The Cedarville Herald, Volume 39, Numbers 27-52
Fall and Winter We have now in over 600 Btyles of foreign and domestic woolens for the Fall and Winter season. A fine line of Overcoating* to select frem. How is the time to select your Fall Suit and Overcoat. Do it now. ;fTl v K ^ - o"w- KANY, The Lead ing Tailor XE,NIA, OHIO ■5*P3«p5asasrr' We Sell at Right Prices Lumber, L a th , Posts, Shingles, , Sash, Doors, | B linds. Cement, Lime P laster, Roofing ' Ladders, -Slate, Brick, e tc .^e tc . m When You Decide To Buy A Bill of Lumber Buy The BEST and Buy It HERE! It’s the Kind You Need It’s The Kind We Sell It’s The Kind It Pays To Buy, THE SAME IS TRUE OF Building Material For Which WE ARE HEADQUARTERS TheTarboxLumberCo. TRY OUR JOB PRINTING MEARICK’S Unusual Is the Early Showing of FallSuits,Coats,Dresses Featuring Exceptional Values WonderfulNewTailormades $16*50,$20,$25 Everything new In materials, colors, trimmings ana designing is well represented. Medium length and new long coats, in straight line and ripple effects. Smart plfeated skirts, effective yoke mod* •Is; new pocket Styles. All sizes for women and misses. The Cleverest Fall Coats $15, $20, $25 A choice collection In velours, checks, gabardines, English tweeds and novelty mixtures. Loose or belted models. Some with trlm- .mlngs ot fur, many with double upstanding, deep collars, the over collar of Velvet. Silk lined woman’s and misses’ sizes. . Dresses of Silk and Serge $15 and $20 Fashioned in Serge, Taffeta Silk or in combination, straight line, coate# or’belted model. Much bright colored embroidery used of darning yarn or chenille silk, colors include navy and black and also in plum, green or brown. The Mearick Cloak Co. SECOND & MAIN, DAYTON, OHIO MW^ajgiia» Urban* barbers raised price of a ahavu im 1<> cents. <5alien public schools will ap t open until repairs on buildings are made. Ambrose J. Reneel, sixty, was struck and killed by a train near Fcs- torla. Public schools a t Cleveland are overcrowded with an enrollment ot ! 97,000. Campaign was launched at ColUni- but for a new $000,000 Y. M. C, A. building. Five persons were injured when Harvey Marshall's auto turned turtle near Canton, George Franklin McCleary, eighty, one of the oldest Odd Fellows In Ohio, died at Cambridge. Following a quarrel at Canton, Dan Chlncisan, Roumanian, shot and killed^ Us wife, Mary Chlnclsan, Joseph p . Bader, forty,six, drowned In a spring on the farm of his brother, Charles Bader, near Newark. Shot in the breast !by Claude Eu- man, colored, William Davis, also cob ored, died instantly near Columbus, Joel J, Trube, sixty-seven, Wealthy farmer near Xenia, suicided by shoot Ing himself througnt the heart, Mrs. Charles J. Schumm, thirty-five, of Rockford, wap electrocuted while using an electric washing machine, - Three highwaymen assaulted and Tobbed James Dusenberry at a lonely spot near Crooksvllle, securing $44. New $40,000 school building at Mid dlcfburg, Logan county, was dedicqjed by -County School Superintendent E. A. Bell, Announcement was made that the Cleveland, Southwestern and . Colum bus railway will give night freight service." Fifty ladders at the Hooven-Owens-’ Rentchler plantv at Hamilton went on strike following a dispute relative to Overtime. , William Caskey, a Columbus driver, was badly hurt a t Mt. Vernon when his horse struck a track harrow and ran away. . " Mrs. Watson’ Hubbard, ninety-one, one of Sandusky’s wealthy and promi nent women, died after several months’ illness. Dr. T. H, McAfee, pastor of the Trinity Baptist church in Marlon, was elected moderator of the Marlon Bap tist association. A flying jump from a runaway team brought death to Charles, A. Kasliup, after a spectacular dash down a steep grade at Cleveland. Ordinance