The Cedarville Herald, Volume 34, Numbers 27-52
MWWF* j 4 ! jtumgTxw M erediths usic Store. DAYTON, G. N o w 3 • Located At 131 S. LUDLOW, ^N ew Cappe! Second Largest Stock in 01iii\* HEtPj U§ |MOW The Cedarville Herald $xtoi> I ’ter Y e a r . ' KARLH BULL Editor Entered at tho Post-Office.. Geriar- vill'.>. Osiol-er !U, lift?, U3 nccuuri class matter. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1011 HUNTING NOTICE. i T&He W ha t Pill ? W hy , a Dr. M i le s ' A n t i -P a in Pill, of course. Good . or all kinds of pain. Used to relieve Neuralgia, Headache, Nervousness, Rheu matism, Sciatica, Kidney Pains, Lumbago, Locomotor Ataxia, Backache, Stomachache, Period ical Pains of women, and for pain in any part of the body. “I have used Dr. Miles* medicines for. oyer 12 years and find themexcellent. I ‘keep Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain-.Pills in'the house'all the time and would not think of taking a journey without them, no matterhaw short a distance I am''going. Xcannotpraise them enough," '■ Mtss Lou M. C hurchill . 63 H ig h S t., P e n a co o k , N . H . At all druggists. 25 doses 25c. - MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind. 'Where Are Y ou r Interests - Are theyinthiscommunity? , _ Are they among the people 1 with whomyou associate? ■ Are they withthe neighbors ! and friends withwhomyoudo business? -Ifso you want to know what Is happening in this community'. You. want to know tha goings and comings of thopeople with whom you associate, tho little news items of your neighbors and friends—now don’t you? That Is what this paper gives you i‘ In every issue. It is printed for S' that purpose. It represents your , interests and the interests ofthla town, Is your name Onour sub- , scrlptton books? If npt, you owe' « it to yourself to see that li Is put there. To $0 so ~ Wffl Be T o Your Interest Wo, flu? utulevsigneU, forbid hunt ing with dogs or guns on our farms: J. C. I'inney J. M. Finney Ularonce Finney ‘ John Burns Edwin Dean Mrs, Fannie Barber J. Auld Clayton McMillan George Hammati David McMillan J. W. Matthews - David Johnson Henry Kyle Mrs, John A. Barber Will Smith J , H. Henderson Will Arthur ’ Abe Mann Isaac PalterBon J, O. Townsley Clarence Stuckey Luke Booth —Gall and see the. Bull Dog Feed Grinders and Miami Gasoline En gines. J, E. Pierce. |ABusinessProposition Did you ever stop to think, Mr, Business Man, that the news o f your business is as much a part of the local events as a wedding? on a church fair? T h e> ladies are just as much interested in a new fabric yon have on the shelves as they are *n any home happening. Your store news and anouncements in these columns will reach alarge circle of eager buyers. This will enable you to sell your goods while they are new and irerfi and. you will not Lave to sacrifice later at remnant counter prices. Think it over. There’ s a Way To defeat the mail order man’s cut* throat methods In this community, The way i* publicity for your buslnc-sa it’* the same way he uses. Out colamas will give your business the publicity you need, I INSECT SENSEJ3F SMELL Anta Are Said to Recognize Their Dif ferent Species by Odor, ' Stuck,ita of the behavior of ants are well aware of flic fact that they will not tolerate strange .'ants in their, nests. If a foreign, even though of the same species ancl in- .distinguishable to human eyes from the lawful inhabitants- of the nest, strays in from another nest she is apt to emerge hastily, pursued and ■attacked by the ants which belong ih'cro. How do;they know that she is a foreigner? It does not seem likely that among the .thousands of ants belonging to the nest another ant of exactly the same species should be recognised, as a stranger by her appearance. The English naturalist Lord1Avebury in his book on “ Ants," Bees and Wasps” records some experiments'to test the possi bility that ants may recoghize