The Cedarville Herald, Volume 26, Numbers 27-52

THE JOHNSON CONVENTION la utarang the I>on:oa\uto ctato con. tventfm, what did gtatv Oontroi Gem- jnHti’j Chairman Frye mean," or, who .was ho gapping at. when ho .talked aixuit "some one who was always a }!««<«’rat, tfltlmtit frills, fancies op factious?1’ ' * ' , Temporary Chairman Snlzgaber re­ vived the battle cry of the French Rev­ olution, with all Us horrors, hy declar­ ing that "The Democratic party is baptized in the , spirit of Liberty, Kquality, Fraternity!■” "Let ns not lower or surrender our- high ideals of human rights. All men, pot some men, are created equal/* shouted fialzgaber at the Johnson con­ vention of the party with mighty few. votes in congress, except those it gets by the denial of human rights! "ltumps leave halls;- majorities don’t,” was a terrific blow at the John- con highway robbery of entire delega­ tions delivered by former Mayor Ed Moore of Youngstown, in his speech on the Miami county- ease. “Democracy believes in consistency,” was the vociferous shout of Permanent Chairman Goelte, presiding .'over the Johnson convention, which did more inconsistent things than- ever happen­ ed -in Ohio before, ■—;o:— "You can’t trust us when we get back home,” said John J. Lentz, Op­ posing the plan to refuse to nominate a candidate for the United States sen­ ate. He was nearer right, than he in­ tended. ' "Brother Lentz must have heard those instructions through a long-dis­ tance telephone in the neighborhood of Clbveiahd,” said his Franklin coun­ ty colleague, and supporter, Ulrlc Sloane. In the same speech.against setting a precedent in the senatorial nomination, Mr. Sloane said they "couldn’t era* any hose down my throat” NO! NO! NO! NO! came from every part of the hall, when Johnson’s hired-man Baker of the Cleveland gag­ ged delegation, declared that', every delegate comes here under obligations and pledges. No.l No! No! was again shouted -when Baker said; “Under the call every delegate was sent here to name the candidate for United States senator.” < “There’s a lot of twaddle, here about Cuyahoga county arid Mr. Johnson,” was angrily shouted by hired-man Baker. If he., meant sharp" criticism, he’ll find that outside Democrats all over the state speak more vlgorously. than even those in the convention. 1 ’ '. . T. •. "Government by Injunction, if per­ sisted in, will wreck the liberty of the people,” Is a declaration In the John­ son platform of the Johnson conven­ tion that nominated Tom Johnson, the fax, dodger, who is using the' United States court injunction to prevent any trial of his tax dodging. “ft Is a protest of the true Democrats of!Ohio against turning our party over to .socialism." So spoke M. A, Daugh­ erty of Lancaster, two years ago the chairman of the -Democratic state ex­ ecutive committee, in support of the . minority report on resolutions, over­ whelmingly rejected at Johnson’s com­ mand and against the majority report overwhelmingly adopted just as John­ son furnished it ready-made from Chi- cagct ■ ■ * “HOMERULE” J o h n s o n 's K ind lit H is Own P a r t y In H is»Qwn Coun ty. DEi.EOATES BOUND AND QAQOED. ONE COMMON TIE, Destruction to Protection the Only Principle Uniting Johnaqnltes. No matter what other differences John IL Clarke may have had with t his party, he has been from firist to last and at nil times a free trader. His election means an ultra vote against protection on every possible occasion, that may arise In the United States senate-should he be sent to be a.mem­ ber of that body/ He was so bitter against Bryanlsm that his nomination over such a persistent supporter of silver and Bryan as John J. Lentz was an insult to all the Bryan followers in Ohio and all the sincere aliverltes. Bryan may condone It, he may even campaign with Clarke, hut that does not make It any more right and is no credit to Bryan, It simply proves that “the peerless leader” Is for the man that is for him and prefers support to principle. Johnson's throw down of Lentz and conrtlng of Bookwalteiy and also