The Cedarville Herald, Volume 25, Numbers 1-26

- m , e s oiiio, aaaifc units!, l-uiWt,jr ■nil remitted. h * Ywk «nd Citt. *1 lovreit rates, 'rj?fc convenient wav t# mil. > i l o N Heal Estate, tVl B tte r a l Security. *« , Pres., " Pgf^ . JEST ttdiu-f o f tlic market {■ d «twk farm :eaji *|. }’*., bi* fosmd at thg ■:i; S*: j rtt'of Weimer. filler' with (very. nf? to bo found in R si .class meat market, so handfos the etle- ited ^wif't Company’* mis. And courteous :! lumtht treatment t’s ifrith the above. Fresh Fish-am! lee e South... To j Cincinnati,’ j — Louisville and oil I s o n t e Points. i ! Special Low , Hound Trip Ipurlieu!!,os regarding 1 inquire o f f J. H . & leeeotiiiive. na Cure hat you eat. Contain'* all of flie ■ digests c*l hinds of itant relief ami tv-vet blows yc u to ei.?- all .. Tlicnie.-t r«R i'.’vc e it . Jiv.t ' tt-oinany V'speptie-. !.* vjj "been thingf.U» f.i ied. It I ir. of gas on tlit.! -tom* distre-safJtrf aflnjr. ary. Fhci^intl -.lake. it do you gjaod tns*U tilTM 60c.alM, I* Fof*, |Soppr»»i 4 m m m nm tm PAINFUL i^ a j a y a s a » J a W l w of FfJtttlSJ-*!*" tttum ttnt, j* P c # M o ln e * , I owa . M. EidgWay r NTS PMAVllMAtltPCti.. |U.».P*Te«r 4 »rfic« i n ir*g linW thuix the** _• r h « e „ with dwtfspj o f *Krf,fr« id! pitr*rtnti*.***»r*Jr. i »bui« Lad iofeiffn coantriMf pr&oo. ptfWtiWi'WW*-. 8>,4 t j , Ihrn't Atop wort ibstti and render Attack of prtfu- U Caro, ib coft- .will •ttr* youin t flh‘!'!»i!ltt to t«K* j hi your herdor itijirttioh’a. Pticti feltfjjwsty* 1 / k r ,. . . Winter. Rates ' # , j TO ■ * Lookout Jit, Tenn Ashevlll.-, K. C, Utarlt stem'. F, C .fnfk/!)iivil|i., ■fla. ' iM. Anjjust.lm-, FI# IVnau-oisi, Fin. I'ahn m ;i, . Tmiifia. Fta. ' ITaVmia, Cuba. - ■New Orleans, l,a. ■ |opoints in T e x a s a n d f o r n i a . -gfpjffl malm i atikmniWim firtw^aWw fWaSTBl" nul• t „ ■■ . .. W ¥ ¥ , Y E E Vw JLJL Who are the Boot, Shoe and Rubber Dealers in Springfield, O d'olfarf^n^Bomq y or^ ? s wholesalers, place orders direct, and get the largest discount for cash? Who is it that can make purchases for Twenty-five thousand largest retail shoe hnn«L?£ a u - o S, *ru°n-e Pm,e ^or cas.^? Who is it that has vforty years’ and training among the greatest shoe dealers in America? Who is it that runs one of the and* oDDortunitv in JLJ 1 u * 1- W “ ° IS jt that turns out more Boots, Shoes and Rubbers than all other dealers in Springfield? Who is it that has seached a plane of intelligence tor the money than other dea!eSm<3SJ attained hy any. other dealer in Springfield? W e mention these facts in evidence of our plaim that we are prepared to give better goods for Shoe A.nd T h ey W ill Exp lain . T he "Whole B u siness. tC fw cIw na tl D iv is io n . ennsulvaniauneH ftdwtdte*1P mwium Tnln»c,Btf)dTtflH* ColHrnblM Iv. Alton.,.......,* TCJelTerson" London LCUrluk# Halm#......... 1 CedArvlUe.,'* ■Wllberrorca" X enta ... {iv' Spring ,Val, Ifoxaim a.... “ V» j » i » t I1| i ' Oregonlft.,..' Ft. Ancient *' Morrow ......" So.L ebanon “ L o v e l a n d 1 Milford....." llatavlft Jc.. “ Cincinnati......<U liUlTWlL GiodimiU!' liU riiJt" J f U f t r l '* tfntad.,1 llmr... “ it latitat Ortnau,, wyinu*'* Ktusaa tfrUgT»l.“ «ai»-fj|' VilbtrfM *' CrianllH “ Wna ACVliiV tooitn ..I" W.Jtfo'a1* UlaaJl... “ WanlttJK, Between SprInafleltf. Xtnl«, Dapton, Richmond, WESTWARD. Springfield lv .TtiiawSp'jri. “ Xenia... { ? £ Dayton_{f Brookville-‘‘ Dsdeon Eldorado... “ Rlchmondnr. X AM 3*08 335 335 401 5 3 T AM *735 754 8X5 Mj AM rsnr EASTWARD . lUdtuat.illi Eldorpdo ** Dodson- “ Brcokariilt ‘‘ Canton {iv XeniaJ f v TtUew'8— “ M AM erB - *830 1010 ) Alt ♦920 93ft 1000 T a j m r m AM AH AM 10*05 21 "" ,-43 8 48 J.9 4CU.05 635)9 401106 70610071130 7151035 AM 73510,55 . 