The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52
T h e C e d a r v ille H e r a ld . W, H. BLAIR, Publisher. I CEDARVIT.LE, : : : (OHIO. GROWTH OF INDIGO. DANGER IN KISSING. * A Hsblt That Should Be Practiced With Care If at All. When viewed from at least one stand point it is easy to see that kissing, as generally practiced, is not without dangor, and that it would bo infinitely better were it much less common. If all persons kept their teeth clean, - -breaths pure and mouths healthy, there' would not fyt so much room,, for criti cism, but it Is a lamentable fact tbat these requirements arc oftoner disre garded than observed, and oven by peo ple who make protensions to refine-, roent Again, there are many victims to com* plaints whioh render them poor suh- . jocts for the kissing habit, and yet thoy can be scarcely blamed for tholr defects. Digestive disturbances render their ■ breath impure, and not infrequently ulcers form in the mouth as an indirect consequence. As for'those who noglect their teeth, and to whom the tooth brush is a com parative stranger, to kiss .them would he a hardship, to say nothing of the danger. Dr. Johnson, in a medical contemporary, aptly says of this class . of people, to rinse '.the mouth -and brush the teeth is not to ttfom a necessity, but there are proba bly many who,, daring their whole live, have never used a tooth brush. In such - cases the particles of food find lodgment botween^the teeth after eaoh meal, and there remain to endanger, as ttaoy do, by decomposition and putre faction. not only the comfort but the health of the individual. The result . of the decomposition and putrefaction of hi ts of food betwoen the teeth iB the production of a very poisonous acid, known to chemists as septlo acid. When this acid is mixed with the saliva It be comes highly poisonous, and if an indi vidual whose saliva is thus loaded with septic acid wore to bite a person the one bitten would become seriously poisoned and the wound made by the bito would become exceedingly sore, painful and vory difficult to heal. It is hardly necessary to say that the mouth of a person in this condition is not kiss- able. it must bo borne in mind tbat many o f. the most common diseases from’ whiofi mon suffer are the products of germs; also that theso germs in many instances are taken into the system and given .off through the mouth. Wero a person in the early stages . of dlpththorla, and bofore he is aware that bo is a victim of the complaint, toklaa another, ho would ins , quite apt to transmit the disease. And so it is with no small number of other maladies. This subject is one which deserves hotter than the flippant treatment which is generally applied to it, and certainly kissing ought to bo infinitely less com mon than it.is now. It is all very well for members of tho same family, con versant with the habits of eaoh other, to practice it, but when it comes, to moro acquaintances kissing evory time they meet, from a physician’s stand point, the custom is huzardous as well us absurd, in this matter the English people stand out in singular" contrast with Americans, for they limit thoir kissing to relatives and near and dear friends, and do not degrado it by mak- j ing It an empty form of salutation. As for kissing children, to stoutly ra- sist such overtures should be n.rong tholr earliest .teachings. They aro far more sens!tivo to its dangers than adnltsrTHid-for—mow acquaintances, strangers to kiss thorn should bo bold as great an offense as kissing the mothora—Boston Herald. Mckle a* * I'retty <>!rL A locomotive engineer has a keen af fection for his "iron Bteod." Isn’ t that what it is called? But if one may be- llcvo an engineer on oho of the groat railroads of this country, locomotives are extremely fickle, lie declares that his engine will take a train over .. steep grade with a rush on one day, while perhaps on the very next day, with tho samo train and the same grade, the artful coquette, will pretend to he shy, will draw back in feigned timidity, fonco, flirt and fin e ly do what it is asked to do with a pout, " I t ’s hard ,".he says, “ to realize that your engine isn’t alive. She acts like a horse. She trill shy and balk at a grado when she feels like it, and, again, will tako the. bit in her teoth and jerk the load clean over tho hilL You can’ t .help calling such an engine ’her.’ Sometimes I feel like speaking to her when she is sulking. Maybo I do with* out realizing i t ."