The Cedarville Herald, Volume 45, Numbers 27-52
MM NtfMMM mmmt Mearick’s July Clearing Sale Suits, Coats, Dresses, Skirts,. Blouses, Sweaters, % ■ , * Fur Choakers, Silk Scarfs and Hats Reduced for Immediate Clearance Second and Main Street, DAYTON , OHIO TJTeTihishGone or S Mr. George Hoare inWat* bins thought he'd have to re* •varnish, but come to find out he had varnish enough on hi* car. It was clogged (dull) by dirt groundIn by-exposureand ordinary cleaning. WhenBrighten-AII took that. dirt off he put off revarnishing tor two years. Uncle ffirnrn grightejv^fU- THE OHLV AUT 0 H 0 »IL? CLEANER THAT CLEANS THE BODY, WHEELS. BRASS. AND NICKEL PARTS. HEADLIGHTS. WINDOWS. WINDSHIELD, (EVEN LEATHERCUSHIONS) and P olishes , as it wipes dry . * J. A. BEATTY & SON Green St, Xenia, O. CANNOT DO BETTER W ITH M O N E Y Yon don't want life insurance, because you "can do 'better with your money.” Your business pays you even now, you say, fifteen per cent on your capital,” Does it so T But money itself cannot earn fifLeen per cent. Safely invested—not on hazardous speculation—it will return on the average not to exceed five per cent. The extra ten per cent is the result o f your labor, your energy and resourcefulness, your superior executive ability. Death will end all that. The extra ten per cent represents the money value o f your life to your family and your estate. Death would destroy that value, but life insurance will indemnify against the financial loss, just as fire insurance lessens the loss When property burns. THE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK W . L. CLEMANS, Special Agent j ' EAGlE“ MIKADO” . PencilNo. 174 f o r Sale at yasw Pealef 1 Made In five grade* AW C l^THamLOWPENaL WITHTHE REOSANO , EAGLE MIKADO IACLE PENCIL COMPANY, NEW, YORK mom vmwmmrmi SimdaySchool ' Lesson' f (By BBV. i ‘ II. It, I>, ’ Teacher o? Ks.-slitiU .t-:ibie in itus Ohmd- i Bible Inetil'ite or *’h!ra'’o.) C oi> r!*lit. J " 0 ». W cctfrn - Sc I’ n'in- THE « p i , „ JHITCHENfel &I3CA B IN E T ^ •I.■»*w*.* a * # * re * * a* a%* * ae * ■*> . 4 l e s so n for j u ir 9 DANIEL INTERPRETING LEBU- CHADNEZZAR'S DREAM LKSSOJJ TE3fT«-Paniol Z. GOLDEN TEXT—The I'.lijirAoms of this world arc tocr'iiae tlio UJ:,r;Toms of our Lord, and of Ills Christ: and Ho Bi'.al) reign forever ant! ever.—Rev. H;10. REFERKNOB MATERIAL—Ira. 9:0, 7:H, 14:47; John 18:33-^, PRIMARY TOPIC—IIov.’ God Answered Doaiei’BPrayer. JUNIOR TOPIC —Daolol Reveals the King’s Dream. "INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC —How Daniel Mot a BuVerti Teat. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC —God’s World-Kingdom: Its Nature and Method, I. Nebuchadnezzar's Dream (vv. 1-13). . Tills dream made a tremendous Im pression upon the king’s mind, hut lie. ha® forgotten Its content. He urgent ly demanded of the wise men Hint they nialcf known the dream and Its Interpretation. Because. of their fail ure the king was very furious and commanded all the wise men of Baby lon, to be* slain.. li. The Revelation of the Dream {vv. 14-35), When the decree was In process of execution Daniel was sought out to be slain. H e sought an Interview with the king, and obtained time. Note; 1. The prayer meeting In Babylon (w . 14-1S).. Daniel was the leader In : that prayer meeting. He called his fellows together and roost definitely prayed to God. Their lives were at stake; their need .was great. 2. Daniel’s ascription - of praise to God (w , 19-23). God heard their prayer and Daniel responded In lofty strains o f praise to God. 3. Daniel before the king (vv. 24- 30). Because he had been with the Lord and had obtained wisdom, he was confident before the great king. 4. The content of the dream, (vv. 31-35). Daniel made known to' the king that In his dream he had beheld a great image with a, head of gold, breast -and arms o f sjlver, belly and thighs of brass, legs o f Iron and feet part of ir?>n and part of clay, tie be held the Image smitten by a stone amt the stone became a great mountain. 111. The Interpretation of the Dream (W. 36-40). . . 1. The head of gold represented the Chaldean / monarchy with Nebuchad nezzar as Its head (vv. 37, 33). With- the accession o f Nebuchadnezzar to the throne, the times of the Gentiles began. 2. The breast and \arms of silver represented the Medo-Persian power (v. 39). The Metlo-Persinn empire was a kingdom inferior to the Chul-- dean. : , 3. The .belly-and thighs of brass rep resented the Grecian empire under :Alexander the Great (v. 39). 4. The legs of Iron represented the Roman empire (w . 