The Cedarville Herald, Volume 34, Numbers 27-52
M: erediths .usic Store. tDAYTON* O. Now L o c a t e d A t 131 S. LUDLOW, New Cappel BTdYU Second largest Stock ' , •% 4 , |iu Ohio, . HEIjP US GROW The Cedarville Her&kL £ 1.00 P e r Y e a r . • i X* KARLH HULL 'M'J! aiuf” Ed ito r Eatpred the Poat-Ofllce, Cedar- vxlle, October. 31, 1897, as second qlae* matter. FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1*10 The -way the Indian medicine ven dor sold, his wares on the street the past few nights would remind one th a t the community had not been in a healthy condition. J f<The liv e r Pills act So Naturally and E a s i l y ” Such a statement, coming from the cashier of a hank, shows what confidence responsible people have. In these pills. Mr. A. L. Wilson after trying them wrote: • "I Have used Dr. Miles* Nerve and 'D iver Pllla and also your ' Anti-Pali). Pills, on, t p ^ U , with good results. The Liver Pills ac t so naturally and so easily th a t I scarcely know th a t X have taken a pill, Frequently .being troubled w ith headache I take*an Anti-Pain PHI and get immediate relief In every case.” A. L. Wilson, Sparta, 111. . Mr. Wilson was fop a number " of years cashier' of the F irst 1 National' Bank of" Sparta, Dr. MUes* Nerve and Liver Pills are different frpm others. Many kinds of liver pills are “ impossible” after .one trial on account of their harshness. Dr. Miles* Nerve and Liver Pills do no ta c t by sheer force hu t in an easy, natural way,, with out griping, or undue irritation. , Xhey are not habit forming. If tfte first bottle falls to benefit, your druggist will return the price, ^sk.hlm, MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind. «0 YEARS* EXPERIENCE TttaoE !WArt«« D esign s _ ConVniaHTS&c. •Asrtff* sendln# a sketch and dascrlptlontnay la fttlr MVtrtatn our opinion free vnether an - i ll probably patentable... Commnnlea. itw oonfldentw. KANDBOQKon Patents . XXU . , B.pcr.f 0 rC ur|nrcPoatonuw e, lath e Imertedt!, ljr. Lsrijeat. etj al. Terms,13 u »Unowsdonlar*. JK SSS rnM i G E N E V A C O L L E G E ‘ ' C O tEU V C A T JO X A L A college of liberal culture with ex* ceptionally high literary standing. Ta pers accepted by leading universities. Six courses leading to degrees of certi ficates, Large school of Music. Rates moderate and opportunities for self-help abundant, Alimitednumber of scholar ships Carrying free tuition available. Address GENEVA COLLEGE, Reav er Falls, Penh’a. HUNTING FISHI HalfHull__ lift i«la the«# oatdoef foru. . rant ttin orr*4ftt ttst jwittm. in kk hr lAmmjti ytar he PTlTiteM. Jf jen’tf i t thfM thltgt i n tatty tht . tiATIOHALtfOATIMM ll» p*tMa tnttlh, IMS« r**n lnttrteurf, litw- «Mi», Ihriuini, lift Bic- Intfd. tiorift, nn ktatiw, tnd bo v yh# Uv«* vkirt the** »Uhi»# •flat ofihW *X* ucAt sKctMLTM/yitrfi SendwJff.ftMBjif tr ,«*fh M h » »« vm«m« ym «; four tf 8>t h tge&mkb . tntvttu*r '•l*nfftt tf to# hetw _wnM ithed ttwete «tM W*»S p»ht rtfnitt Kite, Mf.} *» . jMHtWIit tnt. ftt hetkt- .... **i p H hndiH. Othyanbestthltf ftk.r»t»i*f r-*i«*. s o t,) Aib ...4 p, m XtMtMisrmnMa , , isc, l rovu > I k ? i I _ w >so* « e JC » MATiOHALSfOSTSMAfr.liMylttfeAmlSb tales The producer. '•ft must ho Annoying to have to aelr >our husband for money," said the in* rusive woman, ■"I wouldn’t think of [olng so/* replied Mrs. Cumrox, “We odist on family games of bridge and w that way avoid being under the lightest obligations for what he con* T ‘rs* -w*. Both Senator Foraker arid Sena tor Biclt, one time senators, have' been mentioned as candidates for governor, The announcement has not been formerly made bu t since the latter has been sued by his phy sician for a medical bill, the pro fession will not over-exert them selves for "Checkbook Charley,’* The New Carlisle Sun states that oiling the streets has been respon sible for driving the birds out of the trees along the residential streets If such he the case Xenia avenue residents should give the street an oil bath for experiment and be re lieved