The Cedarville Herald, Volume 30, Numbers 1-26

I ' ■' 8 'C"~ ’.IS**. 5 V •'J ■ #*4 *• >* ft* < S?«*■ , OUR LOSS! YOUR GAIN! t Good weather makes good business* But we cannot control the weathe?*., If we could our business would be great Had spring been spring insteadof winter, the largest part of our stock would have, been reduced. But as it was, we are entirely overloaded with a good spring stock of Clothing, Shoes and Furnishing Goods, and we must make some effort to dispose of them, The only salvation we have to dispose of our overloaded stock , s J s IIS TO GUT THE KNIFE SO DEEP I That it will make the people from miles away .come and take advantage of this great bargain sale, which will last for s - s s COMMENCING JUNE 8th AND LASTING TILL JUNE 18th. BELOV WE WEX QUOTE A PEW. OF OUR PRICES s CLOTHING HATS Men’ s and Young Men’a$5.0O Suits, during sale. . . . . . $ 2.98 Men’s andYoung Men s $7.50 Suits during sale.. . . . . , 4.98 Men’s and Young Men’s $10.00 Suits, during sale.. . , 0-98 Men’ s and Young Men’s $12.50 Suits, during sale----- 8.98 Men’s,and Young Men,s $15 and $16.50 Suits during Our $1.00 Hats, during sale. ...................$ ,69 Our $1.50 Hats, during s a l e / . 7 . ........$1.00 Our $2.00 Hats, during sale___ ........................... $1.25 Our $2.50 Hats, during sale.. . . . , , . . , .........., .........$1.50 Our $3.00 Hats, during sale. . „7— .......... $2.00 s a l e .. 10.00 PANTS FURNISHING GOODS Men’s and Young -Men’s $1.00 Pants, during sale, . . . . . $ .69 Men’ s ahd Young' Men’ s $1.50 Pants, during sale.......... .98 Men’s and Young*Men’s $2.00 Pants, during sale.. . . . . 1.25 Men’s and Young Men’s $2.50Pants, during sale.. / . . 1.75 Men's-and YoungMen’s$3.00 Pants, during sale.. 7 . 2 . 1 9 . Men’s and Young'Men’s $3.50, $400 and $4.50 Pants fr during sale 2.75 .» *i •< «>« *i * 1.00 .74 VESTS "Which we will sell during our-sale 50e on the dollar. Spe­ cial sale on boys’ and children’s clothing. Men’ s 50c Shirts, during sale 33 1-3 or 3 for Men’s $i; $1,25Shirts' during sale. 7 . 7 . , , , COLLARS , Men’s 10c Collars, during Sale. . , . . *. 7 . . . 7 . - 7c Men’s 12 l-2c Collars, during sale, . 1 , „. i . . v.. 8c Men’s Rubber Collars/during sale., . . 7 . . ........•. 12 l-2c KWEAR a w « 4 a w g sale ..... . fcy* 0*$&+* +** ****** #■ft ** t # ^ **W ** * *-St * 0* Men*# or TouagJ^en^ 50c Sfcirte orDrawers, 4uringsalo .38 MEN’S HOSE Men’s heavy working Sox, regular 10c value, during - sale. ........... ........ .. 7 ...................5c Men’ s black or fancy Sox, regular 12 l -2c valuer, during sale...... ................................... . . 7 ____; ........... “7c Men’s black or fancy Sox, regular 25c value, during . ■ sale., . i,» « , , . ' . •• >>» *«. ■ i . . . « '.17c OVERALLS . Men,s 50e Overalls, during sale.7 . . . , / . ; . . . . . ; / ; Boys’ Overalls, during" sale, ..............: r. 7. Boys’ Brownies, during sale...... .................. .......... » r •%, ’ TWe have a line of LaceCurtains ancKa full ,line .of La­ dies’ Skirts and Suits, which we must dispose of, as we have not got the room and must quit handling them. 'IV0 will sell any $1.50 Skirt during sale ............ 7 . , 75p We will sell any $7 Skirt ^during sale , . ........ . ., 3.50 We will sell any $8 Skirt "during sale.' ,7 .7 7 .7 7 .7 7 .7 7 470Q- , Y/s also Garry&eoiuplete and full line of Shoes, espec­ ially ladies’ which we are closing out at a great sacrifieein order to makeroom for our stock of Men’s Shoes. s s s 37c 30c 21c s s ■- t l ■ $ •met" We have a line o f Misses* Chttdfen*s and Boys1Tan Oxfords which we will offer during our sale at 60c oh the dollar, Don’t think that a suit of clothes is no good unless you pay $20 or $25 for it, We can sell you a Suit for $10 or $12 as good as any $18 or $20 Suit you can get in Xenia* s s s 30 East Main Street^ Next to Galloway’s Drug Store* For the Cheapest and the Best. S Information Con* Farmess. cermng With all the remedies suggested fot bllghton peat trees, the difficulty still exists, and many pear orchards are destroyed every year. Atone time itwas believed that by keeping the orchard ground in grass, the pear trees Would escape, but while the rapid growth ot the frees seems