The Cedarville Herald, Volume 49, Numbers 27-52
& m THE C E D A R V I L L E H E R A LD — — KMTGR AND PUBLISHER K A m m m th THR RUBE DEPARTS U ths Fo#t~Q£Se#, C#d*r-Yin«, O., October 31,1887, h ssccnd tiaam <*m.***» FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 1020. FRANK DEAN ANNOUNCES tsml former liquor lobbyist, arranged — — . ' *tor that meetir.gr with Sen. (1 ) L. T. Attorney Freak Dean will be a can- Marshall. 'didate fo r Common Elens Judge a t Ih o line-up started with Daugli- the November election on the nonpar. *rtjr, who used Smith as middle man. tizaa judicial tuket, For some years Romus, the boot.egg.r tiiat made his all candidates fo r judgship* from miHfcmaj the federal agent who wins justtic* o f peace1 to supreme court bootlegger’s wife and goto con- must be on a nonpartisan ticket. fVol ° f a fortune; Emberton, Sen. Mr. Dean was recently honored by ^ ^ Marshall, Judge Gowdy and the being elected Chairman o f the newly Prosecutor, J. C. Marshall. A nice- elected central committee. He is well combination o f jail bird, bootlegger, known and has the educational quail- lobbyist, and so-called reformers. fications aa well as the ability to p re -. — —<.......... "■"<■—- i aide over the Court o f Common Fleas. ! His friends expect to carry the! campaign into every precinct in th e ! county and they are confident of sue- i cess, . i According to Will Hays, the film* have eliminated the wrube” from American humor. Pictures are shown in every small town. A great portion o f their spec tators live on farms. Comedy relief, to be effective, must deal with life elsewhere, The rural patron will smile at a caricature o f the city fel low, but the fun is lost when turned on himself. But perhaps a better reason why rural caricature has ceased to “ g o " is because the goat-bearded, one-gal- lus farmer, around *whom it revolved, has disappeared. The chief difference now between the farmer and the urbanite ia that i f either is a rube o r boob, the chances are it is the latter. THE NEW TIME POLITICAL ASSOCIATES One o f the things the people o f this section, o t Ohio might as well get ready fo r ia the hew o r Eastern Cine, .Cincinnati has adopted it by a w t e o f ______ ’ the citizens for all the year round. „ _ , Dayton is planning to get action thru George Remus, once Chicago law- the Jnter St^ commerce commission yer, saw the chanceto make millions that is 6Upp0sed to legalize such- as a bootlegger, Cincinnati furnished changes, Springfield also is consid- .«• ideal location fo r headquarters in ei-ing the fast time question and has <#uch a business* Pahtac$ -and po liti-, promise o f some o f the railroads, clans in Ohio, were open fo r bribery, foiling in iine with the*city, Remus flourished, Purchased distil -1 The Iina now between Eastern and leries in Indiana and Kentucky. M .ney Central Standard time is from Toledo came as from the clouds and soon|to Columbus and South to the river. Remus was worth several millions, ‘ should the rest of Ohio be placed in Wealth came to fast fo r him. B e the j^ t e r n ' time zone hy the Jnter had protection in Washington, D, C. state Commerce commission, the mat- and in Ohio. Hi\ was ahle to purchase tey would be settled for all time, officials as easily as he had distiller-1 The greatest opposition to the fast ies. He became bolder in his operation,»tima in- th is’ section o f the state has ) and approached the Wrong man, Thos. been from the ^ interests. I t looks f H* Morrow, Cincinnati, then district now like the time is -not far away attorney. The break followed and to when all o f 0 hio will be in the East- this day Remus has spent most o f his ern time zone. It has also been sug- time in jails, county and- federal. gested that the next Ohio legislature When he' went, to Atlanta he hired legalize Eastern time fo r the entire a special car,'In that prison he lived state, as a king. Charges led to political pull i rphere is much confusion at pres- beings oc^rcised with tho warden. The en^ over two kinds o f time. It is'not Senate Investigating committee turn- what ahy particular community wants ed* to Remus in the Harry Daugherty. what it will be forced to adopt. investigation. Remus is reported tot - ___________ ._______ have said that he had paid Jesse [ , Smith more than $250,000’ as protec- j tion. money. Smith was Daugherty’s! confident and life-long associate. The- investigation caused the Atlanta pris- national wealth