The Cedarville Herald, Volume 34, Numbers 27-52

WStaMHEfr **« M erediths usic Store. [DAYTON, O. •Nowj Located At 131 S. LUDLOW, Cappel jBTrt’ggi The Cedarville H e ra l i $ i , o q JPer Y e a r , KARLH BULL - - Editor ' Entered atathe PoBfc-Uiflco, Cedar- }vtlle. October,, 31, 1897, as second •olaaajraattor. FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1910 Evil of th# Present Day. One of the great evil# of the pres- ent time la tho anxiety ot young peo* pie, and too often ot their parents as well, to earn money early. , A Matter of Bight, "They toll me" said the Innoeont maid, "that your marriage was the^re- gult ot lore at first sight. Is It true?” "It Is,” answered the round-shouldered xnau sadly. "Had I been gitted with second sight, I'd stilt be In the bachelor classl1’—Chicago News,1. i Haste Not to Be Repeated, “You nay you have quit smoking?*' "Yep,.never going to smoke again” j "Then why don't you throw away 1theme cigars?” “Noyer; I threw away a box of good cigars the last time I . quit smoking and It taught mo a les­ son." Second^Largcgt.jStook ingOhio.f h e l p ' u s ~ P 0 W I Earth's Most Desolate Spot. , Not only are human Inhabitants un­ known south of Cape Horn, more than 2,300 miles from the south pole, but, except sea forms, within that specs ' animal life and vegetable life are prac­ tically absent-save a few low forms !of hardy lichens and mosses, C A S T O R IA Tor Infanta and Children. TheKindYouHaveAlwaysBought Bears the Signature of ^ Aptly Quoted. A young lawyer wished to cite an authority on a case he was conducting, and, not being able to remember it, his opponent wittily remarked: “Though lost to cite, to memory dear.” Of irtMngthMilnff *»• .nerves control the action tfif the liver and btftveu JJrt Kdea’ Nerve and Liver Pifi» <»m VovaOsattMh, ' «q*ee &'<***.. His Master's Voice, “I will hot stand it, Doyle, and I give you to know quite plainly that, if it wasn’t for the years and years that you have been in my employ, you'd have gone long ago!"—London Opin­ ion. ' ■ M m mins tiaMSt tastaatft— .iwfffrnift rite. - - - - - Statistical. Cholly—”Ye3, It was a frightful ac­ cident. Tho doctah said I narrowly escaped having softening of the brain." Polly—-‘‘And how long did you escape It?" ' , A Conundrum. Why Is a musical instrument like the open sea? Because It is often sounded.—-Home Notes. ■ . Honor Above All. Believe it to be the greatest of all infamies to prefer your existence to your honor, and for the sake of life to lose every inducement to live,— Juvenal. „ - Revelations, You never know how many figures can be carried In the head until you hoar a life Insurance solicitor talk, or hear a Woman give out recipes for cakes,—Atchison (Kan.) Globe. Evil in Neglected Legislation. In Belgium, where education is not compulsory, 21 per cent, of the work­ ing people over ten years of age can neither re'ad nor write. • A Word to .Parents, It Is better to keep children to their duty by‘a sense of honor and by kind- ness'than by fear.—Terence. B O G O A N ’ S EXCLUSIVE STYLES The, Store Others Try to Imitate. J H w Our July Clearance Sale The Greatest ioney Saving Event in Our History $65,000.00Worth of theBestMerchandiseonEarth from Which to Make Your Selection Below we quote only .a few o f e many hundred o f bargain qually as good , as which will prevail all through our three selling floors during this, ttie greatest JULY CLEABANC f BALB OF HIGH-CLASS MERCHANDISE ever held in Mows^With prices quoted. - SHIRTWAIST DEPARTMENT . 