The Cedarville Herald, Volume 66, Numbers 27-52
a I M III# Jeww* lfo*» si sitilnMs it »W$k <$xa(rd-fikpis#K*i« Jbank 9M | , Mrwride, 0*11t e d i , fe y a f 3*m W**» Mfe*r®ri S**wB» lapw i h* l i t Court of 0 om - FI sm * Gr**»* «®*0&r». Whkb mm No. *8,1**, praying for divffiree o» , j th* u m d i of grow nagleet of doty. wWJ tries »*tios the* *i ths fed day . £,*,*, vrijjBOB 50 fey boaring after « f Atffeiat AMR, *■* Wknar *U«J Het, #ix wee]cil tbs first publication ■m&m ** V(# Qmwm B « Court! 1JbiBi(^ or m „ »ft»r July 31, 1948. of Grows Qoqttty, Ohio, for divorce m the mmei i f Mm* *fefe«fc o f fetor, fw wfegoiafen. o f H ot wwMden •MMMP i l JEsy Jtangaa. sad fw etita*? relief *rid eat* brie# No. 88347 on the records of said Court Said action ■will be beard before said Coart on tha i$th day of September, 1943 or as soon thereafter at is convenient to the Court. 18-6-61-9-10) " ROBERT H. WEAD Attorney for Plaintiff, Kay Wiser. LEGAL NOTICE William Homer Leavell, whose place o f residence is unknown to the plain tiff, will take notice that on the 24th ( « - 86-6-7-80) * ' FORREST DUNiCLE, Attorney fo r Albertha Leavell. PROBATE COURT SETTLEMENT OF a c c c o u t The Third, Final and Distributive account o f Marahali L. Wolf, Admin istrator o f the Estate o f Minnie Hanlnger, deceased, with vouchers, has heen filed in the Probate Court o f Greene County, Ohio, fo r inspection, settlement and record, and unless ex ceptions are filed thereto, it will be fo r hearing and confirmation on Aug ust, 19, 1948. ’ July 29, 1943. WILLIAM B. JdcCALLISTER “ Probate Judge Sto$S|®PiPiPS t d m s m m * m s * ica I n San A n ton io , Texas, stands a mis sion fort of which is written; “ Thermopylae had her mweenger of de feat, thu Auuno had none." 182meng*vs theirRyesh«rtin1856, Alamo Chapel B e ' E v e r A l e r t - B u y W a i B e a d s How many relics, dear to the hearts of millions of Europeans, Hitler.has wantonly destroyed? Thousands o f shrines linking the present with past glory have been ■mashed, to rubble. BUY WAR STAMPS BONDS TOMARK THE) PLACE ' WTTHBEAUTY FOREVER ARTISTIC EASY TO BEAT MARKERS PRICED PROM $25.00 TO $95.00 Hundreds1On Display YOU WILL' ADMIRE , THE .LOVELY GRANITES THE SUPERIOR FINISHING ‘ V THE NEW CLEAR-CUT LETTERING 's. \ A VISIT IS MOST CONVINCING The Qeo. Dodds & Sons Qrctnite Co. Xenia, Ohio -A Free Booklet On Request Pliohe 850 * 2 >&ed m BUT- feeaufe you're "taking If •«y ''--d riv lng /•*< and. driving i/ewer— you may figure that your car natds loss attention. But actually It needs mare cars. Hors a rt 3 Important things fa remember about ratlonsd driving and your cart M#MkSAM«UKHMSHAFTTO RT "CMOS IT' with sludge, carbon and other injurious wastes under today's driving conditions. Oil should be changed at least every 1,000 miles or svsry two months, whichever comas first. •ATMRIIS SIT EXHAUST!t. much quicker when cats stand idle and driving is mostly short trips. This causes starting trouble and plats* may become perma nently damaged if battery stays under charged for long. Get SOHIO’s expert battery service reg>darly~Ktvty week and ksep your battery fit! CHASSIS lUIRICAfiOH Ht|BIB, TOO. Now, out cars have to last * .. end frequent, expert greasing has new importance. New grease, applied at Sohio stations, forces out old, worn grease».. abrasive dirt. . . and Contaminating moisture, Get Sohio Polot*by.Polnt Lubrication -and be safe. CAN*FORYOU*CAB...FORYOURCOUNTRY A BRIVI UNDER H M.F.H. • KffI* IH f MISSUM AU2 US. • M|N« YOUR CAR"UR TOSTANDARD" BORIfefTlR CARE THR STANDARD Oil COMPANY (OHIO) m atm em tem Miracle on Farm Front To MeetNew Food Goal Conservation Farming Proving to Be Godsend Total war requires total produc tion, This is as true of essential crops as it i* o f armaments, find the miraculous achievements o f fac tories are being matched by miracu lous production on the farms of America to meet greater food goals. The big objective of World War I was, as today, to win the war, and all efforts were toward increased food production on American farms, However, ,the methods being used to- dSy differ from the methods used then, because farmers have learned a bitter