The Cedarville Herald, Volume 36, Numbers 1-26
1[,-ni,' ,M^1-|>,.,;,T J^I»^ .!j>.i-;*-^Ti-1T.;^ '-i^Ii.;-;«fti.^fa>^.',»i» ■ P jjMWM • M « * S m of C4MUL.70& A t Wistprinan^s. Jliv (5. F . Siegler spent Monday in ■ Uincimiatl on business, ‘ > | LOCAL AND PERSONAL £ Miss F scu llne Reynolds is visiting Misg J awc # W righ t of Idcvviile, IwL - Wine of Carslui, 71)0 A t W isterinan’s. j Mr, and Mrs. E a r l Rahestraw , of j Mr. II. N . Coe retu rned from a'.Xoniq. spent New Years with tin j trip to South Carotins, Tuesday, former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. T - ’——•*—■— ©avid Rakestraw . Oysters 23 cents a quart, celery, fruits, dates and nuts of a ll kinds, i W in. Marshall The two yea r uld daugh ter of Mr. Louis Sm ith, of near Beiina in seriously Ui w ith pneumonia. .--The W a tt & Foust brood «ow sale will be held Tuesday, February 4 a t Cedar Va le Farm f t Mr. George E . Sliroades, of Xenia, spen t New Years day* with Ins brother, Mr. Lee Sliroades anti fam ily. • Mr, Allen Naines has gone to B a t tle Creek, Mich., for treatm en t of stomach troublo. Dr, Joseph Kyle and family, of Xenia, spen t New Year’s with Mr, A. C, Kyle and wife, ' A number of relatives took thb ir dinners and spen t New Years with Deross Kershuer and mother, . Mr, and Mrs. 8. M. Murdock were a t homo la st F riday to a large cairn paby of relatives and frieds m hon or of fheir sou-xtiriaw and daughter Rev.. W. W. Morton and wife of Grayson, Ky, Mrs. K . B, Rader, of Dayton, spen t New Years day with he r brotbey, Mr. Lee Shroades and familyr*- Mrs, Caroline Bhroades wba has been visiting here for some time return ing home with her. Ralph Kennoti, who is studying ve te rina ry at the 6 . S. U., has been spending his vacation a t home. ■ Mr. John A rthu r, - second year Btudent in 'th e dental deportment of the O. S, TL, returned to Columbus* Wednesday, Council met,, in session Monday evening to finish the business for the year had settle a ll outstanding bills which amounted to $480, —-The Exchange B ank of Cedar- ville^Ohio, pays in terest a t 4 per cen t on savings from $1.00 np. They* request holders of Savings pass books to bring them in and re ceive cred it fo^ in te re st on Jan 1st. Mr. Ray H itchcock and fam ily o1 Xenjaspeufc New Years, with. Mrs.. Sa rah Richards.- L ittle Edwin,* re mained over for a few! days v is it w ith his grandmother. , Mr, Charles Payne c u t a n artery oh h is left b and Wednesday, while attemp ting to open a .can of corn w ith a knife. The wound bled pro fusely and it was neoessary to" band age,the h and and p u t in a sling. Mr. A . C. Kyle", who has been confined to h is home- since th e first of November, was able to be in town. Tuesday. Mr. K y le reports th a t h is sickness k e p t h im from voting, th e only time since 1880 When ho cast hi# firs t vote for Lincoln. Miss Louis Smith expects to re tu rn to Chicago Sabbath evening to resume her a r t studies.. Miss Smith was compelled to retu rn home On account of a severe ease of the grip h u t has fu lly recovered. ’Faye tte county f irmers have s ta rt ed a movement to ask the legislature? for a $50,000 appropriation to be used in stamping o u t bog cholera in Ohio Farmers lose a t least $2,000,000 ann ually from cholera.'’ Mr, G. H. H a rtm an , wife and, daughter, visited several days this week with the former’s relatives in Clinton' County. Mrs. H artm an stopped over in Spring Valley tor: a v isit with h e r sister on her return home. •_______ Mr. Chas. Raney and his brothers and sisters as jo in t owners of the home farm have sold same to Paul Butcher, of South ' Charleston. The Raney heirs have purchased a large farm iu W arren county near Lebanon and expect to get possession in March, According to the Ohio, Rural Life Survey in fourteen counties there were only 129 m inisters with one charge: 264 had htilf a m in iste r; 172 each had a th ird ; 18i a fourth or fifth. Fifty-five per c en t of 746 chu rohesw ith a "w ho le’’ m inister are growing. Only 36 per cen t of the churches w ith mj, isteve on one- th ird time are_grow ing. In these counties there were 68 churches w itnou tpasto rs. gedartille Cownship School Report. ZDW O flv ID. -Cfe s r* a cv a■■** •5 K ST CD SI 5* S’■ *■* s - t e k s to'W K » a a at' at O o'cr-*■**»X3- w *3-o K cn to '57 oO co »t' ’ B ; © : D •' ct f p C\ < * o * rt ur o S* *^S- •H***- g .c OTJ Number of D istrict.;............ . En ro llmen t.:............................ Average Dally Attendance... P e r Cent Daily Attendance.. Number T a rd y ......... ........... Number P resen t E ve ry Dbj Number of Visitors.. Bank for Nov......... ... 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 u 20 7 19 9, 15 H 92 10 18 f 14 9 1H H 82 66 r00 08 77 1)5 87 08 90 O 8 & 12 2 4 O'j 26 4 9 ;5 r, 7 4 8 4l 45 71 21 18 2$ 72 60 20 r> 6 8 ' 4 40 0 02 4 4 1 '7 3 6 1 HONOR ROLL 1. R u th Huston, W illis Corry, Robert Brannum, E a rl Collins. 2. HajzelSfc. Sohu, Rosa Andrews, Dorothy Andrews Infez Action, Osn Acton, Donald Northup and W ilbur Conley. 3, Alice Lackey, E d ith Ratnsy, Mabel Strobridge, Catherine Smith, Clarence Sm ith . , 4, John Moore, Wayne Weimer, No rbert Weimer, Lester Oilmans, 0, E lizabe th Cresweli, H azel Hu taler, Maurice Harness, Dewey Corn, Robert Evans, and F rank Evans, f fl. Alice H ixon, W ilbu r McMillan, C lara Wldener, 7. Dorothy Chapman, Nellie Noil, Virgil Bookman, H arry Davis, Den is Davis, W ilbu r Neff, Bernice Beckman, Gary Chapman. P , P, Rltenour, Supt. ER EDITHS ’ US I C S T OR E PATRON IZE - DAYTON ’S - BEST Second Largest C lassic Stock In the State 131 S. Lud low St*, * Dayton, O. POULTRY Headquarters H ig h e s t P r ic e P e r - POULTRY and : , Will call fttiytfbefe iff the- m trn ity fw r . tlieitt# . ping* d i r e c t- td th® high* • m * i priced- E a ste rn - m arke ts \ \ oimbtet h i Id .pay t h e .high* e^t; price a t homo. C E . B1LADSTREET GROC ER N. »* # * « I t. rieee*ee*e»aeei>eiwie X en isi. O h i o ' tt*mmt&**mn*im***. Our January CLEARANCE SALE Begins Thursday, January 2 , lasting three weeks until January 25 . Coats, Suits, Shoes, Millinery, Carpets and Dry Goods of ail kinds are reduced to genuine Clearance Prices. A much larger and most gratifying business in the past year naturally gives us an opportunity to make this Sale the biggest ever. But— B I J Y E A R 11 . Y F O R C H O I C E S E L E C T I O N S * • ■ ■ 1 ■ l; 1 1 ■ ■ '"'r# v '*r'T' ' '' ■ " ."Lir' " The Johnston-Shelton Company T l x i r d , a n d M a i n S t s , (SUCCESSORS TO THE DE WEESE-BIDLEMAN CO.) Miss Ru th Owings has. boon spend ing the HolidaysTn Cincinnati. Miss Hazpl M arinackof Celina has •been thegoest of Mr, Moore McMil lan and family. Dr. and Mrs. W. R. McGheeney entertained a large company of friends a t dinner, Tuesday. Christmas and New Year were spent in a delightful manner ,a t the' home of Mr. H . A. McLean. W hat will another year bring fo rth? Mr. Fred'Clomans and Miss Ger trude Reynolds visited iu Blanehes- ter for several di ys. Misses lim a antUEula Cres well en tertained anumberof.friends Friday evening in honor of Miss Frances Patton of Sparta, 111., and Miss Cora Conner, of Yellow Springs. . Mr. Thomas Turnbull-, of Los Angeles, Cal., formerly a resident of this p la c e ,.is visiting in this county. Messrs, Alex, and S, K, Turnbull are brothers. * Mr. Turn- bull a few years ago became quite prominent in assisting the govern m e n t s breaking the salt- trust. Word was received here Thursday of the death or Judge Samuel Cour.t- riglit, of Circlevlllo,- -Elckaway county, a fte r a long Illness due to pa ra lysis.. A wife and two daugh ters survive.. The Courtrfghts have visited hero in the pas t a t the homo of Mrs. W. M. Barber. Forrest Paine, colored, was placed under a rrest Monday evening by lo cal officers, a t the request of the Chief Of Police of Cliilliootho where he was wanted on a pa rentage ohurge as filed last October by May Butler of th a t place. The Chief returned Tuesday with the prisoner. • The Board