The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 27-52
rjpss^tixj^KwafiivAsj; , a,-a»»-V*vgi,eewgrTearxr*f T [ \ K H K t \ I i f x Is) , j THE TRAiWINQ OF GIRLS, at .T.-j'.'-trrvr;a w n sr.~":*<W| *.v iMHiriiMHiM’ wt;j;m,y ni . wsj 'AI' kh . j HA'ITKDAY, OCTOBER, }H 1893. IF. 11. JU, AU t , Kt l it or and Prop’r PfflCE * .l,2 3 PER ANNUM. ~ <T3I'*£1’3i V l i e i iO T O S tV . (,iiv«tiniM«*i’ e>Hrmh,™Hov t . ( \ •prom, Pt-itoi:. ‘«milrtr norvieas ut lijiio h on *al»l>ntli Hcliool ut Ui:oo u m IS. I’. l I ihiv I i .—Hm . J. K. Mtiit-Hi, ii.ii or, Sorvieps nt U';i)i>,fi hi ; Sabbath school hi UI:.(H! si m, Mi K. O liiircli.- linv» U, h . Tufwi, |ia«- Sm, ■I'rmu'hiiur at 11 in: Siililmlli x lioiiV at 0‘HO a, m .; tilaas. 3:0U p. ill,; Young People’* limitin ' at 7:00 p m; imivor niooUnj; Wednesday ovoiimg at 7:0li . .• ■ ’- l*. V. Otiiii'oli. ~-.ittfv, J . V. ■ Warnook, .pastin'.' H wvv 'U' wh ut 11:00 u in mid 7 p m; HaUiatli seinxil at, lUUHIji m A y . K. ('iuirH i.—It(iv. A. <1. wpivey ■r»»ator. Breaching lit. 11:00 a in ami 7 tin |i ir; Chmi} o fry ot'i»r.Snldml>li fit IU:00 a. ui .; Sabbath school at 10;0(> a in. Baptist Ohundi. —■Uev. l>. M Tiiriif>i\ pastin'. ItroHaliiiig avery. iSaUlHUli at l l 4 hi . ami 7:00 |) in;. tSaliliitU) Siihnul at 2:00 A-Usels t* ut; Pray.or mooting W « l- limit(uy night. BAKWO! BY ELECTRICITY, How thA Gniiln a t iDllEnf«nt. S'rHQdfl m Flour I* Ascertained. Tbo Minneapolis Journal says: “Th*. lolHors soli (lour under differout’branas, and. doubtless, many housewives have wcmctovwl how tho grade of, each brand 'continued uniform, generally malting ‘bread of tho samo quality. A visit to ‘■the ‘dough-room' of tho big Pillsbury ’flour mills would reveal tho secret. Piled all around tho room are little •pasteboard boxes, each filledSvith wheat in Hour, and" each boarin g a label. The •dough man1 takes tho half-pound of wheat in, one of the boxes, puts it in a email hand-mill and grinds , . The bran and starch are quickly washed out, leaving tho gluten, which is worked into a sort of paste. .This- is baked in a email oven, and tho height to which i* rises determines tho value for brood- making of the consignment of wheat of which the handful ground was a sample. “When tho- attention of Electrician Hughes, who has charge of the electrical plant of the mill, was attracted to this baking oven, ho observed that it toon * }png time to heat it to tho baking poinV by means of tho oil-lamps under it, and bo at once formed the idea of baking the gluten by electricity, with the result tha t he has just applied a most interest ing little device, which in its way ia quite a wonder. “Tho millers had alwayshad trouble to secure an oven tliat would do this work satisfactorily, and tho best one they could buy eamo from England, It lr about fourteen inches in height, with a cement bottom two inches in thickness, and.a door twelve inches high, I t took one hour and forty minutes to heat thin ovetioto the 500 degrees Fahr. necessary to r baking tho. gluten, arid thon when the largo door was opened to put in tho gluten, about 100dogroesof temperature