The Cedarville Herald, Volume 32, Numbers 27-52
‘IT PAYS TO TRADE IX WiaNUMEaUD.” The Store Tlfhere^Styii The Store Originate, ry to Imitate. $38,000 OF OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF Ladies’, M is se s ’ and Children’s High-Grade, Fashionable Suits, Skirts, Waists, Coats, tailored Wash Suits, Lingerie Dresses, Street Gowns, S ilk Petticoats, Millinery, etc. EV ER l rilUSG NEW-'—That will b t this order of things in our new home. NEW BUILDING—NEW LOCATION—NEW FIXTURES, and above all, NEW STOCK from top to bottom* This th a t our present stock must be disposed of and quickly, for we move very shortly, Hence this sale, the greatest money-saving carnival tha t this section of the country has ever known, was planned and inaugurated* Thursday Morning, July 22nd, 1909, We placed on sale our entire $38,000 stock of high-class, fashionable Suits, Skirts, Waist*, Separate Coats, Street Gownr, Tailored Wash Suits, Silk Petticoats, Automobile Coats, Millinery, etc., a t price concessions tha t are positively unheard of in the annals of Ohio merchandising. YOU KNOW OUR STOCK. You know it is right in every particular, up-to-the-minute in 'styles, every piece of the highest quality. Bu t why say more? The goods speak for themselves. Round trip carfares refunded to all points within 4 0 miles of Springfield under the plan of The Merchants5 Association. s SPECIAL FOR. JULY $ 2 0 .0 0 Rubber Mounted H a rn e s s ............. .... - C. E,. HAGER, 413 EAST THIRD ST., OPP. WAYNE AVE.-EAST OF CANAL, $ 13.50 DAYTON, 0. The One B ig Event o f th e Year CLARK CODMTYFAIR,AUQPST 10 = 1 - 12-13 More Live S tock , More’Exhibits, More Attract i ons and Larger P u r se s for Horsem en than any County Fair in th e S ta te of Ohio, Ju st a Few o f th e Many Extraordinary A ttractions DAN PATCH (1:55) and MINOR HEIR (1:59 1 - 2 ), the two fastest hor ses in the world, will pace an exhibi tion mile on Tuesday, August 10, and will be on exhibition the entire week. Thrilling Race b e tw een tw o .O s t r ic h e s from the Florida ostrich farms one of which has record of 2 : 12 , on Wednesday and Friday* E xc iting Marathon Race-distance 1 Cmiles for prises aggregating $ 120 . Troupe o f Trained Seals-free attrac tion with exhibition daily in front o ' grounds. S ix $500 S take Races and free-for- all pace for $400, other harness races drawing purses aggregating $1,900, making a total of $5,470. The horse breaking the track record of 2:10 in any of the regular events will be a- warded a cash prize of $50* County Road Race for farmer boys for purse of $90 Matinee and track horses barred* Exhibit from the Ohio Experimental Station, Wooster, with lecture daily. Band Concerts D a ily -in both front and rear portions of the grounds. SUNKEN SHIPS, Wooden Wreck* Sometimes Rina to the Surface. When a ship disappears beneath the waters it is by no means certain that it will never be seen again. I t may rise after a few days or even a few hours and continue afloat for months, a constant menace to navi gation. .This, of course, applies only to wooden ships. When an iron ship goes down it stays down. Some yearn ago a coal laden schooner collided with on unknown vessel in a thick fog a t night a hun dred miles from Cape Hatteras. The unknown continued on her way and 0 veas swallowed up in the fog, bat the schooner, with a great hole tom in her bows, began to settle, and her crew was launching the boats when seen and rescued by a passing southern liner. The aban doned ship was then two-thirds full of water and bows under, In less than ten minutes after the crew had been taken off the schooner’s stem rose in the.air, and she made her final plunge. As she went dorm the deck blew up with a /noise like thunder* Two menthu later she W S L W t t i g m W i n tow OVER $12 ,000 IN SPEED AND CLASS PREMIUMS DON'T MISS TUESDAY. X X GET OUR PRICES ON PRINTING X X jj!MKfVd the trend of the gulf stream. The explanation of her resurrection was a simple one. Her cargo had shift ed forward when the how tilted down with the inrush of the water and the rolling of a rough sea. As she went down the coal ran out through the great hole there before she reached the bottom, and, re lieved of its weight, she roso again, turning turtle as she did so. A ship with a broken back is also likely to. rise as soon as her cargo floats out or disintegrates under the action of tho salt water; A wreck in ballast or with a light cargo drifts with bows from tho waves if there is no current worth mentioning , 1 ut in a strong, swift current tho bow will face in the op posite direction to tha t in which the current is moving. A ship bottom up will float with about an eighth of the depth of her hull out of water and in a heavy sea will lie lengthwise of the waves. When a ship has been down long enough to become thoroughly wa terlogged and riddled by worms i t never rises again from its ocean grave.