The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26

L A >: M i i t r o a b E ) . As IS»U1*MXWHNT WKKKI.Y NKWltl'AMSa. &YTURBAY, JUNE, 20 1891. jy, If. BLA I It, Editor and Prop't PRICE * 1 .2 0 PER ANNUM. < I I I Y t < I I I k l l t E C T O l t Y . ' J’<>Von»,'(r*r’5 Chureli.—Rov T. C. JL'oiil, 1 ’nHtor. itninilar sorvliro.N m <nbbftth w>li*»o|nt lojiHi h l>( B. lv Glittrelt.—Ip>*., . 1 . K. . wwtor* St‘ rvlcnHnt, « m ; ;>!il>t.mtl ^jlKiol at 10:00 a ;ii. . M. H oy , ft. L. Tufts, im#. (ur. Krtfiwlti't.? at 10:45 x in: NaUtmtli wJm»l »« «• "*•» 8:«o p. m,? Yoon" Kwplti** iiiuetlit" at 7:01 p m; priiytir mootiiiff VVuilnos.lny, evtitling »i V:00 IT. V. t!lmroll.— Rev. .1. C. \Viu-iifK;k, ,Miator. Services atlhOO.a in ami 7 p {«; tin!)I>«til Si-lnml lit 10:00 a Hi .'A V . tit filmrah.— Itev, A. O, vplvey mitor, SorvifOH, at 11:00 11 in anil 7:00 p m such SultltaUt; Sabfiatli school 8:00a ni- Raptlst filini c b .— Hoy, D. M Tut-nor. pastin'. J'rem’ltlMir Ovary Hatibatb in II* in. and 7:00 p m ; NatibaUi &tilu>t»i til •sipiiio’clock, n in; Prayer mooting Wed* liesilay iiifebt* HORACE GREELEY. Bis Remarkable Influence In the Newspaper World. AnOatline of the Snccess Which Attend* ed Hi* tSOTort*aa an Editor—Frag­ ment. of HI* Paper'* History. Mr. Greeley was the sole proprietor o f the New York Tribune when It first ap­ peared, says a, writer in that paper, but, appreciating his obligations, in about three mouths he associated with him Thomas McBlrath as a partner and business manager. About fifteen thou­ sand copies were then being circulated .and the success of the venture was as­ sured. It had started as a penny, pa­ per, but at the beginning of its second year the price was; raised to two cents, and the weekly receipts supplied a con­ stantly increasing surplus over expen­ ditures. la these earliest years three other notable men,. in addition to Mp. Greeley and Mr. Raymond, were at­ tached to the enterprise. One of these was Bayard Taylor, another Charles A. Dana and the third George Jones.- Mr. Taylor and Mr. Dana were employed in the editorial rooms, and Mr. .Tones sold papers over the counter. The cam­ paign of 1844 brought the Tribune into the full measure o f public favor. Mr. Greeley loved-’ llenry Clay as a man and admired him beyond comparison as a statesman, No one of. the vast army of Mr. Clay's ardent champions worked ~ such teal and devotion as tho ^ o f the Tribune. Personally and the paper he argued and ed night and day. and evety night and every day. and it may be doubted If his grief and bitterness in the hour of his own defeat, twenty-eight years later, were to keen and deep as the sorrow with which he announced to his readers the overwhelming defeat o f . Henry Clay. From that moment the batteries of the Tribune were turned upon the slaveholders and the abolition agitators in almost equal degree. Its fixed policy was the identification o f the whig party with the cause o f freedom. The Polk administration was opposed with sturdiness and rigor. The annexation o f Texas and the Mexican war brought out a steady fire o f protest, and if as projects they were not beaten, certain­ ly they were shorn o f their worst ambi­ tions, and their Worst results wars pre­ vented. During this period of the Tribune's history* from the democratic triumph o f 1844 to the whig victory of 1848. it took it* place as the leading American newspaper. It was filled with great achievements. Mr. Dana was managingeditor, and Its news de­ partment was remarkably Interesting and complete, Mr, Taylor was supply­ ing his famous letters from Germany. Science, social philosophy