40-43). (1) The two legs represented the eastern and western divisions of the Roman empire. (2) The feet of Iron and clay represented the two elements of human government, which Inhered in the Roman empire and are present today in all forms of government, namely, absolutism and socialism, or Imperialism and democracy. These elements have np coherency. 5. The stoiie cut out o f the moun tain (vv. 44, 45). Tills la the kingdom of heaven so graphically set forth in the New Testament, for the''kingdom of heaven is the kingdom which the God of heaven shall set up. - (1) The stone Is Christ (Isa. 28:16; Matt. 21:42-44). (2) When did the stone strike? The Impact of the stone was upon -the feet of the col umns (v. 34). This shows that, it did not strike at Christ's first corn ing, for the Roman empire was a unit at that time; not even the division of the empire as represented by the tiyo legs had taken place as yet. The stone smiting the feet shows that the stoiie will strike when the Roman empire shall have been divided up Into ten kingdoms, (3) The kingdom of heaven Is thus seen to be brought Into realiza tion through a. great catastrophe. The end Is not by gradual -jd peaceful ex tension through preaching the gospel, but by a crushing blow. The stone does not fill the earth by crowding the colossus out, neither by securing its submission to God." but destroy! tg it. Gentile dominion shall end In a e ash; upon Its ruins shall be built the king dom of heaven. The action of the stone Is of judgment, not grace. The text plainly says it Is “ after” the stone has done Its smiting work that It be comes a great mountain afad fills tlie whole earth (see Psalms 2 : 5, 6 ; Zecli. 14:1-9), Just as the first part of this dream was literally fulfilled, so shall the last part be fulfilled. Messiah’s kingdom shall be a real and literal kingdom, „ tin, r-nf■ News Spreads of Miracles, Jesus went over the sea of Galileo, and a great multitude followed him, because they saw his miracles which he did on them that were diseased.* - John 6:1 nhd 2. Hush! Like some late l !r<j that lingers, t’trar.gc wild voices < o:;ie and go, A ’ th e w in d , w ith fa iiy fin g ers, Harr* t!,« wAi dai- o of too sr.;»w, MORE GOOD THINGS Put one cupful of raisins through the meat grinder, and then cook in a quart of chicken stock for twenty mlu- utes. Thicken with six tablespoon- fills o f hour, blended to a paste with one-fourth of a cupful of butter;. season with one teaspoonful of salt, a few dashes of pepper. Add one pint of thin cream mixed with the beaten yolk of tin egg. Stir until heated through, and serve with a garnish’ of the stiff ly beaten white, flavored with two teaspooufuls of lemon juice. ' Imitation Pates de FoieYGras.—Boll in separate sauce pans a calf's tongue and a calf’s liver and let stand for a driy In the refrigerator so that both will be cold and firm, I1:- -e and cut up- the tongue ' into small triangular plpces that will look like the truffles in pates. Put the liver through a fooil chopper, using the finest knife and repeating the process. Into a large mixing 'bowl add the, chopped liver and one-fourth its volume in melted or softened butter, working the two, together until smooth. Now add to the liver paste one tablespoonful of strained onion juice, one teaspoon ful each of made mustard and worcest-, prshlre sauce, one-fourth of a ten- spoouful each of ground claves and cay enne pepper, one-half of a nutmeg grated, and salt to taste.. Butter tbe inside of jars or glasses and pad: the paste ns firmly ns possible, mixing tbe bits of calf’s tongue with It. Cover wilh melted butter and - put on the covers when the butter is hard. Set In the refrigerator and the mixture wlU keep for weeks.” Waffles.—Beat one egg, add two cup fuls of sour milk, three-fourths of a teaspoonful of soda, one and one-half teaspoonfuls of baking powder, two tnhlospoonfuls of sugar anti about three and a half cupfuls of flour. The lmtter must not he too thick. Have the Iron quite hot before greasing both sides. Do not look at the waffle until it has time to be eoolcM. Do not serve hot syrup with hot waffles ns It, makes the crispest waffle soggy. TEST EVES OF MILLION KIDS Vision of All Pupils In New York Pub lic Schools Examined In One Day by Physicians. New York.—Nearly 3,000,000 boys and girls of New York’s public school.-: had their eyes tested In one du\ recently. It wns health day ir. the schools, and the Eyesight Conservation Council of America co operated'with the school authorities In arranging the, wholesale eye testing and distributed 50,000 copies of « pam phlet on the. care of the eyes. Teachers In the schools will co operate in the examinations for de fects of vision. Ears, teeth, nutrition and nasal breathing will also be tested. £arth»S!ip Moved Whole Town 11 Feet Renton, Wash.