The Cedarville Herald, Volume 30, Numbers 27-52

o f-16 «amm O HQ i&HIfiEiM xBgo. mjbabvume , m u o . . * W p B o m m t T o r n P a th o x a u e and promise careful ami prompt attention to a ll busi-nefiSEijS {[Intrusted to us," NEW YORK DRAFT and BANKAIONEVtORDERS* T h e ' ■cheapest and" most con­ venient way to send money by mall. u . ; Loans Wade .on Real Estate, Personal or Collateral [Security, Banking Hours: 8. A, M. to 8, P, M, 8. ;w . S mith ,-. President.! 0 , L. S m i t h , Cashier. ,.t f Pennsylvania .. ......LINES ......... 3 ante$townexposition P a lly Excursions to Norfolk •; - Tom* East with Stop-ovei’s a t Pittsburgh N ew York Harrisburg Boston Baltimore Ph iladelph ia Washington R ichmond , and other points Northwest' W est Southwest Go One Route—Return Another,. SPECIAL REDUCED -FARES Sunday Excursion to COLUM­ BUS, §1.00 round trip from C-adarvlllo. Train leaves 0:40nc in- Sept. 15,1907. Fo r particulars call on J . W. RADABAUGH, Ticket Agent t. has a very bad effect ca yoursys- | tem. i t disorders youf stomach •add digestive,apparatus, taintsyorir Ihiqddand causes'constipation,, with aliits fearfulMs. i S c o f f ' d ? E m x x t d i o n s t r e n g t h e n s e n f e e b l e d n u r s i n g m o t h e r s b y i n c r e a s i n g t h e i r f l e s h a n d n e r v e f o r c e . I t p r o v i d e s b a b y w i t h t h e n e c e s s a r y f a t a n d m i n e r a l f o o d f o r h e a l t h y g r o w th . ALL DRUGGISTS; 60c. AND $1.00. mhaB The Cedarville Herald. S i.o o J ? e r Y e a r . 1CAKI.PI B U L L , - - E d i t o r . FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1907’ HE GOT COFFEE, Th* la a bland tonic, liver regulator,,and bloodpurifier. -i It gets rid of tbo poisons, caused .by over-supply of bile, and quickly cords bilious headaches, dizziness, f, loss of appetite, nausea, Indiges­ tion, ponstlpatlqn; malaria, chills, and fever, jaundice,, nervousness, Irritability, melancholia, and all sicknessdue to disordered liver* • It Is not a cathartic, but a gentle, herbaf, liver medicine, which eases without Irritating, lEas Trice 25 c at all Druggists. ! j * 150,000tJSED IKEVERY LINEOFBUSINESS roR AM, PDRP 08 E 8 s r ^ o u v e n 4,fa‘Ed TVptWrifer TM i stand,r <3 vnihf.1 Writer W. J . TflRBOX, LOCAL AOENT. PILES FISTULA AttnAM*- ■ DISEASES OF THE RECTUM tils'! J$ makes k pperittt? of tliCO <lltfei.es* H& jfcsf* NetThin *r.l ltd dC'UT.tk*;V htzto Luatatj. Efc&Sefi JtMftflft tfstd r»fcfn attif- tt WnfiMift m m rofc* wk <>.* rkctalbibkaski {*#**> Mh<ifn&nt0Sd:«Uc£fcaOnffttafeL fc‘.4t!Ciba4|C-L D R . J . J . M c C t B L L A N C olumbus ,! ) . Oulte#VRiiildln#, 44 let! StoM*tr*s» RETURNOF BRENNAN. The election in Xenia prom­ ises to be rather warm as Mayor Brannan has announc­ ed that he will enter the pri­ mary for the nomination. Clem Linkheart, „who has been sheriff and “mayor for several forms, is also talked of as candidate. ..Heretofore Linkheart £has always been regarded as* wet candidate and in favor of a liberal policy. During his former administration he won distinction for himself among the saloon-lceepers and that element by refusing to convict a violator on evidence se­ cured through an Anti-Sal­ oon detective. No purchased evidence went with Link- hefart. Mayor Brennan is koown the country over- as one of the Mayor’s that believed arid put into effect the laws, The laws were enforced many of them against public-sentiment nevertheless.they were.on the statute-books arid must be obeyed-, Under Mayor Bren* nan. the saloons in Xenia have, fared well* I t was l-^affe fry 1 1111 was regarded “radical” in his views. Today the saloon keeper of that *city admits that Brennan has been fair with them* He has demanded that the laws governing the liquor business be lived up to and those caught were punished* The election of liberal man forMayor of Xenia will do more to turn the town dry again than any possible thing. It was the result of the Link- heart policy that greatly as­ sisted in voting out the sal­ oons. * People become dis­ gusted with the open violation of the law, brazen assault on