The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 27-52
<4 . ismUM WfiMfi, lo r thooft wheel ro, porort* KM o i Vvl* WitR** fesiffrate- holds, %* urdan we toon th e ling w ith 'a o f .it* &»«**** ttghlifa rt, com* all whoso he owner, ive to get r your lot verty, you • Ion.—Lil- ar. LLER. ot Fear o rail. is being- a deputy was born sepb, Mot, Johnson, ed to Sli,er- eighteen, ced officer, retiug out s of crimes voyeurs of moved-to •y and has once. She antroll, a d him on ud fatigue, fagan and hieves, five e Cherekee ding alone iMo face to placed un- alize that n earnest oon found, yera.1 shots er also ar- ers, noted when she father, was She is five is one hun- , has Intel-, a firm ex- ment, and ner. She people, and iving dates t, th a t she elf against bis remark ed with her well edu- and brazen. . on the mar- s. He says •almost ^in- id. p not often h jyirls has g ree of per- rs of Canon hurch, Ox- rs in wood, rving of an do- for tho a mission a top panel in hi: uoat, wer panels phons sug- btless nn- tho path” tered. For orite work ;s of eigh ts boys, to ciples and TS. the United or the rais- ndred and n’s clnbs in which Mrs. resident ashington. velopment bought a or cutting rations. -lab, of tho n inoorpo- motioa of social wel- by the sft- of a club ork, and by ble and ax- won te a s e who de* which hap* defi. The k a pail of under the stnpaftsd, condemned he woman , forth* tnrned id h a te general ire i t a ingalto jr b a re i* A m o - tractive dsviee \ I TEMPERANCE NOTES. GAVE HIS HAIR FOR DRINK. Uow Turn and Jerry ftpalled H Thuuki- glvlBK and Jlrakw »* Sagagamant. "When 1 first came to Kansas City, tome twelve years ago," said a com mission man to two or three friends who were enjoying a cigar in his office the other day: “one of the first young fellows I met here was Jim McNerney. That wasn’t his dame,, bu t i call him Jim because his name was John, and McNerney is near enough his name so Jhat those who knew him a t all will easily recognize him by the story I am about to -tell. "I haven't thought of Jim before for a longtime, and the way I happened to think of him to-day, the day before Thanksgiving, is that tills little inci dent huppened on a Thanksgiving day. IAs you all know, -we don’t usually get much cold weather here before Thanksgiving, and .many of ns who came from the east and were in the habit o f . making Tom atid Je rry a Thanksgiving drink were apt not to be able to find it on tap a t the usual places where such-drinks are dispensed on that day. But on this particular Thanksgiving we had had a few days of cold weather with snow just previ ous, and on coming down to the office after breakfast I thought I would stop in a t Bishop & Christie’s and see if I couldn’t find' a fresh bowl-of the steam ing decoction. , Sure enough, occupying the place of bonor in the center of the bar was the , big bowl of golden custard, and I was just about to drink down a liberal sized mug when Who should walk in but Jim. ' “Now, Jim was 'considerably addic ted to the flowing bowl, in fac£ he was noted for . getting hilariously in toxicated and kicking in the offiee door and demolishing things generally. After each' of'these sprees he would register a solemn oath never to get full again, and jnst so sure when the proper time came aronnd'he would do the same thing over again.' “Well, as-1 said, in came Jim and of course I had to invite him to drink, which he did with great gusto," and as was his usual custom he struck me for &dollar, for Jim was constitutionally broke.. 1 gave him a dollar and went out and thought no more about him. Abotit- midnight, just after I hod returned from a little whist party, the door bell rang and I was called to the door, There I confronted a big police man, who told me that a friend o t mine by the name of McNerney had been arrested for creating a disturb ance and wanted me to come down . and bail him o u t, At -first I was in clined to let!him stay there, but know ing if he didn’t show up a t his office in the morning he would lose his job ! concluded I would go down. “ When ! got to the station I was. sbowh to the cell where he was locked up,fast asleep by this time, and I went in to wake him.. When he stood up finally and. looked a t me Jt didn’tteo - ognize him. When 1 had seen him in the morning he wore a fall beard and long, curly hair, but now he was clean shaven ,and his hair was clipped as I closely as a jail-bird. I took him up- stairs/deposited fifteeu dollars for hiB fine, and took him out in the air and proceeded to sober him up, When he had regained