The Cedarville Herald, Volume 34, Numbers 1-26

m mmasssm W H Y Y ou Showi«S"Bmy Y o w S h o e s Of M l c*1*»"tr IN THE X N l S i e y , ARCADE Springfield*s L a te s t andjjBeafc Shoe House This is not- only the largest Shoe House'5in this part of the state, hut it is the BEST. I t must be the best to continue the largest, and wo not only ■ continue to be that, but are making rapid strides far ahead of all competition. Far ahead in Selections, Styles, Qualities, Service, Comfort and Fit—for here you will find your ideal style of footwear a t just the prices you wish to pay. SEE WHAT ff ISLEY IS SHOWING BEFORE BUYING YOUR SPRING FOOTWEAR Men’BDress mid s tre e t Shoo and 0 \fordo, all otyleo |2 to ?0. Mon’o Working and Street Shorn*, a ll leathers, $1.23 to $4. Men’s Comfort Shoes, all leathers, $2!25 to $5. LadieB' Dress Shoes rind Oxfords, a ll leathers, $2 to $6. • DatUes Street and House Shoes and Oxfords, all styles, $1.00 to $8.00. Ladies’ Comfort Shoes and Oxfords, a ll styles, $1 to $3.00. . Boys’ and Girls’ Shoes, Oxfords and Slippero, all styles $1.00 to $8.00. In fan ts’ Sure Foot Shoes and Slippers, all styles, $1 to $2. i B«VV%V.B.\%VBV » V .W .V BVuVo»d"s‘VV.V,V«V«V«V.VV.V.WA"»W« Cut Price Meat Store. Spot Cash. A n order w i l l convince . C. C. Weimer. t t u .AWNINGS. JO H N F . STEM LER , Prop. . Banner Awning & Tent Co., —MANUFACTURERS OF— AWNINGS AND TENTS Waterproof Horse Covers' and Tarpaulins Cots - Camp Stools - Camping Outfits Canvas in All Widths for Sale , ... (} . 33N. JeffersonSt., Dayton, Ohio. • • Vacuum Cleaning.. Latest and Most Satisfactory Method Plant has been equipped with a new engine. All work Guaranteed. Orders will be filled as booked. Ask for Estimates on Wall Papering. C A L V I N E .W R Y . The PalaceRestaurant Mrs. Chas. Harris, Prop. Xenia Ave. Rooms formerly occupied by£C. C. Weimer. * Meals by day or week. Lunch served all hours. Furnished Rooms for Re.nt.rj THE HICH GRADE LEHR PIANO I t USED afcNDENDORSED BY Tit#flrawt C»!ts«na{«>) <sfM:ij!c, KrwYdrSt City, TNfPceM.lmaMftcil*#*«!S;:s 5 r, E;M!ae;!ofci«, CmfettkUtf It Wafts*Scfcja) 6 ) 0 ptt»,CkkM$, T)i# tmfa dmtmUty «fMasks, Ftrsaw,Cate, ■ AND OTHER LEAOiNO COHEERVAYORIER AswealffetfcidhMse fcsd jx«4rfa tone, atmMhs am, rrsfrs f»'ijMinen&fi-1 flamhlo «Mtewo*b*» t t t U S S ‘ ..... ... -f foihf.win too fivtti siflfccftUwbestiostmsaeat*rcnAa U is It# £ds« t fcm fw tho Is.-xac',w&srsiia '■!r aft'?^ncr-vat Thrtl toi«*&6»'j*todac£5 m Rssrksli *« i H / LIH It A COMPANY, Matmifra, - littOD i »«* -■ ■»— -......*^rrrr- Hu irfi.i-iinrthYtiirii^Ttfwrriiri BASKET WEAVESAND HIS PRODUCT Totally Blind, a Competent Basket Maker, Working at His A Society Helps Him to Dispose'of His Product. Home. Hanna’s Green Seal “THEMADE-TO-WEARPAINT” yHos stead the test of tiroe aad hao 'been improved In quality’with else patsbg years. . Many brands cf paint are offered for sale and spate oftes careful scffitEay is net givea the nihjcct with reference to the xjaality of the paint to be used. EXPERIENCE IS A GOOD TEACHER. TESTTHE QUALITY. It is a good idea to learn the eompoiitioaof thepaiat you intend to we, Th ere is a difference. " The printed formula appears on every package of Hanna’s Green Seal Paint. This Is an evidence of good faith and attests {Jus confidence the makers have in their product V FOR MIX RV KERR & HASTINGS BROS, * / f c . / A * 1' . CURING BAD HABITS, Try a tittle Self Hyjnotiam on Your Pot Weaknesses. In r, larue eastern eit^ is a profes- STOP BLINDNESS (By tho Ohio Commission for the ElinOt.) •“In the clear field for preservation of eyesight our allied antagonists, syphilis and gonorrhoea, still loom hugely menacing. Not that their menace to eyesight is as fierce as to sanity or woman’s