The Cedarville Herald, Volume 44, Numbers 27-52

iitoiii ■%NM «**•> SiMM nttr.iii.itatom "B ull DURHAM . i * l * a an tftataIRQ gggfidigarattMfcr 10 c Wewwntyetitehayethe I mk * paper I mp *'«ULI..,» * * * * * *** cam M mv « ■Wkbeeohpaokaf** fewefe •f *4 the ve*y «n**i •la*r*tt« P*P»r in tit* w W , , v ■ m Z ,7 C Z L j c * & Don’t P k kO n tn j M M fo fcM - Oct theO m WI m O hr , / l # Y e « M l Yew Deed* W E have the v w ability to help you sellyourgoodsand w f can do this m% m reasonable cost to you. Economyand stand* ardizatipn are the watchword* here. W e urftHammermill Bond, - thtrstandardi econotpk cal, business paper and we turn out a grade of priuting tbat brings re­ sults fwour customers. ,LET VS SHOW YOU The CsdUfflk- B « d i rdh ^ r KARLS BULL Rat**** at the Poat-OfS**, C*d$r* rifle, 0.} 0otober 81, mffl, M ascend cUuu matter. FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 9, im THE NEXT MOVE; Cat* and, Deg* * f Paao*. There ta. one place near PhllstdeK phta where cate and dogs dwell u>- gather In pence* It t« a cemetery, do toted to dewased. pets. It is at Fran* davlUe and contains many handsome tombstones. \ FOR SERVICE ’ . - V <• 9 ' ' ’ * . . Leave your Clothes to be Dry Clean and Pressed With Richard’s Drug Store ODORLESS CLEANING GUARANTEED. Called For and Deliv­ ered Twice Weekly. ' & Horen / ■ DRY CLEANERS XENIA, O. Does Every Power J o b Youcanplow,disk, harrow, harvest, thresh, hale hay; grind feed, hit the silo* saw wood* pump water* pull stamps, do road work orany other power job around the ferin quicker, easier and at less costtoyouwiththe Fordson Tractor, Twenty-four hours each day* every wofitog day to the year it will give maxi- mum service. Light but powerful it get* fiom jbb to job quickly. Easy to ©«srato and control—effi­ cient, economical andabove •1 DEPENDABLE. - <3ettothe powar-farmtog frameo fmind now* Cab, jtooos ordmp m a Card tor toot*. See the Fordeon to practical tof4-iM m a* ’ * o p e raw fk XL A. MURDOCK:, JsmMtown, 0. I The JEndowmwit land Building cim, paign for Cedarville College that has been in progress has met with success and yet the goal J im not been reach- ed. At this -writing the amount pledged is Just about what is required for the endowment alone. Well and good thus far. What shall be done next Is the question wa hear .discussed. ..must? Shall the campaign be drawn to a close, pledges and money returned or the work continued? In our opinion the work should: re­ cced, The people want the college to remain in our midst, The institution is now in position to meet the endow­ ment requirement*,-or should be at the end.of the five-year period. In the meantime efforts should be made, to raise the additional for the buildings. Present business conditions had much, to do with .the pledges. Suck a condition is not always to be. Better prospects are ahead-of every .one if the People will only give way to optimism. - If our adivee was to be. followed the authorities will at once make plana.to meet the requirements of the W. J. Alford subscription, an offer which is good only^until the first of the. year. Be agrees to give ,$20,000, one half to improve the Al­ ford Memorial, if the public will do the sajhe. Re also wants to endow the building with $10,000 if the public will .do likewise. AH this endowment >vhefi raised would*add to the general -endowment o£ the college and yet provide-for the now building, Let every effort be put forth to meet these requirements before Jan­ uary 1st. This community cannot af­ ford to let a $20,000 improvement slip by. A modern building with en­ dowment for upkeep, means increased properly values. The College authorities should bend every effort at once to meet the requirements of the Alford offer.' They are not unreasonable,' neither are1*they impossible. It can be done. Mto