Newspaper Page Text
'7?r9vn!P9Fn' v r PERRYSBURG JOURNALi VOL. LXV-ED, 1. BLUE, Publisher. - PEERYBBnE&, WOOD 00., 0. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1917. $1.60 m ADVAHOE-HO. 30 REP CROSS WORK AGRICULTURAL NOTES PEnnsBUHG elevator BIG PATRIOTIC CELEBRATION I W"pTl1 - , Tt? ;" V Perrysburg Women Working Like Beavors for tho Glorious Cause. Red. Cross work in Porrysburg is not allowed to lag behind, but is constantly kept at tho head of tho procession. There were tf3 wompn present at the Red Cross meeting last. Friday afternoon and, the manner in which everybody worked indicated that there is'no danger of Porrysburg women failing in their duty to the men who are supporting Old Glory. Mrs. Greeuhalgh, as director general of Red Cross work, had charge of the business meeting and made several appointments as fol lows : General Chairman Mrs. W. S. Walbridge. Work Committee Mrs. Mawor. Secretary Mrs. II. E. Bcrning. Treasurer, Supply and Distrib uting Committee Mrs. C. L. Muddy. f Xmas Boxes Miss Cora Knerr. There will bo a business meeting he first Friday of each month. The above named ladies, as chairmen of their committees, are expected to be able to report progress of the work in their departments. Mi's. .Greeuhalgh expects to go south with the Colonel as soon as the battery leaves for camp. Dur ing her absence Mrs. Walbridge will act as the general chairman of tJie meetings. It. is greatly desired that as soon as a Porrysburg man is summoned for service that he will notify the Red Cross Society in Perrvsburc so that the usual outfit may be pro vided. Tho women are planning on pro viding every one of the selected Borneo men with gifts. This, how ever, refers to the men from tho village. The good women of the township will see to it that the township boys are also provided. A very much interested group of young women met at the rooms last Friday night and were very busy making sweaters and socks for the boys of tile Second Field Artillery. Mrs. Emma Simpler and Mrs. Lilly of Toledo were callers at tho Red Cross meeting last Friday and wero delighted with the splendid work the Porrysburg women arc doing. Mrs. Mawer, Mrs. Sawyer an Mrs. Thornton recently visited Red Cross headquarters in Toledo. At the Red Cross meeting held . for the ladies who cannot attend afternoon meetings the following officers were elected : Marie Mungcr, chairman; Madc lyn Yoager, secretary; Ila Blinn, treasurer. All are welcome at meetings to be held Monday evening. EMBALMER AND FUNERAL DIRECTOR No Extra Charge for Auto Service. Credit Extended if Desired. ' AUTO AMBULANCE SERVICE. Both Phones Main 1. Perrysburg, Ohio. R. P. BARTON, tJNDERTAKER CPERBYSBUBB,JiH0 iones Main Twenty-seven AMBULANCE SERVICE NO EXTRA CHARGE JOHN ZURFLUH PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER Dealer In Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Spectacles. 90G Monroe &f Toledo, Ohio. Near Michigan Street. Special enro wiW bo taken with the repair of all kinds t.f Watches, Clocks and Jewelry. DR. B. KINSLEY ; D 1 JSTT I s rp Office Hours 8 to 11 a.m.; 1 to 5 p.m. Offlco upstairs corner Second ana mum aumw, PERRYSBURG, OHIO. PbM Mil 14 Services for Next Sunday in Several Perryaburg Churclioa. ZOAR LUTHERAN CHURCH. P. Klucpfel, Pastor. Sunday, September 16th : Sunday School at' 9:00. Public worship at 10 :00. Luther League at 7 :30. Bible School every Saturday at 9:00. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH. Rev. Daniel Carter, Pastor. Services Sunday, September 1G : Sunday School, 9 :00 a. m. Public worship, 10 :30 a. m. Public worship, 7 :00 p. m. Epworth League, G :00 p. m. The pastor's morning theme will be "A Forward Look and. a For ward Reach." In the evening he will preach on "Getting Right With God." A new conference year opens ; a new program begins. May our first service have a large attend ance of members aiul -friends of the church. lie loves his 'Divine Lord best, who' loves his brethren, the church, and the work of the Kingdom; and expresses that love in faithful service. