The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26
MPCRSONAL, f * P««nded the Jfc I fe h u g iv e * i nhaU bo pef. ;l»o jfoteratrveui; lljr ^afirugwi in nraent, and that 'iolation o f that Th{* order a f. 10 nobility who rides. ^sui said to pon being intro, the sop of the 'dr place is in oment. would do auso they loved ih^i^HfWd for ifti'fe duo tliat }s which is stngn- i,instance, ifchful black ser- Ijr In Zanzibar, cried thftjftQouH les, frwjDLtho in- coast,«snfferiDg king dangers in :r that he might unknown grave, led for his per- ■ ho quean took d fidelity, off- In the con- ibaeco is mainly refinement in is the tin-foil tt. hah suffered 7 a t large the iacco consumed countrymen are so, either sweet tt can be used oke, in, pipes, r original this ty, but a te not account. Tri- 38are concealed lowers and are s than as addi- iqnet w o r n a t an recently to exquisite pinlc foliage, tipped h pale pink and sre I restricted ions to tiie use 3, then, w ithout t»se hardy roses, and clematis, second place in rst; but i f I con- on to labor and lould have the •y garden these ■ edominatc and for grand cf- Sir Frederick i Millais, among ore was such a without a hard "oderick’s letter to your letter I ng considerable- ■ is world without ite pains.” Sir o belief in what morally under- ie I do believe worthless with- continuous la- NSENSE." i - i - ^ s p e n r Uurdo^i c-a-l-o- rper's ilazar. icared in a Con- ■ •Iron bedsteads kely the linen kc’s Magazine, erk (assigning the Etruria, af- isage)— "Frontl up to C., 6.”— who go to tho more afraid of not say about might say.—OST. ‘w-ihoy-t-1‘Don't i self-possessed t why not be Ise?”—Saturday Mrs* Wickwlr* of you flirting that policeman irt/' Mary Ann The day officer ‘'—TndlanapoHa ianatiori.—Miss ,)— “ iVfay is it i always crease ■ ton~-"Thejr of* c wind, and we Clothier and called the dn youth to her at an acquaint* costed her, “to bark at Mr. young and nn* Times. kfistake.— "You re, Miss Hark admirer. "Y e a t him a box oi ;ecp them and ij Mr. Noo, He -N . Y. Sun. eently married, hhe tells her to a fire hours’ $, pouting, hot "make up,” 1 h«*aks. “ To W* thtum oath «*•) "M y dear, dir* YtmJtiww TEMPERANCE notes . f a s h io n a n d a p p e t i t e , (ttneH ttw iii Itfcspoaslbls te r th e ~ rweut Wad Practice*. Alcoholic, drink is the hay, turf, -etd and coal of hell on earth, Those Aat drink and cause such suffering, drink because they saw others drink- -jL Everybody drank, and they keep oS i« gfcat measure because many ‘ gtfre drink also, and want to have, or anyhow are willing to let, the drink within reach. Ever Bince Noah itumWed on what made such a fool Of him, the genesis of drinking is first fashion and then appetite; fashion starts fbo practice, -and along with fashion appetite keeps it up. The pre- $eAing and passing generations are re* sponsiblofTpr the drinking fashion as hrtvep among ns now, and in the same wajJ^te passing generation is go- fog to be.Si it does not look out, re sponsible for the same habit in the gen* gratl^n that is coming on and in all the coininggenerations that shall feel its in fluence. And to be actual and practical, , i want to say that the passing genera* tionmeans me, and you, neighbor, and the next man. Apart altogether from Christ and the church, merely by qnr common human nature, by the solid arity of the race, “ we are all members one of another;” we learn from one an other language; accent, notions, man ners, and among the rest this deluded' notion and most mischievous practice of the drink. This incontestable natural law has made and makes every man that has drunk or drinks a professor, a teacher,'a pro moter of -drinking, with all that fol lows. And, further, with the prev alence the drink fashion lias had and has, every one that does not take pains tobe couuted out is counted in and acts as a silent but consenting partner. This is what vast numbers have been aUd are, “ ignorantly,” unconsciously. If the evils resulting from the use of drink were, as they doubtless were in Some places and times, and may per haps be even now, comparatively few and trifling, there; would he no need of special efforts to reform them. But actually these evils, even to overlook the sins (and drink is a very second original" sin) and crimes (and drink is the cause of most o f our crimes) only the sufferings it occasions are immense, incomparable, ubiquitous, continuous. 