76511115 Acc.Trklneltar»M«r»vfcrCIntian*lil6 30, IT55. Aco. Trains lar> ClaciiuaUfor Xomw t i l 10, t 5 20- — ■ ’ ' *------------------ ----------- tm 1 i «4« fSlojfoj 4«MtM‘tlie«&*ia 1200 aooato1200add- 1200 ai&igAtM 12.00 Been. utdMiai ..... Dark Faced Tip* nirlt; light iuil, fti_______ ________ - jpMllmua Sleeplnir,Car on. No*. 2, S. 6. I-t, 10,PO)lil oindr105,eitherrunthrough, via Columbus andPittsburgh orconnectthrough Pittsburgh Unlon Station to andfromBaltimore, -Washington, TUIWdelpUia and' Mow York,. Mo», 8, 301 and #1connectat Richmond for. Indianapolis and St, Louis; No*, at and3forChicago. _ G.L. PKCK, E.A.F0R6, • frntnlAuurir, ^ G««rilPnutanrlg«t, . JPiftsBtmoji. F knn 'A. ’ ■ - Fortimecards,ratesoffine,throughtickets, E. S, Keyes, Agent, CednryUlei Ohio. It Spelled ’fche Namo, ■ He walked up to the hotel regis­ ter and signed his mime with a- flourish, <% K, Plitholognyrrh^' ,fIiook here, Turner!” exclaimed the clerk,: who knew him :well, ^Are they hunting for. yon' or what?' Where do. you get that outlandish namo??> - “Get back, my boy, get backl You're slow,” replied Turner airily as he lit a eigsr, “That's my Same old name, written in ' pliin English and pronounced as usual—just ‘Tur­ n e r / l/ook at it, Of course I do it just to got them alt guessing. The)- wonder what nation I am fromj what my name is, I can now hear people talk about The all around, I t is, as I said before, English spelling, ‘Ph tV there Is the sound of ‘t’ in ‘phthisis; ‘olo/ there is the ‘uri in ‘colonel;' ‘gn / there is the *n’ in ‘gnat;' ‘yrrh’ is the sound of ‘er' in ‘mvrrh? JTow, if that does not spell 'Turner' what does it spell Ghat. TOADS MAfin _Pl**«fnt. FtUt«bi«. FottuL y#ste, Ooofl. Do Uooo7lWT«rSlolt*ti.We»l(en, orOrip*, lflo, SC.5Q& *»# CURK CONSTIPATION. ... ftferX.* Ktmt*/ (*>>»*«, X« i M k «LS** T*rk, 114 *r Wearing Out th« N*rve», Many neopie wear themselves out needlessly. Their conscience is a tyrant; An exaggerated sense of duty leads many a person to anx­ ious, ceaseless activity, to be con­ stantly doing something, oyerpunc- tual, never idle a second of time, scorn to rest, finch are in uncon­ scious nerve tension, They say they have no time to rest, they have so much to do* not thinking they are rapidly unfitting themselves for probably what would have been their best and greatest work in aft- or years. Self control of nerve fore# 1* the great lesson of health and therefore of life itself.' To under­ stand how to relax is to understand how to strengthen nerves, Ilearty laughter is a source of relaxation, as arc also all high thoughts, as those of hope, beauty, trust j>f love. Ite- l&xation is found in ' diversion,— Eondon Doctor. W M T E D ! ‘ lleliable man f«r Mansigers of a branch Office we wish to open in this vicinity. Here is a good opening for the right man, Kir.dly give good reference when writing. tiff A. t WWfM tVNWlSIte MO*M( otacirtWATt, rmto. Iflustratcd catalogue 4 cts atnnps ;f8tw.|ih WDiridS-tiS'skthe Club. I f members of the “Hay Fever As sedation’1would u?e I)r. King’s Few Discovery for Consumption, ‘the club would go to pieces, for it always cures this malaily—*abd Asthma, the kind that baffles the doctors—Si wholly drive# from the system, Thousands ol cues bopoh .-a sufferers from Consump­ tion, Pneumonia, Bronchitis owe their lives and health to i t It conquers Cup; saves little ones fr.oni Croup and Whooping Cough, and is positively guaranteed for all Throat and Lung troubles. 60e, $1 00, Trial bottles, free at Bidgway'A Co. To Core a Cold In One Day, Take Lixative Bronio Quinine Tab CIS, All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W, OroveV signature is on Cads box. 25c, ‘ * 'A ■ 'l ^ CH ICHESTEfi'E S K v . f . PENNYROmiE ahrf tb* ttersli}. » « > ^ft) ’*V( ■Of.. ra*4‘iiis«TKW'W J ^ H r vh O aM t MASH* iw1*!