The Cedarville Herald, Volume 27, Numbers 1-26
4 v iu ' m u g .n o t e re Dealer. t> lain as notes. Vi, .oent“ life, with c- iln o s t as cheap )0 more than, wwditions yon ». ;-0ur policy in aia, if N. Y* ----jting type- !<)Of which writers. f*- {Hi ma- ' ton , onto dL V TS . batirtedaodallPaM Innewre rti*. i •.ParcftrorricKS fit* tiM* this »Oiotue] »to.,wJlh Sofcrip-. Me or not, *•*« of | Un PiMau,” wltS*i ;for#I£ncotMb-fci f & O O . aiNOTaM. e. 0. “pf llOfiftfl* Hart t# Ut» . . . . <‘W a te h U s Grow ." B e t t e r g o t o t h e D a y l i g h t S t o r e , when yon g# to Springfield, ORBETTER,GOTOSPRIRGFIELDTOTRADEWITHBEND(JRE N allw®* There is Christmas doings there this week. Open every night. Furs to Your Fancy And fur coats, $12.00 to $50 00, the best fur coats njmie for the money. Infant’s Fu r Cab Robe? $2,98 . Children’s Fluffy Boas, White, 98o Rope Portiere* for 98c and you would declare them worth $1.50. Oth ers a* fine as you want them ■ . Couch Covers, $1.2(5 to $6,00 , If You Bathe Better get one of these pretty $5.00 bath robes for $3,98 Eider Down Dressing Jackets, 50o and the p re fti^ t onds for $1 to $3 Silk Petticoats—almost forgot to mention them—$5,00 and you could not get the silk for a ‘>V’ $4.60 Sjlk Waists, $2 98 apd say! they’re O. K. gilts ' Vesting Waists and waisiB of Madras and Mohair, anything you wont iu waists—bu t women Fascinators Fancy and for the fairest, 2oc to 82.00 - Silk Shawls, pretty as hands and skill can make them, right from the Orient. • Misses knit blouses, $1,00 / T. D. BENDURE, Daylight Store. Springfield, 0 . G o o d s . A F u l l A s so r tm en t O f China, Cut-glass Bric-a-Brac, DinnerandCoiletSets, Parlor Lamps, Salads, Jardcniers, etc. -/ fitly something useful as well *s ornamental that Christmas dinner will taste better'on'a new set of dishes. See us be* fnre buying. We will save you money. 44 S. Foun tain A y e . Sp ring fie ld , Oh io . CHRISTMAS GIFTS ■OF QUAL ITY - ell will be as strong as over in that place and even stronger than i t was before. sh ow y o u su ch e le g an t de s ign s in go ld and s ilv e r a s a t th e present. Diamonds, Watches and Gold Jewelry; Toilet and Man icure Sets; Silverware in Sterling and - 9 4 Plate;. Rich, Gut Glass. K Y L E & T A T E , X E N IA , OHIO ,. N 0 .4 , SOUTH DETROIT ST . ALL OyfiR THE HOUSE." Simple Method# of Mending Leaking Granita or Wooden Ware Utensils. The average housewife looks upon two things a? absolutely unmendu- ble.* When her granite or wooden ware utensils spring a leak she thrown them away with a sigh of resignation and proceeds to buy new utensils to take their place. As a matter of fact, either of these uten sils m ay.be successfully' treated a t home, without much expense. When a granite u tensil begins to leak en large the hole and drive in it a cop per rivet. This will take a very short time, not much strength, and the leale. will,be effectually stopped^ You can buy different sizes of cop per rivets a t hardware stores. They come assorted in packages and ought not to cost more than 5 cents a pack age. One package ought to mend all the leaking granite ware tha t you will use in your whole lifetime*. The rivets have a head at one. end. The small end should be in serted in. the hole in t h e ’article you desire to.mend’and pressed through. Then the ^vessel should be placed on something firm and the end of the rivet hammered' down o f .flatten ed out: This will hold it in place. You will find that* the ri.vets are soft and’ very easily manipulated. I t will be best to mend a hole as soon as i t is discovered: I f it is air lowed to become'too large the gran- ite is liable to peel off fo r some dis tance around the hole. * I f this hap pens .the ware will not hold a rivet, bu t will chip away. If' you desire to mend an article made of wood fiber take some putty and carefully fill up the break- Then allow it to harden.' This will last fo r a time if le ft as it is, . However, the work may be made more sub stan tial by painting i t over and with, broiled stuifed tomatoes o r , peppero you will have an ideal dish, •' Removing Crumbs; .The most refined method of re moving crumbs from the table is t considered to ha the use .of a table napkin and either , a small silver tray or an ordinary plato. The met al crumb scraper.is' still in use in many homes,4jut the napkin is pre ferred by those who fallow closely the customs of the day. • !