The Cedarville Herald, Volume 39, Numbers 27-52
J 'Vi Removal Our Entire Stock Must Be Sold by February First W e have leased our store t© the Ideal Dairy Lunch Co. and guaranteed to be closed out by February xst. E v e ry article in this the Larges t Retail Electrical Shop in the middle west must be sold regardless of price except M azda Lamps. Th is is a bonified sale the immense stock o f ,Fixtures, Plumbing Supplies, Electrical Appliances and G as Supplies are to be sacrificed.. ‘ /./' ’ . ‘ ' / ‘ a » •; >* . “• ■ . t . . . . Th is coming Electrical W eek and just before the Holidays offers exceptional opportunities for a great savings to you. Come and pick out your Christmas Electrical G ift for they will go fast. Our Christmas Tree L igh ting Outfits just arrived and must be included in this sale. T h e d ea l to lease our store, was closed last Satnrday afternoon. * ' M. J. Gibbons 20=22 W est Third Street, Dayton, Ohio Ordinance No. 91. An ordinance to levy special assess-mcnts fo r the improvement o f Main Street from the P. 0 . C; & St. L. E. E.crossing to the- South, side o f the bridge over Massie’s Creek, by paving,the repair o f cement curbs and gut ters, and installation o f drain tile. - Be it ordained by the Council o f the Village o f Cedarville, State o f Ohio,three-fourths o f all members elected thereto concurring: • ' Section No. 1. That to pay theportion o f the cost .a n d . expenses- ’ heretofore determined to be speciallyasseissed fo r the improvement o f Main Street from the P. C. C. & St. L. E.E. crossing to the South side o f the bridge over Messie’s Creek, by paving,the repair o f cement curbs and gut- • ters; and the installation o f 'dram tile, there be levied and assessed upon the •, lots -and lands hereinafter described,the several amounts herein set forth, Cedarville Main.Street Paving Cash ' v, ' Assessments Owner’s' Nam© ; 8 . ft,- at gj ■S ft3 I *4 t 9 § , s\ <8 a 8 ' 3 T h e R ea lm 'o f . ■■* • ■© • Christmas Fancy l To the realms of Christmas fancy I-must speed away, away, Where the elfs of joy are dancing And the sprites of pleasure play. I must go where gentle fairies . Whisper, softly qn the air. And the g ift king;waves his scepter Over blessings sweet and rare. W. P. ToWnsely.. . . . . . . . . . . . Win, and C. A . Townsely . . . . , ' Vinna Harper........ . . . . . . . . . . V inna. Harper.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jennie T u r n b u l l ... .... .... * . Sarah E. Weimer. . . 1 . . . . . . . . ' Catharine' Townsley.......... ..... Margaret B oyd .......................... Q. E . and J. W- E radfute*., . . •John Fields.,«...*r« . . . . . . . . George E. B oyd . ............ . C. W* and Ida Stuckey.. . . . . . Charles Eidgeway........ .............. ................ cd.\ " ■ *•* t •* b* * * * * * * ♦• V*’* t ft:}- *•« ■ •. • .«: • • '• * * i« • • * %,«''» '* * .*•« • • .» '• Eobert Bir Township. House. C. W . Crouse......................... Anna T ow n s le y ...,............... . J. E. and F . P. Hastings... ’ T. B. Andrew s.................... A . B. Clemans. Elizabeth B la ir.. * . . . . . . - <. Mary J. McMillan.. . . . . . . . Hugh. A . B a r r . . ........ J. C. Barber..................... ..... Miron I. and Emma Marsh. ♦J. P. Chew........ ..................... David W. Hower.................. Exchange Bank........ . W . M. Barber....................... Crouse & B u ll,. . . . . . . . . . . . Lulu Barber................... .. Charles S m i t h ............ P. C. C. & St. L. E y ........... >*i*» *■• r * • * -f■a- ■ **4«-*. i ,• '*»\V , k » • fc • * Mitchell & Dill ,9 i, 55. . .427-50 Mitchell & Dili ' Q 20.. 427.50 Mitchell & DiU • 8 61.5 287.82 Mitchell & Dill , ‘ 7 61.5 287.82 Mitchell & Dili 6 23. 107.64 Mitchell & Dill 6 38.5 180.18 Mitchell & Dill 5 31. 145.08 Mitchell & Dill 5 30;5 142.74 Mitchell & DiU ' 4 45.0 210.60 Mitchell & DiU 45.0 210.60 Mitchell & DiU* 2&3 74.66 349.41 Mitchell & DiU 3 28. 131.04 Mitchell & DiU 1 74. 346.32 Land 47.5 245.58 Land . , ' , 78.6 397.99 Land ■ - ■ # , 54. 273.78 Land a 60.00 304.20 Mitchell & Dunlap 41 73.5 418.95 Mitchell & Dunlap 42 45. 210.60 Mitbhell & Dunlap 42 73. 341.64 Mitchell & Dunlap 43 62. 290.16 Mitchell & Dunlap 43 22. 102.96 Mitchell & Dunlap 44 122.83 574.85 Mitchell & Dunlap ’ 45 76.5 358.02 Mitchell & Dunlap 45 94.25 481.09 Mitchell & Dunlap 45 26.08 122.06 Mitchell & Dunlap 45 . 50.16 259.33 Gaunce a 66. 334,62 Land • * 29. 147.03 Land ¥ • 62. £14.34 Land ♦ ■ 19. 96.33 Land ' * • 16. 81.12 Land * * 80. 