The Cedarville Herald, Volume 66, Numbers 1-26

ck:»*r.vrmg B £ e \ u i p: t § , * w * m*mr ............ .MW »w u iiiiv U w w HP H I ; c ' » » A l l ' y » t > t g H 1 E A L P K A B ^ lf M a x w KOITOE AMD PUBLISHER l<S5»n W>S£l iHHacM; «*•. atwwWWjWf JUNM%» IMM. T**W ftwmA**fc St th* Port Ofcoft, (M arville , Ohio, Oetobur 51 ,1857 , u recond claw matter. FEBRUARY 19,1948 iiimn'mHMimKumiiumiiwuwwwHWWiwwimwmutHt OUR FOREIGN TREATIES— DANGEROUS ‘ The meddling in French politics in northern Africa by the New Deal hold* public attention, Therd is critical newspaper criticism o f the part Roosevelt and Hull played in that mixup. You have even never been told o f how hard it was for theJSngr- lish to withhold violent criticism. That was the occasion of the W e have secret and also free trade treaties with many countries which the public would not approve if there had been any publicity. William J. Hale, research consultant, charged before a Rankers* convention in Minneapolis, Minn., that at the end o f the war this country was to destroy all plants being erected or even being used for the manufacture of synthetic rubber/regardless of the fact the country is spending millions of dollars of income tax money to provide even imitation! rub-, her to keep the auto wheels running oh the highways. Jt is argued that some 550 million o f dollars has already been spent by the New Dealers and ho synthetic rubber is in sight. That is the reason William Jeffers, rubber dictator, is. fighting the New Deal from Roosevelt down to the lowest Democratic pre­ cinct committeeman to get rubber- • Two other treaties that will aid in reducing prices on farm -products are the wheat treaty with Canada when 5,000,000 bu­ shels will be shipped into this country in April. Every ship that goes to the south Pacific with men or war supplies returns by way of Australia where they are loaded with Australian wool purchased at a higher price than Americn wool is bring-, ing in this country. For this, refcson Drew Pearson, radio com­ mentator says there is no need for rationing clothing. Nearly every secret treaty carries a free trade clause not only damaging to our labor and industry but the farmer as 'w ell. . ’ FARMERS DID NOT W ANT TO STRIKE It is evident there is nothing the New Deal can propose that will heal the break, between dairy farmers and the gov­ ernment'but greatly increase prices for milk and cream as wel as other farm products, Freezing milk prices has brought the .duplicity of the New Deal milkers in Washington into the open Jimmy Byrnes is gping to be the goat and we predict he w il be cast to the wolves just as Leon Henderson was sacrificed. Friday, last several hundred Maryland farmers, dairymen and distributors held a meeting to discuss the freezing of milk prices. It was only by a close vote that a “milk strike’^ was voted* down. It was proposed to shut out all milk to residents of Washington D.‘ C. and the District of Columbia until prices were increased. The fanners want milk taken out of the hands • of the Agricultural Department tha t is playing to the milk trust. It was argued that no milk should be delivered tha ; would evftn reach the White House or the Congressional res taurants as well as the half hundred government owned pri­ vate dinning rooms in public buildings. The freeze was about the last straw to cause the break be jtween farmers in this part of, the nation and the government, . It would be impossible to reprint some of the comment. It is the only time many new converts were made against AAA domination of the American farm for political purposes. No; one farmer in 10,000 has ever read the AAA farm act. It calls - for many things farmers have never been informed about. When the time cpmes that a farmer that milks fifteen or twenty cows twice a day, in winter and summer, cannot have but a half pound of butter even from the 6ream he. sells, regi­ mentation is at his door- If he i% affraid to defend his dWji and stand tot the health of his own children, he is not entitled tp any butter. I f he swallows the‘charge