The Cedarville Herald, Volume 45, Numbers 27-52
V XSt Am Girls’ School Shoes BROWN CALF LACE 8 1-2 to 11................................................. $1.98 11 1-2 to 2 ...........i . . . * ............................ $1.98 2 1-2 to 7, *..............................................$2,98 O S E R ’ ANNEX DEPARTMENT SECOND FLOOR , XEN IA , — - - . OHIO — — • 1 * /- : V ■' -■ '■■ ■■ : '■■- Ford parts, like almost everything else worth while, are counterfeited, Imitation ' parts are manufactured to S E L L at the highest possible rate o f profit ahd the grades o f steel used are consequently not the same high quality,- specially heat- treated alloy steels specified in Ford formulas for. the manufacture o f GEN U IN E FO RD PA R T S . Don’t be misled—‘Insist upon GENUINE FORD ' PARTS made by the Ford tyfotor Company, By 80 doing you will get from 35 to 100 per cent more wear from them, ..and .you will pay the lowest .possible cost—the same everywhere. 50% OF GENUINE FORD PARTS RETAIL FOR LESS THAN 10c EACH Ask fbr Parts Price List When your Ford car, oc Fordson tractor needs attention, call tinus. For remember w e are prop erly equipped, employ competent mechanics, and . use Genuine Ford and Fordson parts in all repair work; . R.A. Murdock VICTIMS OF MORBID CRAViftfi* NEWYORKER* LATEST SLANG Envelopes to Match Use envelopes to mdtch the color o f your stationery* , : : \ We can supply you with fine letterheads printed on H^mmermill Bond and furnish , envelop^ to. match in any o f the twelve • Color® or white* Rememberweareletterheadspecialists. You Will find the qualityof our printingand the paper we give you very high and our prices very to#* Let 111 Show You What We, Can Do >ublic Sale Bills Are A.Necessity LeaveYourNext Order Here Mongora” Mu»t H*v« K#*J W«rd -Hu Found Much citenrent, No Matter What th* Prio* Th*y Hav# to Pay, The ease of anonymous letter -writ ing wportcMl from the French town of ; Tulle affords a typical Illustration of the methods o f the '’sensation moa- , gen’* missives making accusations of ; Infidelity have caused the deaths o f ) two persons in an asylum and brought I misery Into several homes. This is precisely the result desired by the writer o f the slanders, Mak ing a sensation Is the very height of enjoyment ainong a large number of morbid persons. Tlie human crav ing for excitement Is entirely normal, but in its pathological and criminal manifestations it often leads to trag edy. • The majority of young children de light In sensational mongerlng. A He o f Imagination Is the commonest form o f Juvenile unveraclty. A little girl who ’’sees” bears and wolves In a coppice near her home in vents stories, o f hair-raising sensation alism concerning the fierceness of the animals, Another girl declares Bhe sees. big eyes In the stem,of un oak tree, A boy, twelve years old, arriving at a boarding school, told' his companions of the dormitory' that he had flown the first airplane from Buckingham, palace and had been personally com plimented by the king.—From the Continental Edition of the London Mali: UNABLE TQCREATE DISEASE Science Has Demonstrated‘the Impos sibility of the Human Mind Hav- ing That Power. “In one sense It may be said that the human race gets the diseases It deserves; but the sins are those of ig norance and neglect, of physical laws rather than against spiritual ordi nances,'' said Sir Richard Gregory in the course of his address at the.re cent Edinburgh meeting o f the Brit ish Association for the Advancement of Science. "Plague is not now explained by sup posed iniquities of the Jews or con junctions o f particular, planets, but by the presence of. an organism con veyed by fleas from rats; malaria and yellow fever are conquered by de stroying the breeding places of mosquitoes; typhus fever' by getting rid o f lice; typhoid by cleanliness; tu berculosis by improved housing, and most like diseases by. following the teachings of science concerning them. “Though the mind does undoubtedly influence the resistance of the. body to invasion by microbes, it cannot create the scientific organism of any disease,' and the responsibility of showing how to keep suqh- germs under control and prevent, therefore, the poverty and distress due to them Is a scientific rather than a spiritual duty." American-Grown Bulb*. In ''the future it is not likely that the United States will continue to do-. pond upon Holland for our spring flow ering bulbs. This country uses annu ally hliouf §2,000,000 worth of Dutch bulbs, and produces scarcely §25,000 worth in any one year, this despite the fact that few plants are more widely adapted and few crops more easily grown than bulbs. The Federal Department of Agriculture has pre pared a very' interesting bulletin on bulb culture In the United States which points to rich possibilities in tiie years to come. . Bulbs can be grown in this country on both the Atlantic and Pacific sea boards and in the Ohio and Mississip pi valleys. Some o f the hardier and more robust of the narcissus varieties thrive even ■In the gulf* states. Con trary to whaj would be generally sup posed, it Is not too cold for tulips and narcissi to succeed as far north ns< Sitka, Alaska. They thrive along the entire border of the United States, wherever the moisture conditions are suitable. » Learned to Love Japanese. Major General William Vcrbeck, former adjutant general, who is pres ident of St. John’s school at Manlius, N. X , lays claim to being the first "white, boy of American parentage to be bom In Japan. His father was a missionary who was attached to the Tokugawn government as an educa tor, and later helped to establish tire Japanese Imperial university.. Young Verbeek’s playmate and friend was a Japanese boy whom his father helped to bring back from California when he was detained and stranded while in quest of an American education. The boy's name was ICoreklyo Takahashl, He Is now premier o f Japan, “Through this-Japanese boy," said General Ver- beck, “ and my association with his people, I learned to love them and to have the highest respect for their In tegrity."—New York Evening Post, superstition Common. Book learning and Intelligence seem to have nothing to do with belief in charms. In Roman days Sulla would not move a step unless lie carried with him his small gold figure of Apollo, which was his amulet.- In the present day In New York city a construction en gineer of more than local reputation, and the most matter-of-iact type of person possible in most'ways, care fully change's from pne suit to the oth er a tiny gold hand that was given to him by an old woman near the front fines in France. Immense Cold Storage Plant. Chicago has one cold storage plant which will accommodate 21,000 tons o f meet. Chill Peppers! ' gkom data gathered from the vari ous consular districts It is revealed that the growing o f chill peppers is confined principally, to the states of Vera Crus, Aguascalientes, Ban Luts Potost and Lower California, and the district around Han Martin, in the State of Puebla, This tatter district is found to be in uormnl limes one of the most important for the cultivation o f this product for export, the possi bility for the crop being very exten sive- Favor Among Those Who Affect The AriieWp Life! “ Quaint" M the latest word of the world that meat have n now and,un common adjective. It has quite out moded “amusing" In the slang of the studios and among those who affect the artistic ltfa. The dictionary meaning o f the word—“oomWiiing an antique appearance with a pleasing oddity, faucifuluess, or wW«J»lca!neas’ —has been quite submerged In the passing erase for its use. When the governor’s daughter In “The Tavern” said to the vagabond. “You sre the quaintest man I vwey knew" aim Aid not really mean what the dlctleasry says the word means. She was admiring his powers of deduction. But the "Intest” word ha l been worked lu(u the speech and tluit was the desired thing. The tone always used In connection with “quaint" is patronizing, whether it la applied to a human being, a picture, or what not. The user Invariably tries to give the Impression that the object thus passed upon could have been done ever so much better If he, or she, had bad a hand in making it. To be ,vqunint” nowadays la to be ever slightly damned.