The Cedarville Herald, Volume 39, Numbers 1-26
mmm - -!-— -te>' • «*«*• mlf'l ^*..1.»‘ «.M11.nli .tfnminniJMnmwj Be Suf e You are Right and Then Go' Ahe&d That’a what we said to our tailor when he had a difficult alternation to make* W h e n t h e garment was finiahed it was perfect and the fit was exactly as deiared. Not a garment leaves the home that is not satisfactory to the wearer. We’ ve sold thousads of suits, O’ coats and odd trousers and have yet to to aee the first dissatisfied customer, f My Dear Sir:—You can rest assured that your suit will be all that’s desired if it contains thedabel of Straus* & Hilb and the makers name be Hart Sehaffner & Marx, Come in today pick out your suit and leave the rest to us. Clothes for Man or Boy STRAUSS & HILB „ Confidence with Agood place to |HAUOO QL 111LD whom you btrade ASkyo«tiendS “The Surprise*Store’’ n»*-**»« 28-30 E. Third St., Dayton, Ohio- 1 - easy* wffljioimiisi.il 1 Kid* v m ; GreemrUle, B. d;,™‘ ' I ’wafit other# t6 j know of the groat benefit I have d«- I rived from .Vmol. I tun 81 year# old j and Vino) has given me strength, a healthy apjwtite and overcame nervous- j ness. It ia the best tonic recon- atructor I ever used.” —Mrs, M. A, H utchison . Vino! is & deljciou# cod" liver and iron tonic without oil, guaranteed to overcome run down, weak, devitalized conditions and for chronic coughs and colds, C. M. RIDGWAY, Druggist, Cedarville, Ohio, LOCAL AND PERSONAL T o C i v m a r a n t e e d t ia n c t lo t t oic Y s u r H o a « y lla cK . ...... ....... . it the tiro* e . ......... . . If It fat)s to satisfy you, returnthe bottle to the dealer fromwheat yett feooght -ana- ......— It, and we will ref dyour roonej. Town...........' i -auta.. S'gahem - - •CUT frills ftv i s IS . C . D e W I T T a'V C O M P A i i V , C H I C A G O . » » » - WOE suchpower in any other car unles youpay nearly $200 more The OVERLAND 35 H P. at $695 ^ As-a rule automobile prices vary according to the power. The $695 Overland is the one big, important, out standing'exception to the' rule. Because the factory builds twice as many cars as any other producer .of automobiles of like class—■. We can price this car way below its power class— nearly $200 below. , . LEGAL NOTICE. flannabery &Cummings South Main St., f . •v . ’ ... # Auto Accessories and Supplies. Car owners feel welcome to use * our fro© air serviae at tlve curb. Sealed bids will he received at the office of the Clerk of the Village of Cedarville, Ohio, until 12:00 o’clock noon of Wednesday, the 7th day of June, 101G, for furnishing the neces sary labor and materials for the com plete construction of about 4000 square yaWs of paving on Main Street in said Village of Cedarville, Ohio, Said contract includes about 1333 cubic yards of excavation, 4000 lineal feet of drain tile, and 100 lin eal .feet of cement curb and gutter. Bids Will be received on brick, wood block, sheet asphalt, asphaltic con crete, water-bound macadam and tar- bound macadam. - - Each bid shall contain the , full name o f every person or company in- t terested in the same, and shall be ac companied by a bond to the.satisfae tion of said Village Clerk, or a cer tified check upon £i solvent bank, said bond or check to be in a sum equal to Five (5) per cent, of the amount of the bid, as a guaranty that I f the bid is accepted, a contract will be en tered into and its performance prop erly secured. Checks of unsuccess ful bidders will be forthwith returned, The check of the successful. bidder to be returned upon execution of con tract and securing Bam© as aforesaid, otherwise to be retailed by the said Village o f Cedarville, Ohio. Specifications and plans may b© ob- ,tained .from the Village Clerk, Cedar- ’ ville,'Ohio, or J. P. Shumaker,' En gineer, Xenia, phio. Said' specifications are in printed form' and contain.instructions to bid ders, together with blank form o f bid, ,and other matters o f importance 'to bidders. Bidders are requested to use the printed forms in so far as possible. ) The right is reserved to reject any and all bids. J. W. JOHNSON, Village Clerk, Cedarville, Ohio. i Mrs, A. E. Richards and chil dren are visiting relatives in Now Paris, Kerr & Hasting# have added a Ford roadster to b# used in con nection with their business. Mr. D. R. Johnson ha# also purchased a Ford touring car.