of “ uhpatriotic. shame he is not in our opinion entitled o either .financial return or sympathy. ; If the dairy farmer would rather give away his milk, his, labor, and throw away all profit, he should give' his milk to the deserving families with undernourished children rather than let the milk trust reap war profits at his expense. Now* tha New Deal speculators have a corner on most of.the protein feet fo t hogs and dairy cattle, the pig trough or a few calves wil bring more profit than is possible through any five or ten gal Ion milk can, New Dealers and organized labor work hand in hand under the slogan “Food will win the War” , to hold down food prices at the expense of the farmer, whose, son in service on foreign soil eats oleo and Argentine meat that Russia and England can have our''lease lend meat", One. fact stands out as certain as the noon day sun, the city New Dealer is going to have less to eat, ration or no ration His $1 an hour wa$re cannot purchase something that has not been produced and cannot be produced under present New Deal regulations. He should be able to see what's ahead of him and his family and who is responsible. The city wage earner and salaried person will soon be pay- ;r Ing the largest part of the.war cost and the New Deal cost of government. W ith low farm prices and high costs of produc- . tion the fanner will not have the profit and will escape income taxes to some extent and cannot be expected to purchase war bonds bn par with the $1 an hour and city salaried class. Even this w ill not get food to the 81 &n hour workers in industry or government agencies, Washington still does not believe the farmer can and will eat before city folks can start out with a handful of money and market baskets, with numerous rations cards. , Thu first page story o f waste o f gasoline as' told by Her. P, B. Guthrie, Oil City, Pa., is truly Roose- vdfciatf, No storage at the refineries and the gasoline as a by product fo r producing lubricating oil is turned into the Allegeheney river, as it was fifty years age when even the scion* tist o f that day did not know what it was. Then, coal oil was all that was known in producing lubricating oil.. The Pennsylvanians that must take three gallons o f gasoline for their automobiles ■jare no different than the farmer that milks twenty cows and is given one half pound of hutter b y the milk trust operating under direction o f the New Peal. -Waste, is truly* Rooseveltian in war and out. , BRICKER’S NASHVILLE TALK--------FAMILIAR SENTIMENT The anniversary celebrations o f such great men as Abra­ ham Lincoln serve to direct the whole attention of the nation to the concepts of good government and set it thinking along the lines o f maintaining in America the kind of government which has Come down to us over the years so that it may be passed on to future generations as free and as secure as it was when it came to us. In this light the sentiments'uttered and arguments made on such occasions take on added signift ;ance, such as, for in­ stance, the address o f Governer Bridker last Friday evening at Nashville, Tenn., when With unusual clarity and force he re­ flected in his words a growing desire among the ordinary run of individual that government fulfill its highest and best func tion* A t lea&t one sentiment in the Bricker address stands out to be remembered, “I Want my post-war America," he said, “ to be a nation free from the confusion and the inequities that come from centralized control and bureaucratic authority over • every phase of life and business activity," Here, Mr. Bricker has spoken the language understood best by the vast majority of Americans who remembered from their grammer school day* the axioms of freedom, independence, and progress assoc­ iated with the country's birth and growth, He spoke in the American tradition, and in full keeping .with the policies he has followed as governor of Ohio where for a third successive time he has been chosen by the voters to keep on, as the homely childhood phrase has it, practicing what he preaches. — Columbus