The Cedarville Herald, Volume 59, Numbers 27-52

rKDARVn.LE HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, i$3G NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Estate o f Don A . Kyle, Deceased. j Notice is, hereby given that R. ’ Henry Kyle has been duly appointed! rs Ad:,’h;Utt'istoE o f t<ie estate o f Don A . Kyle, deceased, lata o f Cedarville, GTeene County, Ohio. Dated this 17th day o f July, 1938. S. C. WRIGHHT," Judge o f the Probate Court, Greene ’ County, Ohio. LEGAL NOTICE Jva Floyd, plaintiff, . vs. • Harley M. Floyd, defendant. Common Pleas Court, Case No. 21178, Harley. M. Floyd, whose place of residence is unknown will take notice that Iva Floyd has filed suit against him for divorce on the grounds o f gross neglect and _that said matter will come on for hearing on or after Sept. 13, 1936, at which time de­ fendant must answer or judgment may be rendered against him. MARCUS SHOUP, ’ (8-31—9-4d) Atty for Plaintiff. NOTICE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS Greene County, Ohio Roy P. Holt, ‘ » Plaintiff,' vs. Nina Holt, Defendant. , Defendant, whose residence is un­ known, will take notice that suit for divorce has been filed and same will be for hearing on and after six ( 6 ) weeks from first publication of notice. Grounds extreme cruelty. F. L. JOHNSON, .A t t y for Plaintiff. . cs(7-24—8-28d) LEGAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given that on the 11th day of August, 1936, the trustees o f •Cedarville Township, Greene County, Ohio, filed in the Common Pleas Court o f Greene County, Ohio, their petition praying that there be transferred from the road fund, to the general fund, the sum o f Nine Hun­ dred Dollars, ^($900.00), That said transfer is necessary in order to pay outstanding obligations o f the town­ ship, as in the petition set forth. Said cause will be for hearing on the 5th day. o f September, 1936, at 9 o’clock A. M., or as soon thereafter as the same may be heard by said court. Objections to the transfer must be filed before that date, TOWNSfHP TRUSTEES, , o f Cedarville Township, Greene County, Ohio, By A. E. McFarland, Clerk. Marcus E. McCallister, Prosecuting Attorney. (8-13-20-27d) Dr. H . N . Williams DENTIST X -RAY EQUIPMENT Yellow Springs* Ohio h I For fwtnfy ytart Hi* loading hotolol tho Capital C ity ... Ultra-Modom In Equ ipm en t and Sorvloo Three P mamm Pining NtfOcm Papular Prlee* Na Cavar Gbirfr ^ ^ ^ I M P R O V E C ) UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL S UNDAY 8 chool Lesson By REV. HAROLDL. LUNDQUIST, D«»n ot theMoody Bibl. In.tttut. QfChicago. A w «t«r« N.w»p*p»r Volta, • Lesson for September 6 TURNING TO THE GENTILES ■i.in . l ... * - **, LESSON TEXT—Acta 14:8-13*. 19, 20; Romans 10:8-16. GOLDEN TEXT—-1 have set thee tor a light of the Gentiles, that thou ehouldest be for salvation unto the uttermost part of the earth. Acts 13’ 47. PRIMARY TOPIC—What Happened In Lystra. JUNIOR .TOPIC — When the Gospel Came to Lystra. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP­ IC—Trials . and Triumphs o£ Mission­ aries. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC —Christianity Facing Other Religions. The progress of the first mis­ sionary journey into gentile terrir tory had brought Paul and Bar­ nabas from Cyprus to Antioch of Pisidia ' in Asia Minor, where Paul preached with great power. Per­ secution by leading Jews then led them to go on to Iconium where they tarried for a long time preach­ ing “ the word of grace” in the face of many difficulties, Next they came to Lystra, in which city we consider first the experiences of • I. The Messengers (Acts 14:8- 13, 19, 20). They were immediately faced with the case of a man crippled from birth — outwardly hopeless, but having that inward faith which Paul at once recognized. He speaks, and God works in mighty 1. Power (w . 