The Cedarville Herald, Volume 44, Numbers 27-52
KARL1I BULL Ctdarvilie H W i EDITOR Entered a t the Post-Office, Cedar- ville, <>., October 31, 1887, as sccon& class matter, " FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1021 NEARING CHRISTMAS. 300 Coats VALUES O F COMPELLING INTEREST Choose your new coat now—a t ho other time has choosing been so advantageous. We believe there has never been a variety of Coats like it. Certainly values are extraordinary. Lowest Prices in Years For Good Coats $ 2 2 The Ultimate in Coat Values at $35 What One Can Buy in Coats at $49 That’s a very small amount for Coats so attractive. No Handsome wrappy coats or loose straight-types, always . The materials are'all pure wool Yelour, Polo Cloth and one would judge them to be less than $G5.00. Fine mater- of fine Warm materials, like Bolivia, Suedene, Velours. : Silver T f e -ta p i t a end t o t u r n e d , _loee. back. and . . & .Mnp r .n 4 g - t o t give a in- * * * * * i « t o - t o - t h e t a d women belted models, embroidered, braided and lined. r 1 l-.'. That covers an c£ mas buying of Toys •nf > *&***&.. s a d now. We have never known Christ* Us to have an earlier start. “Where Are the Toys” and When we point to ih s big sign "Toys” th a t is placed a t the entrance leading to Toyland and Coin own in the Down Stairs Store, the youngsters take one look and throw up their hands. - No wonder! . Such dolls’ furniture and dolls and games and animals and dishes and soldiors ;r.;l wagons-and coasters and playthings of every so rt have not been seen on these floors (nor anywhere else)—since before the Great. War—apd t h a t mean i. since before'some of you were born. • We went all over the world for these TOYS* Some of them you 'w on t find anywhere else, Christmas is nearly two months long a t The Home Store. But of coulee, some of the most wonderful things are likely to walk off .soon to the secret places where wise parents* hide the ir childrens presents EARLY. - Tinker IPGya The Wonder Toys Follow Mo Tinker, Tilly Tinker, T u rtle Tinker. Tumhlc Ti-iku-, lU t- tlebox Tinker, T osip Vl'-’rcr, Unit T inker an<l Y.’hirly Tinker. „ SCIIOENHUT TOYS AND DOLLS The Sehoenhut all wood dolls are the greatest of nil inven tions. 1 ' . * Sehoenhut Toy Pianos have iV?curate notes and can be played upon. ; 4 , Schoeimut Alphia Blocks are cute and attractive. Sehoenbut’s Humpty-Dump- tp Circus i3 acknowledged the no3t amusing unbreakable toy. P A R K E R ’ S G A M E S AKE /.’LL HSiBIi Polly Peek Pickles, Prippln!* I l i n k i n g Sets, Hilly b o a t P arly, Olil D ,tk U lngtosi. Uarmluor Target, Ton Pins, Munny Mm: lav ■Y.’asMng Sets, Old Maid, I.oiin, TMi’k-dy Winks, _Flinch, Hook, Pet, Butico, Checkers, etc. TEA 8ETS For th# Girl* In China, Aluminum and Enameled At Any Pric# Hie Toy for the Boy “ AMERICAN FLYER” TRAIN These train s are completely equipped on d rclo track from CO inches to 245 Inches, Recreation, fun amt education. m 4 BEDS In Every Six# and Kind for Dotty IThe F a h le n T e h a n ( o p<V n Tjrowwfwn i w s m m .2*64-43! wm ■■$ >-.“v.—r .......Ttinrawiawrl' - Kiils vb&Ht MKUK l Z • < ISYOURBUSINESSA SUCCESS? Finestationery is a big aid to Business. Printing fine stationeryis ourspecialty. IMHiMH The season is rapidly approaching when the one great thought that th -obs in the heart of every unselfish person is “what can I give my friends to increase their happiness?" It is only a crabbed, sordid soul a t this crowning summit of the year, who asks “what am I to receive ?” Chil dren expect to receive and we are happy in the thought, but rightly balanced adults find their chief pleasure in giving. * This does not include that class of chronic misers, who, by long years of cultivated stinginess have strangled every generous impulse, and who suf fer so a t the idea of giving up any thing, that it is necessary to admin ister an anaesthetic to get them into a donative state, but it means and re fers to the overwhelming majority of Americans. Once in a while there is a poor wretch so stingy that he is constantly in pain. The mere sug gestion that he give up the value of a peanut throws him into cramp colie. To save* expense he may raise his family on wild gooseberries and hazel nuts until his children develop into physical, moral , and mental dwarfs, but fortunately such in stances in this broad and generous -nation are tolerably rare. The Lord-loveth a cheerful giver" and “it is more blessed to give than to receive", are faithful sayings, and worthy of all'acceptation. Give where your gift is needed, where It brings joy and gladness, and your own heart will swell with genuine pleasure. To lavish gifts upon the rich, the strong, the powerful, in the hope that you may receive in return, is mean, groveling and pitiful. Don’t belittle yourself that way. Give freely only where love prompts, or better yet, go out among the poor, hunt out those less favored or less fortunate and do acts that will brighten human lives and the brightness will come hack into your own heart by reflec tion. . x The great and noble characters of the world have been the generous ones. The shunned and' hated and despised creatures of the race al ways have been the misers the grasp ing, hoarding, pinching ones who val ued money above humanity, and hug ged their