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Rev. W. II. Pliclcy, Minister. Services for Sunday, September 10th : For a full Sabbath in the church begin with the Sunday School at 9 :30 a. m. The lesson is of great interest to all. Subject, "The Fiery Furnace." Daniel 3:lG-27. AY. II. Roose. superintendent. At this time of year every Sunday is Rally Day. There is a place and a warm welcome for everybody. Morning worship and sermon at 10 :30. Dr. Pheley will preach on the subject, "The Christian and the Other Cheek," a topic for to day. In 'the evening at 7:30 the choir will give a song service under direction of Prof. W. A. Zapfe of Toledo, choir master. Dr. Pheley will have a short message in harmony with tho inspiring (Continued on 'Eighth Page.) Experience the Best Teacher. It is generally admitted that ex perience is the best teacher, but should we not make use of the experi ence of others as well as our own? The experience of a thousand persons is more to he depended upon than that of one individual. Many thousands of persons have used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for coughs and colds with the best results, which shows it to be a thoroughly reliable prepara tion for those diseases. Try it. It is prompt and effectual and pleasant to take. FOR AUTO SERVICE T.J. SULLIVAN DENTIST Henfling Bldg. 810 Conant St. MAUMEE, OHIO ' Reasonable Prices and Best Work Guaranteed. Office 'hours 8 to 12 a. m. and 1 to 5 p. m. Bell Phone FREDERICK C. AVER1LL ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR-AT-LAW 818 Spitzcr Building, TOLEDO, OHIO. Homo Phono 1428. Prepared for tho Journal by Ohio Experiment Station, Fall spraying after the loaves of fruit trees have dropped may be substituted for the usual "dormant spraying, and orchardists will thus overcome the difficulties in hand ling freight and obtaining labor in the spring. San Jose scale unless extremely bad can be controlled practically us well by fall , oper ations As by deferring the work until spring, according to ento mologists of the Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station. Heavy spray tanks are much more easily hauled over firm ground in the fall than over soft ground in the spring. Men and teams are more available for doing the work in fall than when the rush of spring work is on. Also the application of such a spray as limc-surphur solution or a miscible oil to orchard trees confers con siderable immunity from attacks by meadow mice and rabbits dur ing the winter. Insecticides and any required machinery should be ordered now for this November spray. Loose smut, which was common in some Ohio wheatficlds this year, may be prevented in the next crop by hot-water treatment of seed wheat. The directions given by tho Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station for this treatment are as follows : Soak the seed wheat for four to sjx hours at ordinary temperature. After the sack or basket of seed has drained, plunge it into a tub of water at a temperature slightly be low 130 F. and after a minute or two into another tub at exactly this temperature. The grain should be kept in the water for 10 minutes and stirred occasionally to maintain uniform temperature. The first tub is used to bring the grain up close to the temperature of tho water in the second tub. If lots of less than half a bushel are handled, the grain may be brought more quickly and uniformly to the required temperature. This treatment also kills scab, stinking smut and anthracnose if present in seed wheat. If loose smut is absent these other diseases can more conveniently be prevent ed in the next crop by sprinkling the grain with formalin (a pint to 40 gallons of water). Screenings are frequently carriers of disease and should he used for feed. Loose smut is often overlooked because it appears at blossoming, while the other diseases are evi dent after the grain has formed. SCHOOjJOTES Items Concerning Various Depart ments of the Public Schools In spite of the unusual war con ditions, there has been a decided increase in the attendance of thet Perrysburg public schools, and especially in the high school, which alone has an enrollment of 81 as against 65 during last year. The total enrollment is 445, which will be increased as some who are still absent because of illness and other reasons will soon return to school. Dedication. Every citizen of Perrysburg ought to attend thc dedication of thc new school addition, Monday night, September 17th, at 8:00 p. m. Tho program will bo held in tho auditorium, but the new high school will be opened early in the evening so thc public may in spect, it. The address will be de