The Cedarville Herald, Volume 35, Numbers 27-52
< mmm mmmm SUFFRAGEPi(lZE FLOAT INCLEVELAND PARADE I mm r~ ~ .‘ --*:■. ^w^ag^g^aaaiao^wiBgwwB^ ^ t A«frrt^-,S3K ^ mmmmmrmmmtmmmmmemimm Midway at the PanamasPacific MostStrikingand «»»HE float arranged to represent the I group of statuary, “The Suffragist ' Arousing Her Sisters," won second prize In Cleveland in the Fourth ol July parade.. It portrayed the aroused genius o£ womanhood sounding the call to women o( dll nationa to awaku to the need and glory of opportunity* that confronts, them. At the feet of the genius are grouped the working girl, whom she encircles tenderly with her free arm, Indifference, Vanity and the prostrate figure qf Degradation. WOMENEXERCISE FRANCHISERICH! TheyTurn OutandVoteWherever : TheyHave FllSuffrage.' LATE ELECTIONS PROVE THIS .Every Woman Prominent in*Socfal> Industrial or Reform Work a Be liever In the Enfranchisement; of Women—Present Widespread Agi tation la Positive Evidence- That Women Are In Earn.est In Their Demand For the Vote. The following facts show that wom en wan.t to vote;' They do vote wherever .they, have "full suffrage. In-.Colorado they have been voting 19 years, and although they form hut 49 per cent of the pop- . ulation, election returns show that they cast 4.5 per cent of the vote. In the. six equal suilrage states they -vote as generally as men. In their first, election in Los Angeles, out of less than 80,000 women . of voting age, 70,000 registered, and of. these 66,500--more than 95 per cent—voted. In many precincts, every women reg istered voted, while SO per cent of the men registered was the highest vote recorded in any precinct Last Slay 10,000 women rimtehedin. the suffrage parade in New: York city, the same city where the Woman Suf frage party, only one of several suf frage organizations, has 00,000 en rolled members. - No other canse today Is being agi tated With the determined and ever increasing intensity that character izes the suilrage movement. We are told that It has been set aside by leg islative bodies (not by popular vote, mind you, but by men afraid to iet it come to popular vote), on a nil average once every 27 days for. several years past, And in spite of all the reac tionaries Washington carried, for suf frage In .1910 2 to 1, and in 1011 Cali fornia carried in the teeth of fiercest opposition, while this fall Ohio, Mich igan, Wisconsin, Kansas, Oregon and Arizona will vote on the question. It is silly to say there would be all thlib agitation and ever widening circle of interest if tho women were not behind it. Women of wealth are not content With giving money to the suffrage cause; they go out and do personal work for it; worlcjug women give what they can of service after their day's work Is done. The action of the General Federa tion of Women’s clubs in San Frau- .cisco proved not only that women want It, but that they are getting ready for it all over the country. In*, stead of passing a resolution endors ing suffrage, a course of action voted down by the suffragists in tho federa tion themselves as urlust .to the worn-. en who were not' yet ready for it, the federation'unanimously passed a reso lution advising each state federation to form a committee for the study of political science; Courses of study are to be published for the use of the clubs, and the million women in the General Federation are getting ready for the citizenship, which they know is coming, : Mrs. Decker of Colorado, Mrs, Moore of St. Lords, and the new president, Mrs. Pennyhacker of Texas, three successive presidents, were all suffragists. Mrs. Decker, whose death is a national loss, was a woman ac tive. in the politics of her state. ■ •Scarcely a woman in industrial or reform work can be found who does not believe in votes for women. Mrs. Raymond Robins,,. -Mrs. Giendower Evans, Florence Kelley, Jane Addams, Mary McDowell, Kate Gordon and the rest. Every legislative and congres sional bearing sees these women pleading for women’s right to elect their representatives. It can be said without fear of con tradiction'that the women most qual ified by Capacity and experience are unanimously earnest in their demand for suffrage. It is the woman, of sheltered life and ignorance of the way "the other half” lives who gets off ' that curious rigmarole about chivalry and pedestals and the bur den o f the vote. It is not tho woman who hag been to the legislature fry ing to get a Mil passed malting it im possible to work women is hours a day in the heat, of July, The vote does not deem a burden to that wo man. Not by a long shot. “WHENTHEWOMENWANTIF When you hear a man say, “I am willing women should vote when the majority of them want the ballot, you may infer one.of the following things: He is ashamedj of being 'an anti- suffragist hnd wantB to, hide it, so he evades a direct answer. He is a Turk In