of Zimmerman, too, even after he had openly declared for Clarke, '"only Bhowed. anew the plainest fact of all, that Johnson is for Johnson only, and any follower can expect to he betray­ ed by him the Instant It will help Johnson. Tho one common tie of all of them, however, 3s that of free trade. ’ Glarke is nearly as radical as Johnson, And Johnson asked congress to sell all the custom houses. Every vote for a John­ son member of tho * legislature, whether on a Jones ticket Or any other way, Will be a vote to put Clarke, the free trader, in. place of Mark Hanna, the protectionist Tho DemocreUc* ticket Is a queer mixture. Johnson, a tax reformer, who dodges his taxes; C/arke, a .cor­ poration attorney, who bolted Bryan and told Tom Johnson in public that he did not tell the truth; Monnctt, who left the Republicans because they re­ fused him a third nomination."— UhrichflVille Chronicle. M oxby to loam ; Oit firel mort* nge from $1000 lo $. 1001 ) at. six per cent per annum. Address M. Perry* man, 27 S. Limestone at., Springfield O. C lm ,T. B. Derrtarratlc Voters Ridden Pver Rough Shod and Robbed qf Their Rights, With a Rude Dictatorship Such as Ohio Politics Never Saw Before, • “Just Taxation” and “Home Rule.” Again the voters of Ohio are to have that as the Tom Johnson battlqpry. This time there Is no shielding behind a political preacher, hut Tom Johnson himself la the candidate. He owned the convention. He .contr died all of Us gommHlees- He threw out of the convention every delegate whose scat was contested if that delegate would not da as he directed. No other test of fitness pr. regularity was required. Nearly a hundred such contested seats were dopided upon in that, way, then Johnson mado the platform and nomi­ nated the state llck-T at the rate of a man a minute. i Strong Democratic constituencies were robbed of their "home rule” by their “home rule” dictator. Delegates elected by delegates In accordance with ■all. party precedents, customs and regularity (even according to the peculiar terras prescribed by Johnson’s pwn committee), had their heads out off with neatness and dispatoh, and [Were openly threatened with being thrown out of the convention bodily, .Contests were cooked up to secure con­ trol of delegations and the balance of power in the convention was turn >d by such methods. But for them Jot nson might never have been nominated. The, unit rule was used only by John­ son, and'the 73 votes from his own county of Cuyahoga were voted every time as one, so that he really needed 'nobody- there, xlot even Salen. All the ■rest, 72 besides; Johnson, wore mere ‘nonentities, John H. Clarke included. sAs if all this “home' rule” were not .enough, it was seriously considered by -the Johnson managers whether they should not vote out of the convention bodily delegates whom .they did not Hite who wore regularly and fa'irly elected by their own counties, and against the validity of whose election ,no .question could be raised, much as they wanted to do it. All this is. "home rule”—Johnson “home ruld," Light in his own county of Cuyahoga, in the precincts and ■wards and township of that county, the Democrats had such1a dose of “home rule” as never was heard of.-in Ohio politics since the state was start­ led. The voters were not permitted to {know who they were to vote upon un­ til they got t,0 the primaries. Every !man desiring to be a candidate tor del­ egate to the county convention Tn Cleveland was told that he must pay $10; for the privilege of being .voted far as a candidate far county conven­ tion delogato. If ho -was in. the least suspected of falling in his fealty to Johnson he was compelled to produce the cash before Iris neighbors were permitted to vote for him, even to go Up the county convention. On the other !hand. If ho was an unquestioned John­ son man, the general belief In John­ son’s county has been that the $10 was jnot required of'any such aspirants. As Ito this, though, no one outside of the * inner circles of Johnson's closest crowd can speak with certainty. That