456.00 Childhood’s reaM o f Christmas fancy Gfnce again shall feast my eyes With the old time love and rapture, With the old time fond surprise. •‘geuieel" frigidity o f his nuaien.ce. .a the very commencement of the “Christ- mas Carol.’' where mention is rondo of Scrooge's clerk occupying a dismal lit tle cell—“a sort of tank” —there was an Irrepressible shout o f laughter from au occupant of the back seats, who doubt, less, bad an everyday experience of a similar tank. The laugh was taken up by others, and the apptauso thencefor ward was continuous. .In talking with Cutbbert Bede at the deanery over the events of'the evening Dickeps especially referred to that burst of laughter at the mention o f the “ tank’* and said that -he instinctively blamed the person for his applause. Early Christina* Play*. Two of the earliest Christmas plays that have come down to us are to be found Itt the Jew fragmentary works of Hilarius. a monk of .the twelfth cen tury, who is said to'have been an, Englishman and who is known to have In the flickering hearthstone shad-1^ a.?,puplI 0f,tho tnlonb Al?e1'a,rd: 0£ 1 the three, mystery plays which he is 0W8» . , j thoughtJo have written in cofiabora- In the music and the mirth, j tion with Jordabna and Simon, prob-' 'Once again each dear remembrance ably brothermonks, two were evideut- Sneaks eood will and peace on iy pimq during the Christmas season . J [ a “ r r * -name)?; “$fae Imago of St. Nlcho- > earth, / ( las,*’ most lively produced on that saint’s, day. Deg. 6. aud “ The History •o f Daniel," which seems to have been tntended for Chrlstmua presentatlon, Open Saturday Un til , 9 P . M i The foregoing assessments aremade according to the foot front' of the property assessed, and Councilfinds and hereby declares that the property hereinbefore assessed isspecially benefited to- the amount o f the aforesaid assessments b y reasono f said improvement. Section No. 2. That the total as-sessment against each o f said prop erties shall be payable in cash within thirty (30) days o f the date o f the final passage o f this ordinance, or in ten (10) annual installments with in terest at the rate o f Five and OneHalf (5 Vs) per cent, per annum upon deferred payments, at the option o f the owner. A ll cash payments Bhall ’ be made to the Village Treasurer.All unpaid assessments shall be cer tified by the Village Clerk to the County Auditor •o f Greene County, Ohio, -to be by said County Auditorplaced upon the tax duplicate accord ing to the provisions o f law, and the same shall be collected as other ’ axes are collected and as provided by law. Section No, 3. Said assessmentsas collected, together with all interest thereon, and all portions thereof, shallbc applied to the payment o f the bonds and interest thereon, as thesame become due/ ahd payable, which were heretofore issued in antidpationof the collection o f skid assessments, and to no other purpose whatsoever, Section NO, 4, This ordinance shalltake effect and be in force from and after the earliest period allowed bylaw. . Passed this 4th day o f December,1910. . K. P. McLEAN, - Attest J, W. JOHNSON, Mayor o f the Village o f Cedarville,Clerk o f the Village o f Cedarville, Ohio. Ohio. “ACornerof the Campus” —Given By— PhilomatheanLiterary Society -OF- Cedarville High School Thursday, December 21, 1916 Cedarville Opera House Admission * • 15c In the realms o f Christmas fancy , I shall very shortly see A ll the old; beloved memories Coming back to gladden me. Long forgotten forms and faces, ' Long departed thoughts and ’ dreams, . I shall And in those fair vistas . Where the Christmas streams. Holiday Tim*. In Holland. The country where-the people enter roost thoroughly, perhaps, lute the epir- j It o f the -nativity ,i» Holland. In .near- j |y every fDutch town at 2 o'clock on L’hrisinmS morning the young meu as- j iemhie in (he market place and tight glory lirge bonfires and slug carols until »rtwn, .when they repair to tile house s— *" » ftsw a ff asst;. Times. -H “Christmas Carol” -a r « - Wolverhampton, England, was first town in which Charles Dickens 1 gave his celebrated reading o f the ! '.