toto tow Various tpoete# of Attorn. About 120 (Hftferowt uftaMCf of tern are native t» the United States *ud 64 *f theee are gaged t* ****** •astern America, m fegt a dope* are purple and bine and even bocanfaia Had it itagniree p*fcttot irtpdy to dis- ttegBiah their many apeciea. TheNew England aster (a the most striking o f the group. It has a stout h*rdy stem, ■ometiraoft eight feet high, gad kupa vldet-purple and oometimto ptekb* dowers, and Is fcjmd In the swamp* (n the late summer. Great Britain claims only one native aster. Many American species are cultivated in English gardens under the name of Michaelmas daisies. The" Swiss spe­ cie* ta Ihb most beaurtrtil jmrple aster which Is found in such quantities ‘•long the,New England highways in the un« tumn, and which, with goldenrod, makes o radiant display of purple and gold^lpdianapolia News. --- . City Without Windewsr-------- Out In the desert of Arabia, five days by caravan from Bagdad, stands the holy city of Nejet, and■in the whole of the town of nearly 100,000 people there I*, hardly a house with Windows.. Also, .beneath many homes are immense “serdobs,” or caves, hewn out of the limestone which underlies the Arabian desert about Nejef. Many of these fterdaba are built one room below, Die other, some of the lower apartmentsaiming one hundred feet below the street level,. These under- 'ground chambers are reached by wind­ ing stairways, also .hewn from the rock. They "were originally butit to provide p refuge from the intense bpat of midsummer, btit in many mstanceas they have now become a refuge for Arab .criminals and robbers-who live at Nejef and prey oh tfc«i caravans of pilgrims, \ Highest Type of Joy, TherpV no Joy superior, to that of rising above what the community pre., diets for you, Yef. every man has it fn him to be Infinitely above what others think possible. Hidden deep In every jnatt are the unseen personali­ ties waiting for the ♦ouch of occasion to call them forth.. They respond as a majtjter of growth and then only to answer a recognised need. As the mind Is urged to finer discriminations It teams' to weigh more subtle argu­ ments. As the heart Is taught to feel the cry of another's sorrow 1t devel­ ops larger capacity to enter into the finer feelings of the-human soul. It Is all a mnftpr of human and divine- laws. He who permits himself to de­ velop his best becomes the man ol the hour in time of need. He rises on the strength of hl$rtrained per-/, -wllty —Exchange. Ancient Nurembnrg Token. Crushed andbattered, a rarecoinhhs- been discovered In a garden" at Llan- va'ir,- a village near the Roman city of. Caerweiit, midway between Chepstow and ..Newport. It has, proved; after careful examination,,to "be a Nurem­ berg token, and was.minted In 1510 by Christopher, BpiiUte (who was bom at Ann&bfVg), at Tlntetn, whence a few years previously the monks had been driven out. Bchuts found the milt ponds- and fish ponds-left, by the monks ready to his hand; from the forest,of ,Dean he obtained festf Iron I Bind wood ‘for charcoal from the forest of Westford, which is In, the neighbor­ hood of Hanvalr. Cases are on record of Nuremberg coins having been- dis­ covered in London, And as far north os Lincoln, but this ts~the first In­ stance of such a coin, token being found In the western counties or In south Wales.—London Times. -Mahogany Tropical Tree. The. true mahogany,- grows^ only It tropical countries, particularly InCen­ tral America,- the West Indies, Mexicc and Peru, though' small ornamental ‘trees are grown In southern Florida. The western sumach or mahogany grows In lower California. Y o u c a n t h e a t ’ e m ! ‘The Second Guessers ta*t iWK'n.v "■ .