The Cedarville Herald, Volume 13, Numbers 1-21

T H E H E J i & L t B SATURDAY, MARCH, 19 1892, W, Jl, f ib A 111 , Ed ito r and JProp'r PRICE * l .a o P i n ANNUM, C I I U B O H l > I B E C T O R Y . CoTdUftnfnr. Pastor. Cliuroh.—Rev T. O. M>rou), Itugular services at 1 jj-Oft a m; Sabbath school at 10:00a m R. P. Church.—-Rev. J, P. .Morton, ' castor. Services at 11:00a »h; Sabbath ieliool at 10:00a in. M. R. Church,—Rev. G. I*. Tufts, pas­ tor. Preaching at 11;00 a in; Sabbath arhool at 9<w», m.; class, 3:00 p. in,; young People’ s meetln1' at 8:00 p m; prayer meeting Wednesday evening al 7;00 j - • U, P, Church.—Rev. J, O. Warnocic, ' pastor. Services at 11:00a in and 7 p si; Sabbath school at 10:00a in A M. IS. Olmroh.—Rev. A. O. wplve.v pastor. Preaching at 11:00 a in amt 7 j 0 Op in; Classevert otherSabbath at 10:00 a.m.; Sabbath school at10:00a hi . Baptist Church. — Heir. Johnston, pastor. Preaching every Sabbath at llain,and7:00p in; Sabbath School at ,;3:0Qo’clock i*in; Prayer meeting Wetl- >- tiesday night: B IR D T R A IN IN G . A Xtegular A v o ca tion Am on g , Germans. t h i • U t il* Feathered Creature* T au gh t vte Perform Many DlMcnlt and R a m l i g Trick*—An Odd Oeeopetlow. The Holland bird-catching in autumn Jha regular business, and hutsare built 1 among the sandhills, or in the meadows Joiningthem, in which the men can ait in comfort, says the St LouisMechanic. A small window on one side looks on to the “ vinkie baan,*’ the level space be- r tween low banks under^wbicb the nets ^ lip, where linnets and siskins are . tethered to long twigs. The ground is 'isfctewed with grain, and at a little die* ' teuioe the best call-birds ore placed in .their cages: Goldfinches' are most • priced ,1 for: they constantly utter their rippling song, •but a rcdpole or well- ■ trained,chaffinch is almostequally good. .Holland lies on two" o f the main routes by which birds travel from the north, for those that come down the Baltic“ cross the land at Denmark, while along the German ocean travel thousands from Norway and Sweden.: The mainstay of the bird-catchers are , ' the hen cbaffinohes. wbich Icave their w mates In Scandinavia and cotHa ito thou- sands to,southern Europe. .Two,bun •died,inaday isnotat all anunnsnalnum her,to be taken at Ode “ vinkidlbaair." "These are all killed, far the table*,and . 'Trows o f them, with their heads fastened 7 * 6 'a split hazel stick ;5 tike partridges fir . a gains carrier, am in eyeryjptitd- terer’s shop: , The tgwi^birdi^hrambi lings, cross-bineahd ‘.redp^lfes—-arOj saved and Hold for cage^blfds,5' ifot' -tfiir - Dutch are particularly fonftjD(.*vlarite»^ andclever at tamingallkiM*. ;o l .c r e ^ ttWfL *• • The writer has often epdnt iin After* soon in the hot Watching for .-.the Hogo f flocks o f cbafBnche*. . The tame ,birds begin to call teb'cfn 1 #*# see -the wild ones passing, tap and • .pull the strings to which thqbifd* n$r attached, sad as they flutter from' the ground the flock vrheCV settle in the trassClose by, and^jbep fljtdW n'to the grain,' Hardly bars they pitched bCfora the nets clots over them. And the man runs .out to disentangle hU capttVes. The tame birds arc so used to, the. net# teat they do not. flutter -or ruffle feather, but jump back to their twigs, cal some more hempseed, and sipg afresh, withoutregarding the death o f tihstrwild relatives. Bedpples, linnets and siskin’s are easily tamed, especially the first. In a few days they beoome -perfectly con* tented with a cage life. In fact, 1 knew of one which voluntarily surrendered: Its liberty. The winter was a