The Cedarville Herald, Volume 35, Numbers 27-52
f ■ 1 % !i[ if i ' i ' i ■j 8 * ■: 1 f fi'J: ' t I" I- l t ■ < mmm* iWmfiWW m f n m s ~ MD EQUAL SUFFRAGE Massachusetts has just passed a 54* kour-a-wrsfc law for women after -40 year* of agitation by ' ‘indirect influ ence" to ianaovo workinff condition:). Utah, In 1941, passed a nine-hour law after legs than, two years of effort hy it* advocator. That io, women with the votes got tho levy from the first legislature from, which they no!;cd’ It. Women without votes ashed for 40 years without getting it, Of tho six equal suffrage states, three have passed eight-hour laws for women and .one a niuc.hcmr law. Of the non-suffrage slates* not nno hao fcu eight-hour law for women, and only five have nine-hour Jaws. Tho legislature in most of tho suffrage states have cho’.n much greater read Iness to pretsef women from over work than have the legislatures in most of tiie nmi-tmurage ntiilea Julia Ward Hove stmt a circular letter to all the editors and ministers o r four denominations in the .then four suffrage states, ashing' wlial, U any, benefits had resulted from ..wo man's ballot Out of 924 answers’only *2 were unfavorable. Among the benefits' most often cited was that equal suffrage had .made it easier to get liberal appropriations for educa tion, Working women believe that they will have a more equal chance in the industrial struggle- when they have the*protection of the vote. The trades Unions of America and Great Britain are in the front rank of suffragists. Organized labor believes It will be far stronger when women vote than it Is now. It believes in raising the status of women’s wages and working conditions hs the necessary‘prelimi nary to any general advance in .work ing conditions for men i R H M K H i i r i w b O ,labor are solid against woman suf frage, HEADQUARTERS IN TENT /rHE ,Lima suffrage headquarters are in a donated*tent on a vacant lot,.'1 I the use of1which Is likewise donated. The tent ’is large enough to seat 200 people,, and somebody donated 200 chairs. Crowds floclc to the tent daily,' for it is pitched ill *the center ‘of the city. ’ WHY OHIO NEEDS EQUAL SUFFRAGE *»■ r ■- -F . . * ManyLawsThatDoInjusticeto Womenof theState. The only elective office a woman can hold iri Ohio I b member of the board of education; it carries no sal ary. The State school commissioner can not be a woman. A woman can not be on the aboard of. control of any state charitable in stitution, A recent law giving per mission to appoint a woman superin tendent of the Girls' Industrial Insti tution is In conflict with the consti tution and former decisions of the su preme court. The law limiting woman’s work to fit hours per week excepts canning in dustries and others engaged In prepa ration of perishable goods and con tains no provision for department stores, laundries and some other in dustries. The age of consent In Ohio is Id years, In equal suffrage states i t runs from 18 to 21 years. Women have school suffrage only. Wife desertion is not a crime in Ohio. The wife is not entitled to a voice In the choice of a family home. The law does not secure the wife any portion of the family Income free from the husband’Bdictation. A wife's separate property Can be levied upon for family necessaries ordered by her If not paid for by her husband, and she can not secure a repayment. A husband holds dower Inter. St In a wife’s Separate properly. Unless he ' signs a release this interest hoids gtwd after she has sold her property. In Ohio the father Inherits property of deceased children; the mother be comes heir only it tho father is dead. ' (The wife has nd shard In the chil dren^ earnings if the husband is liv ing. A wife is responsible for the support of the family if the hflsbanfl is unable to render support. The wife Is not co-guardiem of the Children and the husband legally con trols the choice of church, school, clothing, medicine and work. The father may legally appoint by will tho guardian for his unborn child. If looke as If Ohio need* woman's suffrage. ' 1 Vote for Arhendm hi 23 on 8#pL S. H O W A R E W O M E N T O L E A R N ? hooks as If Some Other Folks Besides *Women Don’t Know It All, •* Some people think women don’t know enough about politics to vote. Tho other day Mru. IVoife of Cleve land* in canvassing Ward Seventeen asked a policeman, a fireman, the proprietors of a dry goods store, a grocery store, a drug store and Sev eral other men where precinct o was located. None of them knqw, An other woman' living in Columbus asked five business men of the city who tho. secretary- of state was, and they could not tell her. The press chairman of the suffrage asso ciation wrote to the Census Bureau and the Deparement of Labor In Wash ington, asking the number