The Cedarville Herald, Volume 28, Numbers 1-26
10. V # Mjew $%■ a r-'-r !'£/’! •*«. U • fc*l.: 4 vf: ;§inw.k%vLn| *:' -. ' ;n I, ir-iip-;. I'®*.*r'->'C. I a >-v,';. —black or la have h it and,up to. tcolors. mks I esitest Belec- tyjiahCbildv sizes 4 to fi |oq and $ 6.00 Cenia—colors mu ati^i Blu,c Skirts 061 wear, in "in's; stylish Q, $8,50 • ami ^ ig Skirts in Section....... ft).GO Each. year fOr Lad- i most satis- Buy ffieift I n. no other-r ,00 a t wear well, .... 25c she, *•« very last time/* mniti'W'l iliftMint at the floor open* wry l u t lie repeat vl OS lie sat writing in the pretty. Rowingflrawmgroom, * 'Ttw:rpUo came in, and the room !s«:::c kautifu?, Because prettinea# -■teas not of lien T-:cy eat together and talked, and nurmif' a little interval the mm% .heart jogged his olliow In an. irritat ing way ainl murmured, ‘‘This is the wry Iqst lime/* , , • *Yes/’ said' the man aloud, ar.d smiling, asked to what his #f~ ■iinaatlwwferred • Then they talked again on various rcbjeeta •yrhic-U related to the man, for she knew all his past and some thing of his future. “Why ate you sad today?' she asked after awhile. ■ The wan hesitated, “Because I don't know why I am sad—a t least I can’t toil you.” “May I tell you a little story?” asked she, “Please,” ■ “Listen, then, but remember my stories are not personal. There was, once a man who never was a hoy Be cause he had been unable to spare the time. Being a hoy or even a youth uses up a lot of time at the beginning, when lime seems short, and adds it,on io the end; but cir- ' 1eumstances and loneliness in strange places made? it impossible .for the man ih'iny story to invest time in this way. So he skipped, Boyhood and youth, and Went straight into manhood in a Strange country.” ’ f- “And what effect on him did that- have?” asked he in the drawing room, who hafl Become interested after the story’s first sentence, . . She who fold the story smiled - and, ‘continuing, said / “I t had on him the effect of tropieal Sun upon ,voger...hle life. , I t made him prema ture in all wav?, but strong also and ' glorying in his- strength. A great aeal'was-shut op t'o f his range of ’'.vision,' and his life’s limits’were nor- row, bn tin thosejimite very intense. , To'him the world was himself—he and hie work, his aims, his strength. Nothing else, you understand. Hav ing missed youth, enjoyment did not , come into his schemel' H e did not lookAbout him for life’s soft lights. •and its music and so never-saw-1or heardihem. He bad no time.’’ , “Ah!” , > . ; : i. ’ “ Y§s* i t was a pity, /Well, then one day by,chance he. met Feminin ity—happened ’upon her munching cake and sipping- tea, Femininity smiled prettily a t the man and of fered him cake and tea, which lie amazement. Then Femininity’s rosy, dimpled fingers went tripping dainti- - * ly' up and down the -keyboard of -a piano, and she sang to' him,, every ■ note in her rippling little Ballad " twanging a response on one of the. man’s heartstrings. And he asked himself—well, let me see, he asked himself”— “Why,” interrupted he who lis tened fix the drawing room—“why, he had never before known that this was the world and- how he had Been led to think tha t his life was the real life of the world.” " , ^. ’‘Yes,tha t was what he asked him self, And so dainty little Feminin ity, smiling all the while, drew aside the lace curtains; which had hidden from liis range of vision the Byzan tine alley wherein she lived, and he, looking down the alley with her, de cided that it was the real world! that Ids world so far had been a dreary fantasy of his, own creation, The man’s lights were not wide Or deep, bat very intense, and of course be laid his heart, new found, rever entially and “unreservedly at Fem ininity’s feet. Femininity laughing ly accepted the heart, and then”— “Meeting another man at the cor ner of her alley,” said the listener, “threw the heart down, still laugh ing, and went back to