The Cedarville Herald, Volume 47, Numbers 27-52
m irn j m nwwp, m w w i The Criterion’s Final Reductions on our entire stock o f Men's and Young Men’s 3 piece Su Is, Many in good year round weights * Values up to $32.30 reduced to .50 Values up to $40.00 reduced to ,.50 Values up to $55,00 reduced* to .50 BOYS' SCHOOL S P E C IA L S - 500 Boys’ Blouse Waists on sale at. 25 Doz. Boys’ Shirts on sale at 9 5 c $1 .25 , $1 .95 , $2 .65 Boys’ School Suits at Special Reductions lira. ')> "A sStcufcfo 2 )a d a n d tfa 22 S. Detroit Street, Xenia, Ohio ISliERI _£_w ’ - < Bread. ■P loaf. .. »' >4 .1 t 4 . ■ m*- COUNTRY CLUB ,24 i-2- lb. Sack __ Large Ripe Bruit, “ 3 lbs. for .. , PALMvOU V E *9 3' bars CRACKERS, Soda or Butter, lb. .. J 10c (BEANS, Country’ j Club, can ........... 8c MACAROON s a a p s ; lb. .. COCOANUT Taffys, lb. , . . . . *. 19c 19c VANILLA Wafers, l b . . . . . . . MILK, COUNTRY CL Large Can ................. 8C G INGER ALE,' 1 n r Bathesda, bottle. SOAP,Crystal White Q O p 10 bars . . . . . . . . . . « 5 0U STAR Powder, 4 a p a c k a g e . .......... MASON JARS, 7 Q r pint, 69c, qts. doz* * * * CHEESE, Fancy Cream, lb. 25c SALMON, Alaska, *1 if A 1 lb. can .......... JELLY Glasses, with Tops, doz T IN CANS, Star Brand, d o z . . . . 35C 59c AUGUST SPECIALS Auto Shopping Baskets (hickory) good for car rying Picnic dinners. Clothes Baskets, Clothe s Pins; Brass Wash Boards, Wringers, Washing Machines. Kitchen Utensils, Aluminum, Granite and Tin Ware, Fiber Lunch Boxes and School Dinner Pails, Kitchen Floor Mops (linen thread). Garbage Cans, Ice Cream Freezers, Ice Picks, Tin Fruit Cans, Sealing Wax* Mason ja r Caps and Rubbers. , ■. Window screens and screen wire. Tires, Tubes, Auto Accessories, Electric Supplies, Gas Fittings, etc, Alt kinds of repair work promptly done Look ahead for Christmas! We give and redeem U, S. Trading Stamps, Sensible Spending Substantial Saving A. E. Huey Hdwe. Co. ✓ TRY OUR ?OB PRINTING The Cedar v\!A Herakj KAULH BULL * - EDITOR Enter*! at tb* Poat-Ofitoa, Cadar- ville, 0., October 31, 188?, aa ascend ulnss”matter. • Frill LAY, AIT JUST 29 E24. CAN'T HOLD IT It is a long long way from gra^s to hay, and it is the ever lasting grind that puts irk and beansTon your table. Once in a while you hear Johnnie Smart ■has made a killing in the stock ! market and closed out at a big j profit* Maybe he did. Morelikely j he didn't. But if he did the the money won’t do him' any good. Money not honestly earn ed- --cash not earnestly worked for, is counterfeit. It has wings, o f an eagle. You can no more hold it than you can hold a wild cat with your bare hands. That’s bunk,you say? All right, now sit down and go over the family fortunes you have known. Think of the people you actually know who have had speculative suc cess, or -gained dishonest profits, by misrepresentation, who ha<’e their winnings any length o f time, , • ENFORCE THE LAW,. There is a law whereby a school teacher that resigns after .the first of August, .can be kept from teaching.in any other school in the state,, for a year, The object of the law was to check wholesale resignations just previous to school opening. The local board now has two places to fill at a time when the choice .of teachers is impossible without disturbing some other teaching force. Tt looks like the 'oral board would be justified in enforcing th.e provisions of the law for protection if for nothing else. The teacher's contract is all onesided. The teacher can force he board-to terms but" it looks ike the board is helpless. Teachers that resign after the irst of August should- lie given to understand what the .law is for. Messrs' Q .'L . Smith and \Ym. frame left Tuesday for Kansas •Tty, to purchase feeding cattle. \Ye learn that Miss. Ruth Pat- ;pn, assistant principal of the high school has resigned her pas sion. This makes.two vacancies the board- has been called uponto fill within the past ten days. Miss Aileen Cultice, who has been in poor health, hSa been re-’ moved to Dayton for treatment at t hospital in that city. Banner Morgan was bound oyer to the grand jury tinder a '$300 fi Dad yesterday to await the ac.