The Cedarville Herald, Volume 50, Numbers 1-26
I u : \ V’ u » •M- ' 9 tn-.IZMljHt ; 1 "W *M .J^.li.wtfa Jb^. zail T H E C E D A R V I L L E H E R A L D l"lgUW"'ii!Wr~W.ay twy.p-., KARLH BULL EDITOR AND PUBLISHER jEnteml * t the Poet Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October S I, 1887, aa second eisuw matter. Television Will Esmtmlly Reach Real Place in World FRIDAY, JUNE S, 1927. WILL CONGRESSMAN BRAND RON AGAIN? W h a t ia Confreesman Charles Bread goingJx> do? W ill he be a candidate to succeed himself? Political writers in this, the ; Seventh District, are discussing whether he will run for another i term in congress or take a plunge and seek the nomination for , governor on the Republican ticke t Some say that he has his : political ear to the ground* One thing is sure the Congressman { has the faculty o f reading the public mind. Others say he will i find out that the present Republican legislature has made the road hard for a Republican nominee with a direct tax levy, tax increased on insurance companies and hundreds o f agents over the state pounding a Republican legislature. Older politicians have not forgotten what insurance agents can do as was exper ienced in the Pattison-Herrick campaign, The Columbus Dispatch says that while Con. Brand has the record o f the Ohio delegation for-absences in Congress this is to he overlooked in his district when he gives away one fourth o f his salary. The best indication that Congressman Brand is to try a repeat order is from his press department informing us that, another $500 check has gone out to Warren county on the crusher payment. Those who have "Mr. Brand running fo r gov ernor can first digest what $500 checks mean to counties in the Seventh District. ‘ THERE MUST BE SOMETHING WRONG GOVERNOR IS TO CALL.LEGISLATORS BACK A Refresting Ride on Lake Erie jcrnmgr. ftwiBtriWoV bMuttfJ W,fc« «u»4 botri^rard*»n root. to Nbi*ra fXf w CSPfrWW**»d pfcaitttr. ttiptU, . Erwttw*y-eT<>rT night-W irera ». m» anurias « 7i'o « , m P gb ] \ as invus fttfi $J^O -R otm d Trip Eure, $9,50 ■ - —3ffi|5S2 . : & i w b t e 5 « r w : CJ*y<rt*wl.OUa • 4^*JtL< ftEK 1 C '- . «»Vi i-i.'Y ‘<vm: There must be something wrong in Northern Ohio from the protests we hear o f and read about in regar& io the fight being made against the so-called corn bprer. In a numher o f places farmers have secured injunctions against government and state officials to keep them from destroying wheat crops in an effort to fight the corn borer. There is a wide difference of opinion about the damage the insect has caused in that part of the Ohio. Farmers have'gathered in different localities by the hundreds tq organize to protect their crops claiming there is no damage to any extent but that greater loss is being caused by govern ment agents walking into wheat fields and using tractors and oil burners to fight a supposed evil that does not exist. I f newspaper accounts are correct the lobby politicians are more alarmed aboutthe corn borer than are the farmers. More than-600 automobiles and trucks loaded vrith politicians on the* public pay roll are racing over northern counties in the state in a supposed mad endeavor to kill the corn borer. One concern is said'to have sold the goyernment more than a million and one ' ha lf dollars worth, of tractors, trucks and other equipment. It was only a few weeks ago that a former; newspaper friend said to the writer that the com borer was destroying thousands of acres of crops in this state and reducing land values to almost nothing'. . ’ • ■ This friend was anxious to, know what conditions W e re in ‘ Greene county. W e were urged to take a part in the campaign and keep farmers interested' injthe fight against the pest. A f ter some discussion we learned that our friend was represent ing- an oil cbmpany that was selling oil by tank lots to be used ' in fighting this evil This gave us some insight into the purpose q f a statewide campaign, The public can get some idea of how some of these things work and why the federal .government is to spend ten million dollars and Ohio $200 ,000J«iore to wage a -> war against the borer whether it exists or not. The idea is to spend this huge sum.. I t is no wonder farmers are protesting but the time to have done <the .most good was. before the money was appropriated. The politicians and lobbyists are going to have a ^appy and prosperous-year as long as the. corn borer war .money lasts. By that time they will find a new epidemic. The legislature took final adjournment Tuesday without attempting to over-ride Governor Donahey’s veto on any of the bills