The Cedarville Herald, Volume 30, Numbers 1-26

■<«- ■ m m «w*^»hj 4+1 ’• ,«v4' *V/ *T ^ *^; • -S-a?* |f| •s^r.- s r a From Any * • ■„ ’ •- ' ■• c- Standpoint Style, Quality, Service or Price . The Footwear We Sell is Superior If It’s style you want, we give you the best and the newest. If you are particular about fit, we guar­ antee it; If it’s service you want, the quality of the leather and the workmanship assure you of the long­ est wear and the greatest satisfaction. Our prices for Hen’ s Shoes and Oxfords range from $2.50 to $5.00, and for Women from $2,00 to 153.50. Whatever is your price limit come in,-we will have the Shoe or Oxford at that price to please you. - PRICES RIGHT ' SHOES RlftHT fi 25 E. MAIN STREET, SPRINGFIELD, O. mmmmm 13* Of Valuable Farm On the premises, 1->Dmiles north oast ofJXenift orv the Colum­ bus pike and known as the Daniel McMillan farm, hut pow owned by the W . B. Hardie heirs.' THURSDAY, JUNE 27 , at a p .m , ' This farm contains 148^ acres, consisting of 20 acres of timber, . fine orchard, o f 75 healthfultreos and the balance m high state of cultivation, Improvements. On the said farm consist o f a ten-room brick house with slate roof. Good well’o f water and. sjpi‘ing_antl cistern at the house,; hirge^ T'bahlfbarn that ’w ill a c com m od a ted horses and 16 head o f cat-^ tie. Combination crib and cow's table, Onemodern pair pf farm ' scales, A running stream through the north side of the farm*' i makes It an ideal stock farm. . ’ " ' . , . . ‘ “This estate 18being- soiu for a dudsloii-of-tue-estate-of-the -lata-, W , B. Hardie, ’ _ \ - . • * ’ * ' I ’ : *Terms of Sole * ” -' . i A deposit o f ?1,000 to bind the oontraofc o f sale 1* farm ikgtVept about Oot. 15. The $l»fiO0 to bind the contract to bo part o f the one-third purchase price. Balance in two equal payments o f -one and two years, secured by first mortgage on the farm bearing 6 percent Interest, or aU Cash if purchaser so dealt__s. 1 . . . . _ _ . . For all informatlou call on W- C. Hardie: On the Farm. W . F, Smith, Auctioneer, 716 Reibold Blag. Dayton, Ohio. Y o u W a n t A S u m m e r "Wewant to make it for you, and there are many rea­ sons why we cau best make it for you* FIRST—Because our assortments of new summer suitings are the largest and most fashionable shown in the city, thus affording you a range of patterns to se­ lect from not to be equaled elsewhere. SECOND—Because we guarantee to make you a suit to your fit and measure, absolutely correct in style, faultless in workmanship, and properly tailored throughout, at a price that cannot be duplicated by any other first class tailoring establishment in this vi­ cinity* Prices $17,50 up. We call your special attention to our new line of ' ‘Shadow Stripes” in serges and light colors. Wil/etiborg Bros Tailors, 22 West High Street,] Springfield, Ohio. Ehersole Pianos A B S O L t i m V H U & A & L & ' ■ h jdtuVijiiiit,* -lYii,-in-y, «We JmVdfovuumnbWof fs*Ki used j 21» p « o ! o Fiartosln the Ctttsctvdtwy where they irt eoH3t«atly fitftjccfed to the hard­ est Mud of tm» We hm found the Elxbsole to be a good, durable pteuo, well ^ chWtft tfuWeor .nut tairoDthawaste roei«.M •#* BAim, Directress '.*< ■<■!«Gassemtaryo! Jfasl* WM«#AOf*..,rfUW * | Tins Smith & Nixon Flatto Co. - ' 54 m d %%£< Pmnh Street, ' CINCINNATI. 