The Cedarville Herald, Volume 39, Numbers 1-26
F .ILMTiOt (hi Wait* FasiwAir t fmrtHKtt km been palMMl W W(« Feat*,! Department motor kmm efeanfed from »iM)Ms*»Meemers •tsurt of the time indicate* aUJ:|$. A0&' In m i rrtniWfMrini ssm ^ b ^ k I siie ‘ thljewnwier of feafidiw buaff pgtooeau ^tosBem* h 4 thfl Clarke resolution vri&ehBaergoes to the 8 *oefe for *»©tt*nu S« strong U sentiment in *fewR oom anamat themotorservloe JIdea thatmany predict the general ■‘ npproprfetttm bill wall be bold op - should Ibo Beuate decline to pus •thoOt^i^hv^oa. mmmwmm apjlajlold will bare.* horseshow thle year at, tho loir grouofie on June^ 4 * 15 and 16 , under the same management so m iomer years. Thor* was no *how the past sdhson duo to hoary log* theyear previous *Cedarvliiepeople bare always boon umtereetecfen those event* and will wolt 50 m«?tfeo announcement ol an* other exhibition. ;CUBTOK U, F, GMCRCH CHIM 88 * Fre- —’Above AH” smoke theBold,. ^ ” ' Thtijn-f*1-V’li ; .-.M r JW R O i jSERVICE, - * VJNITKP FRUWYTERIAN* iilV. iff. McMlohael, pastor Sabbath School at S: 80 . Preaching by the pastor at 10:80 Y. P. G. IJ.,at 6 : 80 . OporaHduso services at 7 : 00 * Prayermeifclng Wednesday at 7 . A Stpdy inHabnkakuk. , *0 * *• ;p. CHURCH {MAIN STREET) . Jf^Ii^h^sauti, Pastor, Teachers’ meetingSaturdayevening •w tifufe* Sabbath School Sabbath morningai 9:10 o’clock. ' . -* PreachingService 10:30 a,m. ' C. E^Society 5:30 p. m. - JP#3! P) theservices in tibiaOpera J|§«S^*»bbath eyeningat 7 o’clock M. E. CHURCH. I .W. Patton, Pastor; Sn&diy School at 0;80 a.m, ^koaohlng at 10:80 a. m. l^worthYioaguoat 6 ; 3 o. ' Y^rare cordially invited. ' ; _fpostal services each evening the egweek with the exception,of - “ ll»»v»s and Hell aiwbefch inva m y if God i* God." —Even equirret* - prepare, paredaew in no new thought. —Lenaer for t . V. Sacbath even ing will be Wallace Wipe. —Inapixatien thinks things eat; pemmratien work* them out* —xoar secret is safest ii yen keep it yewaetf. Bo not talk* —Hr* and Hr*. Carrie Mcl&oy bare the earnest sympathy of the congregatioa in the loss o f the lat* tars father by death. —la momenta of depression we sometimes think the old strong at tachments which bore the name of iriendshipe, which had no ulterior or material reason for maintenance are growing rare. —Mies Brace Griffith ia visiting her parent* in Terre Haute, Indiana, for % few weeks. —The muzsle of a gun is a good thing to keep away from. So m a man who ia all the time kicking about something, —Mr, Albert Sellers, of Meybell, Colorado, visited his unde and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Corey, recently; m has been in Colorado for 12 years, —Mr. and Mrs. Currie Mcllroy re* moved the first o f the. week to their ■tewhome one mile‘southwest of Ce- darville. —The social at the Fluke home last Eiuraday was a very pleasant and profitable, occasion. The Christian Union tenders thanks to Mr* and Mrs, Fluke, ■ “Xwixt optimist and pessimist The difference is droll: The optimist sees'the-doughnut, ■' The pessimist see*, the hole.” —One woman in a near-by town made5$20 for the church opt of a nickel invested in flour, ShB baked rnd sold bread, bought more -jflour, And so on. Here’s a hint for the pov erty'stricken, . —Many, a farmer or fond mother has scraped and sayed fo r years to: .ielp the eon . through college* and: found the game not worth the candle, for the boy came out utterly useless m ruined by bad habits. —We certainly congratulate the Clifton Band on the excellent Lecture Course they have, presented this year, Cvery number was fine, . : —“Going to church does not make hfty one a Christian any more than .aking a wheelbarrow into a garage makes at an automobile." —Dr. Ritchie will be absent next week preaching at the First U. P* church, Columbus, the entire week* Dr. Mitchell and he were classmates' in the School of Philosophy, ‘ —“I shot an arrow into the air; it fell in the distance, I knewnot where, tilt a neighbor said that it killed a calf* and I had to pay him six and a half ($6.50), ,1 bought Some poison to slay some rats, and a neighbor swore it killed his, cats; and, rather £or