The Cedarville Herald, Volume 36, Numbers 1-26
4 T AsWfMMtotal *u ii If flM£}< L I N E S NEW DAILY TRAIN TO CHICAGO PAN HANDLE ROUTE r .c . a &ST.I.RY. . C-eljstsbuo . . -.'.At45am Leaven l osscton , .......... ?.*>>"&am Leavea South Charleston.. ,. 10,42 am Leaves Cedarville. . . . . . . . . . . .10,54 am Loaves Springfield.»».»,»♦, .10.45 am . Leaves~^JCenia .......11,27 am • • Arrives D a y t o n . .12.01 pm , Arrives Richmond ,1.10 pm . ■ - ' (SoaikCiacaga6,53:pn| Arrives CHICAGO =| EnglewoaS 7.06 pm '.••••«•■ . t-UrnonS{atiim7,30 pm CLUB CAR,*DINING CAR SERVICE AND COACHES 1 COLUMBUS TO CHICAGO , PARLOR CAR SPRINGFIELD TO CHICAGO Connect* a t Richmond for Indianapolis, Louisville and St. Laul* FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONSULT TICKET AGENTS (D-ieo) ' ■' $ 53 , 000.00 BEING, GIVEN AWAY to those who act as the representative of EVERYBODY’S MAGA Z INE and THE DELINEATOR—all in addition to liberal com missions. Let us show you how you can . Seciire a Share simply by forwarding thekubscrlptionsor your friends and neigh bors and Collecting t,he renewals of our present subscribers. Try for THIS month’s prizes. There are iota of prizes that can be won only bypeisous living in towns same as you own.-. .Write a t once to the , BUTTERjCK PUBLISHING COMPANY Buttenclc Building, New -York City. S i ® ffi Q ® ® -4>f tf* q & & kp $ w_w w 9 9 ® . I t a Very Difficult Task fpr Most People. WE MAKE IT EASY FORYOU Tom ' deposits here earn something every day. Lot us help you save and get something ahead.. WE PAY 5} PER . CENT INTEREST ON DEPOSITS OP ANY AMOUNT. In terest Payable January and July. - Deposits made. up1to and including January 10,1913, will draw interest from J anuary 1,1918. ASSETS OVER $2,75.0,000,00, . / We Are the Second Largest financ ial Institution in the City, The Springfield Building & Loan Association m m « m m €0 •m €0 05 28 E . Main St,. Sprlnglitd,§0. * ** ■* CHAS. H. PIERCE, Pres. CHAS. E . PETTICREW, SeCy. ™ $ S t $ $ S $ $ $ $ $ f $ I '$ $ jjf TRY OUR JOB PRBSITING I M E R E D I T H S ’ l I T l U S I C S T O R E PATRON IZE - DAYTON 'S - BEST S e cond L a rg e st C la ss ic StocK in th e S late 131 S, Ludlow St., * Dayton, O* t35£5 P0P ITRY Headquarters Highest Price For: ■' POULTRY • end .■Will call anywhew Iwth e eiswtttfy for •theift** ’ Stop*- ping? direct/ to' tW iiigh* l>riced ■ Iliisten t. markets' enahloAus to psy .ihn.'fifth.;* eat price at homo. - C. E. BRADSTREET N* Delimit ftt. GROCER Xenia, Ohio $ r,oo 'P e r T e a r . The Cedarville Herald.] INMATIONAL SlINMYSfliOOL L ess ® Children Cry for Fletcher’s KABLH BULL Editor Entered ,at the Post-Ofllce, Cedar- | viHo, October SI, 1837, as second I class matter. . FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1913. ; <BJf E- O. BEU.I3B8, Director of Eve, nlng Department The Moody Bible Jn- . BJltute pf Chicago) Jamaica’s torrential rains ought to mollify the ginger. Youth has been defined as just one darned blunder after another. Prophets are bum leaders. If you dont’ believe It, look at Turkey. A Parisian hotel will he opened without servants. Also without guests. Skirts slashed at the knee are the latest fashion. Handy to get at the money, ' . Statistics sfiow that more bachelors than married men become insane. Why say mpre? A New York paper advises Its read ers to start a pearl farm, Still seed pearls are expensive. That town which seeks’to hear the name “1912” can never hope to be up to date next January. - Cuba certainly is learning the gamo. It Is now crying fraud over-the elec tion and demanding a recount. Money that Europe doeB not spend on a general war it can invest nice ly In buying shoes for the- baby. Our only fear of a woman. In the president’s cabinet is that she would put scalloped paper on its shelves. Army aviators have Invented a noiseless aeroplane! The harmless one, however, is still uninvented. Powdered wigs may be pret]ty, hut their historical significance is/out of touch with' the spirit of these times. .. The corset Is of some real use to mankind after all, A female Imper sonator has died because of tight lac ing, !