The Cedarville Herald, Volume 44, Numbers 27-52

w m m w m m m m m m w f e mum* 2tK S ti2 l5C iMfyMm.'jr btm tim * po&sr* YjmMtr* m m *? roril mmU tmnm t ^ jm u r pmtr«n»* tkf&mmmttikr ammiH&f o r wnini m * mmsmb J m I mgh *n£* jroiro*---Hte«m*rin^l tttd stototjta#. Jwth 0 I t$ *«& wrote aarrte* « » i #»*»ro»y m » * triMl. _ W • i Work with th* Porf *prin**~-, a c t aitmhut themi 'The *‘third *priug" ch«ck*th* rabound and •toe* the aide-sway. Save tire*, fual.and car depreciation. Mod* •rat* la price. JMKriinMn 1 ifl <)t ‘ ’ i . tt. A-'MURDOCH, . < Cpd*rriUe,aiid Jamestown BURPEE;JOHNSONCO 1 rwD » a 'S j ill » d 1i“s :, u. S. t\ ■mfti WHY NOTHAVE GOOD GLASSES SINCE YOU HAVE TO WEAR THEM Tiffattyte Optical Service Pro­ vide* Too With toaRrot. ." ' TIFFANY iBETTER GLASSES S. Detroit St. Xenia, 0 . ,** FARMS - 1 Town ReMdeaceA^Vscdht Lota LIFE and FIRE INSURANCE AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE The Beat on Earth J. G.McCorkell Attention FarmersI Use our services to secure" c o r n huekers, general laborers and all other classes ®£ farm help. NO FEES CHARGED Springfield, Ohio Home 837 Bel! 875 Aircraft Controlled From Ground. For torn* tim** experiment* have Lees carried out in various cottntriea With the object of controlling aircraft from the *w«a& and a French ma* dtlae atrceeeded rocootty—00 a pre- aortfed ooum with certain spaoiited .dhaattTOH-te covering a dfcrtane* of ISO MWtteters (aboot 1X0 tailea), and i* tetteteg, when refatrod, in a eertain airdrome. A WmiJar maiAdnehaebero davrioped is the United State* which, aeeerdt&g to a reeeot atatomeet, «*& trowjl witbont a pn<tt stforo XOOtotlro and teaA dkm to a deehmated poet ' ' W ~ j j m m m O ctober ie FAUL wwmtn TO THE GHIIIS* TIANt AT CORINTH. jattk. ef tliaa* i* *h*rtty,~lCar. % TmhmmscM m at x , ftow. <■ FWUART TOPIO-How te *how Our JUNX®» Tonc-Wb*.t r^eve Dee*. BfraRJdTOHATB and MUttORTOPIC —A JXter to the Civuroh at Corinth, TOCNOPWOP3WBANDA DVt/t TOPIC -®ome Problem* pt an Karly church, 1, Party Spirit la the Corinthian Chyroh (1:10,11), In this church rival factions were contending agatnat each other. Some were for Paul, seme for ApoJlo*. some for Peter, and some for Christ The cause of this condition Wan failure to aoe that the membership composing Hit, body cannot be divided. By one Spirit all wore baptised lute the ope body (IB*.13). • 11. Love the More Excellent Way (I Ota*. l&tl-lS). Alt of the Spirit’* Iglft# are good, *but the most valuable of all Is love. Not all can preach or interpret tongue*, but all can have the gift Of love. Love in tbl* chapter la the more excellent way of chapter 12:31, (1) The Pre-eminence of Love fvv. 1-3)* It tranecend* (1) apeaking with* tongues. For men to possess the lofti­ est eloquence and he lacking In love is to he as t>oomlng*bras8 .and dunk- lug cymbal. . (2) The gift of prophecy—-the ability to unfold mysteries. To he able to penetrate the mysteries of nature an£ providence is, good* hut to-love is bel­ ter. , . (3) Faith*of the moat Vigorous klnd, even such aa to remove mountains, is Of less value than love. (4> Philanthropy of the post genev- oUs .sort, causing one to .surrender> all earthly goods for the sake of the ' poor is praiseworthy^ hut unless actu­ ated. by love Is valueless before God. , (5) Heroic devotion which leads to martyrdom la'profitless unless hacked ,by lovA , _ • • - 2, The Attributes of Lovedvy, 4-7). (X)- It Is long-suffering hud kind. (2) It is free from envy- Those1 who love are entirely free from the spirit engendered because of the su; perlor worth and success1of others. . (3) I t .Is free from boasting and vanity. Love strives to do good to all - hud 1*not careful to seek their admire-* lion and applause. (4) It is decorous: Love is always ‘polite andmannerly; knows how to he-’ have ai all'times.' - (6) I t is unselfish, It is always seeking the good,'of ethers and Is for­ getful of self, ' — (6) It doe* not give way to passion. It does not allow Itself to "begroused to resentment. - it Is hot quick tem­ pered, , l ‘ (7) It takes no delight In evil; does; not impute evU-motives to others; Is