y-.-wtynl k- 'i fH' -n THE NEWS-HERALD, HILLSBORO, OHIO, THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1914 ,,Tr,- "t f Y THE QUALITY VpfoCUVTl SHOW HOUSE A Theatre With Real Ventilation ALWAYS COOL, CLEAN AND SANITARY BIG FIVE REEL PROGRAM To-Night Thursday Decoration Day COMINGMT WEEK, REMEMBER Just One Day Only REMEMBER Don't Miss This One or you will always regret it. AdmissionJOnly 5 and 10 cents. RAINSBORO. May 25, 1914. Misses Grace Redkey and Amy Cly bourne spent Sunday with Mrs. Lor a Copeland near Millwood. II. S. Foriker Jwas the guest of friends near Washington C. H. part of last week. narold Roads left;thelast of the week for Greenfield, where Jhe will work In the Pad factoryjjdurlng the summer months. Mrs. Kate Redkey, of Faint, is spending a few days.amongjher child ren here. Rev. W. E. Shriver attended the funeral of a relatlvejat Greenfield last Friday. Ora Garman and wife beganj'house keeping last week on the IfarmJJnorth of town. Granville Moore, of Michigan, was the guest of his daughter, Mrs. Frank VYeddell, part of last week. C. E. nolllday spent Saturday and Sunday with his brothers Dat Man chester. Ilenry Copeland and family spent Sunday with friends at Washington O. H. Miss Ilelen Hodge Is the guest of her uncle at Jeffersonville this; week. Dr. O. C. Hook, of Buena Vista, was called here Sunday on professional business. George Free and wife and son, Rob, and John Roads and wife attended the Ross County Sunday School Con vention at Chlllicothe last Wednes day. J. A. Head and family, of Ilillsboro, and Miss Jessie Barrett were guests of J. B. Davis and wife Saturday evening. Miss Nell Garman is sick with ty phoid fever. Miss Margaret Ballentlne enter talned the Sunbeams at her country home last Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Chatterton, of Williamsburg, Is visiting her daughter, Mrs. W. E. Shriver. The members of the W. C. T. U. will be the guests of the union In Bainbrldge Friday afternoon of next week, June 5. John Watts, Geo. Free and W. T. Hodge appraised the property of the late Ellsha Beaver last Thursday. Howard Hodge and wife have gone to housekeeping on the farm of Homer Garrett. Quite a number of persons from this place attended the Paint township S. a. Convention at New Petersburg on Sunday afternoon. - TWO SPECIAL FEATURES Maurice Costello and Mary Charlesan in "Iron and Steel" i Rosctta Brfre and John Ince in "The House of Fear" "Snake ville Fire Brigade" A Real Old Time Comedy. "ART FOR A HEART" Lillian Walker and Wallie Van in a new Comedy Creation "A CRUEL REVENGE" A Two Part Feature that is different "The Coming of Sophie's Mamma" Just a Scream from Start to Finish TUESDAY, JUNE 2. Thomas Bailey Aldrich's Great Masterpiece in Four Parts "Judith oi Beihulia" Proclaimed by many as the most Wonderful Film ever made. Made and staged in Amer ica by the greatest living Motion Picture Director David Griffith. An All Star Biograph Cast Including Blanche Sweet, Henry Walthall, Mae Marsh and Robert Harron. 500 Performers-300 Horsemen N. B. Upp was a business visitor at Chlllicothe last Thursday. The Board of Education of Paint township have abolished six districts In the township viz : Nos. 1, 3, 9, 10, 12, 16 and the pupils will be taken to either New Petersburg, Dallas or Ralnsboro according to their locality. This is a big step toward centraliza tion and the board is to be commend ed for its action. Mrs. Susan Fletcher died at her home near Rocky Fork Caves on. last Thursday morning after a long Illness. Funeral services were held from the home at 1 p. m. on Sunday, conducted by Rev. Shriver and the body was then taken to Bainbrldge for inter ment. FOLSOM. May 25, 1914. Rev. and Mrs. N. S. Hoggott and two children, of Chaney's College, vis ited at the home of A. J. Fling, Thurs and Friday. Mrs. Etta Hott and two sons, of Hlllsboro, visited home folks here Thursday. Rev. L. Davis, of Belfast, occupied the pulpit here Sunday. Chas. Cox, wife and children, of Buckrun, and J. L. Walker and wife. of Cedar Crest, were guests of I. W. beets and family, of Bunker Hill. last Sunday. N E. Denham and wife were enter tained at the home of J. M. Grlllltb, of Harrlsburg, Sunday. Misses Grace Hopkins and Bessie Wright and Mary Collins!! were quests of Leone Hopkins Sunday. Homer and Matt. Collins, of Hllls boro, vl9lted relatives here Saturday and Sunday. J, D. Post, of Hlllsboro. visited his daughter, Mrs. W. F. McCoy, Sunday. Dorsy Collins and daughter, and Neal Collins, of Hlllsboro, have been vi9ltlng her grandmother, last week. Insurance Notice. To the members of the Central Mutual Fire Insurance Association. The annual meeting of the