The Cedarville Herald, Volume 69, Numbers 27-52
d a u t w m a m t s , F riday , a ' ugust *, w b m B A C K AGA IN , BIGGER THAN EVER! AUGUST 24th-30fh COLUMBUS, OHIO GIGANTIC PARADE OF OHIO'S RESOURCES IN AGRICULTURE. HORTI CULTURE, LIVESTOCK. I INDUSTRY . EDUCA T IO N . FINE ARTS l WORLDOFHIGH-GRADE i f 1 '. 'i V , 1) MIGHTtND v - «V.y, j|S|. A. .4- WORLDS greatest ■- E ENTERTAINMENT DAY This year spend several days at the Ohio State Fair, Something doing every minute, day and night, lor every member of the family. Thrilling harness, races, gigantic Grandstand spectacle, exciting outdoor acts. World's largest Junior Fair; America's greatest Farm Machinery Show. j UHNM HOOSON Director ol Aqnculfure ft. P SANDIES Manage' OPENS NEW "SERVANTS’ ENTRANCES’* Admits Light and Power where you need them » e • Whether you plan to live in your present .home for some time to come, or to put It on the market, modernization including Adequate Wiring It a good Investment. Adequate Wiring no t only increases the value of your property— it makes your home more convenient, more livable, Think what it would mean to have correctly placed mod ern lighting equipment for every activity, for every room! Plenty o l convenience outlets for eye-saving lamps. . . fo r comfort appliances such as fans, heaters, electric blankets..« connections fo r radios and fo r all the appliances available now end in dle future! Every convenience outlet is * "Servants* Entrance" to permit low cost electric power to help yon with more and more household tasks. Make more use of this willing helper to save your time and strength as hew electrical appliances become available. Adequate wiring means better living. V H I D A Y T O N P O W I R a # A M D L I G H T C DAM Y »...............................................I' .- 1 r r m m » A P * 6 \) ia ' UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL S UNDAY I c h o o l Lesson _ By HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST. D. D. Of Thu Moody Bible Institute of Chicoso. Released by Western Newspaper Union. .1 .......J.l . ' Lesson for August 11 . Lesson .. lected and Council o( permlHlon. subject* and Scripture texts ae- i copyrighted by International of Religious Education; used by ui JESUS AND HOME RELATIONSHIPS * LESSON TEXT—Exodus 30:12; Mark 7:8-13; Luke 2:91, 92: Ephesians 9:1-4. MEMORY SELECTION—Honor thy fa ther and thy mother: th a t thy days may be long upon the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee__Exodus 20;12. Home—that place so dear to the heart of each one of us—is even more precious in the sight of God. He is. concerned about our homes and those who live in them. Right relationship between chil dren and parents have much to do With the peace and prosperity of a community and a nation. Experi ence hag demonstrated that to be true, but even more basic is the fact that it is in accord with the premise of God. One of the sad breakdowns in modern life is that of proper honor and obedience to parents by chil dren. In all too many homes God’s Order has been reversed and in stead of honoring and obeying their parents, children (both young and old) have taken the place of "boss,” and mother and father must obey if.they want.peace and rest. The problem of juvenile delin quency, or perhaps we should say nfbre correctly, parental delinquen cy, is right on our doorsteps now. That means that the-need for our lesson is both great and acute. The future happiness of hundreds of thousands of children and the pres ent welfare of .thousands of neglect ed and boss-ridden parents will de pend on the intelligence and faith fulness with which this . lesson is taught in our churches, and the hon esty of heart with which we all re ceive its truth. I.. The Responsibility Stated (Exod. 20:12). “Honor thy father and thy moth er”—how good, and substantial; and right those words sound. We are told by, Paul that this is the "first commandment with prom ise” (Eph. 6:1-3), The Lord was not making a bargain with, man, or seeking to draw out obedience by a prize, but there is obviously a great reward in the observing of this' com mandment. Then too as the children of God (if- we are such) through Jesus Christy