The Cedarville Herald, Volume 25, Numbers 27-52
rageBank *LLL, 4 Merchant# aty jn -. e and remitted, . liu s Hew Y u tk amf at lowest rat**, i;;l man, pres., Bsiilth, Vice p r£>3> J- 'WiUmaii, Casky^ BEST Product of the marks t and stock farm pftjj, ,j_ wa^'s be found at t])0 . Meat Hfnre of s Weimer. together with ■„ every* thing to be found.fa a tirst-clnss meat market. Also hmudes the ceJe. ■ heated Swift Company1* 1 Hanip. And courteous ai*l. honest trefttmont. goes with the above, ed.' ' •' Fresh' Fish and Ice stauram anil Dining Rooms* and Limestone street, • hio. ■ , INONA LAKE, , raous Summer Resort. Inti., the pretty summer ■ - wsj’Jy.'ima Lines in North* «ls rrst, recreation, enter- . (leli"htful surroundinfes inir to enjoy vacation oiit- t. is the stte ofWinona As- • mer School, and is annaliy persons who are strength* the excellent, facilitiesfor' •If. and invigorate in hotly Ving influences, for vlriHt famous,. the Opening Day of the ci'ursiou ticlcots to Winona alo vinlYDnaylvania Lines, ‘tamed from May 1/Jth to memswv • infortnntion* 0 n thcBuh- time of tnuns, apply to the Pennsylvania Lines, or Chief Assistant -Qenerul ' Pittsburg, Pa, In forma* itiojis at Winona Lal;e, m- i Summer School -sessions, ■ isiicd in reply to inquiries (A 8. DiCKfcY, Seereturv id. ’ (•MarksobtainedandallPat-j ictedfor moderate F ee */ S ’POSITSU.», PATENT*OFSlCEi patent inless timethanthose lungtoe, . ] wingqr photo.,with descrip*i1 iif patentable or not, free of*! lotduetill patentIssecured. !i fnw(IfObtainPatents,"wSthi1 ie u.S. andforeigncountries]; iiow & co . 'n e t , WaamNGTON. d , e. l*WS Ef’CLiSH 0 YALFELLS x 3) f >. IrtulJrw.fc.ite fireccLf f.t - t : w i,T .i i r ia. i t c a turn us, EWUwl witti blue tlbbni’. C riii< ieilan scren s* iilM ll> irlo iis . uu y of y.rtirliiwwM, Ff fie I'arli«i!r,r*, Tests* Iter foe r,nrfl*-Vf. le!trr, 10,000 Trtstimoi.lale, Bo!.1ey in crfKuiCAT, co. 11 a r e , I ’U IL A ., M , ion this saner. sry Precaution. , a cold. I t is worrti t. I t is dangerous. Minute Cough Cure at once. Alloys in* :ii’8 th e h e a d , s o u t h * i the mucous mem*, mughs, ere tip, throat v.3. ' Absolutely safe. v% Children lihe it. JTflli WjE. je t S t e a m e r HOUND 9:15 a.m. Daily. 1:15 p. m. Daily. roit 4:30 p* ffl. ?do 8.30 p. ffl. 3000 PeriOfti , Pist mrgnifleent day :tkf-s>. Detroit, Star «f, Port Huron »*iul miera ; * *. io wd TtSHMOO vtr Points and Fort Is carte, Parlors n»rt' mi trip^diOO. Per* Mention. J* W* It, Toledo, Oe fTHE HANEATERf • ‘‘'The man eater is mad** . j joekr*.] at the tali Texan appye- fcfrivdyv ~ '■ ■' '-Are you certain T * I asked. ‘T fcwv It. I had my suspicions, vc'teriLy. and- now there la no .[i-.uht ei it.w This was ecrious-.* The man cat- a v;;i! the largest and most fero- . bloodhound iri Texas.-.It wits.- hard enough to control him a t any jjjac-j hut mad l I shuddered a t the ■thought. .. * Hv week's visit a t the Bolton raneh had satisfied me that my host ■ realty eared for only two things in die Wld*—his daughters and the man eater,- ‘ ■ ' “Where is Miss Sallief" I in- Amm quired anxiously. .“Oh, that’s all right,” replied Bob bin carelessly. <{Sallio took her pony and went fop a ride an hour .gV^aiid the. hound is sufc. enoiigh. l ctpeliriiim. hy the collar iust now and lucked him up where ho won’t get at, anybody. But it breaks, mo up, old fellow. I wouldn’t lose him for anything.” ■ My interest began" to weaken. Miss" Sallie was safe, and the dog’ was locked up.- "What was a blood hound to mo? I f the savage mon ster died, so much the better. • . I walked off to the stable. A ride over the prairie was no t to be missed on' such a morning, and .there would he a ehanOe of riding back with Sallie. • ‘But I was doomed to disappoint ment. lily horse was lame.’ I t did not take long to convince me th a t somebody had been riding him the night before. , Just then Pedro came in sight. The ugly little Mexican gave a start when he saw mo and looked away. “You yellow rascal!” I shouted. “You had my- horse last night I” ' “Ho, senoT.” - “You are lying!” • “Ho, by. all tile saints, senor.” * “Then where-Avere you a t mid night?” . , . 