The Cedarville Herald, Volume 30, Numbers 1-26
t* J makeVo#r«lfandyour?rkmlsaetirismas 01 ft. ,Come and see and be satisfied that at Schell’s is the, best place to buy. ^ E*I.f . Diamonds from ... ...... ,,$ 6.00 to $100 ea<?fi Gents* Wateftea from.,,....,’........ .......... $1 to $100 la d ie s * Enameled Watches, red need'from $J 5 , for..,.:.,-.,,. .............................. ............. $ 10.00 Sterling1, Silver Tea Spoon« from to $15 per se^ | jjw a v ii 0$5vyM& ':'JC4 Jfc*±, *L i.Cbtit£**kii* ■T V TW....... - ............ from* $l0t<*$l8$WJ3ek b , tS ted tng Silver Table Spoons "-from.... ..........••:. ...... ..................$16 to $21 per. sot Sterling s ilv e r Forks f r o m .... $10 to $20 per se t , Kiel* Cut Glass frotft,....,—4l.7&'lo $20 per piepfe Also Out Glass TrnpWote - „ " , 'from * .;......— $2.50 to ' $12 p e r & doaett . Bracelets, solid gold, from,.,'... . .,$12 to $33 feaeb Bine Boll P late and b illed Bracelets ‘ ■ * , from....;,...,,, ....... ................ ”»-$2 to $ 8 .each- F foe slfino of Signet Rings overseen » , < in Southern Ohio.-,/.— .,/./w $2 ‘to. $16.60 each Also a fine line of Flam Rings-, lo-Kt . * ,j%Bl 1 gnd'22-Kflne.'.frojn.,.;--‘41t60 to $10 each Hmb tellas’ iiaforal wood, horn plain, and Korn* gold or savo r trimmed, gold and silver handles' both forJadfe* and gentlemen, , from,... -v .>....$1 to$ i 2 eaoh, Bings fop children from......*;'..,,......... ,76eto $6each Rings for lad le s from......... X« ....... , -..$1.59 to $200 Bdh'd Gold Cuff LteksYrom $2.so to $2ttper pair P la ted Cnff l i n k s fron t...... 50o to $J per pa ir Bolid Gold Scarf Pins, with or w ithout Sets, ■front;, ..$1.50 to$ l5 each phifed Scarf Pins from /too to $1 each lad i.es1H a t P insfrom 250, to $2.50 each Gents’ Fobs from ..........................,«,.$! to $10 each Ladies’ Guard Chains from .,- /--IB to $20 each Clocks from..................... ....,.»...... ....$1, to $54 each Y«ry fine lino of lad ies’ Solid GoldBroocdies . frond.,..... I . . . . , $2,50 to $120 each Kodahs-froin....to ,$20 each ; A ve ry fin^ lino of Carving Sets _• ffOlll..— $2. 50 to $10 °'Triple P la ted Knives and Po rks /$2,<3Qto $6,50 per se t Also a speoial line of Quadruple Knives , ^ And .^Fftrkn at,*!.**.. per* set-* - Something entirely new—Silver filled ~ M Spoonsat the, following prides.; / •' a eaah Mr. T. C. Batin returned to €!«• rion a ti Winfoeadjiy a fter a tew days vihit here w ith relatives. T ins ta lk o f H r , Cortelyou for fbo Presidency is permafure. H e b UU Isas s is cabinet positions to fill, Mrs. W ill Torrence and h e r motto or Mrs, McIntyre o f Xenia spent Wednesday w ith Mrs, Bello Gray. —Ypn can g e t a special price on corduroy pants a ll ne^ft week a t Kagley Bros. 'AU sizes and grades. M r, H a rry Hiito of Terre H au te, Ind . spen t the w^ekylsiting rtiltrilvw in an d around town. Mr. and Mrs, Win. Clay returned, home Thursday from a v isit w ith relatives a t Be Graffe, O. Mrs. H a rrie t Mills, m o ther of Mrs, J„ H . Wolford, is quite low hav ing suffered a ' third, paraly tic stroke .' Misses Sadye and Fannie Ih ff aij spending the. holidays with fhei b ro the r W alter and wife afc.Mnpcie, Ind«, '. ■. Prof. Reynolds and fam ily visited friends In B lanehestsr itsil -vicinity from Saturday, un til, Wednesday last. ’ , ' ** < „• * ‘ / ' ^Plymouth, Hock Coekerals;-t*r_ sale now. A. H . ‘Laskey*. 0 ames town Ohio.