severe, one, and the little fellow came in through tliCopen vrinddteof a house at The Hague to share their food with the birds in a large aviary. Their mtstresi fed him regularly, Bud, though he had Often an opportunity of escaping, he never availed himself o f it, tmt lived fee years the merriest occupant o f tba •age: These birds can be tabglit to sit mo­ tionless on the back of a chair, to ” 11 # dead” in a basin o f water, to draw up their food in an ivory bucket, in a fete days; bat the trainer must be prepared to give theih long leseoUt. Birda*mind* differ entirely from those o f animals; they do not learn gradually, and if they are to be trained they must be so most thoroughly. An boar a day for a week wilt hothaveone-quarter the effect that four hours o f continuous earn will achieve. It la this fact that eauaee so Many dteappetatmenta ha teaming hawks, for men certainly beoome tired ami hMMtttmt at. 'the mr>aient iihtii wuu^w nawewvapspvwaww waam s nnmwMisr f wvw tbete labor baa begun to produce aom* sdtMik Th* hawk te put baric «aM k al ^ j A itaiy. ^ Lau A%uAt hett teem ed iaeeoa. In HoUandfcawka gHHHUv' $$$vwB' tgPHI put" tedg|£i. i «ffii^BPa|NBMrWMEJWwP .wNBNw-sNwffiwwWt AwqKfllffiv j UFE IN SAN FRANCISCO. tetetoP and K«Tis(i and BCstauraak Lunohiofii Mid Dinners. There la not a city in the world, or, to qualify, on this side the “ ppnd,” where people visit all their lives in rented homes—be they in pretehtlons quarters on the avenues, in down-town hotels or in the degrees of boarding houses that flank the, streets from end to end—as in Sun Francisco, The word ▼ki.itis used, says the New York Sun, because the settlcdness of eastern home life is not. felt or understood. Real domesticity in the good old New Eng­ land sense is an unknown quantity. Yon move into quarters having some­ thing'desirable to recommend them and meander out agaip at the end of a month if the desirability isn’t forth­ coming- Packing and unpacking, that bete noir o f most, women, is here a diversion. It all reminds one o f a huge; game of progressive euchre, in which. the prize royal is bestowed upon the person making the greatest number o f moves, the aim being always to get somewhere near the shops and theaters and in as fashionable a quarter as one’s means will permit. If the financial conditions are good, four rooms together are engaged, two if they are not. particularly so, and failing either extreme one room an­ swers with a folding bed; Into these different apartments the luggage is sent, say about top a. m. The owners having engagements for luncheon some­ where—it’s the exception when they haven’t—follow about two p. m. Be­ tween that hour and dinner, at six thirty, everything pertaining to the fit­ ting has been stored away in closets; tidies aire thrown over the chairs, lamps- areshrouded in pretty shades, anetching finds its way to the wall, the best French novel, with a box of chocolates, adorns the table, and madam herself, gowned within an inch of her life, is waiting for milord and table d’hote. She is as much at home and comforta­ bly as though her ancestors hod laid the corner stone o f the building three centuries before. At the dinner she meets everyone she knows. Why not? They are part of the procession that marches, counter­ marches and changes eternally. ■Un­ married society men on small salaries —ample for their own wants, an occa­ sional. box at the opera, drives behind livery teams, and good clothes from the tailor on the installment plan—drift Into boarding-house life by the thou­ sands. They get cheap, darkish rooms on the top