The Cedarville Herald, Volume 43, Numbers 1-26

■ 4 m fit y 4hf pMip&i Wkssttaw *4#% U *M» £ | a d ^ ^^uuk S^mBfliWIWtoto ^Jfr ' atytMJMS ‘^yk^lPA ' sRP^aiMS^OS^S* j^^Was ^BtoV^a uup* «MM|M tiui Wfftb&M^l «(rifet|MUM| «# ]to|M| l Mr^. —t, ^MM-a ^M^tattfcA K ma J i »f# p it TaMt 4MnV» IMjtlMto #HS- ani vsi— i i f M Hi ssssMiiei- fist sM 1 tostfe tow safer &Ji hm» -MltM if h*s ssy ft *$. Th* *)dad oil vm * .ybffi* "j^tftt )M0&yt&6&, b*stt '<«t£gk loew it* H n w t r fliiM , fK 'i^Wjt RWR toe rsyto* Issfl dWtowwifar, here mm for sole, !• **** *•**’ oil stott >0911 tottog SPSAESNW^SeiDSlDSISk^ 9SI 9jdS—. g 'CT*wi *wd tk tt sw ott companies h*>v« w sd t food ottd sre fair, bat o f titom #re on -pspse only ftttd otttt bo hqssrfl of, itt Now Toric, jjhere ia s firm $i*t tovs»W*irti»t fo r tbsh: dionto, f‘fibtoirtof o f inTootoumtSf utd fchs ysarTMU up to October had beenX vs thousand and two oil companies organised and- all hadbeau investigated, anly minor per cent, were found to bo Square- .v ,i The astounding sums thkt are ju st ikven away to these, fak e firms has paused financial firms throughout the to a campaign to' educate the ople td'the fast that i f the schemas good and certain there is little fo r sa lt, . ^ ., >,- ; The fa ct thatiJUto in a great while, ?pje o f the new companies strikes it rich, has induced the many* to part itb their.'.cash and never meet it . . Thousands o f dollars in the United Stated the savings of years, invested fn Liberty Bonds, have been exchange ed for stock certificates, not ‘ Worth the paper they are printed oh. The one who gets his money1back-with a good profit or any profit at all, isthe exception, nbt the rule. 1# THE, BUSINESS MEN , ' ■ / / % qimBNSHiP. ^ The thpught has been "expressed at jrecenf conventions that one of the greatest dangers to business today is Ijh* apparent indifference o f the business man in regard to his duty ns si. dtixen." It seems that his affairs Of every-day life tend to consume his rime so that he cannot direct his. at­ tention to matters of government. As a result there is much vicious legis­ lation and national waste...and Wsi- ;*e$s made to suffer. . To a consider­ able extent this'criticism o f th<*busi- man, is merited. .. But his indiff­ erence is mors apparent than real and * change seems to b e in evidence. The , activity ,o f business men in the pfes- smt^rigsis indie*tes the beginning o f *xM yU *fe«it he wifi dto*(M » 9Xe*t* , -toto^ Jefototo olwseoshlp and govemment. ADVERTISED, LETTERS, remaining unclaimed in the post oflte«a t Cedarville, O h io,-fori the "wedc ending Feb % 1920i Beaw, C. C. ., w ,* Beer, Leonsrd. oBusher, Mrs. -Ruth.' ‘ Culver, Ksthjryn. V " Johnson# Lucie. * • Morrison, .Mrs, Rate. Pttnkerman, Chas. , Rhinehart, Orion. ., Smith, Martin, " ' - Bmi.th, -Mrs. Jerome. ( 2) Shaffer, Mrs. Jennie,'' .: Tenderberten, Mrs, Ells i%J . W. A. Ttbrnbull* - Postmaster. * DAY OF PRAYER. ' THE ‘W Hast DC AH, Mriw Rtwe Yww Bleed to Red and llghtia* Trim SAFRTT IN VIGOROUS BLOOD If Yen’** Ltotless «md Depressed Don’t Daisy a Mimtta^-Oct a Good Taato If you gat the infinenxs, see o doc­ tor at once—but why get it? ‘ Isn’t it worth while, instead, to tries every precaution now, against getting it? 'Probably thebsst and first thing to do is to make sura you are .in a good physicri oendition. During an epi- deipto almost everywhere you go you art exposed to theinfluenza. As long as you are really well, the red cor­ puscles of yourblood fight off and de­ feat disease germs. But when you are tired and run down, when you feel alright except that you haven’t much energy or enthusiasm>your blood *Js tired out too,* and you are an easy vic­ tim. ' - Pepto-Mangan has become famous as a builder of rich, Vigorous blood. It help* you when you are run down. It heps you to avoid illness. .Or, it helps you to recove?, if you realised your poor physical condition too late. Physicians have ‘ heCn recommend­ ing Gttde’a Pepto-Mangan for years, ■ in