- Miss Margaret Alexander spent several days In Yellow Springs this week. ■■■■•■ In Your PocKet if you let us make your clothes* We give you value, style and workmanship and work is guaranteed to be ( first class only KANY, Ths LeadingMerchant Taylor XENIA, - - - - - OHiO . DRAFT STALLIONS. Prince Albert, the Imported Belgian and Longjumeau, the Im ported Percheron, will make the season at the farm on tt>« Wilming ton road just south o f CeRarvilio. Owing to the unsettled condition of tho horse pnarket tho soason for each horse will he $15 for a colt to stand and suck. This is an ex ceptional opportunity to breed your mare# t* proven sires at such a low fee. Book yeur mare# early. ANDREW WINTER, OBcar Lee, Groom, Phones, barn 13 on 108 and resi dence 88. | n n in Sumrai I^KSHdiHorx Read ’ s all about thecharmsof<rTheCoolestSpot NearHome/*wheresummervacations may be enjoyed at prices to fit any purse. VacationResorts,Hotels,Camps fullydescribedInattractivebook containingmore than 200 photographicview#,with complete Informationregardingaccommodations. A^flvto T.oral A tint o ta j/y itt • " , C. C. //AW E S , J)h!riit IKitUHgte Ax*iif J j f ju r3 %\, on to Keeps Two Kinds of Time. A new French three-handed watch tells both 12-hour and 24-hour time, one hour hand being used for each kind on separate dials, while a single minute hand does for both. Importation of Birds. The department of agriculture Is sues about 500 permits annually for the Importation of birds; the number of birds imported amounts to about .'-00,000, and as many as 17,000 birds arrive in a single day. The L. A , B. of the tJ. P. church will give a market in the Hanna- beryroom, Saturday, May 27, We still have some lime and sulphur and arsenate of lead for spraying, McFarland & McKee, $100 Reward $100* l|Th« readers ;this paper will be picket'd to that therein at least one <bf«#d«d diselae that Udeoce h#s been able to tore Ip #11 ik stages and that is Catarib. Hell's CAt*r*h bare is the only poyitjye cur#now '-ihoWh' W the medir;al /nficwiity, faq#yrrii being * constitutional disease, requires a cOnsUfctionAl treatment, ilall’a Oaiorrii *;ureia taken Internally,' acting direttly up* on the blood and mucousaurracee of System thereby destroying the foundation of tiro (liaeeee, findgiving the patient Strength by bajbiwg tfp the cpnstitlitimi aud insisting wtnmlutjfdm; Itswork. The proprletoA Uftveasjmtfih fnSthin Its curativs pitWw, hatfltej^dBerOheHiKidnrtl BfilUrfsfor any casts tt*aiU Mte to dura, &nd for lkt o F. i, OH»W»V A Go.,Toledo, O. HaW* FamR> PfitsetVe thebeat, Rev. J. S, E, McMichael and wife were in Columbus Wednesday at tending A meeting of Presbytery. , Wednesday C. W. Robinson, a postoffiee inspector of . Oolr’ ibua, visited here Wednesday and .took in tho situation relative to the robbery.. He also took the “ five fingers” a term used by cracksmen for a too) need in pulling the knob o f s a f e . The invention has only been known a fow years yet is very simple and does the work without noise. ■, . Mr. Ralph Murdock reports the sale of a Ford roadster to tne Hagar Straw Board & Paper Co , and a touring car to Mr. O. E, Bradfnte. A very delightful picnic was held at the Cliffs early Wednesday morning when the Freshmen of the college gathered about six o ’clock. The following menu was served: buns, bacon, weeners, eggs, coffee, strawberries and cream. Those present were; Ruth Thompson, Louise Finney, Jeanette Engle, Helen" Cteswell, Nellie! Harriet Stewart, Freda Turnbul, Norman Foster, William Anderson, .Merle Stormont, Robert Coleman, James Day and Howard Coiry. ; Mrs. G, Harper suffered a paraly tic stroke Wednesday and in her fall received, a btoken right hip, The stroke ,ts supposed to have taken place atffint ten o ’ clock that morning and the,discovery was not made until after four in the after noon when a neighbor boy went to the house with the mail as w a s . his usual custom, During that time Mrs. Harper b i lain on . the floor near the stairs in a helpless con dition and when found was suffer ing Intense pain. Drs. Marsh and MoOlellan were called to administer medical aid. The left side of the body seems to have been affected by the stroke. AlthougL