The Cedarville Herald, Volume 46, Numbers 1-26

Itty f mimmm KROGER’S f o e mrtm f o o d a t l o w e r p r i e e s Country Club llighe&t Quality C an .. . 15c i . n r i l Avondale Extra Standard Corn C a n .. 12c W V * * • Clifton Corn Sweet len d e r Ca n . . . . . . 10c SUGAR CORN Standard can.............. .. $c Peas Country Club T iny Variety Ca n . . , , ; .23c Country Club Sifted Can , . 19c Clifton sweet tender W isconsin Ca n . », 13c P A i r h P C California fruit in their own syrup, ,15c f C a v U v a Chuntry club big can in heavy syrup25c Del Monte can 27c Avondale big can 19c B m i m a m Sunsweet, small size 2 lbs.......... ............15c n i U l v M Extra large prunes l b ................. ..., . . , 17c Sunsweet, 2 lb. pkg . . . . — . . . . . . . . . . 35c f l l C K C S ? Wisconsin Cream ib. , ................... .29c L U u S I iu C i Brick cheese lb. 34c Limberger pkg..33c Kraft Pimento Loaf .lb, 39c. Kraft Cheese lb. 45c. I I v a m / I Country Club great big D l C d U 24 oz. loaf....................... ............ . 8 1-2 r » n k r i f r D C ! Butter, Soda, Oyster, v K A v K u n u Graham l b . . . . . . . . . . 12c GINGER SNAPS Fresh crisp, spicy, p ound . . . . . . 10c CHOCOLATE DROPS Per pound.......................... 16c CHEWING GUM All kinds at Kroger’s 3-5cpkgs 10c BUTTER Coutry Club Fresh Churned pound 49C f Fresh rendered Lard pure 1 2 c PillsburyFlour !214lb...........45c Soap B A R S 5 c ^ S O A p P 7 F O R . 25c MATCHES Large Boxes full count 6 Big B oxes .. ,25c Genuine Red River Ohio buy deedrotatoesnowBushel$ 1.15 per sack.......... 110 lb. sack .;...$2,io APPLES EATING .......... 4 lbs. 25c COOK ING -.....................5 lbs. 23c POTATOES 15 Lb. Peck 60 lbs. Bushel 75c. 19c THE UNIVERSAL CAR LM fivi Attention FordOwners! Ford parts, like almost everything else . worth while, are counterfeited. Imitation parts are manufactured to SELL at the highest possible rate o f profit and the grades o f steel used are consequently not die same high quality, specially heat- treated alloy steels specified in Ford •formulas for the manufacture o f GEN­ U INE FORD PARTS . Don't be misled—Znsiat upon GENUINE FORD PARTS made by the Ford Motor Company. By •6 doing you will get from 35 to 100 per cent more wear from them, and you will pay the lowest possible cost—the same everywhere. 50% OF GENUINE FORD PARTS RETAIL FOR LESS THAN 10c EACH Ask for Parts Price List When your Ford car, or Fordson tractor needs attention,caJtl onua. For rememberwe are prop* sdy equipped, employ competent mechanics,and M e Genuine Ford and Fordeon parts to all Mpak work: R.A.Murdock PencilNo.174 MGLE'ISIKADO” Fee Isle m f* * r Peeler Made le five trade* Am f o * mtt tiLim/ nm u with the red band ■' .lAfltJB MIKADO ■. E A G L E P E N C IL C O M P A N Y * N E W Y O R K The Codarville Herald KARLH BULL - - ‘ EDITOR i r ! Entered at the Post-Office, Cedar* ; viile, O., October 31, 1887, as second class matter, FRIDAY, MARCH 0, 1923. THE SWEETEST MUSIC A wealthy man residing in an ex* elusive apartment house recently cs* tablished the custom of bringing groups o f city poor children to his place and turning them loose in his quarters as only children can do to enjoythem3dves, A number o f the nerve-racked fashionable dwellers in the apartment house soon joined in a petition, to have the nuisance stop­ ped. When haled into court, the lover of children observed: “ There is no court in the land that can check a child's laughter", .The Judge Relieved and agreed with him, but sustained the rights o f the petitioners and thc- children’s parties in that particular location were forbidden,- • We love the glorious music o f the great composers—it i s » something caught from the source o f Divinity; but we,- perhaps the most of us, bet­ ter love the sweet and simple melodies which, bubbling from the heart, issue from the lips o f children to an ac- companient of echoing laughter. The singing of children, and their happy laughter—what