and coaimer- ctal affairs were handled with marvelous j •kill, and already the paper had won its f way into the affections o f thoughtful sad patriotic people. It was during this time that Fanny Fern wrote an 11- lnstrstive aooount o f the attitude held toward it by all aorta and kinds of the population. She bad bent out for A copy, but her messenger had returned Without it. The news-stand supplies were exhausted So she undertook to find one herself, and, coming presently upon “an old huckster man," seated under a huge,, faded umbrella in the sun, she asked If he had a Tribune. “No, ma’am,* he said, decidedly. And then, as the authoress told it, this •onvereMktn ensued: * ’Why. yes you haverMid I*laying toy baudon the desired number. “ 'Well, you can’t have that, ma'am.* he replied,*‘tor 1 haven't read it my ftSlfe* *‘ 'But I'll give you three esnts for it f "OfopT ■ * #ffcihrF “ HepT “ T m t H•Hoiftm eoulda*tgetHfor one dol­ lar. Jt'ftfe* eaty eofy h i .ft* kdW end 1 won« i*u i, M1 , re nsq toe I ehanee to read ft through myself!’ j _ You shonid have seen/* said Fanny tnern. concluding, “ the shapeless hat. the mosaic coat, the Uttered vest and the amazing trousers that were edu­ cated up tp that Tribune." This sight was not a rare one as the yesrs went on. The Tribune was a elsM papeiv but the class was not de­ termined by the kind of clothes people wore or the amount of money they conld command. Brains and conscience were the qualities to which the Tribune appealed, and wherever they lived it found a home; Voond the Station. Two 'Egyptians, dark-aklnncd and fer-topped, boarded a downtown train on the Sixth avenue elevated road a few days ago. soys a New York paper, 1 hey took, seats near the door. One of them produced a piece of paper and a pencil On the paper were eleven straight lines an inch in height. An inch o f space separated them. As the train stopped at Fifty-ninth street tho Egyptian drew the pencil obliquely through the first line. Tho other man watched the operation intently and nodded approval. At each station a line was turned into an X nntil Eighth street was reached, when they were all X’f but one. There the pair left the train. That was.the Egyptian wuy of finding the right station. Some phil­ anthropist counted the stutions between Seventy-second and Eighth streets and gave them, the paper and pencil, with instructions. A Hint About Sponge*. Never use a fcpcmge, says an exchange, unless you have, thoroughly soaked it. This will take out the muriatic acid used in its preparation, for the market. If you buy a sponge from a drug store or anywhere at retail you do not get the-virgin article that is dragged from the bottom of the sea. it has seen a number of changes. Sponges arc bleached white with muriatic acid, and the mep ivho dp this work have sore and sometimes bleeding lmnds on ac­ count o| the strength of the solution. After btcachipg the finer ones are dyed reilow Serenaded tho Editor. The editor of the Aroostook (Mo.) North Star was serenaded by a cow a few nights ago. lie says: “ She sta­ tioned herself directly under our bed­ room window and began to ring the changes and variations on the most un­ earthly and discordant cow bell that ever was turned out o f a foundry. ‘Ting-a-ling, clapety-clap, ding-dong, whang-bang, ticlclc. tickle/ We had been expecting that the addition of a prominent North Aroostook granger to the editorial management of the Star would elicit some agricultural response, but we bed cot expected the response to take the shape of n serenade by an old cow at two o’clock fn tho morning/’ After llstenlng to the doleful and dis­ training sound for ’ half an hour tho editor arose in his wrath and his night­ gown and with a club convinced the cow that she had waked .up tho wrong journalists Hush is a newspaper man’s life in northers Maine. BANK OF CEDARVIUE toiler ft) Banking Busbies Transacted. Oe».W. Harper, Pres. W . JL, C le nm n i, C a sh ie r . individual suets princijtfilly invested In Heal Estate $200,000. 