The Cedarville Herald, Volume 39, Numbers 27-52

HP r,“ ChlWna Cry f*r Fletcher's m The Hindi You Have Always .B©tight, saA vvMcli lias Ibeen In uso tor over SO years, kas frerne the signature of , and has freon made under liis per- sanal snjMsrvisioai sines Its Infancy# Allow noone todeceive youinthis. All Counterfeits, Imitations and ‘ f Just-as-good' * are hut > Experiments that triflewith and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment* r What is CASTOR IA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, pare­ goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant* it contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance, Its ago Is Its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it lias been In constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, "Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea, It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’ s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS lBears the Signature o f InUse For Over 38 Years T h e K i n d Y o u H a v e A l w a y s S o u g h t . TH, CfKNTAUT. 0«Mt»ANYkN*WY«M«RCITY, WeSellatRightPrices Lum ber , Lath , P osts , Sh ing les , Sash, D oors , | B linds . Cement, L im e P laster, R oo fin g Ladders, Slate, B r ick , e tc .^ e tc . We We Would Be Pleased To 1 ■ Have You Drop In! f^T feese Frequent Reminders That We Are Selling Good Lumber / And Building Material Would Be Worse than Useless WERE IT NOT A FACT! Our Sole Object la To Keep the Fact Before You, Expecting That When In Need Of Anything In Our Line, Y ou Will Give Ud A Call. TheTarbox LumberCo. H ow to Build U p or Tear Down Th is Community r$r THE FIRST OF FIVE ARTICLES ON THE ABOVE SUBJECT WILL SOON APPEAR a=a.jaas;:."-.-a IN THIS PAPER, a s m ....... y THE ARTICLES ARE OF GREAT INTEREST AND IMPORTANCE TO THIS COMMUNITY. READ THEM ;V - ** • » « ♦ ¥ * « • * * * tt left i $rr jf<a yttoatii Davie, twelve, won drown- fid lu the Scioto liver at UJrclevIlle, Independent teamsters at Cincin­ nati v e s t on etriijo for increase of wages, Cincinnati anti Columbus will be competitors in a contest for a farm loan bank. W'ili'am Reran, eighty-one, wealthy retired farmer, died at his home at Delaware. , Fire damaged the town o f Williams­ port. I’ichaway county, to tho extent Of $33,000. Thomas Wright, forty-two,' was*kill* ed by a Baltimore and Ohio train at Cambridge. Jitney buses at Geneva must pay 11- cense fee of $15 to $25 and furnish $l,00fr'bond. Representative Ashbrook has rec­ ommended Glenn Baker for postmas­ ter at C'ehterirarg. Gertrude Taynor, thirteen, died of burns received in a gas explosion ji t her home in Columbus. Isaac Ervin was killed by a Penn- sylvania passenger train while walk­ ing on the track near Crooltsvllle. Oliyer, six, son of T. P, Schregg. garage owner, Blufiton, was instantly killed when an auto turned over. A. L. Freese, thirty-five, railroad flagman, living at Crestline, was crushed to death by a freight train. State fire marslial has been asked to investigate numerous barn flre3 at Newark recently. Incendiarism is sus­ pected. Boy Oxley, six, got beyond hi? depth while bathing with companions In the Miami river at Dayton and was drowned. ’ ' ’ Leroy Silbaugli o ! Lancaster suc» ceeds James A. Devine as head of tho state department of building and loan associations, Levi Hattman, eighty-six, Df Napo­ leon, Mexican war veteran, seeks di­ vorce from his young wife, whom ho married in 1812, Forest Rowe, fourteen-year-old son of Grant Rowe of Mt. Victory, was thrown from a wagon and instantly killed in a runaway, Unable to swim when he walked into a deep washout irt Black river, pear Elyria, George Pocrat, a steel worker, was. drowned. Thompson H. Douglass, Baltimore, and Ohio engineer, hurt in a wreck at Sullivan, filed a $50,000 suit at Nor­ walk against the company. i Spontaneous combustion in green hay started a fire which destroyed the bam of Jacob Howald, north of Delaware, with $3,000 loss, School enumeration in Perry coun­ ty shows 406 less children than ip 1915. There are now 10,271 children of school-age in that county . Ohio Spanish-Amorlcan War Veter­ ans elected Frank Autli of Toledo commander, and urged, pensions for widows of Spanish war veterans. 