The Cedarville Herald, Volume 67, Numbers 27-52
c b d a r v i l l e h e r a l d , F r i d a y , fcfcrrfeHBER l , im * fe X Adequate W iterf' Stock la Essential i Improvement Seen * As Production Aid ' Full utilization <?f grazing area*, with an attendant production of m ore and better meat and dairy product! require! adequate water for liveatook on range and pasture. No matter tow palatable and plenti ful the forage, if sufficient water at regular intervals is not available, livestock will not reach a good marketable condition. Development of enough wells and" springs and ponds* to supply the necessary water is not the only re quirement, lyFA points out. Proper distribution o f the water in. relation to available forage is essential to efficient grazing as full utilization cannot be realized if an adequate supply is not accessible to livestock on any part of the pasture or range acreage. Sto,ck-water developments are im portant on farm pastures in humid areas as well as on the ranges in semi-arid and: arid states, according to government authorities. While the greatest need is in the latter areas, inadequate facilities prevent the fullest use of good pasture on many farms because the. owner is not aware that a lack is possible in the more humid section where he is raising stock. Also, . he may not realize how influential stock-water supplies can be in improving the quality and quantity of range and - pasture feed. ------ -- ----- ----------- In many states, farmers may re" ceive assistance in carrying out stock-water developments under the conservation program adminis tered by the agricultural adjust ment agency. Conservation of soil and water are aided indirectly by development of ‘ necessary pasture and range water ing facilities. With proper develop ment and distribution of water sup plies, grazing can be restricted on, overgrazed, eroded or depleted Tangeiand and the stock rotated . over other areas, in keeping with their grazing capacity. Adequate water supplies on farm pastures, while encouraging more uniform grazing, will also aid pasture im provement practices, and decrease damage from erosion. ' Water facilities are, roughly, o f two kinds—natural and constructed. Springs, streams and lakes are in the first group. The second requires drilling, excavation or other con struction work to make water avail able, and includes wells, artificial reservoirs and ponds, ditches, and troughs and storage tanks attached to springs and reservoirs.; Fertilizer Increase Half M illion Tons American farmers this year will use well over 11,000,000 tons of com mercial fertilizer—a new all-time high. That's’ half a million tons more than were used in 1943 and 3,000,000 tons more than in 1940. Adjustments in analysis o f com plete fertilizers to be sold in differ ent states have been made to insure the best possible use of the avail able materials supplying nitrogen, phosphoric acid, and potash. The nitrogen content of many o f the available grades has been increased somewhat, indicated supplies of this important plant food being about 35 per cent greeter than last year. While some fertilizer ingredients are available in somewhat larger amounts this year then last, all of them', including such importaht nitrogen-carrying materials as am monium sulfate, sodium nitrate, am monium nitrate, and fertilizer com pounds, are still on allocation by the War Production board. Large Worm Loss Experts say the average wormy pig, if it lives, requires ont-fifth more feed to reach the same weight as an uninfested one. Since about half of the pigs in the United States are laid to be infested, elimination o f internal parasites would sava great quantities of feed. It would save many hogs, veterinarians esti mating that worms kill one pig in ten, By wide experiments and use, phenothlazine has proved -to be the only drug thart will control nodular worms. It also controls Toundworms or Ascarids as effectively as other commonly used anthelmintics. Phenothlazine is usually given with dry feed mixtures to hogs*conflned in a pen, although Individual doses o f pellets, tabs or as a drench with a syringe are also used. The drug Should be given according to printed directions or Under the supervision -o f a veterinarian. Retail Purchases Up T T t i r A C T U t fttTAIl SALES |£ACH NEWWGH m f 19931 m i 194(1 I949( tyaritfi nprmtto.S kMm Mm T NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate o f Vincent Kigio, Deceased. Notice is hereby"given that Inez M. Itiglo has been dttJy appointed as Ad ministratrix o f the estate o f Vincent Rigio, deceased, late o f Cedarville, (Jrecne County* Ohio, g - ■ ' Dated this Znd'dny