livered by tho Hon. P. B. Pearson, (Continued on Eighth Page.) NEW LUtfE TO FT. WAYNE. Tho Henry L. Doherty Co. is planning an electric road from To ledo to Ft. Wayne that will enter a country hitherto untapped by tho electric lines. Tho road will run through Wntervillc, Grand Rapids, Napo leon, Defiance and other cities and open Toledo as anow market to many farmers along its route. While the plnns are still only in contemplation, engineers havo looked over tho grounds for thc proposed road, Many Improvements that will Greatly Increase Efficiency. When tho imnrovemnnts that are now under way in tho Perrysburg Grain & Seed company's elevator atthisnlaco nro comnloted thorn' at ins place arc completed, there will bo no elevator of its size in Northwestern Ohio that will be better equipped to handle the bus- iness. The Directors of thc company vorv wisnlv nlnnnnrl f.1, immvw- w- ,j ..--.wj - a. wv vw M m III v ments and the Manager, Mr. Thomas Roethcr, who has had 21 year's experience in the business, ' was just the man to take charge of i I tQV , . 'I Among, the improvements are new boiler and engine, thus increas- ing the working force by a large per cent. The new "leg" with 7xlG inch buckets give a carrying capacity of of"3,000 bushels per hour. New corn cleaner and a new wheat cleaner are also added and a track scale of 100 tons capacity has been established. Concrete floors have been placed in all the tanks, as well as in the elevator. The wagon scale has been mov ed to a more convenient place. The workmen are now busy con structing a new feed house and office building which will be 22xG0 feet and will furnish ampje room for the large stock of feed that will always be carried and give a new and up-to date office. The Perrysburg Grain & Seed company propose to keep strictly up to the minute in everything that will add to tho business and assure a first-class market for the pro ducts of the farms in this vicinity. The Manager, Mr.Thos. Raether having had over two score years experience in handling grain and managing Toledo elevators is espec ially well calculated to look after the interests of the patrons of this elevator and the stockholders of the company, who are chiefly farmers of the vicinity, may know for a certainty that nothing will bo lack ing in the management of the ele vator to make the business success ful and creditable to the community and the men who have put their money into the enterprise. LAST SUNDAY'S GAME. PerrysbiiKg defeated the Jewels of Toledo by the score of eight to three. The game was moi'o inter esting than the score indicates. Perrysburg was leading three to northing until the eighth when a walk and a hit followed by two errors allowed the Jewels to tie the score. But in our half, with five hits and thc help of two errors, we ran in live runs, which was plenty. Thc visitors could not find Welch. Thc features of the game were Welch striking out 19 men, and the heavy clubbing of Harper and Welch, getting seven hits between them. Cheapest accident insurance Dr. Thomas' Eclectic Oil. For burns, scalds, cuts nnd emergencies. All druggists sell it. 30c and COc. DIED IN PITTSBURGH. Mr. Orlando E. Robinson of To ledo died on Friday, September 7, 1917, at Pittsburgh, Pa. Tho body was brought to Toledo on Saturday and the funeral held at tho home of Dr. W. II. Rhcin- l'rank in Perrysburg on Tuesday, September 11. Mr. Robinson was thc father of Mrs. W. II. Rheinfrank of Perrys burg and had many friends hero who regret his departure Great Faith in Chamberlain's Colic . and Diarrhoea Remedy. "Chamberlain's Colic and Diarrhoea Remedy was used by my father about a year ago when ho had diarrhoea. It relieved him immediately and by tak ing three doses ho was absolutely cured. Ho has great faith in this rem edy," writes Mrs. W. II. Williams, Stanley, N. Y. Maumee Valley XVUU53 W V Wl U UU XVia,JtJ UCLTeSS. ,, ...,. , , , .l'y effort ,s bci"& madc bv those in charge of thc big patriotic demonstration to be licld Saturday in commemoration of Perry's vie- tory and as.a farewell to thc sol- diers of Maumee Valley, to induce tne lormer president to come here, . ,,ii;t:,, r,.i T?r.n..n- tt t t v r - - r, """". '" "u'.u' S. Senators Warren G. ITllVfllllir and Atlee Pomerene and William Allen Smith of Michigan ; Con- grcssmen Sherwood nnd Over- Jli J . 