The Cedarville Herald, Volume 30, Numbers 27-52

J \ CUT" »M3m i«iii,r,. 7 TWiii[ it; U hto Ito ’H have to trust «r Imtwher, or Meats 3 on ly fcind to ■ppliances lo r c, and they'ro mid. Don’t go U'H hot, Day USE , .13, 0. rfrom alc)ch?*cUeh& and uQTOirfound *uy otir OascarelVi Since ho has niivfcr hud entirely cured ItUa-i- mend tl\om to ,do« -I, , of ur I uc W»name*** W4ndlanapoUM&d* for wets d by person who ,»m of opium, iue, .cocaine,: form '6 f '“ i any.* 'dies. is offered be- ' unscrupuiops also statei#eJ$t&*,. medies. life is * t this reward ' goods parch- ■ .market, which tampered with, icdies cure by’" nog ,apd invig-, - ) 0 n the nervous by weakening ‘■hero are no better than Dr, Miles Pills, and Nerve fa have used them commend them, to wife is using tha Idors it the b o a t' rid. A lady friend most a total nerv- mv earnout sftliei- ‘orSl hottloa of the erful reSnUr;." •Lake City, Utah. In Pills are sold by jv UI guarantee that vlll benefit, If ft your money. Mover sold In bulk, 21khart,Ittd $ urant. in the Book­ building across rom the old Restaurant y and dining l floor, reached lea ls 25c and Springfield; 0 , *r:d rational tn atMent INK i.i drug *. fv:;,! for IGS7RorthOiMhtfi kft. US OHIO Good Repair, of Uardwiek, Vt„ 100 ycam old, Th* ovtinicat. tall. Thfc and bn the repair' oner time had t« b* •. «- , TasteGood',DoGood, lpo. 10 c ,t 5 c , 60 o.NeT*r ahlot otamjied 0 0 0 , onayDHCk. hicagoorN.Y.' 598 ' 1LL1QH BOXES THE FAMOUS &, ■ - " - ( “ * ~Q~ ~ ~ *' ~ — — — - — . . 4 ■ Thursday, Friday, Saturday, , r. V 1 j ,.fl - ■ & . ■ ■ ■ t» » * . , ; Sept, 26th, 27th and 28th, The Formal Opening and Exhibit of Exclusive Fall Millinery. ' ‘ a • ^ V • ' ■ **••• ■ ' -- * . Radical inovations in from material and method of elaboration mark the Ex­ clusive Collection of hats to which we invite your interest. They include the orig­ inal models from abroad and creditable adoptions of them. Rigkfe Full Orchestra Afternoon and Evening Thursday the 26tli. ^ ; ' ( • • - - •> •> -•* , « , Springfield’s Exclusive Millinery Store 55 To 39 South Fountain Jive mm w i NOWSHOWING «©• . . ‘ " r. Complete Line ■Right;«p p tlfe^ m fttute:fic jstyle -and w e guarantee the service a W E K E E P TH E B E ST OF EV ERY TH ING IN FO O TW EA R -FROM Infants’ShoestoFeltBoots, v r r t r m utM Cl t.f ,’3dcf teustJri «|u YfcHIMHf * Mftms AND ARE THE CHEAPEST BECAUSE BEST . AGENTS FOR THE Hanan & Son, .Walk Overs,- The Krippendorf Ditt- mann Co., Grover’s Hand Made Shoes, And Many Other High Class makes of Shoes. PftATSffORTAFT ‘fraukite, Clark and H ik ing Coun- Wes tike latest to EndorseCan- (Macy of, War Secretary. Beth CMnnit{f(» of First County Pass Retolutiona, d a rk qoynty Commit* t«a toy Sentiment' |q Overwhelm- jnyiy Fee Tuft, On# by one the counties of Ohio, by tlie eadonsuneats pf their committees, eye dt-clarlug for Secretary William II. Taft for the prcoiucncy and against any opposition to him which may arise In his native state, The endorsements hi nil eases are. vigorous in their praise for the achievements of the Way Secretary end pledge tho unani- moas support Of the county for his- candidacy. Clark, Frnhkl{ri and Hocking coun­ ties ate the latest to thus formally join tho Taft movement which is sweeping over the state.' The resolutions of the committees endorse Taft and the Roosevelt policies. Information from the eighty, eight Ohio counties show that a vote of the Republicans would indicate but slight opposition to tlso War Secretary. The general enthusiasm which is so mani­ fest'is promising the county commit­ tees to sonte action which wril reflect the sentiments of the republicans of their counties. , • Two Endorsements. ■ The Franklin County executive com­ mittee in session at Columbus ratified the endorsement of the central com­ mittee and supplemented it with an equally :np vigorous resolution. The executive committee’s resolution is as follows- “Whereap, .The,Republican County Central committee of Franklin county has adopted &'resolution declaring In favor of Secretary William' H. Taft, for president, -a copy of which resolution. Is- hereto attached: “Now, , 'therefore,- be i t ; resolved by the Republican county execu­ tive committee of said Franklin coun­ ty, That we heartily approve of the action of said Central committee in adopting said resolution, and hereby declare our complete and cordial sup­ port of the same; and "Be it further resolved, That the chairman o l tills committee he and he Is hereby authorised and in­ structed to co-operate in any way within hi# pqyyer for and on behalf of this committee and the Republicans of RrankUn county in furthering the best JnterOsIs pf the candidacy for Presi­ dent pf Honorable William H. Taft oi Ohio,1' Praise-For Taft The resolution of the' Central com­ mittee, which boro the flame pf every' member, follows; ' 1 ’ ' Whereas. 