The Cedarville Herald, Volume 50, Numbers 1-26

\mrn^r,m^ ..'iifc' ft- .iX. I^,f'v Buy your hose a t Mabley’s first quality onlyalways! SPORT HOSIERY Choose yours at Mabley’s and enjoy dis­ tinctive novelty effects. Colorful checks and jacquard patterns In sports-like lisle and rayonmixtures. ALL-SILK HOSIERY All-silk.top-to-toc, semi-chiffon' weight. Flesh pink, pearl blush, sunset, French ■nude, Aloma, auburn, piping rock, Al­ gerian, gunmetal,and‘cvenglow. • FINE RAYON HOSIERY Stockings noted for tjieir lustre and lasting'wearing qualities. In beautiful colorings. French nude,*Alesan, gurt- \ metal, grain, peach arid shadow. $ $ 1 1 4 8 acK v IMPORTED LISLE HOSE —withpointed heels, (a special style fea- jture); full-fashioned, and very shape!v A broad selection of colors and Out sizes, too. v LISLE HOSIERY You'll like It for many Occasions and here's an- excellent variety o f Wanted shades irt splendidquality. Out sizes also at 59c $ ■ ■v.i 1 ;BLUE MOON SILK HOSIERY jSfewspring shades , alsdhlae\andwhite At ip X * v J Moon SilkHosiery, lightweight, Full fashioned j lisletop* and sole. Splendid wear­ ing quality.' ke $1 .75 Silk H osiery, ch iffon weight?,4 Inch lisle band; full fashioned; new spring colors. At $1 .85 S ilk H osiery , medium weight silk,’' 4 inch lisle band and lisle soles. Every pair full fashioned. Q C — Extra f j n c Blue.Moon Silk Hosiery, c h i f f o n and s e r v i c e weights (all silk from top to toe.) Outsizes, service’weight ?1.95 I f you cannot coma to the store, o u r j Personal Shopper, Norma Fay, will j . buy for you. Write to her. • J • *». ■* ■ a g o q d a t O r e ■ FifthandVlh#Sts.. -CINCINNATI FountainSqu»i* ! , Pringle’s Meat Market MHSBBBBSnMKSBMnBHVBMBEBBI0BHHEEES3)IBHS>BHnBPKBElBan^S3Sa33SSS3S335S^0S&SSS3SaEC3S7. Prices Slashed on Meats and Groceries STEAKS—Round, Loin, Porterhouse 30e lb. ROASTS- Chuck or Rib.... ...................20c lb. BOILINGMEAT— Beef....... ............ ... 15c lb. HAMBERGER— .. ................. : 20c lb. PORK—Fresh Ham............................... 30c lb. PORK CHOPS— ........................................ 30clb. FRESH SHOULDER -.............. : 25c lb. SAUSAGE— .................... 20e lb. LARD— .................................................. 16c lb. FRESH PORK SIDEMEAT....,......... 25c lb. 1 BREAKFAST BACON-Sliced.........35c lb. HARDWATER SOAP-4 fo r ....................25c POTATOES-per peck.......... ......... 50c BAKED BEANS—High Grade per can.... 9c TOMATOES—Big Can............................... 15c Leaf Lettiee, Celery and Fruits ■ WE PAY HIGHEST PRICE FOR EGGS- Get l* '* i-'-'A r.Tsy, In . *■ hit* . ‘ I during the /jujlr.'.-i j jt5r> ydif htveypyr reas/ortah,.! Automobiles. By Arthur Brisbane See America This Union Pacific “ Gold Cotu»fc Limited" is crossing from Wyoming* Into Utah, rolling over snow cov­ ered hills 7,000 feet high, ThiB is Teal American country, Colorado,. Montana, Idaho, tlja Da­ kotas, Oregon, WasliingttMi, Ne­ vada are your neighbors In this •part o f the world. . It lookB what it is-r-a great and powerful country. Straight walls o f stone, capped With pine trees, tower hundreds o f feet above you. Telephone and telegraph wires cross in all directions, Good auto­ mobile roaffs run beside the track. One stops at Salt Lake City to get acquainted with the Angel Mo­ roni and all the land that stretches ’around him. Moroni, very big In bright gold, stands above the tem­ ple built by Brigham Young, fo r “ Latter Day Saints." ■ dust across the way is ’ the Fed­ eral Reserve Bank, of solid .stone, and beyond towers the snow cov­ ered Oqurori Range, the Wealth o f the Utah copper mines hidden in it. Many things are as Brigham Young would have them and as he left them. , The Angel ■. Moroni ■doesn't suspect that the real au­ thority below is the Federal Re­ serve Bank, the gigantic' oopper mine on the mountain sides, and the big Union. Pacific Railroad. says all intelligent'human beings should see the famous “ Death Val­ ley-” For $42, covering all ex­ penses, you can spend- two days' 'motoring through the mysterious at a modem inn, built oh Furnace Creek. In Death Valley, you, stand oh the warm sand, far below, the ‘level o f the Pacific, and look to the west, at the white top o f Mount Whitney, highest peak m the Unit­ ed States, The trip must he made' between 3ias everything that anybody could want— you study brilliant colors o f the appropriately named "Funeral Range” on the awrt, and to the west the tall pana- ptals, Uncle Gam’s most precipi­ tous mountain range; rising from ^ 1& Valley/ more level, to a height o f 11,045 feet to the pen- patoal snow o f Telescope Peak. Picturesque and convincing