The Cedarville Herald, Volume 41, Numbers 27-52
mmm t *.i< ’-{T- '! TTW TH E CED iVRV lL IiE H E R A LD ! XMOH BUIX, Editor and Pub lithw 1 ? Xa&eeed at tb* Po«t-0fl5oe, Cedar-vilU, 0., October 31.-1887, fui second ; h 3 am matiser, . ■ i FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20 , 1918 i FROST AND SNOW ESSENTIAL TO CHRISTMAS. The aged or thin-blooded may find delight in celebrat ing Christmas under an orange tree or having a dip in the surf, but w e hold that there can be no proper Christ mas spirit in a land where a hot plum pudding makes you shudder, even if w e have promises in this section at this time o f having a green Christmas, H ie Anglo-Saxon race, the race that kept Christmas alive on earth, was a race o f the north, and more espec ially are the traditions and customs o f our holidays— our real holy days— frozen deep in the glacier deposits o f New England history. The blazing yule log, the smoking roast pig, the sharp ring o f the skate echoing down the winding stream. The bob sled and the coasters with the turkey shoot or the roast goose, are as truly an essential part o f Christ mas as the spruce or cedar or pine that breathes the in cense o f the forest thru the house on Christmas eve. Florida and California are fine places to go if you are searching health and have a dependable bank account, but don’t befool yourself into thinking that your Christ-' mas Day under a Southern Cross is anything but double crossing your soul, because the north, the friendly, man ly, red-blodded, happy north, where^youth rejoices and old age sits bubbling by the open fire , is where the feel and the spirit,and the incense o f Christmas are native. r Those who have spent the winter under the northern stars always remember Christmas for its real spriit o f o f simple love. Love without hop e o f reward, without pretense; l<j>ve that exults -in doing gracious deeds cer tainly abounds ,with a people that have been reared where these customs o f the Christmas season have been fostered and nourished these many centuries. You might as well begin practicing writing 1919. A Merry Christmas to all Herald readers and patrons. The Kaiser isn’t saying very much about bis present location. Probably it was Holland or Hades. *You might as well brush up your memory and begin figuring for the,income tax report is about due. M cAdoo only wants the railroads under government, Democratic, control five years longer. Well before this can happen therew ill be a Republican congress in con trol. Some fine politics M cAdoo is putting on. Henry Ford is in the newspaper business, the first is sue to be January 2nd. Henry has it on all h is .brother, publishers when it comes to drawing business/ It may be a flivver with every subscription or a-subscription with every flivver; rngt cnam t-ener.. There is going the rounds a story like this: A mnn received a chain let- ter, with the request that he write five, letters Just life;© it to friends*’ Instead o f doing this, he wrote one letter very Inuch unlike it to the man, who, wrote, i t As a consequence, the man who wrote it was much Incensed* But the man, who broke the chain has since to; formed his five friends how they were saved from annoyance, and ttiey have written to the man who stood between them and the chain tetter their warm est thanks. Meantime, the man who _wrote the first chain letter has apolo gised to the man to whom he wrote New Incandescent Lamp. The. multi-filament incandescent lamp o f T , B. Rider, a Californian, is so arranged that a new filament au tomatically replaces a bhrned-out one1( and that pulling a chain ,lh the socket will Increase the light by turning on auxiliary filaments. One form of lamp •has 12 filament sections o f 25 candle power each. When "current is turned on four filaments are lighted, and as these burn oiit each Is replaced by a new filament, so that if .each set has an average life o f 1,000 hours the total duration ' of the lamp will be 8,000 houts. A* each filament giver way it releases a spring that changes connection to the next, thus keeping it. This is perhaps the first time a itor. New Horseshoe Wanted. A British road improvement society has offered a Paper. Fforn Fibrous Plant. England has been manufacturing pa- ,a bwrovera t i t per f rom aif0( R fibrous plant growing , rtt prlze for a horsesh 0 e ] lH northern Africa, since 1802. This that will minimize the damage d on e ;paper l8 6( excellent quality, snowy to highwaysby steel shoes and at the »Whjte and has been extensively used In same time give horses safe footing ca Enfeland ,n th<s printing of books and smooth pavements. j magazines. Tw© Excellent Values in W om en ’ s Shoes! 81-2 [inch lace boot with narrow toe and - military heel 81-2 inch lace boot With low heel [and medium round toe, in Gun Metal Calf a t . , Roth are 'reasonable prices Frazer’s jShoe Store * * g * * y ^ - .........■- X e n i a , Shoes ofjthej,Better Sortj 1 Ohio ^ A l e x a n d e r <S C om pany ****- COB. M ain L imestone f I Iv* ------------------ - — f. * I Emery 1 Shirts at very 1 Lion Collars ^ _____ . o m i D o c u ^ K i e r l c i n d y H c l K e r L f lane/S;stef-emol CXuni: <xnd Sv/eetkecx/ir* This is the Home of the Practical Christmas Gifts for Men From Beginning to End This List Is Most Suggestive SILK OR MADRAS SHIRTS $1.50 to #10.00 HOSIERY 40c to $1.50 MUFFLERS $1.00 to $6.00 COLLARBAGS $1,50 to $5.00 PAJAMAS $1.50 to $4.00 ■l , ’ UMBRELLAS $1.50 to $6.00 NECKWEAR* 50c to $3,00 HANDKERCHIEFS 15c to $1.00 GLOVES $1.00 to $12.00 . JEWELRY #50c to $5.00 UNDERWEAR . $1.50 to $.8.00 WALKING STICKS $1.00 to $3.00 HOUSE ROBES AND COATS $6.00 to $30.00 BATH ROBES $5.00 to $30.00 FINE HATS $ 2.00 to $8.00 Let Us Suggest That a ■*. Hart Schaffner & Marx or Michaels-Stern SUIT or OVERCOAT Would Make a Sensible and Much Appreciated Gift $30, $35; $40 to $60 G ift Certificates ate most practical and con venient. Our office will sup ply them for any amount. They'rjtj redeemable In mer chandise at any time. loxander S3 C om oan v " parrx^ COR. MAIN AND LIMliSTUNR STS. SPRINGFIELD . OHIO
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