Dispatch EDDIE R1CKENBACKER CHALLENGES BIG BAD WOLF Eddie Rickenbackef, World War I ace, who was without doubt saved by an act of Providence when a sea gull perched itself on his head after; days .of floundering ip a Pacific* sea, is out with a challenge to Roosevelt and all his followers on the wage hour issue. Roosevelt and Byrnes stretched the truth as to inflation and higher prices. Organized labor gets an in- AiPereased pay check# The salaried class and farmer are frozen. Xante 2tat*ry,)jui * gumd, Hi* tepfc was not " I ” but “ Lincoln, the Pol­ itician”1. Tbe following Sunday «v*. ping at a union service w* hoard Dr. W. K. MeCheaney In oiw o f his re­ markable addresses on Abraham Lin­ coln, the Christian." Neither Stewart nor MeChcsney used the per­ sonal pronoun "I” . RoOsevelt has p copyright cm that. Mayor Stewart related a story that certainly can be applied today, Ho told o f *n incident during the Civil War when one o f the Union Generals reported to Lin­ coln, the Commander-In-Chief that he had captured certain territory, tjuipment and a cow. The President was asked: ,fWhat shall t do with the cow ?" Lincoln replied, “Milk t” . Under the New Deal Roosevelt would have had to reply, “ Mortgage it” . mm** The butter situation-is getting hot. It is going to get hotter all over the nation and Washington among the blew Deal gouty administrationists. When S fanner milks ten to twenty. c6ws and a milk trust gets more prof­ it out o f the milk in butter and sale o f milk than the fanner that pro­ duces it, and then tells the farmer that he can have but a half pound o f butter back for a family o f three or ten, someone is going to do without butter and the calves and the pigs' are to grow fatter. Meantime the. farmer will get < his hutter but the city, chap that follows the New Deal manure spreader is going to get noth­ ing but dust in his eyes—evidently not butter. Even Jimmy Burns, who got our New Deal farm implement to spread the barnyard fertilizer has made no impression on the rural pop ulace. Let no farmer be shaken by the claims that all this is for his son or some other American boy in un iform, . Churchill and the English Red Coated Tories,do not eat Oleo, neither does Stalin or h is" Russians. Both Want American butter and lard, not substitutes. It is the American boy in uniform overseas, rural and city, carrying a gun fo r the British that eats oleo and lard substitutes. Im agine the New Deal brand ° f hutter in the topics that will not melt at 12Q, degrees. *How much cream can be in that brand o f butter? Don’t be fooled about butter for your son or any other, American boy. Our En glish cousins come even before our boys in service or even our own civil jan population. Some day the Atlan tic charter will prove that very state- I f you think you are not in Russia o r Germany just take a-pair o f your own or wife’s shoes and try- to have ’ hem half-soled, The shoemaker will tell you he is not allowed to use the leather.' That is what they do in Europe, only the women in Russia, under Communism, other than the of­ ficial families, wear burlap on their feet. That was |he story o f Judge Turner o f the 01}io- Supreme Court, who with his wife, majie a tour of Russia" just before, the war to study Communism. IJhey could not wear jewelry, fine shoes or millinery. You will recall what Communist Harry Hopkins said recently, ail Americans were to be reduced to the 1929 level o f living—the days o f Herbert Hoover. Ye, Gods! Hoover ' comes into his own. -■ .