'Ohio now has in fhs cab­ inet of .President Roosevelt a dis­ tinguished sms whose high character and emfboai' public service commend him to- thfe' c&nftdeWe of the Nation. ^ 'A ' - , ‘ t ,$%«««*, Wfth#&sv#he t* inrtt fitted 1 1 ^ -a ^-snaafemd i M Rdmirdsfi^itiim; • 3 How, tinp-cfoje, he It resolved by the Republican county central bom- mitteo of Frnakhn county,' That war heartily ettdora&Hoh. W’iHiam # t$ m as our Choice for, President o f’ the Halted States, and! Pledge him hjtjfl earnest and enthusiastic support ft# President Roosevelt’s successor. ^ The, Hoc-king County Republican Executive committee at a called meet- inWfit Hogan unanimously passed the following resolptfoiu Resolved, That wo endorse the can­ didacy pf Hon. Win, H> Taft for the Presidency no: the practically, unani­ mous choice oi tiro Republicans Of Hocking County. Wo believe au'flxpresSion of the Well known, nentimeni of tho RepUblleans by a committee representing Is proper at thin time in order that oilier states may know that Ohio is solidly for Taft. JAMES I,. MARTIN, Ch’n. H, STRAWN, Secy, * ' The Executive committee of Clark county, meeting at Springfield, unanl- monPly adopted the following: "Resolved, by the Republican Execu­ tive committee of Clark County, Ohio, That as far U3 our authority goes we heartily endorse Hoji. William H, Taft of Cincinnati as Our choice for the nomination for the Presidency, believ­ ing that wo thus express the over­ whelming sentiment of the Republi­ cans of Clark county," iHflnyiay Frazer’s Shoe Store. 17 East Main Street, Xenia, O. jf, RIGHTS Of TAXPAYERS | mi ■ ’ » In all the various suggestions of the referendum in .relation 1o schemes of government involving largo expendi­ tures of public money, nothing is said -aa- to—the-rights--of tho- taxpayers;-in. To Cure a Cold in One Day Tate,Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. £ Seven Million boxes sold In past 12 months. T k l S S i g n a t u r e , Cures Grip In Two Rays. o n e v e r y b o x . 2 5 c . Mah-of*WSr 7 Mdn-of-wdr is a phrase applied to a line of-haftie ship, contrary to tho usu­ al rulo in the English language, by which all ships are feminine. It arose in the following-manner; "Men of war" were heavy armed soldiers. A nblp full of them Was called a "man- of-war ship,” In. process of time tho word "ship” was discarded as unnec­ essary and there remained tho phrase "a man-of-war.” Why the Dot Over "I.” . The small latter ”1" was formerly written without tho. dot; i,tho dot was Introduced in tho 14th century to di'Vingulah "1” from “o'* la hasty and indistinct writing. i ’ ’ Not the Sunshine. There. Was an old man who was charged with Illicit distilling and was brought up before the court. The Judge, 'who was a witty fellow, asked the prisoner what was bin Christian name. The prisoner replied; "Joshua,” and tho Judge answered; "Are you tha man that nrodo tho sufl shine?" afld tho prisoner replied: "No, sir, your- honor; Tin tho one-that made tho moonshine,"—Army and Navy Life, Chick on Scorchers. Why Be Pessimistic? Like an Individual, a nation cahnot expect to bo healthy or happy which, so to speak, I d forever feeling its own pulse and ’coking trt ltd tongue in the glass, if- we canhot alter the condi­ tions of modem life, we can at least make the best of them, and steadily refuoo to bo lugubrious on their ac­ count, charm our pessimistic medicine man never so wisely, ’ Rabbit's Motherly Devotion, A trapper going his rounds at Leeds* ...................... . , ' town, Cornwall, came upon a rabbit cyeHlsta la Itoumanla, to facilitate Jnursing her little ones, and lying on Identification, are compelled by law to have their names on tho lamp, glasses of their machines, so as to h i legible a t flight,. her side to do so, while she Was evi­ dently in excruciating pain, Her two forelegs wero broken and bleeding, and (securely held in &steel trap, SECRETARY AS REPORTER. Like Chief Justice Fuller, Secretary Wilson and other men high in the pub­ lic service and confidence, Secretary Taf£ began Ids career as a newspaper man. The first money earned by him after being graduated froth Yale was as court reporter on a Cincinnati pa­ per, the Old Cammercial-Cnzette, then edited by Murat Haisted. Mr. Taft started at $0 a wdek, and when be quit had worked mp to "twenty per," All the time he was thus engaged he was studying at night under hts father’s direction. Necessity did not drive him to the work, as his fattier was a man of-ample fortune, but the secretary osfiilL.heetose.lt _was.