The Cedarville Herald, Volume 48, Numbers 1-26

m m The Vrtms-Woxd Puzzle this week is of an igvjf.ml design and contains some excellent word*, Pew are really difficult, however thero are a few that will arouse your interest and yetaffcrl ranch enpoyment. As a matter of caution be careful of No. 40 horizontal. It haa a word of 18 letters. This Week’s Cross Word Puzzle SundaySchool 1 Lessonf tjjy IIBV, I*. ji. prfKV. ATlill. fHMB »ti th e -{Svon.bg' Si-fi.ujl, &hn»is IMWO l«- itltUIO i'f ClitCOgli ) (0, 1WS W•■■•itemNmvrpapyr t*nh»n.i Lesson for February -22 GOOD CITIZENSHIP (Temperance Le&con.) HORIZONTAL •1. One who wonders. 5. To Brown. 10. King of Psalms. 11. Famous pres, (Init.) 13. To kill 16. Tame, fondled animals. 18. Preposition, 19. To deduce, 20. Time of year. 21. Excuse 23. Preposition. 25, Negative. 27. Pertaining to .(abbr.) 28. Indefinite article. 29. Implement, (hewing) 30. Personal pronoun. *■ . 31. Scent. 34. A definite spot, 35. A boy’s name. 36. Little devil. 38. Conjunction. ' 39. A separate entry inJaii account, '40. Preposition. 41. In spite of. . 42. Editor (ahbr.) 44. An eastern state (a'bbr.) 45. Thus 46. Members of a church body. 57. To talk '58. A European black bird. 59. Short letters 60. A curved hone. . - . < 62. Nickname of famous Press. 63. An eagle 64. Boy’s nifckname 65. Same as' 62 horizontal. 66. A girl's name 69. Ai'my order (abbr.) 70. Boy’s name (abbr.) 72. Boy’s name (ahbr.) 73. A stepi. v 75. Possessive form of a girl’s name. 77. To be able ■> 80. To cure, as herring, by salting and smoking. x 81. Cuts 83. Allowance made for waste, 84. A lock of human hair. 85. To shun 87. Main-thoroughfare (abbr,) 88.. Large quantities 89. Wide-mouth water pitchers. 90. At an angle. VERTICAL 1. Unusual. 2. An adverb 3. Six (Rom. num.) 4. Boy’s name (abbr.) > ■ 6. A bone. 7 p An exclamation 8, 9. 10 . 11. 12 . 14. ' 16, 17. 9 . 22 . 24.; 26. 82. 83 . 86. 87. 38 . 13 . 17 . - 18 . 19 . JO. 51, 12. J8, 54. 55. 56. 57. 61. 67. 68 . 10. 71.- 73 . 74. 76. 78 . 79. 80. 82. 34. 36. 15. A couch An implement. A precise description. A beverage, Rights (abbr.) A prefix meaning three, A magazine Thus Entangle Not approachable Aroused to action,. A single unit. A boy’s name Pi'eposition. Incorporated account (abbr.) Portugal (abbr.) A conjunction To act A critical niai’k. Depart - * Repent ■ - . A man’s name n An Italian Province Preposition . . ■ Well known ' / Guided •' Part of the verb “ to be,” Characteristics To go (Scot) An insect A girl’s name Artless Remote A title given to an English Peer. Past tense of sleep. To throw about To put away , A unit of measure (abbr.) A ote of the musical scale. Coarse outer coat of cereals. You (Germ n polite form) A beverage A medical man (abbr.) House of Lords (abbr,) Answer to last week’s puzzle m m m m ! Everything for the Farm FENCE, LOCUST POSTS, STEEL POSTS TILE, PAINT COAL Favorite Ranges and Heaters, Nesco Oil Stoves, John Deere and Oliver Plows. We have a few Cultipactors at a “good prices, Do not forget we have Balso Oil for your tractor and your automobile. Cedarville Farmers’ Grain Company Phone 2L Cedarville, Ohio We wish to purchase a few stacks of LOOSE STRAW Located within 10 miles of our mill, Call Cedarville Phone 39*4 rings, E. S. HAMILTON, Buyer The Hager StrawBoard &Paper Co. C E D A R V iU X ., OHIO liX:f=S(>N T EX T— Hum . HI 1-14, GOLPUK T J5X T - “T hun a lt lova th y n eiishbor a s ■U ijwU ,1— «'«n.i. HJ,9. PR IMARY T O I M l i ' ) : n An­ o th er. JUN IOR TOPIC—- R o w a n ! 