of In firm ary Directors has gone ou t of. existanco under the newlaw and on Tuesday the county homes were turned over to the com missioners. Superintendent Sptton and wife gave a d inner to the mem bers qf the infirmary board and their w ives'and the commissioners and th e ir wives, $100 Rewards $100. The readers of this paper will be pleflae- to lettrn that there Is at least .one dreaded disease that science has been uble to cure in «|1 Its stages and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Care is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a oamtiiutkmal treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, acting directly up au the blood and mucoussurraces of system thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature In doing Its work, The proprietors bnvoflo«muCh faith in its curative powers, hat they ofler one Hu 11 tired Hollars for any cam that It falls to euro. 8end for list o testimonials. Adtlrcs3. F. J. CHENEY &Co, Toledo 0. Sold by Druggist, ?0c. all’s Family Pills are the best. ITRADEMARKSnflOeopyriahtSoWAlrttilor no ] frit. Srmi model. r!:rti'hnror t botM and brief dmrl-lntlon, for MECSEARCH-nr.ii repot! oii t.attnmt.lUiy. tascnrrteimtirnq-.____ _ fiendC-reit!trthmp tor NEW BOOKLET, foil of p--ttf-.it information, Jt-willJulpyouto *°REAO PACES It nnd13bafor^applytos Ifor a patent V/motcKk^ 1 D. SWIFT & CO. PATENT LAWYERS, „ . ^303 Seventh St., WaahinQion, D. C. imesi Very Serious It is s very serious mattef to ttsk for one medicine and have the wrong one given you, For this reason we urge yott in buying to be careful fo got the genuine— B L a c k - d r T ugh T Mvcr Medidne Tlio reputation c f this old, <v. Me ntsshclne, for cottr.Ufsation, in-' ’ digestion end liver {rouble, »a Ik;n« ly estqMiShed. ’It doso not indtato other madldnes, 3t Is better tlmn otheic, cr it v<K>'dlJ, hot iso tfid f„v» & vtarite live" p&v/dc?, with A l&tge? » sal* than ail others combined, j; mmm towx * ** j B O GG A N ’S * __ 1 f j ' • E x c lu s iv e S ty l e s The Store Others Try to Imitate. NX one can, ca rry hts burden, however heavy, -HU uiyhtfali.. Any one can do his work, however hard, for one day.. Any one can live sweetly,! Jii patiently, lovingly, purely; till the sun ‘ * '. Koes down. Ana this is all th a t life ever really means.' /. J[ Our January Clearance Salenow in full blast. Never inthe History (h ECONOMICAL l iv ing . It is a; necessity for the majority of people tp buy meat* to letirn to cook those cuts which are cheap, or cheap er than’ the choice ■ cuts. As meat Is one of our most expensive foods, wise haying will lessen the monthly hills. m of Merchandising has there been such price slaughtering as . will prevail on our entire stock of highclass Boggan- made LadiesandMisses wearing apparel. Every article within our door* will be sacrificed—Nothing reserved. I t is j and has been our business principle never to carry over merchandise from one Got a pound of moat cut. from th a 1/ ^ season to another, a precedent which has established our exclusiveness as well a* tump of beef, cut the pieces in size A t . . r tor serving, roil in flour ana brown m. z* confirming the fact, tha t we carry nothing but the very newest and most up to frying- pan with beef drippings or j /B , , . j i t * e xl e x lL ^ ^ the minute models. In view of the fact tha t the winter season is at its height when toggery is most in demand, you will agree tha t this is the suet. When well browned! add two table- spoonfuls of beef drippings, and two tablespoonfuls of flour, mmix well and add three cups of stock Or water; let this boil. , In a cassarole put thin slices of a small carroCand onion, and pour over this the boiling mixture with a teaspoonful of salt and a few dashes of red pepper. Cover and place in a slow oven for an hour, A mediflm flank steak if carefully cooked is tender, Well flavored and palatable. Score the steak on both sides and sprinkle with a tablespoon ful of lemon Jquice or vinegar, tvhicb softens the