The Cedarville Herald, Volume 23, Numbers 27-52
ft- . > > 7 :4 I f e r q l i l , P M A YKAtL AiMMiMit 'Ul-telii Vi^U WA am A m w if « p isin * » t w n » . # w w f i m w m t A y , A m m r i t , i m Mr. Bryan** «flk*fli art mot * Hkaly fatate»»tep ftiid tafa«p tabk*w fl > mm I tiNMtft mum otmapimvpo* ihn 3m4 ofPrmiimt MoKiuky. Kansas alway I m aowa sort of it jpofitkftl law OHbaud. Tbakm known m ib* aocWiat party is the Jatwt, but 5tl**ot making muoh headway. Acllai may havfl vision# about h re* aura to V m old job of presiding over mb*Senate, but be knows when he is ^Mvrake that ttayar* only dreams. Congrcaaroan Camp Clark is one of the popular democratic speakers, bo oAtisebe lets the issues alone aud tells Igood stories to amuse his audiences, Prosperity in Colorado hss been ex tended even to the train-robbers, a hunch of which held’ up and looted the passengers on a Union, Pacific train. A ss result’ of the advertising ob tained in his first campaign Mr, Bryau ’-became a rich man, but be isn't likely in even get the satisfaction of making money out of bis second campaign. MatBaoa County fair. The races o f the Madison County - JL’Vir tu be held a t -Loudon, August 28 2d, 30, fil wilt attract 'much ’a t tention and gteatyjrowds are expected. nVedtteeday there will be 2.50 trot, purte $2,50; 3.00 trot, purse 3250; 11 year old trot and pace, purse $100. 'thnrsday; 2.13 pace, purse 3250; 2,27 trot, purse 3250; 2.13 pace, purse £.300; running race, purse 375, Fri- «lay;>2,25:pace, purse' $250; 2.19 trot, purse 3300;- running race, purse 3100, , < ' *‘ n'~ . T"T^ k • - The following extract ; was taken. V! from one ot Dowiefe recent sernmus, text being “The Kingdom of God is ’'Conte." In speaking o f Elijah, the u-Iesseuger of God and John the Haptist as being men as be is: for when Cod sends a messenger He does not send an angel from Heaven. He sends a mau-in whom he placed the spirit of Hi# Messenger. “ I believe - l am That Man, the Messenger ot ♦Jed's oovenant, the Prophet of whom Atosss spoke! * * * I proclaim the downfall of sll monarchies; ot a ll republics; of all t-hurches. I say that the kingdom or ration that wilt not obey this Proc- Iimation from Zion when it is pro claimed to and understood by them, shall utterly perish. * * # The Apostate Churches have gone to the Devil. VVesley, speaking of bis own, said if they gave up holiness of life they wouldOnly become “dung and dross,".. Though they stand ap parently strong today, they are dead and withered and will fall. , . * * AiKftharT.il* XtwSteButeKw LHU*Daugh tm u tb I am the mother of eight children and have had a great deal of exper ience with medicine*. ’ Last summer my little daughter had the dysentery in its worst farm. We thought the would die. I tried every thing I could think of, bnt nothing seemed to doher any good. I saw by an advertisement in our paper that Chamberlain's Colic, <Jkdera and Diarrhoea Bemedy was highly recommended and sent and got a bottle St once. I t proved to he <>Mof the verybest medicines we ever bad in the house. I t saved my little slaughter's life. I am anxious for ev* «ry mother to know what an excel lent medicine it is. Had I known it a t first it Would have saved me a great deal »f anxiety apd my Kitle dangh- ter mwdh suffering. Yonr* truly, Mrs, tiro, F. Burdick, Liberty, It. I. TW sstohyG M, Kidgway, That* net 27t tncsefcoot houam la Mfckta*. - “Mothers endorse ft, children like Ssu M Mass nasft* Wfttefcr to On* JfttesteOeegk Cate. I t will qaWtly sera mil throat and Inn* WUg m j A Co., Druggistei 1' ia r iiHihteteWate'WStem hwh fW thstmomster i i the Blade ^iHI viteB |r MNIWi US a a^m Jk afcJK gBDPM3 ftMIBm^Dt J^yifiSlSk _ Ctey City, t«*„ 3m . 