The Cedarville Herald, Volume 48, Numbers 1-26

ik. ■■if *•. *• T U Cn iwrH ie H w iU » * 4 1 0 1 *ULL - - -#4 K o r r o i IMf w i *t OftiarC nil’*, 0,, October 31, HOT, m **&>#» natter. FRIDAY, MARCH 8S 19*3, OCR NEW PRESIDENT President CooUdgt a t last, The m l of the Jong trail of preparation has boon roachad, Now with the inaugur­ ation we have in the White House a full fledged, well balanced experienced man holding the reins of government and equipped to his individual liking. Up to this hour the president has been kept busy trying to shape and modify the legacy left to him, but necessarily hampered by the clutter e£ effirialdem and th e bewildering wage of policies which in no sense were the children of his own creation, The situation is now changed. For months President Uoolidge has loan nutting his official house in order As a fact na President ever has had lx tter opportunity to shape a govern* mens thr.t would lie ready to function with Jftill intelligence and understand­ ing the instant lie stepped into office. The people look forward with « n - fiduice to the real Coolidge in action- No one knows better than the Presi­ dent that with the assumption of com­ plete power he must also bear the full burden of responsibility, hut the peo­ ple, ever generous, will stand behind their national leader. For the next four years there can be no parties save those that stand for a united nation whoso aspiration is peace and the prosperity that follows in its. wake. FARMERS LOOSE OCT --- ■«-miaK-*i-* MACHINE afSHRAT ION PUBLIC Wednesday, March 11, 1925 Beignmng a t ten o’clock a. m, sharp,‘a t the Thomas II. Parrott resi­ dence about five miles north of Washington C, II., and.about six miles south or Jeffersonville on .the pike leading from Washington C. II. to Jeffersonville, we will sell to the highest bidder, rain or shine, 40 head of good horses, about 50 head of cattle and a lot of stock hogs, etc. HORSES This lot of horses consists of a. few fancy matched teams, mated teams, a lot of bothjmares and geldings that will be sold singly and a few hack horses suitable to ride or drive. We consider this a good serviceable lot of business horses. We will also sell two -or three span of mules. CATTLE The cattle offered in this sale comprises a -ot of choice springer Hereford hejfors and young cows, A few with calves a t foot day of sale. There will also be some Shorthorn forward swingers and sonic forward Jersey springers. Wo will also sell 14 ycad of yearling Shorthorn butcher steers and heifers mixed and a few others. We wil also sell one good, yearling Shorthorn hull and two good Shorthorn yearling bulls. In conclusion we expect to offer a lot of stock hogs, but wo are not prepared to name the number at tins date. TERMS HE SALE-—A credit of .S months or 6 months will lw» given bv purchaser giving an approved note on all *ums of $50 and over;, less ;$3Q cash; ■. Arrets.—Col. Howard Titus, South Charleston; Col. Guy Curry, South Solon, 0>: Col. Guy Johnson, Columbus, O. Clerks—H. C. Ireland, W. F. Jefferson. Lunch served on the ground Thomas H. Parrett &. Albert Briggs NOTICE 1 wish to thank the vast number of patients who have taken advan­ tage of my special low prices the pnstfe\v months; for their confidence in my work; also those who have been thoughtful enough to write ex­ pressing their satisfaction. In appreciation of the interest that 1ms .been.shown I will extend the time on these low prices for 10 days only Reductions on ail Work fer 10 Days.Only Extractions Free With All Work . Positively Examinations Painless Extractions FREE NO CHEAP MATERIALS YOU GET WHAT YOU PAY FOB DR. SMITH (Himself) DENTIST 909 Main W* ^ ■■■■•■ Springfield, O.. 25 1-2 S. Limestone St. Open Daily and Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Evenings. C.N. Stuckey &Son We have taken over a full line ■of McCormickPeering Implementsand Repairs J.jl, Case Line of Implements. Ohio Rake Company Implements. We have John Deere Implements and Repaii s on hand. - In fact we are in a position to furnish you any thing you want. JUST RECEIVED A CAR 0 F WIRE FENCE; FENCE POSTS; BARB WIRE; DRAIN TILE; GET OUR PRICES. If in need of implements or Repairs cf any kind see C. N. Stuckey & Sou j I t is with some disappointment that u farm organization leaders witnessed ] t!:o closing of congress without tho i desired relief measures. As in *11 fpr* j mer sessions there was * legislative jam a t the eksing week when little or nothing r$n be accomplished, The farm tenders had been