The Cedarville Herald, Volume 32, Numbers 27-52
* f 1 i 1 THIEXCHAIGEIAIK rKDA ltY JM iK , OHIO. ^^1«l^V\AA»A_^«yV>A^1 Wj» SOLICIT YO l* BATBONAft* and proml** ca rtfu l and prompt attention w ato business in trusted to w . "A hard chill, pain through the chest. difficuit breathiiig. Then fever, with great prostration/ If this should be your experience, send for your doctor. You may < have pneumonia! If your doctor cannot come a t once, ~A"h iaviC"Ay£!f‘2r''<£h?TifyHPfcefc^^ * l l exactly what you have done. Then do as he says, h o akohd in this cough medicine. j:cMyer^U.omltM^, NfiWYOttK o n A l l and BANKMUM , ORDHRS*- most con* mousy l>7 $Ch* Ch*np««fc *H.'i ir»nt*nt -way to mail. BO, team Made Personal o r : on i da AM I Estate, Security, Basking lit nr* i A. M. to * P. M. B. W. S mith , PrmidfKt. ' , e , L . S u r e ' i ’H **' t l: f # When Sick Women atifferli:^from head ache, backache, f in - side, or nervousness, or say oitier ail ment resulting from ' =, trouble, should get • ; use it regularly. C k s been found, by thou ladles, to relieve female k- nesa, by restoring to 1- .dr the weak womanly organs. Take Mrs. F . S. Mills, Murietta, Calif,, tried Cardul andwrites: _ don’t think- anyone can recoiruuond a medicine more highly tb sn .1 ^an Cardul. 1 had a tnUbap, followed by In flammation. i positively be lieve 1would have died, had it not been lo r Cardul. When 1began taking it, I could not stand onmy feet. After tak ing two bottles, I was cured, and I nowweigh 165 pounds.” Try Cardul—itvrfllhelp you " Sold everywhere. 4$ -« * mnrOMkwU9M.nriMUJO* win. ttesT For I ^ TheBowele, ^ CANtrycATiwimo' sold J,____ ___ _____ ___ _ . SoMftatftsAto sgr* Ofyear jnon,y h«*k, SWrllngRftmsdy Co.,Chlc*gf»crH.Y* Boa MUIUM.SU.tiTEDNILUOSMIXES FOR SALE! Houses and Lots in Cedarville and vicinity. Buy before the rush. We have three or four desirable proper ties just outside the corporation limits At very reasonable prices, also 2J<£ to 4 acres of land. Will sell one for less than cost of dwelling which cost $3,501). Have a centrally located rooming house of 15 or 10 rooms very cheap. Farms for sale in Central Ohio. SMITH, CLEMANS&HOPP1NG Solid Gold Glasses Fitted with Sptcial Lenses ground to Order for 4 $5.QO, Worth $15.00 Invisible Torlc Bi-^ focals, $3,50 tworth $9,00 Charles S* Fay, M’f'g Optician, 2S K i Last Main Street, Springfield, Ohio. >i ntfhjtift ( rililuiflf'lVlfC^t’tlil J. H. M cMLLAN . Funeral Direct >r ami Furn iture Dealer. M anutaeturcr of Cement d r a t * VaultsandCemonfc Building Block*!. Tatephtm# T. Cedarvilte, Ohio, It May Be Pneumonia; Keep the Dowels In Hood condition. Vine of Ay^’s PUI& at will cau« sux Increased flow of bile, and produce a gentle laxative effect the day following. Ul'O!” Th* Cwktrvffc Herald. Jftae Y » « r . I£A , t i »W3Lfc» FJRIDAT, 8JKFTEMBEB10, 1909. LETTERFROM The following la tte r has been re c i t e d by Mtes Mary Murdock from Rev. B. B- Garbold, of Karnizawa, Jap an , concerning the fund* oon- trlbu ted by Codaryllla peop le: “ W* have ju s t closed our annual meeting. Yohr l e t te r . came bring ing repo rts of Cedarvllle friends who are very dear to me and a sub s tan tia l expression of th e ir In terest in Tlie Kingdom building In Japan You don’t know w h a t a joy i t will be to use th is money in One of the loudly calling opportunities wh ich1 are springing up all along the line. I sha ll lot jo u know very soon in w h a t land of work X sha ll use it. May a ll who give and a ll who can no t give follow th is money with th e ir prayers. I,do long th a t this limy be the beginning or a Cedar- yilie Mission in Jap an . And may i t prove to be the means of bringing very near to eaoh o ther and very near to-Jesus Ch rist the people of all the churches in Cedarvllle. Please accep t m y hea rtfe lt thanks for the the d raft for S ixty Dollars, Gold: dated, Cedarv llle,. Ju ly 10, 1909, I am sure you m ust