1 “I was attending to my business,” snapped Pedro. He looked so viciously mean and so impudent th a tT gave him, a',light cut with my whip and told him to get out of my sight. He muttered something and slunk off. There was no other animal that I cared to ride, and I made up "my mind to walk. ■ I had left the ranch several hun dred yards behind me when I turned and looked back. Even at th a t dis tance I could plainly recognize .Pe dro.’ Ho was walking around a-lit tle cabin back of the kitchen and .was apparently peeping through the cracks.' “Looking p t the man eater,” I said to myself. “I t is a good thing 'MuTblrastLs^toeimduipr’’" ’ ~ The bracing morning air and the level prairie stretching out'before me for miles tempted me to take a long walk. A long way off I could see a hill, the, only one in all that flat country, Why not climh i t and see what was on the other side ? Per haps Sallie was oyer there. So I walked on with swinging strides' for a couple of miles. / , Suddenly I came to Adead halt. . “That spunds like the.man eater’s bark I” I exclaimed. Again I heard, it and stopped a moment. For an instant my muscles were paralyzed. I was absolutely unable to move. A thousand horrible thoughts rushedunto my mind. ■> I f this mau bloodhound was on my.track my case was hopeless. I could not get back to the ranch. There was not a tree in sight, and the hill was still miles away. . What was to be done ? I summoned all my strength and mado a run at the top of my speed. I kept on as long as I (could, and then paused to rest and listen! The man cater was coming my way, hu t not much faster than I could run. ’ I resumed m y flight. WouM a mad dog have his u sua l‘keen in stinct about him? Would he pur sue the trail or become confused and give it up? These thoughts inspired me with a faint hope. I f the dog’s slow progress enabled me to reach thd ail), where there was timber, I could climh a tree, or possibly he would h missed, and his master would ride in pursuit. Prom one point where thero was ft gentle rise in the prairie I could «eoin the distance a moving speck. ' It was the man cater steadily fol lowing my tra il! . My surmise turned out to be pa rt ly correct. The animal seemed to ooat fault. Ho would stop and run W:k a few yards and branch off aimlessly in every direction, hut this did not last long. After .a*orie-3 of eccentric movements .the Hound would get on my track again *s3rush forward. He was gaining, and my chances of reaching the hill began to dock gloomy, n Tor the next fifteen minutes 1 ««1 some good running, but when I D on ’ t B e Foe lew r*k« tb* tfcntili*,wrtgtMt ROCKYMtiOTfAlN f t A doe- c«t, jywteiwfeWWt•jt kMpft you wolf, ftm* ^ ftetara U en box of the tonaiai UXtihve Bromo'Qufoiiie " B W j Hmt tftjtioi o>com til ifc# ***# turned t a east a backward glance I could see tho dog more plainly than ever. ■■■■■' One thing encouraged me; he didi not appear ta see me, but blundered' on in .a clumsy, dazed Bort of way. - There were no streams to cross,’ nothing that would throw hint off the scent. ‘I liad ho weapon, only a small pockeiknife, cud a fight with, ft mad dog was out of the question. My strength was giving out, and I ; felt th a t the end was not f a r off. When I again looked hack, tho dog' was not more' than 300 yards away, and the base of th e hill was still a mile off, A spasm of terror seized me, but to my surprise the ;great-brute sud denly sat down on his haunches and howled plaintively. ‘ ’ I t was a minute or two before’he found the trail again,.