—N. Y , Tribune. She Price of Politeness. A tall young woman in a mackintosh stumbled at the corner of Smlthfleld street and Fifth avenuo last night when , it was raining in terronts, and a pack age she earned flow away from her and landed on the pavement A gallant « young physician of Allegheny stooped to pick up the package. So did the young woman and her umbrella neatly lifted off the physician’s hut and de posited it in the gutter. The doctor’s nose also came into collision with the point of the umbrella, and he praised Heaton that be escaped oph thalmotomy Of the left eye with a hair breadth. But he picked up the package, presented it with a bow, and still had timo to rescue his hat from entire destruction beneath a cable oar.-"Pittsburgh Dispatch. On* of the Most.Profitable Industries •* Central and South America. The portion of the Nicaragua which stretches to the northeast from the shores of Bake Managua la known as one of the best indigo-^rowfcng distrlotf, o f the world. The cllrpato is cooler than that of the plain o f Leon, and con tinues growing so as one gradually as- conds the grade until he finds himself on the plateau of Segovia, whore the days are always pleasant and the nights cold enough for-flres.! But a few leagues from Loon, on ovary side of tho trail and as Jar as the eye can roach, a rich green undergrowth covers every cleared spue#, whioh much resembles the tender sprouts 6f the locust treo, and is wfiat the natives call “jiquilite," or the indigo plant In planting It tho richest Boil is care fully cleared and burned over, trenches are dug two or throe inches deep and about a foot apart into whioh tho soed is thrown-_and lightly covered with earth.- Tho planting is done in May, at the close of the dry season, and the shrub is ready to be cut la August The young bushes ha’ve to bo Care fully weeded to prevent any .other plants from springing up and mixing with them, which would injure the qual ity of the indigo. About the middle of August the leaves present a rough sur face and appear as if covered with a green sand, when the stalk is out off by the gatherers a few inches above the ground, leaving a few sprouts remaining, which produce a second crop that is gathered about two months later. The first •year’s rosult is .usually small, that of the second year muoh greater and the third year’s immense, after which tho crop diminishes again until the seventh year, when the fields have again to be cleared.and planted. The out plants are tied in bundles,, like wheat ip tbo United States; and carried to the fermontation vat, wb»ro enough water is allowed to run in to covor it; then the swelling mass is weighted down to steep and ferment Tho only skill required In tho manu facture is to he able to check the fer mentation at the proper moment and natives competent to do so reooivo vory good pay. f When the solu tion of indigo has a peculiar groon color it is drawn off into another vat, where it is incossaritly agitated and beaten by revolving fans until it changes from its original green qolor to a .dark blue, and tho coloring matter commences to precipitate. Tho water is then drawn off, leaving a granulated, soft blue, clay, which is drained in bags, thon dried in tho sun. Carefully selected as to quality and packed for export in packages of one hundred and fifty pounds ouph, or “ccroona. ” • Forty or fifty years ago Nicaragua produced from nine thousand to ten thousand “coroons" of indigo per an num, but now it may bo doubted if tho total annual product exceeds two thou sand. Most of the' fine “ haciendas" of tho high country aro now commencing to graze cattle, and, though many still re main whoro labor is cheap, the indigo farms aro gradually disappearing, and cattle, coffoo and cacao fields aro taking tholr place.