* ' Fascination’of Wall Street. ‘‘There is a good deal of unhappi ness connected with Wall street,” said James R. Iveene, “but there’s a fascination about stocks th a t isn’t known to any other line of business. Wall street invariably draws a man back no matter what his failures may have.heen. I f a dry goods mer chant goes under,( loses' every cent ho has. and finds th a t he is complete ly wound up no one ,sees him in the dry goods district 'until he has tried a good many times to get on his feet i.n other ways. Then he may go back. I t is the same with other branches of trade. But when a-man gets heavily -h it down around the street ho can he found a t the old 6tarid?nntil he leaves the world fo r good?’ . • » H *... 1•1■' ■' 1,nT rn" * > ■ - His Disease. • -Congressman Hamilton of Michi gan tells the following story a t hjs own expense: A farmer had asked Mr. Hamilton to ride with him on his wagon. They drove some dis tance m silence, and then the team ster said,'“Professional man ?” The congressman answered^ “Yes,” Then quoth th e driver: “You ain’t a law- Our Display of Stoves W e h a v e m ade a care fu l study o f the requ irem en ts o f our custom ers, and our success is la rg e ly due to the fa c t th a t w e h ave a lw a y s tried to supp ly them w ith ju s t w h a t they, w an ted . O u r d isp lay o f stoves is unquestion a b ly the larges t in the c ity and th e y are to be sold, if low prices can d o it. -yer, or you’d be talking. You ain’t a doctor, or you’d have a satchel. , You ain’t a preacher, because you cussed when you .barked your shin , getting into the wagon. Say, mis ter, what is your profession pny- , _ , how?” “I am' a politician,” said pressing a firm cloth over the. paint. Hamilton. “Huh!” , snorted the Then paint i t again, and your uten- teamster.', “Politics'ain’t no profes- u e sion'. Politics is a disorder,” RANG E S . ’ . Qur line of Ranges com prises the following makes: Round Oak , F o s te r ’s P r ize , .. C lim ax , • P en in su la r , E u rekah , Slack Burners. \V*e evideutlv have, the leading slack burner, in the Foster stove,- (exactly like cut), if sales are to be 'taken as a standard. They are just the thing when the price- of coni is high." Fire Shovels, pokeres and tongs. In fuel anything Needed in the Stove Line. - y V- HEATERS . You do not have to buy our goods because yon look a t them, but you will want to buy, for the price coupled with the quality and merits of the Istojrie are bound to sell them, Beckwith Round Oak, Florence Hot Blast, (air tight.) Garland,. Jewel. CO A L B U C K E T S lu tu ll styles and grades, . either the Black or Galvanized. Iron, f ' I - ■ ' Prices to suit.the purchaser Stove Pipe. We carry a full fine of HANDMADEST0YEPIPE . 'A u v Size; * . A LITTLE NONSENSE.' He Held Up a Train, blit *Twa« Not of tho Railroad Variety. The traveling men in th e emdk* ing compartment of the Pullman were “reminiscing.” The conversa tion turned to each . man’s most thrilling expe* ience, and each sought lo recount n tale in which ho had played the hero’s part. One told now he had carried a beautiful girl down the ladder from the top Story of a' burning house. Another gave a. thrilling account of how. ho had put two burglars to rout* p isto l in hand, at 3 o’clock in the morning* BtiU another told how-in the jniidst of a train wreck he had extricated two men from beneath the burning timbers just as the flames were about to engulf them. "All the ex periences, if not yarns pure and simple, were highly colored by the vivid imagination of the narrators. The conversation hud been listen ed to by « small, mild mannered, in offensive looking man and a “rank Outsider.” Seeing a smite hovering about the corners of his mouth, one of the drummers turned ,to-him and said, “Perhaps you can fell u# some experience o i yours of this kind.” “Well, maybe I can,” reptiod tho granger in' a way which seemed to indicate th a t thrilling expefienOa# *crp to him an everyday, oeetir- rinee, ‘T v# done several th ings in For Instance. one# I held up-a tram." “Whatl” came a bu rst of incred ulous surprise. “You don’t look it, l man. You all alone held up a i train ?” Their tone seemed to indi- ?cate Wonder as to what he was do ing .outside of a jail. “Yes, alone and unaided I held up a train,” ’ “Tell us about it.” They crowded around expectnnt- ; ly and lighted fresh cigars. I “Oh, gentlemen, 1 don’t know th a t I care to talk about it. Are you sure you waht to hear it? ” i “Certainly. Go-ahead,” came the ' chorus. k>. i “Well, I said th a t alone and un aided I held up a train. You See, i t was this way ; 1 was nine years old, and I was a page a t my big Sister’s Wedding. The tra in was p retty heavy, but”*— -He got no further. For once the laugh was on tho drummers.