favorable to attack of blight, and although tho grass may retard attack, yet the trees will succumb damage to the fruit crop, Jins almost exterminated many of the insect pests, that have given the fruit growers such a hard fight for years when they begin to ripen. The tomato is one of the plants that does better for transplanting, and if they are transplanted two or three times, they only grow more Btocky and produce better. There is nob a bib Of danger of losing tomato plants by transplanting as they will grow from a slip almost ns well as from a rooted plant. Keep them well cultivated and if tho woather comes off dry, give them plenty of water and the crop is certain and large. In giving agreeablemalady was there all the time and some tunes much more than at other times. “ There was considerable in 1803, when tins country took the island, and so, how to get rid of the small- in order to save the life of the or- tomatoes water a sprinkling pot is chardo. Tho cancer worm that has *not of much use. The water should almost completely defalcated the Jbe poured around the plant in a trees lor several years and rendered’ liberal fashion two or three gallons the orchards an eye sore on the lat a time and about twice a week. farms throughout the early nwtme* is so completely destroyed that it tv the disease should it find its way -will be years before the pest again into the orchard, The spraying of *becomesnumerous enough to do any trees, or treating the frees at the. damage. Says Mr. VaudCrrort. On- roots, will confer benefit but there ]y a few plums and cherries are loft, ism* sure remedy for blight. j he says, and scarcely any of the —— |eggs of tho oreullo, an Insect that |Former’s Voice, Teas will probably bear deeper stihgs these fruits, have been pfasitfng thait any other seeds!" The’ hafebedi'and they wIljTbe so thinned crop delights m a cool moist soil out that they will not be able to do much damage for a time. Water in the evening and early the next morning stir soil about the plants with a steCl rake to keep it from getting too compact. Tomatoes are- about the most satisfactory garden vegetable we have; it ap- jireciates attention so thoroughly.— deep planting insures these con­ dition?. It, has been found, how­ ever that making a furrow 7 or f?In­ ches deep, filling lbWith a mixture of coil and a porportiou ot fertilizer, and planting the pear, on this, 2 In- cho:i below the surface, produce bet- t »r results than deeper planting, if the pea roots prefer to go down deeper, they will do So provided the gArdner lias prepared tho proper conditions, Teas may be planted at 'any time for a late supply, lb It. Vandervort, proprietor oi **F<»rf«fc House’' fruit farm War Jamestown, one of tho most proml- HMst fruit iftiaei's m this settlors of the country, says that the wot, void C U B E S SfOMAGH body gets ik life from , food pwvrly digested. Healthy digestion means pure bloodfee the body, but shrfnaeb troubles arise frosa carelessness in eating wad vbxnkch disorders upsettheentirasystem. Improp­ erlymedicated foodsourson tna StOniach, OMtxiug distressing pox was a serious problem. They undertook tosolve It by vaccination. A vaccine stolon Was established and largo quanllties of the inOtter were produced, “ There are a million people on that islandand they were vigorously i assaulted by the vaccihators. Tho island was divided Into vaccine districts and each district was* named by* persons who undortoolc | the work with enthusiasm, and in a few*weeks or months, at most, thero were 800,000of those people vacci­ nated, Tho experiences of the vaccinators would made an interest­ ing volume. “ Since then there has been very little smallpox, and what there hds heen was of a mild form so that there is scarcely a scare in a small­ pox case, The plague is regarded as uprooted in „that island until another generation comes or the old scars have lost theft virture,” HALL BEARING LAW N MOWERS $2.50, $2,75, -$3,00, $3.i5y $3.50* to $7.50 NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT, VACCINATION, There is no garden vegetable that will respond more markedly to rich land and good Cultivation than tomatoes. A tomato plantwill glow on a manure pile aiul flourish all