premised earlier in lire setsian this support bat the op­ position kept these bills buried know­ ing the longer the session ran the least chance there would lie fo r pas­ sage. The Crs.mptcn bill, desired by dry leaders to create u cepcrate unit for prohibition enforcement also went in^ to discard. In contrast as to hov; speedily a measure can be put through we would site your attention to the passage of the salary grab bill. This measure put $2 5C0 more yearly into the pocket of each congressman and senator and .it went through without much debate, in f »ct was a rider on another measure. You did not hear of any fillibuster a- gainst it even though some members of congress are said to bo opposed to it. Senators Willis and Fess say they are opposed to the measure from an economic standpoint bu t we did not read o f either exerting any particular influence or using their oratorial pow­ ers on the floor against it, Congress­ man Brand says he will not. use any part of tho increase for his own use, which is placing the two Ohio Sena­ tors squarely up against a statement 'as to what they expect to do with their $2,500 increase. 1 H.OT.EL ST. JAMES Jhncail YMLYISW m I w O i 1^0lQfc", •MUi FtTirtd ljr Ifmm Travtlisf^iW Etcort OPPOSITES We’re, always wanting it hot in the winter time, and in the summer we long for the frost. F a t people are forever trying to reduce; thin people try to add to their weight. The rich imagine they envy the poor and the poor envy ’he rich a great deal cf the. time. What we have wo don’t want, and whatever we haven't we crave earnestly. Only a few are satisfied and those few”won’t admit it for fear they will be accused of having no ambition. A nation builds a great ship. Im­ mediately some other natiop trios to build a bigger one. You erect a fancy home, and along comes another man with' an envious eye and determines tc eclipse you. An especially difficult task always invites a challenge to master it. The eonspiqbus thing about life b the face that everybody likes, it, but few are satisfied with it. THE AMERICAN.HOME We were impressed the othed day jy a statement in the correspondence column of a city daily paper, where •i writer asked the question ns to what hiyl become of the American Home The writer of course was not ask­ ing' about this Important question sc much as to- what about the home, as he was certain women, who were so concerned over the defeat of the child labor amendment. The thought struck us that we know of no.- American institution that has so changed, that has lost as much, of its influence as the American home where parents should have direct in­ fluence over the youths of twelve to eighteen or twenty. A few days ago we noticed that con­ ditions in a neighboring city were re­ ported to be deplorable, socially. This had to deal entirely with the con­ duct of young boys and girls in their teens and the liberties parents were granting them nowadays. The result of a survey caused the appointment of two protestant ministers and a Catho­ lic priest to work out a plan to meet indifference on the p a rt of parents towards their children’s surroundings and associates. I t was advocated that a campaign of education was neces­ sary for parents. There is no question but that the average family does not spend enough time together in the home, Business cares, social activities, clubs, recrea­ tion are all considered first and the care, instruction for the young, advice necessary a t the proper age are no longer obtainable in the average home Father and mother are busy and in hustle of the days that succeed each ether the youth gets information he should have, from the world at large, depending entirely oil what his assoc­ iations are, The Amerjcan home was tho found­ ation of this republic. There must be move influence exerted in the home of today and tomorrow or we face a more dangerous situation than wps confronted before the davs when the evil of strong drink war. permitted. Non* I m » $•**«' 4e* ripti-ns iff jseemry fit* i t e atrptea* point ct view; and *-# imfUri Maurice Maeter­ linck is lbe «n (f ]w«t who has fur adequately dasoMfecd how «emvy | looks from u *«twMohile. Are 11.a | ports lag^iTgJ Can’t they keep u , j j with Una aMebaateal age! Dwfn’t a j piston, a ratchet *c a cog-wheel In- . spire Hem? A great Wtstinghoaf1 j engine we once taw seemed worthy of ! generating a* fcwplmlon; but if seems to generate no poetic steam, We have odes to trees, skylarks, the fringed gentian, even the tiolijhock, and hundreds t« the