The Cedarville Herald, Volume 34, Numbers 27-52
'>»1 >1 y»wi'igfiiiiiw ijifj>iw»f *rnnty-*f BOGGAN’S E x c l u s i v e S t y l e s The store where styles originate The store ethers try to imitate. ExquisiteArray . • . , . . i Of Women ’s and Misses’ E x clusive Wearing Apparel That the BOOQ-A.lSiVSJIOP is the acknowledged leader in styles Is fasfc lie’eorinng wide spread and manifested most tombly by jtho. fast growing popularity of the BOGaAS-MApK GAIi&tBNTS which have merited their present groat demand, A Few Things You Should Know about the BOGG AN -M AD E SU IT S They are products of the most artistic and approved designers, they are tailored, by the most sbilltul of tailors, sponged, fheunls; and sieamed, they are made ot the newest and best ^materials and' wrought in the most sanitary factories of the Eastern and Western Hemispheres, • • t ' ‘ _ - ‘ ' . ' , A Few Things You' Should Know about the Boggan- Made Goats & Dresses I t is hard to express the merits of these garments. That they, am in a class by themselves is deckled. The coats are tailored to tho lastnotch are made up of th,e most popular shades in reversible materials, new est designs m buttons, sponged, shrunk and steamed . and nre guaranteed to be the best on the market even at higher prices. And tho Bresses’inade of the^ finest serges, and all the newest woolen cloths are the swel- lest things to be Seen for early Fall Wear, f Boggan-Made Millinery Here is the Department that will Open Your Eyes. >I'he most beautiful models are hero for inspection, and wider fche suporvlsion of bur Miss $vans you will wear the smartest headgear at the,most popular prices. PETER A, BOGGAN, 24 E . M am 'S t , Springfield, Ohio* W E P A Y C A R F A R E warn To be given away Monday, Nov. 2 0 , ’ l l . < *. . » ■ . A t 7 o’ clock p. m. In addition to the Pony will be given 850 in Gold—divided into seven prizes, $15, $10 $5, $5, $5, $5 $5. Tickets given with each 25c CASH purchase. Save Your Tickets . C. C. Weimer. Dealer in Fresh and Salt Meats, Fruits Etc. We Meat all Prices Made. CEDARVILLE, OHIO. 1 have purchased the blacksmith tools and business o f Arthur Townsley and I have con solidated the same with my harness business and am now located on South Main Street, Cedarville, where an invitation is extended to all friends .to call. I am prepared to do first class blacksmithing, wood work, harness, making and repairing neatly done and at. reasonable prices. All work guaranteed to please. I am also prepared to build cement columns for porches andiOrnamental work as weil as cement building blocks, Friends andformer patrons are urged to call when in need of work along our line. Respectfully, R. E. TOWNSLEY. South Main St., Cedarville, Ohio. tmWW FILEFISH, The Bite That Cau»sd Them to U*» j come Camel Packed. | “ Ob, mother, see the camel fish!” ' * So cried the email girl in excite# ■ ami delighted wonder as with her j mother ebe walked .along in front o f I the tanka at the aquarium, and sure- £ Iy it f'Cemed ns if tho fish she point- j ed out must bo one o f a species \ hearing that name. As. a matter o f j fact, though, the name o f the fish ’ was not camel fish, though it had ; two humps. It was an orange file- fish, its humpo illustrating the vicis situdes attending fish life in the sea. The orange filefish is.not pretty, lmt it is curious and interesting. It has a deep and very thin body, like a flatfish swimming on edge, and in swimming it carries its body at an angle, bead downward. For the origin o f one part of its name it i3 in color orange, tinted and brown and white, and.the file part of its name comes from the fact that it has rising from its head a long file shaped spine which it can-raiEe or fold down along on its body at will, From the top of its high back in front the head of the filefish stopes down sharply to its snout; from 'the top of its back at the other end there is a sharp slope down to its tail. This gives the fish ' a high, thin ridge’.along the midlength of its back, and how this particular filefish came, to be camel backed was as follows; Some much bigger fish that once encountered it in the- sea made a dive for it -and got it squarely mid- wny' Of"the -length of its back and simply,bit a piece out of it there, as a human being might bite a piece out of a slice o f bread, leaving ip the filefish’s back an incurving line of about the same sweep and dimen sions. Such a wound would havo killed most fish of ordinary build, but it did not prove mortal to this deep bodied filefish. The marks of the teeth that bit that piece out o f it are still visible on the filefish*8 side. ' / Coming just where the bite did, square in the middle o f the length of the back, which slopes down sharply at either end, the gco'oped out .place, at the center, gives this filefish the appearance of ‘ two humps.