o f August, 1944, WILLIAM B, MCALLISTER, Judge the Probate Court, Greene Dounty, Ohio. BUY WAR BONDS ALONGFARM FRONT (Contmusd from first pogt) (Continued from first page) C A T T L E F E E D I N G L A G S — Corn belt cattle feeders have ship ped in 23 percent less cattle fo r their feed lots in the first six months of 1944 than were shipped in during the same period of 1943. This figure has been released by the Bureau o f Agri cultural Economics and they add fur ther testimony to the lack of confi dence which cattle feeders have in the future. However Ohio feeders have shown very little decline in the num ber of cattle shipped in during the first six months o f 1944, For that period our in-shipments* wdre within 2.5 percent o f what they were a year ago. * WaBhinrton&etter FOR SALE—Practically new three •burner oil stove and small’gas heat er and-twopiece living room suite. Mrs. Albert Jones, W. Chillicothe St., and Yellow Springs Road. (Continued from first pegs) quiffi thg Congress to. remain in con tinuous session. In any event, one thing does seem certain; Germany must aiid will soon display the White flag of surrender. Her days are defi nitely numbered, and some o f those in the best position to know are quiet ly offering their-friends odds of two j to oue, or better, that the European > war will not last until the first o f No-1 vembed, Many other friendly wagers ! are being made here that.the fighting will be over before Oct. 1st. The end may come even much sooner. markable battle action picture o f members o f the 3Tth—boya from* the Seventh Ohio District—going into action against the ’ Japanese on Bou gainville, Both are°7the gifts of Gen eral Bieghtler and* arrived this week in. splendid condition. Ohio and the nation can well t o proud o f the'fight ing 37th, and its grand Commander. No division has a totter, record, or has seen more action. No group o f Apiericanse have endured more, made greater sacrifice or displayed finer heroism than have the fighting men o f Ohio’s 37th. Two new pictures, which occupy1 places of honor on the wall o f your < Representatives private office in Washington, are attracting the atten tion o f Ohio visitors. One is a splen did protrait o f Major General Robert S. Bcightler, Commander of Ohio’s famous 37th Division taken recently in the South Pacific; the other is a ve- While control over food prices may remain for same little time after the end of the war, most people think that food rationing will probably end, ^ithin a short time after the collapse of Germany. According to the latest available information, the Wpr Food Administration now has ' some two million tons o f food in reserve for ci- villian use here in this country. The food reserves of the armed services are several times that amount, while Lend-Lease food stocks sbrEfotbare e s timated “at between fotrry/jtto/Mx mil- 4ion:tons; Farm preduction eowtinues at a high level, with additional sur pluses being created day by day, , - . ’ A ^ The United States finds-itself in the peculiar situation o f having hundreds of millions o f tons o f rubber (mostly i synthetic) available, while at'.the j same time suffering from a serious i shortage o f automobile tires; ail be cause of a lack o f skilled workers in the tire factories as the result, o f shortsighted draft and manpower policies. We are now manufacturing synthetic rubber at the rate of totter than 350 million tons a year, yet every day vitally needed trucks, busses and private automobiles arc going o ff the roads and streets for-want o f tires.” ' ______._______ / SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE The State o f Ohio, Greene County Common Pleas Court. Casa No. 23400 Either Soft, Plaintiff, Vs. Dorothea Salt, at al., Defendants. In pureance o f #n Order o f Sale in Partition in the above entitled action, i will offer for sale at public auction, at the West door o f the Court House in Xenia, Ohio, in the above named County, on Saturday, the 16th day o f September, 1944; at 10:00 o’clock, A. M. the following described real estate, situate in the County o f Greene and State p f Ohio,.and in the Village o f Cedarville to-wit: Being part o f Military Survey No. 4367 ad being the East-half o f Lot No. 24 and the East end of Lot No. 36 of Durtlap’C'Addition to said Village, hounded and described at follows*. . Beginning at a point in the South side of Xenia Avenue at the intersec tion o f the same with the West side of a 16'A foot alley at the Northeast corner of said Lot No. 24; thence with the West side o f said alley South 33 degrees' 15’ East 216 feet six inches to a point in the West side o f said alley and in