The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26
EBSONAt, court “tnor* n by WQmoa 1 cost more s several ir» !«t must be 1tliq patches a t the coq . is a serious ■th and IA, ■ H Christopher discovered n the keep, ttt Duran- 1set op foot icity of the *» is estah* t world’s Rockefeller an and child lollars each eat sum of f t a peanut Astor could u r own d e a r . *0 each and th which to in p to be a • Eugenie, is •ensation in amatic, e ren pretends to r plumber, was pro-' court of the Is of thirty adds to her which ~in- , a technical brass hanv ' 8 some time h a s ostab- spital, also, ion, and her eople there for this gra- ost devoted t wealth has Poropaugh’a ngles of the me is- now . salary, the ons the pink c o .and rides the interest Young nd built like ething to do 0 was a boy o wasrecent- t consular ~s a t Amoy, writer. He ears ago and peated visits much about id acquired language, and in let- e has acorn- so clothing, lly selects a < natives. ENSE.” icl6-s-'|J[ hnn- ton Star, y physicians tter for chil- gratifying, h more milk ale Reveille, a t you upset o’s 'dress at er—“ Yes, u t about It ask for soup dvantage,—• kind of a Idwin (read* he best mint '(w ith alac- goyou!”—■ hair restorer ‘Dear Mr: A spilled some le corn husk and when I ir mattress." people of an become eti the dollar d take scats row. After sband goes !.—*Atchison ex-jud/o is recently he Offered by a. 11 right,” he oil offer in o person to scarcely suf* to hang a e,” was the likely," iv* e n St. cornea have to lie Democrat. 1Ladv of the sh from the I want vou is afternoon it seen many n had bet* out am! ic« know it i* bbably 'aiw cu r.ut <>! tonishmeiit« ink that he fray round ’' h o u s e h o l d b r e v it ie s . --Pieces of licorice laid around where run is recommended ^Old nowspapare torn in small pieces gnd wet in water softened by the add!* jjpu of a little ammonia are excellent to w&sh lump chimneys —Pried Cakes.—Two eggs, two cup» of sugar, six tablespoonfuls of melted l*rd, three teaspoouftils of baking ppw- jterand one and ohe-lialf cups of milk. -Detroit Free Press. . —Crisped Crackers,—Split the com mon butter crackers and spread thinly with butter. Pu t them, buttered side up, into a pan and color quickly in a hot oven. They .should be ju st a deli cate golden-brown- and will scorch easily, so look at them .often.—Ladies' homo Journal, —A teasj^onful of pure cider vinegar to a gill of raw linseed oil makes a use ful ’reviver for oil-finished •furniture. Shake the vinegar and oil together till well mixed Use by just moistening a soft/ woolen ran- with the mixture. The vinegar prevents the oil from gumming. -N . Y. World. —Salads may be made of sweetbreads parboiled in boding salted, water, then cut in small pieces and nicely and quickly browned in butter. The akil- «let should be well heated before put ting them in place in the inner leaves of lettuce, which should he crisp and white. Serve with mayonnaise dress- i J ^ i n g .-H . Y. World —Sherbet—Crush a quart of straw berries or other small fruit to a paste; add three pints of- water and the juice of a lemon. Let the mixture stand two or three hours, then strain through a cloth to clear of seeds; .add three- fourths of a pound of sugar, and stir until dissolved; add ice, and drink, when quite cold. I t is very delicious,— Boston Budget. —Baked Shrimps.—Boll, for twenty minutes, in well-salted water, one plate of shrimps. Drain, peel, and chop very fine. Add three eggs, tablespoonful of butter, saltspoonful each of -black pepper' and ground celery; stir to gether and pour into a greased pan. Cover with bread crumbs and bake, fifteen minutes. This is delicious.— Good Housekeeping. —Potted Fowl and Ham.—Cut all the meat from a cold fowl and remove the bones and skin; e n tit very fine; take quarter pound lean ham and two table- spoonfuls butter, pepper, salt, nutmeg, and a pinch of cayenne; melt the batter and mix all tborongbly to a smooth mass;, set aside to become, thoroughly cool; se&ve for tea or lunch, garnished with eiiqqa-of lemon and celery leaves. —Old Homestead. —Bacon and Snap Beans.—Wash a piece of nice bacon weighing two pounds. If the dinner is to be served at twelve o’clock put the bacon on *at eight in the morning. Add to it one talf gallon, of snap beans broken in email pieces, cover with water. Cook gently, so th a t at’ the time of serving the beans will he quite free from liquor.