The Cedarville Herald, Volume 42, Numbers 27-52
)fii|Wiii»llMiiii The Cedbryille Herald .Why Not Save the Difference... COMPAR® OUR PRICE WITH OTHERS THEN MAKE OUT YOUR ORDER AND COME TO THIS STORE TOR BEAL BARGAINS Kurlh Bull, EDITOR. SUGAR ( Entered at the Post-Office, Cedar- ' ville, O,. October 31„ 1887, as second ; class natter. II panada fa bulk cane sugar for^-.. -------------------- 97c IS pcojads Demino Brand cane sugar in .muslin sack lor -------- $2,43 WATER MELONS RIGHT OFF THE ICE FOR SUNDAY DINNER FRIDAY, AUGUST 1,1919. SOMETHING IS WRONG, Dried Fruits Prunes, Santa Clara, per pound, - ------------ ------- ---------------14 l-2c Peaches, per pound, __„______ _______________ _______-— -17c Apricots, per pound - ___——„ ________ -__ ___ '_____ —— 29c Resina, bulk, seeded, Sultans, lb. __ - - - - - - _____ __________ '— 18c Seeded R u in s in packages, per package_____ - ______ _________ .12 l-2 c Post T oa sties____,____ t' ____ _______________ _ — — _12c 1 V • ’ Corn Flakes «— . _____ ______________________ 8c Full Cream Cheese___- ______ _______ _,______ „ ___—________________ 38c Crisco, per - c a n . ____—— «*___ ___ _____________ ——_*30c ' ■ ' ' ' • • ■ Head Rice, per p oun d __________ - _____ ______________ ______________10c Baby Chick or Scratch feed, per pound 4 l-2c, per 100 ib. - _____ $4.25 JELLQ or JIFFY1JELL ,per box, — — - ___________________— „ 1 0 c BEANS—Best grade Michigan navy beans, per pound ----------------- -9c LIMABEANS , per p ound ------------------------ ----------------------- -----------10c FLOUR OCEAN LIGHT OR OLD HICIC.ORY 12 1-2 poundmack--------- ------ 88c 25 pound sack o f either brand, per s a c k ,-------------- ----------------- -__$1.7$ BROOM—BEST GRADE FOUR ST ITCH ________________ _______ 49c Bring Them In— -We Pay the Highest Market Price fo r EGGE and POULTRY.' HE. Schmidt &Co. S. Detroit tS., Xenia, Ohio. “Green-Seal your h ou se andsave n Houae-ownera know the' anhoynnce and expense o f continually paying out money for repair bills, but by using Hannas Green Seal Paint on their property occasionally, these bills can be done away with to a large extent* A n y ;. surface, if left to itself and not prop erly painted, is bound to decay sooner or later, whereas a coat or two o f paint at reasonable intervals will prepare it tQ withstand all the ravages of time tod w et weather. % Formula od Every Packagq i * o u > Y oder B rothers Modern Farmer, Attention R . M. Owen, the builder of the famous Owen’ s ^Magnetic Auto-—has a lighting plant FOR YOU. SOMETHING DIFFERENT. Automatic System Ydu don’ t HAVE to watch it, i t , completely handle* itself, and NOTIFIES YOU IMMEDI ATELY if anything goes wrong. Much greater light and power capacity. Same range o f price as others, and much more idmple. A t very small cost, you can connect your water system. DROP IN AND SEE IT WORK. m *wa*gi| M Baldner-r letcher 42 East Main St., Xenia, Ohio. The price o f milk and cream and butter and cheese are higher than ever known, fo r the summer season. I A season when pastures give a cheap feed in abundance, and when the winter transportation and labor' problems do not bother the producer. And yet, the country over, there are more big dairy herds being sold wider the auctioneer's hammer this year than ever before, In one dairy county that wo know five o f the chief herds o f the district 4.have been sold at auction in three months. These herds are managed by skilled dairyman; they Were high producing herds, they were on farms where much pasture land was avail able, and close to a big city market, reached over paved roads. And yet these experienced dairy men, unusually favored in situation, equipment and low overheaded ex pense, quit, Any breeder's magazine will show pages o f dispersal sales. . A ll over the country milk cows are going to the butcher; big herds are being broken up; dairymen who ffife not eptirely quitting