- citizens phone;s ^ ijs; .... $8 per set .Tea Bpodns .... Dessert andTahlesp< p o r^ s t I Mr. Stpwarb SatorBeld of AGanta Tllihois arrived,lasfc’Saturday and spent u few days with h is -mother and brother of th is place. ~ Mfse^Bertha JDeao, who I? a ttend ing a business college a t U rbans^ is spending her vacatioh with her p a r- ents MiS and Mrs.' Charles Deap. Mr,.and Mrs.,D. G, Bull, Mr- and t J T v Also a fu ll Hue of all Mnd^ of Jewelry which i t is impossible to uaine insthis^mall, \ Xenia, Chri \ 'spacewill be seen at " . 1 ' f f t ' .: 5 XSTU stina's. fe .1 at t •^Steele Building, Xenia. , m** | LOCAL AND PERSONAL ~ | 1 .wilt en tertain -Year’s Day* Mr, F rank E rv in of Chtetonati :ife v isiting h is parente; . ; Clyde Barr c f Day tonspeh t Christ- * Mr, K a rlh Bull is m ak ing a flyingl Bov. Jam es Hutehison of Altoona mas in town. . r - v - ‘ ' —F rida of Diberty F lour a t Kagley Bros. The best.ffonr on the market, Mr. and Mrs. W . R . S torrettspen i Tuesday in Boufh Charleston. , Mias Verna Bird entertained Mie> Inez Wickerh&m the llrsfc of the week. , Mis* Martha Brotnagem of .Fa ir- field* I k spending her vacation hero, Mis* B e th s Rainey is visiting- rel atives Mi Iowa. Mis* Lnlu Binitb le ft Wednesday f o r a v isit w ith relatives in Chilli- oothe. Mr. ‘ and Mrs. H a rry ■Townsley f .■Mrs. George f?reswell and, dhlldren relatiVea on New arrived home from Bpartaf /Illinois, Thursday morning. : ’ Mr, and Mrs* Chas,, Kisbefc of j ylrs, Melda Bull entertained the joveland ar$ visiting Mrs. Andrew TurnKUR fam ily a t h e r home Christ- W in ter.- m a s tia y to dtoner. '■1 v isit to Salt Bake City an d other, western points, . * -Mrs, A /D . Endsley Of Tarentum, Pa.* is visiting h e r mother Mrs. Belle Gray. Mr. and Mrs. John Lott of Cincin nati spoilt the. holidays w ith rela tives here. * Mr. .Wilbur Collette,, of Dayton spent Sunday with his parents Mr. and Mrs. Seth Collette. Mies Xulti Henderson who is teaching school a t Warren* O., Is home for holidays. Mij. J . W . Stevenson entertained friends and re la tiv e s ' Wednesday* Vou can- get a special price on corduroy pan ts a ll h ex t week at Ehgley Bros. All Sizes and grades. Mr. Will Graham and John Fin* }noy of Cincinnati are spending the M issDota fcSlegUTspent a few days holidays here. _ > in Dayton th e first of the week. i .. . “ . .......... ........-- - f ME aridM rs. Raymond B ake r ol Mr. ami Mrs. to I t . galloobwger Cincinnati spent ( h ristmas with Mr are spending the holidays a t Oxford. (and^Mrs. 8. T. Baker, Frol, Morris of the college sp lutliig ticr vaeation a t Oxford, Mr. and Mrs, J . H . Andrew enter- to toified the Andrew fam ily to dinner O. Christmas. The place to get yolu* Caudles for Christ- n m . We have a hue line of Candies, Oranges, Nuts, etc. We have the English Fruit Cake better thaavou can bake, A Mice lin e O f Hotly Wreaths 22c for Butter 27c for TCggs Call and get a niceHocking Chair given free to Customers. 0 .M. TOWNSLEY, The Corner Grocery .Pa., .spent a few days w ith his sop fames a t R. F , K e rr’p . F ive cents g e ts you. more news papers fo r you r shelves than over before, a t this odlce. Miss Nellie tjk tick of jOolUmhus spen t th e holidays with her aun t Mias Bill(an Stewart, -Mr. and Mrs. O. M« "To’wnsley spent Tuesday and Wednerday In Springfleld. * , Miss B ertha -Strain is v isiting friends *hd relatives In Patntervlllo and vicinity, Mt«s Bernice Wolford o f Cincin na ti spent Christmas with her par* onts Mr.‘ and Mr*. J , If, Wolford* —For blankets, storm fronts or rain aprons, see the line carried by It. E . Townsley, j u s t t h e ‘time of year for those articles, / Mr, Reese Barber* of S t Boiiis Is visiting h is mother Mrs. Esk ride. Reese 1* a c ity salesman for the Washbum-Crosby Flour Co. -“Yon can get a special price on Corduroy pant* a ll nex t week at. Hagley Bros. All sized and grades. Because we make medicines for them.