The Cedarville Herald, Volume 46, Numbers 1-26
a * K R O G E R ’S FOR REGULAR EVERY DAY LOW PRICES pte^i^e&c^’“iK“ 33c m Leif*C m *,. Ptoc^ppifi ... . . . 24 c Crafodi FfoeapphNo. 2 can 17cDei Montebig can,. ........ . . . 35c PlTCrSWl^tS fa"1?**Strawberry, Blackberry, Rasp- 2 0 c fcn^TJfy 0 - 11? # 0m i£ elJ3*38 at. 1737172^. PURE IRUITJEfa^ Al[flavoi^unce glass , „ . , ‘I: .'. fU E IT G ir Wisconsin Cream lb, . , . . . . . . . . ,29e V f l& b u E i Brick cheese lb. 34c. Kraft Pimento. .39c Kraft Swiss lb .» ........ ..... ........................... . .45c CRACKERS ...... 14c D r a a if l Country Club great big l l l t f c t t l 24 oz. loaf............................ 8 1-2 B U T T E D Coutry Club Fresh Churned C*|« p i l l I Jen, p ound .......................................... D&I a lGGS&f?T:h.!....., ... ......, 23 c P A o r h A C Del Monte in heavy syrup can .. . ,27c r v d v l l v o Avondale big can . ..................... , 19c r n f f a o Fresh roasted, French Brand lb,............ 35c v U l l t v Jewel-Bourbon Santos lb . , ..................... 27c t SpecialSantos, pound ..................... , . ..................... 22c Country Club Tiny Can.......... . . . ,25c M ^ 6 2 I S ^ountr^ Club Sifted Can............. .49c Cliften c a n . J 3 c 3tandard can........... 12c fc Country Club extra fancy, c a n 15c Avondale country gentleman can . ..:1 2 c *Clifton can 10c Standard..................... 8c MACKEREL Genuine Norwegian, large meaty 7 1-2c C m I mam ** DelMonte red, lb ............................. .25c M m II x IOH Pink Alaska 1 lb. can.................\ . . . . 12c SARDINES in oil can 5 3-4c, Mustard sardines, ,10c C -iw -,-, 25 lb. cotton sack........................... ,d»«l QA O U g a r Bulk 4 pounds 3Sc ‘ «p«*OD ■ • t Q - . „ 12 bars to cartonn , . C J _ o r y 5 o a p 3 bars;/i 4 C__________5 4 c Crystal white or Kirks 10 bars,............... -45c Fels Naptha bar 5c P. & G. Naptha bar. .5c PRUNES Large sunsweet, lb. 17c, Sunsweet sm. lb 25c EVAPORATED PEACHES Per pound................. 17c MILK Country Club highest quality, pure 3 cans 29c €• J Genuine Red. River Ohio buy d e e d r o t a t o e s nowBushel . . . . , . . . . . $ 1 . 15 . ............................ ""...■Il,.li" .....■■- ■"T"1."..n>‘»............. ...................... 1 ; i n p i UQ Greenings eating or cooking 4 fr lbs »* . . . . . . . . 25c WONDERMASH Arcady 100 lb. sack.,. . . . . . .$3.50 25 lb. sack . . I .......... . , .95c «** HI; THE UNIVERSAL CAR r v i # i ...Mo j *Si SALKS AND SERVICE A t te n t io n 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 me same high quality, specially heat- treated alloy steels specified in Ford formulas for the manufacture o f GEN UINE FORD FARTS. Docrt'b*mbfed-Instst uponGENUINEFORD PARTS ixttde by the Ford Motor Company. By *o doing you will get from 35 to 100 per cent more wear from them, and you will pay the lowest poeeibiecost—themme everywhere. m % OF GENUINE FORD PARTS RETAIL FOR LESS T F . a N 10 c EACH A ll t for Part* Price List Whan your Ford Car, or Fordaon tractorneed* «ut*Rtlcu,adl outut. Forrememberwe areprop erly•qaip-ped* employ competentmechanics,arid u*» Gtmrfm* Ford and Fordsou parti la all R.A.Murdock * 'H ie CadarviUe H m l f ; KAKLH BULL - - EDITOR "A c t e j Entered at the Poat-Ofitaa, Cedar- j villa, 0., October 31, 1387* as second '■ ciaM matter. FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1823 tw en ty - four cents a bu shel “I got 24 cents a bushel. What did you give?” is the message a Michigan grower pinned to a potato. The Vir ginia woman who found it paid $1.20 a bushel. The Outlook tells of a Ncrth- jjakota farmer who shipped four car loads of potatoes, which were sold at 80 cents per hundredweight gross, for a total of $330. Of this sum the rail road received $180.00 as freight charges, the commission merchant re tained $42 and various other items accounted fpr $110 more, What the farmer received for his car Was a check for $1,301 These instances speak volumes—> explain agrarian restlessness and the