The Cedarville Herald, Volume 26, Numbers 1-26
A*MV> ** * • tearint « * mm & kurm am *| w fowmi «t Ik* l* n , VT«iaa«r. - <hu «n ry u*g to be toaact t* * rst-etess meet Market. tW# haadh* On o*h- "««* Sw ift Cw#J)«oy'ft I»w*. And courteous |» d honest inwtawnt i with the wboy«. i Fm h F»h and !<;« m b Back IVJt&LSf, OHIO, of Merchants and In. leolicUed. Collecttonr snd remitted. fNew VAfk and Cin- « a t low**!, rates. The lyjsfc convenient way to “■m a il.' jfe on Iieal Estate, Per. bilateral Security, aan, Pres., (Smith, Tice Pres., | J Wildman, Qasirier, sful listjsiMtjpfit. EesttsWBat¥gBel. Receptive. Unless you Ige, yon can never tell getting until yon. have partially eaten. We We select stock with a |g the best meats. We leelect stock and there- leafs •you may depend [that will please you. M M SIN ps b e l iv eped leplione No. 74 »h Always on Hand. REVIVO ,**«««* vnrAurv ><► !• M a d e * W eHM an .oi i i f, Kidgway, Odswf®*, 0 >A AMD £W O R L E A N S •VIA— MCfctSCW not:.. • T H E R N R Y « VN*;crtNQ y f t c v Ar4 fMUi SjpiafiL w»i«* tmmn Ms. U ; !’« S'Mt aw...»»« Turn, i ■.-jihrr-t Rj, at ••l tav. t-ramX»*t t / f i tnr-itey*. OevAgdat t s ! 'ii. fc.M'^a.a.xawMaTy K-riM, MichiffmCutmi iM t all ronn<N-fliiaw*agwne M* ’«*»•«*• at *;.« fw. » rM»Uifei {attNSpw, unaaijOjr.M Mr CMoign at *** It ....—_ ,. intcMaewkfc “ *** inla. iS*Wftl rO rtetm ' trftlt tfctowtlt atarfAtt HUM#ta MMiott H u C„ « « at.* at. ifila «M t 1 o oariwtM. tMMu* mot i tanttaitt . TOOD, M t n a a t f t m . l*rth Liimnttete ^L< */ V fr- *• ,jr t ‘ W fiz rW 'i a- ' NMaM weHr.V'sssssw, '-J A N D G E N T S ’ F U R N IS H IN G S . « « Wortli of Clothing That Must TbeSold Regardless of dost. We Need Money and Wo NeedRoom. A Chance to Get l, Clean, TTp-to-Date Clothing for a Song. Stop and Reason With Yourself-Can You Afford to Miss This, It is a 1-oney Maker for You. One Dollar W ill Actually Buy Two Dollar’s Worth of foods at This Sale. * m - A FEW THINGS FOR YOU TO REMEMBER. Men’s Suits. Men’s H eavy all-wool suits, small size, worth $8, $ io aihd $*2, go in this sale $2.98 a t. Men’s black c lays and chevoits, a ll .$3.48 sizes, worth $6.50, in th is sa le at.* Men’s heavy black c lay and alhWool chevoits, worth $8, $10 and $12, now go in $4.98 this sale for.,,..,. Men’s Pants. One lot of men’ s neat dark pants, sale 49c »'*»••4vrt**-« 4 f*' * t • fc.-*^'*'*»»#*•,*'«*f. ■ price me lot clearance sale price...................J......... On of black chevoits and clays, at 98c One lot of men’ s pants, worth $2, at d* | | JJ clearance sale price.,..,.................... JJ) 1 * 1 0 One lot men’s all-wool pants, worth *1 A Q $2,50 and $3, sale price.......... l ^ J r O One lot of blue and black chevoits, ail-wool, in this sale at... $1.98 Children’s Suits *ndOvercoats. One lot of fine suits, sizes 4 to ia years, 79c in th is sa le for, One lot of fine suits, sizes 4 toJC4 years, A Q - in this sa le f o r ......... ..............y O v One lot of extra fine children’s suits, made in Italian lining, sewed in silk, go in (|* this: sale at Men’s Overcoats. Good strong overcoats worth $5 and H C $6, w e w ill sell you for..............,....5 ) L a * u Better ones in black and blue, worth (JJ A ISA , more money, for,............................ j^TCatJU B lack and blue Kersey meltons and fancy mixtures w ith serge lining, worth g Q $ 1.15 $10 and $12, are marked to. Bargain Counter. One lot good strong heavy ones, $1.48 wear resisters, in this sale a t .,,..,< One lot of boy’s sweaters, “ hot stuff” fot‘ the money 11c; one lot of fancy ones a t>7A - y 39c, and good heavy all-wool ones a t ... f y v Canvass Gloves, good ones for the price 5c this is surely a bargain.... * ......... a Men ’s socks, worth 10c, now going at f | _ clearance sale price.................... I I V Handkerchiefs, good and strong for the i - price r*., 4**+»'»'•. m »,4» t'lim.