The Cedarville Herald, Volume 44, Numbers 27-52
uiI Mriiin ibhiw ■riMiiiatfiiihi ♦ # fe #. fe $ fe 'll '*0 0 1 LOCAL m KRSONAl * * * * « * • « » * Gfeeriee Jfeek and family ©f Oxford* O* are visiting with relatives here. I ■ I * * * #* ’ mm 1 W ^ o* W. Jfefct,(*f) nA:~^ JR$ lip*. John Lo*t of Bttfe* iPPltM l Jl«* o* < visit wife relative*. *D seat A in the delicious Burley flavor O & e you ’ ve enjoyed th e toattedflkvor you wiU al*> way* want if - Sale;- Abeuv 40 bushels «£ timothy seed. N. F.Ewhank, phone. ,, O' Jf* ^^sfeball has gen* to M*r- WnavUla* Ind., to take the water baths fox rheumatism. ?**?*; A two story house* ££*■ dwelling Ghillicothe -street. Building to be movedfrom Jot. J- B« Orr Miss Maude Hastings has gone to Nexvton Palis, O., whey, she wS teach this year. Pot Sale:* A two story house, frame dwelling, on Ghillicothe street. Building to be movedfrom lot. J. R, Orr Mrs. Samuel Kildow of Springfield, has been visiting among friends here for several days. , Mr.,ad Mrs, J. E. Kyle had for their guests from Saturday until Monday, Mr."Herbert Melntyre and family of West Liberty,' 0 . - • * w. R e Canhefouiv. at :,v -k--Ofllce.w'- L . CLEM AN S al Bs tate my office each Saturday or reached by phone at i ,;» y . residence each ‘evening. l’'',."1" I"''J#,rir" PHONES Residence 2-122 CRDARVILLE, OHIO -JJ T H E B E G I N N I N G O F A B A N K - N O T E Little Marcia’s baby dress though made of the^finest linen was ulumately worn thread bare. One day it landed in the.rag bag and was aold.to the junk doaler. When the rag sorter touched the discarded ganrtenthedefeated in a flash thefine quality of„the flax and set i f aside for a jpurney to the Bureau o f Engraving and Printing at Washing ton. Eventually it became legal* tender—a bank-note, ftist how is told in one o f the beautiful, booklets about Chur Government which w e are tending each month to those interested. lust send us your name and address and you will receive a copy o f every issue o f the series without cbaifa. TheExchange Bank CEDARVILLE, OHIO. We «MWtW •mm <?*r Sal#> mm Ail Tight heater i» good condition, P, 1C. GUlUan, S*ri§ NOW, IS THE TIME to prepare for winter driving. Any of-the following closed car tergahu?, ‘Gosnmteed as Represented” will afford you real comfort and proiwtioa !rom wintry winds and snow. Your car, Liberty Bonds. Live Stock or Baled lay taken in trade. ‘ 1921 Stodebeker Sedan Repainted and rebuilt. This ear is guaranteed same as new Studebaker. 1920 Bulck Sedan „ Only been driven 1000 miles; looks and runs like hew. 1918 Wsseatt Sedan Wire wheels, Cord tires and completely rebuilt. . 1918 Weaoott Coupe 8 Wire wheels, eora tires, good pahSt and body ooadltieas tsaaa mission and rear a*l« overhaul- * ed. 1#18 Mudam Super Si* Sedan ■Good tires ant good jfeWfc upholstery, seat oovars and nHK&snhtalty A4. 1»18 Eeo Sedan This Is a bargain. Repainted and rebuilt; first glass tires. 1918 Stndebsker SIX 7 Passenger Sedan, tires, top and paint very good; mechanical condition very Jobd. 1920 Oaklad Coupe Looks and runs like new. 1920 Maxwell 5 Passenger; artcraft winter top; cord tires; new paint and completely rebuilt. 1918 Crow Elkhart Convertable sedan, wits wheels new print, cord tires and com pletely rebuilt. 191# Prise Sedan Rebuilt, repainted, cord tires and wire wheels, reftftft m am * #HAftft 0 0 WeSweiv . We hate epen k&Ws's* feaadatd m*pl** mid terms.» tes, to*M m «*d tomring on seme plan sad terms, Beth RMsSs 419—Call ns and Rarer*# the charges' Burke Mortor Company 249 If, Ponntaitt Ate, ’ SpringfisM, Ohio “U p bouse that tsum s o a r William -Northup o f Coshocton visited here several days last week. Rise Florence Willtamson teaches this year in the Columbus high school and has gone to that city, FOR BALE—Seven room oottsge, gas, cement walks, large lot, must he sold by September 1st. Phone 88, J, G. McCoriceil. ' Mr. and Mr*. Wm. Come had for their guests Sabbath,. Dr. and Mrs. Fiances Newcomer o f Dayton, O. Miss Belle Middleton Of Yellow Springs spent the week-end at the heme of Mr, end Mrs. W. R. Watt. Joseph