would this world-be without them ? A hell so sad that other tortures would serve as a welcome relief to doomed soulsl The child-loving philosophy of the city flat was right. Singing and laugh­ ter. give happiness not alone tp the youth that sings and laughs, but to all hearts that ye&rn for happiness, sure­ ly to all aching, despairing hearts. But such-music is not appreciated by the selfish residents o f a fashionable, apartment house. In the memory o f every normal in­ dividual must live the songs and laugh -er of innocent childhood, the mother songs—soft lullabies which mingle vvith the flickering firelight o f winter eves, woo tired eyes to close until the sandman on his dream ship comes to bear the sleeper away, away through spaiesoent song-haunted seas, where care never was, nor grief, nor pain. No, there is no court in the land can hush the laughter o f a child, or still die mother's crooning lullaby. But courts can move these blessings be­ yond walls infested by crusty, crabbed shrivelled souls. THE WEATHER Tiie weather furnishes the best top*. ic fo r diversion of conversation o f! anything we know of. ’ When people tire o f disucssing the League of Nations, the, tariff, Con­ gress or taxation matter.'*, they can always have a ready subject in the weather. And the month of March is the best o f the year fo r changes, One day we have the welcome sunshine only to be followed by chilly blasts and snow. It may or may not come in liko a lion that seems to have no bearing, in fact no more than the appearance o f Mr. Ground Hog on February 2. We have this consuiation in March, We know that with it the winter is disappearing .and that spring cannot be many days away. — .-.-v.'-vy*. a,. A New Turk Law—. j The Turks have made marriage com -' pulsory. Someday bachelors m this - country will he put under control, J 9 m » Why Not Get Help Next T im e - B ill--“ Have you ever seen me with more than I could carry." Will—“No, but I've seen you when I thought you should have made two trips fo r your load." OHIO AND REFORM Ohio is regarded in and out of the- state as one o f the most advanced in thought and progressive ideas o f any in the Union, To this all Ohioans -will readily agree. But if we look on the other side o f-a situation not always considered, Ohio evidently must be the most cor­ rupt state in the Union. As a state of reforms and reform organizations no • state has move o f them than Ohio. The Other day the Ohio Prison Re­ form Association met recently in Oberlin and the resolutions passed have been widely published over the state. Some o f the recommendations we would say are good others are de- cidly bad. . •.* First the death penalty should he abolished. Another was that the in­ determinate sentence should be" Used for all crimes. This resolution is de* cidedly bad. For the past five years Ohio has been reaping a harvest of crime more from the use o f the inde­ terminate sentence •than anything else. A prisoner is sent up ’and by a few months o f good behavior and a political pull or a shrewd lawyer on the job and the prisoner is out ready to play his trade again and society has to stand for it. Reform organisations have to have something to reform. The more o f these fellow's at liberty the more the reformer impresses on the public the necessity o f such organizations. Wo do not say it in every, case but- in a large per cent o f these organizations the salary is the most attractive part of the work. That probably ans­ wers the reason why we have so many reform organizations. I f the list o f all in this state who are drawing fa t sal­ aries that, are connected with these organizations were published, the con­ clusion would be reached that Ohio was the worst state in the Union. Not so—Ohio is only a fertile field for professional grafting of- fa t sal­ aries. SHOCK ABSORBERS Work with tho Fort’ spring*— not against them, '/he “ third spring" checks the *aboundand slops the side*sway. Save tires, fuel, and