—New York Times,__ ,..... * A h Available Excuse. He—I ’m afraid my picture of Miss Gotrox Was not fiuite satisfac- "fcOftv■' S h o -O h , well, a rt should not be held responsible for nature.—Puck. du ll* NeoaMftry. Ytr, Sw ift^W hy on earth are you taking my revolver to the party ? r n i l M t i* a m A party, my dear.— Cincinnati Commercial Tribune* , ' of platters belonging to .any set of china without piling them on, top of each other, almost awkward and ' inconvenient method, with much risk of breakage when handling *them. There ate now- for sale plat- . ter -rests made of natu ral 'wood. ; Each dish has its separate and ap propriate rest with ’regard to its size. The smallest one fits down on th e fron t rest, tlie nexi, size fol lows above, un til the entire set is placed. The. whole service no t only shows to advantage, bu t i s . safely held so th a t each p latter can be se lected a t Once. By th is simple means these large dishes take up little room on the pantry shelf, and there is no longer noise/ or confusion in restoring them to their places. Kitchen* Too Large. The French, tlie best cooks in the world, perform their entire task ( within the area th a t is often given in this country in a house of mod- j erate size to the china closet alone, 'f o r the American, following his English ancestor, has fallen in to the habit of giving an undue amount ; of importance to the kitchen, or I service portion of th e house. This J tendency ^reacts npon itself, and it *may be th a t the exaggerated impor tance given to the servant'problem in this country is less unavoidable than tho ordinary housewife sup poses,' I f she could once lie brought to consider restricting the area now given, to* the kitchen and the closets connected with i t might i t not be found, th a t the ordinary routine o f household ‘life would move along more easily and with less friction ?• —Good Housekeeping. Steak With Mushroom Sauce. . Remove the hone, superfluous fa t and flank end from a sirloin steak cut about two inches thick'and press the meat into circular shape, Place it on a hot, Well greased griddle and cook to taste, turn ing frequently. Pou r over it •a mushroom sauce made as follows; Brown a slice of onion and a. clove of garlic, cu t fine, in three fahlcspoonfulft. of butter* Add four tablespoonfuls of browned flour, one-fourth tahlcspoonful o f salt niul a dash of penper,.aiul. when It becomes frothy add a cupful of brown stock, L e t -come to. a -boil and attain over half a cupful of button mushrooms. Reheat without boiling before turn ing over the steak. I f you rttrxouad the steak . Two Dog Stories. G. ~\Y, Savage and Frank Olin of Winfield, Ivan., went overland in a wagon toThe mounTouTs™T!T&T"Re3' a rrived* in Winfield,.■!nmsnrn -in* hungry. I t had made a trip of 700' miles . and probably retraced the route followed by- the wagon. However, this story is still several laps behind a tale told by some Iolti (Kart.) boys, who took'a dog to the I Philippines with the Twentieth regi- ; ment. According to this tale, the dog swam hack', stopping a t the is land of Guam, 'where it got into a fight with a native cur and lost an ■ear, .:■■■■ ■ ■ :x. Cedarvflle, Ohio, where a full line of Hardware,.. Pumps .arid Paints can . always be found. Take L a x a t i v e B r o m o Q u i n i n e TaHets. Swen MQBonboxes soMIn past 12 months. This signature. on every box.25c. W. M. HARBISON, Practical Miller and Engineer, .Mem ber of the M. E. Cbnreb, and Carrie Post, No. 94, G, A. R. Cedarville, Ohio REMOVING THE STOMACH. A Colossal Statue. A monster iron statim of Vulcan, weighing twenty tons, will be erect ed by Alabama in the Mines and •Metallurgy building a t the St. Louis ■fair. This colossal statue will be forty-five feet high and will he a W/.