The Cedarville Herald, Volume 33, Numbers 27-52
1 f): ... .... - . „ ■- Hivfcv iffiM M ft r'-’W* 0 m lT ak fd War V/itSr Stills oaau fteet in a Prompt Adr.tfnlatfa- lion Victory* iK'a * I 8 F B mnPr|,pf1fr’fiir1¥^rsPir>np,i1ISwDnnftnmr ligWiluL lu itu UiiJUiUt)UiiiiW luljpw isju,, ^ In g e l s ' * Sopf. IB, ■ I ' l t r a i i f f l f f l i i i E B V*T rn Tl- k - * T a ft v.; IO" GC ?TC-» t- m;* Of M t $ 'A v, *3 ateing ca “trot:- r !o I" - , ■ i p • ri-.i i i fU 'lt a-imloic- r- F.T C i " V S I Y i ■i r/w-.•:v> r, w k; t: l IP * ' l i t h i u m wore pro* fuse l-ratoisi j ii jo ■•Secretary c£ Pea ee#c* ond v rrre pointing out how* < 1 *irIdy ccfi qr *-tiy Mr. Taft ■was , ac- Istery Bites ^hqnnfi dMput! Falsa iressi M e , Ltete Fair ' VlrJtera Who Wish to Hear Him V/UI Stay Over Until Saturday —, Arratigcraonto -Havo Been Mado Whereby Ha Can Bs Heard by Ail Who Attend—Great Interest Already Manifested. (’oluminiit, O i:’rectal.) - - Tim largest gtel.i: lto.i any single day ever has brought to thlo city is ex pected Saturday, September 10, when Theodore Roosevelt will stop hero and deliver an address! on law and order. The North Side Chamber o£ Commerce, under whose, mini,lea; tho event is being arranged and through vvi 2 se eft’ortn tho former president l:aa been induced to come hero, is expecting 100,0(1® persons. This number, of course. Includes those from the population of this city who will attend the address. Ilun* deeds and' thousands, however, will come from all over the state, as this will bo the second address of any tort that the ex-presirtint will deliver in Ohio on this Jrlji, It is expected, further that tho vis itors who coma to this city for tho state fair will arrange to .remain over and hear the returned hunter. The state fair this year will have a spe cial appeal to all tho state, according to the members of the state boards of agriculture, and it is estimated that the crowds will bo larger than over before... To care for these, arrange ments havo been made with the Big Four and the T. & O. .0, to run shut tle trains to the fair grounds, in ad dition to all of the regular streetcar . service. . Colonel Roosevelt will speak at ' Gcodale Baric, which is ■but four ' blocks from. the Union station. A grandstand will he built to accommo date the committees in charge ,of tb arrangement stand to provide the speaker with a rostrum. There will be. no limits upon the crowd, as the' returned hunter is known for his ■strong and carrying voice and there is n6 doubt but*that I 10 will be heard •by all who assemble. In case of rain the speech will be at Memorial hall. The ex-president will bo met at Dayton by a delegation of citizens of Columbus, who will travel in a spe cial. car and extend a formal greeting and word of welcome to the distin guished visitor ' before he really reaches here. Automobiles will be in Waiting at the Union station, and the way from the station 'to the park’will not only be roped off, but guarded by ”’*^»li<*0, ' • Dr. J . F. Jones, president of J h o North - Side Chamber q E Commerce, will preside, and in ft few brief words will present Colonel Roosevelt. Sev eral bands will he provided and there will bo music both before and after tho speech. > . On the platform with tho speaker will bo Governor Judson Harmon, V/arren G. Harding, Mayor GeOrgo S, - Marshall,* Congressman B.