the first and mostNmportant consideration to come before us is, What is the 'mind and will of the Maker of us all regarding this mat ter of the relationship between par ents and children? His words are plain: we are to "honor” our fa thers and our mothers. The word “honor” carries .with it a great many things, but per haps the three outstanding elements' a r t respect, obedience and affection. But men do not wish to follow God’s direction, so we see next ' . II. The Responsibility • Evaded (/dark 7:9-13). ' Such an important commandment naturally held a high place in the thinking of the community. To vio late it involved a measure of shame which men sought to avoid. So the Jews of Christ’s day devised a scheme which made it possible for a man to appear to be very religious even as he deprived his parents of the .honor and help to which they were entitled by the law of God. The man who did not wish to sup port his aged and needy parents could entirely evade that God-given responsibility by declaring that his property was "Corban” ; that is, dedicated by a vow to God. There after no matter how great was the need of his parents they could re ceive nothing, and yet he could keep it and use it for himself. Thus do men make “ the word of God of none effect” (v. 13) through their traditions. The method differs but the Bpirit persists even in our day. Jesus made short work of such trickery and evasion, He declared their man-made -creeds and tradi- tlbns to be simply a means of mak ing the command of God of none effect'.*Once more he condemns that formal religious observance which serves as a cloak for sin and selfishness. . HI. The Responsibility Fulfilled (Luke 2:51-52; Eph. 6:1-4), The manner .inr which children should be obedient to their parents and honor them in the home is beau* tifiully exemplified in the life of our Lord, living as a boy in Nazareth, I n the home the growing youth finds the best place for normal, well- rounded development (V. 52). There is no substitute for the home. X The words of the Holy Spirit through Paul in Ephesians 6:1-4 stress the same truth and enlarge upon it. Thifc matter of honoring and obey ing parents “Is right,” says Paul. :-It is the Lord’s way, but it is also ' that which commends itself to eV- | ery right-thinking* person. I There is tremendcAly. important truth" on the other frae. of the pic ture. Parents are no t'to provoke their children to anger, to dlsre- ; speot or disobedience. May God help us who are parents that we may take to heart this part of our lesson. Our children are our most valuable possession, WANTED! Full time or part time laborers. Handy men. Welders, A carpenter. Blacksmiths, first elo!ss , Machinists and helpers. UNIVERSAL ATLAS CEMENT COMPANY, OSBORN, OHIO ALONGFARMFRONT*put^n* °»a ,i|we on*od» the farmer a better chance to make the Rapid Growth Needed For Better Result* j 1 Fast Feathering Chicks Cut Down Feed Bills By W. J . DRYDEN 'Efficient, rapid growth is best measured by the weight of the bird at an early age. Studies* of the USOA on the growth of cockerels have indicated that the greatest variability occurs between 3 and 6 weeks of age, if a good d iet.is fed and the cockerels have access to di rect sunlight and the equivalent of, free range. This is the best period ‘ (Continued from page one) APPLY LIME NOW— Farmers woud do well to make lime applications on sod instead of immed iately precede the planting of corn or wheat. Legume seedings will get more benefit when applications are made further ahead of seeding, and application during slack work periods. Damage -to standing hay or ice-cover ed ground are the only conditions pre venting applying lime on sod a t any time of year, SOILS NEED MORE ORGANIC MATTER— Wartime food production has caused a marked depletion of soil fertility. The decrease in organic matter in !crop land is one of the most serious defects in our wartime cropping ays- tern.. Farmers are urged by soils men to follow some sort of rotation which In cludes meadow and pasture crops in sufficient, amounts to maintain organ ic matter in the soil. Organic matter helps keep soil in good tilth, permits water and air to enter the soil more easliy and