50c for choice o f one lot Lingerie and Tailored W a is ts / all this season's goods that sold up to $ 1 . 00 . ' 7 5 6 choice of any waist that sold up to $ 2.00 WOOL SUITS ^ ~"~ $ 6 .95 for Suits that sold up to $ 20.00 $9.95 for Suits that sold up to $30.00 . COLORED WASH DRESSES 89c For our celebrated Simplicity House DreSs, worth $1.00. * $1.19 Choice of any Wash Dress that sold up to $3,50. $2.95 Choice any Wash Dress that scftd up to $5,50. ~o WHITE LINGERIE AND LINEN DRESSES $2.95 For Dresses worth up to $5.50 $3.95 For Dresses Worth up to $8.00 SILK DRESSES $6.95 For Silk Dresses that sold up to $20.00 $10.95 For Silk Dresses that sold up to $28.50 SILK COATS $8 .9 5 For Choice full length Taffeta or Peau do Soie, also Cloth of Gold that sold ragularly up to $18.95 * , - - MILLINERY 95c For any bat in the house that sold up to $5.95 $1.95 For choice any hat that „ald up to $10.00 During This Great Sale Like Reductions Will Prevail in All the Follow­ ing Departments / HOSIERY NECKWEAR PETTICOATS CORSETS ' SEPARATE SKIRTS GLOVES • UNDERWEAR PARASOLS WASH SUITS, Etc. This will positively be the greatest bona fide sale o f High Class Exclusive Mer­ chandise ever before held by any merchant in Ohio so take advantage. Ask for Boggan's Exclusive Stamps which is another Saving of 5 per cent to you. REMEMBER, we refund carfare to ali our patrons on purchases o f $15 or over within a radius of 50 miles. , ; #. , Peter A . Boggan, U East Main Street, Springfield, Ohio. “Use our rest room to meet a friend, Or a leisure hour with us to spend.’’ MUSICAL MOUNTAINS, Singing Cliff# In th# Pyr#n##« and Roirlng 8«nd* in Hawaii. In certain parts of the world are mountains and hills which are said by the natives to sing. In tho Pyrenees certain cliffs emit plaintive sounds re­ sembling the strains of a harp. Two other cliffs In the same chain are called tho “snorers." When the wind is in the southwest they send -forth a pe­ culiar sound not altogether musical. The faces of these cliffs are marked by deep gullies, open in front, which may be compared lb the pipes of an organ. At certain times a stratum of air, held between .the cliffs and border­ ing trees, closes the openings while the wind blows freely between through the gullies, or organ pipes, behind; hence the mpslc that is heard. At the confluence of the Orinoco and the Klo Meta are granite, cliffs which sing at sunrise. Humboldt refers to the phenomenon as the musical stones of the Orinoco. The music is caused by the rush of the expanding air through fissures partly closed by mica. Many i lore examples might he cited to slio.w that nature makes use of prin­ ciples which have,been adopted by man in the creation o f musical sounds, Nor are the mualcal sounds of nature confined to rocks, mountains and bills, for in Hawaii Is a sand bank fifty feet high .which, when the band Is moved about In the loose sand, produces a sound like that of a melodeoh. It is said that If the observer slides down tho bank on his back, dragging both hands In the sand,, the sound becomes as loud as falut thunder.