The Cedarville Herald, Volume 51, Numbers 27-52

«w THE CEDARVILLE HERALD K A R U I BUM* EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Xattyed « t the Post Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October 31, 1887, m second class matter. F R ID A Y , JUDY G, 1928 WE MAY HAVE TO LEARN TO WALK Fourth O f July Quit Day Here European Trip Is Rgftgribed Tb*r* was no unusual excitement ‘ or celebration of the Fourth hen : } Wednesday, Scores of families were \ out of town visiting or Fightsechtg. f Many families enjoyed picnics, at * Clifton and Bryan Park. One feature of the day was not a single acaidenfe has.thus far been re­ ported from fireworks during the evening or by motor cars. Hundreds of motor cars passed through here during the day. A t the raffe the American public insists on riding w e may as a nation be compelled to learn to walk in another ten years. The ratio o f automobiles in this country to population is very low , five to one. W e learn now that the ratio fo r the world is one to every 64 persons. Two years ago it was 66 persons, TT p a lfh W ith the United States out o f it there would be only on e car tor | s u m m e r n e d u u each 877 people. ^ ■ ■ ' „ The American people have been educated to ride and walk­ ing* will soon be a lost art. WHERE TO START TO REDUCE CRIME More than two years has been spent in completing the first compilation ever made o f existing state criminal laws governing arrests, preliminary examination, bail, methods o f prosecution, grand jury procedure and indictment, by Dean William E. Mike! and Professor Edwin R , Keedy, o f the University o f Pennsylvania Law School. I t is revealed that state laws relating to indictment prob­ ably are more diverse, more responsible fo r miscarriage o f justice and more generally in need o f reform than any otjier single g r o u p /o f laws governing procedure in criminal cases. The compilation illustrates strikingly the multiplicity o f criminal laws in the various states and emphasizes the necessity f o r a uniform code. v * Attention is Again focused by, this work on the fa c t that simplification and clarification o f the law and elimination o f technicalities in criminal procedure are objectives that must be attained, before delays incident to criminal procedure can be Isaw he reached he should open it, reduced to a minimum and justice expedited. ’ * ‘ * ’ WE CANTALK ABOUT THE WEATHER There is an off repeated statement that i,vhen w.e can find nothing else to discuss we can ta lk ’ about the weather. The month o f June this j^ear has been.so unusual, one really wonders about the lines o f the poet, “ What is-so rare as a day in June?” Locally we had rain 26 o f the thirty days and many o f them decidedly cbol f o r a summer month. Fire at night tinie was a common thing in rhost homes. One writer discussing the . weather says we entered the month with a deficiency o f 2.94 inches. The normal rainfall is . 3.98 inches according to government reports. The rainfall foi the month is given as 8.80 inches, only 1,06 inches below the previous High record o f 9.86 inches in 1880. The latter record practically covered n period o f eleven days. This year the rain was spread out over the entire month. ; July came in much warmer .and we are hoping f o r .a more , favorable month. Crops were put in early this spring- but to date w e are at least two or three weeks late. What little wheat there is w ill not be, cut until after the fifteneth o f the month, according" to present,predictions. TEST ON PROHIBITION IS : ^ PRED ICTED Year after year, the Glorious Fourth used to leave a trail of small, new graves across the country, Tetan- Ufj, the dreaded lock-jaw, made its ap­ pearance along the middle of July just ha surely as toy pistols firing blank cartridges or dynamite “ caps” hanged lon the Fourth. With the establish­ ment of a saner, if tamer, Independ­ ence Day, that danger him.,lessened. The tetanus germ is"1quite common, especially in garden soil, However it can multiply only when it is de­ prived of oxygen. These are the rea- ons a barefoot youngster bo often develops tefiylus after he has run a nail into hi®foot. The nail which has. been lying on the ground has be­ come infected, and the nature of the wound shuts put air. Every wound which, excludes ,air ought to be opened. If a physician .................................... If U physician cannot be secured, it should