agricultural block, point the ar- gumenf for co-operative marketing state the provocation for the recent farm credits legislation. It is hard to determine the remdy for a con dition so thoroughly unwholesome in an industry basic beyond all others. tVhat seems to be suggested’ is that the day .when foodstuffs, certain food stuffs, can be marketed at a distance at a profit is passing, that the eco noxnic interdependence of - sections carries grave drawbacks, and that exchanges may need to be confined to smaller areas, each of which shall oe largely self-sufficing, —Giricinnh- nati Times-Star. The above Is but one of many, such stories appearing in the public prints that tell’ of how little, the farmer gets for his produce. The- houses, of con gress as well as our state legisla tures are over' crowded with paid lobbyists of all sorts of reform or ganizations seeking laws for this apd that, which in the main are only organizations officered by men and women who are making their living on keeping* the temperment of the people to their liking. Meantime the stock’ exchanges and other boards are going merrily on gambling on food products as well as leather, steel, lumber, cement and the necessities of live. These gamb lers know that legislation cannot be passed to reach this Sort of thing as long as these so-caller reformers are before the public.* \ Congress has been largely under the control of the “Farm Bloc” yet there is mightly little that has been done to help the farmer other than lending him money on security as good or better than his home town oanker would ask. The real business o f the farmer and in fact the nation is suffering because certain selfish interests are continually in the way demanding old age pensions, maturnity bills and a thousand other things that have the tinge o f nothing but Socialism, pure and simple. ; . When the farmer learns that these leeches .have more of an interest in hia pocketbook than in his crops and what he is to receive for them, they will be kicked, from our legislative halls. , • Some of Us Know It. A curtain lecture Is worth all the sermons in the world for teaching the virtue of patience and long suffering. —-Washington Irving. < Error In Education. In frying to teach children a great deaf in a short time, they are treated not as though the race they were to run was for life, but simply a three- mile heat-—Horace Mann. ,Trip happiness is the aim ■ JL human beings why not dope’ otrt What brings it into- our lives, and’having found out turn our selves into a bunch of go-getters. We might as well work for the thing worth-while since we hate to work anyhow. Perhaps the greatest measure ^of happiness comes from per- itsonal achievement. 11 « We’re all stuck on ourselves.* Ia Very well then, let us achieve. wCan’t be done, says you? Non-J * sense. There is always some- 1 thing a man can do perfectly. IfJ he can’t play the harp lie can_ tackle the five string banjo, but’ let him learn to play the instru-* ment bo perfectly no man can*; saythe in handing out Jazz and* trying to pa|m it off as Bee-1 thoven. * r P S P * ; i f » “THINK TWICE” Ww you have your eyes examin ed V a Dentist? Our Optometrist has had 4 years University training in the Optical .jdenee. Optical Co. 4i S. Fountain avo Springfiel d* 0. m MfttYsR. how S mart th » othmv Pi i.L0WIJ?HR OQiStir K/WJV0 ASf much a s you pa a b o u t wh * © i YOUR, SHO* H PlHCHSSl C. E. Moore, of Coshocton, O., had a bull, ar.u the bull bad cooties, To kill thorn, Micro painted the bull with coal oil. The bull walked too close to a linn kiln and his hide burst into ffames. Ihen the bull plunged unde a strawstr.ck, 'When least heard o. [the cooties were gone—so were the I Jstrawstack and the bull. ..Easter Novelties.. Miss Grace Lyle of Arkansas, for- j mer student;.