The Cedarville Herald, Volume 28, Numbers 27-52
| LOCAL AND PERSONAL J <&><*€>%* • I/>avo your laundry at McCoy's barber filiop for Jlariy Alexander, Mro. Julia Condon and MisriNelHo Coiulon v/ero in Xenia, ‘Wednesday. f Mrs. Hugh Boyd has been sick the past wee!;. Miss Olivo Horthup, le ft Thursday for Dayton, where she will v isit relatives a couple of weoks. Mrs. Wr. J. WiUlman and Gladys, are visiting relatives at Osceola, Iowa. Miss Ethel Spencer is ^biithig Miss Helen Dodds atJ?eiiia,-Du?- * . . *■ Mrs. Gertrude Sibley, who" bus been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Dean, returned to her. Home in Columbus, Thursday. Mr. Sam Sfeerrard, of Dayton was the guest Mr, and Mrs. E , G Lowry the first Of the week, •Miss Belle W in ter is suffering from an attack of quinsy. Miss Agnes Stormont entertained a number of friends to dinner Thursday. Miss Edn a Mitchell is visiting her grandmother, Mrs. Shannon, of Xenia. *• Dr, J . W. Dixon is visiting with relatives a t Gbillicothe and will no t bo a t his office un til Ju ly 24. Mrs. G.-U. Stuckey is quite sick a t the home of her son, Edw ard Stuckey of Clifton, suffering with, an abcess of the stomach. Summer lias ju st begun,* Previous hot spells must be accepted as were practice games. —Get McCormick guard plates a t Wo Ilford’s . , Dr. H. C, Middloton, has been the guest of his daughter, Mrs. Horst, of Leesburg. . - - ' Mrs. Ru th Clme, .of Chicago, w » b the guest of friends, here this week Deaconess Tarbox, le ft Wednes day for Zion. City, in the in terest of the ohureh. Miss Pearl Kakestravy, entertained her classmates, Wednesday. . Mrs; Anna Morton, returned home Thursday, from a v isit w ith Eev . and Mrs. Thomas Turner, a t Id a - ville, Ind . - Mrs. Sam AndersOn, entertained a, number of ladies to dinner Thurs day, in honor of Mrs. J . W, Smiley, of Sparta, 111., and Mrs. Ffnnlc Spencer, of Cooper College, of Sterl- ing Kansas. A ll the teache rs. of the Fiiirfleld schools have resigned their positions accepting more* lucrative positions elsewhere, • Mr. J . D, Williamson is having 'his' house improved by a coat of pain t, Mr. E llsworth Dowry is the .. artist. Mrs. Iteufns Syphons of Indfanapol is and Mies E lla Syphers, of Jam es town were guests over Sabbath of Mrs, G. W, Harper. Miss Zola Downard will spend the coining week as guests relatives a t Wilminton aiid Clarksville, O. - Mrs. Chart. Pendlum returned this weel: from a pleasant visit with her daughter Mrs. Mitchell at Chicago. __ Mr. and Mrs. Marlon Townsley - and—C a rrie -v is ite d - -relatives— a t Springfield, Sabbath. Mrs. John Cooper entertained Mrs, W. J . Smiley, Mrs. J . D. W illiam son and Mrs. H annah Cooper, F ri day. • . Miss Grace Shears returned hoftie Monday evening after a very pleas a n t weeks v isit with friends in South Charleston. Mr. and Mrs. J . H . Milburn. en ter tained a t dinner, Wednesday, Mr. C. Sr. Stuckey and h is coftrtins the MI sscb Bishop of Martinsburg, Va. Mys. Fannie McKenzie and two sons of Port Jervis,’N. Y. are vis iting Mr, James McMillan and family. Miss Inez*Shepard returned home Monday after a weeks visit with her brother, Frank Shepard and wife of • Dayton. " • * Foster Smith left Tuesday for Mississippi, Where he has accepted a position in a normal school teach ing short hand and type writing. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Lott, have been spending several days in Hpringflcid, vioiti^Amengreh>Bves. Mr. and Mrs '^hornas Moore, and Miss Mary Barber, of Jamestown, were entertained by Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Kerr, Tuesday, The Misses Bishop of Marialnrt* burg, Va., have been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. 0 . H. .Stuckey, the past week, • - Master Fred Bull,, of Springfield is spending part of bis summer vaca tion with his grandmother, Mrs. A, II. Bull. Mr. Thomas Arthur lias been quite sick with kidney trouble, but is reported much better. The Daylight Store in Springfield, owned by T. 0 . Bemluro is having a eloslnfpout sale as can lie seen by the last page of this Issue. Mr. Ben* dure lias leased a room at Ports mouth, O., and expects to go in bus- inena there. 