—‘New' York Sun! m m m m ...LET US SHOW YOU THE WAY ... * p i m l t m - r u i iW iM X ij f . v l ' / W m m m l i t # / ? / ' having ,* , . » r To Furnish Your New Home ' .4 . • . ' This is not always aii easy thing.to do, many obstacles are in the way, but if you consult us and examine our well selected stock, you will find many of the obstacles removed. Three great factors must be consider ed in presenting the claims o f our merchandise to popularity— . — - - - -DURABILITY, DESIGN AND P R I C E = = We will assure every customer of getting the most durable goods on the market. Our designs are correct In every •: % detail and are always - - ' ■ New. ' ■i 4- Our prlces are the lowest con sistent with good, up-to-date, first-class merchandise. In our Carpet Department you will find more new and interesting fabrics ' than ever before. 26-27 North Detroit St. FURNITTRE ADAIR’S, XENIA, CARPETS OHIO, STOVEs Visit our Stove Department before buying - your new stove. -We carry all the standard makes. £ "Had Had Had." “ While you’re discussing the pe culiarities, of the English lan guage/’ remarked a publisher, “ has it ever struck you that the word fiiad* can, with perfect correctness, occur three times successively in am ordinary English sentence? N o ? Well, i,t can.x Only the other even-. ing I came across an instance. It was a t the meeting o f a certain as sociation I->am interested in, and there the Secretary in reading the minutes said, ‘The chairman o f the committee then reported that the. trouble which lie had had had now been overcome/ ” “ That’s interesting/^ chimed^ in the literary man, “ but it’s nothing , . . , _ to the possibilities o f recurrence j particular, ball o f bread which she ” - L -* -a-~ 1 or One* Used to Determine, a Person'* Quilt or Innocence. Throwing people into the water to let it determine'their innocence or guilt was widely in use in the seventeenth and eighteenth centu ries. A synod o f west. Prussia for bade its use in 11-15. Sporadic cases, however, occurred during the whole o f the,nineteenth century. ”5fofessor B. P. Evans wrote in 1SD5 o f its use in Dalmatia, where, in some districts it was still custom ary to throw ail the women into the water on , a specified day to see whether they would sink or swim. A rope was attached to each in erder to sqve from drowning those Who proved their innocence by sink; ing, while those believed to be guilty because they floated were also rescued and. made to promise to forsake their evil ways, on pain o f being stoned, ■ ‘ A traveler has described a mod ern survival of the. Ordeal used m detecting thieves In ‘southern Bus- ( eia, says’ tho Dietetic and Hygienic I Gazette. ‘ AU the servants o f the household where the robbery oc curred were assembled, and- as many bails o f bread were made as there were suspected persons. ■ A sorceress then addressed each one o f the number, saying that the we can correctly* get out o f the word ‘ that/ You may say that that ‘ that* that that speaker indicated was not'that ‘ that’ that that gen tleman intended/*- Might Havo Changad History. I f Oskar Becker had aimed true on June 14, 1861, the map o f Eu -. rope might not be what-it is today. On that day at Baden Baden Beck er, twenty-two years old, waited for King William of Prassia'in tho park where ho usually walked and, when be appeared in company with Count Fleming, fired a pistol Bhot in his direction. The man was captured by people who were much more ex cited than the sturdy king, who kept on hie walk despite the slight wound On his nedk. Becker wa3 sen tenced to twenty years’ prison serv ice, but tho king pardoned him in 18GG. lie went to the United States! and two years'later died at Alexan dria, Egypt. held in, her hand would sink swim os the party addressed was guilty or innocent,. She then' flung it into the water, Boiling water was used in ordeals by the Persians, and it is referred to in tho Avesla. It contained both the sacred elements, water and fife, suggesting.the deluge past and the fiery doom of the future, In the simplest form o f tho hot water test the barm arm was plunged to the wrist in trivial cases and to the el bow in more serious trials, usually to bring ont rings or coins thrown therein.