- L. Taylor, Judge John Sater, Dr. Washington Gladden, Ur. W. O. Thompson and many other men prominent in public life. Colonel Roosevelt In agreeing to come made the condition that tho meeting- was not to bo political in nature.' Therefore in malting up the reception committee and the list of honorary vice presidents. Dr. Jones was careful to represent both of the parties, and this meeting will prob ably bo tho first opportunity the pub lic will have of seeing hoth the can didates for governor upon the same platform. Kvcr since Colonel Roosevelt an nounced that ho would speak on lav/ and order there has been a great deal of speculation as to what he would say. Several of tho politicians are said to he n little uneasy. It is believed that some of them would sent themselves from tho meeting i? it were not for tho fear that their absence would bo construed as a coa- f, avion. There is a general feeling that someone Is coming in for a s'cjhd sro’-ing. It Is believed that Colonel Roosevelt, in common with many others in Ohio, has heard the grossly exaggerated reports of disor der growing out of the recent street car strike. These reports have been circulated by interested parties, chiefly rival cities, and have done tho reputation of this city much barm. The fact that the. former president may scold someone will only add to tl 0 interest the public already takes in the event. . Tho unknown person who comes from the r emotest comer of the stato will have tho same ehanco to nee and I.s ar no t»? citizens who have homes Japing on the park. There will he no reserved coats, no favored parties, and even those into whose hands the immediate handling of the speaker has boett placed, will not occupy any of hi3 time or hlo ,energy. He will give himseif unreservedly to the peo ple* of Ohio while he is here. Colonel Roosevelt is due to arrive in Columbus at 11:45, Saturday, fiep- tonaber 10, He must leave for Pitts burg at 15 "0. This In itself will ox- plain Why there can bo no hof.d- chaking, and why there wPl bo no \Milica! eealsrtaeeo. whether the t -,;k Say in Panama, Cu ba os* tho Philippines. It has hem demonstrated to tho r rantry tent tho president has lost rxne of hlo ability to handle perplex ing problems quietly and attain re sults quickly. Tho war of the gov ernment against tho railroads on tho is. >}r of levs eased rates was tho brief struggle of a week, ’and has ended in a signal victory for tho executive. A four-hour conference at tho White Iiouse had these' results: Tim railroads have agreed to can cel all increases in rates which were to havo gone into effect on or after June I. Tho railroads will file no further increases in rates until after con- gross has acted upon tho pending rail road legislation. In ronsldv ration of this agreement the prosid - 1 'has promised to cancel the injunc, .n suit restraining the in creases In rates •when the •pending railroad bill shall be enacted into law. - ■ The govei nment has abandoned its attack upiu the traifle committees and traffic associations. .The administration victory rcacha- beyond the 24 western ’ roads that wore made parties to the suit Insfl luted by the government, as it i3 gen erally understood that eastern road.: will follow the example of the com panics in the west and refrain from undertaking to advance rates until after the rending railroad bill be comes effective, and the question of reasonableness can be passed upon by the interstate commerce commission. Railroad regulation has been sought by the people for a quarter century. President, Taft’s' adminis tration is accomplishing tremendous results in that direction, and the American people, are too fair-minded to overlook the fact. P E lS i t tL 1 1 1 1 H 1 ® Qecret of the Vogue of Governor Harmon Uco In Contlnuouo Pro gram to Show Favorable Side to Heading Public of tho State—la Not a Popula'* Idol Through Strong Personality. &10RE GUARDS; MORE-JOBS ■ After investigating the escape from j the Ohio pen. Governor Harmon, says he may appoint more guards.' Atten tion, Logan county Democratic ex ecutive committee!