- , j A ll New Deal farmers are expected to swallow their own doctrine and like ■it—even no buttery The New Deal farmer that follows the Mason, Brad fute, Stonebumer barnyard crap should be force'd to do without hutter and forced' to milk ;his cows and de liver the milk to the milk trust to sav<£—America. Farmers are pointing a finger at the Xenia City commission on the time issue.. Another.finger is pointed at the lack. Of the law enforcemnt on local ,issues. These subjects are not to be laughed off. When mob rule is winked at and local citizens divid­ ed, rural citizens see the picture. It is Xenia's nest that has been fouled, not the county," Last Friday evening two Ken- tuckeyians took the law into their own hands when a couple o f negro youths entered one o f the leading city picture theatres, in Springfield. The youths were sold tickets and took their seats, but in the wrong place for there was resentment and quick action when they happened to sit be­ side two Kentuckeyians. Argument arose. Physical effort Was put to task. Result, the negroes landed on the sidewalk, in front o f the theatre .The youths disappeared up an alley, the Kentuckeyians returned to the theatr Prof, Oakes, Wilberforce , Univer­ sity, writes a letter to the public ex­ plaining that the recent race trouble in Xenia did not-originate among the students and that the race agitation was the result o f Antioch College students fomenting sentiment on the race issue. The college element only used the negro *”to arouse sentiment for Communism. Colored educational leaders deplored the recent “ mob rule” . One o f the loudest exponents of the mix up in Xenia has been a New Deal Democrat, He would con done “ a rope and noose” if he had his way, The Ohio % passed by a Democratic,legislature and signed by Vfartin L, Davey, a democrat, gives negroes equal rights in picture shows. Now certain Democrats want to lynch the negro. I f we view the situation Correctly the Women's Voters League n Yellow Springs has a subject in ts lap that will permit debate for some time to come. The organization might also do a little “ American in­ vestigation” among those who seek to arouse sentiment on the race issue. It is well Lincoln lived. For many reasons. If he had not probably Roosevelt wblild have had no excuse to go On the air the other night. It -.vas another of the “I- or We” blow­ outs and little of what Lincoln said, did or did not do. In contrast faefoio the personal pronoun, “Lend Church* i l* we had the picture* of hearing Mayor James Stewart speak before One.o f ' our lady subscribers calls attention to a clipping banded us where there is to be a ceiling on the height o f women's shoes, an order from the New Dealcrats in Wash­ ington. ^ ie clipping says heels can be only two and five-eightsinches with four colors,, white Tusset, black and brown. No fancy, trimmings and overlaps. No evening slippers. The order comes from the esteemed Donai/l Nelson, Senrs^Sawbuck Ex­ ecutive, who is running, the war fo r Churchill Inc. We Suggest probably this order was unnecessary in view o f .the attitude o f the many “ inter­ ventionists” .- in Greene and other counties that do not know there is a war on even, with their sons in for­ eign service.* Our lady friend when asked as to why and wherefore of such an order said it was to conserve w o o d t o make more “ New Deal blockheads" in Washington. Cincinnnati motorists are to re­ ceive a check fo r their extra tires sent in under government edict. There are 100,000 tires stored in the Hir- linger Tire & Motor Service -Co;, warehouse under New Deal lease. O f all the thousands turned in the New Deal is to’ selt your second hand tires around $8 each. Generous American motorists, Greedy New Dealers. Your neighbor may be one that voted for the New Deal Communists en­ forcing „unAmerican ideas to reduce the nation to European poverty. The Iowa State Senate has adopted a resolution- asking Congress to change the Roosevelt crazy war t(.ne to standard time. It is the contention o f farmers in that state that it is an injustice and the cities join in cn the request. Iowa wants gasoline federal tax and the ration dropped. The time question promises to be the important issue in the next pres­ idential election. Fa^m) Estates as well as western states have joined in the demand. The Xenia-City Com­ mission goes New Deal and rejects Ohio law, Xenia schools might rind themselves outside o f state aid unless legal time is recognized. Any rupal patron can bring the issue to a' head In a few minutes. Aibninistraticn leaders, in both the Treasury Department and on