- In Tibet plaintiff and defendant settle their cause judicially by plunging their arms into boiling water containing' a black and a white stone, when he who brings np the white stone wins the verdict. Drinking Toasts. The bit o f toasted bread that was deemed such an important ingredi ent in many an old time drink was considered a morsel o f honor and fell to the one.whoso turn came last ANNOUNCEMENT 1 How Cossacks Catch Fish. J The Cossacks on some of the i rivers in Ilussia have a singular . , .. „ „ „ : method of catchtag t h o W l r i M j I jn winter. They cut a long trench j across a river when frozen and ran j a net from one bank to the other; The very name host o f anecdotes. toast calls up a The well known one o f the accomplished Judge Btd- tlion, rMing several miles np the i *4*1$ ; stream, they form a liner across the 1'frozen surface and gallop their j horses down toward the nets. The ' fish, hearing the noise and clatter ■o f hoofs, become frightened, dart , frith a rush down stream and are j Urns entangled in the net. #< I Ton Much. | Silas— I hear some . wandering 1 piano tuner knocked tho stuffin’ out ] 0 ’ Hi Jones. j Hank—Yaas; ye know what a | feller Hi is for gettin’ ,th* wuth 0 ’ * his money. Waal, ho wanted tli’ j tuner to throw in an oilin’ 0 ’ the I windmill and. a repairing o’ th* mowin’ machine, all for th* same money.” —Chicago Nows. ISHEAUTY WORTHTOURWHILE? ViolaCream eonUtveijr frecklt*, tnolM, blAek hstv?*, tuftbum *nn t*«, rftfttjprlnff diluted,- blotched, rourii *t»doily . ^ Klein to the fr«KhiMH&and deltMcrefvtmUi, greft'WKtSkinSfibc......... . flUrilKdfttfSdoent# pro»o«iiioa Md 0 nid*b»JBMnWon seqttut, tv teiiis,mtNrrMd 1 If* appointment as ambassador to the ! court o f ot. James is especially 1graceful, I “ Genius—sure to be welcomed j where Everett goes.” i The next response to this was; ! “ Law, equity and jurisprudence— ; no efforts can"raise them above one f Story.” I Alphonse Itarr, one of the datn- j’ tiest of writers, once gave a . toast f at a dinner o f physicians by pro's posing “ the health o f the sick,” 1 . ..-y...:.- ......................... I' s Banana Crops, j A crop o f bananas is harvested oh an average every fifteen days ' throughout the year. Each thrifty i banaua plant has many .suckers or ; stalks growing from a single root at ; tho same lime. One or more ■ bunches of the ripening fruit are out from a single stalk, while the other stalks growing from tlm same • root are loft untouched, and in fif teen days another of the stalks is ■ shorn of Us fruit, This process con* , tinnos inmwafitly during the year, '! In July and August it is necessary 1 to out off the ripening bunt-lies ev ery ten days, while in December and January about once a month is suilleionh the average throughout the year being practically fifteen Herald, DAYTON , OHIO. Our Fall Opening Tuesday^ September. 19th, and for the Remainder of the Week. No exposition of ’new merchandise we have ever attempted can compare tvith this Fall Opening, The Old World style centers have been scoured for the new,, desira ble, exclusive things thru our Paris, London, Belfast and Chemnitz offices. '- ■ 1 * The marts of. this country have been visited, by our buyers and we cordially invite you to see the result. The FviKe=Kumler Co. ESTABLISHED 1853 , y X 3 C GET OUR PRICES ON PRINTING ::z Only Once in a Lifetime You will buy a boiler i f you buy wisely. A boiler will give you SUMMER HEAT IN W INTER , will heat every portion o f your house, and the money invested will give more comfort, health and happiness than can he obtained in any other manner. It will banish colds, pneumonia and will ROB WINTER OF ITS TERRORS and rigors. While indoors YOU WILL NOT KNOW IT IS WINTER. Without boiler heat you are missing the greatest comfort and hies sing in life. Find out the cost to secure such heating and you Will wonder why you did not have it done before. HIGH GRADE STANDARD BOILERS furnish well heated houses at minimum cost o f installation and for fuel. Twenty-two years’ experience shows Us what to furnish to secure best results. O t m C A T A L O G IS A*k for It and tot *ny InfortoKtion*bo*iifHritinx. GIB LIN <& CO it h U T ICA , N. Y. \ /
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