The Cedarville Herald, Volume 42, Numbers 27-52

Make the High Cost of Living LOW by Buying at The BigGrocery FLOUR FLOUR/, 25 j pound sack ..„............... . . Best Grade Qld Hickory. FLOUR, beat grade Old Hickory........ .$1.44 ..75c SALMON BEST GRADE SALMON, per can.......... . .12 l-2c SALMON, pink, large can........................................ 18c * ■ i » • , • , JELLO or JIFFY-JELL. . . . . . . . . . . . . ...............; .9c Canning Specials BEST GRADE TIN CANS, per dozen.................57c MASON GLASS JARS, per dozen. . . . . . . . . . . . . .78c Bring U n a Id— We Pay the Highest Market Price for EGGE and ; POULTRY. BROOM-BEST GRADE POUR STITCH____________________ 49c H.E. Schmidt&Co. j, t >S. Detroit tS., Xenia, Ohio. ^ M m m m m m m m am m am m m m M m m Km m m m m nm K am m m m m m The Cedarville Herald Karlh Bull, EDITOR S mu For Sale:- Indiana d r silo in good condition. Also on& corn binder. ’ John A. Bums. & s» =3 t If-you have a hundred dollars, or a thousand or more— you cannot invest it more safely or securely than in the right kind of Bonds. No longer are people content to possess idle money. . Idle money is as objectionable as an idle man. _ _ / ' ^JJDon’t tolerate lazy or idle money. Make your money get up and get busy—put it to work. 'ISThere is no place in the country for indolent people— nor, in this day and age, for indolent money. .The service of our organization consists in aiding you to invest your savings wisely—in Bonds, which offer a fullness of safety and security. The kind of Bonds we sell are the kind of Bonds you want to buy. Our representative will be glad to tell you all about them—if you will either write or call us by phone* Any time you are in Dayton, we should be pleased to have you stop in to see us—corner Second and Main Streets. R.E.DEWEESE & CQ M U TU A L H OM E B U IL D IN G ♦ ‘ DAYTON*OH IO **• Entered at tha Post-Office^ Cedar- villa, 0 ,. October 81,, 1887, as second class matter. FRIDAY, AUGUST 29/1919, WE’RE NOT SO HARD UP. EE Everybody, to listen to them tell it, is losing the race between the dear old purse and the speedy H. C.L. Old H. C, L, gathers speed at every lap, and family purse stumbles along, hardly in the race a t all. Anybody will tell you that it is im­ possible, absolutely, for the majority of the families to live decently these days. And a lot of folks believe all this, Mob hysteria/ that’s all. ’As a matter of fact the average family is living better today in this country than it ever did before, any­ where in the world. And if,you doubt it you go into the stores, go to the stores that sell jew­ elry and watches; or those that sell pork chops and bread, and ask wheher business is good. _ Ask the banks how balances com pare with those of four years ago. Ask employment agencies ho'; wage schedules, and the number of employ­ ed, compare with the good old days of 1914. And finally, go to the agetns for any of the lower priced automobiles and inquire what the chances are for speedy delivery of a nice shiny auto. All over the country the demand for cheap cars is the greatest ever known, and buyers are waiting for weeks to secure their cars, These automobiles are prchased by workers, by farmers, by small busi­ ness men. A lot of this pessimism is simply hysteria; the cost of living is too high and we have no argument on that but the Average American family is as near catching up with i t as it ever was;* and the everage family, the country over, has more money, excess money for luxuries or savings bank, than it ever had before. And labor never found it easier to secure its demands. Not only for Wages, but for .shorter hours, better 1Working conditions, a general square deay. Don’t -get too sympathetic over your lot; remember 1907 or 1893, if you can and you will feel considerably better, SIXTY DAYS SAME AS CASH House Warming Sale Ends Saturday IJ £ IH . - g £r. r- in El: m §g to .' ss.; V § EEas # “E Make Your Cash and Credit Count Now You'll double your money by doing so. Its only because we packed our warehouse jam full' a t old prices that we are able to offer such values as these. Manufacturers have doubled their prices since we bought this stock and present circumstance5 are forcing them still higher. “M ake H ay W h ile th e Sun ' Shins” An old maxim of practical wisdom particularly applicable here now as the days of SUN SHINE in the house warming sale close Saturday. Buy all the house-furnishings you .need, for it will be many a long day' when we can again offer Furni­ ture, Rugs and Stoves as low as quoted during the house warm* ing. sale. O ' ' 1 XENIA SPOB W YOUNEEDPRINTINGDROPINANDSEEUS... i-rrr I:-1| -•*v*Ti | hi — ' il" -Li ***/'«7***/ I T |!i I J \ ^ ' '' J.< ----- - -jjKvv '! Domestic Rug Prices That Are Refreshing In the face of the constant advance and a t a time when good ru-... are so much In demalnd. Th6re are over four hundred room size rugs in the selection- all are reduced. • ' $88.00 Worsted Wilton Rugs. In all colors, extremely n e a t'd e ­ signs; linen fringe, 9x12 feet. House Warming Sale Price .................................. . . , $74.00 Royal Chenille Rugs In catchy patterns, double faced, give double wear, 9x12 fe e t H ou sew arm ing A f-r* me.. Sale Price ..........i ............ . / . ...................................... $48,00 Axminster Rugs, deep nap, good designs and (b o /* to rt colors, 0x12 feet. House Warming Sale P r i c e ............... .. $40.00 Axminster Rugs, extra heavy wool nap, all over and me­ dallion pattern!*; all colors, 9x12 feet. House' ibAP* o n Warming Sale P r i c e ............................................................... $28.00 Seamless Tapestry Rugs, 9x12 feet, wool A n n n A faced. House Warming Sale Price .................................... «P toU »l U $38.00 Seamless*Tapestry Rugs. 9x12 feet, wool A n C n A faced, large selection. House Warming Sale Price . . . . . $53.00 Ten-Wire Tapestry Rugs, seamless weave; | h n n o n all colors and designs. House Wanning Sale Price .. . Large and sc u ll size rugs proportionately reduced. 1— / I NOLEUMS Be a Profiteer Without Reproach . BUY LINOLEUMS AT HOUSE WARMING PRICES. . Unoleum like everything else advise you to take advantage of Prices. INLAID LINOLEUM, $3,50 Inlaid Linoleum, 2 yards wide, square A rt > in yard. . . . . . . .............. I U $3,25 Inlaid Linoleum, 2 yards , wide, square A r t j q yaTd ........ «PfasfcO $2.60 Inlaid Linoleum, 2 yards wide, square yard ................. .. $1.80 Is seeking higher, price levels. We Cappel’s House • Warming Sale Printed Cork Linoleum $1.45 P rinted Cork Linoleum,' 2 yards wide, square . A-J n n yard ............... $ J U U O ■$1.30 Printed Cork Linoleum, 2 yards wife, square " a a yard . . . . . . ............... .. . «fafC 84c W ater Proof Linoleum, ' 2 yards wide, square yard 6 3 c iiiiiiiiiii SPRINGFIELD, OHIO. How to ‘’Reduce." 1 have a letter from "J. D. S." in­ quiring if there Is a reliable cure for fa t While this Is riot a health col­ umn, still I confess an Interest In Oils topic. If “J. 1). S.” Is having trouble “reducing" he might go to Mesopo­ tamia and perspire. Our old friend, Sulim P. Raja, Writes that n fat per­ son simply melts and runs down In that climate. As .early In the morn­ ing as daybreak oho awakes to find tilmself bathed In perspiration. The “cool” of the night means n tempera­ ture of 90 degrees; by 11 o’clock the temperature rises to 120 degrees, and at midday the air simply burns the lungs. Nobody remains fnt In Meso­ potamia, and nobody works If It can be avoided, and Sulim tells me that It generally Is avoided under the pre­ text of turning everything over to Allah. All the fat pilgrim needs In : Mesopotamia is somebody to support him. If this can lie arranged, the fat takes card of Itself, However, one might reduce, even In this cli­ mate, quite handily, while looking for somebody to support one.—Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Love, Love, amid the other graces In the world, is like a cathedral tower, which begins on the earth, and at first In surrounded by the other parts of the strupture. But at length, rising above buttressed walls and arch and para­ pet and pinnacle. It shoots sptrellke many a foot right Into the air—so high that the huge cross on Its sum­ mit grows like a speck In the morn­ ing light nnd shines like a star In the evening sky, when the rest of the pile Is enveloped In darkness. So love, here, Is surrounded by the other graces, nnd divides the honors with them; but they will have felt the wrap of night and of darkness, where It will shine- luminous against the sky of eternity.—Henry Ward Beecher, Secret of Longevity. While other folk get tottery In the knees nnd hnve asthma nnd ear-trump­ ets long before their time, people on the stage seem to have grasped the happy secret of perennial youth. Andi this secret consists more In right think­ ing than In wearing fancy vests and hlgh-schoot hats. When old Ponce da Leon put on a new pnir of knee pants few centuries ago nnd started for Palm Bench, Fla., whore lie had ar- ranged to discover the fountain of youth, he did not understand this great secret of staying young, So ho died at tost without being able to conceal lls real age from anybody. He should lave lived now and gone Into the movies.—Thrift MagMlne, 1 Everybody is Going to the Biggest, Busiest and Best Fair In the State The Great Montgomery Co. Fair DAYTON, OHIO Sept. 1-2-3-4-5 Grand Opening, Sept. 1st. (Labor Day) 20-HARNESS AND RUNNINGRACES-20 $6500 . in Purses 4 RACES EACH DAY Big Exhibit; of Live Stock, Including Dogs and Rabbits. Large Display of Farming Implements, Tractors and Trucks* THIRD ANNUAL AUTO SHOW Two Big Free Attractions Each Day » Band Concert General Admission 35c T. A. Routson, Pres. I .L .H o ld erm an , Sec’y* mm $ : 1 a E v e n riiiii N e v ■ Since the New a centra a round . And t o . most prac used othc iority of l Now. 1 New Ides unanimit: isn’t a doi from kingbt Never clogs Leads now t because wid "HelpingMoll' , Of. G lVM SUCi Don’tmlMjw

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