have spent time and taken much 'p a in s to collect th is money. May God bless you in tb ia service. I regret th a t Xwrote to Prof. McChesney a t a time when he was so very busy. I hope th a t he m ay have the re f t which he needs before th e opening of school. I wish thkfc he m igh t tak e a yea r off and come te Jap an . I should love to peep in a n d ice the town and the college a n d a ll those whe m ik e these places a t- tfssiWwa- I V B " liar* a meeting th is evening and as it is almost s^x o’clock X will stop writing bu t w lille t you know soon abou t the use of the money. One of the fa r reaching uses to which it could be p u t is the p rin ting of a Christian paper which is feeing eagerly read by m any more people than we. have copies of the same May God bless you and and all who love Hxs law, Sincerely, B. F . Garbold, Kyoto, Japan . „ New Book of Kings. A lino book might be written upon the psychology of royalty, containing all the human documents that have comb down to us from the rulers of the past.'' Such a book would make us think more kindly of those rulers— even of that long list of the kings of Israel of whom we are told Hothing ex cept that they did evil in the sight of ilic Lord.—Boadon Times. VALUE OF DRAGGING ROADS. Hew Farmers Can Make Boulevards Out of Neglected Rursl Highway*. The Mount Joy Star and News of Pennsylvania tells in one of its Issues of how a farmer in that locality baa been making good roads by his own individual effort The newspaper item reads as follows; Frank L. Nlasley, a progressive farmer residing a t Bamford, believes in having good roads and is so emphatic on the subject that he keeps nearly half a mils of new dirt road adjoining his farm in re pair a t his own expense for his satisfac tion and to prove to the taxpayers how well it can bo done with little expense. To carry out his plans ho Sot to work and constructed a double or split drag Of the King style. This drag he made him- self of logs and other material lying around the farm, so that'really about the only thing that it cost him was a few hours of labor. « ' EVery farmer has the material lying around ,his farm to build such a drag, and every farmer has enough mechanical ability to build fi. as it requites no spe cial skill and matters not how rough it* construction Is. Then, too, all the farm ers have some spare time to make the. drag If they apply the time to it. After every rain that the road get* * little uneven Mr, Nissley hitches a hot** to the drag, runs it, over the road as fa r as his lands adjoin, tlio road, and the re sult Is that the road along his farm is always nice and smooth when the read along his neighbors' farms Is rough and full of ruts. The Nissley plan of Improving the road* will go far toward establishing a good road system. He makes ho big fuss about what he Is going to do or what he Is do ing, but goes about It in a quiet manner hnd does It, and the results show for themselves. The fact that the road ,1s bettor along his farm than any other place, in the neighborhood is evident to all those who use the road, and doubtless in the near future some at hi* neighbor* will follow his example. This, however. Wo do not think 1* tb* right way to keep public roads in repair, as they should be maintained a t the ex- ponso of the public and .not individually by each landowner. Doubtless Mr. NI**- ley's progressive, movement will enthus* the supervisors of East Hempfleld town ship to a full realization of their real du ties, and doubtless In the near future the township will have a drag which will be run over all the roads-of the township whenever they get rough, and then all the roads o f the district will, practically be smooth all the time. One man and two horses can m two days go over all the roads In a township, and such. Work might toe necessary about * dozen times a year. The entire cost of this will not amount to *180 a