The Cedarville Herald, Volume 30, Numbers 1-26
I li E THIS CUT- recommend i t ; there isn»t ■ "Summer you have to 3degree to your h a t t e r . Cared For Meats >ather arc the only "^ind tq have proper appliances f0? them right* 'and they're 4 safe when sold. Don’t go pplng-when i t ’s hot, Buy .bo sure. H . CROU SE ,. JEDABY lhhB , O. 1 ZY LIVER :»reU *o « op 4 th rt Jt wraia *otb* n. I m i troubled * treat -de»l W.J? «»d i«»a*cii«, Now »toe« u w ii ndyC»th«rtl« iW t e r y w o o h b S tn^wcBBunood Wwni to tey ' ledfctpp X fcavo ever aeon." * t. Osborn HUIK o . a, WU niter, JT mi , Best for The 5ow«l$ HbKU)ll o c«.re or your moneybook, Remedy Co., Chicago or N.V. Eat i l L E , TEN MILLION BOIES, iep ur N erve nerve energy th a t runs, ms of your body. The . battery, is the nerve the brain and spinal. nd from this ba tte ry ; tree is sent ou t through em of nerves. T q keep !y healthy, you must mty of nerve force; it e not, th e organs -work :tly, th e ’circulation* is ‘ .^digestion bad, appe* r, kidneys inactive, and - sains and misery are ilty. ‘ can keep the system nth Dr* Miles' Mervine. :s in generating nerve it strengthens the. and makes, the 'whole strong and vigorous, pleasure in MiComnumUJng Nerylno to those entering vous prostration, insomnia lancholy. After several ilterlng from above alsQdses s medicine and found Irome- f, It soothes and strength- nerves. Chases away the id depressing thought* and sufferer renewed strength It is a superb 1 norye ro- rDGB JACOBr SEmMANN, JttUUon, Wisconsin. »* Heart Cure Is sold by list, who will guarantee that ottla will benefit. If j t falls Fund your money* >- edicslCo,, Elkhart,Xxid ;er$ slaurant. iatecl in ? th e Book- otel Building across let from the old ’ stand, Eestaurant. lobby and dining second floor, reached :or. Meals 25c and t i e e t j Sp iiiighv lc tf & ISE? MBUSOHIO likeW , * t n m i t o a f s #ee fh<* lifrt en.wlft'i W d e v . J iia t. t h e tlm n «? **•-, Oft* (Win Nr _______ W r H W f t i lift .'ilimam1 !i a humorist as Mark FINLEY PETER DUNNE If Finley Peter Dunne' hopes to become as famous Twain, he should change his name to F, P. Dooley. It is Mr. Dooley who is famous, though Mr, Daune does Mr. Dooley* Just now he Is wi ting a new' series; of Dooley talkss which some critics consider better than those preceding them- Mr. Dunne was born in Chicagonot quite forty'years ngo. . ., WILL" PROSECUTE VIOLATORS. The County Commissioners are preparing to prosecute the violators of the road law ■ and will cause a number of a rre s ts ' in a few . days* Mr.'Herbert Nash, son of Commis sioner -TSash, has heen appointed GUARDIANS-SALE OFREAL ESTATE. ,ln pursurance- of an qrder of The Probate Court of Greene County, Oliio, 1 to" be directed, I will offer fo special officer to- look afte r viola- sale, at public auction; oh Saturday lions. Ib is stated th a t a number Ae ,3th> day of April 1907 j at 2 of farmers have persisted in hauling during the. soft weather. The fina ls from $5 to $50. . The paper ,mill teams hauled a t night on one occa sion m order th a t the trip Would be oyer a frozen pike. WOMEN AND CHILDREN. Richmond, Ky., .March 12.—The . c iti^ns by 148majority said to-day that' the 12 saloons in 'Richmond . must g o . T h e whiskey men carried only one'prebfnct out of four. ■ The features oftlje day vvng a prer- • cession in. which 1,500 school child ren took part, each child carrying a lohg banner*on which was inscribed ” nYote for Me,” They marched to all the voting booths, where *’A t the Cross” and .“America” were sung. The women played a most impor tan t part. The weather was very rainy and the mud was deep, but this did not deter them. They donned gum boots and rain coats and waded right in. - JONES LAW UPHELD* The Supreme court on Tuesday virtually held the Jones law consti tutional by over-rujllng Certain mo tions of Toledo saloon keepers. The questid'h is-a most important ohe for local option in resideut sections of cities. The measure was furthered by the Anti-Saloon League' and passed by the last legislature, The, saloon interests as a whole have had little support Irorn the Supreme Court on important decisions. Oclock, afternoon, upon the premises, Real Estate hereinafter described, Sit uated in the The Village of CedarviUe, Greene