*** »»u.8■ ' ' * ' r P O n e jo t of men’s,socks, worth 25c, now at 9e a hargain....,,,,;..,.,,....... *<*» •*■^» .■***#!«*.H «H 9M . 4 One lot men’s house coats, well worth 50c the clearance sale price.... ....... ....... 0 Men’s white and fancy shirts, good I A - goods at a “ reach-of-all” price..... ...... - Men’s underwear, men’s and boy ’s caps good a tthe bargain price,,, t<M «•:«****•£«-*>* .f A Word to tbe Wise is Sufficient. We trill Offer Special Inducements Every Day, so heonRand. We w ill have tbe Crowd. . ;. v . C o m e ill tbe Morning. Don’t forget the location. ’I j No. n E. Main Street, Springfield, Oh.*o, The'Globe Clothing House. Butting Into i u d Cot Ic« In Grcle Cky, but W**n’i Worth Bean* I n B o s to n from “latter* Prod,nSeifXTodtXw- dtont to Hit Son,” tni atom* JJorac* iArlmer. Buvtrtniitlooof Smalt,M«y- ncM-dl £ Co., PuWWwm, Botton 1 never »ee a feltotr trying to crawl or to buy bis way into society that t don't think of toy oH friend, Hank Smith, and his wife Kate—Kate Botta she was before be married fcer—and bow they tried to butt their way tbrongh the upper crust. TTjmite mid I were boys together lb hTianourl, and he stayed along in the o4d town after I left. 1 beard of him oa and off as tending etore a little and fanning * little and loafing a good deal. Then I forgot all about him until one ddy a few years ago when he tamed up In tbe pepers as Captain Henry Smith, the Klondike gold king, jus! hick from CSrole City with a mil- UoA BUOast and anything you phnae £a iTftfcne There’s .uever any WaUt to wtoaiA iphier may'he worfh he thoee, en*^»«fli IUMii«ji)atkm. 1 met a Uftkr puMded when a week lahv p i office boy brought me a card reeding Colonel H«ny Augnstns BotttoXnaythe, but S euppoeed It was t dlstingmshfd foreigner who had to idee me up ao that be could ... m t k p mast on Chicago in hU book, and t WM the boy to show Pv» got a pretty good neemofy toe at and I’d tom& t too mnefc store a t hank in my time not to knew 'even W«k « elean Pmt* and a play t o t •» « » mm m W ^ Wto earn but ft w** ji»t siwtrttng eat of ■ptefljhL ThMlmewa nsade toe yO» i»fl M t o wibi «M»d ®«Itvtoff «k m heap; ttoffi hVd spent hia whole life Where mousey hardly Whispered, let atone tolfeed. #Wt » • wtolipetof now where ft weuM sheet Wanted to know what was the he* ef being a neb if a toltow w a n t the nebtoeet tort ^ * wb. con am , to Itostoto ««d toat if Id prick ap m •* » s«*«isi»*BP hear lsto the Ba^dc Bay. m X i i m m new m e t tour fl*m and •*ffeetoed ttort ft w»a « m * w a * sorted deg to earry a tows* «* towtop in yam m e t betotor: that h p m m tbe dm© m the (wreai evsry t t m * * l that totv JWA tori «• thmw t# »s<h tow n and p m pm toe pot w h o ye*,, •howto toWfl. in*C tout w*m * m m atmM kiir iw s i **d ft e t t e ^ be was new America^ for smito; tno Au« gustus was Just a fancy touch, a. sort of high card kicker. I didn’t explain jto Hank, because ft Was congratulations and not explana tions that he wanted, and I make it a point to show a customer the line of goods that he’s looking for. And I never heard the full particulars of his experiences in the east; though from what I learned afterward Hank struck Boston with a bang all right. He located his claim on Beacon Hill between