The Cedarville Herald, Volume 32, Numbers 27-52
G. KELBLE&J&ELLING OUT SALE Continues to Draw Large Crowds of Buyers. Th is large stock of Clothing, Sh oes , H a ts and Furn ish ing Ooods Is one of the largest and best stocks of Goods in Xenja, and no on e can m iss this opportunity to save m oney and buy firs* c la s s up-to-date goods a t ha lf and le s s than ha lf price. T h is i s pos itive ly a se lling out sa le to enable Mr. Kelble to build and complete his n ew store building. A few of the low prices: Men’s Suits, were $25, now ................... $12.48 Men’s Suits, were $22, n o w . ............ $10.89 Men’ Suits, were $18.50, n o w . . . . . . . . . $9.75 Men’s Suits, were $15, n ow . ............. ..$7.49 Men’s Suits, were $12, now ..................... $5 25 Men’s Suits, were $7.50 to $9, n ow . . . .$3,55 Boys’ Suits, Long Trousers and Knee Trousers at half pride Fine Press Trousers and Everyday Pants at half pride and some less. HATS^Straw, Stiff and Soft. $3.50 ones, $1.95, $2 ones, 98c $2.75 and $2.50 ones $1.39 $1.50 ones, 73c ' $1 ones, 49c FURNISHING GOODS Press Shirts. $1.50 ones, 89c * $1,25 ones, 69c $1 ones, 59c 75c ones, 37c . 50c ones, 29c All the latest collars, 9c. NECKWEAR 75c Ties, 37c .. - . 50c Ties, 23c 35c Ties, 18c 15c Ties, 9c UNDERWEAR $2 kind, $1,29 $1.50 kind S9o $1 kind 49c 75ekind 43c; 50c kind 23c; 35c kind 19c Best Overalls and Work. Shirts, 39c BELTS 75c ones, 89c; 35c ones, 19c; 50 q ones, 23c Handkerchiefs--Red, White and Blue Kinds, 3c 7c. FANCY HOSIERY 35c ones, 19c 15c ones 7o 25 cones, 11c SUSPENDERS 75c ones, 39o 50c ones, 29c 35c ones, 19c 25c ones 18c 20c ones, 9c SHOES! SHOES! SHOES! SHOES! For Ladies’ Misses’ Children, Men, Boys’ $5.kinds $2.85; $X kind 09c; $3,50 kind $2.25 $2.25 kind $1,49 85 c kind 49c $1,50 kind, 89o $1.25 kind, 79c Hundreds of other goods at half and less than half price. Don’t miss the place, last two store rooms on W . Main St, See sign marked 45-49 West Main street* Store open evenings, closed only on Wednesday afternoons, (clerks’ half holiday) ' ’ 45*40 WEST MAIN STR EET , C. KELBLE, Agent, ; v X E N I A , O H IO . LOCAt AND PERSONAL 2 —'Oxfords a t cost. Moser’s Shoe Store, ill and 83 S. D e tro it S t. Xen ia Mr, I?, P . H astings wa» a Colum bus visito r Tuesday: K enneth P iitt is v isiting relatives in Green Springs, Ohio. Mr, and Mrs. J . H . Millntrn.vfsited t » ) .tly e sm Columbus, Sabbath'. Miso Helen Puffer ie m ak ing a v isit "with relatives in Springfield. The a n n u a l Summer Partners’ I n s titu te w ill be held a t Boaemgor, below Jamestown, August 18. . Mr. and Mrs. A lb e rt McOiven a t tended the funeral of the former’s m o ther ip Columbus the first of the week. The Spab r reun ion was held T hu rsday a t the hoinu of Col.' I, T. Cummins on the Jameetown-Xenia pike. Mias D6rh S ieg le r is v isiting Mr. a n d Mrs, J . p . Sohaffer of ipayton. Mr. R« A. Young of Casey, 111., sp e n t W ednesday with, h is sister. Mrs. I r a Townsley en te rta in d a •taw re la tiv e s Tuesday evening. . Miss Verna B ird en te rta ined the G^ O, T; d u b Tuesday afternoon. "1 . 9 . S h aw h a a fold his Duma of 4$*o>r«s to S. ®. H anna for 18.000. Mrs. Sarah M itchell ts th e guest o f h e r b ro ther, Mr. J* P« B a rr of Dayton. ’ M iss K a th ry n MoGiiven is v isiting h e r cousin, Miss Dorene N icho ls, in Columbus. Prof. P. M. Reynolds and wife are Spending a couple of weeks in Blau- Chester. 