The Cedarville Herald, Volume 30, Numbers 27-52

CUT" there ibiCfc lave to frursfc buta-her. ir Meats Inly kind to (pllnncoa for [and they’re* Id. Don’ t go Is hot. Buy SB, ]i, a ! “Cftgcnretn^fof _tmred of stomach. Iwarri of p.raUo is ■rful composition, 1'cnlleri ruuiodio* ■Cmsoarota rellev* Hera X have taker; llotaey Clfcy.N* J, ■ (toGood.Dp flood, Ocj, 23c, 50c,Never ; stamped COQ,' rback* - * pgoorN/XV^cja > LION BOXES certainty : Ir heart • is : |>n in four lit may he luild know Irious con- Jiave short palpitation, • ■lushes;' if f£t side'; i f ; smother- luyji heart, |ur heart is diseased, lire will re- I'Ottle, and condition rote to the ■ advice, as X trouble, and X had'pain ■ft side, and raw a deep r little exer­ tion, and I tide without 110 to try Dr, rvine, which . at I am in. was before, InC'o I. com- about thir- (llelnes, and h my heart , THOMAS, :slcy, Ohio. Blu 1 Is sold by rantce th at if it fails Ikhart, Ind, [lie B ook ­ ing across the o ld estaurant d in ing , reached 25c and Ind [lgfield, 0 , 1 j » bta ¥ b 1 Jlanai trratewnt (RU03, j;er.:i fcf fit Dennisonfive., OHIO lop alr. Iwlcfc, -Vt„ Frn oil. Tho N tail, Tho the repair- lo had to ba * \ / ' M ^yr?Tii¥^" m 1 1 TAfTTHEBUILDER Political Writers of A’»n.!r/ To!! e¥ liie Olilcaa's Achievements In the Americanization of ■■ the Philippines, ■ Ho |q tho Father cf the Islands, Soya Savoyard, Clover Washington Cor- respondent—His Work Across the Seas an Epoch-Making One. At this time, when the nation la IciiMng. toward Secretary William Harvard Taft aa.the nuccecuov of Pres- Id<nt ItooseW'Jt, the political writers of the country are training their pens on. the big war secretary and laying his public life bare to the people. In. remote cases, where correspondents conducting their bureaus under orders from superiors, are forced to pen arti­ cles antagonistic to the Taft move­ ment petty incidents arc magnified with a view to damaging the Ohioan's presidential prospects, But in nearly every case, the recital of the achieve­ ments of Secretary Taft, since his en­ trance' into ’public life, with his ser­ vice In the Philippines outshining all other efforts is an enthusiastic extola- tioa 6f Taft the organizer and of Taft ■ the builder. . ' ' Premier of Administration. Commenting upon the leading part p’ayod by .Secretary Taft' in tho Roosevelt administration and Upon tho trip to the Philippines to be tuade |SlTJy in the fail, Alien Beach, political writer on the staff of the Ohio State Journal, has this to say: “When "William H. Taft sets sail from Seattle on Sept, 10 for Manila, it "will be a“departure In a dual sense, For three months he.will he In the far East,, separated by thousands of leagues of waterway from the Ameri­ can continent anil the American peo­ ple.- In the mm/ physical sense of distance and remoteness this journey will he a noteworthy departure. It will be so alscfin-that for awhile it will take him out of the Roosevelt environ­ ment, In Manila, as much as iu Wash­ ington,, he will be the premier in fact . if not in name of an epoch-making American administration, but there .will be a difference. When he went •to- Panama, when ho went to Cuba,- an i when he went to Porto Rico it W-’a as Roosevelt’s lieutenant to carry out Roosevelt’s policies and •to <16 Roosevelt's work. He went simply as a cabinet minlst’er. '■But his prospective trip to the Philippines is more i* the nature of a leave of absence to go home to his own people. Before Roosevelt was- Roosqvolt in- Washington, Taft was Tf ft In Manila, • , "As secretary of war Judge Taft is inextricably bound up in the Roo'se- velt policies, In September ho will leave all that’ and for mouths will be , where all he seesand hears aud about all there is, Is the fruition of Taft pol­ icies. Runs Away to Win. And-so ft is that there are those’ who foresee that this Journey, to the Orient will be the finishing touch fa tin malcing of a candidate acceptable ' to the American people,- Taft will run away to win. “Ever since the day Theodore RcoSevelt started to Colorado on a hear hunt and said he had left Taft silting on the lid, the American peo­ ple have looked upon Taft as a- good man to succeed^the present occupant of the White House. The Cincinna­ tian’s boom for president really start­ ed that day. Succeeding events have only served to confirm the opinion of Ill s public that Taft is a sincere and thorough-going Roosevelt!an, amLlhat lie would carry out the Roosevelt poll- cics againsf any sort and degree of op- jnslfion, Iii all parts of the country one heats the expression of this opin­ ion, and there Is also a widespread sentiment that Taft is the best expo- n-nt of thos’o policies at the command, of the country.’’ Iji tho same spirit Savoyard, the- cl.'ver Washington correspondent, writes: , “Mr. McKinley sought Some leading Republican to make a satrap of the Philippine islands. "His choice fell on William H. Taft, atsd perhaps it was tho most fortunate ti nt could have been made. Taft went over there, and hit) view of tho p<*iplft we had bought was the view of a Burke and not of a Hastings. He In* terpreted his mission to he a work of planting American civilization on tho olher side of the world rather than ex- pl’ iting theft sugar, hemp, timber and olher resources for the money there was in them for American adventur­ ers, Htwester Work. “ I do not remember to have read any passage In the federal constitu­ tion conferring on our government au­ thority to.go up and down the earth civilizing people less fortunate than ourselves, but that is honester work than ’robbing them would be, and as constitutional. “ Taft, foil In love with that strange people. He was their friend and their guardian!* Hu believes they have the foundation'Tor tno" orccllbn or aii'en­ lightened and henellciftnt civilization. Ivlan.^ of them nro his personal friends, for whom ho lias as mud* affection and respect as for any of ids friends i:i Ohio or in Washington. Ho strove to form a good government for their advantage.* Never was there a min­ ister of a hock or a teacher of a class •that discovered more solicitude for hit charge than did Big Bill Taft for that poopla. “And that is why Big .Hill Taft wants to b'n president of the United fltetes. And there must ho BonjctMc* good in tiint prop’o. They responded . to Taft. If ho regarded them as chil­ dren, they looked up to him an » any other American, more than all ether Americans, and if tho hand of God is In the thing and this govern­ ment la to ho made tho divine, itetrii- ment to riviiire the Orient Toft is not only .the, logical nominee of tho Ra- 'publican party, hut the logical candi­ date of tiic American people, “Taft is a big, strong, healthy, good- natured man, but there is all the bull- .dog In him there Is In Cleveland, and if he shall got the presidency he will he president. His Akron speech and his judicial decisions, to which pro­ fessional laboring men object, show tho metal of the roan. Both wifi cost him. support, and it Is just as certain that both will earn him even more support than they will cost him," Tho same may ho said of the Brownsville episode.” I T H E W INN ER . | I mot a .politician who was In a good position To know what public sentiment do- maudedi . . , ■ lie had ir.s.uo information on the wishes of the nation, And could* grasp a situation, single-: handed, - • '-I’ve been trying," ho explained with a weary look and pained, "To Und a eaneldato who would belong To the Powers that ‘produco’-rbut it isn't any use. For. everywhere I go I hear the song— Chorus. ‘‘Please omit the lemons, for WO know ' what lemons cost: Please cut out the icebergs that are sure to be a frost. What's tho use of risking a .return of 'ancient graft. . . ' When everybody everywhere’s for Big,.. ■ ■» ■ .■ ■ MIA, TAFT!” „ . . ■: .II.' ■ ■■ What’s the news from Minnesota—Who’s the choice of South Dakota? How’s New Hampshire lining up with old Missouri? ’ / And Un-re's only one reply—"Oh,- 'they are shdutlng for Ohio, And old Vox Popull’s tho only jury," There Is one that there’s no daunting— he's been weighed and found not wanting— That's.the talk you've got to hear from sun to sun. la he Roosevelt's successor? And tho answer still is "Ycsslr! lie’s a heavyweight, hut, Lord, how no / . can run.!" 1 ■ Chorus. ■.. •Never talk <Sf Fairbanks nor of Cannon nor of Hughes; Why not pick a winner when you have n L-huuce to choose Why not fire the Biggest Gun and rako ’em fore aml aft? _ . . Everybody evorywht-re’s for Big i - ' B I L L ______ 1 . TAFT! ' —Toil Robinson In “Just .By tho WayA •Cleveland