- We toll the'm . all aboutAyer’s Cherry Pectoral, aitd they, prescribe it for coughs, colds, bronchitis, con sumption. Theytrusfit* Then you can afford8, to trust it, Ask youf-own doctor, ThobeiUklnUof atetttetoniwto ‘’Sold for .over sixty yssM." ' m lbd«fcr?. 0 , i m po.,xowjn.JtMfc 'Alto»ua«lkotmw»or yers 9 sabsaparuu , ■“ Puts. au«Yi#t. W*lMV*si>'s«<>r«Mt W*.yub«»h tli, fontittl*, oCAllJpur intaWtoM. Ayer's Pills greatly afd tho Cherry Pectoral in preaking ■ tip a -cold. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured, With local applicaiWn#, tin tliey cannot teach tliofteatol the dfScasA Cnt&rrh In bloodor comdtutioitat.diwatet and in order to cure it you must takvSthorimi remedies tfiUl/s CatiU-rhCaro isJlotsqnackhieOicine It waspresettbed Dy otto ol the best physi cians in this country for years amlisuteg" u1»r prescription, -It i* composed ot.the best tonicsknown, combined with tho best blood purifiers, actingOJrccUyoa tho mu ecus surfaces'. The perfect combination of two ingredients is whetproduCeaspch won derful results in curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials free, ** •' . > AddressI**, J, CH&NHY & CO, Toltftjo, 0. Sold by druggist, 75e.' Hall’s Family Pills 4ro’the best, O' MONEY to loan on first mortgage on. FARMS, only. W o also have FOR BADE ROME desirable farm s and several nice GEBARVTLLE, . XEN IA and JAMESTOWN DWELLINGS. SM ITH & OLEMANS; CEDAR- V1LLE, OHIO. Gould-last week’* rougtohodse a t the Madison Square bicycle track he referred to as a ’‘race rio t” ? U Only Plain ’Congees,mart. Senator ^cveridsre was talking One afternoon in Washington to a group of newly elected congress men. l rott boji i fK lie said, ^must on no ^Unfortunately there is no prospectf Kc6P Cof* of securing the passage of an elastic th ink before jrm speak. Then you- won't give currency bill before Christmas. It* t o your advantage to. settle your amoun t before DOc, 81. Re member th is date la the la s t chance, ,R. McClellan. $>u _ yourselves away;” The unripe congressmen laughed, had Senator Beveridge continued j H should hate to hear th a t ono of Mr. and Mrs, John Johnson en tertained relative* ’ from South Charleston Tfuesdav. Mr, Win. H aley who Is employed , a« stone c o n ta c to r In New Orisaimf 1* visiting h is m o ther Mrs. Haley. you had "acted as a new southern congressman once did. t “He as soon as he reached Wash ington went oft to a photographer** to be photographed, T Want my likeness tak e n / ho said, - ‘Cabinet?’ the photographer asked, Tho south erner reddened find looked pleased, j 'N o / ho answered, 'ju st ,a plain “Buffalo Those Halve Half the world Wonders how the o ther ha lf lives, « = ! Lflftfand *as pau iw i, ■ rii|he*e# oae. everyday congressman/w Nows, " . , t ^ Pauper- Ci*roym*rt, That, ministers are underpaid would seem evident from the fact that dur- Wonndo, Bums, H odis and all n km eruption*} th ey know It will. Mrs, G ran t 8hy f IFHi E , Reynold* 8 h , Hpringfleld, 111., aay*: “ I regard it otto of the iteee«i*ti*s ^ houeekeep^ ihg.” Guaranteed hy a a il druggist*, was a doctor of divinity, while the other* hold tho decree of master o, art*, Of ah the spiWipai clergymet 1 in Etigland, $,$00m * less than ISO * week, and the graatast majority jmmh iunday tIOHMOFOLITAN MAGAZINE want* a rcprcflentativeln every com m un ity to collect “ renewals” and to solicit new subscriptions. Many COSMOPOLITAN agents today have gradually bu ilt up a bus iness t h a t actually nets front $1,600. $2^000, and, In one or two cases, $5,000 yearly, These agents Rave got such re- marizubfe Ttfuriw bjf -offering,sub scribers w