The Cedarville Herald, Volume 45, Numbers 27-52
DlUlWIMteW l ppAftR! A . mm Jones Millinery For Your Approval a Complete Line of Fall Millinery CORRECT IN STYLE * 5 RICH IN MATERIAL MODERATE IN PRICE May W e Show You « '• M ' « JONES HO East H igh S tree t, Springfield , Ohio ** • \ A SPECIAL VALUE B lack K id , Brown K id and P a ten t '; , ‘ *1 r ~ < . >• i t « M ed ium Heel or M il i ta r y . $3.95 S.V& S. Sell For Less *? S .& S . SH0E TORE East M ain S tr ee t , THEUKIV^ftSAI.CAR I f A tte n tio n FordOwners: Ford parts, like almost everything else worthwhile, are counterfeited. Imitation parts are manufactured t<5 SELL at th e . highest possible rate o f profit and the grades o f steel used are consequently not the same high quality, specially heat- treated. alloy steels specified in Ford formulas for the manufacture o f CrEN- U INE FORD PARTS. Don't U misfed—Insist upon GENUINE FORD PARTS made by the Ford Motor Company. By •o doing you will get from 35 to 100 paircent mote W#*r from them, and you will pay the lowest possible cost—the Some everywhere. *•- 80% OP GENUINE FORD PARTS RETAIL FOR LESS THAN 10c EACH A ik for P u is Prica List When yotor Ford c«r, or Fordaon tractor needs ittentkm, cell ones. For rememberwe areprop- sdy equipped, employ Competentmedisnlcs, and « nm Genuia» Ford and Fotdsec parts In EH wepem wGmm R.A.Murdock X en ia , Ohio ' V , The Ctedtarvdle HwntWi y seng BULL » m n TOR . IBatased a t the Poet-Offle*, Qeiar- v illt, 0 ., Cfetohee 21, 1987, mm aeeosd efef# matter. $ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 88, 1 m A SMALL MAN AFTER ALL A renewed interest in the deposed German Emperor is being aroused through the announcement of the publication of bla memoirs. Everyone will recall how the former Kaiser so often assorted 'his' dose afe&nity and relationship with piety. He was, with God, the co-dispenser of bepeficience and of wrath wherever the German royal standard cast the shadow of omnipotence above subject .peoples, As a dispenser of wrath, terror, hate, bloodshed and inconceivable suf fering and sorrow, the Kaiser has unquestionedclaim to distinction. With this frightful burden of .moral responsibility bn his soul, i t might bo posed that he would be eager, in some measure proportioned to his debt to his people and the world, to make all possible reparation for his errors, sins and crime. I t is said that in response to a re cent appeal fo r war victims and. o r phans, this man, whose mad, imper ialistic schemes sent more than a mil lion of his fellow men to death and doomed other millibns of widows, or phans. and broken men to suffering in the lands of the allied nations, replied •‘I am really sorry to hear of the mis ery of these sufferers and regret my inability to help, owing to the calam ity of the exchange." And then ’he sent the committee a picture of him self in full uniform as his royal con tribution to ithe fund of colossal mis cry. •• $ „ . ' , I t is also said by those who have t-ead the advance proofs of his book that the ex-Kaiser shows no change of- heart, no sign of remorse, but nlanies his failure to succeed upon naving taken counsel with bad advis ors./ ' This, great War Lord, who often re ferred to “Me und Gott,” measurers dp pretty small as he prepares to take nis place in history. Fo r Rent:- House .of five rooms, gas and everything complete. ' . " Mrs. J . N. Lott There's a, difference.. You save it a t Service Hardware, .Awkward Place for an Echo. . An extraordinary echo is produced by'-the high hills surrounding a golf course in the south of Efnglandi and it la feared that a three-mile limit may have to be fixed for children and clergymen.—From Punch, London.- One Woman’* Deduction. One Atchison woman who has taken the best care of her hair all her life, only to have It turn gray a t an early, age, says: "The person who wrote that a woman’s hair la her glory was a bald-headed mno."