The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52
with them m their flte8u tb»w in. their lomeetie aY, la tobreatl ijiaflp by the * at h a d d is t a b a ^ t /w e f o ; c^ thoro the tu fa *s in states. MarHa^had noth • cradl°S abandqeod, n0r s 'biended by th*. State. ir I c , too, with tfo} earnesto ligeneo q | the wijmoji. U k , Mon was moj-e'a^nt. iaws ions principles orkovommaw uoal p o lit ic thnn a b o u n r tonalities, and thei; neighba idea that women Sindnot t endurance to Vote tea hold, >y said they never Otaicd thrt day so easily m s i t ^ in c0" chairs listening td cases 5 ) J lt " ’as less of an e % t toT * /atch aloaf .of bread throueh in phases until it omerged 'froa in perfection, . ; « 1 have manifested grcit pttbliJ al a conscientious interest S i .epartmentr ' of Govn-nmontl x in that of education.' At the * ms, W yoming was rotWnoi « » smaller per cont. o f illitftbcvl other State or Territory infei] 'Again, she has no public 4 b t ’ so; 10 , tsoo, after every obi mu-* beon paid, .there was in ,8f: $280,000; due, no doiibt in st nef . to woman's economy in jqj, Qy 1 :ponditimes. Ahdyot her e ['i£j and charitable ifistitoiiiots W mined, Ow, Wyoming has boon adult.: the, sisterhood of States witl \i uffrago provision in her conatt'S She has boon duly warned tl it \ viso would probably block ])6t-f Tor admission, but her wisigif is said; “We will take the pofl m, who have endured with-a.- iship of - pioneer life, ,in"to t « - itb us, or \vo will remain aT<rw tH there aro manly men enouj h ■ ress to admit us tbgothei” ely there was a sufficient -hute ■e already to .pass' the bill ftor much opposition and prof lebate, in which, the old' platfi ,t have been answered- a hun-l is were made to do duty oncel' he frivolous objections we hear * sides of the' Atlantic in Eng- ’ d. America alike, are an*, >f gentlemen who have had itage of collegiate education^ n science, philosophy, history °* It is fair to suppose that , isent the best arguments they,®! bonce we inust attribute their " not to any lack bf native but to the paucity of the. ma- hand on that side of the ques- story of Wyoming should close >te on this subject, as wo now ndant facts of-long standing to 1 st all the absurd suppositions' l-harrowing prophecies of the. ie '■, * * ' *• * #. * last speech given at Harvard**] Wendell Phillips, o f prophetj?| d seer, in speaking of the des oman, said: “The first glimpse ,Saxon blood in history is that Tacitus which reads, 'In all ittors wo consult our women.* nco, when robust'Saxon aonfia away Jowish superstltjion and prejudice, and put under its ilious scholarship and squeam- •n, somo second Tacitus from r of the Mississippi will answer tho sovon bills, 'In all grave o consult our women.” ’ This made only nino years ago, Is nlflllcd. The statesmen of nave indeed echoed back from ver dome of our capltoi that ?rave matters we consult our \ yea, more* beyond,'the valley ississippi they have planted a where the matrlarchate, or go, shall bo realized once 'by inheritance wo would share conquests of our fathers, from ihg on Plymputb Back until igh rightful heirs of North •oni sea to sea, yet wo gladly 11 for that holy land, called redeemed from the great Desert, where at last women r.-ie FEMNINE - athlete . i; ' nvr;,-/;!r,!that summer's here, Glows* *watof rawing; mu t-snwKtstunninggame, ArJJiS-'ttlvsportfor showing Oiir'S 0 ';ifoe,*i6and gracctoluoss, jfte’s aim,rcat onwalking, ab S jra\’o.ysi:Ucs: “Tiremodem girl /V ftlilnu’histoad ot taiuing," ■ fttr’USire .'oupoints a.bpat basc-baO, fir your swiftest pitching; , gbe% ilrivpTOurvery fastest span, v.jimtiinpvt all knots for bitching. Ysn-'rehaltedfor heir nil your life, An;?