Infant* and Children. fluKMYooHniAhiajtBwgbt BOUrs the' Signatureof F 33 CF fee Farmers ' aliesbid thrfaraisrs of Greene county the ^ ofi*tbe jxtirfcetat YoenhsperO. Q. fonserum . O^ierdrd i C. < 7 . virus will iminaue ,fat 100 flbfi>igi:their matntai life. Pigs three to ten day* eld oanbO immuned their natural life with lo O. serum and l Q. ©. vims* will send you an expert to teach you how to vacci nate your Own hogs. RW j^va&s; ■ t O*A«Dobbms, CedatytlU, O., Beferenoes South-west Xfatlonel Bank ot Commerce of Kansas City, J*o. Order your •OMM'from W*’ Hinbry, our agent, Stockyards, Cincinnati, O.) or Iatsr-Sfcate Vaccine 0 o,,.Kausas City, Mo. Hutchison & Gibney LET US SHOW YOU A d Aoierican Lady Corset If Half Knew I f half the f&ahionable femi nine world ktiowwhat corset the other halt was wearing* there would be even more American LadyCorsetsWOftt* * , •_ A large proportion ol the iashionabl# world do know and demandAmerican Lady Corsets, whichmould the figure and set u«l off the gown, as no other oorset Yen will find among the almost unlimited number of design ef different proportion!, and American Lady Const mods! for “your” individual figure. After yen buy an Ameriean Lady OOrsst look at the new aae w«i*t«................. $5.oo to $ 10.00 N*w Salts............... .$5.75 to $35.00 HOWSkirts.................. $5.75 to $10.75 -Oood^smsdvssUog. WHat you buy now wilt be quite asaving. Douot forget to go into . the Bseement. Hutchison & Gibney X f c N I A , O H IO . « w A Wonderful Thing lias Happened The regtllybig things in this world are only d6ne by people getting together, —all deciding to do a certain thing, and then doing that thing- A hundred stores in Dayton have gotten together and arranged for what is honestly predicted as the greatest Spring Opening Week in Dayton’s history. ■ •• *. •' • • .•» .• D ay ton ’s Sp ring Opening: W e e k March 14th through 18th This is :the great week among retail stores in Dayton, and among the people who are interested in their wares—and who aren’t interested. Get out your calendar and you ’ ll see that the 14th is Tu|s4ay. The next day is Wednesday--Suburban Day—the biggest o f all the days in Dayton’s Spring Opening Week, Th is is the particular day we’d advise y ou to come to Dayton. Cunningham—the Dare Deyil- wiil walk the tight rope across and overthe GreatMiami Stiver in Dayton on Suburban Day. The Real Meat of this Of course the big things in a Spring Opening are the expositions of new spring merchandise—rich gowns, suits, hats and shoes for thewomen* togetherwith, corresponding finery for the men and children. But the displays are not confined to clothing, they a y ? r embrace hardware and plumbers* supplies, pianos and jewelry, bicycles and flowers,— yes, “ everything for everybody” . And on Thursday the auto dealers have a parade, and an autpshow.righton the streets. There will he music and bands and glitter and show, for whether the “ weather permits1’ or. not Spring will have come in store merchandise displays. i i ® ijAf. the t i m e w h e n Blondin walked the tight tope over the Niagara Palls. “ Those Were the good old days.” Well, tight rope walkers aren’ t all dead. This chap Cunningham is going to be w ith us on the 15th* and his maneuver w ill make your hair raise. He not on ly walks the rope high in the air oyer the river, he performs on it. How? well he puts his legs in a sack and waddles along, also he stands on his head on the rope, sits at a table, and does much more besides that will make the most cold blooded thrill. Remember then—Suburban Day March 15th, at 1 o ’clock , over the river walks Cunningham in Dayton. A band w ill escort him and you from the city 's center to the river, on ly three blocks from Third and Main Streets. Bring the kiddies, come b y all means, and come early. Here is what the Robinson Circus Management says of Fred Cunningham^^King of the High Wire “•Mr. Cunninghamslatcs'lhatnothin# feet tong, and at Ford City where,his would please him better than to Walk wirewas 725 feetJofiA om the river and do ail hfs stunts, and . hedisplays a readiness to ttyand please „ fee work rc- that