members of the Central Mutual Fire Insurance Association of Hlllsboro will be held at the office of the Association in the Richards Building, SouthJHIgh street, Hlllsboro, atl o'clock, p. m., on Thurs day, June 4, 1914. Themeotlngls for the election of officers and for such other business as may properly come before the Asso ciation. U 0. MuuLmon, Prea. Otto F. Hobst, Sec Hlllsboro, O., May 27, 1914. adv LITTLE THINGS IN BUSINESS In Many Ways They Have an Impor tance That at First Seems Out of Proportion. A seemingly insignificant word is' "Detail," but have you ever Btoppcd to consider that success is dependent on It in a largo measure or that failure may be the oulcomb, If you neglect the most trivial detail? Competition today is so keen that the alert and energetic business man will make it a point to see that the smallest and seemingly unimportant part of his business has tho same care and attention as the most im portant parts, for It is the looking after these little things that assists In materially Increasing your business and putting It on a higher piano. We are prone to attach little sig nificance to letter writing, and Btlll have you ever roallzed. that your let ter Is a true Index to your business methods, and that carefulness In writ ing Is essontlal, for the impression it conveys Is very Important? The receiving of complaints and the adjusting of them Is another es pecial detail. Haw many future sales are assured by proper adjustment of somo wrong, whether real or fancied, and, too, consider tho good Impression you have helped to promote. If we were to attempt to enumerate all tho trifles there still would be some missing when we got through, for tho little things that need your attention are so varied and happen ing so unexpectedly they necessitate constant watching. CLUNG TO HER MORTAL LIFE Little Thing Like Having Head Cut Off Apparently Did Not Worry California Hen. A headless hen that for 12 hours after she was decapitated, walked around the corral like any other chicken, has been worrying Ephralm Tucker, a local stationery merchant, residing at 408 Eureka Btreet, accord ing to a Hedlands (Cal.) dispatch to the New York Herald. The hen had been suffering several days from what Is known as the gapes. She became so sickly that often a conference with his wife Tucker decided to cut the hen's head off and end her misery. When he performed the operation the wound did not bleed. Instead ol fluttering to tho ground tho hen walked off a few feet and stood still. Tucker was puzzled. When he returned at 11 o'clock he went back to the corral with a lan tern. The hen was still standing, and in addition had laid an egg. Next morning the merchant went to the chicken yard once more. The head less hen had moved 20 feet, but was apparently as full of life as any ol the other chickens. Tucker could stand It no longer. He seized the hen and with tho hatchet cut off what was left of Its neck. This time tho hen fluttered and died. A Century Ago. Mortlmor M. Jackson, a distin guished Jurist, was born 100 years ago, March 6, in Rensselaervtlle, N. Y. At the age of twenty-four he moved to Milwaukee, where he engaged In the practice of law. He was a member of tho Territorial convention of 1840, and helped to organize tho Whig party In the territory and to oppose the exten sion of slavery. He was attorney gen eral of the territory for five years and one of the first circuit court Judges of the state of Wisconsin. In 1857 he was the defeated Republican candi date for United States senator. In 1861 President Lincoln appointed him United States Consul at Halifax, where during the Civil war he ren-' dcrcd the country valuable service. In 1882, after more than 20 years in the consular service, Mr. Jackson returned to his home in Madison, Wis., where he died in 1889. Measuring Man's Worth. Dr. Katharine M. H. Blackford told tho Efficiency society at ltB annual meeting some of the ways of meas uring man's worth almost as accur ately as though his moral and mental qualities could be placed upon the scales. All that the man doing the measuring has to do 1b to keep tab on something like 64 characteristics and qualifications. "One must be very careful not to make mistakes," Doc tor Blackford admitted. "There was a foreman, once who expressed dissat isfaction with the methods. Ho showed his tables. Tho group of workmen under him measured up: Cheerfulness, 100 per cent.; accuracy, orderliness, 100 per cent 'Then,' asked his employer, 'what's the mat ter?' Aw, said the foreman, 'they're so darned gloomy.'" a8trathcona's Big Banquet. It was the late Lord Btrathcona, chancellor of the University of Aber deen,, who