ha t i* known as the mag- azimri’club,” And by magazine “ o lub /i -we mean an oder by wbieh tb e various publications taken b y a subscriber a re combined' and offered b y COS" .MQFOLITAN’S agents in the form of a “ 0lub” atdOper .cent to 60 p e r cent, les* than he h a s been paying for the various publications singly. Now COSMOPOLITAN’S Cluto Depftri'ment, -which handles business, it* th is year more p«t> fectly developed th a n Over before. .COSMOPOLITAN, .therefore, is exceptionally Well fitted to offer the energetic agenk the opportunity o f building up and renewing from year to y ea r a business which w ill in time prove no t only pe rm anen t bu t re m arkab ly resu lttu l. . , F ilf out, therefore; the coupon be low—•today’-rfo r fu ll particu lars a sto bow you m ay begin—single-handed —the nucleus ofw h a t wfifeventually develop ih toawonderfu lly weli-pay- ‘mgj Independent business for you ,.", "-Fill o u tau d mail the coupon'below now—TODAY. -Add ress; Agency Depfc., Desk ,12. COSMOPOLITAN 'MAGAZINE, 1789 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, . * AgencyDept,, Desk. 12 , - . • COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE, , “ "No. 1789 Broadway, -New. York City. Gentlemcft—Will yOu Mudlyteli- ,me how apepnanent, resultful business may be huiltup in my cOmmtfnityj represent- mg.;CO%iOPOLITAN.MAGAZINE— a business which when, conscientiously, followed has repeatedly been knowh to yield,$l,6od$2,000, and upwards, yearly. in t e r e st s HISTORY, (Continued from paga h t Jgamo—1 *—^ .. »<» , Street, R, K ..., or Box'Np,,, *• * ' \ sy ^ ‘ M i «•* *»* *. * j * State... r»**M*>»f.»**t* CONDENSED STORIES. Mow Senator Ball Aroused the jro of an Admirer of Burns.' ' Former Senator ‘Call of Florida,- who immortalizcd-lumself by taking off a -tight shoe in the senate ehtiM- ber one day and hoisting.a huge foot, c lad jn ft bhie J-arn sock/on his desk, .heard from other senator# early in his-term that Superintend ent Smith1- of the' ‘botanic gardens gave palms- and potted plants to statesmen he lilted. Call wanted some palms, and he east about-for a way to get on the right side of Smith-' .Somebody told ‘tow r * 'nuaxa J” s . skvj >suitn, him. Smith wns a great admirer of Burns and liad a fine collection of Barns’manuscripts and editions. That was Calrs cue. He walked over to the garden, found Smith and talked of many things, At the proper time, delicately and Unob trusively, he introduced tho subject of Burns. “There was the poet/’ lie said, “For fine sentiment ho has them all beaten. I read my Burns every day/* ■ . “Ken ye Burns?” asked Smith] much interested. “4 “I -should think I did/’ proclaim ed the enthusiastic Call. “Why, t know most of his poems by heart. They can have their other poets, but. as for me, give mo Jimmie Burns”*— “Jimmie Burns!” snorted the en raged Bimili, “Jimmie Burns! Aughf Billie Washington! Char lie Napoleon! Bammie Jefferson! Get out of mo1 sight, ye ignoramus!” Add Call never did get,his palms. ^ Saturday Evening Boat, of the +‘Brtek c h u r r li/' on Rocky creek, Chester dtotetet, South Caro lina , and in 182$ Gavin wasinstaltod paator of Beech woode ehureh, in . Preble county, Chxo, Where he mar ried Jtoeauna Reynolds, H e r e mained pastor of, .th a t congregation un til h to J e a tb if *867. F ind ing ' i t almost impossible to keep away from the contam inating influences of slavery w ith the grow in g population In South Carolina, th e Rev, Hugh McMillan, wirii th e jvwillinjf; Of hlS gfiSHlOtt (IStSSUltBS^ to move to th e northwest—slavery hav ing Been prohibited In the terri tories of the northwest. In J828 he led the Way and chose