**1 wito b;nt< v !. vnMtw k * mm l *J* wn *« h * •tr nessw» i«wattitt ' *” ,,r‘T«fOt#s'r#ti o»#»WA*, m #»*# #%«*«*» ** msi .*„ * QUEER MEXICAN^ CUSTOMS. Convenient Manner of performing a Dreaded Society Duty, Some of the Mexican customs save. much trouble, says a corre­ spondent of the Boston Herald. Yon are invited out to dine. On, rising from the*table you jthank your hosts for their hospitality, and, thu# is your dreaded dinner call accom­ plished. How, I contend that this is most civilized and amazingly con­ venient. Ho Mexican arises .from the table without expressing his thunks for the hospitality extended to'him, and nhyays this is done with old fashioned grace of speech, The poorest man you have at table, per­ haps, as I have seen, a humble ranchero, would not forget this lit­ tle act of thanks, not for his life. A nian of .rough .exterior will sit down to meat with you, and, though' he may mix up his forks and bram dish a fork in the air along with his knife as ,ho talks, he will observe' many graceful • customs, offering whatever is passed him to a lady at his elbow and if he gets- a tidbit insist on his neighbor sharing it. In country places your host in true Moorish fashion will put a choice morsel in yoUr month. At bottom Mexican etiquette is Moro-Spanish, and many of the most familiar arti­ cles of food h^rk back for their' or­ igin- to the Arabs- Especially is this "so in the matter of sweetmeats, and the famous . alondigas, meat balls of small size,’.villi a stuffing of eggs and sometimes of spices, are Moorish .for a thousand years. On the tables of the well to do the des­ sert is a matter of wonder and shows the Arabian taste for sweets. Some­ times half a dozen delicious pre­ serves will be seen. The people have a very sweet tooth. ForThe Comxleplan. 1 - ,eomp!exiim always sailers Iron • insness or constipation, Unless tb* v*>Ia arc kept open the impuritie ■ n the body appear in, the form o ■ghtlv eruptiops, Do .Witt’s Litll*! Yiv Risers keep the liver and bowo'v *h by condition Und remove lb of such troubles, O'. E. Hoop**; b ’Uv. Gtif. snyst “T took DeWitf rie Early Risers for biliousn * .. y^were just what I needed, l a' dug better now than in fear;*, . ver gripe or distress. ' Safe, tb iJ t and gentle. The very best piI , O. M Ridgwav PIMPLES ’ “Mjrwifohadolmnlcaonfaerface,but •b# I im boon taking OASCAHETS ana they JUar? aU disappeared. I bad been troublod withOonatlpattoaTorsometime, but after taking the first .Cascaret I have badno trouble With tbis aliment. Wocannot speak toohighlyof Casearets,” F rxd WA bthaic . t7Q8<3armantownAve., Philadelphia, P*V # CANDY . CATHARTK J A T e l e g r a p h e r s S t o r y S i , l That afternoon the 'president came dowm to the station on busi­ ness, and I looked at him closely. He" must have ,seen me watching him, for he shifted his position un­ easily and nervously handled .the in-, strument. I may say that he-Was an export operator and- preferred, tele­ graphing his messages to writing them.. . . . He seemed ill at ease that day, and I withdrew my eyes and busied myself1 elsewhere. But more; than once lie cauglit me looking at him. Twice that day the president drove down to the station, and slow-’ ly he drove home again, as though he were disturbed about something. The third time he came it was al­ most. dark, and I heard him send his cpachikian home, telling him that he would follow soon on foot. DickBamsey and 1, after learning telegraphy*, hpd gone west together and' taken positions at neighboring Railroad stations. _One afternoon there came a fran­ tic call at the .wire, and I hurried to the instrument to hear. Dick tapping off the words that the express train had been delayed and to hold the “run -way,” due at .he station ten minutes later, until