The Cedarville Herald, Volume 37, Numbers 27-52

•MtfeMi mwmmwm.mw PU9H davenport week AICappcTsAugust Fvniture Sale IH lt SWOT, Ssifeat fM( *«o^»AVm « ie * « Y * « G u e s t C h a m b e r *n y e « p H o u s e . W i t h o u t E x t r a F u r n i t u r e E x p e n s e ,^?hU wonderful Bed Davenport open* from « handsome parlor Davenport to at full *me» comfortable, sanitary bed In one operation, You, do not sleep on the upholstering, but upon regular bed* springs and a soft cotton mattres*. ft Is mechanically perfect and the spring-work practically indestructible. The frame is made of choicest quarter-sawed oak, thoroughly air seasoned and kilo dried. The finish is of the richest golden oak, hand rubbed and polished—(any other finish desired without additional charge). The covering is the best grade of moroc­ coline leather, upholstered perfectly plain as shown in the illustration, mak­ ing it easy to dust and keep clean? tegu­ lar price."$43,00, August POO J f i Sate P rice---- ...-----_______ Inexpensive Bed Room Furniture CappeVs are as well able to supply every need in the less expensive grades of furniture as is demanded m the other grades. ' The satisfaction that one may realise in buying the cheaper qualities here t» accounted for by the fact, that no matter how low the price may be the quality is as high as it is possible to obtain. $ 12.00 Solid Oak Dressers, like cut, golden gloss -finish, 40-inch top, 18x24-inch French plate beveled edge mirror. f O AA August Sale Price,-------—„-------- ---$ 3 iU u $13-00 Princess Dressers, same pattern as the cut, 18x30-mch French plate beveled. QA mirror. August Sale. P r i c e . . w *u II Regular W F tw ta ix FREE Delivery a t Sate x ‘JPirifce$x- - As-trr -4 t-wdrswsw-ftwSMina,-mgrvr»3_ ,- ■X'je-n•*?r f u# Wl»?i Jkl»F*r* * * " # * "yrtsie wg —/> Drop-Side Sanitary touches $ 2.48 $3.25 Full Length Drop-Side Sanitary Coaches, patent fabric,, helical steel ends, six center sup-' port springs, gold bronze-©A AO finish, August Sale Price„¥fc«<fU Bdrldge Sewing Machines : Underpriced $31.00 Eldredge Rotary Drop- Head Sewing Machine, with the , wonderful automatic tension, quar­ tered oak,Tour-drawer ©ftQ Aft case. August Sale Price..y4»U»HrU $30.00 Cappel’s Best, Drop-Head, Shuttle Machine; four' drawers; quartered oak case. ©Aft E ft August Sale Price....,__ y t t i u l l J $17.50 Pioneer Sewing Machines," £K5*.s*,e . $ 12.60 A full set of attachments and 10- ; year guarantee with each, machine, Uptelsftred . K od ttri <' Very c 0 m- make.mahog- anyfinishedbr quartered oak, A L a rg e V a rie ty of Beautiful R UG S At This Great August Sale , There are Rugs of almost every size and grade in this sale, from a good low-priced room size Mat­ ting Rug at $?.25 to the .finest Wil­ ton. , In many instances the prices are a" full third less. Patterns and colorings are beautiful. Come in and select as many as you want while there is so much to be saved. $17.50 Tapestry, Brussels Rugs, with or without seams, will wear like iron, allover or oriental styles, 9x12 feet. August © 1 ft Cf) Sale P ric e_________ I £.sWU $20.00 Axminster Rugs, oriental floral, a'llover and medallion pat­ terns, .9x13 size. August.Sale Price 1Vs $35,0Q Seamless Wilton Velvet Rugs, tan and blue in allover pat­ terns; 9x13 feet. August Sale Price- lUl/VUA JSUS' $ 26.10 $41.00 Wilton Rugs; bright; hew designs; oriental and allover styles; 9*12 feet August .SMc Price $ 30.60 any . f i n i s h . This plcti ure il­ lustrates the most comfortable and restful Rocker on the market. It is substantially c o n s t r u c t e d throughout, full spring back and box seat-upholstered ia morocco­ line leather; regular price'$15.60, August Sa!e M Q gO / 2 IS 22 1S.MAlN-SZ : Manufacturer’s c o u n r i i t GO-CARTS Added to Cappel’a August Sale i t X ^ia :M ;Q S» ::x $14.50 Allwin :.'.v Go-Carts, $7.65 Exactly as illustrated, black en­ ameled steel tube frame and push bars, turned,wood.handles, nickel angles, nickel auto style fenders and wheel forks, four-bowed hood, 10-inch wheels with kS-inch rubber tires; $14.50 value. Owing to man­ ufacturer’s overstock, ©T RR August Sale Price.