'Everything is to lie cold regardleas of coot. Tim store is v eil known to every buyer in the vicinity of Springfield for fair deal ing. The shopping check# Wilt be redeemed a# can bo noticed in the. jidvcrilscijirnt, " whistler ’ s W ays . Winning. S tru t Children at Models and Then Tiring Thtm Out. fIh e late famong hut eccentric artist, James McNeil Whistler, had tins gift of winning children to like and trust him. ilia friend, Mr, Mcnpcs, has drawn an nmusipg pie- ture-of how he would proceed with tome stray little child of the streets whose heauty or picturesque tatters had caught his eye. A few words and a smile and the child would ac company him to her home. A hard er step was in explaining to -the mother, who was willing enough she should be painted, but certain to de- sire to wash her up and put on her hnrt . clothe::, that elm must come just as she- was. But that conceded and due payment promised, he would sail off triumphantly with the ragged mite trotting trustingly at his side. And when Mr. Whistler and hjs model had arrived at the studio the artist would cry gayly; f<Xow we are going to do great things together I” f ^Then he would prepare a lunch- on, set tire table, and finally-—a moment of breathless interest to the small girl, who had been allowed to help in all the preparations—-he would cook and. tu rn a beautiful omelet and serve it blazing hot on a big platter. They would have a gay and festive meal together—and after that, business. ‘He worddpose the child and begin to paint. Once he began to 'pain t ha quite forgot, except for the purpose of art, tha t the child was a child. Ho never asked or thought if she were growing tired. He painted on and on. He would have painted on un til his little model fainted with weariness had she submitted so long to the ordeal. Fortunately she was sure to protest in tinie, although confidence in her necw friend1usual ly inspired a really long period of' patient cnduran% so long indeed that when the Inevitable protest came it was of the most primitive, inarticulate and irresistible land. ' There would he a sudden loud, prolonged howl or an' outburst of tempestuous sobs. The absorbed artist; greatly annoyed, would cease work aqd tu rn in bewilderment to his friend, exclaiming helplessly: “Pshaw! What’s it all about? Can’t you give,it something ? Can’t you buy it something ?” But, although gifts often assisted in soothing the exhausted and un happy little model, the sitting was over, and it sometimes took more gifts and all Mr. Whistler’s powers of persuasion, even with another prospective omelet included, to in duce his overtired jittle friend to come again for another one. — Youth’s- Companion. - How to Prepare Tea. In the best restaurants” of the Chinese quarter in San Francisco.; tea is never made in a teaiv , hut each cup is-brewed separate! The cup itself is'different,' I t is a small bowl covered with a strainer and a lid. A tiny bundle pf long tea leaves, is placed in. the strainer and the boiling water ia.poured over it. This first infusion' is invariably thrown away as being unfit to drink. Th is ■ procedure has cadsed tlie leaves to swell, and when next the*boiling water is poured on it filters through slowly and is allowed to steep for a few moments. Whcm the strainer is removed the goldoipiquid that re- main8-in-the-hoL\d-Ruufy-lor..drink- ing, without m ilk or sugar, is as dif-. ferent from the tea ordinarily served in an English drawing room as Champagne is from ginger pop.—- if< ................ ' LONDON’S ROMANWALL. “Cal fornian” in London Chronicle. Old English Inns. There is a discussion in the Eng lish papers as to which is the oldest inn m England. A writer in the Estates Magazine thinks tho Ostrich, at Colnbrook, Middlesex, is one of the oldest. There is every reason to believe i t has been in existence TOO years and even then, topic the place of an earlier inn, burned down by Heniy I. in consequence of the mis deeds of the tenant. The story of the Seven Stars, in Manchester, cim he traced qlearly back to 1356. I ts existence as a licensed house dates down to that year, Among the relics of the Seven Stars is an old clock which has stood a t the top of the staircase for more than 200 years. , _____________ Rossetti and Whistler. * . Once Boseetti nailed Whistler liow* J-iOliked a sketch he had made for a picture. “I t has good points,” was the answer. “Go ahead With it.” A few weeks later he was asked about the picture. “Doing famously,” said Rossetti. “I ’ve ordered a stun ning frame' for it,” *Some time later Mr. Whistler saw the canvas, framed, hut still virgin of paint brush or paint. “You’ve done noth ing to i t / avid Mr. Whistler. “Ho;” replied Rossetti, “but I ’ve written a aonnet on tlur subject if you would care to hear it.” . When the recita tion Was over Mr. Whistler said, “Rossetti, take out the canvas and put the Roftnrt In the frame,” EXCCRSIONS To COLORADO JfcNK 2DTH TO JULY 3D. » VIA rENNSYLVAHlA LTNI5&- Breclal low. faros to Denver, Cor ra lO springs ana Fucblo, account Li* teniahiOiW) Epworih League eonv m- tion. Good lime for health and p ls n - . uro reckevs to visit famous ttoeicv Mountain te tr is , (let full Informal! m from ticket agents ol Ponnsylvai.a ................ « : A portion of tho wall which was built around old London by the Ro mans is now being destroyed by builders. The part which has been laid hare is cevea feet in height and hay a thickness of eight and1a half feet, and about, fifty feet of its length has been, exposed. Hr is founded on gravel, and at the bot tom is a course of, flints and clay. Upon, these are built up two layers of stout burned tiles, of the common Roman pattern, and then- comes rough dressed masonry. The tiles and tho masonry alternate; in the seven feet of the wall's height there are throe course? of each; held to gether by cement, which is so firm w.at it blunts tho tcrisla of the work men who are endeavoring to destroy it. Throughout the neighborhood this wall serves as the foundation for modern buildings. The offices adjoining the excavations now com plicated by the wall’s presence are id part supported oil it. f Out of His Line. Patrolman Hogan, who stands at Eleventh and Walnut streets, ac cording to the Kansas City Times; is asked many peculiar questions every day. Women especially, ask all sorts of queer things. “Last week,” said the officer, “a woman came up here and asked mo how many children the ■president has. One of the queerest questions I was ever asked, however, came from a woman the other' day. She stopped on the corner here and, after hesitaring a moment, asked: . “ ‘Officer, is my dress-unbuttoned between Abe- shoulders ?’ “There were two buttons unfas tened., and I Told her so. > “ ‘Thank you,’ she said. Then she studied a minute. ‘I wonder who I can get to button them ?’ she asked. ' -------- “ ‘I don’t know, lady,’ I said. ‘Hot me.’ ” * Ear-Trumpet Canes. The passing of the old fashioned ear trumpet would seem to be at hand. Enterprise and progress re cently developed an acoustic walk ing stick; Only Upon' close exam ination does the metal crook dis close its dual utility; The ingenu ity of the artisan is reflected in the production of.this oleverly deceptive auricular evolution. By posing tlie handle beside the head tlie average deaf man’fi_hfiar- ing may be vastly Improved. Be neath the handle is an car tube, ad justable to right or left. Situated between the handle and tho ear, when in use this trumpet is almost: perfectly concealed.. By removing the cap at the tip of the handle tlie appliance is made ready for service. —Hew York Globe. * ■* V ■ v"'“r • ' .Coffee We Get From' Arabia.' There is a wide spread and deep Seated belief that little or no gen uine Mocha coffee is brought to tliis country. As a matter of fact, how ever, the United States is the second largest buyer, of -Mocha coffee in tlie world, France being first. The United States buys more than two and a half million pounds; of Mocha coffee annually, and it is the real, genuine Mocha too, coming from tho Mocha district of Arabia and shipped from Aden. These arc government figures, and they effec- .iufllly-tlispose of the popular helieL. that only enough coffee is grown in the Mocha district to sbpply the, grand Turk and a few other highly placed potentates.