The Cedarville Herald, Volume 42, Numbers 1-26
I t Bull, iijjiiiira’iiWiii. lit*-'^ if^tihiiiiii i iv • » mJfcnipiiOfci m itth Cedarville Herald EDITOR Entered a t the Post-Office, Cedar- ville, 0,-.October 31„ 1887, as second class matter, FRIDAY, JUNE 18, 1910. Mrs, W. R. Sterrett has returned from JBelle Center where she attend ed the R. P. Synod, She was accom panied by Miss Fannie McNeill and ;Mv, and Mrs. Dwight Sterrett of 'Mansfield, where both have been en- ’gaged iri’teaching intho public schools -in that,city. GALLOWAY & CHERRY, XENIA —- — OHIO Whipple, Milton's Diction, How. grandly Milton rolls and winds through the arches and labyrinths of his magnificent and Involved dictioff, waking musical echoes at every turn and variation of Its progress 1—K. „P. rSRBSMSt; Spring arid Summer j - W e have a fine line of woolens for SUITS, OVERCOATS and TROUSERS. W e are ready, to serve you. Our prices are reason able and our work always guaranteed to be first class. K A N Y , The Leading Merchant Tailor XENIA, OHIO. THE TARBOX LUMBER CO. STERLING. Q U A L IT Y M0v$4% This front ttoor Mandard large size nncl thid:nc’.':i'2 ft. 8 in. by 6 ft. Eia< by 1 f { In, thick In solid white pine Plai l plate No. 5033 AA....... $0.65 Bevel plate No. 50331>3 0.D5 Same size with plain cc.!: Veneer. Glazed with pfoi.t plate No. 5035 A ... .$12.30 Bevel plate No. 5035 B 15.CO Extra Quality. Oak veneer Is Yn of an Inch thick three times usual thii»knt.:i. To eliminate chance of blistering veneer is hpplicd with a prac* tieally water *preef sj cdal glue. Special lead cootingend putty is used under gta.s to prevent moisture coming off the glass fern Eetthvj inly doOf. . Wry" HA’fKm r MMps, ■.<& . %?• ATDIRECT rices HE ground on which we solicit your patronage is th a t we offer a better quality of millwork— better than is usually sold by mail or through a dealer—the best th a t can be had a t any price. And we design you new styles. tJ Our mills are equippedwith the fin est and most accurate machinery ever i.v,4.r,tcd. We run sanders, planers, moulders, etc., slower than usual,mak ing the work cost us more in order to give you smoother woodwork. Wood work capable of finer finishing a t lower cost. Surh a policy would make our prices accordingly higher but for the fact tha t we save youmoney in other ways. Selling costs are cut by selling di rect from factory to you. Our fortu- ’nato location a t greatest hardwood lumber market in the world, and the most advantageous railfoad point for manufacturing, enables us to buy bet ter end cheaper; and to ship cheaper,, Write for complete Millwork Cata- l -.', St shows a few select house plans. We quote direct mill prices on every item" of rough lumber and finished millwork needed for any house, barn, gaiagc, factory or repair job. Sendu3 your list of materials needed or have your contractor send it, and get our delivered prices. You’ll see then tha t v;o* save you money, Pi vtcn:indt:;i of geoh. Refundmotuy if I.il 6:Urf: tl. (•-1cur cldieercJ plica iJuj. S m t Jut peu muiJ tu t. T m &T8RUN& LUMBER CO, BURCH StrMt Cincinnati, Ohio jiody lit LiWJtersanl Maurice Kin' rear, 20, former cfbvT la tho artil lery rorrij and d Junior' in (Berlin college, was found with a bullet woun ’ through bis heart in a desert ed coll, ;e building at Ohcrlin. A re volver and a letter from a girl were found beside the body. Trying to safeguard live younger boys entrusted to his care at a picnic cost Raymond Wolfe, IG.-hls life fit Brooksviile. near Cleveland. Wolfe was exploring the depths of Cuyahoga river to see how far hin-companions could wa.de when he sank and- drowned. Fire, starting In the engine room of the Bartje- Paper company, Steu benville. destroyed the plant, causing a loss estimated at $100,000. Claiming that the city probe into Zanesville's municipal affairs reflect ed on the administration of Mayor D. J. Ryans, Service Director M. L. Tracy and City Solicitor B, J. Hark- uess resigned. Kber A. Baker, 72, oldest locomo tive engineer of tho Erie railroad in point of service, died of heart dis ease at his -home at Marion. To raise, revenue lost by prohibi tion Dover council has decided to tax moving picture shows. Governor Cox vetoed the city and school financial relief bill, for the passage of which over his disapproval