The Cedarville Herald, Volume 39, Numbers 27-52

C W t w U .P . Ckardt Chmili. CLIFTON U. P , CHURCH CHIMES. ■—And the Lima mob started from a saloon. —Are you living a liappy Chris­ tian life? —Our Sabbath school is expected to make special contributions to For­ eign Mission work during September. —Mr. land Mrs. Casper Finney have moved into Clifton, —Shall the church conserve the child or wait to reform the adult? —Next Sabbath is Rally Day in the Sabbath school as appointed by the General Assembly. Will you help to carry out the plans of our lead­ ers? Everybody come to Sabbath school. —Mrs. Anna Westlake has moved into Clifton, occupying the property recently vacated by Warren Print?, —The flag should be on every school house and the "Bible on every teacher's desk. m —The Women'® Missionary Streiety meets next Wednesday with Mrs, Frank Skillings. Her mother, Mrs. Campbell, is one o f our shut-ins and will be glad to see the ladies. —Three dr four times a year every- congregation, should come together at the church for a purely social even­ ing. At such times there should be no charge for entrance or for any re- M ftiftti Uuti M* t* nmd* M ! WiltedJTJatwy, John may he provided by the official board j K*r{ e?] attenJin8 a sign o f gratitude for the honor shown them, or by housewives, who are always glad to help the cause along. —To destroy the Christian princi­ ples of this nation is as, much treason aa to assault our flag, —Morality is ah essential element in education. Education which is only intellectual is radically defective. —Fay Fluke and Robert Ferguson have resumed their studies in Anti­ och College. —Kenneth Ritchie, William Roger and John Collins, Olive Finney, Helen Rradfute and Louise Finney entered Cedaryille College, Wednesday. —Uertinany some years ago banish­ ed the Bible from her schools but has since, restored it. * —“The church is not a refrigera­ tor for preserving perishable piety, it is a dynamo for charging human wills. The object of the church is not to tell how to dodge difficulties, but to furniBh strength and courage to. meet them. The business of the church is not to furnish hammocks for the lazy. It is rather to offer well-fitting yokes fo r ' drawing life's loads. The man who does not attend miry church virtually votes to do away with all churches, We preach a con­ structive gospel and try to honor Christ in our worship." .’ —Dr. Ritchie preached at the 2nd Springfield Church, Friday evening, in services preparatory to Commun­ ion. , . » Edwin Bradfute, Cecil Rife, Alice ■*w- We Sell at Right Prices Lumber, Lath, Posts, Shingles, Sash, Doors, | Blinds. Cement, Lime Plaster, Roofing Ladders, Slate, Brick, i' ■ etc./^etc. „ We WeWould Be *-* Pleased To Have You Drop In! jfiThese Frequent Reminders That We Are Selling Good Lumber And Building Material Would Be Worse . than Useless WERE IT NOT A FACT! Our Sole Object Is To Keep the Fact Before You, Expecting That When In Need Of Anything In Our Line, You Will Give Us A Call. , TheTarboxLumberCo. H o w to B u ild U p o r T e a r D o w n T h is C om m u n ity By J. O. LEWIS T h e Farm er and th e Merchant. T HERE con be no doubj; that the prosperity of the country—the entire people—is based on the quantity o f' produco RAISED ON THE FARMS, and no other one thing so seriously affects the business interests of the country as a goneral crop failurdT If the crops are generally good throughout the country and happen to be a failure in one par­ ticular locality the merchants are not dependent on the home farmer, but can have his goods, produce, etc., shipped in from other sections and thus supply tho demand of his customers, while, on the other hand, THE FARMER IS ALWAYS DEPENDENT ON BIS HOME MBRCHANTS-the town or city which is ‘ his marketing place—and the home banks for the nam ing and disposition of his products. TH E MERCHANT NEVER BUYS HIS PRODUCE, HAY AND GRAIN FROM OUTSIDE POINTS WHEN HE CAN G ET THEM FROM THE FARMER, RUT THAT THE FARMER IS GIVEN LARGELY TO THE PRACTICE OF ORDERING MANY OF {418 NEEDS FROM STORES IN o t h e r C i t i e s , m o r e p a r t i c u l a r l y t h e . l a r g e m a il o r d e r HOUSES, IS A W ELL KNOWN FACT. Not a day passes that goods of almost every description, from soaps to farm Implements, Including gasoline engines, manure spreaders, seed planters, cream separators, cooking stores and ranges, clothing, groceries and What not, are seen in our depots and express offices addressed to local farmers. MR. FARMER, DO YOU THINK IT RIGHT TO COME TO TOWN WITH A LOAD OF PRODUCE AND S