0* 1 INCOME TAX ONLY f 1 . “ 2 Orwell c. Riddle Telle the Tex <j» 9 Coirimlseiott to Abolish All a ft other Form* of Taxation, 5 ■ft . w • .................................................................. - . . . At the A lu 'U meeting of the Tax COmmlBsloa of Ohio, Orwell C. Riddle,' editor of the Columbus Press-Post and a well-known newspaper man, said in part: In discussing- taxation it should always he kept in mind that tho only legitimate purpose of a tax 1 b tribute- A tax for any other purpose Is extortionate or punitive, and ought to be abolished. An income tax is the only rax that.can be applied: eaultably. tinder our present system Ohio raises funda from direct levy on lands and chat­ tels, excises, licenses, interest on deposit o£ state'funds, all of which are wrong in principle and practice. The Nichols excise law, Wills and Cole laws and Aikln. saloon tax are not paid by the per­ sons directly assessed, but by patrons. Direct and indirect taxes , on manufac­ tures and commercial properties become items of "coat" and are. charged to tho customer, , Indirect taxation Imposes the entire burden of furnishing state funds upon the consumers of life's necessities, an in­ sidious way o f piling up the receipts' of the treasury to be anuawlered Jn riotous expenditure, graft and loot. Tins proposed "single tax'* would be iv punitive tax that would lead to rapacious land monopoly on the principle of “sue. vlval of the fittest," - local, option in taxation is a proposi­ tion that will defeat itself by simple analysis. 1 An inheritance tax la a crime against the dead and the Hying committed by the state in the guise of law,' Its true name Is statutory stealing. Taxes on mortgaged property and .oir the mortgage, special vehicle - tax and' similar imposts arc double taxation. Nu­ merous special taxes arc proposed that are preposterous, ‘ In abolishing direct taxes on property I would favor abolishing taxes on all kinds o f properly, tangible and intangi­ ble, rbal and chattel, industrial and com­ mercial., and. lax the Incomes of all per­ sons engaged in operating these prop­ erties; - * To make an. Income tax Just and equit­ able it should he imposed on every^per­ son, male fyr female, adult or minor, who performs services for compensation—!n- CommCrcial and industrial pursuits, and on the products of, agriculture appraised at an average market price. The farmer could not reasonably object to a tax on the fruits of the soil if the tax on the soil Itself be abolished, ' In the industrial and commercial branches it is reasonable to'believe that a larger sum wouid.be obtained by a tax on rewards for Service, from heads of firms and eorporetioim down to the low­ est paid employ?, thdn. Is derived tpday from a tax on physical properties and inadequate methods of trying -to reaoli intangible assets. The Jhcnmc- tax would be a speelflo ' tax, the full amount of which would ba Known, it would bo the entire tax In­ stead of each individual indirectly bear*,-; lag the taxes of tho butcher, baker, “cIotHIerf gfasrir'dr any other-institution patronized. An increasing business would And its way Into the pockets of more employes, from vhorn the,stateWould de­ rive increased receipts. And this tax .could, not be^Ediiftedjiom;oaotia-another “Untirit t* Anally tact by non-resistants. Tax** *r. sheet raUwsy. «.w*rurh-w. and Steam railway* would morn equit­ able under an income tax than under th« pyeawnt system/ Tax on fhanehlse 1* *#-> voeated, •rate-eur ptwwo* syntaitt . » ^ s s r w » ! & £ * * * - They arc going to go out of private o#a-.' ership into public ownership. Whan popularly owned,’ * tax an franchise, on physical property and on vapUailsmUon wilt fall together. If such properties Were producing tribute to the publid oof* • -fora.under mi income-tax,., public tuvnefa. ship would m«*o no taxation perplex­ ities. A frartfhiw* tax would he an ob­ stacle "in the way of public ownership in addition to the obstacles In,the present; tax system, ■: ■■■ . ; / .Give’us an income tax at a horizontal rate. It were aa unjust to lower the