The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26
at ;ioa, for' r 9 examine the of line L g i Ide of fine Pant is. Ibe excelled. ICO. > m o . wr ■ . ■« r£UBRY«Hd {aKy mail# teamen. They t! v t turn and mar- is** *#t m imAMA jm-Ww. i i t 1 { §4* ■.if ■ swr-KT? ~1 a * tfmimhturtr V ifiiitLY nb ^ si * aj > kr , SATURDAY, JUNK, 27 "1891. W. I f , I H j A IH) E d ito r m id X*topW PRICE *1.30 P in ANNUM. CIHIBCII DIKKCTOIIY. SfS (foftwnntorv <Glutn')i.~'Rev T, C. Pastor, lt«KtUKi' 8<irvtc»)» a t 11:110 a m ; tfabli^tU school «t lUiiiu « m 1'lWLwr,.. S«rvio«K qtll-jffe'S, seliaot.atllhflORiir. *■ • . ■M. 15. Oiiin'tili,™ Itev, 1}, 1., ri'uftH,'iias» toft VreRehlnk a t l<Mr, H m; NaWath • school Ht 940 mi to.; o J hbh . $:00 pi iii,j Yoi»«MtffflQP.je'& meetltw at 7:00 n ; ,j>ra.Y«r iiioeling Watluesdny eveiling at ■7 ... ;. 1 . . J._ u . V. Church.—Hpv, J . C. AVariinuk, pastor. S oi ' v I ooh a t 11:00a m and 7. » iii ; Habbiitli, school at 10:00 a m ‘ ‘ A C l i n r o l i . —ttev. A, U. NpWev onstor. KerVIi»fi8 . a t 11:00 « m ' nnit <7:00 p JMettOU Sabbath'; Siibbiith. gohon) h:00a )H. Baptist GhurCli.j-r- Kov. D.MTurner, itwstop,,- JPreaobteig. every Snlilmthuit Hauifaiul.7:(H) p in; Sabbath School a t 2:lM)o'clock pi n; Prayer meeting Wed nesday .night: j closer tip rcr^n o’s ,n«cp. The otaouetvff sosWiPg,id©w»”Uere.la- crewed by 04 per eent. In the ten year*' .from. 18*) to lspO., . . 3Che ’ffiiue of the diamond* and^dfhcv Precious stone* imported Into till* coun try by 18» alono wraa$11,705,000. . J - - Samiuath^a to Prwi|i'>tw«< “1 am not particularly vain." said a , New York belle the other d*y, “bat * b « | 1-faa ffc t|fa |iv* r|^ ^MufaJcAr f am a mere ahjcdVSmudfe of myself.'? I know many a woman will liftupliwr voice with me over the: way wo are treated by the average dressmaker. We protest faintly f^ou t & wrinkle around the slwnkfeivt.'Wjfrlir 1°* tee. madam, your,, left,shoulder is uonraeh higher than your right it is almost l?p- po»-~1 We,flush- and *ay .never paind. •Tbeth p i oMaHa-that stykt?Qf,^coye need* -a . full *r*p.,s< I . *ho$d »p t:have chosen th a t * l# n i% r you ijytelL} aqd ‘A, perpqn wtw round shopldcrs oan’t . expect her book to eat- real straight,* d r *Xhf. present style is trying to o person of. Jong neck,dike yours,' She admit4 that the general effect of the gown is 'dumpy,* bu t then you do Incline to .that bjiildc apcLof course it can’t ,be.blamed on the dre$tmoker. If.yoijr chest ivos fuller your dress .would button more even. If .your..hips, were .regular the Skirt woujdp't sag. You walk hopae wondering bdw>you.cgn get alongwith ou t, crutphea. and thinking what a bad job-nature made of you anyhow.” PURIFYYBURBPp. C f M ICA-TOJf-KA» fjiejgreatefijf Blood furiflpr, ' B A s Xlver Regulator nnd Tonic ever known, is pro- 4H f l i J?««l lu Nature’s Labonttotyby Nature’sChil- ' _—_ m - dtun—the tYatmSprhiXlndinnaofthoRdclIUr ^ T f l M Slope, aibong whom it* preparation hasbeeh 1 1 1 ! ■ ■» sacred legacy from generation to gencratfon ■ “ ■ " for unnumberedyear*. I t is purely vegetitole, widKoes dlroctly to th e seat of nine-tenths of? .the ills of humanity—the bl°od-^ttnd 1 * 17011 - l B derfnl work of r<«tovaUon begins With theiiraf ■:■- dose, health and strength surely, following. KA-TQN-IMCyRESS:;.T„:»S^ ■nil »U slmUar »hmaut», iM uelS i p€-rbottle,<ofor SUS. A ^ y o n r d ru ag irt fo rifta n d i i . jfiflOrfioiimiaiMedifiw mmitm,u CHAS E. SMITHES ' --------- BANK OF CEOARVILLB' ' » *», ■■*'? ’ ■•«.