1 Ol-Oill- ence. IN TE ftM KD IATK AK i) FU.N1UU TOP- IC—O heyinB th o taw YOUNG PHOPLH A N D ' a IH ’LT TOP- IC-—O beying a n d E n i,re la x th e L aw . It Is highly important that the dis­ ciple of Christ should realize that he ■is ft citizen as well as a Christian. In­ telligent Christians will show loyalty to the state as well as to the church. In faot, the' better the Christian, the better the state. The failure to recog­ nize this truth has brought Christian­ ity Into disrepute In many quarters. I, The Christian’s Obligation to the State (vv. 1-7). I, Obedlence'to the Itulers (vv, 1-4).. This obligation Is upon all Christians. The reason this obligation is universal Is that civil government is ordained of God and the rulers are His representa­ tives, It Is God’s purpose -that man. should live under authority. It is His purpose because man’s highest good demands It. To refuse obedience to civil authority is to resist God. This of course does not mean that a Chris­ tian at the holiest of the state should do that which Is morally wrong, just us parental authority does not Imply that the-child Is under obligation to do that which Is morally wrong at the command of parents, hut it does de­ mand submission as the law of the be­ liever’s life. The Christian frequently has need to call upon the rulers for help and personal, protect on ‘ (Acts 18:12-17 f 19:35-41; 22:25). 2/ The Spirit of Such Obedience (v. 5), It is to be conscientious, that Is, It is to be regarded, not merely as serving a good purpose, but morally right. 8. The Nnfiire of This Obedience (vv. (!•”). • (1) Payment of personal ami prop­ erty taxes, Thft citizens who enjoy the benefits of government are morally hound to support It. 2) Payment of duties upon merchan­ dise and license fees. The business i-xchange between nations must be. regulated. For such regulations ■ ox- . eu-m.-i incur .for v.V.teh hcne.it-. the .■Hi'/.ym; siiroulrt-pay. Cl) Veneration for magistrates— “fear to whom fear." Those who fear God should venerate Ills representa­ tives, that is, civil rulers. ( 4 ) The proper attitude—“honor to whom honor." This means tlmt civil servants, officers of the law, should be honored because of the ministry they perform, II, The Christian’s Obligation to Hie ■Fellow Citizens (vv. 8-10). This is. summed up In the word “love.” Love is a perpetual obliga­ tion. Paying of debts Is obligatory upon nil. Christians are judged bv their promptness In paying debts. The only debt that is right to owe is that of loye. Although we give love to the i full each day, each succeeding day ••alls for It over ugain. Love works no : 111 to one's neighbor. .This--.love for­ bids defrauding In matters of prop­ erty; It forbids going Inio debt where there is ho reasonable certainty Of be­ ing able to meet the obligation; it for-, hlfls defrauding in matters of moral purity. Where there Is real love, adul-, tery cannot be committed, for It Is a crime against one’s neighbor. Love forbids murder. It forbids stealing. It forbids coveting, i t forbids working 111 to one's neighbor. III, The Grand Incentive of the Christian'* Life (vv. 11-14). This is the corning of tire Lord. The supreme call is to the Christian to awake out of sleep. The picture here presented la of one asleep when the sun Is high In the heavens. Life’s duties can only be properly executed when one Is awake. The one going through life-without-thinking of eter­ nity is asleep. Each day is bringing us nearer to the .eternal goal and since that day Is at hand, we should 1. Cast Oft the Works of Darkness (v. 12). The works of darkness are the sins of the flesh such as dishonest dealing In business, rioting and drunk­ enness, 2. Put on the Armor of Light (vv. 12-13). With this armor on the Chris­ tian will (1) walk honestly, (2) not in rioting and drunkenness, (3) not In chambering and wantonness, (4) not in Strife, (5) not In envying., 8, Put on the Lord Jesus Christ (v, 14). The only way to he free from the works of darkness is to put ou Christ,. Fa ta l P rosperity , Often our trials act as a thorn-hedge to keep us fn the good pasture; hut our prosperity Is a gap through which we go astray.