The Cedarville Herald, Volume 67, Numbers 27-52

CEDARV1LLE HEftALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, m l Evangelistic Services SEPTEMBER 17__OCTOBER 1, 1944 C H U R C H O F G O D CEDARVILLE, OHIO E v a n g e l i s t R e v . A . P . C a i n SPRINGFIELD, OlIIO SERVICES EACH EVENING EXCEPTING SATURDAY AT 7 ;45 6 . ', Your presence, co-operation and help is solicited in this campaign in winning, souls for the Kingdom of God SPECIAL MUSIC AND SINGING Public Sale F a r m M a c h i n e r y I , Located 3 miles South of Bowersville, 9 miles South of James­ town, 7 miles North of Sabina on Zimmerman road, on Fletcher and Zimmerman farm on T h t i r s . S e p t . 2 1 , ’44 At 1:00 P. M. F-20 Farmall Tractor on steel; Corn Cultivator and Breaking plow; Rumley Oil pull Tractor; Rumley 28 inch Threshing Sep- eratorjj Rumley 8 -roll Corn Shredder; Tractor Disc; Dunham Cultipacker; McCornvick-Deering 8 ft. binder; McCormick-Deer. hay loader; John Deere Manure Spreader; McCormick-Deering mower; Thomas 12-7 Wheat Drill; Rubber Tired Wagon; Grain Blower; Grab Fork ;tSteel tired wagon; Power Sheller; Fanning Mill; 7 hog boxes; New Hog Fountain; Hog Feeder; Stock tank; Brooder House and New Brooder Stove; 50 ft. drive belt; and Miscellaneous Articles and some Household Goods. . TERMS OF SALE— -CASH G. E. L it t le Washington Letter (Continued from first 9 * 90 ) has just made a report showing the Federal government has. in operation 20,230 passenger automobiles, ex­ clusive of the War Department; the Navy Department and the Post Ofice Department, In addition mileage is also paid to thousands of government employees -for the use of privately owned automobiles. According to the committee, a conservative estimate of the .total number of miles traveled on .government business at government expense in passenger automobiles a- lone this year will be somewhere he -1 tyveen,three hundred and four hundred million miles, “with accompanying gas­ oline consumption of between 20 and 30 million gallons. Perhaps these fig­ ures, as given by the Senatorial Com­ mittee, explain why gasoline rationing has been so necessary. birds continuously and are small, and gray or yellowish in color and are easily found in the fluff feathers just below the tail of the chicken. Best control for lice is nicotine sulphate painted along the tops of the roosts about 20 minutes before the birds go to roost. The treatment should be repeated in about 10 days. - 7 — Many reports are reaching Wash­ ington to the effect the leading part Sidney Hillman- and his GIO Political Action Committee is taking in the Presidential campaign is not as bene­ ficial to the Roosevelt-Truman ticket as originally anticipated, but instead is causing more conservative elements within the American labor movement to turn against the 4th Term and to support the Dewey-Bricker ’combin­ ation. Then, too, old line organization Democrats are resentful of the way the more- radical Hillman-Browder group has moved in and taken over controLSOffAKeir party machinery in many^neefions of the country. ALONG FARM FRONT (Continued from first page) OWNER Phone 6-1522, Cedarville, O. Weikert and Gordon, Auctioneers Wayne Zimmerman, Clerk. T im o th y s e e d p r o d u c t io n SHORT . This years crop of timothy seed of 1,352,000 bushels is 18 percent less than the 1943 cro pand is 15 percent less than the 1933-42 average annual crop. Yields per acre were better than last year but the acerage was less. This years production plus carryover makes the total supply five percent less than in 1943 but 17 per­ cent greater than the 1939-42 average. HERALDWANT AND SALE ADS PAY - - - ~ A- V ' :V- : : LICE AND MITES - ' REDUCE PRODUCTION I .Poultry lice and mites in the lay­ ing flock may cut production' as much as 30 to 40 percent. Lice live on the T k e re ’s a telephone 111 the li ouse wnere ± am I an connect it Jor me ? I N days of ample telephone facilities, when someone moved; we left the telephone in place so: that it m ight be connected forihenextpersonmovingin. Today it is a different story. There is a serious shortage of the many items which go to make up telephone service, including telephone instruments. Pro­ duction of all telephone equipment was stopped- to enable the manufacturers to go into full war production. As a result, subscribers' unfilled orders are mounting daily. Many