The Cedarville Herald, Volume 43, Numbers 27-52

DM g a g C H A S . 8 . JO H N SO N GMmmMt#wcm vizkm , o r courts mmmm artS W. L . O SM A N S R e a l E s t a t e teeasdlt'-SafetMyyflF mt -sMeiiaafee fcv alsMe - at my .**©* i v<*sr m m tik ' IMMMKS lUrtd.ac* 2-122 CEDARYILJLE, OHIO it yr ^WALTER F. •f Toledo REPUBLICAN PRIMARIES, AUGUSTlO th SUM A Pound r ^ . ; -"- f i i O i r B 1,r~ ,•’•:; Flat* your order iiog floor before 16 . floes higher.Qrder now. FRESH GARDEN VEGETABLE S TOMATOE PLANTS ’ B R E A K F A S T J F O O E S *’ . SbrecModWheat -------------- — 12 l-2e Podt Toknticn . m -,..--.— *“-—•*.■«— •*•*12 l"2c Cem Flakes .— *— ----------—< — •— -.------- .w — -_10c RaBtoaFood -------*'— j u — ,— — — — 13c »nd2Jc of Wheat Mothers* Oats, per boa didswt,«e*Ssed.^ti^iwee^^«^aeoe)if4e.'OM|i«oe*oes,?*»Se*.e«#e»e»tS^* __ lie * C A N N E D -G 0 O p S ’ ’ • Milk**vaporite4,WSaons, Petandmany •than, Iat*e «*• caa 12 l-2c Com pot can 10c Poaa per, can . - . .4 2 1-2* Tomatoes per can ,12l,*2c 'Peasant Butter, lb. ■Me esi.N ..... ..........A ----- >«.- — ■» ■«*■.-------in. .... ,*„*,..m— • B E A M ft . i mi it SUB Kiln Dried Com Heal -fc Red Kidneys ,p*r pound •4wkari*»«dMM*«t*Ut*4 m*^mw«**i-»*■*• abm**-**^ ec Baby lima* per pound ------------------- ----------------------------.l ie Best Nary Beans, perpound \c Hominy 5c PAT-A-CAKE, make yolir own cake, add nothing but water, package . . . . . 25c - - — T* ; — — — —“ BROOMS— Bast grade 5 aewed, two days only* one te a customer. h ighest m arket pr ices pa id fo r chickens and eggs . BRINGTHEM IN. WE AWAYSBUY OPENEVERY EVENING. JL ■Mn BE. Schmidt & Co. $. Detroit tS., Xenia, Ohio. BROWN fo r U. S. Senator ‘ "Good Government in our country ulti­ mately depends up- Von the active partici­ pation in politics of , patriotic men and women, — not for what they can get out of politics, but for what they can bring to politics,” Waller F* Brown WALTERS. BROWN FOR ■U. S. SENATOR CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE ,CHARLES3. HATHELD, - Ciuiiniu ******* vTRY OUR lOB PRINTING m #mLM.jSfr Tbs CederviBe HsrmU KDITOR at the Peeti-OMee, Cedar- ytfls, 0^ OetebecHMMtT, aaseoend glass FRIDAY, AUGUST U, 18*0 ■awpssssaanssnmMsimassBppRampspssc TER WHEAT MARKET, The Chicago wheat market’ opened last Thursday after haring been clos­ ed since the government took control of foodstoffs when we got into the war. The government them fixed the price o f wheat, and there was no oc­ casion for open wheat 'market But now that the government has -given up control of the g^jin, the mart opens and men buy and cell in com­ petition with each other, thus fixing a price from hour to hour, or^agrw-* ing upon a price they will p»y for wheat at some future date. The market opened around two doUara and seventy-five cents i hush- el, about what was expected, Friday ,it fell ten cents a bushel .It will liku- ly fluctuate considerable in Hie next few days bat it is-reasonably certain to’ remain in ■the taeighborhopd o f two-seventy-five for some little-time, There ip no reason to believe it will vary from that figure twenty-five cents for the present, - Transportation facilities db not enter into the present price o f wheat, but may do so later on. That is, if the large centers o f population are unable ’ to secure an adequate grain supply because of transportation, the grain will be high in such centers. But /the -price ef wheat on the Chicago mark­ et is really controlled by the price which the'Europeans’ are willing to pay for it. ’ There are many people 1id this epuntry who believe that wheat will go to four dollars, or even five dol­ lars a bushel.'