are seen in the an on warden to be .convicted on a con- nouncement o f the United States De- HEALTHIER LIVE STOCK Better national health and better spiracy charge. - , Remus was next sued fo r divorce by his wife who had become enamored with a Federal prohibition agent of Cleveland thifcfc had produced evidence against Remus. The wife is said to Lave been engaged in liquor cases. The next heard was tha t the once fed eral ‘agent had become in possession o f about a half million dollar’s worth o f genuine liquor certificates, These certificates Remus .claims as being his property held by his wife. Daugherty has been indicted hy a Federal grand jury and is awaiting trial. A mess o f rottenness the like of , which the country has ever known. A ll the force o f machine politicians is heing mustered to gain freedom for Daugherty, the keystone o f the whole structure. Daugherty has three poli tical aids in Greene county. When Judge R. L. Gowdy, Sen. ( ? ) L. T, Marshall and Prosecuting Attorney, J. C. Marshall, met behind closed , doors some weeks ago in a Springfield hotel and agreed to deliver the vote o f Greene county to Sherman Deaton for, state central committee, Greene county was contributing her shared© up building a political machine for the Daugherty interests. Added to this D. Pemberton, utility lobbyist, partment o f Agriculture that “ the outlook for the complete suppression o f tuberculosis among all kinds of live stock is encouraging,” Th'd government, with the co-opera tion o f various states, 'set out several years ago to undertake the eradica tion o f tuberculosis in cattle. Counties townships, farm organizations, com munity groups, all helped, 'Tubercular, cattle were slaughtered promptly. For some time there Was strenuous objection on the part o f Some farm ers.. Then came complete justification of the government^, policy. Entire dis tricts were found to be entirely free o f the disease. Herds improved in value. Stockmen were pleased. Con sumers too were pleased, because the fear 6f infection from tubercular live stock gradually disappeared! Now the Department o f Agriculture says that “ with the current progress in eliminating tuberculosis in. cattle a noticeable decline o f the same di sease among swine is taking place.” While the department is conducting and urging tuberculin testa for cat tle, what about the thousands o f half sick hogs that go onto the market? Is not the public entitled to some pro tection here? AS TO AUTO TIRES . . . . 9 ...... A WORD ABOUT PLA Y The difference between work ami play is that work is activity fe r fu ture reward and play is activity fo r its own sake! , W c lay bricks for the money we obtain; we play tennis fo r the fun we get out o f it. Professionalism is decried in the realm o f athletics, not because . in dividuals capitalize their skill, but because as soon as money is paid fo r playing games the money becomes the reward instead o f the joy o f play ing. Playing is no longer play; it has become work. Aft interesting hook- on “ Games and Recreational Methods fo r Clubs, - Camps and Scouts,” b y Charles F. Smith, is n valuable contribution to the subject o f play because it shows how to organize inherent desire for play in children nad gives practical infor-rnation. The best education and development has always come from play. When we are at work at what interests us our faculties grow best. Food eaten with relish nourishes more than the same food taken .un der compulsion. The same principle holds true fo r tasks and responsi bilities, I f taken with distaste they never benefit as they do when taken with play* . A game entered into With delight always is better fo r the health than A “ daily dozen” if approached with distaste. Physical culture is most effective when taken as play, ■ The best education and development nlst> dome hs play. A game o f authors or a cross-word puzzle contributes more lasting in formation than a history o f litcratureread under compulsion o r a certain number o f prescribed hours o f reading the dictionary. Education in the past, has largely ignored the play element, Children have been made to study-history and geography with the promise o f rewards in grades when they have finished, not by the indue- mant o f the fun o f lemming them. I f they know how to play at history and geography there would be no need for rewards. • In childhood organized play does three very important things, It teaches