'The sufferings relieved by all the ano dynes and all the alms-giving areas nothing beside a ll those caused by the drink alone. Where is qnr pity? Where is our show .to claim good nature and benevolence if we w ill not do what we fairly can to stop all this pain? What generous compassion there is aroused for a few sufferers such as those of Johnstown! Here are sufferers by the hundred thousand. If to relieve them men had to do some very hard thing, had to reduce themselves or their families to poverty, had to risk reputation or health or life; if they had even to practice some- considerable, standing self-denial, there would he some excuse for doing nothing. But actually all they need- to do is these •two things: First, they should quit pat ronizing the fashion, should cease and let it be lcuftyn they cease to use drink. And then M^pmrse, further, man be ing, he Tfioimas Carlyle says, emphat ically q' proselytisive animal,” they wonld naturally and rightly wish to get others to do the same. In this Una the easiest thing to do, and withal a very good thing, is to help to swell the attendance at every temperance meet ing! to pass aronnd tracts and papers, plead friendlily with harft drinkers or get some competent person to do so. Brink is no inherent want of onr nature, but na plain and repugnant a violence done it as Is the tightening of ■ females’ feet among the Chinese; then its fash ion-power is enormously offset by the strong and growing public sentiment against i t So to renounce i t entirely and forever, whether as an habitual nip, or constitutional pick-me-up, or social treat, is really no great punishment or self-denial, Or hardship, and soon ceases to be any at all, especially when set beside the accompanying glorious “ luxury of doing good. ” The man who finds it too hard to quit drink for others’ sake, ought on that very account to quit for his own, and hisposterity’s sake, before the grip of the tyrant appetite has for ever strangled his free will. Secondly, not only as a safeguard of their own resolution to abstain, not only as a safeguard to other men’s like reso- tion, not only as an aid to the weak of the passing generation, and to the thoughtless of the codling One, to be free front means and re minders and occasions of continuing or learning the drink habit, bnt particu larly as a means of preventing drinkers, actu&lor prospective, from recklessly inflicting unmerited suffering on oth ers, they should do wjiftt they can to keep away the temptation, to bar out the bar. Here again a few topers . would be denied their luxury and tem porarily afflicted, but millions of .men, and still more of women and children, would be saved atrocious suffering- This would be justice among citizens, humanity among men; ’twonld be alto most effective cooperation with the grace of Rod ahd fair play given to Jits desire to save all men.*—Kev.Martin Ma* bony, in Tracy (Minn-) Trumpet. Ateoaor.ro liquors brought front Christian nations under the protest of the pagans of Africa are designated i by those benighted people w 'er the term which in onr language means thame water. SO BERED B Y A JE ST . H ow a n OJil Kelt c a p ta in sto p p e d HU Prinking. How much more readily a person Who has a keen sense of humor may sometimes be influenced by a quiet sarcasm than by serious remonstrance was illustrated many years ago by an incident in .the life of Capt. M---- , a famous old navigator of Nantucketfdn the days when Nantucket was still a great shipping center. Capt- M—— had been round Cape Horn more times than anyone dared say, and in his later years set up as an instructor of navigation at Nantucket, where he was visited by many young navigators and by some older ones who wished to brush up their nautical knowledge on some of the muny points where the captain was especially well informed;* CaptJ M—— was greatly liked by liU fe llow townsmen, but he had one grave fault,(which was only too common amongtnen of his generation. He,was given toNhc use^of WeaETndia mm. At intervals lie disappeared from viqw, retiring to liis little, bedroom, and gave himself up to his jug for hours and even days. A t these times the captain simply gave out that he was pot "in port.” His. wife, a most excellent woman, expostulated, entreated, see ded, but in Vain.' The captain Beemed beyond her influence. On one occasion when the captain had retired-to his room1 for this dis creditable reason -and had spent more than twenty-four hours there, there happened to be a great demand for his services on the part of the navigators, who , were just starting out for Cape Horn. They came and went, and poor Mrs, M?