The Cedarville Herald, Volume 41, Numbers 27-52
i , ?v i t*' b j « *»!**•<* * t th* PonVOfflw, O s tia l Till#* OotobSV 81, 1887, M JMMOQCt el*i* m*bte*. vwmam^mmammmm&smrnmiammKaitga FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, IH I i raa»l*,t)»n«. Translation? w Uke photograph*, ®98t foar reproducing drawing* and for sunsets. It' to m though one ’Who could not see the French cathe- draln or the Pyramid* should acquaint hhuaelf with good painting* of them, But they are not the cathedral? or the Pyramid*. They are the nest heat thing, unless, as may be the case, the tales of travelers are better. These, too, are not the original, but a teach* «r*s Interpretation'—sometime? very good, and sometimes not— -Andrew F. West. '■• • ■■■. >• Soap Bubble Last* for Month*. The Mr of an ordinary room is filled with tiny particles of matter which fall on the airy soap bubble, alter the surface tension, and—-poof—it Is gone, says the Popular Science Monthly. The effect of these minute particles on the stnbiUty of bubbles was first brought to light by Sir Dewar., Be experimented In clarified a ir until he wws able to produce bubbles which lasted for months. Be has even pro* -duced a.soap film, which was a year old recently tunH which seems to re main hist oa.lt was. So tell the chil dren that tha secret of successful soap "bubbling is to Imv^ a perfectly phrf .soap solution and to blow the'bub bles In and with air that .s .also per fectly pure., - ' v General Wttchfindor. General Wltchflnder was a title assumed by one Matthew Hopkins, fin Impudent arid cruel wretch, who, for three or forir years previous to 1847* traveled through the counties of Es sex, Sussex,'Norfolk, and Huntingdon, England, pretending to discover witches, superintending their exam ination' by most cruel •tortures, add compelling them to admit and confess matters equally absurd and Imposst- •ble, the Issue of which was ,-Alie for feiture of their Uves. At first the cur rent of popular feeling was strongly with Hopkins;. but, a t length tt pet against him with such violence that he was seized and subjected to his own favorite test of swimming, and, hap pening to float, was convicted of witch craft, and pu t,to death. In his bur lesque poem, “Hudlbras," the poet, Butler, holds up Hopkins to ridicule and contempt - Ask fo r' Ballard’s Pancake *ud Buckwheat flour a t Nagley's. NOTICE 1 have a complete cream station built on truck arid will be at the B-. H« Little grocery bn Tuesday of each week, where I will take care of your cream, test it and pay for it in money (not checks). Highest market ■price' paid bar same. Honesty and courtesy our Motto. J. A* LONG CO. Per H. P. Bothast Union.City, Ind - PUBLIC_ SALE! Having bought a small farm I will not heed all my stock and farm equip- ' ment and will sell same on what is known as the W. H, Luce farm }£ mile north of Clifton On the Clifton and Springfield pike, on Monday, November 25, ’18 At IS o’clockthe follhwing^property: 2 HEAD OF WORK HORSES A good work team. -1 4 . HEAD OF CATTLE 1 4 - Cobsistitig of two large brown cows giving good flow of milk;! large pure bred Jersey giving good flow of milk; l -roan cow* heavy milker* fresh.by sale; 1 rtd eow just fresh; i Jersey cows, one fresh last spring, the other recently; 2 good Shorthorn heifers fresh in Decern- buerj 1 large Jersey heifer fresh in December; S 6 mos. Shorthorn calves, one? heifer and other a bull, ---- 50 HEAD OF HOGS 5 0 ---- Consisting of 1* thrifty sheets, 75 lbs. •ach;30 head of Duroc pigs eight Weeks old; 6 pore bred Duroc gilts. 16 HEAD OF DELANE EWES 275 Shocks of Good Cora;. 12 Tons Of Clover arid Mixed Hay in Barn* IMPLEMENTS:-l 7-it. tongue truck binder used three years; t Oliver riding breaking plow used three years; i good disc harrow;2 horse wagon with flat bed; harness and other article*. Terms Made Known Day Of Sale C. E. NORTHUP Col. Glen Weikert, Abet. Chat, Hatfield, Clerk. HOW’S THIS? Wo offer Ona Hnndrdd Dollw to* ward for any easo of Catarrh that oaimOt •be cured by Halls Catarrh Catarrh Medicine hds been talma by catarrh sufferers for the Mat thirty-five years, and has bo- «HM known as the reliaWt wn- Ssurttttsrettsx WOMENOFOHfei URGEDTOHELP TWrWSougtilInMelWv Work Gatnpalgn. DRIVEBEGINSNOVEMBER11 SW a SM K * ' Organization* Taking the Place of Home In the Lives of Puokoyo Boys Over Thors and In Canton- ment* in This Country Must Be Backed to the Limit—Seven Wider ly Known Women lew# an Appeal *0 Their Sisters. Dayton, O.-—(Special.)