The Cedarville Herald, Volume 34, Numbers 27-52
H^itor^irw Men’s and Yonng Men’s Clothing for Autumn Wear Autumn is here And with the failing leaves and sharp air comes the reali zation that you must have heavier clothing, THE FINEST MADE CLOTH- INfr IS HERE in all the latest styles and newest coloring made by Hart, Sehaffiier and Marx and Michaels Stern Co, The Varsity, Shapemaker, the New English sack in tan grey, blue grey* brown, cheviots, worsted and cassi- rneres; also a beautiful lino of plain and faney weave serges.' To fully appre ciate these suds and overcoats we have in our mammoth stock you must come in and let us try them on. Hart, Schaffner & Marx.Suits and Overcoats $20, $22.50, $25 to $30. Michaels Stern Clothing $7.50, $10, $12.50, $15 to $18.50. A W ond erfu l S tock o f Fine C lothes r k . * , J . . . . fo r Boys While many of the stores have planned for a’ light Fall aud Winter busi ness, we have made preparation for the biggest business in our history. Our shelves and counters are filled to overflowing with an unexcelled linje o f high grade suits for boys andjehildren, made by the best makers in America!, Boys three piece combination suit consisting of coat and two pair o f full cut knickerbocker trousers $2.50, $3.00/$3.50, $5.00 and $6-00. Boys all-wool wool worsted, cheviot, cassimeres, plain and fancy serge suits in brown, grey, tan, blue and blue grey, all'guaranteed to wear well and fit perfectly. Coats.serge lined, trousers full linen lined, $5, $6, $7.50 to $10. r p - , Wren’s SURPRISE STORE, M4#J5, 28 & 30 East Th ird Street, Dayton, Ohio. § LOCAfc AND PERSONAL | F o r S a l e Second hand- surrey, cheap. J« H . Wolford. Mrs. Sauiuel Tomlinson and children, of Plymouth, Xnd., are guests of relatives here. . —New buckwheat, bulk and package. - ’ / McFarland Bros. ’ Mr. Charles Galbreath o f Dayton spent Saturday and Sabbath here. Mn F. F. Hastings and wife have returned home alter a twelve days "visitw ith relatives in Muskingum county. —W a ll pajier. We are almost giving it away. Come quick, . West’ s, Xenia. Mra. Bohert Armstrong,, formerly Miss' Mary Ann - Gee, of Morning Sun, Iowa, , has been the guest of o fM r .’and Mrs. L . A . Teas since Tuesday, . The Wednesday Afternoon Club was entertained this week by Mrs. WYH , Owens. —W inter Caps, 2&c to $3.00. / Sullivan’ s, 21S. Limestone, Springfield, O, Mrs. O. L . Smith and JE.'CJ. Oglos- be* attended the Purity Congress that is being held in Columbus this •week. Mrs. Thomas Stowart and daugh ter, Miss Anna, of Yellow Springs, were guests of Mrs. D. H* Marshall, Wednesday. . * —One thousand pieces of sheet music at 10c per sheet. r West’ s, Xenia. Mrs. W . R. Sterret has arrived h om e after a two weeks visit with her son Walter and wife in Beaver Falls, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. O. B. W iles had for their guest Sabbath. Mr. and Mrs. Alien. Mr. aud Mrs. Pangel and Mr. and Mrs Heffner of Dayton. The funeral services f a / George Tiiarr, the murdered man, r&ze held Tuesday afternoon from the residence.of Mr. 31. A . Barr. Brief services were conducted \ by Rev. M. J. Taylor. ' Burial took place north of town. largest lino of heating and stoves, coal, wood or gas, junty at prices that are as- igty low quality considered, ane County Hardware Co.t Xenia, O. dl and see the Hull Hog Feed ore and Miami Gasoline iOn- . j . E. Pierce, The Signor Cafarelll Concert Co., greeted a large audience at tho op era house Tuesday evening, tills being the first of six mmohers on the Brotherhood Lecture Course. The entertainment was o l a high order and the program contained many numbers from the classics. M r . J . R . O r r has completed tho draining o f his quarry'that is to bo used t« furnish stone when the Col umbus pike is to be macadamized next spring. »fho qttiwry has been partly tilled with sprmg water for several years and many fishermen will M b - deprived o f a few hours ppotfc at this point. —Pilot Acetylene Generators for the lighting of country homes. J. E. Pierce. —Hew stock of Bibles, all prices, every body should have one, West’s, Xenia. . —Men’ s Suits $10 to $22.50 at Snl- llvan’ s, 21 S. Limestone St,, Spring- field. Misses Irene Schmidt of Day ton and Ida Jeffries of Xenia, were the guests of Miss Ina Jeffries, Sabbath. Mr. Fred Fields of Lima spent Saturday here,, . Mr. ,J. K. Stuckey-attended the Tri-State Vehicle aud Implement dealer's meetiug in Cincinnati this week. During his. absence Mrs Stuckey visited relatives inXeriia. —Violins, guitars, mandolins, har monics, accordions, victim bows and ail sorts of fixtures. West’ s Music Store, Xenia. Mrs. Lucy McClellan and Mrs. J. K. ’Turnbull expect to leave today j for a visit with Mr. W . J, Smith and family of Rant, Come to the Hallowe’ en social and get your fortune told next Tuesday evening in the basement of the library. ■Refreshments. Admis sion 15c, . Mr. and Mrs. W , J. Tarbox are home after a three week’ s visit in Hale Center, Texas, where Mr. Tarbox has been looking after his crop, he having large farfn interests there. . '-‘Men's and Boy's Sweaters and Underwear. McFarland Bros. The first frost o f the season that 1was at all noticeable was found ' Monday morning. Along with it } came a small amount o f ice where water stood In small quantities. According to weather reports it has been thfrty yeara since we hav® not had frost by the 16th o f October- I Messrs. O. L . Smith, Louis Tin dall, Andrew Winter, Dr. Loo An derson aod Birdsell Greswell took in ‘ ‘ Get R ich Quick Wallingford’4 at the Fairbanks Theatre in Spring- field Thursday evening. —For snappy, stylish overcoats go to Sullivan’ s, 21 South Limestone St., Springfield. Mrs, H , M: McMillan and Mrs, Mary Barber spent Thursday and Friday With Mrs. Kate Jackson and Mrs, James Holmes in Xenia, Mrs. Elizabeth Owftns Is , quite ill suffering with heart trouble and also being threatened with pneumo nia, Mrs. I. C. Davis Of Dayton was called here yesterday by her mother’ s illu’ess, The.Meadow Brook Herd of cattle arrived at homo this week after be ing Opt eleven weeks. The season lias been one o f the best In the his tory o f the herd and Messrs. Brad- fute & Son expect a large winning at the International at Chicago this winter, Mr. William Watt, who haB been out with the Cedar Vaie Duroc Jersey hogs aud sheep, Is home for the,season. This herd sel dom meets defeat in tile show ring and this year was no exception of former years. WE DON’T HAVE TO PUSH Golden 'R u le flour. It pushes itself. For wherever It becomes known it jumps into Immediate favor. Housekeepers who try it once use it regularly there after. THE REASON "GOLDEN RULE*'FLOUR makes friends can bo easily learned by trying a sack of it. Order ube today and you’ ll need no urging to ordci another when tho first is empty. t , ■ ' Joe Baker, colored, -was bad ly cut by Elmer Lowe tu„ Xenia Sunday over a bottle o f whiskey. In the mix-up Lowe put his flogers in J&ak- Baker’ s mouth and he bit Utetn. This angered Lowe who slashed ills victim with a knife.' THE PACIFIC MONTHLY. SPECIAL RATES ON THE LEAPING .MAGAZINE OP THE WEST The Pacific Monthly of Portland, Oregon,, is pubHshfng a series of splendid articles about the various indusUios of the West. The Sep tember number contained an article on Success with Cherries. The Oc tober number had a beautifully. il lustrated .article on Subcoss in Growing Apples. Otiler articles shortly to be'published are Success with Live Slock, Success in Grow ing Walnuts. Success with Fodder Crop. These articles are written by exports, and are not only authori tative, but very interesting. Ip addition to the above, the Pa cific Monthly each month publishes aJarge number btclean, wholesome, readable stones and strong indepen dent articles on the questions o f the day. The price o f The Pacific Monthly is $U")Qa year. To introduces It to now readers, it will be sent for six. months for 60c if this paper is men tioned. Address’. Pacific Monihly, Port land, Oregon. —Winter’ s . Coming! Get your horse blanket® o f the Greene Coun ty Hardware Store, Xenia. We carry the famous lino of Ben Hur blankets in all grades at prices that are r igh t,1 WANTED—Good Housekeeping Magazine requires the services of a representative in Cudnrville to look alter subscription renewals and to extend circulation by special method which have proved unusually suc cessful. .Salary and commission. Previoulous , experience desirable, but not essential. Whole time or spare time. Address, with references .1. F. Fairbanks, Good Housekeeping Magazine, 681 Fourth Ave., New York City, WHATISYOURFAMILYWORTH? I f your family is worth the best you can afford in bouse and food and clothes, is it not worth the best reading as well? And the beslread- ing—best tor boys and girls, best for meh and women—is to be. found in The Youth’s Companion. Of stories alone The Companion will print nearly SoO in 1012. With all the rest o f the paper thrown In, and counting the gloriouslong serial stories so varied and interesting— stories of coolness in tho face ot peril, Bfrange adventures 'with crea tures of the forest and tho sea, mov ing stories o f life’ s obscure heroisms stories breezy with good natured humor, quaint and curiohs charac ter sketches. Now is the time to subscribe, for you will'receive free from the time your $1.76 is received all the issues for the remaining weeks of 1011, containing the opening chapters of Ralph J). Paine's great serial story of tho Boxer rebellion, “ The Cross and the Dragon.