The Cedarville Herald, Volume 45, Numbers 27-52

mm The Hit o f the Season Patent Leather Straps and Oxfords White Linen Straps and Oxfords ALL SIZES ALL WIDTHS / Frazer’sShoe Store XENIA, OHIO |j CAStHra Tire Protector —eliminates 95^ of all punctures. Prevents stone bruises* which later lead to blow-outs. Makes any tire wear longer. Five years b f success is the best evidence.of the merit o f th e CoffislcL.xPays for itself many times over by the ex tra m ile ­ a ge .you get. Caffield Tire ProtectorCo. ' Agents Wanted. 117 W .|Court S t„ Dayton, Ohio \' Red Wing Polar Cakes The new milk chocolate coated Ice Cream 10c ON SALE AT Ridgway’s Drug Store Armstrong’s Restaurant Why Go With Your Feet Wet? When You Can Have Your Old Shoes Made Like New A t The Eight Price We are fully equipped with machinery to do all kinds of work—soles sewed on a specialty. We guarantee each and every job—our work must satisfy or money refunded. The customer must be satisfied or money refunded. Your patronage highly appreciated. We uss the best of material* So give us a trial. We have just opened in CedarviUe near top of hill next to T. T Nunn’s Grocery on North Main Street, CedarvUle, Ohio. Electrical Shoe Repair Shop L» JAMES, Mgr* W* WINGATE, Prop* ea ts try our job pam rijto a a a a FIGHT ON PNEUMONIA Army Doctors $eek Vaccine to Prevent Dread Disease. Ki*p**K L’*)**. Mortality In Modern War Could Bo (Jut Ono.Half If Preventive for ^Pneumonia and Other Rwplr*. tory Di«***«» la Found. Chicago,—Merritt W. Ireland, sur­ geon general of the United Staten army,’ declared that the mortality In modem war could be cut virtually one- half if a preventive for pneumonia and other respiratory diseases could be found. As a corollary he asserted the elim­ ination o f the menace of pneumonia would cause such a.rapid increase In the population o f the world that In a short time we. wouldn’t know what to do with the surplus. His statements were made at the Congress hotel, where he was a guest of medical men attending the eight­ eenth annual congress on medical edu­ cation, public health and hospitals. He •aid they are bat ed pn figures compiled from the death lists of Americans In the great war. - These figures disclose, tfiat while 87,000 soldiers were killed on the bat­ tlefield, 45,000 died from pneumonia In the hospitals and training camps, he said. Of these 42,000 died in four months. , , ••The greatest problem Before med­ ical men today Is finding a vaccine or preparation which will prevent .the contraction of diseases which lead to pneumonia and death,” General Ire­ land said. ‘‘This controlled, deaths from other diseases, especially In war1-, fare, would be negligible. "Physicians all. over the country are bending their best efforts to' the solu­ tion of this problem. In the army we have been making extensive' experi­ ments and it is possible now that we are on the track, of a prepara­ tion which will lead to the desired results. "Within the last few weeks army physicians have been trying out a new vaccine in the army and some of the reports are encouraging. That, how­ ever, Is all we can say. It will take months of work before anything defi­ nite will be known. '• "If war should be declared tomor­ row, I would not neeil to have a sin­ gle cot prepared for patients suffering from typhoid fever and malaria, the diseases which worked such havoc In the Spanlsh-Amerlcan war. These diseases are under control. But under present conditions we would have to make a huge outlay both in money, beds, and medicines for the fight against respiratory diseases." “#uppo*a that this U*r* v**•*!,” u y i th* skipper with a xrrea. •Bh*«I4 le t* her t w u iu t. rua away and hemp upon a etane, **#appo»e she'd shiver and go down, when save ourselves wecouldn’tI" The mats repUee, "Oh* blow me ayotl Sappese sgsla she shouldn't," ,-Wallso# IVwtn. W WHAT BHALL WE IATT IS JUST 103 YEARS YOUNG This is season of the year when every member of the family will enjoy an; English Plum Pudding. — Soak one-half pound o f s t a l e b r e a d crumbs in scalded (mllk, using one 'cupful. When cool add one- fourth o f a pound o f brown sugar, the well-beaten yolks o f five eggs. Dredge” lightly with Hour, add onp-lialf pound of raisins, oqe-fourth pound each o f currants and candied cherries finely cut, two ounces o f citron cut In