The Cedarville Herald, Volume 25, Numbers 27-52
i l ’z r - A.RVfLLE; OlJi0> ' f i ' H Mff. l;ulij;< York. ;in(j feoWatluw^t l^ics U u' t w M m w m h m v J Z ifvmail. „ v-to wrfy ou lfea i ^ t:ife JVi <-ollateral%eiu!tv 1<u' iklman, I>i-eaM ** _%1(h»a», Cashier, BEST ■ o# « » nw fc, aiHl stock /im*) ^1Ul flj **9® be. found #l ^ Si cat Store of * 9 lesyWeimer. together with m n thing to be found ft, “a. lirst-olns.^ uicut market A)so bundles fo 0 ^ hrated Swift Company's •Bams,' And eoiu'^Qim rani honest treatment goes w ith jho above. ’crod, ■ i«* • » ’t* ’ »■ Prosh Fish iunl Ice 1 and Dining Roms h and .Limestone street' Ohio, . . . ' , ' . ’ m&qm t c in n a t i Division. isyivaniaitinER) lecl Passenger Trains-CentralTime. a .jxoaijnsxi VMLI^A m X' a S!' :* 5 O}t? 50 i'' ’ ft..., §11 , 8 K> ■rs 3d8 33lt-13 r d l l : ; : v . fs ®fg ■•‘•jJfsisL .,,,.. 6 23 9.3^1156- S.,..q 9 42 ------ 5 46}3 69!’21S| ...... 10IT 10 31 2 SV <1 t*™i>3J5 27 ,.., . 34 9 07 !3Bl'M M. . . f l * 9 30 *,.,. ' 40 !,.... sr'Y 0210 1510 mo 2010„ lR.„J.... 10 f 53 i 9 42 954 10fW 9 * 10-2S . ,1 03 42 M l 18 57 , 1103,11 ___ ^ ; a ®72 75 5 40 j » I am <pat Ijrat1 11>M “ 4'535 ........ ... * * M V $ US TM [ | fl TS ffrm -zr ~t~ir £ b * I ? f9 39 8M i ’45 a 1 l I 0|*K i l S«i#wafefJOrraTfix 10,^25. *•1*1*4ij*«ts pMoguriramr^aM I®******■«&** ISOQiM I*1200»h- moiw ana Pitafturxtt t,r con- .•Ounth Tfntoa tjtatioa to and JH-j«Hrfnjtton, PWIafielphia Jfew, s , riot nm is t conned 'ImUMittpolia and st.Ldute; r Chicago. K, A, FORD, tntwnr&ire, throughUclcds, flid Xfarthw IxifottnAtton ie> &-M*rk,oHrUrred*»<! fa * - arfiMiSffi'ffii llttfctCf*. . 0tiii«atlp*tei — - - - - . . . erv t®ObMl#P*WB«,’, wjth; «U.S,iw?for«gtr eo&ito**] IOWA CO. twk, 0*?. How is yoar oppomity to get FELT BOOTS, FELT COMBINATIONS and RUBBER BOOTS below the market. We have made a purchase of over $4,000 in the above goods and we w ill put them on the market at wholesale price. Will save you 40c to 50c a pair. Bo not fail to see our Shoes at 95c, 1.25,1.50,1.95, and 9.50, Ho equal in this country for the money. , . STARKEY’S ARCADE SHOE HOUSE, SPRINGFIELD, 0 . JOBE STO R E N E W S W H O b H O T W H B W X t S I M M J A N S S K E D em ocra ts N ever M ade th e L aw or En forced ’It, A T om John son Denial T h a t I s an Evasion , K W r TH IS W EA TH ER Suggests them. W e haYe them, for you in a lm ost endless varieties and th e prices a re $ i , $1.50^, $2, $2,25 and. up to $3 each, i n ’ all the good F a ll colors. B lack Mercerized W a is ts $1 and $1.25. Black Mohair- Tail ored W aists , special, $2: F ap cy Yelvet W a is ts , very stylish, $5. .. 5 i t h ^Q la ir sfs, : i V ; ;> t - -; ■ . ; V / . E d u c e d to $2.98. They are remnants and were formerly $5, . /O n l y a few to sell a t th is p r ic e . . . ; .............................................. $2.98, J latittcileftefijewns. Nicely made, tastily trimmed, of the best of flanhelletts in six styles—three a t 75c each; and "three styles a t ;$i, .as .they are made of ioc outing flannels the price is low for ap~good style and q u a l i ty .. . • . ^ . UnderwearSpecial One table , of rem nan ts of Under- ’ wear,’ containing Boys1 and G irls’ Grey Fleeced Vests, Boys’ Ecru Ribbed D raw e r s ,. Lad ies’ Union Suits, Size 4. Probably 20 dozen in all, formerly worth up to 35c, all ’ reduced to 15c. Bress 0 oodsSpecial One tab le probably 30 pieces of Wool D ress Goods* mostly black, odds ...and ends: T hey formerly were 50c; 75a and $1. You can no t :, equal th em ' for school and house.' dresses. You select from th e table th i s week..... * * Jf * V 35 ° Eadies%HHsses’ andCWMrcn’sTUiNUrCloahs We Vaut.ta show yoti thia Fall because every garment in cur stock is rtew this season and we know the styles and prices are right, . Ladies’ All-wool Jackets, nev? styles S5. Misses’ All-wool Cloaks at $5, $6, $7.50, €8.50, $10 