handed him when a recess was taken ten days'previous. In as much as great pressure was brought t o bear on the mem bers for restoring certain items, only a handful gathered/for the final adjournment. Gov. Donahey Says he was forced to use his veto in that the legislature order more money spent than the income of the state will be during the next eighteen months. The legislators say not. It seems that Ohio's bookkeeping sys tem must be a jumbled affair when the auditor of state, gover nor and legislature disagree. Anyone who has taken the.time to go over the appropriation bill can see thatymoney was provided for many things that should have beeiyeliminated. For this reason many things worthy had to gohy^me board. One thing is certain the economy program promised at the start Was not found in reviewing the work of the lobby governed body that appropriated m om money and- increased move taxes than any other legislature in the hjstbry o f the state. “ There was one man about the state house that did not hes itate to say what he thought about conditions, and that was Attorney General Edward Turner, who during the session said the state, house was “ lousy with lobbyists." JVTr, Turner in an address in Dayton last Friday stated that what the state need ed was a governor with backbone enough to run the lobbyists out and run the legislature himself in a decent way in the in terest of all the peop le ," W e should like to see Mr. Turner gov ernor. Attorney General Turner some years back found a few members of the legislature were accepting “ funds”'-in'sup port of certain legislation. Convictions sent, several to the pen. Mr. Turner might investigate’now and see where a single lobby ist can spend $86,000 influencing legislation and just how this great fund is spent. That much money would buy a lot of soda water and cigars. There being, more than one lobbyist it must be taken that Columbus has had a touch o f prosperity since the first o f January, W e were interested in a statement made a few days ago by C. F , Ta ft of Cincinnati who said “ the recent session was of no great honor to the party in control or to Hamilton county,"* or words to that effect. Coming from that source it would in dicate that some of the big Republicans had more than they could swallow , - ■ The public looks with spsplcion oft the plan to virtually a- bolish township, offices in Ohio and at the same time try and re store the office or justice of peace that Was put out o f business by the United States Supreme Court. The rural form o f gov ernment does not suit the lobby element, Road interests want township trustees out o f the way. They have been too close to the land owners and the road lobby gave the orders and the legislature reduced the township offices to less than that of constable, 'T-'EUEVISION, th* latest selen- title accomplishment of ‘ the engineer* o f the* LAI telephone syntem, will undoubtedly have * Wwl place in th# world’s work o f distent communication, according to officials of The Ohio Bell Tele phone Company. Whle research and development work for the perfection o f tele vision will go on for years, enough baa already been accomplished to indicate that in the future it will have an important place in the art o f telephony. Television over telephone cir cuits and by radio wa^ demon strated on April 7th in the Bell Telephone Laboratories in New York, where it had been developed. Transmission was from Wash ington to New York by wire and* by radio from &XN, the experi mental radio station o f the labora tories, located, at Whippany, N. J. Reception was in the auditorium of Bell Telephone Laboratories ip New York. Members o f the pres* and execu tives of the -Bell System were present when Walter S. Gifford, president o f the American Tele phone and Telegraph Company, in New York, talked with Herbert Hoover, Secretory o f Commerce, in Wash? gtpn. The television ap paratus, which Mr. Gifford used, permitted him to see as well as' hear Secretary Hoover, whose •facial expressions were distinctly visible to the people.assembled at the New York end o f the line. Connections Were then, estab lished with, a larger form o f tele vision equipment which permitted all the assembled guests in New York to view, on a screen on the stage of the auditorium, the face and. •/.expressions . of Secretary Hopyei^as h.e . talked., Following this’, several of the' New- York guests talked with those in Wash ington and .saw their features. Then the guests in New York heard — saw — an -entertainment transmitted by radio from Whip pany, N, J. Today the Bell System scientists are relatively