- If his mal ady had dimmed his sight and con fused him, there was still a chance for me, but it was a slim one. • With a tremendous effort I broke forward on ray last run. This time I would reach the hill or tu rn at the last moment and die, making a vain effort to choke tho monster. The blood rushed to my head, and I could hardly see anything a,s I darted on at' the top of my 9peed. The hound was rapidly, making headway ahd at last seemed to have me in view. A glance Over my shoul der showed him not a hundred yards behind. ' " r ' Everything was'in a whirl. Some body was riding ou t1from behind the lull and coming my xvay: The hat,, the riding habit—-I ,could, not bo mistaken—it was Sallie Bolton. - . B u t.my raco was nearly run. Even with help-.in’sight I could-hear up no longe r., The girl was riding like the wind, and I could see tha t she had a lasso in one hand, .1 knew.that this cattle, queen, as •the cowboys called her, 'could do anything almost with a lasso, hut would she get there in time ? ( The roan eater .came bounding on, and Sallie rode straight at him like, a little thunderbolt. She whirled the lasso over and over around her head,'and—but it was too late. .1 could hear the dog panting behind me! , A wave of darkness rolled oyer me as I fell to the ground just as I heard something swish through the air. ~ Bxit I wa.s up in a minute—just in time to, see my rescuer give a pull that tightened the lasso' around the dog’s neck. A few convulsions, and the dog was strangled—dead within six feet of me. My thanks were cut! short'by the appearance of a light wagon driven hy one, pf, Bolton’s neighbors,, who offered to take me back to the ranch, an invitation not to be declined under the circum stances. ’ ' .Sallie Bolton rode on ahead, and when I reached the house her father was waiting to congratulate me upon my escaper “|It-U^TVdroVworlc,i’- ho said. “He unlocked the door and set the dog on your trail-—at least I think so. He had a key, and he has disappeared.” ■ „ . Undoubtedly it, was Pedro. He had been trying to pay me back. I have never seen the Boltons since my adventure with the man eater, bu t I am not likely to forget the little cattle queen while Hive. He Meant the Bird. Some time ago a man got a curi ous present from a sea captain. I t was a fine specimen of the bird which the. sailors call the “laughing jackass,” and lie was no t a little proud of it. As lie was carrying it home he met a brawny Irish navvy, wlio stopped himhnd asked: “Phwat kind of burrd is that, sorr?” ; ■/.* ■* “That’s a laughing jackass,” ex plained the owner genially. The Irishman; thinking he was being made fun of, was equal to the occasion and responded with a twin kle of the eye: “I t’s not yersilf; it’s the.burrd Oi mane, sorr!”—London Tit-Bits, A Patron of the Realistic School* “Do you prefer realism or the ideal in art ?? asked Mrs. Oldcastlo as they sat down in a. corner of the magnificent library of the new neighbors, “Ob,” said her hostess, “I would not have anything but realism as long as we can afford it. Of course if people ain’t got much hioney I s’pose tha t them ehromos are better than nothing for tho poor things, but I just told Josiali when we com menced building this place tha t there wouldn’t he anything except real paintings in i t if I could have my way, and every picture hero is realism.”—Chicago Bocord-IIerald. Appropriate Texts, One of the restaurant men of Hew v ork who have popular eating houses all over the city likes to in- terpolaie d ittle literary morsels on his advertisement cards. Hero are three appropriate onoa which be printed recently t “Coffee, which makes the politician wise, ’ Pope. “Dispatch is the soul of busi ness,” Chesterfield. , “Let good, di gestion wait on appetite, ■Shake speare .