The Cedarville Herald, Volume 35, Numbers 1-26
Cedarville Residence and - - e Business Properties For Sale. U Elegant, homea on West Xenia avenue. 2 Brick Bustneis Blocks on Main street. * 2 Good residence properties Chillicothe street. I Good 5 room house 'with , barn, cement walks, good well and cistern. South j^ JVIain street, Price $1X00. ONE 10-room house oh Main street between rati road am( Xenia »Ye- nno. LotYOxlJo foot; cement walks drilled well, cistern in house; barn', Price ana terms reasonable W.LCIEMANS Real Estate Agent The Cedarvile Herald. ■ .<$t'oa I;,er Year. • [ karlh bull . Editor Entered at tho Post-Offlrio, Cedar ville, October 31, 1887,, as second class matter. jmm * > s j . mj$Sr Take What Pill? Why, a D p . Miles' Anti-Pain Pill, o f course. Good for all kinds of pain; ‘ Used to relieve Neuralgia, Headache, Nervousness, Rheu matism,- Sciatica, Kidney Pains, Lumbago, Locomotor Ataxia, Backache, Stomachache, Period ical Pains o f women, and for pain in any part of the body. “1 have usedDr. Miles’ medicines fqr over is years and find themexcellent, I keep Dr.' Miles’ Anli-Paln Pills in the house all the time and would not think <pf taking a journey without them, no matter*how short a distance.I am going. Xcannot praise them enough.” .‘MissL ou M. Cmmcmrx. ■,» 63 High St,"Penacook, N. XX, . -A t ad. druggists, 25 doses 25c. MILES'MEDICAL. CO., Elkhart, Inti,, CAUSE' AND REMEDY. Uncertainty of the immediate future ,is looked upon by many men o f affairs, a •> a blockade to enter prise and business prosperity, and this blockade is now quite apparent throughout the channels of trade. ' The Presidential Election; the efforts-of Congress with no fixed purpose;. Organized Labor as a new factor in politics; together with other matters of greater or. less import, represent at this time a phaotic conflict of separate inter ests, to harmonize which is now the . problem before the country. All want Prosperity, Peace and Plenty. Read with care the Cin cinnati Enquirer, a journal that prints all the news each day from every commercial Center through out the world. A barometer.of causes and effects that points out, as a Beacon Light, the danger-and the safeguard therefrom. As well known, the Daily En quirer is the largest in size and highest .priced paper in the United States, yet cheapest, measured by quality and quantity. . The Weekly Enquirer, With the cream and digest of all the news, able and conservative editorials, market reports, methods and re suits from Government and State- Experiment Stations, veterinary matters, People’s Eorum, choice literature, short and continued stor ies, iloiKectarian sermons, geheral information, etc., with the exclusion o f r-iPnsatters of scandal and im morality,' is today the Cleanest Weekly Family Journal obtainable, Each issue is alone worth the price o f a year’s subscription. Solicitors £ r subscriptions make a bond. fiine p and increase the good influence pf The Enquirer in the uplift of morality and industry, arid for the betterment uftd Welfare of the community/ For terms \vrite to The, Enquirer, Cincinnati, Ohio, . *’! U b ACMPAfet* »c> tots it ,4 t iwbJfl tioths ttittu. 1tfei U0r.M#il a dial with IJfjsJSllwjp KiSw»Str 6 # stela (.'only CatIi.nltt 1 ftej-fciryEitithbcttct -I shall cese.Uils- rw&tomsnil tiieim /n jay rir(*n<U **t B S 1 ft*** «YSfieett,” ' tA*** Osfcora Mill Ufa.3, rail alter,***#. W - a P R I N T SALE BILLS Iii[»iiliin nliWrs.aM*■ ANtt PRINT THtM RH5HT FJRIDAY, FEBBUAKY ID, 1912 Additional Locals. Mr. Johu Steele-hag moved into the Jfagler property recently va cated by Mr* John Bean. Mr. Hubert Bird and family at tended the funeral of Mrs W. -H. King in Xenia Tuesday. picture- ot the First Presby terian church, ol Brookline, Mass., -if winch H'ev. W„ W. Iliif is paster, appears this month on the ftist page of the Heraid and Presbytery. Charles, the young son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Townsley was taken to Xema Monday where he. under went an operation at the McClellan hospital for. appendicitis. The upejratn n was a success and the young fellow is improving nicely. The Board o f Education at Clif ton ha* purchased a piano of Mc- b’arland in Springfield to be iisk Iin the schools. Mr. G. F. Siegler, music supervisor, will with the as sistance o f the pupils give a musi cal entertainment on the eighth of March, the proceeds to go to the benefit of the library. The Yellow ' Springs Farmers’ Institute will be held Feb. 21 and 22, three sessions each day. ' Among those on program are Howard. Me- Cnne, of Wilmington, on “ Cattle Feeding"’ ; W» N. Scarff, of Hew Carlisle, on “ Profitable Fruit Grow ing” ; W. A. Lloyd on “ Tho Agri cultural Survey of Ohio!’ ; Meron Kyle on “ The -Agricultural College and. the Farmer” ; Prof. D.* H. Barnes on “ 'iha Itural'Sebool Prob lems.” $100 Rewards $100. The readers of this paper will be please; to learn that there is at taut one dreaded dio^susathat scieaee liasbeen able to sure in all Ms singes and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Carets tbs only paritiya our* now known to the medical fraternity. Ostarrh being a constitutional dnwaaa,,requires a constitutional treatment. Bail's Catarrh Cureis taken internally, settingdirectly -up an the blood and mucoussun-aces of system Biertby destroying the foundation of this disease, andglving tb* patient strength by buddingup tbs gcmatitutioa and ttssUtiug naturCin doing Us worfr,' Tha proprietor bays so much faith in l<a cttratlve powers, lmt-they offer oneHundred Pollan for any sase thatitfsAI* to cure. Send for fiat o testimonial* Addrate l\ J, CHFNEY & Co, Toteda O. Btfid fif Pmgglst, 70s. all's Family Pill* sre tlHs best, O'er headache t>v, lHUm’ Ant\ -.Pain Puis PublicSale - Having decided to locate in Texan I will sail at public sale on what I k known aB tlie-A. O. Bridgman farm, at the edge of Cedarville on the Yel low Springs pike on . TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1912 Commencing at 12:30 p. m. the fol lowing property: 4 HEAD OF HORSES 4 Consisting of 1 gray mare nine years old, good liner, in foal; 1 bay mare, fl years old, m foal; 1 roan mare, 11 years old, in foal; 1 road mareji years old. 5 HEAD OF MILCH COWS Consisting of 1 full blood Jersey cow, calf by side; 1part Jersey, calf by side: 1 Red Polled giving good flow of milk; 1 registered Jersey heifer, fresh In A p r il;! Guernsey heifer, freBh In April, Hay In Barn; 40 Shocks of Fod der, 150 Bushels of Corn inCrib. FARM IMPLEMENTS. Consisting of McCormick mower, good as new; disc harrow', whei* drill, corn planter with 80 rods f wire; Co tooth harrow, corn plow, 2 Oliver Chilled and l Syracusebremc- lng plows; 10 foot steel hay rake, one horse cultivator, 2*horSe road wagon milk wagon. 2 buggies, 8sets of work harness, set of buggy harness, 20lm. seed corn, 2 galvanized water tanks HOUSEHOLD GOODS Consisting: of bed room set, 1 sot of dining chairs, 3 rookers 2 bed steads, 2 druggets, I) ft-, dining table; .Hilary table, 2 parlor stands, White Sewing Machine, cook stove,S heat ing stoves, gasoline stove and many articles not mentioned. 35 bu. of Potatoes, 50 tbs. of lard and 150 lbs of cured moat. Terms Made Known Bay o f Sale. CASPER HEITZMAH », T, BAKER, Auct. ANDiM-ivy J a c k s o n , clerk. mm MDiir.it g i g - toyou andyour*. Itmr*a» all the Itilercst< in# haws v i the cor.uftmety, of y 6 ut neigh- iwmandftiemKofthechurchesamlschwl*. f>( everything In which you are directly Interested, Don’t yea think ths Route P*p*r It it gtted thing fit have? H s Gonespondence : Course Ruth looked vendcrincly at the big,; bronzed, bearded chap who stood crail-, Ing down Into her u;- urned face. , Somehow those eyca were familiar, j- and yet— , , tJ_i “ Burt?” sho gasped, “This cant j bo you?” ’ f “It can’t be anyone else," he insist ed, "May 1 eorae in?" j Blushing, she stood aside to let him 5 pass. In her^snrprise sho had forgot- j ten oven to be hospitable. Ho made I Ido way into the parlor as though It were only yesterday that he had paid ■hislast call. The room was little changed; as little changed as Ruth herself—and as primly prerise, Even Ids photograph ■’was still In the little leather frame on the mantel; He crossed the room and regarded it admiringly, though there was little to .call for e^’miratlon In the sofnewhat faded cabinet of the heavy fowled ponderous hulked man with a placent smile hovering on a rather weak mouth. Ruth stood beside him. “Can you wonder,” she asked, with ,a nervous IltUe laugh; "that I did i.ot know you for a moment?” "I don’t think you know me yet,” wms- the unexpected reply, “Let's -Sit down and got acquainted.” He looked toward the old horsehaii covered sofa, but she moved* toward a rpeker by a stove. ’ Beneath the beard the lips parted in a' half smile and he sank into a nearby