The Cedarville Herald, Volume 32, Numbers 27-52

frS&h?' -tm-rw rt» e*HS (San 4 tM , Fruits, Cneksrt, Cake*, Cereals of I All Kindt, r “* Ovoralls, Smater Coats and Hosiery ccoanviLLt, cu r ro a , jam es tow n * « d SOLO MEDAL FLOUR. And ♦ ♦ ♦ always tha b «»t in Staple Fancy Grocerio# at IMarland Bros TELEPHONE NO. 61. and ♦ ♦ ♦ LiRds-, Got theGift et dsey's, Dayton, L I N D S E Y ’ S Payton, Holiday cv r-J ■- ■ Th* bftat pts.efaItmytea for Holiday Has The Bargains. Bargains Special prices on Jewelry, Silverware, Cut­ lery, Musical Instruments, Suns, Gents'Fur- nishings, Clothing, Trunks, Valises, Suit Ca­ ses anti Holiday Novelties, You are Invitedto Call and Examine a Be­ wildering Display of Tempting Bargains. Getthe Christmas Presentat LindseyV T. C. LINDSEY, 27 .S* Main Street, Dayton, Ohio. F! NEWMEAT STORE I have opened a moat; itore ip die J. C Barber room and asks for a share of your patronage. The finest outfitinthe county has been installed for the storing, handling and re­ tailing of fresh and saltmeats. Our prices will always be consistent with themarketquotations. Inspection Invited. C. C. Weimer. for Winter Overcoats art dominant when you frequent the fashionable thorough­ fares or where the up-to- (late man is a ‘habitue/ because they have been made by us. Our fab­ rics are exclusive—our styles are popular favor­ ites, and no one In Ce- darville would be re­ garded as a man of fashion would have his suit or overcoat, his evening suit or Tuxedo made by any one but KANY,TheLeadingTailor, XENIA. OHIO. ~o*v*i+*rrt<tih ' m m s / TRY OUR JOB PRINTING DEAD FLIES. <u THE YGUNQ QAttiLEN. ATonof UP»d fl;: it t ?■ -->'{ fi'oj St thr Loji'l.iU »■>■ns .1>«-,.<{ i!i g[o M.flli 'V 1' 1 ?■*•■« 1 >it* ivftl. bjrfl-m < u]*t;vhv ,n-\ irfpi ,w 1>I m . Tin- j it'd .\iiiu/ou iLj. t 11 flu*. Brazilian* fi"«r ‘T>v,n tit* stream iu b*»Or amt woup in mil* lion* of ih*‘ fm* wjiuh tirrie in <iU-n*e eltvud-= j . m tl»» wan-rV edge. Tim ijiua *mi killed, dried thoroughly iff the »iui and jwked in bags. They are then shipped. Dead flit* con*tituy* one of the richest of foods Or animal?. For chickens the flies are mixed with other jnyralt- enti*, such as millet and corn. By themselves the fli.-s are too rich, hut their power of nourishment is ao great that a nmall quantity of them lias a most lienefif-ial effect, Two years ago the Braziliangovern­ ment ftopja-d the exportation, being afraid Unit the li«h in. the rivers would suffer by being deprived of this lly f.w;d. But the prohibition has Ix'en removed. Formerly dead flies sold at 10 uvula ft poinidj hut the demand has grown and the. sup­ ply so lessened that 30 cents a pound ianow charged, H« Wad am r«ir **■*, » *•••* scrupulous vlefancc and neat- in li* dreaa, oupht to hint* Splitting Grmnit* With Air, The expansive force of compress­ ed air is employed in a very inter­ esting way by the North (Carolina Granite company. On a sipping lull- side, composed of granite which shows no bed planes, hut splits read­ ily in any direction when started, a three inch Imre is sunk about eight ' feet deep, and the bottom i« en­ larged by exploding a half stick of dynamite. -A small charge of pow­ der is fired in this hole, which starts a horizontal prack or cleavage. Charges increasing in size arc ex­ ploded until the cleavage has ex­ tended over=a radius of seventy-five or, &hundred feet. Then a pipe is cemented info the bore, and air is forced in under a pressure of from eighty to a hundred pounds/ The expension of. the air extends the cleavage until it comes out at the surface on the slope of the hill. A horizontal sheet of granite several acres in extent-may thus be sepa­ rated. .... . Mr*. Burn* H*r Own Hous*kwp*r. Mrs, John Bums, wife of the la­ bor member of the Fnglhh cabinet; is her own housekeeper, and when she was presented at the. recent drawing room of the king andqueen was probably the only woman pres­ ent who could cook hex husband1* dinner. A «toty is told of Lady Haversham, who wrote to Mira. Bums, asking her to come to her “at home/’ the lady wishing to pose as one of the Liberal*. Lady Bar* ershamexcused herself for not call­ ing first, asshe oxpkined that “Bat­ tersea was so far from Grosvenor square/* Mrs. Burns replied that upon consulting a toap she found that "Gmvenor square wa« just the same distance from Battersea/* A Washington Jok*. feome Washington joker played a cttjel practical joke onthe editor of an eastern magazine. In the July number a letter commending re* cently printed “Treason of this Sen­ ate” articles u prominently display­ ed, The letter is signed “Dorsey Foultr, Police Magistrate/* Dorsey Foultx is the standing joke of the Washington i«>Hee detriment. He isa negro who while being tried for murder several yearsago walkedou* of the courtroom and c?