of the nightly pest. Says tiie Ohio State Journal: “ Senator Burton's efforts to con fcinue the monetary commission be yond December 4th'next will be al most universally condemned by hlB constituents. The people don't have much faith jn th a t commission either in itswork or in the way It is doing the work." Which brings to mind what has the* Senator sup ported yet th a t was really of great interest to the people? The coming constitutional ' com vention seems destined to have three important subjects, any one ol which will probably keep the work of the convention from being rati fied by the peopie. The liquor ques tion, taxation and Initiative and referendum. The cities strongly favor the latter without respect to party lines as do many prominent farmers. Again, we find tha t both the liquor interests" and the local option people have no objections to the measure, which would indicate tha t the opponents Will have a hard task keeping It ou t of the constitu tion. , . . Dr. H. M, Brown, prominent stock breeders And land owner and a re publican leader in Highland county is a candidate, to the constitutional convention and has announced bis platform in- the Hillsboro News Herald. I*iquO£_ license should be Aejparately submitted to the .people from other issues; one per cent, tax is a good one and should be made permanent with additional measures Cor hringingout intangible property; initiative and- referendum for the will of the majority; simplified mu ulcipal government; weman’s suf ferage if it Can be shown th a t they are ready to exercise the righ t of franchise. There is nothing else that the Dr. needs to catch a vote. Dry Detectives Ini Osborn. Dry detectives entered a restau rant In Osborn Wednesday but no announcement is given out as to what was captured, while the jpro prletor, George Oster, claimed that nothing Was found. I t is the first raid conducted in the village, the detectives being armed with search and sejzure pa pers. Too Literal,. An Atlanta grocer told more than he meant In his Christmas advertise** ment: "Apples, Oranges, Imported Nuts, Fruit Cake. Shop Now and Avoid tho Rush. Remember, the Early bird. Qele the Worm,’"—Everybody’s. $10# Rewards ?I00. The rtaders of this pspar vrfil bt plMie* tol«ern that there k at least one dnades dleeemthat tnleaet has been able to e«weIn ail ifn stage* and that Is Catarrh. Hall's CstaVrhOurc is the only porttiv* «ar**ov knew* to the aaadieal fsetemlty. Chianti being a eonstiiutlonAi dimeae. requires a otiustUothmal treatment, Hafi'a Catarrh Cure is taken internally, aiding directly up on the blood and raucous sumoes of system thereby destroying, the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building fipthft constitution and SMtetinf nature hi doing Its vrOrit, The proprNtdie bare so much faith in its curatlv* powers, lmt they Offer one HundredDollars tor any Sake that it fails to okra, fisnd for list o twrtAmonWa. . Addma ». h CHENEY ACo, Toleda 0, •eld t»r Drofgirt, 78*. all's Family FiUs me tbs best* ~STO>IESS OF The SOUTH."" Character of the Rank and FHS of the Confaderate Army. A glance at the personnel of the Confederate army in tho ' years 1801-5 will perhaps ho. instructive. In its ranks are serving side by side the song of the plain fanner and the eons of the great landowners—the southern aristocrat. Not a few of the men who are carrying muskets or serving as troopers are classical scholars, the flower of the southern universities. In an interval of the suspension of hostilities at tho bat tle of Cold Harbor a private soldier lies on the ground poring over an Arabic grammar—it is Crawford H. Toy, who is destined to become the famous professor of oriental languages at Hartford university. In one of the battles in the val ley of Virginia a volunteer aid of General John B. Gordon is severely wounded—it is Basil L.