1uovoor H"ey oi Kentliekv. linvn norm jiKlrnd in speak. " The demonstration will mark thc annual celebration of the Maumee Valley Pioneer and Historical So ciety, Hacked ly the Toledo Lorn- liierce club, Transportation club, Automobile club, and other civic organizations. It is planned to make the affair the greatest patriotic demonstra tion ever witnessed in northwest ern Ohio. All enlisted and drafted men in thc Maumee Valley who do not go to army camps before Saturday will be invited to attend. Col. Howard, commander of the Sixth regiment, said Monday he would have his entire regiment out. Most American war, northwestern Ohio of the Second regiment also will imihes will have this opportunity come. Tho Rail-Light, interurban oi" bidding good-bye to the 1,000 lines and the Toledo Automobile Sammies now under arms at To club will see that they are trans- ,ed() !Ulcl Bowling Green as well as ported to the grounds. ,hc 2000 other young men of this Although the exact hour has not vicinity soon to bo soldiers in tho been selected, the affair will be National army, started early. Besides the addresses, the enter- Judge John II. Doyle, chairman taimncnt committee has provided of the speaker's committee, at the for music from three to four meeting Saturday afternoon at bands, including thc Sixth Regi which plans for the demonstration ment Rossford, Overland and were mapped out, said: Bowling Green bands. "The United States is at war Police protection will be ade war for a principle. Wo have a quatcly taken care of by Director treacherous element that must be of Safety John C. Newton of To stamped out. We can't have too ledo, and Sheriff Gus Skibbie of many pratiotic demonstrations. Bowling Green, members of tho That's what makes the people Grounds Committee, understand we're in war and that Military units will stage a big we're there to stay until victory is demonstration featuring riding by our reward." tho mounted scouts, first aid drill This will be a combined demon- by tho ambulance company, artil station pv all the people of the val- lery evolutions by Batteries B and ley to supplement the usual annnal E, and infantry drill by tho 6th meeting and picnic. On this oc- Regiment units. LIFE BURNED OUT. While engaged at his work in the yards of the Big 4 Coal Com pany at. Toledo, Mr. William Gil der of Perrysburg lost his life by being electrocuted when he came in contact with a live wire while oper ating the loading device. Death resulted instantly. Deceased was 30 years of age. Ho rsEsvft Build Up Your Bank Account Take time by tho forelock. Don't be satisfied with a small balance in bank. Deposit every dollar that you don't require for your actual needs. Money is safer in the bank than in your pocket or in.your home. 'You'll be more loath to draw a check than spend the cash. See us about an account. We do all kinds of banking. Make OUR bank YOUR bank. We pay 4 per cent interest on Certificates of Deposit. hj? Ktifertt0 lanimtg Qfatttpatuj PERRYSBURG, OHIO. THIS OLDEST J1A.NK IN WOOD COUNTY Pioneers Invite , . . cnsiou thc Public will bo tho hosts; thc soldiers tho guests of honor." There will bo 1,000 soldiers in uniform, 2,000 of thc selected men, or "soldiers of the National army." mi. c:..j.i. ...i n .t oiui uiiu ocuoilU regiments 1111(1 fllO TCllt ntnna llnilnn nnnminnil of Col. Greeuhalgh will bo present. Picnic lunches will bo furnished free to all soldiers, and frco coffee win ue served.- Kvnvr Imniim Every business house in Perrys burg should be decorated and clos ed at noon. Every family in the Maumco Valley should feel an obligation to attend thc soldiers' and selected men 's field day at Ft. Meigs, Sat urday, September 15th. This was the appeal sent out by the executive committee composed of representative men from Bowl ing Green, Perrysburg, Toledo and other towns and cities along the Maumee river, following a meet ing of the Toledo Commcrco club Tuesday noon. On historical ground conse crated to the memories of a former leaves a wife (formerly Miss Louise Wicbeck of Perrysburg), with two children, a boy 5 and a girl 1 year of age. Funeral services wero held on Monday at tho residence, Rov. Humfeldt officiating. Mrs. Gilder was a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Wiobeck, formerly of Perrysburg, and they have many friends who extend sym pathy to thc bereaved family. & 4flKlBatoi.4toaj.-.-y.-,. ...,.'.