8-10). Faith releases the- unlimited power of an infinite God. It did in Lystra almost nineteen hundred years agq. It does today wherever men believe God, The miracle- of healing which took place created a sensation which resulted in great 2. Popularity (vv. 11-13). The heathen people were looking for an incarnation of their gods. The supreme god in their mytho­ logy was Jupiter, and . his chief attendant was Mercury. In Paul and Barnabas they thought they saw these two gods, and began to give them acclaim and honor. The flesh loves popularity. Few temptations are so appealing! and so treacherous to the Christian worker as a desire for popularity, Paul and Barnabas might, have argued that such public esteem would help them in their later proc­ lamation of the gospel. Or they might have fallen into the specious fallacy of those who say that the approach to the heathen is by way of an appreciation of their reli­ gions, and .by an adaptation o f gos­ pel, truth to their philosophies. True servants of God like Paul and Barnabas were not to be mis­ led into either of these pitfalls. They vehemently turn away the false popularity and earnestly urge the people to ‘ ‘turn from these vanities to ihe living God.” Such faithful and self-denying .witness to the gospel is greatly needed. There followed at once; a star­ tling change in the attitude of the people. The fanatical Gentiles are joined and stirred up by equally fanatical Jew’s who had followed the missionaries, and we soon find them meeting 8 .' Persecution (vv. 19, 20). Fickle and short-lived Is popu­ larity with men. Let us labor to please God rather than men. Paul ' was stoned and left for dead. But God had not forgotten him. He never forsakes his own, It is believed by many that even while being stoned and near to death, Paul' was having the Oxpe- riehce which no other man ever had, and winch he describes in II Cor. 12:2-5.. Bo that as it may, God- miraculously brings him to life and full vigor at once, and the messengers go on their way to Derbe. *As they continue their ministry we turn aside for a glimpse into one of Paul’s epistles to consider II. The Message (Rom. 10:8-15). The carrier of a message is im­ portant, but of far greater import is the message that he carries, The word which Paul preached, and which you and I must teach and preach if we are faithful to our calling is "the word of faith.” It is the glorious good news that "Whosoever shall call upon - the name of the Lord shall be saved.” Reader, have you called on his name? Have you admitted your need of salvation, and in your earnest de.iire to be saved have you abandoned every trust in self- righteousness or self-improvement and believed on him in your heart as your personal Saviour? If not, “ Now is the day of salvation.” If you have, it is your privilege and your duty to confess him "with the mouth,” telling everywhere by faithful life and testimony t h a t Jesus still saves.-^ The Getting of Wisdom True wisdom is a thing Very ex­ traordinary. Happy are they that have it; and next to them, not those many that tlynk they have it, but those few that are sensible of their own defects and imperfections, and .know that they have it not.—Tillot* son. Money and Ilealth Money is the thing most envied, but the least enjoyed,. Health il the thing most enjoyed, but the least envied.—Colton, • Clear that aching head. Right that pset stomach. Move those con* atipated bowels by taking Noah’s Regulator. Pleasant to take,, mild though effective. For sale by II. H. Brown, Druggist. sMMi ) If you need fence erected or re* - building o f old fence, Phone 141-F12. . (tf) MAYWOOD IIOUNET', Subscribe to THE HERALD Temperance N otes Sponsored by ^ Cedarville W, C. T. U. It Wag Never Tried Prohibition did not fail. It was never tried. A t no time was the law in the hands o f its friends for en­ forcement Eugene Chaim, once said, "The law is l per cent-.and administration 99 per cent,” wKat is needed today, is an administration in power which be­ lieves in the principle of prohibition, o ' dry law enacted, with dry officials from president down to justice o f the peace to enforce that law. When that takes place we shall •have prohibtion o f the liquor traffic. > May the day soon come when the millions o f voting church members see their responsibility in the matter. A hundred n day is the way auto­ mobiles are killing people in the United States. In the majority o f cases, liquor it at the wheel. Who helped put it there?—Watch-Ex­ aminer. Alcohol is just as poisonous and no more so, or no less, sold by a boot­ legger, saloonkeeper, government, or drug store. Legalizing it is tho remedy of the wets. Legalizing it 13 the remedy of the drys.