The Cedarville Herald, Volume 53, Numbers 27-52

fx a TUB C IOARV ILLE HERALD K A I ttJ S BTK Ji EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Entered «t th« Poet Office, Cedarville, Ohio, October $1,1887, M eecond clw» matter. *r" ” ” '"' t o d a ^ AUGUST T,’m i ~ - OHIO BRAND INCONGRESS . It certainly hag been extremely unfortunate that one of the largest Republican Districts in the United States should be forced to apologize for the class of statesmanship that has been sent to Washington the past eight years. The responsibility of course is with the people in the district, but the people in the past have been mislead, hoodwinked by fake promises, ham­ strung by false issue Hared before them and to top it off gift of salary money for stone crushers in the interest of companies making such equipment,' Gravel roads and cheaper insurance have played a part all of which have proven genuine fakes so far as benefit to the people are concerned, You wonder why a candidate for congress must resort to such tactics and the answer is that he is accomplishing nothing and has accomplished nothing in,the past to constitute a record that will bear investigation. Not a single proposal has ever been brought to a realization for the benefit of the public, The Herald has no personal grievance with Congressman Brand. We have never asked him for a single thing, but we have disagreed with his policy as not being outstanding and •what it should be for a district such as the Seventh is. We have had no use for his political friends and associates, such as Harry and Mai Daugherty, D. Pemberton, the former liquor lobbyist. During, the exposure of Harry Daugherty and the Ohio gang in Washington, we urged Congresman Brand to de­ clare himself against Daugherty, but this he refused to dor In fact he stated in one of his letters to us that he would close the correspondence so far as he was concerned. The Seventh Dis­ trict Republicans certainly are not proud of Harry Daugherty’s record in Washington.—Certainly-there is enough'self fespfec! that the District will not approve of Mai Daugherty, ever Fayette county, since depositors in the Daugherty bank may get as low as ten cents on the dollar on settlement of the bank failure. As to Pemberton, his record as a lobbyist and his con. trol of Clinton county has sent officials to prison with indict­ ments against others in the $136,000 graft steal. These men an! the political associates of Brand. It was their directing hand a-: two different meetings in Springfield early thia year in Brand’s behalf to shut out all other candidates. There was even free liquor to all who desired it and plenty of affidavits can be had af to what took place behind closed doors. The issue in this pri­ mary Is the nomination of a man for Congress that is free from such alliances and not bound by the political hold the Daugh- erty-Pemberton politicians may have on Brand. That candi­ date is none other than Probate Judge Harry Gram, Springfield, who has consented to be a candidate on the plea of citizens in the district that want all taint of the Daugherty element re­ moved. , A vote for Brand is a vote for continued power of the Daugherty crowd in this district. Mr. Brand prates much as to what he has done for the farmer. We say nothing but misslead them on false issues and promises. If their present plight in the markets is the result of Brand’s efforts, they should be satisfied. On the other hand if 4he farmers are^riot-satisfied-they certainly-should be-convinced that either Brand has been wrong in his ideas and methods or has done nothing at all. There are nine counties in the Seventh District, all of them with strong agriculture following. The farmers in two of these counties have been unduly wronged. Politically they have Wor­ shipped false gods and subscribed to doctrines far from the ethics of good government. Farm owners in Clinton county have been duped