be opened anyway with a knife which 1ms been boiled. An infected wound should always be treated by .a doctor. He will probably open ifc widely, clean out all loose ■lireds of tissue, treat with * three per pent solution of iodine or other disinfectant, and give about 1600 unit# Of tetanus Antitoxin. If the wound Joes not heal within a week another dose of the anti-toxin should be given; The, incubation period of tetanus Is between 6 and 14 days—usually 9 or ID days. Through its effect upon the nerves tetanus produces a muscu­ lar spasm and tire jaw muscles, among others, become fixed. I f that were alii the patient could be fed through his nose, hut the poison spreads, and in about half of all cases convulsions, ex­ haustion, and death.,result,. Once tetanus has developed the treatment consists in large doses of tetanus anti-toxin. / Application of of local antiseptics to useless. Proper treatment of infected- wounds will practically always prevent tetanus, A the disease does develop the patient should„be placed under a doctor’s care ^mediately, A few hours may mean the difference between life and death. LOCit-PERSONAL , There are many friends o f prohibition that feel the coming election will be a test vote on pab lic .sentiment, follow ing Candi­ d a t e Smith’s open statement after t h e .Democratic conven tion last week. , • To some extent this may be true. Some o f the Eastern states will endeavor to make this issue eclipse all -others that usually are up in a presidential campaign, . The manner in which the fajrm re lie f problem was handled in congress no doubt gave the foea o f ’ prohibition encourage­ ment and expect a large number o f dry f armer Republicans to leave the ticket, W e look fo r no great landslide from the Re­ publican dry sections. ‘ _ Prohibition was, put into the constitution not by the sole effort o f either political party. Public sentiment demanded it •and the parties responded. Neither o f the parties ’w ill openly espouse a.change ,even though ,a party leader here and there might advocate^modification. To change the constitution Svill require the united effort o f the parties; and this cannot be hoped f o r atth istim e , The only danger prohibition faces at present is from the I Kokomo, Anderson and Dajeviiic, Ind League For Modification o f the Volstead Act. This organizal- ‘ ----------------------- tion is supported by some very prominent men that represent railroads, great industrial enterprises, banking interests. Suclv men as these that have hundreds o f thousands j> f employees |sth at 2:30 P. M can create more, sentiment fo r modification than" either o f the dominant political parties. Dr. and Mrs. H. M. Brown and son, Robert, o f Defiance, are the guests of their brother, Mr. II. H. Brown and family. Well here we u * to Itos 1mA « f William Tell with anew «*$ jh to moun­ tain peaks all about u* **£ onr room Is nice and rhiliy. It nuMfe to * great change after Napto* wh«r* w* worn very warm. I think I wwrta toat, ju*t the day before we were going up ^Vesuvius a week age. We want to Pompeii in the morafeg igpd almost walked our feet off over the old cobble­ stone streets, finding it moxb interest­ ing. Pompeii itself has famished more light on the way the Roman* Iked than anything else to history, so who should say that the destruction of the,city was in vain? Out of the 20,000 inhabitants only about 2000 perished and they were the ones who went hack for treasures. All of them were warned in plenty of time to escape. Some o f the bodies were left just as they fell and they invariably had vessels filled with coins and jewels in their hands. The really valuable finds are all in the Naples museum but the houses and streets are just a# they were. It is called the “Dead City” yet it seemed very much alive; the spirit of the* place brooded over it and seepied almost to speak to you. To go from Pompeii, the work of man to. the crater pf Vesuvius, nature indomitable, destroying man and his works at will, was very impressive, 1 had no idea I could ,be so impressed, In the first p. e going up.to amazing, with all the Naple’s Bay coast spread out below you, ending up with a funicular at a 55 degree angle, which made half the people feel groggy by the time, they reached the top. Most of the railway is through lava flows, .vhich look formidable even in their mrdened form, Hovf horrible they nust he when hot and moving reient- cssly down