—-Bellcfontalne In dex. ' . ■Tho Enquirer is covering the get-a way at the penitentiary with white wash. Of course it is hard for War- don Jones and Governor Harmon to understand how it camo about.—Lan caster .Gazette. ■Warden Jones was a former hotel man of Ironton, O., so some allow ance must he made for the prisoners wishing to leave mine host so un ceremoniously. — "Washington C. H. Record-Republican. It probably is true that tho regu lations which havo to do with, guard ing the prisoners have boea only slightly modified* if at all, and it IS wholly unlikely that any of tho men who got away had it in mind to re flect on the management of a Demo cratic warden.—Martin’s Ferry Times. Governor Harmon calls attention to the fact that escapes occurred during the administration , of Governors Campbell and ■Forakor. lie might also have added that General Morgan escaped from the same prison during the Civil war, but he can’t bolster up the record of Warden Jones by such statements.—Zanesville Courier. The penitentiary is one of Gover nor Harmon’s special pets. Ho ‘To- formed” it soon after he took his seat for governor. This makes eight pris oners that have escaped from the penitentiary since Jones took iharge. Norwalk Reflector. |j FOR ENDORSEMENT IN 1901. £j ^ Harmon and Finley On Record p 9 In Platform They Helped p N Prepare. £ 5 ! g The Ohio Democratic platform # in 1501 was written by this nub- ^ cominittrc of the committee on O resolutions: M. A. Daugherty, o ft Judson Harmon, Ilaiton Smith, pj E. M. Kennedy, E. M. Heisley, P § W. H. Spence and V/, L, Finley. & The* platform contained no ^ P reference tr> Bryan, and strnli- o ously 'avoided endorsement or ^ § reaffirmation of either the Chi- o cage or Kansas City national ^ 8 8 pronouncements of tho . party, o ^ But tho Ohio platform of 1901 fl did contain this plank: d §5 “A conotitutional amendment {) J* io required for the election of ® United Otateo Senators by the w § direct vote of the people. Here- after, until thia Its paoood, when- &> over a senator io to be olcctcd, S it chall bo tho duty of tho otato m ecmmlttoo to give notlco In Ita £ call, that tho NOMINATION OF ffi A SENATOR WILL BE MADE g AT THE STATE CONVEN- f TION.” • § ® This plank, as Well as ihe on- ^ u tire platform, was written by #1 H Barton Smith of Toledo, but it ^ u was endorsed and appioved in *) subcommittee, in full committee f] w and In convention' by Harmon o (J and Finley. $ i s # * « » 3 S 0 « 3 t s * * # # # a £ 3 C » a $ § ! This ’lower of control over a pco- J j pie’s daily reading, which may Justly : ho regarded aa the greatest power in I the world, has several times been s'x- 1 erted in a way that has profoundly j affected history, ’ I mention here two examples, merely to show how irresistible It Is. They occurred in international af fairs, hut similar instances are easily cited from our domestic concerns. At the'time of the Boer war all the Information furnished to the world, about that struggle came through London, and was>o adroitly and per sistently colored that the people of America never knew what the row was about. -It was always described as an is 3 iio over the right of fran chise. As a matter of fact that war was instigated by mine owners of the Rand for the purpose of getting cheap labor, and by British imperial ists ambition to grab off additional, territory. By . means Of elaborately “tainted” news the sympathy of America, •which would naturally have been . on the side of the Boers, was so perverted that we saw1' our. government lending Its countenance and even Its practical co-operation to the British- without a protest, We had no way to learn tho truth. “Britain Our Friend/' Another striking illustration is the universal belief created in this coun try in 1898- that Great Britain had stepped between us and a threatened .