—Residents of Cedar Fails, a mountain town forty miles from Puget sound, were terrorized recently when tho entire place moved eleven feu toward Cedar Lake.- Should the slide rontiuuo It will mean the loss .of all property and the abandonment of the town site. It has been found that the clay formation upon which the foun dations are erected lies lii a slanting rock strata of extreme smoothness. . There is really nothing but the weight of the day subsoil to keep It balanced, Tbe winter’s deep frost and a supposed earthquake shock' may have been cause of the earth- slip. As every section of the town moved exactly the same di rection and space the only dam age was a few broken window lights. , INVEST * YOUR SAVINGS IN THE D AYTON POWER AND L IGH T COM PANY SOUND— SOLID—SAFE 29 GREEN . STREET XE N IA , OH IO Goes Too Far for. Death Data, New York.—Seeking data for his book, “Tbe Hereafter,” Thomas \V Weggle’lus of Brooklyn, a twenty-three year-old chemist, swallowed what la thought was Just enough annesthetli to take him to dentil’s portals. Tht book will never be finished for young VVegglelus miscalculated the dose ami the portals swung wide for him. Forgiveness o f 31ns, Blessed are they whose Iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins are covered.--Romans 4 o Influence. Influence Is the exhalntlon of char acter.-—IV. M. Tn.vjor • Where They Were. On lnqulrlpg why they made sc; muchnoise upstairs, the twins toldme that they were just playing “war.” Pretty soon the noise ceased, all was still; beromlng tineas-/ at the unusu al silence, 1 went upstairs to Investi gate; they were nowhere to be Seen; *but after calling, several times and asking where they were, n still, small voice from under one of the beds an swered: “We dnsn't tell, hut we'i someplace upstairs“-“-Exchange, Extreme Economy. A 'icigbbor had some dental Work done. When the filling was com pleted the tooth felt too long, causing him noK-ousness and annoyance, I asked him why he didn’t have the dentist grind It off a little and he said seriously: “Well, I hate to think of all that gold dust going to waste, after I’ve paid for It"—Ex change. Beginning Downfall, The darkest hour in the life of a young man is when he sits down to study how lo get money- without honestly canning It/--Horace Greeley. TheMiami Valley School forNurses - , REGISTERED IN OHIO AND NEW YORK Excellent classrooms and teaching facilities. Two full-time Instruc tors. Large staff of, lecturers. All branches o f nursing taught. Loon ’ fund. High School Diploma or equivalent preferred. Eight hour duty.. Fall term bqgins about September 1. MODERN RESIDENCE HALL — SINGLE ROOMS, Sun Parlor, Recreation Rooms, Campus, Swings, Tennis Court. For In formation apply to L. A . HANFORD, Principal, DAYTON. OHIO. THE UNIVERSAL CAR N ew P r ice s M r . Ford announces new R ock -B o ttom Prices effect- ive January 15, 1922. ■: , * A. '■ ’ , * * I ’ * ‘ ' >% T o u r i n g O & f * -• • » * » * « * . •.* « » « • •. • » * « • • • * * * * $ 3^8 C h r s s i a . ................... * ......................................................................................... .................................. $285 - H i i i n s i b o u t ) <■ ■ 'o. .• *■* *■ * • « a «''• ' «' *>•* • • » ■ • * * . ' * * m *• • » *$319 O o i i p s •*<»..*« *■* ••p i; ••• ■* i • * a * ■*. a » *#!■'■ •t * « •* •* • , .a-.* *• $580 SGCIHQ 'k .a. •.* V * **.'• * •*.•** '.*• r 4' *'*'■ a'»'*■*. *.•>a' *.v *■*'*■* lj •, b $ 045 . . T r u c k C h a s s i s . ...........................................................................* ....................................; . ,$430 T r a c t o r . ; ......................................................... * .... .................................* ________ /.$395 . . • .■' * •v. v‘ -v■ • 9 - ’ •' - * . . F.' O . B . DETRO IT W e can m ake prom pt delivery on a ll models* Inves- *. 1 '.* • ' ■ | ; • 1 & ■ . tiga te our se lling p lan . Liberal term s. C a ll, W ritej or iPhone R. A. Murdock AUTHOR IZED FORD AND FORDSON DEALER a s ’.A' -’ ! ■ | \ ♦ ■ = s Cedarville, Ohio Jamestown; Ohio Save for]OId Age But three men in every hundred are self-supporting or “ financially fixed” at 65 years, .according to statistics. Are you to he one o f the three or one o f the 9? 1 Now is the time to de cide. Answer by opening a Savings Account in this Association now. We pay 6 per cent interest, compounded semi-annually, and your small begin ning will soon grow to such propor tions as will mean independence for you, The Cedarville Building & Lean Association One dollar deposited in a Savings Ac count here give* you on* o f then Lib erty Hells to drop your odd change in,-. I
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