year, hut will do more good than a thousand dpi-, laws a year spent oh the road* with a gang of fifty, or more men, with plow* and scoops, going over the township once a year, as Is now the plan used by most supervisor*. ' There are a great many different kinds of system* advanced for im proving our country roadf*..,. On*vtxf toe simplest and one which every In- divfdsol flmnap oaa employ today .0.11**$#**** :we$:mmMsr batnffit to m road Is the system of dragging the dli$ road by his farm fcy toe split log toad drag. Fanner* can make such * drag in a few hour* hy gimply splitting' a. tug in half eight feet long, i f the farmer takes these split pieces, the split surface facing to the front, and fasten them with Atout staves three feet apart, according to the directions given by Mr, King of Maitland, Mo., too inventor of the drag, the former will have a simple road implement that will make a. due, smooth country boulevard opt of the worst neglected dirt road In the com munity. The secret of successful road- making with the road drag will de pend upon dragging the road after every rain, filling in the ruts, smooth ing out the uneven places and building a high crown In the middle of the road, so that the water will run Into the side ditches Instead of standing in the, middle, and, most of all—doing It. Talking does not keep a dirt road repaired. Neither does excuse finding. One hour of drag work immediately after a rain does the trick, nothing else. GOOD SAND FOR ROADS. Call- _ Itefffcmttirlfc qi tt i*r*t&* ctotftttoiatteCttretbrtAksistfc* H o l d f a s t TW MM* *»!*!*< it* «l«f«l»*M «»>iWOtt* TM« PI* *kM ; H tref tun tk« clrtkel. !.*»>»ft Utetine—is thtiefare* |r te clwuftcst pi» to k w . T tr » J-dO*..... [ Yoa will tt met teecstt % idrocatc. , M.lllotU >!« bslftft s ;!j intifttliv. E u r tn apply ’. *~iwt t t easily te a e re l heta the line. 0 .i:e > Ltnsr tlira y i« w et. M iafttattred by i&MtfcMhiMrftrtiftgCfe W fttetbU tT i V t, FOR SALK *Y R. BIRD, C kdaevidii E, O hio , TI m 8reaiDiarrhoea And Cure* acute and Chronicdiarrhoea, dysen tery, choleramorbus,“ summer complaint," Asiaticcholera, and prevents the develop- went of typhoid fever, S*me wonderml -emits obtained in *11parts of the world. “WORKS LIKE MAGIC.” gAumA <tt fee»\ CO 1 jft* P r im SB o o n ts p« r Box* Don’t aeeent a trttbsdtBf" as Jfvour hasn't it and don’t eat* to get It foryon send direct to THE MTARI0 CHEMICAL COMF^yp Valu* of Watt* Product From form* Oil Wall*. Two hundred tons of rich black oil sand from, the Sunset wells a t Visalia, Cal., will be used on some of the roads of Tulare ,county, in California, this summer. Superintendent Twaddle, chairman of the county governing board, has been experimenting and found It satisfactory, Tho sand comes from the wells mixed with the oil. When this flows into the sump hole the sand sinks to the bottom find sep arates itself, the oil running off, Grad ually the sand piles up nfound the derricks and a t the mouth of the pipe and fills a large part of too sump. There are piles forty feet deep on the Adeline, Maricopa road, Oil and Gate City properties, which have accumu lated in the course of four or five years. The sand coming with this heavy oil is different from th a t found with tho light oils, even that with the Kern river product. Those who have tried It say it is su perior for roads to any common sand that may be mixed with oil. I t has a binding . lallty that ^ lack ing in arti ficial proi uets. Before Its adoption in Tulare county it was used quite a lit tle on highways In the Immediate vi cinity of the oil fields, it being given to whoever would lead and haul it'nway. A wide use of this byprod uct by rondinakors will be a boom to too heavy oil producers of Sunset by ridding them of a nuisance and trans forming It into a source of revenue. Mr*. Blenkjn* laid 4own her novel with a deep sigh. Th* hero of the elopement in the hurt