is commendable’ ’. - , j ^ p e r f o r m a n c e t "ufrf' Cu.nnlnJiha”1 iotvc* fe pwform f* tha/the fetter iMCssevmTloTT’poIre nni?i «fiEa» 10 k placed gft fset apart, wbldi makes a very familiar with this kind ef work, having tame performance compared with the recently performed over the Allegheny “over thefiver work” . v River At Templeton, Pa. pn a wire 34 * r So you see the Dayton .performance is the most sensational and thrilling to he had. Over the river, and away up In the air. course Prize Contest WITH THE FOLLOWING PRIZES:— a FIRST * -. * - THIRD - ' - - - $15 FIFTH 25 prizes, $2 each - - 50 prices, $1 each - - SECOND FOURTH - - - ,1 2 0 - - $10 —u*f. . — ' m m m A fi' *» “ “ — •*•«** <lk $50 - - - $50 The object o f the contest is to decide themost desirable lines that each store sells. In their contest Windows the stores—a hundred of them—will display five articles. All you have to do is to take a score sheet (obtainable at any of the hundred co-operating stores) and put down on that score sheet the article in each window you think is the most desirable in that particular window. WHO’LL WIN?—We don’ t know. The article in each window that receives the most votes by the public is the most popular article of that store. If your judgment Is the same as the popular vote in the greatest number of instances you’ll get first prize. So you see the public itself decides the contest. Ail we do is to receive the votes and score them, thus ascertaining the eighty prize winners. Perhaps this doesn’ t interest you and you won’ t want to bother with registering your votes. But the merchan dise displayed—which will be the finest and most interest ing that each store has—will most certainly interest you* You’ll come to*the Dayton Spring Opening Of course you will. It’s the biggest big thing of the season. Let nothing keep you away. It starts with the Grand Unveiling of the Store Windows at 7:30 P. M- Tuesday, March 14th and continues in a “ blaze of glory” through Saturday Night—the 18th. Announcement published by Dayton Retail Trade Promotion Bureau E vehy W eohesday S uburban D ay I n D ayton Get the Wednesday Habit of Coming to Dayton It pays than argue acros* the fence, I paid him four dollars and fifty rents ($4.50). 0n« night I set sailing a toy balloon, and hoped it would soar till it reached the moon; but the can dle fell on a farmer’s straw, and lie said I must settle or go to law. And that is the war with the random shot: it never hits in the proper spot; and the joke yen spring feat yon think so smart, may leave a wound in acme fellow’s heart,” m m M H _ TW pastor’s report at the end of four year’s service jin the Clifton congregation contained the followin'' facts: Sermons preached In^Clifton 168: abroad 100* making an average each year of 67 sermons. Members received in 4 years, 68; ot these 33 were received on profession and 28 on certificate* During the four years 7 members have been willed away by death and 6 hate been certified to «U;w churches. Those removed by death were Mrs, Margaret McCul lough, Mrs* David Turner, Mrs. Wil liam Knox, Mrs. Thomas Stewart. Henry Kyle, Jeremiah Finney and Airs* Mary Finney. ’‘—During the four tears of, the present pastorate, four wedding! have taken place, vis: Mr. and Mrs, Hogsetti Mr. and Mrs* Harris, Mr. and Mrs* Alexander and Mr, ana Mrs, Casper Finney, —The following mon of Clifton Church attended the Xenia Fresbyter* lal Brotherhood Convention in Spring- field last Monday, vis: Messrs* Cor don Collins, William Smith, William Waddel, W. B. Ferguson and C. M. Ritchie, Mesdames Gordin Collins, William Smith and C. M. Ritchie were also in thevparty. —The W. M. Society will meet Wednesday, March 15, at 2:80 at fee church, Mrs, Jennie F. Ritchie and Mrs, Ada Finney leaders, —The prayer meeting will mes Wednesday at L3G with Mr. Geo, V Rife as leader. •TT* A»a JB&TgW&Tk f |« ..ecreta^and Treasurer of the Monday. erhood Convention at Spri lai -Mr*. McLean continues vet weak; her daughter Bfeaoh la to * M ri&m tne Writes 1 rewhid hfe eotfe 4» Xafemaseo a right andhas a fine home.
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