The Cedarville Herald, Volume 67, Numbers 27-52
I* ’ ■ V ‘ 4 i v , xmxmtxx sura , nmr,mmm it, mi OO O -tO T FACTORY PURCHAM * %jmmvwm c o a t s AN imv 1 f 4 S mwMt. If m K*vf « 1 m we m # n mu MV* you free* $25 to $100 oi» your coet. Q R D GIVE TO THE'WAR CHEST by i L u u m of cfotm I >friM*eSt)4«,la»HngConcert, Bttp—dabls Protaction latHaRabtl Thajr h«T* "•yMj’thf**’'— Mtmrt byAlU*»fOf.Hwilrdl*. lU fr iO ii ( m $gatmwt t»i* n slifN d look*. Itctsiiii AiUfaotiMttrprv^Maduw/tr ■ M^WAntfproetulnguntrtde- fMd>Ui|iiMKdoii.lMk<bi *• Alligator label . ... "tha / bwtoaoMioraiaweer’X * O thers to $ 25.75 i t / c e iiE S h c p * # # # S R H i mntO itvmwm faimHtld, Ohio GIVE TO THE WAR CHEST What about Corn Pickers? Every day. by mail, by telegraph, by telephone, •we are receiving urgent appeals from farmers for McCormick-Deering corn pickers to harvest this year's ‘ crop. With farm labor shortages even-more acute than in 1943, the demand for pickers has skyrocketed. It is many times greater than ever before, greater than our capacity, or the capacity o f the whole industry, to produce. W e have done everything we can to help in this situation. . (1 ) W e have completed production of our 1944 torn picker program, and have done it weeks earlier than ever before. • , \ (2 ) We have actually built 50 % more corn pickers than in any other year o f the Company’s history. (3 ) We have allocated these machines to the corn-growing regions, with govern ment approval, in the fairest way we knew. / , C om pickers are still under rationing, and every corn picker we built has been allotted to" a farmer with a rationing certificate fo r it. They were all sold be fore they left the factory. There is no surplus, no reserve o f machines. • There simply are not enough com pickers to go around in this year o f unprecedented demand. Under the circumstances, what can be done? We can only make one suggestion and that is fo r our farmer friends to fo llow the old helpful- neighborhood tradition o f American farming, a tradition that comes down from the days o f bar-raising and log-rolling. I f farmers will share their machines and share their labor, much can be done to harvest this vital war-time crop o f com . . INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY B& fi F»r Wafer « m I letter Value* Welsh**, Dluiomb, Jewelry, Suite, Radies, Ouitt, Mutteel Instrument*. MONEY TO LOAN OW A nything t f va tu * - - Jest I r f e f It In f SUITS ;wi $0.75 O tt k e ; # 5 W . M a t* I t , Sprln fftetd, O i Pasture and Forage Important This Year | Lime and Fertilizer Boost Crop, Improve Quality The supply o f feed (rains rela tive to livestock and poultry num bers promises to be less favorable In 1944 than it has been fo r several years. As a result, farmers should •plan' to take every possible advan tage of pasture and forage crops in ■order to produce the volume of ‘ dairy and poultry products needed .*this year, according to the War Food administration. Oho of the best ways to increase production of pasturage and forage, and at the same time to improve the quality, the WFA says, is to apply more lime and superphos phate on pasture and hay land. The 1944 conservation wrogram of the Agricultural .Adjustment agency is' designed to stimulate increased pse o f both'these materials. In most of the United States east of the Great Plains, and in some of the higher mountain areas and the areas of heavy rainfall in the Pacific Northwest, the WFA says, it Is necessary to add lime to the soil in order to grow such legume crops -as alfalfa ,-red clover, and sweet clover. The legumes are considered desirable for two reasons. They pro duce heavier crops o f more nutri tious hay than most of the non competition from war crops" has made the legume and grass seed erops problem a serious one. Reserves have gone and it will be necessary to conserve aO present acreage as well as provide in some manner for additional seed. legume grasses. Also, because o f their ability to absorb nitrogen fronts: the air and, through their roots, transfer it to the soil, they increase soil fertility. When superphosphate is used ae top-dressing for pastures and hay land, it enables the more desirable, more nutritious, and .more palatable legumes and grasses to crowd out the poorer varieties. In a num ber of tests, pastures supporting mostly poverty grass and broom- sedge were top-dressed with super phosphate. Kentucky bluegrass end white clover then tended to crowd out the poorer plants. Neither lime nor superphosphate can do the job of the other, nor can both together take the place of other elements of good