thin shreds. Add one- half pound of suet finely chopped and creamed, one-half of a' grated nut­ meg, one and one-half teaspoonfuls of mace, the same of salt, one-third o f a cupful of orange juice j mix well and fold In the stiffly beaten whites o f the eggs. Turn Into a buttered tube mold and steam, six to eight hours. Serve with; * ( Lemon Sauce,—Mix carefully one tablespoonful of cornstarch'and one cupful of fine granulated sugar, a lit­ tle salt, and one cupful of boiling water, while beating constantly. Cook five to six minutes, add two table­ spoonfuls of lemon juice and a grat­ ing of the rind, two tablespoonfuis o f butter and a generous grating of nut­ meg. Steamed BroWn Betty.—Mix two cupfuls o f brown bread crumbs with two cupfuls of chopped apple, add.two- thirds o f a cupful of brown sugar, one cupful o f seeded raisins mixed with two tablespoonfuis of flour and one- half teaspoonful of salt; add one cup­ ful of milk to which ode beaten egg has been added and beat thoroughly. Steam in buttered molds two hours. Serve with lemon or vanlUa sauce. Angel Food Pudding-Bake an angel food In a large sheet. When cool cut In rounds or oblongs, dip In melted fondant and cool until .firm. Serve with any bright-colored sauce such as strawberry or raspberry sauce. Tills may be made o f the crushed fresh fruit or canned juice, thickened after straining from the seeds. itTHnwriiltfini 1 gpt. '-I* ■pa A Convaraiilori. SotWMm 2 Rhd 3 oVlmfk—at the half- way house o f night—I heard slow hoofs below my window, and leaning out, saw tinder moonshine two great cart horses wandering down the road •together. They were enjoying a phase o f their existence unknown to u*. They conversed in little sounds and when one stopped, to snort and anlff at the water of a dock pond by the way, the other also stopped, raised his head and looked steadfastly up into the starry sky. I saw the moonlight In his big eyes. Presently they put their noses together. Then one gave a slight start —perhaps at the opinions o f the other j —and side by side they sauntered away Into -the night-hidden land.— Phllpotts, «, Fordsoiv THE UNIVERSAL TRACTOR Stern Critic of Education. The teacher had sent numerous notes In vqln endeavor to get Johnny bathed and cleaned up, There was no reply and .no visible Improvement In the hoy’s appearance, until at last the mother, driven to desperation, sent the teacher a long letter saying, among other things; "What Is* it to the teachers whether the children lit their schools hove a bath once a day, o ' once a week, or once a month, or once a year? They are washing the sap all out of the children, and that is how so much tuberculosis started.” Mure Makes intelligent Pet. Mr. Edgar Wright, living at Sutton Bridge. Lincolnshire, England, hag a hare which he has tamed and taught to play a tambourine and turn a. wheel. He caught it«on a farm \vhen only two days old. and fed it wjjth a spoon until it was able to feed Itself- Its queer antics about the bouse led to its being trained, and It will now tap the' tambourine with Its, forepawa as often as ft is asked. It stands on Its hind legs to turn the wheel. After It hns done Its "turn".it returns to Mr. Wrlglit, and either nestles down io rest or climbs about him, after the manner o f a-kitten, • Buy Your Fordson NOW l l t U a Mrs. Lulu 0 . Daniel', oldest Inmate of the Arkansas Confederate home near Little Bock, Ark, la just one hundred and three year* o f age. She'’ la anything but a “has been," having • younger outlook on life than many women half her age. She makes all bar own clothes, even to the Irish crochet lace on her dainty collars. She la a stranger to digestive or other Bis. Her lightness o f foot Is phenom- IPlga Milk Cow, Lurty, Va*-The mysterious milking •very night for some time o f a cow belonging to David Baker, a fanner o f this county, has just been explained. Keeping a constant watch on the cow for a night revealed the fact that sev­ eral pigs were responsible. The pigs were found standing oil their hind lege pulling and tugging at their break- fa s t . How te ‘-Reduce." I hove a letter from “J. D. S.” In­ quiring if there Is a .reliable cure foi f a t ' While this is nol a health col­ umn, still I confess an interest in this topic. If “J. D. S.” Is having trouble “reducing” he might go to Mesopo­ tamia and