their nest mates through some movement of the feelers or antennae, with which they sometimes seem to. greet each other when they meet. He stupefied with alcohol, ants from different nests“ and placed them near one of the nests. The ants from that nest came out and carried their helpless nest, mates home, bufthrew the bodies of their enemies away. •Evidently friend and foe were distinguished by something other than their behavior. . A German physiologist, Bethe, solved the, problem in' the following way: He suspected that ants from a: foreign nest might have an odor that excited the, warlike instincts of ants in the home nest. Accordingly he took a number of ants from one nest, killed them and crushed their bodies so that the body fluids were pressed out. Taking some live ants ■from a second nest, he (irst dipped them in water and alcohol and then into the body fluids of the other uhts. lie then returned them to their own nest. Their nest mates fell upon them as if they had been total strangers, and they were driv en out and in some instances killed. On the other hand, Bethe found that the foreign nest, the odor of which they now presumably boro, would receive peaceably the anta which had undergone ’the trans forming treatment, Other •observers have confirmed these results of Bethe’s for many, species of ants. Tho truth, then, seems to be that any ant odor dif fering from their own puts the ants into a warlike attitude. It is true that this explanation requires one to suppose that a dif ferent odor belongs to every ant nest, and this seems hard to believe, yet nothing else appears to account for the facts. There are many other remarka ble things about the sense of smell’ in insects, and it must be remem bered that the sense of .smell in hu man beings is far inferior to. that of some animals—for example, the dog. Alan cannot judge the capaci ties of other animals in the matter of smell by his own poor perform ances.—Youth’s Companion. . TATROFOnto, Guv op lor.CDo, r L ucas C ount * /*• •F»AKif J. C uemgv make* ontb that he is senior partner of tint firm o t T, J, OimNtrv & Co., dotoft business in tha city of Toledo, county, Ana state aforcai'I, and that said fflrm will pay tho sums ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for cash «ycry casa of Catarrh■ tlmt cannot bo cared bv the turn of H aul ' s (Xmtinii Conn, FRANK J. CHKIGTY, Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 0th day of December, A, li' 1880. 'r — -, A. W. GLEASON, j steal I Notary Public l W - UMk * * to your own community to btiv jow You Ow e I t ..._.. t ied* froi.li year home nsecebaat *ti<J ntaijfi bv er tratlitecn aiea, Voa can Always fitui me aa«e*Hte«ieat* of repasetitiUr* haatnraAmen hi thMe wlio will stand back ol every statement cod price they.make. Printer's ink When used on good presses liid neatlyditpluyed typefor your station* efj'-i* valuable. We novo eve*! facility for doing dm belt of jol work, at A winjmum p r k * ; Hall's Catarrh cure is taken tntwmBlty • id acta directly on tho -blood aad maeons , surfaces of tire system. Send for testimoni ! «!*, free. Ohriiiantlc J'elti* rrflorcd oy os* * ! tt MUten' Aoil P*ut> r*m« ** 4> hm * H ti7 , CASTOR IA , For Infanta and CiliiMren, TheKin ) YouHave AlwaysBought ; Boars .tlio ; Signature o f DUST -IN THE AIR. ~ It Has a Bearing on tho Tamparatura of tho Atrtiospher*. When the air very thick and hazy it may contain floating dust particles to the tiumber of from 10,- «J0Q to ‘JO,000 in every cubic centi meter, while a cubic centimeter of. very clear air may contain only from a dozen to a few hundred par ticles. An English ob'-erver’a data indi cate that there is a relation between Ihe^uuntity of dust and the tem perature of "the air. A great amount of dust, it is thought, increases the temperature in the daytime and cheeks the fall of temperature at night. The reason is that the pres ence of dust1serves as an obstruc tion to .the free radiation of bent through the air. The sunbeams pass through very pure, clear air without lending much heat to it, and at night the heat received by the ground during the day readily escapes through the same air, but if the atmosphere is heavily laden with dust the sun’s ’rays are partially ar rested by the partial' .