was the presiding genius of the quartercentenary celebrations In 1906. He gave the gargantuan banquet to about three thousand grad uates and undergraduates. He built a hall specially for the dinner, and brought all the materials, together with 700 waiters to serve them, from London, in three special trains. The organization was perfect, and the colossal arrangements moved without confusion or hitch. Preserving a Memento. "Bo this Is tho house where den. George -Washington made his Jiead quarters 1" said the stranger M ha gazed at the Inscription, "No, boss," replied Mr. Brutes Pish, ly. "Train' ezackly da place. Dtfaoaa w&ero da sign used to be was down, so we had to av it" Kerns' Big Busy Store IS READY TO SUPPLY YOUR SUMMER NEEDS Get Under the Sheltering Shade in one of Kerns' Parasols. Fan Yourself With One of Kerns' Artistic Fans. Beautiful New Summer Dress Goods in all theNew Materials Beautiful Cool Thin HosierySilk and Silk Lisle :25c, SOc, $1.00 $1.50 and $2.00 Pair It Is Time to Put On Your Cool Summer Underwear. Our Stock is now Complete. We Have the Mentor Underwear. There is Always Something Doing at This Big. Busy Store Thursday and Friday May 28th and 29th Our Expert Corset Fitter From the Gossard Factory Will Be Here. Come in and Have a Corset Fitted to Your Particular figure. Your Dresses Will Not Look Right Unless Your Corset is Right. Most Good Dressers Wear Kerns' Corsets PRICES $2.00 TO $20 THE Everything on the Ground Floor CM. KERNS South High FORT HILL. May 25, 1914. Mrs. Jane Stults was a visitor in the vicinity of Olive Branch Satur day. Mr. and Mrs. J. Stults entertained Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Bert Noble and son, of Marshall, Mr. Stineburg, of Chlllicothe, and Mrs. Mary McCall and son, Davld.of Carmel. Fred Bhoads spent Saturday with his brother, Oscar, of Cedar Point. Melva Hockman called on Edltha Holten Thursday, Eva Bhoads spent Sunday with Jane and Grace Havens. John Kissllng visited relatives in Sinking Spring Sunday. Mrs. Eliza Beed, aged about 65, died at the homo of her son, George, this morning, after an illness of several months. H. V. Matthews and wife, Benson Butler and Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Stults motored to Greenfield Wednesday and took dinner with D. C. Matthews and wife. Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Bhoads were tho guests of Mrs. Jane Stults Sun day. Mrs. Dr. Chapman, of Sinking Spring, spent Thursday and Friday with her sister, Mrs. H. V. Matthews. J J. Butler and family, of Elmvllle, spent Sunday wlthH. M. Eubanks and family. Mrs. Rebecca Stults spent a few days last week with her sister, Mrs. Jane Stults. P. B. Cartwrlght and wife and Har vey Kissllng and wife, of Sinking Spring, spent Sunday with Austin Eubanks and -family. Eli Moore and wife, of '.Sinking Spring, spent Monday with J. L. Beed and wife. Faith Sams, of Carmel, spent Tues day night with Eva Eubanks. Walter Dunlap, of Greenfield, was the guest of H. V. Matthews Satur day night and Sunday. J. L. Butler and wife spent Thurs day night with their daughter, Mrs. Lawrence Kessler. Mrs. D. O. Matthews and mother, of Greenfield, are spending a few days with, the former's son, H. y. Mat thews and wife. Germany has 60 towns where women are employed as policewomen. 'And what do you know about Moses?" "Please, teacher, it's my first Sunday here and I don't know anybody, " Punch. COOLEST STORE IN TOWN Street. Ffacecrw m soap VrOfW&lONMIIORUOCfr We hand you something new in the soap-maker's art Christie MacDonald, the famous actress, says: "Your Nyal's Face Cream Soap is Perfect. It is one of the few soaps which lean use and think yours the equal of any of the im ported $2 and$3 cakes which I have tried. ' Yes it's all too true. Nyal's Face Cream Soap is vastly superior to all other soaps, .It cleanses and purines the skin, keeping it clear, rosy, velvety and elastic. It is fragrant and subtly sweet. No it will not smart the most tender skin". Really it's the pride of particular people why don't you use it? Of course, you value a beautiful, healthy skin, then use. Nyal's Face Cream Soap. It is the acme of the soap-maker's art because it giyes a soft bubbly lather and is fragrant as the flowers. It costs twenty-five cents the cake and well worth it. Nyal's Face Cream Soap will improve your complexion. Come to our store get a cake today, This is the one soap you've been looking for. Use Nyal's Face Cream Soap Eor one week" only, one cake of the above soap and one can of Nyals 25c Talcum 35c. MILLER, The Druggist North High Street, Hlllsboro. Ohio Hillsbooo, Ohio y- . J fl 4t " 11 ; i 0! iffl I m itt I -1 -"?-