‘Christmas Carol" after the conclusion 1 of his first London season. He read It In the Com Exchange on the evening of Wednesday. Aug. l l , 1858, before a crowded and appreciative audience. He was accompanied On that occasion by . Arthur Smith, brother of Albert Smith, ‘ who managed all tho bnsiness details of bis tour, i As Bev. Mr. Parke was on friendly terms with Arthur Smith, he and Dick ens were invited to stay at tho deanery during their visit to Wolverhampton, and Richard Bradley (Cutbbert Bede) was asked to meet them, It whs, how ever, Dickens’ custom on such occa sions to prefer to put up at a hotel, where he might be as private as he de sired and from the importunities of guests who were anxious to hear bis brilliant conversation, but he cbfeerful. !y accepted Mr, Parke's hospitality and visited him at the deanery, although he did not sleep under his roof, . | HO made more, than one story In that Inn (tho Swan), and his experi ences there with tho mention Of the waiter whom ho saw returning from the fishmonger’s across the way and* slapping Over his thigh the sole intend ed for the novelist’s dinner formed tho subject t<ff one of his graphic articles In "Household Words,” j His Journey by nigbt from the same ! inn to Birmingham supplied him With the material for his famous paper, "Fire ami Snow,” iu the same Journal, Mr. Dickens was greatly pleased with iver, furnishes the best example of the Jlirlstmaa carols, At Bhriatmaa Ba Marry. i \ i Christmas be merry and (iia!iv.,*ti) I withal ; And'feast thy poor neighbors, the grrat the , with the small. * . ' —Thomas Lusser. Believed to have kicked aud beatett his wife, Emma Klncade. thirty-seven to death In their home, Columbus, Lu ther Klncade thirty-one, negro driver of a city refuse wagon, Is held tot in vestigation, . Federal and state probes into the carises p f the high cost of living are demanded by the Ohio United Mine Workers, 'Hie miners allege hlgi prices are occasioned by unfair and illegal speculatiqn in foodstuffs. Eight members of the Oak Harbor high school football team, were in Jitred when an automobile "driv.cn by Gustav-Nehis of Oak Harbor skidded and collided with, a telephone pole near Norwalk. Joseph A. Gibbs, until recently firs*, assistant postmaBter at Sandusky, and George A, Manore, former postmaster at Melrose, Paulding county, were in dieted dt!*T0ledo by a federaK'grand Jury. Both are accused of appropri atlng poslofflce funds. c ■ George Rennie, eighteen, and E. K Hegerman, fifty-seven, both of Mal vern, were Instantly killed when sev eral tons of slate fell on them while they were mining clay ih the mine owned by the Sandy Valley Clay Mitt ing company at Malvern, Carroll county. Forest fires are raging in several parts of Geauga county. Fifty farm ers fought a lire in the woods at Con cord. Two gangs of section men were summoned from Chardon to help sub ■w ^ r ^ t n iT S i1*! ’n T 1"3 nftGr* ! due the flameo. Hundreds of people MrfdpnrW« 1 Bc? ° ’ T^0 8flt by I fou*ht two forest fires west of Atibur* i W K K S t f j s r & ^ s s s - .tS ^ sympathetic an audience and that of-1 ten in London he had scarcely been 1 1 , able to continue bis reading from the" ^ "T R Y OUR JOB PRINTING" Other G ilt Suggestions Striking New Overcoats, $10 to $35. Pull Dress and Tuxedo Suits, .$17 to $35. Clever New Sport Coats (Exclusive Designs), $ 10 . Fancy Vests, $2 to $5. Separate Trousers, $2 to $6. Give Your Boy I s First Long Trouser Suit for Christinas W hat a w ond erfu l th ing fo r the you th o f today to w ear his first “ long -trouser’ * su it! ^ * v F or m onths he thinks abou t it— dreams abou t it— and w ishes fo r the tim e w hon he, to o , can wear, lon g trousers -— ju s t like “ D ad .” *’ • ■ - T h e M etropolitan is n ow in trodu cing to Xm a s shoppers m any innovations in practica l, dur ab le suits— the k ind that appea l to you th * -r and a t p rices their parents lik e to pay* — Suits w ith V ertica l G org e P ockets. 1 ' — S ingle and D oub le-B reasted M qdejs. — P lain and be lted ba ck e ffects . • — B elted V e s t N ovelties. and many other styles in a host o f attractive new fabrics These Are AU Especially Resigned and Proportioned for Youthful Bodies, PRICED $1 a $1 e $ 10 T 5 *20 j/Ierroflo/itan J)^ON^LiRQ£ST£XViBS/VECi,OTmm‘ **■ & F a th e r m J S rn " Ludlow at Fourth. Quality Comer. IttttM This month’s Butterick Patterns are TOe and JSe—none /uglier* JEWELRY One of the most appreciated is an ^article of jewelry and especially so if it comes from our complete stock. ; Suitable presents for every member of the family may be selected at our store and by making a small deposit on them, laid away Until desired. Engraved free. » • FRANK & 00SSARD J e w e l e r s South Limestone {McFarland Piano Store) Springfield, Ohio. i -h 0 i * *
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=