The Cedarville Herald, Volume 45, Numbers 1-26
if - 4 ) $ I ' I di ) || I o ? i'l 0 r t f' I-'! * ’* 3 1 •■■• - •— i|Tnyr-TnnngniM"liUHi> J|Mfe*|Uy|Mfc JM^MjfyyyL ^ SondaySchool S*?k*r « »«fttafe Btrt* 1* Via Moody *w* pt cw««o,j Q*JMwXyto, Wortartt {i«w*jN«iMr Catoa. UESSCM FOR APRIL 10 raster lesson I45SS0N T»XT-*Jobn J»;ULJ1. QOltPiyn TJSXT—Th» Lord 1* rlMB ta- <*te--Luk* M:M, *iUMARX AND JUNIOR TOPIC-Th* H fR 'Iu tir, S ‘5*S^t,lS>lA’ri8 ANIt SENIOR1X1PIC ~Wky We <Hwv* J£*at*r Day, ICOUNOPKOPUd ANO adult TOMO ~Til* nar*ct of Belief In the Re*urm- ¥*% >1. Jeeue Manlfeeta Himsalf to tha OltelBlea, Thoma* Being Ab**nt ( yv . 16*85), Me appeared to several of HI* di»- . dpi** at several different times during that day. This la the that appearance to the disciples as a body, The rumors 9 t HI* several appearances on that day caused the disciples to assemble to taUt over the matter. For fear of the dews, they met in a private room and barred the door. While they were dls* cussing the strange happenings of the day, the Lord mysteriously 'appeared before them with the greeting of good cheer, "Peace be unto you," Me did apt come with censure for their fail* »re and desertion. At Mis birth the angels announced "Peace." just be fore he took Hie departure, He said: “Peace I leave with you; my peace I five unto you” (John 14:27); "Let not your heart be troubled” (John 14:1) ; and now the first word after His resur rection is "Peace.” Having calmed their fears. He gave them an unmis takable evidence of His resurrection. “And when He had so said, He showed unto, them His hands and His side. Then were- the disciples glad when they saw the Lord.” Their doubts needed to be scattered, and His peace needed to be-upon them, Consider: 1. The disciples' commission (v. 21). "As pay Father hath sent Me, even so bead Xyou.” This commission was not •implyJfo &class, as the elevenf but Is' to ail Christians, In Luke 24:33 we ‘find that there were others there In that meeting besides the eleven when Jesus shewed, himself to them and commissioned them, showing that the commission is not confined to a clash • or order, but is wide as tbe Christian - body Itself. AH Christians, therefore, .are envoys and representatives of Christ. The exercise o f this great function is not merely optional with the individual but is obligatory upon him. The Lord placed it upon a plane ■ with His own commission- from the gather—“As my Father hath -sent me, ad a«si I you.” S, The disciples' equipment (v. 22). “He breathed on them, and anlfh unto them, Receive ye the Holy Ghost.*' The mission of the disciple is a very ’ gteat one, but every one who goes .forth la its execution He clothes with the power of a new life by the beStow- ment of His spirit. No one who has •this equipment shall ever fall. The’ -Lord's representatives have His life in -them. The barrenness of- bur efforts ' is due to oiif failure to take by faith •ur equipment. 8. The disciples* authority ,(v, 28). “Whose soever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them; and whose soever sins ye retain, (hey are retained,” This iauthority was not by virtue of office, . ’ but by virtue o f having the Holy Ihost This would give the spiritual .discernment to know who had or who hod not repented, end consequently, :to pronounce pardon or not. II. J muc Manifests Himself to the ’ Olestpiee, Thomas Being Present (w , i96-2»)., . Thomas was abjsent at the first ap pearance of Jesus, H>s absence de prived him of a vision o f the Lord. Ab- <nance from the'assembly of believers .always occasions loss. The other die- cipiee go to' Thomas at once with the 'glad hewt of the resurrection, but he will not believe. His stubborn^dlsbe- lief Is such that he doggedly declares -that unless he tees the prints of the -nails, etc., he will not believe. It It right to demand evidence, but to pro* scribe terms is rank unbelief. Note X. The Lord’s kindness to those who have difficulties! Thomas deserved re buke, but the Lord kindly supplied the evidence which be demanded. 