prohibiting baseball oft Sunday in Bellefoptaine, recently passed by council, is to be submitted to a referendum vote, Toledo’s, nfew Terminal building is being remodeled so that Toledo will have a convention hall with a seating capacity, for; 5,POO people. , Albert V -1 Voorheis, vice president of the Union Savings Bank company and a prominent business man of Cin cinnati, is dead a t seventy-four. • ' Postmaster Sol Fisher of Corning was bound over to the federal grand jury a t Zanesville He is ' Charged with a shortage in his accounts. ' Jealousy prompted Daniel Sinko, thirty, to shoot and kill his sweet heart, Anna Snelka, twenty-seven, at her home In Cleveland and then com* mit suicide. ‘ Calling for an elevator as he leaned out-Into the shaft, Prattle Ehrot, thir ty-two. had his head severed by a de scending elevator weight in a Cleve land dry goods store, _/ Because Rev, G-. W..Ffiefer, Metho dist pastor, -Findlay district, was transferred to a small town a t less salary, he'll quit the ministry and go hack to the carpentry trade. D. M, Massie of Chillieotho was se lected as chairman of the speakers’ •bureau and F. M. Hopkins, Fostoria, as chairman of the publicity bureau, a t state Republican headquarters. Bocauso the petition filed by the party did not contain the number of signatures required by law, the elec tion board refused to accept the Co lumbiana county Socialist ticket, Nelson Christy, aged six, was burned to death and his older brother James and sister Ruth were seveerly burned at their home In Alliance, as the result of playing with matches; At Cleveland, Mrs, Frank JS. Henry, Society and club woman, charged with running down a man with her auto and not stopping, was lined $5d and sentenced to live days In the works. Rev. L. Griswold Williams of Green ville, addressing a meeting of Uni versallsts, declared the church of the future will be open all week and have a library, playground and gymnasium J. Manapace and J, Sandri, coal miners, employed In the Midvale- Goshen Coal company’s mine at Wain* wrlght, near New Philadelphia, were crushed to death under several tojjs of rock. Over 150 pupils of. the Willard school district, Cleveland, went on strike as a protest against a recent order of the school hoard, resulting in children having to* go a mile to an other school. Delphos was selected as the next convention city at the dosing session of the state convention of the Catli olic Knight of Ohio at Cincinnati, George W. Hatlhauer. Cincinnati, was elected president, and W. C. Weaver. Crestline, secretary. Federal census department’s esti mate of population of Ohio cities for JOJfi: Cleveland, 680,728; Cincin nati. 411,978; Columbus, 216,025; To ledo, 103,028; Dayton.127,905; Youngs town, 109,032; Akron, 86,684; Canton. 61,532; Springfield, 51,846; Lima, 85,078. When the farm wagon ih which Fred Ireland, bis wife, mother and two children were riding was struck by a train at a crossing near McAr thur, Ireland jumped with, the infant child in hi* arms. His wife and older child were killed Instantly and hla mother and babe injured seriously. m r o C U m iM U lM C I M D R J tm e s KEWltSCOVtm e m t tM r m fM m m o A r ORDINANCE NO 88. In*kin«' i t an offence ctrn»talt mt0' UP/ remove or tie* o f tn p lv iL part gf, tUe waved street! ag.e’ vMhtmt first obtaining 80 t0 <lo»and giving bond to ^ X^age, m an amount , and with security to fie approved by the Mayor, Qrt,aineft by the Council of Oi^i0? l age Ledarville, State of Section J, I t shall be unlawful for ®^6on °* persons, to break into, ^®a^ .uP» remove or destroy, any part fitreet)* ,of the Village, without first _ obtaining from tne Mayor a permit so to do, and execut e s /™ 1 l eUY?ring to said Mayor, a bond to the Village in an amount to be approved by said Mayor, said bond to secure the proper replacement of that part of the paved street or streets, to be removed under said per mit, and to indemnify said Village against any and all damage resulting from the breaking into or tearing up said street or streets, Section 2. Any person or persons violating any of the provisions of this ordinance, shall on conviction thereof, be lined -in any sum not-exceeding Two Hundred Dollars ($200.00), and Shall pay the costs of prosecution. Section. 