The Cedarville Herald, Volume 44, Numbers 1-26
■ r f . **' • ™ *«-."• v*-^ [ T rou t* am*Co. ions*Co. V • V - ih I M M . •S wp ? se ts mum 6 LEAKINBS *®” *\A**Us Ho&*ar. si, ixiraeMi * * * wM n t, W i S S i S w I S w 'S ; . 8to M,* ‘ * ' * * * » “ “ J 5 ^ l . “ > * « . « . ChUlhB, 2 S 1 ^ *»**%*. HP c*m- v T i ! u *?' D*BtoaA*aey eaosefi by iJU S j * ^ ? h ? » S t0 **Ya tf*® *** tsew e i. He wi» p war veteran, Swallowlag ewbollc acid at ker ? w- * * * * * * r** lAedp, *3, eaded Her life. My*- the act, m no motive cap „/$£??** Jamw W. Hell Ot Mm*r»bttr*, missing three day*, *** toanfi in Klllbuckjiver. He had attached * heavy chunk o* coal to hie body to make him sink. Mtft* Alta M, Koehler ■was found fullty of murder In the second decree for the aliened killing 0f her two Wmren !*4 3 *Bd 6 y ^ 8*by a Jury at ° ' & H,utf*sty of Belmont county has rendered wverdict of acci- dental death In the due of Daniel ” !*"*• Jr;> 12>° t Maynard, shot and Wiled by Alyto Nolsn/14, a pldynute. A broken heart la worth $26,WO,' .according to the estimate made by MMa Lillian P. Everhart, a stenogra- .l*w» to * suit for aliened breach of Pt$»l*e bled at'Columbus against Mark Browning, a manufacturer. ’■ A nUt of $25,000 to the medical col- lenc of the.University of Cincinnati toward an endowment fund for the establishment of the chair of surgery and anatomy in the college, has been made by Mrs. Minnie F> Ransohoff, Bev. J, H, Mindllng, a Methodist minister-farmer of Waterford, Wash- innton county, committed suicide by drinking poison a few minutes after, he had been turned over to the coun ty sheriff in’ -connection with the depth of hie daughter. Mlndling*ad mitted he caused the girl’s ’death, by an iilenal operation. First United Brethren at Findlay will-erect a $100,000 church. , Uavld Orm,. 50, Lancaster, was craphed about the arms and shoulders when he wae struck by a 2,000-pound -monument which rolled off a motor truck. - James Quigley, justice of the peace, Youngstown, was indicted on an em- besslemeut charge based on the alle gation that he, fatted Ttjs account for fines collected. Charles Geckler, 66, farmer .near Canton, committed suicide by blowing his. head off with dynamite. , - Gallon council and mayor, after be- ' lug, deadlocked a year, agreed to ,a plan for rehabilitation of the munici pal light plant. • - - 1 ' Governor, Davis named W, R. Sprague, former- state representative of Scioto county, ’municipal judge of Portsmouth, succeeding; Horace Small, . resigned. *; ^ , _ «> Warrants*were issbed at Lpgan, for ,4S men whose names were obtained l-when Sheriff Lapimey and •Deputy Marshal Thomas, Jed by Mocking county's woman - prosecutor. Miss Mary K. Davey, raided a cockfight in Long Hollow, between Buchtel and Orblatoo. . „ ' ~ —t r I y.y.. Curtains, repaired at Wolford's, iwoee Awstrawe sate biewara m ah attempt to crack a safe in the Tayior Hardware company at Sidney, James A. Miller and » , J. Clancy of Wind sor, Canada, are held on a charge of burglary A third nut escaped with $lAd taken from the cash register, Bieeoyary of a loaded revolver in a , call la the county Jail at Springfield was made by Sheriff David Jones, which he said leads him to believe that prisoners there intended t% re sort to gun play to make their escape. - .Soft drink dealer has, rented the abandonee city Jail at Norwalk. . Omega Langford, *, died from in juries received in an explosion of benxol which wrecked the home of Rev. Charles J. Langford, the child** father, at Youngstown. Corbett Ijean and H. B,- Hood es caped from the county Jail at Spring- field by drilling a hole through * brick wall* As a protest against a raise inrates 70Q rural patron* of the Eaton Tele phone company discarded telephones. Marion church women raised $650 for the, Chinese relief fund, «:__ .