and up. Children’s Cloaks from $8 to $ 10, all prices between. .Morite Carlo Goats are the new-coats of the season We have ail excellent one mfldeof the best of matCriaL style just right, nt$12, We do-not believe it can be equaled f>r 815. - : ‘ ^ • ’ ‘ ' ' • - , ' v SfeeMKpariiaaM, Chilaren s School Shoes at $1,50 and $2, the kind that wear satisfactorily to both the parents and the Wearer. Ladies’ extra heavy solo winter weight shoe, special 81,50, would he cheap at S2. * & C0 XENIA The Intellectual Game. He never mastered algebra: ' He couldn’t use an a i or aaw: . . He wasn't much on spelling, and He had no knowledge ot the law: He never worked upon a farm ;, He thought potatoes grew oa treeaj To hint: a locomotive was A thing of fearful mysteries; He couldn’t-splloe a rOpa; he had , Ho knowledge Of the distant Star*, He didn't know the difference Between adagfos and bars; He was no linguist, and be found It hard to get his dally bread; . He was no statesman; he supposed That they were Greek* whom CeSsar led' He knew but llttl# poetry Aha of the Bible (even less; He couldn’t earn \Wn oents a week; .But; Mooed, l‘ How . M« t - could . BTay «'■■■■■ 'CB.e*«I- : ■^•CWoago Record-TleraMC Forty year*' forittre. To be relieved from a forturing dis ease after forty years’ torture might well cause the gratitude of anyoae. That i« what B eWitt’s Witod Hazel 8,dve rfifl for 0 , Habey, Genova, 0 , He says: .‘‘Howitt’s Witch Htusel Halve cured mt>of piles after I had suffered forty year*,” Cures outs, burns, woiuidfl, skin diseases,. Be ware of counterfeits. 0 . M. Btdg- way, Giant VfiTtres at Jirarf prices iff 1** dits and children’s underwear at McCorkellV Beware o f ointments for Catarrh Jh a Contain Mercury. ( . As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and conipletely derange the whole 'system when entering ft jthrotiglt the mucous surfaces. Such 'articlesshould never he used except on prescription from, reputable physi cians, a i the damage they will do is tenfold to the -good you cau possibly derive from them. Hall’s Catarrh Curd manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo,*0., contains no mercury, a' d is taken internally, acting directly Upon the blood and mucous surfaces ot the system, hr buying Hall's Ca tarrh Cure ho sure you get ihe genu ine,. I t is taken internally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F . J« Cheney & Co. Send for testimonials, free. Sold by druggist, 75c.. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. Shall the Honor of Our Soldier* Be " Sustained? Every peraon with a friend In the Philippine service of the American army know*' the truth as to that soldier, of all the abuse that none but Democrats, or their mugwump allies, have, heaped Upon these boys right out of our American homes, Not all Democrats have joined In this abuse.' Not even In congress did all Democrats take part in It, But as a party or ganization, the Democracy tried these tactics, until they discovered that they were arousing the wrath of the peo ple whose own boys these soldiers are* So a silence has spread over the land upon this subject But the atrocious attacks should not be suffer ed to slide out of sight Oar Ameri can soldiers are not thugs nor thieves, nor assassins nor murderers, ifof any other thing that they have been Call ed. Nor should their slanderers he encouraged by a vote from one friend of Our brave and noble citizens in arms. *®v® rBrwft- >ANC r w V ® w ' The Democratic party haver came - into power, without bringing disaster upon the country, aloe# the days of John V‘ Calhoun khd free trade, U m think this is too fefoad a state-', ikeflf, study up oh your- country’s iiie- loty.