in the past by the Pemberton machine that robbed them of $136,000 tax money* In Fayette county the Daugherty bank failure caught not only farm owners but citi- zens in general.. Many of these people are today destitute as a result. The farmers of Warren, Madison, Greene, Champaign, Union and Logan should extend a helping hand to their broth­ ers in Fayette and Clinton county by breaking this alliance be­ tween Daugherty and Pemberton and Charles Brand. It felt to the lot of Ex-President Coolidge to remove Harry Daugherty as attorney general and it is within your power to restore the Seventh District to honor and dignity by having a Congressman that will not be under the political control of these men that have betrayed the public in the past. Victory for Brand at the primary will bring rejoicing to the house of Daugherty and Pemberton but by nominating Judge Gram the Seventh District will follow the eliminating process adopted by Mr. Coolidge when he fired Harry Daugherty. h A r t h u r S H s b a M Qnk«tQ iM W W»» < AairioH BalMlag M m . Not Elephant*, Microbe* She Skat the Wife Already weakened, partly demol­ ished by terrible eartbqwftke shocks, many houses, palaces and churches in Naples were leveled by a severe gale, adding to the terror and loaf o f life, 'Then came a tidal wave driven by the gale. A fter repeated earthquake shocks, I Loesosi £wrA»f*»t 3 ■NAOMI AND RUTH: A STUDY RACIAL RELATIONSHIP* IN with Vesuvius the background, a the city, thousands sand dead, no w< frightened. ^ng menacingly in ricanr sweeping ijured, two thou- sr the people are The appalling extent of Italy’s dis­ aster is due to the fact that in build­ ing even small dwellings, walls' and doors are nearly all made of stone, roofs of heavy tile. Earthquakes caus­ ing even slight disturbance separating walls, allow heavy stone doors end tiled roofs to fall through,, killing the inmates. • MMaMWNMtMMMHPMfHtMlimmiHlIHlIllllllHHMIUHMHUIIimimHlIHmilHHflMttHHIimiHdtmHlIHmiMHmiHHHIMrmi'A Before marketing your live stock call THE SOUTH CHARLESTON STOCK YARDS DAILY MARKET Phone 80 S. K. SMOOTS P. P. SMOOTS MONEY PAID WHEN WEIGHED Some Day You Will Decide to Heat Your Home With Gas Why not do it now when in­ stallation is most convenient? en« » . . It is almost inevitable that you will aomeday decide to joy the advantages of a gas heated home. - NOW IS THE TIME TO DO IT r * » For now you are not using your basement and installation can be most conveniently made without interrupting home heating. *The«, too, special summer rates and easy terms on gas furnaces and gas burners make RIGHT NOW the time to decide to HEAT WITH GAS. Cull ue for *n estimate on Installing a gas furnace or gas burner in your home. GAS mi ELECTRIC SHOP TH* OA* m«t mCTSICH9IAm iAMOK COMPANY IT Ktetroft tt.M T e l e p h o n e 59ft <?«• #A V t#N » fW » # AND UOHt CO) ■ X lN i * . titiTftICT ' w I t is believed th a t Mussolini will Order dwellings rebuilt of reinforced concrete. Ordinary steel framing is too expensive; lumber, scare in Italy, is, too perishable to suit Italians, ^ McGUntic-Marshall, art American concern, erecting the great bridge across the Hudson river, has devised a method of steel construction, ex­ tremely light, little more expensive than wood, Mussolini should investi­ gate that. In ancient days men gathered to watch elephants, tigers, bears, rhi­ noceroses i.nd other gigantic animals light .each.' Other or fight gladiators. All interest centered on the big en­ emies of mankind. Rembrandt painted a most interest­ ing scientific picture of an elephant, with itB queerly made knees and deep wrinkles^He never heard of a microbe. Today human intelligence is con­ centrated on enemies too small to be seen, f a r deadlier than any poisonous snake or ferocious tiger. -Dr.-Thomas F.