The Cedarville Herald, Volume 40, Numbers 27-52

0 McArthur, a t 1 Jehu Oev thirty-four, was killed by a train. Total Ihd (' ~cns contribution Youngstown wna ICU.577, NYwJy fo:iacd company will start drilling for oil near t ’onneant John Schvventtor, seventeen, vras drowned while bathing near Meehan- Jesburg. ' At t>t. (Tairsvillo Mrc. It. F„ Reed, tisty-fivo, wac hilled by a fall down cellar stops. At Lorain James Russell, fifty, died of wounds received when shot by highwaymen. Charles P. Mauck, forty-two, was founded dead In a cell in the jail at Port Clinton. howls Huber was killed a t Belle- font-Jlne wncu struck by a moyins steam shovel, Jonathan Hartz, slxty-flve, farmer near Shelby, was killed when he fei1 from a hayloft, •* Henry Bonnet, twenty, auto sales­ man, Dayton, died of Injuries received in an auto accident. Rev. J. C. Kusai, Hastings, Mich., .accepted a call of the Conneaut Fin­ nish Lutheran church. Much damage to gardens And truck farms was “wrought in the vicinity of Hamilton by a hailstorm. Nicholas Jurlch. member of an Erie, railroad construction gang, was found dead, stabbed In the heart. Fifteen members of Company D, Tenth regiment, were made seriously iff at Salem by eating tainted meat. Paul Sands, seventeen, - Bellefoa- talne, was killed by the accidental discharge of a .shotgun he, carried. Growing crops were damaged when Apple creek and .other streams near St, Clairsville went out of their banks. Firemen and employes a f city wa- terwprks joined policemen at Canton . in demand for $10 a month wage in­ crease. . Alliance city council .granted 15 per cent' wage increase to all policemen, firemen and city waterworks em­ ployes. The larger cities and towns of the state are forming home guard organ izations, -which will have police powers. Mrs. W..W, Gates, popular In Elyria society, left to manage, a farm in New York state. She expects' in work in harvest fields. "Worrying over the possibility of his being drafted, Stilman Lawrence, a steel worker at Mansfield, took poison In trying to end his life. Near Geneva Miss Elizabeth Cow- den and hei; mother, Mrs. Rena Cow- den, were injured when their auto skidded and overturned. Fostoria business men closed their stores and motored to small towns nearby to get subscriptions for $1,100 shortage in desired Red Cross fund’. ■- George W. Powers, president of the First National bank, Delaware, is. dead, following an illpess of nearly a year. He was seventy-two years old. After digging, a trench, as his grave, James ,Corry, ninety-three, Pierpont, choked himself to death with his"sus­ penders. Three people were injured In an .automobile wreck at .Toledo. Benja­ min Lavine, twenty-five, has a frac- tuted skull. The auto swerved and hit a tree. For the.second time .In twenty-five days, Mrs. Lorena Rayle, bride of five months/ Is seeking divorce at Napo­ leon from Perry Rayle. She withdrew the first suit. . ■- Armed with a razor, an unidentified man attacked Mrs." Lucy Bates, fifty, and Mary Spino, her daughter, at their home in Tiffin. Mrsf Rates’ ohefek was cut. At Canton John'McGuire and John Leutholt pleaded guilty to second de­ gree murder in connection with the death of Peter Loutzenaiser, Canton traveling silesman, • Webb C. Haye,s, whose $50,000. gitr made the new Memorial hospital for Sandusky county possible, announced an additional gift of $10,000, needed to complete the gliding. Miss Mary Ballard, telephone oper­ ator a t Napoleon, called 100 farmers ■when she saw the Toledo Grain and Milling company’s plant in flames. They saved the building. Ohio coal operators have agreed to set aside 6.000,000 tons of coal for household use. A clearing house will be established by the coal committee recently appointed by Governor Cox, Despite the fact that crops arc heavier than ever before, thijs far there has been no groat shortage of harvest help in Ohio, according to N K. Shaw, state secretary of agricul­ ture. Mrs. Florence MatthcWs, daughter of the late United States Senator Jo­ seph B. Foraker, was granted an ab­ solute divorce a t Cincinnati from Ran­ dolph Matthews. Habitual drunken­ ness was alleged. . Paul Same, eighteen, a former Ohio