life and health. Yet perslstenly, unabatingly, syphilis dims and sometimes obliterates the sight of children, women and men, quite guiltlessly infected. Children, congenitally infected, escape blind­ ness only, in many Instances, to lose all brilliancy of sight. And their elders occasional/ go quite blind. As for that twin evil to syphilis, gonor­ rhoea, it deals out darkness still more ruthlessly, qnd with a cold in­ justice. The few adults whose eyes become involved almost invariably infect only one eye. Tho percentage of cures is low, hut tho uninfected eye still serves. Not so with babies. Infected innocently at birth, their eyes are almost always both in­ volved; and without expert treat­ ment they often lapse into wwap'Hde and lifelong Mindayes. ■ -“Some . day tho public will stand erect, shake1 itself, lock its enemies in the face. Then syphilis and gon­ orrhoea, judged clearly as destruc­ tive diseases, not confusedly as by­ products of sin, will bo controlled, restricted, largely stamped out. Nor­ wegians, taking the question. up purely as one of public health, ap­ pear to have solved it, in part at least, and by the use of unsentimen­ tal intelligence. Can not Americans attack the same task? Just now a fusillade of leaflets doubtless does something, for this Individual and for that. Leaflets, however, leave syphilis and gonorrhoea as safe as Gulliver in Lilliput, a target for tiniest arrows. These first causes of blindness are ho yet impenetrable to attack. Only results are vulnerable. But these results are. diseases of the eye which themselves may be cut off. The childhood eye-disease caused by, congenital syphilis can lirobably almost always be prevented by long and patient expert care; and the gonorrhoeal infection of babies* eyes at birth can he neutralised by an act as easy as rolling off a log.” Thus writes Henry Copley Greene, Agent for the Prevention of Blind­ ness, Massachusetts Cominisison for •the Blind, in “New Boston.” The Ohio. Commission for the Blind points o ;t to Ohio, citizens tho fact that since the great dlscoverj of Crede no physician dares bo ignorant of the remedy for needless blindness of babies. ■■"Leaflets*' such as are mentioned above will bo sent free to apy Ohio citizen who will write to the Ohio Commission for tho Blind, Columbus, HOMETEACHING FORSIGHTLESS (By the cWo CoRimr-ri'rn for tho Blind.) Have yon a friend who in blind? It> his life that of shut-in? Would ha not he happier if a field of activ­ ity were opened to him? One of the purposeo of tho Ohio Commission for the Blind is to send teachorti to the homes of the- blind adults to bring to them the opportun­ ity to learn reading with the fingers. There is open, free of charge, to all blind readers a fine library of excel­ lent hooks, and our government has also provided for the sending of tho boolto from tho library to the reader and back to tho library again with­ out cost for postage; in other words, tho hooks are franked. Hand v/orl: of various sorts would also be taught by home teachers. Thus occupation would take the place cf idleness. Only lack of money to carry,on this work has forbidden Its prosecution. Tim general assembly will be asked to provide for this great work in the appropriations to be made tills winter. eionai hypnotist who bus a wide repu lijtlou for curing the habit of intern* peranee. His method is dirt simple. “There is no real hypnotism about It —unless it is a mutter of self hypno­ tism." tills professor once sakj. "I simply observe the mind process of the niau that drinks and advise him how to reverse it. 