his senses sufficiently to talk I asked him what was the matter, “ 'Tom and Jerry* was all the an swer 1 could, get oiit of him for a long time. Finally I got .his story. I t ap pears he had spent his dollar in short order setting up Tom and Jerrys to himself and some chance acquaint ances, Then he wandered into some other place where they wero keeping •open house and giving a Tom and Jer- ry to everyone -who came in, Jim got one, and then wanted another, which was refused him on the grounds that he had already been treated. So the thought occurred to him to go t6 a barber shop where he had credit afld have his beard shaved off, so disguis ing himself that he could get another drink. The plan worked to a charm. Then he went back and had ]his mus tache shaved off. On this new face he got another Tom and Jerry and then lie was stuck. But no, another bril liant thought struck him and back he goes again and soon the clippers had made his curly head as smooth as a billiard bail. Going up to his office and drawing, on a skull cap he went back and worked the place for a third bowl. Ite had literally pawned his hair and whiskers for Tom and Jerry. “By this time he was feeling pretty well satisfied with himself, and, by some ill-luck, remembering th a t he was Invited out to cat turkey a t the home of his betrothed, started ont there. Ills girl failed to recognize his smooth face atid shaven head, and npon his persisting in explaining who he was, her father called a policeman and had him arrested as an escaped lunatic. And that wasn’t the worst of it, for when he failed later on to put in an appearance and they waited dinner for him until th e tnrkey was fold* the young lady was so mad She refused even to accept his apologies, and Jim is an old bachelor to-day. ’’—Kansas City Star, ^ HYPNOTIC CUrtEB. Experiment* In the Treatment OfDrank- - Pnheee withaat Medicine. Hypnotism or hypnotic suggestion is being employed by physicians of stand in g in England and dn the continent as a cure i Of drunkenness and the opium habit. In some of the hospitals of Paris it has come to be qnite naual to throw patients suffering from alcoholism and especially from de* lirium tremens into a hypnotic sleep as the quickest add safest way of cheeking their ravings, and it has been found that in most such cases It has been possible to prevent the return of the violent symptoms by prohibition by the will of the hypnotizer. So suc cessful have been these experiments, and so cate fully and systematically have the more common phenomena of hypnotism been studied, that a regular course of procedure has been fold out, which is followed u carefully as would be the case in the administration of any accepted remedy. Prof, Bernheim’s definition of hyp notism is: “The induction of a psychi cal condition in Which the subject's susceptibility to suggestion and ability to. act upon it are enormously in creased," Sometimes the subject is in a Round sleep, sometitncB in a half- waking state, and often in full posses sion of the senses and the intelli gence. Sometimes th is state is self- induced, bu t more often it is produced by some mysterious influence of anoth* er ou the nervous syatepi of the sub ject.. Suggestion is a familiar enough phenomenon. The contagion of laugh* ter or tears is a common example, and the acts of everybody in their normal condition ore guided by.it to an extent not usually realized From th is con trol of suggestion over the acts of the most self-possessed of individuals to the domination of the ’idea imparted to the subject deep in hypnotic sleep, the progress is regular, for the differ ence is of degree and not of kind. Some writers go so far as to class all impulse to action which comes from without to suggestion, and’assert that all that portion of mankind who lack that self-reliance and self-sufficiency which is the possession of only the few, are all ’their lives led by suggestions. Men who yield easily to the tempta tion to drink aro especially victims of suggestion, and as a rule hypnotic subjects, and their cure consists in .fix ing in their minds the suggestion to ab stain in the place pf the suggestion to indulge. • in practice the process of cure Is to hypnotize the patient and tell’him as firmly os. possible that he ha? lost his desire for stimulant, and thu them ust not and cannot longer ipdiilge in it. Dr. Bjornstrom, a Swedish uuthority on hypnotism, cites a number of cases from hospitals' in several European cities .and from the private practice of physicians where coses of dipsomania of long