The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26
i \ m \ |ine la<4fts im they pass by. Tbo jneia- \ *5.\wi’a bare a peculiar reverence for Moo- | (lay. That is tbo day on which they In- I P3ICS S 1.25 PE^ ANNUtyL vitj their to dine with them. Ou K > i r t . U K j . V KiiiVsi'Ai’un. thitt day tho dinner |s served to the members without card, it is a homo dinner, and the waiter’s card is tiis- . IL 1 »D A \ , J L L A , TSOI. P^usifd With for tho reason that it is the intention to maim, the dinner free ir i n i / r>in „ ' tv.°™ everything that hn« any semblance / /. l i h A l l l , E d ito r and Prop'p of business. A NEW POMPEII. * Korol SumrestSpH hy .» Well-Known Euir- .» Hill 1'hUo.iophcr, Frederic Harrison, tbo English essay ist and philosopher, Has recently made a plea for “ an English Pompeii-" It is * deliberate plan for u subterranean City, furnisbedwith all the “rt>nve-> nieuces” of to-day, that may bo un earthed a thousand years from now for th«v: advantage and instruction of pos terity. In a few ccEturips,ho declarea, the human raqet will have exhausted gold, silver, coal, ivory, fur, whalebone, and perhaps mahogany, ■The- elephant will soon be as rare as the mammoth, arid with the elephant will disappear the. seat, the whale, and nil the larger marine mammals. London, in the twenty-ninth century, he thinks, may as desolate as the Egyptian Thebes, Wi for the benefit of the New Zealand tflbbe trotter of 2890, who is to moor his electric balloon, bn the last broken arch o f London bridge, he would construct a subterranean city in which each centu ry woulddeposit its almanacs, guides and other treasures. These vaults he would have thirty or forty feet square, ‘Clfecd twenty feet thick with the strong est-, known cement. and to contain a careful collection of products, works. Inscriptions, pictures, books, instru ments and the like o f each century. Eacli vault should be opened officially by public authority anci legislative sanc tion in the last year,of each century., He would store up,photographs, phono graphs.' encyclopedias. models of loco motives, ironclads, etc., together with elccrical •photographic reprints of ord nance maps. lie suggests that leading painters should dedicate •their best works to our remote posterity of a thou sand years hence, and bury these can vases in the new PompeU t €11 liU CH W IU S C T O l t y . / •* - ■■ ? I’l-veiiunier (lhnr"h,i~itpv ’IV C j •]n*nii, fiufjtor, ■Jeitulijr wervhTs tfj ji :< hi u ui; fbibbHth scjiohl at lo;oii/a n, a dbP.; rihuipli.—Ilew d. !<’. Moitui! H Jtk^or. Hervices at-1hub a mi ; Sablrntf yi-luml at 10:00 a til. ' t M.K. Church.- Kev. (i, L. Tuftii, mo* mi . ProiiHilng at 10:45 a mi : Sabbath *-<Imol at 9*:J0 a, m,; elans, ;> mi p. m,: Vouue People** meutiu" at 7:01 ' .prayer, meeting Wednesday evening *7 7:00 " IJ. V, Church.— ttov. .T. .0, Waritnrk, pastor.. Servh-.«H at Il.;iy)a id and 7 i in|Bublrtth school at i0;00 aVu -t ■ A V.-lfi. Ohiirp.li.—H pv . A, ->pivev j,r-i<*r. f-etvices at 11:‘H) a ui uiui :00 pm each Mitblnuh; Sahlmth school MHOm. . : ,■ Baptist Chilrch. — Hew I). MTifnier, pastor. Pronebiirg every Sabbath jit 11* oi, and 7 :00 p in; Hi.ibbtttb/Hciiqol hi - 2:0ti o'clock t>»»,• lb-ay«r 'niaetlhg. Wed n esd a y night. CITIES Q F > A U S T R A ^ 1. /' Their Advaufocov aiiii Uaogers—Tb• Need , J o f an Agrteiuvural The preyMUng,state, la fill ing tho larger towns: with gobchthings— excellent museums, splendid libraries, free reading rooms, palrks, botanical gardens,, manifold places of interest or amusement. These are for the multi tude. and the muititudein Australia ts unquestionably bfcohaing sotfthWn ;iu its taste for excitement and^amtise- •ments. says a writer in Century. J'or tho rich are music, tho theater and clubs asexpensive and almost as luxurb ous as those of Pall Mall or Piccadilly For the children, o f all, excellent schools and universities. So rich and poor alike crowd into the towns, which become large-, without becoming crowded, so wide isttllombm for expansion, so per fect' t&evapidlanees of tram rail ant? boat for the suburban residence. Tima the cities have acquired not only an ex cess o f population, but also a social and political, dominance which is neither Tiritisli nor American, and for which . only a continental parallel can oo found. To an outside observer the re sulting condition o f things seems arti ficial and not without grave dangers, ' but curiously Interesting, as illustrating new forms of national growth, possibly incidental to extreme democratic devel opment. The concentration of popula tion has enabled the artisan -iinss to. se cure unequalcd present advantages, but there is justification for the view entertained by many Australians tbdfc it will sap the foundations of parma- . neat