perspire. Our old ,frl snd, Sulim. JP. Baja, writes that a fat per­ son simply melts and runs dovvn In that climate,' As early In the. morn­ ing as daybreak one awakes to find himself bathed in. perspiration. The “cool” o f the night means a tempera­ ture of 00 degrees; by 11 o'clock the temperature rises to 120 degrees, and at midday the air simply burns the Jungs. Nobody remains fat In Meso­ potamia, and nobody works If it can be avoided, and Sulim tells me that !t generally is avoided under the pre­ text o f turning everything over to Allah, All the fat pilgrim needs in* Mesopotamia Is somebody to support him. If this can he arranged, the fat takes care of Itself. . However, one might reduce, even In this clt mate, quite handily, while looking for somebody to support one.—-Seattle i’oBt-Intelllgeticer. Finny Veteran*. What Is the average age o f fish? There is not a great deal of Informa­ tion on the point, but It would seem that a plaice Is a veteran at twenty, One of that age was recently caught In the North sen. It had been previ­ ously caught 16 years ago, when It was reckoned to be about four years old. An Identification disk was placed on It in accordance with the Interna­ tional scheme of inquiry Into the mi­ gration, growth and age of fish. Then it was released, but it ultimately end­ ed Its romnntic career in the toils of a trawl ttet. The oldest-living fish would seem to be carp, specimens of which have been known to live 200 Fears; while at I'lymonth, In a tank, Is a large conger eel whose. ago la reckoned at forty. Boy Knocks Man’s Pipe In Haymow; Bam Burned •John L, Hayward of West Bridgewater, Mare., was enjoy­ ing an after-breakfast smoke at . the door o f hlg barn when A boy in a passing automobile threw a snowball. It knocked the pipe out of Hayward’s mouth. While Hayward pursued the boy, burn­ ing tobacco from the pipe set fire to the hay In the mow. The bairn and dairy were destroyed, with a lore o f |2,200. '4 1**< Coat of s Pound of Honey. Few of us ronlire whet a pound of honey means to the bees who produce ft. To make a pound of clover honey, beep must take Hie nectar of 62,000 clover blossoms; and to do this re­ quires 2,750,000 visits to tho blos­ som* by the bees. In other words, in order to, collect enough nectar to make On# pound of Money, A bee must go from hive to fiowsf and back agait % m im times. Food* From Mouth America. The red pepper probably was used fr.‘ food In South America a thousand years before the doctors of Europe In the sixteenth century took It up In a serious way as a remedy for various ills. The winter squash is found wild In Uruguay, a fact which Is used to confound the botanists who believe that this Thanksgiving standby orig­ inated In the far East. Yankees think o f the Hubbard squash as a delicacy eternally allied with New England, bnt Its seeds have been found In the ancient tombs near Lima, tombs of Peruvians who died without ever hav­ ing •’ heard of the MayflDwer Or of Bunker Hill, Limousine Invalid Car Service -CALL-— J. H. McMillan & Sol i Cedarville, Ohio- Citizens. FUNERAL Phone 7, DIRECTORS Penny as Financial1Barometer; The cent Is the barometer of busi­ ness, and It Is Interesting to note that during financial depression a large number of these Coins accumu­ late Jn the treasury. Even a big storm or a strike will cut down the number of pennieg in circulation, for the penny-roendjng public Is Indoors, or else forced to save for “ ralny day*” that threaten. It la a sign o f prosper­ ity when large numbers vf pennies are fb circulation. Famous London Bridge. Blackfrlars bridge, a famous struc­ ture 'across the Thames, in London, was built by Bobert Mylne, In 1760 to 1769. Owing to its piers giving way It was replaced by an iron structure resting on granite piers. It, is 1,272 feet long and 80 feet broad. The bridge derives' Its name from tin ancient monastery of the Black Briars, which once stood on the bank o f the river d o se at hand, It dated from 1270, and Was the. scene o f several parlia­ ments. It was there also that Card­ inals Wolsey and Cnmpegglo pro­ nounced sentence o f divorce against Queen Catherine of Aragon, June 21, 1529. In 1509 Shakespeare acted In a theater that occupied part o f the aite of the ancient monastery. ^ . a n m fta p H i A t this amazingly low price you can't afford