leadership, co-operation, and the need o f obeying rules. I f you don't keep up the rules you are out, Yod can't “ make up the rule* m you go.” There are certain regulations that have to be obeyed or there is no game. 1 In life there ate always rules that can’t be ignore!. I f a person fails t o get an appreciation o f the importance o f rules in youth the wc-y o f life T.lll be hard fo r him. All to all, play hold* an important place to life. A* welt *a “ Lord, twrih tut to pray,” there i* need fo r the supplica tion, “ Lord, teach us to play,” The interests that favor certain o f the variou* kinds o f material for roads have been making great claims as to the cost o f tire mileage. We are not in position to give authorative statements fo r any one kind o f ma terial but the claims o f the cement, interest over the stone or macadam roads are interesting and may be a bit over drav n' by the statisticians who should, know how to handle these problems. ‘ According to a test the cement in terests claim, that a 83x4 cord tire, costing $34.50; or $138,00 for four tires, the tire charge is $3.40 per 1,000 miles on a concrete road and $23.20 on a macadam road. On, such a basis a set o f such tires on cement roads would ‘ give 40,000 miles. For macadam roads the motorist must of necessity have seven sets o f tires for a 40,000 mileage. These comparisons may he fair or not, only the figures are given to cite that improved roads mean much from an economical stand point to every motorist. No doUbt-the cement interests have taken advan tage- o f every point to show up their claim to the disadvantage o f the stone mscadabi road. The cost o f the various types of road are not included. ‘-The cement road must cost, considerably more than the macadam,/but the later sa\* es much in high interest charges. Tire manufacturers for years have contended that the loose gravel road was injurious to automobile tires, es pecially in the .summer time. The slippage o f loose gravel caused fric tion and heat that deteriated the' rub ber in the tire and reduced the life and wear o f tires. 1 Twenty years .ago the price o f a small sized tire was as much as the price, today o f the 33x4 used as a ba sis o f comparison by the conient in terests. We are getting more value in tires than formerly- and We qre also enjoying a lower mileage cost as the result o f good road*. B d a ruuapnuwj espeeus Up Toiriato Crop Growth It ha* been found by the New Hampshire, experiment. station that acid phosphate speeds up the tomato crop materially, and makes It possl- •lie to heat the frost. They have used from five hundred ,pounds to fifteen .mndred pounds of acid phosphate to rhe acre, In addition to twenty tons, of manure, and the acid phosphate has advanced the peak of the crop better Ilian manure alone, or other chemical fertilizers. According to the reports the bulk o f the crop has matured from one to two weeks earlier on the add phosphate plot ■ ' -Apparently the acid phosphate causes rapid early growth, and as a result of this a much larger number of blossom clusters, blossoms, and fruit is produced early. There Is ap parently no difference in the rapidity of the development of the fruit from the time the blossoms are formed un til ripening occurs, but the fact thai there Is blossom In abundance from a week to two weeks earlier Is sufficient to enable the grower to get the ma jority of the tomatoes off the vines before frost It will not cost much to treat some of your tomatoes with the add phos phate, and it might worfcjmt to greaL advantage. Hogging Off Field Peas and Com Is Profitable Hogging-off trials resulted in returns o f $18.05 per acre from Canadian field peas and $37.70 per ncre from corn last year at the Udgeley substation, according to a report made by Super intendent O, A. Thompson to P. F. Trowbridge, director of the North Da kota experiment station. The return was considered especially good In view of the fact that the field peas were badly damaged by unfavorable weath er during May and June. . The average dally gain per hog for 121) hogs was 1.10 pounds on the peas, 0.22 acres furnishing pasture for eight days. The hogs were then turned In a ten-acre com field, where they made a daily average gain of 1.7 pound* each for 17 days. The value o f the gains was computed at It) cento per Pound, PILES Why Suffer When a Few Applica tions o f Rid’o Pile Ointment will give relief SEND NO MONEY Furnish us your name and address, Stating you will use Rid’o Pile Oint ment according to direction and we will send you postpaid our regular $1.00 lo i:, - In two weeks, if you are ftntirsfle.! wit hresults, send us the dollar. I f results are not gotten simply tell u* (honestly) and the account is squared, RID’O CO., Box, 21 Station A . Dayton, O, THR TEN BUTt LIBSSON V GQLPKN T. aotghhor :*• PRIMARY Wants About JUNIQR TO INTERMKJDIA' 1C—Loving and YOUNG PBO IO—ldas.1 Hum** lANPMENTd— MAN je.