—Harper's Weekly. AN ILL MATED PAIR. Wide Apert In' Temperament Were Thomas and dan# Carlyle. That the Carlyles were 'an ill assort­ ed couple no one could deny. She was a highly strung* nervous woman, very quick, able and Impatient, disappoint­ ed with her iparrled life and her posi­ tion, Jealous of the admiration which Carlyle received at the hands of all his admirers, especially of one or two wpmen, whom she found very unsym- pathetic. That Carlyle adored her there Is lit­ tle doubt He loved her with .ail Me rough, passionate power of his nature, but he was a peasant In manner and character and lacking In all the little outward signs of devotion'and affec­ tion which so many women exact and the absence of which they resent most bitterly.. Mrs. Carlyle found herself tied to an Irritable genius who, sensitive at every point, deeply devoted to her, but abso­ lutely Incapable of translating that love into the language which she craved and longed for, I remember her once saying to me In a hitter way, "My dear, whatever you do, never ♦marry a philosopher," and that was the key to the enigma—the woman al­ ways hungering for proofs of the de­ votion In which the whole of her dally life was wanting;,—From Lady St He­ ller’s "Memories!." ■ Physiognomy Not-FUliabl#. Xam. a profonp|tdl«bellever In phys­ iognomy. Featuresafo falBOwitnesses. Stupidity frequently wears a mask of intelligence- I know business men who look Ilka poofs and,poets who.look like business men. Men of genius In­ variably look like, idiots, and if you pick out the man who looks most em­ inent in a party you are sure to find he Is a nobody.' 1 always distrust men who look magnificent. Nature is a stingy creature. She seldom gives a man the double gift of being great and looking, great, She took care to lame Byron and deform Pope and dis­ figure Johnson,. But the crowning ex­ ample of her Jealous parsimony is Shakespeare. I have always been dis­ appointed with Shakespeare's face. It does not live up to his poetry. It Is dull, heavy and commonplace.—From "Adventures In London." Thai Mlatsk#,. ' fa his biography of Alexandre Du­ mas Harry A. Spurr says that the im­ provident French author, who hated avarice, was once waiting In line for his cloak at a soiree when he saw a millionaire'glve a tip of GOcentimes (10 cents) to the servant who handed out hla paletot, Dumas, getting hla cloak, threw down a 100 franc note. "Par­ don, sir; you have made a mistake, I think," said the man, offering to re­ turn the note. "No, no, •friend,” an­ swered Dumas, casting a disdainful glance at the millionaire: "It Is tho other gentleman who has made the mistake," Shak«#p«are In France- I once stumbled upon a choice bit of French quotation from Shakespeare, It was a tale by Ifchard. The distinguished author of this talo rendered "Frailty, thy name is wo­ man," by “Fragitlte, e'est ie nom d'une femme" ("Fragility, that is tho name of a woman”).—Strauss, , A Woman's Compliment ”1 admire your hair, dear.” "Thanks.” "But isn't It a good deal of .trouble i'to find that peculiar shade In the shops?"—Washington Herald. do GsntU and Nioe. ‘You have nt> Idea,” said Ethel, "how my poor head hurts me.” "Well,'' said her friend, "why don't you take your hair off and rest It?”— Ladles' Home Journal, , Not Golden. The power of speech Is a gift vouch­ safed to man alone, and tho effect of it Is to render silence, perhaps the grandest thing in all the world, a bore to him,-Puck. Pitas ir SmilitP A M IIT IVE BUARAHTEE I#IsimMUMyr*t*mandsNHMWf m* IR. HiBRftSUMOID MAMatimiHlwftdjstoattlf <Mq;v<rr » f HmssfeTtkstrmwrt mam of s s t aygBUFSSiSih #MtMM#ntIy, AtaMHiU# gw * m m . m u THEi. 0 . IITTNEH 00 .,TeJeda, 9 W* INFANTS/CHIIDKKtf PromotesDigestionJCfcerM- nessandRestContalnsneilte OpiimiMorphineiwrJ N o t N a r c o t ic , j j^vi/onoksm zzmm i . jKizStam* JhdxttSetts- Jbot&mi* nbfr.. ..vmSsit* i Sui* CASTDRIA For Infants aad Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought . Bears the Signature of AperfecfBemedyforConsfip* Hon,SourStomach,Dlarrim Worms,CoiwulsiGns-Fewrish'. nessandtossOFSLEEP. Facsimile Signatureof NEW YORK . A t fo m o n t h s o l d ■ .35 P o s e s - 3 5 CENT5 i.lGimranteedunderthe1'oujRj Exact Copy of Wrapper. THEOENTAUneOMMNV, «CWYORK1CITY. Great Bargains Hutchison& Gibney’s D R E S S S ILK S— N ew ’ Lot, 85 c Goods . f F o r sg^cents S U M M E R S IL K . F O U L A R D S F or 25 cents MfefRi Popular Prided Restaurant for Ladles and Gentlemen. - Service is unexcelled S, Detroit street, Xenia, 6 . In Use For Over Thirty Years IT W ILL JUST TOUGH THU SPOT and prove an every day winner every.