farther along in their work on television than they were .on transoceanic, telephone, in 1915,' when the. American Telephone "and Telegraph Company conducted the first successful test from Washing ton t& Baris and Honolulu. At the present time, transoceanic tele* phony is being used on a commer cial basis between the ‘ United, States and Europe. fust what the ultimate field of television is to be can be left to. the imagination. The one thing • that seems clear is that it will hef a us# closely associated with tele phony. „ Television, the system which per- _ mits observing a distant-even# with] ail its action, ha? been a dream -jf inventors almost since the Inven tlon’ o f the telephone Year* hove been-occupied hy the Boil scientists in Its development. As the result, | distance, has been eliminated from; vision in a,manner similar to that ] in which it lias been {-limit'd tf.I fr m s’-eecH hy telephone. \ In the operation of I•'-tp'.wion' •Ciftipnient the scene ‘ view."f -n a c.voup of pUolnrh'ctr.e ijj ,'s • I*rg« photoslsc'trle calls which sesa .th* seen# point by point as each detail is illuminated by th* narrow sleeps o f a narrow beam o f powerful light, Th* e*!U respond to light by initiating electric current* and the** currents, hlghl. amplified and properly conditioned, are then sent to the distant receiving *ta- - tion, either by telephone lip* or by radio. A t the receiving station the currant varies th# brightness of a light, or o f a series o f light*, causing the light to flash before the eye* o f th* observer-. A syn chronized flash o f light reproduces the light ana shadow o f each de tail o f the scene for the observer,. These flashes form a picture, .tak ing the same relative positions as th* photoelectric eyes had observed, The entire scene towards which the transmitting equipment o f television is directed is electrically observed by this equipment and transmitted and recreated at the distant receiving equipment in leas than a fifteenth o f a second. This operation o f transmitting a.scene* and .recreating it is a continuous process. After all the details o f the scene have been transmitted the apparatus repeats the process. The, result is that more than fifteen * times a .second there ,is recreated for the distant observer th* same scene, as his eye wpjJ'd have taken in if it had been placed in the loca tion o f the transmitlng apparatus * o f the television equipment. The development o f original apparatus and the construction of. the largest photoeelctric cell* ever built were required because o f the problems of operating, at the enor mous- speeds necessary to send, de tail by •detail, an entire scene in less than a fifth o f a second, Performance and Comfort a it Unequaled at Its Price LOGAI Sapplie riety Store! light-active^ apparatus o f extrema aen&i .. ...... - — —...... . t s itiyvty ‘ and refinement, enormouq/amplifi- cation o f the feeble e!ec&ib current, and ah extraordinarily ’ accurate system, o f synchronization were re quired because of t}ic? high speeds. . By this synchronizing- apparatus the usecessive'details o f the scene are reproduced’ before, an observer in about an eighteenth o f e second with orderly esrangenfent and-with an exacthrat of synchronization o f about one hundred-thousandth, o f a second,. _ • In- one form o f the •-receiving apparatus the observer looks through* a rectangular aperture, v-ihouf two. inches :by .two, arid one, . half inches. Through -thfr’ he sees Ihg scene whichJa viewed by the distant transmitting'apparatus, In another foj-n. Of ^receiving appara tus, which > a ? ’ developed, for ob servation by an audience Instead Mir> Lenai end in Kcnf Maude Ha;l Mr, Fran hrrakinan roai, who wan able with his pa Shroades. tol * « 7 T E ARE eager to have you ride in the \ \ Chrysler “ 50 "- and drive it, fully confi dent that the moment you compare it with any car approximating its own price—you will not fail to choose the Chrysler " 5 0 " # Chrysler “ 50” Features SO mile* and more an hours S to2Sm iles inSstcondsf 25miles to the gallons ■ ~£ulhrh}cd,*vithampleseating capacityfor adulipasseneens Mohair pltuih upholstery. •V In its characteristic Chrysler fleetness and dash, its smoothness throughout its entire speed range, its economy, its full-sized roominess for adult passengers, its smartness o f line and coloring,- indisputable value proclaims the " 5 0 " as far and away the greatest offering at , its price. Coupe $ 7 }o; Coacfj $ 780 ; Roadster {with rumble seat) $7951 Sedan $ 810 ; / 0 , b. Detroit, subject to current Federalexcise tax, ■ Lu . J. ' I# ohm. modem f>»- *tl Chrysler