The Cedarville Herald, Volume 49, Numbers 1-26
c wish to purchase a few stacks ol LOOSE STRAW Located within 10 miles o f our mill. Call] Cedarville 39-4 rings, E. S. HAMILTON . Buyer,' The Hagar Straw Board & Paper Co. CEDARVILLE, OHIO GOLD PIN TRUE BITING T E E T H NATURAL IN APPEARANCE > . Guaranteed the Best or Money Refunded Work Completed in One Day For Information Call Main 909-W M M PER PLATE Crowns and Bridge W o r k ..............$4, $5 and $6 Fillings , . ; ■ . . . . , , , ,$ 1 ,QQ and ^00 Cleaning---Restored to natural color . . . , , ...................... .$1.50 Sura Painless Extracting (Free With All W ork) ............ 8 0 e , PR . SM ITH 25 Yz S. Limestone St. Over 5 and 10c Store, Springfield, Q, Open Daily and Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Evenings FOR REFERENCE CALL COMMERCIAL AND T* A-‘ New Idea, Black Hawk, John Deere Manure Spreaders Favorite Parlor Furnaces, Favorite Heaters | Favorite Ranges. W e would ^especially call attention to our stock o f Aluminum and Pyrex Carving Sets, Stainless - Cutlery Electric Irons, Electric Toasters, Haag Electric Washers. FENCE—POSTS—CEMENT—FEED—'COAL . Cedarville Farmers’ Grain Company Everything for the Farm Phone 21 Cedarville, Ohio MaiUBB i VICTORY THEATER Dayton ONE WEEK C g a f i iU J t V I A N 9 1 M a ^ 66 011 STARTING J A N . SAT. ONLY FIRST TIME iN DAYTON ! SAMH.HARRIS ff& L S t s g td JOHN MUftKtir AMKftSON ENTIRE ORIGINAL NEW YORK CAST INCLUDES Fanny Brice, Clark and McCullough, Oscar Shaw, Lottie* Howell, Le Dora, Brox Sislerc, Kunaway Four, Bud and Jick Joseph Macauley, Frank Altv/orih, Wynne Bulloch, George Clif ford; Rudolph Malinoff, Irving Rccc, Dorothea and Naida, Heart Permain, Jack McCarthy, ar.d OTHER NOTABLE ENTERTAINERS FAMOUS MUSIG BOX BEAUTY CHORUS Mail Orders Accompanied by Remittance and Self-Addressed, Stamped Return Envelope Will Be Rilled in tlio Order Received. Prices including Tax: Nig!itf>-$L10, $2,20, $2.75, $3.30, $3.85 Sat, Mat^$1.10, 31.65, $2.20, $2.75, $$.$0 DON’T BE CROWDED OUT! Send Ih your wail orders now for this, the iaoat expensive musical entertainment now on tour, BOX OFFICE SALE OPENS MONDAY, JAN. 18 SPECIAL NOTE! OUTSIDE OF OlNXaNNATI AND DAVTON THIS ATTKACTION W IL L POSITIVELY NOT APPEAR IN ANY OTHER CITY IN TH® STATE (IF OHIO THIS YEAR. TRYOURJOBPRINTING M M. BLAME TARIFF FOR FARM DEPRESSION Immediate Revision to Give Agriculture American Price* Asked. Chicago.—Governor Small’s farm re- lk f conference, held at the Hotel La Falla here, followed up the action of the agricultural meeting at Morris, 111., recently, mid adopted a number of the resolution.'! pa-ssed there. Ke» vision of tlio tariff law In the In terests o f agriculture ami Immediate provision for the handling of crop sur pluses were demanded, with the blame for the fain, depression of the last few years placed upon the lurlff system. Tlie resolution--; were presented by a 'committee consisting of Frank l). Burton, chairmnn of the legislative committee of the lli'nols Agricultural association; George M. Peek of lhe American Council of Agriculture, one of the Americans who carried on She recently published debate, on farm problems wills the British economist, Sir .Tnriah stump,; C, W, Hoyden, pres ident of the Illinois Bunkers' associa- llon; H. ,J. Stuimrd of the Illinois de partment o f agriculture; President Walker of the Illinois Federation of Labor, and It. M. Lundstrora of the Illinois Chamber of Commerce, The resolutions,' which numbered six, were In brief as follows : (a) Request fop the abolishment o f the discrimination ngulnst corn sugar In the pure food laws and widespread publicity for Its use. .