14,1 m Be. W . & Qwdwsi, MsmWsslle, III. • r t —I lave ftsei D r, CaMwefi'a Mv M 1WP •s s J mri I was jhst aMft to m my I Im i iimi dewft toeMdy IB Ihk Im w msi Mma new Dr. i a f Vwfftsttlifii w ‘fan M m PMW mi^KWMBP thm newer nf D r. OahKmlfli fllmm Pspsm. I hat hnlf « f them mum stsmash tresMs. iw i fbr IBs, Ms or 31 beUle, to C. M , Bldgwsy. IeMw«e«vnis is to have a township hiftsi a t ket. The bendswars bought by the First National Bank ofCircls* villa. ' ft I4f*l Wk IftftiM* Twenty-nine ofltosr* and men wrote from the front tosay that tor Scratches Bruises, Cuts, Wounds, Bore Feet and Stiff Joint*, Bockleu's Arnica Salve Is the best in the world. Same for Bums, Bkin Eruptlon* and Piles, 25 cts a box. Cure guaranteed, Bold by Kidgway & Co., druggist. Lightning struck a brewery in Al toona, PS., the other day, and soured alt the beer. I tH tO u H , Constipation is a curse, and afiiicts too great a portion of 4he American people. There is no excuse for it either,«« we sell 'a remedy that will banish the curse, and with moderate use will keep you well. I t is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Sold in 10c 50c and 31.00 aims. For sale by C. M. Kidgway. The farms of Kansas yield this year over 3160 to every man, woman aijd child in'the state, Tbit ThrobbingHojtdsohe Would quickly leave you, if ’you used Dr, Kings- New Life Pills. ThduSands of sufferers have proved their^matehless-'merit for Sick and Nervous HeaoacheS- They 'make pure blood and build Up your health. Only 25 cent#, Money back if not cured. Sold by -RidgWay & Co., Druggists. Sergt. John R. Carroll, 100 years old, has joined Warren Post, No. 286, G. A. R„ at Brooklyn, N. Y . . A'30-P<ran4S*4»jr can take Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin with as much safety and beneficial re sults as an adult. I t is a mihl liquid laxative and chidren thrive upon it. Syrup Pepsin assists nature in cleans- iug the system, and its use .is not a t tended with any of the upleasant gripings and nauseating effects caused by the use of pilJs or so called cathar tics, Try a 10c size bottle (10 doses 10 coats.) Also'sold iff-50c and SI Bites by-C. M, Ridgwtiy. The census of White Plains, N. Y., shows more dogs than people. . JBninU i * Tr»g«dT. . Tihiely. Jnforination given Mrs. George Long, of New Straitsville, Ohio, saved two .lives, A frightful cough had tong kept her awake every night. - She had tried many remedies and doctors but stcadit y grew worse until urged to try Dr. King's New Discovery. One bottle wholly cured her: and she writes, this marvelous medicine also cured Mr. Long of a severe attack of Pneumonia. Such cure* are positive proof of its power to cure all throat, chest -and lung troubles, Only 50c and 31.00. Guar anteed. Trial bottles free atRidg- way and Go's drug store. Hawaii has closed its last school for teaching the native language. Here after oily*English will bo taught. ttuy *f i 81m To be bound hand and foot for yean by the chains of disease is the worst form of slavery. GeorgeD. Williams of Manchester, Mich,, says: “My wife has been so helpless for five years that she could not tarn over in bed alone. After using two bottles of Electric Bitters she k wonderfully im proved and able to do her own work." This supreme remedy for female diseases quickly cures nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, headache, backache, fainting and dizzy spells, I t h a godsend to weak, sickly,.run- down jieo^Ie. (lure guaranteed. Only 60c. gm. Kidgway A Go., Drug The Army and Navy Journal brings together the WaUntie* of lives lost in railroading in the United Btates the past year, and compare* these with the easulties in the Philp* pines, reckoning on the Imsis of an army of 63,000 men. The result shows railroading to be about four tknei a* perilous a* war MM MWAM, 3100. The tenders of this paper will be pleased to Isarn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure iu all it* stages and that k Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure tha oily positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being « MMwttkiUoiMl dkease, rsqutrse* <m* ititttUesiftI traatmml, Haifa Catarrh Curt k take* fcttaraafly, acting dhrsrtly apon the Mead and teuton* M i-fax* of Uw>system, 1hereby ikatroy* lag the fatwk ik* of the disease, and gfvlag the pflUsnt strsagth by naUdiat up the osmetua* IHrti and ambling aaiar* in doing Ha waste, Jh e pospriators Hava an much lakh ia flumsatita powers, that ttiey afftrima Hwndted Dollar* for any anas that ft firfk to rite*. Bend fat Metof kssUmoakk. ff. J . OnontY A Co. Tokdo. Ohio. IMd hy drMgtats. 