-the.-Ecadiest entrance to-active employment that brought him daily in contact with law­ yers and court proceedings, > The secretary likes to discuss news­ paper work with reporters. Ho uses the shop term 3 with a familiarity de­ noting Ills farmer experience In the business, and understands how to out­ line a "story" for tho "boys” better than any member of administration, barring only tho man in the White Honso.-“-Washlngton Herald. CAV?at«,9iri Tt*d*.W*r1(*ftt)Uii!cd aaJ sillPAfc* tOr.diKt'd h t MocucSATi: Ptc*. 1 Oi/n O reict t«reeo*irt u ,». i * at « htorriefc .and we f .*« tttm * patent in ItMUrn# thin those remote W*»h<ntrt<ii>, Send model, dcawi.ift vt nhotn.. with tleecrTp jttort, Vr« adriw, il fiauntehift oi .tot, freer oi chaeae, Ouffeenotduotmpatentistecaeed. ! >M w i k t w , ' ' J * o « ! P * t e n t i , e'With tost of Htn« in tte l .f»,and fs*«i»n eounleiet sent tee*. Andre**. C.A.ANOWtfc CO., ow, Parfcar OflutiWA*nt»*in>H, D, ft. AVv^t*1 i pa'-3ing jwigmrnt uiton the projects. lu bnHiueso affairs, uurh mattera are referred to llie stocklmificrd or the cor- ]ioration3 interested, and only stock­ holders may pass upon them, in a municipal community, the stock­ holders are tho taxpayers. And In all matters involving the expenditure of their money which it may be'consider­ ed advisable to submit to the test of a public ballot their interests should be considered In lie voting. To permit a great army of non-taxpayers to par­ ticipate in this expression of opinion, and possibly to outweigh, by their votes, the deliberate Judgment of those who have the greatest interest at stake—tho taxpayers—-cannot be look­ ed upon as an act of justice. In a community where suffrage Is so cheap, where the irresponsible, un­ interested vote is large, a referendum system which exposes the interests of the taxpayers to the votes of those who have absolutely no financial in­ terest in government is absolutely in­ defensible. And yqt, when these matters, are under consideration, there are few to raise their voices in favor of tlioso who make government pos­ sible by providing the money for its maintenance/ "Taxation without representation’’ was'ono Of the evils and oppressions that led to the American revolution and the freedom of the American colonies from the rule of the mother country. Taxation imposed by the overwhelming vote of the unfaxed would be an evil just as great.-—W11-. mtngton (Del.) Every Evening.- TAXING CREDITS. ■- . In his remarks at tlie state tax’com- ■mlsslon meeting, Mr. Derthink, (Mas­ ter of the Ohio State Grange,) alluded to the fact, that at. Mt. Vernon and Bellefontaine tho savings bank de­ posits earned 3 per cent and the tax rate was 4. A tax system that re­ quires such a payment IS grievously unjust. A great deal of this business is not so bad, but it is bad enough to turn the state into a community of law violators and false swearers. „„ It is a calamity that this abuse should remain another year. The harm done in one year will outweigh all tho benefit of the taxation fo'r a century. Laws that do not conduce to honor and . justice, are uncivilised and un­ christian. Mr. Chamberlain, of The Ohio Far­ mer,, spoke to some effect on the tax proposition. He .made a. number of excellent Suggestions and ‘upon the matter now referred tq, -ho said: "Amend tho constitution to permit levying a tax of one-quarter or one* half of i per ceut-.ofl the value of all, evidences of indebtedness tod re­ quire" all such evidences to ho llstqd, to be legal.'"