chair. . "Got' in last night," ho rumbled, in; answer to her question, ‘Tm only here for a week. Came on to see a man and lie won’t be hack from Europe un til next Saturday " "I take It then that you live in the west?" Burton nodded. . "Southwest would bo more nearly correct," ho said. "Down in Arizona and Old Mexico mostly." "And 'this is your first visit eaol since—” She paused and colored, - “My first since yoh opened your cor respondence school of character, for mation," he chuckled. • . “My,what?" she gasped. “Maybe you forget just how I came to go west,” he suggested, Shi shook her bead.; She remembered only too well. Burton Brooks had given up a position because be did not like the work and saw no chance for advance merit. She had broken her ' engage ment in a hitter letter in which she had. upbraided him for his lack of con centration, She had been ready to for give and forget the day after, hut it was too late. Burton had gone on the midnight train. ‘Whalenvilie Was a flag station and none knew his desti nation. That had been four years ago. Evidently he had not forgotten. “Do you think it klpd to spoil It all by referring to my unfortunate let ter?” she asked patiently, ; “It Wasn’t'unfortunate,” he insisted “You don’t know what a lot of good that letter did -me* That’s what 3 came to tell you."' ' From his pocketbook ho drew out-,a sheet of tracing cloth and held it toward her, “ There it is,” ho said. “It’s been my Bible these Jast foul years. “I’ll admit that when I got it I was sore. I was sore for an hour, Then I realized two things. You were more. than half true and the rest of.it was that you had worried yourself sick over ma and most everyone else. You rlways did have the trick of wanting o manage everyone you came in con tact with and sometimes the contract grew too large for you,. You were worried because Jen Stevens ran ;away with that actor fellow—and I gol Jen’s share too, “So I Just packed up and lit out, I didn't blame you for not wanting to marry mo and 1 didn’t want to put temptation in your way—or mine. “Well, I got out to Chicago and got -a Job With a construction company. Every morning I read your letter and when It began to grow ragged on the edges I copied it on tracing cloth. ' ! simply couldn’t talk hack to my boss, remembering what you said, and so I got ahead. Down in Old.Mexico when I was living in a box car and bossing a section, I took a correspon dence course In engineering and after that I called your letter tho Corre spondence course in character. It did me a lot of good." “Then I’m’ glad that I wrote the ’ et- ter,” sho said softly, “I was afraid afterward, that I had spoken too strongly.” - “It Was the best thing that ever hap pened to me,” he declared, “1 don’t need the course any Inore, but I do need the teacher, Ruth. May I have her?" For a moment sne hesitated. It was in her mind to hold off, to punish him for thoso four years in which he had ‘ given no sign. Then Bho realized that he took hhi punishment Very literally, and that she, too, deserved a punlsls- ment for her scathing arraignment; and Brooks, seeing her weakening, an ticipated her answer with a kiss, “It's not off. i that pupils marry their-teaeliertt," ho laughed, “but there ard exceptions to kll rules," Vofretied For, j Here's a .conversation wo actuaully ! overheard: , j “Hello, Jim! How aro you? .Fine. ‘ How's our old friend James?” | “Doing nicely. He's gone in for a course in health culture," , ! “That so? Well, ho can stand it—lie | always did have a magnificent const!- , lutlofl.”~-CleVelanfi t’laindenier. [Caviaii,asid-TfatkMavhb «! i II mi I: k ">?cosida(.».imrMoeeusVrWxs. j! ,'iimOrfies ifij - i/m iv in, , rupi.ie- u,jj.r-ATcnTAJrFic*- [and war,win inkulifts lif'w tf.tnm irRiiaK-. f —.tt/osln'::£-rtov, ; , ‘ SSflli ttivjcl, 0. Mif-.tr>. crip* Sf«tijnr tJ-tiJ, Wo otlvJjj, Sf l:aU:i!al>ieC, nMrfrte t>i .Oteffcis, OmiiStta tSadMf liJtAkiteKWw* Attisyu**. “ iLviip,W-i«» wtett.” w«h ajwt ct txr.i'. .a U; q LLfi, ami fareif.mcaur.triss ■RStklS, AtMreie. C.A.SNOVVACO. U1 B f f iE M O M SUNMtSdiOOl , L esson Br'liev.Wil'JsBiUTUw.n.n.tXMctormb't*Coats* , MutHlySiLioIfliwtBU,filutfcfo. * LESSON FOR FEBRUARY 18. i MINISTRY OF JOHN THE BAPTIST, j X-KSSQI-f ri3XT-Mftrt; ltl-8; Luke .3:K0. MEMOBT VERSCS-Luko S:8, 0 or 10, GOLDEN TEXT—Repent ye: for tpo Itlngdom gf heaven Is at Liana,—Matt. 3:2. The story of John tho Baptist’s min