-: * fiencral Banking # Riialnes Tiansacleil. -S . -iGeo.W.. Hxrper, P re*. ; W . L C'lemnns, € u h le r. Individual «««eta principally invested isiRssl PRECIOUS STONES. .Facta G a th e re d b y a Special A g en t Of th e Conaua Bureau. Xocatlons and Finds at the Diamonds and Other ■ Jewel* Produced In the. Pnlted,Stages and ,. . ,..Their. Valne. ■ r • A .very Interesting: report prepared . for the purposes of, the census is fur- nished by George F. Knntz, the special agent who bad charge of statistics as to precious stone* and diamond cutting in the United States. This is a field which never before has been covered in the.census, and Mr, .Kunz Is an. ex pert in it, says the New York Sun. aiming,,for precious and ornamental . stotK^bhasbeen carried on in this conn- try atirregalar, periods only, ahd/tha , supply ciiscbyCnsd has not been great, inctu ded many varie- ” number.'of diamonds found . 'lisniiteii. and .their dtecov- bK far^ ro uad purely, odeidentol,.' the placeawbere they’*re met with being certain well-defined districts of Califor nia, North Carolina, -Georgia and re cently in'Wisconsin. Ip.'.the statistics of the prdd’jctidhof preclotis' stones for 18S9 presented by Mr. Etwz diamond* do ntAappear a t till 4 Sapphires and bubies are found near Helena in Montano, bu t they are not of the. standard bias and red shades so much'-prised.4'They' have i&rver been mined systematically, though within' the last ^wo yCars companies have been formedto'mino for thom either sepor- s b ’y or incidentally to the searob for gold. Emeralds have been mined to a small extent lb Alexander county in North Carolina; and soma beryls have ' been discovered In Colorado, a t Now Hilford In Connecticut, add a t StoUe- bam !n MAlne. The tnbpnolso is how ^stematicaliy mlxlfed near Los Corillos in New Mexioo, bu t it lacks the soft* ness bf oolorxlistibgnlshlng the Persian 1 turquoise,1 though It is fdlly equal to ft in hardness. The finest' garhets In the world, rivaling those from theCspe of Good Hope, are collected by the Na'vsjo - Indians and by soldiers of the a^jsMnt forts from an t bills and scorjpioh bests In NewMexico and Arison*. Tbd In dian* trade thriB for stores, and they are sent to the market in parcel* Weigh ing sometimes a* much a* th irty or forty pounds. ' ‘ ' ‘ This About completes the list of the better known «nd snore important pre- dott* stones found in the United State*. The small: amount obtained of e*oh and their respective frequency ar* *ug* gested by Mr. Kuna's staliatica of the- value of the native gam .produoUtm in lSSO: Sapphires, «S,7Wk emeralds, tad; turquoises, ta3,d78rg*inetSi AMM. Accordingly, all except stt Insigtdfi- cant part of toe prCcioua stones bought in this country a re imported, and the demand fa increasing. The value of the imports from 13701a 1879was lea* than 837.{«K),000, and between 1830 and 1389 it was more than 167 , 000 , 000 , or more than three time* a* great. The Inorease has been steady. The value of the gem* Imported in 1889wjfa nearly twice that in 1830; and more than nix time* the importation of 1870. In no other country Of the world fa th e ’Use of then* ornaments so general a* hare. Diamond cutting fa extensively prac ticed in the United States. In New York alone are sixteen firms pursuing the business, mush of their tins* being expended In reoutting stones previously cut abroad, for our workmanship is su perior. From the litte r pa rt of 1838 to the end of 1889 the price of rough dia monds advanced from 80 to 100percent. The great radootkm in weight doe. to cutting is sbbwn by the fact th a t dale monda or diamond materiel which weighed 54,344 carat* before cutting weighed only *5,005 oaxaU afterward. Nine-tenth* of thi* Work fa done in New York, which fa the gww* center of the American trade in the jweekwmeton#*, while London fa the chief maritetof.the world for rough diamond*. Nothing, ‘He'-Ut* «r»«, fa bnnidfa and e6ld mtfa ' ■The Terrible-Porter. - Twenty-five shoeless'passengers late ly entered Chicago, after a night trip from St. PauL They all belonged in the sleepingcarwhlch left the latterclty. Another sleeping car is usunlly added a t La Grosso; and dropped off- at Milwau