—BsllefontainS Republican,' . -i-ri,jig..... friifrniii>ii took Out for fever, IiiliouAtigm and llte f disorders at few season niHy be prevented V ^kstisifig-the system with DeWitrs Uttle Ksrly Risers, These famous Tfttle pills do not grips. The/ movd fee bowel.f gently, hut copioosl/i^nd »y reason of the ton ieproperd^ p i * .wneiind strength to tMgmtids. <. C. M, jftitlgwfy , . Animal Food, I t ia related o f an Irish coachman that his medical adviser, prescribed animat food as the best means of restoring health and activity. ’Tatnck," said he, “you’re run down a hitj thaFa all. What you need is animal food.” Remewber- jng his base a ietr days afterward, he called upon Rat a t the stable.- “Wall, Pat, said he, “how ate /o n getting on with the treatment ?” “Dh, share, ah/* Pat replied, “Oi. manage ail figh t with the grain and' Oats, but it’s mighty hard with the chopped ha/*” Amerlca’a Fameoa Beaatles* | : Look with horror on Skin Hrup- tons, Blotches, Soma slid Pifoplea. They don’t have them, nor will any one who usee Buokien e Arnica Solve. It, glorifies the free, Bwema or Salt Rheum vanish before it. I t mires tom lips, ohsbped hands, ehilWams. Infallible for Piles, 25c at Rldgway A Go’s, drug stor& \ Misree* deeco lined Jersey leggings, thenewstyle, nl MeGorkelTs, is m e m r A m h e i r ? Or le It a Trap For Tom?—A Demfr oratlc View. ■While Mr. Bryan has been declaring; for some time that he would not be a candidate, he has been Using his Ut most endeavors to create a situation that Would render hh#- uosjles-tloa fo* evitable. What cOuld be safer, assum ing that Mr* Bryan wants to head the caravan again in 1D01, than, to offer hie mantle to Tom h, Johnson and help him along toward the crushing, defeat that the voters of Ohio always have ready tor an Advocate or rotten money? Possibly Tom L/Johnson is puffed up with a hope of victory in this year’s campaign, but who can imagine Mr, Bryan carried AWaywith this delusion? Re ot all men shmiu. know vthat the adoption of ,.h!S plat form by Tom Johnson’s convention destroyed any possible chance of Democratic'Victory. Knowing that s# certainly as anything In the future can be Known, it is not1 difficult to ap preciate the benevolence wnlch the "peerless leader” displays In permit* ting the.country to understand that Johnson is bis heir.—Washingtan Bust {Bern.). A Democratic Lawyer* Declares the Sherman .S ta tu te Against T rusts Adequate and Effective—Enforced ■ Only by R epublicans . 1 No stronger tribute to the completer ness, the shrewdness, and the efficacy of a statute was ever made or could be made than that given to-the anti trust law of the United States, which has been In force since It was signed by President Harrison, July 2, 1890, by the distinguished Democratic at torney' who addressed the Democrats of Columbus on the’ first of October, John H> CJlarlr, of Cleveland, when it comes to railroad"law, “knows whdt he is talking about,” as he told Tom Johnson' that* night on. the platform when he corrected; the Cleveland may or’s mis-statements on railroad taxa tion, and safd that Johnson did not know wh'af he Wa5~talking about. In his, strong speech In support of the Democratic candidates made that even ing, Mr. Clark eulogised very emphat- iclly this statute, and declared that It iEj adequate to extirpate the trusts whenever thoroughly applied- He said that it had. broken up combinations already and could be depended upon to continue to do so. He further said that among the combinations-thus In terfered with and brought.tb naught were-some In which the papers were prepared by some of the' shrewdest lawyers In the country, but thiB stat ute was too- strong, for them. All of this is true, but not near ,all the truth that Mr, Clark might naye told. He-might have designated the statute by its common title, the one generally ■"given after its principal author/ John Sherman, of Ohio, so long Republican leader in the United States .senate. He' might have stated that It was the first