- Rivero of the Rocke­ feller foundation showed a gathering of^scientists in Paris slides, explain­ ing experiments with psittacosis, or parrot disease. And Doctor Pfeiffer, learned Ger­ man, discoursed on the “Pfeiffer bacillus,” known to cause certain forms of influenza. - 'The germs discussed are so small they pass through porcelain filters. No microscope la pqwerfaletKmfh .to reveal them* ' „ Science is not oven able to explain how the germ o f grippe or psittacosis, after years of harmless inactivity, can suddenly spread world-wide, creating havoc i n n few months. Calvin Coolidge wrote a history of the United States in 500 words to be engraved on a mountainside in South Dakota. >Mr. Borgium, sculptor, carv­ ing the mountain, changed the text, Mr. Coolidge disowned it£ and will probably write another. You feel as though you had read of Moses coming down from the. mountain with the Ten Command­ ments, and Borgium changing the wording, possibly leaving out the word “not”. UD8SOH MW#—*SO Beak: e t Ruth. GOLD** 9MCSV~Jta« beta u»4* Of as Sees* afi aatUaw ot msn for to *w*U «a an tks too* of tlie sarth, PKpCARY R0MO—Ruth a Helpful TQr*C--1JWs«nl'« Vslthful- ~ n n a«& . AT®AMDWBNTOB.TOP- iPaushtwr. : smmm .jgwakbers of Other Macs*. TOGCMOPMgFUB AMD ADULT TOP- IC-Jrfc* War ta Worn Brotherhood. ’ V, Hew Naomi and Ruth Were Brought Toqothsr (1 ? On account of famine In Bethlehem b f Judftb, Naomi frith her husbandAnd .tye sons sojourned In the Unfl'ef .Moab. After the death of h e r .bus- (band, her taro sens married Moabitish ;women. After a time her aon* died also: After the death of her eons. Naomi resolved to return ta her home, ,-landv having heard that the Lord had visited his people. In giving them ’bread. They wen tto Moab to escape ,trouble bnt oniy got Into more. This It always the caae when God’s people ‘go into the world to escape difficul­ ties, It was not until.Naomi was thus chastised that she resolved to return. -When: the time came for her to go. Ruth end Orpeh accompanied her for ,a distance. 1 II. Ruth’s Noble Choice (1:18-18). Greatly as Naomi loved h e r daugh- tera-ln-l*w, she would, not have them .go into tills matter blindly. She wished them to know the seriousness of their, action. 1, No chance for them to marry again (v, i i ) . . ; v , ' . " Naomi told’them that she hod no more sons for whom they could wait. ,In that day tor a woman to be. tin- 'married was the greatest disgrace. 1Society differed then from now. No ’avenues went open by,- which women *could earn their living. | 2. Heathen gods must be renounced l(v. 15). \ ■ Idolatrous worship could not be car­ ried’on In the land where God’s peo­ ple dwelt This Mag delicately touched tupon wben Orpah went back. She went -back when It was plaln thatthere was no chance for .her. to get a husband. 'After.Orpah'e return Naomi put an ad- •dltional test upon Ruth,, that of giving ’up her religion. Uuth was equal to -the occasion. Her mind was. folly imade up* 3be was willing to accept ‘as her God the One Who was able to (product in hi# subjects the nobility of •character she hid observed In Naomi. (Ruth’s determination was so definite tend unfaUeriog that her expressions (have come down to ns in words which ,”no poetry has outrivaled, and no patiMt hap wxcroded. and which has gone through centuries with the music which will not let them he forgot­ ten.” She was determined to share Naomi’s Journey, her houie, her lot In life, and grave In death, whatever or wherever that htdaid be To crown it all, aha renounced her heathen gods and worshiped Jehovah, the true God. i ll* BlewlngeWhich Attended Ruth's Choice* - 1, She found'the true God (1:10). Instead of a heathen god who was unable to help Mr; she had the Living God, the God of Israel. . 