The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52
I ~ f»B*.’BerjWMj'■» 'i■■«"•. ... ..--•'uMMi PROCRASTINATION’ Is tlie tliief of time, and time is the thief that takes your money and does not give you value received. Here’s how it’s done. Ladies Button Shoes, Cash Price . 88cts..........................................................................Time Price. Ladies Kid Button Shoes, *• “ $ 1.50................ . . . . . ................................. ......... ■Boy*. Stnga Boots . M “ 1.00.......... ............................................................... . Mens Stoga Boots . “ 1.50............................. ........... ................... , , ............. “ 2 .75 ........... .................................... ............................. “ 2 . 7 5 . - . . . . , . . . . . . . , ; , . . . . , . . . . ...... ...................... . “ 12,00. ^ ,«, ’. , . . . . Mens Best Rubber Boots Mens Overcoats Mens Fine Overcoats Mens Fine Suits ■<; it ** a it <• (i tt r. .% 1.25 1.90 125 2.00 3.25 3.50 16.00 15.00 We continue to offer cash buyers every inducement's to prices, and challenge any competition. Special Bargain Day Monday. STEWART 8s McCORKELL. AX INDKPKNDIKST WKKKI.Y NICWSI’ ACEJl. SATURDAY , NOV. 8, 1890 W. n . B L A I R , E d ito r and P r o p 'r PRICE $ 1.20 PER ANNUM. K n itter* A t t e n t i o n ! . Buy your loaded shells at Binn's, PLUS1I CLOAKS. "Ladies, we will sell you Blush Cloaks on weekly payments at jiiuoV Don’t forget that on Monday, Tues day and Wednesday, November 10th, lltlia iu l 12th, there will be a grand sacrifice sale o f dry goods, clothing, underwear, boots and shoes. Now is your opportunity. You can’ t afford to miss this sale as you will save from 25 to 113^ per cent, on every dol lar’s worth o f goods purchased!tit 'B ird ' s M ammoth S tork . Wo have burdtotl the..combination on leather goods, and now soil ladies shoes at 75 emits per pair, also Mil waukee grain bools at $3.00 that can not be bought for less than $1.00 at any other-place; .. ,1 E L owry . F o r $ a l e ! 250 shocks ofcorn suitable for feed ing cattle, flood place to feed . Call at once at Big.Spring Mills W M llAKnisos' FiNtlt I'lB ll! Fresh lake white, cat, pickerel and herring-. Next door to the buna. P bgoy L awson . Hawthorue Family Next Monday Night Peanut social Thursday night. Mrs. Oscar Spahr, o f Xenia, is the I guest o f her. parents this week. Chas. Ervin went to Cincinnati, on business, this week. The “ Y ’s” hold a special this afternoon at 3 o'clock. meeting ..> * Reserved seats for the Hawthorne family are selling rapidly. Secure one before they are all taken. A t Stormont & C-o.’s. Mrs. Miller and Master Eugene, Illinois, are the guests o f friends Cedarville. ... • o f in Fountain Townsley, who has been making his home in Chicago, returned to Cedarville last Monday. Farmers, do you want to give no tice that your farm is posted? I f so, hsmd in your name and ten cents to this office. On Monday evening Mr. and Mrs. Will C'rcswcll entertained quite a number o f their friends in honor of their brother, Andrew and wife, and i their cousins Mr. and Mrs. Jamison, o f Zanesville, Ohio. Ed Smith attended a meeting o f the local board o f the Southern Building and Loan association, at Xenia, Wed nesday, the state agent being pres ent. About three hundred shares o f stock was subscribed. The ‘ ‘ Y V ’ fiave at last taken defi nite steps towards establishing a circu lating library and reading room here. The library committee met Tuesday and divided the town and township into districts and appointed a canvasser for each district, who will wait upon every citizen and give them an oppor tunity to co/vtribute to an improvement that will do more towards the develop ment o f the youth o f the vicinity mbrallv ami intellectually than any other one thing. Our merchants are responding liberally, but those who advocate “ moral reform’’ oh every oc casion have iiot gone down in their pockets deep enough to make a very big hole in them as yet, . Cedarville rivals every other town o f its ,size in tlib county in the way <5f- energy and business push and this township con tains more persons who advocate tenP^ perance than any other township in che state. That is right, but while you arc talking will it be amiss to ask you to contribute sonieof your surplus for au improvement that 1ms for its FAWCETT !' Has In stock a fine line o f WATCHES , CLOCKS, JEW E L R Y and D IAM O ND S ! The finest line of Optical Goods in Greene County; A Specialty made o f Brazilian Pebble Spectacles in Gold, Silver and Steel frames. They confer a brilliancy and distinctness o f vision, with an amount o f ease and comfort, seldom enjoyed by spectacle wearers. " Jos. Cavanaugh will rapve his fam ily to Xenia ip a short time, as he has secured a job in one o f the cordage factories. Mrs. Moore, ot London, a promi nent W . R . C. lady will be in Cedar- twine j ville, Saturday, the 1,5th inst., to iu- s pect the corps here. The members o f the JVI. E church hold