(eelthis charming cfeaturo— '‘(tforg, smceful, loving, senslbio’’- - • rveysingle feature , ‘ jjatgoesto raaliQ that perfect thing— i-womta one rouia die for, . &Hypwprnil hisUnppy life, Withmthing left to sigh for, SSiashler opo sinall roomto swoop, “Suthwork’s so veryheating— B* 4 foricyhloqd,' I really can’t; jtBctinrvhourt to. beating^, --Apstto Anderson inMunsey’s Weokly. “ m u > ■A Vouching kittle Story o f. the ‘ Johnstown S'lood. . , ■ T^tho vast possessions that ours; but Palestine on tbit P looks smaller still, yet the rino of human ’equality was iore by Jiim whose life was sacrifice.. Through all tlp>sc that thought, wafted’by winds round' and round the globe, to living echo to its truth un* Vyormng answers back, and ora of people who have al'O e depths of solf-saerifice,bavo tuough great tribulations to e chorus, “Equal Eights to in race is^destined, I believe, dm new “gospel of Women's all the nations on the earth, England and America hate step by step, in this direc- I venture to predict that if now shining on the maittt* >f Wyoming, will.soon gild do dome of St, Paul’s, ■ling of the future will not bo saints weeping, around the of the dark past, bu t* happy seeking westward the, one ■ in ous* constellation, of Icing in a risen humanity, from poverty and Ignorance, >mthe hateful spifit of caste to live evermore under * tal government, a united in power and glory. AteMho toasts ot the dinner of the Ijjibftown correspondents' at tho 'Fel- l$wifaft. Club on .Saturday night, and ifha reminiscences were In.order, some Mjinoe remark brought out from flen- ti J). B1 Hastings, who,' havingj.boen libslisnefabtor of tho.newsp'aper men at F Jolnstoivn, had bocomo thoir guest ’ip [Jfp'Tork, a story of tho flood, which, ;tfciughit has waited a full year- for the. idling, has the.' freshness and delicacy 'jfj newly-plucked flower, and the al-; pew odor of heroism insoparable ;irim ’a tale of noble’ Stations, even I tbugh tile hero bo put a tramp.' This #be. waytho General told it: ■■■':.■ <Jtwas the ,night after the flood, and t^Wdarrived on the spot only, a short fj&i&betorc, after-driving -sixty miles hrarthemountains, You know what a jioirible thing”darkness was in .Tohns- i'ifrm anyhow, and that was the first flit,' and the worst. ,'A few of us wore standing on the, bank overlooking'the fainand the. stnpldering debris, at the ridge, saying nothing and trying not to [jink. Presently some one pvlled a tew lecespf wreck together and built a-firb. lecciuldsoo each other thon, and one ijf the toughest looking men l ever saw 'my life, and it took a pretty ragged fold dirty. anftTntsorablo man to attract 'Attentionfin Johnstown then, hunted irbnnd until he found a battered old cn, and itf it ho. made some coffee over [.fijBflro and handed it around to us, I Hid, when he handed me mine:. ,l ‘I suppose -you’ve lost overy thing?’ "Wo always made somo remark like |that to a stranger then; it seemed about tieonly natural thing to say. " ‘No,’ skid lie, ‘didn’t lose any thing.’ " ‘You belong hove?’ said I, “ ‘Nop,’ said hi?. ' “ ’Got frionds here?’ > •“ 'Nop.* “ ‘Lookhere,’ paid I, "who aro you, Aayhowi’’. i' ‘Well,’ he sort of muttered, ‘I’m what they call a tramp,’ “Thon he seumod to .brighten up and Hid: ‘“ I’ll-toll yo: I ain’t dono a stroke’o ^oyk in moro’ n fouryoar, but I justliap- penod to come along boro, An’ I toll you it just knocked me out I seen all those people with nothing loft an’ nobody to help ’em, an’ I just pitched in ’fore I knewit. I ain’t muoh good, but I done till could, an* I’m going to stay hoto howas long as I ldn,bo of any holp.’ “ 1sort of tqok an iimtostTto tho fol lowat that, and told hini who I was, and that it he’d come round to headquarters nei t day I’d givO him some work to do. He wa3 onband early next morning, and ho said he didn’t mind, what he did, so re tied a whito piece of cotton about his hst marked ‘Morgue’ on it in big let ters, and told him to go and help handle thedead. You know what awful work thatwas, but be looked like a gboul any how, and be didn’ t kick at the assign ment. -After aday or two Wonoticed that he was one of the best men bad. Ho ras-patient, industrious And kindly, and as faithful as a woman. Ho .never shirked a task, no matter bow hideous, as long as there we organized a regular ioice, i v.