1 The la te s t case of typhoid fever to b e reported is t h a t of Mr. 25, T, Ph illips. V’JPhe W ednesday Afternoon Club was en tertained th is week by Mrs. Lucy McClellan, - Wells drilled or dttg by Johnson Bros. Sc Swyers. All hilts payab le to John Johnson. The Sm ith fam ily reunion was h e ld S a tu rd ay afternoon a t the Jack son d riv ing p a rk . Mrs. W a lte r IHff and daugh te r e v is itin g Mrs. UlfTs siste r, Mrs. f. W . Northup of Coshocton. Mr. W. It. Torrence and wife of gettia were guests of Mrs. Belle tray , Sabbath. Mule Florence B allard of Birming- iam , A la., has been spending the reek w ith Mr. and Mrs. O# L . Sm ith Jam estow n lias arranged a racing leefc und e r the,. direction of the riving association. Mrs. L au ra Weller and daugh ter, Myrtle have retu rned home a lte r a four •weeks v isit w ith friends and relatives. MT. Jam es McClellan of th e Day- ion Jou rn a l is Spending his vacation w ith h is family- who have been Spending the summer here. Mrs. I r a G&tegand Mrs. A. G. Evolyth spen t Tuesday in Colum bus w ith Mrs. Cates parents, Mr, and, Mrs. Poatle. ■—L, T. L , spells ‘‘Loyal Temper ance Legion” Ice Cream social to- tnoiTow n igh t, opera house lawn. Everjr • body come—this means Y-O-U, —Notice* the O. Kelble, Agent, Xenia, adve tisemen t in th is Issue. Prices cu t as never before owing to the fac t th a t the owner does no t w an t to move the goods in to a n e w building: Call -and see for yourself Mrs. O. H . Milligan and son, William, of Alleghany, Pa., where Rev. M illigan is pastor of the Ben Avon congregation, arrived Wed nesday for a v is it w ith Dr, 13. C-. Oglesbf• and wife a n d o ther friends —Vanilla Ie# cream, #trawl to# ewasiQ* p fa* a ^ d e tea* hams mads.oaadies a t th e L. T." L. lawn fgfc# to-morrow n igh t. Pestn jaster W-0 CostiS of Jam es town will hav# h is a rm rebraken. and^reset i n a ^ hm p lta l,ia chaste* dont and it was hot hrt right. The annu a l McCleilan picnic and reunion will be h e ld a t th e McClel lan school house, a* usual, on Thursday , A ugu st 19. The J . W . McLean p roperty will be offered fo r sale a t two o’olock Sa tu rday afternoon by th e adm in is tra to r, J . It. (linn of Jamestown. —The L . T. L» ice cream social tomorrow n ig h t will ho held out-of- doors or lu-doors—depending upon the w ea ther. You will be sure, to find it. When coming to the Greene County Pa ir do no t fa il to stop a t Moser’s Shoe Store, 81 and 88 South D etro it S tree t., Xenia, and s e t the big bare ains in summ er footwear, Mr. H a r ry Nagley, who has been in Columbus, re tu rn ed hom e Tues day and will rem ain here for the p resen t. Ilev. Jo h n Wilson and Wife of V irginia, 111., are v isiting Mrs. Caroline Wilson and o ther relatives In th is v icin ity . —Regal ?1.09 Oxfords for Men and Women, Sale price $3.19; Regal, $8.50; Oxfords frj.eu; Moser’s Shoe Store, 81 and 88 South D etro it St., Xenia. Mrs. Jam es Townsley and Mrs. AleX Turnbull retu rned from Spring* field la s t S a tu rd ay a f te r spending a few days visiting Mrs. JAmos Barber and o ther relatives m th a t city. r4 , Mia* M artha Kyle, who has been Che^Lackey fam ily reunion *viaitlng- relatives here fo r several hwld S a tu rday a t / J * ho“ ® of Jw e rts , le f t Thu rsday for Washmg- m. Fergus*® on the C lifton pike. [ton, j), <*., Where she will v isit her --------1 ’brother* Ralph Kyle and la tte r go here w ill be an open a i r preach* on to xow York City. r service on th e M ethod ist lawn bbath evening a t 1 o’clock p, m . he Mi«s-sMcNeiU expect to leave s t week for th e ir hom e in Belie n te t, to spend th e ir vacation . .