—New York Tribune, It NeeUsa Tonic. uiniF gripe «»„« ............. Little Early Hirers expel all poison from the system and mto ft* _ tonic to the liver; W. Scott, 6JU Highland ave., Milton,?Pa,, says: Have car ried DeWitt's Little Earl Risers with me for several years mid wnnd not be without ,them.” Small and easy to take* Purely vegetable, They fiefer gripe or distress* WAYS OF THE SHAD. Their Migration* ahd HowTHeyfclv# - at Spawning Time, Shad fishing is hard and precari ous work. The fisherman must count on having- his clothes, always soaked with iey April water, O ften,; too, the ncta come in empty, and then, there, is nothing to do bu t tor make another east and hope for bet ter luck. A remarkable fact noticed by fish ermen is.,th a t the identical shad ap parently frequent tho same streams year after year. To. prove this they point out tha t those Taken in Flor ida waters are Smaller than shad caught in the north, while in dif ferent streams the fish differ in form, thickness and shape. After entering the rivers the shad take little if any food previous to spawning, hut afterward they will bite at flies; o r any shining object floating in the water. They have even been known to snap at artifi cial bait. The toothless mouth of tho adult is unfit for feeding upon anything except minute animal mat ter found in the water. Pood is rare ly found in the |r stomachs, tho only substance commonly ^eon there be ing something closely, resembling black mud. From this it is. sup posed that, the .slmd swim with mouths extended^-swallowing-Ahc- animal life that swarms in the wa ter and on this growing plump and sweet.—Outing. Character In Umbrellas. One’s character is said to he re vealed with infallible accuracy by the way he holds and carries an um brella. One enthusiast, who has made a study of the public’s umbrel la manners, "lias announced that he 'would want no better guide in choos'- ing his wife than to watch her furl and carry her umbrella. The man who.pokes you in the ribs with his umbrella, for instance, does hot alone announce by Such an act that he is rude or careless. To the experienced eye he actually lays bare the innermost secrets of bis character. , • The man or woman"who carries an umbrella with tho point back ward and downward is unassertive. On the other hand, persons .who in walking .carry their umbrellas- by the handles, with the points cpntin- .usilly extended or pointing forward, •-will be found self assertive and en ergetic. The pedestrian who grabs an umbrella in the-middle and.goes forging ahead with it in this posi tion is likely to bo, found alert, hut ■of a selfish, oven conceited disposi tion. ' Speed of Dogs. Greyhounds are the swiftest dogs . known, and scientists say. that they arc the swiftest of all' four footed animals. Trained hounds can trav- el at tho rate of eighteen to twenty- ■ three yards a. second, which is about the. speed, attained by a~ carrier: pigeon. Thcso dogs, are bred for -speed alone. Every other consider ation is lost sight of, and only tho machinery:tha t makes' fpr motion and endurance is cultivated. Foxhounds are also very fast trav elers, going at tho rate of nearly,, eighteen yards a second. <M. Duso- lier, the noted French scientist, has pointed out in his statistics on the speed of animals that little fox ter riers trotting along with their mas ters who are .driving or riding a bi cycle cover., milo after mile without a touch of fatigue or distress.. Many animals akin to dogs show even greater endurance. A wolf can travel fifty or sixty miles in a night ’and bo ready-for a similar journey the following night. iTH ED FO RD ’s* 'BUCK-DRiUfiHTj THE ORIGINAL; [LIVER MEDICINE! A tallowcomplexion, dizziness, biliousness and a coated tongtia are common indications of liver andkidneydiseases. Stomachand bowel troubles, severe as they are, much harder to cure. Thedford’a Black-Draught never fails to bene fitdiseasedliverandweakenedkid-* noyB., At stirs top the toi to threw off the germs of . ague. Jt is^a' certain preventive of cholera and Brit'1**'- -* the kidneys, ed by ■MXdiseareof With kidneys re inforc Thedford’a Blade* Draughtthousands ofpersonshave dwelt immune In the midst of yel lowfever, Many.families live in perfeot hoalth and have no other doctor, than Thedford’s Black- Draught* It isalways on hand for use in an emergency and .saves many expensive calls of ft doctor. Mulllni.S.C., Atirch 10, fiX)!. 