—New York Press. EUfxito at Work. The most extraordinary of all lit erary workmen was the French nov elist Babae. When engaged on a novel he retired from all contact with the world and saw no one but his printer. He began his daily task a t 2 o’clock in the morning, his desk brilliantly lighted with candles, Clad in a Mack robe, he sat down and worked away, drinking great cups of black coffee as a stimulant. No matter how much daylight there was bn the outside, none of it was permitted to enter his room. When thoroughly exhausted he would re tire for refreshment and sleep and the next morning at 2 o’clock would again seat himself At his desk. Thus for weeks and sometimes for months liO wOillu go Oii uiilil Ms work was completed. Then he would, retire to the country or take & journey for recuperation and rest, HI* On* Brother. One of the most curious instances of longevity is found in Miss Louisa Courtenay’s “Notes of an Octoge narian.’’ A witness in a will ease in which. Jtellenden-Ker, the- great English conveyancer, was engaged was asked if he had any brothers or sisters. He replied that he had had’ one brother who died ICOyears ago. Tho court expressed incredulity, and documentary evidence was produced in support of tha statement, This showed thst the witness’ father, who married first a t the age of nineteen, had a son who died in infancy, The father married again at the age of seventy five and had a eon who lived to appear in the witness box at the *g# of ninety-four and made the above startling statement, . ■ '. - ■ ' *•. Very Serious 1 It is a very serious matter to ask I for one medicine and have the I wrong one, given yon. For this ■ reason w e urge you in buying. || to be careful to get the genuine— || B u C T aug HT a live r Medicine » T h e reputation o f this old, relia- 1 1 hie medicine, for constipation, in- 1 ■ digestion and liver troubl e, is firm- ! ■ l y established. It does not imitate (’ ■ ether medicines. It is better than f/ ■ others, or it would not be the fa- u ■ vorite liver powder, with a large; ■ H ,sale than all others combined. n | SOLD IN TOWN F2 U Daily“atwe.ClevelandandCedarPoint-"Daily on theGre*^£atoH^ke * ride °a *** •H’Weel con*traded, fleetest, Mfcat twlMeraW steamer STEAMER EASTLAND VAJUt F I V E $i H O U K S ROUND 1 THE • The BA8TLAOT, being of the "ocean type” ofn»**eag«rsteamer, m om faster and smoother la any kind of weather than a sy other steamer of It* claaa on fade* Brie. S eason opens J une 12* closes semt . 12. : Good Definition. T rue w it is nature to advantage dressed.— Pope. X,e»re Cleveland - - 830 A. IS. 1 1 Free Dancing oh Board. C okhsoctons ArriveCedar Point - - 11:45 A. M. 1 1 made and Tnaonsx T ic k e t * S old to all teave Cedar Point - - 4:30 P. M. 1 1 points, Rail orWater. Arrive Cleveland - ' - - 7^5 p. M. ( | The Eastland Navlsalta* Ca. Cleveland, O. m They Go N o islessly TO* M m WHAT YOU WANTWHEN YQI? WANT IT Hue is the celebrated “Grey Streak” that made the much talked, of record at' the recent Savannah races. Speed 70 miles per hour. The car forjtll occasions and especially uthe “Doctor's” friend. Model No* 10, with RoadsterBody, 18 H. P., $1000.00. SPECIFICATIONS S iats Three Persons. Current supplied by Magneto. Wheel Base 91 inches. Shaft Drive* Picssed Steel Frame. Four Cylinder Engine size 3 3-4x3 3-4* This same car, with Toarabout Body, $1,050.00. BUICK Model “F” Most reliable car on the market. A remarkable Hill Climber* Well adapt* ed for country driving, Model “F.” Touring Car, 22 H. P., $1250.00. SPECIFICATIONS. - Seats Five Persons. Wheel Base 92 inches. Double Opposed Engine 4^x5. Chain Drive. This same car with Roadster Body if desired. BUICK Model No. 17 The greatest Car value offered for 1909. Do not ever consider other makes until you have seen this “Silent Forty.” Car has straight line body of approved I rlhllnn nml jo . hsillfif * Model No. 17 Touring Car, 40 H. P. $1,750.01. SPECIFICATIONS. Seats Five Persons. Current applied by Magneto. Pressed Steel Frame. Wheel Base 112 inches. Four Cylinder Engine 44x5, This Car equipped with Roadster Body if desired. We al«o haye to offer the 50 H. I*, seven passongor Touring Oar, Complete apacifleatiahN given on request, This same ear equipped with Roadster Hotly it desired. Also agents far the “ Incom parable White Steamer,4* Five paseonget Touring Car |2,000. For a “ town car” there I n nothing to surpass our low cut direct drive “Waverly Electric.** A silent car. $1,SU0,00. A visit to our Garago will convince the most exacting th a t we have the most reliable ears a t low est prices. We liar* two ear loads on th« way. Call and lntpeot the line before investing. The Central Electric & Supply Company K E L SO A G A R F IE L D , P n * . .......................................................................J * t k D r t n K S t., X E N IA , 0 .
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