The Cedarville Herald, Volume 54, Numbers 27-52

a m * * w b b - y , iv l y u , i m VMM C I D A R V I L L E HER A LD ' W M I B l . — — — WOTO* AND PUBU3HBR ! CadarriUf, Ohio, October S i, 1887,, __ • ■ ,* i FRIDAY, JULY *1, 1981 " m m r r c m m V Q n c m n g a s e n a t o r Friend# o f prohibition are going to find themselves in a very i uncomlortaWe position when it comes to selecting a dry candi-1 date at the primary next year that will be favorable to their ; cause. As matters now stand the politicians in the Republican j party have most all avenues blocked fo r the entrance o f a bone dry candidate. The wet leaders in the party have decided that Attorney General Gilbert Bettman, shall have the 4cfmlg0#ofi, and h#ht making more progress to that end than the drys prob­ ably imagine, He will be backed by every liberal organization in the state, political and otherwise. He is $ known wet and has played* prominent part in the Hamilton county Republican organisation. He is a politician o f the old school thathas not much use fo r the primary, commission form o f government, or any other movementthat would keep the strings o f government in the hands o f the people. He is known as a believer in “ gang*' fl control such as Hamilton county has been ^ His nomination and subsequent elec­ tion would give Ohio wet representation in the next Congress. If nominated-he will undoubtedly oppose Senator Bulkley, Cleveland, who will he a candidate again. He openly advocat­ ed repleal o f the eighteenth amendment and won easily over his dry opponent, Roscoe McCullough. It is not likely that a dry candidate can be nominated by the Democrats. The Re­ publican political managers feel, the time is rjpe fo r turning to the wet element in this state and every 'effort will be made to keep a dry candidate from entering the-primary against Bett­ man. It looks as if the drys had been asleep at the switch. -•, wmmmmmm rnmmmmmmmm Sportsmen will be interested- lath* announcement that the Division o f Conservation o f Ohio w ill distribute from 17.000 to 20,000 pheasants on the various atatepreeervee at Wellington, Urban* and Roosevelt, this year. Ap­ proximately 220,000 admit game fish have been placed in streams in Ohio within the psst two months'. Many o f the streams in Ohio ware beared o f fish last summer owing to the dry weather. \JtrnfifafC h A rth isr fcrlgbstnw Jut a Uttie getter A£ Ofct Kaa pase Aiaae ... A Time to Held O* Raws**!* Teeebtag fkwt'? Krerybody jaet a ltttie hit happier. Stock* a Uttte better bare, German ( bonds were stronger. Yon could bor­ row money for simulation in Wail Street at 11-4 per cant a year,.. U a i S a a a i a e a ease a & a a a s Apwii w m m w W wmh ^' ■ eneditow# Wa de general repair week, grind cycles fo r wewera, Hava them reground ready fo r Harvest J. A . Stormont - methods o f politics noted for in yesrs past.. S'* . * ST « ' W . _ WICKERSHAM REPORT ONPRISONCONDITIONS The nation has been shocked at conditions in federal pris­ ons according to reliable reports from the Wickersham Commis­ sion on Crime and Punishment. Particular stress is laid on the manner in which child offenders under Federatfaws are mis­ used, neglected, even tortured' in various state penal institu­ tions to which they have beep sent. Many o f these; prisons' are damp, unsanitary, dark cells, while in most cases children are mixed with adult hardenetLcriminals. Some prisons half starve all convicts while brutality is a common charge No one expects a prison to be a palace but even criminals need not be treated, as brutes, especially children that are sent for correction "more than for punishment. Such conditions as the reports reveals tends to prove that our prison system is but a graduate school for crime.. Such treatment hardens the pris­ oner to a determination to get revenge on society once he is lib­ erated. There are ways of strict punishment other than by the - cruelmethod. 