guardsman,"was found lying along a fence, near his home’ ih Richland,’ with his right breast riddled with shotgun bullets. He had taken the gun to shoot hawks. Ardie Loutzenhlser, pretty sixteen- year-old Parisf Stark county) girl,, left home in company with two strangers. Police traced the girl to Akron and thence to. Toledo, where trace of her was lost. Four persons, occupants of an auto which plunged down a twenty foot ..embankment Into.Sugar creek, near •Tiffin, suffered painful injuries. Ed­ ward Adlesporger, glass maijufac- gurer, was the most seriously hurt. Dream of Wealth Dlepelieti. A sad but illuminating commenb a rr on the futility of human bopes when applied to getting rich quick U furnlabed by an advertisement which recently appeared In one of the San Francisco dally newspapers In the classified columns Hera It is. t Will sell—1 have 6.00 shares of a one# welikno*T “ fa*0* kftd '*®*ln* company; Will exchange same for one aetUng-heft and thirteen fresh egg* (Leghorn preferred); only permanent {g#eetora need apply- A. ftoom* S0-$i Bacon Bloch, Oakland tmm h^n 'p&mmV Dayton’s Famous Annual Fall Fashion Show September 18 to 22 This is the event toward which thousands of people look forward. ■ * It is the authoritative style showing for the new season, . / The world's merchandise* is on display. FiRblsmof DaytonRetail Trade Durian other in attractive displays in the various stores. Show-windows become wonders—some for the inge­ nuity of ideas* others in settings of beauty and mag­ nificence rarely seen. Handsome interior decorations are arranged and ex­ ceptional demonstrations featured. The world's most fashionable modes are shown and, in fact, all the needs for men, women, children and the home. Its vastly interesting. Come! *, * ,*> EveryWednesday ^DurbanShoping1 DaylnDayton Visit thesteresdispltyiif this tnttti GREAT OCEAN jf r^ Atlantic Storm Waves Are L t u Thar Fifty Feet In ’Height, Twenty feet in height, from creel to bottom, is a big sea-—even ioi sailors. Captain Scorcsby’s observa­ tions on the height of waves long ago proved that in the heaviest Ak lantic storms the waves very rarclj exceed forty-three feet from hollow to crest, the distance between crests being 500 feet and their speed thir­ ty-three miles an hour. More re­ cent observations have shown that Atlantic waves may reach forLy- eight feet. At Kurrachee, in India, wave.- were measuited on the breakwater which wore about forty feet above the sea level. In Wick bay, in Scotland, cele­ brated; forfheayy seas, some have been observed -of forty feet in height, bu t this is uncommon, It was estimated that one of the great rollers, which came about,every ten minutes, poured over the breakwa­ ter at Wick with a masa of 40,000 tons of water. 'Blocks of concrete 'weighing more than two tons were carrfed completely away. Great waves have often carried away, the^ most solidly built light­ house, and there is, perhaps, no more triumphant work of engineer­ ing than when a lighthouse, is made to stand in a particularly difficult and dangerous piaee against the in­ cessant ell'oxts of the sea roused to all its fury. A? to the- depth to which wave action extends the knowledge is un­ certain.. Shell fish, which are known to live n't depths of 50 or 60 to 150 feet, are thrown upon the shore by heavy storms, and the bottom is often much disturbed at the'depth o f 1fifty feet. But concrete and granite blocks, used in the construc­ tion of breakwaters and immensely heavy, are seldom disturbed at a depth of twenty feet. To “have the decks swept" by-a TOPCOAT. Brown, velours in the faddy tobacco ■ shade gives this natty coat, so suitable 'for knockabout pufposes. The odd belt; and arrangement of pouch pockets, to-1 j gether with huge bone buttons and, white broadcloth collar, make modish finishes. 1 Trap shooting is to be a popular snort this fail. Consequently many smart suits are offered, This pepper and salt mixture makes a dashing out­ fit, the trimmings and re-enforcements of leather adding just the right note. great wave is common a t sea, w e n when the vessel is in good hands. . , Often this accident has proved fatal Ashtabula county, lay down .n it a n d ,,t 0 vessel and crew, bu t generally re- suits m the loss of bouts, galleys and too often of some of the men.