The Cedarville Herald, Volume 39, Numbers 1-26
r & * »a« Kijmri^in fc.ttiarraJMili ifei Monty In Your PocKet if you let ub make your clothe?. We give you value, style and workmanship and work is guaranteed to be first class only KANY, Thi Leading Merchant Taylor XENtft, OHiO We Sellat Right Prices Lumber, L a th , Posts, Shingles,'* Sash, Doors, Blinds. •IS''®- Cement, L ime . P las ter, Roofing Ladders, Slate, Brick, etc., etc. * W h a t Is W o r th B U I L D I N G At All, I s . Worthy The Best Lumber, ® I t W o rk s To Better Advantage, Requiring Less T im e and ££ Labor.f, T h u s , The Difference] In Cost Is So Slight, Q T h a t I t Should Cut No Figure, You’ll Find ’Twil Pay to Use The Best— THEKINDWESELL df*Jt*"?%. i iBrnaniai l Rtroa* By lHlioifciVlaol Im p o r t, N- H .r “ OWHttto rtiri S fflliWIWSlIiBill mum TliffVim■ VW WTWi' ]*rr- tho time. Note.ng helped her until we.tried Vinol. Then her appetite Increased and she i* strong end wen, end I wish other parents of weak, deheate children would try "Vinol. —U eo . A. Cot&iffs. Th» is because Vinol contains the tissue building, strengthening cod liver elements and the tonicironwhich a weak, and run-down system needs. C. ht, BIDGWAY, Druggist, Cedarville, Ohio, The Cedarville Herald, 41 , qo F»er Y e a r , KARLH BULL U - E d ito r Entered a t the Post- Office, Cedar, ville. October Cl, 1S87, as second class matter* g FRIDAY, WAY 12, 1216 SURVEY FOR COMPLAINTS. Officers of the Dayton Power A L ight Go., were In town Thursday in the Interest of the lig h t service following our comment la s t week, Mr. K . Fitzpatrick, J r ., w ill call on each patron and you will he asked to state your complaints abou t the service. The idea is not to embarass subscribers, but to learn from each just w ha t is wanted to correct o r Improve the service. The company Is giving the public th is opportunity to -express them selves and each one should have no hesitancy speaking out. If you are no t Satisfied say so, the company {warns to know the exact situation so th a t the necessary Changes can 5be made. , - VISITORS WELCOMED Direct to the Farmers We will fumiah, direct to the farmers of Greene county the best serum and v iru s bn the m arke t a t 2 cants pot C. G. for serum - a n d v irus: 20 0.<3. aerum and 1C. Cl virua will immune f a t 100 lb . pigs th e ir na tu ra l life. Figs th ree to ten day s old can be im inuned th e ir na tu ra l life with 10 <3, C* serum and 1 0 . 0 . v iiu s . We will send you an expert to teach you how to vacci- . nate your own hogs. REFERENCES Phone O. A. Dobbins, Gedarville, O., References South-west ITational Bank ot Commerce of Kansas Gity, Mo. Order your aerum from W- H. Embry, bu r agent, Stockyards, Cincinnati, O., or In te r-S ta te Vacoluo Go., Kansas City, MO* - The Columbus delegation number ing about 200,representing th e Man ufacturers’ and Jobbers’Association in th a t c ity made » stop here Wed nesday and made, quite an im pression as the crowd marched up the s tree t to the square where short, speeches were made. Presidenl W righ t of the Community Club presided and Mayor" McLean ex tended a word ot welcome. Speeches were made by P residen t M. J , Robb, of the M, & J* Asso ciation,, W , B. Tracy, of the Cham ber of commerce, Mayor Kerb and Maurice Donahue, member of the Ohio Supreme court. The news papers 1 of th e city were all repre sented, Music w as furnished by the Fourth Regimental Band and a glee chib t h a t rendered a number of selections. ’A member of. th e sta te Sunday .Schoel Association was in th e p a rty and distributed literatu re iu beha lf o f th a t organization. • 2 & £ j £ 0 * la st Your Home and Your Neighbor’s This is “ Neighborhood Improvement Week’*in thousands of communities where every property owner is asked to consider the improvement o /his home and neighborhood,. Are you helping, to arouse Interest in your neighborhood? In home and neighborhood improvement plenty n f good paint i t the first essential. The paint must both beautify and pro tect buildings. You can accomplish this most caSily and calls** factorily with Tanlac Romance Now Fully Told. Its Launching and What Inspired It Is a t Last Explained. HIGHSTANDARIJ LIQUID •PA INT “ High Standard" hides tho surfacebetter# spreads over moHumrfcca par fpukm ot paint and wears longer than ordinary paint baefcuse it ia atfmrtlflcallymade of the best materials by expert paintmakers, Years Of SKpesut* tests have proved that these careful method* irfvei most protection and lasting beauty. “High Standard” is tlm