— ----- t * « w «J Daytonhas The Best Stores • InOhio ' • CompleteStocks T fyb u tb tin D a ® DaytonhasUp- to-the-minute , Styles Right Prices Wednesday--SUBURBANDAY—I b Dayton * ■- " i © Dayton ha* completely recovered from it* great disaster and the merchants have planned to make SUBURBAN DAY mote attractive than ever, to out-of-town shoppers# Attractive Merchandise Price Inducements -Excellent Transportation Facilities-Rine Hotel and Res- touraiW Accomodation*—Matty Theaters and place* of amusement. > “SHOP IN DAYTON—IT WILL PAY YOU.” The Fact Remains No amount o f misrepresentation by the peddler* o f slum baking powders, no jug­ gling with chemicals, or pretended analysis, or cooked-up certificates, or falsehood* o f any kind, can change the diet that Royal Baking Powder ’ I mmi h e tn ^ l y t h e <»Kft« t t $ l c x am ln a lto n s to fee of Htt; M g k e s t Ieav e** lu« r i t t e i r i j i ^ i fre e Iron* a lum , bm 4 ®f ab so lu te p u r i t y a n d iv iio le som e n e s su Royal Baking Powder is indispensable |©f making finest and most economical food. OHIO’S LARGEST BUSINESS SCHOOL m p m TYPEWRITING DEPARTMENT, JACOBS BUSINESS ’COLLEGE, DAYTON, OHIO. Many young man an l young women are arranging to ‘enn^r the Jacobs Business College;’"Second and. Main streets, Dayton, Ohio, at the opening of the new fall term on Monday, Au­ gust 31, For several years the Jacobs school hah been by“far the largest busi­ ness school In this section of, the state aiid from present indications .the at­ tendance this fall will be much larger , than ever before. - ‘ Starting sewmteen years ago In' one small room in the Reibold building the school has grown gradually every year, At the end of a short time it acquired additional rooms In the Reibold build­ ing until in 1900 it outgrew its quarters and moved .to -the Eaker building, Sec­ ond and Main streets, occupying the fourth floor. Almost every year addi­ tional space has beeh secured until now the schobl occupies the entire fourth floor and ,tlie entire third floor with the exception of one small ropm. Just recently the school has acquired additional #oom and last year consid­ erable space was added, The Jacobs school has been fortunate In being lo­ cated, Jn a building where additional room could be ’secured ,as needed, ac­ cording to tbe growth of the school. . The placing of its graduates in good positions is one of the featured which appeals to the prospective pupil in, connection with the work of the 'Jacobs College, Several hundred calls are re­ ceived each- year for bookkeepers and stenographers qnd Jacobs graduates are found in the leading business of­ fices of the city and many of the sur­ rounding cities. Graduates have also been unusually successful in the Gov­ ernment service. . The Business course Includes Book­ keeping, Arithmetic, Penmanship/Busi­ ness' Letter Writing, Spelling, Rapid. Calculation, Commercial Law and Banking. The training In this depart­ ment is' the result of years of experi­ ence, and the use of tbe best text-books to be found. _ The Stenographic course includes Shorthand, Typewriting, English, Spell­ ing and Oflice Methods.' Tbe work in this department speaks for itself as a very large proportion ' of tbe sten- graphlc work in the city is done by graduates of the Jacohs school at the present time. These Include many of the most important shorthand positions in the city, as the stenographer to the City Manager, tbe private secretary to Vice President Deeds of the.-'NatIonal Cash Register Company, the private secretary to the president’of the Bar* uey &Smith Car Company, the stenog­ rapher to the Flood Prevention Com­ mittee, the court stenographer In the new Municipal Court, the stenographer to the Chief -of Police, and' hundreds of other*Important positions are held by recent graduates, of the shorthand de­ partment of the Jacobs school. Now typewriters,’ adding machines, private telephone exchange, Individual desks, banking fixtures, and modern office appliances make, up the equip­ ment, much of which is not found In the ordinary, commercial .school. Ex­ perienced teachers,- the ’majority of whom have been with the school fpr , ( ; -—From a photograph* many years, direct the -work of the pupils in a way to secure the most rapid advancement consistent; with thorough work, Individual instruction is a prominent feature in connection with-the work- ' Young men and young women inter* esfed‘ln the best in a business educa­ tion -will do well to visit the school and see its advantages: Might school Is held three evenings each week during the. fall and