The Cedarville Herald, Volume 37, Numbers 1-26

* 3 t The Fashion % 9 /• Correct D ress for Women FIRST SALE OF THE SEASON » * *>• uil Cloth : ■ ‘ j . ■t-0* 4 t* *,* »*».» ** *»»%*. $1479 Schmidt Helps You to Enjoy Life at - the Least Cost Our Prices Schmidt's Old Hickory Flour, 25 lb sack for....75o Schmidt’s Ocean Xiight Flour, 25 lb. sack for.!... 70. Country .Cured Bacon;,.,18c Breakfast Bacon, per lb...? Fancy Sugar Cured Ham, lb ............... .,..,...,....,18 California and Picnic Hams, per lb ..... ....... 18 ■ African Java Coffee, per lb .......... ;.......................22 Bio and Java Blend per l b , .............. ................. 24 ' Bio Coffee per lb ...: .......... 26 For Friday and, Saturday Creamery B u tte r ' per pound ......... ...... .... 29c Potatoes Per Bushe l , . ! ___ ............. 85c Butternut, Bacon P e r Pound .... ......... ..22c Sugar, P e r 25 Tb, Sack .................... $1.07 Gold Medal F lour 25 lb. S a c k .. . . . . . . . . ...............75c Stone’s Cakes Received Fresh Daily A Car Load of Seed Potatoes of all Kinds H. E. Schmidt & Co • f Wholesale and Retail Grbcers ■ T ■ . - V ^ . . . v . . . ; f - ■ = > -I - ■ . ■ : . . . r , • • • • • . u ,■ , . ■. ’ ■V ■■ • ■' \ ■ 30 South Detroit Street,, . . Xenia, Ohio. Hutchison & Qibney ■ . ... ........ .« ; , , ■ . . t . W . The Season’s Splendid Assortment of ■ *’ ** J Ready-to-Wear Garments and Silk Coats, Silk Suits, Dresses, Waists, Petticoats SPRING COATS Swell %New Styles HOUSE DRESSES Gingham Dresses Children’s Rompers Plain and Fancy Underwear, all New Goods. Dress Goods in Voiles, Rice Grepe, Mattarbe, Ratine, Messolfne, Silk, Taffeta, Chene Foulard Silk, in all shades and trimmings to match* Carpet Departm ent The very latest style Ruga, Mattings from Importers, Linoleum in different grades. Window Shads* in all widths, 25c up. Hutchison 6 Gibney X en ia , Ohio MM MM r Hr** i*? i m’m^ n fhe Csdarville Herald. I i . o o £% r V iw r, wiM m p w i pnayaftinwtui- HAWLH BULL, * Editor Rntcrod at tho Font-Office, Oedar- V 1 II 0 , October ai, jgSf, as saocmd slaw matter. In AU S h a d e s a n d S i z e s I t W ill P ay Y ou to I n s p e c t T h em G rea t R ed u c t io n on C oa ts Ail this season’s latest materials and shades in better styles, better quality and better made, OFFERED THIS WEEK AT SPECIAL REDUCTION A SAViUti uF iS TO 35 Per Cent ON ALL COATS AND SUITS THE FASHION 33 East Main Street, -- - - : Springfield, Ohio 1 l To Cure a Cold in One Day ttf*Lax*tivt Bromo Quinine-m^ ^ ©» m*y M m m m m m 'm r n w m u jm m mourn* T h k FRIDAY, APRIL 34, 1214, Board of Trade Meeting Tuesday The Cedarville Board of Trade will hold a meeting In the mayor's office Tuesday evening. Everybody come out, . Cedarvllle College base hall team defeated the -Xenia -High team in a fast game Wednesday by a score of 25-1. NOTICE. The'Board of Education of Oedar- vllle TOwnship will elect teachers for the ensuing year. Friday even­ ing May 8th, 1914, Applications to beleftw ith the clerk. - By order of thO Board of Edu­ cation. - _ - , - - - A ndrew J aoxcson , Clerk. Imrasriom <By E. O. SELLERS, Director of Evening Department, This"Moody Bible Institute, Chicago.! LESSON FOR APRIL 26 THE LOST SHEEP AMD THE LOST COIN. LESSON-'£BNT--LiVee 15-4-10. GOLDEN TEXT- “Even so, I say- unto -you, there Is joy In, fhe presence of the angels of God -over one sinner ihot re- penteth," Luke 15:1a. I- introduction, ’vv. 1-&—We now cpme to that chapter in the Bible which contains three of the more celebrated parables of our Lord. In last week’s lesson we had Set before us the severe terms of diaqlpleshlp laid doivn by;Jesus to the-multitude which followed, him as he left the house of the* PhSrlSee. The writer, Luke, makes ft clpse connection be­ tween the ’ final admonition about “ears to fiskr” in chapter 14 and verse i q fan is lesson, Jesus had ‘iffted the' w k d though he had left the door open te himself, for he was seeking those who were prepared to share with him in his enterprises Of building and of conflict, if they could hear bis teaching. This is responded to by those outcast ones, the publicans and the sinners. They had no righteousness of their own, no spirit­ ual hope centered in themselves and they turned eagerly to one who.was unqualifiedlyhonest with them though a t the same time he set tip heart searching conditions. What a "con­ trast! The grumbling . theologians, criticising and bickering, grieved that he should demean himself by such associates. In reply, JesuB shows them the truth of the fundamental purpose of God’s attitude toward these who eagerly sbught tp ’hear," by giv­ ing tnbm these parables. M the first two, the sheep and the coin, we see divine love seeking the sinner; Jsx the third, the prodigal, we see the sinner seeking the father. Christ’s idea of- goodness consists In saving the had. The Pharisee holds aloof. Christ goes out from among the Pharisees and among the outcasts. ' ‘ ' True and False Shepherds. II. The Lost Sheep, w . 