I heard ,from him. Directly after the message came the' line: “Express train in sight. Something wrong. Stand by.” 1 waited a full minute; then came Dick’S familiar tap tap: “Ex­ press is being run by strange hands. They have stopped at this station. Send relief,” . There was a second’s silence; then, before I could flash the alarm along the line, the tapping begftn again. It ran: “Everythingall right. Good- by” • , I signaled for him, to repeat the message, and again came the words; “Everything all right, Goodby.” I held the instrument in my hand and debated with -myself upon my course of conduct. I did not want to needlessly’, send the alarm alon * the line. Oh the other hand, why had Dick sent his first message ? I touched the instrument and asked, ‘Ts everything all right, Dick?” And the answer came back, “ Every­ thing is all right.” I t did not seem at all like Dick’s touch, but I laid it' to nervousness and quieted,my fears while I waited for the “runaway.” N I recalled that Dick lmd told me over the wire tlie previous evening that the “runaway” would have a large sum of money aboard, which it was to transfer to the express at his station. : When the “runaway” ,came up, I notified the engineer that the cy­ press was waiting for him at Lake-, yille, and I also casually merttiboed that the alarm had come from, there* but tha t afterward I- had rcccived-a messugc that all was well. He seemed disturbed and advised mo to repeat the story to.theHnited, •States marshal aboard, which I did, with the result that the train pulled Out of the station prepared for emer­ gencies,' though neither, .they, nor I thought anything of the hasty mes­ sage that had been flashed to me. Ten minutes Inter the message came over the wires from Lnkevillo: “Found train in charge Of highway­ men. Dick Ramsey murdered at in­ strument. Object was to rob the ‘runaway*' btyt we overpowered them after a desperate struggle. Notify .the stations along the lino to send relief” This, in. brief, was. the story of the death of Dick Ramsey, and after I had seen him laid away in the graveyard at Lakeville 1 packed up .my goods and journeyed farther on, :forT could not remain so near the scene of my old friend’s death. Well, strange things happen, aiid after I had found a position with the same company fifty miles away I was assigned back to Lakeville. 1 found the Village grown into .a. settlement of very fair size and the simple little station replaced by a very pretentious one, while the hum­ ble little churchyard where they hid buried poor Dick Ramsey was gay with flowering shrubs, and spires of marble lifted themselves^ here and there among the trees. Dick's grave was still marked ly the rude cross I had placed over it. The president of the road was a self made man. Often he did not go up to the city, and on these occa­ sions he wired mo on his private line, and I wired to the city for him. One day, chancing to sit at the instrument, there came a call on the. president’s wire, and, respond­ ing, 1 received this message i ‘Let me. know if the road 1*3clear,” A minute later 1 called up his pri­ vate wire and tapped, “The road is clear/’ , „ T “All right,” came hack the an* ftWOP*. “ , I t was ft simple enough message, hut it set my pulses throbbing. Me­ chanically f touched the button and repeated the message,* “The ror.d is dear,” and immediately came back the words, “All right.” I sat at tho.instrument like a man in a dream, and my thoughts were with Dick, who had sat at the same Spot five yeato before and bad touch­ ed that same instrument, What was there in tha t reply that so fascinat­ ed me, or was it the anniversary *ef jujU jfaJ f l t r t t t i i t k t d b i ItastMi poor Dick’s death that ..made w l , flreade Jlasie f f o a s e , 1 I . 