- ■There is a sensible Bug-; gestion, and it hai been tried m bth*0 ttr states -wtift- btisfoei#. tod Hi vrai save the s ta te from disgracing-Itself. The people ,aro hot aware of the enormity of the offense against the true principles of taxation tod legislation how being perpetrated nnder the hresent system. Of qH de'- Vicea planned against the prosperity of a people, that which alms at their Integrity is tlie ptost fatal,—Ohio State Journal. PLAN TO GUARD PUBLIC CASH. 0. B. Kegiey, master of tho Wash­ ington State Orange, is calling espe­ cial attention to a movement started a t the last session of the grange to secure a uniform and accurate ac­ counting of tlie collection and expend­ iture of all public money. The campaign is designed to bo general, and it is expected that the question .will bccomo a loading issue all over the Halted States in the next two yearn,- Its object is to reduce public business to the santo basis of careful conduct as private enterprise. An amendment to the state constitu­ tion will be necessary. The resolu­ tion follows; “Whereas, All money collected from the people by the local, state and na­ tional governments by taxation and other means should be expended and accounted for with as much cafe and thrift as all good citizens expend and account for their private incomes; “Bo it resolved, That the following provision n ’ < : b j'ct of uniform public acr >n.,;i:.i . made a part of the const!: fit a oi the state of Wash­ ington, and that the members of all local granges and all good citizens generally throughout the state be and are. hereby requested and urged to in­ terest themselves in securing this re­ sult: "Thfe legislature shall require all money collected by taxation or by fees, fines and public charges of every kind to he accounted for by a system of accounting that shall bo uniform for each class of accounts, state or local, which.shall be prescribed and audited by authority of the state.—Spokane (Washington)' Press, June 12, 1907. INEQUALITY UNDER A UNIFORM TAX RULE. Money, bonds, mortgages and other securities, if assessed at all, must bo assessed at their full value. Real es­ tate is assessed at not more than GO per cent of full value. When the rate is Zi/j per cerit this means that every $1,000 In money, clc„ must pay a tax of $22 50, ahd every $1,000 In real es­ tate will.pay a tax of only $15, thus making the hflrdert on money, etc,, GOper cent more than on real estate. This is why tax laws are evaded. T omut d«f» l.TW.eTA'X'JBrSTj LIQUOR°>l MORPHINE’ lire RftMfc*,' it the only <ur* and rational trrutmcni for thoseaddictedto DRINKorDRUGS, Pendkir freeBookletand term*, fill? KerthfaMltis Are,. COLUMBUS OHIO monuments€ut Stoncsand Statuary JjtoSSE Many things must be con­ sidered in the construction of a monument, Not only should jthe design be artistic, but the material substantial, and the workman- sliip—the best. We aim and succeed in combining all these at all times. With, our -superior facilities and equipment, which are not equalled by any retail concern In the U. >SMwe are prepared never before to furnish high grade work for less money than infer­ ior work will cost elsewhere. We employ no agents in this terri­ tory. IC a t all interested m anything in our line, write, phone for catalogue or if possible call to see us. Bell phono 891, Citizens 2J5. Established 3804.’ GEORGE DODDS & SON, 113, 115, 1.17,119 W', Mam St., Xenia, O, Automobilists We Want Your Attention Whether you own an Auto now or want’ to buy one later, we know that our services ’ . will prove valuable to.you. We specialize in Second-hand Autos. If you want to be put in touch with buy- y ers or owners, we arej in a position to get you better prices than you would bevapt_to get otherwise. - " As expert engineers ”we 'give"fto’ all a- “square deal”—^buyer ahd seller alike. Our aim is to give value received to both. Dayton Auto Exchange o., DVNN and SWAIN. Bell Phote 3708. 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No dark-room is needed and every step i s exp lained in the illustrated instruction book that accompanies every outfit* Made by Kodak workm en in the Kodiak factory—that tells the story of the quality* THE KODAK BOX No. 2, CONTAINING; 1No. 2JferowaloCamora, 1BrownioDevelopingBox, * « I RollNo. 3Bro\vnl 0 Film,T,ox., 1StirringRod, non 1.00 .20.05 •IB .10,0o $ .15 ___ .15 . -------DeJeloping'Xnbes, .10 8 Paper Developing Trays, * ,80 1 Doa. 2U x Duplex Mounts, ,Wi 1Do?., KoBnlcpry MoahtiiigTjijao, .05 l Instruction Rook, - * - ,io b x. $ 4 . 0 9 P rid e , C om p le te <3*/f QO A* att KodakDealers. $4.46 W titcfcr ItodiM (•/ the Kodak £ox. EASTMAN KODAK CO* Rochester* N* Y*> Koiahctt*. ' P ,

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