istry, opening as It does with a prophetic reference, connects the Old and the New Testaments, showing the ■ New to be the fulfillment of the Old. Thus we. say: Tho Old is in the New' tontalned, the Now Is in Jhe Old ex- Xdaincd; the Qld is in the New con cealed,The Ne*' la in the Old revealed, Christ is tile1 tbemo and unifier of both Testaments. If -ha had not been com ing, the Old would not have keen writ ten; If he had ,pot como, the New would not have keen written, ■* What a strange impressldn this fiery preacher o f the wilderness, John, must have made upon his hearers! His dress, as his message, bore the marks of the wild. Strange, is if not, that such a one should be chosen to pre pare tho way for -the Messiah? We might have ,chosen a.dllferent Instru ment—a well dressed, polished, elo quent, silver-tongued orator. The Baptist’s message had its.basis in the word of G.od—“The word- of God came unto John in the wildernr i.” That is where every pulpit message ought to. come from, The business of the preacher and teacher of Christ is not to Invent a gospel, hut to proclaim b«e already provided. The Bible is the final critic of the uressa e, John’s ministry was preparatory; if looked forward, to the coming of some thing better. Just as John himself gave way to Christ, so his message of repentance made room for faith in Christ. John baptized with water un to repentance. The Baptlsts’s jr.lnktrj- went no farther *than that, Jesus Christ turned the water of John’s bap tism into steam by the fire of'the Holy Ghost. -John prepared; Jesus re generated, The necessity for repentance cannot be overlooked in this lesson. In a sense, It Is the first step into the King dom. Both John and Jesus began their ministry with a call to repentance. Repentance is clearly defined in this lesson as a turning from a life of sin to a life of righteousness,'' There are three elements in repentance: First, the Intellect is involved—It is a change of mind or viewpoint; second, tho emotions aro involved—it means to have a car© regarding the thing in question, so we find the words "sigh,” “grief* substituted for repentance; third, the will plays a prominent part tp repentance,-for there is included In tho word the Idea'of rin after-thought, resulting in a change in-one’s course of action. Reponfimce is not only, a heart broken for Sin', but dso from sin, That this is John’s meaplng of re pentance is clear from his exhortation to thoso who asked1him the meaning of his call to repentance—exact no more than that which is appointed you;, do violence to no,man, neither accuse any falsely; bring forth, there fore, fruits worthy Of repentance. A Jllttle boy was once asked the meaning of repentance. Ho replied: "It means being sorry enough for a thing so as not to do it again” John preached the wrath to come. Evidently he believed in fufuro pun ishment. He did not believe-that the desire to escape future punishment was sufficient or the best reason why men should recelvo Jesus Christ. And it may b© that no man really becomes. a Christian who seeks to be one only that he may escape the results of his sin. We aro saved that we may glori fy God in the life that now is as well as to be delivered from the wrath to come. He' who doe3 not serve Christ hero will- not dwell with him in heaven. The fact of wrath and future punish ment Is not an invention of modern theology.- Chrl3t believed in it and taught It when he referred to the "worm that dleth not, and the fire that is not quenched," and pictured the ungodly being cast-into "everlast ing fire.” Wo should have to blot out a largo part of the Bible if we were to blot out all tho Scriptures which teach future •retribution- for sin. When w© consider the fearful' atroci ties perpetrated Upon the tons of men, the frightful iniquities practiced upon helpless women and children, and then see the ease and luxury and splendor ■fn which the perpetrators of these, crimes live, we wo>iitt be very sorry to bo assured that there is no future retribution for tho perpetrators of Such deeds. Give the Justico of heaven the same degree of common sense consideration that you give to the jus tico of earth, and sojjhewhere In the other world you must place a peni tentiary, John's preaching drew the crowds, and co Will the preaching and teach ing of the Gospel today, when pro claimed by men as consecrated to their mission as John the Baptlzer was to his. The