the pianowith her new friend.” “Exactly, , Well, now the man was in a very sorry plight, because he had lost his own world-—the aeif created fantasy—and, being forsak en in the new world by her to whom his heart had been given, ho could not iind bis wav. Disillusion blind ed his eyes with tears, and, groping about in the Byzantine alley, he”— “lie met From From You must let me tell this piece,” said the man in the drawing room, “He met 1'm.i From,, who.happeiied. to hare wandered carelessly from out her Moorish alley into Femininity’s do*1 main. He looked like a man, so I ron Froit welcomed Him with fas* cirmting, lower Bohemian good fel lowship and swung aside the rich ’ drapery and heavy perfumed curta in : triad? Bad- hid -from his view the. world of brighter, flashing light# and dancing music in which ah# Jivedi ' „ ” ' “Lookyjg Into the World, the map drew a long breath of ratisfaetion, and, u Frou Froa challenged him WEDNESDAY MORNING , ■* ■:■ i' . i . * We Started Our Stupendous January Sale To Continue for Ten Days We offer every item and. article in this store at a net saving to you of 15 to 50 per cen t Winter goods will be sacrificed absolutely regardless of cost. We aim to start the new season, always, with the new season’s goods* For this reason you can always depend upon getting ail you want of the latest in this store^-and mighty—little of tha t which you would not want. DRESS GOODS AND SILKS Of coni Bp we’re not giving them away—not all of them, but there’s not a price we quote matched in tliis city, Thousands of yards of the new spring styleswhich arrived too soon for us. We advertise everything, so everything it must bp. IN THE GARMENT DEPARTMENT We have the greatest array of stylish new garments we be lieve ever announced in this city atrhistirue in the season. Only two coats in the house that were here last season. Only thirty nine garments that were here three weeks ago, Every other Cloak and Suit in the house bought within three weeks . at 40 cents on the dollar. They’re yours at the same rate and still we make a fair margin. TABLE LINENS AND DOMESTICS Hundreds of people waif tor Dendure''* Jumi Sale because they know they get “Linen”—Linen, the same as is sold from January to January—not “stuft” bought for ausplm*ge,” Prices will not be quoted here, suffice it to say that you will not be disap pointed in price or quality. Any unsatisfactory purchase will be bought back a t the price you paid. Reliable Furs regardless of cost: $10.00 Coats, $ 3 » 9 8; $?o.°o Coats,$7 98, eto., etc. Gloves, Hosiery, Muslin Underwear,, I k T. D. BENDURE, Knit Wear, Silks, Dress Goods, Ribbons, Neckwear, Embroderies, Daces, White Goods, Men’s Goods Hankerchiefs, Leather Goods, and Notions, etc etc,—all at special price reduction to reduce stock and make room for the great summer stock to arrive. DAYLIGHT STORE, SPRINGFIELD. that' he 'had ne t fought the reax world after alb Still, he had lost his-own, arid when—well”— / “No,” said she who listened,- “you cannot tell this part. I must, for he did not go into another alley, you know, “He wandered Into the cloisters of a white marble temple, because in the brightness of the sunlight winch came after dawn he saw a pure pres ence— a g irl— standing, on the ; threshold. ■He^approached the pres- ” ence, sb he longed for rest, though - after his two phases he felt he had no right. . 