75c. ^ r t T a t nfiyPSBsars tha hast. fc VflB- m C m MBDflMIMAAMfiM - ^3... <4- lb';/- S -L lZ ito ITOLPFO IN yBANCE. fHft CWarPM HA» DCVgLOftKO ANA* TtONAU FiGHTlNO fttAOI. I t S* ft XsHisr, ftiir*fi|K* fwwrft, tft* mpee a* c*M**t, mn # w u s n , W sm tit* CvftlMiteMt* H* l**H**e. H*rt*»* in|wte>** 0**1* tor Persons other than JTteucb are wont to maintain in spltt e* the occasional pin iiricks that tha irrench duciist* in flict on one another that French duel ing I* a French farce, But Frenchmen and sometimes other persona in sym pathy with them insist upon being tak en seriously. Xhcy insist that dueling with swords, which Is the real thing in French duels, is not child's play and that compared with It the old fashion ed Anglo-Saxon resort to a "pair of flve»rt Is brutality not to he thought of by the scraping smirkcr of the boule vards. * The French habit of settling disputes by resort to duels’with swords bas. de veloped a national dueling weapon, the epee de combat, a long and strong blade with three triangular grooves tapering to n keen point, with edges that never are used snve for defense. The hand is .protected with a broad, round guard shaped like the gong upon an alarm clock. The handle is straight, with’no other incumbrance, and bal anced by. a heavy pommel which pro jects beyond the root of the thumb when the weapon ia held ready for a thrust, It Is a modern development of the rapier with which Cyrano do Bergerac fought the bullies of Paris. It shows traces of Its descent through the ele gant court sword' which was coming Into belpg when O’Artagnnn became a field marshal lu the "Due do Brnge- lonne.” But Its' hilt makes It Impossi ble for ordinary Wear in Its present shape, and'the epee de combat is the weapon of the French duelist Ond/of him alone., In 18SS General .Boulanger and M. Floquet found It necessary to settle their differences at. the sword’s point The Critics bad’not much difficulty in picking the winner between a civilian president of the chamber of dopdtlCB well advanced in years'who bad limit ed his practice to sparrow shwtlng with a pistol and a “brav’ general" In tbe full ardor of his life Whose sword was the symbol of his profession. Yet they were utterly mistaken. If M. Floquet was no swordsman, ho was full of quiet pluck and common sense, and he practiced one stroke only the night before the fight A dozen times, though not too many to make his old limbs stiff ’the next day, he might have been seen In * welt known sallc* d'armes straightening bis arm and raising his wrist until he could only just sec tbe point of bis sword above and beyond tbe ball of his tbqmb. .Tbe next day Boulanger made a furiotia attack, with many stomps and nourishes. The little president stiffened-bis back, threw out hts point; and the unlucky general Impaled his neck npoh the blade. Boulnngor recov ered, to die by bis own hand after "Boulangismy bad been, discredited, “Harry Alts’’.of tbe Dobnts suffered much mdre quickly (t-om the. effect* of the cpCe. His real name was Hlppolyte Percher, and in fighting a captain of lnfnutry on the lie de la Grande Jalte about certain scandals connected with the French Kongo he was hit In tha right armpit and bled to dentb. The duel fought l>y Catulte Mcndes in May of 1809 was almost ns serious, and it was caused while Bernhardt was playing “Hamlet” by aonio fatu ous quarrel over the physical develop ment of the prince of Denmark. M. Vsnor, Mehdes’ opponent, Wfts a fins swordsman