not- suspicions’. It is forgiving. Love has no sympathy with that which is evil, but sympathises with that which Is true;.has a common Joy with if. . (8) It beareth all things. It wraps itself in the gracious.mantle of love and Shuts *11 evil out. (9) Love Is trustful; it looks into the future with confidence, (10)aLove Is hopeful; It seizes (he things' of the future and brings them into the present, appropriating them for Its use. * (11) Love Is firm. It Is free from vacillation. It intelligently Sets Its attention to things that are right and’ with unvarying strength ,holds fabt ■* 8. Th* Permanence of Love (fr, 8* 18). (I) It outlasts prophecy. Proph­ ecy In the Scriptures means both a foretelling of events and the teaching of the Word of God, Prophecy as pre­ diction shall be fulfilled; prophecy as teaching shsll be brought to an end In that day when teaching is not needed (Heb. 8:11; Jer. 81:54). (2) It outlasts speaking with tongues. The face once spoke1the same language, but as a Judgment for sin and rebellion God brought confu­ sion and caused the people to speak many tongues, The day Is coming when the redemption wrought by Je­ sus Christ shall hats been accotp- pUsbed in all its fa liu ss; all nations Shall M brought back to one tongue. (8) it outlasts knowledge. The knowledge 'we now have Is only rela­ tive, but the day is coming when this relative knowledge shall be done away ter the coming in of a wider and nobler intelligence; the twilight shall be lost fa maturity, for at Christ's coming we frNjtin te* Him face to face aad shall ha Ilk* Him, Lars will always abide, fs*R*#J#Jwr* Th* trotolt tor 0 * 4 ’ Th* search of men for God has been an age-long sesrofa, throughout th* centuriM men have groped in dark­ ness with the cry, ’’Show us God," th* deepest hunger of th* heart, and th* deepest perplexity of the mind. When Phillips Brooks was called in to give some religious instruction to Heiatt Foliar, spending her life in daricnM* and ieolatlon, She greeted Mm with one sentence slowly spelled ent. "Please tell me something that sm teww about God."—Wesleyan .^kriatian Adveeat*. f Aeftenteg Hides. T k m are two simple ways of *eft» Mtof iesther and raw skin*, one is to n * to thoroughly neat’* foot oil, A*R0 m #-. way to to dissolve tore* totow* tdero* seven mmt^s of suit •"4 to* add enHtaif ounce* seteratim % J e t Shto water to saturate y .t o j f r "J P t o tool enough pot to fes** roe Mhd« *»«*k »’>» *k(o jp t; tor J2 honrat wring <m sad tetng up wbr# dty rtofMgtt tto* m n a n m f f i t o m w m » T # m s u— vwa w*toU m latalyl D* yew totoCMl to gw tsMir $ S H C 8 £ YI^TOJtY T * * j3 * n N0TS8 day?- Aewog the astoMe eve« 4 « e f to* u sua l N o n a s . To toe Fleeter* of toe Village of Ca­ fe toe m m £ » Z y e see i ,«* * * ? 0hi9> veer adeniad heme, whero yeur < Y o « m beirtoy aotiAed tout e t toe sees feteroste are aed » t ii keep i* ' tpeto wito toe folks "bask hema.” MUe* of land rnel sea «w wperote y e feme toe highways and byways #f your hew* toero; ynee egref oweiM; see “Main Street" and toe iM toerol) and school home, h a t memories of to*M things perstetonUy cling te you. Your Home Town Paper will give you the live nows about your old friend* “at home;" it will give you both the gossip and th* serious news concerning men and events; it* will bring te you the true atmosphere of your native soil. Subscribe today. YES* IT ARRIVED, The beautiful October days were marred Wednesday afternoon with the arrival of the first real winter weather, Fiyst we had a cold rain that turned te hail, Next we had r*in with a combination of hall and snow. Had the air been a degree or so cold­ er the snow .would have been very noticable. - ...L. M M *. mm' m te 1 +w « w y t/ 8Wnn|MW 5 * * 1***0 * • WA e « to e 6th gpjanlsh reBtaaoa, ym m m i J 9 to* day of November, Ig fi, in toe Vib- SeferjmVj, at toe Vtotery T h e a tre ,!