lesson. They helped win the last war, but many. lost, their farms and their livelihood, in the aftermath. From earliest days there-has ^ been a mistaken idea that' in- ' creased production meant a nat ural1^ increase In soil ruined. There were a few progressive farmers who raised their voices early for action against soli ero sion. hut their attempts were futile, As long as there appeared to be that inexhaustible supply of new land .just beyond the western horizon, men preferred to leave the ruined land behind them, and to exploit new fron tiers. WorldWar I created a sudden and abnormal demand for more food, with the emphasis on wheat. Agri culture's answer was increased food production through increased acre age. Wheat alone jumped from 47 to 74 million acres during and im mediately •following the war era. The increased acreage resulted from a big "plow -up". o f land which in Keep Machinery Going Shirley Perry hammers out the prongs of a manure spreader while Gail Daily tightens the bolt oh a wheel. These girls are taking a farm course so they can do their bit on the food line, while many a farm hand is doing his bit at. the fron t turn brought about the !g “ blow-up” from the dust bowl about 10 years ago. When the black fog of dust winged its way across the sky and darkened eastern cities as far as the Atlantic seaboard, America realized that something drastically wrong had happened to its agriculture,. Then the time was ripe, although late in the battle agafiist.soil erosion, for conservation farming to get its start. Adapting and improving the tech- ' niques of the early soil erosion pio neers, the work of the Soil Conser vation service and the AAA has proved a Godsend to the United Na tions In the present cr is is.. Because land is the farmer's chief business asset and because land is indispensa ble to the national welfare, the na tional farm program includes con servation as one o f its objectives. Curculio Threatens 1943-Peach Crop Peaches are in. grave danger of being destroyed by the curculio, if prompt and decisive control meas ures are not taken, says Dr. Clyde F, Smith, associate entomologist of the state experiment station at North Carolina State college. He reports that about ten times as many beetles are being found this year as compared with 1942 and that growers will have more wormy peaches at harvest time un less they use every possible means o f controllifag the curculio. Dr, Smith makes four suggestions for controlling the beetles and he says that all four methods should: be used, First, collect and destroy as many adult curculios as possible by jarring the trees, Second, fol low a proper spray program. Third, pick up and destroy all drops. Fourth, oultivate under the spread o f the trees, as soon as wormy peaches cease to drop. Farm Notes When young pigs are old enough they should be pastured on clean ground—pastures which have been freed of worms and.disease organ isms by plowing. . Most farms have more than' one type of soil which, with a rearrange ment d £ field boundaries, could grow hay or pasture crops more efficient ly than they do at present, itmmmmrnmmmmmmmmKaimmmimm- WANTED Truck Driver for Cream Route Mali or Woman, The Miami Valley Cooperative ) Milk Producers Association , Dayton, Ohio. - j i r i p y p " UNIFORM INTMtNATIONAL S UNDAY! choch . L,esson Loosen lor August 22 GOD GIVES LAWS FOB HIS ■ FBQJPLE ’ ■ LESSON TEXT—-Exodus S 3 :1-8; CnUttin* 3;S3-M; j ; u - m . GOLDENTEXT—Thou shslt }ov* the Lord thy God with «U thy heart, end with sU thy soul, and with «Uthy strength, sod with all thy nilnd; and thy neighbor as thy* self—Luka 10:17. Our God lx a God o f prder. To have order we must-have law, hence God gave His people not only the fundamental law of humanity’s . moral sens# o f right and wrong, and tha Ten Commandments which are the Vasia of all codex o f law, 'bu t also those detailed regulations needed for the law’s interpretation. The law o f God was not intended to establish a legalistic system~of salvation by. work, but, as revealed in the New Testament, it was to guide and. bring us> to Christ, in whom it finds its true fulfillment. These are matters of fundamental importance and suggest the need of a .careful study, of our three Scrip ture portions, - I. The Law Established .