The Cedarville Herald, Volume 26, Numbers 1-26

m F^F? KPS ?’‘tfwfrv" ^ jx ^ m * '' t\ A ft ft >,?.± '-"vfi»-^eif-^4» ;its® S f | ■c^t^ te'- ■ »w^Us. * C ^\jr- Jist'ell^ii*'"' AV'ork w ill «*mf a n y o t h e r 26 tb fiflNURIi 26 th flfiflUM SftliEI TWEHTY-SIXTJ Tie Last in our Present Store and the Great- ity VT q Have Ever Presented to tie Peo- Being tie Last in tie Old Store ’Will Be an Event in Price Sac­ rificing of ■: Unusual Importance to tie Buying Public. . . is c PDLiHOIAHSAND mm H 'idA * ’ ' 'V*' - A. £ ; v t ' ‘ .v , - VC 1 5 ^mkim" 7*H* »j V*i r , *. oSS i f i s s t t i ■ ■fV.’Jj -.V, "M M p i i i // >yi ,/ m m i ! i w ■• r ’V"’; v \ ^ : ■ j _y,.» > 'V , ' jf <» >;s' . / ,| f - I 1 -••• . , - €y ( , v , v‘ •,; O X ^ K S m s S i © U \ ■ fAUR ANNUAL CLEARING SALES during the past 25 years in. pur present Store have had such ------ 1 ~—■<— -----*—U1— --------------------------- —•*•— -----1------------------ J- '~ - pres pantile resort in Ohio. as the greatest shopping mer- The fact being that this will be our last A nnu a l C lea r ing S a le in the Old Store and that our pri­ m ary purpose in its creation is to close out our present stock at the earliest possible date, thus being reliev edof the trouble and expense of moving same to our New‘Building, we shall make this sale the most im- portant buying event in our history. In addition to the extraordinary low prices indicated in the circulars being distributed ip your jg2 toWnas a further incentive to our out-of-town buyers to attend this sale, we shall pay the fare to Springfield g all cash purchases of $5.00 and upwards within a radius of twenty-five miles. “NOTE”-Sale opens on Thursday Morning, January 8, continuing two weeks. Prices quoted in circulars are good only during the Sale. O be Closed AII Day of all Goods - I 1 « L im e s to n e S tree t , ft* SQB ig|^*'3 IWUtj m ; t'p >PI.S, * *. ** .X- The queelion aa to «l ^,dh1ate lor Governor pufMiided since ti.ft recet #t Cleveland but from a >fyron T. Herrick will l ■„t mn« in (he cobveutlo Isplenty of time yet He pick, paugberty nr Dm ubie to lood t^e P*ace*; the odda a te strong ly ?M Cleveland >nan, for h is fie is ths choice of Se jwd.his choice lias great j jfie people of this state, : ■ question but that Gea Dick would moke a siroi gubernatorial chair but able-man and. needed in portaht place, that of bo Jo the House of Represc | ‘ zb chairman of the state It is really more import uext sl<ite, legislature sb publican infiotb houses. #>- '' i * - ‘f . i a P 'v . W'hile Senatdr Hanna l pressed his opinion as to E as a candidate for govert to reason that it would b l his home county. The - tor at the present time : ' political friend in the pei Johnson, the leader of H L Cuyahoga county. His • Jo the hands of Democvai man that lie is, he is urn control' for the Repub i’ Row if heading the state I a Cuyahoga county man [i Marcus to give over his < | Republican party it seei ( should be done. A solid ' delegation from this co [' legislature may he of me the people of this state tl [, thought of at the present I In speaking, of the P ind the selecting of candi |> call a recent editorial fro f- Guzette, that noble Gree gan asking that this quet [ ‘tied “in the open” in the ( , convention with 'perfect for nil aspirants, and not number of good men bed of eo-caUed leaders deterh man. It says that “such win once or twice, . but there is destruction to th< | All abuses of.power, wbt ey or government, cure t the end of the destrucl who' employ them.” W ['. know that the Gazette | ;, things settled ‘'in -the often fails to “open” t public that are of great The Gazette has always l ed the mouth-piece of li this county not to Mo “smother” apd it is inde that such nu article shoe its columns. Why Gazette give the inside went of the present Re< tp the death of the Why was not the sewer the county and the J “grafts-’ settled “ in tilt does the Gazette becoui affairs that do not county in a financial w and “smother,”- “ prot fend” the set of “ graft? into the public treasur el out to be a case »§ Green street organ fe« the lied tlmt lays the4 The appointees for j office of the Dairy ant ioiter have been auu doubt Horace Atskem lievcd af a heavy b U« sacs-ryj j.- i - uMy xi\ak, .*v, 'i r'roiisnriifjj )*t for *•- i She \9. 6 Kt'.Ut t *s'tf? fried AyU’sC ! andwas cecuHv ct . ly .p .jo d v 14© n m t m your cou^h yeti have hat C hcffV P « o t t best thing yd It’s too, ilsl until yott havl tion. If you a] 'ja?sy,-e«‘ »l C h e r ry r e o t t „ ItlSSiSflft 4V, ... ,F .il A ____

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