- Gilder- sleeve, who lias left, his professor’s chair, at the University of Virginia to serve in the field. Hq still lives, wearing the laurel of distinction as the greatest Grecian in the English speaking world. At the Biege of Port Donelson in 18GR one of the heroic captains who yield up their lives in the trenches is the Rev. Dab ney 0, Harrison, who raised a com pany in his own Virginia parish and entered the army at its head. In the southwest; a lieutenant general falls in battle—it is General Leoni das Polk, who laid aside his bish op’s robes to become a soldier in the field, having been educated to arms at West Point. I t is a striking fact that when' Virginia threw in her lot with her southern sisters in April, 1861, practically the whole body of stu dents at her state university, 515 out of 530-wbo were registered from the southern states, enlisted in the Confederate army. That army thus represented the whole southern people. I t was a self levy en masse of the male population in all save certain mountain regions in Vir ginia, North ■Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia. 1 One gets a possibly new arid sur prising conception of the character of the rank and file of the southern army in such incidents as the fol lowing: Here are moibk trials going on in the moot court of a certain aitillery company, and the discus sions are pronounced by a compe tent authority' “brilliant and. pow erful/* Here is a group of privates in a Maryland infantry regiment in winter quarter-huts near Fairfax, V a .,.Grid among the subjects dis cussed are these: Vattel and Phil- more on international law; Hum boldt’s works arid travels; the Af rican explorations of. Barth; the in fluence Of climate qa the human features; the culture of chiton; the laws relating to property. Here are some Virginia privates in a howitzer company solemnly officiat ing at the burial of a tame crow,- and the exercises include an Eng lish speech, a Latin oration and a Greek ode!—Randolph H. MoICim in American Review of Reviews. England’* Union Jack. The original flag of England-was the banner of St. George (white, with a red cross). This in 1606' was incorporated with the'banner of Scotland (blue with a white diag onal cross). This combination ob tained the name of the “union jack” in allusion to tho union with Scotland. This arrangement con tinued till tho union with Ireland in 1801, when the banner of. St. Pat rick (white with a diagonal red .cross) was amalgamated with it and forms-the present union flag. I t is generally understood that the word “jack” is a, corruption of James.— Hew York American, AHIWAIS’ TOIUTV" Fur Seal* Ar* a* Particular aa Women In Fixing Up. Tbe cat carries fear ejotbestnjsh in lier mouth, for with her rough tongue She cleanses her glossy coat as a hoy' brushes off bis clothe*. She licks one of.her front paws and rubs it over her fare and she is ready .for her break fast. Foxes, dogs and wolves do not use their mouths when they need to v^ash and brush, but scratch themselves vig orously with their hind paws and are as fresh as ever. The cow with her long, rough tongue combs her coat of hair until it. Is dean and curly. The horse more than any other animal depends ou his owner to keep his coat fcLproper condition, but often be will roll on the green grass or rub. himself down against a tree or fence. Field mice comb their hair with their hind legs, and the fur seal in a similar manner spends as'much time as a wo man In mrklng herself look Bmart. Although the elephant appears to lie thick skinned and Callous, he takes great care of his- skin. He often gives himself a shower bath by drawing water Into" his long trunk and blowing It on the different parts of his body. After the bath he sometimes rolls him self in a toilet preparation of dust to keep off the fljes.--. 