—XewYork Press Canada’s Woodlands. ■While the destruction of our for ests, due to the heavy demand for paper pulp, has been decried, it ,looks as though we should not suf fer for pulp making material while Canada has sueh tracts as the new ly opened district of Algoma. Here there nre reported to he morn than 100,000,000 cords of pulp wood alone, and if this is not sufficient the Thunder Bay and Rainy River districts can supply 200,000,000 cords more. Canadian territory has been de veloped largely along the lines of the railroads and waterways, and she can furnish timber to the United States for centuries to come by opening now country, A German Incident, A Half length portrait of the Ger man empress occupied a prominent place in a Catholic hoys’ school in the Ermoland district ,of eastern Prussia. Recently the eliaplaiffhap- pened to look closely at the picture and was "horrified to find that her majesty was decollete. A local house painter provided a chaste covering of lace for her majesty’s Heck, whereupon the picture was permit ted to he rehung in the schoolroom. This incident is now forming tho subject of; an investigation by the German iriinister of education, who considers it a gross, insult to tho empress to assume that any plcturo of her could ho improper, • W E H A V E pafms to Sell and can sell yours FA tW IiOAHS five years. 0 MITB & REMANS, TWO GREAT ARTISTS. The Difference Between tho Work of Reynolds end Gainsborough. The contract between theta two great nriht?. Reynolds and Gains borough, h almost the d' Terence between art awl nature. Reynolds •{fas learned in what other painters had done and had reduced his own art to a ’ system. Gainsborough bund almost everything for him- Eelf—never lost the simple, natural way of looking at things and people and painted not according to xiue, but at the dictates of what he felt. Reynolds planned out his effects; Gainsborough painted on the spur of the impression which the subject aroused. Reynolds’ ni’t was based on safe, general principles, Gains borough’s was the fresh and spon taneous expression of his tempera ment—depending, that is to say, on feqling rather than on calculation. His temperament, or habit of mind, was dreamy and poetic, gentle and retiring, including a small range of experience. Reynolds, on the other hand, was a man of the world and of business capacity, intimate with SamuekJ-ehnson, Oliver Goldsmith ainTotlier celebrities of the day; a man of knowledge and clever con versational power, whose pictures by their variety prove his-versatili ty. Consequently when the Royal academy t as established in -1768 he was elected president by acclama tion 'and was knighted1 by George IH.j an honor that has ever since been bestowed on the holder of this office. • ' . V ■ '.'■ These two men were, at the head of tho group of portrait painters who in tho latter part of the eight eenth century and in the early years of the succeeding one added luster to the new growth of a rt in Eng land.—ChaTlcs H. Coffin in Cen- tury. . , ■'.