The Cedarville Herald, Volume 36, Numbers 27-52
m u m MMMMt rnm mm ?**sr mm Uh*ri I # t a i n * I ^ 1 st * am feMtiter wtifc t#» a***!* j if yw Bin1* Uk* Work o« t* th* U« totieei* lwtt a t r n it o * AmmJ H*4** m ** k S3S2^5£S2S5a?t“ | , m » « « iu»t ,»w iy w »i kmimmmf' K m *wfl»g*4 few every (working for your living' and- have toHm fk e awutfy #riiq** to «*<»*«» ( about deriiM that life is altogether }ft** a week la twm in the pterin* too atreuuoua for comfort in your •Mta liiWBii m m END OF SMALL TOWN: Willi*** Alton Write tMtida Warning' tee * tf m y PUtaty Mall i *#*&»#$ Order Haute*. Writing to the oonvftutipn of ffcf! • fSouthweetera Luwbernisti’a assoc!** tito. held recently at Kansas City* Wmto» Alton White uy s: *Tam exceedingly aorry that I can not attend your convention, I t seexna to me that to# lumbermen of this toottoa are undertaking: a work that •hotOd.commend them to all good citj- *•*«*» ; *fc ■•- ‘The pr**emtian of the" home trade to the home town carries with, s^csau*w •*w 0 " I t aeema to me that a lot of good things tn American life will pass « the eofator tonp passe*, And it wui ftoaa just so surely as centralisation . of retail mail order business in oitle* ***^Fh* American country town, the town of from one hundred to one hun dred thousand people, preserves bet-, ter, than the crowded city and better’ |h<m the ilonely ranch and Isolated . farm life, the things that make Amer ica great. < . , . "Bare In these country towns the .spirit of nelghborilness is the -prevail ing spirit. Men come to know -one another and when any two human'be ings come to know one another; in, tho.oce wJfto is intelligent and ^lse respect always rises for*the other., Th<know one's yellows always is to' ’ sympathise with therh. Nelghborll- n«ss spells fraternity. - “Th® American country town with 'ft* broad circle of friendships, with Its close, homely, simple relations be tween men, with its spirit of co-oper.: •tied and with Its economic statue .that permits the creation- of no to- •decently rich, and no abjectly .poor; tbb American country town, it seema to me, is the most hopeful of our American Institutions, \*To destroy that town, furnishing .the market for the farther and giving steady employment to labor, means a reorganisation of ohr'cpmmercial, so cial end industrial life that will be revolutionary—and more a matter ..of doubtful value,. **Themail order house therefore be comes a menace to this Country, the mall order house unrestrained will kill out smaller towns, Creating great Cities with their terrible contrasts of. ' life/With their cruel social relations, with tbefr.inevitable caatofeeling that come from the presence of .strangers who are rich-and poor hying side by * siae." *' ' : - ; « ". ’ ” •’ f • •• - ' -.Min. ..TV„„.. . - i iriMto Tha boy* win ****** to teats, ; and attend tkamMlvee to all their } wants, even, doing their own cooking I on* day during the weak, They will i rise a t |:S0 a. m. .and tom to at fist# ]■p, a t, «b4 them vffl ha Sva hours' teaching daily. Thera can be little doubt that at oh a system carries with it many advantages*. It teaches boys to be self-reliant, tidy, and useful, and will entail no extra cost on the rates, other than that of the tents, for tt# boys provide their own food. Cottonseed Industry. The annual output ot the cattee. seed industry is to value close up to the. |JOO,OW,OOd mark. Until rpceat years the seed of the cotton pliant, ex cept what waa required for planting purposes, waa practically valueless. In the- opinion, of th e southern ootton fanner. The seed waa hauled away to be dumped into the streams >or left to rot to Holds.. Today this 4s chang ed and the once despised byproduct of the cotton fields is steadily loom ing to importance. In the shape of oil tor lubricant and table purposes, meal for cattle, food, eak§ and hulls for fertilizer, food, etc., Cotton seeds are A source of enormous wealth to the ¥ uthern country. Ttys Industry, which only a few years back was un known, la now a gold mine. FATE AND A COW- it. .The.Kaiser's Joke, During the German maneuvers) re- eently a company of dragoons wawtold off to represent a .convoy of wagons. The kaiser, riding over the held of.'bat tle and seeing a drogooa lying on the ground, said to him: ' ‘Well* what are you lying down there .-for?” "I mm representing a wagOn, your majesty," replied the sol dier. ' "Are you?" said t the kaiser. “Well; get up and, go 'and. Join the others!" "That ‘la Impossible, your majesty," said the soldier, "because I have lost one o f my wheels’." The emperor burst out laughing and,* giv ing the man two shillings, .observed, "Here's something for you to get the other wheels oiled with."