(line. Good.heaUIi, good chper and long life Je what wo promise if you Buy Our Meats Jlicrqbes, disease and death lurk lu a lot of the meat that'fi sold, ' •but not in ours. Wo sell the best and at a fraction above cost, Our market'is safe and not high priced, • c H- G rouse C e d a r v i lle , O h io . Hew from Cover to Cover ^ * ■ • M E W - > - INTERNATIONAt D I C T I O N A R Y , J-UST ISSUED. Chief, Dr. W. T. Harris, former U. S. Coin, o f Education. The Webster Tradition Developed by Modern Scientific Lexicography. Key toLit- cratureof SevenCenturies. General Information Practically 'Doubled.: 2700 Pages. 6000 Illustrations. 400,000 Words and-PIirases. GET THE BEST in Scholarship, Conven­ ience, Authority, Utility. The Bookoidtef «#• ••#.. IN THE BOOKWALT6R HOTEL HIGH STREET DININGROOMFORLAD1BSUPSTAIRS ALSO REST ROOM. . M E A L S N O W a s G B N T S . LunchCounter on Rain Floor ^ > Open Pay andNight. Th# Baat of Good Used in th*. Gjal- innry Department. J. H. McfllLLAN, Funeral Dlroctir and Furniture Dealer. MAntiffieturor of Coinent (Jrftv# Vaults atod Cement Building Blocks. Telephone If. Geflarvilla, Ohio. DR. LEO ANDERSON, j Veterinary Surgeon' and. Dentist. I GRADUATE O. 8. U. Oillce Waddle’s Livex’jr Barn. Citizens ’ Phone 98 and 81 j CEDARVILLE, - OHIO IS BEAUTY WORTH YOUR WHILE? ViolaCream pouHtv ljr et&tlicute# frscWw, n«dos, b l a c k noads, gunbttm ena tun, I!**A1?***^. blotchea, ronKbendOily — - wtlu to tho n«eho.Mta*nd dellceevefvduth. Thoroisnosubstltntofbrthissuperiortuirm- „ .. - wue The life secret o f the trorld’s jc"nTAT ii * w uuyiinewona'R gresteetHkinSpecialist. At aft Drnggirtsor nrtMt?tSJii60JffnUh pfopoglficmand t»n«rmnr*tid i.Oihlo. A t l a s h o t e l and RESTAURANT, REMODLED - REFURNISHED ... ___ _ SewB, pjiriicte, II ybn'rt ot Ifc.so things f i t «Sl ttjoy MtJOIMLSPMniJUl' in ft tr.cnth, loot! e sent i i.-tirualiv*. leife* cstlnp, IhfilUr.,, kfejrM. flf.ttcs on haniiMf, rilnnff, Win.itiohtsfiot«r»ryir,A »na hoy, who Uv«< tvhtr. «ncs» .litrins «s|ayMnM v rest hsna. ,Sie»ta srtcwi tiksi efrifi »•I3«.MMpt ei e«rt» etii * » will Pttl.l » MW ot fits KArreKAt ttottemm *et h«**y ..Mat. trtlM0*M W»(*k tier . VeM .. . M!c*i fn*,) At rayejuth rM- ett Mnu> etirt Ciinj r.aDClUilinf y«tthVet,rMnUf , hoi. j jitf, , . m.i| KAtleert«pett*»sh , , 19s. J. voiii# . we') VOS IWUC# HAtlOHAI. irWlSHAH. 1st!. —SFafofc Paint- / . -Ch ick* .There wl li. T . ehnr Mr- O, B. with Cinei —Gas W per dozen > XEI bs Gre a guest at JEwry. Mien Loi 111., has b L. Cleman . —Fancy best In tF ■^Edon one, 25 It Ke Mra, Hal of Xenia 8] H, H. Mck —FOR house on X D. B. Ervii —Stop Ice Crear 3Sfr. Hov vania is tli Mr. and terfcaineil < Thursday McClellan —Best u« figure —Lippii Peach ar Mr. O. I the Fourtl Yes, the lo al days. , About twt ! U. P. Ghu , the churc! : had been; tfio a , th* the raim Vt* " made.. Mr. Wil upon Tu< D eb . Graj loway of Stewart o that the a operation. the patier be expect ' 7■u *> I ,; ME:7- ( i 3 sp 0^0 t}« J J :

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