ehapter was such a splendidly ruinantje figure. No won der hi* friend** wia*- wm «wav with have found" It impossible to m is t Mui. Ho was so unlike Jack, Poor Jack waa #o dreadfully prosaic. He never even’ quarreled, ° Sucli reflection* were hot new to her. But ber last library book, containing the portrait of the heroic Adolphus, had fired her imagination afresh. It was unlucky fur Jack that he should return from hi* office a t the precise moment when the unfavorable com parison had. reached it* climax, Mrs. Blenklna* reverie was so deep that she did not hear the sound of the latchkey. The first intimation she re ceived of her husband's presence was when he stood before her. He was pot, certainly, a romantic object. The pockets of his overcoat bulged out un- symmetricnlly; from under each arm an ungainly brown paper parcel pro truded. "T wish you wouldn’t make sucli an exhibition of yourself!” exclaimed So phia, with a look of intense disgust, “It’s so dreadfully bourgeois. Why didn’t you have the things sent?” “Nobody saw me, l*m sure,” said Jack, putting the parcels triumphantly down on tho table, “and 1 wanted to give you a surprise,” He took out a penknife and cut toe string. The first package contained 8 pair of warm sleeping socks. From the second he produced a beetle trftp. “I know you suffer from cold feet,” he said, “and I heard the cook complain of the cockroaches tote morning,” As Jack displayed these trifles one by one he Jooked anxiously a t his wife in tho hope of detecting a gratified: smile. But Sophia's thoughts had gone out swiftly to Adolphus de. Montmo rency. “Take thsm awayi How could you buy h ' up J i trash!” she cried, exasper ated. Tha pained look on Jack’s face nearly drove her mad, g ls meekness Irritated her beyond endurance. Why didn't he swear a t her? A blow even would be preferable to silence. Sophia refused to wear the sleeping socks. She declined to mollycoddle, she said, and next day She laughed a t Jack for putting a comforter round his neck. Jack had a bad throat, hut, to please his wife ho left the wrap a t home and went out without It. W n ho came back fn the, evening his cold was mneh.worse. If* wanted to go to bed, but Sophia ridiculed the Idea. Jack would have committed suicide to please hte wife, and be did. Day after day he carried that 'cold about with him. Sophia .thought i t ’more manly and romantic not to give way to such trifles. Consequently. Jack caught one chill on toe top of another. He became feverish, even delirious. Then the doctor Was sent for, bnt it was too late. Jack had a severe at tack of tnflp mjatlon of tho lungs, from which never recovered, «nd even a t the iastgophlg could not help rafiectosg .that Adotohqs would neve# %av» & m t in tt^toeh n dteease. Sophia became a 'Widow. She wept over Jack, qf coatee, but behind her grief there was a kind o f exultant feeling that the ideal man had become, after a ll,« poasibilfty, : Of course Sophia met him. The or dinary conventional method of making his acquaintance waa too commonplace for her emancipated soul. I t Was a case of love a t first sight, and the lat ter occurred o n .the Brighton grand parade. Love ripened into acquaint ance,. HI* name was Eugenio Fite Jones. The Jones she forgave because his mother had been an Italian. They were married, a year after Jack’s death, f t made no difference to toe dead man. The flowers on hi# grave had ceased within six weeks of the funeral. For a whole fortnight Sophia lived in toe delirious atmos phere of two people who do not know each other. Then her Meals began to bo realized. Jack had always been deeply inter ested in her thoughts and confidences. His acquiescence lii her opinions and slavish admiration of her mental gifts had been positively sickening- Eugenio would not listen to her a t all. Wom en's views were of no consequence whatever in hi* estimation. If aho spoke on social questions he