(Exod. 23:1-9). At Sinai the Israelites were brought into the presence of God in a dramatic and solemn assembly to hear the words of God from the mountain. These were later writ ten as the Ten Commandments on the tables of stones Here, they learned In a n ew way of the maj-i esty, the righteousness, and the lo v e , o f God. The Ten Commandments are rec ognized as the foundation on which all legal codes,, ancient and mod ern, are built. They cover man’s relation, to God and his relation to His fellow man, They are unsur-; passed as a. comprehensive and compa&t statement of the moral law, The' passage in Exodus 23 gives us some o f the rules and regula tions Tor daily life which are in a sense an interpretation of the law. This portion gives us an idea- of the type of laws provided by God for His people and reveals “ the moral flavor of - the whole divine legisla tion,” •The thing Which impresses us as we read o f the divine requirements o f justice toward all, of love for one’s enemies, of refraining from « e witness; o f refusing all brib- , is that God's standards are very high. God’s law .is good, if is right, of divine quality and perfect purity. It has, however, an even higher pur pose than providing direction for lif^. We learn of that as we hear H. The Law Described (Gal. 3:23- 28). •What was the purpose o f the law? It was and is a servant of God to lead the needy sinner to Christ. The Word “ tutor” in verse 24 does not refer to. one who teaches, but the servant who saw to. it. that the school boy, possibly a bit reluctant, arrived at his destination. The law convicts of sin and makes it evident to the repentant one that he needs divine help if he is ever to-meef its demands.' The law real ly puts a man in prison (kept in t ward,” v. 23), and makes-him look to Christ to set him free, When one trusts Christ he comes into the place of a son. 'He enters upon a spiritual maturity which makes it no longer necessary to have a tutor directing and disciplin ing him. He has entered into a hew relationship by faith, end is a child of God. , Does this 'mean that °the law has been set aside or abrogated? Not at all, Jesus Himself said, “ Think not that I ani come to destroy the law .. , l a m not come to destroy, but to fulfill” (Matt, 8:17). This is our third point; i n . The Lsw Fulfilled (Gal. 5:13, 14). Paul had warned against the folly of legalism. In Christ men are free from a slavish bondage to the law. But men, desiring to substitute li cense for liberty, were using the grace of God s i an excuse for self- indulgence and sin. Christ has set aside all the cere monial requirements o f the It /, for He became the perfect, once-for:all sacrifice for sin, which was infinite ly superior to all the offerings of the Old Testament law. He thus ful filled the type o f the offerings. The moral requirements' o f the law were gathered up in Him, and in Him we have only1 one law to ful- - fill, the law of love, Obedience to that law meets all the moral re quirements of the Old Testament ! lftV/s Liberty to the Christian is not a freedom to do as he pleases, not “ an occasion to the flesh” that it may live in selfishness and sin. We are free only to be bound by the blessed law of love, The tablets o f stone were (and still are) important, Their laws have never been set aside or with drawn, But In Christ God has dond what He spoke of through Jere miah the prophet. He has put His law in the Christian's inner being, and has written it firms heart. (Jar. 31:33). ....................................... mym g i b s F A R M P A R I T Y P R IC E (ConUmtd from frtl peg*) examples o f parity price fallacies, In February, the report said, the parity price fo r >*heat was 11.41 s bushel; this was “ much too high” be- -cause wheat can be produced more cheaply now than in the years on which the parity formula is based, On the other hand, the parity price fo r milk was said to be low. The report concluded that in case after case the parity formula had inter fered with adjustments