citiziens who had taken part in advocating a dry town and the murders that Were com- mited as the result of the saloon. If the saloon-keepers of Xenia want the town dry again it is their duty to elect a wet or liberal candidate* There is no question who the moral element will support* The return of Mayor Bran- nan means a great deal to the people of Xenia and Greene county, for. Before his . term will expire, should he be elected this fall, county local option will be" in vogue and the saloons of Xenia will have to go, Then will come the nsed of a man who has a back-bone such as Brannan posessesto'enforce the laws* Since the above was writ­ ten the nominations have closed and Mayor Breman will have no opposition, A Woman’s Simple Lite Card, To be tender, to be kind, to bo able to boar our trials bravely, to ddeldo without prejudice, and to riso above mifiplcioa; to look for the beautiful and the good in the precious common things about UfJj to let the none of in­ ward trust and peace rise to our lips and permeate mtr lives—tkla its tbo "simple Ufe.-^Ruth Starry. caterpillar's Sight. A ralohrin&rYi eyes cannot see at a itteatef distance tftaa li-cth* of aft 'tfKtft : . . * . |4 **>*$*'&%#!xffrpkf r fife*****-%ik. Major Asked For Tea, but That Made No Difference. Back in the seventies' of the last century, when the Kansas division of the Union Pacific was called the Kansas Pacific, Major E. D. Red- dington, who had served with dis­ tinction in the .civil war, was pay­ master, ' At that time the paymas­ ter was the biggest man connected with the road in the estimation of the employees and the people living in the towns along the line, and his arrival in the pay car was usually the occasion for a great outpouring of the people. * One night Major Tteddihgton's car pulled info the town o;f Wallace. The major and his clerics .were giv­ en-a grand weki. me by the people. They were escorted to a railroad boarding house and treated ns royab guests. I t was conducted by a bux­ om Irishwoman, who boasted that she set the best table of any town along"the roud. . ‘ 4-t supper that night every regu­ lar hoarder turned up at the table looking his best. The Irish ^land­ lady," as they called her, appeared in a .neat blue calico dress, all primped up and smiling. “Tay ’r coffee?" she asked; with a pretty courtesy, as she passed from one guest to another, The regular hoarders understood it all, and they answered, J/Coffee, please, mum.” Major Reddingtftn, however, was a down east-Yankee and not much of a coffee drinker, so when the question was put. to him he replied with his usual po­ liteness: . “I Will have a cup of tea, i f you please". ~ ; ■ I t almost took her breath away The look of disgust' o n ' her face caused the regular‘hoarders to 'tit­ ter. Then she flared up. “Say coffee, ye omadaha, f ’r. we *have no tay,” she said as'she poured the major's cup lull of steaming coffee.—Kansas -Oity Star. m EXPERTDISCUSES J wmm$ TAXATION | 'he also th a t ho saw / A tax onmortgegea, batug a special fex upon one form of fa an indirect tax, and the result of a release of mortgages from taxation will bo a lowering in the rats of Interest on loanable capital. Tin* man who buys properly on credit fist m assume for purposo of iUustraUo* tlic case of tt farm purchased ■with borrowed, money) baa no reason to complain if .the capital which he bomswa is not taxed to tbo holder of the fnairument* that represent the log#, It is true his plop* ■erty will be assessed to its full value regardless of the debt resting upnjn iW but the brat effect of .such an adjust^ meni will be to reduce the price he must pay for bis land; that is to say; the tax results in depressing the value of land, by an amount equal to its capitalization. The second, effect is. that he wl'i bo obliged to pay less for the money borrowed with which to purchase the land. I t Is doubtless true that up to ft certain point these'two tendencies will counteract each other, for the lower the rate of interest the higher •will he the valuation of -Jana. But the balance will most certainly be to the