prosperity, unless a check* can .tie found. The gravest problem before ;Jrustralia is apparently how t o ‘get a $;u£lcient agricultural population to stay upon the land. The temper of tho country la not favorable to#the patient industry o f the farm, with its remote results and slow accumulation. Within the lust few years the curious phenom enon has occasionally presented itself of a serious dearth o f labor in’eountry places, while in the towns tnftsses of un employed, were besieging the govern- nment office# with demands for reliqf works. Sent, sometimes at govermnept expense,-to the rural districts, the “ un employed'* soon drift back to the mingled wants and delights Of City life. FOUNDED ON WASH-DAY. Tba H«mble Origin o f On* -of tb* Cele brated Clubs of lionton. • “ Were you ever in Poston . and did you ever dine at the Temple club of thatcity?” asked a well-known club mkn of Chicago, says the Chicago Tribane. Then ho added: “ Nearly eighty year* ago several merchants o f the Hub took to dining downtown Mondays forth* reason that that day was wash-day at heme and their wives gave* the order that there would be no regular dinners on that day there. In this way the men. becarascronies, for they were id th* habit of dining together at a down town restaurant. They looked for Mon* > day to com* with the interest o f boys and they saved up their best stories for that meeting. This was kept op for some years, when it occurred to them that the town as growing, and they had not as much time os formerly, ft was ’ suggested that if the good wives could get along better with the housework on one day for tho absence of the husbands they, th* wires, could do much better if th* husbands took dinner downtown ■ every day. On this suggestion the Tem ple club, one o f the oldest in the city, was founded Of course, the member ship has changed since its formation. Many o f the original members have passed away. It la now a club of eighty members, and most o f them are bank ers, The building In which the clnb- rooms- are fronut on the old Poston Common. The bay-windows ere larg* and look out on the most fashiouaht* promenade o f the city In those win dows every afternoon one eon see A number of th* older members, every one a hanker worth from a million to two or three tnlllious, sipping their brandy and soda. * great drink with , tlie older cion of Poston, and_ watching WOLVES IN MAINE. After Long Absence Thoy Again A p . pear In the State. About a year ago considerable excite^ inont was occasioned in 'Maine by the discovery that wolves had returned to the state after an absence of fully half a century, probably more. They were first seen around tho lumber camps in extreme northern Maine, says a Ban gor correspondent of tho Boston Globe. They have recently commenced appear ing very numerously in Washington county, tho southeastern portion of thO state,, near the coast, and not many miles from this city. Thoy are the old- fashioned gray wolves, gaunt and large, and the farmers view their encroach ment with the greatest alarm, knowing that their live stock must pay the usual penalty to the newcomer^. Big lake seems to be the headquarters for several, packs of the wolves. Lum bermen there have often seen tho ani mals and plenty of their tracks, while the Fassamaquoddy Indians, who hunt them through that section, corroborate tho stories o f tho loggers. Joe Moll and’ Lewis Francis saw two recently Peter Newell saw four, while Toman Joseph and Wallace Leary sighted three at the Narrows, just above Princeton. There is no section of tho state to rich in deer as this identical one where tl:o wolves liavo taken possession, anti should tho latter animals range freely through it the deer will bo driven out. Already it is said that,®, number of car casses of deer have been found where tho wolves had killed and left them. Tho Indians realize more than any body else tho amount, of devastation which tho waives are able in this man ner to cause, and thoy ereabout to start with a largo* party to cover tho entire .county and scatter tho newcomers if possible. In the early days in Maine the wolves were a perfect terror to the settlers, women and children did not dare to venture outside the log house without a 6trong escort, while the pioneers were obliged to watch their cattle and horses to save, them from .tho sneaking gray pests. In later ypars none have been seen within the borders of the state and l£was the .general impression that th* genuine gray wolf oould not be found south o f Labrador. That this impres sion I* erroneous is shown by 'rooent, developments, ________ . , KW ln i o*«*•* *• biswi ' Attempts have been made, not•with out success, to form minerals, naya Prof. Crooker in the Forum. Artificial ultramarine lias long been an article of