County, Ohio, to—wit;— First; Tract—Being all of Lot Num ber Sixty Five (65) on Cedar Street in Samuel Nesbitt, addition in the Village ef Cedaiyllle, O. as the same is designated, number on said plat. . Second Tract;—Situate in the Vill age "of CedarviUe, Greene County, 0., and ’bounded and described as fol lows, to—wit;—Being at The South East corner of Lot Number Sixty Five Number (65)of Samuel Nesbitt, addition to The Village of CedarviUe, Greene County, O. and Runing South 72 degrees West I32 feet along the South end of Lots Number {65) and 66 of said addition to the. South West corner Jot of Number 06 Thence South 16 degrees East 140 and> 1—2 feet ;Thence N, E. with the middle of Massiescreek to Andrew's line; Thence'North 16 degrees West'-.115 •nd t —2 feet to the place of begin- ing. Containing 6i and 5—100 poles same more or less. The above described Real Estate has - been-appraised follows, to—wit!. First Tract;—Seven Hundred and Sixty Six ($766.00)Dollars. Second * Tract;—Three Hundred ($300.00) Dollars. . Each of said, tracts' to be sold for not less than Two—Thirds of the appraised value. Terms 6f Sale, Cash on day of fjalc, Thomas W*-St John. Dated* March 12—1^07. Guardian of Lydia Weymouth, . - ' Imbecile* Howard and Howard, Attorneys for Guardian, SPRING AND S U f lf lE R (f-,•*1".! ifill If you want to dress right up to date let us m a k e y o u r c l o t h e s . W e have the goods and we guar- antee the workmanship. Every thing to be first class or no sale* JACOB K The LeadingMerchant* Tailor, ANY, Xenia, Ohio. 'STAGE^EALISM, ITIg SCHOOLS OF U ILB IU IM H m 0 tW ? p r i s s y of Irvin, in a Be. A t d, mow* ^ a Thn lofo t w ' t . , . took place Terentiy in Belgium. ° T X* ? 1® lT Lfi?T,fa< 0vcv W O mart-lied r f VITT « G{ I through tho Directs of Bra^eb to i n n - o f t h o i n f a n t t i a l j to csk for obligatory! 5inw:'J thj education. The petition preccnted \ to the mayor was signed by 800.000 for which, of course, a large life- like doll was used instead of a real baby. The play had i%n a good many nights when oue) day the actor received a letter of protest from one who made it plain that he was a linn believer in realism on ‘"“The complete success of TIcnry VIII,J was marred last night,” the letter ran, 'when the king kissed the baby. The whole house tittered, “Herewith I offer the hire of one real baby—my own—for the pur pose of personating the offspring,” I t was a delicate matter’for Sir Henry tq, decline the services of a man's own baby, but with the help of his manager,, Mr. Bram Stoker, the famous actor composed a repjy which combined courtesy and hu mor and which has been incorporat ed in “Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving.” ' “Mr. Irving fears,” wrote Mr. Stoker, “that there might be some difficulty in' making the changes you suggest „with regard to the Princess Elizabeth'in the play. ‘T£ reality is to be achieved it should of necessity be real reality .and not seeming reality, for that we have already on the stage. A series of difficulties then arises, any of which you and your family might •find insuperable. • . * _ “I f your real baby were provided i t might bo difficult or even impos sible for the actor who impersonates lung Henry VlH. to feel tlio- real feelings of a father toward it« This would necessitate your flaying the p a rt of the king aiad further would require that your wife should play the part of Queen Aiine Roleyn. Tins might not suit either of you, especially as in reality Henry VIII. had afterward his wife's head cut off; “To this your wife might natural ly object. But •even if she were willing to accept this form p£ reality and you were willing to accept the responsibility on your part Mr. Irving would, for his'own sake, hare to object. “By law if you had your wife de capitated you,would be tried for murder. But as Mr. Irving-, would also be tried as an accessory before the fact he, too, would stand,in danger of his life* ’To this he dis tinctly objects, as he" considers the end,aimed at-is not worth the risk involved.” The Novelist’# Mission. The neglect of Disraeli's writings may ho in part due to the fact that most people tliink it is below the dignity of a stqtdnuaU or of any man following what is called a “se rious” profession to compose works of fiction. Certainly niany do not yet understand that the man who writes novels may be a very wise man. They do not realize that ac curately to portray human nature and to present pictures of life is not only a most worthy but also a most difficult task, requiring for its per-" formancC an intelligence far above the average acute powers of ob servation and-a keen sense of hu mor, for surely the great novelist is the observer sounding the depths while others glance a t the surface and examining the mysteries of Ijfe while others are content to over look* even the obvious.