standing have been cured. Some leases, were received in delirium tremens, others in bnd stages of alco holism, and others who had been vic tims of the habit for years, hut so far as known the cure in all cases was per manent Dr. Charles L. Ttickey has given in the Contemporary Review another liBt of cases, some of them very striking, which' have all re sulted in permanent euros of the drink hab it I t is curious to note that, in- some cases a single-reduction of the patient to the hypnotic-state was suffi cient to enforce the suggestion of absti nence permanently; while in others the permanency of this impression has only been secured after some weeks of such treatment In all these cases cited by Dr. Tackey tho . suggestion was made that alcohol was poison and that- the subject loathed it, and that loathing lias continued. Interesting inferences may he drawn from these experiments, notably that dipsomania is a disease subject to cure by the will of the patien t Persuaded that thoy must not drink, these drunk ards cease to drink and cease to want to drink. If the will could be aroused in any other wuy it is^probable that the cure would be as complete unless it be tbat in some mysterious way tlie will of tbe subject is re-enforced by the will of the hypnotizer. Another reference is that the permanence ot these suggestions is the principal gnaw anty of the immanence of the cure, and that if the hypnotizer will it, or a stronger influence he brought to bear on the patient, he may relapse, lin t it is to be said that relapses are possible under any circumstances, and tha t so far these reported hypnotic cures have been permanent.-—Springfield Republican. FACE'S AND FINDINGS. “M a n y temperance people want to punish the man who gives the drink. I t is all-right, of course; but what is the matter with punishing the man who is given to drink?” asks a clergy man.—N. Y. Tribune, IloX. W. II. II owiasd , of Toronto, states tha t the consumption of intoxi* eating liquors amounts to 80 gallons a head in England, 12 to 15 in the United •States and only gallons In the Do minion of Canada RussrA most people are accustomed to regard as a very cold country, and so It is in the northern region, "but it has a large area In the southern part of the temperate zone* I t wilt surprise many to learn th a t it lias an area of vineyards amounting to About 458,850 acres,’ the average yield* of wine from them being 55,800,000 gallons, of which rather more than half is grown in the Caucasus, Tntt barrooms in Wlllimantic, Conn,, hare been Closed after fifteen consec utive years of business, but some of the keepers will retain their old stands for a year, awaiting the outcome of the next vote on the license question. One will become an. undertaker, an other a druggist, another a dealer in boot* and shoes and a few will mote ou t of town. In the meanwhile the legal sate of liquor ia to he continued under the supervision of a town agent and seven druggists, A FAMOUS LAKE, l< n s | ( Owratlvw Frvpartlc* of ZteWaters, Early in this century Antoine Dufour, a prisoner in an Indian camp on the margin of a lake in what is now South* • to Washington, fell into the water while trying to escape from hla captors. Dnfour was a sufferer from rheuma tism, else the accident would, not have happened to him. The bath instead of stiffening his -joints seemed to have a healing effect, and the Frenchman tried the experiment of immersing himself daily in the waters with wonderful re sults. He soon had the free and pain- le u use of liis limbs. Subsequently, when he made his escape, Dufour spread the report of the curative prop erties of the lake. But in the thinly set tled wilderness of that time no one was very.much interested In healing waters. For three score years little was heard of Medical Lake, as it is now called. In 1878 Andrew Le Favre took up a quarter-section of land where the vil lage of Medical Lake now stands. Le Favre knew nothing of the virtues of the water until his sheep, which were troubled with n skin disease, were eured by slaking their thirst r t the brink. L e Favre tried the water for his rheumatism, and it left him.' To-day the fame qf'tEb lake has spread far and wide.' I t ia situated on the Columbia river plateau about sixteen miles south west of Spokane, and is 8,800 feet above the level of the sea The stratum of the country round about is hasaltia Tbe lake is sixty feet deep, half a mile w|de and a mile long. The water is of a greenish tinge, and no plants grow near tlie water. Animal life is also ab- sent* and an