■hostile coalition by tho - nations of ! continental Europe at the outbreak } of the Spanish-American war. This j fantastic invention having been as- i slduously repeated a million times or ■thereabouts seized such firm hold on |the popular imagination that even the j most complete official refutation has j been unable to eradicate the belief j that “Great Britain was our friend" [ in 1898. The facts, of course, a 3 pa- ! tlently set. forth by the German qm- ! basaador in January, 1902, and coh- ! firmed by the foreign offices, are ex- j actly the reverse,- but have never ■made tho least., impression. The false- i hood has been responsible for very \ remarkable results In our social and political life, and seems destined to bear fruit perennially. Wo may therefore conclude tho fact to he that not only can false neva utterly .mislead an entirernation, but tho effects of it may be tndestrnet- |Ible.—The Prens and the Public, by j Charles Edward Russell. ( An Ohio Case In Point, j When Governor Harmon was nomi nated by the Democrats in 1908 ho , was acting as receiver for tho Mor- ’ gan railroad properties, aud yet that . fact was not brought to tho mind of ; one-tenth of one per cent of the Ohio voters during the campaign that fol* 1 lowed. * . i There were two reasons, probably, ■why this was not injected into tho .1908 campaign a 3 an Issue, In the first place judge Harmon's opponent i ignored It; and further, the stato campaign. Wan overshadowed by tho ‘ national contest for the presidency, : and aside from the dominant stato issue the campaign v/as waged along i national lines. • ’ [ Judge Harmon Mtnaclf made his : campaign on the old Jacksonian Issue : of “turn the rascals out.” He prom* ■’ laed to reveal the reeking graft, and . to fill the penitentiary with the male- \ factors. This forum pledge of Mr. * Harmon’s has been filled, paradox!- f rally, by an emptying of the big ( penal institution- more convicts hav* 1 ing made their escape under Har* ; men’s warden than during the twenty :j years prior. Many of the fugitives have been retaken, fortunately. Mean- j time, the governor .has not one eon* ’ vlctlon to his credit the Mark Slater ■ case having emanated elsewhere. But this is digression. ^ ’ Became Personal Bureau. Immediately after the oVctton ■ Judge Harmon took up with (‘hair-; man Finley the matter of continuing ; tho Democratic news bureau through- ‘ ■out the winter and, probably, Indefi nitely, It was agreed that the paver* . nor-elec- &liou.d meet half the ex- j peiiRe, arid the party chairman tho ’ other half. After ft short time the ! entire root of the bureau came out ' of the private purse of the governor. I With the Inauguration of Governor ? Harmon in January, 1909, came an ■’ end to politic.;! news. Tho campaign bureau gi in Rated naturally into a ! source of personal publicity for Jud- ■ son Harmon. Through all the year ; and thrr vghoul the legislative ses- ! sion of lt> 10 this dissemination of fa- ' votablo expression Inured to the Har- j nion benofit, aiul lmd the effect of * fixing firmly in the public mind the picture of the governor ns champion ■ of the people. His years of corpora tion law practice; his railroad re- : colvershl’p at tho Morgan behest; his ............ : 1 lD&'t!’jh£t4 Ljfft-'Yiufo I'.Olfih ai n 'u K l --Oil fN-ed v«, :■} e it'a r *e t j r '(.*. (Vr ' gotten os* eero ove;looked , After u year e.r/1 a half tho llar- mrij firllow* rc naturally held their chie f in high cefoem. Hia ctat* sman- ; el h> was J tifuilie; Ms hold t :> t!;c ( afr ‘ n end r.yr 3 of tao l Of le e‘ u*;”o \iS car able. * Never Q!czo to tho People, i And yet Harmon has never hem a ‘ popular isF’i. Ziln aype aranco in pub- } ! '- idet’cs ivvot a signal for fren- 1 zi' *1 ;q He decs not stir his j !’