0 HAS. E. SMITH’S Is the place for you to get a smooth shave or a stylish hair cut. Over The Bank o f Cedarville. W y T R A D 1 3 R */ • ■ Attorney At Law. NO, 9 EAST MAIN STREET, OP­ POSITE COURT HOUSE. Q. L. P aijjr , 1 ). i>. s. E ukh II hvnolds , ». i>. * r j i s E & R m o i w , DENTISTS ! i Xenia National Bank building, corner Main aucl Detroit $t.«., Xenia, 0 . V italized Air arid Nitrous Oxide Gas uA6d .or thvr'Ai^iESciSfdu.O' lion o f T ee .ii, OHur.QUMNlEttWlrH THE GE0JRAFI<r OF T<K> COUNTRY W IU CSTA» WUdH,Y/IUJAUE IHFOIWATIQH fM U A ftIM V OF TiliS MAP OF THE B G Hiilgwny.lut*,|uni secured the salo o f the most valuable consuittplHtn remedy over tillered l<» the people of Cedarville Ohio and takes great plea­ sure recoinniendlngit. There are n great manyso-called consumption cures, hilt Jackson*.* Wild Cherry and Tar Syrup is conceded by physicians to poAso^s the most healing and strengthening properties to (ho kings o f any similar preparation bcioro the American public. Thousand o f peo­ ple have used it and testify to its merits, and while B. (J. Bidgwuy has been handling tiicsu goods no one that lias ever bought it inis been dis­ appointed in finding a po-itive re­ lief id one dose mid a cure for acough in oiiebotfie. . Price Sound 50 cents. For sale liy Ik O. BJdgwy. Bocklea’HArnica Salve. Thft beat ftftivft in the woftd Ibr cats, bruises, ftoree, niceru, n*U rlienin, (ever sores, tetter, chapped liHods, chi'bjuiqs, Corasand all skin eruption*,and ptwilive­ ly cures piles, or no pay required. It it guaranteed to give perfect e itiaiaction, or manner refa'ided. Price 26 e-mu a boar, For sale by B. G. Bidgeway’* THE MUCH-DESIRED IONS WAIST and llfiFECT KIP EFFECTcaa.oulyN* ptoaoeca *uet«.iftljy ^yillPLEX Corset ADJUSTABLE OVER THE HIP ANt>Wlt>t. FIT m 1SKM tnutHiitlf. liHitig Perfect Ease end __ Contour. a*r* *HH(M« A mumr ! whWi alii WM (rt«i iMubleat-rtaauA m m * , Wfcleh Wtn Hot awotr. OaovA— m Wentnl. Heartfur fiiMnfiite t m u t e a n c a . , a c a « * . t s a . CMraio.EdM.SFaicBy, mi' t ' , * TimDin'd Ilnnteton;id fsixn(fhldipo..Toilet,Ottmrs, l'.orta, DaSalle, Mt-lltio. floefc I.' iiih I, tr. lDLIXOiS; Davenport,' 0tu«.'at(»e. Oltstw*, o . i J cp I iwm , Vta Mi'ilnw, Wln^crjvl, A'rinlioii, Itsrlen .and Connell Ilians, inIOWA; MldtiMIMlOami St, Cnul, InDIN- SESOTA j WaterlOivnanl Sluu* Pall,. 1nDAKOTA; Cameron,SC3»*tpHmol Kansu*City, in MISeOL'IU; Omul-.a,1,1noo)r,.Flutl.Ow-H'li'-l»>n 1 1nNF.aIiASKA; AUrlti^in, I.enr«iiworl)i. Dorio;i, U' |>c)<u, II uic I j I iko P, IWIvWUe, Alilleue, DodjoCity, ColilHell, In KANSAS; Klnjiflnher,Kl llau'.andAtlrwMnINDIAN TERlIITilltV; Denver, t>>liiraui>SprlDK, 11 ml i’ueblo, IIIOOlAntAHO. 'fraven-'ii .lev r.rm, of richFirinln* ".tillunulngliuu!,,nfron’.i mhe beet fui'llitltsu(liner- vamomu'mlb'ii' to alt loatrivnml dllm»-i.t unAWest, noltliwertatirt-nulliavutof Chicagoanil to i'adtioami ti*uitw:eiMilcet:iinirui. M A G N in c z tr r VESTZBVLm EXPRESS TRAINS leading nil cmnpetfior* In epknibvr of rnulpmcnt, lietwccn emC’AOO nml OHS SIOINSX iViSCIC fifrrFS *»<) OMAHA, anil betweenCHICAGOand DKNVKII, COLOllAiK) SPlttNCWnnl l'UJEMAvia KANSASCITYandT’Ol'KKAalul via KT JOSKl’U. Flnt-ddMDayCoachrv, ritBKRCITtNlNOCHAIR