(b). Request for the Immediate de velopment of the Lakcs-lo-Gulf water way n s, a means of reducing trans portation costs. . . . (c) Declaration thnt the cotton and coin surplus problems are essentially the same, with an Invitation to the cotton growers o f the South to jom the Mlddte West In an attempt at a solution. - ■ (d) Attack on the present tariff, so far as Its effect on farm prosperity Is concerned, with a demand that the present congress inaugurates a na tional policy for the protection of farm products and for giving Ameri can farmers a domestic price basis ns opposed to one dependent on world conditions. (e) Bequest for the passage of remedial legislation In time to apply It to the present surplus. (f) Assurance that Illinois will co operate with Iowa In the meeting, at Des Moines January 28, with com mendation o f the' Iowa plan for a Corn holt conference. KEEPING WELL Coolidge O. K.*s Pershing Ruling on Tacna-Arica Washington.—General Pershing’s In terpretation of the Tacnn-Arlca arbi tral award was sustained by President Coohdge In his decision e - the Chilean appeal from actions of the plebiscitary commission, over which, the general pr* shied. \ The President reiterated that Chil ean .sovereignty was not Involved In the interpretation o f the award, and emphasised thnt both Chile and Peru had pledged themselves to use their resources mid authority to bring about a fair plebiscite, The general's stand that the award gave the commission "all authority necessary, for the determination of the prerequisites o f a fair plebiscite" was sustained by-the President.. The derision was handed to ttie Chilean nnd Peruvian diplomatic, rep resentatives here and was cabled to General Pershing nt Arlca, Where the commission Is sitting. Dempsey Agrees to Fight Wills at Los Angeles Los Angeles, Cah—Jack Doyle, vet eran California light promoter, ob tained from ,Tnck Dempsey, world's heavyweight champion, a promise to light Harry Wills ten rounds to a de cision for the title In Los Angeles Labor day, September C next, on three conditions. Dempsey's first two stipulations were that the group of Lov Angeles backers whom Doyle, roprocenfs and who have slgnillcd their willingness to underwrite the match up to $2,000,- 100 obtuln permission to hold the bort In Los Angeles Coliseum and that iliey show tlio necessary lim.n, ability to carry the deal through. ?,1 Miners Rescued After Being Entombed 18 Hours Fairmont, W, Va.—All the miners, 10 in number, who entered the No. 3 mine of the Jamison Coal and U,ol>e company before it wns partially wrecked bv an explosion have been accounted for. Twenty-one walked from the "val ley of tliCh shadow of death" after having been entombed for more Ilian 18 hours, and 19 bodies'were removed from the pit at Intervals following the blast. Athlete Killed by Fall Salt Lake City,- Adolph Wullsteln, twenty-two, a law student mid a noted athlete nt the University of Utah, was almost ItiMtaiilly killed when he fell through a skylight of ibe John It. park building on the university campus. • * ■ Smallpox Spreads in Russia Vladivostok*. Russia.—-Smallpox is spreading rapidly In the Primer* and Spassky districts and thus tar 216 deaths hqvo been reported. The Thinking Rssd Ifatt 1* but * r*ed, the weakest In natural but ha is * reed which thinks. The universe need not rise In arms to crush him; * vapor, * drop of water, suffle** to kill him, But were the uni tors# to crush him, man would still be treater than the power Which killed him; for he knows that he dies, and qf the advantage which the universe has over Mm, the universe knows nothing, CATARACT »R , FREDIKirK H, GREJSN Editor n t "HKAI.TH” epH E eye is a photographic camera, X or, rather, the camera Is an lad* ; tation of the eye, The light rays enter , the camera through the lens and fall , on the him or plate. The. same ar* i Tangement exists In the eye. The eye lids are the shutters; the crystalline lens Is the focusing machinery; the retina is tire plate. If the lens in your camera became cloudy, or opaque, you couldn't take a picture. If anything happens to the crystalline lens In the eye so that the light cannot pass through it, then that eye cannot see, because no light can reach the retina, The old GreekB and Romans thought that vision wo* located