-Just .what they* bake their belief upon, we .do-not know. There is a pretty,good wheat crop all over the world.. Europe’s ' crop is much.better than, last year, There is a lot of unsold wheat in Australia, and marine transportation is such that it can now be moved to Europe. Argentina ha3 plenty of wheat. We entered, the harvest with a large sur­ plus, and this year’s crop, while not as large atf lkst year’s, is.tiremendous. All told, we shall have several hun­ dred million bushels to spate. So it ,is hard to see why wheat should^.com­ mand any suck price as four dollars a bushel‘unless transportation.breaks down completely, When, o f course, a bushel^ofwheat would be,worfch*any- thing the owner o f it, if he bad it where it was wanted, saw fit to charge. - —Columbhs Dispatch. -Robert Handman, son. o f Rev. and •Mtp. W- F- Barriman under wmt %» operation, yesterday by Dm, Madden A Shields for the removal o f adeniods and tonsils, Rev.' W. A , Condon and family, who have beep visiting relatives^here for the past month, return to theirRome in Urichsville, O., today. - -x . - Herman Sjtraleymet with a bad ac­ cident one day this weekwhen a team of horses hitched to a mower ran aWay. One of the lines became tan- flled and Mr.' Styaley endeavored to right things while standing on the mower. There was a colt in the team that was not used to the unusual shifting of the lines and it gave a lunge throwing,*the driver uhder the mower. As a result Mr. Straley re­ ceived had cuts and bruises on the Hungry—-c/ course You Are -t'** OUTDOOR LIFE- always WHETS the APPETITE for SWEETS Me EDGEMONT COOKIES and CAKES The natural craving for sweets Is Sharpened by . outdoor life—such as tennis or golf, baseball or hike, picnic or^outing, riding or .swimming, auto trip or work in the fields. And aren’t -we Women lucky to> be able to serve such -Wholesome cakes that are so tempting in appear-' nnce, so attractive in design, sq dainty in coloring and - go Convenient to get! ^ Jusbthtnk how'we Used to spend hours'and hours - In hot kitchens baking cakes—using'our butter and uugar and eggs, working and worrying and then not - being sura that our cakes would turn out right, Nov^we can go to our neighborhood grocery—and from bis stock of Edgemont Cookies and Cakes, all of them always good, select Just the Cookies and "Cakes that suit the particular sweet tooth of each member orthe family; -BomBoas in a variety of flavors. Delightful com­ binations of;sugar or honey cakes and fluffy marsh­ mallow, Southern Molasses Cakes or Honey Bweets, besides •’Parfait” or “Edgemont” Sugar Wafers^ ' ,Chocolate Cakes for"those who prefer chocolate, . _ Old-Fashion Cookies, the kind that children of all-, ages like so well. 'v - - Semi-Swects like GrahamWafers, Imperial Wines, Lemon Crackers. - 1 t " 4 H v. , f S « Spicy Ginger Snaps so pdpular with everyone. Every one delightful with COOLING beverages, FROZEN dainties, LUSCIOUS fruits or as DESSERTS. , The double enameled green, tin and the G. A G. trade mark is your guide to unusual goodness 'in Cookies,. Cakes and Crackers—at, yottr neighborhood ’grocer’s. , If he hasn’t all varieties in stock he can get 'you exactly what you want.on, short notice-^-for v « maintain, a fleet of trucks giving dally service. '! the !GREEN & GREEN W Baiert 0 / UNUSUALLY GOOD ' COOKIES, CAKES m i CRACKERS ,C*i>rritMItiS-Tii*Gr»e« MSGrceBC««piar Trad® Mark I ... 