The Cedarville Herald, Volume 44, Numbers 1-26
V '1 f '»! TT ym r Tralrnumirm * H*x %lnmB3amWM t M t l u s a van* m m mmm; ext v*t* mum * wm iimw mmm *. X tmm tvimi, w j **» I «#t «**w* l "W * «m tmAm mmmmmm flow ed Uw imy*. J’y* Umm her* to* ditetgmftbfr « * * » * that <««Md h l» “Til* W*y of th# Th# d#rie v#w**d, with •AtevkiteagM; wto i*u*pU«d « cruNh «C OOikiCMpfe taat*#d Of COMMI** **9110 way o f -tit tiwNNpww * «y « m » loot Inw&Ntet with res** of *w*#t f*M* $M ooXitudo, Th* flMMooeta of hffieiMi4*|#*wiy drift bock t#y#s nod rid* your N#ol» fc**v*aw*rd la your jkovto yon ay* not bod. low bar* ptefaftjw abated and yoar shu hav* fctootJfcod yp*. Bat that d m not bald yoo Utom oboobfodoc to hem* and Jorod ooeta who otttl trust you. There la good ahead. Wfa** you bavo paid tbo m b ty It* penalty bo *ux*e you obow jtbat aun’a identity wm not cow- •plate,'* ' . j It was song service day at the work* -•feMsa. ■■■.•.■ ■■■■,■.'*■•. fw*— 0 ft*r a whla-*«Hd tbot day woo the brat time 1 ever mmt *lk* a k m . The eky-faide aetntitew foe e» ay aotvoa ood toodo «u* f#rgat- I beet b**o fat elite Otoe flfty-«v# days* Jiwt got by* sow. X’w glair too, for I'll mute bo back. Worn rim# X m id b*t# picked,” The ringer paused sad «wallowed herd. "WW* *k*~~Qed‘» best Uttlo wom- M ; little girt--i*y oat boat b#t~ri»’* |ot diphtheria. I get to thinking wb*» the follow «oW X wax not bad, and to lids In the m et r*preU##riW# man jmkv Bo wo* always wwttrhtof **d robbing mgrijM* «v*rylfctag bo m id And, first os* I**L Q m day bo *p- oot a y jMtrtor table aad broke all a y boat rittoft, wWeb I bad placed oa tbo table a few minute* before. Ho also upset tbo sewing aarbtae aad tbo chan*, and I don’t know what else, “ So when Mr. (hirfew heerd that the a ipmt’M soap would euro skin dis ease* be Insisted upon buying a cake, and after bo bad gone be began to wash tbo dog with that marveloua when k# started the oldaoag X bad; *°*P- I don’t know what ingredients to at&g-~tiu you saw me. I’vegot a , said soap contained, but after It was good voice? Do youknowif I might1rubbed into the dog’s Skin that ttn- Hftip__r jfprtunate animal became frantic and He stopped and turned hack to tbo , acted aa though gauied gome of the spul-llght it bad when be ssi-f. Thesebe fucod about, Mlf Biy bayy can live—” ®. . ■ **xm wilt w o»i :w m t# {*** ,#*» wbo seemed to know. “Tl v. tvwor: .will pardon you thl* afternoon. Sing “Wwio-t* mm « ,» t ibe *ick one* back to health, then sivwr said the minitter, “let’s sing; tn Wfm„ ,,HV 7 „,n, fp!( vou that good old song, ‘Bleaa’d Be the Tie Jho«»r ^ y0 That Binds.’ Everybody sing. Many, E K S c r t ^ c e atnred wonder- of you bavo good v^ces” IJ ™ . { T ial ^ a Tbo little chapel organ began and| lHE v ^ s h o i ^ S a with himand tbo leader pitched the tune. Before. Da^ f d w ^ t i e^ iT ld oS . No w e the second verse. Was reachedtho| pft<WKl down m chapel was jailed with mnaict Then little window. He looked up through i ^ ^ ro°e, Mr. Curfew tried -to hold the liar* to the" s>ky anil bis face re -th e beast, and It reached around and - bit his ear almost oft, and of course 1he released it then, and the uproar he made, as b * dnneed around the hones, heading hut ear with one hand, and summoning the police with the other was simply .scandalous. “Meanwhile the ?log ran off, en tirely demented, Mrs. Turpentine The visitors bent forward and scan ned the faces of the prisoners. A voice somewhere , among them rahg nut In rich tenor, dear and dean as s clarion, call, Ifc'Carrled its notes an might * super-chorister, The #ld song echoed and reechoed through the ceil halls, and the tenor led the rash There was .a. voice that might have drawn encore and encore from the most fastidious and critical audience. Tet It was among the prisoners, Butt where? . , , Next day music lovers went through the workhouse looking for the man "who sang tenor at the song service,” He was not found. They went among the prisoners and asked, No one ao*m- „ed to know, Could It be that a famous songster bad fallen? > , * S The critic who had “discovered u .voice” would not be satisfied. . Ho Imagined a beautiful mystery in the singer’s reticence. That he wa& a prisoner was