1 • i “She was so pure and white, the ‘ innocence of knowing nothing gleaming on her forehead’. She * could not, like the others, conduct t . him into her world, because -she had \ not yet crossed the threshold of the temple herself, and she knew noth- 5 ing of that which he had lived and , seen. Still she was a girl, and his .worship‘pleased hey, ' J “Very .sweetly, though ail nn-j knowingly, she helped him to.take his stand beside her-on the thresh old, she understanding Nothing and never -dreaming bat- that lie, too, had the earliest phases to pass and could enter her temple with her, • “But when her innocence of ig norance had spread itself ,ronnd the man for awhile the crude purity* of it—the”*— ' “The nothing knowing, nothing seeing, nothing understanding spot! lessness of it all almost choked him,” said the man in the,drawing room, “and he realized that-since he had not at the beginning found this World he could not enter i t now <jr a t least not accompanied by the cold .Whiteness of the little maid who hath hb breasts/ ■So now in real Is now going oh. Greatest Bargain Even t of the Season. Don’t miss this grand ' Opportunity to Buy High-grade at Greatly Reduced Pricey. V 19-23 South Limestone street, W ren ’s Old Stand, S P R IN G F I E L D , OH IO HIS COLLECTION OF ORCHIDS One of the stories. John Bur roughs, the aged nataralist, loves to named Orr, On one of his trips Mr. Burroughs happened , to be in the and the price is the hwio , ji > 'cents. Tin* town ,Where Mr. Orr lives. Meeting arain becauseD^fumwfciarcJr tt! free frOn 1 ..W. bin xt-vAMf- UiivK/tiirrliti Iniiirirtris f'lii.iniVnls. If vituronicer fries tt lively housekeepershould ’know that if J they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch * for laundry use they will-save not only time,,because it never sticks tothe iron, but because each package domain 10 oz. -One full pound—while nil other Cold Water Starchesampul, up in pound packages. hen despair he .turned away from the telfhas to do with a friend of his classic temple, feeling hot only that he had failed to find the real world, but was unfit to be taken into it* Then, as he walked miserably away, ^ Use Mr/ Burroughs i ju ou chemca *, i yo gro t . an angel from heaven came across insisted that his friend should ac- **«•' you a 12 -oz. package it labecausehelms his path and laid hef cool band oh ^jnpahy him to the hotel for lunch- *8Ux,Jr 0l) ,13ml w!l*i«-h hc 'vishcsto dispose his forebead, so that”— . eon. As they were eating Mr. -Bur- h^ rl lmT f 3 I'1,Dt‘f!rince- k"ows roughs inquired if his friend was D0L ^ rf l cd M!iny BLeCJ£df c „ Demand Defiance % think, said the naturalist,. cT-^^yjy gjj^thewftnayauee ofthojronstiek- eiy man ought to have a collection Bg,t defiance never stieW. of some kind. I t adds zest to life.” “Oh, y&5,” said his friend, “1 have quit# a collection. l am interested in flowers. Come home with me, and I’ll show them to you.” BAD BREATH ---------------- tiiinetbfemloinwininciy j __ BkMrfall,«»ytfastth«yIi»T»«ntlrelrearedsit;. 1 thereforelet yon toowshit; l ehill recomweDA then toen, oneencrerintfromtnabtronhlee.’' _ Ohli.H.Uiljini),MaitlaAouBt..Ne»rIOrk,H.T. “Ho, dearl A woman—only a wo man. But she showed him that he was already in the real world and that she Was, too, hut that he kept going into little phases of life and, thinking each was life itself, was al most broken hearted when he found himself unfitted to live in a phase. He was very happy with the woman, because he loved her, and yet, think ing that he must be of some one of the phases—the little phases—he had seen, not knowing that they were of liim merely, he fancied the woman must he apart from himj that”— - * . “This must be the last time?” “Exactly. But,. Ah, the woman understood. She kne w that he was really of the same life and world as she. She thought—that he loved her, and”— “She loved him?” “Yes, dearl”—A. J . Dawson in St. Louis Ilepuhlic. HI* Aoedunt. A bright Harvard BoyBroughtBis first yearV; expense account home with him*, in accordance with in structions from his father. His par ents were very much puzzled when they inspected it to find a large proportion of their son’s expenses charged up ia one item—“S, IbH ” ,A t the first gknee they were in clined to think “& P. 0.” might Be the initials of Some fair maiden, and a storm Began to Brew for the tm- conscious f reshman. Bui at the end . Beat for Th* Bow*l* v iiN o t n t j b c v j c a w of the expense lidt they found a foot with