- Now the young man who took his girl, out in a canoe1during the Slim mer, is taking her out on a motor cycle. - Tortoises are cultivated In the Sey chelles Island for their .Bhell. And ldb- store are cultivated on Broadway for ..thefr money.. , The candy trust, has been attacked In the courts. Gladsome tidings for the young‘man who starts his court ship this winter. Keeping “a headless cat alive 12 hours" may be a, triumph of medical of surgical science, but i t -is awfully hard on the cat. _ That threat of approaching side whiskers and the other threat of a general war In Europe appear to haVe been false alarms, The Illinois supreme court w$nts to know whether poker is work. Too deep for us. but it’s evident that the play ers aren't union men, " i Not only do transatlantic wireless messages promise to be much cheap er. hut they inay relieve us of the hybrid word “cablegram." A Pittsburg woman wants a divorce because her husband was sober twice in twelve years. We take it that they were not successive occasions. “The Blind Banker of Paris,” who was able to get away with $2,000,000 belonging to his clients seemB to have had an eye for the main chance, A Philadelphia man has died, leav ing $100,000 without any indication as to where it should go. But then the lawyers don’t need any Indications. Statistics prove that bachelors go Insane oftener than married men, but- any married man knows that bachel ors have more time for such activ ities. . Pierre Loti announces that he ad mires the freshness of the American girl. He Is reticent, however, concern ing the freshness gf. the American boy. Twenty-three hundred love letters were found among the effects of an Australian bachelor. Evidently h/t either had to die or marry to sto*p them. Brickley, the CrtmSon star in the' Harvara-Princoton game, has been offered a job in vaudeville. The hall player has something else t6 worry about how. "Atnerica is becoming more mu- steal,” says Campanarl. Luckily, ho hhs never heard congress sing the “Star Spangled Banner" at the close Of a session. Some sclent lute in New- York can now keep head}* ‘e f Us altvo 12 hours "if necessary," Lut If put to a refer- enduin of normal cats it would never be necessary. A New York woman Wants a divorce because her husband drinks cologne. She can't he blamed, considering the odor of some of the concoctions classed under that name. ,at ' ___ * ■ , Dynamiters bought alarm clocks by the dozen for their infernal machines, but you cannot make a commuter bo* 11 tyre that dynamiting was a bit too good for an alarm clock, In a New York speed contest typists wore writing from 113 to 117 words a minute. Since we have observed that people who wrote as fast as that, don’t my much, the news excites no etfVy. LISSOM FOR JANUARY 12 MAN THE CROWN OF CREATION LESSON TEXT—Genesis 1 : 3 », 37 ; 3 ,- 7 - 9 ; 15-81, GOLDEN TEXT-—’‘God created man in Ms own image.” Gen. J:* 7 , Ten times the words, "and God said” appear to the first chapter of Genesis. God spake, and ’twas done. Now all la In readiness earth apd heav en await hi* word, "and God said let us make man." It would seem as though a conference was being held before- this momentous ' event. The “let us make” Is full pf suggestion. That each person of the Triune God head was present to creation wo saw In last week's lesson, and It is bore still further indicated by the plural form ef the. Hebrew noun for the name of God. But what pattern sbdll We follow to ‘the making of man? Surely only the highest and - best, hence “In the Image of God ” This- does not,necessarily mean the physi cal image, hut rather the intellectual and spiritual Imagd of God, see Col. 3:10, Eph. 4:24, John 8.25. God who Is spirit (John 4:26) does manifest himself In material form (see. Phil, 2:6, Isa. 6:1-4). and similar passages, and this form resembles the human. But this "Image” (likeness) bus been blurred and marred by sin, James 3:9, It was, however, perfectly