The Cedarville Herald, Volume 37, Numbers 1-26
iJi-w. sc W»igBS8W«#M>j>»IS S3? wnwpi M a t l» liq u id momy* T o n f $ t * * d i t m w jom kou#$ imd.tbha *un, wind, rain ttnd dust b u t upon it in the effort to we«r It out end $et «t the wood. Bye end bye you h iv e to do it all over again —but le st often w ith l! =1! Hi, | Hanna’s Green Seal Paint than with others. When ’yon think of the cost of paint and painting, remember that one- third is paint and two-third* labor. It posts more to put on a poor paint than • good one. Use the paint that last* longest. FOR SALK BY KERR & HASTINGS BROS. rm mf Schmidt Helps You to Enjoy Life at ! the Least Cost domm [Our Prices] £| Schmidt's , o ld Hickory Flour, 251b sack for..-..75c Schmidt’s Ocean Light Flour, 25 lb, Back for... 70 Country Cured Bacon..,48c Breakfast Bacon, per lb... 2 Fancy Sugar .Cured Ham, l b .......... .................. ,...,18 California and Pionlo Hams, per lb,............ African Java Coffee, per lb 22 Bio and Java Blend per lb......................... 24 Bio Coffee per lb .............. 26 For Friday arid Saturday Creamery Butter ■' per pound........ ......... . . , ........... ’ ___ ____ £ j y C Potatoes Per Bushel ...................................................O t ) £ Butternut Bacon , * >■*/"i Pet Pound .......... l, .................................... Ltj&C Sugar, Per 25 ( P i A*7 S a c k ............ . . . . . . . . ..................... s P l a U f Gold Medal Flour ay g* 25 lb. Sack ........................... ........................... / o C S tone’s-Cakes Received Fresh Daily A Car Load of Seed Potatoes of all Kinds HL E*. Schmidt jtS Go., 1 “ • - * _, Wholesale and Retail Grocers 30 South Detroit Street, Xenia, Ohio. Hutchison &Gibney The Season's Splendid Assortment of Ready-to-Wear Garments and Silk Coats, Silk Suits, Dresses, Waists, Petticoats SPRING COATS Swell New Styles CSU30S HOUSE DRE SSE S t Gingham Dresses Children’s Rompers Plain and Fancy Underwear, all N ew Goods.f§ Dress Goods in Voiles, Bice Crepe, Mattarhe, Ratine, Meesaline, Silk, Taffeta, Chene Foulard Silk in all shades and trimmings to match. Carpet Department Thg very latest style Hugs, Mattings frbm Importers, Linoleum in different -grades. Window Shade* in all widths, 28c up. Hutchison 6 Gibney Xenia, Ohio Kit rrtntlitli.boitl.6o it, W tiH U k itw o tM ........ . ...Hlota r& o <5L Motkmy Baclxl wy'lrfciiso*L mhk .— •ti, I iiHHUIHJHB1 • th. tHAl.r fromniton, m f h e ’ Cedarville Herald; S**«o r*«r V « a r . KARLH H U U I - E d ito r Eutpred a t the Post*0®ee, Cedar- vilte, October 31, 1887, as second ?las» matter. FRIDAY, JUNK 36, 1D4 Can radium cure cancer? They say It can, sir. The earthquake shakes the lust as *ell as the unjust. It is an ill wind, etc. Eggs are too expensive to throw at actors. *A homely woman Is generally good- and all women want to be beautiful. Absolute silence is maintained in a Moscow club. It is. not a woman's club. A Boston dog has inherited ?i,500 a year, ft is to he hoped that he won’t squander it. * * The calamity howlers will have to stand aside as soon as the baseball season opens. Digestion by violet rays looks like an attempt to' defend the absinthe cocktail breakf&sfi There Is a good deal of truth in the saying, “A knocker never wins, and a winner"never knocks.” ...... "Know thyself" Is good advice, but If a man is married he will find out all'about himself anyway. "Spelling is a necessary evi|,” says a contemporary. Depends on how pretty the stenographer is. ’ Berlin has a bank managed entirely by women. And yet a bank is sup posed to keep Its affairs secret And now'they have Introduced what is called the one-step dance. The one- legged man can dance it to perfection. Only seveh grams of radium in the world? Pshaw! It will; take more than that for one day’s dope on base ball. > Men’s clothes may be in “low key" next spring, as the artists call it, but the same old high prices will rule, no doubt. r It is reported tl *t the fhngo sets Indians crazy. It L it the same ef fect upona lot pf the white people, so called,. The treasury department says the 50>cent piece is losing its ‘popularity. But Just wait until the baseball sea son opens. Planning, what you would do,'With a million dollars if you' had it may be a pleasant indoor sport, but It isn’t profitable, , * Being is forecaster and having tp go on record with a guess every day must- he A powerful aid In keeping down false pride. A sentimental, poet.says "trees are most beautiful when they leave,'" So are a. good many things, including most pf the poets. Now that $5,000 has been paid for a rare flea, some thrifty owner of a score of dogs Is liable to wake up and find himself a millionaire. Gradually the men who last year dedicated their lives, to coloring ,cala bash pipes aro recovering and return ing tb their civic duties. The English artist who says Amer ican girls’ complexions are ruined by steam heat cannot be accused^ tff pro moting the hot air system. Now that, an earl’s daughter has made an air flight upside down, it will probably be considered au fait in society circles, if not an actual fact. Just now there seems to be two classes of men in this country— those worrying about their in comes and those worrying about their Income tax; News that a rising young alienist will make an exhaustive study of his deceased father’s brain furnishes the finishing touch to the triumph oi science over civilization. i m a w w . SM San iH . LESSON (By JE, O. SEILERS, Director o£ Evening Department, The Moody Bible Institute, Chicago,)- - LESSON FOR JUNE 28 REVIEW. BEADING LESSON ONLT-IIeb. 4:14* 6:10. GOLDEN TEXT"-"The Son of man la come to seek and to save that whirl: was teat." Luke 19:10. . The golden text la a great summary of the