winter months for tbe benefit of those, who work during the day. The courses are the same a* in the day school' with the same- compe­ tent teachers in charge. Tbe principal of the Jacobs school is W. E, Harbottle, to whom all com­ munications for literature and full in­ formation should be addressed. The literature is sent free on application; FOOD F0RJ.0ND0N The World's Largest City Is Ever on the Verge,#f Famine. COULD B E EASILY STARVED. if SuppliSa-Prpm Abroad Were Cut Off For a Fow Week* Death Would Ravage th* Great and Woqlthy My* tropolia—Source* of. ft* Provision*-" “ 1 -. ^ K i Londofi i* a city aod u County, but It I* so Immense and so diverse that it might almost be said to be a country One of the most strikiug things about Londdn Js ita utter luabltity to-feed Itself,, in the matter pi food Its very Immensity is the cause of Us utter de­ pendence. If supplies were cut off from without it would starvp to death Inn few weeks, It fertile richest city in the world It bus palatini shops, thousands of. stores and Countless warehouses, but It produces practically nothing In the shape of foodstuff. It is like a great baby that him to be fed by its mother, the world, and tbe produceof tbe world Oil* the mouths of its 7.500,000 inhab­ itants. By tbe rail, tbe river and tbe road all "that Londoner* eat and drink is brought to them, and three-quarter* of It all is conveyed In ships from abroad Until the beginning of tbe nineteenth century, London bud no docks. Today they cover an area of twenty-two miles, And wheat from the United Stitts*, Russia; Canada' and the Argentine Is disgorged into their granaries from the holds of ships like so much sand Many Londoners have never, seen the docks, but two lonves out of every three that they eat are made from the grain that comes to them through those docks, Most of the grain ships berth in the Victoria docks, -but since they are *e necessary to tbe city’a welfare they have tbe rlghf to moor at any quay In tbe port of London, a privilege no oth­ er vessels possess,’ Tbe London butchers never cease to sound .the praise of English beef and mutton, but they sell little that Is real-- ly English. All the cattle that are shipped to London alive pass ashore at Deptford Into the market which stands on the site of the dockyard where Peter the Great learned ship­ building, EVery animal Is inspected by a government official, and those that are id any way diseased are killed and cremated straightway, Cattle come by train from alt parts of the kingdom to tbe Metropolitan cattle market at Islington, traveling through the night, and oft -Mondays and Thursdays the market opens at dawn and continues till 8 o’clock in the afternoon. The cattle that are sold are driven to the slaughter house* and killed, and the meat Is oft sale at Sftiltlifield early next mortilng. At 2 o’clock In the morning tti|» market Is ablaze with light, and the streets In the vicinity-are blocked with railway vans. At 4 o’ctock the sales men are in their places, and soon aft erWard tbe buyers from the big shops arrive, and the sawdust strewn ave­ nues of fed and yellow catca&ies are thronged. Smlthfield’s dally Supply of beef and mutton is about i.doo tons, but only a fifth of this moat is British, and much of the mutton comes from New Zea­ land Vi* the Victoria docks. The county of Rent Is noted for its fruits and vegetables, but K-ontluft Would be unable to satisfy Us craving for green stuff without the aid of oth­ er countries. The miscellaneous vege­ tables annually brought into England $ m Me evoictb dost VMtJ There are severs^ ,mnrk*tn in the mrliopulls-’lnl MUM Wit ft-*’ Spltllttiefils, ' flit- Great Nditlu-rn potato market antt the i-’:imumton fruit and "'vegetable market - nut the iiiifli of the apples, oraiytes, lemons, unions, potatoes and ■niter roots that are. brought- rrom’ France. Italy. Spain .nnd Algiers find ■heir wily , from ttie docks of Covent 'hirden in cPtimion with the home 'rowu fruit nnd 'vegetables which ’each l.uuijmt from alt points of the -ompasa in tunics and bnaket’ ^piled nigh on lumbering Vnns. ..Vbxt of the market gardeners sell >he(r. own wui - ch at :'the garden,*• vitlle the foreign utiiff lit idld at anc*' h«t Fop .‘ton .ve.