certain. /He had been seen. And he "bore the.. ixfcauet’a label; So they looked again at - prisoner after prisoner and Into cell after cell. In the last cell hut one a inin waa reading. They. were wall ing noise lessly and he did not see them, It -was a song hook he bold. Then,«he looked up, quietly slipping the book back-up, on the'bunk. He arose and turned to• the-narrow window'!t’a'fhars'. Some one called' to him, .Apparently he did not hear,, They called again', ' How they wished they had" been abVf to use his name,, But how could they' know It? . ■ ■ “Step this way—yqu at the window ' —weWant to speak toyou ” \,y He started, as If undecided. >.They knew he heard. Then very, veiy slow ly end timidly he.came to them, Xt was’ the tenor. “Where did you get that voice—that tenor?” ope asked abruptly. s - “Oh, I thought you had another war- . rant for me—when I get out. is that ! all you wapt? Honest?” “ We have no warrant for you. We do not know anything about you. But we want to know'about yourself; about that, voice. We’ve come to help you. That tenor has no place in a. workhouse,” They had found a singer Who had not found himself. They led him. to W * . . t spoke. But as they neared the end of the ceil row* they heard a song follow ing, passing, leadlhgthem. It .sccmsd on lta way to the former derelict's home. * * . ’ And as they passed out the groaning gates the silvery tenpr notes boro •to them the beatitude; “Bless’d be the tlo that binds.” That he should be burled in a wick-. er basket was the oppressed wish of* a .Worthing (England) barrister. CLEANING THE DOG « “ jpHIS I? the mdst wonderful soap ever offered the public,” ex plained the voluble agent, as he opened his grip, “It will dean anything un der the’ sun. ft will remove grease spots, polish tinware—” . “Oh,; I have no was crossing the road pushing her baby buggy, when the animal collided with said.vehicle, and spilled her off spring into the roud. I am willing to admit that such an experience was aggravating, but I don’t think It was ladylike in Mrs, Turpentine to come ' over to my house with her muddy in fant under her arm, and shake her fist under my nose, and tell me. that for five cents she’d pull all-my hair.-out, “Old Mr, Popplnjay was standing on the corner, leaning on his cane, waiting for a street car, when the crazy dog ran against his cane and he took a header into th^ gu^eir* and I really felt sorry for blur when Xsaw him going home ten minutes ‘later, dripping slush and mud .'like a sea- serpent, but X couldn’t sympathize wUU . him so very much 'when he picked up ft brick as he was passing our place and smashed a panel In our front door. , •, . “For two days people were coming here claiming that we ought to' reim-, burse them for damages done by that dog. Xt seemed that .the Unfortunate animal made a circuit of the town, and left a trail of "desolation behind him. He upset six pans of milk for Mrs, Trumpeter, and scared Smith’s family horse sp it rah away and In jured several members of the family, and killed eight prize chickens for Mr, Dippy, and,I don’t know what else. In view of which, X think we can struggle' along without any o f your marvelous soap.” 'doubt it will re- ttoro bnlr to bald heads and make c b lc k io n s la y eggs,” Said Mrs, Curfew, setreftf ticaiiy. "I U. quite satisfied Us made of barks ana ' buds and healing herbs, but I don't want any of your marvelous soap, haying had expe rience with other of the[ faihdW/1 An Intellectual. “You often hear It said that ‘Mrs. GUthery has all the brains in theGIith- ery family," “But Mr.- GUthery !$ a successful business man." ' * - • “Ob, ye*. However; homerely makes »* While sipping tea and, smdk- - / . ifumed cigarette, Mrs, GHth- / discuss more abstruse ques- ttaSt have nothing to do with uoltWWOrk, or the upbririglnK or.the GllthSry twine than any other wqinatt io her *Ht"—Birmingham Age-Heralcf^ Blondes Easily Removed. ‘ A prominent- tradesman in .South west Xmndon expostulated with ia gahg towwlk, or tne j repairers regarding * email ,sftme kind. Bast fidl an agent came . mountain of wood blocks dumped In alOng, selling m Soap that would do fr0Itt hla premises, everything, you can think of, from i Th6 ptoteet being, ignored, he sur- beautifying the,female complexion to |reptmously stuck a card, bearing the chaslng-the cows out of the eorin The f .agent talked as thpugh he, had eight- j offending heap, day works In him, like our old grand-} pMlanthroplo suggestion was father’s clock, and he didn’t make any { qU|c^y actod on by passers-by, and impression until he said the Soap!mpre than half the, blocks had dlsap- , , would heal all sWn diseases o f man poared before a vigilant policeman re- . “When X was a boy X used t* sing . ^ ,“ ,®e5lrt 6} |moved' the eftru.