—Exchange. Dry- Kansas has a balanced budget and cash in the bank, state debts have been reduced, and taxes light­ ened during the past year. “ Sobriety is prosperity's bedfellow.” Several weeks, ago, Charjes A, Hartnett, state motor vehicle commis­ sioner for New York, started a cam­ paign urging all gas station prqv prietors ftnd operators to refuse to sell gas to any driver showing signs of intoxication. This has proved so effective, according to the press, that a bili has been introduced in the state legislature putting the law behind this move by making it a misdemeanor for any .filling station attendant to sell gas to an intoxicated motorist. Which, Bread or llcer r By Flossie Stevens Woodbucn Wauseon Which shall it be. which shall it he? I asked of John, and he of me: I asked for bread, John wanted beer; Wc-’ve not enough for both, I fear. I pled' with bint to think o f Nell. Our little girl we loved .so well; He said he’d bring us home some bread, ' But ere he came, our Nell whs dead, Our darting Nell, at last, was gone Where hunger vanishes with dawn, Whore Jornm gives the hungry bread Ami weary, ones will all be fed. We still had left our little Dan. Sweet, childish, patient, little man; lie wanted bread, our precious dear. But father brought home only beer. O why must laser be in our land? T is this wo can mot understand; Why tempt the weak, why starve the poor, Why keep tho wolf so close the door 7 la there a reason, tried and true? Why no, it’s just for revenue; Our nation needs it, so ’tis clear, Wo should buy bread, but must buy beer. For Sale—Davenport, combination gas and coal range, Call phone No 7, Cedarville. Subscribe io THE HERALD IN SPRINGFIELD AT THE REGENT I5V WEEK 8TARTINQ ^ FRIDAY IN 8PRINGFIELD AT THE 4MM JUfc MflMaagH m # rm m I E FOUR DAY# .y Starting SATURDAY! Tayuw Lcr mm la th e r ’s Wife” Robert Taylor, that handsome young man of the movies who has captured American women's hearts and simultaneously established himself as a very popular star with the men, by hie outstanding per- formancss in "Society ,Doctor,” "Magnificent Obsession,” “Small Town Girl" and "Private Number” is the star In two new M-G-M '’pic­ tures set for release this fall. The first of the two new Tay­ lor vehicles Is ”His Brother’s Wife,” a modern romantic 'story la which Taylor has Barbara Stanwyck as his loading lady, "Gorgeous Hus­ sy” with Joan Crawford, la the other new Taylor hit “Hie Brother’s W W will be the attraction at the Regent theater in Springfield for a week starting Fri­ day. The film has received ' sin?, limited praise from nat! ual cinema critics end Is declared to provide a new peak la heart throbs with its modern end twisty romantic story. The State theater in Springfield will show the new Paramoent hit, "The Texes Rangers,” four days starting Saturday. Fred MacMur* ray. Jack Oakle end Jean Parker are the stars. SALE AS USUAL Labor Day MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7TH AUCTION SALE EVERY MONDAY SPRINGFIELD LIVE STOCK SALES CO. Sherman Are. SPRINGFIELD, OHIO Mela M M — ~— 7 ~ Xenia-London Bus Schedule Arrives and leaves at Richards Drug Store as follows: Leave Cedarville Far London 7^44 A . M. 9 :44 A . M. 3 :30 P. M. 5 :4 4 P. M. Leave Cedarville* For Xenia. 0:01 A. M. 11:01 A. M. 5:01 P. M. 7:11 P. M. Please Clip and Post for Convenience CAPPEL’ S GREATER AUGUST SALE REDUCTIONS U P TO Per Cent K ENDS SATURDAY! N EW FALL STYLES' IN HOME FURNISHINGS ALL INCLUDED Your Last Chance! 124-130 East High St. Springfield, Ohio OP Furniture Saturday, Sept; 5,1936 AT ONE O’CLOCK Furniture Store, S. Main St., Cedarville, O. ^Living Room Suites, Dining Room Suites, Breakfast 'Sets', Tables, Stands, Bookcases, Buffets, 9x12 Rugs, Small Rugs, Chairs, Rockers,-Piano, Victrolas, Records, Porcfi Sets; Organ, Bed Clothing, Library Tables, China Closets, Mirrors,"Pictures, Si|le Boards, Ice Refrigerators, Roll Top Desks, Davenports, Gas Ranges, Stoves, Electric Table and Floor Lamps, Clothes Racks, Child’s Chairs, Bird Cages, Pillows, Clothing, Kitchen Utensils, Extracts, Books, Smoker Sets, Sewing Cabinets, Folding Beds, Child’s Wagon, Toys. Many Other Articles Too.Numerous To Mention TERMS—CASH . E. Barnhart SAFE and SURE! FOR 51 YEARS THIS ASSOCIATION HAS PAID DIVIDENDS July 1935 Dividends 3 Per Cent Accounts.opened by September 10th draw Dividends from September 1st and are Federally Insured. SPRINGFIELD FEDERAL SAVING and LOAN ASS’N 2D E. Main St. Springfield, O. ’ “The