E L L IT TO THE MERCHANTS OF YOUR MARKET PLACE AND THEN TAKE TH E MONEY HE PAY8 YOU AND SEND IT TO SOME MAIL ORDER HOUSE AND BUY GOODS THAT YOU COULD BUY JUST A8 CHEAPLY AT HOME AS FROM A MAIL ORDER HOUSE AND HAVE THE FURTHER SATISFACTION OF S E E ­ ING WHAT YOU BUY? You may nay, “Ob, well, I sold my butter and tggi to the groceryman, but he doesn't handle clothing!" Yes; but, my farmer friend, if tbe clothing mah does not sell his clothing he must go out o f business, and the groceryman loses a good customer, his business is curtailed, and be then must needs buy less of your produce. You are fust as much in duty bound to buy your cloth­ ing, your hardware, your farm tools and other necessities from your bdme market as if these merchants all dealt lu your wares first hand. TH ESE VARIOUS BUSINESSES ARE INTERLOCKING AND INTER­ DEPENDENT, AND ON THEIR 8UCCES8 DEPENDS YOUR SUCCE8S.' A certain good farmer in this county ordered a corn planter from a mall order house and, owing to delays In freights, did not get his planter In time to do his planting while a good spell o f weather was on. However, it finally came. He got It to the farm, set it up and started in with his planting. 'Through carelessness or oversight a small gravel, got in one of -the holes through which the com drops and ihere lodged, with the result that the plate was broken. This put the planter out of commission. The farmer had to stop his corn planting and cOme to town to see if he could get another plate. He called on the hardware stores and implement dealers, but-as none of them carried these mail order house planters In stock he could find no plate, and tbe final result was he was forced to follow the plow and drop his corn by hand. Had he purchased his planter from a home merchant he could easily have got the necessary repairs and not been delayed. It certainly was more costly to the farmer than if he had paid his home implement dealer many dollars more. Furthermore, the Implement dealer bad been buying com every season from this farmer who bought his planter from a mall order house. Every dollar you' send to a mall order house Is taken out Of local circula­ tion entirely, and the good of it Is lost forever. IT HURTS YOU IN THE LONG RUN Just as much as any one. Therefore, before yon order anything else from out of your home town go to town and see if yon can find what you want, of it yon can't get to town telephone a merchant, and If it is a small package be will send it out by parcel post If it isn’t satisfactory send It back. Merchants guarantee the goods they sell just as well as mail order houses. There Is hot a local merchant who will not treat yon tight Give him a chance and he will appreciate it To bn continued nndor tbe title, "THE STRENGTH OF THE WHEEL.** Cedarville High School, —The j...;e for tho State to incul­ cate the Law o f God is the Public School (not the Reformatory or the Penitentiary) the institution through •tfhich it educates its children for the responsibilities o f citizenship, —Fourteen million youth in tho United States never darken a church door. The Bible in the Public Schools s their only hope for moraL training. ----------- —---- " ----------------- — <£> i OCTOBER 8. COME! —Mrs.-George W. Rife, accompani­ ed by her daughter, Miss Carrie,' were much appreciated callers at the Parsonpge one day recently. —James and Harriet Kyle, who have been visiting with their uncles and aunt, John and Don and Clara Kyle, have returned to their home at Amsterdam, New York. —Miss Grace Griffith has returned from a visit with her parents at Terre Haute, Indiana, —Rev. Lee E. Rife has returned to his home in Philadelphia. The family will remain a few weeks longer. —Thomas, the youngest son o f Ray pnd Mrs. Knox, has been seriously ill for ten days but at this writing hopes are entertained of his recovery. —Robert Fluke of Fairfield visited his cousin, Fay Fluke, recently and worshiped with us Sabbath, —Mr. George W. Rife and Dr. C. M. Ritchie attended the autumn meeting of Presbytery at Columbus last Mon­ day.'