—The seven -most widely known women or Ohio joined In a cell on all women of th e .state to push the United War Work Campaign of Nov. I I to 18 "over the top.” The organizations taking the place of home in the lives of our Ohio boys over there must be backed to the limit, they say. The appeal I? issued by Mrs. James M. Cpx of Dayton* Miss Belle Sher- wln of Columbus, bead of the wom en’s committee of the State Council of Natlorial Defense; Mrs. Prentice E, Rood of Toledo, president of the -Ohio Federation of Women’s .Clubs; Mrs. William Cooper Proctor of Cin cinnati;- Miss Helen Taylor Of Cin cinnati, chairman of the Y. W. C. A. executive committee, for* Ohio and- West Virginia; Mrs, F. F. Prentiss Of 'Cleveland, and Mrs. Frank A. Seiberliag of Akron, "The people of Ohio are to he con gratulated that In this state, as in all states of the Union, the organizations looking after the welfare of the sol dier abroad and strengthening the second -line of. defense'’ at home will hold a joint money drive.. When the Y. M, C. A., Y, W. c. A . the Na tional Catholic War Council, the War Camp Community Service, the Jewish. Welfare Board, the American Library Association and the Salvation Army came together in a united campaign for 1170,500,000 they made a prac tical and patriotic move*Jieartlly en dorsed by the women' o f Ohio, they declare. A Woman’s Advisory Council, em bracing women of all religions and employments and representative both of. Industry and capital, is being formed,' under the chairmanship of Mrs. C. A. Gt&aselli of Cleveland. Miss Elizabeth Hyatt is director of the woman’s, campaign. The Coun cil will put before every woman of the state, the facts of this' 1170,500,- Olio campaign which ia to bring the good cheer ot Ohio homes Into the camps of France and Italy and Si beria, where hoys, many ot them from the Buckeye state, are fighting for'democracy. Leaders of the cam paign will peint out this fund means less than ;.a dollar a year fo r enter-- tainment of the m eno f the army and navy .' - "The women are going to be prime factors to the drive,” F. W. Ramsey, state campaign director, said today. "We're counting on mothers and sis ters and sweethearts, - as well 'as fathers and brothers arid good pals.1? •The Women’s Advisory Council will take no part in money solicita tion. State campaign officials, how ever, recommend that a t least one woman’s team he formed to each community and a .certain part of the solicitation campaign turned over to it. These teams are usually, of 18 members, -and. If the experience ot Liberty Loans follow*, the Women’s teams .will spell pep. Another job before the .womaa’a Aldvisory Committee is to mother -and big-slater -the ’’Victory Girlsf* Girls between 12 and«20 year* Old will be asked to earn and give to the Campaign- The money must be the result ct their own work and can not be solicited- The usual gift wilt be $5, which, it is reckoned, will supply a soldier over there with all the com forts of the seven organizations for five weeks. The woman of the state will naturally have x responsibility In what their daughters accomplish. While the Y. W. C. A. Is the only woman’s organisation recognized by the government In war work over seas, each of the other six organiza tions In the drive has women's com mittees and is backed by women’s strength. At a meeting of the War Work Council of the Y. W. C. A. ia Chicago last month John It, Mott re quested an outline for mobilizing the entire womanhood of the nation in the drive. Six women from -the Jew ish Welfare Board, three from the War Camp Community Service, eight from the National Catholic War Council, eight from the Salvation Army arid one from the American Library Association, together with Y, M, C. A, delegates, determined- upon general enlistment of all women un der state advisory committees repre senting each ,of the seven organiza tions. The organization already set up by the Y, W- C. A. Will be used in each county of the state, -and Y. W. C. A. representatives On county executive committee* will broaden their work to become representatives of all wom en of the comty. The only Woman ori the National Executive Committee, Mrs. Henry P. DavlsOn, declares that nationally Jewish, Catholic and Protestant wom an are working eagerly together, and the same J&ult is rapidly being accomplished ip Ohio, — *— — I---- 6 FRANK L. JOHNSON, Attorney and Counselor-at-Law XENIA, OHIO. Offlee airar Galloway i - Cherry* DR, O. P. ELIAS TSHlflIS? • X K M a D B M i .M f , CedapHHe, O. Mrs. G* o * m Smith. H , wife a t the •dttor of the Leipeie Free press, of to frisua . Besides her hvutbaaf* •he is survive* by three small ekit- drea. John Carley, Cleveland, is the mew •resident of the Ohio State BaBdtog 'Trades oounctl, which oeaeladed a three days’ convention a t Cohuabee. A, B. Smith, Springfield, warn Nested first rkte president. Resolutioas were adopted eepoalng statewide prohlbi' |ion. Ralph Lewis. Sabina banker, and h it brother Jphjs, soldier a t Camp Shaman, died of influenza. At Mast Liverpool, W. O, Powell, wife and two sons were Injured when their auto turned turtle. Lest saloon a t Helena. Sandusky county, closed voluntarily, State health department ordered private funerals for toftaeax* victims, the same a* In ether ooatagtou# and Infectious diseases. Former lieutenant Governor Asa W, Jones died a t hi* home a t Burg- hlll, Trumbull county, near Youngs town. He h id been ill six months With heart disease. During the first administration of Governor J. B, For- aker he waa appointed judge advocate general. He w ee* candidate for the nomination for governor when chosen u running mate for Asa S. Bushnel! in 1896. J. C. Babcock and Ferdinand We- heele of Napoleon ware arrested, charged