2, She found friends (ch. 2). [ As she went to glean she was lad to the field of Boss, a man of grace and wealth. The servants of Boas treated .her with consideration, | S. a good husband and happy home ' (ch*. it and 4). i 4. Ait honored place In the Israel- -ltish nation (4:18-17). ; 5. She become * link In the chain of 'the Redeemer’s ancestry (4:18-22 cf. Matt, 1:5). j The one who fully decides for (Christ and gives up all for Him shall ■ receive a hundredfold In this life and la the world to come eternal life. Lady Owen, in Paris, rich, titled woman fell in love with Doctor Gas- taud. He, she says, reciprocated until she lent him 10,000 francs. Then he stopped reciprocating, went back 'to his wife and—only tot vernacular dc- .. __ , . scribes it—gavs Lady Owen “the air.” {' J**® _____ first, of right rarial relationship. The ' L«dy Mme. Gastaud, three times, principally ipensatlonal truth: in the stomach. | | (l) The famine to the land Indl- Smoking gold-tipped cigarettes rap- Icates the testing of the Jews in the idly, Lady Owen expressed Indignant iftoat tribulation. surprise when the police refused to set her free. Who can read the heart of woman? Why shoot the poor wife Instead of shooting the “a ir giver?” All through the ages women h av . protected men and blamed each oth Dr, James Eads How, Ilf' .ong friend of poor men, is dead d star­ vation, leaving perhaps |1 ,00^,000. He believed that abstention from food could cure anything. His theory cost him his life. His money is left to help the most unfortunate class of Unemployed, the “hoboes,” whose friend he had always been. The good example of sympathy is worth $1,000,090; wisely spent or Oth­ erwise. But $5,000 spent on ambitious youth might do more for the poor than $1,000,000,000 spent on confessed failures. (2) The going Into Moab Indicates ,th i sojourn of the Israelites among the rn tloDS. (8) The sickness and death In Moab indicates tbs chastisement of the Jews isud their sorrows in (he present age, ' (4) The return to the land Indl* (cates the gathering of Israel to their own land, Palestine; ; (5) Rath’s decision Indicates the gathering of the Gentiles through th* 'Influence of the Jews, : (0) The marriage between Boas and (Ruth Indicates the union of the choreh ‘with Jesus Christ Adds Charm to Character . Small kindnesses, small courtesies, 'small considerations, habitually prac­ ticed In our social intercourse, give a greater charm to the character than the display of great talents and ac­ complishment*.—Ketiy. Doctor Wod, head of the Crocker Cancer Research Institute, announces the successful growing of cancer cells in a glass tube, That they are genuine cancer cells i r known because, transplanted In the bodies of rata, they produce cancer. For 8,000 years, Doctor Wood says, men have “worked with d*ed cancer cells. Now, for the first time, we have them alive, and capable of producing human cancer.” The announcement It important. To hold any study your enemy is a great i Ffedkig ■ Hspyiasw* i God made the world to be happy In, (but all (he happiness some people get la hunting for trouble on a dark night with a dim lahtern.—Herald of Gos­ pel Liberty, , Mrs. Nancy Oglesbto, and daugh­ ter, Dorothy, returnod home last weak, * fta r a tan days visit with R*v. O. M. MOllcaa and family in Pittsburgh. Mrs. f . M. Rsynokta o f St. Bernard, *»d Mry* M a rp ro t Maymta of I * Fas* Ind., have returned home a fter » visit with I lf , and I I m * f r t d Osmans* W ay joined 1 mm I t IteftooUkh w)m had bero m fulphur Springs to r 'sawnfi day»« ■ * . uctunroN*, ou>wuc* IN INDIAN MOUND Two eemplet* skeletons And taro skulls, apparently those of children, war* mwartbad in excavations made in an Indian mound on th* farm of Cassius Hainss, on the Fairground road five miles northwest of Xenia, a f*W days ago. The mound builders relics, which include beside* the bones, tools such as were ordinarily buried with theta dead to times ycsMatasrfy *W I hens* mss* m y liidi i M i f « f tide rogtan, tetinds a bum $mm r is r te tir o h t t a f Iff Br« flif i y r tin* with a rix-tash bta*. m d bandta sta tee mm ^ f t * * * ^ * ^ ^ inahaa tang; n s ten t ptete fisr w t i M i ^ Iff a m usa H knawn, aseevdlng t o War. W .