increases water holding ca pacity. Twelve-day-old New Hampshire chicks show fast feathering, left, and slow feathering, right. in which to make accurate selection of the most efficient birds by their body weights. At this age, Dr. Charles W. Knox of. the USDA says there are maximum differences in weight between the slowest grow ing, the average, and the fastest growing individuals. The lesson from these experiments would in dicate that culling should sta rt when the chicks are still in the brooder stage; As Professor Rjce once said —a real poultryman has the eye to cull and the heart to discard. Cull ing is an art of Optiscan—the a rt to see and the will to”discard. Know Your Breed . Aberdeen Angus By W. J . DRYDEN History of the Aberdeen-Angus breed in the United States dates | back to the importation in 1850 of * cow named "Dutchess” from Port- * lethen, Scotland: There is fib’ rec ord of any present off-springs from this cow. In 1873, George Grant, & MM Need New T ire s? Remember Th is: the New B. F.GOODRICH SILVERTOWN OUTWEARS PREWAR TIRES Earlier Delivery If You See Us NOW I 70 Elgon of Sunbeam* excellent type of AberdeemAngus bull. Victoria,. Kans., imported a t least three bulls and ran them with com mon stock. This was .really ihe foun dation of the present breed in America, although many importa tions have been made since that time. " T h e Aberdeen-Angus are .bred and raised almost exclusively for beef, although some strains are fairly good milkers. Thev hold an envi able record in the feed lo.t and as fat slaughter cattle; Shipments o f the new B.F. Goodrich Silvertown are arriving, regularly, and wc may have your size. , But there’s more demand for some tire brands than others, and the big extra- demand is, for Silvertown, the tire that outwears prewar tires — even at high speeds. *, There's a reason! The B. F. Goodrich Silvertown is a better tire. It gives extra miles of service .because Litlen to-the mew B. F. Goodrich radio (iwi "Detect and Collect ' its new tread design is wider, flatter and' puts more rubber on the road. More and stronger cords support this tread—-give it extra re sistance to bruising and blow outs. ,That’s why we say, if you need new tires now-— or will soon — come in-today. Order now for earliest delivery. - Convenient Terms on Our Thrifty Budget Plan with Lew Lebr es M. C. on ABC network. Tburttlav evenini. i 5 Plus Tax i.0(M4 Fleet - W ing Station, Phone • 6.1000 CHARLES HICKMAN Xenia Ave. GOOD PRINTING . . . and Full Value for Your Dollar! Control Corn Earworm By Proper Treatment In order to prevent corn-earworm Cornell has found that an inexpen sive medicinal type of mineral oil, heavy grade, will prove satisfac tory. The ears should be treated after the silk has started to turn brown a t the tip, from three to five .. days r ailk first appears. Apply the oil with an ordinary medicine dropper, Fill half full, 4* about 20 drops, for small ears, and three-fourths full for large ears. In- ;; ■art the dropper into 'the silk just .. inside.tha tip of the husk as shown. ;; The oil penetrates the silk “chan- .. nel" and kills the yourig worme ae ;; they enter. DDT May Not Always Be Dangerous to Bees Latest findings indicate' that DDT may not be as fatal to bees as was formerly believed. It is true that if the hives are sprayed with DDT the bees .will die. Tests a t Michigan showed that bees in orchards which had been-sprayed did as well as bees in an orchard where DDT was. not applied. It was found in Cali fornia tests that DDT proved no more harmful to beet than other sprays. We Pay $5*00 for HORSES $3.00 for COWS According to size and condition Small animals removed promptly FARM BUREAU GOOF AS3N. call collect. Xenia 756 ; Dayton-Kemnor* ft?4S OUR PRINT ft SHOP IS AT YOUR SERV ICE . . . 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 he produced at a poor price. ■* ■ «■ Poor Printing even at a low price is expensive, because it gjyes 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. W e Solicit Your Next Printing Order The Cedarville Herald PHONE 6—4711 PRINTING and PUBLISHING SINCE1877- j U n i 11 in n i t t t i 'H f r iH t ril 11§
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