<ieh, be coming heated, i” ,.n warm the air, and in like manner heat radial ed from the earth at night is re tained in the hazy layers of air in contact with its surface. ‘ Without its atmosphere, which serves as a coverlet to protect it against the fearful cold of space, the surface of the, earth would be frozen like that of the airless .moon. But the data- gathered by reliable observers show that the- atmospher ic .blanket wrapped around, our plane varies in its power to retain heat in proportion to the amount,of dust particles that it contains.— Harper’s Weekly, y A Costly Grudge. ’ . The most expensive act of dam age ever committed by a railway worker was that of an Italian navvy employed on the construction of a tunnel,through one ■ of the moun tains in the Black forest. Having a grudge against his foreman, he suc ceeded one night in altering the po-; sition of the stakes which marked the cour.e o f the. work. The ex cavators were working upon the tunnel in two, sections, one from the north.and one from the south. Owing to the shifting of the stakes the sections instead of being direct ed to the. same point were found to .be iwpr!h»-ix feet apart when they r.oaelicri tlio middle of the moun tain. The northern' half of the tun nel bad therefore to be entirely re constructed at a cost, of £175,000,— London Chronicle. / “ ■' *—— - 7 ------ - The One He Saved. Harold, aged nine, came home one day so bruised and dirty that his mother was thrown into a state of marked perturbation. -“Mercy!” she exclaimed in hor ror,. ,rHow on earth, my chiid, did you get your clothes and face into such a state?” '1 was trying, to keep a, little'boy from getting, licked,” was Harold’s virtuous if hesitating reply. “ Well, that was fine,” said his mollified parent. “ 1 am proud of you, sonny. Who was the little boy?” - > : . “ Me.”—Chicago Record-Herald. • What'Ho Wai Practicing. When a leading citizen of a New Hampshire town returned thither after a prolonged sojourn abroad lie made a tour of the place to find*out how all his old friends were ♦‘getting along.” - At one establishment he found a youth, the son of an old friend of his, whose father was still paying his office rent, 'Tracticing law now, Jim?” ask ed the returned one genially. “ No, sir,” replied the youth frankly; “ I appear to be, but 1 am really practicing economy.”—Lip- pincott’s. Careful Child. “ Is your little boy sick with any thing?” asked the Ind of the lady who had just moved in next door and who had asked him to come over and play with her little boy. “ No, indeed,” she smiled. “ Why?” “ ’ Cause I ’ve had my tonsils taken out on’ my adenoids removed an’ my appendix cut OttL an* I been vaccinated an’ scrumizod for ty phoid an’ spinal meningitis, an’ I’ve bad antitoxin injected, an’ I do hope J won’t have to have anything done to me this year, so I can have a little hit 0 ’ fun for awhile.”— Woman’s World. Great Scheme. Jorkins — There1;? Perkins — you know Perkins?