most *d**Mrtoty and sconomkal point to use. Ask a* for point information and color combinations tbrInteriorwalls, Jkwrt *#4 woodwork as. well as fo*j the outside of your house, M cF a rland & McKee '■-If “Every few years someone sug gests something that will tend to better our condition, whether it may pertain to our business, our knowl edge, convenience, or health, or our social state,” declared L. T. Cooper recently. “I t has been my pleasure to offer Tanlac to the world,” he continued, “I presented Tanlac on its merits, knowing'full well tha t it would prove satisfactory if properly tested. “Confident as 1 Was of tho recep tlon Tanlac would receive, I confess I was hardly prepared fo r the wonder ful popularity into which it a t once sprang# When i t is considered that just nine months to the day after Tanlac was announced, one million bottles had been sold, it can be under stood that when the story of Tanlac is called a romance of the business world it ia quite true. “Tanlac appeals particularly to the best people everywhere-Apeoplo who are able to judge carefully and to ren der a just opinion of its merits. Upon the thousands of indorsements of such men and women Tanlac's astonishing success has been,based. Great as is the demand for Tanlac now, I really fecl^ that the country, as a whole, is only just awakening to it, “Tanlac, which is the joint product of Herr Joseph Von Trimbach, the noted German chemist and myself is I believe, tho most affective remedy known for ailments of tho stomach, livef and kidneys and for catarrhal affections of the mucous membranes. “I t is ’compounded of roots, herbs, barks and flowers, many of which come from remote parts of the world, and it is free from the mineral taint feared by many persons. “I have no doubt that Tanlac wilt he as successful in your city as it has in every other in which it has been in troduced/' Tanlac now may he obtained in Cedarville a t the llidgway drug store, Where it is fully explained. Tanlac may bo obtained in Yellow (Springs a t tho Finley Drug i t o r e ; South Charleston# Claude W. Deem, Jamestown, W. F* H a rpe r; X*ma. Sayer Jk Hemphill. JtffiKH'IONAl SUMfSWL L esson (By B. O. BKTiLKKS, Acting* Director of Sunday (School C ouhmi o t the UooAy Bible Institute. Chl-aso.) (Col'?right, 1U1«, ’West, r» Newspaper Union.) LESSON FOR MAY 14 wLO,WE TURN TOTHE GENTILES.” LESSON TEXT—AM h 12:15-63. GOLDEN TEXT -1 have set thee for a light of the Gentile*, th a t thou uhuuldcst bo for solvation onto tho uttermost p art of the earth.—AetB 15:47, In the unfolding and over-widening of the program of power we aro again confronted with a crucial event, It is suggestive that a t this time Paul, whose name has just been changed from Saul, now assumes Ills place of leadership, succeeding Barnabas. Per* ■go, tho capital of Pampbylla, was on the southern coast of Asia Minor, and Antioch, tho capital of PlBidia (south ern Galatia) was 90 miles north. Paul is now In full control and ho other man save our Lord has so deeply im pressed human history. I. Paul'* Opening (w . 13-15). Wo are not told why John Marie returned to Jerusalem. Ho may have objected to the changed leadership; there may •have been sickness involved; as a Jew he may have objected to Paul’s ac tions. Himsubsequent missionary zeal restored him to Paul’s favor (II. Tim. 4:11). Departing from Perga (v. 14), perhaps on account of an attack of fever (Gal. 4:13,14), the party ascend ed to the higher altitude of the impor tant city of Antioch, the site of which is now marked by extensive'and im pressive ruihB. After finding lodgings they repaired to the synagogue on th e , Sabbath day. Here they coUld meet the people and woftld be given oppor tunity to speak of Jesus, Paul put himself in (he way of opportunity and opportunity to-beckoned to him. •They did not demand .this privilege because they wore Christian workers. Their participation in the service and other actions commended them to the re spect of the leaders of the synagogue, which was the great dbmocratia forum of the Jewish nation, ’H. Paul's Sermon (vv. 1(1-11). Paul began his remarks even a s Peter did ’a t Pentecost, by quoting the Old Tes tament and referring,to Jewish his tory, using tho tame to lead up to his testimony rbout Jesus. (Matt, 5:17.) “Jt is ours to show wherein Christ ful filled the- law, the obligation resting upon us by reason of his covenant of. grace, and tho blessings which Issue therefrom," This ia one of Paul’s three recorded missionary, sermons (see also, Acts 14:15-18;; 17:32-31), Tho, last two were to Gentiles only. This Is a scriptural discourse. (1) -Messiah's people and ancestry .