-ual-ju toput him on the pay roll, and I asked him: “What’ s your name?’’ . • ” ‘0h, just put me down* "Jim,*” he «*id; ’that’ ll do.’ “So as Jim ho wont down on tho roll, lad that wgs tho only name wo evor knewhim by. Wo kept him at work aboutheadquarters most of tho time, aadof forty-five of the forty-seven days I was ih Johnstown I bad no mOro Steady, hard working, faithful and honestman among all the thousand that Werethere. Hodid every thing he was setto do so patiently, Intelligently and uncomplainingly, that wo all. got to ihlnka good deal of him. He remained, « Appearance, a very tough-looking titizen, but as ho worked among the •Irkandsuffering and miserable, a good deal Of his toughness wore off. lie got *toto refined, somehow, although we didn't think much about it until after ward, “One day tho last of the men Were |*ld off, and bo drew tho first money he b#Ahad sluco ho began to Work. “What ate you going to do now, dim?” I asked him. , ‘ “ Well, I’ll tell you,’ he said. ‘Yftu wtowT ain’t*always been » tramp; 1 twd to have « nice home in Maseaohu- totofknda wife and children, bat five l**f»sgolhad some trouble with my wife and. I went away, and—well, I ain’t been good for nothing muou since. ’ . •/ • “ ’Now, Jim, look boro,1said I , ’what you want to do is to go right back to MassacUussette and see if your wife's alive, and look up your children and live lUte a roan again,' ■“ ‘General,’ bo said, ‘that’s just what I was cornin’ to. You see, I ain’t boon caring much what-became of mb since I got to trampin’ around, but seeing those people so miserable an' workin’, you know, an’ helpin' ’em.what I could, jts kind o’ changed me, somehow, an’ I want to see if I can’t ho .somebody my self. b'o I’ve got somo money now, an’ I’ll go back an’ hunt up my folks, an’;I, know I can got work, an’ may be I’ll got along all right again.’ . ‘ f 'Jim, you’re just right,’ Isald. 'how much money nayb.you gol?’ “ '‘bixty-eight dollars, General.’ - ; “ 'Now, T il tell you what you ‘ ao; ,we’re allgoing away in-a day or .two, you know, and you go down to tho* com missary department and toll ’ejp to give yon a sui.tof clothes,' and flx„yoursolf up some, and jv.hon I go homo I’ll take you with me, and you bah stay a day or two with me, and thon go on to Massachu-' setts.’ . ’ . ■ ,■■■*■ “Ho soorood very grateful. I asked him.: • , “ ‘What will, you do. when you get there?’ . . _ “ ‘Oh, I’ll go t work again;’ “ ‘Well, all right; now you gooff and got a new feuit, ar.d I’ll' take you homo with me .when I go,-’ I said, and Jim hur ried Off toward the commissary depart; ment; • •' / 1” “ Later^-in tho day he came back. You wouldn't haVo- known himi Of course the suit wasn’t much, but it was neat and; clean, and he’d got his hair cut and his heard Bliaved off, and he had on a boiled shirt and a necktie. Ho was a big, .stalwart follow', with a hand- so.me, waving mustache, and he looked really handsome. Hut there was some thing tho inattpr' with him, and in a minute I knew what had' spoiled Jim’s life. ' .. “ ‘Jim,’ I said, ‘you’ ve beendrinking.’ “ ‘Well, General,’ said he, .'you know I’m through work now, an' hadn’t tasted a drop-, ever since 1 been here, so I thought I’d just get a quart of whisky while I was down there, and—-and I guess I’ve drunk a pint or so of. it, but I ain't drunk,’ . ‘Now, see here, Jim,’ said I, ‘this isn’t right; you’ll.nevor get back to your wife and' .children if you. start in this way. Quit it right. -where you 'are, and don’ t spoil every thing just as you are ready to begin over again.’ ; “Ho sort of half promised and went on down, the road, but 1 noticed that ho.mot sotpe friends and that there was adenl of tilting of elbows. I watched him until he met another party of friends and saw tho olbows go up again; and 1 ’ the.n Jim wqiit on out of sight “ Somo timo afterward one of my aides came to tho tent, looking very queer, and said: . ‘ “ General, there's an. accidont hap pened to Jim, and I guess you’d better come? * “ I hurried off after him, and away' up the railroad track I came to a little group of men, and in tho midst of thorn poor Jim lying on the ground. He had got in the way of th o ’ freight train somehow, and both his logs were cut off above tho knee, We picked him upand carried him to the hospital. We did what wo could for him, but it wasn’ t much. Two or threo of us sat by* his bedsldo’ all night, and when day broke ho died. We picked opt the finest coffin wo had for Jim; wo dug his gravo in tho protticst spot thote was loft in tho com* otory, and ho had the biggest funeral that there had boon ih Johnstown at all. And tho day. we loft wo .took a board and set it up at t&o head of his grave, and all wo putonifc toas one word:*Jlm.’ ’' —Si Y/Sun. . TO AVOID DYSPEPSIA. Do Not Do Afraid to K»t a Light Lunch Before Going to Bed. * Most students and womon who are j troubled with' insomnia are dyspeptic, and they should, therefore, oat before going to bed, having put asido work en tirely at least an hour before. If tboy ! ,:: j .. *hr>v should simply be gry they should cat whatever ihoyv. an j . ; A glass'of milk and a biscuit is some-j times all that., can bo taken at first, oi mashed potato buttored. If possible, tho Might meal should betaken In an*! Other room than the sleeping apart* ment, and for men In tho city It will be found advantageous to go out to a res taurant, Before eating, however, * a bath should be taken, preferably cold oi cool, Which should bo given with a 'spobge ot’ stiff brush, and tho body thoroughly rubbed off . with a coarse towel afterward. The bath need not bo raoro than flva minutes in duration. Further than this, tho patlont should go to bodat the same hour every night and arise at the same hour every morning. There Is a popu lar superstition that grown people should not oat immediately before go ing to sleep; that it will give them in digestion ornightmare, or jboth. The writer, a correspondent of a medical journal, can not sea why adults should be so very different in this respoct from babies. The average person should be In bed seven or eight hours, which is time enough for tha digestion of almost ■any thing edible, In our American life, he thinks, the dlgeatlon carried on through sleep probably has the better ehance for thoroughness. — Chicago Herald, TEMPERANCE NOTES. AN HONEST CONFESSION. I am alcohol; have you beard p£mot I ’m a spirit of svil, bymenSot free. ' I come from the rotting of fruits und grains, From spoiling and wasting the farmer’s best gains. . , , The life in the food’Is turned Into death, And sciuis destroyed by my fiery breath. A poison broth doth tho brewer brow- From tho golden grain God gives us for bread, That poison ipn I ; the harm that I do You would never believe if the whole could be ' ’said, . J ■. Wlied-iulrc, I look like tho water clear, Were a glass of each hero, you’d not know us apart, , . * Merely seeing pfe so; but if you come near, .Myllory odor might cause you to start. Thcrwater gives life and refreshment to Wan', Three-foiirths of his life-Wood is water, you soo: . ’ ' , A co nst&nt supply be inuse have while he lives,' But never u drop of my poison needs ho 1 Sometimes I am callod the waterof death', . Shame-water, ■ fire-water, . and other 'such • names-, ' . But I ’ll show you’ that I’m not wafer at ail. For water won’ t burn, air,-while alcohol , fiumes ’ ■■ If ignited, and so, sir, that’s just what I do; I’m a poison that burns wberever I go; - -I burn on tho tongue with u venonutus smart, I scorch the poor stomach till ulcers there Start, ’ '■ ,t suolc the life-juices from rich flowing blood, As a brooklet is dried by a fiorco summer sun.1 My fire in the veins Is a terrible Ultrat. More maddenlug stiU ns tbo poisoning goes “• On. a . . I’m grectly for water, and wherever I go, . . , I take ft from stomach, limgs,'liverand brain; Ahd robbed of tins water of lifo in himself . The wretch who drinlts me drinks'put' fire and pain. . ' Above all i harden and injure the brain, • Destroying the reason,, debasing the mind; When all sense is lost through my