in­ side ring controls'everything, and the rank and file Of, the -Cuyahoga county Democracy must do what they arc itold or stand aside. The oldest and ’.best Democrats in Cleveland by hun­ dreds and thousands were disfran­ chised and robbed of their rights by such performances. •. Nor was thlB all of "borne rule” as applied to Democrats by the Johnson- Ttes in Johnson’s county. In order to make sure beyond peradventure that none bu t Iris henchmen— Johnson henchmen—should be elected as coun­ ty convention delegates, in adltton to ,the restrictions stated, the most ur­ g e n t and repeated requests were re- •fused to-let the voters of the var­ ious precincts know the names of tho candidates for delegates, even in their own precincts. Having got his own county by such methods, even then Johnson ,was not satisfied, and nil the Cuyahoga dole- gates to his Columbus convention wer actually selected by a committee, as If he couldn’t trdst his own county convention. Then, on top of all this, came the udlt rule, as If after all these precautions and. this double and tre­ ble sifting of his men, Johnson gagged them with the unit rule in Cuyahoga- county, so that not one delegate dared to do One thing or speak, one word, except as Johnson dictated. Such IS "home rule” according to Johnson in Johnson's own party, in his own county, among his own closest followers. Never before In Ohio has any party leader of any party dared to engage in such dictation, or the half of ft, In his state convention, from the fifth draft of its call, with re­ strictions and requirements never heard of before In Ohio, down to the very last minute when tho nominations wore reeled off- by acclamation, de­ clared In spite of obvious opposition at the rate of a man a minute., Stich is Tom Johnson’s "home rule” as shown by Iris own party operations at his very home. His “Just taxation" -la exactly as just,. The hnmbuggefy of It cannot fool tho Voters .of Ohio in November, Because they arc counties, the small counties hare needs peculiar to them* aelves sad require home rule. Yet Tom Johnson would rather holt his platform than give them “home rule.” ■ —Workmanship, accuracy, case of handling and moderate in price are features of Thomas drills. Look them over. The Only Way. ' A kind hoarlcd uhman who was walking the. other day through one •of tho streets in the; vicinity of Fair- mount park paw a little hoy fitting on tho. curbstone crying bitterly. “ * Her heart was at once touched, and, going up to tho little fellow, she asked him the eau-e of his grief, .Looking up through his tears he ex­ plained that his mother had“pent him with gome pennies to a nearby grocery store and flint ho had lost the money, “Well/' paid .the woman, as she put hew hand on. the hoy's head, “shedding tears will not bring back your money. What makes you cry that way ‘r” ’ . “ 'Cause/* answered the boy, as.he looked at tho woman perplexedly, “I don’t know how to cry any other way/’;—Philadelphia Ledger. Stomach Trouble, *‘J have been troubled with uiy stomach for. the past four years,” says D. L . Beach, of Clover Ufoolc Farm, Greenfield, Mass. ” A few days ago I was induced to buy a boy of Cham­ berlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets, Xhave taken part of them and ieel a great deal better-.*’ I f you have any trouble with your stomach try a box of these tablets. You are certain to be pleased with the result. Price 25 cents. For sale by C, M. Bldgway. I t is estimated that half a million New Yorkers are awake and busy, legitimately or otherwise, all. night. His Life Saved by Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea, “B, L Byer, a well know copper of this town, says he believes Cham- berhun’s Colie, Cholera and Diarrhoea remedy saved his life Inst summer. He hiid been sick for a mouth with what the doctors call bilious .dysen­ tery, .and could get nothing to do him any good until lie tried this remedy. It gave him immediate relief,” says B .1 T, Little, merchant, Hancock, Md; For sale by 0* M. Bidgway. , Germany’s new