would be lost, and it required flftooii minutes to balto the dough. • ‘Jn the Hughes ovou tho small piece of gluten Is placed lu a cylindrical brass cane, about an inch In diameter, which in turn is placed In tho oven, also cylin drical in form, and a t a temperature of BOOdegrees tho gluten is baked in four minutes, tho entire operation of beat ing tho ovon and baking requiring less than twoH o minutes. The tost of the gluten ia in tho height to which it will rise. In tho little cylindrical tube la placed a plunger bearing a weight of <'loten and a half ounces, pressed down closely on tho gluten, which, in rising, ’ carsie.i tho weight upward. Tho higher it li/’s it in tho tube, tho stronger aro, tho b;cad-making qualities of tho wheat from which tho gluten was taken, and tho milling of tho proper proportions oi tho diuoreat grades of wheat, as deter mine!! by the gluten tests, produces tho required standard of flour. I t is in this way that tho brands aro kept oven. Mr. Hughe.; simply connects his oven with tho roguiaroloetric current in tho mills, and acquires the desired result without I’resosin and expensive delay. Itoow _ha boated to (ISOdegrees.w A C.ici nneinecr. A cool heeded engineer prevented * discstrous collision near West Point, Miss,, the other day. Tho telegraph op erate? neglected to hold &freight train aa directed, ntid it Was pulling out of j the atatlcn W*.e:i a pntcenger train wes j discovered roUudlhg a curve «t the rata ; of fifty miles an liclir. The- engineer of the freight jumped, malting no eiTort tc, [ atop his engine. Tho engineer of the | passenger train, however, brought his ! train ta an abrupt ‘-i&ads.till. Leaping ’ from the cat) ha jumped on tho freight engine and stopped the train ju st two feet from hto w , Tber6 is a married wan in Atlanta, f?n ,wlio wears oye-g»as:,:M vdthagold rim. Hjs wife wears oyc-glasses, too, And tho two palm ate just aline- Tlioy aro the parents of three chi idrow, th« jsurigeot being ten year* of age, and eiit’u of th# children ia near-*igW**. I h c i wear fyfrglMMWt' u>o» AW h t B tM lu »n!i?;|til{A «| livery-Oay, Aftaii n, One very serious deficiency —1- tioation of. the average girl !•>i il*» truce of tho ordinary affairs t,f life, Nearly overy man, whatever ids pro fession, lias n general kuowlrdgo of these thin’js; he knows how tho new building gees up, understands tho prin ciple of the steam engine, can tell why crops are rotated or explain the con struction of a suspension bridge. As a result, he finds everywhere sugges tions for thought, and his sym pathies trained in many directions. This is because’, when ho was an intelligent boy, his attention was continually called to these tilings—-a course of ac tion which would never have been thought of had he be.