The Cedarville Herald, Volume 26, Numbers 27-52

I Vl z m ‘ i s P t r c c t t t — — - - — — - — - B P * * * Discount I Onemeek KINNANETS A 4>? S S ^ r u ? - n * ' € IK . *C Twenty=Pive Per Cent. Cash The Greatest Money Saving Opportunity Ever. Known to the Public Anywhere Incapacity of floor space, on account of failure of contractors to complete our new additions, is what' compels us to take this course, to enable us to secure room to display our stock of H o l i d a y p ' O O d S (with wh ich ' our basements are how filled. Everything in our cloak Department, Suits, Skirts, Coats, Furs, Wrappers, Dressing Sacques, KimmOnas. Every­ thing in our Carpet Department, including Carpets, Druggets, Rugs, Mattings, W indow Shades, Poles, Etc. ■ " W " @ C & h X X S L ,f .£ < ~ > 3 C C l ± tw ■ ' TEN PER CENT DISCOUNT ON EVERYTHING IN OUR STORE . Ilh |I3 mM a opp This, the greatest of all Cash Discount Sales, starts tomorrow morning and will continue until further notice. N! R.—Everything in the store marked in plain figures. Come and help yourself. • « c Bushhell Building, Springfield, Ohip. THE KINNANE BROS. OO. ! PLATONIC I Annabel had many friends among men. “What cant it is to say friend- n e emoKCd in silence; : ■ ..- “How do ‘ you define a man’s friendship fo r a woman ?” he, i n - , qnired a fte r the pause had lasted a long while. * ■Annabel took hpr time before an- 1 swering. 1 '* ; “I think,” she replied a t last ra th ­ er sldtoly, “i t means having her in­ terests a t heart so much that they tiermirenesH wnen nc ser ncr uown. ni1- , +1__ Ktf_, cry tbbuglit ncnina the cures, Tiierei They got ftem se lv e sm to two is Jno off Uien witlmut com. j armchairs,, bu t she seemed to find, fortin| f a t it must all come, a n d ’ AL OVER THE HOUSE. conversation something of ah fort! ■• “Friendship has many advantages otnc she must be petted into happiness again. Doesn’t it sound puerile?” ship between man and woman is im- could never bore you—so th a t her . ... n„„u pain .o r happiness would always be possible 1 she would cry. With flare- lo almost more than your own, ing'eyes. “What degrading.,cant. y ou woupj never hear her lightly .with a flushing cheek. She liked (spoken of. v ~...... t h e society of men. They gave her a new outlook on life. She would enjoy i t if they confided their love affairs to her. So%he said* Some­ how they had no t as y e t given her tiiuE enjoyment. She was twenty- {wo, with a piquant face and figure and a man of the w trl 1 style of con­ versation th a t half veiled an un­ fathomable innocence. You would' save her' all you could. You would let nothing of hers he injured.. Where you could you Would put velvet between her and the rough things of the world, as Garlyle said ” “ Yes, but he spoke of his wife.” Annabel did not seem to hear the over—the her thing,” he said a t, last. ] • .. • ■ “Yes?” ' “Yes. I t has fa r less' obligation about it. Now, one takes an inter­ est in one’s friend's work. How’s it getting on, by the way ?’’ “Ob, much as usual,” said Anna­ bel. “But one doesn’t feel it weigh­ ing on one’s mind th a t she should have to work a t all. Now, with one’s sweetheart how different! She should Sit all day in silk attire and cross her little hands in her lap if she liked. The wind should no t be words. She was looking over the j allowed to blow too roughly'on her. roofs, the appallingly uniform roofs j Ridiculous, wouldn’t it he?” Ivensingf of West K ton, to where a j “Degrading,” said Annabel stout- J golden haze hung in the sky and j ly, I t was a ho t evening early in wonderful dream music was being discussing'a subject they had often g rea t dusty exhibition, full of rowdy discussed before. ‘ I Whitsuntide revelers, and the music “One comfort about my man to was blaring from a brass band. But m an style o f friendship,” said* A n - ?distance and the summer and the mibel* “one great comfort, is th a t quiet hour caught it all up and left -one needn’t be eternally bothering nothing of it bu t what was beauti- ahdut one’s looks and th a t sort of ful. I t made Annabel feel restless, thing When oho wants to have a ra- “ I'm going in,” she said sudden- lional