—Holden Days. s t e a n T“ IN PALESTINE . American Locomotive* rutting TrainsFrom •InlTnto Jerusalem. ' The Now World ministers to the needs of tbo most ancient parts of tho Old. Think of a railway in tho Holy Land! And meditate on tho fact that tho locomotives of that railway wore made in a country which was never beard of tintit Palestine was hoary with the snows of centurios! Henry Hillman,’ United States Consul at Jerusalem, reports to tho Department if State, under date of September 22, THE GRAND CANYON . The Most Wonderlal of Colorado's Maey Wonderful Eight*. Th e 'G rea t -Granite Gorge Ig, about forty unllea in length / Th a t portion from its hepd'to the Bright Angel creek, some fifteen miles, la narrow,, dayk and gloomy. It stands at the. upper gate way of tho groat canyon us if bjr its very frown to keep back the intruder and guard from vulgar eyes and sordid greed the grandeur, the beauty and hidden treasure of tho lowor canyon. A t tbp Bright Angel creek everything changes — the granite slopos aro flatter, they aro of a softer black granite, out into sharp pinnacles and crags, and ^eem more as if formed of very coarsely stratified slate. The canyon grows more apd moro picturesque and beautiful the' farther we proceed. The granite has lost its awful and threatening look and slopes back in boautiful hillBldosof variegated black, gray and green. At the Hide canyons and from tho bends of tho river tho upper portions of the whole gorge aro brought into view, showing the great marble and sundstono cliffs, benohed back far away from the river, while .mountains jut in close be tween the side canyons and washes noarly a mile and a, quarter in hoight. As we lbok down the river, or up a low side canyon, with the placid water between its polished walls of black', and gray, and groon, for a foreground, there rise above the dark sandstone, tier upon tier, bench upon bench, terrace upon terrace, stepping baok farther and far ther, and higher and higher, and in im mensity of height and proportion seem ing to tower almost over our heads: First above the darlc sandstone come tho flattened slopes of tbo lime and min eralized matter, -in horizontal layers of yellow, brown, white, red and green. ■Then rise sboer walls of stained mar ble one thousand feet or more, the lower portions yellow, brown' and red, the coloring of red growing brighter as it nears the top. Above this smaller benches of marble, at the top of each a l.ttle mesa covered with green bunch grass and bushes, and above these a dozen or more terraces of scarlet and ilarao-colorod sandstone, stained on their outer points with black, and the littlo honchos botween them rolioved by tho bright groon of *tho grensewood and bunch grass, tho wholo crowned with perhaps a couple of thousand feet of the lighter gray, yellow and white sand stone lodges, capped by pinnacles and spires, turrets and ’ domes, in every imaginable shape, size and proportion. —Scribner’s Magazine. In Philadelphia now railway* fr ,t , and intended for tbo ora Jerusalem to Jaffa, had arrived at Jaffa. The Consul adds, and the addition does credit to his judgement, tbat it must interest Americancitizons that tho first locomotives over used in this anciont land wero made in the United States. Jaffa, or Yafa, as the natives call It, is tho Joppa of tho New Testament times Located on the Mediterranean sea, thirty-five miles northwest of Jerusa lem, it is tho seaport of the City of David. The population of tho place Is about 10,090, of which half are Christians, *,GO0 Moslems and about 500 foreigners and Jews. Jaffa -Is surroundod by orchards, and the finest oranges of Syria aro grown in the vicinity, Regular lines of Austrian, French and Russian steamers ply botween Jaffa and European ports; and English and Egyptian steamers and many sailing 7 esaols make frequent stops there. The exports are grain, oil, soap, raisins, cotton, wool, oranges and lemons; and the imports are manufact ured goods of all kinds, rice, coffee, tea and sugar. The introduction of a railway Iron the coast to the City of David will stlm ulate commerce and encourage tourists to make a journey which has been hitherto one of no little difficulty. All aboard for Jericho!. Take the train on the ifeft for Jeru salem!—Pittsburgh Chroniele. —A traveler frho had vory Urge feet asked a waiter to bring him a bootjack. "What for?” “ To take off my boots." "Why, Mr, you’ll b-vo to go to tho forks ti the road to got them oft" NOVEL DAMAGE SUIT. A Hase-lltill Crank Wants 1'eeunlary Salve F«r it broken Nose, Tho suit of a base-ball spectator for damages to his noso incurred whilo in the discharge of a duty— that is to say, white in'attendance at a gamo at Wash ington—raises a novel question of lia bility not without personal interest for all who feel called upon to subject thomsplvos to the perils of tho National game. As tho first case of the kind on record i t will naturally havo much sig nificance in aJegat way.