floor without a scrap,of com­ fort, and skirmish on the outside for space, and air. Thousand^ of people live in room& in private houses and over shops and in every sort of structure ex­ cept a church, going out for meals everywhere and anywhere when hun­ ger overtakes them. The restaurants are lnviting, it must be said, offering a perfect dinner, in­ cluding elaret,. for one dollar.' This is Of course, at the best places; There teill'bd, for instance, spuP» mussels or any sort-of-fisht yntrccs, roasts, broiled .iquail,.tenl duok, snipe and so*-bn; sal- afis- o f' Shrimp, yrab, lobster and ices, rVritbTblabk:obffee and kirseh. It Bounds and is delightful; but undor’it all istoe rpoison o f »a«ps. Ihdolence characterizes thewoificn^pleasuirfc-sceklng and lack '.of ambiti<mtoemyp. . . . - ’A PIU^TE- RABRlT HUNT., St it » , V- h. y . . * ’ . t B M | h Aiitmat*1' K illsd fo r H it. W h o l* *- to’-tMteWt.*n-for-.a.Mosth.< Epr sSycral.months post'the Piute In- dlans in the vlhinity have been prepaid tng'for a grand bunt- in the -valley be- ttteeen the Tdquima .andv Hot Creek ranges^. The. Indians Arranged their ^ blonsand began ths cath^algn against the;fleet-foot«d little animals. Thebunt teasorganizedunderthe direction of the. old chief o f the tribe and he’diVided^tha hunters into-aboUf tenban^s, Whowere to take thdir '-stand along the foothills , o f the ranges and at a preconcerted slg-’ jasl all were to start for a Common cen­ ter and killallthe rabbits whichcame in tbsir way, It was the idea to drive the rabbits gradually to the center o f the valley and thbn have a -grand slaughter o f the whole lot as they would, bo run into such a part of the valley that they could not get ateay, ’ The hunt progressed for seven days -and at the end o f that time the Indians bad driven a great number of rabbits into the center of the valley and began the killing o f them there, During the drive It Is estimated that they killed not less than three hundred* each day and at the grand wind-up they are re­ ported to have killed four thousand rab­ bits in one general slaughter. In addition to the rabbits they also drove many other small animals, such as coyotes, badgers and foxes, into the center and killed a great number of these. There are about four hundred Piutes In the band and.they have killed enough meat to last the whole band about a month. The Indians willBmoke the meat and eat it rate daring the next month, when they expect to organize another hunt further up the oountry. p oin t* A bout lloiVeU. A f n i n l mistake is made about baa* teats, most people supposing that th i White willow basket is the best. It Ieoh* besWbut it ie by no means the Strongest- Ths w)iite teillow slips art eat la the fill And keptgreen all winter by packing tbs stubs in wet send or water, and tehin spring comes the bark peide off with a twist o f the band, The bttflr basket*, on th* eontraiy, are made frern 4rie4 willow Nips, which have beeANteaqttdthett peeled. WhH**«t m banM *», theyart- nwwfr etedki er< awlteik weerfar foagrrihaa the white, J. F.SMITH, * —DEALER IN— ' P i i i i i o s ^ A c O r g a n s •+ WealHercnanfise, -f a r t i s t s PICTURE FRAMES. X E N IA , - - O H IO i\ . t y . B q b b Attorney at Law 15 E. MAIN St., - XENIA OHIO. MARCUS*SHOUP, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR-at-Law. S pecial A ttention G iven to C om ­ mercial L aw , A nd A bstracting O f T itles . Correspondent for Bradetreet’s Coni' mercial Agency. B ooms —No. 1 and 2 OentralBank Building, Xenia,. Ohio, Telephone at Office and Besidonce. No. 96. N o t a r y P u b l i c I n O f f i c e BANK OF; CEDARVILLE General • ■ ■ ‘ i f ■ ■ ',!