upon you! The volcano itself doe3 a roar and belch of fire •very few minutes, throwing out red hot lava and rocks and clouds, of jight sulphur tinted smoke. We watched it/ fascinated, and were very reluctant, to leave when the time .for our descent came. The crater you see in the- pic­ tures is the old 79 A. D. crater which {fl 3 miles around. That eruption must nave been a marvelous sight. I don’t, wonder that Pliny the eider was so fascinated by it that he ventured too close and was overcome by the gases, and so perished, all because of his xeen scientific spirit. The 79 A, D. crater crusted over inside, with a few five pot-holes Until the 1906 eruption when this new smaller crater was brown up. It is a# high’ ns the 79 A. D. crater hut only ’ about one twentieth as large. But even so it .oaks quite formidable enough. We were. 3000'feet above sea level and ordinarily at that height you ate cold. But the lava ground was so Warm that ypuj* feet were hot and the air all around was so warm that you wished you hadn’t bothered with a sweater. Professor Heigh Alexander pf Oher- Un College, accompanied by his wife And son, are spending his Sabbatic year, travelling in Europe, Egypt and Palestine. They Will reach home August 26.- COLORFULLIFE OFNAVYSHOWN INNEWPICTURE — lam n n c i yraft—all druggists in 3 sire*. Look for the same <• every box mid accept no eubetiUUc-. “Sharp Shooters,” With George O’Brien and Lois Moran Will Please Local Audience Don’t T a l k About Your Kidney# In sealed boxes- ACT! Mrs. George Morris and little Anna- belle Kennon, returned Saturday after spending two weeks visiting in The Shawnee Camp Fire Girls will give a market at Master’s .Store July U. P. CHURCH Fox Films' “ Sharp Shooters,” which plUya Saturday night at the Opera House, to one of the most colorful pictures that film fans have seen in a long time. The c&st is headed py two such able stars as George O’Brien and Lois Moran, who add new laurels to their already long list by their work in this picture. This picture has as its ingredi­ ents ©very known element to please any fan, no matter how. discriminating. Every scene is full of action. Romance, comedy, pathos and thrills are prevalent throughout the >picture, J, G, Blystone has done'an outstand­ ing bit of direction, The plot of the story revolves around a little French ^girj from Morocco and an American gob. From Morocco the story moves to the New York East Side, where the girl follows the sailor.’ There she falls into the clutches of a notorious bootleg king and it is then that George realizes his love. In a smasli-up climax George leads a gang of his buddies to the dive and cleans Up the entire out­ fit. William Demarest gives a com­ mendable performance as the bootlegger and Nancy Carroll is equally as fine as the East-Side gii’l. Some splendid comedy is done by Tom Dugan -and Noah Young as the sailor buddies of O’Brien. " “Sharp Shooters” is an original story by Randall H. Faye, and Marion Orth wrote the scenario. Som e unusual.photographic effects in the Moroccan and. East Side sequences have been obtain­ ed by Cameraman Charles Clarke, The fact' that George O'Brien served in the Pacific ffeet during the World War makes his part in this picture all the more alluring; for in every sequence he is thoroughly at home., . The most sbugh-for puts of beef are all*included in less than 18 per cent of the total carcass. Inside—Outside — nil around the house We have a du Pont paintfor every purpose You buy paints and var­ nishes for many different purposes; to fill many differ­ ent requirements* In the du Pont line o f paints, var­ nishes and enamels there is a paint product especially made for every possibleneed. \ The same high and unvary- ing quality you have learned to expect in Duco can be .found in every.other.duPont paint product* A ll du Pont products must meet the same high du Pont stand­ ards-of quality* W e carry a complete line o f du Pont paints, varnishes, enamels and Duco, Gome in and look over our du Pont stock o f paint products. Let us help you get started on an economical plan o f paint protection. “The onlyway to msk§ -, roup action- out of one man’s Conduct is to observe j him over a' long period of time.- Hi# average may be guessed at. But no- body can Hay how he will act in a new and unusual dicutnstance.”