an election‘ to-day to decide the Quite a pleasant event took piace at the cozy home o f Mr. and Mjrs. Ed question o f allowing ladies to act ns Smith, south Of town, on Thursday delegates to the general conference. ' eveniug, in the shape o f a neat surprise 1party gotten up by the ladies o f the Bert White, of*Richmond, Indiana, dropped, into Cedarville this week, and was cordially welcomed bv his old friends. l i e was'on his way to Co lumbus, where he has a situation offer ed him as guard in the Asylum. Mr. James Harliison died at lvis Relief Corps, it b.eing Mr. Smith’s birthday. About fifty guests were present. The evening was spent in games and social conversation, old and young mingling in the enjoyment, and not least among the passtimes o f the evening was the elegant lunch , ... en , w . . , rwinch everyone partook' of. • To say home west o f Cedarville, Wednesday . . . .. .. „ i V E d s eyes were round on ’ coming in consumption. TJ~ " morning, o f Ho had been in Cleveland taking treatment from a physician and returned home about two weeks since feeling much Admission, reserved seats 20 cents. They can he secured at Stormont & Co.'s. Mr. Iiob’t Gray has consented to sell tickets for the circulating library . association. "The " Y ’s” have a secret, and they won’t tell,/or it’s all done up in a pea nut shell.” , The literary society in’ district No. 2 liaJt been postponed until Tuesday night Nov. II . A ll are invited to at tend. Word was received Ivy friends o f Mrs. Florence Keys, o f Red Bank, o f her serious illness this week, Her la ther* J ; H , Gowdy and Mrs. Milton Keves are with her, but slight hopes o f her recovery arc entertained. David Turnbull who was the demo crat candidate for sheriff in the coun ty jliat Monmouth is situated, was elected last Tuesday in spite o f the six bundled republican'majority he find to contend with. Fred Fields is dead, Stricken with typhoid fever about three weeks since he continually grew worse until Wed nesday evening when he quietly sank to rest surrounded by his sorrowing wife and parents. Married to Ger trude Uiff, o f this place, scarcely more than a year ago, tlie dosing days o f his life have proven happy ones, and the sorrow that comes to the young wife ns her h unhand is cnllcd, in the prime o f manhood, to render his ac counts to his Maker is only known to i those who have suffered a like afflic tio n . The funeral seryiee will be held at the Cliff House, conducted by Rev,. Shannon, o f Xenia, this morn ing at 10 o'clock, after which the hotly will be taken to Xenia for interment. object and can not fail to result in , ,, , ■, , . e.t. . , , , , . . • better amllns friends were o f the opm- just what wo are all striving tor-—the T. ____. . . . . . . . elevation o f the young? Will notone evening spent in a reading room with out restraint do more Upwards inducing a young man to abandon. his saloon associates or the card table than n doz en lectures or years o f coercion? The 3 'oung ladies o f this vicinity are giving us an opportunity to try it and they should be listened to a t least. ion that lie would soon grow stronger. Tlie deceased was thirty-three years o f age. He was united in marriage to Miss Nettie Cooley, daughter o f then late William Coolly, in June' 1884, and besides his now bereavedw ife and three children, a large circle o f friends mourn the death o f a man o f upright ness und excellent character. Tho funeral was preached at the residence As a happy ending to a short but yesterday morning at 11 o’clock by George Boyd, our liveryman, was pretty badly scared this week and thought he was a- horse and buggy short sure. Frank and Charley Weim- er hod driven it to Yellow Springs* and not intending to remain long, hitched to a rack, and upon return ing'after transacting their business found the. rig gone. Mr. Boyd was notified and search was at once insti tuted when it was found in Xenia, where some one had evidently driv en It, Ei>. H e iu i .P:—Mr. John George and lady gave an excellent dinner party to their many friends last .Satur day. Ere the sun had reached the meridian sixty invited guests were as sembled at their fine residence and were enjoying themselves in the many meetings and greeting which nccompa. ny Such occasions. I t is needless to say that there lmd been agitation among the fowls, and that the best o f What might have proved a serious esArwtrophe happened at the stone. qjmrry <>fD . & Ervin last Tuesday everything had been prepared for our morning. Store Jones placed about, comihg,.but it was so, and we all par- twenty-five cartridges o f d y n am ite ’ took to the extent o f our capacity o f which had become chilled, near the the good things as prepared by Mre. fire to thaw out and in a short time it George. Friends were present from exploded, shaking up the ground for Indiana, northern Ohio, X en ia and quite a distance and rattling the win- oilier places and all had a delightful 4 ow* In nearly ttxery house in town, time* O ne wtio was there . glorious.campaign, and after listening to couviuciueing speeches by Hon. Andrew Jackson, o f this place, and Levi Mills, o f Wilmington, a few gen tlemen were invited to spend a ROeial hour at the hospitable home o f Air. Jackson giving them an opportuni ty to meet Mr. Mills, It was a most recherche affair. . Mrs. Jack.