. COOLEY-TURNBULL. A very4pretty wedding was solem­ nized last Thursday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. K, Turnbull, near Jamestown, when their daugh­ ter, Miss Jffary, became the bride of Mr. Wilbur K. Cooley. The cere­ mony was performed by the groom's uncle, Rev, Walter Cooley, of Mays, Ind., in the presence o f a lajge num­ ber of relatives. and friends. ^ The house had been tastefully dec­ orated with cut and potted flowers arranged appropriately where the happy couple stood. Miss Marie Lit­ tle played the wedding march as the couple descended .the stairs. The bride wore a white organdy and lace gown and carried an arm bouquet of pink roses. Following tbe ceremony a three course supper was served. At the bride’s table were Mr. and Mrs, Cooley, Miss Martha Cooley, Miss Marie Little, Miss Anna Turnbull, Miss Wilmah Spencer and Messrs, Ward McMillan, John Cooley and Col­ lins Williamson. The young couple went immediate­ ly to their newly furnished home on the Cooley farm south of town where they* are the recipients of con­ gratulations and best wishes from their many friends. The bride is a popular girl in Jamestown where she graduated last year while Mr. Cooley, is a prosperous young farmer from one o f the oldest county; families tin the CEDARYILLE AMAZED BY SUDDEN ACTION. The incredible action o f simple iavoptik eye wash, is startling. A school boy had eye Strain so badly he could not read. A week's use of Iavoptik surprised his teacher so much that she used it for her old mother. - ONE WASH showed bene­ fit. .A small bottle Iavoptik is guar­ anteed to benefit EVERY CASE weak, strained or inflamed eyes. The IN­ CREDIBLE result is astonishing. Pure aluminum eye cup FREE with each bottle. A, E. Richards, drug­ gist. (No. 8) Toledo baking companies Increased 5 cent loaves to 6 cents and 10 cent loaves to '12 cents, Mrs, Jane Skeols, eighty-four, was found dead sitting in a chair on her farm south of Delaware. E, M. Fuliingtou was '.appointed state tax commissioner to/succoei James Boyle, resigned/ One-half block of the*business Sec lion of the village ,of Weston was , burned. The loss is $60,000. Thomas O’Neal. Erie crossing watchman at Gallon, was struck by an engine and fatally injured. At Newark the . mother of Robert Brickies, six, saw a truck run1over' the child’s head. The boy may die, Edward Moore, Democrat, received his commission as postmaster at Rich- wood to succeed Owen Livingston, Re­ publican. Emil Gaffner, Toledo motorman, was probably fatally stabbed In a flgbt with four young men who refused to pay fares. Mike Wood, section hand, was ar­ rested at Ashtabula on the charge of Intoxication. Search revealed ho car­ ried $8,350 in a belt, Deputy Sheriff, Gaboon raided the general store of John Krueck, mayor of Penfleld Junction, atfd confiscated several slot machines. Governor Willis unveiled the Klrker memorial erected at West Union by the state In honor of Thomas Klrker, Ohio's second governor. “ Trouble between 600 miners and the New York Coal company officials at Athens ended with the resignation of Mine Boss John Murphy, M. J, Clark, Nlckol Plate flagman, was instantly killed at Conneaut when a freight train crashed Into the ca boose of the train ahead. Despondency over Hi health caused Mrs. Ida Sherman, thirty-two, to hang herself with a towel In tho bathroom of her home In Cleveland. Unless fifty dwelling houses are built at once, Fostorla will lose a factory employing 200 men. There Is not a vacant house In town. J. W. Jones, superintendent of the Canton Electric Light company, was held to tho grand Jury for the death of a man in an auto accident. Alvin Vaugn, sixty, prominent Lees­ burg township (Union county) farm­ er, was found dead la his dooryard with his head and face badly beaten. Three auto bandits at Pfqua held up E. C. Scott, Jeweler, forced him to pour diamonds and jewelry to the value of $3,000 into a bag and escaped. Three cracksmen at work on the safe of the Farmers’ and Citizens’ bank at Milan were frightened away when William Bedell opened fire on them with a shotgun. Mrs. Clifford Jackson, wlfo of a salesman, leaped from a cceond story window of a Cleveland restaurant, fol­ lowing a quarrel, with her husband Her ba<$t wiy» bipktm „ . . . r m teMMftua &nviBti6a, in *4, Jonrncd session at Columbus, adopted a state platform and heard Senator Porcerenc nt:sl former Governor Cox discuss state and national issues. Because she would not elope Mrs, Mary Uickowltz, seventeen, bride of three months, was shot and killed by Edward Kozak, twenty-five, at Lo- rain. Kozak then committed suicide. A committee has been appointed, with' T, P, Riddle as chairman, to recommend1a type of monument to designate the junction of the Lincoln highway and the J)ix!o road, near Lima, Standing in front of a looking-glass and placing a pistol to. his head, liar ry W. Cummings, head of a banking and bonding bouse at Toledo, shot and killed, himself. He had been de­ spondent. Of the $25,000,000 to be-raised by Methodists for educational purposes Ohio