—New York Herald. \ Human Factor Counts. Lord Telgnrooqth, in a letter to the Lpndon Times, writes; “In the contro versy between the advocates of bat tle or surface ships and admirers of the submarine, one factor, and that a very important.,one, has been altogeth er ignored—namely, the human fac tor. Ships ate built to carry human beings; and, as far as present statis tics enable one to judge, no submersi ble vessel has.yet'been constructed In whlctf men can live for more than a few weeks, continuously, without deteriorating, mentally and physi cally. owing to tile, abnormal condi tions prevailing, on board, Man Is an adaptable creatpre, and possibly, In the course o f a century or bo , a race of human beifigs, may be evolved which can exist, comfortably, with out fresh air, exercise or change of scene. In the meantime, surface ships will be voted the most'habitable. Doc tor Johnson must-surely have had a U-boat in mind when he declared that ■being in a styip is being In jail, with the chance of being drowned."’ Fur Industry, Up to within- a ^entury of the pres ent time, raw furs were one of the most important products o f this coun try, commercially speaking. Immense quantities of them-were exported to Europe, where they were dressed, dyed ’and manufactured .into garments. This natural ’ resource ’has been largely destroyed by the killing off of our fur-bearing animals. At the pres ent time We are largely dependent upon foreign countries for supplies of skins. Within recent years- a great fur dyeing aud manufacturing industry has been built up JW-the United States, employing lQtQpO-operatives.; We now Import annually fuw skins valued at §C!>,000,000, and o f dressed skins only §*1,000,000 worth. Community Cars in Japan. The -community. motorcar, owned Jointly by 200’ would-be motorists. Is the latest thing in Japan. Fifty-five American cars have been sold by n re cently organized Japanese company to 11,000 owners, each of whom paid §10 for Ills share in one o f the -cars. In return for his §10 the owner re ceived a year’s Interest In the car. The year is divided into days and hours, t<ml the'specific tlule Is allotted for each stockholder to ride. The hours have been so arranged that fotlr peo ple go riding with the driver during eaeh period. - UsCfu, sunflower. It has been found that every pnri Uf the sunflower plant may be util ized for some economic purpose. The leaves form a cattle food and Fie stems contain fiber which may be used successfully In making paper, ihie pith o f the sunflower“stalk is the lightest snhstnmte known; Its specific gravity is 0,028, while that' o f elder Is 0.00. and cork 0.24. The discov ery o f the extreme lightness of the pith of the stalk has essentially In creased the commercial value of the plant. Title fight cellular Substance is now carefully removed from the stalks and applied to many Important uses. One o f Its chief uses Is th* making o f life-saving appliance*. Clutter* Inthe Eye. Roll soft paper up like a lamp lighter, wet tip to remove or use medicine dropper to draw It out R tb the <Aher eye- SHOCK ABSORBERS Work with il»* Fort'*prin*»— uot against ihottL ih* "third •prlng" check* th* abound and •tops th* sldh-SWay- Save tire*, fuel, and cardepreciation- Mod- «rat* in prioo, Dittrilatar* R . A . MURDOCK, CedarvillMnd Jams*town BURPEE'siOHNSONCO 1 ftftJ I A M!a'm« t V-’.-. U U A PUBLIC iSALE! Friday, November 17, 1922 * C om m en cin g a t 10;30 A . M ., th e fo llow in g ? 1 Pereheron Stallion 1 3-Year Old Road Horse 1 ' _ ’ L .; -^•yrr araTru*.- ■.v \s-,jer ....... 22 Head o f Steer Cattle Wt. 800 Lbs. Each ■■! ■ . ■■ . •.■>■■■' • ■ ■. ■. 20 Head o f Dairy- Cows, 10 w i t h Calves by .S id e / 9 Black Angus Cows, 8 with Calves by side 17 Head o f Cows, Heifers and Calves R ead y fo r th e B u tch e r ._________________ ^ 80 Head of Shropshire Breed- 1 rag Ewes 80 Hogs Ready to Ship 57 Summer Pigs N 225 Head of Fall Pigs Mead & Titus, Auct. M . E. Sadies’ A id w ill Serve L un ch . Prices on Hartford Passenger Car Tires and Tubes', effective May 8th, are n o t sub je c t to war-tax, the war-tax having been included* W E*VE known motorists to go along fo r years thinking they were getting high value fo r their tire money until they dis c o v e r e d the trem en d ou s e c o n om y o f H artford T ires. It’ s safe to say that you too w ill get a new idea o f what a good tire can. do when you start with Hartfords. A brand that has been saving people’ s tire money fo r a quarter o f a century* HARTFORD TIRE/ andTUBE/ M . C . NAGLEY We Recommend H rtford Tires and Tubes
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