• .r, re. ih- ,'{rs r.ot fisc his follow- \ e; - wkii ti,, * lu; a fighting zeal. He ! ii pleasant 1 appi oachablc, but -- 'That in something which i :va;n ; I j v .F ; was the strength ' of Fore.her In Lis old fighting days; I wl.i'U marked Blaine as the “mag- ' nett’ man from Maine,’’ is entirely ’ ai.uat in Harmon. lie Is lVieudly, i but cold. ' And so v.Uile i l.iiming for him tin , Intense popularity, none explain why ; thin is r.o. It means merely that they , have read it in tl:o newspapers, and ■it has been cu studiously repeated , that they havo come to believe it as |a matter of fact. s Something of this - wub shown at 5tho Bryan demand that ’ Governor j Harmon declare himself for a sena- I tonal indorsement' at the state con- ! vention. Th» politicians and tho j officeholders, of course, promptly took i the Harmon side, but the people-— the Democratic rank and file—line up for tho most part With the thrice-beaten, buffeted Bryap. and his devotion to “principle” rather than expediency. Li Notice to Prospective Automobile Buyers!!! TAKING HARMON'S MEASURE We wonder what the local Bryan Democrats are going to do about sup porting Harmon now?—Steubenville Herald. Jud Harmon, Bill Bryan and Tom Johnson can’t all three ride the Dem ocratic mule through Ohi.p without a spill.—Zanesville Courier. . W e desire to co rrect a false state** m en t that has been circulated by other agents that a (Chicago mail* order, house is to sell the BUICK AUTOMOB ILES next season* T h e statement is absolutely false and was circulated to influence in / tending buyers* But why should not the pledge of the Democratic party be kept?' From j what, source docs Governor Harmon get his authority to have his party act otherwise than in good faith?— Portsmouth Blade. a Buick Customers are Our Best Salesmen." Will Colonel Bryan consent to pass through Ohio on his Way from Scot land back to .Nebraska, after'.Har mon’s convention throws the .colonel's senatorial demand out of the win dow*?—Eitet- Liverpool Review, The policy of some of the city pa pers in savagbly attacking Colonel Bryan is cfiticlsed as being liable to have the directly. opposite effect from the one sought. Harmon must have the voter, of Bryan’s followers. —Elyria Telegram. ' 1 ‘tor 3 Wert tlhat-i T H 1 Bryah may play a ' greater „ part than many may {Suppose In the nomi nation of -a presidential candidate. And- ho cap defeat, any Democratic, candidate sboud he think best to do go, even if •Republicans did not de feat hteL—Oak Hill Press. PECKHAM MOTOR CAR CO., D IS T R IB U T O R S . DAYTON ,O . The people don't care whether Bry an or John Smith first called on tho Democrats to indorse a senatorial candidate. The technical objections raised by Governor Harmon to the convention's jurisdiction in the case are of no importance,—Columbus Cit izen. William J, Bryan’s attack on Gov ernor Harmon may increase the. Ohio executive's popularity among the anti-Nebraska man, but it is hardly conducive to that spirit of enthusias tic harmony of which both W. J B. and "Honest Jud" claim to bo expo nents.