went inspection laws have reduced the amount of meat imported by half. ^ QUESTION ANSWERED. Yes, August Flower still has the largest sale of any medicine in the.civ­ ilized world. Your mothers and grandmothers never thought ol\usiug anything else for indigestion or bili4 ousness. Doctors were scarce, und they seldom heard of nppntdicitis, nervous prostration or heart failure, etc. They used August Flower to clean out the system and stop Airmen tat ion of undigested food, regulate tho action of the liver, stimulate the nervous and organic action of the sys­ tem, and that is all- they took ’when feeling dull and/bad with headaches and other aches; You only need si few doses of Green's August Flower, in liquid form,, to nmko you satisfied there is nothing serious the matter With you, You can get this reliable remedy At nil druggists. Price 25c and 7uc, Low Rates South and Southeast.* On September tilth anil October 20th TJIH. LOITSVrr.LH* NASHVILLE R. R, will Sell Round Trip Tickets from St. 1-ouin, Evansville, Louisville and Cincinnati to the following points at the lowest rates ever mined; Tickets- will he good return­ ing fpr twenty-one days from date of saty nixl stopovers will ho permitted on going tri; t points south of Kontucky-Tcimeo* sec .slate lino; . FROM ST. LOIUS TO NewOrleans, $12 00 Atlanta, $13 00 Mobile, $12 00 Montgomery, $1*2 00 IMnninghatn, $12 00 Tcnsae.ola, $H 1>U from C hicago tq NewOrleans, §10 00 Atlanta, $13 00 Mobile, §115 00 Montgomery $1(1 00 Birmingham. $lf> 00 Pensacola, 00 I'KOM LOUieVH.t.i: TO New f)rhnns,$H 00 Atlanta, §11 (X) Mobile, §11 00 Montgomery, SI I 00 Birmingham. §11 O:) IVnsaroln,.§14 00 , FROM CINCINNATI TO New Orleans. $11 00 Attnuta, §tt 90 Mobile $14 00 ■ Montgomery. $14 00 Birmingham,. 11,00 I’eiisuol , §14 00 FROM EVANSVILLE TO New Orleans. §12 00 Atlanta, $11 00 .Mobile. §12 00 .Montgomery, $12 00 Birmingham, §11 00 I’cnsaeoln, §14 00 Bates to Intermediate Points to be the same, J’roportibnslely low rales to points west of NewOrleans as far (is Houston. ’I o Jack- Sohvilie, Florida, and intermediate points, S3.00 pigher than rate to Atlanta, •Take advantage of these very low rates to make a trip through the south to investi­ gate its wonderful resources and opportuni­ ties, , Time tables, folders,- maps and desrno tlve literature, reintide to lands, truck and stock fanning, along the line of the Louisville & Nashville R. R., will ho sent upon appliraflon toO. L.Stosn, General Passenger Hg-nt, Louisville, K'y. Good Pills Ayer’s .Pills are good liver pills. You Know that. The best family laxative you cart buy. They Keep the bowels regular, cure constipation, Tri A'*’,ro" 3. d,A«WCo„ IfOWOlI HM<! Want your moustacheorbeard Abeautiful browrt of richblack7 Use BUCKINGHAM’S DYE To Cure a Cold inOne Taka Laxative Brnmo Q l t i^ e Tablets. . 1 .. <X f d l . I W d l M i V0|H( D, CuriMCrip hi tw o m m m bOXi 0 5 o # Well NamedPaint the man who storms at the.weather because the paint on his house won't weather the storms "could live a life of sun-' shine by using jf- Patton’s - S un -P r o o f Paint Patton’s Sun-Proof Paint gives double the service of all-white- lead or any ordinary paint. I t is made of the most perfect com­ bination of painttnaterials to stand the severest trial the sun^md weather can give it. Guaranteed to keep its gloss and wear well for five years. ■ t . . . < 1 Send for book of Faint Knowledge and Advice (free) to PATTON PAINT CO„ Lake S t., Milwaukee, Wia. saKT T GEORGE H. SMITH, Cedarvjlle, Ohio, Agent .tor •_ United States Life InsuranceCo. Which writes.Bankers’ Insurance And whose contracts are as plain as notes. Jf you want protection, take Ordinary Life, or Twenty Payment life, with Endowment Settlements. 'Yon can carry $2,000 or better, almost as cheap as $1,000 in investment.. If investment, we will pay you $400 more than you pay in, a t the end of 20 years. Wo give you 7 elective conditions you can change a t your will. "From 2 to 8.