are cutting down ‘their herds so they can “ afford to stay in business. t - And baout, this time we discover that milk and butter are not only the cheapest foods we have been getting, but that they are essential to the health and 'growth' o f the young, and we might say essential to the welfare o f the adult. j We are discovering there is no sub stitute fo r butter, or fo r cream, or for whole sweet milk, and many cities’ are supplying poor children with free milk at their schools. The necessity and demand fo r dairy products is greater than ever before, and still, the source o f supply is con stantly dwindling, and the men who have been longest in .business are the keenest to get out. State and City ^regulation o f the dairy business from 'a sanitary stand- paint is all right to protect the people from adulterated goods but we have it from experienced men that they cannot make ends meet under some o f the city rules as"to handling milk. For this Teason herds-are offered fo r sale and the public must suffer a shortage of dairy products and higher prices, all due to the fanatical ideas o f some theorist drawing a handsome salary at the. expense o f the taxpayers. Gold bricks won't do fo r building material. Some fellows make ethers get in good. good while There's nothing like a blue law to make some people see red. Lower freight, rates would enable us to get California fruits cheaper. But how can we have lower freight rates on high wages for railroad em ployees? • The many comments on our editor ial last week dealing with the new health law convinces us the more that no member of the legislature voted for such a bill because the majority j f the people wanted it. We suppose that more isms will be forced on the people o f the state he-, fore another year is past. The state tax committee has sent an Oberlin professor to Wisconson to get new deas. Our new fangled state consti tution came from Wisconson ideas of the socialistic type. The Standard Oil Co. was fined a ■few million dollars a few years ago following a government investigation. Since then oils and gasoline have been higher than ever. The same has been true with meat. Rather than have to pay more now everyone should know what they are doing before trying to down big business. Prof. Sherman Liming and bride arc guests at the home of the mother, Mrs. Flora Dobbins. Clearance Sale Parents if your boys need a suit buy it now. The Best Clothes Values in Town $22.00 Suits..................$17.95 $20.00,Suits . . . . . . - . . . $ 1 5 , 9 5 $18.50 S u its ............... .$14.95 $18.00 S u its ............ ..$14,45- $17.50 S u its ..................$13.95 $15.00 S u i t s . . ; ...........$11.95 . $14.00 Su its ..................$10.95 $12.00 S u its .......... . . . . $ 9 . 6 0 $10.00 Sui ts. . . . . . .......... $7*95 $8.50 Suits.. . . . . . . . . . $ 6 . 9 5 $7.50 .Suits............ .. .$5.95 NOT, the highest priced, but the best quality at the same prices—-that's saying a whole lot but it's true. Guess men who have worn other makes, are now wearing w- ■ » Hart Schaffner Sr Marx ■ clothes will back up that statement, and now, men, our .two and three-piece all-wool fancy suits are reduced, and a very liberal duction w.e assure you. The reason—it’s clearance time. re- I f you did not know it before you do now, $45.00 Fancy S u its ........ Blue Serge 10%Off $40.00 Fancy Suits $35.00 Fancv . S u its ........ $ 37-95 $ 33.95 $ 28.95 $30.00 Fanqy S u it s___ $28.00 Fancy ^ S u i t s . . . . . . $25.00 Fancy S u i t s , . ? , . $ 22.95 $ 19.95 M en ’ s and B oys’ Furn ish ings E C. H i lb are M en ’ s and B oys’ H a ts and Gaps Reduced “The Surprise Store” 28-30 E . Th ird S t ., .. D ay ton , Ohio are Reduced f c i ■*> ■ 1 sst q V . ,r a vho ig arx i , our ! rery li •iffi®. ii 7 W . $2 $2j $1 s and $ and - The Lett Leader. On the death of Southey, m 1S43, W.iHhun Wordsworth was made, poet laureate of England on April 5 o f that year. He bargained with Sir Robert Peel, before accepting, that no official verse should be required o f him; and his only .official composition, an ode on the Installment o f the prince con sort as Chancellor o f Cambridge uni versity In 1817, Is believed to have been written by Cither his son-in-law or by his nephew Christopher, after ward bishop o f Lincoln. Space does not permit an extended review of Wordsworth's reputation as a poet save to repent .the reumrk o f Do Quincey. who tinfd It was militant from 1820 to 1SJ59, and from that time until ten years later It was triumphant Famous Kamakura. Egypt built her monuments In stone; Japan built most of hers of wood. The Egyptian pyramids were .thousands of years old when "Kamakura was built. Today the pyramids seem no older, but Kamakura’s greatness* Is only n mem ory. A few temples built from the wreck, after Ore and tidal waves had destroyed the city, are. all that have remained, and they are fragile temples o f wood. Yet for oil their weather beaten, neglected look, the temples of Kamakura* ore well worth visiting. Avenues of cedars, wooden gntes and bridges over ponds hidden under bed? .of lotus blossoms lead to the temple doors. Inside are Images o f various gods, some several centuries old. Many Kind* of “Money." Anything that is used In trade as a medium of exchange or a measure of value, recognized alike by both parties to a transaction* Is money. It may be wampum, skins o f animals, shells, metal or paper,* but If by gbvernment authority or'by common consent It Is recognized as a medium of exchange or a measure o f value It Is money, Even live animals have served the pup* noses and uses of money, KSBHBI Spring and Summer W e have a fine line of woolens for SUITS, OVERCOATS and TROUSERS. W e a r s ready to serve you. Our prices are reason able and our work always guaranteed to be first class. K A N Y The Leading Merchant Tailor XEN IA , OHIO . are d e d u c t RETREAD YOUR TIRES Do not throw away your tires when slight ly worn but let us retread them at a much less cost per mile than what ‘a new one costs. For economy over high priced tires let us retread one and prove our claim. Neither should you throw away a casing when a blowout occurs; W e can repair it and guarantee the work. sligh niuc w oi i tin clair -:asin >air Xenia Vulcanizing Co. 102 E. Main Street, Opposite Grand Hotel * o . Slightly Bewildering. “Dad, .what Is a roost?" asked Char- lie, “A roost* my son, Is1a pole upon which chickens sit at night*’’ replied his father. “And what’s a perch, dad?" “A perch Is what chickens perch on." “Then I suppose, dnd, a clilekeh could roost on a perch?" came the further Inquiry. “ Of course l” was the smiling reply. “And they could perch on a roost?” “ Why, y-yesl" answered dad. “But If chickens perched on n roost, that would mnko the ror a perch, wouldn’t It? Bnt, If just after some chickens had perched on n roost and made it a perch, some more chickens came along nnd roosted on the perch And made It a roost, then the roost would be a perch and the perch would be a roost, and some o f the chickens would be pctchers and the others would be roosters, and—well, there I" GIVE YOUR CAR A NEW FINISH'DO IT YOURSELF WITH ONE OR TWO COATS Just a Pet Name, When 1 was assisting the county <lerk In the office Inst summer a cou ple came In for b marriage license. As they know no one in town they asked ‘ where they could find if minister. The clerk said ho would call one ami th e ; ceremony could he performed In the" inner office. The minister arrived and : the ceremony started. When It came I time for the bridegroom to put the j ring bn her finger h o 'go t it on the' wrong One. She corrected him with: ‘ "Oh, yon little pickle,” and the cere-' taony proceeded.— Exchange. V JV ~4 U T Q FINISHES THETARB0X -LUMBERCO. ; r c )
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