the Ways and Means Committee, seem' to be unalterably opposed to the adop tion o f the Ruml Plan to forgive 1942 taxes and place tax collections on a -Urrent basis fo r 1943, while Repub 'tenn members o f the Committee favor m adoption o f some Pay As You Go ■ax program. The Ways and Means 'Committee is now holding hearings on the matter, but a final decision is not expected for some time to come. The New Deal squanders purchased the largest hotel in the world, the Ste­ vens Hotel, Chicago,, to house the U. S. Army brass bats. It had 3,000 rooms and the building cost $26,666,- 000, The New Dealers paid $6,000,- 000 for the structure and contents,, the amount o f outstanding bonds held by financial and political leaders. The stockholders will not receive anything i;or their investment. All contents are to be sold March 16th,. including a stainless-steel kitchen equipment that cost $100,000, In the list will be a lot o f 4,000 gold plated chairs from the grandbail room that cost new^a-' bout $20 each, The $6,000,000 will be paid out o f yoUr income taxes, Waste that is the Roosevelt Slogan, LEGAL NOTICE Ann* Davis, whose place o f resi­ dency is unknown will take notice that on the 16bh day o f February, 194$, W, M, Daria filed his petition against her for divorce on the ground* o f wilfull absence for more than 3 years, said cause being case No. 23093 before tha Common Pleas Court o f Greene County, Ohio. Said matter will cprae on fo r hearing on or after April 3rd, 1943, (2-19-6t-3-26) MARCUS SHOUP, ' Attorney fo r Plaintiff. f HunmiannMiiMiiiiiMWiBW y - m improved UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL S UNDAVI chool Lesson BY HAROLD L. LXJNDQUIST. t>. D, Ol The Moody Bible InitRute ot Chlcaso, .(Relee.sed by Western. Newspaper "Union.) - Lesion for February 21 > Lesson subjects and Scriptin'* texts se- R X t ^ ^ d « M te" b y permission. - JESUS THE GOOD SHEPHERD LESSON TEXT—John W:M«, Z7-30. GOLDEN TEXT—“1 im the good shep­ herd: the good shepherd glveth his life lor the sheep."—John 10:11, Constructive Loans Sorrow with ft purpose. Borrow for ft definite need, Borrow conservatively. Borrow from . Springfield Loan O il to W. High St. Phone 8061 Springfield, Old* Beautiful and meaningful as .they are, none of the other .figures or types of our Lord’s redemptive work have a stronger appeal than that of the good shepherd. Even those who have never, tended sheep nor yet seen them under the shepherd’s care , sense the telling, aptness o f the alle- ■gory, of the Good Shepherd. We know how much we are like, sheep needing the tender shepherd’s care, and we soon "learn to know and to trust Christ as the True Shepherd of the flock. . The center of the. picture,,is the Good Shepherd,^ and it is 'around Him that-we group our' thoughts. I. He Knows His Sheep (w . 1-5). * At night, whenever' possible, the sheep were .brought into a fold, a walled-in enclosure with shelters and with a single gate. Many different flocks were#kept together under the care of an undershepherd. In the morning the shepherds came to lead forth the flock. They came by the door, not as the thieves of the night, who sought to come in. by stealth * over the wall. ' When the shepherd called, his own sheep responded, We are told that they would not come at the call of a •stranger—not being ready to trust him. The application is obvious,- and yet a word is in order. We ought to examine ourselves and see wheth­ er we do indeed know our Lord’s voice. Do we respond when He calls us? Then,i too, let us' be on the lookout againsf those who profess to .be shepherds, who call them­ selves “ pastor” or “ reverend," and, have only one purpose—to despoil the sheep. They ate “ thieves and robbers’VJesits said so. They are only interested as. long, as it pays. The true shepherd cares' for his sheep. II. He Protects His Sheep (vv; 6-15). ‘ ' Not only thieves, but wild animals would attack' sheep,- and it is said that often the shepherd, died to pro­ tect them from harm. But the hire­ ling, serving for what he can get out of it, is not interested