-ir-n. TUyu *b«U luve thy •The Coniwantf- ow to Sarve bleu. AND SENIOR TOP- Iplme Other*. AND ADULT TOP- Rahttiunahlpa, I. The Fifth Gjaamandment (r. 12). 1, How this commandment may be broken. (1) By showing disrespect to parent*. Disrespect ta shown to parents— (a) By speaking o f them as “ the old man" and "the old woman.” (b) By being ashamed to be seen lb their company, = (2) By disobedience. (3) By not supporting them in their old age. 2. - Promise* annexed to this com mandment, (1) "That It toay be welt with thee” (Eph. 0:8). i (2) That thou mayest live long upon the earth. II. The Sixth Commandment (v. 13). This is a bulwark thrown around human life. Man was created In God’s Image* Every attempt to take1 human life Is a thrust at God. This cohmandment may be broken: 1, By sinful anger (Matt. 5:22). 2. By hatred (I Juo, 8U5). 8. By Immoderate recreation, 4. By-employers having unsafe sur roundings, thereby causing tUer death of their employees, 5. By sending Children to toil In shops and factories -before maturity. ' 6, By suicide. 7, By Infanticide. A By wars. * III; The Seventh Commandment <V. 14). This is a butwark thrown around the home, This commandment* may be broken! 1. By Unclean On ughts; affections, purposes and Imagination* (Matt. 5 :27, 2$; 15:12), 2. By unchaste conversation. 3. By wanton looks (Isa. .3:10; 11 peter 2;14). 4 By ,immodest apparel. 5. By actual adultery. Q. By divorce, IV. The Eighth Commandment <v. 15). TIP* commandment s|rlkes at the shl o f theft. This commandment may be broken: 1, By taking that which actually belongs to another. 2. By false w ights and measures, 8, % / ■ 4. By employers defrauding em ployees and the-employee falling to do honest, wotk or put In- full time, 5. By borrowing and not returning. 0. By going into debt, knowing that payment Is impossible, 7. By usury, 8. By graft 8. By. lying advertisements. 11. By making assignments to es cape payment o f debts. 11, By Strong nations oppressing the weaker ones. V. The Ninth Commandment (v. 16), The sin aimed at by tills command Is a ‘most deadly one—that of lying. This commandment may be broken: . 1. ‘ By actual open lying. 2. By perjury—swearing to false hoods by the name Of God. . 8. By slander, 4. By tsie-bearluff G-ev, 19:10). This Is commonly done by repeating a report without investigating Its truth fulness. 5. By creating s fSlse Impression (Ex. 23:1). 6. By « breach o f promise, 7. By withholding the truth. 8. By exaggeration. 9. By flattery. 10. By recommending a man for a position of honor and trust who Is unfitted for tt VI. Th* Tenth Commandment (v. It). ......... ... . This commandment strikes at the desire tor that which Is unlawful tot one to have. Tits ato does not lie In the desire to putseae things, but in the desire to poetess that which be- longs to another. It Is not wrong to have lands and personal property which one may have acquired honest ly, but It is wrong to have the lands which belong to another. It Is right tor a man to have a wife, but it is sinful fo have another’s wife* This commandment goes hack o f all the rest. It deal* not only with the open violation, but with the inner deslre9 and motives. It strikes at the very purposes of the heart FAMOUS FORTS IN U» S. HISTORY By ELMO SCOTT WATSON The Fort That We* Built by Indian Sieve* Nowhere Else t o Go 1 h*v« been driven many times to my knee* by the overwhelming con- victims that I had nowhere else to go. My own wlsdont.aud that of all about me seemed Insuffdcnt for that day.