-ira this.place has , teen the premier market of l-ondon for vegetables, fruits and -lie and ’here arc linns Who have traded be- oeath its glass roof fdr generations. ' Some of the fish that feeds London is landed on a floating pontoon nt the rivejf front of Billingsgate "market, and it a very early hotu;.ln the mocnlng me may, if he chooses, gaze upon flsh -tig smacks from the 'North sea, little •pen barges loaded with fish that have (teen lightered front larger vessels in the docks nnd clumsy looking Dutch gal.lots loaded with .cels which are en: titled under n charter granted by Queen Elizabeth to sail up tbe Thames tnd moor below London bridge. The railway companies convey 79,- 000 tons of fish from different parts of tbe coast in the course of a yen while the boats convey 57,000 tons. The .tolling of a big bell announces the opening of the market at 5 o’clock; ahfl thereafter the fishmongers are busy buying,-and the fish porters In their long smocks nnd flnt’topped hats scur­ ry from the stalls to the carts beating fish boxes dn their heads. The provision business 1s a network of commerce In Itself, but there, is a big dally distribution throughout Lon­ don. because wlthoat lt London would have to live' on dry 'bread, meat add. vegetables,-“New York Pres*, f Cattyf* and Csramony. Thomas Carlyle and his wife were so wedding frightened that It Is’sad to think of i t Replying to a letter of his describing bis fantastic terrors, shsr wrote: “For hqaven’s sake get Into a more benignant bttmor or the incident will not only wear a very original aspect, but likewise a very’ heart breaking one/ I see to t bow 1 am to go through with i t ”-T , P.’s Weekly, London. Isli of Man’* Busy Governor. For plurality in office tbe palm must go to the governor of tbe Isle of Man. According to Spencer Walpole's ac­ count of the “Island of Home Rule,” th* governor la chancellor, president of the common law courts, president of tbe council, president of the Tyn­ wald court and, in addition,‘acts Us his own prime minister, home secre­ tary and head of tbe treasury.—Lon­ don Chronicle. • A Cass of Dropsy. She—Do you know It is dangerous to Use some Words carelessly? Thus, If you were to drop the first letter In mu­ sic it would make you sick, He-YcS, and If soldiers in battle were to drop tbe drat letter in griddled they’d get riddled.—Buffalo Express, ' On the Way. “Why doesn’t tin t dachshund come When I call him? The idea of sulking on me!” “He’s coming as fast as he can,” said the man’s wife. “Hu’s got his front legs started,"-Washington Herald, Gonsldarabls Opening, “What a dear utile mouth Peggy has,” .> “Yes; her last dental hill amounted fc fST,6ftH~Bost«n »Tnw*cripi, Schmidt Helps Y qu to Enjoy Life at v the Least Cost These Save You Money Country Onted Bacon...........,14c Breakfast Bacon, Sugar . <, Cured per lb ,- ............ 38c Fancy Sugar Cured Ham, ..■lb ..................... ...........18o California and Picnic Hams, per lb ................ ...„14c Sohmit’s Ocean Light Flour..................... ;......... 65c — -S p ec ia l-- - Thursday/ Friday/Saturday A fr ic a n J a v a Coffee, P e r P o u n d ; . v , , . , . . , 22 c F r e s h f c r e am e r y bu tter , her, p o u n d . 28 c P u r e Lard* P e r P o u n d ................ . . , ...... ........... n c - B u t t e r N u t b a c o n , J ................ 22 c Canned Corn, Per can., 6 c • Shoe Peg Corn, per can........ 7o Corn .Flakes.,........... ........... Oc Schmidt's 01d »Hickory Flour, 26 lb. Back for,..... ;.,..70c The Ball Mason Jars Ball Mason Jars in quart sizes, per dozen..... :................. 45c Bail Manon Jars in pint sizes, per dozen.......................... 40b DOWN THEY GO AGAIN! NEW POTATOES Per Bu. . • • * . . • • $1.00 "k- ■ ■- L ‘ I t s 25 lb, Sacfc of Cold Wf* Hour 75 c H. E. Schmidt & Co • * ■ ■•• - . . i- - ■ - - Wholesale and Retail;Grocers 30 South Detroit Street, Xenia, Ohio* Paint Is liquid money* You spread It over your house and then sun*wind* ram and dust beat upon it in -the effort to - wear it Out and get at the wood* Bye and bye you have to do it all over again •--but less often wijth Hanna’s Green Seal Paint than with others. When 'you think of the cost of paint and painting* remember that one- third is paint and two-thirdb labor* I t oosts more to put on a poor paint than a good one. Use tbe paint that lasts longest* FOR SALR b * KERR & HASTINGS BROS, X X GET OUR PRICES ON PRINTING X X spate:

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