The Jamestown Journal, Volume 77, Numbers 17-52
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER, 25, 1954 THE JAMESTOWN JOURNAL PAGE SEVEN Greene Co. Farmers Invited To Soil Testing Meeting Greene County farmers are invited to attend a meeting' on soil testing and fertilizer usage at the Court House Assembly Room, Tuesday evening Nov. 30, at 8 p, m. According to County Agent E. A. Drake, the meeting is being planned in cooperation with the county grass land committee to discuss soil testing and the intelligent use of lime and fertilizer. i phosphnte nnd potash needs, They Speakp;s for the evening n ie 1njso completely Identify the soil BOWERSVILLE MRS. CATHERINE HAUGHEY Correspondent *a»t»aaaoa»)i**aaa«aao»a************* Lode: — Bowersville Personals — George Green and Jimmy G a r d n e r o f I t a l y , Texas were guests Thursday night of Mr, and Mis. Dali Henry and sons Larry and Donnie. Mr. Green is a brother of Mrs. Henry. Jack DcMcnL, director of the s o il; type and determine the amount of testing laboratory at Ohio State j orgnnlo mnlter preSent. Tests can University and E. P. Reed, E xtcn -: a,so be secured [or trace elements. sion agronomist. j From, the soil inventory, agrono- Mr. DeMent will tell of the work j mists recommend kinds and a- nt the laboratory, the importance mounts of lime and fertilizers need- of good samples, time of taking ed for specific crops. samples and translating the soil j Farmers who have had soils test- inventory results into lime and j ed are asked to bring their soil fertilizer recommendations. Mr. ( inventory and recommendation Reed will speak on kinds and a- sheets to the meeting next Tues- mounts of fertilizers and liming day evening. materials to meet the rccommenda- Farmers who have not had soli tions. ! tests made are urged by Drake to More than 250 Greene County farmers have had. their soils tested at the state laboratory for lime, attend the meeting and learn why a reliable soil test is so important to profitable crop production. -Australia is Building- World’s Biggest Stadium for Olympics Fletcher, W M Mrs. Herbert Bowcrmaster, of Recsville, Mr. and Mrs. Charles m f l Horney," and Mrs. Harold Cline, of w i m i Pleasant View, Mr. and Mrs. Or- vllle Miller, of Bloomingburg, Ruth Australia is preparing for the 1956 Olympiad with many new construction projects, including the erection of a stadium to seat 120,000 people. A $5 million international village for visiting athletes and team officials is also part of the project. In what is expected to be the biggest Olympiad since the war, the people from "down under” are demonstrating a hospitality of unequalled dimensions. They’re building a complete village of 788 b rick y or concrete houses in 2, 3, 4 or 6 dwelling groups. The vil lage will have Us own bank, post office, medical centers and j other facilities for foreign ath- j letes and their staffs. The organizing committee, backed by the Government of Australia and local municipal ities, are backing the project with typical Australian enthu siasm. Visitors can expect a roaring welcome from the home folks here. Nearly 5,000 athletes and officials will take, part in the games, The traditional Olym pic flame will be flown4 from Olympia to Cairns. Then, run ners will carry the torch 2,750 miles to Melbourne. Queen Eli- ! zabeth is Patron-in-Chief of [the 1056 games. INFUSIONOFFAITH By Edward L. Van Dyke H ang ing up th« telephone, Nelson King settled down heavily In a kitchen chair to pon der over what he just had dona, Il« hadn't Intended to summon young Don Baldwin, instead he'd planned to visit his neighbor, tell him he thought It best that he, Don, did not see bis daughter any more. The Bible beside him, however, bad turned bis hasty fathorly de cision aside, Comfortable In the chair, Nel son King listened to the steady roar of the nearby creek. Then, knowing exactly what bs had to do, he left the house. Poor Janet—what a crisis to her life the flood had brought! Did she beliova Don a coward— or had but one freak and uncon* trollsble fear In the man been unearthed? Before her very eyes, Don Bald win had, Indeed, presented a pa thetic figure that morning. Three men had been nearby when the little Gleason child had fallen Into the rain-swollen stream —Sam Gleason, the father, Don and Mr, King himself, Into the cold reddish water the •light form had disappeared, to bob up again and drift with the swift current Desperately the men had raced along the bank, Hearing the shouting, Janet had hurried from the house, With mixed dread and prldo she had seen Don Baldwin move out on the swaying trunk of a tree, fall en Into the stream. The child was drifting near and Don had but to reach forth a hand to grasp the sodden form. Cringing, he had turned and Bung his arms about the reassur ing body of tha tree, Fast his abject form Gleason had plungOd to maka tha rescue. Later in the day, Nelson King had gone to The Book for comfort "Judge not and ya shall not be fudged; condemn not and ye shall got be condemned," he had read, Tha telephone eall had followed. He was in his little farmhouse office that night when the young man arrived. Tall, erect