—North Baltimore Beacon. The Great SOBER SECOND THOUGHTS You didn't hear any criticism of I "governm<*nfc by injunction” when ! President Taft brought tho railroads ! Into lino - unless It whs from Wall i street. Cottnet! Monday p re sen t ex Consider taken up j. improyenic South .Mtu granted a ; The grade line as p owners do more of gutters vra street. I t was d» the West 1 To do this to pureha the Smith, properties. Red their the proper put down also to bi an error Shroades agreed to j raising Mi so that a 0 The stL ordered ti a crossing;; and. one ac; ■The repo; nuttees u report slu licenses hi amount of fine assess! The Jig-1 , outagp for Mayor An< • company v voltage am be well for a little mot er to be pit The mayor very poof, . Dr. J . i lie secured Mr. D. 9 . beginning B ills to t’. ordered p reported m General Til •V „ T, •jc I. Somehow or nnolbor our old friend j "BUI” Durbin hati managed to keep -. out of this. Bryan-Harmon Imbroglio. ; The Kenton prestidigitator Is manl* , festing remarkable self-control. Judge Harmon Is reported to "have laughed" when he read of tho closing Of b!o Dieoldontlal headquarters In Cincinnati. A nmile la often used to mack agonies. Some men grin when having a tooth pulled. Just to fiiako it binding, tho anti- Harmon wing of tho Cincinnati De mocracy replaced tho governor's friend and counsellor, Mike’ Dovan- ney, on tho state central commlttco with a man named Meyerhausew. An ingenious Democratic journalist holds Hint thero can not possibly ho a senatorial ccandal, anyway, aa Potnerene is poor and Kilbourno la a fight-wad. If there are only two of them, why not draw lots, Indorse and . have done with it? Regent Georgo P. Codd of Ann Ar bor university has sailed for Europe with an, offer to Roosevelt of tho i , presidency of Michigan university. If Theodore should aceopt wouldn’t tho bricklayers and carpenters havo to get buoy In Ann Arborf A down-state Democratic paper la having a fit because ’'Imperial Roose* ! velt io hobnobbing with. the kings 1 and emperors of Europe u Soothe , your troubled spirit; It’s tlv kings and entpa who are doing tho hobnob bing; Y. R. Is tho hobnobee. Physicians Advise too p.Ci 0 ? d gocdhsatlvo, to keep the bowels cprn and prevent the pciaons of uiidlfc&tod wed fromgetun.-'into your system. , s “ LAXATIVE LIVERSVRUP Piles or Smiles? A POSITIVE GUARANTEE totancJiatohroliovoandulSl.-nAtaiycarocftti DR. HEBRASUNQOID ttio taor.f; w.radcrfal KfirntlOc disowfip of jasdern liiiic^mr HieB.tvr.v?trnficni>fHcnltiff Piles, I'f’C.ua, V< tier, f.iit r.Sirur.i, Mnr; V/orm, Bwbor'n Ju ii, <U'. ’WitniiigWvs.icOl- cutc.J Of.'ii'', pt!c L'jlro J,i!l7 ilio gpriftir, tn. tuovc.il tho trouble rud hcni<! t m irritatifin pcnaftticntly. Ab:.»1uto nitk-fdi' 1 gur.r- antcf.3 or jiioncv rcfimdi 1. VrFati3«tn a(I)rum<«is, nr nia,,. . firiat tautplo3ccntarocoverwailin - THE 0. 6. DlTTHEBGO.*Toledo, UMo* --- WiWijW9i»iar4’---- ------— Fair! Sept. 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, '10. | i S p e c ia l F r e e A t t r a c t io n s D a ily ^ 3 Good R a c e s E a c h D ay 4 . , . “B e t t e r T h a n E v e r ” A dm iss ion 2 5 c . G ra n d s ta n d 2 5 c V. Hendrickson, Pres. George K. Cetone Sec. g $l ' The reader to learn that dtaaanthate •II ita etcgci Gatairh Cure known to th boinft a conh oonstltutioni Cura is token on the blood thereby dtati diaean, end | building up nature in doi bare bo mucl hat they offi aew that it i testimonials. Address, F Sold by DrU{ all’s Family nr. Utica* I .Cavpftt;,andKtalcuMafkaobtainedandall T a t - cm bjstncsscnnducfed tor MODStf ayc f*sCO. ’ ^v.nOFncciap^ppooiYeu.o PAttirjYOmcej, ‘Uul wecan« . era nril' ilt in timetirlnHitoseJ rcr.v.ta £J in WaslnuRtOP. S bCii.U.wJel, fimwi igmohalo.. wjh drcrrip*« tiou. Wo a,Rice, If i.att'fttable «* cit, free oij tinrge, Ourfec’.v.tOuetiKfV.tentittwcureJ. > APAf-icxvGV. "Bo.r tnOMoifl Patputi,'* Wttiig r-.v.t ai r„ui’r; in tjsoVC Vi. endforeignicrjitri*;? i f l B S * S d 8 S * S « S « S * S . «esa AikUe oont free, Opp. P atc ' iv Ovricc, V/nn’.miQVofi, o. c. 8 -a %X GET OUR PRICES ON PRINTING ' Xsyo- or do yt Do yi and get Now, newfor and -boj For j made s season t interest. loofe# y o u n g , opeeial special special Outiij 5 \to » § «r'
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