3. This ordinance shall take effect and be in force from and after the earliest period allowed by law. Pa.aed thi« 16 th day of September, 1916. * R. P. McLEAN, •Mayor of the Village of Cedarville,’ Ohio. Attest: J. W. JOHNSON, Clerk of the Village of Cedar ville, Ohio. ORDINANCE NO. 89. ft .■ • ■ Aft ordinance making it an offence to burn leaves or trash upon the pftved streets o f the Village, or to place or cause to be started a fire of any kind thereon,, and providing jx penalty thereof. ,, BeJ . i ordained by the Council of the Village of Cedarville, State of Ohio: Section 1. That it shall Be unlaw ful for any person or persons, to bum leaves or trash, upon any of the paved streets of the Village, or to place or cause to be started a fire of any kind thereon. Section 2. ^Any person or persons violating any of the provisions of this ordinance, shall on conviction thereof, b e ,fined in any sum not exceeding Fifty Dollars ($50.00), and shall pay the costs of prosecution. , Section 3, . This ordinance shall take .effect and be in force from and after the earliest period allowed by law. ■ .■■■. . ^Passed this 16th day of September, 1916. „ t R. P. McLEAN, Mayor of the- Village of Cedarville, Ohio. Attest: J. W. JOHNSON, .C lerk of the Village of Cedar ville, Ohio, AVE IN THE MONEYLESS MAN DouH Tie Your Own Hands T HE line of demarfcation between SUCCESS and FA ILURE in life often depend# upon the possession of a certain amount is small. Opportunity th a t would lead to big resu lts cannot be taken advantage of by the MONEYLESS MAN, Buccess *» irrevocably defeated, not through lack ot ab ility—RUT FOB LACK OF A FEW READY DOLLARS. / Learn to SAVE MONEY. Don’t be satisfied for a single m inute un til you have a few hundred dollars in bank where by the scratch o t a pen you are able to g e t it any time. Don’t tie up all your resources m investments tlu jt you can no tprom p tjy realize on. No mattersfiow well-to-do you are, you can advantageously m ake use. of the con venience of a savings account. . T H E Springfield Savings Society POINTS OUT THE WAV I ts motto Is safety before Inurement. I n invests only in government, sta te and m un ici pal bonds, I tlo n d s money only on first mortgage (on real estate &]jid th is a t abou t two- , lifts of actual value no t recognizing improvements. ’ I t was organized m 1872-and enjoys the record of never having made a single loss in Forty-three years. It Pays 4 Per Cent on Deposits Compounped Semi-Anuually Ifcsuggests as a m atter of convenience th a t you bank with it by m ail and make the two- cen t stamp your messenger in the best business venture of you rlife . W r i t e f o r o u r b o o k l e t " B A N K I N G B Y M A I L ” “ In te rest S ta rts on Your Deposit From the F irs t of Every Month" tl , Address inquiries to the Springfield Savings j Society, 9 East Main Street, Springfield, Ohio CASTORIA X X GET OUR PRICES ON PRINTING X X T k Z ^ t ^ S S f m ■ ■ v ' Bears the >■' " ■ ' ■ ■ • ■ ■Signature of S % JR 1R JR PEACHES K J u s t Received a Car of JR • * pancy plberta peaches jr I l 1 1 K » 1 § BUY Special Prices for Canning NOW WHILE THEY ARE CHEAP H $ ^ S, DETROIT STREET SCHMIDT & Co % % i i % % XENIA, OHIO ^1
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