—I^ris Ma tin. The English' Sparrow. The facH h it insect-eating birds are lea# ptoatjfukto .$$(«, but I M beauty, totoulgeht nato&s^todri tom lone much to lessen to* ifdmfor the •mall boyr»hqj'mrn®rifipsefi kto*Un»- ihot and airguh, to such, hawntoJ vantage., . . v-- " *'!■.•** - »* It ia probable, too, that the English iparrow has.,dpne nearly aa much, as the emali h o f to make the •l i f t e r tong birds niiserahW to the ^dtlea.' I loubt, however. If the sparrow Is as ,black aa he is painted, and I sadly tear that sOme published Opinlonii of him bavh;behtL; blaspd<by the bnrlters*., loss of early.morning glcep... I*Sn.ow tor a fact. that the English sparrdw Is far more of ah ihitfecWatjtag bird than he hue the Credit, of being- * I have observed them sxteni^fhly and bird for .bird; 4 know that/h* Js a more valuable.speples from, an ento- fivologloid standpoint than IS our well- beloTed rohlh. Were it-hot tot* the |oy the 'red breast , brings when he comes to us with. eseh, returning spring, 1 think that we ceiild do with out him vely,nicely. He 'destroys few Injurious Insects, eats much fruit and literally; gorges himself' on opr loll- taprovtogAshing worms- One more Influence against the pres ence of/birds to dries should not go tmmenrioned. The peaceful (in day time) hbwse- cat 4s one of the Worst snsaalesvoC birds we have/aad should be banlriied. Vicarious Burial. *' A good woman's husband was die membered and eaten by an African tribe, .She, desirous'ot giving, him Christian burial, waa l e f t .no other alternative but that pf 'exterminating, with the assistance of certain accom modating friends, armed, with the de structive weapons t>f our advanced civilization, the tribe ,to Question, which had shown such a receptive at titude toward her husband. The bodies of'savages were brought hack hustling burgh then go to the in lands around. Madagascar! i'm there you would only’have to work about twenty-five days a year and could support yourself and family in all possible comfort. People do not need to work so hard if they axe only willing to try something new, says an English historian. There are other places where the necessities of life can be had for practically; nothing, and jnany of the luiuriesT'toc^for little effort. Now- there .are the islands around Madagascar, They number some 16,000 and only 600 of them aro Inhabited. Nature is wonder fully lavish'. - A man can own a whole island lnmself or live on one that is already peopled. Land is abundant, and .like the air and wa ter, it haB no price. And the best things to eat are yours*—all kinds of the finest fruits —bananas, melons, oranges, figs, | ^ pineapples and berries—and you &< don*t have to go without such deli cacies as figs and citron. There is plenty of tobacco to be had and all the coffee that you could possibly drink. Then there -is domestic poultry in great numbers. Pat tail ed sheep and goats that you could cook up into all sorts of luscious dishes; Copyright, ISIS, by Awooiatad Mt- __ entry Prawt, , ijniHWipf) Professor Slocum of the college at Madlsou was fifty years, old at a cer tain dale. He was tali and stoop shouldered and ungainly. He waa ret icent and undemoustrarive, and socie ty knew him not at all. Misa Deborah Day of the same town had reached the age of forty-five. She was plain of face and frigid of attitude, and her charms were missing. it was one Sunday in church that fate brought the old bach and the old maid together tu the same pew, .and they sang frolu the same hymn book. Pate, through a mutual acquaintance, introduced them after the sermon. A few evenings later the professor call ed. The talk was pf philosophy. Be called again, and they talked of theoso phy. He-made n-thlrd call,and tbeage of the world was under discussion for an hour. After that It was for the. cow to do her part. One evening, Just at sundown, Miss Day walked forth In a meadow- to ather a few daisies. At the same our It singularly happened that Pro fessor Slocum sought the same mead ow in search of geological specimens. The lady discovered her daisies, the professor discovered his pebbles, the two people discovered each other, and together they discovered a cow, A cow may be simply au animated object on the landscape or she may be a dis covery because ?he Is enraged over j the loss of a horn knocked off in some You wouldn’1: have to be afraid , way and because she has her bead of your life all the time fo r fear down and her tall up and Is charging that you were going to b,e nu t over the pebbles