—Presbyterian Record, Our Love of God Our love of God would he idolatry If we. did not believe Iri Ills love for us— His responsive love. FARM BUREAU LEADERS | MEET IN COLUMBUS W. B. Bryson, president of the j Greene County Farm Bureau, is in Columbus the last of this week attend in" a meeting of state leaders when plans- will be formulated for the new membership drive, It will be known ! an the "continuous membership” plan. ; LEVIES ON HORSES Fred Weimer has brought actio?: before Magistrate Jackson to levy or four head of horses that a Dayton teamster had placed on his farm fo; winter feeding. The owner cannot be found and the horses will be sold by Gonstable Cal Ewry on Monday Mach 2, from the old Boyd livery barn. FLIPPANT TALK, SERIOUS ACTION Measure Aims to Stave Off Tragic School Bus Accidents His W ritten Word God never leads us to do anything that is contrary to Ills written Word. GET0UH.PMCESONSALEBILLS NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate Joseph McAfee, deceased. J, W. Johnson has been appointed and qualified as Executor of the es­ tate. of Joseph McAfee, late of Greene County, Ohio, deceased, Dated this 9th day of February, A, D., 1925, S. 0. Wright, Probate Judge of said County. , COLUMBUS, OHIO. KB petting parties held on seliUpl . . buses? Does some older girl sit In the driver’s lap while tlio younger ones park In the hack of the. vehicle uhlcli la conveying the childien to school? .» These questions might be uaked if one had been In the Ohio senate re- rently. ■ The frequency of petting In tlio julel rural districts of Van Wert emm- l.,', as compared with that In the more j noisy, urban highways of Cleveland, was debated In a spirited ■argument ! I.ctween Senator Olaron L. Sharer of [Van Wert and Senator L. L. Marshall I jf Cleveland. , j Oddly enough, the subject about which flippant debate arose was a bill io stave off such trugic school bus accidents as have occurred in the last two years. . The hill, fathered by Senator Sha­ fer, one- of the two blind men in the. upper house, proposed to put school, aim drivers In a separate compartment from the children, raise the minimum age limit ol’ the drivers from sixteen n- eighteen, force other vehicles to stop behind the buses when they are ending and unloading, and make it a imnishable offense to fail to stop a t a railroad crossing. . t The bill passed the senate, 27 to 2.. '•The provision putting the driver in a separate compartment from the cbil- *3ren is important,” said Senator Shu- j.fer in arguing for the hill. | “We’\e often found that the. young- j tv children' would he in the back of I Ihe bus or truck while the driver j would be pet'Ing the o'dor g'rls n)i ,i.* t i'irid. S'-at: “I ih n't want to have i, pd. .-iVe for stem- girl to get on the UiKer’s lap white he’s driving school children.'’ . The house passed the McDonald bill .•ailing for compulsory reappraisal of real estate every six years, . ■ *■ - ■ HORSE THIEF LAWS S ENATOR GEORGE JI. BENDER of Cleveland moved to repeal the an-' .•lent horse thief laws, which caused no much trouble during ami before the Niles riots o f ,last November be­ tween Ku Klux Klim and Flaming <'lr- •le members. ■ It was learned several weeks Inter hat Klan organizers had gathered up lien ostensibly as members of a cor­ poration organized under the olu law which gives fifteen or more residents •f a township the right to organize » society for the catching of “horse Ihleve# and other criminal's.” .Numerous'persona who carded guns it Niles said when searched they thought they had a right to carry them jruler this law.' ’ The move of Senator Bender