'The Subconscious solil- 0 pry iu the mind of the man that dtinlts runs something like this: 'When did I have my last ball? AVhew! Long as that! i- don’t see how 1 stood it so long. W< ’hln’t have ’thought it possible/ And so on the victim repeats to himself on the .prin­ ciple that lie needs this periodical stimulant just as .it is necessary to heap coal on to fire to keep it from burning out. In a word, that man self hypnotizes himself into the belief that lie needs a drink. “My advice to cure this craving is not to tight'the appetite, but to tight down the cause that leads to the ap­ petite.’ Lot a man repent to himself' over and over again: ‘1 really don’t • need Ibis drthk. If t take It, it’s slm- . ply a matter of pouring so much down ' my throat superfluously, for l could get along without/- Before long be will be surprised bow instead of hyp­ notizing himself into drink be will hypnotize himself out (if it*’ ■ Simple, isn't it? But if this self hypnotism or whatever you choose to j call it is a cure for Intemperance why • is it not equally a recipe for curing other bad habits?—Chicago Tribune. | CALL AND LET US SNOW YOU OUR - Double Disc Harrows Spike Tooth Harrows John Deere, Sore Drop, & Sattley’s New Way Corn Planters S tee l Land Rollers Buggies, Cream Separators Posts Tile Fence and Salt Doub le arid S ing le s e t s of > \ Driving and Work H a rn e s s T h e b e s t on t h e M arK e t f o r t h e m o n e y TRY SALVET STOCK SALT. C. N. Stuckey&Son. KNEW HIS BUSINESS. This ' Parisian Beggar Realized the Value of New Shoes. Begging has long been a great a rt In Europe, By using subtle touches of misery am) calculated effects of dis­ ease ami dismemberment the beggar became a master of pathetic appeal. A delightful story of Dupre, the sculp­ tor, is quoted by Hamilton W. Mabio In tho Out took. Looking «ut of his window in a ho­ tel one blealc wintry morning In the good old times, Dupre saw an old beg­ gar sitting barefooted on the stone steps below. Ills heart was moved with compassion, and be began to search for a pair of shoes; He found two pairs, one of them n^w. » POOR TOOLS ifte Cause of Fye Injuries, "Do not give tho new pair away; you will need them yourself,” urged Ills prudent wife. "No," said the sculptor, “l shall find the old pair more comfortable. More­ over, If \ am to give anything away I am going to give the best 1 have," So be hurried downstairs and put the new shoes in the bands of the bare­ footed old man. The nest morning the beggar sat on the steps as usual, and, as usual, his feet were bare. Dupre hurried down to him, • “Where are the :Uwra i gave you? You are not wear­ ing them/* ho said. "No," replied the old man, *‘I could not near them, excellency. If l did nobody would give me anything. X have pawned them." Al.^iStiammer^-as boughtftomafellow £ wofkm^.forfifty cents, amt it was :;.iflSdeciPe&eapmaterial.Theends r w iiayebcegcb'tpped lik^ shells fromah piece howninthe pie* Altered a worj;thans 9 «. / ASooci hammer wh W i hdvebrokeninthtsway Lakes of Blood. The name Lake of Blood or its equiv­ alent has been given to places as far apart as England and i-oatli America. "Sanguekii” i. e ’. tin* Lake or Blood—wau tin* name gi\e:i by the vic­ torious Ncvnr.i'.ts to the battlefield at Hastings, where the Basons were over­ thrown and sialu with terrible ‘.image, I’or a similar reason Lake Tm-imenc? has borne the name "Hangiuetto” be­ cause its waters were reddened during I-it* second I’unic war by the blood of f.,mio 13,000 Itoinans who fell before the troops of Hannibal. Yet another Lake of Blood, called also "Yaguar Uorha." is situated In the state of Ecuador. It la one of a series of lakes formed by the extinct erniero of volcanoes ou the towering heights of tho Andes range of moun­ tains. » C I NC I NNAT .mmm / Piles or Smiles? h POSITIVE GUARANTEE {ofaatClaifij'K’Iwsaalt'/taaWjcteaftilh m , m m M ID ! $1.4@£*{rats«3 is*£j> f r o m Coc3ai*v||Ie s w & s r , s p u n s s m T rain I obvcr ,fso ffir.A fi-irattea dir.