2. The revelation of the Lord trans forms a doubter into a possessor, lit. The CencluMen ef the Qeepel <W. 80-81). - la these verses John's arguments are •ummaxised, and an explanation is given as to why he wrote this Gospel. Many other things could have been written, but these that he wrote he fudged adequate to prove his point: To prove that (1) Jesus ef Nazareth was tie expected Messiah; (2) that Be was divine—the very Bon o f God; . <8) that those who believe on Him ai God’s 'only Sen—the Messiah—wohid receive eternal life, Eternal life is in Him and only as He is appropriated by faith can men be saved. What Christ taw in Wertd. Christ saw much in this world te wasp over, and much te pray over; but He saw nothing in It te look upon with contempt. Happiness in Our Heart " The happiness that we talply seek the world over is ait the time within us, nestled deaf to our ewu hearts.— Bruce Calvert, rtiiri-ririiiH-'i-jfifri-1 11 ymiutm Our Cemferte. Most ef our comforts grow Up b#> our crosses.—Tomut.' Swift Locomotion. Men can ran about 82 feet a second, that being the world's record for a hundred yard sprint. Contrary to common supposition, skaters ate no •witter than runners, the world’s rec ords for both being precisely the same —02-5 second* for a hundred yards. Banners on skis bare, however, »*de ns muck as te feet a second, sad te » «* iMi mm teen 1Wtest n ||gjftyilgtf. txR Humeri*. While masiog a tour of the souther* Wart1*, we were driving along a coun try rend, when a fanner came walking toward us. On* of our crowd, a te> meriah thinking he would hare soma tea with the man, stopped the car, •ad taking a email satchel «*d a mag- axing, gave a tea-minute Impression of Billy Sunday. When he bad finished, the man looked at him a little queer]?, put big hand In 10a pocket and gave him a card. On it were the words: "* aw de*f.’-’>-Exchange. Magpie Omen ef til Luok. te Yorkshire, England, country folk crow their, thumbe “te tom the luck” should they meet a single magpie, te Scotland a magpie seen near a dwelling l« believed to portend death to one of'the Inmate#. BUSHNELL BUILDING ANNEX SPRINGFIELD, OHIO The Highs* Grade, Bert Disciplined, Bert Equipped Buelnete Training School in Ohio /"-» EaUbliehtd IBM ADVANTAGES NOT FOUND ELSEWHERE Open ell day ail the year. Enter at any time, individual Instruc tion by profeealonal bookkeepers and stenographer*. Any eourae .rosy be selected independently of any other. Thousands of successful pupils; International patronage; pool, lion* for graduates. Gauntry's Largest Industry, Amerlf'a’s largest nuinnfns'turing In dustry Is Iron and steel, Tbe pig iron recovered In wieUlng Iron ore (innujn'e to about £5 per pent of the raw ma terials. The equivalent ef about 14 per cent is driven off by volatilization In the poking of the coal; In the proc ess of smelting a further 40 per cent escapes in gas, fumes and dust,' and the remaining 21 per cent represent* the Mag. New teuree ef Platinum Supply. In testing native ore for f*oid * Californio chemist, eavs Popahir Me chanics Magazine, discovered ibat Ute ordinary iF'ia trretinrnt, 1with sup plement:-,:y proven extracted plat inum In the form of platinum black and Jn quantities up to several eunew to the too. ........, I....HI.)...... Rate* Wall P h 1 Juba was downtown with Me tether, who was buying a pair of sheea. He found a pair that wort Mttrtartwy rod told the cierfc he wottld <*k# fem . John looked at Ms tether **d -aid: “Are you mm rmr teet teal 'ontcT.ted te thepi, daddyr - ' T “ GETOURPRICESONSALEBILLS niiMiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiuitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiitttiiii iiiiiiitiiiiiiiiituiiiiiiiiititiiiii niiiifMiiiiiiiitiitiiiit SCHMIDT’S WEEK END SPECIALS We purchase our goods in * whole s*lc way direct from producer, thus making * saving for YOU. HOUSE GLEANING GOODS | Brooms, good weight, well made 3 J kobbm , guaranteed to wear. Q A _ 5 Were 79c new each___ . . . . . . OH tC SOAP | P . & G. Naptha, 5 per bar. ,, | Star Soap, s . p o r b a r , ............................... .. i Lye, * • s per can | Ivory soap, 'S'. A. b* r s . , . , , , . , . . , * . « « « £ . St. Naptha W . Powder, S 7 boxes f o r . ........................ PEACHES Best yellpw peeled, California n o 5 halves, large c o n , ...... ................ 