cases „ofvanemia (bloodleaspess). It is reliable, effective, and has a rec­ ord o f Over twenty years sqccess.Take no,chances,with a rundown condition; Get Pepto-Mangan today. It is a good health insurance. Pepto-Mangantis sold in liquid and tablet form* There is no- difference inmedical value. ’ But bq sure you sure you get hte genuine Pepto-Man- gam—“GudoV’ , The- full name should be” on the package. \ (Advertisement) * '• INBREADLINE More Than 1,000,000 Face .Death Is Message Brought by Miss bakesian. Imagine a bread line o f* 120,009fam­ ished people waiting fo r-twenty-tour hoUra s day for the.dole p f fopd that 1* the'sole barker between^them sud death from starvation. That Is the situation in Aiexandropot, a city in ftnsslan, Armenia, according to H itt ririm ine Dakesian, s 'purity Axnwrisa o f the surrivori o f tow ya*** The annual Day o f Prayer for For­ eign Mission! will be observed next* Friday, February 20 at 1:S0 in the M. E* Church. The leaders for the af­ ternoon are: Mrs. A, E. Richards, Mrs. Albert Bfoejr,Mrs. U RoyAllen, ■Mrs. V. ®. Bustier, Mrs. ,Harriman ritd Mrs. J. P. White Bvsry woman is cordially invited to atjtowd these meetings, i . . .Hm he Betti ... Before the advent sf ChrisUeattr, begs were boueehold pets smoog the Bswatiaas. • ■* " 1wrBwii,Kioto,- - - . - w for -- »pp^( #m*l**« to**t#<a*.•«»«', Is tow a wet *efc Hto»*■fito'Ctos i iJato BtottdtoerftttrimeiAltoi i l WP1g 'y ni' w w » — - — - l«rs Plaster* I #( m&xm MISi HERMtNE OAKESIAN. of ahs horror* of Turkish massacre* and deportationk. Saved by no Ameri­ can woman, she has come to this Cpun* try and entered Oberlin College. Witli her Came fourteen other Arise* ttlaii gins In charge of Miss Adelaide S. Dwight, s Near' East Relief worker, who has been instruments1 in helping .o save hundred# of thousands of their people from^iaath by atamtion. Min Dwight, who Is;not given to exaggen atiou end has sett condition* at Aral hand, says mote than s million people are facing death by starvation to Ar­ menia and will perfah unless America, aids. . Herself an eyewitness to the slaugh­ ter o f hundreds of helpless women and children by the Turks and a vic­ tim of the deportatlops, Miss Dake- mut, j p unusually pretty, girl, asyv Uteri IS unfold suffering in Armenia and Syria, She pfrdaes the effort* of She Near East Relief, formerly the AmericanCommittee tor Armenian and S in Relief, to save as many of b people as possible, At fcrivan, the capital of the Armenian republic, one hot mjttl fa given out deity, and by Dili relief alone the city's death rate has been cut from a thousand dally to an average of twenty. At Alexandre* pel, where the refugees from Turkish Armenia were driven by thousands, the situation Is appalling, Miss Dakesian says. It in to avert these wholesale deaths thatNear Rest Relief Ismaking a nation-wide appeal tor funds. . Ah* Almost Started a Fad. A girl Who selected two earrings from different sets yesterday morning When dressing hurriedly, wa# stispdot- *d of introducing a new fad. Elmwns wwensdowi o f the attention she at- fcected and did not totilv.e that heads ef her ttdghbors i» church were turned and twisted to get a "doee-up" rif her jewels until site reached home. A fiance to her mirror *mi» h(.P that stos was the'object or mi-.! -...i in her tew, tor « huge pearl bt<«*mu<>d in one ear and a brilliant bine m-mlnti hnnf from the lobe of the other. -Werrtstw *totttetPmtt. v « Ms WIT OHSHIPHN6PROeiHi Hrn Can Vast Merchant Bwt Be Operated Without Lott to Treatury? 1 > „.' ii ' ii ' i r i r FUTURE OFFWB ONSEA IN HANDS OF SENATORS Washington, X>. C.—The country ha* tovested between three and tour billion dollar* ip merchant ahlps, which It pew has on Its bands, Every faxpsy* *r, whetbar farmer, worker or mer­ chant, business man or manufacturer, *t present la *, stockholder to these ships. How can they be tun at * prof­ it to competition with other patient? to other words, how,,!