came as a bill to repeal forty-two sections rf the code dealing with corporations now obsolete, such as 'companies #lo :lraln sSi-plus water from caualb and to Install sewage systems In cities. Burled in the long list of statutes were eight sections ,of the horse thief laws. * * * . * ' ■ LEADS EGG RAISERS A FLOCK of White Leghorn pullets owned by Clarence Householder of Fairfield County leads Ohio’s farm Hocks In efficient egg production for a period of ono year, says a report by poultry extension specialists a t the Ohio State University. Theso 128 White Leghorn pullets produced 231.8 eggs apiece, ou the average, for the year ending Nov. 1, 1924, and so outdistanced the 1196 ’arm flocks whose production was re­ corded, month by mouth. In co-opera* fan v th the poultrymen at Columbus. The university standard for efficient ;gg production is 369 eggs a year for ?aeh b ird .' * * * i KILLS INSECT PEST3 ELECTRIFIED poison, manufactured £ so that it will not wash'oft In the waviest of rainstorms, Is now avail* lide to Ohio farmers who perfer a aiwder or dust spray to kill Insect n-sts. Word of this new process has, mmo to T>. M. DcLong, professor of entomology a t tho Ohio State Unlver-, flty. , By the new process the Insecticide :s ionized In manufacture. Even vhen placed under running water, the1 onlzcd or electrified Insecticide will flick. * * * * MILK PRODUCTION I p1116 Williams Cow Testing Associa- I turn leurs every other association of its hind in tho United States by an average of 1.060 pounds of milk for ■’ach cow, according to a recent sur­ vey of Ohio's 23 cow testing associa- j lions made b.v Mm dairy dcpnrtmcnl at ] ■Ohio Ktatc University, j ConghRemedyMotbe* GaveUsStili Best Fine Tar and Honey Beat All Modem Drug* In thousand* of families it ha* been tho custom for many years to keep pine tar and honey always on hand for coughs, cheat coltlo, bronchitis. spasmodic croup, and throat irritations. Our mothers knew that it was good, that it often broke up. the worrit cou,;h Jn 24 hours, and that it could bo given to young and old alike, as it contains no narcotics or harmful drurra. And now wo aro told that in splto of modern medical discoveries there is still no better or quicker cough remedy. Doctors say tho pino t a r . quickly loosens and remot cs tho phlegm and congestion that cause tho courrhlnrr, also healing soreness, while tho honey not only prives a pleasant taste, hut helps soothe irritation. // Tho original compound, made up many years ago and ueo.d by mll- ltono of people, was Dr. Boll’s Pine* Tar Honey. This is scientifically Fruit to Be Avoided The fruit »f the t.'.eny 1» gt'WTUlly jncjlluc, although tow and then e,.... 41,sv — j *4 iJUli 1“ “ ' - . a lorg.'-fraltt d varkty 1 b found | offt niJmcn. ihnutgh hcxnng the P flint is fit f«.- The have;- famous eulog: s of woitliy the 4<umm>n dml.o cherry contain jwrI1 stirred up to affect the like com Inspired to Great Deeds Many brave young rolndK^bjJJ men, pi unble acid‘and imth fre.-a and wilted leaves are jail.Bi-no.us. incmkith-ns. and so strive to the like il< - Exchange- composed of just the right proportions of plno tar, honoy and other qujck-aetimr, healing Ingredients which tho best doctors have found to aid in quick relief. If you want the original and the best, bo sura you get Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar Honoy and no -other. Only 80c, a t any good druggists. J | D r . B E L L S PINE-TAR-HONElf FOR COUCHS “REAL” BABY CHICKS Hatched from purebred carefully culled flecks. All standard varieties* In our custom hatching department each order goes into a different machine, INCUBATORS OF ALL SIZES. BROODERS—Coal or Oil Burners. The Northup Hatchery Bell Phone* Glifion Exchange It. R. 1. YELLOW SPRINGS* OHIO REMEMBER McMBIan ’ s FEBRUARY , ’ * Pric 5 Reduction on Living Irfocm? Suites ‘Our Location Lowers Cost' t® You” M cM IL L A N ’S F & s r r s i fy re i S t e a l e r s uneral “ 'rectors CEDARVILLE, OHIO MBMBWBWaWrjEaBBMBSii agWBMgtS^ I Tim m iu v jij o i-'hoWs (hat the Ohio Vlllle" CeV,- ' Af'.soi intieii In r-( Is- .