his attitude to wards women, but lives in a Christian land. . He is a tightwad, who wants to keep something away, from other people. ■ . He Is in league with evil, forces, which fear women more than they fear God, , Ills employer Is opposed to woman suffrage. '. He Is living In tho year 1313, but is afraid of ridicule. He is a poor Tiling who can not make up his mind, because he has none. Queen Elizabeth, who lived in the days of strong language, had a phrase for King Philip II: “Hee la a Ilogge with a ring inn his Nose,” SUFFRAGIST NOONHOURMEETING, CINCINNATI. jltS. SU8AN FITZGERALD, daughter of a United Stales admiral, stind- I mg cm a chair in tho downtown-district of Cincinnati at the noon hour iking the voters to support Amendment 23, giving Ohio women the bal* t at the Sept, 3rd (election on tlio new constitution This scone has baea familiar one in cities and towns fill over Ohio. M&m You Don’t Need a Town Crier « to emphasize the merits of your business dr iff* notified your special sales. A straight story told iff a straight way to the readers o f this paper will quickly reach the cars of the thoughtful, Intelligent buying public, the people who have the money iff their pockets, and the people whp listen iff reason and not noise. Our books, will show you a list of ‘tlie kind o f people you appeal to. Call and see them at this pmea* Will Bethe By HAMILTON M. WRIGHT. F OLLOWING tho battleship pa rade into Fan Francisco har bor—the opening event .of tho Panama - Pacific International exposition in 1&10—there will be a pro gram of events of world Interest and Importance in a succession of two montb3 apart, interspersed with lesser events; Yacht and motorboat races of an International character for great trophies and cash prizes; aviation meets with the famous bird men of the world; Olympic games, In wblcb the athletes of the world will take part; Intercollegiate contests; automo bile races, in wblcb the holders of the world's records will participate in tho automobiles of every nation; military maneuvers, in which the crack cavalry and Infantry of this and. other nations will participate upon an extended scale. The location of the exposition gives widest scope for the greatest In ternational sports program tn history? The auto races will pass Into Golden Gate park before the huge concrete Coliseum ■seating 75,000 people. Tho military maneuvers and Olympic games will also be held in the Stadium. On San Francisco bay motorboats will vte for tho world's records before the’Har bor View site of the exposition. Noted yachtsmen will sail from Europe .across the Atlantic, to Now Fork and then through tho rapama canal to San Francisco. Persona) invitations -will be extended to the foreign rulers to at tend the exposition if possible or to he represented by their diplomatic repre sentatives in the royal yachts. The concession and amusement fea tures at the. exposition will be among, the, most striking and original ever dis played. The ‘‘Midway” will be located at the Harbor View site of. the expo sition, the location of the night life of the exposition, and every possible fea ture that can be conceived 'as appro priate to an exposition will be shown. The Chinese residents of San Fran cisco have under way a project for a great Chinese concession which will be surrounded by a replica of the great wall of China, inclosing within its en virons a series of Chinese communities and embracing every possible feature of interest In Chinese life from the manufacture of silks and ivory and woodearving to sampans and . junks floating on miniature waterways and itself one may look out over the bay through the GoMr-n Gate to the Pacific ocean. At night Harbor View will bo brilliantly illuminated with incandes- cents, Finsea lights and waterfall illu-l inanitions. A - tim in 'of lights will' stretch across the Golden Gate, the in- ■teniational fleet of battleships in the harbor will be illuminated, a huge Exposition Original of All commemorative structure towering ; 1,300 feet above the Golden Gate will * be surmounted by a searchlight, and j Its outlines will be limned with Incan-1 descents. In fact, the contours of the exposition site will be visible for miles .away. The went will be ou exhibition to those who view the Panama-Pacific In- -- g-^SE,’ -t- i? IFOR mm lA 1 ■-!