The Cedarville Herald, Volume 35, Numbers 1-26
m A h FINANCIAL STATEMENT «0F THE- CEDARV1LLEBUILDING & LOANASSOCIATION Forth# Fiscal Year Ending January 31st, 1912. A MYSTERIOUS VISION. T ” *' ' AJdBETO.................. C*aUW hand » # SU 52 Loans on Mortgage security $7,900 00 Loans od stock oi* pass-book security * 40 03 Tarartura and fixtures - 90 00 Dus for insurance and tax** from borrowers - 162 60 l i a b i l i t i e s Running stock and dividends <* * $ 6,10# 30 Credits on mortgage loans 4,940 6« Paid-up stock and dividends * * 10,160 00 lieserye fund - *30 Borrowed money and accrued Interest - 2000 00 Total , - - ■ t $28,094 02 Total - - ' * ' $.29,394 02 r & q jmfts Cash on hand at close of last CscaL year • - $ 1,981 34 Dues on running stock - 3,198 89 Paid-up stock - - 760 00 Loans on mortgage security repaid - 720.02 Loans on stock or pass book security repaid « ' 315 00 Borrowed money - ■ 2 . 00 Q00 Insurance and taxes refunded by borrowers - 14 60 Interest - • . - • 1,694 40 * DISBURSEMRNT3 Loans on mortgage security - - . * $0,100 00 LuanB on stock or pass book security - - 140.00 ■Withdrawals of running stock and dividends - 2,HO 13 Withdrawal of paid-up stook 960 00 Insurance and taxes paid for borrowers - 68 85 Dividends on paid-up stock 961 21 Salaries - 125,00 Rent - - j » 18 00 Printing and supplies , - U 00 Other expenses - - 3 OO Cash on hand - * -21162 Total. - - - - $10,683 21 Total - , ' - $10,683 21 PROFIT AND LOSH Interest. - - ' - ’ ' $ 1,684 46 j $' * - s „ ' ' f 1 4-f . % r f ‘ i-j v^ , ,* f h k ' PROFIT AND LOSS Dividends on running stock $488 99 .“ '. *’ paid-up “ 961 21 To reserve fund - 77 26 Salaries . . . - . 126 00 Printing and supplies - ' H 0u Other expenses - ,'/ 3 00 Rent- * 1 - 18 00 Taxes, insurance* sundry expenses - - 10 00 Total t - - ' - - $ 1,694,46 Total’ - ' . $ 1,604 40 STATION OHIO, f SB. GKEEHJ2 COUNTY* Andrew Jackson, being duly sworn, deposes and says that he is the Secretary OfThe Cedarville Building & Loan Association ot Cedarvilie, Ohio, and that the foregoing statemen t is a full and detailed report of tlie affairs and business ot paid.Company for the fiscal year ending on the 31st' day of January .A. D. 3912, and'that i t is true and correctly shows its financial condition at the end of saki fiscal year. . ; ‘ " ' A nerbw .J aokson , Secretary. Subscribed arid sworn to before jme, thia28th day of February A . D, 1918. ■ •- / _ i',' L. Gh Btrpn, Kotary Public, Greene County, Ohio. OBRTliPlCA'-CE OJ* SHBEE DIRECTORS OF A tjpiT IN 'd- OOMMrCTBE •We, theundersigned,"W» 3* Tarbox, D. Bradfnte and W . A . -Span* eer, director's, of the said Cedarvilie Building &Loan Company of Cedar- villa, Ohio, do hereby certify that the foregoing is.'*, true ,and correct statement o f tbe financial,condition of the said Compatiy on the 81st day of January A . D, 1912and a true statement of ils affairs and business for tbs fiscal year ending on that day. •Ul * " W.J.TAimdX ■' O . ’■*» D, B r ADFCT® ’ , ‘ ' W . A. fiWKW*R ; , . Do Your Glasses Suit You? Try our modern dark room methods. Headaches and other eye troubles cured by properly fitted glass es. . -■• e * ** * ■ *♦' - *. ■^.. . * -ar. < • ■ The transparent tissues o f the eyes are easily rui led with medicine. CHAS. S. FAY Mfg. Optician 28 1-2 East Main St., Springfield. O. MAKE YOUR DOLLARSWORK ' 5 %?o I s jW h .t The SpringfieldBuilding &Loan Association ^ [Paysfor Deposits in Any Sum, Start an Account Now Deposits made on or before March 8th, 1912 will bear interest from March 1st 1912. Our assets are $2,350,000.00 Oiir Reserve Fund is $119,000.00 Springfield Building & Loan Association, 28 East Main St.. Springfield, Ohio, the *99 This Month's Butterick Patterns 10c and iScr—none higher. Singular Or*am That Foretold Fat* of Major Andr*. { The following instance may serve } to strikingly justify Colquhoun’s ' theory that there'is an original spiritual energy expressed in dreams which, has nothing to do with the state of the bqdy and is beyond the power of the soul whan it has been reabsorbed by the material organi zation on awaking. Prior to his embarkation -for America at