meaning and the essential pur pose of all of our Lord's activities. Each lesson is an illustration of this simple promise. In them we discover chiefly our Lord in his work of pre paring his disciples to share with him in this work. Lesson I. The observation of man’s attempt to get the beat seats with the consequent abasement, calls forth the parable of the great supper. Therein we are shown, man’s enmity against God as revealed by his contemptuous treatment . of God’s overtures of grace.. The rebuke and the parable reveal God’s willingnebs and man's re fusal. In all this our Lord was seek ing these men. A man in New York wants a di vorce because his wife served him up cutlet gravy seasoned with car bolic acid. Some men are so hard to please about tbelr meals. According to a fashion journal, bal< loon hips are coming into style. Still It won't be as hard for father to help out With the automobile tire pump as It was to book up the back. Isn’t It about time the “safety first" movement should be directed toward the man who reaehes into the medi cine cabinet for a^ottie Jn the night without first turning on the light? One hesitates to'consider what the emotions of King George were when he learned that Queen Mary hadi been stopped at the door of a museum be cause she insisted upon carrying an umbrella inside. Women are urged to cease mak ing sideshows of themselves. This will come as a great shock to the gentler sex who have long believed themselves to be more or less the whole show of creation, a claim gal lantry has always allowed. ■ The New York Capitol at Albany very nearly burned the other day be cause some lone was so stupid as to light a fire lit a fireplace there. The fireplace was constructed largely of wood, which served the purpose per fectly until the rash Innovator Ut the iNk - Subscribe (oi the HeftWr The Perfect Son. Lesson II. This is the EaBter les son and Is aside from our series. In it -we-are shown that Jesus Christ- is- himself the chief subject df prophecy. Lesson III. . The one central truth here taught is that to be his dla- ciplb we,must give up all and make him supreme. In our affections, aims, Ideals, yea, make him. the sole.pos- ’sessor of time, talent, and posses sions. : -.. Lessons IV and. V. It is impos sible to separate these, three para bles. They are a wbole’in that each tells of something lost, sought and found. The Son, the Holy Spirit and the Father are each seeking. Our Lord was himself the perfect Son of the Father; who never got into the far countfy, or out of adjustment with his Father- He is different also from the churlish brother in that he re joices to "bring back hie o>vn." These two lessons particularly illustrate his work of saving, \ Lesson VI. Beginning with this les son, our-Lord seems to.be sifting the multitude, and at the same time be preparing his disciples against their work of co-operating with him in his work of seeking,and saving. Tho true motive in service is in the use of all jve possess for him whom we love. Lesson VII. As the last leBson had to do with stewardship, this has to do with service. This present life is hut the vestibule of the eternal one. If we so live this life as to develop It and to rule its desires, we shall find abundant gratification in this world beyond towards which we are traveling so rapidly, Les*on VIIL Jesus Is still Instruct ing Ills disciples, Offenses must; or rather, will come, butiOrgivenOse la. the dlvlne attribute, not because he is indebted to Us nor that he-is mawk ishly^ sentimentally, sympathetic. Nothing we do ever places him under any obligations to us. When we have done ail we will exclaim: "We have done that which was our'duty to do." This.does not set aside the joy which is ours and his when one of the lost is “found." Lesson IX. Not only did Jesus sift the multitude and reveal the need of helpers, at the same thno setting be fore them the terms of dlscipleship, but he also emphasizes the thought of gratitude on the part of those helped and' of those his servants who are judged worthy to help him. Lesson X. The kingdom which our Lord came to set up upon earth is to. begin witliin uB and it is not to con sist of eating and drinking but of righteousness and truth. The.visible kingdom which our Lord came to set up upon earth I b to begin within us, and it Is not to consist of eating and drinking, but of righteousness and truth. Lesson XL The picture of Zacchae- ub is that of a man revered to his right relationship with God; the out ward evidence being his acts of re pentance and restoration. This lesson perfectly reveals the essential work of Christ, and that to which he is calling his disciples. Zacchaeus did not seek Christ, but Christ -came to seek and save Zacchaeus and ail like him who are lost. Lesson XII. The great refusal re veals that the condition of being saved or being loBt rests with the in dividual soul. Many elements enter into the refusal of men but the es sential one is "and ye would not," John 5:40. Much possessions will not satisfy the human soui. There is the danger that we trust our wealth rather than God. Lacking one thing, everything is lost. Summary, The whole of this pe riod of our Lord’s ministry was that of conflict and hostility with the rulers, wonder and amazement with the people, doubt and uncertainty with the disciples, As he went from place to place he showed Infinite patience. His compassion was for melt in.thelr sin and his heart beat with tenderness. Though his words at times were se vere, yet his impulse and passion was to seek and to Bare. His faithfulness In dealing with men, guests and hosts, rich and poor, publicans and sinners, Pharisees and outeasts—is also clear ly set before Us. 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