itery nidi ' Men- say: . “Ho’s.a drunicard; .that's, all— never mimli” ■ • . By rotting of grape juice is ma'do ruby wine, . Now nearly one quarter of that stuff am I, Of fermented elder I’m nearly oue-tenth, And of whisky one-hulf from the corn and the i ' rye. ‘ ■ ■ . ■ • One tumbler in clghteen'or twenty of beer, Is my pure poison self, to injure and kill; And ot brandy andVom, and the rest of the list, CI'm a principal factor, drawn off by the .still. Tho older, the bfcor anil the wine have least • , Of ray subtle poison, fearful,anil dire, But they are most dangerous of all. beeauso" They're the kindling wood that starts the fire. Men never begin with'the poison pure. „. ... But weak, swcotcned, flavored, made to taste good, Wine, elder or beer; and tho ruinous road Is easy and rapid, downward und Sure. —Kva Jones, lu'Union Signal*. ; RUM A lA D ^ x f RlWAGANCE. . A Chicago Minister's Kliiquun and Logl- icial Teuipernm-e Herman. ’ ‘Thieves In Our Houses,” was tho subject ot one of Kov. Robert McIn tyre’ s, rccont sermons. The text was found in St. John x, 10: “ Tho thiol coinoth not’ hut, for to steal and to kill and to destroy.” : “ If a liJnn should ontor yonder door, make his way down to you and whisper in your ear that a thief was in your house you would loso all interest in this sermon and hufcry to y6nr home. The thief does not always entor to steal money, but 1 somotlmos to steal persons, individuals. Charley Ross, a beautiful . boy, was - stolen, .many years ago; although every effort was . made for his reebyory ho was nevor found, and’ the matter to this day remains a deep mystery, Tho thief who steals n'chiid is not always a human thief. Sometimes the wolf, the lion or tho tiger steals into tho homo and carries tho little one away to the 'jungles, novor to bo seen again. Birds have been known tocommit such thefts, and I well remember the story told raq dn my native country, Scotland, by my father. A fond mother-had dressed her little hoy J& his prettiest, brightest clothes, niujrtof£ him playing about the cottage d f l p ^ A n eagle,’ whoso nest was on thovsummit oi a beetling crag in a neighboring mountain/swept down upon that homo and carriod away tho boy. Tbo mother hoard tho rush of the wings: saw tho dark shadow cross the 'threshold! heard tho. childish, scream and saw tho bird.bear her loved one away to the nest on tho mountain’ top. No human aid could reach him, and for months his brightmantle, vvitlrits brass ’buttohs glistening in the sun 'could bo seen fluttering in the wind. “ I do not mean to speali: of .human, habit, ant i iirsi- 't u iw ‘uthority that rum is a tnief.I will quute you Shfekespcare, who said; Ts it not’ ptrango that- man .shall put an enemy in his'mouth to steal his brain?’ Next to tho soul ih Importance Is 'the brain. In this day a yhung mSn who comes into the city from a country town stands about aS much change for. escape’ *s a pigeon‘flying from a trap before q circle of marksmen. Rum, like all thieves, has many false namesW>enr,’gin, .brandy, etc., but its rent nam<5 is’ rum. If a man steals my brain ho has brought on n e a double death; it wore better •lor myself, better for my family, that I were dead. Bum steals onemun’ sbrains and leaves Film a maniac; another it leaves maudlin, a disgrace to his Chil-' dren and a curso to his patient wife. “ Cleopatra powdered precious pearls into a cup o f wine and drank the costly draught, but the man drinks a costlier cup who puts his brains in his glass and drlhks it. A costlier cup is the one which throws away tho blinds of his children, and the home for tho feeble minded shows tjiat three-quarters of-the children there are from parents who drink rum. t have been taught to hate turn a* Hannibal was taught to hate Home. No drop of llqsor, except the communion wine, has ever crossed toy lips. I say to you that I abhor the man who sells liquor to tho poor laboring nj»tt more than I do tho lepoil, and I would sooner touch the crusted Ups of the lat ter than shake hands with