The Cedarville Herald, Volume 33, Numbers 1-26

mmrnmmmmmm m RECEIVER APPOINTED T h e M o se Cohen store w as d o s e d M on ­ day, Tuesday and W edn e sd ay for Inventory fo llow in g the action o f the court in appoint­ ing M r. H a rry R anh as Receiver. ThursdayMorning MARCH 17th A T 9 : 0 0 A . M . Th e store was opened . There are n ow sur­ prises plentiful for everybody in Clothing, Hats And Furnishings Fourth & Main S ts ., Dayton, Ohio. CLOSING-POT SALE We have decided to quit business. On M onday morning, March 7 , w e began a grand closing-out sale. Every article in .our large stock w ill b e o f­ fered at prices that w ill surprise you . CARPETS RUGS W A L L PAP ER MATTINGS LAC E CURTA INS W INDOW S H A D ES P ICTURES BR IC -A -BRAC * ' " ' t Everyth ing must be sold and the prices w e are making ought to m ove the goods qu ick ly . VAN AUSDAL & CO South Main Street, I | Dayton , Oh io . COMING!! SATURDAY NIGHT MARCH 19, K. of P. HALL, BARBER BLOCK Best Show Yet In Motion Pictures 2 HOURS O F SO L ID EN T ER T A INM EN T 2 Don’t Forget the Date a Admission 10c. hard to please , Ua Use Trying to be Neighborly Will ! 3om» Pecp!«, WiiQii Hi'.?. Calloway ctoi Mra. | Pcfr-oa hi tlicAmarkefc oao morning j *'R'I iriqwml for tho news of tho! people I t lior Moek it fame to light ] tliat tho Carulcone, who used to bo j neighbors of tho Calloways, now hold that relationship to tho Dec- Eon?. Xoiitrally the diameter oil the Carohona as a family and as in­ dividuals was shortly under discus-1 sum. Mrj. Dpesoa, who admitted] somewhat grudgingly that she sup* ! po;;ed that the Carolsnns were j “pleasant enough/5then turned eon-1 ftdential and recited o story, which the Chicago News prints: “Mra. Carol}on ip at Shadow Lahe now, toiv't she?” Mrs. Calloway had ashed, ‘Yea,” paid the other woman, and she never said a word to me about it before she went. I sawMr. Carolson weeding the pansies the other morning, and I called out, just to he neighborly, ‘Your wife gone away?’ “He grunted something that might have meant either ‘yes5 or ‘no.5 Xwent on: “ ‘You’d better go away, too, and stay over Sunday with her. I’ll look after your house.5 He gave another grunt. “ ‘Why not stay until .the follow* ing Monday?51 asked. ' “ ‘Thank you/ he growled. H wish my firm was as generous as you are,5 Then he went into the house. “A little while after that my daughter met him on the street car­ rying a suit case, so I knew he'had taken my advice, . , ‘“ I suppose he won’t be home for ten days, He must have gone in a hurry, for he didn’t tell me a thing about his going/ I said to my daughter. “I had so much work to do that I could give little time to their place. Still,' I like to be neighborly, so early the next morning I went over and picked all their pansies. Then, seeing that Mr, Carolson hadn’t stopped the mullc or his paper, I helped myself to both. Afterward I telephoned to the milkman not to leave any more milk. “I ran to the door every time I heard their bell ring and explained to thg1caller that the family had gone away for ten days. It was a lot of trouble, for I had to keep, watching all the time.” “ You always have such a sense of responsibility when your neighbors are away, Mrs. Deeson/5 said Mrs. Calloway, “Well, I try to. do my duty by everybody. Late in the afternoon a boy name with a suit case. I call­ ed to him that there was no use ringing the Carolsons5bell, as they wouldn’t be at home for ten days, “ ‘I had special orders to bring' these clothes today/ said the boy. ‘Won’t, you take them in—dollar to collect?5 “ ‘I don’t meddle with Mr, Carol- son’s clothes/ I said. ‘Bring ’ em back in ton days/ Then I shut tho door. You have to he .firm with boys like that. They'd argue all day if you’d let ’em, and I had my dinner to get.' “ Wo had just sat down to the ta­ ble when my daughter said, ‘Who’s that picking the Carolsons’ pan- sics “ ‘Here, you!’ I called. And if it wasn’ t Mr. Carolson himself, look­ ing madder than a hatter. “ ‘Some one has picked themall!’ he snorted. “ ‘I thought you were away/ I said. “ ‘That accounts for the milk and tho papers, I suppose. Perhaps you’ve tlie clothes that I am wait­ ing for?’ ' ‘“ I sent them back’— I began, but didn’t get a chance to finish the sentence. I f I told you what he said— I could hardly believe my cars! Some people arc hard to please, aren’t they, Mrs. Calloway?” Physicians Advise t!wms of AKM-JbjMfive, to Ixep the t&wtb cpm and prevent tinspoisons of uaufccsied ! food ffoat Ketua.