74 Arcade, | S P R I N G F I E L D , O. * 45 E a s t M a in S t , . X E N I A , O. , ................_............ For half an hour the president busied himself around the station, a most unusual thing for him, and when he finally took leave it was to walk hurried.’" away in the direction of the churchyard, a journey which T often took myself. Scarcely realizing what I was do­ ing, I pulled my cap over my. eyes and started after him. \Yhnt ex­ cuse 1 would make if he turned arid saw me I knew not. I only under­ stood that some force was pulling me onward and that same force was taking me over the same road arid in ■the very footprints of President [ Greydoii of the.Lakeville and Laska I.railway. ' ' . : j To my -surprise, he turned the 1corner as he reached the church, : and, plodding his way past it, open- | ed the gate which led into the *Church3'ard and slowly wended his way among the graves. Noiselessly I followed him.’ Through the nnr- row pa ths' we went, he the "sub­ stance, I the shadow close after him. But, horror-of horrors, he stop­ ped ! And, ray God, he bent over Dick Ramsey’s gravel -Lower and lower he sank until he was upon his knees and his hands were spread'out upon the sod. In the uncertairi light of the rising moon I could see that he threw back his head, that his face was drawn arid deadly white arid that his lips were moving, I must have stepped upon a twig, for a sound, betrayed ,ino. Spring­ ing to his feet; he turned and faced me, not ten feet away. With n cry of rage he sprang to­ ward me. “So you-followed me 1” ho cried fiercely between his teeth. “You dogged my steps 1” Hq was a powerftil man, but in tho struggle which followed I easily mastered him and had him pinioned, white and panting. “Do not add another murder,” I said fiercely, “to that of Dick Ramsey.” -s “How do you know?” he whisper­ ed,. “I recognized your hand upon the wire. I was tho agent at the next station when you—-took Dick’s place —-you remember—Eve years ago—• today!” “Oh, God, yes J” he cried. “Shall I ever forget? Wiien I had to come to this cur3ed place to live, I thought it might disappear after awhile. But it grows -stronger every day, I live with it, see it, hear it—that poor fellow—all the time! Yet I had to do it or be killed. There was a gang of us. Oh, oh!” h( cried, and, break­ ing down utterly, the proud presi­ dent of the road buried his face in hishands. I t was n strange scene, wo two there in the moonlight,'accuser and accused, he trembling, I revengeful. “i tried to lead a better life,” he continued, “and on ray gains I suc­ ceeded well. Birt, oh, the misery of these years! I thought tonight if I could see his grave and pray upon it I might be forgiven and have rest.” His eyes sought the.spot where poo£ Dick lay with crushed skull., “What are you going to do?” I asked after we had stood there in silence. “Give myself up now, I suppose,” laid he. “There is no other way.” The next day the whole country_ was ringing with the strange coiifes-' *ion of President Grcjaon. He made a clean breast of it and waft so manly and sincere in his repent­ ance that nobody was sorry when his sentence was placed at a term of imprisonment instead of the death penalty, Which is so summarily dealt out to criminals in the newest of the westmii towns,. f r t n f , t * * * thl* BtenutnW14w* «vetV.»»