4 John W. Bailey, former bookkeeper of Citizens' Trust and Savings bank of Columbus, is charged with a short­ age of about $5,000 in his accounts. State armory board decided to can­ cel the leases on ninety armories in Ohio, now that the guardsmen have heen. mustered into the federal 'ser­ vice. Will Limestahl met with instant death and Ben Keller probably was fatally injured when their speeding automobile crashed into a bridge near Fremont. “ John Routt was granted a divorce from Vera Routt,, at Bellefontaine, but the decree will not go into effect until •Sept. 28, 1917, their third wedding an­ niversary. Rev. Dr, Washington Hoffman, pas­ tor of First" Methodist Episcopal church of Duluth, Minn., was elected the sixth president of Ohio Wesleyan university. Ohio Letter Carriers’ association elected J. P. Rapp of Union county president, J. H. Morrison of Fremont, secretary, and Percy/ Stites •* Wan* seon treasurer. Sheldon Clements, fifteen, knocked his stepfather, George W. ' Sheets, down a flight of Btairs at their ,home in, Cauton when Sheets attacked his mother. Sheets died. ,T. 11. Clements, superintendent of schools at Grandview Heights, xienr Columbus,'resigned his position to ac­ cept the superlntondency of the Lan­ caster ublic schools. Mary Pergei, sixteen, only support of a widowed mother, slipped while crossing railroad tracks at Lorain and was cut In two by a train, She was on her way to work. Northwestern Seneca county is to be the first section In the state where electric current will he carried to farms. The Fostoria-Fremont trans­ mission, line will be, used. Grant Bali, a junk dealer, and his son Ira, of East Union, Noble county, were shot ami killed by Alex Clark, a son-in-law of Ball, Sr. Quarreled over the care of Clark's infant. At Fremont the $20,000 suit of V,\ C. Obermoyer against Charles Sheten* helm, wealthy farmer, for alleged alienation of his wife’s affections, wes settled out of court for $600. General R. B, Brown, past com­ mander in chief of the Grand Army, newspaper editor and for years prom­ inent in Ohio Republican circles, died at his home in Zanesville. Several hundred Wilmington citi­ zens aided in fighting a fire which threatened to destroy New Burling­ ton. The blaze was confined to three buildings, doing $5,000 damage. Missing from home for two days, Isaac Grticr, sixty-five, a farmer, was found dead ih a field near Ida home, a few miles from Newark. ’ Excessive heat was the round of his death, O. E. Williams, owner of the water­ works system at Defiance, lias tent* tivoly accepted tho city's offer of $125,000 for the plant. Voters must approve a bond issue to buy tho sys­ tem, r THE, GREAT Montgomery County FAIR DAYTON, OHIO SEPTEMBER. 4, 5,6, 7,8. 19 * Trotting and Running Races - $6,200 in R.acing Purses GREAT EDUCATIONAL EXHIBIT 19 School Children’ # Exhibits, $1009.00 in Premium!; Manual Training and Domestic Science Display; Boys and Girls’ Stock Judging, Pig Growing and Poultry Growing Contest; Two big State Exhibits. Horse-Shoe Pitching Contest. Back Yard Garden Display. F R E E A D M I S S I O N T O A L L School Children and Soldiers, |fAttractions every day. ADMISSION S,A. Mosby, President. WEDNSDAY. Sept. 6th. Special Features, Band Concert and Free I. L. Holderman, Secretary. X X GET OUR PRICES ON PRINTING X X CASTORIA For Xo&htB and Children. R ib KindYouHawAlwaysBttgfit Boars the Signature o f I OF READY*TO=WEAR « f t % Palm Beach Suits „ Regular $17.60 and $15.00 Suits d ! l A E A while they last for.— ................... .......... .............. ^ 1 U o tJU Regular $12.50 and $10 Suits F A while they laek f o r ........................ ..................... ..........I l U n d U Regular $7.60 Suits O K while they last for.......... .................... ..........-...........i J l T t / O Linen Dresses 4 • # • ALL FAST COLORS Regular $13.50 and $10 Dresses /J %m Regular $8.75 and $7.50 Dresses f t i f | £ while they last io r ................................ ........................ J [ ) 4 , 7 U WHITE DRESSES Regular $15.00 And $13.60 "White Dresses *7E while.they last fo r ....... ....... ...... ............... ... ............ 1 D Regular $10.00 Sind $8.25 White Dresses it/H while they last f o r ........................................................ «|)Oe / O Silver-Bloom STRIPED SKIRTS A ll $8.00 and $6.00 S ltrts £ 2 A F Willie fch®y lftti for •»«•»«* House Dresses I $1.00 and $1.85 g i n g h a m ' or PER©AL1B HOUSE H (\ n I DRESSES, while they last......... ................................ * I " L . 6 Figured Voile Dresses AU$8*75 and 47*50 Votlo Drosae* A j » Ctl01CO,«*e»4e>k(*««»•«*<• »•« «,•«•><HlfnWMlMnMtt<**». 7 S / £ l * f t £ f t ££ f t f t £ tnAMe-MARKSurn! , iff. *wrt * « ! * ( * « *<•ihotMf.nfl InOf ,aW(,ro mtth« i D.SWIFT&CO. HUTCHISON «S GIBNEY Largest Stare in Greene County | | XENIA, - ' ■• - - . . OHIO *

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