seen to the perfect Man, Christ Jeaus, see Cor. 4:4, Heb. 1:2* 3. - Science at a Pause. How God created man we are" ndt told, except that he was "formed of the dust of the ground,” and .to this day the bodies of men and of animals consist of the very same elements as the soli which forms the earth upon- which they dwell, It Is yet to be proved that man came from.the low er animals, and It la-H scientific secret y.that .a t this point the real leadefs of science axe at a pause. The dust of our bodies Is the same as yopdor stars, as the lily of the field, as that which kings and queens are made. But .still there are higher heights, --for God breathed Into this-man his own. spirit, verse 7, and from, this union of the body and spirit man be came a living soul, Man is the con necting link between the material and the Infinite, by the physical he Is re lated to lower nature and by the spir itual he Is related to God. ^ If the theory of the rehabilitation of this earth after, too destruction of the pre-adnthite races is true (chap. 1:2-13), we now s?e God to his won drous grace preparing a place - for man’s especial abode, w . $, 9, 15-24. The two accounts of creation to the first and second chapters of Genesis -are not contradfe^Sr^Tand.to make them so one must .read Into the nar rative what Is not there, The first presents a concise .outline of creation, the, second an enlargement that con-, nects these events with the region where man began to live, the .starting point of the present human race. That Edett wah undoubtedly to the region of the Euphrates and the Tigris rivers is pretty generally accepted, though, of course, we can only specu late as to the cradle of the human race. . After God had created Adam .with the highest nature the animals .were not fit companions for him. Nor could he be the beginning of the race of man without one like to hlmpelf! Man can attain his highest only as he has human companionship (v, 18), Adam had the power of speech, and an Intel ligence, and was given the right to name the animats of the field (v. 19). But in all this there was no compan ion for him (v. 20), > Unity of Llfo. In the first account- is the simple statement that God created "male and femalo,” hut to the second we see that man is not complete without the woman. God's mode was to make her "bono of his hone” ( vt . 83, 28), This suggests the utmost possible unity of man and wife; unity of life, of soul, of emotions, of. home, etc, Matthew Henry calls to our attention tho wom an Was not taken from “out of his head to top him, hpr out of his- feet to he trampled under foot, but out of his side to he his equal, from Un der his arm to be protected, and near his heart to he loved.” The marriage' relation is tho most sacred of all human ties’(v. 24), It is tho best posslblo training and educa tion In love, sacrifice, duty, victory over evil, in all that Is best In life. These are tho qualities needed to build up the race. When one is de graded the other of’necessity is low ered, To understand] the full meaning of the marriage relation we need to comprehend the relation of Christ and Ills church, Eph, 5:31, 32. If, then, mail lias such a high be ginning, does not that very fact im pose upon him a. burden of responsi bility to hie Creator?' “Nobility means o&igation,” and to renounce Is base ingratitude. Even as God said, ’“let us make man,” so by his power We are to continuo the work of ntoktog mptt; who shall be complete in tlhrlst Jeshs. Created to God's image, what a les son to leave In the minds of our schol ars. -Lost, marred, obliterated by Sin, yet it la posslblo to have it restored In Christ, Is that imago bright or dim? This is' God's world, we are God’s Children, created for him, ' Nautical, ' , Ancient mariner (at the first foot ball game)-—Where’s th e ' tackle we hear so much about? Smart Land lubber—Don’t you see .the, linos over the ground?