■*■•■. . - — A Hard Problem, ■ “Is this Mine. Pompom ?” breath lessly inquired a man .who .had. climbed several flights of stairs and been admitted into a darkened par- lorv . . • ■ “I t is,” replied the stately person,- age whom he addressed. “The famous clairvoyant and for tune, teller?” “The same,” _• “Do you read the mind ?” “With perfect ease.” “Can you foretell the future ?” “The future holds no mysteries th a t I cannot unravel.” . “Can you unfold the past ?” “The record of all things past is to me an open bookT” “Then,” said the caller, feverish ly talcing from his pocket a handful of money, “I wish you would tell me what1 it is that my wife wanted me to bring home without fail this evening and name your price. Mon ey is no object,” ■-■:*' >-■ 'Original Hmtory. . The following extract from a schoolgirl’s’essay comes from a high school in India and was published in the monthly magazine of the school: “King. Henry 8 was the S eatest widower that ever lived. e was horn at Anna Domino in the year 1066. He had 510 wives, be sides children. The 1st was be headed, the 2d was revoked.. She •never smiled again, But she-said the word ‘Calais’ would he found on her heart after her death. Tho greatest man. in this reign wasHord Sir Gnrrett Wolsey. He was sir- named the Boy Bachelor. _He was born at the nge of fifteen .unmar ried. Henry 8 was succeeded on tho throne by his great Grand Mother, the beautiful and accomplished Ma ry Queen of Scots, Sometimes known as the Lady of the Lake, or the Lay of tho Last Minstrel,” - A Strike and an Apology. On one occasion . there was a strike, on professional grounds, of the members of the Irish bar, owing to an. insult offered by John Scott, Earl of Clonmell, who was chief justice of Ireland from 1784 to 1798, to counsel practicing, before him, which was resented by the bar in its collective capacity, Tho judges sat, but no counsel appeared. The attorneys all vanished, and their lordships had the court to them- 'selves. There was no alternative. The next day Lord Clonmell pub lished a very ample apology ip the newspapers and, with excellent ad dress, made it appear as--if written on the evening of the offense and iherefore voluntary.—-Law Times. A - ........ - ---r-• ' ---•• Cat Island Cats, In one of the harbors of Kergu elen Land, a barren arid-desolate b it of antarctic terra firma to the south east of the Cape of Good Hope, cats escaped from ships have made thein- welvear a t home on a little islet known as Cat island, which has long been used as a wintering place for Sealers. Here they live in holes in the ground, preying upon sea birds ana their young, and are said to have developed such extraordi nary ferocity tha t it Is almost im-* possible to tame them even ,When captured young. D A T F N T Q I K L r I vl I aCaM«t3, otiQTrade.Matk* obtained and all Pat- ]>ntbusiness conducted for MOpStiAft Pecs. O ur O rric t i» te e b s ffr u .S.P atcnt O rrice ; and we can ccMrc patent In less time than those; ■fcnioto f«>n> Wasblnuthn.’ Send mode!, dtwiner ct tiliotd., with descup tion. Wo advise, If patcntablo of not, free of- chatrce. Oar fe«not dno till (latent tosecured. _, ft ftjtMPtit.c-l', "How to Obtain Patents,” with-; eur.t ni came in tho V-S. and foreign countries;; sent free. Address- i C.A.SNOW&CO.I ft ftp, PATCH? O ffice, WACHlftfttdH, O. O. WAirtifryvwiiHti A Horn Curiosity, , Our old Ft-hool teMiioi.J: told us that “all U oiim are not h-wc?,” and this i*3 very :r:if’ as .for as thn horn of the rhinoceros is coneernul. That curious protuberance is nothing leas lhau a collection or amalgamation of hairs, so interwoven and aggluti nated that under the microscope it appears to be of composition similar to the pith of a cornstalk, except that tho hairs arc not so widely sep arated by the material that ’binds tftern together. In olden times roy alty employed rhinoceros horns for drinking cups, the notion being that poison put into them -would show itself by bubbling. There may have been a grain of tru th in this, for it is known flint the ancient poisons were all acids, and these would cer tainly decompose the horny struc ture pf the cup very rapidly. T r y T h o se C u re s F o r 8 tln g s . All sorts of stings, whether from bees, wasps, hornets or bumblebees, should he sucked to remove as much poison as possible; then have a slice, of acid