Sealers are m a position to extend the convenient* o f ■* - ‘ ‘ - 'i. Askabont Chrysler^sattractive plan, AHChry- ■ time payments. ----- -— ... _ ............... .............. ....... .. - , sler cars have the additional protection against theft o f the Fedco'System of numbering. m B72 B U I L „T A S ' -O N L Y C H R Y S L E R B U I L D S D S JOHN COLLETTE, Agent, Jamestown, O. *n •t C H R Y S L E R . M O D E L N U M B E R S M E A N . M I L E S P E R H O U R 1 ’ * i ' ~ ~ The Most Tremendous Selling of by n single person, the observer* fimk a) a gins* aereeq on .which « repNiifi»etdlJ3g|taet hy ' instant, what ^ 'tuklr^place >h*fote the dwluw 'tritrtaniitHng apparatus. - During “the reesaroh experiments various stages o f accomplishment wi*rp reached which might seem to *eve Justified publication, hut pub- i T.fiop, was .withheld, as these -i’ atrw wen; only amps'in the pva- i,*im At im esrf.v point in fhe •■■•vrlojiniunt, for example, the uric- 'W ' ti i f motion pictures wn» ;; vs suplirhed. Event in Springfield EVERY ARTICLE OF HOUSEHOLD Hr* h : AND FURNISHINGS TO BE SOLD AT , Crossing Dismal Swamp A canal crosses the DIsinUl swamp, opening navigation between Elizabeth City, N. C., anil Norfolk,’Ya., thus per mitting vessels to pnss between Al bemarle sound and Chesapeake bay. Speech and Action Action hangs, as It Were, ’'dissolved*' In speech, ip thoughts, whereof speech is the shadow; and precipitates itself therefrom. The kind of speech Ip a man betokens, the kind of action you will get fpom him.—Carlyle. F rien d ly p ig e o n * ■ Hundreds of pigeons, flocking In friendly Intercourse with loiterers on the steps of the New York Fifth Ave nue library, make It look like a Ven etian plate, -FOB CASH ONLY ■ Right of Enjoyment o Nations and men ere only the heat when they are the gladdest, and de serve heaven when they enjoy It— , Richter, Com e in, select what you need, look at the B egu lar Price Ticket take, one-half o ff and that is your purchase price. LTicki SPEC IAL PRICE On all varieties of chicks throughout bal ance of tho season. We will have chick* through the en tire months of dune end July, THESTURDYBABY CHICK CO. AUBURN AND ERIE AVES. Main 838 Springfield, O. 50c. Saved on Every Dollar You Spend Upholstering Repairing Refinishing O F < FURNITURE QUALITY WORK ONLY— , » ■ ••»*} 4 PRICES SEASONABLE WE CALL FOB AND DELIVER WORK PHONE 3 Fred F. Graham Co. , ■a Whiteman St. uiMinitiinrim ‘fnrr“j-]-i--T’~i"’t ..... n Xenia, O# warn COME IN TOMORROW! \ THE SPRINGFIELD 3 * ' & ■ Enterprise Furniture Co. 122-124 E. Main S t . . East o f Shanwnee Hotel Springfield; O. mTr i i'i ii $ Nearby and Y o n d e r ! \ * ’ * • “Hta # A Y « SfWAtt — ftOM* . KNOOfeH T«m w .- WAV* V* TOWRIT* Cm OAUt. nK;'V V i ; " J' kyt\ V4j id <• i . • , . ' <■ ,'i*''' '-’■■if>- ' v * . . . ^ By T, T, MAXEY » WNU Service Carlsbad Cavern C AltLBBAU CAVERN In the Guada lupe mountains In northeastern New Mexico, although known loyally for a long time, was not explored At Ittigth until quit# recently. Its start ling magnitude was a genuine ttn*. prise, - Descending some two hundred ffeet from the crest o f a hill, one gazes upon a new world, the enormity « f which staggers the Imagination. Ap- - parently, he has stepped oft tutu Mat might have been some giant's jday*rriund—everything havlfig been, conceived on such s large sealfe ‘ i ,,, .fltrfrtchlnr m um ,\\ ,'fifsrijesHy><«1 , ’V. V ; *rJ-' 1 ; 'f ' - '.u , wane'ranging frotq UK) to 1.00Q .Tfeet apart, smooth here end .rough yonder, worn so ’ doubtless by the coursing of Water ages ago. There rises a great formation with fluted sides, Ilk# n curved column for a king's man sion. Yonder Is a stone formation resembling a waterrsU, Then, there la- a straight-sided pit some 150 feet deep; great chamber* of unbelievable size-some perhaps coo feet wide, their high crillcgs hung with atalac Lies banging In sis# from a few fitches to the full height of the roomj massive blocks of limestone one hun dred or, noire feet across and other suffwlslng'Specimens of subterranean arehllccttfee, No ,one know* how deep or how largo this titHnk: cavern is, Student* o f caves'thifik that it way exceed all other American eaves, both In sis* and beauty pt deooiJ*tl«a, *<K »*<f, wester* UfeM4> * m d 2 lb . C l Bnlk, 1! Brown J Pints d| Jar Car O LEO , L b . f eM y O CAKESj Bons Macaroc / CRACI ter lb l 2 lb. Caf I) to ironi t he c j n* MALT,I Large! Isotm PU F FE J P k g SHREq p k s , RICE, , xl'% IbsJ ■Jeep or is, Ktui lay excee I both in Raw 0*i*i J S i l i f e ' Jr •s 1 ( J !b i hi
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=