____________ Loss of $10,000 was suffered by four . firms when fire swept a five-story fac- f - united States Gold Coins, tory building at Cincinnati. * -fh® flr®t American gold coinage of East Ohio Gas company drilled in half-eagles and quarter-eagles a well on W. 'H. Black’s farm jn (of thf vaIue of $10, $5 and $2.50, re- Holmes .county which will produce e,y* wna placed in circulation from Ceen«my #t tpwtoh. The couatry a* a wtu<le baa last the “hang** of speaking EugiUh Bom* people proudly Mat* that America t- no longer a British colony, that *h« Is creating a language of her own, and, to prove their independence, tbry make a practice of incorporating into our speech sounds without definits edges, sounds trailing clouds of oMU* tsred raurraur*. sounds of such ale* hwtal simplicity that they jrsscmble *rant*. taken over from the speech of person* who have come to us from all the non-Hugilsh speaking countries of *h*world. And, in their lore of equal ly and fraternity, these people fuse to exceed the speech of those whose simple needs are satisfied with frugal'vocabulary; to this wsy they havs succeeded.to cutting down their own vocabnllatlc rations to the famine point Lavish, generous, wasteful In other matters, the country ha* learned to economize in sentence and syllable till It has reached a genuinely demo cratlc simplicity of Bpceeh.—Henry Dwight Sedgwick, to Yale Review a day. More than 1.009 delegates .are ex pected to attend the annual conven tion of the.Ohio State Automobile as sociation at' Cincinnati April 22-2$. Eight men charged with first de gree murder will be tried, at the pres ent term of the Cuyahoga common pleas court. Coal company having a $5.25 con tract to tsup'ply Martins Ferry with coal reduced the price to)$4,50 a ton. While lighting a pipe in bed Mrs. CatherineCollins, 70, Youngstown,set fire to the bed clothing and wae burned to death before help could reach her. .George Lpng, -32, single, died at Ravenna as a result of burns, received when his motorcycle caught fire, - Adolph Gllck, indicted jointly .with Moe Baron of Brooklyn for attempt ing to bribe Safety Director Scott,to allow whisky to be brought into Youngstown,' pleaded guilty In court, Leslie Wallace, 36, railroad telegra pher, Cincinnati, died from*’' injuries received to an auto accident. 8 - Eisenberg -.clothing' store, Canton, was robbed bt $l,5fiQ worth of -mer chandise, 1 ’ - lApecGy l , as 4,000,090 to 5,000,000 feet of gas 126 y9ar* One and three dollar gold pieces were formerly coined, bnt they were discontinued in 1880, The first colu called an eagle was Used to Ireland to the thirteenth century,.and was so called from the figure of an angle Impressed upon It, but- It, was made o f base metal. The standard of the eagle was borne by the ancient Persians, arid the Romans al*o carried told end silver eagles as ensigns, and .sometimes represented them with a thunderbolt to their, talons. - Cbnrle- nmgne adopted the double-headed *a$d;ii^ ;to e .btondi^;;:of;ythe< Holy Romah 'qmpire. The eagle wa* the standard'of Napoleon I Idhd Napoleon' IH, as well ;hs:;of Ar itrla; Prussia and- s^'"u :v.’J Waterproof Sole*. If shoes are much'worn Jn the damp without overshoes the soles should be waterproofed. Most shoe dealers car ry .a preparation forjrtie purpose, or a'two-to-one mfxture'*of melted,mut ton tallow and rosin may be applied at borne. You wni find that the soles do not only defy waterafter such treat ment; but wear longer. ‘ ValOabte Crowns in Vatican. In the pope’jMtreasure,. bouse atp two;crowns which are valued at sev eral million.dollars.' One of them wa* the gift.of Napbleon