—Judge, CASTOR IA For Infants and Children, ?i)fi Kind You HaveAlwajs Bought Hoars tho Sh e jKtoa You Have Always Bought, and which has been ill use for over 36 years, has borne tho signature of and has been made under h is per* sonal supervision since Its Infancy). A llow no one to deceive yon in th is. A ll Counterfeits, Im itations and ««Just-as-good” are hu t’ Experiments that: .trifle w ith and endanger th e health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA CJastoria is a harmless substitute for Castor O i|, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups^ I t is Pleasant. I t contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. I t destroys "Worms and allays i?everisliness. I t eurcs Diarrhoea and. Wind Colic. I t relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. I t assim ilates the Food, regulates the , Stomach and Bow els, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Paimcea—The Mother’s Friend, GENUINE CASTOR IA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of TheKindYonHaveAlwaysBought In Use Fo r Over 30 Years : the cehtaub cowPAwy.rr muwbaystreet , new yobk cmr. ...... .■■. ■ r I make olothes tha t fit a t the shoulders, under the arms, around the neck and th a t hang right, front aDd back—and th e trousers look as though th ey belonged to you . The clothes" keep their shape too . U s The f Tailor X E N I A , O H IO k.lAiti.L.lAi$i,LAAl4s.AiAAitt,LAAltLL.lAi44,iLAAUAL FRESH ft! -# “|everyg-% Monday, Thursday and Friday They are the kind you will enjoy, no water, nice and large. ,v [rif P H O N E (10 ] C . M. S P E .N C E R A LOCAL MAN or WOMAN is desired right now to represent T he P ictorial R eview in this territory—to call on those whose subscriptions are about to expire. Big money for the right person—fepre* sentatives in someothei districts inakeoYer$60<bOOa month Spare time workers are liberally paid for what they do. Any persoh taking up this position becomes the direct lo cal r esentativo of the publishers. Write today for this offer of a ■ . • , PICTORIAL R EV IEW 222 West 80th,-Street. New York City FISTULA am> ail DISUSES OF THE RECTUM f>r.MfiClelUhtnhohncMfa thot.tof«»icn and tho t>t£b1(Qtii»t h« ffiakc* a ipaeUUy t>i tfceM‘UwaiMf aridha*hadft ytM roAiwnt tfj f»(n and hj frombutinw*. Blk<lJhf» fljrtod fend Sktar Dr*4*«tf of W^men* mm rax roar m i * m*m* and lodoiwmenU it patientitUrefl, KiutlUUed d r !* j » j . M c C l e l l a n ' COU/HBUS, 0. PilesorSmiles? A POSITIVE GUARANTEE tobnmedlateljifAltov*«ndnlllmstolycut* OR. HEBRAS UNQObi the most wonderful setcnlllk dbcovery of modernUmeaforttusfiovererttusesofItemn(} files, Eczema, Telter, Salt IlUomn, Rfnt: Worn!,Barber'sItch, cte. Thishighlymedicated antisoplio Salvo killn f.bo frorm*, removes tnci trouble end heats tho'Irritation permanently. Absolute satisfaction guaraniCodormoneyrefunded, . „ t-t ioesocl*, atDruggist*, ormallad. Trial sampleacent*tocovermailingc THE 0. <S, BITTNERC0.,Ts!erfo, ONto. in~‘i-i iTifi'-iwf i ir'1 .............................. Clothes That Fit i £ i i t IT WILL JUST TOUCH THE . SPOT and prove uri every day winner ev e ry time, GQod health, good cheer and long life is what we promise if you Buy Our Meats Microbes, disease and death lurk 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, Woman Finally Recover* From Nervous Breakdown Impoverished neryes destroymany people before their time. Often be fore a sufferer realizes what the trouble is, he is on the yerge of a complete nervous breakdowfi. Tt is of the utmost importaifee to keep your nervous system in good con-- dition, as the nerves are the source’ •of all bodily power, Mrs. Anna Kounz, 211 Mechanic St, Pueblo, Colo., says: “For many years .1 suffered from nervous prostration; I was unable to do any house work and doctors failed to help me. - Remedies I tried from druggists did not do' me a particle of good. A neighbor told my husband about /*■ ■ Dr. Miles’ Nervine and he procured a bottle. After-the first few doses I showed a marked improvement and after taking two bottles I was entirely cured. 