-ii riie-rely an in telligent girl. Thera is a feeling that all this kind of information is superfluous, if not positively out of place, in 'tho train ing of young girls; so they grow up with their fields of observation and reading narrowed to a minimum, says a writer in Kate Field’s Washington. On' account of these lesser ignorances they find themselves surrounded by a world .full of mysteries, of which the least un intelligible are clothes and servants. Is it any wonder that they fall hack persistently upon tho few concrete in terests which seem to be within reach of their understanding? •There was a little flurry of discussion not long ago abont “Why women read novels.” Well, they read them for,tho sume reason that men do, because novels are tho best expression of the quality of modem life; and they read more of them than most men can, because tliey have more" leisure. For exactly the same cause women read more poetry and more metaphysics than their husbands and brothers. -The reason they do not read so many news papers and serious periodicals is that they find them full of stumbling blocks, on account of the narrow limits of their education In practical affairs, flow many women understand any thing ‘about a new election law, or an im proved system of drainage, or th e1eon- dition of Irish polities, or the latest’ ap plication of electricity? This ignorance is not the more excusable because' it is shared by a great manymen. It should bo a part of every education, whether of girl or boy, to make a not too inter esting world sis amusing and suggestive os possible. _________ THE TIME TO RETIRE. .PURIFY YOUR BLOOD i 'MJ fi 3CA .-TW-ICA , tin) gvoatesi jfil 'orl Puiilicv, ■^V1’ g f ffi u Liver Jlcguliiior and Tonic ever known, in pro- / ,v pared in Nature ’» Laboratory}y Lu'un.-’fit'hil- r a l ; * _ tlivn—tiio Warrutrpxiuglmliiin.uiftJiol'af'iiUj R egularity la (tho H our to V. t O t»erred U a tb er Than E irlln cw , It is all nonsense about “beauty Bleep” coming in tho hours before mid night, and that the rosy checks of the oountry lass is the reward of retiring at the time when the proverbial pole- faced city girl’s evening commences. Tho late, hours of fashionable life would not necessarily scatter the roses from the cheeks if the l&te hour for re tiring could be the same every night without variation. It is irregular hour* and meals that cause pale and haggard faces. The handsomest couple 1 ever saw, says a writer in tho Cliicngo Herald, retired regularly a t half past eleven, and always indulged in u light ksnch just .before retiring. They were both pictures of health. The lady did not look over' twenty-live, though she never hesitated to say that she was thirty-eight years old, and tho husband looked a t least ton years younger than ho really was, They Were- both do* votees to the laws of health. For years Uhey have allowed nothing to interfere with the regularity of sleeping and cat- kig hours. Almost tho midnight hour was chosen for retiring, because It al lowed them evenings ut tho theater and an hour or so at oven tho most fashion able reception.0.. When alone in their home they never indulged in an earlier hour, became then it unfitted them for. entorluinmeat of which they were very fond. , ______________ NAPOLEON'S ENEMY. TUe Woman Whom the Emperor 5Io*t Hated, The woman whom the flmperor Na poleon III. hr-led rami on eaith has just died, cays the llonton Herald. During the brilliant