'I t is tirrr more attention is paid to the kind o f a prison youthful first-time offenders are c6mmitted, Society o f the future will be in greater danger as these youthful-prison- era are liberated at completition o f their terms unless they are given more humane, and decent treatment. There is a chance o f winning the youth back into the straight path by good treat- . meat and encouragement hut never by the brutal methods as exposed in the Wiqjkersham report This commission has re­ ported on several branches o f crime enforcement lately butthis report is shocking to say the least. J.w'1' ' V ^ s s S e - rot! WHL FIND THE RIGHTTIRE AT THE R jg h t P r ic e •V »* lll »fcow jmm *k j ll fijri Itn jri bayMl?THEkwlta*■*•!<*WiW* HlaMry** LaweM Brices Ll/ctim* Curm lM l ■XTMA^RAVINW* IV van bidv or PAiMt In a J«|l N, M., a cell J* now occupled '{W9 •ARiwt- i Fall; onC*. * e i » t o T i n t e r In’ PreiUfettt'BaW tog’iJ fW jiW ^ h w When ever you find several far-| <*wta **ep ted « t t M W k V mere together, i f they are not discus*-1 f*™ * t i » U n it«l State, were ing the price o f wheat it i* the milk ^0B^ t crim inally, so an old situation. Many o f them *r» selling «»•«>• brok«n in health, *0 t fa r from part o f their d eity stock in as much j'tim g rsv e , conv ic te d o f selling, must as the income from the s e lf o f milk 1801*0 Prison. He toe* alone. What o f or cream does not pay fo r the feed. The present plan o f only paying fu ll price fo r part o f the milk,- based on an average, month last winter, sdems to be creating much dissatisfaction. The farmers seem in a quandry as to what the milk companies get fo r the over-plus fo r which they" pay only a- bout half price? There are some very interesting reports in circulation as to what becomes o f the “ surplus milk" but we only, refer to them not having % means o f knowing whether they are true. ■ A friend o f ours that..owns a farm on the Troy pike north o f Dayton in discussing farm , conditions several days ago, gave his experience when he dropped into a Columbus refresh­ ment establishment some time ago. Being accompanied by his w ife the tw,o-thought they would refresh, them­ selves on pne o f the het days by hav­ ing some ice cream. The girl that waited upon them handed him * tick­ et fo r 30 cents which he wqs to pay at the cashier’s desk.- In as much as they had plain vanilla ice cream he felt 15 cents a dish was rather high, and remarked to the cashier that he did not object to paying such aprice when cream was higher but he had a perfect right to protest in view o f the fafct’ that his tenant could only get $1.75 fo r a five gallon can o f cream. By this time the proprietor, who*had stood nearby atod heard the Conversa­ tion stepped up and stated what he had to say .was so but regardless o f the fa c t cream was low in price to the producer the milk companies were charging ice cream makers the same price this year as last. The converse tioit closed when the proprietor said “,You know 'one company owns most o f thb'various milk- concerns h i va­ rious cities in Ohio, which are operat­ ed under various names. th»se that did the buying? The m in .who has made a wise in­ vestment .is foolish ,i f he lets it go at. this time, i f be ha* the power to hold iti The w ise w ill remember that ev­ erything comes back. What .goes up hjmra. down, and v ice ' versa; This nr.iuy hasn't lost 'anything ex cep t'a few billions o f dollars, nothing like h a lfju much as one- year’s United States payroll. Atid what we have lost is nothing compared with what we made in the war. It is good time to remember Goethe’s ' “ Money lost, something lost . . •« honor lost, much l o s t . . coinage lost, everything lost.” • - % . . - . a : - '— . M i KmK S W H - $ 4 -3 * $ 0 .5 4 «A0SI... (Wa4A*> ■ A W 9 4 # iSOM .,. T | § 1 0 .9 0 iSMI..., (N iiN ) S A f 11*10 ' 4.73.19..U. B i f f ( I M » ) 1 2 .0 0 S.M-ie:.. * 5*00 1 3 4 0 G * odV n4T ir* *S » lt* ic*T hm lhS * rtk * w — ta— a— efcanrin • JEAN PATTON. CedarviUe, Ohio