The Cedarville Herald, Volume 42, Numbers 1-26
mm The Opportunities for Getting a ( *Good, Proper Stfngxirg pi * new Spring clothes are m % thick as hasty pudding and it can happen quicker in a store that deals in cotton-— thin in a hive that heaves with bees. Just because the War is over* is no sign that every thing is sunny sailing. A suit of clothes with a thread of cot ton will fade, pucker and leave your bed and board just as surely this spring as any other season——and don’t let anybody tell you different. New Spring Suits $25, $30, $35, $40 and better • 7 , . ■■ - ; - "Sir .,•/ E v e r y S u i t G u a r a n t e e d t o g i v e y o u s a t i s f a c t i o n VW VVVVWWWWW lW MM U lJ LOCAL AND PERSONAL VW.VAW/^W«VAW.W/A Bapd concert tonight. ...Glass Churns a t R. Bird & Son* Co. 1 Go to the opera house tonight. j Walter Ballenger of Dayton was a : business visitor here Saturday, i Albert Swaby has a new Oldsmobile touring cur, ..P a in t and White Wash Brushes all grades R, Bird & Sons Co, H^ a t h e Trombone Seneze at opera house tonight. the W. L.Clemans is having an'outside stairway erected on the south side of Richard's drugstore as an entrance to the residence on the second door. ^ ^ S tm fc i 2 ) a d a M tt / k 2 k y & '... . . •■ .. . 22 South Detroit Street* Xenia. | ANNOUNCEMENT § | AnnualExhibitionWeek | | APRIL 7th to 12th | J S | Showing a remarkable display of finished | 5 . monuments and markers. New and original = § ' designs executed in the finest materials by ' g | skilled workmen. , j§ | You are .extended a cordial invitation to = 5 visit this exhtbit. It will prove interesting . | I . and instructive. . . § E - ' g | The George Dodds & Sons | 1 * Granite Company 1 | I 113-120 West Main Street - . Xenia, Ohio | uiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiHF C A R O F - I Potatoes Red River1Ohio, Kings, Rose* Cobblers, Triumph, Rural. Chicago Market Buy Early Priced R igh t W . W . Troute Grocery Co. For Sore, Aching Gums and Teeth S. S. Steel, Kx-County CommlMlorter, O t Chlltlcolhe, who has known Ur. W. o. Joftaft and used lit* liniment ton years, say*: “Xfind It the beat remedy 1 know for Toothache »nd. Neuralgia," YOU TOO SHOULD TRY "HOUSE-tONE-E-AH” * Cold Kill* Fl«h. I t has been proved that sudden Cold sometimes causes the death of thou sands of fish in the shallow waters of the tropics and sflbtropies. Many sp£- cles are so chilled as to become help* less, and are cither killed directly by drowning or are washed ashore in a comatose state. The phenomenon Is known locally as "freezing,’’ although the temperature Of the water may be several degrees above the freezing point ' ffe* Bat*,. smart Jto* 4 rttii 3»<-. 4 W tmi a t Att #**» Stews F<*Sub hy C. M. w idA .E - »**w *fc Things He Will Not Part With. W. H. Hudson, who has had for twenty years A kind of esoteric repu* tatldft as- a naturalist, says of him self In a recent bloganphy: "I can only say of myself with regard to this primitive faculty and emotloh—this sense of the supernatural In natural things, ns 1 have called It—that I am on safe ground* ns the feeling has never been outlived, And, t will add, probably to the disgust of some rigidly orthodox reader, that these are child ish things wSiteh 1 have no desire to put away.” . Frank B. Bull of the IndianapoliB Star spent Sabbath with relatives. He left that evening for Cincinnati in the interests of The Star. ..WALL PAPER—Large' stock of cheap And medium and high priced papers in stock to pick from R. BIRD & SONS CO. Sunday petitions are in circulation in Xenia, seeking sentiment on the Banker bill which if passed will give local option to towns and cities on Sunday picture shows. * If summer has not arrived it must be just around the comer. The un sightly storm shed. ..in. front of the post office was removed to some se cluded spot to awdit the passing of summer, 0 Floyd Faris of Florence has rent ed the Dean property on Miller street and will move here.. The infant son of Jerome Smith died Saturday, and was 'buried in Mas- sies Creek cemetery, Sabbath, . Mrs. L. G.%ull was hostess to.the members of the Wednesday afternoon club this week, Mrs. Lucy McClellan has beeh on .the sick list this week . suffering with, bronchitis. ..Household’needs-Step ladders, Vac uum Sweaperp, Clothes Racks, Cloths Baskets a t __ - , R. BIRD & SONS CO. The Montague Light Opera singers at opera house, April 4th,>the real musical treat o f the lecture course. Attorney E. G. Frankenstein of Cincinnati has^ brought suit against Fredricka Bryan, widow of John Bryan* late of Yellow Springs for $10,000 for legal services. The at torney drew the will fo r Bryan and was his legal advisor. He also preach ed the funeral sermon. ..Linoleum and Congoleum—A num ber of choice patterns to choose from and we lay it for you, . . . __ ___ :_ R. BIRD & SONS CO. Lee Shroades has sold his property on North street to Mrs. Buck, who has been living with her son, Charles. Pos session waB given Wednesday. Mr. Shroades is moving to Springfield and has taken employment with the Rob- bins-Myers Co., in that city. Mr. Shroades has purchased the home place on East Chillicothe street of the heirs. It is occupied by Aden Barlow. Rev. W. W. Iliff of Brooklyn, Mass, visited relatives here several days, returning homo Wednesday evening. Rev. Iliff has bmn in Pennsylvania organizing Presbyteriancongrcgations for the New Era movement when $38, 000,000 will be raised over the country for denominational work. Rev. Iliff preached Sabbath morning and even ing for the R. P, congregation. War Loan Director. , 1• t “Those are. the things for which we are going to* pay with the Fifth—and last—Liberty Loan," Mr. Franklin ex plained’at- a meeting of Liberty Loan' county jehairmeh in this city. ’"That is what I mean when I say that this money you are going' td raise —through the .things already