days tha t followed the coup d'etat; Napoleon mado countleyi efforts to live on good terms with the old nobility. There was no limit to t!:a bribery, cajolery nnd even threats to wMeh lie resorted in order to Induce til-m to frequent h b brand-new court. The Marquise do C.of.tollane, whose death is just announced, took the load In bidding him defiance. She not only refused to go to court herself, hut she cat any of her acquaintances whom slio knew to meet with favor tin re, and ts her c;Jon was the most charming' in Paris, the ebanea of being excluded from it was not to he lightly encoun tered, The IMnrqnif e was a grand niece of Talleyrand, and it was tlirougk her Influence that the great diplomat *igned an act of retraction and became teconciied to the church of Rome. For some years die lived in retirement, but In earlier days sho was one of the rfio:.t brilliant and powerful of the yasdesdames of Paris. , Net ia D i Bhiffea* A merchant in Syracuse offered v young woman twenty yards of Bilk feat ^ d iv a if she would saw half » cord of wood in fvoatof his store. -She bor rowed u saw, spit on her hands, atrf t **nt through that woodpile ia j.«M three hours, and tho admiring crowd bought her a ttvel»o*doll*r hat to gc frith the dreoa Tie Dragon M u Msilicloe Coiiimy, Gsw, Pa. :1km 32T Have A Fruitful .Meaning To Buyers ‘ . . / '■‘t a r o s a ' T-TV ■, Houeliold and Kitchen Fern it lire. AVli^n cleaning house this tall you will lind you need anew parh-r or cham ber suite. Jt is then we can do you good. We have an elegant line to select from and wil/guarantee piicefc. BAEB & M 0 ET 0 N. -!•" ‘X‘.“A* im V*- \f^;l ‘-V7e •vr *?T' —~T *. . Itinay be you wi need the servicey of , XJ±Lc 3 L©i,t a , 3 s . o r ‘s ■ . or practical enibalvncrs. If so we gu in.nt*good service B A E B (vu M 0 £>.ku FAWCETT. ■ S y i O L ' O L Has in f-toek ii linn line of W A T C H IvS, (M X )C K S , J i.W ICLIi ItY ami DIAMONDS! T h e fine*!’ line oi tlpUeal (So'><l« in (Jrnem t"minty A Siweinily iniiiit of Ilri /.iliiin [’oliNi'iSpef(i>eli‘s in Ihilii, N«*\ei !•i,*' S ’ i i I tniim-i-, Tln*> confer a lirillniiicy and iMslIncIms-i. of virion, w ith all J i onuul ol ea^a mu' com fort, seldom cnjoyeil by MpeotiicU- wi'tirt r-s. nn ] \ f e i * c lu i ik i , rX ' * U l o i \ NO 10 N, DETROIT STREET • X E * V I * - £ n O , . . B e f o r e v o u b u v v o u r s u i t , O v e r c o a t o r P a n t s f o r F a l l , s e e K A N Y T H E T A I L O R h e h a s a f u l l l i n e o f - F o r e i g n a n d D o m e s t i c g o o d s a l w a y s n o h a n d t o s e l e c t IV. i n . P e r f e c t t i t l i n g g a r m e n t s a n d ; f i r s t c l a s s w o r k g u a r a n t i e d a t a r e a s o n a b l e p r i c e , i l l 'll! i l l . 0. L. P ais *, ». i>. «. ■K bkk U» t . sbi ,»«, ». ■. g nisE& itiinouis, DENTISTS !i 'Xenia National Batik IjuihUn};, corner Main am! Detroit .Sts., Xenia, O. Vitalized Air a n d N itrous Oxide Caa u sed fer ttie FA»WLESSExtrao- tlen ©f Tooth. PKEOSGi AlilOUulllCLt to tiiCCoilkiltn* liCii ofOhio. r r u - v y c ^ v r r i o x •H’Ti'.N' I. l.' i l iv-'itvil ly Cio tn’ieml B u c l£ len ,'a A r n ic a S a lv e . The bruises *( *'l . • . I "t i<>- , 1I;Jt :v pr poo 1—...J“II. * s ■ 1 / ,1. 