-awry, of f r^ lo iu t:* :r-\f v f! r t l o H t c l u n R t i ’ra , J‘c - "c?, r a ft lih om a , Eit>R W i.ra n X b ,’;, j , , 1 \ 'th J ilii.-'b W n t’m- j f ; ! c-ie .-i U-A K / f thn g, • u", to - C‘ j t t>„, r~>\ ■ fh e uOiCveon (vr., "-..i .it’.'/. X ' :.U-:L;.:Us gaw- i a* Ico- ,*u' 7 , , 1. 1. „ „ , . i ' vj< n ornteHib Trial ( l o 3 < w I t ... , .OVi( K ,vt.tvxusutag, mi 0, €, mT»ERC0„Toledo,Ohio Tho Donkoy'e Head. Among tho moat extraordinary piece:) of symbolism known to have been used by the early Asiatics was a figure of a donkey’s head used an a representative of the deity. There io no doubt what­ ever that the name emblem was once used among the Hittitc-s, the Egyptians mid one or two other nations as a sym­ bol of their red god, But. The super­ stition of the yellow donkey of India, the story of the mvift ass of eastern Asia and the ass of Dionysius and many other mandolin ass stories are ;iii survivals of that curious form of ’religious woiiihip Hie adoration of the ass’ head. They Doth Know. The fool said one day in the king’s presence. "I am the king!" And tho king laughed, for ho know that his fool was wrong, A week later the king wan angry be­ cause of an error he had committed, and exclaimed. "I am a fool!" And t!m fool laughed, for he knew that his king v,un right. iheutestie Pets* telco'<A t>$ mm m iw, u r n ' Aau-ihtot luj *. «i ATLAS HOTEL and. RESTAURANT, REMODI,ED - REFURNISHED Popu lar Priced R e s ta u r a n t for Lad ies and G en t lem en . - S erv ice is unexce lled S. D e tro it s tr e e t , X en ia , O. Torture! Torture!! Torture!!! And the most severe torture, is suffered daily by hun­ dreds of people with the piles. Stop tha t torture by using ST. GERMAIN P ILE SUPPOSITORIES, Mr. George Kennedy of South Solon, O., has this to say for this good medicine. South. Solon, O., July 20th, 1901. To Whom This May Concern and Especially Those Suffering with the Piles:—I v/as afflicted with protrud­ ing, itching and bleeding Piles for 25 years. At times I could not work at anything for weeks. I tried every Pile remedy I could hear of, some would ease me a short time, but there wasn't anything tha t cured me until I used St. Germain Pile Suppositories. I begun using this medicine one year ago, and it has cured me sound and well. This is the first .summer in many years tha t I have worked a t all kinds of work in ease. I have worked a t very heavy work such as handling sewer tile and ditching, and have felt no signs of tlieir return. ^ I cheerfully recommend “St. Germain Pile Suppositories” as a safe, mild and easy cure, to those who are in need of a medicine of thin kind. « ST. GERMAINPILE SUPPOSITORIES are sold on its merits to cure Piles or Refund YourMoney. C. M. RIDGWAY mmm \ \ p 11 T ess ! Ha m to ll t s m • m i In • nm w it N a Lir Tbt pri M H Wc Mi ed Mb Chi P Mo! Stri nuu S P ir< Fo >y 1 Lar tore S. ; Al th l merit f THE RAPID Folding Go-Cart combines comfoi t, durability and appear­ ance at tiie lowest possible price consist­ ent with quality. Mother's sr.oiios-,-, “ Nothing too good for tho baby." „ We also inanufacturo Tkompson’o Folding Crib. Sanitary, ■ comfortable, convonient, durablo and ecoaonflcal. Ask your d raler to chow you a “ Itopid bolding Lo-t art ” and Thompson’s Fold- tn g fn b . both of wuuh aro aurac-irasy articles for vnfr fl'lhtL FT!rAL-Uttfr w . tho baby, Tho bert ono motion Coliansiblo Cart mtfc. If your dealer doc» not hasidlo these two articles, write us dirett for price and ciraufats. * U c# not MISHAWAKA F01DIU0 GMMUE CO., MIAmtln, I m L TR' r a k a r /

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