The Greene County Guardian, March 28, 1957

March 28, 1957 ( the greeme camMijr GUARDIAN REESE NEARLY UNANIMOUS C e d a r v i l l e Two basketballers from Ce­ darville College were elec­ ted to an a l l - s t a r team of the M i d - Oh i o Conference during a meeting of coaches Saturday in Columbus. Coach Jack Willett of Ce­ darville said Pete Reese, a local C e d a r v i l l e lad who scored 431 points inhis fresh­ man year this season, missed a unanimous choice by but a single vote. Lane Moody , diminutive (five-nine) junior guard, was the second Cedarville co l­ l e g i a n named to the all­ conference a g g r e g a t i o n . Moody now had a three-year total of 1,167 points—nearly 400 points a year. Cedarville College wrapped up its cage campaign with eight wins against 15 losses, an improved record for the MARCH 31 DEADLINE PETE REESE . . . Cedarville's owi Stanley Hetzler Leads Area Unit To Stale Stanley Hetzler, Jamestown Route 2, legislative chair­ man of the Greene County Farm Bur eau Co-operative Association, led a c o u n t y contingent to a meeting with state r epr e s ent at i ve s last week to discuss farm legis­ lation. The group l u n c h e d with State Sen. Lowell Fess and Rep. Herman K. Ankeney. Those on hand also included Richard Dabney, Jamestown, Farm Bureau organizational director. Topics included the general appropriation bill, sales tax reform, ditch drainage, wa­ ter and sewer line costs and brucellosis in livestock. Lois Thayer Honored as Jr. Leader Lois Thayer, Cedarville, is one of three Greene County 4-H club junior leaders hon­ ored Saturday at Farm and Home Week on the Ohio State University campus, Colum­ bus. She, a l o ng with Kenneth Davis of Xenia township and Edward Stafford of Beaver­ creek t owns h i p , received Junior Leader Honor Awards and 4-H Club jackets. Ofher awards on the youth program included a diamond pin for Carl Pickering, Sil- vercreek township, who has been a leader in. 4-H Club work for 20 years. Five-year pins went to John Stover of C e d a r v ille township, Mrs. Ernest F r e e ma n of Xenia township and Howard Ash- baugh of Beavercreek. Lambs Must Be Sold Unshorn to Qualify— small school which plays in big company. The l e a g u e mark was 2-10. Wilmington and Defiance College each placed three men on the 10-man all-star squad. Ashland and Findley each placed a single man on the squad while Bluffton and Ohio Northern failed to win a placement on the top 10 list. top m a s Paid-For POULTRY .Need Hens Now ROBERT RHODES S. Charleston HObart 282^1 Delmer L. Bone, manager for the Greene County Agri- c u l t u r a l Stabilization and C o ns e r v ation Committee, states that producers must sell their l amb s unshorn to be eligible for payments under the wool program. "Unshorn l amb s , " for program pur­ poses, means that they have lever been shorn prior to the time of sale by producers. Producers mus t complete the marketing of either wool or lambs not later than March 31 fo r payment eligibility under the 1956program. Unshorn lamb payments are made on a p e r - hund r e d ­ weight basis. Payments made last summer for the 1955 pro­ gram amounted to 77 cents per hundredweight of lambs marketed. Lamb payments are determined on the basis of the shorn wool incentive* payment, the average weight of wool per hundred pounds of 1a mb , and the value of lamb wool in r e l a t i o n to horn wool. He explained t h a t , under wool p r og r am regulations, "completion of marketing" means that the title of wool or 1a m b s must have passed from the seller to the buyer. If it’s S/M/qas IT’S PURE1 (and you get • full weight, too!) Lambs sold between April 1, 1956 and March 31, 1957' are eligible for payments un­ der the 1956 program. These payments will be made this summer when the shorn wool incentive payment becomes known. Applications for pay­ ment under the 1956 program must be filed with County ASC Offices not later than April 30, 1957. Lambs sold after*March 31 will be eligible for payments under t h e 1957 Droffram. which runs from April 1,1957 through March 31, 1958. P a yme n t under the 1956 program will be made this summer when the payment rates are determined on the basis of average prices re­ ceived for wool sold during the 1956 marketing year. Any marketings after March 31 will be e l i g i b l e for 1957 program p a yme n t s to be made in the summer of 1958. Bulk OYSTERS Cedarville Locker Storage Co. _Cgdarville Dial 6-1141 Ope*! Bowling Every afternoon--and Monday, Wednesday, ' Friday. Saturday and Sunday Evenings Community Bowl i Xenia Dial 2-60181, 14 Brands of Soups-Sandwiches Carry-out Service Drait Beer Four exacting tests assure the purity of Skelgas. And Skel- gas is the only gas that has passed all these tests! So it's just good sense to depend on Skelgas . . . the name that made L-P Gas famous. ‘s. THURSDAY — FRIDAY — SATURDAY rjngOpenHous MARCH •28*29*30 EVERYONE FROM BOTH CITY AND RURAL AREAS ARE WELCOME TO OUR OPEN HOUSE SALE F-R-E-E • DOOR PRIZES • GRINDING CERTIFICATES 1-BUSHEL SEED CORN • 1-BALE FARM BUREAU BALER TWINE • 100 GALLONS BULK GASOLINE NUMEROUS OTHER ITEMS Milk and Doughnuts • GRAND PRIZE FREE 1 8 " POWER MOWER Nothing To Buy—Just Come In and Register Reg. Value $94.50 DRAWINGS TO BE HELD SATURDAY, MARCH 30th AT 12 NOON ★ OPEN HOUSE SPECIALS * 20- Gallon GARBAGE CANS $2.75 25-lb. Calfmaker And Calf-Teria Fail $6.75 80 La. BAGS PLANT P E P ___ BUNNY GRASS SEED SHADY GRASS SEED________________ 5-lb. box $3.40 ------------------------------- $3.20 ____________ 5-lb. box $3.50 jJNICO, I remicb , Winter Fountains 88-gal_____ ___ $39.95 Summer Fountains 100-gal. - ______$32.50 Hog Feeders 18-bu....................$57.95 30-bu.________ $69.95 10-QT. GALVANIZED PAILS / “ 60C Garden Rakes $1.75 Cartilube GREASE GUNS $ 2 .8 5 REG. $4.00 SPECIAL____ 2-Gal. Farm Bureau PREMIUM OIL REG. PRICE $ 2.20 SPEC IAL____ $ 1.65 10-Tube Carton GREASE REG. $2.90 SPECIAL___ _ * 2.10 PLAIN SALT BLOCKS 75C • HAND TOOLS • GARDEN TOOLS • POWER LAWN EQUIPMENT EXPERT NURSERY MAN WILL BE IN OUR STORE SATURDAY MORNING (MARCH 30th) 9 A. M. 'TIL NOON BRING YOUR EVERGREEN AND SHRUB PROBLEMS IN FOR FREE ADVICE Free Ground Corncobs for R o bc Beds, Flower Bede, and Mulching World's finest fuel and applianct Hemlock Cafe Jamestown, O. Duke's Appl. AnyoneCanBuy At FarmBureau! J ame s t own Phone 4-8551 GREENE COUNTY FARMBUREAUCO-OPASSN. 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