1 hm usedThtdforffs B!ack*Dttuj$ht forthruyurs sndlhsvtnot btdtogo to*doctor sines 1KsV* bun takingTfc> It Is th# but medicinefor me that is on the merket hr liver end kidney trouble* end dyjptpiti and other 'cempiafnti. Rev, A. G. LEWIS. 0 A S T O R I A For Infants and Children. fiB M YouHaveAlwaysBought PHILOSOPHY OF LAUGHING, Optimum * Supreme Sedative—Worry I* Bad For the Health. Again a word about the philoso phy of laughter. When the system fa ncrve.d and is making coliseums'or unconscious effort, 'the nerve; that tighten the walls of the blood ves sels uto hard at work, and pressure in the arteries is great: hut a hearty laugh, as Brueke’s interesting exper iments show, tends to bring tho blood over into the joins where there is no pressure, relieves the arteries and brings the exquisite sensations of relaxation of rest. This is fa vored even by the attitude of a hearty laugh. To draw in a full breath, throw back the head, open the mouth and let the expiration “gurgle forth witli sonorous inter- mittence,” to quote a phrase from tho “Philosophy of Laughter,” and to do it again and again slowly throws-off the chains of tho world’s great taskmaster and brings us back, back toward tho primeval paradise, where there was nothing, hu t joy, and sin and sorrow were unknown. Once more, optimism' is one of the supremo sedatives, There ate men who worry because the sun will sometimes go out and the earth grow dead and cold like tho moon, or tho coal measures be exhausted, or tho fertile-areaa-of-the World dry up because of the denudation of for- .ests, hut tho philosophy of health is that the best things have not hap pened; that man’s history has. only lust begun; that, on the whole, there has been steady progress; that in virtue, comfort, knowledge, arts, re ligion and nearly if .not quite all the essentials of the further develop ment of man, faith in human nature and'belief in a future better than the present is the' conclusion of ev ery philosophy of development ahd evolution. I t is opr good .foptime to live in a day of the evolution of evolution, and this-is giving a new meaning to the very-word progress and-makes us feel that the world is rational ahd beneficent to the cove and .that where conscious purpose .and effort fa il we sink back into ev erlasting arms. This is a sanifying f oint of view authorized noW( by oth science and religion and ,is a good psychie state to sleep on ot in which.to enter thegreat rest.—Ains* lee’s Magazine. •- ’^Seara-fhe— Signature of Subscribe for lb* Herald Too Much Fault Finding. * Henry Crabb Robinson, the kind ly and philosophic barrister, once gave an effectual rebuke to tho hab it F-of fault finding. I t was, as we read in his diary, during a visit to Paris. He had spent the day in sightsee ing with a London acquaintance, who said to him at parting, “I will call for you tomorrow.” “I will thank you not to call,” re plied Robinson.. “I would rather.' not see anything else with yon, and I will tell yoii frankly why. . I came to Paris to enjoy myself, find that enjoyment needs the accompaniment di sympathy with others: Howr, you dislike everything and 'find fault with everything. You see nothing which you do not find ihferior to what you have seen before. This may be all very, true, but it makes me uncomfortable.' So I shall be glad to see you- in London, but no more in Paris.” . A Judge of Sermons. A clergyman in Scotland invited Bishop Selwyn to preaeli In his churcn. As usual his lordship gave an impressive and beautiful-sermon, ,which at the same time yas perfect ly plain and simple. The rector was delighted and said as much on meet ing one of thdmost regular members of his congregation. “Well, sir, I don’t think so much of it,” rejoined the man. “I t was so simple any child could have un derstood it. For my part, I liko a sermon which confuses your head for a week. I don’t know any which beats yours for that, Bir”*—London Tit-Bits. • : A Safe Refuge. A certain wild beast tamor had been on bad terms for some time with one of his neighbors, and tho other day, as tho result' of a violent quarrel, the latter, with a friend, at tacked the former just before lie Was timed to give his performance. The tamer, unwilling to make a scene, took refuge in the lion’s don. ' Judge of the amusement of tho spectators when they beheld tho two men standing in fron t of the cage and shouting through the' bars at Tegular intervals: “Gome out of that, you big cow ard I Gome out of th a t!”