—Kansas City Star. Difficult T ransaction. "When a iflan marries for money," -said Miss Cayenne, “you may arpect complaints from •everybody , concerned of having gotten the worst jot the bar gain." :§yHOMEir ^ PHILOSOPHY W HEN you get a sliver in' your finger it’s likely to cause trouble If it’s, left tj»efe. As a- matter of fact, after' a time oldl mother nature sooner or later will1 force it out whether it likes it or, not. It just don’t belong there. One way or another it's got fo get hack to where it. came from. When it docs then both sliver -and stick are better off. They’re stronger, The chances are .both r,liver and stick must pass through all sorts of changes before they •unite again. That’s the price they pay for getting away from where they fit. It's always best to find out where we fit an' not try to break in where we don’t belong. Of in te re s t to YOU. I have a few bar ga ins in land. See m e a t once . , W. L. CLEMANS «*■ WHY NOT HAVE GOOD GLASSES SINCE YOU HAVE TO WEAR THEM Tfff«n%’» Optical Service Pro vide* You With the Beat. . T IFFANY BETTER GLASSES «. IMnit St. Xrate, 0. JUXTURE COURSE TICK j BT SALS. FRIDAY, KEPT 2». Th* appm uh of the winter w o r n bring* tiw teeter* tm t t t Jwfisr# eur community, the tffe Institution that provide* g*#d *fet» ijwtmaetiv* en tertainment fa r young and old. The first noadwr 1* Tuesday, Oct IQ whan the Jugo-Siav Orchestra will giv* an entertainment. One of the features of thfe entertainment i» th# Tamburic* a native instrument of the people of Croatia. It is similar to a mandolity banjo or guitar but it pro-i ducea more life and sweetness of tone. Tuesday, Nov. 14, Hon. J. W. Olsenj a^well known educator, legislator, lecturer coming to this country from! Copenhagen and passed through oil the stages from sheep hoy school toucher, law maker and is now dean of Minnesota State University. As a lec turer he has humor with a rich vo cabulary. “His lecture is “What America Has Done For Me”. Dr. Chancellor Henry Bradford, for » merly of Denver University, will lecture on Wednesday, Jan, 10. He has a special message for young people. • - ■ Tuesday, Feb. 30 comes the Davies ^ Opera Company with a feast pf Mel- ody and Laughter. This company has a, number of comic operas to select from and the recommendations'we have should insure a -large sale for this community likes good music. The last number Comes Thursday, March 23 and is Foluhni and Com pany, a master workman from the field of magic and illusion. He has a program of tricks that will delight .- all, arid introduce'many that have never yet been given here.. . , The sale of tickets begins Friday,' Sept. 2D. Adults will* be $1.50 and! children’s tickets, $1.00. You will see* that these prices arc much under tjjq.- „ .prices-charged last year. The plat! opens for the first number, Saturday, | October 7th. . j The lecture course committee this •; season is as follows: A. E. Richards,! .Mrs. A. E< Huey, Walter <?. Iliffe, L.j D, Parker, -secretary? _WJ L. Clemans, j treasurer;* §. C, Wright, chairman, [' FALSE HOPE Sin on every side/ i* growir.ir bnldT, and the very delusion co*i- Lined in the statement, “The world is growing better," is of sntanie origin, and is for the prr- Pr,-v of putting to sleep the forces of righteousness, ; Inman nature is incapable of ir-..s;:3 improvement by any human proves -1 known to mankind. The only thing within the power .of God that can change human na ture is regeneration, RefoVmatiru cannot affect, its character. Re generation must precede reforma tion. Those who have been regen erated are of course growing bet ter; they are improving; they are progressing; they are growing more Godlike. The good are getting better, but the bad are getting worse, The imgttierated, the unwashed, -the unsa-cd are more skilled, subtle, / "XoTpCAfTEtC and powerful in the practices of sin than ever before in the history of the world. The corrupt are becoming more scientific in their corruption, and more determined to practice cor ruption, There are three great stubborn facts confronting us. FIRST—The fact pf $m. I t is the most stubborn fact, the most awful fact, and the most destruc tive fact in the universe, SECOND—The