-T^S1 AMBITIOUS YONG PEOPLE THE MUSEUM IN GOLDEN GATE PARK, SAN FRANCISCO.. Amid aemitropical tattings will be located the permanent features of the Panama-Pacifio International axpositlorv-to be held ih San Francisco in 1915, portraying the life of the river dwell ers around Canton. The concession will cost $1,000,000, and influential Chinese with American attorneys and engineers will shortly leave for the orient- From Nevada concessionaires will establish a riproaring mining camp, picturing the days of ’40 and the bonanza era of the Comstock lode, Bret Harto’s heroes, old Wells Fargo stage drivers, gamblers- and gambling, bad men, prospectors, shoot ings and holdups will lend a realistic touch to the camp. But the chief charm of Harbor View for most people will lie in its setting in San Francisco bay. As the crow flies the site extends along the water front for about a mile, but fol lowing the irregular contours of the shore the distance is more than that. Along the entire water’s edge at Har bor View will be built an esplanade, or bund, along which - visitors may j walk, and an existing lagoon will be made the basis of a superb yacht har bor, Classic columns will rise from the water’s edge, and near by will be the great exposition structures, the Palace of Liberal Arts, the education al building, the manufactures build ing and other edifices that house the more serious phases of tho exposition, as distinguished from the amusement features. Harbor View lies as an am phitheater, with its sides the. wooded slopes of the Presidio and the tenant ed bills Of San Francisco. It is near the most populous part of the city and Is not moro than twenty minutes’ walk from Nob Hill, where lived the multimillionaires of California's early mining days. Looking down from tlio hills one can see all over the Harbor View site, while from Hatbor View JAPANESE TEA GARDEN IN GOLDEN GATE PARK, SAN FRANCISCO Japan will make the greatest exhibit ever shown from the Flowery King dom a.t the Parisma-Paolfio International exposition at Spn Francisoo in 1915.; ternntlonal exposition in 1915, Under the stimulus of cheap .railroad rates find convenient traffic arrangements thousands will have ah opportunity that they could have in no other way to know their own country better. Side excursions to the. Yosemite, the Grand Canyon of the Colorado, the Yel lowstone National park, the Redwoods of the north coast of California, the big trees of the Sierras on the ap proach to the Yosettdte, the side trip to Alaska by the inland channel, will be parts of the delightful and educa tive features o f a•visit to the exposi tion. Routing over any of the eight trans continental roads tbat terminate upon tlio Paciiic coast Avlir etidlffe the trav eler t# come by one route nnd return by another. Visits to the slopes of Puget sound and the great fast grow ing cities there, the *Great Salt lake, the Santa Clara ‘valley, with its prai« rles of flowers: the orange orchards stretching from the northern portion of the state to Los Angeles*. Redlands, Riverside and Sun Diego and the jour ney through the Panama canai, cither coming or returning, perhaps most Wonderful of all, will bo among tho un usual opportunities of 1915, to see much o f the world at a moderate ex penditure and under, conditions never before obtained. When the Panama canal is in operation ships will nego tiate the journey between Atlantic and pacific coast ports in less than three weeks'time, A GLIMPSE. OF CHINATOWN, SAN FRANCISCO. . China will display « wonderful exhibit at the Panama-Pacific International ggbeiltlepi**jten Fr»r.«l«,-n in IQIS , ........... .. ’ , ___ . ■J£X GET OUR PRICES ON PRINTNG X X NE.W FA L L TERM OF The Jacobs Business College, Dayton, Opens Tuesday, Sept. 3. Nearly 400 Calls for Office Since January 1st. Help Announcement is made that the new Fall Term of tho Jacobs Business College, Second and Main Streets, Dayton, will Open on Tuesday, Sep tember 3. Many young men and young women have already arranged to en ter at' that time and the indica tions are that the usual large num ber of students will be in attendance. The .Jacobs school.is by far the ing placed bn tho market and which is used for taking dictation in place of the not took and pencil. Full infor mation in regard to this new course will be given on application. Tuition for all courses at the Jacobs school may be paid in easy monthly payments and considering the quality of instruction given and the large amount of money Invested in equip- largeet school of its kind In this sec- meat, the fees are extremely reason- tion of the state and is now recogniz-' afiie.. - ed as one of the largest business schools in the entire country. During the past year about five hundred dif ferent .students haye atended and each year the school grows and'be comes more prosperous. At the open ing of the new term the school will be reorganized in all departments. In the "Business department Book keeping and 'Business Practice are the main branches, but daily Instruction is given in Penmanship,. Business Let ter Writing, Spelling^ Commercial, Law, Arithmetic, Rapid Figuring. This department is equipped-with banking and office fixtures, individual .decks,- Burroughs Adding machine and other modem office appliances.