the former. Statistics', show that throughout the United States the average paid'for overy ^nian, woman and child for liquor is SO. There.Is a saloon across the street froq^l a factory in this city -which has apionth- ly<nc(‘ount’of sa,000 against the laborers which is settled outtof the' pay-roll. Iki is tho great gigantic curse of- tho Nation and the ono blot on its history. If I had tho money that is spent for drink I would sot a school-house In overy plain and a -church on evbry hill top, and in less than fouryen.s would haven Biblo In tho h.ands of every person on the globe, Last of all rum steals a man’s good name and he loses self-respect, he Is out of employment, his children unedu cated, his family poorly provided for, and ho dies in middle life. “ Once tho devil wets his hand..-in whisky toe-got a grip, on U man, ho seldom lots'loose until he lands him in hell. The whip is now changed, and the preacher and editor who 'trembled before its strength now wield thelush. The lowest man is the preacher .who- stands Sunday after Sunday in fcil pul- I pit and never Bdys one word about the-' liquor traffic. - ' “ Thieves work together; Rum, and’ extravagance go hand in hand, and -many—a. good man has been driven to -drink or-to crinjo by" tho oxtravagffneo o f pis wifo or himself. •The oxtravav gance ip. the city is overwhelming-.- People' patronize the theater who rofuso to pay their rent. Cash- goes, but land lord may whistle. I believe in adorn ment and think that a man shchild look’ •his best and a woman' her loveliest, -but do not go' beyond the means! You do wrong when you .wear to“ Ch,urch' any thing but plain dress, something that will not make the poorest woman in the congregation ashamed ‘ in comparison. -I I do pot believe in.oxeessive simplicity Debt is a twin brother of Satan. Prao- tico economy jn tho home! and if you want W lead a fashion, let it bo in ele vating and assisting the needy and your reward will he waiting your arrival in Heaven.”—Chicago Globe. ' WHAT A CRANlT is . BXDDTiK P h o t o g r a p h e r • / ^XENIA, OHIO. lloforn>«ra Who Are Dqeuieil Incompetent - Because They Are Kxperts. A crank ' is simply a moral expert. fWhon we want to know what aman diod of wo call a medical export. Ho. may not know any law, litoraturo or poetry; but that doesn’t matter if ho knows medicine.- But if we want legal knowl-l edge' we cali a' legal expert. Ho may not know, enough of medicine to eat his dinner proporly, hut all we ask is if- ho knows law. I-noaoh case we want a.man who has made tho thing a life study. Ylut matters o f philanthropy—iiko tho Tom-' por;pice -reform—arc supposod to bo so easy amtslmplo that any able man can settle them m odd moments of leisure; Hence the, man who gives his life to studying all there ■ is to "be' known on the subject ot Temperance is called “ a crank,” and is doomed -incompetent be cause ho is an expert. But-tho trouble is that those who do not glvo tho subject that close,, concen trated attention aro-apt to miss somo Important facts. Tho only way for ii person who has not timo to be a crank oh tho subjoot of Tomporanco is to make uso of some o! tho store of statistical and othor infor mation which the cranks have accumu lated. But ho must bo on his guard, for there is great danger that in tbo process ho will himSolf becomo a crank—-for that is the way cranks are made..— Bettor Day ." ’ SACRAMENTAL WINE, A Brink /That Proved Too Much fo r’ a'I 11ur|-tarVlIar<l .llnail. , The strength of tho liquid which somo churches are pBing as "tbo.fruitof the yine” for tho infvst .touching memorial of tho Christian faith appears from tho following account given in tho World") ■of an occurrence iii the,cld St, Paul's Church in Now York City: - •, ' ••’. Near the back door two big bundles were foumk'cpntuining ovpr 11,000toojrtbof silkand satinaltardraperies andvestments, and upon peeringin -the officerswere surprisedto see a manabout,sixtyyears old comfortably sleeping ] on-asofa, Tho door was opened.