4-7.—Tho shepherd is God the ton (John 10:11, 12; Luke 19:10). .He la the "True Shepherd,” the Pharisees were false -ones. This adds point) to the parable; see the Old Testament rebukes for the same, Es. 34:7-10; Zech. 11:10-17; Jer. 50:0. The lost sheep belongs to the fold, hut was out of place. These outcast ones were still Israelites and the backsliding Christian still belongs to the fold. A sinner is ft lost sheep. He Is away from the care, the protec­ tion, the guidance of the shepherd and is torn, bleeding, and "ready to die." One such lost one will call forth the shepherd’s utmost endeavor to save it, far beyond the oaro lavished upon thft.ninety-and-ninealreadx safo.in. 4 he sotff, *m* mayi* isftnr, totr; sad1pw- vstton, *»d b* keeps up the search “until he finds it," This does not mean that all will be saved, see John IT;*, I t ft, V.’, but every “sheep” that Is astray he will find, Once found it rests upon bis shoulders, is kept by his power, l Pet. 1:5, Over it he and the father rejoice, yy. 23, 24, 82. There is here the evidence of the in­ terest in the -flock which is incom­ plete and the interest of the owner as well, The safety of the lost one depeufled upon the shepherd’s Interest, Work* of Holy Spltft. III. Tho Lost Coin, vv. fi.10.~The»9 three parables are a unit in tfie fact that they reveal the attitude of God toward men who are in their deepest need. Each is the story of something being ‘lost and the fact that It is found. The first is a revelation of the son, the last of the father, while this central one sets forth the work of the holy spirit through the church. Hev..22:17; Epb: 5:25. One of ten coins in this woman’s marriage neck­ lace Is loBt, hence the Incompleteness. The spirit .will npt rest until It Is found, nor should the church; The woman takes her lamp—the word of God, Ps. 119:105;. Phil. 2;15, 16—and sweeps the house. ' It haB been sug­ gested that sweeping usually stirs up a dust and that some are likely to object So the world will object when the church of the living God begins to stir up a dust and they are annoyed at any eager search for the lost oneB, Acts 17:6. The woman is a sugges­ tion to us In that she sought "dili­ gently,? until the lost coin was found. Then she, too, calls in her neighbors that they-may- rejoice-with her. - Does the:.church keep up a like .search? And do we know anything about the “joy" of the holy spirit? Gal. 5:22, I Thess, 1:6. Over the wellbeing of the home the woman watches and aga.in the'search is in the interest of the owner,, and in the interest of the household. IV, Summary,—-The chief value of these two pictures is in their revela­ tion of the work, and Interest of the eon of the spirit. The crowding mul­ titude of publicans and sinners, held in contempt by the Pharisees, JesuS viewed as lost ones. Appalling as this suggestion is, yet the sheep be­ longed to the'-shepherd and the coin was the property of the woman. This suggests the dignity and .value of men and the tragedy of their condition, Knowing all this and understanding the full j significance of that 'tragedy, the son as the shepherd has under- taken to seek and to save the I ob L School Teacher’s Mission. To capture the citadel of a child’s mind through love and sympathy; to lead pupils toward higher Ideals of life and duty; to establish closer re­ lations between home and- School and state; to exalt purity, of life and con­ duct; to strengthen the moral tone of the community; to make good men and women; to establish and dl^hffy the profession of teaching; to make education attractive; to magnify the state; to-meet the need for educated .ciUsenship; such is the exalted mis­ sion of the teacher.—Hon. Charles It, Skinnfc - Woman Must 8ay “Obey.** Church. 