—Chums. A Careless Boy. Mrs. Boggs—Little Johnny has lost his knife, and I was th ink ing^ Mr. Boggs —*W hat?: Has th a t' boy lost another knife? I t ’s out rageous I Hero I am slaving my self to death to support my family and everything going to rack and ruin. That was a good knife, and it’s a shame,. . Mrs. Boggs—I was' thinking, my dear, that as I have found six or eight knives, that you have lost you might give Mai one of them. Stops the Cough And Works elf the Cold. Laxative Bromo-Q,uinhia Tablets cure a cold in one tiny. Ho'Cure, Ho Pay, Price 25 cents.. Makes the fires of life burn with ft low. Renews the golden* happy ays of yoiith. That’s what Rocky Mouhtam Tea-doea,. Ask your drug! i™t, ; • Buggies painted ftt Wolford’s * FOR THE LITTLE ONES. Mow Toddy and Freddy Helped Moth* or to Cleon House, Teddy and Freddy thought it-a shame that mother should have all tho houseeleamhg to do, and after talking the matter, oyer they decid ed to .help her. Beipg two very lit tle hoys, fliey didn’t know much about-it, hut they had.seen a.deal of scrubbing and washing going on, and' they thougfit.it must he 'great fun too. } v - “Time Joremy hoys to take ifieir nap,” called mother, and she 'set tled them both comfortably in^ her spick and,, span, freshly cleaned room. They pretended to be sleepy, but no sooner had mother disap peared. than Teddy bounced up, f ol- lowed .quickly by Freddy. “How, we’ll have it all nice and clean when muvver comes back,” said they. * • Teddy got a cake of soap arid' a very wet' washrag and, climbing a chair, mounted to the bureau and made the most beautiful clean white lather on the looking glasB, while tho water and sOapsijas drip, drip, dripped.down to the freshly starched and ruffled cover. Freddy had his mother’s toothbrush and another cake of soap and was hard at work on his knees, scrubbing the hearth and.freshly oiled floor.. It'wns just at this time'that'their mother found she had forgotten.her'glasses and came softly back to the room, tip-; toeing, so as not. to disturb her sleep ing bqya. .Perliap3 you can imagine her delight at Teddy’s and Freddy’s' help!—Hew'Yorlc Tribune. How Boys Fish In Slam. When a little Siamese boy goes fishing, he does not take with him a hook, arid line, nor does ho have to .dig for bait. On tho contrary, his fishing apparatus is a very sira- plo -affair and would .arimse a little; American boy if he were to see it. . Of wdiat do you suppose it con-: sists ? Why, of nothing more qr less than a deep basket out of which, the bottom has been cut. Tho little ■Siamese boy takes.-,.this bottomless basket in. his hands and holds it in a shallow part of the stream. ’ Then another boy, who has been stationed farther up the stream,- drives the fish downward by flourishing sticks' and grasses in the water until tho boy who has been patiently holding the basket all “this time has a fine Btock of fish in the- basket .trap. Both boys then thrust their arms down-into the bottomless basket and; pull out the fish that-are penned in thore. And tho result is -enough fish to make a little American boy open his eyes very wide. But dp you no t think that thq fish must he more plentiful thore than here ?—Cincinnati Enquirer. ASprlghtlyMalden.