^ of CedarviUe, Ohio, at toe tones Dajjrtm^ Ohio, for three nfehte strob- (^ 4 the plaoe* for th* holding of teg J rm t o v »M*t O e te h w m wito , . ^ ' matinee «n Wednesday Oeteber 19 th. aabaitted te said electors the The heroine te the wife of a Spanish - w p J» JR mmmt SHEEP FOR B ^A IC FA ^ r politician. Har unserapokmaness as regards social and poiltioal vice* have driven h*r to make her own way in the world, A woman of artistic ta l­ ent, whose paining* a re prised and whose senslbiltyte* end intellectual krone** are generally admired, she te found iu her studio by a young es­ caped. convict, a victim of her hus­ band’s duplicity. The young man has come to clear his hams, being on the trail of one of her husband’s black- guardedly henchmen; but he remains to ppse fo r her and then to woo1her. Out of this dramatic situation, which ORDINANCE NO, 105. \ MADISON COUNTY IS * OUT IN FRONt, Ju st a t present Madison county is before,the public through a grand jury investigation as to county offi­ cials being connected with the* booze situation. I t is reported th a t one or more prominent officials have kept the corn product in' the court house and that a county automobile has been u?ed to deliver it. Swift Locomotion. Men can run about 32 feet n second, that being the -world’s record for a hundred yard sprint. Contrary to common supposition, skaters' are no swifter than runners, th* world’s rec­ ords for both .being precisely the same —92:5 seconds for a hundred yards. Runners ofi gkte have, however, made as moch as 72 feet a second, and in leaping on skis more than 100 feet a second is attained. prosed by Council of said Village on the fit! day of Ccteber, 1921, te brought to a climax when the bus-,{village Clark of the Village 'o f C* band reutm* ti find his drunken d*rville, Ohio. ^ henchmen making unwelcome' love to his wife, springs new life, new joy for tbb fair Revctte, whp as the cur­ tain falls is seen pressing to her lips }* hopeful, passionate note from her beloved Don Caesar, There are several effectively drawn secondary characters in the play*! which in Its settings reflects the color ful, picturpaqueness of Spanish cities* Jn the specially selected company supporting the famous sta r are Macey Haripn, Malcom Fas*ettf Muriel Tin­ dall, E'. L. ^emandez, George G. Thorpe, -Marguerite Maxwell, Ann# Sutherland, Charles JBrokaw, and Jnd- son Langill. Those desiring choice seats had better make their xeseava- tions early. Phone’ordera will be ac-, cepted. The Early Balkan Settler*. The -first barbarians to settle per­ manently in the .Balkan peninsula were the Bulgara, a Finnish people, whose home was the middle Yolga districts. The Slavs are said to have begun to pour into this region as early aa the third century, but they were pot established until some time after the Bulgarian, invasion, tom of tfe humane* of . bond eYroid f o T b £ 5 S Village In the sum of IWMJ90 for* , the purpose of extending the time I Come with u* to Chicago. Arriving «a wrotow toto» te * ateto-wpifir for the payment of toe indeht*dn*s*ifte» Nebrftoa who raises sheep by toe 9 m toeroanfe aweiror Atetote Of **id Village m u ttin g femn th e ' purchase of certain fire extinguish­ ing equipment, and which said indsbt- ednass the said Villager^* unahi* to pay * t maturity by reason of the limit* o f taxation. Said bond te to mature Three (8) years after date. Said question te submitted pursuant to the provisions o f an ordinance his -n*mti toe tocteent te ■®*t **o°*d to toe rife* o f Jlto N W i s» tery of Agriculture In Washington, The stock farmer has shipped ItflQO sheep before tearing hon *. Wtem hi* flock arrive* in Chicago he sells It and te Mid TfGN-TY -V - < 3 fiwTiJ PER SHEEP after freights, commiMiona and other <margce are deduct­ ed, ■r . . . The next morning ha goes into a fairly good Chicago tesianp^fct and orders mutton chops for breakfast When he pay* hw bill he fit*** he ha* eaten the equivalent o f to* price he hrid to e 1 day before roroived for four aheep. . As we have, said before the woodpile is full of $enegaml:nus» s J jggggaguiAU’aaB.'ffr.ti'rMH iw i l i i " w M ^ T S j ga i DOES IT PAY TO WORRY ABOUT APPENDICITIS Can appendicitis' be guarded against? Yes, by preventing intestinal infecy tiori. The intes^tial antiseptic, Adler- i-ka, acts on BOTH upper and dower bowel removing ALL foul, devaying m&tter