McAfee,-who has been in the McClellan -hospital for several weeks retome' home, Saturday. Wilbur .Dunn, colored, exsoldier, has been, taken to the Soldiers’ Homs Dayton, suffering With a complica tion of diseases, , Morton Oreswell* who has been at tending Chicago University this sum mer is home. He. will return to that city and enter Rush Medical College. Harry Hammon and Ralph Towns- ley, returned home .Saturday night af ter a two weeks visit at Ray City, Mich. \ Harry Wright left the first of the week for Lynchburg, 0 „ where he has been chosen principal of the pub lic schools. Mr.'and Mrs. Charles Barr of Day- ton have been spending, a few days With the former’s aunt,' Mrs, Sarah Mitchell, Mrs- T, A. ,Spear and daughter, Elisabeth of Cleveland, have been guests of Mr,"and Mrs. A. E,. Jolly, the past week. Dr. and Mrs. O, P. Elias, Bernice EliaB, MrsvJ. W...Johnson and Mrs. Anna Little attended the M. E. Con ference at Bellefontaine* Saturday. Miss Marjorie McClellan, who has. been spending the summer with her father, Mr. J. J. McClellan in Joplin, Mo., has returned1 lo t the opening of college. W ..A. Turnbull and wife, William Hopping and wife, Dr. 'Led Anderson and wife and- Ralph Wolford went to the reservoir Saturday for a few days outing. W. A. Rogers and wife of Waverly, O., have been visiting in California for the past month stopped off here enroute home and spent Tuesday and Wednesday with Mrs. Anna Towns- ley* f ' 1 “ Mrs. O. L, Smith left Tuesday foe Kansas City where she^will visit with friends and- relatives for ten days. While there she will he joined byher sister,’ Misa Mary Ervin, who is en route home from California, The usual services will be held at the M. -E; church, SUbbath. Sabbath School «t fi;3Q; preaching at 10:80; Epworth League at 6:30, Miss Jo sephine Randall, leader.. The pastor’s subject for the moriiing will be “The Challenge of the Unfinished.” • font A ^ £ & * * '« * 9*od buggy, T. W. St John, close Mr. and Mrs. Charles Baum enter tained a large company of friends last Friday evening in honor of their twenty-ninth wedding anniversary, The house had bsen decorated for the event with the flowers of the ssason. The guests ware served light refresh ments and pink hearts were the .fa vors. The evening was very pleasantly enjoyed by all present. The gas rate In Yriloy Springs has been increased as fellows: first 8 M, 60c par M; with So discount; second 5 M 65c per M; third 5 M, 70c; and bo on up to 30 M which is 90c per Mr David Pettiford, Yellow Springs, who hauls hay on a Ford truck is now minus ruck. Some- days ago the truck was burned with a load of hay. hjr. and Mrs. W. H. Smith and daughter, Mary, returned the last of the week from an auto tour across Indiana into Illinois.,While gone Mr, Smith and family visited' their for mer home in Fowler, Ind. He says .that farmers in the section of Indi-. ana and Illinois that he visited are far worse of than those here. Very few of the farmers in ' that section are feeding any stock and all their com. will go onto the market. For Sale:- A SO gallon.copper ket tle, rim and paddle; Leather couch; Oak Bed and Springs; Walnut bed and springs; •Oak center table; Chif fonier; 2 Dining Room tables. < — Mary C. McCorkell, Better- examine your five dollar bills that have a likeness of Abraham Lincoln on them."This section is said to be covered! with countered , bills that are duplicates of ’the original other than Lincoln's face. R. A. Murdock is having' a heating plant installed for his garage that will meet state requirements. Mrs. 6 ; E. Jobe has presented a large palm to the Exchange Bank to be placed in the -lobby. The palm is quite large*and is eighteen years old. Sell lubricants, paint, roofin8 spec ialties. Regular or part time. Sub stantial commission. Car is advantage Free samples. Write for interesting proposition. THE IVISON COM PANY, Cleveland, O. Mrs, Alvira Murray bad for her guests last week her brother,. Joseph Moorehead and her brother-in-law, William Sunafrank, of Cambridge, O. Saturday, Mrs. Murray accompanied