^iatoyoaf systca. I The latest twJa:t at Celsius 1?VOLVOtasativo LiverSyrup, purely vendable, gaitb, j reliable and of a peasant, arcjiintk taste. Vclvo acte. ot» tits liver, as well as on tls f st<»« h AnJ toweb, and 13 at tho f,reatc>Cpcr.:/.!lt> efficacy in cow.tipattoa, indigestion, | t $lk headache, fowld.itcs, col^ifttufcace, etc. Try VPi j u r i un LAXATIVE I VLLIU LIVERSYRUP! An Honest Man. A man well known in * ew York and the possessor of much dignity of the impressive sort was strolling through a Long Island village re­ cently when a well dressed, prepos- Etsning little girl of perhaps seven years halted him. ’ ■‘Are you an honest man?” the child queried. Tho dignified man gasped. “ Yes, I— jl think so/’ he replied. “But are you quite sure?” “ Yes, I am quite sure. Why?” “Because you can hold my dolly while I tie my shoe.” And it came out that way.—New York Globe. He Was Too Slow. Magistrate—Your husband makes a charge of assault against you. Madam—Yea, your honor. I ask­ ed him if he would always love me, and he wan no slow in answering that I hit him with a mop. I’m only a woman, judge, and a woman’s life without love to a mere blight.—Il­ lustrated Bits. Piles or Smiles? A POSITIVE GUARANTEE t»ImfttMKsUtyrtttwe*wltHtiisaHtytut**W» DR. HEBRAS UNfiOID ttia tntm t wcmlrthil tdestSfis fe w e r * of modern tfinesfjr tneewsrrtit <«.it>ritf!hpg 1‘i.e#, JVrctns,- SVjItSf, 8*it MiAcm, Hire Vt’o t n , iHilwr'a Itrh, ete. IbSs hi«Wy medi* cutset Mtiicptln Salvo, kills tho gonna, re* moves Oio tiouhlo roil heats the InUatl.-ia prrirtsaetitty. Absolute taHsifcetlon g e n t* a«:eed or money teranrtrfl. „ . „ , Hiirs SOcts. t& IVHBklsts, or milled, TriAl 8CCntStO (0 tt!X UlMlififi T H E 8. C. B ITTNER 00., Tttefc, OM*. t'WOSKRn. j fetcHHid Hss Prom His Wtf*j And Ski I Cherished Her Qwrt. t ; “How’ij kHucce, LfcmP’ ; _Tho old kke wan wanking at tho ; eink after Ms flay’a work. I 1 “KnOj Marthy; f>noP I “ Does tlio store look just the same, with the red geranium in the window? Land, how I'd like to cco i it with the can ehiaiag inf How! does it !ook, ISbonP j Eben did not answer for a mo­ ment. When ho did bio voice shook t a bit, , “ The storrA) nevor been the same since you left, Marthv.” A faint little flueh came into Martha’s withered cheek. Is a wife ever too old to he moved by her husband’o flattery? For yearn Kben and Martha had kept a tiny notion store. ThenMar­ tha fell sick and was taken to the hospital. That was months ago. She was out now, but sbe would never be strong again—never be partner in their happy little trade again. “I can’t get over a hankering for a sight of the store,” thought Mar­ tha one forenoon. “I f I take it real careful I can get down there. ’Tisn’ t so far. Ebon ’ll scold, hut he’ll be tickled most to death,” It took a long time for her to drag herself downtown, but at last she stood at the head of the little street where the store was. All of a sudden she stopped. Ahead, on the pavement, stood Eben. A tray hung from his heck, on which were arranged a few cards of collar studs, some papers of pins and shoe laces. Two or three .holders were in his shaking old hand, and as he stood he called his wares. Martha clutched at the wall of the building. She looked over the way at the little store. Its win­ dows were filled with fruit, and an Italian name fluttered on the awn­ ing. Then Martha understood. The store had gone to pay her expenses. She turned and hurried away as fast as her trembling limbs would take her, , It will hurt him so to have me find out/’ she thought, and the tears trickled down her face. “He’s kept a secret from nie, and I’ll keep one from him/’ she said to herself. “He shan’t know that I know.” That night when Eben came in. chilled and weary, •Martha asked' cheerfully the old question: “How’s business?” “Better’n ever, Marthy/’ answer­ ed Eben.—Youth’s Companion* How Painter Lawrane* Got Hit Start, Sir Thomas Lawrence was one of the great portrait painters in Eng­ land. His parents were poor, hia father being a country innkeeper. One day Lord Bhafteabury’s father and mother etoppqd at the inn, har- ing their young son, the future lord, ' with them. In conversation the innkeeper spoke of the genius of his boy in drawing and wished them to test it by a picture of their son. They assented, thinking to gratify a father’s pride, but not looking for any evidence of superior talent. The boy came in modestly with chalk and paj«r and in a few min­ utes had drawn a picture of their son, on which the parents looked with wonder. They recognized the genius and promise of future great­ ness and