in the lens. When It became thickened and white, they thought that water had fallen down In front o f the lens, so they called this waterfall by Its Greek name, cataract We now know that tills thickening Is not In front of the lens but In the lens itself or in the capsule or envelope which surroutfds it. This thickening o f the lens often oc curs in old age. Just why the lens thickens In old age we do not know. It may be one of the changes due to age, like gray hair. Rut many old people never have cataract It Is sometimes found In young children, It may be caused by other conditions, 'such as diabetes, Bright’s disease, poi soning, Injury or eyestrain. , It Is especially frequent In persons exposed to high degrees of heat, suCli as glass blowers and furnace workers. It is sometimes hereditary. s In the beginning the clear, transpar ent lens becomes spotted, or streaked, with white bands, the vision Is weak-* ened or the patient may see d,ouble, or may see black specks. One peculiar symptom is that the patient can see better in the twilight than he can in bright daylight. The white spots and; bonds slowly increase, the pupil be-, comes white and the patient gradually becomes blind. Cataract may affect on^ or both eyes or It may attack the eyes Successively. It may become stationary at any time, leaving the sight impaired but still present to a considerable degree, or It may rapidly develop in both eyes until the patient is completely blind. Cataract does not destroy sight, I) forms a light-proof shutter In the front of the eye. If the thickened and use less lens is removed, sight' can be re stored. This Is done by the eye sur geon, who. nicks the conjunctiva, which covers the eyeball, cuts through the envelope which surrounds the lens and pops the hardened lens out through the opening just as the cook pops.pqas. out o f their pod*. Bnt this cannot be done successfully until the.cataract ls„"ripe,” that Is, until the lens is hard .enough to pop. out in one piece. I f done too soon, it won’t come out clean; If too late, it may have grown fast. The eye sur geon- can tell when the right time comes.. When the cataract is removed, t h e , light can get into the eye. But the ' patient can’t focus. So he has to have [ artificial lenses in the form o f glasses 1 to focus the light rays on the retina, | {©,1826. WMttrn New»p*p*» Union.) f You’ll Like HA INES C ITY £T ’S UPLAND air Is good to breathe, There is a ■ tang about it that is not cnly agreeable but stimulating. The State Board o f Health has cer tified Hamer. City as one o f the healthiest places in the country. You will also like the air of prosperity which permeates the place. There is an atmosphere of progress everywhere. You see it in the huge buihlings.feeing erected, in the preparations fo r expansion, and in brisk movements o f business generally, Naturally, you will like the lakes and groves, Fa your automobile you visit the six lakes within t",» city’s limits—some of them yery large—and all the time you are in and among the groves latfen- ed with ripening fruit. But a city is more than buildings, or business, or beauty. It is made up of people; and the people of Haines City are of the likeable bind. They make newcomers feel at home with the true friendliness o f the South. Yes. you will like Haines City. It is a city of X X GET OUR PRICES ON PR NTING X X SPRINGFIELD’S GR E A T E S T CLOTHING SALE The Hub’s Annual January Clearance Now Going On EVERYTHING REDUCED-NOTHING RESERVED MEN’S and YOUNG MEN’S SOUS AND O’ COATS REDUCED PER GENT «8.75 | S ^ 0° ,COATS$14.06 $22.50 Lui £ i"? .0,c0ATS $16.07 $25.00 |“E ji? „0,C0ATS $16.75 « M 8 E ? ” $ 2 0 .6 $ a i l ^ ° 'COATSS27-50 S3S-«® r X s J"S,°, coats $26.25 DRESS SHIRTS M ESS TROUSERS 20 % 20 % DISCOUNT DISCOUNT Boys’ Suits and O’Coats 20% DISCOUNT THE STONE THAT SAVES YOU MONEY SWEATERS 15% DISCOUNT N. W. COR, FOUNTAIN AND HIGH ST. SPRINGFIELD, O, i
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