* our flag to be kept on tha seas? . These are the guestlona.wlth which the member* of the .Senate Committee bn Commerce ate wrestling to a nota­ ble Series of hearing* on' tha merchant marine Which ary now to .progress at the Capitol/ It la likely that these hearingsmay last several weeks more, and the legislation on.which the committee ISseeking light Is expected to engage the attention o f Congress for severalmonths to come.. The ques­ tions Involved In thO hearings consti­ tute, Ip fact, the gravest-single eco­ nomic problem that has been Imposed on the country as a*result of the wsr. Senator* on th# dob, , The responsibility for .preparing a solution o f tilts problem through these hearings falls on 19 senators, Includ­ ing the following from Middle W®8t stririt1- -• ■Y , tilinbls—Lawrence Y,. Sherman. Minnesota—Knute Nelson,' Mlssonri-^-James A- Reed, OWo—Warren G. Harding. Wisconsin—Irvine L. Xenroot How Hearings Are Conducted, These hearings ate held In the large committee room,of the Committee oh Commerce, in the Senate wing.of the Capitol, lb which hearings on the mer­ chant marine have been held to many past sessions of Congress. Pictures o f the -new merchant fleet look down from the while. The .Senators sit at a long table with Chairman Wesley X Jones of the'stateof Washingtonat the head. Around (t are grouped each day' representatives of the country manu­ facturers,merchants, farmera.bankers, exporters, shipbuilders and ship op­ erators. DfHclatsbf the U. S. Shipping B*ard, which now controls a majority of the ships, are alwayc* near at hand.1 ,. The dally sessions begin at 2 p. to. and last,usuallyuntil toward 6 o’clock, or after the adjournment of the Sen­ ate for the day. The.dally attendance of the committee' Is good, and the in­ terest' Shown' by the Senators la keen- add sustained. They/ aa Well as.toe" witnesses/ realise thatumthe result of the comnjltee’s deliberations bangs the fate ot the nevr merchantmarine, vflth lOtMKK? oflhNffs end men and It* JL^ieacstoC-sUPA sstt wbrto miwW dtiisrs pnsn avecige, , m at'w* t a«o nttmtitii these sesslooa foti that there he* ■»?- er before been a series.of congresston- al hearings'at which so much money and such grave poasibillties for eco­ nomic good or evil have been at stake , 1 • Problems to Be 8 olved. , to substance the problemi to be solv­ ed in theae'hearinga are as follows: * H qw can sil these ships of the coun­ try's new merchant marine, built, at high war coats, for”the emergency' of getting men and supplies to the Eu­ ropean battle front, be operated In the fierce competition of peace times against ships under other flags which have b««a toads available to thelf owners at a price which permits their operation at a profit? Should a certain peggeutaga of the cost of Opr merchant ships be charged off as war expense to the seme wsy that the .navy Is charging off the cost of its war emergency fleet, end. the army the cost of its camps and other surplus warmaterial? • This-Point having been settled; how can the-'ships be most economically,op* erated Jn accordance with American standards of upkeep and wages? The latter question involves that of ownership. At present a majority of the new ships are owned by the gov­ ernment. Should they be turned over to private Citizens, end, If so, at whaf price, a* compared with their cost and the present cost of building ship* In the open market? RekfWflelblllty of AenSts, The House of Representatives-al­ readyhas taken action on measures in­ volving the seine questions, voting si- mort unanimonsly—240 to 8—In favor of the till introduced by Chairman William S. Greene of the Committee on Merchant Marine, which directs the ‘ShippingBoard to sell the government- owned ship* in Its control to private buyer* at the world market price “as soon as practicable." This bill is now before'the Senate Committee on Commerce, and these hearing* relate to it, together with three Senate bills on the merchant ma­ rine, two o f them Introduced by Chair­ man Jones