The Cedarville Herald, Volume 35, Numbers 27-52
f t ' esaay, Rf**- * “* **f ! f iV ' ’* ON V * , - f $ f c v •• i*x i » ;*/** 5- & a ? Mt- , . *v 4 / 0 £* S w,WSt®%' 'Each' Amendment Will Be Numbered On * -* ' • ' f e . .* i,; «•>.-*• i i-;t. ■••.;" N • 6 Is the Initiative and Referendum ' • :- .'• • ISJn / l f l Is Municipal 1W . W Home Rule Separate Vote Necessary on Each Amendment ■I K 3 r «.<-*• ' ' **• i S ' , **V-- »' - ' >"•’« ^ t- <>••« To Vote For Everything Ballot Must Be Marked 42 Times 4S* Subscribe Fdr The Herald. ‘i J Ft 1 i M rc € 3 r . t a L , a . r «*-.*% 1 i . o e d G I F o l i a H a f a e t to t t o f i m H 1 H o n t i i BncK . ""'if.'ittftr ctiarSfi^rfcStif'.oi K«Sn,yrt'i t*n micafiT^y l» t*«not i*V** \{( h \ SOU,»»will s M hik Js«tiF money. 'Hit Ko.Snl tola?, nil thinKiiatintca, ■’HIoofaiitl EtonifcOMIowfm?,ffl-tj.-nrIttot!)0Cc,iTci*»Etlmtlm* of H it tons to .stinf? jxiti. f .tm o tco fcattwio the tltAlcf from whomart* lwtigiit |t,*M tMWJll KfiMWin*f»0«ey< S&liiVroirssvf; The Great Dayton, Ohio. September 2,3,4,5, 69- 1912. W ■ . ■ " . • v • - - ; ; ■; * . . , , * • . . . ■■ ' •v . ,**-**" ■ ■ Grand Opening Monday, September 2, (Labor Day) on which t . . . * ••■ •' - ^ • • . ' - \, - ■ day the 2.14 Stake Pace guaranteed by the Dayton Breweries Co and the 2.24 Stake Trot guaranteed by Krug’s Bread Bakeries for $1200.00 each will be raced. Best Speed Program Ever Offered for Entire Week. ' Special Display in all Classess, State Experimental Station and State Blind School will have their exhibits during the week. Special Attractions Each Day. Better Than Ever! w« • M . ’ , ' 1, . * 4 • ' ' * , H. V. Henidrickson, Pres, 2 5 C e n t s G. K. Cetone, Sec’y. THRILLING PRODUCTION “OHIO PIONEER DAYS” Paine’s Powerful MasterpieceVividlyPortrayingTrials andHardships ofEarlybuckeyeSet lers toBeNightly FreeFeature,OhioSlate Fair,Columhus,Aug.26^31. HISTORICALPAGEANT OFGREATMAGNIFICENCE Three Hundred Performers, Forty Full-Blooded Sioux Indians, Twenty Acres of Scenery, Two Troops of' Cavalry, Each Performance Closing With a Peerless Fireworks Displays--A Mighty Program of Amusements. •A mammoth spectacular production, entitled, "Ohio Pioneer Days,” will bo the nightly free feature at the Ohio State Fair, Columbus, Aug, 20-31, in clusive. It is fitting that a t this time this grand ’historical pageant should be produced, inasmuch as the cente nary celebration of the permanent es tablishment of the Ouchcye capital will be held In conjunction with1the Estate Fair. The first setting shows a peaceful scene of activity—settlers at work In tlielr fleldc and timber land, their good housewives busy about the cab ins, the sturdy blacksmith and helper busy at their forge; friendly Indians lounge about the trading post. A dispatch rider Is seen to approach the fort, riding hard—leaves orders for a detachment oE troops to proceed west to quell an Indian uprising. The courier dashes on Into the settlement, leaven the mail at the store, changes horr.ofi and is off again. Friendly Indians are.seen quarrel" lag with the Sentries a t the fort anil nals, (The troops are away.) Soon an- other Indian lire Is started, this time much nearer the settlement, and tn the dim distance the skulking figures may be seen. The lire Increases In volume and the Indian chiefs may be seen addressing their people. Sudden ly the dread war dance commences, and now the settlors reallzo that there will coon he an attack. The women and children are hastily gathered to* {.ether, loaded Into prairie schooners and the teamsters gallop off to the fort, lien and boys pull the wagoii3 into the form of u hollow square; the blacksmiths, storekeepers, the trap pers and '‘hunters, the farmers, are preparing to defend their homes and loved ones. : The Indians, iow worked into an insane frenzy, are coming toward the settlement with hideous, yells. The settlers make a determined stand and repulse the awful horde; the Indians go back to another war dance. Now, from •the opposite direction, another band of Indians are seen in a second - ju ta u tM w a z " t j ■ F W ' l 1 . . show muon dissatisfaction over tho ■rations issued to them. They4.ro fin*- ally ordered away by the officers and proceed sullenly to their tepees, Now the great- gates of the stockade open wide and a company of troops march es out and on. through t'ho settlement, cheered by the settlers, and Is soon tost to view in the distance. The In dians, seeing tho troops leave, send two of their number to follow them, and they can be seen' skulking through timber, and fields. Soon they return and amid much confusion tho tepees are taken, down, the horses hitched to drags, and soon all of the Indians proceed through t h e ,village amid the taunts o f. the settlement hoys, who call after them not to came back, . . A long- prairie schooner Is ■now seen approaching the settlement from the west; settlers come in from tho fields to greet tho strangers;' the out riders report having met the soldierB and inter the Indians, and indicate that they are suspicious, of the ltcd- skins. The tired travelers decide to spend the night at. the settlement and commence unhitching tlielr teair. -.f oxen. Now, far away in the west, an Indian lire signal is seen. It la soon answered from the south and again from another point. The people of the settlement exhibit considerable uneasiness and little knobs of men are rtt together watching the sig- war dance, flaming arrow signals are fired by both hands, and with a con certed ehargo' both hands Start into tho settlement" from opposite direc tions. Soon hay stacks .burst- into flames; the heroic' band of settlers di vide and fight back t o . hack. But slowly the Kedskins close in,on them; soon they niust go down; their prairie schooners are already burning armind them! the women a t the fort, knowing what their fate will be should their defenders fail, are seen firing from the port holes. But now out of the west a welcome sound is heard—tlie bugle of the troops. Soon the boys in blue are seen approaching in open order on double-quick, to the rescue, but not a minute too soon. The Indians, jubi lant over tlielr victory, are taken by surprise as the soldiers surrodnd them. The settlers, with renewed vigor, nOw come from behind the bar ricade, and with the aid of the troops soon exterminate the entire band of Redskins, This makes one of the most thrill ing and exciting climaxed imaginable. Tho production is true to life. It makes the most realistic, thrilling, awe-inspiring spectacle ever presented. Each evening’s 'performance will conclude with a $6,000* fireworks dis play under the direction of the Paine’s- Fireworks Display company, Ameri ca’s premier pyrotechnic kings. \ PARK VIEW—-OHIO STATE FAIR* “ TRY OUR TOB PRINTING HAC# 6R0WP AT OHIO OTAT* PAIR
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