^ times face value o f your policy in paid up insurance without re examination. Also agent ,for the ' * ' . , „ i General Accident, of Philadelphia, indfclieU. S. Accident Co. of N. Y £ BHYAFS HEIF1 ^ H If candidate Tom Johnson can holt r" -’ !{-two planks of his Own platform, why I may-not people who'are not candl- r« J o h n son A fte r T h a t R ew a rd \ dates bolt the entire thing? For- H is Oh io P er form an ce? j w-glt thcir- wcaithw tlie sliver staunchness of Lentz and Thur­ man that caused Tom Johnson to turn against them for tho United States, senatorshlp and offer the nomination, to others? Boolewaiter was a sliver man, perhaps Jones was; hut Ingalls was not and Zimmerman was not, while Clarke did all he could to de- f e a j / Br y r i t L"Cl a r ko is now John­ son’s candidate. Nothing Else Explains the Outburst of . Bryanlsm by Bryan Bolters—But How Does All This Agree With, the Play That Ohio Campaign la Not National? ■ The press of all parties-In .every quarter of the country apparently agrees in one point lri resepeet to the ‘picturesque coriditlons created by the recent Johnson convention a t Colum­ bus.- That Is,- that Tom Johnson’s nomination for’ governor of Ohio by the Democratic party and his complete capture of the organization of that party In this state with his absolute mastership over It in every respect, put him In the very front of presiden­ tial possibilities witlrin that party. Everywhere politicians and students of party movements seem to be of one mind In the conclusion that W. J. Bryan will be moro Inclined to throw towards Johnson all fhe strength that he can command In the next national Democratic convention .that to anyone else now in sight. Common, gratitude would require this. There has been an ebbing tide of Bryanlsm recently. Many havp freely predicted the entire eclipse of .the eloquent Nebraskan, Just when his fortunes seein to be at the lowest ebb Bryan gets from Ohio Democracy such an endorsement as h e ; has had nowhere else since tho day that he first became a national charac­ ter, Tom Johnson did this for him, for Johnson, controlled every move of the Ohio convention of 1803. He was IT from start to finish. On top of it all, having crowded down the throats of reluctant Ohio Democrats tho re­ newed endorsement of the Kansas City and Chicago platforms Johnson order­ ed the unprecedented step of a resolu­ tion inviting Bryan to stump Ohio, Viewing these facts, everybody natur­ ally concludes that Bryan will do his best to hoost Johnson to the nomina­ tion for president. Unless this shall he dne, no one can see any meaning In Johnson’s Invita­ tion to Bryan to come Into the Ohio campaign, and no one can see any rea­ son for Bryan’s coming here, unless the Ohio campaign is the opening bat­ tle for the greater national conflict Of next year. Just here, however,, John­ son makes the play in his platform that tho present Ohio campaign lsf. purely local artd not national. If such Is the case, why does he arouse the resentment against Bryan of countless thousands of good Democrats, deluded no longer by any of the silver and so­ cialist sophistries of Bryanlsm? If the Ohio campaign is not national not oiie of these things has anything to do with it. If lt Is hallonal, what kind of a game of deceit is Johnson trying to work Upon the people of this state7 Again, if the Ohio campaign Is not national, why does Johnson bother himself about the United States sena­ torship? Why did he compel and drive the Ohio Democracy to do what they never dreamed of doing before; nom­ inate a man for United States senator in their state convention? The United Staets senatorshlp is one of the great­ est national offices In the country, end lt is an empty arid Oven insulting im­ position to exact of tho Democrats (,t this state an entire innovation In all their party precedent by nominating a candidate for that ofllco, if the campaign really has nothing to do with national affairs, as the Johnson plat­ form puts it. ' '• STRAY 8 H 0 T 0 . How many absentee delegates were voted and counted in’the Johnson con­ vention? In Hamilton county, Preacher Bigelow openly confessed that they hadn’t even a list of their delegates. Republicans, don't help Johnson by wild talk about. tho big plurality against him, but all get out and work .and voto and give it to him. Anything helow 80,000 he. will- use as a basis for claiming the Democratic nomination for president next year. ■ Bryan hasn’t changed his sliver-' views since Clarke.called them "dis­ honesty and repudiation." Has Clarke changed? If not, why should Bryan help him? If Clarke has changed. Why should other people help Clarko?