unbroken silence broods over the dark pool. The water bas s specific gravity of 1,012, and holds so much alkali in suspension that after bathing the body feels as if it' had been oiled. A shampoo for the head is easily bad by rubbing tbe water in with the hands When the surface is furrowed by a strong breeze a lathery foam forms on the shores Strange to say, a species of terrapin lives on the bottom of the lake, and in Its depthu,but never rising to the surface, roams a creature, half fish and half lizard, that is known as the “walking fish," the Mexican aXo* lOtL—Chicago Inter Ocean. —A gentleman visiting a school had a book pu t Into bis hand for tho pur pose o t examination1a class The wbrd “inheritance’’ occurring in tlie verse, the querist Interrogated pne of tbe youngsters as follows: “What is patri- money?” “Soniething left by a father,” "What would you call it if left by a mother?" “Matrimony.” the Oaly One Kvar Fflntsd—Cnxt To* Had the Word? There Is a 3 inch display advertisement In this paper, this week, which has no two words Uike except oue word. The same is true of each new one appearing each week, from The Dr, Harter Medicine Co. This house places a "Crescent" on everything they make and publish. Look for it, send them the name of the word and they will return you book, beautiful lithographs or samples freo, "How no I strike you?” said tbe artificial limb to its mate. ‘‘You’re a corker," was the reply.—Washington Star. Confirmed. The favorablo impression produced on the first upiKsarance of the agreeablo liquid fruit remedy Syrup of Figs a few years ugo bos been more than confirmed by the pleas ant expeliunco of all who havo used It, and tbs success of tho proprietors and manu facturers the California Fig Syrup Com pany- ___ _________ T hem aro many men who are generous to a fault, but it is generally to their own fault—-Boston Transcript T ........ ............ .. F ain from indigestion, dyspepsia and too hearty anting Is relieved nt once by taking one Of Carter’s Little Liver Pills immedi ately after dinner. ’ Don’t forgot this. WisnLETS—"I think nomo of Dr. Wind’s advice Is sound." Mshlets—"I think it’sall sound.’'—Brooklyn Esg'.a L ots Is never satisfied until It gets both arms full.—Dallas News. T his fat man who writes poetry should invariably be boiled down,—Texas Siftings F ond of n nap, but seldom found sleepy—s noth,—N, Y. Journal,_____ am , men nro not homeless, but some arc borne less than others.—Texas Siftlugs. t W hen may u ship at sea be said not to bo on water? When she Is on fire. A counter irritant—an impudent dry goods clerk.—Buffalo Enquirer T he sluggard who goes to his sunt and gets nothing Is forced todeal with bisuncle. —Pittsburgh Dispatch. “T hai -’ s what you might call cutting a swell," said the suracon as lie lanced a big bolL—Binghamton Republican. WicKwmz—"It It true thst Mudge has joined the church I" Yabslcy—“It is. lie did so on an election bet,"—Indianapolis Journal, _ DocTonsarethe ones who mn afford to smile every timo they sco men drinking each other's health.—Newark Advertiser. “ B ewahb of vnhity, my boy, The bird* of gnud.vplumage do not make the best cat lug.” "No, indeed. The parrot never guts into the soup,"—Brooklyn Life. Ax exchange speaks of a man who “is notapbysiclaii, but a simpledruggist,” We had supposed that a druggist w m a com. pouhdiellow.—Binghamton Leader. CxABltR Yocxosooht.c—“I’ve brought tbe ring to-night, Alice,'' Alice—“OMhe see it- It looks wo large,” Clwriio Young noodle—"Oh, that’s wusttiU the girls said," —The JewAtora'Circular. H ot (to servant)-“Lino, what has be come of your sweetheart!” l.lna—“He doesn’t <» h H» Shy mere." “Why not?" “Well, you sec, his wife is of such it jealous disposition that I gave him the gre* • bounoe.” Tna smatx of a ebronio catarrh pstiset Is often so offensive tliat he beoomes as ob ject of disgust After a time uloerstlost sots in, thr spongy bones are attacked, and frequently entirely destroyed. A constant source of discomfort Is the dripping of the E urulent secretions into the throat some- mes producing inveterate bronchitis, which fa its turn has been the exciting cause of pulmonary disease Tbe brilliant results which have attended Its use for yesre p u t properly detlgnste Ely’s Cream Balm u by far the best and only cure. A remedy recommended by Pbysfolsns and.Druggists. A SKxeiTivxold bachelor says that pretty girls always affeot him just as ornamental confectionery docs—they give him tbe heartburn.—Once a Week. Uss B kowx ’ s BsoxcniAi. Tnoonss for Cougns, Colds und other Throat Troubles. —“Pre-emineiitly the best."