a Mayflower’descendant and a Declaration signer's great-grandson, breeds which believe that when tbe Lord made them he Was through and that the rest of us just happened. And he hadn't been In town two hours be fore he started In to make improve ments. There was a high wrought iron railing tii front of his house, and he had that gilded first thing, because, as he said, he wasn't running a re ceiving vault and he didn't Want any mistakes. Then he bought a nice open barouche, had the wheels painted red, hired a nigger coachman and started out in style to be sociable and get acquainted. Left his card all the way down one side of Beacon street and then drove hack, leaving it on the other. Everywhere he stopped he found that the whole family was out. Kept it up a week, on ami off, hot didn’t seem to have any luck. Thought that tbe men must be hot sports and tbe women great gadders to keep on the jump so much. Allowed that they were tbe liveliest little tot of flees that be bad ever chased. Decided to quit try ing to nail ’em one at a time and planned out something that he reck oned would round up tbe whole bunch. Hunk Sent out s thousand invita tions to his grand opening, as he called it; left one at every bouse within a mile. Had a brass band on the front step* and fireworks on the roof. Or dered forty kegs from the brewery and hired a fancy mixer to sling together mild snorts, as he called them, for the Indies. They tell me that when the band got to going good on tbe steps and the fireworks, on the roof even Beacon street looked out the windows to see what was doing. There must have been 10,000 people in the street and not a sotd but Hank and Ills wife and tbe mixer in tbe house. Rome one yelled "Speech!” and then the' whole crowd took it up. till Hank cam# out on tbe steps. He shut of t the band with one hand and stopped the fire work* with the other. Said that apeechmaking wasn't his strangle hold; that he’d been living on snowball* ia toe Klondike for so long that Ida gas pip* was ftemrn, but that tbia wel come started tbe Ice. and he thought about three finger* of the plumber’s favorite prescription would cut out the futot Would the crowd jeia him? He had invited a few friend# In fee tbe evsatofc hut toeto aeeawd to be tome astoeodevstendiBg atxmf tbe dete, and be bated to have tbe good staff curdle aa Ml biftdx. While tots was going on tbe May flower descendant was telephoning for the police from one side and the sign er’s great-grandson from the other, and just as the crowd yelled and broke for the house two patrol wagons full of policemen got there. But they bad to turn iu.R riot call and bring out the reserves before they could break up Hank’s little Boston ten party. After all. Hank did what he started Out to do With his party—rounded up nil Ida neighbors in a hunch, though not exactly according to schedule, for next morning there were so many de scendants and great-grandsons in. the police court to prefer charge* that It looked like a reunion of the pilgrim fathers.1'The judge fined Hank on six teen counts and bound blip over, to keep the peace for a hundred years. That afternoon he left for the west on a special, because the limited didn't get there quick enough. But before go ing ho tacked On the front door of his house a sign which read: Neighbors paying th*lr party calls will PI mjk not heave rocka through windows to attract attention. Hot Inand not going to h*. Clone back to Circle <llty for a lit tle quiet. Your* truly. HANK SMITH. H. B,—Too awift for your unole. Hank dropped by my office