and clean looking, Don looked almost defiant as he shook hands with the older man. Nelson King saw hie daughter then, hovering uncertainly In the kitchen. And In her eyes her fa ther could sea the same strange defiance, ' "Janet," he asked, "will you do something for me? Go to the poul try house and get that account book of mine. Take a flashlight— the power !s stiff off, you know. No, sit still, Don—lt*a Only a step or two to the rear of the house." The girl had been gone but a short time when the men heard first the deep-throated roar of a farm animal-then a cry from Janet. "Good heavens!" cried Nelson King—" the bull must be loose!" Mr, King saw Baldwin racing toward the abund of Janet's voice. The bull roared menacingly, yet Don did not slacken his speed, un armed though he was, The voice of the middle-aged farmer, strangely calm, roared a command, "Don—you and Janet get back here at once) I’ve the dog and a club—we'll take care of tha bull. Take Janot Into the housel" The older man waited until they were gone, then the rays of his flashlight played on the dark form of the pawing bull. All was well. The two short and powerful ropes by which the bull was confined to a huge tree had held, as ha knew they would. On the damp ground Nelson King sank gratefully to bis knaas. Tha words ha spoke were ad dressed to the faithful farm dog, but ha hoped that God, too, waa listening, "Hex," said he, "It was a risk I had to taka. But It worked—and you and I have reopened the door of faith for two flh# young people. Now there Is no distrust-no fear off fear Hiatt" $76,400,000 In 1954. Of the $6,600,000 increase, according ‘ o Mr. Andrews, about $ 3 , 100,000 is due to growth o f the company and $3,500,000 is the result of changed dividend scales for certain categories of policies. Mr, Andrews pointed out that in dividend payments will vary ac cording to the amount of a parti cular policy, the plan and bene fits, the age at which tire policy was Issued, and the time It has been kept in force. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Spahr of ...................................... . . s , . . . .......... Cedarvllie were Saturday evening; \ 12f'll? dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs, C. JYI.A. A - - D l / I v • • * H, Chitty. LEROY HOLLINGSWORTH • * * | Correspondent Sunday dinner guests of Mr. a n d j ................................................................. Mrs. William George and sons Paul j Mr, and Mrs. Jesse Pickering and and Billy were Mrs. Catherine ; family of Wilmington spent Tues- Haughey and William Gallagher. In i day With Mrs, Lenna Jones, the afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Neil ‘ , • • Pcndry and David were also guests.. , , j Mrs. Ella Morris of near Sabina Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Ballentine and ! spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs, Judy of Germantown spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Roger Haughey and Deborah. * •* » Mr. and Mrs. Herbert .Hargrave and. Joyce entertained to dinner Sunday Mr. ad Mrs. Edward Gahm ' and children and Julia of Williams port, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Cook and Jimmy Denn and Mrs, May Ellis of Jeffersonville, nnd Miss Shirley and Jeanie Mae Clark, were guests Sunday, of Mr, and Mrs. Raper Jones and Ronnie, and Mrs, Lottie Jones, D. A. Powers, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Kyle called on Mr. and Mrs. D, Forrest Strong of New Holland Sunday. • * * Mrs. Nina Vickers and family of Dayton spent the weekend with Mr, and Mi's. Ernest Beal and family. Mr, and Mrs. Charles Walton Jr. and family of Beavertown and Mr. and Mrs. .Robert Beal and family of Port William spent Satur day with Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Beal and family. Mr. and Mrs. Leland Storer and Miss Shirley Storer of near Sabina called on Mrs. Pearl Storer Wednes- venue Service Service, P. O, Box 2119, Cincinnati 1, Ohio, or the Sixth Civil Service Region, Post Office and Courthouse Building, Cincinnati2, Ohio. Applications will be accepted until the needs of the service have been met. (EASY DOES IT " W.T..7WUMWII A VOID meal monotony and make food preparation more fun for yourself with aome of theae simple tricks: Canned fruit can be frozen in the freezing compartment, right In the can. For serving, open both enda of the can and push out tha mixture which will be solid. Slice' and top each alice with whipped cream and coconut for an Inter esting dessert Clove apples are wonderful with ham or pork, or as a dessert. Sim mer quartered apples, with core section removed in sugar and wa- The United States 90,000-ton "super" aircraft carrier "For. rettal," now under construction wOl have what is said to be the largest and strongest anchor chain at any vassal afloat. Each Una will weigh about 360 pounds. ' 1 Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Rudduck Mr. and Mrs. Tom Stear and iday evening, daughter, Marilyn, of South Solon,! Mr. and Mrs. Neil Pcndry and son, j David, spent Sunday evening, with „ „ „ . , _ Mr. and Mrs. Thane Chitty a n d i‘™d fami!