Leader. - ' A CASE OF TA fT JUSTICE. „Senator Scott Tells of an Incident In War Department Wo.rk, Hovz Secretary of War Taft doea’ business, was strikingly Illustrated by Senator Scott of West "Virginia, the other day. Tho senator told the story to a surrounding crowd <*£newspapar men. .. . “fPisat’a all right about Secretary Taft being such a Jovial follow,” the senator said. “He’s jovial, all right, but that Isn’t his chief attribute. It’s his. sense ,4of justice, and when that has been outraged, lie's stern’ enough, “I had occasion to observe once how he. acted when-he thought, injustice had been done. As 1 was Interested in the matter personally,! am. con­ versant with the details. A West Virginia boy had enlisted as a private soldier and wast sent to the Philip­ pine islands. I-ater ho re-enlisted, served as a corporal, a sergeant, took ihs examination for a commission, passed it and returned from the Phil­ ippines- to tho United. States. At Fort Leavenworth he was turned down for th§ promotion, because his chest measurement wasn't la proportion to -his height and weight.. "The young man laid his case be­ fore me and asked mo to Intercede, Together we went to the war depart­ ment and called on Secretary Taft I explained the case to him, and lie ask­ ed ine to bring the young soldier into his office. The lad stood attention, as fine looking a soldier aa you wanted to see. “How Tong have you been in the army, and where did you serve?” SecretaryTaft asked him. “Four years, and most of the time in the Philip­ pines,” was the reply. . “ .'When you enlisted the first tfmo and the second time, was any Question raised about your chest measure­ ment?’ the secretary continued. *' ‘There was not.’ ‘"Have you been in the hospital since?’ “ ‘No, sir.* “ ’Gentlemen," said the secretary, turning to the members of Ills staff- and there wasn’t any joviality In his looks or In Ills-tone just then—‘this young man was big enough around the chest to enlist. He was big enough around the chest to re-enlist. He was big enough around the chest to serve his country as a Corporal and as a ser­ geant fifthe tropics. He Is big enough around tlio chest to get the promotion which lie has earned, and, by the sev­ en Gods of War, he shall have It/ ‘‘And,” concluded Senator Scott, en­ thusiastically, 'lie dIJ get It, too. And he is doing good service today.” We’ve{Madea MoveYouWill Appreciate. In clothing circles July 4th usually marks the end of the active buying season - - - - not so this year, on ac­ count of a season which never ar­ rived — a spring which disappear­ ed without , ap­ pearing;— harken* ing to the voice of cold business reas­ on, we have de cided to offer you bargains never be fore shown in any other store during the month of July. mm $nit sale. . - No. 1 . .,,bout 75 two and three piece suil:i- many priced at $15—none less than $ 12 . July sal ■ a $9.75 men’s SuitSale. . No. 2. . Nearly 100 choice patterns — 1 • "V""-’--T made for us to sell at $10 and $18 neat ch’eck worsted effect etc. All this season's manu­ facture.-. July sale- I.JO men’s SnitSale. No. 3. ^This}|{includes our fittest lines of new gray {{and brown worsteds, plaid .tweeds and eassimeres, blaclc and blue serges and flannels. We have more of these than we ' \ want, good as they ari. AStraightDiscountof 20percent,1=5Off $30 E. M. System Suits, in July sale............. .... .$24 $22{{E. M. System Suits, in July sale $17.60 $25 13. M. System Suits, in July sale.................. $20 $20 E. M. System Snits, in July sale... ‘ ............. $16.60 Young men’s Suits. Choice any suit in this department, formerly priced at $15, $16 and $18. In July sale $11.5# Young men’s Suits. We have taken all the cheaper ones none worth less $ 10 —many $ 12 -— about 50 of them to sell. In July sale $7.50 A few youths* and some men's "left­ overs/-' something good in nearly every size. July sale Special clearance TX Cbe Boys’ Stop We can commend tho savings possible, to the consideration of all parents. >5 and $GAll wool suits, from the 'most noted makers of boys' clothes in the country $3-50 20 per cent reduction on all finer grades.' 2 0 p e r c e n t r e d u c t io n o n a l l $ 5 , [ $ , 7 , a n d $ 8 T M e n vs T r o u s e r s 5.

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