(17*23); (3) Mes siah’s forerunner' (24, 25); Messiah rejected (20-29); (4) Messiah risen from the dead (30*37); (6) Jesus the Jastifier (ss-?&); (6) the application, a word of jamming (40, 41), There must have been some evidence of rest lessness in his audience* hence his sharp warning (41). . ML Paul's Derision (TV,4247), After the Separation of Jews from Greek proselytes the latter besought Paui to continue hie testimony literally “tho, Sabbath between/’perhaps at tho mid week meetings. Questions and discus sions were tint order in the breaking up of the synagogue service, and as Paul and his company departed they were accompanied Jjy some who-had believed (v, 43). Knowing tho testing which would follow. Paul and Barna bas did personal work with these, ex horting (o steadfastness (John 6; 31, 32; Col, 1:23), ia the grace of God (v. 38, j)9; Bom. 3:24; Bph. 2:8), It is only in grace that any afe able to “continue’’ (Rom.' 5:2; Gal. 5:1, 4). It is personal- work which gathers a crowd and such was the method of Paui and.Barnabas during, the inter vening week. Bo well was the work done and so great was the power of their testimony that “almost tho whole city” gathered the next. Sabbath to “hear tho Word of God.” Such evident interest in this now teaching aroused the Jealousy of tho Jews, %cars of Jewish: proselyting had never secured Such a result os this one address of a doubtful stranger-produced. But hack of this Jealousy was tho greater sin of unbelief. To hear tho Word ot God (II Titus 4:2; I Thess. 2:13) docs not necessarily produco obedience and faith (Luke 8:5-7); not always tho greatest number of hearers will pro duce the greatest number of conver sions, To interrupt a speaker Is not unknown In synagogues today- Tho Opponents “contradicted and blas phemed/’ doubtless contending that all who hang on a tree are accursed (Gal. 3:13) and they produced a wild tempest of voices and confasion. Only to attack and to destroy tho work of Paul and Barnabas could save these Jowisb leaders. Human nature I b the same everywhere. Paul and Barnabas thrived upon op position. We believe they foresaw this development and were prepared for the emergency (v. 40), Because of long training the Jews were best fit ted to receive the Gospel. It was no accident that the first apostles were Jews, but it Is serious business to re- joctithe Christ, and the history of tho Jewish hation since rejecting Jesus has been written in blood and tears. Paul’s “Lo we turn” (r. 4G)- marked the Rubicon of spiritual history. Chris tianity is to become world wide, not by means of the Jows, but in spite of therm # immediate relief from r.Shoop’s Ma^UcOintment* iBfWiiWU ‘f j State of Ohio f 1Greene County J as. . Pu rsu an t to command of an ordar ] of sate in Partition issued from th* 1Court of Common Pleas of said - County, and to me directed and dc- : llvered, l w ill offer for sale a t | public auction on tit* premises in i tho Tillage or Cedarville, in said County, on SATURDAY, JUN E 8, A. D. 1916 a t 9 o'clock P. M., the following lands and tenements to-wlt. Situate in tho County of Greene, S ta ts of Ohm, and the Village of Cedarville. being lo t number 25 in Dunlap addition to Uie Village of CedaWille, a s tbosamo is designated number and known on tho recorded p la t of said Village, except 11 feet off the south side of sa id lo t. The sa id Premises were appraised a t twelve hundred dollars (01200.00) The said Premises are located jn the said VillagoofCedarviUo Greene County, Ohio on the south-east corner of Vine street and Xenia Ave. Terms ot sale—Onfjtj on day of sale, To be sold by .order of said Court in case number 14134 wherein J , A, McMillan is plaintiff and Elizabeth Galbreathj et, a l are defendants. F, A, Jackson, .Sheriff o t Greene County, Ohio. J . A. Finney, Attorney fo r the Plaintiff. m m q lm KttWMKilP PILES % 3^-'****<•*”>. I*L** *"/</** !