— the captain’s wife, was worn out in answering calls for her in* capable husband. . / . Finally there came.' to the door two young New Bedford men, masters 'of whalers, who wished to obtain from the captain some information likely to be of great value to them. When Mrs. M----- opened th e door one of then! said, in a rather loud voice: "I am told that Capt. M------ is not in port. Can you tell me when he wilt be in?” "Hum!” she exclaimed, turning half around and speaking loudly enough to be hoard in the captain's room, "he- znaybe expected in portwhen the wind stops blowing from the West Indies!" The captain heard., There was si lence for a few moments, and then came a crash of crockery on the stone flagging at the back of the house. The jug hod gone out of the window. Then there came1, a sepulchral voice . from within: "She’s stopped ftfblowin, Priscilla!” B y and by. the captain came ont, dressed in his best clothes, with.a clean "dickey” and a neatly-adjusted stock. His wife’s simple joke had sobered him, and ho was not only “ in' port” that day, but continuously thereafter.—-Youth’s Companion. - GENERAL GLEANINGS. L ast .y e a r th e arrests fo r drunken ness in lrc land were nearly five thou sand more th an thofie In 1880. T he saloon costs the country two bil lion of dollars annually. >If the one hundred and fifty saloon keepers in tho country annually paid a license of one thousand dollars each there would still be a balance against them of one billion eight hundred fifty million an nually.—National W. 0 . T. U. Bulletin. D enmark ’ 1 ms five local Woman’s Christian Temperance unions. Special attention is given to work among the children. Temperance articles, when signed by well-known names, are ac cepted by the press. The national president, Mrs. Elizabeth Selmer, re ceives much assistance from the good tetnplars, who often arrange for and pay the expenses of meetings for tho \V. C, T. D. T hebe I s a singular unanimity of 6pin- ion among physicians with regard to the destructive power of alcohol upon tho human brain. Dr. Kate Mitchell says: "The brain, the most important organ of the body, the passions, the in telligence, of all human desires and feelings, of the highest as well as of the basest of our propensities, is the organ the earliest and tho most pro foundly attacked by alcohol.” T hree hundred and seventy-five ont of the six hundred railway corporations of the United States prohibit tho use of intoxicating llqttor by their employes. The Brotherhood of Locomotive En gineers, alone, expelled nearly four hundred members the past year for in toxication, The public demands assur ances o f safety when on the rail, and no alcoholized brain can be trusted to guide an engine, open a switch or wave a flag. Employers realize this, and thus selfish interests are aiding the temperance reform, A ll E rroneous T heory, v There is one trivial obstacle in the way of explaining certain cases of al leged spontaneous human combustion that is not usually taken into consider ation by those who favor anch a theory. A human body weighing one hundred and fifty pounds contains about one hundred and ten pounds of water. Moreover, it requires about four pounds of alcohol to evaporate one pound of water. . Ilcnce, to merely desiccate a human body something like four hun dred and fifty pounds, or not far from forty-five gallons, of alcohol would 1 ms required, while to incinerate the body three or four times as much would bo required—a volume several times as great a* the volume of the body ibielf. —Chicago Tima*. , HOUSEHOLD BREVITIES. —A little powdered borax added to told starch stiffens linen beautifully. —I f a little soft (not melted) lard or butter is rubbed oyer the top of bread dough when in,a mass, and after being molded into loaves, a hard crust w ill be avoided. —Muffins.