—^Melville's “Victorian Novelists.” Your Buggy Painted WOLFORDS A Great pity. In liia very', very early youth Mr. Mmnpser had heen a pretty child* His friends did not believe this was possible, and even he had forgotten all about it until one day he un earthed a painting of himself a t that period from among some old lumber. Tins he handed to his wife as Some compensation for his present. Somewhat worm eaten ap pearance. , “There, Alice,” said Mrs, Mump- ser, proudly exhibiting the picture, to the servant* “that is a'portrait of your master painted when.he was a child.” Alice gazed open mouthed a t the production. * “Lor*, mum,” she Said after some moments, “what a pity it is we have to grow up, ain’t it?” — London Standardi • H is Idea of • Wife. Discussing with a representative of an Irish paper the qualities a wife should possess, a tittup said the other day that she should he “aii all around woman,” between forty and fifty years, not handsome, but temperate. “If there is any drinking to . he done,” ho said, “I can see to it. She should lie able to wulk twenty miles a day and be good a t begging, bottles and pota toes and also a t ballad singing. She Should be able to fight a round or two to defend her husband when in , action,” ^ ^ •.............. | PATENTS names. Heady one-fourth of the population of Belgium is illiterate, i although the law offers- free eika-a-1 tion to those who cannot pay for i t . ' There is supposed to he a primary sehooBfor every commune q£ over 6,500, hut only a meager grant is allowed, and the teaching is often of the poorest*; The schools are man aged by the commune and not by the government, and any private place of instruction may be selected as the communal school. Educa tion practically ceases at the age of twelve. What was learned is soon forgotten, and the relapse into in difference and ignorance is inevita ble. The schools are inspected once & year. Although the* technical schools of Belgium are .fine, the pri mary system of this most crowded country* in Europe is wholly bad. Champagne Cork Frizes. The waiter as he removed the empty champagne bottle stuck the cork in his pocket. “What did'ypu do jha t for?” the guest ask .1. ' “For the prize,” the waiter an swered solemnly. “The champagne agent offers a prize every month to the wa er who sends in to him the most • tries., Four months ago, with 250 corks, I won. I t was $25 in gold, Not bad, eh? Another champagne firm gives- you a dia mond pin for 500 of its corks, for 1,000 a gold watch and for 1,500 a piano. There arc smaller prizes for fifty,* for 100, for 200 corks, and so on. All these things help to sell the champagne* A waiter, you know, with a low word or two cim nearly always force on a patron any dish or drink he’s pushing.”—New Orleans Times-Demoerat. Chicago R,aWe,<y- Representative Mann of Illinois never, loses an opportunity, to1ex patiate upon the glories and mate rial prosperity of Chicago,. One day he was holding forth in his usual strain when he touched upon the'*part played by the rail roads in that prosperity. “Statis tics show,” declared the member from Illinois, “that 1,150 trains ar rive in Chicago daily. These trains, run by some twenty-four companies, carry over 165,000 passengers. The railways have been a strong factor in. making Chicago what i t is to day.” .Whereupon Congressman McCall of Massachusetts’; smilingly' inter- J. jeeted: ' " • f “Mann, that's an awful charge to, prefer against thp railways 1”—Har per’s Weekly. * — •> SHIEXD & Yfcurself frpm error or faulty dress by buying a faultless garment. We Now Have On. display a Full.Line of S U I T S A N D O V E R C O A T S Perfect in shape, make, and pattern* Call early and gelt the choice. Springfield’s greatest Clothing store. 