them to Springfield Where they visi ted A, E. Kilgore and family. Mrs. Murray returning home Tuesday. NOTICE:-Lost in the Murdock Theatre % hand tooled purse contain ing |6 and small chsnge. Also name cards, etc. Finder please return to Wilmah Amott at the J, W. Johnson jewelry store or residence and obtain reward. Leonard Brigner was in Columbus last week where he was called by the Industrial Commission for an exam ination o f his eye that had been in jured some months ago while em ployed by the state highway com mission. Reports are not very en couraging’ that bis eye will ever be much better, Midget S\i>re# in the East, In the “ikuifes,’*or markets, of Nnta, lus, the modern SJiechem, the city of theSamaritans, the stores are so small that the customer standi} outside to examine the meager display o‘f Euro* peon and native Damascene wares, Here are rows of silversmith shops, where the artisans work cross-legged, producing from crude .silver elaborate ■fornaments for the peasant 'women, Then there are the coffee shops, the street In front blockaded with men sitting on low stools, sipping the thick, hot beverage from tiny enps and smoking long rcd*plped, bubbling nar ghiles as they gossip and play a gam# Of “tawla.” There are also the sweefc meat venders, from whose stalls pro trude Into the street large trays o! “kanafle,” the pastry dish for which Nablus is noted. The dish has a fill* lug of fresh, sweet cheese, over which is poured melted butter nnd thick Slru'p until it is literally soaked with the mixture; For Sale: Cottage of six rooms, on College street in good condition. Well* garden, fruit trees, cellar demented, gas and electric lights. ’ The Wallsce-Snlder Realty Co., 604 Areas Bldg,, Springfield, O. W. J. Tnrbox moved to his new res idence Monday. The building it not completed but several rooms have been put in shape to occupy. N. P. Ewhank has moved to town and taken the residence Mr. Tarbox vacated. Mr. Ewbanks purchased this property some months ago, Wanted:- To hear from owner of farm or good land for sale for fall delivery, L. donas, Box 551, Onlay, m . „ 8,144 Lake* lit Michigan. The State of Michigan contains 8,141 inland lakes, ^covering an area of 4AM Muartf miles, besides a waterfront oe fee ’Great Lakea el Ijm mttea. The members of the Research Club were ,entertained yesterday, at the home of Mrs. R. S. McElhinney, . Ira Davis and son, John, drove 1 brought from Grceneburg, Pa., last Friday with a Dort car tljat Mr. Davis will use in canvassing Ohio for the’ Nu-Cord -Tire Company o f that city. Mr. Davis will he the Ohio represen tative o f the company., - Treasures' in Royal Library. The library at,Windsor castle cotm }risq$ s^among irs 120,000 volumes some notable treasures. There la a row of Caxtop’s Including the -only perfect copy’ still existing of his ’Aesop’s Fables,” and two "Bibles, both" with, precious associations, though of different order. One Is the Bible- which Martin Luthbr used to carry in his pocket and the other was taken by {Charles I. to the scaffold. There Is a Koran, too, on the fly-leaf of whfch is inscribed: “From the library of tha late Tippcp Sultaun of-Mysore.” This Koran belonged to the late Emperor Aurungzebe and was purchased by that prince for the sum.of 9,000 guineas, Another Interesting Shelf Is that containing the'holograph records of parliamentary proceedings furnish ed by each successive prime minlsfei since 1837. for the exclusive informa Uon of the sovereign. May B* Pirate’s Hoard. Henry Johnson, the chief man at Orange Town, island of 8t Eustatia, Was digging a post hole, a few yean ago add turned up a small sealed earthen jar, which was filled with old coins. They were Japanese pieces 200 years eld, relics-of the trade which the Dutch were among the first to e* tablteh with the far east, These were said to have been buried when a black pirate barque poured her drinking, blasphemous crew ashbre for a night’s orgy. Another story of the Japanese coins la. that some Klttlfonlan or Ber* ifiudtan, waxing rich In contraband trade In his