advantage of the man who de­ sires to buy land with borrowed capital; for the Tate Which Axes the price of land is.tbo commercial o r in­ dustrial rateMwhile the rate that must be paid for the money borrowed la the current" rate bn loanable capital. Not only Is that latter lower in itself than the market rate on industrial capital, buj it will be yet further depressed by the exemption o* such capital from taxation.. I t Is lack of confidence in commercial laws by which values are determined and to Which -vntractg are adjusted: that inciteft to a constant ef­ fort on the part of legislators to lay hold of loanable capital for the pur­ pose of taxation.- Experience shows this to be Impossible and analysis shows It to i)0 -unnecessary. There is no reason in the nature of the, case, due allowance being made for the peculiar industrial qualities of govern­ ment bonds, why the fanner should pay more fornuoney than the govern­ ment.- The farmer’s true interest lies in removing every element of un­ certainty- that Surrounds a loan, and one of these ia the’threat of the law that mortgages should he taxed.”— Henry 0. Adams,Rrofesspr Of political Economy.in fhp University of Michi­ gan and Statistician' for interstate Commerce Commission. , PERSONALPROPERTY Complaint feecftuse It Does N°t Pay its Share 6f Taxee. ' ' There boa been much complaint of late because pm'eewSI -property, es-’ peclaUy intangible, property* does not pay its fair afiftre of SjHbtp’taxes,' It ift-sftid the pey- mors in proportm. Offter-kiMOf *• " “ " M p s t ■33L ^ ^ I ^ T ^ M d l L o n f o tA s - PtaniotesDi^slidn^heifiuf" nftegandflsshCdntalns neither O^«bMor0imeiriior>Im6raI. N ox N abtci iA H C G T IC , A#wy * ' RoiirSQUr Stop^chtDiar Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- nesc end L o s s OF SLEEP. - ■ p "-.- 1*—■■»»»■■—'— ■ FaeSmuto Signature or NEW YDBK. CASTORIA F o r I n f a n t s a n d Oh.ild.ron, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of “TAKE THIS CUT” tr"'X EXACT COPT OP WRAPPER. In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTOR!! - 'THECtNTAUHCOMPANY*NEWYOflKCITY* “ Wo" .recommend i t; there isn’t nay heller,,. In Tuicl-suminer you have to trust to a large degree to your buto-her. Well Cared For Meats in hot weather are the only kind to. buy; wo have proper appliances for keeping them right, and they’re sweet and safe when sold, Don’t go meat shopping when it’s hot. Buy of us and be sure. C . H . C R O U S E , CBDARVILLE, O* HEADACHE “ MyfattierU «<1 been a sufferer fropj ilokbeadaeba for the last twenty-five yean and never found any relief nntlUio boean takincyoor Oaecareti. Sines, be has beenn takine CaecaretB be bae never bad *be headacbo* They have ontlroly cured bltm Oatoarote do-^Wbat yon recommend them to do, ( will elvo yon tbo nrivileBo of nelng ble name.** E.M. Dickson, 1120 Re8ln6rSt..W.lndlanapolU,lnd. Best For w The Bowels • ^ . L w m CANDYCATKART 1 C _ Pleasant,Palatable,Potent,TaeteGood.DoGood, Never Sicken, Weaken or Grlpe. Mo, Mc. tOp.Never aold in bulk. Tlie Kanulne tablotf stamped 0 0 0 . . Guorautecd to cure or yonr money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago orN .Y .' 598 J. H. HcMILLAN, M a n u f a c t u r e r o f CEMENT GRAVE VAULTS, > h h iu l s t m , t e h h u u o h b o x u * Hollow Cement Building Blocks, Chimney Blocks, Veranda Col­ umns, Piers, Etc., Etc. Telephone 7. Cedarville, Ohio • ■*>! Mr. SBarpter, the liouji. ... <(Yeaf i t ia quite aotteenble" aaicL the caller, with a dieetfal smlle^ “I got- it a couple of days ago while I Was stepping on a street car, Tlie motorman started too soon* and he made me hit my jaw against, the side of the car. I thought at first that it had broken the bone, bu t i t ’ hadn’t quite. I t hurt me awfully, though, and, I want you .to bring suit against the company for dam­ ages." ,CI am very busy just now,” said tho lawyer, ‘Tut I can take, it up -for you in the course of three or four'days." * “That won’t do at all." “Why not?" “Because," answered the caller hesitatingly, “that might bo too late. The lump'is getting smaller every