conversation. ■ I don’t know Iv, springing to her feet. “Here anything more aggravating than to goes fo r lighting the lamp,” And thflr one’s best talk to a man, as I she whisked into her little drawing did out a t dinner the other day, and room with a movement anything but to find him obviously speculating dreamy. as to whether one’s ha ir’s .all one’s TTr-*' own. Her friend followed resignedly, Now, X don’t th ink you or though he had been very eomforta- a n y , o ther of my special chums would oven notice if I 'wore a sack when.you came to see me. That’s so refreshing.” j “I t is,” said the friend. '“For irt- eganee, reitre girls would be dread* i’iillv pu t out if their shoe had a lit­ tle bole in it, J u s t a t the tip, when a man was !here. Bu t yon” hie where he was. l ie was quite used to Amiabri’s frequent changes of. mood, and by indulging in no such himself ho was often able to tire her ou t and to get down to the forlorn litilo entity behind the many poses. Tin * ’Ju st so—degrading. Then Ihere’B th a t absurd notion th a t women want taking care of. With one’s friend the fiction doesn’t have to ho kept Up, She goes alone to the theaters and meets one at the door, and there’s no nonsense abou* having to ; see her home. She takes her own No answer from Annabel. The hand at the exhibition was playing a particularly vulga- «>mic song. I t came in at the window' softened to a melody straight from paradise. He thought he heard a little sigh. He came and leaned over the back of her chair. “The mutual society, help and comfort, the one ought to have of the other, both in prosperity and adversity,” he said, speaking low. “How does th a t sound, Annabel?” No answer, * He knelt down by her chair and got hold of botli her hot small hands. “How does that sound, my dear?” “I t sounds sweet,” she said in a voice th a t was only a breath. But he hoard. “Is it as sweet as it sounds?” he •asked. , That was long after, however. Treating the Bruise, comedian jn a Paris theater • Some of the Things Which Explain i Why the Cake is a Failure, When the cake is a failure it may­ be because,’ firstly-, the fru it has sunk to the bottom of the cake. I f so, the cake was badly mixed, or it was moved in the oven before it Was set, or the oven door was heav­ ily' banged; hence the cake fell, and great was the fall thereof, because, like Ilumnty Dumpty, it cannot be restored to its former estate; Secondly,.the cake may be a fail­ ure because it has heavy, dull col­ ored streaks through it. If the streaks run through th e center only the cake i s n o t sufficiently baked; if all through the cake the butter and sugar are no t creamy enough or else the bu tter is not- rubbed in thor­ oughly. There is no remedy. Thirdly, the cake may have risen splendidly a t first, then havesunk in, with perhaps a hole in the middle. The reason, for this is th a t there was too much bakingpowder, or the cake was moved in the oven, or the oven j dry, unless properly '/bandicu, siiomtl j no t be allowed. The strong washing i powders an,d fluids, if usi ] m mod­ eration, will no t injure the clothes. ; The chemicals in use are ammonia, horax; chloride of lime. All chem­ icals should be dissolved before the clothing is pu t in the tubs. These chemicals rot the goods, and they' soon fall to pieces. cape we ‘go n o t Jfcuowv' Anynow lie s ta rted .with i t on his first Midlothi­ an campaign, and he was stilllv,-car­ ing i t a fte r th e general election of 1S92. In Edinburgh he appeared to wear the same hat year after year, bu t i t may have been, fetched north fo r th e occasion as a mascot, as lie generally drove about bareheaded, and very few of his constituents ever saw him with his head covered.” Cleaning Hairbrushes. To wash hairbrushes dissolve a couple o f tablesp.oonfuls of borax in a little boiling water and add to it a sufficiency o f cold water in a shallow vessel, deep enough only to cover the bristles. In this dab tlic brush up and down till elean, rinse with clear water and p u t in the air to dry; Itomember in washing brushes th a t hot water must no t he used, and they must not be placed near a fire or in tlie sun to dry. Carelessness in these points will re ­ sult in the bristles losing their stiff­ ness and becoming discolored. ti n , bfm t . made a great hit out of a painful m- bus and off she goes. Now, if she dden t. While indulging in a bit of were—n o t one s friend she shouldn’t horseplay on the stage he struck his go one step by herself. There would head accidentally against one of tho always be a tedious male creature a t pillars of the scene upon the stage, her side elbowing off the passersby The thud caused a flutter of sympa* and taking every unnecessary care- t },y to pass through the audience.’ of her. Sounds oppressive, doesn’t <*&, great harm done,” said the jtiL r „ , . . . comedian, ‘J u s t hand me a napkin, ^T e s , said Annabel. A little a glass o f water and a saltcellar.” wistfulness had crept into her voice, *“ door was banged before the cake was set, Fourthly, the cake may be badly burned beneath. The reason for th is is that the bottom heat in the oven was loo fierce. To correct this evil stand the cake tin in a baking tin containing about one and a half inches of common sa lt or sand. This acts as a nonconductor of heat. and some of the sturdiness had fad ed. . “Then there’s no t th a t terrible demand for sympathy. One expects one’s friend to lit in "with one’s own particular mood, ju st as one picks up .u book that chimes in.w ith it. If she doesn’t happen to suit one day, off one gm It isn’t tic-mi-ari- re lamp was A high concern on t , .....^ ........... bamboo poles and quite beyond the ]y on one’s mind that she may lie “Where?” Ami Annabel jumped reach of Antmbers five feet of . in tremble of t e r own, or, if she is, These were brought, and he sat down, folded the napkin in the form of a bandage, dipped it in the glass and emptied the saltcellar on the wet part. Having thus prepared a compress according to prescription and when every one expected he would apply it to Ira forehead, he gravely arose and tied it round the pillar. tut her lounge *hair with one bound height. She go t a low chair and pre- pu'sod 'he r pretty feet under pared to climb upon it. agonized hijpreriom For one with “One moment,” said her eompan- whom opciMBMrti was “no object” ion gravely, “We have decided t h a t ! Che was w omk-rfnllv r.hod, it is righ t to protect all that belongs hnbVi “ I ’m po so ify /’V u d her friend, t o our friend, Now, th is chair t-'f m .to'f >>n 1„ ih.nto fil l! Vrtit lOTl^-, fft tlfl . Fate of a Snaks ,Tamer. she t an ray *o. There’s m nm l for An English lady snake tamer, the I wjU «j . . . «tv flu* snail grieve Leyton, has just met a terrible death bu in ' >. h i tho village of Vaehlingen, in Ik- hiimm. 1 i:;r sx.mk with a Bhomsh Prussia, She was perform- -I d idn 't mt.i» in imply tha t you longs to mine ami will bo more !*.<> i, 'MM1 in the s.iih (li>niiiy, ■ HT never said one. twitch Annabel ret tied to the situ. p m to eshibiulevonliwres to «tion with surprising caac. She l i t V\Wi v m '* friends, and hole would Ire (he lamp and adjusted its red shade J; j- flovetik,” ’ Jrmd mid “Thank yon” ...with g r a f f iti? h .K <J •i i apparently the ie applause of the spectators infiiriat- ed the reptile, which tightened its ,t heart, toils ^ aml amid the shrieks of tho ” her on the platform ooulfl:h«'tloahtois**;- i , , The snake wiis immediate- m *I ly killed,^. .London Globe. | cm- <nu mil public strangled Mnl tm i’.iiig before anything < > t"M.v lit- E sther! Thorn, * i * Laundry Pointers, f Clothes cannot be rinsed too much. The little spots of iron rust which appear in most mysterious places—in gathers, under ruffles, trimming, e tc ,-“are due to the soap not having been rinsed out, and it united with the bluing and formed ail iron compound, llust often comes, from the boiler, but one edfl always tell when such is the case. The question of whether clothes should bc soiiked overnight or only a short time is a much discussed question; but, considering tho oe- ti°u of soaking to be the removal of d irt, to lesson the Wear on clothes, soaking overnight is too long, The first action of soap, which is alka­ line, 1$ to soften d irt and make it soluble. I f the clothes soak loo long other compounds are formed much more difficult to remove, One cannot always see them, hut they are there. The use of chemicals in the hum* Loot tijc Point “Which would you rather have,” said Jones to Brown, “a five pound note-or five sovereigns?” , “Seems to me there’s no differ­ ence,” was the reply. “Oh. yes, there is.