1,s • r!; eti rs of td - Ms" ; 11 * r v " r-t AI ,11 day m y- *. 1 ,1c.” , 4,. r.. -i.d ■: on 8, of Art.ui>? w i* t.l .p < .1 tv. ort of t.ir Male ci > 1 ].: , t'*’ib.u it $ .a.i - :■’.i ”i«; \ K lit Li. A ll. : tnN ‘al* l A V ■p.'.’FCd wi.kdi shall !‘■** ; v »• ir.;» «t r.„c .1. a., .icy-, ere (its, 11 ;- - f t \ eJl<f n* f r . . v'-.t 1 . j ’.inl-.-teek ; a- ; *e'»r . el: ni r. :il and ; 1 r-’ .ml 1 f;v n" ^ X 1.1 - t >t!.e . v ;? -x.. f m l ; * r . 1 ? i *) the! .aj 1-cpc«s- w t t c . . fMi:r>’i -1 :.tiJ j [ ii t.v..*. • as ti.i." ft g.-Mtig i ! ’:!- • 1.1 t: \ it c : 1 .: J«f ... »i- h > rli .e'S*7 1* l . l r :. icito 17 r ; ‘V-i ,**.*<;• u r •= . .. .r. ■, \ 1 :*«if ityt 11 . 1 I* 1 ;, 61 iv*’y \ 1 ; 1 .wy f«if any iitiTKc ; I* 1 . - S’” ; •? may T*y (.■ci.cral • ».i* CJ»I 1, .: I i . i rii.n; anil tho \»1 i v I E A D O W B I t O O K S T O C K F A M . Foi sals. A choice lot of young bulls; also a tine lot of grade heifers for sale at very leasonable prices. Come and see them and be convinced of their merits, orwrite, to \). Brad i‘u if &Soil, IkMlarvill* ’■j . ■ j ! , ■ J ? L Cincinnati Division. I jfBnnsiilVBniaLines.! U I SchedulsotPatsengerTralns-CentralTime- Westward, Columbus...... lv Allan:........ .......“ West .Teflei'sou .. « fxmdou. .... •< So. Charleston... “ Selma...... ...... “ Cednrvtlle__..... “ Wllberforce........ “ i Xenia......... jJV" SpringValley...., ItOXHUUU......... “ Waynesvlllo,__ ■“ Oregonta ............ * Fort. Ancient...... “ Morrow............“ Souili Lebanon.. “ Loveland,,.,..,....'< Mllfortli.......... « IlatavlaJo.,.........“ Cincinnati.....or; I S I81 1, 11 AM AM..{'AM l> CM I 357 430 435 1458 520l10i5Uf2 | ‘i Eastward. Cincinnati.... lv. Batavia Jo..........“ Milford............... “. Loveland...... “ South Lebanon.. “ Morrow;.......... Fort Ancient...... “ Oregonia.. ..........“ Waynesvlllo...... «< Boxannn.......... “ Spring Valley.,.. “ Xenia......... {{£• Wllberforce....... Ccdarville.....“ Selma...............* ’So. Charleston London West JelTerHon. . “ Alton..............«■ <’oluntbun....,...Ar. 3 391846 902 id ia . '“N j f f i 920,o. 4 9 5 * 3 . 936'2421502'Ssr *250*8 00,1850, 155; 415.ga ',9 • •!1435‘sr, 20 95413CO"52l!=g 1003 •... fbSSr’2^ L 014 s » l! 'ia' I'iiSs:®?’ iUl t v ;'M w 10i%vJ f547^0 1 non' 4 RLR; ^ w 923103S 515;+q 933103S 33S 553123 .... 1047 a .. ... 10151! - • i§2a.jg 1069.3-— ... 1110,-. 420 ... Ill 33,s 54510371160:444 12 If ..........12 6401120)1 AM AM 0ff S3( l‘M( I'M .... J im P«i§2 8 1 5 || I’M ? 7 b *800^415*345*800 "(428 8461 900 910 IQ AM t500l f530 5 45 605 620 630 6.40 646 655».... f7M - 708* • . 720 9671 7301002 f73tc - 7454... 80ol0f3l 8261016 847;* 855. 9151130 AMIAM J g | SO I’M | I’M ®s. 01 y 8« ? £ Between Springfield, Xenlt and Dayton. Westward. KprlngneJfl.lv. Yellow Springs. “ Xenia. Dayton lllcliinond. . 903 AMIg 25 *645 935,11035* 735101511 1 0 * . . . 73510 IS AM 1425; l'A D001125) 6001 AMIAM Eastward, Klehinon*! Dayfon .... Xenia....... .lv. rnr. lv. nr. AMj AM 1300*7 10l 635J 920 633; D2d 7 IS 957 .................... ,lv .