fact o f salva- • j « i , There would be w* aslvatim* if we were not to*L Yon can’t live something that hasn’t been lout, Tim salvation provided by the blood of Christ » the only fact that »s constructive, irgtentP? tive, and recr**tiv*. THIRD—The stubborn fact of depraved, lost human nature. Tls-s great entity known as sinful mat* cannot be improved by external processes; he cannot be redeemed by education or evolution, or any other of the delusions, He can ho saved only by the regenerating act; pf the Holy Ghost, It is the duty of the church and of every minister of the gospel to preach the awfulness of sin, the absolute certainty and” power of salvation, the judgment that await* the unrepentant, and to denounce with all the power possible the .hellish delusion that the world is growing better. Awake! Strike! Preachl And reach the unsaved, for they are growing worse—not better. N ew Men, c l a s B price! >Bus For o^ lizecf j* - INDIANAPOLIS PHYSICIAN DIED AT BATTLECREEK, MICH. -.Private funeral coWces , fo r Dr. John H. Bull, aged fourty-four, a prac firing physician j n Indianapolis for twenty-years, who died Sunday in a sanatorium a t .Battle Creek, Mich., were held Tuesday a t 2 p, m.- a t the home, ,3Q35 N, Pennsylvania street. The Rev. A, B. Philputt, pastor of the Central Christian, 'church, officiated with the Masonic lodge in charge. Dr. Bull had been ill for about a year and had been in the sanatorium about a week. He was born June 28/ 1878 ire Kokomo, Inch, and lived all his- life in Indiana. He was a lieutenant i nthe medical corps during the $ s r anorwas station ed a t F t. Dodge, Iowa. He tvas a'mem ber of the Gentrai Christian church, the Columbia Club, the Acadamy of Music, Indiana Medical Society, the Indianapolis Athletic Club, Ancient Landmarks Lud'ge, F. and A, M,, the Scottish Rite, and the Shrine. - Surviving are a widow, Mrs. Effie Bull; bis father, Horard L.' Bull of Kokomo; a sister; Miss Elsie Bull of Richmond; and three brothers;- Dr. Earl V. Bull o f Linton; Guy' E, Bull of Richmond and Glenn C. Bull of Winnetka, 111. .— Indianapolis News. Notice to the publie—* We will no' longer accept goods once taken from the store unless arranged for a t the time of purchase o r were defective at time of purchase, C, M. RidgiVay' Favorite pipe and pipeless Furna ces a t Service Hardware. I t takes theJumpandJerk out: Puts PepandPowerin in stead . If you want a smooth -running engine and power-"that you can always depend on, Columbus Gasoline is the answer. It’s apure, unblended fuel of proven goodness that thousands of Hoosier motorists swear by* / It takes the jump and jerk out of*the. engine and saves the cost of new parts and repairs that always result from ragged perform ance. ’ It gives a quick, easy start, a sure, fast pickup, and unusually big mileages per ~ gallon, and sqves your car, your bankroll and your temper. ? v G a s o l i n e STRAIGHT RUN WITHOUT BLEND Columbus Oil Company COLUMBUS C-4 OHIO 1CEDARVILLE DISTRIBUTING STA M. C. NAGLEY Miller Street and Penny* By* * -C* E. MASTERS §: ., *vy 'X And l jHere » Blankets pair. W b lanket ? For i m an y he r COMFOJ " what' go< have any > m ay sele t w ill have : ' '* I Gall 36-38 W. Telephone No. Id6. R. A. MURDOCK W. W. TROUTE R. BIRD & SONS CO. Save fo r O ld Age But three men in every hundred are sett-supporting or “financially fixed” a t 65 years* according to statistics. Are you to bo one of the three or one of the 9y? Now is the time to de cide, Answer by opening a Savings Account in this Association now. We pay fi per Cent interest, compounded Semi-annually, and your small begin ning will soon grow to such propor tions as will mean Independence for you. TbeCsdarville Blinding & 1 L oan A s so c ia t io n For A Sa i V t < t 1 The A fo One dollar deposited in a Savings Ae count here gives you one of the* Lib erty Bells to drop your odd change in. ..Give Us A Chance To Figure On Your Printing,.. Have y ed, mfmis , for and d ; from Xei Will be ir , Elr DAYTCE
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