<ia{K:d dur-c •‘ng the trial. Since that, time 1hor­ sey .Foultr has appeared in every part of the country, hut the Wash* ington police b%vo never captured him.—-Pittsburg Dispatch. A CyrtiSAt Vi*w «f Worftan. Arthur Symons seems to have been attacked with the Bernard Show microbe. In u meat book ho writes of a woman in whom he seems to ho irden-ely infere.-fed, “Woman a* ho taw her,” he says in his study of ( hri>tianTn;vaIga, “is tUo beast of prey, rapacious of af­ fection, time, money, all the flesh and all the roul, one3nerves, oneV, attention, plcasnre, doty, art itself 1 iSlio is the rival of the idea, and she newer pardons, She requires the sacrifice of the whole man. Noth­ ing less will satisfy her. And to love a woman is, for on artLt, t*« change One's religion/*People’ , Magazine, _ Ambitidua Ncwabsyei, The Boston•Newsboys, a protec­ tive union atHMatcdwith the Ameri­ can Federation of Labor* has vote,! to £fondoho of its members to Hay- yard onhcrslfy in the fall The n:> ionsome time"ago started ftscholar­ ship fund. hoping to raise $,VuO. The fund now amounts to i&JjOf', which yields an income of 5100, President Fil'd, an honorary mem­ ber of the union, urged the holy not to wait until the fund is com­ plete, offering to aCi opt the income f>f the present amount until it 33 larger, “'Hie 1senddiary of the. fund will ho selected hy compditive ex» animation. * * /........ W « eA * i— Him. •/jut '**'*’*, j I Jvtueiij»t*r one lumdsome jw-pg 1 fellow whom 1 mod to mv*t oeva* -.'luuily iii), uk » il 4 utm « who cap* Jiiredhiy y-iiiihful fa#cjr. I met hire, only at. ju/i'hiy. m he did not rise till Uta. aud Thu fact, with * wr- ram iieii* made nie that he w«« A gambler. In °my= inexperience it only invested bim with a certain ro­ mantic mystery. One morning *» I was going out to my very early breakfast at 8 cheap Italian cafe on Long wharf I was surprised to find him also de­ scending the staircase. He was scrupulously dreatad even at that curly hour/but I Wes atruefc by the fact that he was all in hli^eVend hit slight figure, buttoned to the throat in atightly fitting frock coat, gave, I fancied, a singular-melan­ choly to his pale southern face, Nevertheless hergreeted me with more than his usual serene cordial-* fty, and 1remerabsred that he look­ ed up with a half pulled, half amusedexpression,,at the m y rnortt- ing aky as, he walled * few stepi with me down the desert^, street, X could not help saying that I was astonished’to see him up so early, and he admitted fb ii in his usual Mablt^. a smiling significance remembered, that chance if he did it again/* As we neared the street corner n man in a buggy drove up impatient­ ly. In spite oFtfie drivet’a evident baste my handsome acquaintunco. leisurely and, liftjfigilits.gtol* got ini w sy haf to me with a pleasant smile, was driven away. I have a very lasting recollection of his face and figure as the buggy disappeared down the empty street. I never saw him again. I t was not until a week later that I knew that an hour after ho left me that morning he was lyifig dead in a little hollow be­ hind the Mission Dolores* shot through the heart in a duel for which he had arisen so early.—Bret Barters ‘Tinder the Redwoods.” • , j'r*-JrTi—"*“* AttMli* Knew H*r Builnvs*. Amelia was all sweef,,nice and nervous, and she said to her sweet­ heart*. , , “You have been so old n fnepd I want to tell you something/' I am,” and.ehe>blushe^ “ I am going to he marriedIw " ’ “ Wait!” he cried hoarsely. “Be­ fore you go further hear.me. I, must say it,lthough I have no right now, but I will have less right later. I love you. I adore yon. I have loved yon since we were children together, t dfc,not sen how I can live and see you the wife of anoth­ er. But at least you will know that l lum» iovul you all these years, and when you hear the wind sigh over, my distant grave—of course that is nonsense”— “ Don’t take