Xenia, Greene county, Ohio, fo r hie location/'Soon a fte r th is a ll the rdmalnlpg menl- bera of the fam ily followed and also a large number of the members o f Ida congregation and o thers remov ed to d ifferen t places in th e sta te of Ohio, Ind ian a and Ililnoto. From thto society of covenanter* to South Caro lina have grown m any large and influential congregations to*tbe northwest. From th is venerable couple, - Hugh' a n d Ja n e Harvey McMillan, have sprung seven fam i lies, represented to the fam ily tree, embtoctog nix generations, five of which participate to the fam ily r e union today .. T h e .num b e r o f de scendants are as follows? , -Daniel McMillan, 12 children, 45 B ildren,. 10 gfeat-grandohil- ‘t* *J‘* * 1 , Mary McMillan, L"child who died m infancy. ' . John McMillan (the only surviving one)f 10 c h ild r e n *47 grandchildren," 41 great-grandchildren, -1 great- great-grandchild, . Gavin McMillan, 18 children, 14 g ran d ch ild ren ., f David McMillan,/ 'l 2 Jchildren, 43 grandchildren, 5; great-grandchil d ren / ^ • / 1 * ^ Jam e s "McMillan, 8 children, 14 grandchildren, - -/ - H ugh McMillan, *3 children. *8 grandchildren* •' Making in all 300 . > n - . Number surviving, 194.- ’ , 1OftbeSe, 7 have bce ttjn the minis try and -5 h ave toa rried m inisters. A fter the reading of th e history, th e Rev . Robert McMillssbr-Uon of tb e la te Dr, Hugh McMillan, deliv ered an eloquent address, .referring to God’s goodness -to th is family, and exhorting the yonUg people to- follow to the footsteps of their fa th ers, and to lay 'ho ld on thejro,mi^Ss in H is word. T he address Was quite leng thy , se th a t even, a synopsis of !Ifecan n o tb e given, m th is hurried le tte r. :Hori, R ob e rt.McKUight, of FRts- burg,‘Being present,' was,called, upon and gave son>e Very in te rsting rem - Iniscenclesdf f h e e a r ly d ay s of the MclWillaus and- covenanter's in" this section, -Other speakers addressed the .assemblage briefly. The rem ai nder of" the eyening iv»s spepfc m p leasan t social intercourse, as was the Whole day ihdOedy and it- was n o t until a |a,to hou r th a t the beau tiful grove was deserted. ’During tb e day, the sketch ■of a "tree showing th e complete genealogy of the fam ily war on exhibition, the tru n k representing H ugh and Jan e McMillan—Seven branches reprsent- tog their seven ch ildren and other branches, some w ith 'branches rep resenting th e ir children and t h e children’s Children,, and to one cose th e childrens’* children’s child, ThiS tree showed a t a glance the large fam ily connection) and proved aft intereslng study for the y ou th lu i members present. _ *8 . L . E . Mr, Bellicose Storor still insists t h a t bis hand was dealt off the bot tom of tbe pack. We Help You to Save and HAKE MONEY. »*4* ' Having arranged for exceedingly tow clubbing ra tes with publishers ifthe best aiid most popular pnbli- ’.-ation* in tbe United State*, Daily, Weekly and Monthly, wte are note vady to fit! order# a t from Thirty o Fifty per cent, less thaft there? julaf prices, giving Subscriber* toil tehefit of the lowest clubbing rates, it sahie time ftlkswiriga liberal com* ftisStoti to Solidtiug-'Agenta.. To adverlisO our new offer* vould entail a cost which We Save to the Subscriber by sfskiftg each -eader o f this item to send a postal tard for Sample Copies of T h K VEiiKiY EufitriiiBk* and if so sitfi* tied to do a little agency work dur ing the winter, make applied ton for geucy. I t is a fact that Tilt? K n * jtRivKK offers more ftud better ■irga'ns than may be had from thet sources, Un«i* Allan. % aufipdiHt there in «ueh a peraon m ho