- 1ion of the grand jury. , ' NAT REISS SHOWS OPEN ' IN XENIA FOR EAGLES All new and clean equipment’ mdnew riding devices, mark the appearance of the Nat Reiss Show .in Xenia all this week under the auspices of the Xdnia Aerie, Fra ternal Order of Eagles. Among the attractions are Sweet’s- Bar, a Real Wild West Show which in cludes twenty bronchos with In dians. cow boys apd cow girls; a Minstrel show, carrying a num ber of artistsin this type of a- musement; the Box of Fun; the Motordome and many others. . Popular riding devices are the Caterpillar, the Merry Mix-up, 2 fern's wheels, aWliip and the old time-honored merry-go- round. Eagles.hope to swell their ath letic fund through profits ; of the amusement during this week. The Nat Reiss shows are loca ted at the old Reserve Park,Cin cinnati avenue in Xenia. You are missing something good if you do not attend this great show. Floating Factory Ono of the Norwegian whaling com panies established a floating factory aild two whalers off the coast of An gola last year when they were unable to ohtnln it land concession. The flouting factory without fixed base has , o wider field and may prove, It Is said, to be the method used in the tthaHnc of the future. Deepest Hoick The deepest hole In the world Is no! In Gemes, fit-axil, according to pops bn belief, but Is located In Marlon comity. West Virginia, near the cMj Of falrmont; Its depth IS 7,5711 fee;, tuld H descends, frojn an altitude of about t.Oiiii feet. The second deepest ; hole lu tlie earth Is In Uarrisim conn i ty, West Virginia; depth, T.T.'i fret •Th>fi;> Holes were diilted for natural ! gaa. Unprofitable Transaction A deaf titan went Into n butcher shop and Inquired the price of a large bone, which ho thoii,f;ld would do to moke soup. "Oh, rn give you t h a t s a i d the butcher, The customer did not catch the butcher's reply, •‘Can’t you take something off?" he asked querulously, 'Tvs,” said the butcher, "yon can have It for 23 centsT Outstanding Exception Ordinarily a woman Is afraid of a mouse, but not If she promised to love, honor and oHy him,—Nelson News, i: P a i n t e d T b i r Way to Bright Future Ahead H . .. , , , , , | By GEORGE ELMER COBB 1 1®. l»3t. We#t«m Ntiw»p»!Kr Union.J A l an DEANE felt in harmony with the world as he left ihe little tine-embowered cottage, where the treasure o f hie heart was bestowed - Edna Wilton. Alan wuH something of an artist. I-’or a few months he aa«J|ited a scenic- artist in getting up the scenes for a grand spectacular drarnu. Title led to hi* Introduction lo a suc cessful manufacturer, who was wak ing a speelulty of bis celebrated "Tied Rose Soup.” The man hud got the Idea of'advertising the sumo on all the cliff sides be-could And In Idaho. The more Inaccessible,the place, the more daring the feat o f thus giving his soap publicity, the more liberally’ was he willing to pay, ; With all arranged and a surety of' good money ahead, Alan went to Ednpj and proposed. He .had hesitated he-i fore because there was a rival In the, field. There was one Burt ltldgeway.j Edna . had entirely disabused Alan's’; mind of the fear that she ever dreamed' of Ridgeway as a possible suitor. . So lie was very h'sppy as he left the Wilton home In ;the early twilight., Suddenly, at a lonely spot, he heard a suspicious rustle, then quick footsteps.* Alan turned just as some one fairly* leaped upon him. j “Ridgeway, I’ve found you at last!"{ wttB hissed In his ear- '' » Alan- was' strong, his assailant no match for him. He twisted free of his feeble dutch, .gave the man « puslp and the latter fell to .the ground. i “0h, I've jnade a mistake,” lie said,1 quickly, regarding Alan, more clearly. \ “It seems so,’’, repried Alan,’ vritu; curiosity'and pity commingled, regard-' Ingjils assailant, “ You spoke the name of Ridgeway, though. Were yotMook-- Ing for him? and Is It Burt Hldgewuy' you mean?" : "Yes It Is. I’ve been watching to I'ome ncross him.” r. “Well, Ridgeway Is away from the,- "own; has been for-a week,” explained Alan. “ You didn’t have a very friend-.' ly welcome waiting far Wm. It seems,” , he intimated. “That’s not my busi ness, though, See here, my man,” added Alan, as the other arose and, in trying to keep his feet, staggered somewhat as though from sheer weak ness. “you look and net as If you need ed help.” ; Alan was surprised, us the man, In stead of replying In words, turned away from hint anti, leaning against a tree, sobbed out Incoherently some thing about “a great, wrong” somebody Itad done to him—“ disgrace,” "ruin," a-long tramp,,the need ot foot* and shelter. . ‘ , Through It all ran a