the outbreak of the Revolutionary war Major .Andre went to visit a friend, Miss Rebec ca Steward, who lived in Derby shire. During ,his stay it was ar ranged that they should ride over to view the wonders of the famous peak.. It was also Miss Steward’s desire to introduce the major to some friends in the neighborhood, including a Mr. Newton and the curate of the parish, Mr. Cunning ham. She had given both .these gentlemen notice of her intention, and while awaiting her arrival Mr, Cunningham took occasion to tell. Mr. Newton the oircumstances of a dream he bad had the night before Which affected him so that he could not shake off the recollection of it., , He said that he was standing in the midst of a forest that w » b en tirely strange to him. After gazing listlessly around him for a few mo ments he perceived a horseman ap proaching at great speed. As the latter came opposite th'e spot where the dreamer stood three men who seemed to have been lying- in' am bush sprang from their place of concealment and, seizing the bridle - o f the. horse, ordered the rider to dismount. They then carefully searched his person and led him away. The face, figure and bearing of the horseman made so deep an impression upon Mr. Cunningham’s mind that he awoke; but, falling asleep again presently, he dreamed that he.was one of a throng of'spec tators near a great city; that he saw the same person he bad seen seized in the wood brought out between files o f soldiers, who marched bim to a gallows and there banged him* When Major Andre and Miss Stew ard arrived, Mr. Cunningham- was horror struck to discover in the per son of Miss Steward’s, friend.the very man whose seizure and execu tion be had witnessed in bis .dream, Here was an accurate anticipa tion of events that actually happen ed within twelve months from the, date of tiie dream., The capture of Andre, ttte search o f his person for documents that convicted him for acting the part, of a spy. and his public execution' constitute -one of, the most dramatic episodes o f the contest with the mother country. How is it imaginable that so definite a vision, of coming events, could ’arise from the influence o f any physical condition orfthe mind o f the sleeper? What possible, state of tbe body could confer upon the soul the'.power to describe future oc currences with such exact fidelity to details? Slaughter of the Buffalo. In 1881 the hide hunters/shipped 50.000 buffalo hides to the .east. The next year the-number whs 200,- 000 atid in 1883/40,000. Only 300 were reported in 1884, and after that there* were, hone- at all. . In 1883 Sitting Bull and hishand,witb some white hunters, killed the last 10.000 of the northern herd. The last survivors, twenty-eight in num ber, were killed on the Big Porcu pine in 1886 and were mounted for the. National museum. With that the wild buffalo of North America practically ceased to exist. Tha First Gingerbread. The homely luxuiy, gingerbread, has been popular ever since the fourteenth century. It was then made and sold in Paris. In those days it was prepared with rye meal made into a dough, and ginger and other spices, with sugar or honey, were kneaded into it. It was intro duced into England by the court of Henry IV. for their festivals and was soon brought into general use, treaclft.being after a time employed in tbe manufacture instead of hon ey- ________ ‘ Not So Fabulous, After All. , 'Tather” saidTeddy, "is it true about the Pied-Piper of Hatflelm? Is it true that he could play bn his pipes so well that the rats Would Come out of their boles and drown themselves?’^"Well, I don’t know,” was the evasive answer—“it might be. Your uncle John can play a cornet so that it will frighten a cow into n river and make the dogs within fivemiles growl like an an gry bull. Yes, I dare sayit’s trtiol” —London Globe. DAYTON . OHIO. Well Connected. "Yes,” remarked the telephone girl ns she gazed out at the wayes and wondered wfyat their number was, "I amconnected with the best families in „our city.”