6 ur Dumb Animals. GAMBLED fOB A GIRL Prines Lticioq Bonapart* Wpn a Brid* From HiS Brother Pierre, It is said that the two brothers, Prince Louis Luclen Bonaparte and Prince Pierre, in .their early youth when shotting mouflotis Jn the moun tains in Corsica, came across a beau tiful peasant girl vrlth whom they both fell violently In Jove, Who she was and whether.she favor ed both brothers Or neither I cannot 1 tell. Be that as”it may, they quar- [ reled. Les preur chevaliers of old would no doubt in similar 'occurrence have had recourse to lance, and sword. The Corsican princes decided to play for their belle a game Of cards. They went to:the.nearest Inn and wrote and signed a paper agreeing that which ever won the game should marry the lady fair. Prince Luclen won and. faithful to his word, a Short time after married Ngfe*, - , She never left the Island as far ns I know. Prince Luclen lived In England, securing to her a.comfortable income, which she received,till her death, some where abonl the spring of 1891.—From the Princess Murat’s Memoirs. Flower Perfum**. A garden foil,of flowers is more fra grant when shadowed by a cloud than when bathed in Uunsbihei at least that Is the conclusion, to which experiments of n French scientist Mad. He asserts that it is light arid not, as commonly believed, oxygen that exerts the. great est influence in desortylng odors. Ac cording to the same authority, the in tensity of the perfume given off by a flower depends upon the relation ^be tween the. pressure of water in the cell* o f the plant, which tends to drive ont ,the essential oils that cause the odor,- an.A the. action .ofAha sunlight, ■which tends to diminish Water pres sure In"the cells. Sprinkling the plant Increases the turgescence and as a consequence a mote Copious production of perfume. At night the air round a flower bed is ‘heavy with odors, be cause then their emnnntion is not op* posed by the sunlight.—New York Tribune. M arin** a n d Sailors. Marines are really soldiers serv ing on shipboard, and not sailors. They are a part of the armament of the ship, not a part of its crew. The marine system began in the British navy about the year 1665, when an order in council authorized the raising of 1,200 soldiers for sea service. The system, however, o‘f having soldiers exclusively for serv ice a t sea was not carried into ef fect until 1698, when two marine regiments were formed, W ell B ehaved. Mother—I don’t like the looks of that hoy I saw you playing with1on the street. You must not play with had little boys, you know, Son—Oh, he ain’t a had little hoy, mamma. He’s a good little boy. He’s behn to the reform school two times, and they’ve let him oul each time on account of good be havior. .v. .. Th« $h*p*s of Egg*. There was recently had before the Zoological society of London a mathe matical discussion of the differences In the shape of eggs. A few eggs, like those of the Owl, and the tortoise, are spherical, or nearly so; a few, like the grebe’s or the cormorant’s, are ellip-t tical, with symmetrical jbnfls; tho great* majority, like the hen’s, are ovoid, or blnnter at ono end than the other. Tho hen’s egg is always laid blunt end fore most. Eggs that are the most unsym- metrlcai are also, eggs of large size relatively to the parent bird. The yolks of eggs afe spherical whatever the form of the entire egg may be. This has been shown to be due to their being Inclosed In a flnld, the “white/’ Which makes the'presaure everywhere on the surface of the yolk practically constant—Scientific American, New Game. “What waa. that tiresome old ex plorer talking about?” inquired the languid lady. • “Progressive Patagonia.” “And how do you play it?”— Louisville Courier-Journal. J u * t « l i t T o* A p t To eke ont his salary the people of a Snail country 'church gave their pas tor a donation pftrty. among the pres ents being a fine new dress coat for the pastor and a pretty bonnet for bia wife. On the following Sunday as they walked up the aisle in their new habili ments the choir Inadvertently struck out with the volantary--much to the discomfiture of the eensitive clergy man and his wife—“Who are these in bright array?’’