any longer. When, danger appears, he flees. He has not the real shepherd heart'and cares not if the sheep be destroyed. Having stolen them to enrich him­ self, he will not defend them at the cost of his own life. Note the sharp contrast of “ I am ^the good shepherd” with the dark- 'picture of the faithless hirelings. Not only does it magnify His goodness, but it deepens the blackness o f their treachery, . , We should recall , that the Good Shepherd is able to protect His sheep; for while He lays down His life for them, He takes it again in victory over sin and death (see w , 17,18). The Saviour seemed to have been defeated' at Calvary, but He arose again, and ever liveth to make intercession on our behalf (Heb. 7;25). III. He Seeks Other Sheep (v. 16). The other sheep Jesus had in mind were probably the Gentiles. The believers He then had were Jews, but the day was to .come when the Gentiles were to hear and believe. His desire for them may well stir in our hearts ftn eagerness to go out and bring in all—both Jew and Gen­ tile—who will, by believing in Christ, become members of His one fold. Note the word: “must” in verse 16. . It does not say “ if convenient,” n6r “ when we can raise enough money,” nor “ after our local debts are paid” we Will ’ go out and seek others, •There is a divinejmperative here— it “ must” be done. Let us not fail to gather the full significance of the expression “ one flock, one shepherd.” We are not in­ terested in. any manufactured unify of man-mad^ organizations, Certain­ ly we will not accept union which means . compromise of essential truth. But unity Under Christ, the one great Shepherd, that we w a n t- yes and will have. He makes that certain—“ they shall be one flock,” Lei us hot put hindrances in the way of that kind o f unity, and let tis not be delinquent about seeking the “ other sheep.’ ’ .Now a final word. TV* He Keeps All His Sheep (w . 27-30), These words (said after a period of weeks had elapsed) stres* the blessed assurance which comes to those who foilow Christ. Jesus re­ buked the Jews tor their-unbelief, ■telling them that they were not His sheep, , - r Those who are His have been giv­ en to Him by the Father—an eternal gilt to Him—and He gives to them eternal life. The power back of this whole mat­ ter is evident in verse SO. Christ is God. He who is,in Christ’s hand is also in the Father's hand, “and no man is able to pluck them but of the Father’s hand,” Instead oi trying to 'modify that statement, or to quarrel with those who behave it, every* Christian ought to accept it and about CHURCH NOTES » :B wiiw(«»i»nu«HWMu,wuiwu«nimmiiiiuiii|iiiiuiuiiiumN METHODIST CHURCH EL % Afcefc . Mini-tor > Telephone* 6-1381 Sunday School 10:60 A . M, Clayton Wiseman,'Supt, Church School, 11 A, M, Semen, “Portrait o f the Master,” Missionary Institute, Feb, 24 at Wilmington, plan to go now, Feb. 28—March 7. Week o f Dedi­ cation a part o f a national observance by all Methodists o f the U. S,„ March 2 —Last Quarterly Confer­ ence. Begin now to collect material for * written report. Personal /evangelism campaign March 14-18 pointing towards Easter, Gene Abels wishes to thank those o f the WSCS who made hia sunshitie box possible. UNITED PRESBYTERIANCHURCH Ralph A. Jamieson, Minister Sabbath School 10 A. M., Supt, Harold Dobbins. , • t ' Morning service at 11 A. M. ’ COMMUNION SERVICE . . Y . P. C. U. 7 P. M, Subject, "How Christ Builds a World o f Brother­ hoods!” . _ < ' Choir Rehearsal Saturday, 7:30 *P. M. ' , ’ (. Services preparatory to Communion Will, be held Friday at 8 P, M! with the message b y Rev. J, Reed Millet o f Xenia, * ‘ Service Saturday at 2 P. M., with the message by Rev. William P Chasq, whom, we are glad to welcome to our community.and fellowship. The session will meet after the Sat­ urday service in our regular monthly meeting. H^there are any who wish to unite with the church by Profes­ sion o f Faith, or by Certificate from other churches, we will be glad- to welcome them at this time. ,The Sac- ament o f Baptism will be adminis- ament o f :Baptism will be adminisi- FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Paul H. Elliott, Minister 16:66.A, M. Sabbath School. II. K tormont, Supt. > Church Service 11:66 A . M. Sermon “An Enduring Victory” . 