rate as the income goes tip as it would bo to raise Ute rate as the .income Increases. There can bo no Justice in any gradu­ ated or s’ldltlg scale, for an income tax. Why should not the man of larger oppor­ tunity pay in proportion to h|a opportu­ nity? Moke us mil taxpayers through the medium of a direct income tax and we will all become actively concerned In the common welfare. Wo will all be­ come public-spirited citizens, Jealounly guarding our own rights and interests and Justiy regarding the rights and in­ terest* of others, an ohio Y ea , It seems Ohio has had a finger in the making of the Oklahoma constitution, which has comeahOut through the In*, telllgent suggestion of Mr. Allen R. Foote, commissioner of the Ohio state board of commerce. 77ie following section In the article on revenue and taxation was drawn by Mr. Foote: "Section 30.—The legislature shall -require all money collected by taxa­ tion, or by fees, fines and public charges of every ldnd, to be account­ ed for by a system of accounting that Bhall be uniform for each class of ac­ counts, state and local, which shall he prescribed and audited by authority of the state.'' > r That Is an important provision. It brings into relief the public business and makes It understandable. A great deal of the corruption and reckless business In the public service results from the Irregular and bungleSome Way of keeping accounts. Uniformity encourages Care, because mistakes are easily discovered and explanations; are made unnecessary. There Is a best way for accounting, and the people should have the benefit of that best way; and It Is pleasant to note that Oklahoma is -opening the way to get that advantage through the thoughtful* ness of an Ohio man.—Bdltorlal: Ohio State Journal, May 9,1907. foir J m r ' Canotmirid Intfrestinj trtfai U*" Sp*«l Ckri*»4',|p»l|WIt* Have you over fHilgyHt about the way in which sgtpfft ■»* KRiR" bored? Many pmmm wonder why it is not ntunhwM k wguter Of- tier, ns jnofct otb«r fcriieifl* are, but that eoubi not b*, $or the numbers »re not arbitrary, ^hat they real­ ly mean ia tho nm^erc of hanhs it takes to weigh a powsS. IVlienj therefor^, i w k c s spool beating the jmmbo* 4Q it means that it takes forty hanks of that particular grade o f oetton to weigh a pound, and so with all the other numbers. The more common grades from which thread it usually made run from ion to fifty hanks ,to the pound, The finest spinning seldom exceeds 300 hank# to tho pound, and m the coarsest there is about one-half a pound in each hank,— Chicago Newd. Tho He*t of the Sun, Professor Langley o f the Smith* sohian institution Was once ,asked if he could give some notion of the heat of tbo sun, a body of which he had made a close study. He an­ swered that the boat is intense be­ yond conception; that it in enough to warm 3,000,1)00,000 worlds like ours, aiuT that the earth receives, every.minute enOOigb; to 'taiga to boiling 37,000,000,000 tom of wa* ter. Hotvrithstfmdi$g these star­ tling figures, however, the*heat that the sun gives to the earth is not a thousandth part o f X per cent of what it sends etsew|mrc. All the coal beds of Pennsylvania, although they can supply tho ‘ country for hundreds of years* would net keep up this heat for the one-thousandth part of a second* ^ ; AboMi-Advapfe*.--'. Perhaps the editor may give the hoys and girls a better understand­ ing''of the nature of adverbs than’ they now have by saying that, they are „only 'convenient forms of- ab­ breviation; enabling ns to use a word where, otherwise a ’phrase. woiild.be necessary/ Thus we jay “here” -instead of “in this place f .