__What dofonso tho party defendant, to-wit, tfio Wash ingtondub, may have to offer has not boon divulged. Presumably it Will make contention oither that tho foul tip was the act of Providence, or .that the defendant was guilty of contrib utory negligence In boing presont at a gamo of ball; and tho moro so that bis features were entirely uncovered to the vicissitudes of tbo conto3t, whon they might, at Blight oxpenso, havo boon protected by a mask. It is difficult to surmise how oither contention could materially avail to better tho defendant’s cause. An at tempt to impart a providential charac ter to tho National game, in any moas* thattlireo American iocomotlves~ma'dc~4~Tin»rwoiil<l-more-tban--t»x4he-lngeniiit,y__tmaklng preparations^ to play a flute of tho Philadelphia lawyer; while it would bo as absurd to expect that tho frequenter of bail grounds should wear a mask as to as.c that a member of Con* gross, who resorts to a morning session PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL. —The crown which the negus 0* Abyssinia ordered to be made at Milan is nearly completed^ <wsft..baii already been paid for. It is 6# the purest gold, contains ISO precious, stenea, and weighs three pounds. . — A correspondent of the London Spectator claims that by S' mere eng*, gestlon of ago he can make a hypnotized youth suddenly look old, to the extent of his face muscles “falling in,” And the "hue of ago" overspreading It. ---A French attorney was writing out a brief. Ho was in splendid health, only forty years old, and was writing rapidly, when all at once he stopped, and from that moment coiild not toll his own name. Memory went out from him. like a flash of lightning. — Ellen Terry is said to have “ achieved her first stage’distinction by screaming.” In a’ play bearing tho out landish title of “ Alter Heel," she had to take a snake- around her nock and scream, and so realistic was her simu lated horror at the' situation that tho scream electrified the house. r--Tho Better Man.—An American thief who got safely to Buenos Ayres with his boodle, askod a messenger one day to dot an errand for him, and the half-clad,’ half-starved native, who nov- er had ten dollars in his life, drew him self up and replied! “ Not fbr you, sir! You aro a runaway thief, white I am an honest man.”—Detroit Free Press. ■ —A German nobleman recently ad dressed bis workmen on tho occasion of a harvest festival, and announced that ho would reward two of them who had- worked for him for forty years with a present which- would stimulate all of them to do their -best in the future. And thon ho handed each of tbo lucky toilers, a sum of money equivalent to $3.00 of American money. ---Doctors-the world over treat doctors for nothing. A surgeon in Dover, how5" ever, charged a doctor £21 -for attend ance and the latter refused to pm.y and went to court Tho plaintiff pleaded that, though physicians treat their col-, loagues free when -in act.'vo practice, re tired medical men, like the defendant, hayo to pay like other people, and the judge, accepted that view. —By the death of a relative in Munich,- Anna Holt, a young Bavarian, is heiress to a fortune of 8100,000. Five years ago she was a chambermaid in the Falmer House, Chicago. She catno to this country in 1884, at the request of a former lover, whom she had known- in Munich. Ho failed to meet her in New. York, as promised, and Anna bqd to goto work to maintain herself.. Now a fortune awaits her, but the lawyers have so far boon unable to find her. —The late Sir Richard Burton, British' Consul at Trieste, tho distinguished ex plorer,, was a remarkable man. While in the army in India ho developed his skill in linguistics so far that he could spoak . twonty-nipo languages and dia lects. Saying nothing of his discovery of Lake Tanganyika, in Central Afrioa, he made, in 1853, the. first authentic visit of a Christian to.the holy olttos of Mecca and Medina. A s,a Government official, Burton was cantankerous and egotistical. ’ " ~ Tho Value .blooming l> MS > h the e (MMtylMss. jjMa renedyforeatarriii* »n.sad peoplerecognise nee method ot treating stlohs can do bat little tlonsl In character sod utiona! remedy. llood's good.Cstarrh thereforerequires;. Sarsaparillaattack* the daease at |ta foundation ■•A LITTLE NONSENSE."' —I t is estimated that in putting on a stiff collar a man will walk about a half mite, were it in a straight line.—Texas. Siftings. — In tho Wrong Business.'—Tho man who does not get enthusiastic .over his own work sometimes is in the wrong business.'