—Catholic TTnivefse. K l LLT h i C O U G H and CURK tw UJNCS <mDR.KINGS NnnseouM N E X T - W E E K - T H E - E A S T Next week will see the close of our remarkable Removal Sale. It will be a time of bargain opportunities that cannot be repeated* THE RIKE=KUMLER GO. ESTABLISHED 1863 ' •zm & FIND A MEERSCHAUM MINE JMineral fa Dug Up In New Msxlooand j 8 hlpp«d to Manufacturers In ; N*w York, There la only one meerschaum mine In this country. Bp to a year ago.there might as well nave been none at all. About five Tears' ago a company formed to take over tbe mine declared confidently that it was igoing to make meerschaum pipes out of the product, . "For your years we were the laugh* Ing stock, of the trade," said a mem ber,of the concern the- other day, "hut we're doing the laughing - ourselves now,” He flourished before the visitor's eyea orders for mers groflB of pipes than anybody except a mathematical prodigy coiild count. And he shows a Picture o f the new plant which, is to bo occupied very sdon. At' present the work has grown to such a point that the, walla of the small factory ovej on the East Side, New York, are bulging worse' every day, In'tho. small building they can turn Out only about thirty-live gross o! pipes a day. This totals, however, more than 1,500,909 pipes a. year/ which Would seeht enough ’th supplyJ every pipe smokertn the country.-nut} the' new plant Will tuba out ldd gross ’ a day.,' One ot the orders flourished* so proudly by the manufacturer is for 500 gross and came from a. Boston dealer. - - There la only one other -meer schaum mine in the world. At least, nobody knows of- any other. That one Is in Asia Minor and supplied the ma terial for all the meerschaum pipes made up to A year.ago, The Amer ican mine Is about thirty mites from Silver city, N. m , . !N0 REASON FOR BLINKERS i , -h-i-— ■. , f>, j f t I - ■ ■ > - •Tens of Thousands of Horses Are Now r- Working Satisfactorily Without • \ „„,, . ' < Thrift. ; 1' v t k i It is said that the use of blinkers, lor hlinder^ iuuth*y are called m this ^country, bad 4tw origin la the desire iof eertsic fashionable folkd for ,&con- •renlent place to display the family forest. Of course,Ahe common excuse -is that they,keep,the horse from dhy '(mg'. '. ■ ■ * "There is no reason Why borscn 'should wear blinkers,” saya a writer In theBulletin of the S, P, 0. A "This >fs shown by the' fact .that there arc tens ot thousands $f horses working .satisfactorily without them, not .only | In private carriages, but In cabs, vans land ambulances and in towns where jthe traffic Is thickest. 1 "No riding horse la .ever Seri* with Iblinkers; they would he considered to (look ridiculous with them; the draft ]horses In tbe army do not wear them, •and the large brewers .and the chief [railway companies have long ago dis- rpensed with. them. * “We recently read In a German pa- !per that their use had been done away .With by the authorities In Berlin. Dueaseldorf, Aaohen, Kdenlgsborg and .Cassel, In Darmstadt they are allow* led only In special oases, and Hamburg [has lately decreed that they ahall be [permitted only If they stand well away jfront the horses’s eyes. : "The difficulty of dispensing with :blinkers In the ease' of horses which ‘ have been uncustomed to them, even jfor years, la largely imaginary. We [have known Several oases where the (Change has been, made and there has jbesn no difficulty at all.” I ... ; Still Hit Little wife. In a little shack at Sparkhiii, Mrs. [Ellen Feck,' aged 52, the "confidence {queen,” released from Auburn peni tentiary, Is being guarded by her aged husband as Carefully as though she was the hast Woman in the world, "My Molly made mistakes,” said the aged husband, "but she’s comb home to me now, with her nerves shattered and her health gone. No, yon can’t see.her; she’S suffered alt she’s going to, and In future I'm going to shield her from the world. Why, she’s the beat little Woman that over lived, and I Wdn’t have anybody both-; 'erlng her.” ! So great Is his loyalty that he Win permit no one to say a word against the woman who victimized men of more than $1,999,000 and brought dis grace to him and their children. "She’s my little wife,” he aays. featlmatlrtg Fewer ot Sea. The "live powCr" of a furiottft sea la