fruity apple, tomato- or peach, or a crushed berry or grape, either ripe or green, hound lightly to tho wound, i f the pain is severe, after a minute take off the fruit,/ wash the si'ng in warm water and bathe it well in alcohol. Then wet a folded linen rag in either alcohol .or^yinegar, and hind on the sting. I f neither alcohol, vinegar or fruit of any sort ds at hand, try a bruised plantain leaf. Change the applica tion, whatever it .is, every ten min utes .until the pain subsides. Shi& l Got It. Miss Elder—Well, I maintain that women can -do anything that men can. . - Mr. Gazzara-—Oh, no, the au c -. tioheer’s business is onO women can not go into! Miss Elder — Nonsense! She’d make every h it as good an auctioneer ns a man, Mr. Gaazam—Well, just imagine an unmarried' woman getting up be fore a crowd and exclaiming, “How, gentlemen,’ all I want is an offer 1” LOW FARES WEST AND SOUTHWEST. Anyone contemplating a tr ip West may take-advantage of tlie reduced fares for tlie special Homo-,Seekers’ excursions via Pennsylvania Lines to points in Colorado, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Mon tana, Nebraska, tho Dakotas, Ore gon, Washington, Texas' and other sections in the west and in all the, states of the South. Stop-over privileges perm it traw lers to investigate business openings Those tickets will bo on sale certain dates during tlie sufnmei-. Detailed information as to fares, through Jftne, etc., will bo freely furnished upon application to local ticket agent of Pennsylvania lanes.—17-15. Kvcry housekeeper should know that, tf they will buy Dolmncc Cold Water Starch for laundry uso they \v$!l save not only time, because it never sticks to the irohj hut because each package contain 1(1 oz,—one full pound—while all other Cold Water Starches are put up in. % pound packages, and’ the price is the. same, 10 conta. Then fleam because Defiance Starch is free from injurious chemicals. If your grocer tries.to sell you n 12-oz. package it is because lie Itns a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose ol before he puts in. Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starcli has printed on evorj package-iii-large-M-ters ami flguresJTL ozs.’ Demand Defiance and save much time and money and flic annoyance of tho iron stick- ,gni- Defiance never sticks. D o y o u r C h i l d r e n ask J* ^ ' QUESTIONS? Of coiirso they doA* I t is their Way of learning and it is your duty to answer. You may need a dic tionary t o aid you. I t won’t an swer every question, hut there are thousands to which it will give you true, clear and definite answers, not about words only, but "about things, tho sun, machinery, men, places, stories and the like. Theft, too, the children can find their own answers* Some of ou r greatest men have ascribed their power to study of the dictionary. Of course you want tho best dic tionary. Tho most critical prefer the New and Enlarged Edition of ^ W EBS TER 'S^ I n t e r n a t io n a l ; « D ic t io n a r y . ^ I f you have any questions ( w S s \ * about it w ile us. rJSSSSSW G- & C. MERRIAM CO., punu.HKn*, W*— v / o pr in o fie l d , MASS, 'e RE V IVO RESTORES VITALITY J f l a d f s i t W e ll M a il THE ^ of Me* C M E L j E L A .t f ? ap3Eia i 3 ?g,c>3ac s £ n n c a B Z 3 W p ro d u c e sth o n b o v o re su lts In SOdnjr*. lifteM fcewwtnltyandcfttckly. Ctaes *hen»U ott«n£ti!r XcUBftmenwill retain tlieir lest m tnhood.uidold men will recover their youthful vigor by utln« RF.VXVO, i t uulckly eart surely restore*W«mo*« new, Lo»t Vitellty, Imputetky, nightly KmtWlMw. tb rtrew er, Fftlllnf Memory; Westinr niwuee.MMg tit effect* oCcolf-abujs or etcBceetia lodiietMImt Which unfit*hue for otufiy, bueluw# or marring*. I t cot only care* by rtertfeg *e tho goat of a i«**», buf lAftgrett tterv o to n to ftn d blo o d b u ild er, brio*, leg buck tho p in k g low t o pftto check* tn dw r Mating tho ft t 6 o f y o u th , f t W*rd* off iM w ttj end ccn.iumjittaa, Ineltt ca fctviug R