*■ ■->*'** Bttsines Iratieacied. Geo. W . Ilnrpcr, P i ^ h . W . Vi. Clemane, Cnehier. fillvtduai umo U priScIpsIly Invested in Ren Estate $200,000. f Sg$ SckoOto^^HOBTHAND. GkUtedtetchetn, Thorough work. Modern meth odA, Low expenses, SOper cent, of graduate* la good position*. CommercialShorthand, Type- ' writing and practical RngliahCourse*. For C*u* logue,sddrt*«K.L.UeVerfithJPrin., &*adttMty,a b, Ik P a !*«, D.a. i. E bkr R byholos , t>yo, TIME & REHOIDS, DENTISTS !! Xenia National Bank building, corner Main and Detroit Sts., Xenia, O. Vitalized Air arid Nltroua OxtdeCas used for the PAINLESSCxtrao- - tion o f Teetli. W . - I f , T R A D E D Attorney At haw . NO. » EAST MAtN.STREET, OP POSITE COURT HOUSE. AREY8UAWOMAN WHOHASNOTARENA COPY OF AMR'S DEV HOMEMAGAZINE, o f Philadelphia? “ The best and cheap­ est I l l u s t r a t e d monthly ever pub­ lished in theEnglish language. 1,500 pages for $1.50, SixSMStiriuuiSsMi Article: by host writer*on all subjects of inter eat to women. Three Month Free i f you take it now* Sample copy 10ct», Go toBoyd’srestaurant fora good meal; only 25 cent*. M e r c l i f t n t , T a ilo r , *" ■ NO 10 N. DETROIT STREET X E JY 1 & 0 «, Before you buy your suit* Overcoat or Pants for Fall, see KANY TfiE TAILOR he has a full line of Foreign and Domestic goods .always no hand to select from. Perfect fitting garments and first class work guaranteed at a reasonable price, KINYMETIM THE MUCH-DESIRED LONG WAIST and PERFECT HIP EFFECT can only bo producedwocwtAdiy By wearing M l m e the n u p i [ X Corset ADJUSTABLE OVER THE HIP AND WILL ITANYFORM iniUntly.glviiig Perfect Ease end ______________ _ Contoiiir. They hav* D anbl* 8c*m a, which will no* rip | Double Steel* mud Bone*, ' which will wo* breolt. Made In three length*. ,Tnui and Ratteen. Anydrygood»de*ler IntheU.S. car *\G>plyjrou. CnvawM Wanted. Sendfor OaMogue. BO ftTREC M F C . C O .. Ja ck son , M i c k M & M , «N»nOUAINTEOV»imillE.OtOtt8WH»WIHI*00|INIf»«lll(l»TA* NV0HVALUAI-EINFDSUATI0N FROMAITVOV OFtlHi SAP OF THI SHI VODJ .Pi mJDc MNlliatfltoownt. IctHirgirnbiMnE $ml retbjy*ifotJtK lag Mg* cr«HM •!>•▼«. Notbluf MifikuH tm ham, w that r««flire» muck tlmf. IdedrfllRft Mon ftw ti«h ffiitrttfMr rrtdyteaglit ami prorkSMwith•*«- ’idaymeal hrrgd eUan•Yc«r*Mrk,Alllinew* toIM.mn. Failiwrtfmlsri tree* AfterftAiltnairaJVf fu* tdiMlaA*N|«Mfr.nlFf,why.soharmtoBone..Adilrvaa* V. €.AUiUX, JU e 4C« a AhpMflt Httlll* iLyy>A^-irr/vAy>Vk m \ » 00 kg ,1 dtiiLj,EaclIsM&PacificRy. The Direct lloute to -nd from Chlcico, Joliet, Ott.lFt, I'cort*, L a 8«lle. ^oUue^Kock' Inland, In ILLINOIS; UsvmporL Muwnllnf. ^ottuinwa, OfkMooM, IX* MoUra, iWInfvrwt, AUdnlran; H.rlnn * 111 ] ' Coauclt OlufTs. in IOWA ; Jllmieiijtctl^ nml 8t. I’m;!, In MIN- NESUTA: Wntertown and Sioux KatU, In DAKOTA ; Cameron, St. JmenU and Kan**s City,' In MISrtOUKI; Oirmlm. Lincoln FVttrbur.v*nd Ncteon, In NRDIIASKAf . Atclifeon, IrfttvenKorlli. Horton. T-pefca, Ilulc'olnwtn, Wicl.ltA, Ileilerllle, Atillene, Dodge C lt-, Caldeell. ta KANSAS; Klngfl.hcr, Kl Itfimand.AUnco,lp INDIAN TEItlirrOHV; Denver, Colorado Spring, and Pueblo. In COI j OKAIK), Traverw* new arc*, of rich terming ondgraxlng luudt, nUvnllng the heat tecllltles o f Inter* communlcnll'rii to all town* and citlre van and. writ, northwnt and vouibwoit o f Chicago and to Dteifle and' ;:tan*-ocoaulc eeaporte. MAOmriCXNT VZSTWULX mxp/tgss TftAINS Vadlng oil competllors in eidemlnr o f .equipment, IwtAeen fJIIICAGO anil DEM MOINK8. COUNCIL BLUKKS and OMAIIA. and h.iwien CHICAGO and