t§ ' wait another day for your Fordson Tractor. There is no tractor made that can approach the money value o f the Fordson. Nor, is there a Tractor made that can-do more work for you. Remember, the very day your Fordson arrives, . it is ready for any one o f the 101 jobs it pan do—3* either as a tractor or a stationary power, plant,. The Fordson has proved to-the 170,000 owners that it has not only cut the cost o f'field work 30%t to 50# but that it has made substantial savings op every job to which it is put. Fordson figures are interesting-rhoney-savers, labor-saving, drudgery-saving facts you ought to know. Come in, phone o f write today. R.A. If YouNeedPrintingDropinAnd SeeUs jLiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiicaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiini; imiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii _ SCHMIDT’S WEEK END SPECIALS § We purchase our goods in a whole sale way direct from producer, thus making | | a saving for YOU. 1 • I | fiHOUSE CLEANING GOODS § Brooms, good weight, well made | brooms, guaranteed to wear. OAg% 5 ' Were 79c now each. . . . . . . . . . PEACHES *. mm Best yellow peeled, California n q . , | halves, lajge can,....................§ SOAP | P. & G. Naptha, E!^ —■ per bar, « . . . . . . « . . . . « . . « . , . . . . . | Star Soap, C S per bar............................. . | 1 1 c g Ivory soap, . 5 4 bars.............. ......... ... | St. Naptha W. Powder, | 7 boxes for.................... 25c 25c _ Jello, S any flavor. g Knox g Gelatin. . . h• • # • *•« •, • • • ..9c 18c CORN * Best, extra standard, 8 cans................................... 25c HOMINY Van Camp’s best, large............ ......................... 10c COFFEE Old Reliable . j . ................ .......... 31c Battle- ship*•1 M • i •t*1»»t*«1*1t i *« 32c Hotel Astor, in vacuum cans best coffee packed................. 8 37c BEANS | Best Michigan navy m i per pound.............................. ....... ...... 8c S g Lima beans, i , per pound. . 1 We pay the highest market price § in town for eggs—give you the ca»h— | •and always buy, | We also buy your cream at the | highest market price. - g H. £ . Schm idt 6 Co. 6 [XENIA, OH IO ' 'llMItlllllllHIlIlllltllHIItlllllitlllllllilitilltfllttlHlllltllllflllllltillllillltlllMlltlllltllllliritllllllllll llllllIltllllllllltlNIIIHtllllliflfi m % TRY OUR JOB PRINTING m % twmun • • # # LOCAL AH h . * * * * * John Bowisni Stout; The Young 1 held the FoqrtS Cqjr'I Mincer the Fourth vaeat H S F Wanted:- Violi J. Ji. Adams, Vic Herald. The Home Cul held the Fourth mill. Mrs. J. W. R .son-in-law and Dana Busch of n Notice;- The install officers anj Tuesday even’ni; Mrs. Robert BiJ from her two so| delphia and Fred Miss Audrey El the guest of Missf Fourth. We buy Grain a call, The DeWir t5 A baby daught' and Mrs. Leonarc^g morning. . . l a ' Miss’ Anna Col?10* the play groundje! the Springfield p ings during the Ttev. Walter daughters, Margo" nor, o f Urichsvil; •days this week dial and Mrs, R. C. W ars rk We make a sp from the mills. The DeWii eiCS, ht Mrs. J. E. Fari at the wrist yest from a stepladde set the broken m Dr. 0 . P. Elias nice, have gone Va., on a visit wi Dr. will will be while the family weeks. Notice: All trespassing on John Taylor, Nc .mitted even on Will all who h students please Mr. S. G. Wright rooms, price, wi i and whether moi sired? S, Us lllllllllll 'Dr. David Mel and Dr. J. Alvii were here yestex Trustee Board m are members. Representative Oil Company wx .arranging for tin filling station to wanted at once Mrs, Fred Kei to the McClellar dicitis, is much tion will be per; im g ic Word has Merald Jobe, w Vard Medical G home until the He is at Camp E boys are in cam We have a f stock at all tin tory. Save the The DeVV Miss Louisa . for two weeks; ing Club at D Mrs. Thoman Smith. For gale:- M (2t) )c lc For Sale!- Hi passenger busrf Delivery truck, | cabinet Grand Knott, Cedarvill rice CARD OF T ill thank each nnf kindness towar^ Hazel Bell, d u l t h e also'M r. NaglF funeral servieeJ Dr, and Mrl tabled at dinnl Mrs! Leroy A f Moffit of Xenir Moifit o f Win! Prof. Allen residence on cabinet, kilchel toy *utomohil<l tary chair, 3:ui| oleum, ('lothc next Thursday! m m MNtf mm Butter tnilltj chicks at tlie r The Del %

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