secret, hitter strain connected vagrtely wi th,Ridge way, but the man did not explain fur* . ther, Alan, in- a kindly, considerate way, made a proffer of assistance. The result was wretch; was comfortably housed' at the little1hotel in the village that night. When Alan started opt on hie unique painting trip, the stranger, who wpb named Jim Prevoast, accompanied mm. Dpring n,month bright, Cheering let ters followed Alan in his wilderness course. Then, although he wrote regu larly, there came .no replies. One afternoon Alan nnd Ida com panion bnd been working, since day-, iirenk on a particularly perilous un dertaking, Alqn had left Prevoast to put on the finishing touches and had gone to the near settlement to arrange for the removdl o f their traps. Returning, Ills heart stood still as lie neared -the cliff. A matt was hack ing at the ropes sustaining the frail platform a hundred feet dawn. He sawed them through; there was a crash below—n blood-curdling shriek. "Burt Ridgeway 1" exclafmcd Alan, in amazement and horrdr, and rushed at tike villain..The latter, unnerved, as tliough he saw the wraith o f the man lie had Intended to plunge to bis doom, went down like a shot, ns Alan lilt him, his head striking a rock, - There lie lay senseless. Alan peered over the. edge of the cliff. Clluglbg to a trailing cable, swinging to and fro was hts helper. It was the work of a moment to de scend, to venture down the swaying cable till Prevoast could climb over him. Alan insisted that the terrified Prevoast precede him to the cliff top. When lie arrived there he found Pre voast bending over the Insensible man, his hands full o f papers, "The coward! the murderer 1” cried Prevoast forcibly. "He sought to mur der you, to get you out of the way, so he could win your young lady, for see, I have found some of your letters itt his pocket, Which lie-riiuat have In tercepted. Documents, too, that will aid and clear me o f a crime Imputed to me, which made of me u fugitive and of which he was solely guilty. One month later, armed with a writ ten confession from Ridgeway and the knave eliminated from their lives, Alan and Prevoast completed their strange trip. The one wtrdltd to - the bedntlful girl he so loved, for the other, the matt whom Alan Deane had so unself ishly defended, the dark pnst cleared; there whs to both a bright, promising future ahead. Building’ s Many Tenants The 13,000 tenants of the Equitable bulldlug in New York city require twenty subway ti-nlns o f ton cars each tally, , 1 This Slipped By “1 may be down but I’m nut out, thought the runner as he safely alld Into third.—Aggie Squib, Hibernating Animals Among the mammals which hiberaat* are the dormouse, badger, bat and hamster, A numbar are incomplete hlberttators, as the prairie dog a#d squirrels, asSET AND HE USED TO BE SUCH APET - - - - - - - — - * # J * T+f * an ' i -D on ' t fcVBN GET A 5M E L L I fn i \ ■ovA>S$W*SES5> riiarii Mill Dr, K. Ri Gel poses Mis been i is not Re\ of Ne relain For qualil, Plac ttt otic good „ Wat fore vi R. lrv ■Jt a : Y-iiv' . JobitiFenyStmes The Touring -Car $ Runabout . . . $265 PcmoaaufcURima andSuite,$S5extra Coup• > - • . $523 TudorSodom - •: 590 FardorStdaH . . 685 Atlprieoof.o.b,Dttrotl \ l 0 J f r i - ,nf ( J t m o s t D a r l v i n g C o n f i d e n c e Driving a Ford is so simple, and requires so little effort that you are free to de vote all your attention to .the problems o f traffic, There is a sense o f con fi dence in driving a Ford, impossible w ith any more complicated motor car. Detroit* M ichigan / •»’ ^ * S r ■ ■J- ' ■ ‘ 8BB TftE NEAREST AUTHORIZED FORD DEAtER 'b U.S.Royal Cords BALLOON - BALLOON-TYPE — H IC H PRESSURE Built o f Latex-treated Cords n n iR E building took a big step for- A ward when the makers o f United StatesTires invented the LatexProcess. The added strength and wearing quality given by Latex>treat 2 ;l cords i« something that the user o f Royal Cords can tell y ou about from his own experience. Royal Cords arc the standard o f value in cord tire equipment—even more certainly today than ever before. And this holds good whether you are considering a Hlglv-PrcssureTirc, aBalloon* TypeTire tofityourpresentwheelsamlrim*, o r* BalloonTire fora2G or 21 inch wheel UnitedStatesFres amGoodTlras ■Hindkr Bay U.S. Tire* from r *JnUMnK ServiceHardwareCompany
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