° , i°f a fk ?as* entirely A t a meeting of medical men In of Alabama iron, which runs like Vienna the otlier day Dr. Ullman bronze in a liquid state, and will be . prescn(cQ a woman of Bixty-two covered with a coat of shellac. I t . ..earg whose entire stomach had been will cost $10,000, and a fter the r6inoveg jn an operation fo r cancer, world s fair it will be erected m one Nevertheless’she digests all her food Of the principal parks of Birmmg- nn(j jiag gajncg weight since the op ham ns a permanent monument. Crushed. $100 DOLLARS IN T o be d istributed in four prem ium s o f $50 $ 25 , $15 and $10, on June 1,1904. B u y ydu r F r e s h an d Salt Meats, F ish a n d O ysters A t m y M ea t M a rke t and ge t a ticket w ith each 25c ca sh purchase . S a v e you r tickets WEIMER. eration. The doctor stated th a t the ‘ operation o f removing .the stomach * An Eastport (Me.) man was stand- hf nfSw beensuecessfuilyperform - ing near the door of a clothing «d over twenty times.. The #tom- ‘ ’ meditntion, when a ach reafiy plays only a small part in w oL « i1t talkned1,u r a n r h e g a r t6 complex act of digestibn its stare a t him. He never moved a Rr^cipal use being th a t of a reser- muscle, hut when she again turned J v^i r i ienc,<l w he thought he had caught her eye j organ meals hrive to be taken meon- fo r a sure enough mash,^ and ho j ™ “ eye. smiled and winked the other e .! ' ^ r<f ^r<; scv e rn llittle organ^ of Imagine his feelings when she ex- ?°??P^0X hhenucal function fa r more claimed in a startled voice: “Heav ens! I dummy! indispensable than the stomach, which are seldom heard of. Wo thought you were a clothing . wn\c i ar« B?Luof ' .5® pi 6 J “ could not exist, for instance, with out th e suprarenal capsules and the pancreas.-—Harper’s Weekly. Town Ha* Two Names. Pierce City is probably the only town irt the state tha t has two l-affles. I t was originally called aft er Colonel Peirce, the -president of the. Frisco railway, EXCHANGE bank CEDARV ILLE , OHIO, A CCOUNTS of (Merchants and ln* dividuals solicited. Oolloctiohc promptly made and remitted. D RAFTS on New y w k and Cin cinnati Sold al lowfri rates, Th# cheapest and most convenient way to send money by mail;. T OANS made on Real Estate, Pei* eonal or Collateral Security, .-; New Zealand’s Old Age Pension*, Unde# the old age pension law of New Zealand a person to draw a In later year# pension must be sixty-five j’ears of the inhabitants iorgot apparently ago and must have resided in New ] how Colonel Peirce spelled his name Zealand fo r the previous twenty-five' . and fell to calling their postoffico years, must no t have’been itnprie- vVillism \ \ lldmnii, Ire s .. Pierce City. Now the town is known oned fo r a period of four months Soth W, Smith, V iee lrce ., on the state maps as “ Railroad Sto- during the last twelve years for any turn, Peirce City, Postoflice, Pierce offense punishable by imprisonment City.”—Kansas City Journal. > fo r one year and must have led a .W 1 151X11 tu« VXC©XTOSif W* 3 Wildmnn, OnsWet, An Exclusive. Thomas Hailey Aldrich, tho a n iho r, H an exclusive man who makes few friends. On# day Mark Twain sent him a book and wrote on tho previous five y e a rs ., Ilia yearly ini come must rtot exceed $260 o r his net Capital $1,360* and ho must not have deprived himself of property « * » . , or income to qualify for a pension, % leaf, “To Ihomas Rmley Ahlrich, Tho full amount of tho pension from his only friend, Mark Twain.” $so a year, payable monthly. -Satu rday Evening Post, / 1 J is iny Grits and Pancake Flour. Any one is a fine breakfast dish, a t -Gray and Go’s. tf i Job Printing ol all kinds executed 1 at this office wUh neatness and .dis- Ipatch, A Careful Buyer, TieBestisM YaHjlant. TieBesttsflatfeSel. Moats are deceptive, Unless you are a good judge, you cab never tell what you are getting until you have it served and partially oaten. Wo know'meats. We select stock with a view to having the best meats, We know how to select stock and there fore have meats you may depend npon—meats that will please you. C, H. GROUSE. GOODS DELIVERED Telephone No. 74*. fish Jklmft tin Hand*
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