—-Three cupfuls of flour, two cupfuls of milk, one-half cupful of sugar, one tablespoonful of butter, one egg, three teaspoonfuls of yeast pow der, Bake tm gem pans .—flood House* keeping. —Rice Pudding.—Put in an earthen pudding-dish a quarter of a pound of well-washed rice,'three pints of milk, fou.r ounces of sugar and a little spice or flavoring; bake it in a moderate ovdti about an hour and a half. It coBts about eighteen cents. —When egg, either whites or yolks, is left over and likely to be wasted, crnsli some egg shells, niix^rfiem in it, and dry in the oven. Soak before using to clear coffee. Tho yolks odd richness to it and the whites hold the grounds together and mulra the coffee clear. —I f yon have boiled potatoes left over, a very nice way to use them a second time is this: Grate them into the dish they are to be served in, put bits of butter here and there, and dust a little fine salt over them; then put them in a hot oven for five minutes. —Apple Dumplings.—Crust-the same as dough for biscuits. Break "off a small piece, fold it smoothly over a peeled and cored sour apple. Drop in boiling water at half-past eleven. Serve very hot with sauce made of rich, sweet milk, and sugar flavored with lemon. Housekeeper.' • —Buttered Parsnips.—Boil until ten der, and slice lengthwise, putjtwotnbU!- spoonfuls of butter ■ into a saucepan with salt, a little parsley and a salt- spoonful of sugar, put the parsnips in';' lay the parsnips in order on a dish, pour the gravy over them .and serve.— Boston Herald. —For fried asparagus prepare a bat ter with two eggs, well beaten, half a -cupful o f milk, flour to thicken, and a little salt; dip the stalks in the batter.. To prepare asparagus salad, cut the tender green tops in inch pieces and mix them. with lettuce leaves, a few sprigs of mint and a teaspoonful of powdered sugar, serve with mayon naise dressing.—N. Y. World. — Fig Pudding.—One cup and a half of cracker dust, two tablespoonfuls of su gar,' one-half a, nutmeg, one small cup of minced beef suet, one cup of milk, two eggs (beaten very light), one-quar ter of a pound of candied orange peel, one pound of good figs cut into small pieces, one teaspoonful baking powder. Boil about three hours,* then *oat hot with " suitable sauce.—Detroit Free Press. —Oatmeal.—Put a teaspoon of salt apd a scant quart of boiling water in the top of the double boiler, and place it on the stove. When the water boils, odd gradually one cup of coarse oat meal. Cook ton minutes, then place it in the bottom of the double’ boiler and let it cook one hour. Put a tablespoon of salt in th <5 water in the lower boiler. When done remove tho cover, stir with a fori; to let the steam escape, Servo it on a platter.—Boston Budget. —Raspberry Vinegar.—Put perfectly ripe raspberries in a bowl and cover them with good cider vinegar. Let them stand for two days, then crush the berries and squeeze them in a cloth to expel the juice. Measure it and to every pint* add one pound of white sugar. B6U if for 'twenty minutes, skimming it well, Take off of the fire and let it remain until perfectly cold before bottling. Cork well and set the bottles in a cool place. Mixed with iced water this makes a very refreshing drink In summer,—Ladles’ TIome Jour nal. _________ _ HOW TO BUY A BONNET. Nome SumnUoiil forth*- Novice InHill!- ' Jicfjr A rt. The woman who has a becoming bon net has either learned just how to buy- it, or else she was lucky enough to go to a milliner who preferred to sell her customers the. bonnets that suited them. Here are some suggestions as to how to buy a bonnet Never purchase yonr bonnet after merely seeing it on your self in a small mirror. When only your head is seen it may be pretty, becoming and picturesque, bnt you must be wise enough to think of the ensemble. So stand in front of a large glass that dis plays yonr figure and then choose. The large hat that, when you only saw yonr head, seemed so becoming now looks like an extinguisher on you, for it dwarfs your already small size, brings out in a funny way the slender ness of your figure* and makes yon look as if you- had a pagoda erected over yon. You happen to lie tall and plump and a little bit Juno-like, and you put on a tiny turban; now look at yourself. Everything seems right but your head, and the very top of a beauti ful piece of work is by your bad choice made insignificant-looking. Your hat move than anything else requires to be like you, to suit you notu and body; and in arranging your ribbons, and flowers* and feathers, just remember that it they are inanimate things they arc yet expressive, otherwise how could Shake speare refer to them a* "delicate* fine hats, and most courteous feathers?’’