and, sportsmanlike enough to reoogniso the double advantages be enjoyed, contented himself with parry ing correctly, Cntullo Mcndes threw himself on his adversary’s point and was severely Wounded In the stomach on almost the same ground where Percher bad bSen killed several years before. I t often Is Urged outside of France th a t French dueling consists in merely pricking your man In the hand or fore- arm, as the least disablement Is held to "satisfy the honor” of tho combatants. Bnt the hand and arm of an adversary are those parts ot him which are near est to you and which you can reach with the least exposure of your own person. The wound that Is produced by trans fixing a band, which jnay be protected only by the ordinary kid glove of social custom, is not only totally disabling, bnt also extremely painful. Soldiers who have been shot In the palm Inva riably collapse for a time with tha acute agony produced by tbe rupture of so many delicate nerve centers. A thrust In the forearm is equally effect ive, for it disables ail the muscles and ligaments that enable ft man to bold and manipulate bis swotd. But. though a One due-list is always capable of these particular thrusts— and they are far more various than Wonld be imagined nt first sight—be has by no mesns exhausted his strokes when these have all t>ecn parried, At- tScks In what is called the “lower line” are frequently successful aud invaria bly produce an awkward wound when they itMtoed, Tbe throat Is aa vulner able and as often attacked aa is the chest, and It must be remembered that the entire body of each asaailant is open to attack aud obviously to injury. SCROFULA wftftk Jung* Kite! :fiftlm i—, Yo« have them In :fart wM tttef m well *« Ift tdkl* ffCOTT* EMULSION cute* them t» summer «* Its winter* f t tec«tMniy looking and pteae* « * t tasting . tonasiltas;*lldfM(«tei§» m m to to w n n uM f ttw im ftw ti mm ifgj weiftr MMiNM* In India, the land eff famine, IhouMitds die beiwuse they cannot obtain food. Tn America, the land of jdeafy many aufar and die heeanft* they raamd di'geat tha tmal they eat. KmM Dyapimia Cere difeate ‘what pm Mi. I t iostaatiy refhives and Stefauttr eoees all monauh trnnMea. A On,, “ WmikMeii I U K 3TBS«S . a s M M r n | o w M I f f i f t H OURINfi FliFStkttiNiiu^tijMponiijttel fii»c*»*toruno* iri,iK.ttlurnnrMFTkt'kF*<i Inttlrict,*nj SnUlf .... icktuu-Filtdvii-um. U*uveajfi«r ftiUiW* Oj/ioivwjf^rx,**.’’ MIDDIK ABEDM O W S S A # ; v ... .. .. .. .. M , MUCiiUOIlB Ottil* blUJJW, fift'.u *c'ci>nip;'!iled fcjr * orIwrntiia wrif.-ition, t.i-nwiw oFropy Wdltaoiit In tiiB urlno, auq alUmuon, tli;i cokir fitrtOf w >lila or, mUklrb hue *(BiiU clujuKiriK to a a*rk #na torpidMppptrfliicoitnus' .’ns nnrvottadobuaymullow ->rtit uitr, rj'tnmutw'r, thi*•» imji irnmt htaze of LOST M anhood , in «lrSt.cn s-ncrf,-!cl;<!ur;> tSiatra- pixtiMcart'd tsitu.natUFjod, ? f X H T m A U » i r _______ ■ Cl jiV * f j v « 3 » u s m “■'Af iNSTITtiTK v aii; Chic-tgo, III. . B lood D iseases OF In «h* FIRST* SEOOM0 an* TH IR O S ta g es HadePure \7 Q lTean nlways find at tfip * • old reliable Meat Shop of G. W. Crouse's Choic-3 Beef, Fork Sausage, * ; Veal, Lard,' Bologna, Wenerwust, Bac:n, Hams, Sugar Cured .Shoulders. Give us a trial and t be con - ’ inced. FRANK H. DEAN. A*rrousBV at L aw . # 41 E. .Main Stv Xenia, G. Adam's Restaurant and Dining Rooms Corner High quid Limestone street,- Springficld, Ohio, Blue Front Stable. ' Lenve your horses- there and your rigs 1x3kept on the inside, out of the rain nnd storm, 20 N, Fountain Avenue, Springfield, O, C iu n its E. T odi >, Proi* $500 REWABDI Wo wilt pay the aliove rew»rd for nny cate of Liver Complaint. Dyepcpals, Sick llctiil- ocho. Imllgcatlon, Cnnstipntion or OostivonoRti we cannot cure with Liverit*. tho Up-to-Patc Littto Liver I’ill.when tho directions uro Htrict- ly compliedwith, Thcynro purely Vogotablo »ml never full to give intisfoctlon. 