and daisy gatherers. * the next moment, either;.for there ™ eu the dffh ^scovety showed'up. m n t a smgle automobile m a n y of ft rpugb afrujr thllt ^ soen bet„ the islands. Exchange. ter days, The meadow was retired. _ , ■1 and the shed was more so. They Bock Candy. reached it jttgt fn‘ time for the pi*o “Originally what is now known lessor to find a botird and bar the e«- as rock dandy," explained a don- trance against the cow and later on to fectioner to a reporter, “was called further streugtheu it. There,was,no. " - - - - ~ ' ' doubt about the bovine, helnu in ear nest. She made frantic efforts to tear down the shed with her remaining horn, and when, she could hot effect an entrance she stood on guard to beep jfier victims from coroiug out. Dark- in the trade Gibraltar rock. Origi nally, also, it was the, purest kind of candy, for it was crystallized su gar pure and simple. Ordinarily it is purer now than many other can dies... Hawthorne in <The House ot iVws suddenly felt, and .then the per; the Seven Gables/ describing U; tm-bed,couple suddenly-realized their small store, says, ‘For instance, to civilisation by the avenging expedi tion and were placed-fa the grave, surmounted by-a modest/slab placed there by toe widow and bearing the fglkprlng inscription: "The remains •of toe I beloved husband Exports Wilt Be Large, ■ 'The estimate that a billion’dollars' worth of manufactures will be export ed in toe current fiscal year,-made by the, bureau of statistics, department of cbmmvroe and- labor, .seems likely to be justified, , The official figures, show for the nihe'montoa ending with March $780,000,000 worth of manufac tures exported, these figures. being $74,000,000 In excess of those for the Corresponding period of ibe preceding year; and as toe exports of manufac ture* to tbs year ending June 80,1011, Were valued at $007,000,000, toe fig ures at hand seem to dearly Indicate tn,at the total for the current year will pass to* biliion-dollar line. thexje was a glass pickle j a r filled.; with fragments of Gibraltar rock— not, indeed, splinters of the veri table fortress, but hits of delectable candy/ Other writers of even earlier date than tha t speak of Gibraltar rock. I t appear?, how ever, tha t the Gibraltar was. finally <lrf?pped, and i t became known as ■rack candy. I have a price list is sued in 1848 tq the-candy trade in which Gibraltar rock is the name given, though after tha t it is quoted as rock candy-” - Doubts Booking 8trs«ts. Chief Bogin***' Goodrich of the bu reau of Incumbrance* of toe dspsrt- wwut of highways, New York, has pro- posed a plan fo r toe double docking oil tfortj* 4 tcond itreet. New Tori'), he- tween Fifth and Lexington avenue. The street Is one of toe most con* geeted to toe city, there bring proba bly no place in .toe world where.so many system* of tranfjportaUon Cen ter a* hetd. The double decking of to* street will giro an opportunity for eeparattog toe traffic, in say nothing of a t once doubling the capacity of the str e e t , Here 1* a problem which will have to be met' hod suceeriftoiiy solved, a* the itodrih office building, SO J o 80 atorlp* 'to bright, gradually replace* the older buildings. Some of the de#ft'towfr street* of New York ere alrririy eougeetod almost to a sUadetfft, *0 that traffic a t times to nearly itoposetoto, • -■ Club to Promote Olvto Beauty, The executive committee of the Oak Park (til.) Citizens' dub bos formed * bureau for listing all vacant lots to to* vtibtg* to be touted' tor use *« «dWef garden*, The atm Is to make beautiful places out of what have been- httoecto. *#*d patches. . mt Mcs «rSmin«? Amm v£ MAftAMTEE I l f S S II g Jta £ g _J^ ^ L JUkjlbg v Jtr f- IIIW m W BWBIWWWIJgfiffiUff 1 Cromwell's Army, The famous army with w^fch the Protector overthrew, the tyranny of King Charles was officially known as the "Now Model." The strength ot the New Model to an arms—infan try* artillery and cavalry*—footed up about 80,000 men. The "Ironsides," as they were more familiarly called, rarely loet a battle. Before the push of their pike* and the rash of their cavalry the plumed hosts of the king disappeared likd*chalf before the wind. The New Model was the most demo* erotic army ever known, and a t the same time, the beet disciplined. - Englishmen Are Larger Today, There was a tournament as a fee* tore of the Shafeespereon England show ut Earl's court. A* a result the discovery has been made that English men are much bigger today flan they were to the age of chivalry. Old ar mor, it 1s found, is far toe small for thd modem tillers and there was * great scurry to get new oorselets, greave* Und; other parts ready to time, The shoulders of .tps moderns are much broader atir* their legs a*d arms are thicker. The change Is attributed to the effect of generations of outdoor Sprit on the British physique. Mutt Pay Fee for Dancing. Any parson past the age of sixteen years who wishes to dance at, Dodge OUy must pay the oily $1 a year. Th# city commissioners met not long ago and pasted an ordinance providing for a license fee of $1 from all dancers, and further providing that no person under the age ot sixteen can attend i dance unless accompanied by a par- wit or guardlosb—lUseas City dour* ^Linrtiin itiiiiiiMiafwin. 