|s f mm *d tit* sWJdwn, to* A, Galleway, prmtorot *f tits Qrowta uukmm hafflmtoiff to p«to mti County Historical society, and a bona th* first teeth. . awl* 1 m m i epmwi Mto m»m- The awl, Dr. Galloway says, is t o t mar, test not mnto *to*v*toNf finest of toe kind ha ever saw, still dona outil this jmmroar* Dr. towa* being Sharp. (way says tiuti to* sysrimto s to » r r » - 'On* sketaton js to a t a f a very large ■ fina^ and t o M man, I t bod been buried fae* down- teg th a t mm * vataaWe ansi w « ha ward and the hand turned to ane side., taken from it. murom VOTE FOR Judge Gram is oppoted by and is fighting the Mai Daugherty - Dee Pemberton machine, which is backing Ills opponentlora FIFTH TERM ». Republican Candidate FOR CONGRESS PSrintoxy - - August 12 th G n M m f ' l t o d M em b e r inf WHtewfeerg CollagA P ra ririen t Spria« fiald Y. M. C. A* fh a irm a si C la rk C««wty Cbnfitor Amariwu* R ad Cross. V to trym nn C k rist E pjsoopal Ckmm . ' District Caastitomas, sto. Boy Scouts. Fannar---Roarad OA Owni nnd operate* 70-acri torm. Jodga- 4 ^obnto « m Juvwul# Court. ' Activa workar in pdbHe walfara antarprises in dty, coonty aad stats. MautoarR O .it, f c U UrA I t , Krof P* nnd-l$wonsr Judge Grom’a Hfa work has kora FOR PEOPLE- Ho known tibair troublea, tbmr probtoms, tkmr bopas, tkair fnnra* Writ aquippad in every way to represent tkam in Washington, he will, if elected, represent THE PEOPLE end not the RIG BOSSES of tbe poUtical For FIVE YEARS he wna Secretary to Congress­ manGeneral J*Warden Kufer and fie .know* how to do tkings in Washington. VOTE FOR , JUDGE HARRY G. GRAM FOR CONGRESS —Political Advertisement. A l o n g E v e r y H ig h w a y Hpmcimiig Oeaigmmd 9 prin$f* mmd tomr HomdaUle kgdrmwMc * 1 <nek mbaerbers 00m* tribu te tm tbu rUUmg eum tort u t th e mew Fonl O NE of the f in e thdaga ahtat d titia f the t»ewFord i* the way it talcagyoet over the mUee vritbout strain or fatigue. Mentally yon are at ease because yon are sure of the medhanfaml porforun e of the ear. No matter b tm long tbe trip* or rough or devious tbe roadway, you know it will bring yon safely, epddtly to the journey** end. Through thickest traffic, up steepest hills, along tbe open road, you will drive with security and confidence because the new Ford la so alert and capable and so easy to operate and control* . The steeringwheel responds readily to st light touch. Gears shift smoothly and silently. Brake* taka hold quickly and firmly even on rafe-awapt street*. Vm usual acceleration, speed and pewer eve especially appreciated in emergencies* A space but little longer than the ear H m H Is all you need for parking. These features simplify the meebanhp of driving end, togetlieewith reliability, add a great deal to the mental eomfort of moteringi. . j , Physically, too, you will feel fresh and relaxed in the newFordbecause It la such a roomy, oas^riding ear. th e restful, wril-nphelstered seats fae- viteyau to sh lmokaud relax and enjoy the panorama of the passing miles. Steadily, evsnly you travel along because of the specially designed springs and tbe four Honditille doubU+cting hydraulic ahoefc absorbers. They cushion the car against bard jobs and bumps, reduce bouncing, and smooth your path along every highway* See the nearest dealer and have*him take yon for n demonstration ride in the new-Feed. Then yon will know,'from yonr own experience, that it brings you everything yon want in an automobile at an unusually, low price* M 0 tn TJHRSE M W P R IC E * t i t s 440 495 t i t S t t m m m m m • • t i e # e e « * « * • * • * I t w t a i . . . ■EB f OMM • * wriffiDF* o n e * fitort Chapa ■* Datmxa G*n** . ThroawisdawFattier Ssfa* Ciarorlfils Ctorialst . . .DaLam.FhaetoU , . . Ps'JLwto fiidm . • » . twtmateoSi ntmdlL^^w Mwwm MSMI • * g- p g mm* t o t o w m l jM i Ctmpmy ptm tbm w te# #w .«w tteF w 4 « #w ,y.

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