus. Henry- complime 1 Guffey re learned t according Noon. T complete cently M; Guffey b< sixth rea. There * industrial * the Indu.* Superntei the dvisi: reported, for fatal i cupationa 13,389, or 1,479 lest r Kearns s; ities were ago. Predict! ■ “saturatio would bo 110,009 p- made by * the divisic applicatioi bout fifty period. I eligible fc applied ar manent le* - said. No three per after the present ti ing pensio Requireim suit in th per cent o During of Ohio r 1,229, acc< Secretary from sher the goveri teetive coi •Ohio Stn closure im 1,184 pro dential, hi lahd. Fan averaged ■ ment and tion, and * cent of tl cent of tl represents pared will small inci the 3$10 ago, sccor REV, WA Word ha Illness of is in a h< with gal Hopping i place, s l and has l Presbyteri city for r S u b s e t' J 1
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