f ! PLUMBING W a ter C onnections C h a in in g W a ter o r Ca» P ip e * , Repairing Faucets and Leaks Have the Water Piped late the Yard fe r Sprinkling . Pmrpeeea. W . ® M A H O T B S N O M t t S S While on the subject o f. milk-.we o f­ ten wonder what city people would do. i^ they had the opportunity o f get­ ting a glass o f cool, fresh milk from iome fa rm ' houswife’s refrigerator. The city man has been educated to the point where he believes good milk Joes not come from a cow and it can not be safe to drink tontil it has gone through a manufactured process. I t is s a fe 'to say that most city people would not recognize milk as it is us­ ed on the.-farm. Neither would the farmer recognize even, his own milk a fter it was prepared fo r the d ty market. We. have in mind a nearby city that boasts much o f its milk standards, From, our point o f view it is not milk, hardly has the color end is fa r from having th e taste. I f there was ever a product that Was a substl tute, it is called milk and sold in that city. We can agree with the health authorities that it is pure— there is not enough cream or m ilk properties to even sustain life fo r germs. Dean Hanford o f Harvard univer­ sity j^ r a students are “ not spoonfed.” They are expected to he responsible fo r their own education end, to great degree, educate themselves. Truly Dean Hanford sayai “ The most im portent typo o f education is self-edu­ cation. The student '1 grasps, retains and masters what fie works out fo r himself.’’ ’ T o educate means “ to Iced out” from , e, out,, and duco, to lead, A ll that you can do fo r a boy is to bring out o f him, to “ lead out,” that Which is in him ,. Stuifiing him ?f£th ready-made information does little «ood . , . v -"* • . In Buckingham psisce good Queen |,Mary, had a grand?hallf first in that palace;* etece T # » thoUsim young men, “ that hake not had much amusement lately,” Went to the party. The music, chosen by Queen Mary, ac­ cording to emitom, 'w ith some advice irom her son, the prince o f Wales, had United State* f|wpr. Titles, o f the la w * music, included: “A’m Alone B e­ muse Love Y on ” 5“ GirI o f a Million Dreams,” “ Hawilan Stars are Gl«am* ,hg,” and “ Peanut Vendwr,” all a iong way form the “ Blue Danube.” President Hoover said America nuat g o to the raauce o f Germany and Vustris, and stocks went bounding up vard. That happened in spire o f the fact that the President’s message meant that many o f our European cut tamers were cloee to bankruptcy, and .nany o f our MlUons, sent abroad .night never come back. Reports from over the state well as other fru it producing sections, indicates a b ig crop o f all kinds this season. We need crops on the farm but a big fru it crop o f ell kinds gives the public^opportunity fo r lower pric­ ed living, ' We notice that one com­ pany in a lower Ohio county has tak­ en the entire Transparent apple crop o f the Fruit Growers Assoc, at 80c a bushel. - Now it is time fo r the men to here a good laugh. A s the years come and go man has seen the adaptation o f all onr masculine styles. Women took our riding breeches,; our pajamas, shirts and other apparel. Thisfall thsy are to wear our old style derby hats o f the Weber A Fields minstrel age. It is go­ ing to be too bad if men ever adopt the Ghandi diaper in place-of trousers. A newspaper controversy is goiqg on in one o f our metropolitan countWs as to the,guilt or innocence o f a pro­ bate judge in that county that hat ev­ idently been living a double life, The judge seems to have been liberal with his lady friend with whom he bad on­ ly a “ platonic” interest,, so he says. The woman was charged with Obtain­ ing a marriage license by fraud in that she had failed to state she had been married one or more times. The judge wanted his $2,800 diamond ring hack and threatened action that reach­ ed the newspapers, Rich furs and an auto were said to have been other gifts. The case is being handled by the newspapers