“then” for “ at that time/” “ thus” for “in that manner,” - A great many adverbs are formed by adding to ‘adjectives the fermination “'iy, ■ which means “ like,” but the prinei-, pip of.abbreviation stSl'holds good, as in the ease of “ foolishly” for, “ in a foolish manner,” “ basiny” for “in a hasty manner” and “ wisely” for ‘dike a wise man/'—Chicago News. * “ irt44|l*tpArtt|/ ^ , TheTues does hot mcamonly"dis-; giiit and reprchaHttu. In Japan for instance, it jue*b» delight-7 A damneae in greaMug yott-bisaea. In w*et Alswa tfg* feb ‘ S M fe y h&e In me before anytl w _ The Bnsutofl hik in mgn of cor­ dial agreement. When a candidate for ofiienscores a point, a hiss from the^Bomito audiouec is his reward.- - Among the Khylcs tho hiss de­ notes satisfaction and content.-r-In- dianapolia News, SuaflSXfian For P«nWl|j*i% - Aii ideal penwiper can be made from a wishbone. Shading wpx heat­ ed to bo made soft will servo for the head. Before it hardens form mouth and nose and heads for tho. eyes. Have gome twisted wool for hair. A few tlucknesxea o f Wool or flannel material cut like a eliawl will serve for its clothes, which can be, fastened with a few stitches. Tins will make an odd but serviceable penwiper. >< That Awful Four, . "Qur purpose f8-to’ make Ohio the Best Stat* in the Union tn which to earn a living, operate a business and own property."—Taxation Flatform of the Ohio Stats Board of Commerce, Women Exact Heavy Interest. An English woman says that women make much better hankers than men. That may ho true. Did you over know a man to borrow money from hla wife and escape paylrtfi It hack less than seven or eight ttniosy—Waohlagloif Herald. ................... OverworKed, in tho city of Newark tho other hauls Capvagangakostonlos applied for a peddler’s llcentmjuul got it. Now is tho time for tho Newark license dork to apply /or an lac/easo of Salary, Off to bed went au**y Hefei; Grccay ate t!ie pk; Lazy Done* sat in a chair And 6,-ja. “ i*a rattier die Than move myself Up steep stair Or wash my face and eoinh my hair*” Tattle Talc did run and tell Alt hurt peaple said, Her did she always speak the truth, But spun ton* r e n t ItwieaU; Then slowly cant* rmtut Sullen Font, And happy children put them tint. Cincinnati Cwrunwial Tribune. Can. Vow fist!*** Mof . .. I have a face, but no eyes, mouth or nose. Though other* listen, to me, I never hear them when they speak. Sometimes I go on my way evenly, sometimes slow; sometimes t am called too fast, amt sometimes I stop altogether. I stand a!l day, yet am never tired. What am 1? Answer i A clock. R**ptm*ifcfi)ty. A young woman » # m rcsllfces that she Is married until *ft*r hor husband is taken ill. HI* first cold in the chest convinces-her that msmaw* has some responsibility. Man to never eon* vlnced bt the fact trtraii ,ths night he is xeft atone with ttm first baby. Cupid’* Throo* 1* Csid, Next to a *t midnight about the loneaofiMft sttfiit is a ham­ mock on tfca tcoct jyowh after tbo first big THE, FAMOUS * Special sale of” F a s h i o n a b l e M i l l i n e r y We announce special sale of Millinery for Friday and Saturday that, ehould-be of interest to every lady not yet supplied with their Summer Millinery. Ordinarily we would not offer such great reduction in the midst of the season, hut we must confess that the weather for the past month has been so disagreeable that tsales have not been what they should. Hence these reduced prices, just as tardy sum­ mer is here. HERE ARE THE FRIGES a n d d e s c r ip t io n s . Our patterns that sold from $15, to $25 we have divided into three lots. Dot No, 1 . . . . . . L'ot No. 2 . , , . , Rot No. 3 - , . . $ 9.95 * 7.95 $ 5.95 Trimmed Hats in white and all col­ ors, in chips, fancy braids, neapolitans. all the newest creations that sold from .