—entered into an agreement with his wife soon offer their marriage, twenty years ago, that whenever cither lost their tem per or stormed tho other was to keep silence. Boh—And the scheme worked ? Jorkins—Admirably. Perkins lias kept silence for twenty years. A BALL00N THAT FAILED, i It W 11 to Hsv« Startled Pari* In 183L ; but It R*fu**d. j A dirigible balloon, L’Aigle, was j to have made a journey from the Champ do 'Mars on Aug. 17, J83-L 1 The poetic wording of the prospec tus'is in it'vlf a curiosity, and the aerostat also was not wanting in in terest. It was forty meters long— tlmt is, K‘0 feet—and fifteen in width—that is, forty-eight feet nine inches, I/t hud tile form of a mon ster sea figh and was inflated with hydrogen. Within was a second envelope, which, with the aid of pumps', com pressed'or rarefied the air for as cending or descending, as the case might be. At the extremities were two great “ roues a aileltes” for steering purposes. . There was no motor, and the nav igators had to work the'machinery with their hands. The car of wick er was described as a marvel of comfort, with seats for teu persons. The dirigible was to have made its ascent with the two aeronauts. MM. Lenon and Edam, who were to have been accompanied by their wives. .• • The prospectus of the 1834 dirigi ble informed the public that the i 1 - ventor had constructed two years ago at Montmartre a monster-ma chine which he raised one night far away from curious eyes to study its capabilities, but the result was not equal to his expectations. Today, after great improvements, the. ap paratus was ready for victory. . •This would fie achieved in the presence of a groat concourse of spectators, and the inventor and his wife, until several people, would make the ascent. Given favorable wind, two. hours would be sufficient, for the journey to London, which is ninety-eight leagues from Paris, Tho itinerary was indicated with great precision. - But in spite of the magnificent promises and after the expenditure o f groat trouble and energy the ap paratus was got to the Champ de Mars, but beyond that i t would not move. The crowd was enraged ana smashed the machine.— Paris Let ter. Greatest of Infant. Prodigies. Perhaps the most marvelous in fant prodigy on-record was. Chris- -tian Heineeker, born at Luheck, Feb. (J, .1721. At the age of ten months he could speak and re peat every word which was said.to him, when twelve ^months old he knew by heart the 'principal events narrated in the Pentateuch, in his second year he knew most of tho Bible by heart, and before he was three he learned1 to speak Latin and French. To. his,fourth year he em ployed himself irf the study of re ligion and the history of the church, and his^ fame as' a scholar spread So-that'the king of Den mark sent for him and. was amazed at his learning,- But ’ before ho was five years of age he fell sick and died.—London Chronicle. Retold Stories. The girl was tolling tho man an anecdote, and a queer look passed over his face. The girl stopped, embarrassed, ‘T am afraid I have told you this story before," she stammered. “ Yes, you have,” the man ad mitted frankly, “ but don’ t worry. It isn’t' half so bad as what 'hap pened to me yesterday. A mail told me a story that I had originally told him. Worse yet, ho got all mixed on it, lost the point entirely and then expected me to laugh at i t ” “ And you couldn’ t?” “ Oh, yes, I could, but not the way he thought,” —New York Press. A GW* Way, “ Why do you keep asking me to be your wife? You surely wouldn’t want me to marry you if I didn’t love you,” “ No, I don’t want you to marry me if you don’t love me, but I can’t help thinking the practice I'm get ting in asking you may some time come in handy. Nov/ I’m going to give you another chance 4o turn me down.” “ Oh, well, i f you’re determined to have me X suppose I may as well say yes.”—Chicago Record-Herald. The Danger Line. . “ Once,” said Brother “Dickey,, “ dar wuz a man who prayed dat he might git out 0 ’ de wilderness, an’ his pra’r wuz answered, an’ time he got out a ordermobile run over him, an’ then ’bout de time he riz up an’ breshed de dust from off him a a’rship felled on him, an* w’en ho come ter Mssc’f ag’ in a police man told him ter move on, so he lifted np all de voice what he had left an’ prayed for a harricane ter blow hint back ter wlmr he come from l”—Atlanta Constitution. THE HK H GRADE LEHR PIANO IS USED AND ENDOWED BY The Orxnd ConMmfory 6t Mutfc, Ntw