shnt her up in the rudest fashion. He never brought her in a present when ho came home from business. Jack never failed to hate something In his pocket a t least twice a week. But Eugenio had more Important mat ters to consider. He had Ids club and Ids Wagner society and his golf. Fro- quently he dined out with bachelor friends. When Sophia remonstrated with him he told her to mind lief own business. He even went so far as to strike her. Later on Eugenio began to pay marked attentions to other women. Ho neglected hhj wlfa shamefully and flirted openly before her face. There were even rumors of a second estab lishment in the suburbs. On ono occa sion he disappeared for six month* At the end of the half year he earn#- buck and treated hi* wife worse than ever. In a year’s time be had drunk him self to death. The gossips declared it was a happy release for Min. Fite Jobes, Bnt the flowers were always fresh on Eugenio’s grave, and bis magnifi cent tombstone, which absorbed most of the widow’s provision, was tho envy of every mourning neighbor. XVhen Sophia died a year later tho doctor declared It waa the result of a broken heart. She passed away with the name of Eugenio on her Ups.—Lon* don Sun. Value Of Good Road* to Farms, I t hns been Bald that “goad roads lead from good farms to good towns,” and It seems a direct way of mating tho fact, Wherever there aro good roads leading Into a town that town te Invariably an active and tip to date btnlnc33 community. Whenever good toads run through a farming region too farms are found well kept, the houses bright and in good repair, and the outbuildings show an air of *nu* wmfort and prosperity, • -** "TAKE THIS CUT’ In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THeCCHTAUHCOMFANV, NCWVaHKCmr, “+ 5*! T " THE BEST VEHICLES FOR THE MONEY. THE McKAY BUGGIES, SURREYS, Spring, Road&Oil Fitld WAGONS Best quality—Select Ma terial. Carefully .made. Built to stand Hard Service, The cheapest in the end. Write for complete Catalog and Prices: MoKAY CARRIAGE CO., 6RQVECITY, PA. MONUMENTS, GUTSTONE, STATUARY. T h e men who transfer litjge blocks o f granite in to beautiful monuments i atl^ headstones h r our workshop are th e most s k illf u l' th a t money can procure. - ■*>- t You can depend on ge tting the very finest a rtistic Creations here—and a t prices below th e ordinary. , W ith our superior facilities e id equipment, which are not •qua iled by any re ta il concern in the IT. S., wo are prepared as never before to furnish high g rade work a t less money than Interior work will cost elsewhere. We employ no aguntB in th is territo ry . If a t all interested in any in our line, w rite or ’ uhone lo r catalogue or if possible call to see us, Bell ’phone odi. Citizens 'phone 215. E stab lished 1801. G E O R G E D O D D S & SO N , H 3» i*5> x i 7 , ixq W e s t M a i n S t , Xenia, O. RIEDLING P I A N O S embody every detail that can possibly add to tlie value of a Piano of tho very highest grade. The lowprice at which they are cold astoniahcc those compet entto judgeofPianovalue, KiedTing” on a Piano means highest artistic rc- eu !:3 in t tone, touch, durability and case design. Send for catalogue and name and address of our agent in your vicinity. A.I. RIEDL1HSPIAKOCO, - PIpHtti, Win. ELA ST IC % R O O F P A I N T motw D S j for tin, metal, paper, felt and ruberoid roofs. Is proof against the weather or rust. Absolutely non- porous. Will not crack, peel, blister or scale. Will not evaporate after once set. la a fine water-proof ing material. Contains t»o ingredients such SS salt and lime which enter Into toe composition of too major pdrt.of the so-called roof andiron paint* on too marijet to-day which have no clastic qualities and are destructive to metals and fibres* and are bound to crystalito any metal. It is germ proof. Sendfor drtular andprice list Wky not pnrehdle the btit mien it tests no mere. T h eD A L LM A N CO O FK R i U P F L V CD ., r o n d - * u - l* o ,W l a , CASTORIA Hot p»f| o tild rm . Th KM Ywia sA in p BMtft ' Bears th* 8Sfa*tur*of < C«n*»mhlp, I q exert!