of men, women and children In industry in th© state of Ohio, Both departments wrote that they did not know, as tho census reports dealing with those fig- tires collected in he year 1910, owing to the lack Of funds, h»d not yet been published. The last report previous to 1910 tn the volume In which she was Interested was out of print. It sort of idoka as If some other folk* besides women "didn’t know ©very* thing 'down in Judes,"' TRY OUR JOB PRINTING . MeCorniJek of the In* ternatiopal Harvester Company, family acted as sandwich woman In Cincin nati to advertise a suffrage meeting gotten UP by the Men’s league. Mrs, McCormick was a Chicago woman be fore her marriage, and now lives ,in Industries -Which flourish on child "Boston. She is a member of the * n t :&■% Qoti TheWholeWortl San Francisco ^ # * * m » * # * m *+*«« ’*'W*09Q ; By HAMILTON M. WRIGHT* T ill* v ;.V m »w’uh l is in tenstn l i‘i tlio opening t f the Patr'.nvi ca nal and in tin* great in fan t-, tiouul fete a t which the United' States, will celebrate the tnmpletinn of th© canal, the I’anarca-I’aclfio Interna tional exposition, to be held In San Francisco iu 151.15, The prodojnalhm of the prariik'uL Issued b.v authority of conrav.-.-;, b:\i boon delivered through the iuffirntncii* tality of the department of state to ev ery quarter of the globe. Imparks nr, to tho exposition arc pouring hi upon the ^exposition management' from all I parts of the world. The nations of tho f.vorld in recognition of AniefJea’fi great i [infimnmriruM.iiffrTttTnawpwar'iiwmiifirmnrr t iftirrrrBriii^^ m* —-- f>ESC* *'? «-J.-C-S- S;>S-S--MJj-JGIJ’ Q *#•*:■*■*•*#••»-#-*< Is to Participate t o the Great ExpositionInl 91 § Panama^Pacific hay arp-- Mea-'is. SlclSlm, Mead £i V/iiJto of Ftor/ Ymk, dtnJsucrs of Mad ison I'qnjitv Garden, the Boston Public library, the Agricultural bonding nt tho Yi'orid’B (’''lambkin exposition; Thomas Hastings. prealJent 'of far- rare &' JHrudhiga, sircUHceift In- chief, for the. Pna-An».nrh’ati exposition at- Buffalo; Henry Bacon, designer of tlm Lincoln mesmrjr.l; Willis Poll;. associ ated with IT. II. Eutifb'un of the Wcrld’u Cetanilffi-.n exposition at Chi cago, Tiles© architects ::xd their ass> elates pronounce the site of tho expo sition as unsurpassed for A groat mar-, ilium celebration. The exposition struc tures will l»e tho- Jar* eat and. costliest ever ©rcotpd for « world's exposition _...... ....... h u so Grecian eoiumug tidorind with tlio flags of nil tin; nations of tins world tmd surmounted at convenient Inter vals by classic arcades. At tiio Junc tion of these two otreeib will bo erect ed a civic center. The buildings in Ihia architectural' group will coat cloao to i;.9,OQ(.yJOO, The uvu.'liHi'i of the civic center will bo a new city hall to lake the place of the om* destroyed In 1900, Tho exposition authorities have voted the sum of s?l,0i«i1tt(!i) for a great audl- totiurn to accommodate visitors to con ventions during the exposition. A great opera house will be created by private capital at the civic center, and the famous singers of the world will be heard In San Francisco In exposition board- of officers , o£ the National Woman Suffrage Association. MRS, CATT_INJFAR EAST See# Women of Asia Vote artd Sky# It# Time For America to Wake Up. On© of the most remarkable World Journeys ever- made is that o f' MrS. Odrri© Chapman Cat£, .president of the International 'Wdindn Suffrage Al liance; Mrs. Catt started frpm New" York a "year ago last April and is now in the Philippines on her way home. She will have held 1,000, suffrage meet ings and traveled 30,000 miles by the time she gets around to San Francisco. In" a recent letter to Harriet Taylor Upton, president of the State Suffrag# Association, Mrfi. Gatfc deplores her ab sence from Ohio during the suffrage campaign, and expresses the fervent hope “the mira'Cle may come to pass, arid Ohio join the states of the free.’’ She writes further, “When T see Mo hammedan, Confucian, Buddhist, Hin doo and, ParsCe women actually voting in municipal elections In this old Asia, 1 think, It is about time -that demo cratic America waked up- tef the Situa tion. About the time -you take your vote, I shall be interviewing the vot ers of the Chinese republic, and espe cially the women members of parlia ment. I certainly tmVor dreamed that Chinese men would outdo the men .of Ohio In .recognizing the social valu# of the opinion of their wives,” THE HEW SAN FRANCISCO, LOOKING OVER-1'HE CITY TO- £HJ2 HARBOR, SCENE OF THE PANAJIA-PACIIiq INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION’ IN 1910. ' achievement a t Panama tiro preparing for participation In tho exposition upon a more comprehensive scale than at any -of tho greatest of former -world's expositions, > The foreign