46 iOC = COHN City Practically Mining Camp, The town of Butte, Montana, is a v^st mining camp, combined with a modem city. The Butte district hae produced more than a billion dollars’ worth of metals, copper heading the list. This Is the moat productive metal-hearing area of Its size in the world. EAGLE“ MIKADO” . I'.i1-*’ HR ivu •* For Sale at your Doaler Mad# te Rve grade# ASKFORTHEYELLOWPBNC3LWITHTHEWEDBAND * EAGLE MIKADO EAGLE PENCIL COMPANY, NEW YORK 5c ,.5c 1 1 c 25c 25c Best,"extra standard, , n p E i a n s . , « e J C E 3 cans Abundant vitamin now contained in small yeast tablet Y east Foam, Tablets are from 4 to 5 times as concentrated as the ordinary baking yeast.The necessaryvitamin patency, there fore, is contained in a much smaller dose. HOMINY I Van Camp's best, *1 rv § large. . « , . • . . . . . ■ , A. z. COFFEE Old 9c 5 Jello | any flavor..*.............................. § Knox ' I Q s Gelatin A O C BEANS 5 Best Michigan aavy m . | per p ou nd .......... ................................, * C § L ima beans, q | per p o u n d . . . . . , . . , : . . . . . ............. O C Reliable ................... .................3 1 c S Battle- - O O r \ Hotel Astor, in vacuum cans o 7 _ f best coffee packed — . . . . . . . . O § C | i [ ______ ________ . _ S We pay the highest market price 1 in town for eggs—give you the cash— f and always buy. „ , | We also buy your cream at the | highest market price. § s 5 H. E. Schmidt <3 Co. “ T C O N G R A T U L A T E Y O U ,1’ writes a A well-known.physician,“on yournewthera- peutic yeasL I am sure it w ill be welcomed by themedical profession abd by thousands o f peoplewho dislike eating such large quan tities o f fermentative baking yeast—as well asby countless otherswho soughtin vain for. any appreciable tonic benefits in many drug laden.and untested ‘vitamin’ preparation,” This yeast supplies what modem foods lach Yeast Foam Tablets correct a serious defi ciency in present day diet by supplying the essential vitamin which is found in many- raw foods*but which is completely elimi nated, in many cases, by the time these same foods reach our table. ,This vitamin is necessary to digestion and the conversion o f foods into healthy tissue and bodily vigor. 1 W ithout sufficient quantity o f vitamin your body goes sick and you are only too aware o f it in such signs as loss o f appetite, failing strength and endurance, nervous ness, sallow skin and other definite signals o f vitamin starvation. Yeast richest source o f vitamin In the yeast plant is an abundant store o f th is indispensable vitam in and in Yeast Foam Tablets there is nothing but. pure whole yeast—millions o f these tiny plants being concentrated in each tablet. The vitamin potency o f this new yeast is therefore h igh and, consequently, ita tonic and reconstructive properties aremost unusual Yeast Foam Tablets are made by the world's largest manufacturers o f dry yeast, the makers for 45 years o f the famous bak ing yeasts, Yeast Eoam and MagicYeast, They are the result o f two years o f experi ment conducted under the guidance o f some o f the country’s leading medical scientists. Recommended by physicians and sold by druggists everywhere. Extraordinary advantages o f Yeast Foam Tablets The only pure, whale yeast In easy-tb-tajee tablet form. ' They contain no drugs o r other ingredients* They do notform gasnor cause belching. - , They are the only pure, wholeyeast suitable for children; thej/ do not cause fermentation* Bach lot is tested to insure high and uniform vitaminpotency. •- • JSIorthwestern Yeast Co., Chicago Makers o f the famous bakingyeasts, - YeastFoam and MagicYeast | . ( {XEN IA , OHIO . : | 7itiiiimiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiHniiiimiiHHniiB»iiauminuniiiiiniiimmimiHiimumim»iiiuiitiimiini>]immmi»nmiiiiniiiiiiitm 'Yeast F o am T ab le ts " . t&sonlypurt rebel*yeti in convenient tatietjbrm Of Interest To YOU , : ' * " ■ ,] ^ - , ■■ MYDEAR SIR.