7:66 Christian Endeavor Monday, ’8:60 P. M. Monthly meet­ ing o f the Session, , " Wednesday 8:00 P. M. Last meet- .ng "The School o f Missions.” Thursday at 12:00 Oclock. The Wo­ man's Missionary Society , will hold the annual covered dish’ luncheon at the home o f Mrs. Walter Iliff. Choir rehearsal Saturday at 8 P.M! THE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Sunday Services Sunday School 10:00 to, 11:00 A. M. Preaching 11:00 A. M. to 12:00 M. ‘ Evangelistic Service 7:80 P. W. * Wednesday Service - Prayer Meeting 7:30 P. M. Sunday School Superintendent, Ru­ fus Nance, I Pastor, Raymond" Strickland. CHURCH OF GOD R. C. FREDERICK, Pastor Sunday School, 9:30 A , M. " Morning .Worship, 10:30 A , M. Young Peoples Meeting at 6 P. Evening Service, 7:45 P. M.. Prayer Service -Wednesday evening, 7:45 P. M, M. A NAME THAT STANDS FOR GOOD FURNITURE BUDGET FLAN AVAILABLE- Adair’s N. Detroit S t Xenia, O. ’ * tHmmmmmHtiMHiiimmtuiHiiiHimmmiimfttiitmmMH A % Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted, Reasonable Charges. Dr.C.E.Wilkin ♦ i Optometric Eye ,- Specialist - .* » Xeniftj Ohio W Nat everybody with * dollar I B *»*«*•.«* » *booi a gittt JM, itraight to the bapk and J r M War Bond*. Hay y**y IHfflFS RINOL Recommended for the relief of r h e u m a t i s m a r t h r i t i s e e i l u m b a g o Welt know* ip tki* ridalty Price— $1.50, 4 Bottle* $S.0f FOR SALE Brown’ s Drug Store CORNER PHARMACY Xenia HORNBERGER Jamestown : H elp Launch The 1 9 4 3 O ffe n s iv e . . . Buy V ictory Bonds! '^Thurfc ^1 WK.J ! MU-nry Fonda Maureen O ’Hara I n " |“ T h e Im m o r ta l “Shadow of A Doubt” with. ; Teresa Wright Coming Sunday “ The Powers Girl” Carole Landis ‘‘Johnny Sat. Feb. 20 4 Day* Doughboy’*- w ith Jane Wither* “ P ittsburgh” , Marlene -Dietrich % - *.U • -!*1» ’ tk'i it'/. Sun, For 4 Day* ‘ ♦BANDIT R A N G E R ’ * — p l u s - ------ “ 7 Mile* from Alcatraz** Judy Qarhnd “ For Me And My Gal’V --- -------- P/u* ------------ “ Spirit of West Point” tf " ’ i f Sun. Mon. Tun. 1150 I Tea per cent of your income id War Honda will help to build toe planeg and tanks that will iniure defeat of Hit- let and Ms Axis partners. Experienced Typists ahd Clerical Workers, Steady em­ ployment, pleasant working condi­ tions, good- pay, McCall Corporation 2219 McCall St. Dayton, O, “ We pajr for HORSfeS $2.00 COWS $1.00 -o f she and condition Hog#, Sheep, Calves, ate, Removed promptly Catt - w m iA 3 P M T 1 L L 5 E B K. G- Suehateb,KeniaTOhto^ The Cedar for the Red noon Feb, 2 J. E. Hastin „ Mr. apd h announcing j J Wednesday r j Hospital. { Mias Betty ] the Kirksvill ( week-end at Mr. and Mrs Money to i Cedarville Association, Pvt. James stationed at a furlough . visiting his James Bailej Mrs. Normi visited with Morton over ■C. W. Mil) . munity sale • v farm,- Wednt are announce ■ ; Rev. R. A. Easter date that is possi been- twenty >was‘ observec - infej-esting s put in your not suit we -move the dal have rollers • . giving. Mrs, B. H "Christmas Si smomted to munity. She . thanks and i port given t) P. F. C. / . inducted into „ on a furlou .. , his Wife at 1 ■Mr. and Mrs Nash is the r W, L. Truhi stationed at . Atlanta, Ga. -I We will he J .*,» farm. ’ -•f Cedarville . 4| ", Association. 1 •-if-#' --•«( V WANTED ^ man to take / .! hidtbeir Work enj ‘ modem. $1' board.. Call m t The Yeilo' * ' closed Tuesi1 cold weathei county were t ' ■ ~ . MRS. J. S. V j «at HOME C ’ *■ I m Mrs. J. i members of and a few f ir, ■y at her home u Members a\ “ The. Most Happy Hon Papers wi Murphy, “ Y , Mrs. Ira D. . ; on “You MV , A paper t: i’ VTaUght Lift . / . ‘ Jark it, ’ Mrs. Del . vocal numt Lavender?’ the Wind” . A salad , hostess. WANTED shock. Tnt> John c. Cedarville FOR SAI ’J Waltham pieces, Rc r j Phone 6- * : I BUY = m W *a . a: 9f m »\« SI Alto—1 W1 tel i

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