with menacing a liberty bond solicitor. , Edson M. Mills, professor c j snath- ematica a t Ohio university, is dead. While’Assistant Fire Chief Allen B- Nice was speeding to a ’fire in Columbua his auto struck and killed Otto Thiel, aged 52, a mechanic. Reaching Jfor a revolver when a ’ lone robber held him up, Louis Schmidt,'.aged 43, grocer a t Colum bus, was shot through the right lung, He fired twice a t the crook, who es caped. Schmidt may, die. Orville F. Bafcus, a returned mis sionary, was chosen as postmaster of Sunbury, The postofllce department adhered to its new rule that the high man wine. - Fred D. Baker, postmas ter a t Sunbury, recently' resigned. . All pupllb entering Columbus pub lic schools ’must be vaeclnated^ ac cording to a ruling of the board ot education. Parents who do not wish to abide by'this ruling will be com pelled to take their children from school. A dozen persons were injured to a railroad accident near East Liver pool. E. Curtis Rkenhaus, Socialist, a jeweler of] Youngstown, wal placed in jail a t Cleveland under bond of 15,800, charged with violation of the espionage act. By proclamation of Mayor Schrelber of Toledo, all idlers will he arrested and sent to prison or required to worlo on the government nitrate plant;. ^ Three hundred men end women employed In the plant rif the Clause' Shear company, Fremont, walked out, demanding they be paid every other Saturday Instead of the 10th and 25th of the month. -Ohlo'a labor shortage continues acute, according to reports from 21 local employment offices throughout the state, Approximately 10,000 job* were-filled during the week-ending 8opt 14. Requests for help numbered 17,074, Spanish influenza to the different camps 'o f-the United States caused the death of six Crawford county boys. Deaths a t Camp Sherman as a re sult of the influenza epidemic now total 920; New cases, however, are being- reported more siowly, -and dis charge* from the hospital continue to increasing numbers. Federal circuit court of appeals at Cincinnati denied the application of John J, Shea and Edward Taylor of Toledo for a rehearing in their ap peal Rom the fines and sentences Im posed upoa them to the federal dis trict court a t Toledo. The zaea were convicted a t Toledo on indictments charging misuse of the mails la fur therance of schemes to defraud. ' Grape growers of the. Lake Erie Islands, are receiving prices this year which are the highest to the history of the grape industry* For Concords 170 per ton was paid and for the Ca> tawbas prices of from 195 to 1105 per ton have been paid for the crops. G. V, Sheridan, secretary of . the Ohio State Medical association, haa gone to Washington, called by the council of national defense, medical section. The- council of defense is planning to organlxa volunteer med ical service corps to other states along the successful lines followed In Ohio. , Mr. and Mrs. John Moss, near Goodhope, Fayette county, died of Spanish influsnza. Four daughters and one son are seriously iU. Governor Cox has recommended to the provost marshal general that the call for 4.000 Ohio draftees to entrain between Oct* 21 and 24 be suspended on account of the influensa situation in this state. The men are to go to Camp Wadsworth, S, C. He advised also that physical examination of prospective draftees be suspended for the time being, Mr. and Mfs, Edward Kennedy, North Lewisburg, received word that their' ^son, Glade Kennedy, who ran away early to August arid joined the navy, had died aboard a hospital ship. The hoy Was 17 years old. A large production of all grains in Ohio is shown by the first joint crop report of the state and federal gov ernments. Many counties report bumper crops of oats as well aa other grains. Spring Wheat, where grown, yielded more bushels per acre than winter Wheat. The condition of the corn crop Oct. 1 is fspotted at 78 pet bent of normal. The heat price tor your eggs will be paid at Nagley’s. CLASSIFICATION li you desire information regarding the taxation amendment to^ th tt Con- stitritkm providing lor classiflcstion, £»!***• write , | OHIOTAXfATliS iEAGUE, *0lG**U!uU4i»g, it Do Not Deny Yourself and Your Family Longer. Don’t let this heroic year of ’eighteen pass Without placing music in.your home. ^ AGood Piano or .Player-Piano is a permanent investment—not luxury. You are buying happiness and contentment for yourself, your family and friends, and now more than ever with all amusements and enter-, talnments closed to you, owing to the danger of contagion, you should fill your home with music. When there is more entertainment and fun at home, you nor your family will want to go “out” . ! . Come in and Select from Our Showing of High-Grade Pianos and Player-Pianos, an instrument which will give you never- failing delight for a lifetime. W e are sole agents for T “Chickering” "Milton” “Brambach” “Brinkerhoff” “Krakauer” “Gulbransen” vr , » , ** * ’ A K And Other Famous PIANO and PLAYER-PIANOS i t . * < h - Easy Terms Arranged for Your Convenience 168 NORTH HIGH STREET c o l u n i b u s , onto.
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