—London Express. ' dn Sunday school. A big fellow fromffthat Mr‘ Curfew. had an Imitation bird , <+*37 y Y ou ran u o risk when y o u buy a Y iCTS -OLA it • **\h wa'fte*;1 ft'(UQ . It gives you eitactlv veu wm t — the world's lv '-; 'or pity-.d by great fer;.*-... t-.c they, tl cu.'s^eives. wish ,to bo iionrd* , 1 * ; V- ® w<; have Vxctrolas in varum;? sizes to ti£ e v e r y refjuim rifT it. You oa ii- ;*K>£ Ctffoiti an iftfoi ur- m m i 'n t chn f :ar< o t l y g iv e y o u nooieU iu ig less tno I joa U ■mm m m ' .< , . j ___________ ? A u Tire M t e g e at the Lowest Cost in History u i ! s i z e r,t(i !■ f $$ 3 3 \ 'll 3 *4 f 33 x .3} i 33 * 4 |3 x 4 } 35> ;S Clincher Catcher f* QAJg'W* • S.S. s. a as. }1 7M 26 .. Kv^K II) • cc'i NewTrices RED-TOP OldPrices NewPrice* RIBBED CORD OldPrice* NewPrice* NON-SKID.CORD OMPrices NewPrice* GRAY TUBES OldPrice* NewPrice* ra i- ' ■812-80 §21,05 $17.00 ew* ~ ■ « . ■ $2,75 $2.15 0 10-63” £7-75 22.09 $32.00 $25,00 $34.25 $27;50 '3,25 2^5 9 21,09 81.09 26.00 39.20 32,99 4 t t 5 36,49 3.60 2.90 i> - 26,90 -1^,00 34.40 49-80 41.85 52.30 ., 46,30 ■4,55 , 3.55 w* “ 58,35 JL. 59-10 49.65 62.05 54.99 6.00 4.75 W*■a. ■ 47.95 ■.y — 73.65 61.90 77.35 68.45• 7,25 5.85 • pins wtfr /fls. Other reduced in (irofiirtint - . .. ■ ■ 'T*J .. tt e Pr‘£cjo Apply to Our Regular and Complete Line dPflco ?*t?iai)prrrte(l by value never is au advantage to. any but the man who sells to mryes i*. c.”,u “ clean-up” and quit. , A re^PjVju ' ^excelledmileage tire made by a company that can and Will deliver atl iiKf, r*t£ -r> than you pay for is the only one you can afford to buy, Sold pnly by Dealers A.NaT -IiOwBrice on a Known and Honest, Product 4t£ asKj'ift' iawsipar?% " i i Did H e is one family of stances t! he owned when Jab It's an oi \ of the sa1 people lei plentiful. It is not regularly interest i Th wga» For s Orii I I In this lot O s 37 Green J TheCedarviUeBuilding£ LoanAssociation '(Our forefathefs fought for'independency am.* we phould 3ave for M e cadence. Open a Liberty Bell Savings Account' hctC' . Amb*r. Amber comes in round. >Irregularly shaped lump* lta color ranges from a pale1yellow to a reddish brown. Xt is sometimes transparent and Sometimes opaque. When It is heated gradually In an oil bath It becomes soft ftnd flexible and may bft worked easily. Two pieces may be united by smearing the surface with linseed oil and then pressing them' together while hot, Clondy amber may be clarified by boiling it In oil, as the oil fills the numerous pores to which- the tdrbld appearance Of the amber Is due. Formerly ^the small bits of am ber cast off in making objects were Wasted or ground tip for use th var nish, but now they are pressedr to gether Into '■“ambroid” or “pressed am* ber.” • Turbulent Constantinople, Six hufidred years before Christ was cradled, Constantinople, then known as Byzantium, was a great seat of commerce, spreading Its palaces, Its temples and Vrtately streets over the whole peninsula on which Its suc cessor stands today. Even In those days it was (he center and cause of almost ceaseless strife between Ber- elans, Gauls And Greeks, who cast en vious eyes on the “Pearl of the Bos porus,” Siege followed siege; again and agnln Its streets ran red with blood before, In the year 830 A. D„ Constan S 'mce Generally Best. To suffer in silence, to refrain from answering th bitt est of calumnies places us, on a vantage point vastly superior to those who Would injure us ftnd discounts what they may say. Gossip only becomes serious when we countenance by denial, -Silent con tempt speaks louder than the most vociferous contradictions. Nothing 