nations will be .repre sented by the finest assemblage of dis plays that the world has scorn .The strange tribes and peoples,-of Pacific ocean countries will participate in a wonderful week’s festival in which the nations o f .the ’orient will take part, •Tho most marvelous parades ever wlf- n'essed will he seen-on the streets of &ra Francisco. - - Tito commonwealths ■of the United plates, each of which jis a member „oC the Union 1ms taken its part in, tha Wilding of the canal, will be vepre- oentefi by tho most'magnificent slate displays «wer assembled, California him dedicated more than $20,000,000 to the nation’s fair, and the city of San Fran cisco, the west an.d the tuition are co operating to render the exposition ono that will express fn every way the pride arid" patriotism of the American people, , Tho Pananui-I’aclltc International ex position will ho tlio greatest exposition In the history of the world, A Itot.'iblo commission of architects of national reputation Is engaged upon the plans, nud within n few weeks first construc tion work will begltu when grading o< tho site and the building of a,sea wull,- wbleh will serve In part as the basis of a magnificent esplanade along San Francisco harbor, commences, Among the noted architects who aro designing the wohder city which wilt rise from the shores of San Francisco and will he visible in detail to passen gers on ships entering the Gulden Gate. Tb© site of the exposition takes ev ery advantage .rif the combination of I harbor and hills that give' San Fran-, I Cisco Its- chief;,!cUarm. The main fea- | times pf th<- exposition will be located IIa t Harbor f’iuvv, on ffctft Francisco biy i midway between the ferry building and the Golddri-Gale, and 'the perma nent 'buildings, to /remain after the ex-1 i position Is over will be erected in the ' v e s t end of Grilden Gaff .park, which fronts en tho l\wifld ocean.; ■Thcsv sites and intermediate locations will be connected uy u, marine buntevard that sweeps from -Harbor. View tbrougb the Presidio- t<r the Gulden Gate- and then turns smith to Gulden Gate park- A trackless trolley will take visitors over this magnificent ,acenle boulevard fro'/a Harbor View through the military res ervation a t thiM'residlo, whoro-the gov ernment Is planning, \ wotidorful mili tary display, to Golden Grit© park, arid oriq admission will include entrance to both features, Th© site expresses’the maritime character of the great cele bration* .in hrinnofiy with the pxjmsl* ‘tlon Sah Francisco itself will he tuv exposition city in 1915. The parin’ and water front of tho city will he im proved at an expenditure of millions of dollars, and the ferry building, the main entrance to S;in Francisco, will bo adorned with a grand court of hori- Mnrkcfc street and Van Ness ave- 01’. nue, the two main thoroughfares of San Francisco, each running from the bay arid meeting in a V in the heart of the city, will he decorated with i days. . Great saengerfesta in. which the choral societies of foreign countries participate will be held upon the expo sition grounds. The Panama-Uaclfic International ex position.*will open with a pageant in San Francisco, harbor of the battle ships of tho navies of the world. The foreign Vessels will first nssomble a t Hampton Roads, where, Joined by ships of the American riaty, the entire fleet Will be reviewed by the president' of the United"States arid foreign'dignl-' triries, Thlri fleet; f bmlargest ever as sembled, will then proceed through the Panama canal to the hat-bob a t San Francisco, where it will participate,in (lie most spectacular naval demonstra tion ever witnessed. San Francisco in ■1915 will see the flag© of more nations than .have ever been brought together In on© place a t nny one time. From unofficial assurances how received It is anticipated .that 100 foreign battleships IA addition m those of the United States nrivy wHl be gathered in San Francisco harboh A huge commemorative edifice, lu purport line .Bartholdi’s statue of Lib erty,. Will welcome vessels from afar. The structure, to be known as"the St Francis Memorial tower, -will bo 850. feet In height, with a base' 220 feet, square. Tho shaft will be eighty-live feet square, with corners rounded, nud Of steel construction and terra cotta veneering. The approximate cost of th© tower will bo $1,000,000, From Its summit .the sightseer will look almost Straight down upon the Waters of the. Golden Gate, 1,300 feet below. y». r'ViiA „ ’ I * l ** bm m * •OENE IN (J0LDEN GATE PARK, BITE OF THE PERMANENT FEATURES OF THE PANAliAr PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION AT SAN FRANCISCO. ISIS. * . . rir ■ ■• , . X X GET OUR PRICK! 