day." 8 ontim«nt in tho Wedding. - Very few persons have the cour­ age to be married quietly, without fuss or expense. Men have some­ times gone through the ceremony and left their wives at tho church door. But in such,, rases the mar­ riage was one of compulsion or state necessity and in nowise, af­ fected the general custom. The old fashion of the posy ring, given on the wedding day, was pretty, and these rings, with their quaint con­ ceits and affectionate mottoes, are now eagerly sought after as curiosi­ ties. In these prosaic times lovers no longer share broken coins or the halves of a locket or give min­ iatures to wear around the neck, as even George IV., that heartless and selfish monarch, did, being buried with the picture- of Mrs. Fit^-Her- bert ,hanging on his breast. Little items of sentiment are gradually disappearing, but not tho fine clothes, the parade, the extrava­ gance, the crowds and the cham­ pagne.—London Queen. The -Black Maria. In Boston’s early days -a negress named Maria Leo” kept a sailors’ boarding house near the Water front, She was a woman of gigan­ tic size and prodigious strength and was of great assistance to the au­ thorities in keeping the peace* When ah unusually troublesome fel­ low was on the way to tho lockup Black Maria, as Maria Lee was call­ ed, would come to the assistance of the policeman, and her services were in such requisition for this purposo that .her name was associat­ ed with almost every arrest made, Black Maria often carried a pris­ oner to the lockup on her shoulder, and when the prison van was insti­ tuted for the purposo of carrying prisoners it naturally enough was ityled the Block Maria, n r /m Ml thoMiMGry ot this jistiMi when the rate of tateramt on bout s«mrittes v w *t> tow «s at that tlm®, ■ Thia cotattwmwitalth could borrow moony at tiio ''fate; of about two par cent aud tbo prlcc'of imqpeitlonfciiaa-; cut-itia# waa #0 high that they.yielded tho investor but little more than three per cent on hift investment.' in auoft cases me payment ol a tax of $20 on’ $1,000, which Is hut little above the average rate otlnte in this city, would reduce the not income on such invest-* merits to ft very smalt flgure. i t is not strange that those conservative capitalists Who never tnlso riska by In­ vesting in securities! that are not gilt edged forgot to Inform the assessors of the amount ot their holdinga and the practice of concealing Intangible property became very popular arid is likely to Continue so* Tlio Tates of In­ terest have advanced within tho last three years and the last legislature deemed it wish to exempt from tax­ ation the bonds of the state Issued after Jain I, 1900* thus following tha precedent established by the United States soon after the commencement "of the civil war of exempting govern­ ment bonds from state, county and municipal taxation. .Some complaint has been made by real estate owners because tho rate ot taxation of satiiigs bank deposits is So low, but it to doubtful i t tbe public reab'zes as much, in proportion from the taxation of intangible property held by private Investors as from the tax on savings bank deposits. The laws 61 the commonwealth, as interpreted by the shpremo court in recent decisions, make It easy for a citizen to claim a residence where*he spends very little of his time* and capitalists naturally seek those mu­ nicipalities Where the lowest tax rates prevail and Where assessors are most obliging.. Assessors are aWaro that if they resort to extreme measures there will bo changes In the legal residence of some tax payers and. a consequent Shrinkage in the valuation list, There Ja undoubtedly much undeserved criti­ cism bestowed on this class of public officers by people Who do hot appreci­ ate tho difficulties in the way o t strict* ly equitable taxation.