on so, John Henry,” she said softly. “I ’mgoing to mar­ ry—yon!” Then the strongman fainted, and as shMbent over him a determined little line showed about her mputh, and she muttered, “ I had to do something to bring him to it.” A Victimof Sootoh Logie. A highland hotel keeper was one day having a squabble with anslUng- lishman in the lobby of the hotel about his bill. The stranger said it was a gross imposition—ho could live cheaper in the best hotel in London, The highland landlord replied; “Ob, nae doot, air, use doot. But dae ye no*1ken the reason?” “Not a bit of it,” replied .the strangerhastily. “ Weel, then,” replied the host, “as ye seem to be a sensible bit cal- lant. I l l tell yt. There’s 3GI days in the Lunnon hotel keeper's calen­ dar, but we have only three mouths here, Dae yc understand me noo, Breen’ ? We"maim mnk' hay in the htelan’awhen the sunDime?, for it’s unco seldomshe disV’ Lav* and Fully, “Let him but love me—I make no conditions?” said the virgin who was very foolish indeed. “He must love me for myself alone," said the virgin who wasn't quite so foolish. But the virgin who was least fool­ ish said, “He must lovo me in spite of myself.” It is mart, however, who proposes, find ho isn't so easily scared off by foolishness as by some other things. -'•■“Tuclr. ’ n A ah*r» In * Jaw*!, There is a story told of a French servant who was'shown a priceless jewel by a great duke. “ Thank you, my lord fluke/ said thermal! ofViencp, “for allowingme to share with yon the possession of m great a treasure” “In what way?” said the duke. ^"Why, your grace ran do nomore than look a? it. and von have ftl- loucd me to do the same.” Physicians Advise tS^SSSSS^S i *ow'1* ■ « *o««rh andMm*, andtsrf thejtrestsst J*, f*y of imdi*sffrd The la M m i m « » * " ! . VI i.vn » . « « . * . i m pm*r «*st.Wr, „ m t *iw raww% «na rent to# jctrttKt, - 9r^ i *?i LAXATIVE LIVER SYRUP CHRISTHAS Will Soon Be Here And now is the time to make your selection and the best place in Xenia or Greene County is SCHELL’S JEWLERY STORE -H ER E Y O U C A N B U Y - filledW.tcKfroM. .$I0io$2S (*ent«T goldfilladWatch from,. .$Sto $50 Ladies’xolidgold^case from,. .$10to$50 Gent’ssolid gold case .... .$40 to$100 Also,alineoflow priced watches for LadiesorGents f rom.. . . . . . .$1to$7 Diamond rings f rom. ,. . . , . , .$6to$400 Signet rings from,. . .. ........ $1to$16 TriplePlatedKnivesand Forks, per set ....... . .............. $3.50to $4,50 Quadruple PlatedKnives andForks, per set. ...... ........ . . . .$5 to$6.50 YoncanalsoseealargeOneof Sterling SilverTeaSpoons from$4to$10perset St?rling Dessert Spoons and Forks, $10to$16a set /V - t A N D A L S O FO R A N IC E G IF T , Toilet Sets, brush, comb, mirror, military brushes, clothes and hat brushes, ladies’ and gents* umbrellas, necklaees in gold filled and .solid gold, bracelets in gold filled and solid gold, gold filled beads and also solid 14K beads, scarf pins, dress pins, solid gold and gold filled sleeve buttons, gold and gold filled lockets, and an endless variety of set rings, signet rings, plain rings, band rings, all solid gold, silver and gold thimbles, gilt clocks, chafing and baking dishes, rich cut glass, large line of back combs, the largest stock In Xenia. C hests of S ilverw are , all trip le plated . Kodaks from $x to $20, and all kinds of Kodak sup­ plies. Kodak Christmas calendars mounted. Fine hand painted China. In fact a full and large line o f goods always to be found in a first class Jewelry Store. '« ' -; ■ , 1' * - 5 * / ' ' ‘ // F. J. pH- SCHE.LL, Steele Building^ 1 ’ X B B IA , O. A poor furnace is not only a' source of discomfort, but causes ill health, and wastes your fuel and your money. HIGH GRADE STANDARD FURNACES give younotonlywarmair, butpure, fresh air, to breathe, and it is warmed to the proper temper­ ature. STANDARD FURNACES are honestly made of the best materials, and will pay for themselves ina very short time by the fuel they save. They are not an expense, they ARE AN INVESTMENT earning you larger profits than almost anything else you can buy. OarCatalogis Ptet. Ask for it and forartyinformationaboutHeating. G i b l i n A C o , UTICA N.Y. X X GET OUR PRICES ON PRINTING A A To Cure a ColdinOneDay TA*LaxativeBromoQuinine t .**. ymyn. MtUk lit ] 4 ppmn umiHPPt ^ * v

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