which might sta rt infection. EXCELLENT for gas on stomach o r chronic constipation. removes m at­ ter which <you never thought was in your system and which nothing else t jn dislodge. ' One man reports i t te nbelievable the lawful impuritites Adler-i-ka brought out. A.E. Richards druggist. An ordinance to toe toe salary and Bond of the Marshal o f toe Vil­ lage and Repealing Ordinance* and part* ofc Ordinance* In Conflict - Har#witlu BE I T , ORDAINED BY THE COUNSEL OF THE VILLAGE OF CEDARVILLE, OHIO. ,Section 1 , That the salary of top Marshal he One Hundred and Fifty; Dollars (1150.00) per ahpun and fees payable'. mbntRiynan# he shall give bond in'the sum of Five Hundred Dol­ lar* ($500.00). Section 2. That all ordinances and. p a rts 'o f ordinances in conflict herer with he and the same are hereby re­ pealed.. . ; Section 3, This ordinance shall take effect and be In force from and law. ' . Passed this 3rd day of October, T021. . D- H. -McFarland, Mayor of the Village of Cedarville; Ohio. * A ttest:--J. W. Johnson, Clerk of toe Village of Cedarrille, Ohio, OWNERSHIP STATEMENT. This is to certify that KarlH Ball is owner, publisher and editor o f toe Cedarville Herald and thafc there are no bondholdeto1h r mortgages. KARLH BULL. J I N G L E S t o other' '..rte toafe. The jingles o f the sleigh-hell is a memory of the past, 1 jingles that are f a r too sweet to last!—hut they blessed u loved ’em, with their sottl-entracin’ chime, but it seems t*., / ~v, ren’t in - . tendOd to Btand the test of timo, .Then, toe jingle in the pocket whichcan never he mistook, when a feller’s steamer wages overflows hi# pocket-book. , , I t’s , d" jingle thq^a en- jquragin* but allers simmers1down to melancholy whisper, Whc toe to i­ ler’s inner thirds,—is > the jingle pf the poet with a satehol-^d, of words. 1 , ’ ¥ YOUR OWN UNC&E JOHN. EAGLE' .PencilK*. 174 M *K A Ti A For Sate a t yoaeDf*£iur / 1 .Made Ju*f«vo nW*f*e ASKFtHt TH£ YELLOWPENCILWITHTHEREP BAND > EAGLE MIKADO - ; v EAGLE PENCIL COMPANY, NEW YORK efro IMS Great in Vpitue-Giving—Great in Magnitude t " ■ ' ' ^ A remarkable event! Thousands of dollars’ worth of brand ‘ qew merchandise will be placed on sale next Saturday morn­ ing at surprisingly low prices. Not only has new merchandise teen purchased for the greaj, Faff Festival, but many, many items in our regular stocks have been materially reduced. , Opportunity is the slogan of this great event. It is an opportunity to save money. It is an opportunity to buy your entire needs for Fall and Winter at prices that "are extraordinar­ ily low. It is truly a.golden opportun­ ity for every one. Attend the great Fall Festival! Be here on the opening day, and attend as often jas you possibly' can. New merchandise will be offered each day —and you will find values here that will well merit your investigation. Don’t miss this great opportunity—an opportunity to buy high-grade Rike- Kumler merchandise at remarkably low prices. and $o5 Fiir-Tiimmed Suits, $35 Taffeta Dresses that formerly sold up to $55, now, $10.75 * $75 Fur-Trimmed Coats, $55 $15 Trimmed Hats, $0.50* $7.50 Brown Kid Oxfords, $5.05 $12,50 Children’s Coats, $0,06 $10.00 Infants’ Coats, $6.05 $5 HousprjTesses, $2,05 Here Are Instances of the Remarkable Opportunities ■A T.1F.^ "T A t i. V ... ■ O S I Y w .*1* .Amt* Heavy Outing Flannel Gowns, . 800 1,150 Pairs of FttH-Fashioned Hosiery, $1.85 340 Pairs P art Wool Hosiery, * $1,29 , Eiderdown- Flannelette Kimonos, $1.65 Fine Silk Drosses, (Downstairs Store) $18 Fur-Trimmed, Silk-Lined Coats, (Downstairs Stdre) $18 Kew’ Fall Low Shoes, Pumps and Oxfords, (Downstairs Store) $3.05 ^Children’s All-Wool Ser^e Dresses, (Downstairs Store) $3.06 Children’a Fine Winter Coats,: (Downstairs Store) $7.40 Smart Woolen Dresses, $19.75 "N ’ * ' Fur-Trimmed Saits# (Downstairs Store) $18 1,000 Large Sized Pieces of Aluminum, $1 Tailored Silk Blouses, $^95 All-Wool Tuxedo, Sweaters. $ 8 .8 6 Crepe de Chine Envelope Chemise, $2,05 Pink Satin Elastic Top Corsets, Payton, Oisb AcSiK* Mri*s af Sawiitl f&mmmmmmpmsBsm ^ a a a M

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