York ORy. the Pennsyhtftlft College el Mude, PMM tiphl*. Chicuge Contervelerr A Hlnthaw School *1 Opera, CHoege, The Puthfo Ceneerratoft of Mualc, feeble, Colo. . AND OTHER LEADING CONSERVATORIES A fiwefii yet brilliant and txnretfol tone, exquisite ' rtoei, perfect adjustment hna durable workmanship plrtesnin tho front l'Ankof tho beattnetrnmenlatnadi to day. It is the Idea) piano far tho home, where Ite prgwmOe t*a eicit ofculture and refinement Tit* IiE filf HANO I*mamifartured under kintal H . h u m & COMPANY* M s n u f r t . « i i f t t o t t f . P i# ALCOHOL 3 PJ3II CENT., AX’egelablePffparalionfirAs- ■ IM l M i ■ : m M H i mt I nfants /C hildren PromotesDi$esKon£heerfuk messandRestContalnsneife: OpiunuMorpliinenorMineral N o t N a r c ot ic . J^iofMDcSBSWmm. Jfhupkm&fd“ jUx.Sr.waf- Arfrf/e,m- jtmseStctl* M W itfaiSerj- . C/crukd flan*. " ......— V i ' I — AperfectRemedyforConstipa tion,SourStomach,Diarrhoea Worms,Convulsions.FevcrLsli- nessand Loss OFSLEEP. FacsimileSignatureof N E W 'Y O R K ., The Aiwa Bears the Signature of luaraateedw^rit^Fo^^ Exact'Copy o f Wrapper, THECKNTAUHCOMPANY, NEWYORKCtTY. ■HSHMHBBKHDUBH ! Hutchison & A Fine Assort ment of Rain= jeoats Just Received Fresh Fish AND .OYSTERS At C. M. SPENCERS 1 - - ’ t • i - f </ * - r-y .-i - - ns Have Bought !n m Over Thirty Years W o o l M its just in Blankets, Comforts, t —Just from the factory . *- j ' F lanne l N ight G owns KNIT PETTICOATS Kid Gloves Corsets Hosiery Hosiery Holiday Haadkeiv chiefs Fancy Boxes Hutchison & Gibney, XENIA, - - - ' - OHIO. IT WILL JUST TOUCH THE SPOT ami prove f»» every day wim-er every lime. Good health, good eheer and long life. Is what we piomiee If you ■ 1 Buy Our Meats Microbes, disease and death hide- in a 1M. of tho meat- that’ s sold, but not in ours. Wesell the best and at a fraction above cost, Our market is safe and not high priced. G H. CROUSE Cedarville, Ohio. J New f rom CavertoCover T / V E B S T E B 1 S N EW IN T E R N A T IO N A L D IC T IO N A R Y J U S T I S S U E D . E<U* Chief, Dr. W.T, Harris, former U.S, Com. of Education. The Webster Tradition Developed by Modern ScientificLexicography. KeytoLit- eratureof SevenCenturies. General Information Practically Doubled. 2^00 Pages. 6000 Illustrations. 400,000 Words and Phrases. G E T T H E B E S T in Scho larsh ip, Conven ience, Authority, Utility. The Bookmaker ..-Restaurant... IN THE BOOKWALTER HOTEL HIGH STREET^ DINING ROOMFORLADIESUPSTAIRS. ALSO REST ROOM. M E A L S N O W a s CECNTS . . .Lunch Counter on MainFloor ~ > Open Day and Night. The Best of Good Used In the Oul- . intvry Department. ATLAS HOTEL and RESTAURANT, REMODI ED * REFURNISHED Popular Priced Restaurant for Ladies and Gentlemen, » Service is unexcelled S. Detroit street, Xema, O. J. H. McniLLAN. Funeral Dlrootir-and Furniture Dealer. ‘ Manufacturer of Cement Gtuve Vaults and Cement -Building Blocks. Telephone 7. Cedarville, Ohio. g g _ —! » m i " -Ji— j'u n r "i.uiijLiLjsjgg DR . LEO ANDERSON , Veterinary Surgeon and Dentist, GRADUATE O. 8. tl. Office Waddle’s Livery Barn. Citizens ’ Phone 93 and 81. CEDARVILLE, - - OHIO Very Serious h is a very serious matter to ask for one -medicine and have the wrong one given you. For this reason we urge you in buying to to careful to get tho genuine— BL ack -D raug HT Liver Medicine The reputation of this old, reUa* tie medicine, for constipation, in* digestion andliver trouble, £3firm ly established. It does not imitate ether medicines. Tt is better than ethers, cr it would not be the fa vorite- liver powder, with a largeg sale than all ethers combined. ■ SOLD IN TOWN ' !■?. A$I> Atiti DISEASESOFTHE BECTUM t o tlcffttfop aoitotaiwi -fc, <*-.,• t*A it* yriibUdthftl tftftktt It IfcSfJ<vrtf AT mnmmi ' r.a l dr .» j . j. M c C lellan C olumbus ,0. nyto’-n-lirrni ■-...... ■ ^nTiflitri>iWii|iii,TiT^fi^nfr~riHirn
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