The Cedarville Herald, Volume 31, Numbers 1-26
Wednesday, May •v \ , , • . 1 . • • ' Afternoon performance w ill commence promptly at 2 P. M., eveningat 8 P. M. J 27 Glasses Of Hartman Stock Farm will exhibit famous Arabian Horses. * Burmuda, the champion race horse sire of the Wo^ld will be in the show.The Mitchell Sales Stables and Riding Academy will also be represented. Tandem teams and four-in-harids. A high class lot that have been shown at some of the leading shows in the country. McLaughlin Bros, of Columbus, Will show their blue rib bon coach stallions, winners at Paris and New York City. John L . Bushneifs famous show horses, with T . L. Anderson, Mayes* ville Ky,, and P. Si Neal, Wilmore, Ky. have been entered. A car load of beauties. .Cincinnati and Dayton have made a lage list of entries. '! T 115 •IT FAYS TO TRADE IN SPRINGFIELD’ Are near at hand, and we wish to call the attention o f ^11 graduates to our excellent line o f High-grade. Footwear for such occasions, which is now ready for your selection. • - Don’ t spoil the effect o f a handsome gown or suit with shoddy footwear. / Come to us and be fitted correctly with the latest styles in leathers and lasts, at prices that are right. LAD IES ’ MEN’S Strap slippers, Pumps Shoes and Oxfords in Pat- End Oxfords. ent colt and Gun Metal. . $2 to $3.50 “ $ 2 .5 0 * # 0 $ 5 Shoes Eight, Prices E ight. Make Us Prove it. 2 5 E. Main Street, * Sprlngfeld, Ohio, Member Merchants* Association . a. F l Messrs. John Pierce for the cor poration and Zv T.’ Phillips for the , township* have finished their duties asassessors for the present year and have filed their report with the county auditor. , For the^corporation the following1 valuations were reported: Horses ..................... .—... Cattle-... ........... ...».......... Hoge........ ....... ......... ....... Carriages....-........ Watches .................. ....... Pianos ...... Merchandise ....... - ....... Products.—.................... {Money............................... StockB, bonds................... 6,05s 286 ..70 2,025 575 2,605 19,470 3,060 18,750 4,000 . Grand Tola’ ...................... TOWNSHIP i808Horse*..................... .... 1742 Cattle .................. , 32 Mules........ ................... 4438 Sheep.............. .......... 0618Hogs................... ........ Carriages (194)................. Implements, wood, ete Pianos................................ Money.............................. . Credits.............................. $ 71,017 $ IK Y » U U K juts f i f i tm tm nT tt t ^** v rJKlFN AAINU 73,710 47,496 8,046 20,000 24,470 6,455 33,250 965 20,255 63,060 Grand Total,................... $292,810 Ebersole Pianos ' u m A B i u e . ' "We hare for avrtraberd jemrt used iSbcrsolePianoslathe Conservatorywhere they am «o*JtonUy subjected to the hard* eiit kind z>i use. We have fouwi the Xbersol* to.be a good, durable piano, well «bCeto w w andtearof themusic room.” Oosft* B avh , Directress > t in s Ssmlftt Ss N ix o n Pirn® Co. mmnd O IL FoartM sWaat, . CINCINNATI, D, No Tidal ViAvet on Oreat Lakes. There ate no real tidal waves on the great lakes, Occasionally waved ot astonishing height roll in upon the shore, where there is no storm, but such phenomena are not in any sense tides. They are the result of gre .atmospheric pressure, far from the places where they are observed, or o! distant tempests. Attitude Toward ctes*. What Ik the precise attitude that tnep wquld bate women take up with regard to dress? They are perpetual ly rating the sox for* alleged .extrava gance in this direction, they are con tinually grumbling at fashion, and yet it la not always the .best dressed wo men who attract and command the attention of men*.says one of the fair •fen. - ■ . • J&s MILLINERY ■ For Graduates , and M ld ’Summer Has 8dnie Good Points, Every once in a while something happens to suggest that the Chinese idea of decapitating the officers of a failed hank is not all bad. . , ■ False uogio. Attorney General Moody, discussing ajegal point, said: '‘That is striking but false logic. It reminds me of t conversation I qnce heard at the sea shore. A man in a striped bathing suit was running on thin, pale leg* over the hot white beach toward the cool water when a friend, seising him by the arm, said; 'What! Are you going in to bathe Just after, a heavy lunch? Why, yon will ho drowned.’ 'Oh, no: not at all,* replied the other, •I ate nothing but fish.’ * I ..iMWt* ■ Just received newdesigns em bracing a very choice and com plete collection of suitablo bats. M ode l H a ts . From the recognised fashion authorities of New York, at greatly, reduced priced Put Your Money In a The Pacific Coast extension of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway now under construc tion,opens to thesettler thousands of acresof excellent agricultural land. Thenewcountryin Adame/ Hettinger, and Bowman Counties, North Dakota, and Butte County, South Dakota, is now reached by the new track. The soil Is a dark loam with clay subsoil, and produces' id abundance wheat, oats, barley, spblz, flax, corn andpotatoes. The landis well adapted to fanning, good water is found at a depth of from twenty to fifty feet, and the whole countryis underlaid with lignite coal that putt crops along thestreams, and in most cases can be had for the digging. _. The climate is healthful, the air is dry and invigorating, and the percentage of sunshiny days is high. Outdoor work dan be done almost every day in the year. Rainfall is amply suffi cient to raise the crops. Regular mall service has been established, the roads are good, rural telephone lines traverse the country, and automobiles are in common use. The deeded land in this ■ district sells for from $10 to $18 per acre. There are many instances this year where the Crop equalled invalue the cost of the land. In Butte County, South Dakota, there is considerable government land open for homestead entry. Government landoffices are maintained at Lemmon, Hettinger and Bowman, where filings and final proofs may be made, AHof these towns are on the new line of the •' c Chicago Milwaukee & S t Paul *» Railway In Montana, thenew*railroadtraverses good farming land. It has been demonstrated that big crops of grain maybe raised. Along theYellowstone andMussellshell rivers, the water is used ter irrigation, and phenomenal yieldsofalfalfa, sugarbeets, and grain, are always certain. In the Judith Basin bear Lewlstown, Montana, is one of the most remarkable sections to be found on the new line. Undernatural rainfall, the famous bench lands produced this year aiitaverage of 3S bushels of hard wheat to the acre, and the price was 94centsperbusheL The basin contains about lSOOsquare mit<w and Is sparselysettled. Some government land still remains open for settlement. A government land oSiveismaintained at Lewlstown, In Fergus County, outside the Judith Basin, is one of the greatest stock countriesIn theworld, and good ranches can be purchased at a reasonable figure. The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul RailwayCo. has established an immigration department ter the purpose of assisting- In the settlement and development of the now lands now being opened, •Pamphlets descriptiveof its resources will be forwarded free on request. B la ck Hats] Alio blaakaridwhite effects in largeand small shapes. jUntrimm ed H ats V F. A. MILLER General PassengerAgent, CHICAGO GEO. B. HAYNES Immigration Agent, OHADAMS STltKlT, CHICAGO A new line jasfcreceived froth the best maker*, in dress and sailorihapM, C hm * Grip Osterfy, | 81 Stmuti Xntitot G , »i To Care a Cold inOneDay ‘M i * L a x a t i v e B r o m o Q t t t a i n e A < * * v w y mm m a. I
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