E W f t M Other. I t c*n bo cu rled in text pocket, ftyMMI, *I.OOp«r p*c*a*e,cr m fo r*ft.oo; « ? • w rltte si *nftr<tne<M to «#. r*lMMi theWMMuejf*, BookanaonvUsffeer Adrift** • MANUFACTURERS WHOLESALE PRICES VEHICLESiHARNESS We sell our. entire product direct to tho user at wholesale prices and^guarantee a Sainol arBlaie m BetaH Pfles W€ INVITE YOU TO CALL. AND INSPECT OUR WORK LARGEST STOCK We carry the largest stock of vehicle# on our repository floor of any concern in the world. All of latest style, thoroughly reliable vehicle*. Our Imp includes Carriages, Buggies, Surreys, Phaetons, Station Wagons, Delivery Wagons, Runabouts, Road Wagon*, Spring Wagons, Carts, etc. COME AND SEE US BEFORE MAKING YOUR PURCHASE . WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY CATALOGUE FOR 1905 Send for our free catalogue. To. out-of-town buyers who cannot come to see us, we should be glad to send, on request, our illustrated catalogue, by means of which you can buy as safely and satisfactorily a# if on the ground. ' PRICE Extra 3-4 Rubber Tires, $13.00 Guaranteed as good tn every way as sold by middlemen for from $70 to $ 75 . note some a t the good points. Has self-olllng. dust-proof axles. Full wrought Brewster fifth- wheel •WUh bent reaches mor tised Into the head block. Oil tempered apd tested springs. Wrought steel Bailey body loops. Strictly second growth hickorywheels,with firesputon hot.. Bradley shaft couplers. Full length bottomcarpet* Rub ber step rads. Sprlngbackand spring cushion. Finest finish throughout. The greatest Bug* gy In the'World A the f^rlce. NO. 3078 . NEW YORK BUGGY. TH E MANUFACTURER can always offer you more for your money than the middleman, the only house in the State of Ohio selling direct to the consu We are mer who manufactures the vehicles and harness they offer for sale. MOrriDBS. STRAIGHT SILL - SURREY HARNESS PRICE * 81.50 ExtraYBRubberTIfM, $ 1 6 .0 0 No. 4066 Is a light,compact vehicle with ample seatingca pacity for four large persons. Furnished wlth^bellcol lar self-olllng axles. Oiltempered and tested springs. Full bottom wrought fifth-wheel. Strictly second growth wheels. Full length velvet carpet. Bradley shaft couplers. Haiid- somelyfinlshed, - ; : Guaranteed * ! good as sold by.others for Sag.00 to $35.00 more than our price;.... We Manufacture 65 STYLES Highest Quality—-Wholesale Priest GUARANTEE A SAVING NOT LESS THAN 26 $ ' '• ' • . J* Our No. 246 Single Strap Driving Harness PRICE $ 12.60 GEHUINE RUBBER MOUMTIHQS, Extra $1*75 We carry 2000 sets ot Harriiss In itock COME AND SEE US OFFICE—REPOSITORY—FACTORY Sotrth High Street, crossing Hocking Valley Railroad, Terminus Electric Car LiM* Th t 20 minutes ride from comer Broad and High Streets Columbus Carriage & Harness Co. COLUMBUS, OHIO H A L C S f i Is it true you want to look old ? Then keep your gray hair. If not, then use Hall’s Hair Renewer, and have all. the dark, rich color of early life restored to your hair, Clearance Sale. Millinery Eritire stock of Trimmest. Hats , including Model and Hats from our own work room, at half the former price . Ju s t received, tho season's late models m duck and lingerie for women avnd children..................................................... 4 8 a n d 78e $2.50 Ohffioa and Braid H a ts, now...... ............................................ 98c $1.00 tTntrimmed Hate, now...,-......../............................................. „....J 2 Se ,$1.50 B eady -to -W earllals, now.................,..... ................................. 8 0 c BBc Baby Cape, ttoiy..... ........................................................................ tS$ 26c Mesh Veiling in white, n o w . ................ ........ ...................... ,..J 9 e 76c Flowers and Foliage, now.................................................... ...... 2 Sc R ibbons in co lo rs a t r e d u c e d prices, ■ 37 Green St Osterly. Xenia H i o l HERALDSALEBILLS \
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