to Pitis XH,.and contains the largest emerald to the world. The other, the gift Of Queen Mabel' of Spain to Pius IX, la worth probably $2,000,080. < Paradise. There la nothing that is nenrer to you than heaven. ■Paradise and hell.. into.which of them are you Inclined, and to which- of them, you tend to walk, to that in this lifetime yjou are most neat. You are .between both; nnu there is a birth between each of them. You stand In this world be tween both the gates, and ydu have both the births In you, >God beckons to you in one gate, and calls you? the devil beckons you in the other gate and calls you; with whom yongo, with him you enter In, The devil has to his baud power, honor, pleasureand worldly joy. On the' contrary, God bas -ln hi* hand crosses, persecution, misery, poverty and sorrow; but in the root of these is a flre;*In the fire there Is- light, and to the light the -virtue, and to the virtue the paradise.—Jacob lloobme. ’ Death's "Pal* H oth ." Scandinavian peasants firmly be lieve to a,'Pale horse,” which, when a man Is about to die, comes and stands before the door of his house-white shadowy and ghostly to the night When-his last breath has been drawn he must perforce mount lb* spectra}, steed and ride away. Springfield, Ohio ,■ . ' * . • . ’ . Four Days Starting Thursday, April 21st D. W. GRIFFITH’S 1 ■ UNEXAMPLEDWONDEROP THE 20 th CENTURY*-*^ ’Of) “ JFtmsi Pve ever seen.* * *■ - ’ - * ' \ — H oward C h and ler C h w s t t UA magnifiunt production?* - - C harles D an a G ifcs&r “A Work of Superb Art** * — B rooklyn T imes “ Worth $10.00 a Seat.1* — N ew Y ork H erald * An EIGHTH ART * • Combining Drama, Painting, Poetry and Music v . , t « ■* • ^ * A THRILLING PRODUCTIpN-r-Embodying ThcFamou* D t a » matic Story of thd tame Title, accompanied by a*Selected, Orchestra of 30 Symphony Placet* 'i i A i r f f .fiw /n n t o oon t o f o r o d u o i/o n a m i tro n b o u n d aon fra o tn . **Way D own K a tt** £ * & [ £ n ^ h J rm o ^ o a p t d tF irw t-m 'a** tU u trm F e b— !««■ * «u M .t ln .0 25c to $1.50 “N igh t. 50c to $2.00 PHONE RESERVATIONS NOW AU Seats But The Gallery Reserved HIGH AND LIMESTONE STS. HIGH AND LIMESTONE STS. s;* ' Inhabitants of Rural District’*, Neighboring Towns and Villages W ill Be Extended Every Courtesy .» , **.■■■■ . . A t the New Kaufman In With FIVE FLOORS OPENING Wednesday and Thursday i,April 20th & 21st AppropriateMusical Entertammeot 7:30 till 9:00 . , ’ ' ' ’ ^ ‘ 1 ‘ ' * “ ' : i' ^ . ' / * v -1' ■ v :\. • / ' fI, , * 1 " , ' LL departments in this beautiful new s to r e ' - have *been^ .completed and—a —Ia-r-ge- . clerks and department heads are constantly en- r ga^ed marking and arranging the sparkling new merchandise fo r our opening which takes,|»!&ee W ednesday arid Thursday evenings, April 20tli * * V ' .>■'.■■ •'j ■■ and 21st. . ♦ ” ' : A ll merchandise that occupies space in this store is brand new and first and perfect in quality, assuring 100% satisfac- , tion to every purchaser. If( for any reason, any purchase made in The New Kauf man Store fails to give satisfaction, this store stands ready \ to make a refund in cas|i or new merchandise. This is 11 policy that has been maintained for over fifty yearfct . * Our buyers placed their orders w ith the most reliable manufacturers in the mercantile business just at a time when they w ere quoting rock bottom prices: 'Th is gives us the opportun ity o f offering our brand new stocks o f Spring .. and Summer merchandise at. the lowest prices in Springfield. . '' - ■ ■ > ‘ * ' Open for Business Thursday Morning,. April 21st •n ‘‘ ' t \ - t ( I 5 r * MI ! * I mm ..Give Us A Chance To Figure On Yeur Printing...
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