}fc the college, has been visiting friends hero the past week. If You Like It Say So— • If you like a thing, say So. I f you do not like a thing, say so. Try not to say, “Well, I don’t know Maybe it’s all right. • * * • At His W o rd - Hardware Dealer. “ Say, Jonc-s, when are you going to pay for that corn sheller?” Farmer Jones: “Humf—You said it would pay foritselfin nine months,” * * * The Reason Why— Say Bob, can you tell me why women are cleaner mfnded than men? Suro, that’s easy. They change it' oftrier. m■ .- ' • Revenge— “Willie, if you don’t be good I’ll lock- you in the Chicken coop with the chickens.” “ You can lock me Up in there but you can’t make me. lay." *. . j* . Summer Is Coming-— A trade journal says that all shoe prices are rising.; * .Why worry over that—summer is coming. No reason for -low shoes be ing higher, * *. • . • For the Movies— - / A San Francisco- nian is seeking his seventh divorce. He should enter the movies. . * • A Long Term Loan— If one’s a ten spot in his pay .. That he will kindly loan us, We’ll pay it back the very day The soldiers get their bonus. *, A ” * ’ Sab. for the Movers— Old King Tut never lived, to see the day—but he’s had his furniture mov ed carefully at last. ’ . "U.-.V * who Would Think— That King Tut was a hipvie star.' That Long Island Sound is made with fog horns, > That Sing Sing, is a grand opera production. That Liverpool is a Swimming tank. That the*.“pen” was taken from Pertfield. j At Least One of the Cauies, j Every year, sees one-time luxuries , added to our list of necessities. That IIs the main cause of, the high eost of ] living, directly as well as Indirectly.— |Exchange. Not Well to Be Too Observing. A person who is too nice an observer of the business, of the crowd, like one who is too close in observing the labor ; of the bees, will often be stung for his curiosity.—Pope. Quick Action of Pianist. An expert pianist has to cultivate his eye so ns to- see 1,500 notes op signs In a minute, while his fingers make a't‘ least 2,000 movements in the same space of time, It Pays to Buy the Best None better than what WE make* Perm it we to convince' you, by placing your order fo r a decor ated Easter Egg, We also have a fu ll line o f jelly and marsh mallow eggs and pretty boskets filled w ith a n ice assortment that will please the kiddies. Leave your order early for your decorated eggs and let us put the desired name on them free* KERR’S Sweet Shoppe it Astubhom motormaybe dueto stubborngas . ' A stubborn obstinate mule has nothing on the motor, that’s been imposed upon by a logy, lifeless gasoline. J t ’s a hard starting “ animal” . .Cold weather adds enough to the difficu lties o f" f starting, even with good gasoline. Columbus Gas- ° ; oline tames the stubborn mulish m otor in short order. Too little thought is given to the selection o f a pure, all-power fuel like Columbus' Gasoline. Use it ones* After that you ’d drive a iong way to . get Columbus Gas. But you wonH need: to—fill in g stations are conveniently located. Commence today to take the “ mule” ou t o f your car with a peppy, powerful tank fu ll o f Columbus Gasoline. W ho , hau » 00 16^ p Walter Slokes, of Mahoney City, Pa,, quarreled ivith his wife. They ■decided to part, and agreed to di vide the furniture 50-50. Mrs, Slokes called the police when Walter Started to saw the table in half. Q a s o l i n e Columbus Oil Company COLUMBUS C-13 OHIO Distributed Locally by A waiter in Chicago nearly died of > shock when eight-year-old Stanley, Gust left a $10.00 tip after a $.35 ! meal. Before a policeman could nab him, he disappeared. His father says Stanley ran away from homo and has six'more “ tips” left. CEDARVILLE DISTRIBUTING STA R. BIRD & SONS .CO. Miller Street and Penny. Ry. M. C. NAGLEY Telephone No. 146. C. E, MASTERS 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/yo,u to he one of the three or 'one of'the 07? Now is the time to de cide,1Answer by opening a Savings Account in tiiis 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 for you* yOUR TbeCedarvilie Building& to n Association *?>.* '“Jr.> One dollar deposited in a Savings-Ac count here gives you one of thea lib erty Bells to drop your odd change m. ?
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