1 have been perfectly well for years and cannot praise Dr. Miles’ Nervine too highly." r If you are troubled with loss of appetjte, poor digestion, weakness, inability to sleep; if you are in a general run down condition and unable to bear your part of the daily grind of life, you need some thing to strengthen your •nerves. You. may not realize what is the mat ter with you, but that no reason why you should delay treatment. , Dr. Miles’ Nervine has proven its value in' nervous dis orders for thirty years, and merits a. trial, no matter how many other remedies have failed to .help you. Sold by all druggist*. If first bottlav falls’!to benefit youp tnoney Is returned. MILES MEDICAL. CO., Elkhart, Ind, / % ■ y- The Bookuialtef * . 4L ...Hestaufant... IN THE BOOKWALTER HOTEL HIGH STREET DININGROOMFORLADIESUP STAIRS ALSO REST ROOM. M E A L S N O W Sts C E N T S , Lunch Counter on Main Floor ■ Open Day and Night, The Best of Good Used la he Cul inary. Department. LAZYLIVER] " I flml-Csscarets so good that I wohld not b e / wltbirtit thorn. I wss troubled a greet desl with I torpid ItVor and headache, How since U klngi Csscsrots CsndyCatbsrtle 1 feel very-much better I I shsll eorulnly recommend thorn to my friends 1 ks the host medicine I have ever seen.” t Anns Bailnot, Oabo/n Mill Ho. X, Fall Elvar, H a ts.« .B eat For ■ —, ^ The Bowels CANDYCATHARTIC taSSiVA?' Potent, Taste Good.Do Good, ",r '" ‘lii!, l»c,Kc.Wi.Nev** •old In’bttlkv .Tho.ftOTinifm tablet Rtaw»p«4 CCG. Ifo&r&nteed to cure or Your frwncy buck* Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. for j H g M l S H E , TEX MILLIQH aOKS l Stop y,mr i>a<i -...calh with Dr, MIlM* Lkxti.tiv« Tablet*. < J* H. McHlLLAN. Funeral Director and Furniture Dealer. Manufacturer of Cement Grave Vaults and Cement Building Blocks, Telephone 7. Cedarville, Ohio, R n r l h l Indigestion. , , , Relieves sour stomach, Oalpuaiiottofthoheart Digestswhatyou^at t 6 YEARS* EXPERIENCE TnAbK M arks D esigns C opyright * A c . Anyone sending n sketch and dascription may unlckiy hscortsm , itr 0 Mm.,n ftes wbethrr an tnyenttnn it (itnhRhiy nninitaijia, Ctdnttitinini. lio.nastrictly<1ftnnit*iiti.n.,HftSOBMli on Patmu soiitfrne. oldest sacii.-y for scraniiif patenf*. l1‘.ynnta tkknn tfirmiBh Momi a l o , m*tws tfi.-rmitusiHi, withontcharce, in th* Scientific flmeiKaB. AhktiA*vmsly itltistralsd weekty. Jjwasst Hr. rnMihmoranyscienjiftoj.vnrmih, qctna.t3* ikkrsjojjrtnor.tt’a,iu Soldbynil flewsdaaists. LOCAL A? I -Wine of Car - The Waft & F will be held Tiw Cedar Vale. Far; Messrs C-N. aj Columbus busim Mr.. Q. H. St: French luck Spr Mrs. J . W. Job the first of the w . acute indigestion Mr. Harry )w< Louis Saturday, mained over umi left for Detroit U "Prof. F, A. Ju r fined to ills home severe case of tin Mr. O. A. Dobl spending several tending the-State Mrs. Emma } visited her siste Owens, Timrsdii,' Prof, F. M- F have been in Bin where, they were death of the forn O l o t h e s of CLEANED a t B ■ —The Exchang ville, Ohio, pays i- on savings from $ They request 1 pass books to brii oeive credit for jr . —Choice Plym erels lor sale. Oi 3t Harrison Lill Thursday a t the « funeral will be hi the residence of J The regular m the W. O. T, Ur r library Tluirsda o’clock. Mr. Wm. Con. have been in Nei Weeks where the; tendanceat the f > ■Whitelaw. Reid, morning. Xonians take r. 1 of Reviews this i to the death of I states th a t the la < born “ in the lilt! , &fr. T. H. N< turned home Sal ter a two weeks’ in Coshocton. T panied home by I er, who will mill The two year o and Mrs. Louis S. . died Tuesday afl pneumonia folloi lngitls; The.fum nesday, burial Springfield. Mr. brother of Mr. O. *’ eighteen months nl. several weeks ago > soase. . THE R E X For all 1 BHEUfi lun*e|e,*olat ita,Kkh*yTroh ,. ■ Aar “ 6 -D I STOP 1 Gives Qi It stops the aoh llevfis swollen j —sots almost in the excess urio safe and euro I other remedy 1 free on requi BOLD BY Oae.Iionar pert paid upon rear) Iobtainable to y SWANSCHRHE I tt La C’l W AN S F ia t n rflh»nattp*tlon ’Stomao ^ T r e a l . a t c 3SJ u %
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