- Look at the,,eyes of hurt Think of tho size of he?! Can you Imagine it. can you believe, • She could be naughty or . Peevish or haughty or Anything else that could worry or grlcvo? . Ah, but tho wiles of her! Tea, and the smiles of her! ./ How we all look .with, a pleasure pro found; i Laugh nt the tricks of her; Wish there wore six of hor; ’ One's not enough to distribute around. All of tho spice of hep Mixed with the nice of her, ■'Twouldn’t: bo right to have everything sweat; , . * Sun and the Shade of her, . , Jewel and Jade of her, Ono with tho other mokes many com plete. a . ' Sun. apd the shine of her, <> * Cross and dlvlno ’of her, Fretful expression or spirits elate; . All of us wonder and Puzzle and ponder and / 1 Love her for each individual trait. Trick With a Coin, Place a piece of money on a shal low plate, pour some water over it and then ask some ono to takef away tho coin without wetting his fin gers'. As tho coin is covered with water, ho will naturally reply that he cannot do so. To show him tha t it can he dorio take a largo glass, hold it upside BT7IW THIS PARER. down and burn, ft lighted strip of- paper inside of it. The instant the paper is burned place the glass, still upside down* on tho plate, - As ft re sult the water will at once disap pear, and tire cause thereof will ho the warm air in the glass. Tho plate will then be dry, and the coin can bo removed without welting tho fingers. I f it., wasn’t popular, if it wasn’t loved by ihe people, why do dealers say? *‘\Ve have something just as good as the Madisori Medicine Go’s Roekv Mountain Tea.” Think if over. 35 cents. Askv your drug* glM. j As an niterihought let tne say I airi elosing out all iriy paints, varnish, lead. and oil ftt less than wholesale prices, W. M, Mitchell. Summer Furniture Tlmt Will, he suitably for nil elates, jw our stock, in oomjiRdo vu ewry . respect arid comprises diiVeivnfc lines of : : A e h i j t i r s K o c b f j r s i O o x i o l i e s s s C e n t e r T a b l e s S i d e b o a r d s B e d s t e a d s ' • W a s l t s t f u i d s D r e s s i n g S t a n d s Carpets! Carpets! We>represent some of tlie largest manufacturing concerns in tMs liire wldcli enables us to quote prices that surprise all ; ; : • • • • .., 1 . fi. mcmillan, Csdamilk, 0 ... FuneraLDirector Furniture Dealer. f t m s G feam Separa tor . Has no peer in*the primary essentials for cream get ting. jJViilk and water are not mixed. The water can- is round. Milk can is fiatr-slightly ovaled at the sides td make it strong. Ample space between milk and water can for ice if riec esssary. The “Arras” Cream Separator will save your wife the can lifting, skim ming and washing-crocks twice a day. “« « C. n . CROUSE « t, , . . Cedarville, Ohio.. ‘ ALT tiVER THE HOUSE.' An Attractive Bedroom That Didn't Cost a Large Sum. A clever Chicago woman (who thinks tha t everything French is delectable has fashioned fox1herself a rose and white ■ bedroom with a few.tonchea.of gilt that has a decid ed air of a strictly French apart ment, and comparatively little mon ey has been expended upon it. • ■She has covered tho walls in white cretonne,, with a four inch, wide stripe of' pink l-osos, which, oc^ curs .at intervals of a foot -and a half. .The woodwork is white, and the picture molding of white makes a 'cove, and it and tho ceiling are white. ■•. The bed is, of whitowood, arid a panel of cretonne well covered with pink roses has been inserted in the head and foot hoards. The coverlet Is of tho same fabric. The chairs have white and gilt frames and are upholste.^d with the. rose cretonne/ An effecti -o screen has the lower halves of the frame covered with the cretonne, and in - tho upper portions is^-pink india silk shirred, ■ Pink silk pillows adorn the lounge, which is covered with pink denim, and the pink deiiim is used for tho heavy window draping and tho portieres. The floor is covered with rose pink filling, ‘ The sash curtains are of brus- sels net trimmed with renaissance braid, a medallion of lace inserted in the center. A writing table is of whitowood, its fitments of plain pink porcelain. The dressing table is of white and gold, tho top covered with a bit of pink damask edged with gold braid. The bathroom, which is connect ed With this attractive bedroom, has a floor of pink tiles, and the walls are covered with a pink and white enamel