19, 2 1 , 23 Soutli Limestone Street, - . Springfield, O* "s . i . To Cure a Cold in One Day ToteLaxativeBromoQuinineTaWets. >0 X S even Mfi&m box es so ld in p a s t 12 m o n th s. T b l S S i g n a t u r e Garwc Grip faTwoI>«Qtt* , i © a e v e r y fr & V tj* * b o x . 2 5 c . Tho Influenza .Baeiltu*. * I f people habitually eat a little too much or much too little, if they make a habit of breathing* dirty air, if they systematically poij sonvtheir nerve centers with excess of tobacco or alcohol, if they period ically paralyze their white cor puscles with an overdose of old co gnac or new whisky, if they sit in overheated rooms and take little outdoor exercise, if they are over • or under clad—in any or fill of the foregoing Conditions the way is he- * ing prepared for the easy conquest of their tissues by the influenza bacillus.—Ileader Magazine. ! « Long Artificial Watercourse, The Bengal Canal.’ 600 mlloa in lengthy Is. the longest artificial water course in the world. Cape Cod Folk. ’ Some curiously appropriate names are to be found among the citizens ot a small village on Gape Cod, The; local lumber dealer is named .Lum- bert, tho milkman is,Mr. Waterman, the fish merchant is Mr. Phinney, the minister is .Mr. Paradise towLthe pro vision dealer is Mr. BAc6n .' C A S T O R IA *For Infants and Children. The KindYouHavaAlwaysBought Bears ths Signature of E b e r s o l e P i a n o s a b s o l u t e l y d u r a b l e . “We have for a dumber of . af t ; used Ebp»olePlanos.ln the Conservatorywhere they ire osWTntly subjected to tho hard est kind of use. Wo havft ioenu the Ebersole to bo a good, durable piano, well *,b' ■. v n3wear and tearof the nrailc I00R1, '■#*'* jJt ■>*’0H awk , Directress r » iti * 3 on«natory«t Mario. MAMUMOfWt it- ' - Th e Sm itn & N ixon iPiano C o . IS) am * *2 E . F o u r t h S t r e e t . . CINCINNATI, O . [H E WELD C*ve#t*. *HdTrmk.Mtricinbhdiifd *tlf*t ....... ..................... *■■*«cOT«m4c- KWSthin tho#*; "Walh'ittotoC1, > Aradmodel, drawl.* ; hm . w « od*iMf. it t ......... . , rhwg#, Orirfrtaot/oertll p»OH»t*»«or«A A "Itoi* P ikiU .-w ith St m m M tMV-S. *m» fenHfn Mlt-ttmti AwMIli . . X S o i e n c o h i t s d e v o I o p « d s o m e t h i n g In f in i t e l y b e t t e r t h a n th e o ld -s ty le w r a p o r c l a m p . GG rSITTSBURGH PERFECT” FENCES ARE WELDED ^ ■ BY electricity . This, is the mode#a. o f ccmttfietfojfi# T ts a rs c l fife ; added through th e elkrimatfott o f gtatiouslfiieo defects. AWI?APho!c!smcbtete,cratfat{mgaiw.nlfelngafedafioWttfiiW|lli#f8*'Ricfc^\i>l#«WtofrA.ttttlli atnoonl plvaalzlag on “F1TTSBDRGHPERFECT? »6IMFORC«» THE WtO* TECTION AGAINST RUST AT THE ELECTRICALLYWSLDED JOINT; tte jrioj. STAYS CANNOT Sl*lP. They are always fast whe*i t t i f Wtt# pA* SfaT did iRSaSnHteN fcteomeonepiecewhen thounion fetnait. The ftxrfeis hke# solidShell dptrfmhdrie*}. Every Rod is Guaranteed Perfect. Don't alW your prejadlceln favor oIihcraridly-d«cllring*nd iMWantlqt»t*dmttlMAltei<lw»v* ®herStofoesknown, towarpyct» goodj'Hgcicntf **PITTSBURGH PERFECT” PENCES REPRESENT PHOQRE**, btam e Wr#<k of thousarid*oi dollarsworth ofslandardmaterial h dailywokfedby electrfcfiy* The hoop on the average sugar barrel fcitheMated countrygrocery stows Is .in riocttis&Sy ws*dad ' produci. ■ ■. U yourwagonwas made Ina largefiefory, its tireswereweldedby thdtkkf* Youwill findefedricaffySvetdodhtops eftIcecreamfrtezers andwashingmachines, onmany tubs andtuckets. Examine thorn. ** PiTTSSUHOH PIRPEOTw fences vtt m|de fcythbmodem, UmpU and daarvelotisproees^ ptodricing81THEW tt.0 THAT HELD.1* MR* PARMER i LISTEN' NOW. Every agent handling11PlttEEUROH PERFECT” fm«*Na«Ao^ Dad toguarantee thist Thai tho wk**hr* not inJuroAot tho iolnio, That tho ftneo |o ooiteOiiy oOlMstotilo to uneven around* Thai tho otoy* wM not oopsrat* front tho otrands, THAI tho fsnoo la all rifht fa oeory portlOMlor! Coifa you Askany momdefinite protection? Your complete satlifact-on h afcsolutsly W *-’ ’o Hf withd-erria'; [ • e, f MtHdeble e< .•><*. free of - n d Al atent t*eet o . ( C. M. CROUSE. h 1 Vri’lfilWIniII t O.A.SNOWAOO. beMKhsimsrai*^ VltTAt*® KMKTFENCW<»*«»I IVW>
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