— N. Y. Sum ’““ fashion Note, She—How ruffled the sea is to*day. He—Yes; it’s tho fashion for the shore to wear raffles on her skirt a'. waves,—Judge* —The wife of one o f our missionaries found a cook-stove in the bouse of an Indian, hut the native houselieeper was still cooking over the open ir e outside the door. "When asked why she did not use the stove, she replied that she “ can’t make it* go, and it filled the room with smoke.” Further inquiry showed that she built the fire in the oven instead of on the grate —American Missionary._________ ___ t Jjwe, July end A«gnat. The most charming Summer Resorts, of which there are over three hundred choice locations, are to be found in Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, South Dakota and the Peninsula ofMichigan, along thelinesof the Chicago, Milwaukee& St. Paul By. N arly all are located near lakes which have not been fished out. These resorts are easily reached by rail way, and rango in variety from the “ full dress for dinner” to the flannel-shirt cos tume for every meal, S bwemdeh ani > O ctober .—The finest shootinggrounds in the Northwest ere on end tributary to the lines of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St, Paul By, The crop or Prairie Chickens zvill be exceptionably S ood this year; also Ducks and Geese. In TortbernWisconsin and. the Peninsula of Michigan splendid Deer shooting is to be had. Full information furnished free. Address G eo , H. HiiAFrono, Gen. Pass. Agb, Chica go, I 1 L , ■ “Now,” ,’ said the carpenter te his wife, "we’ll bo off to the party as soon as I get out my clawhammer, brush ray nails and clean up a bit.” _____, B a lin g P resses for Ilay, Straw., Etc. No investment will pay- farmers better than the purchase of a good Baling Press; a poor one will be money thrown away. TheWhitmanAgricultural'Co. manufacture -a full line of presses thathave no;squal, and .are warranted superior in every respect to any in use, They are also headquarters for Ciaer Mills and other Farin' ftlachlnery. Send for free illustrated catalogues, circu lars and prices of machine wanted. D on ’ t rely too much on the man who poohs at superstition; bis is' often merely s sham-pooh.—Binghamton Republican. H am - cureo eruptions will return. Eradi cate themwith Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. Hill’s Hair and Whisker Dye, GOcents. I t is peculiar that the faster aman Is the sooner age will overtake him.—N. Y. Herald. ___ •_ A x r one can .taka Carter’s Little Liver Pills, they are so very small. No trouble to swallow. No pain or griping after taking. T ub old woman who “lived In-a shoe” evidently bad neighbors wbo kept hma.— Puck. I _ ^ No Opiumin Fiso’s Curefor Consumption. Cures where other remedies fail. 2 Sc. "Y oc ’ rb Just the man I'm laying for,” %» vbebricktnuaoMsaid to the contractor. M as v keys that do not lock—On Apiano. Do BURixrss up to dots-Telegraph opor ators.--.Uoll and Express.. i — ----------— --------- H ave an eye to -justness- Oculists and opticians. P atiext waiters—Callors. ,n the physi clan’s ante room,--Lowell Courier. I t Is a wise old saw that knows Its own broken teeth.—is". O. Picayune. W hen .young poople get iuto court—In tennis. D own on all correspondence—The paper weight. “T uhnei *. about by every wind”—The weather vane. • T he light was a draw when it drew a ctr cus full of people.—N. O. Picayune. You can’t fool with a live clectrio wire. It is ulwayB in dead earnest.—Lowell Courier, » M akes music after it has been “stopped” —The organ. DirrcitExcES of opinion occur among men who have more than one idea.