essential to an adequate wa? food program. Since the parity formula haB been written- into agricultural legislation and the Price Control.,Acts, howeyer, legislation probably Would be neces sary to carry out the ’ committee’s recommendations that if be discarded, The production program recom mended by the committee .follows, fit the main, that now being drafted by the War Food Administration, but some-of its suggestions probably go. far beyond anything the WFA has in mind. . For example, the committee recom mends that sugar beet acerage fie cut one-fourth in irrigated areas and eliminated altogether in non-irrigated areas, a proposal which, is almost certain to be fought vigorously by Congress members front-beet-growing States. . Sugar beet acerage would, be cut to 600,000 acres in 1944 and 465,000 in 1945, , The committee program would mean a huge expansion in long-staple cotton in Mississippi delta and sim- iliar .areas and a sharp reduction in short-staple . cotton. Total acerage would- be cut to 20,500,000 acres in 1044 and 19,500,000 in 1045. Cut Urged in Livestock The report recommended a heavy liquidation o f livestock in 1944 to .save feed and a huge increase in soy beans, peanuts, potatoes, flaxseed and vegetables. Food to keep'the- population o f the liberated areas from starvation and resulting bitterness was said by the committee- to be just as important as the heeds o f the armed forces. Government title to food at some! point in the distribution chain .was recommended as necessary to elimin ate black markets. Judicious use of food subsidies also wag advocated; Food procurement apparently furn ished one o f the few instances where the committee was satisfied With the Progress being made. The report .said food purchases were being made largely by the War Department and the Food .Distribution Administration t f the WFA *nd that this central isation of buying had resulted fit im portant advantages, A most vigorous effort should be .made, the report said, to acquaint ;the public with the necessity for sac rifices with regard to food, and it should bo made plain that -’these sac-, rlflcea are being shared equally by all.” “ That Axwsrioams As nab tide is evident in the Widespread rid* latinos of ratiemdag juyi pries lattao* by poopk whoweald bw sherit" ed at the idea, of pane snatching,’* the report **M, “Our people are not liars or law violators by nature; they simply do not yet identify their own interest and the winning of the war with support of the war food program.” I N O T I C E ! ST o CO al C o n s u m e r s ! § 5 2 S 8 I | I Wfehave coal contracted for andean assure reasonable delivery, depend ing on the railroads. However, we will be compelled to ask customers to haul;their own coal due to government requirements and labor shortage. Haul your own coal and take advan tage o f a liberal discount. F r a n k C r e s w e l l Cl. L . M cG u in n | I I -BUY WAR BONDS TODAY REPAIRS I am in position to.serve alT my patrons for Plumbs ing Repairs as well as Installation of Fixtures such as can be secured under government regulations. You still can have certain plumbing for , new-work a/id repairs for water systems on farm. Give me a call. . ; Phone 4-3561 F. E. Harper JAMESTOWN, OHIO W A N T E D DEAD STOCK We pay for UerftX and Cows $4.0* Animals o f size and cunditihf Telephone XENIA 1272R or DAYTON KE-7081 , WMCHBT PRODUCTS, INC. Dayton, Ohio We also remove Hogs Calves •— Sheep ............... . . . . . . . . and Full Value for Your Dollar! :: OUR PRINT SHOP IS AT YOUR ■h - * SERVICE... There’ s a commonly used ex pression: “You get just what you pay for.” This applies to PRINTING just the same us 4 • most anything else you buy. Good PRINTING can’t be produced at a poor price. < Poor Printing even at a low price is expensive, because it gives the prospective custo* mer the impression that your services or product# are not up to standard* We give full value for every *dollar you spendwith us fo r PRINTING —and our prices are always FAIR. We Solicit Your Next Printing Order PHONE 6—17H . PRINTINGand PUBLISHING SINCE18?? j f i
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