and one by -Senator Rans- detl of Louisiana. Ait of the bills have the same object—namely, the sale of the war-bullt ships to private owners. It may be stated Incidentally that there is no bill before Congress providing for continued government ownership of these ships. Out of the four bills under consid­ eration it is expected that an effective bill trill be Constructed for the con­ tinuance of the merchant marine along lines that It Is hoped trill brtog out the same character of nonpartisan vote that ,was manifest In tin- recent pas­ sage of the Greene bill in tl o House flWMWi’ 1 tt f ' The City v«. the Country, The city Is n place where people twist dWelb-tiie country a place where people tony live.—Exchange. Vast British Empire. toeludlng ail her possessions, the British empire has the largest terri­ tory, It had at the beginning d the war a total area of 1S, 12#,W 2 square mile*, o f which 121,(512are in Europe, aiffrfieo In Asia, S.r.lS 2 i,I in North America, (MOO in Central America, 12,- 80d to Dmw««t to imtob America to AwdrelMMu MAKE THIS STORE YOUR WtADOUAftTERS IN SPRINGTlSItt The Edward Wren Co. QUALITY FIRST AND ALWAYS STORE NEWS CHARGE ACCOUNTS SOLICITED n e x t T u e s d a y ■ J, - * ■’ : .if I S YXa w*^ pnwiwbt for puNUc ingpectiofi the newly errangedi Rug end Curtein de- w n f !-* partments on the fourth floor. This fitore is now* without queitiofi, tji« * * greetest Rug end Curtein center in this section of Ohio, Thouwnai of dollers worth of. new end dependable merchandise offers, en unlimited, choice at any price you wantto pay. Introductory low prices will feature this openilfg mid— ^ , ■ We promise you, with all sincerety, that you will Rod rug values in Hits sale, not equaled in any other store inOhiu. Bargains that will pay you to come 60 1 ’*■V A 1 " ' * ' ■’Y ' r/• , ^ ( " 1 'V* • »- 'mites to get. Good quality Rugs were never cut. so sharply in price before. -Rugs for every room in The House can be bought in This sale at tremendous sav­ ings*',' S - ODDS AND ends sale of furniture y n i LEANED from .very rar'ner of our jjig furniture store sre Odd Table, Chairs, Rockers. Beds, ■ ^Mattresses, etc. That have been priced to move quick; An opportunity like this comes but , , ««ce a year,—D or t let the other fellow get all the good things. Anticipate your needs a little . , in advance. It willpay youbig. S CURTAINS , Curtains hundreds of new, dainty durable curtain# and curtain ina- terials grace the long counters and brass racks in this great new curtain store. Thrifty womankind will find many hours Of pleasurable shopping and unparalled savings in this big disposal of high - grade curtains. Every imaginable cprtain need can be supplied in this sale much Wow regular prices. ■■ Y Spring Wall Paper Sale of Big Bargains . Just think what a trip to Springfield during these'sales will mean to you in dollars and cents. Wall paper, too, for every room in the house in bright new patterns in price reduced beyond all previous records. You can p&par the whole house now for die ordinary coat o f a few rooms. gill'iHJII'JIiJ'JJliftgttMLMiVHiMi H I ---- .J ------ STiUtoJMH!* ' Vonfinl Drivea HalWithanAple q Poor printing enoi^h to bring you good rem its. q U se an econom­ ical paper such as and come to an eco* n o m ic a l p r in te r . Thafsus. Quickserv* Sdw<Mrkst‘ ^ ipricee. <J H em m m M M f ' Free Radiator Protector WithTirePurchase Why let your radiator freeze when yon canprotect ft without cost BUY TIRES BEFORE THE ADVANCE Quystock is large ■— strictly fresh factory guaranteed FIRSTS—Some slightly blemished. » , , * * ,, ^ , #* * Famous Mason Cord, PorUige, Racine, Fide, Bhclnttsie > Knight, Clingatohe, Goodyear Bkmridied. SAVE 20 to 45 PER CENT The Quality is in the Tires—Why Not the Sorrios? The SpringfieldTire &SupplyCo. FountainAve. NewY, MiC. A. Balt 799 Horae 983 B SpringfteldLGhici Springfield*First endBlemishedTift Store 31 N. \

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