the general assembly will return June tC. It Is. similar in provisions to two other measures previously vetoed, arid the reasons for the dis approval. Cox tells the legislature, are the same as cited in former mes sages. The bill would permit people of distressed subdivisions to vote levies in excess of the Smith 1 per cent limitation to meet old and cur rent deficits, in operating expenses. Streetcar fares are expected to gp to 7 cents at Cincinnati by Oct. 1 un der a Tare revision ordinance ;by which fares automatically increase every three mouths! until the com pany’s reserve fund is $650,000. ■William Swanton, 83, died of in juries received at Canfield when struck by an auto. He was Mahoning county’s richest farmer. Reports of damage from flood and lightning reached Cleveland from out-? lying points ■ following a heavy rain- stem . Serious injury to crops near Avon and Ridgeville was reported. H. H. Holman declined to accept re-election as superintendent o f Rich- wood schools, He will go to* Mt. Pleasant. Pa. < Newark society women formed an organization pledged to,.sell $2,506,600 in war savings stamps this year. Ruth Muntsdorf,. 4. daughter of John Huntsdorf of Milan, Was .injured fa tally when a horse kicked tier on the head, . John P. Campbell, 46, committed suicide at Leipsic. • Equipped with gas masks, Dayton firemen entered the cellar of a refrig erating plant and •rescued' two boys who had. been, overcome by escaping ammonia1James. Grace Sturr, 30, committed suicide near Eatou by drowning herself. Postmaster George Wiudle of Be hring put a force of men to work planting 30,000 evergreen trees, with view to sturting h. forest to supply people with Christmas trees. A company of jtlie national guard is being organized in Perry county. Application has been made- for ap pointment of u "receiver for the -Mi*, ainisburg and Germantown Traction company on the ground that the com pany's *eaniings- are insufficient to pay operating expanses. Isaac 41, Carman, 84, who won med als of honor* for bravery during the civil war, is dead at Washington C. 11. Mrs. Emma Lee Elam of Indianap olis was elected president of the bpard of trusteos Of Oxford college. W e lte r grade school teachers asked- the board of education for h larger increase in pay than the $5 a month offered by the. board, Mrs. Harriet Taylor"Upton of War ren, president of the Ohio Women’s Suffrage association,. will be in Co lumbus June 16 to urge immediate action by the legislature on the fed eral suffrage amendment. Mlrean laundry at Cleveland was damaged by fire which followed an explosion. Loss estimated at $10,000, Lancaster school teachers were granted a salary increase of 10 per cent. J. R. Clemens was re-elected for a three-year terra.. John L. Miller, 50, Cuyahoga Falls, was drowned at-Monroe Falla, near Akron, while making an ineffectual effort to rescue his 15-year-old daugh ter who had 'fallen into the water. She grabbed him around the neck and both went to their death. Rev. Kelley L. Smith, former Pros pect Methodist church pastor and head of the Marion county Sunday school association, died at his home at Mt. Victory after a long illness. Chit} and Pennsylvania, in federal supreme court, were granted tempo ral;/ injunctions to restrain Weal Vir- g ia a from halting exportation of nat iral gas from the state. I iquor said to be worth $20,000, wb ch was towed into Put-ln-Bay har bor mysteriously on a .scow by un known persons, was unloaded at the put lie dock on the island. No at tempts have been made to remove It. Vrs, Leroy p. Wolfe, 36, Sidney, d ial of injuries received recently Vh3n a train struck the ante InAvhich she was riding. Two other persons were killed. Two youthful pay roll bandits, who robbed a cleric employed by the Ohio Dairy company at Toledo of $4,000 in front of the company's -office, were cai’turod by detectives 10 minutes labar. under a house four blocks from the scene of tho holdup. The money w«s recovered. TOAMEHDTREATY ISTORE 1 ECTIT Busines Interests Urged UseTheir Influence. tn PEACELEAGUENOT ANEW IDEA W. A. Julian, Chairman Ohio Branch, League to Enforce Peace, In' Mas terly Address at Cincinnati, Point* Out What Would Happen If United States Senate Should Amend Peace Plans Formulated at P«pie. Cincinnati, O.