- With more than 16 to 1 discrimina­ tion against Ohio, as compared with Georgia, in the number of votes re­ quired to elect a member of congress, Ohio people will soon see that this is a question concerning them greatly. Tom Johnson hasn't paid those barik taxes yet. He Is still dodging' them and fighting them. Crippling the' railroads of Ohio, aa the Johnson platform plans to do in several ways, means serious loss to their vast armieB of wage earners. That' 60,000 railroaders and their friends*wril resunt- this a t the polls was the warning of M. B, Ingalls to his colleagues on the committee on resolutions. They paid no heed, but adopted the printed platform prepared by Johnson’s hired man from Chicago, When Bryan’s struggle for life was on In. ’GG, Johnson kept out of Ohio, trying to elect a single taxor mayor of Now York in opposition to the regular Democratic candidate. Spontaneously and Simultaneously, all over the state, the anti-Johnson, anti-Clarke Democrats are speaking out qnd will soon be organizing. E. M, Young, the Democratic' mayor of Republican Cuyahoga. Falls, is only a little In the lead of tho increasing mul- titude. Herrick and Hanna must stand or fall together fit the November voting: Republican redaction of Herrick’Svote on tho assumption that Johnson Is bound to bo defeated anyway, may Im­ peril Hanna’s chances in close counties and districts. Anything that can be claimed as a gain for free trade and single tax will be claimed as a loss for substantial business and the pro­ tective tariff, while the defeat of Han­ na, the protectionist, will be felt far and wide, away beyond the border of our own state. Irrespective of party-divisions, the people In general admire and -trust Theodor ■Roosevelt. His administra­ tion Is a positive strength to his party in the pending campaign. How could tho Johnson slate. con­ vention control the counties and dis­ tricts contrary to their own views in the United States senatorshlp? Cer­ tainly the. candidates nominated before the Johnson convention met, if elected to the legislature, will be tlarly ox* empf from the exercise of any author­ ity by that convention Who is to be cheated? Sam Jones or the Democratic party? One or tho other is sure to suffer, should there ho Any bargain made in Lucas county by Tom Johnson. Td s , husband make.) mo n week­ ly allowance/* "Do you fimt it enough F "Yea, Hut it takes nil I get dur­ ing the last three weeks to pay tho bills I tun up the first week/’- - Cleveland Main Dealer. lb TR JBU T iN G m P O T FOH aa . , P 1 TOBM 6 H i ilFECT” FENCES, m s A i v m m steel } mres , F O E F I B O T , F A E & ^ X D H O G F E N C I N G * ' THE OkLLELECTRICALLYWELDEDFEN0E* E V E R Y R O D G U A R A N T E E D P E R F E C T , 5, The DURABLE Fence, None so STRONG. All large wires Highest EFFICIENCY. ' LOWEST COST. No Wraps to hold 5 ” Moisture I . r<i;i 1- c a u s e Rust. “PJTO-ncKUH I-Luvoer” r’Kxejxa, (StaudnraStyle,) —; . /telcfe!? ST 3 CK Paso?, We kn SAVEYCDMOIJEY finFencing. GALL AND S E E IT. . ... C .M . C R O U S E , ilARPVVARlT pIiMPs/ STOVES C E D A R V 1 L L E I f l Great ' Invention I ' fl. Word Y ] fJaehine. The B enn ington is'destined to make back numbers of existing type­ writers. Has 5-new and valuable features ofunerit, any two of which would make a superior machine. No larger than existing typewriters. We are now offering a limited amount-of stock to m- vestors-at $1.00 per share. People are becoming interested ell over the world and are beginning to realize what a Won­ derful