|7 2510 05 Yellow S p rin g s, •* 171510 29 B p r i u g ll e ld ... ur,: 8(B10 50 __________________ I AM | AM , flSunday r,top. 1)Stops to dlsclm rgo passen gers received cast o f L oveland. Dark raced Type iiuies t’a, boa 1.00n, m. M1.00 a. m.; kgbl ! kc S from1X0 a a, tc1.00 p.to. V iillm n n N l c e p l n r C n rn n n X * s . S , 6 , l , » , s o a n d 21 elih er ru n tbroughvIaC olnm - bus an d I’lttslnirgh o r connect through BUtis burgh U nion S tatio n to nnd from B altim ore, W ashington, I'hilridelptiln nnd New Y ork. N o*. 1 . 1 > n o ,l 2 1 connect a t Illchm ond- for . fm llntmpolis o lid S t, X^mls: N on. 2 1 a n d X ‘ for Chicago: N o . 9 tot IiOgnusyiort. I JOSEPH WOOn, E. A, FORD, J’a-»gfr, Cfavd TunsrerJ j n i 8-2J51.-I» r i r r s n r n o n , 1* ens ' a . ^ { F o r tim ecards, rates o f fare, Ihrongh tickets, , baggage chrcUs, a n d fnrtl-.rr Inform ation re- j g a rd ln g flic n a m in g o f train s a p p ly to a n y j A gent of th o rcm isi'lv a u lA Lines, W . I I , T o n x n t ’c , A g e is t C c d a r v ille , O . THE MUCH-DESIRED luoofall^.rf.j.tr.v iZnnjt <sl.nll, ft to time, lie ;n,i, j ublishcil r.s lnay It ■d!n tied l-y Kv.. S t f i « 1." .*.! mioh «lc i: .n, t’.oss cleplr.rs LONGWAISTandPERFECTH 0 »>%!&;£;ug?-,?;'£‘£‘%ZSL, by Yvcr.ring TH E ’cua only be.produced vav .JS li’ofly ,Viiu.,’ii:uii--'it«,' .,::d lin 1 j,<«,scd to stub tiii-.CMdii.t-ot nitty lit-vt'i: ;>rd nj-i.n tlieif foitiots the w«>r*L “TaxuiU.n A ir.ettf*aenf-~2<a." i-,.>««.v 3, T b l * ,:.!•■atilvall lako ef j ci 1 1.11 tl, a first dny r.f Jet, i ny, IhJJ, •5 M .u ’i K. JIV: );i,T., j Speaker of li e Ui-nse », ucj tescr.tatlvcs, w j i v a n *n h a « c > i t s , X’rc,«;.I.'i»tof the Senate, Adopted April 84,1801. , - , VVIJKWSTATKaCl* AV' liK'A. fijito. ) t.rwn; of thk H m t.».i*ttY of S m e . J PIT* F i S I " flanictJ. Byan, :•’>eii f.'iry of State of r i d t -N if 5 til ! j J l!ir Slate of Ohio, t:itci,y certify that the ft rcifo! itj l» a true copy a joint mnlnlion fttlop-i . 1 llic (icacral A s’omfdy of tlio Bttito of tip.., mi fhoiMtii day o f April A, If. lhL'l, Dorse! a d j u s t a b l e OVSB THE Hlf* I as ’ oti.r, ihsf.ui,.,. fiiva .: P e rto u t tlc s o set* C d : i to* l h ^ Im^ Tmrible HcAtns, tvriT v-i, m l toUe» flbm tbo w«|i»al mils blod In lhk oh.ct. vlpj Ho ehlc Steels ttml K«n«t. In Icslimony whereof, I have hereunto sub- • - ■ - - - - 1 scribedmy nameand afllxcdmy offc wiiieli will n o t incnli. Madi* la ihtva Ven<rth4 «t»nn anil fnfJeM*. AnydryAf-wrisdi'a'cr Inthe IT.5* mr icmplyvou OanvaMeVs W ould. S/ml ft.v (’iilalt.-ivo BOftTREE m . CO,, tiM- fsEAb.l dal seal, at fVdciiilnmthe 25th' day of April, A. T». 1691. ' DANIEL .l.ItYAN. BrCrctaryof State, BANK CF CEDARVILLE Ueuciraf Bnukiug Busiiipg '1 rnrpjaeietl, (ice>. W . IfaiTU’r , P r c « . W. I*. CiemaiMi Caakler. " Itlividunl assets principally investsd in Real I’stats ?2.j!),*f)». ■am-gaio'-nza© 1 oPd© w . . JEC. T R A D E R Atlori'oy At Law. NO. 9 EAST MAIN STBEET, OP POSITE COUET HOUSE.
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