• -The police- men filed in, but tbo hum,on the-sofa'hard- j ly mpvcd as ’ the officers surrounded him. It was then' discovered that the man whs ‘‘gloriously drank,” - and shortly his conditionwas explained by the ] contents of thinjar probab^^wS^^^^^^? fromahoavy loss, for had tho thief not been overfeomc byhl3 deep draughts of tho rarewino howould undoubtedly hove got'safely away with thtShOOty. Anitwas-, he was 'removed to tho station- house screaming and fighting like a madman. He teas'toodrunk to tell his name,»mi' ot onto’ I fell into aheavy sleepinrhis cell. Around tho- ante-room, where nil-thevestments are stored, \ valuabledraperies, loose and In bundles, wer« strewn aboutin tho utmost confusion, { Wo confess to a Very strong pbjdctiOn to offering to delicate wdrao'n and Chil* ’ dren, to growing boys, and to ..men struggling up from, the pit of intemper ance, a drink, which is-too much for the hard hcad.of a'burglar.—-Batter Day. * ] T ub theory that whisky is necessary in ttio treatment of pneumonia has re- i eolved a blew from Dr. Bull* of New Ydrk. Glty, who discovers that In 'the1 Now York hospitals -sixty-five per cent of the pneumonia patients die with.' , alcoholic treatment, while in London at >tho Object Lesson Temperance Hospital only five per cent, die. W hen the late Horace Gr«»l8y,JW»j was a staunch adherent to Tern, principles, was once pressed by an iv-^ waiter to-take some brandy and wafer, he mot the opportunity by sayWtog “ Well, Pat, I’ll take half that to oblb(Ujat yon. Give toe the water and take tt brandy somewhere aUe.”—Saniight. *o- ot .Eularglug old pictures a specialty. Artistic Crayons, tho new Opala apdl Transparencies, First class woi'k guaranteed. ■* ' i O. O. HENR IE , —-CQNTltACTOR yon— - ’ MTiu.‘IronandSlab M R O O F x n a r a - • i " , , SPO X JT ING f Ajiilk G M K B A L .TOB W O l tK , -Castiugs hirnisiibcl ‘proiii])tiy-ibi' - nil kinds o f Stoves, •. Office over .« Hook’ s Dry. Goods StorVi/^cjlia', O. Agont for Enrclui Furnace.. i ,v ,...V > ? , is . i . ; ’> .' ■ * , "t- (r,L. ^A.INl‘3, KBEUIU5V3fULD^,I>,D..i* . , J I'ALir& iiErmiis, - DENTISTS-! ' Xeii|.a National Baulc buildiiig, coir. Main and Dctroit'Sts., Xenia, O. . Vitalized Air and Nitrous Oxide Cas used for trie PAfNLESSextrac tion o f tooth. ^ ; ■ y -. • , ■ t* . . CHARLES E. SMITH, T H E B O S S ^ ^ A R B E R Guarantees tho >vest work' in his .line* o f any barber in-town. Give him a call. Basement o f Orr’s building*, ;.y. TANK HEATER. A G R E A T SAV ING TO -ALL CATTLE FEEDERS. . Stockmen Wlio liavo used tills Heater. Bay they woulil not do without them at nuy price.p - - Sectional view below oliotvsbow tho llatne and Binoltn is carriod around under tlio bottom, givhqy S rreatfaoatlus Biu-lauo/ No «j>arkB save the heater, Ono firing:will lastfrom0to7 days. Ahy hoy can operate. No progressive farmer canafford to ln>wltliout one. Investigate aud yon will, anrely buy one. •n.-: COSTSFROM 2 c TO 6 c PEROAt 4 -SIZES. •tMDroa cmcDUn BNOmice*. * - ■ O . P . BEN JAM IN & EJRQj LAFAYETTE, IN». ‘ ‘ S t m d w b Rotary Slattia Siwii^ Mac’ if> set*. ' . fiat the firmOf its Huv dlsj-.oiv- d retiring \>vmutual l* »«t riicKs will hereafter ho SSetjy i*rm taiiic o f JiutrJfs FIHF' J. I*, B aub . ; O. At, M o KTON, .J.B.KVLh, - .... . . . Rhlttld RHIYC*Cffrtlfl* sotul/ia mi 6 dlncUMb friotioh N early A boushkd . Rent one-helf tatter -with mum BMMoa of Rm 0 n*MfEas’.(<t OF CEDARViLLE Uakttitsr* ti»» Jiteral B a n k ing Busines Transacted, « . W . Hnrpcr, Pres. raiMtnl # m . _______ . W i I t . ClemaiiR, CdHltleF. •a nnati < V Lines foil of T o T o l e d o , For the Knights Templar Conclave ’ at Toledo excursion tickets will lie sold August 19th and 20th at one fare for tlie round trip from stationson the PnunsylvaijULines in Ohio. Tickets will l>e good returning until August 23d, inclusive. - The Knights Templar o f “Ohio" will bold a conclave at Toledo August 20th. Excnrsiou rates via the Peiin- sylvania Lines. 0ec notice in tMs Jpaper. ■-*J(f
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