—N. O. Picayune. O bseuve tho costumer if you wanttogrow fat; ho is always letting hla clothes out.— Elmira Gazette, No max should carry a half opened um brella in a crowd. He should either put up e r shut up. COXTIXUAM.T running aground —The steam plow. F ugitives from justice are posted in the hide m a r k e t . w e l l Courier. W hex a man goos down the genera) ver dict is that he has gone up.—Dallas News, IT is tho fashion now for friends to send cups to a young lady when it is announced that she Is engaged. It soems ai if spoons would tu more appropriate.—Somerville Journal _______ ..... ....... . comfort ...................... stand every thing. One pill adote. Try them. T in sede water clerk who cannot draw years without drawing your wife's attorn tion is n s expert—Union County iN< J.) Standard. gvfrapjEcs O N G E N J O Y S Both the method mud results when Syrup o f Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver.and Bowels^ cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup o f Figs is the only remedy o f its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial m its effects, prepared only from the most healthy ana agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup o f Figs is for sale In 60o and $1 bottles by' all leading drug-? gists. A n y . reliable druggist wbo may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for /any one who wishes to try i t Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. » 4 it mudiaoo. cal lO vm iU E . KY. , M W YORK. n.r* CURED OF SICK HEAOACHE, W. D . Hw sM to i P a lm y r a , e . , w r ite s i ••Khava bams a g r e a t s a fr e r e r fr o m C e s t iw a iw s a S flic k H ead a ch e, s s e b a t t tr ie d a s s y m edictaea* h a t TutfsPills ta t h e o a ly an a t h a t c a v a m « r e lie f. K g la d t h a t o a e p ill a cta h a tter thaw th r e e s f a n y a th e r k in d , and d o es n o t . w eak en o r gripe-" E legan tly , an g a r c o a te d . D ose sm a ll. P r ic e , SB eer.ta. S O U ) E V E R Y W H E R E . Offioe, 44 Hurray Street. Hew York. IMPROVED MONTANA STOCK RANCH TIMOTHY UW N STOCK RANCH, locat'd on branoh lino of Northern .i'acffto Kaltway, within school Usd that will ho In nmrkdt soon. Form h«s been fettled formanyyenni *n<lhas good buildings* Lend litlrrltfktedandhee produced Inone seeson4,900 bn»hsis or grain. MOtons of hay end vegetable* in nbundsnee. Livestock snd formntsehfaery included In solo. I’rlce, r““ ---- *• -.* * ‘ suitableterms, i Address* ■rNUCSTHISWlfiiWiyttffl y«*.«vttfl> its Ku i is ra nw I taMSi one-third cash, bstanoe on •H. MOOD, Poi). MtlllU. $1??PerAcre I s ; sesnf CHEAP, Sat Is* vettors TRBOuem vs bars ei*deovertMpercent. Iters •eportasltlesla thecomingmetropelle. Kteunlone oa m-rtaamarAwaweraeiwoena ' IANDWHISKEY HAlfTfl CCHID AT HOME WITS OUT rAlK. Book nrjntr> tlcaists S B N T » E k . . IB, M. WOOIXKY. M, l>., __ . ATLANTA, BA. Oheo 1MH WklMklllW v u n t w r i r n m i r t H p iM e U I V E E V e b CURED TO STAT CUREO. U N I | E ■ .E H We want the name and ad* dremofevery tufferer inthe & M O T I I N I 0 l-’.S. and Canada. Address* A O I I H n A P.ItnMlAjw,V.B .Ik&le,X T- GOLDIN klkOEUIB « 0 cM a£ Won*and the chotcret —rlUrnreot tie beet Author*. Write tor terns to HuntA gatOn.IWttk Ave.,N,Y. n t u i n B i M r u m r i A N .R .-E . IS 5 0 when w a r n n e Ta a » vxrti » era fleam e u te that te a tew the AS>ertIaem*at ta Ula f tp s I* better than any soap; handier, finer, mow effec tive, more of it, more for the money, and In the form o f a powder, for jronr convenience. Takes, as it were* thh fabricin one hand, the dirt in the other, and lays them apart— comparatively speaking, ward ing with littlo work. A* it saves the wont of the work, so it saves the worst o f the wear. It isn’t the use of clothes that makes them old before their tim e; it Is rubbing and •training, getting the dirt out by main strength. For scrubbing, house-cleaning, washing dishes, windows and glassware, Pesrline has no equal. Ifewar* o f imitations, prize packages and ped*’ d,tnt* JAMES PYLE, New York. pJHO'8 REMEDY FOR CATARRH.—Best. Easiest to i a cheapest. Relief is immediate, a cure Is certain, ; (k»kllnth*Hs*dlthMiW*vmi K A T A R R 1-4 VeS*’ R J T " ^ r \ I \ I I jute “ A * Wsma.pis
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