—(Special^—Stress ing the fact that amendment of the League of Nations' covenant means rejection, and branding as false the assertion that the document Is “Wil son-made,” W, A, Julian, chairman of the Ohio branch, League to Enforce^ Peace, in a masterly address here urged the business interests of the country to use their influence to have the covenant ratified by the United States senate. “We hear a great deal from Wash ington to the effect that the League of Nations plan adopted by tbe great powers at Paris is a ’Wilson-made" document,” said Mr. Julian. - The sen ators-who use this argument to de feat the nearest thing we’ve ever had to a Federation of Mankind do so to Seem* «n Unfair Division. Thousands of hats discarded by English women are exported every year to Brazil, where they are eagerly bought by tho Indians. The fenthers and other ornaments on the hats are taken by tho men, and tho bare straw chapes given to their womenfolk, Useful Though Unwed. , The modern view ’is that a woman IS not necessarily a failure because her life lms been Mtss-spcht’—BostoiV' Transcript, W, A. JULIAN. Chairman Ohio Branch, League Enforce Peace. either through unpardonable Ignor ance or Unriardonal le partisanisni. The League of Nations plan was formulated long before Woodrow Wilson was Aral nominated for presi dent. - During the Taft administration treaties were drawn up, one with France and another with Great Brit ain, in which the parties' agreed to arbitrate all justiceabie questions and abide by the arbitration, with ma chinery for determining what was a (usticoable question—a question which would be settled by a. court on prin ciples of law or equity, “When those treaties were sent to -the United States senate for ratifica tion that august body of lawmakers did to them just what they would like to do to the Paris covenant. They blithely amended them as they would amend the Lord's Prayer if that sacred work were submitted to them for consideration. “Although those treaties were never put into operation, they were, the seed from which grew the League of Nations adopted by tbe great pow ers after months of consideration at Paris. The people of the country became interested in the idea and when the great war swooped down upon the world four of five hundred of these people met i n , Philadelphia and organized the League to Enforce Peace, This organization laid’ down a paltform. recommending that the United States enter a League of Na tions under stipulations, and em bracing many points Included in the present treaty. “The propaganda of the League to Enforce Peace spread to the other side of the water. An association with a similar program was organised in England. Then France embraced tbe idea. The French and English governments appointed commissions to consider the question of the League of Nations and its practicable charac ter,* and to recommend plans. Mr. Rlbot of France asked our own gov ernment to do the same thing, but we refused, “When President Wilson went to France he found a tremendous wel come there Tor the League of Na tions, or rather A League of Nations. "The League of Nations plan which Mr. Wilson submitted to the repre sentatives of the various foreign powers was revised, clarified and made into a much better document than it was when first presented. And in its present form it is different from toy particular plan. Investigation of it will show that It was taken from very many different, sources and ham mered out, as such a document must be hammered out, whore there, are 14 How the Months Were Named, January gets its name from Janus; February from Februn—-purification— ft Sabine word; March from Mars; April from aperio-—open; May from Mala, goddess of growth; June from Junius; July from Julius; August from Augustus; September from sep- tem—seven; October from octo— eight; November from novcm—nine; December from deceoi—ten. Optimistic Thought. A low station with safety is better than n Jjlglt one wllli danger. titfKbrvnt memhfttji to be kaUsfl&A bjf , the result. “Up much to eliQW that the Lensjw of Nations covenant is not a ‘Wilson* made’ document. “Now, what will happen if Jllo oqu* ate is permitted to amend the cove* nant? To amend the covenant la one single particular amounts to ‘re jection of the whole, and the United States will continue