Wesleyan university usks for $1,000,000, Ada university $500,000, Al­ liance college $750,000 and Berea col­ lege $650,000, Fifteen men were indicted at Lima charged with being ringleaders in a mob that attacked Sheriff Eloy when he refused to deliver up Charles Dan Ids, negro, charged with assaulting Mrs. Vivian Baber. ‘ . Franklin county common pleas court refused to grant th^ Columbus chamber of commerce a permanent Injunction restraining the State from purchasing the Wyandotte building for office purposes. Dr. H. G. Huffman, oculist and ad­ vocate of fasting as a nature cure, died at Youngstown, victim of his be lief, after going without food for sixty- nine days, Was unable to break hiB fast of forty days. , State Auditor Donnhey In his an­ nual report declares that Ohio sehoo' teachers are receiving only an aver­ age wage of $54 per month./ He also says that increase of indebtedness Is menacing the schools. Farmers along the right of way o! the Lake Erie, Bowling Green "and Northern appealed to the state public utilities commission to prevent the destruction of the road, which the owner -would sell for junk. Carl Dement. Sim Bowen,. Baxtei and Leslie Cooper wer bound over to the grand jury on the charge of first degree murder, for their alleged coil nection with the killing of Marsha1 Lou C. Kennedy of Proctorvillo, ‘ Charges preferred against the Rev J. D. Darling of Columbus, recently re moved as secretary of the State, Sun day School association, West Obit Methodist Episcopal conference, were dismissed by a committee. Two bandits shot and killed Loe Rankin, superintendent and paymas­ ter- of the Youghioghen'y and Ohio Goal company, near Martin’s Ferry, and fled with $8,670 which they took from Rankin. The money was found inter. A suspect held has been iden­ tified as one of the bandits. Wo matter how hard your bead aotud, q». KIMf JuiU-XXa vitta -wUI tvdw.ywa AVE IN SAFET In Tinie$ of Felice Prepare For W ar P R E P A R E D N E S S a i f TN TIME OF PEACE PREPARE FOR W A R ” is a * maxim that is just as applicable to the individual as it is to the nation. Wars and other disasters usually come suddenly, and the man or nation who Is best prepared.to meet,emergencies is always the winner. I f you-are earning a regular salary, or if your business Is prosperous, NOW is the time to prepare for adverse conditions. But few o f us Indeed live life’ s allotted span without encountering financial difficulties. The only way to guard against such is to build up a reserve fund against such a contingency. ABE YOU DOING IT? I f not, Wisdom, the product o f the centuries, will dictate that you BEGIN NOW." No-epoch In the life o f any individual can possibly begin more, auspiciously than that which is marked by THE FIRST DOLLAR SAVED . F’ifl T H E Sprin g f ie ld S a y in g s Society Feints out the way for y^u to save in-safety,- It pays 4 per uent interest on de- ; - deposits compounded semi-annually, i t ’ spreads before you Forty-Three years o f experience In the handling of other people’ s money W ITHOUT THE LOSS , OF A SINGLE DOLLAR. ' . It suggests that you you open an account TODAY. It encourages banking by mail, Make the two-cent stamp your errand boy in this, the beB^ business venture of your life. 1 ’ Write for our booklet “BANKING BY MAIL" “ Interest Starts on Your Deposit • * * From the First of Every Month” Address inquiries to the Springfield Savings Society, 9 East Main Street, Springfield, Ohio CASTOR IA P R I N T I N G A / a f - n . M IkmBoalil Bears the -Signature of J u s t R e c e i v e d a C a r o f $ pancy plberta peaches 6 ' , ' I ' : Special Prices for Canning BUY N O W WH ILE TH EY ARE CHEAP t t t I l m | S. DETROIT STREET, PEACHES H. E. SCHMIDT & Co IK S IK XENIA, OHIO w w * We e IjriMlirq Com: 0OU1H-. tract v.’j ' night. . the coir given an the ques That a for the it under th has tw o , be a navi oyer the Instcac caudeset! greater n given urn the 28 art The pet ona-'b mi W$w plan years, T cussion o letting t themselv the affiri Pierce a R obs and present a vote was . lution wa up again ing and y getting tt o t eleotip Messrs. Heath mai ! company. On moti was thank support bration. Mr. A. 1 from farm stock an Tuesday,1 ty rL I w ill ht Thomas S n\k ildrra. q t t a p I will hc.f Bailey-Ms October 17 o f live atoi W m k - U n a jM v s Pul t Shortho The. unde auction at London, O Wednes Boginn 50 Head grade mih named bre Also a fei D o not n Madison co high grade some of tt sale. Col.J .J . Y Minshall, / Brown L( 1

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=