1 taken to » Xenia hospital. It was a mystery that he escaped with his life. Ant* That Plant. A spgties of ants Hying on the semi- ■Tid plains Of Texas cultivates' areas of grassabout their dwellings. On the cultinned space, whichmay have an area of ten t6 fifteen'feet, only one kind of grass is allowed to grow, and it is Said that the seeds of this grass are planted by the ants. Roads are laid out regularly, radiating from the bill across the plain, and the shoots of undesirable plants ate promptly nibbled oft as. fast as they appear among the crops, When the harvest of the protected grass Is ripe the ants collect the seeds and convey them along n radiating highway to the little rooms in their hills. Interesting and wonderful is the economy of these tiny insects. They may, when the colonies are large and numerous enough, dC considerable damage t<i grain In fields where their mounds are reared and the dearlnga made.—Brooklyn Eagle. rmommmmmmmmmmrnmmmmmmmmmmmm dan Francisco FouncUd by, Spaniards, A fact little known is that the city- of Ban Francisco was founded by a Spanish officer from the Arizona pre­ sidio of Tnbac, in the Santa Cruz’ vhl- tey, south of Tucson. -He was Captain Juan Bautista de Ansa. In January, 1774, he had pioneered across the des­ ert, from Coheres to theColorado river, byWay of the Camlno delDiablo (Road tiMtd ami w it, • «* .*„,*w the Devil)* then visiting Monterey, head and body and yesterday was, r„ Otfobeh by a dircot command , ^P tna tint F/owir*. Most kinds of ctit flowers will keep for a long time if they are Completely hummed in water. Placetheblossoms I« bowls of water every night, and S « t o «aw thim in the morning. ’The flowers will often appear as fresh as If they had been aawiy gathered,—Popular Htechaufci t ■***-ss» n# CedOrville Cliautauqua, Aug. JO-14. FusnsinMMBaNiilnBiMia^sefik^^ of the SpaftlOhviceroy, he started again for Tubac, with 240 people and much livestock, destined for the foundation o f a presidio and mission on the great bay that had been found by Portola in 1700. Ansa’took the Gila route as the safer, forded the Colorado near the Gila’s month a month later and, with an advance .parly, on March 28, 1770, established the presidio of San Fran­ cisco on the Golden Gate. gtrength of Character. Strength of character is not mere strength of feeling’, it Is the resolute restraint of strong feeling. It Is un­ yielding resistance to Whatever would discontent *hs Dora without or unset­ tle ua from Within.—Dickens. E Y E S i. Corr*ct!y Gktsec Fitted* f 4 *AT MODERATE PRICES TIFFANY'S Optical Department &J*aEvenings byAppointment ManyWonen Never Look For F U R until the winter season is here and snow failing. The •hop that hflg the cerrect Fur at th« right pride ig the one that geta the business., We/reprepared in anticipa­ tion of your need*. 30x3 30x314 32x3*4 3bc4 32x4 33x4 34x4 EDERAL TIRES Traffik -..314.10 . . . 1&S» . . . 21J2S —. 28.06 •« * 28.70 29.95 . 30.56 Rubbsr 316^6 • 22A0 25410 3375 33AO 34.95 35.75 28x3 MOTORCYCLE TUBES UREY REb .. $1*79 $ 1 ^ 5 DIAMONDTIRES , 6000MILE * SqiMtg* •*««.615JS0 .*•»aV*V it*if-Baird 1SA5 2240 28P6 ( 30x3 31x3J4 SZxZ'/z 31x4 32x4 33X4 es-.i A t X t ••»«***« «w»lew • *o ««•«*• * 29^5 **•'#-«*• 4 * 28.05 28x3 Firestone Casing 5000 MILE $!4.40 * Clean Up Sale; On Diamond and Federal Tires and Tubes '• Prices Cannot be Beaten . l J J M .g i c R u b b e r M e n d S a v e s H a lf O f V u lc a n iz in g B i l l . a* Also good for repairing Rubber’ Boots, Shoes And Hot Water Bottles rt-mT' Small Siz« 50c Large Size $1.00 FRANK J- 117-119 East High Street, PIERSON Springfield, Ohio* Repairing and Remodel­ ing at reasonable prices FVRR1ER, SecondFloorAroueBldg. Spriagfieid, Ohio. MODEL 4-90 $875 No touring car at any price is more dependable or more economical to operate than the Chevrolet* Yet with all its 1economy and low price it la a handsome, roomy, comfortable car—one you can teal proud to own* 'i i « For a limited time we cati make immediate delivery O w e n s 6 S o n darville i n t a s i Ohio I

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