Mrs. Harper Is past eighty years of -age yet she has lived, alone since the death ot her husband. Toxication Is Self Poisoni g. Few Realize the Causes of This Form of Ailment. Few realize what a great number of people, among those who live in such cities as this, suffer from auto intoxication. This condition, which has caused so much discussion, is" nothing more nor less than a slow self-poisoning of vital organs. It is. the very foundation of many ailments. When the organs become weakened from any cause they are unable to throw off the amm.i.’ ations of waste matters. The putrefactive germs Soon begin to get in their deadly work and the sufferer finally is a direct victim o f poisons generated right in lus own system. Among the common results of this auto-intoxication are jaundice, hard cold, constipation, indigestion and fer menting of food, biliousness, sick headaches, backaches, diarrhea, diz ziness, pains in the kidney region and nervousness. Tanlac is designated especially to combat this condition of congestion brought about by auto-intoxication. Its properties as a tonic and invig- orant tend to throw off the poisons and to spur the organs back tp needed efforts—in short, to clean them and make them normal again. To an automobilist it might be said that Tanlac acts as a spark plug in the human mechanism. It starts the vital, engines and then keeps them going at a properly regulated speed. Tanlac is now obtainable in Cedar ville at the G. M. Ilidgway Drag Store, where it is being daily explain ed during the constantly increasing demand. Tanlac may bo obtained in Yellow Springs at the Fmloy Drug Store; South Oharieftton, Claude W. Deem; Jamestown, W. E. Ilafper;/ Xenia, Sayer AHemphill, AVE IN SAF Benjamin Franklin’ s feat with his kite ogenefi up marvelous industrial opportunities but liis real con-* tribution to humanity came along With his simple observation that a*penny saved was a penny earned. "in T H E Spring fie ld Savings Society Paves the W ay to a Competence S AFE, Systematic Saving took concrete form in the United States in 1816, when the first Savings Bank was established m Boston, Mass. The year 1916 is the 100th anniversary of the idea. V ll/H A T a splendid opportunity to celebrate this anniversary by join- T V ing the ranks of the thousands upon thousands who have learned to recognize saving as the best business proposition in the life of any in dividual. Y O U N G MAN ! ! : It is up to you entirely whether you are going to get along in this life or whether you are going to be a failure. Better take stock right now and determine which it is going to be. If you really wish to succeed* START A SAVINGS ACCOUNT AND KEEP ADDING TO IT EACH WEEK. It will surprise you how radidly your account will grow. BUT YOU MUST SAVE IN SAFETY THE SPRINGFIELD SAVINGS SOCIETY invests its money only in Government state and municipal bonds and lends it only when secured by mortgage on real estate at about two-fifths of actual value without regard to improvements. SO SAFE HAS BEEN .ITS POLICY THAT IN THE FORTY-THREE YEARS OF ITS BANKING EXISTENCE NOT A SINGLE LOSS HAS BEEN SUSTAINED. LEARN TO DEPOSIT BY MAIL We Pay 4* ON DEPOSITS Make the two-cent stamp the errand boy in the great est business adventure of your career. We Pay 4? - m ON DEPOS ITS Write for our booklet “ BANKWG BY M A IL ” Address inquiries to the Springfield Savings - Society, 9 East Main Street, Springfield, Ohio J Never Have We Had Such A | Fine Collection of SilkSuits andDresses, WoolenSuits, Coats, Skirts, Waists. Our Sales have proved satisfactory in spite of bad weather. Gome and See Them Parties have gone to Dayton atid returned to buy from us. W e are showing one ef the largest and best line of Rugs, Carpets, Linoleums? Mattings, Wood Fiber Fillings, Draperies, LaceCurtains, also Curtain Goods by the ■_ # 'p ’ yard, WindowShades, Table Oil Cloth, also a fine line ofBedSpreads Cedar Chests, Carpet Sweepers, etc., ever I • - shown i’i eur carpet department. j . * • * < * When you are ready for anything in this line, visit this department — IN THE BASEMENT we be lieve we can save you some mpnfcy Warners, Nemo, Gossferd, Frol&sete Hutchison Gibney X E N IA , OH IO $ m i
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=