1» harder to bear Iq silence than vilifica tion, yet tljnt It Is the part of wisdom to do so Is illustrated daily. There may come a time in our lives wlten saying nothing will seem to be an de fine the Great turned his back on WoWicdgmenf of gUllt and then"Will, Rome to make a splendid metropolis b^ given an opportunity to reply to. T o Forglva 1* to FofflCL” In a divorce case beard recently In Glnsgow the 'question atosie as to the difference between “ condonation" and “forgiveness,” the New York Evening Sun states. The judge decided that In a Christian, as well as a lay sense, it was assumed that every man had a slftt^ on which, were written the faults of his wife; Then forgiveness would be the complete wiping off the sihte c£ the record, tn condonation there was no blotting out. Tim retard remained on the slate and was only covered over with a piece of paperwith flm remarkt “That will obscure the record until ahothfir matrimonial of fense occurs,” Then the paper would be raised and the record and the mar ital sin was stilt there. o f his empire in the city which he re named after himself. Th* Bib!*. * j I think that X know my Bible as few literary men know it. There Is no book to the,,world tike It; and the flnekt novels ever written fall far short In interest of aky one o f the stories it tells. Whatever strong situations I have to my books are not Of my creation, but are taken from the Blbbe. ‘‘The Deemster,” Is the’ story o f the Prodi gal Son. “Tim Bondman,” is the atory e f Esau and Jacob. “Tim Scapegoat” Is the story o f EU and h is sons, but with Samuel as a little girl; and “The Manxman” >0 the story o f ttavld and Uriah—Hall Calhe. , Th* First Piayiha card*. Early playing cards were called tar* calumniators. But the ordinary little1 backbitings of every dny life are best, met In steadfast silence. In replying to them we are apt to lose our temper and Our dignity, which is both foolish and fUtHe.'—Exchnngq. Mu»lo*f Prodfflfti. Most musical prodigies are boys to spite of the lhw that girls develop mentally faster than beys. Glri prodi gies on the violin are almost urf- known, Very few of the great diva* have been known as child wonders, although (here is a mesmeric method by which young girls can be taught to ring in imitation of great artists. Can There ia Thought Without Brain? Most o f the scientists ’agree, that there can be no thought without a liv ing brain, yet some of the best schol ars Argue that before the appearance of man, nature was far more toteiti- gfeijt than we are at the pibseht day* and from a, logical standpoint it seems reasonable to suppose they are right. No machinery created by man ever worked half so perfectly as the?piabets «ta or taroCcbl. They differed a good jtheir orbits around the sun. In the deal in various localities. Backs close-, forests of.our globe nature has aeblev- ly resembling them are found to d a y ,^ rtie WMt maTVriaxx* inventions in I the Of plants, animal* and in. land : khU I *ectft Tllf5 Jftws J* gravitation, at* by travelers. In oarda of this kind j traction and repulsion', and the pht-no- wtf ut l| « a*i.fito ^ 1,f<? ftntl «lohth are beyond th* The notion of bad luck atlat ed to j comprehensibility of muu, yet tlmy are that number is of orientfil origin. A manifestations of an intelligence i * v HIGF iindgs Great«r riding comfort, «ui*ir *ttt*ringj atop body-sw*?; **v« .tir«* and fa*!. Op*r*te with Ford kpring*-— notag«in*t thma. t Moderate inprice, * fHilrilrtin •» ft. A, MURDOCK, 1 Cedervilic,and Jameetown B u r p e e ' J o h n s o n Co. I f J l S , ! A N A (MH I S, !!. r, A WHY NOT HAVE GOOD GI.ABSES SINOS YOU HAVIt ,TO WEAR THEM [GOOD XUHA Tllfaity1* Optical ftwtka Vide* You With th« E*«t, ‘ tradition relates thiit a Vcnetimi, perhaps Marco I’olo, “or his father Niccoto, first brought cards from China to tils'nattve city, 'Venice. Italy, Which IS the first pfcea In Europo where they were known. T IF F A N Y i telli e ce far superior io the workings of any human brain. The creation of man and the Workings of his brain should, alone, be sufficient evidence of pte-exlstent thought.- BETTER GLASSES ft. Detroit Bt. X*»U, 0.
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