for a minute on his way to Frisco, Said be liked things lively, hut them was alto gether too much roughhouse on Bea con Hill for him, Judged that as tbe crowd which wasn’t invited was so blamed sociable, the one which waa invited would have stayed a week if It hadn’t slipped up on the date. That might be the Boston Idea, but he want ed a little more refinement in his. Said he was a pretty free spender andwould hold his end up, but be hated a hog. Of course i told Hank that Boston wasn't all that it waa wracked up to be in the school histories and that Orel* City wasn't so tough as it read ia the newspapers, for there was no way of making him understand that be might have lived ia Boston for a hundred years without being invited to a straw berry sociable. Because a fellow cut* Ice on tbe arctic circle it doesn’t fol low that he's going to be worth beans on the Back Bay. If it’s a billions attack, taka Cham beriain’s Stomach and Inver Tablets and a quick recovery is certain. For sale by 0* M, Bidgjtay. ToCere te Grippe Je’24 Keen. Ho remedy equals W abkbr ’ s W hitei W ink T ab Stmi? for thl* terrible and fatal disease, I f taken thoroughly and in time, It will cure a osee In 24 boars, and for tbe cough never foils it that follow* I * _ . to give relief. 25 and 60c. Ben, G. M i Jgway, Pharmacist. Come and see the famous Red Cross tank heater*, just received at Pierce A Stewart. TH E FOOL ROO STER Ma'i Always Crowing, lo t If* th* K m Tb it Coy* ih* Egg I've heard a good deal in my time about the foolishness of hens, but When it comes to right down, plum foolishness give me a rooster every time. He’s always strutting and stretching and crowing and bragging about things with which he had noth ing to do. When the son rites, you’d think that he was,making all the light instead of ail the noise. When the farmer’s wife throws the scraps Jn the henyard, he crows as if be was the provider for the whole farmyard and Was asking a blewing on tbe food. When he meets another rooster, he crows, and whan the other rooster licks him he crows. And so be keeps ft np straight through the day. He even wakes np during tbe night and crow* a little on genera) principles. But when you hear from a hen ahe's laid an egg, and she don’t make a great deal of co I m about it either.— Frem “Letter* From a Self Hade Mer chant to His Son,” by George Horace Lerlater, Pawn in Health and Strength—‘Nerv ous—Irritable—Ache all Over —a Depressed Condition. ' Rapidly Ohanged WerkiegOvertime. Eight hour laws are ignored by those tirelete, little workers—Dr. King’s New Life Fills. Millions are always at work night and day, curing t _ ....... Indigeation, Biliousness, Cod*tination^ ..................... eh.li Sick Headache and all stomac , liver and Bowel troubles. Easy, pleasant, safe, sure. Only 25c at B. u„ Ridg- way’s drug store, In Berlin 838 public buildings are owned by the state and 407 by the municipality. ’ Weft Agate, The many friend* of John Blunt will be pleated to learn that he has en tirely recovered from hia attack of rheumatism. Chamberlain’s Pain Balm cured him after the best doctors in the townfMonon, Ind.)hsd foiled to rive relief.