estimated by multiplying tbe mass of the surge by the square of Its speed. When the surf, impelled by the drive of the btoad sea, meets a aolld ob-' Stacie, Its pressure Js thirty tons per square meter of water. This estimate, which is close, explains hoW water, Wheh continually sapping the foot of a cliff, breaks down the land, forces baik the shore line, and little by lit tle, constantly and safely, Increases the sea's domain, A wave from 33 to ■such, NO MANUFACTURER GIVES SUCH VALUE FOR A MODERATE PRICE Durable Comfortable V' P*" TOURING CAR, Fully Equipped. $ 6 9 0 . F. O, B . Detroit. Speed Safety Service ROADSTER, F u ltf Equipped, $ 5 9 0 . F . O. B . Detroit. B R O S ., A g ts .Ceda?,vlotio. ' Jewels of Indian Princes. Som^ Ot the Indian princes possess jewels which Would put those of Ab dul Hamid in the shade. At the iW i durbar the blaze of gems 'Surprised even the. Indians, themselves. The Maharajah Of Harblning* was wearing a diamond necklace which had cost £90,090, and was eonstdered a bar gain at that* Besides a necklace of row* of perfectly matched, pearls as. large as filberts, tbe Maharajah of Qwallor disported •a sash depending from his left shoulder to his 'right knee, the material of which was com pletely hidden by similar stones. An other rajah carried a sword-hilt cut from a single emerald, and in the tur ban of the Nizam of Hyderabad was the Nizam diamond, .which weighs 277 carats, or more than twice as much as the Koh-I-Noor, One-Time Tramp Reaches Honor. William H; DaviSs, recently placed on England’s civil pension list with a pension of fifty pounds a year, is prob ably the first actual tramp in the his tory of that country to' be bo honored. Davies 1 b a Welshman by birth and a. tramp by preference, having lived the life for many years in this country and England. He is minus a foot, the result of a stolen train ride. After yehrs of vagabondage be tunied his attention to literature, and following many bittor disappointments "arriv ed,” He has written both verse and prose. Humanity of the Great, The greatest men are the most hum ble, the most willing to admit their limitations, and the most reverent. Public Sale Having sold my farm I will sell at FublicAuction onwhat is known as the Isaiah Holloway farm,two and one half miles westof Selma, on the Cedarville road. Fridays March 8th, (91, At 10 o'clock a, m. • S HEADOF HORSES 5 Consisting of 2 Black Mares 5 years old,, weight 3200, safe in foal; Gray gelding 5 years old, weight 3500; Bay gelding 7 years old, weight 1600; Black pacing mare fl years old sired by J. S. G* 20 HEADOFCATTLE 20 Consisting of 20 head of fat cattle weighing better thari 1200. 70 HEAD OF HOGS 70 Consisting of 0 Brood Sows to farjrow in Match; 4 Brood Sows to farrow in; May; Ofthoad of shoats weighing about 100 lbs each, s> 123 Head Of Delaine Ewes. Consisting of 123head Delaine Ewes to lamb in April. . FARMING IMPLEMENTS. -Troy farm wagon, good as new; Deere hay tedder, Ohio com cultivator,Superior Corn cultivator, Oliver riding breaking plow, Two hinge harrows, Two .Disc harrows, Deere corn planter, Wood hay rake,Defcring mower, Four sets of hip strap work harness, Bridles, Collars, 26 feet high, and 626 feet long- ft. wave At the sSa produces every 1& Forks, Shovels and many other articles seconds—represents power of about* hot mentioned, 400 Buuhfils of Corn In Crib* T e rM tm ad ekn ow am d a y o fsa ltt T l t e t MEAD, Audi.'■' : • -. ';- R0BERT ■: ';■ ■ HOWARD H0LL0WAV. 1,3,)'1 1I, P,—steam-par square yard, KoddtefeSS pripItAtkmritbsfarirt. »l#wt» whatyonBit J, E MITCHELL «i. Fire - Lightning - Tornado '' ’ . 'INSURANCE -" ' 1 * 1 >“ * f* * *'*■ 1' * » BEST COMPANIES - LOWEST RATES* MEl M E R E D I T H ’ S l T I f j S l c S T O R E PATRONIZE - DAYTON ’S - BEST Second Largest Classic StooK ifi the State 131 S. Ludlow S t , * Dayton, O. Palace Meat Market FRESH & SMOKED MEATS FRUIT & GROCERIES Triiesdale &Rohler SUCCESSORS TO C C. WEIMER. Cedarville . - - . Ohio, ESTABLISHED 1S96 W . L . CLE .M ANS , RE.AL ESTATE ■ ; * AND . I N S U R A N C E ■’ ’ CEDAR .VUXR . . . OHIO
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