OKNVKR, COLORADO STRINGS and' VUEDLO, via KANSAS CITY and TOI'KKA and via ST. JOBBPIt, Flret-Claw I>ay Coache*. FREE RECLINING C itA iq CARS, *nd F»t*cn Sleeper*, with Dining Cur Service, CI omi «nn*ecU»n. at Denver and Colorado Spring* with ’diverging*' railway line*, now IbrmiDg the new and plctureoiu* . STANDARD OAVOB TRANS-ROCKY MOUNTAIN ROUTE Over which (operhly-miulpped train* vnn dally THROUGH WITHOUT CHANGE to amt from Natl LakeCIfy, Ogdm *nd dan Fnwirluco. THE ROOK ISL a NU I* abo the Direct and-Favorite Line to nod from Munitmi Pike** Tmlc and *11 ottier ianltnrr »hd scenic rraortnnndcitlv* and mlningdl*trlcts In Colorado. DAILY EAST EXPRESS TRAINS Prom St. Joseph nnd T - o . City to and Atom all Im­ portant town*, dilos amt section* In Sonthern Xetinudtn, tfttom'B and the Indian Territory, Also via ALBERT 1.KA ROUTE from Kansas City and Chlcngo to Water- town. Sioux (hill*, MINNEAPOLIS and ST, PAUL, connection* for till |K>lnt* north and norlhWeat Between the lake* nml the Pacific Goatt. ' Kor Ticket*. Maim, Folder*, or deelred Inftirmallon apply to tmv Oiupon Ticket Office In the United State* OrCanada, or addreM C. ST. JOHN, <Un'l Mauagtr, JOHN SEBASTIAN* Gen’ITkt.Al’aa*.Agt* CHICAGO. ILL. Itlm youmfttsn |i»syell |f y«tf lUarctflf wlsdorti jnd InulHirrat Mfrgest iwrfite t<M-day. I Ipmiiilas yMt toy liptitaJ* p«r»oiu>l litteuflon. I aii- llefldkt tit brhtly VtMuhflity fairly peryon lifehlnric«*telr» Js«n c<*«d »nU Iwidp, nml tehr* liner InuhkilGtkf ■twill arotkfmlua* BErioBMlr*k«w tq jtimYlimThott« wmi tiultiii i. tvs ?In'theirateir iotfiUiIt*, tehfl*- tNnrUny I wilt dim -fitrnUlf •»* emiiwitHtuU II Nhicn yen can Tile kiln with machinen j in full equ ptment and goo« < running order* Good ji»y* ing businesB. Two acrei* of land. Good four room,, house. To sell for cash or trade for Biuall farm, good reasons for mak'iig -i change. Call on / WgHeBwm., HklUU)OWflCE. “Lookat theMap.” P ennsy lvan ia JJnefl. . * . Aw they ih« Shortert Bout*lbtween• Chicago and <New York? AfS-they tba ' Shortest Route between^ W. Lout* Sad N*w York? Aro they 'Lb*Shortest • . Route between Cincinnati' and New York? Aro theytho Hhorteat-Itente b*- .twaeaCincinnatiandChicsgof “ L o o k r t t h e M a p .” , * V ** ''*• . « . #’ .* , , PennaylvA tils r^ *v .L ln e p . .■ ' ‘ Do they,make.oouncctlon tertb« Her- ; reaohtng)laln**>f tb«'Wait findNorth- j •wentbywayofmilcagoT'u* th*vYaak* ; oonnwUon forAlVjXltM.oMb* Wffg fnd l developing Nouthweat .jry way of at, ,< L du I k T t>o they' by wAy of Cincinnati andLoulavlllnmsko cotelaecUon tor tba builnes*center*andgleaiureandhealth naortaof thoSouth? J? “ L o o k $ ^ t h e M a p .’ * Pennsylvania . Lines. • •Do£ey reachthoflak#rasort*ofMich- ! Iran? -Do they realhf the Mountain re- - aortaofthe Utirfp Do theyextend to th* t flatnou*Ocean»*ei t*of the New JenWT * CoaatTDotheymakeconnectionthrougn * MewYotXRifaDpolntalaNewKngl**iay f ‘ (X o o k a t t h e l l i p ^ $ f*-+Z V w a. pMtnsylvanlA /•Lines. * ’ TAre they the. only sysletdofratiwkya * .ihat connect the CAplial* or Indiana, V OhioandPennsylvania with theCapital' of thoUnitedHtatea? By reasonofCb*lr { central situation do they formthe link* l that bind together nil sections of tha { United StatexT Do they con*tllute th* greathighway*betweenthe Kaat, W*M> Morthwe*t,Southwest andBoutu? - “ L o o k a t t h e tu lap .n jP e n n ifiit t lft lin e s* n u u i v s h i h i d laaiuwiim vt t*nrav«rn« socialandoomtoerolal inWroounet “Look at the Map.” j jg g g g a s 'M l 's I f . 1i,Torreuce, Agent C^Urrlll., 0 ,

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