- Slice the bacon thin and place it on a •Hallow dish. P a t the beans in a cov ered dish.—Housekeeper, —Fillets of Salmon.—Cut about a. pound and a half or two pounds of sal- ^monJnkumall iUlots;remoYhigLtbein fromthlttbone with a sharp knife; re move a(l the skin carefully, dip each fillet into a well-beaten egg seasoned salt and a little lemon juice, then Into breadcrumbs, and fry a delicate brown inhot ldrd; place on a warm platter, andpour over each one a little Worces tershire sauce; serve with green peas andnow beets.—Boston Herald; Modern Voting Men. > Effeminate young men arouse the wrath of a late writer, who thus dis courses: At a little function not long agothe majority of men, both married and single, talked in effeminate voices, using their inflections and accent pre cisely as Women do. The tastes also o f themodern young man are towards tho effeminate. Many yonng bachelors are keepinghouse by themselves, and they can tell you all about it, from the price oneshould pay for tea to the proper widthoi a tabiecloth hem. But this is not the worst. I was paying a visit one afternoon’ and on being ushered into tiwreceptionroom 1 saw the young man ofthe house, a boy of nineteen, sitting by the window busily engaged in doing drawn work! He had his embroidery frames and was deftly weaving the threads of an intricate spider’s web pat* tern in and ont with seeming satisfac tion. He spread ont his work fo r My inspection—it, was a sideboard cover— and patted it, smoothed it and held it opin various lights, precisely ns a girl night have done. Though I should have enjoyed taking him by the coat coltar •ndgently dropping him in a clear cold pool of water, I bravely repressed my disgust and admired his skill.—Phila- celphia i’ross. The Finish of Govm. Women who are inclined to shirk the little niceties of sewing in making a gown, and only looking for a good ef fect for one or two wearings, would find out their folly if they would ex amine frocks made by the greatest tailors. In these, due and strict atten tion is given to the proper sewing of every thing; the pocket is never forgot ten, it is always placed in the most con* foniont spot that the style of She skirt '•rill permit, and, to keep it from sag ging down, the top of it is fastened by little strap that extends up l» the waist-band, a stitch or two more in suring perfection is never begrudged a good modiste*, and the amateur W&mihl certainty bo an imitator to that "wtent. - Ladies’ Homo Journal, , tail -Mr an Tho Leading Story o f tho August Wide. Awake, SA delightfulreminiscence of Lafayette’s lost visit to America, is contributed by Sarah O. Jewett; it is entitled “Peg’s Little Chair,” and has a full-page illus tration by Garrett. “Tho Bride's Bou quet** is a charming story of a good deed, and “The Silent Lie” is an admira ble school story. “Pokeberry Juice and Mullein,” by Kate Upson Clark, is a little tale th a t reveals some of the funny toilet secrets of country girls a generation ago, “Mr, Brown’s Play fellow,” by J . Loxley Rhecs, “Shells of Sea and Land,” by Will M. Clemcus, “The1Poppy Bee," by Mrs. Hall, and “How to Dry. Starfishes,” by Louisa Lyndon, are good short articles for the lovers of natural history, “How the Cossacks Play Polo” is a terrible and dramatic story of a Russian field-sport indulged in by officers of the Imperial Guard; it is by Madame de Meissner of the Russian legation. “What Seven Indian Boys Did” is a true account of some knowledge-loving Alaska boys, by Fronds C. Sparhawk. Margaret Sidney’! “Peppers” serial in this num ber baa all the interest of a good novel. “Miss Matilda Arobambeau Van Dorn," the serial by Miss Comings, is full of amusing developments. “Marietta’s Good Times” are really good times. “Men and Things” pages abound with original anecdotes. The poems are by Kate Putnam Osgood, Maria Johns Hammond, Eli Sliepperd, Jane Ellis Joy and Richard Burton. Especially good things for veranda reading are the Margaret-Patty Letter, by Mrs. Wil liam Clafiin, and the fine ballad by Mrs. Harriet Prescott Spofford, “Pope’s Mother a t Twickenham.” . . : Wide Awake is $2.40 a year; 20 cents a number. A specimen (back number) will be sent on receipt of 5 cents. D. Lothrop Company, publishers, Boston —Out of Tune.