the center o f a 12 foot alley Southeast comer to Lot No. 36; thence South M degrees West 42 feet 4 inches to a point in the center o f said alley; thence North 35 degrees 10’ West 205 feet 4 inches to a point in the South side o f aforesaid Avenue corner to McMillan Lot; thence with said street N. 44 degrees East 55 feet to’ the place o f beginning. Together with the right to use said alley in common with other property'owners. Being the same premises conveyed to Home Owner’s Loan Corporation by Sheriff’s Deed ‘dated March ‘25, 1941, recorded in Volume 171, page 163,. Greene County Deed Records, Said Premises Located at Xenia Avenue, Cedarville,- Ohio, between Miller and McMillan Streets. Said Premises Appraised at $3,000,-. 00 Three Thousand Dollars. . TERMS OF SALE—Cash, 10 % on day o f sale and balance upon deliver; of Deed. WALTON SPAHR, Sheriff of Greene County, Ohio. Robert H. Wead, Attorney. Aug, 18, 25; Sept. 1, 8, 15. . Eavey’s Fancy Quality Merrlt Extra Standard No. ZCanISc Cupee Brand — No. 2 Can ISc Wisconsin — No, 2 Can 14c; CatofliO* Peas Apricots Cut Beans Merrit Corn C sof , 24 Cans* C eof 24 Cans C to f 24 Cans With the prospects of short crops In gen eral plus the fact that the government will require over 50% of this season’s pack of canned foods, wise housewives will stock their pantries now. We suggest that you come’ In now while our stocks are complete. Remem ber, your Blue Stamps A8 through Z8 and A5 through L5, Book 4, are valid—good for. 10 points each. St. Fronds or Headline Choice. RIpo Halves No. 214 Can 21c Green Glo Brand No Points . No. 2 Can Its Extra Standard Fancy Halves Heavy Syrup Limited, supply No. 2Vi Can 39c APRICOTS *4 .59 Doz Cans 2 No. 2 Cdns2Sc C sof 24-Cans C sof ■24 Cans PORK & BEANS $2 .93 Pintos In Rich Racy Sauce 2 No. 2Va Cans 25c C sof .24 Cans i t oy fij end uilltyand et your Tt ■ t o * * o s! you'll -find that J a Savings go hand In hand «t your Thrift. E Super. Why ' ' 'ey to Shop and Sava Way. not the. PREPARED M US TARD Merrlt Brand Pure BUY MORE WAR . BONDS AND STAMPS KIDNEY BEANS ASPARAGUS c, MAS0N CAPS LEMON JUICE COFFEE COFFEE COFFEE . Moss Rosa Dark Red Milford Cut Green Genuine Ball i Zinc ' Pure. Saves Fuss and Bother HERSHEY'S COCOA J f t j X ' Pan Honor. In Re-U>oblo Mason Jar. Vacuum Packed Eavey's Quality. Vacuum Packed. Regular or Drip dreakfast Mold ■ Ground Fresh For You JU A B A 4 A L A D E OrangeondGrapefruit m m v r n n k n v E No Points N a 2 M l * . NC ° o n ^ 5 « Daz 25e u> 29c 33c 24c *-Lb 14V2C EVAP. MILK ICED TEA FLOUR DUZ OXYDOL CRISCO COOKIES COOKIES COOKIES Green Pastures . Fine Quality Eavey's Special . Blend ■ i Gold Medal S-UBeS2*« Soap Powder SmPfcefftc Soap Powder SmPkaPVic Vegetable Shortening Lb ier 24c ; Pot-o-Gold Ic'd Marshmallow IcedAnlse Kiddles' Favorite Cadet. You'll Like This Ono 3 7 « r 9b 5 7 c Lae 23c Pkg. ■ t-ae 23c ■Pkg ■ s:Lb 67c Jar 115 29c . Lb 29a Lb 29c NAVY BEANS They’re Delicious Baked 1 5 - 3 5 c 8 . 9 c ROYAL ANNE CHERRIES New Pack--Fancy Quality PITTED UNPITTED Np. 21/i 57C Can NO.2>A48c Can GMVEWHTfUKE am e Delicious. Special 46 Ox Low Price Can This Week SMUCKER'S OLD FASHIONED 30 Ox It's Delicious And A Jar Real Thrift " E " Value FACIAL TISSUES Scotties. Fine Quality Jfe> 25 « GROUND FRESH FOR YOU ! MERRIT COFFEE Mild, Sweet Drinking Blind 3 £ 59c Bag Single Pound 21c Pork & Beans No 1 Healthful. Dellclou] Wing Yfi&r fifipty Ju % Vt-du\ Jug P&GSoao iikn_ Cake Limit One Per Customer Cake We Sell the Best Meats in Town e handle only grade A or AA beef and we guar- L i M antee every juicy cut to give complete satisfaction • Sirloin Steaks..........' - ...... 40c Smok d Callies.............. ... 32c Veal Chops................. ... . 40c Bacon—Sliced 40c Veal Steaks................. ......45c Dried B ee f................ ..... ...70c Short R ibs................... ......23c Pork R o ll....................... .. 45c Rot Roasts.......... - .... .... 1.32c Franks 32c... Weiners..... .... 35 Hamberger................ ..... 30c ■ ■ / Swiss Cheese............. . . $ ... 55c ‘ HONEY LOAF Yellow Onions tur"*’ |Q ’6? p Cantaloupes M od ify 49 e-Creamery Butter* 49 c j * i Elberta Peaches - Apricots - Crisp Green Beans i ' I kr Shipped Melons - Home Grown Pascal Celery Apples Oranges Beefs Peas Sweet Potatoes Celery Hearts California. It's Ripe When m It's Green. Jumbo 2-Doz Size Stalk dm V C Large Size Michigan Wealthfeo Sweet and Juicy California Valencias Large fiuhehee Well Filled Pods W i n SAGS ARE SHORT PLiAHiERtNC YOUR fflOPPIHC •f CAC et OTHER CONTAINER, . T i a y i s p a p i r i Vi THE CITT S FINEST COMPLETE FOOD MARKET
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