land management. the WFA warns. But on soils which require both, each adds to the effectiveness of. the other1. . Eight-Year Old Boy Is. Tractor Driver A 13-year-old,boy was seen oper- ting a tractor on his father’s farm in Greene, county, It was his fifth season as a tractor operator, which means he began at the tender age of eight, according to T. L, Davis, University o f Illinois. - The farm consists o f about 100 acres. The boy’B father has been a tenant on it for many years. Father and son comprise the man power. Mother and two sisters do their part. ■The boy takes great pride in his work, and when school is in session he even gets in a few licks, mornings and evenings. The summer vacation gives him a great opportunity for his favorite occupa tion. It is not unusual to see women doing farm work in this county, the farm wives doing a turn. A recent survey showed about 75 o f them in the fields. Fifty boys and girls were also doing field work, many of the boys being less than 12.years old. “ Killing Poison Ivy If the poison ivy plants are •prayed' with a solution of sodium chlorate in the proportion o f one quart o f crystals to thfee gallons of water, the plant will usually die after the first application. If life is still evident, however, a second ap plication may be given in a few weeks. , pood in Brick Form What is said to be the largest ro tary press in the world was Installed at the Boughboy Mills at New Rich mond, Wis., for forming bricks of dehydrated food for th e . civilians freed from Nazi subjugation, The bricks are actually one-half the bulk of dehydrated food, meas uring 6 by 3 by 2 inches. Four cargo planes, loaded with 5,000 pounds each of these bricks, could feed a million for one dfiV; The mill is making 250,000 daily. ‘ ' WATCH REPAIRING H A R R Y M . M O G L E A* Phone 6-2931 West North St. Cedarville, 0 , WtMMlMlIIIIUliMHHIMItimHIIIW-mMIWUMWWRlMllllim iR— r k / / # 452 jfr . - Made his first landing on our shores. For this reason we celebrate each October 12th. The spirit that drove Columbus to the western hemisphere should be the goal for us all in what ever capacity we * ■' * ' 9 i, i' -. ‘ . i' ' •- operate. Our progress must be built on the same principles that gave Columbus the vision and determination to lead his people to greater opportunities and the better things of life. XENIA. OHIO ■..if , ♦ «! /*% '! o * *A' ^ I’M SAYING WASTE PAPER! All over the country wive* and sweethearts are collectingwaste paper. They understand that our fighting men desperately need this critical war material. They aremaking a weeklyhabit of saving old newspapers* boxes* wrap pings. They arenotburningor destroyingwaste paper—they are sending it to makeorWrap more than 700*000 different S A v e 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 shortenthewar! ' * NEXT SCRAP PAPER DRIVE NOV. 13 tTOlHH H€ HE SIXTY -S mm mmm By CLARE MembeJ ■’’He "Battle of wounded Ns * ,ed by eight] ^ o f the Tea ing the meeting at which Presicj his campaign, attention in Wal out the country! Theodore Green I paign InvestigaJ testimony of Tel ses in which the| that the naval ted. Hotel empl<] ent during the-i they were not, is being expres^ tempt o f the the Union spok| names and reptj heroes. (Since the at Green committe| Union a clean Jb Navy men are il see a new bran! New Deal—Edil A careful chi the Senate Invl appointed by V| . who was so ■ Sidney Hillmanl 'Action Commit! the recent Deni vention '.shows "G. ecn of Rh.od«j score o f having o f New Deal 1c the Hillman gJ o f Delaware, a| o f the Commit! one o f such' bill art of Tennessq member, has hearings; all wonderment , and the object| When Monti to obey the or Board. Attorl mediately cal the Company well Avery, Pi| tion, under phi when Jamesf (1 the American] ans; failed to j War Labor to drop his' bai was done abo| recently, whe wrote him a letter 'asking government o| gain.” Petrif dent was a bll his ante-recoij followers. It see whether ney General Petrillo and t| Board ordcir- resefved. onlj poration exec The War government ly up to the deciding whd Formula wilj in the steel ed Industrie! creased, head of the workers the] and wage i| However, tb • the final dec the Preside* Official..Wl Moscow c(»| Minister Cli with great | that Fresic Churchill u| 'g soon af “restingj ^visions enunciated I Vail iipsofa| when that | integrity started, isl ■k SBSweafcya The Dec and the Cl States nref gressionalj play ther« away in a| der heaVj day of Be money wi| bronze at ond floor i them. , Accord! Board ar products,] sheet st« become PNlMMI
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