in that d ty from all accounts. How the judge, explains Ms “ platonic” Interest in his lady o f the streets, to his wif# and fam ily, the newspapers do not state. Such Is the life o f a big d ty , A ' huge whale plow* the northern tea, swallowing millions o f tiny ma rine erdatures, on which he lives knowing nothing o f b is past L ittle doe* be dream that h it ancestor was a little creature, the “ tree shrew,” that you could ca n y in your vest pocket, dtill less can he imagine his future, or know that bis: body w ill be boiled down) and the oil sprayed on park trees to kill an epidemic of'p lan t lice. From tree shrew t o whale ninety feet long, and from giant Whale to plant lice destroyer, is a considerable change. We human beings know abont our past and future as little as the whale knows about bis. Professor Frost; director o f the Yerkss observatory, finds indications that* there axista a “ mind” in the uni­ verse, He is n ot like the French scientist who replied to Napoleon’s question concerning God; “ I have no need o f that hypothesis.” I f a cock­ roach in a skyscraper could talk and say: “ 1 believe there is Somebody run­ ning this skyscraper,” you would be amused. Somebody, somewhere creation is amuaod when one o f the little germs on this earth grain o f dust discovers tadkations o f * guiding intelligence in the naivete*. OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF ;#L ODD TROUSERS Hats, Caps, Shirts, Hosiery, Neckwear, Bath Rohes •' Luggage and All Accessories Go a t C learance P rices aa B e low $50.00 Fashion Fork Suita $40,00 Griffon Butting Now $40.00 Griffon Suiting Now $30 and $35 Griffon 5uiting Now $35, $30 and $25 Broken Sixes Now —« i £« * v * a* 1 $36.75 $20.75 $24.75 $10.75 ,$17.50 28 Suits, mostly small sizes, at give-away . price :.uf $13.75 . DOBBS FELT HAT SALE $10.0Q Values N ow ...................... ............. $8.00 Values Now $5.00 Values Now '•*P#1*S* -(kW««r $6.05 $5.05 $3.05 $4.05 $3.50 $1.05 STRAW HAT SALE $10.00 and $8.00 Values Now $5.00 Values Now — ........ $3.00 Values Now ................. . $2.50 Values Now ... ....................... .............. $1.5p , ODD PANTS 25 Per Cent OFF SHIRT SALE. $2.05, $2.50 Values Now ..................... $1,95 Values Now . ............... . UNDERWEAR SALE $1.05 Values Now ........,r............ $1.50 Values Npw 7 . . X:: $1.00 Values Now' ......................... . - HOSIERY SALE $1.95 Hosiery. Now $1.00 Hosiery Now 75c Hosiery 59c or 2 pairs, ,50c. Hosiery 35c Value 3 pairs fair $1.65 $L«45 $1.45 $ 1 4 5 85c , HkV • ft*?? NECKWEAR SALE >2.50 Values Now -at*1wV* « A-*•«s gSVjdh*©*' Now jlSOO^' 8tmi 50c Values Now The C. A. Weaver Go. Opposite Court House Xenia,. Ohio rsrs W bst srs vitamins T We know that w* c e n t live without them, that thsy cm * rickets in children, what food ­ stuffs contain the various vitamins,' and scimtiBi'fs hsvs ju st discovered that tw f o f them, vitamins A and B, g ive oft sotoe kind o f strange radia­ tion. Bats deprived o f certain neces­ sary vitamins have n s children. De­ prived o f ether vitamins, they starve to death, although supplied with abun­ dance o f food . Three important things we pdveess without knowing what thsy ara, electricity, vitamins, sm iths soul o f man. , New Barnsdall SPECIAL GASOLINE 1 AT THE LOW PRICE OF PER 10 c GALLON Plus Tax Somebody stole twenty-eight can­ ary birds sa they set in their cages singing Sweetly. And, having stolen them, turned them loose in the perk. It was a mistaken kindness. You might ns well take twenty-eight sons of the very rich menNorn their yachts automobiles or pole ponies and turn them loeie in the werid for oxistanee. Theg wonldnft thank yam - ' FOR TRUE ECONOMY TRY OUR Combination Sale S GaL Regular C. $ | . 1 S k ; ias 1 Gal. 100% Pure Penn sylvania Oil , PRICES GOOD ONLY A T OUR STATION Ce. PHONE IS XENIA, O. Mi. 1—108 * . Main St, No. a—N, Detreit M. Nm Belibroek Read

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