Pioneer Association of Springfield . ' Wednesday, Sept. 16,1936 BEGINNING AT 10:30 A . M. SHARP 5—HEAD OF HORSES— 5 ONE t'ATTI.E PONY w r i J ^ 00 ^ “ rY.fvdi ^ J V^ 8nd siH ? cSrK °!d« w,c11 broken'and sound, TI ya I . I ’1 n, 1 •' . £ y 7 yen™ old, sound and good worker, weight ii W C.k 11 years old, good worker anywhere, weight 1600 lbs.; Light Bay mare, two years old, weight 1650 lbs.; Well broken pony. 50—HEAD DAIRY CATTLE—50 . Consisting o f 25 head o f cows, some fresh, some springers, and remainder Jl}(Jfood flow o f milk; 21 head of heifers, 1 two-year-old Guernsey bull eligible to register; two young bulls ready fo r service and 1 bull calZ ** 135—Head o f Poland China Hogs— 135 no .'Consisting o f 88 head ofahonts, 50-80 lbs.; 27 head o f weanling nigs and 20 head o f open sows, all double immuned. g p gs 123—Head o f Shropshire Sheep— 123 ®Lhc£wl ,o f breeding ewes—some one’s, two’s and three-year-olds, and !noUlh^ j Wesi ®9 °* lambs—oner pen fat lambs, one pen Buck lambsan' Icmamfk!r f «bdcr lambs; One two-year-old Buck and two FARMING IMPLEMENTS . .£ m:,na11 tractor with corn plows and breaking plow; tractor disc and douMe horse disc* John Deere com planter, with tongue truck; rotary hoe: cultipacker, 14-inch Oliver sulky plow, two-row corn cultivator, spike-tooth hanwv, 32-7 grain drill, 8 -foot McCormick binder, New Idea manure speader, Matforni low wagon, 6 -foot mower, self dump rake, hay tedder, clover liuncner, com chipper, corn shnller, cider press, feed cooker, hog feeders, 2 hog fountain, grapple fork, Massey Harris cream separator with power pulley, butchering tools, tankheatcr, two sidos o f riew harness, 3 log chains, 2 sets o f block and tackle, Duplex feed grinder, 1 9x12 ten t camp stool and Cots, milk enns and many other miscellaneous articles, 1935 INTERNATIONAL PICKUU TRUCK j FEED 225 bushells o f extra good corn; 60 bushels of white oats; 85 tops o f a ifafa hay; 12 J tons o f sefeond cutting, baled; will sell 7 acres o f third cutting on ground; %% tons o f baled oat straw, . TERMS-CASH Cedaryille, Ohio F. T, Martin, Auct, Silver* and Turnbull, Clerks A* L. FLATTER - • ‘ . . y WE1KERT & GORDON, Auctioneers FRED 8T&WART, Clerk Lunch Served by Missionary Ladies’ o f Glifton Presbyterian Chuirit* NEW THIN BY KERCH TISEMENTS OF THE TI F IF T Y -N IN NEWSIE FROM DEPA COLUMBUS.—T response to numtr prospective colleg students has obtain 623 institutions of the United States,. by Librarian Paul publications are av the library’s refere catalog collection a few colleges and nation, Librarian Another decline real estate force! experienced during wata collected by George S. Myers a Governor’s Farm a' committee in co-o State University, number of foreclos, involved seventy-on othef properties c dential, business o land. The total w - reports by eighty-f o f 1,203 sales an twenty-eight sale population and far counties that wer July foreclosures x decrease when co .265 sales in the pr sizable decrease, w • the 1,602 foreclos 11935, according t ''Warning that t fever”, has again was issued by Dr. director of the S Health. Three c .have been listed last few days a i dressing rabbits malady, Dr. Ha thought that at o f the rabbits in tularemia. The he frequently cautio wild rabbits to we not to put an un • the game.- /th e and prolonged 111 stances is fatal person. More than 600 o f the 4-H Clubs the eighty-eight Columbus from S the annual state it was announced the Ohio Agricul ice, who is in cha , ’ Club organizatio ers will.include Morrill of Ohio S J. F. Cunningha college o f ngrici president o f the federation; Walt# Ohio-Grange; an result of the con at the congress equipped with da activitie sand ot est to 4-H Clubs formation to tb members in the The continue for more than wouid be require lost as a result during the mont was the asserti Thomas P» Ke safety and liyg Commission of thnt the avera prebend the an upo nthe state' cidents. Super latod that there occupational dk ■ fatalities, filed for the month Auto Stri ; A automobi Honaker, Conn bicycle Frida; Singleton boy, Miller street o was on one i Was destroyed auto badly da Ho lights and i party, being Intermission. gated and Sin bicycle. Hon any blame. METHODIST OPEN The annua copal Gonfe Wcdaewlay, t gage tlie mi » week*. Re the local chi yetnm.

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