commerce. The formation of the dia mond ts said to. have been actually ef fected. but In the opinion of the in- ventdr the process is so difficult end so dangerous that tho diamond miner and Hie diamond merchant need not feel uneasy. The ruby abd the sapphire have lately been reprodaoed in Paris, and curiously enough th* coloring mat ‘ l both is found t* b* due to ono ___ the same metal-chromium—In dtfareut states o f combination. Red aod bine stones o f an intermediate vio let form which might be likened to the rare and beautiful oriental amethyst, have been obtained in one and the same Operation from thesam* lot o f material. Th* jcw c'» th” * produced have so far all been small: la-gi enough to form B, = 1 3 3 © : 1 3 3 1 . : F i f t y iL n z m a l F a i r CF THE GREENE COUNT? AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY - W Z X i X i X3333 r r E I i D A T - XENIA, AUG. II, 12 , 13,14 PROGRAM U N U SU A LLY ELAB OR A TE AND IN TE R E S T IN G . .IV• « , » * W W - . . A . . - *... *...* ...* ... j m & i i # f e l l W8B jjSfe m E VER Y D A Y A B AN - & NER D A Y W ITH _ S P EC IA L M M M M & a t t r a c t i o m ; f || A L L D E P A R TM EN TS W ILL O V ER F LOW W ITH O G O O D TH IN G S , SV a miP •3W jMJ., T H E SPEED D EP AR T M EN T W ILL BE E N JO Y A B L E W B E YO N D EXAM P LE . $ T H E COM ING S FAIR o m W IL L SURPASS PRECEED ING ON E S . Rpgardisggood races us the magnet of a Fair, the I>i- rvuiorn have evented entries of the fleetest-footed h« r*ea' in the ununtry, and the con duct of drivers and owners will be M»r*)jrtilntedJtu»tthe contests will behot andhon est, while theexbihiifonrtMil through will be respeccabie. •*" **r ♦* ,»R, Back to the Old Way. After deliberate ’consideration on. the corps of physicians employed by the Jackson Mannlacf tiring Co., to investigate flic so-called advance III medical seleneo wjlb reffcreiica to thq treatment of lung troubles,they have decided thsMlio old reliables" medi cinal proper1‘H ^ f Wild€hprry Bark and a lslgllly elmdnatcd pWiparatlftn o f Tar, possesses the most' reliable stimulant fo'thc Weak nndidist'endciS loltesdf tho lungs. ’• TJiu>’ are na- turc’s own remedies, JiVid'fas a con- scqucnco the mftiMifaetiirer has de cided to.continue the sale of Jackson’s IVihl cherry and Tar Syrup under a positive guarantee that one dose will relieve the most.obstinate cough and one bottle will generally cure a cold. Price 25 and 50 cents. For sale by II. G. Itidgway. 0 . b . P .ix r , » . n. B. K bkk R kvko I. ds , d . a. a M IK E & REYNOLDS, DENTISTS !i Xenia National Bank building, corner Main and Detroit Sts., Xenia, 0. V ita lized A irju n dR Itrou s O xide C n s u sed fo r thw P A fN L K S S ix tra c - * tion or T * * t n . ulEXDOWBROOK STOCK farm ; ’ Consumption Cit red. Aftoldphysicianretired frompractice, having had placed in bis hands byan EastIndia tnia elonsrytheformulaOf» simple vegetableteme- dyforthespeedy and permanent care of Con- sumtiMi, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and alt Throat andLungaffections also apoeitlvaand rSidtoalcareforNervous Debilityand all Nerv- tm*Complaintsafter having testedits wondet futcurative|>owerSis thousands of caseshasfelt ithisduty tomakeUknownto hiesufferingfellows. Actuatedbythismotive aftd a desire to relieve human suffering, I will send free of charge to aitwho besireit this receipt in ficr- manFrenchorEnglish kithfait directions for Poi Bale. A choice lot of young bulls; alfco a hue lot of grade heifere for sale at vei-y reasonable prices. Come and see them and be convinced of their merits, or write to D.Bradfatc&Son, C e d s r r llle O- W . * 'F , T R A C E R Attorney At Law- NO’ 9 ^ a s t m a i n s t r e e t , o p p o s it e COURT HOUSE. _ _______ ________ a ________preparlngandusing. Sent bymailbyaddrsss* * * s ily om om e u to l ob i- * t« . ff.Y. 20.1yr, CHAS. E. SMITH’ S It th*pltwo foryott to get * tttooih shave or » atyliah ltiur cut. Over The Bank o f Ceclarville. O ffice or D ittos & G allin ', Dealers in line horses, Columbus. O., G entlemek —Early last spring one of our.horses was flcriohsly -injitied by being kicked. Arabian Oil was recommended to us and we gave it ft trial. The result waff not Only satis factory, but surprising. The wound healed rapidly, and the animal was ready for ujw In a few days. Since' that time we have by ils use cured a number o f cases o f scratches aiul re moved some bad eases of curb. Ara bian OH is undoubtedly the best gen eral Stock Liniment that wo ever used, and we advise Farmers and Horsemen to keep* supply o f it in their stables at all times. Yours l!c- speetftjlly, ■D itto * k C allin '. We offer $106for a case o f Scratches Arabian Oil will not cure* For sale by B. G. Itidgway. / I
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