wealth in the face o f’mis ery. The world shouts when such iheit die, but it follows the generous man to his grave with tears and real sor row. ■. ■ . / That's All the Difference, A green liar dee,complains because what, he encounters In his travels Is! not what he ' s accustomed to at home; while a sophisticated globe-trotter en joys It because It Isn't / ’ SAVE HEBE AND SPEND THEBE. The great cry for tUfgrmerr.ent among American? has so stirred the people in behalf of this cause from an economical,standpoint tha t it is gems to go through, With it of course will go the moral strength of the people who want no more war. While the government will save many millions by such, a program it is useless to save it a t one source only to find it wasted a t another. The cconomicy feature is lost unless this money saved is put towards ■wiping out our war debt, One o f the greatest farces 6eing enacted a t the present time is the socalled prohibition enforcement, The appropriation asked for is ten million dollars, a sum that is almost stag gering in these days of economic demands as a relief for the tax pay er, This week our attention was cal led to an article in a Cincinnati pa per as to the value'of whiskey in two warehouses just across the river on the Kentucky side. The liquor is val ued a t many millions and is being guarded day and night by a large armed force by the governmeht. On the face of the proposition it looks’ foolish that the government would spend thousands upon thousands of dollars each year to guard and pro tect a product th a t has been out lawed. Additional expense is’ also be ing placed against this large stock of liquor- by the owners who are tak ing no chance with government guards* and have a force of their own men guarding the liquor to protect it from holdup men tha t have been raiding liquor store houses over the country* Public sentiment has not yet forced the -paid prohibition leaders to der mand of congress that this stored liquor be sold by the government and converted into commercial alcothol where it will be of use in Science and manufacture of goods other than in toxicating liquor or drugs of strong alcoholic content. The,liquor th a t is causing the gov- • eminent the most trouble is that in storage and the many illegal ways used to get it out. Government officers have been offered bribes} one .New York official deposited $100,000 last year on a $7,500 salary. This should convince the prohibition adherents that the only solution to the prob lem is to- do away with this stored liquor. The people have always taken their temperance advice from paid leaders. The abolishment o f the li quor business in total .is going to separate some of these leaders from their five, seven and ten {thousand lollar salaries. These are the people .that are largely responsible for the ■ necessity of the tax payer' digging deep to raise the ten million t o #en- force phohibition—and give protec tion to the. millions of gallons, of out-,- lawed liquor in storage. j _ To those who a t heart are for temperance and a strict enforcement of the’, law looks like ‘the prohibition leaders bn the pay roll are only play ing us for a good thing; Poem jb>? Uncle John ALWAYS A BRIGHT SIDE. I used to think the Devil dwelt in subterranean den, “and stoked his helish fires to melt the*stubborn souls of men. I usei to picture out the fiend, in childhood’s fertile dreams, and almost fancied I could bear his scorching victim's screams, . . Therefore, I lived a decent life, and always toted fair; I think I’ve done enough of good, to keep me out of there. . . But still, in spite of all I ’ve said and wrote,—in spite of other’s heavy loads, that I have had to tote,,—I sometimes, can’t evade the thought, how easy 'tis, to slip, and scoot into the Devil’s joint, and terminate my trip. , . I f that should be my mournful, end, I’d try to grin and bear it,—but I know a few old stingarees who will be on * hand to share it. . . . , F Powerful X-Ray. A French scientist, chief of the bu reau of radiography for the Paris hos pitals, has demonstrated that an X-ray apparatus can photograph subjects .through a stone Wall more than 25 feet distant from the source Of th* rays. He has obtained clear photo graphs of metallic objects* tl»o rays filtering through a marble plate more than an inch thick, 12 Incites of oak, four Inches of plaster and a sheet of lead on*eighth of inch thick. A THE CLEARING HOUSE OF NATIONAL THOUGHT Do you know that Uncle Sam conducts the largest printing-plant in the World? It requires five thousand people and a plant worth five million dollars to pro duce the printing utilized in operating the government. Then there is the seven, million dollar building—on* of the most beautiful in the world -hou sing the Library of Congress* The story of the small beginnings of these two great institutions, their steady growth, and their present importance in the work of the nation, is told in an attractively illustrated folder o f the aeries on Our Government now being issued by this Institution. There has been a great demand for these stories and it is evident that they have been doing a valuable work in informing the people o f this community about our government. The ExchangeBank j
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