—Harvey Wickham. . „ PA IN TS VARN ISH E S 1 e n a m e l s DUCO Made by FREDF. GUAM CO, WHOLESALE RETAIL W A LL PAPER — PAINTS — GLASS Whitman St., Xenia IFYOUNEED^RMING DROP IN jbr Economical Transportation ^ T A Y l N O / OF H ERBERT HOOVER^ Mr. and Mrs, Fred Tdwnsley and Mr* and Mrs. Fred Clemans spent the week-end visiting in Cincinnati. Sabbath School at 10:00 A. M. Preaching at litOO A, M. Subject “ Is God With Us.” The Membership and Attendance, contest in Sabbath School started last Sabbath with ‘much interest. Plan to he present regularly during the sum­ mer. M. E. CHURCH are th«s as- Words without action sasslns of Idealism. We may count food in calories, hut we have no way to measure human misery. If democracy is to survive through­ out the world, it must be a success in the United States, Socialism is a European theory of dlspalr, , The elimination of waste Is a total as*at. It baa no JiabiUUaa, The greatest governmental experi­ ment In human history was universal free education at public expense—ami it has bean successful. it is always the children who are ground in the mills at international disputes, and honest charity Inquires no further than that ' The most potent force In society la ih. ideals. Out for the next several generations wo dare not abandon seif* Interest as a motive'force to leader* ship and to production, last we die* Mrs, Nan McIntosh left Saturday | for, Jackson, Ky., where she will make | !her home with her daughter, Mr. AlbertWork, of Calidonia, Ind.j ylsited several days this week at the home of Rev, and Mrs. ’t, A. Jamieson. Sabbath School at 9:30, P. Gillilan, Supt. Preaching by the pastor at 10:30 A, M. Union Service at 8:00 P, M. Seems Joke on Rich Matt The only way for a rich man to bo heftithy is by exercise nhd abstinence, to live as If he was poor; which was esteemed the worst part of poverty.-*- Teraple* Bart Peculiar Cry The bat’s cry IS perhaps the shrill­ est sound that human ears can appre­ ciate. Most people over forty lose the power of hearing this creature's cry, for it Is too high-pitched for any but the keenest hearing. PURINAFEDS ■ PIG Cl m COW CHOW BULKY LASS HEN CHOW CHICK CHOWDER FENCE LOCUST POSTS STEEL POSTS HANNA GREEN SEAL PAINT JOHN DEERE IMPLEMENTS HAAG WASHERS CedarvUIe Fanners’ Company Everything fo r the Farm Grain Phon* 21 Cedurville, Ohoj C/5-;StKH*SHS$lCHWHWBKHiHMl- i M E N T O G E T H E R g ——— • ' g By DOUGLAS MALLOCH Jfr. v EN on thrones and i-VJ Men in ditches1, Men in robes and Men in britches, Rich and poor and Which and whether, Men, we all are - Men together, to- Men on thrones will .Tire of ruling, Wise men weary ’ Of their schooling, Men who do not Share life’s weather Men who are not Men together/ Men on thrones must Love their brothers, Men with wealth must Slmre with others; All God carer', I Think, is whether - Men like us me Men, together. Men 'on thrones will Find more pleasure, , Men who dig will Find more treasure, Men not marked by Fez or fentlmr Mon who Just are Men together. ($, 111$, bought* Malta:h> Paintyou ctiin- depend upon Foi? p a in t in g yo itr house, we recommend LOWE BROTHERS H IGH STANDARD PAINT. We sell it be­ cause we Icnow it is good. It gives the kind o f results you want-— and its ho&uty lasts f o r years* ’ ' ■ % JFJtfi&-*”TheArt of Color in theHome,” n newbook con­ taining a chart front which hundred* of cedar combina­ tion* canb*clionon. Come in and got Acop f. R . BIRR & SONS CO* Cedarville, Ohio n P H E sensational popularity o f the Bigger JL and Better Chevrolet is dfie in great measure to the fact that it is the biggest auto­ m obile in the world available at such amaz­ ing low prices* ■The 107^ wheelbase is o f vital significance in a low -priced car. For it means that the buyer can now secure the balance and roadability that on ly a longer wheelbase can provide— plus the restful com fort o f ample room for both driver arid passengers* Com e in for. a demonstration—and bring the family along! , The COACH *585 0 ^ ^ 4 9 5 'The Coup* ,. 5 9 5 & i * r . . ! 6 7 5 JT h<* Convertible c & « . , . . * 6 9 5 TfirImperial$ 17 -* C l A n d a i i * •MitJr u*htD*uv«T$375 (Clwtlil n«l,) UtiU»yTn.ck*520 (C’fuMjt*only) All ptlresf.o.b. Hint,Mich. Ch*«k CktrrrUt They laeLui* th« laWMHhunUlln* nn » £ * ‘*** Removal o f W ar Tax Lowers delivered Prices! THE LANG CHEVROLET CO* Plume 90 Xenia, Ohio 121E* Main S t Beal Chevrolet Co*, Jamestown, Ohio H ill Top Garage, Cedarville, Ohio Q U A L I T Y A T , L O W C O S T

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