—Ladtek’ Home Journal. Young, but Wits. "But mamma thinks Xam too young to marry." "Why should a te think that? You're much older than she was when she got married, aren't fbaT" “Yes, but father was drawing a much larger aalaty at the time than you're getting,’’—Chicago .Record-Her ald. Practiced, but Nat P«rf*ct. Jack—I’ll be frank with yon. You are not the first girl i've kissed by any means. Mrtfld—And I’ll be equally frank With you, Yott have ii great deal to learn, even at. that.—Boston Tran* script. ' Resolve not to be poor; whatever yon h#re. spend less.—Dr. Johnson, THE HK H GRADE LEHR PIANO It USEDANDENDORSEDBY Tht tnm* CMMcwfaff t f NewVwk Ofiy. Hit PtSfttyivtAlt OtllMt tf Muilt, PMU m W jx M*. . CM m > s « CM itmftff a Hta»b*wktkttl *fv)Hn*,GlMt|t. Hit PittMt CM ttm ttfi tf Mailt, IfotMt, fltlt, AND OYHkR LtADlNCI OdNiiRVATORIINI : • J 0 *M, , pU ttft to-day, it M p rtw o e ii* T b tiu r- (A# «o*t*r. . . in ttHf MMlttt HflitHfl A COMPANY, MBmtfr** iB B t f t t f P i * i|W ...... . . , , «i*i. ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT, AVefetaKelkfpsntionfirAs- slmilaitegilBfbotfaMlftflito ttagUicStomadisaaiBcwmcf I nfants •'Tnii.muN PromotesDigestkmOeeifuP ness andRestJCoiUalnsnekte OpiunuMorphinenorMoeral N o t N a r c o t ic . BafkinS*d- Jkk.it/um* jBUMfeSdttr £s&* MSTOBIII gor Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of ApertectRemedyforCOns^u- Hon, SourStomach,Dlarrttcet Worms,ConvulsionsJeverisli- ness andLoss OFS leep . ' .Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. A t b nttmtlifo o ld j 5 l ) o s ^ - 3 5 C * f n |;ChJaranmed.imder ^ Exact Copy of Wrapper. In Use For Over Thirty Years c m THECENTAURCOMPANY. NEWYORKCITY. Great Bargains -a t— Hutchison &Gibney’s D R E S S S ILK S—' NewJLot, 85 c |G ood s ^ For 59 cen ts SOM M E R S ILK jg FOU LARD S F p r jz s cents M E S SA L IN E Black,Jyard w ide jj . 89 cents HO U SE JD R E SSE S $ 1.00 Each XENIA, OHIO. IT WILL JUST TOUCH THE • SPOT and prove an every day winner every time. Goodhea’th, good cheer and long life is what wo promiee if you Buy Our Meats Microbes* disease and deathlurk in a lot of the meat that’s sold, but not in ours. We sell the best and a t a fraction above cost. Our market is safe and not high priced. G H* CROUSE Cedarville, Ohio. Newfrom CovertoCover WEBSTEBtS NEW . INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY JUST ISSUED. Elio Chief, Dr. V/.T, Harris, former U.S. Com. o f Education. The Wehster Tradition Developed by Modem Scientific Lexicography. Keyto Lit eratureo f Seven Centuries. General Information Practically Doubled. 2 iroo Pages. 6000 illustrations, 400,000Words and Phrases. GET THE BEST in Scholarship, Convene ience, Authority, Utility. The Bookmalte? •* t t t v IN THE B 0 0 KWALT 6 R HOTEL . HIGH STREET DINING ROOM, FOR LADIES UP STAIRS ALSO REST ROOM. M E A L S NOW . *15 C E N T S . Lunch Counter on Main Ploer Open Day and Night. The Best « t Good Used in the Cul inary Department. J . H. McniLLAN. Funeral biraotor and Furniture Dealer. Manufacturer of Oemeat' Gr»yt y&ultu and Cement Building Bloeke. Telephene 7. Cedurrllle, Ohio. TMI I I11 1 1IiHMIIII rM— _ DR. LEO ANDERSON, Veterinary Surgeon and Dentist. GRADUATE O, S. U, Office Waddle’s Livery. Barn. Cltizens’Phone 08 and 81 ' CEDARVILLE, - - OHIO smnateseuMEeEEamemnBeancKManMi'r Very Serious It is a; very urioue matter to ask ft$; one medicine end have the wrong one given you. . For this reason we urge you in buying to be careful to get the genuine-— B u C T aug HI liv e r Medicine The reputation of thh old, relit* ble medicine, for constipation, in- digMtipn and liver troubl 0 , I* firm ly established. It docs Led Imitate ofiieTmedicines. It is better than others, or it would not b* the fa- ' t . . . ■ salo than ell others combined. 0 1 SOLD IN TOWN n % ATLAS HOTEL and RESTAURANT, R E M O D I . E D - R E F U R N I S H E D 1 Popular Priced Restaurant for Ladles and Gentlemen. - Service is unexcelled S. Detroit street, Xenia, 0 , 6 P I L E S ‘ InkFISTULI Ast>Ant. t DISEASES OFTHE flECTUM- dr * j . j. M c C lellan «W 5 £! 1 » / CeuiMint, 0 .
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=