bill introduced in the 5Xst congress, and that having passed the Republican senate it was reported to the house May l, 1890, by another Ohio Republican leader* ’Wil liam McKinley, who'Presented a rulo for Us Immediate consideration Ho might further have stated .that the hpuse Democrats opposed this bill with speeches by such great leaders among them ns Carlisle, Bland, Springer, Richardson, McCreary and Wilson, au*. thor of the free trade tariff. He might have shown how ,the Democratic party followed their lead in voting against consideration, taking the same old position that the Democracy advance todayas the only remedy against trade combinations—that of free trade and nothing else. The Democrats could not defeat the bill because both bouses Were Republican, and it became a law by the signature of the Republican president, Benjamin Harrison. As soon as the courts opened that autumn cases Were commenced under U and wore prosecuted under a Repub lican administration, with the results that Mr. Clark specified, He mlgat further have recited actual history by stating that during the entire admin istration of his friend and fellow gold Democrat, Grover Cleveland, this taw fell Into "Innocuous desuetude” and nothing was done with It In fact in- his very last message, ^President Cleve land, with this statute on the books that Mr* Clark commends, complained to Congress that hb could do nothing to suppress the evils of trusts; This is the same statute that President Roose velt is now Invoking, with suits pend ing againBt Some of the more conspic uous of the trade combinations, arid their trial Is not far"distant. Taking the history In its entirety It Is a mark ed exhibition of the contrast between Republican achievement and .Demo cratic Inability to accomplish anything. LARD ALOUD MUST PAY IT ALL; Any O th er In te rp re ta tion Conflicts W ith and Contradicts, th e P la in Words o f H eury George, Declared by John son to B e H is -E xam ple and Authority. Already the Johnsonltes. are- begin ning to dodge and deny in regard to the one principle in which he has ap1 Reared to be consistent and unchange able heretofore. Mayor Johnson’S special personal organ said the other duy: - . “Mayor Johnson does not desire to have ail the taxes.placed on lahd. He never said soi he never believed so; and that]-Is not the doctrlrie of the single tax, Everybody who knows anything about the- subject under stands that It Is not. The single tax does npt exempt the stockholder and bondholder, for the 'thing* which Is represented by the stocks and bonds, unless they be United States bonds, would be taxed .for all it is frorth. The single tax Is a' tax not on land but on land Values. It Is hopeless tb explain to' those who do not want to present a subject-correctly, however." . We have given this Quotation at full length that, there may. be no question of fairness in Its treatment. The trou ble about it is that it is In complete conflict with what Henry Gdorge Wrote. The yery words, “a single tax on’land values,” to use Mr. George's own expression, is defined by him as “not a tax on land hut oh land va lue - on that-value which attaches to land Irrespective of Improvements in or on it," ’ . In Mr, George’s book, which John son says Is the gospel of this entire crusade, he reiterates and emphasizes the Idea that this is a SINGLE tax; WHAT A COftFORT !To Those Who Fancy a Stiff Hat. To know, w h a t we say, m us t be true or your mon ey back. .Now is. the tim e to select your Fa ll o r W in ter H at, either in stiff or soft felt from one of the largest and best selected stocks ih the State a t prices th a t defy competition. A comparison w ith other dealer's prices are wha t we desire! W e invite your inspection. - W hen you. see the style and quality wp can show you for $1.00, $1^50, $2.00 $.50, $3.00 and $3.50 you will be convinced th a t no Springfield dealers can dup licate either the styles or prices. All ,hats are union • V - . f • i ' * ” ’ made. ‘ • SlMlVAfl, TheHatter, 27 South Limestone Street, S PR IN G F IE LD , OH IO . TWENTY TIMES , A m ill iona ire . Yet Taxation Johnson’s Own Returns For Taxes Iri Ohio Were Just These and No More; AM of .lt iri PoriOilal' Property Only: In 1894 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -fT,200 In 1895 ,,,,...