—Fitchburg (Mass.) Sentinel*. I The only just way to treat intangible property is either to exempt It, or to levy ft small taftapon tt, say, one-tenth of one per cent, In view of tho fact ,tliat when in the state it receives a certain poilco protection and in some cases, although not In all. the courts of Ohio are open for the enforcement ’Of rights under it* Her to«a of aft Ideal Heath. In the lind en hospital Ward wan a little girl Whoso brother had died ro- centjy enough to make hie stoter- etlll a subject of reflected interest. "It was ail along of eatin* too much, ice cream'and ginger cookies," sho said to the doctor who Was attending her, Then she smiled- feeatificaliy and piously, ’-it was a beautiful death, doctor." . jftittar, Bitteh Thoughts* Roy (mutt-’ chastisement)—1"When pa asked mk'S hand, ha might have made it a condition that it should be reserved for him exclusively.” *»"■*» ... i IS NOW penalty of sewlflg wor­ ries in hot weather. Besides we e&n*t prom­ ise you such a variety to select from later in the season; The most beautiful things will vbe picked up first. If you want the best come early . See the N ew G ing­ hams, they are counted very smart this slimmer for grown-ups as well as for children. (iUTGHlSON & GlBffEY’S, E » XENIA, OHIO. t y * i* ■ • 1 VNSLEY BROS,. Cedarville,rOhio. Manufacturers of CementjBuilding Blocks,’Build- lngs raised and foundations constructed. See us for Cement work of all kinds. Estimates cheer­ ful ly given. F lak es o i Sn ow FLEiJCYwoalciifi, soft and unsiirnnkeii; brightened colored clothes; shining windows; glossywoodwork; glis­ tening china, glittering glassware, and sparkling silver ate every day objects to the woman,who summons to her aid Maple City A few thin f,ft6wy flakes dropped into the heilyr f;om a cake of this woudcr-Vfotldng Soap, will quickly make a heap of dirty clothes.look like a snowdrift. It preserves textures instead of**eatihg” and cor* roding them as strong soaps do. It work^like magic in hot or cold water, and is the purest, finest Soap in existence for ’’all-round" housework. This large, substantial white cake is the most economical because it lasts ns long ps two' of oilier kinds. $ centoat all grocers* MAPLE CITY SOAp-ImZM WORKS, Monftiouih, ' lUlriote*^ mm® $5,000 Reward will be paid to uny person who ’< can find one atom o£ opium, -chloral, ’ morphine, cocaine, ether o r chloroform dr thej^y-*-r" derivatives - in ■ any f”# ;- L>r. Miles’ Hemedies* / ' " This reward is offered b e -j , Cause certain unscrupulous** persons make false statement* ) about these remedies.; I t fa- understood tjhat this reward applies only to gjoods. purch­ ased in the open njiarket, which have not been tampered with. Br. Miles’ remedies cure their strengthening ,and invig- • orating- effect upon the' nervous system, and not by weakening the nerves. “I consider th a t thero are no better • rt metrics "put up than" Dr, •Miles* Nervine, a n ti-r'a in PUJ es , and Nerve ■ and Liver J?lUs. Wo hove used them for years, and recommend them, to , many others. My wife is using tho Nervine, and considers it tho best , medicine In tho world, A lady friend of mine, who wao almost a. total nerv­ ous wreck, through, my earnest sollet- tntfon has used bo veriil bottled Of tho Nervine with wonderful results.” ^ , 1 VM, CROME, Salt "Lalto City, Utah. Dr. Miles'Aritl»Paln Pills are sold,by your druuqlst, who v/lll guarantee th a t the firat-''package will benefit. If It", falls, ho will return your money. 23 doses, 2 $. cents. Never sold In bulk; Miles Medical Co., "Elkhart, Ind Baker’s Restaurant. Now located in the5Book- waiter Hotel Building across the street from the old “Adams” stand. Restaurant in hotel lobby and dining room on second floor, reached by elevator. Meals 25c and 35c. High Street, Springfield, 0 . e d g y L I Q U O R l f f l l l * C MORPHINE ill Vi? ?hi? •“•'J? rational troatinent COLUMBUS OHIO Old Clock (n Good Repair, James H, Clark, pi Httrdwlck, Vt„ has. tt clock about 100 years old, ,Th«. mahogany easo is ooveri feet tali. The ivhrlte aro of Wood, and all the repair* tog needed for a long time had to be made on these. t i-iica fiva*A,ccn»a t t j k RiJi't llSMrwil, ms * rttnt*>nsa.McijryRcih 'tasMsflYfjaj, cjoh Ijauo, spetm of InteractYj>au. ASUgatlns KEXUDOCS *-■!*’

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