*’ And there Is the g ift of the Companion Calendar for 1912, “ An the Now England Coast,” lithographed in ten colors and gold, Only $1.76 now lor the 62 weekly Issues, but on January 1, 1012, tho subscription price will bo advanced to $2,00, THE YOUTH’S COMPANION, 1HBerkeley St., Boston, Mass. Now subscriptions received at this office. Ccdatvillo Flour Mills Maf #* jtMi’T lli 4tatft# *M>Mt aMttr ' MM. M* la* While tho raising of horses is attend ed with greater risk than the raising of cattle or sheep, the fact remains that <when properly conducted the horse business is one of the most prof itable lines of animal husbandry. With prices continuing at present lev els one can count on, from 10 to 12 cents per pound at/from two to three years old, depending upon individual ity and type. In ibis connection It is well worth remembering that It costs no more to raise a line, well bred" ani mal than It docs n scrub, while the returns, may bo from one and a half to two times as large, and the satisfac tion to be bad is-many times as great, Light to Banish Sorrow. Sorrow dwells longest ..where the eun is shut out.—Florida Times-Uhlon. $100 Rewards $ 100 , The readers of tldi pfipwf will b* plwulo- to learn that time is at haSt on* dmatled dJ*MMthatscience he* b**n shift to mm ta all its ttsgca and that l#Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Care ts tlmonly porittw cure now known to the medical fraternity, Catarrh being * constitutional dtsmws, requires a oowftltBtlonai treatment. Bill's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, tiding directly up csi the blood find mucoussurrahftof System thereby destroying the foundation o* fit* disc**, nndgiving tits patient strength by building up the constitution aud ftwUfiitg naiut* Indoing itsWork, Ths prpprletortf have eo much faith In Us curftfiYft puwwr* hat they offer on*Hundred Dollars forasiy ease that it falls to cur* 9tnd for fist o UsttmonWa. ^ Attoim P. J. CIIBNEY A Co, Toted* 0, Rski bftrDrugs**!, ?*«. Ill's FamilyPills m* tbs hurt, Springfield Ohio That bountiful crop production Is very closely associated with what we understand as “good times” and pros perity may he realized in the case of the two leading products o f the coun- try—corn and cotton. The value of the first In round numbers for 1910 was $1,600,000,000, wlilch is said to be sufficient to pay llie Interest bearing debt of tbe United States and exceed by a considerable value all the gold and silver dug out of the earth In tho year 1909, The value of the cotton crop for the year just past Is placed at $000,000,000, which woutd be enough to just about wipe out the national debt. When these and numerous other crops- aggregating values correspond ingly large are produced from the soil of the United States annually it Is re alized the more readily why our coun- try la one of the wolthicst and most prosperous in all the earth, Th* Ph osopher of Folly. “We note,” observes the Philosopher of Folly, "that even Senator Gordon, who was in tho senatp for 66 years, never sprung his original poetry un» til ho was about to leave.” Don’ t “ put o f f ’ your Winter buying until the real cold, cold weather. Come to WREN’ S BIG STORE and make your selections NOW from the biggest stock o f merchandise in Ohio; We pay your carfare both ways when making purchases amounting to $15,00. You cannot enter our store without realizing that this is the place of ASTONISH ING VALUES . ■ ' ' ' ■ / • ' 'k COATS , SU ITS , FU R S , M I L L IN E R Y , S H O ES , H O S IER Y , UND ERW EAR , C H ILD R EN ’ S W EAR , G LO V ES , S I LK , DR ESS GOODS , B LA N K ET S , COM FO R T S , F L A N N E L S , DOM ESTICS , L IN E N S , D RA P ER IE S , CURTA INS , FU R N IT U R E , C AR P ETS , W A L L P A P ER , S TO V ES , HOUS E FU R N IS H IN G S , AND GROC ER IES , ETC . >. V 30 Complete Stores un= der One Roof BEING BIG BUYERS, WE ARE CLOSE SELLERS. TRYUSI £ Kaufman’s ' . ?■•■■■■• *: ■ I. ■ 15-17 S. Limestone St. - Springfield, O. . ■ . *■■■. . * ■■■■ We are showing the best and most complete assort ment of Suits and Overcoats this season ever displayed in this section of the state; All wool worsteds, tweeds, cassimeres, ete., at from $ 10 to $30 . i The new browns, grays and mixtures, as well as the n«at dark effects for the man o f quiet ta«te. In our big store there is a Suit or Overcoat to satisfy the whims and pocketbook of the most criti cal. Suits andOvercoats, PureWool $10 to $30 Time to think of heavy underwear—50c fleeced-lined and rib- . bed to the better grades of fine woolen*. ' , Our hat department it complete with all the new shapes and shades The STANLEY at $2 .00 The BROMLEY at $3.00 The STETSON at $4.00 are the best hat values in the wurld* We have the biggest children’ s department in Springfield and can take care of the youngster* perfectly and at small cost. Our boys* department is equal in every way to any in the state of Ohio and we are amply prepared to fit out the young fellows in every detail. ' SU ITS AND OV ERCOATS , $2 .00 to $ 15 . Boys’ Shirts, Waists, Underwear, Hats, TStc. > Kaufman’s We refund round trip carfares to Springfield upon all purchases of $15.00 or over. ^0
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