to be in a state of war with Germany, There is a clause in the treaty which declares that if any three nations sign that treaty with Germany as it now stands they may enter into international re lations with Germany. The signatory nations may open up trade and bus! ness and start to do business with Germany just as if all the other na tion's had signed the treaty. Suppose Japan, France, Great Britain and Italy sign the pact, as we are told they are more than willing to do, what would happen? They would be at peace with Germany and we would be at war with Germany. ’ We will be at war#with Germany until we sign, and' we will be Isolated, standing alone, while the other great nations are reaping the harvest of trade. > “Already the National Chamber of Commerce of England has opened a branch office at Coblenz. Germany. They are there ready to do business the moment Great Britain and two other powers sign the peace treaty. “Furthermore, if the United States does not sign the peace treaty with Die League of Nations in it as it is now. .we will be plunged into interml nabie litigation over the $700,000,000 worth of ships which has been award ed us to replace the bottoms de stroyed by the Germans during the war. If we accept the peace treaty iSfi hi ,'flWii i ri tin irfuimtitwi -*r if"u .as it now stands we get this,tonnage without further parley. If we do not accept It neutral powers will deter mine -Just what tonnage, if any, Ger many shall be compelled to give us. “Another, situation with which we will be confronted in case the League of Nations covenant is amended and thus rejected is the possibility of having to return to their former own-, ers *the $1,000,000,000 worth of alien property sold at auction by this gov ernment pnder the alien property custodian act. “As you can readily see, how much more easily we can deal with the.j Germans now that We have them on their hacks, and all our allies assist ing u§, than if we allowed them to get up, having made peace with all the .world, and having only us to jleal with. One who runs may read the result,” Mr. Julian urged his hearers to see to it that the senators at Washington are informed that the people desire the ratification, of the League of Na tions covenant. Mr. Julian is known' throughout Ohio through his untiring efforts on. the health-and old age pension corn- mission, of which he is chairman. LEGAL NOTICE. Common Fleas Court Greene County, Ohio. * Charles Ella Cowan, Plaintiff VS. ■4 Albert Cowan, Defendant.* Albert Cowan, place of- residence unknown will take notice that Charles Ella.Cowan has filed suit for divorce against him in said eburt, her petition charging wilful absence for more than three years and that the same will be for hearing at the court house in Xenia, Ohio, on July 7,1919 a t 10 A. M. or as soon thereafter as the same ban be reached by which time defend- ant must answer or demurr to . said petition or judgment may bo -taken against him. ' Signed Charles Ella Cowan. DR. O. P. ELIAS DENTIST Exchange Bank Bldg, Cedarville, O. A New One FREE -B u y a D e ligh t G a s M an tle If they break in 90 days return the | Label to address on same (the factory and a new one will be sent FREE, from the following firms: C. C. Saum W. W. Troute Geo, A, Shrodea Robert Bird & Sons Co." B. H. Little C. E. Masters M. C„ Nagley C. M, Spencer Home Bakery T A I L O R E D t N( 1 fltl fj i $ I the j.1. * r; i *1* 1 tai 1 ?t j!: ■ 1 wh 1 fori [■ | 1 L ~on 1 he’l Park A Fashion suit meets popu lar fancy comfortably and in a very taste ful way. That’s the story Shor t—swee t— true. Custom Service Without The Annoyance of a Try-on Ready-To-Put-Qn l . Tailored a t Fashion Park Hot Weather Coat and Trousers at unheard of piices . $10.00 and up Weaver Opposite Court House Main St., - - Xenia, Ohio This month9s Buttevich Patterns are 10c and 15c— none highteTm k am Willard Service Station Recharging, Repairing and a complete line o f Rentals. New Batteries in StocR L. C. R. Storage Battery Co. 118 E. 'Mainj^treet, - Xenla,*Ohio Geo. W. Lane, Manager Coi XE1 Stc N a i “i h from m. bases o fore I Linimei. P, Saxt ton C. 1 H< should 1 4 Mouseh For Si Do ■ f t You h William a Mrs. On Is back i:; glad tosc?1- as new u st Sc „ s S tops 1 I tV i
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