-*tf yon w an t your ice cream de livered to your home e ith e r before o r a fte r supper ju s t leave you r or d e r w ith some L . T. L . member and th e same will be given special a t tention. (rs. W, t r . lliff ha* been spend* ■ sever : days tliis wesk with r . and Mrs. W . B . G raham of How Spring*. h ennm b e r of case* of typho id The “ Jim tow a F a ir” will be re vived again and held in September im oonjunofcion w ith a ^Home- Coming.” The da tes s e t a re Sep tember 22,28,2*. R . G, George is p residen t a f the new company to control the fair. ■ t . ■*• i V The drye in Montgomery county hays ju s t completed their poll o f the county. I t is sta ted th a t such an election will bo held if the pres en t m ayor Is re-elected. The poll shows indications t h a t the drys can win according to those hav ing the work In charge.' The saloon keepers in Spring- field th a t signed an agreement to ciese th e ir places la s t Saturday n igh t or Buffer prosecution have taken rongli lumber and hoarded the fronts e f the buildings. A half dozen buildings In one row decora ted in such a fashion preseuts a bad appearance for the c ity and Judge M iller of the police court says th a t the boards muet corno down. An Old Enemy. Persons who rise in the world aye not always as frank about their fa r mer plae03 in life as good ren:c and humor might load thorn to be. Dean Hole in Iris book of reminfceenees, “Now and T h e n /' tells a- little story of one whose humor did not desert him in time of prosperity. A foot man who had begun life as a doc tor’s boy grew interested in the study of medicine and spent his leisure hours reading medical books. H e eamo to the United Statc-3, worked hard as a student and as a physi cian for many years and attained a large practice. After some yearn of absence he returned to Ungland. Seated one day a t luncheon with those whom he had formerly served, he suddenly astonished the company by holding up tbe mustard pot and addressing i t with, “Hast thou found me, O mine enemy?” Afterward he explained th a t the only reproof he had incurred from the lady who was then a t the head o f the table was evoked by th e neg lected condition of the mustard pot. BOTHENBUflG. An Ancient City That U Stiif Stately , and Faacinatfrtfl. ’ For a thousand years Ilothenburg has been a city. For more than S001 years i t was a free city of the cm- \ pire. I t is hot like those ancient [ towns which, through centuries' of strife, preserved their entity through being huddled near the base of some great castle. I t is no t like those towns th a t were p ro tect1 >ed by powerful princes, for i t has maintained itse lf by its own unaid ed sturdiness. I f great barons came to Hothenburg they yams' to receive protection, no t to*giva it, or else they came to be entertained with the lavish open handedness th a t made the city g place to which emperors themselves found pleasure in resorting, By crusaders and pilgrims Roth* enburg Was held, in affectionate re gard, no t only for its generous hos pitality, b a t because, seen from the river, i t bore x striking resemblance isw jw p r . ■ Mi.** H a ttie and Belle K e rr of R u siitllle, In d ., viator* of Mr. R. F, K err arrived here Wednesday even- idg for a v isit. T hu rsday morning i« mininer o i — ... Misses K e rr and Mrs. R . F. ,f tll* t ha* developed here in the ; K e rr wen t to Columbus to spend a ; week should be a warn ing to few days w ith aelatlves. >##tdenfi to n#« ex tra care abou t! - . k in g w a te r. The hot su ltry day s Those who went on the Dahl-* wndweivs to such an epidemic. ‘MiUikin grocer* excursion from mieh eare canno t be exe re lsid here were*. Mr. and Mr*. Clarence he cond ition of property, fih e r# ,o te lling where typhoid germ* Northup, Misses Mary trooper. Jflel la Nag ley am t t ’afri# Townsley, t When th* Worrtxn Fainted. This happened on the Lake Whore flier no t long ago. A man rushed In from the ear behind, evidently in g rea t agitation, and said: “Has any body in the ear any whisky? A wo man in flic ear behind has fainted.” Instan tly dozens of flask* were pro- ( dueed. The man who had asked for ■11 it picked out the largest one’, drew I I the cork and put the bottle to Ins D f A f f iO . With a long, satisfied sigh, he N I V R l I I J a _ pilgrim* «v4 sttS’’Sbbyfof a* BB- grims’ Howe there, is *n ancient - stone* bearing upon i t an ancient carving of a hand and g, hatchet, with .the ominous inscription, ’“He who quarrels in this house shall have his hand cu t off.” . Yet since those early days th e town lias bten comparatively for gotten. Even yet it has no t become a haun t of the tourist and the trav eler, although each year a few Americans resort there, bringing back tales of this city th a t oufc- Nurnbergs Nurnbcrg. I t is easily reached, being on a little branch lino from the railway between Frank fo rt and Munich. It. is a place where th e sightseer cannot go wrong, fo r everywhere is fascination. There are both stateliness and beauty. There are towering houses with crisscrossed fronts, Tliero are deep dungeons under the Rathlums, reached by stairways dripping with moisture, into which no t a ray of light-can en ter, and in one of these dungeons some five centuries ago the men o f Ivothen- bnrg placed the burgomaster who, mote th an any other in the long burgomasteriaf line, gave to tho city power and wealth and prosper ity. But they charged .him with conspiring With the emperor and not_ only g a ic liim>no light, bu t edged th e ir animosity by deliber ately giving him no food. I t is in all a fiercely dramatic story, fo r friends who were still faithful tun neled to the cell and madly cut through its prodigious wall and reached tho prisoner, b u t only to find him dead. Nowadays they tre a t unpopular burgomasters with more considera tion. Until I hii ^. iiiiw - ici , jf vhvSOIi for three year*, and a t the end of th a t time ho is either elected for life or gives place to a nu =eessor. j Bu t an election for. life docs no t j give unchecked i<ower, for it is a ! simple m atter with these town-folk, t if they tiro of a life cho«en m ayo r,' to m ako jiim “«o era*y with vexa tion,” 1 b i t wn» expressed to me, th a t he is glad to resign and ac cept the pension th a t they pallia- tively offer. Only recently they thus got rid of one.—Robert Shaekloton in Harper’s Mm sine. MID SUMMER SALE of and July 22 nd, we will sell our entire stock of low Shoes and Slippers a t 20 Per Cent discount from the regu la r selling price. All our well e • , * known makes are included in this sale. Frazer’s Shoe Store, XENIA, OHIO. S I ___ s s s s s t s s s i r X GET OUR PRICES ON PRINTING 2C2C ‘WlllilK Wljfi “ IX AJlH-fAS.* WBW ^ .........V* rem a n d fo r thi* reason tha* H a rry Bird and Wt 1*. Townsley. *^ , + ..* .• .< 1 ..^ tIML j * ibt±* * <t«<c *M)f2akAi-SilMi* TfirA1la* ..bout dlffiWmt ild b* e lta a a d up * ; ojrt l(* M l« ilNS'M* Uiw. " ” *• ” » * ’ ^ VL ^ ,about diffiront part* of lowa Th* party look in Niagara Fall* . land ihilftkt*. Hpa. With a long, handed it back and remarked #*Thnt did me a lot of good. 1need • eft it, for if always makes me feel aueer to * * * a woman faint.” ., COLU MONEY CANNOT BUY A BETTER PAINT THAN BANA’SBRENSEAL, Tho Paint possessing every essential quality. Nothing in It hut what should he there, ^ ’ Nothing lacking that will Improve It. \ Pigments scientifically combined, and finely ground In Pun»jf Linseed Oil, - “ The Made to Wear Paint” ' tha t outwears all others, and that in wearing away does so gr«du-v< ally leaving a perfect surface for repainting. r e * «A tt »v A- KERR & HASTINGS BROS
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