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BIRD W r ite fo r Jftf o f mailable gift* Addrci# all mad orders to 3 .T . BABBITT, be., Box 1776, NewYork City f PULVERIZED MONITOR T I Flour Made From Choice Selected Winter Wheat. Fancy cakes and crackers. Fresh fruits and vegetables. J. E. WADDLE | Phone 2-26 H. A. McLean < « t , V » K X'*£ . ■ Sole, Agf©nt;'For f; .'' F ou r=*Q ueen s, :• •; A=JacJt Cigars, ^ “O u y =Y o y ” V * , - ' * i • 4 ,< „ ' Strictly Hand Made, no *Dope/ I.. S. HOWICH Dayton, - / - - a Ohio.' Veterinary Pointers By Dr. DAVID ROBERTS* '«■ Wankesha, ffis. Thoroughly examineyour sick stock by taking tho pulse, which should be from 28 . to 40, .Take their temperature which designates fever by the use of a Veterinary Fever Thermometer, Tile live stock owners of, the United States would be several million dollars wealthier if they gave their live stock proper carcand attention, such aslieswithin the power of every live stock owner on earth, in the form of Dr, David Robert* Veterinary prescriptions. ' DOnotexperiment, or permitOthers to do so, onyour live stock when they are ailing, for the prescriptions of Dr, David Roberts have been placed within reach Of every live stock owner on earth. • The season Of Hog Cholera is on atid an ounce of pieventioji is worth a pound of ci 3 . . Indigestion is one of the great cha* .els of this disease and should bo pro ven d and overcome by the use of Dr. 1 David Roberts Hog Tonic internally, and ; pens should bethoroughly disinfectedwith ’ Dr. David Roberts Disinfectdll, Abortion in cows can be positively wiped out of anyjberd on the face of the earth by the uayrif Dr. David Roberts Veterinary prescriptions. Damp, cold, rainy seasons, such as fall, often produce inflamed or caked udders in , cows. Tins can be overcome by the use Of Df. David RobertsCowTonic and Badger Baim. r Do-not waste your time and energy in trying to make a milker out of a beef animat, or a beef animal out of a heavy milker, as the law of nature will not permit It, Irt operating upon lamb's, pigs and calves, always use freely Dr, David Rob erts Hdaiing Oil, Precaution against death of tattle by » bloat should beguardedbykeepingon hand •no of Dr, David Roberts Cattle Trocars. * We carry in steok a ti of Dr. David They ave tbo "Besfcby Cattle that have broken into cornfield#, . and have overeaten, should be kept from , drinking water for twenty-four hours and f be given small dose* of Df. David Robert# y Laxotonic dry on the tongue. “MILCH COWS’’ If the point of the teat be stopped up,' • making milking a difficulty, useDr. David "> Roberts Hard Milking Outfit. Remember that you are not keeping live stock to look at or for pet*. They • sh mid either be profitable or be killed. "Veiy often non-profitable animals can be made profitable by adding to theif feed such ingredients as will aid digestion, and is contained in the Dr. David Roberts •Stockvigor, mixed with linSeed meal. The proper time to dehorn cattle Is when they are calve# a fewW ks old by the use of Dr, David Roberts Hotn Killer. If an animal in a herd be afflicted with Jump jaw, it should either be treated Of ?tl * ?* 1 ‘4 exceedingly dangerous to ' the balance of 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 disease* that cattle are heir to. Use Dr..David Roberts Disinfpcfall. If you want your hogi to fatten quickly and economically, give them Dr. David Roberts Hog Tonic, This will rid them of worms, prevent indigestion and many other dangerous diseases too numerous to mention. Sell your cream for a good big .urn, use n.fln fw 'uC!e<& \?£i,yi,n* * P*n of Dr, David Roberts Calf Meal, a substitute fat whole milk for calves.- Anyone wishing specific direction* in the treatment of live stock aliments should feel free o write Dr. Roberts. Inquiries will be e .eerfully answered, Koberta’ p repared p re sc rip tio n s. O. M, RIDGWAY, Druggist, 1 This month’s Butterick Patterns are 10c and lSc—nane higher . N i -rat Hi u IX of - Cjifria* dition. —New W ill s e ll. and see i ' C l o t b CLEAN ! i t z l Mr. Ve i ‘ Visiting D i i 'f Kisses spent. The ' Min \g[ Misa M 1 - re la tiv e s]” “ the Oente The me) afternoon iMrs, R. F Mrs, Sfce *- ^ t e j ^ f i l e v "m WarreV til Monda Deputy- ie.having t week, spi r and takin S tate Fa il Bev. Da - Daytoh, f< ton Presby guests of I enson for r-v •*M ,"■ . ( -Iwill ha«- caning pe her 10th order. Miss Gle- - Mrs, H a r r< • th is week. Mr. a n d . Master An- Monday ai • friends in .. Mr* Lem county rt Jntnes Tow s tree t a t th day* The were a nun Dr, W. B atid Rev* T ly spent Wt I O ia, 31 )F j Banar to c le J ir 1 ’avi e st< isel no) pet or i ima to t %es avid edn orn wee Ho affli to fian. D srcoi ir ci ;ent tieat ifcct rittei » D will >n a nun big a pa tuba .dirC' (men is. •ipti hru Sc f m i
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