season there, ana in planting them It pays to take some pains to have them stand on a very rich spot. Make tho plot where the tomatoes are to stand very rich with manure and then dig a hole and dump two or three shovelfuls of fine manure m the bottom of it, and sot the plant above this, Jtlrive a stake by each plant as tho plant tied spring, which has resulted in much! cloth, ahd the to lb fruit with Will strip of not rot An epidemic of small pox, of a mild form, has latd hold bf Columbus and tlie Bfato Journal is moved to tho following editorial comment: “ Talking about vaccination, one strikes atopicthatisfull of turmoils. There is A decided prejudice against it, but that prejudice is ridiculed vehemently, The man who is against it is just as honest and intelligent as the man who is for it, and their qurrol is a just one. So we are not getting into the argu­ ment, since there is no possible way of ending it. j ‘Hut wo Want to relate a little! ti» c C t'J U liK tt MVUHI.IC 1 _______ . and worn and dyspepsia |.claimstheviattm. . _ 1 Thedford'* Black-Draught I curat dy*penri*u It frees the stomachand/htwrii of congested matter and gives the stomach newlife. Tb#stomachi*quickly inrigotsUad lad the natural stimulation retulii in a good appetite, with thepowerto thOr* wilh ttui uuffi *nd natural remedy. Try gWtford's Blafk- Drnughthxley. Ton can buy a package inn* yoor dealer for 25c, If he&*»><£keepit, tend the money to T&* Chattanooga Modioina Go,, ttudtimootfa, Tenu., tad a gmikag* Will ha tnfcUtd ycm. In tho Matter of Publication of tho Notleo m tho Estate of A. O. BridgmanDeceased. Notice Is hereby given that tho un­ dersigned has been appointed and duly qualified by tho Probate Court ot Greene County, Ohio, ns : tutor of tho above named ,ato. •All persons indebted to sab! estate jmusfc make immediate payment; ! thoso having •claims will present : them for settlement, i>* It. IK Kerr. soon aslfe Isiretrsplaftted, and keep observation of a situation uo;wuiu Porto Kick That used to be ft first- class smallpox country. The dis> ’TP lu firi l X l l w J Bl IBD'S IGHT, Value- of Mental pleasures, No man's life lo free from struggles and laortilicaHorts, hot even tho hap­ piest; but every one may build up his 'own happiness by seeking mental pleasures, and thus making bimsbif independent of outward fortunes.-* , Von Humboldt, GRASS CATCHERS, 6oc to $ 1.25 “ SPRINGFIELD ” CLOTHES WR INGERS 10-inch, $3.00, 12-inch, $3.50 each With SOLID W H ITE RUBBER ROLLS Warranted Three Years W H ITE MOUNTAIN FREEZERS $2,00, $2.25, $2.50 to $5.00 each 200 CHOICE N EW HAMMOCKS Get Choice Now $1-00 to*$0,00 each ‘ ’GLACIER” NORTHERN REFRIGERATORS $7.50, $8.00, $10.00, $12.00 to $42.00 Each THE SPRINGFIELD HARDWARE COMPANY, Both Fhoiies 87 Springfield, O. itif’toiwVMUiM TMs month’ll Butterick Patterns are 10c and ISc—none higher, ; , ‘f i t wlfcilttttSH umi m For Wori that < T H I , g’his eo* •phocked la the unnom Mrs. A. 1) Tarontum, The tele;-'.. Gray, hen tJonof her time anoti telling of h Mrs. Gn . efie, and : Xenia, left Tarontum. Mrs. Eno .ville’e talt ■ tho- annou -broughtsa< The Va Tarontum ] ' Tins co shocked 8i .the sad hi that- deatt . Tarontum'i wgmon, Mr ' wife of A, dent of 8 curred at h •avenue at i 'MrB. End apolis, Ind. her ’ child! was the di Elizabeth » prosperou A' feWyearT to Gedarv mother and She gradua high, school attended /: graduating the class of husband w July 28,190- D. Endsley of ourjiigh elected su; ■Through tli her liusbar r soon becam of friends, disposition knew.her. . -member-of Roformed 1 AlHiooglist ineinborsht was a regif services ar . clntritable a Mrs, End; exceptional considerabl was a mei Book Club r Circle. In aclditio survived by and a broth burg. . Funeral s< her late rest avenue, thif- conducted b. ■the Reform , assisted by Rev. J. 1). Methodist First Prosi favorite p- will be suni from the Ta The inter Tuesday mo ■tety. Mia. E. ( Turnbull an Xenia left h attend tho li Mrs. Gray days but w caring for Gnly Endsi• NOT ICE « In the M the Notice i Bridgman 1) Notice is h dersigned h. duly qualifl* ot Greene V utor of the All persons ’ jnust make those ltavi them, for set wht Barj ■ jr i r

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