CARS, andPntafeSleeitrv, with Dining Oir Service; Clonecunnectlnn*alDenverand(iiloradnSpring*with ilWergiug rnllw*/ JI um , mm forming the uew and (iclurcujo* STANDARD BAXfQR TRANS-ROCKY MOUNTAIN ROOTS Over Which wpct WV',quipped tcln* ran dallg THROUGHWITHOUT CHANOE to and fromSalt takeCity, Ogden and dan 1'rainl*m, THE ROCK ISLANDla alK) the Direct oral FavoriteLinetoand from Manltnn Dike’* IVafcami a1) nlhprwinllarvand (cenlcmniiaaodritltaendnilninrdlrtHcUlaCulnrado. DA ILY rAST EXPRESS TRAINS > - FromStJowph andJ/.i.5a, Cltvtoamt from all Im­ portanttonne,citiesandmlion, loSouthernNetinekn, Kauan*andtiie Indian Territory. Also viaALBERT LEAROUTEfromKmtwOlfvandCfilcaeofoAVnfer* •own, rlmx Walt*, MINNEAROT43 and ST. PAUL, ceniiectlnngforall tailntan. rthandnorthwestbetween thelakestuidtfir>PacificOnaii. For Ticket*. Jtiiw. Pol.ltw, or desired Infrnnathw applytnonr Oiamit Ticket Office In theVtlitedB(at«* er Canada, or addteas E. 6T . JOHN, JOHN SEBASTIAN* r IT Hankgtr, Gen'l Tkt. ft Faa*. Agt, T PTTTf»f'». t » t . O ffice ok O ittok ec «.» ai . mn , D ps J ppa in line hoi’acM, Ooliiiiihtis, O.. (igNTLEMEN—Early Iasi spring one o f our horses was seriously iujiirotl by being kickeil. AriiMnu Oil was rt-coinnu nilcil fo « s anil wit gav« it a I rift I. Tlte result Was not only saMs- fftclory, lint siirpri'tiug. The »vi 1111 1 healed rapidly* nod the miimnl tvas feudy fov use in » few d»vs. Since that time wc have by its use cured a number o f cfteps of scratches and re­ moved some bad cases o f curb, Ara­ bian Oil U undoubtedly the best gen­ era) Stock liiiiiment that wo ever used* and we advise Farmers and Horsemen 10 keep a supply o f It in their stables at M)t times. Yours Bo* stiectfiilly, D ittoe S c G a L i . in . We offer $100Tor a case o f Scratches Arabian Oil wilt not cure. For sale by B, G. lUdgway. PURIFY YOUR BLOOD. Slope, among whom its preparation himbeen ‘ ’ ’ ' neruii T l i H i ■*»sacred Jogaoy fromge a on to generation “ wff for unnumberedyears. It tsiiurelyvegetable, * f und goes directly u> the scat o f nlne-teutlia or l the Ills o f hunnmity—the blood—and its won-! H derful workof restoration loginswith thetlrsfc 1 ■ dose, healthand strength surely following. V I MTf)hf.1 /A PH jifO KUBum*tl»B>,Tf«i«r*lgla.Py*pcp*!o,S«rofnl*, liver Cpm- R lt j Ufl, fVH UUlICO plaint, Constipation, Kitltuiy Dlnwte, Yaemr guad Ague, antiall ihnlliiraUmmtik%rliwSI petrbottlp,Ufnrafi. A*kyouvdrocftl^t far tt, and,U & T$8 Ornoii Iidtan lledicins Co 2 Dam,C«rry,Pa. GREAT SPECIAL MIDSUMMER OFFER LOWEST PRICE CLOTHIERS, , BOand52 East lainSt., Xenia, 0; OFFER cliolco o f One ef& k i£midred men’ s Fine Bros® and Business Suits iu Sucks and Frocks, Ji^ht and medium colers for tiie cxtrcmely small price ol* 1IESE SUITS we have re­ duced From $14, $16, $18 and $20. They are faultless fit- ting, being made by first-class ni;»imfucturcr.s who are always ■glad to close their Spring Stock at this bite season for low prices. Sea Our Window Display Abd if you are fortunate enough to itpctira one we will make a cuntoraer of you for life. c^BOU T One Hundred and C o Twenty-Five Boys andChil­ dren’ s Suits at the following re­ ductions : Choice o f suits, long pants, age from 13 to 18 years . 75 « . REDUCED FROM $ 12 , $14 AND $ 16 ! 1 ' ABOUTSBKNE PANTSSUITS, Ages & to 16YoAra, Cat to $ 4.25 - $ 4.25 - w o i r r t i - 1-3 TO 1-2 MORE ! POSIT IVELY none o f these advertised goods w ill bo charged, and ail will be on Spec­ ial Tables with prices in plain figures' marked upon them* Greatest bargains o f the year. Subscnbs for theHerald sow. I 9

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