rose, but toward a flywheel the poet turns a cold an ] fishy eye. He exalts not man’s brainy ingenuity. We fancy -he Is wedded In exorably to nature and that nuiehiner, gives lilm a pahs, says the S t LouN Globe-Democrat. We’re sorry, for tliN may mean that am nature recedes into, thq background, creative masculine brafh will soma flay abandon the field of poesy altogether, and build nothin,1, but mechanical dingbats and doodad- At least as notable ns Miss Eva Morrison’s swimming in seven and r. half hours the twelve miles between Charlestown bridge and Boston light was the fact that, of the several mop who had planned to swim with her, all but one decided not to enter the w« ter after testing Its temperature, and that one. after a single mile, decided that It was tog cold for 1dm and gave It up. This illustrates the one form* of hardihood in which women are tin decided superiors of men. Not onA can they remain longer Jn colder wn ter than men can, or, a t any rate than men will, but they wear ,wl(h seeming comfort much lighter clothing in winter. Few Of them have any use for the thick flannels to which men resort soon after fab begins. ,Tho rea son is physiological, the average worn an having Just under her .skin a deep er layer of adipose tissue than the nv- erage man. It forms an excellent pro tection from the cold. That, loo, is why, tn spite of wearing few, clothes and thinner ones, they do not catch pneumonia so easily as men do, or die of It so often. ,'•10” Brand Pancake Flour 2 Fkfjh. for 13c. , Tv. Fil’d & Sons Go. Most of. the qualities common to human btelngs are found In the natures of birds—love ■ Jealousy, vanity, fear, courage, cowardice, sociability, devo lion to nest and offspring—In fuel, very nearly the full gamut of etno tions. In considering f’ ' facts, semi mentalisfs have been led to credit birds with almost1human Intelligence and esthetic sense, writes Lee s. t'rrn dull in Mentor, .Others would hud- us believe that birds are purely me chanioal•and, instinctive. In their ac tions and reactions. But those who perceive the great truth -Unit ail life on earth, -from diatoms to men, is controlled by the same all-powerful forces of nature, will take a middle course, Man 1ms outstripped Ws riv als In mental development, lmt hJs at tributes can b e traced, in diminishing force, far downward in the scale n! life, In many points of comparison ■aside from the disputed one of ability to reason, birds cap hold their own— sometimes- a little more. On an average every flay in the Unit­ ed States five churches, fifteen hotels, one hospital, five schools, four ware- houses, two theaters, 359 dwellings, ninety-six farms, six department stores, . eight public garages, three drygdofls .stores and three printing plants suffer Art; losses varying from ‘‘trifling’' to "total.” *How do nit these fires start? They are caused by stoves, furnaces, hollers and their pipes; by matches, by Smoking; by spontaneous combustion; by sparks on roofs; by defective chimneys and flues, by lightning and by electricity, If the proper precautions Were taken, if the individual exercised The same care to prevent fires that he does to protect himself from bring run over In a crowded street, most of 1he tiros would not occnr. Among the predatory wild animals which the Washington state depart­ ment of agriculture Is striving to de­ stroy, or at least control, the coyote offers the mosl serious problem. Not­ withstanding a eenaMess campaign against lids wily marauder of farm poultry, small pig» and lambs, ns well as -countless numbers -of game birds, the coyote Is increasing hurt extending hi* hunting gronhds closer and closer to human seUtemenift. Within the, city limits of Seattle, Judge John B. Wright dubbed ft edyofe to dentil on the road to his court. Coyotes have migrated into the vicinity of Belling* ham, Everett Had Aberdeen, localHies where their melancholy yodeling had never before been heat’d. To total the damage from the. pilfering of these night raiders la impossible. , HIGH SCHOOL NOTES A game of basket ball has been ar­ ranged for this Friday evening bat- tween Boys' and Givis' teams a t the Alfoi’d Gym. The. F-lamagundi Literary, will'meet '•n the school auditorium Friday, Mch. 3. The program will -consist of a play “Mischievious Mattie”, Vocal solo, Dialogue, Essay, Book Review. Biog­ raphy, Reading and Recitation. The Modern History class of C. II. 3. retired to the school auditorium for the daily recitation lust Friday. The first number on the program was the song "Marseillaise.” Everyone in the class was supposed to sing, but it was very near a "solo” .by Prof. Smith The rest of the class sang so low that they could hot >be heard. The class has eta studying the French Revolution for some time.