foolklllw,” mused' ttoele Alien ivntkn, ’ but he ha* either retired rmii hurittes* or ha’s kap*l»«iitr Raff o i his oritors.” ,u One offer gives $5,00 Worth for nly $2.00, another give* a Daily *ipcr, two Weeklies And two lonthlie* for only $h15. . .The Veterinary toolumn of Tut vjs^kAY is worth from -Ye to fifty dollars to any horse Wiiefv ti 'W riio tO 'd ay to A time NONSENSE. Hew « Ftmeu* Cemperiflon Cause to *B«Written. . Tho story of how one of Faderevr- ski’* mf>nt popular foroncsitiojw came fo lie w rittcaw as told recently m Doxtdoa by the, famons compo-- er’e wife, ,J- • I t was in those early days when the master pianist was a professor At the- Warsaw conservatoire, and the_ scene -tf«s the home of the Polish poet, Swietzochowski, who liad just expressed the opinion-that no living composer could compare "in beauty and simplicity with Mo zart. At tho moment Ignaee Pa- dcrcr/rkt merely thrugged his alioulders. Bat the follov/ing even ing he appeared, asking permission to play for the poet a little Mo- zarnan.' tiling which perhaps he did not know. Then he played his own now, famous minuet, “Ah l” exclaimed Bwietzochow- ski triumphantly as the last note died away, “Now you must ac knowledge? that a composition like that could nOt have-been written in our time/’ ‘^Perhaps/’ came.-the quiet reply, “only i t happens that I composed it this very forenoon.” — Lippin- cott’s Magazine. ■ , H«r Awful Sin. * .^Sometimes/’ tehe ‘whispered as she snuggled a little closer to him, tcL am- sMinost;afraid that I am not worthy o f y o u ” •“Why, darling,” he asked, “should you ever, haye euch a though, as that?” ; . • “Well, I—I once almost made up m y mind to have my hair bleached.” r-C h icago liecord-Herald. you Properly Amended. ' /’Tommy” cried his father, m tist go to ‘bed th is instan t!” “Xo!” .replied five-year-old Tom my.’' '. “ What’s th a t? Ttow dare yon say Tfo’ to me?” - ' ' i .“Excuse me-, Tfo, s i r / ” said T om ray /'w ith ' uftdiininished deter- »minafion,—Detroit',l?ree Press, The Limit. /T h e 'Professor’s -Wifo Good- heavens! I f th a t - absentmmded husband- of. mine hasn’t sep t-'tbe cook a .flew fu r.b o a and given mo notice i d leave on tb e first o f ,the m on th !—Flicgende B latter. - • . Yha KnoWledgo That Hurl?. - Towner—So Dumley m arried a college , woman. My, i t must - be fierce, fo r h im to be tied- to a wom a n who know* so much t h a t ,h e doesn’t know! ' .* Browne—Oh,1 th a t doesn’t hu rt .him to mU6h as th e fact th a t she know* how much he doesn’t know- T^Philadelphto Press. Tho Usotolness of Pbatc. “Do you cam for great poets ?” asked the literary young man. “Well/’ answered th e ' truthful girl, “I can’t say I care much for the things they wrote themselves. But their sufferings and privations certainly make loving biographies.” —Washington Star. *Twao ffvor Thu*. Mistress—I suppose you know nil about pastry ? ; ' 'Kew Cook-^ifc'srtoa'am, IfiRtreSs—What kind o f pies are you m ost fam iliar with? ISfew Cook—‘Bakers’ pies, ma’am. —Chicago News, No Harm Don*. ^Green — Rounder looks since his marriage. happy Brown—Yes. “Mis wife married him to reform him, Green—And she has succeeded? Brown—Oh, not she failed.—De troit Tribune, Just a Hint, Micky—Would yer want to have a close fellow for a beau, Lizzie? Lizzie — Well, dal depends. I Wouldn’t mind him being close on de-parlor sofa, b u t I wouldn’t want, him to be close in an ice cream par lor,—Puck. The Actor's Distinction. , Miss Sue Brctte—l)o you use the term railroad o r railway? Foote Lighter-Well, when I’m going out on tile -cars I say railway. When I ’m walking back home I call'it railroad. — Yonkers States man. B**i* Tfe Mugc Cura, “ To keej'i th e biKty in tufto,” write* Mr*. M aty Brown* 20 Lafay- Plaee, Pojughkeepale, N . Y, UI lake Dr, Klfig’s TH*m Life Fill*. They a re the tnoat reliable and pleasant laxative I have round.” Best tor the ' Hlomacb, L iver am) Bowels Guaranteed by a il druggist*. ,£5e. -. *< 1 fiannllMiiram in Xftglund. Woman Goan#) for grill and fry- M i; tftmUar m p t t i m f **oe*Muy.