- In the Shorthand department Short hand and Typewritng are the main branches, but d'aily- Instruction is also given in' Spelling, English, Penman ship and Modern. Office Methods, . This year a new course is offer ed—that of Stenotypy. The 'Stenotype is the new machine which is just be- The placing of tbe students in good positions after ' the completion of their courses is a large part of the . work of the Jacobs School. The uni versal satisfaction given by steno graphers and' bookkeepers with a Jacobs 'training has "created a steady and ever-growing demand, which is frequently greater than the supply, Since January 1 over 370 calls have been received by the Employment Bureau of • the school for office help. Many of the leading firms, of the city depend on the school entirely for ad ditional tffiee help which they may re quire, . The Principal and Proprietor of the Jacobs School for jnany years, W. ' E. (Harbottle, cordially welcomes, the closest Investigations of tbe methods employed. The large catalogue is mailed promptly upon request to any one interested. Visitors are cordially- invited to Inspect the school at any time, the office being open daily from 8to 5, - * Veterinary Pointers B y Dr* DAV ID ROBERTS* -Waukesha, WIs. Thoroughly examineyour sick stock by' taking the pulse, which should be from 28 to 40. Take their temperature which designates fever by the use of a Veterinary FeverThermometer. T h e Jive Stock owners of the United States would be several million dollars Wealthier if they gave their live stock propercareahd attention, such as lies within the power of every live, stock owner on earth, in. the form of Dr. David Roberts Veterinary prescriptions. ■ Do notexpenpient, or permit others to do so, on your live stock when they are ailing,, for the prescriptions of Dr, David Roberts have been placed within reach of every live stock owner on ea th, The season Of Hog Cholera is on and an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. • Indigestion is one of the great channels of this disease and should.be pre vented and overcome by the use of Dr.-. David Roberts Hog T on ic internally, and pent should be thoroughly disinfected with Dr.. David Roberts Qisinfectall, Abortion in. cows can be positively wiped out of anylherd on- the face of the earth by the uacfof Dr. David Roberts Veterinary prescriptions. Damp, cold, rainy seasons, Such as fall, often produce inflamed or caked udders in . cows, This can be overcome by the use of • Dr. David Roberts Cow T on ic and Badger Balm. Do not waste your time and energy in trying to make a milker out of a beef animal, or a beef animal out of a heavy milker, as the.law of nature will tiot permit it In operating upon lambs, pigs and calves, always use freely Dr. David R ob erts Healing Oil. Precaution against death o f cattle by bloat should beguarded by keeping on hand •no pf Dr, David Roberta Cattle Trocars, Cattle that have broken into cornfields, and have overeaten, should be kept from drinking water for twenty-four hours and be given small doses o f Dr. David Roberta Laxotonlc dry on the tongue. • • “ M ILCH COWS” I f the point o f the teat hfe stopped up, * making milking a difficulty, useDr. David Roberts Hard Milking Outfit. Remember that you are not keeping live stock to'Ioek at or for pets. They- should either be profitable o r be killed. Very often non-profitable animals can be made_ profitable b y adding to their feed such ingredients as. will aid digestion, and la contained in the; Dr. David Roberts Stockvlgot, mixed with linseed meal. The proper dm£ to dehorn cattle it when they are calves a few weeks old by the use o f Dr. David Roberts Horn Killer. ' If an animal' in a herd be afflicted with lump jaw, it should either be treated or killed, ds it is exceedingly dangerous to •the balance o f the herd. Dr, David Roberts Absorbent Will overcome lump jaw in cattle, .■ Thoroughly disinfect your cow barns once a week, as this will prevent and over-, come many diseases that cattle are heir to." Use Dr. David Roberts Dislnfectall. If you want your hog* to fatten quickly and economically, give- them Dr. David Roberts Hog Tonic. Th is will rid them of worms, prevent indigestion and many other dangerous diseases too numerous to mention. Sell your cream for a good big sum, use part of the check in buying a pail o f Dr. David Roberts Calf Meal, a substitute foe whole milk for calves. Anyone wishing specific directions in the treatment of live stockailments should feel free to write Dr. Robert*. Inquiriea will be cheerfully answered. We carry in stock all o f Dr. David Roberts’ prepared proscriptions. They are the “ Best by Test", O. M» 11IDGFWAY, Bruggist. iiyiait)i|riirifrfiliif'*fTt'l[i"*"*''*M‘'1* He.A. McLean Sole Agent For Four=Queens, A=JacK Cigars, “Ouy=Yoy” " Strictly Hand^Made, no Dope. L. S. HOWICH Dayton, Ohio, T h i s m o n t h ’ s B u t t e r i c k P a t t e r n s 10 c a n d 15 c r ~ n o n e h ig h e r . 1
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