$5 to $15, divided into three lots Children's Trimmed Hats, leghorns and , fancy braids, white . . Q C /w T 7 and all colors, from ., / U i s Children's School Hats, worth {L Q r up to $2.50, Sale price----- Ladies' Street and Untrimmed Hats— ■all we have in this lot, sold as high as $2.50 , and $3.00 Sale price.. i'.,* ■» i ■ »■ * ■ • * 49 c Lot No. 1..........^ Lot No. 2 .. ...v . V - .. • ; .... • . 1 • • -• . - Lot No. 3. ., r. . $ 4.95 $3.50 $ 2-50 A special lot of flowers.......... ,25c Special Jot of Ribbons, some sold as hij|h as 35c yard. Sale price.., .17c Special Lot of Ribbons,some sold as ~high as *50c. Sale price.. r ........25c .•'Those Talked o f Sailors Wehave them in great variety— 49 Cents to $5.00 1 35-30 South Fountain Ave, Springfield, Ohio. ’—DseGoi p Mr. Hart i . DondoiiwTu —B e s tp o It does gi HAHNA’S Miss Nell ’../pa Rlrd ape Mr, Geor; Oiueiunati ■' —Carpets, i at McMillai DAWRE1 ’■pointers—se Mrs. Ra Atkinson s .fields ... Mrs. Han her daughte Springfield. •A .f:r'■ -Quytalnf At McMillnr •7 ,l'f' r G.ood pign gOqd paint T-sold by J. ’ , Miss Lena til., arrived guest of Mis Goideli En hben with ya ter hoiv than A very unusual opportunity to. buy the newest ideas' and ^styles in Ladies^Walkmg^Skirtsdh all ishe mew materials,- that were $6, $6.50, and $7. for the very popular price of $5. Colors: Black, Brown, Navy, Cream and Fancies. $9.75TailoredSuits $ 9.75 This week we offer your choice of about 25 Suits that were all choice new styles and the best of materials, that were worth up to $20 and a few higher, f or . . . . 1 . . . . _____$9.75 Patent Leather Oxfords AT Reduced Prices. Here is where you can save about $1 on your Patent Leather Oxfords. The price has been clipped in every pair (exceptQueen Quality) as follows; $2.50 Ladies Patent Leather Ox­ fords.................................. .$1.85 $3.00 Ladies' Fine Oxfords . . . . . .$2.15 $3.50 Ladies' Fine Oxfords. , . .$2.45 Every pair has our guarantee. That means they are right.. "Lon^ Silk Gloves They are scarce bu t’there is‘plenty here, in every grade and in all sizes, in black and white. Long Black Silk Lisle..................... 75c 16 Button black and white fine Silk Lisle, extra value. ,, .v ............. $1.00 16 Button Pure Silk Gloves, black and white, at $1.50, $1*75 and $2.00 TOIEET GOODS UNDERPRICED Witch Hazel Soap 3 f o r ................... ...1 0 c White Rose Glycerine Soap3 f o r . 2 5 e Cashmere Boquet Soap 2 , for........... ...25c 25c Talcum Powder. .18c W H ITE PARASOLS Thisweek you can se­ lect a fine White Parasol in embroidery or hand painted, about fifty styles- toselect from at, .$1.50 . SO ILED LINEN VERY CHEAP Such as Towels, Napkins and Table cloths in brok-. . en sets and .are slightly - soiled from handling, all marked at a great re­ duction Ttte regijlt* D. will 1 sebttrch, 1 'iiuj FOR SAU icanopytop <r Ia bargain, K The paint j/painters-poe 1 HAb Miss. Dun employed to |afc Oak Grov DAWRI3N t when expose 1weil as insidt Mr. B, S. j.viMiJSedMr. t of near Day ; .Sabbath. WANTED , Oile who wan A good open the Excliang Bey. R. B. Mieh., will fchurch Sabi usiiai time. M m . W. J. returned ho visit with 1 McMillan an> WHEN YOt See tliat tl Hanna's Gn by 16 , so will » Mr. S. b . South Chari ! W . R. Sterrel I and Sabbath, i JOBE BROS. & CO., Buy atA NENIA, OHIO. . sj 4£ l-J Curq a Cold In One Day roeLaxative Bromo ^wnineiWMi.^/^. / sold Inp«st 13 month*. 'TO® ’C«mCrip In TwoDays. on every At any ra getting rid principle g-o-n-e! ” with Ayer certainly c nomistake as * reguia the scalp 1 must have iffi nature • ffk* twstlt. , “ fiold ioi w -'■‘-mg'. mm#*t ■ T ' J

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