- jn and daughter received the guests, making all welcome. The elegant parlors were made more beautiful by floral decorations. In a short time luncheon yvas announced, the menu comprising every luxury. The tabid was beauti ful with rarest o f silver and flowers— smilox and bouquets o f autumn’s rarest blossoms. A boutoniic was furnished each one ns a souvenir o f the pleasant occasion. The evening was a most enjoyable one, the gentlemen entering into a discussion ujion the vexed polit ical problem, interspersing their re marks with many a laughable anec dote pertinent to the occasion. A t a late hour nil departed expressing tlie hope that we may again enjoy a kind ly greeting as the days go by, uroilnd this fireside. Among those present were A , T. Gross, A . Wiekorsham, Geo. Shickley, Morris Eirenman, I. T. (Timmins, J. L . Ginn and Nels. Smith, o f Jamestown, Levi Mills and E . J . West, o f Wilmington, I. Bhoup and Jno. A , North, o f Xenia, and Jno. McLean, ltob’t Gray, Bev. An drew, Cal Crain, J . G. McCorkell, Jacob Zeigler, J . R . McElroy, W . J. Smith and the H erald scribe, o f tills place, • Rev, Morton. Last Tuesday’s election lias proven a surprise to everybody. Democrats have made decided gains in every state, with the exception o f Ohio, who rolled up a majority o f about 12,500 lbr Dan J . llyan, (Secretary o f State, while the rest o f the republican ticket was elected by majorities vary ing but little from that amount. O f the twenty-one congressmen elected the democrats captured fourteen. In Greene county, however, tlie result was disheartening to republicans. Her usual 2500 majority by reason o f the light vote, dwindled to about 1600. Boots, democratic candidate for Sher iff’, made a vigorous fight, and as he was indorsed by the Farmers’ Alliance and supported by a great many o f our prohibition friends Dodds’ majority ran down to about 300 votes—-the smallest any republican wasever elect ed byfir the county. In Oedatvillo township the vote was very light, there being only 509 votes cast. Dan J . Itynn polled 333 votes; Thaddeus E . Cromlcy, den >emt 97; and Melan- thou C. Lockwood, prohibitionist, 77. In the balance o f the ticket there was no material change with the exception o f congressman and sheriff. James W . Pollock, candidate for commission er run two votes ahead o f his. ticket. It. E . Doan, the republican candidate for congress, received 324 votes; j . Q. Smith, democrat, 109; and Rei Bath- bun, prohibition,' 69. For sheriff, Dodds received 289; Boots 150 and Turner 61 votes, and seeing how hjs family Lad grown iu so short a time would be .putting it mildly. A t ele.ven o’clock the.gucsts took their departure, everybody hoping it'would not be long until they could go again, . O nk who was there . ____ I B G Itirigwny has just secured the sale o f the most valuable consumption remedy over offered to the people of Cedarville Ohio,and takes groat plea sure recommending it. There arc n great many so-called consumption cures, but Jackson's Wild Cherry and Tar Syrup is conceded by physicians to possess the most healing and strengthening properties tothe lungs o f any similar preparation before the American public. Thousand o f peo ple have used it and testify to its merits, and while B. G .ltidgway ha* been handling these goods no one that has over bought it lias been dis appointed iu finding a positive re lie f id one dose and a cure for a cough in o ne bottle# Price 25 and 50 cents* F or salo by B. G, Rldgwry. An honest Swede tells his story in plain but unmistakable language for the benefit o f the public. “ One ofmy children took a severe cold and got the croup. I gave her a teaspoon ful of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy, and in five minutes later I gave her one more. B y this time she had to cough up tjje gathering in her throat. Then she went to sleep and slept good for fifteen mi nutes. Then she got up and vomit ed; then she went hack' to bed and slept good for the remainder o f the night. She got the croup the second night and I gave her the Bnmo remedy wfth the same good results. I write this because I thought there might he some one in the isame need and not know the true merits of this,. wonder ful medicine.” Charles A . Thomp- scen, Des Moines, Iowa. 50 cent bot tles for sale by B. G, Kidgway. Bnckion’ s Arnica Hiuve, The best salve In the world f ir etna, braises, seras, ulcers, salt rheum, fever SWM, totter, chapped hands, chi’hlains, Corn**ndall skin eruptions,anil piwitivo ly cures piles, or no pay required. Ii H guaranteed to give perfect auisfsciio*), or money refunded. Pries 28 cent* * box. Forsale by B. G. RidgewayV I
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