- The prompt relief from pain which this liniment affords is alone worth many times its cost, •ale by C. M. Ridgway. For Tbe transfer has been made to Mr, John D. George by Alex. Ervin for the sale of three-fourths of an acre. The oomrideration was $262.50. CeMi Ar* Deapereue. - How often you hear it remarked: “ It’s only a oofch” and a few day* later {earn that the man h on his hack with pneumonia. This it of such com* toon oeeufttnee that a ootd, however slight, should wet he disregarded. Oharaberiaia’s Gough Remedy oewa- teracts aify ieode&y toward pneu monia. I t always oares aad fa pteas* s p its take, ftold by & M. Bkigyray. Mrs. Bobuckof Lincoln St., ’Wilmington Ohio, says! ”1W*Btroubled with nervous prostration, indigestion .and generally run down in health. I took one box of Dr. A* W. Chase'*Nerve Fill* end now1 can toy my nerves are steadied, my general health is improved and my indigestion relieved. 1 can recommend these pma ycry highly," Dr, A. W. Chase’s Nerve Bills are sold at 60ca box at dealer* or Dr, A. W. Chose, Medicine Co,, Buffalo, N. V. See that the portrait and signatureof A. W, Chase, M. J), are on everypackage. SW?WWWWW?KWWWW 9 W??WWW«WW?W 9 W 9 « In S ilk w ill be, largely worn; w e ’ve got some very good designs at fair prices, from $ 5 * 75 , $6.50 up to $17.50. These are famous Monte Carlos shape. S liff'ik . No one can guess the Btylo of tbe Ready-to-wear c**|4-Q -------- ..Tail°r*tt>Sd0Suita that we sell. Beautiful colors..... .... .. ia Navy, Black and Brown, at *12.00, $15.00 and $18.76. Bead next week’s Herald. It Saved HteLeg. P . A, Dsnfortb of LaUrsnge, Ga., suffered for six mouths with a fright ful running sore on his leg; but writes that Buckfon’s Arnica Salve wholly cured it in five days. For Ulcer, Wounds, Piles^ it’s the best sslye ia the world. Cure guaranteed. Only 25 cts. Sold by B. G, Ridgway, the drnggvt. H A L F F A R E PLUS $2 00 ForBoundTripTickets VIA Louisville&NashvilleN.B. TONEARLYALLKNN1S IN A labam a, F lo rid a , Georgia, K en tucky , M iaaieaippi, V ir g in ia , N o rth a n d South. Car o lina a n d T e n n e s s e e . Ticketson sateMarchfid and 17th, April 7th and fist. May 6 and 10th, June 8d and lfttli, and on first ana third Tustday Of*teh month there after until Bov. 17, andgoodmttitti .................. * - .ofted*. ihg $1days fromdate te$« For further information consult your looal agent, Or addrste C. L STOftf, fee. Pees, Agent, LOUISVILLE&NASHVILLE RAILROAD, LOttSV&LE, KY. A Bad Breath A bad breath moans a bad stomach, a bad digestion, a bad liver. Ayer’s Fill* *» liver pills, they care con stipation, biliousness, dys pepsia, sick hesdsohe. 'tee. AWtewweteto S i f i r l c Must hang right or no satisfaction. Ours are excellent- values and guaranteed to skirtS please—both the party and the purse; prices $1.25 to $2.75 and ‘up. W ^ S c f c nlany we cannot describe them here, r r a i a i a All-wash China, a favorite cluster of a Trickling down the front, button, new style sleeves, lined throughout prices $3.75 to 15.50, in Madras, Black and White Tafiefta. Fine assortment of Wash Fabrics a t 10 cents and 15 cents per yard. Carpets A large room full of pretty, new and excellent designs of Velvet, Ingrain ' carpets and Body BrusselR Prices as low as at any other store in the city. Made and laid to please. Our upholsters have fine reputation*. Hutchison & Gibney, North Detroit Street, Xenia, O, A t t r a c t iv e F u r n it u r e That will be suitable for all classes, as our stock is complete in every respect and comprises different lines of : : O h a i r « X I o d c o m M O o n o l t e * G e n t e r T a b l e * S p r i u i f t e W CI*lllWtia.X!!CiM m i i d o b o i i p d g JCkrcteW teitiijE Oarpotai mxpm W e represent gome of the largest maanfowturiiag j | concern* in this line which efiablee ns to q«ete ; price* that surprise all 111 a memo. etM aa ij \ S t a o i n f e M t e s * M l
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