- Dayton spent Sun- Roger and Diane, wlth Mr' an Mrs' Chelsea IStoops. * • • j Vaughn. P. Lewis and P.jrlce, • • ♦ Thane Bock and Thane Chitty, at -1 Mr. and Mrs, Ralph Haines call- tended the Michigan-Ohio State j ed on Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hor- Football game, Saturday. ‘ Mell and family of New Burlington * * * !Sunday evening. Mr. nnd Mrs. Roy Jacobs, of ------------•-— ----- - near Yellow Springs, spent Saturday evening with Mr. nnd Mrs, Thane Chitty nnd children, Leesburg, spent Thursday, with Mr. and Mrs. Rollo Chitty and Jane, * Investigators Needed The Internal Revenue Service, Alcohol and Tobacco Tax Division, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Shepley, of Us still In need of Criminal Investi gators, $4205 a year starting rate. The immediate vacancies are in the StateS-of Kentualpri—Virginia, and West Virginia, The appointments will bo permanent after serving one year of probatloli. Those Interested in a career with the Treasury De partment are urged to file, A written test will be required and applicants will also be rated on the basis of their experience and/or education in the fields of criminal investigation, law, police science, and police administration. Full particulars regarding the examination or instructions on where such Information may be obtained can be secured at any Post Office, or from the Executive Secretary, Board of U, S, Civil New York Life To Pay Record 1955 Dividends The Dayton Branch Office of the New York Life Insurance Com pany has been notified that tho company will pay a record high total amount in dividends to Its policy owners in 1955, according tb John J. Audrcws, C.L.U., local man ager. He said the amount to be reserved for dividends to individual life insurance and annuity policy owners in 1955 will bo approxi mately $83,000,000 as compared with j Service Examiners, Internal Re STILL COOKIN'—Ranges operating on boltledl (rural) gas helped feed thousands of cagoans "evacuated” to four suburban forest preserves by Civil Defense au thorities during simulated air a t-jp” tack on nation's second largest city.! NET EFFECT of Mar* Cor* day’s being caught by camera I on Hollywood fishing pier is, well, er , , . you be the judge! i land his mat® exult over new na- Itional birth mark. Their SOwhelps topped former litter 'record for |pedigreed pups by two. RECIPE OF THE WEEK Holiday Wafers ft cup butter 1 cup sugar 2 eggs 4 cups all-purpose flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon cinnamon ‘■w*- ft teaspoon cloves ft teaspoon allspice ft teaspoon nutmeg ft teaspoon salt ft teaspoon vanilla ft cup milk Cream together butter and sugar. Mix In thoroughly the eggs, well beaten, and sifted dry Ingredients, added alter nately with milk and vanilla. Roll and cut In fancy shapes, if desired. Bake In a moderate (375*F.) oven for 10 to 12 min utes. For A SAFE FUTURE Save Now At Cedarville Federal Savings & Loan Association 2 y2% Earnings — O U R S 9TH Y E A R — tar syrup to which cloves have been added. Serve warm with meat, or cold with cream for dea- sert Sweet potatoes era more de licious than you can imagine when they’re mashed and blended with cinnamon. Sprinkle paprika over the top for garnish. Prune Whip takes on a glamor ous look when It’s served In tall glasses. Altemata the prune mix ture with sliced bananas and top with whipped cream, chopped nuta and a maraschino cherry. APPLES Grimes Golden Jonathons Delicious Winesap York Black Twig Banana — PR ICE — $ 1 .0 0 to $ 3 .0 0 per Bu. - C IDER * .5 5 w ith ju g .6 5 w ithout ju g SMITH ORCHARD 7 ml. east of Jamestown on RL 734, then north 1 mile on W. Lancaster Rd. PlanningSomeFarmImprovement? I f it's a bu ild ing jo b— If it’ s a d ra inage or erosion control p ro jec t— If it’s electrification or hom e app liances— N o m a tter what fa rm improvem en t jo b Y o u Under take IFCREDITISNEEDED ASK EARL SKILLINGS S E C R E T A R Y— T R E A SU R E R SPR ING F IELD N A T IO N A L F A R M L O A N A S S ’ N He can fit a FEDERAL LAND BANK LOAN to a wide variety of needs. ., Serving Cham pa ign , C lark and G reene Counties u 1 i < h 4 l i N \ L«J>J><>< H i) * EVERYWASHDAY in an Automatic Clothes Dryer It never rains or snows in an Automatic Clothes Dryer. You can forget washdayweather worries from the day your new clothes dryer is installed- Forget lifting and lugging of heavy clothes baskets, too. You just toss the wet pieces into the automatic dryer, set the diab and in minutes the clothes are ready for ironing or fluffy dry, as you choose, No more hanging out the clothes in a cold rawwind, No more rushing out to rescue partly dried clothes from showers, smoke, soot or broken clotheslines. No more dripping ciothes hanging in basement or attic. Any day you choose to wash—any hour—clothes are dried sunshine sweet, fresh as a breeze, without your taking a step outdoors, Before another washday, And out how easy it is to own an automatic clothes dryer. j - Sold on oasy forms with a small down paymont. Soo your doator or inquirs at any principal offict of this Company. THE DAYTON POWER AND LIGHT COMPANY
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