Brimming champagne glass np- *B0tc which quite qleared the mys raised, ha said, *Thb is undouhtedly terv and the atmosphere. I t read: As they approached the Orr home six fine, healthy children, playing on the lawn, ran to meet their father. “These,” said Mr. Orr, with a ♦winkle in Bis eye, “form my collec tion of orchids. Ain't they grand specimens?” -DitlolviliQ Pfowarpot*. Amateur gardeners may Be inter ested to leatn of a dissolving flower pot to use for transplanting. Ac-, Cording to the descriptions that have been given, this flowerpot can he transplanted with the cutting .or BCfdhng in it, and it will dissolve and become a fertilizer within thir ty-six hours. The pot is made of a composition of garden soil and a small proportion of Barnyard ma nure. I t is claimed that it has no offensive odor when dry. Birry Wail Blue. Berry Wall, said to Be the host dressed of Hew York men, returned from Europe the other day wearing a long tourist coat in which there was a peculiar underlying pattern of blue. He wore a serge' suit, also blue—a dark blue. His shirt was a light cerulean hue—blue. So Was his cravat—a darker hue, but Blue. And in the ‘middle of his cr&vat. DR .E . C . OGLESBEE, PHTSCIAN AND SURGEON* Specialty X-Ray and Electro Thera peutic treatment. Also latest im proved apparatus for treating diseases of the nose, throat and lungs. c a n o v cATMiarnc’ ,,Pl»a*»n*.l,»l 4 t»hl«,PoMn*,T**t«Good,DoQcoa, H its , Stakes, weikas orGrips,llu,Kc.Ha.HnVr ■oldIs balk. Th»ceaataa tablet ititapMCOOC. «huu»ata*4toasrsoryoaxwnt/Utk. Sterling RemedyCo,, ChicagoorN.Y. sg# m m SALE,TENMILUOHBOXES AVeryCloseCall. “I stuck to my engine, although every joint itched and every nerve .vas racked -with pain,” writes < 1 . W. Bellamy, a locomotive fireman, <yfi jdurtirigton, Iowit. “XWas weak and pale, without any appetite and all rrtn down. As Xwas about to give up, I got. ahottle of Electric Bitters, and after taking it, T felt ns well as I ever didin my life,” Weak, sickly, run down people always gain new life, strength and vigor, from thhir use. Try them. Satisfaction gua ranteed by all* Druggist Price 50 . . cents. [ “-Peninsular ranges arc wonderful bakers and cookers. The supply hardly equals the demand. Better see them at K erh & H astings B ros ! SicK H e a d a c h e . When your head aches, there is a storm In the nervous sys tem, centering in the brain. This irritation produces pain in the head, and. the turbulent nerve current sent to the stom ach causes nausea, vomiting. This is sick headache, and is dangerous, as frequent and prolonged attacks weaken the* brain, resulting in loss Of R. E. CORRY,1 AUCTIONEER j Sell# Real Estate and Personal prop erty anywhere. 1 romptueea, attention to details and satisfaction guaranteed, High service. Low prices. Residence Telephone 235 Clifton, O. Call and secure dates ffe.ihtv—tb# abandon of real life in ih# actual world-unlike tny prevx- eu# iftjtcie#/ which were aboard/ And When the very first grayneiia iPi y ni * 5 ? “o ' . t f e ' ' JteriMllv ' »pin h * / ™ . Smi; “H P , Sundries, principally, W , „ iuwmmse-Liuo. grab*” came tad the flashing light# paled m the dawn hour Frou iron , Being ;Y, catreleasly laid open "Bar fr»illyf*':'BHwM •Dotrunic Trotiblf, It is exceptional to find tt family tired and #l#epy a tii# page* m tm x ttv’# pnviite diaiy, *nd thk man iread, Having read, ha kmw wild waft numbed, j 4 “So in tlw oh^fly momihg twi- 'light ha groped h?'