neutral mart, exchanged the dollars an.d eagles he had gained from America tot Japanese gold at the money moHiants, tnereby eluding the clutches »f the British admiral. Lord Rodttef, who raided the Island ia 1781* . Inventions «♦ WoMtfl* Comparatively few invention# have been made by women, bat the follow ing are recorded in tha United States patent office*. Cook stove, sheet iron shovel, Ice cream freeaar, sadiron* fountain pen, washing machine, toast* af, pocket book, spring seat for furnt- tara or cant, button, drees pattern, duet pan, portable oven, tMatfbie masher, attachment tor heatlhg ket tles and betiett by gas. r Shoes! Shoes! At lowest prices in three years. Shoes for the whole Family. Our new shoes for Fall are arriving every day, some o f them being already in stock. . There has been quite a drop in shoe prices in the past three month#. In the k it two a weeks, we have reduced the price on our whole stock from $1.00 9o $4.50 on , each pair, and on one pattern in womans shoes $6.00 oh each pair, selling this style which 3 months ago was priced at $13,50 a pair, nowat $7,50. THINK OF IT, a $13.50 shoe at $7,50. Come in. and see our real values. YQU WUX LOSE MONEY BY GOING OUT OF TOWN TO BUY Ladies’ Shoes Priced at from $2.95 to $10,00 the pair, in brown and black and other,popular shades. See our patterns at— a pair-:— $3.50, $4.00, $4.50, $5.00 Men’s Driess Shoes Prices range from $3.00 to $10,00 the pair. Newest styles in medium toes, and they are priced right, and. cheaper-than in other towns, $3.00 to $10 apair ~Boys’ Shoes $2.75 to $5,00 h peair. Prices speak for themselves, as do also the wearing qualities Children’s Shoes Frof 9„0c to $5.00 a pair. Our line of misses shoes at $2.25 to $2,50 a pair is particularly strong. We give a sack of candy with each pair children's shoes. Rubber Shoes A new line of the famous Lambertvile Snag Proof Boots, and Rubber Shoes formerly handled by the late J. C. Bar ber, is now in stock and we are prepar ed to fake care of your wants in , this" line* We are also handling the Ball Band and the United States brands. Men’s Work Shoes $2.95 to $5.25 per pair is the range of prices. Buy once, and you will buy the second,pair.; $2,93 to $5.25 Pair ■. • » '» • • a , *•• * ■ • •...#■ ■ « ■ *■ \ *.■. & ■* . # *. , 0 ' » • * * • • • * :• '» • ■ m S7 X «■4 ■ *■ ,.a #\o'■* .*>w,9 ■* •a■.«’ « •/'■# •; * /t ■.*'■ '**■ *»'.2 lfcs*'.“1XC- ' • . .. • '» •' "»..!* . * '•. » . • “Vs. ait".*. S' ; V * . a-' ft 2 * SEEDLESS RAISINS; . . , * ................ . , ......... 25c lb; S^X^jAkR’V '■ *■« S’ - • 1 <#'W *- -O a. * •*V ’ft, •ft:.1*;a a a ft-a1, *.«■*.• ’ ». * ••■.*"ft.'*', ftX0 57C■. s t * ‘ ‘*-4 ( . i - R T ‘ ' t - ‘ ' . LENOX SOAP— Large Size #** ............ .. •. **10 bars 54c" “O ut Special’* Seel Cut Coffee— 38clb« 3jbs# for a .............. . .$X,00 Liwldcliwe double-* cross a master mind % TALK ABOUT film# novels. THEY 8EHT Jim down. "ft" * * TO TEXAB to investigate. - * « ■* SOME OIL wells then. *■ » .# WHICH THEY might buy. IF JIM said O.K. • » * AND HE was to report. » * # BY WIRE In secret code. » * 4 NOW-ENTER the TiUatn. A SLIPPERY crook. GOT WIND of it AND TRAILED Jim down. COPIED OFF hi# Code. AND BRIBED a*boob, IN THE telegraph branch, SO THE crook could get, THE EARLIEST word. AND CORNER stock. AND WORK a bold-up. IT LOOKED Ilka easy ooln. BUT JIM got wise. AND THREW awayhis cofeu ■ AND WHEN he sent THE FINAL dope. "IE FOILED the villain* THE MESSAGE joataald. » # # "CHESTERFIELD.” AND HIS directors know* THAT ALL waa well. WkTH TH08E oil W«U», FOR OIL men know. THAT "CHESTERFIELD" mesas. “THEY SATISFY." • • « V'OU'LI* know you’ve "struck I it rich” when Ton discover Chesterfields. Yotrfl say "they satisfy.” A wonderful blend— the pick o f Turkish and Do mestic tobaccos—,put together in the Chesterfield way— that’s "they satisfy.” And the deno a can not bo DMT>•« A mmm * mbomt iho Ch&UnrtUWpioak*s*ofl0P C I C A R X I T T X S I askxst k MyiHtiToiMOooC g . X X G E T O U R PRICES O N P R IN T IN G X X
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