—The mistake of the compositor and the short-sightedness of the proof-reader were recently exem plified in the elaborate description of a wedding party, where it was announced th a t a “maudlin orchestra” discoursed sweet music. What was meant was a “mandolin orchestra,” the newest wrinkle in swelldom.—Detroit Free Press. ’ ■ , • ._____• •* - —An amateur photographer went thirty allies out in the country to take some choice views, filled fifty plates, and found when he came to develop them a t home tha t he' hadn’t opened the shutter o f his camera.. He had pressed the button, but for some reason it hadn’t done the rest.—Philadelphia Record. •______ —Stem father a t seaside hotel table to son who is moving off for a bicycle .vide—Come back, sir! Is that any way to leave your egg shells? How often have I told you to smash the shells up, or you’d ‘have bod luck all day?—Phil adelphia Record, • P l u s Spanish—the king of Spain. Goat In for a quiet Ufa—tho hermit. i C ontains u ciitti. gartlclo—the scabbard. —Mall and Express. K jusubbs on account books are sore ■fans of abigger aorapo coming—Puck._ BiorotiSTB do not have to take ont a r’a license. T n bow-legged man has the bulge on the bicycle.—Binghamton Republican. A h article that has got some snap to li the torpedo.—Mull ana Express. T he Order of tho Bnth—Hurry up them towels.—Smith, Gray &Co.’s Monthly. D hatii is the only power that can make some servant girls dust—Elmira Gazette. B ibbs to a question of “privileges”—The hired girt. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ E ton the funny man sometimes gets ont of bnmor. T hb end of a long strike—a home run.— Washington Star.- - - — Tin light of the world is of no Interest to the man who has not a good liver.—N. Q, Ptoojrano. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Go i t “tooth and noil”—dentists and oar- vectors. _______ PaxxrxATixa musio—“The Song. That ronebedMyHeart,”—Mall and Express. Txxax are not necessarily four sides to s ai|Maffight.—Indianapolis Journal. “How contagious the gentleman behind bathe” said a Boston girl a t the base- ton.—Washington Star. a mab - I AM economical bartender can make two lemonades with one lemon, but it’s a tight fn e e e a —Bln ghamton Leader. T n older a man groin the more pleasure he takes in thinking that the yonng are not M wUd as he used to be, and #will never be Ml good as t u l a—Atohliwh Globa. > ULCERS, CANCERS, SCROFULA, SALT RHEUM, RHEUMATISM, BLOOD POISON. these and every kindred disease arising from impure blood successfully treated by that never-failing and best of all tonics and medicines. S i PEG! Books on Blood end Skin Diseasesfree, Printed testimonials sent cn application, Address n«8wift SpecificGo ATLANTA* CA I'V Through To Mackinaw. The through sleeping-car service over1 the Cincinnati, Hamilton and 'Dayton and Michigan Central RnUromls! be tween Cincinnati via Toledo and De troit to the fairy island of Mackinaw and the Northern Lake resorts has been resumed for the season. These ears leave Cincinnati every evening, except Watur-/ day, a t 10 o'clock, arriving a t Mackinaw ’ a t 0:40 o'clock the next evening. Ask your local agent for tickets via C., H. A D. or address any CL, H. A D. agent or E. O. McCormick, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Cincinnati, O. has been gram Web i ted a ' A B oston woman patent on a stockingsupporterwhich an ex pert says will supports Bostonwoman by s royalty for good manyyears. M au flirts are to be dealt with st water ing places this summer. Lat as jlltymaa Mospa—V. O. Piosyuno. A Modal Hallway. The Burlington Route, C., B. fit Q. R. It operates 7.000miles of road, with termini in Chicago, St. Louis, St. Paul, Omaha, Kansas City and Denver,- For speed, safety, com fort, equipment, track, and efficient service It has no equal. The Burlington gains new patrons, but loses none. “Pooa jlgsbyl He has lost his mind” “I'm not surprised to bear it I. knew long ago that ms head was cracked.”—Indianapolis Journal. ' . . ---------*— r —:— •■/■■■ I t I s the unloaded guns (hat always go off at unexpected moments and wreck things. It Is different with men.’