= I'd sooner have the note, for when you pu t i t H your pocket you double it, and when you take it out you find it in Greases'” _Brown was so tickled with the riddle that he went in to his d u b and promptly asked it of the first man he came across. “Give it up,” taid the latter hope­ lessly, . “ Why, tho rid e , of course, fo r when you pu t it in your pocket you fold it in half, and when you take i t ou t you find it all crumpled—ha, ha!” Learn.to Forget, • “A good ‘fo rge tte rj ” said an old man and a 'fefccee-sfnl one the other day, “ ig really as valuable a posses­ sion as a good memory. A goad ‘forgetteri knows what t o forget and what to pass over to the memory to hold on tap for fu tu re Use. Fve al­ ways found it paid to let other peo­ ple's mistakes and my' own go. The memory of them is infectious some­ how andi seems to breed more mis­ takes and crowds out the thought of more useful things. Yes, my advice to th e younger, habit forming gen­ eration, both men’and women, would he to cultivate first of all a wise, dis­ criminating ‘forgetto r/ ” dave Charlie Away. An Oakland matron related flat oiio night she heard a noise hi the house, and she alarmed he r husbaml, who resolved to go downstairs a f i investigate. “But,” went on the matron, “by the time Charles got his leg on and was downstairs the burglar had departed. But we found a window open,” H e r hearers nil looked their ear prise, and then tho matron realized, to h e r confusion, th a t not one o f them had before suspected th a t a slight imported ion * i h t ’ ' in - er husband’s gait was due to a Cork leg. — San. Francisco Table Talk.. But liis-friend looked more hope* less than before, and to th is day Brpwn can’t make out why ire dill Hot see the joke.—-London Globe. Gladstone and Hie Ciolhcit. Of Gladytorn-a recent writer says; “No premier in the last half cen tury td les " " ** * ‘ “ pai l s attention to his clothes than didMr,Gladstone. His hats were par* ticulariy shabby, his frock coats of uncertain ..age and bis nether gar­ ments much bagged a t tire knee with sitting a t a desk. This disregard, however, extended only to periods when Ire was out of office. When in Donning street lie dressed almost smart ly for a man of Ins age. How many years’ service Mr, Gladstone extracted from his famous In w u m .j Atoms and lofts, Tho atomic theory has been aban­ doned by n il; the atom is known positively id bo decomposable. I l ­ ls tho number o f its corpuscles or ions th a t determines the eharaolr-r of lire atom. An atom made up of t&O corpuscles,is* a hydrogen atom; one of 11/400 corpuscles is oxygen, etc. Bu t what are the. corpuscles? S ir William Crookes paints out time in 18N> th a t daring spirit, Wila*m Kingdom Clifford, advancing Upc« some vague speculations of F ‘.doif and S ir William Thomson pre* Lord Kelvin!, , wrote definn „.* “There Is great reason to hchw* tlsat every 'material atom rid51*! upon it ti email electriccurrem.** i t does/ no t wholly consist uf «** c u rre n t” t ^ P o c h a r d colds? asthma* a n d c o n kinds, y o u e a n n o j h j i j g b e t t e r th i lllS *'*'■ *^ ' C h e r p e e td C h e r ry F e d e r a l , pwji d o c to r If this H e u s e s it. H e n w h y it s o o th e s an lir- f o r j , Coughs,* S stjtcsvw Winter Unds Extra heavy, double lined, 48 c per'garment any 75 c underwear. Extra heavy derby i tan and Bultnon, douhh pearl buttons, nicely atiteed to give satisfue, ger garment. Dr, Wright’s'extra underwear, 98 c per ga Lamb’s wool glove Wear, $ 1.00 per garme Australian lambs'w< ' $ 1.75 per garment. , SULOVAI The 27 S o u th L im e s to ii S p r i n : There’s eco j^r made garn quality tha' • \Ve a’ Tttiptri I t costs G( Save cloth 32 east fiigl Any A Pod is Gard ( Travel Bili Mu: Foil Go] Ink Th< a n d ' il

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