11 iiimiiii, irsaadjmtoagto »WiMh TfM toMJOBftiSiai , Brigand* at * 8*11. There was a most, startling scene at a ball given not long ago a t the residence of Baron Bemondini, at San Vito, Italy. Dancing bod jnst ■ comulenced when half a, dozen arm ed men inarched into the.ballroom* They posed as detectives pome to oryest a famous',, brigand, Alberto riSumrai, who, they asserted, was among the guests. The wanted man, in the guise of a noble, was speedily located and surrounded, *But just as they were protending to hantj cuff him the self styled detectives suddenly drew their revolvers and leveled them, at the astonished dancers. In double quick* time the latter handed over their jewelry and other valuables, the booty thus secured being worth upward of $3,000, They were, of course, brig ands of tho band whose chief they had come to arrest. To Aim Straight I* Hpmarl. , Anthropologists have remarked that taking aim is a human charac teristic that c\ m the anthropoid apes cannot bo said to Bliare. Apes and monkeys,frequently throw nuts and sticks, sometimes with unpleas ant consequences to others, but they show little or no ability to take accurate aim. The baboon is said to excel somewhat in this respect, but still it would never, pass for a marks man. Accuracy of eye and the judgment of direction and distance that arc involved in real aiming have been developed only by man and are among the tokens of his in tellectual superiority. — St, Louis Republic. Sighing and Yawning. Sighing k a sudden prolonged in spiration of air following an un usually long pause after the last ex piration. I t is not necessarily due to mental depression or sentiment, but oftener accompanies indigestion and tho pressure of gases in the stomach, I t is (isually involuntary, A yawn is on involuntary stretch ing of the muscles of tho throat and back of tho tongue. While usually involuntary, the mere pretense at yaWfting will onuse imitative move ments of a similar kind by observ ers. In fact, yawning is peculiarly imitative, though none can explain why,—New York World. • ..........................H . n nil ; ...............................................................11,,im - -in .................. I. i. Situation. “professor Slocum, I must leave here this instant!" exclaimed the horrified Miss Day* ’ ’ “And so must 41” wa» the reply. "It is not proper!"' "Certainly not!" "I shall tie a laughingstock!" “Arid, 1 the samel" ; “I can't go, hut you must!" said Miss Day .as the cow quieted down. “Pro fessor, you must see that you must go —you must see It!" ‘ ; "I do :see it,” be replied, “and, while I cannot depart froni tbo shed, I cap climb on tho top of i t " This he accomplished by making his way through a gap to the.roof. He was now in a petition of propriety, but there waa tius'eow again. When she saw him perched up there, so near and yet so far, she tried to climb'up after him, and at the etui of two min utes Miss Day wns.isbriekfng for pro-: tfectlon, Down scrambled the pro* fessor, and the cow took to ‘running around the shed to find where he had disappeared; ’ The interior of the shed bad uow become ao dark, that nothing could be seen; In trying to strengthen the dCpt home mbye the pro fessor fell down and. rolled over. In trying to go to his ntAktnnco Miss Day suddenly found herself sprawling. Can a person maintain frigidness when surrounded by a cowslifed. with a mad cow battering awny at the door? Can a person be stilted after rolling In the straw and dirt? ' Can he or she be severely ceremonious when it is Im possible to see ouch other? The pro fessor wisely decided that they could not, and he reached out and clasped Miss Day's hand. She returned the clasp. Then he put his arm around her to a protecting way, and she did not shrink. Then tho old cow made up her mind to melt the frost and bring out the turtledoves If she bad to break her neck to do i t She gave u bellow of warning and retreated eight or ten rods and then came