— Abraham LlnoolH. Cure lor Depression • , The best cure tor depression Is to J look around and see what is happen- 1 tng to other people. Yon are not hearing all the misfortune* of the world. ’ Among the Interesting sights In St. Augustine, Fla. (the oldest town In the United States) is a tablet over the en trance to Fort Marlon, bearing the coat of arms of Spain and the following legend: “Don Ferdinand the Sixth, Be ing King of Spain and the Field Mar shal, Don Alonzo Fernando Hereda, Being Governor and Captain General of This Place, St, Augustine, of Flori da, and Its Province, This Fort .Was Finished In the Year 3756. The Works Were- Directed by Don Pedro De Brazos Y Garay.” But this ancient inscription does not tell the full story of the forts In St. Augustine, From the day In 1505 when Pedro Meuendez erected there the first rude fortification to hold Florida against the French, there have been a series of fortresses here. And they have been connected with some stir ring scenes In Florida colonial history —with the massacre of Jean Btbnut’s Huguenots by Meuendez, with' De Gourges’ terrible revenge and with other Incidents which gave this “ land of flowers" a baptism of blood. The first fort erected on the present site of Fort Marlon was an octagonal wooden structure named San Juan de Pinos, built as early as-1583, It was this fort which Sir Francis Drake, the famous British navigator, captured without resistance during a flying raid oh the “ Spanish Main” In that year. A little later a more pretentious struc ture o f stone was begun and It was named Fort S t Mark. In 1038 the Spaniards were at war with the Apa- laghian Indians, who lived near the Suwanee river, and, having defeated them, forced -their captives to work on the fortifications for more than 60 year*. When Gen; James Oglethorpe, the .founder of ‘ Georgia, laid siege to St. Augustine ib 1740. Monteano, the Spanish commandant, had a large force of convicts from Mexico at work on the fort and by this time It was so strong that Oglethorpe .failed. At ’the close o f the French and In dian war. Spain, France’s ally, was forced to cede Florida to the British, In 1748 It was given back to .Spain, who held it until 1819, when the Unit ed Sfates purchased It for $5,000,000. On July 10, 1821, the Spanish flag, Which had flouted over St Augustine for more than two centuries and a half, was lowered and the Stars and Stripes went up over Fort S t Mark. Some time later It was renamed Fort- Marlon in honor of Francis Marlon, the “Swamp Fox." - * (©,' 1324, Western JJew«S*p«r Onion.) Orifrto«l“Amsrica” noise An trim was original ly wnd «Kly fori a portion Qt central Bnucfi, the territory explored by Ves pucci In his voyages to the New World. It was first employed tor the entire western world by Mercator in 154L We wish to purchase a few stack* o« LOOSE S T R AW «* Located within 10 miles of our mill. Callj Cedtrvilie 39-4 rings. E. S. HAMILTON, Buyer. The Hagar StrawBoard &PaperCo• QEDARVILLE, OHIO New Fall Millinery Special Showing o f Models—Saturday Imported and Domestic Vel ours and felts in authors- • tive advanced styles. New shapes in dude channel red, , Valenus blue, jungle green, jlush sand, grey •and black. CHILDREN’S HATS All styles and colors—Make your selection early while we have a large assortment. LARGE BLACK HATS and Matrons fashioned in Lyons velvet and moire also. Satin eombiations in all the lead ing fall shades and shapes. ’ (Large and Small Headsizes) Priced To Make Buying Decidedly Easy MAS! C( j PLAC) CEME Ced Phone 37 Greeri St. Xenia, O. TK» JT m m When printing anything at *11 ba sar* that th* first coat is dry before applying the Second. Yon will only waste tints end print and make a poor job of it if tbs surface Is not thor oughly dry. though « j M r samiy naijaid* have xsitift ~~.......................... claws, only «ps* town i l l toss. bring* and certain aril* on finger* and More Fun Than a Circus The Great Montgomery Go Fair 4 BIG DAYS Diamond Jubilee 4 BIG NIGHTS Sept. 6, 7, 8, 9,1926 i , m. Dayton, Ohio (OPENS—-LABOR DAY) 5100.00 —In Racing Purses —5100.00 (3 RACES EACH DAY) Sf Large Display o f Live Stock, Farm Machinery, Grains, Seeds, Vegetables, Fine Art and Merchants’ Exhibits. SPECIAL— HARNESS AND SADDLE HORSE SHOW BOYS’ and GIRLS’ Club and School Exhibits — Best in State BIG ANNUAL AUTOMOBILE SHOW Elaborate Fireworks Display Every Night Featuring the Spirit o f 1776 to 1926.20 Big Free Acts Day & Night Presenting Six LeLlands/Pless Trio, Hamilton Bisters, Nathal (Man or Monkey?) Leo Tard Trio Sophie Ringons* Diving Girls and Prince Nelson. • ' « General Admission 50c R. C. Haines, Pres. Automobiles 25c I. L. Holderman, Secy, 181 -A i c o ■'do' b e ne- eq . nru . Hi' Oils A Phone Ma Suf Coi Lai DILL F quart '■Ht BANAb yellov OLEO. Chun SU ITC 16 l b f POTAI Pk. . b u t t i Great S W E E T 2 lbs.
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