- T * ’ * ’ \ * • - , - • . ■ ■* - * Cedatwille, Ohio, has been renowned for years as a great-lime producing center. Its preducts have enjoyed a State wide and National reputation as one „ the most durable and substantial building and agricultural products in the United States. ! The Columbian Exposition at Chicago, awarded a medal to a producer o f Cedarville lime, as a commendable and durable product. ■- .. . Its products have attracted the attention o f the National Geological Survey at Washington, D» C., and in their report the quality o l this well known lime is mentioned in several instances. . State Geological Survey also dwells quite extensively on the quality o f the Cedarville products and the enormous possibilities a&^egards their * agricultural and chemical value. * * i* • i s^ua*:ed on the main course o f the Pennsylvania Railroad and'its exclusive position as regards the quality o f its natural deposits spells un- , limited possibilities for the farmers and the industries o f central and south eastern Ohio. 0 The lime and limestone products o f this vicinity have been developed to a marked degree during the last half century, principally in the production o f high grade lime, but little did the principals engaged in this business duirng the last half century realize the wonderful possibilities as regards the manufacture •o f chemical and nitrogen producing fertilizers, The modern farmer and land owner is familiar with the value of lime fertiliaxation to the soil, and the -enormous possibilities from the application o f nitrogen producing compounds. It is evident, asidenitrogen producing compounds. It is self evident, aside Merest that the United States Government has taken in developing nitrogen fixation plants over the country, that the Government realizes the necessity o f providing something suitable for the future generations to l supply the lost nitrogen in the depleting soils, * ' The Government has spent millions o f dollars in these undertakings and the activities o f our large financiers, such as Henry Ford, The Alabama Power Co., and the Fertilizer Trust* in trying to get possession o f the large Muscle Shoals Nitrate plant in Alabama are evidences o f the great importance o f the future demand for nitrogen bearing fertilizers. , * j j W e know these facts, ' \ ; j f The producers o f the Cedarville lime products during the last half century did not realize the enormous latent possibilities o f‘ their limestone deposits. ^ This stone is highly valuable for the production *of magne&ia compounds, such as THE 85 per cent MAGNESIA STEAM PIPE AND BOILER COVERINGS / which are used in the conservation o f fuel, also magnesia chemicals for use in the manufacture o f drugs, chemicals, rubber, steel, paint and most every con- ' ceivable manufacturing industry. However, in the manufacture o f these products, that is, in the separation o f the magnesia from the limestone, we have available a valuable bi-product known as calcium carbonate which is o f extreme value as the base for the manufacture o f a large number o f high grade fertilizers. And in the separation « f the various elements o f this limestone there are thousands o f cubic feet o f absolutely pure nitrogen available for combination with the bi-product calcium carbonate, which provides an economical method o f producing calcium cyamides, that valuable constituent o f all high grade fertilizers which have been used here-to-fore sparcely on account o f the enormous costs paid German and other manufacturers. This information, I am sure, will be o f interest to every farmer, manufacturer and citizens o f the state o f Ohio, This great natural, exclusive deposit at ,Cedarville, furnishes the raw material to conserve the fast depleting coal supply o f the United States. It proovides medicines for the sick. It provides the nec essary ingredients for mixture's in rubber, which lias become a necessity in transportation and any number o f Uses. The bi-products provide the necessary in gredients for a number o f chemical purposes and as indicated, serves to supply the fast depleting fertilization o f our soils. This we believe will benefit every citizen o f the State o f Ohio, " ■ , $| 4 iA , | t W e desire your interest and solicit your patronage. Respectfully Yours, * , 1 * THE ABEL MAGNESIA COMPANY, * By Car! -r N. Abel, Prcident A-.* v«£ ~y; : I '1 l 51 U " 1 ■ .| ■ r f ft i v ft* »* ..i s,. ‘ AW | ft* i
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