crowd have not tired of tho Gocpel, but only of the average preach er of the Gospel, The messenger, and not the mdSfage, is at fault Tho hearts of men with all their needs, as well as the Goapri of-Christ with all its power, is the same today as when Christ walked upon the earth, ' John fas a hold preacher, and a study of bis life shows us Unit he died because of liis bold rebuke of Herod’s sin ■ A Uaefuf Acierice- “What it geography?” asked the fa ther who wa* testing his son’s prog ress In study, “Geography," fcplk^l little Jimmy Jiggt, “ is what you . .c Inside your frOtisers when you think you are going to get « whipping-”— Washington Star. Children Cry for Fleicherfs T h o K ind Y ou Have A lways B ough t, and. wh ich 1ms been J r use fo r over 30 years, has h om o the signature o f and hag been made tinder his per sonal supervistoiit since its Intohcy# - Allow no one to deceive yon in this* AH Counterfeits, Imitations and ‘ Must-as-good” are but Kxperlments tliat trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. W h a t i s C A S T O R IA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil,. Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. I t is Pleasant. I t contains neither OpUun, Morphine nor other Narcotie substance. Its age Is its guarantee. I t destroys Worms and allays Feverishness, I t cures Diarrhoea and "Wind Colic, I t relieves d'ee,thing Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. I t assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach aud Howels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Ghe Children’ s Panacear-The Mother’ s Friend. . i GENUINE C A S T O R ! A always FBe&ra the Signature o f The Kind You Dave Always Bought In Use F op Over 3 0 Years THECENTAUnCOMPANY,»7MURRAYSTREET. NEWYORKCITY. f H f i B Self- ALSOJBARGAINS IN S ilK . R e m n a n t s g g | | |4 100 YARDS AT 50 c. A YD. HUSoiledLinenGKf$, isc. each All wool dress goods, short lengths 35c. a yard. Sold formerly for 75, 1.00 and l.5t). Kindegarden goods, something new. flUTGHISON & GIBJIEY’S, XENIA OHIO, Fresh Fish AND .OYSTERS. At C. M. SPENCERS ITWILL JUST TOrC’H THE SPOT'and prove an every day winner every Time. Good health, good ehceyand long life is what wo promise if yriu Buy Our Meats Microbes, disease and death lurk in a lot of the meat that’s sold, but not in ours. We sell tbebpst and at a fraction above cost, Our market is safe and not. high priced. C, B CROUSE Cedarville, Ohio. WAgHiN«t#fr( b ,«, f London’* Va*t W«*,*h. London, in riumrtary value, la wortb two and a ball time# m muck as Fatkb '* ^ New fromCovertoCover WEBSTEElS NEW _ . . INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY JUST ISSUED. E«Lin Chief, Dr. W .T . Harris, former U. S. Com. of Education; The Wehsier Tradition Developed by- Modern Scientific Lexicography. KeytoLit- crature of SevenCenturies. General Information P ractically . Doubled. 2700 Pages.- 6000 Illustrations, 400,000 Words and Phrases. GET THE BEST in Schqlarsbip, Conven ience,. Authority, Utility. . Bookmaker M l -f I I IN THE BOOKWALTER HOTEL HIGH STREET DININGROOMFORLADIESUPSTAIRS ALSO REST ROOM. M E A L S ; N O W a s C E N T S . LunchCounter onJMainFloor Open Day and j^ijht. The Beet of Good Used in tha Cul inary Department. ■gJUiig- J. H. McHILLAN. Funeral Director and Furniture Dealer. Manufacturer of Cement Grave Vaults and Cement Building Blooke. Telephone 7. Cedarville, Ohio. aaw ii m DR. LEO ANDERSON, Veterinary Surgeon and Dentist. GRADUATE O. 0. U. OillCe Waddle’s Livery Barn. Citijtfns ’ Phone 98 and 81 CEDARVILLE, - - OHIO Very Serious It is a very- serious metier to risk for one medicine and have the 1wrong one given you. For this reason We urge you In buying to be careful to gst the genuine— B U $ 3 S g l 6 HT The reps• ;on« f tkh old, reiia* fcle medicine, fe? constipation,.ia» digeriipst rindliver -iitfullc, fc firm* 3y established. Is coca noi imitate ether mediclncc. It io better tisast otlier.i, or It w tfii not be tho fj» vorite liver powder, with a large? eaterth&aall others combined. sold m 'm vm m i i - A TLA S HOTEL , 1 and RESTAURANT , RMOD I ED - REFURNISHED Popular^ Priced Restaurant for Ladles and Gentlemen. * Service is unexcelled S. Detroit street, Xenia, O, S PILES' nanFISTULA AM*At* DISEASESOFTHEHECTtffl fljf*Xi.'n f.cta SE»&s&a®us»Ba! £>R.*j. j. M c C lellan ^ ymtsniwjtaMUL.
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