—-St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Leave Something to Others. If, ns Shakespeare says, "all ^lie world’s a stage,” don’t try-to be tiie , ,. whole, show, or you are apt to find an >n e a te r blouse, made of jersey In silk FALL BLOUSES. The peasant or smock style of blouse and the waistcoat blouse with dlrec- tolre basque will take precedence over the ordinary waist this fail. A,-recent novelty which is proving enormously popular is the Waistcoat- unpaid mirror. clown wbem you look In the Would Look Lazy. A traveling man was eating in a stuffy little restaurant one very hot summer day. There wete no screens at the windows or tlio door. The proprietress herself waited on her customers and shooed flies from the table a t the same time. Her ener- j getic but vain efforts attracted the attention and roused the sympathy- of the traveling man, who said: “Would it not .be better to have ’ your windows and doors screened ?” | “Wcllj ves, I s’poso that would help some," replied the woman, after thinking a moment, “but ’twould look mighty lazy like."—Chicago Herald. ' ■ ' Bright Scholar*. 9 Examination “howlers" are by no means confined to schoolboys, as an “information test" of freshmen .at Hew York, university showed. The definitions of “hypothecate” as “a druggist" and “esophagus” as - “a tomb in which dead kings were placed” .were worthy of lineal de­ scendants of Mrs. Malaprop, whiV tho statement that “Beowulf wpt a character in Shakespeare’s ‘Ivan- hoc’ ” rivals the classic account of Aesop as “a man who wrote fablps and traded the copyright for a bot­ tle of potash."—Hew York Trib­ une. Daily Thought. The best part of our knowledge is that which teaches us where knowl­ edge leaves off and ignorance begins. —-Oliver Wendell ^Holmes. *’ or fiber silk. This is somewhat of a sports garment More in Life Than Wealth. Wealth has made a lot of poor hus­ bands and worse wives. Knowing something- about cooking a square meal, and keeping sweet, Is far better than counting money with a grouch. SPECIALS IN GROCERIES It is a man-siaed job to keep up a stock ia condition to meet, the wants of all the people, but that is what we are''doing. We are prepared at all times to give you the best of the market—clean, fresh, aatiifying Groceries and Pro- visious of every description. And at Very Moderate prices, considering the times. Try US next time. We'll make good. ' FLYER forFriday andSaturdayonly 25-lb. Sack of Pure Cane Sugar Here is a chance to buy Sugar far below the regular selling price. $ 2.38 Old Reliable Coffee . Pound, steel o u t.... ....I.. ....... .....................28c Primes, faucy large Santa Ulara 40*60 size, 2 pounds f o r .... ................I..........25c Country Butter Per pound ............................... ............85c E x tra fine Dried Peaches ‘ per pound..........._....................... ..............12>^c White Corn Meal 2 sacks tor ..................................................... 180 .Steel Out Coffea . » p e r pound.... ........... .................. .................. 19o "9 Differedt K inds of Bread per l o a f ................. ... 4c Just Received a Car of Watermelons and Cantaloupes Get One Off the ■ Ice For Your Sunday Dinner H. E. Schmidt fir Go., Wholesale and Retail Grocers 30 Ssiitti Detroit Street, . . Xenia, Ohio Highly Y.mpsmmsntal. “I t makes me uneasy for Mrs, Dubwaite to go to town," said' Mr. Dubwaite. “Are you afraid she’ll got run over by a motorcar “Ho. She either sees so many things in department stores she can’t afford to buy she comes home quite upset or she attends a thea­ ter and gets bo wrought up over the trials and tribulations of a movie heroine she can’t enjoy her dinner.”-—-Birmingham Agp-tlernld, 8 J f t: EE 1*1 ’M sljl! !0D ' l l “Brinkerhof f ” Pianos and * * • • • • ■ ■ ■ * Player Pianos are so artistically designed thoroughly constructed that so are sold under a positive guarantee of satisfaction. 168 NORTH HIGH STREET A COLUMBUS, OHIO. V - ** •

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