.i way out m o th« m which li«w belw«*n % 'p#q5r* f | 1$^. A:Mark-Twain Story. / ' M a r k i i i tells a- ■ i t # y 't h a t whiff traveling in Cermany .Aman , sitting next to him at a dinner in a where thore are mKloineatic ruptures ^hotel ordered a Bottle of Johannes (mMatoniO y, hut these can B* h*- w winer When it brought 1 , ? J f * , 1 !lew Be uw on iha bottle a label of Mo- Ufa Pill#i around. Much trouWo they e(iJIe and ca| !c,| lo it fho attention attve by their great work In Hfomach. of ^ manager, who exclaimed! and Liver troubles. They not only “Ach, what a stupid donkey 1 1 die- relieve yon Hrugglam., but cure, t#c, a t all {jnctjy told him to put on the Jo- 1 *habftrtbmrg 3«fesl,” ' t memory, inflammation, epi lepsy, fits, dizziness, etc. Allay this stormy, irritated, aching condition by taking D r. Miles* Anti-Pain Pills. They stop the pain by sooth ing, strengthening and reliev ing the tension upon the nerves —not by paralyzing them, as do most headache remedies. Dr* Miles’ Anti-Pain Pilta do . not contain opium, morphine, chloral,cocaine o r similar drugs, '•pick Jiwid»fh« la hfreUUary in iny family. My father * (rrent deni, h M for many V«ara I,k»v* h*« apcll* tlikt Wero *o wwrr« that I v w tunable to attend tomy btislnw* nfifalw tar a &,.y onw *t » time. During a vety iw\ era ntlaeit of he’daehe, 1 tank Dr. Mile*’ Antl-Fftln Fill* ewl they am® “ ““ M " ? V ^ ? 3 h . Dree. A B. Ktift. Co, South Ileftd, In«, DC. MUae"Arttl-P*lrt are *«Wby ■xsrt&sit a b p H s w i i f f iiaMK, *«»<; yeuc the t l do*«*, J» ftartta, nevar eoio in Mile*Medical Co7Elkhart^Ina SavedFrom TerribleDeath. The family of Mrs, M. ti. Bobbitt of Bargcrjon, Tenn., Saw her dying and Were powerless to save her. The most skillful physicians an d ,every remedy used, failed, while consump tionwn# slowly but sutely taking her, life. In this terrible hour I>r. King’s Now Discovery for Consumption! turned despair into joy, The first hot-1 tie brought immediate relief and its f continued' hoc -completely cured her. J I t’s the most certain cute in thei world forall throat and long froubles.1 Guaranteed Bottles 50c and $1.00. Trial Bottle Free at all Druggist. , 120 A(iiE PA® FORSALE, <3u the Yellow Bprmgs pike three! fonrtb* mile from Oedarville. * Tin*# farm is nicely located, being les# f than ope mile from college, churches i awtl high-nchool. Improvements are | gowl. Land produces gotsl crops. ( Nice young orchard, Bearing excel- kn t fruit. Never failing spring# on fitrm. I f Interested, call on or ad dress, W, J . IlAWruORNR, ^ R, V. 1)„ 2, . (kdarvllie, Ohio* Fab. 27, ISOS* Sausage T ime is here. The sausages arc here, too. If you Want to get up an ap petite for breakfast come in and look at them. Mads^ of the best meat with just the Proper Spicing,* One look a t them will make you hungry. ^Vith or wit hout buck wheat cakes they will make a breakfast fit for a king. Try them New Year'rf or any other morning C. / / , C H O U S E , Cedaruttle, Q. Miss, Agn##W«tl#y 616Wells 5tmi. Marlnette.Wii REV1V® VlTAUTf SISWeU#Street, ■_ IfARtaSTV*, Wi#., Sept. 25 , 1908 . IvrMftUrundownfromncrvmd- PewandovenfrorkandhadtorMign my position and fake a rest. J found time I was not gaming ray strength and healdi M fa«t as I could wish, and a# your Wine of Cardni was reamnnendeda#wriift good medicine for the Hi# of our sex, I bought » bottle and began using it, 1 wft#satisfiedwifh the results from the tiw of the first bottle, ar.dtooktlireemoroandthen foundI was restoredtogoodhealth Mid strength and able to take Up rtrf work with renewed vigor. I considerita fine tonicandexcrilent• for wohj-out, servou# condition, and ftui pleased io endorse it, AtTNFAmmi-IY, #WV,KsSUiWI mam O i RolHuid Cardui and ft Sfic. packsge dt Thodford’* Black*I)iftught tod$y, WIHE OF CAftDUl Made a Weil M ill tfrttimjbJ'X!' !F^oiJKiWO*9i? ^!im3xaca®pqriir, 5tfs?wf»nr»a unfckir, owr<«wb««iiuhlUniME Mn»«»*«wiUt*t»la iboir loH waywill tm m «wir amiSftft vasw &*--#*(»• •BRVxvo. i s a t l e r i r W w i » vmtur, Kithur iA*tRe«ttr,XMii»x tgtMtmr, , ttotthm Ot or eWMSMldInMtMMHSIti !wblcUBttfl*dmi*->fsixes',bwrina»» m htawW**,^ i aoionlyxar*sI<ywtsxibw>tia* nm <#*«*>*,biw , ManMtiiisrrsitottlttMktaiofiat ' iftSwqwmiAtftS, mMI ftftMSU)#, . ^ fc«i(fti»Marts* ' <5».” a iSftftrft It# ^IlKaftDsr** of Se*„ •#«,<*► ’!♦ CASTOR IA t Far Jafttht# and Childrsa, i t M 1m Hava Always BtogM
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