-»* tm & m d m M i fo r W w iU *5 “ ^ f r t o i m oitietS* O f t t i i i e t i e t h Y I k in r I ** flBRBWLYAVI vfterowere » numbz -wn including oonductorg, \ Saeraph operators, and or K n a t i Holiday to ba ^ mveriigatloa ^onduett officials a* to the n us ^ o f wrecking rite fines) « S t r a i n on th e roa« t Nc w e about 10:80 P. m . L L . The tra in passes S e c t i o n o f th e s ta te ab | n l mteute a n d go ing do * wealdmean death-and d ^ jhonld the track be obstru haj just aea freight tm in v ^ injrcver from one track V mzl HeltBft notified Oedarville ® imdpassed » tod light. H eouWb&done wa« to send *im t!P the track to signal the jleo /op, this befog done witbi nos distance of the freight. y t Thereappears to be eon flax jpte of opinion ad to the s h, Selma and the fovesrigatio determine the cause and JJ - tiamC- TV'lth the 1 m any ' recen t vrecks, causing loss o f h i ;ty tfie score, i t ' would s Pnj I railroad men would, exert-r iy / not only for th e ir own live tr. 1 f'otes, ffOAD S#EHi<NTEN re January 1st the. new yent into effect, th e chi ^tcjacl supervisors' being del, ' ‘wth.- The to ad s , in. the will be under th e 'd ire c tio new superin tenden t and vplace' the t o w n s h ip ' trust narked Mr, D av id Dixon. It is doubtful if a better j iot the place cou ld have be 'Mr, Dixon-has been a very r 1 ful farmer and is regarded ofgood ability, and sound j 1 He is conservative in al Which,means t h a t his ser resultin’good to the peopl township, Of eburae Mr. D have to have tbe bo-opes., these interested in road w • wo feel that he will be give aSfS LQm; UVE THE B( Bri l Municipal Ownership Would ft , Position Impreanablo. deferring to the recent annoi thatM.146' persons are on th of,New York City, the Newer tjser declarite that In the eveip Kt riclpal ownership of street electric light and gas plants, fl otherpublic utilities the city t T voWd constltete n political 1 vould make .h 'change of Hoft Impossible/ It recalls the fact that 2 te- 31 can imploycea in Philadelphia k ielphia In ib e bauds of tli Durham machine for years, »great popular uprising ovei grafters. ’ . 4 “If Durham h ad .had ,cont street railroads and other p in Philadelphia through ownership,” I t observes, ”lie hughed a t popular uprls would have befell a s ahsMuti igg itority as tbe caar.” ij g The point is well taken. r j« In Other cities the polittcr ntri wder public ownership wot wooid m Philadelphia and ,T Bosses may be pverth patters tamed ou t whenev «ewill it a t present. Public -*f all public ntuition WOUi u Would bind the people und deliver them info Jf •political grafters,—Lo -Record. WOW CITIES LOSE Municipal PUrd Boduos the subject of wsetves far mi **nMly recelvee *unlcipal owner y municipal ^Wehmentions 1 though it is jtii «t cost of pro £*Se&. Tiie om J^kcd, because rtese involving 1 *N? a loss of la « you own a *** tecoiviug a htesess your ten k yoursejf the w ”^ » e s a char ***** Just ngatant 3 S j 61 ^ Wohts exceed I ^ / e d . Simili ^otherwise qisj ?• corporation J^hchbc taxes //’totetlon b t^ ^ deration 0 Succeeds 11 « »i5f ?llt IK ** exci Took w . AiWtefeBij 5 % si ZL Du ?7 sp’dkci 2 * $ f o r , 2 V all<i imtoi 2* Ohdioa * T*mwei v«t
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