befriended the young art­ ist, giving him the help needed to develop his wonderful gift. Hit Portrait. One of the members of a certain suburban photographic society re­ cently delivered a lecture, illustrat­ ed by lantern views. Another mem­ ber, thinking to have a joke at the expense of The lecturer, slipped in among the slides a lantern portrait of himself. The jo’ e would come in, of course, by the portrait ap­ pearing on the screen immediately after the lecturer had announced the apjiearlng of something quite' different. Fate and chance were unluckily against the humorist, for when his portrait was presented the lecturer, without knowing whatwas on the screen, gravely read from his list: “The next slide, ladies and gen­ tlemen, is the picture of a refrac­ tory donkey!” The Other Way About. A benevolent looking old gentle-: man was walking along the street when he came upon an-irate parent lecturing his offspring. “Yow, you young rascal/’ said the angry father, *“onfc off home, and be­ fore you go to bed tonight I’ll give you a good whipping!” The old gentleman mildly remon­ strated. “My dear sir, perhaps I have no right to interfere, but re­ member the wise old saying, ‘Let not the sun go down, upon your wrath.” 5 “ Don’t you trouble yourself about that.” was tho reply3 “I won’t do anything of the sortl Oh, no! What I’m going to do is to let the wrath descend upon the son.”—Judge. A HIGHLY INTERESTING EXHIBIT OF FOOTWEAR. FOR SPRING YOUR TRIP TO SPRINGFIELD ON OPEN ING DAYS Thursday, Friday and Saturday, March 16,17, 18. WILL NOT BE COMPLETE WITHOUT A VISIT TO OUR SHOE STORE We carry as varied a stock as any one in the city--all the latest styles in all the new leathers* on comfortable lasts. While the prices are most reasonable, there i» a sufficient range to suit all purses. Meet your friends and leave your packages at OSCAR YOUNG’S, 7 East Main Street, Springfield, Ohio. R. D. WILLIAMSON CANDIDATE FOR C O U N T Y • ‘ ■ : 1 ' A ; ’ ■- I C O M M I S S I O N E R S u b je ct to th e d e c is io n o f th e R epu b lican P r im a ry E lection . Watch Our v - . Announcement of Automobiles For 1910. X E N I A . O H IO . 6 0 VEAR&’ EXPERIENCE T bade M arks D esigns C opyrights A c . Anfduawndtttcm.kiHrhandde.ertptlnn mnt (julfltlrucertaln ouropinion tree wiietlier *3 tavaimnit 1.proTi»MYpswnf.]jl*t_Commnnlf»* tloat*trIctlrcdnBdetitft].,HANDBOOKonPatent* lentfree, olrteate.ectf forMcntinsMtent*. Patent! taken tfironihMutm* Co. retell* tpMtiUnotht, withoutcharge,inthe Scientific American. AhmdMinef?lllnitraleilweekly. JarkeriMr- dilutionof anr.dentineJnarsal. Term*,13 a tear: fmtrmonth*,$u Boidbyallnewsdealer.. ■H tifcRsdsftt Serious The Palace Restaurant M rs. Chas. Harris, P rop . X en ia Ave. R oom s form erly occup ied by C. C. W e im e r . M ea ls by day or week , E un ch served all hours. Furnished R oom s for Rent. P A T E N T S C& eeM ti end 1 imU.Matk*attained and111l’*t- esthuslnewiWHlBdedfor MoKttatk V***. : QgRCFricti«cpiH»ciTtU.s.l»ATf:Htarni;R KrtJtrerati.*?■nr* (rat^it its (csstirrl«thta thee* remote Washmyt***, . . . . ' £end m j !*\rltam.!*1 <1 e.'kh t!*e-fl|p n:m. We ms-*;**,it Mt*»Ub1e M O b t, free m Oarle«r>otfl!WiHil patentI#secured, APAtm to twain PAtenf*,*'-wilh c.s:,t nl nameTntH g.SLAnd foreign eomtdet sentfree, ArMr*** O.A.SNOWife.OO. j] 6«fc P A fta r o m i t , SfASHINATOff, Ot A . NH pym *■ vo *> iw > It is Averyserious auttef toask for ono medicine and have the wrong one given you* For this reason we urge you In buying to hecareful to get thegenuine— BLA c k - draug HT liv e r Medicine « The reputationof t!:k eld, reJia^ !| bie medicine, for eoiiotipatiott, in-* Jl digestionandlivertrouble, es finn* i* ly estahlislted. It docs r.at Imitate ethet'medfciftcs. Is la better than others, or it wcuU net be the fa* vorit* livet powder, with a large? •alethan*Uotttcrocombined, SOU) INf TOWK n THE RAPID Folding Go-Cart i combines comfort, durabilityandappear, anco at the lowest possible pika consist- cut with quality. Motiur's nictto “ Nothing too f-ood for the baby.” We also manufacturtt Thompson’s M B Folding Crib. Sanitary, comfortable, I^ H j I convenient, durable and economical * W H Ask your dealer to Showyou a “ Tmpid ” Folding Go (‘art” and Thompson’s Fold, ing Crib, both of which are necessary articles £«r the baby. Tiie beet one motion Collar.nibfcCattmade, handle these two>artic!cs, write ti3direct for price and uruihus. MISHAWAKAFOLDIMBCAftfttAlE C 0 .f If yout« talerdoe* not f Mlsli 8 W 8 k«) 1*4

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