are najnesL .Pln^®8 in that valley, once the bed o f an inland sea. Gold, silver, copper, onyx are in. those mountains. Many have died searching. What once were black molten o f lava Teach out into the as they poured down from volcanoes# (dead ages ago. You walk over plains' of salt a • hundred feet deep. Life is scarce there, a few snakes in Summer, ■ horned toads, the chuckwalla liz­ ard, eaten by the Panamint In­ dians. Above puzzled vultures soar, wondering why the automobile doesn't die, as the donkeys did. Brief and sufficient are the lines here and there on wooden' tomb- , stones, cracked by the heat, a name and “He Ran Out o f Water.” The Angel Gabriel has watched many struggles in that valley, when the temperature went to 140. Traditions tell o f Piute Indians, standing on the mountainsides, watching one party o f white men fall and die three hundred yards from a water hole. One survivor, Bennett, “ struggling to a spring, found a ledge of pure silver, broke ofiTa piece and when he reached civilization had it made into a rifle sight.” Many have tried to locate that “ gun-sight ledge" o f pure silver. You might find it. Not far away is a beautiful date aim ranch, 178 feet below sea evel. Anything will grow if .you give it enough' water. And across the Amargosa Des­ ert, you travel to the .“ Ghost City of Rhyolite.” Once it had a popu- > lation o f mote than 10,000, rail­ road stations, stores, dance halta, jail and church. All still stand at the foot o f Bullfrog Hill, church, jail, mills that ground.up orb from • the rich gold mine/, ail abandoned how. - This is an interesting country, marvelously fertile fields, all the climates and all the products o f the earth. Other Americans have pre- pamd theway fo r you. See America. 8 S CHOOLDAY S \& Spring Wall Paper In all the new designs and colors. Artistic papers for every room in the house. 4 % . COME IN AND GET OURPRICES - L. S. Barnes and Co. Phone 733 Green St. Xenia, O. TILTON’S STORE SQLD Plants PeettlfarHt** The swae plant, such as wheat, may be an annual if planted early and a Usdnlal if* planted late. {Similarly, plants aoeh as the castor oli bean, which arc* perennials in an equable climate, are often annual* where there far a whiter. - Documentary Evidence It doesnT aeein to do much real good to claim that youth and age are mere­ ly state* o f mind and we notice that photographs continue to bear the seme incontestable evidence as.of yore. S £V 'Where Savings are Safe** Paid on Deposits Cempouad*d S«Kti-Aa»umlly 20,000 Members Assets Over 10*4 M illion WEST SIDE BUILDING & LOAN ASSN. Three j a” 4 Dayton, Ohio. Offices: I (Established J887) •—TO B . A . IMM int Will be known as the. “Toggery Shop” “ Whora the Styles o f Tomorrow are Shewn Today." 12 Green St Xenia, O. We have doaens o f fine, high-grade used pianos, that were traded in on new Wurlitzer pianos during the Christmas rush. These pianos have been thoroughly gone Over and reconditioned by experts. Many have been entirely refinished and look brand new. There are several pianos included, that were used only as -■demonstrators. These pianos are occupying valuable floor apace as new merchandise is on the way, we must dispose o f them immediately. BIG PRICE GETS % KI ' ’ ■■■• ■■ . . . ....... Space does not perm it us to list ail the pianos offered in this! gigantic clearance— this partial list w ill give you some idea o f the unbelievable values to you. Sale starts tomorrow morning prom ptly at 9 o ’clock, $696,00 Milner Grand. friQE ft ft A demonstrator .......................... $wUUiUU ..$345,00 $445.00 Studio Player. Mahogany finish.> ,..,, ... $850.00Marshall &Wendell fin Player, mahogany finish,,.. .yvuuiUU : $595.00FaruyPlayer. Oak fin ish ............... $650.00 HalletA Davis f 1AQ fill « Player. Mahogany finish.,..^ it D i UU 1$676.tKl Kingston Player. ' ,#90Q fl(| ■Mahogany' finish. . . . . . ; . . $975,00MelvillbCltrkPlayer. tOCQ M Mahogany finish,.-............ .tpbOujiUU $545.00 Lingard Player. Mahogany finish. . $505.00 Strad Player. " Oak finish. $545.00 Ellwood Player. Oak fin ish ................ $305.00 Decker & Son Upright Piano $350.00 Wegman Upright Piano. Mahogany finish.... V $395.00 Starr Upright * Plano .......... $995.00 Electric Grand Pteyer, A demonstrator. * .•# moo $289.00 $249.00 $69.00 .$49 .0(1 mm $59510 F or homes With kiddies, What could bo 1more &|>pro- * priate thau one o f these pianos. Each instrument car­ ries the famous WUrlitxef g uarantee o f satisfaction, Xn a sale like this only seeing is believing, Itt O u r f i e s t i t ih i l S t o r e A t S . L u d lo w S t , \ , MM m

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