2oo bosec contain 100 Pill*, 10a boxes contain 40 l’illfl, Ho bo *08 contain 15 Pills, fiownre of snhstitu. tionsund imitntions. Scut hy innil. Stamps taken. NBItVITA MISDICAL CO., Cor. Clinton and Jackson Sts., Chicago. lit. For sale by C.M.lUdgway, drifggist, Cedar- vilio, Ohio. PILES OUJtED WITHOUT TBE KHIPEI Vonrdmggcst, whom yon know to ho rcliahlc will tell you that he is outhorited to refund tho tuoncy to every parchaser where 1‘IZO OINT MENT fills to euro nny case of ITCHING, BLIND, BLEEDING, or PltOTKUDtNG PILES, no matter of how long {standing. Cures ordinary cams fa six days. One application gives ciso end rest, Relieves Itching instantly. This is anew discovery And is sold on n posi tive guarantee, No Core, No Pay, Price, 81.00. For esie hy C. M, Eldgway. Right on Time < . is the man with a good watch*--right there when ever he is due. Everybody who nn<‘ o f «nf Watehrs ia aure «f correct time, Wtj'.cait IttrnSdi you wji I i nhy of the Jftdtng make.*, amh w Elgin, Waltham, Hamilton or Haut|>d(n; in fact any kind you wirii and at mu ll n Ix>w Price a« to mtfprbe you, Hoc U r Itelore yon buy. K t L B st T a t e , 16 *<. Iteimit St„ Xenia, Ohio. Jt ategMJU D AMR® N' 9 'V.' f l M « » a s » IN i i' n ** * '!•■ ■ *1 -■ ProntotesDigeaSonEkeerfub ness amiRestContainsndtteT Opium,Morplune norHmeral. NOT N A RCO T IC . ■;■ ■ -'-'.l ■M«»pW')l|I mh#tXdMrSiHm*mMR jmx^auatk*■ ■■ ASuSSft- ' " *- ^SSSuMk« — »JW- Apetfecl RemedyforConslipa- Tion. SourStoinach.Dianiwea Worms.Convulsjons.Fcveusn- ness andLo39QF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of • N EW YORK,_____ y« fla lS ft« tft»B 4 |TheKindYouHm AlwaysBought Bears the Signature of • Al b u i o a l l i s o J li } ') D o s t S C ) M S t EXACTCOPTo r WRAPPER. In Use ForOver ThirtyYears M S T O R U -TMC 3 KNTAUN 30 MMMV*NfiWVQDDfilVVt. m a am Knock Down Prices ► A T ^ H ETCHISON # .(jIBNEY crF-ft^—t-s^*-' Summer Silks, 65, 75, 85c quality down to 50c 25c for the 35, 45, 50c' quality. Silk Ginghams reduced from 50c to 25c, D im ities, I2?.c quality dow;h to 7.1c; 8Jc down to 5c. ‘ Balbriggan Underwear 25c Ladies' Summer Vests 5 to 8?jC White Goods in Remnants 5 to 10c. "■ . , tv Duck Suits down to $ 1 . » ■ Crash Skirts 25 to 75 c. W hite Marsailles Skirts greatly reduced, Spring and Fall Suits, all wool, $5.00, $7.50, - $10.75. Challies s yards for ioc, fine for comforts or Summer. ^Insu re YourProperty in the Old Reliable_^ Fireline InCDrpr.t-Ated 185!f. T HIS company immi’cs Favin property for One Per Cent. and uuder. Town and Mci’canttln property for .60 cents aud upward. Itcmeinber, there is no policy fee charged. I)rop me card or call. Will be in town every Saturday* W. E. SEAN, Agent, Cedarville, Ohio. In, fatotlM Amwerei. Y««, August FlowA still has the largest sate of any, medicine in tho civilized world. Your mothers’ and grandmothers’ never thought of using anything else for Indigestion or Bil- ionsness. Doctors were scarce, and they seldom liesid of Appendicitis, Nervous Prostration orL,Heart failure^ etc. They used August Flower to deaif out the system and slop fermen tation of undigested iood, regulate ac tion of tho fiver, stimulate tha ner vous and organic action of tha system, and that is alt thoy took when feeling dull and tad with headaches and other aches, You only need a few doses of Green’s August Flower, in liquid form to make you satisfied there is nothing serious tha matter with you. For ftdo hy ( ' M, Kidgway. Your chances for a wheat crap are doubled hy the use of a good fa* tlliaar. The hast ate the da*, f " l«m A Vo. brands, ft*hl by _ Htorainnt. Aug —-Chincao arc dangerous enenfice, for they arc treacherous. That's whv »fi tountwlfcito of DcWitt’s Witch Hazel Halve arc dangerous, They fitok like DoWitt’s, hut instead of tho all-healing witch hazel they all con- tain ingredients, liable to irritate the skin and cause blood poisoning. For pi cs, injuries aud skin disease* uae the original and genuine DeWiti’s