*,,,»,»«, 1 None In 1890 10,800 In 1897 ........... 9,600 In 1898 , 6,300 in 1899 ..................... None In 1900 (sworn to) . . . . 7,2,06 In 1901 .......................... 13,900 In 1902 (sworn to) . . . . 13,986- No real estate appears' iff name of Tom L. Johnson, Where Is his vast wealth $ concealed from assessment and :i tax payment? : o , , . , • , , « , v,.*• o ,0 0* , *wO •••’,.***0 : JUDGE JOHNSON : And H it A vow e d H e n ry George ideas— B y the Very Word* of Henry George. I f Here are a few Sf them: "Private property In land I* Iriconslstent with the best use Of the land” I . .."Ws .should satisfy, the law of justice, by aboHshliig all titles, declaring all land pub* lie property." ' "It Is not necessary to con fiscate land; it t» only neces sary to confiscate ren t;'to ap propriate rent by taxation." He proposes "to abolish ail taxation save that Upori land values," Every word quoted Is cop ied direct from "Progress and Poverty," by Henry George, The Outlook. . Her Papfi—Yo’ dsiiinh ter many ;kah, * ‘ ' “ “ ' ■ -j Vm ................... . mats laid km en tda wife ^ons wafih- luftfa dfltigliU fifth? IVm t Whad dm yo ’t prhppcc's ? The- Siut or ( a Mdower)—Bborj eingid one’oh da pw&sows fo’ whofo in’ Jo1hubpronaisridter liber’lypat* Hfidsta sudeesfifth.—Judgt, that Is to say, that .there shall ba no other tax of any kind upon any mat ter except that upon land, which shall he reached directly by taxing Its in come or rental value, and the full amount of that Income or "rent," to use his exact and repeated expres sion. He may say something some thing somewhere about taxing Blocks and bonds, but the chaptert and page upon which it Is said must he cited by those who make such a claim, that their Henry George, when he talks aabout a "single" tax, does riot mean a SINGLE tax, hut only one tax out of various taxes, Mr. George said once in a published debate upon, this question with so em-. Inent an antagonist of the present Re publican party as Edward AtkinsallJ "To reach this point of theoretical perfection, at which land would have no selling value, I, e., would yield to the mere owner no income, would be to reach the Ideal, Mere ownership would cease* Men would not care to own land they did not care to nfle This Is the George ideal. This is Tom Johnson's Ideal towards which, aft Johnson said . at the meeting In Lorain in his first speech of the cam paign, he is tending, arid towards which everything he does Is directed, a» he said at Lima two weeks later. It is ah absolute abolition of all value in land to the private owner With the avowed purpose of abolishing alt pri vate ownership, and not One Word in it at all about another kind or forijt of- taxation, In fact a great part ,of his argument with Mr, Atkinson waft taken Up by Mr. George In the en deavor to prove that the tax on land values would need no other kind of tax to produce enough public feve&ue to pay all the expenses of every kind,: municipal, county, state and national, Nat only would this be enough so that there would he no need of any tax upon any stocks or bonds, hut there would he no need for, custom houses, and not the slightest' chance for the,: least particle of protection, ' Don't spoil a nice 4 dnm p a te ra with An inferior pattern, Hat MoDaU’s »t MoOoMVr. 