** a censorship of tho Sir*M 1* to exercise a monopoly ot talumny- Benjamia Constant, Meat is Healthy, The human system needs meat, not the tough, in- digestable kind which makes it a labor for tho diges* fcive organs to asimilate it, bu t the nutritious, juicy kind which gives you muscle and nerve for daily duties. G W, Crouse &Co, s Successorti£C* C-, WrEIMER, “We recommend ifcj there Jsn’i nay b etter,,, I n mid-siimmer you have to tru s t to a large degree to your biitwher. Well Cared For Meats In ho t weather are the only k ind to buy; we have proper appliances for keeping them right, and they ’re sweet and sate when sold. Don’t go m ea t shopping when it’s hot. Buy of us and be sure- C. H , CROUSE, O ED A RV im C , O. Headache? I f i t does, you. should try Dr, Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills. iWhy no t do bo . They will relieve the pain in ju s t a few min utes. Ask your druggist There are 45,000 druggists in the XL S. A sk any of them. ,, A package of 25 doses costs 25 cents. One tablet usually stops a headache. They relieve pain" without leaving any’ disagreeable. after-effects —isn ’t th a t what you want? . " “My son. Frafils Snyder has used Dr. Miles' Anti-Fain’Dills for a Ion® time. H e never had anythin? to help him so much for headache. A year ago he came home, and X was down sick with such a. dreadful nerv ous headache. He gave me one of tho Antl-Falti Pills: and a fte r1While I took another and was entirely ..re lieved, X always keep them In toe house now, and gave many away to Others suffering .with headache.” MRS. LOUISffl itewm&Tor. ' Powell, South Dakota. Your druggist sell* DA Mile*' Anti- Pain Pill*, and we authorize him to return the price of first package (only) If it rail* to benefit you, ' MilesMedical Co-, Elkhart, In& The Bookmaltep . 4 estaurant... IN THE BOOKWALTER HOTEL HIGH STREET D IN IN G RO O M FO R LAD IES UP STAIRS A L SO REST ROOM. M E A L S N O W 3 5 C E N T S . Lunch Counter on Main Floor Open Day and Night. The Best of Good Used in tho Cul in a ry Department. ^ Piles or Smiles? A POSITIVE GUARANTEE ToImmrilatelyrelimand uHiffiattfyedrtwHIt OR. HEBRAS UNGOID the most wonderful scientific discovery of modern timesfor the severestcs.es ofItching Piles, Pcreraa. Tetter, Salt Bhenm, Bing Worm, Harbor's Itch, etc. This highlymedi cated antiseptic Salva kills the germs, re moves the trouble and heals the irritation permanently. Absolute satisfaction guar anteed or money refunded. Price BOcfs. i t Druggist*, or mailed. Trial sample2cent* to covermoiling. THE G. C. BITTNER CO., Toledo, Ohio. FISTULA Ana Ass. DISUSESOFTHE RECTUM dr . j . ]. M c C le llan COLOMIUS, 0 . t ITOiY*. TH, MIT n iW X t. |^ "SM im $ >N IA lf f S*ld By Is*** Wltrterman. J --Ji3 ?,2W3, Mr*. \ Mfs* wcdfc v Mr- vaeati. FOB b rssd i Mr. • typboi Mteo K y „ v w«ek, Mr, < ■psitdi; Brof, S Mr*,. Emhro. noon. Mr. J Tuasdo. ■! McFari The i . T, U. w Tbursd FOB Bplend: Phone Mrs. Tteited ner, las Mr. a cinmiti Mr. am Mr. a ed the I Columt FOB to r Behi 81 Mise ' A .D . t . season. Mr, 1. . vacatio assistin du ring Mrs I., h a s be« i >’ a r t, lefl umbus, Mr. J .■ i liv ing 0 - • bag run 800 acre.- Mcssi Hawcln rived '■ relative Mr. . ■pondln .; and at Beattie, tog. Mrs. ( ltig wltl of Kans n igh t av beth Ba The : • was he; ; A . H. F Dean at tended. Mrs. ’ z y spell a t the b Waa aor b u t is r Chari Mr. and tlio mis' broken Tuosda, tho lad Mrs. \ a tillin' boftio tit Joseph - •> A num l t vicinity ■ Mrs. ’ V era; ? Xna Mi Seattle. In Yelli route. ver. Mr. A oftleo a fifteen Sf*f6 el Mr. Ht- field all p ie was talte-t. Tho 9 had fosi eorreet bides ’ Ijoueo v Mr. lb* Cod Itoa. J Hi* t i l t IP*J*V- -"'.-inwirms
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