- I f the French people lid not know any more about the Rev­ olution.. than the History class knew tbout the song- we’re almost certain that i t would have bean a failure. ; m m i .‘Chapel exercises were held Mon- Jay with. Rev. fl. J . Kyle as the speak er. He read from Matthew 5: 1-20. His text was: "And He openod His mouth and taught them saying.” Rev. Ryle said that in earlier study he couldn’t understand the use of "He opened His mouth." Now he believed that Jesus must have cultivated his voice and modulated it so.that he could be heard Rev. Kyle emphasised the fact that v/e should cultivate our voices by op­ ening our mouths to he heard and train it to use, in later yesis. He then led Us in prayer, followed by singing, "Holy Ghost! With Light Divine." Carries Cook’s Name -Sally-liimn, the popular tea , cake, received its name froai a .pastry cook of Lath, England;' Sally Lunn, who about the end of the Eighteenth cen­ tury used to carry sndi cakes about. In a basket. ■ .' Mrs, Will Crawford of Miles City. Montana, arrived Tuesday and is here with her ratohr-r, Mrs. J- H. Milbum. 1 What to Do For APersistent Cough The Ladies’ Aid Society of the M, iE , church will give, a chicken dinner 1at the church. Tuesday evening, Mch. : 10th. Tk..:- ! .0■each. > ■ ' r/i.- / V Unhoncrcd , Herman Lionneriir.f.sri « ,-.s b >m in , England the.Mb of Oeioher, 17'A H * J married his bv.fl niece etui was -I'i-i-diy osirueiKed. lie o<i;>n> ot incri:-:- „nci settled near the < rlvi-r, wiero he -’developed a princely estate, lie v.’as involved in tic' scheme of Aor-'m Durr , to for.ii a riouihnostein wap're jind j was arrested and tided on the ctsr.rge of ! conspiracy. Charge Accoun t _ Another time man -gets the last word Is when he sa y s: "All rigid I AH right! teil ’em to -charge It.*’—Duluth Herald. Everybody knows how foolish and dangerous it is to let a coughbang .on and on. The proper thing to do is to • ‘ stop it—quick—and for this purpose there is nothingbetter than .that great old. home .remedy that our parents .and grandparents used so successfully— j Dr. 'Bell’s Pine Tar Honey. It oftenre- : .lieves a severe cough-overnight. Doc- torssay there -isreallynothinglikepin® ■ tar to quickly loosen and remove the phlegm and congestion -which arethe direct musc at the coughing, while -fhe honey not-only gives-a pleasanttaste buthelpssoothesorenessandirritation. But be sure you not the nsnuineDr. Bell'a Tine Tar Honey ana -not some substitute. Dr. Sell's isthe oriKinsl, and hashcen laiownior ' lnanyyoarsar.the beat. Itwocientificaliy'com- • ipotmdori of just tho riulit proportions of .-pine tar, honey and other Quick-ffictiiiKingredients,, v.hich thehest doctors) have found to aid in brinEinc quick relief, Containsno opiates nr oth-'rharmful dniEs.so can .besgiven even to £ yoigiEHiildren—fmef Orspasmodic croup. I f ■you'want tho best limne-retncds in flic druc ;. ‘Store, act Dr. Bell's, Silent all good druggists. WmMSMXS & ^ & u c u m x z & mtmuiMB •irtions.of ftfTinarcd bund to al . .snoopiat i given evi iodiccrouj dy in the .;oad drugs in a& a qo»< dijnffy, ~1 « • .iimoipbiri itt>d IWK#*UfIIW IbaflAT i l p rM p it ■■mmmi * $ Money to loan 5fv' interest semi-annually, for 5 or 10 years, or, 5 1-2% semi-annually if a 20 year loan is de­ sired, Loans may be pai'l be­ fore due if b. mnvel desires. Miss Fanny says him sees by the paper* that the hifly who has been up* , pointed n biemher of the Surre valley i commission known more about pleb­ iscites than any other living person, | and she floes hope the 1atly will be - able to free the valley completely of i ; those repulsive little dleonse-hroedlug j , insects; >TW •*' 4 P o o s * j s $ s s e e m s T i s s i ft t i i e m o t o r ’s f . . ^ to take iiiaMdous delight in slow starts* in. ragged, jumpy rnnmug, and in stub­ bornly resisting every ckmce im decent performance. Fill with Coiambus Gasoline, snd feel the difference. Your car starts more quickly. It gets away w ith new vigor. Colambm* smooth, missleas running prevents motor damage. Its full mileage saves your purse. Shake off the handicap of poor gas. Look for the Columbus pump. Columbus C a k e < CRACK SoGA C (B15TTE EATMC 1 ‘i t s b MILK. 3 f o i LARC. Gasol ine

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