*• --M* i A , ji ■% ta r” o»tamtoVi 1 toRRtol!NVW"'tolS 0. * Ga s o l in e Fill up the tank o f your car vnthCotumbus, and you’ll listen patiently to the “I Told You SoMClub when it starts slipping high praise to Columbus * For you’ll be hep to Columbus ^goodness yourself* Yoii’ll know o f its power, its pickup, its big mileage andyou’ll ‘ -yes’’ thousands of other Columbus users ’ til the ruminating kine come home. - ‘ t '*-- ■ • . ■. ■■■■ f! : >•. - 1 ■- i ■- ■ • t ... .. ■ > <•„ .«.■ ' . ■ . , And you’ll keep on using Columbus because you’ll find it’s the best and most economical gaso­ line that you can buy. ' r j * • y ” , j > C O L U M B U S O I L C O M P A N Y Columbus. Ohio Cedarville Distributing Station Miller Street and Penn. Ry. Telephone No. 146. R, A. Murdock M. C. Nagley - C. E. Master-si W . W, Trouts Cedarville LimeCo. R. Bird & Sons’ Co. s W e Are Orders For You Placed 0 Siltncp Generally Serb To suffer in silence, ro refrain from answering the bitterest o f calumnies places u3 ob a vantage point vastly superior to those who would, injure us and discounts what they may say. Gossip oiliy becomes serious when w* countenance-by denial. Silent con­ tempt speaks louder than-.the most vociferous contradictions. Nothing is harder to bear In silence than viHflea tlon, yet 'that It is the part of wlsdor to do so is illustrated daily. Tliere may Come a time in our lives when saying nothing will-seem to he an ac­ knowledgment of guilt and then will be given an opportunity to reply to calumblatorS, But the ordinary little backbitings o f’every day life are best met in steadfast silence. In replying to them We are apt to lose our temper and Our dignity, which Is both foolish and faille.—-Exchange. ' "March Dust* and "King Ransom.* “March dust,'' for which farmers have vainly piped amid the recent bleak rain, snow and Bifeet, Is a most coveted commodity, of which In differ­ ent' countries a “peck" or a “bushel" is said to be “worth a king’s ransom,” writes a correspondent from England, The proverb dates, I am assured, from" Saxon days, whenmnrders could be ex­ piated by fines on a sliding'scale, which In the case of a king lhlght vary from $100 to $500—huge indemni­ ties for that period! Bnt the saying probably enshrines some dim, sub-con­ scious memory of the crushing taxa­ tion Imposed on the English people to pay the heavy ransom >for Richard Cfoeur de Lion,* who had been “in­ terned" on his way home from the Ornsades by the medieval predecessors of our late enemies; 353 FEEDS vi* V ' •, 4 r ‘ . Tankage 60 Per Cent Standard Middlings Flour Middlings - Red Dog Flour Butlers. Hog Feed No. 1, Butlers Hog Feed No. 2. Arlington Flour Bran •) SUGGESTIONS FOR THE SEASON Spreaders (special price) Hog Troughs Hog Fountains Water Tanks Fence Posts Paint Oil Stoves 335 § Now is the time to Lay in Your Winter Coal. A word 1 to the W ise is Sufficient. k Conversation. Between 2 and 8 o’clock—-at thehalf­ way house of night—1 Heard Slow hoofs below my window, and leaning out, saw under moonshine two great cart horse* wandering down the road together, They were enjoying a phase Of their existence unknown to us. They conversed In little sounds and when One stopped, to snort and sniff St the water of a duck pond by the way, the Other also Stopped, raised his head and looked Steadfastly up Into the starry Sky, I saw the moonlight in his big eyes. Priw-ntly they put their noses i together, Then one gave * alight start I r-perhaps at the opinions of the other —and side b f side they sauntered away tsfio the nlght-i.lddcn land,— PhiipOil*, I Hard Coal Pocohontas Coal Yellow Jacket West Virginia m um The Cedarville Farmers’ Grain Co lllllllll IIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi'lIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIHIIII|IH||llllllll|||llllllllill1lll -Give Us A Chance To Figure OitYour Printing...

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