* #t the genuine Laxative Lfauh^Quiiiittii f#wot* m b m d f ««•*«* i« »**><**r f e i& I F Anything Needed " Can- be supplied from McMillan's furniture house where you have a<good line from which to select. ... / 2 Eargc tUarmoms t Factory Prices. - Cash or Easy Payments, Specia l Sate Th is Month. Nice new Piunos fully war­ ranted,at exceptionally low prices. We furnish a stool, ,nh elegant scarf and instruc­ tion book with each piano. C h a i r s H o c k « r s C o n o h e s • . Oeiitex* T a b l e s S it le b o a rdH B e d s t e a d s IW C i a t t i r o ^ s e a s W a s l i s t t u i i d s D r e s s i n g . S t a n d s Inspect our Carpets and compare our prices , v^ith other houses. J . H. ITcMillan, Cedarvile, O. Funeral Director ' Furniture Dealer. Th e 1udw ig, Kranich & Bach Cures a Cough or Cold in one d a y ! W h y cough and risk Consumption? Th is fam ou s remedy, w ill cure you a t once. . Fo r Grippe, Bronchitis, Hoarseness, A s thm a , and other T h ro a t and L u n g troubles, i t is the best medicine made. P leasan t to take . Doctors recommend at. ‘A t a ll d rugg ists . Price 25 cents . ^ ALWAYS FEEL YOUNG. I - '. AFP " ........... \^ ' .■ . K im ba ll Pianos At figures wherein the recollections of j quality remains long after the price is j forgotten. Gome and see the mnnd J ninny other bargains this month. j For Xhitnioguea .and. Prices address F. 6. MILLER, 71 AllOADB, SPRINGFIELD, O. Men and Measures at Washington. During the present session of Con­ gress The Saturday Evening .Post, of Philadelphia, will contain hi weekly, irticles on National nflairs by the,jfor- mer Postmaster-General, Honorable Charles Emory Smith. In Men and Measures at Washing­ ton Mr. Smith will discuss the "great egislativft mid diplomatic questions of the day, explaining the news of the week ami giving of clear presentation of National policies ami politics. Mr, Smith’s long familiarity with public affairs, his shrewd ] ililical iueight ami his brilliant literary style combine to make the papers of unusual interest. Tho lighter side of Washington life, the amusing happenings, the current gossip and bright sayings are found in A. new department, entitled a Wo mart's Washington. These bright let­ ters are by the author of The Diary of n New Congressman’s Wife, People Grow Old by Thinking Thorn* selves \o Be Old. People grow old by thinking'thCm- selves old. When they reach ihe age of forty, fifty or sixty, they imagine. that they look like others of’ the sritue age .and that" they soon will be useless, unfit for work and unable to 'perform their Wonted duties: (As surely as they think this it will como true, for thought is creative.' How many of us can say with Job, “The thing which I greatly feared is qoino npon irie?” Tho time will come when children Will not be allowed to celebrate tbeir birthday; when they will know that by thinking themselves young they will remain young" and ‘that they will cease to grow old when they cease to believe in old age. The body is built up of beliefs, and orir convictions are stamped upon every fiber of our beings. What we believe, what we think, that we are. So people- who remain young in spir­ i t never grow old. Not one of a hundred Btudcnts, of whom the writer was one, under Oliver Wendell Holmes at Harvard ever thought of him as an old man, although he had then passed his eightieth birthday. His spirit was so young, and he was so buoyant, so fresh and full of life, that wc always thought of him as one of ourselves. His vivacity and joyousiicss were contagious. You could not be in his presence; five minutes without feel­ ing brighter and better for it. The genial doctor never practiced med­ icine, yet he did more to relieve hu­ man suffering than many practicing physicians. His presence was a ton­ ic. I t was a perpetual delight to be near him.-—Success. C A S T O R ! A- For Infants and Children. H ib Kind You Have Always Boiigli! Boars the Signature of —Foa RENtf—Best office room in Oedarville—over Hitchcock’s billiard room. J, P. OheWj. 