Witch Hazel Halve, ltidgway A Co.. Drug gists. During the civil war, as well «e hi our late war with Hpain, diarrhoea was one of the most troublesome di- •eases the army had to contend with. In many instances it Itecame chronic and the ohl soldiers atilt sulfa from It Mr. David Taylor of Wind Ridge, Greene to ., Fa., Is one of these. He uyC ham berialn’a Colic, Cholera and »dy and mv « he never that wmtra give h^n I t la for Mdehy ('top Oattfbmk Th« HO! of le w York I* thesafestInaurnuce Uomge*» to insure yonr property in, Beeen^ HI* the largsst company in the ^ making ftspecialty of inauring J W , «n d V illiftg e property a £ fa ' F irw , L ig h tn in g and Tom , d o **, Itaagents do not h a tin ' ajKjfogizo to ita jmliey holders tdna their property iadestroyed, becatuff a ' Com pim y P fty» the Ctah immediateljkftod without delay. \Vrite to me or call at my office far, testimonials from my own emtomt*! throughout Greene, Clark, Madiias and Fayette counties. ' Office open every day in the week, W . L . CLEMANS AOBNT , Cedarville, ; Ohio, Homer G. Wade, a ce Manager, i ‘WheretoLocate? Why, in the Territory Tr»ver(Fcd by the.......... Louisville ' < S c ■ Nashville Hailroad . -V ; ■ ' f .-. .• ---- TH E—. Ysrcit,CcuiralSouthernTrnukliej ------ i n - — KENTUCKY, TENNESSEE. ALABAMA. MISSISSIPPI, FLORIDA, WHEDE - F a rm e r # , F r u i t G row er# , S to c k l l u h r r # , M a o v fo ('tin < n ,\ J t i r m f (•/■#, S> rcttlriMir# a n d MOOcy J.em hiA will Hurl the -gicaU-fl ct-IttLCt-CK in tin- Iniioi] Suite# !« make ‘'big money” liy renyuii nf Hi] nhunilnnro * n l chvinitie(-f of LAND AND PARKS. ' TUBER AND STONE, IRON AND GOAL. LABOR ~2VB&TTBMf I'rco tfilcfi finnnoist sStiKtiinco. ntttl Crt-rdiial from loxathii, fur Iho maimfactutor. [ Lnnil nntl fHrmB at^l.UI) >Fer »erc ami»jt-1 w«rJs, *11(1500,1)00«vr«* In Went Florid*HitI cari be taken gratia under U. S. llomeiftll laws. 1 Stnekraising in the Gulf Coast District will] make enormous profile. Haltfan tzeursloa ths First tad Third Toeedmys of each moath.. Lot ns know what yon want, and art will tell you where and how io get it—hut desVI delay, aa the country ia flllfng Uprapidly. 3 Printed matter, maps and all inforiuaktg free. Address, B. J . WEKI88, General Immigration and IndustrialAd Lnlnfil*( Xwtieky. ExchangeBan! CEDARVILLE, OHIO. . A CCOUNT of Merchant* andl dividual* solicited. Collect)* promptly made and remitted. TlRAFTHon New York and ciuuati aokl at loweat rates, cheapest and moat convenient way actitl money hy mail. T OAN8 made on Real Estate, •ft* aonal or Collateral Becnrily. William Wildman, Pres,, Beth W, Smith, VicePrt*.. W,« J . Wildman, Ca‘ seam FOX, THK* 4 ’ Arcade Photographer ft In tlie nioftt reliable and vStrictly Up-to- date Artist in the city—Springfield, O. NERVITAPll ImN® w ® mt ®N® ----- “ ,Lift• i f - M w dN te T d k ia l* i »wMa% r. a.iwi*»w« T1 have as far) than For new are wl Rips Leave A m Our Walking Dele Tne only thing that tant^ wife iaa moitir htithand. t t t Too many men love not euongli of them love u t t t We do not mind th<J labor ao tad aa tho pneuin that ia tire hy those win<j ’ whooolite in and bore uq We frequently have a kind* t t t We heard a" man tn augry to another, one daj hut then it was hy teleph* partite were a safe distq Telephones come in might inch caaee t t t We were informed tlH by an owtaider that the Iully ripe for the tad- stated that where he lodgl before the liUtc creati| around and presented ments for the night. . t t t » I t will he ft long ll occur* to onr town ho] know as little as their fa 11 t The problem: “Whatl with our hoys’* has taca *0 small ftxtent, hut »j i* that n e tt to an incq that will wot w<uk. t t t W ide Wei wfinder cffWotoSw when we how miNdi more fm than the hnlaiiee oi th »ta|ftterat44ay, in*«) fiteirihrltewr 900 Wife 3-lMaWteftiHtrate Jw ’iflteftlft wm *11 -'••Wftftllftt . ta ftt
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=