® « A * $ N 0W & 0 0 . f n»'(* wasHi-’wea, o ri. LEGAL NOTICE. Sealed proposals will be received a t the office of the Clerk of the Village of Cedarville, Ohio, until 12 tOOo’clock moon of Wednesday the 14th day of June, 1916, for the purchase of the following bond issue of the said Vil lage of Cedarville, Ohio, te wit: Nine Thousand Dollars ($9,000.00), issued in anticipation of the collec tion of special assessments.for the improvement of Main Street, Cedar ville, Ohio, from the P. C. C. & St. L. It. R. crossing to the South side of the bridge over Massies Creek, by Paving, the Repair of Cement Curbs and Gutters, and the Installation of Drain Tile; said "bonds are issued un der authority of the laws of the State of.Ohio, and of Section No. 8914 of thq General Code of Ohio, and under and in accordance -with a certain or dinance of tho Council of said Village, being Ordinance No. 88 and passed by Council on the 8th day of May, 1916. Said, bonds are dated June- 1st, 1916, are in denoirtinations of $500,00 each, bearing interest at Five and Ohe-lialf (51n) per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually, interest Cou pons attached; said bonds are number ed from No. 1 to No. 18 inclusive, are payable at The Exchange Bank, Cedarville, Ohio, and mature as fol lows* to wit: $500.00 June 1st, 1918, ahd June 1st, 1919; $1000.00 June 1st* 1920, and $1000.00, June 1st each year thereaft er, to and including June 1st, 1927. Said bonds will be sold to the highest and best bidder for not .less than par and accrued Interest. !i All bids must state the number-'of bonds bid for, and-gross amount of bid pud accrued Interest to date of delivery.* * Bids should bq sealed and and en dorsed “Bid, for Maiti Street Paving Bonds,” * , All bids must be accompanied with a certified check upon a solvent bank, payable to the Treasurer of the Vil- lage of Cedarville, Ohio, for Four (4) per centum of the amount of bonds bid for, upon the condition that if accepted the bidder will receive and pay fo r said bonds, within ten (10) days from the time of award, said check to be retained by tho Village of Cedarville, Ohio, if said condition is not fulfilled, * . The successful bidder is to furnish, the bonds without, charge to the Vil lage therefor, and subject to the ap proval of ,the Village Attorney* The Village of Cedarville, Ohio, re serves the right to reject any and all bids. J. W. JOHNSON, Village Clerk, Cedarville, Ohio* Finish your floors with Hanna's Lustro - Finish and they will look spick and span under the hardest wear. I t stains and varnishes. a t oneapplication. You can buy HannasLu in any wood color to match your woodwork. I t will dry with a tough elastic coating that will not show heel marks. Also fine for furniture* stair treads, window sills and all woodwo k . - Will Not Fade o i tl: V Soldby Kerr & Hastings Bros. ros. Galloway & Cherry II, E. Main St., Xenia, 0. headquarters for Reliable Carpels, Rags, Linoleums, Draperies, Etc. Xenia's Exclusive Carpet and Drapery House C. M. Spencer T h e O rocer . * > ' 1 - i , _ *> i •*0 , F R E S H F ISH Phone 3-110 Cedarville, Ohio SGHMIDT’S W h en you w an t tho best Groceries the land affords go to Schm idt’s. We have long maintained a repu ta tion for ca rry ing in stock all varie ties of food stuffs for the tab le . Get the profitable h ab it of buy ing a t the B IG GROCERY . Seed Potatoes GARPE FRU IT each ................................... ................ . 5c I Flour—Schm idt’s Ocean L igh t SIS l h « .............................................................. Sir*. Creamery A ( \ r f B U tte r a»k«..fitHfi.mi.tM L a rd , per pound........................................... . Sugar Cured B reak fa st lie 17c I'ogutar 10c package of 1 ........ 5c Corn F la k e ........... .. ..... ............ . ......... •Tomatoes 6c per c a n ........ ............................ . ...... ........... Canned Coro ........ 7c POT tJfllV (MtiltiflMHi MH.fiIHiiltlHMlMMMMtfi.lMIMiHI 8 bars of Lenox Soap ,,•..« < > ..............« * * .« ...... 8 bate ot Ivory H eap ...................................................... .......... . Silver Thread Saueakraufc 10c 10c ..3c per pound .....’............................... ...... . ........... {Just Received 2 Cars of S E E .D Potatoes Red River Early Ohio, Early Rose, Six Weeks, Triumphs,IrishGobblers, Rural New York, Bur* bank, etc. White end Yellow Onion Sets. H. £. Schmidt S Co., Wholesale m 4 Retail ©rocers t 30 South Detroit Street, .«• *• Xenia, Ohio* nwOumwi Mr. and M entertaining Friday. Mr. and M wood- have here. Rev. J. S. liver the bac High School church, Sabi Commenceim evening, Ma; Rev. and. have for th Pine Bush, 1 LOST—Pa, lope pertain provement c where betwi a nd"J. H. St( er please nt Hey Harry S . Prof. F„ I. of the Sug: formerly of elected as Jefferson to county. Pr< be ,a candid of his towni Spring Vail Preble ■cou $55,000 cent ing is being US, louse Ohio $ \ : \ V , o f ti & t n (*J. 10 , sowed t - and he i(S, attach any tn TS, Bp ’ ir- SAME tallorl {on
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=