-.:v ;tv. unfics hlgheftl In Imt- • m . fi. i- a ’.fTHgo p o.laction for 5. '<<: . in the state Is 23 per - Si* • rn*.t;\'l ati-a average. MSitA-". - Ifi-ar new voices anil see. new faces n the fleJt'Uti Play^ “The Boomerang’ Feb, 25th, N ew Spring Coats Display N ew Features Spring Coats ale decidedly differ­ ent this season. Collars are tailored in many instances while furs are used for bands and cuffs High shades-— sombre colors, deep blends, softer tints, every shade imaginable is brought into use, bringing with them striking beauty, $25.00 to $45.00 $39.75 to $59.75 Aid • m h g m i m This advance Spring showing of Living Room Furniture includes the very latest in style construction and . S om e of the best of the new 1925 patterns in both genuine Baker Cut Velours and fine Ja -quart coverings. We wish to call special attention to our unqualified guaran tee'of satisfaction that goes with every suite sold cs v ell §r s the fact that any purchase made / throughout j.he month of February will offer a saving be­ tween $35.00 and $75.00. Suits have all outside backs o f Davenports covered in the same materi. 1and come with or without tassels and French finish carved panel fr-nts^ Nauchmar. r.prinj constriction and a celebrated factory guarantee under spr,'. g ccnslrucli n \J ■■ Revealing the New Fashion of Spring Fashion’s stage is set and these advance Spring ModeS come to the foreground to prove they are well able to play the part of smartness. So, if you are wanting a new and lovely frocks, a coat, or a chic ensemb'e suit, by a'l means see what this collection has to offer. . The keynote in style this Spring i$ color, with the coming of warmer days, one will see many gatherings of smartly dressed women a shimmer with color. • ' Many New Versions in Spring Dresses All the characteristic of youth are embodied---these dresses of Flannel and Kosha—smartness of line, and de­ lightful color effects, and though price is suggestive of a moderate expenditure each dress possesses a distinction one expects to find in garments bearing higher priced tickets. $15.00 to $29.75 The Ensemble Suit Increases in Favor The Cusenble suit reflects the combined skill of master dress and coat makers. Style detail that belong to the Ensemble suit alone, have been carefully worked ofct. The long slim lines are most cleverly emphasized in use of materials Charmeen, Kosha, Bengaline. Springs most favored fashions. XENIA, OHIO K yggyy-ygjHj rm&mt imi i T * ' Every <3 ti?3* you ; ibe purse in r the us duee. FOl “ MU ll i I Kennel! -of a "deaf raeket on pie, last v bout town. JO cents t list when similar m. Young i tion from ; npolis, Ir:-! Knowirip town golicj liking his who could the young. isfied he w down. ’ Young h 22, and hot They, fel police Fridi rested.' Te!. • roomed ani detectives •■ was search day’s work • in police eo and costs a house. , People s giving to s you th s/Ev ■sympathy < selves tenn GREENE * OF I Greene ( Education day and M Four stf. county. On speak in t •.conference; the,county . Monday institute in Xenia, will The foil. Morning Worship f Arnold. 10:30—J Franklin J ' 11:00 O ment. Rev 11:30—7 Arnold am 12:00 Lun Afternoc 'ship Train Fred D, C 2:00 —S Sunday Sc ■2:30—The Education. 3:00—A Adults. • 3:30 T. Young Pei The We- B. S. Ministei Evenin Worship f 8:00—T 8:30—T United Pr Cross'V I now hav Word Pui t U Wi Kan;- becoj' Coob fetar It. M as G<

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