car depreciation. Mod* orate in price. EHelrllatort R. A. MURDOCK,' C*darville,»nd Jamestown \ j > tecleJetertAsh A M an S hows HORSE <?g/vS & BY AIOT /NDUUSlN IN A t,OT 0 ‘ HOI? <55 TALK . / LUNGARDIA FOR COUGHS AND COLDS The quicker you can remove a Cough or Cold, the better. Deep-seated ones are a menace to Mie Lungs. I f LUN­ GARDIA is not better and does not act quicker in Coughs and Colds of all kinds, sere throat, difficult breath ing spasmodic Croup, and for the re lief o f Whooping Cough,—your money back. Use it to ward off Influenza, Thousands praise LUNGARDIA. For sale by C, M, Ridgway. Poison Gas is Solidified, "Poison gas" can be made so solid that each soldier could carry a cauls- ter of It in Ids pack. 5 fo M ON EY FOR FARM LOAN S IS HERE • it Thirty Five Million dollars o f Insurance money to loan on Farm mortgages at 5% . Will loan up to $80.00 per acre on the best farms. Must be nice well located farms. Interest either anually or semi-annually, $100.00 payments accepted. W . JL CLEM ANS , Agent 0 . lutf'WWf. HE’LL GO FIFTH— Where are you- going my pretty maid? I ’m going forth to bathe, said she. Where are you going, fresh young ■sir? ■. ■■. r ■ Me? I .think I ’ll go fifth, said he, f ' * -* Half Against a Half— It is said'that one half o f the world does not know how the other half lives. It now looks as if one half does not care what the other half thinks o f its' way o f living, - m . m Every Little "Movement— • t Minister—Would you care to join us in a rtew missionary movement? May— I am crazy to try it;, is it anything^like the fox trot? * * -m - ■' You Get the Pain— Under present prices when you go to buy glass fo r your window, you get a nain. The Poor Fish— The sunfish plays in the water, The. starfish rests in the sand, The flying fish uses- the atmosphere,' And the poor fish walk on land. ■ * - * * '* • [How, Old Is Aunty A Aunty was explaining to little Harold the story about Columbus dis­ covering America and ended it with: “ And all this happened over four hundred years ago." • Harold, his eyes wide open with wonder,said after a moment’s though, “ Gosh, aunty, what a memory you have." Who Would Think That— The Woolworlli building is a book o f many stories. That Marshall Field was ;a general. That air-brakes are part o f a f i l ­ ing machine. That Farm Bloc is an overgrown city square. That Easter is an .annual European poultry show. Ynd that Lent is a European loan. I t s M i h a t y o u p u t i n i t s “n o s e b a g ’ t h a t c o u n t s W ith the power o f today as with the power o f yesterday—its what you put in the nose bag that gets results. Better feed means better w ork -be tter fuel, better all round 'motor performance. . Instant-starting, fu ll-pow er Columbus Gasoline, means more energy-producing fuel for your m otor—a “ nose bag fu llo t more motor vigor —more o f that mgnt air” pep every mile your car travels. Load up today w ith Columbus Gasoline. Get the best out o f your motor and enjoy v all ’round top-notch motor performance every day o f the year. "0 Gasoline i •*. Columbus Oil Company COLUMBUS C-12 .OHIO Distributed Locally by CEDAIIVILLE DISTRIBUTING J5TAR- BIRD & SONS CO. Miller Street and Penny. Ry, M. C. NAGLEY Telephone No. 146. > C. E. MASTER^ R. A. MURDOCK [ W. W. TROUTE Save for Old Age But three men in every hundred are self-supporting or “ financially fixed” at 65 years, according to statistics. Are you to be one o f the three or one o f the 97? Now is the time to de­ cide. Answer by opening a Savings Account in this Association now. We pay 6 per cent interest, compounded semi-annually, and your small begin­ ning will soon grow to such propor­ tions as will mean independence fo r you. Tiie Cedarville Building & Loan Association B urpee * J ohnson Co >w m a n u o l 'i , I, ;. ,1. IS YOUR BUSINESS A SUCC ESS? Fine stationery is a big aid toBusiness. Printing f ine stationery is our specialty.

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