1 Grtyhourid Fastest Quadruped. A correspondent says that as the result of experiments he has riiadc under careful timing lie finds that the greyhound is the fastest of all four footed animals. When going at full gallop, it can'cover twenty yards a second, or about a mile in a minute and twenty-eight seconds, a speed that comes very near that of a carrier pigeon. There are few thoroughbred horses that can ex­ ceed nineteen yards a second. Grey­ hounds have been known to do better than that by four yards. Foxhound; have a record of four miles in six arid a half minutes, or nearly eight­ een yards a second, This speed is to sonic extent an inherited gift, as •Wolves can rim at the rate of s mile in three minutes. Siberian dogs can travel forty-five miles on ice in fire hour*. Df. ,P» R. Madden, PracticeHm* bed to &YB, BAH, NOSB AN® THROAT. OliuMesAccarato!yAd-, sted* Allen Building, Xonift, O, ieiei-So(ie,-="OHSc# Ha. $1, HtoMesws Ho, y„ t Unthtnkabts. “Suppose,” said the girl with the Gibscn girl rieek, “you bad never cared for men at all, and you fell in love with a young man a t first sight”— “Well?” said the girl with the dimple. " “And you engaged yourself to him”— “Yes?” , ' “And when you married him”— “I can't imagine anything of that kind—xm a first engagement.”— Chicago Tribune. Ti)' if" nin'MiIfiil -ftifr^-./t-fr-1-yfp--y -’■-f To Cut Glass With Shear*. A sheet of glass—a .window pane, for example—can be cut as easily as a sheet of cardboard. The secret consists in keeping the glass, the shear* and the hand? under water during the operation, Tho glass can bo cut in straight or curted lin-'S without a break or a crack. This is because tlie water deadens the vi­ brations of the shears and the glass.. If the least part of the shear* come* out of the water, the vibration Will be sufficient to mar .the * uowh * of the experiment, R, E. CORRY, AUCT IONEER . Promptness, Fairness nptl Sntisfac- . tion .Guaranteed, Bell Telephone ' Cedurvilte, Olfto. at residence. R, B.tsO 1, Some Odd Looking English Hats, Stubbs in his “Anatomy of Abus­ es” describes a pleasing variety' of now fashioned headgear—hats perk­ ing up like the spear or shaft of a temple, hats flat and broad cn the crown, like the battlements of a house, and round crowns with bands of every color. This variety of shape consorted with an equal vari­ ety of material-silk, velvet, taffeta, sarsenet, wool and “a fine hair, which they eall heaver, fetched from beyond the seas.” Whoso had not hat of velvet or hat of taffeta was held of no account among the gild­ ed youth of the time, and so com­ mon a thing was this ostentation in the matter of head covering tb it “every serving man, countryman or other, oven all indifferently, did Wear of these hats.”—All the Year Round, Count Pulaski's Horsemanship. In the American army of the Rev­ olution there were few who could equal Count Pulaski either in bom* . manslnp or as a swordsman. ( His feats were tlie wonder and envy of his officers, and many were the seri­ ous injuries' received in trying to imitate him. I t is related bf him that with his horse at full gallop— and he always rode-a magnificent charger—he would discharge hi* pis­ tol, toss i t in the air and catch it by * tho barrel, then burl it at some ob« jeet in advance, and then, without in the least; cheeking the speed of lus horse, ho, would slip one foot from the Stirrup and, bending over toward the ground, recover his pis­ tol and wheel into line with as much precision as though he were engaged m ordinary exercise. A Law For Hutbands, At ttelzen, in Lunehurg, tha au­ thorities have passed a law which 1* more.popular with the fair than tha sterner sex. Husbands must ba home by 11 oVlook. A fin* wqafd to i(> ahiHing* is the penalty for in­ fringing this regulation, half of which goes to tbs pumn—■-pmuaja*- blybh* wife—'ttfat»httaft aw ithe accusation, - * aA l .. . -i i__

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