kee. I t fa the custom with the porters of thfe tvvo cars to'take the shoes (to be ^fceaned from the forward -car to the rear one, ,where they pleasantly chat While putting oh the necessary polish. On the particular night referred to- both the porters had been regaled rath er freely ifith drinks from traveling flask*. They fell asleep over.the shoes, and-when the car Was dropped off a t Milwaukee two* porters and all the shoes belonging to the -people in the forward car were dropped off too. - Serenaded tbe Editor. The editor of the Aroostook' (Me.) North Star was serenaded by a cow a few nights ago. He' 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 ev tr was turned out of a fOundiy. ‘TiUg-a-ling, clapety-elftp, ding-doUg, whang-bang, tickle, tickle.' We had been>expecting that the addition of prominent North Aroostook grangerto the editorial management of t h e ' Star .would elicit som* sgrlcultural response, -but we had not expected the response; -to take the shape of u serenade by on old cow a t two o'clock tn tbe morning.' After listeningto the- doleful ,and dfa-' training sound for: 'half an hOur tho ;.ai^se,ip bfa wrath w d bls;x»igkt- gown and wltk a club convinced the oow th a t she had Waked up the WrUbg journalist' SUch fa a newspaperxiian’* .Ufa innortbem ’Maino, ' ‘ B G lUdgwriy lmt ju s t secured the tale o f the most valuable consumption remedy evor pfiered ( q ike. people .of Gedarvllie Oliio aud takes great p lea sure recoUimcndiii^ It. There are- n g reat litany so-catled consumptioii cures, h u t JackBoil's Wild Cherry and Tdr Syrup ls conceded Uy physicians to 'jiOsdo** ‘ thp most healing , and streng then ing properties to the lungs o f any sim ilar preparation before the American public. Thousand of peo ple kayo used it, and '-testify lo its merits, and while B. G. Rldgway has been liaudling these goods no one th a t has ever hougliv it has been dis appointed in finding a , positive' re lie f id one dose and a euro for a cough In one bo ttle. Price 2o and DOcents. F o r sale by % G, Rhlgwry , k Mucklviiji’s ^*. 1 ( 4 *vu .-4nivc. , The beseaalv* In the Worid for cnis sore*, n!c«*ra, sh H rhvmn; fevei ■'ore*, tetter, chapped htmua, chi'blaiur orusnnd all skin wupiionwandpositive / cures pile*, or no pay required. fa ■’ar«nte<*d to give perfect a dfsiaction x j jiiey rein i*h»t. Price cent* u ox, For sale by B, G. Bldgeway'* THE MUCH-DESIRED LONSWAISTand FtRFECTHIP JEfFECT osn only b* prodifasd suowiafnny to vrusnng THE ADJUSTABLE OVER THE HIP AHiaW i t ■ ANY' FORM kMiMuiy, Stefa# P e rfec t i * * t a fid _______ j Gan tour, jk m M* *re»m, whkh alU m l rlu ; D m M , M ««I s ss A M w i , Whtofe nilt M«*t hrf*ki £ % % £ ; 4 faeumwwrs W shM k So nf ft* Vntiittpmh ■ M m t c M rs . c o , J k o m . k ick GREAT SPECIAL MIDSUMMER OFFER > 1 1 1 1 lowest price cloth iers , , 60 and 52 East Main St., Xenia, 0 . 13 OFFER choice of . On# Hundred Men’s Fine Dress and Easiness Saits in Sacks and Frocks, light and medium colors for the extremely small price of P HESE SUITS we hare re duced from $14, $10, $18 and $20. They are faultless fit ting, being made by first-class manufacturers who are always glad to close their Spring Stock at this late season for low prices. See Our Window Display And If you at* fortunate enough to a tcu re one we .wilt make a customer of yon for life. DEPARTM ENT . (BOUT One Hundred and Twenty-FiveBoysandChil dren’s Snits at the following re ductions : Choice of suits, long pants, age from 13 to IS years * $ 9 . 