invention we have. More than $30,000 worth of machines .have already been ordered. •The typewriter world is Watching with interest the coming of our machine, which merits tho beginning of a revolution' in this great industry. As soon as we shall have sold enough stock to complete equipment, manufacture, adyertisp and sell our -machine, no more will be offered at any price. If you wish, to make a gilt-edge investment in .an in ­ dustrial enterprise Of the first rank, with prospects of -large dividends warn: us Von ruusi-Ecrus. Preference in positions ■ given to investors., Capital Stock $1,500,000. Shares $3.00 The Beftflington Typewriter Go., 304 AND 305 LYCEUMUUILDING,' KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI. J. P. BOCKLETT HACHINE CO. X EN IA , OHIO. New Shnp4l5 West Main St. Next Lutz’ Blacksmith Shop, All Kinds of Engine and. Machinery . RepairingaSpecialty List of Machinery we Have for Sale. ; Gasoline Engines, on hand for Immediate Delivery. One- Ouo- One- NfcW. -IX- h. p. -8 h. p. -4 h. p. SECOND hand . One—1^ h. p. One—3h..p. One—4 li. p. One-—10 h. p, Miscellaneous: Machinery onH an d , in Good Order. . STEAM ENGINES. One—3 b. p. Two—7-h, p. One—25 li. p. Onh—65 h. p. Three—Purificrc. Sovon-Smoke Stacks. I Three—Tanks. Eight—Boilers. Three-wBlowera. j Ten—Steam Pumps. One Wood SawingvOutfit, Five—Heaters. Prices, Dimensions, Capacity furnished on appli­ cation. Send for complete second hand list. Get our prices on new supplies before buying else­ where. ABSOLUTELY FREE! $10,000 To Do distributed among subscribers to tho Cincinnati Daily Enquirer in November, 1903* On Tuesday the 3 d day of November, 1903 , there will be a state elec­ tion at which a Governor of Ohio will be Voted for. To Stimulate interest in this election, the Cincinnati Daily Enquirer has set aside $ 10 , 600 . Tins will be distributed, according to the schedule annexed, among the subscrib­ ers on and after this date until the close of the contest* who estimate nearest the vote which will be cast for the office Of Governor o f Ohio. The num­ ber of the total votes cast for'the office o f Governor will be determined as fittrit and conclusive by the official certificate of the Secretary of 1 State. THEPRIZESTOBEDISTRIBUTEDAREAS FOLLOWS: To tho one making* tho neatest correct estimate Of, the exact total o f the vote for tho office of Governor o f Ohio. $ 0 , 0 00.00 To tho Second N e a r e s t . .................. . 2 ,600 .00 To tho Third ^Nearest* »’. *...., ♦»» 5->000.00 otheFourth N ea re s t.... ....................... . 600.00 To the Fifth N earest........ 260.00 To tho Sixth N earest,,.......... ......................................... 200 .00 To the Sot?enfch N e a r e s t.,........... ............................. 160.00 To tho Eighth N earest.................. 125,00 To th e N in th N e a r e s t ...,...................... ........................ 100,00 To tho Tenth Nearest ^?5.00 To tho Eleventh N e a r e s t .. .. .. .. .. .. ......... 60 .00 To the Twelfth Nearest 26.00 TOthe Thirteenth N earest,,.., 16.00 To the Fourteenth Nearest InalLfourteenpremiumsamountingto $10,000*00 If thbre Is & tl® In the estimate of two or .more person* for any on«i cf the prizes, the amount thereof will be equally divided, THE VOTE OF OTHER YEARS* IAS#..... .........•jjft.ic.G ..........tos,«4i .i . . ..Ml *16 i»o» * #**,««» rest:..,.:: T4/,1 r ,0 1808 , ........... **7,489 'X *****v»*> *7^^530 $1.50 for a month’s subscription entitles to one estimate, Tor estimate blanks ami full particulars, see DoilyorWeekly Address all estimates and communications to THE ENQUIRER PROFIT-SHARING BUREAU, P, 0. BOX TIL CtNCBWf* 0. September 7 to 11 inclusive, excur­ sion tickets to Dayton account fair will lie sold Trem lliclmmml, Spring- field, London, Moarev find lidcnual- Hto. ticket rtfrtk'Ms t<u IViuiAylVAifift Hnc«, Haiti devotes almost hnenfixlb its revenues to free ischobls Of the children of school *g* ha ftuaria 17,000,0011 are receivis* 89 instruction* * I

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