1 - That will be suitable for a ll classes, as , our a tock js complete in every respect . and comprises different lines of , G l i a i r s R o c k e r f s ' ’ G o i i c l i e s i C e n t e r T a b l e s S i d e b o a r d s R e d p t e a d s i , . j M t a / t t r c s s e i s S p r i n g ' s ' . W a s h s t a l n d s - D r e s s i n g S t a n d s .. Carpets!' Carpets! We represent some of/the largest manufacturing concerns, in this line which enables us to quote prices tha t surprise a ll : : : . : : : : : % b . memraan, mmm, 0 ♦♦A Funeral Director Not a Job For Barney. About thirty years ago Barney Williams^ then a famous actor in Irish characters, was playing an en gagement at the Rational theater, Washington. In the audience was a woman with an unruly baby. The infant refused to he consoled and made so much noise that at last the actor walked down £0 the footlights and said; • “Get a nurse for that baby l” The woman was indignant. She gathered up her hopeful and swept majestically up tlio center disle, while everybody was hushed and the action on the stage suspended pending the woman’s exit. Just as the insulted mother reached the head of the aisle she turned around, R^d, aJ in quick answer to the ac tor’s speech, she exclaimed: Fu rn itu re Dealer. “Holrish need apply f' Rough ori Lord Russoll. , Halle, the musician, used to relate that the catalogue of an art exhibi tion held in Manchester, ^England,! in 1856 was fu ll Of absurd errors,. One picture^fpr instance, represent ing a madman sitting unclothed on ‘ the bare ground with his arms clinched round his'-knees, waft ,la beled “Portrait of Lord John Bus* sell.” Halle declared that after contemplating the so called portrait of the statesman for some time an old man was heard to remark with becoming gravity, “Probably when he was out of office.*’ Embarrassing Erudition, “That young man hft« a brilliant future before nii ftologisli And the little Boston boy Whose bumps were being examined pol ished life apectaoios and exelaimed: “Pardon me, butYou open up a very interesting Held o f inquiry, Where else could my future be i f it were not before me P*—Ohio State Tmmtii) ! .ill* Is What Tom Johnson Alms at i lrt Ohio. Henry George's, plan, that Johnson and Bigelow advocate, declares; “Let the individuals who now hold prop erty still retain, If they want to pos session of what they ate pleased to call it their land. .Let them buy and call it their and. Let them buy and Sell and bequeath and devise it. We may safely leave them the shell if we take the kernel. It is not necessary to confiscate land; It Is only neces sary to confiscate rent.” "In dfeallng with the big corpora tions we Intend to proceed not by rev olution but by evoli tlon. We wish to face the facts, declining to have otrr vision blinded either by the folly of those who say there are no evils, dr by the more dangerous folly of those who either see or make believe that they see nothing but evil In all the existing system, and who If given their way would destroy the evil by the simple process of bringing ruin and disaster to the entire country.**—| President Roosevelt | The Sign of the Three Balls. The three gilded balls used by pawnbroker* are the three gilded S ills-which the Florentine banking ouse o f the Medici assumed 'as their arms when they beofty a -wealthy. The founder of the fam ily had been a medicos. Hfe chil dren went into banking and gbjt rich, They assumed the oafitfog l m,” said the phre- odat of arms of ihe pill* and hu% them out to showwhere'tbefe bank was, their business'brii the sfeture of pawnbre: ____ rivals caught on to the idea asri hung up three golden bglfe, *&d P® their aaeeeiaorib having VS banking, retain, the balfe m Ihe bl«aMathe pawnbitfkfog ride of m e . huri&ese. ; The baby’s Cep, Mreqtte or hooves for 25e each at MoCorkeftk, 'i a** a - , . . . l .tT4 r„.r<r._,, ... . M m . -A , ft. ry t ■ ^
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