—Item's- Horn. — “ In this littlo casket I have pre served all theso years- tho dearest re membrance of my honeymoon. It is tho hotel b ill”— Fiiogendo rffattcr, — Inducing a Pucker.—Mr. Tootum dolo)— "Pete, hanT~rnoTdaE sack'd1green persimmons. I‘s nox’ on do pro gramme.”— Harper's Bazar. — The Proposal Declined.— And what Is your business rny pretty maid? for instance, should similarly defend-! J,1111n W!l 8’!rl**,r*Bh0 .ohOn ofan A „„ fcbl r ’ Ta* OHP BUll lift tender wait, till his countenance white standing outside a door on the other side of which there might chance to bo a stalwart-heartei* Texan bent on escaping the servitude of a quorum count. One of the many' morals pointed by the present suit, regardless of its legal outcome, is that tho base-ball should be. made less of a projectile than at present, and gtvon an elastic or semi* clastic quality—like the cartilage ol the nose, lor oxamplo—so that, white still retaining tho contuslve power es sential for the dislocation of tho play ers* thumbs, it might impinge wi.h a lower average of fatality on the com* paratively harmless spectator. In the absence o f some such device to retake the ball innocuous the tendency of ball- goers will be more and more to avoid the peril o f the SO-cont seats and resort to tho moro primitive but safer and thriftier knot-holo. to the grave detri ment of tho club exchequers.—Philadel phia Record. Love at First Sight Briggs—Havo you heard the latest! Robinson has eloped with a chamber* maid. Griggs—Heavens! What made him do that? V Briggs—I understand she brought him an extra towol when he asked for It,— The Jury. —Modest—Critic— " I do not think -that ‘America’s greatest writer’ hasyot appeared,” Author— “ I confess I haven’ t received much recognition.” -** Munsey’s Weekly, . miss, lie si Id, Thanking you kindly, no sir, sho said. — Boston Herald. —No Cause For Alarm.—Mr.* Dash (anxiously)— “ I am afraid ymir father will catch up with us!” Mfss Flyaway—> “ Catch" up with us? Why, ho went ahead to have tho minister ready!”— Puck, — “My husband and I agreed years ago nevor to quarrel before our chil dren. Whon oither of iis fools incorised wo send tho children out." ' -“ Yes, I Bee they are in tho street the most of the time.”— Boston Journal. — Young Author.— “ You havo no idea bow fluently I write when 1 am describ ing some object I like—something I fairly dote on ," Mias Flip— “What’s t ie matter with writing your biog raphy?’’—Texas Siftings, — At 11:30 p. m,—Mr. Stayer— "B y tho way, havo you heard Sig. Tonoria’s new song?" She (very much bored)— “No; how does it go? hut, then (with the courage of dpspalr) I don’ t suppose there’s sense in asking you how any thing goes . " —Jury. —Caught.— ‘ {Tell mo, dearest Emma, will yon bo mine?" “ W ill you always lot. mo have my own way?" “Always, dea rest" “ And ray mother may live with us?" “ W illingly ," “ And not ask fo? a latch-key?" “ I would rather throw It in tho sea.” “ And give up yonr club, and always be at home to dinner?" “Always, and on the min u te." “Then you must oxcuse mo, but you are not at all the sort of man X should wish for a husband. " —FJlegenda Blatter. *jr*u»in»tiDg teetwuqa** m the blood whies sank* end f>od It, ana by restoring the effected •Ogmbrane to healthy condition. A book contain. lag full informationwiu m tent free to oil «b» wishIt. N.B. Besnretocetmlr Hood’s Sarsaparilla Boldbyall druggist*. II; six forIS. 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Boo, (disease at Us rouadatt prUtee In the blood whi by restoring the affect jouditlon, Abookoonta u be sent free to a ll» aly od’s i <3 i ■f t t t <J h t. 1 ft t tv at f< P ’ tl tl oi ol hi H w 1 ; six forKh Preparedo .potheoaries, LoweavMi - . < '.C®..- i One Dollar BAND! & ‘i w 81 , M g' at S< in sh ki bi th . ri, dl or tb qi; .■ it.- fo ■ m;- th so Y, m« m to of fo: I pr da P. p •sb fa of op on 111 hi • t<** Comfi HMlibPretend garment : GreatWOTECTID BOWELS and KEYS. N ooin affordto gonil i (ncold weatftei UST, andOHEDDLI .bout OXTR.FLA.NJ i-PBOOF LEATB « , VS and 9 8 P I JACKET CIRCUL >ol Houee iu your t ■ A G s ft FLAG CIRCULAR ANIONS& GO. - BO STON . MJ ’ BOYS’ CLOTHING mryMae*)Mwnto* LOTHRl MINES IV’OULDFOBYOUNGPE . | A U ILLUSTIti 1 S T . irsoaslte. By Pansy. II ;MENandWON dsto the wondersaboutt 1 .00 a year. _ _ _ _ _ . U | | HOSTHL M i l ILLTJSTKA J u l f a sac. » yes Nursery.Theltotbsr's Ite C.DEK YOUWO PE ,L THE FAM ILY . 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