8f England bishops recently Considered an amendment offered by the bishop of Lincoln to eliminate the use of the -word "obey" by women In the marriage service. The bishop of Winchester said: “I cannot help think­ ing it is a regrettable thing that the word should, continue, 1 cannot say that Without saying that In an ideal* ■ marriage service X should desire to see some reference to the leadership of the man In the home." And then the bishops avoided a decision by hav­ ing the amendment withdrawn. Children Cry for Fletcher9* Tho K in d Y ou H ave A lw ays B o u g h t, a n d w h ich h a s been. I n u se fo r o y e r SO y e a rs , h a s b o ra e fth e s ig n a tu re o f and has been wade under h is per­ sonal supervision since itstafancy , A llow no one to deceive yon in th is. AH Counterfeits, Im itations and ‘* Jus t-as-good ” are b u t. Experiments that trifle w ith and endanger tho health of Infants and Cldldren—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTOR IA Castorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare­ goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. I t is pleasant. I t contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other .Narcotic substance. Its ago J# Its guarantee, I t destroys ‘Worms and allays Fevexdshness. For more than thirty years it lias been in constant use fob tho relief of Constipation, Flatulency, W ind CoUc, aU Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. I t regulates th e Stomach and B ow d s, assim ilates th e Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend, ? GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS fBears the Signature of In Use For Over 30Years T lie Kind.You Have A lways Bought " r'- ,* ' jm :We Are-Ready.1 jp " With the best line of woolens we ever had. W e are pre*. pared to make your Spring Suit up=to«date. Our prices are low enough for our work so you will not have to buy a suit all ready made. G IVE US A CALL KANY, TheleadingTailor XENIA, .OHIO Explains Baseball's Popularity. Nothing equals baseball as a popular sport. Baseball stimulates the mind and invigorates, instead of exhausts, the body. It can be played In any field, at almost no cost. Expense is the handicap wbiob keeps tennis and golf out of the running as great popu­ lar sports. A baseball game may be played in two hours—ait advantage which will ever make it more popular than cricket as an International game. Years, Idle Years. “Years have really' very little to do with age, Some people are old at :wenty-slx, and others rather childish it sixty-fire.’’—"Michdel Fenya,” by Mrs. Henry do la Pasture, Her Other Half. The four-year-old twins, who had no playmates of their own age, were de­ lighted when a little girl of three came to visit a neigltbor. After tho three children had played, together for a time, the twins, hand in hand, went to their mother, and said, “Mother, where’s the other one o f ' he»?”— Youth’s Companion. The Handsome Horse nndi fast trotting stallion, Axpedition 46829, owned by D. A. Sprague, will make a short season at Cedarville in the hands of Johnny Jones, who will later train him for the races, Axpedition has been a great Blue Ribbon winner in the show ring at both County and State Fairs, At Xenia last fall he took first in class and also sweepstakes over all ages. In competition with horses from Clark; Greene and Warren counties, Sired by Tanforan 32814, a son of Expedition 2:15 3-4'. Dam byAxius sire of Edward E. 2:15 1-4, Rex- tell 2:15 1-4 etc,, by Axtell (3) 2:12. Second Dam Arab Girl, Dam of Bessie Bonehill 2:05 3-4 that produced Joe Patchen 2nd 2:031-4, Empire Direct 2:071-4 etci, also. the. Dam. o t Col- Cp.it 2:101*2,5 Banner Leaf 2:131-4. Sukharte 2:20 1*4 and others. He will make the season at the low fee of $15,00 to insure in foal, or $20.00 for a living foal. IX A. SPRAGUE Fare $3 22 ^ w a f t i a a k . ' DA,£T MTWEEN THE GREAT SHI? “SEEANDBEE” length 503 fouls Imudlli 03 6 IseliMi 510 stateroom* unit pnrjora uccftmiriodaling 1S60 pfiMCB* cer». Gteaier its ro»t—fafr»e* i i oil wdnsirttons*~ai<hcr ih all gppomtiueatfr-^tlun anr steamer on I’tolliirti - Inland waters of tho vorldr 1st servioo June loth. Magnificent Steamers M5EEANDBEE/V "City of Erie** and^City of Buffalo'* D aily—CLEVELAND and BUFFALO*— May. 1st toDec. 1st Leave Cleveland * ■ 8:001*. M« . Leave Bnflalo • * 8:00 P« M. Arrye Buffalo • • 0:30 A. M* Arrice Cleveland • (S:30A. {Central 5Un<?ard Time) Connection* at Buffalo for Niagara Falla and all Eaitoru aud Canadian Point** Railroad ticket* reading between Cleveland and Ilntfnlo oro good for tnm iportxtloa on o a r steamer*. -Aide your ticket agent for ticket* via C. & 11. Line. \>iho na for Lafitlftonie Illustrated booklet free/ THE CLEVELAND & BU FFALO TRAN S IT CC%* C la v eU n d , O. J 5 S McClellanMeatMarket The place to buy your first c lass smoked and fresh meats. Every customer must be pleased. PHONE ORDERS GET PROMPT ATTENTION Ranse McClellan S . M ain St,. Csrdsirvilie, Ohio j TheBookmaker ...ftestaarant... INTHE BOOKWALTER ItOTEL HIGH STREET DIMING ROOM PORLADISSUP STAIRS ALSO REST ROOM. “ m h a x . h n o w * s Lunch Cotmkr on Main floor Open Day and Night. f a * IhatHxiQtmi U**ft in tho Cal* ioJW/ DISEASES 0 ?THE' b ECTDM iss& ssr DR-*J. j . M c C lellan r a o L ? golbmibs , o ! Br. m w U^stivs Tablets AM m tk , Ms a

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