paper. “Book*' Muslin. A correspondent asks, “Won’t you oblige by saying why the word ‘hook’ is applied to muslin?” The idea tfiat hook muslin derives its name from tho peculiar manner In which i t is made up for sale— toamely, folded in yards and each, yard doubled in again on itself in suefi a way that the process of open ing i t strongly resembles the open ing of a book—is ingenious, but in correct. The word has its origin in Buko, which was erroneously writ ten “Book,” tho district in India where it was first made. I t was not until lVfiO tha t tho manufacture of British muslins became a rival to those in India. India masting are still famous for preserving their whiteness. Caution! This ismot a gentle word—but when you think how liable you are not to purchase for 75c the only remedy, uni versally known.and a remedy that has had the largest sale of any medicine in the world since 1868 for the cure and treatment of Consumption and Thront and Lung troubles withoutlo3- ing its great popularity all these years you will be thankful we called your attention to Boschee’s German tiyrup. Ihere are so many ordinary cough remedies made by druggists arid others that are cheap and good for ltghtlcdlds perhaps,Aut for severe Coughs, Bron chitis, Croup—and especially for Con sumption, where there is difficult ex pectoration and coughing during the nights and mornings, there is nothing like German Syrup. Sold by all druggists in the civilized world,, G. G, G reen , Woodbury, H. J . i Then the baby Ismost like- I ly nervous* and fretful* and p doesn’t gain In weight. {Scott’s Emulsion | is the best food and ihedidne E for teething babies. They gain from the start. ----- -"WUit'fnr«r■ft****mpte; scorra aowNR, chtmi*tA . juanuK JV'iitl- Ififorfc* A Venomous Bird. ' But ono species of venomous bird is known to the Btudcni of ornitho logical oddities, tho rp ir n’doob, or “bird of death,” a feathered para dox- of Hew -Quinea.' ' I t is not ft large or formidable looking Crea ture, as one would naturally expect, being, scarcely as large as a common pigeon, but longer and of a more slender build. I t is of a gray, glossy color, without any special markings except tho tail, which ends with a blood red tip. The bird is compara tively helpless, being able to fly bu t a few feet, and can be caught with out difficulty. However, it is -un necessary to say tha t its poisonous bite causes tho nativo Papuans to let i t severely alone. Persons bitten by the creature arc seized by mad dening pains, wbicli rapidly extend to every part of the body. Loss of sight, convulsions and lockjaw are the other symptoms which follow in rapid succession. Tho natives say that there is no t a case on record of a survival of tho bite,'thero being no antidote, death always ensuing Within tho short space of two hours, Oriental Logic, A man bought three pounds of meat and brought i t home to his wife to cook for dinner and then went his way to his place of busi ness hi the bazaars. The wife was hungry and ate the meat, says Har* peris Magazine. In tjie evening the man came home and asked for Iris dinner. “There is no meat,’-’ said the wife, “for ihe eat nto it.” “Bring the eat,” said the man* “and a pair of scales. “Weigh the cat,” said the man. Tlie cat weighed three pounds. “If th a t is the cat,” said th e man, “where is the meat? And i f this is the meat Where is tho cat?” s Solving * Problem. - Iri a 'speech in London the other day the orator told (in admirable story of the advice given by an Eng lishman, a Scotchman and an Irish man resjwetively to a gentleman whose servant was constantly break ing articles in the household, The Englishman in his blunt, honest way said to the employer, “Oh, get rid of him*—iliemia#' him.” Tan Scotchman’* advice wfte, “Stop the money out of hi* wages.” “But,1” said tho master, “he breaks mote .ihamiris wages amount to,” “Then*” Mid the Irishman, “false hi#wagei*” f" F ie Golden Rule Fleur*
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