persons will he required to do without service for the duration—and longer as the end of the war will not solve our problem. Telephones in Vacant houses or apart* ments must be recovered, and installed elsewhere for someone oil our waiting list. The only fair way is to give every* one service in his proper turn, Every telephone, which is recovered and put back into service, brings your installation closer. Your co-operation in aiding our installers to remove left- in instruments enables us to use all available facilities efficiently. Thanks for your help. f p' 1 ! ^ T f o t c W m ‘S tm d & f& t y t e t o n y f THE O H IO BELL TELEPHONE COM PANY mlM., MINISTERS PUT ON SPOT BY POLITICAL ACTION GROUP crimination into membership in your church? * In your union ?’/ , / " . ■ Will you support a federal ' bill ti provide legal sanction, enforcement provisions, and industry-wide author.. ity for fair employment practice? Social Action— Please describe in as detailed fori as you desire the most significant f things you, or your.church, or your union are doing for economic justice. Information of this type will be es­ pecially useful. Here you have the first steps for I taking the ministry into CIO politics, j ; GOOD PRINTING . . . and Full Value for Your Dollar! RHEUMATISM???. Come to Browns’ Drugs • Cedarville, O. REINER'S K I N O L The medicine ydjlr friends, are all talking about—for .Rheumatism, Arthritis, Neuritis, Liftnbagqs. Feb. 4t, Met fit; iimiiiitiitiMimmiiHMimiiiiiiiMimiiittMiniiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiMij t j | — t-tr-—- — . T-:------ •" j *r I Pipe; Valves and Fittings for f | water, gas ajjjl steam, Hand and | ^ | Electric Pumps for all purposes, I | Bolts. Pulleys, V Belts, Plumbing | $ I and Heating Supplies. ! J. P. ROCKLETT I SUPPLY CO. L XENIA, OHIO imilHIISIIM IItilM M M tM lM HM HM aiimtM M IM SOM M SM lM tlllt • ( iiiiiiaiM m iiiiiiiM iiiM iiiiiiiiiiisM M iiiiM M M m iM iM tim iim itin ' WATCH REPAIRING :: HARRY H. MOGLE j Phone 6-2931 i West North- St., Cednrville, O. OUR PRINT SHOP IS AT YOUR SERVICE . . . There’s a commonly used ex­ pression: “You get just what you pay for.” This applies to PRINTING just the same as 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 i f g ives:the prospective custo- mer the impression that your ■■ * ■ ’« • services or products are not up to standard. We give full value for every dollar you spend with us for PRINTING —and our prices are always FAIR. We Solicit Your Next Printing Order The Cedarville Herald PHONE 6—1711 PRINTING and PUBLISHING SINCE 1877 J M im tim m iiim m u m n iiM iiiu u m u im iiu m im iiiM iM itiu m P I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 I I I I I 1 I I f t i l .......*.• ■ .«>£'. y ^ I’M SAVING WASTE All over die country wives and sweethearts are collecting waste paper. They understand that our fighting men desperately need this critical war material. They are making a weekly habit pf saving SK C M fiF old newspapers, boxes, wrap* f ** pings, Tbeyarenot burning or destroying waste paper —they are sending i t to make or wrap more than 700,000 different. war articles used by our armies. Do your part along with these patriotic * women. Get your clubs, civic'and church groups behind this movement. Collect waste paper-bundle it—and turn it in * .. and help * shorten the war! A •H E R E 'S -HOW / ............. .. SAVE NEWSPAPERS/ TIE.IMFIAT BUNDIEStit • • • SAVE WASTE PAPER! * 1 • • • • • • • • • • • « « INCHEStUCH m u . ^ COfifiijOAIEDPAPER, iMICT! WPEfiSCRAPS SMEMA 6 AZIME 6 LUMU w Jt’A V f i m i l L W A T T E P A P E R ••Vw* -wo***aw-- •v S I C( 1 T ! . -r 1 . . ex hai 3tt <4 i has ! ai sh‘>v mail my dun hj ■ civil enn as c. ers < than mitt ernn i nt i lov tile ! « past e i go VC sto r E*. . nuni L 011 usini urpe­ no rncn nor.- 1 gem hair '/ fill tcm| with • N( on 1 ) still ay has i time ■plusi arc i. the ) ning ernn askh of a port fort pres Farri; this \ high and, even The thre drou ■wlie: cord a ca whe .of-.ti Adn suec proc . lot.n rest’ time cstii tie i lots 20 t catti all 1 enco natii ante ic fe ity whi( supj In t. not duct abo' T- * begi equi war are • mil* be 1 *War be • tra 4 ligh stai cilit far< iiici titi. fre elc mu Elc tra SW' gre leg tio toi to Go pir to mo tlu- Pr vc cn elc res po rc. by th ve I CE /ASTE MW MlitBA iOXES i

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