for the side of the shed like a runaway, locomotive. She hit It fair and square, and two- thirds of It coved in like a house of sand. In the caving she was mixed up with beams and boards, ahd the pro fessor took advantage of the occasion to tear the door aside and then pull Iris companion out Into the open. Then they ran for the nearest fence. It wasn't dignified to fall down three or four times, but they fell. It ‘wasn’t eminently proper, when ttie fence was reached and the cow was hard on their trail, for the professor to throw MlSs Day over nnd then take a scramble himself, but that’s the way It was worked, Then as soon as the man in the ease '.could get his breath he re alized the Inevitable. They wero both tattered and frizzled. They had togeth er Jinssed through peril by flood and fire (and Cow), nnd romance had come to their hearts .at last. "Miss Day, I have loved you from the first!" announced the professor as he took her hand. “And 1—l"—she replied after gasp ing for breath. Of course she had. too. and of course that settled if then and there. The old cow looked through the rails at them, heard the cooing of the doves and with snort of disgust turned tall and walked away. And y%t she had made over two human beings to be like tho average. T*1"*1..»in THE HU H GRADE LE R PI NO !* « « * * AMD ENDDRtCD BY * TtoIhMktoItoutrMtarrri M m U, PiHri*,Ori«, AHDOTHER LKADIHQOONAKqVATOBIM Atwferiyritol^t M idMw^ Hu, tfettMt* CANS! \ O u r P r i c e s Schmidt’s Old Hickory Flour, to lb sack ftr..,...7$c Schmidt’# Ocean Light Flour, to lb. sack for... 70 Country, Cured 'Bacon...18c Breakfast Baoon, per lb...28 Fancy Sugar Cured Ham, l b ........ .............................22 California and Picnic Ham s, per lb ................... 18 ' African Java Coffee, per lb ......................................22 Bio and Jriva Blend per ib.....:............. 24 Bio Coffee per lb..,...........26 Chick Feed, a lb............ 2 # CAN S! * For Canning CAN S! G e t T h e m W h i l * T h e y ’ r e C h e e p Star Tin Cans, per dozen............. 27c /Boil Mason Jars, qt, size, per dozen.,........I........................Mo Ball Mason Jars, pt. size per dozen............................ ....... 40c Bali Mason Jars, half gal, size, per dozen.................................... 70o O u r P r i c e * titar Cracker*" - ...... * titiver Prune*..... ..... - .... W ........................................................................... f Prunes-........................ Fancy Larg# Santa ClaB* Aprioots, per Ib 13 Fancy Large Lemon Cling Peaches, her lb...,.............® Tomatoes, per can........... 9 Shoe Peg Corn, per can....7 Peas, per can .......................8 Lenox Soap, 8 bars...... 10 SU G A R For Friday end Saturday only SPOT CASH 25 Ib. Bag for $M8 .. Save you r cash reg ister rece ip ts sew cured here and getcither a Clock or a beauti ful Mirror, G o E . S c h m i d t & Wholesale and Retail Grocers 30 South Detroit Street, . . 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White Skirts Su itable Season Articles Another Shipment S ilk G loves a ll Leng th s and Colors, S i lk H o s i e r y ................................................ .. , 50 c to $ 1.50 W h ite H o s i e r y ,................................................................ 15 c U p Hutchison & Qibney XENIA, OHIO. t , ser X X GET OUR PRICES ON PRINTING asssc satamts ^nr.-.Ttr .nsttoinm eatym # M m tir iti, IT Keeton* ......... nuiuev, M m j,W.iHWiil: AM TV*.<m I FillQHtMMt l-n III! MiMttM fl** m O f b k f u r Pron can-,] .......... I ........ .41 pis s4 a bcautj Cadf influex tiealb ■great 1 notevi Bnuifv sornch of the not be) eretee, aouto 1 . th a t a > Tbroui iniffere known ‘ was p ^ . ;D,rs. •*l h , -ttofttb ' .greate whet* -The Ham a ( .wita bo ' 'ton, wi .; »fc that mi : carpen 'A fterM - ;the lib! . F. B •farm, v BradU *■cteaed temtiy. 1 Cedars Mr>: hi*, fir Collinr ■ cbUdrt ;.Mrs. I f ate di a g a in , . . Njabet - , ended ’ Mr. Bi - hi* ho dftUgb'/ The aaaoeir^ bteedt-^f | , the k* cattle. WrlUia:, ■have pee InTSa", , B. Bri-' forme name brano Angui two m is ktu herd h nnmbi ,1 )hio 0 . Block i 1 atate 1 1 0 demaii 0 Mr. - termit nature. hi* Un> result! - prodrn in tin clrcleB being! rector Comps ship It Loan A Win! and fit ■ wm a i victioi tlan lit moral chnrct When the old and la cotigtt herfeh and ge congre -lap w*« m aeplre W ir t awing flince honeet wore* Best metvtit one ali Yelioi The homri 'wfiS^t of fri aervto B ev .. assist . Futt, pray* Which 1’saln 0 ! lna tlecea: optlg alwaj on th< apokf jtomtt Mtj «W>, t
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