— Ilev. litnrn Ward Bucher. T re reason why tbe ocean is so often called treacherous mast bebecause It isfull of craft—Boston Post. A Doss in Timo Save* Nino or Halo’s Honey of Horahound sod Tsr for Coughs. Pike’s Toothschs DropsCure in ohemioute. "S ee with what a swagger the Tanner walks now!’’ “Yes; a sort of cornstalk.” —Baltimore American. F or indigestion, constipation, sick bend* ache, weak stomach disordered liv er—take Beechsm's Pills For sale by all druggists. “L et me give you a wrinkle,” ns Time BRid . to tho. mature benuty’a face.—Balti more Amorlean. B iliousness , dizziness, nausea, headaohe, aro relieved by smalldoses of Carter’s Lit- tlo Liver Pills. Tns old-time father and mother were a spunking team.—Galveston News. § 8 S S S S S S S S S S n i f f s S p e c i f i c S 8 a ™ - " ? - * f | Blood and Skin | s Diseases ^ s S .A reliable, cure for Contagious f i S BloodPoison, Inherited ficro- • fa!*andSkin Cancvr. G S 'At a tonie for delicateWomen a and Children it has no equal.. 9 S Beingpurelyvegetable, is harm- Q lees in Its effects. - G . S Atre*tl»co« Bloodand BklnDto- f t eeeeemailedm i am appUcatioD. g JDrmgoleU Sell It. 0 | U U F In every (own to represent our 5ut>- I V E scrtpUon Department and tike orders _ _ _ _ for a Beautiful Subscription Book, W A N T “HERB AND BEYOND ” —some thing that will Appeal to every hunt- A U E ly. Greet Inducements to both agent I g l f i E end subscribers, especially In con- nectJon with the popular .Lothrop fiOOD Exclusive Territory. A M w U l l money-maker. I t P I I A A I I Write to-day for territory end r C R S U N * * rn’* <° D- l o t h r o p c o .. ■ BOSTON. M ass . S w £ P o E s h B e AUTY ov POLISI s a v in g L a b o r , c l e a n l i n e s s , 00&ABIUTY&CHQIPNESS.UHEODALIEL HO 0 M B V flC H HEATED. t ♦ Vile cod-liver oil has lost Its vileness in Scott’s Emul sion and gained a good deal in efficiency. It is broken up into, tiny drops which are covered with, glycerine, just as quinine in pills is coated with sugar or gelatine. You do not get the taste at all. The hypophosphites of lime and soda add their tonic effect to that of the half-di gested cod-liver oiL Let us send you a book on ca r b fu l l iv in g — free. gcorrfi BowMSaChemltts, xgeSouth 5thAvenue, New York. YourdruegbtIteepeScoft’a Emulsionofcod-liver iB—all drugjpss everywhere do, |i. THE ONLY TRUE t IRON TONIC Will purify BLOOD, rernlete KIDNEYS,, remove 1.1TEB dieorder, build ureugtli. renew 'l l , power" tn o ro k e o d , bones, nerves, mus* clos, receive now force, angering from complaints pe* L IU l i d culler to their sex, nsiualt, find * sere, speedy cure. Returns rose bloomon cbceks,bttAUUnetC am p lexlo a. Bold everywhere. All genuine goods beer "Oreseest*” Bendwsk cent sump for 38-psgS pamphlet. ' 01 . MASTER MtMCINI CO., fit. Louie, Ms. $500 R EW ARD wlllbepaidtotheagetitofsnyeosleootnpenywhs willssyoyerhisownnamea*Mont,thattheJoxse 5 TON WAGON 8CALE.8G0 isnotequal toanymade, ands standardreilabla. scale, ror partkxiiers, eddreeeonly JonesofBiighuKon,Blogbamtoo,B.Y. A S THM A GUR ED 52J5ftS!!rJj5Sr- ,®5,(r etoedleg pa, BAEtnTOirf ASTHMA CVBS gives insteui reliec end euros walls uieep, us 1nossisnuff or e, liquid, le easily used anfi guaranteed tocure when per-Sverluclg used, T rln Sl.swaciti’ucglsto; er liy mall. Shoree. V*. Addre.l ------- W Sb O O ., E llAU tiw , N. SWHOMCtStSMniiw,lintpaMI» Yi Which— Man or Shii t? Has the man grown, or has the flannel shrunk? Usually, the .shirt i& to blame. No, not that, either. —but die way it's washed. Flannels ought to be washed with Pearline. If you’re buying new ones, start right. Have them washed only with Pearline (direction on every package) and they won’t shrink. A s for the old ones, Pearlme can’t make them any larger, but begin with it at once and it will keep them from growing smaller. It will keep them from the wear and tear o f the washboard, too. As one wash is sufficient to ruin flannels, crest can should be exercised as to the use of the manylmit'ttions D a n g e r DONALD KENNEDY OfRoxbury, Mass., says B ilD U iU U C C A C I U X U H W IIIC U K U l LU G IIIM IIJT I B iU 'i U U U I which are being offered by unscrupulous grocers or peddlers. Pearline is never peddled. * 1 * JAMES PY l K, N. Y, BOlUNQ WATER OR M S I E P P S ' S GRATEFUL—OOMFORTlNQ. LABELLED i-2 LB. TINE ONLY. Patents! Pensions S*«dfov Invantora fluid*•rfiawtoObtotn arattitt. Sandtor Digest 0 *FKNSlSNmid H»l’ST\ i.MVS, AGENTS dw n o a d . tiia Orest. 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