7 5 * REDUCED FROM $12, $14 AND $16 ! V] V W". V.l: Ufa ABOUTSOKNEE PABTS .Ages 4 to 16 Years, Cat to Inf $ 4 .2 5 - $ 4 .2 5 ftll *3 . ——W O R T H ------- 1-3 TO 1-2 MORE I OSITIVEMT none of these advertised goods w ill he charged, and all will he on Spec ial Tables with prices In plain figures marked npon them. Greatest bargains of the year. wa* Subscribe for the Herald new. la the place!:fbr you to get & ewfooth ehavp. or a stylish, hair cu t,r* Over The, Bank of CedarviHe. W . . F , T R A D I ? R . ■ '■■'<* .. • ^•-^■: 4 ii’ i*1 Attorney At La NO. 0 EAST MMN STREET/JOP- . FOSITE COI RT HOUSE/j -■ hi '. ijji - lhi ,":»',n~;'>,i"..an,i,jn,ire ' <J, L, P ai . vr , b, n. a. Ej! k it-R kv NOLi>s,.ft. q. • WISE & RETIOLK; ;■ DENTISTS :!i XeniaNational Bank building,- corner Main*and Detroit Ste., Xenia, O. . Vitalized s i r »nd N itrous Oxide C as u sed for to o PAINLESa Ex trac tion o f Teecti. M A H UNtCQUtlNUDWITHTllEGEOCMPHTOFTOOCOUNNYWIUWNfi -SUCHVIIUMIEIHFOaUHlOH ,FK0« t flVOTOUHHIUfOFTHI m 11 i,RocStIsiEffll&PacificBy., Th« nirret l!ou(e to ntid from Chlc«go, Jo)let, Oq»w», La Salln, Slulin., T£gcU Irituml. In ILLINOIS; XJtvouport, Mutcitlnc, OUuinttn, Otkatoosa, ‘ I jm Molnu, tVlutcnot, ADdnbdh, Horton and Connell Blufa, In IOWAUluneopolia an* SL fiml, In |*tN- N£SOXA: Watertoorn and Sioux Falls. In liAKOTA; Ctmci-on, fit. JoM|>li and Knua,f City, in JUlSSOintf; Omiiha. Unwin. Fr.lrkury«ni IV..tton.InNEBRASKA: AtcHInm, I^nvenwnrlli, Horton. 7n|«It«. Hutchlmon. WltlilU. Belleville. AWItn'o, Dwlgo City, Caldw.il, in KAKBA9:, Klncn.her, £1 lteno and ATIncd, In INDIAN TSRlUronY:. Denver, Colorado Springs «nd tiy>l>lo. In (XHORADO. Trnrerwa near nmtt Of rlcli ftnnlht o‘atl grtrlnglandj, filTordl’Hthe lies; ftell|tle, of Inttr- eolmnunlcntl'iD to nil tou-uo and cltlm toil and Wr«t, horiliveat and rouiliircsl of Ctiiiago'and to l’aelOOand itaiu-oteatilc ei.ij'oHi .MAGN IF ICENT VESTIBULE E X P R E S S TRA INS L-adlng nil onmncUIorV In aidenAnr of. rquIpOiant, between UIIICAOO atnl D£3 MOINES. COUNCIL BLUFFS and OMAHA, and between CHICAOO mid DENVER, COLORADO SPRING* and FUERLO.-vla KANSAS CITY and TOPKKA and Via ST, JOSEPH. Firtl'Cloes Day CoechM. FREE RECLINING CHAIR CARS, and Paine Slceptn, wllli Dining Cnr Serrlce. Cloie conneciloce at Denver and Colorado Springs with illvergiug railway llr.es, now forming the new and picturestie STANDARD GAUGE TRANS-UOCKY MOUNTAIN ROUTE Over which (uperblv-eqnlpped trains ran dally 7HR0VGU WITnoCT CHANGE to and lhim Salt Lake City. Ogden and San •Francisco. THE ROCK TSL a ND I s alto the Direct And F ovgt U o Lins to and IHtit ilanUon Pike's Peak mi l all et'ier sahlfaty and sceale rttorteanddtliv andminingdietrlctein Colorado. D A IL Y F A ST E X P R E S S TRA INS From S t Jo-.’fA nnd i~ ,mw City lo and from all Im portant toniiy elites nru iFillone In Southern Nebraska, Kaccs . yn ' ft.E fnSt.il; lerrltr.ry. Also elk ALTfRUT L1IA i:nt'Ti' fi'vn Kn*:»it ri!V n:sd Chicago 10Waier- *own, Sioux Frdls. MINNEAPOLIS and ST, PAUL, cojir.eal.iiig fi.r nitirnir.to ir rth and ncriliwcst betwtew the tokfAn.id lit-*Pofific f’casS. For Tii Yets, M am , Folders, or deslfvd Infutnallon api iy lo '-ay Ceapon Ticket OCIce in fh* Untied Slates orCaoeila, craddtess , ; E. 8T. JOHN, JOHN SEBASTIAN, 'IMoncgcft G-n’l Tkt A PlM. AfeL, O Arr««*/rc,. Tf.t, O f f ic e o f O it t C e & G alt , i n , Dealers In fine horses, Columbus, ().. GXNTLVit en —E arly Insi sjiriiiff mm of our horses tvas seriously fiijtlWof by being kicked. Arabian OH m ' ii « recoimnended to us and wo gave H :t trial, The result, was not only sitItn- factorv, bu t sui’iirisiiig, The m ‘ ouii '1 healed rapidly, at*(1 the nninntl wn-« ready for use in. * few days. ^iinm th a t time we have by Its use cured a number of cases o f scratches and re moved Some bad cases o f curb. A ra bian Oil is undoubtedly the best''.Lit eral Stock L iniment th a t we ever used, amt we advise Farmers ami Horsemen to kefep a supply o f it in their stables a t all times. Yours Itc- spectfully, D itto ® & G alun , We offer $100for a case of Scratches Arabian Oil will not cure. For s*lo by Bi G. Hldgway, *
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