—N. Y. Recorder. Its' Excellent Qualities Commend to publle approval the California liquid fruit remedy Syrup of Figs. It is pleasing to the eye; and to the taste and by gently acting’ on the kidneys, liver and bowels, it cleanses the system* effectually, thereby promoting the health and comfort of all who use it. I t Is silvery well to offer your sympathy to a man who' has followed your advice ana failed, but It Is bard sometimes to get him to accept 11—Somerville Journal H avk no equal as a prompt and positive cure for siok headachei biliousness, consti pation, pain in the side, nr d all liver trou bles. CArtor’s Little Live: Pills. Try them. T his diplomat who said that tale-bearers could not occupy high places never saws monkey go for sooooanut tree.—Elmira Go* zetfe. A sallow skin /acquires a bealtt ness by.the use ofOienn’s Sulphur clear- onp- Hill’s Bair and WhiBker Dye, 60cents. “MissP rim navel goes into the water.” “No; abe la too modeot to surrender herself to the embrace of tho ooean.”—N.-Y.World. A nt one oan take Carter’s Little Liver Fills, they ore /so very small. Notroubleto swallow. No pain or griping after taking. T n fellow whs Uvea on bis wits must frequently put up with poor “wlttles.”— Binghamton Republican. B est , easiest to use and cheapest Plso’s Remedy for Catarrh. Bydruggists. 25a T he penny-ln-tho-slot machine is a great ln-centivo to the ohewing-gum industry. ‘ISS1 A s she enters womanhood, every young gjrf needs tho wisest care. Troubles beginning then may make her whole life mis erable. But the troubles that are to be feared have a positive remedy.* Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription builds up and strengthens the system, and regulates and promotes every proper function. I t’s a generous, support ing tonic, and a quieting, soothing nervine—a legitimate medicine, not a beverage, free from alcohol and injurious drugs. I t corrects and cures, safely and surely, all those delicate derangements, weaknesses, and diseases peculiar to the, sox. A remedy that does cure is one that can be guaranteed. That’s what the proprietors of “ Favorite Prescription ” think, If it doesn’t give satisfaction, in every case for which it’s recommended, they'll re fund the money. No other medicine for women is sold on such terms. .Decide for y0ur8elf,whether some- thifig else sold by ‘'the dealer, is likely to bo “ just as good ” for you to buy. T H I S I S THE ONLY SCALE S t o n . R eliable , A ccurate D urable * BEAMBOX-BRASS-BEAM-*!RON-LEVERS. ADDRESS, . J O N E S “ hefws THEFREIGHT^FOR TERMS. BINGHAMTON, N.Y. r h l l COT ifi RESRDf» FofInformation C P lLC r I 111 J ob "M . BCHMirr, lwehestsr. H T. o r tons 1 1 » m h i « *i «**>*• “August Flower” The Hon. J. W. Ferinimore is the Sheriff.of Kent Go., Del., and lives at Dover, the County Seat and Cap ital of the State. The sheriff is a gentleman fifty-nine years of age; and this is what he says: * ‘I have “ used your August Flower for sev- “ eral years in my family aud for my “ own use, and found it does me ‘‘more good than any other remedy. “ I have been troubled with what I “ call Sick Headache. A pain comes “ in the back part of my head first, “ and then soon a general headache “ until I become sick and vomit. “ A t times, too, I have a fullness ‘‘ after eating, ajiressure aftereating “ at the p it,oT the stomach, and ‘*sourness, when food seemed to rise “ up in my throat andmouth. When “ I feel this coming on if I take a “ little August Flower it -relieves “ me, and is the best remedy I have “ ever taken for it. For this reason “ I take it and recommend it to “ others as a great remedy for Dys- “ pepsia,’ &c.’’ ® 6. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer, Woodbury, NewJersey, U. S. A. Pa ten ts ! Pensions Bond for Inventor’*Quid*orHow to Obtain a Patent. Bend for Dl***t of PENSION aaS BOUNTY LAWS fatbiotco ’T ab & xix , - waobutozov , n. 0. Ormxiaa»m»s*i^ayn*ni» DONALDKENNEDY Of Inlay, Mass., ayi Kennedy’s Medical Discovery cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep Seated Ulcers of 40 years standing, Inward Tumors, and every disease of the skin, ex* cept Thunder Humor, and Cancer that has taken root Price, $1.50 . Sold by every Druggist in the yU. S. and Canada. SOLD MBDAL, PA 1 UB, 187 A W. BAKER ft CO.’S Breakfast Cocoa fromwhlohth*«M**ot«e hu he«o r*moT* 0 t . A atwlutolv pur* 1 it It w I k H i , No Chem ical* areaa*dla Its praparatlM. H has mor* than (Are*Amo Ao HnngtK of Cocos mlx*d wlA Stsreh, Arrowroot or Buftr* sad 1*thereforefar more •*•> Iaomlent, cottlng Itii IAn n s ’ lemfocup. Itl*d*llolou*,nonr- _ Ibhlnff, •IrengthMlao, OAtixV staasTan, anf admirably adapted far lnrallda .at wall aa for paraaoa In health. ■old hy flroccn *r*rywh»re. W.BAKER ft C0„Dorchester,Xtaa. Away with the wash-board ^ Use £ 3 A s long. V V V X a s you use the old wash-board there’ll be hard work and waste. Tha t’s wh a t g o e s / N/ with it, and can’t taken from i t That’s what it was made for. It’s the rub, rub, rub, on it that ruins the clothes, It’s the wash-board that wears you out. You don’t need it Away with wash-day! You don’t need that, either. You don’tset apart a day for washing the dishes. Wash the clothes in the same way, with no more work, a few at a time. But you’ll have to use P ea r line to do it. P ea r line only can rid you of wash-board and hard work; with it you can do your washing when you like. . And you can do it safely, too. Directions on every package. Away with the peddlers and prize givers, who say. their imitations are “ as good as” or “ same as” Pearline—IT’S FALSE—l’earline is never peddled and has no equal. Soldby*11gropera 340 . JAMES I’YLK. NewYork. U N C H >e done ? _ s V d t n d s f The house ough ! !o be cle&neJ*" w i t h S a p o / / o * T r y e x e J * e in y o u n nexh ho use* cleo^mn^And be convinced ^ IGNORAN CE of th® law . excuses no ^ man,” and ignorance is no excuse for a dirty house or greasy kitchen. Better clean them in the old way than not at a il; but the modern and sensible way is to use SAPOLIO on paint, on floors, on windows, on pots and pans, and even on statuary. To be ignorant of the uses of SAPOLIO is to be behind the age. ^ S u m p G o a My wife and child having1a severe attack of Whooping Cough, wo thought that we would try Piso’a Cure for Con sumption, fcnd found It a perfect lucceaa. The first bottle broke up tho Cough, and four bottles completely cured them.-H. S trinokr , 1147 Superior St, Chicago, Illinois. A SERIOUS MISTAKE. Mach mlKkltn. done In the treatment of can.tlantlan. The common opinion I* that all reoalrciaeataare fulfilled Ifthemedlelae force* aaloadlnO of the hewel*. A areat error. Medicine .Imply pnrxdtlve, correct* nomorbid condition, consequently their tree I*followed by (renter coalIrene**. A rem edy, to he effectual and permanent, mn.t he composed of tonic, alterative, corrective and cnt.inrtlcproperlle*. Thceureadmlr- ably combined In Dr, Tntf* I.lver 1*111*. They will. In a abort time, cure all the *Mf- ferli.*. that result from Inactive bewel*. Thcyslvc tone to the Intestine*, *tlmnlate the accretion*, nnd correct Imperfect fane- 1 tlonal action af the atemneh aud liver. T u t t ’s L iv e r P i l l s NEVER DISAPPO INT . Ptlet, 25a. Office, 38 A 4t Park Place, N. Y. WHIIMAN’S re S oun S lllKBEB PEBPETIMI ^ ■ ^ ■ B g ^ S V io s n y L a v e r PrAasow msdtriorHoy, Straw sad Wool. Always vlctoritm*. netNdvedTintrmhhiM at til prominent fairs, for pant Jr * vmw AlioBustSTEAMPRESSInAmurlta I EWIS’ 98 * LYE I FOVrDKllEDANDFSK7VKXB m* (.FATINIIDJ The ttronout and purett Lyi made. Will make ihe but per fumedHardSoapin20 tn lhuiei tctlhnul boiHnj, I t is the beat for cleansing waste pipes, dis infecting sinks, closets, wash ing bottles, paints, trees, eta. JPENNA. SALT MT’G 00., Gen. Agts., 1’hiia., Pa. CURED TO STAY CURED. We want the nuneand ad- _ _ dteiwofeverysullcrefintl:a & ASTHMA O V « U g S tV !^ V S L V 9 i where, fur IcrniP' ile'.ay AUilrem HINT A BATOV, ISO»th We.. ,VY. I lly, arnreuiiins ratxa«n>as. uiw.a WAIITFnAOKNTS. cither g> >M sell(.t'slthh nnillLlI lioni-nty only capital reI’urcl. Aildi-c**, SEnUACO. ISOSCh«m. ut Conunctc*.Chk-ago. 11L •rstaa taia rtfta.mr iMtmvtai, A .N .K .— E . / 1333 * WNENWaiTlKOTO AbVCRTISPRS PIEMB •Uto that yoa saw ih* AdvwrtUMMet la tht* HAY FEVER tiflhiiiiit*' lOmufa-, tT r.• -ana-.liiifi.tttM t ■nr I- - Til i iTgnam lilii.lWilMilliiilniii.inM.qiiliiifliyaWrf ^ i
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