fiber; ’season with salt, pepper, a dash of nutmeg, cloves and a little chopped Onion. Cover thickly With line hrefcd -t&uiflbs/ roll up and fasten weil wife skewers, Sear oyer well In a hot frying pan, add a pint of stock or water and hake an hour and a half. A dish which may he, new to some is an ojd one to many of our friends across the water. Bonny clabber./This is simply milk that has become thick, before it is very add. If it has stood and acquired cream a ll. the better. Serve as one does a custard, prlnkled with' a little grated maple sugar or with brown BUgar. I t Is a most whole some dish for hot weather, good for all'ages and especially good for those who have alimentary troubles. Junket Is another easily prepared food, Which is both good, and cheep, It Is never economy to buy Wilted vegetables or questionable fru it The waste makes them more costly than those which cost a few Cents more. H Greatest Money Saving event ever afforded. Everything goes- come get your choice of anyarticle inour houseat a saving of t * MAKE YOUR SELECTION OF & Coats Suits Fms Dresses Sweaters Hosiery Neckwear Underwear Shirtwaists Plumes Millinery Hair Goods ■Petticoats Umbrellas Veilings, Leather Goods, Evening Gowns . Evening Dresses Handkerchiefs Etc.. r WE ALSO REFUND CAR FARE TO ALL OUT-OF-TOWN PATRONS. You don’t have to be inconvenienced when you shop here by going to any organization with tickets to have your carfare refunded. Just come to our office and they will give you your fare without any red tape. Don’t Wait---Come and get First Choice. TRADEHARK DROPS THE BEST REMEDY For oil forma of RHEUMATISM Lumtag*,SelAtiM, N mxa I- (hqKhbtRyTrsubtat, Cttenfepnf AtthJM “ 6 -DROPS” STOP THE PAIN CUvoa Quick Rellof I t Stops tlsf* aches and pains, re lieves swollen Joints, and munclea —aotsahnoatllke taaelc. Destroys the excess uHc acid and Is muck, safe and euro in Its results. No other remedy like it, S a m p l e free on request. SOLD BY DRUGGIST3 One,hollar per bottle, or sont pre paid upon rtcolot of price if not , obtainable in your locality, . SWANSOtt RHEUMATICCURECO, 1St Uk« ttnwt Chtoags PETER BOGGAN Both Phones 825 Springfield, Ohio. . ' Use our re s t room to meet your friends, Or a leasure hour, with us to spend* 24 E. Main St., BARI ------------------- -Kill (hem tilt , hls new rat poisonwflll r quickly rid yourfartn OfI , every re t and monso-and do it without a b it efjriutk o r bother, i t never fallo-kills every time; tho ckdncsl, atm- rpJcs£aiul mircsi re t poisonmade. ^R a t R i s -K i t P a s te i th» n cut poiton in the tab* _ Ineteid of (beoMst/lc, hird-to^ptn caS... /Kat I'.ls-Kit PittslsputMpinSneat.liahdy / Luke. Youdon'thavetouseaspoonor knife i /to removeUfrfimthe cm and apresd It on J I thebiittyoUiltnplypres*,the tube and the/ Fpoitonepreadtluelr-no itdamRi t THE 1 Ine, no tnurt.no trouble, Vcs on any kind of bait. Keep*.Indefinitely. K illin ' ■ •at RamadyTaE tlnatlan.Slak *M r Stomaah.Balahlng and )*mt Trauhlaa. tM p*r ■a* « t Bfagglsto. Bnaiwa SKIN SORES ftolpread-i • , . .. . ......... ............... mice,. 1roaches and other vermin, too. GuttrmfterUdifaih, 'jumk&xbaapl J-yr rfifttP aed, t**¥&f* ' PHt* SShi j . </ Jrumsis MR V \ . or dtrict M g'* fr a tttv t J f e IVeKiiEitiir*,-kSISf ■ ilre'frtSl,. ' 0, H a t* ilk « HL (f Xenia Fertilizer Co. Will remove all dead stock immediately free of charge. SOc per 100 lbs. for hogs or sheep. $2.00 per head for horses and $3.00 per head for cattle will be paid upon delivery a t the plant.] BOTH PHONES Bell 337-W Citizens 187 q u ic k l y - h e a l e d . i\ OlttlU IV. M tiai' l.aXullvn Tfttt. lets willtaut tilin'.U.,; ,»f *‘r;ir.d!elnft,'’. No m a tttr how hard your head aencs, Pt, MU**' 1411* will help you. ' For Sale byJ. E. ma<lle, ^.»Us anti greeories, and O. M Bidgway, druglJiOL Win. Byers, the former owner of the plant, is in charge as general manager. i t you c an ’t sleep fo r nervousness tek * a D r, M iles’ A titl-P aln Pill,,
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