bought with the •credit ’of it—is paying for the saving; of a half a million Ameri can lives. ‘ :A ■ '■■ “The speed and bravery of the American 'dough-boy* affected the German On the front line more than-it did the men at German general head- Quarters; but the fact that America bad ten tons of mustard gas ready for shipment dn X919, to every ton ' that Germany had; the fact .that we wore; going to have a tank on the, front line1 for every 75 feet of the line in 1919; the fact that we would hive thou sands of batteries of guns where we did not have a single one in 1918— those facts had an influence on1 the German General Staff. “And; far from that money/those millions and billions of dollars wasted in an unnecessary preparation, I feel’ that the fact that the money was silent and , that that enormous -output of munitions was ready, was the--con trolling factor in the weakening of the German General Staff, and that it caused their message to the Kaiser that they were beaten, and tBbt be must sue for peace. And the way L see it is that this money, Instead of being wasted, can be ’written down a# having saved the lives of hundreds of thousands of American men . who would have been sacrificed bad the? war continued another year. “I do not believe that we are going' to be troubled with this loan, I look1: for at least 20,000,000 subscribers to the next loan. "We must let the' people of the United States know why there is a Fifth Loan, what the money went for, what it did—-and that is the moot in* ■portent part of it, what it did. We must tell them that It brought back two or three or four or five hundred thousand safe, live. American hoys, instead of having them buried in France. And I cannot conceive of the American people failing to respond to that kind of an appeal.” A Message to Men .About ff The even ing o f musical en joym t, given by the Montag ue Light Opera Singers, Apr. 4th. Plat opens Tuesday Apr 1st. A number of Masons have become interested in the organization of a lodge of the Eastern Star. Some days ago a meeting was held when a number of Jamestown members were present to discuss the proposition, there being such an order in that vil lage. t t is understood that enough charter members have been secured and an application Bent in for {fie charter. AUCT IONE ER TERMS VERY REASONABLE Satlsfactiftn Guaranteed or no Pay • • forties wanting two auctioneers 1 am in position to supply the extra man with unlimited ex perience. PHONE 2-120 Cedarville, - - Ohio To the Wounded T HIS is our homage when you us by: Not the crude pitying stare you dread* but this— Averted eyes, and conquered tears, and pangs * Of helpless love . . . Too do not know how brave We also are, not stretching out oar hands, Maddened with pity, to the stranger faces That whitely pass us, needing na no much! Oh, hoy with deep bright eye# and crippled foot, Oh, soldier with the face made old with war, We promise you, by every wound yoa bear, A nation’s [homage and a nation's help, And all its grateful hearts, your eager friends! Sulamith Ish-KIshor, in The New York Times. ( Liberty Bond— Liberty Lost “For your bond let me trade you this stock,” Said a scalper to prudent Bill Brook. . “Not today, s i r ,Bi l l said— ' Theh ttxe salesman he led* TO the jail where he now Is- “In hockA —Best developing and printing done. Clarke Nagley. Leave films at.Nag- ley's grocery, C A S T O R IA Pof Infanta and Children In Use ForOver 3 0 Y«ars Always bears the ' Signature of W E say “satisfaction guaranteed” a good deal. *We would like to have you know what w e mean by that phrase. S a t i s f a c t i o n in clothes or anything else you buy hjefe means to us' exactly what it means to you; you decide it. All merchandise made by human hands and sold at any store may have defects; none of us are infallable; but we do guarantee that Hart Schaffner & Marx'Oothes are all-wool and will satisfy If for any reason they don’t-^we’lLmake good. W e ’re just as particular about bur Furnishing Goods, Hats and Caps and Boys’ Clothing; we don’t care to keep any money that we don’t give value for, “Satisfaction guaranteed is the big idea at this better store for men. E,. C. H i l b *•* ' . “T h e Surprise Store” 28-30 East Third St., Dayton, O. Metric Denominations. The metric denominations and val ues for measures of capacity are as follows: Klloliter or stere, 1,000 liters, equals one cubic meter; hectoliter, 100 liters, equals one-tenth of a cubic me ter; dekollter, ten 'liters, equals ten cubic decimeters; liter, equals one cu bic decimeter; deciliter, one tenth of a liter, equals one-tenth of a cubic deci meter; centiliter, one one-bandredth of a liter, equals ten cubic centime ters ; milliliter, one one-thousandth of a liter, equals one cubic-centimeter. HOW’S THIS? We offer One .Hundred Dollars Re ward fo r any case of Catarrh tha t catlhot be cured by Hall’a Catarrh Medicine, Hallj’s Catarrh Medicine has been taken by catarrh sufferers for the past thirty-five years, and has be come known as the most reliable rem edy for Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Medicine acts thru the Blood on the Mucous surfaces, expelling the Poison from the Blood and healing the dis eased portions. After you have taken'Hall’s Ca- rarrh Medicine fo r a short time you will see a great improvement inyoUr general health. S ta rt taking Hall’s Catarrh Medicine a t once and get rid ,of catarrh. Send for testiraoinals, free. ) F. J. CHENEY A Oo., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. DR. 0 , l \ ELIAS Exchange in B*l&t 7 DENTIST Bldg, Cedarvme. il. * New and distinctive spring pumps and oxfords are arriving daily, priced [from $5.00 to $8,00 % We noVv have in stock black and tan lace oxfords AAA & D. ALL SIZES FRAZER’S SHOE STORE X«nla» Ohio Shoes of the Better Sort
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